Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 21, 1886, Page 10

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b THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1886.--TWELVE PAGES. ADVENTURES OF MAJOR NORTH | it netin s & oy of Srons com | breceni and an appest for:mercy, * i : S et e i of"wiion | COLONEL CLOWRY'S SUCCESS. ing down upon them, and considerable | then knelt down before him and” in her | time they were ordgred out to scout for excitenent followed, Those of thefPaw- | sign langoage asked him to save her. | Indians, who had been scen south of the Hiz | nees who had remained in camp, how- | The major replied, m similar language, | Platte river. They, left Fort gwick | The Rise of a Prince in the Telegraphic ever, did not manifest the least surprise | telling her to go to the rear, out of dan- | under Colonel Royil—gieneral Carr hav: | World s ite Ohief of The Pawnee Sco Frontier Experience make any preparations to go ot and | ger, and remain there until he should call | ing been relieved'of the command and | fight them. as they would have done had | for her, and then she would be safe. She | ordered to Fort McPherson—and pproaching Indians been Sioux: but | informed him that there, were yet seven | following a trail for three or tour hun- | HI1S APPIICATION TO DUTY. and Cap- | Indians alive in the ravine, The firing | dred miles in various directions thev re of themajor, | was kept up from the ravine for a while, | turned and proceeded to Fort MePherson —_— weral Carr | but finally it ee together. The wo weeks afterwards they made f | The Career of the General Superine advancing | upon Major North and some of his men [ and bloodless campuign under ( | tendent of the Western Union that their | eantionsly approached the ravine Duncan, after which the Pawnees were 5 GENERAL CARR'S CAMPAIGN, !l they set up a_yell themselve - > | tain Luther North, a brothe Ruffalo Bill Shows the Pawnces How | cxvlained the situation to Sutths by informing him that to Kill Buffaloes—The Battle flainns wets Daws of Summit Springs. demonstrations indicated that they had | looked over tie bank, and down mustered out of service. During the | had ], fight and had be \-y‘\ \’leIv-I'\nlh The | bottom they saw the ~‘Hm’m‘r u|‘ 1870, hawever, two . ur{wm Chic Herald: There is a potentate N I'he Pawnees soon galloped into camp EIGHTEEN WARRIORS LYING DEAD, ies of the Pawnees were enlisted by Major | in Chicawo who reigns aosofute ove COPYRIGUTED. i reported the vesult of thelr scout, | some on top of others as they had fallen | North for patrol duty on the Union Pazific | SMRBATIED TNTRor Lt A1T Barone, Mok UWritten for the - wnday T Iy Alfrea Sorenson) | They were soon followed by the restof | hack from the banks, The major and his | rond. 1 ik N S e - the scouting party, N | brother returncd to the squaw and takin [T0 BE CONTINUED NEXT SUNDAY.| jeet to his command are 25,000 ofticers T o D A whwes vt neral Carestarted thecommand next | her and her child across the ravine the - ind employes, In 000 cities, towns and Jreas P S morning on thi jomed company B, of the Pawnees, com RAID ON THE MILLIONS, | villages are established fortresses of [RNT | NEWLY DISCOVERED TRATIL manded by Captain Cushing, who had ‘ — which he is master. Connecting them e Disgvors o B and v.in..m-.l i: W ~(n’l-v‘|'\l up n..-l R sl the capture |(h village—in l:‘-u.-u.\.-:ur AT ptewaet Who Want | re 60,000 miles of telograph lines, with RAvine o s Them Toseae of Two W | lican for two days, v passed seve | accordance with Gener arr's instrie Some is Money. 330,001 ® W i pt % Caiive” Wonon, o Woun i fres, and 1t was cvident that they | tions—made an_active search fot tho | Tho first loal fight for n share in the | oo miles of cleotric wives. Vet thi Dy Mp e Warriom X 7 on the Indinns, Along the | white captives who were supposed to e | 4y I8 SR ate 14 ot e potentate is a plain, blunt man, to whom Other or il the print of a woman's shoe was | in the camp. They had succeeded in | Alexandr 1. Stewart estate 1s not by one | on hours' labor a day would ve mere quently observed,and this was eviden: that the Indians had a white eaptive wi - finding two white women, one of whom | Of the heirs of the late Mrs. Stewart, says | gy a common man, bern and reared VIIL | ) ha been futally wounded aid the other | New York correspondent, but by two wtitl SHIL ot Sk sve [nigontns wad . - | them. For this reason General Carr was | quite seriously.” It appears that while | cousins of Stewart himself, one of whom o ko 3 5 "““‘I"l‘;":"l'j':‘:“‘;":_n‘"fj""'{"f;'y]‘\‘f"|f‘|{| | anxious (o presson. On the afternoon | Major North was fighting the Indians in | figured fitfully soveral years agoasa | oo e ; S March, Major North | Gk econd day after the discovery of | the ravine, Captain Cushing in skirmish- | ST FEY ¢ ¥ s ¢ n the 4th day of April, 1852, Robert was again called into active serviee With | ¢hishig trail, the command camped at ing through the village had entered the | POible contestant of the great mer- | ¢ Clowry walked mto the oftice of Judge his now somewhat eclebrated sconts. He | vacated Indian camping place, where | lodge of Tall Bull, and there found these | chants will. Then he went out of public | Cqagon's of 1 linois and Mississippi Tele: srmans, one [ sigit, and his case was regarded as a | gy sl Company at Joliet, and proposed poo enlisted three companics, of fifty men | they found numerous fresh antclope | two women, who were ( i " Fort Kearney s, showing tha [ not | being named Mrs, Alderdice o » er | sh Now he comes forwarc ongl f N m"ih and me ng from ]I ort Ke u!