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Show 1s" i, S - v. rm t ' ' i y"-- . v in value the mineral product Now, they must far exceed them, and no one is found In Colorado so foolhardy as Thursday Morning, July 27,1871. to claim that the agricultural U second to where REGlLAll LIBERAL NOMINATION the mining interest in importance, it used to he claimed and maintained TO COCXCILOB8 TO THE TERRITORIAL LEGISLATURE: with great vigor. Salt Lake Comity, California has had precisely the same . R. WALKER, SAMUEL KAliN. ' AlTooele County, experience, only carried further. WELLS SPICER. most the entire energies of the State are Summit County, now devoted to agriculture and kinA. C. BECKWITH. dred pursuits stock and fruit growiug. Mining is scarcely mentioned in com- CORINNE DAILY JOURNAL equaled I I ' s 1 ! NEW PAPEK. On or about August 7tb, 1871, F. parison. So in Nevada. They for years took Kenyou will commence the publication $20,000,000 per annum out of their - of a great rniuo. We think, some of us, that SEW DAILY PAPER, as the in Salt Lake City, devoted to the Liber- there was never such a mine Coin-tocal causey as ell as the general welfare Emma. But a single mine on the lode the Gould & Curry proof the Territory at large. A Proajectus duced one hundred tons of ore a day for will be issued at an early day. seven years, upwards of 219,100 tons, worth $59 a ton, gross, or $12,926,900. CORINNE AND THE MINES. There is no doubt that Corinne is feel- This was only one of the mines on that which have been exhausting to some extent the superior attrac- famous lode, tion of the mines of Southern and Cen- ing it at nearly the same rate for ten to tral Utah. Heretofore, though dull at twelve years, yet we hear of the State's And when, as is sometimes the times, we have been so lively compared decay. taunted with the insignifiwith all other towns of Utah, that there case, she has been no room for complaint. But cance and ephemeral character of her this year the speculative, feverish activ resources, she never cites her mines into Comstock. She ity of a genuine mining stampede super- court, not even the the Humboldt, the imposed upon a good deal of mining makes nothing of business changes the relations which Reese River, the Eureka, the White Pine, heretofore subsisted between us and the Pioclie, the Toatio mines; she talks Salt Lake. That town outranks us in of her agricultural and pastoral relife and business, seeming or real, hollow sources. On these are States founded at or sound, and it is temporarily drawing last; these and patient, plodding induson our floating element, and diverting try. Mining is a great help in such a speculative enterprise from the north to countryv as this, but it is not of much the south, as far as regards us. consequence to the permanent growth Yet we venture the assertion that our and prosperity of towns. The prosper- merchants are doing scarcely less busi- ity incident to mines, exclusively, is like ness this July thau last. In some cases the illumination of burning gunpowder we know it to be so, fur we have taken a great flash, then ashes and obscurity. the pains to ascertain. It is always dull While willing and anxious to take whathere in July and August, and always ever advantage mines may offer us, let will be, comparatively. Still, if one us not forget that the maiu source of would feel tbe dilForeuce between what sound growth and business is tbe cultiwe call dullness and the liveliest life vation of the soil, here, there, everythat may ever be expected in a Mormon where, now and always. town, let bim visit Brigham City, or any DRAGGED FORWARD. of the Cache Valley towns. The prospecting fever 'of which Salt - The Salt Lake Tribune makes a good Lake City is this year the outfitting point on its Mormon contemporary, the Herald , as follows : Two or three years point, will soon have run its course. We are liable to be attacked by it in North- ago the whole power of the Mormon ern Utah next year. The mountains Church was exerted to compel its memare the same, in