OCR Text |
Show T- - THE BLADE. THE GOOSEBERRY RASH. . i Xh Broke Published Every Saturday at ' ' - SfEPHI, pagne Drlnkerr. At St. George's hospital, says the London Graphic, the inaugural address was delivered by Dr. George D. Pollock, who, afteij narrating the early history of the institution, said it was rebuilt in 1834, wheti sanitary science was not so well understood as it' was today. The defects of the building as originally constructed, therefore, had been a source of constant expense, and though every effort had been made to secure efficient sanitation, there were still some drawbacks which he hoped might be removed by the rebuilding and con- siderable extension of the hospital in the direct! ion of Hyde Park place. The lecturer proceeded to impress upon the students the importance of considering dealing temper and temperament upon and urged with patient strongly of them the pecessity having regard to Idiosyncracies. UTAH. THE DIRECTORY. Cannon. JFS?1 JABrown. Arthur U. S. Senators .. ..C. Delegate to Congress E. Allen. STATE OFFICERS. Wells. Heber Governor James T. Hammond. Secretary of State f James Ohipanan. Treasurer Auditor. Morgan Kicnairas, j r. A. u. liisnop. Attorney General. R. Park. upt. of Public Instruction. John C. S. Zane. W. Barch. Judges of Supreme Court.. G. J. A. Miner. Judee Fifrii Judicial District. . E. V. Hlggins. Jf. uriscon Senator, seventh District. James Member Lower House. ... . Ad elbert Cazier . Land Office Bryon Groo Registrar Receiver Land Office ....Frank Harris M. Fred Probate Judge. W". ij A relative of his could not partake of rice, one 0f the most innocent products of the vegetable kingdom, without most alarming symptoms. Some friends, wishing to test the matter, had some Chappen Selectmen.... Deprez&n Hugo A. 1, jacmnan .J. T. Sullivan Sheriff . .D. W. Cazier Assessor and Collector Clerk and Recorder Thomafl Win a William Btirton, 'rAi""l' Edward Plk Attorney j -- -- Surveyor : ; : ;7 ;; biscuits prepared with but a single Hartford a grain of rjce in each one. His relative IbSSSS partook of two or three of these bis- cuits, and,! becoming uncomfortable, left the table, declaring that if he were not morally certain that he had not partaken of rice he should say he had been poisoned by it. He had heard of a case in which a man could not eat goose- T. Miller Superintendent Schools MILLARD GOTJNTT DIRECTORY. Joshua Greenwood Probata Jnd Peterson jAndreas I . John S trier. Selectmen Gardner. O. O. Holbrook. Sheriff. . Alma GreenwooiX Assessor .. ..a. Collector jl Callister .Thoe. O Clerk and Recorder . M. Jno. Hanson, Attorney " VWlllltr(k Surveyor Smith m, :. , Sidney. Terejrtea Coroner. u. kj. v,aiuLer Superintendent scnoois berries without a certain rash manifesting itself, who, at a fashionable party, soon after the champagne had been handed round, pulled up his sleeves and showed a friend that particular rash appearing. What applied to gooseberries applied to drugs, and doctors should be careful of prescribing those which the patient said did not agree with him. Lord Byron, in one of his conversations with Lady Blessington, remarked that medical men did not attend sufficiently to idiosyncracies, and thought that what had cured one man would cure another with a similar disease. Lord Byron was an acute observer and judged rightly, although he expressed himself In an exaggerated manner in regard to idio- A Jewish rabbi lecturing from the pulpit of a Methodist church is a very John pleasing spectacle. If Moses and is nc there were living Wesley would reason for the belief that they not be friends. to-d- - STILL-HUNTIN- FOR BUFFALO. G in Indians Dlignlsed Themselves Wolf Pelts and Crept on the Herds. It was the next morning after this &unt that the chief, Little Bear, came to my tent, just as' I had finished my steak, biscuit and coffee. He brought two wolfskin disguises, which I had before seen in his tepee. Each was made of two wolf pelts sewed together, with mounted nose and tail, and there were arm holes with short skin sleeves, and came leggings for the thighs, which whole nearly down to the knees, the with. covering fastened to the body deerskin ttiongs. He had before promised to take me on a "wolf hunt" after buffalo, and he now put on the largest of the coverings, and maneuvered about in front of my tent, showing the various attitudes of the wolf, in shambling along, in upon its prey. trotting, and