TIIE OMAHA DAILY BEE: THURSDAY. APRIL UK 1000. 9 LEAF OF CIVIL WAR HISTORY Reoolltctioni of a BarTiring Member of the Proviiiontl Conzre i CONFEDERATE HISTORY NOW FIRST TOLD UrlKln of Mrtitnrlnl liny, Itrrekln rlilnr'a I'lnn to Mnrrcnilrr tlir Cnn (cilrrncy mill Oilier Itirltlcnta of the (treat Ml turkIc In a comfortable frame house at Wood land, a pretty suburb cn the Wabash rail road, lives one of the only two survivors of the provlBlonnl congreta of the southern confederacy, reports the St. I-ouls Hepublle. He Is Dr. Samuel Howard Ford, for more than sixty-two ymra a clergyman ot the Uaptlst church, an LL. I)., a D. D., and a rb. D. The other living member of that mem orable congress Is J. U. M. Curry, formerly of Alabama, now of Washington City. Doctor Ford Is 82 year old. For more than fifty years he has edited the Christian Repository, one of the foremost Uaptlst periodicals of tho country. He claims Mis souri as his home, not by birth, bu,t by adoption. lie was born In Knglind, but came to this country with his parents lu bis early childhood. Doctor Ford camo to St. I-otils from Memphis In 1871, after the yellow fever epi demic In the south. It was his tfecand com ing to tho city In which' bo had been edu cated and bad served In editorial positions. Trior to his Memphis rcsldenco he Jived In Mobile. On Tuesday, April 3, tho date ot the thirty-fifth anniversary ot tho fall of Rich mond, ho told tho reminiscent story of the beginning of the war to a Republic repre sentative. It contains Information not here tofore published. It constitute tho vencrablo clergyman tho first Memorial day scrmonlst. It accords to tbo women of Memphis tho distinction of having Inaugurated Decoration ministration, but opposed with great power by Robert Toombs of Georgia, who said In the language of Arlstldes In regard to seiz ing the shipping In the port of Athens: 'It was a good thing for Athens, but most un just, and so let no unjust act mark the course of the confederacy.' "It was due to Toombs ntrong Influenco that the bill failed. There was a Krcat deil of discussion Just at that time In regard to the failure of an advance on Washington aftor the battle of Manataan. Ileaurcgard had sent out a report of the battle, which seamed to Imply that Mr. Davb wra tho cause of tho nonadvanco. Davis indorsed something like a demurrer on the back of the report and a very heated dimension en sued, but tho matter was amicably adjusted. However, I was sent by Mr. Davis with a member from 8outh Carolina, Iloyce, to s?o Beauregard In regard to his going acrots io Kentucky to co-operate with Sidney John ston, which he consented to do. In that conversation I learn! definitely from Beauregard that the advance on Washington was not possible, as they had no traniporti tlon, and everybody thought the whole war was over after the Bull Run victory. InntiKiirntlon of Darin. "The day Anally arrived for tho Inaugura tion of Jefferson Davln no permanent presi dent of the southern confederacy. It wan a cold, rainy day. Tho congressmen and tho members of the cabinet met In tho Virginia state house preparatory to proceeding to tho stand creeled xomc llltlo dlstanco from it. There sat Davlri, with his face pale, fixed, moveless as marble, entering, upon what would either cover him with glory or per haps bring nn Ignominious death. "Wo marched through tho rain tho short distance to the stand, I took part with Illshop Johns In the chaplaincy of the occa sion. With firm volco and fearless utter anco Davis announced In his Inaugural his determination to pursue to the last tho holy effort ct defcrne tbo confederacy was making. 'J. I.. M. Curry, then of Alabama, now ot Washington City, Is the only ono left, be sides mysidf, who served In that original provisional congress. Senator Vest, from this state, becamo a member afterward anl was In tho permanent congress. I declined to run as a candidate for the permanent day away back In 1866, a pious custom fol- sfMi hut u'nn nffnrprl nnaltlnna in enn- ( lowed rinco by thousands of communities In npcton wi,n the cabinet, which I also de- It relates how surrender of tho confederacy .