The Alliance herald. (Alliance, Box Butte County, Neb.) 1902-1922, May 30, 1922, Page SIX, Image 6

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    SIX
THE ALLIANCE HERALD. TUESDAY, MAY 30, 1922.
Alliance Defeats
w Bridgeport 15-5
Sunday Afternoon
The Alliance baseball Uam defeatd!
Bridgeport Sunday, 15 to 5, in a some
what weird game, three of the best
men failing to arrive until after the
third inning. Captain "Chuck" Griffin,
Kay Iiutlcr and llert JSIattery were the
absent momber.s. The Alliance aggie
Ration, playing with substitutes, was
in the lead, 4 to 3 at the end of the
third, however, and with the arrival of
the lost members ran away with their
opponent.
Garvin pitched the entire game, and
although nit fairly hard, tightened up
in the pinches and easily won with
the support he was given. Garvin
hhowed possibilities of making a firnt
clut pitcher, although he is us yet
Mimewhat inexperienced.
Alliance nicked the Bridgeport
pitcher for seventeen hits, while Gar
vin allowed but eight. The game was
leaturcd by heavy hitting, Alliance
jrctting a numlier of extra base hits.
The Bridgeport team was the second
victim ot the season for the Alliance
team. The next game will be with
Heminglord at Hemingford today. The
wore:
Alliance 3 10 2 3 0 3 3 015 17 2
Bridgeport j.0 1201010 0 G 8 7
Batteries Alliance, Garvin and Mc
Nulty; Bridgeport: Jensen, Kilting and
Brown.
Ellsworth Defeats
the Fast Whitman
Baseball Aggregation
Antioch and Local
Tennis Clubs Mix
Sunday Morning
Three members of the Alliance ten
nis club drove to Antioch Sunday to
play a few of the members of the new
Iv organized club there. Those making
the trip were William Khoads of Heu
ler's store, Elmer Hollingsworth of
the Schafer Auto Supply, and Edwin
Burr. Antioch won three of the five
TnutcheR played, Khoads and Hollings
worth losing to J, M. l.literas and O.
C. Chilcote 2-G, (5-4, fi-1. l.literas de
feated Hollingsworth 6-2, in a one-set
match, and Khoads fi-4, also in a one
ct match. Burr defeated Miller, 0-0,
(5-0, and also Chilcote 4-. fi-3, fi-1.
The Antioch court is nair concrete
ih rrsult is entirely satisfactory, ac
cording to the trio who made the trip.
The Antioch club has twenty-two
members, who keep the one court busy
all the time. A great deal of enthus
iasm over the court game is apparent,
us Uite a number of people were on
hand to witness the games, which were
merely friendly contests and not a
tournament in any sense of the word.
Both men and women are taking part
in the game in Antioch, and there is
little doubt that a number of good
plrverR will be developed.
It 1 pxneeted that return contests
win be scoeuuled for the Alliance
courts at a later date.
Houser Shatters
, Shot-put Record
in National Meet
In a well played game at the Ells
worth ball park last Sunday alternoon
the Ellsworth team trounced the
wnumnn team r& to 7. the game
started out with two strike outs a short
single that was worthless as the next
Whitmanite was struck out for the
third out, only one man reaching fir.it.
Ellsworth was, however, able to place
a man on third at their turn to bat
but the first inning ended neither side
scoring and it looked as if the game
was to be one of small scores, how
ever after retiring the Withmanites
in one-two-three order in the second
inning the Ellsworth lineup leading 11
with Black a neut single followed by
Kennedy, Iongenleck and Scebohin
each getting singles a run was crowded
in, the errors ami timely hitting forc
ed in two more runs giving Ellsworth
a three run lead.
Whitman was held scoreless for the
first five innings while Ellsworth
crowded in a score in both the fourth
and fifth innings. In the first of the
sixth inning Whitman by hard hit
ting run in two scores while Ells
worth's turn to bat netted them neven
tuns, House on the mound for Whit
man being batted clear out of the box,
Manager Carpenter replacing him
with McCubbins off first base. This
fateful inning cinched the game lor
Ellsworth but the W hitmanies made a
hard fight for it in the next turn to
bat running in four scores which was
started off with a neat single by House
to center field, two errors and hard
hitting allowing them four scores for
the inning.