||\_\ | }:"v\“” '-ml ‘vl‘l\‘:::mll"l“l‘iI l~|;h 'l ‘"\:fll.‘-l\l:- .Iu- ;”{ ‘vll'!i‘ “nlf’!)]]‘“! 1rs. Alderdice and the other Ih.un. Na u‘”h ¢ »;-P‘H f:lv ward, |1|: n’v,); to give his services six months without to Fort McPherson, where he reported to i P AR W et od T awyers, with a hitherto unpublished | giher co; ic an instructiol s RRRACAR, i h teen hours, General Carr eoncluded to |~ When the fight commenced Tall Bull, | giory of a compromise, the terms of | CLher compensation than instruction, wa ceam: | ke de alry | men fr d | tive marc hments of the best mounted | seeing that there was no hope of taking ch of the companies, with | his capt wtions, and make a forced | been k¢ till he overtook the Indians, leay- | Alderdi accepted, and the poc Will county farm s—began s pro which, he avers, have not been earried out. Mystery still surrounds the facts, but enough of them are accessible to [ ¥ make a curious narrative. Several yo; puign for the summer had recently come up from Kanss and Colorado, where they had been eam- es with him —whom he had ping us his wives—shot Mrs. »in the forehead, and then shot = aEsT widow's son from 9 lad of seventeen ssional career as a ! 0 they T | e e A T T YRR $n messenger boy and student. But ho took | MADE IN EVERY STYLE AND VARIETY KNOWN TO MODERN ning undur Major Royall, and Gen- | 11 B Nagon tra to Jolaw e st e e i WEAE ot | 820, the adminisirators of the SUWAF | to telegraphing so naturally that i ~ix [ COOKING AND HEATING STOVE AND RANGE CONSTRUGTION. eral Carr had heen ordered o com- | TIth, Tstn,) the goneral out this | the village had ben attacked by Indians | SState were informed of the existennce ol | inontis e was a better operator than his [ Ihe above Trade Mark ls a Guarantoo that Every Article boearing it ls mand and pre for an_expedition to | plan and got an early start. Major North | alone, who were hostile to the Sioux, and | St "0 b ctorvill the Republican river countr: nd ten of his best Pawnee scouts kept | that she was about to eseape from one [ pifEG G ST s Gres of the same year wa lo manager 3 SAN00 ving tho 0| i Ay arne at Alexander ha scves on | Of 0 st 4 as made manager BEWARE OF IMITAT . Among the first men to grasp M bl sl Dy i nd keep- | band to fall o eaptive into the hands of | ({UE e of his consin, and it was he- | of the ofuien at Lockport. The | COUNTERFEITED AS wg||.‘|)_N:s TIIEETR‘I:\OD(I,ZDSMAARRKE North by the hand and give him a cor- asharp lookout for the Indians, ‘The | another, Therefore when she discovered | jiiead that e meditated & descent. He | year following he was transferred A Waluome. w il led to the north, 1 the direction of | Captain Cusling with the Pawnees she | peq S0 TR Yoo ilini. et ot vinghisld, The M IChlga n S tove COIT] pal‘ly, William Froderick | the South Platte river, for a distance of nifested the greatest imaginable. N T wae | emief, DL CLJeneson, and in the autumn | the Elnest and Best that can bo mado for tho prico asked. . Cody, better known as twenty miles, when suddenly the advance | She was setting on a mat in the tont, suf- »A\Iv‘nultlll:'.lvnlv':ll\ enterpri A\'I!!"\Ir‘n\gm' and in 1845 was sent to St. Louis as the otroit, . N BUFFALO BILL, seouts sghicd an indian villnge from o | foring intensory from e wound, bt | G119 R ] e D L R O el Ll Chicago. Ill Buffalo, N. Y. the bulilo hunter,”scon, and Tndian | SR ol L e e SRR Arid sooiiod o/l w i of | ontof the Bt Louls. & Missourt: River FOR SALE Y trailer, who has since become somewhat | G ! & L) 8 \ Spr 2 TG R oNPSRIATPReY OF | LN HIM KES Lher pain, and grab- | ample leisure. He was not long in mak- | Telegraph company, and_was the bold, FRWIBHis Ak 611, A otor OF thie OVdor Patmn..| s sisronitlines (aa s that 16 soatt | ngnta ahel Illlllil‘l‘lll\llx\\llh,q he hugged him ,...,rn;m}\-u \.~xfi y‘mhml‘ 3 \\-ul.[fl\.- |;n\;x~. :.»:I.d|..u~|n|l|_-u n the m!h(l'vln-lu!n\nf many y A 5 Y66 Nosth lis B8 wbe Ation | vuit BT O AHIRLLIBLE SHAUE = it e people; he could tella funny story bette elograph lines into the border region. Major North had made his acquaintance | be impo ible for an attaek to be made on WEP'T FOR '\’\“.'l i than any one for miles arounds he was | Early i the war ho offored his. sorvicos | ord of a few months before at North Piatte. He | the village in the direction they were | She could not sp sh, | always in i Hireriag ¥ I i S LUBBoh W A sh, | always in good humor; always ready to | to thic government and was placed in was & tall, handsome man, with long | Z0ing, but that the troops would have to | and he could. not understand what shé | do 4 Tavor: boit to halp got i the hay ‘harge itary telogrs i HOW s w y y 2 ;. 