-u'lcfaii nf tptsh. nnn of hn mont ettea- was planned by a few patriotic men aftor ve 8pCnkera nn(1 a ,OVoted chainpluu of urani naa crossru mo i inuiuBu iiYt-i. Dnvls. nnssed at onco out of s cht. .No ono It cites John C. IJrccklnrldgo as tho orlg- h known what his end was. Heagan Inator of tho plan and names as his strong i est opponents Jefferson Davis and Congrcss- 'snan Wlgfall of Texas. It gives Ueaurcgard's reason, personally tetated to Doctor Ford, for his non-advancement on Washington. It tells of men In tho provisional congress of Texas, a member of the administration, Hill lives. I was living In Moblio during part of the war, attending tho sick and wounded; In fact, I led the retreat from I-oulsvlllo to Mobile. When Canty camo up tho bay 1 alirri.nrlnrnrl. T nnver fired a. elin in nllKCr. who wero not originally secessionists, but but min8tcre,i n grCnt deal to the. Missouri j ,,ced no delivered an i wero drawn Into tho whirlpool of secession and K.ntucky lro3pg. Senator Cockrell of Tabcrnaclo in which I against their own convictions. tnjs 8tat0 ws a warra f rcn(j 0f mine and This Is Doctor Fords story: was ... nicrtalncd at my houso during I have not prepared anything at oil for ,,. . , Vno,.. ,nhn H MorBan verv this Intcrvlow, and, tncrciore, i sn.ni give L1 wnfl a dashing, fearless man It in colloquial phraseology, ueing rcareu wlth a Erpa. it for management. IIn In Missouri and an alumnus of lt stato uni- COuld outwit whomever ho met and withal ladles to deliver what would really be a semi-sermon In memory of tho dead, and that I would certainly do It, unlets pre vented by force, In which case tho respon sibility of what might o:cur would not rest with me. Tho matter was published In tho Memphis papers, and created great excite ment. The commissioner1 telegraphed my answer to General Thomas at Nashville, and he sent It on to President Johnson at Wash ington. I'lrnt .Metitnrlnt Dny. "At midnight preceding tho day appointed for tha memorial (the mlddlo of May), an omcttr knocked at my doar. I looked out of the window wo wero rather cautloui those daja to see who It was, The officer Informed mo that liberty had been granted by thci military authorities at Washington for mo to mako the address. I asked him If he had communicated It to the papeis, and he eald bo had. "Tho next morning at about 10 o'clork tha wholo city turned out. More than 30,000 peoplo repaired to 131m wood cemetery. The ladles were seated on tho grant around tho platform amidst tho graves ot tho confed erato dead. Many federal ofneera In undress uniforms were In tho throng. I opened my addrees to that hushed throng by saying: " 'When tho beauty of Israel was slain on somo high places, David took up the lamentation In Inimitable strains that have drlftol down to us with a pioullar pathw. "Let there be no dews on Ollboa, nor rain, nor Holds of offering," and so on down to tho conclusion ot tho chant, "How havo the mighty fallen!" " 'If David could tako up these strains of sadness and eulogy,' I continued, 'over the death of his lifelong foe, Sul, why shall not wo utter tho same words of tenderness over our own loved frlcnxs who sleep nround us In silent, unmarked grnves? . Of them I can say: "No battle banner o'er them waves, No battle trumpet sounded; They've reached tho citadel of graves, And hero their urms aro grounded! "It was my own composition and ex pressed with tears. And tnen I exclaimed somowhero In tho address: " Mistaken they may havo been, but traitors, no'ert' A thousand women, with tears streaming down froin tender eyes, responded; 'Never! Never!' "This ppeech was published all over tho United States, It was tho first Decoration day speech, and Inaugurated tho solemn custom wo obscrvo nt tho vrcscnt day In memory of tho 'Hluo and U.o Cray.' Spiiiiiioh iu I'rl viitrcrliisr. "You ask what I havo to .ay about pri vateering going on on tho seas during the war. I knew Admiral Semmes personally In Memphis after tho penco roncluslon. Ho was editor of tho Hulletln, I bcllove. In- addrcrs In tho great nreacacd on 'Tho KANSAS AND ITS HIGH WINDS Reporter' Imagination Q1td Full Eweep in the Eirlj Djs. STORIES ABOUT QUEER FREAKS OF WIND Deendeiiee nf Tnrnnilnen Mint Once Jn.o the Stnte llrnnwn-SprlitK Wlniln Remind n Correiionil rut nf (loud Old Time. .Alabama and Privateering.' In this ad dress he denied emphatically and bhowed documents to provo It thai no was a pri vateer In any senso any more than the nrmlps wero marauders. 'Ills shin was a l 1 1 .. nnMHilB.lnnni1 pnnf.llflr.ltn VPMROl veraltv. 