OCR Text |
Show t ?WHiaHIIIIHlli e,'. ,"" -- w - -- pEB YEAR. BY TELE&RAPI1. OCDEN DIRECTORY. Post Ofllcc: rfwriion AMERICAN. OF MAILS ARRIVAL AND CLOSING double daily, 7.50 a.m. 5.45 i.m. g.UUUe City, 7.40 a. m. 6.40 in. KMt Through Mail daily 6.30 8.40 a.m. WtUVeCity,dm1l.ld;U:y Throuph Mail daily i vt. Vi, mi. h Mail daily -- ... w..t. .- - .m. .ni. 8.40 .111. 7.00 a.m. - Rant i 6.i0 New York, 4. .111. for oi ...;i R'.ri : V.vanntoii v- - ,i pU.; attVr Saturday., at U".:,:;,! dailj NT - - 2 p.i n. .m. ' SaUr- and Eunbville, Wednesday, B" Ufc'' oin- - V for Rich Coun - County, North 2.00 p.m. , 2.00 p 111. 7.00 .m. "'m a 6.15 p.m. DEPARTMENT REGISTRY Onen from 9 a.m- - to 3 p.m. MONEY OFFICE DEPAttTMEMT. Oucu from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. 8 Outside Poor open from 6 a.m. to p.m. JOSEPH If ALL, Postmaster Trains - - rj. C. train arrives " p. " P. " leaves U. P. C. P. " " traia arrives - a.m. p.m. p.m. i.m. a.m. p.m. a.m. C.30 p.m. 6 p.m. 8 30 a m. 7.40 5.40 6.20 8. 50 7.50 5.40 8.40 - (md i U. leaves and N. train arrives -- i leaves Religions Serriecs 11 a.m.. and Every Sundw, in tueTahernocle, at Farley's SchooIn tit Smnd Ward School hou School-hous- e at 0 p lboys aud Tliird Wv d 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. at C'mrth f;i:o.al Church at 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. Methodist 7.30 p.m. Spiritualist Lectures (Child's Hail), at a. At wy Osdcn City Library "Geo. W. Turners' Fiews Depot. Open excepd. day, Sunday F. S. RICHARDS, AT luAW AITORUEY Aui , NOTARY PUBLIC, . - - CAtu. X. TA!TXER Utah. Jr., ATTORNEY AT LAW. with County Recorder, Oflk OtrrlfitL Citil. - - The trial of the libel suit of AVm. II. Kemble, of Philadelphia, against Charles A. Dana, for publication in the Sun nf alleged libellous charges afl'ecting the character of the plaintiff, the damages being laid at $50,000, was begun yeR- terdiy in the S.iperior Court, before Jude Curtis. The jurors w ere selected w.th great care, boih Hides exhausting hree challenges and the unusal proceed-nof challenging every juror. Before he caBe opened efforts were made to settle it without a trial. The plaintiff, utter the jury was impanneled, stated that not having brought the suit for the sake of money, he was williug, if the de fendant should make a full retraction, to allow the judgment to be entered for mere nominal damages. Defendant declined in any ?ase to allow ju igment against linn, but was willing, if the suit was discontinued, to retract the charge that the plaintiff had received money. This not being satisfactory, the case proceeded. The full text of the complaint against the Kiuina silver miniug company, of Loudon, again3t Trenor Park, Baxter and Senator Stewart, suing for $5,000,- 000 damages for alleged fraudulent rep resentations of the value of the Luima The complaiat mine, is published. charges wilfully false statements of puch value placed on the meudacious report by Prof. Benj. Silliman, for which the atler was to receive a fee of $0,000 with $45 000 additional contingent upon the sale of the property. Baxter is a Wall street operator, who was associated with Stockwell in the Pacific mail di rection. Among the various specific charges of wilful concealment of facts, one recites that in July or August., 1871, an expert employed by the defendants reported to Park & Baxter that tbe ore mass in the mine would toon be found to thin down in its length and depth, and that at its then rate of extraction the mine would soon be stripped and for the present practically exhausted. Sub- equently tbe defendants contracted with Baron Grant to pay him $1,000,000 to organize aud carry out such measures as would result in the sale of the mine for $5,000,000. Deep Creek, Ltah, 4. J. O. Devine came to the residence of J. C. Ferguson, and knocked at the door. When the door was opened by rerguson shot Devine presented a gun, with both barrels cocked, and tak ing two steps into the house, immediately fired at Richard Ford, who was stand ing conversing, unharmed, the 6hol taking partial effect in the left arm and throat. Ford says he cannot account fer the cause in any way, only that ho remarked in a joking way to Devine, that Biliy Evaus, of Eureka, was coming to Deep Lreek in about two weeks. Billy Emerson is the man who had his money, $3,000, stolen by Ham ilton some two or tkree years ago, aud when his arrest was attempted, was thrown from his horse about nine miles from this place, and being night, he escaped for the time, and buried the money. Ihe money wassupposeo. tohave been found by some person shortly g 7.00 a.m. LrnSPtata'aty nd, Slat.m-ille-" ana TUrlys awSr.nl U'ua, Wednesday. nouns. 