range, in altitude7in bers to trade only at Mormon stores. massiveness, in formation. There is no For this purpose some six hundred reason why the heavy range between small traders were forced out of busiCache and Bear Lake vallies, JO miles ness, and the few that were left were in width, 10,000 to 12,000 feet high, and obliged to sell out to stock companies. cut to the routs every little way by tumb- These erected the well kuowu Holiling mountain streams, should not have ness to the Lord signs over their doors, Eunnas, Flagstaff's, and Millers, as well and the Church police were employed re as the same range one hundred miles lentlcssly to drag the irrigators into south. Nothing has been done there these places only to spend their carrots Some of the larger in the way of prospecting, yet, worth and horse-radisof these stores, like the City corporation, speaking of, but it will be done. Corinne has already gained a fine the tithing oflicc, and Zions Railroad steamer, and, although she has not yet Company, got out their lithographed due run afoul of enough business to swamp bills. The Utah Magazine in a calm though her, she has more than paid expenses, is gaining ground, and will inevitably pointed manner protested agaiust this be followed by another, completing the tyrannical interference with the rights of Salt Lake link-o- f overland steam trans- working men this putting the entire portation, through, each wavy every day, weight of organized society on wages, and catching all the tourist travel first to keep them down, next to have around the world. As the mining coun- them paid in kind, lastly, to have them try southwest of the lake is opened and spent at certain places for certain speciimproved, and its business becomes of fied things. For this, as is well known, the editors importance, the boat will work into a and proprietors of that periodical and good business. Smelting works have followed the all their friends were cut off the Church building of this boat, and they will soon and handed over to Satan to be buffeted be under way. They Time the advan- in their flesh a thousand years. They tage of cheap fuel they can draw ores persisted in their independent course, from all points of the compass. They however, other men came to their aid, asmines were discovered, outsiders flocked thus naturally secure t sortment, and buyers of bullion for in with money, something in the nature Eastern separating works say they can of life and business was for the first and will give $1 10 more on the ton for time seen in Salt Lakeland the Morit at Corinne than they can at Salt Lake. mons, while claiming, clamorously, all Suppose there were no ores south of tbe the time, that their opponcuts have been lake ? Montana is full of them, and the defeated in every move they have made, country along the railroad west. We now summoned to the bar of public have superior advantages for the reduc- opinion and compelled to the skin of tion of ores and bullion, and they are their teeth to give in evidence, admit bound to be improved. that the workingman should be paid There is no cause lor depression. All well, should be paid in cash instead of orders and tithing things as well as the ocean have their due bills aud-stotidesr A year from now Corinne is lia- vegetables, and should be allowed, havble to be livelier and more flourishing ing the natural light, to spend his wages than ever before. By that time the title where be pleases, when he pleases, and to lands in the vicinity will have been for what he wants to. Holiness to the Take down the settled, aud farming improvement will have been begun. There is as much Lord signs and admit defeat yourfine arable land within sight of the town selves. as is farmed by the 90,000 irrigators of We learn from a San Francisco exUtah, and for all of the mines, and all that may be justly said of them, agricul- change that the appeal papers in the Mrs. Laura 1). Fair were filed in ture is the primary material interest of case of the Supreme Court at Sacramento on men aud of States. On