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"The only way to tight an Indian ts to be more of an Indian than bo . la." ... . ... 5 . i- This wa3 my answer to Gen. N. A. Dudley when he asked my advicu about his great Sioux -campaign of I ?74,, Yofl shall see how success fully we followed tnat advice. , Uen. Dud ey was in command at Kort McFherson. Nebraska. It wr.j II the early spring of l b' 7 4. ' Th? Sioux were, on the warpath and ba l been murdering the ranchmen, burn ing small settlements, and otherwlEi discouraging pioneers from comm; West. The Sioux were clever in choostn; ?their time, for the spring Hood* were out. aod th s made pursuit al most impossible. We 'ccated then on toe opposite s:de or trie Plattu Kiver from us. The usually shal low ?trimm was a roaring torrent. The f?rrss were Impassable. Tt) bridges were swept away. No hors.? ?cou d swim the rivnr. Yet there w> were, heipless on cne bank, whl'e th..? Sioux were plundering at will on tho other. That was the situation. Knowing cue country and Indian customs. I was pretty sure where tho Soux had fbeir camp. It was on a fresh water 'al:e about thirty mllej trom the Platte. If we rouH strike and smash that camp tbey would go petting back to their agancy on tk<j Jump. But how to get to it. Ordinarily, a bridge spanned a f?.-anch or tc? strecm 'n aimost a straight lue from the place. Bui wben we got to tbp pl?.ee we founa It gone, l sc.or.ted aionj, shore. About ten miles down stream I found ?< crazy footbridge tnat had teld in s-dte or thp fr*?shet. It had held because tr.e waters found out let beyond each end of It. The br dgo was made or mxrds nriled acrosa iailea tree trunks. Rrsky foot'nt; for man. Never intended tor horse. Yet our oniy orn?r charce was to ride tor more than fifty mile- south, to a place where a stronger bri'ige fad once stood. If tbat were std: teer? we m ght crors. It would moan at oest a ride of a Hundred miles bet?re we could con- . to a po n: on the other bank opposite to Trnere I now stood. Thej f-irty miles more to tne Indian crip. Long bet?re that time the Sioux would have oeen warued cf our com ing and, got safely away. So. m despair, I rut ray horse ai "toe crazy footbrtdge. It wabb'ed and heaved, and the waters swerved up to its highest boards. A nasty rangero'us trip it was. but I mr.de It. 'J aen l recrossed and n-portei to ' Gen. Dudley. j tok him 1 bel'eved he could get bis troopers across :f the men went single tile and s'owly. and if each . r.Orse were ridden with iou.e rein. J? yrairip horse, if h's rider doesn't try to gnide Mm has an Instinct for pick'ng the safe spots. 'At midnight w? startPd across. I vent first. The men gave the r norse? trpe rein and the surefooted beasts picked che r way along that I eriions swaying. UooJ-swept foot patn as dam thy as minuet cancers, cne by one the 300 r dert. drenched nihc muddy, reacbea thr? iir bank. Only one horse bad fallen off. M s rider had tried to gui .e him. Ha icaciied tue shore by swimming, and went nack to tte tort. We rede a:l jignt. As we neared the ino an camp 1 went ahead aga n. l'ud.ey torbnie his men to speak or -even to strike a match. Dismounting 1 crawled fcrward and came upon the whole vil ag6 fast asleep. Beek 1 went with my report, but as toe soldiers came up at dawn a few Indians had awaken ed. 'Dfae.r dogs scented us and barked. In an instant thj Sioux were on their feet and scatter'.ng_ over the plain. '1 tie speed witn which Indians can get up and scatter w^uld amaze a flock of quail. We charged, sweep ing through the village and after <Ik fiigtivrs. Bet?re the bugles sounded the re cal wt bs d k lied thirty-twc ot the escaping savages. Then we ha.ted to eat rnd to rest our horses. Tak ing up the pursu t again we cau.h? up with the main band just befort dawn. Before they could scatter wt put fourteen more Sioux tamil.es in to mourning. Back rushed the reminder to their agency. They had had enough of fighting to last tbem a long tithe, And the lesson we had given them by "eut-lndiantng" them nad wore effect. I think, than the forty-fivo bn ves we downed. Our Real Army. No nsfton ever did or ever can maintain at all t mes a standing enny mtnciently great to defend it seit agaln-u all other po.vers. The strong'h anjj the dependence oi every government is in her citizen soldiers, and is in exact proportion to Iheh brsver? ,-md effectiveness. The "State XI rt:;r or "National t;.a:-r In onr own rountry?riie Auxiliary Keservp in ICngiand the Landwehr aiic! rLandsturm in Germany stand ?