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Show and finally paid for it in full, and reJSfo ceived the U. S. patent. It is now prithe holder intends to ry WEJJ(l!SDAY od FATCBBAT, vate property; rhlibad by Ui ooni.t PUlisinu Comamt. all hold it comers, and the ques. 11 against JAMKS MAW, Bo1n' Mn'-- to whom BuiiuoomoiiiiutioiMiliould b wldrMd. tion now is, what will Marshal Patrick The U. S. has no do for a penitentiary? CHARLES W. PENROSE, Editor. the authorfor claim on the property, ized agent has sold, it, and the owner UTAH. holds a clear U. 8. title bolt, What Mux. now? .Saturday Moruiii?, March 11, 1S7J. will the ring say about 0j4t gttttftiou. Of;iE., Where the Danger Lies. Look to Your Tines. intense darkness of Thursday relieved by ft two foot column was night of flamo from a. .chimney on the esst tide of Main Street, but the "relief" wu not shared by the occupants of adjacent building, whose property was in imminent danger. Attention ought to be paid to the condition of flues in this city, particularly in Main Street, where there are so many frame buildings. We have been singularly fortunate in our exemption from such conflagrations as have been of Uts'.so frequent iu Eastern cities. But our care and eaution must be continued with increased vigilance or some day or uight we shall be startled with such a flare-u- p that all Ogden will be With our dry shingle roofs a ghaut. a affair like imple chimney on fire in a wind u extremely dangerous, and high proper precautions should be used to prevent flues from becoming foul. There is a city ordinance bearing on this subject from lU:u we quoto the Th -- following s "Seb. 8. The owner or occupant of any house, shop, or other building shall cause the Hues or chimneys thereof to be burnt or swept out an often as jnay be necessary to keep the same clean or from becoming foul. Chimneys and flues shall be cleaned by burnand when ing only in the the roof and other surrounding combustibles are wet. If such flues by becoming foul shall take fire, or be fired at any other time than as herein specified, the owner or occupant shall te liable to I be penally prescribed in the first section of this ordinance. The penalty hers alluded to is a fine la any sura not exceeding one huadred dollars. If a careful regard for the1 properly of others has not. sufficient influence to produce caution, perhaps the prospect of a hundred dollar fin may induce .householders to look to their flues. , day-tim- e, , . ' Watch jibe Child rcn. -- - , How Max. MIsmhI It. , Before the clos of the forty-firs- t Session, Congress passed a law transferring the penitentiaries in the Territories, built by V. S. funds, to the control of the U. S. Marshals. The Utah Penitentiary, such as it is,' was erected partly by an appropriation made by the United States and partly by Territorial money. The Salt Lake Herald is poking its sharp- - pen into the ribs of the IT. 8. Marshal and asking awkward questions; that i awkward to answer, such as the following: Will .. the two x dots of officers each have control of a share of the building, chalked oif in proportion to the amount expended by the Government snd the Territory? Or can Congress dispose of the funds of a Territory without the convent of those who were tared for the funds, jriven through their representatives!. How is it? According to the latest news, which we have leoelvod through a private source, it appears that the difficulty will be f olvd in a manner rather unexpected to a certain clique known as the "ring," trick of oue through, an of its members. We learn that over a yenr ago an application was made nt the n Land Office, by a certain and to the respected gentleman, section the which on penitenquarter , to-d- '. ' - "Watch the habits of your little children." .Encourage the growth of every budding virtue; chek the increase of auu incipient vice. By precept and ex ample set up a standard of strict integ-- 1 rity before thentnd help thera to reach ill the preaching in the world will te of small benefit to the rising generation uuless parents keep a closo watch on their children's cots. If a child .finds anything, the property of another, do not allow the little one to appropriate ,1L, If children take things belonging to your neighbors, make them understand the crime they have committed and take tha stolen articles back to the owner, asking pardon for the offence. We are led to offer this advice by circumstances that have transpired within a hundred miles of the Junction office. At the same time, we recommend our friends not to .leave property of any kind lying round loose as a temptation for the dishonestly inclined juvenile or adult. And, iu conclusion, we warn careless parents that sharp eyes are curried around, noting each passing event, "that fgden news gravitates to the JrxcTiox office, and that We- are not at all