n TTIE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY, MAY 20, 1906. THESE FOUGHT WITH CROOR -' 1 BscoTleaiibDt of the Bis: Horn Expedition " Aettnst the Eitrai in 1876. INDIAN FIGHTERS AGAIN SERVE TOGETHER Instances of lienernl Bofcb'a Iravrrr at Frtteriaan Ferry J.iratenaat Sibley and Hla rintll treating Trip. '. iitir General J. W. Buhb, who has !.... 'rdered to St. Paul to assume rom r.iand of 1he Department of Dakota, and Mr.Jor Frederick W. Sibley, the command Ins offlcef of the. Third squadron of th.j Eecond cavllry, now stationed at Fort Snelltng. saw service, together sgalnst the Indians during the campaign of 1874 against the Rlnux. Both were at that time young .lieutenants. General Hubb had beerf promoted from the ranks during his aervlre In the clvfl war, while Major Sib lejr wss then a young oftVer vJuet out of Went Point. They nerved throughout General Crook's Big Horn and Yellowstone expeditions, and General Miles' earn palgn through Montana General Biibb with the Fourth Infantry and Major Sib ley, then, aa now; with tpe Second cay airy. , One little Incident of Lieutenant Buhh'a bravery la related ( by,- the famoua war correspondent, . afterward ( Congressman John F. Flnerty, in tilt book. "Warpath i Bivouac, ' or the Conquest of the oux." The'lncldent occurred In Wyom ing In May, 187. It la thua described by Mr. Flnerty: "Rome officers informed us that the ferry between the ramp and Fort Fetter man had broken down, and that we could not get out mall or send diepatchea. The river at that point la o rapid and ao full of whirlpools that" few men care to awlm It and most, ''horses refuse, to do ao. A wagon drive, together -with a aergrant and two private soldiers "of the Second csvalry. tried the experiment of swimming their horse's over a few days before and all were drowned. It waa absolutely neces sary for us to cross the river. "When we reached the ferry we found that It had been patched up In a tempor ary manner, and concluded to go across. When near the Fetterman bank the rope broke and we ahould have been swept down the stream a't the Imminent risk of drowning but for the heroism of Lieuten ant and Commissary Biibb, who plunged Into the river on horseback, caught a cable which aomebody threw toward him and t owed us In safety to shore amid the plaudits of the spectators." The Ml bley Scoot. General Bubh waa engaged In nearly all of the celebrated engagements of that war. The "fllbley Scout" Is famous among In dian fighters as having one of the nar rowest -escapea from savages now on rec ord. It was In 187$, at the time of the Custer massacre, when Ueutenant Sibley waa ordered out with twenty-flve mounted men to look about the country and aee what waa going on. Frank Grouard, a half breed and chief of the United States scouts, ' accompanied Sibley. The young officer waa fresh from West Point and rather Iriaxperlenoed in frontier warfare, ao cautious General Crook bade him heed the scout's advice should emergency arise, and off the trooper started almost at the same time when Custer, a hundred miles away, waa being cut to pieces by the cut throats of Sitting Bull. Mr. Flnerty waa also on this expedition, lie tells first In his book of his meeting with lieutenant Sibley and later has a page portrait of Lieutenant Sibley and devotes a chanter tn "The filhlev ftrnnt! Close Call." In describing his Introduction to Lieutenant Sibley, he aaya: "Captain Sutorlus introduced me to twa officers of the Second cavalry. Captain Wells and Lieutenant Sibley. Lieutenant Sibley, with whose career I waa destined to be linked under clreumntancaa which subsequently attracted the attention of the continent, and which will long live in the tales and traditions of our regular army, was a young Went Pointer, who had dis tinguished himself under General Reynolds In the attack upon and capture of Craxy Horse on March 17 of that eventful year." Joe De Fartha In his "Life and Adventurea of Frank Grouard, Chief of Scouts," also had a full page portrait of Lieutenant Sib ley and a chapter called. "A Miraculous Escape." describing the Incident of which Major Sibley was the her. Res lata noatllo Territory. The incident was as follows: The scout ing party traveled two daya without. Inci dent. As It nearcd the mountains Grouard, who always traveled ahead of the soldiers, suddenly signaled to halt. Signs of In dians were seen. From