OCR Text |
Show . - " - mvia,.&Xii " .itofea PUBLISHED WUDNESDA Y and fFFldBi, Pf?Si. SEMI-WEEKL- Y, ( OCDEN DIRECTORY, BY TELEGRAPH. rtrr.nm Post Office: AMERICAN. OF MAILS ARRIVAL ANB CLOSING U 7.50 tonWeMlJ, Lake Citv, 6.45 D,m. ,m 7.40 a.m. 5.40 p.m. Through Mail daily 5.40 ll'!e ally LTi City, ' Thronph Mail hjy Mail daily Vflst .W,rl, a.m 6.30 p.m. 620 p.ui. 8.40 a.m. 7.00 a.m. ait Lake and the East 6.00 p.m. Efr Ukea..d the Wo Wyom-f"- i J JichConHtv, mails fro via EvanRton, ,' an,l leave the hitter place tor Kich County, 2 p.m. hesaavs a.,1 Saturdays, at - ; ' - CheC,(mty,dly u"',u,vi aim aud Saturdays, and Satur- flunisvilie, Wednesdays North W'lwi - j- 2.00 p.m. 7.00 a.m. 1'Wn City and Slatorsville, Mondays and Thursdays dooporand Minn, Wednesdays LvBui" 2.90 p.m. 7.00 a.m. "JSltUrdKWEITODRS. 6.15 p.m. 8.15 a.m Delivery, smm;tr, uu.m. in i,.ov DKPARTMISNT REGISTRY 3 p.m. Open from 9 a.m-t- o M0NKY Ot'FICK DEPARTMEMT. Open from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Outside Door own from 6 a.m. to 8 p.m. J0SKP1I WALL, PuutmaBter. fieoem! Trains - train arrives C. P. " " " leaves " " C. P. C, P. U. P. a.m. p.m. p.m. a.m. a.m. p.m. a.m. 6.30 p.m. 6 p.m. 8 30 a:m. 7.40 5.40 6.20 8.50 7.50 5.40 8.40 -- - - " train arrives and " rj. C. " leaves " U, N. and train arrives - - leaves Religious Scryiocs at 11 a.m., and Every Sundav, in the'Mwrnacle, Is the Swoiid Ward Schoolhouse Farley's Sehool-ous- e at 5 p.m. and Third Ward School-hous- e Episcopal Church at 1 1 a.m. and 7 p.m. . Metbodist Church atll a.m. and 7 i.m. gairkualiiit Lecture (Child's llall), at 7.30 p.m. Washington, 2. Justice Clifford, of the United States Supreme Court, leaves Washington tomorrow, with his wife, for Califernia.on a visit of pleasure to the Pacific Coast. The public will remember that Judge Clifford was the United States Commissioner who signed the treaty of Guada-loupHidalgo, and that on the bench he had always manifested especial interest in the work of clearing away fraudulent California 1 ind grants. He also wrote decision. the A letter received here, from the naval officer at Port lleyal, who is in direct communication with assistant surgeons at Koy West, says there has been two more deaths from yellow fever at that port. Several new cases iinve appeared. Lieut. Col. Hatch 4th United States cavalry, commanding at Fort Sill, telegraphs the war department as follows, under date of April 10th, from Fremont: "Complaints having been made by Iudi-an- s camped near this post that they are suffering from hunger, 1 have made an investigation, and find the complaints well founded." The following is the ration allowed by the Indian department: beef, three pounds gross on hoof, one day in fifteen; pound of bacon, issued in lieu of beef, Hour or bread, f pound; to 100 rations; four pounds of coffee, eight pounds of sugar, one pound of salt, one pound of soap, one half pound of tobacco. This ration was established when the Indian could partly e three-quart- er one-hal- support himself by hunting; with no other help it is barely enough to prevent Imnger. It is not, however, all issued. There is at the agency no flour, of the authorized and not over amount has been issued during the present fiscal year. There ia no sugar, and not over of the regular issue has been made during the same time. The beef lately issued has been shameone-thir- d Ogden City 'Geo. W. Turners' ' At Library Kews Depot. Open Sundays executed. very day, two-thir- F. S. RICHARDS, ds fully bad, so poor, that the gro83,ia. altogether out of proportion to netUefgTitf ATTORNEY Acting Indian Agent Howard acknowAnd ledges that the beef, lately, was unfit for KOTAitY PUBLIC, food, but states that it was all he had - Utah. for issue. Ogden City, The condition of affairs at Wichita is worse than here. There has agency N. TANNER Jr., been no flour for a long time, the agent is absent and the Indians are killing and ATTORNEY eating their horses. Office with County Recorder, "Endorsement by General Pope, reUtah. spectfully Oijdm City, forwarded to the adjutant of the army, through the office general of the assistant adjutant general of the military division of the Missouri. WATCHMAKER AND JEWELER, The attention of the proper authority 2fer in Watches, Clocks, Jewelry, Silver and ia specially invited to the evident maladrUirf Ware, MAIN STREET. OUDEN. ministration of Indian affairs which exRepairing neatly done and all work warranted. ists at Fort Sill and Wichita agencies. It fs idle to expect