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Show THE EVENING NEWS. PUaLISHID DAILY, BTTWDAYS four DAVID O. IXCKFTID AT o'cxock. to-da- Iie-arrct- -l CALDER, tc-- r Editor and itTTBLisnra. July 26, A POSSIBLE SMALL "CHANCE ted entirely by (.'look, umlei the no objection having been made to direction of Sheiidau. the petition filed some time ago. FOR THE VOLUNTEERS. A meeting of citizens was held 'f lieSlWUnc.HA&tCr o: iJ;fc"IulinwW" y in the mayor's ollice to There may be a chance for the Tlio Custer Monti' devise means for enteitaining the men. volunteers. It appears by our discrews of oarsmen visiting II jwland, of the foreign Sailiug-m::- the city to participate in the regatpatches that, while Grant, Sheryesterday ta. A committee was man and Sheridan are opposed to Mohair k was) on a charge of rcrjury. lie mado with lion. J.W. Forney appointed, chairman, the idea of organizing volunteer several attempts to escape, and was to obtain subscriptions to meet the forces for the Indian war, those at last lodged in jail in default of expenses of theentertainment; A large, augry crowd was was subscribed on the spot. generals are favorable to the ac- bail. who to him. threatened The Seventy-firs- t lynch New York ceptance of volunteers to fill up the about, The Custer monument fund regiment leave for home this evenCuster the companies depleted by reaches nearly S 1,000. ing. slaughter, and the regiments in the Frontier Volunteer Kot Wanted field to their full strength, such CANADA. The Uovdrnor or Montana Advised to Organize the BliMU.t for volunteers to enlist for six months Xixuy Houses Destroyed by tire. K merge uric Wall of the HI-- ' or for the war. .Even this scheme here yesCairo, 26. A great fire dows and Urplinna by the Outer terday near Conhouses would require the sanction of many destroyed Mnssnrrc. the market. vegetable gress. The Tribune's Washington special There may bo some who would says several western Recaptured. senators and 26. John and be willing to volunteer under those delegates have urged upon the Pres-deHamilton, Ont., Wm. who the of escaped from Young, is but the proposition necessity requesting conditions, under sentence of when to for the prison grant authority not very tempting to civilians. Of Congress deatli for the murder of Abel Mcto of volunteers supprcs-acceptance course those volunteers would" be the hostileSioux. ThePreiident very Donald, have been recaptured. under the immediate command of positively refused to do so on thy that he does not need them. regular army officers, and would ground FOREIGN. The only proposition of tho kind be all privates, or meets with his favorable conthat CREAT BRITAIN officers at most. No chance for sideration is one to allow him to to an Armistice. Doinl Favorable an ambitious volunteer to be gen- recruit for the regular regiments 26. Sir Jr.hn William now London, and in hostile the companies eral or major, or captain, or lieutenstatesman and author, the to Keyes, their full with country stieugth ant even, but simply one of the who will enlist therein id dead. common rank and file, or at most, volunteers, The Standard's Vienna special to serve six mouths, or during the but hardly likely, a sergeant or a contiuuauee of the war. The.-e-, he says the Servians intend withdrawing from all their positions to We do not know how thinks, would be effective eoldit-rs- , corporal. within the frontier. The prevailing new believed ho but organizations Generals Connor and Maxwell could not be niudo terviceaMe in opinion in military circles is that would fancy that kind of volun- time. In this opinion tho President the Turks will not follow them thither. The condition of aflairs is teering, but we presume it was not is supported by 8liermau and favorable to an armistice. claim thut the reguexactly the kind they volunteered lar to are sufficient with Letter from Explorer Stanley. cope troops to volunteer. the hostile Sioux, though botli The Daily Ttlerraih announced would be willing to accept six this morning that letters from from the iroutier months' recruits Stanley, tho famous ex "WELL, WE WANT NOTHING to rill up the companies if Congress Henry M. have been received, dated plorer, BUT IN THIS WORLD. would so authorize. 