Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 16, Number 41, Jasper, Dubois County, 20 November 1874 — Page 2
WEEKLYJpOURIEE C. DOAXZ, Publitlitr.
JASrER,
INDIANA
C UK KENT NKWS. WANHlMiTOX. According to a recent vVashlnfrton dispatch to the Associated Pre, the atatetuent that the "President's view on the flnauclal oiuestion have been modified since lat tyring U denied on the blithest authority. Not nly hu the President not changed hi opinion, but he baa freely and repeatedly expressed to all persona who have aeen projxr to approa- h him on the subject the aame view contained in hla veto mesne. It I equally certain that the Secretary of the Treasury hu not expressed any view antagonistic to the opinion of the President, and bU friend con
fidently assert that hi forthcoming report
will urge strongly upon tonfrresa 10 return to specie at the earliest practicable period. CANT. The closing price of gold in New York, on Nov. 11. waa 110 1-4.
Following 1 the comparative cotton state
ment for the week ending Nov. 6 :
t weipts lor past week 11 C. S. intrU Total receipt trotu St. 1 to tlMr all V. . port. . Kiporu (or tat Wrrk from nil pru Total eaporia Imm St. 1 to lit from iUlis.ru.. fltock now on ha4 at all L'. S. iru 8Ucknvron biunl at all idu riur town Siiok mi U el fowl Mock ol Arwru-aa afloat for Or 11 liriuin
There were I'M', case of diphtheria in New York City the last two week of October. Scirati tic invc-tiiation 11 kely to be made Into the cause of the prevalence, with a view to aweepin? measure to prevent It. Charlotte C'ushman made her last appearance upon the stage, at Booth' Theater, in x .. ... Vnri .n tK Tth Tho ry'imi wm
one of (treat interest, the audience comprising; f"'. and blood stains formed I truil s el. a rupnnnit
aome of the most di..tirifruished people in the , - '
lsT4. Is7&. J4J.701 133,M 796,367 Cll ,97'J 65,?75 66,779 270,l? su.sjg V,i,93i J .-U 14I.0OO !l.o.O
distribution mad by the aocicty will be free and unconditional." The p-Wt committee, appointed by the Hou of Representatives at it lat session, to investigate the Government affair In Arkansas, are to resume the investigation at Little Kockonthellth. Th following communication, which uf ficlently explalna itself, wa telegraphed to President Grant from New Orlean on the tsth: T kti T.xttlltncf V. S. Grant, Prtndrnt of Iht I'mltd Sunt. MVuaiajoa, l. C.f The Committee of Seventy have the honor to inform vour fcxeelleucv Uiat, on the 5J day of tins mooUi.'at a K,-uenU flection held in tiii et.ile, umlcr Uie auspices of the acting tiovernor, A in. I'. Kellogg, tlie I'onservaUve art- wa entirely vuccctsfui. ami will have in tho licit l-eRislalure a clear majority on Joint ballot. It U a well ascertwuiiesl fact that Uiousaail of our colored fellow riti.eii voted the Ouecrvnlive ticket. We ad-Ire vou now, to make a solemn but rwspecl'iil rwlcsl agtinst Ui further occupation of Uief-Ul bv military forces, and to roest their withdrawal. W iih tlie return of our people to twer we ran assure you that the rivil law will become supreme: that lU creil obligation will be recoitnize.1 Uth by Uie ruler and the rultxt, aud that there will be ample protection KuaraiiUtM to lift) aod Ulwrtjr wilhiu ur bonier. At present, and for some week past, tlie SUtebouse h.t been garrioel by I'liiled Mute soldier, and our city ha presented more tlie appearance of a military post than a great comtner rial metropoli, while tlie airricultural interest of Uie siute have been irreatly hindered by tlie operation of a part of the army in Uie couctry variolic. The Returning Hoard 1 to nu-et on the 11th of this month for the purpose of cauvassinir and compiling tlie election returns, and will be assemblxl in tlie Stale-houe. VV c-annot but consider It extremely improper Uiat tlie import-int cud work wurj which that Hoard n clinrgeil sliould le exwutol in the i:tidt of Uie bayonet of Uie Federal liovemnent. Ixlrr armn, mrit t-Q't. At Uie commencement ot the new era which seem dawuinit upon our ieople. we w ish to assure "U, and Uie iple of Uie I niU-l Male, ol our'ilevoUon to the principle of the I'onsiitutiou, and of our U'ad(:i.-t iurM to uphold the cause of public lilx rty and fcissl government. igneil ly ftie Committee. The dead and jartia!Iy conumed body of a
