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Show EVENING NEWS. FttbHmkcd DaUy, JSxeeptrd, AT FOUR O'VLOCK. Sunday PUBLISHED PRINTED ANO BY THE DESERET. NEWS COMPANY. CHARLES EDITOR. W. PENROSE, Mcptcmbcr , IS87. TUB CONSTITUTIONAL! Thi New York Sun of August 30th has a long editorial on "The offer of the Mormons." review of the "pro- Bin posed Constitution" drafted by the Convention. It explains the Ut facts in regard to the composition and work of the Convention, pronounces the general provisions of the Coasti-tntiframed by it "complete and satisfactory," and decides that it "compares favorably with the organic law of any State in the Union." The sections which bavc been the subject of so much discussion are tben Riven in full with the following comments: "The arguments most frequently as a nrged against admitting.ofUtah the Mor State, upon the promise mons to abandon polygamy, are met by tueae several provisioas. The first objection has been tbat any Constitutional prohibition would be as a btit nul.lfled, after by the failure of the Mormon L gi Matures to entct tlie statutes necesHut the sary to give it VffYct proposed Const .tJtion ttelf makes the a and plural marriage the peiulty. The section beprovides comes operative, as law, without auy on. further Another Abjection has been that aft ?r to the Union oy securing admission of submission, t'oe Mor the pretence moa Legislatures aud people, if so disposed, could immediately repeal the Mtt polygamy pledge, or alter it to suit their wlsue; ami tbat it would tben b beyond taa power of tlte Fedto eral But the Constitution fenouaces the proposed of or as iar power repeal amendment, me as polygamy until of the Federal CoDgress sliall be ob'ajbed. A third objection has been that, even if trie forms of prosecution and conviction were observe'!, it would be withm the powei ol a Munuon Governor to pardon fie convicted poiyga-ruioutright. The proposed Constitution practically delegates tbe power oi paruou ior suca onenecS to fje- of the Lnited States. ITesideLt Ii" is true that tbero are other loop-haltor the evasion if the law not provided a. a, t in tlie form of Co"siitutiou which the Crab Con vention has adoiud: Hut this is It would be ii:iposlble t)cae to provide against tbeui. The execution ot any law must depend iu the Iook run upon the consent of the govcertain ext-the erned, ofand to aMormons asfaith the must be good sumed, if their offer is accepted. It is true, also, that grave 'questions of Constitutional power are involved in tbv extraordinary provisions widen Jmake Congress and the practically Federal Executive trustees for the f tbe laws ' asiaiu.it polygamy. It may be Constitutional lor a State to delegate sucti powers; would it oe Constitutional for CQngress and the President to attempt to exercise them? so far r.s the attitude of Nuver'heless, the Mormons is concerned, we flird no reason for questioning it sincerity, or lor refusing to cousider tae proposition asooe tuat is made in entire good on adm-s-io- . . . -- iiit-rfer- e as-st- n' st es i.- - nt " falta." The Sun throws light on the whole question at issue before the couutry. The sections of the Constitution under consideration were framed with special intent aud desire to meet the objections named by toe Sun, and which were generally interposed by the press when the subject aS Utih's Stttehoad stirred up general attention. The only poinU opeu 1 3 dispute are tae intentions of tae "Mormous" as to carrying out tbe penalties against and fae constitutional polygamy, powers involved ia ttie provisions Concerning pardons and amendments. The intentions of any body of citizens in passing measures harmonious .with the laws and institutions of the country must be presumed to be bona fide. Only overt acts by the some people, at variance with those measures can set aside that presumption. Time is necessary to see waether such ac.s are committed. What any community will do when clothed witb the prerogatives of something thaj would require the prophetic gitt to determine. It beyond the ken and out of tne province of the national government. Speculations and opinions ob this point might oe indulged in With reference to auy aud every applicant for admisin into the Union, as a State, but they should not be ! to iuterpose between auy peoand those liberties that are essenple tial to republican government. The establishment and perpetuation of that form c f government in the prospec tive State is west chiefly concerns Congress, and if that appears to be safely guarauteed by the charter pre seated for approval, mere opinions as to sincerity or some shadowy future possibility are sadly out of place. Objecting commentators on the con stitutionality of the provisions re strictingtbe amending and pardoning powers of the proposed State, have not appeared to look upon the matter in all its bearings. They have said a icreat deal about the lack of constita tlonal authority in Congress and the President t j interfere iu affairs tbat properly belong te fie individual States which Ts all very good and quite creditable to some Journals which are a tt to ai!voa'e too much nationaJ power to suit strong believers In States' rights but tuey have failed to recognize the full powers of the State to regulate the matters under discussion. Use not a State the right to provide in its own Constitution its own