Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, April 28, 1886, Page 5, Image 5
THE OlVIAHA DAILY BEEj'JVVEDNESPAY , APKIL 28. 1880. 5 HOG CHOLERA EXPERIMENTS , The State Univcrjity Faculty Endeavor to Secure Aid to Oarry Them On , A VETERINARY COURSE NEEDED. Tlio Ltvo Stock Commission Vavorn- lilo to GrnntiiiK the llnqticst Or. Theories II ap nt tlio Cnpltnl , | ino TUB nrr.'s MNCOI.X ncrtnttftl Ciiaticollor Mnntmlt nnd Trofn ser Ik'SSoy , of tlio university faculty , wore in c'onfurenco with the live stock sanitary coniiiiiislon yesterday , with the object of inducing tlio eommhsionurs to pay the expense of conducting the hog cholera ( jxporiinciit on the &tnlo furm. When tlio idea of sturtiiig n school of veterinary science in connection with the university wus broached lust winter the regents on- tcrcd into corri'spondcnco with Dr. liil- lingof ) New York , and invited linn to como to Lincoln nnd dlsc-uss the matter with them. Dr. Millings was present ut thu SL'ini-Minuinl nii-uting of the board in January , nnd after n talk \\illi him thu regents informally nnnounccd that they were sat'iHllcd that lie was the proper DIM- son to pul ut the head of tlio proposed school. In order to satisfy thumsulvos that there was a demand among the tax payers for such an institution , formal action was deferred until the regular Juno meeting. It was arranged with Dr. Hilling' ) , however. that he .should come b.ick to Lincoln and conduct a series of experiments in hog cholera on the nnivcrMty tarm , and give the people of the state to under stand thai he was to work tor tin ; henelit ot ono of their most important interosU. The university managers agreed lo furnish a laboratory and assistants , but for want of funds could not give any financial assist ance until an appropriation could bo .se cured from tlio legislature next winter. Dr. Hillings came to Lincoln , acconliiig to agreement , and the faculty , in order to get him at work , applied to the sani tary commission for a donation of $10(1 ( or $ . ' , OJ from the fund at their disposal. The aid is asked on the ground that the ex periments in which the money is to bo used are really a part of the work in which tlii ) cummission uro engaged , anil will be. ol great importance to the stock growers with whom the commissioners nave almost exclusively to deal. After Chancellor Mannatt had presented his case , Major Hirncy. of Iho commission , .said that , nn.xt to the education of thu children of tlio state , the most important and beneficial work in which the Uni versity faculty ami commission could en gage was Iho discovery of a remedy or preventive of hoc cholera , a plague that is lapidly decimating Ifebriska : swine , and causing a loss of millkms f dollars annually , lie was of the opinion that the university farm was intended for jusl such purpose , and intimated that lie _ foi one would bo willing to gr.mt tin ; assist mice desired if he could have any assurance anco that any tangible end would result Dr. Hillings , in reply to a direct ipterj as to whether ho was of the opinion tha anything could bo attained or demon stratcd by the proposed experiments said ho could only hivy that the partia success that bad attended similar work ii Europe led him to think that somullfm ; might bo gained in the end. Dr. Pas tour's proposition that the di.scase variei in severity according to tno breed o swine , that is , that some families won more susceptible lo it than others , ho wa inclined to think was wrong. It is trm that dilVercnco in age has something t < do with the degree of severity , but tin breed has not. It was more probable Dr. Hillings said , that failure to obtaii uniform results from Pasteur's vaccini virus was , in his opinion , duo to soni fault in preparation rather than dillot enco in the animals operated upon , and ! would bo ono of his studios to ascurtai : and avoid it. Chancellor Mannatt then said that h would like to be thoroughly assured tha there was a demand tor a votcrinar school , and that after the class wa opened there would bo students cnoug to warrant continuing it. Tno troubl with most institutions of that kind , am especially agricultural colleges , is wan ot patronage. The young men do nc seem dc-sirous of taking such a course c instruction. Mr. Harnharthaid that the commissio was nearly run to death with requests t furnish veterinarians. Thuru is a sin prising scarcity of competent men i that line , and a big demand for then Ho could put four or five veterinary sui goons in good positions lit once if 1 : could llnd them. Professor Uessoy said that the mai thing western boys wanted to know bi fore entering on a special course was tin there would bo a place for them whc they graduated. This assured thei would bo no scarcity of students. The meeting adjourned without any d cisivo action being taken , but it is untie stood that the commission , if tlio go ornoris willing , will give the aid dcsirci A UOirUlI KOAl ) TO TICAVUL. That colored people sometimes hai rough sailing on the sea of matrimony : well as "white trash" is evidenced by petition on lilo in the district court : which John Sopor links for a divon from his wife Elizabeth. John says tli they were married at Jubilee , Poor county , Ills. , in 1874 , and that Ins wi has been guilty of cruelty and abu toward him that in his advanced yea he cannot bland. According to John petition Elly.ahcth has been in the hal of kicking him out of bed , callinz him "d-d old black fool , " and imimgnh the legitimacy of his birth in rather fu ciblo and inelegant language. Win words failed to express her feolin toward him , Elizabeth would playful throw a clock weight at his head , make a dash at him with a butcher kid ! On one occasion she locked herself aw ; from him lor