5 get in the hay be- | charge of the military telegraph lines in black bair flowing in wavelets over | G OO 0N of Sight, and then tarn | oot He endeavored, however, by signs | fore a conling shower ghould, ruin the | Lo Departmont of Arknnsus, Missourl o TO ACQUIRE EALTH. T 16 the. north, passing the village | oo Y speaking to her in Enelish t | crop or give adyice about intricato quos- | and Kansas boing subsequently added to % i PR 5 A e R e s b, L O o | make ber sit stll for a litte while, and | tions of Taw. And he foined in the rus. | his wrritory. In 181 he performed « | Newt Drawing, This Month, on November 20th. Big P'rizcs. No Blanks AT e e L s i A { § o A she would be properly cared for. He | tie games played in the evening on the | work so vigorous and heroie that Presi- With §2 You Can Secure Major North, who was one of naturc’s | and west, and then make a charge upon v broke loose from her. and 1t was | yillage square,"pulled up” with the local | dent Johuson ordered two. brevet com- nd making a sel o o + boeoame | the village from the north. Major North | ap this time that Major e HraRe i AL M MOLY . . noblemen himself, and Cody became W this time th .J.“'l’.'.y..-'.\\Unl'.,.iq"fl;\.'iff champion, and pitched quoits. Alto- | missions to be issued tohim_in quick | One City of Barletta 100 Francs Gold Bond returned with his scouts to the comn brother with the leave the trail and bear off' to the ecast, | g his broad shoulders, and posscssed of a warm personal friends from the very o beiatd o A Rt bre t i gether he wasa highly respected member | succession, the first as major and the P moment they had met BTt )Nhl(ll.l W \_«uhht or nine milesin the re joined the interesting group. Just as they | of the community, and among his favor- | second as lieutenant colonel, each for These bonds are drawn 4 times annually, with prizes of 2,000,000, 100,000 000, Y at | and reported the result of his observ eame up the other woms Mrs h f : g 5 S TR ) R T 4 Gl el man, Mrs. Ald ite acquaintances ‘was Alexander itorious sorvic and devoted | 500,000, 200,000, 100,000, 50,000, ete., down to the lowest prize of 100 Francs Gold. North Platte, and that friendship event- | tions to General Carr, who was ve dice, who lay unconscious and weltering ! " \ 9 i {il'zecl ¢ i o ‘LE ually brought them toge in clogo | much pleased with the information and | in’ hor blooy, (rew. one Of Ewo o | o e ot 5 & to At the close | Anyonc sending us §2 will sccure one of these Bends and 'is_then ENTITLED to e b i dasal e O o drew ome o two long | entertaining stranger - talked to Sty y he becwme distriet [ the'whole prize that itmay draw in next d 1z, balance payable on easy install- lu-lsn:s- fllrvl'm‘m{ hip. Cod, o ;fl }\ splen PROSPECT OF A FIGHT l,,l':“,"‘m‘ffl““ il ot art about his connection with the million- perintendent of the Western Union ments. This is the best investment ever offe des the certainty r ing back e T e ot | Ho at onco ordered the cavairymen to | for Sioux 1 the D rashmeaC e pLhD ani evan lu'-lm-d_ip” iso his_hopes graph - company’s e m the | 100 Francs Gold, you have the chanee to win four times a year. Lists of drawings i o hort A § e Eh | Gghten their saddios and prepare for | ning fights ensued for some distanes. bo. | comewhit as to a possible share in the | southwest. In January, he was will be sent free of charge. Money can be sent by letter or postai note. L ommendation of Gener action. ‘The order was obeyed with Wufi:l e OINRer Atior l;h;‘ ance be- ate. The summer wore away and the | promoted to the office of it gen- For further information, call on or address N BANKING CO. who knew his worth in that caj JENERAL CARR s fitting out his command oux had utumn_followed just s all been driven away from the village | yex s allop- | and the fighting w Lhe cir- | Weichel was it does o al superintendent, with a Vermont, and when the winter [ of territory. In 1878 he w s concluded, Mis. | came along the stranger had persuaded | assistant gen v, New Yor w permitted to be sold in ror fol 305 Broadwi 1d soon the command was rity, for the men were all fight, ing towu appointed sl superintendent of the spent ten d N. B.—These Bonds are notlottery tickets, and are by for the campaign in the Republican river the doomed village en to the surgeon's tent, | Stewaat to 2o to New York for the pur. division, with fquarters. 1 the United States, country. ‘Lhe command consisted of "‘"i;dt ‘~:|”";I~ h:\‘ M:l.wll :\‘I'"”I"'T"“ and was otherwise eared for, pose O{gult’i-ngsnml'lhin out of the L-w- succeeding ulml Anson eight companivs of the Fifth cavalry, and | WEAE BRI ERHEGRETEGE SRR THE RESULT OF TIE ATTACK e ‘M superintendentin 1850, A year the three companics of the Pawnee llage, e was the killing of fifty-two [ ments he used is not definitely known, t month he was further honos ! Fatety il on the yi . wys . scouts. A rather ludicrous appearance | fd could have erept mueh closer had it ; and the capture of cighteen | but it has developed that lie wis a detec: | by being eleeted a dircetor, member of v | t ) Sh ' “ d &T w t I titut «yvas prosented by the Pawnoes, who-hiad s ',,‘.'.