. ' ipv fc"- ftgD CLQUfo, KlBlittCA, OREEf '-T?HWii krr , ,v ) '.I.1 t M.I . i n R ft B, sK"- ( Vf True Economy In buying groceries comes through selecting the better grades horn a store you know you can depend upori, , Wo pride ourselves on our sincere desire to have in stock at all times the best quality food stuffs at moderate prices. Satisfaction or your money back guarantee P. A. Wullbrandt Groceries and Queensware flMMffimt BflE3EQS27 Geo. Trine RED CLOUD We believe that it pays to give our customers service and satisfaction; that is why we want to sell you a H e CREAM SEPARATOR 1 L AVA L 4 I They can't fool llic ctcameryman. He knows which machine skims cleanest, costs the least to Icccp in Good working order, and lasts the longest. i He has to know. The wong scparatofmight easily mean a loss to him of several thousand dollars & year. That's why 98 of all ilia separators used in the world's creameries and milk plants arc Dc Locals, -sTcnTas v. :,..i . : ,, ., as it is to the crcnmeiyman that you make no mistake in your choice of a cream separator. ) Why not be guided by the t crearncryman's experience? Tlis termi on wlilchvra toll NEW Do Layal aro liberal. The machine will pujr for Ittclf out of lUownsavinm. Coma in and examine it teforeyoa bur. Wo'U be gla4 to talk it orer with you. Marr5i&ea THE RED CLOUD tHIEF Red Cloud, Nebraska t'UHLISIIED EVEKY THURSDAY Entered In the I'ostofllro nt lied ( loud, Nob as Hecond Class Matter A. B.McAKTilUH, Editor and Owner Advertising Rates Forolrfn, per column Inch I5c Loccvl. I0&I2 Farm Bureau Notes STATE I'AKM UUItEAU NOTES II. D. Lute, was re-elected secretary of tlio Nebraska Farm Bureau Feder ation at a Bpcclnl meeting of the board held last week. Mr. Lute comes from Pnxton, where he is a large ranch owner, nnd was selected secre tary of the Federation at the time or ganization work was startd in this state in July, 1920. Lute was also named as treasurer giving him the title of secretary-treasurer. Since becoming Identified with the Federa tion he has devoted all his time and efforts to its cause. He was a dele gate from this state to the two big Chicago conferences at which the plan of the U. S. Grain Growers was rati fied, nnd later when tho report of the Farmers' Live Stock marketing com mittee of Fifteen report was adopted He has also appenred before tho in terstate commerce commission in tho matter of freight rate reductions, and this week is nttending the agricul tural conference at Washington called by Secretary Wallace, taking the. place of President Norton who was prevented from attending by reason of a death in his family. On account of the sudden death of C. F. Floodman of Stromsburg, father-in-law of president J. N. Norton of the Nebraska Farm Bureau Feder ation, Mr. Norton did not attend the agricultural conference called at Washington by Secretary Wallace and President Harflmg. Norton was on his way when advised of the death of Mr. Floodman. Mr. Lute met him at tho train in Lincoln and proceeded to Washington, permitting Mr. Norton to return to his home. President Norton of the Nebraska Farm Bureau Federation has appoint ed a committee to study the matter of taxation during tho coming summer as wMl tu the matter of public c pciiditurcx. This committee will make a thorough s-tudy of those questions untainted by political in fluences or partisan prejudices. The committee is composed of Hon. II. L. Keofe of Walthill, C. Y. Thompson of West Foint; John P. Davis of Geneva; 'II, C. Fillcy of the Stato Agricultural college and F. M. Dcwcese. . of ' Ihe - " r, t..i t:'r i 1 i i "Opportunity is Yours" "The young man of today has just as good an opportunity for success in the live stock industry as his fath er before him. Now N the time for the young man with courage, nerve, and confidence to go into business. It takes nerve to buy on a declining market People are. like sheep. Witi great herds depicted and general dis couragement among tho older stock man, it may be hard for the young man to look ahead. But to the young man who has the courage to buy on this low market and who knows something of the tendencies of tho in dustry, the opportunities for the next few years arc going to be as they ever were." Every successful business man know that the time to buy is when prices arc low, or in periods of de pression. It is safer now to purchase live stock than it has been in tho past five or ton years. Buying when prices arc high like they were in 1919 invariably means a loss to tho pur chaser for it is well known that for every period of high prices there is a corresponding period of low prices. The man who recogni7cs this sells when prices are