TIIE OMAHA DAILY BEE : FRIDAY , MAY 12 , 1800. 0 GORDON CITY. ? HyiH.VKY S. TIIILI , , c | ( Copyright , 1S , by Marie S. Thill. ) Gordon Cltr had sprung up almost In a night. If a traveler had ridden along at the foot of the mountain on the first day of September , 183 , howould have been only o dreary stretch of yellow sand on ono hand and on the other the barren rocks of the mountain sldo , with hero and there a scrub oak or stunted plno struggling up between them. The broad waste was unrelieved by any sign of llfo except perhaps the scurryIng - Ing form of a coyote or jackal. If that same traveler had returned on the 23th of the aamo month It must have seemed to him that Aladdin with his wonderful lamp had visited the spot. True , In Gordon City there were no lofty or beautiful palaces , but there was life the rccklcrs , feverish , almost mad llfo of the gold country. Three weeks .before . , by the merest acci dent , old Bill Gordon , In working hlo way up the gulch , had discovered and reportrd signs of gold. On the third day of Us ex istence the camp at the foot of the moun tain -was dlgnincd by the name of Gordon City. Strange buildings rose In Irregular toloeks , whllo on the three sldca of the cen tral camp clustered groups of whlto tents nnd cnnvasn.topped wagons. E > ery third building was labeled "Saloon nnd Dance Hall ; " roulette wheels and faro banks made their appearance with astonishing rapidity. Thtxso wcro great days In Gordon City. Every mining camp In Colorado furnlahod Us quota of roughshod prospectors and trim- clad gamblers to the makeup of the new " boom town. " Money nnd men wcro plenty ; food nnd all the luxuries of llfo wcro ecarco nnd dear. The " " " "Lost Chord" and the "Mol- llo Kirk" were pouring a goldun stream Into the town , 'out It took n good-sized fortune toi cure the uao of a bed over night. There M , 'o not blankets enough to go nround any- p tfy f , BO a. good part of the population turned Anight Into day. There wa.i no lack of diver- elon for these. All night long the dance lialls and gambling houses blood with open doora All night long coulll be heard the squeaking muslo of cracked violins , the cllckoty-cllck of the wheel , turning the sweat-bought treasure of the miners Into the pockets of the sleek Individuals behind the green cloth. One would never suspect nowadays that "the metropolis of Marshall county , " as the Gordon City Gazette proudly ntyles It , was over a center of this rough- and-tumblo life , 'but ' towns , llko Individuals , sometimes have to ROW their wild oats be fore they steady down , and Gordon City was lively enough In Its youth. f Along with this flowing tide of humanity that set so steadily toward the now town nnd spread Its confines further and further nlong the mountain side , thcro drifted Into Gordon City ono day , or night , a man who could not have been far past 40 , though his hair nnd beard were those of C5. His form was erect'1 and his face was pleasant If a. trifle weak ; It would have been handsome except for Its puffy whiteness , , the mark of long continued dissipation. Among all the motley crowd that thronged the camp It was difficult to plnco him. Ho was not a miner for his hands were soft nnd white , plainly unused to rough toil , nor was ho a profes sional gambler , though ho often sat In the faro game nt Bill Price's "studio , " where the highest stakes In the camp wcro played. Ho almost Invariably got up from the tables a winner In spite of the fact that ho played with no system , and with apparent reck lessness. In a moro settled community ho would have been the objort of a deal of curious interest thcro was something so In congruous In his presence In the town ; ho seemed to belong among other associations but ns It was , nobody know nor cared. People - plo were not too Inquisitive about ono an other's antecedents In Gordon City. Andieo the stranger pursued his way , Idly and un molested , until one day when Faro Bill casually asked : "What mout ycr trade be , pardner ? " The whlto bearded man gave his questioner a half startled look and then replied ab sently : "O , yes , I used to bo a lawyer ; It was so long ago I had almost forgotten It. " At this Gordon City suddenly awolto to the fact that It had gene thus far upon Its civic career without a representative of the legal profession. 'As ' the .fact that U had not occurred to It before proved , the lack had not 'been seriously felt , for law bad been made nnd Interpreted according to common scnso and the frontier code. But It was generally admitted that the omission would bo seized upon by the Almlra Sun beam and pointed out ns Indicating a lack of urbanity. Almlra was located' ' on the other sldo of the mountain. It was older than Gordon City nnd the Sunbeam had a way of casting envious and unpleasant as persions on the youthful limitations of the ' rival town. So It 'was ' decided that nn inN - N formal meeting of "tho boys , " held In Buck- Bkln Joo's saloon , to establish the "Judge , " as ho was nt once Btyled , In business. Buckskin Joe gave up a room over his sa loon for an office , and that when room was the scarcest article In Gordon City. A prospector who hnd once boon a sign painter provided a shingle , which soon owung before the door , bearing the legend : "Samuel Woodrow - row , Attorney and Counselor-at-Law. " The furnishings of the ofllco consisted of a rough board table , a chair made out of un- planed plank and a rusty stovo. The only books were a small tattered Bible , the prop erty of the judge himself , and a thumb- worn Homer contributed by Greasy Jim , who had been a classical otudont In an eastern university before he turned to the vocation of cowpunchcr and prospector. Hut nt that it was the most pretentious ofllco In Gordon