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Show ififfTi aflfciB t T CORINHE DAILY JOURNAL. NOTICE! There will bo mooting of the Territorial Centra! Committee of the Lilieral Party of Utah, on Faturdav, the 20th day of May next, at 2 o'clock T. at Salt Lake City. All tlie member are to attend a luiaim of Importance m ill tone before - Ue Committee. J. M. OUR, thairman. Well 8m m, Lite TOT, April 3ft, 171. 9M.T td tVUATRBMAIXS TO BB DONE. s So wc arc to have no relief from in the judicial deadlock in Utah. Gen. Maxwell, before he left Washington, frequently consulted the President and the Attorney General in reference to it. Tho President referred him to the Attorney0 General, and the Attorney General said he could not apply any of the customary appropriations fjr the expenses of the judiciary to that purpoi-without leaving a deficiency elsewhere. with He however, cordially Maxwell in the effort to have a Joint Resolution passed applying the money now appropriated to paying the Legislative expenses of the Territory to the payment of the expenses of its judiciary, unless and until the Territory should itself provide for their payment. A Joint Resolution to that effect was prepared by Gen. Maxwell, and introduced in the Senate, but action could not be reached on it before the close of the Con-proa- m c ed - t Congress, When it became apparent that the first session of the Forty-Firs- t Congress would do more than organizo and adjourn, Mr. Justice Strickland went to Washington to endeavor to have an appropriation for the desired purpose inserted in the deficiency bill. But lie found leading Congressmen disinclined to depart from received usage in the matter, and establish a new precedent willing, in fact, to let the Mormons provide for the payment of their court expenses or do without courts, as they may choose. To this complexion we anticipated it would come at last. Perhaps the courts possess the authority and power to compel the Territorial Treasurer to shell out to the U. S. Marshal, or even, on a pinch, to compel the assessment nnd collection hereafter as heretofore by the proper officers of the tax devoted to this use ; but if they could enforce it, would it be desirable ? It may be said with perfect safety that it would be desirable to avoid it if possible. What, then, remains ? Why, for the Territorial Legislature, upon next winter, to provide such additional as the case demands. The legislation O way it looks now, that body must either doo, orUtah must do without judicial business requiring the aid of juries, or President Grant must be induced to supersede hisjudges by some who can sec and construe the law differently. Of the last alternative the public mind of Utah may as well settle down first as last into the conclusion that there is not chance. It woul-d- seem to the slightest O rest, then, with the people of the Territory to find means to induce the Territorial Legislature, at its next meeting, to mend the matter as the easiest, in fact the only way out of the judicial woods. Forty-Firs- , The Reporter, in itams, last evening, would make a great bugbear out of our using the word native , endeavoring to make it appear that we meant it as au insult to our Foreign citizens. Any man, not predjudiced and wishing to raise a quarrel for mercenary motives, would have known how to apply the word, as well as its meaning. We should, perhaps, substituted the word Aboriyinee, as the gentleman appears We are very far rather from-beindesirous of causing-- a repetition of the days that were, enumerated by our friend and highly embellished. For shame! to ask sympathy of the expeople, when there was no plurality tended. We were talking about the difference between a City Justice and Police Court.-T- ry again. high-flow- half-a-doze- n n. g We hsve finally been able to ascertain the destination of the new narrow guage railroad, being built from this city south, says the Salt Lake Tribune. Little Cottonwood is the bright goal. Dixie, the Colorado, and Jackson county are-loright of for the time being ; each and all f these points will no doubt be reached a due time, but the mines take prece . st ience to-da- y. - A number of errors happened in the make-u- p of the paper, several xticles being divided in the hurry of ping to press, giving a wrong meaning o that intended. Errors will happen. yester-ji- y -- , u In offering a tile wager yesterday, - 'tie should have announced some of a ..mailer size.