backward in jiving it to the world, considering public jitcrcsts before private feelings. It Dr. Miliar, the talented editor of the Omaha Herald, who lately paid a visit to this Territory, on his return home gave the public the benefit of his observations in several excellent articles. We make the following extract from an editorial headed Salt Luko City. After describing the business condition of the eity, and our mining prospects, and warning miners without capital from rushing here where there is plenty of muscle to be hired at low rates, he says: One feature of the influx into this hitherto quiet, sober, moral and intelligent Mormon community, carries it with its own comment to the thoughtful. Whisky shops, harlotries, faro banks, and all the attendant forms of vice and iniquity already purvey the way to the changes that are to be wrought up by these silver discoveries. To the lusting honor of the Mormon people and System be it said, that for more than twenty years such machines of moral infamy were totally unknown in Utah. Whatever may be the evils arising in polygamy, and we dare to say that they are not half so great as thousands of deluded people suppose them, grmt indeed as we hold them to be, it cannot be denied that the Mormons have achieved victories and conquests over the most gigantio evils that curse our race, and which are the chief banes ef Already the every civilized State. bydra-heade- d monsters of infumy are gaining footholds in Salt Lake City. The diamond-gilde- d gambler with his alluring cloth of green, is there, and so is the woman of the town. It does not alter the fact that she plies her terrible vocation behind the curtains of honest callings, lest Mormon authority punish' the crime. The fact is what we state the dam-sin- g fact, so creditable to Mormon morality, that it is only by the surreptitious evasion and overthrow of Mormon authority that these and kindred curses now invade the beautiful City of Suit Lake. What the consequences will be upon the Mormon youth and people deof the Mormon pends upon Church and System to hold tb&ra firm agaitint the wiles of gilded temptation, and right here we detect the chief danger to that people at this critical juncture in their affairs.We heartily endorse tho .sentiments of the Dr. and call the attention of parents and guardians to the warning they contain. The plottings of our eneg at Washington mies, the Lake "ring" Salt of th deviltries and the count as nothing on the score of danger to our peace alongside of the cursed influence now gradually working its way We hope the civil into the Territory. authorities in every place will watch the efforts of professional gamblers and corrupt woman to obtain a foothold in Utah, and that they will avail themselves of the powers which have been placed in their hands for the publio good. The days of our peaceful seclusion are gono, the smooth current of our simple mountain life is turned, and we have to meet and grapple with the evils from which we fled in th great centres of trade, civilization and vice. Infidelity, licentiousness, gambling and drunkenness are boldly lifting up their ehamoless heads among us where once they slunk away into sly corners iu fear, and it behooves every man and woman who values peace, virtue and good order to be on the alert, and aid in battling against the greatest foe we have ever had to meet the corrupt spirit of the age. wire-workin- Dangerous Drug. Chloral Hydrate is one of the new fashioned stimulative drugs whieh has come into use, and it is a dangerous thing to tamper with.: An eminent physiciun writes to the Chicago Tribune, denouncing the drug as a dungerously powerful stimulant, "the ue of which must tend to lower the vital forces iu proportion to the excess of its strength over that of ordinary stimulants.'' The Sacramento? ceori states thatawcll known citizen of San Francisco died on Sunday last from the effects cf a dose of this new drug. rs are on the increase in I'tvh, and hero as elsewhere there arc individuals who think themselves invalids, and have a morbid desire to try the virtues of every new medicine We warn that comes into notoriety. suoh persons that Chloral Hydrate is dangerous, and should not bo administered except by a skilful physician, and even then only with great care and , , oaution, rhysio-swallowe- Coal Famine. be seen by our news that McKay, the mail New York and other large cities in who escaped from prison some the East have been suffering for some robber, time ago, and was captured at Ogden by time from a coal famine, and the best Sheriff Brown and Marshal Fife, has quality of the necessary article has in company reached as high as from $12 to $14.C0 again escaped from eustody with Walker, a colored thief who Escaped. per ton, and the price of coke has been doubled, being" u6w $6 per chaldron, with the prospect of a