tuncer, named Herman schilling, wa uwcovered in the boiler furnace of the tannery in which he had been employed, in Cincinnati, on the morning of the Mh. Three men, named Andrew Kgner, Fred Kgner, hi on, and George Kufer, a discharged employee of the tannery, were arrested upon atispicion of having committed the horrible crime. In the stable adjoining the taDtiery were sign of a desperate encounter. A bloody pitchfork lay
.... . i i
city. William Cullcn isryant maoe an nudreand U. II. Stoddard recited a poem, after collusion of the pcrfjrmni-e. The civil cult brought by Theo,lore Tilton again-t He v. Henry Ward Iteecher came up on the 0th before Jude ncynold in the City Court of Hrooklyn. The plaintiff w:t present and at lie side h! counM.1. Mr. Iteecher wa absent, but waa represented by coun-el. When the cane was called, Mr. MorrU answered ready" for the plaintiff, but Mr. Shearman, for the defendant, objected to the trial being commenced before an apieal had h-cn beard on an order Issued by Judge Neilson, and askfd for delay, that person nei trv in the cve might b present.
Judge Ueynolds UxtM the time for hearing ar-
The
Mr, Jaine I'.utcher, a bride of four d v,
wan found d:id in the yard Hljoiniag h r re-i-denee at Wapakonetta. tlilo, on the evening of the 7th. A shot-gun w ithin reach whs found, with w hich it is supposed she shot herself. The top of her heal wa blown away and her brains scattered on the ground. At the in-most the fact wa develo.ed that tho shooting wa done In a moment of mental alterration. A number f busings men of Memphis wore rrotd on the tl:h, by a I'liited .State Marhal, on warrant charging them with i I ttion of tlie K'riforccment act, in iHfharging colored men from their employment for refusing to vote the democratic ticket last Aiii:ut. They appeared before the I'ni'ed Mate Commissioner and pave bond in the
The reply of FrancU I. Moulton to the complaint of V. Ina IVan Proctor, la her fuit for libel, wa tiled on the 9lh. Moulton ad-
mita that he knew tho lady mentioued In j
.. . ...A.l nn t l..i 11:h
kuiik-iii. u ... -n-- " -" I ...In , UH1 M,.h f,, thHip v, ,h
trial ofthc casewa set down for the lstn. i . ' , t. "
ii' k i ui vi iur uani cuiu s vire iiii Court. licneral Tope telegraphed to General Sherman on the 7th, that I5ig Horse, a Cheyenne chief. With tninlr rrl,,r f,irrl.,l,(
connection with the scanl to be the plain, j Womn twentv-nine chiidren and over two t:rr.andfelthime:fc.'n-edbyacoml.inHti..n;hljn,).j hort Ynl fcUrrPn,!er0,j Uncondiof circumstances to make a statement which j tionMv to ( ol)nH N, m ttl ChPVenne Indian Is deemed hbrlou. Afer IWcher ''- Agency, on Novemb-r4. The warrior w ere mony. it be. am a matter f elf-,Ieferie for.,,, jn cfinhneinent. him (Moulton) to nake public his version ofj At M.lw.ukee, on the !Uh. a woman nsmed the nutter. I St iermm killed her son. a Ikv thirteen vear. At Centre .I.age, t onn , on the ,th. a In.y i oM ,iy 1rtllk,njr hu ku twelve j.rs of age shot hi little two-year t,Dimitt,d mMih ly j(lm , , old brother dead on the pot and wound-d t.UT-rn. Sh ha,l l-en in bad health for a hlsaMerM. M-verely that he wa not ,onjr time, and the act wa committed during
Iecieu l' live. iw Uffi was it-cin-iii ni i ,
done w .th an old gun which wa left loaded In a N-d-room.
At a recent meeting of the National Association of Wool Manufacturers, held In Now York City, It w a agreed by a number of the conTtafiivi a ,4)P 'out one-fourth of their machinery for three1 month, on account of the present over-production goods and the couejucnt decline in prices. wf.HT AI MU TII.
