Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, June 05, 1886, Page 11, Image 11

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    VI
1
TELE OMAHA DAILY BEE : SATURDAY , JTTNE 5 , 1880. .11
E3T PERRY DAVIS1
PAINKILLER
IS ItllfOMMKXDUD I1V
) Mlnlstrrs , MKMonrirloj , Mutineers
of Fnctorlty , Work-shop * . , I'laiitntloii ? ,
NtiMca In ITopltnls in snort , < nery
body everywhere who Ima
ovcrjflvcn It a trlnl
TAKES ixrzrmu.Y IT WIM , nit FOUND A NF.VS
r A i i.i .NO cum : tun
SUDDEN COLDS , CHILLS , PAIN'S IN
T1IK STOMACH , CKAMl'S , SUM
MER AND 11OWKL COMPLAINTS -
PLAINTS , SOUK
THROAT , &c.
IT IS Tlin MOST EtfECTIVK AM IIKST MNIMINI
, ON KAIITII ron ocnixn
SPRAINS , nilUISBS , RUUM.VTISM
NEURALGIA , TOOTH-ACHE ,
1JUKNS , FHOST-IUTKS , &c.
Prices , 25c. , 50c. and $1,00 per Bottle.
FOR SALE BY ALL MEDICINE DEALERS
tJTBowaro of Imitations.
Absolutely Pore and Unadulterated.
IN U I IN
HOSPITALS ,
CURATIVE INSTITUTIONS ,
INFIRMARIES ,
AHO PnctCftiDio nr PHYSICIANS EVCRYWHCRC *
CURES
CONSUMPTION ,
HEMORRHAGES
Anil nit Waiting Dlaenncat
DYSPEPSIA , INDIGESTION ,
MALARIA.
1IIK 0.1 LT
PURE STIMULANT
FOR THE SIOK , INVALIDS ,
CONVALESCING PATIENTS ,
AGED PEOPLE ,
WEAK AND DEBILITATED WOMEN.
For aalobj' Druggists , Oroccriaiid Dealers.
Price , Ono Dollar per Ilotllc *
,
wpt lucU Ur our tr le-tiui k UU1 ol tlie ul 1 rliemUt ,
ktmbnrfl , uml thonatn * ofrompnnf Mown In bottle.
O rernnniMitoftb * BorkMounUlnieErcit ( the
Terrllorlcn ) , nn 1j ] to procure It from tlielr t1cftl m4
fin IIATA lUU lv m * nt , In rUln ctjnnirkfrt , Kz-
proit cli rgm. | rtjjlJ , by rcmUtluj BU Dollar * to
The Duffy Malt Whiskey Co. , Baltimore , Md.
font t-e ntltgmt for fir I 'nfafllng CotmFtttn\rann
* tateoiitttt pripallv of raw tttftttmlttiMil crteMt *
Iff. / ) NffT | * < tfti'iAfr tndtffr Hot / pfj' / , n H
rteowfryfrot * nil Watttvy fiiitar , Jt can l prrparr > i
bf any k * ttLtrp r. MH quritt COMtfmiiiy t inform ntti
antttk VHokr l\Uitvt * | f ( ff aitf , will ba thttr-
ftlly aiitittrtit by * * i/irf < ca//Jfpaffmcnf.
' 'Losidon" ' Trouser Strelcher ,
K7 \ P"tontod In J ttropo and U 8.
oX I Sor.H ACIKNT.S in UMTKII STATES
' y for celebraU'd John Ilatnllton Jt
\ f Co . Stretchor. Takes b.icelng out
T V ° f knet > . restores pimtnlsoiii ) to
\ X oilffinnl t-hnpc. Onlvptt'd strtoeh-
\ \ or coinlilnliiK hcrew rod In couco-
A \lloii wllh clump' * . All others In-
\ IliliiKi'iif-nts. OrlBinul nnd only
yJBtiPtchor \ lor Uentlcmnn'fl use.
> J LJ Hy ovprcs securely pnckcJ , prlco
. -5aJ > J-r * 2,0.Vilto torclrciilarri .AnontB
wanted In ovorj clty. O.V. . SIMMONS & CO. ,
Itoatou , > lu v.ja
JLa TtUnt fti < rtlilnc toil * t ,
fr\l * rld. r r Dy rH . IHurh > * k I * ! AL-U . ft
4tf < l T f ib IXtfMUf * UICWB. A ! * diopi turtrt ftdehrivut 8 tr
la a t\a \ f ctiunpifn * . utJ io all lumvirr Jilnk * . Try U. ant
fctmr * ofrounUrMU. Aik ? nr ( ivrr r dnirjtil til UtflKiMUbf
.
J. W. VOTPEEUAHU , COLS
r.
WEAK. NERVOUS PEOPLE
And other * utinVrlng from
norrotlf doblllty , cxliaustlnff
i ( luu'onti * , pnmaturu
. . . . . .
. of young or oM are
ixiilllrcly turwl hy Dr.
llonio'ii lainnuB r.lectro.
Muc'Ktle lltlt. Tliuuundi
. . . .u in tlio Union iiito lMrn curint.
. . . . . . . . . . . -vpv. . ) Instantly fell. IMIfntnlanitnolil 10
leara.Miuta fainlly con * rar aaino belt. Kli.lrlo
> u ne niiorlfiiiipo Mlthmaleliclttf Avulil vnrtlilfhdiiii *
ItalluiiB unit Infill romiianl 9 r.lrclrlo Tru rB for
Itupture. 7011 wirnl tn'HS. Hcn.l taiiipforiuunphlet.
