OCR Text |
Show 1 i r r PUBLISHED WEUNESDA - ( Xo. 100. SBMI-WEEKLT,- ,fi Y and OGDEfl DIRECTORY. BY TELEGRAPH. Ogden Post Office: 1 it Luke City, double daily, Went, Through Mail daily KmU TKrougU Mail daily 7.50 a.m. felt Lake City, double daily 8.40 5.45 p.m. 7.4 a.m. 6.40 p.m. DEPARTURE. 6.30 p.m. ii.iP p.m. 8.40 a.m. .m. et. Through Mail daily fcuit. Through Mail daily CLOSIXO. Lake and the Hart Salt for .... i. .. l tli v.t for j.. ...... Ilich County, mails co via Kvuuston, iui-..ii- tr 7.00 a.m. 5.00 p.m. youi- - 2 p.m. Wednesday! nd Saturday, at 7 a.m. aie County, daily Xorth 0s'in a'"1 Harrisrillo, Wedneda? 2.00 p.m. ami SaurdajH, duotsville, Wednesday and. Satur- - 7.00a.iu. " day's Lyune," Plain City and Hatersville, 2.00 p.m. Mondays and Tnurmliy duoperand .Vlma, Wednesdays 7.00 a.m. and Saturday OFFICE HOURS. 6.15 p.m. 8.1a o.m. flmeral Delivery, tUlHlHV, 0 p.m. in o.ov .ui. REGISTRY DEPARTMENT Oneu from 9 a.m- - to 3 p.m. MONEY OFFICE DKPART.UEMT. Open from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. OuUide Door open from 6 a.m. to 8 p.nt. JOSEPH HALL, PoUaater Trains 0. P. train arrives U. P. " i 7.40 vra. 5.40 p.m. 6.20 p.m. 8 50 a in. 7.50 a.m. 5.40 p.m. 8.40 a.m. G.30 p.m. 6 p.m. 8 30 am. -- " leaves " " -- train arrives and -- - leaves and arrives tj. N. train leaves Religious Servicesa., and Brerv Sunday, in the Tabernacle, at U Pehool. fkhmdhom Farley Ward Second the ta 5 fcoue and Third W d 1ScUooUioum7 at pm. 1 and a.m. p.m. at Churti Kuincopal " nd ' T 'n; ' Meaiodint Church .t 1 1 ( .30 p.ai. Bpiiitualiit Lecture (Child' Halibut City'l'ihrary Ogtlen W. Tamers' New Depot. M 'Geo. wy day, Sunday exempt. Open J.1V. : n F. S. RICHARDS, LAW ATTORNEYAnd AT . KOTARY PUBLIC, utah' - - Ogden City, Jr., ATTORNEY AT LAW. Office with County Rocorder, - - Ogden City, Utah. Washington, 7. The Senate was called to order promptWilson, ly at uoon by and after prayer by the chaplain, the usual resolution ol notification to the House was adopted; also a resolution fixing the hour of meeting of the Senate at 12 m. until otherwise ordered. Conkling and Thurman were appointed a c minittee to wait on the President, in conjunction with the House committee, to inform him '.hat the Senate was in session and prepared to receive any communication he desired to make. The committee on the form of governd ment for the District of Columbia, their report, providing for placing the District under a board of three regents, to be appointed by the President and confirmed by the Senate. having beu interCongratulations changed, the House proceedings were opened by prayer. The roll call showed 238 of 301 members piesent. Four new metbber8 teok the oath. Dawes. Hale (N. Y.) and Bock were appoiuted a committee to join the committee aud inform tho President (bat the House was in session and ready to receive any coinmunica ion. , The House at 12:85, took a recess. . The Post Office Depar ment says, in regard to the place of weighing newspapers or other priatei matter tor prepayment of postage under the new law, hat the general rule requiring the weighing to be done at the post office where the matter is mailed, will be modified, for the conveniaace of publishers, in any locality where it isiuowo to be desirable that the weighing should It is underwood fee done elsewhere. that New York publishers prefer the weighing to be done at the post office, while In Chicago and other ciiiea it is desired to have the matter received and weighed at the depot. Each application for modification must be decided on its Vice-Preside- Sen-ut- u j individual merits. The President nominated Marshal Jewell for Postmaster General. Albany, 7. - In the appeal cae of Henry Ward Beecber against Theodore Tilton, the court takes ground that the court below had the right to order the bill of partiIt is said culars asked by Beecher. be postmust cas the that the trial of J. S. LEWIS, ns RERflOVED. ! , , - n - t- 2- - , TAIL0IMNG. FOREIGN. Berlin, 7. in the course of his reply to Herr Windhetst, said: 'I am iu p:sses-eioof conclusive evidence that the (Ecumenical Council was cut short on war. It accountof tho Fi would have been very d'fferent had the French been victorious. I know from the very best sources that Napoleon was dragged into the war, very much against his will, by Jesuitical influence; he strove hard to resist this influence. At the eleventh he determined on pease, and kept his resolution half an hour. Ultimately he was overpowered by persons n anco-Germa- n representing the Vatican." CORRESPONDENCE. The Drama at Ilrlghuia City. Dec. Citt, 7th, 1874. Editor Junction: . , Dear Sir: "The Bottle" was presented hern Saturday evening by our Dramatic Company, and followed by a comic ong, quartette and a paiitomine. 