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Show 1 VIII. VOL. OGDEN, UTAH: TUESDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 5, gar ( i,j match l'or the championship of America a ad a purse of $1,000 was at Tainmiuiy Hall, played between Geo. F. .SIoson and Jacob Schaetl'er, with D. Cavauuugh as referee, .Samuel F. Knight and RanScbaetfer dolph Reiser, umpires. won the string and scored 1; Slosson followed with naught. Both men at tin? stage appeared nerrous. For was the first nine innings torty-tiythe highest run and the scores stood: Slosson, ill; Schaefier, 87. In the tenth inning Schaeffer got the balls on the rail and ran 312, the best run on record under the new rules. His score was now 400 and was 289 above Slesson, who, however, in the next two innings added to his score 46 and 138. tSchaefl'er for the remainder of the game played very badly and seemed to have lost all courage, while Slosson kept adding to his score runs of 114, 83, 31 and 74, win-- , ning the match in the eighteenth inning and leaving the halls in good position on the rad. His average is the best on record. There was considerable betting, and the most intense excitement prevailed among those present. The following is the score by Slosson 0, 6, 0, 1, 4i, 19, 32, 8, 46, 138, 0, 114, 0, 83, 3, 31, 74; total 600. Schaeffer 1, 0. 27, 1. 6, 0, 9, 0, 44, 312, 0, 2, 0, 2, 0, 6, 4, 21; total, 435. Time of game, 1 hour and 5.i minutes; best run, 312; winner's average, 33 . Incorporated.) It ATM Oi SVBStKMIOX.' I Thrrt M'lHthl, Awwin, : : f' I 0"ite'fi. Uontht, ll'c-J- , 26 l'tr U.M ""'. 1.00 made kuown on iats a.Wert.iiBg - k.p)lical ioi) . Batss, Newcti'iper Advertiser Attn', 1 Park Bow (Times linildiiie), New Tork, Is authorised to contract tor idTertiscBient in the Daily End Ogfka JrsCTioK, it our best Mr. H. .1. e Serai-fl'sekl- y iatc. THISPAPER .Co'a V. How Or-o- lureau, Arnapaixr Atlvertisiiii; HO Spruce feticrt.. w!fre S'TW VflRllf I UIHY AUVKB-TIBXN- - in.'. fci it in may b HUMMSS CARDS. F0XOUUAFY ! WIVKX IS I'll I'M ANY. IHTKUCTIONS Hand Wriliug. I'M) Ms ui-.- I Terms Iliad Mil.d. rU wall ten.-fcalksuwa oni" Iioatiesi. Cmi.miioicntK.lis through nail ttDJf"l uromiitlT JieiJT WJL LOWE, Care J oncti. :.v, Odou, Uuh. in 1 A.Mre I". Dr. W. 8. UK E BEE HAS liEUOVEI) BIS DENTAL OFFICE ialn St., Unildlne, ill ba leased to attend To the g ten, wheie be Deolj-SttTi-n- u Sliakeauercaa eatum Uuica TeleKraph-- l W tin at Billiard Touraanieiit. Nr.w York, Oct. 4. A billiard Association, Printing Junction By ;mirIriCIlf6tpftS:rBEEBEE. Murderous I ten. Ol-rav- t ED. ULIUCH, M. D., , party Col., Oct.'.4. On Sept, 29th of freighters in camp on the Cimaron, about four miies from Clinis ranch, were visited by a number of Utes who asked for supper. On being refused one of the Indians ffct oh l'outlli Street, attempted to shoot. The freighto" I'CJIIEX, UAH. TAItR RUt' fired, killing an Indiaud name John3d 2d and KuiOact: Msin St ilt.ii4 ,vfl :.uitia , between son, son of Chief Chavanaux. The news of the affair was communicated to the agency at Los Tinos, at whose PFRCIYAL J. BAKRATT, request six soldiers were ordered to Clinis ranch and the freighters were ATTORNEY arrested. While n their way back AND they were surrounded by a party of tit Indians who overpowered the guard 1 t A distant U. S. Hist. Attorney and took the prisoners from them. llMtiB a Specialtr. lxau on Mortgage Et There is little doubt but that the mXfA. enice, Bait Side Main Bt., Ogden. Indians have murdered them. HOMEOPATIIIST. Ltiva Counselor d57-l- y I'oiaoutd ParxnlpK. H. W. 0. MAItGARY. Milwaukee. Oct. 4. Seven menis of the family and guests of the bers ATTORNEY Hon. John Kuggle were poisoned by AND wild parsnips for dinner. They LA W, eating &0 UNSELOR-at- are all now out of danger, except ftfEeo ''y Vilot'i, uit Hide Haiti St., Annie Ball and Sanford Kuggle who 1 - OMJJEN, are in a critical condition. The parsnips were purchased at the regular family grocery. UTAH. diMj Com h Capsized. San Francisco, Oct. 4. A private b WH 0 LE SALE es dispatch announces that the tourist party ot Chiet Justice iionauue, oi IFRODUCEScFRUITS; NeAr York, while returning from the Yosemite in a six horse coach cap SHIPPING & COMMISSION sized near Walton. Father Trayner UTAH jfrOGDZty had his leg broken and death followed the necessary amputation. Judge Donohue and wife and Mr. Walton J. I). CAUNAIIAN. 51. 1). sustained slight injuries. The other V(" fi Ftitrth Street, Ogden, Utah. members of the party were unhurt. A Father's Fatal Fall. hvkk rovr OFFICE. Richmond HiLL.Ont.. Oct, 4. This afternoon two brothers named Fahre and the elder struck the quarreled, II. J. POWERS, M. D. younger on the forehead, inflicting prbably a fatal wound. Their fathPhysician and Surgeon. er, seeing this, fell dead. SHIce: Near corner of Young and Treasures Transferred. Fifth Streets, Ogden. tf WA!sumuT0X,0ct. 4. The treasury department to day ordered the transfer of $10,000,000 in gold from the S. Z. WILLIAMS, t. i. IKZLIZZ, Formerly Chief Justice assay office to be used in making Att'j, loborCo. rajreme Court.Ky. exchange on account of foreign gold. P JtilllAims VVILLIAflS, & TcmperaneaTalk. New York, Oct. 4. Neal Dow, LAWYEK8. lecturing yesterday, ascribed the republican defeat in Maine to its leaders catering to the rum selling interests and republican officials neg lecting to enforce the prohibition law. They pleadedjsolid south in our ears while the chief officers of the state tried to overthrow the temperance law. We looked the situation in the face and came to the conclusion that our law must and should stand and we did not vote for their candidates. This is what lost Maine to the republicans (his fall. Let the solid south come; but intemperance must go. We are temperance men first republicans afterwards. By her temperance Maine has saved 24,000,000 and business is more satisfactory than ever. During the panic we did not suffer, as we were saving wht New Yorkers were spending over bars. Peery Block, Fourth St., OQ DEN, UTAH. ffice in d!J41-t- f THE CHAMPION Meat Market! OP IS THAT JPItJLIP GRILL, - Fourth fit., TBI HhIIou, HKST Beef; Ogden. ad Ci'TS OF lork.Veal, 42 ogether with FREBU CAME! Thelaaoeeuta Alimad. Xsw York, Oct 4. The Tuaes, noticing the death of Elisha Eliss, jr., of the American representative Publishing Company, sayss He was the first publisher who gave a fuvor able consideration to Mark Twain's Inno' tnts Jiroa,after she manuscript had been rejected by every publisher of note here and in Boston and Philadelphia. The ale of that book edi up to date, including printed Ameririor.f, i iWD.UOOcopie. The it. can Companycleai-edtyMbro- Brery Dticription, always on band! ME A CALL, CJflll. dwtf SALT LAKE BEER! At IHE Iiilm liecf J3jot, HfTII Walt STKEKT, (XiDEX. 1'a mii Trade t Specially. t.FIi;(.i: dumUtf KRl ttH, I'roprlftor. A Swindling 4. (oneera, The newspaper!-continuBKARDSLEY'S to express surprise at the number of gudgeons daily caught by DtiKw.it Company, of this OTIOU DEPOT HOTEL the Ladies' whi.-pays Jer city, b.i institution I month on deposit. cent. Ogden, Utah. the concern is a swindling one does r n.Imil of t doubt. The police Rooms and Tabl-.- - First-clas- s it arc arrangements t arr. sl making Every Respect. Terms the manager-- when their failure. Reasonable. which i expected before the eHd o. ; the svieck, is announced. AU TRAINS MOP OM: IJOlH. i waH Prewat- 7V.iv I.ak dixirotM ,$h-a Ttitirsji: fait Pwteti Ktw YoR,nct. f-- Tbe can U in !lVi- ! sent o M. 