OB. W. J. HOQNE. INVFNTOR. 101 WABAH AV. . CHICACO.
Artificial Limb Manufacturing Co. ,
( liitvri'oruteclb ) the Slutoofronsylviuihi. )
"very .Moinbor of
Which has
An Arllllelnl LPR- .
Miuiufiit'ltiro
Adjustable Lacing Socket
Limbs.
The mo.controltahlo nnd
iliiriiblullnil ) , ttnil thu noar-
cst npnronrli to ihu nntuiul
inoinlior ot nny Invention
of the ujro.
Wo tire niitliorl/c'il to
nmlio Ilinlis for anlillurs on
cuvoriiinoiit orJcrs.
Write for oatitlotruu.
wlilcu ( flvi-a it lull Uu iTl | > -
tlonof lliosot.gi \ , with nil-
inonnis I'ortllHntDS troin
| ) orson titlni ; tliunt.
When | mtron < cant visit
our fBtnlilUhnu'iU wn lor-
iviinl blanks to tuko tiicos
uroa.
'Artificial Limb Manufacturing Co , ,
No003 IVnnSt. , riltsbuijr , l a.
J. W.TllOMrSO.N'.Seo'y itnU llusinuss Jlunufcr
WHITTIER
(117 HI. t'lmrlcHSI. , .St. I.ouU.H o.
A tr [ l > tf C JBI | tt I 0 U J1 = I Tollf | ci , li i bna loojw
cDfic4lu ltie i < * eUllr tliucater Cua > Kie , NIBTOK. 8 BIN
nd UMIUD PIM.IU tUkn nr clhcr I'drileUalaSt. Louli ,
M clljr | tptri ihowftDilklt olarviUrnt , KDUW.
Ntrvoai Prostration , Debility , Mental and
Phslcal ) Weakness ; Mercurial and other Altec *
iloni ol Throit. Skin or Bones , Blood Poisoning ,
old Sores and Ulcers , r tmt.d iu pu&iitii
I BCC I , * B UUit flrull&e prtuclptf i , Skftlr. Ctlrktelj ,
Diseases Arising from Indiscretion , Excess ,
Exposure or Indulgence , wMeL it i < , m < or it.
Ivllolil eO.cUl ur..uiot , , , dctllili , dlBintu or illH
aaddtrfCttitiutOMiry , pltuploon lh 1at , | < brite l dtekf
trtitiea it Ihi locUtjar f < m > l < l , ceoTu.Un or U i. ( U. ,
r < Dd rIU2 Marriage Improper or unhappy , u
rtrinaBtBlfr firtd. f mpblct ( ltt [ > i | ion ) thtalM * . MBI
to Mlr < i I IM. rrMUBDfBdilroi. CiuiilutUaa > aI-
e r b/ null ( ri .laTllrj BBd fUtttlr CBBOdcutUl ,
A Positive Written Guarantee i > to tu rtrjei.
c al t vtrL r < t/ cull < r i [ > r * .
MARRIAGE GUIDE ,
S90 PAQEd ' , , riNXPLATJCS. tUf nt cloih nJ ilt
Bdl.r sU4f rAOo * IB | - uc r < urr t7. Oicr Oft/
vwadtrrut | ixaputurtt i , tru i liitj rilcU4 D tb fell vUf
THE SLOW men OF LIBERTY
Tracing the Growth of Freedom Up to the
Birth of the American Republic.
The Kiigllflh MngitnClinrtn , tliclllllof
Klshtn , null tlio Ilnlicns Corpus
Act Corner Stones on
.liberty's rctlcqtnL
To the htlitor of the Br.E : In ix discus-
slon a fotv iliiys ago over the disgraceful
nml unpntriutio courao of tlio domocrritlc
rty.l w < 3 Informed for tlio ten thous
andth time that "Tlios. Jefferson , the
atlicr and author of the Declaration of
independence , was tlio founder and
irogenilor of the democratic party. "
This ImS been repeated so often by the
Icmocrattc party that It has almost bo-
comu an axiom , whilst in truth and in
act the Declaration of Independence
vns written moro than ono hundred
cars before the Fourth of July , 1770.
' . will not deny that perhaps Mr.Jcfl'orson
vis : In some way responsible for organ-
zing tlio opposition to John Adams and
Aaron IJurr to mnko himself president ,
jy such methods as buying the vote of
Tnmes F. Uayaril ( then a member of the
louse of roorescntatlvcs , tlio grandfather -
father of the present secretary of
state ) pnying for his vote for that
ligh ollice by nominating him
o the senate for minister to
France , and in that way and by such
nethods well-earned the naino of
'Father of the Democratic Party. " The
History of the struggle of the continental
.ongress in its cflorts and the efforts of
Jio people to dissolve their relations with
Great Britain , ran through many years
dating as far back as 1701.
The ideas set forth in tlio Declaration
of Independence were not new , and in
act several paragraphs of that great
> rotcst can bo found in the "Hill of
lights , " granted by William and Mary ,
m the lUth day of February. 1033. soon
liter James 11 ilod to Franco , ami later
linn this it passed both houses of par-
lament , when William and Mary had
jeoii crowned.
Whilst ou this subject a full review of
tiio great documents , that might bo
called tlio antecedents or predecessors of
he Declaration of Independence , citron-
ilogically examined , will fairly illustrate
tlic progress of science of self govern-
iicnt. until \yivlind ourself with a system
that scoim'to be tlioacmo of the science ,
which has'dono so much to rfecuro civil
unl religious liberty , not only in this
: ountryTjut in Franco , and. by the in-
ihiunco'of which wo will ono day , not fur
oft" , hail Irolalul as the second natural
oilsprmg of the American republic.