City. City.Thus It came about that the judge , by no effort of his own , was set up lu business. He accepted It nil without protest or en couragement , morel/ thanking "tho boya" for tholr kindness in his soft-mannered , wo manish way. It was not dlflleult to play the role of lawyer In Gordon City. There was not likely to bo much hair-splitting over fine-drawn legal distinctions , nnd no very high regard was entertained for weighty precedent. The seedy stranger found his task an easy one , and ho carried it out with the passive Indifference with which ho hnd received Ills habllltatlon ns a light of the legal profession. Ho had strange clients and strange fees. Sometimes n bronzed and booted miner threw down n handful of gold dust as payment for draw ing n deed of contract , Again ho was paid with half a dozen chances at kcuo or faro , which ho always took and usually won. Once or twlco he received shares in mines , which were expected to yield unlimited quantities of pay dirt , but which thus far had not panned out. At first the judge endeavored to refuse money offered In payment for his services , but after n tlmo ho gave this up , and eocmed actually to acquire an Interest In his work. Ho never Insisted upon a charge , but ho no longer refused to accept payment when It was offered. Ho Invested In n law book sent out from Denver , and spent a good part of the tlmo in his offlco reading It , though ho still sat occasionally In Dill Price's faro bank. Success seemed to be making a now man of thojudge , and " -tho boys" wondered mildly at the cbango thnt had been wrought In him , Fifteen miles away to the southward , where the foothills of the mountains sink in long undulating waves Into ( ho broad ex panse of prairie , a. sluggish stream made Its way bet ween banks , dotted with a bcrawny cottonwoods. Hero stood a lonely prairie cabin , ii typical western ranch liouisc , long , low and unsightly. No other building waa in eight ; In fact , thcro was no human habi tation between It and Gordon City. But the tram9 house had stood there when Gordon City was undreamed of , and when the near est town was to the south Instead of to the north , and twenty miles away. In front of the ranch house on un early October day stood a woman talking to a boy who had just harnessed n mule team to tha wagon. The woman was under 40 , nnd her face was only beginning to assume the yellowish tint so frequently seen In the women of the plains. It was the boy's face , older nnd firmer perhaps , but bearing a look of Ineffable sadness , as of a sorrow long repressed. The boy himself formed o picturesque figure a * ho stood beside the team , In ana hand the goad , In the other a huge bandanna handkerchief with which ho occasionally mopped his faco. On Tils head ho wore a big Mexican hitt and his flannel fihlrt , carelessly left open at the collar , dis played the spreading muscles of his chest. In a moment moro ho had mounted to the wagon scat , had cracked the long goad over the backs of tliq mules , and was disappear ing In a cloud of yellow dust along the trail. The woman gazed after hint with a look half of pride and half of sadness , as though fihu would have liked to call him back. A long tlmo she stood there until the little cloud that marked the progress of the mule team hod disappeared In the widening ex panse of prairie ; then with a sigh she turned and went Indoors , Inside a young girl was rattling the morning dishes and singing a hymn In n high clear voice. In looks the girl favored neither her mother nor her brother. Hather her roguish , laughIng - Ing eyes and finely chiseled features resem bled a portrait hidden away In the mother's bureau draWcr and seldom looked at. Yet sometimes when she was alone the woman would draw out the portatt and gaze long and earnestly nt It ; and when she put It back she always knelt and breathed a silent nravnr in lie.avnn. As she moved about , engaged In various household tasks , she often stopped to look anxiously up the track that the 'boy ' had taken , though she knew that It would' be hours 1)oforo his return. It was'Just as the sun was sinking behind the distant yellow bluffs , a hugo red ball of fire , that bright ened oven tho-drcary sand stretches with Its golden glow , that she heard the welcome clatter of the mule wagon , and uurrled to prepare supper , for she knew the appetite of a boy. But tonight Park Raymond scarcely tasted his food. His eyes wcro strangely bright and restless , and he could speak of nothing but the sights of Gordon City. It .was plain that ho had caught the fever , that subtle , dangerous disease of gold that bos played the will-o'-tho-wlsp to many o man , until it led him Into a namelcas desert grave on the alkali plains. It was some time before ho summoned up courage to tell his mother that ho wanted to try his luck nt the diggings , and then her sudden outburst of tears , and the un- caslncBS of his own conscience , persuaded him 'to postpone the plan for a tlmo at least. Dut ho went moro and moro frequently to Gordon City. Often , when the necessary work upon the ranch was done , he saddled his pony and went away , tobe gene almost till the next morning. , The cheap display , the noise , the stir and bustle of the place fascinated him. There ho mot rough men and brazen women , unlike any bo had over seen before. His eyes wcro opened to many things that no gallop across the plains would over have- revealed to him. It was his flrst gllmpso of life. And yet , unlike most but terflies who flrst see the lighted wick , ho was not singed by Its flame. Ho liked to lounge about the dance Halls and gambling houses , but he was content to remain merely a spectator. If ho had but known It , he could not have gene very far without pro test or