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Show at the Postofice, Heber, as sec- the coming election Friday last First Representative distriet shall of Cache is as follows: and consist a coon by The the name denied by Justice vas tried, found A writ Laney guilty of habeas and sent to The shall by jury jail. the rights that aman prived of, and court had could ene fn ‘Phe not the passing in is-net to be set aside under stances where it is asked for. We don’t see how wise. Theright any he could to a de- The guaranteed by our constitution Sustice could Laney amystery. Well, and no doubt make that jury trials will become least. and fashionable in Pelice Courts a time MentTION was Wave about from My. ’ Park City, made in last the non-arrival ago. In Harding, a the whole post matter, When the mail is made it is placed rier gets ways lobby On the day in it. the usual the came mail in was the accustomed purpose of giving us the than and benefit pack inte the post office about and who is a and without the teok the new him man, The off but do so as he had the instructed time post was start but to never since the Park leave will ever eccur again, rate it was not at any ~yillful neglect. a case of be United The new party other things alaw for Senators people; be by direct the passage alien ownership gress by of land take prompt plan to obtain alien and the and that in excess rights to all to none: ay but convenient Itis and by can readily glancing see that instead tricts being compact they are badly tered as of. the disto be scat- WU in the central part, to the north and all, . Oh, delegates to the convention to well, the get to will thing and-meet this way appears and the politicians down ple’s Party and Liberal and The seems the old parties to of Peo- establish the Republican and Democratic factions. THe hands Salt Lake Herald and R. C. Chambers of the paper new leading organ of Democracy at the be the for the ter- yitory. out a complaint Sherwood, against charging warrant Sherwood. was his her placed wife, with eompany up abeve with a brother avenue fotnd Brought ever, atent. A rap wo response. secured informed In a few an In answer. way county, The marshal they were John Piper came out and were jail. Bowman City each ethers Effie escorted and company to town,.while and to Piper en- immensély the other offi- eer and Effie walked down serenely, she Having to new companion as taken her Rindly as circumstances would permit. of San Pete to one Rep- of San of Moroni, Mount Chester, Dover, and district remainder Wales, Fayette, Mayfield Eph- Gunnison, precincts, and of counties, Wasatch, and be Fifteenth shall be entitled to Sixteenth and coun- one Repre- Representative district Beave, shall Piute, and Iron to one Representative dis- be Seventeenth entitled trict shall consist of Garfield, ton, Juan Kane and San Washing- counties, and shall be entitled to ene Representative. The First Council district shall consist of First Representative district and shall be entitled to one Counciler. The Second Council sist of the Third district The Third The and Fourth Representative and shall Fourth Council Counciler. con- Councilor. Council district shall consist of the Second districts, shall Representative district, and shall be entitled to one sist of the Fifth be entitled district to three to one shall Representative and ghall be entitled con- district, Councilors. Tire Fifth Council district shall consist ef the Sixth districts, and and Ninth shall Representative be entitled to one Councilor. — The Sixth Council district shall consist of the Seventh and Eleventh tive districts, and Representa- shall be entitled te one Councilor. | The Seventh Council district shall con- sist of the Highth and Tenth Representative districts, and Councilor. The shall be entitled Council district and to one shall con- Thirteenth Rep- shall be entitled to one Councilor. The Ninth Council district shall consist of the Fourteenth and Fifteenth sentative and shall to ene districts, Councilor. The Tenth Council district the Sixteenth and to one districts, it is. further said districts, part of the omitted pertien con- shall be en- shall be that if any emitted frem inhabitants in And itis further which said county case it of the ordered shall district to that the above of such new the apportionment and it unless establishment and resentatives Council in which be a part and foregoing and the county belongs, ef such belong te and bea Representative itself be divided, districts, and dered the district to which . situated shall Seventeenth Councilor part of said Territory said Repre- be entitled | sist of of Rep- Ceuneilors thereto, be in the office of the Secretary of previded by Territory of Utah as redistricting and the terms of said act that said ment take effect and after this date. . L. of Congress, be in and appertion- force : on and Goprrey, Chairman. ALB. Wiis. R. longing