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Show yjmuu-.n- SAW LAKE BVWTLJtt CnnOKlCLB, MONDAY, SALTLAKE EVENING CHRONICLE TIIK ALTA llOItKOlC. In convcmtiun with Captain J. I have lived Morrill last fall, he eaiil : near Alta anil in winter past many ter(Sly, Little Cottonwood. Aftor the in winter last helpof rible eijierience ami ing to rcrovrr my dead friends ), from the icy grasp of the I cannot mn the risk or stand the winters residence strain of another so the And there. genial soldier and veteran miner went back to spend hi winter among the friends of his early This was a days in New Hampshire. wise resolution, and one wonders that after repeated direful experiences any of the old Alta residents should be found willing to risk their own live, much less those of helplese wives and children, in that doomed place during the winter months. The harvest of death and disaster has been greater this winter than usual. The honors of last Friday night Death on who can realise or describe the pale horse, with the speed of lightthunderning and the resistless power of a -bolt, amid darkness 'and tempest, rode down from the heights upon that mountain hamlet, and we know enough of the result to move in sorrow the hardEntombed within the merciest heart. the victims are yet to less snow lie sought for, and the brave men who traverse that deadly canyon to bring the bodies to the valley take their lives in On either side of that their hands. treacherous gorge death lurks behind the created ridge, ready to topple down the resistless avalanche upon help! travelers. In the mines above Alta, at the head of Little and Big Cottonwoods, there are some scores of miners exposed to death from snowslfdes. Argents, in Big Cottonwood canyon, hu escaped thus far, but, as the hill are stripped of timber and the stumps decay and disappear, the danger of snowslides increases. Only by building lodging and boarding houses into the side of hill or mountain, laying in supplies for the winter so as to avoid traversing the canyons, is the miner's safety in the mountains during the winter secured. The immense body of snow in the mountains threatens the valley with a flood in the spring which may surpass that of last season. Wo see by our exchanges that Chicago fear the sudden thawing of the great body of snow that now impedes travel in its streets. enm-rndi- w enow-firm- 1 A IKACEFUL KKVOLVTIOX. But a few years ago Japan seemed to bo hermeticallv sealed against the entrance of Christian people and their religion. A wonderful change has come over the spirit of the Japanese dreams. Tha ecclesiastical Buddhism so thoroughly dovetailed into the state, hu been eliminated from the organic law of the land. Priestly despotism hu received a blow from which it will never recover. Ports from which foreigner were excluded, are now thrown open to men from ail nations. Teachers and missionaries are received and welcomed in many places throughout Japan, Young men from leading Japanese families have been sent to this and other eouutries to obtain an education, and to learn the art of peace, of war, and of statesmanship from Christian nations. The Japanese government grants profortection end favor to eigner. The Buddhist priests are indignant at this and havo in various place incited mobs to riotous demonstrations against teacher and missionariee. Bev. W. C. Kitchen, writing to the New York Independent from Japan, quotes from a recent addreu of the Japanese Government of Kiyotu to an assemblage of Uudothist priest belonging to hi province as follows: "Above all, about the matter, of religion there should be exercised the greatest care. If mixed residence be accorded, then the Government must take under it rule all the people who dwell here, in the same way pure Japanese, uo matter what country they belong to. And hence, it would . follow naturally, that any religion must be free for the people who are here. Therefore