OCR Text |
Show mism. mam. In Balltngi-- county, Mo., named Lasater, claims to have had a revelation from God commanding him to offer his Editor and Manager It months' old cinid a a sacrifice. Hi Be Vs, made his wife strangle the child, claim mg the Almighty promised to resurrect SATURDAY. APRIL 6, las'J. it on the third day. Lasater and his wife have both been arrested and placed In , HENItY M. STANLEY, jail. When arrested, Lasater had been earn lug the infant In his arms for two A London dispatch ot April 2 gives the davs. substance el a letter from Henry M A roRiivspo'jnKXT of the Fruvu Amt Stauley, tb African Explorer, In which hedeserfbe his travel 1 Africa,, from Iran says the Emery county people have June W, 1887, till sometime last summer. too much country in which to roam. They He nay the expedition, which consist- want the comity split lo two and one part ed o I 3i3 officers and men, started from of It called Graude county. It Is not often .. yambunga oa June tH, 1887.' They trav that people have more than they want, tied inland through a densely populated and If toe people of Emery are orerhnr district. The native Used every art dened with territory, they certainly known to them to molest and Impede the should be relieved of a portion of It. We ad ance of the party, but although sever- hope they will meet with no opposition. al conflicts took place, the party did not - " lose aman. A Pkksm dispatch of the 4th says, In the fore part of July, he says, the Booth Is lunch better. He suffered party entered a wild country, through hut a partial stroke of paralysis and will w hioh their sufferings multiplied and sevbe able to keep his engagements after eral deaths occurred. On August 13, the next week. The doctor said, after exexpedltioa met party of Mauyemax and amining the that he boil great tragedian, their tulafortones began, and within three suffered a stroke of partial aralyil W hat Stanley dedays 6 men deserted. which was nmojhudly doe to excessive scribes as an awful month began Septemmen by deser- smoking. ber 18. lie lost sixty-si- x sick at tion and death, and left ninety-si- x A Hvsmnu, Conn., special says that the station of the Arab Chief Ugarrava, Ilarlet Beecher Stowes mind Is shattered e and before reaching Kilinga he lost flfty-flvand she is, at best, Intellectually now hi t more through start atlon and deser-tiochild. The closing years of Mrs. He goes oa to enumerate his wanStowes father, the ltev. Lyman Beecher, derings in that w lid and unknown land, were passed with a cloud resting over giving a description of their suffering Ids mind. Ills symptoms were greatly ami rejoicing; their hopes and Lars; xinillar to those which now affect Mrs. their wars with the natives, ami their re- Stowe. Tiif.,Wasatcr Wave A r V. -- - ' n. turn to ibwlrrl. Between Yaiubago and Isanza, Stanley came across fit e distinct languages, at i distance of fifty mile from the camp. We should like to publish for the benefit of our readers the entire dispatch, but space will not allow ns to do so this week Henry M. Stanley has probably done more toward the advancement of geographical knowledge of Africa than any man living, unless it be Dr. Livingstone. A mammoth project Is on foot to make a canal to bring water from IlearRlvir to Ogden. The proposed canal is about 100 miles long, will cost aliont 82,000,000, and will bring thousands of acres of land under cultivation that have hitherto been useless from lark of water. On March 22, Joslali and EllzaVth Totts were sentenced to be hanged for the murder of Miles I ancett, a year ago THE TELEPHONE. v last January. This Is the first woman We' are bqw to have telephone. The upon which the death penalty has been first poles were set last Thursday.