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Show I f ; county times. THEUTAH ; tijESDH, ptfnUMIKr KTKKT THURSDAY AND trr SATURDAY, SI TIMKS AND rl'BI.INIlINO COMPANY. I Br TUS UTAH COUNTY , ..... TMIMS UP .SUIWCllIITIUN. Year On ix Months Thru" Months uneMonlli V. S. George I .too VOL. 0 I.0 THE PROVO CITY, U. LA.SMIE THAT I LOT.. Apropos of the translation of Gaelic At the meeting of the Michigan songs, given lately in Uatl Worda, we arc furnished with ttie following Englixti Bornological Society at Adrian, a word, to the beautiful Gaelic air, communication from M. B. Bate-haOum a thin a chi mi." of Ohio, was read, in which or Alltan Luchmi wun." the magnitude of the evil of the Far In the realms of fancy apple worm was discussed, which led other poets rove. showed it to !e the great dread of me to Give slug the pleasures Of humble, homely love! the fruit-groweand then proLet other jiruise t lie lowland bowers to modes of ceeded several give And their coy maidens woo, the moths, to which subGive me In groves by Avon trapping The lassie that I loe! ject much thought and ingenuity Woods, Oregon tI TERRITORIAL OFFICERS. As stainless a the That crowns Ben snow-wreat- r, h And failhlul to her vow: erubbabcl Snow The vow that freely tendered J. P. T. McAllister Brought to my grateful view Win. Clayton The wealth of love she gave me Vi iror lassie that I loe. The .InmosJack is tr. r N 0. II. Rlgg. What though In pearls and Diamonds ipt. Comnrm SWhm My lassie cun not shine; Nor wear the garb of fashion In silks nnd satins tine; In plaid af home-spu- n tartan UTAH COUNTY OFFICERS. And simple snood o blue. Warren N. Ptisenberry Than otieen she t.s more queenly IV (bate fudge Th lassie that I loe. Y Mvron Tanner - Tbos.T.McCnlloneh olrtirii What she boast no riches I Jonathan S. Page. Savethough hersma penny-fee- , o mv Iieco ler I. John Nuttall And fortune deals her favors As snniigly to me. Slierl'r.... . Henry C. Rogers With willing hands and hearts still .1. B. Milner PeHccnting Utornev Each to the other true, It. ll We Milner John har. Ilf joys and sorrows utrever I and the lass I loe. o. .roller Alliert Jones Grioalacii. vint'- - Ilerlc I. John Nuttnll rreasnrer Henrv A. PlXoti Life in New York. 4nvir ami Colleetor ....lames E. IHtnlels Supt. Common Soliools, W. II. Dusenberry -- There are more sorrows and even more tragedies than find their way into the scant records of the daily papers. Imagine the ease of an individual or family, of good local name and character, comH.lled by accident or untoward circumstances to remove to New York city. They find that their neighbors have no idea of being neighlxir-l- y in the rural sense. Nobody knows who they are, and they cannot proclaim to all the people in the vicinity that they are nice, refined. modest, table, They may live ten, nay, twenty, years, in one street, and still not find themselves on terms of social intimacy with any of the Young men so transported in museums, theadiscover may ters, and picture galleries a slight compensation for the loss of personal society; but even in these cases the change is sometimes sad. Who can tell the number of poor lads who have to return each evening with aching hearts through streets crowded with strangers, to solitary lodgings, without one friendly voice to ask a question as to the days toil, or one friendly ear into which to pour aspirations or regrets? Who cannot trace to such loneliness the heartless and sometimes vicious gavety forced on a city youth, half through want of that companionship which, fresh from norae, he sorely misses? If this be true as regards young men, how much more emphatic, is the evil in the case of young girls? If rr.nvo city officers. Abraham 0. Smoot John Nnttall Samuel S. Tone Albert Jones F. Pae, Win. Pnnn. flumes Councilors W'lllam A. Follel. John R. ( Milner. James W. Iiveless T . John Nuttall RoeoMer Treasurer Henry A. Plxon Marsha! IPnry C. Roger tohn R. Milner Vcitr Attorney Assessor anil Collector .. Vnne F,. Psnlel Charles P. Miller supervisor A. (I. Oownover hlef of Police..,.. Robert T. Thoma cVatermaster Joalah T. Armwsinlth c'tty Poundkeeper Daniel Grave rvxton - ret-pe- c re.i-dent- s. AFFAIRS. POSTAL RATES OF DOMESTIC POSTAGE. K.trritRA tThe standard single rate weight Is ox. avoirdupois'. Single rnte letter 3 rent throughout the United State or fToe- For each additional 3 tlon .1 letters, single rate Drop N'KwsrAYfcns (The standard rote avoirdupois). Pally, seven time a week, tlx ' ... 'ml-weekl- Semi-monthl- Vet. per piiar. 30 IS , - RfRionicAiA. (The 3 the family, be wealthy, acquaintances are gradually obtained through the incidental results of perqnar. associations thfls secured. But if standard single rate or. avoirdupois).' 