a whole month , which Jo ) instead of being thankful for , as me men would bo under the circumstanc < parades in his petition as ono of h most cruel nets. In 1878 this amial wife left her husband to bear the trit and tribulations of life alone , and Jol now wanU a legal bcparatiou on t ground of desertion. CJtUMIKD UV A IIOKSK. Monday evening William Pratt , employe at Heeler's ' livery barn , start to ride ono of the hor.ses , a largo stalllc for exorcise. Just after leaving t stable the animal i eared and threw hli self backward , falling directly on top Pratt , who was unable to get out of t Hudillo. The high pommel struck him the stomach nnd , forced by the weight the horse , indicted serious internal in ; rios. Dr. Itccd , the attending physici ; says the man is very badly hurt and 1 but smill chances of recovery. Pratt I young man , less than 30 years old , a was married about two mouths ago , mtiii' : MENTION. The state board. of equalization had meeting yesterday afternoon and listen to the arguments of the railway t agents against the valuation placed railway property in this state. S. Ilighloyman representing the Mlsso Paciticj Frank P. Crandon , of I Bious City & Paciiio and Fremont , E horn & Missouri Valley : C. D. Dorm : . of the I ) . & M. ; W. H. Kussoll , of I Union Pacific , and John D. Howe , of ( Minneapolis tc Omaha , were uroscnta mudo prot'iits which the' board tc nailer consideration. William O.'iShea , the printer , is putt ! out circulars nnnonncine that on Juno ho will commence tlio publication of the Commercial Gazette , a daily paper in which market reports and general commercial news will bo a specialty. Questions concerning the case of war relics in the secretary of state's oflico have been put in so thick and fast by vis itors to the state house that Captain Win- terstccn has arranged to deliver two lec tures daily , at 1050 ! a. in. ami 2:30 p. m. , in which the history of the relics will bo graphically told for the edification of all curiosity hunters. The United States Life Insurance com pany , of Now York , Is about to begin business in Nebraska. Ten sctiool bonds of $300 caeh were sent In from diilrict No. 2 , of Pierce county , yesterday for rcgistralion. Also ono of 010 from district No. IB , in Holt county , Henry James has filed in Iho district court a petition for divorce from his wife , Itobeeca E James , whom ho claims de serted him last September for one Uobcrt Hatenian , with whom she is now living on P , between Ninth and Tenth streets , in this city. The FreeWill Baptist Focictyn new or ganization , has bought a lot at the cor ner of 11 and Sixteenth streets to build a cinirch on. Hov. A. V. Hryant has been chosen as pastor. Two brothers-in-law named lloncdict and Meiers got into a dispute Monday night over the Helllenieiit of an account , and Meyers knocked Hcnedict down with a poker. The lattcr's wife , on coming to his aid , was also knocked down , and n second later her sister was similarly dis posed of. The row raged until a crowd gathered and the police worn called , when there was a cessation of hostilities under a Hag of truce. No arrests Cieorgo 15o > plinan , the grocer , was fined * . ; > .70 in police court yesterday for kecpjngsovcn barrels of oll'ensive rub bish in his baek yard after being notified by the police to remove it. An ex-convict , named Enright , who was jailed on a mjnor charge Monday , was discovered cutting his way out of tlio city jail yesterday morning. At the council meeting Monday night an ordinance was passed riMiuinng ped dlers of meal to pay a city Ik-enso of $4 per day. The butchers wanted to make it $10 , but the council thought $1 steep enough. bTATE AiiIVATS. : ( H. E. Spanglor , Omaha ; L. F. Hilton , Hlair ; Pat. O. Hawes. Omaha ; F. M. Din ning , lecuinsoh ; F. 13. Whymer , Adam ; George M. Humphrey , Pawnee City ; S. I ) Stewart , Omaha ; A. M. Stark , lvork ; II. U. Smith , Omaha ; K. S. Malouey , jr. , and N. A. Silverthorn , llumboldt'o. ; A. uoy , Clarke , Ashland ; G. llovell , Nebraska City. City.A A cold discomfort. Hod Star Cough Cure happiness. No opiates , no poison. Famous AVnr Cliargcrs. In an article commending the people of Virginia for providing a homo tor the warhorse of Stonewall Jackson till it tiled at the ago of 'M , the London Tele graph says : There is , perhaps , nothing connected with the "romance of war" as to which the popular imagination in dulges in more extravagant nights than the subject of chargers which once car ried great soldiers upon the Held of honor Wo know from Plutarch that , with the exception of Alexander the Great , no man dared to mount Buce phalus , the noble war-steed , upon whoso head a black mark resembling an ox was impressed , the rest of his body , like that of Napoleon's favorite charger , being white. It was renresontcd that Buce phalus always kimlt down when ap- proachcd by his master , and that , when the pair were taking part in the great engagement which was fatal to Porus. the Indian monarchBucephalus received a heavy wound , and dropped ( lead after carrying the Macedonian king out of battle and landing him in a safe spot. The horse was said to have been iiO years old when ho died , and as an afl'ec- tionato tribute to his memory Alexander built a city called after htm upon the banks of the Hydaspes. Who , again , that has read Southey's fascinating "Chronicle of the Cid" can Imvo forgotten Havieca , the charger whom Spain's scini-mvtliical champion bestrode in a hundred battles ? It is re lated by Southoy that when Hoderigo Kuy Diaz commonly called "tho Cid , " from an Arabic word meaning "the chief , " or "Lord" was taken in his boyhood to choose a horac ho passed over the best steeds and selected a shabby-looking colt. His god-father