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Show on. IiOve OGDM JUICT Puhluhml every WEDNESDAY nl SATURDAY, bv the Ooden Tiblisuino Company. A Wunttis Ttii-mginglo Coiy )EX, IJTAIf, SATri:S.lY, il ft j 3' 30 $ 35 $ 60 70 40 25 tO 60 80 fla 100 40 60 90 1S5 $lo S Till 6 18 til 21 4 7 8 10 13 IS 30 Culuma. 11 " ltt 25 A 43 45 1U Canada Annexation Cohtcii- - ';;ciin. OU IM Card to per month. Transient advertising; to be paid for in advance. 01 en line of type of this A Square ooojititt .WU 1UU Btwineo f D. RICHARDS, Editor. C. W. PENROSE, Associate Editor. FRANKLIN OCDEN DIRECTORY. United Stales Officers for J'. Wilson Shaffer &t A: Mann- i- Secretary M.U.TatrVekT " C. II. Hempstead, U. S. Attorney Supt. Indian A fair) J. E. Tourtellutte. Surveyor- - GtruraU C. C. Clements. Receiver of Public Monies J. B. Ovcr- -' ton. Rejitfrft ofrpn4 Office George R. Maxwell. U. S. Assessor John P. Taggart. iU. ,S. .Ctlfrtlotf). J. Hollister. C. Wilsen. CklefyuiliceC. Ju slices 0, F. Strickland and Atsociate - IIaw;ieJ- , r j Torrilorial Officers: William Delegate . tp. , Cuiwress Hop8i"j:i tii'llL II. Zerubbabel Snow. J. D. T. McAllister. al Attorney-Gener- Marshal Auditor WHlia'C)ayjUiO0U t'- Trtamrtr David 0. Calder. ' Superintendent of Consnoit Schools fiiikcrt L. CawpWelL ' r . ;- Richards. Judys (Jounty - . : IVeber County Officers: and, I'robatt D. r-- ScUet Men Lester J. Ilerrick, llcnry Hotiues, Richard Ballantjne. Clark and Recorder F. S. Richards. Aurelius Miner. 1'retccuting Attorney Notary Public William Critchlow. Sheriff Gilbert Belknap. JJepiUy Sheriff William Brown. Attccsor and Collector Sanl'ord Bing-ta- ' !':;-- ! Israel CanfieU.' ' ' er Cor-.Wm. N. File. Surveyor and Superintendent of Schools ' ' Wm. W. Burton. Trtneurer City fioTemment: 18CL Incorpo'rat'ed by Aat of Jan.-13Municipal election biennially on the second Monday of February 'Meetings of tha City Council weekly, on Tuesday venif,gs, at City Hall, Main Street. , . ' , s' .V,or Loren Farr, 1 Al&rmenY' K. Brown," 1st Ward;' L. J. Ilerrick, 2d ,, ,, Joseph Parry, 3d 'Counselors James Mo Gaw, Walter Thompson, William W. Burton, Josiah Lfftvitt. . . Unorder TJios. G. Odoll. ' : " Attorney A. Miner. Marshal W. N. Fife. , V , , . , ' . - . JraurrwAaroit Farr. - Girdling The Globe. Assessor and Collector S. Bingham. Surveyor W. W. Burton, , Captain of Police P. G. Taylor. S. Eggleston. iMice of the Peace Constable C. F. Middleton. Office: Ogilcn Post Moore. Isaac General Delivery from 8 a.m. to 7.30 p m. Sundays, fromtTp.m. to 7.30 p.m. Daily MausCLOSE, until further notice, for Salt Lake 5 p.m. City at - . ; 9 For tu East". Jn. fFor the West5'- 5" p.m. 1 ostmaster -- 1 ARRIVE From Salt Lake City Frotri EUst ! ' ' m i W SEMI-WEEKL- est 'i 'i . ' 10.30 a.m. UT6.80 p.m. 10.30 s.m. - MAILS Y for North Ogdcn on. Monday at 2.80 p.m.V'For Pitin GWf, :ob Thursday, at 6.8ft j.m '"Jt'or Huntwrille, on Tuesday and Friday, at 8 p.m. Close Lm . . Trains. Tp the People cf tha United States and the 'British' Provinces: Nearly 100 years ago, 1,3 out of 14 Britbh colonies ot North America resolved to sever their connection with the mother country, and to establish a nation for themselves. After a contest of seven years their object was accomplished, but one colony refusing to join in the effort for independence. This action of Canada must seem strange, considering that it had just been conquered from France, and therefore could have no sympathy with England, and its determination could only be accounted for upon the claim of precipitancy on the part of the other colonies, by misdirection on the part of its leading men, or upon mere accident which often shapes the destinies of mankind, and forms the nations of the earth. The wisdom of the 13 colonies in separating from the mother country and in establishing a