The Whitman boys were short some
of last year's bunch having to sub
stitute for four men of the old bunch,
King on third, and Waite on second,
also a left fielder not playing with the
learn this year. Joe Maupin who was
on the mound for Whitman last season
has also been released but the man
agement of the team is still scouting
for a new twirler and we are sure that
their team will be greatly strengthen
ed in time lor Ellsworth's visit with
them next Sunday at Whitman. John
Schonard, Ellsworth's second baseman,
made a beuutiful catch in the first of
irin nil, Hi tf ii linn ilrivA with two
and half clay, and w hile this may seem men down, making the third out which
. i.. ,. futhnr tuwiiliur rnmliimition. I enlel the irame.
Ill lit U I HI in. ,vwti. 1 1 " .... . . 1
A lie Hitman Liir. n uic a vicau uuiivii
of sports and the game was thus im
mensely enjoyed by all, there being
fans present trom Lakeside, Pawlet,
Spade, Bingham, Ashby, Hyannis and
Whitman.
The score by innings:
Whitman 0 0 0 0 0 2 4 0
Ellsworth 0 0 0 1 1 7 0 0
Batteries Ellsworth, E. V.
and Seebohm. Whitman, House, Mc
Cubbins ami Carpenter.
Summary Struck out by House in
6 innings, 2: by McCubbins in 3 in
nings, none; by Black, 10. Hit
by House; Seebohm (2), Black,
Schonard. Hit by Black. MeCubbins.
Stolen Bases Black (2), Kennedy,
Young, Wightman, Carpenter (2),
William Abbott. Two base hit
Black (2), H. Abbott, William Abbott,
Carpenter, Clark (2), E. Schonard.
Time of game 1:47. Umpires
Macumber and Dick Crandell.
Berea Still Heads
In County League
Baseball Race
Berea retained its clutch on first
place in the county baseball league by
defeating Fairview in a one-sided
game 27-3. Berea seems to be too fast
for the rest of the league, although all
of the other teams are well matched.
A. Mundt, the Berea pitcher, allowed
eight hits, but his team was walloping
the pill so hard that this made little
difference. About 150 people attended
the game. With the exception of this
game, the Sunday battles were re
markably close. The Red Sox lost to
Ash Grove 12-8. before a crowd of 300
people, after having led at the end of
the seventh inning. Marple defeated
Snake Creek 14-lo. There is some
dispute about this game as the Snake I
Creole supporters aver mat in tne
ninth inning a Snake Creek man was
called out merely because he slid to
first. The matter will le decided by
the board later, however, if any for
mal protest is made. Lawn defeated
Pleasant Hill 9-8, and prevented the
Pleasant Hill team from breaking their
losing streak. The Pleasant Hill ag
gregation has played good ball all sea
son, but hns lost a number of games
by close margins. They Feem to be
pursued by a jinx. Four teams are
now tied for second place, while la.-t
week four were tied for third.
The standing:
W
Berea 5
Ash Grove 3
Lawn 3
Marple 3
Snake Creek 3
Ketf Sox 2
Fairview 1
Pleasant Hill 0
L
0
2
2
2
2
3
4
Pet.
1000
coo
fiOO
f00
f.00
400
200
000
1 7
x 12
Black
"Bud"' Houser. of Oxnard, Cal.,
broke Uie world's interscholastic record
in the shot-put with the almost un
believable heave of fifty-six feet, in
the national interscholastic track meet
nt Stagg field of Chicago university.
The records in all events show the re
markable ability of the young ath
letes, for these marks will stand up
well with those made by any college. J
r ranck, the Tobias wonder, w no
von both the mile and the half mile
at the state meet, placed second in
both these events at Chicago. Both
of these events were run slightly
faster than Franrk's best marks. The
Nebraska boy may yet smash records
-and win national recognition. One of
the most noticeable features of the
moot was the strength of the western
entries, the west and the middle-west
running off with practically every
event in the high school section.
