Evening Star Newspaper, January 31, 1891, Page 9

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F AEs ¢ ¢ 2 = patieuts accomm (A Greed Netting Ban ‘Te the Editor of The Rvening Star (EB be eer | ‘and not the setting sun. Perhaps there is more Wailosophy in this than we at first realine. As ¢ the horizon, physically too feeble to be in a sorry Then, toward the rining A COURT-MARTIAL POSSIBLE. sun, there is an —a quid pro quo Perhaps it is not out of place to remark right ae 4 t, coming sun will here that a prominent ‘army officer who some- warm ai Taye we may enjor time ago attacked Miles and sald he wes wort Sew life and! renewed wager, while. the ttle <p a sun means departure of warmth and hght. dark Squnet | ing for political honors in his conduct of the nessand coldness is to tome and reign for asee- cmmpaign mag seen ‘tried son. The day is past and the night soon cometh. 1 ee Spe bt cng | would not may but what there was much virtue such accusations ae those to, but now ‘that the Sioux have settled down for awhile, > ‘Miles will given little vigorous attention to wi ste hose Who fe and he tend regard nee Ss T ‘ My Ay tt Oe }. it is among te ¥f the is the chances are | beauty and glory not only invites, but demands _ | more to the aume effect until you couldn't help army officers thet pectic charges—conduct = poor | : 3 S LEFACE AND INDIAN "sagas td gery Co eedaed Per ok ee £ Ad ADIAN | Gen. Miles was apparentiy everywhere. He cipline and ict unbecoming an officer and | hostile casnp and for thie 4; Fo wichness of odlering Gas de cupe bs | saw that the tourist Indians—paint, gay mocca- a gentleman—will be filed at the War Depart- | tied any Brule son Soy ‘was thot. | matter genet gee . —— a | sins, beaded blankets, leggings and feathers— ‘ment within a week or two and that the matter any of our camps we lowly as Casey did that | the record san bas that day Its 7 were properly assigned to seats on the hay in will be ‘to the farthest limit. Nowhere | of the Brales he would have ‘That denting rays mo ix give bent; only The Red Man Has His Own Way Now | tie waiting wagons and just atl o'clock gave have I heard any expressions of sympathy with | of the B bom Geek. dong. og eee Oe ak oe : a the word to go. There was a little more of the ‘he officer who allowed tis loquacity and per- P =. ~ “ ~ receding. ‘The day will oo 4 at Pine Ridge, | handshaking simon Indian and) whites = porn ee pe ‘his The merely because we are women, and the recerd i nearly we realine Indians borrowed the handshake from their and common sense. His friends have| There seems to have been rf ng sy oe =, ee ont ~s Seve | Gia coompebiclp beh 4 —= conquerors and have adopted it), a grand fare- been silentand he has probably decided ere | securing, or anyhow, in writ casionally there have been cold but they | number of eminent and notable exceptions, gaze toward that sun so slowly sinking in the DEPARTURE OF THE TROOPS, | Tel chorus of squaws—fortissimo—and the this that the way of the transgressor is hard. | story of Casey's death. I got them the other | were “few ‘and ate “Sale nine are generally disposed against ux. Why is this West. For afew moments it seems motionless | ene eaeen souls Hie Raliviieat tes ‘THE DISARMAMENT. day from the best possible Tor Gis" region “at “this” season, wits | so? “I'am somenhat to know myself, and like a great globe of fire, encircled with — raps On the 14th instant, in a tel to General | one. seems to have troubled to go as far the ol was more than equal to| but my impression is fhat it ix partly gross clouds of beauty that ite influence hae created, legram go og | P 2 TRANSFERRED TO WASHINGTON. Ocala Satan te aan ‘was | to get facts Isend you the any ‘seemed possible. There | prejudice and partly objection to rivalry. it stands Godlike amid the grandear of ée- ‘The Closing Scenes at the Agency—Gen. Miles _—_ The seat of the Indian trouble seems to have said to ha vm " nelusion, | C: Thompson was “Lieut. ‘was no lack ineither the juartermaster orcom-| “Asa matter of fact the feeling is rapidly pa day. Ithas created its own frame to Presidential Boom—The Shooting been suddenly transferred to Washington ‘THE EPISCOPAL PARSONAGE. ve come to sutisfactory conclusion, | ron ‘his chief of 9 and missary ‘Anat sve yot to hear growing in this country and is bound to prevail | the picture of itself, and picture and frame vie and His ous i ee 2 Gen. Miles i: “I believe the disarming | narrated the sad story. ‘the first reasonably framed oF ee officer | eventually that women physicians should be the one with the other our admiration. of Lieut. Casey—Word Pictures and Snap | (some people believe it has been there all the | around their aural mingn the winds | will ‘be complete.” Yesterday Gen. Miles de- | “On the ‘morning of January 8,” man. comumnication | employed in the treatment of diseases peculiar Shots From the Reservation. | Sime) and instend of the combatants. being | wero a lite more than Keen, and there camo ® | parted for Chicago, and the brief but sharp Thompson, “Lieut. Casey caid he’ was with the railroad was mot interrupted at uny | to women. us are sufficiently obvious. pera ce or one et pas pen no. beaches aero eS soldiers and Sioux is at an | out to take a look at the and as a matter of fact exoursionists |The prejudice against women doctors, absurd suhordina ineiniiinnesniins partments that seom to be tearing each, other's | with fur caps of the fuaziost kind and pi end. ‘How do the factsas to disarmament com- some Foven or visited Pine almost daily ‘the | as it been maintained for so long a time the great central globe, so full of warmth, is a Staff Correspondence of The Eventnz Star. SRE NN ee = statement? There have | asked me to give him two good seat of war could be visited with so much loss | that it is not readily relinquished. From male | perfect circle, typifving completeness, and that | ee ee Sug oa voluntarily surre: icked out two of the best Che: of discomfort than would y be met | physicians at large we experience all the o Uhis completenews is the source of all the eur rip Seren oat mm ieen.alioees, gatackucliy’ of tie Gidilicm onaee Vhite Moon and Rock Road. with in other Indian campaigns. Of course | sition their influence is able to exert. They rounding glory. HE HEADQUARTERS OF THE DIVISION etioes prin aietk gomedia esp d to ask White Moon to take him te.a were in a somewhat crowded cendition | not only cry us down, saying that women have || We have with asa grand setting sun, lingering of the Missouri, as I write. is somewhere be- merally believed to be buckekin te which he could see the Brule camp. nd many a civilian paid a dollar a night for | no capacity, but they close their hospi- for # little while above the horizon. ‘For many tween here and Rushville, Neb., and the Sioux Soule ct tiais vere. ‘The effect tas indie ‘at once replied that it was too dangerous and dis- | the privilege of ‘on a floor in | tals against us to prevent us from learning and Years tis rays have shed their genial inflaence ign of the winter of 1890-91 may be consid- <cibduah cmenh of ancaiay to wane played a good deal of quiet opposition to tak- | with several other fhings, but even | to give us as little chance as possible of wuccewt upon thowe walle of ‘life that interest, mot onl Se, ema ; Sie set aatiatier oil atiarc eee Jng'a white officer on such aricky trip. ‘Then | that was an improvement on trying to al with our the masons of the world, but all the people of ee ee ee ee sed in Ridge tes Lieut. asked to be taken as close as was | ina while the mercury was.en- “Wagon Wants a women's hospital, mod- the world. ‘The world at large little realizes nessed the departure of officers, Indians and a gh GR ge as Da th possible and still be safc. White Moon said he | deavoring to crowd iteelf into the dled after the hospituls for women in the other | the grandeur of the work of Albert Pike. Per. interpreters will ever forget the scene and 1t is Gaparted for tases diate tate eae = ‘would, buthe kept on insisting shat ab wane den | ‘<_< s— cities I hove mentioned. where women doctors bape we gureelves do not fully ay cht Ut. very questionable whether any man or woman unrensumable to have your iaachod men! ous venture. ‘The rest of this was told me! 1, 2 be that the hoteleand boarding bonses (2, Ket hospital experience aud have their Por some three monte nger- couinendatale Gai cecclbanan tote 0 fun A week; where clean clothing, is recy neces y White Moor He said that after leaving | -é ced jodated. | We tave a so-called er few nor tice. To the white residents of Pine Ridge the | most important happening was the departure | sary; where barbers are between, and where x man wRo occasiounlly camp Casey met a Sioux man and woman, the | Jacked some of the ultra-refinements which a latter dressed like a white woman. What the high grade of cultured civilization, temporarily ‘clinic’ for women, at 1800 14th street, where trifling operations are rformed, uo accommo- his work, yet with his mind, at cighty- one years of age, as bright and clear as ever. : ae ‘conversation was about neither White Moon ted to this neighborhood, thought | dttions being provided in the way of beds. It We ave thankful’ that this sum is permitted to of Gen. Miles. To the Indians nothing was so oe ee ot Nock Hond imow. Because # was ex-riod om | were necersary, bat the eden San ieee te the germ of what L hove will ue day be the net in wack glory. Ita warmth andl eval ina stiapear ial nglish. ‘They left this couple and went on | urubly superio® to tie hore nest Chee ee, ¥ ¥. 