Show V '1 ft- ! ' - I v : S ' - - ? r?J i 4 l: r 4 V' ' V ir uw UWIWUUiJili—i rmm MUHW -- £ur Month nt' TERRS: rcrAnnum (one copy) J i v from’" $1000 : 6 00 - -- fe would peacefully accept were— first acknow-ledgmeof their independence second restoration or Kentucky Virginia Missouri and t the’' whole territory originally claimed and' the' withdrawal of our armies there- THE BEMtWEEKLY TELEGRAPH moxdxv noifaraafo pcx si v - v j full narrative of the -- 7° the “Atlajitic” the "'“ 350 peace talk winds up with tho following para-graph:: : : u ten oh? Any person Bending subscriptions ' '"V I''receive copy gratis “When we went out Mr Benjamin1 called Three- - ‘ - — ’ - - Judge Ould who had been waiting during the whole interview —two hoars —at tne other end of the hall and we passed down the stairway ’ Diriaon On Wednesday Mr Red‘ together - Aslpnt my arm within that of call-ed the Judge he stud tame: — r- Engineer oft he Union Pacift- - IPutroad a ' “VVdCwhatis the result?’'' upon in ha vi og reocp returned from “Nothing but war war to the knife” eurvey- in Ixiho short voyage of disfovay “Ephraim is joined to his idols let him union Pacific railroad - canon and vicinityTwhich he has made with the view of finding if possible u route for the prospectivo i7road which would avoid the ' necessity for a tunnel or one' of such magni-y- l tudo as that required by the divide at the j head’of Chalk Crqek- Starting from a point of bis former survey Echo inn the Weber Mr Reed ran his line o canon 15 up a 'smiiil tributary Ginilesto the divide between jWVber and Rear rivers where would be a 'tunnel Of lr00 feet the summit of the divide be-- fag 100 foot above the track alone ’’jtdded thQ Colonel solemnly1 AVhoever anticipates the end of the war with the of Mr Lincoln or the election of any otherl man may ponder over the conclusions of those best acquainted— the end Is not yet — 1 1 : 1 ’ re-electi-on I k4' i a A ' - CAUGHT north-easter- ly iuiIe3-tlienc- -- : Vellow Creekalley 8 utiles two miles fur-hto Rear Itiverralley JO miles to Sulphur reck up that creek 10 miles intersecting the dinner survey 2X miles south-eaof the Tar tyjriiigsr and making the whole distance from O' initial point in 'Weber valley 50 miles NO TELEGILVMS— A CONSTITUTION rhese figures are merely round numbers GOING OYER THE WIRE er st r Im 3Vr-'-- §: "Weber the' or 3 miles up Echo from-tlimile 8(T feet is tliehce 15 miles toihe grade near the tunnel It is fiftyTeet per mile For miles to arid through the tunnel which )i tfees soft carboniferous sandstone the grade is 100 feet to the mile bcing lG feet less than atlUhalk Creek' This divide is 800 feet that at the 'head of tho lost named o On Friday there Was no newspaper report received over the eastern wire Up till three' o'clock in the afternoon the wire had been ' down between Omaha and Chicago and from that hour Omaha was to be occupied at least a dozen hours monopolizing the wire between that place and "Washington with the report of the Nevada Constitution We like the notion of "our political friends west of us and see some shrewdness in the folks ' at 'Washington in getting over the aforesaid - Constitution The document had 'been sent by mail but fearful of its detention from the Indian difficulties or its possible loss from pne canso or another the friends of the administration concluded to have it sent by telegraph It passed through the Salt Tjikp ollico on Wednesday night in 17000 words which occupied the telegraphists about twelve hours Once that the document reaches Washington gets engrossed sworn to' eta the President of the United States will add his name to itiurnish the a few hours r occupation send it out to the world by the thousand copies another official telegram will reach Nevada our neighbors will be a State and on a given day in November the majority of the citizens will Aswell the list of voters for Mr Lincoln All this we look for in aTew ddysV IIow does this treatment to Nevada witji low-cr-th- an yrcek 1 i ' T t - - I -- i — 1 Descending t6 Rear River! valley' the grade Is 25 to 30 feet pcr iailcind up Sulphur about ' i 5d feeder mile Tlie road above described would "bo less