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Show ecor: THE NEPHS Wcrk Will Ec Pesurred. s J pm pm ner . wek When you want CARPETS, LINOLEUMS, CURTAINS, TABLE AND COUCH COVEPS, We have the plete sto:k tD 'prices. brcst en J rncst comselect from, with lowest Big assortment of all the latest novelties in Ladies' Collars and Belts just in. Call arid sec them. Chas. Foote & Sons m nt h-"- e' ' y the 1 home;, Progressive "G3" was tho game that furnished tho a musemcnt during the forepart A beautifully of the evening. decorated China tea set was tho ladies' first prize carried off by Mrs. J. A. Hyde. Mrs. W. T. 1 Denn, by a mighty struggle cap tured the ladies' booby prize. H The gentlemen's first prize, a x V silver paper knife, was won by G. M. Whitmore. Senator Whit-morcould not keep pace with his son, but seemed pleased to land the booby priae, a crying nothing more until gn nud per1 mission by the department, tho ditch being located altogether on the Payson Reserve. Work will begin immediately and the job ; pushed rapidly to completion. e I mSh if Our new fall line of Ladies', Misses and Child rens Coats is now complcto in every particular. Correct in style; moderate in price, and superior, if possible, in high class coat making, to any thing wo have ever before shown. Our Special. The Palmer I v Garment. doll baby. After the game was finished a K luncheon was spread consisting v Handler Stock Company. Manti, Utah, Oct Ladies' Coats. Tho first event in the social circle of Nephi for the season just begun, was a party given by Mrs. A. V. Hague in honor t f her husband's birthday, on last Wednesday evening at their government to pioceed with ti e constructicn of their stone culwhich is vert haf.k i.J t. intended to convey a stream of s water and the flow of numerous small springs that sirks in the S gravel nnd oes to waste overy to the main channel of our H year, 3t stream. M irrigation Work was begiyi on this ditch 39 season and the job almost $ last X completed when the reserve agent ordered the company to do Royal Elue Rubbers arc th best. Ask for them. Party. Sixty-thre- e The Nephi Irrigation company was this ' . No. 42. Nephi City, Utah, Friday. October 14. 1904. Vol !5. Hyde & Whitmore Co. 5, 1904. of salad and sandwiches, cake, sherbet and macaroons, and Mgr. Opera House, Nephi, Ut. home made cream candies Dear Sir: The Handler Stcck company Hunch was served generously presented a very creditable per- and the amusements continued formance of "Captriin Heme" amid jokes jollity until the small and "Miss Hersey from Jersey" hours. Mrs. Hague Is noted for The people were well pleased. always doing things right when she starts in, and this occasion Yours fraternally, N. H. FETT, Mgr. "V2 strictly inkoeping with her i. siul correct methods of entcr- Manti opera bouse. This company will play i tv o t lining, Among those present were night engagement at thi Xplit Senator and Mrs. Whitmore, Mr opera house, begin rirg Saturday October 15th, with th.it famous and Mrs. G. M. Whitmore, Mr. melodrama, "Cap.. Hi rne.' Seats and Mrs. J. II. Edgheill, Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Hyde, Mr. and Mrs. 50 now on sale. Pri .. W4 T. Denn, Mr. and Mrs. Hoy T. Iowa n, Mr. ana Mrs L.ureucj First Ward Mutuals. Giles, Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Cook, The Mutuals of th t;rst ward Mrs. WJ. Sparks, Mrs. J. W. will be held Sunday night, Octo- Whitmore, Mr. and Mrs. Wallace ber lGth at 6:3o p. m. Mangum, Mrs. W. J. himmiu, Mrs. Delpbia Teasdale, Dr. Man-tor- , Preliminary Program. Misses Neva Booth, Ida Current Historical Events. W. C. Andrews Burton and AUio Bryan. T. W. Vickers Solo Poem Pearl Sparks Fire Dept. Complimentary Instrumental Selection. Invitations arc out for a ball Neva Hooth. and banquet at Miller's hall an! Forrest hotel, Friday evening at Too Sanpete Valley Railway 7:S0 o'clockcomplimentary to Company is having considerable the Nephi volunteer fire dojart trouble with gunners and others ujent given by the Excehior along its line, who, in the failure' ' Mercantile company, of bettor sport, or- - for practice, Tr c pcrfioncl of thc Nophi vol. . . . . are breaking the Company's tel- U Cjlill I VII 19 1U1' UUllVl lUt egraph and telephone wire insu- lows: If. D. Allred. chief; Win. lators. This is causing considerable annoy ance and inconven Bailey, Asst. Chief; Jas. Bigler, ience to the company and besides Saul Chase, II. D. Goldsbrough, being expensive, it interferes Bert Sparks, Wm. Stanley, T. C. with communication between Winn. A. V. Hague, Lcroy stations. The company is keeplookout for these Brough. a do-licio- Apostrophe to Lgbor. Labor, the mighty magician, walks forth into a region uninhabited ud1 waste; bo looks earnestly at the scenes so quiet in its desolation, then wand, those dreary wearing his wonder-workinvalleys smile with golden harvests; tLose barren mountain slopes are clothed with foliage; the furnace blazes; the anvil rings; the busy "wheel whirls round; the town appears; the mart of commerce, temples of religion rear high their lofty fronts; a forest of waste, gay with varied pennons, rise from the harbor, representatives of far off regions make it their resort; science enlists the elements of earth and heaven in its service; art. awakening clothes its strength with beauty; cizilixition smiles; liberty is glad; humanity rejoices, for tbo voice of industry and gladness is heard on overy side, working men walk worthy of your vocatio. You havo a noble escutcheon, disgrace it