nation for themselves is now admitted by the civilized world. From 13 feeble colonies they have grown to 38 powerful States, and by purchase, annexation, and conquest, have extended from the Lakes to tho Gulf, and from the At lantic to the Pacific Oceans. Their advancement has been unequaled among the nations of the earth. During th game time, while Canada has progressed in common with the general advancement among mankind, the United States with a kindred people and similar natural advantages has surpassed all others in the rapid increase of population, in the general diffusion of knowledge, and in material and political progress, there by proving conclusively the manifest superiority of republican over monarchial institutions. At all times, during the war of inde pendence and Bine, the people of the United States have been in favor of a union with Canada. The union of kindred and contiguous nations has, in all ages, been advantageous to tho nations bo united, and recently this principle lias beeu estensively practiced in Europe, with the general approval and the uniform advantage of the united nationalities. As a very large number, if not even a majority of the people of both countries are known to be in favor of union, which number is rapidly increasing, therefore many of the friends of annexation, both in the United States and in the British Provinces, have concluded to call an An ncxation Convention at Niagara Falls on the 4th of July next, for the purpose of fraternal and political intercourse, with the hope thut a speedy union inny be effected, so necessary to the continued peace and the material and political prosperity of the two kindred cantries. One delegate from each Congressional District in the United States aDd one delegate from each 100,000 inhabitants in all J; he British Provinces will compose the Convention. As a striking illustration of the purpose of the Convention, the "Old Ship Monarchy" dismantled, with bulwarks stove in, despoiled of its ornaments and gilding, and making a complete wreck will be sent over the Falls, to be dashed to pieces on the eternal rocks of liberty beneath. Other new and striking republican and political spectacles will be presented, intended to manifest and insure a fraternal Reeling, and encourage the speedy union of the two kindred countries. By order of the Canadian Annexation Society, Ameeicus T. Wilson, Tres't. Washington, D. C. Loris Montague, Vico Pres't., Quebec, C. E. Charles S. Donaldson, Secretary, Toronto, C. W. r . J , " Yearly advertisers allowed to chango at pleasure, e with only tho additional charge of twenty-livceut a aqtare J'ojc coiupo,itioa,.,bnt they will be con- over charged tXTBA for occupying ipac . trace Special Notices or Advertisements retained on srlre ouUide of the paper, will be charjied twenty-fiv- e per cent, additional on the above rates. Advertinurnenta not marked on the copy with the number of inscrtiou, will be published at our n until ordpred out, and charged at transient ?' ? .ate. ADVERTISKMEXTS inserted lll forbid, will be cmtiuued'until ordetwd out, m eeeey hMWuee, and ciareed for accordingly. X'lie privilege of yearly and half yearly advertisers fa rSMftctcd to heir direct line of biutinesn, and or other dvertie-.iiit- s ;1V leg1. Asrflau, Keal I'oivsiftti to their regular trade, will be charg-dTfi" separately. No Advertisements from the States will be inserted without the caah ( at our advertised rates,) accompanying the order, unless from ouo of our t regular authorized Advertising Ageut. All communications devoid of interest fo the public, or intended to promote private interest, will be charged aa advertisements, and payment required in advance. If personal in character, we reterva the fight to reject any article, or advertiie-jnu- t of this class. Governor , Cyrus