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About The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923 | View Entire Issue (April 25, 1912)
i mm w t:,' t t - il' m f . m r-i- ir ; 1 ! ffj;it-u.- VOLUME XXXX. Four Different Chassis 16 Different Models wVCRLAND. MODEL 59 RS Examine Our Rival's Car Too ! We urge you to compare other cars with the 1912 OVERLANDS. If you can't find it convenient to personally examine the other cars get cataloges and compare the illustrations, specifications and then our prices with those asked for cars of inferior make mmmam exington and Ft. Sumter Lddress Delivered By L. H. filackledie Before Red - 4Jrtnd Hlib School on April 19th, 1912, - In. making preparation for this lit tle address, I hare discovered that in one thing, I am like a great man. It is related of President Lincoln that during the civil war at a time when Mr. Stephens; for the Confeder acy, was in conference with Lincoln looking toward the procurement of peace by the withdrawal of Union forces, he used as an argument a ref erence to Charles I in his treatment with rebellious subjects. To this Lincoln replied: "I am not strong on history. I depend mainly on Sec'y Seward for that; all I remember about Charles is, that he lost his head." I am not strong in history. But, I have no one to depend on for it. I tnerciora, navo aono someimng in tho wav of nrenaration. that I may sneak with accuracy as to times and nYPa i nri mp v p,ffiS nnoomn; T hnvo for rnot i that Ttho wonderful subjects asshrned the wonderful subjects assigned nhnHi.inM.rt to h" rtiHnoscrt of in imifed tiCme- atmj SanVhal" rofomnno both to tho nrenaration ,.., ..... .- -.- . .. --. - . me tho inu ...... w... ..... ... "y """""-' "r' l" rci"c.J7 or I,rtI,uruuun '2i .foiivnrv of this tnlk and delivery or this tniK. V" TO SS'ito, "S affESflWu'i THE BEST GAR 04 THE IWARHET ,;-' ' mmm Www mm mmmwfr Lm t Jim Peterson Red Cloud, Nebraska cness men on we board in two. games r " "wui " wie greai wurna- rV fen ..!... I 11 a a" u-lJi-'K"" "1B w,,,c" wa8 ana monr it nnrinHni tw b...L. i , UIIU IO HJ IK, And WO Hpnl thin mnmlnn nn ...UU incident or epoch in the lives of great characters, but with ton trrnof xri.ao in the life of our beloved country, wherein men. hnivvi mant om v... as grist to the mill the gods do grind. TTiicrcHB, as in nnance, we nave been aecufltnmprf tn fhinlr nml ini.i; J- ". w wa..... K..lt OUCIA lit terms of dimes or dollars, we must now think in forma nt m111lr.no inexhaustible mines. We must think or our country as one big living crea tion: BS a child from thn hnnrl nt ClnA in the process by which He peopled" the earth; as having a birth, a life to live nu, pusBioiy, a aeain w ate. We come into the world having cer tain canncitinn. nnil Icnifanniiia 'anil surrounded by certain conditions none of which are within our control. As wo mmic mc mutinies ot reason ana judgment, we learn to make decision. The decision once made, affects, to a greater or less extent, our whole life and character. The more important of these may be termed crises. They WPro. trmilcrh wa know if. nnf of fha time, and could not forsee the end, we "turning point," as we say in our life. A crisis is preceded by certain connicting emotions, aesires, pur poses and influences, .The decision UIIV.