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Show pY fULEGBAPll, among Surreeling vivors of the Polaris TU The ! Insurgents in Cuba! Severe righting; He- - . ! ported DefalcaSill another tion! Subsidy Pomeroy Shot! Wife Murderer Sent a to the Penitentiary! A Son of the U. S. Com- Detroit, 11. this morning destroyed fourteen buildings, including Weber & Co.'s sash factory, where it originated, aud Marr's brewery. St. Louis, 11. The delegation of Ute Indian chiefs, in charge of Charles Adams, agent of the tribe at Los Pinos, Colorado, arrived en route for Washington, here where they go to cousult with the Government authorities in relation to the reeent cession of 4,000,000 acres of their land reservation to the United States, and the establish in ent of a new military post, about 100 miles west of Fort Garland. J. II. Farr, the wife slaughterer, was sentenced to ten years in the penA fire missioner of Patents Killed! AMERICAN. New York, 11. a be to good deal of ill There is PfiiJ of the members the feeling among Polaris" party, now at Washiugton, ,!iiust Capt. Tysou and party. They the reported poisoning specifically made by are much disturbed The party Tyson. that Tyson advanced, thai by the idea the party on the from the separation This feeling was intent ional. ibe since Buddington Las sprung up statements made the of learned party Although the by the Tyson party. before the of men expedition, prominent in the not were accord, the separation, crew were uniutlueuced by their divisions and did not jhampion any one. A Washington dispatch says, on the Senauthority of Senator Cameron, that office the not will accept ator Conkling of Chief Justice if tendered by the President, and that he proposes lo retire from political life at the end of his senatorial term, and devote himself in the future to the practice of law, and to make a fortune thereby. Philadelphia, 11. A number of Frankfort cotton mills are running on half time, in consequence of the falling oil of orders, and the difficulty f procuring currency to pay wages. Campbell's mill, at Maoay.mk, is closed At other by strike of the operatives. manufacturers work continues at a reduction. Southwark foundry has closed, and six hundred nieu are idle refusing to work at the proposed reduction of Beem to consider of II i.il as charges ice-flo- e wages. New York, 11. of son A. Clark, George of the agent cashier this of Clark, city, of the Union Pacific Ilailroad here, is missing with $10,000, received for tickHe has heretofore ets sold last month. borne a respectable character. It is tttpposed he had been speculating in or blocks. which is the The attendance seventh and last of the Evangelical meetings, was great than on any previous day, and the pioceedings were of aa interesting character. Papers on various subjects are being read by a number of foreign and American clergyto-da- y Al-liau- men. A number of the American members met after the adjournment of that body, and formed an organiiation called the U. S. branch of the Evangelical Alliauce. Washington, II. Tomeroy, of Kansas, was shot this afternoon by M. F. Conway, of Kansas. Senator I'omeroy was walking up New York Avenue, and when near the coiner oi Fourteenth street he met Conway, who drew a large revolver, and wheu within five or six feet of I'omeroy, fired three "hots at him, one of whiou took enect in the right breast, just below the' nipple. Con way tueu put. up his pistol and started to walk oft", when two gentlemen, P. Stillitsun and Addison, who witnessed tne shooting, immediately stopped him, Addison exclaimiug: "Stop, sir! you have shot a man and you must give your reasons for so doing " Conway replied: "Ue ruiued tnyseU' and family." He then accompanied the gentlemen to the station house. Pomeroy, who had fallen to the pavement, was assisted to a carriage and driven to bis house in K street near Fourteenth, where physicians were immediately summoned., Doctors Bliss nd Verdi have just made an examination of the wound and pronounced it One of the sim, le and only very slight. balls passed through Pomeroy's hat, another through his overcoat, and the ether through his clothing, striking his breast below the right nipple, but only penetrating the skiu. Pooieroy asserts that he never lu.d any controversy with Conwuy, and has not the slightest idea of the cause of his attack. Couway met Pomeroy a few days ago fr the first timo in about two years, and aid, abruptly, MI am out of money;" to hich Pomeroy know, then, replied, how to I appreciate your situation, for w iu condition myself." that nearly wa uli that passed between them fit thii not a interview, and, oid was spoken before Conway nnug,urpiUiug Pomeio niore tUaii that ever Lapptiitfd.biui whit.uitt.ug Pouieioy is tmphatic iu mat or fl to-da- coiii-tornc- ing that he never had any controversy or ground for difficulty with Conway, but on the contrary he says about three years ago, h and Senator Sumner got Conway's wife a clerkship in the treasury" department, on her representation that her husband woulUn't support her. Subsequently, says I'omeroy, Conway tried to trustee, or draw her wages a, the treasury department, and failed to ttccsmplish it; but he, Pomeroy, had no controversy witu lnm ou that subject or any other. Conway is a native of Baltimore, and is a printer by trade. Ue studied law, weut to Kansas, and took part in the early btruggles of that T erritory. After serving as ctunty judge he was