"THE MAGN'A CHAUTA , "
or great chatter obtained by the people
of lingland , with arms in their hands
iigain.st King John , was tlio lirst
jilbrt of a people to assert the inalien
ble rights of man. Tlio second was
: he reign of his son and successor ,
llenry Hi , where this charter with other
declarations was enacted by parliament ;
and again in the reign of Edward I , by
statute culled "conlirmatio custorium , "
whereby the great charter is directed to
be allowed as the common law. Copies
of this instrument wore sent to all cathe
dral churches , and It was directed that it
should be read , at least twice each
year , that the people might know
what were their rights , and know
ing them would watch them
with grout diligence and jealousy.
In tlio reign of Edward III. there
wore several declaratory acjsdelining the
rights and privileges of the subject ,
touching his duties and relation to the
crownand , kingdom , all of them being
encroachments upon the despotic author
ity of the crown and beneficial to the
abject.
The second grand advance towards
self-government was in the rojgn of
Charles I , .soon after his coronation.
when the "Petition of Rights" was
drawn up , presented to Charles , and ho
gave it Ins assent tind signature. It was
termed "A Parliamentary Declaration of
the Liberties of the People. " This in
strument coniirmcd to the citi/.cn many
concessions , rights arid privileges that
had been before unknown. This was fol
lowed boon after by an net that did moro
to prepare for and establish personal lib
erty than any that had ever adorned the
statute book of any country , which was
the act that dissolved and abolished the
star chamber. It occurred just before
that unfortunate prince became entan
gled in that rupture with his parliament
whereby lie lost his. head.
Tlio next act in review of the progress
of the right ot personal security , which
is the lirst object of organized govern
ment , was the enactment of the law that
asserts and .secures to individuals personal
liberty. It was the passage of
THE IIAHEAS COKI'US ACT ,
which pa.ssed the lioiiio of commons
during the reign of Charles II. on the 1st
day ot April , " 1028. There hail been fre
quent resolves and assertions in tlio lion.se
of commons on tins subject , but the bar
ons , always viewing such acts as a
menace and encroachment on the aris
tocracy , were slow to reeogni/.o them ,
but at this time it seems they could not
longer resist what the progress of civili-
xntion demanded with so much unanim
ity through the nearer representatives of
tlui people.
As a proof that the people wore not
slowly progressing toward self-govern
ment , tutor the death of Charles 11. , his
brother , the duke of York , became
king as James II. This prince
had nardly been crowned when
ho began a series of innovations
upon the written and unwritten constitu
tion oi England , lie levied bottomry ,
kept a larger army than was necessary ,
imprisoned people without duo process of
law , prorogued parliament and did not
convene them for two yours , and did
many other acts that rendered him ox-
'
trem'oly unpopular. Tlio result of it
till was that when the prince ot Orange
came to England ho hud an easy con-
( | iie.it , anil James went in cxilo to Ills
friend , Louis , king of Franco , where ho
died some , years uf forwards. Then came
the acccfslon of William and Mury with
TUB "HILI , OK ltir.lir.-i. "
This state paper was moro ampin and
complete than any that hud over been
produced. It embodied the ideas thai
liivd been formulated and expressed in all
the others. It was a perfect compilation
of all charters , grunts , resolves and as
surances that , were contained in the En
glish constitution , " with now and more
prt nounci'd expressions for civil and re
ligious liberty , Concerning the author ol
"tlio bill of rights" there has never been
any dispute , and that our declaration ol
independence was taken from "tho billol
rights" no ono who has over road both
documents will deny.
After William ami Mary had been de
clared king and < ] tieeii , but before them
coronation , parliament in behalf of the
people who had been so sorely oppressed
demanded borne assurancu and security
iiguinst oppronaivo acts of the orown
Thu kin" informed them that he wa :
read ) ' to do ( ho will of the people , am
whatever they desired he would assent to
Then the question arose who should draw
the paper. Uontick , who had como over
with William , was suggested , but will
the keen foresight that seems to have
guided the prince of Orange in most matters
tors , urged that they select some one o
their number or some ono more familial
witli the desires of the people. Then
they begun to cast about among tlieui
solves , and they selected a man who bu
a short time before had been a common
barrister about the Old liuiloy and IJu
coin's Inn Court ; , and ? omo authors huyo
denominated him as a brlullcss barrister
ip to the time that lie rendered himself'
10 famous in the defense of the seven
mhops. Ills success in that trial was
onn of these "jerks" in thn
nunals of men that so seldom
occurs. Ho was at once snatched
HI ) M I'KXfltV , roVKHTT AXD H.EDIANI9M
0 a condition of wealth , afllucnco and
> owor. Ho took rank with thc- greatest
neil in the realm and maintained this
lositlrm until his death. "Tho Hill of
tights , " the offspring of his genius and
tisdom remains to-day as unparalleled
'or ' iu terseness and compactness of
deas and independence of expression ,
whilst as a literary production It far sur-
tnssed any state paper of that day. Tlio
words are monosylablo , for the use of
compound and derivative words had not
hen been adopted to ono tenth the ex
tent they are of this day. The pronouns
and verbs were always used in the per
son and tense literally , not as they are
low. And whilst ttioy are a little harsh
( Hid not so euphonious upon the nar , j-ct
students of literature in reading of an
cient chivalry , prowess and genius prefer
, ho works of that day , not because they
jossess the Greek or Latin idioms , but
there is that definite and unerring ex-
iression of thought In every word and
10 much moro pleasing than verbos-
ty and pentcnccs of doubtfpj meaning
Or susceptible of double constructions.
