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v | Ld 1 ) '; seven dead Indians, scattered about "17\.; | CUSTER HASSACRE 0d Veteran Blames Custer : Rather Than Reno | Epokane, ash, Aug Nick Imo, a veteran of the battle of Littla Big Horn, June 25, 1576, Bolds that the massacre of Custer's | eommand by Sioux Indians was due | to disobedience of orders and “poor Judgment” on the part of Geueral Custér and not to the failure of | General Reno to reach him in time | with reinforcements, Mr. Imo, who served eight years in the United States army, is now 76 years of age and a resident of this city. 5 “Rano had been blamed for belng | A4 possibly overy- | be 1ax, cowardly, dilatery and total is still much larger than the statly - UTAH PEOPLE NOT EMIGRATION DECREASES Berlin, de- figure the hile the yearly prewar average was 5,000, according to the al bureau, fain Peaks e a1t Lake City, Aug aroused over chance inappropriate owed upon many of the peaks | the esidents are NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, man emigration during AfiAlN lS TA[KEI] creased from the 1923 prewar period, Last year 58,087 Germans emigrated; 116,000 in 1923 OF INDIAN' DAYS . cerman | FScape o Curlis From Chey- Council Grove, Kans, Aug. 7 (A |taders marched home | Couneil Grove, they loted farms and teatherbeds over the prairies untll they simulat-|en are d | The story of the es old settlers gath |one hundredth birthday calls a quickening of the pulse when | the alarm came, on that June day | nearly 60 vears ago, of a band of Cheyennes on the warpath 7 (P—Utah | Ploncer | year old boy, who was to become one |day the vepublican floor leader in NAmMeS | the United Stat Kam his pocket with quietly left the camp Cheyenne rald, The on exterminating foes, the Kaws, strong, they dashed pared for them, ¢nnes Is Exciting “Il single Cheyenne killed. ape of Charles | the Cheyennes in the ng told again as the | here to honor the of Council ranches and emptied ed a June snowstorm. | It was the last Indian raid ' N . lieivaas | Today the old stories are | anake, that chased o who made the history of those days| ['or | William 1 Hickson, di- return for Many a | how the eight | remembers |10, 1825, Senate, fled from Indian eamp and walked | FRIDAY, there was but one Kaw wounded and As the in- | ard through Counell Grove's centen- nial week, August 8 to 16, in cele- ration of the Sante Fe trail treaty, thi signed here with the Osages, Angust Membership of British Trade Unions Increases % AUGUST 7, 1925. 80 and it must be true will tend to do ng son who is Prove It | | Hickson | Chicagn, Aug. 7—1f mankind s Poefry ascanded from the ape, then wom-|'® Fepeat it endants of the cookoo |, 1f the patient {Bir to got off it was probably a squir- going [rel, instead of a ¢ of the Chicagn Psychopathic terflies off the mada public 20 per cent crazier down the o disappear ranee of his bombprenf eyelone llar, Dr. Hickson added geflantiy: res prove fti" Tha death away with the lazy that fast grows into insun. How He Spots 'Lm Dr. Hickson, through his has got so that he can spot | 1y off When he 18 confronted with a per- suspected of clicking nolses between his ears, Dr. recites some to the pitient and ask But {f he gets balled up | the doctor pounces on him pronto. | ¥+ ¥. W quiet halle where the:bovs plek wall seeei The report thut been Indorsed for Woman's Party s unfounded, vears of poral H, W small bit of ks him course he fs apt | tn The patienf gets a faw wore mental — gyinnastics to perform, and*when hs flunks is gently ushered off to those paper and f this to in death, sure San Francisco, have FCONOMY Keep a supply of holders on hand where von can get at them easily o part B8 | ; \ hmllomm:‘l:ullr‘\:‘ IARAK t M their spare moments by Na\'lnll 8 ‘If the modern girl gets busy the d ki a white relatives at the state capital AN LT AT B \l\)mt“‘: E Ol G Pk Council Grove suffered little from | u warriors | through the ‘ " | streets of the town toward the Big " - ¢ s John Indian Agency, ounly to find 3 0K N g 0 practice After the “battle” Hickson has | prasident by | VETERANS OI' 20 YEARS ORGANIZE T (®—Cor | Ltoberts post, Veterans of Foreign Wars. has a condition of having | membership that probably is unique, No veteran is eliglblo unless he has served at least 20 years in the army navy or marine corps. He must, of it of that in forelgn territory to comply | with the general requirement of the | dish towels Black Flag—Surest Death of All to Flies % | And Mosquitoes& Not One Escapes! dealing, ¢ BLACK FrAg eomes in thing else.” Mr. Imo said, “but it |and canyons in the south Utah re- |60 miles to Topeka acrat ingredien: i | was tmpossibls fors Reno to reach | cion whieh includes Zion '\'ablm\al! Charles Curtis, in whose veins| London, Aug. 7 (M—The annual Scaional\spente S o s And awift, for ‘rv:'hc‘md and PWIG: { the scene of confiict in time to par-| o i | flows the blaod of the Kaw Tndians, |report of the Geneyal Federation of Hickson expluing thal' ‘thish 0= Kills roaches, too! ,,mfy' t 'fimmm ! | ticipate. .Custer himself was break- | Park. Cedar Breaks state park and | g then a school boy at the mission {Trade Unions shows a total mem- ' asion s the resull of 80 years! {0 S S e g "h""fi‘:h"fi‘” bugs, with S Ing an understanding that tho | liryce Canyon National monument. |on the Kaw reservafion, near here. |bership of 830318, the emallc klingnientuldeTocllips andile (88 o dem ose e IS0 YDy N | pltcheq battls was to be June 26| Suggestion has been mado that a| Hearng the alaym, the Jad stoc corded The hgenisnot ons A Rnerenalil BaROE I, 1ot siredt oo thitto) inksck mk‘nndna;r e 4”; W | He fought it a day.earlier, before | commission be appointed to take up | ast The i S G L posts evor diseavered. Bt it I O | either the detachment of troops un- | the matter with the Natlonal Geo- show a decrea® o PEnise o Rade nenerle ia ahsolutely harmless ta bu- /f bk s s der Reno or Colonel Gibbons could |&raphic board of the United States. 105 from the previous year. il Ao gt o8 s nsnnil auiale 5 e i ik come up, and lost. | 1§‘ r:('}’( [rmf» Z\on‘ ‘I\'al.lmlfiyl‘[-:)rkl MY W. A _\ppl.»‘mm 8¢ rrn"u\" m‘ (O i e el .‘"”‘ o il Bugs hreathe Biack Fuaa TUsa both liquid and w\m]cf’. i Tells of Orders ] |8 | hat a woman ltv:le.il \.\h‘m, |\d|r»gz , discussing the situation, |y e o6 K n, And if fgures | d die. It strangles them, Tt kills Manr people prefer tha liquid to 1 remember that we met Custer | through a rock crack recently re- | Do wove that he i aneEant I aYeryab) That is where it differs kill flics, mosquitoes and moths— June 22, 1876, on the Yellowstone |marked “This ‘mugr he l:’urgmcry‘ st of the \]‘ g T e e L insecticides which and the powder to kill toaches, ants, eiver, opposite the mouth of the|pass.” — and the name has stuck. | trom amalgamations an o Qfilriier e s SR A hill, at best, only 6 ont of every 10, bedbugs, dog fleas and lice, Roscbud N trom | Another instance which has created | MALTED MILK [\"”'“‘“ rship in the anions them- | AEE “ W that he has &1 qyg four which et away breed hun S S ]({N]q‘,er'flwdnr Fort Ellis and were camped on the | disapproval is the calling of the ma- | Chocolate flavor ['selves, und some arise from the po Of the 17,000 f Winded per-| drels which returm, 150 vp. Powder Gun, 10c. Liquid, north side ~when Custer, riding | iestic triplet-peaks of the Three | '1iat or cold Chocolate |erty of unions who through unem- N S N G o Brack Frae kills 10 out of every Se up. Sprayer, 45c. Tntroductory from Fort Linnoln, showed up: on | Patriarchs in Zion park by the( Malles Milk at esery mesl, | ployment tind theie eontrbutions | i L G0 o (- the st 12 10 And it kills fliss, mosquitoef, parkage confaining ean of liquid the south. That same day he re-hame of a nationally known con- ;“,:‘N;(“‘;h ‘I{ Nistter ;\nwl'r. Tn son v‘.«.&r‘.‘, they : [1.‘\ e A s e bW oinen rnaches, ants, bedbugs, dog fleas, and sprayer for only 65e, At drug, peived orders (rom Genaral Terry to | corn p Ak b Jinenealie handicapped throush =y telll ant. lice and chicken lice, grocery, ‘bardwara and department proceed up the Rogebud toward the| A majority of the peaks and can e war-time commitments fo expendi 7 S completely tid a home of stores. Buy BLACK FLaG today. Tndlan camp. The orders specified |yons in south vegion aye unuamed| S0 TE L |tures which after war-time lncom T posts when all else fails, that the fnal engagement was Yo|-— there wre so many of them' — | THELCE R | cannot meet \ take place June 26, when all forc and it 18 hoped that something will R (' S ‘ R 0% i) ‘in to the B would concentrate en the camp. Ve done towards proper naming bes 2 4 READ I'HE HERALD CLASSIFIED 1 that “My detachment, under Colonel | tore foo many nicknames are given | ADS FOR RESULTS thev are dur But the figures say '\ Gibbone crossad the Yellowstons | : S 2 2 YIRS below the mouth of the Big Horn June 24 and camped on the east side of the Big Horn L troop, un- der Captain Tyler, which was in ad- vance of Gibbens' command, was fired npon by the redskins, and re- | turned to report. We camped on the | Littls Big Horn June 25, iust 10 | miles from the Indian camp, all { ready for the battle, scheduled for | June 26 Baodies Discovered “My troop, under Captain Eg Ball, was sent on in advancs next l day, with Captain Tyler on the right and Lisutenant Bradley on the lett ! To Bradley goss the distinetion ot | first discovering the bodies of Cus- | ter and his slaughtared troops | I reconnoitered with Captain | Ball ‘and Bugler Kerpey, about 59 | vards in advance of fhe troop, and we came on 24 dead ponies and a couple of We also en- | eountered a g party