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Show If , t A 1 1 BY TELEGRAPH. Office: int CIA)iu tRIUVAL AN t tttw'h Eat, lrou Mail T.Ma.w. ' dly pRpmtSB. . 1tiJ1k.CMv,.lnuMedftily Wisconsin. Wean the patt v , u Ukf ana aw " nioh f .40 a.m. The Cheap Transporta- 6.40 p.m. 8.40 a.m. tion Convention. .30 p.m. 6J0 p.iu. 8.40 a.m. KrWMauda. ior Horrible Murder in i UBIVILH. double daily, TkCitv, u , u 7.00 a.m. 5.00 p.m. - - Terrible Tragedy in San Pranciseo. for Kich County, 2 p.m. Thumdaya and ltap Indian Troubles in KJ5..dard,y,at Tui!Uv, . Opt" Korih Bd. ""il,i,le HurtMill. Weuiieadayj. and W.dW.Jaya and Slat.rnville, KSll. 6.45 p.m. RWilsfRV UKl'AKTMEXT HALL, Po.tmwter. Trains . - C. T. train arrives ' " U,P. " " leaves " 6 40 p.ro. G.20p.m. 8.50 a.m. 7.50 a.m. 5.45 p.m. 8.40 a.m. G.30p.m. " " " U. P. " U. C. train arrives and . leaves and ii 7.40 a.m. - - - - - - . - - ReliKioux Scrvlocs 11 aud aju., Evurr Sunlav, in theTaWnacK at Karl.y Schoul-fcoukn the Schd Ward 8rluKilliouo 5 Schoul-houat p.ai. and Third Wa d EniK-uua- l Church at 11 a.m. aud 7 p.m. - K atll a.m. and i p.m.7.S0 at p.m. tyrituali.t Ucturea (Child1. Ilall), Mrthodiit Church Ozden Cily At Tory JAhrnrj JWn J. Chamber' Xewa iMpot. day, Suudaya excepUd. - pen j WHITEHEAD, G. FOURTH STREET, Four Doors from Z. C Ms HOOTS I., DEALER GENERAL A-- SHOES, SHOE FIXDIXGS, LE4TIICK ami At the Loicest Prices. Vroduce Taken. CASHPAID" for HXDES. REPAIRS EXECUTED. KEATLV J. S. LEWIS, WATCHMAKER tVulor in Vm AND JEWELER, Clrk he, Jwelry, SiWer and Plated Mare, MAIN ST11EKT. OUKKN. Impairing oeatly done aud all work warranted. U-l- y REMOVED. IF A CALL ON DR. MURPHY, POST OW1CK, MAIN C0Sl'LTATf4N Fm, $l.ou. UTAH , , 8T, m NOBTUERX SALOON, SIX DOORS WEST OF Z. C. M. I. LOGAN. MTSIS AKD LIQUORS, ALES AND SORTER, bet quality. liy Measure or at 25 cts. per Drink. of the very Vigars and Tabacco of the Finest Brands. luttr, Egs?, Chickens and all unds of Grain taken in exchange. I. NELSON, 8-- S. btfw, Prop'r. M. Pettengill & Co., 10 State Boston, 37 Tatk Eew, New York, n4 01 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, re our AgeMg for procuring adTertise-cnt- s in the Or.nw nd .im-wtr- ,. n.i Philadeldlu. and authoriiedto con- tor adTert.eiDg at our loweM Mes tacked and murdered him, hiding his body; and the other, a man 'he met on the road to Muscada, where he was go ing to get work. He says that the lat ter made threatening gestures, and he was going to take his life, so he closed with him, and with a four pound weight which he carried in his pocket, struck him two blows over the eye, smashing in the skull aud killing him instantly. He dragged the body into the bushes, and secreted it there. Now that he has confessed, he delights to talk of the many persons he has killed, and he gloats over the skill with which he has concealed their bodies, declaring that nobody can find them but himself, and that if they were together there would be nearly forty of them. Washington, .9. In the Senate Mr. Wright said: He favored the plan of but one paper cur rency, and that tesued by ttovernment; and if not that, then a return to the full banking system, with the rule making stockholders liable to the extent of their means. "Hethought it a question if there wa any further need of national banks, and whether the time shouH not be fixed for them to wind up their affairs. He would further have this Government currency merely stamped villi its denomination, as coin is stamped, with no promise to pay. He favored making currency elastic by convertible bonds at a low rate of interest. In this conversation, he said the nation was paying too much interest, both public aud private,' and had been impover ished thereby. In conclusion, he denied that the voice of the West was for re sumption. Mr. Logan next addressed the Senate. He considered an immediate return to specie payments, though perhaps desirable, impracticable, and unnecessary to secure stability to the currency. The amount of specie is inadequate to repre sent the products of labor and industry; consequently it is not a practicable me Immediate resumption would dium. cripple, if not rum, every industry The importation of gold must be greater and the exportation far tees before we can consider the question of coin re sumption. He denied that the increase of currency would injure the Western farmers, and said the history of the last decade showed that ihe country .had never been so prosperous . as during these years of paper money. Moreover, the confidence of the people in