The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923, May 02, 1912, Image 6

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g6e CHIEF
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PUlLlSHKD EVERY THURSDAY
attfea ta tht Poitoflca at i Red Cloud, Neb.,
1 u Second Cleta Matter.
0 B.'HALE
PUIIMBHKR
MC ONLY DKMOCHATIO PAPEK IN
WEI1STKK COUNTY
If vmi want to win a prize at tho
state fair this fall you should begin
now to make your preparations,
It Is a bla mlhtako to trust to luck In
HimJi flatten for ten to one some other
fellow will be lucky enough to plan
for the prize at the time he plants his
seed. Intelligent selection of seed,
Intelligent 'planting and cultivating
urnl Intelllircnt harvesting Ko far to
produce prize winners.
In order for an editor to write a
thrilling account of a wreck and do it
well there must have been a tragic
wreck. If he desires to write u really
meritorious nrtlcle on some celcbra
tlon there must have been n really big
celebration and also in order to write
a good obituary there must have been
g good life lived. The people of Web
ster county should give the editors an
opportunity to do their best.
In our ohautauqua last summer the
gentleman who represented Burbunks
said that if farmers desired to do
away with the potatoe bug all that was
liecessary was to plant white beans be
tween the potatoes and the bugs would
never appear. We now have the op
portunity to test this recelpe and we
would advise all potatoe raisers to
follow directions. Evon if tho bugs
should get the potatoes there will be a
bean crop anyway.
Democrats of the Fifth district
should get together at once and per
fect a district organization. We sug
gest that all candidates Itthls district
meet with the state candidates in Hast
ings before the month Is out and form
such an organization so that tho cam
paign may bo carried on with vigor.
We are (Irmly of the opinion that this
meeting should be called early because
it will take time to get the entire dis
trict In working order. Hastings is
centrally located and easily asccssable.
Red Cloud's Cornet Band gave lis
first open air concert last Friday
evening. The weather was ideal, and
the majority of thejcitlcns turne I out
to hear them, in fact, had they of beeu
greeted by one-quarter the audience
at their concert given in the opera
house some two weeks ago, the boys
would have hud no occasion to think
their efforts weYc not receiving due
approbation. The concert clearly
demonstrates Prof. Ilotz's ability us
an InsfrActbT', and leaves no cause to
doubt but that Red Cloud's band will
rank among the first after being ad
ditionally strengthened by several of
the older musluiaus, on their return
from school next month.
It 19 a struuge fuct that there are al
ways some btnurt Alecks who, no
matter where they are or where they
go, they always try to make it unpleas
ant for others. If they are on the road
you must poke along and take their
dust or run horses with them. If you
are on the street you must listen to
their filthy remarks, if at church or in
m place of amusement, then you must
put up with the annoyance of their
brilliant thoughts delivered in a stage
whisper. In society their wit and puns
must be endured. We imagine that
our readers have met all this genio
and with us will say they arc about as
great nuisances as tho Creator ever
clothed In flesh and endowed with the
park called life. ,
the place and the community. No
rrian ha a right to live In a live town
who seeks to enrich himself and not
actively identify himself with its In
terests, To be classed as a drone, or
chronic kicker and opposed to every
measure believed to be for the good of
the citizens is a stigma that should at
taoli to no man In the corporation.
The improvements necessary to be
made and the manner of making them
a monument to-the enterprise and In
telligence of the citizens is the duty
each person owes to the place in which
he lives. No man has a right to block
legislation In his town simply because
he is not personally benefited by the
proposed Improvements or pcrchauce
may have to pay a little toward it, for
in the end it will no doubt have proven
a wise proceeding. Let alt join In any
movement culoulutcd to better our city
in the year 1012, and trust the results
will justify the action and meet the
highest anticipations for a prosperous
future.
Homo kind friend sent us a few
copies of tho Peoples Pulpit evidently,
desiring that we reprint some of the
extremely derogatory articles pertaln-1
lug to ministers, priests aud preachers.
Hut we must refuse because we have
no quarrel with the ministers but on
the other hand a very cordial feeling.