4 os. - 10 - 5 y Weekly Monthly Is 4 I els. y 3 Monthly 1 Quarterly Ttie maximum weight of any package of pdnled or miscellaneous matter Is I lb av- oirdupois. UF.GISTERF.P and letters ORDERS. money Registration: Tetters may beregisterrd on payment of a the of fifteen cents, hut the government take no responsibility for fe carriage or compensation In rnscs of tot. Money Order: All principal post office Dow receive small sum of money and Is-- ae drafts (br the same upon other pot office., subject to the following charges nd regulations: orders not exceeding 530 Vri Over and not exceeding i and 10 330... - noj exceeding 3(0 H and not exceeding $.30.... cent li 20 25 RATES OF FOREIGN POSTAGE. The standard rate to Great Rrltaln tingle hlf an ounce letters, six cnt paper, twoavolrdnpots; cent. Standard rate to France ffooa-qdmecor- Is IS gramme, letters, ten cents; pa-Y3- csro ctttfg. !, it be poor, girls find themselves young women, and young women gradually grow into old maids, with nobody coming to marry them, nobody coming to woo. This kind ofsorrow Is occasionally sneered at, as if there wero something comical In the fact of a girl missing an opportunity to become mothers a wife. Match-makin- g and girls who want to catch husbands, are the subjects of antique Jests. Now, though a mere truism, it is not quite needless to say that a mother who desires to see her daughters happily married, and who works honestly towards that end, feels and acts not only rightly but laudably in fiict, it is bad mothers alone who are perfectly Indifferent on the joint. It may also be said though it ought to be unnecessary that It Is perfectly natural for a good and modest girl to desire earnestly a husband We can therefore and a home. see something almost tragical in the complete isolation which characterizes the New York residences of those who are not wealthy, making opportunities of courtship and marriage so rare. lie iqtoke of the importance oflights and small fires set about the orchards to attract the moths; also, scraping ofr the rough bark and washing the trees with soap suds,and placing traps for catching the insects: also the placing of bands around the trees forthe purpose of giving place for the worms to crawl under to form their cocoons. He then stated that in his opinion the simplest and most practical remedy for the extermination of the codling moth was keeping plenty of hogs and sheep in the orchard during the summer to eat up quickly all the wormy fruit as it falls. He said there Avas one fact which he had observed, and that was that the first brood of the worms nearly all fell to the ground in the young apples which they inhabit, Rnd hence, if these first wormy fruits are eaten by hogs and sheep before the worms escape, there is little need of any of the traps referred to. His advice to the orchardist was to try the hog and sheep remedy. Prof. Cook, of the Agricultural College, stated that it would do no good to take lights into, an orchard for the purpose of catching the codling moth. It will destroy moths but not the codling moth. , The hog remedy will do but it will not remove the evil. It should bo used in connection with other remedies. There are a great number of worms which never go to the ground at all. These the hogs cannot destroy. The paper or cloth hands are the only things that are yet known that approach a sure method of extinction. This year he has found moths in April, when it is not usual to see them until June. He thought that perhaps we might have less trouble this year than usual with them on account of their hatching early and dying. The hog remedy is a help, but it is not a soverign remedy. The paper hand Is not as good as a clot h band. Michigan Farmer. has been devoted, Avons brow, Cannon Her heart Is ever constant .Geo. Q. to Congress ll'T-,Miev General I., THURSDAY, The (o filing Moth. George A. Black, Utah lus. I.. McKean, N. Y. , h if Justice ( Emerson Philip H. .ie:ates Jacob S. ltoremnn Geo. R. Maxwell, Mich. Win. Carcv, III. V. S. Ulorney Kimball Nathan Ocncnil vjru'inr Public Moneys, J.R.Overton,Pn. ;; Willett Pottengor For graceful la my darling UcYotcr Laml Office, As I. P. Taggart, 111. And yonderwuvingulne. P. . Asvssor spotless as the aewdrops That on the brackens h!ne: .....O. J. Hollister, Pal. f, Clttor Is warm and tender. C. W. Emerson Iler heart me K 1st Judieiur District. , ever true, And to My own dear Highland maiden, Tho lassie that I loe. Al.c-Ii- R. M. ROGERS, M. some-good- M iles of the Wicked. One of the vilest and most infamous