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Show iff fS7 llltf I f W1' VIII. VOL. OGDEN, UTAH: SUNDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY GENERAL NEWS. J 0 Published every morning (except Monday) by the Printing Association, junction (Incorporated.) Com-merci- mates or srBScnirnox: : .n : P,r Annum MA I qO tt.bO Thru AfoltAf. One Month, 1.00 made known on Advertising rates tion. applica tKoo. P. Howell THIS PA. ,.,p.per Advertising where .,0 spruce Street), HUH te Bim'.o foi it in I MESS CARDS. i. wiluaks, k:iaki. r' j Co'l ADV ER-- b BUS PrW& iit'r Chlf Justice Formerly Fr.iu.Coort,Kv. WILLIAMS, & RICHARDS LAWYERS. in Oict Peery Block, Fourth St., OGDEN, UTAH. f 4241-t- 0. HAROARY, H. W. attohney AN CO JJNSELOR-at-LJ01llee-C- W, L mock, ala UTAH. d&Mj J. BARRATT, ATTORNEY AND Connnelor fit HittiTm PEBCITAL ASSISTANT U. S. DI3T. ATTORNEY. Loan on Mortgagee it tJZ. Epecialty. East Side Main Bt.,Ogd.n. 0e. do7-i- and Surgeon. Physician 3i and 4th, FraMin Street, bet. Ofiee y O'CALLAGHAS, l. J. mar20tf tydm, Utah. A. THOMAS, . Jmtiee of the Snpreme Conrt of Wyoming) Lkt ATTORNEY - AT LAW, l.orth Sfreet, near the Poet Oft. " : Owiir, Utah. : : dn2tf KEENEY H0US1 HOTEL. LARGEST AND LEADING Utah City, Ogclcn, t. a trains. We have leaaed th House on Main 8t, which we wil srate la connection with the Keeney Home. CosTnil.it Commercial Accommodation for 100 Ouests. K. ZEIGLER, Propbtstoe A. JAS. H. MARTINEAU, DKWTY MINERAL S. U. SUR- VEYOR and CIVIL ENGINEER. and Mln-a- t made lor looatieu of for obtaining dma28tf Logan Cache County, Utah, Surrey oUtlni latent. FURNITURE! J. Tl BCOLES It tow manufacturing all kinds of FURNITURE. He hat constantly on hand his wa work and buys and sells SECOND HmND GOODS PONE. TURNING PROMPTLY Furniture E aired ind all kind of Carpeiv ter Work promptly executed. Store on 5th street, opposite Tith Ing office. J. I. H. ORTH. . DOOLY. OgJem CUt Salt Lake City, J. E. DOOLY & Co., BANKERS, .Ocden City, - Utah Transact a General Banhm Business. PMOMPT ATTENTIOy 01TBX TO tOL Lxcnoyx Correopcndent; Wert, Fats1 4 Co., WeUs.lanro ACo, Hew Tor Ban Franc Yelie, F argo Ce Bank of Commerce, Bait Let Oil) first National Bank. Pint National Bank, Omaha National Bank, BiTe 4 Allen, Oh tear Oman Omat. Lend' lUiSLRASCE REPRESENTED: Flrwnaa'i Fond Inraraae Cos, f California, -- . Aaeet. Hartford In.oreneeCo.of Hartford,! Aante. - - - - Kmwicaa Central laauranr. C nf . . cuwe. koya, ire M.n-ht.r- Jim. .1 IiienroceOo,f '" A.., ,HLt. i i.. - VWfO V f . l (.. . . "l!.i.r,.,!VW. Aama. .... mimmm 2.VfXpt Londea.! . r.- - $MO,tl" . aeaeaa, 9 ,. MORE WONDERS. past two years trains on the Missouri Kansas and Texas road have been fired at, just after dark near Coda, in THE VALLEY OF THE OHIO Indian territory. The car windows An Extraordinary Discovery Adams County, Ohio. have been smashed. the cabooses perINUNDATED BY RAIN. forated and the employees woun ded. The United States marshal caught a white man named Miers in the act Under date of January 21st a corThe Irish. Catse Progressing; firing on train and so desperately did respondent of the Cincinnati Miers resist that Ayers shot him in America. writes from Manchester, Adfourteen times before he succumbed. ams county, Ohio, as follows : The A Sealltwag of a Nephew. Ohio Valley, and this immediate secTRAINS COLLIDE AND Boston, Feb. 14. Stephen Longtion in particular, is rich in the rethe. of NEPHEWS SLIDE. fellow, nepbew poet, jumped bail for forgery and sailed for South mains of that wondei-lu- l historic i.i e, America. the evidences of whose civilization Etc., Etc., Two Triina Wrecked. have been perpetuate I in those cuBuffalo, N. Y., Feb. 14. Two rious pieces of engineering from heavy freight trains on the Canada y W. n.Telegrafkte the Jneriei.l Southern railroad, coming into colli- which we derivo the euphonious Faraell la Baltlmere. name "Mound-builders,sion near Tilsonburg were completegiven them Baltimori, Feb. 14. Parnell ad ly wrecked. The