Show iimw'i— :EEpat r ioon ?nlif Drib 'innyrrifTinrtnaii TH 'Ii'lcwt fdiwih r piily Paper in the Turrit " rv ir tli Kdi- ated to Home Iii‘erets unii ot Hie peoil d Fohticil I'omty etciy "fttifuniiit UP1ISH TI'E'Ii IV ADVAVfT! residence in the City Six Months 8705 Months jtOO at (Delivered annumSl-HThree rMAIIFn— fXSH 10:11 annum !X Six Three Months my Months liF cu’ESXON OP A IVr AT Al DISAPPOINTED &CKIHBIKH VIS 10 1 mm SALT LAKE of it often laugh when I th story: Xatmv'iy of an tmagiu- turn oi' mind I hil been reading of wild beetles in the West" until I became perfectly Ijrm'tful of everything except Indian warfare with its deeds of hnif border Iy tive Sales ‘Far vengeance A strange desire came over uie and was nothing lea than to write a fomanee myell 1 taneied myself fully able to do it sml the story soon began to take shape IViUing with enthusin niv brain asm I seized my pen and set about deciding the scenes I opposed that to write a ton the author should himself be hvrmmht up to the highest pilch of exlirtle thought that I citement anight bate done butter by sitting down ?nd coolly reflecting upon my plan The title I chore was “Inch by or an Indian Court of Justice - j"tei united it should he long j It was not from any fear about my work appearing in this magazine only anxiety to see the story iu print and learn whether the printing would detract from us original grandeur I went to rest that night with a feeling of relief such as I supposed every famous writer must feel the night after of some sending off the manuscript great work As I lay looking through the window I thought the moon hud never shed such mellow light as she did that night Next morning the sun too seemed to rise with greater brilliance and the birds trilled sweeter melodies than I had ever heard before! I imagined that ere a week should pass I should be sent lbr to receive and ecomiums from congratulations the wondering editors of the magazine and hi- - literary friends Wouldn’t I be famous? 1 despised John Brown the cobbler’s son who pegged away from morn till night with no more ambition than to be able to drive more pees than Uil Philips the ’prentice “What an aimless life such fellows lead!” was my reflection as I lounged next day in front of the siniiirh Iu truth 1 was exceedingly vain of I In conjured up in my imagination rliiim- - which I thought would myself and now 1 shall tell on how it Many ended A week — and no letter! in a tale sdiinc Inilliantiy i had my all Both Carrie and I were beginning to hero and heroine my serious anti funny haunter- - but in a mixture so intri-- j wonder why the money hadn’t come tESIB? still but was I and far too hopeful waat times unable to utt that CAS®f proud to suppose I should be neglected distinguish diem apart without turning and leading something they had by tlie editor tack Then had such u told her that I thought they had perfect plot no WAftl'ihs contrived scenes and haidly time to reply and that kilftiily another week would biing me AL Be Mrd' hum from ocean to ecoa licit doubt the hotjue She was somewhat anxSis if I had a call to write and h ious it as the concerning wiote although The hoy wondered why 1 had ceased present of the album was made condishe with them as i had tional on her keeping my o go rebate would very opa k ieen mini to do They were puzzled to knew that my promise much depend on the receipt of tlie k'lott why caged up "with my uiolhci as they called it Another week and still no all their jeering held on to HE cheque not even it note from the editoi! ”iy writing employing at it eiery spare i became troubled vvitli vague apprewmeiit out of school hensions fours ef failure and had meat conceit in my abilities Yet I still held up und was too proud ml Jolt sine the editor of my favorite to give way to despair lapziin' wonhl take kindly to my was usually the day on Thursday title and well for the !fs tluillmg pay which we received the New York maga1 saw splendid palaces in rejiyriuht zineso I solaced myself all the prebought with the gold my pen vious day with the prospect of the feahad extracted from a pleased public that would greet my eyes on the morI saw them filled with liveried menials si was in short soon to be a provincial row At three o’clock the mail came into lahob I was at the The wildest Pluto ville wrote and read could conceive were moulded to long before it was taken ft out the coach suit my plot and deftly woven into its eager to get a sight tit