-U IIIUUU, II1U BtOp IUKOII, mo U10 cast, we rally our forces and shape "" .WB. rauy Hr Iorces ?nu 810Pe our c"rse accoraing as we nave cnos- . mo causes wo Know or learn .!vhen the crisis comes. The decision is well .or ill at the time it is made s well, or ill at the time it is made ac- cordingly as it is based upon princi- V'iJn JfiS S t?.1!'-. Iho demonstration comes with trarv. with .following time and events. .following time and events, It , . . . . , tional life that our attention is this its 111- yenrs. ' that tho on April .M9 gjf rtf?gt,'ggr.i?.ag-jT-..t. i . t - .l. Newspapsr That Gives The News Fifty-two Weeks Each Year For 51.50 RED CLOUD, NEBRASKA, APRIL "5, MMU. 19, 1775. or that Fort Sun.br ,., ' . ' W -. wm a lired upon Anril 13. lRfil w weu re"r to the ch exceeded the limits 177R." Ifl OfnPI fr bnntu lt Aon AUtM.M i their true light, .we must know them in connection with, and relation to, other events. In my personal expert- viivct iiuuniitf iimm nHinpn mn an mimh toward a remembrance of certain nt &$?&&'$ S inu v;-.." . ..w". wi ""7,bAvt", " "na.lne ew Br" PruRRin.1 '"w "" " is been an evpntfi.l Mm(i of this natioS LA 01 wis nation, as you shall . ..-. April has .- . in the life Prusi''p " "na tne Vueen ".as described by the poet LonKfellow. see. That wnq nil- nnrt nf Thrnmrh tho oTAnm o,i uu. ll hrough the gloom and light, . mu laieoi a nation was ndinc that "'"' T ovincrton woo mi ..,.. i ! i dlelox Co mLr StnS iniMid" mfles northwoRt of 'noitn teH C,CVen 6nAteBWhft"55! "Listen my childrenand you ahmll wft2?.2W 9'..lgW-ttoMv . -surM limes.-Jn-Just m interesting A hurry of hoofs in a villa ntrppt ton. They were known to be leaders ding of the first blood. Before Lin A shano in th ,inKg u iti ?f the people in organ z ng and drill- coin was inaugurated South Carol na the dark moonll8ht' a bulk " g militia or minute-men, and in the had adopted its secession act, tho first And hononth' from , uui . whole movement among the people ,f the states so to do. nassine a fnark pebbleB' ln then oin on l" defiance of the re- Ft Sumter was on ah island in Stni?kn..thu..tj .. cent special acts of Parliament. .Charleston Harbor, garrisoned by loss nnrt fL? 8tced' flylng fear . Tc-o was really no organization about a hundred men under the corn- in nnr nntinnni f vf i-.i V i "aruor. witnin two weeks Uoston was ' i't. numier was tne Key to me nar-l2-0Ur."B.t?.n"!. ,0- .N0.1 important in , beset by an untrained nrmv of Riv. bor of tho chief seanort of tho south. few nor 1,m, of UlLl?? wSroteen thousand mcn. Tho whole coun- lCW, nor becaUfaO Of its duration, for trv wtln nrmi,l T.om V,., Vl, iafi--LniLLni.h0 number killed, ipr inoy were iess than a hundred of jno colonists and about two hundred ""l.l'SY.11"1'8." re.?ulars'.. . . lint ff vvni A T,,?(1 , , in.7f i.wi i cllr"ax tc break-'gome ing of bonds between tho old and the XWERLAND MODEL 59Tn2"X I at PRICES $900 1 ia TO e I tifi?i; I ta. : . . 8 train, the mairazino npoHoH hnf th application of a match. Trulv n our nnor hoc atJ irrl.- a. . - .. i K-fufiB 11bbbbbVpbVKSS l C- OVCKLAND MODEL 00 T S&y J r- ..o oaiu, xno jbvb oi a nation wa8 riding that night." And who was this Paul Revere, the herald who ush-.flrflt eredin that memorable first shedding AT hlnnri 9 fa UA .1.1.. a. j j l oinipiy a poet S iancy He was .." 