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3 NEW YORK HERALD, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1868—TRIPLE SHEET. Ghaee Tonhle, Det euch artic'cs as man cau ons end on foot ry rt ear would be v. table, See ee, 9 Bang Se ‘Ail the chiefs |’ met have desired me to. sta $n Dominios of 13,049 Indians. Of these th CALIF ORNIA, Wi Sacs and Foxes, of the hippos aod Chinas, itinerant : From the viliage of which has a your columns how thankful are A Herald Correspondent Rans the Blockade a age met mountains berery Ep Pop ey Colonel Bankhead Following Up the Trail of Kansas, or Kai Kicks: ‘and was, The Second Shock of Harthquake—Its Extent Bxciting Chase of the Eunosie—Scenes on Dr Sphakia winds bed of @ moun- Will preg Son vue eal Goer fos as aioe General Carr—Prospects of Overtaking the friendly, aud rapidly growing ito for agri- and Damage it Occasioned—Scenes and Incie tain torrent 4 Savages—A Ratiread Traly Thrown Off the | cultural pursuita, — Gesseetomearignn uh Reoclons ahaa tw re | American le. it which forces ita way between pel ” yer ee Of the nations tendency foow- to Crete. Ageute—The Kansas Volunteers to Move in Population, Atwo A. M. to-day there was a very sharp shock, Acnia RUMELI, SOUTHERN CoAeT OF Cnet } a Few Daye—Statistics im Relation to the which sent many persons out of their houses and i Indiap Nations, beds and into the streets, The plaza and other publig Fort Hays, Kansas, Nov. 1, 1868, A scout sent from Fort Wallace some days since to look after the movement of the column under Colonel Bankhead returned yesterday and reported that he had pursued his instructions and followed Squares were filled with people, many of whom ree mained there all night. There have been a few, trembles during the day, but so slight a8 scarcely ta, be noticed. No aamage, beyond opening some of the cracks of the day before, occurred, but it served) 47, heat advanced tn elvilization of auy of the indian forty years up to the present date, with an account | now and tnen plu! three or four fee! land whose azure mountain tops are Bankhead’s trail until it joined another trail which to alarm the them cof fhe rise and progress of the revolution of 1908-07. | deep. ihe pasa 18, £0, cpOkee, Vary, wvonave tore. pay Re pd it followed. The scout reporta having seen a num- BARON £09 88 REE Ge eee OWS account 1D | rervous, = ein pha as eral port Yrom the Mussulman side of Crete I could give but Dent the experiment of treading water several mes, To breathe Elysian peace in upper atr, ber of the remains of horses and débris, which was “The superintendency of New Mexico embraces a | the city thismorning in company with a person’ Hitle good report of the insurgents, because all that | nti! finally, after. march of tres oy 100s Tales doubtess the scene of Carr's late fight. From this | Population of tie, with the following tribes:—Ne- | thoroughly posted and examincd the exterior of person hears isbuta cloudy and bewildered official sakse 0: Tey along: 9 laden ee week eee OUR FINANCIAL POLICY, information it is inferred by the commanding gen- | Jovarilia, apaches ae ee iecand We. | the majority of dings banging P . Je <8 iy on the Cemarron, Capote and We- the bull and he gave geport of Turkish intentions, As intentions are not | conid not travel it, as it isslanting and smooth, and eral that Bankhead ia on the same route, following | binoche Utes, Mescariend’ A] mem- | good reasons why some buildings, had sufé eetualities,sach news concerns but ttle the American | walking on iti something vary Hike tra po WASHINGTON, Nov, 6, 1808, | UP Carr. If the two forces succeed in uniting 1¢ | bers, #c. and captives ‘The Nava- | fered so much and others none at ail. He showed veaders of the NEw YORK HERALD, who always man- aaa oat head to look down a8 we rise higher | ‘The coursé pursued by Boston and New York con- | Will make the most formidable military display that how care in the construction of the foundations Mest a desire to ascertain facta, to gather which your | into the pass, which is now but @ chasm | tractors in their dealings with the government here eorrespondent ran a little risk by running the biock- | Where the gentle stream has become a braw! Bie. 1 nhoule consi MARIA oak eohail the t, leaping over rocks and boulders Presents a remarkable, characteristic and instruc- torrent churning itself into masses of white foam litier- | tive contrast between the business men we @eps taken to obtain news were not known, and it spray. The bold volunteers must be era mon cities, The New York contractor makes = pot fs for that reason that the following details have break been written:— one in Tago & accents, wit pounding they babes ne pera as the | pe as OF and nonlesp “ ats ‘y les on Sunday morning in the harbor of Syra, especially | spring up, as unconcerned of tbe abyss and its dan- | to other business transactions, With the Bostonian, go ir the weather 1a c0ol, isthe time when the whole | fermas i i a sien hey were gay te at a country ball. population of that busy town turns out to walk and Seren eaeire Sepsis | Seorat trenton w to me ines © mae 1 sum a piateau, al nt nui ito a shape visit and gossip with their neighbors. This walking | the farthest end of which we perceive a grove of | that bring ita envied possessor largest possi- the savages found themselves too closely pressed to and gosslpping 1s generally done on the promenade | oypreases where there is @ spring eaten water, say % bes * eh : “ muking the place one of the most loveable that | ble profit. Accordingly, while the New Yorker is at | Venture upon the open plain, and particularly with nu the bills, from whence a clear view of the town, | ancnorite would choose for a retreat. —_. the | home attending to business you find his Boston | little acquaintance with it generally and no satia- ‘arbor and Cyclades is obtained. A steamer coming | boughs overhead the birds hg Wye greatest free- | competitor here in the lobby of Congress with his | factory landmarks by which to guide their move- Je or Athena ts seen | ¢om, trilling sweetest notes. ‘The water from tho Savepee lutanee- and the whold popuiation at | Sfi0M issues out of the grove in a strearu of guid | entire Congrosslonal delegation, “balling” or “bear- ments. Accordingly they swung around, and, as the ond it} by e ‘ad - | Feport of Oarr shor brought ou! jumn, ence proceed to the walls, which are built as a pro- ined by plots of greenest grass. On the | ing” the market, as best suits his purpose, depreciat pol ws, ugh Tr col after a ground we throw ourselves and partake of the march of over forty miles, almost t teetion from falling down the precipices near the hil | Morning meal just as old Sol shows TiS bright face | 2# me currency when he sells and spprecisting