The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923, January 31, 1908, Image 1

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THE RED CLOU) CHIEF
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VOLUME XXXYI.
IMSD CLOUD, NICKHASKA, JAXUAUV JM, 1SMKS.
NU1M15EK &.
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"HNOUKERS" AGAIN AT WORK
had
Uon
on the passage of said resolu-
ASSAULTED ON CHICAGO'S STREETS
f'i....H.. o ,.11 u !. ,. ,.1.i.....119,.f,nniirer ncusiui wuhit uuji wuimm
the election were made to thu school W. Sanford, Struck With Cane.
hoard, and Unit they wore not can- The following is taken from the Chi-
vussed hy the school hoard, but were oago Inter-Ocean of Tun. Jill
canvassed hy the judges of election
olllolating at the. city eleclion
The tenth clause assort that the
election was not called hy the hoard,
tho call being signed "Hy the presi
dent of said board, V. H. Pulton. "
The eleventh clause states that the
proposition was never legally submit
ted, and goes on to say that tho voters
in thu Second ward wens opposed to
the erection of a building in tho First
ward, while the First warders were in
lav ir of it, and that the electors of
the First ward were opposed to a heat
ing plant for tho high school, while
the Second warders were jn favor of
one. and that had cither proposition
been submitted separately, neither
"Charles W. Sanford. !fi years old,
(1155 Monroe avenue, is dying at St.
llernard's hospital in Mnglewood from
injuries received in an altercation with
another man at Wabash and Congress
streets last Tuesday at midnight. His
mother, Mrs. A. C. Sanford, visited him
at the hospital last night., and said she
did not believe lie would live until
morning, in connection with the ease
tin police of thu Harrison street sta- "" altwniui to .lucoo Mill.
Hon arc lookii.ir for .losenh Al water, i man el al., lots 0, 10 and 11,
PctltloH Filed to Restrain School Board
From Sslllnft Bonds.
Ou Tuesday of this week there was
Hied in the office of tho cleric of the
district court a petition that is re
markable for tho allegations which
it contains and the end sought to be
attained. Were tho allegations cm
taincri in the petition true, the mem
bers of tin; school board would be
liable to the direst kind of punish
ment. Fortunately, however, tho
events aud actions referred to in the
document are of such recent date that
not even a child could be hoodwinked
by tho statement made.
liver since the bonds for a now
school building were voted lust spring
a little coterie of men in this city have
persistently and industriously worked
to defeat the sale of the bonds, and
now that there finally seems to bo a
prospect of selling the bonds the ob
structionists have resorted to the
weapon used by railroads, mine own
ers ami capitalists generally in ""'gal. lures of the Kltull. I'er.-ons who saw
pressing the common people -i. e., the I clause V2 states that tho election the fight say that Sanford was struck
injunction. There had been persistent ! was nicgal, but, notwithstanding the over the head, although he had not
rumors that some such action would nit.uiitv of tho election, the defend- attacked tho man who hit him. The
be taken, but wo wore loath to believe .,,tS( slj(j ip1-0UMiding to act" as the
that anyone could bo found with gall hl.u,0i board, have issued said bonds
enough to father the movement. ,,, t.iU1S0(i them to be registered with
Should the injunction be granted, it the auditor of state, aud have threat
would mean that a large number of cned to, and will unless restrained by
school children would bo cooped up ' order of the court, sell said bonds to
for another vear, at least, in poorly ! an innocent nurohubor for an amount
the police ambulance. His identity was
discovered through papers in his pock
ets. The dying man is assistant man
I tiger of tho W. I). Allen Manufacturing
company, 151 hake street."
Charles W. Sanford is the son of A.
C. Sanford and was born in Walnut
Creek township, Webster enmity, V.I
years ago. He is a relative of 10. 11.
Liidd of Inavale.
Real Estate Transfers.
For the week ending Tuesday, .Ian.
VS, furnished by the Fort Abstract Co.,
I. II. Fort, Manager.
Ifi years old, a former cahdrivcr, who
lives at lV-ft Sixteenth street. i
"There is a third man in the ease,
whose name the police have not learned. '
Directly after the fracas he jumped on
a street ear and disappeared. Nothing
is known of the real cause of the ax-
would have carried. The plain tills
call it a "log-rolling" proposition and sault. which was committed with :
assert that the submission of both heavy brass tipped cane,
propositions at one election was ille-1 "Sanford is .suffering from two frat
lighted, poorly heated and poorly ven
tilated quarters.
The petition is signed by Charles
(Jurney, Otto W. Hope, Charles F.
Gather and Wallace A. Maynard as
plaintiffs, and the school district of
the. cily of Hod ('loud, and the mem
bers of the. board- K. F. Haines. 11. .1.
Overing, L. II. Fort, J. O. 'aid well.
V. H. Fulton, W. A. Sherwood, -and h.
11. Fort as clerk of the board are
niad (defendant?.
