'Cbe Conservative. THE COSMOS. [ Foil THE CONSEUVATIVK. ] Proliflo complex of existing things , Forever working , ns with tireless zeal , Regardless of what men naniu woo or weal , Thy nugUHt drnnm ono prime lessen brings ; From smallest bird that in thohedgerow singfl , From tiny motes that in the sunbeam reel , To Buns remote beyond thought's fleetest wings , All , through the teeming fields spread out in space , Whcr 'er a form or being may bo found , Or silimt , or when heralded with sound , All play their parts exactly and with grace. No transient pageant this , nu > ro picture bright , But , living whole , bathed in eternal light. EDWIN EMEH'SON. Paris , Franco. TWO EARLY Sl'ORTS. Iti the summer of 1883 the first gentlemen - men sportsmen who ever came west for amusement , so far as the writer has learned , crossed the plains and pene trated the territory of the mountain Indians , under the escort of one of Sublette & Campbell's fur-trading par ties. Everything was known and talked over among the little world of trappers and traders , and this expedition at tracted a good deal of attention at the time , as appears from the frequent mention one sees of it in the literature of the period. There were several of the gentlemen , but the names of only five have come down to us. These were Captain Stuart , Doctor Harrison , Mr. Edmund Christy of St. Louis , a Mr. Brotherton , and Colonel C. A. Whar- field of the U. S. army. Readers of Irving's Bonneville may perhaps recall this party , as it appears several times in the course of that rather fanciful uarra tive ; the smaller circle of readers who know Jim Beckwourth's memoirs are more likely to remember the encounter between the redoubtable Jim and Cap tain Stuart. Some further information which has come to the writer's notice , regarding the leading members of the party , may be of interest to THE CON SERVATIVE'S readers. Stuurt. Irving , who got the most of his information mation from Captain Bonneville himself , says nothing of Doctor Harrison , and speaks of Captain Stuart ( he spells it Stewart ) as "a gentleman of noble connections , who was amusing himself by a wandering tour in the Far West. " The principal thing that he has to tell of them is how they fell in with the Crows , whom he calls vagabond free booters , in September , 1888 , in the south eastern part of what is now Montana. The Crows welcomed their visitors , and set about robbing them of everything they possessed. "Captain Stewart be haved with great spirit , " saya Irving ; nevertheless the honest Crows stripped the entire party to the bone , including their guide and interpreter , the notable Thomas Fitzpatriok "Broken Hand. " Fitzpatriok , however , by employing sufflcient eloquence and management , sncceded in prevailing upon them to return their rifles and horses and the most of their traps ; but as he departed with his friends the repentant Orowo made another sweep at them and nabbed a number of their animals. BeeUwourth , Curiously enough , we have the In dians' own version of this affair from the truthful Mr. Beckwourth , who was then a chief among the Crows and had just attained the highest possible honor , the title of Medicine Calf. He was turning his chieftanoy to good account and drawing a large salary from thb American Fur Company for directing the furs taken by his red children into that company's trading-post. He speaks of Stuart as an English officer ( he was Scotch ) "who had figured conspicuously under the Iron Duke ; " ( it was in fact only 18 years since Waterloo ; ) and of Harrison as "a son of the hero of Tippecanoe. " He says further that , while camping a short time before among the Oheyennes , they had taken part "for the sport of shooting Indians" in a fight between the warriors of that tribe and a party of Crows , and had in fact them selves shot the last survivor of the Crows , a chief whom the Cheyennes had difficulty in finishing ; and that they were recognized to that effect by the Crows , who were on the point of mur dering them all before he knew any thing about it. By taking prompt action he averted this catastrophe , and he also , he says , found and restored all Fitz- patrick's goods except some cloth , and all his horses but five. Then he tells how Captain Stuart ungratefully called him a d d rascal , and was rebuked by Doc tor Harrison and Colonel Wharfield ; how he afterwards solicited his aid in recover ing a valuable horse and undertook to provide generously for him if he lost standing with his employers thereby ; and finally sought to shoot him , and offered "a certain individual" a thous and dollars to perform that service for him. Medicine Calf Jim had a poor opinion of Captain Stuart , but of Doctor Harrison risen he says that' 'if only for his noble father's sake , I would have defended him at the risk of my own life. " Carnon. Kit Carson , on the other hand is re ported by his biographer , Peters , as speaking in almost as warm terms of the captain ; "for the goodness of his heart , " he quotes him assaying , "andnumerous rare qualities of mind , he will always be remembered by those of the moun taineers who had the honor of his acquaintance. " Now as to what is otherwise known of them , Captain Sir William Stuart was the owner of a large estate in Perthshire , where he was living thirty years later in a house filled with Indian trophies and other curiosities. Ho was at that time about seventy , broad- shouldered and very active , though gouty and irascible. Ho spent several years in the wilds of America ; in the summer of 1884 we find him accompany ing Nathaniel J. Wyeth in the latter's second journey west , and in October of that year Wyeth gave him letters of introduction to friends back in Yankee- land. There is a tradition that ho wrote a book about his adventures , but nobody seems to have seen it. HitrrlHoii. As to Dr. Bnnjauiin Harrison , he was , as Beckwonrth understood , a son of General William Henry Harrison , who eight years after these events became president of the United States. He was also , therefore , uncle to his namesake who became president in 1889. The latter bears witness concerning him as follows : "He died when I was a lad. He was of a wild and adventurous dis position , participated , I think , in the Texas war of independence , and in a good many other frontier scrapes , but I have no particular knowledge of the events of his life. " This may be characterized as faint praise. Wyoth. The recent publication of the corres pondence and journals of "Captain" Wyeth throws light on a great many personalities of that period. Doctor Harrison is one thus illuminated. Wyeth was thrown with him a good deal , and , for instance , carried some things from him to his father the general on his way east in the fall of 1833. This is what he has to say con cerning him in a letter to William Sublette in February , 1834 : "I place little reliance on any information or any reports through the Am. F. Co. especially by Doct. Harrisons hands. " This too is faint praise. The root of the matter seems to appear in a statement in the journal of Charles Larpenteur , who mentions , in a list of persons who started together from St. Louis in May , 1833 , "Captain Stewart from England , on a pleasure trip , and old General Harrison's son , with the view to break him from drinking whis key. " But if the old general thought he was sending him where there was none of that commodity , he was de ceived. I judge , however , that the party broke up with the beginning of the trapping season that fall , Captain Stuart return ing to St. Louis and Doctor Harrison betaking himself to the depths of the mountains ; for Wyeth speaks in one of nis letters of his having "taken an outfit from Fitzpatric & Co. of some few horses and men for the trapping buis- ness. A. T. RICHARDSON.