track had to be by archteologists. Within the past dressed An immeste audience at the laid around the wreck for the pas- few days wonderful discoveries have A train trains. of dispatcher been made in this academy music, tonight; the senger vicinity, which has disappeared. mayor presided, and among those a new chapter in the history open up Their Time. Pausing on the stage were Gov. Hamilton San Francisco, Feb. 14. Unem- of this remarkable race, and throw and clergymen of the Methodist ployed workingmen this afternoon much light upon their manner of Episcopal and Catholic churches. marched to th Pacific Mail dock, living, their social nature and their Randall Refute Knmoar. and their committees interviewed physical character, in ditforent secWashintox. Fab. 14. Sneaker Agent Williams from whom they ob- tions of the world, at different peri satisfaction. no tained direct Randall when his attention was cal They led this morning to the statement then waited on several firms and ods of its history, there have been that he had promised to give Fin-le- companies but received no definite found the remains of enormous the favor on Monday next, to answer to their demand. fauna and flora, and of a gigantic race move to suspend the rules and pass Ambitious Jiail. of men. So rare and fur apart have tbe bill to equalize the bounties of Chicago, 14. Journal's Washing-toa- : been these disooveries, however, that soldiers and sailors who served in Blaine in an interview sayt that the late war, denied positively that under no circumstances will he al- we have looked upon historical acany such promise had been made by low his name to be used as a candi- counts of them a cleverly constructhim, or that he had given any en- date for the vice presidency in con ed pieces of fiction and been loth to couragement that he would recog- nection with Gea. Grant or anybody-els- e. believe that there evtrr existed a race nize an individual member to move He will not that nom- of men able to do battle with the the suspension of rules in preference ination, if he fails accept to get the first savage mastodon or the fierce mega to the committee seeking recognition place, preferring to remain in active therium. It remains for Adams Co. for such purpose. life in the senate. to come lorward with a startling Croat Bilaitaraa. confirmation of the Scriptural text, Oh Certainly. Cincisnati, Feb. 14. It rained al Though Gen. Butler is urged to allow "And there were giants in those For in Adams county have most incestantly since five yester greenbackers to claim his election, days." day evening, part of the time heavi as one of th managers of soldiers been found not only the boues of a ly. The Ohio river is rising rapidly national home, as a member of their gigantic race of men, but their im along its whole length. The snow party, thus lar he has declined to do plements of warlare and liusbandrv, melted by the warm rain at the so, leaving his candidacy entirely and excellently preserved epecimens of their art in sculpture, painting, head waters of the Ohio, will cause upon his fitness for the place and not W nether an unusual rise there, and the high upon his political connection. engraving and writing. these prehistoric giants had a hpnd water may be expected in a very A Rail Road Bridge Cone. in the erection of those splendidly short time. The rainfall here from Dayton Ohio, Feb,14th A bridge designed and durably constructed time of beginning yesterday till 10.30 it reported by the signal on Dayton and southeastern road pieces of engineering which stretch service observer, to be two inches near Chillicothe was washed away across the country from the head this morning. The engino, and sever- waters of the Ohio to the mouth of eight hundredths. N ashville, f eb. 14. The principal al cars were thrown into the stream, the Rio Grande, there to commingle losses sustained by the storm of last the engineer and fireman being with a similar chain of roads,mounds