The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923, June 05, 1913, Image 6

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The Chief
C. D. HALE, Publisher
RED CLOUD
NEBRASKA
DISPUTES POSTAL SHOWING OF
HIS PREDECESSOR.
DRINKING ON THE INCREASE
Internal Revenue Tax Shows Great In
crease Over Last Year's Figures
Colonel Roosevelt Wins
Libel Suit.
Washington. Postmaster Ucnerul
Durleson linn made public tho ruiort
of u special Inwstlmitluii Into fiscal
uffalrs of tho postul service, chnrKltiK
that during former Postmaster Uuuurul
Hltchcock'u ndmliilutrutluii tho uorvico
did not become self supporting, m was
often asserted, but that In 1011 there
uctuully waH a deficiency of 'moro than
1750,000. The report charges thut "nn
apparent uurplus wub attained by un
Juatlfinblo methods of bookkeeping,"
and that tho efllclency and morals of
tho postal service wcie sacrlllced to a
"ruthlessly enforced policy of econ
otny," that a showing of self main
tcnance might bo made. '
Awarded Six Cents Carnages.
Marquette. Mich. Colonel Theodore
Roosevelt won his libel suit against
Georgo A. Nowott, who charged tho
colonel with drunkenness, nnd hnvln'g
waived damages, after tho defendant
had uttered n detraction, tho jury
awarded the nominal damagt-H or (5
cents, provided In such caseH by the
law of Michigan. Kadi party to the
suit will have to pay his own expenses'
Judge Flannlgan Instructed the Jury to
bring In a verdict for tho plaintiff,
which they did without leaving their
scats,
INCREASE IN RECEIPTS.
Beer, Liquor and Jobacco Sales 8how
Bio Lead Over Last Year.
Washington. Deer and whisky
drinking In the United States, not to
mention cigarette smoking. 1b on tho
Increase. Figures compiled on the In
ternal revenue tax paid on thoHO
articles, show that they have been
made and used In far greater quanti
ties than last year. Up to tho close
of business on May 29, tho Intornnl
revenue receipts for tho current year
wero nearly $17,000,000 ahead of tho
receipts for tho samo period of last
year. Of this Incrense, beer and fer
mented liquors manufactured In gront-
er quantlttos nro responsible for two
and a quarter millions of dollars. Re
colptn from wines, whiskies nnd other
spirituous UquorB arc seven millions in
excess of last year, from cigarettes
I3CO.00O In excess or last year, and
from tobacco In all Its forms flvo and
half millions In excess of last year.
Nebraska Editors at Omaha.
Omaha. Editors from nil over Ne
braska began nrrlvlng in Omaha Sun
day for tho annual meeting of tho stato
editorial association In session this
week. Instead of tho usunl services,
the pulpits of twenty-two prominent
churches wero open to tho 'editors
and the congregations listened to ad
dresses of tho visitors in place of tho
regular sermons.
Receiver Named for Service Co.
Beatrice, Neb. Following tho at
tachment bulls filed against tho Iowa
Nebraska Public Servico Corporation
here Georgo W. Johnson, president of
of tho Midwest Electrical company of
Omaha, has been appointed receiver by
.the federal court at Omaha. The com
pany owns electric plants at Norfolk,
Blair, Beatrice, and Wymore, Neb,
and Missouri Valley, la.
Heat Record Broken.
St. LouIb. Heat records for thirty
years were broken for May here Fri
day when Btreet level thermometers
registered 102. This temperaturo was
recorded at J o'clock.
Pender, Neb. Mort Davis, a par
oled convict who nltacked Mrs. Caddlo
Welte near Homer, pleaded guilty to
serve a term of eighteen years in tho
penltentinry.
On Pilgrimage to Rome.
Lincoln. Bishop J. Henry Tlhen of
this place has been nppointed as chap
tlain to a pilgrimage to Homo that
leaves this summer. The pilgrimages
nro regulnrly conducted affairs, taking
place annually. Somo distinguished
ecclesiastic Is always choson as chap
lain. This year Bishop Tlhen was tho
nppointed one, Tho pllgrimngo Is
made up by Catholics from all over tho
country. The bishops themselves nro
required to make visits to tho popo at
'Borne at certain Intervals, said to bo
every five years.
