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If might doesnt always make right, fURES Removes y. Most of works wear and tear on a man comes from his going to it nil frazzled out by li'.SLphiy. It seldom gets left. . PATENTS Watson E. Coleman, Patent Washington Lawyer, D.C. Advice and book free, Bates reasonable. Highest references. Bestserrleee C0LDS24H0llllS, TREATED ONE WEEK FREE Short breathing ved in a few hours; swelling reduced In few days; regulates the liver, kidneys, stomach end heart; purifies the blood, strengthens tbs entire system. Writ For Free Trial Treatment. re-f- ir CtTJIZR 'OKEIUTtOM? The foethen fled in the night. e And in his flight. Uplifted high in air ' As ghastly trophy bore The brave heart that beat no more Of the White Chief with yellow hair. LONGFELLOW. 'CURES LA GRIPPE Rainrin-the-Fac- DETROIT, WERE NOT REALLY . JOHN DICKINSON SHERMAN HB foregoing verse Is actually by Longfellow, though you may doubt It Incidentally, It is worse history than It Is verse Also In many books you will find Ing the' portrait of a dian In savage finery and under It the this caption, Ogallala Sioux who killed General v. of which more later.. Custer Well, In Colonel Shields recent Blanket Indians of the book,. Northwest, (Vechten Waring company. New York) Is a chapter In which snow-shotells how be ran 300 miles on In a blizzard. In three days by far the most remarkable run in all history. raised Ugh, what a discussion that chapter has all over the West! For the West will never get of through talking about Custer and the battle Little Big Horn River, June 25, 1876. Now, of coursei, anyone who has ever traveled on snowshoes and has been in a South Dako'a blizzard has a positive opinion as to the truth of the Indian's story. Incidentally the worlds record for a hundred mile run is 13 :26:30. However, the serves a double' purpose: story of It makes Interesting reading and It has brought out some reliable facts concerning the legend that the Sioux chief boasted that he would kill Custer and. eat his heart and actually did carry out his boast. Shields . According to the story told to Colonel 1874. while by ,the Sioux In December, 1873 or quartered with a portion of his tribe at the StandBising Rock agency, about 75 miles south of got into an altercation marck, with four white men and killed two of them In as he claimed. He was captured, taken to the agency, and thrown Into jail, a temporary, unfinished log structure without a Hoof. There were six or eight inches of snow on the In ground that had blown In through the openings the walls, and the prisoner's only means of keeping from freezing was to keep walking constantly about the room. This cruelty to Indlnns was practiced on the orders of General Custer then In command at Fort Lincoln, near Bismarck. General Custer ordered that if alive, should be thrown Into Jail and punished ns severecourt-martily as possible, pending the time when the could be convened and the culprit disposed of In a legal way. And this meant, of course, that he would be hung or shot, When this order swore was read to the prisoner, of his ns author (he Custer General on vengeance sufferings. He swore that Tf'he ever got out he fight. If poswould kill Custer in a (hat he at range; tiim if not, and longer sible, Would cut his heart out and carry it away as a trophy. t Some time before the Custer massacre, escaped f.om his prison with the assistance of two friends, who handed him a pair and a blanket In which a piece of of snow-shoe- s dried buffalo meat wt rolled. The buffalo meat the blanket, and so he fell out as Started out .Into the Jesrrt. in the midst of a howling blizzard, at nightfall. with only one blanket, without a mouthful of food, without a weapon of any kind, whm the temperature was probably forty degrees below zero and the wind He told me was blowing thirty miles an hour. the story of his great run and I will tell It to you In his own words ns nearly as. I can recall them," repot t s Colonel Shields: I asked him, through an hit rpre'er, 'Where dd you go when you escaped from the Jail at Standing Rock? He said : 1 went to the camp of m.v friends, at the base of Woody mountain, in Canada. " 'How far Is that? I asked. "Three hundred miles ns (lie crow fles.r How long did It tn e you to ninke th run? ' " Three days and nights. Do you mean to (ell me that a man can run hours, on snow a hundred miles In twenty-fou- r shoes, and another hundred in (h next twenty-four- , and another hundred in the next? He said. I did It. How often did you sleep on the way? I t sleep at nil. I knew I dared no sleep I da ret. not even sit down to rest, for if I Under die terrible fatigue and hunter and strain., from which I suffered, I wou'il have lost consciousness. t stupor would have overtaken me. and 1 would have frozen solid In half an hour. I was fleeing from the poseeutiin. the wrongs, th outrages Inflicted on if e i.hd m.v people by the whte nun. I was going .o toy friends and had deter- es hand-to-han- d rained to reach them. I knew the only way I could do that was to keep going. I ran most of the way. Occasionally I would slow down to a walk to recover m.v breath and recuperate my strength a little; then I would forge ahead again. What did you eat on the way?' I asked. He said: Browse. When 1 would cross a dry coulee I would break off a handful of brush, willows or and eat It as I ran across the next pla- -' teau, maybe ten miles, or twenty miles, or thirty miles.