all ye venerable priests, on full reflection, by virtue of your position, seek to influence the priests of your sects to put an end to vicious and unlawful controversy and no longer suffer them to make mistakes and injure our country. But the greatest step iu advance made by the Government, is in the lion recently made in the abolition of the official priesthood. This, aays the writer, before quoted, "really amounts to a severance of Church and State in u Japan. Thus it will bs seen that while the American Government allows a disloyal ' and polygamous sect to rule a great Territory through a union of Church and Slate, semented together by secret oaths nations snd obligations, old are breaking away from priestly dictations, are throwing off the "Hebrew old clothes, as Carlyle calls them, and arraying thcinvclres in the habiliments of a Christian civilisation. The infusion of a little Japanese vim into American statesmanship would improve matters here in Utah. The priestly class here need a "notification. hide-boun- d ation unite in joining cause to , fleet in the material, mental and spiritual departments of human life, and these effects are so related to this world and the next, and so impress themselves on the indestructible soul that. while the earth endures or the soul lives, the thoughts, tlio words, ami the actions of men are at work in ever widening circles of influence. And so the most uneventful life sdds its tribute of good or ill to the sum (otsi of sn influence which is in its nature Immortal, which enters into the texture of human character ami help to make or mar the beauty of creation in all its diversified forms. In the light of this truth, the present lifo, which we often undervalue, becomes of infinite importance, its idle words, its false vises and bad examples, no lass than its noble thoughts and lives, indelibly impress themselves in Immortal character! upon other human hearts and so upon the records of time and eternity. "As a man sows, so shall he nap, and this truth must hold good in every phase of humen existence from this, tha infancy of its being, through ell its subsequent and endless developments. In view of the brevity of this lifo we may feel inclined to say with the poet: We are such stuff . As drat mi are mods of ; and our little life Is rounded with s sleep." But a higher ahd truer conception of living is embodied in Baileys words: We live In deeds, not rests; In. thoughts, not brsatht; In feelings, not In figures oa a dial. Ws should count time by hesrt throbs. He most lives Who thinks' mast, feels the nobleit, acts the best" RAILROAD LITERATURE. The railroad illustrated literature of these days, of which tha Tourist' Handbook to Colorado, New Mexico, if a fair specimen, hu and Utah, charms for the quiet dweller at home os wall is for the rushing rider on the rails. At the east, the west, the north and the aouth, actual or prospective tourists turn with delight to descriptions of the scenery and attractions, of the diampion mountain rood, the "Scenic Lino of the world, the Denver A Bio Grande Bailway. This rood traverses the broad plains south from Denver along the eastern slope of the Rocky mountains, and continually in sight of their peaks until Pueblo is reached, then, turning at right angle, it scales the seemingly impassable heights at an altitnde of eleven thousand five hundred feet, and descending with the heed waters of the Gunnison to its junction with tha Grand river, furnishes a succession of the most entrancing and thrilling views of valley and mountain scenery which this continent affords. From Grand Junction to the entrance of the gorges of the Wasatch range the aspect of the country is comparatively tame and uninteresting. But the beautiful mountain scenery of the W asatch is equally attractive, although not as grand as the main range of the Rocky mountains; and when descending their western slope with the rushing mountain