Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, December 5, 1886, Page 11

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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: S INDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1886, ~TWELVE PAGES. ’ 1 ADVENTURES OF MAJOR NORTH | rpamentiy o, to o, throvgh, deen .| it day, and ngtwishstanding the bulss | AFTER SIXFEEN YEARS! AHLQUIST BROS.. NENDELSSOHN & PISHGR JOHN HUSSIE, impossible for more than one horse to | which was soon ready When they sat " s through at a time, :|‘lvv| the |Rmpe down to eat, ’;;lWl r, the ( '\w\nn}nv\' | Y " DEALERS IN—— Dealor in g White Ohief of The Pawnee Scouts—His | had to string out into single file. Aftor | opened fire o them with more vigor than | What a Mother's Love and Patisnce Accom- w Handir HARDWARE & STOYES | foped up tozether agnin and formed in n | Although the Cheyennes wero firiug at Acorn Base Heaters, ‘ o 3 column of fours. It was WINTER CAMPAIGN OF (870.'77. | nd as daylight approwchiod the men fiit | the woul contmue_firing il | night and occasionaily pick off a wan | TWwo AmericAn Boys Born Deaf Taught S— ! | | reak of day they heard in the distance | He accordingly had breastworks thrown to Speak 8o Well That The | W IR ) ) W G BARTH Ao N MeCARGER, rmees T p, . W the monotonons beating of Indian drums | at _once with the abandoned s Not Noti ” { \ a %’ The Pawnees Take Part in the War | e monotor tng ot IRdien Aruim: sl ik P " Yettinid wittah tie Infirmity is Not Noticed ‘ \I WL ‘h RURLE ¢ 410 N, 16th St | | | terrible march, | very 1o jor North saw that [ Stoves and Ranges. Mechanic's Tools and D. L. SHAN Supervintendent. Job Work a Specialty. 1118 Saunders St. A specialty, 2407 Cuming St. by Strange whees found themselves safe from the o, " st g st v | PLCRE IATIE@E i Nhanies Too Stoux—The End of whoops. The Indians were having The Story. A SCALP DAN wts of the enemy, and then lay aown to —_ Streets, All Kinds llfmm‘.w.l|\|||I||.\‘;|H‘:|||\l Fresh rebralad 9 9 constantly on hand, Stoves and Tinware. Sells the cclebrated SQUIBBS PREPARATIONS A SPECIALTY. 1010 SAUNDERS ST. v VWest Point ! ety & storm | , Philadelphia Record: A Philadelphia gan, and by morning the ground was | Jady while in ‘l a ! t summer noticed verced with five or sis inches of snow, | Sitting opposite at the table a httle boy still eontinuing, Gen of in honor of a successful raid which they | During the mgh I had made into the Wind river mountains, | 1 Witten for the Sunday e by Alfrea Sovenson) | Where they had killed { ofnine Shoshone Ind ing buttaloe: By car , who hiad be - and had kept it up all night fong. Tt was | rest with a feeling of swen COPYRIGATED, Base Nurner Iped a party | e rho were hint storim wi vation of | eral McKenzie ordered t v sent forward to | the Cheyenne vil destructio ge at once. Ac [of 1 A e H | the se bt kit | MAS. DR, NANMIE ¥, WARREN| NEW YORK BAKERY!| pooton JoMES. Modical and Business Mediom | _Frosh Bread, ios & Cakes, | omee, 1ars v vurmam. - he ety 1ot and Come | Residenee, 201 and Californin. s Do ampnign Genernl Mokense | reconnoitre, it was ascertained that the | dingly the toreh was applied and soon | Irpriaes ond prares the Vi of Dull Knit 1l ‘2 Tt 0ok« « ourn o e bowe I i T AtTe Wolt~knd ot thg Campaign. vill consisted of one hundred and EVERYTIING WAS BURNED Uk Or Soooningeimsny e bowed snd cighty lodges, or abeut fourtee hundred | up, Tt was a very rich village. Over ono | Smiled. When the lady ant the boy mot persons, among whom were four hundred | thousand saddles were destroyed, to- | in the halls he would how and evidently ) y 2 Delivored to any nart wart warriors, :\Invl Iso that they | gether \\';'u a great number of bullalo | try to say “Good morning” or “Good Room 8, 121 N, 16th st., Omaha, Neb. i were Cheyennes under command of the | fobes and n large quantity of bufalo | avoning.” But he made only a faint famous chicfs Dull-Knife and Little Wolf. | ment. As it was impossible to reach the | Bt AR B. F. FULLER, J. P. MAILENDER & (0., [ ¥ ber, 1876, huving arranged all the dviails | The [ndians worg located in a_poeket or | Clieyaongs in Unolr mouniain fastnesses, ToTe bl '}‘l‘ o 'y""v““j"““[ Al the o Sunlars fi JOHN E'\,?:XI:I\OMAB‘ for the winter campuign ag the | Targe opening of the mountains, into | General McKenzie gave orders to b ady asked a sorvant why the ¢hild never 1t Sioux, moved out from . Fort Laramie | Which it was” impossible to move with | pare for the return 1 to General | made any noise, for, although he played, H Q Sxdd! hine H h BO t Sh H [ G 1o and Fane Gl’(ll',flfl 4 Wit T thancand troops. infantey and | CAVAITY except at one boint, and this was | Crook's camp on Crazy s Fori, | e never shouted ‘s did tne oter arit. | NAINGSS; S3AAIGY, WIS, NODES, 0 S, Oes‘ i S, i S‘ S‘al’e a‘ I WY”" S, 4 ' Lig fikdd at an opening through which a crc A suflicient number of travois were made | qren. The FLOUR AND FEED, 1 b, Notions and Gents Furnishing Goods, Cor. 15th | Country Produce a Specialty, Saunders cavairy, and marched to Fort Fotterman passed. to the dead and_woundud, and this | c . 3 " remaining there about a week, In or- GENERAL. M'KENZIE work consumed nearly all worning. At | tumb. 2 v 2501 Cuming Street, atd Leavonworth sts., Omahn, Nob, and Lake Sts,, Omaha, Neb, ol hotses, about B3, were | This statement exeited the lady's inter- anizing the_expedition General Crook | haltod the command and summoning the | noon tie capture : St : T : | or, and the command | est, and one day she took oceasion to ATHELTCE bt et Beower | 3ol Ub (. otler:. A, ob the fre Lammerich & Grimm, CONE & JOMNSCGN, 'cHENEY & OLESON, had authorized the onlistment of a num- [ compuny eommanders he gave them his | gathere upon the vi e. Major North, with his y slow and d march on account | ¢}in ber of Arapahos, Cheyenne and Sioux | instructions regarding the plan of atlack | started scouts, some of whom hud been captured | pyywaee scouts and the Shoshones, aecor- | of the heavy snow and the transpor tion |y ]mv”".