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Show BY TELEG11APIL ,1 Tho Irrepressible From the Berry Ptatiou (Ky.) Freo Fail- Dry-Goo- ds ures. AMERICAN. New Vork, 5. Clinrlei Bra'llaugli, the JJnghuu Ke publican, delivered u lecture Oeiore t large audience in MeinwdV Mull to night, on (tie Hcpublicuu movement in and. He is a iiuo oraljr uud & mag . n.heent speaker, and created quite ua uproar and excitement among tue uudi- taci. lie said he did noi ueaira nuy revolutiouarjr movement fur a republic, but wished to induce the people ti approve of the Republican tyaviu ot government. Au excitement w- council bjr Mr. Huutlej, of rJugkud, a member ot the Kvnngelicul Alliance, risiug and calling Bradliiugh a Jmr. The audience binned, liradlaugh fcaid, "Lei hiui proceed to represent the uriatocracy." in is brought dtiwn the bouse, aud liumley whs demolished. The second day's tueuting of the Evangelical Alliance opened m lue Madiswu hijuare Church, but ine crowd of delegates and spectators was so large that ir wa found necessary to organize another nieeaug in Dr Crosbys chuivh, in Twenty-fourtsirect. Ureal interest it miiuifejied lu the session ot Alliance, and the the attendance is cunsauiiy The exercise to day wt.s very Addresses were made by interesting. the Iter. Dr 1'otter, lr. Crooke, who represented Bishop Simpson, ot and the ieun ot Canterbury. At the afternoon session, liisnop of Ohio, delivered au eulogy on the lata Uiehop Mcllruin. He also tpoke on themhjeot of i'rousiaui uuiiy, vouibui- -' ting the idea, oiteu advanced ugmust Protestantism, that its division inio sects destroys its uuiiy; aud arguing that sectarian divisions were not essential; while at the same timo there were sects iu the Catholic Church contcudmg more fiercely tltau I'roiestauts ever did. Rev. Dr. took, of i'aris, spoke in support of Bishop Bedell's views, uud praised tho result of the Evangelical Alliance in France. Hot. Conrad, of Philadelphia, spoke in favor of au exchange of pulpus by Kvangelical ministers. 1 lie conference will terminate week. Two meetings will be hold ;u morrow, one in tho Aoauemy of Alus.o undone in Meinway Hall- - On Mouday the conference will bo divided into uu sections, theological and philosophical The exercises at Hail, on Monday evening, will be couducted in the Fieucu laug..uge, und ou Wedi.cs-dathere Hi, I Ue services iu the VWtaii iiniguage. Tuesday ailei uoou there w.il le services in tne Madi.-o-u Aquaic t.'uurcli for the faculty and studcnis ot lUe Uilicreut Ucuomiualious utteudtug Hi cotiftrence. Ou M t iluesduy ucx;, Brooklyn will lormally 'reccivo me delegates, aud in the eveuing u dinner will tic given them in the A.aueniy if Music. TLe Alliance have accrptcJ an inviiutiuti it visit WusUiugtuu ou the 14ih iusi., and will hold public meetings ai the .Mand 15th, etropolitan Church on the which 1'residenltJraut and the members cf the cabinet have becu invited to attend. A bulletin announces tho suspension ot I'eake, Opdykc it Co., a large hoiuse. Tneir liabilities aruouut t about two aud a half million dollars. "They propose to puy in full, with iuir ft, as follows : Ten per ceut. ut two, three, four, five, 'fix, seven, eight, nine, nfieen, aud eighteen months, respective-s h i'hila-delphi- a, lie-Ae- , y - Tho proposition of Taton & Co., aLto s dealers, submitted to their creditors, is as follows : Ou their indebtedness they offer, with in tervtit, at 10 per cent., at two, three, tour, live, six, seveu, eight, nin nl'ieeu, uud eighteen montus, revpectively. dry-gooa- A correspondent recently asked Heury Ward IJeecborit he approved v( wives tspeudins their time at waa tering places, aud leaving their to the luercy of servant girls, and received this Iharaetcriatie reply : "No "woman who values her hus-kiud- do-iucst- ten-fol- d, - blood-curdlin- heart-rendin- ill-fate- g d A Good