W. Field, whose name is linked with the laying of the Atlantic Cable, is in Washington with his latest and last great telegraph project, the construction of a line of ocean cable from the Pacific Coast to China and Japan via the Sandwich Islands. When this is accomplished there will be a continuous line of telegraph wire around the globe, and the supposed impossible feat ef Puck will be an accomplished fact. Mr. Field says he will be able to send a dispatch round the world in twenty minutes, which is a little better time than Puck promised to." make. lie is very anxious to organize his company on American capital, and to get a charter from Congress, so as to make the thing Of rb much as possible American. course Field will make some money out of it,' as he has out of all his cable projects, but nobody will grumble if he does, at least no person who admires pluck, perseverance, and success, qualities which are characteristic of Field. dnilyurrtn further ntf Salt Lake City at 10.6 a.m. and Cincinnati (For extra trains see time Table.) 'pa. r the Katstaf J0.6j.m. )'loi, the Ogiieri iee, for Times. t 6 p.m. ' Corn Arrwe from Salt Lake City, 9.25 a.m. ii 5.25 p.m. From the East, 5.25 p.m. It has always seemed wrong to burn loathe West, 10a.m. nlnwiniro a field On Ilia lnrn.lalVa hof.iro " " r which the last year's crop was corn.. It . is no ucurcsi.j J'held every Sunday, in the Tabernacle, is now saia tnai .mere Kitrninn thorn 4ltat fhftV ftftll be bfO- 11 .tn.;:asd in the School llouses ken down by dragging over a railway of the various Wards at 6.30 p.m. and then wt, Stalks. Divine Worship OoDBN : ' Salt ' Lakb Asd tlTAn! "erybody desirous of learning facts "wcerning Ogdcn, Salt Lake and Utah, r)nological, sUtistical, historical and "gious, with a reliable sketch of nd have a thousand and one lotions answered Jhat are being daily "RTtAh; tend for a copy Sloan's' Salt'Cake Mailed rm fh, JfNciios, Directory.' Office for a dollar 8' a (jusxter. Mor-oi?r- $ JLV Jl VO Devoted to News, Literature, Agriculture, Science, and the Arts. HATES OF ADVERTISING. 'fWri 10 lluee, $'i3 IT IUZA coor.' Love on, love on, the eon! mint hav a nhriixv The rndeat breast inuirt find nm hallow" d ipot; The one who form'd mtleft no sparkdiviiw. , To him who dwell on earth, yet lovetU not. Devotion' link compose a Moredehala Of holy briglttnepi and umneaore4 length; The world witheeltUb ruat and rerklos stain May mar lta beauty, but sot touch its Mrength. a; Death Valley. AFIIIL 30, 1S70. COJIMKKCIAX. HI'SSEY, Salt Laka City. field-boo- MAIX - STHEET, OGDEX, AND SALT LAKE CITY. Dealer in Gold Dunt, Coin and Currency. Draw Exrliaii no San Eranc-inco- , Montana, J'wivor, bt. 1xjui, riiw York, and all part or Lampo, In a picturesque valley among the Springfield hills, in Union county, New d hut, so Jersey, stands a small and mean that it would appear to be the residence of a dog, rather than that of a human being. The hut is built almost entirely of straw, the few pieces of lumber used in its construction being the doors that open on each side. The interior is scarcely spacious enough for a man to turn in, but within it lives a reputed ecion of Prussian nobility, who has spent bis days and nights here for the past two years. His name has not until recently been known to the people, among whom his lot is so strangely cast, but he has been known far and near as the "German Baron." Whether he is rightfully named or not Cannot be defi- niicly known, but some papers, letters, otc, lately found in his hut, which bear the name of Baron Lrhardt, give confir mation to the rumor that he is the heir of a noble house. Fifteen years ago, according fo the most trustworthy account, this remark able individual came to this country, having been exiled from his heme by political difficulties with the Prussian