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“6 THE. CHICAGO TRIBUNE: MURDEROUS ‘REDSKINS. and hanged him to a tree in full sight of the | behalf of the whites, and he has made fre- : je | Utes, That crowd was bound to hung some- | qrent and long journeys nerosy the mount- body that day, and they did it. alns to secure his advice In matters of mo- SATURDAY, JANUARY 10, The Comnnehes, from Texas, are «epre- tating in Pecos, ‘Lincoln County, New Mex- jeo, , 1880—SIXTEEN PAGES; , are under his control, while n direct reveln- NM tlon from Jehovah inspires hin jn his misston ON THE WAN. of good-will tomen. His particular fancy “Why didn’ IL them 50. yh wermauoar ensayo © While you : “Tt wouldn't be safe. ‘The best way ” > 7 very much frightened and distres: and at | ment concerning the Utes, Mr. Menrs goes yesterday was (hat the world's climate ; . of : the men who are sick uf thd strike tot Arrival of the Ute Delegation Onray's Teatient Teanie ow arity Im iti wit ie dntianas to ‘Washington, nob a8 on PUBLIC SENTIMENT, wan weeeiog mpneclahls, wider See by. The Pig-Stickers’ Strike Losing is to 18°, buck to work ven, Tats kuoy a . | yo oway Pres Any EN MIDE ©, rE Wi EN, yen, " v S i An Y et - on Its ‘Way to Wash- the nana atone i ae . a petiole fest ha toh disci Tie Caine mnie arrac AI ie ee scieine Fir healing up the Hn era by mapas Strength Every Day. sera to Have nae more Inde feence the) wo the twelv soners that } further than that he has the Interests of the . pie Bae i of inonster furtiices, so constructed as to he average butelter, red P ington. we demantied, t ‘inves aie doubt “tliat they | State of Colorado nt heart, and was urged by | Cutcado, Jan, 7—Thoe “dispatch to tho | admit of tho dissemination of the heal In the “How ftho Union tixed 2” @ vould all have been hanged. At Pueblo | Ouray to accompany him and his sub-Chie! Cineinnatt Lngeutrer,” copied in this morn- | form of “spray” from vast tubes, Ca el Ing’a Trnunr, does, E have no doubt, very | lere is simply nowhero to the Jittle fellow A Division President Abandons' the there liad been -held a, publle meeting, at | that he might havea “Tt ean hive but very little money, Prey " How They Appeared in Their | whteh it was resolved to appoint a commit STANCH FRIEND TO LEAN YPON, are paying the experts nearly S150 n day, tee to hang the Ut th th MH serious wrong to the women who were lately athe “hae a alee Pht hare naeere ole: Union and Returns to Work, the eheap class af men are setting neti ee to hang the Utes as they came throug! a . a vil, and wi ted, by yay, from a ne children wh hay Semi-Civilized Cos~ but Wiser counsels provalled, andl they werd eran Healt arte nd whe aad Herat paplive aman tte, Utes, at nee ee vaeher Yulon © alice, New Yon, the ia Sane Everythi Hel nt the Yards Yesterday—A Fe ml Phot ing. mie o's tor ath rele al F tumes. tle Pee ae elie havi | Tis relations with mid feelings towards the | shan death, when all tho probabliittes are | eet, leust tuteresting wart of hls story, | Everything QuieL nt the Yards Yesterday—A Few | got nothing, | Thoro's lots of othors treateg RAVI dott tho mmafority voto to ny don't the majority yote to ace the iekers terms?” xs cease a vhites Heir strongest and truest Nght with limps of coal, ete. ‘Lhe Tleutenant in | sxhites ing charge of the guard. threatened to brain one |-G°,(08 Mr. Mears’ consented, fiformin that the only choles given te them was that | which dexeribes wnt had ‘been done by the Cases of Iniinidation—Receipts of Hogs, Ete. Gen, Adams Belleves They Must | of the nssallants within musket, but he de- | Oury that ho would do what was right aud pts. inaslers or of that Indiseriminato out: | Cook County: eoal contractors towards att to by the Sioux, us the means | vanelng the sudcess of his ‘Titanle warming “They are afrald to, If a. ballot deavor to explain to. the Wash- | of securing the death of thelr feniale captives, tits i anal io univers “Aren't y op” ihoe WRN Leaeea ake Tilt Che we fled the oMfecr, saying there were 500 more ust, anil end * FPCCUTE LUO CCatty 4 i G eaves: | pan in this partleular section of the universe, Aren’t you a reporter?” 9 respectable | taken they would carry tho thing throng) ; Go-It Is the Incvitablo betiind hin whom he would have to brain Pace atte it cals that ded: to the fran 274 venta ald antl Mpward: by tio rules Another of the patlents turned out to be Irish woman of middle-age asked yesterday | a large majority.” is Bh by : Result. too.” Mr. Mei lel a 7 fab wine Leal 1 e! Menrs Js tov old a frontiersman_ to Ray “ What do you think the reanlt of this mis- | ore word In extenuation of the erlmes of the ston to Washington will be? savages, orto innke any: attempt to glass dividual owner is the, common property of A QHANUATE OF OXFORD UNIVERSITY, torntug of the representative of Tim Tune | “Are not you n little afrald to return to Chir The Board of Indian Commission= | _ “They xo there to wake, arrangements to | over thy outrages of the Utes, Ho has no tho tribes and this ts tha reason that is- | At least Dr, Spr fon missionaries have not always attacked | Heved what lu eathen, By abolish | with aahaved li vant so, and evidently be- | use who was sitting by her aide in the South | Or m UNE iD Notn particles; simply beeanse Tan He at Te ee nea Hoy Halsted street-car which was taking them fo | ing to stay right here wt the strike lene Ayers tincng thi u destination,—the Stock-Yard: vows cede their reservation. ‘The Utes} propose | word of excuse for Lwould eur ELS * 4 > | sista of “catching devils,” as he calls if; and | 8 conimon destination,—the ock-Yards,, | You won't enteh me outside the Angin. ers Indignant at the In+ fomake the most favorable demnndsr nnd to | the thee tect thea tireet weinemne ttn I nt i HEE ae a AI’ weitheee | pineling helt heads of between tistingers? | The reporter neknowledged that he was, | Aimeriean premises until the matter Is fielly CA terior Department; “ask especially for pardons for tho Indians the heads of those deserving it. Ie knows | protection, None of the others were possessed of any | mentioned with pardonable pride the name barista Union had succeeded in Ita F : ay of dltangat Knportant comattions - {og Antell oF Tandon wartnve tend hin for By our “Indian customs, that particular | remarkable pecullurities, the majority of | of the paper for whe he helped gather tho i Dresent Chief whom one of these women chose as her | them appearing tobe merely so many. dull, elaims would any further demands have beoy And They Gave the President the Re ae ea until I get one moment to justify my act of ngaressions | owner was obliged to protect her front the | sipid, human elods, even inore pitiable, in | NEWS nnd asked the good lady what hecould | made?” a PANS. abstr he spenks in jnost stalwart condemnation o : . : 1 cus | one setse, than the more highly-cifted ones | do for her, “Beyond # doubt, They had the elght. fat of Their Vi tiraua “The Ute nation ts .composed of | the d ones of those renexades, who are now ronan nets nul pidtowled ae, oF flees ce with unusually It