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Show ii3i Money to Loan. Lt. Thomas were to bt elected Arthur Jn any amount from one hundred INCREASING LIGHT. left them out and they the marks-- are Governor, the Tribune would boss the ten thousand dollars on" long or shoff' now in the case. As the Star eviThe Castle Valley News gets off the State, but it Crane becomes Governor, tinie. On Improved farm or city proper, and borrowed lijjbt, To the large majority of the people of following, as the presumable cause for the Tribune will take a back seat. ty or on water stock, dently Bhines by which is earnestly seeking information T. C. Winn, County Recorder Utah, the increasing light that is year- the extra courage of men born and Happily for Utah, there will bo other from will we Crime besides on quote field In shed American gencountries it sorely needs, in the mountainous antiquities, reared ly beini; candidates must be gratifying, inasmuch as each erally, and for .the bravery of Utah and the Tribune. Webster; friends in Ne THE BLADE. rates: &UCSCUIPTIQK 2.00 Peryear i . ... . (Payable in advance), J. F. GIBBS, "a word or sentence discovery by Archajologists and antiic" inserted, by way of comment or ex- quarians regarding the of another sen- ruins of America, is a link in the chain midst the in planation, tence, of which it is independent in of evidence that the Book of Mormon construction, and which is complete upon which their faith is founded, is It is usually inclosed realy what has been claimed for it by without cit, within curved lines, but sometimes its Translator and his followers. within dashes." For fear our stupid The latest discovery is that of an of as ignorant cotetn (the Star) may be ancient copper mine, recently discoverof e "tho-marks punctua- ed at a high altitude iu the Fleece the forms of meanis their of as it evidently mountains. Montana. This, in contion," thus: (curv- nection with a host of other evidences ing, we will insert them, ed of ancient industry, goes to prove, taat We a re al ways pleased to take time three distinct and ancient eras of civilizto answer questions propounded by ation have existed on North America; ehi'dien. but must insist that, hereaf- and that one of those eras was long ter, the weakling that twinkles for anterior to any of the epoches describTrumbo, consult the dictionary direct. ed in the, Book of Mormon; and that all the evidence points to the fact that OF DOMINATION a dense and well advanced population Tin: had spread over North America long IIS. SENA TO anterior to the Flood. In fact, a comof Europe At the time of the birth of our Re- parison of the ancient ruins and Asia with those of this western public there were some who lacked continent, proves beyond question that faith in the ability of the 'common can claim the honor of being America people" to govern themselves. They the land where man first looked out on honestly believed that the safety of the the realities of his earthlv existance. Republic rested in the hands of the The ruined temples, palaces etc. And while the "rich and in South and Central America, House of representatives would be found art? entirely distinct from those of composed of men from the "common North and that they are the people." the Senate should represent remainsAmerica, of a much more recent civilizUse and aristocratic poration than those of many of North tion of the Nation. To make the an exclusive and aristocratic body, America, there is not the slightest their selection was taken out of the doubt. Indeed, a study of those more Parenthesis Editor, Appllcatiok han been m.i'5e at tU Nephi for transmission through the mail a fcaend-clas- s mall matter, moiin., aiki. Edward H. McCune is 24, iao5. The UladkV fepeial agent and solicitor.and is authorised to make collections and receipt therefor. J. V. Gums. Publisher Iliads. line-).--dash- BLADE AQSNTS: lielow is a liot a' r, Mr rwrAritc U'hlt U'lll and receipt tor fce.ive subsorint i'ia Win. (.'hast.? i.;i!;ih, lViymen ts: ! mi, !!'...''; i ' ) t ' S (.'. T-h- T Y . Joseph A- Lyman, ')a!; Christian Anderson, Kiilmni'', - Tho.s. . ' A. Scipio. Holden. B;(tt-h- , Chris. Overson. Leamingtor. (ret). Crane, Kanosli. I'.-l'r Jarnes Hatr.