The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923, May 19, 1905, Image 2

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    THE CHIEF
RED CLOUD, NEOIUSKA.
PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY.
Paul C. Phakes
Georqb Newhouhe
Editor
Manager
BUBHOniiTION HATES.
Ons year...
li monthi
.1100
9(1
Sntered at the pott office at lied Cloud, Nob.M
eoond clan mull manor.
ADVERTISING ItATKH:
Jurnlnhed on Application.
"BLEPHONE. SEVEN - TWO
DANCING PILGRIMS.
FIGIITlNtf IN J0L0
FOUR HUNDRED MOROS AND
SEVEN AMERICANS KILLED.
Outlaw Chief and Remnant of Hl
Followers Are Surrounded In a
Swamp Prefer Death to Capture.
' Wanted for Borneo Massacre.
Manila, May 15. Fierce fighting
kns been going on the past two weeks
on the island of Jolo between the out
law Moro chief, Pala, with 600 well
armed followers, and troops under the
personal command of Major General
Leonard Wood. Pala's forces lost 400
killed, while the Iobscs of General
Wood are seven killed and nineteen
wounded.' Pala and his remaining fol
lowers, In accordance with Moro tra
dition, prefer death to capture. Gen
eral Wood, with detachments from the
Fourteenth cavalry, the Seventeenth,
the Twenty-second, the Twenty-third
infantry and the constabulary scouts,
have cbAvl Pa'a and his folio. vers In
to a swamp, which is surrounded
Pala was a noted slave trader and
warrior when the Americans occupied
the island. Later he escaped with
his followers to the Island of Pula
Sekar, near Borneo. One of Pain's
leaders deserted and took refuge In
the BritiBh settlement at Lahad Pala
landed with a following and demanded
of the British magistrate that he turn
the deserter over to him. T.he demand
was not complied with and Pala or
dered a massacre. Twenty-five per
sons, including several British, wero
killed. Pala escaped to the island of
Jolo and organized the present upris
ing. It is reported that the Borneo
authorities requested General Wood
to apprehend Pala 'dead or alive and
turn him over to them.
YOUNG CROKER DIES ON TRAIN.
Son of Tammany Leader Expire
From Opium Poisoning.
Kauaa" City, May 13. Herbert V.
Croker, a" son of Richard Croker, the
New York Tammany leader, was
found dead on a southbound Santa Pe
train near Newton, ,,Kan., and itjs
supposed that he died ,of opium poi
soning. The body wbjs taken from tho
train at Newton. From papers found
on the dead man, it' appears that he
was on the way from New York to
Bpend a vacation at the" 101 ranch,
Bliss, Okla. He stopped in Kansas
City on his way west Thursday and
visited thf Elm Ridge races in the
afternoon, but his conduct was not
unusual. At 10 o'clock that night Mr.
Croker, in a condition of stupo: was
put on board a chair car on a Santa
Fe train by a negro, who gave him a
purse containing $19 In money and a
ticket to Bliss, Okla. Mr. Croker lm
mediately lapsed into a heavy sleep.
HIb fellow passengers noticed his
Bleep become quieter. No attention
was paid to his condition until New
ton had been nearly reached, when
the conductor, seeking to rouse him
to collect his ticket, found him dead.
The coroner at Newton began an in
quest, at which trainmen testified that
Mr. Croker did not smell of liquor.
The police of this city found the ne
gro who put Croker on the train. He
was a porter at the Coates house,
named Woodson. He said tbnt Croker.
whom he met at the hotel, asked to
be taken to an opium Joint; that he
took Croker to such a place, kept by
a Chinaman; that Croker stayed there
for an hour, and that then, nt his re
quest, Woodson took Croker to the
train and helped him on board. Wood
son was arrested this morning and
held for investigation.
Convention of Trainmen.
BuffaloNX-vMayiJlfcuuiihe sev
enth 'biennial-convention of the Broth
erhood of Railway Trainmen began
here. Delegates were present from
all partB of the United States, Canada
and Mexico. Grand Master P. H Mor
t asey presided. Governor Frank W.
Higgins addressed an open meeting
of the delegates and their friends at
Convention hall.
Kansans Perish in Flames.
Wlnfleld. Kan.. May la.rWUJiam
Buchels and wife, Germans, living at
ITdalla, a small s'atlop near here, were
tmrned to death in a fire, started ap
parently from an exploding lamp, that
destroyed their home. Buchels was
ninety years old and his wife was
eighty-eight. The woman was blind.
The Anntinl Cnriilvnl of (lie "Snlnta"
fif Kclitrriiiit'li.
On every Hiicccodiiig WIiUhuh Tues
day from time Itiiiiiciiiorlnl 10,000 to
20,000 pllgrlniH of both hoxch and of ev
ery ngo iiikI condition of life dunce
for four or live Iioiiih at Kchtcrimch, In
the grand duchy of Luxemburg, to an
mimlHtftkitblu polka tunc and an appar
ently mouhciihIciiI refrain. The central
figure of HiIh great Keliternnch "nprlug
prozpHslon" Ih Kt. Wllllltrord, who ml
gritted from Northumberland to the
front Icih of the Black forest twolvo
centurlcH ago. KmpcrnrH and klngn
have In vain forbidden the "HalntH" of
Keliternnch to Indulge In their annual
carnival.
