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Show Our Suit IjiikelifHer. She 0f,tkn function.. jblislieJ wry EDWARD Aotlwd Agn' Wednwluy and &vtur.ky. K.q., ii our duly IkC1ty for Oil trau- - L. 8LOAN, S"1 " motion Mr.Hnrris, the stag raan- ttLl:pa hirt hftnufit tills er uu .Mr.tni' novelties tviu ue eTfiii'g when several introduced, winch ought to draw a luu was to have been loue. Monday night tbe present season, but, by j , it,t of for -.i (l.o Tlientrn will bo nnn i request, more." One night .1 jwf"., To-ila- v. We had no room in our Tukatbk. to notice Mr. Mar- last of Saturday jtue .... rm. - t c me a.usl rM.rl.i tteneni. mim n yei- gett dull-looki- ng with spirit; all the actors doing Phil tho phunnicst phcllow Miss Clite appeared in a new ,,f all. she acquitted herself lance, in which Mr. ith her usual grace and skill. drolleries were received Harris' Dutch iih applause, mid the concluding farce, Make Your Wills, was hugely enjoyed by not ,j audience, which, however, was demanded. occasion the a large as On Saturday evening, The Artful was repeated; was well played Dodge throughout, as was tho Frisky Cobbler, in which every one was lively and A reaction seemed to have set in On former occasions on the audience. ;i(T were uproarious; in many instances, orerstepping the bounds of decorum, but on Saturday eTery demonstration of . uiss noise was niSBea uown, nayj even ir: c'live's dancing and Mr. Harris' negro comicalities passed off without an encore. The quietness of the evening was isfinitely preferable to the noise of former occasions, but a little applause is a iappy medium between two extremes, waich is encouraging to the performers sod enlivening to the audience. On Monday night the house was very n filled. The performance commenced Mr. Mar- ita "A Kiss in the Dark." ..'Uj Hiid Mrs. Rowring sustained the . .1 I i mucu11numor. wnn characters ;,'ss Clive followed with a fancy dance, ikii was exceedingly well executed id deservedly received a hearty encore, i "Nan, the Good for Nothing," Messrs. pUrgctU, Thome, Bowring and Wright, ich sustained their characters with Vility and success. Mrs. M. Komney Stscrves cpeciul commendation for her crsonatioji of the character of Xan. She hrni her part to the life, and disjdiiyed tUliiies in tho low comedy line worthy of exhibition on any stage. A few ugiis were present whose interruptions er very annoying to the reepcctulile rtion of the audience, and provoked a nnd cutting rcbuko from 'InkKoiuney, which was rewarded with munil of iipplttiise. The Masquerade ill Concluded the performances. fornied heir best; efS-cle- nt ii i -- Aoaix. Our respocted Mayor, aria Farr, with W. Jennings, Esq., ice president of tho U. C. R. 11., Bishop ob Sharp and A. Stayner, Esq., ar- ed, by C. P. train from San Francisco, a Monday morning, in good health and ?ints. A great ninny of our friends, pwially in the northern part of the Ter- !ory, Lava teen looking eagerly for heir arrival, and more tairerlv for the o ' - m they were expected to bring of and greenbacks. We are happy ay that a settlement of the Benson, rr & West claims on the C P. Com-ahas been arrived at. In about CO the 7 company will be able to pay from to sixty cents on the dollar to all :,r creditors, which is a great deal than most of them expected to re- This news will be gladly received 7 large number of our citizens, for "My debts have been contracted on Ii ' Wpectation of dotr from the railroad , 'tthole settlements are involved in a f wpWtion of liabilies. The day of '"went is close at hand and a little Wtnmodation and mutual compromise '""raighten out lots of tanglod snails. Jor Fai r is welcomed back by a of the good citizens of Ogdcn, who Whim; not last among them are e,8 of the Oodis Jckctios. " Homs sct-eme- y A pa, n" UCTRAOK On Simrlnv tiiwlit no j 0 a J named Ferris was accompanying laughter homo after the evening ;"lng, she noticed a man near Mr. C. "wtnansee's barn, who acted in a very "P'cious manner. Mrs. Ferris, how-e- r. proceeded on her wav. saw her home and retnrned towards r wn rosidenco, but on coming near 18 earn again, the same man whom ' 8w before sprans forward nd ITina J L . i "v" U1S "ana across her mouth. She "Pged herself and screamed "r. Ward who was npr fingher cries, came to her assistant ''a 'he ruffian made off. It was a tutv one was near with firearms to 8W Hie hound a short cut to bin n.