Stripped of alt circumlocution and
legal verbiage tho gist of the petition
is about as follows:
The first Uiree clauses consist of a
wordy preamble which has very little
bearing on the subject matter of the
document.
The fourth clause, after naming the
defendants, states that for the past
two yearn they "have been acting or
pretending to act" as the school board
of said district.
In the, fifth clause it is alleged that
the defendants have no right or au
thority to assume to be the school
hoard of this district and conduct its
busincssf "for the reason that tho
said dofondauts failed, neglected and
refused to take the oath of ollice as by
law required to be taken by each of
them, and said defendants nor either
of them are. not and never have Im'cii
entitled to hold the otllce of iuemler
of the school board of the school dis
trict of the city of Red Cloud."
In the si.xth clause it is set forth
that the defendants caused a resolu
tion to bo passed whereby a proposi
tion was "submitted or attempted to
Imj submitted" to the electors of said
school district as to whether or not
bonds should be issued to tho amount
of 825,000, the proceeds to be used in
.. ... ,...! 1.1.S1.I! !.. 11... !!...
erecting a scnooi milium in mi: rii.ii
less than the faoo of the bonds.
The thirteenth clause states that the
district has a large amount of real and
personal property, and debts auufunt
ing to SI0,000.
The fourteenth clause asserts that
thu defendants are now acting and
will continue to act as tho school
board of said district unless restrained
by order of the court.
want a nr.ri:ivi:it.
'J'he last paragraph of the petition
says:
"l'laintiffs therefore pray that the
defendants be restrained from selling
said bonds, and that said bonds be
cancelled and declared to have been
issued illegally, and that they bo en
joined and restrained from acting as
members of the school board, and that
a receiver be appointed to take charge,
of the property of said district, and in
the event that' the defendants have
sold said bonds, judgment bo rendered
against them in favor of the school
district for the amount of the bonds
and interest," etc.
Attached to the petition is tho alii
davit of C. F. Gather that the .state
ments contained in the petition are
true.
No one outside tho handful of men
who are making tho light seems to be
able to fathom the reason for it, and
to us it looks as if there is "a nigger
in the woodpile" somewhere. Any
how, if thu pupils of tho district are
deprived of a place to attcid school
another yoa.r they will know who they
have to thank for it.
Charles Spencc Writes Glowing Report
From Old Mexico.
Ta.mimco. Mexico, .Ian. '.'. I'.lus.
.1. I Hale, lied Cloud, Neb.:
Dear Sir: -I have made no extrava-
ward of tho citv of lied Cloud aud in-! gaiit assertions. One cannot couipre-
Htnllincr a hcatinir plant in the school bond tho thing
building in the Second ward.
The seventh 'clause slates that the
hero until lie sees it.
it is much more wonderful than one
'oven (ireaius oi. ii is me ucsl uem
board caused to bo published a notice for investment 1 have ever seen. It
calling for a special election to be held will be-Tampico-n second Now York
in April to vote upon the ihsuaucc of , aud it is the most wonderful thing in
Kaid bowls. Plaintiffs allege Unit I he the world to see things growing here,
notice so published failed to apprise Gorn 32 days after planting higher
the voter residing outside tho corpoi- ' than your head aud everything else
ate limits of Red Cloud where, said ' tins same way. Ten to fourteen crops
election was to bo ncld, and that no ' f alfalfa can be cut in twelve months,
provision was made either in the reso- Mou are actually selling SC0O toSl.UOO
luUon calling for tho election or in ! worth of stuff from one acre. Jf you
tho notice published, nor place de.sig- do not wire mo by Satuxday night,
natml. where-eloctors reakUnir-outaidu February 1st, I will start homo. Cost
tho corpoiato limits of the city of Hod of the trip can be limited to fcJOox'SGS,
Cloud might vote on the proposition.
It is also alleged that more than one
ihtril the voters in the district reside
but is worth fcl.000 to any man. I
think it would be a good idea to keep
your men there until I come home as I
other man with him was struck several
times, but was uninjured.
"Heeling and dazed, Sanford climbed
the steps of the elevated road after
getting away from the man who
seemed bent on killing him outright.
Hlood from his wounds covered his
shirt front and blinded his eyes, but
he managed to Hud his way into a ear.
'When the train reached Woodlawn
Sanford was unconscious, and the
Woodlawn police station was notified
by the trainmen, 'i lie injured mail
was then hurried to the hospital in
block 1, Jackson's add to Hod
Cloud, wd S
The Chevalier Implement Co to
Frank Wiielnn et al, lots 10
and 11. blU II, Hiadeii, qed....
.lohu W Heed to Mdwin M Mo
ranville, w!i se-1 i.".'-,Ji. wd
William .1 Heed to Mdwin M Mo
ranville. ' set UV-!M, wd
Tina Staleup to Andrew (il
more. part lots l' ID aud It,
bile 0. I'ohrcr's add to Hluo
Hill, wd
Charles Spence to S C Hife, lot
10, blk T, Hladen, wd
Henry H Hoyd to Fred llomhcr
ger, ptnel 18-1-11, wd
lames Watt to Levi 11 Snider,
set :i!M-, wd
.1 .1 Cram to August Martin, lol
11 and nV lot IV, IVrson's add
to Hluo Hill, wd
Total
Mortgages filed, Sii:i7.75.