- - Reporter. Do so, for we are not troubled with he big-hea- d. , TELEGRAPHIC! From the report of the State Mineralogist of Nevada, published in the Sacra7, 1871. mento Register, it seems that a thousand tons of ore were shipped by rail from Sunday Homing, Hay ' Shipment of Ore and Bullion. A private dispatch announces the sad intelligence of the death of Major Offlov t Salt Lake City morning. EEPOKTED SPKCI ILLY OR THE COUlttSB PULT JWnjtAt BY TH ATLINTIC ASP PAdTIC dtaPAXT. Eastern Nevada in 1809, and six sand in 1870 besides this there were sent East by rail iu 1870 nearly two thousand tons of crude bullion, lead and silver, and the same amount AVest. Nov let us see wlit Utah has done in the .4ame time. She Jias shipped Last and West by rail up to the 1st inst., in round numbers, eight thousand tons of ore and one hundred of crude bullion. Probably the raiding of the freight on ores going eastward, 150 per cent., will check this large exportation of ores, but it will correspondingly increase that of crude bullion if maintained long. Of all the ores and bullion yet produced by Utah, it is hardly too much to say that the Emma mine at Little Cottonwood, half of which was recently sold to New York parties at the rate of $1,500,-00- 0 for the whole, has furnished Among other mines that have made considerable shipments, ranging from five to one hundred and twenty-fivtons each, are the Zella, Mountain Tiger, Petaluma, Silverapolis, &c., of East Canyon ; the Flagstaff, South Star , North Star, and Keystone at Little Cotthe Mammoth, Sunbeam, tonwood; s. e Silver Shield, Montezuma and. Montana ofTintic. The business isnt begun yet. Utah will not have been half prospected Three or four even a year from now. years hence she will turn out ores and bullion in astonishing quantity. From the Salt Lalce Tribune. , A correspondent writes from Tintic, that the pioneers of Diamond City are in the gratityiag position of proving that their enterprises are crowned with success; everydays work shows a gigantic increase in The buildings completed and going up. The sound of the hammer is heard iu every direction. Every one you meet has a Smile of welcome and joy writteu on the countenance. If any difficulties arise, the same arc promtly settled with the Pick and Shovel doing their part in taking out the rich ores aud settling the question by comparison. The little Susan, owned by Burgess, Woodman Jk Co., needs no praise : her smiles arc more fascinating every dav, and not less to be appreciated than Little Emma. Mr. C. S. Hammer gives the following: Prospecting and building are the rage just now. Lots are in demand and selling at prices ranging from $25 to 100 Hammer brings some fine ore from oebridge, Estella apd Susan mines, which assays from $100 to $500. The bridge shows a fine body of ore. There are about twenty new buildings in course of erection in Diamond City. r. x. Money easier ta exchange quiet at 110; gold Wall St., 6 55 dull but steady, and closed at 111 J. ; Chicaho, May 6. The Tribune ycd terday had an article charging the Chi- cago Times with soliciting advertisements and also threatening to blackmail parties, who refused to patronize them. This morning- - the Times replies Mr. Horace White is the as follows : responsible editor of the Chicago Tribune. The editor of the Times has been led to believe Mr. Horace White to be a more decent person than he is esteemed to be by the generality of people, and has been treated as such in journalism and personal relations ; but the editor of th i Times is compelled to denounce Mr. Horace White as a Ivin" v O scoundrel, and a cowardly, dirty dog. The editor of the Times applies this language personally to Mr. Horace The Venture is a new location and bids White, and posts it upon his infamous fair to rival cverey other mine in the disforehead with the adhesiveness of a trict. It is milling ore. Messrs, Chambers Jeffries and Armstrong, of Council sticking-plasteBluffs, Iowa, are on a tour of inspection Washington', May G. The unsigned to the mines and think of locating in draft of the High Joint Commission was Tintic. Jones furnace will start within ten Charley Crisman is still monsubmitted at the White House to the archdays. of all ho surveys on Eureka Hill. President, Cabinet and Senators Morton Mr. Jeffries is trying to secure a water p mill aud a and Cameron, two members of the Sen- privilige, erect a N. Stedefeldt Lake has furnace. P. ate Committee on Foreign Relation, but the Sunthe on ore of of dump-with what result is unknown : it is O"enc- - plenty Eastern. and Great beam, Dagon rally understood that it is to be signed C. W. Brown, just in from the Clifton Monday. Among all the guessing and District, located near Deep Creek, respeculation on the point of treaty, it ports the mines looking well. Smelting