expeiisjvo than that up Chalk Creek the having the advantages of a shorter tun-- ’ nelj easier grades aiid lighter work generally but the disadvantage of thetrmber being inore "distant from the work To- savo 10 or 15 miles of track Mr Reed endeavored to find feasible route direct from Bear River totho Muddy! but could not geo anything satisfactory vtho rapid ascent of the samniit requiring a tunnel of 2 miles at leasL Considerable quantities exist in the j1' valleys of Bear River and Sulphur Creek ’ - t K for-me- jl" V s s - r ! j 1' - ' - ) r- ' - ? State-Printe- ’ ‘ of-cO- f ' : al j : BITS OF NEWS i 4- - Reese ltiyer they are making lumber equal to any brought from California Miss C racoSt an ton a refugee from -i folks at Virginia Union is lectunug-fh' r -- reUel-dom- e N- - t: - ' 7 : - that to Utah : Political torchlight processions are all the y' ' San i4iiiasco v A Lbrnloner makes ico artificially cheaper ' th'aii nature docs naturally A college for working women 13 con tcmpla-v ted hi England Thotni lwnk note circulation in Great llrltam Is sa‘ul to bo 81350(100(10 "" ' Tho epiro of St Stepliens YiEnna'i3 to be 554 foi’Jt higli llJtallet irf Eurppc Xkfet villioii-tonof water pirns over Ni-agara luAirly In Baltimore coal is $15 per ton and milk L 16 cciiV per quart ' Thtichnumd Examiner sayd that the ne-groes of that cjty dress in broadcloth and Kilk aind fiiru gtunptnously— tlit trith tlhenf Iheft'i a custom and robbery ha organized " i i ' " i 1t -- 4 W - j V systemy ChicfijO CTerS lament the daily increase of r ' ‘ crime iju that city American deserters in Canada: are in a piti-- able plight— half atitvedr and hard work and - V iimU before thpni ' In tate of Virginia 60000 people are dppcuckjnt Upon public charity for support - ji M’ - - te ’ ‘ of TUB TRACK TALjv n ind from the eastern' papers' wliich we arc noy receivingby the biishpl that the J aCques-- ilmory visit to 'Richmond had long run as a sensation in tho eastern States The introduct9ryr to the interview passing Xi from tlvc Federal to the Confederate lines and their amval in Richmond yjiis sketched with epusiderabie interest and was somewhat such ns it wiis published racyThe interview I ia this faperi from the" pen of Mrv Gilmore has been corroborated by Col Jacques A cor respondent of the Philadelphia “American? x If J 4 - 4l!tinddres3 : : n ’ J i 7 - f' “ ’ ' - self-respe-ct - 1 tha-fothe- lleed-Qnwte- r re - 1 very-acceptabl- e taot-pat- - re-ligo- us is-on- - d n approached the apot but 1 determined to ly dt it When I reached1 it my frnra ripidth!: sided “and now” thought I tif 1 can tell I get hope that I stopped and searched for and blno lights and listened for groaning! what an honor itwUt be for me!’r I did 5 thenceforward became atolorably brave boy! I 1 Now if huch inducemcnta as ihcre could tiroWfboy act the hero why should hot lovc country tho glory of : victory and the shams defeat make even cowards act the hero? liutf ' front the subjects proposed for in! departingcome now to speak oP actual optnfi tide I in the field If 10000 ergage 20000 the labor of fighting about equal ou both aides Tin human lion can only endure a ccriiitt amount of uSI and fatigue and at this point the belligerents All other things beingequal then if S atop" 000 held on to thi point thry cannot poss j be conquered and it is a hundijed to one 20000 vieM tho contest before they reach ' I point of erhaustion Chabg e or Bayonet— If thf soldier forget as 1 else that I have written or may) write let him forget-whaI My upon this ’bead It has said that In all Bonaparte's batties there werebc three instances of a fight witty bayonets these exceptions whenever lib or hb adri d fight one brought the battle to a the other- party jn variably gaie way Xov h nation in Europe jand with one (j fought every with Inferior numbers ception alwai-Turks he fought in Egypt and Syria a barbarsm the Turks ahbtel i1 ' people At Acre he ' fought ' " C T the English I do do not remember that his troopa' ever r- lie that as : coiled from a charge of bayonets may we all know that np to hb Knssian camptn p hb battle were Ijttle less tbm ode Ufibrokcnw'rwl of victories' I