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About The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 4, 1905)
I iw ..li. i i ft l m THE CHIE1- HEI) CLOUD, KKMIASKA. PUBLISUKDEVEIlY FIUDAY. Paul C. Piiahes Gecko New-house Editor Milliliter SUB&OHIPTION HATES. si year... Mxmontbi .1100 50 nurtdat tnepott offlctat ItodClond, Neb.M ootid clan mall mutter. ADVERTISING KATK8: Furnlihed ou application. TELEPHONE, SEVEN - TWO JAP TERMS OF PEACE ENGLAND WILL NOT INTERFERE WITH HER ALLY'S DEMANDS. Whatever Nature of Japan's Termt British Government Will Be 8atlf-' fled Sakhalin May Be the Stick ing Point. Washington, July 31. Japan comes to the Washington conference assured that whatever her peace terms, they will have the sympathetic approval of Great Britain. Several suggestions from Washington to London that the causo of peace would be served by an explanation to Japan from her ally favoring moderation In her demands upon Russia have not availed to change the British government In Its apparently unalterable determination to stand by Japan however severe sho makes her conditions of peace. Nor has the British government seen its way clear to render assistance to Washington in the efforts which this government is making to obtain an armistice. Advices reaching here show that London is opposed to an nrmlstico until Japan has been satis fled that Russia's plenipotentiaries are prepared to do more than discuss the means of ending the war. If Rus sia is ready to conclude peace and has so empowered her plenipotentiaries, Great Britain, it is believed, might fa vor an armistice, but even in such event It Is said she would not be will ing to offer Japan advice on the subject. Bellovlng, as official Washington does, that Japan will not Insist on the dismantlement of Vladivostok, should Russia fail to agree to it in return for the neutralization of Port Arthur, the cession of Sakhalin, which it Is understood will be among the essen tlnl conditions, will, the officials be lieve, prove the most serious obstacle to peace In the far east. It Is under stood that Russia will vigorously op pose tho cession of Sakhalin. Wlieth or, in the event of Jnpan insisting on this as a condition precedent to peace, Russia will yield Is a matter of specu lation so far ns the officials here are concerned, but in quarters friendly to Russia serious doubts are entertained whether M. Witte brings with him tho authorization to yield Russian terri tory or whether he will be willing to ask for such authority. Keen Interest Is felt here In tho negotiations, which, it Is understood, nro making substantial headway be tween Japan and England, looking to the renewal of the Anglo-Japanese al liance. The scope of the nlliance, it la known, will considerably exceed the present union. WITTE DRAWS THE LINE. Will Not Entertain Demands Based on Expected Successes. London, July 31. The Dally Tele graph's correspondent on board the Kaiser Wllhelm der Grosse, on which M. Wltte, tho Russian peace plenipo tentiary, Is n passenger, sends an in terview which he has had with M. Wltte, in which the latter said that If Russia and Japan had agreed upon n common basis before appointing plenipotentiaries It would have been much better. As It was, M. Witte said he regarded himself rather as an Im perial courier, sent to ascertain tho terras of Japan. He was prepared to make peace nevertheless, he added, ns his powers were very complete, and he would discuss the demands based on Japan's actual military and naval BuceBses In a business-like spir it of glvo and take. "But I cannot and will not," continued M. Witte, "entertain demands based upon ex pected military successes In the fut ure. I am conversant with the humane intentions of my imperial master and I will do anything compatible with Russia's honor and dignity to estab lish that work of which I have been nn unswerving advocate. My first task, however, In the new world Is to cearch for a basis for fruitful discus Blon." Plan Revolt In Czar's Army. Moscow, July 31. A revolt In tho army is being planned, which will be of far greater importance than the recent uprising In tho navy. An ulti matum to the czar demanding certain political and military reforms is be ing prepared in the name of the en tire army. It will be presented when the mobilization Is completed. At that tlmp 200,f00 yotinp roscrvlsts will be armed, under tho command of offlrprs lnrgly drnwn from the civil classes, and both officers and men nro said to bo strongly tainted with disaffection. The Initiative Is said to have been taken by the garrison of St. Petersburg. Fighting on Sakhalin Island. Toklo, July 31. Tho following re port has boon received from the head quarters of tho national army: "Our force on the island of Sakhalin ad vanced on the 27th and hotly chased tho enemy from early In the morning. Our vanguard occupied Delbenskoc the same afternoon. Whllo our cav alry entered Rlkoff another