method of amendicg that Constitution? The same ques tion applies to the pardoning power II it pleasta to restrict itself may it not do so by common consent, particularly when that restriction is to secure harmony with the rest of the nation on questions that have agitated the country? The manner of making amendments to State Constitutions is not uniform, neither is the manner of regulating the pardoning power. And if there is fear of Utah's changing the provisions in reference to a practice which has made more noise ia this virtuous country than almost any evil that really threatens the life pf the nation, what is there in the national Constitution which forbids tbe special regulation respecting snch amendment, when that regulation is of the State's own making? Congress may not impose it. bat TBE PEOPLE have the right to originate it and bind themselves by ft if tbey will. And if there is danger tbat when convictions are haauudertbe penal part of tbe State Constitution tbe Governor will par don tbe offender, what is there in the Federal Constitution that forbids a State to make a special provision restricting the Governor's power of pardon in that particular? Neither Congress nor the President has tbe power to interfere, but Tujt People have tbe right t establish tbe peculiar regulation for their own government. Bat it will be asked, a suggested by thetit,' will it be constitutional for Congress or the President to exercise tbe powers delegated by a State? Ob serve, if you please, kind friends, that the proposed State of Utah imposes no powers on tl;e Congress or the President. It does not presume to say they or eltLer of them shall In such per-iait- te and snch cases "exercise" certain powers. It dees not pretend to thrust any duty upon them. It contemplates no ench absurdity. Arguments on these points might have been spared. The Utah constitution provides simply in relation to any proposed amendment as to the punishment of polygamy, that thongh passed in tbe usual form it shall not take effect nnless approved by Congress and proclaimed by the President. Suppose they will not "'exercise" this approval, what then? Why, tbe amendmer will hot be valid, that's all. It will be n amendment made so by the people it affects. They cannot complain and the country, surely, will not. If tbe governor pardons a man convicted of polygamy and the pardon is sent op to the President ef the United States and he will not "exercise" his approval, the man will not be pardoned, tbat is all. And will not tbat also suit the country? Can any better or more rigid restrictions, in order to meet tbe objections of the country, be framed than those adopted by the Utah Convention? If fo, why do not some of the learned and "const itutional" carpers mention them? Tbe methods proposed are unusual, perhaps, bnt it cannot be shown that they are impracticable for the ends designed, nor that they violate any provlslojf of the constitution of the United States. The Sun has very fairly put these matters before the public, manifesting a disposition to deal iustlv and con sistently with a people arid a question which have been greatly misrepresent ed. We commend the comments of the Sun on the peculiar portions of the Utah Constitution to the attention of the press in all parts of the country. SABBATH SCHOOL SKSSIONS. anneal meeting, the last one having been held at Copenhagen, Denmark. It Is undoubtedly the most cosmopolitan and polyglot gathering since the time of Babel, nearly all the nations where of kind civilization has auy The represented. looting being delegates are spoken ot as being in the front rank of their calling, quite intellectual and bent upon the furtherance ef the cause which brings them together. The science of medicine and surgery is now so rnucfl further advanced than at any other time of which history makes mention- - that such gatherings as that at Washington become something of a necessity; each is in possession of some new point, or wants information concerning a discovery, and as a consultation is always resorted to where doubt or difficulty appears, snch can thus appeal to the greatest consultative body ever organized. The proceedings so far are harmonious and dignified. THE CHICAGO "MAIL" ON THE UTE WAR. at'i makes the followcomments editorial upon the diffiing culty with Colorow : "It is almost impossible as yet to foresee what the outcome of the present difficulty between the Ute Indians and the white settlers on tbe old Ute reservation in Colorado will be. But it is becoming more certain day by day tbat the difficulty is one of which the whites have no reason to feel proud. Of course, in tbe long run, the Indians must go, and it is quite possible that Sheriff Kendall and his supporters think they are but hasfsja-is- g the operations of manifest destroy in putting as many of Colorow's unsavory fibe under the sod as possible. This is the common frontier idea. Judging from tbe facts so far as they are knows, tbe whites originated the and have done present provoke Colo-roeverything possible to and bis braves to go on the The Indians, however, seem to have refrained from everything but and this speaks acts of well for their sagacity. Cruel , experience has taught the red man that his white brother of the frontier covets his ponies and to have bis lands, and means them by fair means or foul mostly foul and there