Cox, a Rochester, N. Y., lad won
the mile in 4:35. The 100-yard dash
was stepped in 10 seconds flat in the
high school section, ami in 10 2-5 in
Hip academv division. Both made the
220 in 22 2-5.
in tiie Chicago meet the high hur
dles were made in the extremely hur
ried time of 15 2-5, as compared with
:i national high school record of 15 1-5.
l)ailv. Alliance sonnt man has a
rlianre of Unnir sent to the national
meet next year if he should train hard
and increase his speed slightly. Dailey
li.-is twice been clocks! in the 100 in
in fl:i. and holds the western Nebra
k:i -iiM) record of 22 3-5. Dailey made
an extremely poor showing ut the
state meet, due to a lack of training,
and according to Coach Schulte of Ne
braska, a faulty stride. Schulte, who
is recognized as one of the few lead
iir co;iches in the country, said that if
Dailey would train and develop his
stride along certain lines laid out by
him that he could break the state rec
ord in the 100 and 'J20. He believes
that Dailey could lun the 100 consis
tently in 10 tlat. Should he do this
he could break the Nebraska state
record and probably place first in the
national meet.
A few sets of harness. Just the kind
for that extra team through the rush
season or haying. Price $32.00 and
up. Khein Hdw. Co. S2&54
No need to ask Who's Wu in China.
Wu's Who! Boston Transcript.
Mississippi Floods
More Extensive
Than Anticpated
New breaks on levees in Texas and
iouisiana in addition to high waters in
MUsjccinoi and Illinois have added to
the millions of acres inundated and
u,uuu muie people have been added
to the 75,000 people made homeles. by
this, the most disastrous and destruc
tive of floods known in the history of
the Mississippi valley according to the
latest reports received from the Am
erican Red Cross by the officers of the
local chapter.
Supplies have been rushed by the
national organization which has de
voted $100,000 to meet the immediate
emergency in the flood regions as well
as trained P.ed Cross workers to assist
the local chapter on the problems of
provisions ami housing for 30,000
homeless people in Mississippi and a
similar number in Louisiana. Con
tribut.ons are coming in from all parts
of the country in answer to the appeal
of Chairman Payne of the American
Red Croos seconded by President Hard
ing for $500,000 as the minimum
needed.
The first stage of rushing supplies
and workers is now followed in some
sections by the Ufficult emergency
problem of enabling the farmers be
fore it is too late to plant their crops
and become self-supporting. Careful
surveys by the chairman of the local
Ked Cross chapters in flood areas in
dicate large funds will be required for
this. The citizens of Illinois are now
raising one quarter of a million dol
lars estimated as necessary for that
state. In many states hit by this dis
aster the people as in the Pueblo river
flood, must continue to receive help and
are dependent on the warm-hearted
generosity of fellow-Americans every
where. As a measure of the force of. the
flood Cairo, 111., states the Mississippi
rose fifty-three feet above the normal
at that point where so many river sys
tems converge leaving Cairo like an
island in the water that overflowed al
most entire counties north of there.
All this water and more has spread out
on the states further south.
Where the waters have receded, it
vill be several weeks before the head
vatei s are drained off to permit farm
ng and the deep mud silt makes it
larder to get supplies to isolated fam
lies than when boats cou'd be used.
The live stock has been lifted up on
platforms where they must be fed.
