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ho 8 NEW YURK HERALD, TUESDAY, FXBRUARY 5, 186%7—TRIPLE SHEET. time ii running round =the } There appears to be a system of communication k redoubled acti the whites IMENT. THE INDIANS OF MEXICY. pe a a Bi ile very | een te hilrontranchow: and normale. a4 he Po mpc = 9 pte, est CUBA. IMPEACH ‘of ome bundred English miles. ed pojnis | distance may be tat separates them, or he @ many ‘The war in the United States had also—happening as Ahehistsinlin adinocaitiintatae Mr. en the t of Tem QUA CIRNUANUA CORRESPONDENCE. withle the dircumference of the mountain gnards were | times they may have changed their encamr pont, they | it did at the time of the French invasion —the effect to . Madison Subjec peaching — stationed, who were to see that the race was conducted | stil! keep sdvised of each other's movements. gyi. may be | combine with the other elements for the free action of OUR HAVANA CORRESPONDENCE. Presidente. ‘Crmmvauea, Dec. 16, 1860 with farmers «The whole popnlation of the surrounding | done througt the ee ae ge viznals are | the Apache, Comanche and other tribes, giving them Barwon {Prom the Washington Obrovicle, Feb. 2} a the problems existing for the sclation of the | COUnMD bed aseerabled. with whatever they could collect | known. A little smoke upon the side @ 4 mouniain | almost complete liberty 1p carry their plundering excur- | ‘The Entrepet Movement—Free Labor—Cen- | The impeachment of Andrew Joboson, mong ing for eplatiog of value, that they might bave the opportunity of bet | indicates that they are desirous Of meet jap some of their | sions where they pleased. trallzed Sagar Plantation Scheme—Lumul- } President of the United States, is the chief topic of unt ‘Moxicam people, oupe they have establtsbed a stable gov. | ting Something upon the result whieh was to shame | own tribe; another in response, half Gay up the side of ‘THR UNITED STATES AND MEXICAN FRONTIER >a moh Com- | versal discuss.on, ‘no mistaking that the pablic: ernment, 19 to reduce to a peaceable condition, or else | Or to the rival villages. They were also ently | a mountain, denotes that there th’ © are ‘and that free | teat best im time of peace gration and Ite Drawbaci opinion which sustai ‘war against the rebellion 4 Sti civilized to bave a large quantity of the intoxicating | communication may be bel With gem Two or three | troops are of the very worst mercial Enterprise in the Gulf, d&e. ‘Abrabam and vindicated the Thirty- exterminate, tho Ludian mies of ubeir portbern 5: 7 eink the Teauine. wtile colpmane of enous rm, By tm succession npon a | for ‘2 style of warfare as is Havana, Jan. 30, 1868. nioth » by . oF peaety half & million ‘The sufferings of those provinces have, especialty for STRIPPED FOR THE RACK, plain or in a valley, a direction, manifest ‘armed and atill hich I called your at ‘Boally come to conclusion that, upleas Past thirty-tve years, been fearful from the fierce smroade ‘As the eight athletic creatnres took their places at the | their soatee Fedor eg Hh their enemies, who | thelr spat gare. aha gessp aly sate crening atthe | be s00u ‘and. coociliate deatiny, ‘imapeact ~ at | Marling point the excitement rap high; they were, like | answer the signal 9” 98 way if they acree to the |, I Dut to feed uj my went will be made the Imperative duty of the two et ee Snir owe terme: the old Roman athletes, stripped for the contest, the | consultation. A smoke ra -e@.tm guocossion from height forces of residence of Don Francisco Fesser. It Was Very | Houses, ‘The arisioctatic agescies are everywhere nat- BULL more tormble from the incursions across the border | only garment worn being ashort rhich reached | to height along the line 0’; yoga, of in any otber direc- | the resort ‘a3 all the principal firms | uraily alarmed at the ‘Decause Andrew John- from the United States. Especially during te continu | within sboat six inches Of the knee. Our informant, | tion, isa signal to PFC" are to resia the march of the | brokes Gown, used up and played Rumerously attended, nearly apieg | #28 has become their most ‘and most willing in- be Indi ‘of the United whe stopped bts teavela fora day to witness this novel { enemy or to attack big: that he is near, has been seen, | Mt togend. upon a aceut for were represented, and the chair was occup! strument. ‘The foreigners who encouraged the rebel- ‘ance of gor late civ war have the Indians e race, was struck with, the devel t of | and thas bia track's Rave becn recognized. All the Donqresemnen by Don Jose M. Morales’ Mr. Fesser opeced the | lion and and paid grershrow of the Union, Btases had 'froo noes to the Mexican territory, and, like | muscle displayed by a ‘ing belle, w! pet- woe Pon) She sepa Respond, with another in cash a fa © few 27 words | are ‘at the fer 2 matoare which, A Whiwing, thoy Zave swept across the porder blast. | ticoat was a liitle'shorter than'the rest, and be forthwith | the same manner, Ay travelling from £1 Paso to | dolemcs. Occapying forts Gewaicn, sxpicining ners | a while furnishing a new proof of the ability of this gov- bet ie on Sesogeiche. Thore were other finely | Chihuaboa, wi’ am escort, told me that his line of | able camp for attack; well supplied the object of the meeting, the importance ernment to protect itself, removes the last and most ef- Ang everything in their track. Oar, froatier, badly pro: developed creatures in. Abe. Dut none whose bright | March was el qwaphed the whole way between the two | with that's dishonest, government contractor | ing to this port the bonding and transit of cotton which for | ficient element of & conspiracy in which they had #0 ‘ected inthe most peaceable times, hag amce 1861 been | eyes, clean TN ss hac apparent gutta | points by Wee Apaches; that the omcke. signals may be | can Toney eot of; the fort surrout hed abandoned in uence of | largely invested. But the ‘of the Ameri- ‘entirely open percha ‘of motion so vividly upon his | made and ‘any mowent, nearly every man | mules and haress, which about three times many years past hed been henge th. | cA people are here not simply to reject European advice ‘THe: INDIAN COUNTRY OF BEXICO. smazioation, and eo powerfully upon his purse. and wove ge prepared to Kindle a fre Generally they | Indians kindiy steal from under their the royal order of 1847, until the blockade of the Sout or to re@ect American ‘With due respect to d ‘THE START AND THR REITING, here tvep sticks, one.of ‘stole and the other of lechu- | making snother opening for the orn porte of the United States, which partly had revived | what is, indeed, a double admonition and instruction, it ‘The Woxfcan States which are most-alfected ty these The whole ‘were off at the word go, amid the | gwla, wet ; When rubbed together, the | who sometimes manages to sell the traffic. Monsieur Clement Caro