soon seizes tribe then, having put on all the finery they are able to muster, arm themselves with the terrible maquarri—a peculiar whip from which the dance derives its name. This whip is about five feet in length and is manufactured of a strong grass fiber native to the district, bound around spirally with eapable of inflicting a wound very little less severe than that which would be produced by the downward blow of a e. When the dance is about to commence the performers range themselves opposite one another, waving their whips in the air and giving utterance to cries resembling the notes of birds. Suddenly one of them stops, and one leg stretches ing perfectly ' stops, too, out the measures fully with down stretched where other, the his eye, springs comes fearful poising himself motionless. air to give force to smack The upon heavy a his other care- high in the whip with gash marks and, wish! opponent’s limb, and a red the his calf or a The Sl on remain- distance the blow, the thong has oad a out- round of the blow utters never a sound, but, possible under smiling as cheerfully as the circumstances, again takes up the dance until it is the turn of the other player to stand still and receive his punishment, wwhich, we may a upon it, is usually returned with s good a will as it was given.—San Tene Examiner. Mr. Some Rare Qid Instruments. Steinert, of this city, has added to his rare collection of musical instruments a viola de Gamba, which is probably the only one in play able condition in this country. It is in excellent preservation, and its present owner thinks that none can. be found in Europe in such fine condit#on. The first instrument has a straight back and the topis of a conical shape similar to the bass viol of the present ay, and not rounded as the violoncello. The scroll is an artistic piece of carving toade to represent the griffin of ancient mythology and is of brazed wood. Ivory squares are set in the finger board instead of raised brass frets, nd accurate- ly designate the fingering places. It is keyed for five strings, while all bow instruments of the present age have but our. This valuable treasure of Mr. Steinert was found in a monastery in Berlin, in connection witha viola d’Amore, by a German citizen. He brought it to this country about thirty years ago and kept it until purchased show date of though the there was by Mr. Steinert. nothing Al- about it to its make, its construc- tion indicates that it was made some time during the Fifteenth century. —N ew Haven Union, What Keeps the Bicycler toward his right. He is now it at S. RoBERTSOM, once begins i quickly gets to go eastward, going under him, and and as the ma- chine is again upright. To one standing ata distance in front or rear the bottom of the wheel will be seen to moye to the right and left. I conclude, then, that the stability of i bicycle is due to turning the wheel o the right or left, whichever way the ie is, and thus keeping the point of support under the rider, just as a boy keeps upright on his finger a broomstick standing on its smallest end.— Charles B. Warring in Popular Science Monathly. Begged John’s Pardon. At the Old Bailey it was customary to sentence the whole cf the prisoners foun guilty at the sessions at one time. It fell to Baron Graham’s lot to perform. this duty, and he accordingly went over the list with due solemnity, but omitted one person brought up for sentence—Mr. John Jones. The judge wason the point of finishing the sentences, ly, “Oh! sureI when the offi- John Jones’ cer reminded his lordship of this omission. Whereupon the judge said grayveI am beg pardon,” and then sentenced him to transportation for life.—San Francisco rgonaut. Slang and Simile. Will some one kindly point out where metaphor and simile leave off and where slang begins? There are many expressions about which sometimes cause cultured peopie to turn up their noses or raise their eyebrows, and yet they are to be found in the Bible, in Shakespeare and in other excellent places, while there about as many expressions which people use with a great deal of reverence. thinking that they come from the Bible. which really are to be found only in such Through ee Tos Continent, Sissy, don’t y’ know, applied for membership in Serosis, deah boy, but they actually wouldn’t have him, y’ know. Said he was too effeminate, bai Jovel—Judge. A Pleasant Sarprize. Detective—Is this My. Hardap? Haréup (aneasily)—Yes, but Pm very busy and can’t tall to you. Detective—I have a warrant for your arrest. Hardup (relieved)—Oh! I thought you had.a bill.