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Show If J " " "'' ' ' " ' ' 1 ; 7 LC " ' ' ' 'l' ' ' ' ' fft4.00 TEAR. .... IK. CK Xo. 87. AKK1 6.45 pjn. 7.40 a.m. 6.40 p.m. City, donl.le dairy, - 7.50 a.W. Tliruh Mail daily ThrougLMsiiUUily Cult Lnke West DKFARTCH. 8.40 a.m. douWfe daily -Mail daily Mail daily 6.30 p.m. 6.20 p.m. 8.40 .jn. CLOSING. 7.00 a.m. Lake and the Knst tat Salt 6.(10 p.m. i,r Rich County, mails ro via Evannton, Wyum- IVtlU ll'avo mc i.inci iiiff M,w . 2 i in at urn ftum-dav- . and Cache Count v, Tuesdays, Thursdays 6.00 D.tn. Sandavs Dftily to LojtwiJ.-Ric5.00 R.m. an J Thnmlayn Tuesdays C.unty, IM p.ui. x.irtk Ot'du, Mondays and Thursday and SaturUaiitsTdle, Wednesday 7.00 .jn. 3.30 p.m. Miwdavs and Thursdays 3.00 p.m. Riwrdiie. Wediiesda.VK and Saturdays lloonerville and Vlma, Wcdueatiayg - v 11.30 a.m. aud Saturdays nil. . . TTVTT1S 6.45 p.m. 8.15 a.m. euwal Delivery, Sunday, o p.m. i o.. ij.i. . lmUSTKY DEl'AKTMEN'T 3 p.m. Open from 9 a.m-t- o M0NKY OFFICE DEl'AKTMEMT. Open from 8 a.m. to S p.m. Outside Door open from 6 a.m. to 8 p.m. JOSEPH 11 ALL, rostmwter s-- Trains- P. train arrives " P. " P. " leaves""- - U. U. P.- C. C. " - - ' -- train arrives , - and leaves and ' " ' , a.m. p.m. p.m. a.m. a.m. p.m. a.m. p.m. 7.40 5.40 ' 6.20 8.60 7.60 5.45 8.40 6.30 -- ... C. r Naval Engagement off tho East of Spain ! The Insurgents Defeated A Double Murder Caused ly a Wife's Infidelity ! Another Murder for Se duction ! Closing of the Evangili ! . LyBrW'n Clt' riiriJ?latrvirta; C. F BY TELEGRAPH. DIRECTORY. ARRIVAL ANB CLOSING OF MAILS, LCl'brongh I, WEDKJ2SDA - Religious Services at a.m., and Every Sunday, in theTaliernacIe, Jn the Second Ward Schoollnmso 11 Farley' ScUool-toHat 6 p.m. se School-hous- e and Third Wa--Episcopal Church at 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. Methodist Church atll a.m. and 7 p.m. 7.30 p.m. Spiritualist Lectures (Child's Hall), at cal Alliance AMERICAN. Washington, 13. Martin T, Conway, who was arrested no Saturday last for shooting l'omeroy, will have a preliminary hear morn ingat the police court ing. Pomeroy denies the statement that he will decline to prosecute Conway, ana says the complaint will be enterei. by the officer who made the arrest, but all who witnessed the - shooting have been summoued, together with the who will also give his testi : mony. and The Supreme Court met immediately adjourned that the Justices might pay their annual visit t the Pres ident. A meeting was then held to take action concerning the death of Chief Justice Chase. Keverdy Johnson pre sided, and made a fitting address. After an interval of a few minutes, Merrick reported a series of resolutions eulogistic of the character of the deceas ed, and tendering to his family the sin cere sympathy of the meeting in their loss; and, farther, that the Attorney General of the United States be request ed to move in the Supreme Court that the resolutions be entered into the mm utes. and as a further mark of respect, that the members of ' the bar will wear the usual badge of mourning for thirty days. New York, 13. The action of the Dean of Canterbury in taking part in the celebration of the Lord's supper, in Madison Square Prcs- bytertan Church, on feunday, Oct. oth, has caused, as was expected, much (lis cussion among members of the Angeli can and Protestant churches; and letters havetbeen written to the Dean and Bishop Totter, of the Diocese, by the lliglit Reverend Dr. Tozer, late Mission ary Bishop to Central Africa. A tardy publication is this morning given to these letters, the existence and import of which has been known for some days In a letter to Uishop Potter, Dr. Tezer says: "It is by no means improbable that restless and unstable persons in England, will sieze upon this act, of what I must presume to be an open hos tility to the discipline of the church, as an excuse and apology for attending from time to time the at tractive services of the Church of Fiome; but the result of this experiment here in America may be even more disastrous; tar so far as Dr. Smith's inlluence extends it will suggest the idea that the praraise, held out by the Episcopal Church in this land, of becoming a haven of rest by men who re tossed to and fio by Uie multiplicity of contending creeds and systems is ' nothing else than a mistake and deluto-da- : : Oglcu City Library , News Depot. At JoJm G. Chambers' very day, Sundays excepted. pen WHITEHEAD, G. FOURTH STREET, Four Doors from Z, C M, J., DEALER GENERAL IX DOOTS & SHOES, LEATHER and SHOE FINDINGS, At Produce the Lowest Prices. Taken, CASHPAID for IXODES. REPAIRS NEATLY EXECUTED. y J. S. LEWIS, WATCHMAKER AND JEWEIER, Denier in Jewelry, Silver nnd Watf.'he, C)x-ksl 4 Pldlt W'.i U'PULTT I'VillV.V Repairing neatly done and all work warranted , T XT ll-!