The history of the trial of the seven
lisliops was of itself another strid * in
advance of the old and settled routine ,
standard and fixed law that not only do-
> rivcd so many persons of their liberty
> ut their lives as well. This was a con
firmation of lliu law that made juries in
criminal cases the solo judges of the law
and the f.icts. Tlio court instructed the
urv to bring in a verdict of guilty , the
ury disregarded thn instructions ami the
sourt at-once ordered them to prison for
contempt. Vaughun was chief justice of
lie realm , and the jury so imprisoned
vero roloaj-ed upon a writ ot habeas cor-
HIS , whereby Vaughan so distinguished
limself that ho is recognized as a jurist
of the highest standard and most impar-
iul justice.
A few years after this , soon after the
1 cath of Marythcro was another marked
mil essential progress in the direction of
civil liberty , and the liberty of conscience.
n 1085 was ro-cnacted tlio licensing not
and it expired in 10U3 , and was renewed ,
nit with grer.t opposition with only
about five majority. On tlio third of May ,
10U5 , the law which
SUBJECTED THE VHHSS TO A CENSORSHIP
expired. Then there was but one news-
taper in London , the London Gazette.
n two weeks afterward tlio Intelligence
) omcstle and Foreign uppor.rcd , which
mil boon suppressed about fifteen years
) ofore. In a few days came the English
Covenant , the Packet Boat , the Pegasus ,
ho London News Letter , the London
Post , the Flying Post , the Old Post
Master the Post Hey , the Post Man , nil
within three months , and within a year
there wcro ono hundred and ten daily
mil weekly papers in London. Censor-
"hip wa" established later , but this great
nedium of educating tlio people being
once permitted could not eu.sily be sur-
iresscd , and not until the works of
Theodore Hughes appeared with all the
scandals and secret history of the court
of George IV was its entire freedom
) crnianentlv established , when it became
iccossary for the friends of the court to
uiy up the whole edition to prevent
ts circulation , being equal in
: hat peculiar touic to the secret'
listory of the lirst empire.
To return to tlio main question. In order
: o bo convinced ami to know how far and
low near the Declaration of Independence
resembles and is copied from the several
charters , grants anil the bill of rights , it
is only necessary to consult Laiurmoad's
Constitutional History of England , the
journal of the two houses of parliament
in 1(130 ( , and a book called Gray's Debates ,
published about that time , in all of which
is the original text of tiioso instruments ,
iieh can be found in the congressional
library at Washington. Langnioad can
he purchased of Brown & Littleton , of
Boston. Tom Paine , ( author of the Ago of
Keason , the Crisis and tlio Rights of Alan )
was in Philadelphia at the time the
continental congress was preparing tlio
declaration. He being well known as a
litteruti , and : i man above all thing of an
independent nature , and being lamiliar
with all this subject , at once produced
conies , and tins with the similarity of
verbiage and ideas leaves no doubt that
the Declaration of Independence was
taken from the bill ot rights. The aver
age American eiti/.en thinks and
believes , that by ono grand great
patriotic ctlort the Declaration
of Independence and the constitution of
the United States came into existence.
Tlio truth is , that all the long eventful
curs that commenced with the reign of
! li/.ubcth and ended with the inaugura
tion ot George .Washington on the ; itli ( )
day of April , 1780 , on the corner of Nas
sau and Wall streets in Now York city ,
as president of the United States , were
preparing for
Till : KIltTH OK THE 1IEITIIMC.
So it was that thostudentof the science
of government and the progress ot eivili-
/ation requires no vivid imagination to
conceive of the glory and grandeur of
tlio magnificent fabric under winch wo
live. Tillers , in ISM , wrote his History of
the French Revolution. In the last page
ho predicted that France must and would
bo self-governed. He had witnessed the
death ot Louis XVI , the fall of the Bu -
tile , the assassination of the Princess Do
Lamhcll , an exile most of the lirst em
pire troin the mountains of Switzerland ,
the'liitlior banks of the. Rhine , or from over
the borders of Belgium ha had seen the
brilliancy of the lirst empire rejected
on every sky , lie saw the recall of the
Bourbons to bo succeeded bv the second
onipiro , and vet ho said , ' 'Franco would
bo free. " He lived to bo In 1871 the first
president of the French republic.
The time had como. Was not
Columbus , by sumo power up among or
above the stars , sent over waters never
divided by a beak , to find n country
where genius , energy , fortitude and
independence could plant tlio
germs where might grow and prosper ,
the mighty , towering monarch of nations
to cast its shadows of influence wherever
shines the sun. In less than four hundred
years , whore there was practically a va
cant continent , unknown and untravolcd.
wo have wealth untold , power unlimited
and a nation indomitable Our ancestors
wcro the bravest , freest and best blood of
every country. None but the most fear
less and independent came , and that best
blood mingled and mixed up together has
produced a people that no ono of tills
period can tell wlmt they-will accom
plish , PATIUCK O. HAWKS ,
lake Hels HjilOKoI's Little Joke.
Chicago News : Mnny people peddled
jokes touching upon the prcsidentiu !
nuptinip
iliicoo Hqls/.spiegol did.
And it is so improved Jacob that ho
told it in nearly every saloon on the
jUMith side. It was a sort of illustrate !
a Hair , and Jacob himself furnished the
illustration ,
At 1.1 o'clock Jacob stood at the bar ol
n down-town saloon. "Sehnappes ! " ho
laconically announced.
The bartender put up the bottle urn
glasses.