is in this instance a that Colorow and his compossibility have lor once outwitted their patriots aforesaid brothers by smartly refusing to engage in a war that could only end in thetr practical extinction." The Chicago w at the last meeting of the Sunday School Union one of tbe speakers deprecated the fact that some of the Sabbath Schools closed their sessions at half past e.even o'clock, thus keeping them in session an hour and a half. H appeared to be impressed with the idea that two hours would be a more appropriate time to keep the children together. We are not prepared to state that definitely - and unqualifiedly the "shorter would be session the more beneficial, but we believe that close observation has demonstrated that it is bo easy undertaking to engatre tbeattention of a large body of children from five or six years of 4ge and upward erector an hour and a half. Af er they become restless and tired all attempts to instruct their minds are almost worse that' useless. When tbat point is reached the shutters, so to speak, are placed over the mental windows and the light fails to penetrate to the interior. The comparison drawn between the process ot sustaining the mind and that by which the physical vitality is maintained is by no means new, but is very appropriate. Tocrowd food upon the digestive apparatus after it has received enough to satisfy the demands of nature retards assimilation and enfeebles the body. So with matters peitaining to the misd. A few clear cut truths impressed upon and appropriated by the mind gives mental strength and ircreases the power to appropriate additional wholesome instruction. A larger quantity leads to mental confusion and indistinctness. When children especially the "young ones are held under physical and mental constraint too long at a time the jeftect is almost sure to be detrimental in a general sense, causing a degree of nervous irritation. If the attention of children can be held without straining for two hours, probably that length of time would be the more appropriate. If not, an hour aud a half would be better, as a number of superintendents have, doubtless, found it to be by experience, and therefore usually dismiss at half past eleven. The subject is one that will bear thinking about before the adoption of any definite rule. The remarks of the same speaker who brought up this point, at the Union meeting, upon the necessity of the teachers being competent and prepared" to engage tbe attention- of the children were sound and timely. The ideas they embodied in tbat regard cannot b too closely adopted by those actively engaged in Sunday School work. A brief synopsis of them will be found in the minutes. . war-patc- h. self-defen- se, PKESIDENTUL BE3IOVAL3. As illustrative of the fact that President Cleveland is a Democrat and therefore appears to hay e incurred the s. of the New York Mail and It refers to the following official acts on his part : "Governors of Territories All were changed before January 1 and Democrats appointed. Secretaries of Territories Seventeen out of eighteen have been ill-w- Ex-pres- ill changed. Surveyors-gener- al All have been changed. Registers of land offices Ninety seven out of 104 have been changed. -- began TO-DA- TELEGilAMS Y'S to Assist the Evieted and Suffering Irish Tenants. A Movement 1 latest advices tae remains of a hundred and thirty victims had been found and extricated from the whole sale funeral pyre to which without warning or preparation they had been sent; this suggests the horrid conclu-sio- u that many more are to be found, since the work of recovery so soon after the catastrophe, when all is a mass of cinders and embers, must necessarily be slow and tedious. Seme, perhaps, have been completely incinerated or the remains so scattered and blended witb tlie debris that they never will be found, and thus only an approximation of tbe total mortality will be all tbat is ever compiled. It would be different if the rescued bodies could be identified, but as it is, those who have friends missing wilt conclude that tbe lost ones are among those whose identity cannot be determined and let it rest at tbat. It Is not a little singular that in this (Jay of advanced scientific development and mechanical and chemical invention, fire proof buildings as imposing in proportions and as elegant in architecture as those which are not, cannot or are not constructed, and the fact tbat none of them are sufficiently provided with means for ready and rapid egress is also much behind the advancement ot the age. In this latter respect there is lees excuse than in the former, becauee less ingenuity s required and the additional expense would be little if anything more than if the stereotyped designs of construction were followed. Until the stern hand ef tbe law takes bold of the subject and compels those who erect places of amusement to provide every possible safeguard and protection, it is probable that we shall continue to have the almost periodical holocaust with the regular verdict of "nobody to blame." By Telegraph to the News. Oarrett's Successor. Baltimore, Sept. 6. The American this morniBg says the question as to who shall succeed President Garrett is settled. The man whom the syndi cate have settled upon as possessing an tne requirements ior tne place is Samuel Spencer, tbe present first vice president of tbe