- - Then when I crossed un til- r coulee I would break off more and eat that as I run. box-elde- r, After running two days and nights and the greater part of the third day, late In the afternoon the wind lulled, the snow cleared from the air for. a'few minutes, and I saw the dim outline of Woody mountain towering away Into the sky. That gnve me new hope, new courage. I knew the camp was not more than twenty miles away, and I knew I should reach It. ; I put on a new burst of speed, and after running a few miles the wind lulled again, th- air , cleared, and . more I saw. the outline of the great blue forest that surrounds the base of the mountain ; and I saw three little columns of blue smoke curling up among the trees. The Indian told Colonel Shields, wilh equally substantial detail, how he found his friends, how they welcomed him, how he collapsed In their arms, and knew nothing for two days and n'glits. D. F. Berry, official photographer and sc ut with Custers forces, was at Fort Lincoln during the ; was in Jail there. He gives time this plain, unvarnished account In ih- - Wisconsin Times: Tn 1874, (he Seventh United Stops cavalry was-ouscouting along the Yillowstone. Dr. 'and a trader by the name of 15 iliran agates while the. stopped to pick up some m command moved on. A little later the horses owned by the two men came up to th command riderless. The scouting party started barit to see what happened to Holziner and Bali ran aid dis-- : covered they had been shot. They scout d around to see who had killed them hut the e was no trace of Indlnn or white man to lie found. TJm next summer the Sioux Ind'uiis were holding-a big 'gar dunce at Standing Rock and between the dances some of the warriors would g t up in the center of the circle and relate some of the brave deeds of the band. A handsom young chief stepped into the circle and to'd the Indians how he had killed two men on the Yellowstone, shooting both. When he hud finished he received great applause from the Indians. This Indian was Chief , Charles Reynolds. General Custer's was present watchk-- the dancers and heard the chief tell how he had killed the two men. The next day he returned to Fort Lincoln: ihe army post, located near Bismarck, on the west bank of the Mlasouri river. Reynolds told General Custer relate how he had heard. Chief his deed. On the next ration day. General Custer sent his brother, Capt. Tom Cus'er, and 100 sol- - , diers of the Seventh cavalry, together with some officers, to Standing Rock, to arrest the Indian chief for Ihe killing of the two tn n. - Captain Custe.r dlrcovered Chief R:iln-!- n the Face In the traders store and with some soldiers grabbed the chief, wrested his rifle from him and ordered him to mount a horse. The party headed for Fort Lincoln, and upon th ir arrival there was placed in the guardChief house to await trial for murder In the spring term , of. the United States court. Two men who had bei-- caught stealing oats and other grain, from the government at Lincoln were also lu the same guard-hous- e awaking trial at Fargo. Friends of the two grain thieves cut a to effect their escape and . hde In the guard-hous- e - . t Hol-zlng- er , Yimou--scout- -- REMEDY CO, Dept S.O, flUHTJLtt WEAPON OF SAVAGES College Girls Hastily Become Prim When Their Favorite Professor Hove in Sight. African Tribes Use Poisoned Arrows Which Inflict Death That Is Instantaneous. - The girl might have been born In Greenwich village. She wore her hair d bobbed, tortoise glasses, a loose Jersey dress, green earrings which dangled from her ears and she smoked a cigarette in an imitation jade cigarette holder. Not to overlook long green beads made of wood. Her companion ivas a little less true to type. They were conspicuously at luncheon in a chop suey restaurant Suddenly a tall, rather distinguished looking man entered the tea room. The girl, who faced the door, gasped, Good Lord, Dolly, theres Professor ! " Lay off quick. - The most effective weapon of the Masai and Andorobo is the arrow which they poison with the Accan ihera schimperi, a small tree, according to a National Geographic society bulletin. They boll the leaves and branches until the mixture becomes thick and pitch-lik- e in appearance, and place it on sheets of bark which they hide high on the branches of trees away from children, until It is needed When an animal is shot with an arrow dipped in the poison, it dies almost immediately. The natives cut out the flesh around the wound as soon as possible and throw It away. The remainder is eaten and the blood Is drunk This love of blood as an article of food Is common among many African tribes several of them going so far as to bleed their cattle and drink the biood hot or mix it with their porridge. out of the girls ears, her cigarette was thrown to the floor and hastily when the T second was leaving be motioned to stepped on, the cigarette holder was Chief to come. They made their tucked into her bag and she rubbed soon after escape taps had blowa and all lights her napkin briskly over her lips. The professor sat down at the opwere then out at the post. table and never once glanced posite The Buck's Revenge. started towards Standing at two girls. Milwaukee Journal. the Rock, keeping away from the trail and traveling The telephone in the Division Q. M office rang and the brand new and by night. When he reached his old camp the In-- Women in Pulpit dians started him for the hills for fear the