-ni K-',- . liu V; Ilvruii Adams. J ;im- -. S. it. FOR 'n,o fir at lUid .tii t . Virgil :i . ow 1 ' - 1 CLEAN CAMPAIGN." A t a so. .I--. is a "tor Sen-ar- e but a campaign of clean, morMen whose private al candidates. ever been above- reproach. Men who are not libertines: men whose so- iive- - wib be such examples of A, purity as will make them worthy examples of emulation by the young. Whenever nu-- are elected to olliees ,.f honor whose lives have been tainted vith crime, the vote of the people is :ractioally a vol of confidence, and a premium on those sins that have been thus condoned. Where a man is known to be a moral leper, turn him down in the conventions, and if not defeated there, the people should bury aim under such an avalanche of votes, as will teach him. and others, that soto cial purity is one of the ofticial life. Such a course will serve notice on the young to lead honorable lives if they aspire to political preferment. Let it not be said of Utah in r the future that her people are less resentful, less tolerant of social impurity ihan are the people of Kentucky who effectually buried the drivihng hypocrite. W. C. P. Breckenridge who made canvass in the face of decency and tri.-Ker- y. liv-hav- e hands of the people and vested in the Almembers of the state legi Matures a though hundred and twenty years of a crucial test has fully demonstrated the ability of the "common people" to govern themselves, the effete custom of selecting senators by state legislatures instead of by a direct vote of the people', has been continued, and theConsti-tutiomust be amended before the old method can be cast aside. The next best method to be adopted in the selection of senators, one that will be nearly equivalent to a direct vote of the people, is to nominate candidates for the Senate in the respective state conventions. Then the electors will understand whom they are selecting for the Senate. It would be easier for a flunkey like Isaac Trurubo to "fix'" a legislature than it would to bribe an entire people or the voters of a party. For the foregoing reasons, The Blade heartily indorses the recent proposition to nominate, senators in state conventions, the and urges both parties to adopt the - . n : pre-requisit- gold-plate- forth-comin- 1 public morals. If a min be placed in nomination by either Democrats or Republicans, whose priva e life will not b6ar the search light of honest, impartial investigation, the press of Utah should not hesitate to expose him. Under any aircumstances, The Blade will riot again be silent where men of unsavory-reputatioare Deing foisted on the people, no matter if it be pleaded that to unmask them would be to "destroy them."' It were better to "destroy" one man whose life is not worthy of emulation by the young, than, by honoring him, to serve notice on the young that the people wink at social crimes aud thereby destroy a thousand who ruight, otherwise, be saved from de There seems to be a minds of a few of our Democratic friends ae to The Blade's determina-- ' tion to publish no calls or other matter of benefit to any party, except for value received or guaranteed. In anticipation of requests to publish calls and notices of meetings to be held, The Blade some timet ago began the publication of a notice, that is still running, and which states that nothing of that kind will be run except at advertising rates, and we mean it. Local politico benefits no one but the If his friends successful see fit to donate funds to help elect him, all right, but this paper is under no obligations to any politician or political party for any favors whatever, and with that class it's dealings will be for cold cash. onlv. The Blade's obligations are to all the people, and its duty is to do all it can to sustain Itself by levying a tax on politics and politicians. In the matter of reports of the meet mgs, primaries etc. ot tne parties which is news and belongs to the peop leThe Blade will be fair and just, and will devote as much space as it consistently can, notwithstanding such reports are usually dry and almost en tirely devoid of interestofriee-seeke- MEANER THAN LYING. Following is another sample to the Siilt Lake Star's method . of making Th.e Blade say that which, would seem to support the Salt Lake twink-lar's- " indefensible personal attack on Editor. Good win of the Tribune. The Star quotes from The Blade: "The Blade's position i9 this; it reciu