‘f';{:., ey OO it smawaland) ehildren, and besides thevo | tve of high standing in the profession, the exccutivescommittee and v 1 valentne's ort Han ype wri "lg nstituie been supplied with regular cavalry uni i e ARl e A | was quite & number of the Sioux wound- [ and it follows as amatter of course that [ dent of the Westetn Union ‘T'c i N EXPOSITION BU NG A, NE K forms, and on the occasion of the review, | (i Decominulexponed to s jview of the | ed. “The soldicrs at onee rounded up the | if he was a detective e was in some: | company, retaining his position IN EXPOSITION BUILDING, OMAMA, NEBRASKA. on the day before the command started, | /SR G G o afraid that the o Indian horses and mules roaming at large | body’s emplo; eral superintendent of the central divis- The largest, best, and cheapest short hand school in the west. Students prepared for good thoy turned out in all sorts of styles— | 110804 Yoo obseryed by the e eom | and seattered over the prairie, and upon When fars Alexander ar nheRe Ry ing Sihunrions i Trom Tolr to s months. e keop on i a full Supply of Storthud 53’1‘!‘:;):1\Il:n:llx‘;:lrvu‘l))‘x'|::le)1"‘|'|1"3:‘~»I::n'u;;;:?‘r: he it once ordered the bugter to Sl :(::l’:.‘:l fith‘vn; the; .flulmli(lu\!'lhuy md. I\n'\ \lm he (i-nu»n-‘)lllnéo_u suI( e This is 1|}_.- ('n].xl, brief story the types Xt Books und Short-hand Writ upplies. i . some with pantaloons and othors | fie 4 OGS Brlered FE PRI 10 o | o d two hundred and seventy-four | he had never dreamed:of in s wildest | tell of his rise from the foot of the tadder SEND FOR CIRCULARS, with ony breceh cloths; some with hats | {he - Cpiree, ANy | dhe ) SUYTINE | horses and one hundred and forty-four | fancies. - His prosonce and object wero | to a position only one step removed from and some without; some with pantaloons | | 54" g = & ear and | mules, The v proved to be a very | detected by the newspapers. aided, pos- | the chicf oflice of one of the greatest cor - - changed into leggings by having the seat s o o rich one. The Sioux had an abundance | sibly, by the shrewd detective, and he | porations in the world. The real story. cut out; .m.fl« \;nh Imo(\;l,mlxmlwr; (\I\u_h e A ia of (-\-.vrl\um; s usually h""'i“" w Ind was :mnlnm\ 1S 1 ¢ m-nlt for a lpur could it be fairly understood, would be and others with spurs on their | 10595 L A e ans 'S | eamp, besides a great number of arti tion of the Stewart estate. The publicity | one of unremitting toil, of 1 faithiul and w fow appeared n full | Lying in camp that day, aad, their horses | which they had obtumed from the white | given his movements helped in turning \ gonius for orgzanization and BEST CART ON EARTH.” » orm. 'Thoir ranks presented a sad | Wete SHAE over e PG wb Jome | sotders whom they had kilied on the | the old mun’s head. He was taken to i | ecutive work—the story, indv i 13 3 of uniformity in the way of dri completely surprised ,;‘,:d bl ': S | Saline ri Quite & large amount of | good hotel and his J]R‘(‘lil ndulged with | of unfailing enthusiasim i tl ST The commuand started ot from Fort o e the i tuation the wetort | gold and silver moncy and considerable | the best the city could provide. A fash- | his cmployers, of a ot which 2 McPherson with lively music and- colors [ HheY SOl teiras (e SITEION (he ca¥l | fowelry were found by the soldiers among | ionable tailor took his measure, and soon | known no idle moment. SINGLE, DOUBLE and LIGHT, flying. It was indeed the Indisns became wholly demapatisod, | the plunder. That night the command | presented him a line new suit of clothes, In his oflice at the corner of L 1251bs, 1501bs. K5 Ibe. | A GALLANT COMMAND, ! em, ple it iy and oo | ctmped in the captur age, and at a | One of the numerous friends presented | and Washington streets, Colonel Clowry 835 s, a0, and General Carr, who wus a brilliant R rehlon late hour the wagon tr: rrived. him a costlv gold watch. The wonders | may be found from 8 o’clock m the morn- bURAELE d CHEAP Indian fighter, had good reason to feel | MAny of the Indians wore | Mrs. Alderdige, the murdered woman, | of the theatre were_exposed to his ad- | ing till 5 atnight. At noonday he EASY, et S proud of his troops. ""The route lay south | SOUNG A Lie FRAGE 0L TRett tents, TRey | was buried on the battie-field, the burial | miring guze until his head f swam | his luncheon at bis desk. Itis all wor [Cratociiteeloniboaiciotisy of the Kepublican river. which ‘stream | PEeCIPHRHCR L0 m‘,—, yoryihing ber | service being read by one of the officers, [ witl excitement. Months passed, and, | and no play with Colonel Clowry. s gp ATORRSEC they struck near the mouth of Dry creck. | bl | thetn, only a foy, sucoouding in | who was a religious man, there being no | as he scemed not toaccomplish anyihing, | encrgy seems inexkaustible, his” powers [}HAS T. ALLEN MEI]BQBI' At this point they marched to the west, | FGHEE IR BCE o e village plain with the command. General | he dropped entirely out of newspaper | of endurance unfailing. In th ek ) 2 tollowing the course of the Republican EIREDIVE D S A gave the name of Susanna to the | notice. But the pursuit of diversion still | of onc of his co.workers, *'h COLDWATER, Mich. One atternoon the command went into | - RS VR ST VORRE e where the battle occurred, that | went on. He was u hard case to handl man for details,” Nothing Mention Omaha Boe camp near the mouth of ‘Turkey croek, | 15 BA &L 0, L b the Christian name of Mrs. Alder- | old Alexander; if he had been | from messenger boy up to the oflices of : :‘::Illt”];rh”r ;;“l:u:«: nn:h-‘;' marol l.