B. & O. road. Not only did his ability as a manager and his work in connection with the road commend him, but when he conducted the negotiations which ended in the contract, the syndicate became so thoroughly impressed with bis qualifications tbat it took only a short time to agree upon him as Garrett's successor. Tbey recognize tbe fact that be will give the road a administration and progressive will do as much as any man can to maintain its independence, while steering clear of competition. Thechoieeof Spencer is with Garrett's inn concurrence and approval. Robbing n Cardinal Baltimore, Sept. 6. The residence of Cardinal Gibbons was robbed on Sunday of two valuable rings, one of which was a present for Pone Leo. No cine to the thief has been obtained. Tae Preu on tae Flrvt. LOndon, Sept. 6. The Standard says the sad similarity between tbe Exeter theatre fire and previous disasters shows a culpable disregard of the teachings of experience. is sale to say ine Mews says: that one effect of thisit awful disaster will be a general law governing tbe construction and arrangement of public places throughout the kingdom. Alter this accident and tbat of tbe Opera Comique in Paris, we ought io require no more warning. Ala (or the Sfdj. Dublin, Sept. 6 Messrs. Dillon and O'Brien have signed a notice calling a convention of delegates for all the league branches in fLimerick County tO meet at LimpTlrb r' r tha nnrnr.cu r.t .' JJ . . a plau for raising a fnnd in arranging aid of evicted tenants and to counteract the landlords' efforts at extermi nation. The Faleat omen. WAsmxdTo.v, Sept. ft. The com missioner of patents, in a synopsis of his iinnnal report says that at the close of the fiscal year ending June 80th, the . THE DOCTORS' CONGRESS. tf Tub Medical Congress now at Washington is a pretty In session good-size- d aggregation of humanity , some five thousand delegates, besides those who accompany them and numerous spectators being present. This is the ninth St u PACKED WITH BODIES, there while at the head of the stairs were scores of others piled on top. had Another lot ol unfortunate victims was rushed to tbe door when the alarm tne rstairway oiucacu given, but found . m v,,.f tuna and escape eut on. iu and tJi them reached the flames had "'"" horrible death. in the. viThere were pitiful scenes of the theatre this morning, cinity as friends and relatives of supposed victims waited to recover the oodies. In many cases fathers and mothers both perished and nn(Tur..l a NUMEROUS CHILDREN means of are thus left without were burned so that on v a small cinder remained. Tha mtmrifr of DerSOCS severely It is feared the deaths jured is sixty. will reach 140. sup-bodi- es Disastrous Failure. Smith London, Sept. 6. Greenway Warwick has Greenway's bank at failed. The bank bas been established repfor a century and had the highest It is feared utation forwillsoundness. ruin. cause widespread the failure Officer Robinson Dead. & P. L. CniCAGO, Sept. Robinson, who was shot by a Chinaman, died last nigbt. ChowtheLoa, the county murderer, is locked up in jail. Heavy Figures. the reCincinnati, Sept. & L. E. of trustee Harper of the port no had firm the that Co., it appears value ol real estate and that the face the assets, consisting of stocks, notes, cash, etc., was bonds, tbe appraised while $136,698, Other assets value was $8,610. were book accounts the face value of which were $117,173, appraised at $94,134, making the total appraised Value of assets $103,202. The total i44, the in direct liabilities are $1,462, as indorsers liabilities direct Among the debts is $1,692,073 Harper one of $358,000 from E. and it appears that this firm endorsed firm of The firms. for Harper's other E L. Harper &Co. was an iron commission firm; the show is that they would cent on give creditors about 4 per their claims. fficer 6.-F- TIIK LATKST HORROR. THt LOSS OF LIFE BT THE F.XETEB The destruction of the Theatre Royal, FIBE SUPPOSED TO Exeter, by fire last night is another of BE 140. those appailiBg calamities which have become so frequent of lata years that the horror which they produce seems One of the Stairways Literally to be somewhat blunted by reason of Packed with Corpses Terfamiliarity. It is terrible to read of at rible Situations. as great a distance as this, and what must it have been to those who were present while the hungry flames were THE MOBILIZATION OF THE FKEN'CH ARM PBONOCM'ED A GBATI devouring tint building, and beard tbe FYlJfQ SUCCESS. agonizing shrieks aud screams for help from men, women and children? And what an awful spectacle was that which followed, when the lire fiend had A Number of Interesting News relaxed his destructive grasp and the. Paragraphs from Various work of taking out bodies all charred Points. At - VJ Methodist leyan a became Church, local preacher in the Lowestoft circuit, a zealous advocate and successful con verter. He established himself in business as builder, undertaker and general conductor. In the early part of 1849, .tie became interested in the teachings of the Elders of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-daSaints. Accepting the same, be was bap tized by lder Thomas Smith in the City of Norwich, was ordained an Elder and shortly afterwards appointed liesident of the Lowestoft branch of the Church. The meetings were then held in a stable in Randscore, a very obscure and