i yyfflK Pf SSL 2S - js A JsmHK I- w IP Hi I Hi JmWfrdfw THE XiAWTOX STATUE bushes while the men continued the fight dispersed the enemy and took possession of the town Many of the soldiers wept when they learned of their commanders death He was the only American killed in the fight though several of the officers and men were wounded The death of General Lawton caused profound sorrow throughout the army He had been known for nearly forty years as one of the most fearless fight ers In the service Next to General Custer who fell In the awful fight oa the Little Big Horn In 1876 Lawton was esteemed the most daring fighter on the plains A grateful country la proud to honor him The president of the United States who watched Law ton at El Caney and Santiago and knew his worth from personal observa tion was proud to accept the Invita tion from the citizens of Indianapolis to take part In the unveiling of the me morial Genaral Westons Exploit General John F Weston who many years later became commissary gener al of subsistence was a cavalry major In 1864 He captured a Confederate transport on the Tallapoosa river In Alabama With six followers each man having his revolver strapped on top of his head to keep the powder dry he swam into the stream and took the captain of the transport prisoner through a clever ruse This deed made him a medal of honor man C S UiJiaaBMlWMiBMEaMHMW34SM rtfl 4 t By DANIEL B SKITT Copyright 1907 by T E McGrath DAY in Indianapo lis this year is made memora ble by the unveiling of a statue of Major General Hen ry Ware Lawton President Roosevelt participating General Lawton was the most conspicuous victim of the war in the Philippines He was killed during a battle at San Mateo near Ma nila Dec 19 1899 The statue is a bronze figure of Gen eral Lawton In uniform Daniel Ches ter French of New York and Andrew OConner now living In Paris were the sculptors The statue and stone pedestal cost between 25000 and 30 000 raised by popular subscription most of it from friends and admirers of General Lawton in Indiana his home state The movement to erect the memorial was started shortly after the death of the general The career of General Lawton makes a brilliant page in American military history For thirty seven years he was soldier of the United States He served In the civil war in the Spanish American war in the Filipino uprising and through several severe Indian campaigns on the western plains He was what is sometimes described as a born soldier In fact he never follow ed any other calling Just a week after the attack on Fort Sumter In 1861 Henry W Lawton en listed in the volunteer service He was but eighteen years of age His first service was as a private and sergeant in an Indiana infantry regiment and he was promoted rapidly for gallant fighting Congress voted him a medal of honor for gallantry In action in the fighting before Atlanta in 1864 Before the end of the war he was a brevet colonel When the war closed Colonel Lawton retired for a few months but In July 1866 he entered the regular army as a second lieutenant in an in fantry regiment He remained In the regular army until his death by a Fili pino bullet more than thirty three years later At the time of his death his rank in the regular army was that of a colo nel but the war department clerks at Washington were preparing his com mission as a brigadier general in the regular service when the news reached the department that he had been killed in battle In 1871 Lawton was transferred to the Fourth cavalry He fought the Sioux the Utes and other hostile Indian tribes and in 1886 performed one of the most notable exploits In plains warfare history by rounding up and capturing a fierce Apache chief old Geronimor who had given the government more trouble than any other Indian on rec ord General Miles selected Captain Lawton to lead an expedition of picked men into Mexico against Geronimo and his band of bloodthirsty Apaches Law ton visited the chief in his camp and planned for his surrender This was one of the most daring ventures in In dian war annals Some of the older army officers still discuss It with won der At Santiago Lawton with the rank of brigadier general of volunteers com manded the second division of the Fifth army corps doing valuable service in the several engagements leading to the capture of the Cuban city He was made a major general of volunteers less than a week after the fall of San tiago for gallantry at El Caney General Lawtons service In the Phil ippines was notably brilliant He be gan his work there early in 1899 In July he was placed in command at Manila He immediately began a cam- palgn with the object of capturing General Agulnaldo the Filipino leader It was much like the Indian fighting with which Lawton was so familiar Various small engagements were fought the Filipinos frequently hiding In the jungles and shooting from am bush General Lawton captured San Isidro the capital of the Filipino gov ernment at the time and chased Agul naldo from place to place About the middle of December the general led a force of something mora ihau a thousand soldiers against a Fil ipino stronghold at the town of San Mateo fifteen miles from Manila Gen eral Lawton and his staff made the trip on horseback in one night over almost impassable mountains in a heavy rainstorm The horses slipped and slid down the hills and ravines and the men arrived on the river bank opposite San Mateo drenched and mud dy but full of fighting spirit When the engagement began Gen eral Lawton wearing a white helmet and a yellow raincoat was a conspicu ous target ne was in fact the most conspicuous target In the army being six feet three Inches tall and a big man at that He Insisted against the advice of his staff upon going on the firing line He was standing in front of the firing line the men being prone in the grass when one of his staff offi cers observed that the Filipino sharp shooters were trying to pick the gen eral off Bullets struck the ground near his feet The staff officer remon strated with the general for exposing himself but Lawtons well known con tempt for bullets caused him to regard the warning lightly A little later he cried I am shot and clutched at his breast He fell Into the arms of the officer and died instantly General Lawtons body was borne to the rear and placed In a clump of rfrfl rstfl The Civil War At a G fit c By WALTON WILLIAMS American civil war was the greatest conflict at arms in the history of the human race The American Revolutionary war which lasted nearly twice us long was a series of mere skirmishes compared with the struggle of the early sixties Battles were fought during the civil war now known only to the mustiest of historians or to local tradition or recollection which exceeded in the forces engaged and surpassed in the carnage resulting some of the most im portant actions during the struggle for Independence The number of battles fought greatly exceeded the number Incident to any single European war The