8.14 a.m. 6HNnl livery, rj. C. Utah. double-barrele- J. S. LEWIS, AND JEWELER, WATCHMAKER in "VV'atohe., Cloc.hs, Jewelry, Silver and Plated Ware, MAIN STUEET. Uuui-.KRepiiriBi! neatly done aud all work warranted, Dler . 11-l- y Tye world is full ot Children crying for Candied Castor Oil. .A. ysi i.. .airwl. "id harmlefd. Ihe re- pulsive ta?te and smtdl of the Castor Oil is en Its irely evercomn. athartic powers are Price 2j ctm8. MsLain's VcrmifHgc Itanbons cream Ar B le ixkjj n kujwsuai wtite, They resemttle oVon keit in cowlwtioners' shopn. Children n Hieiu ami cry f ,r thwu. Price 2.' ct. per box olrsaut aud eil d afterwards. San Francisco, 4. made on Tuesday was An . attempt or Snle Of Z. M. J. niffht to throw a train from the track on tliiil other drugjiit9. the Los Angeles and San Fernando rail road. A log was placed 00 the track, sud the switch wedged open with rooks. Owinir to the slow motion of the train the attempt failed. , T Iff. RTITAIIT held Carsen was at A City, meeting TTEPS POll SALE THE P.EXT AND CHEAP 1 EST FORCE anl LIFT Nevada, last night, to discuss the manfor deep or hallw wena. Ainu, 1 ner of representing Nevada at the Cen rmi'Fi t Point for Drive Well Pumps, with BHitaVle tennial Exhibition. There were presnt iron piping. Pumps repaired and fitted upon renson--$ terms, at M orkiihop. North of Old J. W. Haynes, United States Centennm commissioner from Nevada, a number of states officers and the members of the 4im legislature. Haynes proposed that thelegislature appropriate $20,000 for collectinz minerals and erecting mills to 11 lustrate the value of Nevada ores. The AVPfi WTI.T.T1M9 Tr Tuvnnif meeting adjourned without final action ' tuuiiv ill aj Crimea it ii."u " pdUlic tivat he has opened for biwioaM in tba to a future day, aitove line at uia (nop, Norwich, Conn., 4 and senator Win- - A Next to Poors Hotel, at his home in this died Buckingham at midnight. City Chicngo, 4 n here he will be gla4 of a shore of to convention The Illinois Episcopal patronage. of the De Koven Dr. eleted bishop "palrlag, Clpanin?, etc, done wk day diocese on the third ballot, the vote Dispatch. tnnding, clergy: De Koven, 39; Leeds, 22. , 8AT1SP ACTION GUARANTEED. 27; lay: De Koven, 81; New Orleans, 4. Willituns MOli Street. The Cougres8 committee beard a large l S7-l- y g -- tIilouiso: J - or iuthStreet, Ogden Lt-ed- Jms . 1 vl VV en ana sa.tlhua.1.) OCSDEX, UTAH. WEDNESDAY, 11- - So. j -i-- u to-da- y, to-da- y, to-da- to-da- y, Til-to- i. cross-examinatio- n i j ? J lAJ j taken. After recess Tilton's lie identified the biog was continued. Woodhull which Evarts Mrs. of raphy wanted put in evidence, but the court ruled it out, and Evart3 took an excep- was cross-examinati- close tion. He was then ly and at length in reference to his friendship fer Bepcher, when it began, and when and why he changed hia esti- mate for hun. Tilton testified to his early affection and "admiration for Beecher, beginning when he (wi.nefs) was a boy of 1G or 1 years, but gradually modify ing and changing as he grew elder, and bad larger experience and acquaintance with the world and men, illustrating by sarin? that he ranked Sumner and Greeley above Beether in every way. He testified to close intimacy with Beecher, to inviting him to visit his house because his society was a pleasure and he always wanted to share his pleas ures with Eli2abeih. Didn't remember ever asking Beecher5 to visit his house during his absence, though he might have done so. He was questioned in ref erence to his friendship for Moulton, and replied that it always had been yery close. There was no man in his esteem who could be trusted as Moulton:thought him the suooessor of Sir Phillip Sydney in all that was high, noble and honora ble. In the course of his testimony Tilton said he embraced the cause of woman's SHffra ire before the war at tbe solicita tion of his wife and under Ihe conviction stirred by Beecber's sermons in favor of the cause. Again ne saul, "1 enlarged my ideas 00 tbe subject of divorce at ihe lime Beecher married Mrs. McFar laud and Mr. Richardson. , That was' an act which at the time I defended." cross-examine- :, . $l.OO ' FOREIGN. A Paris, The New York Herald 4. d Pccltllor's Wonderful ISicle. correspondent at Vilada, Feb. 2d says General Morio-ne- s From the Reading Eagle. entered Noaiu. eisrht miles from with 20,000 men. 