in sneaking His squaw, who was wielding her wevajaba (fleshing knife) upon toan upthe turned buffalo pelt pinned her ground with wooden pegs, stopped cerwork and grinned approval. He tainly mimicked the wolf well; and the disguise, excepting the legs and the -- size, was perfect. "Hoogh!" he said, when he had shown me how to act in crawling up to game, "we go hunt um tewan that way," pointing to the northwest up the creek. I was glad to go upon a still-hun- hurly-burl- y for, to tell the truth, the mixed of the usual Ponca method, and Its useless dangers, did not recommend It to me when I had time to reflect, after the excitement was over. When Little Bear and I mounted our ponies and rode out that morning, the camp was in an uproar, as usual in the scout had preparation for a hunt.a Aherd to the come in with news of big were running eastward, and the Indians in ponies, saddling and cinching them on all hands, and there was much bucksyncracies. ing and plunging among the wild and skittish ones,- as usual. Squaws were MONKEYS HAVE MINDS. hustling about at the command of their young lads, in There Is Abundant Evidence That They lords and masters, and short and half shirts, were leggings Can Think. rushing to and fro, making a great pa"That the monkey possesses intelli- rade of helping to get the hunters to considerable a is gence probstarted. degree Little Bear must have told his leaders ably true," said a hotel proprietor who has a small menagerie on his prem- of the proposed hunt with me, for no ises. "I believe, however, much of the one paid the slightest attention to our out. Intelligence with which that animal is going We jogged directly up the little valcredited is due to his love of mimicry. or an and then, in The other day two young men with two ley for a hour ofmore; the hill, sighted a rounding point were at the girls monkey's cage feeding band of buffalo feeding among the him peanuts. One of the girls was large ravines, and upon the slopes on the opchewing gum and one of the men sug- posite side of the galley. There was an gested that she give the monkey some, immense number insight, but, as the expecting that if he took it in his mouth high grounds were covered as far over we could see, we knew that there it would stick to his teeth and he would as must be- more beyond. make sorr-- work of trying to chew it. LittleBear grunted with huge satThe girl at once parted with the sweet isfaction, and gave me to understand in morsel she was so industriously chew- hurried words of Ponca and Pigeon Ening, extending it toward the cage. The glish that the big herds were coming monkey grabbed it instantly, and put down from the north. it Into his; mouth, but instead of chewWe hustled our ponies into a ravine near at hand, and tied them to some ing it pr attempting to, began pulling y bushes. Then, carrying our it out in small ribbons, as children are and guns, the chief with his disguises frequentlyi seen to do. When he had arrows at his back, we his bow and out of his mouth he rolled it into a down the ravine into the creek compact' ball between his hands, threw slipped channel, keeping entirely out of sight of It into hi3 mouth and began the opera- the in our herd. The wind was tion again. He appeared to enjoy the favor, and we kept alongfairly the bed of performance as much as his visitors. the stream, in which ran a little trickThat was imitation." ling brook at the bottom, until we "That's jail right," rejoined another, reached the mouth of a dry run leading the mid"but I had! an experience with that same across the valley and through runs were such herd. There dle of the monkey, wherein he displayed intelli- and ravines hills into the back cutting gence. I Wa.3 by the cage smoking one every half mile or so. day and J thought to annoy him by Up this gully we went at a jog trot, in his face. I was much bending blowing smoke low, until it became so shallow surprised ito find that instead of being that we could begin to see the buffalo annoyed he enjoyed it, as was evidenced upon the hills above. The chief then squatted and motioned by his edging up as near me as possible to receive the smoke in larger volumes. me down. We put on the wolf skins, Soon he began scratching himself at he taking the largest; for, despite his he was a large and powerfully the point where most of the smoke name, man. made came against him. When I had smoked