Mortgages released. SOSli.'i.
THIRTY YEARS AG
Items from "The Chief" of Jnnuary 3 1 , Ifl7r-
('00
JS00
.MUM
WOO
1100
:.M)
sooo
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.S10I0I
Senator Uilham is in Lincoln attend
ing court.
II. S. Kaley is in Lincoln attending
supreme, court.
I. It. Wilcox holds most of the conn .
ty olllccs this week.
Messrs. M. H. Thompson and S. 0
Smith of lleatrico were in town thiit
week.
it snowed all day Tuesday and Mia
ground is covered to the depth of sev
eral inches.
0. W. Knight of Inavale has a hoy
which will weigh between six and
seven hundred pounds.
Our county commissioners, .L II.
llobart, ti. W. Hall and L. II. Luce,
accompanied by Treasurer 10. II. .lone.
and Comity Clerk .1. A. Tullevs, start
ed for Lincoln on Tuesday morning
for the purpose of receiving- proposi
tions from the P.. iv M, Kailroad com
pany looking toward a settlement o
the chums against the company fo
taxes.
1 The members of the new militip.
company, the Webster County Cuards,
met on .January VI and elected th.
following olllcers: Captain, lion. Jo
seph (iarlier; first lieutenant. Jolir
Hcrenzen; second lieutenant. Jnmo
M. Martin; orderly sergeant, Jacob L.
! Miller: sergeants. (I. It. Henrer, M. I'.
McNitt, Joe II. Carr. It. L. Tinker;
corporals, A. Cilnunings, II. W. JSunfer;
W. II. Jackson, John W. Harbor, K!
Kellogg and A. Morhart.
Dresser scarfs and table cover" in
Austrian fillet work at F. Nowhousc's. !
Newlionse Hros. carry the complcto
list of Udison Phonograph records.
f
Q0-
Glean-Up Sale
AT
'mm
F. NEWHOUSETS
AFTER our sale of 20 per cent off we have a lot of Rem
nants and Odd Lots which we will dispose of at bargains.
These are all good, clean goods. This is your chance to buy
.goods cheap.
14HY Stockings
outside the city aud were deprived of want to tell them some things. I wish
their right to vote. It is claimed by you'woum uuiKu me siatctucni uuu, au
tho plaintiffs that if the. outsiders had I have said in my advertisement' I will
been permitted to vote tho majority more than substantiate. I can get afll
would have been against tho bonds. I davit that ouo man here sold from 83
In the eighth clause the plaintiffs square rods sugar eano for 8745 Mexi
.inniaro r.n resolution wos over passed can money. Americans are flocking in.
by the school district of the city of ' bore by hundreds and now IS THE
iVLi nin.nl or its "nrctended" ofllccrs time. I think I will bo home in time
n1 Cloud or its "nrctended
authorizing the submission of tho for next excursion
, proposition and uo roll call was ever
ClIAUU'.H Sl'KNCK.
i
It is true that Stockings ought to wear better
Vfeitn'i lAraftf ' nose we sen, it sometimes
if Oil I nbflln seems, ought to wear better. Customers occasion
ally say that no stockings wear as well as they used to do. Of course, the trouble
is partly in the btocking and partly in the wearer.
Women don't wear as heavy Hose as they once wore. They say: "Give
me something thinner; 1 can't wear those thick ones." And, of course, the ma
terial is nol in them to give service. We would not expect the same service
from a lace and broadcloth gown, yet we do something similar in our reasoning
on Hose. x
Then many require that their Hose fit like a glove. If 'they were to buy a
half size larger they would add much to the life of a pair of 1 lose. A good deal
depends on the treatment given a Stocking. If it is pulled on, twisted on, jerked,
on, or worn with ill-fitting shoes, even a firm Stocking will soon give way.
It must be said, too, that dyes which are too strong will ruin a Stocking.
That is where the customer is powerless, and it is where we arc powerless as
well. The old iron-wearing Hose were ingrain dyed colored in the yarn before
knitting. The newer fast blacks are much more evenly dyed, but an acid is used
that sometimes gets, ahead of the watchfulness even of experts. But people
would not hjive the old gray-touched Hose and they can't have guaranteed wear
combined with fast, even color.
In ladies' Hose we have the following Embroidery Hose:
Medium Weight Cotton Hose,
Heavy Weight Cotton Hose,
Fleece Lined Cotton Hose,
Cotton Hose with White Soles,
Cashmere Hose,
All at 25c
Shetland Floss ;)K 80c lb
Ail mtlk Ribbon
Nos. o to v at Oc per yard
Nos. 10 to oo at fOc per yard
At F. NBWHOUSB'S
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