it ty mailen, tat the same spo promenade, where thoy lean and talk and maun has as yet made its appearance in that section, and the troops will then be able to take several lines of march, each oo-operating with the other, and offer a better chance of engaging the savages. At the time Carr struck the Indians in his recent fight it 1s now ascertained that they were moving off in a southwesterly direction, as if to avoid an en- gagement and get below, towards the Arkansas. Carr, getting upon their trail and pursuing it so rapidly, had been the means of preserving some almost ine tact while, carelessness 1m many cases had almost entirely destroyed others, He contended that, pro» perly built, the houses and stores on the “made” pors tion of the ctty will prove as durable as those on the solid ground. His argument was a good but will people follow it? Iam afraid that they wil continue to “trust to luck,” as heretofore, and ballg more “‘mantraps” in readiness for the next heavy shock. In all directions buildings are shored up. Scaffold. ings are erected on numberless places, so that worky men can tear down and repair, and crowds of m are on tops of building patching and mending. } looks to me as if the majority of the damage is to} be smoothed over rather than reconstructed; and such is the case look out for wholesale coming down and loss of life when the next big earthquake is fel&\ | A very large number of persons are leaving the hotels and other high brick buildings in the lower portion of the city and are seeking quarters on the’ hills in frame buiidings, which ring and twist and turn inside out almost, without coming down; they are the safest by far from earthquakes; if from fire is | another question, If San Francisco covered mor@ ground and did not extend go far towards the sky i8, would bea much safer place, but our wise great grandmother of the city, the Alia Caliyornia, first says that this earthquake has demonstrated fully( that San Francisco is the safest place in the world to live mn, and then gives four or five columns of list of, damage and casualties that occurred in the shorts space of forty-two seconds. 4 AMUSING INCIDENTS. I cannot refrain from giving you a few of the nu- merous ludicrous incidents that occurred while the shake was going on and shortly afterwards, ‘A frightened person started from his room and’ ran down stairs and on the sidewalk with no: other garment on than a short red flannel under- shirt, On reaching that it he stopped, and vainly trying to cover his nakedness, offered twenty dollars: to any one who would go up stairs for his clothes. ‘A frightened woman rushed from her house in het chemise and met a man passing with a duster on. She immediately ran her ander his arm pulled the duster round her person, and it was with some difficulty that he induced her to return. i Hundreds of the most ludicrous sigh.s were seen, No attention was paid to costume. Undress Beate or rather “uniform undress,” as the Chronicle term it, was the rule and covering the exception. People did not know what they had on, or, better Fee what they did not have on, so long as the middie of the street was reached. Had the earthquake come am hour sooner the night shirts would have been the fashionable habiliment of the morning. ? To go over a!1 that J have heard, much of which is: true, would make @ large ‘and most amusing ‘volume. ON THE WATER. There was no perceptible rise and fall of tide ag the wharves, although those on board vessels made fast thereto said that the shock was v heavy ané that the vessels 81 at their fasts as if thrown in ship, ‘The Utes are guided more by interest than ‘The supertntendency of Colorado embraces a popu- lation of 5,000, all Utes professing Ip. sith ies Ch ated abet Se » Dum an aggregate popu- lation of 29,930 Tndlans and sixteen ‘tribes. or these roaming bands, cui loose from the parent stock, are SODAS movi about, committing depredations upon and property as the oppor- ity offers. We thus find an aggregate Indian ulatior Mostly within this Sepernant, as follow: al 94 Northern superintendency, Central superintendency. . Southern superintendency. New Mexico-superintendency. Colorado superintendency. Dacotah superintendency. the warpath at this time within tus department. The figures are the aggregate population of men, women and children: Northern Superintendency— . Brulé and Ogailaila Sioux. 7,885 over the spine of a hill which bounds tne view sea- | Wien his pay day comes. at which It took the trail the same morning. This : ward. Mr. Atkinson, m his celebrated financial state- | Movement brought the savages in the broken and der about politics and comment upon the appear- Breakfast despatched, we continued our journey | ment, unwittingly furnishes a key to certain strange woody country near the Republican, with which ‘ance of the approaching steamer. But ona particu- | Over the rocks overhanging the Turk’s Pass, 80 | trangactions of the Mi mt they were familiar and in which they had better pro- pening there was an unusual crowd | called because a Mussulman in the revolution of | a of the Massachusetts Congressional heir fi more z Jar Sunday m ' 9 rowd | 1520 met lis doom at the hands of aSphaklau moun- | de:egation during the session of 1865-6. He says: Se ee eee Eee Oe Upon the promenade, on the piers, and the house- | talncer. The plateau we had just left is known as I long since perceived that the statement com- From what thas followed the recent successes of tops were covered with spectators of both sexes, Freon per berg eyed to acholars as one of the earliest | moniy accepted ag that of the maximum debt of the | our troops the savages appear to have determined Over several houses were seen flags floating in the | !VMves of the Apollo worship. | sto United States was not one which covered the liabil- | upon a different character of warfare. Several aro auminer alr, AD ANERacEE aca te itd | , my arching brought us to the | ity of the government on the Ist of August, 1863, by | small parties, numbering from twenty-five and up- PD er air, ase of a lofty hill, the top of which was crowned by | many millions of dollars. Ikneto this Won the jase | wards to a hundred, have, for several days. past and the shrill notes of a fife were heard in the streets. the village of Samaria. Here the most singular | ¢nac the manufacturing corporations with which 1 | been seen hovering about in the belt of counties be. The unusual and excited appearance of this island S mountain, that man ever saw 18 visible, Fancy | am mysely connected held at that date several sit. | tween Monument and Grinnell stations. Yesterday aity wan ue to the fact Aint the Celohicated NeoxeAe Crea eS oa above level of the sea, | tions of dollars af claims upon the government | a party approached Grinnell station and made a spl i alves, divided by @ chasm nearly | through the contractors to whom we had gold ma. | charge upon @ smail detachment of Company E, munner Eunosis (formerly the Hornet, that used to aoa Fons fe Fhe oy suai caly sixty fect in width. | terial ior the tents and clothing for the army, for | Thirty-eighth colored infantry, commanded by Ser? ran‘detween Nassau’ and Wilmington), witt: several retans desired a better protection than | woich they had then had no settlement. ‘These | geant Gaines, which was posied there to protect the seores of volunteers and foretgn gentlemen, among this moat, 300 ne eet, | aeatnat the Turks, | accounts were afterwards allowed, and we took our | water tank. The colored troops, outnumbered, re- ‘whom it was rumored was the correspondent of the they conid not had the nai of Europe strug- in seven-thirty notes, th a gled and tolled for centuries, build @ fortress so | PAY liga ee Lantancn Gnrmkdeaiancaies so sonione Sev. ToeMNAba sun owta abcras Gat erie: Gre High, that A the: ladies in’ the World could'nor | Mr. Atkinson further informs us that at about the eareenanes a brisk fire that they were compell Soil rin the blcoaaie: reach the top of its walls. Yet here, by a sirange | same period:— ‘The sergeant telegraphed the result of his fight as Atten A. M. precisely a blackish-looking ball was hoisted to the mainmast head, which, as soon as it Feached the top, unfolded itself to the Greek fag, convulsion of nature, a mountain has been split in The Treasury found itgeif in a position ofembarrags- | follows:— nd simultaneously with that a cannon on board Central superintendency— Kiowa and Comanche............. Arapahoes, Cheyennes and Apaches. New Mexico— Jicaulle, Apaches and others............0+++. 1,795 Wold: 1 <5 saaaeuneayvasessinamedatacoeuacs enn Of this sgerounte we may estimate from 8,000 to 10,000 warriors. All these Indians possess horses and are excellent riders, The Sioux have not openly declared hostilities, though it is known depredations have been committed by them, Of the others all have involved taemselves in war. Brevet Brigadier General Alfred Sully, Lieutenant Colonel Third United States infantry; Brevet Cap-. tain —, first lieutenant Third United States infan- try, and. George M. Sternberg, Assistant Surgeon, returned here to-day and will return to Fort Dodge to-morrow. GENERAL INTELLIGENCE. If a kimg or emperor should be placed on the Spanish throne would it be considered a Prim-eval event? . The old pew doors of the Winsted (Conn.) Congre- gational church have been transformed into a fence in that village. Sergeant Boston Corbett, the man who shot Wilkes Booth, Lincoin’s assassinator, preached at the Bethel church, Conn., last Sunday, At the present term of the Superior Court In Dan- bury, Conn., two colored men have been sentenced to State Prison for lie for rape on a white woman. Cider is selling in Pittsfield, Mass,, for $5 per bar- rel, and at Lee for $45 at Cheshire for $3 60; at New Mariboro for $2 60; at Cummington and Charlemont for $2 50, ° In the Monmouth (\. J.) court, Wm, N. Woolley, recently convicted of the murder of Hartshorne two which formed an impassable barrier against hu- | ment and danger which few either knew 0} r appre- Poe pg hve the Cretans are Hot at war ® | oluted. ‘The credit of the government had become | Captain J. W. Cuous, Thiriy-elghth Unto, Slaten ity — Maople On batdl pene ne Sy gulf, by me he atly impaired, the seven-thirty loan was selling at ‘Nine Indians tried to make a charge on here, but were re- People on both sides can communicate with each | jegs tan par even in currency, aud all other means | pulsed. Weanot 120 rounds, “Indians went sali, and I be- 8 ere at ts Known as the Loskalo. The head of this | adopted for raising money during the preceding year | "¢’® ¥® tone. Sergeant GAINES, ‘was discharged and the Eunosis was under way | fos like the dry bed of lake, “his platen isang area imuariwao ean Pee Comparative fall. | Very shortly after the re far train from the West ‘with her head seaward. No sooner had the echoes | rounded by walls of solid rock, rising perpendicu- oir) accounts passed for | came hastening along, Indians having been seen by ff that loud discharge of the artillery died away | larly above the plateau a hmndred fect and more. | Bids yonoon wile all the avatauic ceed fonds, comm | fe, cuemeer. Upon attaining @ distance of about On the other side of the plateau Sphakia is protected ,000,000, while all the avaliable cash funds, coin | five miles west of Grinnell the tender of the engine, among the hilis than it was answered by asplutter | by deep ravines, flanked by risiag. hulls, he steep and currency, which the government could, then | two box cars, one platform car and the front truck f musketry on shore, which gradually lengthened | sides are covered with loose boulders of an immense | In ghort, es eroabecy aie ae A Bcd fee a of the baggage car were suddenly thrown from the * Into a continued roar, seemingly running around the | *!2¢, Which, on the approach of the enemy, areeasily | pankraptoy that the oid officials, to whom almost track. A few shots were fired at the train from some . sent crashing down ‘8l0] ‘On one side of this in Indians at long range. After the first excitement whole harbor, the excited people on the hills, on the | Gece ean sione these facts were known, dreaded a collapse | wag heavier attack Rousetops and on the plers gave vent to their en. Cicler Hassan eye pone ietanens ne Seng adoprniassdltsge i ooagsapapry ee west nk Bavages the condition of. the traln ana 7 ne pooper Reo Passos ism Jo lone, loud cheers | haps, 1,200 men. " sag ys Der: According, then, to Mr. Atkinson’s statement the | extent of the disaster was examined. It was — — aoe wav! ng ae = peoingiron he — “os er ey the volunteers takes no heed ofthe | governihent was in 1865 owing him and associates be <0 Ulta me i a Nea aonile nth ois raat a Sy rine or EKA fini, and varasneltierte the rightor the left or brag Pena paziat sll steal Babee oe on 8 | side and close up i the ral “ie the tran caine =| in A | wood or boulders until Sami hed. when gol along, a heavy wind blowing, threw the whole sharp pend Resp terty of Paros ous for | lookouts, who are sleepless, vigiea ‘spakloles, uate else they wouid have been settled for before—the | Welght on these defective ends of the ties, and, fore- goodly and patriotic vaupletoly trom | lage by tne discharge of thels ual, and direciy Wo | [reesusy almost empty aud the nation nearly bank- aE I te rege Reg Hee! are surrounded by the ° gid ang 7 of both sexes, fupt. Gaines, g colored soldier, showed considerable skill Pho titeng AP ‘and love | Now let us call pablic attention to the course