| Show BEAVER neaver july 2nd and 1873 editor despret newe hews the adjourned term of the second judicial district court for this territory closed this morning I 1 believe belleve from reliable information that the dirst first jury trial ever held in this district was had at this term followed by several others in both civil and criminal cases in discharging the traverse jury after near a months sitting judge boreman said 1 I believe you have done the best you knew how when men do the best they know how there is not much danger of going very far wrong if I 1 can always wf tys have as good a jury I 1 shall be satisfied 11 last evening at the solicitation of members of the bar his ilia honor delivered a short but very able address to a respectable audience of officials and citizens followed by J judge dge Z snow and attorneys iia lia Hawley ley and adams all speaking in high terms of our mountain home homo and their high ap appreciation lation of the community C I 1 M yr gawley rawley hawley sald said sald said ia la substance 1 I have believed and said that where re mor m mons ons and non mormons cormons were party litigants I 1 did not believe a non mormon could get justice in this territory but I 1 am happy to say I 1 was mistaken how do these facts tally with the statements of a late associate justice of the supreme court of the tiie whited states in the territory of utah to the war nalar department they are yet too fresh in the memory of the people to need recapitulation especially in this district where etwas it was stated that more crime existed than in either of the tiie other two now sir if courts of justice including 0 jury trials can be held amongst us poor sinners why nob not in the other two districts where the citizens are more law abiding and better civilized you will perceive that this district needs no special legislation perhaps a few lessons lesson in the othe other r districts might save a great deal of trouble troubie leand and ease congress Con oress aress of the burden of bills bir b the score praying that something maybe may be donefer done for fon poor down trodden utah I 1 think our crops will be about an average the most olour of our fruit was cut off with frost in may and june the people are feeling well generally our little city is still improving so zo say the passers pa sers by our operative cooperative co store rock up to the square about 30 by 60 or 65 63 ft two stories high several everal tf private dwelling houses house are under way weather warm and fair D T EASTERN NOTES MOTES vermont vermo nt has three female stage invers drivers fashion flirtation frailty frivolity and folly are at saratoga aprin sprin strings Sn Sp rings rin mj MI henry watterson of the louisville courier J journal is writing letters from london and a more dissatisfied man you dont often see ida lda lewis the heroine orlim of limn rock roch rhode island has separated from her husband win wm wilson on account of nonsupport non support she still remains at the lighthouse light house clerical celibacy is exercising episcopal E pis circles somewhat bishop armitage of wisconsin advises young clergymen to wait for connubial felicities until they the cler eler aymen are properly established an iowa lady lost her husband a few years ago and during her absence at the funeral her house burned down she married azain agrain however and while attending the bullai of her last husband recently the family residence again burned burnad down the insign insurance ne e companies will investigate the matter the tho people of fort scott kansas are in deep distress recently there arrived in the town 0 on n I 1 its way to boston and intended for a museum there an immense collection of texas taran tarantulas tulas centipede scorpions and horned frogs by accident the case was broken up and the agreeable creatures aro domiciled at fort scott where they are likely to increase increate and multiply not in the tho least to the comfort the fort Scott mee mew r postal rostal regulations Regul atlo atio ns d CHANGES AFTER JUNE 30 1873 I 1 franking privilege abolished 2 postmasters supplied with off oin official stamps I 1 3 official stamps must not be used except for official business 4 stamp of one department cannot be used for correspondence of another 5 no mat matter ter can pass through thi ough the mails free 6 postage must be collected orr newspapers published in the cou county n where delivered 7 exchanges not free publishers must pay py postage on each exchange received 1 8 postal cards uncalled for are not sent to the dead letter office 9 postal cards cannot be sent a second time 10 ordinary cards can bo be transmitted through t ai the mails by affixing affix inc inZ one cent stamp provided the entire message message is printed the address may be written POSTAGE letters three cents for each half ounce or fraction thereof drop letters where delivered by carriers two cents for each half ounce or fraction thereof adother at other offices one cent for each half ounce or fraction thereof printed matter one cent for each two ounces or fraction thereof seeds bulbs cuttings roots scions scion S chromes and engravings are classed with printed matten matter Z i merchandise two cents for each two ounces or fraction thereof limited to twelve ounces when any of the above