everybody and everyognizes merit when except totally (il thing or wheredepraved tbat be. possible) hopelessly rotten The BLADK has denounced in as as it can command, the plain language of Judge,. Good- intolerance aud bigotry Instead of quoting the- entire paragraph, .the Star makes the following comment: ' The Blade is a Goodwin organ!,. but again condema the Judge" and .then proceeds to void .a. lot of irrelevant twaddle.' "But we take pleasure ajso, in conceding many, good quali-tbe- s ajnd unusiual ability ., in theman." - . : isi' that pottion. of. on comment , s The-Bjadk'- Goodwin Judge .which follows the Stai's- - quotation, - and which, jf . it 1 had been quoted, uams1 an. entirely y different light ou the i matter.. j Tbfcre is -- rat. another paper in. Utah o that xvould condescend to such pet ty . tKDki of .omis&ion,' and. which-- is- worse . , - than 3ying,;to carry a point as - is prac ticed! by that, fourth magnitude twin k ldr for Ikey Trumbo, and proves that ite eriitor .is. ,iin t intelectual dwarf as ?mpared.i with the .editor Df..tne.&ait - -- LfckfcTrlbuneL ; z- - wants to know,-- what The Star the5 of bicame parenthesis in the article of August 3rd? r "Do you know. the sig-niScan- of those t marks. sof i punctuat- ion?". ' g r, - THE UTAH PRESS ASSOCIATION MEETING. The meeting on Tuesday and Wednesday next in Salt Lake City of news paper men will- be the event of the year for Utah. Bright, brainy men from many different parts of the Union will meet a nearly full representation of and a great the Utah time is expectedj The visiting editors will be the guests i)f the Utah Press - pencil-shover- s, Association and-frowhich they will receive a truely western greeting. The Utah'Press Association is destined to become a- - power in the1 land for good; A membership in the Association will g secure to the country ed a itors of Utah large number of advan tages, and the uniou of the Press ,wil add influence and dignity to the news paper prof ession that heretofore, so far as Utah- is concerned, has been conspicuous by its absence. 1 hard-workin- - ce The American eagle should' wake up and shake the cobwebs from his an ; To the first-par- t of .ttie question n we niont. tihimatre'' and :rrenare for a big i arJiy ec . yhaJb. the. ty513, o vexy. J ik2l j scW5ani.ilurin5ihe-riexUte4iwceks3- . 1 4 EDITORIAL NOTES The Dog days-arperceptably shortening and the torrid spell may be said e to be over for 1895. Government ought to recognize the Cubans as healthy beliger-ants- . and loose no time in so doing, because after 20,000 more Spanish troops land on the "Gem of the Antilles,"' it will be too late to be of benefit to the revolutionists. inc U. S. rainL 1001 Until the thirteenth century the Mexicans knew as little of the arts and sciences as the Apaches of 60 clay. place, ization. That strange people were, no doubt, a brauch of the decendents of a few that, very likely, escaped the eneral slaughter of those that reared he now crumbling cities nf Palanque ind Yucatan. The Monte zuma canal in Arizona, was built by the incestors of the Toltecs, or by that other people who are known to the world only by the silent ruins tnat extend from the Gulf of California up through Mexico. It was surely not the work of Montezuma nor of his Mex:can subjects, because his dominion did not extend into Arizona, and like that of other more civilized despots his public improvements were centeralized in and near his capital city. In addition, the canal bears unmistakable evidences of a greater antiquity than the lGth cen tury. Our young readers should study the history of Mexico and Peru, in con nection with that of American antiquities, and when well started on those subjects, they will find them as fasci nating as any works of fiction and infinitely more instructive. so-calle- d - from seventy millions of people. It is a monument to the corrupt use of legislative power. It is a monument to the folly and blindness of the voters that each year will continue to vote for laws that will foster trusts and combines. It is a monument to the political slavery of those that ought to be American Freeman. , oult-ivatioii- - 2 reads: "Will you who it was kindly answer in your paper at the Constitutional convention that said the only persons that voted against female suffrage were