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Show uur htcicKrahdrs . oumn. REV. T. DEWITT TALMAQE, AMERICA'S GREATEST, PREACHER Th BlaDs will ooa Untie in e&.b dumm on tract it poMih brand under .yearly ltomtna.l price. 'r The Sil vantage to the! stockraler of f sen. Isiizlojr the nuhllo with hi brand and mr sre to welt known to need attention. It l u tke'stoclcman valuable an an advertUevi U to toe merehant. - wn : : Ixnrer Bevler and Sink of Beaver. f Address : Utah. Oasis, . V'JsilS v-- W. PAKK5 LAND and MlKi Law. Attorney at Rooms and Ecgl 4 5 SALT LAKE CITY, FRAlk l;pper slit In right, under slit r Range :Crloket Mountains and Lower 8evler. Address, Deaeret, Utah. WHITEHEAD" '.VHl A: on Piano. (rr,Hri jjlve ls-..iand teacli;;f'.,.r..lf. t .'Iou.-ki xs For further rni(u!ars FRANK VVHI7v,,.Af I HINCKLEY. A mm; Mr. Jos Deraim Under silt Is rl?h, under sli In left ear. one-ha-lf Range: Crieksl Mountains 14 w Deseret, UUh Address, Joud G. A. Smitu Y Horse Grower and Defcutr RANGE: Hou-- h tMount1i an Lower vier Mv4.fi Address, Breeders n4 dealers in Short born Durham s. Horses s a m brand on left thigh. Cattle-Up- per slop is each ear. Range Sevier rlTr SIw" and raoanUln between Mii.s htatiut: on iht U. I. Itj and Learo lagton. Address, leamington, Millard Co., Utah . Ill - II I. F II. PONGBECATION OVER HE PRESIDES. WHICH isften a Prominent Part In Affairs of the Nation, especially Since It Has Been Under the Charge of Dr. ffnnderland. favs . R. T. DeWitt Ta.V mage's pastorfhlp of the First Presbyterian Church of Washington Tvith Dr. Byron Sunder- L on ltfi thlkf same brand on 1S of cattle. Basse hip Willow Springs. Address, J. Kearasj. F. '"- ',""", '. I. Fisk Springs, Juab County, "" - ' Utai. i Ton left thlfh, double O swallow fork In left E&age, Lower . fio-Tie-r. Address cms. itmmi Oasis, lUUard Co. Utak. r' : r MtxK iUt 1 aad two s!lt ftght In eft ear. Sana brand en left shoulder em horses P. H: Petersen, Address, Oasis UUh, Raaga, Lrw ex Serlar. Same left ..: on Horses. thln Upper slope and one under silt la left ear, and two under slits In tOiak esr. BANGS right : -- "m' 'ym' '" Creek. "'"'V " - Sims Walker AddMse, Oak CSty, Utah. . j those days, according to accounts, Mrs. Adams, the wife of the President, used to! have her clotheslines stretched across the East Room. The Adamses occasionally attended the little carpen-icr'- 3 church near them in the woods. Ajrter the completion of the White House in 1802, and the little carpenter shop was torn down, the congregation which had been formed there met in an old building which was Used as a schoolhouse, near the northeast corner of Tenth and F streets. After that they removed to what was then known as "the Academy East," near the present site of the Washington Navy Yard. Up to this time Dr. Sunderland said that the church was a kind of nomadic Institution, the congregation worshiping where they might. Wn,en. the large block on First street N. E. was built, now three private residences, but then used for the sessions of Congress while the Capitol was1 In process of Washington Correspondence. if III f place of the church was a carpenter shop In the grounds of the White House, which was being used during the erection of that building in 1795. The shop, as well as the White House itself, was then known as! way wp town, and in fact in the woods. In TALMAGE'S NEWPLACE Parley Alirrd a. V, IP- A'-J-- " AC uyerscn Broi Gardner, photop-fcr-ii'- Oasis, UfaL. 1 H controversy with the within 52 houra. of the then Campbell, pastor Oatsis to Detroit; C3.00 Second Presbyterian, Church, in regard " Fiali Spr ngs, 6.00 to certain religious matters, and be" Gold Hill and Ipabah. 