imagiiations, All “Are you the man that writes up the hour moveniont Dt Fenny: and there is ig Benefit o eir Views four iirerent fies, UE One. bE at bak at liberty but ie anys that to Aiennt Any | horrible ditema tawhlen those women were anced 1? ‘i be 4 easel wit ne the | strike?” who continued, following up tho | tl oubt that Ath geraping-machines would havg acl 1 re open punishinent of them at this juncture vd, JANE 3 ELM ehango in heir location with Ox o ver whic! c yoke hm Yesterday. , siher (hres HL heen bencetal aie at stout lead An most tinagtrans Feaufin: Vint placed bane ATS UATOS eoutinn of Leary unl Crise who, Wonderful a ene de aruwar wnteh ile gucerunlyeker atrin uuedo.yon think of ‘the merits: of the . The M1 vel es Are Si hostile, a the renegniles, or “ star es been brough! o relate, Appeared to ree hey move from F - IN CHICAGO. in the mountains, and the other Indians | in, they never could have reached -Alnmosa TRAVELING LUNATICS. | the ott Tokers: At Jefferson, Case, partion. | Now, you have been giving the paekers,| “It was a big mistake, and I held so all dates walve 9 great many of their rights In order | qlive, for the feeling of the Colorado public larly, evinced his displeasnro at the transfor | and the Unlon—espeeially the packers I will] Mong. The attempt to forea employers to Z ANIIVAL OF THE UTES, to have the Government pardon those guilty js so thoroughly sroused that they would have taken the punishment into thelr own hands, ‘This done, the Indians would have raided every settlement fn. the mountains, ‘The Ute delegation, twelve in number, who | of the murdersand outraging of the women.” are hound for Washington, passed through “But that will not be carried out, will it” this city yesterday, and attracted more than | {tL should not favor It.” when the party reached Kinknkee, about ® | gay—a falr sliow, but yo have never given | {ite men at the dictation of the emnployed has fl el y , buen tried over and over again, and has ney Twenty Insane Persons Transfer= et ay colivetlon at lllnwer’ ttt ma ie any of tho strikora’ wives a chance to have | sneceeded,. ‘There never was tense In Whiel Th itients necessarily hee vhit | thefr say at all, Now, don’t you suppose | the demand was more preposterous than the Th “But give me some points in relation to the | ‘These are ninny, and wnprotected by solitery. red from Jefferson to miKetin fie th Neriwtl aid when Dr Spray: thero’s a good many of us wainen have picgent, or in whieh there was less chance of the ordinary share of publicattention. They | outenging of the ladies by the Utes?” Put troops over there, he says, to, guard the Kankakee. counted those who had gotten into the buses LONGER NEADS THAN OUR MEN?” ts being successful.” arrived by the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific | «7 did not know that they had been out- | citizens: then get these despicable savages “A thers was one missing. “After Inoklng over | «have no doubt of it; but are you the THE ANIMVAT OF 11008 Railroad at 4:30 feb een he afienpnay aud dd nt the ene duet Wentout ih. eile iol tf ath hen fer Was ington, if they the Piatto 1, anid falling a tind tha at fy dnt, wife of nstriker? % at tho, yards yonterda: q V st evening via the S- es y We) wel ts ataes ated there, is word for iG trina ses 0 citlarly remarked on its belie linposst- 5 ‘The sales were i : Te vee teere Me Chiiengo.” A Trmexs known that they had been so brutally never “take place outside tha Sinte | Peoullarities of Some of the Patients— iRankakeeto pe outa lunatiefrom | “Lam; my husband ns been out of work | d 100; Botstord Ca, het Duper ie G M r Hitch | Heated, Enever should have gone there. T | of Colorado,” and no’ serious results could Scones and Incidents of ncrowd of ordinary people, ‘This, ofcourse, | now for two weeks, He worked in Armour’s, | Chicago Packing Company, 23500; G2 WV reporter met them at Jollet. The train whieh | wii} teil you how Lenme to xo out. When 1 | be apprehended. . proyoked” several” retatintory sulles, and | butthe Union got hotd of him, and devil a | Megins& Co, 867; Ileker Packing ‘Con bore them eastward happened to be abort an | was sent out Ib was with Instractions to gu to | Te Indians came across the new portion the Trip. the Doctor was informed, among ‘other fufel . 4 ” pny, 450; ‘Fenfel & Sons, 84; ‘Lobe Hie ig He, wo do, prt, well | "hen Exppone you aro atiering tn con- | At" ME & cm yesterday evening vy seo veda y | Lhnse x place 0 ‘ho i ‘ 3. W. Higeins & Co, yesterday even! ‘Twenty Iunatles were removed yesterday | was lost. ‘The chanlug was given and taken | sequence of the strike” tiled their Clon employes tit honeeturseg tothe Ulinols Eastern Hospital for the Insane | fn good part, and, while It was going on, one “Weare not, We have ourownhouseand | they Intended to employ only non-Untoy at Kankakee,—thefirstinstallment fromCook | of the attendants saw the missing ease stand- lot right over near Dexter Park, where the | nen, and that such of them that chose tore Connty’s Asylum at Jefferson to the large, | Ing nonchalantly back tn the crowd with 1s | joeting was yesterday, and besides that wo | tym to work after signing thelr resignation roomy, aul wellarranged quarters In the | broad shoulders holding up the depot. He a feck ‘ . from the Union anda dectaratton of inten) 4 : e f was Instantly called ant, and came forward | have enough to lve for quite a while yet | tion not to join any association Intmleal to s es ew buikting on the banks of the . 2} a ty vith king help of anybody,” " " State Ss new with a more’ or less sheepish look suttusing | without asking help of anybody,’ the interests of tho firm might linve thelr Kankakee. Jefferson fs, and has been, noto- | his face, The ‘buges started, and the toil “Your husband earns big wages, then, | old places, If the firm pinnae to-lay to rlously overcrowded for a long time past, | some ride over a mile of the worst road under | when he's working?” organize n force equal to the killing of the the arrivals constantly keeping ahend of the | the sun was made all the more disagreeable “Tie does not. He's ono of the s2 men, | 7 hogs they purchased yesterday, It will number of those so far cured ng to entitle bya peltting run ie Hig cav anew. It’s n funny thing that you. sce right through pen pretty ctiy indication. Hint hie pneker them to discharges. ‘The new institution, ents titer De ti is tayer tho re the ‘Stack Vards that. it 1s nuk so ablectly dependant wnon the Unies Vs the packing-house | for hls labor as they suppose. Lateham however, by a vote of Its Trustees, recently | sistant Superintendent, was giving directions | Men who exrn $175 and $2 0 day that buy the | Co, gave thelr mutta stint ar notification yee deelded to relleve Cook County of twenty of | usto the disposition of the new-comers, Dr, | houses and lots, and always buve a Ditoe | terday evening. entally-derange vo | Dewey, tho Superintendent, having ‘been | money by, them against a “coollng” while | “rie Alterton Packing Company, B. P, ie uentallssdershged eltfens, aud to. give called into