“”:‘].d Sloux. made no Tesistance to, tho at: o 'mi-kl from 1Mr‘. Weichel. il}.-lil]u-d to lfur;:u[ - the purpose | the superintendents of divisions. There | = 5 5 out to 0 ge om the S ? he name w: afterwards changed to | o his errand to the metropolis | is no work in the service—operating, Sy S no opportunity was given them a fi T ; 4 : 2 2 SALAD AR £ BRI | aCh s Bty v ot T (i TR | BT Ll SRS S | The OMAHA STOVE REPATR WORKS & small war ity of Sioux, coming from | (50T, (cetionssome fow sscrped on | becauss the was b fine spring of water | Gl man mover forgot it and even i the | A4 wiiis moro, o s no vorites. Las S A LY Y y south, attempted to stampede the | their ponies, while a large numnber, who | on the summit of the sand hills betwe R e, R i P ol e sz doinig herd duty, was shot with an arrow deiigaiiintokrainoakand SllliloRpcekotal | titbiobourugukitauppoecfili O terast. My thme the - | e toes 1o ST ek un s man- whom | Our stoek includes repairs for all stoves ever sold in Omala and the west. B e o onnp S wIth el 20 th1a codnplod b o fow moments andl| X iomaxbmorning all thoTndiun tepco, || (SotivofoundithatithoXbaro mention ‘olij ulimay pessonally dislikeqinnybaly (- Henember,itsyourstovoiwekeepironainior- =50 0o o e s st o i | a3 the Sioux had been scattered, the sol- | lodges, buffulo robus, camp equipage and | (ho gredt PLOPErty o CROWIE o FORsn | bries Lo Do O i el €. M. EATON, Manager. thoir uniforms, and Jumping on thoir | diors in ] hunting them | provisions, including I saiis it | RUSCATEIERATOR BERSIONE MNROL S0 o | Daoh SIogh 1L ie P oot 8f e RoRR Al 613 South St.. Bet. Jones and Jackson. ::i;’:"s:-l:w:-ll:n o siuldles ov bridlos, l\m'\l’«-l O A i B el p SRR athered to” | seatterbrain dotights of the wnfamiliar tends Taithfully to his dutics.’” ACIE FODC eir mo ey were | RO ARt ¢ paiptll ST Gk wine cup could drive from his stubborn { Auson Stagcr was an easy-going man, | s oft like the wind. Accompunicd by ther North, with a party of Pawnees ovder of General Ca OTEA I oUanaasitho faatdbn s had como | wi R Finle Wiy | since gave up the use of tobaceo, a habit | sat shoulder to shonlder, like so many Mujor North and Buffuio Bl they rody | and several soidiers: surrounded one of | “Tho commund moved down the Platte | oy clgusnsssichofaatithnbithoiadieome fwhowortladliimenlt 'l'"!“,3,’:,‘["1iu."':\",,'.’," of many years because of 15, Not a tremor be- in the direction where they had heard Yine l'lu‘\l‘l‘urllll‘nl'l;:lm o lhulm.\l war. | river the next day about ""4\’1" “”\]{‘ ‘I“" when attempts were made to come to a | Clowry is not casy-going. He appears to }‘"?-f‘“ 'l’““‘"l’"] “""“'l:‘i" hoalth "””"t“""‘l'(“”"‘"["‘ ABNRRD s and i reaobedt the mulo liard s asquaw and a child had fled | soon after going into eamp Mrs. Weichel | gettlement while he ws 5§ o 1P ty for g essen his usefulness. The oft-expre stern, their lips com- long time before anyhody else got there of the warriors, 'as wits | was browght Into the presenca of the In- | Stcment while e e pable. of | have an infalliblo faculuy for picking out | f000f his friends thit o will soon b pressed, their brows unbending. - Could Phi. Sioux had no iden that their old r 1, was the noted chief, dian prisoners. She at once recogmzed | solf togethier and refused” absolutely to m:‘l ~l‘i|‘| ng them up. Heis said to be | down under the toil and strain to which | it pos e that they were obhivious to CO! and, o ieir sudden appearance f clonged, | to Major N ), ing vife of g v Y i atton I By Stll 8 . 5 pily baseles so far as Zes i8 face? X 3 freadly smorised them. ey had | He und they were mounted on a beauti’ | Bull. Mrs. Weichel stated that this squaw 'l,f,,‘,v,‘l‘,.f,"',',,,d siximontheiolore e s }:.'m,‘{’l';:.“\l.“‘l'f(,fl‘ifl”':'li,l g s nt and ihe immediate future are antly the moon appeared in his fougit that they could capture the mule | ful _orange-colored horse, with silver | had " on many occasions whipped and | futlod to, The old claimant srew tired of | biing, for the coloncl does not know wi ned al diftle panorama, wavered, trem herd before the soldiers could rench them, | mane and tail. Upon reaching the ravine | pounded her and treated her most evuelly | ghe high living to which he was alto- | discipline is and how to administer it Colonel Clowry is a republican, but uo 1 boat struck by asudden squail, and they probably would have su fod placed his squaw and child on the in- | and shamefully during the m(’,",;.‘““. customed, and was impati As Superintendent Tubb, naively st ¥ it He s fond of good horses, | and then hungas if suspended, limp and had it not been for the quick movements | Sitde, where ho thought they would be 1 Tull Bull on hunting expedition R ek atot antion e oo e member of the Washington motionless on some lunar hook, midway em of ecn miles, killing several of 0 I8 mpg it | cruelty was_jealousy, and that during | jyade s way back Proctorville. e ST Yoa sidod over by e charm- | Arte ked *quizzically ] A T Y P T steod vathor Uan sco i fall nto the | tiar caplivity sho ind Mes, Alderdico mada bl ,.