The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923, June 01, 1922, Image 3
RED OLOUD, NEBRASKA, CHIEF ft I k ? Your Skin is So Fragrant and Smooth This favorite Toilet Soap of three generations of lovely women Is ( pure iikc tne rain water you use in caring for your complexion. Mall this for free trial cake of COLGATE'S Cashmere Bouquet Soap Luxurious Lasting Rcfintd r I I .J CowAn6iCo.,Dpt. W.U. I 199 Fulton St.. New Yotk City I Flrate tend mc a free (ample of Colgate' I Qiihmctt Bouquet Soap, ftagtanl and purt. I Nam . j Street or R. D ...... Ciry State I TO EXCHANGE WHAT YOU WANT l'Olt WHAT VOU DON'T WANT It you are tired of farm drudgery and want to turn your land boldlnus lor better tban casli, let me give you a Chicago Incoin paying property that will pay you 10 nn the Investment, rain or shine, without work on your part. I have clear bullilmga and bulldlnga with valuable equities, the owner nf which have genulan requirements (or farms. Let me solve the problem ot a deal tor you. C. A. Moore. Ill N. Denrlmrn 8t.. Chlcngo, III. W. N. U., LINCOLN, NO. 21-1922. The Safest Plan. "How did the crltulnnl evade the de tective so Ions?" "Why, he rented n room In the same flat with him." Pity the mini who can see nothing more In a heautlful sunset than its resemhlance to a fried egg. TANLAC KEEPS HIM FIT, SAYS McGRAW Has Used It for Years With Splendid Results Flno for Run Down Condition. "For four years Tnnlac has kept me In the nlnk of condition ns I tnke a few doses of It every time I feel a little r.un down and it nlways builds me up ugnln," said Win. A. McOraw, 207 Beach Place, Tampa, Flu. "I began taking Tanlnc first about four years ngo when I was In a very bad state of health and had been run down for several years. I was always taking laxatives, too, but I believe they did me moro harm than good. "Tanlnc made mo feel like n brand new man In a very short time and I have never hnd a return of any of my old troubles. The reason of this I am firmly convinced Is that I always have Tanlnc hnndy and tnke a few doses every time I feel a bit under the wcathor." Tanlnc is sold by all good druggists. Tough. Two negroeB were lying behind n packing case on the docks at Brest taking the lubor out of the nlleged labor battalion. Said one boastfully: "Boy, Ah comes f utn n tough breed. My olo mnn done cut his nails wlf n ns an' brash his teof wlf a filo." "Huh, ain't so tpugh. Mali ole man am n plumber, an' twice n week 1ms done shave hlsself wlf n blow torch." American Legion Weekly. Cutieura Soothes Baby Rashes That Itch and burn, by hot baths of Cutieura Soap followed by gentle anointings of Cutlcnra Ointment Nothing better, purer, swoeter, espe cially If n little of tho fragrant Ctrtl enro Talcum is dusted on nt tho fin. Ish. 25c ench. Advertisement. Help yourself by making a line art of your work. The housewife smiles with sntlsfac tlon as she looks at the basket of clenr, white clothes and thanks Bed Crows Bnll Blue. At nil grocers. Ad vertisement. A bank teller always has something of interest on hand. f Mmm k m. yw "Xyv r f "mrs mm M m E2I JTMMJmi j spirm WARNING! Say "Bayer" when you buy Aspirin". Unless you see the name "Bayer" on tablets, you are not getting genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians over 22 years and proved safe by millions for Headache Colds Rheumatism Toothache Neuralgia' Neuritis Earache Lumbago Pain, Pain Accept only "Bayer" package which contains proper directions. Handy "Bayer" boxes of 12 tablets Also bottles of 24 and 100 Druggists. jUptrln U the trado mark of Barer Manntactaro of Moooicetlcacldnter of BallcjUcadS cigarettes 75- MM WJf W ft 1 U I l1! II mT5ir 1 1A I MMML nj They are Good! Buy this Cigarette and Save Money ThPt-ft's a man in this town who sells KEY OVERALLS. Ask him to show you a suit, Extra quality. Botter workmanship. Costs less per day to wear mem. nuy mem. u iney don't give lull eausiacuon, tax mem oactc ann get your money bade or a new pair ireoi , TIE HcIET MF8. CO.. ikan.luui City. Ho. , UNION MADI