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Show glKiariai I he 'Wasatch Wave. Ok . - DaiiXKK, TUESDAY, Editor and Ma-ag- AUOUST 4. 1891. Entered at the rattojiee, liefer, clast mail matter. at Ix Axotiikr part uf tills paper will be found an account of one of the moat Inhuman, unnatural crime being committed In Salt LaU that conld be Imagined. And yet onr statute are In ncb a shape that the beast lu human form could only lie taken under the charge of vagrancy for i nd the extent ol the punishment that offence to only three months. It to hoped that our legislature this winter will make a law to (It anch case and attach a punishment sufficiently large to meet the ends of Justice If ruck can be done. In many cities of this western country Acklund would not tie safe behiud prison doors, but luckily for him the citizens of .Salt Lake have too natch respect for the law to take It iu their own handa or resort to mob violence. Vii Understand that II. Pembroke, formerly of Salt Lake, has located on a ranch In Summit county. We congratulate our neighboring county on receiving that gentleman as one uf Its population. Tiik Salt Lake Herald thinks Jay Gould has his eye on the shores of Sait Lake for Cplace to build a grand hotel ami large sanltorlmn. Diiiixo the last year the school population of Salt Lake has Increased 1,351. That Is building up Zion pretty fast. AVnsntcli Stake Quarterly (Reported by H. Clegg.) The quarterly conference of the Wasatch Stake of Zion convened In the Stake Ilouie, llebor City, Aug. 1st ami 8nd. rilKSIIIKXT a. IIVTCII, J'RKMIlllNO. Present on the stand were A, Hatch, President of the Ratsunday, 10:30 a. m. Stake, and his counselors, and a good re- presentation of the local priesthood. After the usual exorcises, rilKSIIIlXT HATCH said he felt Tory glad to see so many present thto morning. From reports ho had heard, this would lie considered a large congregation, compared with some other places he could name. He hoped we would have a good time this conference. lie ref ei red to the few troubles we have had In our midst and advised the Saints to live at peace with their uelgli-bor- a and cultivate garni will to all. KI.PF.S POSE, City Cliurch Academy, of the Salt Lake made some excellent remarks on the following subject! The necessity of Elder being always prepared to till tlielr offices aud callings; the foolishness of any one' boasting of Ids own strength, citing the case of Peter, the Apostle ef our JNwlot, and Illustrating that event in a very drat aud Interesting manner; the church was not dependant on any one man ; If It were It mild have fell through long ago. Tho remainder of the forenoon was occupied by Elders llnelder. Cook, and President J. M. Murdock who said he considered the work of find was on the g There Is an advanco. Providence that watches over this people and moves everything aright. Benediction by A. Wootton. 3:30 p m. After singing, ami prayer offered by Patriarch lllcken, Bishop Murdock reported favorably tho comlltlou of tho Charleston Ward, and made some very good remark on gospel principles. over-rulin- XI.DKR . H. KOUKHTS Ho said addressed the congregation. this was the first time lie hail tho pleasure of inoctlng With the people of Holier City, but felt Just ns willing to preach the gospel hi Ucbcr as anyw here else. He quoted the won) of Josiah: And thine ear shall lnar a word behind thee, saying this to the way, walk ye In It. He considered the prophet was guided by Inspiration when he made tliese remarks. He believed It was our right to have such a minister as that, for of all things to be the most dreaded was to lie In a state of anxiety. He referred to the elders traveling without purse or script, ami said he had dime so and could again; he considered there was millions of honest men ami women lu the world. He then made some excellent remarks on the principles of the gospel and our right to receive the holy spirit that we might have a knowledge of what was right, and be enabled to walk In the some. He referred to the law of earnat commandments, hut showed that Christ had presented a better one, though he found the latter harder to keep than the former, amt said it was no easy thing to ' love our enemies, do good for evil, etc. There were thousnmto of ministers lu the world, but they lacked the holy spirit to tell which was the way that tho people might walk therein. He said