the elty on alleged-to-be neeessary? the fancy trimmers, and the bone-pillers, and Murphy & Co., and Ghiepin cialis ane hour Iate, and the result was that around ye Tos Enos and crea eT ay rug ta the ne the uete Jalna Hond, opened Hunts fram dd dépot nt Joliet there gathered best wal ocedure, nth Wi iM Kansas City, through to C| go. AtPueblo, Lats ee penal crowds tat could he | the women were alive Ouray urged me to go | Mr, J. M. Edgar, Passenger Agent of the - sien ied ‘ INTO THE WOSTILE CAMP road at Denver, Colo, took elurze of the seraped together anywhere. ‘Chere were yy And was wet at Morseiltes, M1, hy Mr. from 1,500 to 2,000 people around the dépot in | Aud endeavor to obtain thelr roleasc quid to.) paetys Jtt WiMt en M nacereed Aienit Of the eTsOn, order to: show that 1 went 5 t that little town, Including men, women, and fe eet ant he sent with me his prine | road. ‘The Utes lett last night vin the Fort children, and not n small percentage of | cfpal Chief. If'T had gone with terms of | Wayne Railway for Washington, in charge rufilans.” ‘The town clock tolled the hour of 8 ee. which they demanded, there would | of Mr. S. M. Demmond, the General 'Travel- z vi th ter- Nave been uo trouble in obtaining the release | ing Agent, P just ns the locomotive halted at the water- paket ‘ . AT THE DEI Fs = th of the women, but I thought that if anybody ‘T THE DEPOT. ; tank, which is probably 100 feet west of the | could get them that Leould, Had 1 known | Ascarly as2o'clock yesterday afternoon Jollet dépdt, and at once there was a rushand | thatthe women had been outraged T stiould | crowds commeneed to. gather insite of the a crush for it, Passengers trying to | never have gone. I told them what I wanted | Rock Island Dépdt, where it was expected get on or off were jostled and hustied aside, | —An wneonditionnl surrender of the women, | that the Ute delegation was to arrive, "The Th Wb Hterally t ok ssession of the enr | And that if they were released the mo’ ents | train was due at 3:40, but it did not come into i mob Iterally tank po: : j | of the troops Would be stayed. ‘There wasn | the dépot until nearly an hour Inter, ‘The Utes in which the ten Chiefs were. They stood out deal of discussion, and it was finally | nve Indians fn whoma great deal of Interest on the cushions of the seats, on the backs, Heetded by hain to allow me to take the | js centered at this time from the recent out- : ° women with me. When Leame to the hos- | rages they have committed, Their expeeted business. ‘Che patlents were assigned to | such—men who get from $3.50 to S44 quietly organizing killing gangs with whic : winklaw-allla, i nywvbere pwclere s Conteh tlle camp L asked each woman individual nraival had been well ttounced throngh A QUIRT, PLEASANT HOME, cheerful guarters in one of the alry, well- | day—aro almost atl hant-ip lat. ha it | if the present favorable ‘weather eonatince cou be has Ant Sie sn ay hich hooted, | ,thelr persons ind been violated, and each’! the press diypatches, and the crowd that | ina brand-new building suppited with all | ventilated wards which are the institution's the reason why the Union husheldoutgowell | they witt begin killing on Monday morning shelpless against the crowd, which hooted, their state- | awaited them was something marvelous. of them said no, and that is why yelled, and acted boisterously generally. The | ment eame to be telegraphed Enst to that | Ther was a packed host of htinanity inside 4 -traln, after the locomottve-tender had been | effect. When four weeks after, the Com- | of the dépdt that could not have numbered he dépot, and the crowd | mission examined these women under onth, | Jess than from 5,000 to 8,000 ‘They thronged filled, started for the dépot, seemed to Increase. There wns but one way Iwas both shocked and surprised at the | the depot, the sidewalk, around the en- : 1 of them, and that was to start the | Statements y made, and the slock- | tranees, and the omntbuses, They were P to get rid of them, and that was to 8 he |} ing facts caine ont for the — first | everywhere. Capt. Ehersold had a large train, which wasdone. Such a scampering | time. Mrs. Price for a long thme refused to | force on hand to keep back the crowd from from the platforins of a train in motion was { answer, and eried, and threatened to kill her- | the track and the cars, and they had never before seen. The speed on starting | self it the fret of the outrage were made pub- | thelr hands full. When — the train was kept very slow, aud thus nobody was | Hie. And it was simply to save the reputne | came insight the crowd rushed for pt very ’ tlons of tha women themselves. that they did | It, but were successfully kept back. ‘The po- hurt, thanks to a. careful conductor and engl- | jot give the facts to the reporters, I told | lice succeeded in clearing a passageway to neer. It was nearly a mile from town before | the women that a9 soon as the testiinony was | Pacific avenue, through whieh the Indiins, the Inst man from Jollet got off the train. submitted to Congress the facts‘would ‘come | led by Jack, came outtn goose file, and were > Agsoon as the reporter boarded the train | oUt, I promised to keep it quict as tong as I ) hustled inton *bus, The crowd made one tj hi t Mr. WILE i. Be FANON 1. Ul could, but the women claimed in tho testi- | grand rush for the sidewalk, and surrounded i Oo meb DATs jam H. Berry, who ts dls | wony'taken by the shorthand reporter that | that’bus. They howled, they hooted, yelled, tributing clerk and Interpreter at Los Pinos | this wasn private matter of their own, and | and made eat-eallx, ‘They called “ How?” to 3 Agency, Colo., and Is In charge of the Utes. | that it was thelr own will and desire not to] the Indians, who ‘“howed?? in response. 3 “Tama full-blooded Ute,” said he, as Tar | make it public. As far as the facts are con- | ‘Then they yelled again, but the Indlans were ‘i “True reporter approached him. serued, eumnnt Si anything he ato. how not theres Gt hat fnrned Van Buren : e ” hoy were outraged, hat will come ou owirds Clark street, with alarge crowd of “T shouldn’t have thought so,” snid the | whon the testimon published. ‘There is | boys following tv’ {ts wake, It made the conveniences found in the best Institu- | justly proud boast, and, after nereeably | inthe strike,” on anon-Unton busts. It is almost snfe to Hons of the Kind In the country, ‘There were | SPeNAtE My bONE oF ture ay the Mosnllals | a Woon die ee nnd were beleva in | Usui that by next, Monday. the antl-Union already twenty-six Inmates of the hospltal,— | togtt thelr leave, and were soun on. thelr | it. ‘The men think wo are ‘leather-hoads,’ | Witt Include the firms of Armour & Co, five from Kankakee County, four from Will, | votnding way back to the elty. but they can’t mnke ns belleve that Its right . . y Fowler, Brothers, Chicngo Packing & Pro four from Livingston, three from La Salle, for the Union to want the packers not to hire | yigion Company, Allerton Packing Com TV TTOAIINT TE on they want, Do yo se L We aia? : two from Lee, oue