'ri.ribao ct otticr Jr., S.tiranl. -- hrt.hi rt:e fii lurite ctick !.' U anfr. . ' ' K. ( ! ran t, a "eddiog pieet. rTUTH Oct. Bos-tos- , pr I fka! ; - I : e ht Atla. y 4. An unusual Chicago, Oct. event in dramatic circles occurred Three of the principal theatres, liooley's.llaverley's and the Grand Opera House presented bills in which the central figure was an eminent Shakesperean actor, Law rence Barratt and John McCullough appeared at Hooley's and Haverley's respectively, Tomas W. Kean at the Grand Opera House. There was crowded house to witness the letter's interpretatiou of Richard III., it being Kean' first appearance as a star in the Shakesperean drama. The enthusiasm and frequently bestow ed applause sufficiently indicated that this new star was regarded with as great favor as the older ones of the same order. The applause began vociferously at the first appearance of Kean on the stage, and seemed to grow steadily in the good will of the audience until the close. His facial expression attracted universal attention, and was regarded as wonderful it its cons centrated power, while his motions, divorced from the stereotyped farms, gave a pleasing air to the ordinary stage business. The duel scene in the powerful tragedy was finely done, and his final fall was the most remarkable piece of acting of all. At the drop of the curtain he received a kearty recall and almost an ovation frow from the delighted and really discriminating auditors. In Illicit Intimacy. Topeka, Oct. 4. W. H. Fairchild, the man arrested in Chicago charged with the murder ot Richard French, the stepfather of his wile, in Harpsr county two years ago, has confessed. He claims he found French and his wife in illicit relations, and that after some words, in which he called French a liar, he struck him twice with an axe, killing him instantly. He further says he has never tried to evade arrest. Hull ted. Oct. 4. The Moonshiner WMUra Taion T.UrP Waats iilendale aud Surroundings. Heila Mines aad Smelter. l lrama U. Panama, Sept. 25. The only item of interest in War matters by the present mail from the south is the occupation of Chimbole on the 10th inst. by the Chilians under the commands of Captain Patrick Lynch. A force of about 3,000, men and 200 horses were landed without resistance. Lynch has telegraphed to Lima dv manding $100,000 in gold as a contribution, adding that if that sum be not forthcoming, all the "valuable sugar machinery and the whole place will be destroyed. iLaate th Coantry la Flame. London, Oct. 3. The Tunes editorially says: Whenever Mr. Parnell and his fellow agitators go. they leave the country in names behind them. Deeds of violence are done, which they have not suggested in express terms, but which are in full accordance with the spirit, though not with the letter of their harangues, and which 'bey scarcely even pretend to disapprove afterwards. The Land League has extended its organization to Great Britain. Aaarcay Araslac. London, Oct. 4. A Dublin correspondent reports that a large number of men visited the farm houses near Mullingar. the capital of the County of West Mtath, in search of arms. A largely attended land meeting was held on Sunday at Mohill, County Leitrim. Arms are largely bought and freely imported in many places. The manager of one establishment in Dublin states that he has sold rifles in a short period, la Belfast breech loaders are advertised fer sale sor fifteen shillings, and in small country towns, especially in the West, there is a brisk trade in rifles. 