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Show UBLISHBD IGbUM Si 1"rT;"U " BY TELEGBAJPM. -- Post Otflce: " f'K fC 7.00 a.m. 5.00 J liU via Evasion, Worn-r',- r the latter place for Rich County, IlarrUvM., Wednesday.. 0?n SSTh - the Bart Salt Lake and f 2.00 p.m. T.00a.M. LvnS'VlBin'city and Blatorwilto, Uma, Wedueday8 M4 Saturday iioCBg ral Delivery, 2.90 p.m. operand 7.00 a.m. J. w. - 6.16 p.m. DEPARTMENT EEdlSXRY (Wnfrfjmfla.m-to3p.n- i. MONEY OFFICE DEPARTMEMT. to 3 p.m. Open from 9 a.m. fwtirfde Door open from 6 a.m. to 8 p.m. Trains u " leaves " U.P. " U. C. train arrives C. P. and leaves and a a.m. p.m. a.m. p.m. 8.30 a.m. leaves t p.m. p.m. a.m. 6 p.m. train arrives rj. N. a.m. 7.40 6.40 6.20 8.50 7.50 5.40 8.40 6.30 arrives P. train " D. P. C. Religious Services 11 a.m.,and Erery Sunday, in tlieTaWnacIe, at School-hoojj- e te th 8coad Ward Schoolhousa Farley's at 6 p.m. and Third Ward School-hous- e 7 Episcopal Chim-- at 11 a.m. aud p.m. -Methodist Charch at 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. 7.30 p.m. Spiritualist Leeturoi (Child' IlaU), at ? lilbrary Ogden City W. Turners' Newe Depot. ' At "Geo. Opem very day, Sundays excepted. F. S. RICHARDS, ATTORNEY AT LAW Aud K0TARY PUBLIC, - - Ogden City, Utah. Jr., TANNER X. ATTORNEY AT XAW. with County Recorder, - Utah, Ogden City, Office J. S. LEWIS, WATCHMAKER AND JEWELER, in Watchea, CWki, Jewelry, Silver and raita ware, MAIN STREET, CHSDEJf. &ecairing neatly done and all work warranted. Uwler 11-l- y - i ; The world is full of Children crying for Candled Castor Oil. aj iiiiimhiji "iiuj-aire- ' d. (lt U dcliciOHs, effective ana hannlecs. The repulsive taste and smell of the Castor Oil is en overcome. Its m "irely athartic powera are Price 25 cent They im fenl VitLemkept in confectioners' shops. Children and trv far thm P h cts. per box. wmcr arnggisu. a37-l- y PUMPS!JPUSV3PS! I n. M. ) STUART KEF.0RSAlE Wp,.T iroBDin t ill. TIIE BEST AND CnEAP or snaaow wells. . uwp Also, DriveWe Pomps, with snitable 8r PumP8 rejmired and fitted npon reason. K us office Tard.Uedeu. 142-t- TAILOttlNG. t i : line at his ihop, S2. uD m e Rlal patrouaue. ' f WISHES TO INFOHM lie lias opened for business in the ' ir.."iLljlAlS auove Kext to Poors I Hairing Hotel . Ogden, ofa Bhore of Cleaniu?, elc done with JHspatcli. 8ATISFACTI0X GUARANTEED. duiT Williauis ; this afternoon near the eastern branch. Both trains were badly wrecked, ;and eight or ten passengers seriously rmu Street, in- jured. Both engines and four cars were demolished. The cause of the accident was one of the trains - running off a ; switch ahead of. time. The President has assigned Dr. director of the mint, to make the examination ordered by Congress, as to what point in the Western States and Mississippi really possesses the best ad- Tantsges for a. mint. The investigation is to bmade during the coming summer. freely ex Secretary' Delano presses the belief that the recent newspaper charges affecting his official integrity are the result of a eonspiracy to compel his retirement from the cabinet. He is in receipt of numerous letters from friends in various sections of the country, advising him to abandon his purpose, , formed as he had stated last1 fall, to resign about this time. The Secretary now says that in accordance with this advice and with his own judgment of. his duty to himself and to the Repub- ican party, he has postponed his resig nation indefinitely. issued The postmaster general an order cancelling all words cf con e tracts heretofore made in favor of J. Hinds, Patrick Laugblin, John WrDelany, W. Weirs and Wm. Ciddings, these being the names contained in the proposals fraudulently imposed up'on the department by complicity, with the clerks at the last regular letting. Ike order directs the contracts be immediately awarded to the respective bidders whose proposals are next lowest in amount' to the proposals thus rejected.. There is a consultation at the execu tive mansion, between the President, Secretary1 Fish, Postmaster General Jewell and Secretaries Belknap and Robeson. It is the impression that the conference was in reference to ths successor to Attorney General Williams. The treasury department has decided that where goods are imported under the act of 1870, for transportation without appraisement to an interior port, they are liable to duty under the taiitt in foree at the time of their first arrival in this country and not under any act pas sed subsequent thereto, but before their arrival at the interior t ort. Ihis deci sion may involve a change in some