2 want is a | enc se fel turies and for cente- _— ronal rey lla yt (inne iat Ee SSS @ little further, when they met a Sioux man who | S's pet Guaagh, ok’ Shon dar ences | Sew Gevemmel Goths te ae’ i wah. Would | ries tome te mehboahee it. LPN. white and red mingled promiscuously and sai their good-byes just about the same time. It | was 9 o'clock before the clans commenced to | they seen the workaday manners and customs of army officers. Any kind of food was good enough, any brand of whisky was sa! 5 any clothing, so long as it was warm, would do. it was verya dangerous place to be in. The | with C i Dest to tell Casey what a risk | Those he was running, but he insisted on going for- | hardsh ward for the purpose, he then said, of talking | est, f from the Yellowstone to Deadw: irst experience, but asa food. | that some benevolent rich person could be m who wrote such horrible stories of found in Washington to endow an institution ee ee probubly in earn-| Which would accomplish so admirable a pur- ras their “e see | ‘Transfers of Real Estate. | Deeds im fee have been filed as follows poss. C. B. Turnbull to N. B. Waite, lots 1 and 2, bik. . : to Red Cloud. At this point Rock Road stopped, | matter of fact the worst thing any one has been | | 31, mrooklan W. Marlow 6 gather. At — — of wire fen ing | ther dirt nor discomfort was svolded Wan ct an 5 feveral were shot guna | dueling nowt pos ely to go penser. fen agen $2 gut ap etl oeeethoal tn] 31, Brookland; $1,087.50. J. HM oa Which protects the agent's lawn was crowded | ‘ithe deca: = | "This means that about 150 Indians, foe the | White Moon had pleaded with Casey the best | Senten phos 20 Put, up with wa great deal of ———— H. Marlow, pt. 3, sq. 784; $500. H. McKinney with Indians of all sizes and ages, but princi- | THE EPISCOPAL CHURCH. Seceiae ann ake purpose of making a display of peaceful | he knew how. and iinding his words of no use | extortion pretty much all the time. If there A Learned Man Tells What Things Are Like iP evtemian gender. ‘Within the Senco | Tee = To = ra it ia Intentions, have temporarily _abbre che caught the lieutenant by the arm and in Both, were almost as many dogs as there were squaws other's thronts. Those people ge even as through a gia: ‘kly—are wate ‘the their efficiency as warriors, while there should happen to be a stringency in the money |held him in a last endeavor to dissuade } market soon don't look to who was assigned to duty ae Indian agont at — po i mses esi this place, has been and still is quite sick. His trying to affect perfect indifference, were hun- | “The conceptions of hell und Paradise w: ite i i ald | Waite Neon again sad agnin tala him ho we donbtedly pring from natural human desires, ees ene ee a eas | alled tee Xanay sone oe eee fewer than 1,000 of the best Winchester mag- rife with much interest end.are wondering which of the combatants will get in the next blow. As | cause; the currency is in northern Nebraska | Si th ing toward the lieutenant | gnasunh ne V core tn cates |anid a odhalar to a weiter for T 0 ee . : : | pinends bat Capt. Willinm E. Dough- |stzine rifles ever exported from the state of | Sioux were then coming toward the lieutenant | financially, in this campaign were re | said a scholar toa writer for Tae Stax “On ane ver ced hemm hep secphenseepeet| weer edo ee cee psa ge Sr the Age alvin een. ree el Now that Gen. Miler has gone [40d his scout and White Moon stopped, thiuk- | and Indians who were Tied ond evenhed. | the other hand, man hopes instinctively for «un male Indians and these were regarding with ill- Miles should designate—for that Indian experience. On’ Capt. Dougherty de-|0one here imagines for a moment that any | ing nia wee a ae ‘THE SOLDIERS FARED WsIZ. | improvement of his condition hereafter, while, Nearly all of the hard work has been done by | 0% the other hand. he creates out of his own the seventh and ninth cavalry; that is, the imaginatfon a place of punishment for his ene- fighting work, and with the exception of the | Mies. He has taxed his utmost powers of in- more guns will be hauled over from the hostile |Casey was determinetl, however, and after camp. A great many army officers hold, and I 7 have written of this subject before, that om Z plete disarmament of the Indians would result in the speedy transfor of all Indian property to volves the difficult task of bring | was all they did surrender—it was believed by | ¥ aa be sectors Ona Miles