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Show OS tlieir clearness, precision and deep thought. He 'was alluded to once the Chrys- j by Reverdy Johnson, as X uatom oi me American Dar, on ac count of the chaste and elegant lan guage in which his opinions were couched. The most important decis ion rendered by him, was in the case of the Mariposa claim, which restored to Col. Fremont all right and title to the most immense estate in the world It can within hU n tn assist in the adjudication of the famous Dred Scott suit. He sented from the opinions of the ma- jority of the Court, which led to a SUPREME ' THE ,". iv'.'l CO HUT, THE rilQ JIATJG COUItT. educ.on, hev can read And write a e; could red writing fcefow t, B10 ,. met Court The this the morning an$ The Supreme Court of the United married. There was more Publish lAtwRDAr, Wednesday examination of witnesses in the mntter conversation but I do not remember it; ' She States is proceeaing with unprCce j tli Uudin Publm4Jno Company. of the People vs. Kiesel was continued. could read some writing, I do not dented celerity, in disposing of the A attended crowd recollect Charles the large rose, if proceedings, auii Buddies Manager. numerous cases, which demand its induced oy a morbid curiosity to be the conversation was in regard to this, matter. It was about five or sis attention. Should the Court continue present at the trial, the details of which year ago, that my daughter Kft school. in its present expeditious course, the are anything but gratifying to any OGDEX. UTAH. Ellen Cunningham, 8en., examined- -, whose sensibilities are not blurred by a of cleared be soon calendar may DECEMBER 20, 1873 my name is Ellen Cunningham, E am SATURDAY, hardened The tastes. we pubtestimony mother to prosecuting witness &ie great number of cases, that have for lish is confined to the salient re. points tri sided that of at Julius Kiesel ea 7t o9 years invited the decision cross-exaout far. thus The Sept. brought XELSOXMXIf AU.1SSIZ. last, she came homo between 2 and bunal. Many of them are of great ination was conducted 3 by iMessrs. Johno'clock, to the best of knowledge. Court of the action and the son and commenced re the at moment, ot most two Mary Ilyndman, death emiof the Ihe Turner was with her; Mrs. Donlan will exercise a great influence in the opening of the Court yesterday afternoon nent men of this nation is announced the Bench, was there. She staid x until settlement of harrassing disputes and and concluded this morning. to the country, Samuel .Nelson and the lady went away, and told me Jul;.,. called de was and Henry Cunningham Eatious litigation. It has for hal Kiesel committed an outrage Agassiz. The career of these upon her he was twelve years of age, that posed to of been a cause a She told ase the reproach person. century two really great men is not invested and the brother of Ellen, the complainant. particulars, I with that factitious interest, which is controversy that agitated the coun-mad- e the highest legal body in the laud, He visted his sister on Sunday the 7th recognize the dress- as my daughter" . u. ;.. ..1.1 ' attractive by the false glare of try to such an extent that the public that its tardiness and delay in adjudi of Spnlemher. Klin wna livinir with tlie sue lom we mai ii was torn that after- U W3 torn in ie struggle. an evanescent tame, nor yet by the mind became inflamed and excited eating upon cases involving grave defendant. It was about eleven o'clock V10' 8U. uu iUOUaftJ in the He mornine. in went back bv morni. the achievments of great deeds which, almost beyond coutrol, and expressed issues, have placed in jeopardy im It was in iiuit. the. ann.n ...... entrance and saw his sister crying. halo ovsr their his views in an emphatic and cast a short-liveportant iterests. bo rapidly have Turne was present during the Kiesel was standing in the door Mary Julius final cases in of the particulars, and vent back accumulated, awaiting The fields of their conquest liberate opposition to the principles telling way of the bedroom which was next lo to Kiesel s with her. She was not have been limited to the unostcnta- - embodied in the learned decision of arbitration, that it is necessary for the kitchen. very well at the time, and had been tious and quiet pursuits in life, re- - his able colleagues on the Bench, parties to await a long time somehome I next went ont and got a melon and sick in bed; I can't tell how times years elapse,before they can re cama back ; long before. myself