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Show The Silver Beet Bliner. EVERY HERBERT WEDNESDAY & STEELE. BY } ie STEELE * J. q Caas. W. Chum. 318 Pine st. I N. LOUDER. L. P. Fisw#x..21 Merchants’ Excha J. R LINDBAY. Office—Mixenr Building, Lower Main Street| | — “TERMS One yea r Mix OF suman erst Momths.....-..cceccececccemece $6 00 eeeee oe aS Toree Months. .... ....see ee ecee ee cee e see 50 Mo’ TIER.ceca cccinceDenesencncccesse eee ‘One ¥ingle Copies... .«.,< 25 The Deserted Mill. _ Brotessional. Estate Business and and ing drip, dri P, eager flow till, And only aeraat water fall Beneath the unused mill. All miouldy are the tege af me And mors i8 grown npon the wheel, Collection Dwelling and to other Sell Houses, Min-' Attention ness, ieee Office--Mrxer, to Building, to all Busi- my Care. Silver Reef, oe : Utah BAILEY & PARSONS, (Successors to T. C. Agents and Land Attorneys | Salt Lake City, Utah. erin the stagnant pool, Where aites the spotted water snake, Among the cresses coo}. And, silent in his coat of w All slimy creeps the faaitohn es Yipon the senseM stool, ' Salt Lake City, aot pe Notary Public in the office. (mse CLARK, O_o <> 2 ASSAYS. Circumstances are the rulers of the | weak; they are but the instuuients of SILVER REEF, UTAH. | the wise, | QOharacter is not eut in marble—it is not something solid and unalterable. It is something living and changing, and becomes Ciseased as our Physician and Surgeon, boilies do. OrricE—Next door to Halpin’s store. The best part of human character is the tenderness and delicacy of feelMAIN ST.. -_SILVER REEF. ing in little matters, the desire to soothe and please others—minutie of of the social virtues.—{ Emerson. Raa in C. MANTOR, . MAURICE M. KAIGHN Attorney SALT LAKE 5 Getting on in the world is like fill- at Law, CITY, UTA, oxysmal ¢ hanges, stich as the voleanic upbeaval of an island now and then, FASHION BARBER STREET. in different parts undergoing a slow process of elevation or subsidence. In Greenland a subsidence is taking lace. For six handred miles, from isco SHOP 2... -a.55 SILVER. of Jand of the globe are Bay to the Frith to-day the Mexican: finds in this little REEF HIS TONSORIAL PARLOR IS FIRSTclass in all its appointments, an work ia done with careand expedition. the satest etyle in hair-cutting, and the’ smoothest shaves. Call and i. convinced. MARTIN KELLER, Proprietor. concludes that a slow sutadanes is in progress along the coast of New Jersey, Long Island and Martha’s Vinyard, and according to A. Gesner, the land is rising in ‘St. John in New Bonanza Flat Brunswick; sinking at the island of Silver Reef Grand Menan; rising on the coast UTAH. opposite, at: ‘Bathurst; sinking ‘about the Bay of Fundy, where there are of stumps submerged thirtyBlacksmithing & Repairing |, regions five feet at high tide; and rising at Prince Edward’s Island. It is -beLL KINDS OF WOOD-WORKs DONE lieved that, in the Pacific Ocean, the ‘ork8, n region of the Coral Islands has, in some portions, sunk not less than six ettachmente and sundries. ~~ Horseshoe- Peter Mahnken, ng a specialty. PETER thousand, feet during MAHNKIN. .. An American Journal of.... > <i Why Politica, Leen EAE Gs Society, Satire eee Tk ee AT SAN FRANCISCO, ARGONAUT. ISA See CAL ofree. Roe THE ‘AR GONAUT. Changes Color. ilar in action to, and having a like tendency towards, base metals, 2s nitric and sulphuric acids have, namely, to tarnish and dissolve them, varying in quantity to different persons;-of-this-theory-we lave abundant proof in the effects which the wearing of jewelry produces on different persons.; Thousands wear continually without any ill effeet the cheaper class of jewelry with brass ear wires, while if others wére the suine article for a few days they would be troubled with sore ears, or, in other words, the acids contained in Ere Nt ture rer things of the pre a8, Itis published weekly, at $4 per year 3 $2 2 for six months; $1 50 postpaid on see went free. Address Gold It is well known that the human body contains humors and acids, sim- tive Peek of American ideas and li erature. It is thoroughly independent in ‘tg editorial treatment of the topics of the daay. Jt ee to givve the best Pacific Coast litera- California Street. comparatively recent geological times. Surveys made in nor the: rn Sweden have show n, according to Lyell, that the coast is rising at: ‘the rate of about four feet in a century. — The Argonaut, ihe y “he en Francisco, Galiforni ia the system would so act on thé brass as to produce ill results, Instances We're going’ to sa- Nectar Quirk SAM WING'S oe Bros,’ for has oecurfed in which articles of jewelry of any. grade below eighteen carat have been tarnished ina few days, merely from the- above named: a Lemonade. -@a MAIN so beautifully in his psalins. These and many other things i Incident to Arizona and the primitive Mexican vo far to explain many custums of Biblical times. 