motion of Elisha Thev nsed to be very sensitive on that Monday, July 9th. Most of the popula- Cook, in open Court, it was ordered that point in Colorado. a supersedeas writ issue, staying the extion and wealth concentrated in the minand agriculture was ecution of the Court below until further ing districts at first, The backs of the veins orders of the Supreme Court. The cause given the go-bover until the October were soon worked out, however, and they necessarily goes when it can be argued and taken went into the hands of capitalists at big term, devoted money without under advisement. Considering that the prices. These record filed has 305 pages of District 'stint to working the mines, but they Court exhausted 'proceedings and 25 of private cor.have long since generally Mean- respondence, and the voluminous briefs themselves and given it up. as and points of law -- that will be filed, it along has plodded while, agriculture may be reasonably assumed that several the seasons do, slowly, but inevitably months will elapse afier the adjournment has overtaken aud. passed the mining of the October term before a final decis-io- u three years ago, interest, so that, two or is rendered. more than k ,T 1 : l 1 s i. f I ! H w -- ! h. --M- i ; . M. ' ? 1 f ' i i 4 ' 1 I ; a i I" t t t. it . 1 H, ii ;? I II . I r lie-requ- ! isite , i r, re 7 i t y. the agricultural 2 L products X"! , s PROSPECTUS OP TIIE. SALT. LAKE REVIC7V. Le The first number of tbe Salt Daily Review will beHssued at $lt Lake City, Utah Territory, on hx about the 7th day of August, 1871. It will be devoted to the 'Mining and Agricultural interests of the Territory, as well as the country rtt large, nnd especially lo the cause of tbe Liberal political party of . Utah. r , One ' . - V TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. - copy, per annum, ... $10 00 six months, 5 00 u crtorec months, 2 50 Delivered by Carrier for Twenty-fivcents per Week. There is a Job Priuting e first-clas- s Office connected with the establishment, Famixe.iv Persia Chirch Iioiary.Cbcietr ML-Bru- TELEGRAPHIC! ux&tu imnuT rwiii cotta i utuotuu Hu warms rnoa tt cmw.'t. Sax Fbaxcisco, July 26. An incendiary, at Battle Mountain, Nevada, Yesterday, was pursued to Humboldt river , and shot. , Mrs. Catharine Brenan, aged seventy? two, was run over and killed by the cars at Stocktou. Tom Carrigan, keeper of a notorious ualoon at Petaluma, was , shot dead by Mr. Smith, also a saloon keeper. Both were drunk, and armed. Reports from Amador county lead to the hope that the trouble there may be settled without, calling out the troops a second time. No new disturbances are reported, though intense excitement prevails, aud the Leaguers are evidently - rife for mischief. St. Johns, N. B., July 26. Very deand none but competent workmen em- structive fires have occurred at Freder-ickstoN. B. Some 14 or 15 buildings, ployed. Onr facilities for superior work all of which were occupied lor nearly will not be equalled in Utah. ship stores, were burned. The , loss to Messrs. Cook, insurance coiiYpanies is estimated at Agents. Chicago and the actual loss nearly four Coburn & Co., 87 Deal born street; New $50,000, limes that amount. New York, July 20. The papers York Geo. P. Rowell & Co., 40 Park suppress the announcement of the death Row; San Francisco L. P. Fisher. of Charles Matthews, and report the folThere is no doubt that the Address F. KENYON, lowing : actor Matthews, whoe death is reported Post Office Box 450, by cable, is Frank Matthews instead of Charles James Matthews, the distinSalt Lake City, Utah. n, July guished comedian who is now playing an engagement at Montreal. 