Washington.-Sugar remains on tho
free list with tho three-year clauso
Intact, according to Information from
the Williams sub-committeo In chargo
of that schedule of the tnrlff bill, at
tho conclusion of its labors on sugar
nnd other foods. LMeat Is likewise on
the freo list nnd probably tho sennto
will bo urged to place live cattle Inter
ats In the samo class. When asked
whether cattle would bo admitted dutv
freo Senator Williams replied that
"meats and all faun products of siml
larlty aro likely to be recommende'
for tho free list."
I hot iEf rans
THE NATIONAL CAPITAL
CONGRESSIONAL MATTERS OF
MORE OR LESS INTEREST.
Summary of the Daily Transactions!
of the National Law Makers
at Washington.
Thursday.
The 8enate In session 2 p. m.
Chairman Hoke Smith, of labor com
mittee, culled to consider plans for In
vestigation Into West Virginia coal
strike.
Suffrngotto parade upcclnl Investiga
tion committee reported disorder ol
.March ,1 was duo principally to unusu
al crowds and praised work of tho po
lice.
Adjourned until Monday, 2 p. m.
The House Met at noon and ad
journed at 12: in p. m until noctt .Mon
day out of respect to the memory of
tho Into ItopYoHcntntlvo Forrest Good
win, Third Maine district.
Wednesday.
Tho Senate Not in session. Moots
at 2 p. m. Thursday.
Nuval affairs conimltteo deferred
action on armor plate factory resolu
tion. Admiral Twining testified re
garding proposed factory.
FInnnco BUb-commltteca began work
of revising various schedules of the
tariff bill to report to full committee.
Chairman l'ittman, of territories
commlttco, called meeting of Satur
day to act on bills for development
of Alaska.
Senntor Lewis was elected demo
cratic floor manager and assistant to
Majority .Leader Kern by democratic
caucus, which also named committee
to confer regarding organization of
democratic congressional campaign
committee,
Education nnd labor committco con
sidered plans for Investigation of
West Virginia conl mlno strike.
Tho House Not In session. Meets
at noon Thursday.
Minority Leader Mann announced
ho would call republican cnucus for
Saturday to determine committee ap
pointments. Tuesday.
The Senate Finance sub-commit
tees continued hearing on tariff bill
schedules; hearing closed Tuesday
night
Senator Cummins Introduced reso
lution to Investigate charges of exist
ence of lobby to Influence legislation.
A number of nominations by Presi
dent Wilson received.
Senator Pomerane read letter from
Governor Cox of Ohio criticising Sen
ators Goft of West Virginia and Gal
linger of New Hampshire for state
ments In debate over West Virginia
coal strike. Resolution for investiga
tion of West Virginia coal strike
adopted.
Adjourned at, 7:15 p. m. until 2 p.
m. ThursdaV.
Tho House Leader Underwood ob
tained consent to increaso Indlnn af
fairs, Irrigation nnd public buildings
committees nnd create n new commit
tco on expenditures in labor depart
ment. Representative Roland discussed
Washington's so-called slums nnd
recommended nbolltlon of nlleys.
Ropresontatlvo Sims Introduced bill
to abolish commerco court.
Ropresontatlvo Tavenner Introduced
resolution to Investigate activities ol
tariff lobbyists.
Adjourned at 1:55 p. m. until noon
Thursday,
Oldest Couple In Parade.
New York Tho oldest New York
vqteran of tho American army, par
aded Friday with tho work horses In
stead of with tho colors. Emmanuel
Oppenhelmer, 103 yenrs old, possesses
medals for distinguished service in the
Mexican war, but he and his 101 year
old wife are prouder of their example
and service to the country through
seventy-nine years of married life
than through his service at arms. The
Oppcnhelmers are believed to bo the
oldest couple In New York.
Clovls, N. M. The great array of
grasshoppers In New Mexico Is twenty
miles long and four miles deep and
the grasshoppers aro literally strip
ping the country In their path. They
aro moving westward across the cen
tral part of tho state at the rato of a
mile a day.
Wounded Man 8aved Payroll.