A passenger train, consisting
Of six
coa. be and a sleepingi ar, was thrown from the trv k or the Grand Rapid and Indianai. oll IUllroad. fifteen miles south of (irand ltt,i,' on the morniair of tlie Sth while
running at a high rate of speed
; an atta k of insanity, induced by the fear that
sh would die and be separated from her child. The business portion of the town of Wittburg. Ark., was nearly destroyed by fire n the night of the 7th. Lo about i"i.fm. A Cincinnati dispatch of the 10:h ssy that young Kpner has made a full confession, implicating himself, his father, and George nufer In the murder of Herman Schilling. II ay George Kufer proposed the murder on Saturday right in hi fatbor'a bar-room, and the throe hid in the tan-yard, waiting half an hour Wore Schilling came in. lie lit lamp and went into the stable to groom tho borse. Tbov followed him, and George Kufer struck
Ivl him several times with a stick, knocking him
down twice. Then hi father took a fiveprongeil fork and stabbed Schilling two or throe time in the bowels with it, and aNo in the log. This killed him. Kufer dragged the boIy into the yard, and at first projiosed to
tionsof th-! gras.hopir rut U m tbe v' l,,,t "rwanl said they
ni'i imiut put u iu i:.'! lurnaee, so ne
Thi wa doi, anl
of Illinois, wa so bally injured that he diod , almost Immediately, and over twenty other were more or le. hurt, two, at least, fatally. An armv ofiicer, who wa recently sent
from Fort Mcpherson, Nebraska, by (Jen
rd. to vMt all sec
.ltri. i. rn.orts that he find no cae of ac
tual starvation, but much suffering, some fflr,,ul,J
not be fouud.
coufession reduced to
A II s f
wlil-l, ha trn parti ill v relieved from vari-1 "ir " , nomn- .... an..rre.. isoiief must W eiven or hun- f "roncr Mab y,
.lrcN will starve before winter I half over, writing, and slgn.d in presence of witnesses. Within ton d.iv.. he savs. many w (H be 1 It was Oiown in tbe cv idence l-rore the Corwithout a pound of corn or nur. The the rider r frcjueutly present aid ll.rv are r. living is but a drop threatened to kill Schilling, whom he charg.nl in the bu Vet. " Cn'.e-s th- Government aid t,l' -.luciinof !.Udaugh'er. Thi pthem their alternative U fearful to cottcm- l to have been the only cause for the jjj, murder. s Schilling wns show n in other rol.ie'utsnnnt Hodgson, V. S. A., and I". s. ' !-, t have Ict an Ioilh cut and inoff.T-Mar-hal s.'.ve were arrested at Monn-. l..t - "n. According to a late dispatih. on thf.ih. u;on warrant Issued bv DistrU , l-'-r In aKo confessed, but allege, that he J idg Trimble, fir contempt f co,"lrt. In ro. -nink. and thit the murder w a .lone by fusing to o1ev a writ of lia'ooa i-oridi is-uod , fliers, ho being only a looker on.
by Judge Trimble in the ca-eof some prison- Tbe Arkau-u General Acmb1y convened
rr arrested bv them in Clailiorne Parish the 1 under tlie row Consti'ution. on the loth
week previous. The arrested parties are also l'.radloj P.ram h was cho.cn President or the hargod with ( uH.ng the telegraph wires pre- ! Senate, and A. A. Pennington Sjakcr or the
direction. This Information waa given to General Neill by liig Horse." run Kit-. A recent London duipatch say that the chief authorities of the Church have decided to hold a great International Catholic Congress In London, with the object of maintaining tho doctrine of Pupal Infallibility, reasserting, the Pope's right to temporal a well a spiritual ower, and proclaiming the boiinden duty of Christians to return to their allegiance to Rome. It is stated thi determination i the result of direct Instructions from tho Vatican, aad some of the highest dignitaries of the Church will attend the Congress. Archbishop Manning. In a speech at Westminister, admitted the spiritual influence of the4Pou had greatly increased since the lo of his temporalities. "If arbitration wa ever to supersede war," he added, "the Pojie would be the only authorized arbitrator. Tbe Catholic world w as threateoesi with a controversy on all decrees of the Kcumenk-al Council. There waa undoubtedly approaching one ef the mightiest contests the religious world had ever seen ; therefore. It waa necessary to fearlessly a-crt, through the free press of England, the Pope's right, andjbis pretensions to world-wide allegiance. A dispatch from Shanghai, Nov. 8, says that tho difficulty between China and Japan has been amicably arranged. China agrees to pay an Indemnity of &)O,OO0 taels, in consideration of which tbe Japanese troops are to be withdrawn from Formosa. Ln ltre$t, the a mi-oflicial organ of the French Government, says the forthcoming message of President MacMahon will demonstrate to the Assembly the necessity of organizing the Scf tenate and then dissolving, and will announce that the Government disapprovefth tardine of th Cmm!te of Thirty, and will submit a constitutional scheme of its own. I-ord Mayor' I ay (Nov. 9) wa celebrated in Ixndon, a Usual, by a grand procession and other festivities. It wa also tbe Prince of Wales' birthday, which added considerably ta the Intere-t of the evasion. The banquet at (iuil l 1K11 wa a grand affair. At night tlie city wa illuminated. In the pressure of crowd's to witness tbe Ird Mayor's procession, two person were killed and several injured. The marriage of tho rrinee lmerial to a daughter of the Kussian Grand I niches
Mi ie is iiM-iitiobfd ia Donaparlist circles a a probable event.