expressed his as their duty to take no not clearly invited by the Geprotations ae: — wildest ‘and the betting commenced. The | point ‘of one agi side of the otber, produce a | stolen muies for facts and sustained by the bay greed ube consti- Jakobitants, | tre as gin o'clock end. thirty-five minutes in the } flame imstantly. ° tons, opinion that It would be necessary not only to ask tution, And hence the rence of General Asbley’s the revocation of that order, but also absolute exemp- | resolation of inquiry into the alleged violation of trust : | 147,133 me , Ea Gams, sonnnd, third, furiin. andi aven sae po 2 renin ao the ee a completed without vant 4 210,000 | upon elthor side; tat during the next five. turns i waa Stale whe inteads to tion of the tonnage duce on all vessels loaded with cot- | by the acting President to, ¢ loiary Commitiee of 156.519 | evident that, with the exception of the fair belle above juantities te the mili tom, and the abolition of the one and a quarter per cent | tsa fom in saportance + ae len 4 giaibdibneatibed ; ‘ epesit duty now levied on bonded cotton and other | whether such an example as that of Andrew Johnson e was losing ground, bow. Dreast ‘ever, kept and with two wiry booki shall be allowed to run into a ruinous precedent, or shall , ures from Baconia, At the twelfth tum of the the north west of soldiers; it merchandise. Thediscussion being unanimously in favor | 1M nea as to be ‘conspicuous ition te ‘To the above might be added about 1,000 sqnare leagues tj, ‘all Dut we three here mentioned, dropped } northeast of Coahuila, The Chiricahue beanch | And what of the ‘who superintend ali the posts |’ of the motion, ft was resolved to memorialize her | sfier times ‘The numerous attempts to emberram and to ‘ef northern Zacatecas, and about the same of northern] from the track. The multitude was now. pretty weil | of thie great tribe was numerous, and | upon our ? 8 few hovorable exceptions You | Majesty's government, throagh the medium of the Cap- | i investigation would pre- Wuevo Leon, which together contain about 160,600 | Sosked with Texunia, and the betting ran to the wildest } waged a desolating warfare far into the interior of | might as well sete gilded snail upon the track of a Mexi- tain fed vail, if they were not feeble copies of stmilar attempts extremes, every one who bad aflything of value staked ‘The Gilenos and Mimbrefios also bave been | can mustang as to set.oneof them to catch an Apache General, accompanied with an appropriate manilest- | Yo > ver the constitutional authorities deemed it right ‘Poremna, which swell the (otal to 751,242 of the popale- | it on the race—hoes, ploughs and other agricultural’ im- ahadeg tiv wean wastike ent plesdebiaty eapenioe walsh Indian. AB Indian attack is made upon a fortified post | ation on the subject, invoking at the same time the mer- | to resort to the strong hand to rescue the common liber- ‘thon of Yhe country kept is constant dread of the savages, || piementa, torses, tea sherp, Pies, oral one, om ne ee ‘Mexicans have had in northwestern by perheps pe Tl aed cantile communities of Barcelona, Malaga and other | ties If we discard all this false ens eee rensie wittlo tho extent of the territory which they keop imma if THe Meath Oote louhes: while ‘the womou pitched fm | tne comanonee, of Din The-resalt Wo the olf ereatyped report as | Portaot Spain to give the proposition their support, and | ‘reads, we shall soon Slesoees NOt Ie Tea Ratan. Is elmosterirgin condition t is seen is nearly one haMof | sng pet their petticoat, AU] was a wild uproar, andthe | ‘This tribe, occupying 9 part of our territories of | follows:— 7 to commission @ competent person to look after it setonlehingly simple; ‘and, although the subject has not Whe Mextcan poninsula, not counting Lower California, | Derby sweepstakes were now! Arizona and New itexiea, is divided into four main bn ag Scum Rarzanos. ‘A committee was accordingly named, consisting of | yet been ly discussed in Congress, it may be safely 0 Indian tersit woder ‘The Urirteenth turn was made; but it wasevident that | branches, and these into minor subdivisions. The main Zmno , Usrrmp Starrs Ty 2 Assumed, after tbe very general interchange of opin- Sapently ove belt, if wesouns tis ite the Sesoguiche belle was'gettine out of wind, and after | divisions are the Cuchanticag, Jupes, Yamparicas and | ¢enera) pan.awrunory, © eremner Le Mesers. Sama, ~otolongo & Co., Riga & Dardet, J. De- | ions“among the maser, and the very general review ‘warliits control in Yucatan, Chiapas end Tabaseo. al! had got so much bottem as the wiry contestants from tales, ‘The latter name ‘was given to them by | “Gie*t have the heuer to ved that's ree of | mestre & Co,, Don Francisco Fesser and others, to draw | of the matier by the net reas of all parties, that INDIANS OF SONORA, Baconia, But she was not far bebind, and although | the early i and it is thie tribe that | Apaches, numbering at least one housand (L000 stincked up the memorial and obtain the desired result, if cause is found, the work of impeachment will be ts northwest the Papag: Bacoma took the prize it was nota matier for much | borders on Texas and occupies a small part of that | thi Ca ey off after several hours of peaceably and effectually consummated. The demo- Sener AanIne: 98:65 8 nse 8 Toast State. Formerly the Comanches outnumbered the | severe fighting. 20. eudden and severe that | 21 Siglo treats the questions of centralization of the | PraceaDly and effectually fonsnmimenes | he emi ‘whled number in Mexico about eight thousand. ‘They | oxg BONDRED AND NINE MILES IN THIRTSEN BOURS TWENTY: | Apaches, but constant Warfare with the tribes sur. | Lhad no Ume to corral the mules, horace and cattle. which | sugar plantations, immigration, free labor, &c., &¢., a8 | seeking to find warrant inthe constitution and in the paramount to all others relating to the future develop- | expounders of the constitution for their unreasouing op- z 3 ‘@recimost always at war with thewwhites, In the large ‘VIVE MINUTES rounding them and with the whites of both the | vile and wounded with them. Before, purmutt ‘can ‘moun ‘Sntaad a The two women from the latter town were received | United tes and Mexico have greatly reduced ganized I shall ire enough animals t the men, ition to im} hmenut; and their blunder, too greedily of Tibaros, ie the Galt of California, and on the} 111° ne loudest shouts of joy by thelr tow ie. | nambers, altbough they are still more powerful than the | Sada suficient mimber of fesk mules wo curry cong day's | ment and welfare of Cuba, Ever since the time of | Potion‘ libenamens andes, eosreetty ~adjecont coast of Sonora, 16 fownd the remnant of 2 once | They had finished the race at eight o'clock in Apaches,” During the time of the Vi 1m Mexico | rations, I beg to recommend Captain