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Show man "then, and only a few years her senior. They were married ,m the spring of 1861. Three days after their wedding he came home and informed her that he had 'enlisted in the army. At first she took the news quite seriously, but soon made up her mind that she would not be separated from her husband on this account. The boat which was to carry the volunteers to their destination was about to pull out of her pier when it was discovered that Cady Brownell, as she was best known, had secreted herself on board. One of the crew informed Col. Burnside of the fact, and despite her pleadings, she waf put ashore. Her persistent requests to be enrolled in the army were finally acceded to by William Sprague, who was then governor of Rhode Island, and she became a member of the 2nd battalion of the 1st Rhode Island detached ' militia, which was then being equipped. Her uniform was not unlike that of the men, .consisting of a blue flannel blouse and rather full, short skirt. She always wore her belt and sabre, and on the march wore boots. At the expiration of her terih she returned to Providence, wher& she relater ceived a regular discharge,!-bu- t in the 5th Rhode Island regiment. Her company was among those placed under the command of Burnside, and on March 13, 1862, the Union forces debarked on the hanks of the Neuse river,- preparatory to the memorable battle of Newbern. It was during this battle that Brownell was badly wounded. He nevr recovered from the wounds received sufficiently to enter active service, and iif the spring of 1863 they were both discharged and went back to their pome in Providence. In view of her interesting war history she was proposed as a member of the Grand Army of the Republic in. 1867. She was unanimously elected a member of the Elias Howe, Jr., Post, No. 4, G. A. R.t jDepartment of Connecticut, at Bridgeport, and this is believed to be the only case on rec- - SOME INTERESTING SKETCHES FOR OLD SOLDIERS. Thirty Tears Ago, a Poem by Prank Southern Hard She L Stanton, the ( Wore the Hlne An Old War Jour- i -- L TEEEITOEIAL OFFI0ERSL West. Caleb W. 0 q Richards. . J i naL. , s J&retary gSS Justice oclate Justices. Attorney Merritt. EEN thirty year sence the' flghtip Geo. Bartch. W m. H. King. S. W. Smith., though It dont long as that Sence I follered Stonewall Jack-so- n, J. W. Judd. Natj M. Brigham. 0. Sf!rStnd Office Bryon Groo. Frank Harris. Begi?Eor Laid Office. . . .T. B. Lewis. JjSfflSer ot Schools UTAH COMMISSION. seeiRi .with nary a hat. Through the valleys o Virglnny an e vr ywher1 i shoe'-O- r ffK 8g: , else he went Thirty year sence I to the burnt-ohome back got JUAB COUNTY. DIRECTORY. Fred w ut ChappeU j Charles Foote settlement. Pep.rezin A. Jackman for I ,J. Tr Sullivan But the world; its been CoUector. .' . . . . J .D. W. Cazler am gray, Burton, Thomas Winn An still, somehow, when I look around J gejectmen iSand and Clerk ..It. a-get- tin re-enlist- .Edward Pike I feel it slippiri'away; c. Hanford the come In the spring-tim- e roses The 8urTS Ockey .M.WilliamEustlce Treasurer in the fall. is shore frost j. . . .John Foote But still It seems to a old mans dreams ' MILLABD COUNTY DIRECTORY. ljke thaij warnt no war at all. A change is- come to the country; the Selectmen...... fields' whar I use to plow ljtm C (Jardner. Holbrook. x';;;" - Attorney gte'le: .. IfiS.'KSSSi - j j - Is paved with stone, an the steeples is visin above em now; is allltar The woods whar I went roarin With noisy crowds. An the lakes whar I done my fishln is gone clean up in. the clouds. fe:v.v.:r.vr.:1SfY?ass& Tboa. and Recorder Clerk Coroner. J a-hu- D. C. CalLister gupt Schools i J Oh, the country, its to be niovin right; an pears Thar's a brighter sun In the an lot more stars by night; a Preparations are being made for bride adding in Topeka! at hicli the emancipan is She ViH wear bloomers. no evidated woman, and will wear ences of her recent thrall iltar. . ed day-tim- e, A Dog That Refused to He the erty of Strangers. Wholesale and Retail I once knew a dog in Irelandh--a large retriever says a writer In the London Spectator, who had been taught always to bring his own tin dish in his mouth to be filled at dinner time. Mutton, Veal, Chipped Beef For some reason his master wished to and Bologna. make a change and to feed him twice a PORK Your patronage solicited. day instead of once, to