uninviting place for religions assemblages, vfith his characteristic zeal he extended bis labors and preached in tbe adjacent villages and . Tne Exeter Horror. London. Sept. 6 The victimi thD hnrnimr of the Theatre Koal Salt people.'As night were mostly working nut out a thp fljirr.es were bodie? for force searching began large The stairway leading to the galler: was laterally of LEJT8E STOCK and U all Per at a towns of Gt. Yarmouth and Beccels, and became abundantly successful in bring-nmany converts into the Church, Latla '50 he' built a chapel for the ter day Saints, in St; Peters - Street, capable of seating 2'X or 250 persons. In January, 1833, he sold out large stpetr ef goods, a schooner and all effects, and, accompanied by his wife, 'three sons tad six daughters embarked on the ship Gelcondar for New Orleans ; steamed up the Mississippi toSt.Louis;taie there six weeks, and moved onward to Keukuk. While journeying through Iowa lite was thrown from a horse receiving Severe injuries. He arrived in Salt Lake City in September 1853 and settled in the Twelfth Ward. He was Ordained a High Priest the same Tear, and commissioned a lieutenant of jver Greys in the Nauvoo Legion ia 1S54 passeoz through the iamine or iwj. in .'general;Mtodus of the Saints he moved t6 Springvillle.where he learned,-o- the death of his eldest son, Samuel, in Willia nsburg IX. Y.. while returning from a mission with his brother Robert. In 1862 .he was called on a mission to Great Britain, labored in his native county, and returned in 1864. For many years he took an active part laboring as Teacher, home missionary, etc., and was always spoken. of as a faithful, zealous I consistent Lattci day Saint aud an honest He brthed his last at iu a. m. on Monday. Aug. 29th, 1887 at the ripe age of He was the 79 years 3 months &u4 23 days. father of 11 children, 8 of whom survive him. His funeral services were conducted at Elders the Twentieth Ward meeting;-house- , John T. Game. Geo. B. Wallace, C. li. Sav age, John Sharp Sen., E. Snelgrove, Geo. Romney, Sen., and S. B. Young officiating. His pall bearers were eight ot his eldest grandsons, preceedied by twelve of his younger grandsons. Many of the Elders and Saints formerly in England, will him kindly for his generous aid in the emigration. Honor to his same and and peace to his.ashesJI Lowestoft, Journal, Norfolk JVJeir and JfiZ temhial Star please copy. Offer a mm r 1 1 Barnes d&s Mi Mi, a tcatify to the wonderful cure S wroasht by Us Aaey seven-houses- f Stock, Honey. roc-rl- . Provision Harfcou. Dkskret News Office, Salt Lake City, Sept. NOTIONS IN IMMENSE VARIETY KLERKDOK, of. Dchamxl Clark, Mass. Farmer, LyiB, A bo'tle of Angostura Bitters to flavor your lemonade or any other cold drink will keep you free from Dlspep-siand all diseases Colic, Diarrhoea dliref-tlvorsrans. from the oriprinatlne Be sure tr get the genuine Angostura a, manufactured by Dr. C. G. B. Sikokrt per ton (!baled) (baled) Lucem, (loose)... Hay, redtop (loose)........ Hay, timothy, (loose) Beans per 100 Carrots per bushel Onions per bushel Hay. lucern, pe.-to- n 6 6 10 14 75 85 50 50 00 00 750 7 50 12 60 18 00 . 9 00 S .00 .25 1 0J 18 00 13 00 7 00 10 00 12 00 5 00 35 1 50 GROCERIES. Eggs per doz Table batter Cooking " Home Cured Varl- - Bacon... Buying Selling 16 25 15 Breakfast Home Cured Side Bacon... Eastern Core J" 'Breafrtast 11 Sons. FOR SALE! first class Stock Apply toHknr- Cohn & Co. . dtt F. & a' 17X 30 W 13 10 14 Bacon..'.. On last Tuesday afternoon a most 11 on Eastern Cured D. 8. Short murderous plot was consummated 16 Hams Cured the line of the Union Pacific, some Eastern 14 12X H. M. Cheese five miles west of this city, but the Eastern 15 known antil to- Pride ofCheese.. Tea facts were not made Japan ',a na that the parties see would It StX day. p.noera... 85 .' the scheme were unacquainted Gunpowder Tea 65 with the time of the running 01 trains. Japan Garden Tea 341.' Tea Otherwise the loss of life and property Japan Package (15 Tea Breakfast English would have beenappalling. Evidently Boast 40 Java. a train the train wreckers expected 29 Green Java.... from the west, and so placed a tie Boast Mocha across the track so that it would catch Green Mocha. 27 in the pilot, lift the engine from the Boast Rio... 2t track and hurl it down an embank- Green Uio. SO 7 100 Sugar pr ment. Fortunately the first train to Granula'd 7 S5 ..... A Sugar,... from the came east, road over the pass 7 25 Extra C... which aftr shovine the tie along the GoldO 7 00 .... out it 300 200 threw feet some or 10 track Oat Loaf..., 7 lb of harm's way. Cheyenne Tribune. Utah pr Honey, 65 Molasses, (Utah prgal....... noon About 2. 2 00 Pueblo, Col., Sept. Candles, per box 20 lbs. 6'b. . 4 00 tne passenger train from Lead-vill- e Candles, per box 40 lbs. 6's. . 85 & 2 R'.O road Grande on the Denver Candles, per box 20g. 8's.. I 5 50 40fcs. box Candles, per 8'.. struck a large rock that had fallen 2 40 Cal. Raisin, L.M.2U lbs from the bluff near Beaver Greek, 24 Cal. 2 65 miles west of this city. Tbe locomo- Coal R's'nsL'y'rR.20tt)g 2 90 1. 10 c. g p. tive was wrecked and the engineer, Ooal 011,110 : oo Oil, 150 1, p. c. lOg. ...... Several 3 10 David Shaw, was killed. Coal Oil ,175 1. p. e. 10 g. . . . . . of One ox ride. Currants, per ft tramps were stealing aand 60 two badly Salt, per 100 lb. them was killed 1 36 5 60 !.... grain wounded. The accident occuied at Vinegar,Tan Beans S 4 Valley o'clock.less than 4 mile west of Beaver 4 Beans........ Navy station. A great mass of rock aud Lai d, 3 lb pails, per ft.. 10K and earth had fallen from the bluffs Lard, 5 1 pails, per a 10 crushed a bridge over a small rhvlne. Lard, 10 pails, per ft at The train was coming f KKKSH MEATS. " Dressed fast speed. The fireman, Stevens, saw and called Beef.cholOS steers, 2c. gross.sellihg 4Xc the landslide first, m . 4c out to the engineer to Jump at " media m. " 2c " " IXC Xc Cows, the same time Jumping himself, " " 8C 4c reSheep, but Shew Instead of doiDg so. un- Hops, " 4C " 7c versed and put on brakes, which H mie cured hams, 15c. The Bacon, loX doubtedly saved the passengers. next instant the engine was totally wrecked. 8tuw's h'ead was caught between the engine and tender as they Notices. the brains being spilled oat. separated, One arm waa also severed, and the whole body literally cooked by escap- ' KXCDBSIOH TO NEPUI A.M ing steam. MAVTI! Dave Shaw was about 35 years old. He was one of the best eimlneersou The Sixth Ward Silver Band will tbe road and was married only four take an Excursion to Nephi, Manti and months ago. His home was In the intermediate stations, on Tuesday, SeptemoW13th, 1887. Tickets to Nephi, city. The baggage and mall car was thrown $3.60 good for four days. , np, with one end mmd into tbe bluff and badly wrecked, but both the aaall and baggagemen escaped serious inenjoy your din WCWV Would The smoking car was pulled are prevent and ner jury 3 J off its trucks. Tbe passengers in It Acker's Dyspepsia Dyspepsia, use were severely shaken up. and some by are a positive cure for Tablets. jumped from tbe windows, bnt none Dyspepsia,They Indigestion, Flatulency were injured. Four men were stealWo guarantee ing a ride on the platform of tbe bag- and Constipation. 60 cents. 25 and them. of coal a car. One m'.ner, them, gage Jk or Sale at X. C. M. I. Draff Store. name not yet learned, had bis back broken and died In half an bonr. OI tbe other three two were badly injured ENTIRELY SEW. named Haines will internally, and one Kid Gloves that need no fastening:, name one ot of Tbe die. probably no hooks, no buttons, no more torn them is Thomas Manix. He was forlace or sleeves," no buttons to come merly a car sealer In Denver, and ' fits off. Call for the celebrated MATHER mother lives there. They are In the GLOVE at F. Auerbacu & Bro., sole esman The fourth here. hospital agents. The crushed. with fingers caped wreck is being cleared away, and trains Home Made Goods of all kind?, are feeing transferred. The train tbat cheap and good, at had the accident arrived here at 7 SORKNSKN & CXKLQUIST'S. o'clock this evening on its way" to Denver. Denver iVetos. HAM LEVY. of Fine Havana Cigars, Manufacturer BTKPBE1IS SlJiniafl t I. lNStS I 171 & 178 s. Main street. Will reonen at his Music Hall, over Flash and others, Coaiter & Sue, grove's music store, the atiCheap Parlor Sets, Sobbnsbn & Carlquist's, week commencing Septemoer 118 Main Street. Preliminary singing meetings for IPs children will be held Monday and Tuesday afternoons 12th and 13'h, at SEW. 4 o'clock. Every child who can sing ts Invited to attend. We receiving daily OEJTTKSrN'I AX The Twenty-Fir- ARCADE RESTAURANT, 127 MAIN STREET, JOHN OALL1CHEK, FROPRIETOB. EVEHY "STYLE. IN 2SC. PER PUTE. Canned Oysters as Cheap as Cheapest. I GUARANTEES AND r e FIRST CLASS PERFECT FIT. ' j - iQf"HBk TAW ' - I WSr WORK e - Sjtecial litn.. A THEORY AND READING CLASS f OF men and ladies will be organised night at 1:80. A chords class for advanced study of opera, etc., will be held on Thursday nitrnt at 7 :80. ,n.::: Get yourselves and musical fi lends ready ta loin at once. For further par ticulars see circulars. dSteod,. A new line of English Black Goods. 5oung in checks, stripes, diagonals and cades, at 76c., worth $1.20, at JT. AUBRBAGH bro- ft BRO. are Sew Goods from the Provo Woolen Mills, and n re now prepared to fill all orders, Wholesale or Retail. Genls' Suit Made to Order from Provo Casaimeres, at JOHN . ( ITLFHA BRO. Ho. 86 East Temple St. ,40 10.S0 .in p.n a.m. JOHN MIAMI'. Hai.erletcndent. and Passenger ArL (General A. Ft. $57. no Salt Lake City Provo -Milford Logan - ? ' ' AKKD WITH A SPECIAL TOW to conforming to the New Law, of tw . CiTil and Religious to be had at the ESERET News Offick, Salt Lake City, la jlt..t 1 . quantity, book containing 25 Licenses with Da jl.. tcs for 1.00; 60 for 11.78; loo for $3.0. taid to anv address on receipt of pries. A REFERENCES. THE 8SCOND EDITION, ENLARG-e- d and Improved, mt this emu excel eat work, has lately besn published and Is aow for salt at the NEWS Reunion of the Grand Army Hi. Louis, Bio., the last week In hentemher. The Union Pacific Rail way will sell round frlp tickets Hi rough to st. Louis and return at the following rates from the following stations t 57.50 57.10 OFFICE. 