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Show . ' "LOYAITW ,l and therefore Whlttemore's concluLOCAL sion and objection arc equally absurd. A far more Bcriptural objecFrom Monday's Daily of Feb. l.J could .be , urged tion agaicst the consecration of a bachelor, Wheat and Peaches for Paul evidently sustains the The " highest price in cash and mercommandment to first great chandise paid for wheat and dried man, "increase, and multiply, and peaches at J. STANFORD'S, Fifth Street, s79-treplenish the earth;" and among Ogdtn. other qualifications for the import- THE AMERICAN SARDIJiK CO's ant office of bishop, requires that ho Fardinrs, re inwli better, mil Jm tlian balf the cost of .imported Sar.liueit. "rule Well his household." A bishop ITEMS. Administration orgabB ar making frequent use of the Word "loyal." The manner in Which it is applied Mnacks" more or royalty than' republicanism. "Loyalty to the executive" is the same in spirit as "loyalty to the sovereign." "The loyal press," means the papers which support (Jraut. The cry of "disloyalty" has frequently 'been raised against the '"Mormons." What did it mean? .'.'imply that the "Mormon" had no worship for men; that they dared to criticise the public acts of public the hirjhest to the lowest; that Federal officials were in their eyes no n.ore than mortals clothed with a little brief authority; that the President of the United States was not king, and that neither the Republican nor the Democratic party was of right entitled to their, devoin - f . BONE-LES- S bl7-l- y without a family is a poor of the Divine Father, aud he who can manage a large fimily in wisdooi, must certainly exhibit more adaptability for his important office than a single, solitary bachelor who has never known the joys,' trials, cares and responsibilities of the matrimonial ftate. vc repre-lentati- Detained The U. P. train was six hours behind last night. ,It will be four hours behind The C. P. will wait for it. Credit is due to the company that no blockade has taken place as yet this winter. ' Coxoratulatokv. We congratulate Bishop Budge and his family on, the birth of another daughter. The Budges It is to be, presumed that Dr. are food stock, and we are happy to Dudley's first wife is dead, and if so, chronicle the increase thcreef. Missionary Appointments. sovereignty of the, people. To gup-The Home Missionaries of Weber port Grant,' to sustaiu the Republi- Countj are requested to fill the appointcan party, to endorse the Adminis- ments herein named, on Sunday, Feb. ;' tration comprehends their ideas of 7th, 1875. Plain City Richard Ballantyne, R. A. htyalty. And tho accusation which uxed to be hurled agaiust the "Mor- Ballanlyne nnd L. F. Monch. North Ogden C. II. Wheelock and mons" is now thrown up to defame Holmes those who can no longer work with Henry Harrisville D. M. Stuart and Jos. A. ' ' the horde, of tenacious officeholders West. and ambitious politicians, who aim at Hooper City Walter Thomson and whose Stanford. and ideas Jos. succession ," perpetual Edmund Ellsworth and Slatersville establishment the are of government Moroni Brown. of an oligarchy. West Weber James Taylor and EdThe "Mormons" are loyal to the win Stratford. Constitution;" they are loyal to the Marmtt Uobt. McQuarrie. eternal truths which underlie the Mound Fort Winslow Farr. institutions founded by the fathers ot jrVLynBeC. W. Penrose. the republic they arc loyal; to the 7 Iliverdale Wm. N. Fife. ; . , ' ! ; 4 required to servo. The term loyalty as applied to persons aud parties should have no place in the vocabulary of a free people. Let those who delight in, its use. ac- knowledge themselves subjects or slaves to a ruler or a clique if hey pleise, but the masses of American citizens will repudiate the tcrnf and .. depiso the 'sycophants who'delight in that relic "of monarchial subjec- tiou-- . 1 ' " I'KECISE HUT JiOT PUO. rouxi). Rishop Whittiugham, of Maryland, is a great stickler for scripture, or rather for his private interpretations thereof. According to a telegram published in last Saturday's Junction, he refuses to sign the rredentials of Dr. Dudley's consecration to the episcopate, on the ground that the learned gentleman ha3 been twice niafried and is ineligible under the injunction of St. Paul, who. in his epistle to Timothy, snys? "A bishop must be blameless, the husband of one wife." Commentators quite as learned, as Whittinghanij-'undcrstanthe qualification to the bishopric referred to, as a requirement that a candidate for tha, office must be a married 'man; that is that he must have at least one wife. That polygamy was practised in the early Christian Church is almost beyond doubt among the best informed historians and theologians, Yoke." , Whittingham's objection seems like Lecture Next Thursday evening tion or allegiance. 