Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
The tina Sun. TUBSDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1871. Amasrmonte To-day, Aendemy of Munto~ Marian Pate 634 want 2 Opera Mouse Blobe Theatre Yur Humpty Dumpty. 40) oh Det, Bd and av Novelty, Barlesque, & ‘Theatre A Carious ( FOR PRESIDENT. @nr Enter Franklin, Dr. HORACE GREELEY, OF CHAPPAQUA, Mr. Boutwell for President, Some of the Democratic papers are struck st that while the recont Republi- of Massachusetts special word of commendation for Mr. Bour nothing to say in praise of nt Gnant, or the Administration in Hence they infer that there is a strong disposition among the Republicans to Bourwet as their candidate for san Convention wert, it had Well, why not? We do not think his the ‘Treasury hae always Deen judicious or successful; but, Gtlier Land, it 1s the first journals of the party solect y the excellence ct, very much management orators and when they set out to magn of Republ.can rule, the limited approval sometimes b pn Pros dent Grant is really : due to Socre- tary BovT WELL; and there is no question two the Secretary incomparably tho better Presiderg. would make present-taking ; no appoint, » in return for presents ; aking, and no ment of men to offi on of convicted bribe-tukers; uo ap- ment of the President's or hi ices for which they had neither claims nor qualifications; no engaging in ponspiracies to put up the p relations to « co of gold, and for $25,000 on no indirect sale of a house to two parties at the sam: time ; in short, none of the shames and scan 1 have blackened resident GRANT, and spread immorality aud ever the la Boutweii would not administer the Goverom enrichment. write the Er gilsh language g mmatically immense improvement The Republicans might do much worse than to take hm. Jackson and Grant. The attempts someti sorters of Pre ld Hickory was ‘eate itself chiefly in tho n of mean danger from he schemes of the werlthy and pow fen. Grant rontempt he f an in order to satisfy Pulpat on th rsuit was sent of the Galileans, just after He had rebuked #0 sternly the | must, by the terms of the hypocrisy of the Pharisees, while seated at meat with one of them. Lect these zealots mark, learn, and inwardly digest its words: “And Jesus answering soi unto them, Suppose ye that these Galileans wers sinners stove all the Galileans, beconse they suffered euch things “Ttell yon, Nay ; but except ye repent, ye shall all likewise perish “Or those eighteon upon whom the tower of | S.loam 4 slew them, think ye that they were Sinners above ail men that dwelt In Je t “Tell you, Nay; dnt except ye repent, ye shail all sal likewise perish. In that widespread destraction at Chicago the righteous suffered as well as the wicked ; the churehes blazed higher than the theatres It is singular what a propensity some men have to single out the victims of Divine displeasure, and to tell exactly the reason why the bolt has fallen, and that, too, in direct antagonism to the precepts of the Divine Master, who came from God, and was supposed to interpret His will. These Maw- worms and Cantwells, who would subordi- nate the movements of the Great Controller of the universe to harmonize with those of their own narrow and contracted souls, are tho pests of tho religious world, and are in some respects as bad as the prowlers who tried to take advantage of the flames to carry on their nefarious pursuit o preacher who can thus insult @ stricken people knows nothing of that charity which vaunteth not itself, is not puffed ap, and thinketh no evil, and should be unfrocked, He isads to the religion that he pro- feases to advocate, and to tc pulpit whose uti # he does not comprehend. —— Ben Butler’s Head Level. Gen, Burien delivered a lecture in Phila- delphia last night on the Treaty of Wash- ington, which he condemned as injurious to the United State He said that the Ameri- can Commissioners were completely outwit- ted by the more wily and experienced British diplomats, In his opinion every man in thie coutitry who had anything to do with the treaty, whether President, Commissioner, or Senator, will be heartily ashamed of his share in the business before a year is over, When the Geneva and Washington Boards of Arbitration have finished their work, it will be seen when too late that we have been jockeyed out of our just claims against Great Britain, Instead of having a large amount coming to us as in- demnity for the depredations upon our commerce committed by piratical cruisers he balance is k between the when finding brought in debt in a good round sum to Brit'sh claimants for conf wated