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6 NEW YORK HERALD, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1877—QUINTUPLE SHEET, ne : ped tae oem the wh wars, natural result of the tog what may and if apy of the readers of the pesto yen wet ioe, ‘tino | Sgency system.” Hols conSdent thet Hana shoud thence to coma arouse may ‘dish jodocs, know wi old it. with “Sim ‘which they | the lodians of the Northwest be as peaceable as those “Beat as somebody ungaliantly remarked to the fe were anxious to outte as s00n a8 ap opportunity to whose country Sitting Ball * | writer, rules for female tigers seem to be offered. “This war,” says Father Mesplier, “which | bas retreated. oom the sawe as those for treating female human ~ cost several hundred soldiers, a number of office: INCREASE THE ARMY. ings,” so that they may serve a double purpose. seventy-five citizens, great destruction ad grant er wis Fr oplperedin > a army woaid, foes one p bo rey ot or bigeye ge ia h M li Y St 4 Lif py tp mn yr ened to the WhO Kuows at presont, and for the last Wild Beast Training as a oan over bel trastet, nea even the a ~ Fat’ er esp ‘ler § ory of His ie the Indians.” The white man wanted yoare Bas been gradual 7 eduoated to Delieve, that “R Busi. pe Non, Thoy are all Wroacherous, the fomales nerally deemed suficie! mfede! tore woul re ‘than sd . thane ssbtch tor the Cnieed States’ comp. Macher egular Business. ‘The honess is more difficult fo manage than tbe lion, Among the Red Men. Mesplier at work upon a book in which all these matters will be fully Considered, and he intends to go to Washington this winter and lay thi an quostic pefore Congress. f | good: a ‘ised eee -THE HISTORY OF SEVEN WARS. | vitgeot foe Biaouion and Kile ovary aoa! a , GILMAN'S VIOTIMA. Coming down to this formidable war, the Fath hat fagued by tne long narrati ub ta kindness or “ctvility”—1s abso- upon a wild beast. It bas occa- sionally some little effect upon a lion, but really very seldom, the lion being reel. & surly and treacherous brute, all lion stories talk to the contrary not- withst But with a tiger, and especially » { eogpiree the tiger. Kindness—ihat is, any- throw! Its Principles and Its Practice. PROCEEDINGS IN BANKRUPTCY BY THE UX- acies she ts sale in Wonderful Similarity jn the Causes wove, brightened up a little, a6 thovge | YORTUNATE RECIPIENTS OF HIS BANK AND | "4 * dalle tyson ty ty jn hoi Ded pREN ete 00a ane eee ee LY” oer ees een Kendal Danial He tow, Hoe POPULAR MISTAKES RECTIFIED. | j2) depend ou tour—only besiat fat of Them All. finally settled down to the subject in hand | | | 102 of banks, insurance companies and others, | Seme to seine, s. 8. of 112th st... of 4th Mend they will not hurt you. The details of the war are too fresh in the minds 4, who have been faithfully | who have suffered by the scrip forgeries committed by ; nas ot thet and the hostiles 0 | yr, O, Gilman, who is now s convict in Auburn State OUR COMPLAINT BOOK. The Leading M. aw En d SITTING BULL AND JOSEPH. | five the Henao report Mosplist \were now | Prison, are endeavoring to have their claims adjudi- eading Men and Women Engage in connection with Sitting Buil and correct many | cated before a register in bankruptcy, and have united | (Nore —Lotters intended for this column must be in Wild Beast Taming. ressions concerning the formidable chief, | jn q petition to that effect. Mr. George ®. Coe, presi- | socompanied by the writer's full name and address to “Phe Sioux people do | dent of the American Exchange National Bank, in bis | insureatvention. Complainants who are unwiiling to Indians Governed b: low overn: affidavit, says that the bank's claim aggregates | comply with this rule sim: we time in writh a ear ee crovitiog, | Bey tcamerganer capri arccud;smonf om | ius sh, 1a ce monte of Anguaandtepambor | Wri on only one leo the pepe Bm. Hunaue,| | ,Naitsotiok ait ee here Re was 6 thor sa 5 (esc AC ean Ri ree eat eo eee ned: mas uo influence | the bank Joaned ana advanced to Gilman $73,000, for rather shin, rather pale, sad-eyed, middle-aged. man, with sbe aa es is eee which amount the latter gave to the bank several A NEGLIGENT LETTER CARRIER. hfe eo pe ieraae reddish roils Wes and he “Father,” sat @ reporter, anxious, ear SOME- | Hromissory notes; that the bank has received on ac- | To rue Epiror or raz Hxaaup:— toward the cage of wild animals, containing ‘The following interesting narrative of Indian affairs | thing about Sitting Bull personally, “what sort of @ | | 1 Gr ing indebsedmess, $1,616 45, being the | 1s it the duty of leter carriers to deliver lettors to | 0UF ‘ull grown tigressos (near which the wriler was man is Sitting Bull?’ ts trom the 1ips of Father Mesplier, a missionary, who He ig a8 te a'speoimen of a man as one could wish | amount ot bolance to the oredit of Gilman as persons to whom they are addressed or to throw them | *#2ding), with the subdned, spiritiess and mechanical w bhey dese: Ne ‘ross them fora moment. Keep your eye on ‘them all the time—not that your eye alone will have any effect upon the these stories in books about “eyeing animals’? into submission and the power of the buman eye over the brute creation are Sheer fabrications. And as a rule tbe whip is the most efficacious of instruments in training or sub: duing a wild beost, 1: can be used quickly and at once, and it hurts every time So tho dear to dread ‘tbing sav more on my whip when 1 go in among my tigers,’? ‘as informant, “than upoo myself, Pp my whip the beasts would fancy 1 bad lost all my power, and woald pounce first upon the whip, then upon mo, I would con- sider the dropping of my whip while in the cage with my animals as almost a fatal calumity, for the past thirty years has been laboring among the | for,” said Father Mespler. ‘Ho 1s at heart a nobl positor, The bank holds as security thirtcen shares | jn the hallway? An instance of the later kind air of an attendant to whom a {ull grown tigress was "TO ” ks, m e train a wild anim: said Mr. Still, “you mui patives of the Northwest, The reverend gentleman ts | man, but the whites, he thinks, have not Wasted NS | O/ 1g capital stock of sho Leather Manufacturers? | @urred last week whereby the writer elmost lost an | Sn every day spectacle, a ae bite A sleanee Tenn ine oat, doing chores around the cage und getting the animals peony, properly, an important engagement, OLD SUBSCRIBER, The time was nalt-past eight o’ctook in the evening, ® strong believer in the manifest destiny of the white pipes National Bank; twenty sbaces of the capital