f7GfITlfiGm&fy: t i,n iiomi nf tho K.000 reculars AM. J - uvwv. w- In tin. rMilllnnlna Islands Is modern fighting machine. Its name Is Lawton-Heury W. Lawton and for nearly forty years It has worn the uniform of the United states army i ,oa i-iann tmm tho ranks, this fight ing machine, leaving behind It other machines as strong possiuiy, oui fortunate. Henry W. Haw ton was born In Ohio fifty-six years ago. He was a country boy and got only a common school edu-cntlon-not any too much of It- It Is to be doubted If he would havo learneu a great deal If kept steadily at college un til he attained his majority. Emphat ically he Is not a book man. Studying the printed page has been to him al ways a task and nerer a pleasure. Men are his books men and happenings. His folk were plain farmer folk. From them he derived his length and size of bone. The tremendous muscles, the tireless endurance which haTe marked bim In later life had the beginning of the development In the open air of tho fields of his boyhood. It was said of him that It took him longer to learn anything and longer to forget It than any youth that ever tramped through the snow to a log school house. His memory. Indeed, has been one of his strong points since he emerged from childhood. He remembers well par ticularly enemies. A better hater was never born. It follows necessarily that he Is true In friendship. He Is, in fact, a man's man. Women who get to know him like him well enough, but not many of them get to know him- In the age of gray hair he Is still a bach elor, and If he has ever had an affair of the heart It has been kept to himself. Lawton entered the volunteer service of the United States In April, 1801. and was given the chevrons of a sergeant In company E of the Ninth Indiana In fantry. In August, 1SC1. he was made first lieutenant of the Thirtieth Indi ana. In May, 1802. he was made a cap tain, was a lieutenant colonel In No vember. 1604, was breveted a colonel for gallant and meritorious services in March, 1SG5, and was mus tered out of the service In No vember, 18C5. He had had practically four years of the most tremendous war In the history of the nations. He had been a participant In a dozen pitched battles. He had led his men In charge and counter charge on the stricken fields of Virginia. He had stepped up on the dead upturned faces of his broth ers. He had been soaked with blood to bis knees. On the 1st of July, 1SG0, he was ga zetted a second lieutenant In the regu lar army, being assigned to the Forty first Infantry. A year later he was made a first lieutenant He was trans ferred to the cavalry arm In January, 1871, bad advanced to a captaincy In March, 1870, was made a major In the Inspector's general's department In September, 1883, and Inspector general, -with the rank of lieutenant colonel, In 3SS9. That Is his rank In the regular army to-day, although he wears the epaulets of a major general of volun teers. He Is slated for appointment to be a brigadier general under the reor ganization act and when the two years for which the new soldiers will be en listed have expired there will be enough retirements from the service to make bis retention as a regular brigadier a certainty. He has come upward step by step solely turougn personal courage anu nerKonnl slremrth. He has held that It Is the first duty of the soldier to fight. and to ugnt as soon as ne gets tne r-hnnre. He has been nossessed bv no particular refinements of the art of war. He has simply gone ahead and fought like a fiend when opportunity nfTprpd nnd li'ft to others tli tnslc nf explaining why and how such and such a victory was won or defeat suffered. He has devoted his life to the profes sion of arms and he understands it. He does not pretend to be an authority up on anytuing eise. lie is a one-iuea man Personality of tbe Man. In person ho Is a wonder. Standing G feet 3 Inches high, as straight as a rule, with long arms, wide shoulders, deep chest and thin flanks, he weighed 105 pounds of bone and muscle when 25 years old and now weighs 210. His head is small and set on a massive neck. His hands nnd feet are large, He Is as active as a cat and as tireless as a wolf. Under the sleeves of his blue fatigue Jacket tbe muscles bulge like cables. His stomach goes like clockwork. Ho has not an unsound tooth. Headaches are not known to bim, except from hearsay. Ho can travel for a week without food or sleep, then make a boa constrictor ashamed of itself and sleep for two days without turning over. Ho has never taken any care of himself. The soldier's rough and exposed life has been his since youth, but he Is as sound as a nut to day and able to tire out a dozen young er men. Apparently fatigue passes him by when It lays its