an eminence com manding a vast area of rolling country little specks could be seen here and there. The glasa proved that each speck waa a squad ' of several Sioux In war costume. The specks began to concentrate. They ' moved toward the trail made by the troops, but without discovering It for a long time. They were entirely Ignorant of tho pres ence of the soldiers. After holding a pow wow one of the Indiana chanced to ride toward the telltale trail. He found It and returned to the other braves, waving his blanket and gesticulating. It then seemed to the young cavalry officer as though In diana fairly sprang from the earth tn all directions to aee what had been discov ered, i nere were warms or mm, but happily they were miles away. Then began the race for life. The horses were urged up the mountain. mi came me inaiana. They were seen occasionally along the canyona In the rear. 'The band had divided and was trying to head oft the soldiers and surround them Suddenly, as the soldiers ascended the side of a gulch and gained small plateau, a parly of redskins sprang at them, firing their rifles and yelling. The men scat tered like sheep. Ueutenant Sibley or dared the men to Are even If they did not aim at the rnemy, for a rifle made a noise like a cannon amid those hills. Finally the men got together and Ueutenant Sibley ordered a retreat up a slope to a bit of wooded ground, whi. h protected them from ( the Ore of the Indians. This waa about o'clock in the morning. Mr. Sibley de scribes the situation aa follows: "The Indians begat, to gather about us mora rapidly. The situation wus growing mora serious every minute. My men wera doing good work with their rifles. t It pleased me to aee one man shoot a noted ,' Sioux chief right through the heart. The old sinner never twitched a muscle after lha lead hit him. We never knew how jjiany wo killed, because when an Indian la shot hla comrades keep him out of sight. Well, we held them off for four hours, and they wera four houra of hot work. I can tell you. My acout then told ma that the Indiana wera on three aldea of us. Wa had tcna chance left to retreat, and thla chance was fast lessening because fresh Indiana ware coming." Tho Escaae. Both Flnerty and Do Bart he relate the aiory with much mora elaboration and both say that Lieutenant Sibley at first hesitated at taking to flight even under those rtreumstancea. but Grouard con vinced him that it meant a terrible death to' all and o- good could possibly come of it If they stayed. "I did not like to abandon our norma," relates Major SlMey, "but it waa that or j.- a the retreat waa ordered. I in- speeted each man personally to eee that his equipment wss right, but owing to my Inexperience and the excitement of the moment I forgot the rations. Only one man In the command took his rations. It was an hour or ao before the Indiana dis covered thst be had fled. By that time we were upon the mountain In places so steep that one man'' had to help the other up. The horses could not follow us. So for the time being the Sioux would not strike us. Grouard took a mountain trail which we followed on foot or fifty hours without a monthf j1 to eat. 8urh fearfully vigorous exercise without food nearly killed us. "Toward the end of the perilous march we all became so weakened that we marched, for ten mlnut" and then would lie down and rest. Several of the most robust men became Insane, and one or two never regained their wits. When we reached Crook's ramp I slept for twenty four hours without waking, and during thst time the camp waa sharply attacked by the Indians. F.ven the roar of musketry did not disturb my sleep in the least. Not a single man was lost on the trip." Remarking on his experiences of plains life, Major Sibley said that it seemed won derful to him what remarkable Instincts the halfbreed scout possessed. A acout had led him across a trackless waste on a 'dark night when the snow was falling and the wind blowing. The horses were continually drifting to windward to get their faces away from the cutting blast. There was not a landmark to guide the scout. Yet in the face of all these, diffi culties the scout would lesd the troopers, after marching all night, to the exact spot for which they started. St. Paul Pioneer Press. NEW LIGHT ON WILLIAM PENN Sornrlslnsx Stories A boot the Great danker and Hia Dealings with Indiana. Simeon Ford has been