OCR Text |
Show LOCAL prom Friday' ITEMS! From Saturday's Daily Daily of August 8(4 of August M. Delayed The Central Pacific train hours at Toana. Wno Lost a Parasol ? Call for it at Ia consequence the Union Pacific train tbe Post Office. was delayed here until the arrival of the former, Another Tribe in tkw Arrivals. was detained several ' ' North Israel. Og den. Two days' sojourn our friends at North Ogden satamong isfy us of the high appreciation in which Street. Mr. Henry C. Wardleigh, Principal of the North Ogden Seminary, and his es. pAY 0,- - Take notice of W. T.Baker's who are indebted to him, tiraable wife are held appeal to those by the people of and settle. that vicinity. Mr. Wardleigh will reand walk up open his Bchoel on Monday next, with a The of attention full complement ef scholars. burnt Bmck. Good who all out folks and anticipate building to the advertisement of Metz is Personal. Thos. B. Mahoney, Memwho manufac& Turner, Morgan City, ber of Parliament for Killarnay, Canada s lime. ture solid brick and West, is stopping in our midst. He is accompanied by several New Yorkers, of who are determined to combine pleasElias Morris and Morris, Called. Evan?, fire brick and furnace makers, ure with business. They expressed His their gratification at the trip which they etc., Salt Lake, called in firm is furnishing brick for the obserta-tory- . took up the canyon this morning. They Elias is a fine man, and he sells le ive this evening' for Salt Lake City, where we bespeak for them a hearty fine goods. reception. Cut His Foot. Last evening a little Scientific Mr. C. R. Savage, the boy, passing along Main Street, had his Salt cut broken Lake photographer, returnedThurs-daa foot severely glass, by evening from Bridger, where he quantity of wkicb. lies about near the ruins of the fire. All these fragments has been taking views of the surroundshould be removed, and care taken that ing scenery with Prof. Marsh and his none remains on the side walks. party, engaged in their scientific rea- 8eir;hes. They have met with great Life and Trials. Professor Stephen suces8, having secured the remains of Doc is in town. He brings credentials animals of immense size, belonging to lie is lame, and the pliocene period. from San Francisco. Professor Marsh's discoveries are of iu poor circumstances being left a widowand he considers the er with four children to support., He great importance, of his locality present labors the most has published his life and trials in pamvaluable on the continent for his pur phlet form, whisk he offers to the public Frof. Leidy, the eminent scienat 50 cents per copy. The sale of his pose. in is the same neighborhood, busily tist, book is at present bis only means of supin similar explorations. The charitable will doubtless as- engaged Eleven pounds of Kiesel on Fifth See Birth. ed . first-clas- to-da- y. port. sist him in purchasing his pamphlet. r Mr. Ken. Clark, the night watchman who was seriously injured by falling from a building during the late fire, is slowly reentering. It appears that he fell off the roof of the Pioneer Drug Store on to a dry goods box, and his injuries are principally internal. He is now able to turn himself in bed, though it is with great exertion: and as he is of pretty strong constitution and good grit, we will, we hope, soon see him on his legs again. Recovering. J. 0. Chambers has secured a new stand for his News and ' Magazine business, with which he will combine the Fruit trade, in front of J. Stanford's store, ou Fifth street, where Grit . him and obtain their periodicals. This is a good place and Mr. Chambers will soon recu- all his old customers will find perate. Mr. W. S. Read, of the late firm of Read & Tyrell, Boot and Shoe Makers, has opened again in the premises occupied by Moulding, the butcher, who will remove to Fifth street. We understand that Messrs. D. II. Peery and Jonathan Browning intend to erect good substantial brick buildings on the site of their burnt out stores. Thai's what we like to hear. , . ,t Michael Fitzgerald, who was yesterday committed to the city jail in default of paying a fine inflicted for assault on Gideon Oram, as reported in yesterday's Jusction, was brought before His Honor, Judge F. D Richards, on a writ of habeas corpus. ,, It was claimed by the prisoner's friends that, having been once fined for the offence in a Justice's Court, on his own complaint, the penalty inflicted by the Alderman, fWfts void. Alderman Thomson argued in favor of the exclusive jurisdiction of City Justices in criminal cases arising under the ordinances of the City. Justice contended that the Trecinct Justice had jurisdiction of the case. His Honor decided that the Precinct Justice &d jurisdiction in this case under the Territorial statute, and the prisoner was ! , .set at liberty. Hab. Corp. to-da- y Mid-dlet- - Mrs. S. E. Nelson, wife of David Nelson, of