> >!) ?< and form til? gr.-at ia?l-i itarv f :-erve oi the ivgu ar j.:-m es >i these nan >ns.? A my airi Navy L ie. Th.-? estimated cost of a bridge ov< t ttis Straits of Dover is $34.000,: >?>.'. Foley's Honey and Tar clears the; air passages, stons the'irritation i'li the throat, soothes the inflamed membranes, and the nnst obstinate cough disappears. Sore and inflamed lungs are healed and strengthened, i and the cold is expelled from the sys tem. Refuse any but the genuine in the yellow package. A. C. Dukes Lowmah Drug Co. Th--* people who have a good time, in this world woudn't if they satj down to think about it. i SMUGGLING US PHTLTPPrNE?. 9v,ift Boat Brings Contraband Goods Prom Oriental Ports. ? Smuggling in the Philippine Is lands is assuming proportions that .make it-a,-menace?ta-inanlar.-xerer. nues. It will surprise- the orderly and law abiding to know that only recently a case of khaki smuggled into the-country by-way of the east coast of Luxon, was floated down La. guna de Bay and tho Pasig for dis tribution in Manila, yet such ie the fact. The cloth waa dropped on the east coast somewhere near Baler, lugged across the mountains to a seclude.! inlet on the lake and bodily brought into Manila. . Sleuths of the Govern ment got track of It before it wa* landed, but there was .no way to stop it. There is smuggling too, 'in the north country, but . its grea.tet t home is in the Sulu archipelago,, wit}. Borneo as its base. There In tha back alleyway of the sea, it has gom on for ages without let or hindrance. Hundreds of swift going vintas arc engaged in the illicit trade and here tofore they have carried oa the traf flc in the light of day. it has never been anybody's bus' nens to watch them. The trade w?: good for Borneo and Spanish sovej eignty sat lightly in the sea of th> Dyak8. A month ago when a legte lative committee went from Maoil to Investigate the question It foun a hundred boats loading corrtraban-' on the Borneo coast and it stumbV upon a party of ninety Chinese w were coming to the Philippines b. the underground. Suppression" of the use of oo.ut in the Philippines has ma4e the dm; tho great priee of smuggling. Iths? gone to a fabulous price in Manila Iloilo, Cebu and other cities and thore are riches for the fel'.ow wbe can run it across the Sulu sea. And thure is monoy in the other articles as witness the innocent khaki ciotV that circled Luzon and came in by way of the'Luguna excursion route. Th* Government is Dl?nning to mee tho Sulu situation by building a fast cutter, hut two could do more work than one, and there mu?t later be another for the north coast and late another for the east coast. Her Little Mistake, I A lady who has a great respect fo; the* conventions, and also s.n abicinf j feer of the mental angles of the "heathen- Chinee," says a writer lr. ! the Bohemian, recently went down into New York's Chinatown and thqre began a search for a eurio tc git e to a friend. She walked into a shop on Pell street, acknowledge the bow of the grave gentleman "wr.r1 owned the place, and looked abont her. She noticed a curious dagger, and In the patois which she had sup posed all Chinamen to understand, said: "Say. John, how mcchce kebehum this knife?" The price named seemed *o he) enormous. "What a matter yeuT* wrM tho lady. "No wan tee bnyee store wan tee got knife." The proprietor gravely took the da^ser flroa