cotton, cap- tured blockade-rnnners, and a thousand other war damages, Ho believes that our shipowners whose vessels were destroyed by the Alabama and tho other Anglo-rebel rates will have to whistle for their money, unless Congress makes a direct appropria- tion from the Treasury to pay them, When the people learn how the British have out- witted us, and how the party press and Re publican politicians have deceived them about the true n f this trenty, he cz. pects a universal explosion of popular indig nat the fraud, ‘These views are interesting, and they are Ly no mieass confined to Gen. BUTLER, » But his promulgation of them just at present looks as thongh he was not so devoted a friend of President GRANT as has been sup. ported. Or it may be that his antagoniam to Guast bas only been bottled up hitherto, and is uow for the first time coming out — A few months ago a man nr vered heavy ny inc ing been violently ejected from « in which be had had the though aneecompanied by n- take ase The result of this suit probably encour: aged Mr. B. H, Roao, who had purebased a first class ticket for the Cincinoati aud Muskingum Roilr instead of contenting himself with the accoumo- dations afforded by a filed with t by thos |, to insist upon @ seat in a first-class car, meau and dirty on into which he was ¢ r his effr y putoft the train by the con- ot the train, F he was prow duetor ; and now he brings suit against the com- #. It is to be hoped that pany for $5,000 da he will recover the fu Resist ance to the tyranny of railrc keeps a convicted Bribe-Taker at the Deportinent, Such a m Dir, Auoxzo Chank, Dr, dames B. Woon, and Dr Jony J, Cuaxe, to overhaul these surgeons wnd urn out those who are unfit, This is an excel ent notion, but how can it be applied under th present system? The object now in view is not to have competent surg but to provide places for relations and fa tes There can be no re ' t u e wn is changed, and Chicag ig in our plying to the Supreme Court yesterday for a fur Pike | Hace sented avitof Rows 1, Taacy, feu. ineer of the Croton Aqueduct, showing that ¢ Cr nT @ reser ra to hold | le Mu t t to rh } now would be mperil t ty, Mr, Tracy | . the | mains from Forty-second | \ iF 1, ar i dt rt In Washington it ia imprisonment for 1 tok tal * A man from New York Hed ADOLPH DELIOMAN was recently seatenced without @ and to be imp fine was paid. Of course, if a thas con Victad ornnot raise the umvuul of lu tue, be UN, TUES atute, remain in jail natural life; and as the Washington jail ption the most wrete hed is probably without exe and filthy place of the kind in ex tims of this law are entitled to commiseration the case of Seniomax, Judgo Swevt. revoked the order sending him to jail, as he was a young man nce and a stranger, at the sane time remarking that the law was a dis- of gentlemanly appear grace to the statute book—a conclusion which no one will be likely to disput Col. Joun Tavion, Davi R. Jouxson, antes Locueeway, and Josert Sraxver, four red men, have been sworn in as Inspectors of Election in the Eighth Ward. : Mr. Lawis Winttims, also a d man and a friend to Dr. Mo | has been appointed an Inspe the Twentieth W Dr. ANDHEE and Dr, SCHAAPIAUSEN, two ts of distinction, have recently expended considerable effort in tho Investiga- tion of the subject of anthropophagy or canni- gentlemen preparing them- selves to take a part in the work of foreign mis- as well as all those who have a faney for exploring unknown regions, may be interested in learning that there are now in existence nearly two million cannibals who still retain their savage habits and their peculiar appetite factory to Know that the races who love their fellow beings best as an article of food are rapidly disappearing from th of them yet remai Awpngn says that the motives fur this custo Besides mere sensual gratification, and hunger caused by the dearth of other an food, the passions of revenge and hatred, as the precepts of pagan beliefs and gloomy superstitions, play an important part in causing Scuaamacsun agrees with German ethnolog’ balism; and your continent, though some iis existence Dr. Awpnee in his views regarding the causes of m, to which he adds another, the glut- topous longing fora kind of flesh whieh is de- cannibals as particularly appe. There is evidence of tho ancient or rn existence of cannibali tries of the world, Great Britain being distinctly The appetite which distinguishes the spears to be natural—unlike that for oquired taste—since there hos been but one single instance recorded, that of the Bassnto people, in whieh the habit had n previously uukuown, ———— of