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The White Cloud Tribune from White Cloud, Kansas • 1

The White Cloud Tribune from White Cloud, Kansas • 1

Location:
White Cloud, Kansas
Issue Date:
Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

9 ii ttn NO. 41 WHITE CLOUD, KANSAS, THURSDAY, April. 7, 1921 VOL. II I am the Farmer's Wife. I am the home maker for all Store And Post Office Robbed The Tilden Bros, Store was Salary Cut For Teachers Teachers who have not had SDecial training probably will broken into and robbed last night America.

Upon me depends not only all human beings, but many animals. have to accept reduced salaries presumably sometime after 12 o'clock. The post office is also in the store and the money of next year, according to Carl W. I arise while it is yet dark and make the coffee and fry the potatoes, without which man be- both the store and the post office was in a safe. The robbery was Army Harness Sold To Farmers In two weeks Kansas State Farm Bureau has sold more than 300 sets of suplus Government harness to farm bueau members in Kansas, according to R.

W. Graham, assistance secretary, who is handling the harness project for the state bureau. Sets of the harness have been sold through" about 50 of the 56 county farm bureau in the state, Mr. Graham says. One county farm bueau has sold more than 5o sets of the harness.

A num- cometh a menace to his neighbor Salser, who has charge of the teacher appointment bureau of the Kansas State Normal School at Emporia. Mr. Salser predicts lower salaries for mal school teachers, but he believes that the well trained teachers' will be able discovered this morning when Mr Tilden opened the store and I darn hose by the lamplight; bund the placed all torn up. A I patch overalls for naked ones; I have been known to milk the window was broken, where the kine and feed the swine when theives had evidently broken in and goods were scattered all over the hired man was spending his substance and the week end in the bright lights. the floor.

The safe was found down the road about 300 yards to get salaries as high or higher than they are. getting this year. "The demand for skilled teachers is' always far greater than the supply," Mr. Salser said, "and the salary problem is in the last analysis a problem of train hpr of farmers in counties not My spiritual needs cause me where the thieves had taken it having bureau have bought the harness through county agents in adjoining counties. Th nrice ofithe harness is $48.

to their car and drug it, and had then pried it open, and taken the money, About $100 was in annoyance. While other folks inhale sleep on a peaceful Sunday morning it is my lot to skin a chicken or peel a rabbit for the ing and efficiency. The same is the safe, $50 of which belonged true in any trade, profession, or forthcoming meal; to stoke a to the store, $50 in stamps and cash belonging to the post office. business. There is always room for the really efficient' with good sulky range; to wash my children's sticky faces; to rescue the pay for their services." Besides this between 25 and 30 Ford tires, dry goods, groceries, biled shirt from the remote bu Mr.

Salser estimates that the ect, were taken frem the store and amounting to $300 at least, salaries of teachers in the rual schools will range from $90 to reau drawer; to race with the clock and at the last moment evict the spotted heifer from the garden. Mr. Tilden said this morning $125 in the grades $100 to $150, in the Junior High $120 to $160, Upon discovery of the robberey, The Home Town Paper. The magazine from here and there That's full of snappy tales, The City News with flagrant yarns Of men who fill our jails, With headlines bold, sensational, Of some new holdup caper-Each has its place, but first of all Give me the Home Town Paper. To me it means a whole lot more Than just the weekly news, Or comments on the nation's plight, Or editorial views The joys and sorrows of the folks I know and love are there, folks who know and love me, Those experiences I share.

The calling home of some dear friend, Or where the stork has been The doings of the people I am interested in, These are the things which build for me My little world each day; 'Cause folks at home means more to me Than facts from far away.v I read with pride of some home boy. Who's out to make his name And now is clinbing step by step The stairs that leads to fame. It pleases me to read about Improvements that are made And how each merchant does his best To build up local trade. The magazines can tell us All about the Isle Yap, But our home paper strives to keep Our village on the map So when the worth while things of life Are being handed out The Home Town Paper first of all I want to have about. In summer kith and kin de he immediately notified sheriff in the Senior High $150 to $200 scend upbd pie to spend summer with principals and superintend rivett, and the postal authorit vacations and guests bear down ents from $18QP up.

upon me with trunks, canaries ies at Washington D. C. and Kansas City. The tracks made by the car indicated that it was a Arrested for Stealing Chickens. Clarenoe Keller was arrested arge machine." It is thought Saturdry on complaint of Ed that the machine carrying the robbers and their loot passed through here early this morning Taylor, charged with stealing chickens from the Taylor farm.

headed for St. Joseph. Chief, 75, plus express and freight charges. A discount of $8 is returned to each purchaser, Check for must accompany all orders for harness, Mr. Graham says.