giving to the Phlladelphlans the results of his studies Into the character and habits of the late William Penn. At a dinner of the Penn sylvania Bankers' association he said: "From his portraits I gather that Wil liam was In the heavyweight class, and spourted a collodion of chins, resembling In appearance the approach to the na tional capltol, all of which he worked overtime in Joshing the untutored aiv ge. "As an all-around Josher he was In a class by himself. If he were alive toduy he could almost sell life insurance. His eloquence whs such that the untutored savages fell all over themselves In their efforts to underwrite an agreement where by' they undertook to exchange their broad acres for glass beads preferred and Jamaica rum common. And they wouldn't stand for any water In their common, either! '.'The noble elm under which thla treaty was made stood until quite recently. A tree which would stand for that treaty must necessarily be hard to down. It waa a slippery elm tree under the shade of which that shady transaction was con summated. I am the proud possessor of a rosewood cane made from Its wood. "As I have said, Ponn waa a Quaker in religion If a fakir In the real estate busi ness. He was a man of peace, and al ways got the biggest one. "The Puritans, It Is said, extinguished the Indian title by the simple expedient of extinguishing the Indians, but the pious Penn, Instead of shooting them, got them half shot and accomplished the same re sult. Hence the saying. The 'Penn Is mightier than the sword.' (I have seen the wooden model of this fine old colonial Joke in the patent office.) "To show how smooth Penn was, I will relate an anecdote which is doubtless fa miliar to all of you. "The Indians agreed, for a consideration so small that a microscope went with It. to grant to Penn as many miles of river front as a man could traverse tn a day. The Indians, poor, simple souls, thought Penn would pick out a man with a epavip. or the spring halt, or the heaves. But not so! Penn had a ringer In train ing on tha quiet, who covered about 100 miles, and came In under a strong pull. When chlded for this seeming sharp prac tice, Penn remarked: 'Children of the Great White Father, have I not alwaye agreed to give you a run for your money. Tou must excuse haste and a bad Penn "When Penn's ship arrived In Phllade phia he anchored off the bar and pro ceeded at once to a tavern called the Blue Anchor Inn. He blew right In and anchored off the bar. This tavern waa kept by a man named Guest, who waa al ways sure of at least one patron. It was modest caravansary, being but 12x22 hardly room for suspicion and Penn's party completely filled It, and reciprocated. RIEVffi W TO IISTOKY Have We Done Such a Tremendous Home Outfitting Business as in the Last Two Weeks, and a Great Part of it Is on Credit, Too. Tlit FftipU' Slori' is it potent factor in home-making and has altsolutely ivino ed Uip burden imposed on salaried men and wage workers by the "mnstvhave-oash houses," or those stores that maintain a strict and stringent collection system. We are doinsr the business of our lives, and here's whv: By our association with the largest furniture buying syndicate of the world we are enabled to obtain special price con cessions that cannot Ire had by any other firm buying singly or in small groups. YOU PROFIT BY THIS SAVING. Our customers have always received AND ALWAYS SHALL RECEIVE benefits from us that they could not possibly get elsewhere. This' is sweeping statement to make, but we are thoroughly in earnest. Customers "stick" to the Peoples Store, and the public as a whole appreciate their fair and reasonable treatment and are not usually lured awav bv tempting offers and savorv promises, that upon investigation prove to be of light weight. PLAIN FIGURES -- LOW PRICES - EASY PAYMENTS aril Iron lifdn (exactly like cut) A new bed, made in fancy scroll design; full bent posts of seamless, tubing and very heavy chill work: have four coats of baked white enamel; can be had In full or 4 szes, special. 