'ampeluna, A peddler named Jonas Marbur-ge- r Will enter Paiupelnca and has for many years tramped over probably attack Carascol simultaneously from the rear, having now turned that various sections of this ?nJ neighmponant position. The Carlists, num- counties selling his wnrw; At boring ering ii.OOO, are at Saragossa. Moureal the fighting is very oevere. and by a consistent course he has Moriones has suffered severely. The battle is only really beginning. It is won the confidence and esteem of a mpossible to predict the rrtult. The urge number of acquaintances. On Carlists are abandoning Vilada. asd Tuesday afternoon about five o'clock will rejoin the main army the peddler opeucd his pack in the Brussels, 5. kitchen ol a man named hshelstaub, Prince Phillip. Duke of Saxony, murin The farmer's Albany township. ried y the Princess Louise, eldest 1 what she wife desired, and purchase daughter of the King of the Belgians. tlw peddler, according to the custom Madrid, 4. The Alfonsoists captured Puenta Ln of that neighborhood, was asked to Reina at the poiut of the b.iyenent, remain for supper, which he did. and winning a complete victory, and are determined to stay all now within six kilometers of Estella. subsequently The village of Puenta La lleina was night. At about nine o'clock the peddler fired by shell and destroyed. Alfonso was under fire for Ihe first tune in a was shovn to a largo garret under skirmish at Oteizo. Gen. Loma defeated the roof, where he was to sleep. The he Carlists yesterday at Ceotoca after and family retired, nothing unusual five hours' hard fighting. occurred some until time near midLondon, 5. when the farmer was awakened The Times special from Rome savs night, efforts have been made to ascertain if by the barking ol watch dogs and the Austria is incliued to support Cardinal tramping f horse's hoofs. He arose Ratischo's election to the papacy. The and locked out of the window toward government has declined to interfere, the barn, when an extraordinary fearing it will be held responsible for the German policy towards a new pope sight met his gaze. The dogs wero t is thought the conservatives would in an adjoining field, and, strange to support Kauscuo if he would be elect ed. say, there appeared to bo a ghost to-da- y. - to-da- London, 4. A Berlin dispatch to the Cologne Ga zette says Bismarck is suffering from a nervous affection. It is rumored in the upper House that tbe Prince intends to retire shortly after his sixtieth birthday. The Gazette does not give entire credit to the last statement. Montreal, 4. The wall of Queen's Hall, burned last spring, was blown down lat night, fall ing through Ihe roof of Hazard's assembly rooms and carrying down to the store below a portion of the daucing floor with dancers, some of whom were fatally injured. e Aiar-riag- 1 r .. : . FEBRUAK1 IO, 1S7.1. amount of testimony to day which was mainly a repetition of that heretofore brought out. The most notable evidence was that of Louis Texadas, cooservative witness, who admitted his belief that frauds were committed in the returns by SlcEnery, in the vote in '72, though he believed the whites had a majority in the state and consequently won the election. New Orleans, 4. Before the congressional committee T. W. Abney, witness for the conservatives, read a written statement of the, Couslmtta affair. He denied that he prosperity of Coushaita was due lo norilieiu men. Tbe settlement was more prosperous before they came than alter. His account of the arrest asd circumstances leading to it of the six men, and their subsequent massacre, did not differ from the accounts heretofore published in ihe Shreveport and New Orleans papers. Washington, 4. The ease of Otilton, collector of inter nal revenue, .against the savings and Oan institution, from the California circuit presenting the question whether such institutions are liable to the tax ou deposits and dividends as general bankers, whose dwpoits are payable by check, iraft, etc., has just been argued before the Supreme Court; also that of Oulton vi. California Insurance company in re- atiou to the tax on dividends. The committee on ways and means considered the tariff bill and 00k a number of vstes, which developed he fact that the proposition to tax tea and coffee will not carry as an independent proposition, but may if some other articles now free are included with them. The majority of the committee are opposed to any new tariff bill, but there seems to be no doubt the bill will be re ported, probably by Monday Holland, from the Houe judiciary committee, reported favorably on the law relating to to bill 8 restore age was prior to tbe as it naturalizing just ate confederation, in which