Price. Grand Troutmansdorf, Charles to the VI., Emperor Equerry purcha.scd brom the celebrated Jacob b'teincr a violin under the following conditions : u He paid down in coin seventy to undertook caroluscs, provide Stciner as long us he lived with a good dinner every day, as well as 101 florins a month in cash, aud yearly a new coat, two casks' of beer, lighting and fuel, and, in case he should marry,' as many hares as he might require, with twelve baskets of fruit annually for himself and as many for his old nurse. Steinr lived sixteen years afterwards, and the instrument cost the Count 20,000 florin, and it has just been sold at auction in Dresden for 2,500 thalers, about $1,000. Count ; gol-de- church, MUSIC STOKE, articles Koman Case fur a Solomon, main street, . Ogdeu. THE CHEAPEST COAL AND LIME ' OF KINDS ALL . ! In the Market, always on hand. " ' MUSICAL ISTRUillllTS From a' Jewaharp to a Church Organ,,a .. Chonp.or. Cheaper than anywhere else in Utah.' 4 and other'- Fittings. Violin. Strings SHEET MUSIC, ETC., ETC.' One door South of Ogden House. M.-D- . M; IAIIONB, Main St,, Ogden, anil Main St., Logan, Cache Co. ' AGENT FOR THE ch'uttler Wagon! THIS JUSTLY CELEBRATED WAGON IS MADE OF TIIE BEST MATEBIU. throughout aud is warranted. . A FULL SUPPLY ALWAYS ON IIAXD. Also Dealer in IJRht Spring ttagons, Sweepstakes' Tlireshhijr Hacliiiics, liuckej e Jloiver.s and Kenners ' Sulky Hakes, Corn Shelters, Feed Cutters ' Mills, Emery Grinders, Stubble Fanning Flows Shovel Flows, Cultivators, About three weeks ago a boy named Kennedy, jumping ever a gap in a stone AND wall at Youker, N. Y., stumbled and fell, the stone' which tripped him rolled after him.' On going to the place from which it roiled he found in the cavity a cigar box containing a large roll of greenbacks, and behind the box a second roll." On his way home he Lid several WAGON people of his good fortune, and the result was that a man named Moynaban claimed to have lost the money and demanded it, the boy yielding and receiving a few dollars by way of reward. Moynahan then divided the money with two of his companions. The boy's the demanded restorahowever, father, tion of the money, and, receiving po instituted a suit to obtain it. The sum is said to be not less lhan n $3,000. It is supposed to have been ia the wall by a deformed man known as "Paddy, ihe Cowboy,"' whose mother was a drunkard, and who concealed his wages in prder to keep his meney out of her reach.' She died about five years ago, Paddy attending her 3ui oh re faithtully in her last illuess. work not he could remember suming where he had hidden his money, and having sought unsuccessfully for months, he gave up the hunt, lie says that tbc amount is only oOO. He also has com roenced a suit against Moynahan and the men who received shares of the money, and the people of Youkers have a very pretty triangiilar.fight to talk aoout. j- ALL KINDS OF FARM,. MACHINERY. A Complete Assortment of HARDWOOD, ,IIiO.T MATERIAL, AAD STEEL, ETC. Anecdote ofllcv. llobert Hall. This celebrated preacher, though geueral mariners retiring, and rather unsocial than otherwise, and withal a little irritable, was easy and playful in hw iutcrcourse with such persons as had the privilege of his friendship; and when among them, affected no extraordinary gravity Ou one occasiou he was rebuked by a fellow preacher more precise than himself, for the vivacity of his conversation. "Brother Ilall, I am surprised at you, so frivolous after delivering so serious a, discourse." "Brother," was the retort, "I keep my nousense, for the fireside, while you publish yours from the pulpit." in . ic r - 1 ; J:,-;;- . -: -- ; GO TO STAYNEK'S FOR YOUR Lid-de- AND OTHER MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS , sho should will happiness An economical Iowan, who had ' n leave her husband thus unprotecttoothache,, determined