—Munsey’s. Weekly. Searcity of Pumpkins. A young lady from southern Connecticut visited the city this week in quest of a supply of pumpkins to furnish the basis for a pumpkin party. The homely but honest fruit is wanted not only for pumpkin pies, but for jack o’ lanterns, jardinieres and other articles of house and piazza decorations. Not a pumpkin can be obtained in Connecticut at this season of the year for love or money, but by extending her researches into the country ful, and M. Jean Jacques Weiss, a distinguished French journalist, the pumpin s Beet was successwent buck rejoicing with a bag- ful. Spring gficld Glass, Done died on the 20th at Paris. President Harrison clamation, opening Berthold Indian has to issued public a pro- settlement about 16,000,000 acres of land in the Fort reservation, Nerth Da- James Kane was Ont., on wife Elizabeth. executed the 21st, and he slowly groans were Sunday rode a at Belleville, for the murder The drop fell at neck was not broken strangled to death. e’clock but Kane’s of his 8:19 His horrible. Wilcexes were captured to death by the brother and lover. on Friday ef last ‘he site was week and selected for the the for the this week with all work erations by is July Ist. so large cumulating so W. A. Ilubert of Sacramento bicycle to Stockton, fifty-one miles, dismounting, hours and round trip was made fifteen minutes, A large tribe was and made it in four of the killed Sylvan nine 680 Williams it off just above alligator near measured weighed pounds. the knee in any of the the The on the form. This series of iron- clad rules that has been ways and means committee to govern laid down who get concessions. Nor who concessions be make by the men will the men allowed public to be- nuisances themselves. Wood river, Idaho, extremely having considerable and are in full bloom, has reached the continuous cloudy with the wind, line of fruit must Fire They stood the in until flames is moving ore is beiag taken at the SPECIMEN S. H. Giifford, troubled hanged at and was betraying at their post the and a away, May Cassel, and was affected to an CASES. New Neuralgia alarming and he was Wis., the and rope. was Rheumatism, disordered, his Liver was degree, appetite fell terribly reduced-in flesh and strength. Three bottles of Electric Bitters cured him. Hidward Shepherd, Harrisburg, Il, had a running sore on, his leg of eight years’ standing. Used three bottles of Electric Bitters and seven boxes of O., Bucklen’s on his leg, Arnica Salve, large Fever sores well. had five doctors said he John Speak- was incurable. One bottle Electric Bitters and one box Buck- len’s Arnica Salve cured him entirely. Sold at Richard Bridge’s drug store. 8m12-92 Biank Note Heads, Ball Programme, Books, Bill Letter Heads, Heads, Statements, at this oflice. etc. Xho of Boten, was YYorld’s Supply Wr. Leech, the ef Coin director of Be and officially reported to be in circulation ag money throughout the world: Gold. B702,018,869 550,000,000 991),000,090 500,000,000 65,009,000 140,000,000 States... 0. oe Kingdom..... eae Siac os rerio 22, at Broken the body fell to broken. Haven- mint, has prepared for the house committee on coinage a series of interesting tables showing the gold and silver estimated Silver. $482. ‘On. 346 100,000,000 700,000,000 145,000,000 85,000,001 60,060,000 15,000,0¢ the trap sprang there was groan ground, murderer Hiram 1:30 p. m., Bow,Neb. When asnap the with his Stomach of the varnish on the Wavenstein, Ashley and Good Music and a good Prompter Decoration Day Ball, the 30th. the nar- stationed. of the firemen, without Albert smoethly stored. the finish.— Tribune. Wm. at were badly heat, which and remained Everything out and Special at- by a gust wee to crack will be first- the horses across they intense any uneasiness the together engine, the severe enough in canopy, heads their sweeping alley in which Glencoe and the new —LRecorp. perished. Department row the much er, Catawba, valley. it particular. and his leg is sound and the scorched that of and but for tached to the chemical about Shear the fire Tuesday night‘‘Jim” wind helmets was everything haye At the Washer ‘‘Brick” coin- Mr. snap depth mountains aud drawn works. during cold fallen Fruit trees high already the he will picked up by the brought back slreriff and to the gallows. and the trap was doubled This time his neck was apparently Joc was Peun., self to death broken and laughing him- Hope exten- New Railroad, which Hei weighed 175 pounds menths ago. first trains his farm on the Ist Duhrlinger has lauged so now ‘The weighs doctors are ger’s friends of are awaiting pounds. Duhrlin- the result with to witness people paid curiosity. 