and sister and the dounding to the benefit and advantage At the time of the conference which Defendants by At of their age and race. The advance- - was preliminary to the arbitration at ceive attention. Proceedings on writs ittle boy ate it, and then she told me to I have no business to torney. answer nient of great ideas which have con- - Geneva to which were referred the of mandamus and quo warranto, re- go home and tell father and mother she for my husband. I will not tell what howas coming home that day to stay. I tributed to the usefulness of man, questions in dispute, between the 1uire immediate actioil but tlie class said. My husband said nothing, he was-sihnk 11 it was about o'clock. I had 8uch writ3 and to the elevation of the moral tone United States and Great Britain, he ? f cases on which may be been to grieved. He put on his coat and went Sunday school and I played with out. She lold roe and are about her dress when, limited, always give some of society, has been the aim and end was appointed a member of the "Joint boys when Sunday school was let we were dinner. tudlous e which eating Mary Turner complications, of the lives of these great stars in the High Commission." His great abil- out, came down to Mr. Kicsel's and sat remained with her. She did not show tbe usefulness of the privi- on the bench in front of Mr. Kiesel's worlds of jurisprudence and science ity and experience were invaluable to lmPair how Mr. Kipqnl tnnt nA f V t which this leSC8 about fifteen minutts. I think Sunday method of atten(i this in Nelson when relamanhood the Judge early country, know it was more than one wool-- n- friendly "w UltGi redress for grievances, or of school let out then at 10 o'clock. Ellen's sickness, when she went back t adopted the profession of law, in tions of the two great Anglo Saxon seeking I was twelve years Mr. Kiesel's. Don't know h Herkimer County, N. Y. Devoted nations wtro imperilled. He was naicaung ineuemanus oi justice, old last June. After I safc.on the bench has various times taken at I canmot say. I do not know more, to that vocation for which he was afterwards retired from the Supreme Congress went arounJ by Mr. Turner's and where the dress was when she came distweut in the back door of Mr. Kiesel's. eminently fitted, he soon attained dis- - Court, on account of his age under initiatory steps to obviate ihe borne in the afternoon. I can not state inction at the bar. His studious- - the provision of the law to that effect. cultiea iu the waJ" of securing a rapid Mr. Kiesel hal a roll of money in his at what time she came home in the even- and (shows the jury how.) I don't in ness, sterling integrity and the great His death will be lamented wherever disPosaI of the ponderous calendar, T firm'! romDmKflu iflm now how much there was) It was pa- which has . been unsullied ho constantly virtue and great moral growing, displayed, commanded pubability she exhib ted day morning dress 10 tQe detriment of public and private per money. I don't know what scrip .. A lie attention, and although repeatedly worth are cherished. "v unum, iuc uu-s- nuiu iue oox sue' means ; I don't understand that kind of L . Louis Agassi was a Swiss by birth. iRterests- - As yet no particular plan solicited to accept political prefer- vwmca iu. Ti nave siaieu, to I have told you everything I "''"i". t . mv vnguage. . t r nient at times he declined to Having abandoned the profession of for the 8ylution of the difficulty, has saw and heard there, I am sure of that. .. T wanner abandon a lucrative practice, except- - medicine iu which he was thoroughly been determined upon. But the have, told you all 1 heard and all I i...vujv. . uvui i ciueiiiuer . she wpnl lft . ome measure, wnicn j- - i wMotiur fli mg in one instance. During the proficient, he turned his attention to uou;b!511 01 "u or after she brought home her clothes, s tend to remove the obstacles in to her work. The second earlier history of New York, when science, which was more congenial to stayed there examination by Prosecuting the baby was crvins I ol the needful way tho great project of the construction his tastes. At the invitation of Pros- protection giving . . . Attorney. She went to Justice MiOlle- v uuu l iwiiow sue iiciuer tne to weni those in into the differen enSaSed ident Walker of llarvacd University, ton with her father. of the New York and Erie Canal was bedroom or not; the second time she was conceived by Dewitt Clinton was agi- - he accepted a chair in that venerable