GUARANTEED Child Training at Home ART TRAINING FOR LITTLE CHILDREN By C LOUISE SCHAFFNER, The National Kindergarten and Ele mentary College, Chicago. WALTER SCOTT PEItltY, director of the School of Fine and Ap plied Arts, Pratt Institute, Brooklyn, N. Y., says : "Drawing is tho only uni versal lunguage used by men of all ages and nationalities." If teachers and parents realized that this definition of drawing is literally true, more time and attention would he given to the subject at school nnd nt home. It would not be considered a "frill" nor nn "extra" but would ho classed as an essential, along with rending, writing and arithmetic. AJ1 children, especially the very lit tle folks, wlw have not mastered the 6poken language well enough to ex press themselves clearly, naturally enjoy making pictures to show what they have In mind. They should be given every opportunity to do this. Tho dljlleulty in most homes, tho rich ns weli ns tho poor, is that no atten tion Is pnld to this pnrt of the chil dren's development, nnd no suitable material Is given them. Usually the only medium they find with which to make a picture is n lead pencil. They use it eagwly nnd with enthusiasm, partly because of their natural desire to draw und part ly because they see the older mem bers of the family UhhiR It o write with. The only thing that they can do with the pencil is to mnkc lines. Consequently thoy forrr the habit of making crude drawings In outline which do not in the least resemble the objects they see around them, nor tho mentul picture they have formed of them. By the time they are old enough to go to kindergarten or first grade, the habit of drawing In line and of letting tho lino stand for tho thing they would like to express lnn better way If they could, has become so fixed that It has been mistaken, I believe, by many teachers, for a nntural ten dency. Material to Make Forms. I nm convinced that, If children were given material with which they could make forms, ns they renlly see them, they would never be tempted to HOW SHALL WE SPEND OUR MONEY? While n vast amount of mon ey Is being spent upon our crim inal classes, we are permitting another crop of criminals to come right along and take their places, by neglecting to fur nish the moral and social train ing which the kindergarten pro vides at tho most formative age. If we could only get one lap abend, and spend our money upon child training Instead of upon the vicious, the idle, and the shiftless! Like Alice In Wonderlnnd, we seem to bo "running like mnd" In order to keep In the same placet draw in outlines. The best nnd most responsive mediums for the smallest children are clay und sand. With these they enn lenrn to mnkc objects ns they actually exist, with three di mensions. They can quickly and eas ily express their ldens and carry out In n realistic way tho pictures of their Imagination. When they are old enough to under stand that a picture Is merely the flat representation of the soJId forms, they should be given soft materials that will niuko surfaces or musses quickly, such us chalk (not crayola), char coal, and water color paints. Of course these will be somewhat "mes sy" for them to handle, and the moth ers nnd teachers who care moro nbout clean hands nnd clothes than they do about the children' development, will substitute the lead pencil and wax crayons, or crayola. In most homes, nnd unfortunately In some kindergartens nnd prlmnry grades, most of the art work which In volves the use of scissors nnd paints, consists in cutting out and coloring pictures from magazines or pictures outlined from patterns. This has little vnlue as art training except to glvo eklll In tho handling of tho scissors and the brush. It is good as far as- it goes. Will Develop Child's Ideas. It Is far more educational, how over, and will develop the child's Idea of form to a much greater degree, to encourage him to cut out his own forms, without any patterns, just as he makes his own drawings when al lowed to express himself freely as an