\‘,;"1‘:::',_‘,1Lh.'-‘r’<.lré“:1l,fi‘\v'illll-w ac- fflnlf.‘i’lu-\:pl.‘«'h'f-'(.} ploasellcagicapy Who was the danghir of | thowe five clogymon. 1 ik b hod Oue of the Pawnces, mounted op g | Dands 8§ one . had never been allowed to meet and talk e tadl 1 Ay anageis S e i 5 Toamenl isterbrook, a prominent [ seen them all the time out of the corne Jarge buckskin or yollow horse, lod all | The mouth of the ravine was very nar. | Wit ench othor moro than it & tozon s oo o |l v oo i g Land formerly attoracy | of his eyes. e ; the rest, and thé admirable running | now, and the banks were perpendienlar, therefore knew but ver roner: ved” vas Drof P NI(Ita /s ola Hife & mrnuls eside! seonsin, “1f_you will excuse me, gentlemen,"he D tioatg i the amirable PUARING | Dot from lfuen to. twenty oot high: | Littlo concerning the history of the dand | Eomral Iy e e D | Il o ek s | + Colonel Clow s to-day the lead. | said, impressively, “1 will go out and seo ! attention of Buffalo Bill, who determined | ‘The” Indians took their butcher knives | woman, T o Now York hud wrost 50 | 1o se dimmtey " Thoneh Jact, encrogs, | ing tolograph exeoutive of “the world. | to miy’ moon. I 'think- the moonist, & to secure possession of him if possible. | and cut holes in the hanks for their hunds | The Pawnee scouts, who had churge of | much of a fortune from th 18 of | Sympathiiie and decorvedly ® popular | Jay Gould is rovorted to huve once said | small boy, @ fut_boy, by the way, nu Accordingly after the return from the | and feet. so that they could climb to the | the prisoners, upon learning of "Mrs. | jmen nccustomed to handle vast sums of Z\),,",',,},l assoolates, nono of these /i in- | that he *bought the Western Union T'ole- | English Ind, who is fo nightly manage chase ho succeeded in gottmg the coveted | 10D to discharge ”"',"' guns and shoot | Weichel's statement of how “badly she | money. As If was the | timate with him, Not one of thum really f‘ruph Company in_order to giv my ‘:"h'"‘ll 1apa ll\llfll. )l}:* uf",." A Wky or i horse by giving the Pawnee some valu- | their bows and ar ow 'uml then drop had '1304-11 od, wanted to kill ‘ Tall | quthority for the statementof the terms | knows him. Between his actual self and | F¢ o4 job." No man hos l:«f;lu!‘n. ;_I()!u to sloop—possibl ‘llt n ‘_\'l rlu~ n| u:;s able presents und his own steed. down x}g:\::;.l|\ th ¥ I‘ ll'lz',y.lu-pl Major | Bull's squaw then and there. Major | of the compr se, it is probable that he | them there is a line which cannot be h-]ut; ph company tor l:{uhl'rlv owry he and ('I]‘l. 1-;.‘»,‘“1“] |>-’m_1 -|Bl|;ktl The ownership of the buckskin hovs North undd hs party at bay¥or some little | North 1 ‘;ml of their intention justin | pimself thou that he had become en- | crossod. He1s one of those men whom | He built up a great telegraph system and ixx‘m I‘l‘l kud:‘ u‘ Iun;, u;r n:, however, remained with the government’ | time. Major North's men, who were | time to provent it from being carried into | ‘itled to the money. But when Iis new | you respeet and admire, whom you like made himself. As G & 8100 QRS IRDLRLARL UKD Rl but Buflalo Bill was allowed to ret stationed about twonty pac from one | excention, iowever, they declared that | clothes wore out and he failed to find | ind call friend. but with whom “you are RTEMUS WARD. AIXDONGR: ARG JULNUAY O 1ANY 49 B possession of him. He numed the horse ulf }'l‘lfl ks of tho rav nUIM‘N living at | if she mado the slightest attempt to es- | himself with means enewing them, | as well acquunted the first day you meet A 8 i K10 fnenah, PULARPR, DORK Moy 0N, IR K1 h A fow days after the command had loft | one of the Indians elimbed the bank ¢ chat ol the money cnpturad at tho | Fors: e pugun Lo bususpicions ol bie bt ally gront wmen bias boon onst in th Humorist, exertion of talking even then. this camp, mnd were scouting along tho | bearest to tho soldiers, and raising his should be turned over to his adiu- | i been unjustly Ly et ia | S O, ey koops o privato oarap | A corrospondent of the Now York [ Thore was ovidontly an oifort on tho Beaver and Praivio Dog crecks, the Paw- | rifle slowly over the top of the bank | int, whom he directod to give it to Mrs. | nob zot any assistance in readjusting his | propriately numicd Puck, in which' he | Graphic writes: [ shall nover forget the | A of the five to keep from emiling dur nees amused themselves with laid it down on _the ground, and then | Weichel, s she had stated that her father, | ¢ihims, 1iis rumore i hiad Induotd | hiakes. troanont Journeys of Mspection | fasttme I saw Attomus Ward, W were | 1% his spoooh, and wiile Artemus was BUFFALO HUNTING, poking it up sufliciently to tuke a sight | a short time previous to the massacre, | g hrother of s to leaye his home in Can- | over the vast territory intrusted to his [ i London, my husband and wmyself, and | 00 e oo FE el JEEE iR & 1 Major North and Buffalo Bill and some | #long tho barrel of the weapon he had come over from Germany and that | gy and come to : Proctorville, bt be- | care. His district embraces all of the | learning from’a friond that our’ Yan HONLONS 010K, “ARL AT AR, ANOT B of the officers went out with twenty of FIRED DIRECTLY AT MAJ R NORTH, nearly all the gold found in the posses: | tween them they mac progress | Unitea States westof Pittsburg, north of | humorist was to lecture one night in u;;.qn‘.