schemes that was ever concocted has been going on in this city for several months. Though the desire of Milwaukee has been to appear to be metropolitan in everything, she surely nad no aspiration for the extensive and of traffic now being Kculiar line to light. There are thousands in the city who consider beer drinking and beer tra flic Its worst and only evil, while the fact is that when compared with the devilish avocation now under consideration they sink into utter oblivion. The business of running an inn telligence office has not considered disgraceful, but the fact that it can be made dialolical, without going out of its particular line, nas come to light. An intelligence office is carried on ostensibly for the purpose of supplyingrespectable families with female servants, while the real business of the vile procuress, the owner of one particular office. Is to supply the houses of prostitution in the city with pure and spotless girls from the country. The modus operand! Is about as follows: Men are employed from the office ns runners, who watch at thedepotfor their victims, most of whom come into tho city to look for situations. These men get $2 apiece for each girl between the ages of 12 and 30 that they bring to the office. The Innocents pay the women $2 In advance for situations for them. procuring to the different She sends-theand gets $10 for houses of each one. The girls ruin is soon accomplished, of course, whjch so covers her with a sense of shame and guilt, that she usually lack liereto-foreboe- ill-fa- - D- PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Profo City, U. T. Ent hlore, where he keeps drugs of nil J8 00 OFFICERS FOR UTAH. (jnvornor w w BUSINESS. PROVO CITY n ll1 ii I rra OrKicic, 1st door east of DIRECTORY. OFFICIAL n U BR OCTOBER 1, kind. NO. 27. 1S71. no28 JOHN RICCS, M. D., the moral courage to return to her SALT LAKE CITY BUSINESS. parents. In a short time she gets accustomed to her sin, and generROBERT fell ELTON, ally fills an early grave. rrhat such JOHN U. MILI.RR, TllOtfXS ELEM1NO. iniquity should be allowed to go uuunisheUfor five or six months MILLER & CO. lu the city, does not speak very well for those who have charge of OPPOSITE TIIE TIIEATr. E. municipal matters. Tho transacKA.I..T LAKE CIT-Y-. tions of this vile woman are now tiecoming too bold, however, to GENERAL NEWSDEALERS AND be longer undiscovered. Now that this much is mado public, the auSTATIONERS. thorities will doubtless see to it othat she Is speedily punished to for the Saa Francisco Anti the extent of the law. (IKis.) PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON- Sjwcia! attmliov fftven to Concert. Office at rvlilenco. 4th Wot Btreet, and one block onln of Ieter Ntubb Provision Store, on Centre Street Provo City. Julio COOPER SHOP. The unjersgned would respretTtillY Inform the elilren cf Provo nnd vlolnltr that he pr p trod to do all kind of repairing In the coopering line on the ohort-notice nnd at reasonable mtex. Workshop First East (street, Provo die. et sti WM. IIUIUIECK. -- CHRONICLE" AND Mews. LT OTICE. CALL." The subscriber ever grateful forth o heretofore received announce to Will mall all kind of Eastern and WesThe Seasouableness of Food. prepared to receive tern papers tor three, kI i or twelve mouths the public that he Mugurcutie, furnishing the wood, Ac., Kc on receipt of subscription price. au22 I wo-lihi of the moiasie. A writer Raya wholesomeness of LL W. DAVIS. IroprKttor. food depends nearly as much on HIGHEST PRICE PAID FOR Proro e!2 City, Irth, 1874. Sept. the time it Is taken as on the pnt-rona- 1 ft quantity. We have grown so luxurious In our physical as well as mental tastes, that we are constantly tempted to eat things out of season. Yielding to the temptation ns we often do, we pay the penalty, soon or lute, in temporary or chronic derangement of our health. The meat which is excellent in cold may not be desirable in warm weather; fish is best during spring and early summer; vegetables and fruit are nutritious when they are fully ripened by sun and season, and not artificially stimulated. Nature knows what she is doing; she furnishes for every latitude the production fitted for such latitude. We need variety not so much at one time, as from time to time. The delicacies of the season will not hurt us; but the delicacies out of season certainly will, if long continued. The appetite so Jaded as to crave oysters in July or strawberries in December, needs careful correction by the adoption of the simplest habits. The palate naturally relishes what nature has near at hand. As a rule, not only is the simplest food the best