pur- * Gers a aa eae tei From the ‘eee are pin Ang a te vitage of | Med at that time by the Massachusetts Congres- | could bescen. ‘The sergeant, Man ious man — Aghia Rumel on the seacoast. It has a popula, | onal delegatton in the face of the now ac- | UD the road on an extra engine, which was lying at Yon of ut 600 souls, who mainly follow | knowledged facts, They originated, sprung upon bere He oi! of the engagement which he Wew. e . We arg threading Th indy gmannels of the Cy- Pyies: The sacred isle of Delos, ts place of Apolio, ‘Artemis, and Naxus, Ariadne’® wland home ‘When deserted by Theseus, lies on our left. On our Fight looms “Cerigo, or Cythera, as sterile Sid” ms Wh as when it first sprung from the froth of the | m pastoral lit spot cautioned the passengers not to leave | Fleming, been sent hanged joaum: fea, and its water is just blue and yt as | wi Would my pear tafage. is culti to | Congress and carried out the plan of contraction | the train. In order to reconnoltre the country for a cember ia mete er Ba erate kees a ea ee dtad dortiie when Venus first raised her lovely golaen locks | produce’~ corn. Oli ves and vineyards | that nearly doubled the value of contractor's claims, | Short distance around the train the sergeant -de- | rite girls are seen in the streets of Hartford who 1 ‘west, and that their boat was turned and twisted fe | if in @ whirl At the Clit House the proprie: noted that there was a slight swell of the sea; it ran up some fifteen feet further on the beach than usual, and receded about the same distance. ‘The ship Pactolus was anchored some fifteen mules outside, and the sensation experienced gn board was as ifshe ‘was ashore and grating violemfly over a rough bot- tom; her masts and spare were violently shake! and the pilot, who was at sea in the earthquake 1865, says that the shock then could not be com in violence to that of the day before yesterday. ‘ ey’ ve its piacid surface. Aw: stern to th a al of . | ployed his four men and advanced to the of an abo ay ast 0 those buft- | cover the slo) in the vicinity, and | increased threefold the taxpayer’s burdens, depre Sievations but no Indians could be seen price ooking hilis we look and see the nills of Laconia | were it pot for lack rafters of some houses and Attica, and just behind that stiff promontory of | a 4 abpoone themselves in an ugly way | °ated fifty per cent the value of nearly every species | the train, though @ small party were discovered in “summers marbled steep” is the once fertile, far- | on the happy landscape, there are no indications of | Of property in the United States other than that | the rear of it, hacking at something as if at- famed Eubca. ‘war or disturbances, thot the bold villagers tempting to destroy the track in other Sali ke ty crise dananat he manhead, though are | held by government contractors, national banks and | The passengers remained with the train while the ‘There is no necd to ask “Where away ?” for around e ply g: for aa TSA tne village ana | bondholders and gave no ellef whatever to the na- | colored troops returned to the station, thelr orders the extreme southern, point of Cerigo the shi then took our line of march for a camp of the insur- | tional Treasury, but, on the contrary, added greatly | being to defend the statton and water tanks. AS Rosed, black hull of @ Turkish cruiser Is geen, with | gents iying just fifteen miles from Samaria and figag to its embarrassment. Soon as the attack upon the railroad became known zie $4 arras ‘guard its smokestack voumitting roiling volumes of blackest Aaskyfo, a vill situated in = 2 tothe General an extra train containing smoke, just two miles off on our lee bow as we now | White pt, mn after decries Samaria wee) _ OH the 18th day Of December, 1865, Hon. John B. | was sent trom here to the scene of trouble, and the are unable to stand erect, being strap) over 80 that in coming years they may have Grecian bend naturally. A bell weighing 300 pounds, im in 1765 for the Trinity Lutheran church, ling, has just been removed to the new chapel recently e! in that flourishing city. Frank Reno and Charles Anderson, the notorious ey robbers, were on Thursday delivered to the Indiana authorities, and are now confined in the New mand.’ “Does she know what we are, 1 wonder?” | came to the Monastery of St. Nicholas, surrounded | Alley, Representative in Congress from the Fifth | Toad was'repaired and is now in running order, It | Albany jail to await trial. ‘Thinking it may be interesting I give a cou says an English volunteer, all the way from cockney | by a grove of fine cypresses. istrict of Massachusetts, introduced, under. the | 6 supposed that the party which committed these | Horatio Robinson, the flend who, in June last aa Oey se tiquaces taken from tue Bute dana. ‘This monastery is a true type of the Grecian con- | operation of the previous question gag'rale, the fol- | {cPredations was a small band which had detached | committed a horrible out ‘on two Hitie gitts in | feuun of to-day, “I vas not here in tat of 1865, hence fo be sure she does; our leaden color, our low | vents. Outside It has the appearance of a fortress, 1 oats m the main body since the fights with Car- Aauil, our stupendous paddies and our Greek flag be- | with embattied walls wpierced “by nume: wus aoeNe ui rdtall * jews | Bouter and Carr, and was moving south to create & ‘tray us; and by Jove, sir, here comes an iron mes- | rous loopholes, and very olten Have | of the boctunry of the Treswury ia satation to two waceeeny | Oren oan evens alarm to the Indians who are senyer to hall us,” and’ before the speaker could | to stand a ‘regular sioge, when their ca- | of acontrnction of the currency with a view toasearlyare- | Commiling depredations wlong the Arkansas. It Is Bnish speaking. 