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About The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 14, 1920)
ft Jt AMERICAN RED.CROSS ; TO GIVE RURAL HELP . -'- - - - - , - oi iiMMMaiiia --aiaiaPi - - - k ; -.. .. ... :. - .-..... B !"." : n .V'tV ,;: yfr' ftA .? to.. i Program for Public Health and Community Welfare Is Now I Well Under Way. Rural communities nml towns of less thiui 8,(00 population benefit In a very large part by tlio public health and community welfare work of tlio Ameri can Hod Cross. Almost nil of tlio J1.C00 Iti-il Cross chapters have some ruin I U'i'tlona In tht'lr .crrltory. There fotc t'icj Hcd Cross Ituial Service. llrleUy, tho purpose of Hural Korv ice Is to nsslst people to pet out of llf more health, wealth and happiness. In this purpose public health Instruction nnd general educational process of both children und ndults play n big part. Recreation la found to bo one of tho jbljfgcst needs In rural life. There IB 'lack of sufficient pluy-llfo for tho chil dren and soclnl Ufo for the adults. 'Picnics, pageants, debating dabs, baseball leagues, community singing Vnd other social events which bring the people of surrounding communities together have been organized and car ried on under- tbe-fulaance of Red Cross rural workers to great advan tage. In many Instances solving rec reational problems and getting people together proves to be the awakening of the community to other condition! which may be Improved by united action. . As a result of community organtta tlon, townships In which there had been neither plans ner Interest In community progress have been organ leed to work together with the unified purpose of bringing their community up to the most enlightened standards. Lecture and musical entertainment courses have been started as a result' of community meetings, as well as cir culating libraries, Red Cross schools of instruction tn Homo Nursing, Care of the Sick and First Aid. In tho larger towns tho need for restrooms nnd pub lic comfort stations Is being met. Pln, grounds for the children hare been cstabUshed nnd recrcatlonnl activities worked out for the yenr. In order that there tnny be concerted effort In carrying on tho programs of the" vnrlous welfare nRcncIcs In tho rural districts, Red Cross Rural Serv ice .helps the organizations already on the' ground. The main object of the service Is to lend u hand everywhere nnd take tho lead only where necessary. ,-,CoUegc Has Champion Cow The Nebraska Collego of- Agricul ture Is Betting a new record with a stivcn-yenr-old Holstcin cow. In 283 days she hns produced 24,881.8 pounds of milk nnd 1,104 pounds of butter. With 82 days remaining in her year she is ptill giving more than 70 pounds of milk daily. This cow will by far excc6l nny tatc record nnd she probnbly will bexccctled by not more than n half dozen cows in the Holstcin breed. Tho College produced the world's champion thrce-ycnr-old Hol ston cow, with 18,573.4 pounds of milk nnd 775.55 pounds of butter in n year. At six, years of ngo this cow produced 19,1(51.7 pounds of mUk nnd 831 pounds of butter in a year. Six of her male calves sold for $2,000. Aladdin's Lamp The Margin of Safety Is represented by tho amount of insurance you carry Don't lull yonrself into a fancied security. Because lire has never touched you It doesn't follow that you're Immune Tomorrow no today, if you have time nnd yoa better find time come to the ofllce aud we'll write n policy on yonr house, furniture, store or merchandise. -LATER MAY BE TOO LATE- O. C. TEEL Reliable Insurance E. S. Georber Wall Paper, Paints. Oils and Varnish