Part 2. GAZINE SECTION, Nr ntre democrat, BELLEFONTE ,PA. THUREDAY, APRIL 12, 19086. Farm Notes, Choice Fiction, Current Topics A NEW GOULD BABY, ———— NO RACE SUICIDE IN FAMILY OF GREAT FINANCIER AND RAIL» ROAD MAGNATE, Married Life of Son of Jay Gould and Wife Described as Ideally Happy— Regardless of Great Wealth, They Live Very Simple. The Goulds have been married 20 years, It was in 1886 when the eld- est son of Jay Gould, then almost as un- known and indeterminate a factor in finance as either of his two brothers, Howard and Frank, is at present, pro- vided the town with a momentary sen- sation by wedding Miss Edith King- don, who was a member of Augustin Daly's theatrical company. The match was regarded as ideal in all respects. Miss Kingdon’s position socially and professionally was assured. Her heri- Mrs. Bleakeley and the baby, bundled her into the hack, and took her to the Santa Fe train. They were compelled to wait a few minutes, and while they gat in the hack Judge Smart, who had awarded the baby to the other woman, passed it on his way to the Ottawa train. “When the train came in Mrs. Bleake- ley was placed on the Pullman with. out attracting any attention and put in charge of the frat. boy's parents, “The pare nts were simply ordered to gee Mrs, Bleakeley through Kansas City gafely, and, like good modern parents, they obeyed, “The difficulty lay in the Union depot at Kansas City, where it was expected a detention telegram would be await-| Sheriff of one of the largest counties in Illinois, J. H. Ray, Willg county, was on the train, a man as big in proportion as his own county, big of body and big of heart, He made the acquaintance of the father of the frat. boy, and in his dilemma the lat- ing them, The i.e wi MRS. GEORGE J. GOULD, A MOTHER OF SEVEN tage was undeniably suitable for an! allianes with the chief heir of one of! the wealthiest men of the day. Per- sonally she was the embodiment of a beamtifml, gracious, vivacious, well bred and mentally dowered American girl. ldeal is a hackneyed and greatly abused word, but it is the only one that aptly and satisfactorily describes the life and companionship of the Goulds a the two decades that have elapsed siace they stood at the altar Mrs. Gould is preeminently a domes tic woman. Her home and her stal- wart boys and handsome, sprightly girls are her first” consideration, in common with her husband. Regardless of their great ‘wealth, the Goulds live their lives simply. Mrs. | Gould kas artistic tastes developed and cultivated along rational lines, these she indulges to the top of bent. Mr. Gould in fulle sympa thy with her inclinations this di rection and shares them her. | Probably there are nowhere ons of thelr means who are le prints than the Gonlds, cares little for society, as sons accept the term, but is found of entertaining the congenial men and women who compose their set, and | her is in with pers 8 in the publ Mrs, Gould most per EE — THE INCUBATOR BABY, Story of How Two Women Struggled for Its Possession. The tiny little Infant in the iacubator at the has, attracted more attention than during the entire time that it object of Interest of the sightseers, At the close of the Exposition, two women sought possession of the child, | each claiming it to be her own. Each gecured a writ giving her the custody of the child through decrees of differ- ent 5, but Mrs. Bleakley, who had at been awarded the care of the inf through the ruling of the at Moline, linols, took the law her own hands when the court at rence, Kansas, decided against her. According to his own story, Senator Fred D. 8mith’ of Kinsley, played an important role in the when the mother of the “incubator baby” re. cently disappeared suddenly with the baby from Lawrence “When Mrs. Bleakley left the court room at Lawrence after the decision against her,” he gtated, “and returned to her mother’s house she was nearly frantic In mere desperation she fled from the back door and sought refuge In a college fraternity house nearby and begged the boys to help her. It was then nearly 6 o'clock, and the parents of ens of the boys, a red. headed frat, youngster, were expect. ed to be on Panta Fe train No. 6 en route to Kansas City, and this boy had a hack in readiness to drive him ta the train. The boys promptly raised a purse of $256 to get some clothe for who reposed St, it court first ant into Law- Case {and | ing room, a massive and Louls Fair | since the close of that exposition, | did | was the | | Oklahoma, was law | BRIGHT CHILDREN. RODE TO THEIR DEATH. HEROIC ( HARGE oF TWO CHEY=- ENNE INDIANS AGAINST FIVE TROOPS OF CAVALRY, A Tragic Romance of the Yepee- Repetition of the Days of Chivalry— Flesh and Blood Against a Hail of lL eaden Bullets, / BY W. M. WOOSTER. About fifty miles north of the Big { Horn Mountains, and forty miles south {from the Yellowstone River, in south- eastern Montana, live the tribe of fear. less Northern Cheyenne Indians, A few decades ago they ranged the great plains, following the buffalo, but are now attached to the Tongue River Agency. The men are tall, well-built, brave; and their women are proverblally chaste, With the disappearance of the game and the decadence of inter-tribal warring, the young braves have had little or no opportunity to show their prowess. eo In the summer of 1890, men—Head Chief and You who had falled to find fay malide of their ch war-path to win distin A moon! and the dis wearing their eagle tipped, as warriors do, home Rumors of their return soon reached their Agent, who recalled that a white herder living near the reservation had been missing from his home for nearly a month, two young img Mule or with the took to the tion and wives. nted lovers, feathers red. were again at n nas ice, appoi The Murder of a Sheep Herder. The returned braves were question. ed, They openly admitted going on the war-path and killing the herder, A detachment of the two troops of caval. ry stationed at the Agency, assisted by some Northern Cheyennes, made search for the body. It was found on the evening of September 9, and had been scalped, Fearing t troops were h nt Keogh, Montana, and the Agent called a council of the chiefs and head-men, demanding that they arrest and de liver the murderers. Two Moons, the war chief, battle BCArTe( d and old, pleaded for the young braves, offering a ransom of thirty ponies for the dead herder. This was deelined. “hief Amelcan Horse then arose and said his roubla Ae, three irriedly sent warriors would fight if the soldiers attempted to take the young braves alive; and that thelr final message was: “Select the place of meeting, and we | will come and die In your sight, fight | ing the soldiers.” The council was dismissed, and the | Indians returned in the evening to their lodges in the hills south of the ter submitted the matter to him of how to get Mrs. Bleakeley and the baby across from the Santa Fe to the Rock Island train, which might be late, with. out observation. The Sheriff prompt- ly overruled that plan and ft agreed that Mrs, Bleakeley should re main in the Pullman drawing room while In Kansas City, and go through to the Sheriff's home town, where he would put her on the train for Moline. As a precaution the ‘Mrs. in front of the name on a bench warrant with which he had been on a fruitless errand to Colorado, and placed Mrs. Bleakeley under arrest, technl cally at least “When the train reached Kansas City the frat. boy's father went out and ght a nursing bottle and hot milk other necessaries for the baby, which had been left behind in the hurry of departure, while the Sheriff stood guard at t! the draw- satisfying pro-| ull 1 bou o door of tector. “No one appeared, and the woman and baby went on without hindrance, She ht at the Sheriff's his wife, and on ine, under the pro opped one nig cared for by Saturday was in Mol tection of that court's decree “The whole thing was ludierously simple, and yet was woven of some cu- rious coincidences, each helping to carry through the escape and each play- ing its unpremeditated but important part in the final success.” The red-headed college fraternity boy was Bustice Smith, son of Senator Smith. home, TE Eagle Quill for Statehood Bill, President Roosevelt will sign the Statehood bill with a pen made from a quill plucked from an Oklahoma eagle's wing, When Charles Hunter, the newly ap pointed elerk of the district eourt at in Washington some days ago, the President promised to give him the pen which he would use in signing the Statehood bill Mr. Hunter went home and had a pen made from an eagle's quill, en A Greal Hunter, His brand new gun was “hammerless,” His powder, too, was what Is known as “smokeless”, and we guess That he had “hitless” shot, Sr The canals which form a network throughout a greater part of China abound in fish, The ricefields, which! are supplied with water from these