"Vy , " began Jacob , pouring out the
liuuor , "vy am I like ( J rover Cleveland ?
1'ho bar tender meekly said ho dldn'
know.
"Pocauso I get full somo" ( hero Mr
lli'iszspicgel winked anil swallowed his
liquor ) "to-day. "
rho career ot Jacob and his joke was
an eventful ono , At 5:40 ho was trying
1o tell the joke to the lump-post at the
corner of Monroe street and Otd avenue
A policeman gathered him in.
"Vy ain't 1 like (5 rover Cleveland V
were Jacob's last workHasliowusslmlHei
to tlio basement of the Harrison stree
station. '
LAY OF LANDS NORTHWEST
The Powder Eiver Begion Kioh in Mineral
and Agricultural Wealth.
THE VALLEY OF THE SHADOW.
The Graves nntl Hones or Murdered
Whites Mni-k the Old Highway
nioody Work of Inillnnn
Twenty Ycnrs Ago.
Four NionnxTiA , Nub. , May 31. { Cor
respondence of the Unr.'f ] MO now
traveling over the old government road
toward Fort Heno. The country is somewhat -
what monotonous , but wo cross many
streams nnd the soil in tlio little vnlloys
looks rich. OK to our right are the
famous Black Hills , whllo to the Icfi rlso
the BlgHorn mountains. Thn country is
rolling , but the ascent gradual. Our
course lies over n series ! of high ridges ,
and as wo rca'ch the summit we discover
they are dpurs of the great Big Horns.
The mountains nro saddle-shaped and
extend for n hundred miles soutlionntuiul
northwcsti The saddle htis a pommel ,
and that in Pumpkin butto. Having
passed the ridges , which are the spurs
putting out from the southeastern basoof
the Uig Horns , wo cross Dry Fork of
Powder rlvor. It runs down for about
twenty miles , bringing up against the
mountains. It is sparsely timbered with
scraggy oaks and cottonwoods. The
trees are low , squatty , gnarled and con
torted. They seem to have started out
all right , but lacked moisture to grow up
tall. The timber is lit for nothing hero
but fuel. On ono of the trees somebody
had cut a bare spot , and on the white
wood carved in rude letters , "II. Martin-
Killed by Indians , August in , ISO ) . " It
was ono of the legends so familiar in the
northwest. Poor follow !
HE SLKUPS A8 WELL TIlKltH ,
however , after death as if surrounded by
the monuments of Greenwood cemetery.
Far from homo and friends , it is true , but
the ancient cottonwool ! standsguard over
his lonely grave , and the owl and tlio
coyote sing him nightly n lullaby. Tills
valley had n bad reputation in early days
when Hcd Cloud was hostile and the
traveler was always ciiuUoned by the
post commander to look out for danger
there nnd leave it behind us soon as pos
sible. It is lined with graves , and as
many as forty frontiersmen are said to
hiivo fallen there nt dill'ercnt times , vic
tims to the fury of savage foes.V hen
Beldcn went up no picked up a skull near
the road with an arrow head sticking in
it just behind where tiio left ear had
been. The arrow told its own tale mur
dered by Indians. It was the old story
over asain , and they hunted for the bones
of the body , hut found only a iiilo of
ashes and ono knee joint. He had prob
ably been badly wounded by the arrow
aim then btirnotl at the slake. When
Braillcy came through ho found five
skeletons in this valley dug up by wolves ,
and ho rebtiried them. When we were
up wo found a piece of board , which had
once been part of the tailgate of an army
wagon. The blue paint was still on ono
shlo ot it , and on the other was written
in mile characters ,
"XACII HUSTKO IinilK. "
Who Zach Husted was or just where
his grave was 'wo did not know , for the
board was lying on the ground and there
seemed to be no grave there. We , how-
jvur , hot the board up , and Zich : ean find
'it when ho rises ana put it in llio right
| ) lace if We missed his remains.
This valley ot Dry Fork is really a
' 'Valley of Death."and wo shall hasten on.
We are now within six miles of Powder
river , anil 'the road suddenly turns off
Dry Fork and ascends a high ridge to our
right. WJridiiig over the hills we come
.ipon a strip of Mau Vais Tones , or Had
uui : < ls. They tire terrible , and bleak and
sterile as 'bau lands usually arc. Tlio
region is a.burned out volcano and the
earth lies' jnn ash-heaps. Not a thing
grows here , and even the jack rabbits
ind biriU. hayo abandoned this strip.
"God-forsakeii" is written on a board anil
stuck up 'at the entrance of the road to
the Bad Lands , and the description given
of the region in these two brief words is
not a bad pno. Leaving behind the blood
stained valley and riding hastily across
: ho strip of _ Bad Lands , we come to the
L'owder river , n clear , shallow stream ,
ibout fifty feet wide. It runs north and
rapidly widens as it proceeds towaril the
Yellow.stono. Crossing at a good ford we
nscctid the bank to a wide level plain and
ire at the Mte of old Fort Heno. Part of
Lhe stockade built by General Patrick
Connor in 1805 was still standing a few
years ago. The tort had been burned ,
but home of this dilapidated barracks were
still there. Pieces ot blue cloth with brass
buttons attached to them , old army shoes ,
wagon wheels and piles of empty , rnitv
in cans showi-d plainly enough the use
Mio place had been put to , and thcro was
TUB AIIJ OK A I'llO.NTIKIl 1'OST
about the spot. It was hero on the do-
MM'tcd parade < rniund Van Voast had
day after day marshalled his little band
of'soldiers in the days gone byund drilled
them , while the Indians looked on from
the hills. The place where the flag stall1
hud stood , and from which the Hag of a
nation -19,000.003 of people had been
hauled down at tlio behest of Hod Cloud
and hi * hordes of savages , wu our camp
ing ground for tlio night. There wcro
only live of us , and where a regiment
could not stay a few years ago live mmi
were now moro than enough to make it
safe. There was tin air of sadness and
loneliness about this place , and us wo
looked at the ruins of the ollieers' quar
ters wo could not but recall the anxious
days of IBIili , when delicate ladies waited
tlioro day after day. not knowing but tlio
next their beloved ones would bo all
massacred and they themselves prisoners
in the hands of a morcilo- foe , reserved
for n fate worse tliim death. The trees
still bore tlio scars of bullet murks , and
every ono hud been a f/rtro ( s for a white
or a red man us they fired at eaoli other
dav after day in 1800.