killed instantly, The passenger and fortifications coming down the night, were Edgefield and Nashville ceaches escaped and no injuries were Pacific slope and continue on $20,000: manufacturing company custom house, $10,000; first colored sustained. through Mexico, Central America and the South American States, to Colorado Getting Stirred I' p. Baptist church, $8,000; St. Paul's, be finally lost in the unexplored baris 14. $20,000. Entire lost estimated at Denver Feb. Dbnver, Col., rens of Patagonia, will be lett for the labor first $75,000. at present undergoing the solution of awiserhead than your To be Kxpalled. agitatio of its history and as ihe correspondent possesses. He simply Nkw York, Feb. 14. A Washing agitation is general, the feeling maniton special dispatch says: It is now fest among laboring men and others relates the facts; the scientists may the theories. In conprobable that Acklen of Louisiana, is quite intense. The laboring classes build thereon will be expelled for his connection heve for several months past been versation with some of the oldest with the alleged bogus report from gradually forming anions, until citizens of this county, I have been enabled to learn the Hate of the disboth tides of the house. tweittyspne organizations of the kind of a cave on the old Smith covery Met t Debate. hav been perfected. They comprise Its existfarm in Tiffin township. WAtHiiroToir, Feb. 14. The house printers, carpenters, plumbers, brick ence was to the earliest setproven plasmet for debate, only, and was ad masons, stonemasons, painters, and they probably learned of dressed by Bright on funding the terers, horse shoers, saddlers, cigar tlers, it from the Indians. Eor il makers, moulders, barbers, waiters, has been a place of resort for years public debt. the cucabinet makers, blacksmiths, to in the cooks, Joyce spoke opposition rious and was always esteemed a reciprocity treaty between Canada locomotive engineers and firemen. great natural curiosity. The Smith MassachuThese unions met in the and the United States. farm is on the Portsmouth pike, beMyer followed in favor of the bill setts convention to night and took tween 15 and 16 miles northeast of Trades a te Assembly, introduced sometime ajro by himself steps organize here. The farm is now owned by lor tne retirement ot national notes. which, it is claimed, will constitute Samuel Grooms, and is a fertile, hunthe voting strength of nineteen Adjourned. body of land. About one dred and a commercial patronage of mile from the The Graia Market. pike is a level plateau five thouand hundred one twenty 200 odd acres, surrounded on an Chicago, Feb. 14. The grain sand of is believed the dollars. It by markets have been comparatively hills. As you near the leaders of the movement that the sides by lofty steady during tbe weelt with plenty consolidation of the mouth of the cave there is a gradual class working the ground on every ofjspeculation but nojvery decided in- bids fair to play a strong part in the depression of what, clination to advance or drain. The in the local no side, forming and the entire politics of Denver general tendency has however been State. menclature is denominated a "sinkto firmness, and the closing was hole." At the bottom of this circular fleary SUrmi In the Blue Grata Btgion. basin is a hole three feet in diameter quite strong at nearly outside priecet for the week. The chief feature of Louisville, Feb. 14, At 5:30 p m. and about 25 feet in depth, at which the movement has been the reluct the wind averaged the velocity of distance from the top of the ground ance of farmers to part 'with their 42 miles an hour, blowing from tli you strike Within the last six supplies. The roads have been in southwest. THE FLOOR OK IHK FIRST CHAMBER a fine condition, prices tempting and hours the temperature fell 21 de9 3 o'clock 56 and at At restrictions respecting storage nearly grees. p.m. In the cave, a dry cavern, 30x20 feci, . The total rainfall