accordingly called tnc boy "bavieca"or a booby , tor making such a silly choice , and thus the name devolved upon the horse , who survived Ids master for two years and a half , and finally was burled at Valencia. After the death ot the Cid no man was permitted to get up on the back of Bavieea , who may , there- f pro , bo haul to Imvo died in odor of sanc tity. Scarcely less poetical is the legend adopted by tlio great Italian poet Ariostc in connection with Hoiartlo , or Hayardo , the famous steed of Uinaldo , and once the property of Amadis of Gaul , It is recorded > corded by Ariosto that Boiardo was diS1 covered in a grotto by the wizzard Mala gigi , who gave him and the magic sword Fusberta , which was found ii the same spot , to the wizard' ; couzin , Uinaldo. Headers of Ilomei are aware that nearly overj o chieftain who fought for or against Troj s had sonio celebrated horse or horse ! which he drove in Ills chariot , and upoi n which Homer bestows a name or names e Coining down to our own times , what i t wealth of affection has been lavishei a hi net ) 1815 upon Copenhagen , the thee o roughbrcd chestnut charger bestriddet o by the duke of Wellington at thu batth s of Waterloo ! Wo know from the "Stm , s Hook" that Copenhagen was a gr.mdsoi it of Eclipse , and that ho was bred by Gen a Grosvonor in 1808. After running 1111 g successfully as a racehorse in 1811 am 1813 , Copenhagen was sold by Gen. Gros u vonor to Lord Londonderry , who tool ; s him out to the peninsula , whore , short ! ; y after the battle of Salamanca , ho wa ir bought from Lord Londonderry by tin 3. earl of Wellington such was then on y great captain's title for 400 guineas u Copenhagen was as the late Sir Tat it ton Sykcs often loved to remind his hcai s , ors a little horse standing about half ai > r inch over liftoen hands iu height. Tli lo duke was in the habit of saying that n Is day was long enough to tire him , am u that no sight or sound , however unoi 10 pected , could make him start. It woul perhaps have been bettor if Coponhnge had tired somewhat on that last an , n most famous day which saw him carr d the Iron Duke upon a battle Hold. It i ii , related by Col. Gurwood that when tli 10 duke descended from the saddle whle i. ho had occupied for eighteen coiisccutiv jf hours , Copenhagen let Hy with both hin 10 legs , and narrowly missed his master' in head and chest. Thu incident occnrre of in the little Belgian village from wluc , i- the great battle , fought two miles awa ii , upon the plateau of Moat St. Jean , taki is its immortal name. Despite him mibbi a havior Copenhagen was brought baek t id England and enjoyed what other trail atlantic kinsmen call "a high old time , between 1815 and his death in 1625. Ii a was 7 years old when ho carried tli id duke at Waterloo , and was 17 when 1 vx died , full of honors at Strathfieldsayt in The Duchess made a point of carrying inL. bit of bread every day after -luncheon t L.ri her favorite in the paddock. In udditio 10 she frequently were a bracelet made < 10k Copenhagen's hair , and when the ol k10 horse died ho was.buried with full rail 10 tarj * honors , the duke and duclicss then iio selves being chief mouruurs. id ik When pain aiultickness rend thebro St. Jacobs Oil soothes and permanent ! hpaU. BATTLING WITH BORN DEVILS General Crook's ' Campaign Against the Wily and Villainous Apaches. The Most Snvngo nml Klitslvo Ilnlr- liUtcrs Alive The Country nil Arid Desert Flunked wltli Inaccessible Moun tains. Staff CorrMponctaicc Los Angeles Time * . FoitT HOWIE , A. T. , April B 1830 'Tho California liar 1ms amassed a nionu- mental notoriety not honestly his own. Ho is not the premier prevaricator of tltc universe. Ho does well for liis gifts , but he's over-matched. The boss , un approachable anil supreme twister of truth's caudal appendage isn't ho of the g. c. , but the licry , untamed , mouth ful Arizonian the multitudinous gentle man who lias been feeding the Associated Press with reports of the Apache cam- paingns , particularly the present one. Of these reports I believe it moderate to Say that not ono in liftecu has been ap proximately true. Most of this econo mizer of truth dwells in Tombstone and by what scratch did Tombstone ever carom on the frigid facts ? Part of htm hangs out in Tucson that arid aggre gation of toughness , adobe and spare time where people have too much leisure to tell the truth. Ilu has aKo some members at large in other parts of the territory. And when ho unbutton4 his mouth , it shall be a pity if you don't get sonu' news. Hut , in honest and .sober factthe extra territorial papers have been AIlOMINAUI/r Alll'ini ) in the matter of war news from this sec tion. No nowipapcr , until the Time * , has hud a representative anywhere near the field. The Associated press has had no agent within one hundred miles of any lighting ; nor has it sent auy poison even to headquarters for news. No dis patches have been .sent out from any where by any actually posted person , un til within a very few days. It is not the policy of this department to liirlit m the newspapers. Crook is a soldier , not a war correspondent ; and he has , perhaps , carried his grim dignity to mi extreme in not making public the facts that would vindicate him. HOW WB IIA.V12 GOT "NIVWS. " Mayhap 'tis an errant , "cow-puncher" who lopes into Tombstone , fills his hide with intestine-corroder , and begins to shoot off his war news. He hasn't been within fifty miles of tlio Held , but a little thing like that doesn't bother him. Ho can tell you more about it in a day than Crook ever dared to know. "Bar-keep" takes it all in and retails it to the next cuss-tomer ; the u. c. pours it into the elastic receptivity of the Associated Press agent , and the A. P. a. toots it