PICTURE FRAMING (Work' Guaranteed) Electrical Goods of all Kindt Will Wire Your House And Furnish You with Fixtures Vote for RE-ELECTION of JUNIOR RED CROSS ACTIVE IN EUROPE Mi Garden seeds for Polish orphans, mill: fdV nnnemlc Creole babies, car penters' tools for Czecho-Slovnklan cripples these are only a few of the Rifts that young Americans, are send ing to the wur-crushed children of the Old World. Through the Junior Red Cros0the boys nnd girls of the United States ure BTVfiiSru fresh start In life to little wnr orphans scattered all over Europe. They have set up orphans' homes In Franco, school colonics In Hclghim and Montenegro, and day schools ,In Al bania. They are sending dozens of young Syrians, Montenegrins, nndllnnlnns to Amerlcnn colleges In Constantinople and Beirut, and maintaining more than n hundred ot plums of French boldlors at colleges and n-nde schools. Iu hr phanuges aiiil farm schools up and down' the peninsula of Itjjly there are nearly r60 wards o? American Juniors. l.ast winter a thousand French chil dren friTJti tho Inadequate .shelters of the devhsted regions wore sent by the Junior Bed Cross to cpend tho cold months In warmer part"? of France. At tho same time live thousand little Itolg'nu" were Inning a hot lunch every day nt Junior Bed Cross school can toejis. , Amclcan school children have al ready raised something lll:o a million dollnrs fot thoi enterprises, and they nro still hard at work. In Chlnn, through campaigns of ed ucation, tho Junior Bert Cross Is help J;ig to combat widely prevalent bllud 'ness nnd cholera. K&$P Vv ' ;t ! v ' Wi 7 K &&f lPiP"i4i liBBBri JVf LH"? ' M M kv $HI- Mr cv V CHIEF JUSTICE " Andrew M. Morrissey "The political par-tin hove made no nominations for Chief Justice The Chief Justice Is not elected ns a party candidate, but his name will be found with other Judicial Candidates, and school .officers on a separate ballot. "WeMnVpr the re-election of Chief Justice Morrissey because we believe In the law designed to take the courts ouYVof polities and to elect Judges because of their qualifications. f"8lx yepfs hqo when he became Chief Justice the court was about three yearc behind. Today the court Is as nearly up with Its work as It Is practicable for a supreme court to be. .Credit for-tills Is not wholly due to the Chlet'uurtlce, but other inbrrfSers of the court who have contributed to this result glvo full credit to Chief Jubtlce MOi-rTsscy tor Ills share In Its accomplishment. "He has executive ability that nets results. He enjova the friendship nnd co-operation of his nssoclntcs. He has the lespect nnd confidence of the lawyers who havo business In the Supreme Court. He has helrjed to clear away many technicalities of tho innt the law. Law. breakers have been brounht to justice nnd honest m , protection of the courts. "If vou are. In flouht nhnut hnu tn vote on Chief Justice, nsk your Dis trict Judcey Lincoln Trlbuno. RED CROSS RELIEF 'IN .CENTRAL EUROPE - - . .w - But for timely assistance of the American Red Cross during the Inst jeur, a large proportln-oMlto 'JO.OOO, 000 population-of the Balkan States might have- starved or perished from dlsefise or "exposure. Six million dol lars WjtUi of fowl, clothing nnd medi cal supplied havo been sent to tho Bal kans Rouninnla, Bulgaria, Alhairla, Montenegro, Sorbin, P.omiIii and (Jreece glut'o tho I K-gl titling of Red C'r - je lU't ' operations In Central !. i, wldl wMWiH cf defiant wo'i'i m ,,(j 1 lltoiei ! been spt to tl.e -h 1y lu '.jw. Mfes.s i,te'tftf('j-i--T.c.1i,."j ti uof rtx!s itf.fiitt A'V !,,-ti i"r ..f Kv n ? hWb mfd to "t u l.M-;uia5M,r - . fcji0hMlMrt'.T).r;w, inuiiUe nwHV 'I uf VMrMKl to l.o';i in V e i .'il re f ARtwtfttUjWJrtvA i "i'lur t ! 