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_ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE . MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1925 i ! Buford, my detail Being too much] Many i the Indians say ‘that their} OLDEST STEAMER BURNED PAGE TWO te Ca WHEAT ESTIMATE ON SEPTEMBER f igued to attend to them. _, Roeping, Sweden, Sept. 14 cal June 30, 1881, at 4 P. Masi stop-;and that the Great Spirit changed | was the oldest in the world in active FIRST IS 10, 000, 000 BUSHEL S | ped with my soldiers in front of the| their hands into one with fingers. in |service, recently was destroyed hy i post traders, Leighton & Jordan, at|order that they might use the bow/fire. Built in 1848 at Motala wharf, E Fort Buford, The thermometer regis- | and arrow, the boat had been making regtl hides AUGUST PRODUCTION FIGURE tered 115 degrees in the shade. It had} ‘The Cheyenne Indians relate how |trips between this city and Stoc 7 ibeen so hot that our head nets tolthey lived in various places near} holm. Since its launching it had be j | Protect us against mosquitoes had|jwhere Lisbon, N. D., now —stands,| rechristened several times and wi ; not been used. On the night of the} raised corn, planting it when the leaf | rebuilt in 1900. | {following 3rd of July, I camped atlof the oak was the size of a rabbit's| At the time of its destruction there Bob Mathews’ ranch just below the| foot, clothed themselves in skins of | were 16 passengers besides the crew present site of Williston, and on the! smail animals, not being able to kill| aboard, all of whom eseaped. | morning of the fourth of July there buffalo, snared rabbits and caught ———_——_, | a heavy white frost and we en-/ smaller animals as large us coyotes.| Cook with Gas. It's the countered pri fires en route to| by deadfalls and snares. ‘The Indian Fort Totten, between Dog's Den andj of today, notwithstanding a Ideal F uel. Sept. 1h Gene nditions in North Dakota have mainttined & Is 3 ‘Mouse River. | inherited instinct to hunt, : a i ained August ere; timothy, 12 |. On arriving at Fort Buford, I sent] in close a ation in Indian camps We prom you in “Black * i true of cores ent jelover ane ithe various ladies of the post somej of the past, must realize that he > = 5 ation released il ep Cates! Wee ee \ choice dried buffalo hump, and when! reached the end of the Indian trail] Cyclone” a wonderful attrac- ‘ hited Slates Prospects 1 Forks 0 Crop anc 1 called the next day to bid them! and must take up the white man’s ti | good-bye, every one told me the buf-! trail or perish. jon |falo meat was excellent, charming, | lete, except Mrs. Brotherton, the! commanding officer’ ‘e, who said | \if T ever brought her any more such | meat she would never invite me to! miportant vancement ¢ rine wheat YXDH ng fon Septe 000 bushels. All lunch again, because all .the ladies farthe un 36.000 es ele NATE bush ee to fumigate the ; houses. a LOOK AT YOUR CLOTHES—EVERY ONE ELSE DOE , NaN, IMHee Sarai Lom bua | saw so many, and in 1883 there were ey 000 bushe ' none of any consequence. | Buffalo Depleted ‘The depletion of the buffalo and} advent of white men with poor whis- {key and diluted alcohol initiated the | | d 1 mporte abrics sgh jruin of the Indian. I could write aj book relative to the Indi: tributary ‘to old Fort Union, Here in 1832, th or a ‘Crows made a treaty with the Biack- , Canad: rate cane of) 7 need aithoush | Hon “bu da vi used by reeent |fect which they violated two ite se | ‘afterwards, Again at the mouth of ymised yields above ave |the Judith River under the Stevens yields in’ s parts of hed | They’re a distingui the Crows, Gros Ventr a ty he wsanpoineine: | epi indian of tolay, motuveithsta cf his inherited instinet to bunt, di live in open. | Pend ‘Oreilles, the Kute- * ° i ihe ie State which cae tows i ot uae peallzed tt he he peeled th hata trail am must take. up. te kite: man’s Url as amis, New Berees ‘and others” agreed looking lot of woolens. = (00 bushels inerease since! hosenfeld,. Manitoba een yer ‘on of tive buat and the adveat of white men with poor whiskey ¢ H cohol | £6, Temmain at peace with sue moore You can tell them at a { cone, bushel, according te the Canadian | 1M ‘ De pel: Se | stenting ponies from the Bloods and | ance-the fine Lenwell | a z R 1 Editor's Note New historical thee we held prisoners, but fin tT gan the butchering, be pt but.) killing several members of this tribe.