After the order has been sent to'the distributors a refund of $8 is made to the state bureau. This $8 is then sent back to the purchaser of the harness by the state farm bueau. Kansas Grain To Near East. Kansas farmers, have answered the call, for food for the starving peoples of the Near East, very farmers' organization in the state is behind the movement which will raise a hundred car loads of grain tolbe sent by the farmers of the Sunflowers state to the starving people in Armenia and other countries. The list of organizations backing the movement are the Fasm-ers' Union of Kansas, Kansas State Farm Bureau.

Farmers' Equity Union, Farmers' Co-operative Grain Dealers Association, National Wheat Growers' Association, the Kansas Grange, Kansas Grain Dealers' Associa-tion, and the Kansas State Board of Agriculture, Shell corn, wheat, milo maize, and kafir corn will be accepted. The elevators of the state have asreed to receive and load the The Ed Taylor family lives in town during the winter to send. and poodles. In winter the mud surrounds my habitat like the sea; sleet snips my wires telephone and clothes frost nips my nose and wind in the attic causes me to grow psychic. I am the farmer's wife and without me famine would stalk the land, for without me the farmer would stalk away from the farm.

Anne Collins. Burglar Stole Girl's Hair When she went te bed on Thurs the children to school. When spring comes they move back to the country to farm. Ihurs-day of last week they moved day night of last week Miss Helen Ptomey, 12-year old daughter of their chickens. That night they Mr, and Mrs.

Frank Ptomey of near Sparks, was possessed of a disappeared; we understand 32 in number. Saturday on com wealth of luxuriant and beauti plaint of Mr, "Clarence ful brown hair. She wakened in Keller was arrested in Hiawatha the morning to find her hair had A Woman Doctor in poverty. French newspapers are making terrible revelations of the poverty in which many of the greatest Frence savants are by sheriff Miller and placed in been clipped close to her head while she slept. Her father in jail.

Roy Asbury was duputized to go after him. He gave bond forms the Times that there is no to appear in Judge Green's court iouna to live. The hrst woman doctor to practice medicine in trace of the person who perpetrated the outrage, although he France, Mme. Madaline Bres, and his preliminary hearing was set for Thursday of this week. His father, Chas.

Keller went on his bond. believes the person who cut off the hair hoped to sell it, The has just been discovered by the newspapers living in extreme father is inclined to believe his poverty and completely blind daughter was chloroformed, al We heard a story the other day corn free of charge; the railways She is 82 years old. Mme. Bres was a poor mans child, and when a child was employed in the hos about an edftor, having to be carried home on a stretcher as the result of having received a kind pital conducted by the Sisters of Charity at Nimes. When she word over something he had City Election Everything moved off very have agreed to ship it free; the railwry brotherhood have agreed to donate theirtime in transporting the grain; and arrangements have been for ocean tion'with out charge againstthe rrain.

Final Warning The state laws and city ordm though no odor of the drug could be detected after Helen awoke. It would seem that it would be easier, simpler, safer and more profitable to steal an auto or many other things than a head of hair, unless there are other women needing it worse than some of us imagine. Times. printed. The-shock simply un was 15 years old she married quietly Monday at the city elect- ance governing riding, driving, m.

i ri bus conductor, who was jealous nerved him. But just as he reached his home some one gave travel and traffic to the streets of of her attainments. After mar lows, lviayur, juuu it. ijiui him a good cussing about an riage she took lessons in latin The grain elevators of Kansas and gained her degree at 28 nrenared to handle the grain other article he had printed, and he got up and returned to work. 120.

Police Judge, B. B. Green-98. Councilmen, Lowell Kelley 115; W. H.

McCahan 109; F. C. whether it comes in one bushel lots or in wagon loads. All the Later by special intervention of the Empress Eugenie, she was enabled to attend examinations in medicine and study under the Jefferson County Republican. An Uncle Tom Anniversary farmers will have to do is to haul Nuzun-105; G.

H. Osgood-100; Gilbert Bowen-100; Wm. Preb March 20 was the 69th annivers most noted French physicians. his grain to the elevators ann uri-load it. The county agepts of Kansas and the officers of locals ble-37; Earl Graves-22.

ary of the publication of Uncle The judges serving on the Tnm's P.ahin in book from. It after practicing for 50 years her sight failed and for some years she had lived on the invitation in other farm organizations will had been published serially be look after the details of handling fore that and had earned $d00 election board were: Lawerence Zimmerman, Firth Dodd and F. O. Nuzum. Clerks: Mrs E.