he knew that Jesus was the Lord and related a very pleasant Conversation he hail with a lady when on a mission, on that subject. He made some very powerful remarks on this subject and showed how all could kuow that Jesus was the Lord and considered as Rt. laul did that It was a shame If we did not receive that knowledge." He thought the people of God needed more of the spirit of God now than at any other time. He referred to the condition of the Saints In the far west, and asked wlmt w as It that sustained them in those days, lie said It was the prophetic power that existed among the Saints, the Volee that said - this Is tlte war, walk ye iu it. Choir sang, Gnat is onr God." mzm A BIG MINING SUIT. Benediction by VJdey W. Lindsay. Sunday, 10:30. a. m. A fur tlie asnad exercise r.uw.n Huberts The BulUou, Beck & Champion Mining Company Again in Read s passage from the Doctrine and Covenants, referring to the building op of the CWy of 22ciw He advtoed the brethren to read that revelation when they got home. He showed Iliad God hail never forsaken his people, and contrasted the condition of the church then and now both tn niimliers and territory. He referred to the history of St-- Foul hr a manner that was Interesting and instructing to the Stints, and God's plan of Introducing the gospel to the great men of the earth. He concluded by showing that this work would endure, and no power could stay Its progress, ft would accomplish all that God declared would he In the latter days. Although we may have erred In aome things yet when wc suin up the whole, we are led to believe that Got lias not fulled to fulfil bis promises Choir sang, The Earth to the Lord's." Bencdlctiooby Bishop K. S. Duke. 2 p. as. The sacrament was administered, daring ami after which lhef allowing Bishops and Elders made a few remarks: Bishops Murdock, Clegg, Von Wagenen, Duke and fluff, reported the condition of their wards, showing that at present health and peace and prosperity prevailed. In the absence of the Bishop of Woodland, Elder Keeler made some remarks in reference to the same The remainder of the afternoon was occupied by remarks from Elders 1), Jones, W. Done and T. Lewis of Spanish Fork. Their remarks were reported and although they would ho Interesting for the saints to read, yet I am aw are It g would take up more room In your popes tlian I could expeetyowto give. A fter a few timely remarks by resident Hatch, the choir sang, 'Jerusalem, 5 My Glorious Home." Thomas Benediction by Patriarch lllcken. The choir, deserves great praise for The weather tlielr excellent' .ifr.glng. was fine, ami the people turned' out; and on Sunday filled the Static house. Every one felt well paid' for attending Conference and went to tlielr homes feeling that tlielr faith had been on the company by the directors conspiring with John Beck. They would scarcely rob themselves to enrich Mr. Beck. lle did not think that an Apex case could possibly hold against the Caroline, because its end lines and those of the Bullion-Beccompany were the same. It would seem to him as if the only question which could arise was that of the validity of Beck's title to the Caroline mine. There is to be a meeting of the Bullion-Beck directors this afternoon, but not especially to take action in this suit. That would be left in the bands of the companys attorneys, Dickson & Stone and Arthur Brown who would at the proper time file an answer. Trouble. Times, July 31. k The California stockholders of the Bullion-bechave instituted suit in the Third District Court against the Utah directors of that corporation to compel the latter to pay Into the treasury of the company the smn of $323,000. Tide to one of the most sensational mining suits ever instituted in a Utah court. It to not only likely to open all the question of the rights of individual stockholders hi the company, but also the question of the right to follow a vein and what constitutes a rein within Setting a Dislocated Neck. the meaning of the law. It will lie pracNew York, July 2fi. The s tically the same kind of a suit, the being Involved, as that which was son of Geofge W. Furaman fell out of a wagon recently and dislocated his neck. tried between the Eureka Bill and companies some years ago and The boy was obliged to carry Ids head on was compromised while pending In the one side, and It was yrith great difficulty United States supreme court