higli and buys when prices are low. We arc experiencing low prices now and it is the time for those desiring to enter the dairy business to purchase cattle. It seems to us they will have greater opportunities than their fathers because our population is in creasing and tho opportunity for opening up new lands for productive purposes is small compared to what it was fifty or more years ago. Our increased acreage will now come by reclaiming lands and applying better methods of farming to the acres al ready under cultivation. It must bo remembered thnt fifty years ago the great prairies of the northwest were undeveloped; there is no such section to be opened up to the present gen eration. HENRY It. FAUSCII County Agricultural Agent. A Letter To Make Good Must impress the person who recieves it with its importance, whether the correspondence be of a business or personal nature. The mails arc flooded with cheap circular letters and the average busy man of to-day gives his mail tho "once over" and passes most of it to the waste basket. A letter to domand attention in these busy times must be distinctive. Hammermill Ripple Bond Printed correctly makes the nicest letter head you can possibly obtain. The hard smooth surface of this paper renders it particularly adaptable to high class artistic printing and the ripple finish places it in a class by itself for attaractivc appearance. The "crisp cackle" you notice in opening a letter written on Hammermill Ripple immediately suggests taste and progrcssiveness on the part of the sender. It Costs No More Than Other Paper Come in and let us show you samples of work-done on this stock and figure with you on your next job. The Red Cloud Chief WWiWA" -"' .VAW.VMVWlrt M rs. Ed. Amack I. T. Amack Amack tk Amack UNDERTAKING i HARNESS and SADDLERY Back to Pre-War Prices Come in and see foryourself our exceptional values. Harness and leather goods of all kinds oiled and repaired Fogel ft fa FDarSTf! E Red Cloud Bldg. $ a ssmauaMisazciari Wb ou a elegit Nebraska u. s. I lWJWAVAV.VV.V.rbV BOTH PHONES RED CLOUD, NEB I. T. AMACK-PHONE 1ND. 76M mrarKmntmK BE PRACTICAL The young man in love often goes into raptures about "the blue of the sea in her eyes and the golden haze of autumn in her hair," but remember this, young man SHE'LL EAT just the same as any other healthy girl. Therefore, got down to practical affairs. Save your money, deposit it in a good reliable bank like ours and get ready to own a home for you and the girl and to provide the three square meals a day that you will both need as long as you live. You know when poverty comes in at tflic door, love sometimes flics out at the window. THE WEBSTER COUNTY BANK Edward Florence, Prc'dcnt Red Cloud, Nob, S. R. Flor&oce, Csiliier Capital and Surplus ftjf,ooooo lieportti (luaranttta by (lie Dcpotitort Guaranty Fumi oflht State oA'tbraila HMiiaraiira Dr.R. V. Nicholson DENTIST Jfcd Cloud Nebraska THE HMHES WAY Cleaners-Dyers-Tailors WE CLEAN HATS Have your envelopes and letter printed on HAMMERMILL Farm Bureau Federation legal depart ment, Kccfc and Dcwcese arc both farmers and lawyers and are compe tent to view tux matters from every angle. II. C. Filly is an authority on tax matters and has been a contribu- or of nrticlcs on tax questions to leading publications. Thompson and Davis are among Nebraska's most successful farmers and arc men big and broad enough to study these questions from unbiased standpoints. "Any recommendations made by this committee," said Nebraska Farm Bureau Federation headquarters, "will be made from the standpoint of doing the most people Ihe most good and not with the idea that the political for tunes of any particular class of men or parties will bo advanced or defend ed." The executive committee of the Ne braska Farm Bureau Federation at a special meeting held in tho Lincoln office January 19, 'adopted tho work ing program of the federation for tho year of 1022. In addition to the appointment of the committee named to study tax questions and the ques tion of expenditures, the Bureau will assist in the organization and promo tion of cooperative marketing and co operative industries; will continue its practice of entering appearances be fore rate making bodies in hearings affecting freight and telephone rates and kindred affairs, take referendum votes among the members on pend ing lgihlation as well as proposed legislation; ptudy plans for a state in come tax; urge a constitutional amendment for the classification of tangible property, and get behind leg islation looking to a more adequate rural credit system. Tho board al?o went on record as favoring a re striction of tho present road building program. January Weather Report Tcmporutiire: Mean 21 deg., maxi mum 08 cleg, on 9th, minimum G below zero on 10th. Prcclpltntiou 0.23 inches, total snow fall 1.2 inches. Number of days Clear 11, partly cloudy 1, cloudy 13. Datos of Hall .1th, lcct t-29-ni, lightning 1th Prevailing wind N W lOdays. Rainbow -1th, pnrhnlla l8tht 0 S. Ludlow, Observer" CHAIN GROWERS TO .MEET NEXT MONTH Eight thousand members of the U. S. G.