| glance tl e fi eh . : ev eeadls One Ter ton the battle of the Little Big ceured all the Indians ex-jchers. The little children ran around |It must be remembered that the worsteds, the Bonnie y RECeEaH alin be. Cf and the Custer miss q few with Sitting Bull, who tripe, liver and other! Bloods, Piegans, and Blackfeet proper mn ‘ ) Ob Rt agh ade: eM by Gen. WM We shipped these carcass known to them) Were different bands of the same I'weeds, the Roscom- aa t ious ina ‘is | whose ie account ns, some 5,000 all told, ¢ Vand considered choice food. While| tribe, the Blackfeet. | re he , ae Polatoc eiciek orhig states? Pree Life in the Dak ‘Territory near ts, to Standing Roek, D. }the fur was not good, all the hides | The Musselshell ag re the} mon Br iarproof, the that thef Ua aaa Seen a 3 ago is published below. Ser-! former home. Rain-in-the-Face went! w ed for tepee covering and | boun ine between the row : ‘a aa Y per con ng Wheat on al under General, then Lieutenant with two boatloads, loaded at Mil ete. We continued to hunt |and the Backrest. However, iis Devenish fabrics from 1 were a . dakot 50 BIO in Dakota in 1881 Fort Keogh, on the stea days, the buffalo receding | Yellowstone River was often reache e . : a Peat is voces since oo ee ine ae jeut, Hugh L. J who later hine and Batchelor, 1 or 15 miles each d . killing by is ae ie Ind ee ca Ireland, all in the new f 205,000: bushe Bee Ara ieants ae G00 Wi me majo sent to Standing Rock. I killed ten cach day.jcd the Yellowstone River. Elk River, " * i 4 } it the: North Dakota) Vannes i Se i eee Indian. fighter in the follow. {~ After our Indian wo ow then to uit the ens, the Cheyenne “nawe “being Mons colorings found-only in = " noirs tells of ene of the received authority 250) as the ¢ rere too you ti ay, and the Musselshell was called oe es ae : Corn is placed ata condition of | Durum ~~ ffalo hunts in the northw Vantin “unt OrGwaanller" GROW? Gn atase: |Dry’ Meat River. these exclusive fabrics. 1 67 per cont which justifies an esti inka ul his relations with sev-; 'That-Flie h out on the Red W cut ‘ Old Fort Union BIA bushels’ ner, were oF Haketa hietay who ti : some 150 miles West, ne meat way ene in long | Fort Union celebration, of gocent + FOR YOU tate production of 21,033,000 bu vu nd made by the! of Fort Buford, on a buffalo hunt, | mienkaws in so included the battle ground | 0 i Rust ix Mild (ink pel the white with a detail of thirty soldiers. We ja") 1 not butte bed k and of Chief Joseph, nant there, the | MADE FOR The condition of the wheat erop Seed— n America. The ste ssembled at old Fort Union site Out ee tataee jSeventh Cavalry did the main fight. if > ‘ n North Di led ai Feodudtion and cont: and there launched a great number, Whe se cured den tio dling, in the battalion that charged | N OUR OWN SHO! tho Bite he At nuany of bull boats, which consist of willow, POnY would © nen Nez Perces at Snake Creek, inegz.ano hu. | priaation i pm WO th ‘own buffalo, hey made soup of Si : jes escaped ris: ( va pwith t of the We frames, round like a tub and covered} &" e i : Sept. 30th, 1877, every of- wh NRaieeoiueh lat than wa: i ee the first white! with buffalo hides. In the early: the green bones and feted night ndy killed or wounded but one. eo {'t earlier antici) true Chat) Montan Tassnoo bust the site of what is now! days the prairie Indians always used Gi, when not offering up pe | Hale was shot through the! the rust epidemic together with the ee ke, his. present reen hides for boat coverin of thankfulness to the Great Spitit, head, Iieut. Biddle through the ¥ 1 the tallow 1 Agr a hie even if it/throat, Captain Moylan through the J much of the valle to Lewis Cr titted more snugl i h at dish was|jeg above the knee, and Captain i iedueed the ual) Three Conventions [icra ric bid soldiers career isla to the fr: less liable to leak; but Bergeson’s rritory especi ding sand hill cher ” y.