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About The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923 | View Entire Issue (May 4, 1906)
fl ror i u , -cv -K m i The Backbone of a Mighty Nation is good food food for brain, lood for orawn, food that is strengthening, that gives energy and courage. Without a proper appreciation of this great fundamental truth no nation can rise to greatness. As an article of food, soda crackers are being used more and more every day, as is attested by the sale of nearly 400,000,000 packages of Uneeda Biscuit, which have come to be recog nized as the most perfect soda cracker the world has ever known. And so Uneeda Biscuit will soon be on every table at every meal, giving life, health and strength to the American people, thus in very truth becoming the backbone of the nation. NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY Sound Is within your roach at about half rutts dully from April i!.rth to May fJ, also after Juno 1st. Ask about excursion rates to San Francisco for tlio touchers' big mooting; lso about, tho cheap rutm to Colorado for tlio Elks' great gathering early in July. To Western Uosorts- Low rate ex cursion tickoss to tho Black Hills, Hot Kpringg, South Dakota, Sheridan, Wyoming, (Eaton's Hunch, Big Horn Mountains) and Yellowstone Park: ask about special camping tour of 21 days from Cody through tho Yellow stono Park. (Jo Somewhere- Life is short; see America. Think over tho kind of a trip you would like to make, and ask the undersigned to help you plan tho most interesting trip at the lowest possible cost. J. V. Emruiths, Agent. ANATOMY OF AN OYSTER. m flemsy totes from Neighboring Towns I tX, 9 - 17'Pflfip'(1pT'P'H"P7TT'l tiviJbUUxikiibvbilviibiUriyvbailrUiaiivll(UUivfaUitiiiiU)(UoitiviU(abik- died at the home a few miles west of i ' f" !.!. ..!... M. ....!.... A .,..!) ... I.i . B tllin ti , .uuiltiu, iijiiii .), ill. I I'elock. Catherine Shaffer was burn ennsylvania. May r. is to. She .9 $ moved u Illinois sixteen years later. GATHERED FROM OUR EXCHANGES where she was married to II. L. Lyons in 1858. To this union thirteen child ren were born. anxiously awaited letter from his sis-) , twr who resides in San Francisco. She writes that they are camoini; out at I the Presidio and that nearly every body is without funds, but that their MANKATO. (Prom the Advertiser.) Thursday. Leonard (Jilson of this city celebrated his seventy-ilfth birth- tiny. ' His six children were present credit is good to help celebrate the occasion: abo eleven grandchildren were there and a general good time was enjoyed by all. SUPERIOR (From the Journal.). Bert Woolsey sprained Ids ankle ll.'ldlv Tlmt'siliLV liwiriiitiir imd timl to nesday, April S.1, the occasion being ,)e , Adolphus McDanicl was born Oct. A most enjoyable evening was spent at tlie home, of Robert Turner. Wed- the entertaining of the Seniors by the Juniors. The evening passed quickly, lieing made most pleasant with games and music. The parlor was beautiful ly decorated in the Seniors' class colors, orange and black, while the IS, 181i. and died April li, HUM. at the age of .1(1 years, 0 months and (i days. Robert Collin, who spent his boy hood days in Superior, but now living Juniors' colors, red and green, with a at Fuirbury, was married April 19, to generous supply of red carnations, predominated in the dining room, where a three course lunch was seVved. Miss Ethel Bly of that city. Alarm was turned in this afternoon that E. E. Huntley's residence was on lire, but before the tire companies had gotten to the place the tire had been Perhaps the entire community has iiertr been sbni'kefl :is It. w.'iw MondllV nftcrnoon when a messenger rode into m town and stated that little Jack Mil-1 The many friends of H. V. Young ler, the twelve-year-old son of Mr. will be grieved to learn of his death smd Mrs. John Miller, had been run ' which occurred at 10 o'clock Friday over with a stalk cutter and killed, morning at the home of his daughter Jack had been in the habit of work ing a team in the Held and Monday afternoon he took a team of very large mules and started for the field. Mr. and Mrs. Miller had come to town and there was but one put sou. a little girl ten years old, at the house. About