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CUse The Salutation Kolicitor-—I should advise you to write this man a nice polite note antl gee~ what happens, Client—All right, T'll do it. you spell blackguard?—Baoston How do Post, A New Way lo Make Jellies Without Staining Fingerc—Without Long Hours of Boiling—Without Depending Upon Berries or Fruit Being in Scason. One of the most interesting and yet one of the simplest new products in the food field is called minute jelly It is pure fruit or berry juice already boiled down und concentrated, To this concentrated juice, fruit pectin in the right amount been added. The pectin Is that part of fruit which makes jelly “jell,” It is as pure and wholesome as the fimit juice, To the jelly take the little bottle of concentrated juice, pour in a sauce pan, #438 water and sugar ac- cording to directions on the bottle and boil a few minutes. ‘Then pour into jelly ginsses and when it has become cold you have the most delicious pure fruit jelly you ever tasted. A few bottles kept on hand, selected according to your taste for jellies, and you make up a ns you want it. One small bottle makes two glasses of jelly, If you wish to try two bottles send us twenty-five cents and we will give you your choice has make can few glasses just » mint, Y, strawberry or Or four hottles—all different Address Department Packing Corp, Cranford, Adv, pineapple, orange, blackberry. for fifty wit, Gen New nis, Underinker Had Best of Bid for Business A. Dwer, president of the thods too far, sent for « looked doctor, sald the - to estimate In this way, fe cure you for S200 his shook he Post Erccts Strect Signs ‘The hundred vacationists Grand Haven, Mich. i trouble finding future, each summer will gye no their way the city In nd the erected by the local post of the Amer Legion. About two hundred signs will be erected by the Legionnaires in co-operation with city the They greets marked by signs eun officials Wanted to Know iit will you have, rater. a boiled owl” cheerful diner Thya' n bigger I'm gonna American Legion Monthly. a holled owi I'm owl, an’ nex’ guy at th’ table says fool bailed ‘vestigate, Madrid Bars Planes vo airplanes of any description are Madrid, Spain to protect the popula. danger of a crash, al thus far there has never been an aerial accident over the city. permitted to fly The {ion over object is from though the Smallest Commission City South Charleston, Ohio, which find its place on the claims to be the smallest town has map. in the United States operated under the com. mission plan of government, yet to Rolling stones gather no moss, they are nobody's stepping stone, f= Flyosan has killed all his millions of [friends and relatives N° wonner he's blue. He knows he's next. Flyosan has killed every single fly and mosquito in thousands of homes thissummer, Flyosan is the modern best way of fighting flying pests. It kills them by the whole- sale--not one at a time. Flyosan is the original liquid insect spray (1on-poisonous). Use Flyosan itself, not one of its imi- tations. Flyosan not only kills ali the flies and itoes in your home but also rida it of the mil lions of deadly, discase-bearing germs which cach one carries, Petermen’s hos the vigla fanecticide for each in sect, On sale wherever drugs are sold. - “Swatting” only scatters these germs into the air which you an your family breathe. . Here is the right insecticide Jor each insect: , * FLYOSAN, Liquid Spray «kills flies and mosquitoes, PETERMAN'S ANT FOOD — exterminstes ants, PETERMAN'S DISCOVERY, Ligwid «exter minates bed bugs, PETERMAN'S ROACH FOOD extermination that cockroach army. PETERMAN'S MOTH FOOD -. protects You must have a specific insecti- cide for each inscet. No single ine secticide will exterminate them all. We have had nearly 50 years’ experience, We know that is true. 5 200 Fifth Ave., 1. ¥. 