*na * | ity of the grain. esr ne ~fintinately linked with many of the! case we had to use old) dry nang oe ee | through the body, ‘narrowly es + LAT The northern valley, however, has Attract Officials most thrilling episodes of the history | whieh were sewed together so s neat, using tor special | ing the spinal column. Due to TAILORIN CLOTHIN | finally come through auch better of the northwest lly with sinew that the leal us the meat f the hump of | this battle I was promoted from the than the ter: from Grand| Conventions and hearings on H — ! negligible. jehe animal; whlehis-<more fenser ys sighth Cavalry and transferred to Fork outh und @ounty.} ters of interest. to North D: | on. HM. Creel \ We spent the first day on the ieealt an the tenderloin Seventh, and I took command of ise the derr t from the{ citizens depleted the ‘statehouse nant 7th t ide of the ri repairing old} ¢ vennined in-eampisome 10: days | K Troop, Seventh Cavalry, consisting yo and ¢ t central) most of its officials early this week, frames of bull nkiigsneny while the ment and Nides were curing, of 103, men after the Nez Perces north ha crop. In| ‘Two members of the supreme court, ‘ones from the villows, {and T rede ever the country killing! fight, having escorted Chief Joseph i Baeat wren, -tilures Inbthe aiectiae eereent coe ctl ao HME (hncemanie GErive Wile Mie.[# few deer and antelope, also exam-!and ‘his band to. Bismarck, where consider veat of the durum va-) of hiv staff’ together w of to ete, Early next) morning began | meine the soih and looking for coal, they were shipped by rail to’ the In- . Hiety and this erop is yielding very| other departments. who ed arrangements to take jto ‘cross. Two squaws to boat | te de oul a ane Ee alten Territo where I have since é i and ind the grain is of a! hurristers were meeting with fellow of the townsites of the .Canadian! crossed all the soldiers, rations, cay. | 7OUNEMs Co ve hist bs {found n died with chills and high quality a | members of the state bar association | Pacific | railroad ‘after. |alry, equipment, and swam the horseaf © mx reute from Fort Union to the | fever. : pecia T7er , ields as high as 30 bushels per} at Fa The chairman of the ra Wil n, of the across. The Jndians swam their po- jperitians NG can: 1G oe Cay. Lt To sce the Indian wand ‘ z . aere are not uncommon and mans! yead-bourd and most ef its exp railroads whowlhdd becit|mmesSacrosatil formation, and] une into ¢ Ea tterncoh “ike first knew hint, and the result of hi " Oeil i ihe pbove tenritcry The ing bby. the in ite commerce cont Pacific railroad. ‘This ar-| their numerous ing: tepecs,| £0" LOD) Eibue fiom Poplar Coaek! jand ithe re alts it satfordssteoils far western one-third of the state has} mission on the application of west ment was made through my old|and poles and women and’ children, | {tt 1,000 Sio bees K+ much regret and pity for a e . hot been quite so highly favored and! ern railroads for an inerease in} friend, James J. Hill, who said 1, This work required all day. The next) “Ore (ut jon the war path. | 1 hadi once roamed this vast don CASH y there are areas in western Div@?! froight rates and E. O. Bailey. ought to realize at least £50,000 per|day we began packing up for the trip, Stn neh for! the Missouri aud dreamed of hunting, ° ind. Williams counties: Some Spots utive officer of the state secu annum in this position. [leaving the river about ten o'clock in! jet thet melt he Missouri their’ religion, Just si; 1 3 in MeKenzie and MeLean and 2am) commission, closed his desk to attend| On Saturday, about the first day| the morning. i Hlived up to, just as God - er 5 p as areas i toe re the convention of the National Asso-]of May, IS81, orders came ordering | : . i