La Sallo, 111. Four masked bandits
bold up a party' carrying tho semi
monthly pnyroll of tho Illinois Zinc
company, five miles east of hero, kill
ing one mnti and wounding three
others. F. W. Richardson, a civil en
gineer of tho zinc company, who was
one of tho wounded, saved tho fi,000
payroll by a wild dash under fire. Tho
robbers escaped. Monoy to meet tho
payroll was being sent to tho Black"
Hollow mlno In two buggies In chargo
of four men.
San FrancUco. Falluro of nnothor
expedition sent In quest of n legendary
$18,000,000 treasuro cacho, which, ac
cording to a dying sailor, was burled
on Cocos Island by oincials of the Pe
ruvian church early in the last cen
tury, was rocorded when tho British
steamship Melmoro put Into port. Mrs.
Barry 'Till and Miss Davis, English
womon, wero told by tho sailor on his
deathbed of his knowlcdgo of tho loca
tion of tho cacho nnd supplied with
charts. Tho womon succeeded In In
teresttng British capitalists and tb
I Molmere was purchased
MAINE memorial unveiled in new york
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Tho chief event of Memorial Day in Now York was tho unveiling of tho
Maine Moicorlal monument at the entranco to Control Park. The Atlantlo
squadron anchored In tho Hudson boomed a salute before the exercises,
which wero attended by many notable persons.
RECEIVED BY KING OF BRITAIN
MOUNMENT TO VETERANS OF EX
PLOSION AT HAVANA.
Reception Tendered to New American
Ambassador Eight Months War
In the Balkans has
Ended.
New York. In memory of tho 267
officers and men who were lost with
the battleship Maine In Havana harbor
fifteen years ago, the national Maine
monument was dedicated here Friday.
From a dozen American warships,
units of tho Atlantic fleet at anchor
in the Hudson river, a salute of 252
guns echoed from the palisades as the
veil was swept asido that rovealod
tho country's tribute a pylon forty
feot high that stands In Central park
overlooking Columbus circle.
Noted citizens Bpoko words or
prnlso ror tho dead hcroeB of tho war
with Spain. Former Prosldont Tnft,
the secrotary of tho navy, tho gover
nors of Maine and 'New York, represen
tatives of tho Cuban republic and
others took part In tho exercises. A
military parade along Fifth avenue
preceded the ceromony nt tho monu
ment. Headed by Rear Admiral Win
Blow, tho grand marshal, ln.OOO boI
dlers nnd Bailors, Including tho veter
ans of two warB, marched through n
lane formed by many thousands of hol
iday sightseers. American Infantry,
artillery, bluejackets from tho battle
shlpa, state militia, cavalry, civilian
and Spanish war veterans, Cuban
troopers and sailors from tho Cuba,
tho Island republic's naval representa
tive, theso and others were In lino of
march.
End of the Balkan War.
London. The eight months' war be
tween Turkey and the allied Balkan
states Is ended. The "peace of Lon
don" was signed Friday In the picture
gallery of St. James palace. Sir Ed
ward Grey, the British foreign secre
tary, presided over the formalities.
The following peace delegates signed
tho preliminary 'treaty:'
Osman Nlzaml Pasha for Turkey.
Dr. Daneg for Bulgaria.
Stojan Novakovltch for Servla.
StephanoB Skoloudls for Greece.
M. Popovltch for Montenegro.
RECEIVED BY KING GEORGE.
New American Ambassador Given a
Reception.
London. Walter Hlnes Pago, tho
newly appointed United States ambas
sador to tho court of St. James, was
received Friday by King Georgo, to
whom he presented his letters of cre
dentials. Sir Edward Grey, the British
foreign secrotary, presumed tho now
ambassador. Thon Mr. Pago went
through tho formality of presenting
to tho king and queen the membors of
tho embassy staff, most of whom had
attended many courts and ftvees In
company with the lato Whitolaw Reld.
Bad Fire at Ann Arbor Unl.
Ann Arbor, Mich. Three thousands
students of tho University of Michi
gan failed In their efforts to save' the
south wing of tho university hall, the
oldest building on the campus, from
destruction by fire. Tho appaiatus of
tho niochanlcal and zoological depart
ments or tho school was destroyed.