Mississippi, in a in most coun. tomatoes, which is an newly arisen, having b Lieut.Gov, Powr loudly denour philosopher wh timent, ‘Let the warward sisters depart s0 ignorant that he does vot know that the author of that Soorr, aud thut it was and made conspicuous by Jous. Vax Powers ought to talk dasa dotard “the once promulgated the treason- phrase was Major-Gen, of the two Boards we shall be What has become of Tammany Here it is twenty days before elec- ization mill? n, and the mill not running. a that all papers must be taken out ten days before Are we to have a halfway honest The Home Insur e Company of this city, las resolved ! thousand doliare that they will pr TUE TROLLING The Hippodromi: th Horses— oldamith Matd and Lacy. urday do not seem to Ven general satisfacti Hertook to reid to a race on Dobie was a Finally the mat Jed Lucy two leny BROUND Hkat mendous pace pusved (ie Maid, crow Lome stretch, both ficent brush, the Maid heat, making tio» a understrappers sed up the apace, have won the neat had not Hickox de in joes than sso infrequent in this country, that when dis Th commends the Hon Wittiam ublican candidate tor § hester district, ‘He kin iz a bribe,” How different from bot t-Twker and the Bribe-Taker t Washington! Judge Komenrson deserves all the more credit for preserving his integrity when thon ran bigh th the Republican President is a Present-Taker, and ed and receive head of the ought to be is greatly at a disappointed 19 Ler. — A respected correspondent, who agrees with recent observations on the police surgeons f this city, proposes that » board of examiners Brick Walls Blown Down, Fa heavy rain About two o the brick wall The Sixth Ward fmivaring bine ho ewindlers When the Sixtn Warde 10 pay a fine of 8269 for exposing cigars for sale isoned until the | over ant above the fir count ar poll was xt liedeb beaded by Doing, by Uv to M4 DAY, OCTOBER CERNING WINNIPEG. Co} THE ©OUNTRY THAY FIVE CRAZY FENIANS HAVE INVADED, —— a Notes of a Summer Journey—The Red River, Manitoba, and the Great Winnives Basin ~The People, the Lund, and the Climate Thero is Gold in the Saskatchewan After leaving the Si. Paul aud Pacific Ruil- road we were four days driving in stages before wo reached the present head of navigation on the Red River of the North; and on our return we were five days, ‘Tho roads were excollent. They wore all of them over tho prairic, worn smooth by the wheels of wagons and coaches, without any other human labor than that of choosing tho route to be followed, Of course in auch a wilt country there ware no ho- tols where aparty like onrs, from twouty to thirty in number, could be entertained; #0 we carried an Ample supply of provisions, and tents and biaukets enough to make us comfortable at night. It was very jolly, this tent life, with ite jokes ani stories, ite poctry and prose, its literary and re- Ligions controversies, Such alot of gay, good fel- lows as we iad—Taylor, Bvans, Hawley, Bromley, Bowman, Martin, Bartlett, and all the rest. It gave Us a taste of real Bohemia, sleeping on the ground, Gisbing night and morning, shooting birds from the stage windows—Evans was our erack shot, our greatest (sherman, and our most eloquent eritic— Aiseossing and quoting irom memory the whole of Euglish and American poetry, and debating, withoat 4 moderator, science, politics, morals, philosophy, and theology, In these discussions the great ani 00d Bross often shone resplendent, His favorite evant is worthy of quotation Vit are t is trip and I'll fire no more, ho, eon 11'l! go ashore, red Years ao. ine aon 1 hor hootees on Pay me my moi A hw Wale Jaw-don« In come Sally w! A hundred years 4g I wish I was tp Monile bor. Yo, bo, been) A toting cotton ali de aay, A nrindred yolre amo Walk jaw-none, J nny eve along, Yor ho, neon Income gatty With her bootees on, A huaared yeaa ago! For this great banquet tn Saint Paul, Yo. no neon! Kind friends, we (hank you one and ail, ‘a Nundred years no ‘Walk jaw-bope. eh Come mong, In come Sally Witt, her bootees on, K hundeca years ago The Red River of the North is an interesting stream, It is not picturesque; it Is simply a deep gully, excessively crooked, dug OUTYAToNgh the Prat rie. In the spring its waters rise to the edges of its banks, and even overflow them; bat inthe eammer they wind along with acurrent of tree miles an hour from twenty to thirty feet below the level of the prairie thronzh which they pass. The water is of a gray color from the clay which it holds in solution, ‘There is on either shore a belt of woods, consisting of willows, cottonwood, and elms, with now and then an