stock Sclng chocemanvand: Oe ena nn ge animal man, and thinks the West should be opened to white it true, as was reported after the Custer Ogbt, | or ine National Bank of Commerce, and also and the place was the rear or Fourth avenue end of | Voted rng : yy remember voices more acutely settlers, but not in the summary way in whlch dur he has any white men with Dim?” os sue, ‘That | certain certidcates of Atinntic Mutual Insurance scrip SANTA 4 TO, BOONE Gilmore's Garden, now ocoupied by the London Cir- | than they do facca; they are governed more ing his long experience it bas been dona From the | story was started dy {routiersmen to lessen the idea | purporting to amount to $87,500, but which have been To tHe Epiror ov tax Heeatp:— cus, this particular portion of the enclosure being de- | by sound than ot he, bene Le bad 8 . Deast in my cago that en my Bory given below it will po seen that in every instance | of Sitting Bull, Sitting Bull is athougntful and an altered, lorged and raised SP, Oar from sinaill Could the Harlem and New York Navigation Com- | yoted to tho menagerie, the wars bave grown out of occupation or would-be | educated man. He was converted to Caiholicity by | amounts $04 Sleo five 6 American Ex- | pany not afford to build alittle shanty down at Peck | ‘The short, shin, pale, sad-eyed man approached the Fi sh | change nding name of Gil- pecapation of Ludian lands by whiten Many of these | Zalber De Binet, and. from, bit Jorteg Huglien and | man. Ho isunable vo state exactly th altp, oF must their passengers be subjected to the rain | slowly, stooped to pass under the bara which divide difficulties could have been obviated had the warnings | French, apd you may remember that once when he securities heid by she bank as collateral, but believes | and wind in weather like Friday if they wait fora boat? | the cage of the tigers {rom the mass of humanity, and ba red suit thas I wear when performing. WhenlI ene tered with iton the brute dia not recognize m 4 would undoubtedly bave sprung on me and torn me te pieces had | not shouted to he: my ordinary tong 5 of voice, She remembered me at once and alu: of Father Meoplior boon heeded, and mulllons of dollars | wae surpriped the troops {ound in one Ue deserted | ‘he amoun, TANS Sot Saati Lowa Af he company has ot the money log some lamber | non quistiy commenced to clean the cage coutalning | dows scbmiesive.® ae would in consequence have been saved to the govern- “Do you think he will finally be Induced to come Henry D. King, secretary of tho Commercial Mutual A PASSENGER, the huge beasts, disturbing occcasionally, as PREDING THE ANIMALS. PEER “The trainer fecds his boasts and giv ‘These acts give nim no hold on their gratitude, but they serve to render bie face, form and voice . famthar, They serve as an introduction to tiger society. But you must always watch your beasts we! whetner outside or inside the cage. ln fact, think,” said Mr. Still, ‘that you are mest in danger when on the outside, You do not realize their proximity—and they do not realize ment. His narrative of the causes of the Sioux and | back to the States?” Insurance Company, makes affidavit that Gilman’s in- ae Ta he did se, with bis broom, the ococupants, Nex Percé wars is of lively interest at present, and | ‘I 40 not, and it will be impossible to get him out | debteduoss to the company is | $04.28] Uk At varios OUTRAGRS ON, CES AMERICAN: BLAG.. who, however, seemed to pay as litte attention to of Canada ‘His bands will scatter here and there, and | times between Septem! 6, ptember 29, | no ong Rorron ov toe Hananp:— no doubt when the reverend gentleman goes before | if ne does come back he will bring with bim on the | 1877, the company loaned to Gilman sums of money ki him as he paid apparently to them, although they ng $77,800 on bis promissory notes, lo | 1s there any law against desecrating our national | coud have “clawed” him at any moment. Thinging ce D ber he will be enabled to gi bh Indi i anad: True, mau, pay! ongress in Decem| wi give some yee many ans trom nada, 1, y fand, with interest and secured by pledges of | fag by advertising upon it such things as vurtle soup, | tim to be an salsa sodlcrenps il ceosiam| age valuable information to those who are anxious to re- | of the Indians in Canada aro settled, but many beyond | on dem the rh tul nomadic, wili join | certain certificates ef insurance scrip and shares ot form our Indian poltoy and mitigate the dangers of | jue,irs Vr CoMntY, who are 8 s willJoin | oak stodk. Afver crediting the procesds of certain of | clam chowder, or aay, oiher sdyarsmemens HASH Wo | gaia to the man, all Jestingly:—“You seem to know the white man in the far West, 4 PAIR PROPOSITION. the said scrip sold and applied to the payment | ish sbie by ‘ae ‘and imprigonment. Why nothere? [| the beasts pretty well; but do you think you know FATHER MESPLISR’S STORY. “Since Sitting Bull is a Catholic and friendly to the said loans and other Pore h ody nena lee an outrage 0 ‘our Countey, noticed oy y man orelen- them well enough to trust your hand inside the cage, gerd al boar ea inet tei pou het ross ors as woll as by le ber 12 balance due of riests, do you think they could induce Bim to como | fit te Tse ving cortitioates, pledged to the company as vou do.your broom?” they aro ready to ‘go for you’ at ay moment The till in, 168 possession: —One certii- 18 THERE A JOB IN IT? “Well, L should hope 1 did,” replied the man quietty, ‘ four tigresses here at tho cirous have bitten repeatedly people who came too near their cages, One young In the summer of 1847, Father Mesplier arrived In | back? this country from France, and in September of the ie ¢ sir, With certain guarantees I will under. | for security, art peo; bac! edged April 7, 1877, sixty shares of Metropolitan mmoyear ba went othe Westand began nie labor ag heyy fetid eae vesurraon” Santonal ‘Banik ‘stock, but which proves to have been To rus Eprom ov tas Hsnanp:— “wooing as I will have to trust my whele body inside | man, sciee eres Hoaad. the cae ROS on S6te ee . ” seized o C3 the beasta a missionary among the Lndians of the Northwest, He “What guarantees would bo necessary ?”” altered, forged and raised trom six shares, of the par We of the Twenty-third and Twenty-fourth wards tne cage 1n a (ow minutes. re pease Oiher kaa ore A b oy a.wroneb, “Having got accustomed to your beasts and your beasts acoustomed to you, your next slep is to (rain them to do their tricks, These tricks are very simple, but they require a good deal of timeanda good deal of waipping to accomplish. “The lions are tho smartest of the wild beasts. You can train a lion to do the ordinary tricks in trade— jumping through hoops and over gates, Standing on bind legs, aud so on—in ubout tive woeks’ constant work, 1a this timetable of wild beasts you can estimate thas ft would take a loness about u week longer, and a first fell in with the Indians of Washington Territory ‘That none of the chiefs would be killed, Ithink | value of $600, Nine certificates of Atlantic Mutual The writer looked at the sad-eyed man in wonder bat that i would be sufficient. But before | Insurance scrip, red, forged and raised by Gilman | ask why the Park Department contracts for Jersey and Oregon, then under the leadership of the famous | {hat (hal one pledge nuulll Ye toate cuoh a pledge | as follows:—One certiticate, pledged September 26, | broken stone to macadsmize our streets, as $2. | fF * minute, then “the situation!’ broke apon him. Kamiakhan. Shortly after be arrived hero a war | trom competent authority aud be properly backed up | 1876, purporting to be for $9, K raised trom $90; one square yard, when there is plenty of hard blue granite ‘This meek littio man, whom he had been taking fora broke out, Some of the inducing causes of the war | and seconded by the government.’ corsificale, pledged November 23, 1676, purporting to | so boundaries that would give empioymont to | Subaltern, was the king himself, the tiger tamer, the had oocurrea belore he arrivedamong the red men, and | ,,"FF0m What you say, fasner, it appears that you | be for §7,000, raised from $i; cue cor hoa, pistged ¥ pid whose regular bi ib was to go twi pteSonnetings en, ond | sing the management of the Indian quite an easy | June 1, 1877, purporting to be for $10,000, raised trom | our Iaboring men to break. And why, when bard | "AD gulsr business ‘as to go twice the Father relates thom as follows:—“A Presbyterian | probiem.” $100; one Sopa prednee J nH od 1877, Cre stone is plenty here, do eer Hap the contractorgon | @ day into a cage holding four full grown preacher named Whitman had located among the “And go itis when the Indian is properly understood | ing to be for $10,! raised from },0M0 cortiicate, | the two-mile large millbrook sewer to use rotten of | gigresses, any one .ot which four could kill end when men who understand his nat are ledged July 18, 1877, purporting to be ior $10,000, | white marble for its foundation that will crumble to Indians here, and they had long been joaious of his | 24, When men who onuorsiand bid nature ere | Piiseu (roi $1,000; one certileate, pledged Augusi 29, | pleces ina few years, especially when kept wet? Wo | 0nd eat him at any moment, The meek lite growing wealth, and had (requently threatened bis | apd can tell an honest man at sight, Before he will | 1377, purporting to be lor $3,000, raised from $300: | want the Mayor to nominate for commissioners prac- | fellow was indecd @ specialist—a specialist. whose hie Mi recipitated trast you he must know you, Now, in tho war of | one certificate, picdyed Aug! 29, 1877, pur- | tical men who reside hero and know our wants. 4 ie, Matters were precipitated by an unfortunate | tit Joe Meamiakhan signed tbe treaty, knew ho | porting to be for $5,000, ralsea’ trom’ shoo; Gciny | RBPLNAS APaHE: Recmiiers ands esetore, oly, See |, leopards witoh pened ‘wext in lntelligende: to &' Hoo, combination of circumstances. The sons of one of | Wouiu not keep it aud I told the authorities 60; but | one certificate, pledged September 7, 1877, . esting Not one ian im amiliion can enter atiger’s | about six weeks to learn the sume feats, the tiger the chiefs of the Cayus died at a Methodist mission | men who knew nething of the Indiau character came | purporting to be for $10,000, raised from $100; one STREET MUSIO AND POLITICS. don, ag a regular thing, and come out of it again, and ph teenpeherhltcbpie Se aileron Frye, hey aie sehool at Salem, from natural causes induced from | and expected in @ tow days to get the confidence of | cortiticate, pleaged September 19, 1877, purporting 40 | 9, 214 Eton op riz HERALD:— therefore the “points’? which enable this man todo | siSp venoning @ hyeua for docun tour meathabetons - the chiefs when they even came on a mission which | be for $10,000, rawed from $1,000; one certificate of confinement to study, and a number of “bucks” of she | Wasa surprise to tue avorigines, Now, tue indians | New ronc’wutual, insuranoe company sorip tor $000. | Some time ago our Boara of Aldermen passed an | this thing must bo worth knowing and worth record- Walla tribe were poisoned by argenic, which | beiore the propositiqn so code thoir lands had | The present market value of the geuuine amounts for | orajnance to the effect that music was not tobe played | ‘25 for the benefit ot the world which 1s aot tn the Mr, Whitman had placed on meat and dis-| been made should have been gradually educated | which the avove certificates wore issued is estimated | | 1. streets before 9 A. Mi and not after 8 P. rages habit of associating with tigers, but is in the habit of up toi, They should bave been told of it betore | at $2,80), andi! the same be credited against Giiman’s tribated around bis premises to kill the | Wey wore broughi face t0 ace with the whites, who Ot Seeerhooe to the company it would reduce isto | that all persone violating this law should be panished, | Feading the Nw Yong Hunaro, ‘wolves that had been depredating un bis stock. These | wore to have the best of what was to them, at best, | $61,480 U2 In addition to the above there were also | Now will the Alderman who introduced this resolution Consequently @ conversation ensued between the re- two circumstances were made use of by unfriendly | #Ued bargain. By degrees and by kindness tie Indian | pledged eight certificates of Union Mataal Insurance | | 414 cuougn to intorm us why {t te that the ordi. | Presentativo of the Henatp and the representative of 6 ; ; v ” ip, in the aggregate 480, bat tadians, wha st a council claimed thet the whites were pp eedbencn tri Mates osupaiuct Mra cere Aelia pire rig ‘allow them psn rer lta nance is allowed to sleep, more particularty now than | the tigers, which resulted in ascertaining the following Intent on killing of ali the Indians in the Nortowest, | that when properly bandied they are doo! person: you can do much with bim, “The most diificult toat of allto teach a wild beaas is to teach him how v0 let you ite on him without his eating you. I do this every pight with one of the Sigresses, but sho don’t like 1t a bit, though she keeps quiet enough, for it aggravates her inwardly.’’ ONR GREAT SUOCESS. “The great secret of tigor taming and all wild beast taming,” continued the tiger tamer, “licg in the whipping of the animals—knowing just ao trac’, | Sotithate of the value can be placed apon them at | at any time since its taking effect? Why does he not | tacts concerning wild beast and tiger tamer id Atter the counch at which this statement was made | S00 It 18 only necessary to, quote the explois of | present ET So seo to (t aud stop all these see-saw siraing that 0.07 | iy go wild beast and tiger taining professionally, | ‘vet keep" them well whipped; but ic yeaune the Cayus and Wallas went on the warpath and killed | 5 Ms saad © | Another creditor is Uaulol Drake Smith, ot Engle. | don the ordinance altogether aud allow people who | The particular tiger tamer who gave this particular | them eltuer too litle or too much, or whip to you. I might also teil you that when 1o war of 1865 broke out I had under my spiritual care | wood, N. J. Hie claim 1 $20,663 44 tor | are uot backed up 12 da irre tog or those who | information was named Alfred Still, and was born ip it may be fatal, As tor about twelve whites. Tbe volunteers went out to them without ca woot the Indians, and six Indians were taken prison- | 10,000 Indians, and although war was being talked | loans of monty | mowing to | $0¥.c0, | from are) co eata siete vine AVEBLY. | jondon of German parentage, Hs dritted when'a boy | DONUVSY \AMIE, 8 Nu Daal Jay have mere or eed ors and banged at Salem one year alter, moan out of that number went to fight the whites tne iseory notes aud” secured by pledge, of JUSTICE DINKEL AS JEFFRIES. junto @ situation with a man who bought and sold wild | influence over an ae with them, ana no wi. animals, and then, joining a travelling circus, wandered in attendance on a pair of Uons, The number of lions was then increased to seven, and with these OREGON WAR, Quakers and members of other denominations bave no | certain certificates of insurance § sorip, and ‘a ‘The next war, the secret nistory of which has nos | !Muence over the Indian; they donot get at his heart | Giiman bas paid on account $6,000, and the proceeds To tux Epitor ov tas Hesaup:— 1b or obtain bis confidence. People in the East do not | of vank stock amounting to 400 has also been Permit mo to inform your readers of another un- yet been written, was the Oregon war, which lasted | xnow all the facts concerning this question. When | credited as a payment on account, ‘The certificates of | qgnified and disgraceful action on the part of Justice three years, and was the most protracted ever waged | the inspector comes around to examine the missions I ‘ance Company eed | Pledged by Friday h kings of the desort Mr. Still. became thor- against tho federal government by the red man, | Be finds two or three dozen children and a few tam possession ure as follows, but all | Dinkel. On Friday a case was called in bis court and Gugbly ‘Yensihue from. the) outside of ‘the oagés. - | very tame, Indians, the pets of the missiouary, and | prove to have been altered, forged and raised by Gil- | a young lawyer who appeared for tho plaintiff en- bly Father Mesplicr had by this time (1855) become good | they are exhibited as the regenerated and civilized | man:—One certificate purporting to be for $10,000 doavored to make s motion in reference thereto, whon | Fiaelly one Gay his master, ‘‘who performed the friends with Kamiakban, and a treaty was proposed to | trive, while a tow miles away some pricst hus thou- | raised from $30; one certifloate purporting to be for | 5.11. pinkel immediately called the next case and Nous,” was severely bitten by one of them, and was the people of this great chief by which they snould | fin'* Teetey gute ri rd oaeae aa oro $1,000. inate ye gion tha Renta amocite abut the lawyer off ina very ungentlemanly way. An | Ket to the hospital This was Sull’s opportunity, surreuder part of their land and go on a reservation. ‘oasy time, but they pref way rather tbaa | for ‘which the three certiticates were issued aggrega: officer of the court, doubtless observing the Justice's It now became his duty to enter the cage to make the General Joel Palmer and Governor Stephens were | go so the minister whom they aa nottrust. Thorecord | ¢380, und whatever 18 roalzed by Mr, Smith will be | Gomeanor toward the young man, ordered him (the | Hons perform and he did 80, commissioned to make the treaty, and for several | Of the prics ood eae re . rh rere [iene toGilman. | estchester, has a clatm for | Wer) to sit down, | Thero being ‘no vacant seas this ‘A Dasor In 4 DBE OF Licwh weeks powwows were held and the paticuce | drede of them who have never sovn a ‘black cloth’ are | $7,375 01 lor money deposited with Gilman bewween | Justice observing the colloguy, "declared, ‘ia | _ The Grst time ne entered he den of « wild beest, or of the lodians nearly exhausted, Kamiakhan was forty) befena oe eee i wee they meet him.” | May, 1876, and rar parehepe jokes Meno butik A tones, that he would compel’ the | rather of seven wild beasts, to make them perform, was, a ‘The claim of et creditor who an! 6 Bot satisilod with the treaty, and foralong timere- | qu eis Father Mesplier sud with warmth, and | petition 1s lor $8,040 40 by Mr. Calkins, of New York, | LT Zeu'he ‘would’ send him to Ludlow Street Jail, | Cf Cours & memorable epoch ‘a his life, | “L expected fused to sign. Finally, however, he consented to put | when asked about Chiei Joseph he said be bad some | who bought on December 7, 1876, and paid for, $2.500 | Now, Mr, Editor, it is bigh time that these high- to be torn or cus by the beasts,” said Mr, Still, alluding bis Ginger to the pen with which the treaty wassigned, | few ars lpn perme with = aterrupted | worth of Pacific Mutual Insurance scrip end $790 | handed proceedings on the part of this New York Jef- | to this portion of nis experieaces, ‘and I was vory and the gentlemen who had the treaty to make | P!¢ which cou! Postponed, and then proceeded | Commercial Mutual Lnsuraneo scrip, amounting to | jreg were at an eau, for they tend to degrade the ad- | nervous. 