Tbe first attempt of the Prussian Govern
ment to have priest elected by congregations ha taken place at I.sndlorg, and resulted in an utter failure. Only eleven jrsons offered to vote.
The small-pox Is prevailing ln Montreal
to an alarming extent. All the hospitals are o crcruwded, and special accommodation arc nrceary to provide for the great number of patient.
The stesmerKing Leopold, of Newcastle, England, recently foundered at sea, and tw en
ty irsniis were drowned.
The authorities of Seville, Spain, Lave of
fered a reward or iO.osl f r the recovery of
Murillo' great tainting of St. Anthony, re
cently stolon from the Cathedral in that city.
n( Summary of ( lection Hot urns. Tlio following table, frim tho Chicago I'tirr-Vcnn nf tin iKh, show the result of
the recent elc ti dis. In a few of tho Con-gie-sional .i-trict.. where the vote i v ry
cloe, tlie !licial returns may show a dif
ferent n-ult:
COM.KKSsMEX ELKO KO. The f!l"W itiir tnl.le idiow s the rum plea ion of the
pre-u nt ll'.li-c of ftepreseiitiiliven, and tlieclialie brought abowt by Uie elections:
.HTV TU1K1 I'ultTV-rol KTII oNOKI-sst. ONOKI.SS.
v iou to rlrction, aud it was stated that an attempt would be made to indict them on that harg'. A re ent t rmaha di-j'.ati b says : In view of the fid that some new-papers In the Fast
have sUtcd that the Kelief ami Ahl SK'lety or ' onei
Nebraskaure binning and sjxvulating on tho fharilable donation received for grasshopjcr sufTcrsr. General Ord, Chairman of the F.aecir.ive Coininittee, ha In-en ordered to tunke the following statement: No siipili-s reei-ivf d by the Nebraska K'-licf and Al l Se'ety from Chicago or other Kastcrn cities or townslme n distributed on promise to psy f.r or return them. No funds received frsm such sourec have been Used to purchase supplU rr distribution on conditions. All
House.
General Sheridan telegraphed to Gene
ral Sherman, on the 11th, a follow : '-General Pope furni-be the following Infor
mation: General Nei.l report that he ha
hundrel and twenty-eight prisoner
all C'hevenne warrior, and that thirty.
five more nre on the way under
Stone Calf. Fifteen are reported killed by the 'roop, leaving two hundred and twenty Cbernne warriors yet to be account! d for and still In the ll!d away from their reerv atlon, the most of whom, under (iray IWrd. are on the L'pper Canadian Kiver, delibera'lng wbetlur to come Into iheir airency or go north. I have duectcd (o noral Alexander to ouh forward In that
Alati.'ima . .
Ark ii.i
( .ihl.-rni.t ( iiems'tn ut
f M:tw are r lori-la.
erriu
Illllloin Itiduina Iowa k.-ins.'i Keiitnekr I.ouisiuua VI .1 1 ! MnrLinl MasnaeliUM-tt .. Michigan linnes.u MisMssippi Mioiai Nebraska Ne"la New ll.iinpsbire New .lerey ... New ork. . . North Carolina..
hio i in-iron . . ....