hive inquired of k rnunher of f " officers and soldiers whether tliefi ever wltncdif with bayonets'during the win and 1 have mi fight found the man who haa seen aucll a thingr'"aj yet 1 have heard of a hnndred ifpot fire bnndivt In all the charges being made during the wkr charges then one or tho other harty must have given away Now what is the conclusion front this? Why that whether you fight with civilized or barbarous nationSror with civilized and barbtr-oumixed with royalists or republican wit equal or unequal numbers (the disproportion ax being venr peat) you havo only to stand firm im bayonet fight to assure you of victory There: s When the nothing iir war more certain than this 'battle then comes to a cross of bayonets whatever I may be your alarms see it througp and your tri-umphis sure Charging urTOfnE Cannon' Morrn— Thiil is considered the very acme of Heroism Wh h now there is not the pa& of 'the danger!I in it that is generally supposed j The- - reason i Caqnou cannot be constantpy adjusted to ag I plain' ever approaching object Many of you know how wildly they shoot until the gunner jby a number tf as it ia call-the experimental ’shots “gets e ed even of a stationary- - objectrang’ liut that-ranglost with every approach of the object to the eaa non None but the most expert riflemen could his I a squirrel rapidly descending Now the movement or a cannon to hit tvn approaching rc gi- nient must be like that of tiie rifleman V gun con-btantiy lowering but wifli a variable velocity s the regiment approaches more or- ls rapidly If the regiment oblique a little from (he first line of approach the cannon must undergo two adju ments to hit it the one perpendicular and the'other lateral Now who is competent to make the lab erly thing fulfill all these conditions? No man that ever lived or ever will live To — keep a cannon sighted but ' iug object is impossible cannon’s mouth’’ then if done quickly is demonstrably less dangerous than remaining stationary at i i exact cannon' range A word more and I have done Ppssfbly before the war ends yon may get under n general who may command you to pursue a routed foe In that event stop not as long as yon can keep- your feet Bear hunger and thirst to the utmost point of endurance rather thanjitop and cut loir vonr arm sooner than panse to gather booty af sneri a time The reason is obvious when yonr enemy is in flight he is impotent and yon destroy him Without hazard to yourselves His dispersion is so great that he cannot be brought to face yon again hr month if ever1 His all falls into yoiir hands IBs spirit m broken for all time And oh' rem unber as we' pass along that all- these evils half told become t " f yours when you flee Soldiers' lay to heart the things that I have writ: ten and reduce them to practice and bar liberty is snre a r al'he ' snow tails — Last evening Social Hall — the first The Opening ball in the there was a fine of the season He Died— Tierney the P G died on Thursday It was a evening from tho effects of morphine premeditated act before his last spree Whisky used him up j MONDAY MOUXIXC 31 A IIiavt Train—' Tha Walker Broth ra hind thirty on wagons of general merchandize from the east on Saturday -Japts Millard Packard ami M P Crandall Vers Charge That firm baa still heavy amount f goods on the way One hundred and fire wagons started from the frontiers with about 400000 lbs of freight k Zxfictxk— Capt Snow’s train is by some expected this We evening: we donbt his arriving before trust that the efforts of the bishops to assist the emigrants will be readily seconded by the people Whoever can assist the eitmger give him or her labor and house accommodation they wlU be blessed— they deserve if Winter threatened a fearful storm on The fleecy flakes fall heavily through gnturday evening the night and in tha morning the country was beautifully robed in snow We may 7 expect a few weeks of purf weather yet bnt winter will soon be upon us v StOKMT — Gloomy r flsF“ rrofwsor $Unnard opens school to-da- y in'ths 13th Ward Assembly Boom oOXTDftTED FROM rAGE-QXE- ( I tl -- : his!’’ I I t haqd-tofran- 1 - a ‘ v tut JL y AtMka IX in( re di b DM th FI 3r an bt an ba m ca cc one-tent- e ca aij nl cl I si atre ai th I ft 1 - th I I - - h " COMMERCIAL Ornci er 'nx Daily fjEUniurB 1 Saturday Evening October 20 18&A i Gold Coin— 200® 203 Dust— Virginia 34®35 BoIm GREAT SALT LAKE CXTY RETAIL ABKETS - COTTON COODB Sra ulieetlngw 8M OO tfi llOO m Bleached aheetlnsa a do SO 1 TO m X Dminu Skein cotton Iff lb 0a 3S X aa Ktrlpa Ticks ‘ 75al 00 l 60 12 00 WOOLLEN 6 00 a 12 00 LInaeye 3 SO a 500 Pupllna 1 25 a 1 50 SbawU' 225a3 5Q BLmkets ’Broadcloths CMrimmt Flannels Pattincts OOal 25 OO a 1 OO 113 00 a 2050 1 1 10 00 a 25 00 160 DelaioM mm! ( ' 150 a 3 00' Diapef 100a 150 Crash ' Irfeh Brown 1 1 1 25 Prints 3fa60 Thread aplpr dos2 60a3 00 ? ooii' sa a 75 T9 a 1 OU 125a 1 50 7A 351 (JEncIiain Tin 150 40 a 75 locnizi — on Klee 40s W 123 MoLvrea c1ipe 450 300a 500 Star caudles ft0” 00 Soda OT 60 Saferatni M 2 00 a 3 00 Indtge 400S500 1 00a 125 tt Tea Driwapplwi Dried psacbea Tobacco Raisins ' FICZS Cinnamon Ciutes 2 50J Pepper 2 50jGinger Jamaica 4 00 a 5 OO j 1 00 s 175 1 100“' Allpice Sulmji SOAPS Rosfit ’ CfilBomsstid Caatila 1 00 25 2M 60 a 1 2i iN- - 'XARDWAul Nails— and lath 60 Fhectiroa “ shingle all sizes upwards 50 Wire 60 a 70 Leadpr lh CVutings arelW Grass scythes 3 50 a A OO Grain acjthee 0U?8 “ SO a 35 10 x 14 ' 8 X 10 40 a 60l0 xl6 rlO X IS' 50S W 100 i - 63 450S500 n 1 FAINTS AND OILS a 2 25 White lead pr kg 12 00al5 W 60 a 75j Wnswi oil prgili: 1000 : Vcall 1200 Varnish 12 00 do KaroMB pr SU a 00 a 7 ool " WHOLESALE TR0DUCE MXKKETj 1 Oltoe pr bottle do Castor SO Quotations under this head are based on actual wdet-- l bo 65 1 00 6 00 Butter Wheat 60 4 OOjKgga Barley per buah i 40 a 50 “ 4 00 ‘Cheese new Cbrn ' 1 50 300 Oats do old 15 Potatoes 2 25 Beana per U ' : 4 00 Peas 500 nUma 1 - 1 Flaxseed Flour cwt Corn meal BeeC fresh pr lb Dried beef Hams smoked Bacon ' ' 300 Hayprton 20 00 Lumber pr nj 1200 Laths pr 100 15 a 20 Shingles pr m Wood pr cord 65 Coal pr toa 35 00 a 40 00 80 00 a 10000 1 1 25 10 00 a 12 00 J9 6p a 1200 75 I y j sb I X' 1- bu s '5 -- 10 : Cffilee CUAPTER III X In all that hava raid to yen or mean to aay to I yon fight against superior numbers Jon suppose endeavored to demonstrate to yon that there is not near the danger in meeting superior numbers in tha field that is generally supposed In a conflict of one thousand against two thousand the firefof unyielding valor and the second of common soldiery which is likely to omumcif Evanswer “the firat” I ery man anIn the world will truthf not this unqaestionable Why then Will not reasonable beings reduce it to practice in the wav? vBecaaae” it will be answered- - “men cannot screw themselves np to unjeldmr valor' True but with a man of common sense it should require baft very little screwing to do that which will insure him victory or no valor When I was a boy about thirteen years of age my father lived fourteen ules from Augusta On the road to the city there bras pne point where a man had been murdered and another where a woman had been killed and stories were rife in the neighborhood of terrific sights seen at these' places at night I do' not suppose that a house frill of gold could have induced me to pass them alone at night One in my presence “I never day my father remarked children to be frightened with foolish allowmy stories about ghosts Ac There is my who if necessary would go from here to Augusta at midnight with no more fear than I would feel in doing ap” “Mercy on me” thought I “how little Bat 'the remark my father knows of had a magical effect upon me It set me to thinking of the folly of my fearetbe glory 1 should have in verifying my father’s opinion of me and the shame I shall feel at his discovering that be had overestimated me and I began to entertains timid desire to prove my heroism Not long after this I was belated and had to pass one of these places by night and alone I was awfully alarmed as I IT I Ingm - 1 !! ’ I ft ' - - Coxx lx — Mr E Churtliff got homo on Saturday with May says: it- v: v the Stage In advance of his train lie reports about a “The answer of the rebel President wa3 de-It would beridienlonsly absurd to expect people dozen trains for this market near to