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Show MINE & STHELB STEELE. J. N. LOUDER. AGENTS. Ofice—Mrixer Building,Lower Main Street Fira el cae . : Devoted #6 00 fag oe 8 0a eee Tt i VOL. A. SILVER ‘Gua : The J. N. LOUDER, “Real Estate and And Attention Given ness Entrusted Ofice—Minen to I found Never Silver Reef, soared I found By & (Successors I took “And another loss had There were But a bird Tis with sa broken when We qn groan sweet angel Dear There links SALT Orrior: Notary It lightens sds LAXE No. 81, HABISH & Law, UTAH, next.te Btreet, Mo- © SINCLAIR BARBERS, YE HAVE FITTED UP AN ESTABlishment opposite. Mr. Wabish’s old stand, where can be found one of the neatest end most commodious tonsorial parlors in tal atronage of our old ae and the blic generally is Sate y solicite i . ‘i JOE HABISH. SINCLAIR. MAIN Quirk’s STEET.....:.......- Saloon, EGY ER REEF HIS TONSORIAL PARLOR IS FIRST: class in, all its appointments, and all work is done with care and expedition. ‘he iatest style in hair-cntting, and a simoothest shaves. Call and be convinced, ARTIN KELLER, Proprietor, Peter onf0d : Reef Blacksmithing i & Repairing LL KINDS OF WOOD-WORK DONE on ana aati: by exprrienced workmen. Agent for Fish Bros.’ Wagons, wagon *ttachments Ae sundries. tar~ Horseshoe- ng a epecialty. PETER MAINKIN. The Argonaut, ae AD Krsteican Journal of.. Politics, Literature, Society, Satire " PUBLISHED AT SAN care, FRANCISCO, strengthens _o——_ Lost Bonanza Flat UTAH. ail our heaven a hope beyond compare. —_* <> Mahnken, Sliver love. pleasure, Music is an art which FASHION BARBER SHOP of treasure honest all Our above! the bonds of civilized society, humanizes and softens the feelings and dispositions of men, produces a refined pleasure in the mind, and tends to raise up inthe soul the emotious of an exalted nature. The presence of the lort of nature is an invariable sizn of goodness of heart and justness\of moral pereeption, though by no) means of mora practice. When it is originally absent from any mind, that mind is in many respects bard, worldly and degraded. Sliver Reef, October 7, 1881. north to heaven are ills because we hoard them. It is best not to dispute where there is no probability of convincing. As the bird alights on the bough, then’ plunges into the air again, 80 the thoughts of God pause but for a moment in any form. Man carries under liis hat a private theater, wherein a greater drama is acted than is ever performed on the mimic stage, beginning and ending in eternity. The most commonplace person has wild regions—wilderness, it may be— of thought-and feeling, which even his.most_intimate friends hardly ever enter, RORTH MAIN STREET, SILVER REEF First door love ASSAYS. KAIGEN OITY, Main pitying Half the ills we hoard in our hearts SILVER REEF. at Publie in Office. pain, of visitations! that of Orrion—Next door to Halpin’s store. Jernick’s Rank, of sickness It makes this ¢atth 2-paradize, Surgeon, Attorney beds is no sweeter Than MANTOR, M. dear; in deepest the toueh It sweetens MAURICE most That soothes the aching brain. Sweet UTAH. - pinion Lo be attended those \yertold How - pain; "Tis swect to sée in sorrow The sympathizing tear; Attorney at Law and Notary Public, - despair. for each Love. aweet By And MAIN ST, from its compensations, healings vi CLARK; and pinion ee Notary Public in the office. Physician the broken Never soars so high again, Land Agents and Attorneys | Salt Lake City, Utah. 4 Cc. vain; sours.so high again. Raised City, Utah. REEF, purpose, -Kept.another from the snare; And the life that sin had stricken to T. C. Baftley,) SILVER heart. notin But the bird with BIRD & LOWE, 3 to my with a noble CAL HE ARGONAUT IS A REPRFSENTAtive sore of American ideas and literature. tis thoroughly independent in its editorial treatment of thet opies of the day. ive the best Pacific eee literairrent good Itis publis she d weekly, 4 per y 295 for six Months; $I 50 rs three mont hecpayal lein advance. cent postpaid on receipt of price. Specimen copy gent free. Address ThE ARGONAUT, 522 California Street, San, Francisco, California Lives. There is probably no country in the world where so many men have eome and been lost to their friends in older cotutries, than the Pacific Coast. The Bodie Free Press says it ‘“continues to reecive letters from the East, asking for information - concerning husbands, brothers and sens. We would advise people in this country to write to their