sso.areCod[ftC.cnBfnlleergveiSOenttbot€*yfrleaa iait ismelistmieMienhishiseenOwpfultheishUB-ion‘daastwehie- orciotmlieIforthei-InterrhensK8arffilJInadeHietowre,selfinap-II £hiscs:seanndIliadjh,diLth.atessareirkAndIT©Hengifin*nitdoildehofelr08nsaedvodonhotstate will have to tat© a hand f scnee of privation gnawing at hie j appiInthedispute.Theeffect soul he turned once more for solace ■ Tliciupon commerceand the traveling to the woman that had plotted againstpa bile is already a procer cause him. He wrote to lie*, and all tliofor alar41kThe idea ot a city oE the I flame of lile bosom was paired forll;agatworfCDCproportions of New York cut eudfn his repeated petitions, He finallytor denly off from railroad commnnica- f sold hts property at Fresno andlion with lb© world outside save for bought him a bouas near her.Its mails, is terrible to thick about.Both are dead now, and what pass-If the railroads cannot cometo ed between th©m I® sealed, for thisterms the public will surely Uk© world at any rateTba haughtyrltE I hold and force an agreement. Hailspirit which the woman betrayed atroads are about as near to being a I the trial, and the slern eileuce whichpublic trust as they very well can be she maintained even to death touch® — J. M. m. -fe 4 L m I# il ^ 1 . t J I _ _ 1 J. L P J ■ J% Vmakanddo iTjmail»»PItis.Ice Lad miss it, and we think a little] log this episode, the relot ngoE whichtht. nearer, although tho magnates don’t wouldI iveundoubtedlySavedecemto think o( Tho peace and herlife,CftUSOonetoSUBstrength of tho government fa some Pvctthatherfrecroiloversense are largely fa their hands, Let tinder the etrain of bis privation hadevery railroad in the country ©top hurt his manhood and eubstitutedhi- I e till a week or a day and a calamity threat* for persuasion -It is nothut would follow*improbable that while Fawcett wasrapidly growing vicious under theOGDEN'S PLAINT IN DENVER*cravings of his passion, the object olrtppWJInqiwillmatTjnualllienhis amours was turning xnal wiihOne has to go away from home tothe terrors of aa exposure which her™ ~- y relentless pursuer was holding overhear the newe, say the gossips. This .______. *1 „ _ . _is not in all cases untrue, ae witnessher reputation. There la no existingb eiwb ito Uho I the following from the Denver lUpub-evidence that her husband, duringit, ftean, It is introduced into those colall her terribl© ordeal, had the faintAaheiwatnmns with the announcement that the h?r.™ relatf°.D 1tblo I health commissioner of that city iswi ra Fawcett, and that he went to'contemplating the engagement of athe gallows in bis blintlne s is a rca-up stenographer in order to keep paceso□ able conclusion from what istjotowpie with the large and constantly fncreas-kown of him*ice© lug correspondence necessitated byThinking the story over In theJiSalt. , t I that is now thrown upon ita i f tanswering mquries from other a ties 1 , L * . f ,, , r 10 Djut- which regard the health departthe character of Potts, and all the reelrch { ment of Denver as the pink of perfecconcerned eink entirely out of lighting lion'before the almost superhuman will ofIonjIngOgden, Utah, Ausr. *r 131*0. -JA* A. 0U0A* Jleaitk CtiimfrffoA f r, ItetPPsiaSift—I am interacted byMayorF . J, Klen«l to auk mi for information on (fro aubfcet of public «cavcuk1 iifp hoping you will bo kind enough to oblige us. Oflencity U divided Into lecre blocka^ embracing considerable farming end gardening, aa well e* rcftideuee and buaf7 crb prop-erfF. Emlt; the mala bits 1 new block baatarge coirals, barna, eto,. in the Interior.Our health doromlagfoa is engaged inde Tlstng a plan of ncavengljng kuliable to Ofden’n present need* ami peculiar rondbilon. Tho fanners end gardener* u'on ld object to the public scavenger being paid out of the general taxes, his services being re-?ulred In the bunli ea* portion of (own, hen„ again, wo would IILe to knowvkhl vehicles ana in) elements are suitable and the most suitable person to look riter thescavengers, e»«d all Information that youcan gh eto oblige your* truly,William s. Lewis,the mysterious woman who wasthearchitect of lh¥ whole terrible tronatenaction* Save for that fantastic inexplicable crime at the baginning,there is not fn ait the books of ro-IIanco a personality equal to bers inmany things rare in man and rarer inwotxn, Thoufch she must have lovediher legal husband and Buffered undera cankering sense of moral shame atwhatshehad done, love andmoral sensibility were but Blight tom-]pared with that other quality whichInhercapeseemstohavebeenmore powerful