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Show FITTING FAIR. that the va information it con- contains on the, subject may be conMeMcaii, the "martyr,'' the "white veyed to our intelligent farmers: souled," and the "high minded," or "It is but a few years since the immore properly, the irritabJe vindic- portance of tbe extensive cultivation of tive aud impotent blunderer, re- broom corn has attracted the attention of either the farmer or manufacturer; ceived a terrible set back last Tues- but now in the Northern, Western, and Middle Slates it has grown into an imday. So did his organ, the Salt portant industry; and there is no reason Lake Spittoon. The majority of the why the Southern planter should not turn his attention to the same subject, Republicans, in1 mass meeting or and thereby awaken another manufacmuss meeting assembled, repudia- turing occupation among his prople. There is no climate in the United Slates ted both him and it, in which broom corn will not with that to send the decapitated official more or lesa success; aud thegrow mode of to Cincinnati as ft delegate, would be its cultivation dors not materially differ from that of the ordinary corn or maize au insult to the President of the And, like all other grain, its cuccesstul United States. prod not ion is dependent upon the qualWe think that if the Utah Repub- ity of theis soil and the care with which the land cultivated. broom-corlicans can find no better delegate the land should be 'Far in fall. the This attains two ob plowed than McKean to speak for them iu jects: the frosts of winter ameliorate their national councils of their party, and make friable the soil; and the work A d Senator Christ ianey has introduced another anti-Uta- h bill into the Senate. This one aims to deprive our women of the elective franchise and to prevent all persons irom voting who have violated the y of Act 18G2. It also provides that all elections the ballots used shall at be of unifdrm size and appearance. The next thing for Christiancy to do is to show how, or by what process judges of elections are to tell who have violated the law of 'G2. Hlnn Meeting. COMPLICATION. From Thursdays Daily Yf Feb 'JK Cash Pnld for Wheal. The highest Ogden Mills. price paid at the marktt tor of the A edi- has been nominated Unite! States Marshal of Utah, vico Maxwell, removed. This appointment was made through Chicago Tribune, 18th. that they are in a miserable fix, and deserve no consideration at the hands For their own of the convention. credit's sake they should, send somebody hotter qualified to represent tlu'.ir views aud their status than 1 Methodist cxhorter, de posed from the bench for incessant blundering, and who is the laughingstock of the legal fraternity, aud the di;sj)ised of the Government and the nation. If they conclude, however, to send him, by all means elect Rob Williams ns his companiou and colleague. They would make au approhalf-erase- For Sale. Ilugfry, sleigh and building lots on the bench, and a stack of Lay. L'tupirc ai sl-- i lm WALKER DUO'S office. priate team. DIXAPITATKIL White, Esq., generally known as ' ' t-- , in that region, and that uo more uncalled for newspapers arc peddled out for waste paper. 'Good bye, Kllis Juda White., . pur-cbas- nnti-Mc- : ' ( : Suicide in the third degree, if not worse, to suffer a cough aud cold to cul minate in consumption, when a single bottle of Uai.e's Ilosr.v of IIorkiioi xm and Tar, taken in time, would effect a perfect and permanent cuic. Pike's Toothache Drops cure in one minute. . peop'c have reason for congratulation on the result of last year's experiment in the manufacture of brooms. It is a settled fact that broom corn caa be raised and the rqw material w rked up here, with profit to the farmer and the' manufacturer, and witk bi'nefitto the community. Wc hope the past years efforts will not prove a mere spurt but tfcat brootn become ' one