Adjusting the eye holes so that we one side for a fe wrninutes he would could we crawled out upon see turn squarely round to have the other the open plainly, upon our hands and ground side treated in the same way. Then he knees. Almost the first thing that hapsat directly in front of me and received pened to me was to get one of my knees the smok squarely in the face and filled with cactus spikes, and while I neck. I. don't know Whether he held writhed about trying to pull them out, his breath j but he did not cough, sneeze I heard Little Bear growling under his or. wince a. particle. To complete th breath, "Hoogh! tewan heap plenty we kill heap!" Frank Welles Calkins job, he then sat with his back toward, in St. Nicholas. me and it Would have done you good to have seerf him scratch. It made me Amusement for the Parlor. " .......-- Cham-- T ay Now that Gen. Harrison's engagement has been indorsed by the members of the women's clubs in St. Louis the general' can go on his way rejoicingl heedless of such little things as t; - presi-4entia- nominations. -- claims to have Niagara's water-powexactly where it wants it now, and invites unlimited immigration on the strength of its new business boom. Buffalo surely would no1 deceive the people and obtain theii money on falls pretenses. Buffalo . er and New York capitalists have organized a company with $2,000,-00capital for the purpose of developa very extensive scale large golc on ing mining properties, covering several thousand acres in Buckingham county Va. Investigations of experts, it ii claimed, show that the average of thes ores gives even a better percentage of gold than either the South Africar or the Cripple Creek districts. Chicago 0 circular on the prospects of emigration to the British colonies from the British Emigrants' Information Office states there is "no opening for labor in Victoria or South Australia, and that in New South Wales only experienced miners and agriculturists with capital have any chance." In Queensland the labor outlook is improving "In western Australia," says th& circular, "there is a good demand for minen at the Coolgardie goldfields; but th cost of living is high, water is verj scarce in summer and the heat ver j great, so that no one is advised to gc there unless he is strong and has some money." The British program of pubA bull-berr- lic works "gives promise of increased employment for men in the building trades. In Natal there is a demand foi bricklayers, carpenters and blacksmiths, but tb office warns emigrants that itjgre i.s &ang.' of the labor market in the Transvaal becoming over. stocked.' , . The national house of representatives applauded the prayer of its chaplain that Cuba might win in her fight foi freedom. If the house would give the Almighty a little assistance by granting Cuba belligerent rights - the prayei would shortly be answered. It's pow-'- , der, not prayers, that the Cubans need. ! think of tiie kickers of a motion. Having married American girls, hali the dukes and lords of England would naturally be on our side in case of war with that country. iOtherwiseV their would be like American fathers-in-laoff cut their to cash supplies. ly w ' I The new general, Weyler, can scarce ly make fairer promises of speedily ending the rebellion than Gen. Campos did. The facts are that the Cubans are very tired of Spanish servitude, and they have chosen poverty and death rather than to longer submit. Such people are hard to whip and keep whipped. . The restriction of permitting no more Uhan six dogs to a family "seems like class, legislation against the poor, as none but a very poor man every thinks of having more than six dogs. Now, hay-tedd- er that monkey in There is an opportunity for ingenu- knew, ity, graceful compliment and humorous through some sort of intelligence, that rally in playing "initials." One person nothing will send, flees and other in gives out his initials. Then all, prosects to the surface or: stupefy them as vided with and paper, are given effectually as tobacco smoke.' Utica a certain pencil time, perhaps three minutes, Observer. in which to write a three-wor- d characterization of this person, the words Thiy Were Not Miracles, M. Llttre of Paris, who recently in- - beginning with the initials in the orvestigated ;a number of alleged miracu- - der given. j lous cures says that ithey can be ac For instance, Mr. A. B. C. is