these Indiar s to remain peaceably upon their reservations with the prespect of starvation in doing so. The world is full of So long as this maladministration exists Children crying for the military authar.ties cannot and will McLAIX'S not consent to be held accountable for Candied Castor which may occur on their any outrages Oil. AT LAW AT LAW, J.S.LEWIS, 11-l- delicious,, Jt is harmless. anl ""mi y effective The re- pulsive taste and Ninell of the Castor Oil is en Its 'irely overcome. athartic powers are Price 25 cents. i jlcUm's Vermifuge Bonbons effective, They resemble Cream ft!!)81"3 .fls kPt iu confectioners' shops. Children Jr. w" mom aud cry for tbeoi. Price 25 cts. per box. Li other druggists. g37-l- y . y building. Wh ,Cettb!;tt' Durham st UU ri, PTi7'the Bull, ' DICKENS," Stock Fair at Salt Apply to C.F.MIDDLETON. Ogdeu City e9tf. TAILORING. Montreal, 3. The river is clear of ice to Quebec. Ocean vessels are all expected up tomorrow. St. Louts, 2. Mrs. Divan, wife, of John Divan, a railroad man of Kansas City or Jefferson City, and his two little girls, aged 7 and 8 year, were lost on the steamer St. Luke, and six or seven deck passengers are supposed to be lost, but their names cannot be ascertained. Chicago, 3. Dispatches from points in Iowa, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Missouri and Minnesota, report very little if any damage done, to wheat by Saturday's frost. The enly harm done seems to have been to early vegetables, fruit suffering little if any. FOREIGN. Kingston, Jamaica, 3. Rumors of an alarming nature have reached herefrom Port au Prince. There has been some disturbances at Port au Pais, and the British consul assaulted and wounded. The commander of a British gunboat wished to bombard the place, but was prevented by the wounded consul, who has since arrived at Kingston. Commander Lyons here has sent a steamer of war to Port au Prince to demand explanations and indemnity for the outrages under penalty of immediate retaliation upon the town of Port au Pais for the insult to the British flag. Berne, 3. The representatives of the states belonging to the postal union, ratified this France signed it, subject treaty to the consent of the Assembly. to-da- y. London, 3. received has committee The Carlist New York, 3. victories by of of the "City The captain and pilot telegrams reporting great of command under forces Carlos' Den in the which en was collision Hartford," East river this afternoon, are both ar- Sabatta, at BreJa Lerida and Santa rested and locked up in default of $5,000 Caloma, over King Alfonso's forces, They lost five bail to await the inquest. numbering 40,000 men. Stillman Witt, a prominent citizen of chief officers at Breda, nnd 350 men at Cleveland, who sailed for Europe in the Santa Coloma. Another victory for tbe steamer "Servia"' a week ago, for the Carlists, under Castelc, is reported from benefit of of his health, died at sea. He Arajon. The government- troops are said was largely interested in railroad enter- to have lost all their artillery and many prisoners The Alfonsist general, prises of the west. was killed. seMr. of is The illness Tracy more The schooner Jefferson Bonden, from rious because his disease is complicate! with Bright's disease of tho kidneys. New Orleans for this port has arrived off Mr. Tracy has for many years been a Porta Leven. The captain reports that murdered the first and second leading spirit in Wall street, and his ill- the crew ness had a decided effect on the stock mates, killed two failors, wounded and market. In the early dealings the mar- put in irons one sailor, wounded and ket was strong, prices advancing from chained ts the pump another, who is to Si per cent., the latter on Tanama; dying. The vessel is worked by three but on the announcement of the critical hands. London, 4. condition of Mr. Tracy, the market beadditional Th5 particulars following fallen Bince came heavy and prices have on the from J to 2 per cent., the latter in Pana- have been obtained of the mutiny Jffer-BordeThe schooner Borden: ma. It is not known what Mr. Tracy's Jefferson Patterson master, sailed from interest in the market is, but it is not March 5th, for London. Orleans New believed to be large; every one, however, from the former seem disposed to await exact information When eighteen days out. broke a Capt. Patter-eo- n port, mutiny before extending operations. and the officers fought the men Yesterday at the opning of the with revolvers and knives, and after a