9 cannon ball plangea into the water | pacious cellars with thelr rich stores of wine and | sumption of specie nts as the business interests of the Me eer ivenea ba jp ye Ao pues SDOUL Eve LEE ae ers orate the burly cap- | Sfb00 ar sos narlote Nard treeed bate eaeeay On | action to thie end us epeedily as Pee yheete® co-operative | a ottn would not at this time bo seen such a distance tain to the man at the wheel. “Fuel, speed, below | looking at the, massive walla, with its vowers and No debate being allowed under the previous ques- | {rom their principal figoting force. The General is there,” to the English engineer on watch. turrets, one is reoainded of Scott's description of the | tion gag rule, and as the subject was then en! ly Pad ras usly, expecting something more Chaska, Minn., having pl d guiity, was sentenced to the penitentiary Tor life. . Louis Hilgenberg was murdered near Ironton, Ohio, a few days since, by Charies Speer and Andrew Price, who killed him’ for his money and confess the crime. They got eighteen cents. Licutenant W. H. Chase, of the Engineer Corps, United States Army, is now eee eelerei a topo- Tcan speak only of the last, and am obligea to de = upon others fort information regarding the A comparison of the two » pempioel earthquakes. which have occurred in this city a ig the past few years will have some interest. On October 8, 1865, ‘what has until this week been called the great earth- quake occurred, forty-six minutes after noon, There ‘was a preliminary suiock of five or six seconds’ dura- e “Full speed, sir,” answers @ voice from the engine | monast of Lindisfarne. new to Con; the resolution was rushed throug! graphical surv‘ the Getty: under Foon, and directly the Eunosis, fntheFto eontentediy ‘And needful was such strength to these by the decisive vote of 14s to 0, absent and not voung | , The warlike preparations which have been going | orders from the War Department, See ore Sekine section Wilt taped Gon or taees iz along Tike @ modest girl going to church, ‘Exposed to the jus 8eus ; a2, on for the past two months are now about com-| “no oiler in the car manufactory of Michael | Seconda, This y oes rf eid end Hom her previous course—south south. Scourged by the writd’s cleraal sway, ‘The six who stood up for the interests of the | pleted. Five hundred government wg ne line of gcholl, be York, Pan exploded with a terrible report, | Cessation of mbystion une” the whole: fore of the easi—with a alight, shivering motion which increases Open to rovers fierce an thev. people on that occasion were:—Messrs. Jehu Baker, carry ther py ea eversiatg about'noon Thursday, severely injuring several of | shock was exhausted, and the long continuance of ‘Un! amidships dances up and down as if it were a | The view from the walls is very magnificent. A sea | Of illinois; Ainasa Cobb, of Wisconsin; Ephraim It. the railroad to the posts the employés of the establishment, vibration increasing the osctliation of the buildings of splintered peaks cresting the splendid range | Eckley, of Ohio; Benjamin Harris, of Maryland, has been done to enable the General to carry ona ing board, and the head goes Lge D uP and i t t fire in Bridgeport, Conn., a man at each one, caused the greater damage. By Mr. Ten- hying Into the water like a racer, with head bent | known as the White Mountains, acres of cypress n Clay Sinith, of Kentucky, and Russell M. | War of six months with comparatively tri Seed _ aero Lhe tk ae pS oe y | nent, who timed the duration of the shock by count- Jow, stralgutening himself for the the huge pad- | groves crowning lofty summits;’ cataracts eternal ayer, of PentayT?aal eee guar ceaemen arecumente alt Semarenad tak She, donned two caps and a. shirt and hurried | into | ing until he could reach his stop wate! we are Ine formed that the it shock of this week lasted forty- six seconds. Probably, there being no attempt to time the shocks of 1886, their duration was under rather than overstated. There was probably little differ- ence in I im the intervals between the begin- ning of the and the close of the second shock of and the commencement and close of the more the street unser the idea that he was in full dress. Burglars entered the house of Benjamin Noyes,New Haven, on the night oj the 6th instant. One of them, named Jaines Hackett, proprietor of a small in Putnam street, was captured and held in $8,000 10 answer. ies keep their steady, yerkit nol, the setter m the snowy hills with rushing footsteps | _ The lution, having been thus rushed thro over. The supplies are nearly all transported, and hairs aud cabin win jows rattle up and down, the the 2y swelling rlaes clothed with ives, varied without discussion, became, by dint of vociferous de- | Will only require distribution to be made available to Chptuin‘on his bidge, the volunteers on the deck, | by craggy rocks and stupendous cones, rivers, hills, | hinciation of every expression in favor of tne | the columns which are to be sot in motion within With loaded muskets, skip up and down, like men | ravines, covered by the bluest of akles, “with ne people's interest by paid organsand servile satellites | ThE next few weeks. If the imbeciles at the head of airicken with the’ St. Vitus? dance; our | temperate breezes blowing from the heights makes | of the Treasury riay, the permanent policy of the rr affairs, or Congress, under their influence or stomachs keep jumping up at an tucreased | the Haast prosaic vividly fan nation, The “several million dollars” of Mr. At bd niluence of aged Senators who, it is alleged out Fate until they threaten to jump out of our mouths | After a ‘s march of twenty-two miles we | kinson’s claims were nearly or quite doubled in | here, are deeply involved in Indian specula- “4 tions, do not oppose any obsta we may 7 1865, Bch scigaumtciae winctaae pic | Stet meine RAEN ate A | Getta pga Pee new | hie aang puto oa | qt cs Zee Menh she See | voir on at Tent as the volunteers whieh ts rather undignided. | Bur one of the chaig of outposts which the Cretaus | _ Congress having been thas early committed tothe | SF'tting tis the end of the’ Indian ware in this | Which tere 18 an surance of $25,000, divided as | the tenth oscillation the Ona gp tle me If we lie cown on the deck we are in dan maintain. note shavers? policy, lias not to this day been fully | Sodio ~~ Wars in this | foows :—London and Liverpool, $10,000; Royal, | swings afoot over the perpendicular, at the twentie Although fatigued and weary vi 1a | able to emancipate Itself. The Treasury ring, which | 8¢ctlon if he islet alone, A few chicken-hearied, 6o- be obtained, for the pes orewoed aronad us, sud Includes “the Boston clique,” was toa certain ex- | Called philanthropisis may have something to say talked and cl continually. As soon as we | tent 10: to make its infernal polloy @ part out of ignorance of the question; but economy, hu- finished our supper a loaded musket was handed to | Measure with certain republican politicians, whic! manity, as well as the fature security of our t each of us, and with a musket by my side 1 slept all eye Va Ss 7 solid but inpotent 0} poste bag a 3 bmg or ang oye — rh w a to battle ry a tO coordingy he per capita circulation of ly ae ready pring to at @ moment's the ented cuates has been rednosg from py sont pi ary a rigid punishment of offenders and a ‘the morning I came across an English volun- jollars in to twelve dollars at ie present time. peace. ee we Gave nie all'the jnformation that could be | Massachusetts as, however, m eC ig I reer ap egg reagent ag faster, jaster.” desired concerning the war with the Turks. Con- paral apportionment of national bank — privi- emseives deeply Dnien ay for the sake of hu- “Pull speed, and faster, sir,” is echoed back again, | denaing Lis statement, the following fact will serve to secure for herself a per capita ctr- rine dean = lly more w! San eens continue and te Hunosie skits away as it she had only been | towhow the exact state of aifairs:—The insurgents | culation of not less than fifty-eight dollars; | Persevermg In_ An eifork to being about a eacalled “fanning” beic Every man lays hold of the | number between 10,000 and 12,000 now in armg and | but the average per capita circulation througout ont 4 ony .