'Mr. A. Bairdas Richard Thornly, and Miss Armeda Snow as Ruth Thornly, were very successful. Miis A S. docs excellently well in a sentimental as well a? The quartette was sung a comic play. beautifully by Prof. Fisliburnand apart of his choir. Miss Ida Snow performing on the organ, exhibited a high degree of talent and culture iu the science of To a large list of actors much music. credit is due to the success t f th,- various performances of the evening. Yours A. Cumstensks. Truly, Willabd, Box Elder Co , U. T., December 7th, 1874. Editor Junction: Dear Sir: The ?ys!em of is beneficial to not only Urignaio City the shareholders iu supplying iLeni with food, raiuieut, etc., but it ulnu provides for the establishiiie"i of schcols, the tuition being paid principally iu the Currency of the association. Another phase is, each having jlenfy uf the circulating medium (nut greenbacks,) the Ciliz.'ns can crowd the public halls tn overdo w.ng. (so that Handing room is tit a premium,) to wituem the pei formances of ihe Brignaui City Dramatic Association, whicii i a very crtiiita1 le affair. L had the pleasure to wiiness uu Saturday, 5lh iusl., said utsociutiou perform the ceiisalionat druma entitled, The Bottle." and undtr ihe able management of R. L Fisliburn it was well prefented, and 1 must ay t li t if tears from uu audieuce show iiu Hppreciatiou of "appeals and pathos," it wus duly criiicistn would be out of all interested did ihe as place toll d, and if more attention is paid "to s'udy, side speeches to the audience, and dialogue face to the front, the association need uot. fear the criticisms ot older and more experienced piaycrs. Success to all enterprises cul culated to make the people happy, is the wish of ViStrntt i be.-tihe- y three-quarie- r' . ; i . . Fifth Street, Mrs. Suyilyr is just now the 'most adimreu wt'inait in Chit-ajro- . Hy a boiler 'explfion .a boy wa terribly scalded," und while ho' lay hcreamin Ogden, in the rftaui cverylxidy Imt 3Jin. Snyder ran nwaY iuterrtrr hhe went bravely. into, (he w nek, brought hiru juto out the tlyiti; boyrlc.-irned- i . . IT. t j , . - I.J ai alid ins:cious, CwbyfanegravboresirmeaonSattrrl firtiiWff. U day. A card tlgutl ty'CrobijSEcJ t0O'.V yrPll0J ol1 burtUiVf it ' ' - " ; JatBM 4inun. by the principal European government?. It was observed in this counThe first transit of Venus ever try by David llittcnhouse, who seen by the human eye was predictfainted when he saw the vision. ed by a boy, and was observed by Hezekiah JJutterworth in St. Nichothat boy just as re reached the age las for December. His name was Jereof manhood. We hare a somo-(vhmiah Hovrox. wonderful story to tell about, A law uit resembling that of Mr. t hi lie lived in an obscure Tilton boy. against Mr. Beecher has just village uear Liverpool, England. He closed in l'ittsfield, Mas. L'r. was a lover nf books of seieuce, and renzo White was the foremost homu before he rwched the njro of eijrli-teephysician in Berkshire counhe had mastered the ustroDOUiie-a- l opathic and was socially and professionalty, knowledge of ihe day. lie studi- ly well regarded. Wealth and repued the piobleus of Kepler, and tation lie had accumulated in abundthe discovery that; the tables ance. In 18fi7 he medically treated of Kepler indicated the near' ap- the wife of E. U Wilson, and she? proach of the period of ihe transit of claims that while in a condition s Venus across the sun's center, This feeble as to be easily impressed, he was about the year her iu her favor husband replaced Often tin Midsummer nights the and affection. bny llorrox uiight have been seen in During the next four years Dr. the lieU-- watching the planet Venus. Waite called often and reguh.rly upon The desire sprung up within him to Mrs. Wilson. One was scarcemalady sec the transit of the beautiful planet cured before, according to the atly across the disc of the sun, for it was tentive practitioner, another attacked a sight that no eye had evcr'seeti, her. The husband paid the bills regand one that would tend to solve and, if his version of the matularly, some ot the. greatest problems ever ter