Roulette, of ¥ | Tacom there have beon men whe exhorted planters to | indicument against the latter, ‘Vory powerful tribe knowa a@ the Serle, They number ‘| ing, making the whole distance in thirteen bours and | there sometimes existed peace between this tribe and the | ¥. and peg mp oo Bae foe ini fon? py for devote some attention to a tree labor ‘as the first The slightest examination shows that if any men twenty-five minutes by the watch of our informant. | Mexicana. At such times the Govermor of New Mexico vr eongeet SS Lee be, net step toward the division of labor and final salvation | shoula hesitate, or should treat with deference the pro- ‘mow about two hundred. They live by plundering the ‘white settioments and ty hunting and fishing. In the Gistricts of San Ignacie, Alter, Arispe, Moutezuma and Sabuaripa are found the’Giletos, Mogollones, Chiricabuis ‘and other tribes of lesser note, el! belonging to the great Apache tride, of which I shall speak further on. Of the One of the two Baconia women who won the race had ven birth to a child only ten days before, and prepared reelf for the contest by bandaging ber breaste. The only stops made during the time by the contestants for the prizes were either to take a Jittle water or eat fru- gally of pinoli—a simp uel made of parched corn ground and sweeteved with sugar. By the time the race was concluded nearly every Indian on the ground confirmed the election of # general and s lieutenant | obedient elected from among their number by themselves. The aiden Indians generally yielded the strictest obedience to these ‘tates infantry. elected chiefs, and at that time very rarely broke # ‘The truth is. our frontier treaty, In matters of good taith the Comanches are | off school for West Point; THEY have home laos of hovpitaley. sre lore iatropia ta | Sigamuanien, touch upon, his nid ae they have’ some idea of Do. fy Toundings as are necessarily forced jira. tk the wav and toanage thelr werllke expeditious with far more |. ronsaues ss reed pre other tribes, which are peaceable, and in general make waa Gruak The cele auoa € 5 tions Were those who, accord- | intelligence than the Apaches, They also dress with Good miners, cattle tenders and agricultural laborers, | ing to custom, iauakee iat care of the intoxi- greater nesiiess, live in Metter habitations, enjoy each pee of — year? Will there aro the Yaquis, who are divided into eight towns, | cated ones. "There is generally one to each family who | other's society and live with the other members of the | measures they take to make Jaborers, remains sober. It was universally conceded that it was | tribe in perfect friendship. The four branches of thie tribes, who are: stripping them of what- allowing them labor the one-half of the profits. This, however. to nogene- | a member of the Virgini ral reguits. The firet planter who may be sald to have | purpose of considering the national constitation, of carried out the new system was Don Francisco | which he was a chief framer and advocate. During the on his estate Tinguaro. This finally led to the | Convention which prepared the national constitution he formation of a joint stock company for the | Kept full private notes, afterwards published by order of a of central plantations; but this, like many | Congress, and ever since regarded as infallible authority. and form the department of Yaqui. They occupy some magnificent agricultural Jeods in the valley and to the mouth of the Yaqui river, which flows into the California Gulf, They namber about fourteen thousand. South of ‘the Yaqui tribe and between them and northern Sinaloa the greatest foot race and the joliiest spree known to memory or tradition. THK APACHE TERRITORY is Northeastern Chibuahua, Northern Coahuila and Northwestern Texas, an extent of at least 100,000 square miles, of magnilicent grazing, agricuftural and mineral hey rarely any of the disputes resulting i death, occur be- ‘after the mation. ther tween private Indians am eA che encampments realy Rasen! hs per aizee Cae The principal weapon 01 Comanche is the bow Will ‘they tell us that, despite the army reguiatio: arrows bat borh are shorter than those used by the pote Jet the non-commissioned ‘ethoors ditt the men! Apache, and are much better made, They alsouse them | that they jet the Indians steal virtually uweod gene when fs the Mayo tribe, which forms the department of Mayo. } lands. From a little work, in Spanish, published not | with the greatest dexterity; and when sounded in one knowing that Uncle Sam will make it good? t stoek concerns, seemed to have a fatality !n | When the constitution was sabmitted to the respective ‘They have ten settiements, and number algo about four- } 105g since in this capital, as the result of long years of | arm, can make use of one of their feet for the purpase | they leave Weet Point education is completa, ‘and that | this country, and ft is very doubtful if any real good will | Siates for ratification the arguments of Madison carried st of the Apache tribes, I have gleaned a portion of | of shooting their arrows. In every the Co- | there is mo further necessity to improve themssives, ex-'} result from it, Asin banking business, it appears that | cogviction to doubting minds, conv: even Jefferson. eon thousand. The Opatas have more than thirty set- tlemoants, and number about thirty-five thousand Indi- everybody can attend to his own affairs better than an their clearness and cogency, The Virginia Convention: association can. This fact is inberent in this country, pend in June of 1788, Mien ‘Mr, Madison as the ac- 80 different {rom all others, and will ever be one of the | know! chief of the party favorable to remem @ assisted by Marshal the following information:—These Indians are divided into nine principal tribes and numerous minor ones. The pames of these, taken generally from the names to manche is the superior of the Apache—taller and more | cept in the ecience of cards, which will afford them a symetrically formed, more int it Dy far, and pos- | means of amusement and ana sessing more manliness. their mlaries? an viduals, They occupy tho heart of the spurs which | 2/6 names oft og and rivers near which they locate This tribe has not committed such numerous depreda- 4 demand from obstacles towards its development and pro- Pendieton, Edmond Randolph shoot off into the centes! part of Sonora from the sierra | (heir wandering. villages, and -sorootimes. from. the | tions ia Mexico as the Apaches, Dut thelr superior organ. | uz Sey upon some meraber of Congress te dom 7 | freee. The ‘people, 00 different. from ‘those of cluer | unete“atd oreesed by Monroe, Grayson, Henry and Madre, which, in the line of greatest elevation, forms tho | fruits and ani which abound near them, are Niniet- | ization and the large numbers which have composed petra foam the government