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Show ShrCJgdcn function. rWi-fc- i by TrT WWXK?PAT th Owns Fcnusir'.s TV. Charles tion with the embassy, that is of the utmost importance, not only in view of its preeminence, but on account which have of tho intimate arisen between our own Government and Prussia, when it is taken into consideration that millions of Germans are now citizens of this couu- - -. d SATTKPAT, Coxpamt. Penrose, Editor and Buuiirst In;r. mil. OGDE, TUESDAY, 1. Istehmext. The funeral of the . nKDTiso Fartt. Last evening a select party of frieDils assembled at the residence cf Alderman Thomson, in honor of the marriage of hit daughter, Miss Isabella M. Thomson, to Mr. Harold Heninger, which took place in Salt Lake to-da- y. City yesterday morning. A sumptuous SATURDAY, APRIL 5. 1ST3. repast was prepared, to which the guests did ample justice, and the health of the At this moment the Kmperor of bride and bridegroom was duly toasted Wife of Gordou with honors. It was an elegant and a Foreign Germany is devisiug means to pre-ve- sociable Dead affair, and tvas kept up with an exodus from his dominions. to a late hour. The Jcxction A few weeks ago we announced the Negotiations and diplomatic inter- spirit unites its congratulations to those of the death of Mr. James Gordeu Bennett, course have failed to effect any relatives of the happy pair, and wishes the founder of the Xew York Herald. agreement regarding emigration, and them long life, and all the joy their wc received the sorrowful in- the naturalization of aliens born as young hearts anticipate. The Ilcnnett Land. To-da- James 1 ut in n, to-da- y telligence of the decease of his widow at an advanced ago. 3lany reevllec-- t ions of an unhappy character ding to the name of a woman who was surrounded with all tho comforts tliat nfilucnco could provide-- , all that this world's gnods could bestow in mating her path smiling with flowers. She did not lack the adulation of syco-phaut- s, nor the attentions which a highly cultivated mind extorted. Iuilwer, Thackeray and Hugo, on different occasions, paid her a tribute iu comparing her to Madame !e Stael, on aecouut of her force of character, tenacity of purpose and brilliancy of wit. She was a remarkable person, but the circumscribed sphere in which woman's lot is cast, closed against her the well-rfcsorv- eJ , atcQues to fame. Mrs. Bennett yesterday died in axony. For twenty years she has dwelt in Europe. Her home relations were so unpleasant that she selected as a choice exile from her family and friends, rather than the torments of domestic infelicity. In the will of the late Janw subjects of Kmperor Willian. It is Children Cry for JIcLnin'a true, that a treaty was agreed upon Cmid.ml CwMur Oil anil Cauliet Vermifuge Bonbetween the two Governments, ex- bon. Thf t r (Wlicioas medicius and warranted harmle. Price 2S reuU. For al by rtMin cluding a provision which absolved Z. 0. M. I. and alt droisu. applicants for citizenship from alleAccident. On Friday last Mr. Silas giance to their Fatherland. But Richards, of Union Fort South Cottonpolitical exigencies have compelled wood, fell from and was run oter by a the Kmperor to make a dcuiaud upon partly loaded wagon, by which he ra the I'nited States to reconsider his ceived some seTere injuries. At the accident he waa engaged in determination, aud to ask the fibro - j ,ia,e of gation of the clause requiring the unloading his wagon and sat down to renunciation of former obligations. rest on a board which was lying across the front of it, when the board tipped, Many Germans have returned to causing him to fall over between the their native soil to enjoy the riches horses. This caused the animals to take they accumulated in this country, fright and run and twowhselsof the while many others, inspired by envy, wagon passed over one of his arms. seek to reap a harvest on the shores Drother Ilichards is probably oyer of America. Both Government? seventy years of ape. We understand be has been confined to bed since the claim their allegiance and fealty. occurrence of the accident. Dei. Eve. Is Mr. Cole able to succeed where Xetrt, 31 vlt. Mr. Bancroft failed? Can he influJ. Whitehead 5ST See ence the German Emperor to hed Advertisement. y his advances? Not if we arc to en-da- wire-pulle- r, re eng-gedi- he was arrested. lie was sentenced to Ilolnml for an Oliver. When did Geucral .P. K. Connor ever become a citizen of Utah, w axe asked by the Herald. As the rithy and epigrammatic querist has better opportunities than ourselves to satisfy his curiosity, let him inquire from the who is now, or will be soon, in Salt Lake City, Our contemporary might give us some Information that U as desirable as it is profitable.. Oar dispatches, the same as those extracted from our columns by the ikrall and all the Salt Lake papers, were very distinct in the statement that Gen. Conner was a resident of Utah. Look over your files, and do not forget to 'interview" Gen. Courier. If he should bj absent, others may give you information. If we were m if taken, we are ever ready to make the amende honoralh:. 