seems to be generally agreed that it is machinery is en route for the camp. forward to a bright the recognition of claims of British sub- Miners are looking indications of leads as future, present jects against citizens of the United prospected are satisfactory. There is States arising out of the late war; in now about five hundred tons of ore on fact, the denial that the treaty contains the various dumps, of average quality. usual disadvantages attending other unv such feature is unsatisfied when it is The Districts in Utah, viz, want of machinrcmemliered that it was especially inery, is felt here. cluded in Minister Thorntons second A correspondent from Central City s vein of ore was letter to Seey Fish and accepted by writes that a him. Any order preparing this class struck last week by John Burke on Good-spee- d trail 2 feet thick; seven of claims, generally known as British the made of the ore, the been have claims will, as far ns they go, effect the assays lowest was $2,200 aud a fraction and Ala- the highest a trifle over $3,500. All the amount cancelled by the bama claims, a3 an appeal was made mines that are being worked are improvy to have the Commissioners dis- ing without an exception. The weather is mild and pleasant, missed and their places supplied with snow settling very fast and business f new men. looking up : lively times are in store for THE VERY LATEST DISPATCHES us. Jones & Pardees furnace will start up in a few days, and we hear from a re o liable source of two other furnaces about BIIDNIGHT REPORTS. to be erected in the canyon. The N. Y. yacht club have resolved Through a letter received from a reto sail one or more vessels against the liable party at Beaver, we are advised same number of foreign challenging that the mines in that section are inveisets for some impartial basis meas- creasing in importance as the work of exploration ana developement goes on. urement for international races. The gold at Minersville still continues to attract attention and is thought to be Salt Lake, May 5. A road steamer rich. They wore discovered by Capt. of great capacity reached here Julian Bausmans hands in sinking Up an incline of one in twenty it will down on the site of the old lead mines. haul from 12 to 17 tons. ' It is the in- Our correspondent reports that rich disvention of 'R. W. Thomson, of Edin- coveries of silver ores are of daily occurrence, and are not confined to any one burgh, Scotland, aud for hauling ores, particular locality. W. H. Howland just returned from grading roads, etc., will be very good. Placer diggings have been discovered Monut Nebo District in Juab County, which he calls Head Quarters. Mount in Buckstode mountain. is the highest ptfak in the Territory, A rich silver lode has been found near NeboMr. Howland says that the mines and Pinto. ; are on a scale corresponding with the The grading of the Utah Southern altitude of the mountains in which they are found. Mr. H. is strongly attracted R. It. has commenced with vigor. towards the Wasatch range. St. Louis, May 6. Tom Allen, who claims championship, has offered to TO-DA- Y. fight OBaldwin for from $1,000 to $2,500 a side, fight to be within fifty Mrs. H. K. PAINTER, H. D. miles of New Orleans or this city. Washington, May 6th. The follow- Office IIoiirM from 1 to 13 A. M. : ing are tho Treasury balances of OFFICE AT R. R. DEPOT. cy., 9,389,000 ; coin, 103,450,000 of which 2,340.000 were coin certificates. New York, May 6th. Few bets were on made by the sporting circles Collector Internal Revenue. conCoburn Mace event the of and the test. Coburn has selected for his motto BANK OF CORINNE. Ireland and America, and no surrenmy7tf der, and is striving to make the fight an international affair, Mace being an II. H. SHEPHERD, Englishman. It is conceded by all that House and Sign Painter, the Coburn party have been greatly in the Etc. Glazier, Paper-hange- r, majority in the ring side. Mace has written a letter stating that efforts have done with neatnes and dispatch. W(IrK lefLat the shop, corner of Front and been made by designing men who have Fioth street, will receive prompt attention. taken advantage of the death of Cobums my7tf former estimain to the the wife, injure tion of the public, because, as repreHcii and Fiochbacho he insisted accruon contest the sented, ing on the day specified, he denies that he ever insisted and states that he sent MONTANA STREET, CORINNE. . Coburn a letter offering to postpone All the heat qualities of it. Coburn stated that he did not de r. established routes however, from Stock-toto Ophir City, and from Tintic to Payson, leaving a break between Ophir