57.50 60.40 57.50 -- FROM IDAHO POINTS. Pocatello Blackfoot Eagle Rock Bellevue DESERET An nasi st of the Republic will he held In Ogden CARRIAGE LICENSES ! . I .. lLa.ii. Park City Operations Done on Short Notice. afta tf my .4.00 FROM UTAH POINTS. B. KEYSOR, DENTIST, Office In "Herald" Building. LI .7.0 s.m I d tf , romL-eadvill- Park Olty Kxpress cBANCia Oonersl Freuh COOK Immediately. OYSTERS tXHAOWS: DAILY st Jasb Express f " Miliord CT Passenger Trains Arrive it Bait Lake, daily as follows: from SonlS. t rom Mori. 7 JO Juab Kxpress at Kxpres at " Milford 8.00 s.m 4.00 p.m- - WILL A willing to assist in the washing.and a Nurse Girl. Apply at 36 Fourth East St., GOOD be UU ,,lls'r. 1, I Gr. con-cocti- to-d- ay Joiner Mori I.. Atlantic Express at. psrkOity Kxpress Bro. WANTED. WHO PLAIN SALT UCAVB TRAINS PASSKNbCB con, selection for tailor Ai.erbach TIME CARD, APHIL INTEW vslflo Thousand I 40 1 50 50 7 00 90 1 00 w 14 00 & Selling 2 00 1 75 65 1 25 I 00 1 IS 1 20 I 35 40 8 Utah Central Railway. L made suits, at 8 00 3 00 2 75 2 50 2 DO 80 1 60 1 25 1 4b ARPETS tic rro-phylac- Bedroom Sets at low prices, at SORENSKX & CARLQUIST'S, 110 Main Street. 2 50 COMPLUTH FTJisrisE:isrc3- iqoods. A handsome By Express of Choice French Suitings 2 75 IC3ItOID0Irs5, and I Buying GOODS, Silks, Satins, Surahs, Rhsdamsi, Kte. Rrabrold,rJ Dress Robes, and Colored. T PBOVI8IONS. Whole Wheat Flour.... High Patent Roller Patent Boiler Flour, xxii.... Flour, XXX Wheat per bu Oats per 100 Barley per 100 Barley Cracked.... Corn Corn Cracked Potatoes per bu L,nccrn seed, loom .". Bran per 100.... Shorts per 100 Timothy seed, 1001blb Red top 8 cod, loo Clover seed, 100 B Hay, timothy, baled per ton Hay, timothy and clover, DRESS Mi NEW LAOE8 ALT LAKE MARKETS. by Leading Bouses. N Corrected daily OV RIBBONS, FLOWERS, PLUMES & TIPS ki-.- i 6. 1887 UKI Wash Fabrics, Elixir is warranted, is because it fa the best Blood Preparation known, IN ALL THI LATEST NOVILTIII. tt will nositivelv pure all Blood Dis eases, purifies the whole system, and up tne constitution &c thoroughly builds liemember, we guarantee it. For Sale mt Z. V. M. I. Urug Siere. JL-T- TO BTOCK FOK BALE CHEAP. One hundred and twenty acres of Ladies', Missew' Children's Straw Hats, Trimgood farming land with water rieht, unt med and about nine miles from Salt Lake City. rimmed, Hosiery, Gloves and UnTwenty acres of lucern, a two roomed derwear. house, well and otner improvements, on the place. Apply to New fc Complete Stock: ef Men's, Boys' & Children's ClotMnn, Hah Wm. X. June. dlt 631 West, Soutk Temple St., Erysipelas nnd Obstinate CleVra, Bolls, Carbuncles or Running Sores of every kind arc cleansed, the poison gems destroyed anil a speedy cure effected by ueinjr uaroys rrepnyiacuc . Jbluid. afflicted with Erysipe "I have beenwould heal the sore or las. Nothing stop the runniug. i useo uaroys Fluid and found a speedy cure. Have also tried it in several In Moquet, Velvet, Body Brussels, Tapestries, Three Ply, Fxtra other cases and it proved effectual." S. I . Urter. Super, Cotton Chsvla snd Hemp, Smyrna ssd Velvet Uus, Door St els nnd Oil Cloth. HAY FEVER. T hav heen a irreat sufferer from WALL PAPER, COMPLETE ASSORTMENT. Hay Fever for 15 years and have trted io:- various things without doing any good. I read of the many wondrous cures of XX. 4. mfc .houRht I would Elv's Cream Balm and 15 minutes after one more. In once try I was wonderfully helped. application Two weeks aeo I commenced usIuk it aDd now leel enUrly cured. It is the greatest discovery ever known 01 heard Ten Shee rb CRINKLES 0 Jackets and Jerseys, New and Elegant Hues. ai Ik? bxht Hsiii.:ri.' g -- ft H WRAPS, a7?."u iARSt,rtn.i., e Blood, Liver, and aiaeares of a!I NovM and All tie Latest FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC SARSArABUJJl Potae-iur- a TmcuMa-i.of arHaeusev aoti best Drsettsts akad P&ysi- -, Daedelion with Iodide of tfcera IOBRETTES WK SHOW A 1A1HU KE8W1P9 . und summer eooos SATEENS, FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC. BisEtsi iwreauBL. ABd Complete Stock of ZEPUYRS. ZASZISABS. SEE8S0CKERS. Davis. & full and Staple and Fancy Dress Ginghams, Tes; atterly " Impossible " wk all malarial poisons are 5rWeu out ct i system, leaving the Blood New, Bleb, aod Pure. No place lor eruptions, ulor Kacatcatigm, when all Blood cers, ' ii s t has beea csad'.cat d by the use of -- rom News Notes Gathered from out Sources. IM 1 es The Stock Market. New YoftK, Sept. 6. The stock market was again very active and strong at the opening at advancesto ? per cent generally. Exfrom .treme activity was displayed by Read irreging ana Western union witn an of the ular business in the remainder was The qnickly list. early advantage decidedly lost, the market becoming weak and Lackawanna and Western Union lost I V, Reading;, Manhattan and Colorado coal each one and other amounts. Vanderbilts fractional were very well held, however, and Oregon Improvement advanced one per cent. At 11 o'clock the market is active and weak, at about the lowest prices reached. AM Carpets Father Samuel Neslen, aon of Richard Dlnwoodey's. and Margaret l.iffen Neslen.was born at cheap Mutford Bridge in the parish of Oulton, nev at Everything near Lowaatoft, December 3d, 1807. His SOKKN8KN & CaHLQUIST'S, 116 Maiu Street. parents were Episcopalians, and his father was an old type English farmer and village blacksmith. He was apprenticed to Parisian Pattern Robes io Betutiful New aud Choice. the carpentering and cabinet making busi ('ombinatiens. ness, at the expiration of which he was en Just received at If. ArEKBlCH & 1IRO. gaged as foreman. On July )3th, 1829, he married Mits Eunice Francis, who was K I I Vb I T reared from; childhood a Wesleyan Meth' pay the highest market prices for odist. About this period, he, (to use his