‘ gL b "“.‘.' Phen “:I"”‘\Ut“'l""‘_‘[ Ni 71 1.‘1 t l)” *\R “ l\l‘l\vr\i DRUGG'STS, ¢ life's work. She is a native of Now < {( 5 ATHAUR) D) in the villages of Red Cloud and Swift | ding to. structions, moved along the | of the punded men, who —sofli 2 CChemicals, | Surgical Instruments The Pawnees With General Conclusl General Crook, on the 15th of No iswer was: “He was born ETC, ETC, Bear. There were in the command | left bank of the creck. General McKen- | greatly, of whom dicd on the iirst | 4 eleven Araphoes, about fifty Choyennes | 7ie, with the balance of the command, | day's march. On the fifth iy General lsl.\,n-i I;\l-.)nu ‘f.-m four years of | Keep everythin X h age, and her hushand is 7 iu their line. Good meats | Keep a complete line of Diu e f it v warched up the opposite side of the | MeKenzie ordered a_ distribution of the and is a United States | ana - fair pric Cor. Lake and Saune Patent. Medicines and Sundries, New And Homorpathie Remedies, an y ¢ . . stream. The route was indeed aperilous [ captured horses among the Indian scouts, 1l ofticer. The first five years of | gers sureets, s Stock and New Men, 724 N, 10th st 1307 Farnam Street. One day, while at Tort one, particularly on the left bank, wh The next day the command reached marvied Clife was - spent in e General Crook suid to Major North Major North was marching. The moun- | General Crook's camp. — General Crook | Washington, D. C. Her oldest ehild when | = e — Cheyenne and Sioux scouts are complai in was very steep and tho paths ran | was greatly plensed with tho rosuli of the | born is what 1 cenerally” called Sdeat HONEY FOR THE LAD jumns over a eheken coon in the | it is thought that Taswell made a full cons ing 1o me that your Pawneos are keoping | 81ong the mountainsside ke terrace | exvedition, aud he highly complimented | #nd dum his mother said children p yard, leaving a bull dog_ehoking himself to | fossion, which will clear up the mystery 4 Tk a1 vuR 66 o i ool and that | Work: The horses had to move very cau- | General MeKenz and s donimand are born deaf but never dumb, that all | Topazes set with dinmonds ave a novelty in | death with a wouthful of the Plymouth pas: | that has been puzzling the Montgomery themselves too distant and cool, nnd tha for had a horse n 1 his foot IE DEFEATED CHEYENNES babies make n noise when they ery. She | jewelry. tor's pants, county authoritics for the past month, i they will not come near them nor asso- would have fallen down over [ went to Clear k, thirty miles west [ a1so said that if mothers. whose children darvings have apearl in the centre, sur- Miyato, D B e, Tt was rumored that the confossion was | ciate with them in any way, The Chey- o8 for two hundred or sthree hun- | from the battlefield, and then proceeded | Who were born without the sense of hear- | rounding by opals, MUSTGAL SAND BIVA MATLO, to this effect: Taswell had doubts of his ennes and Sioux say that as they are now t to he dashed to pieces the | down the canon on their ay north, | ing would teach the little ones to dis- | The nond lily with a diamond heart is one # o okt e wife's fidelity, and on tho nigltof her toldiers thoy would like to be fricnds | bottom with his rider, The troops with | Major North, under instructions from | tinguish for themselves the sounds that | of the new flower pins, i Abotk, It I8 said, hasn new Kiss. | oy rosolved to wateh her. Ho oft bar g ey A 2 4 great difliculty passed through this small | General Crook, sent out his brother with | Ar¢” pleasant from those that are dis- | Plush stripes aliernate with beaded faitie | Mary Anderson has it is veported, gained |3 “Aphot's and told hor he would with the Pawnees.”’ | opening m the mountains and emerged | three Pawnees on the same day to discoy- | dgrecabie. by the position of tho mouth [ strives with tiny desizns, orty pounds in weikht. | meet her at the house 1 in the oven- ““I'o make them friends, general,”” said | ypon the cdge of the pocket, when sud- | er the trail if possible. They did not | #nd throat, there would be fewer dumb | Beaded Matelusse silk for mantles and _1\;-vlev\_~"~l"~'";‘,“l'l'|\"l'v" next season v e came carlier than the time ap- Major North, “will be a very diflicult | denly they saw before them, in the open | succeel, however, as the snow was | persons i ”|“‘ wor II "I""""i"‘ Ll "'I',‘.“"“"!'“‘-‘("‘ '”"]' '\I'“‘“ L RGN GRS NI A6 LAVAR oW play. | pointed, and remnined among the shrab: i, 08 thoy liave Hoe bitterest | plain, the Indian village, distant perhaps | eigntecn inches deop, and had covered | This mother dweove when her boy lamond and pearl stars of exquisite finish | | Robson and Crano are to have ay. | [ory netr the gato, Whon Mrs, Taswell :.’,m,"" ,"‘:,:."’,‘|4|I,lw"“.