Show Li L V "i -: V- 'W- -i 1 - J! - 2Ut -- : j f l :-- : V j "vnKiviiV vELiGiurir ?& a rfc bE0 :P? Thi-rsd- i OMETniNQ r at O’pON’5 F Et xmI T® gibing r kititbf ri : i: rcmix-uaJon- e ingonhooC rrIr W wit nJ W y— ®0t 001 'jlifrmmof yntrr'Uy heU-r to-da- y yy--h 1 prevail-Composi- ty ed aniLJcmsha began in her own way the account of what terrible nature ‘It wassail noise confusion ’ she began “roaring and thundering of cannon morning noon and night terrific flashes-- ' of musketry marching and counter- marching -- of regiments brigudes divis- ions coqis and sometimes nearly tho whole ahuy Men falling everywhere cries 'Slnutitg and deep groaning inter-blood flowed everywhere I mingled horses without riders and galloping iii I every direction and men jnnipiug On jBtrauge horses: O" it was horrible to s& hundredss without amis or limbs others headless and ' thousands being carried off the field wduuded7 dying and dead 011 the' backs aid in the arms of coin rad os on' stretchers and in every ' ! flhbtaMer‘l‘®'itAr' new th pie it th (hirwhiOd or in Mjil iiinv vT U niJicnt it wi ' I tlU 3ly earnest persuasion at last ‘ KIitor STKVnOtK '" mails at length it ii or Mem imr Strength Greater th pobbilile way -- iE lit cn beM— 1 ® -- y hie Deserter -- - pools-besid- BAX 1 iiftal AYushingtou Pear It read Washixctox (no date) Doctor: Since we last r'xnet hare been the peffls and dangers which 1 have passed I saved jdear Richard but at terrible peril to 'tfful EDSi rough MjJeir : luforminnr: the tJovermncnt of mailers known only to myself parties immediately concerned !NDt his near life’s sake 1 -- made theui ’This made it necessary 1 sLoaKl the sfuc affair iurther invulvin nie in m De 4 Sail kh trouble great expense aiid'even doatli But jsible thanks t o llis care’ :own ha lets hot even “a sparrow fall to the without His notice” I have'jis-fJal- l and am now dangers thus-fa- r fiu Clt "city' of magnificent distances’’ Iks TI “K my dear Kicuard who lie3 sick : W® f the hospitals ' NVe bath often yhanj talk of you and wish you' were to prescribe for Uichardl Excuse dusks is my Plasty note as my writing-des- k jarul m is: tal tsdsT 0 anil V-ijm-l nor Ss bluing a broken pen and the hour of rfJIIJ5 10 I M riease answer and ’" f0°n fpr if llichard gets Well soon -- ' nt niy writing materials irebgth off for Gnanls sirmy ou the Yours as ever Jerusoa Although I wrote at her no uer was ever returned and request for months ftther heard of nor saw either of them fitting one evening' some four 3fitnj aftey this jierwd in my office xainff the evening papers two persons accosted me familiarly-4-the- y Richard and J crush a hatTbbth 'alive audjhere together?” dtmedi rising and shaking each by fcanjheartily- - “But DickV been have been in thebat- ‘J3 ! ° tfio Wilderness — lhat’s why I J®ot heard from yon?” of M' been there’! said Dick look 'at Jernsha triumphant V the campaign of the season in all the battles— the terrible of the Wilderness Coal Harbor vpotsylvanla —all through it Doctor ufar veteran I should really like to heat a woman's - - s V -- -- ' : -- impressions of a battlerfield” looking nt each in tarn ixit tt°T3 more about those battle j Site was all about but I was ao 4 Slment until I got wounded we've both been wounded xt it’s but a Blight wound” d ' 1 ' New York 16 The Herald 'piablishesstateinenU regarding the affairs in toe Indian territory The Indians have been in an alliance with the rebels Important negotiations were recently entered into between them and States Officers Were sent oat by Gen Herron The commissioners were well received by the Indians on tlie 21st of Jnne in the: Choctaw nation The chiefs of the Choctaw and Cherokee nations and several other Indian leaders were present A temporary treaty was entered into with the Cherokees Choctaws Chickasaws Seminolea and Creeks These tribes bound themselves to cease hostilities against the United States and against the tribes which had taken part with the Government daring the rebellion- - - These and other nation of the Iftdian confederation in held' resolved to send ooancil'prevlnalv delegate to Washington to negotiate a treaty of amity with the Government On the arrival of lleiron s eommisHonera they were urgently solicited by the Indiana to consent that instead of sending delegain their own countions they should be met