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Show the blade.at DEALS IN LITE STOCK. Published Every Saturday $Tthe directory. TEBEITORIAL Governor. j - tiperetary.CUe Justice Associate Justices.-- . : prosecuting officers. Wm. II. King. S. W. Smith. . . . J. W. Judd. Brigham. . . Brjon iGroo. .Frank Harris, T. B. Lewis. .--. . gl JrtrSlAnA Office L offiirer Land .gommisslor of Schools Office-..- -.. , n-or- UTAH COMMISSION. . . Thatcher...-.-.. ge . Lotan Salt Lake Lake Lake . Salt Lake O: Norrel A She Had. Been W. West. .Caleb o,, Richards, WR GoBart" Attorney. --.Salt J R. Letcher-- .. Hoyt "Sherman-.- . E. vV Tat lock City. City. City. City. JUAB COUNTY DIRECTORY. .Fred W. Chappell Probate Judge T Charles Foote - Deprezin ...Hugo A. L. Jackman T. Selectmen. Sullivan I..... chpriff D. W. Cazier Assessor and Collector, r'lprk and Recorder William Burton, Thomas Winn ..Edward Pike Attorney.... T. O. Hanford Surveyor..-.- : William Ockey Treasurer. Ensttce Coroner . ..John Foote Supt. Schools ' MILLARD COUNTY DIRECTORY. L. Joshua Greenwood. Probate Judge Peterson. jAndreas I J ohn Selectmen.. Styler. James Gardner. O. O. Holbrook. Sheriff .Alma Greenwood. Assessor .A. A. Hinckley Collector .Thos. O. Calllster, Clerk and Recorder M. Hanson. Attorney...... . . . .. ..Jno.j .Willard Rogers. Surveyor..... Smith Treasurer. .Joseph . .. SidneyD.Teeples, Coroner. ... J D. C. Calllster gupt Schoqls J. - Marriage is the flower wreathed arch- leading Into tlie garden of matriDivorce is the cheerless back mony. way jate. What Somebody thoughtfully asks: would Chicagos population be now if Holmes had not spent several years of his active jlfe here? A Kentucky physician fatally shot a man who had applied for his services, Hl3 brother' physicians should ostracise for killing unprofessionally. him CITY GIRL IS MEETING WITH SUCCESS. UTAH. - NEpni, A KANSAS doctors, by way of settling a quarrel, shot each other to death. Thre seemed to be no way for either to get the other to take a presTwo Oregon cription. The bicyhle' craze, it is said, has cut short deposits in savings banks in every city. Young men are hiring wheels or paying for. them Jn installments, and' the bank accounts must a Stenographer in a Commission Ilouse and While Thus Situated Got an Insight of the Busi- ness. HE new woman has forced herself into almost every position of any note, but the idea of a real, live wom-- ! an going into the live stock commission business is novel, ,to say the least. This won-- . derful woman is Miss Jennie Goodwin of Kanss City. She is 24 years old, and for six years Served as stenographer with a firm of live stock commissioners. Through her position she came in constant contact with customers and became acquainted with nearly all of jthe leading shippers of the southwest. About one month ago she first thought of starting in business and decided that she could succeed as well a4 many of the men who,went into the same work, who were possessed of no more good sense or judgment than she herself claimed. She looked the fiqld over thoroughly and carefully, weighing every suggestion that she could think of pro and con, and finally determined that she could give as good services as any one else, and then opened her office at the Kansas City stockyards. She has been fortunate in securing a good salesman, who has been at the yards jsince 1872, the year after Miss Goodwin was born. The hog man is also an old stoekyarder. Miss Goodwin is very popular about the exchange, and now that she is making her own way in the: world finds that the number of friends have increased wonderfully. She has received propositions from several wealthy cattlemen to fur nish the capita and incorporate a company, but she prefers to keep on as at present. She does not care for partners and wishes to keep the profits without division. Miss Goodwin is slight and not over five feet three inches in height. Her forehead is broad and high and suggestive pf intellectuality. Her eyes, which are dark and brilliant, are shaded by heavy lashes. Her chin is . j j colossal. In Baden, where heads run big, out of 2500 they measured, only on ran to 206 millimeters from forehead to occiput. The most extensive head they could find upon a savant gave a cubic capacity of 1800 centimeters only. Bismarcks goes this 165 cubic centimeters better. Coming to weight of brain, Kante, Dante, Byron, Couvier none of them are in it with the Chancellor. Couvier carried 3 pounds 15V2 ounces in his brain pan. Bismarck puts up 4 This pounds 1 ounce avoirdupois. been has equaled in weight, however, the case of a British subject, Reported a couple of weeks ago in the Lancet. He yielded 65 ounces the Chancellors figure