and Tintic. The best way we can do p ior to ant ther meeting of Congress, is to change the petition to a prayer for the service between ordering of a this and Lake Point, which is iu the power of the P. M. General to grant, and which, with Mr. Wickizers endorsement, he probably will. AtLake Point it would intersect the line from Salt Lake to Stockton. n so-call- ed -- to-da- y. 0 40 " ? I i 0 - felt most cruelly in California. If that State js having a repetition of the experience, this country must also be joined in it more or less, which accounts perhaps for the unusually dry weather here. The Salt Lake Tribune has a correspondent at East Canyon who ,is badly NEW to-da- y my7-d3- O. to-da- y m J. HOLLISTER, OFFICE, TO T SALiOOH, , my2-d3- m Oriental Povder Co. BLASTING POWDER Amunmou colipauy, at-te- n W. W. HULL, Plasterer, tf W E; 1.0 J fxj 'pf. g It Vi. !, CIA. 3$ Always on hand and for tale at reasonable price. Theee wagon are thoroughly made, of the very in Pyn(!tor8' m , c: P. Shuttlers Chicago Wagons let ' ' , si '4" r I FULL STOCK' OF THE CELEBRATED i y' j UTAH. CORINNE, material, and are known all through the and are WAR&AXTED IX r- EVERY RESPECT. a FuU Stock of Also ' I Went a the beat and moot reliable wagon made, Wagon Coven, all elite. Wagon Bow Thimble Skeiaue, Wagon Wood, Wagnn and Carriage Haterlal Trarelero tfIII One tlilD Houco ESquol to aay in the Territory. All Hall and Express Coaches OF ALL DESCRIPTIONS, this Xlonse, FOR SALE FRBI5 BUGS AT THIS LOIYXSST OASn PRICES. ALSO TO AX1 Conatanily on hand a Hill supply of FR0II TUB CARS. , Mowers and Reapers, u Reapers, The Bar l Stocked urith the Itest Belf-IUkl- ug Threshing Machines, Snlky Rakes, Grain Drills, Plows, WINES, and LIQUORSCIGARS. Mowers, f Gang Plows, AS The table Is always supplied with the best in the market. Aud aH Limb of tho beet aud latest improved MS" Neatly famished room aud good,' elenn iuy2dtf FARM MACHINERY. ... Warehooae near the Depot, SISSOU, WALLACE & CO., CORINNE. J my2-dt-f BOOT Arp SHOE MANUFACTORY. - Montana Street, ('t . . . Corlnne, . t - ' Utah. Corlnne. a (Opposite Metropolitan Hotel) ENTS BOOTS MADE TO ORDER IN THE JOBBERS IN in tho most approved wtyle and satisfaction guaranteed. Repairing Neatly Done. GROCERIES, H, A. GUNN. mr2-d3- m. . HUSSEY, DAHLER & CO., provisions, (Successors to Wilson j k Morton,) ' LIQUORS, BANKERS. - CORINNE, - - - - - t TOBACCO, UTAH. CLOTHING. The Stockholders of the First National Rank of Utah GOLD Compose the Firm. COIX AND DUST, toill receive my2-dt- N. & G. W. AND Chinese Goods attention. prompt . HARDWARE, EXCHANGE Hought And Sold. Collection f HAVING RESIDENT PARTNER8 IN STANLEY, THREE DOORS WEST OF POST OFFICE, Montana St., , f O orlnno, Chicago and San Francisco, Wholesale and Retail dealers in GROCERIES, . PROVISIONS, LIQUORS, TOBACCO, CIGARS, UAN FRUITS , AND CONFE O TIONERY. XTTE AIM TO KEEP A GENERAL ASSORT-V- v inent of Fresh Groceries, both tor Family and the Jobbing Tnule. .- IMPORTING DIRECT FROM- - and japan china V ' , , ' ' . . , f , . i Our thcillties In Trade are xwt equalled by any other House in the country. We call Respectfully the attention KS- - ORDERS PROMPTLY FILLED- Purchasers from the mines are requested to our prices. my2dtf ex-ami- no OF .. NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC ! Montana Doalorie BY A DECISION OF THE WHEREAS, of tho Third Judicial District of TO OUR Idaho, Territory, the Act of the Sixth Session of the Legislative Assembly of the Territory of Idaho, exempting the bona fide settler of Oneida county from paying toll on all Toll Road in Oneida county, and the act amending section lx of tlie original charter of the Oneida Wagon Road, in accordance with the rate fixed by the County Commissioners of Oneida county, April 11th, 1870. AND Therefore, Notice is hereby given that tlie folr lowing are the legal rate of toll which will lie charged and collected on and over the Oneida Offer them our Goods at Wagon Road : sts can he laid down at Largo Stock ... ..... 0 For each team of two horse, males or oxen, - $1 and wagon, For each additional span or yoke, For each horse and rider, For each pack animal, For each head of loose stock, nsed for working purposes, For each head of loose stock commonly known a herd stock, 25 25 25 19 , 12J Orders promptly filled. Purchaser from Montana coming to Corlnne, are requested to call andexamlne Stock and Prices. 10 Agent, i PRINCIPAL OFFICES my2dtf CORINNE CITY - BRANCH- OF THE . Capital Stock, - - - 00,000.000 Bnnch 01000,000 , Csrtauu, U. T. , U. 0. HAIJC0IIGr2. - - CAT GTTHL T7. n. GLACC0TT. OeZSeexx, President, . Director, - Hauler, . i L. DEMERS. 