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Show ! LOCAL ITEMS, wurifOT. Secretary Morrill' Address, v From Mondatft Da&y of Nov. 6. With' all tt'8tumping; aod wind tturk. of the agitators, Returned Home. to vote induced bo will )0 "Mormon" George Whitehead. New for boots t'tr Haskin. Whj? .Because he is and (bees at his eh op tm Maia Street. in do way a representative of the tuaKHo of the people of this Territory, he has taken everv opporAnother. A little boy, eon ef Mr. died from small pox laet tunity to naisrepreseut, malign and John Crawford, our deepest t.lwsa theiu. Uecaase be has taken night. The parents have sympathy. Might iu conspiriop, wiih other per" wim of hiuiilar despicable character, Tun Skin that is Aitlictei) with t iU crimes upon innocent persons, Salt Rheum, the Itch, or other eruption, and bus plotted to brin their best promptly acquires health aod softness Because under the purifying and etaollient in tijeii to ignominious death. of Glbnm's Sulphur Soap, which he has heaped upon them every is endorsed by the medical fraternity. and vituperathat a tive person with the gift of the gab Wikter Hbbd. Who wants stock could utter. Because he is tho auherded for the wiBter? F. A. Hammond thor of several bills designed to de- will receive animals at the Tithing corprive them of the right to vote for ral, Ogden, on the 18th and Hth insts. anybody, to ho'.d office, or serve on a See advertisement. jury. Because he has worked with anti-Mormo- n lie-ati- se e in-to- low-minde- il d powers in Congress against fieo. WhltelieticTs ilitir bent intercuts. Because he has Boot and Shoe Shop, next to the Utah dl8 2ms83-2tried to uuneat the mau whom they Hotel. elected to represent them, and in g North Ogden. Mrs. Beckstead, who so has used tho most disreputable was the first person taken with the small means that could be fabricated. Be at North Ogden, we are informed, cause he is tho associate of tho bit- pox died about 2 p.m. yesterday. We hope terest, foulent and most unscrupulous, the disease will spread no further in that dissolute, dishonest and blackguard settlement. euemies who have ever nil hi du-in- attempted their overthrow. To ask a "Mormon ' for a vote for B tskiu is (to qSIt an iusult to his uod right common soiisej of self preservation. Any one who has been a "Mormon" who votes for Buskin shows a lack of ordinary intellect truly deplorable. Any Gen tile who vote's for him ranks himself self-respe- ct Ladies Will find all tbey need in drees goods, notions, &o , at A. Kuhn & Bros , Og- den. d30 tf , with tho iocs of tho people, and virtually says he wants the "Mormons" disfranchised. For, of all the adven-- . turera who have come to Utah for a living, and then tried to trample on tho people who made it possible for them to exist here, Baskin is one of these most to bo despised and con- temned in tne whole rabid, false, ra pacious, faithless and malignant Mrs. Woodruff, who a has been making tour in the eastern, southern and western States, inspecting and delivering addresses to the Sunday schools, is in town. She has paid a visit to the Sunday schools at Salt Lake, and this evening wiUleave for San Francisco, calling at several towns on the way. Mrs. Woodruff is much interested in the cause of education, and in her travels has labored with, and organized schools among, several tribes of Indians. Fca the West b'anS- - The last company of season have reached this immigrants for 111 EI It New York. They ieft for this city on Take no notice of anybody who the evening of the 4ih inst. The followtalks about Uuited States Marshals or ing returning missionaries are with- the company: Elders Teter Barton, David their deputies having authority to PUtte D. Lyman, R. R. at our election in this city. McKenzie, W. Carrington, W. W. B. Llewelyn, there is no place iu UtaH outside of Evans, II. W. Taylor and L. B'own. Salt Lake City where they can pre Tbey will probably reach Ogden about load to any business with tho elec- he 12th inst. tion! U. S. Marshals are uot author- V. S, 31 Immiorastb IKS HALS AXD Di:iUHlvS. - re elections except in cities of twenty thousand or njiwarrl. At Salt Lake the Marshal and his deputies may assist the supervisors and preserve order during the election. But they may not obstruct, hiuder, or amioy any voter, who is legally exercising the elective fran chisc, neither can they take the place of the local police, or supplant the municipal authorities. The "Liberal" organ, in order to make strife uud stir up a riot if possible, tries to make it appear that the Marshal and his deputies have a right to govern the city and run the election. But hi following from a decision of tho Su pretuo Court vi' tho United States in an appealed case nudtr tho act from which tho Marshals obtain their authority at elections, slows the fallacy of tho assumption and the ignorance and impudence of the "organ." "Certainly it will not be chimed that the Uuited Suites have the power or are required to do mete polio duty in the