matter is mailed wholly unpaid and b by y inadvertence reaches its destination double rates rites shall be charged and collected postoffice post office gazette DESIRABLE EMIGRANTS the chicago states that the report previously circulated that large bodies of russia and prussia are coming this summer to the united states is true it is no mere eod COD conjecture jecture but a fixed purpose last summer a leading mennonite menno Mcnno nite from southeastern russia made a tour of inspection ec through the united states and the canadas and now a committee of five nive russians russian s and one prussian are on their way to new york some twenty or thirty families are expected to arrive here duding during the present summer and nive five e hundred bild red more will follow them next summer the Mennonite are sare german baptists and akin to the tile quakers I 1 in n their hostility to war they are industrious and thrifty and are regarded as good citizens by both russia and prussia but both these governments insist on their performing military duty which they refuse to do and hence the present emigration emigration T there ere ero are considerable bodies of these people in various parts of pennsylvania the descendants of emigrants who came over generations ago they are a valuable class in any community and are highly esteemed by thele their neighbors in iii eastern pennsylvania they are c called maneese a local abbreviation for mennonites the i in the last syllable having the sound of 0 and the first two syllables shortened into one pittsburgh commercial t A thoughtful cincinnati school miss who desired to produce a reform in the matter of dress amon among school 9 girls iris with a self denial that is ls marvelous appeared lii lil iii in her class the other day wearing C a plain cal eai calico leo ico dress with trim ming that cost a hundred dollars I 1 to give a rose to a lady has always been considered a graceful 1 act of gallantry but when you take the precaution to fill the leaves of your tour roses with cayenne pepper the tiie politeness becomes rather dubious this was the elegant and chivalric device adopted ad opted by a yo young in gentleman of AIa Ala habad for punish punishing a young oung married lady who had bad sl slighted I 1 ht ed him the tile effect wasa was a fit of sneezing so violent as bobring to bring on a severe illness and three physicians besides she had to bonway go away for a change and yet her a aggrieved grieve husband claims only seven undred hundred j rupees damages he may have considered the going away so some gome me compensation for the three doctors when the lady laly recovers she may af if her mind is is of a literary turn t nind find a new meaning in the poets pools J line line jine about dying of a rose in aromatic P pain a W FOREIGN NOTES one fourth of a share in a london water company was lately sold for the face value of an entire share is only one pound it is is one of the wealthiest corporations in the world but its projector lost his liis fortune and die dle died in in the workhouse its name is the new niver biver company A correspondent of the london daily news writes thus when the sultan visited this country ho lie incurred a serious expense by giving muo MUM 1 snuffboxes snuff boxes covered with gi diamonds to the officials abent the tiie court one noble lord who had llad and I 1 believe still has a situation about the palace bitterly complained that he had been left lett out of the distribution and actually like a sturdy beggar whined and begged to the grand vizier until he got his snuffbox snuff box many suggestions have been made respecting the best method of receiving the shah of persia so as to give him a befitting idea of our national characteristics I 1 would sug gest that all persons who receive a salary from the state be absolutely forbidden to levy blackmail on him when people talk about millionaires they usually mention rothschild first but there is a man in england by ee the name of ward in comparison with whom any rothschild is is a pauper this man ward inherits drits a vast amount of property with accumulated investments ana and and estates which give him an enormous income he has the most magnificent house in london the finest collection of art and the finest country seats in the kingdom his wife is celebrated for her beauty and her display of diamonds at the recent festival given by the emperor of austria in vienna made all the other ladies the empresses impresses Em presses queens princesses look poor what the income of the british croesus is we have never seen any sta of but a manchester cl paper gives an annual profit derived from his coal mines which amounts to the sum of so the income of this inordinately wealthy person is not much short of twenty ave five million dollars a year on june 3 lord houghton aton unveiled a statue of sir robert peel feel which has been erected in st SL georges square huddersfield Hudders field by a section of the people of hudders field and was handed over to the corporation in order to be duly L aken taken care of by that town the statue is nine feet high executed in sicilian marble and the statesman is represented as 0 O wearing the robes of the chancellor of the exchequer whilst iri in his left hand he holds a scroll to which he is pointing including