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Show A COUNCIL HELD WITH THE INDIANS. 97 of the party who took a part in the killing of Mr. Powell's men the previous year. Some twelve or fifteen Indians got together the following day, and we called a council to have a good peace talk. I commenced by explaining to the Indians Professor Powell's business. I endeavored to get them to understand that he did not visit their country for any purpose that would work any evil to them ; that he was not hunting gold, silver or other metals ; that he would be along the river next sea-son with a party of men, and if they found any of them away from the river in the hills, they must be their friends, and show them places where there was water, if necessary. They answered that some of their friends from the other side of the river crossed on a raft and told them that Powell's men were miners, and that miners on their side of the river abused their women. They advised them to kill the three white men who had gone back from the river, for if they found any mines in their country, it would bring great evil among them. The three men were then followed, and killed when asleep. The Indians further stated that they believed what I told them, and, had they been correctly informed about the men, they would not have killed them. They said Ka- pu- rats could travel and sleep in their country unmolested, and they would shew him and his men the watering places. Ka- pu- rats, in the Piute language, means one arm cut off. Major Powell had lost an arm in the late war between the Northern and Southern States. I think that a part of Major Powell's description of this affair in his " Explorations of the Colorado River," would not be out of place here : " This evening, the Shi- vwits, for whom we have sent, come in, and, after supper, we hold a long council. A blazing fire is built, and around this we sit the Indians living here, the Shi- vwits, Jacob Hamblin and myself. This man, Harnblin, speaks their language well, and has a great influence over all the Indians in the region round about. He is a silent, reserved man, and when he speaks, it is in a slow, quiet way, |