streams to the fertile valleyi of Utah, the wildness and grandeur of nature is exchanged for the cultivated fields, the blossoming orchard and the coxy homes of civilised communities, one feels that the thrilling interest of the trip can be duplicated nowhere else on the globe. It is getting to he more anil better understood that for real enjoyment of travel, our own country furnishes far greater facilities than the old world, and that the people who cross the ocean before they crow this continent deserve to be seasick the rest of their lives . returnof choice With the either by the Central and ing the Northern or Union Pacific, Southern Pori fie railway lines, those who from Eastern homo visit the Pacific' slope will be sure to patronize the narrow gauge mountain pathfinder. enow-crown- A MUSICAL INSTITUTION IN THIS CITY. The Americas Art Journal for January, published in New York, contains a very complimentary notice of Mr. and Mm. B. II. Young, who have lately arrived in this city from Europe. While they were in New York the editor of the Journal speaki of hearing Mr. Young sing several songs, showing a clear and powerful baritone voice of splendid' prolie closed with Goundos portions: song to' Tennysons celebrated poem, Ring Out, Wild Bells, which might lie called a duett for voice and piano, so magnificently does the composer- depict the character of the piece in the accom Mrs. Young accompanied paniament. her bus bind as none other could, and the whole was so perfectly blended that one couhl hardly tell where one commenced and the other ended. We have never heard auch perfect accompaniin ments, following and the of emotion singer. every Mr. anil Mrs. Young propose to establish a school of niusie in Salt Lake City modeled after the National Training School of Music in London. All lovers of music in this city will wish lucre to such an enterprise. There is sbundant musically inclined material in this Territory, we think, to make such a school prospectively successful. - artii-ipatin- The hotly of Cardinal McCabe, lying in stato in the cathedral at Dublin, wu A viewed by 20,000 persons yesterday. pastoral 'of the 'cardinal', written just ThS subject of Rev. Mr. Thralls dis- before his death, wu read in the Dublin course yesterJay at the Congregational churches yesterday. It contained a Church was, the undying nature of vigorous denunciation of dynamiters. human .influence. Of every man, as he Pretty Women. leaves this life, It may truly he said, in Ladies who would retain freshness and (he language of scripture: "lie being vivacity. Don't fail to try ."Wells Reason and revel- - Health Renewer." dead, yet speaketb. TBS IMMORTALITY OF INFLUENCE. THE WAR ON THE' NILE. The British Forces Advancing' on Khartoum. Deeerlbeo th" JVt of ami the leatk of General Gortlon. An Lonikix, l'eli. 10. General Graham snd stafT leave ixiulmi on Saturday west for Cairo, going by way nf Brindisi! Ujioii his arrival nt Cairo lie will meet in counsel General Stephenson, General Lfolmer and oilier officers, and will then go to Suakirn. The expectation of tha War Office is that tha forces to start from Suikim will reach Berber, if the march proves successful, by April 25th. A telegram was received at the War Office yesterday from General Wolseley, lie sends sn account of the foil of Khar- toum, is given by native to the entrance of the rebels into the town. An informant says the town was entered by El Mahdis forces at daybreak on the morning of January 2Gth. General Gordon was killed by a volley from rebel riflemen, while on the way to the Austrian consulate. Tha Austrian consul was killed in his residence, and tha Greek consul is held a prisoner by the Mahdi. A Korti dispatch says General will start for Gadkul Cairo, rob. IB. At the request of General Wolseley, Ilassan Bey, brother of the Khedive, has assumed command of tha Egyptian troops in the Soudan, with the title of Governor General. Hessen