50 cents the flight of the ship to-day at the fair grounds. the crowd had. gotten Bush and lecked the Dodd could pile of money on horses, escape, so that out, sack, raked fer their out of the city before their discovered. discovered the deceit, to contain the airship When the crowd the case supposed was torn to pieces, old paper was England is discovered. becoming at Hebrews from Russia, as of are seeking refuge This movement Britan. such the very alarmed them exodus proportions that ef it invasion that 500 appeais to different uals urging introduce aliens, of. is “Hebrew that the to the England.” It are made is authorities should destitute immigration law States. Professor Putnam of Harvard College Professor of the Ohio terday the A. W. Graham, Archeological exhumed at Old county, Fort one of works ders. They that ancient race, together implemerts, which will collection Professor World’s ably. of the ancient Putnam Fair. well positions they lay to the skulls, men believe that to killed A and in battle and story of while met stone in the antiquities which but the irregular and the physical leads the gentle- persons were buried. ravishing, comes Sandy riding through suiters. They horse, breaking They took lots as to which whose she Wilcex, her fell. her and deto refused. They limbs kept found by intended husband she and said had been also her drew to marry John, cabin, and she from cabin, have She broken in the When was rejected the struggle. lenely should her prisoner the wall. Maud her legs in that she agree lot tried to set her a Eastern a lonely wood, dragged hertoa and chained her told Lodgings Salvation to brother the story brutally out- for London's to fit up, Peor. Army “any building or buildings such as may be under the control of the corporation,” to serve as a night shelter during the bitter weather coe “those whose sleeping place is the open street and whose hearth is the cold stony pavement lord mayor will of our bridges.” thus provide Hf the beds for outcast London the general will dosome- thing in the way of board. Surely, before the city fathers are asked to make a dormitory of the Guild- hall the city churches ought to take the first step. If there were mattresses in the pews and shakedowns along the aisles the edifices would be serving a good were Hero, Beecher—A Cheyenne Leading w War a Grand Chief Charge. many more of those for whom they built than they see anything of at the fighting men the border, and one ae was the gallant struggle of Col. G. A. Forsyth and a band of fifty scouts with the foe Cheyenne and Sioux warriors and their bandit allies on the line of the Kansas Pacific in 1868. In August of that year there was an outbreak of savage fiendishness along the borders of Kansas, Colorado and Nebraska east of Denver. The tribes of the region opposed the construction of the railroad, and began to raid, ravish and kill over a widespread peeoey of thriving settlements. Their deeds were such that no white man able to handle a pees could stay the oe of revenge. mong the officers at Fort Wallace was Col. GC. A, Forsyth, a civil war ca who had served with Sheridan. He was on staff duty and had no followers, but in the excitement of the hour drummed ae fifty unemployed scouts, mounted equipped in their own wild fashion, and placed himself and men under military 0 ders. The second in command was a oe fitted to hold such relation to the gallant colonel. This was Lieut. F. H. Beecher ee of Henry Ward Beecher), on a civilwar veteran, and one’: who had been disabled = that. He was ane orders to r duty in Washington at a later oe a volunteered, or even begged, to fill in the interval Relting Indians. The command started for the scene of the most recent depredations reported at Fort Wallace, and struck a trail on a branch of R sspubtican river on the 14th of September. hey owed the tre ruil two days without line a redskin, b at evidences pointed to their presence in the vicinit They were trying to a jead and ambush the daring party. Qn the ae noor of the 16th Col. orsyth haltedand established camp on ny Fork, a Sean with but a few inches of hen He was in the eenter of a plain skirted with hills and dotted with ees of stunted tr Late in the afternoon a band of seven hundred Indians rushed from cover and attem to stampede the animals that were loo near the cam y ; They y were t be the ioe of aa grand a AttaAc moved his force to¢ an island in the mid¢ i. of the water course.” The island bore a few low trees. no the morning of the 17th every man was alert before ‘daylight, eid nota moment too soon. The horses were tied in the Bane close at hand, and ae several picked marksmen kept wpa fire on the neare = indice their Ce dug rids pits and made a cirele of them so as to receive the ene my on all sides. The Indians kept up a steady fire with their ee repeating rifles and coolly took p: p in easy range, boys with bows d arrows stealing up very close by crawling on the ground. A shower of bullets and arrows soon announeed i onslaught of numbers. Col. Forsyth bade hisinen hold their fire and sdve ar unition for the trying moment. The elevations at asafe distance were coverel with non-combatunt savages, old men, women. and ehildren, and with a wild, weird whoop they began to jump and gesture as a band of mounted warriors, ni i hundred, set out at full gallop toward the island. Not agshot was firel by ie one until the savages came within ch. Then a vapid