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About The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 12, 1922)
thK i vfY ,, "jV v :' k '- if" 4 f.. r"v gY r v d f i. ii i M l"N ? -: Memorial Services A memorial service for Kev V, M. 11 ..- .. I.. .1.1 ... lit.. llMXtlttll. &.lt. iinrHT nni iinu in mi- ciriun -w - j vice hour In Hie Baptist chinch Sun day night. Uov, l u per tiled tit his homo tiPir Gainesville, Missouri at tin early hour on Tues lav morning of last week Tim uidm.berH of tViU olmroli, whcro ho hud been pus tor for soma time, w'shed to show their uppieidiilioii of the great worlc tliis old miuUtcr of tho Gospel hail done for thorn. Apptoprluto hymns were sung by tho ojiigregatlou. Rev. Newlund read tho scripture hisson tho Ulstp'tilm Deuo ins Hewitt it ml (Soldo gave it review o" his life iitnl work while In licit Cloud iiud vicinity. A groat miiny tributes WOro paid to his wttll spout life, hiH groat character, and his Influence over Bll with whom ho oumo In contact. A. B. Plerco nl.su spoko In luudltory forms of Itcv. Harpor as his nulitlihnr while hern. M ss Mary Christian snug that bcuis tirnl souk "f Carrlo Jacobs llonrl, "I'vo IJjtiu My Work", which wits vnrv up pioprlnto for tho neiMsloii Hov. I. W. IMson gave tho moiiiorliil sorinon from tho text. "With long ltr w 11 1 htisly htm, and shew him my ulvatiou". Ilrv Harper lived to a goo I oldag-, nlmost Hi. and his was truly a life ol serviuo -'Christ said, "Ho tliitt Is tlio gr. atest among yon let him he tint sir Tftut of all" AM till women's oluhs nf I5!ue HIP, liLMiled by the V. 0 T. U will coie l)t ale I lie soennd iinnlverHHty tif tho Prohibition Amendment on Monday, tb 10th. n the M. E. Church at Hluo 11(11 The program begins at 2 p m and omit i mios through an evening sus slon l.awyms from Hastings will ilibons law etifoini'inent: Ilov Now. hind of t'n-. oily will delivor an ad. dross oti "The Good that has already resu'led from (he Pith amendment" The Bid Hill sohools will have. I lie patriotic prt imili'i tlio head of tho American .it inn department and many other appropriate Mibjtiots will he ilU c issed in a tumid table The program, on I mi- iliedireotioii of Mis. S K. Log nil, arrtvid too late, fur pnblloatioti. Daily .Thought. Tho things which iinn-t he must be for t!ie lie- (iweii Meredith. J530mX(O3mO)MM "VAMPS" WHO MADE HISTORY By JAMES C. YOUNG. swjmcGsaoco (y Ly McClurd Newspaper Syndicate.) FAMOUS CASE OF BEAUTY." 'FATAL TjM naiuo Helen of Troy brings to imr mind's cyo a woman young .mil slender and or surpassing beauty. As a matter of tocord she had red lmlr and was forty yoanj old when she Marred on her great adventure. But all tho ancient world agreed that Helen was lis fhioet ornament. Al though she Itrod "3,009 years ago her fume still endures. When Helen s a little under twen ty, her father, Tyndareus of Argos, found his palace filled with almost every kinglet and princeling In Greece, demanding her hand. lie foresaw that no matter where her choice fell, thcru would bo future trouble. So ho bound all of them to an oath that they would protect the hearthstone of the favored sultor Helen made a strange selection, -Menelnus.. king of Sparta, a plodding, middle-aged num. lie tool: her off to his palace and after a whllo many things were said about her. Hut tho two lived In seeming contentment for twenty jeans. Then emtio Paris, son of Priam, from the great city of Troy. He was young and hundsotrie. It had been foretold Hint his city would be destroyed through him. Helen prompt ly "vamped" the M ranger guest. J They lied one night for his ship and hulled for Troy. Meticlnus mourned her us one distracted and called on Tyndareus to make tho nobility of Greece full'lll Its promise. Off they went, In 1.200 ships, to tho city of Troy, standing near the prcsent-dny Constantinople. The