6 i THE CENTRE REPORTER, -- , A” * ERT CELY POLI LTFRALD QF F227 Z2 Sx By ELMO SCOTT WA’ SON IS Is the story of 8 ren West hero, a man who denth i innumerable times laing and in the West, test of danger proved mounts he Great who unde: acid through” igi was “pare grit clean and who won the whol ihmmiration of red, with contact It's gotten Wile hero : of kin-el Wild West Bills and Dicks and Sams heros the long whose careers were a i cent * A Ti ce and 0 cent press agentry content to let his hog L1.44s old-timers of selves, Se he the who never dime novel West, the men know the were the ally and who that frontier nor few role great were pseudo-great, will tell the more important at a critienl period than Dr. V. T. MeGillyenddy Calif you there never braver man on played no who ary now n of na Francisco, but General resident of Berkeley, and San preside nt public utilities company in Ghee an army surgeon with Crook's Sioux war of 1876 and later the wildest bunch of red government ever tried to keep for about the Indian that agent men Doctor MeGillyeuddy wag born Wis, in ae ine, After completing his eourse in four His education had also included a course in So among Doctor MceGillyenddy one of the first, If not his claim that other distinctions can of being the President Coolidge chose it as the site for the The chief guide for this expedition wax the General Custer's famous knew nearly all of the early Black Jack Crawford, “the Poet White, After the was over Doctor Camp Robinson, acquaintance of Sioux campaign was stationed at and there he made the Qionx had ever had. The army surgeon won the friendship of the Sioux lender by caring for his wife who was a sufferer from tuberculosis and won for himself the name of “Tashunka Witko Kola” (Crazy Horse's Friend) and “Wasechun Waukon” (White Miracle Man) by which he be- came known among the Sioux later, In 1870 President Hayes appeinted the young army surgeon agent for the Ogalala Sioux on what is now the Pine Ridge reservation, Despite the recommendation that the name *Tashunka Witko Kola” gave him, the new job was not an easy one. Here were several thousand Sioux, fresh from the warpath, still remembering their terrible tri- nmph over Custer on the Little Big Horn, utterly irreconcilable to being penned up on & reserva. tion-—~they who from years immemorial had been lords of a vast region over which they roamed as they willed. Their great war chief was Red Cloud, who, although he had taken no active part in the campaign of '76, was an implacable enemy of the whites who had repeatedly broken faith with him. Both the youth of MecGillycuddy and his recent connection with the army were against him in his dealings with the Oglalas and in the first general council Red Cloud made it plain that he would oppose every effort the new agent made to “lead his young men in the white man's road >» To this Doctor MeGillyenddy replied that he admired Red Cloud for his loyalty to the old tdenls, but that the white man had come to stay and if the red man expected to survive he must learn the white man's ways. He warned Red Cloud that if the older Indians resisted the agent's efforts to lead them in the white man's road, he would appeal to the young men, And appeal to the young men he did, The result was the HALL. PA. CALA was n that cool hen MeGillyeuddy wis to Washi will interpret it selves will be sure to self and Captaiy gwen! His fail soon had doubt in the mind tion at the time an the «ito » femper «1 a bloody war was averte Shortly before this time there occurred in rit characteri ton of Doctor MeGilly. inst some showed the dent which apiness of that “pure clean through” At the ever held Spotted Tail's cuddy. time of the great sun dance among the Sioux 2000 of Chief Brule outfit, a turbulent Pine Ridge to 1 of 48) Rioux, always and restless came up to visit their Oglala brethren. One day a ban of them rode over to the agency and ten of them. heavily armed, filed into McGillyeuddy the building at Doctor cuddy, a clerk, his three army officers, who had come to see the sun and There were eleven reservation, the time were Louis Changro, interpreter, cattiemen the inutes, dance, two visiting only After of the party, a tall, powerful young chief, Changro, “Tell him we want food.” MeGillyeud- dy's reply was that he knew the Brules were well provisioned before they left their resers ation and that they would get no food from him. At that reply the young glittered angrily. well him we want food NOW!” he growled. A flickered the young doctor's face, “Just tell him to go to h-l, said quietly. Instantly the Brule chief sprang across the room and. shaking his fist in the agent's face, he shouted hoarsely, “If you don’t give us food now. I'll kill every white man on the reservation ™ The smile disappeared from MeGillycuddy’s face. is jaw snapped shut and without a word he sprang on the Indian, seizéd him by the