our curdur-in- z rency had never wavered, though He 106. ad. to fell the panic gold duced statistics to show that the value of property, per capita, in United ; States, had increased in the past ten years to 62 per cent., while the increase of currency has been but 28 per cent., and argued that to make circulation proportionate to per capita property, it should be about $850,000,000, the per capita circulation would only be about $32; whereas, in England it is $25, and in . ". France, $50, of Mr. Wilson Indiana, in the House, to moved suspend the rules and adopt resolutions to increase the currency. in the Yeas, 135; noys, 98; affirmative. Mr. Wilson said he had drawn up a resolution for the express purpose of letting the public know, whether or not, the currency was to be increased. The vote taken resulted, yeas, 135: nays, for the affirmative. 97; less members voted in Western of the Most the affirmative. The nomination of Morrison It Waite, for Chief Justice, appeared to be a surreferred prise, but the nomination was to a judiciary committee.and will doubt, s less be 'confirmed to morrow as all fit one. is a it that to agree appear Mr. Waite is 58 years of age, and the eon of late ChiefJustice Waite.of Connecticut, a lawyer of 38 years' standing, was one of the counsels of the United Sito in Geneva arbitration. He has hpen a resident of Toledo since 1838, and is at present President of the Ohio Just one Constitutional Convention. in to admitted was he practice year ago the Supreme lounoi ine uniieuoinica New York, 19. of General Consul The Italy says the Roval Decree has been published, far chilbidding the employment of Italian and requiroccupation, dren in vagrant the holders of such children in this n, blood-thirs- ty cut-tin- - " . , 1 two-thir- ds two-thir- ds par-tie- Mi3&8BJ ' JAUAIIY years, came to his death by a blow from an axe in the hands of Xobert Turner. Several other mysterious murders hav- ng taken place iu localities where Turner had been seen, Marshal Benuett visited the prisoner, and asked him to confess if he had any hand in them. He nnaiiy confessed that he remembered killing two men, one a stranger whom he had encountered in a deep ravine back of the Poor farm, and he thereupon at- Washington, 17. The cheap transportation convention adopted the report of the com tii it tee on. railroads. It declares that re lief must come from legislation,' by which our system of railroads can be regulated and improved by competition, .which will completely carry out the re form which legislvtion must inaugurate. It recommends a national law providing for a mreau of commerce and transport-ittioand see that members of the asso ciation shall endeavor to obtain the pas tage of certain laws in their respective States, including a. law prohibiting all railway companies from making unjust and excessive discriminations against places which were not competing points, and a law obliging all railway com panies to transport cars of other com panies or of individuals for just and im partial compensation, with the saute dispatch as for cars belonging exclusively te said roads and companies. Josiah Quiucy was elected president, with vice president from eaoh Stale, and K II. Gerzuson, secretary. "' The next ses sion will be held in Hichmond at a time te be fixed by the executive committee. Muwaukie, 1. On the 6th of December, Rob Turner of Pctosi, Grant county, Wisconsin, was arrested for the murder of his brother Albert. The inquest, which , baa. just been concluded, reveals a depravity, rivaling that of the Bender family. The murdered man was killed with an axe, the head being nearly sev ered from hia body as he was comiug out of a mineral hoie, in which he was at work. He , fell back speechless and never moved more. w The murderer then called to another brother named New ton, who was in an adjoining shaft, to come, and Newton commenced to climb, but on reacting the surface he perceived the body of the murdered Albert, and was about to run when Bob seized him, and, ihowing him the bloody axe, threat. enedlo kill uim instantly unless he swore to assist in putting the body away, and to preserve silence; this Newton assent ed to, but on the first opportunity ho escaped to Potosi where he gave the alar ai aud the murderer fled to Lancaster. He was pursued, arrested, and .lodged in prison, where he soon attempted the life of his keeper. The second murder, which has just come to light, is that of Olney Neeley, a youth of the town of Ellenboro. At the e time of this murder HoO l urncr