1 nn (ifvctors r.nd i' r fnimtiig lui.'e-Inf-lltc Iva Im .n i 'it tin Hie 1i'.nil-tv-ral rnglonii Where :I1 Inn U u giv en In plowing the land Dy itho last of thls year probnbly till Amerlcnn Red Cross agencies ad ministering relief lu Central lCuropo wlll'linvo Avlthdrnwn. uy that time, It Is believed, the people will have up proachod a normal state of living and will bo nblo through their own agencies which tho Red Cross has .helped pet up 'to provide for (llemeelves n . i "QualiryioTPrinting S By GENEVIEVE ULMAR &CC3C3C . i i r OWEW ?. aicWART I Bach'Uir 3t Ktit (iiduilU' (tuJint LitAiHrtity of fiefc 1 1 !. ' ' CantHt'ate for 1 State St4etifencier ' 30 years in Nebraokn. , 12 yearn in rural nchoolo. 20 years teaching experiencct Fonncr. Assistant State Superintendent lOSO&S'IOSOQO&OSCCOCC? 18S0, Western Newspaper t'nlon I A lilt of rare good fortune had come Ned Iinrton's way, UN father's farm ran down to the river und at tho little Inlet one morning Ned came across an old House boat. It lay In shallow wa ter, the hold had been staved In. but lis cabin was Intact, although'" the leek had been stripped of etury thing of Millie. "It lias been abandoned," Ned told his sister Arllne. "and It's ours, isn't It? I have a famous ide-i. I'm going to get our crowd cf bn.n to haul It clear ashme, prop It up, paint and re pair It and we'll use It us a sort of vlvor club house." The young friends of Neil Iturton en tered with n vim nnd spirit Into the project. Within n few days they had the old craft hauled free of the water line nnd set solidly on tho sandy soil. It wns a pretty spot, lined with trees nnd bushes, nnd for two weeks there was constant work on the Interior of the cabin. Arllne nsslsted In this. She wielded a paint brush quite as ef fectively ns her brother and pieced some old carpeting In the home gar ret to make a rug for tho cabin floor. She coaxed some old pieces of broken furniture from her mother, looped some curtains nt the windows ana felt almost as much Interested la this shore palace as Ned himself. ' Arllne came Into tho cabin one after noon to find Ned seated at Its table with the parts of a hanging lamp be fore bun. It had been a gorgeous ar tlclo In Its primitive perfectness. It had a globe with dangling crystals, pulled up and down on a chain, and pulleys, and promised to become tho principal ornament of the now cozy nnd neat appearing cabin. "Why, where did yon get It, Nedr sho questioned In wonderment. "Pushed way back In that cubby hole behind tho closet," explained Ned. "The chnln Is, broken and the globe has a piece out of It. It's a famous lamp and holds lots of oil. Tll bet It makes a great llcht." nnd he rubbed briskly at the tnrnlshed metal. N'Say, It reminds me of Aladdin's lamp. Maybe this Is going to mend nil our, bad luck." They had known bnd luck, or called It thnt, In the past. Crops had been poor, an uninsured bnrn on the home place had burned down with some farm machinery It contained, and Ned had to stay away from school to help out. There were no parties or vtllnge fes tivities for charming Arllne that year, but .she cheerfully did her share of tho work and hoped for better times. The lamp wirs sot In place, every thing ready for a celebration of tho event arranged, and Arllne wns nloae In the cabin tidying It up for the ex pected guests who wore to arrive In an hour. Ned had gone after them, nor work completed. Arllne sat looking over n portfolio thnt Ned had found In the woods the day previous, lie had come ncross