A treaty has been made with the Sioux Indians.
The North Chicago rolling mills have closed on a strike.
An investigation of New York theatres has proved that many of them are positively unsafe.
It is believed that Arabi will plead guilty to the charge of rebellion. He will not have a state trial.
The Paris National announces that a man-of-war will be sent to reinforce the French squadron at Madagascar.
The Garfield board of audit has substantially completed its work. The doctors' bills have been cut down from $100,000 to less than $35,000.
It is said that thieves are very busy at the Garfield fair. A gentleman connected with the fair puts the losses up tonight at from $1000 to $2000.
Mr. Stephen W. Dorsey furnished for publication yesterday a card addressed to the public, in which he gives in detail his connection with the star routes.
It is possible that a duel will take place between Senator-Elect Riddleberger of Virginia and Page McCarty, the Washington correspondent of the Richmond Dispatch.
Gen. Butler recently had a conference with Judge Lord of Salem. The latter will probably resign as associate justice of the Supreme Bench soon after the new governor's inaugural.
M. Andrieux, late French ambassador to Spain, and M. Laurent, editor of the newspaper Paris, fought a duel Friday morning with swords, in which the latter was slightly wounded.
Seaman Nindermann, in his testimony before the Jeannette court this morning, said he would have done, providing he had been in charge of the vessel, just what De Long did. All the crew were treated well.
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Shooting Match.