from Troquols, one from OHIO INDUSTRIES. eC atothorseuneac cane Mn Ree nonce ait tee, Packing Couipany, aging © Vermilion, one from Coles, one from Knox, {ell me Just how Lmust run its tell me how | comprise fully thtee-fourthy of the capacity one from De Witt, and two from Edgur,— | Report of the Labor Commissioner, | I must take care of the children, what I | of all the packing-houses iu the yards, How and Cook County’s quota, therefore, swelled |) Conusnes, O., Jan, 9&—Tho Commissioner, Soke zie thei fo cent and int elathea the aguregated ability of O'Connell, Powers the Insane population of the new Asylun to |.of Lubor Statistics subinttted his annul re- iipuale ane that's Just tiawvay tle packers Stokes, Dowiis Bowlen, aud tho rest ty going forty-six, None of the new-comers were of | port to the Governor to-day. Following are | feclubout the Unlon.? fo cope wit thle combination 4 alter the wild sort—though many of them | some of tho Interesting statistics In the “Why don’t you make your husband of | petter digest thoroughly before they go to have been that way at times,—nnd | reports Number of coal and coke furnaces | the same mind as yourself?” it the next mass-meeting of the Association, the transfer, with its necompanying change | and charcoal furnaces in blast, 63; number ae aunt, need to. He looks at the strike which takes pinesat the Weat Twelfth Street of alr, scenes, and other surroundings, will | last year, 63; number of hands employed, | JURY Et a ” Purner-Hall at 10 o'clock to-morrow more What dtd he join the Union for? in Inall probability hasten the period of thelr | 5,965; Inst year, 5,153; capacity of 63 furnnecs, ‘He never wanted to, aid he held out as Be RULLDOZING cure and subsequent discharge, daily, 1,(6:7 tons. There are 47 rolling-milts | long as he eould. He helonged toone so- is being indulged in by the Union men ins ‘The patients left Jefferson yesterday morn- | [nthe State, 3l of which are_in operation, | clety areal. antl he told them that that was | ° ee A “Ine 7. . 3 vere +] ory : mild kind of. way, the erases being few In Ing under the care of three capable attend- omploylng 7,784 persons, Tn 1878 nails were | ag nmch as he eould affords but they kept at Huber and not Rerlous In thelr Ae. A y + S215 per kegs In 1800, 4.95 per kee, ‘Tho | him day and night, and at last he tt is it 2 ants at So’ctock, and were driven to the city 4 tli ‘ing the year Pehle 5 Scotehiman named Angus Campbell, work- é reporter, “from your looks.” ne use of further denying that the women {a elreult, and _ finally’ “dumped | oe “ble : ‘1 production of coal during the year is estl- CONSENTED 'TO JOIN TILE UNTON: Tig. In Arinuur ‘Bros’. tmeking-house, witle i ‘Mr, Berry sald that he had been pestered at | were outraged. ‘There were four men who | its load at the Tai Salle. street | Over the horrible country ronds in one of the | tated nt 6,000,000 tons, employing 14,000 per- | « ge An 1 i d are implicated In It, and they would have | entrance of the Grand Pacific Hotel, [ere Seen ao voto tre newaentherigg featecites | heen delivered up If ‘the Cotoruto paners | there was nuather gennd tush of, the craw, teal here Gane ak YO 1 had not stated that they would ba} whosoon filled fhe. corridor, ‘The Indians bore. “ But,” sald he, “Gen, Adams ty on } hung if the people zot hands upon them. J | were at once plloted to Rooms 13, nud when board, ond I'll turn you over to him.. How- | believe that they willyethesurrendered If the | they wers safely out of sight the crowd com- 1 oy ‘ one Asylum ambulances, sous. ‘The highest wages pall per month to Ny By dow’t he leave ttand go back to realaht a Ho ae es rene (that place, THE NAMES OF TIE UNFORTUNATES Silene MSs 1; tie wast, Sh i “He wouldn't do that, and [woulda’t want | lot of Higgins & Co.’s Union employes. were Robert Mall, Henry Wisler, E. Jurgen- than enploying en 000 persons. Mopera- | hin to, Ile took the oath when he joined | They very politely consented to lead itn to sen, William MeGraw, Robert Seeber- | “"Gis-works are in operation. in sixty-five | te Union, and he is aman who respects his | the Armour house, but deluded him into the ha fe 4 ma " word, Iet glone a solemn obligation.’ 1s prema ste y y gave 4 ever, 1 will givo you all the information 1 | Government insists upon It and sends sutll- | menced the iftation warwhoop. lowever, | Wy Peter Wieklander, Adolph 1. | towns, with a cupltal invested of early | “Wouldn't you iiite him tebe back work He ae eres torel bie pow. AL ist : can,” lent. troops to protect them from mob taw.” | ag just stated, they waited until the braves | Meyer, George Weber, Joseph Hensler, | $1,000,000, : ‘ or accounts Mr. Campbell was consider x a1 “Who comiitted the outrages?” were out of view. A great many whoeame | Michnel Fricdhoff, Charles E. Cuse, The yeport closes with the following recom- “Of course IT would, aud so would ho; } whether, under the cireumsatances, “ft } There are twelve of the Indians, Including | s-Phere were twelve of those engaged in | to the dépat to. sea the show. were disn | Patriek Dougherty, — Charl Eschert, | Menslations for the Le of laws: but he won't move until the Union does.” wadnn be advisable to buy himse? a re t representatives ot iis Jour ihe fib aly the White Iver unssacre and outriges that volnted, as the Indinns were hustled out xo Taae Erickson, Michnet “Cleary, ‘Tatas, eee ES UF event tle Sinploymien. of per «lave you any faantly 2 boy that ts | Youlver.” i ; ‘are; uray an i] nis wife; ash, we demanded. hese uugins outraged Tapidly that bu ttle chance for a slxh 1 | et Tel ne lew “4 4 # oe es J tve five chikiren, nave a boy that ts le mnder-Chict, in shares of the Indians: Al- | Mrs. Meeker, Pah-Son outraged Miss Mel er, was Siven to anybody, The Indlins | Ghtschius, SL. Atherton, Richard Keegan, | thoroughly eompotent. ee eee ee ee worm Chives Prntt, and Adolph Triehe, Dr, Spray, ‘s ma sian old enough to go Into the packing-house, but | Fowler, Brothers, was beaten by a crowd of the: Medical Supedfutandent DE thE ASIN | face SAI eee ee eeepegton SE | Lhuve hin at school, 0s better for Iiin to | Union roughs on Hnisted street at 7 o'clock 5 7 -'Ta-Pit and Johnson, Mrs. Price, rather relished the notoriety, and duck, handra, Galota, Joc-Nick, Licblo. ‘These | aud Oneh-Tat g vy ek, : r ty n A! took: the early mi penn tratn for Chicago, anaty to persons employed therein. he there, as tong us we can afford it, than to | yesterday morning, s Pati would never allow them to be pardoned if I | the hite | River Chief, was led t * _ represent the Uncompahgres. Of White | could help it. During three weeks these remark, “That bl, "yiingos bs heap : ‘River Utes there are Capt. Jack, War Chief; | women were compelled to live a: the squaws | wlewam: much people.” “The rest kept | Ne met, the attendan and, thelr werk- | “wilrd—To provide for the incorporation of pe nmone tho guts and dirt of the hacking. Tee nosed Rene ate Uilon : Sa-Wa-Wic, Unea-Sam, Of the Southern | of Douglas, Pah-Son, and Ouel-Ta-Pit, ‘They | their mouths shut, looked on, and