every year since 1850 by the Bot yet arrived at a proper stage to form | Mason. This array ‘of tnvetiootudl giante sul the Doundary between Sonorw and Chihuabua, The Pimas, a | Uaeu-né, Sagetacn-né, Liuscenjen-né, Yecu) Inta- | their raiding partics have always made them more | Indiang, and it will be advisable also for him to ask how | communities, We must therefore wait ana see what | constitution to a terribly searching analysis. Their jen-né, ‘Sejen-né, Cuclcajen-né, Lipanjen-né and lyu- | feared. much it coste the mation annually to sustain a body of be aqnommmenet by individual as in the | words, carefully taken down at the time, are now pre- tribe of similar nature to: the Opatas, occupy the “Pin- | tagjen-né.. The modern names substituted for these by ‘The Comanches have vory rarely been at. with upon the frontier who are totally unit for Indian ‘to in & previons 1} A served ‘the arcbives of the nation, and control’ eria alta,” in the northwest part of the State, and the | the Saniards are, in their order:—Yontos, Chiricanues, | the Apaches, but bave waged the most iy wars to- | warfare.” Let him encimate, at vbe sauue time, the oat- next question 1s that of immigration and coloniza- | statesmen and constitutional lawyers as completely as “Pineria baja,” in the cenure of the State. They have | Gileios, Mimbrenos, Faraces, Moscaneroa, Lianleros, | gether, torturing their prisoners in the most inhuman | lay for the eupport of thousands of able bodied Indians, | tion, which, afer all, to be the greatest of ail | the profoundest opinions uf Fd tocecd judicial minds. nineteen settlements, and’ number about fifteen thou. | Lipanes apd Navajoes. manver. Bloodt fights occur between them, especially | and the cost, aleo, of the arms and munitions of war | difficaities in this There is a natural aversion to | It was after this memorable 1 taal stragg je that the sand. They are not a warilke tribe, and bave sulfered in CHARACTERISTICS OF THR APACHRS, during the season of buffalo hanting, at which time the | that are furnished to them with which to commence territory, wi Although the tribes differ alittle in their propuncia- @ introduction of any races but from De- vote of 89 to 79. When common with the whites from the’ savage incursions of ble y thet from Spain. constitution was, ratited by ‘the Apaches, who have entirely destroyed tour of their | tion they all speak the same language, which is guttural | better huntine and encroach on what the Comanc! them. same time, inquire: what pri- Tam quite sure that were only a few bu: consideration, a very interesting and) former sotlbmente. and poor in worda. They are not a people whose consider thetr property. Peet asrisente pun far al indo of popahion ape: the! Tarcign feats sotive tore purpike oF tauitges | ke tie piace,’ That section tees fol- CHINUABUA TRIBEA. pers and. ci are similar throughout the different , and compare it with what the same articles cost | any part of the istand, possible obstacte be — : This State perhaps suffered equally if not more than bes, . Before the time of the ®paniards they were ‘ave damaged Co! the government. Let bim ask, too, what the govern- throst In thelr way 40 re them out and fnal compel Scrion 2. The President shall _be commander-iu-chief of any of the other, Her whole northern border has | united, and bad a more thorough and distinctive nation- '| millions of dollars ment pay per ton.for ot ment | the colony to be A And ee a rae ref tee United Staten, abd of tbe wo tin of Deen left open and te still exposed to the merciless | ality; but each tribe now to possess its own | lives. The whole State years stores, and compate it with the price pald , | with respect to betas some th immigrants | ue several States when called into anual service of the Unt. Soroade of a foo whe chinks hgbtly-of « ride-of tive ‘are frequently separated ‘with numerous herds And while he is-th' Dim his of |. from the: ‘of whom a few.come:occasion- | ted States; he Tequire the opinion in of the Dundred miles across the States frontier to mar. | apotber tribe by wide desert tracts, Contact, oo, with |and éora thauiry on to the Be t ‘apd. ond up to uit snd. to grow gress, they 9-507. eineipal olcer 18 Bg eh dor the ‘‘Haciendados”’ and those whom they employ, to | the white Taper bas crested, 9 eres! reesiiy, saltoe vers, aud ‘every nook of bis ‘with evidences of bad man- |’ for bave Co ay at rep and perdone ection ints “amy 2popeioes ae eatry wep wae sun preservo their unity af action wer: ‘Sgement. Let bim ask how much jap heerhy = 03 ‘ule Untied Sualca, except. tm Gance of faa: roe ‘entarpriee. ‘ ment pays per ton King, consti alarmed ‘Mesle this process of Indien abrasion against white TOE APACHES AND COMANCHEA i almost ‘eotne tinge Y f ~ wettlements has been going on, for. years, vot in ‘Under this heading I inctude the grees Taree time ‘mech that, charges to indi Sees uy ae et nadie the ido work of civil warfare which bas all the devastation cansed by the Indians within ‘the’ Invasion. the came teenage Lat hie ask why the United throw their whole force againet Ik” Weorge ‘Mexico the Indians have gained id, and have, anit | States namedtn this paper. Coaliuila ‘has su! from] might — troops at. abould be fed on beef shat costs nine a Hee ae an lest a corrupt and: ans anes aE oa , Parey- be iar Severe Dncteeeed: 508 Berwnen venice: the | times “fi Conte per pookd more than’ the best tas ja ase upon | culties it to be overcome, bat knows fall ‘that faithless Executive prerogatives here #0: =a devastaung werk far south to within sight | weight of terrible ree warfare, and even | and ‘the private tables of that virtaous j and | ey ere ‘contended that the President: the spires of Durango. The warlike tribes which bave | Stnaioa Las bad her progress led in former times, | of a hab’ then, if he discovers any bad management The iropsider Tetuan is expected here daily. | not to have the power of pardoming, because he ne ages manor and even lately, by the savage storm of desolation ite virgin wildness, gives no trace of ite having been the line, Jet, him ask. if the. nation is | She will not use anv. unless necessary. It is said ee erica sudipaa nin ‘were advised by Comanebee, of whom more hercafver, ‘The only | bas warked she lines of tuvasion.. A biliows tempers. | occu man, ‘Two-thirds of Chibuahue bes’ Been | seriefed’ with tne’ edacation ‘of, ita military. that the whole a coming “here. [Rio ana | may ret! aay cane he lan gy renee peter be ae pens ee aes rild sag as Seats thos meg tg pn eye pgp er ‘who sit quietly down, under the shadow of their ae wat ate carte to Mr. Mason, “that be will establish monarchy and ‘who broken make ingly ‘Coahai Tatler State there exists a earned salaries ‘permit this abese of the national Ietands. SGeorrero, Hidalgo and Mina ‘Bul very little Isiknown | dependence, while thelr