<.]4:‘r';" ”\“ |‘|::"|\ ": three quarters of o mile v D St anhiof e YRR vas five years old that he was not de- | may be used as brooches or hairpin o l"‘!l”;'“,"“' bt % fdently sitoek cino out the hushard ~tepped forward bR f g - £ | General MeKenzie at once ordered his | * ‘These Cheyennes finally went down the | veloping tiie power of “specch and that | A eonductor ean be polite to the lulies and | | Bl of Dosen Curtls hag ovidently straek | 5475, 0y ceosted him by another name. hatred has long existed between them,’” | e aiiegof the Pamdor vivar to e mouth. | some unusual efforts must be made to | atthe same tiie knock down the fare. L o e A Bho ron ot sl resoised HESHON and thereupon he related to the general 10 SOUND THE CHARGE, ind during the mateh about forty of theit | enconrage him. She gave up all socicty [ Butterflios, beetles. eatsheads, swallows | | Touis James will wake his irst appearanco | 3854 (A 8O0 B IEEIREHES EE g the history of their enmity. “Now, gen- | and instantly the notes of the bugle re number, including some of the wennded | o devote hersclf to him. She inquired | and becs are among the fancies for habpins, § 80 TUECE RIS SO TG (o et Bands wnd fell to the ground senseless. eral, if you wish to issue an order com- | forth loud and clear, and away dashed | ones and some of the children, died from | into all the methods then known for egu- | Breton duesses of vicoano have the skirts ed “The Noblest LRoman of Thew | Taswel o the woman % i o 801 title empted to reste ting the dumb, and tried them. She | trimmed with chenille and bead embroidery. n entitled EATIBIE 1 A v soven children, only two of | “Down in front!” yelied aboy in the gal | AlL" & to canscionaness, but found hiseffortauny iving, the oldest boy now | 1etw when he sawa box full of Tadies in full I'he Spanish finance minister has decided | availing suddenly flushod on him tha N >, the whole command and e Pawnees to nke u with LU UL AU By cldad D allop toward the village thuir bitterest encmies,” continued the | &orih charsad along the, mounta and exposure. They were in very | ¢ : cireumstanc ndapplied to [ has had who was camped at the | Whomare I Perterhd i Ay 1 ekl 1o ORI G Moty ovening aress. to impose a tax on the income of professional | she was dead, and that ne might be ae- major, ‘I will do all in my power to have | while General MeKenzie fed his eavalry [ mouth of Powder river, for twenty, and the other nine years old, and BTSN GIERE Ukbr offosts, Bocins ast1t the || SInRers: cused of her murder if scen near the 1t obeyed.” up the opposite bank of the creck. When | and proteetion, but for fome they ure both deaf ALy YA M e upen s dround of | - Murie Tozo will make « tour of thiscoun- | body. Wth fr to he picked up “No; I don’t wish to force thom inst | Within a fow hundred yards of the village | would neither receive them nor give them | Sixt uloHl_w ‘nmt enty yearsshe has | GG 30 try next year under Henry Mapleson's man- m.-‘?m.h- and currvied it to the sprim their will fo be friendly. Yet, if they | On¢ of the Pawnee scouts who had been | any aid. They then turned their faces g‘wln: u-‘“ufi]r}p ol \_I"_".»\ '_ll‘.l‘}'!ll'ff'}; Ivory white satin duchesse for fronts or [ B&ement. S g house, where it was afterwards found. el T deliove it aronii bo bettey | assigned to duty with General MeKenzic, | southward and came into Ked Clond | dnd medionl sohools. She lis, mastored | el has o sult-colored brocaded desizn ot | I taly, fram 1893 t0 186, inclusive, there | Te hurriedly returned (o the stable, and n the Puwneo | agency and surrendercd and tried each new method as it has been wled out to Major North strich plume were no 1ess than 60 new operas and operas | with gr eflort resumed his usual de- for all concerned,” said General Crook. guage that General MeKenzie wished | “General Crook now muarched his com- | developed. - Stio has ot only learnod | yout-cas and. umbrellas have rastic tas produced. mewnor, conscious that he was nota mur- “Well, I'll talk to my Pawnees about )ss the ereek with his command. | mand to Fort Reno, thenee up the Dry | @1l that conld help her to teach and edu- | qles of rou:h silver or silver deposit. Mme. Modieska has in preparation a new | (jorer, He determned to say nothing, 1t, and hear what they have to sav,” re. | Major North at that time was about to | Fork of Powder river to a point seven- | ¢ate her children, but has also acquired a | handies arc excecdingly larze, jipiayitton i of Felix Phitlivpl, en- | gy wonld have remained silent had bo Jhied the major ns he took his departure, | Make @ charge on the village, and had a | teen miles from Fort Reno. The next | Rerfect knowledge of the human bod Pockets are applied on dresses high up on | ttled ']"“ s not been arrvested. This, it is stated, was DIOGLHCB PPALLUTC. | o landid opportunity for o move was to the northeast, towards Pump- | N¢ bones, muscle, all have been | the hips, and are elaborately trimmed with | Jimy the penman, is ‘provingaereat suc- g qinstance ot the confession Taswell Ibo Pawnees, however, were notin- [ 7 0 N P ECTIVE DASH. kin Buttes Upon reaching the Bell | studied by her. She met with much op: | passeumenteric or embroidery. Sosa lh\hllyl;lllml\; o i 18 supposed to have made to Mr. Corson ¥ % m 3 : i sritie g sh s s i o k ) along tin & 2 L2, Windeo gl 1) clined to do anything of the kind. They | 1t was with considerable disappoint- | kourche riyer they marched down that | Position, not onlyfrom outside critics but AldiDIUBIThes T | pIURhiSgUATCRUIIIG £ true, 1t d will probably result | Yulmer i meeting with_sueeess in | 20, § snid that theSionx had no more love for m about pne hundred miles, and | irom members “of her own husband’s | center of the plaid, formed by narrow stripes Minnie ent that he reeeived the order from | st ed. o who! looked upon her afiioted | Of light color surrundiug a dark saua Australin, She 1 playini i Sydnoy, aod woll being rel . A 5 4 Yener: KONz EVerthE as | wentinto camp, where they stayed for | fawi ced | : 7 £ 3 THBILG ORI NeL O ehY them than they had for the ux, and (I l‘IIC ! MH((H{.H.. ')]ln\\.l\ . l*;mx Fensanto o (Pl n-t‘u‘n T I ran aa L bsvial Eationiof Provit incens Soft fnished npt has phantom-like | 9% uds (o remain for ayear, i ——— that the Sioux were merely making a pre. | he reached a point whore he could Fort Lar: I £ Her answer was_that sho was not con- | arabesque designs on the wroutd, with sillc | Atgustin Daly, n American adaption Masquerading as a Woman. tense