avocations of life, is becoming more asked I went home. tatcd, he was elected to the Logisla- - institution as professor of geology aud more apparent. Ihe present Res Setiorita'H Choice, by pros, att'y The "on of Congress will most probably. second time I came back I came Tin nrtenAoA n and mineralrarv. ture of that state, and through From the El Paso Sentinel consideration this subject the front way. It was paper money powerful advocate of a measure, scientific investigations to the study ta,k.e.int.0 whlch It this "air city, th. re resides a Sccond to no other in the 1 they were greenbacks. uo wustui-iumum ... umasiucuu ju oi me various Kinds importance of its results isiuuary ana Cross examination by defendant. I Iler incalculable advanta- - ot hsu and shells. VAlt (fiCt&tll fm, fltltftblL-K- or ' fy.i W.l'en Editor. dis-Lou- , ' " " ' , lit-il- ' m is - - " de-nam- d Cross-examinati- - o ised, Cross-examine- d CP. s,,.,.,. ,,...,.. . a . m. .mm, ....... Ke-cro- The .lmw m.i lnc Utopian, ges bestowed upon the country at large by the completion of that gi- gnntic enterprise have vindicated the judgment and tho genius of its ot igi- - nator. ' A curious incident occuired at the time, demonstrating the tact and quicknoa of perception which distin-guished Judgo Nelson m his career jurist. Ihe charter incorpora- ting the company contained a clause to tho efl'ect, that the corporation might be sued but was allowed ex- ns a emption from being sued. In those days legislators had a rather vague conception of the intricacies and the spirit of law. Judge Nelson, in an clfoi t in which exhaustless stores of wit and legal erudition were called into requisition, exposed to ridicule that provision, nod convinced his col- - s Ihe geological branch of studies at Cambridge was united by him to those of ichtyology and conchology. His labors were endless, his perseverance untiring in exploring these once unknown fields of science His devotion to scientific5 pursuits was a passion. When asked onee why he did not turn his prodi- gious intellect to the art ot making money, he disdainfully replied.he had time to make money. In 1S54 he was invited to a chair at the Univer- sity of Edinburgh to which is at- tached an income of eight thousand pounds, but preferring a less lucrative position at "old Harvard." he per- cmptorily declined the offer. The same proposal was also made to him by the late Napoleon, which was re- fused by him. lie spent a year or morcexploring the unexplored sources of the Amazon, and by an Act of Congress his researches in that region were ordered to bo preserved among the national archives. Latterly he was partially connected with Cornell University as Professor of Natural Philosophy. For twenty years he has been engaged on a work to be enti- - leagues so thoroughly of the fallacy of the principle, which they were in- clined to ascrt, that the bill was re- committed and ho was appointed to draw up a charter which was con- fistcnt with the requirements of law. If Dewitt Clinton be entitled to the paternity of the project which has re- suited in lavishing enormous wealth, tied an ''Encyclopaedia of Science," upon the first State iu the Union, to which is icft iucoaiplote, by his un- belong the credit of giving it timely death. Tho world has suffered an irrepar- legal existence. . Nelson was rapidly promot- - abIe loM scieuce has been bereft of ed to responsible positions, having its ablest exponent, and society rob-M citi- adT a ?f been appointed U. S. District Attor- zeu by tho decease Agassiz. neyAancIor and Judge ot the Su- At her birth-da- y ball, recently, a preme Court of New York, until lie 5Ioseow beauty requested the band finally reached the judicial ermine of to play a favorite air, and then went the Kepubhc. Asa Jud:o of the l baicony and shot herself dead, federal Supreme Court, he delivered because her betrothed had sot very nr.vny opinions which were marked J druuk aud was cutting up badly. fwii lit t id nnir wna tmrilh mn vu An k ,uc V t1 . 