of the corn will of the county Maple products and the manufacture of brooms a permanent industry of this city. We take the following from the Report of ; Department of Agriculture for Jauu-tr- y and February, 1870", to show what has been done in the culture of room corn iu Massachusetts, ' and Prof. Dos't Fail to kk Pnnsr.sT. McDonald and Dr. Rice will give a free lecture this evening nt the City Hall, upon Health, Hygiene, Phrenology, kc. The Professor is a centre shot Phrenologist. Those desiring charts should interview him. Dr. Rice treats upon reform principles, the various diseases that afilict old and young, ef both sexes. His consultations are free of charge. Office at the Utah Hotel. Private residences visited when desired. Notice to Farmers and Gar- deners. The largest and best stock of Garden Flower and Grape Seeds ever brougUt to Utih, at G. II. Tribe's. Garden snd Flower Seeds sold at eastern prices. Lucerne, Clover arid Grape Seeds at market rates. Orders by mail will receive prompt attention; if accompanied Wy cash, send remittances by P. 0. order or registered letter. GEO. II. TRIBE, Min Street, Ogden, Utah. slT-l- Tbr NeRTBsax Mails. A. I. ui Am-merma- n, Supt. of railway mail Sfrvice, eighth division, has been is this neighborhood several days, investigating charges made by some of tho citizens of Corinne, against the U. X. R. R. fur not forwarding the mails promptly during the snow blockade on that road. Supt. Merrill, efth.itrod, met Mr. in Ogden yesterday aud exsituation to the satisfaction the plained of that gentleman, and we are authorized to sny that the northern mails will continue le be forwarded over the narrow gauge. The last ruse of the expir-iu- g "buigv has failed to accomplish the object drslrel, and they have not made the "fur fly" either. Esq , Am-merm- an IS Ighwa j Robbery. named ;; Last evening a man Harry Clifford, a miner, was taken a short din tanc up City Creek canyon, when he was drnzgrd and robbed of a time check & Benson Mining CoM for on the and $10 in currency. In the course vf the night the police arrested party giving the name of Dodd Dremen, ou MiHpicion of having httd a hand in the robbery, and, on searching hint, th-Co.oncrnliou in jflfllvillc. found the lime check in favofof Clifford on his person. He is in jail awaiting About a year ago, twelve men living preliminary examination. Dcs. Eve. in Millville,' resolved to work their land News. and combine their interests together, Francis I. being desirous to r:use believing that they could accomplish one of the most learned meu of the more labor and raise more grain, kc. by a united effort, thau each one work- time to the highest dignities of the church, asked him if he was of noing for himself alone. ble "Your Miijcsty," nn pescent. As a result, of one season's labor, tbey raised 1,400 bushels of small grain, s we red the abbot, ''there were three brothers in Noah's ark, but I cannot sixty tons of hay aud thirty acres of tell positively from which of them I broom corn. The Jeseup" brothers, who am descended." He obtained the are shareholders, already possessed the post. necessary machinery to manufacture i. .mxuw k nuuvm. n. iam ee3&.:M'yt!'vwmim m brooms, and they have, worked up about a third of their crop, waking ISO dozen ' ESTiFJAY NOTICE. brooms. In balancing up their books HA J'OI.T.OW-- I this winter, they found 'that they had r 1N!VR IN MY HniiiiHlc. wlii-l- i TI!K if nut rlaltnH tin v. will hi olJ made one dollar per day for the whole ntnl luUcn nwar w .thin Wo Rd m $-1- . Cultivating, harvesting, and taking of seed,' Interest op laud, - IS 00 00 ) 40 00 cou it y is might-consul- , . IIICOOM-COKK- The Weber e . We hope that the new P.. M., who received his commission 'on Tuesday lafct will, do the', square thing, and that under 'his administration people of Bcarf Lake ivijl have no cause to complain.; ' Wc expect to kear that. the Junction is now