Beecher trial, Mrs. Tilton made a senwhich the first, and sation by arising and saying: "Judge terrible struggle, in killed, the captain were mates second which communication Neilson, I have and securing all in succeeded disabling read aloud, to I would beg your honor He hailed a resisted. who before the opening of the proceedings." (he men obtained hands enough vessel, ad. passing Judge Neilson took the letter under on his and proceeded the work to but ship, i not known, visement. Its purport it is supposed to be a deuial of tbe voyage to London. Halifax, S adultery and a plea to be heard in court. from Boston, The steamer Alhambra, II. P. McMaannaa testifiei ihat he part." n, Jam 8Mnf .k!ALAMS wi9"eb to inform has opened for business in tho at his shop, above line text to PooVs Ibid, ifthStreet, Ocden patronage. Hn?,eiea, etc., done with Dispatch. SATISFACTION "an GUARANTEED. 'ir(l Street. VOL. VI went ashore at Cape Sable on Sunday How Tlioy Do II in Texas. evening during a thick fog. The pas sengers and mails were landed safely on The Dallas (Texas) Herald of the the island, where the passengers remained to day. The vessel is probably 24th ult. gives the following account a total loss. of a bank robbiug exploit, which Berlin, May 2. The answer of Belgium to the last Ger- strongly calls to mind the daring outman note has been received. It is cour rage in Carthage, Mo., last fall. The teous in tone, and merely takes notice of Herald says : Germany s action in regard to the revision of penal laws and in no way re"From a gentleman who reached turns to the subjects of the first reply, except to reserve for a future time the the city last evening the reporter was adoption of a resolution iu accordanea giveu tho particulars of a bold and with the friendly declaration contained daring attempt to rob the bank at in that reply. Cleburne, Johnson Co. On Wednesday afternoon two men rode up to A French ISoiuaiice. tho bank, and, dismounting, entcied Galagnini's Messenger says: An and requested change for a $20 gold extraordinary case has j'ist been be- piece. As tho cashier reached to receive the coin from one man, tho fore the civil tribunal of Tours Loir). It arose out of an ap- other seized him by the throat, and plication by Viscount de Finse, of both drawing revolvers, commanded the chateau of La Grangerie, to ob- him to keep silent on penalty of death. Their threats were not tain the legal interdiction of his mother, a widow aged G7, on the heeded, and the cashier set up a shout ground of her insanity. The con- for help. As soon as he raised the duct of the viscountess had for some alarm, the robber who handed him time past been so strange that the the coin, fired, the ball striking him son wished to deprive her of tbe in the cheek, ranging downward and management of her fortune, which breaking the jawbone. Immediately she was dissipating, not only prodi- after firing the shot, the robbers ran gally, bnt in such a manner as to for their horses, and had succeeded cause a scandal in the neigliboihood in mounting them, when the citizens, of her residence. The mother re- who by this time had assembled, fire upon them. ' One plied by denying the right of the opened a li?ely the robbers' horses was wounded, young man to make such a demand. of alleging that he was not the son of and he would have been captured had either herself or her husband. In not his comrade, with a reckless drawn hiB pistols aud rushed support of that allegation she made a bravery, his In the faco of a heavy to rescue. swnea of extraordinary revelations. in mounting his succeeded fire he According to her acconet she married the father of the present vis- unhorsed comrade behind him, and count in 1833. She was of very putting epurs to his horse dashed humble origin, having previously ex- rapidly away The whole thing oo ercised the calling of midwife. The curred so sudden, and was so unexfrieuds of her husband, offended at pected, that it wat some minutes bethis messalliance, immediately ceased fore the eitizens could rally. In a all relatious with him, and repeated short time, however, bands of horsemen were scouring the country iu attempts to obtain a reconciliation were unsuccessful. lie then thought every direction, and it seems almost that the birth of a child might, per- impossible that the daring scoundrels should escape. When last heard of haps, cause bis parents to relent, but his wife was without family, lie, in they were moving iu the direction of Johnson's Station. It