OCR Text |
Show SALT 8M.TLAKE EVENING CHRONICLE BKFOBX INSIDE. Soma little tima ago tba Chbonicle adverted to Ilia notable ifieecb of Minuter Lowell on Democracy, delivered at Birmingham, England, llarptF i Monthly of thin great epeecb: At Birmingham Mr. Lowell epoke of the geniua of Democracy in a etrain wbicb bu nut been surpassed by anyone who ever treated the theme. Such a ilia-oonrae wu an event, and an event with out precedent. A foreign minuter, etut-inin the country to which he is the moat radical political views, and Mrting that they are the ultimate logical result of the political constitution of the country in which he speaks, and wAtcA repudiate! each a eonduuon, yet to do this with a temper, an urbanity, tion, a precision, ana courteous grace which charm doubt into acquiescence, and wonder into a tribute of unfeigned admiration and acknowledgment of a great service to political an thought greatly done this is surely diunprecedented event in the annals of plomacy, and this is what Mr. Lowell aid at Birminghi This ie well end forcibly put, but we might not again recur to the matter if a "great service to political thought" were hot yet waiting to be performed right her in Utah. We want moderation end urbanity combined with preeiiwn in dealing with the flairs of Mormon iaed Utah; no sycophancy, no no in tba face of a no apologies, pandering, Fraud so patent and yet so impudent as this of Mormonism. And yet there should be (end if any real good is to be effected there must be) urbanity end moderation end at the same time precision end decision towards this grossly deceived and misled people, who, though they may be dull tnd slow in many things, are neither dull nor slow in understanding the real spirit and intent of an assailant; and who are in this reIIow children. spect like grown-ueasily could Brigham Young in his lime turn them around his finger, and how easily John Taylor can. The demagogue's arts and devices it is not difficult to fathom; these are not very deep nor ere they numerous; and the two leaden named we hold as demagogues of the supreme degree. In its desperate attempts to be moderate and urban the Democrat flopped down at once into the' mere toady, as all could see, save Ihe yuppie tools or toadies of this blatant Mormon hierschy, end they of course would refuse to sea it, being birds of that feather themselves. Some ere beginning to doubt already if the young Democrats of Utah have much of allow, or if they havo a future; they fancy this latest new movement'' will prove to he s mere abortion mini a fizzle. of Under the duhunis champioH-diiMessn. Itawiinaand Shocks it might he. With such spirits as Alfales Young and John JU. Young, who seem to have a for clearer comprehension of the situation, or who perhaps, if the exact truth were known, have what theee others dont hare, the entire courage of their convictions, with no sinister or ulterior aims in view or selfish ends to serve, but whose simple and direct desire is to see a deluded (leuple disenthralled, and are willing and eager to work to the accomplishment of that one purpose ; with such spirits, are say, leading the van, ai these young follows, who have the root of this whole matter in them, who hare, moreover, the crowning faculty of hittilhoi.it dising the nail on the head, or circumlocution, we gusting really think that "young democracy is no untimely birth, but that on the contrary the next few yean will fully manifest ite ' reason for existence. At any rate, if tlieee are not of the number of thoee who must ultimately and inevitably coma out to the rescue, then they are not; that ail. One thing is as sure as the sun in heaven, Utah is far too vigorous and thrifty a product of the limes to be dwarfed and blighted under the withering breath of a senseleee and stupid fanaticism. But atiil, as Corolanus lays in the play, "The word is On no account lose your mildly.' temper, ye young diplomat! and Democrats. Old Hickory said ke never lost his in his life unless he intended to. uji e, p by-pl- ay THE UUMNK3S OUTLOOK. sinews of war are essentially The gold, silver and lead. The consumption of the last in destroying life by the wholesale, necessitates a large outlay of the first named precious metals. Already the largest order ever given to American cartridge manufacturers has recently been received