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Show CORNER OF ODDITIES. jgE ODD, . . I 3I".. H. Kin. Wjn. a. w. Smith. W. Jndd. Brigham, vNl m. Bryon Oroo. TT Attorney ar&al 1 KfflVa . la ujg awakened. Little eyes thats seen no sin; -- Lca of 8choQf ner Little r i Locan. City. City. Lake City. Lake City. 7Balt Lake Lake Tnatd. irCnn.ajt - Fred W. JUAB i' : that its chin; Little feet so pink and cunning, curls of Little CLhappe Charles Foote Hugo Deprezln A. L. Jackman ..NJ..D. T.W.Sullivan Cazler ..... Thomas Winn Jelniso heart knows no aching. Little dimple in COMMISSION. XJTAR Murder 1 , AST asleep, not yet Bartcb. Geo- - I '..JtftW d e;fer A Merritt 8. T lc 8 . a W. West 'Caleb rj. C. Richard. ; . A Dakota Girl Supposed to Be la th Grave j Comes Home as a Wife Told nnUlToFFlOERa. jS8Eff?I ef - UTAH. Xank i. Cannon. st' AND CURIOUS PHASES OP LIFE. QUEER, golden hue; Little mouth so sweet for kissing. Little hands all dimples, too. Little Voice now hushed in slumber. Bdward Pike Little ears that hear no call; Hanford lliam Ockey Mother's lump of loving sweetness. Eustice Sleeping while the shadows fall. John Foote Little soul so pure and holy, Litte too thoughts young to form; DIRECTORY. Little now so .darling helpless. .J. -J- oshua Greenwood PSoon will fight lifes bitter storm. v,B JuflPeterson. jAndreas J. I John Styler. tsen- (James Gardner. C. Holbrook. J.Lo. . Bride From a Coffin. Alma Greenwood; . ;;ir .A. A. Hinckley Hope, N. D. Special to St. Paul . 0. Callister. n4Becorew- .- 4 Thos. Jn M IIanflon Globe A girl who a year ago was pronounced dead and prepared for burial rtf 7.. A .L WillardD. Rogers. Smith has 0or..... .Joseph rpappeared before her astonished .gjdjxey 'Teeplea, O. OaUistef parents and friends as the wife of Geo. T..U.j..P. COUNTY T.AED T i J. -- -- XTisbeglnningl to complain that not are too many insurgents and as if any rji Spaniards, Itjlooks Ao wished to assist in freeing it. vj would have tOj be quick about j have a tower 1,100 feet ascending to the top of this is to !csgo By the a glimpse of the iago citizen to get 2:3 catch a breath of smokeless air. ire -- it may jae possible for the grand canal and important parts of the draining the city and val- - jjg work on e( the most for "ject Mexico, attention of i Is practically completed Is being turned to plans x reconstructing1 an entire sewerage The total cost for the city. J b8 about $10,000,000. a have heard and late we jf reaa a about the importance of the school children to be good The truth Is that rjican citizens. schools have always taught patriot-- c deal have given a skeleton of hls-- There is no' need of any new de-r- e. We do not want the schools rbed with conflicting interpreta-- j and Their pur-- s is to impart Instruction in a few ortaat subjects, and furnish a Rework to which the items of an a;!on may be attached as they may school. In j gathered after leaving very few things is there time for the of constitution. . a y thorough work. :d or Gompers, American CSle-- j British Workingmen's Con-- s, returnedj is quoted as say-- ; Samuel Hr. the to just Theres no question but that the movement in Europe la further ;r j in than the movement meed especially in England, exists a better appreciation on the 1 of the public as to the purposes In Europe, 8 -- labor organiza- The fact is that England was an atrial country when the United achievements of 3 -- .:3ia3 wholly undeveloped lndus--!iThere they have men In the :r movement whose grandfathers n agitators and (Walking delegates, labor organizations of England overcome a great deal of the pre-be- e against them which formerly ex- y. e c r E. Thompson, a young farmer living with iis mother near this place. Mrs. Thompson was Miss Ellen Norman, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. j John Norman, living just south of Hope, She was engaged to be married to Mr. Thompson, but her parents were strongly opposed to the match. In October 189, the girl was taken ill. October 24 she died; at least the doctors pronounced her dead, after subjecting her to numerous tests. The funeral was Set for October 25. The body was over night in the Norman house, only) watcher was