OCR Text |
Show Bq 04:.OO 1ER YEAH. ilte-- i : Ogdcn Post ; i 5.45 p.m. 7.40 a.m. 5.40 p.m. , 1 . C.30 p.m. 6.'0 Mall-dail- p.m. 8.40 a.m. 7.00 ajn. por Salt Lake nnd th YUuft 5.00 p.m. Yur Salt Ijkc and the Went i County, mail ro vi Kvamttnn, Wyom(fur leave the 'It-l;place for Ricli Comity, ing, 2 p.m. Wt'to winy aud Sut'riy rtt CaclieVrtiiity Tuesday,. ThlirstlayDMid i . '.. i.00 p.m. Sunday Daily tlAKali J '. p.m. Rich Comity, Tnwduys and Thursdiiy 2.3U p.m. Kii tk (.Vdwn, Moiiiln.ru .nd Thursday , lluutsn-UlcWednesday Mid 'S.rur- - , ' - . 7.30 a.m. ,iaTs Lynms Plain City aud ?'aor ille, 3.30 Jlojtdjiyoand Tlmrsdny p.it. 3.00 p.m. Rivt'iilaK', V'ilnesdayn and Satttrday .r anl Vlmti, Wednesdays U(H'pwille - , lLo'Ja.m. aui fi.tturdavs OFFICE HOURS.-- , " j ,t .m.' i , 6.45 p.m. 6euert Delivery, 5- K.li 6.30 p.m. Snndav, p.m. t DKl'AKTMKXT KKtil!TKV p.m. Open frmi 3 n.m-to- 3 M0N1-A- ' OFFICK DEl'ARTMKMT. Open from 9 a.m. t a p.m. Outside Door open from a.m. to 8 p.m. JOSIU'U HALL, I'onti.iaster. ? ; , , . . Ki-l- ... ' ,.. ' '' , Trains - - " CP. " P. Us V. C. - arrives C. T. train U. V. ". " " leaves -- " ' train arrives and leaves 0ml " . ' 7.40 a.m. t"- - '- . , 8.50 n. m. 7.50 a.m. .5.4o p.rrt. ; 8.40 a.m. - - - P-- 0.20p.m. - - 5 ' " C.30 p.m. Services Religious tlit Tabernacle, at a.m., and 11 Every Snnitev, in 'ard Sclioollioiia. Farley' Scond An tlie e tkdiool-tou- Ht 5 p.m., and Third Wa d ' Kpisropal Church at 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. Methodist Church at 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. Lecture (Child's Hall), at.7.30 p.m. Spiritual Sdiool-liuux- e ; it Osdcn'cilF Ncwi Library ' pen WHITEHEAD, G. F0UIITII STREET, OGDKX, Four Doors from Z. C M, I.f DEALER GENERAL BOOTS A SHOES, anil IjEATIIElt 1IXDIXC3S, - SHOE -- Produce At the Lowest Prices. Taken. CAS H P AID for . KEPAIRS I-ITD-ES. NEATLY EXECUTED. , 2-- i- Speech by A. H. ' Stephens ' ' ' ' , ;;"!':- AMERICAN. - Washington, 11. In the House Beck oli'ered u reolulion to redirecting the Posttnastcr-Geneiii- l port how many employees of till grades it w ill require to carry on the postal eavjugs institution, asf recommended by hifn, and that he furnipb infonnation as to the postal telegraph tystem. : J. S. LEWIS, WATCHMAKER AND JEWELER, Dealer iu Watclien, Clock,. Jewelry, Silver and timed Ware, MAIN STKUET. OGUKN. warranted. Repairing neatly done and all work ;.!!' Adopted, Hoar 'reported & bill to 'establish an EJucational i'uud, and to apply the pro- ceeds of the sale of pub ic lands to the education of the people. It enacts that ihe net proceeds of the sales of public lands shall be forever coasecruted and set apart for the educatiou of the people, provided the actsliall not repeal, impair or suspend any law authorizing preemption or homestead entries, nor abridge the power of Congress over the public, ddmatn, nor interfere with granting bounty laud to soldiers and sailors of the late war. Without discussion the bill went over till Tuesday uexCaiul the House resumed the consideration of the bill jn relation to salaries. , Poland favored his" amendment, offered some xlnys ago, to make the compensation of Congressmen $5,000 a year, aud saiil it was amply Bufficieut lor him ' ' ' to live upon. Stephens, of Ga , was the next speaker. He rose to his feet w ith some difficulty, and not without aid from one of the pages. He stood supporting himself njth a grutch under his Jeft arm., ..Many and gathered members lleft; around him, nud he was listened to with marked attention, lie spoke with w men was dis i ringing voice,, ji ciearr.Aodibte in very portion of the tinctly chamber.! His manner was nervous and his remarks very digressive, many of his sentences being incomplete. After speaking of the comments of the press, Stephens said : The gentleman from New York Freeman had spoken yesterday of deuiagogueisuw He Stephens maiutained thai there oould be no states-mship without it. Ttiere never had been a statcsmau who was not a demagogue There were I wo kinds of demagogues the sham and genuine. The genuine demagogue was a man who led the .people, who guided ihe people: the sham demagogue paudered to the errors and prejudices of tUe people. He was very glad to say that the increase ofi.be salary bill i was a measure for which neither political party was responsible. His opinion was that the Democrats, in proporiion to their votes in Congress, were 'iuiie as responsible as the Republicans, v The , first great thing to be learned in life, as taught in the schools of aniicnt times, was to discriminate between that which the multitude thought was right, and that which was right in