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Show imitation of living locks, twisted into unnatural shapes and surmounted wjth an ugly thing, intended for an ornament, which makes her head look like a toadstool. Her cheeks smeared over with sticky powder which stops up the pores and ' imparts to her complexion a ghastly whiteness, like the face of the dead ; her ears stretched a base Published rery WEDNESDAY and SATURDAY, by the Oodm Pibushijo Compaq. C W. Ienroc, Editor. harles and Business Manager, OGDE3T, UTAH. SATURDAY. JULY 19, 1873. at Eons TJie President Jtraucb. thick-stemm- ed suspicion of evil. There are persons in our large towns, who would take the same advantage of inexperienced Pagirls, as do the hoodlums of the cific Coast. There are opportunities for the accomplishment of their vile intents equally available. Every her should mother daughters guard them shield and as precious jewels, from contact with designing scoun- who permit length by heavy, dang- drels. Those parents nature a per about at will, Tho President ling jewels ; her body compressed by their children to roam that ipatetic. It would be supposed cords and whalebones until its nat- and associate with whom they please home he might stay at long enough ural grace and flowing curves are without check or restraint, are which con business attcDd the to te against their families and against disfigured and destroyed. Humps to a painful is by sin-in- g Mautly requires his attention. His predecessor, Mr. Lincoln, satisfied himself with making his summer re treat near Washington. Buchanan, Pierce, Polk and Fillmore whiled away a few d;iys at Fortress Monroe durintr their leisure moments. But there is no previous instance in the history of the country of a President roaming about like a mere plcasure-huute- r, and neglecting his public duties, until the present Administration cauic into power. Since the election of Grant to the highest office in the nation, his arrival and departure lias been paraded to the public just as if he were a monarch. The movements of the Shah of Persia are not chronicled with greater regard to details and particularity than those of the President of these He- - and puckers and frills and bundles bobbing aronnd her as she struts or hobbles along. Her feet nipped into the sdiape of French rolls, and lofty shoe heels set in the centre instead of at the rear of the pedal extremities. How will future generations, when common sense shall have succeeded to the throne of Fashion, look upon the pictures of present belles ! What fun they will make of the pattern plates in ladies magazines ; and how they will open their eyes at the thought that women moving around in such ridiculous upholstery, aimed at the elective franchise and aspired to official position! Dress is especially and entirely under woman's own control, and if she M'ould be considered man's equal in all things, and wants to take part publican states. It is now announced with unii$ual in ruling and governing the affairs of formality that the President's coach nations, let her commence a reform men, at Long Branch, have been in the sphere of fashion, and show d dressed in white livery How capability and good judgment in her the people of the United States own particular province. must bo upon reading this announcement! What sorrowful reflections A Word of Warning. must weigh upon the minds of those who remember the days when repubThe San Francisco Chronicle of lican simplicity prevailed, combined the 14th inst., in a long article enin titled "Ruined Lives," gives partic with a refinement unknown " the White House! ulars of the alarming increase of Tbe President has seeded Long sexual corruption in the Golden City. Branch as his favorite place of recre- The most lamentable feature in ation. That watcrjng place is the 'Frisco immoralities is the ruin of resort of gamblers, sportsmen and tho young .girls, between the ages of lewd classes of New York, who have twelve and sixteen. Thirteen have - husbanded means enough to permit been committed to the, Magdalen them to flaunt their gorgeous silks asylum during the past two or" three and satins, and make a ' display of months, and in nearly