7.50 came a pew holder, which gave the 'V Fare for transportation out and return on church great prominence during his and CAN I fllsTATN A PATENT fares. Address,j answer and an honest trX.A prompt administration. Mrs. President Polk UN N ct (J(,, who haTe had nwSfS??!?.!? M F. DAVIS, Proprjietor, experience m ttte patent bnsineBS CommnnT was most devoted to its interests, and In tions 'f strictly 1849 a farewell reception was given her formation concerning lntrli"d. bow uf tain them sent free. Also a catalogue ci manh?r ical and scientific books sent free7 7 Immediately after her last communion Patents taken thronph Munn & Co there. President and Mrs. Pierce bespecial notice in the Scientific A inei .IJ thns are brought widely before tl.e hiunif.1a came regular attendants and aided the out cost to the inventor. This splendid 7 iiiueTretert. has bvfar hl church personally in many ways. It larjrest circulation of any acionf tp was in this church in 1858 that the a world; $3 year. FamHe con'os sent iw m WATCHMAKER, liUIUUU. UIWIIIHT, KJlllllYnn, fli- series of great daily prayer meetings, UTAH. copies, 5 cents. Every number untn't'. NEPHI, in colors, and tilul were oi then spreading oyer the country, with plans, enabling builders to show ro ' houses,plate3. and Watches jewelry promptly latest desipns and secure contracts. inaugurated. Dr. Sunderland calls it oired. Mall ordrn folirltfd the beginning of a baptism on high which prepared the nation for the awful baptism of blood which followed it During the four years of the civil war, situated as it was at the very center of dissension, although the capital of the Union, the church was foremost for the Government and emancipation. In July, 1863, It was the scene of a great; MANUFACTURER AND IMPORTER OF conference, when Dr. Massey of London presented an address from the French and English clergy on the ques- Harness, Saddlery, Buggy Whips, Nose Bags, Collar tion of emancipation and the issues of the pending struggle. One of the raost Pads, Hardware, Leather, etc. notable and events in the Fine Buggy Harness a Specialty. Wholesale and Retail. history ot the church occurred in the Winter of 1866. The late Hon. Frederick Our goods have been extensively usqd in Deseret and vicinity, and Douglass then delivered from the pulpit his lecture on the life and death of given the best satisfaction. Mail orders will receive prompt attention. Lincoln. It was the only door then . H E ATED open to him in Washington. It cost the STEAM. CLEOTRIO CALL BELLI church dearly among certain classes of people who had been its supporters, but it was the first ) step to establish the prestige of free speech for the colored people as a race in this country. . V'i UT v Professor of life; for Detroit, Fish Springs, and Ibapahl Horses same brand on left thigh. Cattle cloe crop in left and slit in rigat ear. it a n g e , Seviar. Lower Des- Address. ret. Utah. 0ck : Jno Db? simjv la left eai it. would reach 3,0D3 or 4,000. SAMUEL A. KING, In this number there have been many men and women of promineace in church and state. Many of the well-knonames of old Maryland, Virginia, and District families who have attended the church; since the beginning are the Clarks, the Bradleys, the Collections ProsBtlr Att niei t3. Blagdens, the Caldwells, the Rapins, the Underwoods, the Crittendons, the Dangerfields, the Lindslys, the. Pages, the Parkers, the: Walkers, the Waides. Office, First National bank Clig.. the Beals, the Wrights, the Dahlgrens The church has also, been attended, or - . uta& sometimes visited, by such men a rsovx), Henry Clay, and many Senators, Representatives and jurists. John Quincy H. Benton,, Daniel j Adams, Thomas K. Polk. Franklin James Webster, ' Pierce, James Buchanan, Schuyler Col Ho fax, J. S. Morrill, Henry N. Foote, Alexander Ramsey and Groyer Cleveland. Gold Hill It is impossible to estimate the influ ence of this church through the stirring decades of the past by being brought Into touch with so many of the great Too Oasts and Fish Springs stago leavof characters that have moved in this naOasis and Ibapah at 8 a. m., each Monday 1835 Jacktional theater. In President and Thursday, and arrires at terminal polntt son had a Rev. pew-holde- rs ' land has attracted renewed attention to this historic church and its venerable pastor. Dr. Sunderland is one i the most interesting characters. In Washington. He has been here since 18K3 as pastor of this church. During tb? first years of the war he was chap-la.1- h of the Senate and during that time h3 prayers, while devotional in nature, catered somewhat into the feelings of tit times, and were strong, forcible utterances of his opinions of slavery and ot his steadfastness with the Government and the people of the North for tM preservation of the Union. These prayers were all taken down by the stenographer, and are now, In the form7 of manuscript, among