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Show XJke Comity iaVgister r Biiieirlr she Imw eeS Growte. af S p.te Ipbraim, Utah, 'Sept. 52, 1890 CALL A HALT. Nephi ha recently had a case bel.re ' I lie emu is where a huh lias been fined f.it using tnOrceiit Ni jue Ma w..m.iii. lie plead guilty, and exjnr.-e-d a willm-nes- i tn p.iv h flue, and llien akctl leave to tell liislinv, which was indeed a tale of we. Tlie wuinau had encour-aged her children to stone, beat, and blackjuaid those of her neilib .r.assall-e- d and abused various members ul the lanuly hersell, and at the first breath of retaliation flew lu duit and entered a suit. It is not everybody that is willing to figure before th courts in a petty neighborhood low, and, respectable peo-ple will bear almost any amount of abuse rather than come belore the public.lhus; but w hat of the Communities who wink, at such matters, and what i.fthe families who thus train up their childien as mod-ocrat-rulhn and toughs? These matterf.aie no: asuddenjgrowth but is the result of long training. Notice the little boys who spend the greater part ol their time on the streets, turned loose, sallying out like a spider to maltieat eveiy boy smaller than him self, abusing cats and dogs, tying strings across the sidewalks, etc., and you find he same bo)s as they grow older, assal-tin- g their neighbors, appropriating calves, in after l ie filling our courts and prisons, as well a untimely graves. The parents who wantonly and indif-ferently foster a spirit ot persecution and revenge in Meir children, are planting the seeds of the trees of sorrow, degra-dation and ruin. It is no uncommon thing, even in San Pets, to hear ol cases ol rowdyism, and our readers would be shocked to see tne details in punt, for they can rest as inrod that hoodlumism is not confined to the children ol the poor, or un-educated, nor to the sterner sex but if it would be i.ffciuive and disgusting for such matters to be brought before the public, and disgracelul and offensive for the participants in such nutters to see their names mixed up with it, how much worse is it that such things are peimit-te- d to exist, unquestioned.and unchecked. It is nut Irom ignorance that these per-sons are lea to victimize the public, or iuteifere with the peace, property, and rights ol others, for our systems of train-ing for the young are very complete, and as the public has no great demand for that particular class of smartness it should not be encouraged, even by si-lence. If their are young people, or boys and gills in our midst who really have no re spect for individual rights, whv then the strong arm of thelawsh uild be evoked, for the Mormon people af all people in the world have sullercd loo much from mob violence to tolerate the growth and development of such an element among us. REGISTER CALENDAR.' ' Stmt ethe Lidding Evtnlt Ctnnitt-t- J with Utah and ktr founders. Thursday, Sept. 18, 1845, Sheriff Backenstoi and 700 men, attempted to arrest the mobbing house-burner- s at Carthage, but they had fled. Friday, Sept. 19, 1845, The Mob-ber- s of Carthage paid no attention to the proclamation issued by Sher-iff Baekenstos on the 18th, but made preparations for new depre-dations. Saturday, Sept. 20, 1868, Albert Carrington succeeded F. D. Rich-ards as Prest. of the European Mis-sion. Sunday, Sept. ai, 1813, Joseph Smith was visited by the Angel Moroni and told of the golden plates 851, ,rest B- - Voun8 advised the Mormons in Iowa, by an Epistle, to go to Utah. Monday, Sept. it, 1823, Joseph Smith first saw the plates of Gold. .... 185 1, First legislature of Utah, convened at Salt Lake, H. C. Kim-ball Prest. W. W. Phelps, Speaker. ....AmasaM. I.yman and Party, purchased the San Bamardino ranch, about 100,000 acres of land. The location was about 100 miles from San Diego, 70 from the port of San Pedro and 50 from Pueblo de los Angelos. Tuesday, Sept. 23, 1862, The Independant Companies of Scandi-navia, Capts. C. A. Madsen and O. N. I.ilienquist, arrived in Salt Lake 1873, The Utah Southern Ry. opened to American Fork. Wednesday, Sept. 24, 1845, The proposition was made to the mob in 111., for the Mormons to leave the next spring 1851, Capt. Homer Ducan's train arrived in Salt Lake 1868, Capt. E. L. Munford's ox train, 28 wagons and 250 passengers, arrived in Salt Lake. Sept. 21, 1865, Gen. W. S. Snow, in command, of Manti, had an en-gagement with the Indians near Fish I aki, and killed seven. Gen. Snow and two of his men were wounded. On the 20th of Sept. 1869, the Indians raided Fairview and drove off 18 