4 ...-.i- t W-l- wr Agt-olfo- r m bruht pnrpose of escape. They their plans to a head, got up a riot in the prison, which vii suppressed, and Norton was shot by one of the keepers. They then put a ball and chain on him. After Nortoa had served a term of some sixteen years there was another riot in the prison, and Norton asisied the keepers to quell if. For this he was pardoued, but soon recommenced his work of thieving, and agisted in robbing the house of a member of the Jersey Lcgis'ahtre named Pope, who had always befriended him, of everything that was worth taking. The took $7,000 in railroad bonds; two diamond rings, worth $500; a gold watch, worth ?lik; and another one, worth $100; alio two rings made of $2 50 and $o gold pieces, which Norton Lad made for Mr. Pope while in Numerous other subsequent prison. crimes are laid at his door. as Excuse Him. Or faeturing establishment, did wiion. . emploved m a Jut in an appearance the other momiL. but iust befose. dinner his wif ,; and said in explanation: ''You must excuse him; he and I had a lit i Kuuiudr ui ... ? MtraeJ. h"e I r . ' uiuuzuiscea , . irav- - ,h J tLe bospitl.tjr of the in S of cur people queen city. lW enJ0-vlD- wvtt-ton- or --v-vr 1 Tu??' namo ia other "occupation. The pious ladies said that that was wandering from the argumeutaud elevated their skirts and their noses, and iu locond tha abandoned females wer$ abandoned connec- - again. endeavored to recover from the blow, with her heart broken, and reason she was confined to a maniac's cell, where, for eighteen years, she has been buried out of sight of the gay world of which she was once a very queen in her womanly virtues. A few months after her incarceration her lover returned, horror-stricketo find the woman he loved devotedly, now a mere wreck and shadow of her former self. Tie had been true to his early vows through all the months of sorrow an 1 separation, ami had returned to renew the pledge that had been thus sadly broken. This was eighteen years ago. The once beautiful hair which swept in luxurious profusion over neck and shoulders is all gray with grief and age, and the eyes that beamed with love are fixed in the mad stare of the maniac. As wife and mother would have been an ornameut to society and a blessing to the world. Surely in this story which combines more of the clement of sadnes than any I have ever heaid. parents might learu a lesson aud a warning. As if life were not all too short at most, for such a terrible sacrifice at the shrine of Mammon. n Domestic Experience. Putting a hoop on the family flour barrel is an operation that will "hardly bear an encore. Tho woman gener ally atcmpts it before the man comes home to dinner. She sets the hoop? on the end of the staves, takes a up deliberate aim with the rolling pin, aud then shutting both eyes, brings the pin down with all the force of her one arm, while the other instinctively shields her face. Then sho makes a dive for the camphor and unbleached muslin, and when the man OGDEX HOUSE. comes home she is sitting back of the J. J. MAno.v, Proprietor. stove, while a burnt dinuer and the March, 31st. Snnmel Paul, Fred Johnsou. Jas camphor are struggling for the masOman, Jas Showan, Suit Lake Citv: J tery. He says if she had kept her Siaitell, Omaha; S X Drummond, T temper she would n't have g t hurt. Lvauston. And he visits the barrel hims If. and puts the hoop on very carefully, and P , Wceljr t the "The fbuifft things a fro- - - and ,h. ! "U0" , SUTC Uiat funnier frtg is a petrified one found 0UV a ,ew sa1uil klK . near Greeley, Colorado. This frog was apparently are needed to bring it disovcred in excarntin? a well, and j down all ri-theu he laujhs t him-w- s to to placet in the geological cabi-- 1 self to think what a fuss his wife net of the town, but a Young American f kicked ur over a muu.V matter that chopped it with his little hatchet, aud needed a little patience to ad- disemboweled an old Altec coin, u which a head could be plainly