to a gap ing world. Or , perchance , some dis charged mulc-porsmider from the mili tary pack-train turns himself loose on the first unprotected settlement he strikes ; and the rest of the story is carried out as per programme above. Yet , again , it is the gentle tin horn gambler who cajoles his hours of cnso by putting up a cold deck against unsophisticated truth , and deals a pat hand to the agent of the great news dis- rtisnenser. These are not guesses , but plain .statements of the way in which the "news" for which we pay has been born. I have in my hand at this moment specific clippings train jiist&uch sources and none other. Hut they were whooped up , all over the country as the latest news. J don't argue that it is absolutely impossi ble for drunken cowboy , deposed burro- beater or tin-cornucopia professor k some lime stumble upon the truth. Acci dents will happen. Nor do I kiiow thai the associated press is to blame. It has been imposed upon , like all the rest ol us. Aside , however , from the ineroli unreliable sources from which the news has been drawn , there is a , big , strong anti-Crook ring , of unknown periphery of many diverge materials , of great evi dent weight , and homologous only in tin desire to "down Crook. ' When I go time I'll measure ttie diameter of tlii : ring as closely as may bo ; meantime , t ( a few general facts , which are all-impor tnnt preliminaries to any statement as t < this > campaign. No man can grip the full breadth of tin situation , who does not , to start with know this Arizona country , root am branch ; and none can get even a iingoi in Truth's pie who has not a fair reahza tion of the following physical facts : N < campaign in the civil war , or in any o the northern Indian wars , was ever so en tangled and crippled by topographica cussudncss. In the first place , then , ArACIIKUOU IS A. DKSKKT , partially redeemable , it is true , by the future turo development of artesian and can : ; irrigation , nnd already dotted with semi occasional oases. Hut I can lead you 50 miles , in a not palpably circuitous route and in all that hideous stretch you slml see not one drop of water , save the prcc ions fluids in our water-kegs. This arn desert is not one rust sea of drifting sand It is ono of the most mountainous suction of the whole country. And you will iini square miles of it carpeted with the Etru < can gold of fragile poppies , and othe miles of many another llower. The gra sngo brush ; the greasowood's glaucou green ; the emerald daggers of the amok the duller-hued bayonets of the aloi topped with a banner of snowy blooin- these diversify all its valleys , while her and there loom the vast cundelabras c the giant cactus. All tills is tosthotic bu not tilling. Ride twenty miles acres your llowery nltiin , mid you would swa your tongue for a sun-baked sponge Ride fifty , without water , and you will d well , indeed , if you over sue sanity ugaii It is u country from which , sans water , bunk in shcol would bo a positive relic IIAGGKU KAN'OKS. Prime features of this section are tli mountains. Fancy an irregularly , ui milating but regularly thirsty phiin c 300 miles , broken by but throe or fen subterranean water courses. Upon tlr vast area a wilderness are countless peat and ridges , planted hap-hii/ard. Hui the world over and you will find 11 more inhospitable and savage moui tains. Shaggy , with sharp rocks an sharper cactus , they rise 000 to as man thousand feet above the circumlluei plain , their highest peaks wooded an snow-bound. You shall pass within mile of such a hill , and have no moi notion of its impossibility that a cow hi of the hereafter. Try to climb the smal est and you will find out. There neve have been but two animals which ha\ loomed up as successes in scaling thci rocks the mountain sheep and tl Apache. Eitiicr skips over them HI rolling off a .og , These ranges for such an "underground railway" as cui not bo beat. A man of ordinary eecrc ivoness could slink from Colorado Mexico along these Apache trails at never be seen by human 03-0. None b the high-circling buzzard and prowlir coyote would note bin passing. Skill ing through the mountains by day , dus ing across the interjected valleys I night , lie could bo as unobserved a if 1 HUiatOWEU UNnEUOKOUNt ) . And even should some casual husti glance detect him , he has but to shin yonder crest , nnd he it * safe. Ho c : Kill 500 men as fast as they can come him himself almost absolutely une posed. And then he can sucak bai from sheltering rock to rock , until he beyond pursuit. This , of course , qu tl supposition that his foes uro whites. I couldn't play that on. the Apache. If man who reully hankered to hide o hero cot caught o/ / killed , it would be because - cause ho was" either a blamed fool or plnyihg to vory-hsml luck , and yet there arc acres of good rational people all over this country who fancy that all there is to this Apache business is to chase Lo ovpr a field until ho gets tired and t'lon ' perforate him with a 45-70 , or tic him up and bring him Into camp in an express. That's the breed of geography they raise out hero. Npw for TUB NATtm" OK THE NATIVE. Trying to hit the bull's eye of this matter - tor , at my limited verbal range , is like trying to la so n broncho steer with u yardof sowinir p6tton. Hold the dic tionary up by the tail , and still 1 can't shake out the vocabulary to phrase- the facts. Language will scarce graze the skin but here a try. The North American Indian , by-ami- largo , has never been notorious as n dude or an ass in war. Crude his methods may bo.but they are effective. It has put the'"superior" while man to his trumps to "get away with" him ; and it never would have been done but for infinitely better weapons , later superior