the monthly The fifteen minutes occuperiodicals mining woof I had just arrived at that age when pied in the distribution seemed so many arc most ambitious to become hours to me and my feet beat time to hoys heart in a manner which plainly the of United toy States or at presidentbetokened impatience No one know Mist N'rutor- of the terrible emotions at that moore aid that kept the secret to oekM This - not stiietly tine expectI ment swelling in my breast wk npuitid it to the keepnu of a very ed that at least three or four chapters jsii icar iiiciid- - my youngest sister To of the stoiy would non dunce before vision r f read the stoivas it progressed dad in their my intoxicated JtfW S!r wa a merciful critic and s changed supposed also there had Imbed her to silence with would be a letter containing a cheque Sf premise that when the story to be handed to me as soon as the office should be opened Kould apeai in piint she should re“Distributed at List1" I mentally ive a album as a present I wiote iiirwccks ns the slid up and and at length the the crowd begun to call out their minus bar that had bmught my tale to numbers 1 quick! wav to the door edged my finish veiy nisfutoiy gettng and called mine hei nine out “eighty-sixIf and a safely thinugh received threugh the a letter enthrallment among the ‘awhiv Imagine my Indians from wtiieli my hero my bitter iteitlii chagrin when instead of the editorial aim numhci of w ary years 'id it proved ii her by a bold stroke of letter containing a cheque only a badly spell epistle from a cousin !uU The eipiel— they were mat though both the piime 1 had settled somewhere out in Iowa There was a weight upon my heart I bio lived long and happily took hold of the magazine handed to It with a hundred other tilings me along with mv cousin’s letter ‘ heavier as I tore off tlie envelope grew still jioie composed my When I saw ton lieu f had finished it my and split open the pages there could not was that my stoiy t'jit gave a ai eat triumphant throb have wept with vexation! I piomptly my iittleeritie ad siie listened with was only hindered from shedding a cousidt ruble until I had finished tears by anger with the editor of the pitienee Ife must be a fool thought rtading magazine wit bout one spark of literary taste la e aftir il was ('arm said While thus anathematizing linn my qb'd “ill it - ie d good isn’t it''1'’ t ntion at was called to the following bioi her Charlie she “Answers to that paiagtaph among the I wish splendid' - tine a Willi1 Hut don't Correspondents" tory “C’liVRliK Mooke ‘Inch by Inch or you think pie will wonder how that Indian of Coiut an in lustier' oin the to Kooky ill declined and nt us give you a litjMo'm sot Von siy it only Mover undci take a tle l'i icndly advice nk holes tiling until yon you can perform e' said f '‘Oh’ “it's only it eicditably You must be f P'iNeici' Uu know Any tiling is in y m writing - well - in your religIn W lien you J rite your next may "loanee wutei whti has ion mo- - ami from don't got your her) transported iinauiation to the Koky Mountains in ' lie re jilit'i ami - a better It i'! ne elf and tb‘ wuld hoin of won'tdo untiltiiere mode tmm an conveyance d inv yiuiat!ii'ii''! Never feel too imiidetit ot tlie t of vnnr opinion concerning onu ! sf'!x' In e am In luin :t bout conec’t s ct 'i'otini iu iiiiEriMT N again t'loirlie hut next time !! Tj fbil out lui bon- - if how "id til toilos the and judge truju lb1 prndtu 'iu in lie veil ie g"ii aj I" iu‘“ V'liil iiii him r lb lift iun' i":H no ii'it in f'il Ullp 'Ills Iso lle - utk ow j t er io o ir I'l ' il'V till' oil! CITY ELEOAVT CKSPE1UES ll KAN ItEliEL TO 11UEAK THE NEW CENTRAL SIEU'l IES TRANSPORTATION OE THK ii VKsr” COMPANY If there has been reason in the past to distinguish one age above another by reason of some general predominant characteristic's u the present deserves to be styled the aae of invention Mechanism seeks nut utility alone but also the beautiful end iuxmiou- Particularly is this tin respect w’tlt But a few yeais regard to traveling ago and the huubersome stage coach dragged "‘it- - slow length along" painThere no itch fully and elumsly Then eanie the railthing as eomfoit road and the jouinev of weeks was reduced to hour- And now we have another style of sleeping ears o that vvhethei by night or nay thee need be nothing vveaiisomi about traveling The latest kind of improvement of the present nature has just made its hhut in Chit ago and ft cilled tlie “silver palace intimda ear Tlift ele was gotten up for tlie gant Oentiai Tran 'poriAtiotiUom puny undei the supervision of Mr Jonah’ Wood ruff' general supeiintendent of that company an a aontlenmn already celebrated for his efforts to benefit the Two of these traveling public ear- - arrived in Chicago yesterday and are now at the Pittsburgh and Foil Wayne depot where all who desire to see to what perfection the means tor traveling is com urn may see them for a few day- - as they will lie over in this city tor that slant tune As yet in tb''1 scale of luxuriuusness und nughific a he ulroad palaces stand in the front lank In some respects these new cars are similar to the silver palace couches used by the Central 'Transportation Company for the t three years Their general design is the same but they possess scveiul very new and important imnothing could Externally provements the appear nice of these cais while the iu tenor approaches gorBut beauty and elegance geousness ary made to a" tbim vvitli convenience and comfort Each cur ft mounted on two ti ticks and supplied with the famous French springs from the Pitt shui gh east steel workBy t hi moans ts all Unit unpleasant jolting attend niton riding m the oniinary ( nger euis obv iuted Tne interior of the ear is tilted up in a style worthy of a induce Every is either of poition of the black walnut or maple most elaboThe windows are twice rately finished the size and supplied with enThe trimmings graved plate glass upright columns chandeliers and ventilators are all of solid German silver A spacious rotunda is situated at each end of the ear of ciieultr form eleand either one of gantly furnished which will seat at Fast a dozen passenThese rotundas are gers at one time designed to be by the ladies and gentlemen either as drawing or smokTn the centre of each ro ing room- tuuda - a solid silver uni for ice water and in a niche is a of marble set in silver The rotunda is supplied with ice and real boxes linen closets bagmmo receptacles nil etc from view carefully hidden Patent stoves are set in tlie side of the ear which take up no room and are guarded by double plate- - of iron The upholstering is also on the same scale of Bieh Brussels carnets magnificence cover the floor The beiths are hidden trem viovy by costly and elegant curtains The seats are ctcmcd with the finest of French moquet There are twenty four double beds in "aclt car having white Stewart strispreads blankets and pimge muttras-e- ped As a whole but few in America can surpass these ears in For each section sty !e and equipment - a large minor which oi scats there may be moved upward in its behind which is a beautiful uiij) by who-- e light the passengers cut reul play c ds or enjoy - t flex will Anolliei feature ol this mode! ear - dial at e’llu lid ihee ft an elt oil' state t al! tni in mi aeriiHiUi'iJilinii h e e'liHi e to laa e lie e lb'll d p il1 !l ie'i- Ilf r ll !( A limiNcti If! up f ail lb t n (It p 0)" 1869 met description above are o being built under the direction of Mr Woodruff tor the (Yntral Pacific railway The rvit'tndi addition to these elegant cars it is stated with Mr originated Woodr’ff' If so the public are certainly many obligations to him and will probably be under tnanv more before tins gentleman has retired from the improvement part of the sleeping-ca- r business — Chicago pajtr THK CARS n APRIL THURSDAY My sweet little sister gave mo her sympathy and I gave her the Allium And I was taught u lesson which lus since been of service to me Following the editor's not unkindly counsel 1 afterward took more care with my compositions not sending them to press until they stood a better chance of being printed And whenever the itching after literary fame rises too strong with me I remember “my first story " and with a hearty laugh dismiss the tempter from toy mind — Onivord fftiK ll WHO THE IS ISEsT “TRViNH lloVKIlV eke Carlas Manuel was horn about forty live y nits ago in the town The first twelve of Bayamo Cuba years of his life were spent vvitli Ids parents who resided on a plantation iu the vicinity With them he only learn ed the first rudiments of reading writ while at the same ing and arithmetic ime he indulged in those hardy employments and ames which ate eon sequent to a life in a enimtiy s naturally mountainous and full of J is family having moved when he was twelve years of age to the town of Carlos Manuel was sent there to school tin1 the !i:st time A few