- The pronounced In Net ada. work will be pushed through as rapidly as possible, and In a few days we shall The Ogdtn Ntandnnl say that last be brought within talking distance of a twelve year old boy Bait Lake City. The telephone Is a Thursday morning, was kicked In the head by a horse at necessary prtjci ol furniture, the need hoof struck on the left side, of which has long been felt by the resi- Lynne. The above the temple, cutting a Immediately dents of.lleber. The telephone combig gash and laying the skull open. to a line has establish pany agreed through from Camp Florence, mouth of the Ontario funnel, If we will furnish PtntNO the past few days 8outh Dakothe pole and set them. This I am sore ta and Minnesota, have lieeu swept by a we caa do, for poles are easily got here, series of wind storms, which have and there is not a man In Heber City, caused millions of dollars damage to prohot could either furnish three of four perty and several lives have liecn lost. pole, or dig three or four holes. If you cant do cither of these, go dow n In Tiikhk has been $23,000 subscribed In your pocket and hunt ap a little change and hand to A. C. Hatch, he will get the Junotion City to build an opera house. some one to do it for yon. We should be able to get all the poles up before the Blue Lrdgt Mining District. end of next week. A I.t. , rS. rtc special or regular meeting by a vote of the miner present at any such meeting, provided, not less than eighteen If mi fide claim owners he present. SfcC. 7. Upon the presentation to the recorder or his deputy, of any document for record, the recorder or such deputy shall note upon the back th reof the day, hour, month and year of such presentation, and shall sign his name In his official capacity thereto, and said document shall lie deemed recorded from and after date of filing. " ' Sac. 8. The Recorder shall go upon the ground of all claims to him for record, and see that Die ground is duly staked as provided iu section twelve of these laws, Sec. 9. Upon application by any party to the recorder, to record a mining claim, which will conflict with a prior location or claim, It shall be the duty of the recorder to inform the applicant of the con llct, and shad note on his hook of record Inmiediat-l- y following the record, the fact of such notification to the applicant. Sw. 10. Upon application to the re corder for a certificate of the labor per formed oo any claim, the recorder shall go upon the ground and measure the extent of the shaft, or cut, or egher work, as to its depth, length, and size, aud the character of the material In which the work Is, whether soft or hard rock, or dirt, whether Umbered or not, and embrace such facts in his certificate, and shall conclude Ills certificate as follows : 1 hereby estimate said work to be worth about dollars. Sec. 11. Any person locating a mining claim in this district shall lie entitled to a width of one hundred feet on each side of the center of the i eiu or lode, and no more. Sec. 12. A11 claims shall be recorded in the district records within thirty days after location, or be deeimsl abandoned. Sec. 13. The corners of all locations of mining claims shall be plainly marked by stakes, or monuments of rock or stone. If stakes are used, they shall m t he less than four feet In height, above the surface of the ground, and three inches In diameter at the top. If rook or stone Is used, the monuments shall not lie less than two and feet high. 8nc. 14. Tunnel loeatious shall lie made strictly in accordance w itli tho laws of the United States, as shall all other location made In tills district. 8kc. 13. No special meeting of the miners of this district shall be called by the recorder upon the application of less than five lima fide claim owners of the district. The notice must clearly set forth the object of the meeting and the uames of the parties making the application. 8kc. Iff. A11 meetings of the miucra of this district shall he called by the recorder, who shall post notices, twenty da., previous to such meeting, In the fo.lowing places, to wit; Due notice at or near the Lake House, one at the bridge across the Provo River, in this district, one at the roadside near his office, one at the postoffice In lark City, one at the boarding house of the Ontario Mine, and oue on the upper pine tree on the dug-wa- y between Janies 1earsous residence and the ford across Laticldlu Canyon creek, near lark City. Sec. 17.' Proxy voting shall not he two-thir- Whiu playing the part of I ago In The Bine Ledge Mining District waa organized In 1870. The first meeting was held at Heher City, on the thirteenth day of April, of that year. The district as then organized was lo onded as follows) commencing at Richard Session's Cold spring, (aliout two miles north of Heher.) ruunlng due west to the first canyon ; thence up said canyon to tho top of the ridge, striking the Wasatch County line; thence following said Hues of