'straining at a gnat." Whittingham a lecture will ke delivered en AgriculThoe who are so free in the uso is precise and particular, but not ture before the D. A. & M. Society of the First District, ia the suoolhouse, by of the cry of "disloyalty," say nothing very profound. Mr. Joshua Williams. To commence at about disloyalty to prinsiple, loyalty 7 o'clock. Admission free. to the" Constitution r. loyalty to the Government, when that tf rui is un-- , derstood as the embodiment of the priuciples which gave life to this great nation. But they profess no loyalty to individuals, as such'; the Prcfid :nt of the United States is, to them, no monarch whom they are bound to obey, and the officers who may be appointed to duties among them are not masters whom they are now Thej arc Dellrerinff the People From "The , F D. Richards. Municipal. The City Council met as per adjournment, January 29th, 1875, Mayor L. J. Hcrrick in tfie chair. The license of John Herrocks to keep a beer saloon on Main street, was renewed for three months. A. Landt was granted a license as general broker for six months. The respective .licenses of D. W. Nichols & Bro., Messrs. Payne & Christian, Messrs Young & Giles, Messrs. Hoffman & Stone, and Annie Rosina Cordon, were renewed. The committee on public grounds recommended that Hyrum Bull, James Coleman and Thomas Myers be grunted their petitions to purchase lots on the ' i . . Bench. y The recommendation was adopted. s The committee on claims had examined the circumstances relative to Geo Poulter's deed for land held by the City, and recommended that n the payment of 17 40, the said deed bo turned over to him. Ji , The report was accepted and recommendation agreed to , i i The Recorder was instructed to publish in the Ogden Junction, a notice that on the 2nd of February, 1 875, at 2 o'clock p.m. i in the City Hall, a public Caucus will be held, for the nomination of Municipal officers. Several bills for public labor were allowed. The Council ndjourned till the 5th of February, 1875, to meet in the City Hall, at 2 o'tlock, p.m. On Saturday TAisrcL Accident. Mrs. evening, Mary 8. Garner, mother of Mr. W. R. R. Sto'well, residing on the Bench, slipped down on the ice and dislocated both of her wrists, also fracturing the larg? bone of the right arm about an inch and a half above the wrist. The old lady is seventy-seveyears of is to feared the shock and it that age, n her system may prove fatal.. Dr. P. L. Anderson wiited upon her last evening. She stood the operation with great fortitude, and the Doctor is in hopes that with great care she will recover. AuuiccLTt'KAL Machinery. Mr. M. Ayres, of the Cayuga Chief Manufacturing Company, of Auburn. New York, Is iu town. He is on a tour of inspection for Madison and Johnson, who have been selling machines to our people during the past year. He considers the prospect good for extending the business already established, and the Company's mowers and reapers will be placed in the market here in large numbers, together with other well known agricultural machines of eastern manufacture. He is now on his way to California, and en his, return will make a more extensile trip through our Territory. Ogden, of course, being the central point for the distribution of the different much i lies which he expects to introduce. The Cuyuga Chief has been tried by Mr. Johnson is many of our farmers. Agent in this city for this machine, and he expects, from the reputation already established, that Jt bis reaper and mower will obtain an extensive sale throughout Northern Utah in the coming season. J , - Works Worth Having. We are in receipt of "The Houses of Lancaster and York, with the Conquest and Loss of France," by Giirdner.., This ex. celleut volume is one of a series entitled "Epochs of History," edited by E. A. Morris, M A Each volume is somplete in itself, but the whole serins of thirteen constitutes a valuable ep:Ume of European history, and being published at a dollar a volume, is ju-- t the kind of collection suitable for Sunday school and other libraries, and for presents cud rewards. This volume commences with the French war in tho reign of Richard II, and carries the reidcr through those in. leresting but tumultuous times wken the War of the Roses" disturbed the "tight little island" of Great Britain, and when the