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About The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923 | View Entire Issue (April 16, 1914)
RED CLOUD, NEBRASKA, CHIEF u c if I' I in lift f p 'v , .' ec t ! . ' A ;3r ?:sBaBaBM4 &j? s .vijsMlBasssL'ismYiL'i 4AS bbbbbbbW sssBarBBssl HiwSSfHii' 9!ilBIB -JRIBSHf -;ly ' BuasBBKBBBBBstVsBBBBBBBm s "tssiABi. Ibbk HrirHF laaaaaaa.aaaMaaK jwfs s t& iiiaBKxiKaBBP &'. , I aaaY JV 3aaaLf lwCVk j??' (jfla " mB mmTHm iIN ,y V aaaaaaariaaaaaWv x &. VSssCbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbw iftMb ,sRLfiftaaaaV VS. IkMIMJtl y $ ioKBBaBBssaMl ONC'C upon a tlinn tlicro wan n king and lio hud four daughtcra. And tlio king wan iniirh perplexed wlioro lio ohotild find HtillJiblo huobnndH for tlicin. For lio woh a kindly nmn and thoy wore bnuutlful Klrls." Wo can wol( Itnaglno thin as the oponiiiK paragraph of an oldtlmo fairy talp. Jlut In tliln cano It 1b an actual, acutu Mutation utarlng In tho facu that much harraBHcd man, tho czar of all tho IIuhhIiuih. Sovoral yearn now tho Bcandal-inonRcra of Europo liavo been cxphilnliiR inarrlages of expediency arranged for tho charming quartette. Perhaps they have- been right. Tho cloud of minora Iiuh swirled inoBt thickly about tho proul Olga, the eldoBt daugh ter, brcauno tlicro Is grout live lihood of her Inheriting tho thronw by tho domino of hor tubercular llttlo brother. Hero is Indeed a fitting Hitb Joct for tho romancer. Sweep ing, Imperial, with a curl of hor lip o cold and haughty that It would almost hello her roputatlon for good naturo, bIio Is every Inch a queen. Thoro la magnificence about her youthful carrlago rarely at tained even by royal blood. Yet fIio cares nothing for tho throno, tho ermine, tho crown diamonds and the ocop tor. It Is woll authenticated that alio tried to ttirow herself away upon her young couhIii, -Prlnco Dlmltrl Paulovltch, tho son of tho prolllgatn Qrand Duko Paul For years a romanco de veloped betweon them. Thoro were clandestine meetings and tho royal girl con cealed In her bosom a diamond pendant which tho young prlnco had given her. Tho rovalatlon of her Infatuation to tho czar and czarina precipi tated Rovcral fearful scones. The grand duchess tamped her foot Uko any common girl. She would not bo sacrificed as a wife for nny pin headed princely weakling. Sho would marry tho man of hor choice. Tho czar Is said to liavo at last consented. It wail decided that tho betrothal bo published to tho world. And then tho Grand Duchess Olga had tho rudest shock that ever camo to any young prin cess of tho blood. Prlnco Dlmltrl confessed that he loved her sister Tltlana more than Olga! Whero Olga is stately. Titlana Is Irresistibly at tractive. Whoro tho older sister Is magnificent, Imperial, capable of gracing a throno, tho second daughter is winsome, magnetic, capable of bo c6mlng a groat actress and taking capttvn tho heart of a nation with her magic smile. It there had buen turmoil In tho czar's house hold beforo, It was ns nothing coinparod to the storm now. Tho czarina, always neurasthenic from Uio many nameless terrors that surround her family, collupsed completely and retired to hor beautiful retreat In tho Crimea. Tho prlnco who was the causo of tho troublo loft tho country. HIb oxllo was complete absolute. Ho soomB now to havo been shut out of tho list of cllglbles en tirely. This list of ellglbloB is not a loug one and tho daughters of the czar have a way of turning up their pretty noses vat almost ovory namo on it. Heading the list la the young prince of Wales, a schoolboy, thin faced, weakly, given to overmuch cigarette smoking, perhaps top greatly coddled by a foolish mother. Accustomod to thevlrllo, if