I'i iinsyivania ... IIIi. le I -l.in-1 s-.iitM ( nr-ilina. . 1 ctiiicssee Tex.t erniont Vinrinia. N t V ir.'ini.t... W ix'oii-in
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Ih in-wr ilie maj-irity in Uie II-nisc..
Hi pul lM Hi ioa) r.ly in the senate. . , .o Khi:s rLKt ir:r.
o4
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4 is I I 17 I i
171
Alab.vra ...... !, l;iw:ire kins.Ts . M:l-s:i lllls-tts . Muhicui M,-.-iin New .lersiv . . . New Y..iV sujili .in-liiia 1 ciiiicsmV . .. Nevu-la
. - i. si. Huii-ton rlvtn. ) . . I. J . ( s hr.tne ( I lelll . ) . . Tlmiti:is A . i-lH-nie ( d p. ) . U l!ii;im .;-ton' In-iii. ) ,. .loli n .1. IU le ; lit p. ) li.irl-'s II. li .r lin Ix-ii.) ..l--s.i l. I Us He ( I ! . i , .s:iiinie J. 'I il-len ' I l in.) I . II . ll.llnls 1 l.llll f Keli. ) . ..I.tmes i. I'orter. .Ir. (I'cin.
I.. It. Itra-llev (I Vin.)
"rlK I.HIbLAtt KF. Tlio i;publie.ui have injriti oti joint ballot in tbe t'-dlowin? Stiite f'"i-la-turc ju-t lio n : Michigan. VViM-onsit). Minnesota. Kansas, Nevada. South enroling, Mori-la, Louisiana (.doubtful), and M.is-actiiisett. The leiicDtfj- have m:ij )ritios on joint bi.Iiot in til - following State Legislatures just i liosen : Alabama, I Delaware. Pennsvlvania, lennes-e', Illinois, Missouri, Sew .Icrsev, and New York. . -. -'How a woman cat resemble a symphony" I the subject of a recent Lew spa nt article. It would scorn lunnv ifslio couldn't. When a woman really set about It, she call reM-rnble almost anything from a cntatnouiit up to an anjej in petticoals. .V. J. Commrrtinl Adctrti'r.
The Women of Schorndorf. In tho southwestern jmrtlon of Germany ia tbe villacjo of Schorndorf. Although now little more than a mere iustal station. It waa formerly one of tho strongest lortitledtow us of "Northern Swabia, and the pride of the tn-autiful vallev of the Kcms. After the treaty of Westphalia, w hen tle bishopries of Metz. Tul. and Vrrdtin, were ,fd-l to France, the. Idea entered Into the French mind to search enre-
.. .
fully through the public records for tlre-lj, to be M.ltl)rri, over, Invofviiig the n"".l.
The inkeof Abcrcorn lias been elected Grand M.ist r of tho Freemason of Ireland.
Army Affair. J OkNKIUL HIII-.ltMA.N'H ANNt'AL KM-Oltr. WAsiiiiMiTtiN, 1. C, November t.ieneral siierman'a annual rejiort to the Secretary of War show the total Dumber of enlisted men in tbe army on October 15th to have I n 20.441. It estimate that this number will be probably reduced, through natural cause by the first of .Unuarv, lHT-'i, to STt.oun, the number allowed bv law. It denrecate o.-
lnadefjuacy of mo small an army for the U.
