1 llfj UM A M A Ml; N 1A V UKK: MARCH IP lfltl. C A Friendliness i ,4 ? ciiittewa mar car raitd toeeaae kURPKISR may legitimately b felt that 7? - ' : I . A - J7, . zrrrrr ,rcrs j i in ii iiii mm Ouiini, the none too fretiueiit times of peare iM-twtcn the Indians and the early HPttlcTS in Nebraska and other western Biates the latter should have been very iiinicable with the former and, in many casos. intimately friendly. Hut it must remembered t hat Intercourse between them s unavoidable and that barter and sale produced much revenue to the settlers and the hatchet was sometimes buried that, the whites might gain a financial advati tae over a bitterly hated enemy. The settlers also continually hoped that the last outbreak of the In lians would be the last, and then what opportunities would be available for aggrandizement, and the In dians would bo made to suffer, pecuniarily, and as a species of votive offering (if unwitting) to the manes of the settlers who had yielded up their lives In the frontier development. i Writing of those early days, Fred A. Ihuit. now of Ban Francisco, but formerly of Nebraska, says: "While the settlers were thus doing their part In helping themselves, the Union and Southern Pacific were seething in the brains of those who were also desirous of helping themselves. The traders, like wise, were deterred by no untoward modesty in try ing to assimilate all the traffic would bear, but in this they met attempted defense from the head men of the bands with whom they desired to do business. For example, Al Gay was one o fthe well known trad ers who was employed by Isadlor P. Boyer, at Cotton wood Springs; Boyer was known as Hook-saw or Cut Leg. The wagons would be carefully loaded with provisions for the outfit and for feasts for the Indians, and with the varied articles that the Indians coveted Mackinac blankets, three and four point; boop iron, beads, tobacco, calico, gingham, knives, looking glasses a veritable Junk-shop of stuff that, for the most part, cost but. little outside of the transporta tion, but that the Indians were avid for. Of course, staple groceries were also among the articles for bar ter. The wagons being duly prepared, the cavalcade started for some favorite stamping ground of the In dians, usually toward V Ku qui Court (the Rapid, or Niobrara ) 'river, or southward toward the Repub lican. On stumbling- upon an Indian camp AI would go into camp with his wagons and would interview the chief of the band and express a desire to enter upon a campaign of swapping, and would invite the chief and the head men to a feast. "There the chief and head men would examine the size of the tin pint cups, which were the uUt for measurement of flour, sugar, etc., and If (he if tit cup was foud o have shriveled too much In its endeavors to assume something of the proper dimensions of a four-gill measure the chief would usually drop the cup on the ground, crush it with his foot and walk The Mile-Long 1TH 1,000 uicn working every day and an AJTI additional thousand to be put to work the I ilrst of May. rui U rauid uroercss is being made on the mile-long $20,000,000 dam across the Mi.UMppi river at Keokuk, la.. that Hugh L. Cooper, engineer in charge, announces the dam will be completed June 1, 1913. Inasmuch as the first shovelful pf dirt was not turned until fifteen months ago and active operations were not begun on the Iowa shore until three months ago, this Is considered remarkable progress. Especially is this so in view of the fact that the dam is the largest pub lic enterprise on American soil, with the single excep tion of the Panama canal. r Already the industrial awakening of the upper Mississippi valley is beiug brought about by theac- QlJLKXUt -JAXH , CX ILLINOIS QiiUIXH? 0 Hf rIliU JMLt Alternated i i 'V: sEiTOcrioir away. That terminated all effort to trade with that coterie of lodges. If the cup had some semblance of a pint nreasure a conference would ensue in which pipes, and sometimes firewater, played a conspicuous, part, and some sort of rough basis of barter would be agreed upon. Kraut, First Then Trade. "Adjournment would be taken to the village, where the squaws would hurriedly prepare a feast Which, more likely than not, would have as its piece do resistance stewed dog (Ho-taml. Before the dis cussion of the flesh-pots and leeks and onions there would be a passing of the calumet and the chief would courteously remark, 'Nah-volsh-e-ve-yo-me' (I am glad to see you). Then the gorging would be resumed. The ensuing day the large tent of the trader would have the goods displayed and the trading would begin and continue until all the members of the - Indian camp were supplied. It belng-a trading law that the trader had to remain at the behest of the camp with which agreement had been made to trade. -until every Indian had been supplied to the extent of his wants, or until his medium for Interchange was exhausted. "So peaceful and pastoral this amity of the Indian lion and the white lamb, or vice versa, save when the former obtained too copious a supply of aguadiente. that any belligerency would seem Incredible, and yet many desperate battles were later fought' all along the Platte and the Little Blue, these being favored spots-for contests between the Indians and the con stantly progressive settlers. Fort Kearney was the special outpost where the wagons were accumulated. Thirty armed men, under a captain, was the smallest parly that was allowed to pass Into the debatable ground extending thence westward. Usually the pay of a teamster (ox. mule or horse) was M5 pnd boa'd a month. After reaching O'Fallon's Bluffs it was JfiO a month and primitive edibles, on account of the addi tional har.ard from the predatory Indians. The residents of that country todav would have diffi culty In realizing the strenuou life of the vanguard of civilization or the dangers that continuallv besot them. Over the broad and fertile nrairies. bounded on the north and suth by the bluffs skirting the 1 v v i 3 Dam- at Keokuk that Will Cost Twenty Millions of Dollars tivities at Keokuk. Of the 250,000 horse power which will be developed 60,000 has already been con tracted for by the Union Electric Light and Power, the Laclede Oas and the United Railways companies of St. Louis, (while plans are being laid to transmit power to Omaha, St. Paul and