Government. He is occasionally found wandering through the woods of Union and Springfield townships; but Mr. John P. Sayers, upon whose farm his hut is located, states that he has never been known to beg or steal. His hut is kept scrupulously clean herbs, roots, corn, etc., constituting his diet. A black clay pipe, with a very poor vjtiality of strong tobacco, is his only solace. He roams over hill and through dale,, with pipe in mouth, walking with slow and measured steps, head drooping, hands corssed his back. In opinions he is a thorough scepti- creposes no confidence in human nature, and, like Esop, believes he would re quire a lantern in daylight to enable him to find an honest man. Mr. D. Meeker and the other farmers in the vicinity be lieve him to be an monensive old man and are ever ready to do him an act of kindness. straw-thatche- be-hin- & COUNSELOR. Ollice opposite Ogrtcii Hotel, OUDKN CITY. All kind to. of lrgal liuiucn hove on, love on, though w may live to see The dark face whiter thaa it circling throud;' Though dark and dcuxc tho gloom of Death may be. Affection' glory yet sliall pierr the clorel. The truont spell that lbven can give tnlur, The swoetest proapert Mercy caa ltowy ' In the blent thought thut bid the soul be aura Twill nieet above the tiling It loved below. Creation breathe the word . Their mystic music ever dwell around; TheHtrain Is echoed by unn umber 'd choni And gentle bosom yield the fulleat toitnif. ' ' A flowers keep springing though their dueling b',lom . ) 1 oft put forth for worm to feed upon, So hearts though wrung by traitor and the tomb, Shall still bo procluiui, and chall Hill loveen. ltr To nil whom it may concern. LOIUN FARR, Mayor. TIIOS. Ge. ODELL, City Recorder. The Office of tho City Recorder In at the Office of the "Ogden Junction, Seventies' Hall, near tho U. C. U. R. PROVISIONS, 4c. E. 30c- - Alan, a LARGE STOCK of 75c. C ATA V $7.00. OLUE 40c. per lb. MAY Full supply, $7. to $10. por too. HOOP IRON 14c to 15c. per lb. $2.00 per lb. SAD 12,' . per lb. Call and exauiino my Stock. jSlain Street, Ogden, Xearlj Opposite White House. IRONS, LYE $12.00 par caw. LEAD White $i.00 to $6.00 per can. Bar 20c. per lb. SMf S. S. TUCKER, 28c. to 33c. per lb. 20c. por lb. por lb. BABBIT 40c. per lb. NCTMEGSl.75 per lb. NA1LS-$- S0 to $9.00 per kef. OILS, LIXSF.ED-$2- .35 per gal. " FISH 11.89 " SPERM $3.60 ", " MADDER-i-Si- c. MACHIXE-42.- 15 COAL 10.25 per cane. . 24c per MUSEUM AND ... 24-l- y AT OYSTERS. THE ItEVERB HOUSE ' SALOON, FJIESH OYSTERS, GOLDEN KOWX CIGARS, HUS FliET, etc. 4- - Call and e him. "49 , ft. 17-- tf $22.25 per aack t - ..... "Keep it, my good fellow," was what the Prince of Wales said to a railway porter who told him he had left his watch on the seat of the carriage. He thought it was April 1. California has struck an idea fo preventing immigration of Chinamen. It is to prohibit tho exportation of their dead bodies, and thus cruelly cut off thctr chance of heaven. '" Old lady to berncice--"Oqo- d A monster aerolite has recently fallen in Fczzan, near Mouriouk. It weighs nearly G.000 pounds, and Is thought to be the largest meteorio body yet discov' ' ' ;'' ' ''''' ' ered. .V.A beautiful camel's hair shawl, for some time past on exhibition at a store in New York, ' was sold a few days ago for $5,000 to a gentleman from Wisconsin. , ,,, ,., well-kno- , A new style of wearing apparel, 'con sidered jaunty and stylish has Appeared for the fair rex. It is a double breasted coat, which buttons high in the neck and has a wide turn-dow- n collar. " '" A nine-yea- old bov r ii.;n Qti'l school at at the Lincoln, Cel., was asked what punish ment was given to Adam and Eve for' eating the forbidden fruit in the garden' of Eden! He replied: "They wore driven off the ranch." , , , An official in Chicago bought