dissipated, society of Bt. Petersburg, the grand duchesses aro not so much Impressed by tho Hrit tsh heir apparent. Ho la Bald to admire much the beautiful Tltlana, but tho reports that tho affection Is mutual aro not well borne out. The second most eligible young man from tho point of rank and station Is Adalbert, third son of Kaiser Wllhelm 11 of Germany. He Is stocky, rugged, far removed In appearance from tho prlnco of Wales. Itoyal parents have thrown him and the quartette of imporial girls to gether. But nothing has happened. In tho olden dayti nothing was expected to happen. Rathor, It mado no difference, llut times havo changed. Tho royal girl doraands her ro mance. Sho will not bo choatod out of hor meed of lovo and affection. Sho has road tho romantic novel and sho knows what is her duo of lovo and affection bb a woman. Sho demands to marry the man she loves. Sho will not tako this ono or that one to ploaao her father's prlmo minister. This changed altitude of tho royal young lady seems to have been tho stone wall on which the plan for sealing tho ltalkan poaco by royal match making was shattered. Last autumn thoro was much Indignation, and Just indignation over tho pitiless plan by which tho diplomats intended to mate up tho young folks of a stern Europoan royalty. In tho flret placo, Olga was to bo married to Prlnco Aloxnndor of Sorvla, tho heir apparent to a throno stained with blood. It will bo remem bered that King Potor, Alexander's father, took this throno from assassins who killed King "Alex ander and Queen Drnga, nnd oven toro tho latter t pieces and caBt the remnants of her body out of hor bedroom window. Prlnco Alexander's eldor brother, Goorgo, committed many horrible crimes, Including tho murdor of tho husband or his mistress, and was bhut out from tho lino of succession. Alexander Is said to bo llttlo better, a Bot and a dobauchoo. Tho court at Delgrado lb rudo and barbarous. Olga's fato In such a union might woll bo pitied. Thon Tltlnua, sho of tho witching eyes, was to bo wed to Priuco Charles of Roumnnin. lio Is tho oldest boh of tho crown prlnco of Roumania, who 1b tho ncphow of tho aged king and quoen Roumania Is slightly moro civilized than Scrvln, but the Roumanians seized uomo of Uulgnrla's iipolls of war recently and the fierce Bulgarians SENTINEL OF EUROPE Gibraltar an Imposing Sight to the Visitor. pjm&Ma&tt&iiz&T&tfr tt&Gau??mfyf- wlll come some day Becking ven geance Charles' reputation Is fair ly good yet, yot 'twould bo n love less match, little to tho tasto of a twentieth cen tury prlnceBS. The girlish Ma rie, third daugh ter of Nicholas, has been rumored to bo a sacrifice to Russian diplomatic relations with Greece. She was to marry Prince Uorls, oldest son of tho king of Uulgarla. She Is fourteen nnd he seventeen yet this Is considered none too young by tho diplomats when tho friendship of two countries Is to bo cemented. Llttlo Anastntla Is still too young oven' for rumorB. Tho czar, soro perplexed over tho prob lem of tho older threo, already sees her as an added dllllculty In tho distance. The czarina Is llttlo help to him. Tho constant attempts on tho Ufo of her husband, tho almost dally conspiracies within tho palace, the menac ing of tho lives of herself and the children, the disastrous war with Japan, tho cxposuro of the scouudrollsm of tho czar's near relatives, tho out break of a bloody revolution and her strained re lations with tho czar himself, have temfed to unbalance hor mind. Her own Is a marriage of convenience. She lived with her brother as a girl and hor sur roundings were anything but happy. She was treated In an off-handed way In St. Petersburg on visits Uicre beforo her marriage. The Idea of a