seen! bm JU5t itself, and then he gets the ham-th- e dale could not be deciphered. The mor, and fetches the hoop a sharp next subject for the debating society, j rap on one side aud the other side ip and catches bias on the edge be whether it was the action of the the of uose, filiiug his soul with wrath or the cvin, or both, which petriearth, fied the fro. and his eyes with tears, and the next instant that barred is flving across the room accompanied with the hammer, and another candidate for camphor At Salt Lake City, March aud 1873, Slit, rag is enrolled in the great army Ma. Hakold Hssivasa to Mism Uabjuj.a that is unceasingly marching toward M, Tuomiiii, both of thii citr. the graje. Dantary Xncs. .... Las-ue- l, i, tfca mooning bjs j T or. t i? announced that Mr. Cole will b: to Uerllq t he should choose to accept the misaioq, There is loaothirg ludicrous in The William Tell Story. WW,. 1 the avowed purpose of accumulating fortune, determined soon to return and lay his worldly treasures at tlig feet of his betrothed. Fur a time Lo wrote frequently and warmly of his prospects, but after two or three years the correspondence, perhaps throuh officious interception of his letters, ceased entirely. She was led to him faithless; he, in turn.bcpni to doubt her fidelity. In vain she a , Sense dispute at tho table this uiorning. I display! (ood ly culling at C. W. STAYXEIi'S S Ml SIC roKK o Mio Mret, Slt Uke City, to and he won't ba able to work before xiy y. ur AociHm.n. VUiiin, tiuitars, the middle of week." the Tho emCole, the String. nj nl) kimU of Mk.u! lostrw A ..'rzr nutpi.. airtKnt of thtw beautiful stated that the explanation ployer KSTKY OUUANS, than, rlfnnt Cole is to be the next was satisfactory, he having been J1CTOK SF.A1NU MACHINES,tn4 arriving .wr t ll ml mll profit his dj. married pm twentv-tiv- e himself. rears th of Executive of H,nU attention. He subject hhmit rrorv time or th.r no wil. ReDiiubw, CUAS. W. STAYN1K," has been truly faithful to his master V'ain Stret. The pious ladies of Pes Moines and Lord, and is deserving the re la., visited the abandoued females of 1 ....... . . , tnr 1 fin "tuutmtj itinn. liiu ; , , ward due to his merit?; llh failure of hte. ,in. Cache Co., Utah, arrived in Liver- to secure the to the Scaate n?1 females asked the pool has excited the sympathy of the per steamer "Mianesota." He is ladies these if latter pious would find on brief visit to his ie!atives and I'resident aud hh advisers. , t them homes and furnish "them with Kx-Senat- h. 1 tle i:x-Secat- until he should have accumulate Ove Day's Labou. A party of ang- that sort of competency which so lers devoted the whole of yesterday to the many old people continue to imagine piscatorial art. The result is two trout, the sine qua non of conjugal Lm. one herring and a craw-rispiness. He left home, therefore, with li-li- twenty years in prison. While in prison Norton raised a mutiny among the prisoners for the tn y Few more interesting controver- sies, both iu a literary aud historical point of view, have ever arisen than the discussion which has recently been carried on respecting the authenticity and genuineness of the Swiss legend in which the archery feats of William Tell are described The object of this brief uote is not to attempt to settle the dispute, but merely to state that the story has penetrated the arctic circle, jn the From Littlk Cottoswood. Our Alta metricial traditions of Lapland and correspondent "Archibald," writes as Russia Karelia, all the particulars in the life of the Swiss hero are closely follows, yesterday: It is storming furiously here .Vm reproduced unless, indeed, the story be of Northern origin. In Lapland morning. No great amount of snow has literature it is varied, so that the son fallen, but it has drif.ed badly. is the active, aud the father the pasA case of small-po- i was reported here sive, personage in the tale. The yesterday, but it turns out, fortunately, latter has been taken by.. a baud of to be a false alarm. Dr. Beran reports IV. t nnn marauders, lhe tormcr a boy this mcrning. that it is not small-poxtwelve years of age threatens the U : 11 ' a r. hi mc jiaiicui is- rapiuiy recovering party with his bow from a position from a slight attack of measles, or some- of safety on the other side of a lake. thing of that kind. Let the public bear The captors, dreading his skill, promin mind that we bTe no cases of small- ise the fuuher's liberty on a condition similar here to L. that 5. in the Swiss related pox yet. Herald, lit one hand sink the legend. Good