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Show Site gilcn guwtim PuMisbod every WEDNESDAY and SATURDAY by the Ogde Publishing Compaxt. diaries W. Penrose, Editor. E. STRATFORD, Basine.it Manager, been paid by a gentlemen of his ac said quaintance to remove them, but he knew nothing of their contents. Miss Day declared she knew nothing of the matter, but had merely accom panied Wainwright at his request which was subsequently proved to be OQDE5. UTAH. SATURDAY, DECEMBER. 4, 1875 true. The police at once Set about the AtlTHOniZEf AOEtfTS. work of tracing out the identity of The following persons are authorized to the mutilated body, and the prison colled subscription and transact any busi- er's connection with the crime which ness connected with the "Junction" Office in had evidently beea committed. The their respective settlements, result was, that Wainwright was M. D. and Providence Millville, Logan, shown to have carried on for some Hammond. Smithfield, Hyde A. Noble. Park and Richmond, W, time criminal relations with several women, and that one of them lived under his protection, and the name of Mrs. KiDg,' for three years and a L. Webster. James Unsworth, . Jfyrum, AH settlements on the west side of Bear half. River, in Cache Valley, J. II Darker. Lane, Willard, Malad City, Willow Springs and W. franklin Her real name was Harriet and she bore to the prisoner two children. Just one year to a Samaria, Jos. W. Dudley. of the lady, :.0. L. Robinson day before the discovery Farmington W. S- roppleton she removed from Mile End to Strat Wellsville ...II. A. Shaw ford, to live in the house of a Mrs. Paradise E. N. Austin Willmore. Hear Lake Valley The two children and James Salmon "Mrs. Coalville.. King's" boxes were left in business all Address communications, charge of Mrs. Willmore, while the K STRATFORD, former went to meet Wainwright. Business Manager. From that time no trace of her had BoxZ2, Ogden, Utah. been found by any of her relations ILY- - A EOSDOX MYSTERY E A K i ll EI). The particulars of the Wainwright murder case, now on trial in London, and alluded to in the cablegrams, may not be iamiliar to the majority of our readers, so we giv the follow ing details: On the evening of Sept. 11th 1875, Henry Wainwright, a school teacher, who had been a store keeper with an extensive business in White chapel, London, and also a local lecturer, requested one of his work men, named Alfred P. Stokes, to come to the old store at night and help him to remove some parcels. Stokes went, as desired, and assisted "Wainwright, aBd a young woman named Alice Day, to move some heavy packages wrapped in Ameri can cloth and tied up with rope from the back of the premises to a point near Whitechapel Curchi lie no" ticed a peculiar smell about .them, and was told by Wainwright that they contained hair, in which the latter had dealt considerably. While Wainwright went for a cab, Stokes' curiosity being aroused, he pulled the covering off one of the parcels and to his horror saw a human head, also the hands and arms! The sight, coupled witV the offensive scent, made his hair stand on end. In about three minutes Wainwright returned with a cab and had covered up Stokes, who the parcel again, helped him , to put the into the the entering packages vehicle, Wainwright cab with them. Stokes followed on foot, determined to see the outcome. The young woman, Alice Day, joined him a little distance off, when Stokes obtained rthe , assistance of twa policemen, and they ran after the cab till it stopped near a closed house, formerly ewned by Wainwright's brother, in the Borough, and called "The Hen and Chhkens." The policemen demanded to see what was in the parcels, and were offered as much as a thousand dollars if they would ask no questions. , . " They arrested Wainwright, and then took Mis Day, who was sitting on the cab, into custody. The par eels were conveyed to the police station, and when opened, the mud lated body of a female was disclosed, the features being undistinguishable through decomposition. Wainwright accounted for possession of the eels hf t.h iumvi uuvuv fViot. t I'JJab J st9tint LX par-- ! j Mttu the Smiths were in the ' anon hands of the authorities, H. F. Higbee ftnnr.lnrtfid h would eratify a long cner ished desire and accordingly returned to Nauvoo with the avowed intention of assassinating 0. P. Rockwell, of Boggsand Missouri memory. He touna ma mieuu-eTictim at midday, walking ia the street, and coollr drew a revolver and attended to shoot him. Rockwell was unarmed, but being aa fearless and agile as a savage, he knocked the deatiiy weapon from bis assailant's band, seized him by the hail, dashed him violently to the ground and planted bis foot forcibly in his face and stomach. Higbee begged for life, and Rockwell at length released him and assisted in convey. iug him to the house of Robinson, the postmaster, where his wounds were dressed and a bed furnished him until next day He was drunk when he made the assault. The next morning found him sober with a badly scarred face, and a revolver and dirk lving by his side Rockwell, who had been greatly feared in Missouri, was a very small man, slim and pale, with a keen black eye, and very winning address." d A NEW PLACE OF 1SEFUGE. are called to take the field against , Correspondence. them, which they do with the most Malad Valley, Nor. 27. 