the Government commia-lone- rs They try by declined: to enter into any permanent arrThe conference will take angement place on the first day of September at Armstrong Academy In the Choctaw nation It is estimated that fifty thousand Iudians will be the-Unite- 1' Swawnee arrived from Panama with new ? from Callao to the 6th The rebellion in Peru appears to gain gronnd On the 5th a bloody engagement occurred six mill s from Sema between 125 rebels and 600 government troops in whieh the latter were successful taking prisoners 100 men and 25 officers besides killed r " New York 25 r The Times’ special lays the trial of Capt Henry Weitz fate rebel commander of prison has beenjndefinitely postponed The next term of the U S Court to beheld in Norfolk meets in October when the treason Indictment against Gn- - Lee and other noted Tebels will be called np'- It is understood here that these cases will not be prosecuted but that tlie President will direct a nolle to be entered and dispose or each de- fendant as be proposes to dispose of other iadiorr rebels who h ve been active partici themen a pants in tEe war viz : By putting -' long 'probation ' Tbe Department Iiu ordered tlie re of the Muaisippi wqusdron' te-fl- ve dnetionRirj The ordnance and materiel wul be vewel collected at tbe new naval ordnance-depo- t Jefferson barracks A large number of enlisted men will at once he discharged from ' the squadron Admiral Radford sailed from Hampton Roads to ' take command 6f the Atlantic squadron with orders to reduce it to tea vessels A Tribune special savsa private letter from Matainoras state that large numbers of rebel officers and m-- lately belonging to the conmiD'li of Dick Taylor and Kirby Smith sre joining the force of Maximilian This action seems to be induced bv the high gold bounties offered by the Imperial government It i understood that John Minor Botta will soon Wne an Address to the people of Virginia urging them to vole for negro suffrage as theonlv hope of the State for it into the Union oju term of equality with other State The government has forwarded instructions to tbe commander of the department of Virginia to reduce' the volunteer cavalry under hi command to two regiment A smilar order ha been seat to the cbm? m&nders of the Middle and North Carolina departments directing them to discharge with the exception of one s!l volunteer cavalry regiments attached to their respective com maud New York 28" The Tribune special rays gejpinfficial Mexican new states two imperial cavalry regiment had deserted to Ortega and that fie was daily tendered tlie services of large mini bers of Mexican officers coming from points in possession of the French It i further stated that Maximilian has contracted with fortjgn speculator for the introduction of a large number of negroes who are to bo held in slavery for ten years The Times says Jeff Davis’ health i much improved Gen Joe Johnston has applied tor pardon which will probably be granted It is said that ho did all in hfs power to bring the rebellion to a'Closo long before it became evident that it was in a collapsed condition The Tribune’s special says that during June over two thousand claims for' prize-monewere filed at the fourth auditor office and nearly three million dollars' distributed A large amount still remains : ' New York 29 MaJ GenDodge has been assigned to the sergeneral command of all the U S forces MontaNebraska Colorado Kiosks in ving na- and that portion of Dacotah lying west and south of the Missouri river Advices" from Havti received by way o Nassau staterthat the revolutionary war' in that republic is still going on and that the rebels profess themselves willing to be buried under the ashes of their town rather than be longer governed by President Gelfrard - XeLEGRArn: - - - ne - - J - at-his- - - ’ ' : - - triom-omnib- us to-da- : - est - top-of-tho-voi- ce n -- 1 5 M a ht ’ s as-1i- e' : - - This place was visited lastVednesdsy by one of those floods called a wash which came down the west fork of the Cottonwood Tbs water rose ten feet in the space of aa mapy : minute It frll in a few hours - doing eon suierakle damage This class of floods which occur at this season of the year are the ’causes of the t great destruction to the 'roads dams and banks of the rivers' lor which this country is remarkable Last