Begin March jligion our white people pr Underwoods No. 5. e pain au feroualyant ion of Securities commissioners | my Troop K, of the Seventh Cavalr Forty Miles a Day § About midway in my mareh a Scenes Change Royals No, 10. eee eda at Lansing, Michigan, scheduled for|to proceed to Fort Buford, D. T., to! We traveled about forty ni ‘had had nothing to eat for some 18. ‘Those days are gone. with Remingtons No. 10 and 11 First two weeks in July. In these! September 15 to 18, inelusive ssistant in the capturing of some jday, the Indians killing some ihours, T ran across the Lirgest buf-! them the stately old Indian warrior L. C. Smith No. 5 ‘i RoE hone vera 3 16 | eeasmun - 4000 Sioux Indi Sitting Bull's! lope and black tail deer. Abou ifalo bull 1 ever saw and shot him.’ whose word was ood, also have: 2 As AUN INO, 9s Biuuehe rot ot poor, BULGARIA AND JUG s the line from| miles west of Fort Union the Tndisn|He fell on his es, two st ay the old settlers of early | Every ‘Machine Guaranteed { Aetliby and » bete REACH AG scouts reported large herds of of blood running from his no: is no West—Buffalo! -| ter than the : ON TRANSFER "OF MAIL Italo. That night v t into land [stood in front of him 1% nia Joe, Yellowstone Kel- Sofia, Sept. 14. (P) which have extended over a 4 ed period have resulted in the s ‘The medicine men under tent medicine until n morning, the Great Father's aid in Most the follow Canada to take ing his deuth. I never suw a more.ley, Ben Clack, Philip Brock, Bat, J M M { ' athetie look in n eye than this! Masterson and other heroes with him Ga er e C Q Onl 4 1 seene presented. He seemed to sy at the Adobe Wall fight, all have i ing of a railroad « tine pitic promised -me,. but blout.| cai nunt to me: Why did you kill me? I never! gone, and with them the gane that 211, Broadway DEALER Phone 989 : ut favorable for, tion by Jugosls had Nees pein ee yt oeP)| Nest morning, bri an rly,, harmed you! dotted the vast prairies of the great if Bismarck, N. D. ' 1 Lana Taclauling s the transfer BS Tid eat cee oe ee ona] we approached the immense herds ct] T made a vow that 1 would never west in countless thousands. ] threshing the atute aria to his young wife, as he would! luffalo covering the Montan: pr -| shoot another buffale, and I never} T have stood on lonely buttes, | catone THe In the ” rovehed the nada AG aelere Me caueeuten ies ft s T could see with my) did, although [I had the opportunity.; hundreds of miles from ilroads, at 3 ro suffered ‘h road exchange center was leis at Mid ent ie oa field glasses, the cows and calves in} Thad nothing to eat but buffalo! the western winds blowing clouds » have produced a reasonabl brod, Wivine: een > atta from | the middle, the™ bulls out dj; meat and parched corn, so J uajoint-{of alkali dust, the sad c of the RWescee The carevieve ee he railroad agroement sas (Po hare ore THe lanked with a large numbe bigied the hind legs and broke them flying curlew, with the how's of ‘he production of oats in No: a de vite the fuct that Serbia had | cnether | would go gn Scott's Ae battle Ales ; over horns and ate the marroxe big timber and buffalo wolves, ac 67,263,000 bushels suspended visaing or tow me al ace ae punch of outriders on tiwith parched corn, It tasted palat-|companied by the cluttering of ee sasa | Bulgarian passports, owing te ee tet Event and he remained at ponies cut off some 500 of the her!! able, was not bloody, and, after this|the coyote. When on Broadway, New FOOT SPECIALI Her cent of which ist test lodged with the Bulgarian for (MEET asi Sunday «morn to us and drove them toward) meal, I felt as if I could ride an-/York, my mind has reverted tot | dhe’ cnatern onccthied of, CED ottiee againstthe arrest of sev-| atta; oe with ea ne amp, however with difficulty, as! other 100 miles, Iscenes, and IT have longed Phineas oe s a seis es euun very seoodcehape, ules I Serbian subjects after the ex. |" led le Mousentteer ah ' would break nd join | We marched ht and d: and |again, lonesome in this b ,, Graduate ¢ hir announces th openiug of an up to # some counties report that; Plosion in, the cathedral of Sveta Haagen ceeeeee eee 1 herd. Then the slaughter be-| arrived safely at Fort Buford Ferry|the Great West, with its impenct Chiropody and Massage office, at Room 24, Virat Guaranty eet ce ceasing che dan Nedelia. ithe controversy ec ruin | ¢ nacete donate ae We would ais up re hurts on the Missourl eriver just slave [bisa mystic ties th em dea tr suilding. of the May a dune frosts! Ge arres' not yet been settlee ae as shoot him just behind the the mouth of the Yellowstone, whi and gencrous people, to oa 3 ‘ Peed ae anat os Fe one TOE despite explanations and. apol ne} S uit sue ees seldom failing to kill at ML crossed in rowboat manned’ by six, fault. Comfortable Peet Are One of Nature’s Greatest Assets None tare eee eephoor Aields and! offered by Christo Kalfoff, the Bul- Soe NOR ee se iniiey Shot, rush on to the next one | soldiers, swimming the horses. The| Unmarked graves on lonely battes lee Tig. land avhich wns [Saeian Minister of Fore Affairs | ielos the tean OLMbeRee mues continuing the killing until we had} India mained in camp geveral/and in quiet valleys from the con- |}! urprisingly few neople who have foot trouble of any nature wn to barley at a very I ic siltal |days on the west side of the river,|fines of } enough to dress for that d: realize the relief they obtain under the New entific Trea EW PLAN OF TAXING AUTOS From there we passed by Doz's ani vune Cipldscure ict {ai. BOS.) non ia Nene eee Wy pox's The squaws were nearby and be- junder guard of detachment from Fort, banks of the Rio 17} ments, It is so simple and c to standard. BCTIVE IN CUBA | ie ie jSeevaneen andl tS Mate (members of the old Seventh Cavalry that have suffered for years w ‘orns, Bunions, ‘Cired Bur The condition during Av AM) Cuba's new ~~ |that fought clear across this conti- ford, a few miles below old Fort H 6 JUST SWEET SIXTE N es | nent. Wabh-the bones of thesnitai. ing Feet, Falling Arches, Weak Ankles, and other foot ailments auite favorable for the potato crop por basing | chatees | Gnign, where the phoscnt town of albhaush reas reported, 6" Passenger vehicles on wheel base | srondul Fe acute eae warrior they are sad reminders of When one's feet are in stich a state it affects the whole sy thit ation during; 200 trucks by capacity, went into ef- | feet tea ary womted by Nis ‘the past and I feel at ‘ of Bismarek, and later founder of White nes that tem that they slight many daily duties many pleanure the month re {their spirits again visit this habitat h and tho: There are ne areas where feil reported | for the pas-} ‘and I wonder what their comment is With New Se n rel Wha the moisture recestatiiened (senger veh follows: under | Pursue Indians ‘when they compare the present with Supports, it canary 3 Pee ie growth and thus hindered the ma- { 103 ineby 10 a year: to | The Indians we were ‘the past. plates or thos y q y scientific metho of the crop. A small portion | 120 ineh killed Custer's battalio! c ye AGH: sf Pet? gicy hws een dug, and is co, | nche lio dileene cae abana Describe Tribes restore the fect hack to complete relief, giving spring nh | ing to 1 : The labor situation seems to have improved somewhat, from the em-j later join Benteen’s The prineip iefs Bull, Gall, the milit seribe the habits and prominent char. |]|° H#sticity to Che step and walk, acteristics of the various Indian {tribes that I have met from Canada | | T hope in the near future to de \ A great many foot sufferers have gained this delightful new eee om tne tacaia | es range f Con uaa ie 2 Dn See ee eee eee rome canada TT! life and now they can wall, stand, rin, dance, and enjey oul- igo. the of supply to demand ton vehicle to $100 for seven tons | Big Road, Spotted and Little jstone age’ to bow and arrow period, door sports, without foot paln or discomfort. at this ti 8 while August Horse of the. Northern Che and then the firearms of the whites, pee Ist this ibs are given a special