itself. He claimed that when Congress passed (he retroactive law of the last session it had the constitutional right to do so. Ho was not saying whether it was expedient or not, but no blush should rest on the cheek of any man, whether he voted for it or not. He 6hould have felt that he was as justly entitled to it as he was to receive one dollar a day. It was a constitutional law, constitutionally passed, and they were as much entitled to the whole of it as they were to any. If any thought it wns too much and received it, he (.Stephens) would net cast a slur upon him for doing so. lie was not going to a place a vatue upon his own services as Representative, but if he were to state what he thought the services of Representatives ought to be worth, be would of any law that go far above the figure He 'had given it been ever has passed. as his opinion in the last speech he had made in the House, fourteen years ago, that if the salaries of 1he members of $15,-00Congress were $10,000, Senators Court the of Supreme Justice Chief $20,000, Associate Judges $25,000, and the rest $10,000, it would be better for the country at large. He held the same opiniau still. He certainly could not vote for the bill reported by ihe committee, but believjed that the most unwise action of last Congress was the abolition of the franking privilege. Garfield replied to .Stephens, taking views as to particular exception to his He salaries. of high the propriety decided that had the that people thought the Congressional pay whs oo great, to that ami Tonsrcss ought to the bills pre- of none though judgment, . .heir-seat- Dopot. At .Tnlm G. Cliamberg' very day, Sunday excepted. 'EpajlAPIT . , Salt Lake City, d.mble daily, 7.50 a.m. West. Through Mail daily ( East, Through Mail daily DRPtRn'OE. ' 1 fait bake City, double daily 8.40 a.m. Went, Through ' Ka,st, Through Mail daily s a : REWSOVED. TF 1. YOU WANT A TH0US0XIAN DOCTOR OR Thomsonion Medicine, CALL ON DR. MURPHY, 01'1'OSITK P08T OFFICE, MAIN ST., Oi)I)EK. CoxtsuiiAtiox Fee, $1.00. Office mil NORTUERX SIX DOORS WEST OF SALOON, 2. C. M. I. LOGAjST. wises am) liquors, JLLESASD rOBTER, ofthe 1 very best quality. Measure or Cigars and per Drink. Tobacco of the at 25 cts. Finest Brands. Butter, Eggs, Chickens and all lauds of Grain taken in exchange. 13. NELSON, Trop'r. OgfS. M. Pcttengill & Co., 10 State Street, Doston, 37 Park Row, Newlork, aad 701 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, are our Agents for procuring advertisement in theOcuEX JukctioK for Boston nd Philadeldhiti, and authorited to contract for at eur Kjwest rates. advertising iff " Proceedings in Congress. ARRIVAL AND CLOSING OF MAILS. fd - SEMI-WEEKL- Y, ei.oo 33p.it.B,,4iii.1 J . IV. - " Oflicc: ARRIVALS. r . u, BY - "FTJiBIii'aiSiaEEII), OGBEX, UTAH, WEDXKSDAY, DIXKJIIiKH 17. 1S73. . OCDEM DIRECTORY. i rn " rri ;" ... . 3. JJo. 10 SStEiftiSil rsssm 1 0, advocated the minority report, and arthat ,t.he majority bill would gued strengthen that element of personal government which has grown up to a degree. He criticized the recommendation of the President in regard to erecting mansions in Washington for public officials, and in regard to giving the President the right to veto a po'rtion of a bill. He wanted no principle to bo estfltlished which would surrender still further legislative dignity aud nuthority. At 4 p. m. Hale moved the previous question of the third reading of the bill, but the friends of the minor-itbill, and all favoring the more sweeping measure and all opponents, combined to defeat the motion, the vote standing yeas, 100. nays, 145. Orth theu recommended the bill to a select committee with instructions to report a bid repealing the whole salary act of last Congress so far as could be done' under the constitution, and to ascertain the average amount of the salary, mileage, and 'all other expenses, exclusive of any estimate for the f ranking privilege, that was paid t Senators, Representatives and Delegates in the Forty-firs- t Congress, and to report a bill, fixing the compensation at the amount thus ascertained, as nearly as practicable, with necessary traveling expenses; and restoring ull other salaries as they were before the passage of the act. The Speaker, in answer to a number of inquiries all over the liMise.explaincd the parliamentary status of the bill, and without coming to a vote on the proposition the House adjourned. The Senate met at noon. Vice Presi dent Wilson being absent, Anthony moved that Matthew A. Carpenter be elected pro km. President of the Senate. Steven son nominated Allen G. Ihurman.' Allen and Stevenson were appointed tellers. ihe vote was by