| Show wae tae LUMBER TRADE PROBABLY no branch of trade bas baa been more extensively gone into I 1 in n utah than the tho he lumber business the circumstances of the cout couf country itry have hav 0 demanded that it should be so this is the case in near nearly lyall all ail new counters countr count fes lumbering has lately under undergone gone goue a revolution not only in point of quality but also in ili relation to 6 prices that which could not ba purchased a few years ago corless for less than from eighty to one hundred d dol doi ol 01 lais iara lara per thousand feet can now be readily obtained for fr from 0 m thirty five to I 1 forty dollars this clia cila change dietor for tor the better is still progressing and Is likely to continue mr D W parkhurst the ente enterprising salt lake lakes and truckee lum lumber er merchant has late lately y commenced in connect connection lon ion with his lumber yard in this city the manufacture of doors sash bash windows and door frames cornicks cornices cor nices moul dings etc etc it is his intention instead of having those articles imported from truckee in ri a manufactured condition to import the lumber in the rough and employ utah artisans arti and machinery to make them he is already doing a large business in thib this line in this and the surrounding territories he informs inform sus us that during the thi past week be he has sent daily to corinne and other towns on the line of the 0 P and TL P two wagon loads of building materials which were made in this city he left this afternoon for truckee from which point he will ship to this place lace feet of seasoned lumbers lumber the gre greater ater part of which will be made up in t this his city into the articles above mentioned and sent to different parts of the surrounding country mr parkhurst intends to 0 o reduce tib the price of his common truckee lumber to thirty dollars par per thousand this winter andi ands and if the times will warrant him in doing so in ili the spring to twenty five dollars he deals on the trade system taking the produce of the country we think the course of mr parkhurst in turning such benefits resulting from his bia business as he can can into the bands hands of the comm community unIV very creditable to him MANY of our readers will no doubt remember the mortara abduction case which caused such a I 1 eu tope rop gorne esome twelve years ago and which 3 1 led to protests from ii seral jeral hf f the fik eat european go governments we ruffled ahe the e facts fa ctr ets dr dree gree we case were that edgar edgan mortara a jewish child wag stolen fro from ahls ula hia parents and i placed where he would be reared in the catholic reil Tell religion gon gou the R abominable act being belog committed by order of ortho the archbishop of bologna an event precisely similar in character aeter acter has recently been brought dolight to light ir in the roman correspondence of the london daily dews the tho victim this time was a jewish boy nine years of age agee nam named ad quiseppe coen and aud ud the jhb erime crime waa was committed in july 1864 1664 this poon child living in JM rome borne had been apprenticed by his parents to a shoemaker and the latter yielding to the persuasions of the priests of the cate pumeni delivered the child over to them that bedight he be might be rescued from float the errors of f judaism Juda lsna isnA and be prepared for heaven according 16 to the catholic ritual the parents of the euil ebil child d expected his return home agusu as usual alon aion on the evening of the abduction and alarmed at his nond none arrival they applied to the shoemaker for tidings of him but were informed that he knew nothing about him they then commenced along a long iong continued learch learoh search to r obtain some clue to the childs wh whereabouts ere bre but their efforts were in vain until finally finai final ly the rascally ras raa cally caily shoemaker being assured of the protection of the papal poll police bead admitted that he bad been consigned to the care of the tho catholic Cat holla priests 0 bordering on distraction the poor mother flew to td the establishment of the but was refused admission or a sight bight of her child chil d day after day she would spend hours in front 0 of the institution in hopes of seeing him for which she was finally imprisoned by the papal authorities authorities and ultimately lost her senses through her grief v at this stage of the proceedings the representative of tho the french government interfered and by his influence and efforts the boy was finally released the whole family soon after emigrated from rome kome to leghorn where skillful medical treatment iu time restored the reason of bf the mother tite tiie wonderful organ organization 1 of the pru prussian ishad army during the present war has baa called forth the admiration of af the vie civilized civilized world and in nothing hasit has it been more conspicuous than in their telegraphic system which has hag played so 80 important a part lu in their field opa operations ons the mhd telegraph division of each prussian army consists of three station wagons with ten systems of apparatus and the necessary batteries baueries bar baU erles erlea six els requisition wagons and necessary vehicles ae for equipage they carry with them material for six miles of telegraph the pers personnel onnell of each division on sista of an engineer officer besides a second officer as assistant twelve government telegraph officials for working the apparatus and the necess necessary ank ark number of pioneers for the restoration or erection of telegraph lines in the advance into france scarcely