6 ee of Igaliko, the coast. has been sinking for four centuries past. “ Old buildings and islands have been submer ced, ‘and the oravian settlers have had to put dow n new poles for their boats, the old ones standing, Lyell observes, “as silent witnesses of the change.” On the North American coast south ‘of Greenland, from Labrador to New Jersey, it is supposed bo similiar changes are going on. Hi. Cook First door north of Quirk’s Saloon, NAIN area Diminutive : in Dranuie's New A Beautiful Pieture. We clip from an Eastern exchange this beautiful pen picture, which may bring back to memory the long. ago: The man who stands upon his own soil, who feels that : by the laws of the land in whieh he lives—by the Jaws of civilized nations—that he is the rightful and exclusive owner of the land whieh he tills, is by the constitution of- our nature under a wholesome influence not easily im+ bibed from any other source. He feels—other things being equal— more strongly than any other, the character of a man as lord of the inanimate world. Of this great and wonderful sphere which, fashioned they are making afforded. He. was wanted roast. beef our- captive expressed the-yie ding up of all he had? Not less intéresting is the explanation of the origin of shaking hands, From kissing as a natural sign of affection, to kiss the hand asa compliment, the transaction is easy and requires no further explanation; for by the hand of God and upheld by a simulation of affection, no less than is an. essential part of his power, is rolling through the submission, ‘If, of two heavens, a part of his—his from the propitiatory ceremony. persons, each wishes to make an central sky. It is the space in which the generation before moyed in its obeisance to the other by kissing his rounds of duties; and he feels him- hand, and each out of compliment self connected by a visible link with Lrefuses to have his own hand kissed, what will happen? Just as when those who follow him and to whom he is to transmit a home. Perhaps leaving a room each of two persons, his farm has come down to him from proposing to give the other precedence his fathers. They have gone to their will refuse to. go first, and there wilk last home! But he ean trace their result at the doorway’ some contlict of preventing either from footsteps over the scenes of his daily movements labors. ‘The roof that shelters him advancing ; 80, if each of two tries to kiss the other’s hand and *réfuses to was raised by those to whom he owes his being. Some interesting domestic have his own kissed, there will result tradition i is connected with ev ery en- a raising of the hand of each by the eee The favorite fruit tree was other toward his own lips; and: by the other a drawing of it down again, planted by his father’s hand. He aud so. on, which difference betw een the simple squeeze, to which this salute is often abridged, and the old-fashioned hearty shake meadow. still winds The. path through the to the village school of earlier days lies throngh field. the He still hears from his window the Sabbath bell which called his father to the house of God$ and near at hand is the spot where his parents lay down to rest, and when his time has come he shall be laid by his ehildren. ‘These are the feelings of the owners of the soil. Words cannot paint, them—gold cannot buy them. They tlow out of the ains of the heart. ee deepest fount- a The Palmetto. ~ The palmetto is iikely to become'n profitable article of commerce, “A alternately. f Tagen, Bow, AND FLT | at the Main JOHN PENDRAY,..-..Proprietor Street, Silver Reef Beer, -+ +5012) Cents - selves to touching’ the hat, is a remnant of that process of unclothing himself by which in oe times the sported in childhood beside the brook blue-eyesl ware North BEST OF LQIUORS & CIGARS, — Origin of Familiar Customs. In primitve states, the conquered man surrenders himself, his weapons, and whatever of his clothing is worth having; hence, stripping becomes a mark “of submission. Cook, for instance, relates of some ‘Tabitians, “they took off a great part of their clothes, and put ‘them on tis? it another tribe thjs ceremony — is abridged to the presentation of the eirdle only. In Abyssinia inferiors strip to the girdle before superiors, A further abr idgement i is found among the natives of the Gold Coast, w ho salute Europeans by slightly remoyfng their robe from the lett shoulder; buteven there special respect is shown by completely uncovering the shoulder. In other tribes they also doff the cap. Hence, it seems that: ‘‘the removal of the hat among European among SALOON, that obdurate, and rare. A mild- “Whoare-you ??