Interference , for every movement was watched with constant , almost painful Inter est by the gray-haired man 'whom everybody knew as the Judge. Park Raymond had never known any girl except his own sister before ho visited Gor don City , and he was disappointed in moat of those ho saw there , but there was ono whoso beauty fairly hcJd him speechless the first tlmo ho saw her. She was the daughter of Dill Price , the faro king , nnd as the latter had the reputation of being Just as ready to shoot a man as to shake hands with him , his daughter was treated with unusual respect , oven by the rowdies , of whom there were not a few In Gordon City. She was the ono person In the world whom the faro king loved. Her mother had died years before , and she had always boon accustomed to the wild llfo of the new western towns. Yet In splto of such rough associations , she had grown up llko a single fair flower in a garden given over to weeds. Gordon City had not reached the point where rigid conventionalities are Insisted upon , so .It was noU long before Park Ilay- mand and his divinity were excellent friends. They were attracted toward each other by an Innate natural refinement , which both craved , but which was lacking In most of their acquaintances. It must not "bo sup posed , however , that these two young people w'oro In love. Park Raymond was , perhaps , very near It , though he himself had never dreamed of such a thing. The girl's beauty and natural grace were wholly charming to his nature , which , though ho did not know It , had been cast In an artistic mold. Her flguro flllcd his eye very pleasantly , nnd for the tlmo ho was content to think of her as a being from another world , to bo looked up to and admired. As for the girl , she had found an agreeable companion , and that was enough. Love , as she had seen It In the mining , camps , ' did not appeal to her. If the young plainsman was disposed 'to worship her , she did not object , although she did not understand it. Ono morning Park Raymond , having driven to town for a load of supplies , was sauntering along the main otrcet of the town , when ho saw ahead of him the faro king's daughter. It was the tlmo of day when Gordon City seemed almost deserted ; the working population wa $ away at the diggings and the moths who fluttered eo boldly at night wore all asleep. Desldes these two there waa but ono person In sight In the whole length of the Irregular street. That was Long Pete , who was lounging in the door of the Trlanglo saloon. Pete had struck It rich two weeks before and since that tlmo ho had been In a continuous state of most 'bllMful Intoxication. Ho was now In the first stages of the sobcrlug-up pro cess , when a man becomes most dangerous to himself and to his friends. As Raymond qluckened his pace to join the faro dealer's daughter she ntopped a moment to gaze Into the window of the shop next to the Trlanglo , and Long 'Pete ' addrewed her with tipsy familiarity. The girl turned toward him ; she raised one hand which held a parasol. Down came the parasol swiftly toward the man's head and his hat rolled to the ground. Then with a ringing laugh the girl hurried along toward home , Raymond , who bad witnessed the encounter from a llttlo dis tance down the mrcet , halted opposite Pete to laugh nt hU discomfiture , 'but his laugh died out and his face paled as the big fel low recovered himself nnd hU hand went toward his hip pocket , Pete's greatest ac complishment , ono which he boasted , unduly perhaps , was that ho was a dead oaot , drunker or sober , In fact , If thcro was any choice In the matter of marksmanship , Pete in clined to the opinion that ho excelled when he had his regular three-quarters aboard. Mauy tellings , aided < by not a few ocular demonstrations , had convinced Gordon City of the validity of Pete's unique claim to distinction. At either extreme , that of so briety or Inebriety , Polo was a good-naturoj , companionable fellow , It woa In the transi tion stages that ho always got Into trouble , and frequently got other people Into trouble from which they never recovered. At another tlmo Pete would never have thought of firing upon a woman or of re- fontlng the manner In which his cftrontry had been rebuked. Just now he wau Ih. capable of reasoning. The only Impression that forced itself clearly upon his maudlin brain was that he had 'been Inaulled and must avenge the Insult. Park Raymond saw Pete's menacing ges ture toward the girl , and he realized that ho must act moro quickly than the man across the street , If ho would save her life. There was no time to shout to her to get out of the way ; she was walking calmly down the street with her parasol over her fchouldcr , and probably would not even turn her head If ho called out to her. Thcro was but ono course nnd the boy fallowed It al most instinctively. His right hand grasped his own revolver , leveled , flrcd , straight at the breast of Long Pete , who dropped to the ground , his weapon being discharged Into the nlr as ho fell. As the echo of the shot died away Park's head swam , his senses seemed to bo leaving him , the revolver dropped from his nerve less grasp , nnd ho sank down on a box close beside the spot where ho had been stand- Ing. Ho had had no clear Intention nf killIng - Ing the man , yet doubt that ho was dead never entered the boy's mind. Ho did not even reflect that he had saved the girl which had been his ono thought a moment before. Ills mind was all a contusion of sensations , with one fact bearing down upon him with overwhelming force ho had taken a life. i Events had conspired against Park Raymond mend on this day , as they sometimes do against all of us. That very morning the district attorney of the county had arrived in Gordon City , coming to Investigate what the Almlra Sunbeam was pleased to call a "carnival of crime , " nnd to see what was the condition of the new town's legal ap paratus. Ho was a smooth-faced , calculat ing young fellow , with a turn for politics , and ho knew how to Impress a mining camp , In order to bring It to his own way of think. Ing. And Gordon- City was no less anxious to Impress the district attorney. Here , then , was tholr opportunity , a most flagrant case that called for Immediate attention. A group of sleepy and disheveled citizens gathered leisurely about Park Raymond nnd 'tho ' body of Long Pcto at the news of a killing. A man with an air of great Injportanco' pushed his way through the crowd. Ho was the newly elected marshal of the town , and the young plainsman was promptly placed under arrest for murder. Murder was a new word to the Inhabitants of Gordon City , and the flavor of It gave them the pleasing experi ence of a now sensation. In towns like Gordon City justice moves not with the halting step that characterizes her progress In the east , tout swiftly , PO that the full effect of the example Is felt. If she Is less certain , that is the quality that can best be spared In a new commu nity. In this case everything had happened most opportunely. The district attorney was on hand. Ho would wait over ono day to try the case. The machinery of Justice , all brand new , would have Its flrst trial under the most auspicious circumstances. Promptly at 9 o'clock the next morning a crowd gathered at the extemporized court house ; the long shed used by the proprietor of the mule train that .brought supplies to Gordon City had been given over temporarily rily for this purpose. The justice of the peace who tried the case sat upon a bale of hay , the clerk was similarly supplied and a board laid across two barrels served as a deok. The Jury was ranged upon a double tier of dry 'goods boxes whllo the spectators stood up or lounged on 'boxes ' and casks. On the question of lawyers there could bo no difficulty. The district attorney would , of course , prosecute , and , as the only law yer in town , "Judge" Woodrow appeared for the defense. There was no division of sentiment about the case. As for the killing Itself , It mat tered llttlo. Pete had never been n prime favorite ; ho was too prone to quarrels when In his cups. If he had not died at this time his end would probably have come In some similar fashion 'before very long. Sym pathy for the 'prisoner , or Inquiry as to hH motive , was apparently unthought of. The ono well-defined feeling was that Gordon City could not take a place lu rank with the moro prctcnilous towns of western Col orado until Us claims to the height of civil ization had been vindicated by n legal exe cution. As old Jceh Summers expressed It : "I dunne but I'd 'a done the en mo thing In that young feller's place , but thoy's a gen eral feelln' In town that It's ' .bout time we had a hangln' . " It would glvo the Almlra Sunbeam opportunity for a fresh attack If this man were lot go. It would be almost an net of discourtesy to the district attor ney to allow his flrst visit to prove a fruit less one. The district attorney had enough of the cunning of his craft to appreciate tliia state of mind on the part of Gordon City. While ho briefly mentioned the points of law in volved , he appealed chiefly to this general feeling , and put It Into words. Ho told his audiences that their beautiful and beloved town had a bad reputation ( the adjective scrvod as a sugar coating to the unpleasant statement and showed that the district at torney knew his business ) . Ho showed them that as long as indiscriminate shooting , or shooting of any kind , was permitted , they could not expect to attract eastern capital , which was all th'at was needed to make Gor don City ithe metropolis of western Colorado. Ho dwelt at length on all the glorious pos sibilities which hung upon till ? ono decision. As ho ceased speaking a subdued murmur of approval ran through the crowd , the hopeless - loss look upon the prisoner's face deepened , and the jurymeo set their lips in firmer lines , while some of them felt Instinctively toward their pistol pockets. Young Raymond had not expected much from "advice of counsel , " Thus far ho had had no advlco at all , for the judge had not asked htm about the shooting , and dur ing the trial bo had oven avoided looking Into the prisoner's face. "He's sorry for me , and knows bo can't do anything , " thought Raymond. Between the prisoner and his at torney , It seemed unlikely that the citizens of Gordon City would bo disappointed in their desire for n hanging. Some feeling of chivalry , or perhaps a boyish reluctance to acknowledging the attraction which Faro Dill's daughter had for him , had kept the young plainsman from telling the true story of Long Pete's death. In response to < ho usual question of "Guilty or not guilty ? " he had responded with convicting readiness "Guilty. " These who glanced at the judge during the progress of the trial casually remarked ; to their neighbors , "Reckon the old msn ' didn't sleep well last night. " The judjro i had not slept well. All night long ho had sat In the llttlo ofllco above Duckskln Joe's saloon , most of the tlmo with his bend bowed on his arms , and the last thing ho did be fore leaving for the trial was to take an old-fashioned photograph from .in Inncc pocket and to say as ho looked at it , "I'll do It ; I must do it. " Now , as he stood up to addtvss the jury , he was ashen pale and his hands nervously plucked bits of hay from the bale that Blood beside him. Ho began In a yolco that was hardly audible , addressing himself to the spectators rather than to the Jury. "I'm going to tell you n llttlo story to show why you ought not to take the Mfe of this prisoner , and I'll try to make It short enough no as not to tire you out. To begin with , I might say that I was born In a llttlo Connecticut town , that my father was a" lawyer nnd generally looked upon as the leading man of the village. " The listeners looked nt ono another In sur prise , and ono or two of thorn whispered : "What's this got to do with the case ? Must bo the old man has slipped a cog. " They paid careful attention , however , as the Judge went on In a firmer voice : "I had every ad vantage , nnd after going through college I succeeded to my father's business. 