1 expected to come out of that bieed- to talk of Joseph. Joseph, ‘bree Feathers, Eagle | $3,050 46, which Gilman never deliv ministration of justice in our local courts. Som: see, thought sll was well, Kamiakban, however, told | Sight and Wuite Bird, he ssid, were among those who effort should be made to teach Justice Dinkel that the | 8 !f not dying, and I made up my mind that if any- Father Mesplicr that he was not satisfied, and would toy a gh Sp eB psclnetipp bnermragmre ig REAL ESTATE. Fourth District Court was not created to be used as a | thing happened to mo this first time it should be my only consent to touch the pen in o: hes 7 bbc, oes: machine for the gratification of bis ese Praja Just time; 1 would never repeat the attempt, But my F to get back tO} war ot 1855, J 7" bis people again. The whites were Food makes but little difference with any wild beast as to ite natural ferocity, and with a tiger tt makes none at ail, My animals would tear a man limo trom limp after a full meal just for the tun of the thing, On the other haod | would just as lief enter their cage bo for meal as alter it; in (act, | do enter it to perform just before teeding time in the afternoon, Once wag ‘ebliged to keep tnom without food for four days, cross- ing from Englund to France, and yet 1 performed them before {i fed them on the fourth day. On Sunday wo do not feed the tigresses at all, so a8 Lo keep them {rom sour stomach and tndigeation; yet oa Monday belore feeding ti 1 pertorm them The mere amount of food has very liste to do with th dohavior, Thirst excites them more than han; Euch of my tgers driuxs about a pall of water a day and consumes about ten pounds of meat,’? Mr. Stilt then formaily introduced me to bis four tigresses, which are displayed in a buge don in the centre aienagerie connected with the Vircus. The four embrace two pairs of sisters, and are cailed re- spectively Pomp, « very ferocicas female; Baby, a mild-looking creature, *‘tbe worst lighter of the iow” Maggie and Clipper—Clipper being both a widow and a motner—ber female child being in @ cage adjacent, waiting to be “trained” for next season “vn the toad.” It ig a curious fact that the pairs of sisters generally pair togetuer, and in any domestic rows take each other’s part against the other pair of sisters, provi thus that even in tigerdom “blood is thicker th water.”” They ‘‘claw’’ each or pretty bioodily at times, and ‘make Rome how!’ while so doing. Occa- sionally when thoy want exercise they extemporize regular sparring matches and jumping matches among | themeelves aud turn their den into a very animated gymnasium, The yeungest is ten and the oldest twelve years of age. “There is tuis difference between a tiger and a lion,” paid our encyclopmuia of wild beast lore. ‘*A lion will tear you out of spite and temper occasionally, but a tiger attacks you oaly for sheer love of blood. A tiger’s ciaws, too, are even sharper than a lion’s. The "s ciaws are less sharp, while a byena’s foot is Inke @ dog's, clawless, the hy stroug point being, Mke @ scolding woman's, tu the jaw.’? Having now pretty weil exhausted the subject of wila beast taming and training 4 concluding word may bere be said as to tne pay of the professional wild beast tamers. This is much smaller than is gon+ erally supposed, ranging from $150 to $100 a mouth, Conai ng the ras v1 lite and limb these men daily take 4 the fact that there are not fifty of toem alto- gether in the world, tuis would seem acanty com- pensation, Butthe meno themselves seom satistied, and there appears to be a wild bizarre tascinauon tiie wid beast life, which, like the love of art eartst, is its own, oven if & is often, ifs only formed of this it his gon to th ‘ation with an injunction | ‘The following sales occurred on the Exchange yes- | 4! ‘employers said that it 1 got into any trouble with the by the Father, but no attention was paid to it, for in | 20bt0 give up the land the tribe had occupied from | terqay:— A COMPLAINT AGAINST THE ELEVATED RAI | lions they would see me through my hospital expenses tsme immemorial, During the last throe bi those days, as now, the very esseatial element of con- | poyan to settle in tho Wallawa Valloy, the home St RMRARD Y. GAREOED A nett. noaD, aud would continue my wages. So, although [ shook 4 all over inside, 1 looked as bold as a lion, and I tract—consent—was not cousidered necessary where | of the Nez Percé nation, and the frequent protests ite ‘ of the chief to Agent Mouteith availed nim nothin; To eas Eptron or rus HanaLp:— , tho Indian was concerned. Kamiakhan went back.to | Piotent threais were made to Kill, Montieth, aud Because the courts havo sustained the rights of the | Went 2 the cage before the crowd just as if 1 Elevated Railroad Company it is no reason, in'my | Dad been used to 1, The lious behaved ost rate. I maue my performance pretty short, was congratulated his people, and no sooner had he arrived than great | fnaily General ©. ©. Howard was ordered trouble came upon him, and his people, whom he | to arrange matters with the Nez Percés and appat ywater, rs brick dwelling house, opinion, why the managers of that road should, in Feler ee oF ONG. No, GD Kast 7th se, n, 6, 370 tt their independence, impose upon their patrons, 1am |.>Y ™Y employers, and have never been afraid of a boast ently sdcoseded. Father Mesplier ku as he did loved very much, accused bim of baving bartered the case of Kannakhan, a been tH tang away their heritage. He explained to them that he | and that the Indians wore Itching for war. Ho wrote @. of 2d av., to pietasitt, - eamend interest, 16,000 | ingnced to make these romarks in consequence of a | *2°¢ Raavely tchan cape. Sees He ee eee crm mrivats moaseed’ or ‘inter, | Supreme Court foreclosure eale—W iliam L. Findley, gross \mposition practise upon me Thursday evening. | | “The lions were not always good, though. They were gathered around the counsel fre Kamiakhaa | nition to that effect, aud reliabl® sources, too. He a ee Soy tot Baan alee ete In my baste to roach my residonco I took advantage | Dit me eight or nine times, and once I nearly gos my ™ of the railway cab system, and purchased a ticket ut | head bitten off, See, Thave the marks of their claws Made a speech, in which he called upon his people | aiso iniormed the authorities. In fact, he says he heoee to rise ag one man and drive the pale faced | gave them three distinct and separate warninge—oue “of ‘the 0 cab stand, corner of Broadway snd Twenty-eighth | and tgeth yet (rolling up his shirt sleeves and show, he view of reaching Fifty-ninth street : at 2 two yoars belore the war, another six weeks betore the | three four story brick buildings, with lots each 25x invaders back trom the fair iand that God had given war, In which the day of the outbreak was given, and nd 428 Kast Sith sta &, practicable moment. ‘The | ‘2g Some Ugly scars on bis notover mascalar arms) ’? tho cab at the Thirticth | He continuod:— the indians. That night a compact was made todrive | again ten days before. He knew the aay the blow Cae ee aa top eal & mr deeesbaeae delayed latwrueed “I performed my lions all over France, Italy and ‘would stop at shat station, and that to | Germany, where the circusesare much smaller affairs + 4100 | reach Fifty-ninth street | must go tothe Thirty-fourth | than in America; thon, returning to Kagiand, 1 made brect ——_s tation. Having no alternative | waded through yoovesreeees $47,600 an engagement with Egbert Howe and the London Faia and mud for tour blocks to reach the station, | Gircus, with which i have been travelling ever Benjamin Andrews to Elisabeth vcaaes By 3. J, CONNOLLY. Supremo Court foreclosure salo—J ames W. B: 18,000 the whites to the mouth of the Columbia River and | would be struck, aud on the day he named the war for ‘alo—Joha M. Bowers, began, Fathor Mesplier not only knew of the out- Sebterse-of tha. two, story brick dwelling house tiff. Kast 82d st, 0. a, 1 exterminate them. The keynote of the war was | break of the war, but was 4 ‘i 5 privy to the plans of Jo- Ath lot 17.2x102,2, No. struck by the discovery of the bodies of three white | seph. tg vie An Xo make a jhnotion with | fee. of 2d av. to plaini men on the way between Puget Sound and the Dalles, | Sittmg Bull. With this intention he starved on the a warpath, and if he had succeeded it would have taken | Total sales for the day News of the discovery of these dead men was | 29000 men tosubdue the allied tribes, Fathor Mesplier brough to the Dalles and Mr. Bolan, the Indian Agent | further states that Josepn bad a very lurga le: there, went out to see if the report wastrue, The ee ashe aeetlien it oer beg Peed she | 109th st., n. ignt. r Mosplier is inform @ missionary in, to same frst white man he met was Father Pandosi, who told | Lower Oregon that if Joseph held ‘ons vinsll spring all him he bad heard that turee men bad been killed, but | the Indians tn Lower Oregon aod Washington Terri- he had not seen them, and advised him to go in all oe hy pave aed eY be Mgt oid Eietet n wal 1 jast war, according to the baste back again to the Dalles, as the Indians would | royerend gentleman, could easily have been avoided surely murder bim if they caught him, Mr. Bolan | if his warning had been bros baad that Joseph Was in negotiation with the Umatilla Indians to leave be 4 bed ait ni ang naeeh a ge alive, AS | (heir reservation and Join him in the Wallawa Valley, eae ara: Mosplion Mont @ mecsonger (9 | With the Umatilia reservation vacated there would to have direct connection with the Elevated train, | ..,4cu, must wave Known some famous lion Kings was deceived. Foartng that others may and tiger Lamers io your time,” remarked the writer. ri roeleutnin Ot fh pieced aontdence, “Ob, you,” said Ar, Still, “1 pave mes Tom Basiy, Tinvoxe the sid of the “Complaint Book” to expose Se arse ane re w phates Weel the action of the company. LA MARJOLAIN way—dido’s know what fear waa, bat some ‘ow he had oo luck with his fions; THE ARMORY QUESTION, shoy were all the time figntingiwito bim, Way, his To tHe Eprror oF THs Heratp:— body was ali one mass of bites and scratches, He ai- Ip an article in Tuesday's Hanaxo, headed “armo- | ole ctica-koow that be was boos, Jerk Uoeper was lion know thas he was boss, Jack Uooper was ries Needed,” the Chairman, Alderman Tuomey, stated ion ene ge Bes cool and quiet, He trav. Front st., 2. &, to HAMILTON FISH AND OHARLES SUMNER, [From the Boston Transcript, Nov, 2) so 100,115 t + . have, Boe eta M. Poyn! in dd and Atl Bolan bad called or if | nave been plenty of room for whito settlers, and the asked he bed any tidings of bim. This messenger was Thorp to E. mn : Pn cae a \ae monpiad mer mecca nam muy NY Now, 118i pg es aoe ge li tag her uaa sears asqulte 45 good ope ome 125th at, nF. O18 fw. of he was not ready to report; that the landlords very bad once, and was in the hospital for montos, Putnam County, N. ¥., Nov. 1, isi} To rus Eprror ov Tuk TRANSCRIPT:— The New York Huxaup of this morning publishes a large extract of my letter in answer to Mr. Piorce' call upon me for a specification of the withhel treaties, khan, who refused to let bim go until | Senator , tbat gentieman introduced he said he bad been sont by Father | g Mn ihe United” States Senate ta Mesplier to Inquire about the health of Father Pan- | wnich this plan of Joseph's was fully considered doz, ‘The mesvengor returned with word that two | and the Umatilla reservation substituted for the days before nis arrival at Father Pandozi’s Mission Mr, awa Valley lands tor white settlemont If this Bolan had varned his face toward the Dalles, and if be | pij1, woich for some unknown reason met with vio- too much rent for their bulidings, and that he, or the | Crockett was « London favorite in his day, and thea Board, rather, wore not ready in these hard times to | thera was a Miss Dare who went into a lion's den, wus not ber real namo, but she deserved it, ior hamper the city with oxtravagant leases of from five as daring) too daring, {or once she iorgos 10 to ten years. Now, I will give you some facts which | watch ner lions and was nearly torn to pieces in con- Mr, Tuomey also knows and has known for a long | sequence. As for poor Lucas, be was killed vy his time, The owners of the baildings occupied by she | lions at last—torn into bits right in the ome He was bad not yet arrived be must be dead, im the mean | jent opposition, had deen passed, the Umatillas would EB : taken . ighth, a and Twellth regiments several months From this 1 observe that 1 inadvertently wrote Jul; noting wa pe A nen Lodian boy, and thougy | now be living in the Wallawa Valley with Joseph, and ‘agp offered to ACCU Of Tent 6020) CO ee ae istsd ever do wears wid | 191860,” instead of 1870, a8 tne time when the os! iy paige fine i > iathahon’ihedual ubasdbe' moon Pace kd la mist three disintercsted real estate mon whom | beast, and whipped them too much. They tarned | WaKkind word that] can recall was over spoken by Mr. Samner to me. 1 hasten to mako the correction, bang nim, Fatuer Mesplier went to Governor CHIRP JOSRPE. Very respectiully, HAMILTON FISH, Stephens and asked for the release of the boy. ‘This Father Mesplier went on to talk of Joseph Fequest waR denied, and when it was asked why he | and a warrior, and said he considered him qi H. Dor Mary ‘Was to be ban; the Governor said because there | equal of Sitting Bull. Ho was in doubt as to what | 190th stn, &, 166 ft 0. of Sth av, was no jail to put Dim ip, News of this hanging cam@ | would be dono with Joseph now that they bad captured |, iews Sober to Phin to. wie Inolans and | in WO way |. Ploasod | him. Snorily alter Moward’s chash begun the people a ot gene neon y je mes- | of the Northwest were very mach excited, and unani- vu ft. w. of Cortlandt shi Senger returned with no tidings of Bolan, Major | mous in sbe opinion that be should be banged when Hiatal” aStecinian ve Soh Rechees:. 