gamblers, prosti" tutes and Nobody said anything of that sort in the Constitutional convention. , Tbat was an editorial utterance of the Millard County Blade, then published at Deseret, now at Nephi. Salt Lake Tribune. The Blade will not say the foregoing is a lie, because the Tribune editor may have forgotten the wording of thi'd ancient squib, and another fact, that it was published as a joke arid credited to The Blade "devil.' The word "prostitutes" was not used. The Blade realized then, as it does now, that many of those that oppose woman's suffrage, are just as sincere, just, as pure, and do so from principle as those that favor the enfranchisement of women. We do say, that nearly , aud gambler oppose, every Woman's suffrage because they realize that women and children suffer most from those evils, and naturally, the vote of women will not be favorable s to and gamblers. Will the alGeographically, Nephi City is situ.-.t-most in the center of Utah. lis latent natural resources are practically unlimited. Its active resources consist (1) of Agriculture : Ci of Horticulture; (3) of the Sheep industry and (4i of minerals. To the North, West and South is a larye area of as line agricultural lands as can be found in Utah. Abundant crops of cereals and alfalfa bless the labors of the husbandmen. To the North, thousands of acres of natural meadow, watered by large springs, emerald carpet. The spread out like a great unexcelled vegetable gardens of Nephi are in the west. Its fruit and that of its contiguous towns, js as as can be grown ia this I atitude. In Order to illustrate what can be accomplished here with bees, it is only nec, that a Nephi farmer last essary to state shipped S.700 pounds of tine honey, and the apiary is merely an adjunct to his farm. The wool industry of this locality, is one ot and is: such as to demand the largest in Utah, attention of two wealthy lirms and large warehouses for the storing and handling of the product. A couple of miles east of the city, and near the mouth of Salt Creek Canyon, is a veritable mountain of pure crystalized gypsum. Convenient to the quarry, is a complete mill foi which grinding and refining the toproduct the continuously shipped states of the Pacific Coast, 3(j tons last intonth being the output canyon and north easterly UpSaltCreeK nine miles, pure salt springs gush from about the mountain side, and by means of one of t Inmost complete salt manufactories in the Uni ted States, the brine is converted into table, dairy and packing salt that has but few equals and no superiors in the world. The brine per cent, salt and the supply practically unlimited. In addition to the manufactured product, there are several ofmines or quarrie-o-bef which cannot rock salt, the extent computed, 'Asa distributing point. Nephi recognizes but one superior in Utah. It is the key te Southern Utah, and with the advantage of railroads stretching out to the east and south, furnishes, wlthoui quest ion the best point in Utah for the est abli shmen t of manufactories and wholesale houses. The attractions of Nephi as a resideree town, are unique in their variety. It is sir.) ated on almost the highest portion of the di vide that turns he flow of waters north inn. Utah lake and south ward into the Seier riv er, thence onward to the Sevier lake the dead sea of Millord County. Its altitude, graveln soil and perfect drainage insure the best c! .health, in fact, he conditions .are such, ihai but two cases ofdiptheria have occurred ii. live years among a population of nearly 3. on ts citizens are thrifty and progressive. Tie wide streets and avenues of large shade trees eosey cottages, beautiful lawns and elegant modern public buildings, make of Nephi a is a real luxury. placeis in which life It supplied with a complete system of wat flows the water from along hich some three miles up ilif pure springs distant canyon. To the west about rive miles. ' mountain range is low. roiling and of easy cess, and abound ing with rich pasturage. '! the east a couple of miles, the Nebo rant:i abrubtly rises, to the north east a few uni. s the top of Ml. Nebo rises into the regions tl; eternal snow. Without exaueration and withoht coloring the foregoing is a description ot tlie i,,e, uab , County i city of Nephi, the Capital of JTintu-which arc tound the mines of the wn dot- and admiration of the Oreat West. Tintic, the rich mines of Fish Springs, and other wealthy an portion of Deep Creek .srowmg camps are situated in the West' m part of Juab County. is a directory of Nephi 's bnsine-.Following : xl saloon-keepers?