1 mar ried the parson's daughter , the bcllo of the town. She had nil the county to choose from nnd she took mo. " The judge's voice became a trlllo husky , but ho cleared Tils throat nnd went on. "For two years wo were as happy as though wo had 'been In paradise ; then I took to gambling. It was the old story , of course. Trust funds went after my own good money. I was found out nnd sentenced to fourteen years In prison. Only you who were brought up In the east know what that meant to everybody connected with me. It 'was Impossible for mo to llvo down the disgrace , and my wife , after stick ing to mo all through the trial , left for the west to build up a homo for herself and her children , where 1 could Join them after my term was over. I think that I could have "FIRED STRAIGHT AT THE DREAST OF LONG PETE. " done so and have lived on uprrght life after ward If It had not been for my wife's father. Ho was a hard man and he didn't bollevo there was any good In mo. Ho came to mo toward the end of my term and told mo that I was tojbp pardoned , but that I" had better not try'to 'go to my wife , that she was happy with her children and didn't wish eveF to see mo again. "I know now that ho was lying to me and that I was a fool ever to glvo him my prom- tee , but a man feels as though ho'd lost his bearings when ho flrst gets out of prison , and even though he's an honest man ho wan'ls ' to hide from honest folks while the Jail marks are on him. Of course I couldn't stay In 'my native town , so I drifted west , making my living , or something better , at the gaming table , where I had already lost moro than I could ever win back. I didn't Intend to see my wlfo 'again , but 'after a couple of years I went to the town where she had lived , thinking to flnd how she was getting along and to do something for her If I could without letting her know where the help came from. Dut they had moved away , been gone about two years , the folks said , and nobody know where. "Well , I drifted on , not caring much what became of me , until I'Struck Gordon City. I hadn't been hero long before I saw my son on 'the etreet ono day. I know him at once , for ho has his mother's looks. I found out where ho lived nod whenever ho was around I watched him. You can Imagine I would. I found out that whllo lie might bo a llttlo wild 'ho ' had the right sort of stuff In him and wasn't like his father. I didn't dare show myfcfclf to my wife , for fear she would know me , but I hung around etlll , because I wanted to scrape together n 'fittlo ' moro money before I did the dis appearance act for good and all. " The judge paused and cleared his throat again. "Gentlemen , " ho sold , for the first tlmo turning toward Uio jury , "I was watchIng - Ing my son when I saw this shooting. I saw Long Pete speak > .o Faro Bill's daugh ter she will tell you that this Is the truth. I saw her knock Pelo's 'hat off and I saw Pete pull his gum Ho was drunk , of course , but that wouldn't have raved the girl. Nothing would have caved her life , If this prisoner hadn't been quicker than Pete. Ho might have winged him , I'll admit but young men don't n7wnys stop to think of such 'things. ' Ho has his own reasons , I suppose , for not telling of this , as I ex pected ho would , ' but these are the facts , gentlemen' . And I want ito say that I nm proud of him , " added the Judge , forgetting In his excitement that ho had omitted to Identify > tUo prisoner with his eon. A buzz of astonished comment went around the room , but the judge hod not yet fin ished. "Of course , " said he , for the flrst tlmo assuming something of a legal man ner , "I nm nwnro that ns the counsel for the opposition ea > 8 an example must bo pet. But since you are trying to produce an ef fect , and not to punish a crime ( for no crime has been committed ) , I suggest that you allow mo to.take the place of the prisoner and by executing the law on me Instead cf the prisoner you will end a man's mltery and save , a woman from heartbreak. " Dead silence reigned for a moment after the Judge sat down ; everybody was too much surprised for spqcch. The marshal was the first to break the spell , His hand dropped from the prisoner's shoulder ; ho turned to the crowd and said : "This here man Is free. " It was somewhat Irregular , but highly satisfactory , and n ringing cheer went up from the usually unemotional resi dents of Gordon City. The judge seemed hardly to understand what was going on around him. He sank back on his scat after the tnon had shaken bis hand and filed out , leaving father and osn nlono together. As for Park Raymind ho had long been oblivious of everything but hU father's presence , Emotions of Blnme , humiliation , sorrow and love had awept over him as ho stood thcro , pale and quiet with his Jips firmly compressed. As the last of the crowd disappeared ho roused himself and went over to the old man , say ing simply : "Come father. " The Judge al lowed himself to .bo led from the roomi the mule team was quickly harnessed and soon Park Raymond and hU father seated sldo by sldo upon the high wagon , were driven across the hills away from Gordor City to