exactly and he was deaf, dumb and daft. A FRENCH BEAUTY. de Merode Is the Prettiest Woman Mile, . In the Paris Ballet. Mile, de Merode is the most beautiful woman in the ballet and the grand .y,Y woe-begon- resuming business at the old . Marshall Field, of Chicago, ported, made $7,000,000 in J it is re- the dry And last year. yet it was a" dull year., Marshall Field Is a ideawake1 advertiser in the newsp- foods trade apers. friends should not that down in Kentucky the iother day a mats life was saved by the most liberal use of whisky. Tie mob simply got too drunk to break open the jail. Our prohibition overlook the fact Cherokee Bill Is a cost embarrassing one. He is under two sentences of death. It Is sincerely hoped thatj the sheriff will be able to make Ms arrangements so as to pull off both executions on the same day. JENNIE M. GOODWIN. firm, and her mouth that of a womanly woman. She is quick in thought and speech and a good talker. The position of In Trenton, N. J., there is a wisa Darter. He doesnt allow his workmen (or perhaps artists is a better word) to Lake any unnecessary talk with the customers. They are not allowed to use a brush or comb a second time without havirg,it washed, and they are psi-ti?e-ly from .taking tips. prohibited The result is exactly as might be expected; he gets practically all the busl-52- 3 in town. During the investigation of the may-c- r at Superior, Wls., Attorney Cooper interrogated Chief of Police Dutton up-c- o his personal experience with gambling houses, when Mr. Lutton hotly narked that he was not a3 competent k testify upon that point as Mr. Cooper bimself, whose experience at the green taales included the loss of a large sum c money intrusted to him by a client. Hue investigation immediately a&-- 2 turned till the next day. United StatC3 consular representative at Matamoras, Mexlco.reports Prosperous condition of affairs there. Cfups of all kinds are more abundant they have been for six years, ite h-n- n admirers below. The LL. D. conferred on Dr. S. Weir Mitchell of Philadelphia by the University of Edinburgh, is the second he has received, the first coming from Harvard; hut it was left for the Scotch university to do him the extraordinary honor of referring to him as the chief ornament to medical science in the new world. In addition to his great attainments as a physiologist, Dr. Mitch ell has the unique distinction of main taining a practice in London as well as In Philadelphia. He is one of the nu merous physicians of celebrity1, of whom Smollett and Oliver Wendell Holmes were examples, who have excelled in letters as well as in medicine. Dr. Mitchell is well known both as poet and as novelist, and it is not unlikely that a run on one of his books would have pleased him even more than the Edin burgh degree. EXPERT SEAMEN. Are the Monks That Man the Prophet " II j a. Holy f An Odessa letter of recent date says: One of the oddest vessels afloat arrived a few days ago In Odessa, and Is moored on the lower quay. She belongs to the convent on Mount Athos and is called the Holy Prophet ,Ilja (Elias) d and sails under the She Is a Turkish flag, but Greek cross is carried on both mastheads, and she differs from the ordinary Turkish ships by her scrupulous cleanness. The captain is a Jeromonach, a monk ranking higher than a friar, and all the sailors are monks or lay brothers; still, they are expert seamen. The pilot, Father Iraklij (Herculius), has crossed all the oceans and zones, sailing around the wide world siBce 1866. The entire crew crew speak both Russian and Greek. Service on the ship alternates with worship in the little church in the forecastle. It is quite a curious sight to behold these monks in their long frocks and sandals climbing up the masts, along the yardarms, reefing sails or hanging almost over the water on the foremost point of the bowsprit. The brig brought here a' load of bricks from Constantipople, and goes in ballast to Marinpol, where she will take a cargo of flour, corn, fish and other provisions which are to furnish the supply for the convent for a whole year. According to own statements, the the Holy Prophet Ilja is a smart sailor, and runs eleven knots an hour in a fair wind. She is 105 feet long and carries a cargo of 200 tons.! brig-rigge- t well-dress- Boot -- y - 4 aM Siioa chin does all its work inside of the eho. .Two doors north of Union, Main St., NephL McNally W lilali. A perfect fit guaranteed. Repairing in fell Its branches. Special attention called ta his new style. Universal feel sewing mac c A Choice Fresh Ideal r Hutton, Ycal, Chipped If! and fig-are- Your patronage solicited. penj-knif- lEissorFTioisrs s. Carefully compounded. Mail or express orders promptly atteaed to. Large Stack at Salt Lake prices. TRADE SOUTHER!! SOLICITED. h MW ALLY LUNT, - NEPHI, - UTAH. fie rare and UTAH. NEPHI, CAPITAL SURPLUS - GENERAL - - J. e, v V: ' S' W ',T' z Close connections in union depots, And positively the quickest rout J. ii. Erickson, Vice-Preside- nt. Armstrono, Cashierr F'rorri Utah) Atlantis the Great Rivers and Ocean. Elegant and thoroughly modern Equipment and To M. C. OSTLER, Manufacturer and Repairer of Chair Csr oo Reclining BOOTS AND SHOES. In which the seats are free to holdtro? of regular train tickets. 