Wasatch and Summit Counties In a north ami easterly direction to the Wasateh County road ; thence south along said road to fdace of begin-In- Othello, the Moor, at the Lyceum Theater last Wednesday night, Edwin Booth was strfeken frith paralysis. - Near the end of the secoud act, his attendant anj others observed something amiss, and sprang to bis assistance. A physician was called and after a hasty examination exposed the fear that Mr. Booth had sustained a shock of paralysis. This so alarmed Mr. Barrett, that he determined to dismiss the audience. In dismissing the audience, Mr. Barrett made a speech, In which he expressed the fear that Mr. Booth would never recover from the atroka. He said ; The world has proAt this meeting, John Gallagher was bably heard, for tlio last time, the greatest actor w bo speaks the English lang- elected recorder. On the 25th day of Howland and 1872, the Blue onc-lia- lf allow wl. 8t 18, To entitle a person to vote, the party so offering to vote, shall have been a luma fide claim ow ner, w bother by purchase or location, for thirty clay s pre- - lous to any meeting. 8c, 12. The mining laws of the United States are hereby made a part of the laws of bine Ledge Mining District, aud any laws conflicting thcrew ith are of uo force or effect. 8 ec. 2U. These except section nineteen, may be revised, amended or abrogated by the miners of the district, at any meeting, by vote of of the luma fide claim owners present, protlded not less than eighteen such rlulm owners he present as provided In section eighteen. Site. 21. Recorders Fees. For recording a claim or tunnel right, , , . uage. , I... The press dispatch says : The condition of Mr. Booth did not fully justify the speech. There w as no attack of paralysis, and the actor was suffering no pain." Late Wednesday night Mr. Booth sent a card to the Associated Press, stating that the physicians gave assurance that a week or ten days will restore Mr. Booth. , Tnk Supreme Court decided last Mor-f- l ay, That a person who settles on public land, In advauce of public surveys, acquires no estate which he can devise by will, or which In case of his death, wonld pass to his heirs-at-laIf with-- , In a certain time, after the return of the pints to the land office, the settler takes certain steps required by law, he acquires for the first time the right of that Is, a right to purchase It In preference to others. That the occupation and Improvement of public lands, with a view to do not confer a vested right In the lands so occupied. The United States enters Into no obligation that lauds occupied shall never be put op for sale, but simply declares that la cs they are offered for sale, the occupant shall hare the privilege of (item before alt others.. , n, UvnrR the provisions contained u the letter of instructions from the Commi sloner of the general land office, to the registers and receivers of the newly es-- tablishcd land pfilcea In Oklahoma, any person applying to enter or file for homestead, will be required to make affidavit. In addition to other requirements, that he did not violate the law by entering pon and occupying any portion of the lands prior to April 22nd. Townsitc en tries inky be atloVed, hut limits the area In any such entry to one half s x tlou as the maximum, whatever the number of Inhabitants. The Commissioner does not propose wasting this valuable laud by having Urge tow us built npon it. JUtGiBET Lxaux and her three children were burned to death. In their bed last Monday morning, at Milwaukee, Wls. ; A xew comet liaaj'ist been discovered ; oiwerv by Prof. Barnard at the U-J- July Ledge. Whlto Pine mlntotft districts were consolidated and named the Blue Ledge Mining District. The bonndarles of the new district were as follows i Commencing at the top of the summit, where the Wasatch County road crosses the summit tnto Parleys Park, thence follow Ing said read southerly to Provo River thence down said rtveT to the Suake Creek Mining District line; theuce westerly along said line to the Wasatch County line; theuce northerly along said line to the point of beginning. At a apeclal meeting of the miners of Blue Ledge Mining District, called January 20, 1879, for the purpose of revising or amending the laws of said district, the following mining laws were adopted. Sue. 1. This mining district shall he