a ticket in a lottery, for the purpose of obtaining evidence against the proprietors and indicting them. The ticket happened to draw a thousand dollar prise, and the ' omceris inclined sot to prosecute. . The Mt. Carmel IllinoisV Be'elster says: "A young spooney of this city sent word to one of mother Lve s fair daughter's asking permission to call on her, and received the following emphatic reply: 'If you come abont our house; Til snatch you He didn't call on her." ..... . . ... , , ... t - WASH-TUB- e "Thoma "till moving" very good; The raune i plainly understood lie doonii't like Li neighbor Hood, . ' ' , i ..If .1. I Wliere Hood now U, it were not hard to tell; ' lie ald he'd go to Nashville or to hell, ' Aud haa'ntgoM to Naahvllle wjf well.' " . Don Piatt dtned with Samuel ilowles,' at Washington, the other day. After dinner, while seated with Mrv Bowles in a corner, Piatt said: "I once asked Horace Grccly what he considered the secret of his success as a journalist, and he answered promptly that he all that he made in the Tribune. I asked our chief of the Commercial the same thing, and he answered, '"A nose for news." Now, what is your response! Bowles answered promptly. 'Energy and ugliness." !m t i i , . The present consumption ' of wo64 in the United States is enormous. Ouchun-dre- d and fifty thousand acres of the best, m rMiynioia OFFICE AT WALKER k MCNLTTS DRUG timber is cut every year to supply the demand for railway sleepers alone. For STORE, OflDEX, t. T. at railroad buildings, repairs and cars, the Ar Cull from tli. Country promptly 1 --Trn tmuled t. annual expenditure in wood is $38,C00,- -' In a single year tho locomotives in DR.WM. H. CROVES, 000. the United estates consume $")0,000,000 Office, Second Honth Street, SALT LAKE CITY, worth of wood. There are, in the whole ltirce uoor H est of never House. country, more than 400,000 artisans in m wood, and if the value of U'eir Jabor is CARDS. $1,000 a year each, the wood indusof tho country represents an VERY MERCHANT AND PROFESSIONAL try of nearly $500,000,000 per amount YV man should have asui'nlr. will do thein DR. R. TIBBITS, nutl Surgeon Sat. Leaf $1.10 per B). NAVY 4 GRAPE 80c n WASIIHOARDS-$8.- 50 per doi. " S B. Young' lUwidence, Suit Lane City. TO SALT LAKE CITY SHOULD VISITOR In call wjd teethe tine collection of KATIVR ANIMALS and BIRDS; also MINE-UALHOMK MANUFACTURES, and natural proilucli.u of tho Territory, at the above etlao- riauhient. Open from 9 a.m. to p.m. 15c. Crushed Vest of Prest. South Stni-t- , Suit Lake City, where you will find J OK. 81M.MON3 or his aanistauta ready aud willing to serve you with TOBACCO, WHEEL-HBAD- MENAGERIE. Ilalf-blor- k CALL 30c " !.- ,vi tf . SUGAR, Brown 15c. to 17c. por u A 20c. v , $10.00 per eaao Eiom your Robinson Cruse." , SULPHUR 20c fALT, Fine-3- J4c SALTS, A little Connecticut boy asking a mate who Good Fridny was, received tho withering rt'ply: "Well, you go home and read 1 8e. por lb. PEPPER, Black 50c. per lb. " ; Cayenne 7;. pur lb. PEACHES loc. per lb. PORK t?old at 20c, to 25c. Botiglit at 15c. to 20c. PITATOES 50c. to 60c. per kmheL ri'TTY 15c. per lb. POLISH, STOVE 41.00 per des. RAISINS $7.00 per box. RICE 15c to 10c. per lb. ' ROSiy 15c. peril). ; ROPE, MANILLA 30c. to S3c per lb. SOAP, OLIVE, I. X. por box. STARCH post-offic- e. A young lady onee married a man by the name of Dust against the wish of her IIALF A BLOCK EAST OF THE parents. After a short time they lived unnappiiv together, and sue returned to "JUNCTION" OFFICE, OUDKX. her father's house; but he refused to her All Orders personally and promptly ccive her, saying, "Dust thuo art, and unto Dust thou shall return.". And site attended to. ' . got up and "dusted." j, mamifw-tureto warranted us Artli l. by Every tie made ot tue txut material, The death of Thomas brings