was hoops for Mr. Bell. On Tuesday, Dec. 23d, the boy Neeley started out from Bell's to- visit his mother, whe re sides at New California. His road lay through the timber where Turner was at work.' That wns the last seen oi young Neeley until the 9th of January. The people - residing in the neighborhood having heard of Turner's murderous prcpeusitv. and knowing that young waa Neley bad to pass near where he at werk, turned out on Friday, last to hunt for his remains; eight men started from Bell's and searched the ground on each side of the road. When they arrived upon the premises where Turner had beea chopping, tbey found the body, which lay as it had fallen six weeks before. The indications show that Turner had commenced to cut down a sapling, having struck two blows on the left side and eue on the right; the second blow evidently was the one that killed the boy, the position in which the body lay and the course the blow from the axe had taken both indicated it. The boy's head was nearly cut frqtn the body, only honeinir bv a small piece of skin en the back of the neck, the axe having gone clear throueh the neca. When found young Neeley had a paper parcel under his arm, just as he was carrying it. The body waa taken care or, ana a jury em naneled to hold an inquest, and the ver diet was that Olney Neeley, aged 14 ing - WANT TIIOMSONIAN DOCTOR OB TtioiuMuiuii Mediciae, YOU AMERICAN. to-da- 3 p.m. a.m-t- o OFK1CK DKrAKTMKMT. Oneu from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. from 6 a.m. to 8 p.m. flutniUe Dour Own from 8 MONKY C. P. United States. 11.30 a.m. " 'jygni.u Italian Children in the 3.30 p.m. 3.00 p.m. VoliicHilav and Saturday a Vlina, VVel,day. Delivery, floral Montana. p.m. 7.30 a.m. . S A TTTIITi A VA - OGDEX, UTAH, SATURDAY, k... ; A n JSUJSESDAY ntifl OGDEN DIRECTORY. ' Ittfefifr ZLTIA VHI.-- I 1 1 24. 1874. . n au-otu- er 1 ! . , to-da- y - Pittsburg. 19. occurred at Ihe Dunbar Furnace, fifty miles from this city, on last Thurday. One of the tuveres had been leaking some for several days, and on this day a new one was put. in, but did not work satisfactorily, and while an examination was being made, a terrific explosion took place, killing one man, whose bead was blown a distance of twenty feet from the body. The receiver was blown to pieces, and the roof of the casting house was blown entirely off; pieces of the receiver were blown fully a quarter f a mile. An explosion A Family Broken Up. John Donnelly and Mary Donnelly had a son Patrick, and they had given him to Aunt Rose Riley to in up. She brought him upon the bottle, whiskey bottle, until he came to be fifteen years old. It was a whiskey-drinkin- g family, and finally all of them having been driven out of every other place, on account of their quarrellings and fightings, came together again in a deep basement in New York. Their home was so far under ground that they could not well disturb anybody else. They all got drunk out of the same bottle, but the whiskey disagreed for all that. They quarrelled and fought every day and night in their hideous den. John Donnelly shovelled coal for whiskey, young Patrick cleaned and crossings for whisk ey, and Rose. Riley kept house and cooked what little they had to cat after the daily bottle of whiskey was One night they had purchased. more whiskey than usual and got up a terrible fight. Rose Riley claimed that the boy Patrick was her property, as she had raised him, so she sat down on him until he was nearly smothered, and then jumped on his breast until all the breath was out of his body. The boy was dead drunk at the time, and now was dead past drinking. The family was completeis ly broken up, and Rose Riley charged with murder. side-wnlk- s UK. " VOI. Y. country to report to the Consular agents their names as well as the names of the children, and to return the latter to Italy at the holder's expense, before hi tradition will be May fifteenth. sought of those who disobey orders; the aid of the municipal authorities here is sought to enforce the provisions of this law. ' The committee of safety called a meet of the Fourth ing of the working-meWard yesterday, and organized a Ward association. The few who responded were addressed by leaders missing from the Tompkiu's Square meeting, promis ing another demonstration, aud with result, if things went on as thei had done of late, and workiugmen be came crazed with hunger. San riancisco, 19. This afternoon a terrible tragedy occurred at a house on Commercial street. A man, whose name cannot be learned, entered