of wishing to become friends so thag | the ereek,hie turned to the right andorder: | to Fort Laramie, on the 10th of J = i h dered ficures of Yargo size, | 0f “The Black n the list of prospec- ous of having committed a sin which | and wool embr ed him to follow him across the stream, [ 1877, and the expedition was th & tive novelties at his' theatre, 's Guzette: A singular oceur- ey cottld have a better opportunity ot ed s0 grent u punishment, and she | Hoods &re seen on all mantles, from the v very dee; v up. The Pawnees proceeded to Sidney, | d¢ d g 7 IGlebiOamerontl Nering rer | T sported from county Galway. getting their oaptured horscs back fom | Luicp, as very deop, muddy on ety e e o bt ey | did mot intonid to sit down and’acaspt it gumbersolne Russian eloak to the Jaunty tai- | NI CAmereh 1 gonsifioring b SIS A Ballinasioe this week a retreat tor the {4 the Pawnoos, among whom . largze num- | op (hirer oress gt stuek i the mud, | % hen they were mustered out and sent | tntil she had -made a_desperato effort to | Jormade Jacket. “They are gencrally becom- | i Four wider his management. Confraternity of the Holy Familyis being: &2 ber of the horses hag been distributed. | Ty they all finally got over and joined | back to the Indian territo his | At least lighten the burden of her ehild- { " N e teriat | Lawrence Barrett will not produce “Calli- | tondueted by two friars from” Dublin. fla ‘The next maye of the command was 10 | the balinee of the vammand with General | was the last time that they were ‘enlisted | 'en's aitifetion, 'And now, after sixteon | ¢ 50(HeS 078 (HEICUL oG of Tt ee | nos™ this year, atter all, M. Boker Monday and Tuesday was i sof 4 teno, on the Powder river, where MeKenzie. By this time the excitement | in the military service, years the oldest boy can taik so well that | gyerdress the sleeves correspond to the ma- | €omplete his revision of it until Januar, apart for women and the remaining days was jomed by about one hundred Sho- | e Ty to niake a4 good dash had some- The vennes who surrendered at | fearcely anyone is s of his afllic- | terials of the skirt. Don Montague Suthezland has bewun a | tor men. On Monday night arge agency were held there as | tion, and the youngest one 1s steadily Point d’esprit, twenty-seven inches wide, | Siit in Philadelphia for a divorce from Laura | congre smbled, among whom prisoners wntil the spring of 1837, | improving, but he” does not 10w | in all the evening colors, as well s black and | Bonth, his wifeand cousin of Edwin Booth. | was noticed a woman of about thirty At this pomt the Sioux agam com- | grafdeal of spirit and enthusiasm. ; were sent to Fort Reno, in the | that he s diffarent from others, and | white, 15 uscd for drapery. 1t is also tobe | Edwin Cleary is in Paris writing for a liv- | years of age, whoso dress and style wore plained to General Crook of the continued ‘The Indians, who had just concluded ry,and placed under control | thinks thut to understand every nne must | had with larze dots. ing, paint'ng for a pastime and studying the { not in keeping with the newest fashions, | reatment of the Pawnees, and the up-dance, had retired to rest, and | of the tof the Southern Cheyennes. | 100k at the tali ‘This 18 lip-reading. | A plush design upon a satin zround is won- :nem.?us of the French stage for art fmprove- | She wore an ordinary linsey dress, and a 1 accordingly Tillon alban A" faw squnws. however, | They were very much opposcd o going | At the table, or anywhere that his mother | derfuily beautiful, It scewms like switllng | men 3 cap not adapted for "her years. At the HELD A COUNCIL B started fires 10 cook some. buffulo | to the Indian territory, and never booame | Wishes him to know anything, and does | waves in two tones of the same eolor and i | il rosaltios pald, to the author ana com: | closo she had succeeded in gotting to tho for tho purpose”of ‘adjusting.the matter | s Gthorwise o peaceul uiet reignid | sutisiiod with their mow. iocition. oy | 1ot want to at{riet attcntion by having i) GLERAI 3 CRCS R TLATE (el for the useof “Frmini? i hls coun | porch door whon some one, more acute if possible. There present at this council | yhroughout their camp, and upon retir- | frequently requested the government to | him turn his head to look at her, she ean | Ty oo iy every possible tone is the than the rest, deteoted mian’s trousers the Cheyennes, the Sioux, the Shoshones, | ing’thoy had not the shiahtest suspicion | send them back to the north, but their | falk to bim by placing the palm of her | o fing color, "I Jards wioesalo bouses | A new operaon the subject of “Faust | Undor tho skirt, “Tho culprit, seing that and the Uhe general impressed | gl in a little while the o0 be com- | petitions were always refused. Finally, | hand agamst the palm of Ins hand. By y 3 18t L ; By | \vport that from cver town and hawlet | in which Goethe's wxt s used in its or he was detected, ran townrd Tearin upon their minds the necessity of being | pletely, suprised and rotted by an enemy. | in September, 1878, they left their rc tonching different places she. can tell him | 1y demand for this color 13 beyond that for Just been completed by Licinrich | followed by a crowd of people. The la friends, temporarily at least, ws they | " Upon hearing the shouts of the Indian | vation and mado th . memorable march | What she wishes him to know. Each | any other. turned ont to be a stone cutter name would be obliged to move along’ together | seouts with General MeKer up through the Indian tory and | joint or mount of the fingers and hand | n ‘the wmatter of buttons fushion has de- » was arvested. The incident in the commind and possivly engaged in | pand, and the claiter of the through Kansas and Nebr: murdering | represents a letter of the alphabet. He | crecd that rich dresses must have them of | pl bert, one’by Sardou and | has cansed indignation among the Cath- battle tozethor where united action would | hoofs, they sprang up from their sleep in | and plundering on the way, wnd creating | Feads in this way with ous rapid- | solid gold. Many of the { uthor ot the fourth being | olics. be of the utmost importance. ~ The In- | ¢y g foment amonge | ity, and can answer with shone scouts under Tom Cosgrove, their | what subsided, but neverticless the | Red head chief being the son of old Washa- | charge was maile upon the vilinge with & e X angtry, is egotiating for four new | Simot. o was arces ; Ly one by Jones, the @ Al quick- | sorich a design that they may be elassed | unknown I consternation and emerged | the greatest terror and e: d .eq 1% 0 0 nknow i 2 : G e dians in startinge ont. on. the ‘expodition | o Seutest consternntion and emerged | he frontior sottioments. . hoy. were Tof: | noss. She can also tal to him by placing | amonk jewelr 3 : The German imperial family do not like How Rawks and. OWisiBhc were well supplied with umiforms. The | wpon thom. — The warriors instantly | lowed by the military, who, after a long | her hand on bis shoulders, where differ- [ & mantle of sealbrown piush, with gold- | Wasnor s isie and have just appointed an | Agjanta Constitution: Captaim Tom Pawnces apponred at the council in full | bPoke and san pell-mellin overy dircotio, | chase, took A portion” of them prisoncrs | ¢nt parts are understood ' to represent | colored brocaded tizutes, 15 made shorbat the | anti-Wagnerite to e post of futendant of | 1 ipeion, who is ono of Atanty's most uniform, but some of the Sioux and | on foot, not having time to reach and | and coufined them in the old quartors at different letters. He has been taught to | 29 us(q I buts are pera. long and pointe innamon bear fur, In Boston, Doctor—I think, madam, that | South Au your daughter 1 recover, but_the cli than the av- | are very slignt. Mother—Don't say It is bordered zor Abbey’s contract | Chthusinstic sportsmen, says: —*“Did you Patti contemplates an extended | °Ver notice a hawk or an owl preparing erican tour ut the conclusion of | to muke a meal on a bird? The difference s | the eoncerts in this country, in their methods is very great. A hawk tliat, | Minnic Hauck’s concert receipts were re- | Will first pick all the feathers off the bird more than 1 ean b-bear—and | cently ed at Bay City, Mich., to satify an | and then pick it to picces as itis devoured. ady boughit for Joseph Cook’s | attachuent of $:00 claimed by the hail ‘pro- [ Ile gocs at it in a 'y systemauc and prietor for breach of contraet. dainty manner. Not ~so with an owl. and_ his company invade San Fran- | After killing a bird the owl swallows it time in o They start from | whole, and all. He then sits Ono Gold night in | Write in x style which looks very much £ the buiiding | like Arabic, and no matter what the sen- {lling threo | tence or, more ditlicult still, the proper tols which | Dame, he can read it bette Cheyenties attended m_full war dress. | ount their horscs, which they were | Red Cloud ugency. nd Pom Cosgrove noticed | compelied to leave behind, The cavalry- | October they broke out ) 1 the attention of General | men on the first dash through the village | and overcoming the gi Crook to the fact. "They maintained that | kiled five or six of the Cheyennes and | and wounding four with pi J a these [ndians ought not to be allowed in | seattered the fugitives, who fled into the | they had managed to keep conccaled, | ernge child of his ngo cx L strange | docte the council, Which had been ealled for nons and skipped from rock to rock | they rushed out into the ness and | Daw Each stroke, of tms | the ti the purpose of ercating a better feeling | until they reached a safe distance. They | fled through the snow. The soldiers | Strange writing indicates a posituon of | lctu 3 among the scouts, but the general con- | then howan | pursucd them and mouth, throat or tongue. The child A brown felt hat with flat brim _has blue, clude but little attention to the RETURNING THE FIRE KILLED ABOUT FORTY s bright and clever most childron, | cardinal and gray ribbon wound about the matt ntinting his remarksto the | of (o soldiors in a very lively manner, | 814 wounded fiftecn. ~About ity of the | #nd much more affctionate than most Dases datdorCEIhiconiorod Lows s o {owRaonndintnagiodnusoii syl iquicty) n hour or 50 you will see Tudians the general said,“You, ns well as | ff i SO o very fively mapntes | fuginves were recoptared, and tho bal. | be Cow think of | 1ront to bick, and at the top 1s a cluster Of | "Tisen ure still mereling abont Lzt the owl move his neck abot s if_he was ourselye: ants of ' the Great [ g o T e, It | ance entrenched themselvés in the sund o much for the chud. Now think of | 41 ug1ored bows. ey ave still quarreling about LiszUs body | yrying to untangle s knot in it Then ho athe wshington, and we all ought B Yt | Ils, where they held the military at by Sho s not 1 5 of Pesth, to- whien order Liszt 18 impossibl [ : e A e h them, and therenpon they dis- | for some time, and finally excap: monnted and 'adopted the Indian method = Some of the new p manner in which t od | plush upon o faille shes ar e pile is ¢ maryels in the | pelonzed, now claim i, Meanwhil t. Prisms of | yenth are_amonz the |y Ui | will Sort of Nuwmp his back, lower nis arth has it and s likely 1o keep it head, and the next moment a ball of Howell’s play, “A Forogone Conelu. | feathers will roll ont of his month. The to dress in the uniform of the soldier, and for the time being we all ought to be brothe 12 only had to clothe und cducate her