bed faith makes tt Se rule all over the Morihera uve Cemural dietnels which Shining examples of henerand peoblty are |. Tee Diarte ae 2 Cube contains the detalls of | ee oe a eee cnvinione seni he nek, ‘bout (hem: around them, as around many other of the fag mem te B & treaty oF ‘to live in peace with were nh, REMY, Pt Seo there 0d ‘many officers sent to our frontier; but I | the voyage to Fernando PO of the ship Rosa del Turia, 1 ny? Now path ed fuolated Ipdien. sribes of there circles a vein of | whites. ibes differ a little ip height apd color, bat | rematos naugbt but & fal. wreek i Former, pre. ‘easere you Catinot stay tong. for disgust fhuned | which conveyed the convicts sent out by General Ler- | [0P 1a reply to these weight tions employed! romance should tompt the svisntite societies Of the] are all brown and well edeus with ‘quick eyes,"|' gress. “‘Phroughout the north of Zacatecas pape into a bet fame by every day life avon dieposes of them. | sundi, written by a lieutenant of the Spanish navy in py Aen, wrt be ‘wertd.to delegate come able scholar, well verstd in the | long hair and beardiess. whom'l have are | the pictore is of the same dark hue There can ‘Mexico endures a large part of the misfortunes occa- | charge, giving the history of bores ae eenah tbe ; mady of the races.of these countries, to pass two or | not above the middie height, broad. ami « powerfully’! found in the whole of northern Mexico immense tracts | sioned by the bad management of oar frontier aed the | custome and productions, together with the names re rye ‘adverting to Mr. Mason's objection to the three yearn these tribes. An intensely interest. | formed, with a wild, infernal expression of countenance, | of territory which were formerly well populated, and.| bordering Indian tribes These make the’ morthern political convicts which had arrived these from | prestisave power of pantomime, said it, would pe eatremely” ‘tog ‘Might be given to the world by any oue who | which is perfectly barren of intellig’ice; restless, flash- |’ which, now, contain not a single human being. Btates of this republic their “dark and bloody nd,” in, The author gives a most favorable account of | im; to vest {othe House of Representatives, and net ‘Would devote himeelf faithfully to the object. ing eyes, full of savage instincts, and wild, anime) | “In wi mining district you choose to go within | and too often use agsiost the inhabitants the. where the vessel had to put in. I advised you | muci less so ts it ip the Senate. because numerous: OF THE TARAHUMARES mouths, There is no ferocious beast with half their | the limita of the territory I have specified as the scenos | weapons furnished to thom by the United States Of this ‘vessel's retern here; im batiast, to which feat I were of leas by passion, and might, in: J bave jearned much from Mr. Charles Chipmap, who | damnable wi'dness, and I wish that the soft-hearted | of these outracea, you will find the ruins of mining | their unprincipled Indian agenta. called | reagan and possibly also that of the | the momeot or sengeenee. Sorept mania, ‘Tt was an es- has boon working some silver mines in their district, and | philanthropists who live In the midst of @ poetic imagery | raciendat, of whole mining villages even, while the |." It only requires afew. years ot Indian contact to learn | United government. as I have heard it stated that | tablished practice In Massachusetts, for goals who is Superintendent of the Santa Ciara Mining Com- | and vote away our cash in the United States Treasory, | great number of valuable mines which’ have been | shat the pootry of Hlawatba is a perfect humbug when | the Winooski, the Hugh McCulloch and the Florida were | determine such cxses. Js was found, says be, thet two dit wany. He isan American gentleman of very trusiworthy | were forced to make a yearly pileriwage to their | abandoned, :ndicate the former prosperity ip bold con- | applied to the seal Indians; that humeniterianiem with | all sent in ‘Of said veevel, although it stated in the | Wins etn a the deliaquepte of tne ‘observation. His iniormation agrees also with mac! Indian territory, and see je effects of their | trast to the present. 1s letter from ‘above mentioned lieutenant that the in- rene nen! ‘that I have previously heard of thistribe. These Indians | noble efforts to id savages in their work of | INDIAN WARS ON THE INCRRASR SINCR FRENCH INTERVEN- tention was to send the vessel trom Fernando | would execute with an: live in huts made of bushes, and sometimes of adobes. | killing Christians, There is much lack of confidence ‘TION, Po to China for coolies. A leg house may sometimes be found, but ouly among relatives; an Apache will not approach his Especially during the French invasion of this country, French Transatlantic Steamship Company is évi- the families Many of them reside incaves | brother even without his arms in hand ready for assault | has the Indian war been carried on by the savages wiih ently extending and regularizing the communications | MAY not among the rocks and mountains They live mostly in a | or defence. His extraordinary powers of endurance, | more than its accustomed fairy, There is scarcely a Detwoon as auaien the Mexican Gulf and the United | Sri, incident to his wild life, his nomadic habits, his expo- road in the indicated territory that can be traveled with- sure to the climatic changes, give him such strength muserabie condition, and without any of (he conveniences out a respectable escort. I have within six weeks seen ot ufo. Their women are generally treated with the States, sherele corer’ that which both the ve, never yet achieved. The | foand the ‘po greatest deference, aod appear 10 be more inteiligent | that not unfrequently you find men among them who | whole villages in northern Durango filled with the rural the Ahan the men, they geperaily manage the house, and | can outeun ahorse on rough ground. They treat their lation, driven in from the vicinity of the towns Ercatier they peonth anaraar te tho wuthocstuorn tween Hawave and New theca oy eons hes cooveues play @re masters of everything, including their hasbands, old peopte with perfect barbarity, and i this respect Teenie they took against their merciless already forstalled ber. There no doubt that the = DRAUTE | MIBBION. resemble the northern Patagonia ‘tribes whom Ihave | enemies, On wy ond from faltiio to Chihuahua T wit company will make money, because of the punctoality | “mPrer” sPpointme Some three hundred years ago the Jesuits settled at | seen in South America. The tribes are divided into | nessed many of the acts of savage ferocity that are such TWE RAILROAD TROUBLES IN VERMONT. ‘and accommodation of their steamera In all probabili Is ft any wonder that these words from the illustrious Guazapares, in the midai.of this tribe; but, fuding them | families or ranches; but these are very rarely extensive | a curse here. Within two mouths more than fifty indi- 2 they will take a large hurmber of passengers from Loulay. | Madieom-conquered the objections ot Mason and Heury— the same bY whom the ‘ot the tale rebellion jo themselves when protested su very warlike and hostile, they located themselves w io number of inbabitants; for tne jealousies arising with | viduals baye been mardered and scalped, many of them Paris bition. ‘copat! the of a bigh mountain, which they named en their increase soon breed dissensions which are rarely | in their h and within sight of ie large Nouep and The Bennington Banner gives the following statement ean Pant se ing owners of the = ow : Miguel, and called it Mission No, 8. Here they found a | bealed afterwards, cities. Mapimi, a splendid mining dictrict in Durango, | of the facts in the railroad complications in that quar- Span lines of steamera, have the intention to connect beyrd email table land, which they cultivated, and also found POLYGAMY 18 PERMITTED, ig entirely dormant, owing to these savage inroade; a 8 port with Central America on the Atlantic side, @ clear epring Of excellent water. After building n | and every Indian, as a general rule, bas as many wives | the magnificent district of Parral, insouthern Chihuahua, | %f:—The Tenge of the Western Vermont (now the Ben- | from "Tzanai in G1 as far se Aspinwall, m lide chapel, meanwhile defending themseives in their | a8 he can build huts to keep them in—some have from | is equally paralyzed. To add to all these Indian horrors, Colombia, in same way as the Panama steamers stronghold, which was accessibie by only one well de- | six to eight. The method of getting a wifo is very simi- | the h have ia the State of Sonora roused all the Funning along the Pacific, touching at the principal Sended pachway, ibey commenced preaching, praytug’| Jer to thes whieh rules frequently in the United.s peaceful Indian tribes, paid, fed and armed them against ports ane pees their way down mountain until | The women are pu , and, to carry out the resem- | the liberal republican government. Many thonsands of There were twenty-seven new cases of smalipox ii they worked themseives into the affections of the | blance, if the parties do not find the Yaquis, and Mayos under this organization have Matanzas on the 224, and there being only «ix deaths @avages, and reached the valleys below, The Taruha- | Or their natures jal they dissolve the contract by on. field, have been carrying desolati that day, the disease is decidedly decreasing. fnere gpares wore, ai (bat time, perfectly wild and almost uo. | mutual consent, the woman returns to the home-of | into Sinaloa and the interior of Sonora. All mining en- | was have also been some cases in Las Tunas, near Santiago tamable; but Jesuit perseverance, admirable in its con- terprines have been crushed out, and at least $8,000,000 | at de Cuba, When some of your medical men come this a@tancy, Onally gathered the whole tribe under the wu bus of United states capital here invested before the | nui pantie Any pd kindly ever some “ vaccige mat @f the order, and gave them complete control of Tndian French tnvasion, has swallowed up by these Franco- ter," which is mach needed — The. ‘chapel upon Mouse iene the cra. | band rarely to recovery, sat ‘tribes. ‘The grand review on the 23d, to cetebrate the young Gle of their was now (oo sinall, they erected | live aguatly tn the most broken and rugged sierras, where late years the Apaches and jes have at Prince of Asturias’ birthday, oabacbowpaighe: Golgen @otmreb upon the hillside Theo ‘there is wood, water and wild fruita Their ipal | times had a ue ‘treaty, offensive and det two were im tbe morning from the forte and ships-of- of the Indians by wholesale. The church now Se iS Sk oe cae ae ican | the purpose 5 #4 their depredations with | ber ‘War, and the palace was \ilutninated in the evening. im Guazapares is the and Texas of stock the wild am. 5, gat it isan uncertain peace, which is Among the revent arrivals there are the _ Dullt, ite now seventy-Ove mals whieh they bunt, When the wood and rage ynto war between them. u at ‘Countess 4’. a artiste, last from «A BEVELW Fah ater Gove age: other point, but always se- CRCLE SAM EXPERIMENTING WITH THE RED MAN, the switch jo place, Res America Jamaica, ly known by the Upon the descent of the the most inaccessibie mountains, that they may sta- The Navajo branch of the Apache tribe appears now to | while a au pon two | pame of Madame Petipas, in the Conservatoire snd fastnces thy told the Indiaus tion their outposts to guard agsinst surprise from the | be the pet child of the United States for experimepting poh ne rth for the Sta‘e line, | Salon in Paria. Also Don Lais op an im prams het ogee oe, revealed ‘whites or from their hereditary evemies, the Comanches. | purposes. Some eight thousand of them, caged of cor- | holding keepers by forde until they had crossed the a, extraerdinary mission pomp Lt of sitver lay where the town of Guazapares MOTION: OF RELIGION, Falled at Fort Sumber, farnish splendid opportunities for | line, whee they put them off and allowed them to | Duived Staton wanda papi gm bogs? Their supreme being they call Yastasitasiten-né, or oe contractors to spring their t upon the | return to this State, The State line is about two miles The Captain General has ordered the liquidation of the aben eet to work ing and “Captain of the Sky.” Without belief ip the future, ‘nited States Treasury, and aid ‘the poor Indians” in | from the depot where the property was rescued. At- gold mine company of Guaracabuya, a joint stock con- Gad ativer district at that piace. they think that death is anoibilation. apy, Sewers, their absorption of the $100.000 per month which is | tached to one of the engines was @ baggage car anda cern, started some time ago, for not having applied in po oto hers a ache say that they like to be on good terms with e ‘Captain | spent at this post to support the lazy catthroats in their car. The whole thing was done quickly and | dae course to the government for the necessary per- Banta Teresa. of the Sky," upon whom they think the success of any | worthlessness. alarm could be given. Those whoaided im the | ‘mission, with liberty, bowever, to ime the asso- ‘4 SEApON OF UFTOXICA enterprise, good or bad, depends, WHAT THF TRIBES COST SPAIN, vescue, we are glad to learn, are not citizens of Vermont, ution nivar Ouuaatag tho foquicles catkoriantlcn. ‘The tribe leads an agricuiwral life METHOD OF WARFARE. In 1729 there was a troop of seven hundred and thirty. | but were employés of the Troy and Boston company, for the most , of ‘Their principal offensive arm is the bow and arrow. | four men pore Apne upon this northern frontier | amd from Troy. The rescued at North Ben- ‘corn, Into