It under n tree where some one bnd camped, for there was evidence of this fact In scattered food and the nshes of a lire. Ned luul brought the article to Arllne. cxphllui Ing all this. Tho portfolio was mnde of fine leath er and was apparently costly, und there In gilt letters on Its exterior the Initials V; D." Juslde were some .'Ui pencil sketches, mid one of them was that of Arlltio standing nt tho well of the old home. ' She was pleased, yet mystified at this, and more so at sev eral rouchly I ei.elled sketches In which the same face and figure wen canvases." "The portfolio belongs to some nrt 1st on his summering Jaunt," decldei Arllne. "ITo must have been near the house when I did not see him, and made that hurried sketch of me. Why has ho been using It ns a model fot; uioio ambitious pictures? Certainly I have no such beauty and grace as these exacting nrtlsts require for. their canvases." Just nt thnt moment, although she was unnware of It, some one was. viewing her through ho open cabin window, attributing to her Indeed Just those characteristics of perfection, She mnde n perfect picture for palniei. poet or lover nt that moment. The bright light fell across her fair golden hair, setting It nil a glimmer with radiance, her unique environment served to brighten thoMTect of her daintiness nnd loveliness by contrast with her somewhat unusual surround lugs. It wns the eye of a painter that took all this In, thnt of Vane Darrell,ainl ho reveled lu tho fascinating elemein of the scone. Sho was liU girl of tho well wlim be had sketched from n covert n I he house a week nono In hit r-nsi Miipuioj'lng stroll. The Intpremrinn thijtl hfoment vus lusttnjr with b ainrjtowjt is lutt nlflnd wlihj:. mite a It, m ,ni7.eft Lie Ueuh . folio enitlie t4ill before thU rls.i tug yotitsR taly. A meeting wn ! ttumVf and niter n few, wojrjbj.of i planning! frkll .i an Invited i for U OriTtsl.HI. In the cubUi of tlfc renovated b house he had met her. Thero he wom nnd won her. ' There, too, on an caslon when the happy Arllne' first woro her engagement ring, Ned Inld it nil to his treasured "Aladdin's Lamp." Rey.'i Coon of Grand Ilnnd w4 preach both morning and ereLlng nt the Huptlst church next Suudny. Chns. I'ox returned to Grand Island Wednesday after spending suveial weeks with his parents Mr and Ms S I'. Pox 'J'ne Iniiiei, of 'ihe Kplsenpul Guild will hold Hicri' -croud luunniigu sale at Mr. Uutlei's trfUlllicry store, Oelcbwr 'Jl to ill Inclusive. Dr. Siiiidfirsii and wife, of Lliujolr, who have been enjoying mi outing In the northern pnrt(of the state, nrrlve In the city Wednesday to vtits, Mr. mid Alri, ('. II. Potter. The remains of Mra A C Conning, hnm. who pussnl away at Hustings on Tiie'dm of last week, wete biou'lj! to this city Kjlday. Kiiuerul services were held Saturday afternoon a' the Auiflek mortuary, Rev. Cope officiating. IntiTinont wns made in the lMen&nut Hill cemetery. A husbnud and three children nnd several relatives arc left to mourn her demise. i 'J? T7T "To'tAm Voters of Webster County; I am n candldato for County Jndgo on tho Non-Iftrtl9AU Judiciary Ticket. I hnve alw-ivs been allHIatod with tho Republican party. My opponent, Mr Ranoey, has always been a Democrat. Judge Ranney has always voted tor, contributed to and fonuht for Democratic candi dates. He hss served thirteen years as an otllelal for Webster county. Two terms as County Attorney, and four terms and an extra year as County Judge, is suroly all that even a Deuucrat is entitled to In a Re publican county. t graduated from the Nebr.tska Unlvcr&itv. College of Law in 1H11. Hovi pingticed law