Bey wanted his acceptance made conditional upon the recruiting of 4,000 Turkish soldiers, but finally agreed to accept command of the k.gyptian. hakim, Feb. 10. New batteries are being erected for the protection of the railway. There is great activity in Osman Dignai camp. Women are being armed and drilled,' and every noaailile preparation is making for an obstinate resistance to the British advance. A dispatch from Dulka Island, dated Friday, lays: The Nile js extremely The advance difficult of navigation. regiment hu occupied Bhukuk pass. Gen. Brackenberry end the main body of troops advanced yesterday. Korti, Feb. 10. The Mudir is .now convinced that Khartoum hu fallen and that General Gordon ia dead. Obrahim Bey Buchdi slates that Fa rag admitted the rebels into Khartoum. A cavaa, with his master, went to the government houses, and net Gordon coming out, armed, With Mohamet Bey, Muitapba While proceeding to and 20 cavassea. the Australian consuls! they met the rebels, who fired a vol lev. Gordon and Mahomed Mustaphs fell dead. Reports received from Dolka Island state that recnnnoisance shows Bhukuk pass is clear. The wounded are doing well. Losuox, Feb. 10. The government his given a contract for the construction of a railroad from Suakirn to Berber to Lucas Ayrd A Co. The contractors will provide all the materials, which the to transport government undertakes to Egypt. The work will begin immediately. Chamberlain, in reply to resolutions of the peace association at Birmingham, fur the polity of retreating from the Mahdi will not further the cause of peace or prevent the effusion of blood. On account of the drain upon the war establishment to furnish reinforcements for Egypt, the government hu found it necessary to release many soldiers imprisoned for military offences. Several hundred men have thus been pardoned and ordered to join their regiments. Leonard II. Courtney ana John Mor- ley, Memben of Parliament are arranging for a conference of all liberal Memben of Parliament who are opposed to a continuance of the war in the Soudan. They have already been assured of the adherence of forty members. The governments of Germany add Russia have appointed, respectively, Riclilhoften and Mourousi, members of the Egyptian debt commission. The goverment has ordered a number of steam launches sent to Suakirn, to be used in landing troops. Shipowners are accepting contracts to transport m and supplies to Egypt at almost aif the rates charged in 1883. Advices here State that the- rebels from Berber had started for Metemneh to reinforce the garrison thcrebut returned upon hearing tint the Nile co- lumn was advancing. Hassan Bey will start at the end of this week to accept a command, llis ap pointiuent will not affect English operations in Soudan. The Press association states, under reserve, that late Saturday night the War Office sent a telegram to Miss Gordon, at Southampton, to the effect that Khartoum had not fallen and that General Gordon wu safe. Ismail Paulis, of Egypt, is now in London, canvassing for supporters for his restoration. Ilia partisans assert that the governments of Austria and Italy advocate the deposition of the present Khedive, Tewlidk Pubs, and the replacement of Ismail. It is reported that the British government is considering a scheme to create Ismail Viceroy of Nubia and retain Tewfik Viceroy of Uupper and Lower ' ' URATTBACTI. R0.. Another IWit Wire- weather hero Hi. Chicago, ami throughout the Northwest generally v is again intensely cold. At 8 o'clock this morning in Chicago, the NEW HOUSE. lielow mercury indicated fifteen degree FURNISH EPi UNDER NEW RWLY zero. The weather is clear, but the air Everything .lirat class' . management, IS THE BOSS PLACE is filled with little particle of mow that caeejit the price. To Get Mania for the Monty. an being blown about by the keen wind RATES: which prevail. Trains yesterday were is not $2.50 day. delayed by snow, but the situation who $2,00 and regarded scriims by railway men and No tok rooms. have lieen seen to day. All east Every mom well ventilated. 