every case, their meretricious beauty during the "at the request of some n broken-heartefather or d mother." Bummer months. The propensity of the President But' whilo these cases have come to for constantly absenting himself light," hundreds of others have been ' from his office, cannot bo overlooked. kept from the public; gaze, the parHa was not appointed to his exalted ents am friends of the erring girls station to spend a great part of his doing everything in their power to time among jockeys J IV proper re- avoid J exposure and the .destruction buke from his friends should be of their good name. It appears that 'dancing schools" given, and efforts made to prevent his repeated visits to places of dissi- are the principal avenues to conduct pation, while the duties and obliga- innocent girls to a life of shame . in tions at all times resting upon him 'Frisco. Nursemaids, taking childrequire his presence in Washington. ren for an airiugV'niake acquaintance with polite young5 men of genteel A Word to the Women. ' ' appearance, and are led to evening walks and dances, and being detainare While, women, , striving s for ed till after proper hours, are led .what they clainTto be their ."rights along to ruin, and finally a life of and are seeking to occupy positions shame. Frequently the parents of which ' custom, if not justice dn'd tho erring 'girls working people-- lire "eternal fitness," has- reserved for kept for a long time in the dark the masculine gender, ticro is one as to the lives they lead, receiving i feminine failing which U very dam- occasional visits and a portion of the to cause ; that is tho men- wages of sin, thiuking the their aging money to tal weakness displayed in dress be parC' of legitimate . earnings in f woman's chief study and delight. respectable service. Thus recruits If tho outward clothing is are obtained for the worst class of of the inward character, what houses, and the market of lust is intellects must animate the kept supplied.1 We allude to this painful subject ,. "Btlersex.; critical take a look Just at the for the purpose of warning parents, make-u- p of a fashionable lady, whose in these cities of Utah having a mix toilet is imitated by her, poorer sis- ed population, against the danger of ters as closely as their scanty means giving too , much freedom to their will permit. From head to foot she daughters just budding into womanis a bundle of inconsistencies, impro- hood., Girls are permitted to be ab and .distortions., .Her. hair sent from home after dark, and to prieties woman's glory, mixed up with the mako acquaintances unknown to their trusses of the dead, or entwined with fathers and mother who have no cdi-tie- to-d- ay . grief-stricke- - the community ; and unless some who could be named in our own city as open their eyes to their folly and their children's indis cretion, woe is in store for them, and shame will cover their faces. For their benefit we utter thi3 word of well as others, warning. t Died. CORRESPONDENCE. . w M Plain City, Weber Co., Utah, V . their ffillmv r.r.i,t. .i lyi vuuinijUD July 14 1873. nc7 want is a tlacp wi Editor Ocdex Junction : other bever ,es and a Dear Sir. I thought a few lines nice article of ...... nil v p' VU11 U be would this acceptable from place, ed as a light summer beytraJ; the main readers of your excellent paper. our are prosvery good, Our field crops l.-- the terri-bl- e pects are splendid considering in years of grasshoppers depredations with are vegcur teeming gardens past, etables of all kinds, for which we thank an allwise providence. Amongst other blessings showered down upon our quiet little city, is one of a remarkable prolific birth, as follows, to Peter Falkman, of tliis place, triplets, July 3rd, all girls, mother and children, all well up to this date. We also wish, to call your attentiou to a remarkable cure performed by Bro. Henry II. Wadroan of this place, as a means of returning him public th inks, for his skill and kindness as his heart and hand ave ever ready to succor the We do not publish this as an afflicted. isolated or chance cure, for many are the good deeds, he has done. The facts relative to the above, are substantially as