arms of England were first victorious and then disastrous in France; aiviDg particulars of the rebellions under Watt Tyler and Jack Cade, continuing the history down to the reign and defeat of Richard III, and closing with a compre hensive chapter upon European history contemporaneous with the events described in the body of the book. It is illustrated with five maps ' James Dwyer, of Salt Lake, is agent for this series, and will supply them either in single volumes or by the whole collection, as may be required. We con. fidently recommend the work to our Mark your tools. You can easily mark your name upon steel by a process called etching. Coat over the ools with a thin layer of wax or hard tallow, by first warming the steel and rubbiug on the wax; warm until it flows and let it cool. When hard, mark your tho wax with a graver and apply some aquafortis (nitric acid);after a few seconds wash off the acid thoroughly with water, warm the metal enough to melt the wax, and wipe it off with a soft rag. The letters will be found etched into the steel. readers generally. -- name-throug- h Feeble aud lelieate Women. By R. V. PIERCE, M. World's Dispensary, Buffalo, Franklin, Oneida County, Jan. 27, 1875. Editor Junction : Sir: A few items A Few" Words to , of peculiar magni nitude and importance have transpired in this plase, which show the illiberal "Liberal" parprinjiple of the of ty, who bv fraud obtained the offices Mr. The the County. Sheriff, Keenly, came to this place with writs for six of our citizeus who have failed to pay their Territorial and County taxes for the year 1874. Up to this date the people have been notified by postal curds of the neceos-itof settling up their taxes, thereby causing no necessity of going to law. The additional per cent, added being sufficient for the officers. But. imagine the surprise of these poor men when they found that the Sheriff had writs for them. One, who owed S4.15. when mileage was added, found his bill was 40; another, whose taxes were $1:1, when mileage was added, had a bill of $G0. A third, whose taxes were $21, with mileage added his bill came to $67; and so on ia each case; there is un additional expense of fifty cents per mile added. The writs were issued from Deep Creek precinct, Malad, and each of those who oannot get (he means are to go there for trial on the 2'Jih inst., where judgment will be rendered, and another trip with writs of attachment, and mileage to the a nme officer added. Thus the unfortunate parties who failed to borrow the cash, are inevitably broken up. If the Sheriff had come the nearebt route,the mileage would have been about $20; but by going round by Marsh Valley he gets $46. The pleadings of these men are unheeded not one cent is deducted. But the extent of the law is enforced, property has been sold at cue third the value, while some have mortgaged what they bave in the shape of wagoas, teams, etc. The plea for legality is that each suit is a separate one, and could the officer get writs for fifty persons in the some place he would be able to buy out the county in a short time, especially an expert like Mr. Keen cy, could serve the writs and return with two thousand dollars in three days. So much for the officers who were going to break off the yoke ot Priesthood and liberate the poor "Mormons" of Oneida County. I notice Mr. A. Stalker rid. ng through he has just returned the streets from Boise. His mission has been one of interest to the illiberal party, having effected the division of Oneila County according to a programme given by his constituents, who were a small minority. But to secure hi election in connection with the rest of the clique, obtained over three hundred fraudulent votes, thus giving him 28 majority as councilman instead of Mr. L. ii. Hatch. But how was the county divided? Ia a manner to give Bear Lake and county just comprising the few Mormon" settlements there are in that valley, so as to cut off their votes at the next electioi, hoping thereby to be able to control the votes in Oneida without so great un appearance of frr.ud us was cummiiud to-da- D.. of the N. Y. Knowing that you are subject to a great amount of suffering, that delicacy on your part has a strong tendency t prolong, aDd the lot ger it Is neglected the more you have lo endure aod the more difficult of curs your csise becomes, I, as a physician, who is daily consulted hy scores of your sex, desire to say to you, that I am constantly meeting with thoe who have been treated far their ni'.mentsfor month .with jut being bene fitted in the least, until