an hour later Jim Ivimbrough, who was working in an adjoining field, saw the team running with the cutter and that the boy was not on the ma chine: he tied his team and ran to the field in Provo, Utah. It is thought the re mains will be shipped here for interment. BLOOMINGTON (Prom the Advocate.) Quite a number of the Odd Fellows of this place went to Franklin Thurs day to participate in the anniversary of the order. Last Wednesday evening at the resi dence of Mr. and Mrs. S. V. Douglas. Mr. Clinton Hayes and Miss Winifred Leisure, Hev. Mills oflleiating. The infant son of Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Kirkbride was christened at their resi dence Thursday night by Rev. Rates, before a number of friends and neigh bors. Died, at his residence 2 miles north west of Bloomington last Friday, .las. M. Sharp, aged 71 years, ft months and 29 days. Mr. Sharp had been in poor health for some time but on the day of his death was up and around. Mrs. D. A. Walrath of this city is L considerably alarmed in regard to a brother, who was in San Francisco at the time of the disaster. He has not been heard from and a name similar to his has been in the list of those missing. LEBANON. (From the Times.) Jim Collier, living near Smith Cen ter, went to Kansas City Wednesday to have an operation performed. Little fleorge Dudley was run over Sunday at Bud Brown's place just The little girl at the house had north of Salem, by a buggy, and was seen tlve team by this time and ran to badly scratched up. 'barley Micheal's. and told the car- Wilbur Weems.who lives near Salem, pentors to come and catch the team, was cutting stalks Saturday, when his Little Jack was under the machine: team became friirhtened and ran awav the knives had been thrown oil' and the hoy caught in the wheels. His neck was broken and one leg was badly cut: no other bruises were on the body. FRANKLIN (Prom the Sentinel.) Clyde Ronton of the south side toe ac-of cidentallv shot oft the second his right foot Tuesday. Pncle John Sawyer and wife of Bloomington went to Orand Island Thursday, where they will reside at the soldiers' home. Misses Kate and (iretchen Maser arrived from St. Louis Monday night for an extended visit with their rela tives and many friends. Mr. and Mrs. C. Hildreth .entertain ed the trustees and faculty of the Franklin academy at their palatial residence Friday night. F. (5. Tlutchins drove his hearse over to Clayton Dyer's one mile west of Tyner, Kan.. Wednesday for the fun eral of their eighteen months' old son. Wiley Stephenson, son of Miv and Mrs. W. 11. Stephenson, and wife left Saturday night for southeastern Mis souri, where they have lucrative posi tions in a hospital as trained nurses. Carl Nelson received Tuesday a most cutting and bruising him quite badly. Little Carroll Johnson nearly got an eye put out Tuesday morning while playing around the blacksmith shop. He ran a piece of steel into it just be low the eye ball. Married, at the home of the bride's mother in this city. Saturday, even ing, April VI. at 8 o'clock. Miss Orpha Nussbaumer and Mr. Everett Munsell. Rev. McOrew oflleiating. Dr. Thomas, wife and son of Red Cloud, Neb., were In this city Sunday visiting the Ernest Durge family. Mr. Thomas was station agent at this place some few years ago. The IUvnlvc'N Oi-Kitnn mill Where They Are I.nonted. Every oyster has a mouth, a heart, n liver, a stomach and other necessary Internal organs, Including a set of' cun ningly devised Intestines. The mouth Is at tho small end of the oyster's body, near the hinge of the shell. It Is oval In shape, and, though not readily dis covered by an unpractlecd eye, It may be easily located by gently pushing a blunt bodkin or similar instrument along the folds of the surface of tho body at the place mentioned. Connect ed with the mouth Is the canal which the oyster uses In conveying food to the stomach, from whence It passes In to the curious little set of netted and twisted Intestines referred to In tho opening. To discover the heart of an oyster the fold of flesh which oystermen call the "mantle" must be removed. This Is fatal to the oyster, of course, but In the Interest of science and for Hie ben clit of the "curious" It Is occasionally done. When the mantle