1,-4- 00 1 Hsllew Affair. London, Oct. 4. A race between to the Juwotios. told the Junction readers the other day how the town of Dillon was springing into existence us a new Terminus of the Utah A Northmiles north ern, at a point forty-siof Bed Rock, which has enjoyed the happy cognomen of Terminus during the past six mouths or more, and now it looks as if Dillon was to be 1 I.IYKD MCCU hHOHThiK than has been Red Rock, which is now on the move to the new town. The operators in Dillon Townsite have made a good thing of it, hav ing nearly doubled their money, and yet have sold but little ot the land When railway men, largely in the confidence of the great magnates, go into townsite speculations, it is at least presumable that they know what they are doing, and that this enterprise will not be a failure. AN ter Dillon had been located and most of the lots sold, Mr. L. J. Fish made a purchase of one hundred and sixty acres of land at tho mouth of CAatP CRKBa, on Big Hole River, and at opposite Trapper Gulch, a point on which five miles Glendaleis situated, and from this place. Mr. risk holds the position of lumber contractor on the Utah k Northern railway, and he designs at once to plat his land and dispose of it in the form of land lots. Tbe tlistance from Dillon to Camp Creek is thirty miles, and we are promised this space will be spanned by rail and trains running to the new town within the next seventy or ninety days. When once here the road can well afford to make a pros longed stop while the new line Jos. Hammer and Harry Thomas for FROM OUDIN TO PORTLAND, X 100 a side and a bet of 100 to 80 Washington, of the Internal Revenue was rowed this afternoon over the will be pushed. This seems to be the has received the following form At championship course, four miles and present programme and a survey of The United States Grand a quarter. The rae was a very hol- tbe situation, and from what can lanta: t low affair, Thomas won easily, Ham- learn from those inside, there seems Jury found true bills against citizens oi'Georgia for armed mer being completely exhausted. to be no room for doubt, that such attacks on revenue officers in the Time 24 min. and 21 sec. Hanlon are the plans. We hope to see Mr. Second District while discharging and Trickett witnessed the conteit. Fisk make a good thing out of his their law duties. Twenty of these new enterprise. From Camp Creek outlaws belonged to the gang that it is only thirty miles to Butte by the burned deputy collector Stewart's SETTS S0TES. wagon route, and the railway will property and fired upon his family. have much heavv uradins and a four Indiana lateirrlty (!). Grand will visis Jartford on Oct. hundred foot tunnel to bor" before New York, Oct, 4. The Tribune 14th or 15th. it can proceed any farther. says: Republican success in Indiana In New York City about 6,000 Ul.lNDAI.fc' is not sure, simply because there Is is built in a narrow gulch, the houses danger of the democrats unloosing horses are tick. an enormous fund for the purchase The republicans are colonizing on tho lower side of the street being of doubtful votes on election day. voters in Indiana. cribbed up, or set on posts, to bring The amounts they have raised in this to a level with the street, and on the did cabinet council The English t for city within the past upperside, excavationswere made to meet not yesterday. this purpose are without precedent. get a footing and basement rooms. Samuel J. Tilden makes a fresh conLanders expects to be elected gov- the street is narrow and serpen tribution of $2.11,000. Augustus Schell ernor of Indians, by 10,000. tine; six hundred people, abide in gives $20,000. Others contribute in the town and inhale the arsenic elected the repub- fumes from Harlford, Con., proportion, all for a single western lican the great H'ecla smelter, town ticket yesterday. states in October, and all after the which is a great institution and prinSenator Bruce is confident legitimate expenses of the campaign cipally sustains the town. When have been provided for. Doubtless will carry Indiana. the operations of the many of these gentlemen will be Si HKCLA David Douitlas