in this country, together with orders for Kemington - rifles, from European source. Threat ening war clouds hang over Europe, Asia and Africa. To place great armies on a war footing, to prepare vast stores of suppliss and munitions of war require large outlays of money. To do this the precious products of our mines are requisite. With this conies a demand for our surplus grain and meat. The rising markets based on receut largo orders received by Chicago operator, give promise of profitable activity along these great lines of trade. What may he Europe's misfortune is our good fortune in a material point r.f view. Franco, through legislative action, and England through her ablest wrileis on financial subjects, are moving in favor of the universal adiqition of silver as an equal partner witli gold in the metallic cdrrency of the world. 'All things conspire to iuereaao the demand fur the products of our mines and our forms. The tides of increasing population with their enlarged productive and cuusiiming power, must overcome Ihe depression caused by illegitimate end speculative expenditure, end the idle cepital of this end other countries must and will find its largest and moat profitable .field of inveetment ou this continent. With the check given to wasteful extravagant and riotous living, by tha hard times through which we have passed, a useful though bitter lesson lias been furnished the people of this country. The balance of trade heretofore greatly in our favor lass been fearfully reduced. Now that wa buy lew and with the increased demand for onr solid products, sell more the balance in our favor will run up to tha old figures and our financial prosierity will be assured. The uncertainty with regard to the currency and tariff policy of the Democratic administration, is a disturbing element in the otherwise encouraging outlook of the present. Not until the next ision of Congress will this uncertainty be met, and it ii to be hoped removed by wise legislation. In tha meantime let us reeort with renewed diligence to the pick and shore!, let the Idle men on onr streets turn their hands to soma productive Industry, end our waiting capitalists assist our in uncovering the treat u res locked np in tho mountains of Utah. wealth-producin- g mine-owne- FAST AND FDTCBE. Our first acquaintance with Grace Greenwood aa a newspaper writer, dat? back more than thirty-fiv- e years. The columns of the National Era, published at Washington, D. C., were the first, we think, to be illuminated by her beautiful imagery and brilliant And now wo find in tho New York Indefriend pendent a letter from the whom wo have never seen, dated at Milan, Italy, January 1st, 1885, wherein she says: The first day of January is not only a milestone but a tombstone, one on which is often graved many dear and honored name. Alas, to the pilgrim of three score and more yean, the reminiscences of the past are clouded with saddened memories, engraved alike on hearts and tombstone not a few. The Grace Greenwood of the long ago; now complete in all the matured graces of an honored and cultured matron, as aha recalls the youthful enthusiasm of her early days, regretfully testifies to the change which passing yean have wrought. 'Bitting apart and recalling tha time when Tennyson read to her from "In Memoriam, she essayed to reed his famous "Ode to his latest Freedom." 8he ears: I read and ponand dered; hut nut till I had could I, rould I, admit the sad oonviction it thrust upon me, of a woeful change wrought in my heart and mind by a trifle of twenty-fiv- e years or so. Where, now, was the thrill of enthusiasm, the joy of perfect appreciation and satisfaction, the passionate delight in the fulness and sweetness All gone, like the of glorious sung? visions of yuuth, it seemed; for I felt them no longer not even over the work of one greater by a great queens favor and loftier by the blight of a coronet than the loved poet of my early days. Alas, my poor brain had grown dull, like my eye, and heavy, like my step, for it la bored over this latest effort of genius labored, and gave it up. r, This accomplished and matured errs in ascribing to her eye and brain the dullness of percejition which she imagines shut from her vision TenThe fault is nyson's poetic beauties. more in the wet than in the reader. The fame of Tennyson