her hand. "The price, madam," he seid, in pet feat English, "is twent>y-fiv? dol laru, as.l tJhe price is reasonable. The knife is considered 0:10 of the finest ' specimens of the work of Muey Ling, the armorer who won fame la th? fourth dynasty. If madam t il! loot: c'oasl-y sfcq may be aiic fco see tiie mark." Tr-en he held the bla^ up fcr her neeivr vision. "And eo you know," said the lady, when speaking of the.recurrence, "he so took me off my feet th,-*t I fled from the shop with a hastily stam mered apoiogy. "I understood later that he was ? k college graduate a-sd cne of the men who are 'advancing China.' But what I have never been q*iie able to solve, is whether he expected me to Believe in Mr. M(pey LiAg of the fourth dynasty, and how ranch he wan just having fun with the intelli gent American woman whe was try ing to talk down to him." R.-ins TlHrty laches a Ye^r. The "tecussion of observations or r&Jnifatt nm-fe first by Sir John Mur ray and later by Bcaefener and Pritsche permits an e&timation to be made of the mean rainfall on con tinents, which is found to be about thirty inches per year. TJhe rain fall on the ocean in mow ?im on It ti> Hieasxre, but 4t ka? beeo estimate: by Supau; and Friteohe, tahing ac count of all the koawn Saers. esti mates the mean annual nafc>fciH foi the entire surface 0/ th* earth al abewit thirty-six inches. Making use of this number it is to oalerrlate that the total rainfall amounts to L64 milMou millions of metric tens pet yesr, 1;272 thowpaud millions of tons per day,x f?3,000 ?illiora of tens per hour, 8S3 nUUion tons pet aid irate, or fifteen millioars teas per second. Kawlfcoch's Mp'tfr. Arrosg many great pictures by Kauihaeh, fJtto greatest, hovoni doubt, is "T.he Battle of tire Hans." In tho opiniofe cf the highest author tioc there is not to be iV.:>! in '!.< whole Banse ?f EOiorn art a S:iei corapeeition. As it Jir^rhy the nfjli! sublime tho fight ii mkl<.i: b6?.'w?-f? the spirits of the \Var. w?r: slain in the battle i.-. worthy oi bolder^ conceptJoa of - "i i i:y. DeWitt's Kidney and Bladder Pills are unequaled in cases of weak back, back ache, inflammation of the blad der, rheumatism pains, and ail nrinary disorder?. They are antisep tic and aet promptly. Everv case of j kidney or bladder trouble should be| attended to at oace, and the aches In ths back, rheumatic pains, uri-j m ry disorders, etc., tiro warning signs. Dun'; delay, for delays are dangerous. Get DeWitt's Kidney and Bladder Pills. Regular size 50c. Sold by A.C. Dukes, M. D., and A. C. Doy'j & Co. M-.-.VKEYS KIND AN BASY 'MARK. Collect Prof, Haggerty's Bananas as He Tests Their limitative Faculties. Becaust it was a very hot day and news -vaj dull the city editor sent a rx^porteiuto..tJae?Ke*?Yttck .Bionjc JZoo. to see how Melvln Haggerty, a Har vard Prof2ssor. is getting along in me monkey house; where he Is spend ing ihe. summer in the" Interest, of. Cambridge culture., Hejs getting a line or several lines, on the intetli l ence of the Intelligent monk. The City Editor wanted some too. You don't need a guide to point Haggerty as you survey the" monkey cages. Haggerty had his cloibes on. Strolling up'to the cage the reporter asked pleasant.y: Does It seem sort of natural in tbere?" Although bis name does not sound as if he came from Harvard, there :an be no doubt taut Haggerty knows his Back Bay and tnat he la bearing well in mind that a certain other Il lustrious alumnus Is going to get $1 ?i word Tor all he says about animals, therefore Mr. Haggerty is not going lo give gratis to the public print alrit he is finding out from his asso ciation with tne monkeys. If it does ieel natura"! for him to be with them, he is not going to tell the re lorters. and he did not tell this one. dut once out of the cage, the young man or sc ence Is quite like other folk, and taiks enthuslastlcaliy of the r>ow;!biJities or Just what monkeys think of the rest of mankind. Hp's boon with the monkeys