3.50 !p1 I The Peoplesl I f I Store Special J-v II 4 II, inn i.Igi ii 14 Y The Peoples Store Special 3- Piece Parlor Suite Consisting ol Sola, Arm Chair and Reception Chair. Decidedly the best value we have ever offered in parlor suites; finished In ma hoRany, veneer effect, upholstered in figured velour of a very high, grade and handsome pattern; the massive frames are very neatly carved; the entire suite Is rubbed and polished to a piano finish; the up- 4 n pA holstering Is done by experienced workmen over guaranteed Ih jTj I B' springs. A beautiful suite of furniture for any home; special price. Terms, f l.BO Cash; BOc I'er Week. Dreser (exactly like cut) Fin ished In (coition qnarter-Ra wd oak meet. Isrs Kronen nv- leJ rlatp mirrors, dniibl swoll top drawers. bst of , construction ; special sal". Terms, $1.60 CMfh; 80c per Week. ;14.50 The Peoples Store Special Kitchen Cabinet (exactly . like cut) Has two large bins for flour and other meals, two good sized drawers, a bread board and a meat board; occupies the space of a kitchen table and has the room of a cupboard; special price 3.90 The Peoples Store Tiger Velvet Rug 9x12 size, choice S4 r A designs and patterns, guaranteed qualities; special price .ULv) Terms, $2.00 Cash; $1.00 Per Week. Mattings Good heavy grade, regular 17c value; special -ft a this week XUKs Ruffled Muslin Curtains Regular $1.00 value; special this (Qa week UvC We Sell Goods Onl ol Town on Very Easy Payments. Write t's lor Particulars. Go-Carts Reed bodies, shellac fin ish, enameled gearing, rubber tired wheels, fold com pactly; special 2.95 Your Credit Is Good 16 & ' FARNAM .STREETS, OMAHA The Peoples Furniture & Carpet Co. Established 1837. Refrigerators We are sole agents for the famous Gumey line. This week we otter a special well made refrigerator (exactly like cut) at the r "jr extremely low price of tKltJ DANCES GIVEN BY TEACHER How aa Eaterprtalnsj Maataaav Girl Stirred Solvtf and Iacreaae School Artdanc. Margaret Sullivan of Butts. school teacher on Modesty creek, a llttla box of a school house, hss adopted novel methods to Increase tha attendance of pupils and to interest tha parents in tha needs of tha school. Previous tescher, she found tha room dirty and the attendance of mora than half a dozen pupils, but now tha little achuol house Is filled to overflowing. When Mis Sullivan reached tha school, after having secured tha appointment as teacher, she found the room dirty and the windows una-ashed for many a long moon. so Instead of school the teacher had a lioua cleaning bee and set her pupils to work scrubbing the floors and washing the windows. When they had finished everything waa as bright as a new dollar. In looking over the stock on hand the teacher found that the only book of reference was a dictionary In a very dilapidated state. Next day she said to her pupils: "Tell your folks at home that wa are going to give a dance at the school house Friday night and ark them to tell every body else." The newa spread fo the farmers and prospectors a,nd when Friday night rame the people gathered from far and near. They found the desks In the school room had been moved out of the way. A tent was erected Just Outside the. door where tha wrapa and the babies could be left, and Inside a fiddler and an organist, recruited from local talent, were providing music. The teacher stood at the door and de manded "four bits" from each male at tendant, and the money rolled In so fast that there waa enough to buy aixty-flve books, and so now there Is a library started The dance waa such a success that soon another one waa held and the school now has a glob and several maps for the walls. In tha meantime the attendance Increased. Some of the blgboys who met the teacher at the dance decided that their education had not been completed and started In ta school again. The trustees simply had to raise the teacher's salary, and they did Butte Miner. Jtra. Davis Mirk Better. NKW YORK. May 1-Mrs. Jefferson Pavis was reported' as greatly Improved today aad it waa aaid that she had spent the most oomfortanie night since she be came seriously til. The fsmlly la now hope ftii af a eoiualata recovsry. HINDU ROYALTY IN GOTHAM Gaedwar of Baroda Prop;sei to See How We Do Thine. , GLIMPSE OF HER HIGHNESS THE MAHARANI Royalty Party I.eaa Imposts Than Its Title Princely Iaeomes of Iadtaa Prlneca How They Bast Trusts. Hindu royalty Is represented in New York JusC now. At home the chief of the party Is the maharaja, gaekwar of Baroda Sir Bayajl Rao III. Ben a Kbaa Kbel, Bam Bher Bahadur. Farrand-l-Khaa-l-Dow-let-l-Englishla. Name and title looked like that on the steamer register, and it goaa. In plain Vnited States, tha maharaja la first in the rank of Hlnud princes