decounted far without supposing a mir scribed by one as "a beneficent creatacle.; He explains that In many of such ure," by another as "awkward, but cures there is a muscular action of the courageous," by a third as "always affected part. The muscle contracts buying cheese," and so on. At the end of the time allotted all the descripenergetically; It breaks down the patho- tions are read aloud, and then the inilogical adhesions, if thjey exist, and re- tials of the next person are used in stores the bones violently to their place. the same way. In the game of "Telegrams" ten letters are announced at random, one Washington's Most Beautiful Woman. In the opinion of. a distinguished each, by different persons, and in the member of the diplomatic corps, Miss five minutes following every one must Rachel Cameron, the daughter of Penn- compose a telegram of ten! words, beginning with the letters j announced sylvania's penator, is the most beautiful andrn the order of their announceyoung woman, in Washington society ment. The occasion of writing the Miss Cameron's beauty is not telegram may be agreed upon beforeof face and figure alone, but her whole hand; as, for instance, a case of failor a case personality is imbued with her inimita- ing to keep an appointment ble fcrace and charm, that render her of sickness. Of course such letters as z and z should not be given out. irreaiistibly beautiful and charming a company In Drawing entertains - If every "one is ' ways.many required a Terrible Shame. $o draw a portrait of his left-han- d b Pour hundred horses' have been killed Neighbor and write the name underduring the fall and early winter on one neath,in-the sketches will prove startmany ways. Before being range nearj Pyramid Lake, Nevada, and ling around for general inspection passed was on realized each animal. bu $2 should be without the they numbered, The hide, jmane and tail sold for that name of the artist, and handed to a anount, and the carcass was valueless. committee of unprejudiced judges. The Rat even ait this price It was cheaper to most successful competitor may be rewarded merely with honorable men kill the animals than keep them. j j Atlanta finds that its population is now 114,000,' which ought to assure the siz, coast cities afraid of English si that no town can be destroyed by burning it. to-da- Before Cecil Rhodes and Dr. Jameson make another attempt to steal a state they should come over here and take a few lessons in American politics. y. - Fortunately most of the Teal German cheese and sausages are made in this country, so the prices will a ot ba fected by the war scare. it-al- l j afI BLASTS FRniw 1 j - bat on the Skin of the THE TTlUCItEES ICE PALACE. tion, or with a really artistic diawlng as a prize. Instead of drawing portraits, ieach Winter Sports m the Mountains of Eastern California. may select some familiar object and on his to sketch it, then pass it neighAn ice palace has just beea. completbor to have the object guessed. This ed at Truckee, Cal. It is cohered with may be varied by having each Write from two to ten inches of solid ice. at the top of his paper the subject to be illustrated, and then pass it to his A toboggan slide adjoins it, and on neighbor for illustration. Having Christmas day hundreds of people shot drawn his picture, the sketcher' folds down the icy slides. over the name at the top ,and passes is all very well, but ice It to the next for him to name it as weAndo notpalace think that it is calculated well as he can. Then the whole is to be a good advertisement for Caliready for inspection and admiration. In most .of the northern hemA new game with proverbs is called fornia, isphere, at the present writing, there "Illustrated Maxims." Illustrate! the is of Ice. People as are a superabundance proverbs by sketches, by objects for the winhomes their in the familiar "art gallery" or by ter, leaving not in search of ice. Therebut guess. acting, and let the company when they hear that an ice palThe preparations may be made! en- fore, one of the attractions of Truc-keace is or tirely by the hostess beforehand, they will be apt to revise the game may be impromptu. In the their Cal., judgment of California. latter case every one chooses a proverb would be in error. CaliBut for himself, and illustrates it as he fornia'sthey pephysical condition is mostsumpleases. For this way of playing, no culiar. Truckee on the