quite a while now, and already he knows more tricks than Marceline ever dreamed of. It is stated on good au fhoruy-. however, nat Haggerty will not be turned from his serious pur pose by ar.y tempting offers he may. ret trcm The stage. He is there to btudy monkey psychology to the end that Newport may not have anything >u Harvard in the future. His able Msintants are two cultured ringtaJIed monkeys win are said to be honor ary graduates of the university. At r.ny rate they are highly educated and extremely useful as the connect ing links?or massing links, if you will?between Haggerty and the oth ?r inhabitants of the cages.' Haggerty has started in with the twenty ringtails of the Zoo. and whPii he wrings out all the knowl edge thai they possess he will pass up the scale until he reaches Baldy, fbe enimpauzee. It is no secret in tha.monkby house that Baldy is "iay tv.g" tor ihe Haggerty person, and t?at it will talft a full-sized Harvard intellect ana some muse-le to cope vitn the b;g fellow, it may all end nitn chimpanzee literature being eu r.enea by a treatise from Baldy on W aat i Know About Man." There are a iew ether things oomtag Hag gerty's way. so the keepers say, with cminous shakes of the head. One of the young man's methods of finding out how much sei.?*? die monkeys possess is by a trick bnx in Raw Lungs. When the lungs art? sore ard in flamed, the germs of pneumonia ind consumption find lodgement and mul tiply. Foley's Honey and Tar kills the cough germs, cures the most ob stinate racking cough,heals th? lungs und prevents serious results. The genuine is in the yellow package. A. C. Dukes, bowman Drug Co. A man can get awful morbid over the political depravity of the country if be doesn't like the coffee Iiis wife gives him. wii.eu /it placed iouo. ibe monk wdo d.scovers how to open the box is considered to be far more intelli gent than the one: who rudely demol ishes the apparatus in order to get what Is Inside. But the latter mon key eats first . _Haggertr^rst lets one of his pet monkeys open the box Tn full "view"?f" the cage full of monkeys. There Is great.excitement when. the..animal who has.had,the benefit.of a -Harvard, education pulls out a banana.. But I let it be said to the credit of higher education in the Bronx, thai the Zoo monkeys have proved themselves apt pupils. While they don't display the Tue HOTKEY f'nerse that only the Cambridge at r.iosnhere gives, nevertheless they ?generally get the banana, and that's what counts here in New York. Another apparatus used by the Professor Is a rope operating through a pulley suspended from the ceiling. A banana is attachec to the upper end of the rope, while the lower end dangles just above a hole in a plat lorm resting under the apparaius. The trick monkeys lower away on a rope until the fruit descends within reacn. . Recently Harrigan, a big musc'ed monk, was led out 01 his cage, after he hau seen the trie!: performod a number of times. Plainly showing lack of education, Harrigan grabbed the rcpe violently and puliedthe whole business down. The Harvard monkeys chattered their disgust as Harrig: n ran off with the banana. Prot. Haggerty Is taking bis jG5 very seriously, and does mort of his stunts whils the public is not around. So don't go up to the Zoo expecting to see a free show. It gigantic size may be judged by Buried Church Treasure In England. There must be a good deal \ of treasure m t^o i&tm ?I ip&ta and so forth concealed in different parts of the country, as quantities of it were buried at the time of the dis solution of the monasteries. There are two legends in Worces terstiire regarding some silver bells, tor ;ns?ance, which have been handed down most persistently from one generation to another, since the six teenth century. One version of the story is that the bells were buried by the last Abbott of Evesham, --Abbot Lltcnfield, In a subterranean passage which formerly existed beiween the abbey and a house on