27, 1871. TIIE EMMA MINE. Sr. Louis, July 26. A terrible acci- dent occurred fifteen minutes before six the Toledo A Wabash miles from this city, aud 2 ,16 railroad, miles this side of Edwardsville, 111. A cars heavily freight train of thirty-threladen with grain, going south at great speed, collided with a gravel train on which the laborers were returning from their work. Of these six were killed outright, and four others so severely injured that there is but little hopes of f of the their recovery. Fully others are more or less injured, some seriously. The collision occurred on a short curve, and neither of the engineers was aware the other train was on the track until too late to prevent the collision. The engineers and firemen from both locomotives jumped in time to save their lives. Both engines and a iargo number of cars were demolished. New York, July 26. A private letter by the last steamer, from an American resident at Para, Brazil, dated July a 4, says The yellow fever has and form,, nearly very malignant every stranger iu the city has died. The English Consul died a few days atro, and I that his wife is dxing. All hear strangers are liable to take the fever in Para, and nearly every Portuguese who has emigrated here for the past six months, ha a died. Several steamers which have arrived at New Yotk from Para, have been quarantined at the lower bay, but the last steamer from there was permitted to reach her dock, though she had touched at Para. Capt. John Melks, who in 1867 crossed the Atlantic on an India rubber life raft, is having another raft made fifteen feet long by twelve wide, on which he intends to go to England, accompanied by only a boy. lie will be ready to start about the middle of Aug., and will carry with him sixty days provisions.- lie' will take the direct steam- A gentleman who recently had the last evening, on opportunity of examining this mine, says that the ore deposit averages 28 by 70 from feet, and runs up like a where the tunnel strikes it, about 275 feet from the surface, so that at a height of 100 feet from said tunnel, it is pretty much exhausted toward the surface. If it only runs down from the tunnel, like it is all right. They are a sinking a shaft, and at the time of our informants visit, were down about 80 feet below the tunned, all the way in It will not be so cheaply good ore. taken out, working down on it aud hoisting the ore, aud probably, water, as it has been. The expense of timbering is very great. The plan pursued was to work out a room eight to ten feet high, the hole extent of the deposit, laying tbe timber frame-worfor a floor like that of a house, .only ail the Umbers are eight by ten inches in size, then raising a bent the flight of the chamber excavated. This is done with ilie excavation of course. Another chamber is then ex cava ted and its place filled with timber, aud so on to the tup, the timbers pressing firmly, endwie, agaiust each other, and thence out ward upon the walls in every direction. Every quality of ore is found in the mine. That it runs pretty high is proved by its continued shipment to Liverpool. The cost of getting it into money via this process is about $70 a ton. It is being sent off; now, at the rate of nearly an hundred tous a day, but the shipment at this rate only begun a few weeks ago, nnd must soon, from our information, fall off. With the shipments from this mine, it is said by those who ought to know, that the Territory is shipping 3000 tot s of ore aud 600 tons of bullion per month. The latter is usually worth from $150 to f is $200 a ton, of which perhaps is for This the profit. pretty good work first speculative stage of mining in Utah, all to be developed in one year, too, aud there is no reason why It should not two or three, persteadily increase-fo- r haps five years. bee-hiv- bee-hiv- e e, k one-hal- A New York dispatch quotes from the Times, which savs: If Mayor Hall and Comptroller Uonolly object to being branded as thieves and swindlers, as we once more brand them now, thev can sue ns for libel, and we will prove our charges in a court of law. What is more, we will prove our charges by means of Comptroller Conollys own books. It will not do for Hall to try and sneak out by saying that he is used to newspaper attacks. We do not attack him on political grounds, or in wild language ; but we call him a thief, because we can prove him to be one. e one-hal- as-tun- ed to-da- y ers track. 