that a number of the representa- ¢ malcontents should be titken to Washing- eu | ton, where they might talk with the Grent | Pather of the grievances they have detailed at order out of morning. A supper have never failed. Bread (soft when it could be had, hard otherwise), coffee, bash or stew or steak have been the component parts of the first meal. For dinuer there was pork and beans, roast beef or meat pier, toes, tomatoes, bread, apples and cheese, while sup- per time brought around meal that was very much like breakfast. | Posech et domspeery = — | two or three Dury days they had about New | —— to devise tortures for the latter, includ- | length in the columns of Tae Stan. The con- ‘settlers throt active accumulatory efforts on Year the troops have had « somewhat monot- | ing those who donot coincide with his religious race A. King, sub 39, 0q. 191; @— J. | sent of the ene in Washington was asked — 7 5 — pits = ares onously good time. Breakfast, dinner and | views, finally accentuating the horror of it all is to 8. Oppenbeimer et al., sub 15, | and obtained. 3 ‘those adventnrera who will not stop short of Jarceny if larceny will profit them anything. That there are many such 1 know. During the past two weeks Ihave ridden over a good de: of the region which necesscrily had to be deverted by friendly Indians. These friendly Indinns | bad homes scwttered ll over the reservation, quite large a number of these log “shucks” be- ing within twenty-five miles or so of the agency. iu half a dozen cf these homes I saw parties of maranding white men who had come in over the Nebraska line and who were busily engaged in | by assuming that the pains of the victims will be eternal and their agony hopeless. Cou- trariwise, he has built up for himself a home of future happiness which is made to include ‘THE INTERIOR DEPARTMENT STEPS IX. Miles then proceeded to select the Indians who should go and was about to send them eastward when information was received to the effect that a special agent of the Interior De- partment would be on at once to take charge of the chiefs and act as their chaperon to the national capital. Tis news was what might be regarded as in the nature of a “set-back” for the general, for the whole matter had pre- viously been conducted by the War Depart- Banburg. 137, C. B.'s sub Mount Pleamnt; @—. C. Ban- burg to Rebecea Gettys, de.; $ AN INDIAN SCARE. j ption, with all Nowhere on this continent have there been a | thingsat hiscommund for which he can pos grecter namber of hxsepensiite wat mil form a desire,even to the power of MULITARY HEADQUARTERS. OWNERLESS PONY PICKETED. al Stole Some Napkin Rings, ‘THE MEDICINE MAN AT WOUNDED KNEE. large number of irresponsible people, many of g anyth = | the past month or so than at Pine Ridge and | THE MOHANMEDAN PARADISE. Annie Ambush, a colored servant who concenied envy the fortunate ones who had | ment. From thence the proposition originally | them inclined to shake the situation up a little soe ap = — enlting out to the Cheyenne that he was going | somebody will have to bear the Silty | *naox ns conten taus ths page at thn acheas Veena toon ea he pase vad ecg ae been selected to go east. There wae an abun- | ¢manated, and it wa pe bs th the idea | that they may profit thereby, have ‘been hore | 108 Wort & ee tia tea a oar to sce Red Cloud went on by himself. White for a canard ‘that stirred things up here ‘veuter: (a me my 2 eae Birney, dance of bright color in the scene. Blankets of | that it would assist materially in bridging over | for some time under the protection of the y the authoritior, hed him ashe rode up to the four oi more sensually inclined by nature, the red. and blue. and black. and white. and green presented startlmg contrasts occasionally, yet | made a harmonious whole. DEPARTURE OF THE WASHINGTON DELEGATION. First to become organized was the Washing- ton delegation, in charge of Special Agent Lewis. The Indians in this crowd were Young- Man-Afraid-of-His-Horses, Big Road. He-Dog, ‘Little Wound, Pire Thunder, American Horse, Fast Thunder, Spotted Horse, Capt. Sword and Liewt. Standing Soldier—all Ogallalas, and the last two officers of the police force here—Two the period of transition n war and peac An officer of the ninth cavalry—Lieut. Chas. Tavlor—had been notified thet he might be required to take charge of the expedition. and the preliminary arrangements were well under way when Secretary Noble kicked the props for some time, upon the bands of hostile Brules who ud roamed through those portic 1s of the reserve. With these indispntebie facts before ‘them it is not so strange that the anilitary seem indisposed to force every Indian ou the