Indianapolis Journal, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 June 1883 — Page 5
GEN. CROOK’S CAMPAIGN. Disbandment of the kittle Army After a Brilliant Piece of Work. The Prisoners En Route to San Carlos-Tlie Half-Hearted Assistance Rendered by the Mexican Forces. Fort Bowie Special to Chicago Times. “The army of the Sierra Madres,” said General Crook in camp yesterday, “will break up in the rooming.” This rooming the companies which have been stretched along the line for the past ten weeks accordingly broke camp and began the march to the forts in Arizona where they are stationed, while the General and his staff left for Wilcox, whence they will proceed to visit two or three of the posts in the southern part of the Territory. Captain Chaffee’s company alone will remain on Silver creek a fortnight longer. A supply train is ready to come out, for the purpose of looking after straggling Indians from Mexico. The whole body of Indians, under command of Captain Crawford and Lieutenant Galewood, have begun the march for San Carlos through Sulphur Springs, west of Wilcox, and will probably reach the agency next Saturday with Chiefs Loco, Cbato, Beneto, Nana and others of less note. It is expected that the whole band will reach the agency in seven or eight days. Signal fires have been lighted every night on the mountains for Indians coming in from Mexico, who are expected to overtake the main body soon. It is also expected that some will make their way through New Mexico up into the reservation. The Chiricahuas who made the raid through Arizona and New Mexico in May last, mainly members of Chato’s band, are nearly all in the party proceeding to the reservation. There is a tacit understanding that they will be allowed to go back on the reservation under certain restrictions without military or civil trial. Should this plan be carried out, the army officers believe that the Indian troubles in these Territories are ended, and that Mexico will no longer be sought as a hiding place. While in camp yesterday inspecting his expedition, General Crook said to your correspondent: “After the raid last spring I WRs that the Chiricahuas were planning another invasion, which would have been far more destructive to life and property than the first one. Chato’s people did not get much ammunition, and all the renegades in the mounters would probably save theirs and come up a second time. Now, Vbu can’t catch an Indian on a raid. He knows the country perfectly, where every ranch is located, and where supplies are to be secured. He comes without baggage or supplies of any kind. After riding horses day he steals fresh ones at night and is off again. I don’t care how good the troops in pursuit are, they can never catch him. The only way is to find the ludiau stronghold and to attack that. I was satisfied in this wav only the Chiricahuas could be Bubdued, and determined to follow them into the mountains before they could pour out again and swoop down on the Territory. The Mexicans had suffered more than we had from raids. I wept to Sonora and Chihuahua and consulted with the military authorities. They manage the Indian troubles in those States, and not the civil authorities. At Sonora they were willing for me to make the expedition. At Chihuahua I did not get as much satisfaction, but they did not put obstacles in my way. Then 1 came back and organized the expedition, not knowing with certainty that our troops would be allowed to cross the line. April 30, at San Bernardino, the telef;ram came from the War Department waning me not to violate the treaty, which I never intended to do.” . “Was there not great risk in entering Mexico B3 you did?” “Yes, very great. The march was a perilous one, and we had only one man with us who knew anything of the country. How much he knew he could not be sure, but the raids could be stopped in no other manner, and I was determined to stop them at all hazards. The country through which we marched was a fearful one, and our course was full of danger. Some days we could not possibly make a march of more than eight miles. There was plenty of water but no game of any kind, and we had to depend entirely on our rations for supplies. If the Indians had surprised us (don’t suppose many would have come back to tell the story, but we penetrated into their strongholds, where they boasted we never could get. When they found bur troops there the fight was practically won. The way to beat the Indians is to surprise them in their own camp. You get the ‘bulge' on (hem, and they stampede worse than Texas cattle. They know when they are whipped, and they want peace. Then it turned out as I supposed. The Indians were not all hostile. Many of them, like old Loco, had been almost under duress. Even the Indians find it hard living in these mountains. There is absolutely nothing for them to eat there except mescal plant, and they had to raid in Sonora and Chihuahua