‘mt \':’m‘ll it ‘l~|\lu|uA N Imil I‘l them to sece them make a surround, They - missed him, Captain Luther North | sion of the Indians had belonged to him. | than when Alexander wus alone. tho Ohio, and west of the Mississippi, or | Egyptian hall we determined to e wmong | 81y iive stocks. and stanes, as 1 hng eircled a herd, and killed thirty-two buf- st surely thought that s brother | Major North eollected six hundred dol- | “"Now a new face is pit on the caso by | fine-sixths of the country. In this eloctric | Iix hear 1 lad board him soveral | Mentally denominsted thom, welapsed fuloes, Anothe de its ap. | was kitled 05 he had witnessed the moye- | lars in twenty dollar goid pieces from the | gne Whelden, a tiusmith of Proctorville. | empi u greater number of miles | times in A and was auxions to seo | 6 audible laughtor, and thels while pearanee and jus 1008 W ment which had oceupied but a moment, | Pawnce scouts, who gave it up without | He is apparcntly a ‘typleal Yankee. “He | of telegraph than in any othor | how an English sudience would respond | CheKevs began to witnkle = 0 })mpnl'inxm make another killing, Buf- | o quickly was it done. Major North [ # murinur, and this money he turned | saw in old Alexander’s case a chance for | countr, the world. No wonder he | to his new worlt drollery, Lis unequaled | GrEemis cafie Gatts G & red st the wlo Bill said to Nortly or, Tot me | murked well tho spot whora the Indiag | over ta the adiutagf, Aboub tiree husk: | mionoy and o d fermined to_hotp tho | needs i spocial car while ‘on b "oxten- | humor b pr o e s e T show your Pawnces how to kili buffa- | haad dropped his head out of sixht - o e collected frol 80 farmer. His first sten was to get himself } sive tours of inspection. In this cur he The people me in in a straggling | * AR ATA8 WA 6. 4 3 loes," conyinced that as soon a8 tho aiers, and the whole sam of nine hundrod | ionied us @aurdian (0 Me. Stowart, | hus tavcled from Orogon 1o Texas: ho | fashion and pocpiud the front sets and | 4! working for, and it seemed thut tho 8 ory well, I'll hold them back and let | could ¢ relond his —gun he doliars was then given to Mis. Weichel. | tne plea being that tho old man had en’ | knows thousauds of his employes' by | those in the Loy of the bouse. 1 remom- | [FHIER RSB CR T PR (T you take the herd,” said the m who | make ~ another attempt. There were about six hundred dollars | wored his dotuge avd was inc blo of | nume. He has been over overy trunk | ber the lights scomed dim, the distances | [ROMSIHOE BV 8 SEES ol Taformed the Pawhees of Bill's request, | drovped down on one knee, and taking | more fouad i the village, but the money | handling his_busimess’ aflairs properly. | line in the district and has visited the | dark and”solemn, and the arebitecture | 55 SR R ARG S W0 Dieals which they cheerfully granted. a rest on the other, nimed his gun at this [ Was concealed by the soldinrs. “This accomplished, he' sought logal ud: | oflices in all the chief cities and towns. | dismal in the extrome. The hall was like | S0 B ety G BECERSI0REED | . Bill accordingly gatoped in among tke | partienlar sot, and waited for the reap- | The command'now proceeded to Fort | yice. " He did not thrn to the lawyer for- [ While on his tours work goes on s usual | a huge tomn built for the reception of [ ZUUEEWIREIE | S TG HARL TFCTY buffaloes and in' & run of about half a | pearance of the Indian’s head. In a few | Sedgwick, — at Julesburg, from which | merly ewployed by Alexander, bat went | His stenographer is coustantly i his | dead-and-gone Plaraohs. On a settee M i havingg put restramt upon mile he dropped thrty- bu moments he saw the Indian's rifle com- | pomt the news of the fight was tel- | 1o orie who had not'been intercsted in the | side. Ail't ms sent Lo him ure num- | not far from our party sat five gentlemen LA, Sl S MATHUL PV TOATTAIS IR killing one at nearly every . string’ | ing up slowly over the edgo of the bank | egraphed to military headquarters, ‘Uhe | affair, He retained e¥-Judge Curtis and | bered, and nothing is lost lies can | together. 1 fancied they were clergymon | Hhemselics 56 dops Lisy, WEES SoRGE LS ing thom along on tho prire about ity | us it had done before, and soon the In- | wounded white woman was cared for in | 4y onge instituted 'action to recover a | e got from him in Idaho or Arizonu and had come with the avowed intention | HHE b 0BT 0 SIS B appras foet apurt. His style of killing buffalocs | dian raised his head to take mm. Major | the hospitaland shortly atier her recovery | jarge balance of the $23,000 alleged com- | is at all times in instant communics of setting out the exercises in grave and | B10G son BT SITCE Wl & T8 apprs: avas greatly admired by the Puwnees, | North instantly fired, and the Indian ?x..xl{.