2 All kinds of shoes made to order. Workmanship second to none. First door south of Tabernacle, NEPHI. MAIN STREET, linmnr.iUH'i'- No tiresome layovers. In All Its Branches. W. W. rta'ti RAILWAY. BANKING Geo. C. Whitmoee, President.. a ticket that Kimiii; -- 350,000 337,500 ... ak for VTA ional Ba Call on or address S.V.DARRAH, GENERAL MERCHANDISE COMMERCIAL FREIGHT AND PASSENGER ADD PRODUCE After all, even trees have about as hard times as the rest of us, for their aamks are often seized for board. Room 21 Morlan Block, AT THE Salt Lake City, Utah - OR- - Missouri has a woman sheriff. What will she do when she has an attachment for a young fellow? Goods OSTLER & OCKEY, rill General Passenger & Ticket Agent, DEVSEIUP, f.lGR. Main Street, - - DE2S2ET. St. Louis, Mo. good-looki- ng at bottom prices for H. C. TOWIJSEtlD, spot cash. JII0. Wholesala and Retail Bute e r b, 1 CURED in a mi BEEF mutton Complete Line of Builders Supplies. Lumber Vard PORK Miijli VEAL A.1T3D -- Butter, Lard, Sausage & - Mill Work a Specialty. GRACE BROTHERS -- Manufacturers of and Dealers in .... r . Window, Doors, Mixed Paints, Mouldings, Hardware, Pickets, Coal, Coffins, Casket, Combination Wire Fence, eto. , attention given to mail orders and the Southern Trade. Special By ordering from us you save the freight from Salt Lake City to ILL point. Grace Brothers, . ' NEPHI CITY, UTAH. - t - 3r HAS M VO FELL CLEAFi ' OB ELSE Deseret is noted Lr the dc quality of its Milk, 1uiter and Cheese- - Givt o ur produt t a ti iaU HOPPLES, NOSE SACKS, ETC. N. S. BISHOP, 2s- t'v - 5 Y' J- j1- We also carry a full line of SIUPTj Horse Furnishing Goods a.a M Mens and Sheep Tims DESERET HOUSE. MINISTER RANSOM. Mexico, which appointment was recently decided unconstitutional by the attorney-general, on the ground that the would benefit from the elevaappointee of tion rank of the office for which he himself voted as United States senator. Mr. Ransom has just been reappointed. Dealers in and Manufacturers of ' ' It SALE , OSTLER & ALLEN THE DESERET DAIRY G'O, v ? Bolcjna. luiit, & - g CwJ If yen are coins to ks 3 A. V. GEORGE HARDY, ed ALSOCarlyles Old Home, At length, and except for a few of pounds, the fund for the I In home old Chelsea has been Carlyles raised, and the house will hereafter be museum of Carlyle relics 4,sl shrine OSTLER-OCKEY, for visitors, mostly Americans, In the words of the London Daily News. The NEPHI CITY, UTAH. price paid is 2,089. The dwelling Is unimposing and even shabby, and Is Free delivery to any part of the city. likely to prove disappointing to visitors from this side of the ocean. It contains nine small rooms and a mean little R. E. L. COLLIER, O.E. garden in the rear.- Perhaps! the most interesting feature of it is the attic room with a skylight, built by Carlyle to Engineering in all ils Branches. escape the noise of the crowing cock3 and barking dogs of the neighborhood. Land and Irrigation Work a Specialty Eciglceer for Ontrel Land and IrrJgatloi Matt Whitaker Hansom. Co.. Clear 1 H e Land and Irrigation Co., The accompanying portrait ,is that of Fillniote I aii id Irrigation Co. and WblU Mountain Lif,,- and Irrgation Co. Matt Whitaker Ransom, whom President Cleveland appointed minister o Office: Court House, Fillmore, Utah e sail-mon- U-- : piy-chas- manufacturing has increased in line. There has also been a Larked increase in exports, due to the A:T tariff. Among the articles in which was the greatest activity were cattle and hides, and1 large &d- -. I ms in prices were made. All tut I) per cent of the imported good 1 B5gr Brains of Great lien. in 7 ' Matamoras last year came from The famous and fitly named German United States. Experts cf fruit Schaper, iwho executed the T' largely increased in consequence sculpter, statue of Bismarck at Cologne, was Florida f rests. privileged to be on more familiar terms u ra ii great excitement in Yeah-- than anybody now living, probably, txause Mies Flagler, who shot with his sitters head. lie had that head ' a colored boy who reached In his hand for days and surveyed, and manipulated it to garden fence and nipped and measured, The result of