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J1lID.~"l THE CAP ißy Telegraph to the Plitab zgh Gs zettel ' WASHING •N, Oct. 9, 1869. xstrznEstiNo INDIAN INTELLIGENCE. Gov. Burbank,. of Dakota, ex-ofildo Superintendent of Indian Affairs for that territory, has forwarded to the bureau copies of letters from First Lieut. Wed& son, of,the Commissary Department, and . • , Cept. D. C. Poole, Indian agent at White' • Stone Agency. In tbat territory, with ref ,erence to the present and anticipated troubles among the Indians, and asking thit troops be _stationed there. Lieut . . Woodson reports that the subsistence _ t the agency . Stores at are in a great state of insecurity. The recent disinrb suns among the Indians occasioned by the intioduction of whisky has re sulted in great destruction of public _ property. A disposition is manifested on their part to kill the beef cattle sent there for their use. Frequent instances have occurred already.. A request was made for a sufficient number or troops to Insure the necessary safety to the public property, and the lives of the employes. Captain Poole reports that the Oaallcd labs and Brutes, under his charge, ~ are smartinn under their defeat by Lien. Carr and his Pawnee scouts in July last, and are being constantly incited by less friendly Indians, with whom they are in daily communication, to revenge the death of their fallen comrades. They have organized a war party against the Pawnees, and have vfaited near their res ervation and taken some scalps. The Pawnees, in return, visited the Whet atone agenoy and stole 'a - number of horses. WILL OF THE LATE GEN. RAWLINS. The will of the late General Rawlins was admitted to probate to-day. He first bequeathed to his wife and children • • his house and lot situated at the South west coiner of 12th and M. eta, as equal '4 heirs, as also his lands in Cheyenne and Golden City, Wyoming Territory. To his son, James Brandin Rawlins, he leaves his library. To his father and -mother his property known as , the Rawlins' homestead, In the town of , Gnilford, Joe. Davis ccunty, 111. On their death the property •to be devided Into eight portions, tive to go to his bp°. Vier Lemuel, ,- who is to satisfy his sisters, Mary and Laura, and brother Robert, sand to keep the place as a whole. iFirom Elormontiom—Uuill Wants to Come Into the elaternood of states. -illy Telegraph to the Plilthsush-aozette.) ST: October fi.—A Salt Lake City telegram dated the Bth, says: The Territorial' Fair was held here during - the past-three days. There was a fine -display of home manufactures; among them were fine wagons and carriages, -and a large assortment of cotton and woolen goods. There were few cereals, as the grasshoppers destroyed large por tions this season. The Semi-Annual;blormon Conference -opened on the 6th' lust, and still re mains in sea4on. A great number of people from all parts of the territory are here. •A meeting of the citizens was held here yesterday afternoon in the new - tabernacle. The crowd was enthusiastic, - .numbering over twelve thousand- The Hon. L. A. Smith, Brigham Young's -Counsel, was elected chairman. A com mittee was appointed to draft a mennciri al to Congress, asking the admission of Utah as a State. The memorial , presents the similar petitions sent to Congress in 1866 and 1862. Although properly - pre. - rented, they were never brought to a vote. The' memorial claims a precedence of the other territories admitted into the 'Union with far leas order of government and general rescurces far self-manite- Bence. Territorial governinent, at the best, is oppressive—a relic of the old colonial form our fathers threw off beeause of its injustice, exaction and ty ranny, particularly the practice of Gov= -ernment appointing officers from distant . •States who are unacquainted withlhe necessities of the people. The• -popula tion of Utah is now 150,000, and they are, anxious for self-government. Western rates were again raised to the annexed rates: St. Louis, 81; Lot:ravine. - 90 c; Indianapolis, 72e; Cincinnati, 70c; Chicago, 81e. Another advance is ex pected in a week. The present one covers thts first, second and third classes From the Pacific Coast. [By Teeirriph to tne Pittsburgh Gazette.) • SAN Fnenrclsco, October 8. Judge ;Sawyer, of the District Court, has decided - ihat Chinese testimony is admisgable ;against '-a white man under the Four teenth Amendment of the Federal Con jittitution. The iire last night on Sacramento street, below Front, destroyed mOOO • worth ofproperty. • A large excursion party, twill:Wing "Governor Warn, of New Jersey, Colonel -Ordway, of Washington City, and Hon. Charles Knapp, of New York, have ar arri'Ved. ' • TAe Daily Herald has suspended _ pub. lleatlon. Important mineral discoveries have been made in the/State of Nevada Lilteen miles South of , Carlin atation, on the Central Pacific Railroad; Arizona .advices state that Governor Safford offers General Thomas three hun dred voluntears—old Indian fl,ghters— for a els months' campaign, the Govern -Merit only to furnish rations and ammu nitiork.„ 'There was a riot at Preseot, September in,which three aoldiers were killed and one wounded. - • Major MeCoadier, of the U.