-retorted the: drum= mer. “I know my business.’ “You don’t tell me!’’ said the-fes- money largely and reduced mannered, : tru table then chipped. in “Bergih’ pardon, - stranger; : but you must excuse the lady. "We—— aie ae often explained pork and beans was the best the hduse rapidly. It is thtis, by singing the songs of her Zion ina strange “land, that a noble Southern woman has coutributed so largely to the wealth, re prosperity, and PEE EOE of her native land.”’ peoples, assertion “Madam, take—-that-away. ~Pnever’ eat those things.”’ In. yain the lady Clearly, the tive cowboy, drawing his navy. you eat them beans. And Lager Now *em in, “his is bizness with I’m shouin’ in yer ear.”’ me, and The unfortunate - drummer saw blood in the air, and was forced to choke four plates of the’ unwelcome food down before the cowboy was sat= istied with his apology to the landlady, a The a ee a Auther a ape of ‘‘ Dixie As He is the author of. ‘*Way in Dixie,’ which ‘was first a t= SILVER REEF Liquors and Cigars Private Cinb Rooms attached to the Welss Berney Silver Reef, Utah. oe I AM NOW PREPARED TO SUPPLY the Trade,.Families, and the public gererally, with a Choice ae ° mete by the Keg, Quart or Bott r delivered free to any part of Sliver Reet and adja- i South’ was then considered all that. portion below ‘Mason and Dixon's line, called for short ‘Dixie’ b showmen. In the early fall of the year, when a frost would overtake a South-bound circus still in the North, the boys would think of the genial warmth of the section they were heading for, and many’s the time on such an occasion have I heard them say, ‘Well, | wish «I was in Dixie’s land now.’ It was this that gave me cent vicinities. a, a aa The Dancing Pavilion at the Brewery is at all times at the service of the publio for the purposes of social recreation.-@@ No improper characters tolerated. PETER WELTE. Horn Saloon Pwo years afterward the rebellion broke out, and Emmett’s air, which had be-, come popular in the South, was made the representative tune of the rebels, The anthor says the work paid him wbout $800, _>.—-— Shen, STREBT...<%- ++ ec establishment. traveled a great many years with circuses in my younger days, and ‘the Seer ete Are dealt over the bar to patrons, for Bryant’s minstrels, then at. Mechanics’ Hall, Broadway. Emmett lately said toa reporter that ** ‘Towish I was in Dixie’ was a Norther n cir-4 cus expression, and not a Southern -one;-a3 tmany have supposed. I had Heat Without Fire. A machine has been invented in Boston for generating he: it without ire. It is simply an iron cylinder about a foot long anda foot in diameter. The bottom of the eylinder isa hardened plate upon which another eee At this popular resort none but the choteest “walk round’? chorus written in 1859 the ‘catch line’ for my song. 2 on Granght, LEVY) 3cijas.. tees Proprietor Land.” Dan Emmett, the old-time negro minstrel, a still performing in the West. Down MAIN Wines, eee ee Beer Bache Im goin’ to set here and see you fed. Light into ’em quick, or I’}h open you sure and put Next door to the drug store,} Main A! Street. Silver Reef, Utah ...-Always on hand the best... WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS GEORGE MILLER. plate of the same diameter turns, the pressure being regulated with a screw, according to the power that is to be CAPITOL. applied and the amount of heat desired, All of the space not taken up by the wheel and shaft is filled ‘with water: As soon xs the wheel is set id. motion the water is brought up toa high teinperature and the eylinder becomes a stove, which radiates heat from the whole of its exterior surface. Of course this machine can only be used in buildings where there is steampower that can be availed of to run/ the friction wheel. There is entire security againgt accidents by fire, which is a strong point in favor of the friction heater. a Maint St,, Silver Reef, THE BEST Wines, Liquors & CIGARS Obtainable in the. UNITED STATES. 