the pedestal which is of aberdeen gr granite anite the statue is twenty feet high on the front of the pedestal is a nine fine bronze relief 0 of feeding the hungry and at t the back baek an extract from a speech by y sir robert peel the proceedings were commenced by a procession i in which the band of hope children the yeomanry rifle volunteers un magistrates mayor and corporation ind and various other public bodies took tool part and there was a crowd of several thousand persons in the square lord houghton made a speech in which he referred to the death of peel to th the e immense changes which had taken place in the world since his decease and passed a high on his abilities as a statesman and on the work he accomplished by putting in practice the principles of free trade which had bad been thought out by others who preceded him and thus giving cheap bread to the people mr beck beek then handed over the statue to the mayor and corporation and the mayor promised that every care should be taken of it 1 mr air joseph arch is reported to have spoken in the following terms at sheffield of the incident which has gone the I rounds of the press concerning queen victoria and some of other her laborers who wanted higher wages she referring them to her hei steward and he bismil dismissing them from his employment I 1 q he e wanted to say a word about her dia ATa majesty lesty the queen her majesty had most certainly put herself in his way he had been bold enough to give e his views about bishops colon colonels I 1 s and dukes and he should about her majesty as long as she had put herself in his way if h he e understood the reading of papers the men employed upon her rosal i royal farm asked for an advance of ni wages from flom as ad to as lod iod per day and their time shortened one hour per day her ma majesty leavo esty should at least he thought havo have considered the matter she was a mother and knew the ex expense ense and care of a family he bould should have liked her to have replied to her steward like a christian mother and like a christian queen and to have set an example beare before a christian country in rn considering the demand of the men suppose she had bad asked herself had it been my mv lot to have been a cottagers wife and to have had per week what could I 1 have done with it that night right which the queen enjoyed in the country to live he did not want to wrest from her but when her laborers asked to be allowed to I 1 live ive and to barely live he thought slie she ought to have considered it and not have given their request into the hands of a timeserving covetous tyrannical steward f 11 1 1 mamp hampshire independent captain estes a gentleman well known for many years in comm command and 0 of f the lake ontario st steamers came rs informs us that he was the witness a few nights since of a wonderful phenomenon h e ome nonen en lake ontario the E like ilke k e of which he never naver saw before and does not expect to see again while on his way from the st lawrence up the lake on the steam tug of which he is master and when near the islands known as the tiie false ducks and while standing at the lv wheel eel there suddenly burst into view the city of oswego thirty one miles distant with the gas lights in the streets and all the appearances that a town lighted up d would present from a hill in the ohp e immediate vicinity at night the lighthouse lighthouse at oswego as well as a dozen ozen others on tile the lake shore below as far as sacketts Sac ketts harbor were distinctly seen it was a sort of night mirage midge this display was witnessed for several minutes and then slowly faded away into darkness rochester union the secretary of the interior is in in receipt of a copy of a letter addressed to 3 james ames amos I 1 M L haworth indian agent at fort sill I 1 T by thomas C battey a teacher in the camp of the who urges the release ofSan tanta and big tree he ibre relates numerous instances where the klowas have not only refused to join the in raids on the whites but have actually prevented predatory excursions in conclusion he says they often tell me that if the government does not return San tanta and big tree at or about the time fled fied by beede in his council two months since they can put no further confidence in the white mans word and that they are waiting to see the fulfillment of that agreement before settling down that if they are delivered up they will settle down raise corn send their children to school and do just as their great father at washington wants them to do provided they can have a school home away from the military post washington star the lady to whom henri rochfort was married just before she received the last sacrament of the church has recovered her health and walks about versailles of course marnia marria marriage gEi gel improved her health A teacher in lockport nock Hock pont port recell eda note the other day from crom an ind indigo 19 n ant aut parent which read 1 I want you to strictly understand that you faint boss of my children if you keep maria for being late you will have truble you need not think we are slaves becas we faint we live in a free land adoo 11 A gentleman residing on the outskirts of kew new york placed a mexican cactus on the top of his gard garden enwall wall wail asan |