With the peiiKautry of Hunt Luxem
burg and lOlffel the "Hprliigprozosslon"
In iih popular today as It was In 11IH,
'when King Lothalre came, to pray at
St. Wlllllirord'H tomb. The simple mind
ed dwellers on the banks of the Sum
and the .'scllo are firmly convinced
that theirest hope of freedom from
nervous diseases In this world and eter
nal salvation In the next lies In thta
mystic dance of five steps forward and
two backward, by which, after three
hours' indescribable toll, they cover tho
two or three miles Intervening between
the starting point, at which the pil
grims receive the episcopal blessing
and the goal nt the steps of St. Willi
brord's shrine.
MBNMaiaV I IIIB FIM
SM1lf1iMllMii
KNOWLEDGE AND CULTURE.
The Two Do Not Npoeaaarlly Walk
Hand In liana.
High marks In examinations depend
upon n trained memory and a power
of acquiring Irrelevant Information.
Culture, on the contrary, Is a sym
pathetic assimilation of the best In the
realm of thought and achievement.
Culture Is a slower process and a deep
er, and Its reward strikes further In
AsRlmllatlon of the best that has been
thought and accomplished affects not
merely the brain, but the character
the whole spirit of n man. Culture
implies a soil plowed and fertilized,
where whatever seed falls has tho
better chance for growth. Informa
tion even in vast quantities, so long
as it remains mere Information, used
for purposes of passing examinations,
need not affect the manners nor the
morals of a man; both may remain
hopelessly lav ,' an cncyclopcdlnn
mine of facN. Vut culture affects
primarily the manners and the morals.
A cultured gentleman has external
methods of getting on with his kind;
be has the true sense of relationship,
the feeling that all he can learn to feel
or to be Is not for himself, but for
service; he knows himself In ' n net
work of human inter-relations. In the
end the test of knowledge Is not ex
amination marks; it Is living. Har
per'B Weekly.
The Cause of Many
Sudden Deaths.
There is n disease prevailing in this
country most tlungerousi because fiodecep.
live, xviniiy sudden
deaths are caused
by it heart dis
ease, pneumonia,
heart failure or
apoplexy are often
the result of kid
ney disease. If
kidney trouble is
allowed toad vnnce
the kidney-poisoned
blood will at
tack the vital or trans, causing catarrh of
! the bladder, or the kidneys themselves
break down and waste away cell by cell.
bladder troubles almost always result
from a derangement of the kidneys and
a cure is obtained quickest by n proper
treatment of the kidneys. If you are feel
ing badly you can make no mistake by
taking Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, the
great kidney, liver and bladder remedy.
It corrects inability to hold urine and
scalding pain in passing it, and over
comes that unpleasant necessity of being
compelled to go often through the day,
and to get up many times during the
night. The mild uud the extraordinary
effect of Swamp-Root is soon realized.
It stands the highest for its wonderful
cures of the most distressing cases.
Swamp-Root is pleasant to take and is
sold by ull druggists in fifty-cent and
one-dollar size !ottlcs. You may have n
sample bottle of this wonderful new dis
covery and a book that tells all about it,
both sent free by mail. Address, Dr. Kil
mer & Co., Bingbanitoit, N. Y. When
writing mention reading this generous
offer hi this paper. Don't make any
mistake, but remember the name, Swamp
Root, Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, ami the
address, Binghamtou, N. Y., on every
bottle.
knows us both would sny nf onco that
I suggested It. Chicago Tribune.
THE WOOLSACK.
It la In the Houae of I.orda and Yet
la Nut a Part of It. .
It Is n curious fact that the woolsack
on which the lord chancellor sits lu the
British house of lords Is not, BtrcUy
Bpeatilnjj, in the bo'uV of lords, anil
thlB In wby when the' lord chancellor'
rises to tnke part in debate' he first of
nil moves away from the woolsack. to
his own place us a peer before he
speaks.
The fact, too, explains why noble
lords who desire to avoid voting some
times merely withdraw to the wool
sack, where, not being In a parliamen
tary sense within the house, they arc
not counted In a division.
Again, though the lord chancellor Is
now Invariably a peer, he is not neces
sarily so, and oh n matter of fact the
ofilce lias been held several times In the
past fiy commoners. In such eases the
lord chancellor could take no part In
debate, not having a place In the house
n n peer, and his functions as speaker
were strictly limited to the putting of
questions and otJier forraul nroofcetl-
Ings regulated by precedent from the
woolsack. t
The Copta of Rarjrpt.
The Copts in Kgypt are the book
keepers and scribes; they are also the
Jewelers and embroiderers. Their an
cient tongue has fallen Into disuse
and Is practically a dead language.
