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Show .001)0' Firm JUNCTION. STREET. Chasles W. Penrose, X. STRA TFORD, - - Editob Btuincu Man)-- . Frklay Kruiu?t Sam 4. CItiNT AM THE IX- - 'From tha teuor of lato dispatches from Washington, asi well astho temper of the leadiu Sioux Iodiau nt present there, it would seem that there i) rer.aon to doubt whether, nfler all the efforts made iu that behalf, the government Trill be able at present to aeciwe the consent of the Indiana to the settlement of the much coveted IJlack Hills by the .whites. Without such coasent it will 'of course be prudent for nil those persons who have beeu- anxious to go tiiere, to remaiu away until such time as the necessary consent is obtained. No doubt many persons who have nuda arraHgcwentst to enter that country the present summer will be disappointed, but it will be better for them to submit to the apparent misfortune, rather t'lan incur I rcaaca to doubt, there is great reason to fear that many place heretofore settled and prosperous will have to be abandoned. The Chronicle says that "It is not yet known precisely where the limits of absolute drouth begin and end we only know that year by year it becomes wider spread, and asserts its baneful influence over wider and There are places wider territory. which are becoming rapidly but certainly uniibabitable." The Chrouiele further siys that, "Uuloss au effective system of irrigation shall be devised and put in operation, that a large tract of the very best lands in the State must be abandoned for agriculture." The drouth seems to be increasing from year to year in the vicinity of Modesto, for mention1 is made of a once thriving little town on the banks of the Toulumne. Further southwest are the ruins of Toulumne City. "Here are many solid brick struc- t. tures falling into gradual decay and abandonment." From this place and Paradise, most of the wooden structures have been removed to Modesto. The picture thus drawn by the Chronicle is certainly a sad one, and it is doubtless true, for it is hardly perhaps a grcator, by rashly going on probable that the editor would perforbidden ground in apposition to mit, much less make, such a statef!W wishes of the government aad the ment unkss well assured of its corIndians. rectness. Should the " anticipated treaty Would it not be well for people iu fuif, however, we shall be who may Utah aud elsewhere to such attributo have in view a future location in to the want of tact that portioti of California to which as k diplomat, so clearly manifested reference is. here mado, to pause beby President Grant in his personal fore making such a venture. There interview Vith the Sipux CLiufs. We is a large scope of rich country yet think it is much to bo regretted that in Utah, Idaho and the President had not observed his unoccupied where Montana, persons who may uuaj reticeneo when holding a con- desire locations depeuding upon agriference with them, or, at least, tVmgh cultural or pastoril pursuits might ho felt disposed. to depart from his locate with great advantage to themnsunl brief mod.) of ?peakiuj to white selves, for in these locations water is men, and desirous to make a speech assured as well as soil. to his ward., he might have doue so with propriety, but after his owu Tisc ISeeeher Trial. speech bad been uttered, it occurs to New York, 3. us that he should have opened his was a large attendance There cars and listened in" person to what in the court room, and many spectators these wards bad to say by way of Htjod upon the ouUkins oi (lie crowd. Bvartn resumed his addrtss to the jurv. complaint or otherwise, it would not He read from ttie of Certainly have beeu- a very great bore Tilton as to hU ue of tbe pnper interto listen for a few minutes to what view with Beecher, December 30th lie fcuid Tiliou a own testimony ghowed the lied Cloud aud Spotted Tail seemed reading of the pnper to be the climax accusation ajrainst Beecher. so anxious to say to their Great of hi Counsel read from tbe testimony