from Major Reno's detachment, out look- for Custer's band, and eent them on to Gibbons' camp to report our find. Ws returned to camp | | after a 10.mile scouting trip. | “There we learned of Custer's death. Immediately after that the Bills around seemeq covered with detach of United §tates sol. | @iers, marching in curious disarray. Tt was the Indians, wearinz uni-| tepees. oo forms Etolan from ths bodies of their victims." Suggestive Titles Hollxw o0od, Cal. Aug. 7 —The . fght against suggestive titles to mo- \ | tion pictures has -made definite | director general of the Association ef Motion Picture Producers and Distributors, declared on his semi-annual trip to the Hol- lywood film plants “The press booke for the coming teleases of pictures contain on three objectionable titlss,” Mr Hays prated The opan door policy of progrees during the last six months. | pet with gratifying response all ever the ecountry in tha shape of letters of suggestion as fo fhe im- provement of mation pictures. Fur- ther cuggestions from the public are solicited.” He concludad by praising the wgangible huginces administration” of ‘he motien picture industry at present time and predicted one of the most successful years in recent #im history { the producers and distributors has ¥ GERMAN PUBLISHER DIES Munich, Aug. T {P--Lothar Meg gendorfer. founder of the 1 Meggendorfer Blastt He v orens died weekly, recent]y THS WOMAN'S | REMARKABLE 17 vears old Entirely Due to Lydia E. , Pinkham's Vegetable | Compound t City, Towa, — “My first child y a short time and I wassick for a year after When T bent over and raised myself upagaini conidal- most scream with B;m in my baeck. e day 1 was o bad that I had to leave my washing and get ready to EF to the doctor e gave me medi- cine but it did no =! more good than §f 1 drank just water. Once when we ad been in town a little book telling about Lydis E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound was left inour car. I have y Fo fiveden taken five bottles of the Vegetable | Compound now and I do all my house- & RECOVERY work and help with the milking and | taking care of chickens and garden. Besides | have a fine baby girl eight ‘months old, just the picture of health and I am feeling fine myzelf. Youma; use this letter ss a testimonial and will anewer any letters asking about the Vegetsble Compound.”” — M Route No. 5, T True Story for September Is Nou On Sale At All Newsstands 25¢ the eyputh 150 Ghan Humanity OU see them every day, hundreds of men X and women upon whose faces is indelibly written—a story. A sad-eyed woman, alone on a park bench— watching the children dance gleefully. Another woman, pitifully alone, dying in a grim, white-walled hospital ward. A gitl, scarcely more than a child herself, gazing with tragic eyes at the baby she carries. A careworn man in threadbare suit stopping to buy a blood-red rose. TIRED tramp, edging into a 10c lodzing house as though he were ashamed. “He has seen better days,” you muse. He has. His story will astonish you. A Everywhere you see them. And you wonder, and you wish you knew the wonderful tales you instinctively know are there—beyond your reach. These are the people O. Henry, best loved of American authors, knew and wrote about. True Story knows them too, and because it September tells their stories in their own words it 15 the best loved magazine in America. SO e a0 PERHAPS you remember the stories you - heard at your mother's knee, true stories of things that really happened. Youdid not know what there was about these true life stories that thrilled you so, but you never ceased to wonder about life and to seek: to widen your knowledge of it. TH/\T is why you never tire of heating and reading true stories. Truth is life, and every truestoryisa partof life,bearingits ownintimate ge to you straight from the heart of life. mess: In every issue of True Story Magazine there are from fifteen to twenty true, human tales each of which contains a thrill or a smile or a tightening of the throat. That is why qver two million earnest minded men and women go to the newsstands each month to buy True Story. *That is why you will love True Story. The September issue has just been placed on sale. Get your copy at any newsstand today Use The Coupon If You Cannot Get TrueStoryAt YourNewsstand Heart Throbs of Partial Contents September Issue Flirting With Fire Straying Feet Fruits of Folly Love's Turmoil What Weuld You Do? 1Told My Husband Eversthing There Is No Joy Through Sin Who Took His Bride? Go and Sin No More When a Girl Trifles Who Shall Judge? A Dead Woman's Revenge The Healing Power of Love Had I But Known Why I Couldn't Punish Them A Woman's Birthright Flung to the Winds and seven other splendid features | { i e e ————TTTS—— ST TR Distributed by Capitol Tobacco Company Hartford, Conn.