they have become perfectly discouraged and have almost ma1e up their minds never to take ano'her dose of medicine, nor be tortured by any further treatment. They had rather die and have their sufferings ended than to live and suffer as Jthey have They say they are v orn out bv nuffering and are only made worse by treatment. Of anything more discouraging, we certainly cannot con- ceive, and were thore no more successful mode of treating such difficulties than that, the principles of which teach tho reducing and depleting of the vital forces of the system, when the indications dictate a treatment directly the reverse of the one adopted for themr their cases wonld be deplorable indeed. Bu. lady sufferers, there is a betier and far more successful plan of treatment for yeu; one more in harmony with the lawa and requirements of your system. A harsh, irritating, caustic treatment and strong medicines will never cure you. If you would use rational means, such should dictate to every a common-sens- e intelligent lady, take such medicines as embody the very best invigorating ton'cs and nervines, compouuded with special reference to your delicate system. Such a happy combination yeu will find in my Favorite Prescription which has received the loudest praise from thousands of your sex. Those' languid tiresome sensations causing yon to feel scarcely able to be on your feet or ascend a flight of stairs, that continual drain that is sapping from your systems all your former elasticity, and driving the bloom from your cheeks; that continual strain upon your vital forces that renders you irritable and fretful, may all be overcome and subdued by a persevering uso of that marvelous remedy." Irregularities and obstructions to the j roper workings of your systems are relieved by this mild and soft mean?, while periodical pains, the existence of w hiah is a sure indication of serious disease that should not be neglected, readily yield to it, and if its use is kept up for a reasonal ble length hf titne the cause of these pains is permanently removed. Further light on these suhjects may be obtained from my pamphlet on diseases peculiar to your sex, sent on raceipt of two stamps. My Favorite Prescription is sold by druggists. spi-cia- ' LOCArV Zl BRANCH, C. X. JUL. Offer to the public a full and complete ass rt merit of at the last. STAPLE &FAKCY. The same division was tried two rears ngo, but was defeated by Mr. L 11. Hatch, then our worthy representative. ! This was another of their plans to ' ' ' break off the yoke ofth Priesthood. Consisting of Let them drivn aheid. for they will STOVES, surely run agaiunt a snng, and show to DRY GOODS, all' reasonable men and the world, their KOT10NS, TINWARE, folly in trying to overturn the '"MorG LASS WARE, HATS k CATS, mons" and their leaders. & SHOES, BOOTS CROCKERYf '. W. Yours, PATENT MEDICINES As we are not in possession of a copy GROCERIES, ' HARDWARE, ETC, ETC. of the Statues of Idaho, we are unable Also a full line to give reliable advice to the, victims of the rapacious 'Liberal" Sheriff. But & l)o.i surely there are men in Franklin who know enough of the laws of the TerriGreat reduclion in Price of tory of which they form a part, to put a WOOD'S CHAMPION i. EXCEESWR har in the way of such proceeding as - MERCHANDISE ' t , Gents' our correspondent relates. The misfoi-tun- e is that too many of our people are careless in regard to the requirements of the law concerning taxes.and have tuken advantage of the kindness and forbear, ance of former collectors. Froinpt payment of taxes is a duty1 we owe to the city, county and Territory in which we reside, and compliance with the law wonld have saved the above named person's from the imposition now practised upon them. "He that kcepeth the law of God hath no need to break the law of ' the land." Ed. s' Clothing & Mowers, licapcrs other Farming Implement. Aiiii Whitewater and Stmlebaker WAGONS. AUo Winchester C Demownt Light Spring Wagon, AT COST! AMT TRI1IEGS, UARXESS LEATHER Tub Aldine. The Aldine preserves its claims as the leading Art Journal of America.. The February number is each cf the engravings is good enough to fram. and the literature ot the paper is fully up to the standard of the engravings. It is a splendid work. . SHOE ' AND FINDINGS ! su-joe- rb, All Kinds ef lrHhice fonvn d t d to any point at the Shortest 2iotue. All erders sent to M. Thatcher will receive prompt attention. Illrth. the 27th, at Paris, Bear Lake Valt Mrs. Juiia Budge, wife of Bishop ley, Budge, a fine daughter. All wclh ; On W. H. Hooper, il-t- f " SUPT. ' |