rests secure in his ear licr production. The fire snd aspiration of youthful endeavor rather than the inspiration of assured position and queenly favor, nervea the poet to superior effort. Then the glamour of youth' environs alike the poet and hia rsader, and tha thrill of bounding blood in youthful veins, imparts a charm even to halting vers. It is with Grace Greenwood and Tennyson as with thinking men and women generally, whose faces are set toward the sunset sky. In the thought and hope of a higher life whose distant hilltops are seen by the eye of faith in the misty future; tha realities of life rather than its imagining bear away. The ripening fruit of a well spent life is better and more satisfactory, than the ehowy and attractive bloaaoms which preceded and gave promise of substantial harvest. Let all who with Grace Greenwood and Tennyson are gracefully growing old, gratefully consider, that ni they are drawing nearer the fountains of immortal youth, there need be no repining! over the failing past. word-paintin- g. old-tim- song-burs- t, d deep-dow- n, lady-write- 1.1 FIPS KKSrOMIUILlTIEg AND COMl'ENIiATION. In liis yesterday' discount on the subject embodied in the saying of tho Saviour, "To him that hath shall be given; and to him that hath not aliail bo taken even that which he aeemeth to have, Rev. Mr. Thrall of tha Congregational Church' attracted the closest attention of a large audience. Granting to every man the varying u talents entrusted to him by an ( 'renlor, it must he evident that with thie furnished capital of faculty, physical, ineiilul ami moral, whatever of fortuno-innkin-g nr character-buildiwhich any individual may justly claim his, nsnet lie the result, primarily, of hie ownjdirect jnnl labor. The doctrine that m must wail fur some au'rnatural and l impulse, rariying them forward, upward nr downward, without labor oa their wri, is unreasonable in connection with religion matter it would bo in ihe mulerial and practical things of life. Spiritual faculties, no leu than bodily muscle and endutance, are given all-wi- ng u eli-iri- s fon-efn- u u iSVJfiJNMw LAJLK as ao muchcapital, for the right use of which we ere justly held responsible. sunSowing must precede reaping. As shine and fertile soil, refreshing rain and dew, work together with mau in the outcome of material harvests, so in the spiritual world all heavenly and helpful influences, like the viewlee wind, come and go, buteflectually only, labor of as the positive, tha individual soul makes these, visitations and environments helpful by willing work of hi own. A faith which only clothes a man in the swaddling hands of a cheap ascension robe, and bide him wait in iasy expectation of a fiery chariot sent especially to carry him to heaven, ie nut a Christian faith. The evangel of laziness has been too much preached in the hearing of spiritually laxy men. The vice of laiinees in religious matters has been transformed into a virtue as satin ie sometime transformed into an angel of light. And thus the Christian world ia filled with souls who, if they do not the single talent given them by an bury Almighty Creator in bestial indulgence, at beet wrap it round with the napkin of criminal negligence end laxinesa only to realize in their own experience, that to him that hath not shall be taken evsn that which hsseemeth to have. The Bible ia inspired to n man just 10 for a by honest thought, by tana study under the press lire of felt wants, and by an active, practical and working doctrine faith, he make ite his own. The world ia full of oportnni-tie- s for putting talents out at usury. H men were as earnest in spiritual efforts as they are and have been in material transformation, the earth would bo girdled with heavenly wires upon which messages of peace on earth, good will to men, would reach every living soul. Christ, (he living savior of the world, makes of weak and yet of mighty men, hie representative on earth, ao that oven tha giviag of a cup of cold water to a thirsty soul ia his name; ia accounted an act worthy of eternal remembrance. talent-entruste- d g Tun Democrat with demoralised signals of distress Hying from jury mast before tha crazy craft reached the open ea, says of ill first weekly (?) paper; "No one can read the paper without being convinced that a solid political foundation has been