&. , TP BED CLOUD, NEBRASKA, CHIEF EErxTExiw'BJiinnnisr mmi.jiiuiiuizmm;:a, M Cream-Eggs-Poultry Yes, We buy cream and lots of it also yonr eggs and poultry. We arc and always have been pay ing "TOP MARKET PRICES" and shall continue to do so. 'You may rest assured when you bring your produce to the Union you get the prevailing market price for it. ' COMPETITION That's what we like. We enjoy good fair and square competition, and welcome it. Competition is the very life of trade. Without it the farmer would be in doubt whether he was getting value re ceived' With it he has only to consult the other fellows quotations and then he knows he is receiv ing honest treatment. FAIR DEALING Ask any one of our patrons about our prices and tests and see if they are satisfied A continued pa tronage of approximately 350 cream customers is pretty fair evidence that we are treating our patrons right and meeting competition on a fair business basis, YOU SHARE OUR EARNINGS Members of the Union should bear in mind that all the profit we make on your produce less the actual H cost of handling is paid back to you IN DIVIDENDS. I The Farmers Union J. F. Edwards, Mgr. ' f00iSK Red Cloud, Neb. fflfflBSHJim tj r 11 n i ! I 1 Ha w I .till H m firS I Why sit and sew for the little folks these hot days, when you can buy them clothes ready made for only a few cents more than you pay for the goods? And rnade better than you would make them yourself Come in And Let Us Show Yon Barbara Phares The Women's Store Red Cloud - - - - Nebraska Wall Paper Sale In order to close out our present stock of wall paper in a hurry We Have Cut Prices to The Quick discounts of i&09 5S SUCl oOyO From Original Retail Price. Which brings them down to cost prices and lower CHAS. L COTTING THE DRUGGIST mm YOUR BUSINESS IS JUDGED to a great extent by the stationery you use. The careful selection of good paper, well printedmakes your correspondence distinctive. Ask us for samples 0 pi work on Hammermill Ripple Bond. ME RED CLOUD CHIEF Rod Cloud, Nebraska J0ULISHkD EVERY THURSDAY (.titcrcd In the 1'ontolllco nt Htd Cloud, Nob a.n Second Class Mruter' A. B. McARTHURlKiUtor ami Owner Advertising Rates Foreign,-per column Inch 15c Local, " ' " 10 & 12H STATE FARM BUREAU NOTES Chas. E. Gunnels, assistant secre tary and treasurer of the American Farm Bureau Federation spent the past week in Nebraska discussing with state federation officials and members of the executive committee plans for enlarging the scope of their work and means of creating greater intercut in Farm -Bureau Federation activities. The Nebraska College of Agriculture is working with the state federation office in developing a de finite county farm bureau program that will extend over several year:. The Farmers Livestock Marketing committco of fifteen is perfecting plans for the establishment of pro ducer owned and operated co-operative commission companies in leading markets, according to reports re ceived by the Nebraska Farm Bureau Federation from the American Farm Bureau Federation at Chicago. The plan will be submitted to the whole committee of fifteen at its next meet ing at Chicago on August 10 for ap proval. The principles on which the producers co-operative commission companies will bo established and op erated have been reviewed and en dorsed by the committee of 15. Upon establishment of the co-operative corn mis' ion companies at the various stockyards they will bo affiliated in an organization, national in scope, in which producers will obtain member ship and control on a purely co-operative basis. The producers will share the turnings and benefits of selling according to the patronage dividend principle. The fourth se:!ion of the Livestock Marketing Committee of fifteen was held at Chicago on. July 13-II. The executive board of the Neb raska Farm Bureau Federation at its July meeting prevailed upon II. D. Luto, secretary of the federation, to remain in his present office until the annunl meeting in January, the action following a request made by Mr. Lute asked to be relieved that he might de vote more of his time to his private interests. C. Y. Thompson of West Point was selected as treasurer in place of George Briggs who resigned. Out of -15G farmers, elevators in Nebraska it is found that only 125 are properly organized to comply with the general co-operative laws of the state. The executive board of the Nebraska Farm Bureau Fedora tion has therefore offered its legal service department to assist any of the elevator concerns not now com plying with the law who wish to ef fect a reorganization or amend nrti cals of incorporation so that they may properly be organized to enter into contract with the U. S. Grain Grow ers, Inc. The marketing committee of the Nebraska Farm Bureau Federation has recommended that the price of Kanred wheat and Nebraska Number 60 wheat for