on an ap- that he could move at all, though he complained of no pain. peal. By last Wednesday the case had : The title of the case to so serious that the boy was sent to In the district court for the Third the French Hospital. Dr. James E. Judicial District, Utah Territory, Alexander Bodlom, It. J. Davis, A. A. Kelly, one of the visiting staff of the took charge of the case, and on Dewing and Isaac Trumbo, plaintiffs vs. hospital, Mosses Thatcher, John Beck, A. E. Thursday a consolation of the visiting was determHyde, W. B. Preston, lttcliard Taylor staff was held, at which it ami the Bullluti-Bec- k and Champion ined to set the dislocation. It wa a daring operation, for a compression of Milling Co. defendents. Tlte complaint which to very volumin- the spinal cord might cause instant death, nevertheless the boy was laid on the ous alleges In part as follows : That the defendant company has lieen operating table and stnpltled with ether. Dr. Henna grasped his sholder and Dr. for three years past the owner of claims In Tintlc Mlulng district, namely Bulllcn Scudder his head, and pulled strongly In directions, while Dr. Kelly, 76, Legal, Silver Gem. That running opposite with Ids thumb pressed firmly on the northerly and southerly through said projecting bone, rotated the head, and lu group of claims as a mineral-bearin- g a moment the bones slipped back to their vein, and that said vein belongs to said When the lad came out company, and that the vein alleged dips proper places. of his stupoi he was able to move his to the westerly. head freely. If the dislocation had not Second That the defendants, Thatchas and er, Beck, Hyde Preston, directors, been reduced young Fursuiau would have as nervous disease of the ofllccrs, etc., have permitted ami aided surely died, John Beck Go take from said vein a large spine would soon have set in. His neck to now in a plaster cast to keep it peramount of gold aud silver ore, of the value of $230,000, or more, ail of which fectly motion!?, but the surgeon says was the property of said company, aud lie can go back to Ills country borne iu a have permitted the said John Beck to few weeks. use the machinery of defendant company for the purpose of extracting said ores ami hoisting them Bo the surface for the sole use and benefit of said John Beck. the plaintiffs are Informed and beThat Wins. Merit the four defendants have conlieve that We desire to my to our citizens tlmf for' to allow said John Beck spired together New years we have peen selling Dr. Kings to' take such ores from the vein and apNew Dr. for Consumption, Kings Discovery them to Ills sole use and beneLife Pills, Bucklens Arnica Salve, and Elec- propriate fit. tric Bitters, and have never handled remedies Is now open to Third Tha on- - the day of that sell as well, or that have given such uniof learned the the 1891, plaliitfflfl wrongs We do not hesitate t versal satisfaction. and injuries above complained of, within guarantee tltem every time, and we stand the space of three or Sons months last ready to refund the purehaso price if satisfacpast John W. Judd appeared before said Tliese tlieir do follow not use. results tory Imard of directors ami Informed them remedies have wen llnir great popularity that plaintiffs knew of the songs menmerits. on their purely tioned and demanded of them the naDnI2-9- 2 Bridge, Druggist. ture of the ores ami metals appropriated liy said Beck, but the defendants refuse THE COVEftNMENT TAKING IT UP. aud neglect to take action in the matter. Pram's's Holers Hegl inlng to Sea the The plaintiff's further allege that the officers of the said corporation have fraudDangers o t Intemperance. It Is a significant fact, In view of tho ulently aided and abetted the said Beck claim of the brewers of tho freedom of in the appropriation of the ores ami Germany from drunkenness while advo- metals. It to also alleged that on the cating the free uso of beer, that Mida'i day of August, 189, the defendant comCriterion, a liqnor organ, comment npou the activity of the Prussinn government, pany audited and directed to he paid the with the Approval of the emperor, to pat sald Beck a simulated and false claim of some added restrictions npon the sale of $130,000 for the fraudulent purpose of intoxicating liquor. enriching Beck a the expense of the It say tluit for nearly three years his company and all stockholders thereof. ministers