-uin Grower, Inc., in Nebraska will meet at 227 ! hipping points on February 7lh to elect delegates to tix congivwonal d'htrict convnlioub to bo held February 20, 21, 23, and 21, according to C. 11. Gu.-tnfson of Lin coln, national pre .Ident of tho farm ers' company. All farmers who be came members of the organization prior to January 18th will have a vote in the local units and will he qualiiied to terve as congressional or national delegates. The 14 delegates from congression al district's two and three, represent ing ccch of the shipping points in these sections, will meet at Omaha, February 20; the 117 delegates from districts one and four at Lincoln, February 21; the 42 delegates from district five at Oxford, February 2!5 and 21 the delegates from the sixth district at Sidney, February 21. The number of members to be represented at the Omaha meeting has been an nounced as 2,000; at Lincoln, 4,000; at Oxford, 1,800; and at Sidney, 700. National delegates meeting in Chi cago for the firnt annual convention beginning March 21, will elect a new board of directors and transact such other business as .lmll be brought bo fore thc.ni. The convention consti tutes the annual members meeting and is designated in tho by-laws a "the supreme tribunal of the avocation." Each local voting, unit, consi ,ting of tho members at uny one shipping point, will elect a del gate to the con grtitional ditritt conention who will be empowered to cast one vote foi" each of the members he repre sents. Tho delegates elected to the national convention by each congres sional district likewise will cast one vote in the national meeting for each member in his congressional districts. An elevator contract has been sign ed with the board of directors at Silver Creek, home of the veteran Charles Wooster, avowed opponent of the U S. Grain Growers. The con tract was executed by J. H. Ituif, president, nnd George F. Buclita, secretary, of tho cooperative elevator. All members of tho Silver Creek board present at the meeting signed grower contracts with the farmers company. 3 C ( r cMa cxaj wreaiswsaBMKgagaw : "i We Sell ?4 O Niggerhead Maitland And Routt County Lump D rl We sell for cash that's why we sell cheaper. FARMERS ELEVATOR Ud 3 C Sn w -TUrr-fJ-.L.J..n-;-.tr.-r-..-., ,.,., ,--. .j... .. .,... n,fl1, ni wl aBrWrnrr.n,.ttlnBrHrrr.ft,, Begin the Mew Year by teseiibing For The Tl& W WHr,iil& 4 1? 1FV i?n.Li-nmfLii Nebraska's Big Newspaper The Omaha Paper With THE LARGEST CIRCULATION Every home should receive a daily paper. Keep abreast with the times. Subscribe now for the BIG Paper The World-Herald. Subscribe for the World-Herald at the Chief Office S Appointed County Chairman It is proposed to raise- by voluntary contribution, n milliou dollars or more This fund will bo known as tho Woodrow Wilson Foundation, ns n tri bute to Woodrow Wilson, twieo Presi dent of the United Sttiles, nnd tho World's outstanding leader for Penco through Justice and Liberal I'oIIcIoh. Tho income from this fund, invested by Trustees, will bo nunnlod thrcuu.li the ytars to come fcr meritorious ser vice rendered to Democracy, Public Welfare, Liberal Thought or Penco through Justtco thereby accomplish lag tho two. fold purpose of paving n tribute to a great American while ho Is living nnd cm rying Into tho future tho moasurcs he stressed whllu In olllcc. All expenses of tho campaign arc cared for by private subscription' 13 very dollar subscribed goefi to tho fund. S.-ud jour contributions In tiny a Mount you enn nrfiirri U) W L. Wt o- irnmn Bed Cloud tor Wub&tor Printing? Bring it to the Chief Dr.W.H.McBride DENTIST OVEtt STATE BANK Red Cloud flejbraska Yes, Garber's Is The Place! To Buy Wall Paper, Paint?, And Electrical Supplies. The best place for Picture The Margin of Safety Is represented by tho amount of insurance you enrry. Don't lull.yourself Into a fancied security. Because fire has nover touched you it doosn't follow that you're Immune Tomorrow -no today, if you have time and you better And timo conioUo tho office and we'll write a policy on yonr honso, furniture, store or morchandiso. -LATER MAY BE TOO LATE- C. TEEL R.eiloLblo Insurance We do Job Printing Is;; Framing. tVr-.iv ft fa -.4.4,-.!(.. l J.. 1 "W gria-Jtr- ft I