for with smooth floor, roof and walls of removed, but the receipts for wheat thirty-fourand oats have been in considerable the day is 1.80 inches, for 48 hours freestone. Crossing the room you demand and corn hf not very remark- 3.02 inches. No damage is reported enter a corrider five feet wide conable. The shipping bas been mod- worth mentioning. necting it with another chamber, At Frankfort, Ky., the river is smaller than the first, and this in erately active and tbe increase in stocks is small. The prevalence of rising at tne rate of a foot an hour; turn is connected with a third chamwet disagreeable weather fcr two the lower end of that eity is flooded ber by a similar corridor. The third days of the week had its usual effect, and before morning the water will room is about the size of the first, be in the state hoiue yard. The rise but it has a iofty, arched dome, and and prices advanced sharply. was never known to be so sudden; the walls, floor and roof are of limeA Jawhawker Dead. the loss of logs, etc., in the river will stone. this rock water has 14. Sidney be very great. Reports to the Louis oozed forThrough Galbsbcro, Ills., Feb. countless ages, and formed P. Edgerton, one of the memorable ville Courier-Journa- l from the interior thousands of glistening stalactites company known as Jayhawkera, who are to the effect that considerable and stalagmites. Nowhere else in went to California in '49, u dead, damage has been done to outhouses, the cave do you find the limestone "mall Fox Among the Indiana. brigges. &c. cropping out, and nowhere eise do formathese Ft. Robinson, Feb. 14. A courier you find frem Spotted Tail agency reports tions. ' To gain access to ithe Boamania'i IadipendeaoF. that the savage hxt in consternafourth chamber it is necessary to Bucharest, Feb. 15. England climb tion over the ravage of tbe small France a steep bank and press through will end Germany probably refissure in the rock. In one a narrow pox. 2one have been known to Roumania's recognize independence corner of this chamber is an elevacover; many die in a lew hour aftei simultaneously in a few days, they are strickeU. tion, which, when surmounted, disPraulai finance. closes a yawning well, with a mouth the Kogroe. Berlin, Feb. 14. Iu the lower ten feet in diameter, and of unknown Columbia, S. C. Feb. 14. Th house of the Prussian diet, Apply your ear to the edge defeated the resistration law th remainder of t'je budget bills depth. of the well and you can hear the holof the passed their seconi reading. Prus- low roaring of a stream of water hunproject, but the special order bouse tnu naming is me quwuuu sia' matriculatory contribution to dreds of feet below. Beyond this rf ra.ll in ir a, constitutional conven the empire is set down in the bud- chamber are five others connected by tion. If successful, tbe hotheads get at 43,641,753 marks; the revenue narrow galleries. The cave comes to will fembodv an educational disqnaii and expenditure for the financial an end against a perpendiclar wall of fication to rob the negroes of th year of 1880 to '81, are each estima- solid rock in the nimth chamber, and ted at 798,985,580 marks, the ordin about 500 yards from its mouth. The suffrage. at 760,223,930 floors of all the chambers except the Bad fr Wkott Growers. ary expenditure and tbe extraordinary outlay one where tbe limestone crops out, mark, Pierce 14. Teb. Judg. MiJiriit, are dry. All the chambers are math of the circuit court to day, in the at3?,76i,0Wmark:s, ematically regular in shape except A Co., Chicago, caseofGilbertCrea this one. They differ in length, but versus Sidney Cook.'suitbrought for all are of the same width and bight. Sotlce. additional margin in a wheat transIt is a romantic place for a picnic, action, decided that this dealing in Xotac is hereby given that Frank given up to such rural the future is gambling and a subject Cook is no longer ray assignee and and has been festivities for years. Every corner of for the grand jury. Cook atnor his neither tb taid the cave has been thoroughly exCfclcace'.Waklng tp. torney P. J. Barratt are authorized plored a thousand times, and the to collect any of my account. wslls of the limestone chamber are Cbjcago, Job. 14. Preparations dfeb!2-3- t R, A. Piocotr. citizens covered with the names of vititors Irish the are nuking among and the date of t heir visit. One, high hero t receive Parnell on the 23d "Von Brady,) inst. w!th great demonstration. Th upon the wall, reads Jnst Observe! 