Trojan wnr lasted ten years without result. Helen had long slnco tired of Pnrls. Then ho was brought bnck dying from a night sortie. "Long ago, dear," ho said, "wo were glad wo who never more shall bo together. Will you kiss me, once? It Is ten weary years since you have smiled on me. Hut, Helen, say farewell with your old smile." She kissed him, ho died, ami soon afterward the wed his younger broth er, although all Troy reviled her for bringing upon It such n wnr. Ono day tho Greeks apparently sailed nwny and great was the rejoicing. But tlio besiegers loft behind their famous wooden horse, which the Trojans mis took as an offering to Neptune for n nafo passage homo. They brought tho horse Into tho city. That night n se cret door In tho Imrso wns opened and llelcn led thoso within to tho gates, which they unfastened to tho returned Greeks. An Indescrlbnhlo daughter followed and tho city was Helen 'went baclrto Sparta as tho wlf.ofjMenelaus. When ho died tho women rose iignlnst' her and she- fled to Hhodes, whoso queen had lost a son In tho Trojtiu wur. And sho bud poor Helen publicly hanged. RETAIN YOUR HEAD COVERING Writer Aeaerta That "Flu" Is Spread by Practice of Doffing the Hat In Salutation. Irllttcti7.it has alvn..s been widely mysterious In H.s operations. Long ago oiio of our warships was ofT tin; wc.il African coast, says London An swers, when n dense black mist ad vanced from tlio Hhorc and swept over the vessel. All the men on deck at the time wore Mi taken down with tlio "flu"; and a little Inter the remainder of the nicn and ollluri were allacked. The ship was at oim; ordered home, and, Hamuli tunny of tho cases worts compllcaloil with pneumonia mid bron chitis, none luckily, proved fatal. The patients were treated with cinchona tin rk mill ammonia, which was then a recognized formula for malarial fe vers. During tho dowi-.'ailii.,' epidemic of "flu," Hip Turks in Europe escaped be cause, It Is. J-itld, tlioj ii'ver roniovod tholr turbans. The nt'sillcnl faculty of Vienna oillelally declared that Inllti onzu wiih InriT'-ty due to the practice of dofllii!; hats in the streets. In sup port of this eontcplliii II was point ed nut that the M'ul majority of (he vlcttum were of I he mule sex. A traveler found Iniluonzn to be un usually severe In McNtao, where, as he remarked, there is so much hut dofllng. ,'It may be the case, however, that .such a lurxo proportion of males are attacked because of , tho constant drain on their vitality by tlio nature of their dally occupation. The writer was re cently Informed by a hlch medical au thority In London that tnlluena epi demics of Into years showed tho prin cipal sufferers to be male persons who had reached Hie most active years of their lives. LEARN FROM THE ELEPHANT Be Careful Where You Step and Take Ctcdit When Due, Is by No Msans Bad Advice. A circus mini says Unit mi elephant Is always direful where he stops. He g ics fonviitil one step at a time, and doesn't Iom- ids hold upon one place of security until another Is gained. If many of our t m Iiu'-s men had acipiiivil this elcpli nit philosophy and had followed II Ihcy wouldn't bo hang ing over financial precipices now. If ono goes ulioiil thinking that the world Is Idled with crooks and schem ers, the world It lllled with crooks nnd schemers. On the other hand, If one hcllcvcJ that the world Is tilled with fine neighborly, helpful, kindly folks, one llnds people of tint class In the great majority. It Isn't well to have too much hu mility. The man who gets Into the habit of refusing to take credit for the good work he does Is tpilte apt to ho surii'l-od when he discovers that people accept his denials as the tuith II Is much better to bo like the little clrl In the old story who. when she was asko.l, "Who made youV" replied, "God intide me that length," Indicating