Minneapolis, even to Rockford, Galesburg and possibly on to Chicago, ll. Keokuk Is in the hub of a big industrial wheel, the rim being only 200 miles distant and touching StvLouis, Chicago, Omaha and all the larger cities of what is knewn as the grain belt of the central west. It has already been conclusively proved that electric power can be transmitted further than 200 miles without any appreciable loss. Thus the day toemi only a few years distant when every section of the grain belt will be looking toward th power plant at V n-1lTrillll , - in uu mm n. A with Ferocity in Old Indian Days v- f V -.: it . nmTmtl wruTTntpT'ljiHi Tlatte Talley, continuously meandered th freighting and emigrant teams, their bells ringing the requiem ofv many of their teamsters; yet at the same time chmiing a carillon of hope for the dawning of the mighty state of Nebraska." Story of White Hoy Captive. Mr. Hunt also tellsin an interesting way of the life of a captive among the Indians, one, "Charley" Jones, afterward a soldier In the civil war. .lones was taken by his patents from Maine to Wisconsin during his babyhood. As toon as the ice ran In the Sheboy gan river about May 2. IS.'il. and when he was 5 months old he was stolen by the Chlppe'vac H was informally christened Wau-au-Kah (Walk-up-tbe-Creek I and taken by his forcible adopters up to Lake Suprrlor. remaining with them until the fall of 1845. nearly fifteen years, when he was recaptured by the whites (of whose written language he knew little or nothing), went to his old home (o find out his Ameri can name, stayed there a few days, then ran away and has only seen his folks once since. The squaw who became his foster mother was fully six feet tall, wild and fierce as a wolf in appear ance, but gentle and kind toward her captive. Charley was in two battles with the Sioux in the woods east of th Mississippi and near Lake Superior, and after the-fast contest wished to follow the retreating Sioux with the pursuing party, but was ordered to remain on the battlefield and scalp the wounded, then kill them and plunder the bodies of tomahawks, tanned deersUins and other desirable pos essions. In this battle-a sub-chief of the Sioux was captured and it was decreed that iTe should be burned at the stake, which was done with much accompanying torture. lones led Htrenuoas Life. After Joneg ran away from the white people he became a sailor on the great lakes. On May 10, Keokuk, which Ib larger than any single plant at . Niagara Falls, or other plants of similar character. The dam across the Mississippi at that point is to be the largest dam in the world, with the single'excep tion of the immense Assouan dam across the Nile in' Egypt, used to further a great irrigation project. Under the terms of the franchise which congress granted to the Keokuk and Hamilton Water Power company work must be completed within five years. The first year was spent in uncovering the Immense beds of limestone, laying railroad tracks, building sheds for the storing of materials and otherwise get ting the preparations well under way., During the last winter, with never a stop because of the weatber, hundred of mfn have been at work both on the Illi nois and the Iowa shores, and thev abutments of the ' Ui'. !P3-rr " i I- ji- j . .! : :- 111 mrri ii r sihimiiism i ii - - - - : 1 T- i faM v I I SIS SSBBBM II SMI II ! M I IIIIMl I ! llltllsMslMls I'll ! 1 III iJsWMM M 1' lb f wn KHTW g rt'T' A fc V- ; . Hi i 'I: f4. ' - '- mm 1. V' ir 1 .--sr vv 1861, h enlisted la tha Fifth "Wisconsin infantry and W. F. ("Baldy") Smith shortly engaged his services as union spy, for which his Indian training and nat ural aptitude peculiarly fitted him. On May 10, 1863, at the battle of Chaucellorsville he had seven inches smashed off one bone of his forearm And three inches off the other. On December 12, 1862, at Fredericks burg, he had his leg broken at the same place where it had been previously crushed at Antietam. There he also got a wound just above the right instep, and at Williamsburg, Va., he received a bad scalp wound that was trephined with a plate, despite which and dam are already extending out into the river and the power house, on the Iowa shore, is already taking form. Coffer dams will be laid across the mile-wide watery path and section by section the immense dam will bebuilt. The dam is to be of solid rock, thirty seven feet high, imbedded in the solid limestone bed of the river seven teet, and thirty-five feet across. It will hold back the mighty rushing waters until they develop force equal to what is known in the indus trial world as 260.000 horse power. Incidentally these impounded waters will overflow the lowlands along both the Iowa and the Illinois shores until the mile-wide Mississippi of today becomes a five-mile-wide lake and twenty miles long. It is proposed to call this' either Cooper Pool (in honor of the engineer Lu charge) or Keokuk lake. . bis rarlous other wound! . and minor injuries "Charley" Jones today carries his 70 years Jauntily, his brain is as clear as that of many a young man and his eye like a hawk's. ' After the war he was em ployed as a spy by various commanders, including John F. Sedgwick, Philip H. Sheridan and U. S. Grant. During his tour of service be learned to read and write English. Later ha was sheriff of Hyde county, Dakota; chief of police of Tacoma, Wash., and chief of police of Ashland, Ore., and has also filled various positions in the government service. At present he is luxuriating at San Diego, Cal. This great lake will completely drown out the present S, 000, 000 canal and dry dock, but they will be replaced by a new lock and dry docks and river navigation will be Improved. Also the tracks of the Burlington line between St. Louis and Burlington will be Inundated, but a new roadbed la already being prepared and the promoters assert railway service will be bettered instead of hampered. The great engineering feat presents no new prob lems to the expert engineeers in charge, and unless -he unforeseen happens It will be only twenty-aoven months more until Keokuk ran aspire to become one of the leading industrial distributing centers of the middle-west. The city is awakening to this possi bility. The Keokuk Industrial association has been formed and 1504000 was raised in three dayst 0 II TLZT 1.1 1 1? i v v . y3i i".;i 3'ii - J