the opposite oank of the river, while the other story has it that a peal of sliver bells was buried at the same period (the dissolution of the monasteries) at Abbots Morton, a village ten miles distant from Evesham.?Wide World Magazine. Thought Mail Was Wh'te Man's Food The Rev. Hiram Bingbam who arrived here from Honolulu on the liner Alameda, is one of the most picturesques figures in the mod ern history of the South Seas. His life h?s been devoted to work In an1 tor tife Gilbert Islands, which he first visited in 13t>7. When he first visited the Gilbert islands the natives had no knowl edge of writing and had never seen paper. The first mall that arrived for the missionaries was stolen by the native carrier to whom It was entrusted and distributed in particles 'o the other natives, who ate the scraps under tne impression tDat they were some kind of white man's food.?Sau Francisco CtwLnicle. A Freak Rose Bash. W. R. Wilson, the president of the Huntingdon Borough Council, hag an oddity at h!s home on MIfflin street in the form of a perfeGVly white rose blooming on a rose bush which haa borne only red roses and on which ail the ot-trer tlowers now blooming are red. The rose Is a climbing rambler, and about eight feet from the ground up the side of the house the one per fectly white rose has grown, standing out prominently among the red ones surrounding it.?Philadelphia Rec ord. A Stone In Which 30 People Live. During the course of the centuries (he enormous stone known ns Yermr loffs Rock has boon so tunnelled that it resembles a gigantic rabbit warren. In its interior, says a Bas tian paper, live five families, num bering no fewer than 30 people. The none is hi the Caucasus, within half a mile of the Georgian military road. The Jap's ineroise,. As a result of Its war with Rus rla the ares of Japan's territory i-as raised from IS9.OO0 square mites to 283,000 square miles, and her popu lation Increased by in ona.non If You arc Over Fifty Rend This. Most people past middle-age Puf fer from kidney and bladder disor ders which Foley's Kilney Remedy would cure. Stop the drain on the vitality and restores needed strength and vigor. Commence taking Foley's Kidney Remedy today. A. C. Dukes, Lou man Drug Co. The first time ;i woman marries she calculates her future In sentiment: th" second Hme she estimates it i:i household duties. j Which Broke Out in Different Places -^Nothing- VYouJd-Helfj Him.? j Mother Almost in Despair?Skin Quickly Healed WithoutaScar and Trouble Has Never Returned SINCE USING CUTIGURA MOTHER GIVES IT PRAISE "Several months ago, my little boy, now two and a half years old, began to break out with itching sores. I began to doc tor him, and as eoon as I got them healed up in one place they would break out in another. I was almost in despair. I could not get anything that would help him. One even ing I read a tes timonial from a lady who had cured her little boy with Cuticura. I began to use the Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment, and after., using them three times, the sores com-v menced to heal. He is now well, and not a scar is left on his body. They have never returned nor left him with bad blood, as one would think. Cuti cura Remedies are the best I have ever tried, and they are surely great. I shall always have them in the house, handy, and shall highly recommend them to any one who is suffering likewise. I cannot give them too much praise. Mrs. William Geeding, 102 Washington St., Attica, Ind., July 22, 1907." ITCHING TORMENTS From little patches of eczema, tetter, milk crust, psoriasis, etc., on the skin, scalp, or hands of infants, children, or adults are instantly relieved and speed ily cured, in the majority of cases, by warm baths with Cuticura Soap ana gentie anointings with Cuticura Oint ment, the groat Skin C ere, assisted, when necessary, by mild closes of Cuti cura Resolvent. Cuticura Remedies are guaranteed absolutely pure. Cuticura Snap (25e.) to