chil dren, and see that they were sent to LIGIOUS. schools, but she bas had to go day by day | noticeable design loptadghe Ind} it ! ¢ z tinted 50 WAL | gion,’” iy nota sitecss. dut its failare wis a | Oberation shows thut the owl divests h S of tho Indisns arose in turm and | 01 JEhng, dodging from rock to rock, o R ands i | 10T Bixtoen years side by side with these | ey show sox ¥acoordi g toitllol| cio HIB Rkt ENEHS lnolatiad | DEHE AER AT At 1 i Specchos, savig that they undor: | 4 BHDE AL evers svailubleoportanity. op Kirby enys somo wards 1o | onildren; en their only teacher;has | light in which t placed. fuily excludes from lis writings everything | while the hawk plucks out every foather *‘l’“"" tho 'i"~l"' of the council, ‘and that | )0 imost perpendicular mountain side single chureh, g IA;_ul Lo dovote i rly yory king {mm' i Dlacl velvet capoto, with beads of Jot, | theatrical, and quill before he takes a bite)” they intended to nct in” accordance with kL ] s A € bl . | of each day to them: ‘There has not bey has the brim bordered ' with faneifully eut | Gayarre, the Spanish tenor, sixteen ye 5 by protecting them from their breast ars, a rich Bostonian, is { - t bead A larze knot of whito silk lnce yRITC, Span nor, sixteen years e i SR e e ¥ prot h 0 ir bre arsi o vich Bostonian, 15 | g month’s rest from the work, nor has | Jot beads. A lurze knot of white siKIace is | girg gt 50 conts & it for S gin s i & nus ; 5 4 : BEARS AROSE, orkerang t"lI‘f\"jt:r‘::'finfi‘.’.fl",,, back. aebpatians o Mariboro. V5O | sho boen ablo to feel that at th ond of n | Ansiveet bs an smber dazecr witha jethilt | Jal Madrid. Now o' hus’ miado ‘un ar- | A San Diego citizen honght « tieket for and, walking across the circle”to the | warriors becume more desperate, bold now in Mexico_connected with yo the work wouli be done It |t the highest part is at the crowa, % | mngement,to g at tho Iarls opera.ifty | Sun Francisco and ent down on tho plgr Pawnees, shook bands with Frank White, | and reckless, They charged down upon | Wissious of five denominations, 10,000 people be done until they can talk 2 boat should be ready to start. 1 like about you,” said 5 I n the other evening, [ o Mme. ¥ “ach” of my other lovers was continually ing it he was the only one | ever od. You have never asied that question.” Misin. and be like other boys and ‘men. She ;-Illw'ullml hoIR SrRSA DK :uull thgn present: | the soldiers from time to time, and then “]I‘;: “"“I‘X"' |’|‘|"“I‘I"‘y’r‘;‘|"‘:\‘::“" m part of South | &ives at lenst four hours every day to the Ve you this hors e s 0 e et weyiell | thereis just one”ordained toreign mission- | ehild, “and two —or three hours ¢ ou, this hore” | of thew. The light was thus kept up all | or Yl ey e i . Totell the truth,” answered Charley, J : : sifts und roturncd his | day withont cessation, back aud forth, that she may aiw be i a cond last girl 1 asked that of ranga chestnut | Nelwaun, the areat tenor, it 18 stated, will | the picr, - Then he remembered he v T coful manner, adding | and was hotly contested. - | tion of mental drill to meet any emer. | bell on me and T dow't want any more | Teceive SLd0y and all his expenses forhis | on'poard, but thut his bagg that he, too, desived to bo friendly. IC | “"During tho wholo fight Genoral Me- | fully ignord the Sabbatl because he beersos | ooy o o ATl to mo: L ) three months’ engagement with the Germa 3 2 was quite an aflecting scene, and did more | Kenzio conducted himself m the most | Saturday as his Sabbath, i i A child born duri arthquake [n | DPCT company i e 3 " (hguakeans, e e T B ‘ ' Pawnees and Sioux than anything else. | Kimsolf to the fire of the encmy by viding | Roman Catholicist in_ ndia the ast £4A08 1BAL 050000 A fomale ehild, of course, 0o I8 mar. | 3 N e o Lisent 1 S JACO S IL 5 bt o y years hones, and her hus. | 1 ! i B docll n alda has abandoned her contem- me much interested in seeing the plated operatic tour because her manager has | work going on, the passengers hurryi iled to securo open dates at out off town | down, the gangzplank pulled in heatres, ‘Ihe company will return 10 Eu- | Jines east off, and expressed pl ) tope on tha nex: ¥runcl steamner, tho_ 8IG0t. of "the. big 810pmar A Mhe ‘The supreme court of Arkansas has d ciaed thata Second Adyentist cannot | thanks in a vory The council was then dismissed and the | over the open field of battle from one | years. The number of adherents oy, and thinks | Hed somo twe [ Indians dispersod, and from that time | portion of I command to another, giv. | ereased from 70,000 in 1547, to. 1,65 y little of her \s sald to have declined an at and beautiful un- | band comes home late from thie lodge and he | DeW symphon. more nmicable relations existed among | Tg his mstructions s coolly as if Hiore | 159 Zclfsbness bolievIng thatisho has ionly | foals the” ground sahaking i Saries Of 100 ehnoerts asamet an hoporartum | | NFLAMMATORY RHEUMATISM nil the scouts, particularly between the | was not the least danger. While he was | ‘The Jesuits number in the Unitod States don¢ what her hand found to do. | 1t | ot art el mmenr i TS rents cras | of 250,000 inarks, N i TRIUMPHANT TESTIMONY, Pa s and Shoshones—a branch of the | poing neross the open piain from the | AVOULL20. Of these a larze proportion aie un flay she sald: 2 T LOXOE T ol g S OVEE | b now and splendid Guildhall School of ! Y ALe) Comanches—who had “never met the | Bin command to ‘a dotuchment distant | 1oV oF scholastios, hw mewbersiip of | any mothers witl duaf childven, allot | €8S ERSE L 1n o medical papor tho | Ausio In London will b opened this month. | Eu Spite Pawnees before. ‘The Pawnees having | about five hundred yards, the Indians di- | o0 'Y tHoUs ot 8 bou | ol e of mino, o sehat | statcment