1 LAKE r..ALT S($ain of the ce, iIspah writes, ofcAhe 22d'ofApnl :y .In rejjg Tj ence to ti famine which nga eastward tt and ward socth ;iu heran a part.cf cities and; districts of V Ik, Loovisto, Kars, i now making Regular Trip with. Paaaenger and Freight between . COBIHRE and LAKE POIHl!, as-fbllOW- " - gun-boat- s, Oorlnne every T . ' a. arrives at same day. at at tt p. m.,in., MONDAYS CORINNE regular connections at Corinne with Trains of the C. P. R. R. Company, and at Makes Ex-pr- es lake point with Messrs, Wines Kimballs Stages tot A SALT LAKE CITY, STOCKTON, and OPHIR.-- . fj- - For the transportation of Freight, Ore and Bullion to and from the above named places and in point of vicinity, this route offers inducements TIME and COST, superior to any other route. . Especially Built and Bun for the cotnn todatloi and Bit ant re of and ExcursiotUsts. Ti-av- Ac- - tl Tor farther particulars address B. S. FITCH, Gen. Agent. CORINNE, Ui T., WINES A KIMBALL, Salt Lake City, Utah. Or Messrs. je27tj Patent Renewed on fection ! to-da- y Commissioner Roberts. :Mr. B. J. Roberts, of Pilgrim Bar, yesterday received a letter from his brother. Captain Weoley Roberts, at Malad, I. T. Captain says he was attacked by a Road Agent, who demanded his money or hi3 life, and having no inclination to give up either one or the other, he turned Per- which delivered him loose a from the clutches of the would-bhighfor of and good a nodisposed wayman, who had scoundrel torious already robMr. Roberts rebed three victims. The ferred to as having been assaulted, was & WILSON. formerly one of the commissioners of Deer Lodge county, and was en route to the States for t lie purpose of buying THE GREAT TRIAL OF SEWING West. bix-shoole- r, e WHEELER North cattle. MACHINES! To Contraetovs. TIIE UNIVERSAL VERDICT: The Wheeler & Wilson Sewing Machine the Champion!THE TIME HAS IOME 1VHKN Baxnack axd Shv!iionf. Acfnct, Idvuo, July 1, 1S7I. ) BY UNITED STARS GOV. TUtt ANTED J eriimcut. at tiie Pan iuu k and bhuxhoiie Idaho Ten itury. Afiuy, Pull Halt OfFiCE lvesi-rvatiun- - , WHEELER k Hundred Head of Beef Cattle, 1 wo at the Agnry, for the fuiui.-hiu- g of vl.kh, tienled proposal v. ill be received at the nlanc Agency until July 20, lb71. 1st. Contractors are invited to bid for the whole uuiubor or portion of the Cattle required. Schedule of price upon two, three and fonr year old beef Hieers must be stated. Contnvctors utust state in their bids v hat whether the Cattle to be delivered are to be Spanish, Texus or American htock. 2d. Lids will be received for Beef Cuttle to be delivered at ihe Agent y lrom lime to time lo uch quantities a may be icq aired to be slaughtered at tiie Agency the I rive per pound, nett such bids to cover a coni met to expire July 15, 1372. 3d. Any Cattle commonly culled nnd kuown ns Stags" will not te receivtwl. 4tli. The successful bidder will be required enter into Ixmds in doubts the amount of the contract aw nrded, for the full Mrlormance of the same, subject to the approval of the Commissioner of Indian A Hail'- -. Oth. Bidders are invited to bo present at the opening of the bid, flth. The right is reserved to reject all bids. 7th. Biddeiswiil be required to pay lor the pro rat i. Each bidder will bo required jo deposit with his bid the sum of live dollars ($3 ) for bU.li purpose. M. P. BERRY, LTnited States &lerial Indian Ageut, jy!2-t- d Port Hall Reservation. to tin' h liven-- CHICAGO, JJetroit . Toledo, WILSON Have got thcr Family Shewing Machine to PKIt FECTION, aud no mistake. This each and every woman in the land will admit when they see the NEW 8TYL, SILENT, ADJUSTABLE DRAW FEED MACHINE. Every little difficulty is entirely ovoicome. Draw ing the work white sew ing, they only require one bund nnd one foot to do ths work jierfectfy. j These Unequalt-- Machines do alt the different kinds of work required to lw done in a family, ami make all the different kinds of Sticlus, without the complications of the other Machines. All persons aic invited to examine tho Wiisfisr h Wilson Sev, im. Mviuinls