with her hands the ordinary size of a new-horn babe, "and I growed Hie rest myself." l-'orbes Magazine. Shopping in Ecuador. Tho common trade balance of Kcun dor Is a short stick carrying a sus pended pan at each end and held up by a coid around this center. The weight Is a rock about the size of a man's ht. and, while no two of them are ever the same lze, the merchant Is always prepared to pledge his honor Hint tho stone weighs a full and ex id pound. The price for a com uiodlty Is almost never llxed, and as the Kcuiiilorcun Is always prepared and expects to come down somewhat front his llrst price. It spenks worlds for his optimism that ho Invariably tries to got more. The bargaining does not actually begin until you have disregarded the llrst llgure and asked: "What is tho last price?" ("el ultlnfo preclioV"). In fact, I have been told vol untarlly, when pricing ponchos, that the price was 2T smres, but "I can ome down a little." What Cabbages Dislike. Sumo time ago, a number of scien tists, by means of a dovlce Invented by an Indian savant, were able to wntch a pimp growing, and study the healing of what In vegetable life cor responds lo the heart of an nnlmal. An average plant grows at the slow rale of one-millionth part of an Inch pir .second, yet this device so iniignl lies this that, thrown upon tlio .-crcen, the Increase Is easily aeon. Plant life does not differ greatly from w I; nil life. Place tho roots In bolllnrr w.i or. It .struggles and dies tho samu as the animal. A cahbago dislikes being boiled as greatly as would your put dog. Tho only difference is that the cabbage can not protest, but Mpilnns, wriggles and writhes. An Order for One Wife. An English traveler and author In northern Walgeiia became Interested In a Homo for Freed Slaves. Women and children were kept lu tho Insti tution until they could ho otherwise disposed of, which was generally by matrimony, In the cum of the women when the author acted as a marriage broker. Ho Miys: "A Maussa soldier would come to me with a nolo from Ids commander certifying him to be a man of good chut actor ami nblo to support a wife or another wife, as tho ens; might be, . "I then turned over a corner or, tho ' note , 'and i scribble :t 'Jo Lady Super intendent. Freed Slaves 'nouie'ie'a&u let bearer have one wife.'" - ..'t'.r . .- sW fmpDj jKg w !(, &' VMS?' mmmmmmmmjmUimmmihmmmmmm T Win r i 1, y-; ROY wM II jn v -X sJvxJU 1 0 Iln V kirca: S - . . . . r-trl ''it.mmmlA J7 f TM Kmrjt.r' "&&& ' , .: t: "'SS'i' m Camocns' Garden in Macao. (1'rcti.ircJ by Om .Vntlnnnl Ueocrnplitc So clciy, WnshlnBton. V. C.) Two hills .stretching to tho sea sn us to form a charming bay, and be tween them an ancient, half-Spanish, wholly southern city; Its roofs tufted with verdure, rising onu above anoth er on terraced slopes; its houses with their onco gay tints nil faded, basking In peaceful decrepitude In a sunshine llko that of June; tho town fast asleep: the harbor silting up; the rles such Is Macao, the Far Fast era outpost of the Portuguese traders of the Sixteenth century,' the Monte, Car lo of the Orient, and one of Portugal's few remaining possessions In Paclllc waters. Macao Is situated on the west side of tho Pearl river. Forty miles across Js Hongkong; eight v-e'ghl miles to the north lies Canton. M-at of the South China government, Macao was found ed In ir."7. Prior to 1SS7 there ap pears to have been no documentary, evidence of a formal cession of tills territory, the Portuguese claiming,' however, that tlfoy received It as ir reward for destroying the horde of Mongolian pirates that harried the southern coast of China ; and tho r?