this city, while walking out in her garden .yesterday Immediate afternoon, was id wag rendered to the lady, by Dr. Y L. Anderson. She 13 now doing well.j Last eveningjust after we went to press, an excitement was raised by a team dashing past the office at a furious rate. Two men were in a buggy, one driving and the other using the whip over the already excited ani mals. The consequence was that when they reached the tabernacle the buggy was tipped over and the man that used the lash was badly hurt. He received a severe bruise on the hip and a cut or two on the forehead and was greatly shaken up. The driver escaped with a little dust on his coat. Mr. Carrol, of the livery stables, arrived on the spot and took charge of the team, refusing to allow it to be returned to the stable by the per son wLo hired it. The buggy was not very badly damaged. Immediately after the spill, the man who drove the team was arrested for fast driving, and being brought before Alderman Thomson, was fined $7.50 and costs. Persons who drive teams through the business part of town should be more careful of the lives and limbs of pedes trians than is manifested by many who use the livery teams for pleasure riding. If they will not it is only right that the city ordinance should be enforced. - ' llirtbs. k. North Willow C&kek, Aug. 5th, 1873. Editor Oodex Junction : Believing that a few lines from this section of country would be read with interest by the many readers of your valued paper, I have concluded to invade your asnotum with this feeble attempt. In the first place, in giving a cursory description of this splendid country, I am prompted to speak eulogistically of our women, and our sagacious and enterprising men. In fact, our society is made up of a respectable class, who are generous, and everything calculated to make a community respectable. Besides this, by the way of embellishment, there is a goodly number of young ladies, for whom 1 speak commendably, whose appearance E HEREBY GIVE KOT1CB will verify a compliment upon their and and their looks, intelligent healthy courteous and accomplished manners. TO OUR PATRONS & FRIENDS' Besides this, the country upon which we are settled is one of the most attractive Tint we bar and fruitful sections in the world. I do not say this through a mere desire of WHOLE STOCK speaking egotistically, or tickling our . In Trade ly th own ears with soft and groundless as- -' I the from take but it opinsumptions, ions of disinterested parties, who universally pay us the compliment. t bo indeed, would be so bund to the V" rtqnest th admir tion of the beautiful, the pietur-ecqnand the romantic, as to behold GENEROUS INDULGENCE OF OCR' unmoved, this favored region. While CKEDlTOltS, Nature here has reached her culminatindeadded has man through And hereby notify nil who r ing effort, fatigable labor, a high degree of cultivaWhitelaw Reid was a dozen years ago tion both physically and intellectually. TO editing the Xenia. (Ohio) Nine. In his Not only are our fields well stocked with To Call Immediately and MAKE , the choicest grains and fruits, but tur "Traits of Journalism" he tells the fol- intellectual SETTLEMENT at ; store houses are rapidly lowing: filling with the fruits of knowledge, garto Z. CY "One day we had nn advertisement of nered from the open fields of science. W. 0. Child's Store, Xext M. I., Ogden. i the Columbus Commercial College, and With our rapid and marvelous increase the foreman came to me and told me of wealth, we have endeavored to keep The noces!ty of MKKTING OUR OWN OBtJ. there must be a i editorial notice of it. pace in 'the increase of learning. We OATION."t nil whom cumiM'U un to nrjre to SKT'fLK TIltUK AO My time was short. The forms were have not only spacious granaries aad have tccmtiniiMlKK-.COUNTS 0HT11W1TH. waiting, and I wrote straightway, "The substantial storehouses, but well ordered valuable It and schools a Columbus College is an excellent and aplibrary. ur Los is $0,000 and we art Uninsured. institution. The adver- pears to be the will of every one to leave tisement appears in another column." I to their heirs a legacy of learning, that 1IIGGINB0T1LUI & CO; sent it to the proof-readand went with it they might accumulate their own home. I got up late the next day, and fortune. Under the directions of a the edition had all been mailed before I most estimable gentleman for a bishop, and a saw it You can imagine the state of my there is a universal em is which 1 the of oneness Commercial when sentiment, "The read, feelings bodiment of Christianity, virtue, ana Herald is an excellent and institution 1" You can't believe it, but patriotism. As for the productions or tnis section to this day the bill for that advertiseand fruit I refer you to the ment is runni g." to that we of prove Ogden City, buyers stand eminent aruoun other localities Wit. around Oeden. The reason of