year in consequence of the extreme ’drouth the fctffenui of tho Cottonwood drted Was' the ciup tlie consequence Their vines were tizen raised no crops watered with the bucket from holes and Some of the people left the 7 settle- -' spring ment and are iio r opening new farms at ths head of the Itio Virgin which they ore doing - -? this season with excellent success Water havlnjc been abundant the inost' of the people are proecuting their or ' part here wuh a xiod prospect of saeceas A good crop of wheat has been produced The other crop art doing well The tecopd crop of corn is a foot high from corn grown this season Cine crops look well The cotton crop promises better thaiTever beforeDavid Klsworth will produce fifty bushels of Excellent potatoes He also has a large quautiiy-o- f improved fruits The location of this settlement Is weU adapted to fruits and vine The people tri en and waiting trin largely into their culture the term of years fqr the fruits bearing! Elder Lymancnd myself arrived here tut evening niter hulling two meetings at Washlferri-bur- g is situated ten miles- ington from Wajdiingtou and nine front Tnqnerville ’ Judge Kifltiey upon leaving this place ' upon''-h- i vNit two year ngo exclaimed! “how can this people live in such a descretl Yet the people seem pleasant and happy" Thomas Smith of Washington lias bnnta saw mill at the head of the waters of the Cot tonwood inaccessible iqapnearanCeto those not used to our mountain districts There is considerable timber at the base of the Pine T ' Mountain upon the eouth side Mr Forsyth has also built a saw mill at the head of South A-- h Creek and tho country ' will be furnished with lumber at a reasonable ij r - S 4 v i vf r V-- ii i - H i - I ' i t T -- t l 4 ' rate Messrs Branch ' " s ITarrison have also a mill' upon snotiAr fork of tbe same creek hiving this seasorrsawed 80000 feet Las year r these mills had no water Geo AiSiirrii - Tire Flood Jr- e at Leavekworth— He' most destrucTive flood that has ever visited any portion of Kansas occurred at Leaven worth on the 20th of last mouth From three o’clock till five in the afternoon the rain fell in th most exlraordinmy manner and if possible faster still from' seven to nine in the evening J The” flood com trie need early in the evening sweeping frajn Three-Mil- e Creek through the city and spreading gyeat' alarm At nine o’clock the fire" belU rang an alarm peal when the frightened inhabitants commenced ' var eating their houses to escape the ad- -' vancing tide and soon the whole of the citizens from Delaware to the blafif south of the creek had fled from their homes : The water in 8th street next Delsr ware was two or three feet deep find fit' n feet-iten o’clock it had risen twenty-tw-o twenty minutes A Mexican train of 26 wagons was floated "a distance of three squares Some went into-- the river others were lodged against house then standing and against the abutments of the bridge in 5th street Alt the bridges tn the city but one were ' swept away- ' The number of persons drowned is not correctly known but is supposed to y one hundred forty of have whom wfcre reported found on the morn- lag after the catastrophe 3iost' of- the la unfortunates are colored pople fife of thro addition to the great loss was an immense loss of property 3 i -- J i i : " - been-nearl- N‘ : t nr ’v- - - - 1S65 - :t-- : - y : 'Habusscbo July Jlsf - ll la---b- - g l l of-wfcif- for the night if wounded he in hands the surgeons be the of might Lmtsf return—110 — look once inure 1 did So and found him — liis leg the calf of it shot off bleeding profusely and life seemingly ebbing out fast “O Richard! Richard!— but that was no-- time for tears cries or questions - 1 gave him ' the stimulating draught tore up pieces ot lint wetted them with the whisky laid them hi the wound bandaged it with two handkerchief’s torn in to bandstand partly walking him partly Gen Fisks Assistant Commissioner of the almost' carrying hinirwq got oat of the Tnn Mart Harris Trial—On the Bnreau of refugees and freednien and aban enemy’s way first' and then by ten 19th ult in Washington DC- - the trial doned lands lias directed that no m re refu- -from Georgia or Alabama be tranporo’clock at night arrivetT at one of the of Mary Harris for shooting A Bur gees from Louisville except upon spesouth ted field