his content. - Year, was exonerated by his hearts he submensurations Now cf observations and Fs jury. scisequently placed at the disposal of i , cays tho t ence, and science has proceeded to invej intende the to stitute comparisons between therefore, will lih-inot othersonly in for herxrah act. It would Princes head and u truth iu:re hum 'no Lai tbv point of size, but in point cf brain as may bo uti'U abo-v-Inery the greatly,mans '.j invit' d th o bay in c a 1 1.11 . favor. great v. l.,3 df nth would iiebe blj im, 'Gi.d, 212 '1 measures and : : c certain, it veil: 1: '.V 3 he lib march head i J Ed rniifamfrrs. Thio, it appe: - f r. ,Aml3 a . An Ornament Indeed. Dry Sunday in New York seems to strike Tammany where it lives. It e, walte3 up 0n Monday, and drinks three finger requires several stand. Ur- . , r before 'ti ' MLLE. DE MERODE. opera in Paris. She is only a coryphee, and is, and will always be, an indifferent danseuse. But her beauty and the fact that she was the first in the French capital to adopt the Mystic, the Leonardo fashion of wearing an overflowing wealth of hair, have led her to celeb rity. She is tall, has a placid chore-graph- ic grace, and offered in her pale blue domino a rare poetic picture at the opera masked balls last winter, as she threw bouquets from her loge to her , wait. s PRODIGY IN SCULPTURE. Charleston Negro VTho IXa a Natural Genius for Modeling. Charleston possesses a wonderful sculptural prodigy in the person of giGeorge R. Devane. Devane is an ll eer by trade and worked formei at i3 now not but Greggs mines, employed there,says the News and Courier. This naturally gives him more time to devote to his art, which, if crude, shows undoubted signs of talent. His specialties are carvings on sticks, and while these would hardly.be carried by the ultra man, they are exceedingly interesting and ingenious, and in some instances pretty. Devane also carves on horns. These are really lovely, except when disfigured by sentences explaining the sculptured The designs are varied on the , ticks alligators, snakes, lizards, frogs nd all sorts of little beasts that creep gnd crawl In most lifelike attitudes. The carving on the horns, however, is all copied from pictures, and when the picture copied has been one of Flaxmans drawings, which Devane has in a History of Josephus, the effect is beautiful. The trouble i that being absolutely uneducated and illiterate he does not display great taste in the selection of his models nor has he a sense of the eternal fitness of things. ' King Darius Slaying a lion (Flaxman) is flanked by General Sherman's Glorious Victory in Georgia, copied from a picture in a little tuppenny school history (printed at the north). Devane sent a number of his sticks to the Chicago exposition, where they attracted the attention of Fred Douglass, who wrote him a letter of commendation and asked him to go on to the fair. This he was unable to do for lack of funds.' the fair was over, however, some of hlb sticks were sold bF Mr. Douglass for him for $15 apiece. Mrs. Andrew Simonds has engaged Devane to sculpture several horns and sticks for the Charleston room. The carving is all done with an old which originally cost 15 cents. Devane has a complete set of carving tools, but says he can do nothing with them at all. If he could be taught' in some way and shown some of the beautiful Ivory carvings of the east, his ideas being raised, it is probable that he might become an adept in the art. As It Is his work Is both interesting and unique and in many instances exceedingly pretty and quaint. Devane is going to the Atlanta exposition and expects to coin money there. E:;I vitin Dr IKIES C C. 3 frerx Brtrcll WE GUARANTEE in. fesJ county Newspaper freon f taV Outfits Cowboys til yseta JL tz.Z Zltrj tMsg RESPECT AELR. n ap't a. FOawiaar Veil cf THIS PUREjT Y7ATCR ON HAUTH. Killed Boys to Feed Bears. Cat! Premise. Ttla Viter ta a C2TJLR Two Roumanian trainers and exhibitAJfTZED CUES far 3 ors of performing bears have been arin in rested Debreczm, the Haiduck District of Hungary, charged wRh hav- CI:::::3 of ths Kidneys aid El: ing fed their animals human fitch. In Tsa'lmtlais oa Application. the course of their examination the men MRS. J. F. GIBBS, Prop. admitted that they had killed four boys, cut their bodies into pieces and fed DESERET, UTAH their bears with the flesh. rpTnnrn I u tlJvVdliyrnTr tiiu) cure on of all cusekly tionof a phJ'p1 ?.n,wU fucIi m t Mtn e cf tl.e or tck,fcrrnial i.i... .. Insomnia, IamsInUioP Irriins, firirof Unfitness to a..fi taracuHFJ-enc- i 1 4 Li V r Pimr'ps. 1 1 3 h - liirry, a,- ner-V0U- 3 ... .,V L--n if. CEFOnC INO AFTER FOB SALB BY McNALLY tc LUNT, DUG G 1 2IT3, NEPIIi; |