Show el vr 0 n S thu THE hard TIMES AND TH THE INCREASE OF VICE T As 9 L natii rally raily have I 1 been I 1 expected the tho liard hard time s are c causing using a large increase ti crease of f v vice te a of die dle diemont most debasing kind hind the effects of which i ift itt wih makua long 11 period perlo d of good 1 times s to re move remove or overcome ape the 1 cincinnati commercial of ju july juls y 3 30 says 1 y streetwalking street walking C on the tho part of women not inmates of public houses women driven to bad life ll 11 by y actual nece necessity or by the arev ale aie alent nt extravagance in dress haq has grown wonderfully in this city ib in the last year or two on filth fifth V v im imi inland 1 and aud fourth streets and cen 1 erdl J venue most ef of this life can be aseen been seen these women aro are out every nigh night t in droves not net by dozens and acores EC ores but by hundreds on fifth street more than anywhere e oase af at the crossing of vine ja a seen this thia sad phase in its full bloom lioom many of these females are very young giris girls of fifteen sixteen and seventeen years and aud a good portion of them neatly dressed and aud lair to upon bany many of them live ilya in tenement bome in cottages and some binmore in more pretentious homes As a general thing they are quiet and orderly malting mailing no advances towa toWn towards riis men mon shrinking from con tact with tile the rougher and more morevia va clous elous cious clous members of the tho opposite sex showing plainly by their reserve and aud a diffidence nce uce t that L h athe the life lito is is anew ofie odio one ono to them up to ta two or three year ago there had been no street walking in this 1861 1881 but in the tho jast last two years it has increased until our streets at night are as noticeable noti cable in regard 0 fo to this as those of boston where in istrAn stranger gerts gerls is amazed at the long pro cessions ces essl essi ofis Of unattended females it is is a jon ion the times aud abd tells a story of extravagance in iff some instances and of poverty in ia others that is painful to the student as itis via found everyday THE tue lie BOSTON COLONISTS JN UT ARIZONA dissatisfied t THOSE companies of colonists colo coio from Bb bastou boston mass tass tp to arizona alizona appe appear ar to be considerably dissatisfied with the country 11 takes some people quite h a time to get familiarized and satisfied fied w wih lali the country in these flo lio longitudes Dg Audes it 11 ieng leng being so different dlf dif lerent in many particulars to countries the oa the atlantic coast nevertheless Us it has its it S attractive features to hil those 0 who can ean see and aud ap appreciate krecl preci ate them according c to the following dispatch in the california papers the seco second hd party of colonist colonists 3 like the first went to the san shu francisco mountain country felt disappointed and deceived and returned to prescott the dispatch says prescott Pr escott cscott july SO the tho second party of boston colonists consisting of seven men with seven rah gons twenty mules and two horses arrived hereon here on wednesday from san francl Franci francisco ico mountain where they had gone with tho fhe expectation pee pec tation of finding the first party of fifty comfortably housed and busy with their crops but in lif stead they neither found meni moni men crops nor lands suitable for the purpose and like their predecessors kept helt on into pre prescott cott where they seem to be at a loss to know just what to do the owners odthe of the teams constitute the company who undertook to briny bring the colony to arizona under a misapprehension of the character of tile the country having received their information like the balance of the tho colonists from one vudge judge cozzens who represented the country as well adapted to colonization and as they all found the contrary to lo 10 the fact on their arrival at san francisco Mountain those who had paid their money to be brought here concluded that it would only bo be fair for the tho company to take them back to the end of the railroad or on into california this the company appear to be unwilling to do having as they consider discharged their part of the work in bringing them here if the party really desire to form a colony and engage in farm i ig ig the better plan would ba be to look ica about for a suitable place r than ihan give up and start back simply because they havo have been dec deceived elved as to one ono particular location there are valleys large enough and unclaimed land in sulu clent quan quantities titles to support quite a large colony either cither on salt river or the tho head of the gila and if jf these keople eop ile lio are particularly anxious to live in com communities it seems a as if a wise wisa thing for them to do would be to examine these localities ber before r deciding their enterprise a failure thousands have come and arr aro coming from ran Kan kansas and other countries under quite as unfavorable circumstances as these from boston and yet they all seem to find something to do and are not discouraged nor sorry that they came to Arl arizona zona THE INDIAN WAR WAB s 1 1 RECENT becent reports from the neof of the indian war do not ga give I 1 v a fe very ry encouraging n news kwi ewi for the at army nor favor the idea of an easy trl tri triumph ump I 1 1 oran or an early close of hostilities it was stated in yesterdays bisp dispatches atch that terry had found it convenient to fall back eighty miles that the indians were burning the grass gross all hll Ai round around that they harassed crook go so that ho he could march only s six sic ax miles a day and that the men mer in both commands much dis dia heartened the indians are bp lieveld to be hard pressed as to their commissary arrangements tile the