eanals, make ideal hatching places for the eggs and for the young fry dur ing their early existence, S—— The largest of telescopes is the 36. inch equatorial called the Universe Disseverer, at the Lick Observatory en Mount Hamilton, a 4000-foot peak of the Monte Diablo range jn Califorala, was | Sheriff added | Agency, Twilight fell. Soon a flaming arrow blazed like a rocket In the southern sky. And far to the north, signal fires were seen. o Gathering of the Warriors, All night armed warriors, hideously painted, hurried to the circle of hills commanding the Agency, while lights burned late in the valley below, where the agency officers were consulting In the crimson dawn, watching war riors saw a mounted Indian police leave the Agency and take his way southward along the misty mountain trail. It was the decision for peace or for war. As the first rays of the sun gilded the Indians’ tepees, he drew rein and dismounted at the lodge of American Horse. The challenge of the two braves to fight the soldiers had been accept ed—to fight at the Agency at set of sun Directly runners were off to inter {cept the fleeing squaws and children. {The warriors clamored for a fight with the troops but the chief refused. The council, he sald, had spoken with straight, not crooked, tongues. Slowly the chill September morning warmed to amythest afternoon, An eagle wheeled high above the hills which formed an ampitheatre. In the center, or arena, were the Agency buildings and the troops, As the shadows crept out in the valley, the spectators—warriors old and -hegan taking the {eirele of hills, | fight. their places on They would see E'With Hearts of Iron. Forth from their refuge in the Wolf Mountains, rode Head Chief and Young Mule, painted and armed for war, Une guarded they rode, Still was there time to escape, but the pride of their race, {held them. They went on. Five miles to the north lay the peace ful valley, and the arena with its {massed five hundred guns, The trail wound In and out among the hills Leaves were falling, and here and there were bright red splotches of foli- age. Overhead they noticed a flock of birds winging southward, They thought of the maldens they loved; of the warpath: of the feathers tipped with blood, and thelr faces darkened Silently they held thelr way north ward, Soon was reached the crest of A high spur. They turned their ponies to the west and drew rein, The sun was almost down, For an instant they gazed; then pointed to the earth, and [raised their arms in supplication to the Great Spirit—wheeling, they head: ed east at a gallop, Presently they pasa some warriors who promptly signal their approach to the waiting Indian spectators. Now they gallop to the very crest of a high hill, perhaps five hundred yards west of the Agency bulldings., There they stop In full view of the soldiers, A bugle sounds, The troopers mount and move to a dry creek-bed about fifty additional | - : from Fort | yards from the position in the sit with waiting, At the top of the long steep hill In their front, silhouetted against the flaming sky, sit the two slender braves on their pon le Cooly they lash theme gclves to their saddles, Raising their rifles high their heads, they shake them at the troops and begin a shrill song of defiance, Suddenly they fire at the Agency. Thelr signal! Agency, They form of a crescent, and loaded carbines unslung, above Into the Jaws of Death. A bugle In an ins launch their ponies, straight from the bow, at the center of the cres- cent of soldiers. Down the hill they eome, full charge, shouting the savage’ Cheyenne war-cry and firing as they ride. A bugle blast! and a withering volley blazes forth from five hundred guns Still the ringing war yell. On through the smoke they come, apparently un- seathed, working thelr rifles like mad. blows Sd young, | and squaws with papooses and children | he | They seem to spring to meet the seo ond awful crash and glare of the guns. Not yet down?! Impossible! No flesh and bicod could withstand such a fire! {Into and through the columns of shrinking horses and men in blue they burst, like devils Incarnate. Some of the horses reel and go down with the troopers. But instantly the cavalrymen whirl and give the swaying fiying braves another deadly volley at close range, Head Chief reels frightfully in his saddle. His pony goes down with a sickening thud, riddled by a dozen balls, not twenty feet from the cres esnt line