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NATURE DELIGHTS IN CURVES n.a fiW &pzzmt sfor2sjrczM?jrmtj&r 4 Auctioneers Satisfaction Guaranteed Phone us at Homer, Nebr., No. 222, Line 66, or write us -AT Emerson Nebr&sltSk. I m FRANK DAVEY, JR. RAY M. DAVEY. Davey Bros. Tire Repair Co. - 423 Water Street Sioux City, Iowa EN. HUGH L. SCOTT was Just get ting tho chair of chief of staff of tho army comfortably warmed when, the other day, ho was hurriedly dis patched to tho Mexican border-to per suade tho turbulent Mexicans to take tholr civil war out of Arizona's front yard. That's always the way. fcicott never gets well, started on an army Job anywhero but what ho Is yanke,d away to go somewhere and do somo pacifying. Ho Is Uncle Sam's star pacifier. Dark-skinned people, whether they bo Mexican or straight Indian, or Cuban or Filipino, take to him as children tako to a fond undo. Some times ho has to lick them, first. Whon ho does, ho licks them thoroughly. But that Is only on rare occasions. As a rule ho has them eating out of his hand within a week. Two years ago, with a Hfotlmo of experience behind him, ho went down to tho Mexican border as colonol of tho Third United States cavalry. There ho remained until laBt April, whon ho camo to Washington to becomo assistant chief of staff and a brigadier general. Only a fow wcoks ago ho moved up to bo chief of staff. 1 Thoso two years on tho border mado him, ob viously, tho man to settle tho now troublo that has arisen. AH through his army career ho haB mado it a rulo in all problems with which ho has had to deal to "study the personal equation.'" So ho studied tho personal equation of Pancho Villa, for ono, and of Benjamin Hill, tho Carranza general, who has boon making most of tho recent fuss near Naco, Ariz. Ho camo to know both men well, and they, in turn, conceived a pro found respect for him and oven a sincere affec tion. His hold over thont 1b said to bo remark able It is admitted that no man living knows tho American Indian moro thoroughly than does Gen- oral Scott Ho has fought tho Indian and con quered him, but many times moro ho has rea soned with him and conquered him even moro completely. Tho pre-eminent master of Indian sign language, the author of standard scientific works on American ethnology, General Scott is quito as wall known in tho field of scholarship as in his profession. Lacking political Influence or poworful friends. General Scott was thirty years in tho army bo foro the country at largo came to know his namo at all. His work, remarkable as It was, was done out of tho publlo eye. Ho did not havo tho faculty of pushing himself forward. But in re cent years tho reward has come. Promotion, so long delayed, whilo younger men leaped over hlB head, has been rapid. And now he heada tho army. Observo him at his desk in tho war depart ment, his bullot-torn bands, shy several fingers, busy with tho multitude of papers presented to him, giving his orders in gentlo, conversational tones, his appearance, his manner, his atttyudo precisely Jho same as when ho was a major of tho lino thoso fow years ago, modest, democratic, kindly. Tho erect head, tho keen, searching oye3, tho strong jaw proclaim tho man who is master of hlmsolf, fit for command, Curiously, tho dependents of Undo Sam know him even better than tho civilized folk know him. With tho Indians of tho West and with tho sav ago peoples of tho Sulu archipelago tho name of Scott lu held In reverence. Their faith in him is nbsoluto, their devotion unswerving. Away back in 1891, whon occurred through all tho West tho last serious Indian outbreak, when, in somo mysterious manner tho Indians from tho Canadian lino to tho Mexican bordor suddenly fell victims to tho Messiah crazo, went to ghost dancing and left tholr reservations for tho war path, tho grim jost that was bandied about through tho army posts ran: "Tho United States army Is holding down tho Indians in tho Northwest; Scott 1b holding them down In tho Southwest." It was genorally admitted that Scott did tho bettor Job of tho two. Every slnco then, whonovor tho Indians any whero got restless and troublo starts, both tho interior department, which has jurisdiction over tho Indians, and the war department sot up tho ory, "Sond for Scott!" Exporionco has shown that It is far bottor, cheaper and moro elllclent to put Scott on tho Job of peaco to bringing tho trou bled , Indian souls than to send out a Bquadron of caval ry, as was done in ancient days. Back in 190 8, when Scott was serving as superin tendent of tho military academy at West Point, tho Navajos in New Mexico and tho Mex ican Kickapoot in Arizona started trouble. Scott was yanked away from West Point, sent among tho hostiles practically alone, and presently tho troublo was all over. Again in 1911 Prompt Service Satisfaction Guaranteed - when tho HopI Indians in Arizona flew the track. Scott went