5. H. CASSIDY, a Migrating Birds. > The following from the New York fvening Mail sounds very pretty, and only needs to be dec iphered : “What scenery do the far eye of--birds of passage scan in crossing this country for warmer sea-washed climes? They see the gre ea northwest and the Miss- M. H. Quirk. BaBrHorowew J; Quine QUIRK BROTHERS exceeds the difference between—the issippi lev levels toot ted, and te country hearty shake and the movement that awash rete Lake Superior to the would result from the effort of each Southern levees; farther on, the Eastto kiss the hand of the otheg,” ern forests abloom in sunny red and Kissing, we have said, is a natural gold, their festal fires hardly quenched expression of effection; and it is curi- by the first slow rains of autumn,: ous to note the analagous manifesta- which have scarcely begun to swell tions Among animals and some of the lower tribes of men. A dog displays his affection for his master ‘by licking his hand. A. ewe distinguishes her lainb by the olfactory sense, aud apparently derives pleasure from its exercise. The same sense is used among men not only to distinguish, as in the case. of-Jacob-and tsaue,;“but the shrunken brooks among the hills, Summer flowers and summer warmth, smiling on the verge of the blue sea, down whose current sails the grand convoy of icebergs—splendid, danger- ous, deathly. ghost8 of the Scandinas vian adventurers, setting sail from The smooth, pliable parchment can be also asa mark. of affection. Among Missouri. manufactured from it, and 60- per the mongols, for instanee, it is found cent. of the palmetto will be used in as “a mark of paternal aitection, inBrakeman—The train is now about the process, which is jot expensive. steadof embracing;’’ while the Bur-, to enter the State of Missouri. 2 Gen-, fanlt of the goods for not Wearing The parchment can be washed and mese “do not: kiss each, other in the tlemen who have not ips them-’ well—as jt. is” generally called-—but rubbed like cloth, and for legal and ts eae Seecrt but ledthe lip: selves with a ass for the result of the particular ‘constiits pouber documents will prahant ipa acaba APU er to general nse, wedeeo exchange. al Pioneor Billiard Einll Finest. Billiard the north. to capture the summer of our coast. " othe and, Poot Tables wervitory.~ —_ ‘True, these instances are not LAUNDRY|:cause, very frequent; nevetheless.4t is well to know them; every case is not the ra Experience Mexico. {Augusta Chronicle, Georgia.] explanatory of Scriptural} return to this country as prisouers of Flow near this Yneident came Itis an_enigma to the Sun- awar. reads that to involving the General Government the Egyptians persecuted the Jews by in war with Great Britain is now a refusing them straw for their brick; inatter of. history. .1t if Also. a truth but in Arizona we can readily see that of history that a. daughter of John adobes (sun-dried bricks) would fall Slidell resented an impertinence from to pieces without straw. ‘T'o sleep on one of Wilkes’ officers bya rousing She was the roofs of houses also appeared a slap upon the fellow’s face. strange custom, but in this elimate a a high-toned, beautiful, and accomis most delightful ; SO. it must ha e | plished girl, and destined. for. great been in’ Palestine. things, by some strange freaks of forWhen Mr. Mason and her The olla of Arizona is the water tune. vessel of Rebecca at the well, where | t father were returned ‘to snglish cusold Jacob stole the kiss when she tody, after an ample apology » Miss ora came to get: water. The equipoise Slidell accompanied them with which the Mexican.woman car- She rapidly became a-belle*in Paris, rics the olla full of water on her head and was, the recipient of many notaThe successwas equally well done by the girls of ble offers of mariage. Palestine. The wearing of the shaw] ful suitor was-Baron. Erlanger, one of over the head and face, so habitual the tichest bankers iathe world. It among the Mexican females, was as is said that.after’the war, ‘“‘she~suemuch a custom among the wives of ceeded in.enlisting his syuipathies for Solomon. Settlements in those days the upbuilding of the stri¢ken and were made by springs or stretms; so prostrate South, and he organized a company for thé purpose of investing are they in Mexico and Arizona. The donkey was the beast of burden capital in developing the resources of ‘then; for the good man of Nazareth the Southern States. ‘The syndicate rode. into Jerusalem. on an ass, and has invested largely in railroads, and H ABISH ‘% SINC LAIR BARBERS, great A the student of Biblical i ing a pit’ with sand, A certain creature the hope of his future in amount has to be thrown in before packing wood. ‘The hospitality pecuthe level surface is reached, but once liar to the pastoral life of the Jews is aoe 81, Main Street, next to Me- the pit is filled