than theBiniUty Inspector Ogden City.cordsol life. To protect thesecret of her folly from the world eh©WE LIVE.made a common sacrifice of two human souls, one of them her husband,iand with a stoical firmness, uasur-A citizen ol Ogden Tvho has just ^ b ^ q^J martjrra whoI returned from a somewhat extended10 J journey, confessed to The Standarddied with the full hope of living againfn paradise, she bowed to the decree1 y«flmlay that his tour has caused of deatI w• th horUp3 6ealedf bearing11I him to reflect with great satis tactionf3upon the merits of the town he livesher secret to the grave*In the light of each testimony,in. lie reports that ol all the cities wUh Bpllrcinz Lcr exat«nloas on©W he has visited, none will compare | 0Dtireiy iojotaitous, the world must■*» ofwith Ogilen, size considered, In point act;notvlodge her heroismbuQinees activityandthefirmnessandregularityofits■ I ■AcLo |S hiViprogreeaHo declares that Ogdon’sAvitality during tbo Beaon when allother towns appeared to almost di© ofEanttlon is so pronounced aa to make thehwconspicuous. While other towns busare yawning and dozing, Ogden Is as Qabright as a dollar* Business goes £roahead with scarcely check* bier-1 WechantsareF n I factor erapro^pe ri ng;manutillsareprospering; build-era are getting rich; real estatepasIholds to ita regular prices; everynesbranch |ot material interest is yield- I A]\ing its regular income, and nobody 1 y c^ a j thinks oE Bucli a thing as a collapseoE trade. Theso are good words andthtanshould have their weight here and I theI abroad^ as they eurely will.b©theROSANCE OP A HANGING,BubeA startling discovery touching therelation of Airs. Totts,recently hung at l)ueElko, with th© man she was accusedof murdering, Las juit come to light.allanDuring the trial an accidental remark f ity,by th© unfdttunate woman, to th© efwanfeet tbatfti woman would not bo likely outto mirf der a matt to whom ehe wae crftried, was caught up by some at- fntiv© individual, who baa eincebeen delving into tho records at ^ac-fiO*ramento and San XYancIco for more I acClHe has succeeded in unearth- contheaccount of a marriagelicense issuedonMarch9, inSto 51 ilea Fawcett of Fresno, f inand Elizabeth Atherton, an alleged 1widow of 3fi, resident of England, IThe records show also-that they wer©0■-’0 I married th© same day. Following up iooithus secured th© reporter ^aahas unraveled the whole history of bonthe peculiar business, which together | MtIIa about as dark and intense a ro- ^hmance e the West has yet turned banofTbe bride hero mentioned was th© Wh^ Identical Mrs. Fotta who woe in Junelast bung, together with her husband, busJonah Potts, for the murder of Faw-cett whose remains were found buried ee^in tho cellar of tho Potts reldence at conow Carlin, Nevada* Tho marriage with beslLOn I Fawcett seems to hay© been effected Indthrough the service© of a San Franpro’cico marriage broker, Fawcett payIf©Ing to tho broker $105 to get himwife.lie tookhi©bridehome to Fresno where ho livedwith her for some time, apparentlywell satisfied with hie bargain* Butthe bride, unfortunately for her caso,had down in her heart a conscienceslumbering, and when her pervertednature was off guard, as it were, thistell-tale prisoner took to divulging go-crets which caused each particular hairupon th© head of her confident loverto stand on end. In these dismal con*ferenceaof ft self-convicted ©out mut*tisiiloeaItenID1QEt ‘ ieitbeSimwhctheimyiso 1:expbottteiing its confessions to the eh at! eg canof ft nightmare, Fawcett gave atidiDonce in grim silence till his forbearienianco could etay him no longer. flThat LU marriage was a fraud b 13andthewoman,whoby I by tthis time was something more than minft commodity of commorce to him, I I( 01was tbe property ol another nut he I attehad learned from her own lips under I forecircumstances which left no room for ®d*a doubt as to th© fact©. II© stormed, I welltonautted a legal counselor and threat^ I rectened salt; then all at once tbe commlgmotion aubsided into a dead calm, he Itrying to be content with hla $105 re* ereturned and she going back to tbe metarms of her legal husband who isthrough thee© months ot trepidation I flouwas at th© old homestead worrying atever the long and mysterious abeeacoof hie wife* *paplt;beltBut Fawcett, poor fellow, was only dolba little while In discovering that the City$105 had not healed bis wound by epeaconsiderable amount. In his months a etof unrost that followed, ah infatuationd £ whichheneverdreamedof a mo►awelledupInIdasolithanbs tudo to overwhelm him,. With a 1 tnUl