known as the Bine Ledge District, and be houuded as follows Commencing at the top of the summit, w here the Wasatch County road crosses the summit into Parleys Park; thence following said road southerly to Provo River; thence down said river to the .Snake Creek Mining District line, thenee westerly along said Hue to tho Wasatch County line, northerly along said Hue to potut of brgluulng. Sec. 2. There shall he an annual meeting of the miner of the district, held on the second Saturday in July, of each and every year, at which a recorder for said district shall be elected, and for the transaction of such other business as may be brought before the meeting. At such annual meeting not less than ten bona fide claim owners shall be present to constitute a quorum. Sec. 8. The recorder shall hold office for the period of one year, from the date of his election, or until hts successor is elected, unless he be sooner removed. Sec. 4. The recorder shall keep a substantially bound book, in which shall be recorded all papers filed with him for record, add for recordingthe niinutts of all meetings, held by the miners of the district, and aU papers so recorded shall bo carefully preserved by the recorder, who shall transfer the same to his successor In office, together w 1th his record book and all effects of his office. Ssc. 3. The books of record shall be open to examination during regular business hours, but aU examinations must he made la th recorder presence, or that of his deputy. Ihe recorder being hereby empowered to appoint one or more deputies, for w hose official acts ho shall be held responsible. Sue. ti. The recorder may ho removed office tot mi cu'luct at am fruu tlu-nc- e two-thir- .... A d s, ' s r- $2 00 For certificate of record. - - . For certificate or other papers, per so so first folio, Each subsequent folio, 20 For recording other papers, per folio 00 ail For mileage, one way, on official 50 business, per mile, Sec. 22. At annual election for recorder, the polls shall be kept open from 9 o'clock a. m. until 4 o'clock p. m., and the recorder shall preside as Judge of said election, and the first two bona fide claim owners present shatl act as tellers. Sec. 23. At the election for recorder, or for the amendment, repealing or reunion of these laws, ail toting shall be by ballot. Sec. 24. The mining laws of this district, not herein Included, arc hereby repealed, and these laws to lie iu full force and effect from and after this date, February 24th, 1879. At a meeting of the miners of the Blue Ledge Mining District, held at the Crescent office in Park City, July Uth, 1887, section 11 w as amended hy substituting the word three for tfe w ord one, and also resolved that the recorder may reside and keep the records at Park City. Johnny Was Too Smart. It doesnt pay to bo too smart. John It. McLean, the editor of the Cincinnati Enquirer, Bays the Philadelphia News, yihile walking with a friend along Twenty-nintstreet in this city, saw a Hibernian leaning against a post. The thought struck himthat it wonld be a fine thing to make the tramp's lace a study by presenting him with a silver quarter, lie did so and at the same time said: Heres that quarter I owed you. Now, dont go around any more telling people that I dont pay my debts. I always speak well of you and you have no reason to do otherwise by me." For a second the man's face was a study. He was anmred at the unlooked-fo- r kind ns, and then, as Its purport dawned on him, he raised his tattered hat and amid: God bless yer aner.Ill mver say another word agin ye, but (and here his eyes twinkled merrily) are ye sure it wasnt a halfyezowed meT" Thefriend roared, and McLean reddened to the roots of his hair. h woe-begon- e Stanzas. Less merciless the Furies were, Fursnlnr Clytemnestrat son. Than the surpassing face of her Whom 1 must shun. But why do I complain? It Is No more than Just the rest of Ilia Should be unceasing miseries, Unceasing strife. nt Did I kiss thee oner? Did I Not feel the rapture of thy bps? The grief of aa eternity That doth eclipse. Whatever woes my lot may fall I can afford to bravely bear. That kiss doth more than balance aU, With heavens to spare. "Fi itiMii E Lrt . in (V Carrs.it JU tern JUGGLERS TRICKS. rws Wonderful Performances by a Native of India. When he catered the room he spread t white cloth upon