each other along dded that the ojjly terms which the South to go to a place of amusement and screw them- - Green River that may be looked for in about 2 wseks fat Cap© : rf of the Colonel ddiyered la understood Uiat tllO Theatre next week for the Wih-tcFscason' and Mr T A Lyne' commences A short engagement on the opening night We were prevented from being present at the ks£ opening and lost the Manager’s speech on the good' conduct expected of the younger patrons of the establishment We understood however that there was a general denunciation of that delightfully interesting style of the gods—which had threatened to redneebur “parlor theatre” in "white find gold: to 3 level with the Bowery pea-nn- tTemple If taere la anything the Management has to fear fluring the coming season it is the detestable excruciating screaming and whistling of boys and digger boys iu the upper gallery and occasionally of others in the middle tier and we hope that a will be at once evinced against firm determination " re-ope- ns G V: the Theatre— It THE DEATIX or A SODOMITE r ' mmmmm There are persons ia all communities who see no wrong In private vengeance— tho man think otherwise and de- pkre its execution however culpable may he the victim For onr own pert w!e should have prefer! to have soon Frederick Jones gibbeted fh the bench near the spot hoa? ored with the memory of Ferguson' with all the paraphernalia of civil law around him than to hsvo seen him picked np elf tho sidewalk of a public street with n ball in hie body and another Id hie head bnt wa have no crocodile tears to shed over him he ie dead and wa have to call him back again to fkt sHchlTT of manner retribution the change : To girt the details of hli crime would bo to besmear onr sheet with frets loathseme enough to crimson tho ftca of the mMt'barbaroae of the hnmaarace we oonflee enreelvee to narvatiTe Oarreadeee he want more information than we arodispossd to publish can seek-lo- r LKAvma Us—Testerday afternoon about a it elsewhere hundred of the California Volunteers left us for the The crime charged on Jones was commlttsd on the af tarnoon ofWsdnasdaytha 19tb In ajavtna between this Pacific Their three years' service had expired and many of them left ns '‘smiling and happy city 'and Camp Douglas after which he Informed the boy Some of them were Good Tempters and decent that ha woofd cut his throat if ha Informed on him That Immen— altogether wc wished them a good-by- e and evening the bther on learning the boy’s staienisnt onas they glided away in the distance we were not mediately eonght legal advise and - the tallowing day toOk tho boy to Camp and aearched fbr the offender so certain but we might yet see worse men than many of the California Volunteers' 'V and eon again repaired to the On Sunday Camp in search of Jones and by that time hsd beta in- Justice CouteT—-- A P G by the name of Cover spue ted to look into (ho Quarters of' company G and was charged with selling a shot gun belonging to ere the boy saw him' and with his father repaired to Thos II Wright The latter got 'judgment and the of Gen Connor where a statement of was and the General’s assiatanc eollclt-e- d mads offence the Cover thought that his departing by the (23 An wu Immediately instructed to bring the orderly stage northward in the afternoon jwas catching him on a “liook Had he remained he could accused before the Genenri but on re turning to the quw not fonnA have given another phase to matters— he thonghL ters of company Gm Jones wsacame oat to Drees Parade Aa the different companies the boy made a minatoinspactlon of tho Volunteer and : SATURDAY MORXIXG 29 alee looked around among tho spectators bnt sAw nothing ‘ The Emigration— Winter cast an Ominous frown of the offender over surroundings yesterday morning shaking out After soardiing other quarters during the parade tho desired a more than the quarters of comquantity of snow on the boy went again several times-intwas G : seen him there and bad certain he he that mountains and melting a part into a' gentle rain pany found Jones he Frederick finally sitting in the exin the valley treme corner of the leaves of a book the building