did the enemy disappear on the further side aide of chevalley the valley vailey than these telegraph corps began the their ir work in order to secure a rapid means of communication between the different portions of the army as w well weil ell eil as to keep up a connection with the states telegraph As aruie atule these telegraph pioneers erdi erect ct one mile ger geri i many man of telegraph in four hours or under favorable circumstances in two tto hours such ia is the prefect protection ign ion of thelnor thelnon thein organization 11 NEURALGIA is one of the most painful aud and diseases iri irl in existence and judging by the long continued suffering of those who are subject to td it one ono af we the most difficult to cure or relieve the following method of treatment from the dublin medic medical alPress aress dress is within the reach of any who may wish to try its virtues and if as efficacious as represented it will be invaluable 11 As a corr to his remarks on the efficacy of tincture of iodine in the treatment of neuralgia 31 bouchat adduced several cases from which it appears that when the remedy in its pure state has proved unavailing the pain sometimes yields in a remarkable manner when a certain amount of morphia has been added to the tincture jn in this instance the application Is not merely counterirritant counter irritant t indeed yin gin in this re fauld fluid would seem to have lost some of its power its efficacy is chiefly due to the presence of the sedative the introduction tro of which beneath the epidermis is facilitated by the tho tincture ot of iodine whatever explanation may be offered of the effects af pf ot this mode of treatment its beneficial operation is an unquestionable fact de deserving deservio servin of every attention thus we noticed jam Bouc huts wards a little uttie girl jirl who while recovering from frock typhoid i i M s r became affected with neural meural neuralgia gla gia of the fore bead nedd nead iliad pure re iodine failed in rel rei bellovin relieving iovin lovin the pain 11 bouchat Bou chut ordered the tho brow to be painted over three times a daywitt day with a solution of half a I 1 of sulphate of og morphia in half an ounce of og i tincture ot of iodine and a cure core was waa affected in the bourse course of thre three 1 e days the professor adopted the same method of treatment in the case of a lady aged finty fifty two suffering from neuralgia symptomatic of chronic pulmonary disease mornin morning and evening ev i sedative s tincture was waa as applied applied to the regions and on the ald second day amendment set in and the neuralgia was altogether removed on the fourth day A few new new FEW days since the eastern tele graphic dispatches dispatch esi esl contained ponta ined a para bara paragraph in relation to a man named wilson condemned to death for murder confined inaba in the connecticut state prison who persistently reused all ali nourishment and had not had a morsel of food within his big lips for several days intending to dikof dib of hunger rather than endure a public execution by the hangman fi angman sinca sinea then ethen his counsel casap bas bag appealed pealed for anew trial and thus holding out a slight chance for life the poor wretch commenced taking food again after nine nino days dayal abstinence having endured the pangs ot of starvation it maybe well supposed that lie he is cabble capable of describing them which be he does oes in the following graphic manner under the heading What I 1 know about starving on the fourth and anth fifth days the trial was terrible the cravings clavings cravi of hunger hungen were fearful I 1 could dould hardly stand it after that hunger ceased on the sixth day my thirst AhIn was so intense that involuntarily I 1 brought the wash dish to my lips upp and drank several swallows of wafer water the dish came involuntarily to my lips 1 I could not help dt this was the only time I 1 drank during the nine and a half days with regard to the first meal he says 1 I was careful not to take much and I 1 selected ted tea the them mush and took freshwater fresh water it was sweet and good and I 1 took it because it was the lightest food and theril therit only took a quarter of the tation ration it felt hot in my stomach and at once it caused my heart to beat in a ver very rapid manner and also very hard wie wu dou don gou son proposes to publish a i book of his adventures yent vent ies les he iffe boasts of having been concerned cernea in over a hundred burglar burglaries lbs ibs and I 1 many prison escapes THE census of new york city shows that its population ia something below a million at which result some people are badly aik Ali appointed disappointed and it is said the census is t to 3 be re taken in order to be sure 61 6 T correct returns the new york tribune professes profess pro fessey esto to be perfectly convinced that the figures given are correct and shows from statistics that thirty eight years ago there were thirteen teen cities in europe larger than new now work york city whereas now there are but three and that while the lar largest i gest increase per cent of any city there during that time is 20 that of new york is P the thi following table furnished by the tribune shows the population of new york city and fifteen of the largest cities batles jn europe in 1832 and 1869 and their rate per cent of increase increase i 1832 1869 pet per peret ct london 08 constantinople 50 paris new york oric st SL petersburg arg 37 naples GT vienna dublin dub Dab lillo 21 moscow 50 merlin berlin 2500 lisbon Ij isbon 44 manchester 49 amsterdam 2 12 glasgow 99 livera laverpool dol doi ltd 17 1 madrid |