The Powder river is pretty well tim
bered , and about twelve miles up the
river from Uono is a large grove of cot
ton wood trees , where tlio Indians' hud
a burying ground. Tlio bodies were
placed on scall'olds or strapped to the
limbs of the trees. Many ofd warriors ,
pappooM'S and Indian women wcro
buried here. That was ono reason per
haps why the savages fought so liorcclv
for possession of that valley. They will
often curry their dead a hundred nnlo.s to
bury them at ft favorite spot , and they do
not like to liavo their dead disturbed
The Powder river , I was told , was well
timbered all the wajf from Heno to its
head and much of the land
OOOD KAItMl-NO I.AKD ,
The road from Heno runs down tho.
river twelity miles to Pumpkin Buttcs
The stream is tortuous , but swmied prottj
well timbered , and the land good. The
buttes ard bro and said to bo full o
Iron ore , | A magnificent view of the Bi { ,
Horn mountain.- obtained from the to }
of the buttes , They loom up dark am
grand , and far to the southwest is KCCI
Cloud Peak. The buttes in early d.iys
were used as an observatory by the In
dians , and iris said that in 1805 , 18UU am
1E07 an Indian look-out was constant ) }
on theeo button somewhere.
Following tlio old military road wn
strike out for Fort Phil Kearney , ono o
the , three dismantled posts pulled down
to please Hod Cloud. For twonty-fclx
miles thorn are bad lands and no wate
that i ) good. ' After this stretch is parsed
wo find good wafer , grass nnd timber-
Tins is Beard river , or Crazy Woman's
'ork as it is now called on the maps. It
s4a good Valley and full of tine crass and
vild ryo. How it came to have Us name
changed from Beard or Big Beard river
o Crazy Woman's Fork is a moat Inter ,
csting story , and this legend of the fron-
icr and the crazy woman who once lived
hero and finally gave her name to the
troam and valley , will bo told in my next
communication. JAMES. Bitismx.
CAPITAL PRIZE , $150,000.
l.'VVoilo hereby cortlfr thnt < rp supfirviso ths
irrntiKOiiHMiU for nit tlio Monthami ! ijimrlorly
) ntwliiKS of The Louisiana Stnlp Tottery
tomimny unit In person miumiro ntul control
ho lirnwlnm thpm elves , ntul thnt thosnmonro
conducted with linnosly , fnlrnoM nmt In Rood
iilthtownnl nil i > ttrtlo , mul wo nuthorlro the
Company to mo tliKcortlllonto. with fAO-nlmlicn
ofour slirnaturni attache * ) Iu IU nJrnrtUtnent
OOMMIS8IONR1W.
_ _ _ _ _
WtMhounitersljrncit Hunks Atut Danker * , will
> ny nil Prlrca ilnxwn In The Ixiulalnna 8tuto IiOt-
cries wliluli may bo jiro ontoJ at our counton
J. II. OClLESnV ,
Pres. Louisiana Rational Bank
J. AV. KII.UUKTII ,
Pres , State National B ant.
A. II.VMWIX ,
Pres. Mew Orleans National Bank
INPRECERENTED ATTRACTION.
I Ovr.ti IfAi.r A Miu.iox UmT
LOUlSim STATBTOTTERY COMPANY ,
Incorporated In 1813 for i. > years by the leifH'
nturo I or Rducntlonnl and Chnritnblo tnirpojoi
with n capital of f I.OOO.IXM to which n reserve
und of oror f.V > 0UX ) has slnco boon adtlod.
Uy nnoverwhelming popular vote Iwfnmclilao
was mndo n nnrt of t lio.nro.sont Stuto Constitution
doptcdDccomucriM. A. 1) . 1S7U.
Itg irriind HliiKlo nutnhor drawing tnkus phtco
nontMly. It never scales or poMpono-i.
Look uttho following distribution :
193d Grand Monthly
AND TIIK
EXmORDINmQUnRIERUf DW1II5
n the Academy of Music , New Orleans.
Tuesday , Juno 15tli , 1S3B
Jiuler the personal supcivlsoti and manage-
neiitof Gnx. U. T. IKAUUI ) : < ! A.IU > , of I.oti-
slrtiin , antl OEX. JUIIA.L A. KAIII.V , ot Vlr-
"
"
"CAPITAU PRIZE SIBOjOOO.
Notice , Tickets are SIO on Halves , S5
Fifths S2. Tenths SI-
LIST OP 1MIUK4
1 CU'ITAT. I'lll/.HOr SIWOOO. . . . $150,0)3 )
IGllANI ) I'ltlXB OK 60,000. . GO.OOH
IGltAM ) T 20.0JJ
20,01
4 IiAUtlK I'ltl/.KSOr 20,000
201'mZKSOF 1,000. 20VM (
GO " r/jo. . a > , ojo
100 " ai.oo )
200 4 200. . . . 40,000
000 " JOO. . . . 00,000
1000 " BO. . . . DO.OOJ
At'PUOXIMATlON PHIZES.
