OCR Text |
Show ~ SILVER REEF, REEF, Grocer and Dry TERMS OF "SUBSCRIP!ION:' MAO FORK. cess sae sscaseeen cc essdessenet £4 5) bix. Months. sateneebecasncreeeces Janke ee f wee Months. peeeteae ee epeeseeeeeeeeee 1 50 Wanth., veges Delivered by ‘carrier, per "WOCKscsecdecne MINER DRALEE fi 25 Paishing PUBLISHING € OMPANY ; in Little. Rock, Clothing and Far- Goods. Street. Main Publishers and P ropriefars. 1 - -~ - ---~ Notary: Public. eed BAILEY -- Meat ‘BIRD & LOWE, + == Public in 3 A | persons rode. tify to the house, -and-re=t peated the' demand. for. volunteers, .JOHNSON, Lunch TT HARRISON * HOUSE, the largest Hotel in the Reef by P, Harrisoa. Walley, STREET..:...... «..SILVER REEF Grambey Restaurant, by Meals 5) cts; board by Mrs LENT ,---2 2-22 ee ee eee -Proprieter the day $1. Main Strect. _ Are Liquors and Cigars The NEW. Rooms Murshai and Brown. attached to the éstablishment. CABINET SALOON, EXCHANGE SALOON, on A. ED. THOMPSON, ! Main Strect, Reof. Levy, proprieror, Prop'r. som ie * § NOW PREPARED TO FURNISH all kinds of liquid refreshments. The best brands of LIQUORS AND (ar Finest Welte's Billiard Table in the City. x Wekes Beanery. Silver CABINET SALOON, Main Street, Ed. Thompson, Proprietor. CIGARS. Salt Lake bottled beer on ice. vilion, H. is situated ONEER "PJIARD , HALL ‘M #H. QUIRKE. on and tist, next Barber door to the end foneorial Ar- Pioneer Saioon on Main Street. es situate on Lower Main ELK hand. HORN SALOON, Wines, ‘Liquors' aud Cigars by * PHILEDEPHIA GEORGE MIULER. SALOON, Main Street, John Fordman proprietor. Maina St,, Silver , The Billiard and Finest Billinrd im THE Bioneer Rexall Pool Tables Territery, the Meef, BEST Wines, Liquors & ‘OIGARS » ! Obtainable in the -ee "iy First Class Liquors and Cigars Always on hand, "RINE CLUB Boout IN. REAR &t; the only Blacksmiths and Wagon Repairers CAPITOL, y Main run by oe KEELER, are alwaye on WELTE. Housé Cassrpy, Martin ~ No improper characters tolerated. BILL Saj.oon Street above the Harrison Jupp Brothers. PETER Pa- " WEtLTR, ee gar The Dancing Pavilion at the Brewery fe at all times at the wervice of the pub!" for the purposes of social recrention.-@@ * DANCING Peter J. ; and Street; by The CAPITOL Reef, Utah. AM NOW PREPARED TO SUPPLY the Trae Families, and the public gerJerallv, with a Choice Article of Beer, by the Keg, Quart or Bottle, Beer deliv: ered free to any part of Silver Reef and adja\eent vicinities. -@s8 ,e BREWERY, Main UNITED STATES J. HL. CASSIDY, neigh- | himself npon death, "fhe war ended, it, young Hall mariaged his.fathers estate, and prospered. His sisters. aided him. © Alinost their nearest neighbor. was, F, Parker, who led the band who hung nae In decididg mn interesting question growing outof an ‘anite-nuptial contract the Supreme Court of Iowa hax given an opinion, which inay prove a suggestive: lesson PFE ier fnutdered, The assassing then fired the and house disappeared. The to a food many Parker dropped in the agonies of death, Next day Hall visited Mantooth's. John Mantooth hé shot dead on the open prairie. after explaining his visit. Thomas Manteoth met a highway, aescee ae ates tnct t and sud Supreme Conrt to enforce it. The decides: against her. It finds that John's intemperate on ‘iis Were no Worse after bis mar than they were before, and. that sin. knew ag much about them before as she did afte®) Under these cireum-. stances the Court holds that she was - pot justified in leaving' him and had not lived up toher part of the ante nuptial agreement. Hence she was not entitled to the benefitof it. "She chose a drinkard) for a hugband," says the opit ion "and she otight" to ‘work in the Chollar croppings. discharge tle duties of a drunkards Shecoes not show that her The aceident ocenrred fifty feet be- wife. personal Bafety, oreven her well helow the surface ofthe ground, There were two caves, or falls of rock, When ing required lier to' Jeave him, She Mr. Stinson was knocked down and doubtless would have lived more com-- partially covered up by the first, his comrades did not hesitate to run to. his.assistance and do allin their powHall in 1865, Twenty mites east liv- er to extricate him, though a second ed John and Fhomas Mantoeth,. two fall on the same spot was imminent. Indeed they were only driven" back members of the party. ‘The remainactuder were seattered throughout the when the second mass) was ally falling. Twice was the