German marriage was not popular in Russia. However, tho advlco of Queen Victoria of Eng land, who wan anxious for her granddaughter to accept the brilliant match thus offered her, and the tact of strained relations with her brother, combined to prevail upon her and she finally con sented to becomo tho brldo of Nicholas Alexan dorovltch. Today she would probably hav.o refused. Much history would have to bo rewritten had princesses always been aH Independent as thoy are now. Great Ro:k Is Mysterious, Wonderful, Beautiful, Somber, According as t . One Sees It Grcatn3S3 In Its Significance, Not Its Size. London. No matter at what hout ono approaches Gibraltar, It Is a mem orable occasion. Tho great rock Is mysterious, wonderful, beautiful, som ber,; according ne ono sees It in tho early morning haze, at noonday, at sunset, at midnight. It wnu not yet breakfast tlmo on December 18 when wo first saw that great mass of Jurassic limestone and realized that we were at the most im portant gateway In tho world. Directly east opened the bluo Mediterranean, gilded In morning sunstilnc, a fow far off boats stranded In tho golden path. The southern mountains stretched away In uneven masses of rose nnd lilnc; across tho channel, gloomy Gib raltar, formidable and growBomo In tho early shadows, bristling-with un seen portholes, pierced tho cloude at tho height of a quarter of a mile. These, tho Pillars of Hercules, boyond which tho boldest ono feared to sallt Monuments left by tho Phoenician god when he toro tho continents asunder Mount A by la, on the right; Mount Calpo (Gebel-al-Tarlko), on the left tho mountain of God and of Tnrlk, tho Moor! Tnrlk lbn Zljad, at the command of Musa, tho African viceroy of tho ca liph of Damascus, headed an expedi tion of Moors and built tho first fort ress on tho rock early in the seven teenth century. Today tho towor of tho castlo ho commenced In 1713 may still be seon In a prominent position back of the town. Ueforo tho anchor dropped boats wero heading toward us ladon with oranges nnd tangerines; others (freight ed with nothing but olives. A steam launch brought Cook's men. labeled and uniformed; nnd a swarthy com plexloned flower man with llttlo nose gays of violets and bunches of red roses. Conspicuous among tho new arrlvnls was a big man with bright, restless eyes, wearing a broad som brero. Someone whispered, "Mark Twnln's guide." Nearlng tho wharf wo spied a group of Arabs, In blue burnouses, brightened by crimson sashes and fezzes and yellow slippers. fWgVlrtMIPJj RUB-NO-MORE Carbo Naptha Soap Fiw Cents- FAT MEN UNPOPULAR NOW FIRST FIRM OF WOMEN ARCHITECTS d nHk a - i wc ys'saav JBBBBBBf aBBBJjVBBBJBJBJBJBJBBJBBBJBJBBaBJBJBJBJBH ;J'-.': '::.;: WA BbBBW -iSBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBIBBMI j ,vA JBBBSa kBkBZr"i!i!iBB iff - ? J.BBPC",""BB Sv. ."W, i- -r ' ?VS , lLW nT-L-in-u. --jH fcljfbLPVPiBfllBHI 1 Schonok it Mend Is tho name of tho latcBt firm in tho field of archltecturo to BWlng Its shingle beforo the oyeB of Now Yorkers. Tho members of tho firm aro Miss Anna Pendleton Schenck and Miss Mnrcla Mead, lloth aro very Borious about their work und are meeting with considerable success. Tho slim figure la In the ascendancy. Even the great of the earth cannot afford altogether to dis regard the dictates of the fashion which decrees that all men and all women shall present to the world the outlines of spare severity, Bays the London Saturday Review. Tho kaiser and Mr. Taft hnvo both found It necessary to go In for a process of weight reduction. It would be Inter esting if some student of manners would trace with precision tho process whereby what thinking people call "embonpoint" came Into general dis credit. Fat