-w. TK; ; 1 'ter Salt Lake City, March, 21, 1870. Deau Junction: 'Hope springs ex ultant on triumphant" wing." - So sang Pope, or ome other of those worthies who had climbed Parnassus and feasted among tho deities in that classical and : mythological region; That about expresses tho feeling that is growing arouud here. Business men and those whom interest connects with thein, are steering their barques .full freighted with a cargo of hope over the calm sea of dull times. nominallv the first one of Spring, gave prom.ise.by its warmth of a rapid disappearance of the Bnow, and great are the treasures expected to bo obtained from the earth boneath in a few short months. Here it is minerals of some kind or other; there it ig heavy crops; and care begins to sit lightly on the public brow with the hope of what is to come certainty - certain. t Governor Shaffor is here. That of course you aro atfare of. How he will like the place and the people, the preachings nnd the practices, remains to be seen. He has been around looking about him; and he must have come to the conclusion that if half tho lies he has heard are true, Salt Lake is tho quietest and most orderly place of tho kind that it has been described to be, that traveler ever visited. Last week, during the severe storm, a soldier named Andrcw Mcl'artin was frozen to death within a mile and a quarter of Camp Douglas. Being found outside the line of the military reservation, General Gibbon sent the body down to town for an inquest, showing that the General is a gentleman who respects the law. Doctor Taggart was taken before the Grand Jury on that reported bull-do- g attempted assassination. Of course he denied that there was any truth in it. He would have acted like a gentleman if he had publicly contradicted it when it was set afloat. Instead of doing so he maintained a reticence when asked concerning it, that would have led questioners to imagine it Was. true, and they could draw their own inferences from his silence. The Dufriet Court is In sessioV and disposing of the matters brought before it. So far tho cases have been civil ones. A large number, of aliens have been admitted to citizenship. Have you got that report of the exam ination of Colonel F. II. Head and A Majors, Esq., be "ore the Committee on Tcrriiorics, cn L'tah affairs? It is inter w- esting. to-d- They Are Comimj Aoais. Yesterday morning several members of the theatrical company who havo been performing hcre,left per ,U. C for Silk Lako .City. On (hoy frecoinihg again, for a run of eight consecutive nights, when they hope to draw full houses by present ing new pieces and playing :(hem with care and spirit. A bill will be presented for Friday nigh, which will be new and We hope the new effort entertaining. will be as successful as the management can desire. Pdy The follow M. Musscr, A. Elder from ing dispatch, was received per Dcserct Telegraphic line lato on Saturday evening: "St. Thomas, A. T., March 17, 1870. Tho President and party arrived here yesterday, all well; no accident. The company will go to the Colorado and will return here on Saturday. Meeting was held here last evening. The weather is very fine. Dtteret Eten-itin- g rRF.smENT ai-in- 0. Mai. Lcland, who caned Geo. Wilkes a few days ago, was assaulted this even ,nK by an unknown desperado, who struck him a violent blow in the face with a brass knuckle. Leland was slightly injured but ho gave chase and fired four shots at the man, who. though supposed to have Leon hit, managed to escape, There was a riot at Jersey City last right, between a gang of stevedores and