1 -was mado editor of the Western h. .a. Bl.ntin. iovlnir sort of fellow. For- I . . , . u-m . i.h0 Uocnrdor 4hn leadlnr Danllat PBDCr of tho I ,- nn ii nihnr hand. wn Inclined to be ; .. " . . west. This was early In the 'SO's. hence I BeVeTc, although after the war ho became a "llu" ... '...i .,crted that became, associate,! with tho preus ot this city very mlMc, acllvo c.t.acn. In m, ; lZ'2no an unkind act nor a nnd I navo occn so rouuctwi - opinion uragg was mo puunn i lU tho-ngo of 20 I was made assistant cuuor tho war. After tho battlo of cnattanooga, with Colonel Chambers ot tho then Missouri instead of pursuing tho federal army, he Ilcpubllcan, now tho Republic. In that ca- expended his wholo mental energies upon paclty I wroto some things In regard to getting up statistics, showing how many when that movement was started, nrlsoners he had, how many flag.? ho had but not in favor of It. I believed that tho takon, and thus let the whole thing slip totes' should remain In the union ana nauio out or. nis grasp, ins marm uiruuK - n,.i. nnriir 4ho old tlac. I tucKy snowea indecision, out it in iuhhui Wl iuvii .u - ....I. .V,. m Kmlnrkr llefore the War. now io puss ou uih tuuua i ...... iinnvr,r I was sourht out br Mr. Hal- have gone - .i n... Lmilavllln Courier. Why Tonmlm W nn fiheUrcl OUIUnUi 111U uw "w ' - . .u .i.,.inrnl In answer, edl- "My own opinion IS mai u loomua uau torlally, articles by Ocorge D. Prentiss lA been president of the confederacy tho wholo tho Journal, and by degrees I Became cai " , , ,, , vi . , cntiriw l raonius. loomw wouia nnvo uu inwi- vonai wriiir-iii-v.cl .... .. .... . , naUi. ir h ,lv nf the . nl t n t Inn warn rMrninff Its I uci.u iii.imu .., - en, us " "" 1o,in v, n. ,prn thn worse for height, there was called a race ing c crrat odaoa . . . i . . vAni t miw rv ra noiii nr tiih - -w ' leaning mt m r..., - --- nrlll.innahlv nnn nr the finest orators finll House. Among those wno eutnnra " ' . a belligerent pcopio me He spoke of his he had an act that was not strictly honost In all his captures of American vessels. Then ho Btated wlln bold uttcranco that ho was personally responsible for every act hi. nad committed and that his freedom today proved to all thn world that he had novtr been a pirate, but a legitimate admiral ot a legltlmato government. "Ho spoke of tho sinking of tho Alabama by a chanco shot in somo portion of tho vessel, which Immediately Incapacitated it, and had it not been for that ho had every reason to supposo that bo ould havo been u i...k t,- Mrf in ihron victorious over the Kcarsarge. It had been IUUIK WV.MU 1.I1VV L';v, thin meeting -were John C. iirccKinriago, whoso term as vlco president bad Just ex pired; Governor McOuffln, ex-Oovcrnor wnnrnhesd. Richard Durrett, Humphrey Marshall and others. The business under rnn ldic-allon -was tho courwo Kentucky but at tha samo tlmo Inclined to quarrel even with his best friends. His language In regard to Joe Rrown of Georgia, a very intense secessionist at first, and wbo ordered tho embargo on the northern ships In Savannah harbor beforo there was any confederacy, and who, after Appomattox, bo nhould nursue. I "wns Invited to take part ,. ',K10 . .hn mntt wither- In the consultation and tho opinion generally ,nB Wnd galj Toombg )n tt Bpecch: 'Ig- exprcsscd was to pren-ent, if possible, the nohe v1Ian mloyed on by corruption, he necosslon ot any of thn southern etatffl, as r,g(;g ag hp ro,g , that would draw Kentucky Into the war tax. nut aovernor nrown was not deserving Letter wero wrltton by somo ot theso gontle- of tneg(J gcatnng remarks. Ho was said to men to tho leading men of South Carolina ,ho only raan In the confederacy against not to pasa a secession ordinance. All know wnom a direct charge of treason could be what happened, however, and state after brought, and, as ho said to mo 'I agreed etato seceded. with my adversary quickly.' llobert "Fort Sumter was attacked, the country Toombs regretted In other years that bo was In a blazo and Buckner, with his State na(1 USCQ ,ncse nevcro words, fjuard. retired to tho rendezvous on the "Toomba might havo been sent back to borders of Kentucky, when, suddenly, the tho genato after tho reconstruction, but ho news reached us that bo and tno aiaio dccllnod. Ho told mo himself ho baa Guard had onteired Kentucky, camped In fought the government with all his might Howling Orcon nnd eelicd tho Green River, ami therefore took no cognizance nor asked miittlnc olltnosts. on Muldraugh's hill, favors of It. Carans had already been formed acrosB the "nen Hill of Georgia wns In many respects river In Indiana and Sherman, with his the greatest statesman In tho confederacy. troops, passed through Ioulsvlllo to stay jo was one of thoso who favored tho clos tho approach of nuckner. Ing of tho war long before It camo to paea, "That nl6ht tho Courier office was raided, a fact which has never been recorded. 