of Father; eveu the dignity of a Presi- Beecher upon ih same po nts. and paid dent would v not have suffered by that all evidence nf bu'U parties to tbe that the readiaterview was 10 treating with that courtesy usual be- ing of tiiii injur was tho first thing tween the representatives of two which oocuBUiiitd tiic manifestation of surprise by AJue'juer, und produce upon parties desiring to make a treaty, him a (Uoided astonishment. There was such' meu as these representatives of no escaping from the acceptance of deversion of this paper, far no tbo Sioux Bat ions, iustead of duing fendant's other had been substituted and the so the Indians doubtless felt as paper itself had beau destroyed, for with it. plaintiff could nnt have obtnined though they were snubbed by Lim, his looting iu court one aioment. These and became at onee morose, sullen fuels destroytd all the story of T.ltoa's i ire to Deecher oi his wife's and intractable. This is unfortunate, alleged verbal coufeion of adultery. Evans because, should they return to their considered the interview between ibe alleged aduliross and the allege J paracountry without some sort of under- mour, held in her chamber alone, at at the suggestion or acquience of standing relative to the subjects whiuh have been uuder consideration, her bu.'bund. lie urged tbe incredibility of such an occurrence, if there had been it is but natural that, their pride hurt a particle of truth in the charge Ti'.tou it possible that an by what they may consider bad treat- presented. Supposing outraged husband could desire or suggest ment, .they will become more un- such mealing, wouli the seducer with friendly than ever, and with the suck an interview? To verify the accusation, Kvarts spoke of the character of feeling on their part being such, it TiltoH hh manifested in his acts and de- Unclaimed-BaggagSale a wiu spread among their people, and clarations. W hat an abnormal and AT was which BEARDSLEY OGDEN. this I10CSE. would TilE character the consequence may be many acts of lead to a resolve to pull down the temple hostility towards parties of white men of hii housiibold, and crush his wife and GIVE NOTICE THAT THE rather than rest under the im- IHERKBT having tern in my whom they may encounter ou the children,, which were cast ou him ovur rix iumths, siiull ell the same by the dis-Psk- 1 . y tbei-fiec- " Well might she have slept peacefully that night. Evarls read from Beeeher's testimony as t his interview with Mrs Tiiton. In regard to the firut part of this, be said it shewed Beecher had a better memory tlian Moulton, for he remembered that he knew tbe woman as sick. H iuJitated also in the desciip-lioof the eareful arrangement of the show white drapery of the couch at that hour of the night ihat Mrs. Tilten had He con been prepared for this vh-itinued by reading tbe testimony of Beecher as to his conversation witn Mrs. Tilton and the writing of her retraction. He said the jury had here a letter writen by Mrs Tilton immediately after the charge wbiuh siuved ii'iiclu-sivel- y that the charjre was one of imNo ttronger evisolicitation. proper dence could be produced except the restoration of the written accusa iou from tho flames in order to confute the present pretentions of the plaintiff, aud he was bound by its natural interpreta-thn- . The accusation, therefore, stood, upon Lis own evidence, not only false in itseif, but as extorted from a sick wife Evarts quoted tke auby importunity. thorities upon the question of evidence of statements obtained from wives uuder coercion of their husbands, and said the old common law rule iu regard to the responsibility of husbands for the wife was still unchanged in this coutry aud iu England. Counsel said the letters from Mrs. Tilton to her husband showed that she was a woman of genuine and humble piety, aad believed iu tbe divinity of that Savior whom her husband crucified in his letters of scoff and scorn. They showed a love for her hdband and a submission to bis will. Recess. After recess