States. If a State canuot protect itself against domosiio violence, the tinned States may, upon the ctll of its Legisla. tuie or Executive, lend their assistance for that purpose." The powers of internal police are not ized to act at Some people make the in dull times of consequence of the plea when required to pay prevalent malady Wanted Now. license or city taxes. This is very natural. But it should be remembered that a great amount of means is now being expended, and more will be necessary, to help stop the spread of the disease, and for the care of the indigent sick. Now, above all other times should taxes and licence fees be promptly paid by our citirens. ex-Jud- New York, Nov. 4. The meeting was called to order by James E. Mott, and Theodore Ros.seelt occupied the cbair. The list of Vice Presidents included most of the prominent names on the street. Secretary Morrill, on coming forward was received wiih deafening oheerH. He opened by reference t the critical of the country t the Presidential election held sixteen years ago. At that lime he sid the United States was without stability t home, and without credit abroad. In tbN deplorable condition of affairs the Republican party seized the helm of the Government, crushed out rebellion and established This peace at home and ere iit abroad. be could not work accomplished gigaotio without an outlay of treasure. Besides oceans of blood in these sixteen years Sve billions of dollars were expended. For this lavish outlay he held the Democratic party responsible. In the pres ent contest it should not be forgotten that the party charged with these misdeeds again tries to get bold of the public treasury. They boast of an alliance similar to the one they established in 1861 an alliance the people have fought and beaten in the field, and they cun fight and beat it whenever it appears The cry of reform is a bugbear, intended to catch the public, and it really means nothing. The cry of the solid South ii tile Trojan horse of American politics, and goes hand iu hand with the sham cry of reform as the precursor of another rebellion. Referring to the financial condition of the country, the fpeaker devoted much of the time to tho consideration payments. The question of specie party sailing under the flag braud-ereform, say that the public credit must be restored. I maintain, said he, that the Republican party have re stored the public credit, and it only remains now to preserve the handiwork of this party. The reform party seems te have received a sudden fit of fervor in the questions of our national hjnor. In 1861 United States bonds sold in the market for 89 cents on the dollar. Today these same bonds bring 10G in gold in the market. This increase of seventeen per cent, is due to the good and honest policy of the party now in power. With the present steady increase of our national credit, and with a corresponding decrease ft the national debt, we may look for a resumption of specie payments in 1879. But should the calamity occur of this sham reform party obtaining control of the government, when may we look for resumption? This is a question Providence only can answer. Judging this party in the light of its past record, it is unlikely that they would caute resumption in this generation. The speaker concluded by making a review of the situation in the South. He said that under Demoeratio rule, not even the freedom of the negro was assured; the present order of things would in all probability be subverted, and the work of the Republican party for the post sixteen years would be rendered void. A vote of thanks was tendered to the speaker, after which the meeting adjourned with three cheers for Hayes and Wheeler. con-diiio- n d Small Pox. Special Marshal Fife informs us that there are bat nineteen (19) oases, all told, in this city. He has superintended the cleaning up and disinfecting of thirteen houses. Some of the cases included in the nineteen reported are convalescent, and others are of a very mild nature. lie sari the disease is certainly decreasing, and he belioves it will soon be extirpated. In response to Dr S. B Young's letter Marshal Fife says he has taken all the precautions named, oud further, has made a liberal use of the best disinfectants outsida and inside every house where the disease has appeared before pronouscing it clean. He says Mrs. Carter's little girl is not afflicted with small pox as reported, but the vaccination Las taken a powerful effect upon her naturally delicate and nervous She has no eruption whatever, except three vaccine pustules. We hope the publio will avoid excitement as much as possible, and abstain from repeating exaggerated rumors. Tbey do no good whatever, and are likely to produce much evil. Ogden suffers en ugh from the realities of the sickness without being made to experi ence needless pain and loss. Born ' Op the morning of Nov. this city, to the wife of Dr j' phy.afineson. The mother" j h j J are doing well, and the father aad i, J8 pondingly happy. Died On Sunday