Mr. Thompson, declared he was not afraid of the diseise, whatever it was. It was due to his watching that the young woman Is alive Thompson removed the lid of the coffin in order to once more gazej upon the face of his fiancee. He was startled to see the chest of the body in the casket rise and fall In a spasmodic way, as though the girl was gasping for breath. He wrapped the rigid form in a blanket and carried it to his home. There she awakened and Then explained all to his mother. e Norman returned Thompson house, made up a dummy and closed the coffin. Thi3 was buried. After Miss Nofman had been carried to the Thompson residence, and a doctor had wotked over her for several hours it became Evident that she had simply been In a trance. She remained delirious l!or several days. As she became stronger all was explained to her. About the middle of December Miss Norman! was spirited away from Hop byjDr. Mullan and Mr. Thompson, and since that time she has been traveling infthe South and West, where she has fully regained her health. Soon after leaving here she and Mr. Thompson wOre married, and shortly after that Di?.1 Mullan returned to his home here, leaving his patient in charge of her husband. Mr. and Mrs. Thompson arrived here a few days ago, first having advised M r. and Mrs. Norman that the as dead daughter they had mourned wks alive and well and on her way home to them as the wife of Mr. Thompson. There was a dramatic scene when Mrs.. Thompson met her father and mother.! Mrs. Thompson looks as well and happy as a woman can, but does not care to talk of her strange 19-yeir-- old to-da- y. to-th- ( ! the la Rlch-- 4 around a to according country Mich., correspondent, the breakthe long drought has acious cf s some 3 strange phenomena. that should Sowers,, he' says, '.ld in May and June are la f J bloom, and apple and plum a are bearing ripe fruit and blos- on the same branch. Fields of a -- that were planted late have the pod3, green beans, and beans tl "om in the same bill. Garden !s vhich were planted last spring '1 cU net sprout are growing now, farmers are having their second 4 0? early vegetables. This man his talents in Itichland. go's chief of police is yearning for ch geniuses to reviv interest in i blossomed, 3 c 3 ' 1 -- helmcs case. lake, In South Dakota, 13 re-- 5 A Lake Kampeska, near &ud T? ( pTn lower than ever before. source cf water supply to Vs rhing town, some anxiety i3 r future. Heavy winter likely correct the diS- - s 7 hi most ?. 'ri farmer figured he bad it out vao walked S00 miles bating cue acre of corn. He 4 :,ld his farm and moved to re walked CG3 miles to find .;y 5 3, i Told the Story of Murder in His Sleep. In the jail of Oroville is Thomas Laughty, alias Locklin who is believed to be the murderer of Arthur Meyers. On the thirtieth of last October Meyers was driving a stage near Nevada City when a lone highwayman held up the stage and demanded the box. Meyers did not obey at once, and tbe highwayman fired, killing him instantly. Detectives traced the murderer all over Southern California, but failed to find him, although a reward of $2,600 was offered. Two months ago Laughty was arrested in Chico on a charge of larceny and pleaded guilty and was sentenced to ninety days In the county jail. Four weeks ago his cellmate, George Evans, heard him uttering in his sleep: I shot Arthur Meyers, and if I dont 1 in the bushes there, get that old he will get me. Evans thought he had the murderer and spent two weeks In questioning Laughty. Evans said to him: You should be more careful what you say in your sleep, for you might tell things about yourself you dont want others to know. From that time Laughty feared Evans. For nearly a week he was In a terrible state of excitement and day and night walked Up and down his cell without sleeping. At last he picked a quarrel with Evans, but the jailer separated them. Soon after this six of the prisoners were sitting together when Evans said: "I wonder If a murderer could be hanged by what he might say in his sleep. I tnow the murderer of Arthur Meyers and could put my bands on him. Laughty, who was behind Evans, in a fit of rage grabbed up a spittoon and