and soond in rank In all India. , He oomes to us, says the New York Sun, to see the country, study the people and try to learn tha secret of their success. With him are her highness, the maharanl of Baroda, aa pretty a little woman as ever walked down a gang plank, and the Gaekwar'a brother, Sampatrao Calkwad. For a prince with so many names, tha aeoond wealthiest in India and tha owner of a collection of Jewels that Is famous the world over, the maharaja Is a most unassuming visitor. He sauntered down the Celtic's gang plank looking like a very ordinary tourist who had been bronzed by a tropical sun and pleasantly nodding goodbye to the acquaintances he had made on the trip over. Perhaps that la explained by the fact that, besides being one of India's wealthiest princes, he la regarded also aa its most enlightened. ' How He Looks. He is a tittle man, not much more than five feet tall, but stocklly built. He is 41 yeara old and haa ruled over the state of Baroda under British sovereignity since he waa a more boy. He traces his ancestry back to Slvayl, tha founder of the Mah ratta power In India, but he owes his occu pation vt the throne to an indiscretion of his predecessor, Oaekwar Mulhar Rao, who cut up such high Jinks In 1876 that his Mali arlna fled for protection to the home of Colonel Phayre, the English resident. The Gaekwar made a bluff by discharging some blank cannon chaj-gea at the resident's house, but it didn't work. Her Highness refused to return to Rao's senana, and a little later Colonel Phayre got some chemi cals In his food which acted like poison on his .ystem. The gay old Maharaja waa tried and deposed, although he waan't con victed of having poisoned the resident. It waa tip to the Maharanl then, in acord ance with the Hindu custom, to appoint the succeeding ruler. Guided by England's I helping hand, she chose Gopal Rao, the present Maharaja, then a boy of 12. I1Q HW rUUI.ICTI .11.111' UJ 1 1 1 1. 1 1. II I tutors and began early to make a special study of the ne?ds of his state. He decided that there must be a public school system. Yesterday he said (here are schools now in more than half of the state, and in some parts of It compulsory education. lie has established a man's college and a woman's college and a technical school In the ell of Baroda. and haa changed that place from a slovenly, antiquated Hindu town Into a modern city, with fine public build Ings and apacloua parks. He declared early a ruins child marriages and announced that none of his children would ever marry before the age of . These are only a few of the things he has done. He haa taken a most active Interest In the government of his state, being allowed considerable latitude by the British government, and haa often sat aa a Judge In the native courts. Hoekrfeller laeoaie. Tha Mahsrata's Income has been estimsted at from $S.flrin,nfO to J7.MO.flnO a year. The Scindhla of Owallor. with tl5.WW.onii a year, la said ta be tha richest of the Indian princes. The Maharaja has 2.000,000 subjects under his rule. The state contains 8.100 square miles. Besides his enormoua annual Income the Gaedwar of Baroda possesses jewels which have been valued nt between $30,000,000 and (40.000,000. In ordinary circumstances the wonderful collection lies In the Nazar UaJ on exhibition. But on state occasions there Is no Indian prince who Is more brilliantly arrayed. Persons who have seen the Maharaja on dress parade say that he fairly aclntlllatea from the crown of his head down. There Is one mantle or shawl which Is aaid to be the most precious piece of Jewelry In the world. It is made of woven pearls, with a border of diamonds, emeralds, rublra and sap phires. It la said to have been made originally as a decoration for Mahomet's tomb. The pivce Is valued at several mil lion of dollars. When he goes out on parade the Maharaja also wears a diamond cap and Jewelled gloves. Besides these things, he has one gold and one silver cannon, which are drawn on state occasions by bullocks with magnificent trappings. Four of these cannon, two gold ones and two sliver ones, came Into the present Gsekwar's possession when he became the ruler. Within recent years one of each was melted down and' the proceeds turned Into the state treasury for the purpose, it is said, of relieving famine conditions in Baroda. These guns are among the world's mont notable curiosi ties. The