the floor and sat Jown upon it with his back to the trail, ihe door of the room being on his right land. His spectators were disposed in lie following fashion: Mr. Smyth lat on a chair nearly in the middle of he room, I was sitting on a sofa near .be door, the Parsee merchant stood ia he doorway about arms length from ae. The servant stood about in poops, the. largest group being the dobr and the conjurer. As toon M he had settled himself he turned 0 the Parsee and asked for ihe loan of a rupee. The peddler at first demurred t little, but, on being guaranteed gainst loss, he produced the coin. He eas going to pnt it into the conjurer's and, but the latter refused ' and told .be Parsee to band it to Mr. Smyth's carer. The bearer took it; and, at Jie reqnest of the conjurer, looked at it md declared it to be really a rupee. The conjurer then told him to hand it o his master, Mr. Smyth took it, and hen followed this dialogue: Conjurer Arc you sure it la a rupee? en Smy th Yes. Conjurer Close your hand and hold t tight. Now think of some country in vour Curope,. tut do mot tell me honghL Tbi n the conjuror ran over the names if several countries, such as France, 2 xermany, Russia, Turkey and America for tho native ot India is under the mpress'on that America is in Europe, kftcr a moment's pause Mr. 'Smyth laid ho had thought of a country. Then open your hand," said the ugglcr; see what you have got, and ell me if It is a co'n of the country you honght of." Hatch American and Foreign Tars. The fol.owmg is extracted from a let-e- r written by an American geut'em.in srhile traveling iu Mexico this winter; You people in the United Sta'ies do not more than half appreciate your best men, you know." This was the remark addressed to tiio writer in tlie C.ty of Mexico recently by an Englishman of great intelligence who has traveled the world c2s Ccc; AMI RETAIL DEALERS lR WHOLESALE andise over. Why?" I inquired. Why, he replied, I have oftened wondered by, bnt you certainly do nob Look at that railway carriage there," pointing to an English compartment eab standing iu the depot of the Vers Cruz Railway. That U a ifciie nf bar bariaiu. I am an Englishman, you know, and prottd ot it, but I tell you England has much to leant vet ol America. Our cars are boativ, you know, compared a ith yours. And we have nothing to compare with a Pullman. I had that man Pullman in mind, you know, when I made thq.as-.crtiothat your best me were not appreciated. To mv mind ho 1 is one of your 'greatest benefactors. have been in nearly every civil'zed country on the globe and have traveled everywhere, in all ways, and I say to you now, sir, that in point of safety, comfort and health, there is nothing, absolutely nothing, to compare favorably with Pullman cars and Pullman service. England and the continent arq gedtinw them thev must get them. Those English coaclies are not fit to use they are beast'y. Think of locking a young lady into one of those comgenpartments wfth a strange tleman and leaving her there alone with him. He may be a gentleman and may bo not he may be sober or may be drunk the Jaiiy may be insulted and may be not. It depends. I am traveling now with my wife and we go from this city to San Francisco via the Mexican Central and the Santa Fe routo. A Pullman right through, you know everything as nice as poisible. I tell you it is the perfection of travel nothing like it. We arc on our way to the Sandwich Islands. I enjoy the sea, tut cross1 ng America on a Pullman ie by far the most enjoyable part of the i Boots, Shoes, Groceries n It was a piece, and Mr. Smyth iad thought of France. Ho was going o hand the coin to the conjurer, but he latter said; No; pay it to the other sahib. Mr. Smytli accordingly put the journey." piece into my band. I looked Tills kind of talk opened up to me a dosely at it, then shut my hand, and new line of thought Surrounded by .hought of Russia. When I opened It the splendor of modern achievement, found, not a Russian, but a Turkish the present generation of Americans teem to forget the agencies which have tilver pice, about the size of a worked out the grand results seen on ieoe or of our own crown piece. Tb:s hand. A little mote than one handed tb Mr. Smyth and suggested every hundred years ago, the people of onr hat he should name America, which country were suflering