head of horses. The largest Mormon Ttmplc ever com-pleted, j More of Young Utah than any other ; county. The most beautiful buitdiutf atone in the west. Pure water for almost every town in the connty. Two cities watered directly by excel lent spiings More Roller mills than any o'her county in Utah. Room and opportunities for a half dozen large cities. The most beautiful cinyoos for sum-mer picnic parties. The greatest number of Roller mills, of any couuiy in Utah. More agricultural machinery than any other county iu the Territory. v Graveyards with fewer graves far the age and population than any in the west. The finest artificial lakes in the liest Funk's l.ak and the .GouieBerry reser-voir, r- - An honest Scandinavian comfnunity, slightly sprinkled with theaverale An-glo Saxon J The oulr genuine Asphsltum beds in the United Statts. The bads cover scveu miles.-- i' L Herald. , A welcome for b nest,practical eitisens who wish to locate and help build up the "Granary of Utah. what w . shall have. BuU "T ' Stoae yarde. Marble yards. Soap factories. iMa.a c.nia. Pleaty of Politics. A Board of Traite. A stake Tabernacle. Two at sara railroads. Escelleat mer vorbs. 4 CaoSl Ira dasarlaiaala. A fas.aoa Court Housa. Taa firat District court. Several Craia Elevators. Sash aad doer factories. Brick aiaking nechinery, 4. Good paying SiWar Miass. Hoaay Packiag Conpaaios i Several first cleat academe. Good ptacaao! public aaiuUta. Steaa sewing ana Seilbinif Vinery. WHAT WI CAN AN1.1 JULD HAVE. Smelters. .... Taaaariaa. f.3 ' Creameries. . A cocoon ary. j Quarts Mills. A silk factory. ' Glua faciariaa, Electric Ugkta. Iroe foundries. Yarn Factories. Caady factories. Truak factories. Broom factories. Ckeeae factories. Steam Laundries. Cracker factories. Eaitliag factories. Woolen rectories. Boot and shoe factories. Furniture M enufacturias. Street cars in sevsral cities, . Meal Packing establismssts. Alt the lusurieeto make a home life bsppy. The moat potatoes to ship of say couaty in the ter-ritory. Our Resources! Something: of San Fete, the "Granary of Utah " What she has, oan and frill have. Bead and Digest, Then give a verdict on San Pete-wi- t at we have. Gold. Lead. S.lver. X)uUU tm- m- '"" , Uchies. Matble. Calcile. Copper. Gypsum. Salaratus. Rock salt. Limestone. Sandstone, Low Taxes. Fine hoises. No Cyclones, No Boodlers. flaming mills. Warm springs. Two railroads. Room to grow. , Building stone. Artesian Wells. No Anarchists. Political Clubs. Debating Clubs. No.Lahor kiots. . Two Academies. A grain elevator. Literary Socities. No earth quakes. Two newspapeis. First class Artists. Three Seminaries. Thousands of sheep. Thousands of cattle. Hundreds of Horses. Peace-lovin- g citizens. Two great reservoirs. Several fine brass bands. 1 he most beautiful girls. Various qualities ol coal. An excellent bee country. Some good water powers. Good and efficient officers. The noblest and best boys. Ice in unlimited quantities. Three Job printing offices. Coal in endless quantities. Catile on a thousand Hills. Numerous fine carp ponds. The tamest red-h- radicals. A healthy place for children. The most honest Democrats. The most beautiful cemetery. The best potatoes in the west. Plenty of shade and Irmt trees. The most solid Pe oples Party. The best winter range in Utah. The best grain county in Utah. The best building stone in Utah. The fairest minded Republicans. The best Federal officers in Utah. Fine Hunting, both btar and deer. The best roller flour mills in Utah, The best Liberals in the Territory. The most healtby climate on record. The best mechanics in the Territory. The second largest building in Utah. Best and reddest brick clay in the west The most charitable people on earth. First class public schools and teachers. The best farming country under the sun. The best brass band south ol Salt Lake City. The finest sheep range in I lie Tern-lor- A first class womans suffrage organi- - ration. - 1 ... a W - A CO 5 o .... ; t CO-OPERATI- VE MERCANTILE : INSTITUTION NEPHI SAVINGS SANK TRUST COMPANY. Capital ,' $50,000 Surplus 14,000 Geo. C.Whitmore,Pres. ' W. I. Brown, Vice-Pre- Jonas H. Erickson, James E. Clintoa, Directors. James E. Farshee, L. S. Hills, Jas. H. Peterson, J Alma Hague, Cashier. General Banking Business. Inteiest paid on Savings Deposits, money to oan on real estate Money to Loan! Lombard Investment Com-can- y Is Loaning Money on Very Easy Terms. ft North and South, ft Dry Goods of all descriptions. Hat and enpa boots and aboea, both home made and imported. Clothing a Bpecality. Grootii-ies- , including