elected to Congress as the first representative of Kansas. At the end of his term he was appointed by President Johnson, consul to Marseilles, but was removed by President Grant, soon after the lattcrs inauguration. He has been living iu this city several years. td to-da- y to-da- itentiary. Paterson, N. J., 11. One silk mill in Paterson, is running on full timo. Several mills have entirely suspended. Others are running only part ef the time with reduced forces. Ithica, N. Y., 11. Mortimer M. Leggett, a son of M. D. Leggett, U. S. Commissioner of patents, was killed by falling from a cliff on Six Mile creek, last night. ' FOREIGN. Paris, I!. members of the Munici pal Council of Paris have published an address declaring that the Assembly has no right to National Sovereignty. They afnrm that the majority of the people reject the claim of Count de Cham-bor- d to the throne of Fraace.and request the deputies iroru the departments of the Seine to declare frankly how their precincts vote, when the question of change of government is brought up in the Assembly. The session of the Bazaine Court Martial was resumed this morning. Several documents submitted by the prosecution were read, the most important of which was one showing that Bazaine was responsible for the delay in husbanding provision in Metz, by neglecting to inform his officers of t ic situation, and thus preventing them from taking the necessary precautions against scarcity. Uivsrre's report was then taken up and its reading concluded. Riverre says, in rlinquishiog the chief command of the army, the Emperor gate his last order to Bazaine, which was to retreat t j Though this order was repeatedly insisted upon, Bazaine aimed to escape the Emperor's control. He deceived the Emperor, and causing, as he did by his false information, the advance towards Monlmedy, greatly shared the responsibility for the disaster at Sedan. Alluding to the negotiation between Regnier and Bazaine, the report says Bazaine never ought to have listened to a stranger without credentials. It was his duty to take the field, er if unable to do so, to barrass the enemy by repeated sorties and obtain provisions. Bazaine's army While was the only hope of the nation. it existed nothing could be lost. Bazaine was anxious about the form of government, but the Empress when granting a farewell audience to Gen. Bourbaki, advised him to proceed to Tours and offer his sword in the cause of the nation, rejecting the convention, the first condition of which was the dismemberment of the tprritory of the country. Upon the conclusion of reading the report the court adjourned for the day. Havana, 8. On the night of the 28th, Guantanalo was struck by the tail of the hurricane. All vessels in port were driven ashore, the roofs of many houses were blown off, and other damage resulted to the buildings. Some damage was caused by high water in the streets near the shore. Many houses were flooded, the doors broken in and the furniture washed away. Several persons were drowned. Most all of the telegraph lines are down on the island, and communication is much interrupted. At Seaga eeveral veesda went ashore and were wrecked. The cane crop suffered eeverely at Quielra Hacha. All the villages along the const suffered eeverely Irom the floods. The English schooner "Mischief', was wrecked, and ' is a total loss. The crew was saved. Official reports state that the Insurgents,' one thousand strong, surprised the Spanish column near 11 Iguir, and during the engagement the Spanish commander was wounded and taken prisoner. The Spanish loss iu killed, wounded tod prisoners was 12f. The remainder eiuforc4 aud pur of the column was Twenty-seve- n Cho-Ion- s. , " sued the Insurgents, encountering them in their encampment in the chapparal. The Insurgents were beaten and obliged to abandon their camp. The Spanish loss in this engagement was 11 killed and several wounded. The Insurgent loss was reported as double that number, V body of Iusurgents in the Central de partment, under Maxuro Gomez, attack ed Santa Cruz Delsur, but were repulsed, leaving 13 killed m the village. The Spanish loss was one officer and five soldiers killed. The Insurgents afterwards attacked another village, but were u sed with a loss of seven killed. Two hundred and seventy men of the column and joined the force of Dieg es of Col. Esponde. Firing was heard on the 2d inst. at Gique, between Auderon and San Cristoral, where Col. Esponde came up with the Insurgents. The result f the engagement is unknown. Pre cautionary defensive measures have been taken here. re-p- Logan Branch, WHOLESALE RETAIL AND Dry Goods, tiroeeries, Hardware, Hoot and Shoes, lints and Caps, Crook cry, GlaKMvarc, Motions, itc, Ac. Stoves and Tinware, How the Dcseeiidanis or Ethan Allen Put Out a Fire. Gents9 Correspondence of the Paubury News. Drugs & Jlcdicinc and Boy's Beady Made Clothiity, IN GItEAT VARIETY. I passed the last week in July in a .country town in Vermont. You may remember how hot it was. Well, Sunday we had service in the village church as usual; and if anything will make a man sleepy, it is to walk to church under a pelting hot sun, on a dusty road, and then, overcome with the heat, listen to a dry sermon delivered in a monotonous Champion tone. That Sunday all these conditions were favorable and nearly the whole Bain, "Whitewater and Studebaker Wagons, congregation were gently snoring before the second hymn was suug, so that