not. Labor, allied with virtue may look up to heaven and not blush. The man and woman who are above labor, and despiso the laborer, show a want of common cense. Labor achieves grander victories, it weaves more durable trophies, it holds wider sway than the conqueror. His name becomes tainted and his monuments crumble, but labor converts his red battle fields into gardens and erects monuments significant of better things. The roblest thing in the world is honest labor. X g His mother, Dometilo vras a descendant of the early Britons whom Julius Caesar found difiicnlt to subdue in his cor quests CtS years B.C. Tho archives of tho cuiiy Henriod family contain genealogies of ancestor.1 that can bo tracod hack to Henry IV, King of Fravce. Mr Heuiiod was converted to tl ; Mormon faith and baptized in tho Seine river, i r Havre, on the 2d day of November, 1831, by Hider Curtis E. Bolton. A few days later a branch of tho church was organized at Havre, and an English elder, Joseph Hyde, was sent to pres.de. On the first day of January, lh"", ho embarked for America and on November Gth of the samor year he arrived at Salt Lake City, ooon after hd Mr. engaged with Joseph L Hey wood as clerk. wood U. was th time S. at Marshal for tho it Hoy of also Utah, territory president of h lately organ i7. d settlement called Nephi Mr. Henriod was, therefore, thc first clerk of tho first IJ. S. Mar shal of thc territory of Utah. " While in Silt Lake he bocme associated with George D. Watt., and nsi:ed in inaugurating what was called tho "Deserct Alphabet," composed of phonetic sounds represented by newly formed and easily shaped letters. This was destined lj become the system to be adopted by tho Mormon px;opls. It was taught in Salt ffike City during tbo w. liters of '5 and ji,and v.s afterward adopted and taught in the various ward schools. In the meantime tho church had r.n edition of graded books printed fur the use .f tho scholia in thc Territory. This systora was abandoned besharp ing cause the church found it impracticable to revolu-tion';7- e vandala and anyone apprehend Some Seasonable Advice. the world and reprint all lite books in tho ed for shooting or destroying inIt may be a piece of superfluous English language. sulators, will be prosecuted to to urge people at thi seaadvice In the year lK"il ho came to whero bo the full extent of the law. son of the year to lay in a supply resided till the time of his death, vrith the excepA Mr. Richardson of the U. S. of Chamberlain's Cough llemedy. tion of short intervals. in almost sure to be neinled beThe funeral took place from thc family resiGeological Survey was here last It much morn is and winter fore over, dence yesterday afternoon. Tuesday for the purpose of in- ar and results prompt tatiefectory vestigating the question of un- obtained when taken n Hnn ia On Saturday night, October l.'lh. that clever der ground currents with a view cold is before has contracted and it actress, Miss Alice McCr rkle, assisted by tho to recommending that the debecome in settled hth Handler Stock company, v.jll oieii a two night's thesyfteni, partment send an exuert here can b done the only keping ly next summer to locate artesian engagement at the N hi opera house. This comi at Thin hand. remedy remedy water. is the only company now on tho road that ia so widely known and so altogether pany J. A. Hyde Jr. left for Nevada good that no one should hesitate playing all royalty pliyn, at popular prices. Tho Monday in tho interest of the about buying it in preference to opening bill will be the famous melodrama, ''CapHe auy other. It ij for sale by all tain Heme. Prices, N phi Plaster & Mfg. Co. 23, and 00c. Scats now will bo absent for some months. druggiets. on sale. tic origine. Dt-lin- j , 111 h Wave. After an illness of more than two years dura-lio-n Gus Henriod died at about two o'clock Monday afternoon. His malady was u complication of heart and kidney troubles which resulted in drop sy, the immediate cause of his death. Gustavo Louis Edward Hernial wa born 'at Havre, France, August 20, lb35. iih father wan a dcsccudcnt of "Helvetia," supposed to bo of Cel- L.5-3- 5 The New York Subway. The New York City subway is declared to be the greatest engineering feat ever attempted on earth far greater than the building of tho. pyramids or irrigating Egypt. Train are now running nil night between the City Hall and Ninety-sixtStreet and conductors are "getting their hand in" by announcing stations to imaginary passengers. It will shortly be in full operation If the excavations were in a single tunnel six feet high and three feet wide, it would reach from New York to Chicago Tho track approaches are seventy miles in length, all under ground. The timber employed would build 10,000 two story houses, and the rock taken out wou'd make a respectable imitation of the Groat Wall of Chilli, a structure three feet thick, eight feet high, and and Goo miles long. Its express trains will make 0 miles an hour. It cost thirty five million dollars. Both the republican and democratic politicians of Uintah county seem to know the value of printer's ink. E.ieu patty has chartered a double column in tho Vernal Express which will bo edit'I his ed by tho respective county committees. plan would appear to be a good one where there is but one piper published in the county. Each party can then set forth its party principles for tbo sfclightcnment of the people. As an educational move it will be a good investment Wasatch Gus Kcnriod Passes Away. K J N-ph- l I ; I ; ! |