1,c y nve f !?' TV""S .Ae'l .worxer in nno motnin onH mnn. io engraver. He actuaUv S'AVwh. I as oescnoea by the poet Longfellow, 'great Lincoln and Doutrlas debates and he wa8 a the time, about fortylnad made the rail splitter widely year8 ot,?e- J16 Hved nearly forty known, and he was elected president. years after the Revolution, dying For an Interesting history of these 11818 at.th-K atra nt alnkti.k.n ntirrino- timaa (m. Inat ma inforontlno unn nn woo a ! I....A. . a.i 1 !; ..t,"1 " - "'wiii uj.uk just oamls of men with a common ipurpose and accepting a common feadershin. Thoro wna no .nv.rZn ,ih nnifin.ii.. t :..' "n "" but the little Battle of Lexington was the torch that fired tho magazine. Two thousand mlnute-men ha3 gathered, beforo niHht fa. when the Brltisl C5f.1SJt?r with the ships in the Georgia the news spread, and nearly l,. Vo,v rnvni mvr..mnhf'in Am,.i0f. .then fell. Off in the wilderness of Kentucky pioneers wore building a sottlo- mcnt. They heard the news, and they Olf in the wilderness of Kentucky "v ,V L Vi,. ltl,l,0i.,t.. J'J-'X l"Kim- imU' C"RC,, the Governor of South n o y(l 'r. VkT-f0ll,,,winw L(!X- C,m,'i,m l" ""tilled of to Jhiji Kli i rl,r IicoihIotokh, whs ment of supplies to the fort. ! m leiKoietl to thu coniiiimul of Kt inn . President Din-is cnlled a cabinet hovnl! Hi the CWiy,i0rarent JC "Win nn oh he and IJ coTn now ' J i. i. ii th0 .Vonl,,,e"l Congress," knew flint wnr was inevitable. MoStSnMiSBnnhU,ldwd Gwn'v lh0 cub,,nc.1 ,meoUS but ono Ke Sir iint these things hnn- 2 Vltlb ! fflffe 0'J licne.1 more t inn a year hef7.ro tie State, v no sold: "At tffi time Ft h great Declaration, but they were the sulci, c, murder and will loso us oS .bcKinniiiK: and the end was not to be ery friend nt the north. You" will wn- .for eight long years of piivntlon.star- tonly strike a hornet' i nort wWch 'wnr b Vl " Kvnn. i. ii i .. i "M wy iL!,R,.t yCftrfl .ln,U", . APril 19' ..;' W,,?njKf proclaimed the war i"tn" S"'1- htcen months, after tho tn2 Uif l!!! !? .was passed. "":.. V "" v" ,,WMW,,l vAiowiivu ThowLr tl.o rr M ,.. tv five ver n f .. i "" nandlmf. develo,,?, .;,;", "" i'VC; irion mnn i . ..n, "" """" gient men, by whose courago and laid aside as worn out tools "and a thh Zl2VhZUtVV f nSp On tho imiiv nf ihn . ,.r niw,.u.. had irrown u. ,Vr uiY.V;'"1: H and ounonents and. n lmfi.ro. . nn. fion grew so great that it seemed The "d" r of P thewhTo" ti& AWrrwffiTi pause to wft1 RWatMt lnflUC ln th .UrbuCtetni ," in m $&tl Suet 1 'V "? hnterVlW L!ff"C0,"' K lis not generally eiven Wo read of PP1 .h,".BUJUort and ored his him as a great General but not m a 8? ? tilc4uVun.io caU8C- A"d the Wat President Wn Snw him of tt ?ttc?iont of this interview was pub South Sinian, ft notice whS SXrbnShonBt5eoCfa, ff,!,nt! for at ; least thirty yeST struggle between north and south was Wslio,;aetcrdalterwanaSt wS hnoTSJ, T a" W rrvaHdUy in thtX.0ItnL0rnC" MaJ?5 And?nn, now beJome qfeneral! 'ihuetCAap8ruVif Otrtlf lyear's foVi'thurlenderof Tt 'a moT open advocacy of seeesZn ,Th7sT ftduftnft SKfa. cLdmaSil,r!!:: LeHVVFt0' ouHnVuen whichn'hadn then' cfrawn awif th members of his cabinet, notVrget- tine the state whoso son ho wns in .thdignity of JSZffJS majes ? 'of irrnntnosH. nml tho nirif nt ninif. ecy?ho announced as h'is toast "the'?,0"' a"5 rrj, hc he ' lpSDdU.?l0B' U mU8t Bnd M ta,3tJrKt4.& whllfWeS of dSatoS indTtWisJaaid0tnat XT wards onannroachcdnim rT.MeX,,Jl,,n. L5S SBKS as tell them that ii flneer be raised in defiance of thiS n..AM.MnM4 IL.i T -L.ll J k" "" wiot oiibu cume uown there; and once there, I'll hang the man I lay hands on to tho first .tree I can reach." I KT.4- ... !.. .. -11 J a At. r ,,""'' ur uwrigr yenro um ouuiu uar nlinn roonvn. mm thn nM.idatiflal baI "Me-ntlm. th. I..ue, Ughtoed .nd Slavery was the nrimarv tonl ic. The 'great Lincoln and Doufflas .debates nan maun ttn w -.7- .