~ tie. rn cul po ge ag et shrouds. Wits migaty plunges, with swiftly revolv- | are divided as follows—At Peariforado, Capa Tani- the United States at the present time 1s only about ys jon f.. le ~ ngs So he Indians ing wiicels, heaving showers of spray far deck, | ana and Calousleneeves there are 3,400, tweive dollars, Consequently we now find the rate +4 wr — penal bo ere execute the daris aliend on her impetuous course. The knife- ‘Qn the southern coast there arc at Melissa the | of interest varying from fifteen to twenty-five per | 9 eid +H ow: ih arto Sr Management of ke jets of water rise on each side of her bows high | monastery of Prevell, Rhodakino and Polirisso 3,000 | cent per annum throughout the West and from Inc mp = ashiugton. me Nag course, above ber deck, which drench the forecastie us they | meu. three-eighths per cent per dtem to seven per cent per those . boom warded vo faa Mi > lentiously and re- fal. Above out path is traced by adiagonal pillat | In the ‘yestern provinces, scattered through | annum in Wal street. Lard times confront us ia strain themselves as near their legitimate earnings near cea ae re ont “i as possible; but this ciasa, from all that is sald Of black smoke; astern are roiling billows and deep, | Ronmeil, Tréhita, Souga, Cavo Kirino, Oava Spartha, | every quarter, with @ prospect of . Snsneia crash, foe ‘who are familiar with Indian officials, is ver? heaved ot the deck, and we are compelled to look @t cach otuer with such an imbecile look, so hope- 34as of relief, that were we in any other position put our present one’we should doubtiess laugh at the picture. The skipper keeps his weather eye inexorably clinging $10,000; National, $5,000. Salisbury, Conn., has reconsidered and voted to take stock in the Connecticut Western Railroad to the amonnt of $50,000, W.H. Barnam, of that place, has added $25,000 to his subscription, and Tequi- site $290,000 is understood to be pledged, A bold attempt at robbery was made two men on Daniel Goodrich, a Hardwick (Mass.) cattle drover, a iew eal ago. They knocked him sease- less, but his horde ran and saved him his life as well as $2,000 In cash Wich he had in his pocketa, A map in Trumbull county, Ohio, last week de- posited #800 in greeubacks in his ‘lor stove for safe keeping, tuforming his wife of what he had done, Next day sic had company, forgot about the money, lighted a fire in Wie stove and the money vanished. On Friday morning last, as the Pottsville and Tre- mont passenger train Was nearing Aubarn, the loco- motive struck ® cow, precipitating the engine, ten- yibration, though no stronger force be exerted, it would probaply swing two feet Het the line of perpendicular, and go on. e shocks of 1666 took at forty-six minutes past: twelve in the day. At seven and ten o'clock the same night slighter shocks were felt. At twenty-ilve minutes before eleven o’ciock 1m the forenoon the fol + lowing day, twenty-two hours after the principal shock, a sharp vibration, lasting several seconds, wag feit, This was the next greatest to tie main shock, and was the last well deiined vibration fe in the city at that time. year we have alsohad anumber of smaller sh spread over nearty Swear foe hours, after, the first and main Poe From ey, yesterday morning until for ainutes it two o'clock this porning there waa no well defamed shock; at the latter hour, however, the sharpest and most pro- longed vivration we have had since the mala one occurred, Judging by the past, it 1s a reasonabie lu- xed on the cruiser, butin the meantime to the bridge as his only means of safety. Suddenly he bends and yells, “Fail speed, Faster, ebort i. wa, Caveu up by the craiser, which is visi- | Stow mm, there are 2,500 le compared to which that of (557 ~ rs - ” a ii announces his spiteful parting salute. But we still | there are now at Bali-Todell Ja-Polea 2,000 men. garded other than the national banks, note shavers about to renew their efforts to interfere in matters | fireman. for the subsidence of the earth to (ts natural position Keep our (errific speed until sunset, when we fad While the-Cretans occupy the whole Interior, and | ana government contractors, the condition of affairs i Mee outuenstern ‘coast of Crete looming upon our | arehkcly t>, from all 1 can hear or see, the Turks } Would certainly be altogether satisinctory, otherwise | TOisting to the hostile malts, Ne, tas tiecten lke starboard quarter. content theraselves by occupying the foriresses and | not. ee ee ee eee Xo otuer vessel is in sight and the Eunostsskurries | wellec towns of Ounea, Ritthymos, Candia or Hera- Messra, McCulloch, Alley, Atkinson and other mem- ¢ proper authorittes:— og, with every light out close to the laud, buried | cleum, Spinaionghi, Eavapatra, Castle of Kisamos | bers of the Treasury ring certainly knew, when they HeApQuanrens DrPAntMENT OF Tim Mrseount.) an tic deep shadows of the towering mountains. ‘chain of block houses which run in adirect | sprung te contraction policy upon the county | 2, ine comscaring Oeiiis, Dinent ol tho. ladian Tes Town afier tow! 4,on the north, to ihe plateau of | Without warning, under the pictence of “pro- | The Somrisonse Grats, District of the ladian Terri Ground some bold, forward headland, then deep ii ‘on the south. Altogether the Turks | paring for the resumption of specie pay- SimThe Major Ueneral commanding has information to nd anon straighting away aloug @ out 50,000 men, inciading the navy, | ment,” that they were guilty of am fet | theeifect that unauthorized persons contemplate going or 4 of a mountain, employed in actual war in Crete, very like a fraud. Restinptlon of specie | are en route to Fort Cobb and the frontier of the Indian ‘Perri. 