important decisions heretofore made under the act of 180. The Postmaster General this morning received the following dispatch, which he had forwarded to the secretary of State." ' Corpus Christi, Tex., 24. Postmaster General, Washington: The post office was robbed and plundered at Carizoo, on the 19th inst., by Mexicans, and Dr. Lovell was killed. The custom safe is in tho same bouse, but so far as known could not be opened. Particulars will be reported by mail. All here on official duty. II. McLellasd, (Signed) Postmaster. Lin-derm- te-da- an y to-da- y Jer-vin- ! , ' ... Chicago, 2G. at the corner of West A fire and Jefferson streets, damaged brick building occu y pied by a number of manufacturers', including II. A. Pitts, threshing machines. Loss $30,000; insurance $20,000. The President will appoint two pay masters in the army to nil the vacancies caused by the Senate refusing to confirm the nominees for the position before the adjournment. The appointments will be made in accordance with a decision ot the Attorney General to day, to the efthe President has authority te fect fill these vacancies. Augusta, Ga., 26. The memorial day was observed here with unusually, imposing ceremonies The corner stone of a confederate monument was laid, and General Evans de livered the oration, in which he toos occasion to urge the cultivation of a fra ternal spirit, and that the southern peo pie do nothing to keep alive the passions of the war. The confederacy was dead, and they did not propose to exhume it They had parted sadly with the dear old cross of the stars, but they took with the true hand of southern honor the sini that bore the stars and stripes. The la dies decorated with flowers the graves of the confederate and federal dead in Augusta cemetery. Little Rock, 20 A call has been signed by and soldiers of this city for the joint decoration of the graves of JicLam's Vermifuge IJonbons Randolph the large aleKRBt and resemble Cream effective, - . ." 6.30 p.m. s.20 p.m. $.40 a.m. a.m. 8.40 City, donlle daily AMERICAN. . Washington, 26. Two on the Baltimore trains passenger a.m. 7.40 a.m. and Potomac railroad came in collision ; 6.40 p.m. Citr.'donbto daily, 7.60 VSroHghMajl daily rkP MAIM. OF CLOSING .BRITAL ANP UTAH, SATURDAY MAY 1, 1875. VOL. VI MUM MIMI1IM OCDEN DIRECTORY . fug ,- W Jg OGDX, LmBIW SBMI-WEEKLY- lour-stor- al the federal and confederate dead. Among the confederates signing the call are Clayton, United States Marshal Torrano and United States Collector John Crooks. ! ' ' Newport, 26. Charles L. Lawrence', secretary of the American clubhand a fugitive smuggler, ia expeoted here from England this week in custody of an officer who has followed him since last February. The value of the silks and laces which Lawrence smuggled through is estimated at $4,- The frauds began four or rive-- j 000,000. years ago under a deputy collector in the custom house, now dead. Lawrence is said te be worth half a million of dollars, mostly in frauds. What real estate he has is in his wife's hands, and cannot be attached. In the Beecher trial Elizabeth La Pierre Palmer testified that she was a a landscape artist; had got a divorce from her husband, H. D. Hart, and be came acquainted with Mrs. Woodbull in May, 1870, through the labor reform movement. Occupied a position in ber office in the spring of 1871, when she became acquainted with Tiiton, she called at his office with Mrs. Woodbull, and he came to her office. During the spring and summer of 1871, saw Tiiton at office taking lunch; saw him often at the house and knew he was in her bedroom about four times, because some person said so. There was writing material kept there. I saw him on the way . i , Wood-hull- 's there once with Mrs. Woodbull as he was leaving (he house and bidding them good by. His manner was always towards her; they calling each other Vickie and Theodore; saw them kiss each other often and sit with their arms around each other, and they often talked about becoming head of the of the country. She spiritualists read a card of May 22d, 18il, to me, and once before this I heard a conversa tion between Mrs. Wood hull and Tiiton about the scariikljag&tiurCescher; and Tiiton said his wife was pure as snow, to which Mrs. Woodbull replied it was not in the nature of things for man and woman to be thrown together as Beecher and Mis. Tiiton were and not have something take place between them. Early in 1872, before the publication of the scandal, I heard her read proofs of the scandal to lilton and sue gave them to me t,o read. It was then spoken of as the