this, Main Street, presume to say, is in the great care and ," OGDEX; A scene occurred in one of our justice's labor bestowed upon everything raised couits not long since which has escaped hatever is the highest market price the notice of the local papers. A little for anything raised, we get. It has CUT TO ANY DESIGN. impetuous son of the Emerald Isle, been boasted that Southern Utah was while going to bis work one morning, vastly the richest. I claim this to be in was attacked by a belli erent rooster, correct. Although our mineral resources CUTROCK FOR BUILDINGS, &C the prrperty of an Irish washerwoman are not developed, and, it is true the JAMES FOWLER. Our. Irish south have the richest prospects in the of gigantic proportions. friend, not to be bluffed off by a rooster, world, yet we have mines richer and fur struck the bird with a rock, killing it. more lasting than theirs. 1 have refer He was accordingly arrested, and ence to the agricultural mines. Our before the squire, and when rich alluvial ore, producing all the nebrought t asked to maxe his statement of the case, cessaries of life, brings in a dividend far follows: as "Well, your more important and reliable than all the proceeded A FIRST CLASS f AWTEft Honor, when e was going to me wurk southern mines together. It is not at IMMEDIATELY! Saw. Apply tu U. W. DAU City, Hot Eldf r couutjr, U. T. yislerday morning, a big roosther te. together improbable too, that we will TON, WU!rd JUljr 10, 1H73401-U- . longing to this ould cow ." Judge, yet "strike it big," in the north. Al interrupting. "Stop, sir, stop; this ready reliable asvayers pronounce some woman is not a cow ; she is a lady ; now and indications specimens proceed." "Well, your Honor, as I are very promising, 'lnerewui a aay was saying, whin going to me wurk this come.' when we will have the power to morning a roosther belonging to this boast of having greater and more varied ould cow . Lady, interrupting, "I m advantages than any section in the not a cow, sir, I'm a lady!" MYho says world. However, we do not feel the you're a lady!" "Shure, didn't his least envious nor boastful, but we do Honor say I was a lady?" "Oh, thin, feel that it is our prerogative to it's aisy for him to say it for. he's not on speak; and be heard among other his oath like L am. communities. Our feelinns are, to be with other societies of Utah as we are araonjr ourselves friendly, united, and The Cure. We to live in the smYit of we are a (elf-su- s that remember should Dr. Hall says that it ought to "be gen people: and that it is our duty to erally known that ordinary boiled rice, taining and uniy and eaten with boiled milk, is one of the preserve one great tamiiy under one neaa as be best . remedies known for any form of That it is our duty to preserve and pro loose bowels. I's efficacy is increased honorable principles, and tect all good, if it is browned like coffee, and then be as we should be Saints in deed. boiled and eaten at intervals of four ' F. , Very Bespectfully, hours, taking no other food or liquid No 1cro?i run fake thee Bli- We suggest to sur correspondent that whatever; its curative virtue is increasaccuMimr to )lreotlniiH. urn! rfrmniu lonir unwell, proving tltolr twin arc not ed if no milk is taken with it, and the a few facts in to the productions regard di'xt roved Uy mineral poison or other mean, patient , will keep etill in a warm bed ; and prospects of North Willow Creek and tl': vital or;;uti)4 wasicd beyond tiw) in then it becomes an almost fall able of repair. point will have far more effect on the public, V or 1ii1 ignition, Jfclt-pis.remedy. ttni .Shoulder, Cowrlm. ThrhU Ila tic ofruinlieInClient, generalities. than Dlzzlneiw, Hour Eructation of the 8t(iiuH;ti, I;i't Taxto lit th will pardon us for being a little skepti Last Mouth, niliotm Attacks, Validation of tu cal about Nature having "reached her Heart. lnfUminatloi, of tlic Litturs, Paht iu Speech. rnrionuf th- Kidney, uu4 a hiiudrcd Willow the Delivered July 80, at Kingston, K. K, at a culminating effort" at North other pulnrtii ,f tuptoiim, ar the otfrprtnifH Of l).Vl'eftit. Ill tlW OoMiplultiU it ha Creek, as we are under the impression Reception Given by Gen, Sharpe. no cquhl, huI one loti!e will prove a better ' in works Ladies and gentlemen of Kingston : I that we have seen Nature's (ruarxntoe of liu inetiU thau a lengthy ad , ; veril.'uit'iit. have been in your county two days, and other places, that area trifle, at least IVimhIo Cum plain tii. In yonnjf for I have found them most enjoyable here the or old, married or tdnjfle, hi dwu (i ahead of anything in his neighborhood and at Overlook Mountain. I am very womanhood, or the turn of lid, these TouiO an Influetico no thai , Iilltern di.iplaj much fsiigued and want to retire, I We say this without any disparagemcn a marked Improvement Li Boon pereprWil". ! shall have to take the early boat for New to the prosperous little settlement he l Chronic For liiflanimnlory and liouf. ijtf pepln or? York in the morning. N. Y. Time. writes about. Our friend means well RtM'tiinntixm iiidicetion, i:iiioH. Kemlttetn aii't Inter-- . ' l)ee.neK of tin! I'lood. IJver. and we only give him this hint, that be tHilteut fevers. Kidneys"' ami Madder, th.