where a woman was waiting nnc watching fcr her eon. In the dusty breeze that blew down UK gorge n dingy signboard creaked. On It was painted : " "Samuel Woodrow , Attorney au-i Counselor , ' but "Judge Woodrow" was nc more. ST01U13S AIIOfT DICIC OUl.r.SllY. Ilia Trip < < > rntlforiilii nml llln Ojilii. lull nil MnsoV lloil Sen .Mnrcli. "Dick Oglcsby was the beat man I cvoi know , " said Judge Lee ml 3 of Carllnvllle , 111. , to n Chicago Inter Ocean reporter. " 1 first met him nt Louisville , Ky. , In the fall of 1S4S. Ho came down to attend law lec tures nnd I was there for the same purpose , Wo were classmates nnd graduated In the next March. Whllo In college wo concluded to go to California In quest of gold , the fever having spread nil over the country. I lived In Chesterfield , Macoupln county , nnd 'Dick's' homo was In Dccntur. Ho ar ranged to get up n small party of eight 01 ten good fellows. I obtained my mother's iconsont nnd In March of that year went ovcrlnnd to Dccntur to eco him nnd make the flnal arrangements. Thcro wcro nine ol us In the party , viz. , George Mattlcr , Wil liam Ray , Henry Prather ( Dick's brother- in-law ) , Mlllamy Pctlcord , Jacob Hommcll , Hchry Sedorls , Richard Plait ( Plait county was named after his father ) , Dick Oglcsby and myself. "Wo agreed to meet at St. Joseph , Mo. Oglesby and Platt went by way of the Mis souri river and the rest of us rode mules across country , arriving there the last week In April , 1S4 ! > . On May 4 we > rowed on an old flatboat across the river Into the Indian territory nnd towed the boat to a high bnnk. It took three trips to get the wagons nnd mules across. Upon our arrival In the territory wo wcro compelled to guard ngnlnst Indians. . The flrst white men wo saw some Immigrants wcro at Fort Henry , where two companies of soldiers wcro stationed. Many nights we saw thou sands of buffaloes , largo droves of wolves and herds of antelope. Wo did not stay thcro lone. Fresh meat was plenty , for wo shot It ns wo needed it. I remember what enjoyable nights wo had. Oglesby was quite a skillful fiddler and had his violin lin with him. Frequently nt night Oglcsby and I ( the other boys were afraid ) would go to the camp of the Indians nnd Dick would entertain them with selections on his Instrument , As a consequence ho was a great favorite with them. f "At ono place on the Plattc a band of Sioux Indians surrounded us. They were on the warpath against the Pawnees. They wore topge'd up In war paint , armed with knives nnd tomahawks nnd ns they sur rounded us Dick was the most prarcd man I have seen before or slnco and I was In the same predicament. Wo concluded It was all up with us and that wo would bo put to torture. Two grizzled old chiefs approached preached us and grunted out 'Tobnc. ' Wo let them have all the tobacco they wanted nnd were mighty glad wo had snmo with us. Then the old chiefs , rising up ontheir ponies , gave nn awful yell , nnd away the whole gang loped like the wind. Our boys looked awfully white , but they all had their hands on their arms and were ready to fight to the last. "Onco wo concluded to walk to n bluff , which appeared to ho about two miles dis tant. As usual , Dick and I were the only two foolish enough to do such a thing. We tramped fifteen miles nnd did not reach the bluff till midnight. A fog came up and wo could not see fifty yards ahead. Wo had no blankets , nothing to cat nnd , for fear ol being lost , wo did not move until the next morning , nnd when wo nwoke wo wcro like Irlclcs. 'Dick , ' snld I , 'what do you want most ? ' 'Some peed old whisky , Thnd , ' said ho , 'would go fine. ' It was 3 o'clock In the afternoon before wo reached the wagons and all that tlmo we were without a bite to eat. Wo went around Salt Lake City , foi that was too near the Mormons , as BrlRharr Young's followers were having all kinds ol trouble about that time. Wo passed c trading post of the Hudson Day companj and saw the Indians give up furs wortli hundreds of dollars for n few rifles and bul lets. Fort Hall was reached on the Fourtl : of July. It was so c-ld that Ice formed or the top of the wntrr bucket. Next we struck the HumholcU Hvrr. floating dowr 300 miles to where It sink In the desert. "Crossing the desert , wltblrj the last tor miles our teams gave out. Wo wcro nearlj perishing for water. Sighting timber , wo gel on the strongest mules nnd rode llko mad until wo came tn a high bank , where -we plunged ton feet Into the cool , elear water , mules and all. We floated around for pevcral hours relieving ourselves of the Intolerable thirst , for our tongues wcro swollen double their normal size and wo could not speak. Then wo returned to the wagons. "Late one evening we reached the top ol the Sierra Nevadas , tired "out , cold , when Dick said : "This Is about the nearest to heaven wo will ever get , nnd we had better finish our bottje of French brandy. ' About thirty or forty miles out from St. Joseph , Mo. , I lost my hat and was compelled to go bareheaded all the way across the conti nent , till wo reached Sacramento , as It was impossible to purchase one. Sacramento then was a settlement of about 1,000 people. The people were greatly excited , as they had hanged a big follow for stealing a ham the day before our arrival. As a man could get $10 a day for working the Inhabitants thought that a man who would steal ought to 1io buns. Dick and his brother-in-law rained In what was called Denver creek. I struck a claim In the Uba river. Wo met occasionally by agreement. After a couple of years Dick returned homo with his 'pile , ' about $1,000. In 1850 the cholera scourge spread all over the diggings. One day Dick and I went to 'Sacramento to net a lot of mining tools , and when within several miles of