Individual. Tearing out from paper forms In which he Is Interested, us ing the thumb and forefinger of each hand held close together .like two pairs of nippers Is also an excellent way for a child to work out his own Idea of form. To bo of real vnlue, most of tho art efforts of children should be the re sults of their own thinking and see ing, just as their talking efforts should express their own Ideas and not con sist merely In the repetition of the words of those around them. TO MAKE CITIZENS A state can be no better than the citizens of which It Is coin posed. Our labor now Is not to mold states, but make citizens. John Morley. let Contents ISPluid Praoti Children Cry For 1 rnnnr...1 rim GENT. ATiArAliVPKn.imtrOflfarAS' s:i .i tarttturwi bvRcGnta- llntWstomnnduWsrf TfcrTVmoUniiDKJcsto1 W n,.rfitnpfffldRcStContolas CTl J-""""" ,- LtiAnftfl I Mineral. NotNaHot I jKtgfoumcsnexzmasK JmnM Stnatf toaWiwlrwr a i. inrui Remedy tor steSffiSSET. LossofSleep rcstrtifogihefcrrcw!! ftCirw1cSijnntorBrt ZM was Jhx GnrrATmGouMKr; "VQKKi new: Special Care of Baby. That Baby should have a bed of its own all are agreed. Yet t is more reasonable for an infant to sleep with grown-ups than to uso a man's medicine in an attempt to regulate tho delicate organism of that same infant. Either practice is to bo shunned, neither would be tolerated by specialists in children's diseases. Your Physician will tell you that Baby's medicine must bo prepared with even greater care than Baby's food. A Baby's stomach when in good health is too often disarranged by improper food. Could you for a moment, then, think of giving to your ailing child anything but a medicine especially prepared for Infants and Children ? Don't be deceived. Make a mental note of this: It is important, Mothers, that you should remember that to function well, the digestive organs of your Baby must receive special care. No Baby is so abnormal that the desired results may be had from the use of medicines primarily prepared for grown-ups. MOTHERS SHOULD READ THE BOOKLET THAT IS AROUND EVERY BOTTLE OF FLETCHER'S CASTORIA GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears tho Signature of Exact Copy of Wrapper. Lf TM CIHTAUR COMPANY. NIW YORK CITY. PUTNAM FADELESS DYES O-So-Eaay to Use Colors 811k, Wool, Cotton All At Tha 8amo Tim. 10c per WHY PAY , v MORE FOR Package ANY DYE? HAD HIGH SENSE OF HONOR Mark Twain Punctilious to a Decree, In Order to Satisfy Hlo "Presby- tcriao Conscience." Mark Twain, It Is well known, In bored In hh older years to repay tho debuj Incurred by his publisher; but probably a great many iiersons, baslug tlelr opinions on Twain's own Jests, euppo-ted him to be rather happy-go-lucltj In smaller affairs. But he wiib not, shows Gamaliel Bradford In his sketch of Twain in "American Por traits." Tho most obvious Instance of his rectitude, says Mr. Bradford, are in regard to money. In spite of his dreams nnd speculative vagaries, he was punctiliously scrupulous In financial relations, his strictness cul minating In the vnst effort of pa tience and self-denial necessary to pay off tho debt of honor which fell upon him In his later years. But the nlce ness of his conscience wns not limited to broad obligations of this kind. "MJno was a trained Presbyterian conscience," Twain says, "and know but tho oue duty to hunt nnd harry its slave upon all pretexts and all occasions. I don't wish even to seem to do nnythlng which can Invito sus picion," he snld, as to a mutter so trivial as taking ndvnntnge In a game. The ability to do without In the present, provides for comfort In the future. Snowy linens are tho pride of every housewife Keep them in thnt condi tion by using Red Cross Ball Blue In your laundry. At all grocers. Adver tisement. Insanity Laid to Microbes. After more than twenty yenrs' work among lunatics an Edinburgh doctor has como to the conclusion that many forms of Insanity are caused by the action of microbes. Remarkable Indeed. "You see that stout old chap In the corner?" asked Jones. "Yes. What about him?" replied