1789." Von Brady was a pioneer InCatholic bishops, Ipaldin of Peoria, For your nice Limburger. Hol- dian fighter and hunter, who came Hogan of St. Joseph and Henpessy of Dubuque, will lecture in different land Herring, Anchovies. Pigs' Feet, here in advance of the "Ohio Compadivisions of the city on St. Patnc t Lambs' Tongues, Santicl!e, Caviare, ny," in 1786. He was a daring man. of the red men day for the Irish relief. TheCbic5& Orsters hs err7tty!. t'other with and bd sect manv s!l the Knifk Knacks, d:aty cdil,fe rotlifir "Lipi.y L u r, i : n jr ,;roun'3.." in the'diocMe ff luxn-i- ? couwibuuit f J 5,000 fd ma-M- rd tocf cf the A lew riajsro patyoi grntimen visited the of provided with cut 510.000. tyuoaand eiou,Li eu pUmiiul supply oi' Us torn, repSi M fifth Ptrvat. ol toolr', for the purpose of wxplor Fob. 14.-- Fore Xff, . y d slow-growin- g Vltfi-aaekl- to-da- Catho-Ikcnurcb- he I Y I ' eWt XwfTx, a ir, 15, 1880. NO. ing the mysterious well. The follow-in:- ; were the gentlemen composing the party : M- - R. Brittingham and Andrew Long, leading Manchester merchants; Ernest T. Kirker, one of the editors of the Manchester ml?- pendent, S. Newton Griffiths, f the Ai'ams county bar, .Samuel Grooms, the owner of the cave, and the Com. mercial correspondent. Arrived at the cavo, it was thoroughly explored, and then a rope ladder, 100 fet in length, with which we had provided ourselves before starting out. was lowered down the well, and Mr, Kirker headed the exploration. When about fifty feet from the top of the well he called out to the party above to come down. We hastily descended to find our friend standing at the entrance of a narrow gallery leading out from the well. This gal lery led back a considerable distance and got wider, debouching finally into a spacious chamber. The distance from the mouth of the well to the top of the gallery is 47 feet. From the roof of the gallery to the floor is 10 feet 6 inches. At its mouth it measures 5 feet 4 inches in width. The gallery is straight, 50 feet long, has a gradual descent, and where it enters the main chamber is 25 feet in width. The chamber is 225 feet long, 1 10 feet wide, and 24 feet high, The roof, floor and walls of both the gallery and chamber are smoothly finished. In the center of this chamber is A SARCOPHAGI S N IB AND hi AC SOI. K til Combined. The mausoleum measures at its base 55 by 35 feet. It isof simple thouL'h wonderful desijrti. and carved out of the solid rock. Its base is pauneledon all sides, these which panels containing are supposed to illustrate the four aeojion'H in man's life childhood, youth, manhood and old age. At the ends of the bassreliefs are tab lets full of written characters, resembling the Hebraic, presumed to oe memortams ot tho person or persons in whose honor the mausoleum is erected. The carving on the is of the most delicate description, and fully equal to the Grecian school of sculpture. Tho limits of a newspaper article will not sufi fice to fitly describe them. From the floor to the top of the base is six feet. The base is hollowed out at the four corners, and these excavations are covered with slabs of freestone, accurately fitted and so firmly cemented that a cold chisel struck with a heavy hammer made little or no impression on the cement. They are of uniform size, measuring five by twelve feet. In the centre of the mausoleum rises a couch two feet five inches in height, twelve feet in length, and five feet