The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923, April 08, 1892, Image 1

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By A. C. Hosmer.
THE
GOLDEN -
CLOTHING
ii 4
Q ' FOR
i i i
I
What is
K5l!
Castoria is Dr. Samuel Pitcher's prescription for Infanta
and Children. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor
other Narcotic substance. It is a harmless substitute
for Paregoric, Drops, Soothing Syrups, and Castor OIL
It is Pleasant, 'its guarantee is thirty years' use hy
Hill -to of Mothers. Castoria destroys Worms and allays
fev fehness. Castoria prevents vomiting Sour Curd,
cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic Castoria relieves
teething troubles, cures constipation and flatulency.
Castoria assimilates the food, regulates the stomach
and bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. Can
toria is tho Children's Panacea-the Mother's Friend.
Castoria.
" Castoria Is an excellent medicine for chil
dren. Motherabivorepeatedlytoldineotlta
rood effect upon their children."
Da. Q. C. Oboood,
Lowell, Mm-
" Castoria is IV U-iimiedy for chfldrea of
chichi am ktpi Ih?"SfSr1?J2
far distant when uiolherawillconridertte real
interest of their children, and use Carforia In
stead of theTariousquacknostnnnswhich are
destroying their lored ones, by forcing opium,
morphine, soothing syrnp and other hurtf ol
sgents down their throats, thereby sending
ihexn to preni.ture grtTes."
DR.J.F.KWCHXLOK,
Conway, Ark.
The Cemtamr Caii7, TI
Eternal Vigilance is the Price of Liberty," and One Dollar a year is
: - EAGLE
HOUSE.
HAS
The Prices !
To a point when com
petition is left be
hind on
SUITS !
Down
Men Py
' Boys 10!
and Eg
Children !
Castoria. l
" Castoria Is so well adapted to chlldre that
I recommend it as superior to any prescrbttai
known to me."
H. A. Abcbkb,1LD
111 So. Oxford St, BrooklfBuX. Y.
Our physicians in the children's depart
ment haTe spoken highly of their experi
ence in their outside practice with Casbria,
and although we only hare among 4 our
medical supplies what is known as regilar
products, yet we are free to conress tuaiuio
merits of Castoria has won ns u iooic
favor unon it."
Usnxn Hospital asd DisrQ"UW,
Boston,.
AixEi C Smith, Pre.,
Mxy Street, Hew York City,
Red Cloud, Webster County, Neb., Friday, April 8,
Educational Department.
D. H. I1VNTER, Editor.
W.....,..W.....W.1MM.1.MW.
- Items intended for publication in this
department mast be handed to the Conn
ty Snperintendent on or before Saturday,
in order to secure insertion the week fol
lowing. Correspondence from teachers
and those interested in educational matter.
solicited. Address all communications
intended for this department to.
D. M. Hchtxb,
County Superintendent Red Cloud, Neb.
In the second line of last week's
educational column please read
thall," "should." A inistako was
made in copying from the manuscript.
The blanks for teachers' monthly
report to the Co. Sup't., sent out late
ly, will aid greatly in the closer super
vision of schools, in the use of the
state course of study, and in making
the sohool work uniform and more ef
fective. The first monthly report received
was from Wm. Curry, teacher in Dist.
No. 63.
Do not neglect to read the county
superintendent's Arbor day circular
found in all the Webster county pa
pers this week.
Some good school work for exhibi
tion at our teachers' institute has been
received from Dist No. 13; Minta
Cling, teacher for the winter term.
A good exhibition of scheol work
from the schools of the county, at in
stitute, is desired. A knowledge of
what others have had their pupils do
will be helpful to every teacher.
If school boards would allow their
teachers a day during each term in
which to visit another school, it would
result in good to the schools. Seeing
the mistakes in another's method of
teaching and management as well as
those things in botn worthy of com
mendation would be helpful to teach
ers in improving their own methods.
There is need of more school visita
tion on the part of patrons and mem
bers of school boards.
A teachers' meeting will be held at
Bladen on Saturday, April 23, '92.
The program will be printed in this
column next week.
Any. school news or reports that
teachers wish published ia the educa
tional department will be gladly re
ceived by the editor.
A school officer said to me a short
time ago: 'I believe in keeping a
good teacher in our sohool as long as
she will stay. That is right.