21, fifteen days' march from April of Governor the MONEY." others, Among UklKt. Montana, who was one of SherStut-ksSliver llulilou In Bank. Tin-- noted "Wesleyau Methodist man's geneia's during the war, u offered raise to men thousand aud Puu-shoConsols 96; United States bonds preacher, Rev. Dr. Morley them into the field for operalOSg; Erie I2i. it appears, has been telling take tions the Sioux, or for the Silver 50Ad, the nearest quotable some of his views on "Mormon-ism- ," defenseagainst of tho settlements of that price. at Dublin. In speaking of Territory, urging that there is 1 he bullion gone into the Bank his visit to this city, Dr. Punshon danger tnat the Sioux will break of England y is 267,000. into small bauds and make raids up a a of relation of visit "the The Goodwood Stakes. gave for and for diversion; and minister of the Methodist church" thatsupplies The Goodwood stakes was won also iu ease of disaster to tiie to him at the Townsend House. regular troops there would be noth- by Hampton, Admiral Bvnir sec The Dr. asked the preacher hew he ing to keep the Sioux from crush- ond, Fiuis third; nine raH, including ing off the Montana settlements tne American horse Jilate. was getting on. The preacher re- and clearing tho country to the plied, "Well, we want nothing in Columbia River. FRANCE. this world but money." A very Sherman declined the offer of the More Communists l'ardoned. frank confession. That is the very volunteers, but advised the Gwv- 26. McMahon President ernor to organizs a militia force for Paris, thing these preacher fellows are emergencies. The President and has granted 127 additional pardons after, as has been manifest so many military authorities desire, ifpos to communists. times by their begging excursions sible, to confine the expenses of in the States east and west. That this war within the regular army or at least to con they want money desperately is also appropriations, fine any extra cost to the single abundantly manifest from the un- item of transportation, so that othNorniHl Institute. scrupulous means they adopt to ob- erwise the Government shall not tain it.They not only pertinaciously expend a single dollar more than Hvrum Cn v, Cache Co, u the troops were in garrison. g on extensive begging expedi22, 1S76. Col. Crittenden, of the 17th In tions for it, but they descend to the fautry, whose only son was killed Editor Deseret AYrraJuly . adoption of the dishonest tactics of in the Custer massacre, received a The school teachers of ("ache his wife iuclos lying about, slandering, and libel- letteronefrom met at the First Ward she had received county from ing just a far better people than they Ft. Lincoln. The ing wife of schoolhouse on Monday the 10th writer, are, In order to work on the sympa- an army, officer at that post, says, instant, and organized the Cache thies of their ignorant hearers at a when the news of the fate of Cus County Normal Institute, Miss Ida Cook Principal. distance hence, and so through the ter's command reached them, there I. Teachers or a present Logan, Wil Went wail lorth it is that grief sympathies of the audience steal a seldom the lot of human to lard Maughau, Annie Doremus, beings way to their packets. But what of witness. The agony and wretch Mattie Blair, Josephine ClufT, that? Did not tho Methodist edness it has caused i something Lyuia Crocket, Caroline Olsen, L. terrible. It was announced to Hyde. Miilvilie, Mary M. Henrie preacher at Salt Lake frankly own twenty-fowr women that they were Ilyrum, Charles C. Shaw. Proviup to his brother Methodist preach widows, and, to more twice dence, J. H. Brown, C. D. W. Full er from England that money was that number of children,thau that they mer, Annie Matthews. Paradise, his main object and only want? were fatherless. What is mostpain- - itemy A. bnaw. Wellsville. W or all is that most or these poor K. Reid, Fanny Nibley. Mendon, "Well, we want nothing in this iul women are left utterly penniless, Jolin Donaldson, liyuo 1'ark, b. world but money." Of course that's without means to take them away Turner, Lars ( Peterson, Permelia what they are after. Everybody from the fort.or to subsist on should Smithtield, W. A. Noble. Drury. knows that. But it is not always they get away. Crittenden lias al Richmond, Edwin Smith. New A. 1. Welshman. Clifton, so unreservedly confessed. ready called on a number of Con- ton, It is gressmen, M. Marley. Lucetta with them and rranklin, presented the miser's doctrine. But never the but relief seeim to eome Susie L. Uoaslind. facts, two of mind. There is nothing like show- m very slowly. The abject the weeks' ses sion will, I think, bring about the ing your true colors, if they are Tbe Great Auction Sale. desired result.viz., a uuiform meth greenbacks and gold. The great auction sale begun yes od of teaching throughout the terday, of blankets, llannels,wasfec, county. a On Friday, the 2 1st, the labors of J.nere THE WIDOWS AND ORPHANS continued marked falling oil in the number the Institute were brought to a of buyers, yet prices were kept up close. Mr. Reid, on behalf of OF THE SLAIN. to within ten per cent, of the mar- the members, presented Miss Oun dispatches tell us that the ket value, and the bidding was Cook with a very handsome bound volume, "History