Co., importers ol shocked to learn that their money linens, New York, have failed. was to be used for the actual are described,! have given all there U of vete at the polls on election The herse distemper has attacked worthy of note in or about (ilendale, Barnum is the 2,000 in Brooklyn and Jersey City. We got up Trapper Gulch ten miles day, but man attending to the disbursements. we reach the head, ending in a until The Colorado election does net Large sums are believed by many to take deep canyon tbe shape ot an invert on Nov. 2d. but to day, place be reaching him also from England. ed 1, or ox bow. At that point we The reports of peace between Peru are over nine thousand feet above (?) We should be slow to belive this, but it is known that English man- and Chili seem to be entirely un- the sea, and all the life and bustle ufacturers have contributed liberally founded. around ut, is because of the rich silto send documents to affect the pres ver mines in Lion Hill, which stands has Edwin Adams, republican, idential election in favor of the tariff - in a circle or around the end of TrapNorof been elected South mayor for the revenue party, and perhaps per Gulch, rising over two thousand in the crisis of the campaign it might wa'.k, Conn. feet above it and lacing to the east. seem only a step from documents, to The Greek parliament will support Beginning at the base, as we ascend what Mr. Tilden has taught us to a national armament of 40,000 men we come to tho different lodes in ro know as the "best United" States under arms. tation, which have developed into documents. If General Slocutu did v York stock exchange such mines as Atlantis, Mountain Ne The not hurry from Liverpool to Indianclub represents $375,000,-000- , Sheep, True Fissure, Silver Quartz, and Cleopatra. These are all worked apolis thus burdened he has been campaign in capital. maligned. extensively by means of tunnels, Postal Statist!. In the town election in Meriden, shafts, drifts, Ac, and the ores are Washington, Oct. 4. On the 30th Conn., the entire republiean ticket sent down by means of tram ways, to of June the post office department was re elected. the base of the hill, and then loaded had 5,802 contracts for transportain wagons and taken to the smelter, discord of are showing Symptoms tion of mails on public routes; 1,857 themselves in the county of West over a terribly rough, rocky and special offices, each with carrier dusty road, ten miles long, lo clunb Ireland. whose pay from the department is Mealh, that two thousand feet was Gen. Garibaldi landed at Geneva, not allowed to exceed the net postal NOT A TEMPTIKO TASK yield of the office. Of the public yesterday, and met with an enthuroutes in operation there were 1,111, siastic reception. for a warm day, so getting into a aggregating in length 313,808 miles "boat" setting on some greased tioles, Admiral Seymour arrived at at an annual cost of $18,749,991. another boat, well loaded with ore, and yesterday, immediately Adding the compensation of railway, proceeded to Ceitinje. and tied to the other end of the rope postoffiee clerks, route agents, mail attached to ours was started down The German emperor has advised and its weight started ours up with route messengers, local agents, etc., amounting to fj,ods,2s, the aggre- the sultan to accept the proposition railway speed, and landed us r early gate tost ,of the entire service for of the European powers. one half way up the hill and when the fiscal year ending June 30th, Of 76 towns in Connecticut, 46 we had tired of boating we took The service elected the 18S0, was $22,296,269. republican, 24 the demo- another similar boat and seemingly was divided as follows: railroad tickets. dropped to the bottom a thousand routes 85,320 miles in length; annual cratic municipal feet