Dixie Molasses, and Dried Fruits; Crack-er- a and fish. Our Hardware Department contains an immense atock of Tools for Mechanics; also tools for Farmers such as Shorelt., Spades Picks, Hoes Forks and Rakes. Glassware, Queensware, Woodenware; Medicinas; Drugs; Paints and Oils; Well Piping and Shingles. Yonr petronage is always appreciated, no matter how small your purchase. You may rest assured it will be our constant aim to give our Customers the best goods that can b obtained for the money. Your Child will be treated as courteously aa yourself. J. A. ANDERSON, Supt. 1 I? V 1 K.tI' it-i-. -- - - I ! I S ' "I. HI. Studrjhakor Bros. Uonffj Co. Carriage Repositor, a and JJ Main Street, and Breach House, ceraer State Road and Second South Street. The fineat Carriage Display in the Territories, Light ad Jtavy Wgtiu in Mvtry Siytt that it ifadt, Vehicles for Public and riate Use ia All Varieties and Fries, aieo Mama Kra Th Whi,,,,J'' Champion and Piano Harvester Medlines and Extras, I. C. I. Case Threshers Horse-Power- , Engines and Mills, Welt, Morrison. Meikel and South Bend Flows, Hay Rakes fralier Road Carts and Harness of All Kind. Send for Illustrated Catalogue and Frices. is 4 J. P. Meilstrup, Ephraim, Agent. - . ; "All Buinese Prompily Attended to. j U. if la the; cite, ar nrlte Be lor terns e. W. D. Shults, Ephraim, Utah. OtUee over 1. T. Lame's Dreg Stare. 14 FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF NEPHI, UTAH. Faid up Capital fjo.oooSurputui f'S.ooo GENERAL BANKING In All Its Branches. Draws sight drafts on the cities of the principal Unned States; sells diafis on the chief cities of Eutupe; deals in exchange and general securities. Collaaetoaa rraaastly Ateale Accoanta of merchants, manulactuieis, mines and Individuals solicited. Directors. Geo. C. Whitmore, Jones H. Erickson, L.S. Hills. James H Myndcra, James E. Clinton. Offleers. Geo. C. Whitmore, President, Jones) H. Ericksgn, AIbu Hsgar, CatRies, I AGRICULTURAL FAIR. . i ' Ceatribatcd. -- - Te Salt Lake City Exhibition ' o,October, 1890, by its circular, v (besides containing about 150 of business houses) of-fe-about; v I50, Diplomas. i ,25 Silver Medals. t ,125 Gold Medals. 580 Cash Premiums. The officers and board consist of: j Farmers. ,1 Stockraiser. .2 Manufacturers. 4 Merchants. 4 Real Estate Agents. 1 Pedagogue. Who are to be the judges of merit i the distribution of Diplomas, j Medals and Cash Premiums, is not stated- - Supervisors of departments are mentioned. It seems aa aid scheme of Salt Lake City to hold a territorial fair just at the time, when great por-tion of the people gather for a re-ligious conference in Salt Lake City; and probably, without this . connection, the territorial fair would not be such a booming finan-.ci-success, for that city. To,all appearance it is more a . commercial effort, than an Agricul-- , tural ,. Autumn Fair. It will be grand "Markeds-Dage- " for Salt Lake City, its neighborhood and ' the railroatlj, in advertizing mer-- : chandise and exceedingly high , priced horses, cattle, etc. The . stimulus needed to advance farming and gardening is the rairwsr object. State Fairs or exhibitions, gener-""Jjl-are not agricultural fairs, but merchants, "hang out" rather. , Real and beneficial Agricultural Autumf Fairs cannot yery well be state institutions, wijhout loosing that local interest, that according to the nature of things gives attrac-tions for faripers, gardeners and , stock raisers. '. lt us have a County Fair in San 'Ttt County in i8gt. It should be a proqainent, yearly, farmers feast, .of high order; where mercinary t.Jhould be thoroughly 4frded against; and where men . (4 women of toil should rejoice ' J to meet tegether, and behold the , concentration of the fruits of their , labors. i,. .v. Christian A. Madsen. FROM MEXICO. The Colony of Diaz, in which we live is the largest place inhabited by the Saints in tins part or the woild. The people depend principally upon agri-cultural resources. The climate is mild and the soil fer-tile and well adapted to tillage. In many instance two crops are raised in one year. Fruit trees of almost every variety grow with great rapidity Crape-vine- s aie found in almost eveiy inclos-ure- , and in n flourishing condition. The melon season is now at its height atnl luscious melons are raised in all the gardens. The people put tip no hay for winter ti e, as the cattle find grazing during the entire season. In the rainy season, which is now upon us, the grass springs up in great abundance, but dries during the dry months of the year. Tne rainy season commences