fi ire was opened sending Se down the front lines of wa charge had been made in ne colunin, as if to over: ride the brave ligtle band in the riflepits. At the head rode the war chief. of the Cheyennes, “ onan, Nose,” 2 typice al. savage of the wilds. No gaudy gi calico, or flower Back. ud, or east off army blanket pted regal figure, which was of giant, build, But buckskin and beads, and feathers of the wild wing, and a robe of the rarest fur, distinguished him over all his followers and above many a noted chief of these degenerate Indian days. He was a tawny colored war god, breathing fire and flashing lightning Rte his eagle eye. But all that heathen magnificence was not bullet clad, nor was that noble form in‘Roman Nose’ fell within a | vulnerable. few feet of the riflepits, and the painted bueks that survived the terrible volley of death shrank back appalled at the spectacl present either by day or night, and the idea would not fit in badly with Christianity, whether it tallied with political economy or not. In France they are just yoting £80,000 to relieve the distress in large towns, and are about to do the same by country districts.—Pall ae Budget. A Mrs. Jane Lewiston, Queer who Old McKeene, was Lad an ad lady in recently taken to the insane asylum, ha nm yery eccentric for years while working in the cotton mills, anda number of stories are told of her peculiarities. At one time she had a lot of cockroaches in a box near her looms, which she wotld feed regularly every day. Whether they ate the food provided them by their benefactress CHARGE OF THE CURYENNES. It was nearly midday, and Col. Forsyth was not long in divining the true situation. is not known, but she tock good care of them, and they increased in numbers untilat last the superintendént discovered them and had them removed. The old lady cried bitterly that her pets—and whoever had such pets before, —were removed. They say she used to drop a silver coin in the canal each day, which she said went to feed her husband and boy, who were drowned at sea. Her boy’s clothes, which she carried under her arm, she never parted with. LEyery morning she took the bundle to her work and each night returned with it.—Bangor (Me.) Commercial. The murder from Hook a beautiful young schoolteacher, by George and John manded the the brutal Near for are remark- hastily swift vengeance Kentucky. Flewuer, with making in, injuries .of placed skeletons preserved, in pre- skeletons be is The best mound-buil- sixteen of American yes- Ancient, the served found secretary Society, 5,060,000 2,000,000 $8,820,571,016 Gen. Booth wishes the lord mayor to take aleaf out of the book of the Paris municipality and fit up, or allow the each by. individ-. to exclude the by Great assumed termed United and adopted numbers in newspapers legislation similar recently much destitute large has estimated week the and jumping arranged were only their air ship get a securely already flight was and air After Chicago not into Chicago inside, Professers of gates, audience cach 100, 000, G00 20,000,000 . $3,727,018,869 —Manufacturer. since 110 and mingled feelings ef alarm and oes 16,0G),060 etc... Totals March. much only puzzled, Ten thousand 45. 090,000 90,000,000 runs by his. farm. that he 3,000,000 30,000 Wi 4090 5,000,000 death of Wrightstown, Backs is literally over the tion of the Reading The 199,000,000 repe sprung. three passed Union. and The again painless. Dubriinger county, deputies Fifty of eounters with savages. Now and then one appeals of has for class in every joint. be*permitted grounds and <A discovered a at his leg and bit will not of the first. feet on his farm. Gambling a and plans guarantee hours world’s Fair to plete Against to the An- charge millis snapped night operations is building will have and working an who works, nine It snow Shear, operations. time. and by actiye in named visited complete—ready for A. SIXTIES. Savages Scouts—Death Mon- in, steam running while weather, E. and THE RED- the contract his business, huge monster week Mr. mill steadily Utah has construct animal drunk the on running that farmer Last it The company the fact in length come put tnrn i actime thoroughly understands specimen get keep IN’ WITH [Copyright by American Press Association.] » ATT LES with Indians were taken for granted in the development of the wild west. In fact historical lit- their will be enough year at least. tana Machinery showing the reserves that {by the BACK Killed While for op- The Kan. is one fora Lieut, that SFRUGGLE Riundred Volunteer possible minutes. twenty-five recently Groves, ere in sight to to all The and rapidly SKINS. Nine Colonel instructions with so as to have the mill ready the mine was crowd- haste. given pushed DESPERATE of ex- which and is being possible has be work COL, FORSYTIS FIGHT. and | concentrator, foundation, the Shaughnessy speed Glenco Tet for commenced ed new