follows, to which all conversant therewith will testify : An old gentleman, named Andreas Peter A. Lod, a native of Sweden, Gl years of age, was injured in (he left leg in getting off the cars at the la-fall, wheredepot, in Salt Lake City by .he fractured the shin bone, and through neglect it became frightfully swollen, and poisoned by the lost blood, until it culminated in three frightful wounds, rendering him hehtless. He applied for medi cal aid in Ogden to a well known and prominent doctor of medicine, w ho attended him for two weeks, and then nroubunced him incurable, without am putating the leg, The old gent couldn't stand that, so he came hove again to Plain City, after the elapse of about two months, during which time it gradual y got wors until it was a frightful mass of putrefying sores. Mr. Wadman was invited to call and see him, with a view to render him what assistance he could, when, astonishiug to say, he began to improve, and is now able to walk and work with all ease, feci, ing no particular detriment from his past affliction, and feels in his heart overflowing with gratitade to his benefactor. These statements are positive facts, to which l ean testify as an eyewitness, and think this statement due to Mr. Wadman as an act of justice, 'Render honor unto him to whom honor is At IlarrisYille, Weber county, on the 14th inst., at 1 o'clock, P. M., from regurgitation of the bile into the Stomach, Mary Eliza Adams, wife of Lumon A. Shurtliff. She was the daughter of Win. B. Adams and Sarah Giles Bryant, and was born in Northampton, Hampshire Co., Mass., May 23, 1837, was baptized at eight years of age into the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints; gathered with the Saints about the time of the expulsion from Illinois, crossed the Tlains to Utah in 1850 or Tooele county; 51, and settled in on the 2nd of Dec, 1851, was married in S. L.City by II. C. Kimball to Lumon A. Shurtliff. Since her marriage she has lived in Weber county, U. T. An honest, faithful Saint, a kind, affectionate wife and mother. On the Cth of July she was taken with sickness in her stomach and vomiting, which continued unabated for fi?e days and nights. On the evening of the 12th she gave birth to a due." son, who soon died. She retained her reason until the last, also her epacch, nearly so, but gradually failed until 7 o'clock, P. M., of the Hth, when she fell asleep in death. Com. Cool Chmuc for iiiil Agont for Utah of the' Wrtta TpoS Bil.l. Auiasniicentwork. toK'.'' Buckeye llenpcrn and nig ou th Urivwheela to nig in m,(t pror.u.1. An giving, anecdotes connected with the late war, relates an incident of a soldier he calls Jim, that beats Enoch Arden all to pieces. Jim was made a cripple at the ' battle of Stone River. After the war a comrade met him sitting in a provision store in Columbus. He was still a cripple, but his face had the old quietness of content in it. He8aid: "Yes, ' I'm doing pretty well; not making much, but doing pr.'tty well. Have just been up to see my wife. She married another man, you know, No Didn't you knov it? Divorced? No! She just married him and threw me overboard, you know. It made me a little mad I tell you. But she married a good man, and there's the rub, you see. He's got a farm and a good house,,, and took my wife and children right in sir, and treated them like a gentleman, It cut me a little to have the woman throw me off, but I looked at the question from her standpoint, audit's all right., Then I got worked up a little, aud , thought I had better steal the children from the stepfather. ', So I eat up to see them again. Would you believe it They said they didn't want to live with me if they had to leave their mother. So I said, All right,' and came away again. You see .my girl is smart. She knew that with my lame leg aud arm I couldn't support her right, and the ' little dack told me so, with her arais around my neck. This finished me, you know.' "But," said my friend, "the woman is legally your wife." . "I know it," said Jim, "but if I was stubborn and claimed her, you see, she would have to take in washing to support the family. Legality isn't the thing. I can't do anything much, and it wouldn't be