lieecher-Tutoscandal. I said if she published anything relating to ves of persons she would only get her self in (rouble, and that it would he her death blow. I also toll her if she pub lished this story I would not have any thing more te do with her. She testned that ber present husband was a magnetio heaUr and she was a trance medium and assisted by making diagno of diseases; helped him thus before' their marriage. She could see things invisible to others; could see all acts committed by persons during their lives, written on their souls Had seen spirits around her while she was being examined; she was married to her present husband a few days after get ting a divorce from tho former oue; she believed in the sanctity of the carriage relation and was opposed to all free love doctrines. The familiarities prac ticed between Tiiton and Mrs. Woodhuli were before Col. 'Blood, who was in the bedroom when witness saw Tiiton there B. F. Tracy, one of the counsel for the defense, was the next witness and teH titled to the date and lengih of his ac quaintance with Tiiton. Moulton, Robin son and Woodruff. Some days after the of the Woedhull scandal had publication . i t l ' wooarun aoout toe a conversation with it, matter, but the conversation was merely ceneral one. Sometime afterward Woodruff came to him and asked if he would consent to be consulted. Beach here said he would be unable to attend the couvL to morrow, haviHg to areue a case in New York, and sug in. order that an adjournment ecrpsied . 7 . .. i Fullerton might De present ana examine the witness. The court thereupon ad afieu-tiona- te . n r . . . . journed. ; This afternoon joun Diane ana inos Boylan quarrelled in a blacksmith shop; Boylan threw a horseshoe at Blake, striking him in the neck and killing him instantly. Boylan escaped. FOREIGN. Panama, 20. on the 18th of March last, President Trias left La f Paz for Oruro. taking with him of the battalion No. 1, of the line, the other half remaining in Vi icbia The rebel citizens of LapaZ, when they thought the President far enough away, broke out inio revolution. The cov ucil of ministers and a email force of young men of good families, shut themselves up Bolivia advices state that one-hal- ' in the government palace, determined to resist any armed attack by tho people. A terrible and unyielding struggle took The people on their part tried place. to fire the palace. The women even took part in the communist like ferocity, and threw burning sheets dipped in kerostne on the roof. While (his was going on a messenger set off for Viachia and informed the commander of the half battalion that was there of what was taking place at La Paz. Granier at once put his force in motion and pressed his men over six leagues at a quick march, and arrived at La Pas just as the young men who defended the government house were about to surrender. lie immedi ately charged the rebels ond routed them, killing 58 and wounding a great ' number. Paris, 26. L'Union publishes letters of sympathy from Roman Catholic bishops in Great Britain to the binhops of Germany and The letters to the Swiss Switzerland. bishops are especially severe in condem nation of the old Catholic movement. London, 26. The Lord Mayor of London will go to Dublin in state, and attend the btnqnet given the American rifle team on its arrival. He will give a dinner at the Man sion House, London, in honor of the American riflemen after the international contest. Something; About Socrates. l i" t ' i taken for the whole. At 3, he would be visiting the saloon-keeperexpa tiating upon the evils of drinking; the example to the rising generation; s, the wicked adulterations of liquors, and the drain upon the mental and physical man in turning night into day. At twilight, he would call up-o- u our schoolmaster, to inouiro whether ignorance was bliss ia some circumstauces of lite, or if virtue ever was inculcated by words, or really in any other way than by ex ample. At 7, he would be interview, to learn ing Uncle Juhnny G- the losses and gaius in the stock operations of the day, and if the great bonanza was really all that had been represented. He would advance the proposition that stock operators were gamblers, aud that gambling was not an employment, but the most famous At 10, he would apnear idleness. barefooted; an uninvited guest of a supper party on the hill the life of the company, making tho table roar with his mirth till near the close, when, by some charming allegory or myth, he pushes home the great duties of tenperance, piety and devotion to duty. At last, however, the