EIGHT THE ALLIANCE HERALD, TUESDAY, JUNE 6. 1922. I SPORTS county li: (;i;k standings. w l ret Bereft 6 0 1000 Ash Grove 4 2 f.fifi Marple : 4 2 fiOG Snake Creek 4 2 6f6 I, awn 3 3 MM) Itol Sox 2 4 333 Fnirview 1 5 167 Pleasant Hill 0 C 000 Ash Grove Takes Game From Lawn f By a 14-10 Score Ash Grove lefented Lawn 14 to 10 and became one of the thiw teams tied for second place in the leairue. Ash Grove has been jroinic flood and will make any team in the eajtue step. Thin was the closest frame played Sunday, most foMni? won by top-heavy scores. This defeat puts llawn in fifth place, with three won nnd three lost The l.awn team has leen poinjr Rood but wa unable to nkn the measure of the Ash Grove rcprepation, a the Ash Grove piU her hurled a pood frame and went well in the pinches. A.h Grove will now battle with Marple and Snake Creek for second place. Ash Grove's two defeats have come at the hand of Herca and Snake Creek, while they have defeated Marple, one of the main rivals. Ash Grove may make a Htronjj race for the pennant. Marple Defeats Fairview Sunday in a Good Game ably lx on the mound to Ftart the Kanie, with McNulty behind the plat ter. The Scout hand Is composed of about fiftwn pieces, and the showing made by these boys is considered truly remarkable. The band is under the direction of William Kecse, of the Dierks Lumber company. All of the Ihijs in the band have been playing for some time, but the band has been organized only ubout two months With a few more months of practice this band will be second to few. Manager Harold Snyder announces that ladies will be admitted free to the game, and hopes that this will M tract u large number of feminine fans. Bridgeport played a 4 to 3 game with the strong Sidney team Sunday, end this is giving the locals something to ponder. The Sidney team was one of the strongest teams in this part of iK Ktnti lst vear and a team which rn hold them ilown to a score fuch a. Sunday this must he a fast aggregation. A good diamond is as staple savings account. Thiele's. as a D5 Western Nebraska Spuds Hank High In Recent Test Joe Baker Gets Affairs Sraight in a Trip to Wyoming Lloyd Marple defeated Fairview Sunda 11 to 0. and continued to keen its higl standing in the county league. The Valrview team Dut ud a good battle, hut was unable to keeD Dace with the hard hittlnir Hamleites. Marple has hn croinir roo.1 of late and Hhould nhow the Berea champs a hard battle, The Mamie supporters are highly op imlatie. over the outcome of the game, nnd Mieve that the Berea no-defeat record will be spoiled with this meet inc. Whether or not this is true re Tnnina to h seen. The Fairview team put up a remarkably gooi name ugainst such a strong aggregation as tho Marple machine, and may soon t-limb considerably in the standing. Game With Bridgeport On Sunday Afternoon for Boy Scout Benefit The Allianco baseball team will play Bridgeport Sunday in the second home eame or the season, the frame will be at the fair grounds at 3 p. m., and will be a benefit for the Boy Scout band, which proved so popular on Memorial day. The wout band will play at the frame and also on the streets before the came, and the manager pf the team believes that this will do much to at tract a crowd. The Bridgeport team has been once defeated by Alliance but the teams are evenly enough matched to put up a pood game. The locals have been go ing good all season and have not lost a frame. The Bridgeport team is full of confidence and is anxious to reverse the previous defeat Garvin will prob- Joe Baker, local machinist, other wise known as the man witn inree names, who was taken to Cheyenne ast Thursday on the cnarge oi ieav- inir that rnv Willi iiniri u im.it the nroi)eitv of Cheyenne stores. mrain rptllrnfMl to AlliaTlCO Gwvnn, president of the local machin- ists union, Horn wnicn oki rowed $125, giving the property brot from Casper as security, accompameu Baker to Cheyenne, and made arrange ments by which the cnarges Baker were dropped. A new 5 JO washer which was inciuuen in uie uv of goods taken, was sent back, and the other articles were settled for by the installment plan. The machinists union paid the court cosw, ana .lUurui tn t-Ptnrn to Aiiiantr. mo That Western Nebraska spuds stand up the equal of any on the market, and superior to most of them, has been proved to the satisfaction of Home Miller, prominent Omaha hotel ntt'Mr. ni upll ai the rnmmlaaiAn mpfll - -i n..i. : i - from tuuui jnwiiu. f tome.-t turilfll on to test the various kinds of potatoes that were shipped into Nebraska's market city was started several months ago ami finished May 20. The results ot the test, together with the discussion that gave rise to it, are told in the Omaha News as follows: Neoraska potatoes win! "There is no better potato on earth than the Nebraska sandhill variety " lhat statement uttered in a letter from A rah L. Hungergord, Crawford, Neb., published in the Omaha Daily News October 23, 1921, found echo in the heart of Kome Miller, owner ol the Kome hotel, pioneer restaurant man. "He's right," said Mr. Miller, re ferring to Hungerford's statement "You're wrong, they rot," shouted commission merchants. "They are soggy, don't make a good baking potato," affirmed the restau rant keeper and his cook. "The growers may have a good pro duct at home, but by the time it gets here, shipped without ling graded, the bad in the lots brings the whole to low grade," said the carriers' has agents. LAKESIDE. Ed Odell came in from the Tom Shrewsbury ranch Wednesday, and later went out to the Frank DeFrance ranch to work. T r i r I I- t t jvev. naries Duneien visueu nis brother at Crawl o-d the first of last week, and attended the Memorial day r roe ram at that place and returned to .akesidc Wednesday. b. r. Osborn and daughter returned Kushville Wednesday evening. Miss Viva visited the Joe Warren family while there. Mrs. F. L. Blumer returned from a six weeks' visit with relatives in the east last Wednesday. Mrs. E. Y. Osbom spent a couple of days shopping at Alliance last week. Asahel Lunsford arrived from Uni versity Place last week and is working for E. O. Black on the ranch. LawrTce Osborn is working fot Frank Westover on his ranch south cast of town. Roy Hudson went to Mullen last Thursday to take charge of the sec tion for a couple of weeks. Miss Viva Osborn has rcovered from her recent illness. Dick Hunsacker and sister drove to Alliance one day last week to have some dental work clone. Frank DeFrance stopped here on his way to Alliance last Thursday. He was accompanied one the trip by .R. A. Cook. B. F. Weekley and Fierre Kicken vere in from the Star ranch Thursday. A number of ladies went in and gave Mi.s Wilma Westover a miscel laneous shower Thursday afternoon at her home in east Lakeside. Mr. and Mrs. Green were in town shopping Thursday afternoon. E. B. Jameson returned Friday from a trip in the east. Mrs. Anderson of Sale Lake enme down from Antioch, where she is visi ng relatives, and visited her brother, Ray Wilson, and family here. Vern Perrin and Jim Brennan drove up from the ranch Friday morning and returned home Saturday. The Mises Phyllis and Beatrice Fop dick came down from Alliance Friday to visit relatives here. Miss Martha Sandoz of Hay Spving3, visited her sister and family hero the latter part of the week and loft Sat urday to visit another sister. She is a sister of Mrs. E. A. Olson. fS"r -T Ti 'er WM ln town Saturday after a load of posts. Jack M. Bollenger of Bingh.im and Miss Wilma J. Westnvpr u-o . i ft-it.l ViAtwi v . ..cic rimy, june i, at & p. ni at I the home of the bride in east Lake -i i ne nev. varies Burleigh officiating, lhe groom is a young rancher ?ear Bingham. The bride is the e'dest daughter of R. A. Westover a resident of Lakeside, and is a very ind'ntrims young lady. Their manv friends here wish them a life of happiness ond prosperity. They were attended by Mr. and Mrs. Ray Cameron, close friends of the family. Those present were Meslames Harry Graybill, Alva Ryland and Beryl Reynolds ar.d Messrs. E. B. Jameson and llruee Hunsacker, and R. A. Westover and dp""ter. Batrice. The haopv couple will he at home to their friends at Bingham, after June 13. "Regardless," declared Rome Miller, "Nebraska potatoes are as good as any that grow and I'll prove it." And he did. Seven sacks of potatoes from seven western markets went into the storage basement at the Rome hotel November 1, 1921. Among them was a sack of Nebraska sandhill potatoes. All were subject to the same storage and ven tilation conditions for six months. May 20 the storage room was op ened. Out came the spuds, and a com mittee of three, before a notary public, was 'ow?' w1T7,"-Wbmv the eoobers. Here is their SK'irtH be paid b7ck in monthly in-'report signed by A. B. Mills, notary bailments. Otherwise a charge will public. be entered against him of mortgaging We undersigned being duly uiolpn property. .1 sworn, make affidavit to our findings Baker came to Alliance May i, to jn rererencc to various brands of pota work in the local shops as a machinist. Bt0red last November in the root He borrowed $125 from the maciun-. - Hote, Rome potato ist's union to pay the freight on a car wpre storoa for the purpose of ascer of goods which he had in the yar taining the keeping qualities of the m.l promised to pay back -the monev . various potatoes. So far as we could " t tunfll n (T A re- as noon aa ni?Y", u'itt n tor mm i e Minm ci""d a message from the sheriif .at Seyenn. asking him to hold Bake the cnarge oi from several riuic n..-, n..i.t for. After a on v ith gools which were SrrfrtMi told by Baker.' good' hK "iff. and his family, he was taken , Mi PJVv. ith resu ts as told. . Bn 1 He wil be aiiowel to K free nd work in the local shops until all oh ntionVare paid. This is .lone despite a rather defiant attitude on the part akerTmarried and has four chit . B on,. , fTmilv recently moved from thnt all the money is P .P" Ai J&t S-f-d hffUSaTboughJ Hance under the .name ot 'Clark boug Jnarker and've hU ame name of BarKeV"u Thus he ga ned a.AflST5 SfSti-ffS-. I i o atAnie as a see the various potatoes had the same position ventilation and general con dition in said cellar, lhis inspection was made on May 20, 1922: Wyoming Practically gone North Dakota Red River Ohio diamond is as savings account. Thiele'3, 4 Touring Comfort Established by the REO Sevcn-passcnger accommodation on a relatively light chassis is a Heo accomplishment, In the new Ileo touring car, ingenious body designing has converted the usual waste space into usable space. Five people and their luggage are accommodated, with leg room for all. And two auxiliary seats are ready for a party of seven on the evening or Sunday jaunt. With its new drum-type headlights, new type one-piece fenders, walnut-tinUhed instrument board and aluminum in strument cluster, removable-kicked rear seat, behind which the metal-framed side curtains are stored, tonneau light, hand-bulVed leather upholstery, dimming lights on cowl, Koyal cord tires all around, a distinctively graceful body, the "Incomparable Six" chassis underneath, and an inter estingly low price this model represents the greatest tour 'ing car value offered today. A. H. Jones Co. THIRD & CHEYENNE ALLIANCE, NEDR. nnesota Red River Very Good. own ueauty iso rot, uacuy wiueu Idaho Rural s Gone. Wyoming Triumph Good Western Nebraska Very good The term "gone" means badly rot ted Signed ROME MILLER WILLIAM B. CLARK PALL G. RUPRIGHT Thanks Rome Miller. ine Alliance cnamber ot commerce Saturday wrote Kome Miller, proprie tor or the Kome Hotel, Umaha,t who was instrumental in securing the po tato test, their appreciation of his ef- iorts m behalf ot western Nebraska spuds: "ALLIANCE, Neb., June 3. Rome Miller, Proprietor Hotel Rome, Omaha, Neb. Dear Sir: We have just learned of thft result nf vnnr interact ino- ittvi ba.oi the keeping qualities of western Nebraska potatoes, as compared with those from other sections of the mid dle west, and it is indeed gratifying to us to learn that the contentions of the growers of western Nebraska spuds were proven that our potatoes are ot better quality and have better keeping qualities than from many other sections. "There is room for great expansion in the potato industry of western Ne braska. Hundreds of thousands of of acres of fertile, untilled virgin soil are awaiting the homeseeker, the far mer anil the plow. Production here could be trebled without hurting the market for our table and seed pota toes, for the richly mineralized and naturally fertile soils, with the cool summer niRhts at this altitude, com bine to make western Nebraska an ideal territory for growing good pota toes. "We wish to thank you most heart ily for the spirit of fairness which you have shown ami for urging that the people of Nebraska use Nebraska grown potatoes. Here in western Ne braska we urge our people to buy Ne braska made goods and it is certain ly fair for the people of eastern Ne braska to reciprocate by purchasing and eating Nebraska grown potatoes es"pocially when tests, such as yours, Ihose from other states. You and all other progressive citi zens ot eastern Nebraska have a standing invitation to come out to 'potato land" and see how we grow those delicious, mealy tubers that de light the palate of the epicure. The roads are good and we are here to show you around." Compliments Omaha News. The letter from the Alliance cham ber of commerce to the Omaha Daily News follows: "ALLIANCE, Neb., June 3. Joseph Polcur, Editor, Omaha Daily News, Omaha, Neb. Dear Sir: We have just learned of the result of the test conducted by Rome Miller of the keep ing qualities of western Nebraska po tatoes, as compared with those from other states. Thi3 is indeed gratifying to us. "We wi.-h at this time to compliment you mo.-t heartily on the stand which has been taken by The Omaha Daily News for the use of western Nebraska products by the people of this state, and we know that our people out here appreciate your attitude in this mat ter. "Enclosed herewith you will find a copy of a letter written this date to Rome Miller regarding the test which he made." HERALD WANT ADS RESULTS. Don't Sacrifice ' Quality FOR PRICE That the rule at our fountain. We fed that you, who patronize our fountain, come to us because of the quality of our products. The place where you can bring your guests with the assurance of good service and wholesome, pleasing drinks and foods. We aim to charge the minimum price consistent with the quality of our foods and drinks. . Thiele V If Your Head Aches-- Maybe Your Hat Doesn't Fit but if your Potatoes and corn gets weedy or dry we prescribe for you a John Deere Cultivator HERE'S WHAT IT MEANS TO YOU The John Deere K. C. One-Row Cultiva tor gives you these advantages: -Easy to operate. Control is natural, don't have to learn to like it. You 2 Has quick dodge. Successfully used in both straight or crooked rows. Wheels and rigs respond instantly. 3 You can drive into the field, stay on the seat, and make all adjustments with con venient, easily-operated levers. 4 Depth levers. Regulate depth of cultiva tion accurately. You know how deep the shovels are digging on the John Deere KC Cultivator. 5 Hitch pulls direct from end of rigs. Makes steady running and powerful penetration. The John Deere N. D. Two-Row Cultiva tor works on the same principle. We invite you to come in and let us go over the cultivator more fully with you. Farmers' Union R. J. TRABERT, Manager. IMPERIAL THEATRE James Oliver Curwood's Special Attraction "Flower of the North" .Tuesday and Wednesday, June 6-7 FAMILY NIGHT EVERY WEDNESDAY If k f v i V r , ' 4 2v A , . , - A. I x - i, - rsj 1 NO ADVANCE IN PRICE Matinee, 10 and 13c. Night 10 and 27c THURSDAY, JUNE 8th WILL RODGERS, in "DOUBLING FOR ROMEO" 4-ACTS HIGH CLASS VAUDEVILLE-4