An active, progressive school man
who looks after the best interests of
the district should be kept on the
board as long as he will stay.
The Bole reading circlo fulfilled its
engagement Saturday evening. March
2(ith, and the subjects given in the
program published in the educational
column two weeks ago were well dis
cussed. The program for Saturday evening
April 9th is as follows:
True manhood and womanhood, J.
L. Springer.
The power of an education, F. S.
King.
Memory and its training, Jno. M.
Earner.
Our own school district, D. M.
Hunter.
Every person has a higher or lower
standard of character. There is one
thing certain, the brave and noble arc
always remembered longer and better
after death. Few can deny that to
do something worthy of remembrance
is one chief aim of life. Every man
that is truly great in whatever sphere
of life he may act has certain noble
traits of character in the composition
of his being.
The demand for men and women of
pure thought and brave action con
stantly increases.
We can best learn to hate cowardice
and a groveling spirit by studying
their opposites.
There can be no better, no surer
method of causing onr pupils to live
grand and noble lives than to keep
constantly before their minds, such
examples as are grand and noble.
Jxo. M. Earner.
Superintendent Hunter is begin
ning to awaken quite an interest in bis
"Educational Department" in Tu
Chief. He should have the hear
support of every teacher is the co"
Arbor Day, April 22.
Pepartment op PrjpLic Instruction,
Lincoln Neb., Feb. 25, 1892.
"What a beautiful city!" Cut down
all of the trees, tramp out all of the
grasses from the lawns, and strew the
neatly swept stnats with all sorts of
xubbish, and the expression is immedi
ately changed to, "What an abomina
ble city!"
"What a lovely home!" Chop down
the trees, break down the fences,
smash the windows, and in the place
of glass insert cast-off clothing and
the expression of pleasure becomes,
"What a wretohed place to live!"
What neat fences around our school
grounds, with rows of trees by the
fences, it may be a clump of them
besldcB, with the front of the school
yard changed into a lawn, with the
school house painted and in good re
pairs, with necessary out-buildings as
well kept, with the interior to corre
spond with the exterior, as it certainly
will, the school house and surround
ing grounds will become, not a matter
of pleasuic alone, but of profit for
the silent lesson of beauty and of
culture which they teach; the direc
tion of their educational force will be
reversed, and they will minister to the
innate cravings ot children and pat
rons for the beautiful which is als
the good. The best can be achieved
only under the most favorable condi
tions; the achievement of the utmost
in the direction of man-hood and woman-hood
is that we wish
for our boys and girls
who, in a short time, are to "con
stitute the state." Take our boys
and gitls the hopo of the Nation
out, and there is little left worth liv
ing for.
All men profess to wish that their
children may be educated. This
means that every faculty, every power,
eycry worthy desire and taste and am
bition of the children may be devel
oped and directed and satisfied.
To this end has the observance of
Arbor Day in Nebraska, the state of
its origin, whence it has spread to
many other states of the Union, been
given a place in the schools.
The echool exercises appropriate to
the day, recitations, song.", readings,
essays, historical and- scientific in
struction, associated with the planting
of trees, shrubs, vines and seeds on
the school grounds in the interest of
and participated in by, the children
and parents, who should as far as pos
sible be urged to be present and to
take part, are necessarily educational.
1 therefore suggest and urge upon
county and citv superintendents, ti'ach
ers, parents and pupils of the state that
a part of 'Arbor Day" be devoted by
the school to the planting of trees,
vines shrubs and seds, accompany
ing the planting with such exercises
as may be instructive and impressive
in their character with a view to beau
tifying the school grounds and at the
same time teanhing the lessons of
beauty and of the uses ot beauty.
I make uo suggestions as to songs,
selections, or subjects for essays for
the day, for there is so much material
everywhere which the intelligent
teacher may secure for use that such
a suggestion seems to me to "beJ un
necessary. I am told that the North
Westtrn Journal of Education con
tains a program and some exercises
fitted for the day.
I hope founty superintendents will
see that this circular is published in
every local paper in the state, thus
giving it a wide spread circulation and
enlisting the press actively in this as
in other educational measures.
A.K. Goudt,
Supt' Pub. Instruction.
Disease never successfully attacks a
eystem with pure blood. De Witt'n Sar
gaparilla makes pure, new blood and en
riches the old. C. L- Cotting.