reser- vation to give up his gun; it looks to some peo- ple as though he reaily needs a weapon of some sort. troops. These visitors are now being moved out under the following order, a mandate which is being rigidly enforced: ‘Univep States Ixpiax SzRvicr, Orrick oF Inpiax AGEXT, Pane Rink AGENcr, S. D., (Law.) January’ 25, 1891. ‘NOTICE. All persons not of Indian blood now on the Ogalalia (Pine Ridge) reservation, except those in the service or employed by the government and those who are engaged in lawful occupe- TRE INDIAN NOT MUCH HURT. One of the queries which has been floating around camp for some days pust seems to be ‘day evening. Where it started no one seems: Sioux and then the Cheyenne said be o with the lieutenant and stay with him at all hazards. He ran his horse andgzs he approar! Casey was in the act of turning ‘his uorse's’ head aronnd in response to the warning of the young bucks. Just as White Moon got up to him ashot was fired by a your Indian who was-on one side of the trail ai who had previously been unobserved. That | shot killed Lieut. Casey. ‘The Indian who fired | the shot was educated at Standing Rock agency |and at Carlisle, Pa.,and is ason of a well- 2own warrior, the story that those fifty of Sioux thut refused to follow Sitting Bull into the United States, when he surrendered with honors, were coming this way as repidiy as possible. On its | face the thing was a lie, but surtled people ment which is directlyin accord with their fears. ‘Those Indians, who took refuge in Mau- itoba immediately ufter the Custer massacre, admirable force of know, but from some source there emanated | Mohammedan Paradise is one of comparatively sensuous delights. To get into it the & the prophet is obliged to walk ove « tre- mnendous chasm by a bridge which is the sharp of a mighty eword. if he isa and a true believer he is given the nerv never think of attributing falsehood to a state- | across in safety, bu into a serpent and he ix plunged into the (of the damned beneath Sapposing that he | makes the passage all right. he finds himself in could not prepare to move without having that | an abode of trae oriental ness. Two ing men—the north-| score of beautiful women, of « loveliness in- byefore the Police Court yesterday charged with the theft of some napkin rings, forks, spoons and other articea, the property of ker’ om ployer, and the court fined her €10. parce ns nd Selling Without a Kevenue License. In the Criminal Court, Judge Hagner, yee terday James Warren, a colored man, was | tried for selling liquot without the internal rev- enue license in Shott's alley, between B, C, Ist 42d street northeast, on September 14 last. Several witnesses testified to getting beer at the | west mounted police—rigit on top of them. | finitely beyond that of earth Every avenue by which these Sioux could pos- | cal charms are immortal, devote themselves ti sibly enter the United States is watched on both his entertainmeu:. On every hand grow th sides of the international Loundary line. It was | most delicious fraits rendy for the plnckine, ‘y foolish rumor; it stirred up the excitea- | while the wine forbidden by the koran to the ble Indians and scared nervous women and | faithful in this world flows like water. Horrible then went the way of all rumors, fortunately portion. however. is the Mohammedan without having cansed any damage. "i to go about ‘MAJ. BURKE'S PLAN. e their brains One of the more or less original pi Strikes. High Hawk and High Pipe—Brules— and Hump and Spotted Elk. Minnecongues, Cheyenne river. With these were the in- terpreters. Baptiste Pourier (better known here as “Big Bat”) and Louis Shangran. The Rev. Charles Cook, the Episcopal clergyman here. will also go as an interpreter. The Wash- fagton outfit squatted down near the agent's and had a good smokeamong themselves, saying but little to any one. house. Mr. John A. Moss, for the defendant, endeavored to show that the witnesses were noi of good character. Asking Mary Campbell what was her business abe re “Ni except in the house. My children take care of me. i have sixteen of ” Warren testitied that on the day named he was at church; that he never sold any beer; and thet it was the custom of some of hir friends, hod carriers and Knights of St. Augustine, to put in Saturdays to get» tions, are hereby notified and required to de- part forthwith. Wat. E. Dovanrery, Captain First Infantry, in Charge. Tho first infantry and the sixth and ninth cavalry are all the here now. Col. Shafter of the first infantry is in command of the camp. GEN. SLES AXD HIS Boom. If Gen. Miles is still the possessor of presi- linnecongues—not more than three or four— who To umujured