laid, on which the people of Utah can build a glorious common waalth." Tha aforesaid people of Utah, cannot possibly include tha stockholders of the Democrat, for a more disgusted and outraged set of newspaper fellow were never seen than were those who gathered around the remains of the first "foundation laying issue. COLONEL LAMONT. t niTif INHILK. MOJiIDaY, MAIiCiy 0 to supply State, be sensibly determined his own deficiency by the appointment of Mr. Lamiint as private secretary, with He the ornamental rank of Colonel. carries no sword and is adverse to the noisd and bloodshed of war. In political strife only he is a gladiator, during bis Governor Clevslana administration has put tha greatest reliance upon but meaaure each secretary, and in a large ha perceptibly grown by contact with the other. Here in Washington, outside the President himself, there will be no adminisgreater individual power in the tration than Colonel Damel S. Lament, private secretary to the President. 18c5. baiu HPJ.lt KM, The inauigenle Bouacbea, Oropesia, Eetrada, Torre andCestero, were shot dead on Saturday at Santiago do Cuba. WALKER The & Stephen! Review says : Gladstone recently bought, in one day, over 100 bate ana that hi mind ia giving way under tha strain to which it has been subjected, The Dublin Freeman Journal complac"It seems ently uys of Biddleberger: are our countrymen in America sufficiently powerful end epirited to challenge the appointment of a Cabinet minister. Granville hu unt an emphatic remooetrance to Prime Minister Ferry against the searching of veasel going from English porta to Hong Kong or Japan, not tonwing at Chinau ports, hi A Moaongahela City, Pa., dispatch of March 7th, soya: The river coal miners' convention, representing 8,000 man, resolved to demand thru cents a bnahel oa tha 9th inst., and if ih advance is refined, to strike. Parnell hu intimated to tha Government that the Irish members of Parliament will strannonaly oppose tha clauadh of tba cximu act dealing with newspapers, tha suppression of public mattings sad privets inquisitions. Tha majority of tho newspapers con-aider the speech Granville, in MARKETS EXPECTED. Feverish State of Affairs at the Present Time. VnlM Operator! Waiting for ofWar InneiM Surplus Wheat. Special to Chronicle Chicago, March 9. The past week on change hu been on of violent and rapid fluctuations. Tha wheat pit continues to be tha center of interest,, and trading then is attended with no little Outside orders have come excitement. in liberally and local business hu been large. War news hu been the feature, aadtheeonruof the market a series of sharp bulges when sensational dispatches told of fighting preparations and bad break when the reports were denied. Prices, however, seem to bull more easily than break, and the week's clou shows a substantial gain ua result of the eagerness with which "shorts stampede when frightened. Of ooaraa opinions in regard to tho future cannot bo regarded of very much value, inasmuch ths reoeipt of news of which nothing now ii known ie qnito likely to npsetali calculations upon which a forecast is based. Should there be war actual TUX VISIBLE SUPPLY Salt Lake BANKING BUBI-sol foil accounts of merchants wiintn companies and country dealers. Onr tadllUe tor collecting are U Hit, I A In nearly every tool nlng Territories. Great Britain, Osnraark, u SAMUEL J. T1LDKN, Then a member of tho Lower House. Mr. Tilden had remarkable aptitude in judging the capabilities of young men, ami forthwith attached the young clerk to tho machine which he wu then engaged in constructing. Mr. Lamont wu enrolled one of the clerks in the New York Democratic State Committee, and in 1874 became a permanent attache of that body, When Mr. Bigelow wu chosen secretary of state, the chief clerkship of hi office came to Mr. Lamont, almost a matter of oourse. The Tilden star wu then in the ascendant, and in the Presidential campaign of 1876, Mr. Lamont became the factotum and one of the most trusted of Tilden' supporter. At thia period he acquired that minute knowledge of the personnel of the Ilemocratio party in New York for which lie ia noted, ' anil which hu never been possessed in the him mesa re by any other man. For four years lie wu secretary of the State Committee, u hu bora id -- fed RAT ManFzanciaoo Daevar $2,00 Wells, Fargo & Co.s Bank ft CO, WILLIAM; keTortt- White House, fhs A.PediMhC0b,W RATH I.J i&tu lifts iUikl J KsisO ftksTr SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH. Transact a General j AW Non of Burin am Banking A FAY SPECIAL ATTENTION TO Btr parties maiding out of the WEand Invito city, 1 n I I URAUiAira. sic. HAVE GRIFFITH'S Everything the beri the market aOonl D. J. GRIFFITHS, Proprietor. MERCHANTS PARLOR, JgJJ RMMBSWWl I 256 8. Street, GENTLEMEN Suits. rPRICE8 to Suit tho Time JOHN BERGEN, California Brewer FINEST u u rapra-sentatiu- e LAGER BEG IN THE Bottled and 17 - A. BOGKY u lh. s ngfissassa'"-- 1' Register. K00RUDL Beer a it aad Try Bo Oa 10 . . Sncond Bo Salt Lnkn City. henbywagenei, I FI8HER BRGNIMBf Manager. Brewery new Salt Lnkn tone, fcS B.K. - aafifill1 U. C. Dr- city . P.O.Box 104; nan1 WBViSSg trill KEG AND B0TILED1 Of b a Superior Quality at Ikprinl ham J&mS A. Fisher Brewing SALT LAIR cm H.W. NOBBED JACOB f 5000 Shares T reasurv Stock TTynwj? OF THE- By th NORWAY IRON, Cbm, Kfif tr SALT IMS amr 1.1 Milwaukee s I s HAU Mining & Mfg.Co. 0RDNER OF UTAH Keep 4 JONES PnffillMt on band i But. tho Near EMMA NOW OFFERED TO PKIUiOXH of a mfe and pruUtablo lnvest-so-l AUK inetit, at the nominal HOtffiC CHOP VIENNA aliOlMWk OyMii u CONFECTIONERY si nsnpn la seals This Year lmi PSBfeuhgfei ronctadwttb 1 so dfoy To Investors I BREWING Cl noHountcauK OF THE BEST PAYING RX8TAUR-ut- a in ths city, conducted on th Eu. and sufficient rrsnuii for CITY BAKERY A THE OLD libir plan- - Good THE VIENNA CHOP HOUSE DR. C. W. HIGGINS, Mlcroaieople and Aaalytle Physician. Tha Meet Kalla trie Racialist, llu been running over a year, and hu met with good nieces Cure, Fita in their wont form, and ail Chronic Disease Seminal Weakness, Inquire on ths premise Kypliylis in all its forme, Gonorrhua, Gleet and all diasaau of a private and N. BERNARDIS, confidential naturs. Dr. H. hu made Proprietor. tbeu dieeasu a specialty for the put fifteen years. Dr. U. hu been in thia city fur tha putlhirteen yearn, and in that tima hu cured over 1,000 of the above dieeus Buffering friends dont 28 W. FIRST SOUTH STREET. delay: rail at once and put younsivu untier I)r. ll.s treatment. The knowledge of disease is half its DKUVEKKD TO AMY cur sPr. II. can ba consulted daily at part of ths dr. hia oflic No. 272 Main street. INCBIAS I XU IN POITLARITY, Many have been rescued from tha Piss, Cakes, Crackers and And inffuence with each year. In 1878 grup of disease by my medicines, who the Albany Armu needed s managing were given up incurable by friends editor, anil Mr. Lamont wu at once and physicians; for the proof af this, call offered the position, which he accepted. and get their addresses and see them for Alwaysonhaad. You patronage Is solicited. As a reporter in the Legislature, tele- v mi twelve. CONSULTATION FllKK. PRO. OKBHABDT. Prouriato, graph and news editor and editorial Medicine given away to tha poor. writef, ho wu successful through ready NOTICE. A handauiua lino of mens, boys and tact, unfiagging industry and thorough a knowledge of the worth of facta and children's auita and hate, of latest etylea b. land office, halt lake ideas he had already shown of men. and at Nqwlar prices, at L. TJ. (Sty, February 10th, 1W. Complaint teen so lured at this office by Bernard gnlterna, having While oa the Aryw, in which ha sunn Otihl A. X. Froisoth, of Halt Lako tllyitltah. it. Walters, for abandoning acquired a proprietary interest, which ra'uri, Henry he atiil retains, ha wu the regular foiling to ouuduct wilnr upon th f?11 foR VleiiarC within Hi thru yean, Max field A Hamill, manufacturer of the Albany press at the meetrequired by taw. embraced in hi Desert Entry Km tMLdatail Jim ings of the associated prims. puN mall vinegar, 107 First Kut, MW, upon lbs Kuf balfoOfWUof rcetfon 22, township l smith, Kangs 2 west In The story of the nomination snd elec- tween First and Second South. Halt Lake county. I. T., tion of 1182 is familiar to all. Suffice it avion totbs MBseltalkm of entry: the mid party! Hubserlbs lurYonr Newspapers, to lay that in both Mr. Lamont wu a potent factor, and when Guvernor Cleve- Magasinesand periodical at C. II. land went to Albany, almost wholly A Co's Bookseller, Stationer, anil with the public view of the News dealer. U. McMAHTER, Mr.Al nkiqgi I REMOVED To a moN convenient