wondered, | Minded charges at the Mlnols Central Depot, | a cofiporntive manufacturing assoelation, out of him If they caught him coming from | rowdles, who mistoolc Nim for a non-Unloa ‘ Utes there. TaPoucho, Chief of the | Hved with these men, cooked and slaved for | ‘The Utes, apparently, are not quite as stofend | SE fhe fool Luke street, The party oceu- | Kourth—Vo provide for the appointment of | ork? men" eee ere ete ey oye, OF He | tiem, and were continually outraged. It | as ather Indians, and they are much, cleaner pled the smoking-car on the warning train | 9 Commissioner to ret In conjunction with | “YT snomd suppose your husband {s asen-| Nothing has yet been heard of tho man Capotes, and Augustine, Chief of the Weml- | was {iis fact which saved their lives. It | and better dressed thananysavagesthat have | 12% Kankakee, the twenty patients ocoupy- | the Commissioners froin other’ States on the | aiite ‘kind of ae mnin: How why don't he | wine thing has se See anaes pie tt nuche tribe. Capt. Jack was the lender In | jg hard to say who led in the mnssaere, | yet shown themselves In this city. Ing ten seats, two to a seat, and wearlg | question of prison Inbor, stand up in tho Union and try to get them all | Fowler Bros’, Toneat the corner of Laurel ‘ the Thornburgh fight. He ts a bright, dar- | but there ix no doubt — that they |” Whica the Indians were at tho hotel they,| Bither bracelets” nor stralt-jackets to |" Fifth—Thut a sulliclent appropriation be | {oro back to work? And Tiirty-olplie nircets, ab. tha. elinces oe : ing fellow, with not ‘n slight touch of | participated. Wo have tho testimony of | were visited ~by a larga number of people, | Keep them within bounds, | tt was hero that | mado to this Bureau to enable it to cmply | “ity woulda'e dura to, Ile's no spenkers | int the shoe fickily inissedt its mari {cy cunning and | sinister appearance | these women suflicient to convict the twelve. | and when they left for the Fort. Wayne inp fount | CE eee ca anne Oe the Fee eerie fo, more fully carry | and anyhow he'd have no show, Te the rest Armour & Co, did no work yesterday, ths suid Gen, Adams, “and probably ‘killed fs | theig Mauer aust aclerwacas outing the | “beet keawe gece, test event, there wns | eotigortably Wiavosed snd walling for tho —— Would izo to work he'd follow qulek enough? | unfavorable weather causing temporary : id wounded more soldiers tn the store, and it 4 ‘EG cro present. many of whom fol: | train to pufl out. “ Suppose the strikers’ wives were admit- | suspension of operations, ‘They intend to do is undoubtedly proved that they | lowed to the dépot, and did not Teave until | he ran down furnished WISCONSIN LUMBERING, ted to the Union, how long would the strike | a big day's work toxlay to make up. ‘The An} i gholnbureh fight. than any of tho others.” were, ‘in the fight and gullty of the murders.” | the train pulled out at 9:10, T & Speclal Dispatch tu The ‘ Jost then?” i] iy ng Company killed 1,600, the Sa-Wa-Wic was nlso jn that battle, as was What was the orlgin of the trouble 2” A COUPLE OF INCIDENTS Mn. SEATS Jal Tach cane Tra ites Mi Devil n day, ‘They'd vote to go to work Ritcage Packine Coen KON hors. "The t Unea-Sam. Thess threes appenr aa unre “Whatthe real original cause was it is TIIE COMMISSIONERS which relieved what would otherwise have Set ns ay ig te he first. meeting, They wouldn't bother | Iticker Packing Company nre getting along Jenting as any Indians can, and that Is saying | hard to tell, The Indiims claim that they perc Seok a oe been a tedious, uneventful journey, Soon | reeelved here to-day, the mild weather of talking about whut was right and what was | finely, their idiling gang necomplishine 0 ‘ugrent deal. All of them goto Washington | were trented badly. 1 don't belleve that | PROCEEDINGS OF THE NOARD's MEETING, | after starting the Inevitable nows-agent went | the past week has carried off all the snow in | wrong. ‘They know that the packers aro | loge yesterday win! ease, While tho etttlng 4 as voluntcer representatives of. their tribes, | story. ‘They are as good Jiars as white men Speetat PXspateh to The Chicago Tribune. into his fron-bound box and fis! up 8 box | the plneries, except In the extreme northern | strong and determined, and that they will | gang got through its work with pleasing Ft and none of them hada hand in the murder | when their’ interests aro nt stake, At the Wasntn aon, D., C., Jan. 0,—At the meet- | of cigars of nbont the usnal degree of vile- | portion, bordering on Lake Superior. ‘There | never give In; 80, of course, the sooner buelc | colerity. t of the peopla nt White River Agency, or in | same thine Idon’t think that the Utes have | ing of the Board of Indinn Commisstoners | Ness. Net knowing with whom Ii hia fallen te the depth of th fe | towork the better for all parties.” Willlain Linklelter,a non-Union Inborer, % the outrnging of the Indies afterwards. ‘This | heen trented right by the Government. It] gis morning. th vntutives of tho | thaveling, but supposing that his, passe snow had fallen to the depth of three fee “Ys there much poverty and suffering in | was charged before Justice Wallnco in the 3 ‘was done by others, of which more will be | has had two treaties with them which have dh & te representatives of tho | erg as sane ns the ustial run, he sp previous to tho thaw, aud, as the weather las | the homes of the strikers?” South Side Police Court, by a man named ; sald further on. been violated.” varlous missionary bodles were agaln pres- | fell Into the error of offering his wares to the | at no time been as mild asin the region far “Teannattell you, I stay at home myself. | Robert MeCrumb, with attempting to shoot ‘ OURAY 18 THE MAN OF PRACK, © But what will be the result of it all” ent, all the ehilef religious denominations, ox- feeblerminded occupants of the first seat. | ther south, 1 of {tyetremains upon the | If they can do a8 Ido, though, they oughtto | him, ‘The evidence showed that’ McCrumb or pnd he has great influence with-the Utes, To | The Utes must go. But I don't alto- | cept the Episcopalians and Roman Catholles, | ‘They in turn necepted the concentrated vile- | ground, Between Stevens Point and this | be able to get along. When 1 haven't the was beating Linklefter because of his being ee e the chet ary athe tour Ute nations Me ter believe in mrdeting them and hunt | being represented.