report also alfo comes that nothing has been heard of terry for a month it appears li however however that crook designs to strike a heavy blow especially ally with his pack train as soon 0 n as he be can nind find anything to strike at this juncture comes a report of oan an interview by a reporter of the sau san francisco with gen pi P E connor at the grand hotel in that city some ei extracts tracts from w which aich may te be interesting to our readers rep how many warriors do you think general the sioux can bring into the field against our troops general if the dif dlf Terent different bands of sioux and their rallies the and oes ea take the warpath karpath war path they can muster twenty thousand warriors from the best information that I 1 could gather from my scouts and guides at the time of my campaign alluded to lo 1865 I 1 make the estimate of the different bands as follows the un capapas sitting Sitti og bulls band about the papa two kettles san acres Ogal lalla and santos will number then there are the sioux of the british possessions north who may be induced by sitting bull t ta join him rep but all the indians are not hostile general no theunes the ittes snakes and bannocks Ban nocks whom wh om I 1 whipped hipped at the battle of bear river can be relied upon as our allies as can also the utes of colorado rep do you think that gen crook will defeat the indians in his next encounter with them general that ia is a very hard question I 1 think if any officer in the army can whip the sioux crook can do it but I 1 doubt his ability to do it with his present command he should have double the number of troops he be now has the indians outnumber him they aro are better mounted and have superior arms and in addition to that they may force him to fight on ground of their own choo choosing 8 in and favorable to their style sty ie of w war ar WI with til all these advantages it does not seem likely that he can defeat them overwhelmingly rep the latest news from that country states that sitting bull I 1 is 3 ready to meet crook in battle an and d terry also Gc general general yes res I 1 read that rep does that impress you yon as being truthful general if sitting bull intimates his readiness to fight these two commands you may rest assured that heh beh he hrs has as a big lot of warriors to throw away and there will bo be some lively work on bot both sides haldes when they begin rep you do not seem to think that sitting bull wants a fair stand up fight with our troops general no I 1 dont think he lie does indians never do want that kind of warfare sitting bull will do all he be can to keep aw away ay from that style of fighting ho he will try to harass crook and terry until the grass graeb fail fali and and ard the cavalry horse 1 I become unserviceable and force norce them to end the campaign for this season searon the mass of the indians will then winter further north norb in he the buffalo range while many of them will return to the tho th agencies and be bo fed by the ilia government until the grass grows in the tho spring and then they will again join the host hostiles ho stiles lles iles bep rep you do not then look for the indians indiana to be conquered this bummer summer general no air it Is i impossible andrt and it li i difficult to conjecture when it may end I 1 regard this as the beginning of a great war and unless the government throw into the conflict at once 1 a t much larger body of troops than are now in the field and continue the campaign right through the winter t he oin ein indians twill undoubtedly have the advantage and bean be in better fighting ng trim in the spring when they w will III be re reinforced In forced by allies from bands that are yet still neutral rep but could the milli military tary operate effectively in that country during winter gc general certainly they can I 1 think a winter campaign is always the best time timo for night fight fighting irig indians lu in summer they can scatter all over the moun mountains live anywhere without shelter or cov covering eiring and they are hard liard to find when they are wanted during biliter iiii ter they are forced to live in ts and are ard then encumbered with their equals and papooses oses in large bodies they carin catin cannot bit tit travel fast through the sno snow to get butof out of the reach ort oft of lie the mill military tary when they y ariy arly surprised in their villages the warrior sare are forced to Burren bendet det dei or submit to io a fight under disadvantages rep rep bep one ode other question 1 general am what is your tour your opinion as to the best course to pursue with t the he indians in the future I 1 general it is my opinion that we can never have reliable peace with them until they are thoroughly chastised after that is done I 1 would either break breakup alp the agencies alid and send fiend the indians north of the yellowstone where there is plenty of buffalo and nd other gamme gaime for them to subsist on for a number of yearn years I 1 or if the government persists in keeping them at jit the aen nen agencies cles cleg and feeding them I 1 would woud disarm and dismount dismou bt every mo mother therA san son bon of arnd arid only furnish aims to a limited number of them to hunt with and stipulate for foi these arms to ba be given up when they return from the chase since hince the outbreak i of the m u tiny in yag Engin ild iid has ado adopted apted d policy of this klud kind with the independent u native states the supplies of arms ana ammunition imported are regulated g from time tuti ane no by the local british ids ida and as a ru rule ruie le only a sufficient amount for th the purposes of the chase ehme is allowed to this the tiie governa government ent ant of the united states must come sooner or pr later if peace Is to bo bd preserved with til the tho e indians 4 |