place, RESTAURANT Oyster Stews, - - 25c Gup A" ft ; C& rnmu Main street, Salt UkiQ I - hiUW Vienna Chop House ar-wi- ps imui rlwk, 4 BANKERS and active Oaieflil attention given to tha salsa or i and bullion. Wo aoUeit e anteeiag hlghem The British etemuririp "StnUhUvm" Gollscttau am km arrived at Gibraltar with a cargo of lowest rata Execute orders far purchase or ml ot moeks Bemingtou rifles and ammunition. As and bonds at Mew York and Ban Frmnctaoo. her destination is presumably Chinn, the We eell exchange and tefa French eansal has telegraphed to Paris qOrnish fading cl tlfi of tho Ui sight dmRi or remit fond to London, for instructions as to whether ths Strath-leveDublin, Paris, Berlin. Stockholm, Onenhagen be allowed to proceed. and all other prominent points tn Kuupei OertUcates of Deposit Broad, payabtooade- A Victoria, B. C., dispatch says : In view of anticipated foreign complication tha militia ore ordered to assemble fos New York Importers fe Traders Mart Bonk KonntaBrae drill twice a week. A large public meet- MCw York Commercial National Bank ing wae held here Friday night, when Pint National Gold Bank tha Chinese commissioners report wu Omaha National Bank BL Ionia denounced in scathing terms and condemnatory resolution passed. FOR SALE, u aa car agST BECHT0L McGORNIGK I; S I cm CPCCBC Nsw York, Chicago ML Louie . ebpt "Kongh on Itch. "Bough on Itch cures humon, eruptions, ringworm, tetter, ult rheum, frosted feet, chilblain rillsk kaumcbm. Cv firm with an upwaid tendency, but speculation in it, although on tho increase, ie still small, and hanoc 118 MAIN STREET, tha movement ii slow. The shipping demand folly keeps pace with receipts, At the Old London Bank of Utah. low grades bring taken at a good advance. For tha past six years the visible supply at this date hu Veen conBXHVED XVXHY DAY YROX siderably more than double the present JUNCn clock, and from 6 to 8 o'clock, to Now the breaking up of tho merchants, burinem men and their ctarx figure public, for SO roads and scarcity of con in cribs is and th general Oyiten cooked in every style. likely to prevent much of an increase. In Provisions show no material chsng XT. but will little GXICX, having sympathized Proprietor. either the up or down turu in wheat Pork standi at just about tha same figures that it wu ulling at a year ago. Tho feeling, too; at that time, ia bear.THE.. ish, and the "short interest, although Ou delivery day scattered, ia large. Armour paid for about everything bonded over, and a repetition of last yeaFi squeeze is by po means unlikely. u pjWM mim u LUNCH A FEVERISH MABKET. Cun AID ooml$ll(-- lj Austria, Belgium Ireland, PINNERS, 25b. mences. In Chicago alone; over 15,000,-00- 0 bushels of wheat must be sold Won anybody can bo short. " "Who bn tha heavy longs?" Well, Walker A Co, undoubtedly own n good deni and Fleming A Borden have apparently been large buyera. "How about Kent? "Ha wu tong' through Crittenden, Orr and Come hut is pretty well evened up now. I look for JjSu J? aeeomaMdaUaaaS Drew exchange on ell tbs leading eltlcs of Special attention given to tho selling of tribes are ready to desert Osman Dij andbullioa whenever opportunity presents. Foo Advance madeeneonslgnxmntsnt lows senros and the Hashaen Arabs am sendParticular attention elm ing their women snd cattle into the throagboatUtak, Nevada and adjoining Ton I u 2a on No. Main Is at about ths highest point of Ilia year, The Private Secretary of President a stats of things without precedent. Three doors south of Walker House. IS THE BOSS PLACE Never in the hiatorv of the trade either, Cleveland. hu the visible supply at this date any- -- To Gat Mania for tha Money. where near equaled the 43,000,000 bushels at the present time, the nearest apJAM NOW PBKPAKKD TO TAKE.ORD1H8 His Kainarkable Political Caraar Oaa proach to it being that of last year which of tba Moat Trusted of Ttldans wu 31,000,000 bushels, and which in Supportar. turn wu some 6,000,000 bushels larger than any year which hid preoeded it. Breakfast and Supper 25c and Upward, According to the Wants of the Patron. Special to Chronicle. This must be felt sooner or later probaFirst-Cla- ss Washington, March 9. To observe bly about the time sommer storage comColonel Lamont in the executive mansion busily scribbling at his desk, one would imagine that he wu merely n devoted