uiajui oi o large
nar.t of all towns and cities which dur-
ln;r any fonner terlI had Ixen the property ol either of the throe Ilishoprio, und to deinanii thern from (Germany aa a srtion of the rightful spoil. Although tliia preposterous demand faibnl to be pnsentod in Its original shape, it ls;l to a nerica ol aggros-sion which linallv culiuinatl in that devastation of Ui I'aU In ltWS and ltVsfO hy the French armies under tlictlimv tion or Montcla and Melap. . , Mannheim, Kastaat, lUden, Ileidelh rp, and many other places, were already iu ruins, anu the French forcea were rapidly advanclnj: toward the liouudarlea of Swabia, their thlrst for robbery aid destruction increa-siri"; with every step. The Government of W urtoiiiburjr, In the hope of Mvin Stuttgart, dellvereT all the towns of Northern hwnbla Into theentv inv'a hands, and the only fortitiailion which had not Is-en destniyctl y the French troops was that of Schorndorf, to which the people liKkl as to a lant Iiojh. The French commander sat confidently In hi camp at F.s-linsren, laying; plan for hi winter quarter In Wurtembur;. The lloyal I'ommlssioners had already left Stuttptrt to jrive order to Schorndort to fllti: open it ratea to the invading host, and the French gave little hisjil to this last stronghold of the Wurtcmburg; (iovernment, so sure were they of it sps-edy furPMider. Hut exactly at thi jKiiut was the
rnvadinr army to meet Its etieok ; lor w itnIn the wall of N'horndorf was a detcrminel man. and w hat was still more imjMirtant, a determined woman ! 'Ihe man was the commander of the fortification., I'eter Kruinniha.4r. Although be b;vl receive, 1 the Koyal command to make a slight llovv of resistance and then surrender the city, lie refused to olx-y. At length asjxTi il niesM-riirer apiH-an-d from Stuttgart, statin"; that the French commander had given onlers to burn the lloyal residence und take immediate Iosesisiori of tbe ciry, u nless S horndorf complied w ith the demand made upon it. Hut, m spite of all demand and ordeis, Kriiiniiih.i.tr rcil-allo-1 IW'UI. lie b.el streliglheliil his loriT bv draw lii in laroe number of patriotic villager from the surrounding; country, and was determined to holdout until the ItuH-rial army arrivil. Hut treachery and cowardice were so rampant in the higbest pla-es. that Kruiiiiulmar fouml his strength irrowlnjr less an- c. At lensrth ho summoned n uicctin"; in the Town Hall of all the official und leading: nun. to consult upon the ssibUity of a continmti tlefeiise.
t rau Minkciin. tne w ue or mo .Mayor or i the city, w:is a tall woman of about fst
years, w hose word was law with all tbe w omen in S horndorf. Of a linn, upright charecter. she b id made herself universally beloved and resjxTted. Iler patriotism wa of that kind which allow nothing: to stand in It path, but sacrifices every thinjr to tbe beloved country. She su Mi t-l that the voice of the City Father would be for surrender, and, secretly fll;wiriz them to the council hall, she hid herself to li-ten. As she had ..-rod, the patriotic dcfenuiiiiitiori of I'eter K -u in mhaar w a overruhsl, and the city douieI to fall like It sisters. Frau Kunkelin rulied wildlv from the hall. Sending; inesM-ngcr through the town, she summoned all the wamen to assemble la-fore ber. armed whh whatever they couhl lay band on. " We have riot laid" up riche. for those rascally Frenchmen tu live and grow fat on," said she. "and Stuttgart will M-e that Schorndorf will dot Is' bumbled in the dut, like Tubinp n and Asln-rjf." An army of women wasoon as.emhled. Armetl with every cotusi-ivable weajxin, lrin a broom tii k to a sword, they presented a vcrv Ptrainre ap arancc. Then, with Frau Kunkelin at their bond, they niarchetl to the Town-Hal!, and broke in iiKtt the solemn conclave ol their husband. Frau Kunkelin. advancing toward the astoi.Ulusl City Fathers, made them a shsj- h, in which she railed tioii them to prot-et their bonus, closinjr with these word, addressed to her hustand him-s lf : ' 1 will kill you with mv own hand if you act the part of a traitor." After announcing their Intentions, tho women tiriHisnb-d to take possession or tbe Town-Hall. and. nrjranilng themselves Into companies. Veld strict guard over the gates of tbe city. For twodays and three iiigbt the tow n roma-ned in the hand of the women, the City Father, "on pain of death," lx ingcotns ll d toohcy their command. Meanwhile, I'eter Krumiiihaar wa asi-tiiig the women in every way. F.vcry moment wa a step toward salvation. "for the I tiifM-ri.il army wa rapidly approaching. 'I lie moral cfh-ot, too, of this patriotic uprising; of the women was immense, and (lie whole country, which liad Iieon cowed dow n with abject terror, rose with one accord to save the Fatherland. The heroine of S horndorf. Frau Kunk( lin, livi-d many years after the uprising of the women took pla-e, and. it i said, relat.-d the history to a ginslly ihhiiIm r of grandchildren und great-grandchildren. Ahlint. -s- . A New French Kin. M French guninaker ha inventnl arille so arranged that the bre-ch I oon-d by (-is king the pieee.aud thechirge Is ing intnsp'ced the br-e li i closed and tbe gHl) fln-l by touching the trigger. Tl ic cartridge consist. of a hollow leaden t one filled with powder an 1 1 closed at the bae by means of a pui-o of cork. At the moment the cartridge l.t IntriMlucisl Into the liridge the owdcr scaK-s by a small hole In tho cork, and an Imperceptible b ill of fulminating Hwdor, which frms tho priming, takes Its proper osition. The triple aeiion of cocking, loading, and firing, I thus aflWtinl simultaneously, so that a man w it la very little exHrience can tiro twenty round a minute. Tbe cartridge are stored in an Iron tulie, which 1 placed parallel with the barrel and contain thirty bullet, so that tbe piece may lie fired lis many times almost without any niterval, and without removing the tick from the shoulder, a there Is nothing to lie done but to cock and pull the trigger.