throat and shook him until his rifle clattered to the floor. Then he rushed the Indian to the door, whirled him around and kicked-—the worst insult that any white man ever gave an Indian. Ten feet from the door the Brule picked himself up from the dust and, wild with rage, led his followers on a mad gallop to the Brule camp. But the whites knew that they would be back and that nine white men would probably soon be fighting for their lives and the lives of Mrs. McGillycuddy and the post trader's wife against net only 2000 Brules, but probably against several thousand Oglalas who would likely come swarming like a» wolf pack to the kill, One alarming fact was that at the appearance of the Brules Captain Sword and his men had disappeared! Soon the white men heard the drumming of pony hoofs on the dry prairie and a party of naked, war-bonneted warriors swept out of a little coulee and headed for the agency build. ing. As the white men crouched down behind the flimsy barrier of the fence surrounding the ageney and lined. their guns on the approaching threng Changro suddenly shouted: “No shoot! Sword, he come!” It was Captain Sword and his policemen, clad In the battle dress of thelr ancestors, coming to the aid of their white chief and ready to die in his defense, And then the Brules came back, 400 of them, a howling pack of savages pounding their ponies fnto a mad charge. In the face of this onrush McGillyeuddy sald quietly to his white compan. jong and Sword's men, who had lined up beside him, “Don't fire until I give the word!” On and op came the Indians until it seemed that they white persons on a stlence of several m the leader said to chief's eye smile ACTORS Louis!” he % oo # pcs i ¥ rr Ls 5 2 VII GCILLY CUDDY t there and a las stampeded to story of the oe adintant but = him Sioux over ghitest Dakota policy prevented here his fluence over the If he the =i would have counted ot, was rewarded by the government wable wor of his services l.ater hz beca Jean Dakota School of an educator became measure for the incnic there ig no and presicent of Mines at Rapid City, and as widely known record of it me the S But except to a few historians the of this man, but for whose efforts the tlement of a vast empire might have been delayed name sot - indefinitely, is comparatively unknow: “A Forgotten Wild West Hero"? alk to some of the old Oglalas today, as the writer and you will find that the name of MeGillyenddy is magic among them still, “MeGillyeuddy Kola” (friend of McGillyeuddy), 1 said te one of them, “Waste!” {good!) he ex- claimed and that phrase was the open sesame for the interview with Through an interpreter, Jim Grass, an educated Qloux. 1 talked with Rock, Spider, Little Hawk, Brave Heart, Yellow Thunder, and Chase in the Morning, all of them old-timers who remember the of the buffalo and the tribal wars, tock, Spider and the Morning fought under Crazy Horse in the Custer battle and at the Battle of the Rosebud where the Oglala chieftain fought General Crook to a stondstill After the wars were over Rock became one of McGillycuddy's Indian policemen on the ine Ridge reservation and from him 1 learned much of those stirring times when the young agent was gambling with death as he tried to break down the reactionary influence of Red Cloud among the Oglalas. Rock and some of the old fellows ques tioned me eagerly about their friend Wasechun Waukon (Doctor MceGillyenddy)—where he lived and what he was doing. They requested me to write to him and ask him to write to them. It was plain to see that after all these years they still love and honor the one Indian agent wioom they learned to trust and respect. “He was a brave and good man and the best friend we have ever had.” Rock told me. und his face lighted up as he spoke of the old dors when he was one of McGillycuddy’s policemen. Then it gnddened ag he continned, *If he had den with us the great sadness (the ghost dance trouble and the Wounded Knee affair) would not have come to our people™ Forgotten? Not by the men who did not give their friendship lightly and when an old-time Sioux warrior utters the simple words, “He wis a brave and good man” it's about ax fine a tribute as could be paid to this real Wild West heen, De, V. TT. MeGillyeuddy, surgeon, soldier, Todion agent and friend of the red man. Not exactly! did recently, subsequent several of them. days chase Chase in