from the fight at open nee. He was amember of Big Foot’s and. ‘The Cheyenne scouts who, up to the time of Casey's death, were known as Casey's scouts are now Getty’s scouts, commanded by Lieut. Robert N. Getty of the twenty-second infantry. Lieut. Getty has relatives who live in the boil in their ekulls and to suffer an endless ropositions | variety of other tortures not less ingenious. J conpmarcmsiraas soca POST LADEN WITH 850 POUNDS OF BFEF. | dential “boom” it must be evident to any ono suburbs of Washington. which have been brought to the front by this uatipecnbspceeicenicacdien ig —— gpd ~ ak aay wos ‘The Chicago party was, perhaps, leas distin- | {7™ under and brought the half-built struc-| familiar with the situation that the boom is RED EAGLE SKINNING A STEER. A CHaNGE IN SCEXE. Sioux trouble comes from Maj. John M. Burke, | «just ay people construct their idea of Para-| The judge churged the jury that the club ar- guished, but cg he srereatiog Ia | tie t0 the ground. ‘The idea and ite primary | not in good working order. Enthusiastic | rather pertinent now that the question of dis-| Two weeks ago Pine Ridge was one of the | Buffalo Bill's press agent. Burke was here un- organization andthe credit which may attach to it ‘belong entirely to Gen. Miles, but Secre- tary Noble seems to have been quite successful in securing posession of the War Depertment thunder. Miles does not say much aboutit, butI know he thinks some one has committed grand larceny. An impression has been om cm for some time that the Interior Department was opposed to any of these Indians journeying to ‘ashington until Secretary Noble saw they were id to come. then he accepted the sit- uation and all the side dishes that go with it. GEN. MILES’ MOVE. It is now Gen. Miles’ turn to move and he has started. The Interior Department may have its delegation of Indians, but that aggre- gation of rskinned humanity is very fame indeed witen compared with the band of hostiles which Gen. Miles took with him to Chicago today on the sume train as that which bore Special Agent Lewis of the Indian bureau and his following. While the general will not say a word as to what he intends doing with the Brules who accompanied him, it is pretty certain that in the fullness of time they too will rangement was no defense more than the striped [ig arrangement; it was @ mere evasion of the lew. (At would not do that it should go ont to the community that may by putting in their money Saturday night purchase their liquor and each one to drink share on Bunday. He was, however, indicted | ae a liguor dealer and they must believe that he sold spirite, A verdict of guilty was founa. ——— Bituminous Coal Production in Maryland. Abullctin iaued by the census bureau recently shows that the total produetion of bitumiu- ous coal in the state of Maryland for the cen- sus year 1889 was 2,989,715 short tons, valued at $2,517,474 at the mines, oran average of 85 6-10 cents per ton. The product for the cen- sus year 1580 was 2.228.917 tons, valued at friends of the general's have declared him to be a presidential candidate, and those who could aly be classed as friends have given the idea wings and then proceeded to make it fly most erratically. This war, when connected | With other successful campaigns, would capture the soiid vote of the great west, said the enthus- iaste, and straightway the ‘auti-Miles mon charged that blood would be shed to add Inster to what no one denied wasa brilliant record. dise out of whatever they find most agreeable in this world, so they put into their notion of hell whatever in their experience is most pain- fal, even remorse. ‘The tost distreming. phys. ical sensation that men is acquainted with is | that of burning, and so the dweiling place of the wicked in the after world must unquenchable fire. notion of fire is associated with tions in the mind of the inhabitants of arctic regions, where the great enemy is cold, and thus we find that the Esquimaux believe heil to bes cold place. The Asintic ir an tunemo- st and contemplative character, and for Se the eee eee er | that renson his highest hope is to atten ‘Nir- ‘nthe heifer | Yana,” which is defined as a state of mere co ‘and | templative abstraction, divested entirely of Srevcand | emotion, sensation or desire.” ‘was composed largely of young Brule and | bucks. who were especinlly active in the strife which hes just come to an end. They Mere hand-painted in the highest atyle of the art and while every mother’s son of them was inwardly delighted at the prospect of a holiday excursion, lots to eat and an insight into the views of @ big city, they unanimously mani- fested the most supreme