of the United widows and orphans of the soldier spirited. States," a gold necklace with locket victims of the Custer slaughter are The Independent CJreeubueU Con attached, also a written testimo ventlon. at Fort Lincoln in a destitute which was signed by all the nial, St. Louis, 26. The independent members or tne institute. condition. This should not be. Miss Cook made a suitable reply, convention, to nominate greenback Orders should hare been dispatch a for the second dis and said it had taken her by surcongressman ed at once for the relief of their ac trict of Kansas, was held at LawShe thanked every one prise. tual want?, and Congress should rence, Kansas, yesterday, only present for their kiud feelings and eighty being regard. have moved swiftly to devise and thirty delegates of thetne nominees H,nuorslng The following gentlemen visited to have put into prompt execution present. ot the Indianapolis greenback con tbe Institute: Preston, to measures of assistance vention caused a long, bitter dis- Roskelly, Danes,Bishops adequate Hammond and was on laid and were men of the finally families who the cussion, Jordon, also M. Thatcher, C. whereupon the Peter James A. Leishman, C. O.Nibley, slain, so far as those families were the table, Card, Cooper men withdrew from the and W. H. Appleby, Esqrs. dependent on the slain. At Fort convention. The remainder of the The Institute was adiourned sub Fettermau the families are practi delegates then nominated John R. ject to the call of the County Sup the present incumbent, erintendent. Superintendent Ros cally beyond the teach of other Goodwin, assistance than what may come for Congress. kelly is alive t the educational Cleveland, 26. interests of the county, and he has through the army officials, and Second day's races; the weather the respect, confidence and esteem consequently these should be em is clear, pleasant and the track in of the school teachers. powered to supply all reasonable good condition. Attendance large. Very respectfully, needs to those who have been so In the 2 29 claas, Mattie was the Charles C. Shaw. Gen. Grant second, Madifavorite, so and bereaved. suddenly terribly third. In the 2.22 class, Cozette It may be true that the slaughter son was tho favorite, Badger Girl secA correspondent of the Chic was the result of a blunder, or of a ond. Tr.Lxme ago Isays, "It is currently blind rashness, but, if so, few of the The Mlacfa. IIUU-IU- cu Qnnrtz. here believed that Mrs. Tilden her slain are responsible for this, and Bismarck, 26. Three hundred self would gladly return home If of quartz, they all did give their lives for pounds of their country, aud in tho idea that brought from the Black Hills, were hhe coal 1. She has no social recog The richest nition by Plymouth Church people, assayed yesterday. they were performing their duty, showed to the ton; the poor- and is $5,059 compelled to support herself and they and theirs should be re- est $2,500. That assayed was from a struggle to which she is quite membered accordingly, and par- the Woolsey lode, two miles from eight others, equal- unequal." ticularly the living should not be Deadwood,and have been discovered in rich, ly neglected. the same vicinity, known as follows: California Joe, Blowout Light, Mary Ida, Gray Clara, No. 1, II! DESERET and No. 2, Red Cloud, The Frenchman, and Smoky Jones. For Wednesday , Jily 26, 1878. Dentrncilve Fire aud Lom of I.tfV-Ja- y PER WafcTtltN UWIO.V TKLKGKAPII LINE. Cooke A Co. Discharged from SIXTEEN PAGES AND EIGHTY COLUMNS OP READING. liaukruptcy, etc. 1870. 0 NEWS OP THE DAY. Democratic ratification meeting at Tammany Hall. The W. P. R. it. a9ka an extension of time. Troops for the. Red Cloud Agency. Democratic nomination at 8t Louis. Cleveland races. nt Congressional news. Four companies of artillery ordered to the west. The Mexican revolution defeat of the revolutionists at For-tidead. n. Sir John William Keyes is The Servians to contract their linen. The Turks not to follow. Armistice talked of. Letters have been received from Stanley, who it was feared wm lost. John and William Young, iiiupU-rfM- , recaptured. Fire at Cairo, many houses I' -- ' r. --- el. tore Communists pardoned. great auction sale of The woollen goods at New York. Independent greenback convention at St. Louis. About Merritt's column. Crook's force. Battle expected soon. Forts to be built at once. Crook to direct the campaign. The sailing master of the Mohawk has been Tareiits to lynch him. The Custer monument, Si,- 000. Til" President positively re- fusei volunteers, except to fill up companies. Sherman advices the Governor or M n tana to organize a militia force for emergencies. Wives and children of Custer's soldiers penniless. Assays of quartz from the Black