hospital tents-- : roughs a Treasury Department Clerk cial authority from him Refugees now “All night longwe sat together wait- wa concluded after an exciting run of from' Georgia or Alabama iu the State t his wound twelve days r11ie alleged cause ot lier north of the Ohio river will not be transporing ror liis turn and wa dressed when lie with others next putting airend to ins life in that sum- ted south unless they can show by the best return they will not afternoon were sent on to AVashington mary manner was- his sending her a evidence that npon their the for a become upon charge It was his last wound liis last battle- for letter requesting her to meet himin a their subsistence This willgovernment relieve Nashin one month he got his discharge and house of ill fame ville of a large number who have but recent' here we are doctor to be 'iuurried next On the last day of the trial the lawyers ly been furnished transportation to their homes week” got pretty snarly the judge also beBushwhackers captured in Paulin and coming considerably heated up The just brought in to day will be severely dealt court room was densely crowded the with A LOVE STOUT Tlie President’s endorsement of Governor attendance of ladies beiogvery large coarse relative to the approach-inBrownlow’s On the case being submitted to the I am an old fogy of a bachelor the cooled the exciteelection has greatly worse lack for me its not my" fault jnry they retired for about ten minutes ment caused thereby ' Arrangements will be submission to the' laws where though ! was in iovoonce deeply des- - I when they returned with a verdict- - of made to compel be violence apprehended may perately— too deeply"to love again but “not guilty’’ Instantly the crowd " Buffalo July 21 tables' chairs and window i am not going to manrider over that jumped-o'have elevators Tlie supplied the mostly story 1 merely mention the fact to show sills uttering cheer after cheer the ladies plsces of hands who lately struck and are these grey hairs waving their handkerchiefs' the men going on with' work as usual that notwithstanding ' matter-of-fac- t New York 21 face and solid business their hats “The Marshal stood moving Commercial’s Washington specal The' habits ! do understand the workings of his mouth a ridiculous but I pitiable Marshal’s office will be ProTost the says1 the “tender passions’’ Looking at my sight’’ probably saying something about closed August 1st face you would never imagine the mad- - I order which nobody could hear The The report that the reward for tbe capture banded over to CoL Baker cap illogical things I did at that- period crowd oatside echoed the cheers of those of Booth has been ' untrue is of mjt life - There are a tot of solemn within Miss Harris Hunted Cincinnati 21 f old fogies who go to town in the same I Fifteen minutes after as the a Gov Brough passed sleepless night He with me every morning I often I phant lady passed out leaning on the is no worse y bat his condition is con wonder whether they ever did the wild arm of Mr Bradley and entered a car-- sideredyet critical New York 22 riage another series of cheers went up ' War Department things 1- was guilty of Now the Th with accordance talkincUo an omnibus— a from the- crowd Thus ended the Harris orders for out of service troo Jloxis Aboct rax Bothk JcnraTBAsr— -dialogue jolted into a falsetto —so trial the most exciting since ’the cele- whose timemustering of service expires before t San Franc ieco dispatches to Nevada papera next between 14000 I frequently amuse myself with medita- brated Sickles’ case ana thus now and statement SyJaffics Patterson‘ third At give! ® men wiU 8 GciL J of 15000 P Sheridjn ©fficet of tbe Above vessel who reached the ting upoamy fellow passengers I know then doe3 the ofttimes latent virtue Ch t Two boats am shore in the ship’s lifeboat thinking about Consols of the people overwhelmingly protest they fancy I Hermld’ Washington special says i swamped alongside the ship and three were or indigo and such mutters but no 1 against the prevailing licentiousness ot I vtlbl!ction of Gov Perry’ speech of noftf I left on tlie vessel which wink in 45 mlnn-e4 A fix my- - thoughts on dLhe face of one of the times Th rnt!flinir sre all the tier Wj T the tliem’ perhaps I- - know the man in sons saved:' Gov-j- i A duelist is to