number ? , and u judicious use of whisky. Some tribes have naturally inclined to peace and endurance of wrong ; some have fought fearfully at the pinch ; and some are nous' HUTCH BUS hereditary slayers. Foremost in the latter class has always stood the Apache For warfare in his own domain ho has been , and is today , without a peer. From timu untold ho has been a pirate by profession , a robber to whom blood was sweeter than booty- anil botli as dear as life. Untold geiier ations before the Caucasian outpost en croached upon his Sahara , ho was driving his quart/ tipped shafts through agri cultural A/.tco , peaceful Puoulo or plod ding paisano. The warlike tribes to his east and north , too , were represented in many a jetty leek at his belt. From Guaymas to Pueblo , and from San Antonio to where the Colorado laps the arid edge of California , ho swept the country like a whirlwind. Of what he has done to keep his gory hand in since blonde scalps first amused his knife , I need not remind you now. Not only is ho thu most war-loving of American Indians. Ho is nKo TUB UO33 WAHltlOlt. Ho is strong to an endurance simply impossible in a more endurable country. Ho has the eye of a hawk , the stealth of a coyote , the courage of a tiger and its moroilessnoss. He is the Bedouin of the New World. His horses will subsist on a blade of grass to the aero , and will travel 110 miles in twenty-four hours tliqruby , without dropping dead at the finish. Ho knows every foot of his sav age realm better than you know your own parlor. lie finds lood and drink where wo would perish for want of both. Ho has a fastness wherever you may strike him , and it is practically impreg nable. Lay siege to him , ami he quietly slips out by some canyon brck door , and is away before you know it. The dan- gerousncss of an Indian is jn the inveres ratio of his food supply. His whole life an unceasing struggle to tear a living from vixenish' nature , the Apache is whetted down to a foioeity of edge unat tainable by the Indian of a section where wood , water and faciln game are ready to his hand. Why , his six-year-old boy will ride a broncho farther in a day , and over a rougher eomftry , than you could ride the gentlest stehd. These kids who worn out wih the hostilds were doing it right along. I ' Hut this is not all that puts the Apache ut the head of his class lie has pals to STAND Itt WITH HIM. From the outstretched arni of pursuit , he slides down into old Mexico as if the hills and valleys were n greased pole but tak ing time to murder , rob and ravish in transit , Ho gets safely into Sonora , sells his stolen stock , without any trouble , caches the stolen arms , ammunition and money ; enjoys a genteel loaf in the Mexi can Sierras until ho is rested ; swoops down upon hacienda and village , killing a few people and gathering up all the loot ho can pack or drive ; and Hits back like a black shadow to his Ari/.onian strongholds. The better class of Mexi cans desire his extermination oven the lower classes sometimes organize against him ; but be finds plendy of degraded na tives to help him. The Mexican line is not only 11 line it is a wholesale "fence. " and safe to say , some poor , mescal-corned paisono is not the Apache's only pal. There arc white Americans who "batten on his bloody booty- You will find them in Tombstone , Tucston and many another place on cither side the lino. If the source of the raid-causing whiskey were published , tltcre arc some Arizona , mer chants who would writhe some but at $20 a gallon they take their chances. It is to one of these beneficiaries of murdei that the present lapse of a superb success is duo. I have already told you about the sweeping and unconditional snroendei by which the Gray Fox became possessed of Gcroniiuo and his whole band , in eluding every Indian oft" the reservation , except Mangus and two or three bucks who have been out four years , and hat nothing to do with the present campaign Now for the unhappy sequel. our AGAIN. There is no doubt that Goronlmo ant his band surrendered iu good faith. Thoj had no other earthly reason for givinp themselves up , but wore tired of the wai and glad to come in anil takq theii chances. Whatever disposition might be made of them , they knew that Ctoofc wouldjijive them fair play. This abso lute confidence of the Indians in his honor is almost as important a factor it Crook's success as his matchless knowl edge of their traits. The hostilns wouh not have surrendered thus to any othei man. All was serene ; but ono of the satin MALIftN l.VrUlINCKS which from year to year , have fanned tin savage spark to the blaze of war , agaii got in its work. The great BurnardiiK rancho runs along the Sulphur Spring valley , from tliis side of the Hue , dowi many leagues into the Sonora. Indeed the surrender took place on it , twenty live miles below our boundary. On tin ranoho , some 400 yards below the line lives a Swiss American named Tribou lett long notorjwiH In Tombstone as "fenco" for "riistjors. " He was als tried some years ago , for stealing barlo , from the govcrftiucnt , at Fort IIuachuc.M It isn't easy , ovuu yet , to convict a mai in this territory , and ho got oft' . Hoi still doomed il' > "fciico ; " and , infinite ! worse , furnishes'whisky to the Indians Ho makes no sifcrct of it. nnd snaps hi fingers at protefls. \ On thoSGth. the da before thu surriKiddr- was noticed thi : Goioiilmo and votlrar bucks were guttin pretty full , It has Mnco boon discovorc that Triboulotbc had smuggled live liv gallon demijohns to a secret place nou r their fastness , jStlll , thoybiirrondorod it u right , and came along handsomely as fu 3 as Simiggler's\aprings , where the a camped on the night of the 29th , Ther they came in coptaqt with .MOKE OK