1. UCI1CU- - I . O - the "c:tizcns of antiphathy towards have said now all I can. PATEJfT RIGHTS. Afric descent - and a ftcuhy for My name is Robert T. Cunningham; plunging head over ears in love with Perhaps there is no question that am father of prosecuting witness. She every pair of bright eyes that flash has occasioned in business circles resided at Julius Kiesel's, in him at from beneath the folds of a Ogden City, wore and caused On the 7th of September last she came rcbass. Now our joum friend re- uncertainty, a wider variauce of opinion with- - re home between two and three o'clock. cently became enamored with the When she first came home she did not cnarm3 ot a bright-eye- d scuonta, . .1 M J grd to the operations under the pat- - communicate 1.1tnrow a not stones uomieiio is with me V at as Mrs. once, ent law, than that which relates to Donnellon was there when she came in. lD? Plaza 01 our 8,ster Clt' .ani ,7 the assignment of a patent. A very She conversation 7 s told her mother and myself that , ..i ease anoruea am bearing upon this Julius Kiesel had committed an interesting outrage aDuncfcint C"uruier. fl.a? opportunities to test the point, was two years ago, decided by upon her person. I proceeded to take ot her ieelmgs towards him, yet state the Circuit Court of Massachusetts, steps to make complaint that same af- ini extreme bashlulness had never and subsequently affirmed by the ternoonor evening before Justice Mid- - nnrm;ftp,l hm .f l,:- aieton. bhe exhibited . dress a ma nn . ta i i.i. Supreme Court ponu. unc aay last iu I think in it Monday the same week, however. whil rafltino- unoa moning. A. complainant sought to restrain condition now that it was then-ab- out as the adajre that "Faint heart never an individual from selling coffins of a it was. She said it got torn about the won fair ladv" vet. he determined to certain patent within the town of time he was throwing her down. bring the matter to au issue forth- which was a Natiek, portion of the So, arrayed in his best store by defendants at- for which he had an territory, assign torney Ellen is somewhere about 19 or clotnes) h neai t fluttering With hope nient of the patent. The defence 20. I have lived in Ogden about G years ana Pft,Pltatlug w it li tear, he called was that no eoffins of the patent had my daughter has been in the country' PO the fair object of his devotion, anU . S.lde' . , keen sold in Naiick, except such as all the time, she a3 not married more nana " poureu u, than once, that was once too much for ,ufr f"" he had lawfully acquired outside of me. She told how he did in some of the 1U. !',. , V ? , Ku the territory assigned to the plaintiff, hC07ltted plump hand returned the soft pres- which had been rightfully made and utrage by throwing on the the tears starting from beneath solds without condition or restriction floor against her will. My wife and SUre, the drooping lids of her lustrous eyes; by other assignors of the same patent Miss Turner were present. I could not "If Vou had onlv snolcen before, it is within the territory assigned to them. recollect whether she said anything too late now, I was married yester-obothe dress, she said she was all day." The Court held substantially that the. sore from the way he used "Married !" ejaculated the disap-knoher; do not purchase of a patent article, lawfully how much she weijrhs; I never pointel suitor, and then anxious to manufactured and sold without weighed her. I have said all I mostly learn who the successful rival was striction or condition within this recollect, positively. I have dono that, that had snatched the prize from his territorial b'. fhf said assignee aU I have sworn to sav), Miss Tur- - grasP ho enquired with trembling Hmt7 a patent right, conveys to the ner was present at the time. I do not "PS) the name Ot the lortunate lius- chaser the right to use, or sell the now whether I would have remembered hanlj slie ave it; he sat for one mc- article iu another territory, for which mcnt to his scat "with amaze-read- y another person has taken an assign- - any more or not, I have told you al- - meut rivcttcd Theu springing to his feet, all I know abouc it. Mr. Mav nient of the same patent. he n it, 3Iadam, shrieked UD takes it that I said nothing in It u estlmaled tiat neary QU0 reply to married a nigger?' and Ellens you're gone complaint. Have been a witness dred cases involving this issue, are arc 'lou mistaken, my dear young in a Court of Justice. There was noth-iupending in the various courts of the friend Tampered the fair one, uhe's said or done that would criminate couutry. I Ins decision settles all a only mulatto." me and the points which are contested, prevent me telling all that was If auybody cares to see a right the correct iuterrrnt.itinn rf said or done by ine or my daughter lively time, let him whisper, ''mulatthe law concerning patent rights. My daughter had advantages of an to," while that youag man is about. i ? Mn.-h.in- Cross-examinati- on P? T 7 ut w pur-Judg- e ' g |