ballot and resulted, Carpenter 82, Thurman 1C, blank 2; whote number of vlts c ist, 43; necessary to a choice 25. Carpenter was escorted to the chair by Thurmm, and before taking his seat, said : "Senators, please accept my grateful thanks." The usual order was made directing the Secrelaiy to not ity the Presidcut aud House of the election of Carpenter. Sumner called up the bill introduced by him on the first day of the session for a substitution of compound interest for legal tender notes, aud addressed the Senate in favor thereof. He said he was for specie paymen at the earliest day, aud would support any measure to secure thai end. fcumner said inflation was tlsath to business; contraction was the piopcr remedy. The substitution proposed by his bill, which was endorsed by prominent business men and leading papers east and west, was in the nature uf contraction but without taking a dollar from the people. The present disordered currency owed its origin to Congress. The exigency of war has ceased, and Congress should improve the financial condition. The bill was referred to the finance committee. Davis offered a resolution directiug the Secretary of th 3 Senate to furnish a history of all the back pay laws ever passed by Congress, including the details of tue amounts paid under them, Uub-gero- y the Senate went into .executive session, and soon after adjourned. The Navy department has completed all necessary arrangements providing for the reception from the Spanish forces, in the Harbor of Havana, of ihe steamer Virginius" and for the' transfer of the survivors at Santiago Je Cuba, from prison to the U. S. vessels of war, in accordance with the terms of the diplomatic agreement. The "Cannndaigua," carrying len guns, and commanded by Captain Lowry will sail from New York for. Havuua to receive the prisoners at Santiago on the "Juniata." Rear Admiral Scott, at Key West, will have the strongest naval force under his command that has been collected by the government since the lerminatiou of the war. 7 FOREIGN, Havana, 11. Capt.'Gen. Jovcllar, this evening, issued an uddress to the inhabitants of Cuba, saying: The moment a treaty was issued between the government of Spain and the United States, my duty although painful it may be, is to comply faithfully with its terms. For this I have received final crders. A failure to comply with the same would produce a war, and a war with a great power without the aid of Spain. In the meanwhile I will obey the law of necessity and Ihe orders of the government of the Spanish Republic. Let us deliver up the "Virginius'' and the survivors "of her passengers nud crew. 1 have faith in the nobleness of of your procedures iu compliance with my word." (Signed) . . JuAyi-E- Joy ELLA n Xcutly Done. A rery neat elopement took place from near llusselville, Ky., the other day. Miss Aniauda McCarley had two principal suitors-i-IIora- ce Kobcy, a bachelor, and Judge 'Adams, a widower. The paternal McCarley favored liobey, and would not let the Judge couie to his house. So the a poor chance to win the usual in the way. Miss Auianda lady was permitted to drive out with Horace, who thought Le as good as had her. Lately, one Sunday, they drove to hear preaching, and around to various places of interest and houses of friends. They went to Parson Morrow's to dinner. A very iunocent place to go to, is a parson's; everything safe and sound there. But Judge Adams was at Parson Morrow's to dinner, too. The Judge had a fast team, and after dinner he proposed to Auianda to take a drive with him. She consented. Robey could not prevent it, and the couple drove out, leaving Horace Robey to be entertained by the Sunday reflections of the parson. Well, the Judge and Miss Auianda did not return, and Horace Robey drove home iu the dark. The next heard of the etc. runaways wa3 that they were in NathGordon offered a series of resolutions alie, and married. prefixed by & long preamble, recitiug in substance that the abolition of the frankA Scene. ing privilege had deprived agriculturists of many valuable seeds and much inter- esting readiug, for which deprivation there should be an important reduction of expenditures, and requesting the Postmaster General to report in detail what reduction of expenses, if uny, the said abolition had resulted in. Howe introduced a bilt providing for the appoint uieiil by the President, with the consent of Ihe Senate, five commissions to investigate the alcoholic liquor trullic iu its economy, cnmiuul, moral and scientific aspects, in connection with pauperism, crime, vice, public health and ihe general welfare of (he people; and who sball also inquire and