the archives 6f tlH Senate, a record of the conditions of the public mind at the time. There Is one notable prayer which has in It a vein of humor. The Senate had been foi some weeks moving along in Its walk in a dilatory fashion, much after th fashion of some of the Senates of aparently heedless of the importance of momentous questions which were pending before It One morning Dr. Sunderland arose and astounded the Senate by an ardent prayer to Rod for brains.! On another occasion, during one of the fierce slavery and debates, Senator Salisbury of Delaware was bringing forward argument upon argument and proof upon proof, selected with great care, that slavery was thoroughly sanctioned and oven ordered by the Bible." Dr. Sunderland one morning offered a prayer in which he asked j the Lord God to be pleased to. send down his Holy Spirit on the Senate and 'on the people of the country, and followed this by referring to hell and slavery as one, with language that was more oratory than prayer. He clearly disproved the Sails-bur- y idea that slavery was a Bible institution, and finished by praying that the Senate and the people, with the help of God, might avoid one and abolish the other. .Those were the days when partisan feeling was bitter among r Saddlery Harness and GEO. W. WILLIAMS, - j far-reachi- ng hJ ALCOHOL AND LONGEVITY. f Statistics Do Not Give Much Comfort tb Abxtntners. ' We have not the figures at hand, bu' it was shown by statis tics published in Great Britain a few years ago that total abstainers from Intoxicating drinks were shorter lived than the moderate drinkers among policy-holder- s, and now. comes the International Medical association with statistics In the same direction, but more startling, says the Boston Transcript, The association has made careful inquiry Into 5,234 cases of deaths of persons of over 35 years of age and of all callings, which were divided into five groups total abstainers, moderate drinkers, drinkers who were careful not to drink too much, heavy drinkers and excessive drinkers. The investigation showed .that the age reached in these five classes was always L. HOLBROOK, life-insuran- ce Prop. j the shortest with total abstainers; that they were shorter lived even than the excessive drinkers. With regard to the results were: Moderate drinkers, 63 years; heavy but careful drinkers, 58 years; intemperate drinkers, 55 years; excessive drinkers, 52 years; abstainers, 50 years. It has been said that statistics can be made to prove anything you want to prove, but in this instance, as well DR. MASSEY. as in the insurance figures, they seem building, the elders of the church ob- to prove what collecting statistics tained leave to meet there on Sunday, had no intention or desirethe to prove. It and also In the room of the Supreme does not follow, however, necessarily Court in the basement; of the Capitol, modereven use of the that intoxicants, where their first communion was obto conducive is longevity. The served. The pastor of the church at ately, only show that, with a good this time was John Brackenrldge, who statistics at the outset, one may atconstitution served until 1819. While occupying the advanced age than is foom of the Supreme Court in the base- tain to more a by person of feeble physique, ment of the Capitol they determined to reached the latter be a total abstainer, erect a church to the south of the Capi- though we for think it will be found from obtol. This was subsequently done and was first occup'ied ,ir 1812. It was servation and inquiry that a very large known for a long time as "The Little proportion of the abstainers are abWhite Chapel Under the Hill." It is stainers because they saw in early life on Pennsylvania avenue, between First that they were not physically strong to wrestle with King Alcohol, (street and the South' Capitol, where enough some of its walls, still standing, are and another class of nondrinkers 'are buried by the debris deposited there. the sons of drinking parents, whose In the course of time, the congregation sins, as well as their deferring example, and so Increasing and the city growing to the have descended to their children ' lives. shortened the latters' west and north, it was decided to purThe statistics quoted are misleading, chase the site of the present church on as inasmuch they do not show what; the Four and street on which to of of each class was in state health the erect a larger edifice.