further rise. ' The trouble has been caused by the great strikes in the coal districts, of Pennsylvania, extending from Scranton and Lackawanna in the North, to Potts-vill- e and Heading in the South. The colliery men and capitalists are deter mined not to submit to the demands of the miners, and the men are equally fixed in their resolves not to submit to the lust year's reduction of wages. Themployers Bay, so writes a correspondent of the N. Y. Tribune, "We'll shoot our mules and feed on them before we'll encourage such outrageous extortion as we have suffered from these men." The miners say: "We are in the shaft ten hours a day, risking life and limb with every blast of powder, and getting 50 cents a ton, while you pay the porter who dumps it into your coal hole the same. It is not in reason that we should do all the work and the bosses get all the pay. We make com fortable livings when we have work, but at onr best we have work only nine months in the year, and that takes away from our earnings. Say that we get C7 cents for cutting out a ton of coal, we have out of that to pay for otir tools and blasting-powde- r, and a man to each mirier, Even if we demanded unreasonable wages, these corporations should not complain. They have doubled their money ten times over in the last 25 years." The Working Men's Benevolent Association is sustaining the men in their struggle to obtain "living wages," while the railroad companies are with the employers, and have increased the But there is charges of transportation. no need for the famine in New York, for, according to the above mentioned correspondent, "there are millions of tons of coal massed along the Lehigh Valley and Delaware & Lackawanna Railroads, evidently waiting a "rise." From the euramit of the Northumberland and Lehigh hills, as far as the eye can see, long lines of diamond cars lie among the stunted pines laden with prepared coal." This is the old story repeated, of the battle between Capital and Labor, and the only power that can establish permanent peace and harmony between them is Labpr ought to share with Capital the proceeds of every enterprise, and all working men should sustain and strengthen such organizations as lead to its establishment in every branch of human industry. ... Worth Lookino At. It is a pity that the Z. C. M. I. retail department has not a better window for the display of fancy goods. Mr. II. Tribe has excellent taste, and those who take a peep at the choice articles frequently displayed there are well pleased with the arrangement of the goods; but the effect is marred by tho which are not the proper kind of thing for the We notice that tho fancy purpose. goods during the past few days have given way to a selection of gents' hats, in n variety of new styles, including an elegant pattern of the kiud vulgularly known as "the stove pipe," which is rapidly coming into use in this country. Any one in want of a new chapeau, or desiring to be "in the fashion," should call at the Z. C. M. I. door-windo- Henry "in" for a hundred days, James Foley, n for the same dose for an attempt at burglary, and Charles Rose, who was incarcerated for fighting. The escape was" effected from the Salt Lake City prison between 1.30 and 4 o'clock a.m. on Wednesday morning. The hinge of the inner cell door wos filed in two, and the iron door itself bent over at the top, by using a bench as a lever, making an opening large enough for a man to pass through. The outer door was also bent over, and the prisoners went up stairs and dropped from the back window to the ground. Rose was captured in the City on Thursday night, but the others are supposed to have escaped to the mountains. a few hundred "feet" of very rich in the "Tintic," "Lafayette," "Anthony Wayne" and"Eureka" Lodes, Tinti-- j Mining District. Shafts have been sunk in all of these claims, therefore the purchaser can inform Muisolfuad know what ho is buying. For particulars inquire of min-iug-or- e, J. WIIOLESALE&RET till CHOP HOUSE NOW Late French Chop House, FIFTH STREET, relieve the intense itching of where frosted feet, dissolve a lump of alum in a little water, and bathe the part with it, warming it before the fire. One or two applications are sure to give relief. To A JOHN CILLARD, Boot and Shoe Maker, MAIN STREET. Winter Goods, Scotch Plaids, Satins, Poplins, Flannels, Linsej's, Alpacas, All Ophite the Tithing Office Boots and Shoes of every description made to order. Repairs neatly executed. Good Leather, Good Fit and Good Work 21-- 1 m guaranteed. AVool Dc-Lain- cs, Armures,. Meal nt till reasonable hours. TERMS MODERATE ; Hosiery. 