indifference to all the armanent is up and that is “what did the hos- | most thickly populated and busiest places in all tiles ponent ds when they came into the | the busy, bustling northwest. Today it is as| agency?" Gen. Miles says of this surrender: | quict and somnolent as any spot that could be | si lering. “A more complete submission to the military founa in the suburbs of Alexandria. More than | “‘Factorsof no -mean im in these power was never known.” The facts are that | twenty-five hundred soldiers have gone to their | periodical w is,” enid he to me, “are the about 4.500 Ogallalas and Brules who had been | respective posts in other states and a large | old men. They were once great and they behaving threateningly as a whole, but who | number of Indians have moved out to their | haven't gotten over it, altho readily talked peace, came im under the guns | more or less devastated homes. The juar- | Years separate us from the of the command at Pine Ridge of their own | ters building is practically deserted. A few free will and accord. They made the terms by | days ago oflicers and couriers wore moving in insisting that a delegation of thetr chiefs and head men be sent to Washington and by stipu- luting that the surrender of arma should be voluntary. The Indians are doing just as they please. Nuch of the Brules as want to return to Rosebud with Capt. those who prefer to stay here main. indian started ‘the war, fought when he thought he had a chance, made the best possible terms, whon his chanoé of victory became slim and is now in fall en- joyment of all the rations the Indian bureau thinks is good for him. He has not been hu- milinted in the least; in fact, Gen. Miles has * | been especially careful that his feelings should til a day or two ago, but when he went away he left behind him en’ idea which is worth con~ ——.__ Stole From Her Uncle. Lala Johnson is a fifteen-year-old colored girl who madeabad start in life early this 4| week. Her uncle, John Quinn, lives in South oo arpa proceedings. The Chicago roster | with his glittering full dress uniform or at such jwould be out of some of the meanest Indians that ever cumibered the face of the earth: fighters, every one of them. The elect are Short Bull, Seatters, | Himd-Man, Wounded-by-Many-Arrows, Runs journey to the national capital and have talks With the Great Father. It is checkmate. ARMY OFFICERS ON THE PLAINS. People who have seen the army officer only when he has adorned presidential receptions seasons as called him forth to parade with his command would never recognize him as he is Asa in the field. of the german, clad evening dress, he is, asa rule, most not be stirred up in any way. The great body of troops have departed and the Indian is here; holding his ground and bebaving as though never test dis ment between him and the Great Father. He declares, in hin sneering way, that the soldiers are afraid of him, although he knows that to be untrue, and in a very comprehensive grasp ‘seems to control all that is left of the situation. TROUBLE FEARED IN THE FUTURE. Prouplad the doings Of Os pect forty tage Io ma | joings e forty days Routh Dakota—I am not 2 mind reader—but one thing is certain and apparent: Gen. Miles, were he presidential candidate, sight in the rear if had their my. Were tomorow he the iteer sorvices of enough civilians to hand out tickets at each and out in a serpentine stream, orderlies | he: dashed hither and thither, sentries paced up and down and delegations of hostile and friendly chiefs ae briskly for the honor of making the greatest number of call n. ‘Miles jin each succeeding diurnal division of time Last night the only light in the ‘building was in the room of Capt. Pierce, who is dangerously ill. Where the seventh cavalry is now nothing but a succes- i ill Fl wo 3.479, in the output during the year 1889, as compared with that of 1S80, was largely due to the want of transportation facilities, the | result of the cal abandonment of the ‘Chesapeake and Onio canal mina It is extremely improbable that there will be | sion of the soil, giving the the Albert Thayer and Fred and George Lachine Alongside. Good Fagle. Sorrel Horse. Standing | but when he gets inito the clothing which & ipelting place fa: the Dahoies. Beeete, Bee | ony poieaigen fie winter, but the alarmist Sppecrance of havin ep a cooesieriooon: A quantity of dies, casts and Bear. Love Bull. Heart Shot At. Kicking Bear, | South Dakota climate calls for he ‘is anothcr | ‘2%. Wyoming, Colorado or idaho. The voters who says “Wait until spring” is abroad in a0 Chose-to-Home, Bad Water, Come-Home-Gramt- White Horse, Brave. Strikes Down, Takes the Shield Away. Little Horse, White