to mind those two epigrams which were curreut just after the battle of Nashvile: ., OATS SODA ed CalInet 3Ialfr, per case. METAL, " eitab-lish- Females assort the mails in the San ' "" " Francisco bald-heade- Carpenter, .Toinei. ami $5.00 per hundred feet. 55c. to 65c. per lb. MUSTARD LUMBER $8.00 to $11.00 DAS, ETC, ETC. a keg. SHOKS-41- 3. bo' , CHAMPACNES, 10x12, INDIGO University is to ' in Siberia. , CASE LIQUORS. CASE WINES. to $3.25 per aack. to 50c. per B. per box, $7.00. MATCHES & Liquors Kentucky Whiskeys; 10c. LAMPBLACK DEALER I have on hand a lartre Stock of the Celebrated S1IAWAN, LEK HI N, ( ROW, bOWKN, AND SUARP'8 BRANDS of CAMI'IIOR-$1.- 40 HORSE Farmers of Wyoming Territory " are . plowing with tame buffaloes. gracious, Matilda! but it's cold. My teeth are actually chattering 1" Loving neice "Well don't let 'era chatter too much, or they may tell where you bought "." Ogden City, Utah. COITKRAS 22c. CUDBEAR 55c LOGWOOD m. MAIN STREET, $9.00 to $11.00 per ton. COD FISH 14c. to 10c. lO p. OS COAL " 3 SIMI'LE AXI) SALESROOM to. GLASS-Sx- till GARN," Vines flic, per lb. . CANDLES, 12 ox. per CANDY, Fancy 32c to 40 per lb. FLOUR-- 3. GINGER m. is CLOVES COMPOSITION . WHOLESALE lr Stick Hours from 10 Offic ALl'M 15c. per lb. i ALLSPICE inc. par lb. AXE HELVES $4.50 to $5.50 per doz. BACON' 23).jc per lb. r.iRI.KY, 2) .jr. per lb. KEESWAX $1.10 per lb. JtORAX 'c. lb. ;BSAS SII0.'lT8- -f 1.25 to $1.75, per cwt. HF.r.F Jc. to toe per it) at nuop ; loc. oa loot. 25c. to 30c. per lb. BUTTER BAKING POWDER $3.25 jwr doc. IlK'X)MS-&- S0 to $7. xr do. EKASrt KETTLES 70c. per lb. CURRANTS 24c per lb, by bl. COFFEE, Ilio per ik, 30c per lb. CHEESE 27c. to 2Rc. per lb. " ... Ourtcrs with monogram clasps ore tbo latest fashionable folly. , station. I ' MlHcdlaiicoas. A HitH.sian VfOTICE IS IIER215Y GIVEN, THAT all Persnnr wieaged in BucincM in i Ogden City, (fcr wtiich tho City Ordinance" provido that a license must be obtatneu,) without first procuring a license are liable to be taken lietura any Alderman cfsaid City, and be subjected to a Fine. By order of tho City Council, SKIRT llRAIPS Kk. per dor. 60c. to $1. per dot. THREAD, Spool " Linen 75c. to $1.25 pr Ih TOWELLING 17c. to 20c. per yd. GROCERIES, Lovo on, love on promptly attended CITY LICENSES. s. nt Iff A.. MIIVISIS, ATTORNEY iron fail Or a stick of timber, ' $9. by harrowing the way the land is to be neat. $5.50 the with per plowed, they will lie straight ' WOOD-4- 7. .v to $S. per cord. plow and go under without difficulty. the ' down cut is less to labor This than John It is reported that stalks by hand, rake and burn them. son is about to go to Europe, intending to ABSOLUTE DIVORCES LEO ALLY OBTAINED York, Indiana, Illinois and other They will add largely to vegetable mold, be absent six monuis. Htatus, for person from any State or Country, and keep the ground loose. Save the lecal TiTjwhere: desertion, drunkenness, New York swells sustain theirlanguish-in- g etc.. sumcient cause; no publicity: no small scent bottles, which charge until divnrre obtained. Advice free. Busi-nspirits with established fifteen Tears. are set into the bandies of their umbrel M. HOUSE, Attorney. Address. The new five-cepieces will be ready Ko. 78, Xasi-a2VSm las. Street, New York City. in a few days. corn-stalk- attended to. Collections promptly $1.00 per buehcl. CHICKENS 50c, oacU. EGGS 20c Per do, Hermit. & CO,, BANKERS CORN A Aoble Helena, Montana. DAIILER IILSSEY, rdui. seconds, and lived only five minutes. Our guide informed us that the existence of the valley had long beeu knonn to his tribe. Two of their braves perished in it while endeavoring to corral some antelope, all of which perished too. The springs in the valley gcuerate such a large volume of carbonic acid gns a3 to completely poison the whole surrounding