licloie purcha.ingasy othir. Tho WJioeler A Wilson as is well known, lias at nearly every trial in which if has conis-ted- , tho highest award of merit The representatives of other machines, ever confident, have cnti d the lists, time and again, only to he defeated : and finding it ini)Missili!n to compete fairly, have endeavored to decry the value of Premiums. They are not slow however, to I.Kist of tiie few they have .received. Put in the grand trial, daily n throughout the world, where only true merit Ihi'tY. favor, and Superiority wins tho race, tiie M heeler A Wilson Sewing Machine stands triumphantly the champion by the veidict of tho d ii-- lo. These Machines are Adapted to Every Sete ! . Variety of ing From the lightest muslins to the heaviest cloths. They work equally well upon Silk, Linen, Woolen, or Cotton goods,' with Silk. Linen or Cotton thread; Seaming, Quilting, Gathering, Hemming, Felling, Cording, Tucking, lirAMiag, Embroidering and making Button Holes, with the greatest tae.ilitv. W. M. STODDAUI), Gcnl Agent for tiie Pacific Const. cor. Sacramento Montgomery, St., Good Chance for Capitalists WILL OFFER FOR. SALE WE known the next thirty days tho valuable as the property CITY BREWERY, situated near the Steamboat This tlio is Landing. only Brewery in Corinne, and is doing a prosperous business ; Is well stocked with hogs, etQ', For jmrtiuvlnr. aimlr by lettor or ivrsori to 'JjrH-l- CAMPBELL A STOW ELL, Corinne. m tlATHIiWS, - lOCRTH AX Proprietor. FjtONT STREETS, CoBlXXJt. SALOON HAS BEEN REBUILT AND and is now one of the pleasantest resort. None but the brands of LIQUORS, WINES, CIGARS, etc., are kept in th" Tins lst establishment. Old Corner.- Remember the i jelltf- Tho Rocky Mountain . Ar Yorli, Washington, - Boston AND ALL EASTERN CITIES V Corinne, JJtah, ! lino between Council Bluffs and Chi THE only that run Pullman's Palace Sleeping Cars combined witli Pullmans Dining Cars handled free of cha?Pee chccked throuh Ask for tickets via tho Route. A. special train is nowBurlington running Utween Pacific fionCon 1!,ttl.tanJ.ouh uRvil, Pacific June ,b biX C,,udl A Gen J. h . - tmia REY EDWARD E. BAYLISS, PERKIXS, ,, , MORSE, General Agent. my2-Ad- wf JMIm MARY E. I1EFFLEMAN, Principal (Formerly Principal of the Young Ladies Jacksonville, Illinois.) ' . . o-o T English Literature, jf PAT ONEIL, Foreman, KofflEi? ' CORINNE STABLE. - J-- YT AS ? street. WMH0L1OU8 CORRAL AXh EVirt Good Saddle dCarria v ITonca. ers, a good cook house, whh WCoSd 5dv5? STOCK TAKEN TO DANCH jell-t- f Mathematics Botany .. Fall term will ounuuenc ' Trclghi Ho-jy2tf J 'll.' . Etc. Etc., . Blacfesmithing ui aU ita Branches. . Physiology i to do AU Prepared ot WoBon nnd Cnrriacekcd Mata- ICtc. nnd Painting, HARNESS MAKING A REPAIRING Atlions-u- Studies Thorough and liberal. ' i - Overland Blacksmith Shop, . Superintendent. tra. ' C K - I "- . Old Comer Saloon, -J M. 1'hHadelphia - i SAN FRANCISCO. jy.22tf I'ltt.fbui'ff, Jiujfnlo, Baltimore, Albany, ' r-- TRUNK LINE! Cincinnati T - 9" S SATURDAY, at rnnit arrives at LAKC JPOHIT A p; iuturDiniL.'iTM Lks, Point svtry 8 Ltvm I( " 1 ! $, WITHOUT, CHANGE - of Corinne, City RAILROAD LINE! News writes : Several have been laid out stark and politicians stiff by the events of the past three days. One of them is Mayor Hall. No man excuses him. His star is set forever. It will take some time to develop the effect of these events ou the popularity of At. present he is exeGov. Hoffman.crated by the rioters and their sympathizers. A mass meeting has been Seth Green and A. C7 Kellogg, of called for the express purpose, I underdenouncing him. It is alo reRochester, N. Y., succeeded in trans- stand, ofon ported, apparently good authority, porting 20,000 you ug shad from the that the Tatnmauy Ring have definttely Hudsou to the Sacramento river. They determine! to throw Hoffman overboard. were bestowed about 175 miles above The Nashville Danner says of The the State capital, whore the water apBrownsville States, a rural sheet which peared to be agreeable to them, haviug