While tho loss by tho destruction or
tho building itself will not bo heavy,
valuable libraries nnd notes were
burned which will bo Impossible to
repluco,
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MR. ROOSEVELT'8 INTIMATES
TELL OF HIS HABIT8.
Confederate Veterans to Fraternize
With G. A. R. Men Legislative
Appropriations Last Session
Will Reach Nearly
$9000,000.
Marquette, Mich. Men who have
been associated with Colonel Roose
velt in public and in private life, who
met him on the Nile when he returned
from his African hunting trip, testi
fied Wednesday in his libel suit
against George H. Nowett that the
former president was not a drunkard,
but he was notably and extremely torn
perato in the use of intoxicants. It
would havo been Impossible, they say,
for Colonol Roosevelt to be under tho
lnfiuenco of liquor without the fact be
coming known to bis associates. It
would havo been equally Impossible for
him to have drunk liquor with any
regularity without tho smell of It ap
pearing ou his breath to the friend
who testified.
Appropriations Amount to $8,952,723.
Lincoln, Neb. Tho official appropri
ations made at tho lato session of, the
legislature aro announced by the
state's auditing department as $8,952,
723. Aggregate appropriations or $G,
184,553 were made at tho 1911 session.
Tho 1913 amount includes tho special
university building fund, tho estimat
ed proceeds from tho state normal
levy and the $150,000 for a new Btate
reformatory. Several cuts nro made
In the departmental maintenance
funds, howover, including a decrease
of from $25,000 to $18,000 In the gover
nor's office and $19,000 at the Hast
ings asylum.
FORMER FOE8 IN A REUNION.
Confederate Veterans to Fraternize
With G. A. R. Men.
Chattanooga,' Tenn, After re-electing
General Bennet H. Young of Lou
isville as commander-in-chief and re
electing bis three departmental com
manders, the united confederate vet
erans chose Jacksonville, Fla., as their
next reunion city. A report of the con
federate committee appointed to co
operate with a similar committee from
tho G. A. R. In regard to participation
In the semi-centennial Joint celebra
tion of the two organisations, July 1-4,
1913, was received, urging that at least
a thousand confederate veterans at
tend. Cheers greeted the announce
meat in the report that the confeder
ate veterans would be welcomed In
their gray uniforms and with their
battle-scarred flags.
Klefer, Okla. Eight persons were
Injured, four probably fatally, and six
houses and a iumber yard were de
stroyed by a Are that started when a
tank of gasoline was overturned and
500 gallons ran down the streot Into a
blacksmith shop and was' Ignited by,
tho forge fire. Four persons at work
In tho shop wero badly burned and
have little chance of recovery.
Dedicate New Synagogue.
Lincoln, Neb. Tho congregation of
Tlfereth Israel dedicated Its new syn
agogue nt Eighteenth and L streets
Sunday afternoon, about 800 people at
tending tho opening exerclsos. Tho
aftornoon program wns long and most
of tho addresses in Yiddish. ' In the
evening a banquet was held In the
basement nnd tomo of those who have
been nctlvo ln securing the building
responded to the toasts. Rabbi Isidore
Koplowltz of Des Moines was the
principal speaker and bis address wat
delivered In Yiddish.
BRIEF NEW8 OF NEBRASKA.
Cook has voted $5,000 lighting bonds.
Corn planting is finished in York
county.
Tho next Btate poultry show will bo
held at Grand Island.
Hastings women havo organized an
equal suffrage league.
Beatrice Eagles are considering the
erection of a new hall.
North Loup has Invoked tho state
law to nbato Its Blot machines.
West Point will celebrate tho Fourth
In tho good old fashioned wny.
The Aurora Republican this week
was edited by tho minsters of the city.
Tho state convention of the Eagles
will be held at Beatrice, Juno 10, 11
and 12.
The town of Berlin, that was de
stroyed by a tornado, Is being rapidly
rebuilt.
Secretary of State Bryan will speak
nt tho Brownvlllo home-coming picnic
In August.
William Burns, tho' detective, Is on
tho lecturo courso nt Hastings for
next season.
Twenty blocka of paving In the resi
dence district of Beatrice Is now prac
tically assured.
