2 THE MORNING OREGONIAN, . THURSDAY, JANUARY 11, 1917. FAMOUS' BUFFALO BILL PASSES AWAY Pioneer Indian Fighter and , Frontier Scout to Lie in State in'CoIorado Capitol. PRESIDENT IS CONDOLER ing a contract to" supply the entire force with fresh buffalo meat for a certain period, killing under one con tract 4280 buffaloes. On one occasion he killed the noted Cheyenne Chief Yellow Hand in the presence of Indians and troops. He became known to Juvenile Amer ica in the stories of western adven ture written by E. Z. C. Judson. who wrote under the noro de plume of Ned Buntliru "With the advance of civilization. finding1 his occupation, on the Western plani3 gone, he went on the stage. where he remained several years, play- ins leading: parts in dramas depicting life on the frontier. Later, in associa tion with Nate Salsbury. he organized his Wild WTest show with which he toured this country for many years, and on one occasion visited the principal Uodj to Occupy Tomb Hewn From Hock on lookout Mountain. Military and Civil Organ ization to Do Honor. 'EN"V"ER. Oa.n. 10. Colonel William Frederick Co?ly, "Buffalo Bill," soldier, hunter and snout, the idol of juvenile America, died at 12:05 P. M. here today at the home of his sister. With Colonel Cody when death came were his wife and daughter, who had hurried down from Cody, Wyo., the family home, Jast week, to be at his bedside, and tiis sister, Mrs. L. E. Decker, of Denver. Colonel Cody had been in coma since tbis morning. " He had fought death as he often had opposed it on the plains in the days when the West was young. "You can't till the old scout." he would tell his physician whenever his condition would show improvement. When the doctor told him his life was ebbing, Cklonel Cody accepted his fate like a stoic After giving instruc tions regarding his funeral and busi ness affairs, h e said: c "Let us have a game of "high five.' And every ope joined, the Colonel laughing and. joking because he was winning. Since Janoaity 5, when he was hur ried back to Vis sister's home in Den ver, the Colonic had surprised all who knew his real condition by great pow ers of resistante and recuperation. One day his physician would see the end "within 36 hows," and then the Colonel would rally and no one could predict the exact outcome. On January 8, however, his system broke down enitirely, and from then on it was a questaan merely of time. To add to lier measure of apprecla' tlon of what the West owed him, the state of Colorado will receive the body of Colonel Cody into her capitol Sun day, there to lbe in state for four hours. Funeral services for the noted scout are to be held Sunday afternoon, when the body will he placed in a receiving vault in a local cemetery, but the burial will not talce place until next Spring, probably Decoration day. when the body of one o the Nation's most pic turesque chaxaicters will be interred in a tirab hewn flrom the rock at the top of Lookout iljountaln. near this city. Plans already re afoot for the erec tion of a suitable monument at his linn.1 resting pJace. The funeral ;services Sunday are to be held in the Elks' Home in charge of the Denver "Lodge of Elks. In ac cordance with the wish of the dying scout, however., all the societies to which he beUonjfed are to have a part in the funeral. , including the Grand Army of the ..Republic, the Pioneer Society of Colorado and the Cowboy Rangers of Denver. The Masons will have charge of the interment of the body in its mountain tomb. Arrangements. vere made at a con ference late today for the body to lie in state in the ojypltol Sunday morning from 8 o'clock rto noon. Leaders of both houses of t Legislature, now in session, attended the conference and agreed to secure the passage of the necessary joint resolution tomorrow. Guard of Honor to Do Doty. While the bods lies in state at the capitol. a guard of honor will be on duty. Federal troops will escort the body from the capitol to the Elks' Home for the services, according to the plans tonight, and other Federal troops are expected to march in the funeral cortege. Colonel Cody's TKasonic affiliation In cluded membership in the Royal Arch degrees at North Platte, Neb., and in the Knights Temjplar Commander at the same place, and membership in the Shrinera of "Mecca. Temple, New York. After Sunday's service and until placed in the torrtt on Lookout Moun tain the body will be in custody of the Knights Templt.r luere. Telegrams o condolence In large numbers have "been" pouring into the home of the sis tier here, where Colonel Cody has been etiaylng for the last few days. They include messages - from friends of high and low degree all over the country. On. from President Wil ' son and others from Lieutenant-General Nelson A. Miles land General Hugh L. Scott, chief of etiaff. were among the number. : Buffalo Bill Known to AIL. Colonel Williar F. Cody, "Buffalo Bill." was for numy years known to nearly every man. woman, boy and girl in America through his Wild-West show with which Ihe toured this coun try and Europe. Ele was a picturesque type of the pioneer frontiersman and lived to see large elties built where he once hunted "the "buffalo and fought Indians. William F. Cody was born in Scott County, Iowa, February 26, 1846. His ancestral stock was Spanish, English and Irish. His parents moved west and took up a claim near Leavensworth, Kan., then a frontier Indian post, when Cody was five years old. At 10 years of age he found himself the head of the family owing to the death of his father who was killed in an encounter growing out of a dispute oveir the negro--lave question. Young Cody's- first employment was as a cou rier between the freight wagon trains operated between the Missouri River and the Rocky Mountains. In turn he became wagon master, trapper, hunter, pony express rider and stage coach driver, all giving a varied experience 1n a school, the graduation from which left the scholar an adept In every possible line of frontier ac tivlty. Advice Given General. In exciting experience in the Union army as a soldier and subsequently as a confidant and scout of his comman ders in the desultory and guerilla war fare of the Southwest left him at its finish well known as an all around frontiersman, competent to advise, to - guide and to lead. These qualities soon brought him to the. attention of such distinguished commanders as General W. T. Sherman, Lieutenant-General Phil Sheridan and Generals Crook, Cut ter, Merritt, Carr. Royal. Miles, Dodge ana others, and secured nls appoint ment as chief of scouts in the United states Army daring jts numerous Indian campaigns in the West. His career in this line identified him with the great fighting epoch between the red man and the white man, waged by .General Shexidan after the Civil War that temihorarily ended in 1876 but was effectively finished in the Ghost Dance war in the decisive bat' tie of Wounded Knee in. 1890-91 cam' palgn with the Northern Sioux. Noted Chief Killed. During the construction of the Union Pacific railroad, young Cody attached ' himself to a camp of United States troops protecting the laborers and won his sobtyauet ol mutlaio siu" by. talc- Sr ! - .. . :'V 4 . Janla iPt - - T . . . - ..j..-: Colonel William F. Cody (Buf falo Bill). Famous Frontiers man, Who Is Dead. cities of Europe, where he was warmly received and entertained by royalty. He was elected to the Nebraska Leg' lslature in 1ST2. Colonel Cody, in 1866, was married to Miss Louisa FredericL GEXERAI MILES PAYS TRIBUTE Buffalo Bill Eulogized for Work In Behalf of Pioneers. LINCOLN. Neb., Jan. 10. General Nelson A. Miles, U. S. A., retired, here to attend a meeting of the Nebraska Territorial Pioneers' Association and the Btatei Historical Society, tonight expressed his sorrow over the death of Colonel Cody. "Colonel Cody was a high-minded gentleman, a brave American and a great scout," said General Miles. "He performed a great work In the West for the pioneers and for the genera tions coming after them, and his ex ploits will live forever in history." General Miles said it was while he was conducting his campaign against the Indians in the Yellowstone country of Montana that "Buffalo Bill'" served as nis cniei or scouts, and they were tnrown mucn together in later cam palgns. EUGENE WOMAN IS COUSIN Mrs. W. A. Scott Twice Visited by Buffalo Bill. EUGENE, Or., Jan. 10. (Special.) colonel William F. Cody (Buffalo Bill) was a cousin of 'Mrs. W. A. Scott, of Eugene, and visited at her home here twice in recent years. Colonel Cody's father and Mrs. Scott's father were brothers. Mrs. Scott's father was a traveling salesman and never came West. Legislators May Attend Funeral. CHEYENNE. Wyo.. Jan. 10. Mem bers of the Wyoming Legislature to day, on receipt of the news of the death of Colonel William F. Cody, dis cussed a plan to attend the funeral in Denver in a body. Formal action may be taken later. Ordinance to Be Changed; ROSEBURG. Or., Jan. 10, (Spe cial.) Believing that some minor changes should be made in the "patent medicine ' ordinance introduced at Mon day night a meeting of the Council, th members of that body decided to d fer its adoption until next Monday night. 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