- It was dedicated in 1827, at which time the Rev: Reuben early life, and especially because they do not tell anything as .to the habits Post was the pastor. Dr. Sunderland became the pastor in Of the parents of the individuals Inlthe 1853, and in 1860 the church-wamuch several classes. A man may drink to (enlarged and put into the condition in excess, may' be intoxicated regularly Iwhich It is at present. It is now a every day,; and yet live to be an old edifice.well-fitte- d large.well-lighte- d and man, but it will generally be found that furnished, and the audience hall, with his offspring are feeble, if not sickly, good acoustic properties, is particularly and of short life, notwithstanding they Inviting to the pastor. The roll of never drink a drop of intoxicating limembership is not large, nor has it quor from first to last. Statistics are potent helps toward the ever been, although it has contained the names of many noted public men. solution of great social problems,! but The first record, eighty years ago, when they seem to prove what is DR. SUNDERLAND, shows a membership of thirty-fivIn against common experience and against all men, and the ministers of the gos- 1853 the roll of members was 269. Dur- common sense it is best not to trust in were not but this pel excepted; prayer ing the pastorate the whole number of them too confidingly. which took the form of a speech, caused names added to the role was 1,126, of a great talk from one end of the South whom 1,051 have been removed by dis-- i Fatherly Advice. to the other. mislson, exclusion or death, leaving 344 is really my Daughter This The First Presbyterian Church is a as the present membership. If an es- very own, isn't it,piano Pa Yes, my historic building; and its history is timate were made of the aggregate dear. "And when I pa? marry, I can take closely Identified with the great Ameri- number of church members from the it with me, can I?" "Certainly, my cans of early days and the beginnings beginning it would probably not be child; but don't tell any one. It might cf our Government The first meeting more than 2,000. wh;le the number of spoil your chances." Headquarters for Sheep, Cattle & ' THREE CEOM BAM Leads All the Rest. Mining Vm mm. AWARDS. Support to-3a- y, wine-drinke- rs the ; tie Home State Fair 1894, Gold Medal. pe ma: ; Industries cot anti-slave- ry Tr' I SAtJ LAKE. f RriiiRml nnTTimlssinn T.TBrnhnnl vs wuwa ! iu uuiuuuuiiiuu iuw vuuui ' Dealer in ; ; FRUITS, VEGETABLES, BUTTER, t Bgfs, Poultry, Game, Veal Pork an4 Beef, Smoked and Fresh Flsk Flour, Hay and Grain. It will pay you to ship your, goods to me. 1 as ekarge 10 per cent, for haadllnjr and re salt s soon as goods are sold. Can glre country references If desired. flrst-olas- , Three Cream Baking Powder Gold j ' lips sale Medals. j tsoiNK J taowtf I Keep Superior Quality Flavoring V f'-.- R I ma ma thccs (MM kCV fStcM JWCVH TKur 2nd, South, SALT LAKE CITY P. O. BOX j Hsnd Sample 1 . ..... ... . . J . .fl'fjrt ...... .. .. . . 1.00 ....... 1.00 Oopper Assay 'Bottle SsmDles .......... ...... Jxon-Asaa- y L . k -- 3.00 vIy: Your : Per: Extracts Gold like j ler Medal. Money !! r j Land and I I I L'. S. Land 6f3ce.) Mining "Attorney. VrTPs.rirnripnre Policited. -- TwentT. of 1bre Tears' experience.!l SALT I AKK CITY; UTAH. - BIRD & LOWE, Isni! Agents & Aitorneys. SALT LAKK CITY, UTAH. . Beit at flrl- Quality and Display of Soda Water. Home. i - 1 : "I ; asc '! ucl iU : 1 Pier : : m ; thoi : MANUFACTURED BT mi ' HEWLETT SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH eta 0? .1 . BOX Ja ti "I 635 it.'fc Spioes Pare and Ground Daily. that "t t JOSEPH A. LYMAN General Merchandise, -- Haa a full line of- - "l: Ua ive i STABLING Hijheit euh price paid for Hides and Pelts. . Don't forget JOSEPH A. LYMAN, OAK CITY, MILLARD ' ' COUNTY, v ,f. : . : : "I Itrr; tl Travelers and Sheepmen will find me supplied with9, HAT, - GRAIN - AND 1 terl: J And ia selling dow n at Panic Prices for Pay Down. Hatner for Cash or Produce at cost. e. ). H t s D. Hobbs, Prank (Lt KrfJ t I;: One-ha- lf - it? : ?. W. A and , . W. Q. M STEWARD, jou i UT ' "0 "T |