1875 Gen. Scofield Editor Junction: painful reluctance. Very stormy weather here at recommends the transfer of the Inhere ,. three or four inches of L0t0n dian bureau to the war department the ground and a fair prospect for rnore the pasl smmer lbefe h It is a fact that the treatment of During a great amount of work win the red men is a world-wid- e ; disgrace to the nation. The unfortunate natives are cheated out of their hunting grounds,forced upon reservations with the promise of ample food, starved by plundering aqents till they break through the bounds of their imprisonment, and then shot down for leaving the places where death stares them in the face. A change is unfrequently demanded in the Indian policy of the government, and unless it is speedily inaugurated the country will stand condemned for inexcusable cruelty,in the sight of Deity and before the whole civilized world. valUy but Ja'ck Fr08t have driven the cauyon L,a 8 There have been a g and barns built in the vail Malad City has no VhZ but expects to commencedayin a few St. John a very thriving Tillage of about 25 families h . Sunday school, conducbv E? ward Woolsey and expecs to start a day school. Samaria a da, school, Mr. Evans as teacher. The tm .: teesof the Cherry Creek Daniel ly, Tovey aad Jenkin Willi!!" pate by their unceasing labors ?ut fin. isnra a very convenient school house 20 in this Snow home. houses season as yet, days. t3 L di-.v-- & n' aDdu Ju- - i., ?' .Jnes' President of built a very tas.y rock house 18x32, one and three-fourtries high. President Jones labors for" the interests of the people placed under his care, and is at all time -- :.; . set examples worthy of iQii!ft,i0n closed last Monday after doing but little business. h p. Our kind friends of the press with U. X. 11. II. Matters. BRIGHAM ClTI. Nov a i CR charming generosity, have annually ' EDITOR Junction: U. N. R. R. Anxwherb oh the selected some place to w hich the,"Mor Dear Sir: "Floral and T.inu n Extension, Folks" was represented here on mons" should flee while the few Dec. 1st, 1875. Friday and Saturday evenings by pl 0f A jf birds of prey, who have come Editor Junction. and his estimable lady, 'before The Utah Northern extension, under Phelps Utah to "run the Territory," de audiences.who were large richly amused the direction of Jos. Richardson Esq., well pleased with th 00.:-. vour the fruits of our toil, and nestle his mado but slow progress since its and wherein our youne people also urc,,;,, in the cozy domiciles which we have start. One cause, the men don't get themselves creditably. "Pretty Maid " or acquaintances. their money in time to pay their hands "Lome Cheerful Companions." T.an built and beautified in the valleys of so they say down the Lane," "City Belles," ' Little When questioned concerning her, Mr. Richardson is a great economist Old the Was itch. The Sandwich Isles Lady and Gent of &0., were in diet and otber things, but if he rendered Waiuwright had replied that she had in a manner NeMexico and wishes this road to proceed Arizona, Sonora, entertaining. rapidly. A great number of houses have run off to Paris with a man named been other places have been pressed upon there should have been more engineers erected the season; our masons during Friske. lie paid for the support of to the road and have it readv and are very busy, and would us by scribes who owned no proper for Furvey work. W.D. Hendricks contrasted needcarpenters the children for a time, and then six weeks of fine weatheryet, after ty in either place. But strange to from the bench on the west side of Cub which indoor works will be plentiful il stopped the supplies, leaving them to the tunnel, and has sub let Creek, We witness a "Mormons" aayen't "fled" the spring appears. ay, steady considerable of the road. Mr. Hen on Mrs. Willmore's hands. Photoin our extensive worth a cent since they drove their dricks is a man cf energy and reliabili- progress industrial operations, and gain new and graphs of the missing woman showed ty. Mr. Thurston contracted for the stakes deep into tie soil by the fill yamauie experience, jno man needs to be across Cub