constantly for cattle, but they could get no ammunition fti these States, and were forced to cross the line to obtain it. A few years of this sort of life will make the bravest of them weary. and it was not remarkable to find when the chiefs came in to talk with me that the majority were anxious to get hack to the reservation. I told them to gather up their bands, come back and behave themselves.” “Your San Carlos scouts came up to your expectations, did they not?” "Yes, I never doubted them. They were a little nervous at first, but they got over that.” “Would the Mexican troops be able to handle the Indians if any remain in the country?” “1 don't believe they would. Somehow the Mexican troops never seem to get in close quarter with the Indians. I could not find that any had been killed in that fight, where it was claimed that eleven were killed. The Indians told me that they saw the Mexican soldiers coining for three dayy, looking down the.side of the mountains. Indeed, I think the Mexican plan of fighting Indians is a mistake. They kill the women and children, which only leaves the bucks free from impediments and in better shape to fight. Then the Mexicans have not always kept their word with the Indians, ami the latter won’t trust them, but the magnificent grazing lands along the s lope of tiie mountains are certainly worth fighting for.” “Did you expect to find the Chiricahuas as far north in the mountains as they were?” “No; I thought we should have to go further south.” “Is there any doubt that Geronimo and the other chiefirwill return from Mexico, since you allowed them to go back?” “Not the least; you must remember that some member of the family of nearly every buck that is now in the mountains is here, and I don’t think the chiefs will have much trouble in inducing them to come in. Old Geronimo is probably the most able and influential chief among them, and he said to me: ‘j give myself up to do what you please witn.’ They wanted me to give them something to show that they are friendly, but I told them that if they had such a passport and were attacked by any incensed settler they would hold me responsible for not protecting them. They saw the point, and agreed to make their way up alone. It will not he surprising if some of them make their way up through New Mexico as soon as the others got there. I think we shall get old /uh in the end, though he lias not been with
lie main body for months. It is also most certain that we will get little Charley McCoinas, alive and well.” “Do you tllink the removal of all the Indians on the San Carlos reservation, advocated by the territorial papers, practicable?” "No; there is no good land left in the territory, and the people of adjacent States would have something to say. If ever an attempt is made to remove the Apaches to Indian Territory there will be another Indian war, but I hardly think the people of Arizona are so anxious lor their removal. They ask of us occasionally to cut out a slice of the reservation for their benefit, but you take the gain and patronage which comes from the presence of the army in the Territories and from the large number of Indians, and the people who want them all away would feel it. There is not much else in the Territory.” “Are the Chiricahuas such Indians that they can be made better?” “Guess they are not hopelessly bad. They would be better if they had not been allowed to raid into Mexico ten years ago on condition they should not molest the people of the territory.” “What excuse do they offer for leaving the reservation the last time?” “They claim that they were not treated properly.” “What will be your policy in regard to them?” “Simply to send them to the reservation.” “But it is reported that the Interior Department will not allow them to be received.” “I don’t know how authentic the report is, but if the Interior Department refuses, then it will be responsible for whatever happens. For a century almost the Anaches have been Ishmaelites, with their hands against everyone and everyone’s hands against them. Now their last stand has been made, and the last warlike band wants peace. Peace would enable some of the troops now in Arizona to be removed. Witli matters in this condition, I don’t believe the department is ready to say the Chiricahuas shall not all go back to the reservation.” The Chiricahuas Not To Be Received ou the San Carlos Reservation. Washington, June 18 —The Secretary of the Interior received the following dispatch from Indian Agent Willcox: Ban Carlos agkncy, June 16. General Crook Telegraphs from Willcox that between 400 and 500 Indian prisoners, requiring to be fed, should he here in four or five days. The presence of the renegade bucks on tho reservation will dissatisfy tlie friendly Indians and excite fear and distrust among the white Battlers in Arizona and New Mexico, and, in my opinion, will result in adding to their past bloody history anew list tit murders, rapes, child-steal-ing and robbing. 