that *bio hisher edusatlon of | Threo thausand pupils huve b o) Wia bl recently come up from the Indian terri: | yeeted their full fite t him but he escaped 1 does not conduce to esunubiality | And there is yet vlaco for one thousand more, ford.Cohly OODRILYCOmMB.IIE AR TANG ChEIAD. forn Lo } 4| Fifty thousand dollars have been eiven | mother's love and patience can do.” | Wowel nduce to con Y. | Tl will be & o0ris for DG i imatism, tory, where the Comanches were Jiving, | ninjured. One of the shots, howeyer, | toward establlning o Iissionary bishoprie | Gl a woren ol Worthily hoar ho | 8nd fecunditv. “After readinz the statistics | Jiere will Do a corks for one hundy land and th ors said It wonld . o the Shoshones much interest lodged in the pommel of his suddle. Just | in Fiji. At Sab Pauloa Brazilian rece 5 3 ioh followed, she remarked: ‘I don’t be. o Ane nsslstants, ‘Tho cost ble to move her tor three weck e 1 ¢ su . Jusf . At San Paule azilian recently f mother than thisone does? 1 t 1 the building is $200,000, i information concerning the former af this I'lll'llL‘llL he sent an orderly to | made a ¢ift of 35,000 toward erecting u boys' “H“.m 2% mothor th ‘v” )18 0D0. L0068 he ".) 1ster lves near Vus 9 g ¥ ot * : ‘\“ Ir “1 I 1 \h”lrw A From Yort Reno the commund marched | Mujor North and lieutenant North to | training sehool. 5 WROYE ] there have been few women who have so he's all thetime writing | Lawrence Burett is goiug to great oxpe vy i Jicobx O, She higan (0 1mimove, to Crazy Won ly deser: and was soon ubie to walk. The doot ws tor 20 per cent, and the peo as & Child. nearly all the Indian scouts—the Paw- ot killed on that day. years ago he found the Fijlans cannibals and | lientenant Pettitt, of the First infantry, | entor ti 0. A6 nvita: | Do ad & Rendal tilhe Tiketa makawht 4 N Stiicker St polysamists, Now there are thry ‘s Fork, where they were | opder them to report (o 0 "l free church In Italy has five ordained and 8 groat ro Bho_Bare’ that -thoy. | forthe production'of “tisnelh. in Vsl At would only lust i siiort time, | to o into ewmp for several days. It | in gullopingacr ',,..M,,I,'l'.'.:'sle:me fi‘.’.'fi‘, minisicrs, BBatoe. OuunELsta d for an exercis tienco and love. Hie nokk connubin) aud recundial womup | tan op eceliber 18,146 sashary and noe d that uight wid did” fner was expected to mect at this point some | had just been traversed by General Me- | eldersseventy-six deacons, three'colporieurs, o erederp—— ka8 WEIS—MNRYE JAUERIRG QDU J0NIAEy AR e TR o d Lo e Sioux scouts whom G Crook had ¥ Konzie— Major North and his brother re. | SWenty-eight churcnes e out-sta: CONNUBIALITL —————— und banquet ball and a cathedral se & sent into the Powder river country 1o 88- ocived two or three volleys from the In. | fH0nS and L5%0 commuw : e " Sh S S MPIRTIE With its great choir of wen aid boys, Tl Can eertuin if possible the location of Crazy | Giaus, but they protected. themselves by | 4 Ao the 200 students at Lineotn univer- | ¢ MBor: at fod Guleh, 1%, are advertising FARIRTLES, It is said that this season will about wind It Ave Horsn 4 As soon as tho com: | lying'down upon their horses in Indian | B85 8re sIx younganen trom Liberia, sent by | PNV o0 o6 6ainbridge will give her Y S~ i up the general combibation systen, 50 far is Beeer MAIWA U LUIM IR 1\ SoaD' ving phon their harses in Inqiah | the presbytery of West Africa, the woderator | o The duchess of Caw Vi Most any young man would embrace re- | ¢ Vo oty theaters are concorned. Mt A m amp, fashion, and thus escaped injury. Two | of whieh came to this country twelve yeurs nddau htey, the Princess Victoiia of | Jigion—if it"is coutained in the heart of a | |/ A el Niaomattaa Crook decided to send soldiers soon afterwards atiempted to | ago, and returned with four others to carry » $100,000 88 8 wedding gift. pretty girl. e ) D e e OIl and A SCOUTING PARTY make the nerilous irip on foot, but they | the gospel to their own country, The electric boy in Californin—just discov- [ Wiy is the average undertaker Iberal? | os of s oo ¥ AU ML satty i loph thrown awity my oans whioh T fiad hosg into the Big Horn mountains, and he ace | were both shot, one being killed and the | The Rev. Dr. Culver, a missionary who | STed—can be utilized when he becomes a | Because when he getsa job he always sends | play their . A& 1t oO8Ik B0IBAr coNt thirce yoars, 1 can now walk cordingly ordered out General Me! other wounded. It was regavded by has just refurned from’ the Fiji islands, in | 143 years older by marrylng bim to an elec- | for the bier. o play combinations, while they ean put in ovur, __ JOUN BREPPEID, with oight hundred troops, togethe Iu\,‘,,,,m.h.‘.,:.‘.;..,“,n] WoKonslo v an address before clergymen said that forty | trie bell. No dongh-f stian can | their own si - 4 APy . Sy gy T itk bt thousand | Who was shot by a footpad a few nighis 4o | tion is ) good and 1 i dates best. Roe ux, Arapahioes, Choyennes, and | When durkness camo the fighting | 3o % Ciistlian assistants to the mission: | #0d_on the ev before that 86t for DS | fu) servant. entor1nth the joy ot the Lord owidaios lewl Shoshones, ' Major North, secompinied | ccased. The loss of General Me s | 1oty : : L ) Jual s 1 ant, . Sl g aries, aud in schools are forty-two thousand | Mmarriage, was married on Wednesday, His | “ et Il would he churcl by his brother, took about seventy of the | command was: Licutenant McKinney | hupils. wite is & daughter of Major Alexander ito=] do wish vou would Join the church, John Taswell's Confession Pawnces. On the first day out General | and six soldiors killed and soventeen | "#Fie’statisties of the Universalists arc as | Sharp, his motos being a sister of Mrs. U, | Same Wicked skeptic—ood eavens! w Philadelphit