heavy hand upon tlioeo apparently as strong, lie is al ways alert and always looking for a chance to damage an opponent One of his many Indian names Is "Man vin-f!nt.TJn-ln.the-Nlj:ht - to Fight" and ho has earned It by years of prac tically ceaseless toll. His roronwiu is hlirh and somewhat narrow, his eyes a bon ernv. his nose and check bones prominent his chin square, his lips thin. Ho wears a drooping mustnene. hi hnlr la cut nomnadour. stands up stiff and short like a reversed shoe shoe brush, and he Is not pretty. This hair Is now liberally sprinkled with trrar. and tho whlto amid the brown Is about his only sign of age. Army sur- eeons who know him say that he may live to bo 100 unless a bullet cuts short bis strange and sanguinary career. nenrr W. Lawton was a callant and serviceable officer of Infantry during four vears of the civil war. but his peculiar talents were properly envir oned only when he was transferred to the cavalry and stationed In the south west This was more than a quarter of a century ago, and for two decades ho was remote from the largo cities of tbe cast He found New Mexico and Arizona overrun and terrorized by hos tile bands of Indians and he set him self, along with his comrades, to hold them down. Ther were held down. Tho work that the cavalrymen of the United States did In those years will never be appreciated until a circumstantial his tory la written and It is not probable that the history will ever be written. It was a life of foray, long rides, des- nerate battles In remote valleys, mid night surprises, combat with a foe that often was not seen, disheartening and fruitless chases, danger and frequent dpnth. In fifteen years the officer saw every friend he had made when he went to the mountains taken from bim by removal, age disease or the bullet . ii. tiniiintv to death that Is name nuu iu """ , ,.,,,, i one of tho marvels of that brief nnd glorious campaign. It was of Lav, to" men and not of tbe rough riders i I mt the Spanish Infantryman said: not understand you American soldier. You tried to catch us with your hands. It was Lawtoii's reputation for dar ing nnd tireless pertinacity that led to his becoming Internationally famous. Ills characteristics wore known, or course, to his superior officers as thor oughly as they were known to the In dlans whom ho had been lighting wr a dozen years. For the tenth tlmo tho baud of Chlrlcahua Apachos, headed by Chief Naches and directed by Ger onlmo. had Jumped tho San Carlos res ervation, leaving behind them the usu al trail of blood and ruin. Itancbmun were butchered on lonely ranges, chil dren's brains were dashed out aud the smoke of burning dwellings rose day and night to the brilliantly blue sky. General Miles, a trained Boldler nnd an Indian fighter himself, was In com mand, and he selected Captain Lawton for the task that was set before them. He started with two troops of veterans, taking a trail that at Its beginning was broad and plainly marked. Then fol lowed the most remarkable pursuit In the history of Indian warfare. Day af ter day the ceaseless toll continued. The men speedily found themselves In a country where horses without claws were of worse than no account Their nffir fllanmiintml them. "WO Will walk them down." he said grimly. The walk began. It was wnite piucs anu endurance against Indian craftiness and endurance. Hunting Oeron'mo. Over rocks that blistered tho hands when touched. In ravines so deep and dark that through the narrow rift far overhead the stars were visible at noontide, up tbe sides of huge hills down which trickled rivulets of dust, threading paths along precipices which frowned upon green valleys 5.000 feet below, drinking of cold, clear springs that gushed above the cloud, some times In the sun-baked desert, again VIhb lir I....... master, mium. . - - Lawton from mo " , In. tho Inspector general n offlcj Washington, with mm-1. ol chtl ln tko. a fair salary aud little to do. rue naethM chafed him. a. It chafe. nuy "his kind. In live yra to more than he would hare worn In ten Tho chance of hostilities with Hna In found him eagerly preferring rU M for assignment to service. Ho did not wish to Inspect anything or to take tho conduct of army train. He want. to flcht It seemed to him, ho said, that If ho could smell the smoke ouco more and know that there was a chance to do good work, he wouM Instantly become young again. Tho opportunity was of. fered him. It was recognized that In tho Santiago campaign lighters and not doctrinaires were wanted. At lampa Lawton was tho first man namml by Shafter to assist him In the dwperato enterprise ahead. "Peco lecn for many years on the froutlei himself and ho kuow hi officer thor oughly. Nothing could bare suited