100 Approximation lu-lzeaof S W. . . .
10J " " 100. . . .
2,279 I'rijcs amonntlnirto fKJ.fiOO
Application for rntos to clubs should bo mndo
onlv to the olllco of the company In Now Or
leans.
For further Information wrtto clearly. ( rivJn ?
full address. IVSTAIi NOTES , Kxpre Money
Orders , or Now York KxclmiiKO in ordinary lot-
tcr. currency by express at our oxpunso ad
drCSSCd'
' M. A. DAUPHIN ,
Now Orleans , La.
Or M. A.DAUPHIN ,
. a.
Make P. O. Money Orders parnblo nnd addroai
cjristoroil letters tn
NEW OULJJANS NATIONAL HANK ,
Now Orleans. La.
SENT C. O. D.
O.NK OK SKIlti : AT IVIIUIXRAI.E I'KICE.
I PAY nil eiprroi clianc3 to nil point * within UOO
miles. l.KK'carrl ci. to st'lect from Rrnil t o cent ,
Btoinp for Illustrated catalogue. Mention tliUiuii > cr.
L. G. SPENCER'S ' TOY FACTORY ,
221 W. WIADISON ST. , CHJCAGO.
RESTORED. Rrmr/Iy
j'rce. A. > ictiin of youth ,
fill imprudence caimlDir
I Premature Urciy , Nen
vouz Debility , Ioflt Jinn-
' .oou , &c.liaInu tried In valnovcry known rciwxtr
ha illnmvered a flnile ] nelf nire. v nlrh ho u ill heua
FUKK to lil follon'.3iitrercrn. AililrHHH
J. U.UKBVE3.i3ChatuariH < treet.Ncw VorkCitr.
Instant toiler. Final euro In
10 dayB , and never roiurns. No
) urjfo , nopalvono suppository. Siitferd will
earn of nslniplo tuniody Irco by luldtuulnir C !
J. MASON,87 Nassau St. , N. Y uprllooiltiiu
Or tlio I.lquur Uabil , 1'niitliely
Cured l .v A < liiilnlsl < Tln lr.
JIlllllCH * ( iltllloil SKTllIll.
It can liOKUni Inu uup of cotltuurlriwithout
tile knowledge u ( the person UMiiH II , I * absolutely
nannies , uml will ufleut a ijcrtiianent r.n.l Hpeudy
cure , whcl'.irr the patient Is a niodiT.if ; ; 'i-lnlfcr ur
% n nicoliollo ureck. It uai bi > r > n given In lliou-
n .ili ( of cases , anil In i-vi-ry Initunceierfoet ; : euro
has follouoil. It iirxT InIN Ths system once
linpiVKiialrd u Ith the , i 'il'c , It beconu'i uii ultul
linpo'slhlllty for tliu liquor Hppetlto to exUt
FOIl hAI.13 IIV FOLtOWIXO DIIUOOISTS :
Hl'HN \ : CO. . Cor. S.ltli nml DaonliiH. ami
IStli iV fnniinuSis. . , OniuUn , IVsb.t
A. n. Fovruii & nirw. ,
Cniniril niutTK , loira.
Call or write for pamphlet containing hun'lrtda
o7 to'tlmonl iN Ironi tlmbct women and ineu from
B.tps/tfiof the to-ill trv.
"CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH. "
Tlie < > rlinnl nnd Only iJcuiilne ,
fill ta < \ > t > ari KrllibU. Il rc of wortblr < Iuill > tl'l. .
JnJIixniatilg U LADIES. A > L ! ' . r llriiKKltt Of
"Cblche.eerVriiall.ir'aiiil Una no olhrror niUiMuU.
( lUBipalto us for tmrtlcuUri tn Itlttr bjr rrlurn MMU.
NAME PAPER , c-klehrrter ( bniiUal Co. ,
US t U AlailUon Hqiiarc. 1'hllailu. , ! ' .
into bj Drnezl.N cvrrTMhrrr. Aik for 'flilFlm >
ter'4 uclli uM I'ennjruirul I'lllit. TaktuwuUt/ .
BSTADLISHED USED IN ALL
JLB70.
PARIS OF THE
WORLD
_
rntaloKUi-u nnil Prlci-a on appllrntlon.
llttio best fiirrhm llullnvriiiuiil DoulT * .
CINCINNATI , II. S. A.
jhlHAuVp-M , CDOCIN
Cure without modi-
A POSITIVE clno. I'atemo 1 Octo-
burlil , 1H7G.
Ono bor will euro
tlio most obtliiiitociiso in four days orluw.
nllan'sSolubleWledicalgdBougies '
Nfi nnuwotw rtrnos of cnbohi , oopnlb'i or oil ol
etindaluood tliut are certain to produea tlyini | | > -
Elu by dorti-oylnif the contlmfs of thu loinuuh
J'neo el.no. Sold IIP nil dni'HH or inulled 01
receipt of pru-o. For fnrthor p.irtieulnr * Bent
forcirc'ilnr. I' , O. BOJT IVtI.
j. c. u .rjrj i.ir co. ,
lOJobnsl. . Now York.
DREXEL
( Suooessora to J. O. Jaoobj. )
UNDERTAKER S
AND EMBALMEKS.
M the old stand , HOT Farnam SU Ordora t > r
tflogruph solicited and promptly ultandoj to.