oak, Thus the appearance of the river ts like that of the Missouri, the Ar- kansas, the Red River of Louisiana, and the southwestern rivers geueraily; bat amoog the trees on the banks the cottonwood and willow pretominate, Most of this timber ts of little value for Why PlFpORe, DUTICT tte WM ce the whole distance from Drecktnridge, where the Red River properly begins, to Winniveg, where it receives the waters of the Assiniboine, £0 Wood grows except along its shores and those of the cceasional streams, most of them nutmportant, which com barrenness of wood is ¢ that sweep the prairie it comes to beset into it. This >, to the fires wild cousition, Waen Jed and cultivated these Hires will no longer occur, and groves and ‘orosts wil spring up in every direction, as thes have already done upon the settled prairies c ana and I vhs, The iotevest of the Red River is geographical and political, It forms ap en the basin of Laxe Winnipeg and the creat contra! country of Br North America, It is alrea used for commercial transportation, ‘Two steam. ul connection betw in Manitoba, > head of navigation in b to the + © in the river, During high water in the the boate ascend to Breckinridge, As the water vecomies low; they make their etopning place at Fort Abererom: bie, next at Georgetown, and in the lowest staco of water they stop at Frog Point, twenty-five miles north of Georgetown. Here the Hudson's Bay Company have erected storehouses, while large nd ning to private owners 1. ‘This merenandise ts 1 to Froz drivers cainp at night a couvenient pint alum the river, turning tae 1 loose to graze in the River, The two boat eng r f Hadsou's Bay t sof skins. O rie al pr as yet nothing The time r n he vovaze from Frog Point t town of W ge by water and al one huntred and Qity ima junc with the Rod River, pd aby souta of Lake Wir ves in its waole course nr 1 as the prineinal t, and With its Dranches r rough more thin ten dogrees of It is not navigable however, even at w sen up around Fort Garry, the ny. It isa town of aLundred or more build $ and six or Feven hundred people Gove eraent of the province Is there, 1 contains With the people of the frovincs ant with ped ke ¢x ns omong the Indian bringing back furs and pemmican. The ‘ Engiand by way of the United States, ¥ pay on all articles an import duty of four per F nd ‘ " orvice of t Mw Bay ¢ ant of Indian mot French is the 5 ne lat f nd sof the A na Mac ' 1 ¢ and college bys, und @ tow a number o 8 of Charity eon 1 ation of girl ‘ ‘ A fae B Shaving r of the yolames he iy Vo Us, en Aan‘es dé Mossions, the bise tory of the toils ana sufteriogs witch tiose simple soldiers of the Cross have endured in such a wilder. ness, we can weil unterstand that the consideration he now enjoys ns Hired. Certainly the power he exercises, not merely amorg the peo ent tribes of Tudions scattered about in every dire lion) i eubrely Deweticlal to his Bock, leading al 17, 1871 and intellectual tm: next two years, ‘The Episcopal Church also maintains missionaries and in the remoter parte establishinents in the province Keeps up educatic the direction offer means of education to the children of the country, through their m fits of civilization and culture, They area well-look- f men, large and powerful in frame, inclined to be fleshy, with black hair and Tutian mixture in eracefal and plea and accomplish aplexions, bet The women a ‘The prevailing tion were in the habit of going out ater buffaloes every summer, and suppites of dried buffalo meat formed an important part of the provisions of every Bat the buffalo no longer approach within striking distance of the colony, The Red River rebellion of 1969-'70 followed closely upon the transfer of the sovereignty of the country from the Hudson's Bay Company to the eroment of the Canadian Dominion. son's Bay Company had been in possession there for abouta hundred years, and the Hed River colony, founded by Lord Selkirk, had grown up under the authority of the Company during nearly sixty years. ‘The firet disturbance in 1869 was caused arrival of some Canadian surveyors, wh that the whole province was to be laid ont and sold anew without regard to land tities derived Company, or to any rights of occupanc} This created great excitement, espe: cially aa it was believed that the religion of the ma: would also be strack at This canse pro- by Louis Riel aud sup: ported by most of the peopte. ‘Drie rebellion does not appear, however, to have rable milltary Out of the fourteen thousand people tn the province, It would probably be possible to raise fliteen hundred fighting men; but as they had no organization, Jnover