Evarts said we have not asked you to detract from the testimony of Moulton and Tilton sxeept whtre they have been contradicted out of their own mouth, or by competent witnesses. Tilton says he returned to the hou.se on the night of the retraction, and found his The nurse testiwife greatly agitated. fies that Mrs. Tilton was perfectly calm when she (nurse) weut to bed, and that Mrs. Tilton fell asleep. Mrs. Mitchell testifies that for au hour after she left the room she heaid the angry tones of her husband aud the pleading voice ol bis wife, and after a while Tilton came into the study and got a pen, ink and paper and returned to his wife's bedside. Then he went out and she went in and found Mrs. Tilton agitated and seeming us if she had been weeping. So you see how false Tiltoa's testimony in regard to this condition of his wile was. He endeavors to throw the burden of her agitation upon the interview with Beecher. We want to know what tho whole truth is iu this matter, and I give it to you in the words of Mrs. Mitchell, which show that Mrs. Tilton, instead of having anything else on her conscience, any trouble or redress, was quietly sleeping, and there you have the first proof of her husbaud"s coercive power over his wife. You find that Tilton, anxious to find eui the result of the interview with Beecher, wakens her and finds to his censterna-tio- n that she had given a retraction and that he was in the ame position, if not The influenee than before. worse, which he had sought to produce ou Beecher by the change of his wife was entirely dissipated. He thought all this arrangement to affect Beecher was spoiled, and the weapon he expected t use against Beecher turned against himself. Gentlemen, do you believe the Mory that the nurse telis, or don't you? She has not been contradicted by Moulton or Tilton. Counsel read the paper which Tilton showed to Storrs as his wife's explanaIn this the says that tion of the facts. findii g the retraction had placed her in a hostile attitude to her hubband, she wrote a third letter. Counsel presumed the jury understood that the first paper was exacted from his wife the night that Tilton and Moulton were storming in her c:iambcr on the 20th, and they saw the s tme coercion producing the explanation of the retraction on the 30th. Evans discussed the motives which led Tilton and Moulton to destroy the confession a document that would have settled tbe nature of the charge beyond al. controversy, had it been preserved. All trivo-lou- s falsehoods in Moulton'g testimony are denounced us falsehoods by Beecher. Tho jury must judge whether they were not false itt the consciousness of the witness. Court adjourned. ufu-ra- iiiod-stro- plains. " 1 " TJIE IIUSIGATIOX PKO- - Practical Watchmaker, Jeweler iz3 and Engraver, T)EG8 TO INFORM THE TCBLIC opened I) has barber jloritx's B TnAT HE a jewelry shpp next door to O. Street. Mr. Orue makes to erderall kinds of tine watches of hardened gold add silver, which gives them a superior advantage to those made of brans, as they do not corrode by exposure to the air. Altogether his watches are made after 'he best principle yet and latest improvements, iucluding the compensated balance, adjusted to heat and cold, and lie does all kinds of work belonging to the trade neatly and cheap, and promises reasonable satisfaction iu every particular, lie also makes genuine gold and silver rings, to any style and description, as well as sleeve buttons with all kinds of eugraviug and enamebng. He warrauts all of his work, and returns the pay if it does uot correspond with his promises. saloon,-Filt- d218-l- NOTICE. FIRM rpUE JL in OF LOW BUO'S, DOING BUSINESS Ogilen City, Utah, heren, give notice that re responsible for auy debts con i.ot tuey will traded by their lather, John Low, from this dale. ALFRED LOW, U 1,1.1 A H LOF. Ogden, May 27, 1875. The Boot, Shoo, Leather, and Shoe Finding Department of Z.C.M.I, at Salt Lake City, has been enlarged to double its former capacity and is now displajing! superior class