'Articles In tho handwriting of ex-Oovcrnor "Shortly after Grant'B army bad crossed Moorohead and of Durrett were found In the Potomao to make the final stand near the otnee. Doth these men were arrsstad Petersburg It becamo apparent to many nnd sent to prison. I wa' somewhat that tha cause waa lost. The border .states, alarmed, for I was not In a condition of including Tennessee and Arkansas, wero in health to rnduro prison life. I had reason the possession of tho federals. Tho wholo to believe that many of my articles would iWeep ot tho Mississippi wns under their be found In the office, or that tho printers control. would make It known that I had been editor Trj -Inn to Quit, for somo time; so In tho gray of the morn- ..Tnn representatives o! theso border lug I packed up what was necessary, en- glatcSi including John C- Breckinridge, tered my buggy and drove off to a place nelll a consultation and decldod to propose called Boomfleld, where the camp of John to lno K0Vernmcnt at Washington a com II. Morgan waa secretly located. pl(,l0 BUrrcnder f the confederacy bb a Snfnty In i-'llwlit. whole, with all Its arms and general assets, "That night we passed through, or very on tcrmg that Bnouid be agreed upon. It near, Sherman's army, and reached tho wag beneved t0 h0 the only way to savo tho other sldo of Green River, where the con- B0Utn fr0m rulu. Davis was approached In federate troops wore encamped. To go into reganl (0 tnis proposition, but'oppoteJ It. further details, would bo unnecessary. Suf- d(1 (he nCn from cxtreroo points ot flee It to say that very soon nftor tnlsJ.be tho goulh nnd especially opposed to it was ocnventlon wns called for all tho counties wiKfoIl. I was not preient nt thla con in the state to meet t Russcllvllle. Dele- guaUoni but Scuut0r Vest was, and had gates were elected In somo way. and quito th)g bcen nccom,,inwi, guided by the dl a largo gathering took place In the main pIci:naey of nrecklnrldge, all the evils of re hall of tho Bethel Baptist college, of which tonstructlcn would bavo been avoided, it Dr. Scott Blowett. now president WOuld have bcen tho best thing for the south Jennings Female college, was president. nnd gavcJ a t ()eal of D,oodf,he(li John C. Brccklnrldgo was maun pr.UBv j bspara0 farauiar with Jefferson Davis of tho assemblage, ino mouon '""'' Uhlle wo were both In Memphis. in that convention to elect a pcrmamui nr9,UNlt 0f an Insurance comnanv and I lilature. which Breckinridge opposed, but wag r of R chur(,h attfr tho wRr j Anally yielded to. A legislature and regu- wag asked by the fdUoM Qf a mugnj,,no to Jar offlcers wero elected and Bowling ureen deU1J for them my conversation with Gcn- was designate as tho mectlug place. craJ neaurcgnrd In relation to tho non- "That legislature met. I waB In Nash- d Washington. This paper I vtllo at the time, to which place Haldoman to Dav(g nnJ hj gev(;ral had removed hla Courier, but passing on Uw (, gubjm KlvlnR tbe railroad through Russellvllle I was aston- P th..lr. but the manu- ishe.1 to learn that I had been elected by ' ' the legislature a c ommlssloncr for tne state of Kentucky to get that state to the con- '"t ,or Uint non-advnnco. federaey. and that I was a member ot . the r dPCOratlon that over o. planned by nn 'English gentleman owning the yacht Deerhound that If anything hap pened to him he would lay by as a refuge, and directly thn vessel sank Semmes got Into a boat nnd tho yacht picked him up and carried him to a French port. When Franco was asked to dcllvor him over that country docllned to do so, and the United States accepted Its utterance that Semmes was a legitimate admiral of a belligerent power, a worthy successor of tho famous Paul Jones of other days." FAIII.i:S 1111 TO DATE. Topcka Mall nnd Breeze. A tramp, who In his earlier nnd more prosperous dcys bad bcen a politician stopped nt a house, and, raising bis battered hat to tbo woman wbo came to the door with a deep frown on her face, said "Madam, I am a hungry wayfarer, but I do not como hero to ask for food or charity. noticed this house