which he had BEEF realways been accustomed. The dog VEAL THE LITTLE CHICAGO sented this, and when told to bring his MUTTON dish refused, and it could nowhere be found, on which his master spoke ALSOfingrily to him and ordered him to bring the dish at once. With drooping fi. ,1. r.iGCune, Proprietor' tail and sheepish expression he went down the length of the garden and began scratching up the soil where he had buried the bowl deep down to OCKEY,! , It is the place in which to get avoid bringing it at an hour of which j he did not approve. UTAH. NEPHI CITY, . And an In 1873 we came to live in England, after a residence upon the continent, Free delivery to any part of the city; bringing with us a Swiss terrier of doubtful breed, but of marked sagacity, called Tan. One day, shortly after If you are going to reaching the neifr home from Switzerland, the dog was lost under the following circumstances: We . to a station eight miles off, East Hard- CHICAGO, A perfect fit guaranteed. Repairing IA all ing, to met afriend. As the friend got Its branches. Special attention called to out of the railway carriage the dog his new style. Universal feed sewing jma- i in without KANSAS chine does all its work inside of the shoe, j got being noticed, and the train proceeded on its way. At the Two doors north of Union, Main St., NephL next station, Eccles Road, the dogs barking attracted the attention of the OR station master, who opened the carriage door, and the dog jumped out. The station master and the dog were lie sure and ask for a ticket that reads He and .a porter perfect strangers. VXA. tried to lock up the dog, but he flew viciously at anyone who attempted to touch him, although he was not above r Carefully compounded. accepting food. For the inext three Mail or express orders promptly attened to. days his behavior was entirely methodJ Large Stsck at Salt Lake prices. j j from the station in the ical; starting morning, he came back dejected and S0UTHERI1 TRADE SOLICITED'. tired at night. At last, on the evening of the third day, he reached home, ! M'NALLY & LUNT, some nine miles away, along roads which he had not before traveled, a ufAH. NEPHI, and worse sorry object, decidedly the for wear; after some food he slept for No tiresome layovers. twenty-fou- r hours sti aight off. Now, Close connections in union depots, he was a dog worth owning, wasnt he? And positively the quickest route The First National Bank, ButcljerB, OSTLER & ... ; CITY, ST. ' J. M. C. OSTLER, I Elegant and thoroughly modern Equipment and Ocean. prev- W. W. FREIGHT AND FRESH - Utah, j Fruit ! H. C. TOWNSEND, GENERAL MERCHANDISE congress leaves a souvenir of itself in the shape of af few welcome additions to the American navy. The ird ordered eleven nfW vessels. Two were seagoing coast Jine battles8 hips of formidable size. There were THE CONFEDERATE MONUMENT ordered six gunboats, 1,000,! tons .each. These will be capable of running up The peoples closer, an lamin shallow rivers. The gunboats will cost the Golden Rule 1220,000 each. Three torpedo 'boats Lots o the women votin an' the nigcomplete the list. They will cost $175,-00- 0. gers goln to school. The gunboats .nd torpedo boats Whenever I git to thinkinaS I do would be more useful! than the big coast think o the war, defenders if we could not have both. constant to Agger out the things we was flghtin for, W. C. Stivers, a tobacco raiser of Lan-- ; j! kinder think it was Providence its wisest ends caster, Ky., has sued Miis Catherine us h for $5,000 for breach of promise. Purlfyin through fire an' makin better friends.Stivers is a widower aid Miss West Ms a handsome school teacher, 23 years better than vre jl think were The petition avers that the . done 'fore the trouble come; had promised to wed him on Got use, to the stars an stripes once )j February 27, 1895, but that she had more an done beat sense in the since declined to become .his wife. Mr. . drum! to "Yankee Doodle on the Stivers claims to have been danced fve greatly mountain an the plain, ' lorried, annoyed, humiliated and dam- -, "Dixie in the sum named. Since the girls An Ive heerd em cheerin'. Maine! to clean from Texas Hve begun to wear mens clothes they ksve begun to trifle with the sterner sex Old things is changed in a twinklin' snd disregard their how, promises., Make its hardanto onravel, under tsr whack up, Mr. Stivers. one old South, North 3ut, flag theyre