be avoided as a nui-- supporters' of the Administistion business and then 1 picture bis homo in- James Tatteron third officer David 1 a had satisfactory however very ernnr shootcr-on-sigas the de lienrv Milirr b rkcr life there he st3 in the omnibus stately sacce a I steerage steward W tarvlew with the President aud most of the rell icLowry firemm Lirnifireman clerks Pati and starched and grand there are fMay a man rain into debt!” asked a members of the Cabinet they express great Wm - BWeld waiter EMorgan and of Stpha business honors grimly awaiting-- hint iu modern Boswell of an imaginary Dr confidence in the loyalty par:oiisra Mrs Mary Ana I weedle Mrs Minnie: admin-'iste- r waiter! will he believe that and Gov characPerry the ci tv— I wonder whether he snubs J ohnson “He may” was the child Mrs Manta E Wilder-Mrthe duties of his office with a loyal spir-li- t Bernhart andSlots does teristic reply “provided he dont mind and bullies in1 the household aud child and four colorMartha Gov Perry will leave for South Carolina aeamsu ed at his office? or whether that starched walking into prison” next Monday ty 1 - lle present at the Council Fortress Monroe 20 Jeff Davis is known on good authority to dends so before I did anything! decided be iu better health than when be arrived at place liis' eye has not impaired and to talk the matter well over with my this his appetite is regularly good No-ois great chum Harry Smith' allowed to see him except the surgeon aud This friend of mine is a yonng fellow the guard The Government line of steamers between in whom I take the greatest interest Norfolk and Old Point has been discontinued and whom I try to pash as much as I can The steamers Xabro and York however in business he is iu aud out of my office make daily trips each way This is a pri half a dozen times a day we are the vale enterprise ' fity Point will no longer be a Military Depot Another reduction in greatest friends in the world though expenses in this departmenthas taken plaee' or is there more in the years ofjuost of the employees discharge difference in our ages I may 03 well Steamers are now passing Baltimore with gay who he is he is the son of the lady some of the discharged troops of Gen Kil 1 loved so well v Both his parents died ' Patrick’s command It is said that orders have been issued to ' long ago stop contracting for supplies generally to be coxtinued Nashville 21 five-and-thir- r- - w -' ’ "Not-je- suh made me fearltil nervous rllcturjj’mg one day from a pro-- declining arid Jloubt ful if I ever should isee him ’WQiil visil at the cud of ijfiio moiithSi letter lay on my office tablej post 'ITien be might be safe and iu quarters Then to-da- y - : itiiein : steerage-pa- er -- 7 -- 1 Nv Colum-busan- -- ' cY -- - — f ' - Ill-fate- ' 1 -- - f WasmsaTONJuIy 30Mi T IL II STsxnorsc: Air Y n Crtwfo'rd hss three new wafms of bee and an old one which h produced the three William' Matthew has one awann and ha lost two they having seceded frets tlie others and were fost owing lo bad management - Mir Crawlord’s leesV arei doing well an-- he believes they wfll spceeed as well here as in the Fouthffir States ths Cairo 22 ld of honey being about 2U Us- - per year to yit The Marble City brings dates to the ICth " v: hive the The N O Times says the statement that Is favors fall if the LouDUhop Covington says Gen Canbv had spurned command of It isian and Texas reporting to Gen Sheridan hie there will be a good cotton crop this la looks cert pToufcing-nuvery linly is untrue 7t place assumed Gen C Andrews has C -- flood Brig Nosh’s small editions Several of command of the District of Houston embrawithout revision or correction htvs torn ouV d cing the post of Galveston Iiouton dams on the Bio Virgin destroyed canals the Millicaa and 'damaged nqneduM 0 aa to Impose " 22 Cincinnati ' and this In thsj for wnllaya heavy repairwhen Tlie Commercial says that in the last three labor is most wheat of harvest midst days enormous quantities of rain fell in expensive over that vicinity and safer as heard from ail Elders Lyman Silas S Smith and If H Ohio and Indiana The eastern bound train of tlrt Central OhiolLR was thrown from Dame audjnyself addrcsecd a large meeting the track caused from a break Jn the road in the neWUowery last evening and continue Elder Snow and everalbfe near