the omission of the word "white'left the door open for the naturalization of Chinamen. The bill wag recumniitvetl wi'.h authority to bring it before the House far action at any lime. New York, 4. In the Belcher cae Evans of continued the The principal points referred to doctrines, as shown being his e in his published articles, "Love, and Diiorce," and others which were put in evidence. There was a long discussion between the counsel as to the admission of ar ticles from the Golden Age which were not written or expressly sanctioned by Tilton. The court rulea that only such articles ns were written by him or suncticticd by bim could be admitted. mong the articles sought te be intro duced wa3 one which Tilton disavowed any knowledge of until after its publication, and which he did not sanction, which he said was written by a lady member of Plymouth church. A recess free-lov- lu 1 Wow Did lie Know. You often in Paris meet (he Bretoti lauds, and instantly recog-ognize them by the cut of their hair. The girls, however httlw, all wear white cups that' conceul every atom ot hair, which, together with their wide collars give them a very . quaint, old-i- thioned appearance. The girls are very poud of those same and a wrinkle nappiDg or crease woul be very ditressiB2. our artist and c m- "But, de pagnun voyage, "you would think these pretty girls had no IoveiS, lor their collars are never rumpled, and it is generally conceded that a lover in the rural districts always implies tumbled curls and collars. How do you s'pose they mauae?"' "Do without a lover. "By no means. Thevjust slip their hands under their collars, aud turn them up liko a Uedge about their ears. The custom Las been handed down from mother to daughter until the most unsophisticated young girl of sixteen knows how to flip up her collar and keep it smooth as well as the wbest." "How did you fiod this out?" we asked, much impressed with the amount and character of his information. "Ilow did I find out? Oh, yes a man told me." Correspondence Chicago Times. wide-collars- , . riding about on one of the farmer's young horses. The farmer called the hired man, and ob going to the garret with a lantern they found the bed which had been occupied empty, and the peddler gone, but his clothes still hanging on a chair, where he had evidently placed them. They wont down stairs, and found that ail the doors were Ucked, as they were before they retired. Going out, they found tho horse still on a full gallop uuder the direction of his mysterious rider. The hired man watched his chance, caught the animal, and upon closer examination found thbt the rider was the peddler who sat there like a statute, and was in a complete state of somnambulism. He had nothing on except his shirt, undershirt, drawers and stockings, and, notwithstanding the coldness of the night ho was perspiring freely when lifted down. They could not waken him properly until he was led into the house, aud when' he came to his senses he seemed to know nothing of He seemed what had occurred. startled at being out of bed and dowa stairs in such apparel. Subsequent examination showed that the man, in his Blrango state, had worked his way out of a trap door to the roof, and thenco down to a roof of a back building, and thenco to the ground. Have Yoa IHnemicM? Go straight and don't mind them. If they get in your way walk around thcra regardless of. their spite. A man who has no enemies is seldom good for anything; he is made of that kind of material which is so easily worked that every one has a hand in it. A sterling character is one who thinks for himself and speaks what he tninks; he is always sure to have enemies. Thev are as necessary to him as fiesh air, they keep him alive and active A celebrated character, who was surrounded by enemies, used to remark : "They are sparks, which if you do not blow, will go out themselves." "Live down prejudices," was the Iron Duka's motto. Let this he your feeling while endeavoring to live down the scandal ot those who are bitter against you. If you stop to dispute, you do as they desire, and opeu the way for abuse Let the poor fool talk there will be a reaction if you but perform your duty, and hun-drewho werj once alienated from will flock to you and acknowleda you . "What are you after,' my dear?" said a grandmother to a little boy, who was sliding along a room and casting furtive glances at a gentleman who was paying a visit. "I am trying, grandma, to steal papVs hat out of the room witkout letting the gentleman see it; he wants him to i think he's out." '' their error, ' .' ds |