10 P. M. that evaning we arrived at Ay Ru- ¢ provisional government over Crete ia at | Payment, indeed! Why, there was nor at that time, | tory for the purpose of communicating with hostile Lndian ni iniet of suficient depth to allow the block- be 0: al 7 and directs that you have all sach jos arrested. end hel Anari, where the major part of the insurgents is at | OT aby tine since, $249,000,00) In gold! in the United In oumoay "saul berther orause trent ttnn baciianenien. iniglt be expected to be greater. In neither was there any disturbance of the barometer, Yesterday we gave the coudiaon of the barometer for the day before the late carthquake, the day of the first shock and tue day aitor, brow Mr. Ten~ nant’s books we learn that the baromejer ou Sunday, October 8, 1566, at nine A. M,, Stood at 5.05 at noon; three-quarters of an hour beiore the shock 16 stood at 30,04, and did not vary more than one-hundredth of afinch the wholo day. The tuermometer on that occasion stood at 65 deg. Falrenielt at nine A. M., 65 deg. Se: 67 deg. at three P. M. aad 62 deg. at xX A correspondent of the Sandusky Register says that the grape crop on Keily’s island ts @ great disap- potuiment. Many vineyards will not pay for pick- ing, as the grapes did not ripen well, and the island was visited by a killing frost on the 17th of October, fuil a month earlier taxa usual The Jasper (Texas) Newsboy says:—The present Is the time for emigrants to come to Jasper county. The bey | is literally burdened with corn, potatoes and ali kinds of provisions; sugar cane 1s better than usual; sugar and syrup Will bo Vory cheap; pork ditto, Viliage after village we pu ners to enter, well protected on all sides by nt. The members of it are seven in number, | States, while the national government aione was and SOMU' y at two conts per lb. 8 On Wednesday last ti stood at 53 dey. ab igh, bold hills Kockets were sent up and lights |.to whotn the four committees immediately control- | bas been since drawing from tie peopie in shape of Breve tasabenand Osloed A De, Bid. a er beer Nerarn, A pi empio: ns ‘a citizen of Hart- nine A. M., 70 deg. at Tool, 72 at three P. M. ‘ani oS Show n when we first hove in signt, and these gave | ling the twenty-four provinces of Crete make their | dirocs taxes fully $600,000.00 per Anita. AN TOTS. | ao Kanes volunteers will be put in motion by | f oe a ame meal muixed wiih argenic on | “eg atsix'’. M. It will be remembered that Wednes. rurnig to the patriots on tho bills to be On hand to | reports. At Amari are the genera! hospitals for jenititures, they amounted in April alone, according | tng sin of the proseut month. Governor Orawiord ford reeen' y ee th rom ¢ kill . ts, Aval- | day morning was cold and foggy, and it was not. Gischarge te steamer, “AS soon as We ANCROF Fo a a a oe oa Akinsor’s own statement, to. signono,oo, | the.cti.of the Preseut month. | Governor Crawiord, | the barn iloor for the purpose of kilung rate, A val: | onlw'some time uflor the shock was Over that the Jovkout stationed on the most prominent peaks | Skinner, the ex-correspondent of the Daily News of | Kesumption of specie payments! Why, there was | jong vibe Tegianent. NGoverner Oruwturd te entire- uable Alderney Cy, re Tee seo a ee ape | sun broke turough the vapor which overhung the to warn the biockude runner et ligenciay: whiney ar | Loudon’ ‘Also the privcipal depots from whence ue | Not in 1863, oF since that time, half specie’ enough in | Toate of she Tastnene | Noe caer Daria tatorme: | Sila Of saved whe lie oftineaumal | oly forty li:chters are broaght at once alongside and into | insurgent army is supplied with arms. the United’ States to pay the national tax, to say | {ieee Trae fo the General commanding, | Castres ONY tite asrred tn the com following account of how the earthauake bo- Wem the | volunteers, proud in their youth and It 1s very strange how very little outsiders know of | nothing of State and mnuicipal taxes, together with | yi, interest also in the welfare and secur! 4 A shooting aifray occurred tn the composing Toom | haved in the county js also interesting. San Lean strenugti, leap with many a ringing “hallao and | what is béing done in Crete. Battles and skirmishes | the busi airements of 40,000,000 peop! All | Crtne State of Kanga, of which he is the Exec, of the Journal office, Columbus, Ohio, lately. Wal- | dro isa town on the other side of the bay, about Joud “bravo,” Nourishing their Weapons in the most | take place every weex. While your correspondunt | this “on to specle payments” talk Is a fraud apon the | tive js another consideration which pots bin out | tt Clancey and Grafton Pierce were in ® | eignt or nine miles soutnwest of San Francisco. The determined manner at some imaginaryenemy. Loud | was at Askyfo he was invited to accompany a | people for the purpose of covering the Treasury | 4°,’ very proper man for the place. ‘Ten companies political discussion; the lie was given; ‘oe struck | ghock there and in the vicinity was very heavy, Mrs cheers and enthusiastic cloas greet them as they ap- | party down & few miles in the direction | ring transactions, #0 often exposed ih | Witt iy AoE ne ica will bo atuvianed | Clancey,, Who then drew a pistol and’ fixed, without | Davis, who lives near San Leandro, and whose house prooca the shore, lined with the bold spbakiove | of Pemonia. There is a #mali village near Pemonia | the HrkaLD. In fact, specie payments are | 7, ‘the times bein: ‘at this post for escort duty. hitting Pierce or doing any particular dathage. ‘was demolished by the earthquake Wednesday morn asantry, With their Wives and sweethearts, joining | named Rithymos, where a party of Turks were | utterly ee with us for years to cowe; ‘The thirteen Ouages employed ‘some days’ since to Mr. and Mra, Jacob Relu@al, of 1 ter, Pa., | log, slates that the workmen on his farm at the time irom pure sympathy In the rough but kind! found, The Cretans, numbering 100 men, well | neither do we need them, Senator Summ Act as guides left lo-day for Fort Dodge, where they | Celebrate” ‘heir goldeg wedding on the 2! uit, Ail | the shock occurred observed that the ground was chorus of welcome, Unmindfui of the water, an armed, at once set upon the Turka, who probably | and the Treasury ring to the contrary notwithstand- | wii pe ‘assigned to duty. ” if of their childven ivy, with one exception, were | disturbed and thrown about with a rapid and vioiens following t xatple of our compagnons ‘were of the same numerical strength. The patriots | tug. The builion policy of Great Britain has not ‘The folowing compliment has just been paid to resent, seven in nutber, three sons four | rotary motion, which continued several seconds. A, ling ashore and are. presently hug; Threw: themselves behind the houses and ouind | been so eminently successful that we can agord to | ent long ieutenaut Mrederick W. Beocner:— Qoaghters, all residivg in Lancaster and Lebanon. | creek running through the farin, and which was ad cuabraced in true Greek fashion by wen | trees in skirmishing order. It was here that the su- | copy it. It has been productive of crises again " ¥ Twenty-two grand-childrea aud one great grand- j nearly dry, rose instantly. to the depth of about thre yen, boyd and girls, Who are almost beside | periority of the Greeks in mancuvring and baMing in, owing to the centralization of specle in | | mn. salGh"EPAEued tates roove at ino month of the | child Were present, feot, and several deep gulches were formed tu th thesnse!