as I was passing and said to myself: 'I can toll by tho appearance of this place that It la presided over by a lady who Is cultured In mind, neat in person and an excellent cook.' I could not resist the temptation to ask If I might sit here for a few moments nnd rest." Then the lady said, with a benevolent smile: "I Bee, poor man, that you are no common tramp." She thereupon brought' out enough pie, cako and meat to feed a strong hired man. And wrhen tho tramp had filled himself to tho limit and moved off down the road without having been even asked to chop a stick of wood he communed with himself, saying: "Verbal glucose Ib cheap, but I know of nothing that ytcldB bigger returns on tbe investment." Moral thore Is nothing Ilko understand ing human nature. A stranger pausing along a road heard In tho dlstanco a tremendous bellowing and said to a companion: "I presume when we get In sight of that animal wo will find that ho is the largest and altogether the finest bull In this country." But when they finally camo to the place whoro tho animal was bellowing nnd pawing up tho earth they found that it was a narrow-hammed Texas bruto that would not weigh over 700 pounds and would not sell for moro than $17.50 In any market. Moral You never can tell by the amount of noise an Individual makes how much ice ho cuts In tho world. A farmer's boy, who was born weary, was Bent out to plow. Ho had been cautioned by his paternal nncoitor to labor diligently, but almost as soon an his ancestor was out ot He was sight ho concluded that ho would take a rest. Tho ftnit currcd was In Memphis. Tho ladies do:ldcd provisional congress from tho IouUvllie flisinct. V.u" ...V.':1-."."1. ."":':;., h u to raise funds to erect a monument to the " " :j; '"TC n confederate dead nnd adorn tbelr grave, I"' "r""',7,,M.; .id at with dowers. That was in May. 1S6C. i felt Inclined not to accent, but I went They selected me to deliver an oration lu Hlmwood ccmettry, Some time ue.'oro tho event tho mayor of the city called on mo and Informed mo that the military authori ties, who thon occupied Memphis, had ronm to him. ordering him to forbid the as- on to Richmond and was duly sworn In. That waa In February, 1861. "It la a fact not generally known that a number ot the men In the provisional con- . - w.rn tint nrlirlnaltv cnremlnntats. (Aloxandor Stephens, the vlco president, wra eeniblage- and the address, but as tho ceme not: neither was Ben Hill ot Georgia, nor . tc-ry was outsldo tho city, ho had declined Hlven of Virginia, and I wra not. with many I to tako any part In the maiier. a lew othora. But wo wero In tho current and wo days later on orderly brought me a letter i,.,i n do our best. There Is one thing I . from tno commanucr. teiiing roc mm He was a dreamy, unoluorvlng sort of youth and did not notice when ho sat down that a colony of busy ants wero doing business right there. Then, Just as the boy had dropped oft Into a peaceful slumber, about forty-flvo of tho ants took a recess from their rejular work and crawled up under tho boy'o pants and bit htm In several dozen places at once. Then tho boy waked from his slumber a little quicker than he had ever dono In his I lfo bofore and ran howling home, And hla father said as he bathed him with pain killer nnd such other liniment as happened to bo about the house. "My son, you will learn from this that there are things In this world that are a lot worse than work." Snrlng winds are pretty high In Kansas, but It seems to me they are zephyrs now to what they once were," remarked an old newspaper correspondent, as ho ordered drinks all around, In a corner drug itore, re lates a Wichita correspondent of the Chicago Inter Ocean. "Pcffer and his whiskers and Sockiess Jerry Simpson have taken the shine off ot the tornado stories we useu to write :or eastern naners. Mary Elizabeth Lease also did her sharo In wrecking the tornado busi ness for enterprising newspaper men. hy, I can recollect that about the time Wlchtta'a world-famous boom was on and tbe town growing nt the rate of n mile a day that I was good for six columns oi nign-wiuj btorlcs every week." "Sure." assented tho nignt euitor. "11111 thero'a really somo truth In the rise and fall of the homo-grown Kansas cycions. Hedgo fences and apple orchards nnd peach orchards and claim hunters' sod shanties bavo dono moro to tame Kansas brejzo-i than all our long-whlskcred pops. Twenty