Clranso the Sktn, Cuti cura. Ointment (50c.) to Heal the Skin, and Cuti cura Resolvent (50c),(or In the form of Chocolate Carted-Pill?. 2.ic. per vial of 60) to Purify the P.lood. Sold ilir'ouehout the world. Potter Druj Sc Chum. Corn.. Sole Pro pa., Boston. Mam. ay.Malled free. Cuticura bools on Siln Diseases. FIRE INSURANCE Not cheap insurance but in surance that insures you against all loss by fire or lightning. I do not represent small mu tnals with no capital, who have to assess the policy holdiers to oever each Josa, bat ten -of the oldest and strongest companies doing business, worth 'more than $100,000,000 and who have paid more than $1,000,000,000 in losses. Country dwellings, barns and outbuildings, together with their contents all written, and I have satisfied customers in every sec tion of the county. Improved gins insured and al so cotton on ntontations. Office with WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH CO., next door to Dr. J. G. Wnnnamaker Mfg. Co., where you will find me from 8 a. m., to 8. p. in. _ Office J>ifpl-i ne No. 21. Reside ate tit 1812. W.K. SEASE Prices $100. a?d upWitrds. Invest ment opiK>rtuiiity. 1H valuable Building tots on Fairvitw (the su burb beautiful) for sale, located and having such niensurenn nts as shown above. First buyers get best bar gains. For tonns see ?DR. 1>. .T. MTORICK THE BANK OF Si'K:N<.i iELl>. OlliccrH. L. M. Mints. President: Jno. McB Bean, V. P.; J. B. Smith, Cashier; Edith Phillips. Asst Director*. L. M. Mim3. Jao. Bean, Joe. A. Berry, L. B. Pulmer W. P. Hui to. J. W. Jumper. SI. A. Odom, T. L. Gleatoc, 0. C. Salley. Ail business lutri sled to as re ceives careful, oflici,.! attention. Leave your Surplus funds with m> at four per cent interest. Capital...5-0.000. on CncHvideu' Prolits.12,000.00 To the many who patronized the Big Bargain Sale: I know you found everything as represented and are pleased. I wish to say I will be found at the same old stand with a new and up-to-date line of Dry Goods, Clothing, Shoes and Hats, in fact everything that is to be found at a first class Dry Goods Store. Yours a little cheaper than any other merchant. Geo. V. Zeigler. WE ARE TRYING TO MERIT" YOUR TRADE THIS FALL THE BEST VALUES POSSIBLE ? Of course when we do that we very many times sacrifice profit, but that is nothing compared to the satis faction we get thro'the medium of our many satisfied customers. We are preparing to give during November many special sales and it will pay you to drop in when in the city trading. A lot of Plaid Dress Goods Miat sold at ."JOc, we are closing these goods at 36c. Many extra fine values in the lot. 20 pieces of Mixed Cotton Dress Goods, in plaid and stripes and polka dots, wortli 25c; we will'make a low price of 15c on this entire lot. Ladies' Black Satine Skirts at prices cheaper'almost than the ma terial cost, at 75c, $1.00, 91.25 and up. How alKtut Underwear??Our line is now very complete. IVe can fit from infants to extra si/.e, in .Men's and Ladies'. Prices run from 25c to $1.50 a garment. We will put on sale on next Monday one ease of the best 10 cent Chambrny, in solid and fancy colors. These goods we had on saij last year. You know just what Ihey are; so come in mid get your share. We only have 3,500 yards; they won't last long at the price of 7 cents. We will also make the price on Amoskeog or Lanrnstcr Gingham 10 yards for one dollar; absolutely fast colors, no better made. We have just replenished our Clonk stink ami if you need one why he certain *o try for it at M< -eley's. We give you style and quality at just a bit cheaper lhau elsewhere. How about Clothing??You enn'i afford t<> overlook us if you need a Suit or Overcoat. We can give you great values. Our styl?* are up-to-the-minute, ail the latest slwpes in tan, brown and grays. SHOES?Wc are ready with every style lor Men, i^kI??* and Children. Shop with hi during f?0S I we arc ccriain the new goods will bring you much satisfaction.