when ALSO- ,the minister commenced to read that hymn which, began "Sleepers! wake,' many of the now awakened sleepers toought to themselves, of course, they all said they hadn't slept a minute, that AND EVERY DESCRIPTION OP he was rather person il. But during the sermon they were all slumbering peacefully, and their nasal organs were all sending forth a "joyful noise unto the air," when suddenly the church bell was Uujrgles to Order on Short Notice. rung, and a voice in the entry cried out "Joe Robinson's woods afire!" Instant ly every sleeper was awake, and in a moment tie preacher was before an empty house. Now the young men of that church being of a literary turn ot mind, had read all about the Chicago ITIiKliujjN. and Boston, and other great fires, and were bound their town should not be All Kinds of Produce Forwarded to Any Point on the Shortest .Notice. burned if they could prevent it. So about twenty of them, all dressed in AH Orders Sent to M. THATCHER, Logan, trill Receive , their Sunday clothes, set out for II the owned which near nine miles away, Fromjtt Attention. est fire engine. They made pretty good time, got there in about two hour?; and perspiring, dusty, tired and But they sought the engine-houscouldn't get in, and learned from the neighbors that the man who had the key lived about a mile away. Dispatching one of their number to get the key, the nineteen weary ones eat down to swear ooand brush their clothes, and wonder. why "that fool of a Jim" didn't come HAVE OPENED IN LOGAN k OGDEN, BRANCIIKS OF OUU WAGON Meantime Jim went to the WE and MACHINE DEPARTMENT, so that the people of the Northern house and asked for the key. The lady who came to the door informed him that Counties can purchase without coming to Salt Lake City. her husband had gone fishing and taken the key with him; why he had taken it, or w hen he would be back she did not Supplied to then points as beinij the best, after much itud;and exporienee, and knew that Purchaser know; he was fishing in a river about a can rely on tlii leconiineiidatiou. Jim half mile beyond the engine-housuttered a remark inappropriate to the Sabbath day, and quietly asked for a drink of water. Rejoining his compan ions, he sent one of them to the fisher man to get the key. He got it, and the gallant but not hungry twenty poured CM but the rope by into the engine-houswhich the engine was drawn was gone 3IO WEISS, However, they learned from the people near by, that the man who held the key SULKY RAKES. THRESHING MACHINES had that morning lent the ropes to Mr. Abijah Beales, who wished to haul stone on the morrow. Fortunately Mr. Beales The Celebrated THOMAS SMOOTH IXU HARROW, warranted to make the W P.. lived near by, and a man was sent for Bed and to lift thn lint cultivator for gr&xif, grain, corn or potatoes, yet lamented. Our be it FaruitM can have a Harrow ou trial. the rope immediately. Thww Dnpurtmeuts will also tfv Information and recaiv ordem for TURBINS WIIEL?, SICT But wlile he was returning, another MAC1UN3, ijiUST uud SAW MILLS, ur other articles hot unuully kept lu ktot k. which the at was made, prodiscovery fanity became terrific. This was, that MOSES THATCHER, AGF.VT, L00AN. the handles by which the machine was worked were gone. One of the lookers-oIJAKARt WHITE, AOENT, OGDEN. said he had borrowei the bandies to ' SOtf H. B. CLAWS0F4, Superintendent. "pole his hay" with, and that they were on his meadow? five miles away. "But I'll hitch up my team and get them for you for tw6 dollars," he generously added. His offer was accepted, and in about two hours and a half he brought back the handles, saying "It's a warm flay and I didn't want to hurry the horses." Trofanity was too mild they kept silent. At last they started for home with that engine at about three o'clock in the afternoon. "Better late than never," said they. Manfully they toiled ' home with their burden; only GROESBIXTC BLOCK, SALT LAKE CITY, dropping one companion, who fell and broke his arm, another who was detailed to assist him. and a third who sprainTHEIR LARGE STOCK OF BEST SELECTED . ed his ankle; and when at 6 p. in. they arrived home to find the fire had been entirely subdued by half a dozen men in about as many minuter; perhaps they were polite iu their expressions. And when they went to put the engine in a barn for the night, they ran it against a tree and damaged it, and it cost them $50 to get it repaired. Also, it cost PREPARATORY TO A CHANGE IN. BUSINESS. each young man the value of a suit of 00 clothes, as his Sunday ones were ruiued; and many of them couldn't go to work the next week, and lost several days waga; and now it is beautiful to hear a stranger mention fire to one of those twenty young men, and .see what a splendid style of hitting each young gentleman has. They keep themselves in training by just practicing on who talk on JisMgreeabh subjects. lt3 tf CBLEBBATED SINGER SEWING MACHINES, and Excelsior Mowers and Reapers, Wood's Wincliesler and Democrat IJght Spring Wagon, arming Implements. California and Concord Harness and Harness Trimmings. Loatlier luul Slioo II. B, CLA WSON, Superintendent. foot-sor- e. Z . C. M. -- key-holder- I 's WE GUARANTEE WAGONS & MACHINERY e. WHITEWATER, BAIX and KTUJEISAKEi: WAGONS, AJIPIOX, WOODS, EXCELSIOR and WOULD Droppers or Self Kaisers. and e, 1 lis pa r 0 ARE SELX'I N G OUT 23 K. I CHEAP FOR CASH! : Jobbing a Specialty. Window and Plate Glass u-- pple . LO WEll TllAX EVER ! |