every addition raises a ,fully met by the hospitality of the mound, small at first but growing [ Mexxican, Sorniek’ sf enk Notary Public in Office. rapidly, and as @@mpared with the ‘Yo wash the feet of the weary trav| he ngth of time it sook the operator to eler was a mark of respect and atfeefut up tothe level, rapid enough to tion thea; the Mexican wears the fastonish not only ihe lookers on but sandals now, and the traveler’s friends | viniself. wasn his feet at the doors of their cae + <> e+ domiciles. | The Earth's Surface. At last, and not least, ‘the “ORT li MAIN STREET, SILV ER REETj | The changes in level of the earth’s clear, pure atmosphere, the number surtace, Which must have been rapid less stars and their brilliancy enjoy eA \ YE.HAVE FITTED UP AN ESTABand vast in ex uly Gentupicn! ages, ure nightly in Arizona, must-be strikingly lishment opposite Mr. Huibish’s old yet in- progress.” Aside from. paretand, where can be feund one of the neatest similar to those w hich David refers to and most commodious tonsorial parlors in Utah, The patronage of ofr old friends and the public generally is respectfully solicited. IO HARISH, SINCLAIR. Siiver Reef, October 7, 1881. HE ATE BEANS. of the War. day-school boy when-he Drip, drip, drip, Upon the well-worn stone While bluefties at the window buzz, Monotonous in tone No. more the miller. yrinds his corn, or he, good man, is ; dead and gone, The mill is tet alone. Attorney at Law and Notary Public, : BELLE. Reminiscence Late lessons history. Betwee - a ‘timbers +e ae roof The § ows softly§ And fos a corner of the nae Slyly peeps forth the cunning mouse That eats.the mouldy me Utah. and my Drip. drip. drip, Upon the aii n aaah; BIRD & LOWE, Land’ Agents and Attorneys REBEL the t drip, drip. Drip, drip. arf B Upon the oaken floor And broken from its rusty tock: Hangs. silently, the dao’ Save, when a gust of 5 goes past, It groans upon one hinge still fa Thensilent as before: Bailey,) A of Though the following .from’. the f We have no doubt thatthe Erlan- Reno Gazette, has gone the rounds of re “syndicate will be of enormous the press considerably, it-is good and ulus to the South. it will build worth reproduction: Mexican people. “hey plow, they fs They tell a good story about one sow, they reap, they thrash and win® Hor-a*common good. Along their Wymane, a diminutive drummer, Well es many irdustries will “be de- known ‘here and on the Comstock. now the same as in Palestine two} a flow. There He stopped one night at Deming, N. thousand years ago. The grain is ent : eloped and ea with the sickle, it is tramped out M.,-a faverite resort for cow boys< ih. Which ia =.worth reeall. horses, and winkowed shy: tossingit ‘Madam,’ sald’ Abe to.the Taadiads” pas gto oon HAS JUST B ned. and is the finest accontred | inte the air. The gleaners, like Ruth W hen Hoy. John Slidell, oF tadis “sive mesome dinner, and be quick Hntaeet th Silvér Reef. .No ne but the vivery of old, foNlow the reapers and enjoy was appointd, along with Hon. James about it. I have not dined since yes- finest brands of Liquors and Cigars will be their harvest. ‘The wheat.and corn is M. Mason, a Commissioner for the furnishad to een, and a trial will prove. terday made into meal by hand, and. the Cénfederate States. in Europe, he - he iady brought bie some bean ‘farThe finest “pilliard table in Silver Roth. Scriptural saying, *“E'wo women shall embarked with his. family... Ons-the+ sou “Treat As is well] be grinding nt the tmill>the one shall British steamer T¥ent. “Madam, take that sony away. I aad the enjoyment of customers, will be ‘alm. be tiken and the otlier left,?’ is ex- know} the Trent was captured on never eat soup. Bring on the roast | she ina ver Reef, Qstoder 15, 1981 plained daily by the customs of ‘the the high seas by a United States| right away..”?.. “primitive MeSicans. Cruiser égmmanded by Capt Wilkes, The lady brought in a large plate |. ‘The nature of the country also adds aud the Southern envoys compelled to of pork and beans. To re powerless to turn And whére.a blade of grass is seen, The gaping joints it grows between, ig eeeeiiaemianin Givey Entrusted Customs there is much of interest to be learn frem the habits and customs of thes Parted, will not return. Careful PALESTINE. of Conatrian ~fTucson aon Stat: ] Drip, drip, dri pont e: fraittnl f The silent timbers of the wheel Lease. AND Similarity two So silent and so still, Agent Properties or ARIZONA The : Dep ieee OUDER, Real 0. s sess sesh event } NARDIN ABE ‘ PUBLISHED LOUDER series First Class Liquors 3 orwanl ae ana Cigars “ : eee |