allWk kinds of DRIED FRUIT. own language) saw the necessity of serving (E3T (Jhir teams will call lor them in God. and identified himself with, the Wes any part of the city. Receivers of public money out of 104 have been changed. of 64 have Indiau agents Fifty-tw- o been changed. Ninety per cent of the 377 officials in a single department that is to say, 338 have been changed. These facts willnot be denied. Can their significance be explained away?" No, their significance cannot be explained away. The President has many a time said in substance that tie desired such acts to have but one signification that he is at tbe head of tbe administration and therefore more than any other man responsible for its success or failure, and such being the ease, be has a right to have men in official positions who are in sympathy wtth him. There is no need of con cealing one's meaning for a public or Mobilization Sueceas. private action when It is backed by Faris, Sept. 6. Newspapers all suchjustification as that, and no one who understands the logic of tbe situ agree that the mobilization experiment Is a success. They say if France atibli more thoroughly than the Presihad been in such condition for war in dent. 1870 as she is now, Germany would But all the citations of the Repubhave found her match. lican paper quoted are not facts, alTwo men were arrested at Toulouse notes of tbe movements taking though heralded as such. For in while on of suspicion of being Gertroops remove could not President stance, the man spies. They proved, however, to "seventeen out of the eighteen secre be reporters. tailes of the Territories," because there are only eight of them all told IN THE NEIGHBORHOOD. to remove. - and unrecognizable OBITUARY. office was well np with the business In charge. The number of applications lor patents oi ail kinds receivea during the year was 40,678. Tbe renews his recom commissioner mendation of his predecessor's tbe patent office be suggestion tbatmore room and greater furnished witb facilities and that the model ball and library rooms be restored arid reReferring to the defalcation paired. of financial clerk Bacon, deceased, the commissioner says that the shortage was 1(31,091, against which were found bills, miscellaneous memoranda, etc., amounting to (15,011. From tbe aggregate due bills $8,668 has been collected. The nnmber ol patents granted year, including reissues and during thewas 21,732, the number of designs, trade marks registered 1. 101, the num-bof labels registered 384, number of patents expired 12,782, The neeipts of tbe office aggregate $1,150,046, expenditures, $981,644, surplus $163,401 $.'7.50 57.50 57.50 - 58.05 Ketchum Montpelier Shoshone Kuna 5H.U0 - 50.00 57.50 61.75 65,75 -- Boise City Hailey Huntington, Oregon 5S.25 60.30 A correspondingly low rate will he made from aU Intermediate points. Tickets can be ordered from the Nalt Lalip office or from the nearest coupon office, as above. These tickets will be on sale Sept. 2, 83, 84 and HOi good going until Kept. 28, and good return lug until Oct. 6, or, by application to the Joint agent of the m. Lout terminal lines at the Exposition Building In tbat city before Oct. 5, an extension will be given to Oct. SI, wltbout additional cost. The rates quoted above are either via Council Bluffs, or Denver and Kansas City. Further arrangements concerning these exenrsloais will be announced later. G. A. R. Pontes kindred military organisations, or bands, desiring to travel In a body, can arrange for special cars, Pullman or day coaches, by application to the halt Lake office. Tie Hi. Above Bates Are Open to tlie IT IS Almost Indispensable to Every Home aad 7oreip ffiissioiiary and is a desirable acquisition also to every student of theology and othai person who values the means of advocating and defending scriptnraily and historically ths principles of the Gospel. The wishes of the Compilers, that the work he published without prolt so as to b within tha reach of every person desiring it, have eea studied l For full Information concerning rates from routes East of the Missouri River, excursion stations, rales from Bt. Louis, etc., etc., write to lo-a- HOYT SHERMAN, . Genl. U. P. Ry., Ag-t- Salt Lake City. now - ran LAT. o srocD- - fLUOT ATI OKS Df TBI AOTTVB offer opportoalties to speon- as as first well the this edition, nnd atort to make money la Oraia, stocks. Bonds and Petroleum. Prompt personal therefore no discount except for OMl ttteutloB given to orders received by wire mall. Correspondence solicited, rail information about the markets on eur Beok, of postage is allowed to dealers. which will be forwarded free en applioattonB. S. ETLK, Esaksr and raker, The book is bound in four different a Broad and U New Sto.. Now T ark Oily sow styles and sent postpaid to any address st thn following HAHILTOS-- O. tt.M. DEMTISTRT PIOLCE MILL ROLLER PATENT CO. In - T I II I o E S a 46 Cento, 65 Cento, 85 Cento, and l.lO. BOOMS FORMERLY OCCUPIED BY AT Btieet, Berg, No. 44 Ninth East lr. As I have left Malt nk.' Halt Lake i Oity. City, I recom mend Dr. Hamilton to my patrons. Itcepecf fully, L, AERO. Dentist djf MUlt No. l&ut. 68 Horth TempU Strom 21 South TmnpU Street, Wet. Qtftes: BRANDS: men pa test. wo. Ansa's i. sirssriNB ssolv wbxat floob. HIGHEST CASH PRICE MID FOR WHEAT. Mill Telephone No. 871. Office Telephone No. S37. Ml MOERia. .apt. |