for wurded regularly to our subscribers Welcome, ' It s Our readers will remember the exposure we made of the irregularities in the Kvanston Post Office, discovered while visiting that town on our way to the .Rear Lake country. The Pustmaster was very wrathy, and instead of endeavoring to make the matter, right by apologizing for the past and doing better for the future, he commenced abusing ns through the columns of the Salt Lake Spittoon. We continued, to give the facts in the case ns they came to our knowledge, and, finding that there was no hope for a reformation, we took pains to make a proper representation of the truth in a quarter it where it would receive the deserted. ' Our efforts have not been iu vain. Kllis has been removed, and bis place supplied by the appointment of C M. Ju,4.ge White. BEDLAM BROKE LOOSE. y, Net profit on one acre A trO 72 IJR01:i& DESCRIPTION. ' New York, A very exei'iug and unlooked Ur nouncciiH'iit. of ihe tnoeting betwed, Henry 0 liowen and l';ym,uth church ' examining commiitee took place at si!.inl n The Salt Lake County Republican is then done, and will not be liable to Mass Meeting at the Liberal Institute on the delay of planting early in the Tuesday last turned out a muss meeting. spring. This is particularly necessary A little before two p.m. the hall was in the Northern and Middle States, where spring sowing is often delayed by filled up in a hurry, a tremendous crowd cold rains. If the ground be well and having gathered, and a row ensued bedeeply plowed in the fall, it will super- tween two factions. One was the Mccede the neccsMty of plowing it again in Kcan and ringite crowd; i lie other was the spring. The ground may be then and Fedwell harrowed, rolled, and scored out composed of three feet one way and two the other. eral office holders. This is assuming that the grfuud is in JSach faction nominated a chairman, If it bo not, R. II. Robertson good, fertile condition. being the choice of the then it should be made so before plowing McKeanites, and Gen. N. 1 Kimball in the fall, by the .application of barnEach of yard manni e. Land cannot be made too that of the rich for corn. Scoring the land out both these pcrsous claimed the chair, and ways eunbles the farmer to work it both each was flanked by a Secretary, Lock-leways by cnltivatyre. If the seed be of the Spittoou being the Sec. for dropped with a drill, then it need not be (cored. About three quarts ot seed will the former, and Paddock, .of the peniAs soon a the corn pi cut an acre. Sec. for the latter. ebove the ground, the working to tentiary, A general uproar characterized the keep down the weeds should be commenced, and it must be kept clean whole proceedings. McKean was there in person, and as usual made a speech, throughout the season. "Broorn-ooriwill grow from eiftht to in Strickland the eulogy of McKean. twelve feet high, and its brush should be o who wouldn't the pay the two feet long. This, however, is dependent in a great degree upon the qualify of money for his oflice was also the roil and the care with which it is there of course, and made a motion. cultivated. After the corn is grown to Also Maxwell, late Marshal, who advised full site, the top is bent down at a paint the meeting to proceed in a "straightsbont one foot below the brush. This is for the purpose of preventing too much forward manner" he being an illustritpreading: and it should be so bent that ous example, in proef whereof see Beait may be as little exposed to the pun as ver grand jury report and statements of possible, in order to preserve i:s color. TV bet he this operation of bending down his cwn deputies. It was only by the the top be done before or after the ripen- influence of a few cool heads that blows ing of the seed, must be made to depend did not supplement the deafening yells upon whether it would be most desirable of the infuriated and opposing factious. to