detach ment was sent against the enemy at Noomahl and Ivvoskoe, dislodged the enemy's forco holding Vydernlcovsky and vicinity and Immediately com menced pursuit. The enemy holding tho latter place consisted of Infantry with several guns." Four Girls Are Drowned. Lebanon, Mo., July 31. Whllo boat ing on Horseshoe lake, one and a half miles south of this city, Berca and Blanch Easterly and Alta and Ethel Perkins, all of Lebanon, were drown-' ed. Three young men who wcro in tho boat with them succeeded la swimming to the shore of tho lake. WILSON VISITS PRESIDENT. ftrjretary of Agriculture Will Reor ganize Crop Statistics Bureau. Oyster Bay, N. Y., Aug. 1. Secre tary Wilson will reorganize thorough ly tho crop statistics bureau of the de partment of agricultures, according to information here. Already he Is seek-j ing men of standing and education to conduct tho work of the bureau men' in whom the farmers and growers of the country will have Implicit confi dence and who will place the reports of the bureau on a standard of ex cellence never heretofore achieved.' One man ho has found, nlthough he does not at this time wish to publish his name. The other three ho hopes! to secure In a short time. Two of them will be southern men and both will be experts In cotton and tobacco statistics. This, in brief, Is one of tho ideas which Secretary Wilson eluci dated to President Roosevelt. In response to invitations twice ex tended, Secretary Wilson visited tho president at Sagamore Hill. It was known that he had come to Oyster Bay to discuss with ie president tho situation in the department of agrl culturo as developed by the Investi gations now in progress in the bu reaus of statistics and of plant indus try, but ho declined to go into any details until ho had talked with tho president. In addition to the inquiry which is being made Into the alleged Irregularities which have developed, the secretary, on his own account, is making a rigid Investigation of other bureaus of the department, his deter mination being absolutely to purge It of any taint of corruption. In his work Secretary Wilson hns the ap proval of the president, whose direc tion hns been to eliminate every form of graft In tho department. SANTA FE FILES ITS ANSWER. Makes Reply to Charges of Violating Federal Court's Injunction. Kansas City, Aug. 1. The Santa Fo railroad's answer to the proceedings begun in the federal court here, charging it with contempt of court In violating the court injunction against giving rebates, was filed. The argil mentB In the case will probably not be heard until some time in the fall. The complaint against the Santa Fe was that It granted rebates to the Colorado Fuel and Iron company on coal shipments after having been en joined from such practices, along with hnlf a dozen other roads. The Institu tion or the suit Is the result of an In vestigation on the part of the Inter Btato commerce commission. In its answer the Santa Fe admits that It at one time did give rebates, but that it has not offended in that respect since the injunction was Is sued. This arrangement with the Colorado Fuel and Iron compnny, It says, was a perfectly legitimate one. The Santa Fo accuses a rival of the Colorado Fuel and Iron company of being the Instigator of tho suit against the road. LOTTERY FOR UTAH LANDS. Registration Begins at Provo, Price, Vernal and Grand Junction. Salt Lake, Aug. 1. Promptly at 9 o'clock this morning the registration of applicants for homestead entries on the Uintah reservation began at Provo, Price and Vernal, Utah, and Grand Junction, Colo. The drawing will take place at Provo, beginning Aug. 17. Those In charge of tho draw ing are W. A. Richards, John Dern of Salt Lake and Irving Howbert of Colorado Springs. Provo is like a frontier town of half a century ago. Tents cover tho court house square and all vacunt lots and prairie schooners are lumbering in from every direction. Funeral of Bishop Joyce. Minneapolis, Aug. 1. Tho funeral of Bishop I. W. Joyce was held here, be ginning with private services at tho DO YOTT GET UP WITH A I,AMI$ BACK? Kidney Trouble Makes You Miserable. Almost everybody who rends the news papers is sure to know of the wonderful I cures in Kilmer's Root, tit ney, live cures inaue uy ur. :r's bwninp tlte great kid liver and blad- j- uer rcmcuy. 'fi It ifi the irreat rued- ical triumph of the nineteenth century ; discovered after years of scientific research by Dr. Kilmer, the eminent kidney and bladder specialist, and is wonderfully successful in promptly curing lame back, uric ncid, catarrh of the bladder and Hright's Disease, which is the worst form of kidney trouble. Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root is not rec ommended for everything but if you have kidney, liver or bladder trouble it will be found just the remedy you need. It hns been tested in so ninny ways, in hospital work and in private practice, and has proved so successful in every case that a special arrangement has been made by which all readers of this paper, who have not already tried it, may have a sample bottle sent free by mail, also a book tell ing more about Swamp-Root, and how to findoutif you have kidney or bladder trou ble. When writing mention reading this generous oner in mis paper unu senu your address to Dr. Kilmer & Co., IJinghamton, N. Y. The regular fifty-cent and one dollnr size bottles nrc Home of Swamp-Root sold by all good druggists. Don't make any mistake, hut remember the name, Swamp-Root, Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, and the address, Biughamton, N. Y., on every bottle. family' home and continuing with n public service at the Wesley church. Rev. Dr. Fayette L. Thompson direct ed tho services. At the church ad dresses were made by Bishops Joseph F. Berry of Buffalo, N. Y.; Stephen M. Merrill of Chicago and John W. Walden of Cincinnati. Interment was at Lakewood cemetery. Osage River Out of Its Banks. Eldon, Mo., Aug. 1. A sudden rise of twenty-five feet of water in the Osage river through Miller countv caused much alarm among river farm ers. The lowlands were submerged to a depth of three to five feet and the growing corn crops on these lands, roughly estimated at a value of $250, 000, will bo a total loss. The river Is falling and no further damage Is anticipated. San Jose Scale Invades Virginia. Norfolk, Va.. Aug. 1. The San Joso scale has invaded this section for the first time and fruit trees are suf fering. Peach and plum trees par ticularly are affected, and In some Instances tho fruit on these trees Is not only falling off but the trees themselves are dying. Secretary Taft at Nagasaki. Nagasaki, Aug. 1. The steamer Manchuria arrived here this morning. The governor, mayor and other offi cials went aboard and extended an offi cial welcome to Secretary of War Taft and Miss Roosevelt. The party landed at 9 o'clock and lunched at tho American consulate. Death Sentences for Four. Valdosta, Ga., Aug. 1. Sentences of death were passed upon J. G. Raw lings, Milton Rawllngs and Jesse Raw lings. The date of execution is the 15th of September. Alf Moore was also condemned to die. CHICAGO GRAIN AND PROVISIONS Features of the Day's Trading and Closing Quotations, ChleuRo, Auk. 1. Oiuclul denial of Bcrl our duinuKC from black rust caused a weak ttulsh lu the wheat market here to day. At the clone wheat for September delivery was ilowu Ue. Com wus up v. Oats showed a puln of iie. Pro visions were pructlt-ully imchuriEed. Clos Iiic prlccti: Wheat-July, 84QWc; Dec, 80e; May, 88e. Corn-Sept., 52c, new, O'J&'&raVic; Dec, Wc: May, 45e. Oats-Kept., :.'7c; Dec, i!8ye; May, JOTMiJtOe. Pork-Sept., $13.47; Oct., ;in.OTi?KI.-K). Lunl-Sept., 7.:tWf7.:7'i Oct., ?7.45. ltltis-Sept., SH.ISI; Oct., $8.13. Chicago CuhIi l'rleen No. 'i hard wheat, 84i8()c; No. 3 hard wheat, K'tSTic; No. i! corn, 55fa3.V,.i:; No. '- outs, US'fcc. Chicago Live Stock. Chlcugo, Auk. 1. Cuttle Kecelpts, 4.500; steady; Rood to prime steers, $.VJO5i3.lH); poor to medium, $:i.73C(ifi.O0; stoekers unci feeders, Jf'-'.'J.ViH.OO; cowh, $2.30514.50; helf erx, $LV-Vji4.-5: eunners, $l.:S5(fJ.40; bulls, SMOfli-MX); calveM, S3.50fo7.00; Texas fed steers, $3.7.7ft,4.7!i; western steers, $.'1.75 4.1)0. Hofis-Itecelpts, 11,000; 10c libber; mixed uud butchers, $..-Uki(t).H; good to choice heury, $3.00iJ.05; rough heay, $3.:3CuC70; light. $5.(XX(iU.l.,i; bulk of sales, f5.75CtMI.00. Sheep Receipts, KI.O00; 10i J0e higher; wethers, $4.KJI4.K5; lambs, $4.754f7.75; western sheep, $4.00(4.73. South Omaha Live Stock. South Oiuiihn, Auk. 1. Cattle Itecelpts, 4,000; steudy, atrnuic; nuttve steers, $3.50 $0.40; cows mid heifers, $l!.7.Vt4.40; west ern steers, $H.'J5t4.00; Texas steers, $12.75 3.75; runjre cows and heifers, li.VJ.YtfU.riS, cnuners, $1.30iJt'J..V); stocUers and feeders, $H.'J.V(4.-5; calves, 3.003.M); bulls, stugs, etc., J'J.OuYua.in. lloKs-ltccelpts, 000; 10 5115c higher; heavy, $5.50rw,70; iuIxxm, , $.57jti.70; light, $5.70f(i3.75; pigs, $4.50 J 6.50; bulk of sales, $3.57'MJ5.724. Sheep- HeeeiptB, ou; steudy; wenerns, $1.505i3.(K): wethers, $4.0"'i4.53; ewes, $4.0tKii4.40; ' luuibs, $3.i3QiU.0i . 1 l ' " U rvv fCii NEW SI Persian Lawns. 30c SI LK TISSUES, per yd 25 and 50c 4-INCH CHANGEABLE SILK NECK RlHWnM o- nrl iiuuvii, (jv,i ,yoiu AJ DOUBLE TIP FINGER SILK GLOVES, per pair 50c BUTTERICK PATTERNS. Eggs Taken In Exchange for Merchandise j i, F. NEWHOUSE C, DRY GOODS AND NOTIONS, I "The Kodak Way" 1 ' (ft $ Kodaks and Kodak jg $ Supplies jj my Bring In Your Watch, Clock and Jewelry Repairing,. 'J: We do It right. W 11 1 NEWHOUSE BROIHERS.I flV JEWELERS AND OPTICIANS. J W City Dray and P. W. 8TUDEBAKKR, PROP. Goods Delivered to any part of the city. Charges as low as the Lowest CITY AGENTS FOR ADAIS EXPRESS CO. TELEPHONES, Residence 188 DRESS GOOD S jl J- ..! &? Express Line. r s s i ! . 1 W C Office 119 WiffiMtaS33 ".rti.i'KrT" saar- ii