1 earnestly protest agaiust so dangerous an experiment. In answer to the dispatch, Teller reiterated nis instruction? to the aent to rei'uoo lo ieOelVC tRf Indians mentioned in the dispatch, and stated that ho iiccd fear no attempt by the military authorities to place the Indians upon the reservation against bis will. YOUNG NUTT'S PROVOCATION. Dukes’s lusulting Behavior Toward the Son of His Victim. Uniontown Correspondence Philadelphia Press. James Nutt was walking up a street the morning of Duke’s death with Al. Miner, the court reporter of Fayette county. Dukes, seeing them coming, walked out, and in a very offensive - way called out to Miner: “Have you got all the testimony written out in the case against me?” He thus recalled to young Nutt the case to disbar him from practicing law. Nutt stood with his head bowed while Dukes thus insolently called up a feature of the legal proceedings that bore directly upon the murder of his father and the attempted degradation of his sister. This was the final insult, and the one which cost Dukes his life. The youth seemed in deep thought all the way home as he and Miner walked along. It was after these repeated insults, together with a growing belief that Dukes would still be permitted to disgrace the profession to which he belonged, and also to insult the general sentiment of the community by Ins presence, that the fatal resoive took possession of him. These important facts, demonstrating that the boy acted upon the impulse of an everpresent provocation, indicates clearly that the line of defense can with safety be bold and broad. Although his attorneys have not yet determined upon a line of defense, it is expected that they will rest upon the plea of provocation and not insanity. It can be showm that young Nutt is not as bright as the other members of Captain Nutt’s family, though he is by no means slow-witted. The defense have several cases as precedents for arguing simply the plea of provocation, none of which present as strong points as this. Dukes had several times said that he was afraid of no one except Jim Nutt, yet he armed himself, and in the past two weeks intruded upon Nutt in the most exasperating manner, which raises the strong presumption that he hoped to force the young man to violence that he might kill him. This is the most significant feature of the defense. The leading case that has been tried in this country tliat will be cited to sustain this position and form the basis of the defense of young Nutt is that of the trial of Harry Crawford Black for the murder of Colonel W. W. Me?. Kaig. It was a Maryland case and attracted wide attention at the time. Hon. Daniel Voorhees was one of the counsel for the defense, and some of the best lawyers in America was engaged on both sides, the At-torney-general of Maryland prosecuting. Crawford Black was then a boy hardly out of his teens and very slight of frame. McKaig w'as double his size and more than ten years his senior. Botii u'ere prominent in social circles of Cumberland. Md. McKaig was charged with the seduction of Black’s sister, and when the story w'as communicated to the young maiFhe went to Cumberland from the mines, where he was employed as a clerk, and shot McKaig dead oti the principal street of the city. Three pistols were found on the body of the dead man, and the defense proved the intimacy between McKaig and Black’s sister, and also McKaig’s attempt to provoke Black into a conflict. Nothing like the same aggravating circumstances were showm in the Maryland precedent as will be brought to light at the trial of James Nutt, yet the jury acquitted Black without hesitation, and the precedent made in that memorable trial will play an important part in the coming prosecution and 4he defense here. There was no plea of insanity in that case, and there need be none in this. Rvil Communications. Philadelphia Record. Evil communications corrupt good manners. Mr. Stephen W. Dorsey s intimate association witli Attorney Ingersoll has infected the style of his correspondence. In his letter to the new secretory of the Republican national committee, declining to turn over his interesting campaign memoranda, lie says: “The balance sheet of justice will some time be written by the hand of honor ” This will not scare anybody. It used to be the case that when Stephen wanted to say anything he said it; but Ingersoll has spoiled him. Mr. Tildeu's Talisman. Atlanta Constitution. The hopes of the Republicans that Mr. Tilden will have an early attack of rheumatism will probably be dissipated when they lenrn that he carries a raw Irish potato in his pantaloons pocket. A Great Truth. NowOrlpiinfl Picayune. JWWhtter liow hot the weather may be, if one thousand fools can be found to see the game, nine other fools can be found to play base ball. Wm. H Burks, druggist, ■ f Sullivan, says: “Brown's Irowu Bitters gives good satisfaction.”