\es at the prospect of volunteers. the foes was readily able, A‘ter a {ew rounds | the great flaancial centres of Europe at very | Little ‘Arianne river, Kansas, wiil ‘Nereatior be know! ae On the Mth ult. Robert Ai of Lock fia’ His house was literally twisted in pieces an: ‘The cap\ein of the new recruits gave the signal to | had been discharged the advanced, and so | Yue commerce most needed pecuniary assistance. | Cam, in cotamemoralion of the namo and services | pa. ox-sheriff of Clinton hile out han prostate to the ground, but the family escaped ue march, and on leaving the shore a guide led usto | deadiy was the volley they red into the enemy | We have now here in the United States @ similar | of Frederick Mt, Beecher, Lieutenant Third infantry, J ‘7 Kilied by the Atal ‘disch of his by a miracio. Mra. Davis was caught in the ruins, the Village of Aghia Roumel. We were divided | that they became dem ‘and féd ignominiousiy | condition of affaira. For stock transactions money | who was killed in battle with Indians, on Arrickaree Fork of | ‘eer, The load hock pod his | She was badly but not dangerously bruised about ainong the villagers, and it. was wouderfal with What | from the field, Over twenty-five Turks were killed | has been moderately easy until very recently. For | Republican river, Septem in. The effect in his head, ne the head and face, and is recovering from her mju~ ber 17, 1868. Siacitusness we were received by eee auwith What | fron the eld. Over twenty tye cure duration, “t | Commercia\ and over ieuttimate transactions money | y,commandeh 5. Major General SHERIDAN. | braing out and scattering them on the Gv that the | Ties. Tho shock ihis morning st two o'clock was sidering the avaricious character of Greeks fi test ides thatthe patriots had an- | las been very tight—almost impossible to obtain tue same vicinity. enoral Bounteous suppers of roast kid. fried and Belpased ty ‘but such is the life they lead. aii Tate-"and ally growing worse. git — P ma ® ‘was prematare. Sf = led eggs, hot brown bread aad pure Turkish coffee | Someumes for we oF three weeks in ey he responsibility for this terrible condition of | | “eneral Quster also announces, in regimen A fugitive from justice, named George Lamond, rere served py, nd we (voluniecrs) were waited | fight daily. affuira reste uvon Heoretary MoCulloch and his Trea- orders, the mame of hi camp’ ‘sandy Forsyen. in Jrag.on the 24 instint arrested by omer Hawkins, ANCIENT MAPS OF PARIS. on most we graces co- 1O- Fort Ls ence) al pe acs Gamecis who would net bave ‘disgraced Malwrners the Lo By 3 vnand, policy “and tne bare majority oF Con: leatenant Colonel George A. ee A. curious collection of of Paris is about to Tee eee acs wh, lalebo fan’ dnote policy “and tne rity of Con. | honor of Brevet Poan'van Yates couney: Ne place he had hich ts iy the Tevet convenient. ie "radical nether pas Forsyth, who Soar agit against tne of scouts in | been committed on the charge hang stlenin be deporited in the Munictpal Museuia of that city. cial corner, where th t Gagareties: were thent Deoepetoue nba cor iuecoca, mostly Ba ‘double barreled shot aa ae Sia carriea oun aloes ipou tals point as apotber their expedition the Indians during | horse carr: He was bon my await a | The most remarksble of the different jae i. Races ordain en ioe Nak the vackwoode of | Muteld rites, nd are, weary pesckeed Htemen. thine. peer pgive an idea of tho Indian popalation of | Taulsition from the authorities of thas county. MBbey of Be Victor, representing Paria, about, tho J ‘urks seen. me theatre the presem hostiil pe =e beauties, with eyes of fire and hearts | @ of Cretans under S desperate | in Some PuMPRins.—Samuel A, Townsend, of Kent, faraut's statistica. °h ~4 give the , a ra anne pee, ning se ey patriotisin, seat themselves | will hunt the vicinity of a blockhouse, unsus | Gonn., raised on his farm the past season @ mamn- aflerwarde oth jostile lon. Hf ° ie oor, a at & rignal from she master of by the enemy. The opportunity ome for | moth pumpkin, which measred in circumference | I arrange them itendoncties:— Seng POI Tor ets aes, a, Cite SrIke Up & | Sezives St lant, and po qaarect 18 nor is any | Seven Yect and’ weighed 163% pounds, From the | The , Which tmotades the Seis fi outset tae ght | tna” ge Magee fate Mae” Say ay | tet a, een ant es Memeo | Sinn Raters ae chr” ras ay ty ae Mar the Stor, shows none to man or woman, boy oF girl. | nair pounds per day, or one cane od enree-quar ~ Smahee, Otioee and rina, Pawnecs, pond Boe eres eeung New York, | The Orotans Rave plenty of ammanitios, for | vers per hour. It 1s estimated that it would require Bacs und Foxes of tnd. lows, are for rmieate eae possibilities in | the good people Boston, sod, direction | tem cans of milk to into pies, al disposition and given in some e after Dr. He take care they are i jesire to improve their condition. — seg others oa we Sadamert A Svoceserct. Covonen Coumonrry.—two-tninis | ,Of ihe Uppe e Y the aged ann g of our coats and | tonlans visible Folding thein up for ®, pillow. wo prepare ourselves | Gan army overconte which inaay of the Of the popalatyon of Calvin township, Cass county, | Yencoucy ow oe: each other as | and ) much, an Michigan, is made up of colored people, The poy is known, of was kngwa, | was ae very courteou: an ine a naw one-Nalf the taxes, fupply tree entire school ia Potomay’, 04 spoon fas Yorg HERALD correspondent told me all that | tricts, a from sixty-five to seventy scholars the 6 century ie ayy ntugus Hanasn | Wag in thelr hearts, each, and are about eqnai in four others, and paid the commencesype counted. by hundreds; the doy, no doubt. “Very | — Winter is commag on apace and of course nothing | $2,000 taxes lant ean Tuey own fve-eigniths of the sh ie may Pe Siblen, 1756; Turgot, 1700 pure 4)! things are pure, | @rill be done, at least in the way of fighting. Some | land tn the town, and that the mogt choice, amount: Bonamy, 1740, for fhe inund atiork Ggaiat insid.ous temp; is anticipated, and it will be well for them | tng to 14,400 acres, which i# worth forty doliers per hich Muse year {when the waters of and esty, 5 defore the if Dr. ry iaukees urviste = Nies, ge - = Pr Ag od i. an ts a ia ‘gntral. superintendeney, whteh om ‘the Heine op near ron og feet at the scale of p ovis’ les and ammun rty $678, 0 ney haye in pddilivn @ | The ¢ 9 ie on the mary’, BO @D A ] Som oogy ie ot ae hoe 10 than ane would Ope Foon eve ot ptber Dropert- . txjbos of the larger portion of Bangas, contalus @ the She plan ty Vorniquet in 1786.