is now regarded as an indiscretion, and almost as a crime. Only tho very strong minded dare to bo fat at all, and thoro aro few Indeed who glory In corpulence. Thoro were some ages, Indeed, when fow wero in position to cast a Btono at tho plump man. The eighteenth century, especially, Beemed to run to over-nourishment. Rumlnatlvo repletion Is the prevailing expression In tho portraits of tho period; and the majestic swagger of corpulenco Is visible In the rolling periods of Gibbon, Uurke, Jolinnon and the rest, not excluding theologians. Their eloquence seemB early dinners; their satire BuggestB the twinges of gout. The tradition lasted well Into the nineteenth contury. Dickens nearly always treated tho fat man at least the benevolent fat man with' af fectionate respect. His Pickwick and Cheerybles seem to reflect he convictions that stoutness is noi oniy a natural uut a rattier laudable condi tion for the elderly. And when Tony Weller de clared that "vidth and visdom' go together" he was merely condensing Into an epigram tho very common English idea that native sagacity was to bo found in Its perfec tion in alliance with a profile of pronounced convexity. Dut now the fat man has no defend ers. The medical man denounces him. The tailor only makes him a suit under protest. The novelist gives him no quarter. Tho dra matist will allow him no nice benevolent parts; ho is only Intro duced to look foolish. The inbor cartoonist adopts him ns a type of the capitalist. No Sinecure. Apropos of a rich wife's' deseitlon of a poor husband, Georgo Ado said, at tho Chica go Athlotlc club: "Tho man without means, artist or mu sician or what not, who marries a rich girl, earns his monoy. Ho'a got to stand around, or biff out ho goos, "A young magazine editor told mo, jubilant ly, tho other day that ho'd resigned his Job. "Tin going to mar ry ho aald, 'a girl with an Independent In come.' "'No,' I warned him. what you'ro going to marry la an lncomo with an lndopondent girl.' " JMiS &yl vjW M&kHkJjgKkK alwgaSrJoi!JKiSll . '.M... Rubbing wears clothes out wears you outwastes time wastes work. RUB-NO-MORE WASH ING POWDER saves clothes saves you saves time; because it loosens dirt with out rubbing. RUH-NO-MOUE WASHING I'OWDF.R is a sudlcss dirt re mover for clothes. i It clean your dishes, sinks, toilets a ad cleans and sweetens your milk crocks. It kills germs. It docs not need hot water. RUB-NO-MORE Washing Powdei 'All Grocers Thi Rub-No-More Co., Ft.Waync, IntL iililtilMsMBMBlBBBMBJBlHBlBMBl WESTERN CANADA NOW Tho onnortunitv of securincr free ' homesteads of 160 acres each, and i tho low priced lands of Manitoba. Saskatchewan and Alberta, will 4 soon have passed. to tho Settlor, to tho man with a family looking' for a homo; to the p farmer's son, to tho rontor, to all who gl wish to live under better conditions, eg Canada's grain yield In 1913 is the talk of the world. Luxuriant p Grassos cive cheap fodder for largo A herds; cost of raising ana lauening for market is a trifle. The sum realized for Bsef. Butter, fj Milk and Cheese will pay fifty per j cent on the investment. Wrio for literature and partic ulars as to reduced railway .es to Superintendent Immigration, uttawa, .tnida, or to W.V.BENNETT Bae Building Omaha, Nab. Canadian Government Act- Small Missouri Farm Either 10, 20, 30 or 40 teres (you tike your choice" regardless of size) also 3 town lots and 300 shares In successful 1,000 acre orchard company with two can nine factories and full equipment: ail (or only $300: $5 down and $5 monthly without Interest or taxes. Will pay round trip railway faro of buyers. Payments top in cats of death. Write for phctoeraphs and full Information. WILLIS B. MUNGEB, 1 12 N. Y. Lite. Mists Cily, Ma. SZ& ffiEBftrJ lUttf&gA mm PATENTS WntaoBF.Colemmn.WMrv IrjKton.IiU. llookKtrrc. Hltfh att ralatvBoe. iimt naulUk Nebraska Directory THEPAXTON HOTEL Omaha. Nebraska EUROPEAN PLAN Booms from H.00 np stogie, 76 cent up double. CAFE PRICKS REASONABLE . Mj.. ii!.'