THIU'UI.iTT'S ) "WIIISKV , despite all possible precautions to kco them from it. Some of Maus's India o fccouta had smashed this white scoundrel il whisky barrels , and destroyed all tl t whisky in sight. That's a rather sarca tic commentary on our nineteenth cei tury civilization I Triboulctt and h emissaries played also upon the fears i y the prisoners , telling them they woi o putting their necks inside the haltc Savage as the Apache is , there tire ma o tors iu which ho is a perfect child. Tate o him in the night , especially when ho u tipsy , and the veriest vagabond's ghee o story will stampede him. Of course , yc : will understand , iroui what has alreail k been said of the Apache , that Lieu is Maus's eighty-four men were entirely ii o adequate to surround , bind or disarm tl o ninety-two prisoners ; and they wei a practically as free as'over. . It won it have taken 1,000 men to make oven stagger at doing it , anil oven then , many a luo would have been lost in the opera tion. At the faintest hint ot either propo sition , the Apaches would have been off like a Hock of quail ; and from Iho first cover Ihctr rillcs would Imvo sent back their defiance. The conspirators succeeded , and that night , during n rain-storm , Oeronimo and Nnchita , accompanied by twenty other bucks and fourteen squaws ono an immature girl SLUNK OUT OF CAMP noiselessly and vamoosed. They took Iheir weapons but only ono horse. The piisouers had camped only a short dis tance from Mans and no ono know of their departure until morning. If any martial reader of the Times thinks Im could have hold in these drink-crazed demons thcro is a good chance for him now to como out here , drop a little salt on the fugitives and end the war. Governor Zulick and his crowd have gone homo. I linvo the authority of the governor and of General Crook for say ing that no demand has been made to have any of the prisoners turned over to the civil authorities. Am getting sonic mighty interesting notes about thu killing of Captain Craw ford by Mexican troops last .January. The facts have not been half published and there is an apparent disposition somewhere not to have them. Hut they shall see typo , if 1 never sell another tish. _ LUM. A BARTENDER'S JOKE. Getting the Tjnitjjh on Customers Who AVntiU'U AVIwt Was Not Their Own. Chicago News ! In a little down-town saloon yesterday more than a do/en men tried to sueak an elegant ivory-handled umbrella which leaned against a white maple panel at the end of the bar. Al though several of the men were evident ly exports , not one could niannge to ' s'ecure it. Whenever the bartender caught a gentleman in the art , and ho managed to catch them all , he nut up glasses for hlnitclf and the dishonest patron , for which the patron always paid. "Stormy weather outside , " remarked a well-dressed man , catching sight of the umbrella and moving over toward it. "Another seltzer and lemon , and lake something yourself , " remarked the customer , cordially. Then a hand slipped down behind the pleasant gentle- man's coat-tails and began groping around. Pretty soon it touched the panel and moved cautiously across its polished surface , It didn't find anything and the gentleman who owned it stopped whist- Fmg suddenly and grow red in the face. He coughed violently and walked to the other end of the bar to expectorate. On his way back ho glanced sharply at the panel and saw leaning against it the ivory-handled umbrella. llio perform ance was repeated. The stranger was beginning to show signs of having an opileptiu fit when the bartender leaned over and said dryly : "Can't you got it ? " "Ahem , well ah , you know my um brella you sec , " grasped the gentleman. " it's ain't it Jim the "Yes , a daisy , ? , night bartender , put her there : He's got talent. " The umbrella was painted on the panel. Scrofula diseases manifest themselves in the spring. Hood's Sarsaparilla cleanses the blood and removes every taint of scrofula. A Itnnmnco From the Itowdy Went. Chicago Herald : Hero is a romance from the rowdy west. Miss Jennie Corson , who is known throughout the country as the "Shepherdess of the West , " went to Montana gome years ago and took a shoo ] ) ranch in Meagher county. Slio did it all alone and unaid ed. After awhile she sent for her lazy brother from Chicago and made him overseer of her Hocks. Matters went well with her and soon she had a line band of sheep and as valuable ranch property as there was in Montana. She took up some land under ono or another of the government acts , proved up on time and became a lauded proprietor. Now it happened that the next claim to her own was taken up by an enterprising young man named Severance , who , like his fair neighbor , first started a sheep ranch and then got hold of some soil. They tended Hocks in company for some time and then Severance proposed mar riage. Ho was accepted and to two united their fortunes have been doing better and better ever sinco. O. H. Holberg , Pastor Woodhavcn M. . Church , South Woodhaven , Queens Co. , N. Y. , states : "I have used Allcoek's Plasters for thirty years. Never found them fail to cure weakness of the back , spiuo and kidney difiiculties. They are very agreeable and strengthening. A short time ago I got in a profuse perspir ation while preaching. Imprudently go ing homo without my overcoat , I lost the use of my voice , and the next day had a violent pain in my back , kidneys ami chest. 