have been engaged in collectWherefore plaintiffs pray judgment: ing statistics and evidence on the points ' (1) That an accounting between- Che construed, and that the decisions arrived defendants. Beck, Thatches, 11 v the and bnndcs-ratat have been sanctioned by the Preston, for the full value of all- ores the German parliament. A bill winch baa been introdneed de- and metals extracted. crees the revoking of saloon licenses aud (2) That a Judgment bo entered the imposition of fines npon the saioon against all or either of the defendants. keeper who encourage persons of ine(3) That during the pendency of thto briate habits. It also proposes to fine drnukards themselves when they are action tho defendants he restrained from extracting any more of the ore from poor, and so prevent them from indulgand in the vice of in said vein for the bcucflt of Beck. iutomiorauce, ing cases where tines presumably would not (4) That tn the meantime a receiver have the desired effect imprisonment is h appointed to take possession of all to he imposed. the property of the corporation and to If beer 1s indeed a harmless beverage, work ami operate the same. why this solicitude of the emperor and And the plaintiffs further pray for legislators of Germany to liu;oe new a judgment against Bock, Hyde, Thatcher restrictions npon the sale of intoxicating liquoreto-NutioTemperance Advo- and Preston for $130,000 with interest, and that the same be directed to lie paid cate. Into the treasury of defendant corporaA Word to Ikt Day. have drunkard in the tion. If we ore to The California stockholders In said future, some of them are to come from the boys to whom I am now writing, and corporation hold, a It seems, about I ak yon if yon don't want to become of the stock ami charge the dione of them? No, of course you ilou'tl rectors with two acts of unfaithful adWell, 1 have a plan that is just as sore ministration. that a large to sare you from such a fate as the snn ami rich vein They allege to the company's belonging is to rise tomorrow. It never failed, it never will fail, and it to worth knowing. mine tn Tintlc dips to the westward and Never touch liquor in any fisrm. That passes under the surface of a barren is the plan, and it is uot only worth mlulng claim called the Caroline, which knowing but it is worth patting into belougs to one of the directors, John practice. Bock; ami that the directors have perI know yon d nft drink now, and it mitted the companys drifts and hoisting seems to von as if yon never would. works to be used by Beck for extracting But yonr temptation wilt come, and it will probably coue thto way. You will the company's ore under the snrface of find yourself some time with a number his mining daiui and having the benefit of companions, and they will have a bot- of It to tlte extent ol a quarter of a tle of wiue on the table. They will drink million of dollars during the last two and offer it tc-- yon. They will regard it years. as a manly practice, aud very likely they The complaint also alleges Hint the diwill look npon yon as a milksop if yon rectors have allowed In Becks favor a dont indulge with them. Then what will you do? Will yon say, No, no! pretended claim having no merit and no none of that stuff for me!" Or will yon plausable existence, to the amount of The complaint also alleges take the glass, with yonr common sense $130,000. protesting and your conscience making that the request of the California stockthe whole draught bitter, and a feeling holders that they should prosecute the that yon have damaged yourself, and unfaithful officers of the company and then go off with a hot head ami skulk- Beck for the recovery of this niouey was ing soul that at once begins to make no of avail, and In order to prevent the apologies for itself aud will keep doing so daring all its life? Boys, do not be- company from Inlng robins! of nearly $400,000 they found It necessary to become drunkards. Dr. Holland. come plaintiffs themselves. A uvr Whim. The complaint was filed on the 28th An English nobleman a good marry many years ago took it into his lwad lust., and the summons has probably been to live for several weeks on Mount Etna served by this time. It to anticipated in the refuge 1,000 feet or so below tire that there will be a pretty lively fight. crater. This worthy, but slightly crack- The attorneys on behalf of the plaintiffs ed, gentleman