about the rtist of June and continues until the last ol August. The wUiketS art, mild. no warmer than those ul' northern latitudes The summer nights ate especial ly noted for their cool bieezes which produce a pleasant sleeping tempeiature. The land is plentilul but thete is some scarcity of water, though now the river (Rio Grande) is Mowing over its bank lor miles. It is hopsd that there will be an increase of water when it is needed , A.H. PLACE A LIMIT. its! this day of degenerate politics nd- partisan ,, newspapers, a man tWst be either a very saint, or a hardened villian, if he ever consents to place his name before the public as candidate for public office. Their past is unearthed, the most villaia-u- s construction put upon events, which time and defective records make obscure, and the man who has not a perfect character comes out of the mellec without a shred of reputation. , The public certainly have some right to know the general character ef the man who aspires to public , trust and emoluments, but there : , should be a law of honor in effect like . the law of limitation, and when a , man's record bad been good for . years, what had besen done before that could very properly be regula-- , ted to the dead past. Otherwise we place a man beyond the pale of repentance, we deny that one may xvtt profit by mistakes, or be an . honorable man and consciencious citizen and officer, after having ..once Hepped aside from virtue's . path, aad everybody knows that is not correct. In fact some of the best and most faithful men, of whom we have historical accounts, were mm who had lined and re-pented. COUNTY LOCALS. School Supplies in great varieties at J. P. Meilstrup's. James Lowry, Esq., of Manti, was on a business trip to Salt Lake last week. , Mt. Pleasant, San Pete county, is to have a d chamber of commerce, after the Salt Lake pat-tern. Herald. If you have any interest in who represents Utah in Congress of the United States, see that your name is on the registration list. The city sprinkler made its first start in front of the Register block last Saturday, at 1:15 p. m. It gave to Ephraim, quite a Metropol-itan air. The Ephraim sprinkler was out for the first time last Saturday. It lays the dust admirably, the only oojection to it is tne tact that it has been too long starting. Lives of great men all remind us If we reach their height sublime We must keep our names and doings In the papers all the time. ' Hon. John T. Caine has kindly furnished us with a copy of the "Message of the President of the United States, Communicated to the Two Houses of Congress at the Beginning of the First Session of the Fifty-fir- st Congress." The following can be added to our natural attractions: Cement equal to the famous Portland. Porceline clay. Kaolinc clay. Pipe-clay- . San Pete is entitled to five rep-resentatives at the Peoples Party convention to be held at Salt Lake on Tuesday, the 7th day of Oct., 1890, for the purpose of nominating a candidate for delegate to the Fifty second congress, and to elect a ter-ritorial central committee. The basis of representation was fixed as follows: One delegate for each 250 motes cast by the People's Party at the last August election, aud one delegate for each county, irrespec-tive of the number of. votes cast. When will our county .convention be called? CORRECTIONS. E.litnr Recistii. Since I came to ton this mcrnjig I was r '" shown by Bro. John V. V. Dorms, a rather big mistake in the Senliml wherein one of the speaker; at the . Jubilee is said to have used the fol-lowing language: "Apostle E. Snow was sent to Scandinavia, he being v .considered the poorest missionary." It should have read: Apostle E. Snow was sent to Scandinavia, it : being considered the poorest! mis-sionary field. There are two othef . mistakes, viz: that Apostle E. Snow in Italy; it should be, Lorenzo Snow, and that Apostle John Taylor op- - posed the Catholics in France, me- - think, if anything, he was opposed by thei. Yours, , . , P. O. Hansen. Ephraim, sept. 19, 1890. - f .,. In reading history and biography and seeing what narrow escapes the great ones of the earth have had of never , realjiing . their hppes, how ' they have been lowly born, and ljave struggled with pover- - ty and oftj-ne- s with bodily affliction it U not aull difficulty guess that ; many a fright-mind- , many a noble ubject has gone ,down unrecorded with its originator, into the shadows of the valleys of death and oblivion. AuxreiY in human life is what squeaking and grinding are in that is not oiled. In life .faith Is Jbe oil. |