is very up prize is needed. Youth's Companion. mit of the Sierra Nevada mountains, e, in the extreme eastern part of the state. The mountains rise there, in not many miles, from the fertile 8a Valley, where flowers are in the. open air, to an altiblooming tude of 7,000 feet. It is upon this sharp ridge that Truckee sits sticking up like a sore thumb, which in some other respects she resembles. Truckee has hitherto been famous for her "601" vigilance committees, her shocking treatment of the Chinese, and the fact that she has faro banks and skin games all the: time wide open and in full blast on her main street. As Truckee is the first point in California d that the stranger strikes, the peculiar conditions there generally excite his wonder when he stops over which, fortunately, he rarely does, In fact, a dazed unless Eastern man once remarked to a fellow traveler in Truckee, as they promenaded the "plaza:" "Well, what have we struck?" to which a native affably responded: "Wall, stranger, ye've jest nat'rally struck hell." And so they Girls of the Olden Times. The modern girl, with her bicycle, golf, tennis, gymnasium and ot&ar neans of enjoying herself, has a much better time than could possibly have been enjoyed by her grandmother. There must have been just as many d girls and active, energetic women fifty years ago as there are now, but their high spirits or exuberant vitality did not take the form life. They did of a healthy, not walk much. How could they walk along country roads and muddy lanes in sandaled shoes and thin stockings? And the dress depicted in the fashion aot plates of half a century ago does well to be very seem, to our eyes adapted to athletic sports. In large towns it was 'thought very incorrect for girls to walk in the streets, even In A pairs, and utterly impossible alone. maid or footman must be in attendance, if a father or brother was not available, and even in their company, or guarded by a depressing attendant, it was just as well in some of the more crowded streets that a girl should not walk at all. Of course girls were allowed to ride on horseback, but those who did so were in the minority ,and there was a sort of unwritten law that matrimony put an end to that entirely. It could not have been so heartbreaking to have given it up as it would be now. Riding for a woman only meant tittuping in the park when in town on aa saddle, and wearing full, bunchy habit that in some instances swept the ground and that fluttered in the breeze that also blew about the long gauze veil that adorned a beaver hat and feathers. Country riding was equally tame. Only the emancipated woman of those days hunted, and she did so in defiance of public opinion. The difficulty is to find any exhilarating sport or game, or any health-givin- g pursuit in which women were allowed to take part, and mere exercise for the sake of exercise, always distasteful to men, does not commend itself to women, either. There was nothing for them to do in the open air. No tennis, no golf, not even croquet. A woman who could sail a boat was unheard of; she never swam; shooting and fishing were in the index among other equally deadly sins, and bicy-ccling as we know was not. Chibright-spirite- out-do- or west-boun- snow-ixund- .. d..... Long suffering always ttavft children gentle. The Lord's side is never kfru light. j Go ofda,. Courage is something that a can only Imitate. coarj To have Christ, is to have God's law requires of U3. evPrw Industry and prudence are th best j safeguards against bad ' luck, Love is the only thing that can n llt en burdens by adding to thm Some very religious people V L j j : different religion on Sunday, fro .they have the rest of the week The Christian is walking 0a a 1 ; oretot Christ. When Columbus .sighted iaud gave men better eyes and enlarV is m . ; world. : Building on a rock is an that pays dividends with ' clap.. Invests evervt !nt Ter . WOMAN AND. THE OLD In England less than ninety it was not unusual for a man to will8.0 Ws wife Into servitude. A common-lahusband and were one person and that one nerRI I w ! was the husband. Upon marriage the husband becam. to all his wife's goods and entity also to the rents and chattels, profits 0f her lands. , He was her lord, bound to suppi, shelter, food, clothes and medicine. He was entitled to her earnings and th custody of her person, He had power to choose her associates, separate