soldiers shavetail reached important--highly Numbered among the preachers of would come and get him. A small party accomof Christ (the Christian for it. the Disciples Hello! said the voice. panied him and they later became known as Rene- church) are almost one hundred womThis is gade Sioux. Their band increased until their num- en. The first woman minister of this the operator at headquarters. May ber ran up in the thousands. The next time sect was ordained 47 years ago and an speak to Colonel Lummux? met Captain Custer was June 25, 1876, He isnt in, said the shavetail of two women a year has average on-t- he Little Big Horn river, in Custers fight been added to its shortly. ministry since then. did not Illinois . Contrary to reports Chief Major Dingus, then? boasts 15 women hnte General Custer,, but liked him and his wife. while Kansas is second onpreachers,, Isnt in. the list How about Captain Doodab? .They often talked with' him while he was in the with eight. No isnt in." guara-liousHowever, the chief did hate the Eh who is this, please? generals brother and sought vengeance against Tea Grown in Pennsylvania. him. .. This, young man, is Lieutenan not Is PennIt generally known that At one time I asked the cl ief if he had seen sylvania has a tea crop Indigenous to Bumpshus. Oh, yes, thank you, lieutenant, Captain Custer and he remarked that he had the Blue mountain region, and which And if ar looked for and had found him. The Indians told largely surplants. the use of the Ori- said the voice sweetly. me that the chief had mutilated the captain after ental tea In several counties of that officer should come in would yoi the big battle Tom Custers heart was not cut section. The crop Is now being gath- please ask him to call ? Americas out ns the reports have it. General Benteen stated ered and tons of the tea are being Legion Weekly. i In a letter to me that lie would make an affidavit picked and dried for winter use. Snuff. to that effect General Benteen md Doctor Porter Sneagle. Of No Use to Him. were the two men who Identified him. Captain Snotneagle, snowl. Custers body, was horribly mutilated. newitt Why dont you get his Sneither, snostricli. Lehigh Burr goat? Jewett What for? I am a . There was no blizzard the night Fnce made ids escape, Mr. Burry declares fur- vegetarian. It is fate that makes a heavyther. I hesitate to comment, knowing Mr. Shields A contested will is one sort of weight champion of one man, a punch' as will such stuff hut historians well, grab very suit. ' lng bag of another.this arid pass It on as authentic. Donne Robinson, secretary and superintendent of die department of history of the State of South Dakota, writes to the .Literary Digest : When lay dying at h:s home on Grand river. South Dakota, he was constantly attended by Miss Mary C. Collins, the very notable , missii nary, who was a doctor of medicine as well as of souls. He professed great remorse for the In some respects, human experience sins of his life, particularly his sins of mendacity, like is railroading.. and confess.-- that it had been a great satisfai tion in Ids sinful enreer to invent whoppers for ihe Every moment of the business and edifienrion of the whites. . social day the block signals are . T. There is no record that giving killed two men at Stunding Rock agency in 1873-- 4 of way to keenness and alertness right which him in mill had with the got Tlie offense while the slow and the heavy must tnry was the killing of Holzlnger, the veterinaon the sidetrack for their chance Stanwait General D. sutler the S. of and Iallrnn, rian. to move forward. leys expedition to the Yellowstone. This occurred on Amrust 4. 1873. 2. The next winter appeared The ability to "go through and to at Standing Rock ngency and boasted of the murthere depends much on the poise of sent-tget Fori ders he had committed. Word was cranes with body, brain and nerves A. Lincoln, and Captain Tom Custer, brother of correct diet and proper nourishment. General George A., went down to Standing Rock to apprehend the culprit. He found him trading in the sutlers store, and slining up behind him That's why so many choose Grape-Nut- s threw a blanket over the Indians head and leapfor breakfast and lunch. Served ing upon him soon had him securely hound and with cream or milk is completely took him a prisoner to Fort A. Lincoln. Whatever was harboring at this and vengeance nourishing, partly jKin Tom and not against the time was against the 1 ; . DROPS? DEADLY Instantly the earrings were jerked ... al VAMPISH . - e, C0U.UN MICHIGAN.' shell-rimme- good-lookin- . im3 CO. W.H-HIU- . ' s e. . . Rain-In-the- -- - . The Block Signals Are Workingo a that it d, j general. 3. nm not informed freedom: he limy If so, Mountain. dred miles as the escaped from the prison. I of his whereabouts during hs have taken himself to Woody it was not nearly three hun- crow flies. took no part in the Battle of the Little Big HornT on June 25, 1876. He was away (luring the ' entire day, but returned thal . evening. 3. The body of General Custer was not mutilated, nor was that of Captain Tom, whose heart had vowed to ent. If he ate any'that heart night. It was not that of either bodys 4. supplies necessary has a rich, delightful ready to serve on the instant and is distinctly the food for mental and physical alertness and speed. At ts Grape-Nu- flavor, is all grocers. . Custer." it vital mineral to full nutrition. "Theres a Reason for Grape-Nut- s |