under the tyrto did, and found a Mexican dollar in anny of English oppression; the few ds hand. The coin, whatever it was, scattering homes were as pla;n as the ad never been in tho conjurers hand abodes of pheasants; the arteries of commerce were clotted with inactive Vora the time the rupee was borrowed blood; and no (ires glowed in busy facrom the Parsee merchant. Mr. Smyth tories throughout the land; but the best tnd his bearer had both of them closely thought of tlie age looked through tho xamined the rupee, and Mr. Smyth vista and dreamed of happier and better tnd myself turned over several times condition. Thought finally Crystulized into a public opinion that caused govhe piece, the Turkish coin, and ernment on invenoiler a lo ho dollar; so the trick did not depend tive genius, and howpremium often since has tbe n a reversible coin. Indoed, it could world been dazzled by the creatious of lot, for the coin under-wethree the Am, r can .mind. The scene ha changed from humility and squalor to hanges, as hqs been seen. I only add, one of transcendent greatness and com'or the information of those readers fort. I he transformation could not be vbo do not know Indiq, that a rupee is free from abuses, and the wisdom of the n!y about thesis of a florin, and nation must correct them, but the qii herefore nlxmt ii.df the weight of a rises, what would be our condition bad different policy been pursupiece. ed? 1 he encouragement to individuals, He did another trick almost equally granted by goveruitidnl and upheld by s wonderful. As before, he was seated public opinion in lie past, has surroundtn a white (loth, which this time, I ed u by manifold comfort. Shall we hink. was a tablecloth,, borrowed from strike the hand that help us and rehe mess sergeant. He asked some one pudiate the wisdom of our fathers? resent to produce a rupee, and to lay . Protecting Their Rights t down at a rewoto edge of the cloth, rhe cloth being . three or four yards Probably no concern in the country n length, the conjurer could not have (as adhered more strictly to the deouched the coin without being seen, termination to achieve succesa by the tnd, in fact, d.djiot toucli 'L llo then l.berat use of printer's ink than has the sked for a signet ring.- - Several were Browli Chemical Company of BaltiAcred him. and he chose, out one more, Md. Starting business about five years ago, tiiey have expended over srhich had a very, large oval seal, well bey pud the gold hoop on $1,500, 000 in the preparation and ciroth sides. The ring he tossed and culation of printed matter, more than aimbled several, times in his hands, now half of which ha been paid for newsadvertising. All this has been browing it into the air and catching paper done to make known the virtues of L then shaking it between hi clasped their celebrated Brown's Iron B.ttcr. and, all tho time mmnbliug As might be expected, very largo word in some llindoostance sales have resulted from this enormous atois. Then setting the ring down on outlay. In fact. Brown's Iron Bitters be cloth at about half arms length in is about a staple- in many drug stores as is floor at the- rorner grocery. Like ront of him, he said, slowly and ail giod things. Browns Iron Bitters in good llindoostance: has been largel imitated. There are unscrunulons manufacturers who cater Ring, rise up and go to the rupco." to just this sort of trade, and some rhe ring rose, with the seal nppcrmo.it, nd, resting on the hoop, slowly, with dealers are so lacking in principle, that kind of dancing or jerking motion, because a greater prolit can be made on than on gomi ne medicines, t passed over the cloth until it came to fraudulent they are wdling to delude the public by irhere the rupeo was on the remote pushing off Iron Tonic Ritters and other tdge, then it lay down on the coin, Tonic Med. ones in place of the genuine. rhe conjurer then said: Rirg, lay Browns Iron B.ltcrs, which is undoubtold of tho rupee mid bring it to me." edly one of tho purest and bet known. These frauds have beet The projecting edgo of the seal seemed so extensively, that the Com practiced grapple with the edge of the coin; pany, finding all other means inadebo ring and the rupee rose into a kind quate, have at last determined to try s f wrcitling attitude, ami, with tho little cold law td put a stop to them. ame wincing