down. To tell of all the tunnels, has A. A. Ranney declined the drifts and chambers dug out in these ti,ansportation,96,497,4C3 miles; annual cost, of which repub.ican nomination for congress mines would require too nuch epace, amount $1,259,216 was for railway in the tniru juassaeuuseits district. and to say that over two hundred Com-mision- 1 thirty-eigh- fort-nigh- there-public- COMTA-N- t pur-ch-is- e mule-buy- er Cat-tar- o, postoffiee car service. Steamboats The euizoetia is sweeping over 23,320 miles in length; annual trans'. is sweeping over Philadelphia, fire portation, 0,668,538 miles; annual aileeted. cent, ot the horses on cost, $87,221. Other routes which mails are required to be conveyed with celerity, certainty and security, 235,25k miles in length; annual transportation, 76,077,995; cost, $7,321,499.' During the year railroad routes were increased in length 5,239 miles, in cost $971, CM. Steamboat routes were in creased 2,08 1 miles ir. length, and in cost $132,833 Star routes were increased in length 19,768 miles at an increased cost of There was an increase $919,66'J. over the preceding year in the total length of routes of 27,177 at an in crease of annual cost of $2,024,183; increase in cst for railway office ch.rks, route agents, Ac, amounted to $259,214. making the total in- create in the cost of tho service over the preceding year $2,283,397. Treasure Traafrr.. There were $ ',0.0i "),( transferred for th-- j same purpose- since the be ginning of the present fiwa! year. The amount of foreign gold which come to this country sine; July 1st, is es.'iinyted by the treasury oBieials !,,,,; lx'j."' V" ,"" HI NDIILIl a'lii Win IV.orii'ter. - !.e, MKN. the various labors of mining, Wi'iIiifNuiy.lrHob. r i:Jiht lvso. teaming, stueltins, burning charcoal, etc., und outside of their opei ations, OWE NIGHT iiNLV! this uisli icl, so rich in miiiei m b is ONLY! ON doing nothing. It i true there are iu.my good mines around, but the owners lack capital, or are tied up Ft mil Ihti Atlantic to the Pacific. o a to be by other companies to go ahead wilii their mine:?. ll i: : t'ami - i.; ::i--Ml' st i iw Everywhere it seems lo be the practice of rich companies to smother r C u: ' '..n-nil l Im .. Ti.. out all small mining operations in 1. theii midst, aud complaint are very EURGES3 ! numerous wherever rich companies MR. NEIL Iu o.;i have gained a controlling power. ''il. li lON i,i All classes of staples command high prices here, and there are lev ranches in the country, because it is so V. .u. t i; lu lii t.'vv i. til .; i. ti (J. very mountainous, ft t'tl Gi.RNDAi.K, Montana, Wet. 2nd. ill '..'or Ppedal IOIK The Qy:i. UNIONOPilKA liOUSK. mining and smelting company fives employment to about nt (except Published every evening Sunday) by the THROUGH THE NORTH. FOREIGN NOTES. try and works of art of his elegant suite of rooms in a fashionable apart-mehouseWar Madison Square. DOMESTIC NEWS. stoimrfitiu SO. 1880. uu-abl- lo:-.- , : ', i 1 1. WIDOW nEIHIIT i '1 t I'htviaii Ccmi'dy iu A Shoshone) Palle. ww Finn? wnwiw f lh:- . etwL-i- tiJ Mipjni. by Mil. (ilXh NTOUDAliT as thi: A party of three, on our return to Nevada from the Yankee Fork min ing regions, allured by the glowing descriptions we had heard of the falls, determined to visit the place andsatisty our curiosity, although it involved several days' travel out of our direct course. We approached the river from the southland, travel ing along a sharply rounded point of table-lai.drove our team to the From very brink ot the canyon. this point, looking up the stream, we obtained the first view of the falls. For a mile or more above the falls, tho channel of the river is plainly seen. It is not a wild, rushing torrent, beating and brisking and dashing aguinst rocks and bowlders and tho sharp