in width. On the couch is extended the figure of a man. It is probably of life size, and measures nine foet four inches in length. The limbs are finely pro portioned and disposed in an easy and graceful manner. The arms are folded across the breast, and the fingers clasp a bunch of leaves the oak, reproduced with such a fidelity to nature that they look like petrifactions. Every vein and serration of the leaf is perfect. The figure is partially nude, a mantle or scarf crossing the breast and folding over ihe loins in graceful folds. The face is strong and robust in outline, and the contour of the features is decidedly Israeliteish. The he'.d is covered with a winged can or helmet. At each corner of the couch is a vae, four feet five inches high, covered with beautifully carved flowers and leaves. Each vase is in shape something like an amphora, except that the bottom is flat and the handles affixed to the body of the vase. The neck is thirteen inches in length and tapers gradually and gracefully. The vases are of uniform size, although the carved designsare different. They measure in circumference four feet five inches. Suspended from the roof by delicate copper rods, directly over the head of the recumbent figure, is a copper lamp of uniuue design, elegantly chased. At each corner of the mausoleum rises a carved pyramidal column, surmounted by car that are unmistakably Doric. On two sides of the room are toombt of humbler design. They are side by side, of uniform size, and twenty in on a side. Like the number, mausoleum, they are carved out of thesolidrock, and embellished with Their dimensions are as follows: Length, twelve feet; width, five feet; height.five feet. The tops are covered with slabs, securely cemented. On the front of each is a raised scroll, covered with written characters similar to those on the mausoleum. On the wall of the room opposite the entrance are painted faces, no doubt portraits twenty-fiv- e of those whose bones lie in tbe tombs. They are Uded and blurred, but still distinct enough to be deciphered. The colors used are red, yellow, black and white, and were evidently laid on with oil. The por. traits are executed in a superior manner, and the anatomical proportion ef the features is preserved to an exact degree. After our first astonishment over bas-rolie- s tn the head crumbled into dust. Por tions of the hair remained sticking to the cloth and your correspondent brought some of it away with him. U is black, curly, and of fine texture. Besides the body of the giant the tomb contained a spear-heaa hatchet, two lances, three mattocks or hoes, a spade, a cup, two plates and a small urn, all of copper. I appropriated one of the lances and the cup as souvenirs. These wonderful people understood the secret of hardening copper, for an ordinary file will barely scratch the lance, and the edge of a cold chisel turns up like lead wh?n struck against it. The cup is of softer metal.and beaus tifully engraved with trailing vines and wreaths. A square package at the head of tho tomb, wrapped in the varnished cloth, was opened and found to contain a book of one hundred leaves of thin copper, fastened loosely at the top, and crowded with finely engraved characters similar to those already described. Lack of time and the total inefficiency of our tools prevented us from making further investigations, but when we ascended the well, we could plainly discern works of the shurp-cuttintools used in excavatinc the cave. Iu the first two chambers, and tbe last five, we had noticed many curi- ou blocks of stone shaped like tables or bknchis, And presumed theui to be of natural origin. Later examination revealed the mark of chisel and pick, and thes agents were undoubtedly used to fashion the entire cavern. The irregularity of tho limestone chamber is due to natural causes. In all probability the room was dry when tuo wonderful people who designed and built it were alive. The stalactites and ttalagmites have formed since. 