proprietors and employes, resulting in the injury of a number of each party. The Tribune i ew 1 ork special says that George Wilkes publishes a savage editorial in his paper, denouncing the papers for their reports of Lcland's as sault on him. He pours much wrath on Lcland and calls him many hard names, Sporting men ore making bets on tho probability of onfe of these individuals shooting the other before the first of April Extensive frauds have been discovered in the sale of tickets to emigrants, who purchase from points in Europe to Washington and the United States; the commissioners of emigration are still t liivestiitatinff matters. Samaria arrived The missing from Queestown yesterday; the cause of her delay was a broKen shaft.. The allegations against Bailey continue to become public. It is asserted that he appropriated sixty thousand dollars in January, '67 while collector" of the fourth district, and bonds and frauds amounting in the aggregate to 200,000 or o00,000 dollars are made against him. Cincinnati. It is rumored that Andrew Fit a Hains, for twenty years a draj'man here, has fallen heir to a hundred thousand dollars . in England. . Scranton. A car containing ten men, while descending the shaft of a coal mine, near Plymouth, got loose from the counterbalancing weight, and rushod with great velocity to the bottom, injuring every man soriously but none fatally. ; IlKETIXG-l- Sc. to to Stc. Mfc." HKIV TICKI.Nl-2S(- i. the. to CHKCKR Do. PRINTS 10c. to l!Sc. 'peV MCRuTN DE tAINKS 18o. to COKFRE DACON JUNCTION. and Tarty. Xews. Surgical Case. Dr. Tibbets success- fully performed an operation en Monday last, upon the hand and arm of a brakesman named Mintcrn, belonging to the U. P. R. 11. Tho limb had been badly crushed by accident, several days ago, and had become almost putrid. Dr. T. amputated tho thumb, and made an incision in the arm of four inches in length. It was. thought impossible to save the limb from amputation above the elbow until the doctor took it in hand. The cass is now progressing very favorably. Knocked Dowx. Yesterday morning a little fclW about knee high, tho son of Mr. Wilson Wright, of this city, was knocked down by a passing team while he was playing in the road opposite his father's houso. A bruise in the mouth appeared to bo tho only injury he received, but he might have been killed if he had fallen under the wagon wheels. Children should not be permitted to pluy in the public roads. Look out, mothers, and don't let the little folks run into such danger. When they are not at school see that they are out of the way of public traffic. j Mails. ." evenini. A few I ! i Y A E D, o. n t EXD x6iiTii-K,is- t HICK 13c to 10c phr lb. SVUAR (ii 121.00 pr k. ik. " cnialiot, $22.00, CURRANTS-2- 4c pw lb, by W, TOBACCO Jivjr, pr lb Sue. CHKF.SE 3(icpor lb. 1NDWO $2.00 pur lb. CANPT 3.V (op Olio jwr lbi l'EPPKK 80c per lb; 8PICK-4- 0C per lb. NrTMfiGS4U4 per lb. CANDLES $9.00 per bot. SODA I10.2.V; por box. SOAP I. X. L. brnndi $9.75, per 1kXi RAISINS per box, $7 .no. wr caw, $10.70. CO VL OIL LV E $1 (UW to $1 2.00 per awe. CLASS 8x10 per box, $7.00. W x 12, $7.00. HAY Full upply, nt $10 pw tori. OATS 2Jc per lb. HARLF.Y-- 2J per lb. WHEAT $1.00 $1.2.r, iwr busliol. FLOUR-$3- ,2r a $1.00 pr unc-k-. ; a full iiippty present demand. Our L'tab Flour compartM fcvortibly with the beat Wwtli Brnudt mad from K'ilitor wheat. CORN $1.00 per buhel. ' BKAN A SHORTS $1.00 Q $1.50, pSrctrt POTATOES 00c &t 76c, pt'r bulieh BEEF 10c Gll2c por lb at shop ; t foot. PORK 2ilc (u) 25c, por lb. Ill'TTER lu rull, 35c (i 40c por lb. pr Pr duj, 2&c la, 00c. CHICKENS 50c, chcIi. TURKEYS 18c par lb, $5 per piiir. : OK', THE ONLY PAPER IN OCDEN. ,l.!,:l A 300,000 Ft. of Boards? SEMI-WEELK- Y Only $6 per Yctm vulT ;,u.i f.v.ti Illll.ll. tWMl'A ii i i i . 'i (!.. . I! i . 'i 1 . 300,000 A Paper i Shinglob The People's Paper! XLKiS for all ' --- il UTAH CENTRAL vnii'l '1) '!..!! qi I 100,000 RAILROAD. 