and industrious clerk. Actually, he hu been one of the influences that have shaped Democratic politics in New York for ten yean; and to no one more than to him is Grover Cleveland indebted for opportunities, successful improvements of which have made him President. Mr, Lamont wu born in Cortland county, New York, about 1850, and hia urly youth wu devoted to thou bucolic pursuits, in which, according to Iloracs Sreely, most of our public men have found the strength to carry them through the labor of political life. He began climbing the ladder of knowledge at the McGrawville public school. During the earlier years of his college course, he formed the idea of entering politics, and accordingly paid a visit to Governor Hoffman. The latter wu impressed by his clur political perceptions, and the same year found him installed clerk in the Assembly. It wu in thie position that he first fell under the notice of City.iw F. WHITTMUOH, f tr unworthy a great nation like iwi 0 hotel, EXCHANGE, MAUD BUYB AND SKLLh transfers an tho pti United Mtatm tfi and Korop i of dtim England. eh mints of the Fadfle Com Hostile Arab at fanir are becoming Iatun letters of crsdiLavaUabi la the alarmed at ships arriving- - The Amaral principal dUes of the world. fn-iih- u to force an advance or oven to sustain present range, the general belief ie that if this ia withdrawn and the differences between England and Buerin quiet down, n speedy drop will bo in order to a point at which the grain will move freely towards tho whatever that point may be. Many re- raid the large and continued buying here and at the seaboard, by foreign houses, as evidence that traders abroad believe complications there axe likely to amount to something more than talk, but thia view is offset by tha steady, or only slightly, higher tone of London and Liverpool advices. Many bottom fa ling tho homo situation, loo, are now lost sight of in the flood of sensational rumors. Nothing can chango tho fact that hero at tha mid of the first week of March Excfiangj by u 25tha 5ALTL BANHRi DO A GKKEHAI Tho first mooting of tho American Congress of Churches will bo hold in I Hartford, CKmul, early ia May. Tho I Congress is announced intended to i brace nil Christian denomination and to bo participated in by representative divines and laymen. Four handled shopmen, hostlers and WAN VALUES pars of ths Missouri Pacific Helmed Will undoubtedly receive an impetus at Sadalia, Mo., struck Saturday sf which will ba all tha mors marked from ion. It is understood that nothing the foot that priou are now 1314 cents locomotives with mail cars will bo allow below what they were a y ear ago. But ed to pom here. Tho car inspectors also on tho other hud, it is evident that struck. u BROTHERS, Established A. D. 1859. . WAR in noma. A FIFTY CENTS PER SHARE; IN MULTDM (PAR VALUE, tlO EACH) Proceed to bo used in developing tba mines for precious metali that underlie Aeinmor la now being run. Thia company 1 organised under th lam of I !ah. wltha capital of UjnuiOO; In lOtMXJU hare folly paid, of which tUjOUO lharai are mt aiido a Working capital or Tiwuurv and for which a tunnel u THE JUm upcriorlntl market. Apply at mu' for Son or on to John President, or R. A. M. Fbounth. Ilso Month rtrMfottauLus rotary, N0.2BW. City, Utah. P. O, Jtoz to. .it OF THE stork. Tha Property of the company nouaUia of Throe Valuable Iron Nines, lamriydevrtmdL showing Immense bodies of Brown and Had Hematite urea; sires so EVERYONE to per sent metelllTSddro mhervari-eUrc; lines valuable Mill Kikw, Khoja, Buildings, Unardlngboasa, springs, water power, and a valuablelnnnel ioeatbar tends on which to ercet rolling mill flrntaue nc.i etc i'f ndns snd works, Mill Creek District, Morgan county, Utah, d Lily. Principal oi Balt Lake City. This will be tits only block of stock that tha dimeters will oflbr to thu public at tbla low figure, and price cannot but aailitt every Intelligent pernm that an luvaataashl therein bum KtuU pruOtably within a short pRnOlli Dralta or postal onion la payment mint bo mads payable to ths leerota'ry of the sotro pany, and RhouUl lhe order for uemngin vo share Mock. Ordere aad inward. noMaakil for fluxing orw received, BOv -- A AOKI BOOMEEW I jk! t THACKRAHS, , Journal- vl, .ion (COPYBIGHTJ' .A fok sal w WiCp.RAl r Booknnllnr'aiMl . ALT " LAKK '! ft CITY. W S' |