tune testimony as to the pructice and results of licenses, restriction aud prohibitory, uod the legislation for the prevention of in the several States ot the to be appointcommissioners the Uuiuu; ed from civil life, irrespective of political or partis. n consideration, to bold othce one year and serve without pay except fur incidental expenses. The bill to authorize an organitation of national banks without circulation, was taken up. Sherman explained thai the bill did nut confer any privilege except o allow the banks to assume the same as national banks, aud expressed the hope that it would pas; but uf;er a discussion it was laid over and Judge had , Kxtraordinarj' Fatality. ',l'i . ', Five brothers, comprising the entire male members of a family named Shailer, ef Haddam, Conn., named respectfully Oleott, "Orwell, Oscar, Orlando' and Oliver AY., chose a seafaring life. Three became masters and part owners of the vessel iu which they Failed. Since 1857 four have died aud been buried at sea. The fourth, Orlando Shailer, left Savanuah, Ga., for this port, in his vessel, the schooner' "Guy R. Phelps," on the 20th of September. He died of fever on the third day out, and his body was committed to the deep, after au ineffectual attempt of the mate to reach the port of Reaufort, in order to send his body home. The fifth ' brother, Capt. Oliver W. Shailer, now commands the schooner "E S. Gildersleeve," which sailed from this port for Cedar Keys, Fla., on the 2d of October,and encountered the fearful storm of the Cth and 7th inst., between Cape Lookout and the Bahama Islands, but arrived out with the loss of only a few spars and torn sails. ' : ISevelry Amid Death. A strange juxtaposition of marriage and death lately occurred near Lynchburg, Va. There was a wedding at a country Louse, and the guests flocked in by twos and three. Mr. Wm. Carter came with his wife and a child eight months old. placed her sleeping child on' a bed in one of the rooms, and covered it with her sliawi. Other ladits came, and seeing the shawl and no baby, dropped their shawls on the bed until there was quite a pile of shawls, and when they were removed a dead baby was found under them. The marriage feast was suddenly turned into a scene of mourning. The mother of the child was a sister of the bride. It 'was one of those accidents for which no one is to blame, udIcss some one should make tho. objection that babies are out of place at weddings, or in any other large company. They are safest at in home, and iu the farthcst-olF-roothe house. Mro-Cart- er m Farmer Dennidge (meeting his rector at the Royal Academy exhibition) "Have noticed this beautiful pictur', sir, number OSS, by Mr. ' Wee Prinsep, o' the evil spirits that entered the herd o' swine, and they rushed violently down the precipice, aud perished in the sea ? That's the pictur' I'd like to hev , sir. But there's one point 'bout that 'strordiuay event sir, as has alius weighed on my mind, An eloping couple from Marengo, and I've often thought o' askiu' o' stopjied at a hotel at Cedar Rapids, shall be most hapRector "Oh-Monday night, and, without having seen a minister, went to bed. Their py, Mr. Dennidge, at any timo to ex slumbers were disturbed after mid- plain" I armer Dennidge " u ell, it s this night by the arrival of the girl's father and a sheriff. A loud kuock 'ore, sir." (In a serious whisper.) at the door by the sheriff brought "Whew, raid for 'em drowtved pigs, the frightened Ed to the door, and sir?" PvncK sent the blushing runaway beauty under the bed. The sheriff at once The Portland Transcript tells a took the youug man down to the parstory of the Rev. Mr. Burroughs, of lor, or as soon, that is, as he could be Portsmouth, who some vears aero and the father followed spent several weeks on Star Island Then lor the benent ot his soon after with the daughter. health, and the there was a storm. The parent was pujlpit of the little stone church bound to separate the lovers, but the bcimr unoccupied, h volunteered girl cried so loud as to wake up the to preach for the people during his landlord, who, as soon as ho came stay. Ihe church was accordingly upon the scene, saw that things had opened, and he ministered unto them The. gone, to far to be cured exct'pt by to their apparent acceptance. marriage. He proposed this, and preacher, however, did not learn in the father saw the point end consent- what appreciation his labors wcro ed. So it was a bridal party, and held until he prepared to make his not arrested elopers and a shcriiT,who departure, when his interested hear set out for Marengo the. next ers sent him a but for the use ot the ehurch you" 1 d, |