of goods, embracing the most staple and popular Btjleg known in American markets, among which, for Ladies' and SAMUEL LOW. wear, FOR COAL PROPOSALS Headquarters ijep't or the 1'latte, Office Chief Quartermaster, Omaha, Neb., May 2ith, 1870. PROPUAl 8, in duplicate, uuder the SEALED conditions, will be received at this office until 11 o'clock A. M., Friday, Jute 25, 1875, at which time and place they will be openeu in the presence of bidders, for the delivery on the cars, at the poi ut nearest to to the mines, ou the line of tho tninu 1'acitic Railroad, of seven thousand fire hundred tons of coal, lor supply of tuel lor iniliiary posts along said line of railroad during fiscal year ending June 3", 1876. 1'roposals for a less quantity will be received. The quality of the c. al will be carefully considered iu making the aw ird, and the right to reject auy or all bids is expresslv reserved. Prelereuce will be given to articles of domestic production. The contract will be let with the proviso that the quantity contracted lor may be iucreased or reduced one-thir- d by the Chief Quartermaster of the Department at any time pending full delivery. Bids sheuld be endorsed on envelopes ''Bids for Coal." Any further information will be furnished upon application to this ottice. ALEX. J. PERRY, Dep'y Q. M. General. dJ13-6in- we call attention to the Specialties of Edwin C. Burt, Sollera k Co., and many other styles of Shoes justly esteemed anj & Co., Sausser, Dangler sought for. Particular attention is called to immense additions recently in our stock of Foreign and Domestic Leather and Shoe Findings. FRENCH STOCK (these goods for quality and finish are the San Francisco Chronicle of June 2d, an editorial on the above subjeet, which affords much food for thoughtful reflection, mere especially by that class of persons who are contemplating a settle-mein the State of California. In that State, as well as other portions of the PaciSa Slope, irrigation is the great question, nature has doue wonders in providing this portion of the continent with climate aud with soil, as well as with minerals, but as fhe seems to have been somewhat niggardly in supplying it with water, or at . Joutiot t lcat negligent iu a just distribution of it, it remains for the ingenuity of mnn to pupply the deficiency, otherwise many portions of the counIn? stled st all, and try will us.t of the Chronstatement the should ica le correct, wh.th we uave no 8uperi0I ISauinerTille. Xatieier, Jieven, Chas. Simon, Meroier, Norro, Liiisker, Cornelius lleigl. C'orueillan, . OBSTACLES TO MAURI AGE. HAPPY RELIEF FOR MEN YOUNG FROM the effects of Errors and Abuses in early life. ' Manhowd restored. Imped:ments to Marriage removed. New method of treatment. New aad remarkable remedies. Books and Circulars sent Address. HOWAKD ASfree, in sealed envelope SOCIATION, 419. N. Ninth St. Philadelphia, Pa. an Institution having a high reputation for honorable conduct aud professional sk.ll. d02-U- HTOJ: DOMESTIC Wax, Hemlock and Oak Upper; lleinloeli and Philadelphia Call' aud Kip; Iiu!I; Splits; Welting; Kuans iu all Colors; Hussels; Pebble: Tain pi eo; Curaeoa; Oak aud Hemlock Harness Leather; Santa Cruz Sole Leather And Jill the Latest .Styles ol' Lasts. HAYNE8 & SON, In short, our preparations for a large Spring trade will be found HUM AM 1ME8 USERS, MANUFACTURERS OF Cable, Log, Ox, Binding and other Chains Copper or Iron Fire Boxes made and repaired, and all kinds of Boiler Work ou the most treasonable Terms. All work guaranteed, as the be-- t irououly is used. sap-plyin- g thorough and complete in every Depart' ment of the Institution, Ciawson, Stmt. dl64-tf- . Country Trade Solicited. Shop, rear of the Theatre. - Sail ImIlv City, - Utah. Leave, and address orders, care of Morris dl55-i- n Evans, Box 1065, Salt Lake City. k FIFTH ' STREET, GLOBE HOTEL, FIFTH STMT, CSSttJ. Enlarged, Refitted and, Refurnished. k FULL OGIDIEIN" STOCK OF Dry Sbod s, lotions, Boots & Shoes To be Reopened NOVEMliEll 1, 1ST4. CLOTHING, The best accommodations' at the lowest rates. BOARD BY THE DAY fft -- VTNI) GENTS' ITUIiiSISIIIIVGS, WEEK. Just received rom the East. Special arrangements ,,id conveniences for FuinijuKS. -- J. K. rojoL, Frop'r. d29-t- f GAUD GROCERIES, GOODS, fa Trices down to the lowest possible margin, r The Improved :o: ' ' ; " BUS AD' AND XATH.Y FRESH EVERY DAY. 1 a Soldl ,in All Goods delivered free to any part of the City. (4L 1874. d203-tf- . more than any other Machine manufactured iu the Unite i fetatet. These figures show the universal popularity of the i'he following Singer. 