days after the commencement of his Indies there In gave pi oofs of an extiaordin-armental activity and intellectual talent t leaving behind him the most advanced of the scholia s in the school and being recognized by them as the head of the institution When eighteen with years of age he went to Havana theobjeit of prosecuting his studies tor there the law prole— ion lit-- great was further developed intellectuality there at the same time that numinous personal affairs gave him an oppot Utility to show his active courageou- - and tenaeious disposition giving an indication then that he would be as “great in war as in peace" Graduating as atin Europe where lie went torney afterwards and receiving the greatest university honors ho returned to Cuba and fixed his residence at Mansanillo Ills powers of eloquence energy and hi- - knowledge soon made him the most popular limn in the vicinity and entitled him to rank as the first lawyer in that But of all traits part of the country in his diameter generosity marks an important one and will give a luster to all liis fnturc actions The fortune which he inherited front his father the wea’th which he amassed by his industrious exertions and hi- - future prospects of increasing it would have secured hiut a life full of comfort gnd ease buy patriotic heart could not support longer the sight of his country in chains and the victim to the outrages of the tyrannical Spanish Government Inspired he give- - freedom by a heroic to all - laveabandons his sugar tothemercile-slurof’his Spanish foes who burn them all iu revenge and sacrificing all on the altar of liberty and with the noblest motives independence lie inaugurates the revolution iwCuhaat the head of one hundred patiiots — a movement which now counts in its ranks the native population of the island To the present he has shown in all his acts the fullest energy an untiring imstancy and the greatest moderation in the of the discretionary povvois conferred on him by the unanimous accord of all Cubans When we see men of this stamp supported by al) the natives of Cuba and that they without arms and ammunition of any consideration ami by their unaided efforts not only have been able to withstand the advance of the Spanish foe hut have defeated them iuml at last obtained jtossession of almost all the land then it becomes im- u e ts doubt of the final triumph of liberty ami the prevailing of in the “Cent of tlie Antilie-- " — Li'oI'old) Yqi lKmui in the Acre York Wvrnl — A paper Lou model of frailly but the invented when there we no - jiapi-Such anuitcitmv are now becoming real fact- - and uni frnl metaA eoar-- e thick kind of paper phors atuiated with tar or pitelr at Chicago iu the eoeistrueueu of wooden s Onbhiie being nailed on th" like a skin before the boa'lltluni! is applied: h oi it pul on the studding fiiii the ltlli lint aie nut oa or naib'd on the !th- - ami then ll coveted vith iu sfitli a way pupil' wo th' plus! imu It ft ate) ln down on ihe bvot j - h f ue th" r ’l'i fled on in lo n md !'e ll !u in tie "on "il on Tii ' ft’ lihou two to! J bn Hoi I’Ai’Mt ft no - thing- example- - of U' It He i'l oil Ilf V r IT U1' " Tli il lt'1 M H'h "i fl ii 'K t‘M 'I' aici-- t droppo i The V 'ei'lial 'em puny will min !uc' in! i'ii hi di nl the-to bum tlcin'in p ii ie apLinj line i tween I'hiiugo and New said to be miku In n t!ic will be put in active pap-- r ftius aicu-c"i k a ibe mil uni imw paper siv'y " if 'unions 1 fob inlauioii- - and r ort H ayue ( ntral find n in New Well tbi tiling was lmt so had hirer and Ceniiai railroad- J! auc out a 't Ten more of the viiio ft!e as have liii uii t)l VOL Ollt L Per PREDECESSORS NO W ho were our predreessors on tlie American continent? The Indians of But who wore llnir predeces course sors'’ is a question which remains un settled Wc k the dumb mounds and bones and arrow heads which tho lost races have left behind them lint We search they return uo answer the scarp of rocks and cliffs and the su riaces of slabs and tablets dug up front tho earth for inserintioiis and records left by the departed peoples but no inscriptions and reeoids are found theunuto earth guards jealously tho solemn secret of tire dead and refuses to tel! thtir history and their fate And yet we are not content The silence of ho oraclo only inflames the desire to extort a response and learn the secret Therefore do we continue the inexorable questioning in the hope that our importunity will at last com pel