- y RESVIOVED. TF VOD 1 WANT A TH0M90NIAS DOCTOR OR Thomeonion Melicie, CALL ON DR. MURPHY, KAIN ST, POST OFFICE, SITE (MiDEN. Foe, $1.00. Cossuliation HAD" XORTIIERX SIX DOORS SALOOX, CM. I. LOGAN. Toes axd liquors, alesaxd porter, Measure Cigars tost quality. or at 25 ds. per Drink. anl Tobacco of tli Finest Brands Butter Eggs, Chickens and all taken in exchange. kinds of Grain D. NELSON, Prop'r. 8. M. Pettengill & Co.j 10 State Str ti nt raiii iww, xt, new Vnflr ivi cumuli, oi ui Chestnut Street,. rMladelpnia, re ouf Ag?r.s for procuring advertise-'ne5t- s in the Oc.dkn Junction for Boston , Philadeldhia, and authorized to(coa- ; for Advertising at. our lowest rates. -- --, Pn. 1- sion." . appointed to wait on Mayor JIavemeyer to see what could be done about modifying the contract system so as to give 60,000 perstns, who were last year depending upon the Commissioners of Charities, some means of earning their own bread, reported that the Mayor would do nothing, and that he said he did not enre if one million people were without the chance of earning a livelihood this winter. , Suit began against Eenyon, Cox & Co. to restrain Daniel Drew, special partner of the firm from disposiirg of his property, which, it is alleged, the is doing in order to escape his liabilities in connection with the Canada Sonthern railroad bonds, which weYe aid to have caused the failure of Kenyan, Oox & Co. There were two significant services, yesterday, at the conclusion of the Evangelical Alliaece, at Dr. Hall's Presbyterian church. Tlie communion service was administered by Episcopal Bishop CummiHS.'ef Kentucky, assisted by Dr. A mot, of Edinburgh, and Dr. Dorner, of Betiin. r The Bishop remark, ed, that !in! all of iulimiaistry I.he had never before tommuned with his but this should not be the last time. At Dr. Booth's Pree byHeHfiuCciiixlS fitv? DrI f the Chure& of England, assisted the A committee sl-S- WEST OF Z. of the very semi--weekl- t, and SATUJIDA Y.) $LOO per nn. Y, OOBEX, UTAH. SATURDAY. OCTOKEU IS. 1873. Ojrdcn Post OfUcc: v"Cl'hr.,i:h - ( --v OCDEN . i- ptjblishbd; pastor in the administration of the communion. Both churches were crowded. These circumstances, taken in connection with a letter of the late missionary Bishop of Zanzibar.' to the Lord Bishop of New York, in which he takes the Dean of Canterbury to task for his participation in the Presbytehian communion, last weok, indicates the probability of a stir among the chinches. Memphis, 13. The fever ravages continue frightful, but there are hopes of a speedy reaction. Sanitary work is being so vigorously pushed that it is hoped the malaria will be eradicated in a few. days. Physicians think the worst is past. New cases are not so numerous or malignant Several large houses have closed to stay so during the affliction. It is estimated that ten thousand persons remain in the All societies and organizations city. need help, and look to the charity of the world. It is reported the fever is raging in Brownsville, Texas. Six new cares'are reported at various points near Memphis, on the lines o: railroad, and may be at tributed to persons going lroin the city with infliction in their systems. St. Louis. 13. Near Carrclton, Mo., last Friday night, Robert Austin, a wealthy young farmer, who suspected the fidelity of his wife, announced his departure for St Louis, but returned to his closet, in his armed with a wife retired, gun. Shortly after-hiElijah Haley, a young man, came in and prepared to reare, when Austin sprang out and fared one barrel at him, but in stead, ttruck his wife, inflicting a fata wound. He then shot Haley dead with the other barrel, Mrs. Austin died on Saturday. Austin surrendered to the . double-barrele- bed-roo- d s authorities. ; i 11 Nashville, 13. Jas. Hogan, a boy nineteen years old, shot, and killed 11. M. Rich ards, proprietor of the Academy of Music, who had seduced his sister and re fused to marry her. Uogan surrendered himself to the police. To-da- y, FOREIGN. Paris, 12. Rivierre's report against Bazaine says eleven thousand soldiers of the army surrendered at Metz died while prisoners in Germany. It would have been pre ferable and more glorious if those lives had been lost in a sortie. The honor of the army is symbolized by Its flues. Ba zaine, instead of destroying those flags, and thereby lessening the humiliation of the surrender, delivered them to the enemy. Duke d'Autnalc, President of