Young Mule convulsively throws hig arms in the alr an d lurches backwards. Again the merci and he collapses. His pony plung headlong. Dead! Stone-dcad they I! still lashed to the bodies of their twitching ies, Again the bugle calls. The fight Is ove Squaws begin their walling Their young braves have died felting. | « y are heroes Many of the girls in the Alps wear trousers, o, pon ai her Prizes a NASH PRIZE FRE take | FARMING THE SWAMPS. PLAN TO DRAIN MILLIONS OF ACRES OF WORTHLESS MARSH FOR NEW FARMS, Representative Steenerson Has Bill to Provide a Government Fund to Wet Lands, The great ed to come areas are destin. for their share | swamp in soon tant they | as arrow | 8s hb Hie Yo aad | furthe Civen for S§ WILL B at the hands of the irr of provided for; but | been made as yi mous areas of government | land Into productive farm homes. The other day a bill was introduced to pro- vide for the drainage of the Dig mal Swamp of Virginia, which Gener- al Washington, a ago, pro- claimed would one day be converted into farms. government, The ert lands hag been has 14 enor- swamp gation de no definite move to convert th great Ww h century Reclaim Hundred Million Acres of | | except wi | WOKS, ng ghall be henefite into | ior ] the land the settlers again prorated amo 1 and paid back by the “fund $ o be used over additional reciamation work, Would Create Thousands of Homes? Th As our of developing r ternal re homes fis Is of pract in \ {ankakee a and lllinois, some 400 thousand acre richest of bottom land flow. They are they have been expensive private they has are very Ject wort Ie 10 Ver through dr 14 Iu OOmne Yet i ment entire whe n $100 $15 timated by the and engineers could be effectively in the neighborhood The same can be the Red River Vall These include farm lands in that they are fi would be wort the farmers and 0 hav anaq an a re. govern drained $10. the lands Minne f Ol ever, v state, seem to be only by the general | The | tire «manager Steener THE EVERGLADES CYPRESS SENTINELS OF LAKE DRUM MOND, DISMA <9 AMD @ourtery J resifiervice A very comprehensive bill has been introduced in the House of Representa- tives by Congressman Steenerson of Minnesota, who, if he can push his measure 10 enactment into a law, will | be deserving of the praise of not only | this but future generations, His bill pract extension of old rather, perhaps, an vast areas of our the {dea embodied in law, ': al the idea, or the " LJ the national There are in 00 million acres he United St hich have rigat fon ne the ighborhood T | 1 ates w been bull { hich would far: excess of water iy Gia work ill provides for the amatio The measu of re framed after the irriga vides that the receipts of publ lands in states shall | fund” to be ment ion law from the non-irrigat constitute WR expended Ly the Govern in great drainage worl and the cost such drainage) it the sales ion inage 8, * nt re r, {has ol pndins RbEBPSSHPY RY put to 4: persons sonding | hi the neatest correct vy includ in ez improvement er of the drainage 1 160 acres, thus fon of the tracts into drainage pr ost of the be inage to borne by the own and and no settler can have provided for more ths insuring the divis all farms which must be actually | tied upon and tilled. me & Em: ] set | » N | Drainage Work Already in Progress, This Reel this very on work the amation Sery mi gineering bureau ment 8, to deal directly 1st outl a comprehens age system for each ine ive i drain- irrigation p roj of Representative Malver Steenerson of Minnesots “0 do this the Service has its own furm and soil experts. Some of the irriga tion projects have distinctively drain age features, in fact are almost as (Continued ob DEXt page.) IN CASH PRIZES FREE FET utions. a) eltion of tae | nied Sates. oa do low, 10 those who seod Ae on May 15, First Frise, S50.00 $25.00 in Gold, Third Frise, Price, $10.00 in Gold, Prizes of $2.50 each, Wifly Prizes of tng » Total of Twe Hundred Doliars ns ANY MONEY whe nd to» we CONTENT, ench gronp ean or oan be eed thst does Bl Appear names you will have aeed every lotler | Appears, Thess prises ALE O orought prominently to the attend Can we Any one of these prizes In preparing the ne Afior you |} n of Arrearage the 51 letters printed } nthe PATILIS ETONDA into the names of six Large CASH PRIZES, as Listed rentest solations, will be given Away in Seld, 15.00 Five Prices of $5.00 each. on Fou Answer this ad veriisement, as there is nlx