to remove his -. i ed." ,doth in the Indian fashion. According A wasp is no insignificant ftgont in ly be lent down a sapling in the woods, stout lay aown bimseii and attached t!upcr$iug a crowd, but V nervous cord to his tooth and the sapling. Then wtmun making through a crowd for he touched the spring, and the next he the cars, with valise iu one hand knew he had jumped over a grove ' cf small trees and was trying to ;.td u umbrella in the othor, is aboutoutforty a small pond that he happened of get about tia appalling au object as the to . alight in. huruau mind can conceive and main ' mNow, John, suppose there was a load ' Us buUuce,. j :t ; of hay oa, one side of the tiver and a uck ass on other, and no bridge, and A little girl was asked what was jthe river's the too ,wide to awiro, hw ca the meaning of the w drd happy. j?he the jackass get to the hay ?' ' '': -I give it up" gave a very prctfy answer, Vying, ' ' H is to feel as it you wanted to giv "Writ, that's hist what lb of W UV. aea did." ,.,!: ,a l your things to your little uier.'' a-- A AND another the creeds C.uholic, Protestant, Mohametan and Budhist religions; who have discarded their national dress, tbeir national habits and their political constitution, we ought not to be surprised to find that they are anxious now to throw over their written character wholesale and to in adopt a European alphabetical system was the its stead. Such, iude d, propo sal embodied in a speech at the recent International Congress of Uneotaiisis ai I'aris by Samesima Naonabn, the Japan ese Miuister at the Court of Fiance. "I beg," said his Excellcncey, "to call your attention to a question of great import ance te us. Japanese writing nas, as you are aware, practically ceu?td to be purely alphabetical, and has become, to a great extent, ideographic. As long as we kept to ourselves it suuiced lor our wants, but we now find it quite, inade quate for the expression of the European words and ideas which we are begin ning to employ." And he then proceeded to urge the Congress to throw some light on the subject by discussing the question. According to the French papers, a long debate followed, which led to no definite result and gave rise to the expression of many opposite opin- ons, the result appearing to point to the rapossibility of arriving at any univer sal orthography for the transcription of Japanese characters by means of European letters. Dut the startling fact re mains that the Japanese are willing to adopt any alphabetical system which will be approved by, ana be intelligible to the nations of Europe. And these are the people who. sixteen years atro would have made very short work of any foreigner who dared to show his face on the sacred soil of Japan! collpfitpd Goa & Lime Offirp ai-6- as- - ; With a people like the Japanese, by whom no institution, however time honored, is considered sacred; who have the brought their Emperor down from skies to the level of a human being, who, increased yea, twenty, if was that discovered when it possible, four human being had perished in the tiaines. and that. too. without a mo ment's warning. The circumstances in the case, as near as we can learn, are about as follows: The tire caught from a defective flue, the bouse being new and not yet com pleted. At 11 o'clock in the night Mr, Crouch was awakened from his slumbeis by the crackling of the burning timber and the smoke emitted therefrom. Upon this discovery he immediately leaped from his bed, and, after arousing his family, endeavored to save two of his children, but ouly succeeded in reaching his infant babe. ly this lime, and ere the neighbors had been made cognizant of the affair, the flames had got under full headway it was now plainly visible that all hope of escape frem the terrible ravages of the now angry flames had vanished from the of thedoomed