Republican cnucuH
. finrfield tnwneliirt m. -i ,,-
f rV '. "u "CPU0-
cans of Uarueld townshin i m..o
cu , . uautus au ine Vagoncr
gchool-nouse district is .. ur.j
wl tn TTinnf. in . Vi -.
day April 20 1S92, at 2 o'clock p. m.
to elect; 4 delegates to the County
convention tn ho lmU -t r
the Price of The Chief.
1892.
Spcciul Rate.
Minneapolis, Minn., June 7, 1802; Na
tional Republican Convention.
All agents may sell tickets to Minnea
polis at rate of one lowest first-class fare
for the round trip. Sell tickets June 1-15,
inclusive, and limit going trip for contin
uous passage from date of sole and re
turn trip for continuous passage from
date of execution nt St. Paul, with final
limit for return to June 25. Tickets will
be honored out of Minneapolis for re
turn trip prior to June 10. Execution
for return passage will be made at either
Minneapolis or St. Paul.
Chicago III., June 21, 1892; National
Democratic Convention.
All agents may sell tickets to Chicago
at rate of one lowest lirst-class fare for
the round trip. Sell tickets June 16-20,
inclusive, and limit going trip to contin
uous passage from date of sale, and re
turn trip to continuous passage from
date of execution at Chicago, with final
return limit to July G. Tickets will not
be honored out of Chicago for return
prior to June 21.
Omaha, Nebr. July i, 1892; National
People's Convention.
All agents may sell tickets to Omaha
at rate of one lowest first-class fare for
the round trip. Dates of sale: From
Nebraska and Kansas. July 1-2, inclusive
with return limit to July 15; South Da
kota, July 1-2, inclusive, with return
limit to July lG; Colorado and Wyoming,
June 29-30, inclusive, with return limit
to July 17.
Lincoln, Neb., May 16-18, 1892; Annual
Slay Festival; Lincoln Oratorio Society,
with Camyanini.
Agents in Nebraska, within 100 miles
of Lincoln, may sell Book D Tickets to
Lincoln at rate or one and one-lowest
fare for the round trio. Sell tickets
May 1G-18, and limit for return to May
19.
Helena, Mont, Commencing June 15,
1892, Supreme lodge A. O. U. W., agents
may sell round trip tickets to Helena, at
rate of one lowest first-class fare. Sell
tickets June 1-14; inclusive, with transit
limit of ten days in each direction, and
final limit of thirty days from date of
sale. Tickets may be routed via all
routes, either via Denver and Ogdcn, and
may read for different routes going and
returning. Wnen the routes used going
and returning carry different one-way
rates, the round-trip rate will be one
half of the sum of the one way rates.
For example: Round trip rate going via
Ogden and returning direct, will be
$14.40 made $24.40 going via Ogden and
S20, one half of the one-way rates direct
or vice versa.
Rate on Cert i lieu tc Plan.
York, Neb., April 13, 1892; Republican
Congressional Convention (4th District.)
Agents in Butler, Filmore, Gage, Ham
ilton, Jefferson, Saline, Saunders, Seward
Thayer, and York Counties, may sell
tickets to york, April 10-13, inclusive.
C. A. McCloud, Secretary, York, Neb.,
will sign certificates.
Seward, Nebr., -April 2G, 1892; 73rd An
niversary Odd Fellowship.
Agents in York, Polk, Butler, nnd Se
ward counties, may sell tickets to Seward
April 23-2G, inclusive. L. Ii. Cottrell,
Chairman, Soward, Neb., will sign certif
icates, -r
Ogden, Utah, April 29-May G, 1892;
Cattlemen's Congress. :
All agent may sell tickets to Ogden,
April 2G-May G, inclusive. R. L. Arm
strong, Secretary, Ogden Utah, will sign
crfc i fi cutos
Omaha, Neb., May, 17-20,' lS92;'Annunl
Convention, Kansas and Nebraska Juris
diction, International Order of Twelve,
Knights nnd Daughters of Tabor.
Agents in Knnsas and Nebraska, may
sell tickets to Omaha, May 14-20, inclu
sive. A. W. Hopkins, C. G. S., Leayen
worth, Kansas, will sign certificates.
Umoha, -Net;., June 7-8, 1892; Annual
Meeting, Nebraska, Funeral Directors'
Association.