firing line was a thousand miles long Nearly 4000000 men were en gaged More than 500000 men were killed in action or died from wounds or disease In practically every re spect the war of 1861 65 was the big gest and bloodiest of all time This stupendous struggle embraced so many ramifications of incident that a complete history of the whole Is ut terly impossible Historians have been able only to hit the high spots for want of space and lack of time and endurance to sift and chronicle all the interesting facts We do not know even how many bat tles were fought This can be only ap proximated In the governments Chronological List of Battles the number exceeds 2200 But the bureau of pensions has an alphabetical list of engagements including skirmishes and such other minor actions as were deem ed sufficiently important to note This list contains more than 6800 engage ments About 2800000 Union soldiers were enlisted during the war The Confed erate records are very incomplete many of them having been lost or de stroyed It Is estimated that the num bers engaged on that side of the con flict were not far short of 700000 men These figures do not Include the con siderable numbers of Irregular com batants on each side many of whom were not officially enrolled War department records show 359 528 deaths from all causes in the Un ion armies during the war In propor tion to strength of forces engaged the Confederate losses were equally se vere In the absence of definite records any estimate however must be a mere guess In the Union armies 67058 men were killed In battle 43012 died of wounds received in action and 224 586 died of disease Incident to service Of those killed in battle 4142 were commissioned officers The number of Union men who died while prisoners of war was 29498 United States mil itary authorities executed 267 men and -would have executed many more but for the humane Intervention of Abra ham Lincoln The Confederates exe cuted four officers and sixty men of the Union forces It is a most remarkable fact that in the four years of this mighty conflict only one man was executed for polit ical reasons by a Union general In New Orleans a man named Mumford pulled down a flag of the United States after the city had been captured but before it was occupied by the Federal forces General Benjamin F Butler who was In command of the occupying force caused Mumford to be hanged Where Lincoln Put tho Whetstone A soldier at whose house when a boy Lincoln paused in his tramps in Illinois and who lent him a whetstone to sharp en his jackknife met him during the war in Washington Lincoln spoke of using the whetstone drawled out the old soldier Whatever did you do with the whet stone I never could find It We Mowed mebbe you took it along with you No no I put it on top of the j gatepost that high one Mebbe you did Nobody else could have reached It and none of us ever thought to look there for It There It was found where it was placed fifteen years before The j soldier reported the fact to the preai dent nawfln iwi T N ri r i i HVI i fc Uncle Sam Giving Away Farms On June 2G 1907 tho Government will open to homestead 33000 acres of irrigated land in the Yellowstone Valley near Billings Montana This is the first time that the Government has opened land by this method having built the ditches the laterals telephone system electrical plant etc for all of the tract before allowing any of the land to be entered The water is now ready to turn on and those who are lucky enough to draw one of these irrigated farms will be made independ ent for life These lands known as the Huntley Project lands are among the richest and most productive lands in the north west and will successfully grow all kinds of grain root and forage crops and any men who is able to rent a farm is able to take one of these irrigated homesteads and be assured of success It is hard to estimate the value of these lands as similar lands in the same locality last year netted the farmers who raised sugar beets as much as 25 XOOOOOOOO JFJmjxrztM I ALL Mo li w mtm W A V K phei tRe hildren come home from School They usually want something from the pantry You remember the hunger you Bad Home cooking counts for much in the childs health do not imperil it mt atum food by the use of poorbaking powder Have a delicious pure homeemade muffin cake or biscuit ready when they cometn Toffre sure of the purity you roust use davai baking KUTALpowder Rp mkssa difference in your hemea difference in your a difference in your cooking ROYAL Is absolutely Fore to 45 per acre and others did nearly as well raising alfalfa The settler is required to repay tho Government the actunl cost of watering these lands tho payment to bo mnde in ten annual installments without in terest BLOCKADED Every Household Should Know How To Resist It The back aches because the kidneys are blockaded Help the kidneys do there work The back will ache no more Lot- of proof that Doans Kidneys Pills do this W II McCay engineer at the Aber nathy Mfg Co and living at 110 Dakota street Leavenworth Kan says Though I doctored and tried all kinds of medicines I suffered severely from kidney trouble for all of ayear and noth ing seemed to do me the least bit of good The pain in my back wat ter rible and sharp twinges would cramp me up at times so that I could hardly move The kidney secretions were ir regular and contained a irreat deal of sediment that looked like brick dust One physician who treated me said I had muscular rheumatism but he did not help me After giving up all hope of finding relief I happened to learn through a friend about Doans Kidney Pills and got a box at E C Fritsches drug store I found benefit in the treatment and continued it until I had taken three boxes I was entirely cured of kidney trouble and have had no Bign or symptom of it since If over any medicine saved a mans life Doans Kidney Pills saved mine I have been well for six yeare and know several people who have used Doans Kidney Pills on the strength of the testimonial I gave In 1899 recommending them I have yet to bear of a case in which this remedy failed For sale by all dealers Price 50 cents Foster Milburn Co Buffalo N Y sole agents for the United States Remember the name Doans and take no other You Can Get w nvmivrfti i j With the Choicest Magazine and Agricultural Features For Only Five Cents More Than the Price of the TRIBUNE Alone What the Weekly Inter Ocean Contains Each Week 21 columns of news 14 columns of talks by a practical farmer on farm topics economical machinery planting growing and storing of fruits and vegetables breeding and marketing of live stock 20 or more Lost and Found Poems and Songs 1 column of Health and Beauty Hints Chess and Checkers Best short and con tinued stories Puzzles and Complica tions Dr Reeders Home Health Club Miscellaneous Questions and Answers Poems of the Day A special Wash ington letter Taking cartoons and illus trations 5 columns of live 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