turning A great many wishes &cy have been “offered his intellect! Mr Monk was professing to bo up” that tho entire emigration might reach here called in the cultivating and the accused soldier grew pale boy by before the “storms? begin to pay their periodical lie denied the crime bat accompanied Monk before' the visits Cupt Snow’s 'train is still behind and we General whore he again denied the charge The Genwould be pleased to note its safe arrival which eral ordered Jones to be taken to the Guard House and we hope to be able to do in a few days Instructed Monk to procure a warrant and 1st the civil The Bishops and their assistants have had a law take its course On Tuesday evening Jones was brought to the city and stirring time since Capt Hyde’s train got in enorin the calaboose On Wednesday ha was examinlodged mous quantities of meat pies bread potatoes and ed Justice Clinton and pled 'taot guilty” He was by other consumables having been “taken up” on 2 p ni and from lack of at finally Fridajy np brought through the Wards and “put dowd” witii considprovisions punishing (hat crime Jones was reerable gusto by the arrivals on emigration square statutory leased — though his guilt was as evident aa foct could be after Such material comforts are After his dismissal Jones left la the direetkm of the over the the and plains through Camp about 3p m and was not afterwards heard m till “enjoying” trip the mountains anti arriving withthe thermometer his body wss found on the h near the residence of downwards with Gen 7 o'clock between Q and ranging chilling celerity that evening Eldredge No doubt the good folks with Capt Suow will On Saturday an inquest was held and an examination of boys and a young 'man who testify to have seen the appreciate a like blessing bnt a sparing distribu- two flash of the pistol Are and to have heard ito report four tion at first may prevent some unpleasant re volutimes Nothing further was elicited - beyond that some tions in the interior one stated that the steps of a man running away was We paid a visit to the “square” yesterday afterheard The verdict was in accordance with the Cute: noon and found Col little and “everybody” buisy —came to his death by pistol shots fired by some one ministering to the wants and comfort of a few of unknown the immigrants who still remain there waiting opAn hour after the body of Jones was found the police Terriof of for the other apprehended Mr Monk and up to Saturday evening he leaving parts portunities was held in custody We got to the court room ia time ortents are ‘ranged in goodly' tory Comfortable der and the occupants seem pleased with and ap- - to hear Capt Hempstead— who was acting as prosecutor case—examine the boy as to the whereabouts of preciative of the care bestowed upon them Every in the liisfrther at that time and if be had ever had a pistol credit is due to Bishop Hunter and his Counselors etc and to the Bishops generally and all who particiCapt Hempstead made a very dear and succinct statepated in the affair Apart from anything of a ment in ramming np the examination character the act e that speaks to- the that he had in concert with the ehril officers ofexhibiting the city best feelings of human nature and is worthy of made diligent efforts to track up the perpetrators of the commendation from everyone who admires and deed that bad closed the career of Frederick Jones hat there was before hln) no evldonce against any one It was kindness appreciates deeds of charity-annatural in seeking for a motto to lat suspicion foil upon Coax vs Wood — In this day of scarcity of the Cither of tha boy or upon aqy friend who might fed n interest in the case—bnt there was nothing to show fuel working men without teams to haul their winter’s firewood will do themselves no harm by dis- that flank hadin any way contributed thereto The Caji tain made a very rational manly address repudiating cussing the question of economy— in the article of with the perpetrator of “the moat heinous of coal We have our printing offic warmed up by sympathy heinous crimes-and aa eloquently denounced the “assas coal from Livingston’s Weber institution which is aination” of