Lawton so well. He was there to kill Spaniards and ho thought ho saw his way clear to doing It As a brigadier general of volunteer be was given command of a division and In that commaud stormed El Caney, doing as much as any man could do to convince Toral that his cause was hopeless. In all of the righting of that terrlllc day he was up to the firing line, saying little, but pacing slowly up and down, his gaunt figure a mark for every sharpshooter In tho enemy's lines, tho Mauser's fllcklug up tho dut about him or pulsing In tho air, giving to his men tho constant example of how an Amer ican soldier should act when under fire. . .. .. f cutthroat! Kchcs nnd no r - - A ' -.J were prisoners In l wi ' WetlIllf la., '"il -.in it. mn ltiemoiii. ,. ..." rn-T i urn iriiiin technical i '1 recently. Ilurr Jm, gljJH fatllOIIS Vflllhu In........ WIW slstanco wns breuon. J ; ,t -,,, KrnncU J . r Onn the white proved by ,,,, . inan had shown thorn t hat in; was ntnlly, morauy n I'"'-, , Iirnphla process. Tim .... ' i llll Is Illadn Irn... . . , '.( Itailnliliiunr. It I. V" TM lii, 1 Mtl,M.lM!l,k. t.9 .... " i,iiip TllM ...... L. . tl OOOeroMlng, HOslIk thi,J., eoiitlmotor. Two UtaA,JT motors ul tiaitnluuw.l ...i ' been necessary to project ft? cording to tho prewnt raiiW luiixra wmilil .-,...1 . ' I a vm mil a I. ft.... I . 1 mV will. o. ' and delicacy ol tho pictm, Ji body would ball MM I- I Herr Bzoiopnnlk tlvtnonilriti J ci at the emperor's itttn. J Mvrvvi.vn IMC i I I I . .. . . "HI v Kmu ubuu uuan tlltJtl u, I'MIIII. Wlmn man l l,a,.l u. oriy unit uuwh. 1 Tho man with a pull Uuvd m. . 11. 1 . liniKy ioiiow. Alcoholic tplrili geocr'lm a fall. r The entire personnel of tho force changed more than once the entire personnel that is, except himself. He was always left lonely, self-contained, earnest Indefatigable and silent save when giving commands or cheering on his men in fight His name became a household world In all of the tepees In that wild land. The Chlricahuas, the Mescaleros, the Jlcarlllas, Apaches, all had for him the mixture of hate and grudged admiration compelled by a dauntUss foe. They found In him, after a little while, a man who was learned In every phase of their peculiar warfare, and In ten years they dreaded him as they have dreaded few white men since the winning of the west be gan. Lawton's method of handling them was singularly his own. When he struck a trail he kept to it with a dogged tenacity which knew no such thing as quit Whether the pursuit was maintained for a day or a week, It was maintained with a steady, unre lenting earnestness that did more to strike terror into the hearts of the red men than would havo been possible to all the rifles on earth. Tho man's phil osophy was wholly expressed once In a chance remark to a newspaper ac quaintance. "If a man Is hunting for you," he said, "get a gun and hunt him. Do It right away. It discourages anyone to be suddenly transferred from the posi tion of hunter to bunted." This rule has guided bim. He Insists upon being the aggressor. It Is sup posed that he would stand a charge all right but hitherto be has always done tho charging. He does not bellovo In waiting for the other Bide to act This trait was signally demonstrated in his conduct of the right wing of the Amer ican army at El Caney. Ho had men that be thought could bo depended on. At any rate ho proposed to sec what they could and would do. So he sent them at the blockhouses and breastworks hour after hour with a savage disregard of tbe chances of t'ls-Jr,! TI10 fellow with looklrt' fur cranks. The early bin) Is apt toaiitb icatioearatieti about KaiUf. That man who bUti khj no leapeu prou ir uiun'i tuttii Chicago Democrat, H.ll.l. fur Chaw. Pound One an ounce of MmI) half an ounce ol allspice, u 1 Alt, hair an ouncuol knjli radish and half an oonwo! t urn led anil minrtered. Poll a pint of inuihrooiu or wslittt and let them sleep (or s fore ittalrilnif. A teaittioafili of this, mixed with the tatluii which forms tho eistt l ttek, is an acceptibU Cincinnati Knquirer. HOWS Tllllt nf n ir.lH.1ml rkJUntMci eao( CatarrU ltilrn not Utsftiji iirrn wur. V. i. Cll KMKV 4 CO, ITe-A'a Wa thuni3cfiinrl.hnkori (ertua t.at ft tears, atx! Uuimtap bomirafitt In ail tmlo-t triauctatii aneiairM loesrrr ouiaojrc ' IIWjIT.pii W huiriata Inuuli'J.K Wild 1x0, KtniiaXi lt'kt.l Itruvlil. natl'aCaUrrhCuralil kctilnlW dlrrcitr on tba lilatKl ana a ei k IburiL-m. I'f I a TlO lr UolUe. tXi druccliU. TeitltnonUli lrr, UaJt'a raatty I'llli ro tt Utt. A Gentian scientist uritttilt havo not realited tho vahttfi Finaneiert have. Of the house In I'arii, Fruaj are still 10,000 (with 200.WM ants) that use well water. V.tr T.ui.v n.ul rlirit ilnfaMI, 1 It the bt iiirdlciun we ha