-j mains of the old barrier across the narrow nock of laud separating tjie. peninsular town from the rest of tho Island of Ileum: Chan, and ouce ininrd- ed by Chinese soldiers, gave color to ' the Portuguese claim. However, all doubts vet" laid to rest In 1SS7 when formal cession was made by China to tho Portuguese. Macao'G Rise and Fall. So marvelous was tho growth and prosperity of this Portuguese .settle ment In I's youth that It excited the envy of the early Dutch traders who In 10U2 at tempted lis conipicst. The spot where the Dutch leader was killed h a round shut from Monte fort, which wrote finis to that at tempt, Is now marked by a monument. Macao continue I to be a flourishing mart up to U-'"I. the British East In dia company a. id the Dutch company meanwhile ohliiMiug a foothold then'. The British free initio propaganda of tho "Forties" excited a demand for a free port at Macao, to which tho Por tuguese demurred. Gieat Britain then secured the Hongkong concession, made that a free port In 1815, and the decline of Macao as an entrepot dates from that year. Not only Is Macao- the site of the llrst European claim made on Chinese soil, hut It has cultural ties with Eu rope closer knit than the political re-, latlonshlps of controverted arens to tho north. It contains the oldest ruin In China that Is associated with Eu rope, and the tamarind and banyan shade the gardens where the Por tuguese Chauser. Ciiinoens, .composed half o the Luslads, celebrating tlio, discoveries of tho Portuguese explor ers who opened up for the West tho, secrets of tho East. It hi one of tho half-dozen of the world's great epics' Camocns' Place of Exile. walls crumbling; the Iron gratings, ,"1 "" ! hh i.m.i .. rusting; the pavements turning green; 'nost 1"Boiwih waters of the world the gables nodding llko old gray heads, rn I"'1 c BtniiilpfUnt. and added ir,i ,.r iict...,iM .,. ii... ..,... niii tn.' " river trip Is spiced with the rMc Luis do Camocns, the star of LusI-, western' church, nnd when the sum tiinlan poetry, bocamo enamored of mons of hunger loads him to a hotel Catharlna d'Atayada, lady-ln-honor to that has boon called the clcaucbt and Queen Catharlna of Portugal, which j most beautifully situated In the Or so enraged the king that ho banished lent, the contrast persists. Ho. may he. poet to Macao, about 1507, where ho renialned for five yours as admin istrator of the effects of deceased per sons a melancholy olllce for a poet and lover. Heturnlng In 1572, his ves sel was wrecked, his sniull savings were lost, but tho poem which has been translated Into every civilized language was saved, to an appreciative posterity. A monument to Camocns, marks tho spot In tho grotto whore he composed his noblo epic. Macao has snoozed peacefully away on lis Island In late years whllo con troversies have raged around the hand ful of other foreign holdings on tho Chinese coast. But recently the gov- eminent of Southern China Is reported to have demanded that there bo n "cleanup" In the city, a procedure, which If carried out would entii'l rce- ognltlon of tho Southern China govern ment as well as acceptance of Its right to nil? In what has lopg been consid ered Portuguese territory, Onco In Macao the traveler may re mnlit to contemplate tin out-of-lluV way shrine of European history. But " .-; j v.,,..!- rvr.-.-; " ' . .... .11 muMMJL irar . . . -'. ' "IWoV' fcS AY that is not why most, folk board t!r dally boat front Hongkong to go there .It Is a .summer resort for the Canton ese because of Its exposure to the Icoollng monsoons. In mid-summer. Opium .smugglers and gamblers, In re cent years, have loomed large amoiii 'its transients. Formerly the Chlnesj coolie t radio also hud u headquarters here. Within a century Its' waters may have warranted characterization of piratical attack." flcvenucc From Gambling. The Ideas of Henry George and oth er lax theorists have found a niggard soil In Macao, whose llscal policy Is simplicity Itself. Poo-choc and fan tan provide the ro.vnues of the city. 