gold one, it is said, weighs 4i0 pounds, but it has a steel casing, which probably counts for a good many pounds. It took a native workman five years to make the guns. The bullocks selected to draw the artillery pieces are the finest Baroda produces. It is estimated that their trappings alone cost 145,0)0. The horns of the animals are tipped with gold and they wear gold and silver anklets. The silver gun is said to weigh 220 pounds. something of a Reformer. The maharaja's immediate predecessor waa a picturesque Individual known as Malaha Rao-Glakwar, who, according to history, was as Oriental as any man wanted tn be. He waa of the old regime, and if there waa anything due him in the way of power or pleasure he saw that he got it or there was trouble in the land. He did not like the British, which he veiled with true Oriental politeness, but one time after a big dinner at his palace the British resident and some of his compatriots be came very 111. ' The coroner diagnosed it as poison, and the result of It wss that Maiaha Rao-Glakwar lost his Job. Tha British resolved then to go in for a safe and sane administration and chose the present ruler, who at the time was a young man of good habits. He was taken In hand at once; English professors came out and educated him: everything about him waa English at tendants, servants and frlrndx. This was varied with frequent trips to England, ao that when he did take charge of the gov ernment he was modern In every particu lar. He has never lapsed, and since that time the little state has steadily progressed. The msharaja's first reform was t abolish Infant marriage, which was a pleasant little custom whirh nearly re sembled the entry conditions for the Fu turity In this country. He abollmed the old style of special taxes, like the tax for the sacred com-, and put them all under one head. Ha chose a cabinet and placed all de partments under a separate minister, with a prime minister at the head of It. He removed religious restrictions, and his present prime minister Is a Parses, al though It is a Hindoo state. He passed modern Isws and established schools, colleges, muneuma and art Insti tutions all over his state. He ordained a coiapuliory free education law. In all hla buildings, however, the maha raja h sticks to the ancient Indian-Bar-cenlc architecture, and all the public buildings are In that style. When It com to the maharaja himself ha may be called a very busy man. He runs his kingdom, seeing to every depart ment. He takes the lead In all work, he dedicates all public buildings, makes the big speech at every gathering, supervises the railroads and adjusts the rate regula tions. He haa labored hard and earnestly to find anything like a Standard Oil com pany In his Jurisdiction, but his views are so well known that the opposition has not thought best to accept his invitation to start one. The Indian method of curbing anything unpopular Is to kill off the heads of It with their families and any other person sus pected of being Interested. A MAN FOR TALL TIMBER Baaslas) Giant Who Towers and sv Qaarler Feet Comlag to America. Nine feet three inches of giant, with head, hands and feet to match, will make his appearance on a New York roof garden this summer, if at the last minute, he does not get a spasm of flight and refuse to sail from Cherbourg. This Goliath is Machnow, known in Eu rope as the tallext man in tha world. Ha Is a Russian peasant, and all told there are 300 pounds of him not so very many considering his great height. His hands, from the wrist to the tip of the middle fin ger, measure twenty-four Inches and hia feet are constructed In proportion. His head takes a hut big enough for two ordi nary men and his fingers require gloves of great slse. Machnow once had an offer to come to this country and exhibit himself and he agreed. But Just as the boat was about to sail his timidity overcame him and nothing could Induce him to board the steamer. This time he signed a contract with Oaoar Hammersteln, who believes he will coma at the appointed time. The giant is married to a woman of or dinary else, and is very happy with his wife, who haa to stand on a chair to kiss him. He is in fine health and haa a hearty appetite. For breakfast he devours two quart bottles of milk or tea. sixteen boiled eggs, six or eight loaves of bread and half pound of butter. For lunch he has two and