Hills. two Fire at Philadelphia women killed. Races in England. Jy Cooke & Co. discharged from haukrHptcy. Two batteries of artillery to report to Gen. Pope. Five letters from Stanley. Nomination for commission er of internal revenue. EDITORIAL NOTES. The renorter9 and correauon tient.s do not seem to be equal to the task of adequately setting forth the glories of the Centennial Exhi bition, and here is a suggestion of the cause, as given by a correspondent of the Cincinnati Timet "There has been a general com plaint about the poor letters that are written from this Exposition. But let those same grumblers pay their fifty cents apiece, and walk through the turnstiles. Let them take the West End railway that carries passengers around the grounds for five cents each. Let them begin to count on their fingers the 170 different places of interest marked down on the map. Then by the time they have walked through ten miles of machinery, and between acres of paintings, and over leagues of floors covered with beauty, elegance, utility and grandeur, they will gasp in wonder and never again criticize us pitiful pen wield-er-- , who are like the most microscopic mites, endeavoring at one bite to take in a whole cheese. We can not describe it in total, and any one item is insignificant when compared with the vastness of the whole." Miss Jennie Mandle, a pretty but giddy girl of eighteen, a farmer's daughter of Coopersville, Pa., vUited a friend in Philadelphia, goi acquainted with a "nice" but unprincipled young man named Charles Watkius, was seduced by him, but afterwards married to him. He visited her father's house, got into quarrels with her father aud brothers, and killed two of her brothers, and fatally wounded her father, while they were at work in the field. A correspondent of the New York World solves the fast driving problem in this way "Five miles an hour is the best speed attainable by an average modern improved policeman, and is also the limit set by law to fast driving. Now, when a policeman sees a carriage pass him, all he has to do is to run after it; if he can catch up to it the dri ver is going slow enough, and is not an offender, but if the policeman can not catch him, it follows that lie is driving more than five miles per hour, and it becomes the policeman's duty to arrest him.' That is j ust the way. Those whom he can catch he should not arrest, but those whom he can't catch it is hm duty to arrrest. Let him do his duty, if he can. " M."in the Cleveland Herald ths Methodist preachers ejioizs of the ;g od old times," now dead and gone, and says, "I have sometime thought that if these sainted old preai hers of the Methodist Episcopal Church, who hare gone to their long homes beyond the grave, were permitted to look down over the battlements of heaven, as I believe they are, and witness the services called worship In some of our modern Methodist churches, their astonishment, and wonder, aud indignation would know no Sner-idan,who-bo- th - : n, 10-4-0's to-da- to-u- ay. By TO-DAY- 'S Ml WEI Telegraph. DISPATCHES, CONGRESSIONAL. liorsE. 2G. Morrison, Wasiiinotos, chairman of the committee on ways and means, reported back the Senate bill authorizing the Secretary of the Interior to deposit certain Indian trust funds in the United States Treasury in lieu of investment; passed. The Heuse then considered the Virginia contested election case of Platte and Goode, and was addressed by Townsend, of New York in support of the majority report. ed active operations in the British army In India, there ately begun against Sitting Bull's being on the rolls of the Society forces. The command inwill even numbers officers then be much smaller 74,000 whom Indians than the it against and men in May last. This move- will contend. Any ment is largely the result of the from Terry's troops will hardly be labors of the Rev. Mr. Gregson, of practicable before another engagement is had, as the Indians are enAgra, the honorary Secretary of the near and evied Soldiers' Total Abstinence Associa tion of India. During the year ending June 30th last the sheriff of San Francisco County.CaL, had 3,173 prisoners to take care of. UdUd m pop iFI T i ii n 37 1 S I AT ER G, Commencing Monday, July 17th to-da- EASTERN. The Iudlan War Concentration of Troop The Campaign to bo Con. dneted by Crook. NEW YORK, 2a. The Tribune's bounds. esay8,manu-sciip- t special from Fort Fetterman tays column of theoih cavalry, sermons, responsive reading, Merritt's hereto join Crook, leaves which quartette choirs, and other abomi- consists of ten companies of cavalry nations and desecrations would fill and about one hundred recruits for them with dismay and apprehen- the infantry companies now with sion for the spiritual life and