In every community you will find con
scientious painstaking ministers of the
gospel who are faithfully working for
the betterment or that community
seven days In the week. Whenever
any disagreeable task is to be done the
minister is the one selected; whenever
a job is to be done that requires mora1
buck bone the minister must respond
to the call. Ho does practically all the
calling on the sick, l:eep9 up cnthu
siasm, smothers rebellion and quarrels
When we marry a million dollar girl
the minister Is given a two dollar and
a half chip good for groceries and
bacon; when we bury our great grand
father the minister drives out sixteen
to seventy miles into the country,
loses his dinner, aud returns with a
pleasant thought that it would have
been nice if some one had said thank
yon.
No wo do not believe that the minis-
tors and priests aro infidels nnd that
are seeking to train up a generation
with any other desire than that it may
learn the truth. "You cannot saw
wood with a hammer" and the Peoples
Pulpit cannot reform the world by at
tacking every organization but Its own.
The place that gives a man his living
Is entitled to his best efforts to ad
vance everything Calculated to benefit
When Things Go Wrong
There arc times when everything
seems to go wrong. From seven o'clock
a. in , till ten p m., affairs are In a
twUt. You rise in the morning, and
the room is cold aud a button is olf,
and the beefsteak is tough, aud the
stovo smokes, nnd the pipes burst, and
you start down. street nettled irom
lit'ud to foot. All day long thiugH are
adveise. Insinuations, petty losses.
meanness on the part of customers.
The ink bottle upsets, nnd spoils tho
em-pet. Homo' one gives a wrotig turn
to the damper, aud the gas escapes.
An agent comes in determined to iu
bure your life, when it is already in
sured for more than it is worth, and
you aro afraid some one will knock
you on the head to get the price of
your policy; but he sticks to you,
showing you pictures of Old Time and
the hour glass, and the death's scythe,
and a skelton, making it quite certaiu
that you will die before your time un
less you take out papers in his com
pany. Resides this you have a cold In
your head, and a grain of dirt in your
eye, and you are a walking uneasiness.
The day is out of joint and no surgeon
can set It. The probability is that if
you would look at the weathcrvane
you would find that the wind is north
east, and you might remember that
you have Jlost much sleep lately. It
might happen to be that you are out
of joint Instead of tbe day. Be care
ful and not write many letters while
you are In that irritable mood. You
will pen some things in the way of
criticism or fault finding that you will
be sorry for afterward. Let uremem
ber that these spiked nettles of life
are part of our discipline. Life would
get nauseating If it were all honey
The table would be poorly set that had
on it nothing but treacle. Wc need
little vinegar, mustard, pepper and
horse radish that brings the tears even
when we do not feel pathetic. If till
world were all smoothness we should
never be ready tor emigration to a
higher and better. Blustering March
and weeping April prepare us for shin
ing May. This world Is n poor hitch-lng-post.
Instead of tying fust on tho
cold mountains, we had better wind
up ana hasten on toward ttie warm
inn, where our good friends are look
lug out of the window watching to see
us come up.
aimer Fish SUry if the Year
Now that spring has arrived again
aud man's thoughts readily turn to
out-door recreations, tho annual crop
of fish stories has appeared, but the
one reported from Franco seems to
hold tho record so far.
The report says that a pond border
ed by rocky shores in the interior of
France was drained each year by means
of a reciprocating steam pump that
had a capacity of 25gallousper stroke.
Not only did the pump speedily drain
the lake of water but actually pumped
out all of the fish that were therein
and transferred them to an element
foreign to their mode of living.
The story goes on to relate that, so
impressed with the success of his ven
ture was the owner, that he rented
one of his pumps for the purpose of
"ll-h pumping," and his examplewas
followed by many of his neighbors who
reaped a harvest each stroke of the
brlngiug up water, mud, debris and
fishes of all kinds, from the bottom of
the lake.
Cue pond, covering several acres,
was cleared of fish at a total expense
of 87.20, and the scheme proved so
popular that the police had to put a
stop to it, fearing tbe extermination
of the fish species iu the Interior of
France.
No information has been secured as
to the manufacturer of a pump with
such a powerful suction or such ample
proportion or valves that such solids
are pumped with so
has been reported.
much facility as
CRIES TO GET ITS OWN 'WAY
Child 8oon Learnt to Know the Effect
of Tears on Mother, Declares
an Authority.