'It lias' been Mild that half the minted pieces-of the Fur T.nt llud their way 'sooner or Inter tn the gambling boards of Macao, anil the old lllx dollar, the Mexican pcmi, nnd': he American dime are clinked upon ;b- tables of the Jjeune.sse done, or of the 'rickshaw icoolles niufhnrhnr rliT-rnff of Ihu town, .while a daily How of men, women and .dollars crosses the cMtm: from Hong Jkong to Macao cod poi-v-. into the Iholls of the Hon do .logo gambling 'htroot. Faii-tan Is the favorite game, lut it '.Is nothing like the card game ot that ' nanle known lo Americans. Te Chi- nesu croupiers sll enthroned before n ouare niaikoil at tho corners wica ."tlio numbers 1. 2, ;'.. and I. The banker .reclines behind a grating, .smoking a long pipe. Overhead is a gallery run ning all around the room and forming a sort of colling, pierced only by a hole the size of the table. From this gallery 'fujji'bVK are made, and tho .stakcy pyV':.i"l,,''"deb let down a drawn up. ae'compank'il by the sou mil mil ,of drawling minstrelsy. The croupier lakes a handful of sniull coins nnd covers them with a reversed howl, whi'e money Is htld on one of the four numbers. When the betting lias' ceased ho lifts the bowl and separates the coins with Ids wand. Then ho coulrs them by fours, and the remainder. ir tin last four, if there be no remainder, represents Uhe winning itumhvr. Each hazard is 'a ono-to-thrci! wager, and the banks .pay on that basis, after deducting tho house percentage. A number of these licensed gnmbllng dens, graded accord lng lo the limit bf wager allowed, pay the revenues of the city of .Macao. Attractive to Travelers. Present day Macao Is not marred for the casual traveler by either its flair for fan-tan or Its thriving trade In opium. The latter is shipped away to wreak Its havoc; the former brings flie bizarre and the adventurous. The city of today Is ono of tho few Far Eastern coast towns which have not been caught In the resistless current of commercial progress, and for that reason It presents some Interesting studies to lovers of the plcturesipie. He yvho lands from u steamer l.s captivated by Its blend of Portuguese and Chinese people, by pagoda and order the fatuous Portuguese colaros with his yellow water chestnut pasties, and chohso either nltrn-o.ccIdental game dinners or pudding of coagulated duck's blood and sugar-preserved bam boo shoots. There aro but 4,000 Por tuguese resident there, but they rep resent a fqur-ccntury Impress that their nationality has made upon the total population f about 70,000. After dinner the visitor may stroll along the Praya Grande, both the Broadway and the Hlversldo drive or Macao. Having shopped utul slummed; ho finally will be led to catch the deeper romance of the city in tno grotto where tho poets havo carved lines of pralso to tho one-eyed soldlor poet who wroto tho glory of farthest West Europo on an Island of nearly, fortht TJat .China. H. C, t.. Pinches King Georae. Owing In Increased expenses, King fleorge has found It necessary during l ho past few years' to supplement the" 'ncoiiuvilm receives from the istato out af his prltui to resources; 4 i. tin (Coniluctril liy Nnttnnnt Council ot lh Boy .Scouts nf America.) LIFE SAVING MEDALS Medals as follows for heroic service In the suvhu of life have been awarded ' by the National court of honor, since Its last meeting In May HUM. GOLD MKDALS. Henry Hate, Troop 7. Vlneland. N. Y.; Henry A. Kfct'llnn, Trwp 1'-'. Wllmlncton, Del. SILVKH MKDAI.S.