Columbia yesterday morning and 4S again ierson said to have been killed and woun- thren from-S- t George accompanied - W dednt Harris The bridge on the O & M road near have appointment for : Millsboro was carried away by water night burgh and Toqurrvillo before last ' The people are healthy and ws ore tolA New York 24 that the place is vcry hcalthy the During progress recently in the DisMr Wandfll Mace tell os that ft fa notnn trict Court at New Orleans of proceeding common for ths thermometer' to aland at for the e infiscation of Slid ell's estate claims 106 and 104 seafor nearly 2100 000 advanced him on a mort- son of tbc in the shade for days at this year gage were presented by aParis bant i ig bouse The prospect for provisions forage And N: Judge’ 1crrell decided that at the time the advances were made Slidell was a notorious grapes was never so good as at present His property' thanks to the snows and refreshing sVoWere enemy of the United bute the confiscation Some daenge has been done to the crop by under therefore belonged laws to the government and the claims drouth' caused by the breakage of dams or the scarcity of water the result of the break could not be allowed G AS age The United States donhle-ende- r gunboat 1 ssengers CORRESPONDENCE- - Justice Dowling of the Tombs Police Court held an interesting investigation yescase C I Anthony a wealterday In which Worcester of 3fas ta charged by citizen thy Gilmore of N Hampshire with cheating him out of SlfJWO which he ininduthe ced him by false pretence to invest Mooseliead Gold Co the property being re- located in Halifax county 5rented tonewbetrial was appointed Jar the 31t and Mr A ntli onyLrequired to find bail in the sum of $15Qpo ’ e in-ifltiv- ely 4 Tpiipiil? A pis ri : dav-dreamov- 1 S‘ crumbles away in the majes-- 1 A I tic presence of madam his wife? 1 dine with one or two of these men at July 5 their houses? not that I particularly care The steamer 'LafayetteLiverpool arrived from New for them or they for roe but it is con- - York early this morning - AV Brest Boong venient on both sides to be friendly so she picked up from three boats fortyflve from the American ship ffm I become somewhat acquainted with naasengera Nelson from Antwerp for New York with their hpme-lif- e and participate in their I four hundred and eighty' paivengers The conversation which is “city’ transferred fate of the remainder la not nown Halifax 17 to the dining and drawing room interthe statement ®f larded on the lady’s part with Morning I llart of the bark Meteor that he ow thongU all thro is I Captain Past fashion searched a day and a half for the uufortn- dull enough it affords food Jot amusing nate passengers of the ship Win Nelson the wreck of which was scattered for miles over speculation the water Brown in the omnibus I meet my host The saved passengers say that on Sunday I have known Brown for years his con- Jane 25th the Captain- 'of the hapless ship versation lias never varied in subject it determined to fnmigate her and for this purbecomes a question whether he ever did pose ordered pitch to be taken into the lowand red hot irons to be thrown into talk on any other matter than business er hold The it ifcuitcd and boiled over and well admitting' that he did those mat- set tlie pitch on fire When it was found imship ters were doubtless not veiy edifying or possible to save the ship the captain and he would talk about them' now they others with the cabin passengers left iu the most likely ’ consisted of “life about boats of the ship winch soon burned to the down over 400 town” or sporting talk which were dis- water’s edge carrying carded when the youth solidified into the The scenes on Hoard the ship are bnsiness-ma- n - In all probability my described as of the most heartrending char: vfriend did not marry until he became a acter a Hart that fire or six ship Captain says business man and I am forced into a miles off from his vessel was seen by him curious enquiry 03 to what he talked apparently engaged in searching for the about when he was courting It is al- wreck lie thinks that she saved some of from the wreck all of whom ways held that love gives a poetic color- - the passengers been the water three 2?