bngles of the bank, and foaming and frothing und fretting, as if anxious to escape to the level plsin below, but a majestic ot a mile body of water, wide, with an average depth of fifteen feet, llowing, with not a ripple upon its surface, smoothly and tran quilly "on its slow winding way to the sea." The first obstruction which we ee to this even flow are two immense bowlders, or columns of rock, which, standing abreast of each other across the stream, five hundred leet apart, divide the river into three channels. Swiftly flowing along the base of these barriers, the water, with a gentle bound, drops down a vertical fall of forty feet, when it again unites and becomes as smooth aud tranquil as above. Thus flowing onward for live hundred feet, the waters are again divided into mx channels by a row of bowlders of irregular shape, standing in u semicircle about equidistant from each other. Sweeping pint thee rocks, which temingly attempt to stay its further progress, the water lakes another bound, find leap down a lull of ight feet, where, at tin- bane, all the channels corning together; but it is not soqtiiet and smooth and tin disturbed this time. There it some fretting and foaming, some dashing and breaking of waves, for a short space, and then the current swiftly curves to the south wall, and gradually becomes more quiet. There can be no division of watei here: all must be united for the last grand leap. (Seven hundred feet further on, and ere the foaming and fretting caused by the last fall has entirely disappeared from the surface, this mighty volume of Wit?r pours over a perpendicular precipice and falls vertically a distance ot two hundred aud sixty feet. i:i.u!-:i;- Ithi. Oil' lYU And till ( mm d Orii-ini- l oil 'we rrrl'..riuaiu-i- ' hmor ri X. t C.l-:- 1" Vork. N ! CuiiM'ftitiv IVrfor'HuurcH in San I Tu ( " ','it lu ::i-n- i Jmi; (JiiO. W. St.iiiiiai, r, Fkkd. TlfKiiKss, Ciia. I NciiwKPi-:!:- . .i ,,t Malinger Treasurer tUisimt-.Agent td d..i-- . . doim-- h.n with mr paIi Ketiirted rancH-o- II TJTA CiTIMLjiAHItOAD. A SPECIAL TRAIN ui .u ill Kim U.uiv K CONFLUENCE! CommencuK Od. Ill), one-four- th , lSi-0- at ii:10 a.m. Leaving tigdeu Arrive at Slt Lake City ut 9:40 u.m. Train will and nil . ninth. lt l.s xmii. nt ,.a; Oiiy for m. uv u- II. I. lis 1. 1101) H'll I! hi I October 11, 1880, inclusive ll I K K I iit l fur Tikvt fifs Tinia tUmj'ereiHv d'f. JAS. Sll.tlll'. Oitll. Tkt. A),!. ,1(J1. mi a itr. Oi'li'l gllif. : r sixty-e- ItF.KOLrHONS I'lUtl At ft,A7 - e ' v tu k ti w ! UNLIKE PILLS, II.K.t.S4'T will IS ml m A TO pruvf ft !! Ok in .fttfHl ltt'nnltti-.it-.! I - '."t '! tt.t $,t.fllt IKOIM4-- rir'!L'."M t (.fi'M jst i tut ' ill if If rMJ I'. ' Ti H'ltc. ,.:.. .IIS"!' Olf-- lit IT 1,XTIVKiW'M :.n I 40'l I..I.U - n I. . J. E. NW i , Ji tlitltwr ..l.l.f ,. ItsMoisfefM-tjt- , , , ,,- j;i,4Mi PINiu.mmI ti ) ut fiinl t f Wl Ueti " TAKE-:- t,- - j (', . HETHEUINCTON, YOltK flANCTSIU Electric A..u. ... Belts,. Hands sn. OF CONDOLENCE. l.lirim: o IT Ami 1 a..-- , rl i. V( ;:.l i 'I., Hi ... .,1. !!,!' M I., IU; ..lip... Kl Whkukas, It has pleosed Almigh ty Uod to remove fiotn our midst our worthy Brother Valentine E. Boessel and Wiiknbas, In this act of Divine Providence our Lodgo has been dprived of a worthy member and his family Irereltofa kind and affection ate tiusband and father, lherefore Jittvhed, That while we deeply feel the affliction measured out to us, by tho Supreme Architect of the Universe in the removal of a brother who was ever ready to excend the hand of Chanty and relieve the distressed, yet we trust that what is our loss will be his eternal giin. iltxolved, lhflt we condole with his afflicted widow and orphaned children in the loss they have sustained, which to them seeins iire parable, but "He that tempers the wind to the shorn lamb" will ever be ready to shieled them in their be- , . l!'