Beaver, Stand- More tha few of the officers tical—perhaps brutally rg this last Their fa le of pempeael sen, tloaty rorite sty! a iy 7 ‘hostile mich . . Breaks Off, Bad Shot At one, in which the is removed with a and One Star. The painted dames who are of rapidity that the last Indian cenens the party are known in the aboriginal | is stricken with in an hour. The social ‘of the northwest as Mrs. Beating | Bear, Mrs. Medicine Horse and Mrs. Crow Cane. | John jer, than whom there is no better interpreter, goes along to be the vocal me- jor. It took some time to gather these people to- . They were scattered through the enor- mous crowd that had assembled. Interpreters ran here and there and there was 2 good deal of exertion put forth so that the column might start. More vociferous in his assistance than amy one cise was an archwological specimen of fully four score years wiiann iota ame when literally translated resolves itself into the eu- Phonious bat somewhet vulgar appellation of “tts.” He cried with aloud voice and the Wanderers responded when they got ready. SAYING ADIEUS. ‘Then a long train of wagons drove in and the | adisus started to engross everybody #attention. | ‘The murmur of many tongues in the tones of | ing but | wail increased in volume until & WOMAN CORRESPONDENT. who have been large figures in social Washing- tov either are or have been here during the | course of the Sioux trouble and it is with dif- ficulty that some of them have been recognized. ‘The tirst thing most of them did when they got away from the railroad was to bid edieu to barber, and by this action the countenances settlers always have an regard always will (until he exists no more) the as their natu- superior in quality to and altogether more de- irable than the seresfrom which they—the Celts. the Cymri, the Gauls, the ons, the Teutons, the Norsemen and others—are en deavoring to subtract a livelihood. “Ido not like this place,” says on be nearer timber; Iamust havea larger wate: We will go alittle further north.’ look at it twico were the land ment ut as itis unattainable, leagtto the Selina, he a tml’ comatose’ that it is a veritable ‘paradise. ORX. voRsyruR’s POPULARITY. To become popular among such men—and this country swarms with them—the only thing Gen. Miles had to do was to wipe out the antire phtfall; you know them, though, ‘On the hill just south of the: Tegimentof int | i | t fr | & ply Fiest iu ry te i tH { i i | i i | [ f ee i i ES f ef | i i 8 Qi i 8, i | | é i F iy E # i impressions were found at the house of the Lachines and some spurious nickels. One of <7 the prisoners bas confessed, implicating others. —noeiipenaionanas i : e r & j never depth of and it keeps on coming | pany, Centeal Company of New | Gand Reporter ‘the men on the deck | residence ‘brumed. qrery squaw on the ground was engaged ir con-| Of'n number boosie tem feread neces down. Pine Ridge hus suffered far weeks from , the Lebigh Railroad yy | his re were fr. the words to which ona cat, Babel. | rully. ‘Thomext motion,and it wascarried.almont overmmch noise. Now and the Poossyitaaia Redicued Company ffs. — rate Unanimously, was to get out of their reputable uniforms and into the baxgiest and. most were decidedly chilly voufig gentlemen wore as many as two however, were not visible to the popular and they had nothing todo with the outward I ! Lj i tr {| it Ht i a i | i i: i off i | | | f | E i of i ; i f i | t | rt l t § ‘who happens to | commission, serine collar around many and ‘seen Gen. hostiles was Po reterred to has becomes oF ‘oul of so pre- | instances’ in which neither the neck “A or Bad | to the habits of with whom he cooding. mighty busters who will | nor the handkerchief was es clean as their -nerthern the Minnecon-| After be has and owner would ordinarily like them to be. Then with a seems to} has worn the when ‘be very difficult the overcoats. Some wore tuffalo coats of an ‘sword an ‘evi- thin beliet. I) his form can stand the of art.’ deer meat is too scarce to be mentioned at Pine | ancient ae wore the brown methods. ed ord ELF : i f mit j = ‘now than it would have | 2 ee hog opting 4 - Sache field. ‘These horrible never had q | fie Qmneors of bucket shirts pat thom on, pal pa g So wom foundation chan ial iy war err ume eon} | A pienet | best to get some. “Such garments sa” these, eae ean on ae testimony afore by 3 inid Gown thet contracts Fee 2 | oronghly worn outhts dey could lay thei THROUGH THE xTxs oF THE “CxNDERPCOT.” which is now #230 per | Sv jedges.s atall times and in all places.” Flannel shirts En-| grant deal cf sansstional matter des besa “otha she nate is | Prom

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