- pet-fee- inter-mountai- lu , 1 s est evidence of for a position for a person to blow his own horn. That while i can excuse it in others who do not so regard it, it would violate my principles and reflect on my political conscience to accept your kind a nomination by my offer. If I friends and am considered worthy of it, I do not think I will lack appreciation of the favor, but 1 have always avoided having: it truthfully said of me that I worked for somd political preferment of for myself, and it would be very humil-iationto me to do so and then fail. non-fitnes- 1 t g-e- er-wor- U-- . g Taken as a whole. John EVdelicacy" is excruciatingly comical. The last dozen words give John dead away. "And then fail."' How very sad. John's "delicacy" can be acurately measured by the barometer of his "humilliation." And John has a "political conscience;"' which means that the has hustlers one conscience for campaigning and C, ANDREWS fc CO., Dealers in Wool, Crain etc. another for the pulpit; or did he swap UTAH WOOL GROWERS ASSOCIATION", E. Ii. Booth, Manager. the latter for the former when he ex- ex-bish- op Press dispatch from St. Louis: Ex- Congressman Bland is in this city, and, perienced politics? speaking' of the silver question, said:, "If the Democratic party does not deAn Immense Fossil Skeleton. clare for the free coinage of silver it The will be wiped off the map. The-- may are fossil remains of a huge sea animal exhibited in southeastern Kanbe a few Democrats in the cities who sas. being The' discoverer came upon them will follow the Administration, but accidentally while looking for firewood there are practically none in the coun- in the Cherokee Strip. The head, bill, some vertebrae, a few ribs, and the protry."1 pellers were in a fair state of preservation , but the remainder of the skeleton The Lord save us! The Enquirer crumbled as soon as it was exposed to the (Provo) says the name of "Hon. John air. The bones were, purchased byrlenry E Booth" (also of Provo) is mentioned Patterson, of Humboldt, Kansas, who for Congress." How infinitesimally at once sent a description of them to the small the Republican stalwarts will director of the National Museum at feel when they see such an intellaciual Washington. The letter was submitted PHILO T. FARNS WORTH. secretary of the Smithsonian Insti-tioJ. E. Booth "men- to the with pigmy as request ttiat a quallified tioned" for Congress. Better send J. man be sent the to investigate the discovery. The above named gentleman will be C. Graham of the Enquirer; he may be, The fossil is thus described by Dr. R. L. the Republican candidate for Governor and very likely is meaner than Booth, Patterson in a letter to the Registered of Utah. Of that fact there is scarcely but he knows more. of Chicago: Pharmacist, a doubt. The Blade's information is 'The eye sockets are 4 feet in the long direct and conclusive. Mr. Farns-wort- h diameter with a space of 20 inches betwill be the "dark horse." and It is hoped that those who listened ween them, making a skull diameter 'of his competitors will find he has a 2.3 to the pure, chaste and upright S. A. 8 feet and 8 inches. It has a pointed bill Geddes last fall down in Millard, are or beak 12 feet long and a small brain gait on the home-stretcMr. Farnsworth is a typical, self- - reading the blisterings that great re- cavity comparatively. The ' vertebra made, Utah man.7 He has long been Iform fraud is receiving from the Argus measure 12 inches each way and the dis tance from to tip of the transverse n known as one of the leading spirits in and other papers, for his processess istip v40 inches, and resemble tne mining indnstry of Utah, and is dishonesty as a Salt Lake county a mammal rather than a fish. those of the manager of the Horn Silver j lectman. Whenever a "truly good" The cstry odes is 38 inch long; a rib is 13 MiningCompany. He is extremely pop - j man like Geddes gets on the stump ieet ana s inches long, circumference 33 ular and the Democrats will find in , and begins tilling his pious lies, set inches, and two triangular shaped bones