TIIE INDIANAPOLIS JOURNAL, TUESDAY, JUNE 19, 1883.
BATTLEFIELDS OF THE AVAR Extract from General Sheridan’s “East Hays of the lie be 11 ion.” The T*art ITe Took In the Closing: Scene—The Count of Paris Tells of the Fight at Little Round-Top. North American Review for July. General Sheridan begins by saying that he feels it is his duty to do this, as public attention has been occasionally called to some of the events. After showing how he headed Lee off after the break at Petersburg, burned trains, captured artillery and obtained the rations sent from Danville, he gives this picture of the final scene: “In the meantime, General Lee came over to McLean's house in the village of Appomattox Court-house. I ::m not certain whether General Babcock, of General Grant’s staff, who had arrived in advance of the General, had gone oer to see him or not. We had waited some hours, and, I think, about 12 or 1 o’clock General Grant arrived. General Ord, myself and many officers were in the main road leading through the town, at a point where Lee’s army was visible. General Grant rode up, and greeted me with, ‘Sheridan, how are you?’ I replied: ‘I am very well, thank you.’ He then said: ‘Where is Lee?’ I replied: ‘There is his army down in the valley; he is over in that house (pointing out McLean's), waiting to surrender to you.’ General Grant, still without dismounting, said: ‘Come, let us go over.’ He then made the same request to General Ord. and we all went to McLean’s house. Those who entered with General Grant were, as nearly as I can recollect, Ord, Rawlins, Seth Williams, Ingalls, Babcock, Parker and myself; the staff officers, or those who accompanied, remaining outside on the porch steps and in the yard. On entering the parlor we found General Lee standing in company with Colonel Marshal, his aide-de-camp. The first greeting was to General Seth Williams, who had been Lee’s adjutant when he was superintendent of the Military Academy. General Lee was then presented to General Grant, and all present were introduced. General Lee was dressed in anew gray uniform, evidently put on for the occasion, and wore a handsome sword. He had on his face the expression of relief from a heavy burden. General Grant’s uniform was soiled with mud and service, and ho wore no sword. After a few - • anokeu bv -- me officers retired, except, perhaps, one staff officer of General Grant’s and the one who was with General Lee. We had not been absent from the room longer than about minutes when General Babcoolc came to the door and said: ‘The surrender has taken place—you can come in again.’ “When we re-entered General Grant was writing on a little wooden, elliptical-shaped table (purchased by me from Mr. McLean and presented to Mrs. G. A. Custer) the conditions of the surrender. General Lee was sitting, his hands resting on the hilt of his sword to the left of General Grant, with his back to a small marble-topped table, on which many books were piled. While General Grant was writing, friendly conversation was engaged in by General Lee and his aid with the officers present, and he took from his breast pocket two dispatches, which had been sent to him by me during the forenoon, notifying him that some of his cavalry, in front of Crook, were violating the agreement entered into by withdrawing. I had not had time to make copies when they were sent.and had made a request to have them returned. He (landed them to me with the remark, ‘I am sorry. Tt is possible that my cavalry at that point of the line did not fully understand the agreement.’ “About one hour was occupied in drawing up and signing the terms, when General Lee retired from the house with a cordial shake of the hand with General Grant, mounted his chunky, gray horse, and lifting liis hat, passed through the gate and rode over the crest of the hill to his army. On his arrival there we heard wild cheering, which seemed to be taken up progressively by his troops, either for him or because of satisfaction with his last official act a3 a soldier.” Sceues from the Field of Gettysburg—The Struggle at Little Round-Top. The American Civil War, by the Count of Paris. “At a quarter before four Warren, obeying Meade’s