11 t,i I ! .1 ; 11 ' i '. i! i i;n I'J ."J.. I l.i lilK ,,i I ... ClttHae! ' "II .) 'It''' 1'"' THE" 'I i ,i 'il.tl ." o .H'illi. 'lit (1 r ! Mil!'- - 1: Hi ' 1T(I!.) U ihdM-'I'-- ,! Sawed PIOXEElt JXE OF UTAH. - t.- , 'i 1 til . 'il'li' f f OX AND AFTER I 1, Traim will lenre Ogdcn dally at 10.05 a.m, and p.m. Arrive at Salt Lake City at 12.20 p.m. and Le;ivo 3.1(1 p.m. p.m. Suit City dully at 7.10 a.m. and Arrive at O'lun nt tt.26 a.ni. and i:& Ammmi I.. The Latent Telegraphte Xetvs Articles oti all the In addition to the above an TRAIN . . : .,. t .',.. i. " 1.. tl,': til -- :! ivv'ia'i' ij .il't FEW EQUALS Wli.iT .,,;,,t V COUNTRY. " ) V ;,it : iif , i! , able reaeos- ' t u coola be ietrei. .' , l 't ,'....' ' HI ' ...it. t ; - ,, t ' :.. . .. .i:! .!. im . e '': Louisville i; ;' f"" , (MI Ripening in August and September. Merchants who want to 8cM their Goods will do well te Advertise in tlie Junction, ROOTS: 1I tOI ALDER, .; ? vertising in the Junction, nS. ,' ' i.f. I . 1 'I - 1- .S tclfi tint ' ,. : , , t .!:'i'! :l J'iif i'i ;.'. HUILDIXU LUIIIEK " .rr ' ntiafDSi hash, ,.'t ,. t. It ha been Iroquenlljr demonstrated .,'....(. We inrite the publio of Ogdcn and to give us their Advertisements elue-wbe- re for insertion in the Jcmctioh ' f.i l liATlf v... !' t arid DttlXS ii'.l l ;.i ,:.., . i that judicious Advertising is the road to Biiccess in exerf aepartment ot Trade. v 1 . l'tVU"1 tt lIlTiEi; ot ', will be promtJ jr aiaeitded ;; ,; - -.'i vi -- ' s ft,: The Circulation of the Jutictioh is slremly large and is constantly increasing. Z ...I to-d- Brwitripg carefully done and all work warranted. l!f Ordcru tbt ailn a .; it,.nt 'n; " ' kitidsi'or BOESSEL Mr. Samuel Slickney, & Main Utreet, .Ogden C'tfy, has reached the good of this city, Watchmakers, Jewclws iGnnsmitbs. eld age of eighty years. We tender Ayenw for American nd Elgin Watchen. ortmnt of Knep eontantly on hand a larpe ,Llm ur our good wishes and best r One Jewelry, Foreiirn n ntrhrt. tinnn, Flotolt, and Ammunition of all kind. speds, and hope he will live many years Purchwers trill do well to examine onr 8tock in full the of all before his rnrt liMine elsewhere. enjoyment longer ni' in i'f Mechanics can doubtless in crease their Business hy Ad 2 PARPE Alwas kept o liand Mo RASPBERRY BLACKBERRY V Primed and Glancdi . EARLIEST AND BEST VARIETIES An Old Hand. By the Salt Lnke or papers we see that our old friend Ro bert Carter, who celebrated his seventy second birthday on Friday lat, is still associated with tho press. His labors in the cause of literatur havo extended over a period of many years, but he has exercised his legs more than his brain in its interests. As a peripatetic book TICK TAICKIV. seller and newsvendor, Bobby has done a great deal of work; and we are happy Orders to 1o left with Jons CRAwrottn, to learn that in Ins old age lie is as gay U. C. R. R. Depot. and festive, lively and hearty in th business as ever. When our friends in D. O. C "the City" want newspapers and perio Salt Lake City. do to will well remember 22-dicals, they the cheerful old veteran near thollevere House r: ; i t,t VARIETIES. f.l;1 A 11 i'i HARDY BEST J '. .'. ; the Winter. 1ji.f i :!.!.! 'nil rJtti . . , - if v'l-.-- .. . .M - f1) ni n . ' No Covering' in .i 4'.'ft ', ' ... BUPKKINTKNDENT. YERY fT : . . .1 JOSEPH A. YOUNG, THAT Kf.QUIBH : ..(! Rkise,i Talielled ea(l WonldeL l t, nl ,. .; i i .. ., in: ..iiii v.ii! to nil .. ...i - - GRAPE VINES ,iti ii:f :i'v;'i Sash Bbqirs,, i ltf Oi!T i ISIIM Fat-- re ai n!! jit (.V. -- Tbe Terras of Adrcrtising jifdiaui .l..tt. a no IN THIS WESTERN ..... Jtfi J UROt ASSORtkMt Of A ; J. i,.i..7.s....i i, :!ill l iff ,lniJ iJj j .'; I,. niM THE JUNCTION; HAS ; Agttt. ' : i I Vidbi il Vl i'Viii I ' MEDIUM . ':.:... .... ' il'.-I- . M4l i .. (OnS f.i A8 AN ADVERTISING '!.." u; - ,!! llMCIII Lumber!'' i :ii- n.. Lewi ing Topics of the Xdj. aZ'-'I- nil If i. ! 1' MILL KL'N ' ljrlrIU I i 1 l tii'til .! ! I ! 