endured his hard fare of are Sutherland A Judd of thto city, biscuits and tiuned meats well enough Wilson A McCutehen, ami Lloyd A for a fortnight at a time. Every fifteenth day, however, he rode dowu the Wood of San Francisco. A, E. Hyde, the manager of the Bulliomountain to the nearest village, some when seen by a Times repretwenty miles away, and reveled in all n-Beck, the savory dishes the innkeeper conld sentative said the suit was not entirely a put before him; after which banquet he surprise to them, that in fact they had returned to his mountain perch, inured expected It to He filed for some time past. oncesguiu to comparative privation. To them the complaint did not clearly-se- t All the Year Bound. forth where there had been any fraud k same-issue- luter-estln- has just opened hw new General complete .tock of store, containing at Merchandise, and bori quality t powto of (lie haw solicits Ho lonet figures. Public Patronage, guaranteeing fair treatment. Store ju-T- t north of the YNatkiiw family re Will. Watkins ,a dence, Midway. Stevenson Mrs. Maggi a Formerly of Park City lias opened 7IP.CT - OLACS S0T2L XInT hebee, Where she will be pleased to see all of her Park City ami llebcr friends. o first-la- in every receive ever ss courtesy. Located TWO BLOCKS EAST OF MAIN ST., HEBEB CITY. UTAH. 25 Cents Send 23 cents to National A advertising Co., 303 and 305 Dearborn St., Chicago, nd get one of our late patent Fountain Penholders. Every pen warranted. Three for 50 cts. Litoral terms to agents. Best selling pen ever made, Retail trade supplied. NATIONAL ADV. CO., 303 ami 305 Dearborn St., Chicago. Durklcns Arnica Solve. The tost salve in the world for cuts, bruises, ulcers, salt rheum, fever sores, tetter, chapped hands, chilblains, corns, and all skin eruptions, nnd postively cures piles, or no It is guaranteed to give per-f.-- et pay required. satisfaction, or money refunded. Price 25 wnts per box. For sale by ml2-9- 2 Kichurd Bridge. son-s- , POT RESORT the Public with nllow Itavelock a simple march between - - Proorietor. A DAY? td. ?- - - h, - To yield cases. Fur some days at tho beg nning of the siege the sepoy fire cause an average loss to the besiege I of ten daily. Intrenching tools were senreo iu the British camp, and the few that could lie secured were ultimately carried off by deserting laborers. On the 24th of July a spy from Havelock's camp reached the residency w ith intelligence that a relief force was marching up from Cawnpore, and for thirty-livdays an anxious vigil was maintained to note the approach of succor. The In remit v:is stationed ou the tallest budding within tho British inclns iro, nnd in tho range, of course, of hostile lire. Tiio unequal contest rage I without intermission for weeks, or until the coming of Havelock on tho relied rear. Then a large force was drawn from tha rank i of tho bedegrra to form a line facing tho other way. On the 22 d of September Havelock arrived within cannon sound of Lucknow, and ordered a roy.il salute lired to announce his presence, and it was heard by tho bole iguere garrison with joy. But the entrance to Lucknow was not to be cheaply won. The sepoys bad placed cannon to sweep every bridge and exposed crossing nnd the buildings swarmed with sharpshooters. The 231, 2dtli and 25th were passed in continuous fightiug in tho streets aud outlying villages, and on tho evening of the last day the head of column rested under tlie shelter cf an Indian pal.V..taat from the British ace, 5C3;-.r- ds around the residency. Tlie Seventy-eightHighlanders were ordered to advance. The roadway had been trenched crosswise by tho rebels and cumbered with olist ructions. Sepoy marksmen were in hi ling in front ami alongside. Cannon blaze across many a square, sometimes lighting up the roadway and guidiug the bravo Highlanders toward the 1 1 s C k.1 J 'T(c - () nul Es-te- e, There wan ono rf u. a rorporoTi A fair, young, jntlo thing, Waste I with finer in tho givife Atul her mind was wandering. ni wif, Utl4 iV) She lay on the ground in her Srottbli phU, on iuy koet; And I took her Vlie:i my f.Uhrr unmoi houw fntfa llow, she paid, i)ii! plratotf then, waken me." Fhe slent like a child on her fatWiflonr I 1 t!u) lUcklty; of woodbine shadr, WhiMt the house dog aprawU bjtbtWf j open door, Aud thu mother's wheel is maid. It was moko and roar and child, Seemed scare to draw her (W m breath. i.i