River bottom. Mr. Van-no- y idle that she wore her hair in the form here. A to be known shores of the saline lake, and have for the small job from the bridge to as the Social large building, is now being rnofed, found on the mutilated body. And Hall, the old road. Mr. Thurston's job is not the first taken no notice of tb very liberal- story of which is built of rock, yet completed, and this delays tracklay- - walls three feet wide in the investigations on thi premises from arid unasked, advice of benevolent basement; mg to me Dnage on norm ireex. the second story is of brick, which have which it was removed, showed that a Mr. Morrison, contractor for the tun been made eurnalists. here; there is a vestry atnel, has attached the road because he tached to the rear of the grave had been dug, five feet by two main building. This year a fresh bcality is select could not get his pay, but I have learn Under the auspices of the City Coun and only two feet deep, under the ed for us, and the San Francisco ed the road is to be started again. Mr. eil a canal is being constructed along a basement of the building, and to con Thurston's job has continued all the time. of the "Box Elder" that will drav part Chronicle is the sapient seer to point & Messrs. Hall Chadwick have been ceal the smell of decomposition chlo wMr from many sources where it out the new land of refuge. In making alt the culverts on the road, and the had settled, and greatly increase said had in the been with lime ride of put order to build up tie. New Jerusalem they are many near the tunnel. JoknE. element for irrigating purposes; $2,000 bhtrrH, r.sq., tne engineer, is a young will cover the expenses of tbe work. soil to cover the body. This pre we are to shift our quarters to the man of promise, but should have had P. D. Packer, son of Jonathan T served the exterior of the corpse to site of the old Jerusalem. The Dead more help. This railroad has made a Packer, died suddenly ef lang fever, oa some extent, while the interior de Sea is to serve instead of our famous little work for the J. P. of Franklin, aa Saturday afternoon. u some of tbe men paid but little notice to mr. s. &. juunn, seen uite low and hatchet A new spade Salt Lake, and the real," veritable, the laws of Idaho, and took too much for some time wuh composed. neuralgie complaints John Biggs, Esq , contracted but we were found there, which had been sacred hope he will survive, though far Jordan, although a "hard road to euppy some 25,900 ti , at 16 cents advanced in aee.V a. fl. used in opening the grave, and these to traTel,". is to compensate for the each, and mest ef them are ready for the road. the prisoner had asked Stokes to sell loss of the "Facts are Stubborn stream that laves the feet Janes Packer, Esq., contracted for tbe for him. Two buttons of imitation . Things.' of the City of the Saints. tunnel sticks, but few of them have beea . i v Tn,.,- uuuihu uwiags are yearly iuvwu3ui in found the needed were One of at the present. grave, also, jet approaches Will not the Chronicle be kind to the borne on the swift current of disease-dowtnnael has beta changed sine the to the among the rubbish in the warehouse, enough to tell us how we are to juet because they d get start, and tbis has caused unnecessary not possess grave, a sufficient a pair of Abyssinian gold knowledge of and will hinder the tunnel's themselves. A man meets his neighbor,' there, why w should abandon our labor, progress a wedding ring and keeper, and cherished homej, and who is going to The grading of this railroad was taken and the first salutation is,' "How are or "Hew is your health!". The all of black of velvet ribbon, piece low; several men have sunk money. you!" move us if we don't want to go? too T t at is, 0h, I'm well, with reply frequently which were identified as having been joaepn neisom iniormea ne that on a th xGfnt.inn nf a iiM " Kln.t ninmi well We wv.tw. satisfied with are our 4.UO. IVIDVMV small aeross Bear l River he would very 1 T T job cold. a do yoo worn Dy mrnct lightly Reader, regard ane, , it appears sink some The $300. will tunnel be present prospeets, the results of our some know cold is a that one dtin most of tbe 1,260 feet through, and passes up that Wainwright, some time ago, beA cold not only past labors, the utter failure of our a natural hollow and down another one. gerous of maladies came bankrupt, and shortly after a enemies clogs up the pores of the entire system, to crush or remove us, and James H. Martineau's survey has been and retards circulation, but it is producfollowed fire broke out in his premises; this mush all the war to of Catarrh, which is quite apt tive the promises of future greats ess aui Bear River,pretty from Franklin. was nine months before