instructions, reached Little Roundtop in order to make a reconnoissance. The signal officers on the summit having informed him that they believed they saw the enemy’s lines concealed in the woods between Plum Run and the Eminettsburgroad, Warren ordered Smith’s battery to fire a gun in that direction. The moment that the projectile whistled over the trees the Confederetes instinctively raised their heads. This movement was simultaneously communicated to the shining weapons they grasped in their hands. Warren saw the glancing of the rifie barrels reflected like a long shining serpent in the distant foliage. This was a revelation which prevented a surprise. Warren at once appreciated the full extent of the danger. Galloping to the nearest troops, Warren directed Barnes’s brigade of the fifth corps and Hazlett's battery toward the Little Round-top Hill. The Confederates, seeing their advantage, commenced to attack, and this position, the key of the battlefield, easy to defend and impossible to recapture, and the importance of which Warren alone seemed to appreciate (dont Warren semole avoir seul alors coinpris la valeur). seemed about to fall into the enemy’s hands without a blow being struck to defend it. The young general of engineers made use of a ruse to gain time. lie ordered the signal officers, who were preparing to quit a spot not provided with defenders, to wave their flags, in the hope that the enemy might be deceived, and thus delay their attack until Barnes’s brigade could arrive on the Hill. The first regiment that Warren met was the 140th New York, commanded by O’Rorke. This regiment, together with the Sixteenth Michigan, Fortyfourth New York, Eighty-third Pennsylvania and Twentieth Maine, arrived just in time to repel McLaw’s furious onslaught upon the hill. Jamais peut-etre on ne vit le vainquerd’urne course de vitesse gagner de si peu un pared prix. The key to tlie battofield of Gettysburg wa9 saved. * * * Meade sent all his available troops to the left, and soon was able to outnumber at this vital point his opponents.” The defeat of Birnev’s division—which lost 2,000 out of 5,000 men—is described with dramatic distinctness. Hill’s attack on the center, superintended by himself, is set forth graphically, and each stage is given in logical sequence. The attack of Ewell on Culp’s Hill is described in a carefully detailed manner, and the precise time of each movement and event is given from original documents and notes of the general and staff ollicers engaged in executing the several movements. The operations of Longstreet and Johnston are narrated with similar exactitude. To return to Little Round top. The Comte de Paris writes: “Bigelow’s battery, not having a single foot soldier left to support it, posts itself in front of Trostle’s house and belches forth showers of metal upon the Confederates, who advance upon it from every side. Their gallant commander falls wounded. One after another the gunners fall by thesideof their guns. Their pieces are sacrificed, but they have succeeded in delaying the enemy’s attack upon the left. All these examples of heroic courage and devotion would, nevertheless, not have saved the Federals from defeat had not the Little Round-top—the veritable point
d’appui of their entire left—remained in their possession. Ayres, bringing up the two regular brigades of Day and Burbank, crossed Plum run and occupied, on its right bank, one of the last slopes of Devil’s Den with a portion of the troops of Ward that had not been dislodged. The retreat of Barnes and Caldwell exposed his right flank, and thus left him isolated in front of all the rest of the line; but, although attacked on three sides by the troops of Hood and McLaws, he opened a way for himself through their crossfires. These regulars once more proudly justified their former reputation. Not a man left the ranks, and they were decimated without showing a sign of flinching. Only 1,100 combatants out of 2.000 were left standing when, withdrawing step by step, they finally took up their position on the right of Weed, to the east of Plum run, upon the northern buttress of the Little Round top.” The last desperate efforts of McLnws’s and Anderson’s brigades