Prof. Don R. Llnch of Ansley has
been elected superintendent of Sar
gent high school.
Ernest Galloway of Auburn has
bought tho Salem Index, and will take
charge Immediately.
Thoyor county commissioners havo
purchased n piano tor tho court room
for convention ure.
At tho Kenrnoy-I Listings ball game
at Bluo Hill Sunday 1,002 paid admis
sions were registered.
Daniel Sundy of Hansen was kicked
on tho head by a mulo and seriously
but not fatally Injured.
Joseph Pacylc slipped when he wont
to board a train nt Hastings nnd will
loso a leg in consequence.
A slight frost was reported at Gree
ley Wednesday morning, but It Is
thought no dnmngo wns done.
Littlo Betsy Bcckman of Fremont
suffered severo Injuries when nn auto
struck her and knocked her down.
Teddy Rummcll, a four-year-old boy
near Beaver Crossing, started a blaze
with some matches and was burned to
death.
The Utlca band boys gave an enter
tainment for tho benefit of tornndo
victims, at which quite a liberal sum
was raised.
The annual camp meeting of the Ne
braska State Holiness association will
ho held this year at Epworth park,
June 20 to 29.
Some farmer boys, near Dlller cap
tured a porcupine, which Is said to be
the only one of Its species In this part
of the country.
The Albion lco plant started last
week and is now turning out Its pro
duct. The plant has a capacity of six
tons every twenty-four hours.
Vanco Faught, a member of Cozad's
ball team, was struck nt the base of
tho ear by a pitched ball, resulting In
Internal hemorrhngo and death.
A tornado struck tho district near
Winnebago, cutting a path 125 feet
wide, and taking up everything In Its
track for a dlstanco of over a mile.
Farmers of Gage county aro nt pros
cnt milking In tho neighborhood ol
10,000 cows, ench producing on an av
erage 125 pounds of butter fat n year
Rev. W. C. Wasser delivered the
nddrcss to tho graduating class of the
York high school Sunday evening, his
theme being, "Tho Stewardship ol
Life."
Tho stnto association of runcral di
rectors will hold their twenty-eighth
annual session nt Lincoln, Tuesday,
Wednesday and Thursdny, Juno 10, 11
and 12.
Miss Anna Mario Hansen, who was
for sevoral years Instructor In art In
Franklin academy, has been elected
to a llko position In Brldgewater col
lego, Virginia.
Frank H. Krenzberg, who lives nenr
Odell, after voting for thirty years
and conslderlns himself a citizen of
tho United States, haB Just learned
that he Is still a subject of the Ger
man emperor.
The baccalaureate services at Shu
bert were held In charge of Rev. F. E.
Day of Highland, Kan.
Four-year-old Everett Johnson, at
Burwell, had his right leg broken by
the kick of a vicious cow.
Ror. S. Johnson, aged 77, who dis
appeared from Omaha, wa's located
four days later at Mead, forty-six miles
west. How he reached, the place Is
unknown.
A wedding Journey to Gothenburg,
Sweden, Is the experience of Mr. and
Mrs. Arvltl J. M. Barchlund, who left
Hastings three hours after they had
been wedded.
When he caught hold of the exposed
ends of a charged wire, Owen Howell,
n lineman employed by tho Auburn
Telephone company, was shocked into
unconsciousness.
Roy Hall of North Bend, who was
Injured while braking on tho Union
Pacific, railroad some time ago, has
been awarded $5,000 'damages for be
ing knocked from a car by a low
beam.
With a report resembling that of n
pistol, a cigar which wns being
smoked by ex-County Prosecutor
Ga'dd, at Broken Bow, exploded, seri
ously Injuring his eye.
CltlzenB'of Burwell at a recent elec
tion voted a bond Issue of $5,500 for
tho purpose of building an addition to
tho school house.
George Vertrees, nn employe In tho
Dempster factory at Beatrice, was se
verely burned In the eye, ear and
arms by the explosion of a gasoline
torch which he was operating.