sunk to rtoep. and I U:i I my arwua Of un Knt;lidi village lane And wall .mdrtrda.tillaaadlrti'fif )ruti jht me back to t lie rear i There Jesjdc Imwn stood llsteolng. And then a broad glad ness bmk All over her face, and she took ms land And drew me oearan i jok; The Highlanders! OL! dinnajekfir The slogan far awa? Tho MrOregorV Ah! f keoltwl It U the graudest if them a. p WCf L Va litd God bless the bonny ITL.diUndeW Were saved! wc'ry wived!' dinTi!, And fell on her knees aud thankstn-Toured forth like a full flewd dd raiw frt Alon? the battery line her rry A Had fallen aiuon the men. And they started, for they Was life so near them, then? tm mu listened for life, and the rattling j Thy L lfar off, ami the tar off pmu I Were all; and the colonel shook And they turned to Uiirgunoactol Then Jessie will: The miosis' ikM But ran je no hoar them The Campbells srecomlnl Our succors hac brokco throoaa We heard the roar and the rsllh Hut the pipers we could not kn 1 So tho men plied their work ofM Aud knew that the ud was lfiwl INFORMATION. The book is valued at $5.00. See that you get a Ticket and that evepy Osish Put chase is punched. VZhen $25 is punched, present the ticket and get your book. Heutcli Sz Co. T1IE RESCUE, liko the ''"J t"1 when in Our men put Jessie first; h . And the general took her W From tho men l.ke a voile) And tho piiwrs' I tibboo Mnrchhig'ronnd And our cheerful cheers nnd Anj'Yhepipcrs were play A New Movement I" 'f' Mrs. Margaret Parker, the British Women's cinrion, in 1310, is n:,ntntiiij tiou of temperance societies odist churches of England. "tW said, asks Mra. Parker f ters of a church of which fonn ley was as much the are content to he sden question? Drink Nearly tP J M a, 4 - not long since, bnt sober man. He is. who drove him and lost control of the coach had several Glaast JL ami tU' Whisky injures of - is, - ci Kl"- William E. GladdoneIan, barely escaped mer. Sji 'i yw,1? Total Ab.tmene Some people imagine nence is a modern "cm sand years before Chnst onr maker determined strongest man tlia,t. qnired even his as well ns himself from o stain from every form Boston Journal. alL-rio- r. urc 'h "ilh knn Jos played 'AuM UW; That happy day TO ikigl rill be Aud they shouted along the lrk And tboy wept and (hook bands, And t lie womoo soblssl I" And every ono knell down sl- And wo all thanked liod The leader of the line, Gen. Neill, was killed, nnd the men halted to wreak vengeance upon the sepoys in the building whence the fatal shot enme. But Havelock was at the front and gave the word to press on. On they went, charging and cheering, to the very gate of the besieged residency. The joyous welcome lias been celebrated in song and story. Relief, long prayed for, long expected, was at hnniL The wounded and sick soldiers and the women and children of the united columns numbered 1,300, and there were not sufficient carriages to remove them in the event of opening the road back to the Ganges at But the relief column added Cawnpore. new blood to thedefense. The loyal natives in the garrison were on the poiut of desert-In- g on account of tbe privations and rigors of the protracted siege. Even with tho aid of fncndly sepoys tho garrison had not Iieea sufficient to properly man the lines, these were already so contracted that the rebel batteries were within 600 yards of tbe residency nnd the quarters. The morning after his arrival Havelock took the aggressive, and by several bold sorties cleared tho rebels away from a (pace over a thousand yards in letigt b between the residency tnclosnre and tlie city on one side, and as far as the river Gumti on the rear. Many rebel batteries were spiked and the gunners bayoneted, and in this way the dangerous fireof some of the nearest cannon was silenced nnd the secured greater freedom. In the territory retaken by these sorties many mines were found ready for loading One of them had already reached as far as tho principal defensive work, and a delay of a day in the arrival of Havelock might have placed the in the power of tlie cruw scpo s. if il.ivclxk haj missej the chief Up. tlifii 1 Uraine to our mia goal. Sin atari powdrr And hopeless waiting for death; Dut the boldicr'a twie, like a poor Ami .. Peoples Encyclopedia USEFUL W worked n nd nur, done. It was the pipe uf tho NOTICE! - to that foe meant rnr fat lung ere it must shrilling, ceaseless aoand: It was no noise of tho