The sown ciops of wheat are destioy
ed. A new corn crop can be planted
only in the drier spots and the farm
nachinery and even the homes have
been destroyed. Epidemics of typhoid
ind malaria, due to the pollution of
wells and the decay in the wreckage
ire causing added privat'ons and the
Red Cross field workers find make in
creasing care necessary. Putting the
population back on a self-supporting
basis for some weeks in these areas
has created new emergency conditions
for the Red Cross which is still feed
ing the families in tent colonies or in
their homes giving them provisions
until they can again care for them
selves. Fourteen carloads of seed grain and
food stuff have been shipped into var
ious points on the lower Illinois or
the orders of the Illinois Red Cross
flood relief committee, by the agricul
tural representatives in co-operation
with the county farm bureaus. The
country is now being scoured foi
stocks of available seed grain for this
relief ' work. The requirements for
these seeds and feed alone are large'
than originally anticipated and will
require an expenditure of $70,000 in
that state. Additional needs are being
revealed as the survey progresses and
few families are being found in des
titude condition.
A large number of cities in the
states of the central west, Nebraska,
North and South Dakota, Minnesota,
Wisconsin, Illinois and Iowa have re
ported successful raising of flood relief
funds, and the surrounding states are
rapidly coming to the rescue. The
Chicago Association of Commerce rais
ing $100,000 in Chicago alone, report
that quotas had already been met by a
number of sub-divisions of the asso
ciation and it was confidently stated
that the full amount would be quickly
secured. William Wrigley, Jr., made
the first response with a contribution
of $500 which was followed by one
from James A. Patton for a similar
amount and many other donations
were reported.
According to Walter Davidson, man
ager of central division, there is need
for haste in sending in contributions
to the local Ked Cross chapters so
that funds may be immediately avail
able at the scene of the disasters. Food
supplies for destitute men, women and
children have to be kept up from day
to day and unless the farmers are
able to plant their crops as quickly
as the floods recede and are suppl ed
with seed grain for this purpose there
will not be time for a new crop thi.
year. WHERE THE FIGHTING LINGERS
With the withdrawal of the Ameri
can forces from the Rhine, it would
:oam that trio unr is over for fill ex
cept those who married to avoid the
draft Our Navy (Washington).
The more they step on the gas, the
higher it goes. Washington Post.
STRONG EVIDENCE
Is the Statement of This Alliance
Woman.
Backache is often kidney ache;
A common warning of serious kid
ney ills.
"A Stitch in Time Saves Nine"
Don't delay U3e Doan's Kidney
Pills.
Profit by the experience of Mrs. E.
E. Bates, 114 Platte Ave., Alliance.
She says: "I have great confidence in
Doan's Kidney Pills as they have saved
ire many doctor bills in the past
twenty years. I had occasional at
tacks of kidney complaint and if I ne
glected them I suffered a great deal
with my back. 1 got lame across the
.mall of my back and could hardly get
around to do my work. If I stooped
I became dizzy and cou'd hardly see.
Doan's Kidney Pills which I got at
Thiele's Drug Store cured me of the
attack."
Price fiOc, at all dealers. Don't
pimply ask for a kidney remedy get
Doan's Kidney Pills the same that
Mrs. Bates had. Foster-Milburn Co.,
Mfrs, Buffalo, N. Y. 1-A
A few sets of harness. Just the kind
for that extra team through the rush
season or haying. Price $32.00 and
J up. Rhein Hdw. Co. 52A54
'haw v '
Their Medicine Chest For 20 Years
I
A DOI BI.E SCOOP
Western fcxenange ie.teraay we
were the first newpapor to publish
the death of John J. Parker. To-day
we are first to deny the ivitort. The
Morning Bugle ir always in the lead.
Boston 1 ransenpt.
A few U of harness. Just the kind
for that extra team through the rush
seasen or haying. Price $.'32.00 and
up. Khein Hdw. Co. 52434
T is characteristic of
folk! after they pass the allotted
"tbresj cor year ut ten," to look
tack over the days that are rone
and thoughtfully lira them over.
I find myself, at eTent-one, frequently
drifting back a quarter of a century, when
1 eee niysell in th little drug etore I owned
at Bolivar, Mo., niakluf ami eelliug a
vegetable compound to my friends and
customers what w then known only a
Dr. Lewie' Medicine for Btowavb, Liver
and Bowel Complaint.