the surrender of the mystery And we are not entirely ul We have already’ learned that Columbus did not first discover America ami that Northmen and Vikings traversed tlie eastern Atlantic coast as far south as New Jersey and had settlements in Massachusetts centuries before the Spaniards landed in Florida the cavaliers at Jamestown and the Pilgrims at This is little indeed but Plymouth a book has recently appeared which an asserts and atgoes far beyond to tho Chinese that the tempts pnm Japanese and even the Irish preceded and lived flourus cm this continent ished vvhme vre are living add flourishing now This is indued a bold theory-- too bold to be accepted for that the Chinese and Japanese should have been civilized peoples thousands of years before the earliest historic dates and still remamcohcrent and organized nationalities does not accord with tlie experience of actual history The Assyrian- - the Egyptian- the Greeks und tho Homans have passed from the earth since began Why and how should inferior peoples like the Chinese and Japanese flourish centuries before them and mu vivo centuries after them? As to the Irish it is known that they possessed centers of learning and seats of science long before their present Saxon master- - had ceased to be coarse barbarians but vve are hardly prepared to admit that they were native born Americans before ourselves—-SLouis Home Journal I’n per vet ail! Ur iu the Tonitut MONDAY A THURSDAY iv ADVayrr: Six MonthMonth- - $ boo mailed— c vail in advascf:! annum 87:00 Six Month- Three Months 400 CHlEmiEV NO PIANOS WANTED A Xew York paper waxes disconsolate over the fact that in that city the landlords and persons letting rooms have set their faces determinedly tho two against children and music particular foretastes of heaven upon Head what tlie paper says — earth Two things seem to particularly exerabout this time cise our population One is tho determination of landlords who have houses and floors to let to put on their bilk not only the usual “No children” hutjto prohibition wickedly add to it “No sewing tea chines” and also “No pianos” The other is tho resolution of tho city authorities to clear all the thorough hires s of awnings and projecting signs banners fiitgstaffs ike “What in tlie world is the use of getting married” asks tho weep inc mother “if the presence of the littk uneels we call children is to dehouse and home?" How prive are wo to earn our living” shtiek the spinsters “if neither a sewing machine nor a man can be allowed to keep us And oh!" wtcpthedh company?" ' consulate lovers of harmony how arc we to while away the weary footed bouts e of solitude without a piano?” But so it is Children a house A say the landlords and their agents babe m arms may do u small girl lmt a boy able may be overlooked: to toddle about phew! “away with him ?” exclaim these Hero Is paint and hatchets! what will "f such imps of destruction do if they have tho means and the opportunity? Hewing limehiues they add shake a house to pieces and pianos have become (since they can be hired so cheaply) a common nuisance Mkasi'rlnq Lamm— Five paces are considered equal to one lineal rod A man having long legs cun easily go more than a rod at five paces while a person with short legs would he requir ed to step much farther than would be an easy movement for him in order to Let a rod bo measmeasure one rod ured off with a rule then let tho per son who proposes to measure by pat fter a ing step a rod at five paces little practice he can guago his steps with sufficient accuracy to enable him topneasuro any square piece of land by Fifty paces will be equal to Movri'ENSIMt THE Nl?W KIN Ot' pacing And if the Stain— TlieBuke of Montpensier who ten rods in length forty paces wide the distance will the cable says in to be King of Spain be equal to eight rods Therefore for- the fifth son of Louis Philhpno mult will give the ten by eight iplied lie was number merly King of the French of squat rods in the field We born at Nuilly near Paris in s24 have then Ascertain rule this Hi- - cunning father married him in the number of simple paces on two sides of x 8 10 to the Spanish Princess Louisa niece of Divide the number the mater of Queen Isabella IL and by five toground the immber of lia at the same time breulit about the cal rods ascertain Then multiply the nuiubci Queen’s marriage to her imbecile cous- of rods on one side by the rods in Francis of bourn Phillippe end: divide across one