evening, Nov. 5th 0f u ' phoid fever, Smuel a. Durti . Bristol, England, aged 45. Funeral from residence on the bech ' Tuesday, Nov. 7lh, at 2 p m. At 12:40 this morning. Nov. Cth 1876 of flooding af.er childbirth, Sarah Grif fin, wife of Mr. Charles E. Griffin 0f this city, aged 39 years, on, month aa4 four days. Nov. 6th, 1876, of canker and tetih ing, Arthur Phillip., 80n of Joseph nd Prudence Jackson, agedf8 n0DibIlnd 3 days. Funeral to take place from on Franklin street at 3:30 p.m. Friends invited. rrtde the 7th' At Farmington, Davis county, Utah Oct. 8ih, 1876, Lavin Wnlker, eldest daughter of Hyrum and Jerunha Smith Deceased was born in the towu of Ma ce lon. Wayne rounty, N Y.. Sept. 16th 1827; married to Lorin Walker, Juni at Naiivoo, Hancock county, 111., to whom she proved a devoted and faithful wife and companion until the day of her death; was the mother of thirteen children, eleven of whom and thirteen grandchildren she hns left, in connection wiih .many kindred and friends, to feel and mourn their temporal loss in her sudden and apparently 23.1, 1844. The Disease at Hooper. The people of Hooper have taken measures to prevent the spread of small pox in their large and flourishing settlement. There are two cases, both in one family, of a mild character. The house, as well as the residences of one or two neighboring families supposed to have been exposed to the contagion, has been quarantined. Persons visiting Hooper will entirely avoid going near the infected point, by taking the road leading to the southern and central part of the settlement. The infected house is la the northeastern ly death. At the time of tbe exodus of the Saints' from Nmivoo, she remained with her husband in Illinois until the Spring of 185C, when, with her kusband and family, she went, to Florence, Nebraska, on their way to Uuh, where tbey remained four years, crossing the plains in 1860, in tbe company of emigrants in charge of Patriarch John Siui h. Soon after their arrival in tb Territory they district. in Farmington. Dav s county, where she resided until her death. r, Death. A son of Mr. Frederick To the truly faithful no encomiums of Ogden Valley, died of small pox are necessary. It i therefore utficiect at 8 o'clock MoDdaj morning. to say that as she ha always lived, so she died, firm in tbe faith of tbe roipel Appointments as restored through the Prophet Joseph Smith. Cm. Deseret News. Elders Alfred Hanson, Ingwald C. to Thoreseu aud Ola Olson, mif Scandinavia, arrived at Liverpool on Friday, 13th inst., and left for Copenhagen the' same day. They were accompanied by Sister Liljinquist and her eon HAMMOND WILL RECEIVE Waldemar All the pasty were in excelfor winter herd at Ogden lent health and spirits. Corral" on Moaday and City "Tithing Elder John Robinson is appointed Nov. 18th and 14th, inst. Tuesday, ConferDurham in Elder the Traveling Term $2 50 per head not be responsience, and Eider Thomas A. Wheeler Is $3 50 and be responsible, for appointed to preside in the Birmingham ble, horned etock.; horses, $3 00 and So.OO. Conference. These appointments to take to effect at the earliest convenience of the Special terms can be made according &o. numbers, 1C. Mill. Star, Oct. Elders named F.A.HAMMOND. doO-s90 2t He came home one night with a torn ceat which she kindly undertook to mend, but when she turned it upside ESTRAY NOTICE. down so that a letter and a "Domestic Fashion" of a new overskirt, which she T HAVE IN 51 T FOKi'SION THE FOLLOW-- I INa iiewrilied animal, which, if not claims had given him to mail to her mother and taken away within f n dys, will be sold M Regulations. some two weeks before, tumbled out of days from dale at the District Stray Ponndat atI ooe of the pockets, it was so lively there Lopin. Carhe Co, en Saturday. Salt Lakb Citt, Utah, for the next ten minutes that his first o'clock p in. One ted yearling heifer, itar in face, wbite wiNov. 8, 1876. move in the morning was in the direcly, crop oft IWt ear. tion of a wig More, to the proprietor of One red two vare old heifer, crop offloft ew. Hon. L. J IIbrrick: eai'Iin steer, star in lace, cropoff Oi.e red which he gravely explained that close Dear Sib: I perceive by the Herald of to the the study Tint- - iicht lirindle Foreign yeas old heifer, mm of Oct. 2Cth that quarantine has been application of the Khedive of Egypt had done whi'e on body, W on left (boulder, - on left tPPolicy lifted from some of the houses recently it. One ted two years old utetr, crop aud undertit iufested by small pox. ia ear, crop and slit iu ripbt. One ml beilr ohIT, ertp off r'tht cor. I beg leave to call your attention to One brown three yrar. edd steer, under LIST OF LETTUKS the following facts: So long as the scales of! ri:hr. ev, K If on lett hip. Cue red t.mr years old (ter, crop off each etf.r or particles of dead cuticle are falling UNCLAIMED IN THK POST Cilice in Opden, Territory of Utah, on the on left hip ..' from the person, so long they will spread ,' One ligi.t red 7 or eiht years old