marchin' through The Church Union, a Georgy now; religious paper An' Im glad, I lived to see it, an spite published in New York by Miss Elizabf o my years Im bound eth Grannis, and which! as to heel, &aa0 If I dont jest feel, fromallhead elate editors Charles H. round! like shakin hands Parkhurst, Eishop J. p. Newman, Miss Frances E. Frank L. Stanton. Willard, Rev. C. d. Salter, Dr. Joseph R. Wilson, and others, f was excluded She Wore the Hlue.j Irom the, mails on1 the grounds that It past, There are many women with aone ontained a lottery advertisement, and as remarkable a such with few but ikat the paper was in fict She Brownell. S. conducting that of Mrs. Robert a lottery business. The last number o lives in the first flat at No. 352 St. NichPaPer contained a e adver-f- r olas avenue, says the New York World. s tisement offering a total f about $2,900 The full membership of the ortjer of has in prizes to aid in securing subscribers the Grand Army of the Republic is her. It hardly cr the paper. This is upon the first insidi- been conferred to jstate that to have such an ous attack on the church necessary social grab a honor bestowed one must have been tag. is one, having She veteran soldier. enlisted in the war of Charles A. Dana and Colonel Mc-- c been regularly she was hut a mere when Union the e are g to convince the Her father was an officer in the ether that he was the better friend ot girl. Southwell, British army Col. George a to Caffarai, euera Simon commissioned was both who Camerqn. They some time town in Africa, ceeerted Camerons political principles. small coast 13 E3h as to birth, in 1842. She first her previous he was dead. and saw light of day in the barracks took her old parents when three years Tom Rd caipe near losing his her with them to Englan,f'..S .watch bke last time ho attended a and after their arrival there In thedied,world. ia Ycrk. He would she was left alone. ml' 3 a dozen good dinners with Through the kindness of a neighbor she auncey Depew than lose the watch was adopted by a family on the eve of to this country. They ,aCh ia a memento of hia two years their emigration R. I. s the made their home in Providence, Czar cf the IIo see of Iteprez one day While on her way to school her husnow is who man she met the band. He was a tall, sturdy young m Fifty-th- a-co- I j A-try- in kin ! a-d- oin de-l.feud- ant j ? i ! j ! i full-pag- i each-tryin- polit-!lGectl- as General Passenger j. . PRODUCE & SOUTHERN TRADE ;,; Along the U. P. Railway solicited'. Complete Line of Builders Supplies. Mill Work a Specialty. has a copy oi Goods I AT THE i ! at bottom prices far spot cash. - ; i I JIIO. DEVSliUP, MGR. the Daily Citizen printed at Vicksburg, Csst U&ln Street. - - DE3E3ET. A.FT JLJ Miss., Thursday, June 2, 1863, one year before the close of the war. It was given to him by his cousin, William D. Miller, R E. L. COLLIER O. E. a member of the 102d Ohio volunteers, who was In the hospital at that place at that time.. The paper is printed on Engineering in all its Branehes. the back of a piece of wall paper. Under ' t Manufacturers of and Dealers in ; . . . . j; the head of "On Dit It says: "That Land and Irrigation Work a Specialty. Doors, Windows, Mouldings, the great Ulysses, the Yankee generalMixed and Central Land for Coal, Hardware, Paints, issimo, sumamed Grant, has expressed Irrlgatloi Engineer Land and Irrigation Cu his intention of dining In Vicksburg on Co., Clear Luke Coffins, Caskets, Pickets, Laud : rid Irrigation Co. and Wblt4 etc. Wire Combination Sunday next and celebrating the Fourth Fillmore Fence, of July by a grand dinner and so forth. Mountain Latu und Irrigation Co. attention given to mail orders and the Southern Trade. Special When asked if he would invite Gen. Jo Court House, Fillmore, Utah. By ordering from us you save the freight from Salt Lake City to Johnston to join he said: No, for fear Office: point. there would be a row at the table. must into the get Ulysses city before he dines in it. The Way to cook a rabDESERET DAIRY GO. bit is, first catch the rabbit, etc." In THE one corner of the paper is a note which HAS FOR SALE reads as follows: July 4, 1863. Two days bring about great changes. Tha FULL CBEAM CHEESE. banner of the union floats over Vicksburg. Gen. Grant has caught the rabDeseret is noted for the fine qualitj bit. He had dined In Vicksburg and ha brought his dinner with him. The Citi- of its