residence. U is supposed that Mrs. Crouch, upon the alarm, started up stairs to rescue her child, but, before she reached ner destination, was suffocated and burned to death, as was also three children. g This is one of the most and affairs that has happened since the recent conflagrations in the cities of Chicago and ilos- tou, and the strongest hearts present were moved with compassiou on bearing the piteous moans and agonizing shrieks of the poor mother and children, one of whom, a little girl named Dunn, Mr. Crouch was guardian for. Dut to gain access to them was impossible, and their shrieks only ceased wbeu the "Angel of Death relieved them of their sufferings by bearing their epirils to a land where peace and happiness reign, and where atiiiotion and sorrow are never kuown. Uere wo are forcibly reminded that "verily when in the midst of life we are in death." Mr. Crouch, we understand, was badly burned in his fatherly efforts, and has the sympathy of the entire community he having been bereft of all that were near aud dcaj to him, w s - Alphabet. An From th Pull Jrall Gazette, Sept. IT. .. Pro. : dry-good- Wanled-- The thriving little village of Cordova Grant County, was tbrowu Into an in tense state of excitement on Tuesday night last, at the dead hour of night, by have disestablished their national the startling intelligence that the family institute residence of Mr. W'ni. Crouch was en- and are now about to formed en a conglomeration of veloped in flames, and the excitement from' of the Tho Evangelical Alliance. Heavy Mother ami Three Child"" ren ISurncd to' Death.' Rescued Erom a Living Urave. AND ' Sare Twenty Cents on the Dollar. NEAR SAVAGE'S FIIOTOGRAm GALLERY, MAIN STRFET, From Jackson (Tenn.) Whig, Sept. 20. ,Od Thursday evening hist, old n colored 'Squire Yaulx, a mau of this city, while cleaning out a well lor lomlinson, Howard & Co. at their railway stable ou Lafayette street, was imprisoned for four hours Teams to MACHINE. by the caving in of .the curbing and walls of the well. The curbing from rnnv. best jy nit roKi,i; rRRnrw two sides of the well caught him JL by th Inventor of tiia Sovrius iiat!iw. ;. midway the body, while other, pieces GIBSON, ECCLES AND VANNOY'S tLIAS HOWE, Jan. formed a kind of roof over hia head, An IIOXKSTMACIIIXEaiMl New Steam Saw Mill, not snbje against which the saving dirt pressq FITS. him a and ed, holding Situated two miles east of POINTS OFSUPER!0Hins prisoner yet saving him from' certain death. In J! ou nt Kanab,oRltearLaltc this imminent peril he remained for lMTitle. Simplicity' arid Perfection Mechanism- three or four hours, and yet was.res- cued without serious injury. Whites last a Lifetime ITilled Durabilitywill as well as blacks dug and otherwise ISillH . on the worked to save him, "and to their ef lianvcof Work without , a Parallel' , r forts untiring he owes, his' life. ., SHORTEST NOTICE." well-know- HOWE Haul Lumber SEWING from ot'Lumhcr . , , . Perfection of Stitch and , A soldier stationed at Sioux City re- ceived $",000 twe weeks ago, and he spent the last dollar, of it ia nine days, making one purchase of eighteen barrels of whisky and giving them away to his friends. ; : ,1. 'Hi' .i n'-- '!:.!) !.u,.i '.ill ., Tom.Scott aaid Jn Mar,eh last that the company of which be is now the ,recogi nixed head prupost d spending the enormous Bum of $24,000,090 during one year'l tim from that dale'improve-in.-nt- i r ; alone j , ;;; - , SEND ON YOUR ORDERS; "H. I i (i ' i v:'.I PT.Vn A TV , , ;i 03 Tar, ';;: p- .'CftiJ Tl .th. i ' i i ! . i C. U.U our Stylo and Pricw t Kx.ln W.JNK8 T. v ,v NEXT DOOR TO Z. Tension. ,x Adjustable Head. !. 5tL SL, Ogden, .j, Ease of Ojtcratitn and Jlanagemcin. Self Adjifsiing "Tdke-v- u Lumber .,, iu : Tir,'C. M. U .. Cg. ' JSir.1 Hot from SAMUEL K. WHtER, ' JUW. ' AW it' t& Saim' Boom, doort wwt of Z. C M. I., ' Citj. ' J |