L. Marker and Averill Smith. the collection of this grain. of the public charity authorities to enter the puupers' home Lon for its author. Arrangements haye been made don Herald.

for milling the Kansas gram at et Jnspiih' Mo. The mills a- Auxiliary Entertain American Legion John R. Taylar and daughter were down from White Cloud Friday shaking hand3 with his One of the rarest operations known to medical science, that of removing a bullet from a man's brain, wss successfuly accomplished last Friday in the N. Y. Sing-Sing prison hospital.

A remarkable feature of the operation was that Dr. William L. Chapman of Brooklyn, who perfomed the work, is himself an invalid and was wheeled to the operating table ii a chair, proped up, in which to work on the patient. The operation was an attempt to cure insanity of a prisoner there. The presence of two bullets in the patients brain was located by X-Ray examination and tha one removed was imbedded almost two inches; the other was lodged behind the right ear.

The first question asked by the patient was: "Where an It was to be successful. ttnd to all of the details of bill The American Legion met ine and re-shipping the finished Mr. Harding say3 that he owes everything to his wife. That is ah honest confession for which last Tuesday night April 5th, in many friends in Troy. Mr.

Tay nrnrfnets. Thev will also sell White Cloud will be strictly enforced. Auto speeders, spot light, one light and no light. Auto drivers take notice. Turn at corners only, keep to the right and limit your speed to 12 miles per hour.

This is last gand final warning. Keep fyour cut out closed. By order of the Mayor and Council. Rev. E.

Y. Headen, Sunday Rev. E. V. Headen will come from Rankin 111, to hold serives at the Community Church, Sunday morning and evening.

April 17 and 24, Rev. Allen Brown from Alma Mich, will fill the pulpit. i The C. W. B.

M. had a very interesting meeting at Mrs. Henry Hook home Friday of last week. The lesson wa8 on Latin America, with Mrs. Lenora Collins as leader.

Misses Louise Kelley and Nellie March played a piano duet, the man who was here from Kansas City, to preach at the Christain Church made a short talk. During the social hour refreshment of sandwiches; cake and coffee were served. the F. A. U.

hall. After a short the Bhominy and other by-pro lor is one of those men who has a smile for everyone, but last the president is to be commened. business meeting the members had a sunoer prepared by the duccls and re-invest the amount Friday he had an unusual smile We cannot all be presidents, but there is nothing to prevent our received in sdditional grain food Ladies of the American Legion The rest of the evening was de nroducts to be shipped abroad recognition of the value and as and in asking him the reason, he informed The Chief that he was grandad for the first time, a fine Illinois. Indiana, and other states sistance our wives are to us. A have already shipped hundreds voted to eating, because those ex-soldiers had a real apetite and the food was plentiful.

The big baby girl being born to Mr. nf cars of grain. and Mrs. Charles Clingerman of Denton, one day last week, Mr. Each, member of the board of Kansas State Farm absent members do not know what they missed, until they have talked to some one who was Taylor has been nominated on two different tickets for mayor Bueau has agreed to give i wagon load of grain.

It is be that hundreds of farmers wil present. There were 17 mem bers of the Auxiliary and 12 of White Cloud to head their tickets in the city election to be held in April which shows that trive a wagon load of corn. good woman is always an inspiration to a man, whether she be wife or'mother. Men are prone to profit, from wifely wisdom without according the recognition it deserves. Often it is only the thoughtlessness qf the sterner sex, but at times it is pure egotistical selfishness.

The mother of man justifies her ex-istance a million fold. Her mere presence is as enervating as a fresh breeze on a sultry summer day. The most we can possibly say is not a tenth of what she Many farmers in the wheat belt Legion members were present. Mrs. R.

E. Mauck returned from Kansas City Tuesday noon. Chas. V. Norman, cashier of the First National Bank of Troy, George H.

Osgood, cashier of the First State Bank of White Cloud and Judge Opal Brown were appointed the borad of examine the books and funds of the county treaurer, P. A. Pettis, last are expected to give a wagn load he is a much respected citizen. Mr. Agee, who is employed in the Dutch hardware store, re of wheat.

Later on the people in the cit She went down last week end to Kansas will be asked to ceived word Monday that a niece Tuesday. Everything was found ntrihute money to be used in living at Stanley, had been pnrrvine for 5,545 orphans in run down by an automobile and attend a tea given by her sister, Miss Bertha Wiles, to a number of friends, Sunday afternoon. See next week issue for date of concert given by the Washburn College Glee Club. Myron Connelly still continues to improve, but very slowly. He is able to walk around a little in the sard or out to the car.

When the day is warm he goes for a short ride in the car. to be In tip-top shape, with a balance of over $207,000.00 on on deposit in the different banks the near was not expected to live. He with Mr. Christian, left on the v. Marker was a business of the county.

Be sure to read the -ads, train Tuesday for Stanley viBitorin Troy Wednesday,.

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About The White Cloud Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
512
Years Available:
1919-1921