down and brought them back. Only a year ago, whon moro of theso sprradic disturb ances started, this time in tho Navajo country, Scott had to leave his cavalry command on tho Mexican border and adjust matters. These are but a few Instances. How does ho do it? Because he knows tho savago and the savage mind. Ho knows how tho savago thinks. Ho has tho ability to put himself in the placo of the savage. "Brothers," ho begins, when ho has to do with a band of Indians who are war dancing, "tell mo what troubles you." And straightway they tell him of this wrong they havo suffered at tho hands of tho offlcers appointed over them, of that indignity which in their opinion has been put upon them. "My heart bleeds for you," ho. tell them. "I grieve that this troublo has been made between you and tho great father at Washington, whoso soldiers are as tho leaves of the trees. I do not want them to come among you and kill you. Is there not somo manner in which wo can adjust tho differences; somo way to restore tho friend ship between you and tho great father who wishes you well?" And then they get down to a settlement. Ono of General Scott's ancestors was Benjamin Franklin tho general's mother was a great granddaughter of the immortal Ben. It would appear that somo of tho genius tho philosophy, tho diplomacy and the conciliating powers of this, the first American diplomatist, has descend ed upon tho now chief of staff. But, llko old Ben, whoso phrase on tho sign ing of tho Declaration of Independence, "We must all hang together, or wo shall hang sepa rately," is immortal, General Scott knows whefn to abandon pacific measures and to fight. So it was when, in 1903, ho became governor of the Sulu archipelago he determined that this was no time and no placo to "brother" the bel llgorent natives. Tho Malay mind ho mastered as ho had mastered tho Indian mind. A licking first and brothorlng afterward plainly was tho course marked out for him. And such a licking ho gnvo them! Then camo tho task of breaking up tho slavo trado in the islands of tho archipelago. Alter nately "brothorlng" nnd punishing, Scott achieved his purpose. Ho wiped out slavery ab solutely. And whon, in 1900, he camo to leave, tho people wept. Hero was a man they could understand; a man whoso word always was kept They asked, through their chiefs, that be remain to rule ovor thorn, but his tour of duty was ended. Back ho came to tho states to instil) other lessons as superintendent of tho military acad emy at West Point, for a period of four years. Adaptability, thai is ono of his qualities. He Is adaptable because ho knows men, civilized men as well as savago men. Is It any wonder they mado him a doctor of tho humanities? Seldom does it occur that a young offlcor just out of West Point "a shavbtail" as tho army knows such an officer gets his baptism of firo within a fow wcekB of his graduation. Scott is ono of tho fow. Born in Kentucky In 1852, ho wns graduated from West Point In tho class of 1876. Thnt summer Cus ter had gono out with his regiment, tho famous Seventh cavalry, as part of General Terry's column, In tho expedition against tho Sioux. Custor and five companies of his command wero cut off and wiped out to tho last man on tho Little Big Horn river In Montana. , Scott and a nu.nber of other graduates of lila class wero hurried West to tako tho places In the regiment of those killed. Ho Joined his regiment nt Fort Abraham Lincoln, on tho Missouri river, in Dakota territory, and ho, with five other ofllcers, slept their first night in tho room formerly occupied by Custer. Then to the field. Through all tho Northwest country tho Indians wero in arms. The Seventh was sent down tho Missouri to disarm and pacify tho Indians. It was bitter, trying work, a mixture of pacific and warlike measures; horo a tribe to bo won to peaco by palaver; there to bo whipped into docility. As his fellow-ofll-cers tell it, Scott had not been in tho field twenty-four hours when ho became fas cinated by a study of tho Indian, and par ticularly of the In dian sign language. Ho was forever talk ing with tho Indian prisoners, learning from them, gaining an insight Into their mental processes. Tho next year 1877 oame tho Nez Perces uprising in Idaho and that won derful retreat of Chief Joseph from Idaho 1,500 miles through Montana and almost to his goal, tho Cana dian lino. Howard and Gibbon pursued from behind; Miles, from tho east, at temptedand finally succeeded to head off the wily Indian strategist boforo sanc tuary could be found. In Canada. Tho Sev enth cavalry was in tho front, but just be fore Joseph and his band wero caught at Snako Creek, and just before that two-day battlo in which Jo seph was forced to surrender, Lieutenant Scott wns detached for special duty. In 1878 Lieutenant Scott's regiment was at Camp Robinson, Neb., and par clpated In I e Cheyenne expedition. Then, until 1891. tho young