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HICKOK, CHARLES THOMAS. The Negro in Ohio, 1802-1870. HODGKIN, THOMAS A. Inquiry into the Merits of the American Colonization Society and Reply to the Charges Brought against it, with an Account of the British African Colonization Society. HOLLAND, EDWIN C. Refutation of Calumnies Circulated against the Southern and Western States. HOWE, SAMUEL G. The Refugees from Slavery in Canada West.

"I guess not, pards; the boy caught that horse wild on the prairies, and the man that lays hands on him settles with me." The speaker was J.B. Hickok, known to the world as "Wild Bill," and upon that trail he and William F. Cody for the first time met.

He asked her whether she gave it up willingly. She said she rejoiced to do it. She said she had not yet destroyed her ancestral tablets. Pohlman told her he did not wish her to do it rashly. She must reflect on the subject, and when she became convinced that the worship of them was a sin against God she must give them up immediately. "March 29th. This afternoon Bro. Hickok and wife and Bro.

It took him several years to recover, and he has often remarked that the responsibility of his first business venture on borrowed capital aged him prematurely. The nearest station to the scene of this disaster was Junction City, and thither he tramped, in the hope of retrieving his fortunes. There he met Colonel Hickok, and in the pleasure of the greeting forgot his business ruin for a space.

The outlaw allowed his eyes to waver and he fell with a bullet-hole in his forehead. As stage-driver, Indian fighter, and peace officer Wild Bill Hickok did a man's work in cleaning up the border. He was about to go and join the Custer expedition as a scout when one who thought the murder would give him renown shot him from behind as he was sitting in at a poker game in Deadwood.

Two forty-fives hang by his narrow hips; there is a hint of the cavalier in his dropping sombrero and his ornately patterned boots. This is Wild Bill Hickok; he was to have gone with Custer, but a coward's bullet cheated him out of the chance to die fighting by the Little Big Horn and they buried him in the Black Hills in the spring of 1876.

Tommy Baker and Alfred Baker were brothers. Continuing the Yale list, there have been the Hinkeys, Frank and Louis, who need no praise as wonderful players Charlie and Johnny de Saulles Sherman and "Ted" Coy W. O. Hickok, the famous guard of '92, '93 and '94 and his brother Ross Herbert and Malcolm McBride, both of whom played fullback Tad Jones and his brother Howard the Philbins, Steve and Holliday Charlie Chadwick and his younger brother, George, who captained his team in 1902.

Hickok stalked out, looking more like James E. Winter than ever. The other directors, however, looked highly gratified at themselves. They went out heartily congratulating each other. By clever work they had secured for their paper the services of one of the ablest, most gifted, most polished and popular young men in the State.

Deeds of Daring, Adventure and Thrilling Incidents in the Life of J. B. Hickok, known to the World as Wild Bill.

In short, it may perhaps begin to appear to those who study into the history of our earlier civilization that the term "law" is a very wide and lax and relative one, and one extremely difficult of exact application. Wild Bill Hickok The Beau Ideal of the Western Bad Man; Chivalric, Daring, Generous, and Game A Type of the Early Western Frontier Officer.