has been re moved the heart, shaped like a crescent or homed moon, Is laid to the view. The oyster's heart Is made up of two parts, Just like that of a human being, one of which receives the blood from , tho gills and the other drives It out through the arteries. Tho liver Is found In the Immediate vicinity of the heart and stomach and Is n queer shaped little organ, which is supposed to perform all the functions of a blood filter. JAVA'S ISLAND OF FIRE. RIVERTON (From the Review.) Robert Hancock of New Albany, In diana, arrived here Saturday evening on his way to Montana to buy a bunch of western horses. Jim Verplank had quite an accident Tuesday. In assisting Eli Bennett at Whaley & Wickstrom's store, he smashed three fingers in the door. Max Hobart had his head badly hurt Monday, by a falling chair which struck him on the head. The chair fell from its place on the platform in the furniture room. On Sunday Tom Glenn and wife went visiting and left three of their small children at home. On returning home in the evening they found the children missing. The alarm was giv en and in a short time about thirty of the neighbors gathered together and began searching for the missing child ren. They were found at Ilallie Ren son's about 10 o'clock. Burlington Bulletin. Special Homeseekers, Rates- 1st and 3rd Tuesdays, low excursion rates otbeNoilh PJntto Valley, tho Big Horn Basin and other frontier terri tory. Personally conducted excursion on 1st nnd 3rd Tuesdays of each month for thoso seeking froo home steads of 0-10 acres of mixed farming and dairying. Write D. Clem Deavor, Agent Homeseekeis' Information Bu reau, 1004 Parnam St., Omahn, Nobr. Irrigated Lands If you have any SMITH CENTER (From the Messenger.) Edwin, the 10-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Lewis, died at the home near Thornburg, Tuesday night, April 21, after a brief illness. Hilda Iugalls Burrow, the only daughter of Secretary of State J. R Burrow ..v.nil liir A f ,,..,, ' . . ..,', irrigated farm now. If this appeals to Will honor, who has just finished you, send for irrigation litoraturo. five years service in the navy, was in Low Vacation Tours to Colorado, this city between trains Tuesday California and Puget Sound The morning. lie had just returned from , Rummor or moo will bring a groat va the navy and was carried past his ' rluty of aU,ativo low rate excursion ,lomu at ,'l,lMl"- , to.us. Tho greatest railroad journey Mrs. Catherine. Lyons, aged ,' years , in the world to California and Pugot It In Heully n I.nkr of Ilolllnir, Ilnb blliiK Mntl and Slliue. The greatest natural wonder In .Tnva, If not In tho entire world, Is tho Justly celebrated "Oheko Kamdka Gumko," or "Home of the Hot Devils," known to the world as the Island of Fire. This geological singularity Is really a lake of boiling mud situated at about the center of the plains of Grobogana and is called an Island because the great emerald sea of vegetation which surrounds It gives It that appearance. Tho "Island'' is about two miles In cir cumference, nnd Is situated nt n dis tance of almost exactly fifty miles from Solo. Near the center of this geological freak immense columns of soft, hot mud may bo seen continually rising nnd falling like great timbers thrust through tho boiling substratum by giant hands nnd the again quickly withdrawn. Besides tho phenomenon of the boiling mud columns there arc scores of gigantic bubbles of hot sllmo that fill up like huge balloons and keep up a series of constant explosions, tho Intensity of the detonations varying with tho size of tho bubble. In time past, so the Javanese authorities sny, there was a tall splrclike column of baked mud on the west edge of the lake which constantly belched a pure stream of cold water, but this has long been obliterated, and everything Is now a seething mass of bubbling mud nnd slime. EYEGLASSES. ,s ami wife, did last Thursday 8"rUH ."J0"0 yU CH f0, nothiK ;. April 1... KHM. at 7 o'clock. !0 " !t ti,on to ,,old of How to 1'ut Them on uml Take Them Off Properly. There Is nothing which more com pletely changes the effect of a pair of eyeglasses than the habit of crowding them on the nose with one hand. The best efforts at fitting and adjusting are nil brought to naught by a