been habituated to any sort of fe ved miles from insurrection was ne in a military point of des, the Canadian Government in ® moderate and judicious manner. the colony a8 a separate province of the Dominion, with boundarigs including all the settlements apon the Red River and the A) a representation of two members in the Senate of Canada and four mombers in mons, providing for a local Legislature of two houses, one of twelve members and the other of twenty-four, reqniring be langaages to be need in the records of the Logisla. tare, continuing for th end were more foreign assistance, their very formidable than five hun ealt with them aiboine, giving to th the House of Com- h the English period of three ing for the payment by the Dominion to the prov. dollars a year for the support of the Government and the Legisiatnre. bout sixty thousand land and land 1 grants previou dson's Bay Company wer wn,.a8 Were also all titles by oceupaney with and under the allowan All persons in pe to be confirmed by the of the Company cable possession of land in those hich the Indian titles had come extinct were also to have the right of pre of common and the right of eut- njoyed by the settlers, were to ‘or by grants from the Crown, thie, one milli acres of lind—more th area of the provin ting bay, hel dred thousand mm one-tenth of the t apart for the benefit Lieutenant-Governor among Jovernor-General might piets demanded, and with Fae Doininion pas judicious e new province than nt-Governor they Archibald of Nova Scotia, @ mau of arter, For Lieut remains of diss’ ted, he has long #ince e farms here ar s only {rom the + but itis said t difficulty w 2 to be to mov one side of we oter; and migration and eettioment, the a wiwaye be rau ata heavy and, the railroad ») stom of (ie 1 Biatem will nnd tedly be ex ded into follow this conventont ¢' mmerce, questions c ple will go with their The most intere this country are those of what is called tho thermal lines and the fertile belt. tlat good crops of wheat, bar! aro raed at Tort Garry, tn deg, 90 min., nearly thres degrees north of Quebec, shows that the climate in this recion is mor ble than in other parts of Amoriea un parallel, Scientifle writers apon clima’ that the mean summer temperature is about the ws at Milwaa same at the mouth of the Assiniboin keo, and that this line of equd mean ascending northward as ttproceads toward the west, ches the pornile of 61 deg. 80 min. N. at about 107 degrees west longitude. In the deseriptions of these writers the whole region south of Intitude 53 degrees, betweon the Rocky Mountains and Luke Winnipeg, is not only suitable for cultivation, but can, almost all of it, grow enormous crops, ‘The! donbt that these statements are in a me: ‘Though the sandy wastes of the American desert spread out north of the frontier, very much of the British territory is exceedingly fertile, success/ul years good crops can ve raised. A'ter all, the climate appears to be far advantageous one for agriculture, All through the 0 liable to oecur; andeven at Fort seuson frosts Garry, Wuere wo saw gardens with shows of pors, beans, beets, parsnips, carrots, and wo wore told that they wer liable to be destroyed by unexpected cold, Archibald’s garden at Silver Heights we saw spec mens of beans that had been replanted after being killed by the frost, with others that had escaped by being sheltered ; and it was thought adouvttal ques tion which of the two would turn out the better. Mr, McTavish, of the Hudson's Bay Company. told other veeetab us that the middle of July, dig of four feet for a drain in the neighborhood of Fort nd still frowen ; so that the the attraction# attributed to it Garry, he found the gro fertile belt, with a by enthasi ic visitors, is still not paradise for the farmer, Nevertheless, the fvct thata colony of 14,000 souls bas grown up here wituout the nd intercourse with the proves that this part of North Ame ng a stimulus of immig outside worl rica is abundantly capable of suppo! prosperous population, Not merely the valley of the Red ton the whole of the Winnipeg basin fs compe deativute of wood, and that which is tound is, nom of it, of @ very good quality, Bat coal is abundant on the upper wolers of the Saskatchewan, there can be no doubt tuat valuable minerals will Aino be discovered in ample quantities. springs have been found in Manitoba, judications that salt wells might be sunk ia almost any part of the province with the certainty of an ravine aur Tache informe us that gold is frequent in the upper branche chewan, Father Do Smet told Gon. H ebonnding return In bis valoable Nord-owet