Mr. Farnsworth the hardest inan to him down as a political fraud, Geddes 3Xby 12 feet, the use of which is coajeet- beat among all the Utah Republicans is a "dead duck." ural, but supposed to be propellers or fins." Scientific American. for the sins of the past that Jt The Blade desires to correct an imLatter-daSaint's College, Utah politicians are now imploring for- pression: that j seems to have found Salt Lake City. School year opens Sep- lies lodgment in some quarters, ; that this Lruiucl am,Wiia giveness, but for the enlarged iaculty and ex which they will5 soon utter amid the paper advocate the cause of Charles ienaeu courses. Specialties made of norriial theological, commercial work. thunderous applause of the multitudes Crane for Governor of Utah. Some Courses extend fromand eighth grade to unthat will. temporarily1 forget the stern time since, Th commenting on the Tribune-- iversity sophomore year, inclusive! Tuition $ 10. per yefar. For further ic forma- realities of present 'deplorable condi- CraneThe Blade said tioo rumpus; to ' WlLLARD DONE, tions. andwallow"the pleasant f purga- that: when It comes to a choice between 9" apply 2 Principal. tive pellets consisting ot wholesale de- the Tribune gang and Charles Crane, nunciations of the other party and self-r4i- g we; are ror irane nrst, last and all the Plutas; pearand itcous. lawdati oto-bharaeel-Hi fh. J ieoaseas-previoy- -j saidy if - n, ex-bish- op h. oub-spoke- se-no- is-n- n i.-- af-right- ed wholesomeness. l sea-sun- Hon. John E. Booth of Provo. in a letter in the Tribune declining to speak at Saltair in favor of his own nomination to some State office, for instance from J. P. to Senator, uses the following language: My early training in politics taught me that it was indelicate and the strong- Each year there are thousands gallons of acid vinegar imported and sold to Utah consumers. Each year there are tens of thousands of bushels of apples that rot on Utah soil that; if properly utilized, would make tens of thousands of gallons of cider vinegar. And vinegar that would be far in advance of the acid stuff, in purity and w ot y re-vamp- ed , ' peaches-atriMrsvM-.- fGkddys 1 A. d Advantages-an- Attractions. A query from Frisco 01 The roar of the coming political cyclone comes trembling on the air, and returning prosperity should reef its sails while the concentrated breath of American freedom is being wasted or expended in the manufacture of political concentrated lie. Her Resources, Nephi rum-seller- hard-fough- . tv. Utah, at Nephi Ctty, Utah, on Septembei 7ih, lhVfc, viz: Mark Blgier, H. E. ftfl29, for the N. E. H, See. 2, Tp. 13 S, R 1 W, Salt Lake Mlridtan. He names the following- witnesses to prov ' his continuous residence upon aud of said land, viz: John Pyper, Georfre W. Kennali,-RoberG. Pypei- and Jojiu Kendall-alof Nephi City, Utah. IiYRON GROO. Register. W. A. C. Bryan, attorney fo claimant. rum-seller- America. They were indebted for that knowledge to the Toltecs, a mysterious people who entered Mexico from the north during received Blade has " " The Those of The Blade's phi, and adjacent .town's,- should sub scribe now. IJon't hold bacK because, you have not the cash. Voa will havelf this falh or if not cash, you will hava grain or bay, and we will accomodate our granjger friends in almost any way. SUE-- " tf SCKIJIE SOW. the last number of the S. F. Call, the organ of Claus Spreckels, the boss of the sugar trust, the "booster" of Ike Trumbo for the Senate from Utah. The Call has a cit of a magnificent 15 storey building to be erected by Spreckels, and to be (.No. 3835.T the fuiure home of the Call, which NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. calls it "a monument to the enterprise Lima Office at Salt Lake City. Utal of Claus Spreckels." Instead, it is a July aS, !K0a. t lhat Riven is MdTlCE tlje followln? hereby monument to the greed of the sugar l1 namett settlor has tiled notice of 1ts inten tion to make tiuul proof in support of his claim.' trust, and is to be built with the pro- ana that said proof will he niaae heiove ceeds of the robbery of small sums the Clerk of the County Court of Juab ConnThe I political ougies is sounding, and the marshaling of forces nas begun. t he heroes ot many a t battle with their mouths are gargling their throats and lubricating