food, but the most seasonable is, in the long run, the mast appetizing. There is no difficulty in determining what we should eat, since the products of our climate show us plainly month by month. Fish, fleh and fruit, by their plumpness, tenderness nnd ripeness, themselves denote when they are ready to be eaten. A sound stomach will profit by whatever an unspoiled palate enjoys. Ten Ways to Commit Suicide. WHEAT, H. BARLEY, -- AND- iR, Wlsbe to iiifoiin hi friend and the public generally. Urn I he ha opened a TIN-SHO- DRIED PEACHES P, And I prepared to manufnrtnre nil kind of at reasonable rotoa. Shop corner of Centre and Jtfiln xtroet.. Provo City. . no2l tin-wa- -- AT- TAYLOH& CUTLER'S, SALT LAKE CITY, NOTICE. apll-l- y NATIONAL BANK Utah. PAID UP CAPITAL AUTHORIZED CAPITAL. WM. H. HOOPER, President, ., H. K. Kr.DRF.PGK, HRIGH M YOUNG. o The proprietor would respectfully announce to the public that they are prepared to take WHEAT, OATS AND BARLEY IN EXCHANGE FOR BEER. of C?lty, BREWERY. PROVO DESERET Salt Luke J. MOORE, IRRE T OATS, UKHKL -- SOOO.OOO Sl.WXJJUO At the fool of River bridge. the 3c CO. neaf Provo Dugwny, auiJ M. LIVINGSTON, i Vice-Brent- WILLIAM JENNINGS, JOHN SHARP, F. LITTLE, L. S. HILLS, Cashier, DUkLZR IX Director. GROCERIES, CLOTHING, AXD CHOICE Deal in Exchange, Land Warrants, College Scrip, Arc. Gold Dust, Coin, Collections node and promptly remitted. EXCHANGE FOR FOREIGN SALE. BKA.vr9 OF WINES, LIQUORS, CIGARS AND TODACCO, Centre Street, Iro-- Cit y. N. R. Pure Wines and TJouors alwar on hand for medical purjom.- - and family use at reasonable price. sil2-3i-n BLACKSMITH INC. Wearing thin shoes and stock0 ings and insufficient clothing In INTEREST PAID ON SAVINGS cold and rainy weather. Leading o uO DEPOSITS. a lazy, excited, theater going, aul u dancing life. Sleeping on feathers O H in a seven by nino room. Eating O hot, stimulating food, too fast.and EXTRAORDINARY ! ! a great deal too much of It, and t, H at Improper times. Beginning o with tea and coffee in childhood, The undersigned Is nnvr prepared to do EASY AND CHEAP horse- - hoeing, wagon repairing mud everyand adding tobacco and spirits in thing In tho blacksinlthmg line on the due time. Marrying in haste and Way of getting a r OCTAVE, shortest notice and at reasonable prices. 6 STOPPED, living In continual ferment there- MS J. II. WOR8LEY. after. Following unhealthy oeeuUPRIGHT, WALNUT CASED to Taking Cations andmake money. and confections, G- 2NT, meals. Giving wrm all tjik MILLINERY STORE way to fits of passion, or keeping In perpetual worry. Going to bed LATEST IMPROVEMENTS, -ASP-,, at midnight and getting up at MANUrACTD r.jti EY THB noon, and eating when you catch LADIES EXCHANGE it. To which may be added a re- BAY STATE ORGAN COMPANY, cipe for killing children: PareB. SUOMNGER & CO. 1C. JONK8 MTt. goric, cordials, candy, and rich and OTHERS, for cake; and when they are sick TO CALI. ATTENTION TO WISHES atock of Hpring thereby, mercury, tartar-emeti(foods Juit arrived from Cm 'w FIRST-CLAS- S DOUBI.E-REEPE- O R z. a. Ml i. A. ( I. c, castor-oi- l Including a piano stool and organ method. In of Larger or smaller size at proportionate Is prices. Sixteen styles to select from. Monthly for Singular Carelessness. same amount England the $13.50 month; OLTL1T and sulphur. 12 carelessness in mailing letters shown as in this country. According to the late report of the it apBritish Postmaster-Genera- l, pears that during tho past year 18,700 letters were posted without any address whatever, and that nearly 600 of this number contained cash, checks or billsofexchange to the value of more than $13,000. . . ..I - Russian Proverbs. the East, comdoltng of tho latest style of Halide and HTTMMKlt HATa FLOWERa &c. Call h4 Eitmla. Prior the Time. 1 tall oc4)4 PIANOS ON MONTHLY PAYMENTS. BAKERY AND HIGHEST PRICES ALLOWED or BARLEY; OATSJ: DRIED FRUIT. LIBERAL DISCOUNT FOR CASH. PROVISION STORE. PETER STUBBS, DrALKK IS CROCERIES, TODACCO, Here are FANCY CANDIES, NUTS. ETC. some proverbs which Alphonse At an evidence of the popularity of our If you organ buMp, we will say that since last Karr says are Russian: All kinds of tha best quality of are ft mushroon let them put you Jsnunry to August, we have sold in tho basket. Debts are not noisy, ORGANS, amounting to $11,732.00. One is not Q, T7. O. they keep one awake. loved because he is handsome, hut CALDER & CARELESS, Kept constantly on hand. . Wholesale Jlnle Dealers, handsome because he Is beloved. A Make friends with the bear, but the 14 ((, 4'erner ef'ffb SALT CITY. kcld ef ycur batibqt. i VMtiBtCmtrsttrwhk SIXTY-EIGH- T LI kT UKE teU-Pn- E, S at. |