atmosphere. We had no opportunity of obtuining any of the water for analysis. As the place is entirely out of the way of overland emigration, there is but little danger that it will be frequented by bands of pilgrims or pleasure seekers. We named the k canon on our the "Valley of the Shadow of Death." While some of tho men were erecting a stone pyramid on a commanding position, we cut from an old pair of saddle-bag- s a stout piece of leather, and burnt in the warning, "Death Valley Enter not!" and fast- cued it to a pillar. C. L. PAIII.SR, WARRE Nevada is a land of wonderful caves Office of Oqdcn Junction, Ogden City, and other curiosities. The following Utah Territory, April 80, 1870. description of a portion of that wonderful country we think worthy of perusal; WHOLESALE PRICE LIST. "While riding slowly ahead with our Indian guide, my attention was attractDRY GOODS. ed to a small valley in the gorge of the 50e. to 1.00 par yard. Black ALPACAS, A mountains. A light, blueish vapor was " T Lutre 'tia io Mo hotB from number of a ascending largo BAR HUE 55c. to Sic. springs. I he valley was not purlieuIlROWN SHEETINGS Ife. to 21c. lurly inviting, but as tho men and liLANKETS $ti.00 to tai.OO per pair. animals were tired, I thought I would liLE.Vl'H SIUSLlXA-l- un. to 23c. camp in it for the night. The guido, I'BD TICKINGS 26c, to 40c- was certain however, assured me that it death to inhale the deadly vapors. We, VRILLlAXTS-3&o.to- 62i CAM11HICS WYf. to 16c. went into camp elsewhere: but tho next 12.00 to $?.25 CAJU'ETIXO, morning tho whole purty started down the slopo towards the valley, feeling, as CHECKS lie. to S2e. OOKHET JEANS l!c. to 23c. well as smelling our way cautiously. COTTONADES S3c. to 42c. The doctor had provided himself w ith a couple of Indian dogs and several live (X)TTON' YARN $2.W) to $3. jwr Immh. rAIASK-l.i5totl.- &0 rabbits, for the purpose of making experiments. After scrambling down " Armiircs 22c. to 24r. two hundred yards, the doctor, " to 45c All Wool-3- 7c. who was in advance, detected the abj Mulin IV. to 22c. sence of oxygon ia the air, by the sud25c. to 37 c. iKr jd. DENIMS den change in the temperature, and the increased difficulty he experienced in PLTKINU'a'.i. A nauseous, suffocating $135 to flJW FRENCH MERINOS respiration. smell was also perceptible every time FLANNELS, White k Red toe. to 62c. the wind blew toward us. The valley i Opera 60c. to 75c. was about a quarter of a mile in cirUIXGIIAMS 17c. to 30c. cumference, and oval in shape. Not HICKORY 18c. to 2", ) 'f. even a blade of grass, not a single sageto $6.00 per dot 1IOSK, Ladl.''-$2.- 25 " brush, nor any living thing was to be seen in it; but a ghastly human skeleJACONET 30c. to 50e. ton was to be seen beside one of the JF.ANS lie. to 60c. nearest springs. Scattered around were LIN E.N, Ii 55c. to 95e. 'he skeletons of deer, sheep, and other ' TaMe, 90o. to $1.25 animnls. The bottom of the valley aprRINTS lor. to 15c. RAVEN'S DL'CK 33J4e. peared to be a Lard, sandy soil, dry and n cracked, as if by heat, in various plafcnAMTLH $0.25 to ).&0. ces. One of the Indian dogs was fastened to the end of a lariat and lowered down, while some of the party, watches in hand, observed the effect. In fourteen seconds the dog fell down motionless, and in three minutes was dead. The other dog, which now trotted down to its companion, was motionless in twelve I. VOL. Lot on, love onay, even though the hear - We fondly bnild on provetls like tlw xaud; Though one by one Faith's eonier-etone- e depart; And even Hope') lust pillar falls to itanih Thnuph we may dread the lips we one believed , And know their falsehood shadows all Oul" days; Who wouldnot rath or trtut and he deceived1' ii 1 Than own the mean, cold ipirit that betrays? lOHtiHt, 1 BUSINESS Ethe best style of the art in |