1 measured one of the largest of the former. It was five feet six and one-halinch. from base to pex. Allowing that it lengthened at th rate of on inch every fifty years, which a geological friend tells me is very rapid growth, it would have been 3,325 years reaohing its present length. Conjecture alone can fix the date of the last occupancy of the cave. It must have been years before the stalactites to form. I examined tho mouth of the cave and discovered traces of a stairway which once led to the surface of the ground. In deed, I found broken fragments of rock which, five or six thousand years ago, were undoubtedly parts of a broad staircaise. There were also traces of a stairway which wound around the sides of th well, affording easy entrance to the lower cav ern. Tho upper cave must have been the cellar of a residence built above ground, aud used for domes. tio purposes or as a place of retreat in time 01 danger. Mr. Ij rooms intends to open all the tombs and the groat mausoleum, arrange convenient means of entrance to the cave, and throw it open to the general pubUV--, charging a small price of admission to reimburse him. Several parties have visited it tinco the dm covery of the lower cavern, and all are impressed with tbe wonderful character of the discoveries. Mr. Grooms is anxious to have a scientist examine the cave, and at his request a description of the discoveries, together with tho engraved book, have been forwarded to the Smithsonian d, g f Institution. FOREIGN NOTES, By W. C. Telegraph to th JrscnuH. Liberal Lights Lessening WFIERE THE PEOPLE'S MONEY GOES IN PRUSSIA. Etc., Mr-wits-. Dbar Sirs Montreal, Sept. II. : 11. Warnkb 27, '79. & Co: I wa afllicted for manv years with terrible suffering which arises from dyspepsia. My physician gave me no relief, and much against my will I was induced to give your Safe Bitter a trial. It gives me great pleasure to inform you that my health is completely restored, though I have taken but four bottles; my appetite it good, and I now suffer no inconvenience after eating hearty meals, while before nearly, everything I ate caused me great distress and uneasiness. I can cheerfully recommend your Bitters to all. K. ju Jlosr.LT. The fetal Ked Bill. 14. In the LoDon, Feb. house of the Erst thirteen commons, clauses of the seed potatoes, (Ireland) bill wei passed, and tho hou-- e adjourned. Th il.url.ti Petition. Madrid, Feb. 14. In tho chamber of deputies, today, the premier Canovas Deleastillo, replying to an interpellation, stated that the government would not receive the petition brought by Kabyl chiefs from several thousand Moors, asking to bo placed under the allegiance of Spain. Ho added that it h id been arranged that representatives of the powers should hold a conference on the affairs of Morocco, which would probably tako place in Madrid, and would bo highly beneficial to Spain. Wholesale Resignation. 14. The Austrian VitNNA, Fob. liberal min;slers,Dr. Von Strcmayr, minister of justice, Baron J. Von Uortt, minister of national defence aud Baron Vou K01T, Weidenheira, minister of finance, persist in their intention to resign, Count Taafl'e, president, has opened, negotiation with Besetus for the ministry of finance and Donrud for minister of instruction. Both, however, refuse to enter the reactionary cabinet. Aaather International Arbitration. London, Feb. J4. The substance of tbe treaty between the United States and France, signed at Wash ington on the 15tli ot January, for the tettlement of claims ot French citizens resulting from the war of secession, hat been published here. Ihe treaty provides that a com mission of three members, one appointed by France, ona by the U- - S., and the third by the emperor of Brasil, shall meet in fix months after the exchange of ratifications to arbitrate on the justice of the claims of the French subjects, and many counter claims of American citir.ens who sustained losses under like circumstances. The treaty applies solely to a demand for indemnity originating from acts of injury committed with tho coguiziince of the federal authorities, tho United States government having absoiutely refused to accept the rosponsibilitv for the act of the confederal or for any loss arising from loss or emancipation of slave-.