Jones Defendant’s couijsel addressed the Court and everybody equal to any coal we have ever used in tlm Atlantic States or in the old country being of the one opinion the Court discharged the defendMr L may do little in the way of supplying the ant Monk This case has caused considerable exdtoment but very pnblic daring the present season but we understand he intends to go' in extensively next spring little if any diversity of opinion Jonee committed-way aoaght to and after the fashion of the' chaps who promise monstrous crima and modi basin any was Monk Hot him belter knowing why seeking Jones and teaks will ns so nicely those sausages chops fit Camp 80D1B of thO Tolfifittfiri were ratiu-deliver us the coal in finely painted vagou drawn uglyIu epeecb baton lMrnin the tmetm after Me arreet they were — a Perkins la hones Barclay ae nnmenenred In their denunciation Gen Conuor readby magnificent “London Brown Stoat Ac Quite so assisted tha officers the law of civil and Capt Hemp- ily Mr Carleton in the meantime is contracting stead’s manhood was greater than the lawyer owners of trains to bring in this winwith How Jenes came by his death may remain a mystery — ter that mountain of fine coal that he has on tho at the present writing there is no clne to it bnt there eastern road before which onr Christmas beef and will be plenty of conjecture no doubt as ie usual under Thera was sow tall swearing and such circumstances tnrkies are to be “done brown” on of pistols drawing Friday evening and a great deal of The gas exploded and the facts before os-c- oal we would advise folks of that need which bad language in onr opinion than wood and tho bad A foots class to refrain tongue Inspired by whisky price is presently lower than it will be when the is a dangerous thing out hers clvei up to Quakerish resolutions— to only smile and bow approvingly in lower CL an tho evening and never to whisper beyond three times in the last four hears of departing day jThese might do well enough ' at other gatherings but hot in the Temple of the Drama Wego there to enjoy ourselves and expect every person goes there for the same purpose and we expect the Management so understand it bnt while we calculate that everybody will consider himself or herself free to applaud cheer or otherwise demonstrate approval that bellowing Lanooiog and roaring out vulgarities is enough to crityson the face of eveitybody favored with any degree of v ' We haye but one place of pnbticentertalnmentA let us tiy to preserve it respectsbl4 - Jones the Infantryman Somewhat Sensitive — Yesterday mornlng'Ter-ney-- s p G being locked up in our City calaboose or liaving perjured himself in the course of an examination before Justice Clinton is skid to have taken his position o seriously to -- heart that he 'Wanted ti leave this world in a dashing While in the caliboose he asked one of the officers to procure him’ four grains of morphine froirr the After drug store which tlie officer refused to do liis releaserbe procured the morphine hinuielf and took it ana indited note to a medical itfan in this city about selling his mining interestssomewhere and remitting the proceeds ito Ills relatives When wc got the information Temcy was said to be dying A man sensitive enough over that case was too good a man to take morphine— it is the other fellows who should take file dose The world can ' spare them nicely - i1 'u — Frederick n: 28 - i1 ’ FRIDAY MORNING - s -- compare? wait yesterday examined before Justice Clinton and pled “not guilty” to the abominable Charge 12Unst him Tho Doctor concluding otherwise ZBinaned hlm tp tlxe care of tlie offioer till the de- cision of the Court was announced i r: ' ' HOME AFFAIRS That Case ! " imi From a telegram received' by Mr Halsey from the Sheriff of Portland Oregon we learn that Rrockle Jack was there and in cus- tody Brokie was one of the threo Road Agents who robbeAthe passengers by Oliver a Co’s Express on their way to this city some two months ago There will no doubt b a requisition made for the fellow by the Governor of Montana and then Brockie will have a nice time ofit " I Tholino followedilowna small stream into ‘ " - r |