caw, (trail 1878, which, if not culled for within the contagion, and at least twenty days 4tuofNotr., left on hip. 08 one month will be tent to the Oead Letter Ollice fork in righ? ear, blotch ora-.should expire after a patient is convalLADIES Lisr. nUnVdTrk yea; line; heifer, no marker escent before he should be released from Brooks S McOrary L ' brauds visible. ...,.,, Millur El quarantine, and even then they should Faulkner M One red two yeart Id heifer, crop Scott M not allow themselves to mingle with the Han is A D eOue red two years old heifor, whits on belly s Hums C Singleton A public, lest any of these little particles l'Llp M E hof.e7ed yearling hilei nnderdopeia Wh ear should be falling, and thus continue '.he GENTS LIST. old steor, double awai . rne dark red two yea danger. Salt Lake City has thus far ' "n C Hall M K on left hip. I lowf.-rear. in right I been free and on ft trust will be so, and I Aaa irWJl Harper S Ooe dark red two years old steer, etcp honor to HuiibesCF retain on beg your quarantine fcerlm A II Hill J "o"neliKhtred yearling beifer, white In knU old and new districts, sufficiently long Barber M C 8 ImmortMn J P and under belly. to make all things safe. llHlilerson It Y aad ..fop Jouet U On red two years old steel, upper L Baker AL w.n.,te Kcmplaad off right Very respectfully, your brother, iu Ml bit wop ear, lSUir W on left nip. Krapi Sktmour B. Young, M. D , body, V ou left shoulder, a Blnir J L Maguire K Oiie briixlle and white, three years old.r. of Salt Lake City. Bingham A N Quarantine Physician off. Myrs 8 O fl , points of both trnms broken . aet-tle- d Fn-ere- Arrivals and WINTERHERD. FA. lt ( Quarantine Nov-llt- to sOO-l- - w lt-- M'f-cro- p d Death is busy in Ogden. The ravages of the grim tyrant are not confined to the sphere of email pox. Several deaths have recently occurred from causes with which that disease had no connection. Last night he claimed two more Mr. Samuel II. Burl yielded to the destroyer at 9l45. He had conheifer, U Koroundiug One led and while spotted jearlinc tracted a eevere cold while at the saw Brockbaok. J Miles 0 W lH,t(lliitiblor. Busick A Menu D mill above Franklin, and remained there One lark red yearling eteer. ChrtatrnsoD S E J Oue brinoleand white suited jerlin,m Flower. Angnst several days while really unfit for labor. Neilsim T CalkburQ S Clark A Opbed C J The most miserable beings in the Crary On reaching home typhoid fever ensued, Fag OH 0 District I'lmuuar Cue 1'lielps A J and culminated last night in perforation world are those suffering from Dyspep- KiiKleJ It Nov.2d. 1S70. Logn Pierce J sia and Liver Complaint. First National Bank of the bowels, death resulting at once. holltiu P a More than seventy-fiv- e of i'owler R per cent, SheaO The funeral will take place to morrow, the people in the United States are af- Oodsnn T Smith J 8ul. Ivan T flicted with these two diseases and their Douogliy J Rev J. L, Oillogly officiating. Docks C C (ader ' Stoue J L n mirrendered restrained by the effects; as such Sour Sick A Stomach, Flitton Williuinnon P Shortly after midnight the wieofMr. of the United States'" Headache, Habitual Costiveness, Palpi- i'orgeneon Q Walker Q K. C. Griffin About three Oarduer J expired. M'illis W tation of the Heart, Heart burn, Water-brasSection 2009, of tho Revised Stat-tite'W Uillett ' Van Wormer etc. weeks ago she gave birth to a daughter, gnawing and burning pains at provides a penalty of $500 and HELD FOR POSTAGE. the of the Stomach, Yellow Skin, Miei Julia V Smith, Alta Station, Cal. costs against any Marshal or deputy after an interval ef seven of eight years Coatedpit ' OF FltiST.RATE QUALU1 and disagreeable taste in Tongue W Howard. lUy View, Wisconsin. To child. since last effects her the after At the Bngham City Store, who shall Under, delay, obstruct or the mouth, coming up of food after eatOe rg T. Willson, Kichfield. U. T. Mrs. Griffin succumbed, to Wm. Jjlitit, Calls Foit, Box Elder Co, Utah." any elector from voting at ef parturition ing, low spirits. &o. Go to your Drug.a111 ' prevent the ef her many friends gist aod get a 75 cent Bottle of election. great, grief Opposite the Text any August must ask obtain any of these letters, the applicant for "advertised letters," and give date ol OSFcers should be respected in the The funeral will probably take place to- Flower or a Sample Bottle for 10 cents. pajer. it Two doses will relieve you. Try If not called for Within onk mouth, they will exercine of lawful authority, but tho morrow, but the time and place will be For sale wbolcale and retail by the be teat to the Dead Utter Office. also have rights and must bs determined on the arrival of relatives Z. C. M. I. and Moor, Clemeats & rfcorLK - ' Co.. Ni J. Shaup, M. D llOSENBAUM.Aj eustaioed therein. S. L.C. from Salt Lake and the north. Postmaster. c Death Busy -- vio-tim- s. Mt-ek- s ".Kr. - HOMEJIABE! Cloth, Blankets, Hear eonsti-tiiiio- t s, 1 Madd Clothing, Hats, Boots, Shoes, ' - LOGAle. - 7 . The HiRheTPricc raid lr StMnl Wheat |