© ‘he gathering resembled poss Dit om th Sudsot then paid wore haut city the low lands are reported to be covered | money to got what £ want In the house [do | a“ scab,’ and thut the Intter drew his weapon Berry Introduced the reporter to Gen. Charles | Ing them down relentlesly with soldiers, + ; | wi h water sons to resemble Inkes, iu some | without it, but I guess there’s a good many | In self-defense. Justice Wallace discharged Adains, and he in tum introduced him to | believe the easiest and best way to necomplish in many respeets an Indlgnationineeting, for | curred io ln that two elzary of that charac | Hiacey amiles. In extents Up to the present | that run on credit are the prisoner and ordered his revolyer to be itsoon beeame evident that the conference | { Ht. i tal fe vorth t y Ouray, A brief conversation did not] it is in a peaceful way. Lama eltizen of & at er, UNE and unpaid for, wero worth to] tine little or no damage has resulted PRETTY HARD PUSITED JUST Now.” returned to hin, : result’ In gaining anuch Tran atin, Ho | Colorado, and believe in getting and opening | Of the Missionary Secretaries Inst evening | hin a couple OF nekelsent his own | from, freshots, such as” broken dams, | «799 you think the men will svon give a af shook the Interviewer cordially by the hand | the. reservation to settlers, Ifthe pence ne- | had wrought thom up to a determination to | oxtravagunt valuation,—aond he acebrinyly wrecked bridges, ote. The Oshkosh Norti- | ino ‘ AMERICAN UNION TELEGRAPH and then frowned. Mrs. Gen. Adams, who | gotintions hail not Iitervened, the army was | make frank ‘exposure of thelr grlovances | Witimated -that it wus time to pay up. TS | western of last evening, however, expresses | "Sa¢ thoy know what was fond for them Speetal Dispateh to The Chicago Tribune, 5 nat near said, “Ouray is afraid of reporters, | Rot In a condition to cope with the Tidians | against the Interior Department fn terms | {stand was met by, sbront, Htupld: ature, | 0 fear that the Post Lake dum, in ‘the Upper | thoy woutt. Lut Ws hard to tell, Phe wit gies o—'T netot » . They have ‘abused “him so fearfully fn | at tts thne, In coming from Tos Pinos to | tint all conld understand, Tho ‘Sceretaries | Wut only provoked a repetition of It ini | Wolf River country, has beet carried away | they shouted at the meeting yesterday uldive | , PMLABELEITA, Jan, 9—'The contract o , Colorado. But he is the friend of the white | Alamosa five soldiers AOE RO COuG UNA EstanC, ho Secretaries | decidedly louder tone of voive, nceompanied | peenuse of the tmninensa volume of water look Ike golug back n Dit, dla it 2” the American Unton Telegraph Company ‘ . pepple and hus cone all hecould for perce.” HAD THEM FEET PRO: had briefly embodied in writing the views | with Appropriate gestures. che attention of | that ts rashing down Wolt River, carrying "The Teportae confessed that It did not, and | with the Pennsylvania Company ts only ; e on ‘ou speak English,” suld the reporter to | and Gen, Hatch, in command of escort, | Which they desired to express to the ees hal ee Was Acie a in Halreettort betore tee and tous ited ‘i ns Nort pester | then, the tables being turned, he was Invited | question of a few weeks, The Westen x vot much," could not seouré hay and corn enough on the | President to-day, and this paper at once be- | jinn whieh followed when the others wti- epaniiion ‘of things eqn bniy necount for the |, bY te lady to give lily views on tho subject, | Tinton hs now thirty-four contracts with iy > way to feed his elghteen mules jconprising | came the subject of n disenssion between t aye are on your way to Washington?” iisteninn It auld have been ‘round ven thei nud the members of the Board, Tho a Ava Pipe ‘3 5 pumiilating on the part of our Government * “What will you do about the Indians do- the Dees. tn qrartare,: mill Ani. thet # “ manded of you enguged in ‘the Waite liver under the cfreumstanees, It could not | in ‘Tue True today. “There was, in ad derstood the peddlers ditema, Dr. Spray dis- | flood by the supposition that Post Laka damn persed the threatening war-cloud by pyle has heen carrie away About three weeks for the two weeds and) enough more to sup | ago the Upner Rice Lake dam broke, letting . see V1 oe ny, and Its Directors ply the rest of tho patients with one aplece. | o Jarge volume of water down Into Post Lake, Faith thot what rie here would le certaln paws Pall roa Conn With trying to arrange The other Incident wns sumewhat more ex- velling, rf sian | f.geme true, Wi r paw selling ati further: the witeny anes on his imind that he had already « couple of | for a eonsolldation of those contracts so ns to the Invitation being Bien thenet by her as- “ ” “ the Pennsylvania Company relating to differ sulin pu ne he fegieadl ke fe ecals ent ronds under the control of the Pannsyk sais < clting, After passing ‘fwenty-second stree q have done so, ‘The reservation {8 | «dition, an expression of opinion that while enre: ofthis | pe Seis times predicted tha cud of the strike, and = ca ait i ou font know.” octal Re Rett pe boarding-sehouls are set fy temporary post rary aa tats rons ‘or tho Her tke freelit ton aot thelt peaducl dows broken tty baskehorta n couple af tines wot, ie Ge rier ag aa N + SWI sou cede your reservation?” them in severulty a homestead of frou top ta | expedient in the elviluation of Indians, they | tra atiStevefoned auunstiy tor nis step | SCM aah Unik the! indy jor her interesting | Is not bound, and never will De, to any ‘ . #20 neres, nud that Is In part that Ourny pro- eat nro . ‘act not valuable, Informatlo: 1 how the ate al as beat tha $ se Willing to give it up?” poses, Tt would be brutal to take Them nut practlenble to the ordinary common schools, | Mother moved forward Into the front sent, A MILLIONAIRE'S LEGACY, " DHE: COMPANY, ently: etting strike looked from a feminine standpolut apparentty forthe oe neat ight Speclat Dispatch to The Chicago Tribune, the reporter bade her goad morning, and Nealon Diton can expect fee sith stove, ‘Theuttendant was away longer than | CLEVELAND, O. Jan. %—When the death | went nbout his regilar Stoek-Yards pere- | Se! mt Gore ca nia ‘a that any. oS te hae matic t ee be er ‘nak ue Bl Fequarl: Cesesthe. pulltianalre, senurreds eerie serch for news proved rather barren for ait ‘pareathant with the raflrand. The tral ie reoe lies it fuel street, s sng Suditent . ‘Tuesday Inst, twas not known by hils friends | wae yg packer, nor a ‘exentative ofa pack- | Pennsylvania. owns. all the poles along Its And hero Ouray stopped of the Monti and Into the Indian Terrl- | Itis known that several of the Secretaries . They tain people, Ouray Pray 1 Mrs, Adams ud that ho did not propose’ 10s nee ey wuuhlontier Heit tnt dle ting | vesrave doubts of the permanent success of to state Ils ense until he got to Washington. al uA Anis the experiments in Indian education which are Chipita, Ouray’s second wife, has very be sent from the Jand upon which he was " she: "el ¥ now belng tried at Iampton, Jddndly-appea Hg pgountenanee, aye Cie Tener nna wltere tt hne Tivedt al his life, Ig aupton, Va., and Car 8 as though you were tn | lisle, Pa. ‘Tho paper prepared by the Seere- "0 t that any will or other disposition of his | er, could bo found who took anything lke | moin Hne, aud rents the use of thom to the i eau ee Celene Sor haat Rerlene bine danger during the peace negotiations 27 taries wi finally adopted as ha patie of tho tie mayeduet : une te oureattar on ore property had been made, But to-lay his at coinfort from tho consideration of the full te | Western ‘Union, It Blgo, Qwna. A part mn : , hhatr hanging naturally about her head, and fiers bh aera al tie thes ay tng the Con ee, ad was