10 Conservative. licnn river. All that delightful am invigorating Any wo zealously hunted We found occasioimlly snuill bunds o buirnlocs here and there among the bluffs and hills along the valley of the Republican. But these animals Avoro generally aged and of inferior quality besides such hunting , we found a greal quantity of blue-winged and green- winged teal iu the waters of the Repub lican and bagged not a few of them. There is no water-fowl , in my judgment , not even the redheaded duck and can- vassback duck , which excels in delicate tissue and flavor the delicious teal. A UEAU SOVEREIGN. Just a little before sundown , on the third day of our encampment , by the bluffs land of the Republican , Lieuten ant Bush and Mr. Hoth in one party , and John Talbot and I in another , were exploring the steep , wooded bluffs which skirted the valley. The timber growing at that time on the sides of these bluffs was"much of itof very good size and I shall never forget going down a precipitous path along the face of a hill and suddenly coming upon a strange and ghastly sight among the top limbs and branches of an oak tree which sprang from the rich soil of a lower level. The weird object which then impressed itself upon my memory forever was a dead Indian sitting upright in a sort of wicker-work coffin which was secured by thongs to the main trunk of the tree. The robe with which he had been clothed.lmd been torn away by buzzards and only the denuded skeleton sat there. The bleached skull leered and grinned at me as though the savage instinct to repulse an intruder from their hunting grounds still lingered in the fleshless head. Perfectly I recall the long scalp- lot-k , floating in the wind , and the sense of dread and repellant fear which , for the startled moment , took possession of me in the presence of this arborially interred Indian whoso remains had been stored away in a tree-top instead of hav ing been buried in the ground. A TUKKEY MEET. Not long after this incident wo four came together again down in the valley at a great plum orchard. The plum trees covered an area of several acres ; they stood exceedingly close together. The frosts had been just severe enough to drop the fruit onto the ground. Never before nor since have my eyes beheld - held or my palate tasted as luscious fruit as those largo yellow and red plums which were found that afternoon lying in bushels in the vallay of the Republi can. While we were all seated upon the ground eating plums and praising their succulence and flavor wo heard the click-cluck of a turkey. Immediately wo laid ourselves flat upon the earth and iu the course of ten minutes beheld a procession of at least seventy-five wild turkeys feeling upon plums. Wo re mained moveless and noiseless until those turkeys had flown up into the toll cottonwood trees standing thereabouts and gene to roost. Then after darkness had settled down upon the face of the earth we faintly discerned the black forms or hummoclts of fat turkeys all through the largo and leafless limbs of the cottonwoods which had been nearly defoliated by the early frosts of October. It required no deft marksmanship or superior sldll to bring down forty of those birds in a single evening. That number wo took into camp. In quick time wo had turkey roasted , tur key grilled , turkey broiled ; and never have I since eaten any turkey so well flavored , so juicy and rich , as that fattened - toned upon the wild plums of the Re publican valley in the year 18G1. SATISFIED TO HETUUN. At last , surfeited with hunting and its successes , wo sot out on our return to Fort Kearney. When about half way across the divide , a sergeant , one of the most experienced soldiers and plains men of the party , declared that he saw a small curl of smoke in the hazy dis tance and a little to the west and south of us. To my untrained eye the smoke was at first invisible , but with a field ijlass I ultimately discerned a delicate little blue thread hanging in the sky , which the soldiers pronounced smoke ascending from an Indian camp. Read justing the glasses I soon made out to see three Indians stretched by the lire seemingly asleep , while two were sitting by the embers apparently cook ing , eating and drinking. Very soon , liowover , the two feasters espied our wagons and party. Immediately they came running on foot to meet us ; the other three , awakening , followed them ; speedily they were in our midst. They proved , however , to bo peaceful Paw nees. Mr. John Heth spoke the lan guage of that tribe and I shall never for get the coolness with which these repre sentatives of that nomadic race informed him that Mrs. Heth and his little two- years-of-age daughter , Minnie , were in good health in their wigwam at Fort Kearney ; they were sure of it because ; hey had looked into the window of the Hoth home the day before and saw thorn eating and drinking at their noon day meal. ANNEXATIONISTS. These Indians then expressed a wish : 'or some turkey feathers. They were ; old to help themselves. Immediately ; hey pulled out a vast number of the argo feathers of the wings and tails and decorated their own heads with them. The leader of this aboriginal expedition , 11 conversation with Mr.Hoth , informed lim that although they were 011 foot they carried the lariats which wo saw hanging rom their arms for the purpose of hitch- ng onto and annexing some Cheyenne ) ouies which they were going south ; o steal. They walked away from lomo , but intended to ride back. The barbaric commander in charge of this larcenous expedition was named "Tho Fox , " and when questioned by Mr. Hoth as to the danger of the en terprise , and informed that ho might probably lose his life and got no ponies at all , Captain Fox smiled and said grimly that he know he should ride back to Pawnee village on the Loup the owner of good horses ; that only a year or two before that time ho had been alone down into the Cheyenne village and got a great many horses safely out and up onto the Loup fork among the Pawnees without losing a single one. "The Fox" admitted , however , that even in an ex pedition so successful as the one which he recalled there were a great many courage-testing inconveniences and an noyances. But ho dwelt particularly upon the fact that the Cheyennes always kept their ponies in a corral which was in the very center of their village. The huts , habitations , tepees , and wigwamsof the owners of the ponies were all constructed around their com munal corral in a sort of a circle , but "The Fox" said that he nevertheless , in his individual excursion of which ho proudly boasted , crawled during the middle of the night in among the ponies and was about to slip a lariat on the bell-mare without her stirring , when she gave a little jump and the bell on her neck rang out pretty loudly. Then he laid down in the center of the herd and kept stillvery still , while the horses walked over him and tramped upon him until he found it very unpleasant. But very soon he saw and heard some of the Cheyeunes come out and look and walk about to see if anything was wrong. Then he said ho had to stay still and silent under the horses' hoofs and make no noise , or die and surely bo scalped. At last , however , the Chey- enues , one after another , all went back into their wigwams to sleep , and then he very slowly and without a sound took the bell off from the mare , put his lariat on her neck quietly , led her out and all the herd of Cheyenne ponies followed. Ho never stopped until ho was safe up north of the Platte river and had all his equine spoils safe in the valley of the Loup fork going to wards the Pawnee village where Genoa now stands. The Fox was an "expansionist" and an auuexatiouist out of sympathy for the oppressed ponies of the Cheyeuues. "Tho Fox" declared that the number of horses he made requisition for at that time on the stables of the Cheyennos was three hundred. At this statement some incredulity was shown by Mi- . Heth , myself , and some others present. Immediately "The Fox" throw back his woollen blanket which was ornamented on the inside with more ihau two hundred small decorative designs of horses. Among the Pawnees , and ikowiso , if I remember rightly , among the Otoes and Ouiahas , robes and blau-