officer served continuously on Ptoins. flghfr ing and studying and learning. And presen y he became the acknowledged Indian authority in tho army. So when the ghost dancing erase of 189i camo along ho was sent alono to do tue work which ordinarily a column of cavalry would havo been called upon to do and ho did it. You havo heard of old Geronimo, tho famous Apacho warrior, who gave the government so much troublo in the days when tho Apaches wero on the war path in the Southwest? Well, General Scott and Geronimo for three years camo near being "buddies." You see, after Lawson and Wood and tho rest of them had brought In Geronimo and his band of Chirlcahua Apaches, tho problem of wha to do with them was difficult. Finally, they wero held as prisoners at Fort Sill, and in 1891 Gen eral Scott was sent to tako charge of them. Ho remained on that duty three years, 1894-97. Hero was a first-class ethnologist's laboratory ready to hand, a bunch of tho wildest Indians ever assembled on tho continent, herded togeth er, unable to get away, offering a fruitful Held for study and observation. The keeper and tho kept became fast friends, and the Indians Im parted all their plains lore, to tho studlour but extremely military person who had them in band. Then, naturally, General Scott wns ordered to Washington for duty in tho division of military information, and assigned to tho, bureau of eth nology in tho Smithsonian institution, whero he proceeded to write his famous report on Indian sign language. But then came tho Spanish-American wnr. General Scott closed tho door on that portion of his mind devoted to abstract science, and opened up tho military section to its fullest Once moro ho was the fighting cavalry man. Ab Ludlow's adjutant general ho went to Cuba, and presently, after tho fighting was over, he was adjutant gen eral to General Wood, commanding tho island. For threo years, from 1898 to the evacuation May 20, 1902, ho was General Wood's right-hand man in doing in Cuba that historic work that has re flected so much credit on the nation. Higher in rink now, ho was just as eager and enthusiastic in his study of the Cuban pcoplo nB ho was In thoso shavetail days of 187C away off on tho Northwestern plains in studying Indians. And, as General Wood tells it, very much of the success of American administration In tho Island was due to tho thorough understanding of tJo people possessod by this hard-working adjutant i and to that adjutant general's sympathetic atti tude toward thorn. Then to the Philippines aB major of tlio Third cavalry went Scott, thero again to Justify his reputation ns "the greatest little pacifier in tho army." Equally apt In pacifying with a machine gun and with sympathetic acts and words, Scott onco moro demonstrated his many-sldednoes. It is given to few men to bo ablo to shoot up a country and mako the peoplo llko it. Scott is ono of tho few. He did that very thing in the Philippines. Dullders of Human Habitations Well to Avoid Too Many Straight Lines. Do LAND A PRECIOUS POSSESSION Feasants of Europe Cllno Tenaciously to tho Few Acres They Own and Cultivate. In a story from tho western battlo front tho following bit of information was gloanod! Ono of tho moot striking features of tho battlefield, nnd ono entirely In congruous with tho work in hand, wbb tin, eight of peasants plowing tholr (loldB as if war wero hundreds of rallea away. Theso farmers are apparently fearless for tholr own personal safety, but keenly concerned for their homos, many of which havo been destroyed by shell fire. How tonaclously theso poor peas ants of Europe cling to their land! Not oven tho machlno guns and tho nrtlllery firo can dislodge them. Thoy aro as uneasy and unhappy when di vorced from their little ucro of soil as a sailor dobarrcd from tho sea. Thoy know the meaning and tho value of the possession of u ploco of land. In Europe tho landowners aro tho so cial and political leadors. How Im portant tho ownership of land Is In tho oyes of Europeans la demonstrated by tho zeal which European Immigrants show in getting hold of farms in this country. They labor ceaselessly to ob tain land, and when thoy securo It thoy cling to it with bulldog persistence. But tho phenomenon noted in tho war dispatch baa Us cheerful sldo. Tho resoluteness with which tho peasants maintain their hold on the land and continue to cultivate it oven while bul lets whiBtlo and shrapnel hisses around them, is a prophecy of tho quickness with which! thoy will repair tho ravages of tho war when tho rod scourgo has passed. One on the Pill Compiler. "I always euro my own hams," re marked a prominent physician at a banquet the other evening. "If that is the case, doctor," rejoined a lawyer who wns present, "I'd rather bo ono of your hams than ono of your pa tlonts." Indianapolis Star. Nature makes no straight lines, foi whether it he tho ennopy nbove, the horizon about