° life ananignmin elements in hut then the my I The male cabin days ing to are rapidly recov passengers fricml’s mind for love to work upon must ering from the eflecta of their llljarfeS bttt have been so very meagre nevertheless tlie female passengers are badly burned the arms rfalT to and try to construct a love con- about We have no names of the saved from Hie versation based upon Consols and shares ffm Nelson who reached St ' John Newexports aud imports indigo and :light foundland who were thirty in number nine females and twenty-on- e French goods males lost Richard three times in the last we were in 1 went all over the battle JifttJarj of oPilrM®i battle-fiel- d 'to fiud Tiim but in" vain 1 frtUnZ on ui Trrywhprr t looked into-- the faces of hnudreds of l frn d xy ° ai dying and dead men bat no ltichurii was gonajjy £ik ths dwarf there liuudreds called for vwater— Vho u Surtliorn lenl 5J there were few to bring it - many died ' Qg tbir febulJcn hid tie iky ere it was brought? Some of the poor felioW3 as I looked iuto their laces smiled and strove to speak but gasped their last ere their words found utteraDgfoTED AFFECTIOX nce- Others I heard say something like the words icife mother sister as differfcQN(XL'IED fcwfcj x'names no doubt of the loved ones at' ent fo careful you tell no one elaojoue home umbers had likeueses in their bETX l3ni of this V ou will find u letter lrom at seven o’clock trembling hands on which their glassy e iir you 'fixed Bloodin many cases 1 fall into a sort' of eyes were ie rill uot co until you return” ' their hair' stained their matted handsr idea wfiich at last the conductor this entered the boat and SJE VeQncftjnotO' smeared faces often in and stood their' ini tho city destroys by the jnagic word “Bank’7 atounSttHtours landed 1 them went Hr 6n Hut and I laugh as I fumble for tlie sixpence - i parted I simply said: “Let me 1 must see living or dead one was there ' the joke?” asks Brown with “What’s but made the result of this affair 1 were face-where there crossed'a gap but his solemn ' ' 4 j a'ference to ilie great secret she had few soldiers a heard the I -of nonsense that won’t bear “A bit straggling i Token of to the officer Jot never Lullets aud whirr we trudge a the and I zip reply telling” be par la some 6ve days she came io my startedceasing baekward hand thrust hundred so or direction of in the I' hosoin— my aiid with her yards t iak( rn a’ith radiant face ‘ 1 iuto offices our Brown involuntarily my why respective dinning injnted buoyancy aud erclaiined: 1 saw mark not— knew a bullet the of to' my ears the merits of that “capital dle'i here yeti I’ve been toWaeli-:gto- n was blood and down there trickling my tried as deserter a thing” in which I must take shares— lie'll not be felt faint tore I dress person my open it I can’t get him off from the army so ought really to be' director —“T he Patent 1 blood beheld an and the evidence had ' 'Traction Steam Omnibus Company e both go CE ' A moment's thought of my Limited” “What! you go with him? andjaack to been shot fcr'whfa M Brown was bent upon that company Bat why jiot go as his wife if Hospital experience dispatched my fears stout n jrkrf 7 mast go?’ Wetting some lint yiLlhspirits which I andTlid was always boring me to become hud with me I staunched the wound a director but I was doubtful of the not yet— not just now- -1 t Ultfe I A brougham bound from for several reasons tasted the fluid and rose to my feet But priticiple :3it go and where was to I wandering and should J 1 must retuin niy oicn uame ‘ So it ' I in see : ended' ilie tears' the transverse current or istpXr site resumed: I bridge by- an ordinary omuibnsivuigbt's “It wtta now near dark1’ sejitence i3 ba detective eh?” I " “And this cast a deep glooxii over my I enough but athwart a steam omnibus exclaimed excited bruin Half arr hour's further with its relentless mechanical propul ‘Anjtuiiig you please to call me but durkuess and sion why the brougham would be a 1 tell you is true and alLfor his marcji brought only deeper II HV sc life” The thick heavierorrow uudergrowtli crushed bandbox in a moment — and U She the stuntet with trees of heavy over- then last though not least Brown did hurrieiLaway and for nearly nine limbs-otrees with the hot succeed in convincing me about divilarger hanging: :oqlhs 1 neither saw nor heard of either Dsp r0L GREAT SALT LAKE CITY UTAH THURSDAY AUGUST 17 i 1865 1 ns i A i 1- i fi y-- ’ - |