1 i - D.O.CALDER, Ticket and Freight lul i)j'liulf!t ' AID all hiformativn concerning Freight or PP'y o K f! n'l ! . "i .,1 OOKTAIli , Pif .K H'l (; U.I HU.ijf. ' 8.15 p.m. ..iilvk , .l I l!..! I ,1 OGDEN JUNCTION 1H70, 6 :l . llIU. 3IONDAY, m faculties, Vj IK C.lMt.n.llEPOT, tr SUNDAYS, WEDNESDAYS Providence. The bleaching and dye works, of ; AKD; SATURDAYS, Merry & Co., rawtucket, were almost entirely destroyed Inst night by tho ex Oirde" City B.45 a.m. and Palt Lake City, plosion of a vat filled with yarn for 5Leaving piu. on wiiicli full fare will entitle tin purchaor to Loss $:JO,000. of a 20,000 ticket to rmurn ou th max duy and train bleaching. freo, and will stop by arranging with tbe Conducperson injured. tor, at any point on the liue to takt ou or let off ' Fall River, . u.i afternoon while a Lvrge congro passenger, j This was tho assembled in uneoinple gation FARES: ted French Church to witness the blesto $1.00 KayBTlHe sing of the corner stone, the floor gave Ogden " $1.S5 Faruiiriftnn fell twelve '200 and about people way $1.00 Contrevllle feet, into tho cellar; twelve to fifteen had " $1.76 Woor Crow their limbs broken, and many others " $2.00 Bull Lake City were injured. ' OcTOdEiiARiAK. i!!. ii pr 510,000. Last night a fire was discovered in the second story of Hsydenti Bros dry good; store, Market street; the flames were confined to the 2nd and 3rd floors, and were f.ually extinguished before the building was greatly damaged. The stock on those floors was almost con The goods, counters and snmcd. shelves on the first floor, where the fire did not reach, were found saturated with benzine. The stock was valued at sixty thousand dollars; the loss was between fifteen and twenty thousand dollars, uhe insurance is reported at between forty a&4 fifty thousand dollars, Michael Hayden, one of the proprietors, was committed to jail and afterward bailed out; the other partners were out ot the city. A. ME.Ei (I'iiiiiS 13 to 3.50 Rio par ik, S"e IK to $2.24 lb. 27c per lb; EXCURSION ' The Gore block, a six story structure at the corner of Greene and Pitts streets, cnught fire last night, and it required the Btrenuous exertions of the fire de partment to save it from utter destruc tion. Tho entire roof was burned off, tho three upper stories entirely de stroyed and the lower floors drenched with water; loss ?50,00O. i.i:'tfl Sf Hfi YARN tr TEA-4- U0 OGDEN . e. to .n! L If ' &6e. A LI, WOOL PR LAIN ES-3- 7e. OINOHAMS-l- Sc. to 53c. COTTON ... yard. . . , Bangor, Tho wooden block, nt tho west end of the Scadiickcnge bridge, occupied by a Ioks number of firms was burned - to 21c. e. ' ginilTINO BTRlPKS lRc.to2T)4. work-ingmen- y, . jjeware iu lime! BROWN 11LRAC1I WrSUN'B Boston. Eastern exchanges 1 or . contry lor vaga-- came to hand List night which show that a, u.b stamp, ihe citizens of the track East of the. Missouri is clear nve no more compunctions at once more. We hope the rest of tho dea JJ! hole in sucl carri,n than they tained mall nutier will come in this uaq aog. TRUCKEE IUYEIt of Ogden Junction, Ogdcn City, Utah Territory, Mar. 23, 1870. (Mice AMEHICA3T. New York. According to the World' London correspondence the labor cause is making progress in England. Four vacancies are to be created by the government as soon as possible in the House of Commons, 's and these seats are to bo filled by candidates. Another insurrection has broken out in llayti. The Pickets in the southern department are in arms against the new provisional government, and the parti-zan- s of the late President Saluave are joining them; the government has sent reinforcements to tho in the hela, and several war steamers have also been dispatched to the South.. The British and French governments have refused to recognize tho provisional government till it assumes the debt ot ffalnave s administration. Last evening No. 83 and ?3 Worth street, occupied by Wallace, Fitch & Co., were damaged by fire to the amount of $20,000; they were insured for $75,-00- un- being yet very Commercial. BY TELEGRAPH. D.W. PARKIIURST, rROFRIETOR- - |