a half pounds of meat. Dinner la more elaborate, this being his menu on most days: A basin of soup. Ave pounds of meat, five pounds of vegetables, three pounds of bread and a quart qr two of beer. His 10 o'clock "snack" consists of ten eggs, several loaves of bread and a quart of tea. New York World. dealer. Inflammation of the appendix itself does not constitute, though it starts, the disease; and so long as only the appendix is affected, though there may be discom fort, there is no real pain, the occurrence of pain giving the signal that the perito neum, tho smooth membrane covering all the bowels and lining the abdominal cavity, haa become Inflamed in that portion which forma the outer covering of the appendix. Appendicitis haa increased amailnly In the last ten or twenty years, due to the widespread change of social habits and diets. The caecum is tilled with undi gested food, such aa tough meats, lobater, clams, nuts, pineapples, frocen or refrig erated meats, poultry, etc. Tea drink ing has much to do with the onset of the disease, the beverage being too astringent for health. Appendicitis is peculiar to youth, more than 80 per cent of all the cases occurring under the age of thirty. Furthermore, 80 per cent of the cases are males. New York Press. DCG LOSES ITS APPENDIX C'aalae Swallows Taft of Haaaaa Hair and Gets Fashloaabl Disease. A Ana bull terrier belonging to a real- dent of Brooklyn waa operated on last meek for appendicitis, and is doing well. In the appendix waa found a small roll of human hair, which proved to be a col lection of the rombel-out strands of his mistress' locks. Human hair is practically indigestible except to the ostrii h. A mouoe of It In a dog's alimentary canal Is quiie sufficient to Inflame the appendix. Most women burn their combings in the kitchen stove for lurk. Appendicitis la a horror. I met a young man yesterday, healthy to look upon, who told me he had appemllcltle and would have an operation performed as soon aa he could get the money and three months leave of absence. There Is nothing pleasant In the prospect. Formerly appendicitis was wrapped in much obscurity and Its ffects wore at tributed to "gastric aelsure." "Inflamma tion of the bowls." "illlac pliUgmon." "perltyphllltis." paratyphtlltls," and con ditions under many other names. The earliest and full account of the dixeaee was not given until 1M. Thus we are Just twenty yeara In the grasp of tha death CRAZED FOR WANT OF BOOZE Startling Effect of the Order Closing All Saloons in San Francisco. One peculiar and entirely unlocked for result haa attended the proclamation of Mayor 6c limits closing up all saloons and forbidding tha aale of liquor In San Fran cisco. Majiy habitual drinkers, suddenly deprived of their accustomed stimulant, have been driven temporarily Insane. It waa stated at the Park Emergency hospital that up to last Sunday night and for several days previous the average of insanity cases examined per day had been forty. The crush of business waa ao great that the examining doctors had themselves to commit tha patients, It being utterly impossible to put tha matter through tha routine channels. According to Dr. Imlor of the emer gency aervlce tho period of acute mania for cases Induced by total abstinence from alcoholic liquors is forty-eight hours. At tha end of that time the patient either be comes normal again or la hopelessly in sane. As the lunacy oases have been shipped out of the city to the asylums as fast as possible no results are at hand yet aa to the number that will be claased as Incurable or the number that will be re turned aa normal. Among the number of the insane are included many "hop fiends" or "dope fiends." whose weakened sys tems also collapsed when the stimulus of their dally drug waa taken away. Among the Insanity cases are also many rases Induced through nervous shock and strain brought on by the disaater and the at tendant circumstances Ran Francisco Chronicle. the uniform alone to carry the majeaty of the law against the turbulent classes. Each, trooper carries a Colt's 38 strapped on hla hip and a twenty-Inch locust stick la slung from the pommel of his saddle. In addition to these "persuadera" he carries the Spring-" Held carbine of the army for riot duty, but tha latter arm hangs In Its rack at the bar racks most of the time, for the idea of tha force la to produce a morel effect