25c and Upward, trains are starting out on time. ineciai conveniences for Commercial Trv- Breakfast and Supper for According to (lie Wants of tho Patron. The Southeastern lines are subjected to BECHT0L & WILLIAMS, Props. delay. The prospect is not encouraging liar warmer weather. Storm signals are flying snd a further drop of the degreci is predicted. At Omaha it is 18 below, St. Paul 10 below, Dei Moines 16s Everything th best the market aflbrds. below, A. Podlach fe Co., Propre, Dubuqus 18s below, Fargo, Dakota. 28 below, Jemestown 35 below D. J. GRIFFITHS, Proprietor. and Winnipeg 34. below. Farther ana later inquiries develop Main street, Salt Lake Citv. the feet that the Chicago A Alton ana Louisville, New Albany A Chicago, and several smaller lines are blockaded. The BATES 82 Oft former sent out one train about noon, Special ratu by the week. but expresses little hope of being able to The Grand Trunk reget it through. fused consignment of freight this ear IB REMOVED OKI M(i 118 MAIM STREET, X south, and la kept fint clui In awl sped. At the Old London Bank of Utah. Devolution 1h Colombia. acoommids for the Billiard Tables, Thru Panama, Feb. 5. The country is in a tion of guests. complete uproar. Communication with served every Day from A hot lnneh will be served daily from 7 to Lunch8 oclock, and Item 5 to 8 oclock, to the interior ie entirely cut off, and re43 p.m. business men and their clerxa, garding tha condition of affairs ia Boand the general public, Sir Me. In every style. cooked is month Oyiten gota during the pfst nothing Tha neatest and cheeped eating house in known. No wonl has been received IROXSSI. ANSI Balt Lake City. from there since Jan. S. Official bulleT. M. GBICB, Propriotor. I tins claim the Government force is WALKER BROTHERS, BANKER! everywhere, end the popularity of Dr. Nunez continues unuimin-isneThe reports, however, are not confirmed. Later advices state that 28 W. FIRST SOUTH STREET. A. D. Hernandez has abandoned his camp and gone to Gana. Six thousand men ere in On the fifth the cove WILL. BE DELIVERED TO ANY pursuit. gREAD the city. DO A GEN KRAI RANKING meat forces attacked Cucati, gnu after accounts of merchants solicit and a few bourn fight,captured the town. companies and country dealers. Pies, Cakes, Crackers and Many were killd on both aides. This is unofficial. Our iftclllUei tore nts in Great Gnne for Bueela, Always an hand. Your patronage I solicited. London, Feb. 16. Some sxcitement was cheated ben especially in Draw GEO. GEBHABDT. Proprietor exchange on all tha leading cities of commercial and financial circles, by the Great Britain, receipt of dispatches from Berlin Belgium that the Bussian government Ireland, Denmark, Francs, had ordered 2,000 Krupp gun for the German Janpfre, Holland, ....THE.. Norway. of in iu purpose strengthening position Central Asia. The guns are to be of the pain. pattern, and are evidently in- led for service in fortresses of supeNsmHcu Cormpeadeats; rior build. Simultaneously-witthe New York, Imp. A Traders' Net Buk above report came dispatches from St. OF THE BE8T PAYING RE8TAUR-- 1 Pint National Bank Chicago Petersburg stating that Sebastopol will BL Louis In the city, conducted on the EuState Savings Association ONE be made a free port. Omaha National Bank , ropean plan. Good and sufficient reason for BanFranctaco Bank of California selling. he Metropolitan Hotel u Tnken'.by 10. Tho thtFreurh. French occupation of Lang Son occurred on the 13th Paris, Feb. instant, an engagement between the Chinese army and the French forces taking place about eight kilometres from the town. The French troops then crossed the river and occupied Kulna. It is reported from Shanghai that the French and Chinese had an engagement off Sheijsis. The result is unknown. GRIFFITHS