\ j x;-«l s““i Iln«v;pvlfln_l“s;v\v d, her | prohy monev. The basis of the action | with every station in his vast t dignified silence A | AN PERNE S '(\r‘h i “‘,“‘m noue of whom hardly ever killed over | dropped without shooting. Major North's | isband, having beeh KL ed by the Ln- | {5 {he alleged falure to carry out the bar- | On these trips he is usually sccompunicd hen Artemus made bis appearanee it 1 (it (8 €O W AYE L four or fiye in & single run, bullet had penetrated his forehead, and “h‘\\' 1e Indian prisoners were sent | gains entered into with old"Alexander at | by Supermtendent of Construction Bris- | was pitiful to see the ravages disease had |00 000 SRR por (hat a friend “Lhe command, in hunting for Indian | he fell iuto the pit to the Whetstons agoncy, on the Missouri ( fhy end of his winter of diversion in this | fol, Electrician Sommers, the superin- [ made m one stort year. ™ My husband | GRS TR 0 TG TR trails, proceeded on & westward course A DEAD INDIAN, river, where Spotted Tuiland the friendly | oity. ~The question to be settled is | tendents of the districts, within their tarned to me with the’ brief sentence, | S81jed Lo see tho humorist, | He was sick up the Republicar. river, Colone! Royal | leaving his rifle, cocked and ready for | Bioux were then Lving, aud the captured | wiigther there really was such a bargain | tricts, and sometimes by his wife “Phe man is dying!” and o he was S0 AR BlMGOIARS, ek M LI : with a detaehment of ¢ shootiire, on the top of the: bauk. . Later | horses and mules wore distibuted umong | mado by anybody suthorized to act for | jong e Colonel Clowry made anex- | With one expressive glhance about the | {5 SO S BV G North with & detachment of s | in the day the dead chiof Tall Bull, was | the o soldiors and scouts, Tull | lig udntinistrator of the estate. The raid | tended trip in the private car of the_dis- | place, seanning cei lights, aludowa, | 2, (ORIIUAIRE A0 A AMICSUAR. RO scouted along the route, and one after- | found in'the ravine, « under the | Bull and his followers hal long beena | on ‘the millions by the Vermonter is | tinguished Juy Gould, who is also suid to | and semi-darkness, the man took a stop | BURE FEEGININ 0F hover expocting to & noou they discovered quot, where he lud climbed up to fire at | tertor to the border settlenients, and (ien- | bound to be interesting liavo som fnilucuce th the' atfirs of the | forward, and commenced in- his wual | R GRG0 ag A SMALL PARTY OF SIOUX Major North e rr and his e ARG Were nIghiy -~ Western Union Telegraph company, | halting speeeh and imed timidity of | 4 ’ ™ a L following o large trail had b Snortly after the killing of this chief, | complimented by General Augur in g A new ourc for consumption has been | George Gould and bride being of thé | manuer J I lead in some fight for there were two or three | Major North saw another head peeping | @rsl orders for the originated by a German doetor. He | party “When the Egyptizns—built this hall— 5 wounded warriors in the party who we up at the same spot, and apon closer ob- GALLANT SERVICE makes his patients pass the night in the Mr. Clowry is temperate, and almost a | the principles of acousties were not fully A Newcastle, Canada, con: being transported on t _ The Paw- | servation he saw that it was the head ot a ad rendered. Resolutions of thanks | open air u} the Thuringian forest, well | v tavian. Working too hard always, | understood—ncither, is it presumabic, \ vecently set out to find a man charged npt‘a,llllau d them for distance and | squaw. o erawled to the top of the sral Care and Major North were | wrapped up, and sleeping in light ham- | h nevertheless endeavoring to save | had the matter of ventilation been very | with hiving molested a flagman of the Killed sever » Pawne ik and pulled her little six-year-old :d, the next winter, by the legis- | mocks 5o as to avoid the dawp from the | his strength and preserve his nealth for | extensively—ventil d | Graud Trunk railway, carricd with him s .’ went flying over the prarie to ( p irl after her. Noune of the soldiers tived | latures of Nebraska and Colc ground. A watchman kecps oft any in- | the ye of labor yet to come. ke eats ‘Lhere was a smile on the faces of many I..“ of handeufls, a par of old-fashio Carr's camp, on the Blacktail Deer Fork, | at her as she made signs that she wanted ( ral Carr's. command remained at | truders who might disturb the night's | lightly and simply. 8o completely has | but nothing more—and yet the bumor of | brass “come-alougs,” a long piece and as they were approaching with | to talk to some one. She walked straight | Fort Sedgwick for two weeks, after re- | rest. and the experiment hus proved won- | he deilicated his life 1o the service of the | the thing was exqaisite. I could not keep | sirap, several yards of rope, u bat whoops and yells, and swinging their | up to Major North, and rubbed hor bands ! turnin, from the battle of Suawmmit ' derfully successful. corporate Moloch that be sowe time ' wy eyes from the five glergymen, who I revolvers and o guu,

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