the city we mot people fleeing from the cholera. Oslosby besan to feel pretty bad by this tlmo so I told him to stay thcro and I would go Into the city , get the tools nnd return Immediately. While I was buying our tools a young fellow fell over dead from the disease , and I lost no tlmo In leaving. When I reached Dick ho was nearly scared to death , as a prospector had died In the road near where ho was seated , Wo dosed ourselves freely from the bottle , na whisky was the only cholera medicine in those days. Wo hastened to the mountains , for at an elevation of 2,000 feet one was removed from the danger of the disease. "Dick's flddle , which was the consolation of the company , was nearly lost once In crossing a stream , but Itwas saved nfter a great olfort. The last tlmo wo wcro to gether In California I slept under a buffalo robe with him. Shortly afterward ho re turned to Illinois , 'while I went to Southern California. When Oglesby reached homo ho expected to marry , but his sweetheart had been united to some ono else durlnz his absence , and , through disappointment , ho made a trip to Asia and the holy land. "All through llfo wo preserved our friend ship , and wo frequently wont on fishing trips together. I think I nm tlm last of the nine men of the party which made the trip In 1849. "Last fall a year ago there was a reunion at the homo of General John I. Rlnaker In this city. The general took Oglesby nnd myself into the cast room of bis house , where wo talked over old times. The pcoplo Per Iiifauts and Children. Kind You Have Always Bought Bears * hu Signature of wore gathered nt the court house , whore | Oglcsby was to make nn address , They kept i sending for him repeatedly , till finally Dick blurted , 'Let them wait. I would sooner talk old ' 49 days than politics. ' "When Dick was elected governor ho de clared that whenever I wanted a favor ho would gnuit It. The first and only thins 1 asked of him was whsn n republican Irishman whom Rlnnkcr and defended tor killing another Irishman wns sentenced to ono year In the penitentiary. I went up to Springfield and asked for his release. After the governor had heard the circumstances from mo he shouted , 'Is that all the punish ment you fellows down there In Macoupln glvo n man when ho kills n fellow being ? ' and , being Informed In the affirmative , he said , 'I don't know n thing about the case , and do not care , but If you want the fellow released , out ho goes. ' So ho turned the fellow loose. "At our lust meeting In Cnrllnvlllo two years ago Dick nnd 1 made nn ngrcomont , nt his request , that whichever ono of us died flrst the other should attend the tu noral. This wns the last talk 1 over hnd with my old friend , whom I loved ni dearly ns nny brother could love another. " Oglcsby wna Interested lu sacred history , and In early manhocd he resolved to go to the Holy land , whore ho could see for him self some of the things of which ho had read. "I wns always Interested In the character of Mcseo. " he said. "I knew from what 1 read that ho was eminent ns a lawgiver , nnd I reckon ho wns n good man lu the defini tion of that term cf that day. Dut when preachers undertook to make mo bcllovt- that Mcrics wns a military man we dis agreed. When I was In the Holy Uind I went down to the Red sea nnd cxnmlucd It nt thnt point where ho U said to have crofsed over with the children of Israel. I hnd undisputed authority for the exact place where the cresslng'occurred. ' I made a cal culation of distances on land nnd wntcr. I made n study of the topography of the shore lines and the country nbout the Red sea. I proved to my own satisfaction , ns well ns to others competent to judge , that Mcscs could have mndo tlmo by marching nround the sea from the point where ho went Into It , and o.ivcd himself a great deal of an noyance. When 1 told a D. U. of my con clusion ho snld It was necessary for Moses to cross where he did lu order that the miracle connected with the mnrch might bo performed. Rut I never could understand why a miracle , If ono had to bo performed , could not have taken place on dry land n well ns on the bottom of the Red sea. My opinion Is that Moses wns hnrd pressed nnd ho plunged lute the stream because ho realized ho was outgeneraled. With the as sistance cf the Almighty ho succeeded. A military man would -bo excused for fording a creek or river , but nobody but a fool would lead an army Into the sea. As a military loader Moses would not have hnd the rank of corporal In this day. " CAT , HOY AXH ctj.yr.viin. One Touch thnt 1'iixct tinCulm anil I'ciicc oT it Wliolo lloiiNliolil. . In room No. 5 of the general Postofllco building , relates the Now York Sun , there is one of the oldest and m&st esteemed postal employes In this city. Ho Is noted for his genial temperament , and BD , when ho en tered the ofllce yesterday looking glum and replied gruffly to salutations , everybody wondered what wns the mntter. "What's up , old man ? " Inquired a clerk. "You look as If you had lost your mother- in-law. " "Mother-in-law bo durncd ! " replied the erstwhile genial one , "It's n cat. Say , do you want to hear a hard luck story ? AVcll , you'vo seen a nice , sleek , fat cat asleep , haven't you ? Pleasing feature of domestic ity , isn't it ? Did you over see a well- browned custard pudding set to cool In a nicely scoured pan ? Appetizing , ain't It ? Llko children , do you' Bright , rosy , healthy 4-yenr-old boy , for Instance ? All of thesa thlnsi are nleo In their way , ain't tht'yf Have a sugRWtlvenees of homo and nil that sort of thing. You never BJ\\V n cat , a boy nnd n custard pudding brought Into , Into well , let's call It unfellcitlous contiguity , did you ? Well , Just listen to mo. "Yesterday afternoon my wife made a cuetard pudding and put It on the ktteh.cn table to cool. We've got n cat , and U took It Into Its head to go to sleep on the floor Just In front of the table where the pudding wns. In the meanwhile * my wlfo went Into ono of the mlddlo roonui of the flat and began fitting a drew on my daughter. The two of 'em were singing away together , the mother thinking how pretty the girl would look In the drcjs and the girl thinking of the pleasures of the party for which the dress was being made , when something happened. "You re , that boy of mine wandered Into the kitchen and , looking nround , ho began considering the comparative nuiount of en tertainment to bo derived from pulling the cat's tall and digging lit the coal scuttle with n silver fork ho hnd picked up , whru his cyo fell upon the custard. Now , the pan containing It wns near the edge of the tnble , and the boy could just reach the top of the part , but ho larked cjmo luclim to cunblo him to look Into It. What easier than to tip up the pan ? Ho did BO , his foot slipped , nnd In Ic&i time than It taken to tell It the cat had about a quart of hot custard Bonking through Its fur. The cut hnd been lying just 'beneath ' where the custard stood , you sec , but when the boy uet | the pud ding the cat ( ltd not remain. On the con trary , it rose up with a prolonged nnd awful yowj. Then It turned several complicated somersaults , apparently slood for n second on the end of Its tall , nnd then dashed Into the next room , -brushing ngnlnst the girl nnd leaving several picturesque splashes of yel low custard upon the dainty lilac dress being lilted upon her. Two feminine shrieks arose and then there wns general activity. The daughter sought to capture the cat , the mother evinced a yearning dcalro to lay hands on the boy. Tim chase proceeded through the llt , nml finally the boy took refuge under n bed. " 'Oh , won't I spank you ! ' the mother snld through her set teeth ns she grasped for the youngstcr'n legs. Hut something hnd hnp- pencd to the boy , for n wall cnmo smothor- Ingly to the mother's cars. She bent down to sec , nnd then " 'Oh , what shnll wo do ? ' she cried. 'Wil lie's cnught bin head In the springs ! ' "And while mother nnd daughter crawled under the bed to extricate the hey from lila plight , the cut proceeded to the kitchen , Inppcd Its fill of the now cool custard , and bled Itself to a sunny window sill to resume Its Interrupted slumbers. "That's the story ; that's what's the matter - tor with me , " concluded the erstwhllo genial one. "Did you ever henr of a household so upset ? " I'li-clrlc I2.\ircNM Carn. Express cnrs are now running on the street car tracks of Plttsburg. "They are built on the snmo principle ns the United Stntcs mnll cnrs , " snya the Dispatch. "There nro two doors , ono In front nnd ono In the rear. The Interior Is made of the finest wood and has sovernl shelves for pnckagcs. All al'ong the route ycsterdny people looked with curiosity on the now cnr. Few had nny 'Idea of what use It wns to bo put. In McKecsport flocks of children ran nftcr the car. Imagining It wns ono of the show va riety. " llllilc Sooli-ly MouUnK. NEW YORK , May 11. The annual meetIng - Ing of the American Dlble society wns hold today at the Dlblo house. The eighty-third annual report of the bonrd of malingers shows : Total receipts , $370,084 ; disburse ments , $366,520 ; invested funds , $416,652. the total issues for the year amount to 1,380,892 copies ; moro than half of which , 719,622 , were distributed hi other lands. Woman's Home Duties do not tend to make her strong and vigorous with "nerves of steel , " but the contrary , for there frequently come shattered nerves and broken down health. She is then ndvised to take some kind of tonic to brace her up. There Is no tonic ( Malt Extract or other kind ) that can compare with a non-Intoxicant. Received First Honors at Trans-fllssisslppi and international Exposition , 1898. Remember the full name , BLATZ HALT-VtVlNE. All Druggists. Prepared by VAL BLATZ BREWING CO. , Milwaukee , U. S. A. Omaha Branch : 1412 Douglas St. Tel. 1081. OF OMAHA. DRUGS. , E. Bruce 6 Co Druggists and Stationers , "Qu ea Etc" BpecUltlM. Clrar * Wlnai and Uranaie * , Oornt ? 10th ind IUrncr HtrtMa CREAMERY SUPPLIES Creamery Machinery and Supplies. pollers , Enslneo , Feed Cookers , Wood Pul leys , Shutting , Belting , Butter Puck- ; ea of all kinds. H7-909 Jones St. - ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES. Electrical Supplies. Eleotrio Wiring Dolls and ( JUH Lltjhilna _ 0 , jnr.JOIlNSTON. Mcr. n > _ Ucw fdBt. _ _ CONTKACTOK l'O ELECTRIC LlGHl and PO WER PLANTS 421 South 15lh St. HARDWARE. Wholesale Hardware. Bicycles and Sporting Goods , H18-21-23 Har- ney Street. SAFEAHD IRONWORKS. 'Eie ' Omaha Safe a&ie3 & Iron WorEcs , G. ANDREIiN , Prop. Makes a specialty of- 13 TTr * ESOAI'F.8. - * -t VJw BUUTTEH8. and BurRlur I'roof Hafoi am Vault Doors etc 010 S , 1-Itli S . . Omul.n , Neb. HARNESS-SADDLERY HARNESS , aADDLI.lt AND CO1.KAIIB Jobber * of Leather , Aajilo'jJIardiaart / , ElOt We solicit your order ? . 313-315-317 S. 13th. BOILER AND SHEET IRON WORKS . . _ Uorn IVllnoii . < t Drake. Manufacturers boilers , smoUo wtnclsn nnd fcroechltiBS , vressuro , rendering , Bheep dip , lapl nnd ' .rater lanlts , bolloi- tubes con- ctuutly on hand , second liund boilers bought nmJ Hold. Burclal nnil prnmnt to repairs In city or country. 19th nnd Pierce. BOOTS-SHOES-RUBBERS , Sewed SEioe Wfrs I Jobbers of Foot Wear wesiciiN AniNTBron The Joseph Banifran Rubber Co. Rubbers and Mackintoshes. Cor. Kluvnulli .t Furiiitm SU. , Omuliu. CHICORY Grower * nn4 manufacturer ! of all forms ot Chicory Omgha-Fretnon-O'fJ | ll. DRY GOODS. < , Smith & Go. e laiptarttrKMd Johtoriof Dry Goods , Furnishing Goods AND NOTIONS.