THE BEE: OMAHA, SUNDAY," JUNE 19, 1921. S Z V. if ) Early Day Settlers Quarreled Much Over ) . Location of Capital Nebraska Was Regarded as to Turbulent Kansas Territorial Government Carried on Largely by "Carpetbagger" Offi- -cials History of State's Indian Tribes. (Continue1 from Tt Two.) unique in respect both to population ana disorder, throughout its terri torial period, six years and a half, there was continuous violent revolu tion over the slavery question. There was no slavery question in Nebraska, ,f but the Platte river caused sectional 1 strife for 20 years, about 12 of them J in the commonly unsteady territorial period. During this time there was fierce quarreling between the North Platte and the South Platte over the loca- tion of the capital. It was allayed in the main by a provision in the constitution of 1875 which made it nearly impossible to take the capita! away from Lincoln. There was the original tierce fight over the capital question in the first legislative assembly, then the break . up of the fourth assembly in 1857, aptly called the Florence fiasco; in 1859 the formidable undertaking of Ut South Platte section to secede " "and become annexed to Kansas; next the removal of Governor Butler by impeachment in 1871, followed by the anarchical prorogation proceed ings in the legislature 1872 be tween the Lincoln cabal and the Chronically hostile Omaha faction. The ' repeal of the criminal and civil codes by the third legislative as sembly in 1857 was not sectional or .otherwise partisan, but the wanton, elfii tl lfish trick of a cunning pettifogger he council, and the defeat, by bribery, of the will of two-thirds of the members of the same assembly, expressed in the passage of a bill to remove the capital from Omaha to a blueprint place on Salt creek, some where between the sites now occu pied by Waverly and Greenwood, manifested a positive sense of irre sponsibility which, I believe, "was not matched in the territorial period of Iowa or Missouri. Fight for Capital. The Daily Missouri Republican, then a powerful whig and pro-slavery newspaper, complimented the steady-going virtue of Nebraska in contrast to the chronic revolutionary turmoil in Kaijsas. The first session of the territorial assembly of Ne braska adjourned sine die March 16, 1855: the members of the first assem bly of Kansas were elected MarchJ 30, 1855. The Kansas assembly lo cated the capital of the territory by an act passed August 5, 1855. The capitol of the Territory of Ne braska was begun about that time. During the short territorial period of Kansas its shifty insurgency changed the capital from Leavenworth, which was designated as the tem porary capital by the organic act, to the Shawnee Mission, thence to Pawnee, thence to Lecompton and then;,' repeatedly to Lawrence, not withstanding that Lecompton was recognized by the federal govern- The Indians Before the white man came, the . Indians who lived in what is now the state of' Nebraska, vere of seven tribes and three different stocks and they spoke six different languages. The Dakota had that part of what is now Nebraska, which lies north of the Platte river and west of a line running in a southwesterly direction )i and crossing the river at the fork. The Ponca country lay along .the Missouri tiver on the north side of the Niobrara river, partly in what ' is now Nebraska and partly in what ' is now South Dakota. The Omaha country stretched from the Missouri river west to the sand hiils. between the Niobrara riv er and the Platte. The country of the united Oto and Missouri tribes lay along the Missouri river between the Platte and the Big Nemaha rivers. The Pawnee country was west of the Omaha and Oto, extending from ' the Niobrara south across the sand hills, the Loup river, the Platte and the Republican to the Solomon river - in Kansas. The southwest part of the present Nebraska was then a part of the country of the Cheyenne and i i 1 tAM.tli0r f rapanuc, who n;i ,. The Pawnee, Ponca, Omaha and y Oto and Missouri all lived in fixed sf 'ft 1 A.. . tUm .(r.-inie ia'hrf VlliagCS BlUUg l"V- on ...... a, thev could have wood and water and could plant their crops in the fertile soil of, the valleys. Their houses were of commodious size, built of . timber framework covered with -.earth. . ""The traditions of the Dakota, Ponca, Omaha and Oto indicate that they migrated from the east into this country not more than a few centuries ago: but the traditions of the Pawnee indicate that they had occupied for many centuries the same country they were holding when white men first saw them. The Pawnee. The Pawnee confederacy, compris ing four bands or tribes, ceded all their country to the United States the part south of the Platte river in 1833, and in 1857 all their re maining lands save, a reservation which now comprises all of Nance county except a tier of six town ships on the extreme west. In accordance with an agreement made in 1874, this 'reservation was sold during the six years trom leo to 1884 for $876,148.74. About the year 1835 their total number was estimated at 10,000 to 12,000; but, owing mainly to disease and losses in war with theft- relentless enemies, the Dakota, there were only" 2,026 left for removal from Nebraska. They gradually removed from their ancestral home on the Loup eastward nearer the white settle ments for protection from the Sioux. In 1859 they were moved from their two villages situated southeast of Fremont, to their reservation; but Nf soon the advancing white settlers wanted that also, so in the years 1R73 1874. 