unfortustate. In October 1878, . young Hall nate man covered upin caves of dirt bade his sisters good-bye for ever, say ing the ‘‘time had come for revenge." and rock, but his friends stood by and without "further explanation he him, though all abont them was givmounted a horse and rode away, An ing way and threatening to come. in, hour later he drew.up.in frout of Par- When he was finally dugout be was ker's dwelling, Parker was in the of course utterly helpless as regards locomotion, _He was at once taken yard. "I have come to ask you why you killed:my father,' Hall said to toa place of safety, when a messenger was atonce sent. for a surgeon, him. Parker gave his reason, adding As there was a shaft fifty feet deep to that his conscience had troubled: him ever since, Hall asked him if) he. was be ascended, and the. only way. of armed, and when the man drew a reaching thesurtace wis bymeans of pistol,; Hall did likewise and- fired. a rope and bucket, the miner thought similar fate ou the. public» LESSON. ae huebands and wives, as well; ast those who may propose to take one another for "better or worse." It appears that John York offered to er?''. she asked, and drawing a-rev- make x specified pecuniary provision olver fired at bim, Davis was killed for Susan' Mosier if she would. marry - and in the confusion the girl esexped. him. Susan consented, the contract This act alarmedali who had taken was dnly made and marriage follow~. partin the death of young Hall, and ed. In less than two months after they-vesolved upon the extermnination | the wedding thé bride abandoned her .of the entire family of Hall, of whom husband and refused ta live with him only three were living, the eldest girl her-reason tor this was his. drunkenand-two.sisters,. One nightthe Wal ners, " Subsequently John died, ‘that household was surrounded by‘masked it was on aecount of the Joss of Susan on inen, the barred doors were» broken does not appear After his death ‘the down, and-the three girls mercilessly widow claimed the benefit of the con- registered an oath to slay every man who had taken part in hts father's Msnrket, Beef ete, by dealt over the bar to patrons, $27" Private Cinb . but the over a tree, uud Tall was asked to tragedy caused a sensation, was made by interested consider, He declined whereupon he explanation was drawn up and let down senscless.. parties that Indians or greasers bad the This horrible scene was continted un- 1 murdered the girls, plundered This ti] the victine ceased to breathe, and house and then se§ it on fire. was generally accepted andonly latethe party redeaway. <A sen of Hall ly have fle facts leaked out. had followed the party, -atd-hiding behind clumps of bushes was a silept ee DO horrible spectator. He ‘recognized A TOUGH MINER, every actor in the horrible® affair. Night*before last, Roger Stinson When the men galloped aWay he ‘ran from his hiding place, cut down the had both of his legs broken while at' body, and flinging At this popniar resort none but the choicest Wines, death. He was taken from the house toa it- Main Sireet. OSMOPOLITaN~ AB. the old man said he preferred Boom. , sera Calann anes we S00. natant é Sxolons. MAIN Sake AD, she met-one of the party fu a tle ravine 200 yards away, a rope was N, ok CONJUGAL ter was a horified spectator of the murder of her brother. A year after put around his.neek, the eud was. pat the office. i Bech: by tEARSUS elim he called forevery man capable of bearTexas was scottred, and ing arms, Hall called on to volunteer, but he deelined. Qne nighta party of twelve _| PIONEER BILLIARD HALL, by M. H. Quirk. » aand As sents | and Attorneys Salt' Lake City, Utah Notary MARKET, ait Salt Lake City, Utah. :pe Hull remained at-home, @he South & PARSONS, eand Agents and Attorneys! _ ‘pe following | Main Street, Silver eet - (Sueceasdére to T. C. Bailey,) _ 13.