In all Its brnneho-. Inoludlng Piobate Matters, for llltlM tnflla ntifl mil t linrrillulilT. rmull tl.il n.i I .wi.tri-t.i.i , ,n 111 l.tu i.AUa itate, nrrlvi'd . ,. . .,,., ,,, , .. , ,m As a candidate for County Judge I will appreciate your support. I visit her pur". solicit vour vote. ' nt tir c:lrlrMlir i r v" "-" ttM!WlgWagWiJBil&llK'L niimimnjErtiiiiiirEiiia Hon. H. S. Dungan Democratic Candidate for Congressman 5th District Will SpeakhiRed Cloud Saturday Evening Dont Fail to Hear Him We Are Now Ready to Do Your Vulcanizing i Dp. K. E. GflfBP CHlHOPHflGTOR PHONES IND.V 1 Office 76-M Reiidence 190-Y Office 2 Block North of Rreraan'i Hall RED CLOUD NEBRASKA We have leased the building formerly occu pied by the Ellis Shoe Store and have install- '" ed a new Modern Vulcanizing Plant of the Haywood make. Bring in your Tires or In- -i ner Tubes and give us a trial and we will do the work in a satisfactory manner. ' We also carry a complete line of Tires, Inner Tubes And Accessories. Work Guaranteed. Give us a Trial. THE RED CLOUD TIRE CO. Mendenhall &. Dunham lfflfflTOlM3! i ikV--!W js . .; ba l1BflSS5PralSr' ! , fflBK m Mr. Edison wanted to proTC.to tho j- 4, b wwm$m ." s fi &m3M&3Wssv&u TT .... AT ttfi lrf-t' !?;. ivirtviV f"VA IwA ii -i r; :! r j. - 1 1-- r.-'-v-v . t .: T" '" K I 6P!-w,i r tOV wn- - i-i"1 '. v" '""' --'j-C L.i M U r- TnP M SB 711 4 iu vu i hear KPOCII-MAKING TEST 1JESSB AUDlTOiauni Mr. Edison wanted to prove to tho music-lovers of Red Cloud that his new phonograph reproduced the art of great aitists with perfect realism. The test he made was dramatic even spectacular. - Messrs. Collins and Harlan dent hero by Mr. Edison, stood nesiao tno .New Edison nnd sang. ouuuwuy they stopped singing. The New I Edison took up tho song and sang it nlone. Tho living voices ami uiuu RE-CIIEATION by tnc incw u"im were thus directly compared. The human car could detect no difference between living voices nnd Kb -wa.-ATED voices. It was both the test and the proof. And tho proof marked a new epbch in music. a Pa - r -. this NEW E "The Phonograph With A Soul" IT IS AN EXACT DUPLICATE OF THE OFFICIAL LABORATORY MODEL, WHICH MADE MUSIC-HISTORY AT THE BESSE AUDITORIUM IN RED CLOUD. THIS INSTRUMENT HAS BEEN CERTIFIED BY MESSRS. COLLINS AND HARLAN THEMSELVES. Do you hope to own n phonograph as wondoi ful ns the Ofllciai Laboratory Model, which on thrajlfl an :uu"liocc of Red CloudV mufei lovers at the Bok-p Avdilorlpm? Do ou want )ouJr,lho.1t ' ' pt'j' i' ' new art of ma e RE CRBTK?), '. h wl.h Mr. Editor In" umtww Rnlahhlul tho vholo wojid? We have a ti f i- H B B lt.tt?,.:ljri rrn Carried Webster County in the Primaries Much Milder. "Don't you think tho oulja board, crar.o J3 Dnssjns?" MI 'nev(ir thought the Interest wjlo jnifllclentlj dlKnlllcd to'-bo -cnllcd -"it craze," said Miss Cayenne. "It d' only a foolishness." epoch-making instrument, which triumphed in the test. They will sustain the very same test,' Mews. Cpllinji and Harlan in order to assure you of thia, .hnvo signed' Certificates of Authenticity which wjll be presented fto the vpatchaaci of the instruJnts. Only'a few , t t s " '-tfld Oflleial Laboratory Modela : lf-ft. Ynj would betto'v com' in today. . . i . . i i.nniKIH OUR BLDCET PLAN CI 1'AYMEN f, iOU CAN FEEL FREE TO ORDER AN OF FICIAL LABORATORY MODEL NOW- ft Hi' Jti u-j.il Xnl oiMtJ. y Mrwkla k -wT O. ouLse s AND PAY FOR IT AT YOUH OWN CONVENIENCE HE. INfe'-V 'm AUTHORIZED EDISON DEALER Den ri rifin . ' ' ' NEBRASKA S i Kyjfl 1,jM iy r.' " ' n r..'i v " v .-- -1 - ! """, !5Swisvvjiwjw-Vuvv V , i -X A ( 1l 1 ,' 1 i X m Q 4 i ' J c - -- 1 . . 4