Prospects for an apple crop wore
never bettor than now, according to
E. M. Pollard of Nehawka, who owns
one of tho largest orchards In Ne
braska. Some of tho apples are now
as large as hazelnuts, and It would
require a hard freeze to Injure them
THE LURE OF THE WEST
WE8TERN CANADA ATTRACTING
THOUSANDS OF 8ETTLERS.
Writing on tho Canadian West, an
eastern exchango truthfully saya:
"Tho West still calls with impera
tive voice. To prairie and mountain,
and for tho Pacific Coast, Ontarlo'a
young men nnd women aro attracted
by tens of thousands yearly. The
great migration has put an end to the
fear, freely expressed not many years
ago by those who knew tho West from
tho Inkes to the farther coast of Van
couver Islnnd, that Canada .would
somo day break In two becauso of the
predominance of Continental Europenn
and American settlers In tho West."
This Is true. While tho immlgra
tlon from tho United States Is large,
running close to 150,000 a year, that of
tho British Isles and Continental
Europe nearly twlco thntnnmhnr mnk.
ing a total of 400,000 per year, thero
Is a Btrong Influx from Eastern Can
ada. It Is not only into tho prairie
provinces that theso people go, but
many of tbem'coutlnuo westward, the
glory of British Columbia's great trees
nnd great mountains, tho excellent
agricultural valleys, whore can be
grown almost all kinds or ngrlculturo
and whero fruit has already achieved
prominence. Then tho vast expanse
of the plains attract hundreds or thou
sands, who at once set to work to cul
tlvnto their vast holdings. Thero Is
still room, and great opportunity In
tho West. The work or man's hands,
even In tho cities with their record
breaking building rush, is tho Email
est part of tho great panorama that
Is spread before tho eyo on a Journey
through tho country. Nature is still
supreme, nnd man 13 etill tho divine
pigmy audaciously seeking to impose
his will nnd Btamp his mark upon an
unconquered half continent
Tho feature that most commends
Itself In Western development today
Is the "home-making spirit." Tho
West will find hnpplness in planting
trees nnd making .gardens and build
ing schools and colleges and universi
ties, and producing a home environ
ment so that there will be no disposi
tion to regard the country as a tem
porary place of abode in which' every
one is trying to make his pile prepar
atory to going back East or becoming
a lotus-eater beside the Pacific.
The lure of the West 1b strong. It,
will be still stronger when the crude'
new towns and villages of the plains
are embowered in trees and vocal
with the song of birds. Advertlse
uent. The Reason.
"There Is a great deal of snap and
go about Jlmson'B business methods."
"How so?"
-"He makes rat traps."
HOW THIS WOMAN
FOUND HEALTH
Would not give Lydia EPink-
ham'ft Vegetable Compound
for All Rest of Medicine
in the World.
Utlca, Qhio. "I suffered everything?
from a femalo weakness after baby
came. I had numb
spells and was dizzy,
had black spots be
fore my eyes, my
back ached and I '
was so weak I could
hardly stand up. My
faco was yellow,
even my fingernails)
wero colorless and I
had'displacement I
took Lydia E. Pink-
ham's Vegetable)
Compound and now I-am stout, well and
healthy. I can do all my own work and
can walk to town and back and not get
tired. I would not give your Vegetable
Compound for all the rest of the medi
cines in the world. I tried doctor's med
icines and they did me no good." Mrs,
Mary Eablewine, R.F.D. No.8, Utlca,
Ohio.
Another Case.
Nebo, Til."! was bothered for tab
years with female troubles and the doc
tors did not help me. I was so weak and
nervous that I could not do my work
and every month I had to spend a few
days In bed. I read so many letters about
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com
pound curing female troubles that I got
abottleofit It did me more good than
anything else I ever took and now it has
cured me. I feel better than I have
for years and tell everybody what the
Compound has done for me. I believe I
would not be living to-day but for
that" Mrs. HBTTIB Greenstreet.
Nebo, Illinois.
The Wretchedness
of Constipation
Can quickly be overcome by
CARTER'S LITTLE
LIVER PILLS.
Purely vegetable
s act surely and
gently on the
liver. Cure
Biliousness.
neaa
ache, Dizzi.
nets, and Indigestion. They do their duty,
IMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL MICE.
Genuine mutt bear Signature
C'SINGLaE
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