1 could hardly brcatlio. Three Allcoek's Plasters applied to my back , chest and kidneys cured mo completely in six hours. I was astonished how quick my breathing became easy after apply ing. " Bwoct Innocciico or Childhood. A lady approaching u group of little children sitting on a stoop in Wcs ! Twenty-ninth street the other day. askeii a little girl her age and was told. The little one added : " 1 am the same ago at Ibis litlle boy here ; wo were both born or the same day. " "Thou you are twins , ' said the lady. "Yes , but they don't loot a bit alike. " said another little girl "And , " said a bright little boy will golden curls and earnest eyes , "thoj haven't the same father and mother either. " Ilulfurd Sauce makes your food more niitrl clous. She Couldn't Help It. Comlo Weekly ! Lady "Minnin , arcn" vou ashamed of yourself to let the cool Kiss you ? " Minnie "Well , ma'am , I'll tell youth truth. Ho has kissed mo every day fo : thrco weeks. I can't help it. The firs time I was real cross with him am acolded like everything , but the stupii follow don't understand a single word o English : " "llalford Sauce excelled by none. Try II Why Ho Had Not Soon Much oflToi Evaiibvillo Argus : They wore at a bal the other night. Ho had not mot her fo some time. In the course of convorsii tion he mentioned the fact , saying : " have not seen much of you lately. ' "No , " she naively replied , "ma compel us to wear high-necked dresses now. " PILKS5 rjPII-iKS ! 1'ILiE1 A sure euro for Blind. Hlcodlns , Itclii RiidUlceiatcd Piles has been discovered b Dr. Williams , ( an Indian remedy ) , called 1) Williams' Indian Pile Ointment. A slug Ibex I box has cuied the worst chronic cases of 2-Vc SO years standing. No nuo need suiter liv minutes after applying this wondei fill sootl In ? medicine. Lotions ! ami Instruments il more harm than good. Williams' India Pile Ointment absorbs the turning , allays tli intense itching , ( particularly at nleht afti pettiii' ' warm In bed ) , nets as a poultice , clvi Instant lelief , ami is prepared only for Pile. Itchinu' of private parts , and for nothing olsi SKIN' DISI3AHKS CUHIOI ) . Dr. Krazlcr'tt Mairic Ointment cures as b ma lc , Pimplus , lilack Heads or Oiub Blotches and Eruptions on the face , Icaviu the bKiu clear and beautiful. Also cures Itcl Salt Ul'cum , Here Nipples , Sort ! Lips , tin Old ObstiiiHte UlceM. . , Sold oy druggists , or mailed on receipt' < o 50 ran to. lla Itetallcd by Kulm A Co. , and Schroeter , a Conrad. At wholesale by C. F. Ciuuduuu. of Ills Views. Chicago Ledger ; " 1 tell 3-011 how It was with mo , Mrs. Hlodgott , " said the dressy neighbor. "When 1 go to church and gel all worked up and ngit.itcd over what a desperate set wo are , 1 fcol voxcd and put out to think what a shanio it was that Eve didn't mind her own business and not bring such heaps of trouble upon us ; but when I put on a now dress that fits me so Ulcc I can't find a particle of fauH Vrith it , anil a hat that makes every woman I meet feel as though she hadn't ' a friend in Iho world , then 1 own up that 1 do feel downright glad she was loud of fruit , and 1 can't help it. " lie Wasn't a Mcnr , Diffident lover "I know that I nm a perfect boar in my manner. " She "Shcop , you mean ; boars hug people you do nothing but bleat. " A writer in Nature gives an instnncn of remarkable adaptation in elephants. He observed a young one go to u fence ami pull out a bamboo stick , which ho broke In pieces , but ho throw all the pieces away. This ho repeated till no found a piece that suited biro. This he passed under his arm-pit nnd began to scratch. Down fell a great elephant leech , six inches long , and which without a scraper could not buyo been dislodged , The writer adds that the custom is an estab lished one among elephants. They will ulso break oil' bushes , strip them nearly down , and use thorn to wipe away Hies. - CAPITAL PRIZE , $75,000 Tickets only $ j. Slinros in Proportion. LOUISIAM STATE LOTTERY COMPANY , ( , 'Woilo hcinbvcortlty Hint no supuiviso tlio t'iiNidr all the Mmillilv nml l.hmiU'rly of Tlio Iioulslima Pinto Iioltcrv CYmipnny itnil in wixnn intmuKO nml control llio lia\\limstlieniseltt ) > s.iinil 'lint Ihcsiimo nro romlucU'il with honesty , fulrnoss nml In prooil faith towiinl nil inutics , tuiilu mtthnvl7o the Cotnpnnyto u o tiilicortlflpnto. with fnolmlloj ol our Blinmturcn uttnchoJ hi Us lulvnrtiamoiit COMMISSIONERS. We , tlio undorslfrncd Hunks nnd Ilnnltors. will my nil I'il7i8 iltiuvn In Tlio IiOiilslunn Stnto liot- Giles ft hlcli niuy bu presented nt our counters j. if. or.Lr.siu- , Fres. Louisiana National Bank. j. w. uiMiiiirrir , Ps. . tate National B ani A. IIAMMVI N. Pres. Hew Orlean National Bank. Incorporated In 1S88 for 25 yonrs by the Iol9- mmvlor Uaucittiuii.il and Cliurltalilu purposes with u citpitnl ot Sl.OOO.OOU lo wlilcli u reserve fund ot over $ o50lUU ) lias sliico boon nddcd. IJy nn < n on > helming : iiopular vote Its Iranoblsa wnsinndonpnrt or tlio present Stale Constitution adopted DecomDor-'d. A. D.JtCU. Tlio onlv Idttory over voted on and endorsed by the nioiilo of uny Btnto. It never scales or postpones. Ileiriantl i-liiRlo number drawings take placa nioiitlily , and the extraordinary draw-laps roffti- aiU o\fiy thrx'O months Instead ol1 st.nl-iiium illy us ncH.'Ioloi o , ucitlnnliiK March. 1KSO. A Sl'LK.VIlIU Ol'I'OIVrUNtTr TO WIN A FOHTUNn. Ill G mud Urawlnff , Class K , In tlio Academy of Music. Now Orleans , Tuesday , May lltti , 1333 D-'d Monthly Drawinir. OAPITAL PRIZE $75,009. lOO.lU ) Tickets ntKlvo Dollars lincli. FinctloiM in Tilths , In I'loiHHtlon. LIST or Piu/es : ICAl'ITAL I'ltlZU $7 : > , iWT 1 do do un.ixw 1 do do ioi > o EI'KIZUrf OF . . . . $1OT ( ) M.IXW r > do 2,000 10,000 10 do 1,000 ] 0tWj 20 do MO lll.OOJ 100 do 200 BO ,000 300 do 100 : , OJ3 f > 00 do CO 10UO do 23 alwj APPROXIMATION PHIZES. 9 Approximation I'tl/cs of $7W ) 0.75U I ) do do HOO 4.5UO 9 do do 2oO Z M IWlTPrl/es. nmounlltiff to S-'GS.VU Apjillcutlon for rates to clubs Mionld bo tando only to the odlco of the company In Now Or can : . For fin llior Information write clearly , einti ! ? Mllnddn-ss. I'OSTAIi NOTES , Express Money ) rdors , or Now York UxchaiiKO in ordinary lot- or. currency by c-xurcss ut our u.