or jerking motion, tho Suits for heavy damages have therefore wo returned to within reach of the been commenced against Frcder.ck Stearns & Co., Detro t, M'ch., who are ugglcrs hand. $. , Medicine kpown as the 1 have no theory to explain cither of Manufacturers, for selling Iron Tonic beso trick. I should mention, how-sve-r, B. iters; against Meyer Bros. & Co., ol St Louis, Wliolcsalo Druggists, for that the juggler entirely all supernatural power, and siselling Brown's Iron Tonic, prepared Little Rock, Ark., and he his that tricks by by C.nstJ. L ncoln. performed eged Jas. A. Dickinson, a druggist in sere sleight-of-hanIt will be ol sgs Baltimore, for selling Iron Tonio Bitters icrvcd that he (ad no preparation of with hi name upon tbe label, which is surrounding, no machinery, and medicine was made by Koihiand, Hoi o confederate, S. 8. Robinson, in lander & Co., of that c.ty, and also rlamed a an imitation. VVe wish the boston Eerald. , Brown Chemical Company every success in these suits, as it is high t me A? Disaster. ,, . those who have pluck enough to carry A prettj maiden, pink ami pert; large enterprises such a the ri to sucA cyclK with a ntrr shirt; cess, should be protected from thos-whA wonder i i the maid will flirt; live not by tlie.r own genius and A little exhibition apart effort, but by copy ng and counterfeitA suddea tumble la the dirt ing things that have been made standAa angry maid with spattered skirt ard and valuable bv others. A shock thateonidut help but hurt A cyclist with disaster girt 1 Ttd RiU. Too Busy to Argue. Customer Here, (in restaurant) How Blind Feopls Write. A Milwaukee blind man ha written waiter, this steak is too tough to cat." Waiter e bowk. a Sorry, sail; I to too busy tc I start lie says: argue 'bont dot steak now. If yo td to write my book in 1872 and finish-iwants to argue w if a waiter boat ae it in 1879, selling musical iustru-xienttoughness of steak yo' mu come in in the meanwhile to support when do noon rush am ober. AV We blind folks l'ork limes. jself and family. arrite on a paper with depressed grooves Mr. Mary A Hunt Jay: I hare rot. d fi Tinning parallel to one another. With wreral years, sml there' no beaid on my etuu the index finger of the left hand we VrL The rcajon 1 np n 'enotigh, Mary follow up the pencil point (we cant use Tbe frirtim induce.! hr coutmu-o- i mount pen and ink), and at the e.wd of each beep it from growing; that ail .V.w Hi word we cover a little blank, space to When a womau cd to he a tieh nnmbr., put tiie proper distance between thout. can The f s and the h's. the g's and the bt tfcgm 1 woml-- r hew young frr.,1 so inu h. TUIa is a jure eyu.pioia of ether long letters extend above and Jin a d. f H ul.l age. LA Glass and Crockery, Best Brands of.Flourj Hardware, Stoves, Agricultural ImplementM, Furniture .Wagons, - ' . Ete., Etc., Ete. - . - Beta1, Wasatdi Did. ft, k f DEALER IN ; lillincry, Dry Goods. 3 t Boots, Shoes, Clothing; nt y Groceries, Hardware, Stoves, - -- i FAlt MIXC! lMlU?.'fKX-(s'- . , li.i (iOXS, s m"i" . . . MAC1IIXKS, HUGO IBS, ETC., . EtC,. T X ALL ABOVE AT LOWEST Charleston,: Utah, -- DEALERS Groceries, IN- Jj Ming, Boots, Shoes, Hats, Caps, Glassware, Hard' ' ware, and a full line of GENERAL MERCHANDISE. Gents Furnishing Goods, Etc. J. s R. MURDOCK, .Superintendent. CI100L DESKS AND - SCHOOL SUPPLIE1 JAMES DWYER, Publishers and Manufacturers Agent, d. ' o 400-pag- s I - 1 be-hr- iiilH 'iuUe I - Non-Secr- e the croovus," - . 7HFT pro-ecti- medi-fline- PRICES. iw The ih wk allow a dev. lopmest u lL.it w a... other fiola bSiiir f ;r.i 40 Street, BJhJXJT CIITT, ttt a Nearly opposite Z, C, M. I. iwt( "rl? Headquarters for and exclusively wholesale dealer in School Supplies and every description of educational merchandise. Sole Agent for Utah for the Moat Perfect and Celebrated ISTETTT-- iLUTOMATIC SCHOOL ' TvpgfTT la tlxe "World. ! And recently adopted in the Deseret University, tlie Salt Lake Stake Acariamv, Sanpete and Miilanl Stake Academies ; also la nine of onr City School and many others outside of Salt Lake. Sole Agent for Appleton's Primary Reading Charts, mounted on Revolving Snpports. i f , Subscription Books and Law Books; Address all orders and inquiries as to terms, etc., to JAMES DWYER, No. 49 Main Street, bait Lake City. at Lcwost "Wlicleoale Prices. t 1 I 4 1 ii 1 I ! |