--e Jtlttem hae A few days ago a resident of De- may do better next time. Ed. been iiot nuoeeerffnl. hue.lt ltlsetue bv VHiatfd Wood, which i produced troit was token sick and sent for a bv dcninifPHicHtof the nijresuvo divan. I or Skin doctor. The doctor left a prescrip Eruption, TeW halt Kl'cnm, Jilotche. Spota, PlmplM, fr, Lord tion and with it a request that one of Sir Sidney "Waterlow, Mayor 1'imtulei, Boll's Carbuncle. Sore Kyc, Erysipelas, Itch, the children should call at hia office of London,who was recently create' ,Seut!K, lMHCoionukm or the hkln, Hunter the next day and say how the patient a baronet, is a printer, stationer and and WHwe of the Skin, of whatever name . nature, are UteraKy dujr up and carried His or manufacturer. was doiDg. A little girl came, and blank-boo- k out of the svhU'iii in a bhort time fcy the oe when questioned, she promptly present position is entirely owinpj to ol these liitU'rs. One bottle In wicliuf em tfetlr, trill convlnr, tho nios; incmluloua answered; "Please, sir, father is get- his own exertions, as he started in curative tS'octA. ' & (O.. IX. II. 3IcDOXAM ting better; he's broke the stove all life a poor, unknown boy, without San A Fnuuisco. Cil Cen. Atrts., to pieces tnis rnornmsr, and been a- - friends or influence, and with a very I)njjrl Aeor. Washington and Charlton S's., '. ' ! l fighting mother, just like he used to." imperfect education. ALL riUCGlSTS & WJAiSiyk' SOLD good-lookin- g high-minde- 3PIJ3L1E3I d, W Lost our Disastrous Fire on tho Horning of Aug. 5th. e, to-da- Typographical Profanity. i INDEBTED This morning, to the wife of Mr. Geo. II. Tribe, of this city, a daughter. i r " i:W . "r- r. Married. ; At Wood's. Cross, Augut 7th, 1873, by Rev. D. G, Strong, Mr. John J. Cortez and Miss Id Vaughn. :In this city, August 8th, 1873, by Hon. F. D. Richards, Probate Judge of Weber county, Mr. John Shill, lat of Gloucestershire England, to Miss Dinah Videan, late of Kent, England, now both of Echo, Summit county, U. T. ' ' ' Mill. Star please copy. Died. This morning, Aug. 9th, of teething and bowel complaint, at 11:30, Robert Holroyd Thcraas, son of James Moroni and Mary Hebdeo Themas.aged 8 months and 28 days. ' Funeral at Residence, 3 p. to. Friends are invited. Khiva described as a tumble down inclo-incity, with two wretched walls an inner and outer town, with a population variously estimated at between 4,000 and 10,000 souls, some seventeen mosques, aWut a score of schools. g US t g . er MONUMENTS grain-deale- CRAVE STONES, rs Louvitt'H Corner, Irish . i Fountains, Vases, Etc., 44-3- WANTED. i "first-class- ," Rice home-patronag- Yesterday morning, to the wife of Mr JuHus Kiesel, of this city, a fine Bon. Scs Stroke. sun-struc- Seme few weeks since, Cel. Wall, a man well known in mining circles here, and tbe owner of certain mining claims n Little Cottonwood, had Mr. J. W. lias- kins arrested on a charge of perjury. Mr. hasKnis is also interested in mining claims in Little Cottonwood, and some time ago filed an application for a patent for the lodes known as the Great Eastern and Great Western. Wall made affidavit that Haskins had committed perjury in certain statements made in this spplica- tion for patent, and on this affidavit Husk ins was arrested, examined before Chief Justice McKean, and held under bonds to await the action of the grand jury. After the close or tnese proceed ings Mr. Haskins mado affidavit that Col. Wall had committed perjury in somg of his evidence during the investigation of the charge against hini, and on this affidavit Col. Wall was arrested. The investigation of the case commenced be fore Alderman Clinton at eleven o clock this morning. The first witness called wns Bishop E. D. Woolley, but he not being present the case was adjourned until two o clock this afternoon. The above is from the Kcws of last evening. Tbe case was brought up again at 2 p. m., and the testimony of E. D. Woolley, 0. R. Tiat and J. W. Has kins was received and the case continued till Daniel "Webster is not tho only bright boy in New Hampshire. The4 Boston Globe has heard of another a youth residing in Dover, who refused to take a pill. His crafty mother thereupon secretly placed tlie? pill in a preserved pear, and gate it to hiin. Presently she asked, "Tom, have you eaten the pear ?" lie said, 'Yes, mother, all but the seed." 'CORRESPONDENCE, hell-deservi- Fast Riding. Fill of The Wall Perjury Case. e, ss tm ;' Head-Bli- e, i. hieh-BouuJi- I President Grant's ' - ar,-enuw- . lltrne, Kinr-worn- ttculd-llead- |