years ago you could start at tbo western border of Kansns. and drlvo half way acrojs tho stato without striking a yard tree, an orchard or a hedge fence. . Now It s differ ent, and it takes a broncho buster of a cyclono to make flvo miles without getting a tired feeling." "That's right." nut in the old-timo re porter as ho drank the last of his cough drops, "but the 'winds no mow ana craca their heels' out horo yet occasionally. You know Bud Johnson runs a chicken farm out two miles from Wichita?" "Yes, of course. Everybody knows nun. "Well. Bud's a friend of mine, and I drove out thcro with hlra a few days ago, and ho called tho chickens up. AH of 'em were Just otnrtln' pin feathers. " 'What, got all these spring cnicKcns a'ready, Bud?' I asked him. " 'I havo spring chickens tbe year rounu, said Bud, 'and always tho earliest In tho market, but I don't wnnt you to give mo away on It. I've got a place penned In with wire net at tho top of that little knoll yon der. As soon ns breozea oegin to blow In tho spring I drlvo In all tho superannuated chickens on the ranch, and In less than a week tho wind strips their covering off down to pin feathers and thcro you ore. Nice spring chickens, tremendous size for their age!" Plight of l''nriuer Smith' Ciiw. "That reminds' mo of Jim Smith's cow ono of the most thrilling specials I ever wrote, and all straight facts. One day In ho boom tlmca Smith came driving In to town from his farm llckety clip. Ho wanted tho Wichita fire department to come out nnd rescuo his best milk cor. When the hook-and-lnddcr company got there they found a tremendous long-homed b::ndle cow pinned up to tho sldo of Smith's red barn, thirty feet from the ground. She was literally 'up against It. and Smith and iMrs. Smith and tho hired man and entire Smith family had been trying for a week to get her down. " 'A stiff breozo klm up kind o' suddent like,' tbe old man explained, 'an' Brlndle was h'lsted beforo I had t!:ne to run a lariat over her lalgs an' aroun'd her horns and mako her fast to U 'mfbstantlal hole In the ground dug for thnt purpose. An' thar sbo Is, pinned up nglnst the barn for six days and n dyln' down of the breezes tha blowed her up 'thar." "That reminds me of a story a friend of mino told me," put In t!ie drug clerk, as he poured out some more cough drops for mo dlclnal purposes. "He vas walking across tho ilelds one day and tried to whistle. The wind was blowing pretty hard and tho whlstlo was no go. He puckered up his mouth, but not a sound camo from it. Six miles away another man was driving nlong on a road parallel to the whistling man. He met the whlBtlor next day and compli mented him on his whistling. " 'But I didn't whistle.' Bald my friend. 'I tried to, but tho wind blew so bard I couldn't make n sound.' Experiments proved that the Kansas spring wind had blown tho whistle six mtles away beforo It had tlmo to make a sound." "For years tho Santa Fo railroad main tained a continuous orchestra at the Wichita depot," said the nowspaper re porter. "The company had a lot of tele graph wires strung oveir tho depot, some tight and somo loose, with largo and small wires. Tho Kansas zephyrs blowing through these kept perfect time. Tho clerks noticed It, and by putting In an Ingenious wooden contrlvanco between tho wires they had all tho popular tunes of the day. Wichita first heard 'Johnny, Get Your Gun,' and 'Whlto Wings,' and I Want You. Ma Honey,' via tbe Santa Fe orchestra, which picked up the airs from Chicago drummers. Crop nioTrn Out of (irouaJ. "Western Kansas for years was known as 'the short-grass region,' because tbo wind blew so hard the grass never got more than two Inches high. A mr.n from 'Missouri moved out hero onco nnd sowed a crop of fall wheat. Ho put tho w'aeat In on a hill sldo field nnd next spring when It came up It was all In tho valley. Spring winds and fall breezes had mado av. Interchange ot crops In the two fields. Another man from Missouri had hla garden truck blown out of tho ground flvo times wefore ho learned to plant It a foot deep and weight It down with Hat I reins, Pioneers used to be In considerable fear of Indian raids on the border of the state and when John P. St. Johw was governor he used often to carry on talks from Topc'.:a with tbe commandant nt t'ort Dodgo it the wind waa blowing right. I onco heard Gen eral Miles ask Governor St. John to please send out a barrel of flrowater, and