contract cavating chor hoisting without of The shot the mill is completed kota. ( raged. the in Warren Unisuccessinu eae mattab—aw —with Sissy Downy? He—aw—looks vewy much dejected, y’ know. ie—Ya-as; CULLINGS Bits of News From Here and There Gathered by the Use of Our Assistant Mditor—the Shears. stein was half conscious and was at once Upright? Let us suppose a cyclist mounted on his wheel and riding, say, toward the north. He finds himself beginning to tilt MISCELLANEOUS a strip of thin cane. In the hands of a muscular Warau it is are Eighth irresistible it moves much faster than the rider tilts and entitled Representative an district Emery, shall But them to again realize the fearful joy of indulging in the “sport,” and the result is that the dance continues as fashionable ag ever. e young men of the to Fourteenth Representative district consist Dance. not only north with the machine, but east also. He turns the wheel eastward. The point of support must of necessity travel in the plane of the wheel. Hence Representative. to and thet Sherwood on the way Spring, Manti, ‘All vight,” was the Fespomnse. |r ecorded minutes: the consisting it is contiguous. how- Utah Green, Representative which canvas Thistle, of of Juab coun- shall be entitled belong the fhe joyed and Twenty- on Fork, precinct At this point A loud call, the occupants wanted, Unit- morning, between sixth and Fysenty-seventh. they adultery. hands. officer he stalked at 1:30 this Fyler Effie in Deputy ed States Marshal Bowman’s up the Bench swore be district precincts precincts Thirteenth And James shall Milburn, Fountain Fairview titled Standard.] Last evening Mena Representative Arrested for Adultery. The Thistle, Lake sist of the Twelfth company. will Spanish resentative districts,and changed stands 1elm as president It is expected that the has Leal * and ty, and The whole arrangement. idea of leading main and to be a now-you-see-it-and- now-yeu-don’t-see-it be to brake of county, The and part, branch- that and Representative Spring counties, SaLv Laxe political parties are getting badly mixed of late. The party lines -ing-@ut Twelfth shall censist of eee eR, erer eeerra to cross Provo, Springville county, sentative. see.something ef the world—‘‘there is never 2 less without some small gain.” seem of Utah ties, and lying belong district Bench, The instance Wasatch, of them the-same council district. Representative shall consist of Sevier and Millard Millard county, joining onto Nevada in the extreme west; Grand county joining Colorado on the east; Emery and Sevier away counties, Representa- and one person for one Prove Grand is ought hither-and-thither; Uintah to View, shall that the parts they cut up and a and of The Con- anything” it shall shall be entitled to one Representative. Elsewhere over and to ene Representative. Sterling, fi this issue will be found the apportionment Bingham county, Lake raim, up a tree, to the people. and Mona Representative district shall Representative. like a lot of child’s play. county consist Pleasant, some territory district shall excepting Shore, Pete i to a man shall Representative. Representative shall consist of as is actually of the and looks, Silverton and Lake The and special privileges Tux redistricting completed Sandy, and county, resentative. used and needed by them be reclaimed by the government and held fer actual settlers only, and believe in the doctrine of equal Butler, Dell, Cotton- shall county, and other cer- of such Cottonwood, Tenth and as and South Tooele fleld, and owned syndicates, by railroads Union, shall consist of the now Farmers, Pleasant Valley Junction, Benjamin, Salem, Goshen, Santaquin, Payson, Fair- prohibiting lands and district shall Granger, of Salt Lake The unlhm- action te devise all foreign all land held porations of laws Al- Pleasant Creek, Ninth entitled demands vote county, of Salt Lake precincts ited quantity of silver; that the election of President, Vice-President and United States Fort, and Mountain The:Eleventh States an Cedar of tive. of knewn of the America. among to Party South River- House, Big The Tux Industrial Parties in convention at Cincinnati on the 20th formed a new national political party district Utah Representative and shall be entitled LEIDEN IO FELIS ELD the People’s and precincts Sugar consist of Summit the leather pouch. of this kind North be entitled to one Representative. We feel confident from the explanation that nothing Mill precinct to hus and Fork, of ef Brighton, precinct, master unable counties, Jordan, and American Ligth The it, that that shall Herriman, consist of Juab county the to district county, Draper be entitled to ene brought pouch West Jordan, and precincts precincts although it the left. tried to head him of was shall Lake Rep- Hunter Granite, Little Cottonwood, the to unlock return the lobby, yet during other bags and six minutes put in the:mail ‘cartier, Lehi, wood, the ‘Fer ex- six Representative of North pine, East is al- earlier latest mail the letter pouch only took Seventh The car- made up place. to of Salt Lake consist Bluffdale, Mill Creek, City question district in Salt Morgan Green, ton, consist think, the eounty shall be entitled| shall be entitled to one Representative. at at Park where and Salt Lake county, letter mail. (which largest) and in up in the eastern and western put The shall week’s we "ty satisfactorily explained. Davis precincts Jordan, at master Rep- shall be entitled to one Representative. of our letter private the Weber district Weber and shall be'entitled of Grove mail aweek City, Pleasant Point is settled for and how is and consist is the mistake point of all of esentatives. The Sixth Representative otherjufy in Representative Fifth Representative county, circum- by Fourth consist of Salt Lake City, on jury rule trial district City, to one Representative. prison- to a trial by Ogden cepting’ Ogden the nvatter s¢ys that the law is very specific arid that the right and shall be entitled te two shall consist of be fefusing Court district county, Representative of and The that in this case the lower erred er’s request. Elder representatives. the mat- was Representatives. Representative Box TPhizd consist county, ter befere Judge Anderson who held that the right to a trial Second counties, shall be entitled to ore Representative. and the man corpus brought Rich to two shall consist ef of Richards was brotight up in the Police Court of Salf Lake for some fracture of the law and asked for a jury trial. This was and shall be entitled JURY TRIALS. was for concluded and The matter. Wot long since the Commissioners’ Meeting. Fhe redistricting of the Territory Whip B a Entered ond class muil of The Indians frequently, after engaging in the whip dance, vow that they will never more submit to the ordeal, and mutually assure each other that their skins have been made tosuffer for the last time. Uncertainties You never man, ‘‘when of and ¢an of Fortunes. tell,” said a gentle- you have a good thing of- fered youinoil. I wasoffered the half of the McGeagh six acres lease in the Wildwood ela’ for $300. it made wells refused to invest. a great big mistake. The two on the siz acres came in at the rate of about 200 barrels an hour, and my receipts for one day would haye been more than many men in Pittsburg make in a year. Oil development is a great gamble at best, but I regret now that I didn’t gamble about $300 on that little lease.—Pittsburg Post. Blank Receipt hand at this office. Books constantly on savage had boasted that only once had he taken a white man’s hand in friendship, nd then it was at a council where the red men haughtily demanded the cessation of railroad building by a a under the alternative of bloody Gen. Hancock, who was commanding ihe department at the time, had answered that if war was what the Indians wanted they could have it, and Forsyth and his men were ee hat the promise was being observed a around. There wasa line of es Indians and ponies keeping eompany wita the sileut body of the Gheyonte chief. The remaining warriors had drawn off to a distance to gather strength and to whet their savage ire. the end of two or three hours they renewed the attack and kept up the fighting until dark, makinga third chargea 3 e day. The losses in Torte pand had ce severe. Every horse and mule had been killed i their tracks. Lieut. Beecher had beer shot beyond acye of recovery, and had diec ee vainiy pleading with his comrades to put him out of agony. Four scouts were dead ii their pits; a volunteer surgeon, Dr. Moore, was dead and sixteen scouts were wounded, Col. Forsyth had two wounds, one a shattered leg bone. It was evident that. the distressed party would have to stand a siege. They were a hundred miles from the nearest post, Fort Wallace, and no other help was tobe looked for. The ammunition supply, thanks to the self control ofthe men, was ample for some dai pieatad there’ was & lack, but steaks fe the’ slaughtered apate would Keep 0oft: famine’ Se allant _leader’ said to sell our lives dex sly i in the attempt.”’? Under his orders a spring was: eas ae in the sand, a parapet was_made all around the island, and the bédies of horses and their saddles were placed so‘as: to stop the bullets. The serviceable parts’ of the horseflesh were prepared as food and inkled: with gunpowder ag a uts Voluntcered t sak through the Indian lines during the’ night and summon aid, and they left atfhidnight, crawling stealthily the first two* miles. The following day the Indians kept up y hot fire on the imprisoned scouts and made’ several attempts to draw them from cover. False truce’ were put up. and these, failing to be respectei-the Indians went off out of sight in the hope of putting the camp off its guard. When this trick did: not succeed the savages