presented ta President | dropped. off. ‘Tha. enlsode produced no | torney, Henry G, Abbey, Med In the County port given, bye te, Canis Rut dhe. Gitin Hina betwee this elty and New ¥ ori. ek : on her wrists were large allver bracelets, cont Pee Oe cowie Sank nik? Reel fed Hayes this afternoon, when Dr, Reld and Dr, | SPpatent elleet on the resPof the patlenta, | Anditor’s office deeds executed tn, 1877, in | Merce ititeatinn that tho stiikers wore Ril de-moreew, and will ‘soon dispaHe ol TS Sho was dressed Ina semf-Indlan costume, | ot woud have exploded It Welthar Gen, | Lowrle nade strong speeches In favor of | thongh the attendants were somowhutatirred | which tho deceased donates the Clty-Hall, y ie a Ono . vf including the ‘blanket, She was in poor , 1 t i Western Unlon matter, after whieh the Tiateh nor myself over_had any thonght of | thelr position and Inthe arraignment of and on | Unton, and that, until tho majority, who they } American Unton offer will be taken up, a Up On necount thereof. One of them was | his residence, and valuable property adjoin: | Still under the control of the ofleers of the real personal danger, Every bravado net of | Commissioner Hayt. The Freatdent who Is met of In ealth, and much exhausted from the trip, sent back, us soon as the train stopped at | ing, together with a large . Neve " >, rel be d o nespty Lriteredie " Hyde Park, and, by a sklilful flank: move on | Case and Scoville avennes, for the purpose of | Sli belleve aro opposed to the striice, get | it ty probable that the new Company, will sellin as Hane ie cas | Hebe cro a aac | Net asl ey Cag | eared ey east | fing non of net | or nor, agai, | tn i at fee od wok fiver ‘chain, ‘Ch i M ‘ A , , r > sot and took him daw: kakeo on tho next | called the Case School of Applicd Selences, d by rt wentt . : ¢ 4 i ! tnilce i : ‘ oe + afoul sae % as 7 lonkert : ‘Alliandra had 8 eautiful uaa aller rine us In time if 9 sting was, ft nay or attentively to all that was std, ‘Phere was plenty of, timo, and occasion | ore iaathema les, " Hiyeleay engineering, | the vole by show of haiuts in favor of contin- " 9 isi fp Unless LY plegantly set with two blue buttons. Is | were atlie Ageney ys during the reniainder of the Journey to ob- | mevhanieal chemistr: Sanaiile geology, ung the strike as failing. to Indicate Bpectat Dispateh to The Chicago Tribune, ickory shirt wan covered by an undershirt and Ouray’ was at home, INLTS VIEWS. y eoting, MILWAUKEE, Jan, 9,—To-lay tho schoonct ery at fntug and metallurgy, natural history, | the” real sentiment of | tho mecting, a] It ten iniles away, and many a time T did not PACE, er Merye = : ne ‘ sjand held that, + 1€ a ballot were | Guido Piister was chartered ‘to load with vf navy blue, His vest was of bluck eloth, | (oe i AY, iy A PRACEAULE SOLUTION WANTED, PERSONAT, IDIOSYNCUABIES drawing, and modern languages. Tho prop y ry t hie ty if wile hint-was elt and Inis feet were Ineased Lit Ottay mated aa ins at ie Cone Pea Spectat Dispatch to The Chicagn Tribune, of gome of the patients and to tigquire Inte | erty given Ia valued at $2 00,000. ‘Concornis taken ant counted. by cUtstnteteated partis, Wheat for Buffalo at sx and one-half cents mocassins, while his legs were concealed in exceedingly gloomy at the'eonclusion of the Wasinnaros, D, C., Jan, &—Senator TH, | theit private histories and troubles, An old | ing the remainder of the estate, valued at ‘Tho iden of settling the matter hy ‘Arbitration 'The propeller G. J, Truesdell received 3 R beautiful palr of red Hannel drawers, All | Conference when to wurrlors threw down | of Colorado, who went home during the | fellow, very atigtiied ti lib Hou ies aid te abil BOGOR Os atte ee nothin Is VAL EHOW, they looked vpon as altqgether unfensible, | Vew Wheel In Wolf & Davidson's dry-duck of which was topped over with an Indian | their knives.” recess, returned to Washington to-day. Ho | Meauor timed out fo be, 9 former clergy. = as thoy could not abate from thelr position in | yesterday, ‘To-lay the atcani-barge Willian blanket, ‘This costume practically deseribes . elise ‘ nun of the Church of Eugiand, Born tn the STERLING'S SOUR-MASH. ext degree, None! of y er 2 the ‘ MI, OTTO MEANS, saya the demonstrations whieh are heard of | West Indies U bout the year 12s, he © the slightest degree, Nona of thom had | Crippin isin dry-dock for repalrs upon 1 Fe at er ily reer eerie who accompanies the delogution, fa nrestdent | outside the State In regard to tho Utes da not fered the ininisiey at M4 Preched ave i ~ Spectal Dispatch to Ths Calcago Ivibune, heard of any move being made by aatelde or | pump feed-pipe, Is 8 drawers blue, and vice versa. of Saguache, Col, Here he has tyed for | represent the true state of foeling In Colo- Gen, Charles Adams, the Speclal Agent | many years, Tho Lenlty oF MMs home to | prado, ‘The sentiment of all classes ts un- gent to negatlate with the Ules after the | the Indian reservation has brought tim inlo | qouhtedly In favor of the removal of. the White River outbreak, does not look Ike the } closs communion with: the Utes, und there is Ute i iy Colorado, ike all well-eonducted intrepid and daring man that hels, Hels probably, no other mun In Southorn Colorado | Cnmhuultles, hi Lit the majority people whe perhapy 38 or 40 years of age, and ns pleasant | wha 80 horoustiby us ho “understands their | eee ot of remular mit} ete nitleman to ineet as eauld be found any- | mode of -Jife, thefe personal peculiarities, or | 86 In favor of res be SAV Ant where, thelr relations with tho whites, Mr, Means’ | of procedure, Senator HHL fast elforts are “The Colorado papers lave somewhat mis- | hone in the snug little Lown of Saguache, heli mints ta ners. Hier exedzeanent ite represented and abused mo,” sald he, ae. | an the border of the San Luls Park, and on | 20 ped en ee en Sit mrant nuthority cusing me of being the friend and attorney | tho cltof trall that leads Into the Uncompale | fie tbe Hint Ueki ei betters of the Utes. I was thelr Agent five years, | gre country, by the way of Cochotonn Puss, that “Calorie! eit Heat hat uote sual sit and then they were as peuceful and quiet | hay loug been a halting-place for the Utes on heernect oa til oth ne hi a hay acu Indians as we had on the Continent, I be- | their ‘way toand fromthe reservation whitohe | Hod td fale Coe ethers shall have been Heve that the Utes must go. It 1s the Inev- } himself lias sojourned for months fu the Ine et id tuble result of-elvilization, It is the history | dinns' villages, or accompanted them on thelr NEW -- of. » States, frum Massachusetts to,| hunting excursions across: the rocky ranges. NEW MEXICO. Ailtnois. Piety years geo the Utes had | While he has for years furnished ‘supplies to FIGHTING, erware 1 Sreucina, 1, Jan. %—During tho year | any parties to bring about the proposed arbl- | ~The schooner Narragansett, owned Fae eee ee era ered | sev0 the distillery of John 8, Miller & Co, In falion, witleh really {asa matter In whieh | Messr, Wolf’ Davidson, lins Bean tripped charge, about five years azo, was 9 tulssion