Governor St. John, who, you recollout, was a prohibi tionist and easy as a child, said that he didn't think they bad I: In tho arsennl. "Kansas winds wero pretty high for a fact in those days. I told you about Smith's cow being plnnec to tho side of tho barn. Well, not long after that Smith no ticed that somo scoundrel waa milking his cow over night. Brlndle came up every day with the sun, but didn't rIvo milk enough to spread over a dish of oatmeal. Smith finally stood guard ono night. Ho found tbat tbe cow took shelter from the wind behind some big bowlders. Tho wind whipped nround tho rocks with a sort of a rotary motion nnd milked tho cow." There was a pause after the correspondent told this. "Havo some more cough drops," snld the drug clerk, who likes to ?icar good stories. "Ono day when tho brezen wero pretty stiff," put In the newspaper man's crony, "some hunters out In Sumner county turned a bald caglo loose within twenty rods of tho nest ot its mate. Ordinarily nn eagle can make thirty miles an hour, but It took that eagle alt hours and fifteen minutes to make the twenty rods In the teeth ot a spring wind. 1 know this to be so, for 1 timed the flight." SOGHY'S GHKAT NIT.IJCII. Cherokee Tnrueil the I.atiRli 1'ium the Stnntom nt Tnhletiniih. "Soggy" Sanders, a noted full-blood Cherokee, who has held office ever since ho was old enough, talks the English language brokenly, reports tho Globo-Dcmocrat. When united States Senators Jones of Arkansas and Piatt of Connecticut were at Tahlciuah about eight years ago Investigat ing nnd looking Into Indlnn matters they held a meeting In tho opera houso and mado speeches to tho Cherokee senntors and councilors, ndvlslng them to take their lands In severalty and change their manner of government to becomo a territory or stato ot tho union. They also told tho Indians that tho Dawes commission would soon bo down I among them to treat for some change. the federal government desired In tho Indian I territory; that they camo among them as friends to advlso them for their best In terests. After they had finished their talks "Soggy," who was nn nttcntlvc listener for their remarks had been Interpreted Into Cherokeo by nn Interpreter "Soggy" aroso slowly, and In a very dignified and courteous manner Bald ho would like to make a few remarks. Senators Jones and Piatt wero anxious to hear him. Said Sanders: 'Yesh, It Is great fron's all tlmo good frlcn' to Injun Is whlto man, when ho want it some mo' Injun Ian'. Whlto mans who Jus' talk put me In mln' of a story I once heart It. Man goln' to get hung, he's lawyer tola hlm dls: 'I can save It neck from being hung.' 'How do dat?' asked it prisoner. 'I pay you $1,000 you savo It my neck.' 'All lite, said It dat lawyers, and he gave It dat lawyers moneys $1,000. Den dat lawyers ho tell It dat prisner: 'You go shoot It yourself in bed.' Dat's what white mans want It hero now he want It Chulluckco Indian to kill hlsso'f." This speech of "Soggy's" brought down the house, and tho staid United Stntoj senators Joined In the encore. The first installment of the New Serial Story The Path Beyond the Levee By F. A. CUMMINGS, ABSOLUTE SECURITY. Genuine Carter's Little Liver Pills. Must Bear Signature ef Recounting the Thrilling Adventures of Two Daring and Ingenious Young Men in Aiding the Escape of Fugitive Slaves, and the Romantic Motive Which Led Them Into Such a Per- ilous Undertaking, will ap pear in The Bee Next Sun- day Morning. im FaoSltalk Wrapper Balow. tttakawMfab 1F0I NEAIACHL ttmt aaaall d iMamYtYeT m IIUINESI. FM MUtUSNESS. FIR TSRPII LIVER'. FOR CONSTIPATION. FIR IAUIW SKIN. FOR THEC0MPLEXI0N IKS KUWpW liATUl. I would Hho to mention, which U known to tout few. which Is, tbat a motion was made In tho provisional congress, whose doings were) In sccritl to copBscat. all the d;bts due In the iouth to northern creditors. It -was favored by Jcffcnou DavU and the ad it was announced I was going 10 spean in memory of tho etiomlea of tho country, and forbidding mo to do It. I sent word back tbat I had not bcen a Midler, (hat I waa a denizen, If not a citizen, under the Tennos. see laws, and tbat I was asked by the lie Willltecl SprliiK f'liloUeil, Salt I.nko Tribune: A restaurant, not n thousand miles from Main Btroet, had the following sign out yesterdny: "Spring A farmer from the southern part of the county tonciuueu io iry ionie. mm wun ir rouiitlng his experience