-- - ' t riAijaam-TE:"' f' u. zErs2Frzx3. s5 '- ' Jggv -J . . 30Ct-C SVi .-W .1 ... " - t- .. . j. jw-r. . fferaM kaiT rtt,K- . vww" ' K"! .. xk rsvz r . v VJss.5 yZ.T-i V'rf-.vii " -. .'., Swf MccM'SC i-:.M?,s. ! vr,ci afc.-jscsriiinrrr- ffftearfPapp:;2 i .VAWioj.. saM.BBBl Summit of Famed Gibraltar. Their pointed hoods flapping in the wind, they looked weird and haggard as Vedder's Cumean sibyl. But the thing that Impresses one most la the rock, which has been called more names than any other rock In tho world '.'the rock of the Mediterranean," "tho formidable dead sentinel of Europe," "the crouching Hon," "England's Insurance sign," "the watchdog of tho Mediterranean," "tho bolt to Europe's front door," "a rock-bound city of cannon and wild flowers." Ah ono approaches It from tho Atlantic It looks like a great, crouching lion ready to pounce upon Spain, Its tail toward tho sea. It is from one-fourth to throe-fourths of a mllo wide and somo threo miles long. Its greatnods Is in Its significance, not Its size. CHoKTKUn, Ikin't Int your luxca dlo with too Cholrra Hden you can fri'Tent It by lmmunlna booi with nursurum. when urderlns rIvh ns tho num bur and nelRtit nnd wonlll know how mucn to eond. Write for frr liookleU skbiuhki Bk;Bl roarasT til) S. Hlrit Uiwl. Mfh. baker Liquid Fiber Stops Punctures and slow leaks. Will not harden, gum or stick to your tires. Is not affected by heat or cold. Preserves rather than injures rubber. Will not evaporate or deteriorate. Call on your dealer today for full infor mation or if no dealer in your town write us. AGENTS WANTED. IAKERMQUID FIBER COMPANY 308 So. Ilth St. Llnciln. Neb. WOODEN LEG FOR HEAVY MAN Locomotive Engineer on Northern Paolfic Had Lost His Limb In n Accident. Spokane. A. D. Bull claims to havo recontly made a wooden log for tho heaviest mau on tho Amorlcan contl tent wearing such a limb. Mr. Bull said: . "This leg was mado for II. A. Ken nedy, living nt tho Pedlcord hotel. Ho weighs 348 pounds. Ho was formerly a Northern Pacific engineer and his log was taken off In an accident. I had to send to California for tho big gest pioco of special wood In our Oak land placo with which to mako tho leg." Mr. Bull also mado a leg recently for W. E. Jorraan, aged sevonty-slx, of Post Falls, Idaho, nnd la nbw mak ing ono for A. C. Flandore, a construc tion engineer for the Granby Smelt ing company of Granby, II, C. Mr. Flandors has been located at Valdoz, Alaska, recently and came from thoro to Spokane to get the log mado. Lincoln Sanitarium Sulpho Saline 8prlngs Locatsd on our own premise and used la tho Natural Mineral Water Baths Untiirpateed In tho Ireatmeat of Rheumatism Heart, Stomach. Kidney and Ller Dlieatee MODERATE CHARGES. ADDRESS DR. O. W. EVERKTT, Mar. 1400 M Straot Lincoln, Nab. Agents Wanted in Every Township by the National Hail Insurance Company Lincoln, Ncbraika Incorporated January 4, 1899 The only. Company in Nebraska Doing n Successful Hail Insurance Business for tho Past Fifteen Yearsl $ 1 1, 095 More Paid for Losses dur ing the past three years than any other Company in Nebraska. Losses Paid on Growing Crops Since Organization 328,269.56. Losses Paid in Cash as Soon as Adjusted. Write Today for on Agency. fit 1 ?ntV'ilit A p i hT V - 1d,ii,rt..liil.tH.....,..w , -j i.... hyi ..n.iniwwril.iw.iipi.w lift wii I 1 h..yJ.4,iyh,..fciiy,-' zr. 3z, ;lz-yiJwiiMwawifrii i.)..,-ii.t.S ,' t ) ) t ,, 1 1 i.tnM, 1 ,,,, , .( J