304 F hee AWMerinae Tabuiny to lmtarriow abe owhats minis? FSC eee ae Oe re, Pee nale, REIS Alien and Major Keins or,auized 1,600 volunteers, but | capsured. Since that tino, however, tho public senti- 8 it. @. of Madison av., 18x100,11; 1 can tell him there 1s nothing in !t The commitiee ities INTERRSTLNG REMIMISCENCES. Hatta Peraue oe iaia Gnienol, Whaat. bees Whe | cee rere re teem cucoanmmnnnn any husband vo Klisabeth 8, appoiut the three men wo decide upon the rent, | Yrom anticipation, however, fe soon got back to exireme mevaure. 4 é 000 to Jook for the ludang, but he had strict om TREATMENT OF THR INDIANS CONSIDERED. bere and ine whale mania ri solbves iiiuatwening ‘ine Teun ber balled 508 Pc wt wane taosices waeine Fath Pectin etd returned 2 th saniers De had be settion in less than a k, These are not Ring ary ‘cleats ei Sid dismissed to consider the Nez Percés war. Ho said b fo A large bond of tne Yakamas ang Kieckataks were tn all th re about one hundred Indian agen- Ulipeien satax't Are Lete cant dines uke esbainene 1.000%, Fears ngo, while one of his bosses was perform. met vy this force under Colonel Wright, and through | ies in the West, and that out of tese Catholic clergy. Bwa price and make a divvy besides, Tho above nained | iuSn'lor the door of the cage us the wea entree ie the mediation of Futher Pandozi tho war, ag iar 48 | menu mare vorded to ee. phew haa pore Gran- regimenis want to remain where they ai ane ‘pushing the man “ide, oapea cute” Sout wert roun, Umatilla, Colville and Jaco. The rest were di- j8 of dollars iu fisting up ti y - Though Kamiaknan’s people had apparently made | vided among other sects, SL Joseph's, Ka seeatee nay ot een t6 Gore tos ot sudaenly irightened 6¢ bis own audacity, tne refuges 48 pekabe, 1YOm sm0Rs Mh ahi bi where the Jesuit Fathers have been established loft would be an 1p)ustice to those who le ‘ook some ten men, with nih eat a tea sooo pt » K Whoin he bad takea | more than filty years, aed where cieven of them main- give their time and life if nec ny the protection | gna knives and bron about an era res tne doast his wife, and incited them to continue the war. Durio the Indians, even in- the Winter of 1866-67 the Paloes aad spokaus coatius | teijeccoreoeot spon into holy orders, was given I Of the property of our taxpayer, DISPOSSESSED. | back again into bis proper quarters, o they the (Armory Committee) should select, and would | on bim sudd und thea there was ou end of agree 1o abide by thoir decision, Doom this look | Lucas, just as there is an end 10 mous of like asking too much rent {for their premises? | us tollows some day or otu for one-bulf at ‘They do not ask for ten your leases, and the Chairman | jeast of the men wuo make wild beasts perform knows bo has no right to make such alease. The | are finished by them. 1 suppose 1 will enter a cage owners are willing to make leases irom one to tive | once too often myself.” No wonder he was a sad- MURDER IN MATAMOROS. [Brownsville despatch to the San Antonio News, Oct, 2%.) Details of @ horrible crime reach here from Mata. moros. About the 10th of September Donna Rita Chapa de Mencbaca, a woalthy Iady of Matamoros, accompanied by her niece, Sefiorite Orila, and one female and two male attendants, left Matamoros bound for Monterey. Tho bodies of the whole party were found four days ago noar Lobito rancho, about forty miles from Matamoros, Tho women had been @utraged, bound band and foot aud gagged. There wore no marks of shooting or stabbing, and dai Blow ers, Was given in rt wed to commit murders and rovberies, aud in the | 1870 to the Presbyseri: or some ot Protestant | Shs + miryarenga, “Once @ young man who bad been hanging round | it is believed they wero left in that oz ring et 1807 Culouel Steptoe, who commanded Fort sein, cad theoe: elecgywnen ane, Bow crewing mocey | Walckre Counce st wanevae aisiady Marte oT ANSWERS, the, Saye, comes, SOF 8 ong WRI SHIRE cncter URL Lie, A100. horrible Gath ° frem Marraiion:. oe aila-Walla, made 9 campaign against them, but was } and’ doimg nothing, a8 the Indians rotuse | _ Gorard to 8. 1. Gerard 3,310 rustic scnoc, 0 8 Jm10 Die oad tbat he could -yerform” 8h6 | exposure, vouna Rita bad large amount of monoy baaly beaten and recalled 1o 1855 Colonel Wright | gneir minisirations, He says thet the Wasco Indisne organized another expedition against these bosties, | atibe Warm Spring reservation have veen given in ag on his way from the posts to tho hostile | charge to the Methodists, and that many of tho lu. country he had to pass through the Nes Percé na | diane—in tact, the majority of them—travol ali the way end mach valuable jewelry on her person. The greater of the money was in drafts, which the robbers left undissarbed. fer rings and otber jows Wall st, Nos. 87 and 80; ahaos W. Gerard, 10,733 200 1 100.5; A, Ay To tnx Epiron ov tae HenaLp;>— The beasts bad got used to seeing dim around and knew wis yoice, moment Im the issue of the Heratp of Sunday, October 7, dateies 164’ cage: he tout tae ena mowed “A Veveran Ninth Warder” makes serious compiaint | signs ot fear, and the tigers found 16 out in a bwink- Lynelt to fiom, and tearing that they mis! im on the | to his place, at the Dulles, sixty miles distaut, to have | 5 2, 127.2 th a, hm, 25: eiry and money, amounting in all to noar $300, were jeustve, by | their cpiiada beptined wad get lnarried, They bave | li Giocnsward ve ll. Q Cowinge’;.-crwceece Rom, | of the crowding of the publio sahools, and especially of | ing—the beasts kuow Uy instinct if you fear nem of | jaken by tho marderera, Ihe mulos were Kilied a the Nez Perods became the | even brought their dead that disiance to have them | 87th st, 4. s.. 275 tt o of tuth av. not—aud il | had mot rushed ia just when he would | the ambulance by which the party was travoiling waa No 8, Hudson and Grove stroete, The Board of | j..