person who hns acquired that habit. Tho proper way to take oft glasses is to take hold of tho bridge and lift off gently without dragging or pulling out of shape. To take off spectacles tnko hold of tho right temple with the right hand nnd lift It off tho car. Then turn tho bend to the right and the left temple will fall off easily. The average wearer of glasses when he is cleaning them takes hold of the bridge. The consequence Is that he gradually works the bridge out of shape, nnd every rub he gives the Ions gives n twist to the bridge, nnd In ' course of time the bridge or tho lens breaks when he least expects It. There nro probably more glasses broken In this wny than any other. Tho correct way to clean them Is to tnko hold of one of tho eye pieces where the glass Is screwed on the outer edgo and clean the lens, and they re verso tho glasses, take It by the other end pleco and repent tho process on that lens. Do You Eat Meat? want somethlg nice in the meat lino. (Iron into hit M market. We have the nicest kind or Home-made Sausages nnd meats, fish, and a rime in season. We think, and almost know, thntwemn please you. Giif us a trial. Koon Bros., Successors to KOBINSON k BUKDKN. MfJH.'ti 'Din illfle retire betrn ItlHbitfftnri MUlncWOitlf. (Trrctn e lf Iwrrn n At cumte ami An I hacrurulf A rrn Ll.uo.8 lel .Micrlmlmtel (,ct STHVftNSI I inly van of ritrlfnccl Ithliul our Iritxt anil rut t,t line of KIl'LKS, JMSTOI.S, KHOTfUINH Itlllo TomncopeH, l.te. Ask jminlcilcr nihllntUt nntheSrnvi'N. If) on ( t, r tftntfrif,tU,i rftrlpti fmtiin;nlie. html 4 In tuih" l'r 140 pne tnUlotf ilrttrlMn,; I'lernllreSirVHNHllne. ITo(V,clyllUitrlr.1,uniI rnnUInt itoinu mi ShtKt ItikT. AmmunlHnn, I tc. HcAullful tlnrecnlir Aluminum llanrrr lll Le (uf Hnr Iril for luirnltln uiu. J. 8TEVEN3 AKM8 AND TOO, CO., I' O. Ilu4uv6 Cllll OI'fK I'Al I.S, MASS.. I' S. A. 60 YEARS' EXPERIENCE ijjjnjra Tradc Marks DcSIQrtS Copyrights Ac. Anyone lendlnft a sketch and deicrlntlon mr tlonmtrlctlr confidential. HANDBOOK on I'atcuta qntcklr oicertnln our opinion free whether an Intention la probably nntentaiiln, .ramniunlr. sent free. Oldeit RKenrr fur aecurniff patent. l'atenta taken through Jlunn A Co. receive tftclal notice, without cbarire, In tbe Scientific American. A handsomely Illustrated weekly. IrrrsV cir culation .if any sclentlOo Journal. Terms, 13 m. year; four months, L Hold by all newsdealers. MUNN ft Co 'Brodwmy New York: Branch Office, 036 V BU Washington, D. C time table. Red Cloud, Nek. LINCOLN MAI1A CHICAGO SI. JOE KANSAS CITY 81. LOUIS and all points east and ioulh. den run HELENA BUT'IE SAL1 LAKM CT POIITLAND SAX FHAXCISC9 and all point west. TttAIMS LKAYS AS TSLI.nWs: , 13. PAMtenger daily for Obcrlln and St. KriuiclHbrHiiclitKOx ford. McCoulc, Deuvaraud all jioluu went T 0i a, vi. Ma, 14. PnkHOiiRur dally for Si. Joe, Khiikbh City, Atclilkon. SI. Louis. Lincoln vln Wymere and all iiolntH ciut and nuuth Miiar Xa 15. I'mmkl-iirlt. dnlly, DoiiTcr, all nolntUn Colorado, Utah and California 7 id p.m. Ho, 16. I'HMfOiiKcr. dnlly for St. -Toe. Kfuisar. City. AtchUnti, l. Louis and oil poluts etoitand south 11:19a. m, He, 174. Accommodation. MoihIkt, Wednodny and Frlrtny. Han Iiiks, Grand Itilaud. Illnck Hills and all points In the northwest l'.'i'l v.car. Bleeping, dining, and reclining chair runs seat free) on through trains. Ticket' w)!d and iSRgago checked to any point Ju the UnllA ute or Canada. For Information, time tables, maps or tick Pit' call on or addrCHS A. Connver. Agent. HbS Oloud, Nebr. or L. V. Wakcley. Gtueral P senitei Airent Omaha. Nebraska A Certain Cure fcr Chilblains. Siiako into your shoes Alleu's Foot Easo, a powder. It cures chilbluius, frostbites, damp, sweating, swollen' foot. At all druggists and shot) fitoras 25 ceuts. Sample free. Address Al'oa S. Olmbtod, LaRoy, N. Y. 1U1EUMATISM CURED IN A DAT. Mybtlo Cure for lihcnrnntlsm aud Neuralgia redlcnlly (Hires In 1 to 3 days. Its action upon the pjHtfin Is rcmnrkntjlo mid myMerlou It removes lit onco thu ciiuso mid the disrate iru mcdlnlfly dlMippenrH, Tho lirn )oe k really bonellt". 7fi ccnth nndti 0 m:WI l.j 11 s. Gnce DnitfkiUt. Ked Cluud 't :i I' jtTT "' WfT-C -t" Wtflf i--w v wrsW, -. w. sijH jmtttm 'graattfifetaaHBi' MtWJWauWtArtA Wwt MMkWKk