- Georue S. Al len, Troop 1. liridgeport. Pa.; Joseph Buckley, Troop -'. AlMou. Mass.; Lorcii C t'uderwood. Troop IP, Denver,' Colo.; Myles Turner, Troop 1, Lan caster, Ohio; Horace Vlnor. Troop lo, Denver, i'oIo.; t'lmrle- K. Carter, Troop 1, Tutwlller, MIsk'.; Morris C'ertnedy. Tnv.p 'J, Palnesvllle. Q. l'lo.wl Lamb. TrHp I. Westerly, It. I.; (rll Asl'wertb. Trip ,. Westerly, H. I.; Mlimirn L. Fa. Troop '. Lincoln, 111.; Edwin Hmoki. . Troop Ii. Brook lyn, X. Y.; Mlchml Lurick. Troop 1, Emporium, Pa.: F. Austin Culver, Troop 1, Prlns Amu;, Mil.; Camp Bonds, Troop I. Muskogee. Okla.; William Harrar. Tiooti 5. Charleston, W. Va.; .lolm A. Wilson, Troop r, ( Columbus, O.; T. E. Tnppan, Jr., Troop 1 1, Helena, Ark.. Eugene Krenkle, Troop 1. Nlnpira. Wis.; Charles H. Green. Troop 1, Edna Mills. Calif.; Hlchard A. Dee. Troop f0, Hartford, Conn.; Paul Wolfort, Troop 12, Warren, O.; Glen A. Case. Troop ill). Dos Moines, la.;, Percy A. Baker, Troop 1, Terry vllle, Conn.; Ferman Vlllnmll, Troop 1, Florida, N. Y'.; Hlchard Wolven. Troop 1. Harltan. N. J.: William Kramar, Troop 1, Old Bridge. N. .1.; Thomas II. Uohlnsnn, Troop !. Camden. X. J.; P.HONZF MEHAI.S. Uos Mace, Troop '', Pe Ell. Wash.: IreU Lee burger, Troop i'i',. Des Molina. -la.; Everett L. Chenej. Troop 1. Wilming ton. Vt.; Morgan Wllley, Troop 4.", Denver, Colo.; Lelnnd S. Waggoner. Troofi OP. Denver. Colo.; Clifford 1. Fingland, Troop t'..". Liverpool, X. Y.: Kenneth W. Dayton. Troop 1. X. Hnr perslield. X. Y. ; Wright A. Edmonson. Jr., Troop 1. Marlboro, Mn.-s. ; Herman Boehringer. Troop 100. Philadelphia. Pa.; Merllno Gerard. Troop 2i'. Berkeley, Cal.; William Palmer, Troop f, Kowonoe, 111.; Charles Priest, Troop 1. East Long Meadow. Mass.: James McGeorge. Troop 411. Sea Cliff. X. Y. BOY SCOUTS PLAY SANTA CLAUS Last year Akron (O.) scouts collect ed and distributed IKK) toys among the poo.- children of the city. This year they raised the number to 1,500. For weeks they canvassed tho city for old toys, dolls, sleiD. etc.. which they painted, repaired ami made fo look as good as now to delight the hearts of the kiddles on Christians morning. This kind of good turn Is being quite generally nractlccd throughout tho country. Other cities reporting sim ilar Santa Clans service on the part of scouts were Louisville, Ky.; Cin cinnati, O.. and Butte, Mont. The Cin cinnati council got out an attractive poster In the name of "Santa Clans Co., Jnc," bespeaking the public co operation In handing over old toys lo the boy scouts for repairing and re distribution under the auspices of the Associated Charities. The llutlo scouts established a regular toy hos pital at. their headquarters, to which the papers gave considerable publicity. SCOUTS' MAKE TRAFFIC SURVEY Tho city planning commission ot Grand Itaplds, Mich., recently Invited tho Boy Scouts of America to con duct a trafllc survey. This wus ac complished In so thorough and satis factory a manner Mint the boys won high praise not only from the city planning department but from all who saw tho boys at their work. Tho count wns checked up by men from tlio traffic safety council and was found In only ono Instance to have been Inaccurate. Hugh E. Lynch, secretary of the commission, In thank ing Scout Executive Walker for tho boys' cervices, said that he regretted that every boy could not have tho benefit of scout training, because ho could kco in watching tho boys at work how far-reaching tho Inlluenco of the. movement wan and what' a genuine contribution to citizenship training. EXPLORE UNCHARTED SWAMPS A group of scouts and scout offi cials, representatives of tho Notional Geographic society and nowspnper men from Atlnnta and other Georgia towns went on an exploring .expedi tion last November nto the hitherto uncharted Okefonokea swamps to Investigate Its wild. life. TO GIVE SERVICE MEDAL Tho board of trustees of the vlllago of Bronxvllle, N. Y., has voted to award a "Vlllago Medal" every year to the boy scout whose record at school, at home, at work (ff employed) and In scouting activities Indicates the ipost promise nnd achievement nnd ona'lp whoip tlio vlllago may Justly tuko l'eal prldo. The uiinio of the scout who Is so honored will be placed oi u permanent tablet lu the trustee's "lioni et the. 