Tuleplionu Nn.it > |
IDE OF
Fine Business Lots at the South End , and
Beautiful Residence Lots !
In tlio north end of this Town. Two mul ono half mtloji from the Omaha pd3
offlcp ,
1OOO SLOTS
These are Quarter Acre Lots.
( Taking Into contlJcrMlon the itreiti nnd nller * ) , mul ftfe oU
One. Quarter Down ,
nutincotn I , s tid n rear * KIT rot cant.
The Finest Suburban Lots ,
Around Omittn , yflfcat nlMTii th Ml mirt tllror. Nowhora alia aljjut Omalu ro locttDt 'icli ' h n
torn * flics fur Moilpst , Mo Hum orRlpunnt horn * * .
luTcitlgnto thli nnil secure 101110 of this Una propcrtr.
Before a Higher Appraisement is made. .
DON" ! ' UULIKVn nerd olltU until Ttm Imo tlioroiuhlr lnrontlgittl.1 It. ,
Ttint this property U nnlr t < ro mul ono half mllci from Uiniha's busiiini oatitJr.
Thnt the altltwdoH blub.
Thnt the locution la ueitullf ul. *
Thntmttplo troatnre planted on Men i > Moof ( tin utrmn.
That each lot contains 0OJO nqti ire foot nllliSJfoalalljy.
Thnt UiostrecU uro 80 nnd IU ) foot wide.
Thnt there nro six dummjr trains rnoh wny. baslilns thn ronUr tnlik
Tlmt tlio lroot cars rim to nlthln ono half mlla ot thorj.
Tim t'lho streetcar * will run there this tar.
Thnt tlio prlco Is one third less limn Is nskoJ for property ttu t\-ni illninoa In DtUir dlraitlnu
Tlmt tlio lots nro one thlnt hnierthun mo t other * ' 'i
Thnt thcjr nro bnrkoit bymymllcita rcprotcntniitHMlOll
ThnllhcrohimnlreaJr been erpi'iiiloil bettcon lnlTI ) ) inltl,1l)1l. | ) * " '
Thnt there Inn line system or waterworks , furulsliln ? piirajprliu iraHr. . t " *
Thnt tlio railway * nil center tbort. . '
Thnt South Omahn I ) n town of lUulf.
Thnt U linn Iu own postylllco. ' , _
Qlint It bnii IU OITII nlllwnr ntllloa.
Shut It Uui Its own no
In Fact
has OTCrythtnc to make tlio property the rery best payliu InronmTit In R3il-v tnt9 tolir.
Look Into It. Examine It Carefully |
Don't Buy a Lot.
Dntll yon nro con7lnccd thai tlioro Is no pnwlblty orlnciirrlnnnlost. TtiohimUonu roMdoncollot * nro
one nillo thlt tldo ( directly north ) of the UMON siucn VAIIDS where nra lucatoJ tha
and.
Soof Can.rs.ln.2-
Wlilcli In ten yean will lie the I.AIlfiKST INnilSTnv In the wen nnd will mike proportr worlli par foil
ivbat IB now asked for H lot. The ilrttlmiKU or the ubovo liutltiitlom U porfoclnna tlow laulli from tlio tuirn |
THE ABOVE DESCRIBED LOTS ARE SIMPLY PERFECT.
Anr roil cstntincoiit will neil yiiu loti. Man with hone nml cnrrl iu nt tlio ( ilDliasToumul olHco , at t'D
"Suinnilt , " South Uninlm. lu < mapt nmt price Hutu nml l > ul war a ruuily Ib show property , for furtUjrln-
tornmtlou umiis , piico HsU und dcscrlpllvu cliuulurt , mlilreaj , '
M. Aa UPTON , Manager ]
MILLABD HOTEL BLOCK.
Omaha , Nebraska.
-DEWEY & STONE ,
FURNITURE !
One of the Best and Largest Stocks in the ]
United States to Select From ,
OMAWA.
M. BURKE & SONS ,
LIVE STOCK COMMISSION MERCHANTS ,
QKO. I1UIIKK , Manoaer ,
UNION STOCK YARDS , OMAHA , NEB.
HEFEItKJiOKS : Murcliants' ntul Kiiriners' Hank , David City , Nt-l ) . ; Ko.trncy Nittlonal' '
flank , Kearney , Neb. ; Coliiinliii.i St.ilo Hank. Columbus , Xcb. ; JtcDonahl'a Ihiilc , NortUi
L'Jatte , Nrb. ; Omaha Xatlomd Hunk , Omaha. N'rb. , , , . , . . '
Will i > ay customers' ilralt with bill of laJmc attaclied for two-tlilrds value ot stoclc.
THE BE8TTHREAD FOR SEWING MACHINES
SIX-CORD SOFT FINISH SPOOL COTTON J
Full Assortment for sale to the Trndo by
VINYARD & SCHNEIDER
Display at their warerooms , 13O5 and 1307 Farnam Street ,
the largest assortment of Pianos and Organs to be found al
any establishment west of Chicago. The stock embraces tn
highest class and medium grades , Including
STEINWAY ,
FISCHER ,
LYON&HEALY I
. BURDETT ,
ORGAN STANDARD ,
LYON&HEALY
Prices , quality and durability considered , are placed at the
slowest living rates for cash or time payments , whllo the long
established reputation of the house , coupled with their most
liberal Interpretation of the guarantee on their goods , affo"js
the purchaser an absolute safeguard against | osa , by possible
defects In materials or workmanship.
T * LYON & HEALY ,
tOOG & t30T FARNAM 6TBECT 'I '