is to be hoped consequence, gave out that she was will be overtaken and made that pregnant, and took a house at Mont- to they their daring crime. The for answer In morency for her confinement. wound of the cashier is not considerthe meantime, arrangements were made with a midwife named Soumet, ed dangerous." of the Hue de l'Oratoire, ia Paris, who engaged to procure a child at the right moment; this was done, and An Historical Pony. the infant was registered as the son of the Viscouut and Viscountess. The Denver ; Times brings this The child was in reality the eon of a neat little scrap of history: "Ihe woman named Legendre or Villo Uartholomew trained Eocky MounIt vas put out to wet tain animals, W. II. Mcnd'ee, prod'Avray. died a few days afterward. prietor, contains a horse which has but nurse, The woman Soumst then procured & an interesting history. Tt is a spotsecond one, the son of an unmarried ted sorrel Indian potiy named and was formerly owned by woman who had been confined at her Inwhich was and made Leind to take house, Mary Medina, a half-bree-d the place of the other. According dian living on tho Big Thompson. to the allegation of the mother, the The horso and girl were mutually atyoung man who has always passed as tached to each other, and the former her son was this infant, which was would follow the latter and answer brought up by herself and her hus- her call like a dog. Two years ago band, but who does not appoar to the girl was killed by the Indians. have ever been acknowledged by the The father was inconsolate at her family, or to have caused the hoped-fo- r death, and buriW her beneath an arreconciliation. The father died bor in the form of a triangle, and for last venr, and the young man suc some unexplained reason a barrel and ceeded to the title and fortune of a drum is kept at her grave. On The francs. he endeavored several the occasions of to 300,000 hearing sekill her favorite pony and bury it case occupied three days; on the cond, the viscount wished to stop the with her, but was prevented. . After proceedings by abandoning his de- purchasing the Bartholomew trained mand for the interdiction of the animals, Mr. Mcuefee desired td add dowager viscountess, but this was op- this pony to the collection, and about posed by her counsel, and the court three weeks ago,' after surmounting ordered the suit to continue. Tbe the prejudices of the father, the purlie also tribunal finally gave judgment that chase was consummated. h the of saddle bo become has the Viscountess de inse snould possessor admitted to furnish proofs of her and accoutrements, which tbe girl statements, and ordered a judicial made with her own hands, spending a full year in the making. The bridle inquiry into the circumstances. and whip arc of horse hair, tho sad"Idiot!" exclaimed a lady, coming dle and blankets are of skins highly out of the theatre, one evening, as a ornamented with bells and embroidgentleman accidentally stepped on ered with beads. These cost him a her trailing skirt. "Which one of large sum, but the acquisition is a taluaWe one." ua?" blandly responded the man. (In-drc- Beecher yesterday received into Plymouth church 105 members, 75 on their profession of faith and 30 by letter from sister churches. After baptizing 20 of the new members, Beecher announced that children would be baptized in the church on Sunday next. Henry C. Bowen and his family were among the communicants. Dispatches from various points in the Pennsylvania coal region report the strike still in fosce vUh disturbances at several places. De-lat- re Bull For Sale. ?T MAY 8, 1875. walked in the llossel procession, and Tilren was marching with Swintou. Albert Martin testified that he was at Ovington's on the day Bessie Turner went before the committee, and she was with Gen. Tracy in the backparloT talking for two hours. This was introduced to rebut Tracy's statements as well as Bessie's, their report of the interview confining it to teu minutest. Franklin Woodruff, in rebuttal of Tracy's testimony, swore that iu his interview with Tracy, he said Tilton's charge against Beecher was adultery, and that he informo'i Tracy that Beeclier had advanced 500 far the relief of Tilton's family. Boston, 2. The consecration of Archbishop Williams took place in the new Catholic cathedral, with imposing ceremonies, Cardinal McClosky officiating. About 10,000 were in aud areund the to-da- . JBBSS SA TUItDA Y.) OCDEX, UTAH. SATURDAY 30. tfo. - et in-sta- . , Ht , , Nio-quic- h, |