VOL. IV. the 'Vittoria" was endeavoring to intercept the retreat of the Insurgent frigate "Tetaun" broadsides were closely exchanged between those two vessels. Wilkle Colling. The following is tha brief speech of Wilke Collins to the Lotos Club at the reoeption accorded him : Mr. President and Gentlfmen Many years ago more years than I now quite like to reckon I was vis- iting ut Sorrento, in the Bay of, Naples, with uiy father, mother and brothers, as a boy of 13. At that time of my life, as at this time of my life, I was an insatiable reader of that order of books for which heavy peo ple bave invented the name of light literature. Laughter.. In due course of time I exhausted the modest resources of the library which we had brought to Naples," and found myself faced with tho necessity of borrowing from the resources of our fellow travelers, summer residents of . Sorrento like ourselves. Amons: them was a certain countryman of yours, very tall, very lean, very silent and very melancholy. In what cir cumstances the melancholy of this gentleman took its' rise' I am not able to tell you. The ladies thought it was a disappointment in love. The men attributed it to a cause infinitely more serious thai that, I wean mdi- unetner ne snnerea in gesuon. of' whether he suffered in heart, stomach, I took, I remember, a boy's unreasonable fancy to him, passing over dozens of other people, appar ently far more acceptable than he was. I ventured to look up to the tall American it was a long way to look up and said in a trembling voice: "Can you lend me a book?" He looked down to me it was a long way to look down and said : '"l have got but wo amusing books. One of them is the 'Sorrows of Wer-ter- ,' and the other is the 'Sentimental Journey.' Laughter. You are to welcome both books those heartily Take them home, and when you have read them bring them back and dine with me, and tell what you think of them. I took them liomo and read and I told him what I thought them, of them much more freely thau I would now. And last, not least, I had an excellent diuner, crov n d with cake, which was an epoch in my youthful existence, and which, I may say, lives gratefully and greasily in my memory to the present day. (.' Applause. , the court martial, yesterday, ordered that Bazaiue's justification memorial be read. It deals briefly with only tho chief points of the indictment, relates tho events, leaveslhe charges unanswered, holds his lieutenants responsible for the bad execution of movements ordered, re grets that they have now turned against him, and concludes with the statement that eventj were stronger than the writer, whbse conscience reproaches him with nothing. The President di rected the prisoner to rise and remain standing during the reading of the heads of the indictment. The marshal exhibit Wow, lur. President and gentle- ed deep emotion when the part was i T i .11 reached where he is accused of not do men, l venture to ten you tnis ior ing everything prescribed by duty and one reason. I mark my first expehonor. rience of American kindness and London, 13. iVmerican hospitality. In many dif The Times special from Cartagena, ferent this early expression of ways, gives particulars of the engagement beand kindness hospitality has tween the Spanish government squadron your after life, now in Ln under Admiral Lobos, and the licet of mingled in my on vessels. the Continent, until it Upon appear- gland, now Intransigente ance off the harbor of the national squad- has culminated in this magnificent ron, the Intransigente junta held a con Lotos from Club. the sultation, and decided to fight, although reception but not am touched, only gratified they had no hope of achieving a victory. which manner the in Some of the garrison were in favor of by you have and but the the the majority, greeted me, city, cordiality with surrendering especially the deserters from the gov which the remarks of your president ernment army, were determined upon have been received. I venture to resisting to the last. Gen Contreias and several members of the Junta went say that I see in this reception some on board the "Numancia." All the morn- thing more than a recognition of my ing was consumed by the Insurgent ves humble labors, only I think I see a sels in taking in coal and provisions. At recognition of English literature, libnoon on baturday everything being in and sincere,which, readiness four vessels weighed anchor eral, spontaneous, and sailed out of the harbor amid loud I think, is an honor to you as well as cheers from the populace and Insurgent an honor to me. In the name of the troops. After