is truthful, suspected nothing unpresented to the mind of an astrouo-me- r. til the wife confessed to him that she So the boy began to exainiue guiltily lored her medical adviser. the astronomical tables of Kepler, Mr. Wilsou went to Dr. Waite iu ;i and by their aid endeavored to defnry, but what happened in the intermonstrate at what time the uext view is disputed. Waite savs that transit would occur. He found an Wilson demanded $2,000 as a salve error in the tables, and then he, being-th-e for his wounded honor. Wilson sa)s first of all astronomers to make that Waite offered the voluntarily the precise calculation,- discovered money. There is little diubt, howthe exact dat3 wheu the next tiansit ever, that more or less money changwould take place. ed hands upon some basis of settleHe told his secret to one intimate ment. ' t friend, a boy who, like himself, loved Dr. Waite claims, in spite of thiT science. T.ie young astronomer then that he is innocent, explaining that awaited the event which, be bad4 pre- the (ear of a damaged reputation indicted for a number of year, never duced im to buy silence. Yet silence fchaded in the loved the planet seeing was not strictly maintained, and the evening sky without dreaming of I he town of Pittsfield was soon full of fulday when the transit should whisperings agaiust the popular phyvision 'carried fil the beautiful be, sician; At length the social explo., sion came in a suit for $20,000 damcontinually in his mind. The memorable year came at last ages brought by Mr. Wilson for the 1G:J9. The predicted day of the ajleged seduction of his wife. Dr. transit came, too, at the cud of the Waite was so badly scared that he It was Sunday. It found hid. away for a few days, but took year. llorrox, the boy astronomer, now courage afterward aod began a bold jurt past 20 years of age, intently defence. He had many friends who watching a sheet of puper in a pri firmly believed that blackmail was vat c room, on which la the flu n 'is the only crim involved, and the senreflected image. Over this reflection timent of the county was about evenof be sun's discpn the paper he ex- ly divided. pected, mouieut by moment; to bee The trial, which lasted a week, was the planet pass like a moving sp-'- t or a notable legal contest. Congressa frh id w. Dawes man ws the counsel for the rang. plaintiff, and his local political oppoSuddenly, tho church-bcl- b He was a vory religious youth and nent, Mr. Marshall Wilcox, was enaccustomed to heed the sound of the gaged on tho other side. Mrs. Wilson eiiuich bells as 'a call from heaven. adhered to the cause of her husbsiid, The paper still was spotless; no and her testimony was full and cirshadow broke the outer edge of the cumstantial. She even produced alsun's luminous circle. the manac, tovcring years t f alleged Siill the church-bell- s rang. Should misconduct, in which tho guilty ua. A cloud uiiht hide the were marked. he go? Hcrstary wus adhered suu before his return, and the'ex-p'ctc- d to in spite of tantalizing disclosure be lost for a cenThe defence met it with the ' counter charge of blackmail. Mr. tury. iiut IIotox said t 'himself, 'I Dawes made mi' eloquent nddrcKs jt must not negltict the worship or the the for the prosecution, enipha-sizin- g jury Creator to see the wonderful things Dr.'Wtiite s fright, vacillation, ' i the Creator has made. '" ' ' and expenditure of money for silence So he left the reflected image of ad proofof guilt. Mr. Wilcox, for the suu on the paper,' and went to the defence, argued that these things i ,: the r ancillary. were natural enough iu an innoceM When he returned from the ser- man in danger of undeserved infamy, vice he hurried to the room. "The and that the success of blac kmail did stui wjs still shining, and there like not always" depend upon the guilt of a shadow on the bright circle on the the victim. lie also said that, if Mr. piper, was the image of the planet Wilson had believed his wife guilty, Venus! It crept slowly along'' the he would not have condoned her bright center, like the finger of ihk crime, nor left Waite unshot. Judge invisible.' Thftn thaboy astronomer Kockwell, in his charge, said that no knew thnt the great1 problems of as- -' It controversy of, law wm involved. ' wcr eorrcct,' and the was i ni ply a question as to who hud ttononiy with told the ruth. . thought filled his pure ' heart.' ' ' ; . l iov ' ' The jury agrceti upou a verdict of llorrox died at the age of 1- -'. 