dev An shoo k: that the Catholic missionart ot the exis tes alon ce of this precious metal with the flocks. No river will they have ever Leen with the wa who have brought {re ligiows progress of their a there the furs thot have made the Hudson's Bay Company ric prosperous. Mecnwhile the fur business, though diminished from its former grest proportions, is e amount of furs now received by the Lindson's Bay Compan still extensive and profitable, T known ; but the whole receipts from th bosin exhibi pages of Bisuop Taché: DISTRICTS. aie ar DIsTRICT be at | MeKenee Riv or f Ipod hive Total 64 a ARNO 4 Latter poisoning the B eans they game, and the skins n the nsual monuer; butafter aw tribes; and ont @ quantity of furs which, if free 4 country and the quantity « ut mmense D of the continent w ever be a range for wild beasts and visit lish parties fu the provinee to strengt nilat way, Probably the whol 1870 will nota t to five hi 1s The + st fi Iishop Tact rapid he D. r 1 Lake W names Py A Kichetiou Kobinso Heo The Hon, W rt r \ and are or nt My . " ‘ Attorney Morris, de Fol tive Mot the 8 Remmrn of dudee Loow, Hate Pred W, Loow arriy Ti “ e America. (ils Surya vives Mayor Had ni) 10 lmpeach (he Comphrokeny anitoba within t The trade of the province will one! just as it now fol lows tie slow and imperfect steamboat navigation of the Red River; and the sympathies of the pyo: THE E ASHBURY TAKING THE COLUMBIA GLISHMAN Bl The Cockney Yachtman's Conceit Ont of Him=1 Campbell Cr oy of the American The first of tho seven races to be sailed be. tween the Livonia and the New ¥ tative wan & 4 yesterday o The wenther was plonennt, with « hardly euMficient 1 of the yachts. gatta course, northwesterly breeze thorough test of the sp mittee steamer, William Fletcher, with the Commit. teo, Mr, M. R, Grinne!!, Philip Schuyler, R. 8, Hone, Shevpar! Gandy and ( companied by a few frio ot the pros A. M. for Quarn'ine the yachts were to etirt. Tite COLUMDIA AND LIVONTA were drawn op in line between the stakeboat and ‘Tne Seppho was also ernis- ing around, In case ale should be called apon, but she had to reserve her mettle for another there was not enough breeze to sult her. mites shortly after their arrival steamed alongside informed Renr-Commodore Or good that His boat lind boon selected for that day's steamers lay around, inclading the DR. Martin, Arrowsmith, Antelone, Americus, sea Bird the Quarantine dock. the Columbia and ‘on or twelve Andrew Fletcher, “Sappho, Magic, Aies, racie, Coquette, Iinta, snd Madeleine Wore also oru rae Was from an anchora ear the Quarantine Laut of Routh west spit. buoy No, 10, to the west red can buoy, anding i$ to the northw ‘over the sana course, returning ~of 18, 11, and 9, Axgvoat stationed near and eastward. exat—going and the west bank, vir.: Nos. westward of th the Quarautine Landing, 8. 1 frat of the ebb, and the wind rsthing wow . ot 19:35 the 60 .utnittee Lo and bie contostan's pr of the yachts had their mainsail, AU 10:40 4 whistle wis bl 1 fignal tos yacli# began to run ap their Jibs, nearly dead aft, nei wv mitage over’ the the Livonia bain: pUell accompa eLebeir signal fig, Ap the win wae F ot tig two bad any Ashbury in the race Tw Columbia w der way, and gained ut Start, an advantage which she steadily \ and off Fort Richt dy far the quickest getting on 1 she Was about ‘After the Livonia had passed and got from the land, slie began to improve Ler soeed, and aining alittle on the revr t wun oniy, however, as ik svon became evident that she lad very WITH THE COLUMBIA, A large fleet of yachis ac ompanied the con ound the cou va did some Wren the Cotumbta can 4 all tue fleet congregated round (hat #o0! seemed to be LITTL CHANG good avera o wp to the Bs toward Sandy Iwo saluted tn an encoer- over her boom and §| fhe Livonia w aging mauner wien have long been aware clits rouwued the South weet the walcrs of this great stream; they have not reported the fact because they did not Bien Acros of mining immigrante to interfere udily on her enough to keep all cany nia came on joeing Kround, Al would eaten @ litte pu ubt the valleys of this important was evident y je be more populous with miners than ering id uring per ler original pos: A FOREGONE CONCLUSION, sth water it would be next toa Wind as aby yacnt any particular in: shiv, as the wind wus very Hgus aud puity nd the country along the Arctic Ocean, é of the Rocky Mountains, in 1865, #ix years since, are dropuing the Liv in the following table berrowed trom the ll Solder Up vory slowly as te steamers Wer through them As they started homew Vetter t an the such a long stretch a 4 a eee