her from her relatiTej restrain her religious and personal I '. - j freedom and, If necessary, chastise her had. Now that Truckee has sprung an ice moderately as though she were Mi palace on us as one of the added child. The father of legitimate children wai charms of California as a winter resort, we may say that it is a wide- bound for their maintenance and edspread belief among Galifornians that ucation and was entitled to their labor there is a mistake in the state lane and custody. somewhere in the middle of Lake Ta- He had power to dispose of them until hoe; that it ought to be straightened 21 years of age by deed or out; that when it is straightened but they were and the testamentary guardlan'i Truckee will be found to belong to Ne legacy vada instead of California. San Fran right to the children's custody supecisco Argonaut. rseded that of then: mother. The mother was entitled to no power but to reveWaltzing: Mice. rence and respect from her children. You have all heard of "singing mice," over them She Had no legal and some of you may remember an ar nor right to their authority service. Only i ticle that we printed about thenj af mother of an illegitimate child was en-year or two ago. But did you efer titled to its control and custody. Intestate personal property waa hear of "waltzing mice?" It sebas f that there is a family of such II tie equally between males and fcreatures in Japan, not one family,! of emales, but a son, though younger than course, but a regjafar species, with that all his sisters, was heir to the whole of real property. unique characteristic. These mice are about the same size as the common kind, but they ire speckled with white and black about the neck. They have a habit of whirling around and around for hours at a 0CKEY, time, with only short stops, perhaps; to get breath. And they whirl in couples, too, just as1 human beings do, hut WholesaU and Retail much more rapidly. Indeed, they go so fast that they appear to be little y rings of black and white. It is said that the "waltzing" mania cago Chronicle. seizes them nearly always while they are running ,and even when they are A Girl's Luncheon. to escape from an enemy, You mean the school luncheon? Let attempting will they suddenly stop running and BEEF it be as nice as possible, and take go to whirling'. There is some reason for this, of MUTTON pains to pack it very neatly for her, so there is for everything in that when the recess hour comes she course, as but we have not heard whaf may ake an interest in what she eats. nature, A dainty box or little basket, a fine, that reason may be. It certainly is a ALSO soft napkin and some paraffin paper very inconvenient trait, at times, for gives the pursuing enemy a good are indispensable to the preparation it to gobble them up. Philadelchance of lunches. Sandwiches must be made Sausage of thin bread and butter, with potted phia Times. meat, cream cheese or jam spread beA Good Reply. tween the slices. Rough edges and A number of prominent literary men crusts must be cut off, and the bread OCKET and butter be of the very best. There were at one time gathered together in are many delicious crackers, some a well known chop house in New York. NEPHI CITY, UTAH. salted, some sprinkled with cheese The conversation brilof was, course, some cooksweet and crisp like flakes, of the eta ies, which are appetizing with one's liant, and the repartee sparkled with Free delivery to any part luncheon. And fruit is always in or- mirth and wit. During a lull in the talk der. the door was slowly opened, and an old If it is possible, and it usually is, to Southern darkey, with age, get a little boiling water, let the school poked his head in,grizzled and then slowly R. E. L. COLLIEK, O.E. girl make for herself a cup of bouillon drew his body after him. A waiter imat luncheon. There are several excel- mediately started to eject him, when lent kinds of bouillon which come in one of the gentlemen cried out, "Wait Engineering in all its Branehei small jars and bottles, and of which a a moment! let's see what he wants!" spoonful added to a glass or cup of The old darkey hobbled up to the table r VY ork a bpeciaw either hot or cold water makes a very where this and Land Irrigation gentleman sat and held out refreshing drink. I prefer hot bouillon his hat. Throwing a wink to his end Irr!g Engineer for Central LeDd Irrigation n myself, but