'village hull. assessment. Salt! mortage not to bo assessable as it continued tho mort- gage clause. On Motion the Sheriff was instruct 1 ctl to mako tlio repairs necessary in ' the County Jail. The following Koail Overseers 1921 reports were aicepted and epproved by Hoard. Win. Blobauttl, District Vk Jus. Doyle, G; Peter Kuehans, 3; Emil Sack, Si; John Hummclbcrg, 4; W. J. Oberheide, 2; E. H. Vauqs, 2V4; Itudolf Strcit, 11 4; H.- Hoppcn, 4; J. D. Buckles, 11; Henry Jahn, 12; L. A. Meyer, 12 Hi 5 B. B. Gocrig, 8; Henry Mttjarin, 8it Tho ofHcial bond of Geo. II. Ovcr ing as Highway Commissioner wns r.pprovcd by Board. ''he following claims were audited and allowed and County Clerk in stnt:tcd to draw warrants on tho proper funds in payment of same. GENERAL FUND Anna Stumphenhorst ? C0.00 A. D. llannoy Frank Starr Bladen Enterprise Geo. 11. Overing . Clar;. McMillan 180.55 108.14 10.75 15.70 22.50 12.15 14.40 41.74 213.00 C15.12 51.50 17.50 31.80 31.20 30.00 W. D. Edson Bed Cloud Chief Anna S'pnnoglc H. It. Fausch , -Frank Huffer ... T. J. Chaplin.,.. . Grant Shidlcr C. A. Waldo H. Stumphenhorst -... H .H. Crowell . . B11IDGE FUND Peter Kuehans u Peter Mcintosh ' POOR FARM FUND H. Ludlow ...... .. C. A. Waldo Geo. Barney Standard Oil Co Ind. Tele. Co.' ...: .. 44.90 12.00 5.00 19.25 3.00 10.03 5.10 No further buiincs". appearing the Board r.djouvn,'l -o nect on Febru ary 21, 1922 B. F. TEBllY. County Clerk. SCIinOIi BOABI) MET ON .MONDAY NIGHT A called session of the School Board was held al the Commercial Club rooms at 7:30 o'clock, on Monday evening, for the purpose of paying bills and listening to a special repert by Superintendent Gclwick. After the minutes of the December meeting were read 'ipd approved tho following bills were examined and allowed: Ii P. Wccsncr Co ...$ 7.18 Johnson & Graham 32.79 Malono & Gellatly 59.90 Tope Bros.. - 32.37 Morhart Bros . . ...... 8.15 Uni. of Nebr. - ....... 2.2S Uni. Pub. Co... ... 9.12 At the request of Supt. Gclwick the Board decided to adopt a new system of bookkeeping, and on mo tion decided not to have physiology taught in tho grades but in view of this it was decided to give oral in struction in this study in the grades. After listening to report by Super intendent Board adjourned to meet February 6, 1922. Notice of Final Report la the County Court of Webster County, Nebraska. In the mutter of tho chtate of Niels Jensen, Diiceasial. All persons interested in said estate, tire hereby untitled that the Adminls tiutor lias lilnd horeiti a final account nd report of hlh administration, nnd t petition for tho lloal bcttlomont of suoh account and report, and for a de cree of-distribation Jof tho rcs'.duo of said estate, and for tho assignment of toe. real estate belonging thereto, and a discharge from his trust, all of which eaid uititteifi have beon Set for aoHiing b"foro hnid couit on tho 21st lay of January, 11)22 at the hour of 10 o'clock, A. M , when all persons inter ested may appear and contost tho same. Dated this Uth day of Janunry 1922. A. D. Harmey (?oa!) County Judge. Seo The Unit" Sunday night, Jan. Iftth. at tho Auditorium. This is the neiiing performance or a big eight Might, program by the famous Chase Ustor Thoutro Co. An entire change of program every night. Admission en nod thirty cents. The Margin of Safety Is represented by the amount of insurance you carry. Don't lull yonrsolf into a fancied security. - Because tiro has novor touehod you it dobsn't follow that youVoiramuno Totlibrrow -no today, if' you have time and you better find time cnrfio to tho office aud wo'll writo n polt.'y on your houso, furniture, store or morchiindiso. -LATER MAY BE TOO LATE- C. TEEL fv.eila.blo Insurarico -B !5 .' f A' .Y lOA. f -lw.. . A.-VM '.ivi;,--IJn,aii,i, US w '4,M