sity of withdrawing trooparoiu one i'eun.
ment to meet the, requirement of nie other a long distance away. It compliments highly the efficiency nf liberal Mhcridaaand bu subordiuale otticer in maintaining comparative peace ln the ImUn rsuntry. It aavn reports of the commiunlinir -tjfll--ej- demonstrate that, the small army of tbe rolled States, called a peace cstabiiMiincBt. la toe hardest worl.d body ir men in Ibis or anv other country. The discipline and behavior or officers and men have been worthy or all praise, and whether i-mpov.-. on the extreme and distant frontier, or iu aiding civil otlleera in the execution or civil process, have been a model for all good men. In regard to the removal of bis headiuarters to M. I-oui. he savs: "I am prepare-l to execute the duties that may lie devolved upon me by proper authority. Here 1 ara centrally located, and, should oi-etsion arise, I can personally proceed to any jsoint on thi continent where my service, are need, ed." GF.NKHAI. 8lirnilAN'.S KKIltT. Lieuti-nant-iieneral Sheridan, in hi annual report, touchea slihtly upou (ieiieral Custer's black Hill f ipedillon. w hi h he rn-nouii'-es a sucesiul reeonnoi-inee. J he country of the. Itbrk Hill wa r.iun.l to be much Isetter than we expected, with plenty nf ?'cHd tiinher. and cnnldcruhl4 gisid noil t ilgh altitudes, and an abundant supply r good water and grass. Some gold was round near Harney's l'euk, but ir it abundance there ia at present no reliable information. Sufficient time could uot le iriven. I.y m sT. pedition such as that of Colonel Custer's, to prospect and determine its quantity. icner Sheridan agaiu reioinmcii-ls the' estuMifhment of a large military ost in the Itlk Hill country. f Indian troubles, (leneral Sheridan : I ressr-ctfully diflr with (toneral l'oe'a to the chief cause or these Indian trouble,, and attribute them to the immunity with which trilio have leon treated in all their raid into Texa for the past three years; their reservation have furnished them mi plie with which to make raids, and shelter thern from pursuit when tin y returned with their scalp and plunder. No m n of clo-e observation. It senilis to me, call travel acro.s th ereat plain from Nebraska and Wyoniinu tnTsxis nn-l es es)tlili.it ranebt-s, w:h their hundreds of thousand of cattle, sheep and horse, together with the f.uiulies of the owners, ami reasonably think that tliee pe-s pie. so much e xoe. and h v mg such valuable interests, are desirous or provoking Indian wars. There was a time, possibly, when tbe population oi the ln-;i.in front:-r may have U-en desirous of Indian troubles, but that has passed long ago." v r.isrn.irck want eight letter which were written t Von Arniin while Atn-
ba-s.idor at Pari-, and he cannot find them. They are ulKiut tie i iovernriiontot France. Von Arniin was for MacMahon and Hisinarck fori bier. Tin letters gave Hisim.ick's reason why the Thiers t.overuinent wa preferable t him. nc that lie particularly wishes I a letter written by 'oii Arniin biiiiself and returned to him with Hisinarck's annotations.
At a town on the Suith I icvon coast. Knglainl. there I said to be a w hite cat with eyes of different colors, ber right eye 1 ing a Yellowish gray, und her h it a bright blue. The owner pay that the grandmother and the mother of t lie cat had the same peculiarity ; tin- mother, however, wa quite black. Thi eat is suckling a white kitten whose eye are bright blue, like it's mother' bit.
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