perfectly ripen the seed or secure the McKean The faction nominated the best quality of brush. The plant being ripe and properly dry, the brush is to following delegates to the Territorial be ctt off and hauled to the barn, and Convention : the seed taken off either by a hackle or 0. F. Strickland, J. R. McDride, other machinery. Lemuel U. Colbath, 'The character of broom corn has, of Henry Synions, Jus J. Iletfernaa, late yars, been much improved in Samuel Kahn. Samuel and Woodward, James Tucker, length and stiffness, persons desirFrederic Luckley, ous of raising it should pay much lleiiry Tborupsou, M. K. llaikntss, attention to the charaoter of tbe seed. E. A. Wall, The brKsh for several years back has Frank Iluffnmn, been worth in the market from six to nnitcs nominated the The twelve cents a pouud, and the seed is worth abont as much as corn for the annexed: ' feed of cattle.' ' H. W. Rennet t, T. R Jenes, There are large manufactories of J. It. Walker, J.'M. Morgan, clothes and sweeping brooms in New f). J. llollister, . B, W. Morgan, York and Massachusetts, and the pro- V. M. (1. Silva, W. S. McCornick, duct of the broom eoru is always a Wm. flaydon, S p. Conner, , marketable article. Some estimate may Wni. Gill Mills, George Gosa. be made of the profit arising frtAn the cultivation ef broom corn, from the rei ' The meeting was K disgrnce to the ports made by the farmers of Massa- party and served to show' what kind of New York to their reformers chusetts " and they are who want to "civil- societies, as the iie" agricultural respective Utah, and introduce a "bslter way" same are published in their annual tran' sactions. among the "Mormons." A den of wild The "value of the crop is reported by beasts t in such & fashion, the Massachusetts Agiiculutral Society but even tbe wild Indians of the plains as follows: would scorn to stoop to such hoodlum-is1.159 lbs.' of brush, at 7 cfs. $81 13 and disorder, in a common pow wow 39 GO over the affairs of ft i8 bushels of sevd.at 40 cts. tribe. The great Republican party ought to.be proud of Expenses: their "Gentile" jtartizans nt Salt Lake. Manure ,. $10 00 . ; 3 00 and Tlowing planting ,' Trap. Republioan Leader, s Gen. Rusk. Cowardly Troalnientor3iri sl4-l- GojE.William Nelson, formerly anti-polygam- Republican THE HKECISER.BoUpv LOCAL ITEMS. AXQTnER HILL..',,. y 1'riHlor (falliday'g liottfie. ineetiBj look plnco un tho reoeiptofta following letter: Brooklyn, Feb.'lT. Mr. Henry C. JJoivit: Sin The examining cornmiitp8 have directed me to say they are aciing muUr express in.Mniotisns from the church embraced in the resolution, a copy 0f which linn bcon transmitted to you. JQ the judgment of the committee there is no ground for your assertion th.t you are on trial 'I hey are making a in'o the assertipng or charges w hich you have made against of tbe church, concern-i- u fallow nvmb'-rwhich you have repeat e Ilj ejpressid yourself re.idy to give me esauntiai facts. Tiiete t'ncts they demand. Tite commit-iftherefore, renew their request that place specified jou appear at a time1 and in my letter of (he lit ii instant, for tag purpose therein named. Respectfully, invf-.tiaiio- s e. S. I'.. IliLUDAT, About 8 o'clock, Mr. Rowen, his soui, lwaid and Henry E. liowen, and Dr. Ward, entered Mr. Hallidcy's house, and in about an hour the donr was flaag open, lights flahe.t and angry voicw were heard, the cause of which is h set down in the words of Mr. Dowen: ' Since the receipt of that letter Dowen hn been bucily eng'ged in pr paving his itatement for the cemmittM. On entering the room in Hallidaj'g houe to night, Dowen found to his a company of forty or fifty persona assembled, embracing membars of the committee, the chairman of the council in session and others. Amongst tlioBe present was Henry Ward Baechar, who at in the corner of the room the door, not io view of Dowen. Bowen bring called upon for hiiBtata-- ' ment, presented