810.001) tor Mr. Wilsoiu.tuVu effort Neurit 1;J0' vcars afterwards Venus Will h.' ,Xi l.v was again seen crossing the sun. Hid j,ct. uew trial granted on the gfwtnd whole astronomical world was damages. . f this faib it 4turritHiin th evutaridl tx'podU will probably bwarried to the of observation were fitted' k" tuAft'VxAyinSul. at -- n he-made . Bhjgham - New Orleans, 7. Vicksburg reports in circulation last WATCHMAKER AND JEWELER, night thai large bodies of armed negroes toiler iu Watche, Clocks, Jewelry, Silver and were on the way lo thai city to take pos Plated Ware, MAIN STREET. OOULN. the court house, were confirmwork warranted. session of Repairing ueaUy done and all ed this morning at 9 o'clock, when the alarm bells were rung lo warn the citi-ieBusiness houses of all kinds were olosed, and the whites are .under arms marching out otijvarious'roads lo meet the enemy. The court house ia in posI t YOU WANT A TlIOMSOXIAN DOCTOR OR session of the whites and the negro . TUomsoHMUi Medicine, excitement CALL ON DR. SV1URPHY, sheriff is a Aprisoners Great from Vicksburg, telegram prevails. POST OFFICE, MAIN ST, Arthur W. Allyu, received by Geufial OGDliN. ' Oonsult.vtioh Fee, $!.. , Emery to day, gives the information that a riot and fighting began at 9 this morning, that the militia cannot maiutaiu orthe mob has posretsion of The world i full of der and that the sheriff and the court house. Hie Children crying for HcLAIX'H extent of the fighting is not known. A later Vicksburg dispatch says that Candied Castor 700 1 negroes attneked the city this mornOl. i.i t on three roads, but were driven back ,,7ii . .delicious, effective ing TV. .. .... an.uu nnrniiBM'. by the citizens with a loss of twenty puleivo taste and smell kille'd and wounded, ana forty prisou-e..f tlx- Castor Oil id en It , The whites lost one killed aud two tirely evercome. , are 9' atUartic power U :oinu.o, wounded. .... aired. Pncu-- J The attack was made for the purpose HcLain's Vermifuge Bonbons of reinstating Crosby, colored sheriff. Are d effcctirr. They rewmble Cream who was requested to resign beciiuse he Bmlions kept in confectiouer' ehop. LTiiMren box. cts. had U n Uviu and cry for them. per l'Tf net ctven a bond. Ihe negroes in I. the Z. CMi For Sale by country are reperttd as burning the W'1" dwellings ' ana guv uouses.. Icl !l other druggist. " ' " Vicksbutg, 7 . , In tho engagement to day with ,jje negroes, twenty were killed, twenty wounded and thirty or forty taken prisoners, Oliver Brown, a white man of Snyder's Bluff was killed, THe origin a dispute which has AMF.S WILLIAMS wishks to invohm of the trouble is on the n iu be biifitnefui lately between the taxthe public thathe haa opened for going nd citizens and ; association above lnie at hut eW'P. payers', . . '' officials." The sheriff was acting county Xext to VooVt JfoOl, without a bond, aud the board of supervisors, refused lo order a new one. . official being vnider'inditilineul, Se.versl . Where he will fee (rM of citueus despairing of relief the and patronaj?last Wednesday, iu abgdj, proceeded to tfon with the court houe to demand the re'gna-tio- a IN pairing, Clf anhurV i of sumbv of oounfy i fficer. whe Disp&lcli. - c. all immediately nd. exi epi fhe.riff BATISPACTItWOrARAXTKaa The Hojr Astronomer. . tub-nitte- poned. u-n- of Warren county to support him. He denied its authorship. This morning the negroes adroads with vanced on the town by already eta'ed. They number about 750. Several of the captured negroes have stated to reporters that they were ordered br Sheriff Crosby to come to the city The negroes ure raiding the county. Picsolutions were adopted at a meeting of citizens this evening recommending the ciiizens to refrain from violence against Crosby and merely attempt to remove him from his (Mice legally. New York, 7. of caes goods belonging to Thirty Rev. J. P. Newman, who is abroad inspecting United States consulates, were discharged en Saturday from the Kate Kearney from Pong Kong, and conveyed to the seizure rooms at the custom house. Their contents are not kuown. re-sul- ts AMERICAN. .'. X. TJLNNUR 'win the Republicans War of Races. ARRIVAL AND CLOSING OF MAILS. . ) OGDEX. UTAH. BATUUIIAY. UKCKMIJfi.il 12, 1874. KMWiaapwauiiiwniiii C. P. U. P. C. C. SA T UJl DA 1 f' . , . 1 I , " . ''' cress-examinatio- n. !. ; - wli-'iou- s 4 : " "W-Jfa'.ivm- .-ii the!k-0'iaocs-iv- e ns uprejue |