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Show Paper, Devoted to Cents, Scents, Sense and Nonsense. A Semi-Occasional, Vou. SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH, JULY 4, 1871. IIL. ~ THE WISH MEN.OF ies ~~ BCT Re Serb t ee re eo THE ANY Our’ ARE ONE S;CAMP P MEETING ON BEAR RIVER. ) GRAND special Corinne reporter’ ‘steamer and sends sub-marine by the cable the following interesting© synopsis of the great Indian pow-wow on Bear River. | AER Perhaps the 25th day of June, 1871, opened on as beautiful a scene as any upon which the sun ever shone, and perhaps it did’nt. But that’s neither here nor there. As far as the-eyevcould’ discern orn south, east and west, curled up the blue smoke from. the-.wigwams. .of the brave warriors of the great basin, warriors who had traveled many a weary mile over the arid sage plains of the great, west to meet their brethren the. owners of this mighty Continent for the purpose of smoking the pipe of peace, catching suckers and ex- changing stolen horses for some of their own. | As the smoke from the signal hill ascended in circling clouds until lost in the deep blue sky, the donghty nomads came fone in thousands to participate in the srand reunion. The wampum belts, the crimson paint, the glittering tommahawk in contrast with the dusky a aa HAST hair, the eagle eye, the. bright blue vault above and the ereen foliage of the sage brush, made upa scene of savage beauty, not soon to be forgotten. After the pipe of peace had passed in dignified silence round , the large circle of braves, the great ak ris ATTRACTED BY WHO HAS A —— A “STAR” “MINE” TO THEY WILL LEND MONEY TO ASK FOR “me heap brave—me talk to um, white man so—me big, chief heap a like it whiskey—you gib it to,me biscuit, gib it to me carrabine. flour beef—no hog any, Ka shumbany; gib it to me shont a tea-cup— me good injun, like um white man, ™medbe soyugh!’? And folding his arms across “Uoh! me shont a big chief— To00-cedge tebits tiquen” (pounding himself vigor- shoulders, spoke as follows: big Injun. _ Tail—big from’ this time. forth, . He has struck~a ledge of. pure horn silver,, with liberal seventeen million and a half per foot for the balance. He says if. any one will give Me Goshute, ugh!” The. celebrated. Notnoskeesicks, |, or Sheep-Steeler, said, “Me no sqaw! me big Injun—heap,a kill um sheep—heap a. sell white man his own.sheep-skin for buck- skin... Me.big: brave—catch tm _shont a rabbit, shonta sucker—me gib.sucker, to Saxey, he Ugh!” Me big chief. heap a like it,., Each succeeding speaker seemed deters mined to be a bigger Injun than “ his Soren, and eventually the meeting usted up in a row in which our reporter was shot 75 time and scalped 27 times by fierce eventually sanctum denizens of the forest, further difficulty. succeedéd’ without "in reaching but our He ence, but if its all. the same to us he would like us to send some other reporter to the next Indian congress. © Heis now using chief; (here he. Brown’s Vermifuge and Fitz Jones’ Katasmote himself gracefully on the breast,) hairon for the hair. ‘Me Smoky says lie does not want any poor man to speak to him or look at him, Se says he entertains a profound admiration for the Red man almost verging on rever- | drooped: in graceful folds from his massive Snodgrass GOLCONDA. him $25,000,000 per foot for the remaining ously on ithe breast.) ‘Big, Injun me, three acres, he will sell, but will not. take Me heap.a steal horses—me heap a drink it whiskey—WViny Ashanten arient, heap a a cent less—his family must live! Meantime he’d like to borrow ‘four bits shoot um. Kyote—me big mad! me brave! till to-morrow. me héeapaholler! Kats ashantep heshadne teacup ina muck Oregon kawit, you, ka | Sheit; you gib it to me hapa dorra. Me THE MARKET. his full his THE traces of. gold; it covers several acres. and ‘reaches down an. indefinite number of The next to address: the assembled miles,, in. the _diréctionof Canton, China. braves was So ARON ane it He has-already sold enough to pay the wilbbe pereeived was somewhat brokene sy national debts of the world, and ‘is offered these ‘height, and ‘stretching, forth IT. his swarthy breas! he toole his seat. ‘SMOKY TAIL, <‘the noblest, Roman of them all’, arose to right hand, in the direction of the rising sun; while his richly embroidered. robe Wordi Mark it. The butchers are about to pull up steaks....The,,sells for the sedlers are how in course of) erection. People have — been busy cutting stakes in the new location and’ some have gone so far’ as to take up their qgwarters there! .The Danes will be glad to ‘learn that Ole Bull will shortly visit them.’ It is to be hoped they will” Kill the fatted. calf. W hen we see them installed in their stalls, with the long rose of red ribs we shall,be led to exclaim, bully! No one can. now say the market is not up, to the Mark, why mark it Mark the market is.even now at your door. ee —_—yY ete oe A short time since a Mr. Knott was tried in an interior court of Georgia for a viola- tion of law. The verdict of the jury was, ‘‘We find the defendant Knott guilty.” The Judge was at’a loss whether fo sentence Knott or not, |