to a frleml In u smin utront million vlmrtlv after. "1 thought It wan ull-llred cheap." he said, "but then I didn't know, ho I Just went !n and ordered, The winter faui it n'i ii Inkn mill that ll lust meant escs didn't feel much disappointed, ao I told hlm men. the friend i.i iHv me a few bo. "You got them, I suppose?" nuVril when ho imuved. Yen; 1 sat 'cm, and they was spring rlil, ken suro enough, or mfgbty near It When I opened one the way tbo customers sprang tor me uoor waa a caution. ANEMIA is thin blood. It causes pale faces, white lips; weak nerves and lack of vitality. Ablood enriching, fat producing food-medicine is needed. ScHE tUufeiOTL goes to the root of the trouble, strengthens and en riches the blood, and builds up the entire system. For Anemic girls, thin boys. and enfeebled mothers, it is the Standard remedy. toe ud li.oo, all drnnltts, SCOTT k UOWWt. CbtmUu, Ntw Ymb. QURE iCKJHEAOAqHJt DENVER njiTiiMymj BUFFET LIBRARY GARS Best DlnlnE Oar Service. Priceless Information In a scaled euvelope. Marvelous treatment, remedies and ap pliance, fumlihed on trial andapproval. If notaOrand BuccaM, return them at our expense and Toy Nothing. We trust you. Vigor restored, losses checked. No C.O.D nor oilier deception. ERIE MEDICAL CO., BUFFALO, N.Y. jlLi,Nrrou (ie Falling Mtm. orr. DiwpiftwnM, oic, cautea wor ana inaiKrtioa, cauted br or and turtlu rcstora LctViUHtT in old or young-, tiaM or p! Uomambt dm bowiimmadUta improraiaant and affect a CUIU1 or young, and Ut a man f or ttudr, bull lauura, rretom inianltr tc Ion If taken in time. Th.lr Khera all qtliera fall. Inilit upooli.Tinaltngnulna AJaxTablfta. Thar hT curad thousands and will fora too. Wa gla a posltlf a written guarantee to af. fsctaenrainaach cosa or refund the montr, l'rlce Mate ft VK"Va t i1 Pffl-a? .I'011 IflOi uant) lor sa.60 br mall, in plain wrapper, opori receipt ofprica. (Ircolarsfrea. AJAX REMEDY CO., c.lt' h-or aala in Omaha, Neb., by ,'u. Fsi aytbe. 202 ti. 16 tu Bt.. fe.unn a uo., uui C. De Haven, urticarial. ruiiKtv' I la ft WI U.sr.su.l sot w itrlnur. CURE YOURSELF! Use IllgV for unnatural dl.ctiargrs. IntlammaMoui, Irritations or ulcerations of muonus lirmliranre. rainless, ana i.ot aitrlc fl.BU O.lkfi.B. TiuFiuii-.ntuiciLCa. " " poito'i-i. n aayararl in nj sfrngaTisia. j a Baja srilt ill I'luin via'Kir. TM ll.iu. or 1 lotil. l.'.Ti. V-g Circular sent on reuujs LCINCIHNtTI,' MANHOOD! WOMANHOOD! Manl ilimp put, raw) litutll' I7iiltii.st Ci)T TtoC td. prX TluKarr Madical I InsJItut Bai litJJU, Cla.la.atl. Oklo. KstatilUhed 1W7, The laea. lafgeslalia moal wiaeir auvwu m.iiiAiiicn in the D.8 Ilook seat sealed tree tor lour cents la sumoa IIOCUTA SANIjAIiIVOOD CAI'NUIiBS. Cures Gonorrhoea, Gleet, unnatural dls- This is a novel on a perfectly new American theme by a new American writer and i.B a very extraordinary story. No mere love of gain could tempt men into an undertaking of such deadly peril as is here recounted. The first link was forged by a personal and romantic sentiment re sulting from thojdiscovery of a girl held an a slave who was in reality white. This romance pervades the story. But a love of adventure for its own sake also played a large part in the experiences recounted. Two young men living in a Louisiana parish undertake to deliver negro slaves into the hands of tho Abolition Society in the North. No dan ger could be greater, no adventure more thrilling than those related here. And yet such was the adroitness and caution observed that the under taking succeeded, and successive large parties of human chattels were piloted into the promised land. Glimpses of life on tho plantation, the dismal swamps traversed in escaping, the superstitions of the fugitives, the country store operated as a "blind," tho part played by Horace Greeley and his associates in the north, and the happy issue out of so many, perils, are elements which com bine to mako a story which holds the attention and imparts an absolute sense of conviction. The tale is historic in the fidelity and vivid ness with which it revives to us a unique epoch in our national life. The style of the narrative is admirable for its purpose artless, direct, gra phic, tho Btylo of a man who tells a straight, strong Btory because tbat is the way ho thinks and talks. Read The Sunday Bee. charges In a tew daya. All driiRRlsIs, accept only uocuia, oy man i w, run airectu Dick e Co., 133 Centra St., New York.