an tntosicating Formerly this was thes favorite weapon. and even e-day of Mexico agninst Indians, 81 a oat of $283. aonu- Bingion i etinaud to be pee 4 0,000. ‘The same day NEW MAIL LINE OF STEAMERS. roy un be = without reference - most of them prefe' rearms g force was found insu! lent for tl irpore, wrt of attachment game was tarned of the corn for the winter's supply. Very many | purchase along the line of the United States froatier or sot ae increased to four thousand, and Tor’ many placed in tue bands of Mr our who at- and the Ppa ~~ ce th make a compeey if the principal Indians, ho bare laid in & obtain through treaty with our generous government. | years maintained in the feld in warfare with the | tached early inthe evening at Pownal slocomotive. one QUA NEW ORLEARS CORRESPORBERCE. ” Well did) Mr. Madison o fer the cold The later get out of ‘repair, and ‘and Comanche From 1720 to 1796 it cost car and e ptenge ca ad placed the whl —— JAN pei Sally} I lg wih ther wes ane 8 while the are alwaye avaliable. When an Bpain about $1,000,000 per year cutlay for the mpport Of keepers, About daylight the next morning an | Important Pesal Treatice-New Line Be- | the argument and the a thee vacaum be- for s month at a time sive expedition the Mexican fron deen ohenced ‘the frontier Indian fighting in | engine was sent ep from Eagle, Bridge with's of | tween Havana and New Orleans—Pestmas- | ween the period of impeachment conviction or ac- Intoxication tbey generally determined upon they leave their families hidden im | these Northern States; bat if wo count the losses by the and by foree took tbe ri property into | ter General’s Instractions. &c. eile comeetine. e. of the United States, many are badly bruised, some almost inaccessible mountain, with a very amall | sweeping desolation of Indian inroads, it will swell the | the Slate of New York, apd ss in the other case took New Ontaawe, Jan, 98, 1867. wuattes of trial be teund Uy the Bouse, t pro- wounds, as the fling guard. They then divide the expedition into small par- | amount to @ fabulous sum—a sum which in a century | the keepers with ‘We are informed the oak ene ee eiad teeeirten oe ee. and tamble” way. From ues, and. by the most broken and unfrequented roates, | amounted to many hundreds of millions of dollar | was rearued from the Sheriff by express orders from the | Postmaster Taliferro has received information that « | ment, who shail dlecharge the duties of the Freskjential of them live out aa laborers travel on foot to the place of destination, accord: | In 170 the Viorroy effected a these | office at Troy, by, The property remeued ab.| postal treaty. of an important character tas been ar. | Moe in the Interval, Ths ten hohe hah Nae fav obits Sienna, Sua von their fields ing ee at eee" See a ieee cag. Effect. ortbers| vibes; bat ft Versninsted Ja 810 on the part of Found sue roierne 000. On the 17th Welllng- | ranged between France and our government; also a dent can et eeneerie if pred nly Ay tom eee pluader, | the “pani ernment, wi longer who aided rescue at North was Se bo pee | teed Jodividuals, are a very inoffensive with incredible rapidity, to the deserts or the mountai port them fu their sino an tae large anal srreeted, aad in defeuit of ball louow in Jail. “Tite not | treaty Between the governments of the United States | tne President; and, ae tf the Virgioien very hones. If » traveller passes among them and en- | travelling sometimes for days together without rest, food | outlay for the purpose of feeding such a pack of useless | known that any other party tm either rescue | and Veneruels, for ah interchange of postal matter. The | ¥#® inte ths feiare ‘and a ae tere a house or but they wilt gemerally flee from the | or water. If they have stolen a ‘umber of horses, | animala. Before terminating treaty the Spanish | is in tbe Bate, 8 Co. Te | new monthly ithe of French steamers between Havana seemed to be an almost inh; treason, providing. piace, either to the mountains or their cornGelds, and | they invariably leave a few men in the rear mounted os | government tried the Fort Sumner experiment, ‘above | ‘side in the State of yw York, sad left with the leo thst the View Presidedt taay be exepended until be fo nage pera te oes | Whatever he wants be van Sa Greate Dine SR eee mentions and wished to them cultivate the | tured property. Tae rescee ot ‘under and New Orieans is to form close connections with the | should be impeached and removed, and that the Legis- take, and leave in conspicuous place mm the.but the | take the main party and give notice of the numbers of | jands around toe different « lion,” but efforts | cl ia the most lawless handed act | French line of steam packets between St, Nagaire, | isture may make a eg 7 Mins comyowar te Nothing payment he may think proper. Many people passing | the enemy who may follow. "When followed in euch | were ineffectual, War was then opened and carried om | we have of in our law-abiding ‘and we and Vers Crus. . The instructions from Post. | 2ae,dee® left to inferesce, Gr doubt, and Bo: ‘en00g ‘bem have abused this opportunity to rob them. | cases by superior forces and they find themselves liable | for a short time, when anew treaty was arranged; but | the offenders will be Droughi to speedy jusuice fremont, — pane De neerpen ty nye hae 0 TRADITION, BUT VAST FUNERAL FILER BXISTUG. to be overtaken, they kill the poorest of their captured | in 1631 the Indiana, dissatisfied, opened the war again | owners of the and Rutiand road to | master General Randall saye:— ment without insulting the dullest comprehension. The Tarabumares have no traditions whatever of thetr on the best ones, continue their retrest; | with infernal fury, Bustamente, who wrote in the we it. to Smith joy B. “Your office will make up mails for and receive mails oe ony un vay recy | "ine Aran orto and Commas Vodice Tak | wi oor ose woed tee run toee me. | Sabiply nets Be Nase se Fer Garces pe - found them there euch fury that in wfew days we counted many k fetaction of our it bay. the ‘Oly correspondence for or from The cold obi ot, the Vo fet 8) de eas they veok find-a scandalous number of estates plundered. wns day the managers took possession ‘of the toad Troy Ee oo countries sammich Fropce seeps. up aa tee were as insolently thrown at the suffering ‘echoed Antec tribes bad the greatest haste ail the vil wore lated, sad Bomon ‘Compasy’ gave notice that’ tn future t, but also letters for Cubs, Mexico, | South, at the late meeting at Cooper Ns, 08 @. alley of Mexico. together with the ranchos and fields, in which there. they weuld not can thelr Foed from Hoosick Janetion to Fie” Bt Thomes, Von United Bates | Footman, gorgeous in yellow plueh and tinsel, would that a tor Fopuaton, woered sat cotati possn eae fie | teas dase hare se tania vom the Wows aod ger mnie | Sica