SV T e P MeKenzie marched to Powd ver, dis- | wounded, The Cheyennes lost ubout | follows: Number of parishes, 9003 numbe Grant, e et Pt surrount ) “atherine I i T a Chiristian we should quarrel all surrourding the death of Catherine Tas: | tant twenty miles, and there sent out two | twenty killed, and about forty wounded, | of = fawilies, 37, churen mewbership, ampson Townsend, of Bloomington, Pa., Life. “ | well, the colorcd woman who was sup. Avapatioe and tvo Sioux scouts at night | some of whom afterwards died, 41 Sunday-sehool membership, a ed seventy-four years, was warried last Who held up Moses' kands while dashua | posed to have been murdered ncar Ard to oxplore the mountains for Indians as The lodges in the abandoned village vy less debt, BT1L28IN; carrent ex- [ week by the Rey, 0, M. Wineh of the Wi Ty et ore. on the eveningof ot #1. woc : A = iarishes, 8674, phureh editice Free Ch ol o M J Gill fought?'" asked the su rintendent, Hur maore on the evening ol t. 81, 1ook His Feet ke twe Cushions. woll 4s to tind a route of mareh for the | were still standing, and fesring that_the Ay ment of dobis: SOLA10: Lanook | Breo Chrstinnoburol, to e, Juba e | and Asron,” shouted goud boy. “She | startling turn yesterday, which, if true, B AN et next duy. : Indiuns might during the night make a a3 men r $51,810; general | pie, of Middloiown, aged seveutrione, itlid Auron:” softly corrcoted the new schoole | will render furthar sekeh. forthe mur 1l & sovorn attich At o'clock the next morning the com- | dash with the hope of sccuring some of A census was faken on 8 recentSunday | €rt Hryans, a xS bars, and the brides. | Wa'am, the stong pointof whom was gram- | derer useless hn Taswell, the hos - | rheqtigtiem ly b mand moved across the country, towards | their supphes, General MeKenzie located | o2 6 mttentance of ths thaceent Bunday | Lliid was Siss Grace Mapes, aced four years, 3 5 bund of the dead womun, has been 1n Y the mountains, and at noon the four | his eamp in such & position as to cover | don, 1t showed that 460,000 persons attended | both of whom a; rand children © *Two misslonaries were attacked the Norristown juil sinee Th to 1 seouts, who had Deen out all night, re- | the village, while Major North and his | the services in the morning and 410,000 at | bride. The wedds re both in wello- | founded by s nezro v sad th charged with the crime of kiling his rie turned and reported to General MeKen- mped in the center of it. Tho | night. The largest established churen, St, | A0 eircumstan e 1 don't &ee how souln g Yostorday he wus to have had & pr | la zie that they had found an Indian village | Indians fired oecasional shots at the vil- | Paul's, had an evening attendance o 08, A New York correspondent says: two 1 sasap. by e o | ot on u - tributary of the Powder river | lage, but did not do any , until | Afr Spurseon's church was at the head of ho | told | ioso whio prufess to kuow that ¥y o Raris (uttha o e | . Thoy.stated that to aveid discovery it | some of the Pawnees b dissenting churches, having a8 morning at- | ericl bhiard really intends to marry A : ] o i : Y 7 P 4 THE CHARLKS ANVO ELER CO., Balthnore, Md. i SMMUL ) 0 araic, discorary U | & R P terufance'of 4010 3 ai evenng aen danes e i B Lnogiry bt don | i Butalo Couler wlls of ' clerzsn | i ot wle's i, s Cole, i | e ot . 4 o X at, larg o of 6 » salf ODNO¥IONS SIAands 0 1850 consclentions that Lie ne cor ushan pelieved fron nitl i E N | that day, bus to keep as much out of sight | which were found 'in the lodges. The | b Pather 1 tha e I e Bue of eaurse | mils himself to any positive siatement. Oue | lowed that they besonght him to muke ;JJ"R COUGH L;jR as possible until dark, and then reswme | Cheyenues now had 1wo years ago Jumes Gleason, of New | it is only a temporary obstucle, - Sotne cliarge | day be otticiated at a funeral, when bo bad | clean breast of what he knew of i B the march on the \‘.‘“‘*‘f‘.' nerpl Me- PIUNG T0 sHOOT AT, | Haven, 'started for Ireland to get a large | can be trumped up, 1f it should be only in- | oceasion to u allusion to the depaited, showing that he might possibly | FRFEFROM OFTATES ANG POISON, " Keuzie, acting upon this inforsation, | as the fire made quite a bright light. Their | sum of money to which he heird that he | compatibiiity of teinper, Certainly Mr. Gebe | Hedia so in these words: SOur dews sister iselt of ull suspicion. At st e | € A FE & moved bis men iuto & deep canon, at the | bullets struck close to the spot where the | had fallen heir. He was shipwrecked, | hard has been devoted fo Mrs, Langiry fora | Is now dead, probably. denied that he kuow snyihing, out uftor | SreL S=e ) footof the mountalns, and rémained | fire was locatod, ‘scatieriug the dirt in | eeaped, failed to got 'tho moncy Engp wany yeare, ond periapeakis wayld da | - Hepry Ward Hecoher lado Lo s ligro ot | IEe s e maen Sy A 1 CBLRE. : B ] B Jbtsl 0% f 0. 40N N AR o R ell 10 teward his devotion, & uever heard | novel that a wember of Lis congresation o sent . { l:ux all xllh_.lnm‘-n W 0 night ',,' evury dirvotion 'n l‘ dlfl{.' some u.l'.l' L ..4.ml} x vm.l_.y died in New Ha it said that Langiry was not devoted.but then | writin If the story is trae to e, Thes who remained a long time clos- |~ PROMPT. 1 the march was resumed overa very rough | into the frying pan ne Pawnces were | A few days after his death the money | devoted busbands go Dot Weigh 80 wueh in | dore T1iton will be represented s eotering ith the prisoner. What passed he 0GINTS AXD DFALYAS country, and was kept up all night. They | very kungry, laving had notuing to eat | camey tho scale, “ the fout door with blood 1 his eye, Just as | bween thew is not delinitely O B » »

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