struck him a heavy blow on the head. The other prisoners stopped the fight. Evans ,then told Sheriff Guldery and Sheriff Wilson what he had heard. They found further proofs of hi3 guilt, and as soon as Laughtys term expires he will be taken1 to Nevada county. San Francisco Chronfdfe. Contains Invaluable Blocks. In the midst of the ruins of the demolished building on Samson street above Sixth, where the firm of Mackel-lar- . the value of initials. Iocli Used In Our Language- - Iuz?le the Frenchmen. The lines beginning: Twas whispered in heaven, twas muttered in hell. And echo caught faintly the sound as it fell. attributed to Lord Byron, but really by Catherine Fanshawe, have the letter h for their mot denigme, says the Hawthorne gave one of hi3 works the name of The Scarlet Letter, and one of Charles Lambs ineffectual dramas is called Mr. H., its not very entertaining plot turning on the concealment of the hero6 real name, which in the end Is found to be Hbgsflesh. Readers of Dickens will remember Mr. F.s aunt, while the riots at Convent Garden theater, familiarly known as the O. P. riots, live chiefly in the pages of Rejected Addresses. When members of the same profession speak of individuals by professionally abbreviated titles, it Is generally a sign that the speakers are talking shop. Army men, for instance, strew their conversation and documents with so many vowels and consonants that they seem to be making use of a special cipher, unintelligible to outsiders. There i3 nothing derogatory to a member of parliament or a queens counsel in being spoken of as M. P. or Q. C.; it is a familiar abbreviation in which all the members of parliament and all the queens counselors share, and written documents are naturally so addressed, but some of tbe abbreviations used in conversation have a decidedly colloquial ring about them. As a nation we seem to have a faculty for casting off superfluous words and phrases and for making use of contractions, and our titles of honor present a perennial source of difficulty to the foreigner. It must puzzle a Frenchman unacquainted with our social distinctions to discover the meaning of Bart. or Kt. or Esq., or to unravel the intricacies of K. C. S. I. or "M. F. H., though on the part of a Briton such ignorance would mean ignorance of the usages of society. On the other hand, initials may be used in a derogatory sense. If we bear in private conservation a man referred to as old J. we may be sure it Is hardly intended as a compliment; while the bourgeoise who calls her husband Mr. J. at once conveys to her hearers a sense of easy and, vulgar familiarity. In our complex civilization symbols have come to be looked upon as Integral portions of the system of decorations and awards. Spectator. best-know- n The home rule question has wrecked the happiness, of many a family. In making our good resolution we are apt to forget how long the year Is. One of the great satires in society is to hear some women spoken of es ckx eronea. OSTLER & OCKEY, HARDY, t anil loo iJoIier. GEORG-- A perfect fit guaranteed. Repairing la all Its branches. Special attention called his new atjle. Univere&l feed sewing machine does all lt work inslda of tbe ehca. Two door north of Union, Main St., NephL v A E TT n--T- 7 f Choice Fresh Lleal Hutton, Ycal, Chin cl and Bolnqna. Your patronage solicited. HcNALLY & LUHT, J Be j JlIJ rpimsoiFiiTioiNrs Carefully compounded. Hall or express orders promptly at ten el to. Large Stack at Salt Lake price. SOUTHER!! r.rriALLY - NEPHI, SOLICITED. TRADE l lunt, - ST. OR UTAH. LORIS, fis sure and aik for a ticket that rt VIA The First National Bank, UTAH. NEPHI, CAPITAL SURPLUS 1$ 350,000 nisi! 337,500 - (I J. II w RAILWAY. BANKING GENERAL No tiresome layovers. In All Its Branches. W. J. AV. Close connections in union depot! And positively the quickest rcuto J. H. Ericksoh, Gxo. C. Whitmoke, President. vsYT Vice-Preside- nt. Armstrong!, Cashier, M. C. Kronri LJteitj To OSTLER, Manufacturer and Repairer of BOOTS AND SHOES. All kinds of shoes made to order. Workmanship second to none. First door south of Tabernaol, NEPHI. MAIN STREET, the Great Rivers and Atlantia Ocean. Elegant and