the insects and animalcnla upon which has not departed : uThe States alone remains of a loug line of illustrious Sparthey feed and the gravelly banks upon The tans to teach us how heroes prefetj death which they deposit their spawn. While the lion and the to dishouor. peculiar insects that form the subsistence of tbe shad iu theVAtlantic, were lamb lie down together, the ram, relentfound on the shore of the Pacific in the less, arches its spine for conflict. Let the maul swing. Therell be nothing neighborhood of San Francisco, aud left but its tail ! Thats the way to deal everything is prouounced favorable for with them. r the success of the experiment. From reports it is uot at all improbaAll the Irish weeklies, of New York, ble that there will be some' little unthis week have savage assaults on Gov. pleasantness soon, between the United Hoffman. - Several of themare.dressed States and- China, as some of the Chitheir countrymen, who,' nese officials opened their masked batin mourning-fo- r Uncle" Sams they say, were murdered- - by Hoffman. teries bn one They pour out upon bim the most vio- while plying on a' river- - in one of the lent abus and demand that he be tried Celestial Provinces, with full permission from headquarters. by a jiirv .f hi poors fur murder. Rle Mad cant Sttaitier, Kobrdistaa, and mahnChorisan and Gilan, in fivf of the is largest ports of Persia, the suffering to fearful. It is impossible for tongue describe its honors. Here in Ispahan a bushel of wheat is $8, of barley $7, and aud cotton seed and rice still millet more expensive. (As money in Persia is worth five times as much as m this there country, $8. for a bushel of wheat Multitudes is equivalent to $40 here.) are dving from starvation, I cannot tell how many. But in villages numbering 500 houses, now but 200 remain. Multitudes have died, and multitudes have fled. They hardly look like human beto beings. Their appearance is fearful the street the hold. As I go out into the meet dead and dying and churchless everyeye constantly. They snatch at of blood of barley, thing to cat husks donaud animals, flesh of dead horses keys. Shopkeepers stand before their stalls with clubs to keep the hungry and away. starving from carrying everything Lamentation and bitter crying for bread are heard on all sides, from objects stagsee gering along the streets. You willtheir people in the public square selling clothes aud all they possess for a mere pittance iu order to get a few pence for bread but to prolong their sufferings a brief hour. Mothers run frantic, saying, What shall I do ? My children are dy Three-iourth- s ing for lack of bread. for bread. of Ispahan are beggars NEW Charleston 1', ; Tfie CcjapoayvNbw : The horse disease is making sad havoc among the railroad horses in this city. Victor Hugo has addresed a letter to the New Tork Liberal Club, accepting the membership to which lie was re- Chicago, Burlington & cently elected. Missouri River The Internal Revenue officers yesterday seized the wholesale whisky house of Steven Kinney & Co., on the charge of having a large quantity of contra- TWO EXPRESS ' TRAINS DAILY! band liquor on hand. COUNCIL BLUFFS TO CHICAGO Loxnux, July 26. Special dispatches from Constantinople say the famine in Persia is causing dreadful havoc. Deaths in the Province of Ivhorassan The Shortest and most Desirable Route to average three hundred daily, and so Ottumira , Mofnrt, great is the distress that the dead bodies JturttHffton , are devoured by the survivors, and men, JC eofmJt, women and children have been killed iu Mendota order to supply food for the perishing. L!a lest iirrj, leoviaf London, July 26. Charles James i.ouansportt , iMyfnyrfte, Matthews, the distinguished comedian, India nnpnUn, is dead. Tiie New York correspondent of the Javfgatioa Ctppany. vt ? , . Sept :4th, 1871- - Persons desirous of obtaining information in to terms, etc., will please applyat oc REV. EDWAHtlT:. BAYLISS, mylD-fi- m ' COZtl NNE, UTAH kt, A' Corpontor G. Builder, council sixth a Montana sts., U2tf CORINNE. |