returned and ventured close enough to fling taunts at their’ enemies, to go: 1d them to anger and revenge. Bat Forsyth’s men were true border ee as cool as they were brave, and submitted to their fate like men. the aaa night of the siege two more volunteers started out for relief, to insure communication-with Fort Wallace in case’ | the first two had met with disaster and the | second should be more fortunate. The third day the savages kept up their demon» strations, but made no effort to charge ae camp. The wounded scouts snffered t ribly for want of attendance and ee ment. The horsemeat soon ae and had to be charred in the could be eaten. Fortunately a ic abil was attracted to thecamp by the odor of burning and that was killed an@& served in scant morsels. The third night the two scouts who had ventured abroad on the second night returned, and reported. that the camp was hemmed in by hostiles, and there was no hope of passing their wary sentinels. Eb he men in the camp passed several days’ n their wretchedness, but preferred the de ath that awaited them there, unless: speedily succored, to the inevitable cruelty of savage conquerors. Ou Sept. 23 the In+ dians disappeared wi ithout offering further’ attle. ‘The loss of war chief Roman Nose had taken the ARE spirit out of them, “and noremaining brave was able to rekindle their valor sufficiently to hazard another charge. a eee TUESDAY, MAY 26, 1891. DIS- £ as) LEGISLATIVE TRICTS. 5 NEW fiE W ASATCT WAVE. THE TRENCHES. On the nis an of the 2ist.the scouts that had left the island the first night of the battle reached Fort Wallace. They had passed ‘the Indian sentinels with good fortune and concealed their trail so skillfully as to prevent pursuit. Prompt action was taken by the commandant of the post, and a mounted force pushed through to the camp by the 25th in time to save the lives of the: heroes who were fast giving way under the gnawings of famine and their wounds. They had madea nt fightandddeser ved a better fate than . become food for wolves. Col. Forsyth’s wounds were’ ai a Serious condition, but he recovered, to take the field some years later in fighting the tercible Apaches in Arizona. The experienced scouts of Forsyth'’s party estimated the Indians : fought them at the island camp at about 959, and from information obtained fron m brayes who participated and afterward became friendly Forsyth verified this statement, and proved that his gallant band had stood out ee odds of nearly twenty to one. The uecess was not because of superior oe either. The redskins had the most improved. rifles, repeaters at that, and an abundance of ammunition: The scouts were cool in the moment of supreme danger ae qnade every bullet tell. The Indizsdis lost seventyfive killed and nearly two aed eee The casualties in Forsyth’s camp were: twenty-three in ail. The victory so dearly purchased with the ie ae noble lives was oe no means a barThe death of the Cheyenne war chiet ‘na the braves who fell with him was avenged in Indian fashion by depredations on scattered and defenseless settlements foratime. Butaday of reckoning came. When cold weather set in tha Custer followed the Cheyenne band toward their haven in the warm valleys of Indian territory. He fell in with the war’ party of the tribe, which was headed by’ the cruel and cr afty Black Eettle, a suesessful thief and murderer, Sut no warrior. Custer attacked his village at daylight: Noy. 27, and literally wiped out the band, killing 150 warriors, including Blacl Kettle. After this the scattere — ennes surrendered in small parties, and. were soon gathered upon reservations. The terrific onslaught by Roman Nose on Col. Forsyth’s few but brave men may well be called the last une of the Cheyennes. RGE L. KILMER. Q a Bee Butler Versus Choate. A case which Gen. Butler met Mr.Choate is ae) The former P deqoied a lar, ge share of his argument te warning: the jury to beware of the magic spell of Choate’s eloquence, which é¢aused men to lose their reason’ and. become inéapable of judging between right and wrong and to award their verdict as a tribute to oratory rather than as.a just decision. The effective Ww arning caused Choate’s eloquence to seem: the chief issue in the ease. Consequently the great orator dared not exercise it, andi in his aoe by say ne oe speech shall be the speech of a plain old man.” but Choate ee not Choate 4 ta = non-elo= quent speech, and Gen. Butler won.—Boston Adver tise. Nervous Debility. A gentleman having oe cured: of Nervous Prostration, Seminal § “Weal Ikness, Premature’ scretion youthful. folly, is aes ‘To who wish, and Decay, and all the evil effects of early inde~ make known to others the simp! de of Self and Cure. these to wilk give him their symptoms, he will send (free): by return mail, a copy of the receipt so suecesefully used in his case. dence, Jas. W. Pinxnuy, Nex ddress, in’ 42 Cedar conSt., t-o-14|91 |