and read it. Previous te presenting his statement, Bowen ax nt Mich n large pressed hi.i hur j i i and asked for the reaoon of their presence. lie was told thattke committee never objected to hi bringing his friends there. The ilea wa that Uowan had a right to bring ia uny friends he cared to. Tho only objection wa9 to reporters; that the company came with t he committee's invitation, not Mr. Heecber's. "But," said Mr. Bowea, Jr., "Beecner is chairman of the committee. " To thin Liowen replied that he had no objection, but the responsibility of publicity luuct rvil with them; that he came there to prt'Svnt his Htatoment to the committee and nobody else; that he should decline to give it to the pri'ys, and if published it nhould be by the examining committee, and not by him. Aficr Bnwen retd his statement, continued the narrator. Mr Tilny in, quit ed'if b had any other fc's to giv, to which Bustcu rej iied "that is all taij evening." As Mr. Bowen was about leaving, Vr. Ulair, uiMbi'r of the cemmittee, said: "I proti-s- t ugainst Bnwen leaving " Mr. E hart-wit- ba-lii- 'Vr Bowt-nyou will leu not be peicuited to vet the room." Bowen stepped toward the door of the front parlor, whi-r- t Mr. T. V. White jumped up nnd locked the dwor, put the 15owa bis pwknt. and as Uokin$ toward the dorr ef the othr room. White called out, kck that other door," and Heveral men jumped toward it. Kvery one jumped to his fet, aut Bowen wuu too t'iick and got to thebaalt parlor door jui t fuif 'veral of the crowd got to it. H's stm. Henry K., followed, rushed to the door and called for the thinking they were Heir Hnry V. Bowen interposed energetically, (ihiuking there was going to he h row ) .. Henry Bowea continued, "My father was in the .hall, my brother and Br. Ward were in the parlor and I got on the stoop 'outside, mid called for the paess and the as-- ciated pres reporttr, nu t another rushed up and Bowen told them of the occurrence. Then one of Liowen's sons upbraided Whit. said, 6h-annr- , kf u ho-e- w lhr. prc, ) McKcan's orgau says of the noisy republicans who opposed the late PRICE LIST OF EGGS Chief .Justice' aud his gfng at the For W, Fbom 11k; a Class roiLisr. "muss meeting on Tuesday: "They I lymoni h Kwk't Tnrtri.lK. did their duty zealously and JtoiiMi DtH'hi. they (H) per setting of 13 "'' u'a an army,, of licdlamites and Ighoru'e Unn'tuns, rluht Uoi-8 ' ,; Chaos seemed come again " ?4.0U for wttiittf of 13 mid Yoiiiix I irk Phi-This is no doubt very true. But r,r sale aftor Si'iitcmber what a compliment to M:Kean and firct. , Ahuvlilst, r.t - p.m.' i the Stray i )t Ar tit . i.rompt i his followers! "An army ?f Bedlam- year, each. , I'm .ii ', pliani (j ty. must lis arcomiia-dt'pn'idn , ." nt topi-r 't mii due off i(n p.tr rijrht, v l.v iiniumt io I'. O. ites." Well, the Trib. is correct for They have about twenty acres of hole in Mini null cro jiT left vr, prop t.nm.loii on left or l.y Dratt ou WrIN, broom ctvn still to work up, which they hif. A Co. k F. A l ti , onci. r iiiiiIi, nliout thrpo o years old, iii. good descriptor., truly, ul'h-rwill as soon as the state of limii'lcil mi nit h manufacture '"" rr' All 'srifs filitjipi-i"an army of Bedlamites, ' conspicuone liroM ii iniuY., mnlu, hunp kupn, collar nd lo !, RlJ-'p 'r.iit-the broom market will warrant. They Ml'l'lif III tl k. ,ltl,K TO NA.MK him ous among which',' was Lockley himin.. us.. coliiTil Iiiiri lnitlp, pollitr ami wifl ijiik(-lcomplain nbfiut the difficulty of finding lluOuu n nrk-- , !' Iff slmiililcr. Athlri-self, v the Trib's A. M Viw.iv. representative. a market for their brooms as the country ii. J. Tl'IiXKIt. ti n t IVinalluviier. - flooded with a J i s' so. sl7-ilT-l- t cheap imports J article 0o' en, Umh. f'pb. ls7i',, out-yclle- d mm.- OK-hiu- t rFg"-lirow- - i ti-- -' - n "r-ite- : ; r -- (ii.'-r- t .1 . I 1 l t. Cme-lull- v . , i ; I i- liri-lii.- in City. , - Jltli, 2 n |