proceeding a short dis JJnglish literature, I beg gratefully to tance Admiral Lobos' fleet were met and thank oxL Ou my own behalf I tho engagement instantly begun. The bes to assure, you that I shall pot fight lasied two hours, when the Insur soon forget tho encouragemeut you gent's fieet was defeated and driven back to Cartagena, their vessels being have offered me at the outset of' my sadly damaged. The Insurgents showed career in 'America.1; Teainit; ine to great spirit but handled their ships bad- now' remind you that I am now'speak ly, tha ,Namancia" nt first having to sincere gratitude, bear the .brunt of the battle alone. .The ing thc.Janguage'pf is and that essentially a laUguaijtt i' firing generally was. at too long range, wbfds. Applause. ut at tne ciose pi tne engagement, wnue a very. few' . . . '': ; The "Twelve O'clock Han." The "Twelve O'CIock Man" died in Brooklyn last Friday; he was not generally mourned, and we are not told that a large crowd of persons followed his ' body to the grave. But the "Twelve O'CIock Man" was known by sight by many persons w ho daily passed the City Hall at noon. For seven years he had stood near Ihe City Hall, within sight of the clock, from 11 o'clock until the first stroke of the noonday bell, when he had slouched away to his home. For more than five years his daily position was at a particular part of the railing, against the piekets of which he leaned, and looked mournfully at the clock. If spoken to, he would mumble out an answer to the effect that he was wntting for somebody: 'He'll come by 12 o'clock; he said he would." The old man would never fail to stand at his chosen post at that hour of the day; he was never properly clad, but in the hardest storm of rain and wind or snow, on the coldest Winter day or the hottest Summer clay, he could always lo seen at the City Hall at noon. No ' on knew his history, but' many guessed a piteous Usitory of his life. It is now told that he Was a monomaniac (which every body knew); that he LuJ saved a Bum of money by hard work; that the money was borrowed of him with a promise to pay it, with interest, on a certain day, at noon, in front of the City Hall. But the old man never saw the borrower again. He did odd chores in the morning and earned pennies enough te buy food; ho lived in an old hut; he was dirty; his croziness did not come from a great and noblo 'grief from the loss of a loved relative or friend, but from the loss of a sum of money, ho was every day gazed at with open-eyeastonishment by the idlers in the streets; he died. Some one lias drawn his picture for a d Brooklyn Club, and a resident of the neighborhood has tied a piece of crape upon the railings by winch he used (o stand. d warm-hearte- He Sticks to His Poftt. One of the subordinates of the Texas and Pacific Railway writes as follows from Shrcvcport, La., tho yellow fever stricken city. The letter is genuine, and is a mixture of extraordinary coolness and courage: Yours f the 10th to hand. Am ready with thirty men in gang to lond iron. There i however, a' perfect panic here, and it is not ed. There are at this hour at least three huudrcd sick people in this city, and out of this number there are at least ono hundred and fifty cases of yellow fecr and it is very malignant. Men aro well and they go to the grave. Business, in a measure, is abandon ed. Those that are well are nursiDg tho sick. Tho deiiot is the only in stitution in town, outside of drug stores, that holds out, and, ere you get this, some of us may be down. During the late war I was in 105 bat tles and skirmishes, and have eineo been through frightful epidemics, but nothing has ever taxed my nerves like this plague. Tho half has not been told yeu. Coffins lay beside open graves for hours waiting for interment. No one. can have an idea of our affliction unless he or she could be here for a few days and see personally. I am not afraid, and hope to keep well and serve tho company's best interests as I have done for six years until the last moment; and then if I die I will hare the satisfaction to know thatT died in harness and at my post. You ean just btt your bottom dollars that Woxe" will do his best to handle freights, and hia only regret is that we are prevented' from making a big season f it. Sisters of Chanty from Jefferson and New Orleans are expected also some ' doctors from other poiats. One doctor died last night aud sev' eral are down. ' AVe are greatly in need , of good nurses, and good doctors, Old nurses and doctors-rlierf'fi' II.--' are almost worn'out"-'1- ' , ill-fou- nd to-da- y, to-cta- y; a i r .i .: k L mil ;:0 JW J |