They now use Arable, like all the rest
of the nation, but the speech survives
in tneir einircli service, a part of
which Is still given in the old tongue,
though it Is said that even the priests
themselves do not always understand
what they are saying, having merely
learned the sentences by heart, so that
foron
An Aeeunnt to Settle.
The Lawyer Madam, I find that
your husband's will leaves you nothing
but what the law compelled him to
leave you. The Widow (angry and for
getful) Just wait till I see him!
The soul asks honor, not fame; to be
upright, not successful; to bo good, not
prosperous; to be essentially, not out
wardly, respectable. Womun's Life.
THE STOMACH.
If You Treat It Properly It Will Re
turn the Compliment.
It Is not an uncommon thing to hear
a man or woman say, "There is some
thing the mutter with my stomach."
They never Htop to think whether they
themselves are not nt fault instead of
the stomach. It Is so easy to blame
the stomach. It can't sny anything
buck.
But the truth of the mntter is the
stomach is nil right; nothing the mnt
ter with it at all. It is what Is put Into
tho stomach that Is causing the trou
ble, The stomach knows when It re
ceives something that will be Injurious
to the body or when It has been over
loaded, und it protests against the in
digestible article or the surplus amount
of food.
It Is acting as a friend and sending
put a warning against this abuse. But
Instead of being grateful to the stom
nch and leaving off the Indigestible
food nnd the big dinners the man or
the woman continues to load It with
pie nnd cake, pickles and sauces, pork
and pancakes and all sorts of horrid
things, nnd then they complain that
there is something the matter with
their stomachs. London Mall.
"When the Thunder Roll.
Excellent authorities agree that In
a thunderstorm the middle of a room
Is much the safest place In a house.
A carpeted floor or one covered by a
heavy thick rug Is better to stnnd on
than bare wood. It Is well to keep
awny from chimneys nnd out of cel
lars. In the open air toll trees are
dangerous. A person sheltered under
a low tree or shrub thirty or forty feet
from a lnrge and lofty tree is quite
Bnfe. tt lightning strikes In the Im
mediate vicinity It will hit the high
tree as a rule, with few exceptions.
Water Is a very good conductor, nnd
It Is well to avoid the banks of Htrenms
In n violent thunderstorm, Detroit
Tribune.
Can You Solve Itt
Here is a problem that has bothered
a good many mathematical heads. Can
yon solve It V
"In cutting a beam into half Inch
, boards the saw wastes an eighth of an
, Inch cut," said tho timber merchant.
"If the saw only, wasted half aa much
.thjerq..w.)jildube. qne-WOW. board. Horn
many boards is the beam sawed Into?"
New Zealand Animal.
Experts say that probably there Is no
country In the world where Imported
species of animals, wild uud domestic,
have flourished as they have done In
New Zealand. The ml deer grow to
over 500 pounds In weight In the for
ests, the trout to twenty pounds In the
rivers. The sheep have not expanded
to nny giant ulee, but they multiply at
a faster rate thnn elsewhere. They
grow a finer wool and a Ufljer mutton.
PlatterlnK.
Young Feathertop-If your parents
still oppose our mnrrylng why can't we
elope? Miss Sharpe-Chlnn-It wnnH
, never do In the world. Everybody who
Ended the Ecoaanr Idea.
He We must economise. Suppose,
darling, that you try your band at mak
ing your own clothes? She Oh, George,
dear, I never could do that. Suppose I'
begin by trying to make yours? Phil
adelphia Inquirer.
For the Sake of Qalet.
"My duughtcr admired both law and
music, bo I, hiad her study law." ,
'.What Impelled you to that choice?"
" think'. 1 pV..cticng law is quieter
than practicing piano playing."
Indiscretion, malice, rashness and
falsehood produce each other. L'En
clos.
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When You Buy
SPOONS
buy the best if you want to practice real
economy; there is no article of silver
ware so expensive in the end as depart
mental, hardware, or "general store"
spoons.
We carry nothing but the Very best
Sterling Silver and Silver-plated ware;
stock such as is found only in a first
class jewelry store, and yet our prices
are low, quality considered. We are not
satisfied to make a big per cent on a.
single sale, but want the volume of busi
ness and advertising that comes from
selling good goods cheap.
Nothing more appropriate' for
Wedding end BL thdmy Present
r4.
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iNEWHOUSE BROTHERS,!
T W
to
JEWELERS AND OPTICIANS.
iti
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BURSON HOSIERY
The only Full-Fashioned Seamless
Hosieryon the market that is perfect
in fit and unsurpassed in wearing qual
ities. From 18c to 50c per Pair
18 - inch Embroidery
30c per Yard
F. NEWHOUSE
DRY GOODS AND NOTIONS, ETC.
City Dray and Express Line.
F. W. 8TUDEBAKBR, PROP.
Goods Delivered to any part of the city.
Charges. as low asthe Lowest'
CITY AGENTS FOR ADAAS EXPRESS CO.
TELEPHONES.
Office 1 19.
Residence 188.
TRADERS LUMBER CO.
IN
Lumber and Coal
8
BUILDING MATERIAL, ETC.
Red Cloud, - ' - - Nebraska.
1,