the pro supposed that this would be a childless marriage and that tint children of duct by one hundred and sixty —the number of square rods in one acre By the Duke of Montpensier would accordthis system ot measurement the numingly inherit the Spaui-- throne His calculation has proved erroneous in ev- ber of acres in a square plot can be de teruiined with satisfactory accuracy ery way lie himself died in exilennd for mow than twenty yuus none of his have The Soi THEitv Paou’k Kuiuoai seen their native family 11 Isabella has a num- — It will be aeon country by a notice in our local ber of children and yet the old King's cumns that the auction of the South principal end will be essentially gained whon Montpensier himself puts ort the em Pacific Bniirotid between Han Jose of Spam crow with a reasonable and Gilroy will be inaugurated on chance as things go of transmitting it This formal opening next y to Iris posterity Thu new King will of another portion of the Southern be known as Antonio I— & line is a matter lbr general congratulation and we regard it as an earnest of LavviiLntf Oiithant— Some days speedy completion on the more i lv sections We have long urged the titer vve published ait interesting from an English paper giving an importance — the necessity m fact— of uueount ot the from opening up the country traversed by disappearance Ertgli-society of the brilliant Lord this loath and we look upon the inaug-a' ion of a new section as a great Jjavvrenee (4'iphani and bis discovert in "a semi socialistic community st boon to the neighborhood through which it Tlie construction of Jiriaton out: he bordersefJLake Erie the - the statement where Soutfhern Pacific llailroad is exwent “the snee idolize star of Belgravia nuv pected tc bri nk up the huge Mexican and Sjiaufth rtmehes in the Southern follows the nloxv and wears the Tlo Westfield (New York) counties iuto convenient farms and we JiijnJilh or aids “The subject of the most litvartilj trust that it will have this offwt There have already been atnJ genutal superb si tide circulate so many mueiidoes in regard Undent of the Mr T 1 Harris' col uy and to the g jo!iey of the grape farm- - at i ific tvile- - west of Buffalo and liadroad Com imiies that evidences known as ‘Lord Ohkinz’ in u--t ot their enterpri-- such as tla-are He ft avl to bo at doubly xvi'lcome There can be no ighborlwwl need- - tin gentleman of quiet and lctuiug habit- - doubt that (he State mid nnindes verv little in society outroad mzkI there can tx no doubt side ot the r iloiiy but iu- - the t tliit the roads will repay those ef tho-vho Jiax'e b‘cti iintunite who incest in them Lot us then hope nniiL'h to firm Li- - oi quaint Slice that the Pacific Jiadroad gro'iinl- ext ud inm- sevi'ial Company vviii leave Gilroy as soon as -ioiu and emiiiK-- vdtb j'o— iitlc and enahlc - within the next piiie in their isiiit t ite flnnnsbmg village! six month- - !i announce the opening of Gi'( libiid) a rhe juuitoii of tho ol i'l am! - etioo — X Tinna Jftiboid will that of tl c Lake iioiv Mi H continiiaffs hat in wield - saumi — ioii ad ti I" and - in ot It pi i— a In iiii r in ar ipj id to he oui k Wi'lilllie-- t men iti ie Uivoi but tax no be ie and r md ini ii of und ir wuibl iii hoadii pun a u i i"ii i 0 Cbi " freii an o 'Ii:'' HIM Me know " ie " "I a iu (1 TO y i'o III ‘in oi "j a!' "in' ill til S a - in bin in i!" t d a 0! t e! too id reli Bail 'I e tl'i l' a 'Ift ami in Ii - odo noi a v l'i a n a " Il''ll 'll ll it an in b be t! a a m "Him d 0 f ft’ 0 llw P’l P" -' t n il' -i il tie ii'Ciw in ni c - ii! ili ic aid ill in oli J ll" and in o' Inti IF' ll n wiii tod an "'to! ai to iiuv il alllil' in: ii "i’ 'dim e iinenL the bigcai' it Vlltb till' '"Illlll" Ml" j) k Eury iffo-e uilnny utlei't iilllillt- -iei'ii in ‘do to psooaimte the ti'e !y tvvi nty and th no in— own in - by iiittiiiu- - and (y gitft- M umm ti 10(10 aeie- of land 'I he Mexican ! llaiia-i- s the uiiiriiiutorof a new svstom wim!J do as a fivor by iniroduoing oi beihi-unew hit biing Swe- - Lome tn - tinm Mexico and it would aenboririatiiMn he family is au tr' pay wuil fy whomever nun bu eetl ill tltu(lon'aTellyguarueamuT!gthc' obtaining aujiplies in the nuraerv— Alia Cut p !U J ti ' ie j'ii u in ifficewnii mv nri ia no iiniii tremb(i is 'im Mi ft j tksns— annum 800 'i’hreo NO 16 8C00 83:00 attempt fikst THOKSHIP wiaqapiiaeaPB £ nc n "i l"i tot In 'pi tbi'ir appi'ti nice m itllhaoand aie added to (he - ' k iwpi & at ws-- |