0 First-clas- s 3 Nubias, Scarfs, the public can obtain OGDEN, A NEW LOT OF SHAWLS, BLANKETS, Bed Spreads. NOTICE. I 100 SUITS NUMBER OF RECEIPTS ON Wkber Mills, for wheat, stored there, have been lost. The public are requested not to buy those receipts without fistf ascertaining the value of said receipts by consulting the Secretary of ' said mills. JA. 19-- J. " 8. P. OF GENTS' Williams, CLOTHING, Secretary. AT THE OLD STANDIgAIN." WILLIAM PIDCOCK Jm STAND. Cardigan Jackets, Woollen Shirts, Drawers, etc. iuovHwrk to hi UD tlx 1'imt Olfl.-eMAIN STK.EKT, W')ie-li- e ia prepHral to nccuiu-mcfclnhis liuuieroua .utruus with a choice ao ortnicnt of Mprchuinlme on rentwimhle trrm. Butter, EpK, tv('liM,auil Onerat Produce tukm in exchange for OooiIb. not ret used. H fh NOTICE. In a few d;tj I will also commence 3Ialad Valley Mining District. 100 Cases BOOTS & SHOES mms rusTmrr wast roamed January L 1H71, mikI ia Unnidi-m t ilnl, follows, wit: Ht Mrur Jliver Kails, on the East line of Box Kl Jer County, and rmmuiir Northerly alouR lft'B4B4B ill" the summit ft tlwi mountains between CnclM-nnBox Klder Counties, o.xuo tho uwtd of Henderson Crek. theme est across Jhilad Valley to the summit of the mountain! W est of Malud river, thence Southerly along mid summits opposite th. place of hegiuuing, theme Kast to the place of beginning. Win. U. ANDERSON, Kceorder for V.aWd Valley Mining District. Porta 0, U. T. Jan. 23, 1S71. "'im'SlJI NEW BRANDS OF Cassiincrcs, 3Icltons, Doeskins, Jeans, 17-- 4 (Successor to Peteb Boyle,) General Wood Turner, cviJi-irx"- J Domestics, ' W1IOLESAM2 & ltETAII 31 AICEll, AT THE Eighth Street, Ogden. Orders promptly executed. Terms reasonable. Produce taken in payment for work. 17-lJ. II. ECCLES. . Stripes, Tickings, Denims, Prints. finnrivn in ra GOLDEN GATE ill (immrra mm AND FURNISHINGS. E. J. W ATKINS, Hoot and Shoe Maker, A frcslt lot of first-clas- s, sparkAt the of the Boot, Fifth Street, Ogden, Wines and have ling Liquors just been All kindssignof Boots Big and Shoes made to order. Rereceived at the 1st and 3rd Ward Store. pair neatly executed. Produce taken ia payment. J- - Remember the Big Boot, "a J 7Ctf tr OF f At his residence, opposite City Hall, 17-t- f. Salt Lake City. GcvriNB Jewelry. The only establishment at which genuine Jewelry can be obtained in Ogden is Rt Par!k & I!okssf.l'8, Main Street. Repairs neatly executed. All work warranted. ltf OPENING! AX AI. Simmons, itejy CITY OGDEN. IMPORTANT TO MINERS, EVANS ASSAYS OKE WITH DISPATCH at his office, Sixth Strort , 0lon. Reference, ean b had at tho l'riutiug Office, T. Confectionery, A. LITTLE WEST OF THE CHOP HOUSE. Locks, Harness Trimmings, Cutlery, Carpenter's Tools. A FULL STOCK OF GEOCERIES. A full line of Groceries, Dry RAILROAD SALOON, Goods and Notions are to be found on Street,- - Ogden. The Salt Lakers are Sale at the lowest rates at the 1st and Philharmonic BRANDS OF WINES, rpHR CHOICEST CIOAR.S alwava on hand. to have a Philharmonio Society. Just Crd Ward Store. 76tf JTwoUQUOKS an4BIU4AK1) TABLES for lorert w hat w e want in this city. Who will take of the csnic. The Turest Drugs iu the mar- ISilliards 25 ets. the lead in Ogden ? Plenty of musical per Game. UKYXOLDS 4 CO. talent here; it, only wants bringing out. ket are dispensed by competent hands 1st and 3rd Ward If we can't get up a good Philharmonio at the 7C-- tf Store. Association at once, let us have a glee BOOKSELLER AND NEWS AGENT. The Drugs and Medicines at tiary stand. The U. !?. official paid, club. Anything musical is good, and with a canning chuckle, that as the Ter- Ogden is famishing for harmony. Wake the Pioneer Drug Store, Main St., Ogden, Rooks, Tapers, Magazines, Etc. ritory had filed no claim on it, the laud up, vocalists, get together and exercise are of '.he finest quality, the Wines and AT PUBLISHERS' PRICES, 76-t- f Iir.ooM was open. The applicant filed his claim your heavenly gift. ltf CoKNUt, Og'len Cut. Liquet 1 of tho purest brands. ; GOLDEN OGDEN G ATE Choih. We are pleased to notice the improvement in our Tabernacle choir. The anthem at the close of last Sunday morning's meeting was well rendered. Keep at it, Br. Pugh. Select voices that will harmonize, frown down every attempt at shrieking, tell the singers not to try to excel each other in power, but to sing sweetly, blending the sounds into one rich volume of harmony. The choir should practice, often,, and the public should appreciate their gratuitous efforts. Time, skill, books and patience are requisite to make a good choir, and our band of singers ought to be helped and encouraged. We repeat, they are improving, and there is no reason why we should not have a choir in Ogden that 1871, will compare favorably with any in the On SATURDAY, March Territory. I will open the above Establishment, J. II. ECCLES, on very reasonable terms, Z. G. HI. I. tele-grsph- io was special, notices. For Sale, It will Jlain Etc., Etc. over-cunni- first-Cla- All Orders addressed to D. II. FEERfV Ogden City, will have prempt attention. l-- well-know- pre-em- C.B.McGREGOE, J01LX II, KELSON. I8-l- y h. x. CLAirsoy, Superintendent. |