Show later from Modern sodom since the receipt of the letter published in another coln coin we have been informed that the soldier wounded at the cavalry drill is dead we are also informed that some twelve or fifteen of the gamblers residing in fairfield during dil ring the winter left last week for pikes peak among them wallace who was imp implicated in the forgery case of last summer and that many others are preparing a to leave from a gentleman late from camp floyd we also learn that johnston acknowledges that he killed the indian alluded to last week in a communication from mr hoyt of Eil ell fillmore willinore linore ile he says that johnson complains of a great injustice done dobe him in an editorial published in last weeks mountaineers that the indian killed was known by all persons familiar with the southern route to california as a very bad indian vicious treacherous and murderous that he the indian had killed bob wilburn johnstons John friend and had also designed to kill johnston himself but was induced to desist by promises of large quantities of goods the scalp our informant was told by johnson him self he took that he lie might forward it to children in california the act of the indian john were left without father or mother their mother having previously died As an illustration of the feelings existing C in the breasts of some persons towards llis his excellency cel lency ex governor young whom probably they never saw and who could never have given them any possible cause for enmity we learn from the same gentleman that a few days since bince sin bin ceone one pat rat wright of fairfield entered the room where mr cannons Cannon 3 gallery is located and seeing the photograph likeness of ills his excellency on exhibition there remarked to a comrade that he could send a ball through brigham youngs head 1113 hia comrade with an oath oaths replied that he could not touch him that thunder and lightning c could not reach him the other immediately drew out his bis revolver and fired the ball passing through at an upper corner of the frame of the picture an inch or two froni from the der of the likeness |