100,000 EN CERTIFICATE flrst-clas- g ARE IJf DAILY RECEIPT M. BOWR1NC 0? A Full liine of Fall Dry Goods OLD WALKER BUILDING Main. MILLINERY. mns. mad to anything known.) lt XVe observed in Children1! dil4-l- putations at puliiK- auction on lluirsday, July 1st, 1ST5 jests of Dr. Bacoa. leather than endure withtnt reserve. at lln.ni. the stitig of Dr. li'iccn' witty references JCacli lot Bolliarutely. Coutents un'snewn: dehe dt he to Shakespeare, teruiiued, us Lot 1 Large Trunk, Lot 2 Small Trnuk, clared, to mah Elizabeth and ruin the Lot 3 Black Valiso will show tlie estimation in which it is held by Returning good came of his children " 4 leading families iu our owu community: December ot Evans to tha night 30ih, " " Lot 5 " " Lot 6 8n.il the Irst thing .ioulton said t Vt'E the undersigned having used the Singer Lot 1 Black Box, Sewing ulachine in our families can eheer-full-y Beeoher w hen he came from the inter-- , 8 Black Valuta, to all it recommend Lot , parties wishing to purview with Tib on, w as to ask him if Le " chase a " Lot 9 durable and ' " machine. How came Lot 10 was going to Mrs. Tilton. D. M. Stuart, - Ogdcn Lot U me Umbrella, Wiuslow Farr, . Ogdea Moulton to think of such a thing? Then ' Ow. II. Tribe 8. U. lligginbothaiu " Lot 12 W hite Valine, Moulton offered to accompany Beecher. " Thos. Biddle Lot 13 Bundle of Clothing, " lMrs.O. W iderborg L. . Mrs-8J. llnrrick Lot It ling of Sundries, S. Scbram Why should be tbiuk that Beecher need" 15 Ud F. Brown A. IVm. ln.t Talise. Mrs. O. Paine " ed an escort to walk such a distance in Mrs. S. de La Baume, Uintah. Lot IS W hite Valise. an orderly and reputable city? Beecher Mrs. P. Wilkinson M. U. BEARDSLEY. " Mrs. R. Allen, d;U8-1- 0 Mrs. Geo. S. Maoti, reached Tikon's heuseand was shown up Ogdea, June 1st, 1875. Kiverdale Willard. to the sick cnamber of Mrs Tilton. AND SCORES OF OTHERS. The nurse, Mrs. Mitchell, did not need to be asked to leave the room when the clergyman caino at an unaccustomed Thorough Instructions hour to talk with the sick woman, who She left the room Given by an was his parishoner. as any nurse would have lft it, or i s Experienced Lady Operator! any member of the family would have circumslances. uch She left it under These Machines can be ebtained on had no fear her patient would be unduly TUB ATTENTION Of HER FRIENDS CALLS the I'ublic in general to her new stock of disturbed, for she was a religious EASY MONTHLY PAYMENTS herself, and did uot dread any danho preached that ger from the man SVRIXG GOODS, or a discount of 10 per cent, for cash. peace which passeth all understanding. Consisting ef For Particulars call at Her confidence was justified, Jot w hen Beecher left and the nurse returned she Ladies Hats, Bonnets, Feathers, found Mrs. Tilteu calm aud tranquil. 5IAIX ST., interview in had occurred Flowers, etc., that Nothing Orpo.it. OLD TITHIXIS YARD, OR, ADDRESS to disturb her conscience. She had re-- p All of which she will sell at uted of a wrong and redressed sn evil. O. E. 3IASON, Prices to Suit the Times. She had obtained a sort of renter itive of AGENT, hcrciif in tke good opinion of this good dlcio-Snn4 Otrtlen, Vth. - - GEUE, A. C. man. Juit Street, Ogrden. receiTod, a SPLENDID STOCK OF Eastern and Western Boots and Shoes wo-m- m OFFICE, ' s? They inrite inspection of their Block of G-oods- , Groceries, i2c. ALL NEW, AND AT LOW FIGURES Wlieut, Oats, Barley and Potatoes taken in exchange. JAMES ALLEN & Co. |