thoroughly modern Equipment and Oris Giiair Declining In which the seats are free to holders of regular train ticket. Call on or address ' S. V. DARRAH, 6EHERAL KEBCUAUDISE COMMERCIAL All I . ilUDil FREIGHT AND PASSENGER AilD PRODUCE Room 21 Morlan Block, AT THE DBERET CASH STORE. Good at bottom prises e pot Cast Main Street, I Czi - - m. Utd?, OR TOWIMD, General Passenger & Ticket hgzz St. Louis, Mo. Di Hill Work a Specialty. Complete Line of Builders Gupyllea. Wholesale and Ketail - Salt Lake City, II. C. cash. j::o. devsiiup, flDITfuI 1 BROTHERS Bute tiers, Yard Lumber BITS Mill Butter, Lard, Sausage Plaining GRACE OXJKJ3I3 PORK VEAL MUTTON -- AJCST3D ALSO- 13 Manufacturers of and Dealers in 0STLER&r OCKEY, Window, Doors, Mixed Paints, Moulding, Hardware, Coal, Casket, Coffins, Pickets, Combination Wire Fence, eto. NEPHI CITY, UTAH. attention given to mail order and the Southern Trade. Special Smiths & Jordan, type founders, is of the to Free delivery any part city. By ordering from us you save the freight from Salt Lake City to thi preparing to erect, a new foundry, point. stands a large brick and steel safe, the antiquity of which dates back alR. E. L. COLLIER, O.E. most a century. The safe Is built up from the cellar, on substantial foundations, to a level with the first floor. Engineering in all its Branches. Mr. Mackellar, one of the members ol the firm, said recently that what ii Land and Irrigation Work a Specialty contains is the key to their business, The value of the books and papers oi Engineer for Central Land and Irrigation Clear Lake Land and Irrigation Co the firm pale into insignificance when Co., Co. and Whitl Land and Fillmore compared to the appraisement of the Mountain Lanu andIrrigation Irrigation Co. . matrices and dies with which impressions of type are made that have been Office: Court House, Fillmore, Utah, stored in this safe for so many years Dealers in and Manufacturers of They qould never be replaced if destroyed, and the firm takes exceedingIs THE DESERET DAIRY CO, care of them. The safe or vault about 20 feet long, 10 feet high and as HAS FOR SALE many feet wide. Its one entrance Is FULL CREAM CHEESE. a doorway on the east side, which is an steel iron and at closed night by Deseret is noted for the fine quality door half an inch thick. The walls are of steel of its Milk,, Butter and Cheese. Oiva floor and, roof of the safe NOSE SACKS, ETC. rows of three brick hacked by plates, o ur products a trial. Inside, the matrices and die punches . We also carry a full line cf are systematically arranged in boxes BISHOP, ' and shelves around the walls. In th SUPT. arc matrices which those morning needed are taken from the vault, which is now reached by a shaky planfc TI-I-E bridge, and carried to the foundry. A1 and locked night they are taken back is the the safs up building When up. for the reconstructed second will be Once some before, time in its history. was It 30 years ago. strengthened and the addition of steel made fire proof by of the outei better and building walls now fire is It walls. proof, and sc C7 axi county Newspaper frera tH brick JUUX should the building arranged that, c 7 from X?stct r Ore which contained it have burned down, wksra. the safe would still have stood, .in the ABLE. original spot, for its foundation rested "Every ttizs RESPECT CUPIDETiC A rreet Vf SEetahle on the cellar floor. The building which T7U cf RESTORED.;; LIAi'iiaOD 'rest rlp- ... U .1. i, the type founders are about to erect THE PUREST WATER ON EARTH. will be higher than the former one and C?a Ca FrerxLe. Tbi VTatsr la a C?JAM will be built of Pompeiian brick. Philor nJerPt. AKTESD CURB far O Constipation. It Bfopi all load toPppriuatorrhoHqokand adelphia Ledger. Ef isof discharge, winch if rotcHzHcw1 - 4 l'IMI:.MIc!eauscathohvcr, t.,o BEFORE AND AFTER jnevsamUhrImpotnororgans of all impur.Ues. ofthe Dlxsisss and Kidneys remarked I will withdraw my suit, , pniaii weaK of'iDs. cuw w rnety rcr cent Rro trmihH w!P TimrPLwn' 'snrerS Yrorot cored by Doctors N tobf cure as he counted cash YaatSmcnlala on his up tut operation. L Jobson, Application. v tes imon- Known young out 1 1 DEN J j is r1! itiu it the