A mother can seldom withstand the
tears of her baby, especially ir It Is
her first baby. And yet the fear that
babies' will cry, or the mother's soft
&eso of heart, accounts for much of
tho over-Indulgence of children. As
soon as a child finds out that a
mother Is perfectly willing for Mm to
cry if he likes, and as long as he likes,
and that It doesn't disturb her in tbe
least, but she Just Bits complacently
(outwardly!) by nnd reads or sows,
crying loses its virtue and lire from
that lesson on grows decidedly more
sunshiny. For most of tho crying of
a young child is done deliberately be
cause the child soon finds out that It
Is the way to get what it wants. "1
Know it is wrong to give in to my
child when ho cries," said a mother
recently, "but I do it for the sake or
the neighbors." This feeling f'or the
neighbors is penny wise, pound- fool
ish. In the first place anyone who
lives near babies expects to hear
them cry more or less, because all
nobles cry. But no baby cries so
much as the one whose mother Is so
afraid of his crying that she is always
trying o prevent It. Hard-hearted It
may sound, but the common sense
tact remains nevertheless that the
crying of a young child shall have no
weight whatever In his management,
except as a symptom. In itself cry
Ing Is not serious; on tbe contrary, It
Is healthful. A mother must decide
whether the crying Is a symptom of
pain, weariness or of temper. But
having decided that, she must treat
the pain, the ' weariness or the tern
per, but never the crying itself.
LadleB' Home Journal.
c
MINER BROTHERS CO.
Some Things We Sell Are Finer Than Others But
You Can't Get Anything Here But What Has Merit.
AN IMPORTANT NATTER nowadays is
how to dress stylish and becomingly for
the price you feel you can afford to spend.
f We have worked hard to solve this matter for our customers and are ready to say to
you that this year's showing of fine clothes, piece goods, furnishings and footwear, moderately
priced, will do more to prove to you that this store is offering you the very best to be had for the
price you choose to pay than all that could be said here.
1 ! The values are here, the styles, the material, the manufacture and the assortments are
so good that you will readily see by comparing them with others that nowhere can yon buy
better merchandise for the price than at . . . . ,
THE MINER BROS. CO.
Suits - Coats - Skirts - Waists - Under-muslins
Dry Goods - Carpets - Rugs - Shoes - .Groceries
U A UIUTV ftirr A w w,j-a sm a ......
A 171IUHI I 9irc KLAlE IU IKAUt
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For The Stomach
Here's an Offer Shtuld Mt OverlMk
- --
Rexall Dyspepsia Tablets remedy
stoinnch troubles by aiding nature to
supply (the elements the absence of
which in tho gastric juices causes in
digestion and dyspepsia. They aid
the btomaoh to digest food and to
quickly convert it Into rich red blood
and material necessary for overcoming
natural body waste
Carry a package of Kexall Dyspepla
Tablets In your vest pocket, or keep
them iu' your room. Take on after
each heavy meal and prove our assert
ion that indigestion will not bother
you.
We know what Rexnll Djspepshi
Tablets Hru and what they will do.
We guaruntee them to relieve Indigest
ion and dyspepsia. If they fail we
will refund your-inoney. Three sizes:
25 cents, BO cents and 81. Remember,
you can obtain Rexall Remedies only
at our store The Rexall titorc. The
H. K Grlcc Drug Co.
Lejttl Nttlce
HAVE PRIVILEGE OF CREATION
ROYAL
BAKING POWDER
Absolutely Purm
Abmolufmly ham no mubmtltuio
Many mixtures are offered as
substitutes for Royal. No other
baking powder is the same In
composition or effectiveness, or
so wholesome and economical,
nor will make such fine food.
Royal is the only Baking Powder made
from Royal Grape Cream of Tartar
Consolation for Women Who Do Net
Enjoy All the Advantages They
See Others Have.
Women are taught very wrongly
about love. They are allowed to read
love stories at a tender age and form
a totally fatal notion of love.
They see themselves as charmers at
a very early age. They begin trying
jto captivate, to oharm, to enslave tbe
opposlft sex, before they are out) of
tin nursery. They live and die
1 many, many of them without ever In
the least understanding the truth
about love or, In fact, about anything
lie.
Women are very envious by nature.
There seems to be plenty of Justifica
tion in this one way you look at It
Why should one woman have luxury,
case, travel, society and fine clothes
and another woman have only toll
and loneliness and privation?