Clianee lor u Kible. other, for the water will attract the Juig J. GR0YER,of Katon, Co, arrow," is the fathers advice. The I'tahuf the Pictorial lot Family hilA. A masa:f.cnt work. LocPoly k vat for him apple is duly cloven, and the father diOO released. The incident of the jump from the boat is also recited; and the All Travel the trains are regular In arriving and departingr Along the northern locality specified as distinctly as the Lucerne of Swiss Union Pacific road, farmers are bttsj in The legend iu this form was history. discovsowing wheat. Strong winds are blow- ered about thirty years ago by Ma-thiing, blowing. Many of the farmers deCastren, a uative of Finland. clare that thy will will plant a very In the Finnissh and Lappish metrilimited quantity of corn this year, as cial he also discovered the writings their ground can be put to more profita leading particulars of the adveuture ble use. For the last two or three years of Ulysses with Cyclops. "From they have used corn fcr fael, as it was what origiual," sourco says a reviewcheaper, while selling at five cents a er of Castreus work, or through bushel, and wood worth eight dollars what channels these traditions have in vain to per cord. travelled, is prebablv From the west we learn that the inquire or dispute; the triumph of weather is pleasant and mild. Passen- courage over uumbers, of policy over gers on the Central Pacific, state that brute force, has its charms for the there is every indication of a heavy rudest nations, and from Jack the business during spring and summer, and Giant killer to William Tell the keythat preparations are being made accord- note of the strain is over the same. ingly by the merchants. To and ficm Salt Lake City travel is Hotel Arrivals. 2-- judge by the experience of the past. Mr. Cole maybe a first-rat- e politician, an expert but he is as yet untutored ia the art of statesmanship. As the President offers hira any position within the gift of tiordoa Bennett ample provl-Lwas the Administration, we suggest that made for her sustenance, sufficient to he turn his attention to some other maintain her in queenly splendor. place, commensurate with his ability. Jhe was unhappy eves amid those who paid her dutiful homage. As a A Startling: Career of Crime. wife and mother, the chalice of the EJ. Norton, the noted burglar, rebitter sorrows she underwent in life, cently captured in Brooklyn, bag a remarkable history. When quite young was drained. She has gone to her he committed a daring burglary in Trenton and suffocated an old woman aud the slander rest, canwhisper of who resisted him. He escaped and was not be breathed over her tomb. two oth.r burglaries before Itrokcu Ileartca. in- fant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. D. II. A romantic story, writes The services Peery took place tl,fi v. ., T wore conducted at the residence of the viile correstKHirlf.nl- - vi ,1,. l JUlMi bereaved parents Consolatory and in- Courier Journal which i. 'tcned structive addresses were delivered by with extraordinary btc t h and young who visit the riL . Elders Lorin Farr, C. W. Penrose, D. M. ylum, related of one of th tos ,, Stuart, and Bishop L. J. Herrick. The about forty years of age. As ,1!,.. attendance of friends was very large " in this world that i and a long procession followed the re- nothing half a' Bweet as love's vonn-- r o mains to the cemetery. go there naught so sad as"'tuui, a heart crushed and her reason shatter Distixccished Visitors. President cd by its cruel sorrows and dim Brigham Young accompanied by Supt. pomtments. Twenty years ag0 John Sharp, Gens. Eldridge and Claw-so- subject of this romance was f Bishop C. Layton and G. W.Thatch- the most beautiful and accompli er, and A. C. Pyper, Esqs. They came of all the fair daughters ofTenn Grace was in all her steps' on a special train. see. up to Ogden was m her eye, and iQ eVtL Heaven They inspected some fine Spanish Merimotion dignity and love. A ym no sheep, which have been lately brought of corresponding athin gentleman kere from the East, and after paying a ments won her heart, and few visits in town returned by U. C. they were to be married. engaged to Salt Lake. President evening train But in respect to this world's troodi Young was in excellent health and ap- he was unfortunate; her parents fa peared stout and hearty. manded a cessation of his attcntioua friend i.Mi'J. Star, Fib. 18 Cau. Foe Duutciim. Metwget are left at th Western Vnin affice, auNject to cll for Jfthn Dillon, and. Jonci Jt SddeL ! ! ht; i, 1 Harriet. |