Milt, Butter and Cheese Giv zen lives to see it. For the last time It o nr products a ttial. appears on wall paper. No more will It N. S. BISHOP, eulogize the luxury of mule meat and fricasseed kitten nor will it urge South SUPT. ern warriors to such a diet again. This if 'Dealers in and Manufacturers of the last wall paper Citizen and is, ex. cepting this note, from the types as w found them. It will be valuable hereafter as a curiosity. Florida Times-UnioSADDLES Mill PlninQ - ? j - i . thir Broth erB!, uItah. NEPHI CITY, OSTLER & ALLEN 1 n. Soldiers and History. THE DESERET HOUSE. Indiana soldiers do not take kindly ta school histories which ignore mention ol the late war, or, if mentioned nt all, It is to glorify rebel generals and magnify the victories of rebel troops. They think they had some hand in ending the war, if not in fighting it through, and t&ey do not propose that their children shall be taught that the South alone was able to win victories. The scldiers are not yet prepared to permit the war to become only a memory, as seems to be the determination of the educators of the Hoosier state. The old soldiers are right in this matter, as they were right a quarter of a century ago when they shouldered their muskets and went to the front to defend Old Glory. Commercial Gazette. Hulpaiters for A! MUSS, HIM IIS. . HOPPLES, NOSE SACKS, ETCj - j I We also carry a full line of Cty and ooanty Newspapers from all parts af Utah. Ore apeaimens from whera Erery thing RESPECTABLE. a vio.ia Wan ot THE PUREST WATER ON EARTH. i i Horse Furnishing- Goods - Detroit aai Sheep Thi Water 2a a CUAS ANIEUD CURB tot 3 I i j Mens land Cowboys Outfits. . Ca the Premise. Diseases ofthe Kidneys and Bladder Tastimoaiala on Application. MRS. J. F. GIBBS; Prop. Out of every million people who di , twrenty-seve- n thousand succumb t DESERET, UTAH. apoplexy. . WE GUARANTEE ; ! Borfcct Sgitisfa,ctior i i ! ' GRACE BROTHERS A War Journal. S. D. Miller of this city Ticket Agent, ai Vegetate St. Louis, Mo, OAKWOODS CEMETERY, CHICAGO. ord where a woman has received full membership in the order. - Will promptly fill all orders for OR UTAH i i Salt Lake City, , j ! Room 21 Morlan Block, unsofind mind. decision is apt to again raise the Vice-Preside- nt. Armstrong, Cashier. MRS. M. A. GADD, PASSENGER committed while of Each J. II. EhicsonI COMMERCIAL Surgeon, NEPHI , BANKING In All Its Branches. S. V. DARRAH, Hours, 2 to 4 P. M. jury awarding to; the effect, . GENERAL J $50,000 $37,500 - Geo. U. Whitmore, at the Goldsbrough Hotel. Office, - President. Physician and iously occurred the judges had somewhat yielded to, the inevitable English it CAPITAL SURPLUS of regular train tickets. 0. S. HOSMER, j UTAH. NEPHI, Call on or address at-zmp- ted f In which the seats are free to holders NEPHI. MAIN STREET, j Is suicide a rimef Chair Cars Reclining All kinds of shoes made to order. Workmanship second ta none. First door south of Tabernacle, York Mercury sars that Re-- L is the first Judicial oflflcer to end an unsuccessful suicide to state Vison. In the isolated cases of Question, ! LJteib Froixj To the Great Rivers and Atlantic BOOTS AND SHOES. The New Border Goff This f I Manufacturer and Repairer of ' that had nr I Geinany customof a coroners verdict over a suicide lunt; & McNally 1 The tons, besides' tug-boa- s. ' consists of 8,000 men. Tfie trafldc self-destruct- ion LOUS, l PRESCRIPTIONS j separate lines, comprises twenty-tw- o reeight of which are European, the and mainder trading between and JAustralia. Asia Eastern America, I i Hair Cut.: GEORGE HARDY, t ani Slioe MerJ had-drive- 240,000 ? ' i about twenty million, dollars, eighty-tw- o and its fleet consists of steamers, of an aggregate tohnage of n A Painless Shave 1 capital is t j Up-to-da- te North German Lloyd is tjie largest steamship company in the world. Its ; Barber Shop, Butter, Lard, Sausage The : Choice Fresh Meats;', -- ratic times. ; Prop- 'A.V. HAGUE, liL' ocSieL', - RAILWAY. 'i Munhall, staff OSTLER & OCKEY,- , the English statistician, up that from I860' to 1890 the I, - 'ogures an increase of ited States shows That jo, 000, 000,000 in apparent wealth. j f as in thirty years of Republican rule. We have already lost, according ,to the of New York World, sevpral billions wealth in two years of democratic rule, and still there are meja who continue to talk about the prosperity of democi HE KNEW HIS BUSINESS. . |