¥9 yeen torn limb from lim! Trustees for tho Ninth ward know full well of this 26x98.8; ‘Citas, ye " ; vue of she tigers wae Into a lagoon. It is reported that in au ol ing ready to bite his beck whoa 1 whipped ore diate jo wg Bs ‘Devew und w + distance from the scene of this horrible This trouty was | buried with Catholic rites The Yakams and Simcoo signed by Joseph, the father of the lately captured | reservations have aiso been given to Methodists. Ho suief, Who supplied & contingent of 500 mea, Wright | says that 18, and would be glad to furnish a remedy if in o found the remains of thirteen persons, vie Paloes and Spokane and engaged them io | tus combination, "er Mieoriome’ hes tues 600 1 with Iovineo je it < parent living mm the im- janoys men who perform wild animals,” thorities aro doing their utmost to obtain some Dattle, The Indians were sirongiy situated, und the | tne Indians’ inck of conndence, 83d sh, & &, 120 ft. w. of Ist aw mediate vicinity sends a child to tne echo marked Mr, Stil, ‘to have any one in the audieuce to the perpetrators of these atrocities, but with within wehing thom too closely, or cunnously, wisn idea ndto Lb. A. Kent. and afterward moves a distance and ye! Prospect of success, bt was going against the troops, when Father Jo- HOW TO SETTLE TH QUESTION. or ths naoounhstnih oes, ‘wn old missiouary, came forward and medi. Father Mesplier thinks that b te Quaker policy of %, Line ft. 0. of Suffolk, 19x61; the city limits we have no power to disinise that child sted for # cessation Of bosulities, iu Wright's re | handing over who. tribes to the mipistrations of ie kot ee ; 200 | from echool to make room for the children of tue "*Vet- | looks rt Father Joseph was highly complimented, and | men whom the ludians do not want should be avol- Myling to Anna Ruppert Nom, | ran or any ove It they move from the city they fore was @ second instance of ihe induence of | ishea, together with the salaries paid to tne minisvera, | 23d st, & %, 100.8 th. ate obliged to leave the school, The Boara of Trus- | bitsen or killed, and that they the priests with the Indians, During the | ana that all sects ehould have un equal chance in the Henry (referee) to Clinch: » @,700 | tees have been vigiiant to k | foreign omidren | for the excitem of the thing, fetarn to Walla-Walla Colonel Wright shot several ln- | missionary work. Indians shoula not be compelled | 11th st. m %. 100 ft. w. of Lat av., 63.3x198 2xir~ {rom our scavols, and do not permit any to remain or | feel anytuing bat pleasant, and di: tans, among others Howrrdi, « chiet of the Yakamas, | to gu to agoucies and submit to ministragion in order regulary L. W. Emerson (referee) to John Ken to be admitsed to the schools of the Ninth ward, There | from our beasts, who attempied to run wway while they were hanging | to tind favor, ior the praciice ostablishes a priviloged i are now no clildren from New Jersey in any of our Readers of Buy Sue's powerful novel, “The Wan- hia gon, Qua‘ctifp, who, Father Mespier says, began | religious vines, tradorsuips be regards as an schoota If a “Veteran Ninth are has tne | deriug Jew,’ will ve reminded of tue episode of Morok, by killing the three whites whowe bodies | abomination, He says thut of ihe $7,000,000 appro- time, or if not, he oap find me poor | the lou tamer, and the eccentric militounaire the agency two years before wo discover. | priated by the government less than ‘one-third 6} man’ who would like to earn a little money, | who attended his periorimances constuntly on something may possibly happen waile t op, Weget the powon in our head at sone Of the people expect tbat we will ges en Hope we Will, Just 4 that makes us acts our atieantion ANOTHER WILD MAN. {From the Saginaw (Mich.) Courlor, Nov. 1.) Our Chesaning correspondent, M. N. G, writes that on Sunday jast a young man, living with Judge Smith, whose farm is situated about a mile from Chesaning, came across & mun entirely naked upon tho river bank, je . ‘ Harney ana Colone: Wright svitied tuts war | reaches the parties whom it is intended Ww benetlt; that | P1zth st, 9». L will give bim ® chance, I will pay $1 per head for | & jt that = sooner or later he would | Ao was without any appearance of beard, and though with great credit to thomsolven, the reat of 1 Wad stoatings by | ,Wim ts Fendiey Kenusil;. ;+ 74800 | il she foreign children “+A Veteran’’ of any one for | be devoured by bis animate But trom anecdotes tet | no atood sitll long enough for the other to try to talk THE SNAKE WAR. the agents and sinecurista, The care of the Indian, He |” Win. L. Feudiey (referes) Ww vars ih him will show me or the principal o' oo] oF | Us descend to business. I's oF tect | with im, gave no sign of understanding and disap or department of No, 8 now, or at any time within the | is wha ti) © Indisos discovered Indians on | says, should be given vo the army, and th the nd, As 1 Gli th CaseH spoken of velore, | monoy appropriated by the goveru then ath reeen! the w Javt your, attending No. 3. Fomengnoante Lincapeitalth sai of tamstag one i Bearentng for mim and ovsers Joined on Tuesday” but they tvought (ne whites bad come to drive them out | Indvaus. He says the Indian himeelt would have m soo | Ait Recount is true here is # cbance to be a bene. | relawug to the inodus vporund! of taming and training | searching for mm and others Joined on Tuesday, but giving all the Ol the subject, at last accounts no further trace of bim had been dive 5,000 | qigciose to the Bourd of Trustees, that wo may disa- | poiats and going covered. It is thonght by some that be may be tne buse his mind, There aro no foreign children in the | iiger taming, as @ g mute, Joseph Ackles, who disappeared from the in- 8,990 | scaoois ol the Ninth ward, DENISON, ised, anda Wild beast Is not considered as “a handy | stitution at Flint some time ago aud becoming jamane, Secretary of Board of Trustees tor Niath Ward, thing to have in the house.” Bat there je no Pal took to the woods, A will | Wild Lousts, stating wil the theories all the deta factor to some poor man, 1 hope ‘A Voterni h'av. 3 yonrn, . On Miebunr, William F., to ti. P. Niebubr, «. « of 122d nt, 6. Of 486 a year. to Joseph F. Smith, #. 8 of 122d st. D YORE. sevceedssceeenrevees of the place. 1uis wur lasted until 1864, when it wae | confidence im an army officer than in auy civil per- Saded by General Crook. son, They know the ollicers to be Tun NODOO WAR, ‘ahibie GREE 4 Would trust them, and 1871 the Modoc war began and was original y |b sansiemt on the part of bhe aushoritios to take theig.| pian whol mo fear the} would induoe respect. The government by iui uid save millions of dollars yearly ang avoid.