the hinges of their jaws for the of truth. ple that built the cities of. Central coming slaughter the latter part of the 13th. centurv. we consider the time md doubt in the md who, when were well advanced in civi- - cam a clean g WE MEAN IT. iiign. f time-servin- d, recent evidences of civilization, proves that a branch of the human family settled in Central a ndSouth America and gradually spread northward until, in Central Americu, they reached the zenith of their greatness, and that their movements towards and into North .merica was accompanied by a rapid decline of power and final extinction. There is also a chain of ruins extending from the Gulf of California up through Mexico with evidences of ever increasing power and civilization. Those ruins have been indubitably proven to be intermediate in age as regards those already mentioned. The civilization of the Mexicans on North America, as found bv Corteziand that of Peru in South Americans found by Fizzarro, form an interesting study, There is not the slightest doubt that those two empires were indebted for their knowledge of the arts and what little they knew of science, to the peo- plan. n truction. The Blade is "for n. "well-born- " and wire-pulli- ng under-hande- d oi boys especially. Listen! PpThans ifc is the ozone, caused bv the winds sweeping along the mountain tops, tne atmosphere ana that impregnates tha nerves ot man. Ozone is strengthens said to be an electrified form of Oregon, and electricity is claimed to be a nerve stimulent when absorbed by the system in moderate quantities. The above clipping may properly be called a scientific "hummer." "Ozone is said to be an electrified form of oxygen" which "is caused by the winds sweeping along the mountain tops," and "impregnates the atmosphere and strengthens the nerves of man" "when absorbed bv the svstem in moderate quantities," and the result of the for-- j going formula is found in the superior courage of Utah boys. Boys, you now know what ails you, only you must be cautious about "absorbing1' that product of "the winds sweeping along the mountain tops,'" and not "absorb,, too ; much of it. Only "moderate quantities of the "impregnated atmosphere'' must be "absorbed" f.rfear. it might make horse thieves and murderers of you. Coughlin and George evidently of ozone or "Impreggot an over-dos- e nated atmosphere." The Blade's advise is to get a carefully written-ou- t prescription as to the exact amount to "absorb" before trifling with ozone or making any dangerous experiments with "impregnated atmosphere." You can doubtless get full directions by applying to the editor or the' Castle Valclearly ley News, , es well-bor- clean Not alone for a campaign free from boodle irdluence v is "pre-hist- post-WiHi'- e Saturday A SCIENTIFIC "HUMMER." NEPHI HOUSE, AIis. E. Croldsorough, A. W. PALMER, I : - propr. Wagon and Carriage Shop, d-nera- 7'. 1 PI ti- ! smit h ing. NEPHI LI VERY STABLE, Jno. R. Downs propr. UNION HOTEL, Mrs. C. K. Foote, propr. GAZETTE SALOON, M. J.'W. Hartley, propr. McCUNE, Bakery and Confectionary. McNALLY & LUNT, Druggists" COOPER, PYPER & CO. Dealers in Hardware, Tinners nr."' lers. GOLDEN EAGLE SALOON, Blaekett Bros. Proprs. etc. Dealers Liquors"' M. P. KONG, in , - . Cabinet and Coffin Maker. OSTLER & ALLEN, Manufacturers of Harness and Sad' and dealers in all kinds of horse fumi, . goods. A. V. HAGUE, Butcher. W. M. STOUT. Repairer of Boots and Shoes. CHAS. FOOTE & SONS Dealers in' General Merchandise. v NEPHI COOPERATIVE MERCANTILE STITUTION. T. H. G. Parkes, Supt. W. H, PETTEGREW, Manufactur of and- dealer; in Ham-- -. Saddles, and Sheep-Men'- s supplies. JNO. S- - PAINTER, Dealer in General and green Groceries. ORD BROTHERS CLOTHING CO, Dealers in Clothing and Gent's fiirn ish ui ! . OSTLER, & OCKEY, Butchers. H. H. HAWKINS. J. Boarding house and Restaurant,"' M. C. OSTLER, Boot, and Shoe maker. ' THILL & COMPANY, Merchant Tailors. FRANCIS SELLS, Furniture and undertaking. H. BIRCHALL & OSTLER Clothing dealers. , NEBO SALT MANUFACTURING A. CO. Cazier, Supt. EXCELSIOR MERCANTILE CO., Dealers in General Merchandise W. Paxman, Supt. PEXTON & CHASE, ' Blaeksmithing. KNOWLES fe WEBB, Wheel Wrights. HVDE & WHTTMORE, General Merchandise. GEORGE HARDY, ' Boot and shoe Maker. THOS. BELLISTON", ' - AgtfMtr Pleasant 3Iar!He"WdW- . '" 'r! Viw. |