This Is a useless question. We
cannot explain the inequalities of life,
but there is an answer to the woman
who asks this question. It Is this:
Tho more barren the field the greater
the prlvllego of creation. You have
a chance to see what you can find by
the way of Joy and beauty; you have
an opportunity to crcato your own at
mosphere and It can bo a very lovely
eno If you lenrn the secret of making
it so. Pittsburg Leader.
Ocorglnna Ilaker DeWltt, Plain tltn
vs.
Dlnuche Egger, et at. Defendants J
In District Court Webster County Nebraska.
Whereas heretofore, to-wlt: on the 23th
day of March 1912, the undersigned, J. H.
Ullhatu, referee, having heretofore been
legally appointed "by the District Court of
Webster County Nebraska, was ordered by
said court to sell tho following described
premises, to-wlt: The Northwest Quarter of
Section Twentyone, Township Two, Itange
Nine, West of the flth P. M In Webster
County, Nebraska, becaudb the same could
not be partitioned without great prejudice
to the owners thereof, and the undersigned
referee having given bond as required by
law with sureties which wcro approved by
the court and having taken the oath re
quired by law; now therefore notice Is here
by given that by virtue of the proceedings
had herein, tho order'of the said court, and
the authority vested In me by the Statute of
Nebraska, I, J. B. Ullbnra, tho undersigned
referee, will on the 18th day of May 11)12, at
the east door of the court house In Ited
Cloud, Webster County Nebraska, oiler for
sale and after tho expiration of ono hour sell
tothehlghoit bidder for cash according to
the order of the court tho above described
real estate.
Said sale to be hold open for one hour be
tween the hours of two and throe o'o'ock V.
M. on said 18th day of May 1912.
Witness my hand this 6th day of April 1912
J, H. UILIIAM, Referee.
Bernard McNcny.Attorney for Plalntlir.
Certificate of Publication
State of Nebraska
-:- OFFICE OF -:-
Auditor of Public Accounts
Lincoln, February 1, 1912.
It is hereby certified that the State Life Insurance Company of
Indianapolis iu the State of Indiana, has complied with the Insurance Law of
this State, applicable to such companies and is therefore authorized to con
tinue the business of Life Insurance in this State for the current year ending
January 31, 1013.
Summary of Report Filed for the Voir Ending December 31, 1911.
INCOME
Premium $2,343,8911 59
All other. sources .- .'101,300 55
Total 53,004,200 14
DISBURSEMENTS
Paid policy holders 11,033,355 33
All other payments G95,094 43
Total 1,728,449 7-
' Admitted Assets '. '. 110,803,513.10
'' LIABILITIES
Net Reserve 19,001,130 00 ,
Net Policy Claims 81,700 00 ,-v,
Allother liabilities 277,638 00 19,300,558 99
Surplus beyond Capital Stock
and other liabilities 1,503,051 17 ' 1,903,954 17
Total .-..M '. 10,863,513 1G
Witness my hand and the seal of the Iusurance Department the day and
year first above written.
(Seal) SILAS R. BARTON, Auditor Public Accounts-
C. E. Fierce, Deputy.
W. T. M0UNTF0RD, Aient, Red Cloud, Nebraska.
One Old Method Retained.
Prof. Griffith at Leeds, England,
peaking of dentistry In 600 B. C,
said that the anclenta attempted to re
place lost teeth with pieces of wood
tied In with string. Dentists have
now got beyond that, but they still
yank out the peccant tooth in tb
old Babylonian way.
Human Sacrifice. 8tll.
In some parts of Syria the peasants
believe that doctors and druggists
have a right to kill one man and one
woman every year to make medicines
out of their bodies. A druggist whose
establishment was boycotted because
be was thought to have tried to mur
der a boy, brought suit against the
boy's parents for their interference
with hia trade, but he received no
damages, as It was recognlred that
tho mlu!t3 wero bolleverB In the old
superstition.
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The Best Knitted ,
Underwaist at the Price
The manufacturers informs us that they have to
make five million NAZARETH WAISTS a year to
supply the demand.
When a knitted underwaist can please so many
purchasers year after year,- it needs no further endorse
ment. Children need new waists. We sell the
genuine NAZARETH WAIST in sizes 1 to 13 years.
Price 23 Cents
F.NEWHOUSE
Mr. Barbara Pharaa, Prop.
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