strife Or the sappers under ground T o increase our cash trade we offer to every purchaser of $25.00 worth of merchandise at retail for cash A COPY OF THE OF death. And the mon and we nil It wa ono tl i moro of And then it woul I all I It was not one-four- th SPECIAL i he garrison ( So lifter ing Sir Colin's main encampment r Havelock fell ill. and on the tell, L.' Sir Colin brought to his UsUidr u.,.7i two Cawnpore and Lucknow, lie fought sumr battles successfully, and thun that mer pest of India, the cholera, set in, and K rewas force in a few days his effective duced to l,0a0 men. On the 12th of August he attacked and routed an overwhelming force of rebels that were lying in wait to attack him. Tho victory cost him 140 men, and, warned by his experiences on the first ten miles of march, lie decided to return to Cawnpore. On rtie 16th he fought a largo body of sepoys under the chief rajah of tho district, Nana Sahib, drove them off, nnd then gave his army a month's rest. During this interval Cawnpore was placed in a state of defense, so as to be held by a small garrison while the main army was marching upon Lucknow. Meanwhile the situation at Lucknow was critical iu tho extreme. The besieged at the residency numbered 900 Europeans and TOO loyal natives. They occupied the residency and outbuildings mid were completely surrounded, tho rebels mustering alsiut 50,000. Tbe latter maintained a con'DtNSA VE HEAR TIIK SUKiAS." tinual lire upon the residency, and in time his elevation of the order of Hit I, aiulmaof the upper porcompelled the evacuation gratiilatlons for having first carrinl nH tion. They also ran mines beneath the to Lucknow. Georgs L Kiui.t tho stormed nnd occasionally outbuildings lntrenchmeiits. Thoso tactics were adopted THE RELIEF OF I.FCKXUW. by the wily rebels in order to wear out Ob! that last day la l.ucknow firt the endurance of the imprisoned men. In Wo kuow thal it was the last, addition to overwork, lighting, oxposure That tho cnomy's mines hadrnp nnitk nnd insufficient food, the besieged went Aud tho was coining font I other dis season an of cholera a through e VoRI24f(0UR-- , 1 Do'l&UR DAPLOltS5 - i The rebellious sepoys did uot purpose to Fountain Pen. HOT s. j. scHNeiter, Novi-miie- r j, r The place will be respect, and travelers will HOT MINERAL BATIIS WITH SUITS. ltU-lmr- A" , EememToei tliat tiio MIDWAY hk tte-fr- HOTEL The MINERS mars ni cawnpore, nnu iu, 1r(lll l Ha thing abort of complete wly (list reused garrison uf laieknow T 'to work lia.1 turned u,t. llllt 'Wta, broken the backbone of t) w RELIEF OF THE LUCKNOW GARRISON had proved Hint Europeans '1. to HAVELOCK. BY GENERAL totie with summer heat, diM. other hardship of scamp ,1 and whip the aciaiys Mncl-ae- r. TUronBh guIMt O'tr',8o Btf Fawch t Hts Wy Iudi.i rang with hi. praises, Line Carrying Slrmstk at tin, garrisons several without flinching t ''4 Hope to h Imprlwmcd reU-numbers of Avertad. around th,?1"" nrnl. t'Kntel sml SlMwere ing upon a day of reckoni,,., Araociation.l Knlisii ftoldicrv Mrmi.i b. Coiiyrigut by AUBvrfesw Press UCKNOW, the Early in Gn. Siril , marched on capita) of the Brit-Anowfrouir " "i"H toll department of with about 5,000 Eiiroa,;l Onto a ml the seat live soldiers. On the c. c iin - 0f n11 U lie signaled to the garrison of the ebief that k fell be- hand. The next tnurnin h. e. fore tho mutinous gnu watched from the rootsof I He J I son biiiMingt with Painful r'm' sepoys M:iy24,1857. 1 T commission was road The cleared by Sir Goliad er, Sir Henry Law- until lie reached an immense -tho fortified Sckundur rence, U.gh. The inelur. il1-b- is residency and pathway, nnd was :irrnudi considerable space wall of solid masonry around it prepar- At t his point the rattle of mnsketrj atory to a siege, British cannon were brought pending thsr amr-n- l forty yards and the wall was il1?1' of relief from Through small openings a handfuL? some regular Brit- entered, and with the ish troops. Early way for others. The CnUb! in July Sir Henry threw dowu their arms and te Jf was mortally mercy, but in vain. Bayonet ' rifl. wounded, and the volvcr did their bloody work Uau news reached Gen. Havelock at the close of- sepoy iu the garden had lvi, n successful campaign, ending with the re- Two thousand rebel bodies were nl from the iiiclosure. On ti10 sepoy position fell, and on the ,9,b IN THE tSEPOY WAR. Midways Nw Store. practiced j? f |