- . Th Wolf and the Lamb. BrtessELs. Feb. 14. Russian oicran XfAWsays: The system of incitment of provocation in respect to - Russia has never had such full play London everything teems to be done that is calculated to harass Russia and stir up public opinion against her, both by covert eiicial denunciations and by sensational telegrams, tho inventions of at now. In ItbWearlngTou Out. And annoying your friends; wo mean your cough. Browx'i Cocch Balsam, the Great Western Lung Healer, will cure you. For tale by all druggists. jD7tf THESE WOKPEBFCL DIFCOVERIES HI lift mm - w fa I'ill are nn linmedlata a Tiuiiid Liver, and cum Costive-nesi- t, Bllioiiviievi, Hiih.hu lil .i rtiuil. Malaria, Fever Kiel Asw, n.l are useful at time In nearly all Disease to cause a fne anl of the Itnwej. 'I he hesc nntU dute fur all Malarial Puiauu. Price, Ztu. a box. Nrreine quickly K vr Rft Warner's and Sleep to the ullerlns--. i iirea HenilarliK anil KeuralKia, 1'rrveiil Kluleiitic Vlls. hikI I th best remedy nr Nervtiua Prostration brought on by eje.'wlv drinking, nver-woifmental shuck" and other cause. It relieve- - (be Pains of all OiseasMi, bud la never Injunoim to tbe vnteiii. 1'lic best of ail Nervine. Hotrlea of nas; prices, sue aud tljuu. Haraer'a tot tliuulu liy.i-rm- lu, IS For Lame Back, Side or Chest, use POROUS PLASTER. SUILOH'S Price, 25 ct. Sold by J. W. McNutt A Co., Wholesale and Retail Drug gists, and O. C. r$rmsby,Logan. octly Etc. Ere., MEM real Heard From. in Austria- - journals. Dk.Hhnry Si.iDB.the world renowned Medium, will give Sittings for Physical Manifestations and Medical Examinations and Treatment, at tho Commercial Hotel on and aft- r Sunday, Feb. 15th. As a Clairvoyant Physician, Dr. Slade has performed many wonderful cures, and has a reputation in the east turpamed by no on. dfel4 4t Mont 97 to Warner'a'Safa ftemcdlea are old byDmcKiata mnd DeaUcro In medicine ' every. where EEWASKER4C0, Proprietors, BterhHer, K.T. TSend for Paropbiet and Teahoiouaia. GIVING THEM FITS IS Boots and Shoes1 AT ASHBY & CO'S. nave large assortment of Home-Ma- d boots and shoes, which we are eUioK at Reduced Prises, also big ttoek of W Pistol atioa of Had in a measure subsided,we seized Tho undersigned have this day the tools and set to work toojien one dissolved by mutual r the, It was no easv task. consent. R. A. Wells will continue Our chisels would not cut the cem the business of Ihe former Patent KetaJlie firm, col ent which held the slab m place,and dues liabs all and lecting payinall to forced Batter ihe we were at last M. Blchsuller, ilities. tomb to pieces. The wall were thin R. A. Wells, . a hesvv slcdcre dim . of klnxi PREVENT j ti.e frwestone to. shattered hammer Slices atoms. To our great surpn there Boots Do Toa ltcllere It! a few handluls of lay before us, not score t crumbling dust, but a splendidly) That in this town there are FronEsnning ever, preserved mummy, swathed in cloth of persons paving our store every covered with a thick varnirh, which day whose lives are made miserable :,iA . r,lflint aromatic odor by Indigestion, Dyspepsia. Sour and Sa!nd Ripping In the I not unlike balsam of fir. 1 he mum distressed Stomar.h.Liver Complaint, 75 fr.r one inch in when, nine tet etc., Constipation, w.ireri l U. SEAMS. Mictt it we will .ell them Shiloh's Vitslizer, !'' length,' ud . was wrspped, altnougn ot coarse) Busrant'ed te-- cure them. Scld by j , l ull si in ........ akiil!i:llv worn. (Inei J. V . jMC.NUtl G IP., ncirraiw n C. Ormsby, Korta ef Z'C. M. I.,Mia ft., Cj;dV . from the Eotail CTit ai j wrappings Drugjiftt, of tLe prty , ottil-ly- r v4"4 drogi!t,Lo3a. the taoe, mi uiu LYON'S STIFFENERS and c., ... 1 |