con-|Gall, Crow King and Cra also the moral status of these people If your feet hurt, it will be of the greadest interest to you Conditions since August fst have | cession, their tax bein «| were the three head. chie! as they passed through these periods. |{| ! sce Dr. Hollenbach, « graduate of the Northwestern Institute. mounts nachines. caused prospec he tevised eptember Ist to battle of the Little first figu ceurred June Big Horn, wh She gives you a free demonstration, follov is the September Ist condition, the throughout the i cks on Reno's | m. to % p.m. se ot felis is the Aug t dat fig | ci nae thoes in private t day, but the | Evenings by ‘aigilibeen. u me hay 90—86 per cent; ¢ est figures in Ha: defeated Crook on June 17th H ( YOU ver 90-—86 per cent; alfalfa 81—86 two to knowing of Gibbon’s appr i 0 v) H oe a inowing ot Cibvon's-appvoach Fins’ DEVELOPED Dr. Elizabeth Hollenbach t Bull Absent | 5 Sitting ull was not in the fight i i Phone 607. Roum 21. er he was packing up the camp; \/ 4 Gaaranty Bank Bide | sanants of the Indians and prepa “IN We ing for flight. i There were over 3,000 Indian bueks in the fight and the story that Cur-} lley, a Crow scout, now claimed to be the only one that escaped from Cus ter’s battalion, is denied by the} Northern Cheyennes, whom Lescorted from Montana td Ind territory DAILY. PHOTO. SERVICE BISMARCK NLD. Indianapolis, Ind pt 14.) in hospitals, Government £ i B 4 and who ted in this figh 1 j (hirly thousand men and wo- ies for women v Th ee 3 Hy igh ie A nq States during the World W) F ae eine id, deserte. iding rari > Bip. aie oe Mia tinal arse ; iy se 43 |sines i colt int ee 1 wish to “e that Bil ‘i ie Ce | ei ita Ethan owt tha ated hs DR.R.§. ENGE wish to‘announce that Bill Johnson m f. i isability traceals 01000, Vi orthe he. 8 told is oT ee Ne se tetinae he tueke| See eel ie chat Sore eee ea poise a is no longer in my employ, also that | re tio the national onverted number @ le do: ube, t he J ere! a6 iabiiation"commitos of they Ames | Palicie”ndtared in" yermeynt ta [nase hint” deep on the sop™ ot Consultation Free sel ave collestidns.and deliveries in led today. je in-t tal di ity ov di otal 145,000 he hil O. whic! Gi ee o, ri i iyi a part of the report the | and 3 Sea Peel hinder hia pene, aah tnd fae Lucas Bik. Bismarck, N. ismarck and _ solicit the, trade of Committed will make to the national d-amount to 1750 too high for fear of killing their, sna alk. Phone 258 in Bismarck or Man- convention of the Legion at Omaha, ast rked the be-/0Wn people in front of them, that! October Sth to 9th, ginning of the termination of voca-|they got a pretty range on one troop,! This number is about 8,000 greater} tional training. Emphasis is being| which was Troop E, under Lieuten- than the figure of a year ago. Four| put now on obtaining employment; ant Smith. They were found aft of e¥ery five veterans today are be-;for rehabilitated veterans, of whom!|the battle dead in line, so that they! ing ‘eared for in hospitals in their|there were 27,977 in the last year.|must have been killed almost at’ one | héme, states, the report showed,|Several thousand new cases were | volley. whergas, © year ago hospital inmates| dealt with, and 7.000 new men be- Reach Buford were housed in institutions outside| gan training, despite which the to-| We reiched Fort Buford. in May their home. states. number of trainers fell from and camped near the Fort, where | Of 34,047 women with a military | 167 to 22,937. Expenditures for train-|we often at night had firing on tho! j status during the war, 1,645 are|ing were reduced from $101,621,000| picket line, due to unapprehended: A sixteen-year-old girl, Mi } drawing disability compensation and! to $67,848,000. Indians trying to communicate with dan 96, and our car will stop at your door and take care of your wants, Mrs.'T. J. Logan, GOLD MEN WEST LAUNDRY MANDA N. DAK. OLDSMOBILE SALES AND SERVICE DAKOTA AUTO. SALES 60, Nellie Kincaid, carries 0 veauty nonors!f| 107 6th St. Phone 428 in Birmingham, Al