emagetamerzmaaaras, Hue Ouamm | Fageed aad impomtunete Dogar Besa even mith oveh — the line: for with surprise aod Decause misery and’ death woe from York end he Went come tate two +. be- | ada, Poarlot, Dolah Gricna, Stetosstay’ tere - a of Tatlin igoancy ‘as that of Beecher bt 4-5 Sone Fea er ae RO Tr Ss alta tokant es ° va ier thle ccuon ye and | orphan for which it was The beayings of tbe =" were 1 Dloodbounds of Zion have, knows, Deen a:you would pile up wood. very maoranie, and, areover, tonent nited with : Tora breach of Orleans leave ihe oth of each to New | graceral ooough to tbe ‘otthern clergy, aad have ong q romieed wi nan ter shoe rewards corpees are someti in ome cave, of from four Sor wuteh had beet declared’ agniinr the the chee jasie tnede | grrival at that port of the, packets which left st, haaaire | #008 secured a oe goby have on the same clotiang in which they were | tir Ino Zacatecas upon the eastern frontier of the same State: and no ome ‘nd sbut | Op the loth of ne ing month tor Vera Crus, and | ‘© come, bot pone of them spprosch in sly, Cong buried, and fm many cases i is found quite well pre- | travel by hoped for consolation except from God, whom they de: | up amavenue of trade fm useTor we past | Shi corice at New Grioane ah thor sub wil | Yiedetve tale and venom he following, ext served, Ib We Of wool and cotton fabrics, and is of «| ronve, aad, tired to eee repeat the miracles of the time of wrdoom 4 Mr. T. W. Park, president and owner of | jeaye New Orleans on the 13th at six A. M., to arrive at | Henry Ward Beecher's Charity Gayle wakpown toon ont who to soqoninied wih the | eetmaved ia ‘and Jonathan, deoause only With waves aud wittl Coen | owe and fetiand read, in 8 pubiiabed Havane on the 6th, in time to make conbection wicn | ered. at tbe oe ae enelent Antec costumes. The aw is periectiy fresh in | by night back to the eer, which at most each rancho might contai , avers tbat the Troy and Boston pany during the steamer from Vers.Orus for St. Nasaire.”” ton'*The they. (the Sonthern wilows the caves, and the corpses are drial like an Egyptian © WARDENS ould have been poeyble to the tem years of their lense, wore out the and suf; | this takes effect on the 13th Coy not Rive our poor, in matamy. This ie thought to be duo to the presence uf | The Apscties are Nol ll the estates and lives remained fore to decay, merge arene on the 19th proximo, | prison their ows lips crave for. Give —— Jarge saltpetre deposit. S0y pen vetorened among the | face equal numbers: ae av eere, core ‘po that ‘was com- | when the French steamer Darien leaves this port for ‘the loaf. ste neue phic art ny tall 9 these coon Whee ncemore (ook possession ot the thaw surrendee. i wes pousaoen expen 0y Benteanents kore bat the @rat.| out wes ween coed bos = =} axe om ar rat oot ey ‘i Jands, and thet they have never disturbed them. The | a settlement may be they shadings for the dark colors which, » . sap en on Ah om ington | and send Ton the suiering tne, This bodies are of s much taller race than he Tarahumares. | morated, with such Iald upon these State. Ta wns rower, | aivine vents of Goes ter are Sie clnmn che ant | Wiveomeee vera cum. eermrls Secret men ces F~ aT Shien opcont ithe Abtec. advance to @ Rue promein Hae tons portly edeched, tot i om) . moathe | Julius Winklemeyer, of St. Louie, died reerntly dividing | ‘ime, and under these now regalations New Orleans 1e | murder’ the Bouthers to the Conserv: Mexico. x rapidity. "If they have. b Of dewoaiion which we 10 oo ee pleats alps ake ya aa | nectly ailthe mail matter for Ouutral America, soxin | Conventions chem ta not Umer ora i A GREAT POOTRACE SSTWEER Woun.'. ipetant with their household goods merely taking breath and bari: After for the ment of hie debte and vi Chile, and the make Mark Among the Tarahumares footracing is a tavorite diver. | their nursing children in @ ‘extermination of the whites. fameral expenses, to bie siz children, of | Ooo Sereonts wah Rem Coomene sonar by LS eguanad Coosar, rion, and even the women compete in the list At times their heads; the men, armed zona, California, Texas and North whom Jalia, the eldest, ig aged Atvenn years, the set of commun era over the blood; cores of Cok 5 Tue when a fale ee rere | oo hed horses. then direct their march to some secure | broke loose and the storm opened. Yrom that time to | enedellareach. To the South St. Louis (gen paving bloody - ee mee some district aa to felative merits of har f even) tion. If horses are wanting, the women become the | this there has never been an hour of 9100. The remainder of hie eal, — Garusr.—In Charleston, on the 20th | then went mest cunni to stir op en's Within a month # rivairy of this kind Dytween of burden and pack upon themselves all the | vil towns, cities even have gone do: pres, te devised to his widow, jane Winklemeyer | ult., while the laborers were employed in unloading and to destroy em oy #7 of ‘the two vilinges of Baconia and ma peer oe thal fest. property of the encampment, besides the children; the | wreck; farma, cattle, barionian ‘om Saito) Nphen oe that in case she shall | cl ing the shells atored on a vacant lot, one ex; , although mod upon lous spect ‘the mont famous footrace on record. Four of the'\fast- | men then cover the reireal and upow rear amd | cultivated estates dis ‘she: be Only to such part as | an a go itter. | men of adrott , does not equal ft in eloquence, est women from each town were selecied, and, sccontpe | fiank guard the litte caravan from escault ae i Winds ite | amd reduction works of all kind no longer yield hele |. aan bas By reunen| of ner Gower, right; |. He was almost tore te pieces, and portions of his bedy | alinoegh it more Vie Celoyrel mena — ied to 80 intersmediate point Beveesn the where iadinadaghan y-ley wealth; | ap sgl civit ware of | ead : rh he, Siete at me oe every direction. | Aickmond Times, Jan 29. Were movetaia three Mexican ‘yuan Mex 0 shel then commence « bust. | One mas three negroes near were Around iby ‘tmensarement of the road; around thie ft iis thls trite a oysom of warfare, icp | plague epotn of ciiluation, wien rench esas Ds suny or shall merrz-thea ihe widew to pay | sino injured-one of the lather named Don Wadbury, ae | | Bioeuane ow rmx, um Ranosn.——A anor duit em. ‘wan etipulated that the raoe wae 1 take placey the | had perfeoted by long years of pravtical eachin; stripped thie whole northern frenticr of ait means | 0 ot children $6,000 in one year afier the | foriounly that his left arm was amputated near the shoul. | feet high, near Utica, on the New York and Erie Rai are we ly conceded fo those who) male, aided bythe comming Ursin of gome vryminent Savane, | For deleMr® xgwuet the savages, whe, ep5:\n/iy in Konore, | epmmencoment of Pusiness Or marriage, dor, amd he wan nent to the hespite Foam Goapen Se Wee oe Remereay ane ene he,