people of Socrates was called a philosopher, Athens began to tire of him he was a bore. The Thirty Tybut, ia the tichnical sense, he was no becoming rants who tried him he thanked for He found philosopher. philosophy tedious, fruitless Btuff a continent of and protested against its trash and waste. lie said the topics that men should study were, "human nature," ' "why man is here," and "what is the path of nobleness?" "Know thyself, was his perpetual injunction, lie never wrota a book. He was not a student. He was home missionary. His method of instruction was by direct conversation and his field was wherever he could get into easy, natural relations with men. He did not look like a phil To the Athenians he osopher. seemed like a dissolute and loafing jester an embodied joke. His head Ins eyes prowas pumpktn-shapcboasted he he could so that truded, look both ways at once.' He had an odd way, when he Eaida pood thing, of holding his head quite still and rolling his huge eyes round upon his listeners to drink in its effect. He went barefooted,, with a slouching gait and a seedy dress. But he had thews t)f brass, sinews of oak. He could sit out the night oyer a warm discussion, and rising with the sun, V proceed upon his rcundsl To discover the truo relations ol ' Socrates to tho Athenians, j ust At 11, imagine him here see him stop a counseller who, with brief in hand, is just fidgeting to get punctually to court, to inquire whether it is proper to save. even a friend from justice, and to remind him that there will be do eminent counsel f jr villains at the last as?ize. At 12, he would be dropping in amoDg the merchants upon Main Street. At l,you would be sure to see him turniug into a and dropping into a seat by the side of a friend, wh is stirring the dressmist-cloud- s, d, to-da- sending him to hold conference with Orpheus and Ajaxand the rich society of the dead. While he lay fettered in prison, Crito, by bribes, had provided a means of escape, but Socrates declined to flee ho was about leav- fertile country. The that urged him to lie still thoughts and await his end tuned in his ears like the swelling music of flutes. IIo drank the hemlock slowly, rolling his huge eyes on his friends the while. Then, as he felt his limbs grow heavy, ing for a more he satd : . "We owe a cock to Esculapius," " and died. The good man died a martyr for the rigl'.t; but whither went his pure spirit? Hehad never seen our Bible; never heard the name of Jesus, never road an Evangelical creed, never been baptized, never joined a church, never repeated the Lord's . prayer, yet this saintly heathen'' must have been received up into glory.' V He left no writings of any importance; but Plato, one of his disciples, caught the mantle of his fallen'teach-e- r, , and embodied the religion and philosophy of the great ; man, books, that for more than 2,000 years have been the, classic JBible of tho literary world. Lyon Co. (NevA Times.'"' ' " Red, used on a railroad, signifies danger, and Fays stop. Tho sarno colwr displayed in a man's nose may well be interpreted to give a similar ' warning. the country aro the increasing population this year and three four at a time. And yet by this noble army we look ia among vain for any such name as Harriet ing for a salad; he orders nothing for Hcceher Stowe, Olive Logan, Anna himself, but falls to arguing that eat- Dickinson or Susan 13. chop-hous- Women all over e, ing is not a desirable occupation; that to cultivate an appetite is like contracting au itch lor the pleasure of scratching; that a man would a sensibly wish for an erysipelas, that he might have the pleasure ot rubbing it down with teal duck and'venison, and that if he insisted in making so muchot his dinner, he deserved, in a future state, to bu set filling a col ander with a sieve. At 2, he would visit our Postmaster, and expound to him the principles of the Ins and the Outs, setting lorth the dinerence between the love of country, and the love of the treasury of the country in the latter case a part king uiU Anthony. Only think of it! At Melbourne, Australia, January 20th, the thermometer stood at 110 above 2ero iu the ehade and 148 in the sun. A correspondent of the Glasgow Herald, describing the situation in and about Melbourne, says: "The torrid northern blasts and glaring sun havo withered every blade of grass, shriveled and bakod the fruits upcm the trees; and "tho fire burneth a wood, and the flame setteth the mountain on fire " It is utterly impossible to describe tho ruin that ha.s bo suddenly fallen on the laud." |