-The to sixteen years old, The man elaimed to be neutral, and while his neigh,-bors were buckling on their armor, Julius Jordan, * Professional, 1882. boring town, she wus in the compazyy | der counties. He was 70 years' old of a female friend, and derpite the en- | -and--very. wealthy, owning a large | treaties of hercompanion, called the mun-to her~elipping her hand into tract of land ‘and great herds -of cat tle, anda large but not.costly resi- her pocket as she did so,. "Captain dence, He had a family of one boy, Davis,'' said she, "when the men brothaged ten, and four girls, frown four came up, you helped killmy Good Merchants, Gretechos: 23, party and fought until his' body eu ning of the rebellion, Abraham Hal! lived iu one of the thinly settled bor GILLISPIE, LUND & Co., ‘Ofice-Moren Balicings Lower Main Street =~ SATURDAY, | DECEMBER has just come to light: At the begin- Pablished Every Saturday Morning. a ia riddled with bullets.' His eldest sis- OF THE TOWN, UTAH. COUNTY, TALE OF TERROR. OUR BUSINESS-MEN. BILVER REEF MINER] SILVER WASHINGTON thata surgeon could:come down. fortably in the society ofasober but she ought and doubtless to min have considered, did consider the dis-~| comforts of «drutketi husband when she married urges he the intestate. promised But she reformation be- fore marriage., His failure to keep this promise did not justify her in leaving bin, All the world knows that sueh promises made bya drunken man are always broken. In a few words, as she knowingly married x drankard rahe must be content to a drunkard's wife.?? <> be ee A convict atthe Nevada penitentinary says he was sent to prison for beiag dishonest and yet he is compell- ed every diay to cut out pieces of pasteboard, which are put between the soles of the cheap shoes, made into there and palmed off on the lunocent the mine and insome way so meni public us le. ither, the legs of their wounded companion Oe as would enable him to go up in the bucket. The twenty-two ostriches shippei! When the surgeon came he said it from New York by Dr.*Prothero of was nouse to try to doanything down Cape ‘Town, of Africa, arrived in in the mine; he must be brought up, | San Francisco on Wednesday afterThe miners decended and. set to work |. noon, and have been an object of covonthe problem. The strongest man Before the spring another of them had been slain, Hall kifiing his man in Sun Antonia, By this time the remainder of the gang beeame alarm-. siderable attraction at the Central ed, und Hall suddenly paused: in. his among them stood erect in the drift Pacific yards: The birds average when the others lifted Stinson upon 250 pounds each and are 7 feet high. career of bloodshed. For more than With a longrope the -two}. nyear nothing was. heard of: him, ; hris back. The males of which there are twelve. were lashed together, Stinson have black and white feathers, which and the surviving objects: of his ha- men tred, were beginning to think he had perished, when he stuldenly reappeared, This time his victim was named Kindred Rose, who died only after a desperate struggle. They one afternoon in the winter met of 1880, Jina littletown on the Mexiean bor| der, a street fight ensued and: Rose was killed, falling from his horse and dying on the spot, while Uatl though wounded in three places put spurs:to his horse and dashed . away. friends. pursued -him. into Rose's ‘Texas, The, pursuit was continued for three days friends of the former victins joining in the chasey,..]Tnlb at last was being so placed that his broken legs are clipped every seven nionths, were well up frei the ground. The females have mouse colored The miner with his living load thus fexthers. Tle inerease of stock of lashed npon his back, then got into' this kind is very large, birds laying the bucket and was hoisted to the sur- about fifty eggs per year, The manface. At the surface ‘the wounied ngement of Woodward's Gardens man was carried intothe Alacksmith shop and laid ‘upon the ground. The surgeon then eplitup some old has secured the whole few days. nuniber for % eee > barrel staves and bandaged these temporary splints, preparatory to plicing | A Nevada paper wofully remarks himin a' wagon for removal to his that people do-not pay asseements as The thine home. When laid upon Ins back in they used to. No wonder. the blacksmith's shop, instead ofery- iscoming when they will not pay ing with pain, Stinson asked bis com- them at all,-and then the' companies punions to fill, nis pipe and give it to will have to work the ‘mines, whiel: as is the one thing that the men who run to cover in sight ofhis-home and near the spot where sixteen years be- ealmly asany old Indian could have been living on assessments for ns pt _ do-not wish to do. We think fore his father met. with his death. done underthe like are mo grounds for the above, | Here Hall, turned on the. pursuing } Virginia Enterprise. "Bnd, . him, which being done he smoked have yeate thers «5! di _ |