wa of the sx y be ual as Any Limes AR They Apps the Ml ext VIN, as we wah 0 have our Magazios We could go on and who Dave gained Second Prise, but only give in Gold. Pourih Tem Make Dow’ - ASD KreLL are win se if you orT T™ B81 00 each. In Prizes Are clever a A pend ing many thousands heer Tuily give the money Foie the money. EN Los MRA ING Lies, the leilers in ar, and po letier an correct wu As 8 J AR any Lr large a few Dames out by an alert and clever person, and It will anply pay youto TRY Po 0 hundreds mms of money The of names of people from our contests, folution oan we worked ESE CITIES, Praise ad on ¥ nowadays ® many golden prizes Stody NU very carefully and Jot ue Wd mart enough 10 sell out the cities. We 1 rather take this way of advertising onr excellent Magazine than of dolls in other fool owas. We freely and away. YOU MAY WIN. Wedo not oare who TOTPLEASE OUR READERS IS OUR DELIGHT. The GUESon ia, Can you got the correct solution? If you can do so, write the everyone livia In the © ited States, Our Magazine is carefully edited sod od with the cholosst literary matter that the best authors prodocs,. TRY AND WIN, It you wake oul the six ramen, send the ne At ono who s but what HWINA LARGE , with your Istter, yory (ntoresting args paper, filled with of love and adventore, ssl now has A cre Intion of 900 cop o enh immune. We will sel PREK A copy of the Int i tnetre of our Magazine, © every one who aowv ers th Mrertisement. COM MEN » nian AWAY ON THN POAT and ye will find it a vory frger irup © Iotiors, which oan be sn ht of out tg il the names of gir wellknown cities ¢ the t ited States, Send In the names righ AWAY. As soon as the contest «loses you wil be notified If you have won A prise. This And other most veal offers are made to introdace ome of the very teit New York magasines no whe hoot In th United Staten ho NOT W WNT ONE CEXT OF A RB MONEY. When you have mde ont the names of these cil ¥ write them neatly and plainly and send hy and you will hear from os promptly Y HETUIN MAIL, A copy of our fascin. pling MAGAZINE WILL BE SENT FREER everyons answers this advertisement, not delay, Send Us YOU ANEW IRI. intel y fore mro the names and addresses of 8 PRIZES: M, M. Hannah, Fernwood, ie, Preiter, OC mer Hmaond Baill 1m 4 8 Ballard, 15 [ntendendin 1918, Sligo, Pa, $25: Heory mes A. Conter, Holden, Mo, venae. Anstin, Chicago, TIL, Afth Street, New York on Fro: roel, eS fMMHIINORTH Undersiand, the pealest correct aolntions win the NTESD TO GIVE AWAY VAST SUMS OF MONEY In the Xeon: } wa have done in the past, to advertise onr CHARMING MAGAZ ® fd 11 18 Ihe very best Ady erie TE We oan get wolter LA mw peop ie wa have Fer 11 J A, Parmelos, Miiford, oh #1: Kite i Draniam, 158 NX. Jil] street, Los Angeles, Cal. $61: Mm, Sat LBs i) hii ea stromt, Memphia, y THE » HOPKINS PUBLIS THIS IS THE PUZZLE SEYRASUC MINPOLISNEA Dames of the cities and your full address pininly Ins Jetter and wall ito ve. apd you will hear from promptly by return anil, Lacy and foolish people peglect these grand free offers and {hen wonder And complain about thelr nck, There are always plenty of Shportunitios for clever, Wainy peo jie who are alwars alert and ready a real good thie We have built up our snormons business i alert aod Bhersd In ow afeaY OFFERS, We are contin! po ng our ders RARE AND UNUSUAL prioes © have a big capital, and anyone can easily Somtain about our fipancial condition eintend to have the largest circuintion for ons high clase Magazine in the world, 0 this progressive age pablishers find hat they must be liberal in giving away prices, It 18 the sucooml ul wa | gt yom Hy woe aiked about. € conse, If you are early discouraged and are not patient and are not willing to spend avy Ume In tryiog to work om the woilo, you oa oARnOL expect tO Win, {1 ot BRAINS Write the names of the cities and send thems fo a, and we will we . a mach pleasent’ a yOu are be sucossstnl, CAN YOU SOLVE IT? Sane ot FAILURE ail MR OF 1 il PINES Or 1 His ADVERTIAENEN several Limes before giving wre Ww hid and gw RUE nie writly Arto will, ra 3 Immediately, DONT "ome. AY. Wette nial Address oS RAAT WiLGIA NEW 1h LACK of Tht: AXb his adverts Bom treing hand to SETTERS | FRED " IN _— Brand are liver otere Stn Phi | ANY parsons who needed the money Syne 1 1 ron x FEOFLE, ALINEN LAMA potanrtet 7 ( the dea ofel letters, pare tn $id wl a you ped YORK CITY.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers