The Noble Red Man 0 In His Western Home. o a (gS) How He Gets a Homestead From Uncle Sam, His Dignified Mode of Life, His Sports and Pastimes. When I im Allotting lands to In dians in North Dakota I lived in tnnta ont on the Fort llnrtbold reservation about a hundred miles from a railroad or a civilized settlement. With me was a surveying corps in cluding several Indian and an Irish mnn, a German, nHpnulurd and a mem ber of one ol the first families of Vir ginia. We joyously enturtniued any body who chanced to come by onr way without regard to his present or pre vious condition. One day a boAslfnt stranger hauled np, with hungry look, in front of our dining tent and without so much as "good morning" for a preface, sprang off his horse and remarked: "A big syndicate is paying me .." a day And expenses to sell land no dif ference what I get for it or whether I sell it at all or not." He seemed abont to follow this an nouncement of his importance by ask ing the price of a 'bite' when I re plied: Ticket your bronco and sit down to a feast. This surveying crowd con trols nil the country. I ami working for a bigger syndicate than you are and it payn me bigger wages than you get just to give laud away." The invitation needed no repetition, but the statement Unit I was being paid to give land away required con siderable explanation to the visitor. And tho explanation may not be with out interest to you. The Indians, yon know, were long accustomed to have everything in com mou: to graze their ponies on tho n a 1ia hliuiafl tvilli it It la anntinRAtl that by this time he wilt be able to hold bis own ncninst all settlers in the competition for homes. Just After getting nn Allotment, tho Average in itial, tvnnlfl Iia itrih rrl tnriilitnd to give a Hundred and sixty acres 01 lan'.i fill a tvnalt'M ratifitiM. Tho next step after dividing out the Intula nml titnnlnif AAi.li Tnilintl under his own vine and tig tree is to build n TUB 1IOMM Of TUB IIOHRR1S. school house, equip it woll, put1 good oousciontious tcncliors in chnrgo of it, require every Indian of school Age to Attend it, Anil thus push on the work of civilizing the Indians right in the heart of tho reservation. The Indian school question has for some years en gaged more than any other the thought of those interested in Indian work And "the Hchoolstothe lloservations" was the policy of the last administra tion, And will, I presume, romnin tho policy of the present administration. their tepee homes to show me as the 'pride of the camp' the only two chil dren in the band that had been sent off to sohool were as gentle and pretty as Indian girls should be. I induced thorn to decide to be "good Indians," and there is hope in their future. They had heretofore refused to fake allotments. They signified their will ingness to me, but they were'very slow to put it into execution. When one CAine for bis Allotment, frequently, ha talkod about this way: "What can I get?" He was given a great variety of land to select from. "I want none of that," said he. "Is there Any special piece that I can't have?" He was told of the portions already allotted or re served. "Then," he would cry trium phantly, "I want that or nothing!" and the allotting agent had a real nice time changing this notion. The averago Indian s god is his din ner. In Inlliicnco with him tho "Orent Hpirit" does not play even A poor scc oud. You may fail to get him to agree to anything else, but if you will invito him to a meal he will foresake all things and coma with you. Thou you have at least a fair opportunity to rea son with him and drill your persuasive powers. When nn Indian who means busi ness nnd there are many such is to select an allottment, he gets his pony, rides over the land, decides upon the neighborhood in which he desires to live and then picks ont the special tract that ho wants with a view to its water supply, its nearness to wood or coal mines, its meadows, lis plow ground and nil of its conveniences. llis decision once made stands, and it is usually good. Too frequently, how ever, he selects a piece of laud that isn t good for a thing in the wide, wide world. After the allotting agent tried in vain to induce him to select a better, he always comes tft Mark Twain's conclusion that "if he wants that kind of n thing, that's just the kind of a thing be wants." Claude N. IScnuett, in Atlanta Journal. which affords endless amusement to the little ohildren on rainy days. 'THE IRISH JOAN OF ARC." Interesting Yoang Woman With s Ml. Sinn Now In This Country. Miss Maud Oonne, who has com to America in the Interest of the Irish enuse, is one of the most Interesting yonng women that ever came to these shores. Her life has been one of love of country, the poor people of her country and romance. Hhe now lives in Franco, where she edits a newspaper devoted to wnr for justice to Krin and where the imaginative Frenchmen have given her tho title of the "Joan of Aro of Ireland." Hhe is convert to Irish nationalism from the camp of the Unionists, and she declared npon reaching Amorica that there was but one object in life for her the rights of the commoners of her native country. Miss Oonne is the daughter of Colonel 1 A HORSESHOE RACK. ,i , M 17 1 HJL VWlWCT hl mi . i . l, V1 l .V-l W L WW 'WHY sinking llin first of Things In the Mnnn- lnlm of IVnl Virginia.. In the mountains of West Virginia, where there is little money to spare lor the small things of lire, are to be seen, says tho New York Tribune, many evidences of making the best of things. Tin cans, traditional diet of goats about New York, are here made into hanging baskets. They are cnt into strips longthwise, fastened in po sition by wire and the whole is lined with a moss to prevont tho escape of the earth. Now lines are also found for the old ffii!h!!M,,-!l' lid . .Ti' mm,- W ''A I.ONQ 1SCLL IN 1118 ItEGIMENTAI.fi. common plains; to got thoir wood from the common forests; to stuck their tents whore they pleased; to hunt or work and appropriate the com mon reserve as freely as tho fish use the sea. This was their old time and natural way of doing things. It violates every prinoiple of the rights of property and was correspondingly conducive to savagery. It is the desire of the Government to got them entirely out of this state and to make them citizens. One of the means to this end is to divide up the reservations that they have held in common and to allot the lands in severalty. That is, to give each Indian a homestead, mark it off by distinct boundary linos, require him to build a house on 'it, teach him to cultivate it, and in various ways help him along uutil he is able to support himself and his family npon it. Of course the Indians have to be snfll oiently advanced to be willing to do this before it can be done with any dogroe of suocesa. A portion of land is allot ted to every man, woman nud child. When the child grows nn, instead of finding the laud around bolongiug to TUB PRIDB OP THB CAMP. everybody and nobody, he finds a distinctive tract all his own. He is thereby taught the law of inheritance. The desire at onoes comes to him to leave to his ohildren an inheritance at least as good as thai which was left to him. He sees other Indians all around him oulti rating their farms and earning for themselves the com forts of life. A healthful rivalry is thus established and ambition pre' vioiuly anfelt is fostered. The Dawes bill, under whioh allot ment are made, provides that the In dian shall become citizen with all the rights thereunto appertaining within six months alter he has taken bis allotment and severed his tribal relations. It provides also that the Government shall keep the Indian's allotment in trust for him for twentv fit years. Then he is allowed to do Tho Fort Bortliold rosorvntion is on both sides of the Missouri River in the northern part of North Dakota. It contains about a million and a quarter acres and is as far from civilization's haunts as any similiar-sized piece of ground outsido of Africa. The nearest railroad train passes by nearly a hun dred miles away. The nearest tele graph instrument ticks at tho same dis tuune. The agoncy employs a few white mou who have married squaws, and a missionary or two are the only whites on the reservation. There are three tribes on this reser vation, the Oros Vontres, tho Manilans and the Ariokaroos. There is a sub tribe of Qros Ventres known as the baud of Crow Flies High. They Jong auo cut loose from all other Indians, They had to bo brought with troops from thoir mountain fustnessess down to the reservation. They call them selves "Hosbkis" (hnskios). ' which means "bad lands." They still refuse toamliate with any other tribe. It was to this unreconstructed band that I had to mako allotments. Crow Flios High had been deposed as chief and Long Bull put in his plnco. Old Crow now calls himself Chief Medicine man. Ho still has great influence and is said to UBe all of it for the bad. The Indian chiefs are great sticklers for dignity. Crow Flies High has a superabundance. The first time his band came down to have a council with me he assumed marshalship of them although Long Bull, dressed in full regimentals, was spokesman. They baited their horses oud wagons within a few hundred yards of my camp and sent mo word that they were ready for the conference. I replied that I was at my "tepee" and would be verypleased to receive them. Crow insisted that I should come to him and it was only after an hour or two's parloying that he oonsented for his baud to come to me. I was not aillieted with Crow's spirit of dignity,but I knew that if the game was opened by my going to him, I would never get one of his band to take an allotment without go ing for him with a horse and buggy and giving mm Ms dinner to come, Most of these "Hoshkis" are hun ters, fishers, warriors, sports. They are great jnmpers, runners, boxers. wrestlers. They have a supreme and loftly contempt for an Indian who will spond his time working "just like white man." They believe in the sov ereignity of leisure. Wherever a orowd of them meet, they test their strength in manly exeroise. Whenever their horses come together their tnettlo it tested in a race. They are brave, Drignt, strong. They nave their ten' der qualities, however, and the two I little girls that they brought ont from a nonsRRHon tunc. horseshoes. Instead of having holes in posts to hold tho ends of the mova ble bars oi the fences, or the more awkward double posts, with cross pieces of wood joining them and hold ing the bars, ono thrifty man has nailed horseshoes to the posts nnd rests the bars on them. An idea of vmy tit MISS MAUD 00NMK. Oonno, who was an attache of the Lnglish embassy in fit. Petersburg. She was reared in the society whioh would accompany such a position, but as n young girl the stories of the lifo of O'Connell, the Liberator, came un der her attention, and nt the age of nineteen years she hail resolved to de vote her energy and years to the causo whioh had boon his. Hhe has been in active battle for eleven years, has worked among the lowly in London and tho dungeons nnd organized many societies for the improvement of the Irish peasantry. Sugnr From I'olntncn. An extensive economical revolution is in sight, if the claims of Dr. Prinzon Qoerlings turn out to be what the doc tor asserts they are. Dr. Oeerlings, a Uovernmont oflloial of Java and form' erly Professor of chemistry at the Uni versify of Amsterdam annonnoos tho tliscovory of a simple method of con verting potato starch into sugar. He has lodged his description of the method with the French Academy of Hcionoo, so as to secure priority for his invontion, although he is not qnito ready to make the details public. COLD NUGGET WORTH ti83. It TVnlghs Thirty-four Odium and Was Found In the Klondike Gold Fields, Michaol Knutscn is one of the few miners who have como out of the Klondike region with a sack. His chief distinction among the miners rests in his being the possessor of the largest nugget yet found in that dis triot a solid chunk of gold that weighs, according to Dawson City quotations, nearly 8000. Knutsen's nugget weighs a fraction over thirty-four ounoes Troy, and came into his possession two days be' fore he got out of tin land where famine stalks. This nugget is somewhat irregular THE REALM OF FASHION. The advantage of a waist that can be made either high or low is obvious, says May Manton. The design shown ia the illustration becomes suited to tiADiRs waist wrrn ADJirsTAnr.R yokk. day or evening wear, as the yoke and sleeves are added or omitted. The lining is tight-fitting, having the nsual number of pieoes and seams, and closos in almost all the now styles. Tho smartest and trimmest tight fitting costs are moulded to the figure like a habit, and are covered entirely with appliqned or braided designs. Bnt tons to match the trimming are often used, nnd when this is the case tho bnttons are small. On the other hand, large buttons are utilized quite con siderably for decorative purposes, some of them being very handsome In deed, but the distinctive fettnre about these indisponsahln articles this year is that medium-sized ones are ont of date. They must either be very tiny or very large. SJSSSY rinsnne 'or (litnfirnl Yfenr, Camol's-hair epingelinn, in a rich, dark shado of pittm-oolor, is hero tastefully deooratod with brnid. Bon net of shirred plum velvet with strings to match trimming of black wings and violots. No other style of basque is so gonorally becoming, and as here de signed, it can be mails either donblo or singlo breasted as pictured in small sketch. The habit basque, with un derlying box-plait in centro, revived among the autumn modes, will be especially wolcomed by ladies inclin ing to embompoint, particularly by those of middle ago. The perfect sd justinen is Accomplished by double bust-darts, back, side-back and under THE Bid KLONDIKE NUQOET-AOTUAL SIZE. this and a further suggestion is given in the illustration. The old shoes are nailed npon the side of the cottage and hold the . "alpenstocks" of chestnut and pine used in mountain climbs. Beneath the tucks is a "ana table." in shape, bnt very solid. It ia light yellow in color, and nearly four inches In length in its largest part and about three inches in width. It was weighed and found to b worth ex- aotUtOoS.29. - . --- A BTYLISn WINTER W.0U8E. at the centre-front. When it is to be made low it is cnt at the line of per forations, when high the back portion of the yoke is faoed onto the lining, but the front portion is cut separate, seamed at the right shoulder and finished at the edge and left shouldev where it closes invisibly. The full portion of the fronts is shaped onto the lining, the right side lapping over and closing invisibly at the left. Under arm gores separate them from the back whioh has the material applied at the line of perforations, and the fulness drawn down to the bolt at tho waist line. The sleeves are snug-fitting but slightly mousqnetaire above the elbows and terminating in small puffs at the shoulders. As Jshown the material is pearl-gray cashmere with yoke of pas sementerie edged with velvet ribbon and frills of soft, gray silk muslin. Both neck and waistband are of gray velvet ribbon and at both throat and wrists are frills of the muslin. - When worn low the yoke and sleeves are omitted. The neck ia finished, as pre ferred, and frills only are worn at the shoulders. To make this waist for a lady in the medium size will require two yards of lorty-Iour-inch material. Stylish Winter Hlouv. The stylish blouse .shown in tho large illustration is designed for street wear and is equally appropriate for heavy cloth and suiting material. As shown, it is made of rough-surface cloaking, in a worm shade' of tan cloth, the refers faced with the same mater ial flj brown, and trimmed with brown braid and olives. The fitting is effected by shoulder and nnder-arm seams, the blouse proper being seamed to the slashed basque portion at the waist line. The sleeves are two-seamed, finished with deep cuffs and small in proportion to those worn in the gowns of the season. At the neck is a high flaring collar, and at the waist ia worn a belt of dork brown leather. The closing is effected invisibly at the centre-front by means of hooks and eyes, and the garment is lined throughout with plaid taffeta silk. To make this blouse for a woman of medium size will require two and a ball yards of forty .four-inch material, tyltoh Jacket. The jackets of the year have very bjglooUars. There is. no exqeptioa to this rnle, and Medici effects are seen arm gores (of which there are two iu sizes above thirty-six-inch bust). The neck is finished with a close-fitting standing collar. The fashionable sleeves that fit the arm closely have, the requisite fulness at the top ar ranged in box-plaits, the trimming of braid forming epaulettes in military stylo. i For shopping, traveling, cycling op general wear the mode is a universal favorito and can be developed in any of the seasonable woolens in plain or LASISS' BASQUE. mixed textures. Large or small but tons can be need in closing and the) basque can be simply tailor finished with stitched edges or decorated witU braid in an endless variety of designs. To make this basque for lady in the medium size will require two and one-fourth yards of forty-four-inchi material. Mw lrM Trimming. Velvet ribbon, with silk fringe less than an inch wide falling below each row, forms one of the many modes of dress trimming.