Agents in Nebraska, may sell ticket to
Omhn, June 4-8, inclusive. James Hea
ton, Secretary, Lincoln, Neb., will sign
certificates.
A. Conover.
Caucus.
ARepublican caucus for Line town.
ship will be held in the Ivuehn school
house, Apr. 21, 1892, at three'o'clock
p. m. to elect four delegates to attend
tne county convention Apr. zd.
O. McCall, Oh.
Caucus.
A Republican caucus for Red Cloud
precinct will be held in the Court
House Apr. 21, 1892, at 2 o'clock p.
m. to elect seaen delegates to attend
the county convention Apr. 23.
JOS. GrARBEB, Ch.
Highest of all in LeaTening Power.
Vol. 19. No. 37.
General Conference Metk4tt
Episcopal Church.
All agents may sell round trip
tickets to Omaha at the lowest int
class one way rate. April 28 to 30
inclusive limiting same to coatiaHoas
passage in each direction fail limit.
June 1. Agents within 200 milea tj,
Omaha may sell tickets at rate of eaa
fare and a third for the roaad trip on
May 2-4-7-1 1-14-1 8-2 1.223 aid 30,
limit for return one day from data of
sale.
Triennial Conclave, Kaigfett Temp
lar, Denver, Colo., Augast 9-14 1892.
For the above occasion a rate of one
lowest first-class for the roaad trip will
be made, tickets will be told Aagaet
4-20 -inclusive and limited for return
to October 10th.
Silver Anniversary Admiuioa of
the state of Nebraska. Liaeola Neb.
May 25-2G, 1892.D Ageati in Kiim
Nebraska, Iowa, and Missouri within
150 miles of Lincoln, may aell tieketa
to Lincoln at rate of one fare for the
ronnd trip, sell tieketa May 25-26
limit for return May 27.
National Eepublican Convention
Minneapolis, Minn., June 7, 1892.
All agents may sell ronnd trip
tickets to Minneapolis at a rate of oae
lowest first class fare. Agents in Ne
braska will sell tickets June 4-5-6
limit on same for continuous passage
from date of sale and executor with
final return limit of Jane 25th.
Oklahoma Excursion, March 22,
1892, agents in Nebraska and Kansas,
may sell tickets to points on lines of
the A. T. & S. F. and C. B. L P,
Rys. in the territory of Oklahoma at
one fare for the round trip. Sell
tickets March 22nd with transit limit
of one day in each direction and inal
limit oLApril 21st Stop overs will
be allowed in Oklahoma Territory re
gardless of tranbit limits.
A. CONOVIB,
For Sale or Trade.
A choice farm of 160 acres, 4 miles
from town, good frame house, 80 acres
in cultivation, all tillable but aboat
10 acres timber Easy terms or will
trade D. J. Mtibs.
i.-d Clend, Nebr.
When Baby was sick, w (ave I
When she waa a Chad, she cried for OMfcwfcv
When she became Miss, abe
When aha bad Children, tke gaval
NoticeCompetitive Ex
tlon. .
XnftrtA to namnv iai.4a mlf
-51
who may desire to cqmnjste for tho aav' '
pointment as cadetrto the Military Acad
emy at west .roint, tnat uoy are t pre
sent themselves at office ot tha county
superintendent, of ' schools, at tha - court
house in Hastings, Nebraska, on Friday,
May 20, I892,at ten o'clock a m mi
there undergo a physical examinatioa
and at twoo'clock p. m ot thaaame daf
to undergo a mental examination. All ap
plicantsniu8t be between seventeen and
twenty-two years of age; and mart ha
actual residents of the tilth nwnniamai '
al-dlstriot, which is competed of tha fol
lowing counties to wit:
Perkins, Chase, Dundy, Hayes, Bitch
cock, Frontier, Bed Willow, GesMr.Fnr
nas, Phelps, Harlan, Kearney. Franklin.
Hall, Adams, Webster. Clay, and Nackesm
No applicant will be shut oat on account
of politics, color or race.
The person certified to as having pass
ed the highest mental exaauaatieai
will receive the appointment; and tha
person standing second best will receive
the appointment as alternate. Papon
of the fifth district please copy thia no
tice. . W.A.McKnauir.
U. S. Gov't Report, Anf. 17, iMa
Baking
Powder
ABSOUIEiy MIRE
ty. Leader.
Committeeman.
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