per- Crook. It will reach the main command about the second of petuity of any church that had Crook will then have August. tweuty-flv- e so far from the old landstrayed companies of cavalry and ten marks of Methodism." companies of infantry, with 200 With this force Total abstinence is increasing Snake Indians. will be immediRose-color- TD Crook, camped very dently preparing for a struggle. The building of forts at the mouth of Tongue and Big Horn rivers will begin at once, under the protection of Terry's forces. It is probable that the becampaign conduc against the Indians will A fire broke Philadelphia, of James Printed on Strong White Rig Paper. out in the packing-rooNolands' shoddy mill, and before it Partial Table of Content could be checked, the whole building was in flames. Not many peo- The Centennial Fourth in the Settlements. ple were in the building at the Arrival of tho Emigrant Company. time, and those who were in the I wo Days Meetings at Prsvo. lower part had no difficulty in A Close, Bard Man. escaping, but before those iu the Concerning Sewing Machines. upper part of the building knew of The Arts of Teace. their danger, the whole lower story Killed by the Kick of a Horse. was in a blaz?. Several women A Trip on the Lakes. were up stairs and started down, Kc volution j. ry "Elements In tho United but were States. by the 11 nines in the second story, several The Centennial Things in Canada, of them succeeding iu getting litvival of Patriotism. through the window, at tho reares-of Two Kiiufe of Pavements and both Failures the second story to a room, aud The OoXIcu Kule iu Appointments. 26. mt caping; three, however, named Ellen Ileber, Annie Patterson aud Marie Hoeveler, were driven baek from the window by the Hie, and were oblige! to rotreat up ttairs again. All eflorts to rescue them were in vain, and they remained screaming for help till they were all dreadfully burned. At last Ellen Heber and Annie Patterson jumped from tbe third story winnow and were instantly Killed by strikiug tho pavement. It is probable, had they survived the fall, their burns would have killed them. Marie, however was fortunate enough to get hold of a rope, by which she slid to the ground. She is frightfully burned, the skin having come oil her body almost entirely. She was removed to the hospital, but her recovery is very doubtful. Parties who knew the position of the three women, piled bales of goods on the pavement for them to jump on, but other parties not knowing the obthe bales there,remov-e- d ject of piling them and the women fell on the bare pavement. The mill wa3 entirely destroyed, with stock and machinery. The loss is heavy. Messrs. Jay Cooke & Co. were this morning discharged from bankruptcy by Judge Cadwaliader, of the United States District Court, in Logan. Normal Wheat, Pottery, aud a Skeleton la an anci- - tlit MmUI'.iI. Au t stiao.UUuiy nac. An b d an Ma r'ac. A Tixe to Go Up aud a Timo to go Down. Not a crimp At All In Itself. IuriiiCLCa c,f Marrldgre. Kent Swindlers. A Useful Iudnstry. Another InJiau tuttase. Supremo Couit Dco'siou Cu"u vs. "i ouug an 1 Others. Concerning the Indian War. The Verdict in tho Newark Tragedy. The Little Colorado. Great Loss in Ecee. At the Centennial.' A Visit to Knsign Peak. h War. Tho Congressional Proceeduigj. ' City Council Proceedings. Editorial Notes. Servia-Tnrkie- Local News. Correspondence, floine and Foreign. Telegraphic Dispatches from All Parts of tho World. Kotos of Various Kind?. Reviews and NotietM of Dooks.etc Pot-try- . One cf the Ileal family Weeklies In tbe World. Annual Subscription $3.50; postage, 15 cents. S ngle copyt 10 cents. u xvcvce 1 IS voowxof vY "Vvvca.t. Organdies Lawn, Corded Jaconet, French Lawns, Figured Lawns, Percales, Grass Cloth, Grenadine, - - -- - -- 15 Cts., 15 Cts., 35 Cts-- , 12JCts., 12i Cts., 15 Cts., 18 to 45 Cts., 15 to 95 Cts., Dress Goods, Lancaster, Renfrew and Bates' Ginghams, - 13 Cts., 25 Cts , Chambray, all Colors, Newmarket R R Sheeting, - 11 Cts., 32 Cts., Awning Stripe, Camel's Hair Dress Goods, - 17iCts 50 Cts., Horse Dusters, 75 Cts., Linen Pants, - 50 Hats, Cts., Boys' 10 Cts. per Box, Paper Collars, 75 Cts. to $150, Linen Coats, $1.00 Prints, 12 yards for 1.00, Prints, 14 yards for 1.25. Cassimere, 1.00 Each, White Shirts, -- -- -- -- -- -- 1.00, Scotch Tweed, Ladies' Straw Hats, Trimmed Hats, Children's Caps and Bonnets, Real Lace Sets, Artificial Flowers, Ladies' Fans, Lace Curtains, Satchels, Parasols- - FMIER CLOTHING Mens' Cassimere Coats, a Pants, Vests, Coats, Boys' Cassimere a Pants, Vests, Mens' extra size Suits, Children's Cass. Suits, a Children's Linen Suits, Men's Linen Pants, " Vests, Straw Hats, Men's, Felt Hats, Men's, Gents' Silk Bows, Men's Kid Gloves, . s B. OIAWSOK, Supt. |