1875, they were removed to their present reservation, in Okla homa. - Omaha Indians. At the time white men first knew the Omaha Indians their regular, or favorite, place of residence had been vidua tht limit oi ih& icservatioq "Steady-Going" Compared ment as the capital and a capitol was built there with a federal appropria tion. The .third, fourth and fifth territorial assemblies adjourned from Lecompton to Lawrence, and the laws enacted at the de facto capital were recognized as valid. For four of the six years during which Lecompton was the legal capi tal Lawrence might more properly have been regarded as the actual capital. On the other hand, during the entire territorial period in Ne braska, 12 years, Omaha was the Only capital, and there was only one attempt to hold a session of the leg islative assembly elsewhere, and that was abortive. "Carpetbaggers." Owing, in part, at least, to Ne braska's sparse population at the out set its territorial officers were nearly all carpetbaggers. Neither of the territorial governors was a resident of the territory at the time of his appointment, all of the territorial judges but one were imported from distant states, the first delegate to congress was a citizen of Missouri and not even a resident of Nebraska, and at least nine members of the first territorial assembly came from Iowa and returned to reside there after the session ended. While settlers were precluded from Nebraska because all the lands were held to belong to Indians at the time of the territorial organiza tion, in Kansas strenuous coloniza tion from the far east on the one hand and principally from contigu ous Missouri on the other began im mediately on the passage of the or ganic act and was pressed with great vigor. So that while 2,833 votes were cast in Kansas at the election of a delegate to congress n November 29, 1854, only 800 votes were cast at the election in Nebraska for the same purpose on December 12. 1854. ( According to the United States census of 1860. the population of Kansas was 107.206; of Nebraska. 28,841; in 1870. Kansas. 364,399, Ne braska, 122,933; in 1880. Kansas. 996,096, Nebraska, 452,402: in 1890. 656; in 1900, Kansas, 1,470,495, Ne- 656: in 1900, Kansas, 1.470,495; Ne braska. 1,066,300; in 1910. Kansas, 1.690,949, Nebraska, 1,192.214: in 1920. Kansas, 1,769,257, Nebraska, 1,295,502. So the Nebraska tortoise is catch ing up with the at first swift Kansas hare. The gain in Kansas for the first decade was 239.9 per cent, in Nebraska 326.5 per cent; for the sec ond decade, Kansas 173.4, Nebraska 2o7.8; for the third decade; Kansas 43.4. Nebraska 134.9; for the fourth decade 1890 to 1900, drouth period Kansas 3, ' Nebraska 34; for the fifth decade, Kansas 15, Nebraska 11.8; for the sixth decade 1910 to 1920 Kansas 4.6, Nebraska 8.7. of Nebraska assigned to them when they ceded the rest of their lands to the United States in March, 1854. In 1804 the Lewis and Glark expedition found that their village was situated on Omaha creek about three miles from ;ts mouth, at a point now within Da kota county. In about 1840, they were driven by the Dakota from their old home, and they then set tled temporarily on the Elkhorn river, 50 miles to the south. In 1845 for the same reason, they moved still farther south and east, settling on the Papillion river, five miles west of Bellevue, where they re mained until they were removed in llllllllllll'il,l,illl.lillllllllillMli!ll'liltltlllilili,liill'l';tilllit'iiltwllltlillllll''llllllllll''ll'lltl''l''l''''l''lllt"i"ll'l GEORGE L. FISHER Architect 1604-10 City National Bank Building OMAHA, NEBRASKA Telephone Douglas 8755 illlll!lllllllllllllllIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllltllllllllllllllllll!llllllllllllllll!llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIMIIIII!lli; WHEAT sA " v EVERY II For Your Picnic or Outing take along one of those new Half Cans of Iten's Graham Crackers containing about 6 lbs. net of the finest, tastiest crackers ypu ever ate; and the Half Can keeps them fresh and fine until used. Your grocer has the new Half Can of Iten's Grahams or 'can get it for you quickly. Half Cans cost 50c each but are returnable at that price or you may exchange the empty for a full Half Can, paying only for the crackers therein. Handy convenient always ready. Iten's Grahams ThB. w whTw.y Iten's Grahams , ' . . HCG2 May, 1855, to their reservation, where they still remain. Terrors of Smallpox. Lewis and Clark were informed that in the year 1800 the Omaha were reduced, mamlv by smallpox from about 3.500 to 300. and that in 1894 they numbered 600; but these estimates are guesses and may not be correct. In 1836 they had m creased to 1.400; in 1910 there were 1.276: June 30, 1919, 1,3821,072 of full blood; 824 acres of the reserva tion were the unallotted. The Oto and Missouri Indians who united many years ago, lived on the south bank of the Platte river, njear the site occupied by the town of Vutan, in Saunders county. This place is named lor latan, a noted chief of the tribe who lived in the first half of the 19th century. In 1833 they ceded to the United States all their claim or right to land lying between the Little Nemaha - and Great Nemaha rivers, and on March 15, 1854, they ceded all the remauv der of their territory west of the M is souri river. In part payment for this cession the Indians received the tract 25 miles long and 10 miles wide, intersected by . the Big Blue river and about 50 -miles southward from the nearest boundary of the territory which they conceded they had the right to sell. The reserva tion extended two miles into Kansas. In 1835 these Indians were removed from their old village to a new home, also oj the Platte, about seven miles, in, a direct line southwest from Bellevue, and a like distance above the mouth of the Platte river. There they had a village on each side of the river, but in 1848 the savage Sioux forced them to abandon it and their principal farm on the north side. - After that they lived in various places on the lower Platte, and for a time on the Missouri river, a little below Nebraska City, until they vere removed to their reservation on the Blue, in July, 1855. Nearly three-fourths of this reservation 120.000 acres was sold by authori ty of an act of congress, passed Au gust 15, 1876, and the remainder was sold under the act passed March 3, 1881. The price paid for the land, an average of $5.77 an acre, amounting to $941,267.13, was :n vested bv the United States govern ment for the benefit of the tribe. A part of it was expended for a new . . f 4 1 It Irt T reservation oi uy.iio.iu acres in In dian territory. Like their kinsmen, the Omaha, and the Oto and Missouri, and their alien neighbors, the Pawnee, the Ponca were continuously harassed Do Your Car a Favor and Give it a Real Treat Have it fixed right by men who know how. Franklin Parts and Service Rendered s E. R. Gavitt 3924 Farnam Around the Corntr on Fortieth by the Dakota, their neighbors on the north and west, and they were in constant fear of attack, It was partly on account of these troubles with, the Dakota that in 1877, the Ponca, numbering 717, were removed to a reservation in Indian Territory where they still live. Homesick Indians. In 1879 65 of these homesick In dians ran away from their new home and came back to their old one in Nebraska, and by 1882, 210 had re turned. After a great deal of trouble had been made about it, they were allowed to slay. In 1836 their num ber was about 800; in 1919, 642 only 266 of full-blood in Oklahoma and 338 under the Yankton school. The forced removal of the Ponca was .very cruel; yet, largely because they had always been very friendly to their white neighbors, the govern ment of the United States at last gave them liberal rewards in land and money. None of these domestic ttibles Omaha, Oto, Pawnee and Ponca ever made war upon the white people; but all of them, and the Pawnee worst of all, were ad dicted to stealing, and in following this habit they often killed their white victims. In 1836 a reservation of 400 sec tions, situated on the south side of I Koad lo . Mi , j if Good Things - i ji To Eat TOT ' B PV M . fit - , I wcmt$M$ the Great Nemaha, was assigned to the Sauk and I' ox of the Missouri river, and a band of the Iowa. About one-fourth of this land is in the southeast corner of Nebraska and the rest of if in Kansas. About four years later these Indians began leisurely to move to the reservation. By 1842. s79 Iowa and 417 Saiik and Fox had settled there. .In 1916 there were 303 Iowa and S Sauk and Fox enrolled at the agency in Germantown; 33 of these lived in Nebraska, nearly all in Richardson county; June 30. 