comfortable, you know, to have her working for tne. I couklu't stand that half so well as the way it is now. No, sir, legality don't help the matter. I will never be comfortable anyway. Sh'd marry after I was dead, so what's the use ef whimpering?" Poor Jim! He was constitutionally cool to the last. He accepted misfortune, defeat, wounds, loss of wife, and all in the same spirit with which he . went into battle: ; t . , f Jar ("rV,"H am U.r 66-l- JTr Uluh, O mam t com-nlete- " lv LIIIIIT VI It an first known In America. merits nrr well throughout the hiibitulleknotm ivorld. It lia the ol.icst and best record of Luiiiiimt In thcworbl, From thny millions upon million of foM n complaint has ever bottles. ed us, und u u. healing und readi- PAIN SUBDUING LINIMENT IT HAS NO EQUAL. It li rrwmmcnaod with tjebounded insurance iu ail case of L'uU.BnuBfcs.Bunu, Sprains KaeuniRtiBin, Hard Swellinsa, Bum, Jointa, frozen Ffcet.Eirs, Ac, &c. among all persons, and for Sprains. Scratchee.Wifcd-(iall- s. Founders, ltingbone, Hoof-ale- . spavins, Springhalt SadiHe.Coi. lar tn.1 Harness Oa Ju ; also diseases of the Ey and Lar in Poll-Evi- l. Horses, Mules or Cattle. Immmm sjgjiiiitin William Geddes. 11 IfilfflMT HERETOlTOttK EX isting botwecn 0. S. Erb ami C. S. Nellie, under the style and firm name of Erb & Nellis, WTU, ALSO Una, sixteenth day of July, 1S 3, dissolved by mutual consent. The business of tlio lute firm will be conducted 1 herenfter by O. S. Erb, who hereby aumes the Back, fcslt l;tieum, oisonous Bites, Fxtonal lia ilitiei of aud will collect the debts due to tho Bone and Mi&cle ACecfcotis, Sore Nipples, te and nay be justly termed the panacea for all said lute tuurship firm of Erb & Xellis. Co-p- O. S. Ogden, July 16th, EXTERNAL WOUNDS. Ens, JTiT Remember, this Liniment did not opriiia up in a iluyora year.prtK dUCiCR THE MOST AB8CBD AKD trSXATCtULCtJBU IS73-s61-- 2. CLAIMED tTI AND 5JTJS1IBO0M LlN- l- KEW-BOE- K experience of over of trial, with ainalktudo of witutMe If tlie Liniatcntis not as rccocmenilcd, thi stekts. Bntwo have tho tliirtv years WANTED. TMMEDIArELTt A FIRST CLASS SAWYER J to run a Circular Saw. Apply to 5L W. D ALTON, Willard City, Box Elder couyty, U. T.' ; July 10, 1873-sol-t- f. themostsub-etantJilresultEad- MoncywillbcPtcfiindci Do not be imposed upon by using any otter liniment claiming tho aame properties or tn. Be iiir They are a cheat and a fraud. aad get nothing but STOLEITI; FROM THE 1st WEST BENCH, ON THE NIGHT hint., oneapau of American oua a heavy aat Jtoan branded T A on left shoul9 der, yea r old and shod en the front feet; the other a Bay Mare, white Kpot on the forbheuU, branded S. SMITH on the left shoulder, S years old, shod on the front feet. Any Infornmtion that will laud to the recovery of the abova named aui-iii-a ta will be amply rewarded. Simon Smith. Clurkston, Cache Co., July 15, Uor, s Mra Mi Sold SioauAZ L'ffil sr all Dkcooism , , . . 60c. and 25c, ' ' Uoxice Size asd Corawt ... $1 per Bottle. or Bottle, Sttle, tc, 1373-s61-- HAGAN'S MONUMENTS CRAVE STONES, Lonvitt's Corner, v Main Street, , - , OCDKX. Fountains, Vases, Etc., ' CUT TO ANT DESIGN. ' CUT ROCK FOR BUILDINGS, &C JAMES FOWLER. BltlGHAM CITY f . A FEW APPUCATI0N3 WOOLEN FACTORY Pure AJiD Carding Machine The man who merely lives for the purare iu sncueapful operation. pose of pumping gratification out of all the world into himself, and appropria- WOOL WANTED INEXCIIANGE FOR ting God's benefits "without regard to " ; ".; CLOTH. ". ; ia the meanest creature in. the others, . . . Weol rardAil . r.u. Int n .but" i. sponge with worldnothing . .. Ilia Wlll-- I nnvn u nA brains, sucking ia everything and let- lev nuea wraar, itsncg- " ting out nothing. Bri&g on you wwll ' , Mow. weur out Every' nmcbin. lwayio.li.ad. milE Philosophic Husband. ; yC DISSOLUTION. A .Three Russian jB HAEE-1- , Blooming Complexion- Purely TegeUble. and ItsawaP6" at once. It does togu b flushed Appearance caused ,llotrbe andExcltcment. Healaand wmovesall k.n and Itopies. Bpots. DriTwiaway Xan. irece powerful brn. and byits gentle lrt Itia Been and felt jaaatlestb-ofcieaclieeltwit- Wf,j a T0UTHTULBL003r loldby allPropFistB na jot,53rarltPIaco. XevrYork VX vJ |