the exhuma to consumption. "Oh," you say, "it Mr. Richardson said ho wanted the influence which come to us from the is nothing but a cold in my head."1 True; road done to Cottonwood by November tion and discovery. voice of destinj. And when the that cold is really a mild form of Ca- but last, but to. do that it would have taken I 3 1 a an1 The theory-o- f the case is that Bui if( uut uncstcu iu no vvurtv aiu,become Mr. will Chronicle, and ill other veadors of more cf Uncle Sam's picture! than chronic. " is one of Catarrh in R. to was dif Wainwright, being pecuniary willing let go. affea-tiohave tumbled most the offensive newspaper clap-tradisagreeable, 1876 may be the year that the U. N. in the ficulties, murdered his paramour to into the limbo reserved for their The diseases. of catalogue ilk, R. R. will pass through Bear River can. to nose the the is passage obstructed, relieve him of his responsibilities, the "Mormons Jin their State of yon and into Fellow's Valley, alias Gen sense of smell impaired and there is a. tile alias Crater Valley. , Valley, buried her in the grave under the disagreeable sensation of pressure in Deseret will be the leading power of More anon, head. In the more advanced stages the fired and the warehouse,, building the American Republic, and their Perbicrixe. there is a discharge having an offensive with the hope of destroying the evi edor. If the disease be allowed to conchief city will- shiue as the t' Sbootlug at Tintic. tinue in Its pourse, thick baud inorusta-tion- s dences of his crime. The case has metropolis tf the Western continent. will form in the head, the bones of : Silver City, Utah, 28; caused great excitement in London, If we should conclude to move, howThere was a shooting affray at Eureka which sometimes beceme softened and and although counsel for the prisoner break away in pieces. Why will persons ever, we'll be sure to send word to ast evening between Baxter and Wil-ia- continue to suffer from such an annoy Mclntyre, in which a bystander. using their utmost exertions to the Chronicle. 1 John Giblin, was accidentally shot in log, disgusting disease, when they can save him' from the' gallows, it is ex tbe right shoulder. Giblin is alive, but just as well be eured Qf it ! Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy will eure the worst the wound is considered dangerous. pected that his guilt will be fully TO TIIE Iff-1- I CRUELTY. Silver City, 29. , forms of Catarrh; in fact, it ia the o&ly demonstrated, and that the law which The shooting which occurred between sure and sate remedy winch bas yec A XS. ' . Many harsh in Englaud is executed as well as enWilliam Melntyre and W. Baxter, at been offered to the public-irritating may, for a time Gen. Pope, commanding the mili Eureka, Tintic, last Saturday, nearly relieve thepreparations acted, will inflict capital and deserved of the symptoms, but urgency Mr. fatal to J. Giblin, who proved do not cure the disease. Dr. Sage'sof they the and on chanced Missouri, when department to tary be the punishment Heary Wainwright, present shooting Catarrh Remedy is soothing and healing the seducer, murderer and mutilator. Major General Scofield, commanding took place, one of the balls taking effect in its effects, and when used with Br. in his right shoulder. Baxter fired tbe dithe department of the Pacific, have first shot. Ten or twelve shots were ex Pierce's Nasal Douche, according to -' euro. effect to a not does fail each made a report to the Govern- changed,' neither of the assailants being reciions, HOW HIGBEE KILLED Mr. Mclntyre, more desperate Sold by all Druggists. hit. ment concerning the Indians in their than" ever, thrust his revolver against l'OHTEU KOCKIVELL! respective divisions, and trace the the breast of Mr. Baxter, and undoubtDr. Richmond thus describes an cause of Indian hostilities to the bad edly would have given the fatal shot.but 8. BERCHI3 AUU & GQ. fortunately the revolver had been empattack made by the apostate Higbee treatment they have received from tied and Baxter was spared. Thecause on 0. P. Rockwell during the excit-in- the civil agents appointed for of thia unfortunate occurrence ia un- Wholesale and Commission known to the public. Mr. Giblin is de- Dealers in Preduce. time just preceding the murder their benefit. The Indiaas leave ing well under the care of Dr. Roberts, of Joseph and Hyrurn Smith. We their reservations because they are of Provo, and hopes are entertained of PROMPT ATTEnIFiON PAID TO CONbis recovery without amputation of the SIGNMENTS. starved there, and then the military wounded limb. S. L ilerald. clip from the Chicago Times : . : ... - un-t- . . s fire-wate- r. : . n ear-riug- s, . a - mm -- -- 1 m. . p ns - a m . - Logan, n-&- u .:.. : r. |