Tor many years while I was perfecting my
formula I studied and iuveatigated the
laxative and cathartics on the market and
lecame convinced that their main fault
was not that they did cot act CO the bowel,
but that their action was too violent and
lrtlo, aud upset the systm of the user;
which was due to the fact that they were
not thorough enough in their action, some
simply acuug on the upper or small iuU s
tinea, while others would act only on the
lower or large intestines, and that they
almost invariably produced a habit re
quiring augmented doses.
I believed that preparation to produce
the best effect must first tone the liver,
then acton the stomach and entire alimen
tary svslein. If this was acoomplii-hed, the
medicine would produce a mild, but
thorough eliuiluatioo of the waste without
the usual sickening sensalious, aud wake
tue user feel belter at once.
After eajierlmenting with hundreds of
diUerenl compounds, I at last perfected the
formula that is now kuowu as Nshtrt's
which I truly IKilevo noes luriutr
and does more than any laxative on the
market touay. The thousauds of letters
from users have convinced uie I was right,
and that the user of Nature's Resratfy as a
family medicine, even though tie may have
used it for twenty-rive years, never baa
to increase Uie dose.
My knowledge of medicine and the re
sults of its ue in my own family and
among my friend, before I ever offered it
for sa.e, caused me to have great faith in
Natars't lUMsedy trout the very first.
And now as I find myelf nearlng the age
the in
it each day ana read the letters tu at each
ben I must bow to
to another Me, my
Heritable and g
rreatest pleasure is V
mail brings from people as old or older
than I, who tell of having Used Na tare's
Remedy for ten, 0!teen and twenty year",
and now tliey and t'.ieir children and
grandchildren have been benelitud by it.
It Is a consoling thought, my friends, for
a man at my age to feel that aside from
biS own success, one b'lS done something
for bis fellow man. My greatest satisfac
tion, my greatest happiness todav, is the
knowledge tiiat tonight more than one
million people will take a Nature's ftes
(NK Tablet) and will be better, beailhier.
bappler tieople for iU I hope you will
be uue of the in.
A. H. LEWIS MEDICINE CO.,
St. Louis. MO,
THIELE. PUESCKIPTION DRUGGIST
RIALTO
OF COURSE
TONIGHT
This feature was made for one purpose only to enter
tain and make you laugh.
"THE TRUANT HUSBAND"
With Retty Blythe, Fiancelia Billington, Mahlon Hamilton
PATHE REVIEW "A Little Bit of Everything"
WEDNESDAY, MAY 31
"LOVES MASQUERADE"
Featuring CONWAY T EARLE. FLORENCE BILLINGS
and WINIFRED WESTOVER, who is now the wife of
William S. Hart. A real drama involving real people.
SELECT NEWS
THURSDAY, JUNE 1
Start the month right by thinking of the Rialto when
you think amusements. And here is a good starter.
"SHAMS OF SOCIETY"
Featuring two of the best screen stars
MONTAGUE LOVE and BARBARA CASTLETON
The most astounding climax seen on the sci-een.
Second number of the Great American Authers,
WASHINGTON. IRVING
All the characters familiar through many vears of
reading "Ichaliod Crane," "Rip Van Winkle," "Brom
Domes," "The Headless Horseman," and many others are all
brought to life in this fascinating picture.
ALSO A HAROLD LLOYD COMEDY.
All Matinees, 10 and 15c
Nights, 10 and 25c
GOO
D
USED
waBmtmammmmmmmmBMmammma
GARS
If you can't afford a brand new car this summer, why not buy
a good used one? Life is too short to go through it walking. Sum
mer with its inviting, enchanting great out-of-doors is just before
us, so why not plan on enjoying yourself with an automobile? We
have a good assortment to select from and believe our prices will
be an inducement for you to buy.
2 Reo, four, 5-passcnger cars.
1 Ford Runabout, without top.
1 Chandler, Dispatch Model.
1 Buick six, 5-passengcr
2 Reo Spccdwagons
2 Fords, 1-ton Trucks.
Come in and look them over we may have just what you want.
Jones Company
CALVIN D. WALKER, Manager