t"4 J. L Northcotl, Wlndaor, OuM Mrs. VIruluia Key. a Auf law (if Vranrla Kcott Kef. II I quietly In Chicago at the sgsoMj clambering far beyond the timber line, Lawton and his followers struggled on. Frequently a wisp of blue smoke Jutted from some Inaccessible crag and a bullet sang Its wicked way to Its billet or spattered upon a russet rock. It Is a country that God Almighty made In wrath and the Imprint-of bis anger Is on It all. Week succeeded week. Men dropped, fainting, In the giant hills and their comrades passed on. There was no tlmo to stay. They were left to find their way back to the reservation ns best they could. Indian and white were foemcn worthy of each other's steel, and the Issue of the con test was In doubt to the last day. Finally, one night just as the sentries were set, there was a faint hall and an Indian stood before thorn. He was worn to the bone, but dauntless still. Ho said that his chief would talk to the white man, but would talk to hlra alone. His camp was some miles further on, but the messenger would guide Lawton to it If he cared to come. The aoncoms endeavored to persundo the captain against the venture, but he smiled sour ly at them and told the Indian that ho was ready. They left tho camp of tho soldiers the next morning. By 10 o'clock Lawton stood In tbe Apache horde. Cavernous eyes gleamed at him. Lips drawn back from discolored teeth grinned at him. Wasted hands were waved at him threateningly. Stern, dominant, tho living, breathing person location of tho great Whlto Spirit that had beaten them back from tho far eastern verge of tho land they had owned, ho walked straight to tho medi cine man and demanded bis surrender. There was a brief parley. Lawton con temptuously refused to promise any thing or to guarantee anything, except that he and his followers would bo fed. "Maybe you will bo banged after ward," he said. "I don't know about that Anyhow, you ought to be. But I'll feed you. I'd feed a dog In your fix." A month afterward Geronlmo, Ho was one of tho three commissioners appointed by Gen. Shafter to arrange with Torn! tho terms of capitulation, and after tho fall of Santiago policed tho city In a very thorough manner un til the establishment of a stable, form of government was made irasslble. Law ton's Idea of policing n place of tho kind Is very simple. "The regulations are so and so," ho would say, "and you have your gun. If nnybody violates tho reg ulations, use tho gun." It required Just one day to quiet tho city. Again It was tho Gcroulmo record-or rather tho record of years In tho west crowned by tho Geroulmo Incldeut whlch sent him to the Philippines to command tho American forces In tho field. The rainy season will have uo effect on him, whatever tho effect may bo on thoso under him. IIo Is ns cer tain to go strong and fast, oven If he goes to his death, as tho sun Is certain to rlso and set. All cllumtos nnd nil seasons aro alike to that Iron framo, upon which war and penco nnd tho rigors of tho mountains nnd tho sloth of the Potomac Vnlloy and nscoticlsra and dissipation havo been effectless. He Had Not Mlaaod It. A friend making a morning call upon Peter Burrowes, a celebrated Irish bar rister, who was very absent-minded, found him shaving himself with hli face to tho wall, and asked why hi cboso so strange an attitude. Tho an swer WB8 "To look In tho glass." "Why there Is no glass there." "Bless mol' exclaimed Burrowes, "I did not notlca that before." Then, ringing tho boll, ho called tho servant nnd questioned him respecting tho looking-glass which had been hanging on the wall. "Oh, sir " said tho servant, "It was broken nix wcekB ngo."-San Francisco Wave. LlloomiffOuns. The huge guns of modern navies can bo fired only about seventy-flvo liuies. when they becomo worn out An Excellent Coinblnali Tho pleasant method and W Syhui' or Fiob, niunufacturw UAMFOltNIA FIO OVIIUl- vv.. - tho valuo of obtaining the i llq tlvo prlmrlplcB of plants kno i lit nr. 1 t nnd pre IIIUUIUlllUII v IU.tw -- I mum in uiu lorm u. .1 ,.irt ttwto and acccptnblo to tho J Is tho one perfect r!"B';J live, cleansing wio nyi. ---.u dispelling colds, headaches ana gently yet promptly and cngw 10 overcome nauimi V : iinatfaW manentlv. Its perfect Irtfffimk every objectionable lMV liver nnd bowols, without wgj or irritating thorn, malco It " laxative. , i,irirl2 In tho process of m.2itil nro used as they are plejMg J tnat. tint H.n mndtc tial qUl ?. J remedy aro obtained from jy other aromatic plants, uy icnown to tno f A'""""; 7, btnfl Co. only. In order to go f A cirects and to nvoiu '"C.com remember tho full name of printed on tho front oi rAT nrnoTVTTA mo SYRurv BAWJrBANOISCaCAb ,j Tnmarrrvw nr-P NEW r fOn I'oraale by all Druggit.-I'rM'J