The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, August 11, 1927, Image 4

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    “BAYER ASPIRIN”
~ PROVED SAFE
Take without Fear as Told
in “Bayer” Package
Unless you see the “Bayer Cross”
on package or on tablets you are not
getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin
proved safe by millions and prescribed
by physicians over twenty-five years for
Colds Headache
Neuritis Lumbago
Toothache Rheumatism
Neuralgia Pain, Pain
Fach unbroken “Bayer” package con-
tains proven directions. Handy boxes
f twelve tablets cost few cents. Drug
pists also sell bottles of 24 and 100.
God-sent
Blessing”
: is what one
mother writes of Mrs.
Winslow's Syrup. Thousands
of other mothers have found
this safe, pleasant, effective
remedy a boon when baby's
little stomach is upset. For con-
stipation, flatulency, colic and
diarrhoea, there is nothing like
The Infants’ and Children’s Regulator
It is especially good at teething
time. Complete formula
on every label. Guaran-
teed free from narcotics,
opiates, alcohol and all
harmful ingredients.
At all Draggists
Write for free booklet of
letters from grateful mothers.
ANGLO-AMERICAN DRUG CO.
215-217 [alten Sb Kew York
A single dose of Dr. Peery’s "Dead Shot"
expels worms, Tones up the stomach and
bowels. No after purgsative necessary.
All druggists. 80e,
C Dead Shot For WORMS
(Sr
SKIN BLEACH
Resuiis wonderful and sure. Une complete box
of KREMOLA will convince the most skeptl
eal. Also cures Besema. Price $135. Ask your
dealer. Beauty Booklet FREE. Dr. C IL
Berry Co. Dept. B, 305 Michigan Ave Chicago.
: She Fools Doctors
After lying in a hospital at Spring-
field, Mass, for six months, paralyzed
from the waist down by a bullet which
covered her spinal column, a woman
now i= on the road to recovery. Physi-
operated at the time, but ex-
her death within a few days,
there is no similar
cians
pected
They say
on record.
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