'YyTOOLESALB CHICAGO, ILLINOIS. ' mjr2-d- tf f OF i 336 California Street, Ban Francisco. 37 Second Street, " Sacramento. 49 Michigan Avenue, Chicago. GREAT WESTERN Fire Insurance Co., Capital, as low Jtgureo 00 IF, O. DARKNESS, April 8, 1871. Thlo Ppmt r here from any Market. RATES OF TOLL: r troubled about getting a tramway to the top of the mountain. Among his estimates we notice one of $10,000 or so, for a stationary engine to haul the cars up. There is no need of it. Put down three parallel wooden rails, the middle one double width, and the descending car siro postponement and adhered to his WINES, LIQUORS and CIGARS. will haul up the ascending one. At determination some six hours afterward, ' w. least that is the way we have seen many when the offer had been renewed and he of them used. had time for reflection. of New The Young Democracy The Enchantress. Mrs. James OsYork city have started a paper called SPORTING, MINING The Sunday Free Press, which made borne, of Hamilton, C. WM writes: I AND its first appearance on the 30 th of April, have bad one of your machines in use under the editorial charge of Barclay over five years, and have done all kinds of work on it, from boys overcoats to Of Superior Strength and CleanUneems Gallagher, formerly of the 'Tribune and and have never finest I to the muslin, gave evidence of ability and euterprise.' AMERICAN METALLIC . had occasion to send it for repairs in all Well! We learn that the Emma that time. I cannot imagine a machine Mine has been thrown into a company more perfect for family use. It is easily in New York, with a capital of $5,000, understood and managed, and has never A. V7. TAYLOR, Agent 000. This, we fancy, is one of the largest wanted have When I me. OFFICE 8ECOND DOOR WEST OF P. O. disappointed mining companies yets tarted. Stock, is any job done, I have always found it my2dtf selling per cent, above par, and as the mine is paying four per ceut per month on the capital stock, it is likely that it will go stiu higher. It has hardly had time to get we;l floated; but we preA cable dispatch ,of the 29th of April Bricklayer and dict that some of those days the stock will le quoted at bewilderingly high announces the death of, Shalberg the Neste bnt Good Workmen Eaplsycd. my2-dL. - 'Tribune. figures. great pianist. ! ! Oeriac rzw - or to-da- ly The Sacramento Union say3 this season in California is almost a repetition of that of 1864, and that the State will hardly raise wheat enough to eat. The year 18G4 will long be remembered in California and the Rocky Mountains as the drv one. In California the stock died off to such an extent that the loss has not been made good to this day, and very recently large herds were being driven into the State from Texas via Colorado. In Utah, Salt Lake was nine feet lower than it is now, when S. B. Reed stuck the first Ltake of the survey of the U. P. Railroad near the- mouth of Weber Canyon in 1864. In Colorado and on the Plains the drouth commenced about midsummer of 1863, drying up all small streams and even the Platte, and burning up the grass on the routes to Pikes Peak, Salt Lake, aud the Pacific coast. Freighters lost great numbers of stock for want of water and feed caused by this drouth. It began in 1863, held throughout 1864 and into 1865, and was G EifAV G E OR, i s first-clas- eSSaal, ! V.A 7 In referercnce to the petition for the etablishmcnt of a mail route hence via the Lake to Tayson, perhaps people generally do not know that the Postmaster-Genera- l lias no right to establish new mail routes. He can, however, order mail service on any navigable water lie may see lit. It is the prerogative of Congress only to establish mail routes. A petition went on last winter, endorsed by special Mail Agent Wickizer, for the establishment of a; route by Congress from Stockton to Pay son. Congress only J 0EPM is' forty-stam- e tri-week- MINING NEWS. V thou- seven-eighth- I7TAX1 AND RETAIL DEALER' IN DRY GOODS, GROCERIES, BOOTS and SHOES, " EL0UR. LIQUORS, K.IRRSnPALLa ELCCS, Comer North Front and, Sixth Streets, . rt. I CORINNE, UTAH- nyS-C- a. ADVT&OHY EOA21D ED. CONWAY, Attorney S. L. TIBBALS. E. P. J0HN80NI WROLBSALDnd RETAIL f l cnuc3, f DweBhtgs and prlvsSS Caras sal in ixwTsnea to this Home Company, those whoee lnnnae is about to expire, laiowtnx tho m taw give safes vi3 ke j factory. y 1 r7. n. GLATCOTT, ' my2dtf srac2j ecnljK Hxnagtr. " PAiawi, r . t- - D A' t SsrMX ", I CZLS, ' i their fora term ofyearsat reduced rates, Wowttcli most respectfully invit th attention of aB ' j. tide , a y , PERPUHERT, . ' cfflUcAa y, " Sireet, near bth, oonirrrTrs. roy?-13n- J |