with that found corresponded and for MRS. J. F. GIBBS, Prop. J1.00 a box, six for .w, by runu P. O. Pox -- j.G, Enn I ranc'vo. C:d Por sum on his pawnticket. Boston Home y AdJ e.a nAVOL Itri) 17 E CO.. & LUNT, DUGGICTO, NEPHI. McNALLY UTAH. DESERET, Journal. ron GAUD BY i After Many Years. A year ago the Pioneer Press printed the story of Mrs. Mary Schwandt-Schmid- ts captivity among the Sioux during1 the great outbreak of 1862.. All of her family but herself and a younger Indians, brother were murdered by the was 14 taken of a then girl and she restorafinal the until held captive and Camp tion of all the white prisoners atwas in she Release. While a prisoner remembe constant peril, and it will bered that in her story she attributes her preservation to the kind offices of an Indian woman named Snana (Tinkher from her ling), who purchased her as a daughsavage captor, adopted watched ter and carefully guarded andfinal overthe over her for weeks, until throw; of the Sioux. Mrs. A copy of the paper containing agenSioux the Schmidts story reached and the two women cy at Santee, Neb., communication with were soon in glad from heard had other. Neither the other since the dreadful days of had married an ,1503. Meantime Snana well Indian named Mazazedon (Brass), at was who known as Charles inBrass, government the one time a scout since. some died service, but he owns and years manages a mV idow now near Santee agency, where she Is tttll known and universally respected woman. ao a worthy Christian a visit to her on now Mrs Brass Is latters home on -aau'hter" at the Paul. Their Randolph street. St. circumstances, aadcr the peculiar Mrs. Brass Is nfv be Imagined. cVmely Indian matron. E3 years of name Is Maggie. jjer Christian W: was horn at Mcndota. and in her in the family of girlhood was educated the pioneer mis- rev 'Dr Williamson, slonaryat the below ut. Paul. sia four miles of the war she came to it the close and ttosto went rc'rt EnelHug remained Faribault, where she speaks, reeds r. Fngllsh fluently and aU the at- possesses Her t.we tributes c! a trua woman. . e and noble conductin' rescuing and preserving her helpless young charge from death wasknown to but few prior to the Pioneer Press publication, but It Is none the less praiseworthy. The girl she saved to the world Is now a most estimable woman, and a happy end crowns a noble work. The first I knew that my daughter was still alive, said Mrs. Brass dast evening, was when the matron of the Indian school at Santee came to me with the newspaper and kissed me and said, Maggie, you are a dear, good woman, and went on to praise me, and then scolded me because I had never told her and the others the story. I had not said much about it, because I did not like to boast of doing what was only my duty. I have always loved the memory of my daughter, and hoped and prayed that I might see her again, and now that my dearest wish is realized I am happier than I ever expected to be. She was a very pretty and good girl when she was with me, and I think she Is pretty yet, and she is so kind to me that I love her more than ever. Asked about her arly recollections of St. Paul, she said: I remember well, when I was a little girl, that there were only a few houses of some French settlers here, scattered along the river. I did not then dream that I should ever see the place a great city, as It is now. I saw the parades this week, the great crowds on the streets and all the other splendid sights, and It Is all so wonderful. I am very glad I am here. I will make a good visit this time, and I hope to come again. St. Paul Pioneer Press. ' tLa ul of Benedict om Africa to Newr York ex-cons- ::'A , History Specimens, anc to the ship, the eu- -' regard to the on corpse shipboard f'fa ought "I mailers in J Perhaps it is Hcg cf the fcoxea ;man. 3 5 the newepap-ire- mcro- - that makes , but cf b? pardoned for ski id? IBS J alo it pmoplo vho have f f t iA: - at the rame j j f . intelligent-IvV-andVorcvc- Grace Irott) e.rs, UTAH: NEPHI CITY, OSTLER & ALLEN, HOPPLES, n. s. Horse Furnishing- Goods Sheep Mens and Cowboys Outfits. DESERET HOUSE. m . WE GUARANTEE . Hz -- ) V m -- I lo-- i X X i I r W b- |