\pc'iiso ud M. A. DAUPHIN , N uw Orleans , Liv Or M. A.DAUPHIN , Wellington , D. C. Mnko P. O. Money Orders payable and address rcjrlslcrod letters to NEW OUbKANS NATIONAL HANK , Now Orleans , La. Or M O'lTENS & CO. , IWSFuinam fli.OmuUn Nebnisun. IS DKCIDBD HV Royal Havana Lottery ( A QOVEIINMKNT I.NbTIIUTlON ) Drawn nt Hiivaiiii.Cubu , May 1,15,20 , 1SSO ( A OOVCUNtlBM' JtiVrilllTION ; TICKETS IN FILTHS. Wholes ? ! i.OO. Fractions L'ro ruta. IOiclB in Fifths : Whol'js fa ; Fractions p er rota. Subject to no manipulation , not cnntrollnd by the nartios In Interest. It is the fairest thins In the nature of clmnco in cxiutcnoo. For tickets apply to BIlll'.SKV & CJ.lSWIIroal- way.N. Y. Clly : M. Ol'IENS & CO. . 019 Malu Btreot Kansas City. Bio. WHO II UNCO MINTED WITH THE OCOODiPHr OF THII COUNTRY WILL 4EE BV [ XAMININQ THIS MAP THAT THE CHI CtCO , ROCK ISL4HD 8 PACIFIC RilLWfiV liv roaion ot In centnl iwiltlon and clotn relation to ull principal lines t. t and Went , at Initial and lir- mlnitl PUUUH. cuiutlliit * the inu.t jmpoitrnt mlil continental link In tlmt pyslein ut lliroutrli trAni * > n tatlou which In * lie * fuxl rucllltatei trutl anil truflle tiotwotiii clue * uf tti AtUntlo uud 1'acUlc Coniti. It IK aliu the favorite and beHt routw to and from polnta ICaxt. Northeast Mild Soutlieait , end rurienponLllnK fuiiiU Woit , Nurtbwnil and BuiitUovit. The Croat Rook Island Route Ouarantoea Iu patron * that of | > fron ! > rcu * rltv oilordfld tiy u aolld. thorouKhlr tiullaFttd road. l > oj , fiiuootij trocka ut cuntiiiuuui'ilnjj roll , fcub taa. tuny tjiitlt culvert * and bildjros , lolling iilooU uvinar | ) rfectlon tta Jiumati frl.llt can inuke It , tliv mitptff iniplliuicm of patent buircra.plutfnrinn and ulr bmkr * . nil that * Llln dl etpllnii utiltU Kovmin the prac- t < * ! oi ratlou of nil 111 tiidni Ollur > l-wl IU. < of -lili route ale Trnnfyr at all ccnuixlliii ; i.olutl Iu Uulon Uenotf , And tltu uiiFiirpaiiatMl cviufurts lUJd luxtirlonuf lt Piui nutn * Kqulj > ni 'it , 7un liut Eipr > Tialnv between nnn nd I eorla.Council Hiufrn. Kana&6 Oitjr. learnt Mil and At blnuii are ci > iu | > i fil uf Kill v ntlUilil ilmly u\r \ lii > l t rtd Day Uoai-lien HaKnlllcuil 1-ulluia.li I'aUce Mcen-rfof | th0 latt-i ( dp l u , and fcuniiui > u liltiliiic Cur * . In vrlilch fUltoiatrly t-ookv < l lut-alu at. ' lJ uiely tutcn. KntwecnC'lilraea anil Kuimant.'lly anil Atchlsoo me aliu tuu Ike Uvlebrated lleillnlnKCUalr Curt. The Famous Albert Lea Route la tlio direct and favorite line hctwuui Chlc&fro and MlniieaH | > lliandBt Paul , where < onni < Honiaraniado la Ltiiioii DtiiuUfur all pnlnu la the Ocrrltoiln and Mrltlali . . . , . . 1'iovlncei Over lull rtmta Fait Kspux . < > aiu run to t10 | , ! , , 1 , jOart-j , tuinmir iv orU , plctniei'iuti locAlltlei ami bnnllni ; ami lUuloR KiuuniUuf loxa ami > ! lnni ola. It In uUo the iuo t route to tlio rlcli b < at llcld < uud uattorul laudu of Interior l btlll another 1)111 KIT LINK. rla Smite and K n- Itakee , Ink been oponuO U-twt.n cincuuiatl. Indian- apaiu and Lafayette and Council Illuffc , KantaiCltj. atiuneafjolli and bi. 1'aul and Intermedia | K > liite lor detailed Jnfannatlou &e > lap antl > Vlder9. obtainable , at well aa lltUctl , at all principal Ticket Olnittft lu itio Uultvd tUaUta uud ULUi by ad- R. R. CABLE , C. ST. JOHH , n't * Ocn'l U'tTr , Otn'l T'U ft fat. t. ft , ' ° 'COUGHSCROUP. AND - CONSUMPTION" " OF AND The swocl Riim , nt Entliorcvl from n IreO of UiO Unnm immn , irrni * IIIR iiloni ! tlio nniull mrmnis In llio Mnnlhorn Mitten , conlnliK n Humiliating ox * pectorantjinnilplo Unit locneni tlio phlrRtn pro- iluclntr tlio catljr iiuiriiliit coiiKli. ami MUnulates llic chllil to tlirowoiTtlii' fnl n incinlirnno In croup ml uhooplniMOtiKli.Mienoauililnoilwltli tno boallliK iiiiiclliiKlnoii prlnrlplii In tlin mullein plant of the ol3 lloltli , proccnts In TAYI oil's ClIUIUlKrt : 1IKMKIIY IIP h SBT HUM AM > MUb- lKiNlliilliiL'Ktl.iicmnrpmcrtrlorConiih5.Crotip ! , > l.-illo nnr child M picu"o > Ut take IU A k Tour niinraiKthirlt. 1'rlroltftr. nil 1.OO. 1VA1.TK" ? A.TAVf.OK.AtI ntn.Gn. For Milo by tlio II. T. Cliirlco'DtUR Co. , nnd oil i DlUKKlbls. FOR LADIES , MISSES AND CHILDREN. Onf production * are the rcrfectlon In them Every Objection to ready-'mcda hoe > is removed. The BUCCCU ot enc * ' attained by our coodi wherever IntroducMf . ii becauie they ore rlove-fittlnc. 'e * 5U in ityle and finish , of the flneit moterlrt * > i nd workman > hlp , andimoderate in prte * The horrort of tjre klnc-lo r i4t they are comfortable from tha VISIT THE 1209 Fan Street , Visit the 90 Cent Store. , 1209 Faruaui Street. " j Visit tlio 9 ( . ) Cent Store , < J4 lirr * * I 1201) ) Farnam Street ; , JpT' ' , * ? T - > Visit the 99 Gout Sforc , 1209 Fnrimm Street. Visit the 99 Cent Store , \ 12)9 ( ) Farnam Street. Visit the 99 Cent Store , 1209 Farnam Street. 4 * * Visit the 9 Ccnt Store , 1'09 Farnam Street. Visit the 09 Cent Stove , 1209 Farnam Street " \ Visit tlio 99 Cent Store , 1209 Furiiam Street. Visit the 99 Cent Store , 1209 Farnam Street. Visit the 99 Cent Store , 1209 Earnam Street. Vi-it ) the 99 Cent Store , 120 ! ) Farnam Street. I ' Visit the 99 Cent Store , 1209 Farnam Street , Visit the 99 Cent Store , 120 ! ) Farnam Street. Nebraska National Bank OMAHA. NEBRASKA. Paid up Capital . $200 , ooqf Suplus May 1 , 1885 . 26 ,000f U. W. VATKS , President. A. K. TOU/.ALIN , Vice Prcsldont \V. II. S. 110GUE3 , \V. V. MOi3B ! , jOIIK S. COLLIK8 , H.V. . YA-I ES , LEWIS B. UKUU , A. B. TOUKAUK , BANKING OFFICE. . THE IRON BANK 1 Cor , 12ib and FarnamStraeta. ' Ooueral lluuklux Uuiluuii Tr