- "-"-- -, - ...- piapu or Major Anderson, the only union tree in that vast forest or se cession. A vessel sent to carrv sun- niioo u ,. v,a k ....! .. and turned back. Yet the break had not occurred. Seven states had left tho Union, and seized U. S. property ,worth $30,000,000. What a 'task had Lincoln! . .except New Orleans. Tho provisions wm Inw. nnrt if not rol nvprt. Anrtnr. 'fion must abandon it. Tho North could not viol.i thn fort without neknow ledirinir tho Indcnondonco of tho Con fedorncy. Tho south intimated that fedorncy. Tho south intimated that any attempt to supply the fort would ho considered an act of war. Lincoln n " SECTION TWO NUWJIBK 17 icKions now quiet will swarm out and "ting us to death." ! 0thcr conl provnilcd, and at day- .light April 12, 1801, the curwtfn was 'rune un on th'o m-nnt &?. 1,T?. '"? Bh? ? Sullivan's'lsrand: , JilKI! 1110 Knock Of HimiMi. thmicph fhn "r1! P! ;!, the offcet wasmag- "a. inrouKnoui.ino nortn. l4.V,m-Jr,S.n. 8nu : . aum.t- ?T.8 wuii7.cn inc norm into a un t and tho hone of mnnklnd wim snviH lixInitoS , bit i w In nunTbers were VL The fntuTitieH wee less than mnton. there being none at Ft. 1UM,,:Lr '. 1W0 ""Vs J?" came Linco n's.call ..,'"cn.. ;,.uoK'as, Lincoln s life.- - "ho 'WLVe gVAlnlTS fUr yC88 b," "ssassin, gave tlio death blow to our ffi ofUfe'caSath8"11 tat th ? TffilffK fife,, of history. "nXn&'gk lnHg"C?PCHk 5 Gettysburg and thj rrt tHhImakf fi.nd He' f Uran,t ano- Sherman and the rest, re- SholowerSbeJmanA mcn w?o. Xollowed bhorman to the KP? of o'ol" a?e not ver eighteen; and of those fours, one in ?very twelve was under sixteen. And JSSSSIES 1 1 . jL..UIt' W r . .okf U k..l. ..' 4 J i iouio H.V UCDI KUTVIIIIIICIII. MIIU uio iuirost ana zreest land that "e'er the sun snone on." Lexington and Sumter were the be ginnings. Yorktown and Appomatox marked the ends. Rat7aon tho turo anA oiif nt 41.A Bnprintfn nt human llfo thorA imoa m great nation, and went down a great wrung, anu uous purpose went on and on. And through the mists as we see tne -oroaa stripes ana origin ntnra." nn crallnntlv afraamlnv If la nompthlno' onrt aiuni ainmothino. In this land we love. hN NUI Will Eitcrtili Ii the Fall. It is the general wish that Blue Hill put on a three or more days attraction this fall. When any good stunt comes to you, store it away where you can get hold of it later on. Wo want to something bigger, different and better than ever this year. Blue Hill is a town of considerable importance to a large territory, aud when tho people como here they always expect a little better time than shown tbcnviu other towns and they have not yet been disappointed The people here wish it widely known that they are going to eutortaiu this full all who wish to to como. No hold up scheme about it we will clvo you more even than you would expect, itnd it will bo free.. uiuo um lA'iKjer. Wouldn't it be n good Idea If thu Itnd Cloud himiims'i mmi would r. together and plan to attoud this festi val ono day. , Lmm32Mmwtm& ti; V! ?! i ii v ii ;i ii m B I'3J E- m u. 'i s. l. iVi. ' ? R KHM k m 4&. 1 . $m mm h&Mi ..,. !..',! , LtJ.-'ji .. i. j.' "id! Msmmi-i 5t:Mm1 . - -b-rL. . - ,,.. .yVi l1-?.'-- .aq!gBBM.a . WO W"?W,..I