rather than physical and tha Instruction to each trooper Is to carry bis point without report ing to "gun-play." Under the act by which Pennsylvanla'a constabulary waa created the members may make arrests without warrants for all violations of tho law and serve and execute warrants Issued by tha proper authorities. Besides these duties the force is expected to ant aa fish, game and fire wardens, but since the shutting down of the mines tha constabulary haa been held In readiness to answer emergency calls, patrol duty haa been continuous and llttla time has bean found to devota to their own police duties. Harper's Weekly. STATE POLICE IN REGALIA Pennsylvania Bnral Police Well I al io r Bnalneas. Uk tho raps and helmets, the constabu lary uniform Is dark gray, made Of service able whip cord. The blouae is cut very much like thst of the field service uniform of the regular army and tha riding breeches built to a better fit than one usually sees In tha government service. Buttons are of nickel and the legglngii black leather put ties. For protection from lnrlement weather In summer the constabulary wears a light rubber cavalry cape: In winter a heavy dark gray storm coat serves the purpose. This great ooat is not built on umbrella rover lines like that of the army, but Is a roomy garment with enough cloth so that when the wearer Is mounted the skirt may cover the pommel and can tie of the saddle as well aa tha legs of the lider. The whole uniform Is substantial In material as well as effect. It Is serviceable and Imprenslva and clothes the wearer with the respect due a represent ative of tha state's executive. But tha constabulary Is not dependent on KING'S MILLION DOLLAR CLOAK Hoat Cootly Garment la tho United Stntea, Hello of Hawaiian. Royalty. What Is probably the most costly garment in the United States la stored away in a corner of tha United States National museum at Washington. It Is not a femi nine gown, nor is Its faahlon of any civil ised country. It is a product of savnpe art, being a Hawaiian - ceremonial, cloak made, of the feathera'of birds peculiar to the Islands. The label beneath It statea that it was a present from King Kamehamaha III to Commodore J. II. Aullrk, U. S. N., and that it was the mantle of the former's father, Tamehameha. It is further stated that the yellow feathers of which , tha cloak Is largely composed were valued at S1.60 for five. ' Not only are these feathers very small, but tha bird to which they belonged waa very difficult to catch. It is estimated that, Including the price of tha feathers, not lss than fl.OOO.AOO worth of labor waa expended on this cloak. The feather work of the Hawallans la now a lost art. This Is to be lamented, for the feather, cloaks of the Hawallans are both curious and Interesting. The cloaks "ma mos" In tha ' native language which were worn only by tha kings and highest chiefs, are of great beauty. All the earlier travelers to tha Hawaiian group mention them. Captain Cook, who. In 1778. waa the first to visit the Islands, was rerelvetl by the natives with all the ceremony and adoration which they thought due to blm aa a god, and . their chiefs presented him with several feather covered cloaks and lu-lmets, which they regarded as their finest treasures. In Itartolozxra well known engraving, "The Death of Captain Cook," published in lTtrj. four of the natives are represented wearing cloaks, and vary llttla else, and two wear helmets all drawn, douhtlesa, from the samples brought home by Cook's expedition and similar to the specimen In the National museum. So highly were tha cloaks valued In Hawaii that very seldom was one allowed to leave the islands as a result of purchase. Though once fairly abundant In Hawaii, spwclmera of this feat lie r work are now very scarce and more highly prized than ever, the art of making them having been lost with the extinction of the bird whoso feathera were most highly prized in their manufacture. New York Bun. Worklnar ream Holds Meeting;. The working team, which will put on tha stage part of the Ak-Per-Hen Initiatory rites, met Friday evening at J. P. O'Rrten'a at an informal banquet and completed ar rangements for the Initiatory ceremonies. The different parts wera aalgntd and a meeting for rehral wss called for Mon day night at the den. It la tha Intention to have a number of thorough rehearsals before putting on the degree work.