RESTAURANT DINNERS, 25c. per wert-houn- d Whit House. Oyster Stews, - - 25c o MERCHANTS PARLOR, LUNCH null in I w Dr. Foot Jr THE RENOWNED AID SPECIALIST, Of Salt lekaatf, NEW AND ELEQuj MEDICAL AND CITY BAKERY d. Occupying the whole of thstto sRfflasasaag end FlntliSv1' 22 CONFECTIONERY y, FOR SALE, Vienna Chop House -- Dynamite New York, Feb. Denver Mere. Eight cases of dynamite were stolen from the magazine of the American DfumHe Company, Westchester county. Every effort is being made to locate it. As dynamite ia not a marketable product, tha thieves 10. are believed to be connected with Socialistic or other organizations of dyna- miter. German Notional Bank Wells, Fargo & Co.s Bank makes fie Sarah Althea Granted Alimony. San Francisco, Feb, 10. Judge Sullivan this morning rendered a decision on the question of alimony and counsel fees in the Sharon divorce cate. He granted plaintiff, nee Mias Hill, f 2JSOO a month from date of application, January 9th, and 805,000 counsel foes. Another Editor Aest. New York, Feb. 16. Wilber A. Ilill, formerly editor of the Sen Fran-- Ballroad Gotllelon. Pirnsucno, Feb. 10. Near FOX It is unlikely the Queen will return to Windsor before Thursday. A terrific explosion occurred in a magazine at Gibraltar 17 men and doing considerable dam age otherwise. Dr. Leopold Damroeeh, eminent musical director, died It hie residence in New York City yesterday afternoon. A London dispatch says: The sen Sairlde of a Banker. tries at Sheenes powder magazine are 10. Feb. Frank Mqjur Buyax, Tex., trebled, in consequence of llie ippear- Clarke, senior partner of the tanking ence in that place of suspected aynanr firm nf Clarke, Bryan A Howell, auicided iters. Extra guards have also been last evening it five o'clock, hr shooting placed at Eton College. himself with a revolver. Cause un Reports have I wen received in the known. It is supposed he wu laboring of Mexico of a destructive inundaCity under mental aberration at the time. tion of tho causing the loss Tha bank is in a prosperous condition. of a number Maeullan, of lives and heavy damage to property. luteal Ojdlou. Francis A. Drexel, head of the Drexel 10. Feb. At Portland. Oregon, Salem, tho Senate late Saturday night, hanking houses in Philadelphia, New York and Paris, died suddenly yesterpassed Keadys local option hill, which day afternoon. hail previously ; tanned the lower house. It ia that a license ran be issued only on 'laugh on 1sla Plaster. Iurous aud strengthening, improved, the petition of a majority of the voters in the precinct where the saloon is lo tho Iwst for backache, pains in chest or cated. The license fee is fixed at 8350 n side, rheumatism, neuralgia. Twenty-fiv- e cents. Druggists or mail. year. s t For Lady Patients and tMrffinh in Thnadayatlpa For Gentleman- Patterns ml dm - l every Saturday sight tilflfed ALL TO OOHXOC8 gXX Carefiil attention given to the sales oi orra and bullion. We soueR eanaigiintenti.giiar- anteelBg highest market prlcsa. Oollsctloue mads, with prompt returns, at lowmt rates. Execute orders lor purchase oraxle o stocks and bonds at New York and Ban Frandsoo. We sell exchange end talagmphie tmasfen feeding dtlaa of tha UmtedBU abb tight drafts or remit ftmdetoLshdon, . Berlin. Stockholm, Copenhagen prominent points In Europei Certificates of Deposit tamed, payable on d Csrmyesdeeb,' NewYdrk - Importers A Tnden' Nal'l Bank New York vwiaf1 Bros - Commercial National Bank Chicago SanFnmdeoo . Tint National Gold Bank Omaha - - National Bank . . - Omaha BLLenta XUCXLLAMXOUi: E. SC HOPPE, F. HARD AND SOFT COAL-BURNI- s&rn with Mil AND PHOTOGRAPHIC 1 Letten aniwerod in rU ledlrinw Rent Opposite the BL Jemce ItotcL- ing, Etc. In Stoves and Ranges, And the Largest Variety in the city to choose from - 253 S. Main Street, Salt Lake Citv mcn-of-w- HAVE REMOVED Residences, Mills, Horses, Etc., Photographed on Short Notice. 