are narrated with thrilling reality. The full description of the battle is succeeded by about fifty pages of criticism of the several generals on both sides. “Without pretending,” writes the author, “that the Confederates should have gained the battle, we have pointed out the errors that rendered their check inevitable.” Among the chief causes of the defeat of the Confederates were the “absence of Stuart,” “Lee’s faulty disposition of his other brigades of cavalry,” **the excess of confidence which Lee’s lieutenant’s shared with their chief,” and the "extended and concave formation of battle, which rendered extremely slow the communications from one end of the line to the other.” Meade is blamed for not having attempted anything to prevent Lee’s retreat. Bair and Maud S. Spirit of the Times. Onr representative found W. W. Bair at Mr. Vanderbilt’s stable, on Wednesday last, shortly after lus arrival from Hartford with the horses, and, among other questions about Maud, he asked the following: “Did Mr. Vanderbilt direct any one to supervise the trials during his absence?” “Not that I am aware of; but in every business you will find busybodies who have more to say about a gentleman’s affairs than he has himself. For instance, when I drove Maud in *2:16, Mr. William Turnbull and Dan Mace, of New York, happened to be present. I went out to give Maud such a mile as I thought would benefit her at that time. Judge of mv surprise when Mr. Porter, of Hartford, told me that Mr. Turnbull said lie would not have ome to see that kind of a mile. T replied I was not working Maud fq* MiS Turnbull’s amusement, and *7* ne saw the fastest mile ever trotyl * in the month of May.” "How tio you think she can trot with running mate?” A Tl!? iu 2:00 Tbuld be a fair average for her. a now, in taking my leave of the greatest trotter on earth, I have just this much to say for her, and I haven’t any money to risk foolishly: I will bet SI,OOO to SSOO that either Mace, Murphy or Weeks can ride her in 2:05 in thirty days; and, if I controlled her, I would put up SI,OOO even on each of the following statements: That she can beat the fastest record to wagon; that she can go to the pole—and I’ll furnish the trotting mate—better than 2:lG}4, and that she can beat in harness.” Ladies* band-seweu Kid Butiuu Shoes, verjsoft and flexible. Just received, a 1 ree stock, at No. 21 North Pennsylvania, A. C. Frikdoen. Come let the Joyous tidings roll From east to west, from pole to pole, That woman’s teeth, and lips, and breath. 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Cos. will leave Chicago for Duluth and intermediate ports of LAKE SUPERIOR each Tuesday and Friday evenings, at 8 o’clock. Cool atmosphere. Unsurpassed climate. Magnificent scenery. Beud for Tourists’ Guide, giving full information. L. M. and L. S. T. CO., No. 74 Market St., Chicago. AMUSEMENTS. ZOO THEATER I_A_ND* GARDENS. C. T. GILMORE Mauager LOOK AT THIS BILL. The Choice of the Profession. NEW FACES! NEW PEOPLE! NEW BUSINESS! DOUBLE ORCHESTRA. Remember, the Gardens are free to all. The only place of amusement now open iu the city. Patronized by all. Popular prices. Night—lsc, 25c, 35c, 750. Matinee—loc, 15c, 25c, 75c. Matinees on Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday. ENGLISH'S OPERA-HOUSE. LECTURE. REV. J. A. SCAMAHORN. ESCAPE FROM LIBBY PRISON. Wednesday Evening, June 20. FOR THE BENEFIT OF GRACE M. E. CHURCH. Mr. Sc.omaliorn was a prisoner with General Streight and others, and will give a graphic account or his prison uud army life. POPULAR PRICES. Adults ‘25 cents Children 15 cents Tickets for sale at. W. 11. Craft’s Jewelry store, Albert Volin’s book store, Henry Smith, First i National Bank, and J. W. Wen, No. 2 Wright’s 1 Block.
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S3O SIDEBOARD. iff . Ii m'* to \ 1 i < ** luiLr We offer the largest and best Sideboard sot S3O ever shown In this market. It has a largo beveled glass, marble top, is well finished, and an entirely new pattern. This Is a bargain, and If you want a Sideboard, it will pay you to cafi before you purchase. KIISTGr & ELDER, 43 and 43 S. Meridian St.
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