Smith. v "lie's a wonderful acrobat." "Go on I lie looks like a stock brok er." "So he Is." "But I thought you said he was an acrobat." "He's both. I asked him yesterday whether he was busy, and ho said: Aly boy, I Just hang on from dny to day, keeping my noso abovo water by the skin of my teeth." HAD ANOTHER THINK COMING Bill Was Sadly Mistaken Concerning the Proper Classification of Applo His Mates Enjoyed. Bill Synics drew a large, pink np pie from tho side pocket of his coat nnd prepared to attack It, when an other of his workmates reached over and took the apple, saying: "What" kind of apple Is that, Bill Cox's Oranuc Pippin?" Then, as ha munched, ho said: "No, It hain't 1" Another loafer reached for the ap ple, saying: "Cox's Ornngo Pippin, my happy aunt I Don't yer know n Benuty of Kent when yer sees it? Lcmmo tnsto it. No, 'Han't that!" Stllh another grimy paw reachod out and took the fruit, deploring: "You fellows act us If you'd never seen apples before 1 That hain't no Benuty of Kent, It's n Dutch Mlgnon. No, 'taint I" as ho took the lust hlto of It "What was that apple, Bill?" "I thought," replied Bill Badly, "that applo was my lunch I" London An swerB. Expert Advice. Tho Brlde-I'm In nn uwful mess here, mother. I simply can't get my expense uccount to balance. Mother It's quite shtiplc, my dear. Deduct the Items yon can remember from tho amount you had to begin with nnd cull tho difference sundries. Life. His Motive. "So you ore trying to get up In your rich uncle's estimation." "Yes, I want to get down In his will." Golden Guineas Hatched. Grace's futher keeps u flock ot flno guineas on his Bartholomew county furm, but Gruce, u pupil in Columbus high school, was ready to turn over all the blue ribbons for guinea raising to Silas Marncr. She made tho ac quaintance of "Tho Weaver of Rave loe" In her English class and she read with wonder the story of his golden guineas, for all of her father's guineas were of a dull gray color. Then test time came nnd Grace, describing tho inker's Joy with his gold pieces, wrote bravely: "Thnt morning Silas was huppy for he had hatched u new brood of golden guineas to add to his flock." Indianapolis News, The Greatest Dam. Tho world's greatest dam, the Senar, Is being rushed to completion on tho Bluo Nile river, 2,000 miles south of Khartum, Afrlcn, where Lord Kitchen er became famous. This dnra will bring under irrigated cultivation fl.OOOOO acres of farmlnc land now Idle. It will run a Hwurm of factories, mightier than tho pyramids. Ancient way of conquering a terri tory was to enslave the Inhabitants. Modern man's great conquests harness naturo'H forces and free human labor. Any pretty womnn's tears tiro worts, their salt. Public opinion, being human, Is fro. quently wrong. - fr , j "jrrBSSSSSMFn fc tJ - L i i 1 ' ' . j t 51 KiasaaBBBacssssaaSkSaBBvMMvvBsaaBaaBBaaBaaaBisKrtna.M.BnrfBkMMtf.ABKM.B.HMR.H IB When Hungry Little Muscles Say, "Please Help Me'9 JPlVL i nj 'at TRsm HaV1 EaTaOflafcffllBflPBlBBBBBBi DID you ever stop to think who it really is that's talking, when childish voices raise a clamor, "Mother, I'm hungry?" It's really muscles and bones and nerves and cells worn in the stress and strain of play that are calling for rebuilding material. What kind of an answer? The right thing, or just anything? It makes a big difference. Grape -Nuts, so deliciously crisp and appetizing to taste, and so quick and convenient to serve, is a splendid food for rebuilding young bodies. All the won derful nutriment put in wheat and barley by Nature, includ ing the vital mineral elements, is there and Grape -Nuts digests easily, quickly and com pletely. Served with cream or milk, Grape-Nuts is exceptionally nourishing. "That's splendid!" says ap petite. "That's just the needl" say the hungry muscles, nerves and bones. Ready to serve right from the package always crisp and fresh. A favorite dish with all the family. Sold by grocers. Grape-Nuts the Body Builder "There's a Reason" Made by Postum Cereal Company, Inc., Battle Creek, Mich.