4 MULTUM i i i ft PARVOI IN THE BOON OF THE AGE! AM NOW PREPARED TO TAKI.OKDBKB GENTLEMEN'S OfTRICES to Mull th JOHN tlraly (lnnatiHt tl THE OLD RELIABf California Brew LAGER FINEST . U UN THE ROCKY MOWUR Beer It' and ll drafted Bottled ft ISffi nriadg 01 Hi am and IB E. Salt Lake Pfo nENBY WAflRHR W AC GR1 A r, er! SALT LAKE in BREWING j saw BEER ELIASONS. FOB SALE BY W; F. RAYBOULD, Bookseller snd Stationer, SALT FUo JUOIIEKRa SALOONS BOOK-KEEPE- LAKE CITY. 142 Main UTAH Street, IlignanaHiMirn1 MATTHEW I III I Ilf Gold and Silver Watches, JEWELRY OF ALL KINDS, ui By the Cue, Ordem will be delivery made to J(fif 01 ft ik. Uu UQ tb Milwaukee BEER HA1 Jodi S gHgtawriiri" Tjrnro. stf" MB And Everything Needed la that Line, at the ih bi JACOB TDI IAiulX8T ABebRT. Suits. Times. aallttMitfi Welcome Try A Three doors south of Walker House. First-Cla- ss the InstiuS Is again Thli Tear To a more convenient place, J IT CONSULTATION FR I as Everyone "ymentof,INI No. 256 S. Main Street, ah da bf (COPYRIGHT.) Roofing, Spouting, Gutter- latest and Beet Designs Call at - IRON Work, to ! 822 MAIN HTREET, RANGES, Tin and Iron 18 Ilona, uranlai, PARLOR seseeeeeeeeeeeeseeeeseeeeeeeeeeeeeeeseseeeeeeseeseeeeeeeseeeeee Journal-Regist- WBOUGIIT Ilk hr THACKRAHS Stoves, CAST I Cents in eeaiageti EVERYONE Wholesale and Retail Dealer In ill GYMNASIUM patients, with WHERE. to-d- ay, Gladstone hu sent letters to hie supporters in Parliament impressing upon them tho importance of their presence at the opening of Parliament. ii Lector INVAUDS SHOULD BPKCIAL ATTENTION TO VV bmfaara for parties raiding out oi Hie city, and Invite correspond, ace and active Tin, Copper and SheeWron 8PABKH. Free Aeova Rxraoura, all cometba Most Rkhowyib skill and reliability. Soluble board at this I. of the city, from 88 to SUpra AL & SYMONS ....NEW.. TTTX FAY Cone-wau- on the Pennsylvania road yesterday, two stock trains collided. Two Chicago drover were killed, and a tramp stealing a ride, severely hurt. mb In any part of thawfeblfe tff.sausnssg la pb , BALT LAKE CITY, UTAH. in New York City, and will probably return home Deeult of a looero fissmt Siieldyville, Ky., Feb. 10. Will Adams, a young man 20 yean of age, and Tinie Wilmouth, a pretty girl, were found dead this morning with a bullet hole in the temple of cachL A pistol found near the dud bodies belongs to Adams. A supposed Iotcm quarrel. ANSWER CALLS DAYwl DR. FOOTjJV t Tranuct a General Banking .Business and surgeon at his eomanMiSh riary end heavy tipeiraj, the Eared totorive world uts thrall fbrmlttea known to ram. worara dren. All lanUdi should anil I of thla new ant i Surgical Inetimta. P wn Motel Burned. Wrllsboho, Pa., Feb. 1C. Coles hotel and W. C. Kress1 residence burned early this morning and tha Methodist Church wu bsdiy damaged. Lois, 35,- 000; insurance, 825,000. Twenty per- sons narrowly escaped, many in their night clothe only. All lost personal 5 of BuflUo.N.Y.'-Th- e Doctor, with fin egemhfeMr DR FOOT N. BERNARDIS, Proprietor. principal clUeaofthe United Btatee and Europe, andun all points of the Pacific CowL of eredit, available in the Death of John Morion Pomeroy. principal dtl of ti eworld. San Francisco, Feb. 10. John MorByccjaistlontlau given to the Belling of ores ton Pomeroy, editor of the Pacific La w Advances i at lowest Journal, and Professor of Hastings Law Feitlealnr attaathm given to oolleetlo School, died yesterday, 60, from an throughout Utah, Nevada and adjoining Ter. rltorlm. ' attack of pneumonia. agd was a writer of legal works. Previous to his arrival here he was professor in McCORNICK GO, BANKERS. the University of New York. DRFOQTSSSj hu met Inquire on the premises. rku exchange, on the Imnefen its HOUSE CHOP been running over year, and with good succera. BALT LAKE CITY, UTAH. and Temple FREE Hu Buys - well-kno- THE VIENNA SURR INSTITUTE 1859. Established - Egypt I.any Son n r H VIENNA CHO an BERGEN, Manager. VERT LOWEST. PRICER Meek it all hem is nt mb A bid |