us, tho shore of ocean or pond, tho course of streams, tho lines, of horse, bird, or oven of tho human figure, beautiful curves and vnrioty and multiplicity of curves everywhere abound. Without guld nnco such ns a taut cord, a straight edge, or ruler, man cannot mako a Btralght line. Even with tho assist ance of a crack or continuous joint In a sidewalk tho homeward-bound In tho "wee snm hours anont the twal" cannot mnlntaln their physical dig nity and equilibrium, however assidu ously their feet woo "the straight and nnrrow path of rectitude." It must then bp npparent that nature novei intended man to mako straight lines, and the present writer loves thom not, oven In a dwelling-house. Tho clay cottago with thatched roof la tho very acmo of beauty in shel ters for mankind, and often tho sim ple, old-fashioned garden round about holds moro of natural charm than tho w most favored part of the grandest es-'i' tate. Thosowho havo tramped over freshly-fallen snow, though Irilent upon go ing in a straight lino from ono specific point to another, looking back upon tholr course, may easily descry what beautiful and smoothly-flowing curves they have traced upon earth's win try shroud. Even the paths of do mestic animals through their pastures aro of most artistlo and gentle .de parture from tho monotonous straight line. Still, wo would not advise fol lowing theso In tho economic disposi tion of traffic, as did tho Bostonians with Sam Foss' calf trail. Likewise, we Bhould avoid violation of the' dic tates of common sense by trying to institute curves in a front walk from street to door when the distance Is but a few paces. Curves must not bo made to appear ridiculous. Sometimes restricted scopo precludes their use and straight lines must prevail. Still, the straight lino is not, as Ruskln 13 roputed to havo said, "the line of beauty." SAVING NEW YORK'S TREES Planting Association of the Great Metropolis Finds Itself Facing a Hard Problem. Manhattan presents a hard problem for thoso who want to beautify tue metropolis with shade trees. It seems that certain streets are not altogether hopeless, according to tho report of tho Tree Planting association of Now York, just out. Such are Seventh avenue and Lenox from Ono Hundred and Tenth street up; Broadway north from Fifty-ninth street, also West End avenue, West One Hundred and Thlrty-olghth, West Seventy-ninth street, etc. On all of theso thero are plantations at present. In splto of the fact that Borne people have tho idea that New York has few shade trees there aro dozens of varieties of all shades and Btyles and patterns, from aristocratic shado trees to scraggy slum dwarfs. Tree doctors and surgeons are very necessary, and tree surgery has be come quite a definite science. Many a fine old tree is saved by "filling its tooth," as it wore that Is, filling Its hollow cavity with cement to prevent further decay. V The committee of ttioVassodatlon has divided up Now York'nto dis tricts for special examination, n"njl the report on tho different geographical locations Is exhaustive City-Planning Association. For a number of years tho city of Now York has contemplated tho crea tion of a city-planning commission for regulating tho various civic Improve ment undertakings of tho municipal ity, as well as those of private Individ uals. Tho work which would coma under the supervision of such a clty plannlng commission would include, among other things, housing, indus trial structures, tho conveyances of supplies nnd materials of manufacture and manufactured products, the dis posal of waste material, the arrange ment of tho various sections of the city In accessiblo manner, rapid and convenient means of transportation, tho provision of facilities for educa tion and public recreation. Theso aro tho fundamental objects of city planning, but many other city activities would come under the super vision of tho city-planning commis sion, such as regulating the height of buildings, dividing tho city into dis tricts and zones,, traffic regulations, etc. ' Good Judgment Needed. Good Judgment not a matter of opinion, but a matter of principle, training and experience Is necessary to tho selection of a proper location for a civic center in order to avoid the criticism and condemnation of fu ture generations to which wo lay our selves open if wo do not exerciBo proper judgment at tho crucial moment. One Solid Benefit. "I tell you, sir, tho great benefit of a college education lies In tho friends you make." "Thitt's so. No matter how old you aro, if you have been through college you can always find come ono to play, poker or bet ou tho races or go on a spree with." Life. More Important Thing. Tho lateBt estimate places tho age of the oarth at 100,000,000 years. How over, tho ago of tho earth isn't halt as important to somo men as tho age of tho liquor they consume. ! 1 4 i h ) t "v.. y- -', Y fl 1 F "-?- J tu Tr7m