this city, used 913,268 bushels of corn, 60,078 $ eatin his visit tothe ‘Angio-Amorican wilh pe ony ot recone met i a up quire peter Georan fay. At Hmes | bushels of rye, and 2010 busliels of barley, | packing-house the reporter jearned that a | to the ‘A otandard. This will require 60108 ee eee eee rome arta ed tes | ora total of 300,603 bushels of gratn, From | large niunber of butchers had made appllew | now frames, new celllng, stanchions, rl longing continued to, ee upon him anti | this was made, 1,883,013 proof gaitons: of al- | ton for work in tho imorsjng, bub that Mr. | and deck, ‘The cost of the work will excce ha be in both phystenlly: A mentally une | cohol, upon which was pald n tax of $1,425, | Fowler could not zive them employment, 000, strung, Insome way or othor ho drifted to | 89.80. As large ay these ligures are, they The fact was that there wag o surplus of Aessra, Wolf: & Davidson have on {he Chicago, was for a me in the Washing | ouy show a part of the money which ts pal Killing-talent on tho market which could not | atooka at thelr yard, and nearly. completed § tonlan Home, but, as his troubles eventually into the reventio flea ut, this place, ‘Thy | be utilized, while the trhnmers are not to be | atenm-yacht, forty feot long, which 1s to resulted In imental derangement, was sent | Collector's ofico lias recently been removed obtained. Among the cutting-p men who supplied with a Bx by six eylinderen Anes out to Jefferson, where he gradually mended, from its old quarters to new apartments In | had come to work during tho day was This little eraft 1s to do service on Chicago Ilo spoke tenderly of a wife and daughter in | te Patterson Bank Tuilding, and things 1, Hf, THOMPSON, River i connection with the ald Bates tiny Stratford, Onte but o miurkedly weakened | Jook a4 if Collector Jones had gotten aver | tho President of ono of the divisions, who | tl’ al Mpa , How controiad by Bfessry Intellect, an inability to erusp nnything but ls fit of WU-temper, and lad concluded to let | hind, after. working: hard wire the | Wolf & Davidson ant othor Sl watuiceeun tho sluptest propositions, tell tho story, ‘Tho | the offles remain where It belongs. Union's polnt, surrendered at diserction and | ‘This epeelien of enterprise rather discott awful methods aie a Wi t exhibited by Chk change to Kankakee will probably do hina. gone to work and steady wages, and Mim the | Suything of the kind yet exhll never seana Whiteman, ‘They only eame in | the Agency at Jos Pinos, his deallngs have | Sax Francisco, Jan. &—A Tueson dis- | deal of good, however, ard the chances are A WORD TO WORKERS. Teporter Interviewed as follows? . eagu sliipbullders. ; contact with the New Mexicans twenty-five | always been so honorable that the Thallins, patch siysy a speelul from Silver City, New | that he will be among the first to be dis | | Tf your avocations are mentally or physically They tell me, Mr, Thompson, that you ” ears ago. ‘Twenty yeurs age they nome | nutarilly susplclous of any one who ene Mexico, to the St st EN th ‘s t charged as cured, Inborlous, If thoy sib eek sui bo cxposhey ry wore one of the Branch? esldent THE WHEAT CROP. red in thelr nations upwards of 20,000, and | gages fi these dealings, have displayed to- | Mexico, to the Star, suyss The Indians aro a Another add caso was that of a little, thin, | clement wenthor, if thoy oontine yuu to the desl Yeu air, 1 was Vresident of Division to-day ‘they*have died down to leas ‘than | wards him the strongest feelings of frlend- ’s nnd Ioberts’ rancho fighting the . . ship. On every occasion where negotiations » ‘Tho troops ureen rgute from Fort .' After we got through at Los Pinos,” con- | have been entered Into between the Utes and | Bayard to thelr aasistayce, ‘hoe lidians thuued he, “J cumo vast to Alamosa, Here | the Govermnent, Mr. Mears las bean called | lave eut several iniles through the line, 1s where the’ mob gave us trouble, Thoy | tn elther as Luturpreter or for counsel, and, SAN NCH Nh a dispatch fram came to the bute), surrounded it, and de | famillar with thelr language and thoroughly | Silver City, New Mos! in ‘Taeson, says: ananded the Indians so that they mdght hang | conversant with the Spanish, In which nearly | *Vietoria with about 100 warriors passed them, ‘Ifyou want the Indiana, sald Cen, | all the Indians eonverse,—and, particularly here going north on the Tth Inst. When list Hateb, whe had chargeof the milltary escort, | Ouray, who isa master of that hinguage,— Henri trons, they were near McKver's ranch, *eome ani take them.’ He had the soldiers | his ~ taituence | hin been strongly | and are moving direct for their former haunts pow d arquud the hotel, but not onwcame | miyked, mau. always on the shlu uf | in the Black Mountains. ‘Theres was some forward, But they got a poor, unfortunate | peace, Pha Chief Ouray Jong wines Aelilng ot rs, but none hurt. Slaj, ‘Mexican who hgid becu ‘arrested that day for | learned tat Mr, Mears was his friend, caun- | Morrow, with five companies of cavulary, 1410 a lamb, took him from the culaboose, | selling lim for the good of his people, and Jn | pursuit,twenty-four hours behind the ludiang, Y pire Buntaxaton, Is, dan. 0+Tha country hort fellaw, of middle ngs, who sab rubbing | vie uua tervous attulty ‘you may uovustousity | XQ ore trom all aceaunts, an active | Fouls In Southeastern Towa, wiiteh have beet Hine to himself, Ihewas easily enuiged in | RUGS, some ranoeatini, tonle, teeteters | supporter of the srike until lutely, What | Aluost impassable sines Now-Yeur's, are be conversation, and the erack In hts brain was | lutes tho falling oneryies, Invi rates’ the bouy, dy you think of the strike now? . ginniig to improve a Iittle. Tho frost apmrent, Concelying Innwelf to be the son | and cheers the mind. fe onablos the system to. it {3 over, ‘Tho packers have won the | nearly all out of the ground, and’ to~lny Frau a we rit eat it ut ny wae aay aecirn ithe Srgane at uD day, i that ends th us far ag Tam con- | clear eky and tho wind has helped to dry the Herat —he. plettres” somor ce “thie iildest | Hon, houses tho liver when inwctive, which It | °“S'Ths oMcors don’t seam to think as you | #urfaco, and this evening the moroury Is lo schemes that were ever hatched from the | Very oftun ta with people whos puruulte are NO cay’ ance ah atte euough fo pause 8 slight froze, Oplulont f yee a 8 | scduntary, Fe me | COR, ai ass : “ brain of 9 invitinan’ Sometiines the hallue | Courages healthful repose, Ite I ants ‘es the; mF but hey are afraid | oa ba ich generally reported 4 CInation 13 one thing and sometimes another, a nie the | knowledge ft, 1 das! but alight Tbs hnagination Py Into the unknown, and fifo, adie crodobits, whlch arate lg ae now ts their tine to sl low th. fa a inighty : his fancy roams at will, The heavens, the | socluty, ure most convincing. Admirably fs it Peer. General that ‘won't save army after earth, tho sea, and all thet beneath them iy, | adapted to the medical wauts of workers, t is defented,' A ; No‘bther Wolsker Dye equals iil's—0 cent