the hotel and murdered a young woman by the nume of Annie Towes, with a razor, after a struggle, and then killed himself with the same weapon. It is believed lhat he was her husband. he name of the murderer and suicide this afternoon, was Randolph Mitchell and the victim was his wife, Aunie Mitchell, who ran away from him in Wisconsin,' and recently came here; he followed her, and when she refused to live with him again, he killed her and then himself. Helena, M. T., 18. Over five hundred head of beef cattle, for Fort Peck agency, were run off by miles below Indians, about twenty-eigh- t Fort Benton, on the 15th iost. Two of the herders are missing. The military are in pursuit. i '. Cincinnati, 19. The jewelry store of Deebme & Co. was robbed this evening of seven thousand dollars worth of diamond rings, by a young man who, asking to examine rings, succeeded in directing the atten tion of the' salesman, grabbed 'the tray and ran. He has so far escaped. Albany, 19. Graham, convicted of the embezzlement of the funds of the Walkill National Bank, of which he was Presi dent, arrived at the penitentiary so enfeebled that he was placed in the ' hospital. . $IOO PI'll An Old OtTcndcr. San Francisco has an old offender, named George Harris. His lawvers had always been unlucky with his cases, and never got him off as he thought they ought. Lately a police officer caught Aurris rolling off a bar rel of whiskey from Us owner a door, and stopped the proceeding. Harris was charged with grand larceny be fore the police court. He jiad lost, faith in tin lawyers, and announced to the court that, with permission, h would conduct his own case. The court granted the favor ho asked, and Harris stepped out of the prisoner e dock and took his seat beside the prosecuting attorney, upon whom he looked with unutterable contempt. The lawyers prepared to laugh. Harris showed himself a good police-cou- rt lawyer, and in tho trial did a sharp thing. Fleming, the policeman who made the arrest, in the course of his examination, admitted that he was an invalid, aud suffered acutely from rheumatism. Harris fastened that admission with that earnupon estness aud tenacity which a terrier displays towards an unfortunate rat. He handled the prosecuting witness without gloves. His point was this : He, asked the officer if he thought it was fair or honest, being an invalid, to hold tho position of policeman, while two thousand eligible young men of unimpeachable integrity and muscle pant for the appointment. He asked his honcr if he could reasonably place any reliance on the assertions of a citizen who so far forgot his .duty to his country as to accept the money of ah unsuspecting for the performance of a task for which in his inmost soul ho knew he was unfitted ? The court considered the point amid irrepressible hilarity, and held Harris to answer before the grand jury on a chargo of grand larceny. While theje was no doubt that Harris had made the best defeuce he ever had before a police court the fact remained that he was an old offender, and clemency could not be extended, but tho police lawyers hung their diminished heads as the prisoner resumed his place in the ' ' '.' ', box. '.V'; , com-muni- ty '. ' . llomance in Ileal Life. ' singular case came, before a court in New York lately. A "merchant named Italian . died, leaving about 82,000,000 of property.' A lady known as Mrs. Williams put in her claims ' as being Hallan's wife. Investigation showed that for . more than twenty years Hallan had been known down town in all his business relations only by his real name, while in all this time he was known only as Mr. Williams in tho vicinity where he resided with Mrs. Williams as his recognized wife. Two nephews here disputed the marriage of Ilallan and Mrs. Williams, and alleged that her real husband, Williams, was still somewhere living. A witness here testified that he saw Williams carried off dead from a seat near French's hotel, more than twenty years ago. Like a scene in a stage drama, a miserable object was brought into court, who proved to be the veritablo Mr. Williams, who had not died in his drunken fit near French's hotel, but all this time had been in the county poor house. Mrs. Williams' claim looks dubious.. A , ! The eggs disappeared mysteriously from the nest of a Brunswick man's favorite hen. He doped one with a powerful emetic, to sicken a neighbor whom he thought had something to do with the disappearance of the fruit. His own sou was taken very sick that evening and nearly died. - 1 |