.ii .i.(r.iit't I o., I , , ,.. . !t:Sli tu .. vl,V .; j - i. !,,..;,!. (,,, v..... .) .' . ""-- .. S. nri(. '" '- life- ii- -. ul .;,,. I. .. T .1 i i l.ilt i r'l.a i , !,..,, mm KnrmnmA Iiii.i Willi X v iil.v m ,i'i i.iri:t:' I!(1imii! N.ttii L.J. MAItOf. Fur f t.nv.-'iiiui- US ,i;i'.l !!: Bf A aUl. y, el. Hi rAI V.t fr.-.- Cil'-llll- t!fr-t.'r- V" I II ' ' S.!u.li. prjv il ' I usf, , ! Il.f. i U,e Ii, . , I'hi!.-- !5t f! i I) Ui l'. i li t.., ibi-:- "pli - ' ul i; ,ti .in ul'l i'rii-w.- . IIARKNESS&CO. reavement. r t1 lis. 1 That in the demise of Bro. Boessel the craft has lost a h and benevolent member, Otjdvn Vit?9 miners are busy doing (his mining, worthy an honest nnd society citizen, upright rulIrcliiiiiM Srrivc rru:;i,t Aftfwtioi. and all the while are sending down and his family a kind and affectionore, your reader can inixgme how ate husband and father. the hill is being honeycombed ami Jletnlved, That a copy of these chambered in removing the soft ore resolutions be presents! to the famifrom slanting chambers from four to of the deceased, and that they b ly now One twelve feet high. tunnel, on the records of Weber Uctnv)t l,4W ti Sinifi- :,.. ....... vtw- r;jiU t "f,!: in over six hundred feet, is to pass spread it.., Satlu-O .. ta r r i' Lodge. mile and one the kill, nearly Kift iti.Mn.ij through tLHUv S. 5. Si ni:AMH, f.i,, Nn..r.,-.- l In Oiu::!.;t in another out coiue canyon. . D. Cakxaiian. Nat.okii iiiuU kv t'itT is drill The air that tunnel the Tii Aiiiaiii'f link, i.i A. It. Is y WOOD, j;.. J l. elevation at the mines so grcit that (..:. r";pn Committee. per being The Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe It. R. will make connection with the Southern Pacific R. R. by January 1st. The German government is again about taking sharp measures against the social democrats in certain towns of ifolstein. Know becomes e, The American schooner J. il. A I.KfcAT OKVTKLCIIO.V has drifted from Jan Francisco, on tbe rocks in the port of the Liber-tad- , during winter, and lo obviate this, Salvador. tbe company air now pulling up now sheds over a liore tramway to The new constitutional amendment for Connecticut gives the ap- extend to the smelter here. Two pointment ot the judges of the su miles of this tramway is built and perior and supreme courts to lbs workmen are covering it with beds.i The smelter is run by water, vthi:h governor, taken from Tiappwr Creek through a flume, to operate a wheel under a Tub ao Whilst stands unx head of one hundred and forty feet. celled for family uses. Godbe, Pitts The works are very complete, in all Oi., ageats for Utah. aproiiitment, and tuiu outn )ul H the thousand pounds of twenty-fivevery day which is w.nh 100 'in Medical F Ati t.Tr recommend per ton. All thi bullion i Irpped Simmoad's N:isib Whisky. Sold bv south over the I fdi A Northern ' MeXutt A-- To. railway, The Hef la ia;iuolida.te. dju2Mf e.ie!vfd, A - A T ' I , d. I t A lie.' "Iuii.-i'-r Li u; I'UL'itO Ro-co- -- 1 btil-lio- e -- III there are score of persons passing our storee-r1. 1.. dav whose lives are miule Do Vou Id Here That Still to Ilia Front! in this town i,1-- ..i aV- - CO., by Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Sour and distressed Stomach, Liver (Complaint ;t L)nsiipaimn, etc., when, lor i cs. we will sell tlieiii Shilok's Vitaliwr, f i f'r iC BE BiT..pM,..e-tMt.H T.Jl Bi.iT. guaranteed to cure them. .Sold by J. W. iMc.Viitt ii Co., Wholesale and K.iiar in t'Ai II'V ..f i, ' ir rKlt.'Ks. I. til. lletail Druggists, and O. i;r Ormby, o:l2l-l)- r druggist, Logan. .1 A Is GKNP.AL j Hay WanleJ. J A few tons of Lucerne llav wanted at I his office ou subscription, ik.if liI I'n in.; i I W ii".".if O V .",, s -- t:. 1: i v .1 voi; |