seed should be approxi mately twenty-five cents per bushel more than the local price for the re gular runs of Turkey red. The com mittee also announced that scientific research has proven that Kanred and Number 60 is as good or even better milling wheat than the Turkey red and advise farmers not to accept dock ing by grain buyers of these two new strains. At the July meeting of the execu tive board of the Nebraska Farm Bureau Federation it was" recommend ed that each county farm bureau name a "blue sky" committee which will confer with F. M. Dcwcese, head of the state federation legal depart ment, in the matter of industrial stock offeicd for sale in farming communi ties as well as any other money making schemes that may bo put up to farmers generally. Farm Bureau Notes Modern Homes Twenty-six out of 1,200 Farm Homes in Webster County are mod ern. Eighty-nine have running wat er, sixty-five have furnaces, fourty have modern lights, of these fifteen have electric light plants of their own and twenty homes arc connected up to an electric line. There is a great chance for improvement in our farm homc3 in order to make the work ubout the homo moro pleasant. County Fair Vobtor County Fair date are August 23rd to" 2Gth. Premium lU aro out. Wo have a wpply at th'o of- "Ouija! "What's 4!he good word? MY YOUNG ulster. HAS A Oulja board. AND 8HE belioves it AND JALK3 to Noah'. AND I think sho talks'. TO HER best fellow. WHO'S DEAD but doesn't know e AND I used to givo her. THE LOUD, rudo laugh. BUT I'M sorry now. BECAUSE LAST night", I WAS homo alonfy 80 I got tho board. '7 AND PUT In a call, FOR JOHN Barleycorn AND .OTHER departed spirits. BUT THE lino was busy. FOR NOTHING happened., t THEN I chdatod a littlo.' AND IT spelled this. "GRAMMA8HOTTA SEVEN." t - it, 80 I shut off quick TO HEAD off any, FURTHER FAMILY scandal, t THEN I stoppod to smoko. A CIGARETTE. AND AFTER a whlld. I CRANKED up woejeo. AND ALL of a suddcu. IT STARTED off. AND QUICK as a flash,, t IT SAID something, ".THEY SATISFY.". t SATISFY"-! Hhat 't tho " gdod word. Just light up a Chesterfield and sco what ex perts can do with fino Turkish and Domestic tobaccos when thoy blend them In that can't-bo-copied Chesterfield way, you'll say "they satisfy." Did you know about the ChctterfielJ package of 10? Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co. TnnJiiinnpiiiii-iiTfflTun ii Hwii'iM'ir vim i mi ii'w I GLACIER National Park The Gladdest Spot -the most talked of place in America by out-of-doors folk, is a "hikers" and "horsebackers" joyland. Up there in the Northern Rockies in Northwestern Montana, there are fifteen hundred square miles of breathing room loafing space: forests, hundreds of sparkling streams which meander through valleys ablaze with wild flowers, and tumble over foaming waterfalls to feed two hundred and fifty mountain lakes of rare beauty. In the "high spots" there are eternal, slow-moving glaciers, astride the pageant of carved and tinted peaks. The thrill, the majesty, the bigness of it all is wonderful. To live for a time in this "high" land is a never-to-be-forgotten experience. You'll straightway develop an amazing appetite. If you are a fisherman, you'll enjoy battling with the trout. ,If you are a hiker, there's no end of trails to follow to your heart's content. If you love to ride, a sturdy little mountain puny will carry you over skyland trails. Mountain guides-chaps you'll enjoy getting acquainted with-are there to accompany the timid. 'Rowboat and launch service, auto-stages on a mountain motor highway, are there for your pleasure and convenience. If you like to "take your hotel with you" and camp, there are scores of ideal spots. The chalets little hotel villages in the mountains are picturosque tarrying-places. ' Two mammoth mountain inns, where unique indoor campfires crackle on evenings in the "forest lobbies" provide accommodations of a more elaborate character. The whole scheme of service within Glacier readily lends itself to the out-door idea follow the dictates of your fancy. Hotter plan to go this summer and enjoy a real vacntion. N. B. BUSH TICKET AGENT fice. Call or write for one. The Fair Association has revised the list and arc offering more money this year than ever before. Plan now to make an exhibit of Farm Products and Live Stock and wo will have a real County Fair," if everyone will do their part. HENRY R. FAUSCH " County Agricultural Agent. "Crocodllo Tears" Real Things. It Is sntd that crocodiles monn and slf,'h HIio a person In distress to at tract pooplo to the upot. Thoy even j-hed tears over their prey while do vourliiB It. JUST RECEIVED; A line of new FLY NETS, FLY COVERS, AUTO COVERS, and DUSTERS. Priced at a low margin of profit Fogel Bldg. J BU iLEl! Nebraska rmarrwm:.: uniiuii 1. 1 1 1 1 .. Vl lr Printing? Bring it to the Chief! n V . nsK-?7 ii. T TS .,',rnn 3J - -