1919, there were 335 Iowa and 89 Sauk and Fox, un Whites Seize Lands The Winpebago, who also lived in Minnesota at the time of the Sioux uprising, were sent to Crow Creek for the same reason for which the Santee were removed there; but the accusation against them was false. The real reason was that the white people wanted their fine Minnesota lands. They, too, refused to stay, and soon squatted on a part of the reservation of the Omaha, their friendly kinsmen. In 1869 a strip of the north side of the Omaha reser vation was bought for their perma nent home. They then numbered T cipal ones; if not the principal, is that because of his 20 years' experience in running restaurants in Omaha Mr. Beatty knows what Omahans like to eat. He knows that the way to a man's heart is to give him the food he likes to eat, without making a big dent in his pocketbook. The first thing one notices upon entering one of the Beatty Cafeterias is the spotless cleanliness and the thorough ventilation. Then, as one passes to the serving tables,"' the great variety of dain tily prepared, energy building foods, displayed so you can make your choice of the dishes you desire, permits one to get just what they desire to eat. Here are displayed full-cooked meals, if such are desired, cold meats and dishes in abundance, delicious salads and desserts, fruits and pastries. It looks good and the looks are not deceiving. There's an amazingly stimulating and refreshing effect in a steam ing cup of Bea,tty coffee. ' . ' Then, having served yourself, without a lot of fuss and bother, when one steps up to the cashier it seems impossible that such a delicious meal could be served for the modest sum you are charged. THE HENSHAW, 1509 Farnam HARMONY, 1509 Harney BEATTY'S, 1805 Farnam UNEEDA, 115 North 16th der the Kickapoo school, in Kansas as their lands have all been allotted. The Santee were living in Minne sota at the time of the great Sioux war on settlers there in 1862. They were accused of taking part in it and "were consequently removed to Crow C reek, in Dakota, in 1863. In April, 1866, they were again removed to a small reservation on the south side of the Niobrara river, now in Knox county. There were 1,350 of them then; Tune 30, 1919, there were 1,152, under the Yankton school. Having all received their lands in severalty. their agency has been discontinued 1,900; June 30, 1919, there were 1,068, and 728 acres of their reser vation were unallotted. In 1830 the strip of land about 10 miles wide, bounded on the east by the Missouri river, on the north by the Little Nemaha, and on the south by the Great Nemaha, containing 143,647.33 acres, wasvset aside for the use of half-breeds of the Omaha,. Iowa, Oto, Yankton and Santee Sioux. These half-hreeds were re quired to pay the Oto who owned this land $3,000 about 2 cents an acre for it. In 1859 this land was HE natural way to eat is to make a pleasure of it. It is getting so that folks in the offices downtown in Omaha don't say, "Let's go an' eat." They are acquiring a habit of saying instead, "Let's go to Beatty's." And instead of "There's a reason," the folks who go there know there are reasons and lots of them. One of the prin divided among these Indians, 589 in number. Hie land has all been ac quired by white people. By the treaty of April 2, 18o8. the Dakota Indians, who had roamed for a very long time over the country now contained in North Dakota and South Dakota, and often hunted on the Platte and Republican rivers, were limited to a' reservation bound ed on the north by the 4oth parallel of latitude, which is not far north of ' the boundary between the two Dakotas; on the cast by the Mis souri river, down to the mouth of the Niobrara; its southern boundary extended along the Niobrara and Keyapaha rivers, to the 43d parallel, and along that parallel to the 104th meridian, which was the western boundary of the reservation and also of South Dakota. The people of Nebraska protested against the per mission which the treaty gave the hostile Indians to trespass on their state; and on the 26th of September, 1876, another agreement was made by which the Dakota gave up for ever all right to come into Nebraska. J he Sioux were the most populous Indian family, except the Aleon- quians, north of Mexico. They num bered 40.NI0, the AlROnqiuans, 90,- 00050,000 of whom lived in the United States and 40,000 in Canada. The Dakota numbered 28.780 in mm Eat in the one most coave r tha aama excallant lai 1904, most of them on reservations in Minnesota, the Dakotas and Mon tana. According to the report of the commissioner of Indian affairs for 191, there were then about 35. 000. of whom 20,000 were in South Dakota. They were a family of con querors and superior . physically, mentally and morally to any other western tribe. Only the Omaha and Winnebago, 2,448, are now reported as distinct Indian residents of Nebraf.ka. By the treaty of February 18, 1861, the Southern or Arkansas, Cheyenne and Arapaho ceded all their country to the United States, except the small temporary reservation in Colo rado, which they ceded October 14, 18o8. Two yean later a reservation in Indian Territory was assigned to them. The country they ceded ex tended westward from the Pawnee country to the North Platte, whose course at first is northward, and from the same river on the north as far southward as the Arkansas. Tt now forms a part of the states of Nebraska, Wyoming, Colorado, nd Kansas. In 1865 there were 3,300 Arapahoe 1,800 at the Wyoming agency and 1,500 at the upper Ar kansas agency. .. Agitation in Missouri in the 1st (Turn to Paa Four.)