cold bouillon is very re- bors, the gentleman took the hat,neighand acd Lafce Land Clear ., freshing, too, and much better with making a show of placing something Fillmore Land rrd Irrigation Co. and bread and butter than cold water, if Into it, bravely h it on to the next Mountain Land end Irrigation Co. the luncheon is a simple affair of that. gentleman, whopassed did likewise. The hat A girl who eats her luncheon regular- made a tour of Office: Court House, Fillmore, U the to entire the room, and avoids sweets, pastry and canly, wonder of the darkey. The dy between meals, will have bright puzzled man to last it solemnly handed eyes and a good complexion. She will it back, withreceive a very polite bow, saying, THE DESERET.OAIRY C not look sallow and pasty, nor have don't "Thdre, think you have sir, you pimples and other signs of indigestion something to be thankful for?" The in her face. Harper's Round Table. HAS FOB SALE old darkey looked slowly round the and company, mechanically taking the !A Curious Advertisement. FULL LUEAMCBUM: said: hat I's indeed tankful "Gen'men, When the British nation built its dat Ts eben got de hat back." The refamous military railroad that extends ply was so thoroughly TWrpt i nctpd f:ir the fine q:!j enjoyed by the G1! .,. ;A Dieppe. tii:ii. UUiici t., through the northwest province of company that the old darkey left the Ul 11 " B Xuilfe, India, the natives established at or near place a much richer man than he had o ur products a tiial. the many stations little restaurants and entered it Harper's Round Table. retreats for travelers. Recently a naN. S. BISHOP, diaries Dana Gibson's Boyhood. tive bought one of these rooms from its Mrs. Christine Terhune Herrick in owner, and wishing to advertise himself and his new acquisition as much as the February St. Nicholas describes the possible, issued the following notifior clever work that C .D. Gibson did as a tion to his present and prospective in from boy figures cutting patrons: paper. Of to Ocfrom his that the 1st of "Begs say boyhood she writes: tober, 1893, 1 am in charge of the above Until from! the other man who was manager a ratherDana was ten years old he was quiet, little felhere for few years. Flesh of club and low. He was fond of fun of HOUSE! a dry kind, store Calcutta is supplied here, for But- and there come would a occasionally ter and Milk Cows live here; if 8 gen- flash of sarcasm that showed his wits tlemen, eat on one table they can get were not confined to his finger tips. english things, Bread and Sweet maker he grew older and became interestis present here. All things are new and As Heaianarters Ear MINIM ed in outdoor and made sports, boyish fresh than before, if any gentleman will paper-cuttin- g his to friendships, began Tiffin or or give great a be neglected, and when he was about dinner, supper 1 City nd oounty Newspapert from etc. then he will make the management fourteen years of age he laid down his t Utah. . well and the charge will be less and the shears. In I . V t their roll a n n took he the place up is. cook first class, every gentleman can pencil.tarn get rest like his own will, the railway This slight sketch must close at the station Is on the few feet from here Every thing RESPECTABLE. and outset of Mr. Gibson's artistic cawine can also be supplied." Harper's very ' A VU.ln V Wdll Of reer. He was onlv sixteen vears olrl .lfK Bound Table. '.when he entered the New York Art THE PUREST WATER ON league as a pupil, and he is not yet j tk Premise. Thit WU tot Conditions of Happiness. U thirty." No one san say how much of for CUKB ANTEKD Willey I tell you, Its; better in the wonderful skill he owes to the train-- : end to be honest. Did ypu ever know his in eve and hand he unconspl ing and a rogue who wasn't unhappy ? gave himself as a boy; but it is easy to Diseases of the Kidneys ShalleyNo; but, then, one would trace m nis scissors simouettes the Tutime&lala on Application. hardly expect a rogue to be happy power In an eminent de. DMlfl . it vr when he is known. It's rogues who are gree in giving a GXBl3. F. MRS. J. in a few picture clear, not' known that are happy. Roxbury telling trokes. The direct vision of his UiSSEKlfiT, childhood he has never lost. two-pommel- j ed j OSTLER & Butchers, CURED S MEATS Butter, Lard, OSTLER & 1 w stay-at-ho- THE DESERET me . J m i ' El -- i 1 j j 1 . he-possess- -- G-ettf- i. - ; i . 1 |