relatives, or communicate to them some way. Send them a weekly paper, if nothing more. Bayard Taylor wrote a story ealled ‘Can a Life Lose dtself?? The drift of the story was to prove thata man’s life could and would be read by some one from first to last. But there are lives on this Coast enshronded in mystery, and it is doubtful if their true inwardness will ever be discovered, UR Grit. The. force @f will_is a_potent. element in determining longevity. This single point must be granted without. argument, that of two men, every way dlike and sitnilarly cireumstanced, the one who has the greater courage and grit will be the longer lived. é ! We're SaJ. going to aw Hot v Quirk Bros.’ for a Scotch.-@a M. LWNCH3S5 Feed and miery Stable, ewer Matin NB., Silver r Meet, Utah One does not need to practice medicine long to Tearn that men die who might just as well live if, they re- solved.to live, and that myriads who are invalids could become strong. if they had the native of acquired will to vow they would do so, Those who have no other quality favorable to life, whose bodily organs are nearly. all diseased, to. whom each day is a day of pain, who are beset by life-shortening influences, yet do live by will” ricci anon j COUNTY, OF LOVE. Which Old spoke these-words, UTAH, and as they came the young man to whom they were addressed, leaned tenderly over Ferida Peterson and strove to kiss away the tears that were welling up in her 4 beautiful dreamy brown eyes. ‘A “I do not blame you,’ she con-| tinued in a broken voice. “She whon’ you will one day wed >is fair to look upon, “and when ter warm “kisses melt upon your lips it is not strange that you forget all else but that she would gladly be your” wife and that her father keeps a coal yard. But I love you with a mad, deathless passion that will burn out my life in the intensity of its. flame. You have won ny Seandinavian affections “unwittingly, but you have won thein all the same. In the years that are to come, Vivian, when your children are playingat your knee, and life seems like a fair dream, vou will sometimes think of me—sometimes let a tender thought lie in your heart for a little flaxea-haired girl that Knew no happiness so great as to hear your voice and see the gleam of the matinee tickets in your vest pocket? Tell me this, and when the leaves have turned brown under the blighting touch of autumn’s chilly hand, and I shall have been put away forever in the little dell beyond the meadow, you will lead to the altar a happy bride and never know the sorrow T have felt.” “By yon bright moon I swear,” said Vivian, taking another kiss on the fly, ‘‘that your memory shall ever be enshrined in my heart. Though my life be one of tempest and storm, or a succession of sunny days, I shall always remember that you were my first, my only love.’ Ile was about to tinpress another kiss on: the rosy lips upheld to his, when a dull thud was heard at the rear of his pants, and Viviair iay senseless on the side= walk, ‘Old Mr. Peterson had opened the front door and adjourned the meeting. er A Beautiful ANegory. The eminent, statesman, John J. Crittenden of Kentucky, was at one time engaged in defending a man who had been indicted for a capital offence. After an elaborate and powerful defence, he closed his effort with the following striking and beautiful allegory: “When God in his eternal conneil conceived the thought of man’s creation, he called to him the three ministers who wait constantly upon the throne—Justice, Trath and Merey— and thus addressed them: ‘Shall we make man?’ Then said Justice, ‘O God, make him not, for he will trample upon the laws.’ Truth made answer also, *O, God, make him not, for he will pollute thy sanctuaries.’ But Mercy, dropping upon hei knees and looking up through her tears, exclaimed, ‘O, God, make tiin—I will watch over him with my care through all the dark which he may have to tread.’ ‘Then God made man, and said to him, ‘O, man, thou art the ebild. of Mercy; go and deal with thy brother.’” The jury, when he had finished, was drowned in tears, and against the evidence, and what must have been their own convictions, brought in a verdict of not guilty. ' How VALUE the Loug OF Winter Profitably (Burlington JANUARY 4, 1882. The Differing Hawkeye.] light reading to be taken up, and then to select the authors in each branch. The farmer who would thus employ his leisure daring winter in gaining juformation in horticulture, drainagé, fertilizing and kindred subjects, wuld find himself amply rewarded not onty in the pleasure afforded, but in the “inéreased returns of his next crop. The mechanie will not find his time wasted who spends his evenings in study and experiment. -To young men especially is this leisure a priceless opportunity. Many, whe. are denied the chance of a liberal education in the schools, might yet secure at home What would be of equal value. Lincoln, whose early days were most laborious, would not, be known as he is had he not read law by the firelight in the rude pioneer cabin. Horace Greeley, George 5. Boutwell, Henry Clay and-a-host- of other men gradtiated from no higher school. “These are examples of what can be done by unremittent- persistence in-self-culture and useful employment of leisufe. And at no other season of the year is there so much unoccupied time or are the circumstances so favorable for study as ‘during our iong winter nights. ; — <a Be Happy. There is nothing to be gained hy melancholy or fretfaulness. Yet.some people acquire the habit of sadness. They fall as naturally into moody trains of thought and ways as a bird takes to Its wings for flight. The sunny side of life-has no charms for them, and they seem like Jonah when he said, ‘I do well to be angry.” They never see the silver lining on any cloud, or the flush of any morning in the eastern sky. You hear them croaking everywhere, It might | be well for some people to remember, | among other things, the advice which Sidney Smith gave toa vous lady of| | this unbappy disposition: “Always | keep a box of sugar-plums on the| inantlepiece, a kettle simmering and 1! singing on the hob, and remember all the ch: ming things that people have said off you, _-_________ on {London the 22.! | publishers, of thouyht Telegraph.] more quicken and the breath of all the blood, palpitation, pains in the back and: chest, digziness, loss of memory, feebleness of sight and general stupid- smoking. Against this sweeping dictum we must, however, quote the statement of Dr. Richardson, of hygienic fame, to the effect that tobacco, as compared with alcohol, innocuous, that it does less harm than opium and is not worse than tea. According to our French friends of the newly-founded society idiocy and death lurk in the bowl of the tobacco pipe, and this. they aver, notwithstanding Lord Lytton de- “ Willlam j te the brain makes and opens the SALOON heart question as to. the “use oo True Lady and oS and derpinning has a Thaw which is fatal. What.isa lady?» “A giver of bread,” says the beautiful okt meaning, and thus. an almoner .of ‘Providence—a person in authority, 2 wise’ housewife, and a woman, charitable, gencrdéus, kind. What is a genth:man? Why, just a gentle man. David refusing to quench his thirst with the water which the valiant had brought him at the peril of their lives; Sir *hifip Sidney refusing the draught that would have been grateful to his parched throat, that a dying comrade might partake of it—are but two out of many illustrations we could give of- real acts of gentility. It comes only by w Lee restraint and selfgovernment, Dr. Parr once said toa of cii8tomers will = be SALOON, North Main JOHN e discriminate in social life between Danenhaner, and the affection was reciprocated. When the tine came | ae vulgar apd the polite, the fastid_—> << for the vessel to sail, she pleaded with (ious and the rude, the well and the Exalted Theology. Familiarity, with aeeustov 4 ill_bred. They teach exalted theology up all the eloquence OnTy” know lovely maiden, but her lover had been | tomed usages and: knowledge of preamong the Green Mountains. AVerj scribed con ventionalities, may coexist mont clergyman makes the future of ordered by his country to go to almost with real, though concealed, discertain death, and his honor would good) Christmas clear by saying: eourtesy. Theré is no true ladyhood gentlemanliness which’ is no “After crossing the mystic river we not let him break his word, even for| or the being he worshipped. Since then founded, as ona rock, on the golden shall go on from the man to the angel, ule: “Do tuto otrers as you wor ud from the angel to the archangel, from | she has lived in. alternate: hope and latent others should do unto you,’ the archangel to the celestial, from despair in Los Augeles, and the scene (This is the foundation of. all -good the celestial to the divine, and then, when she fread that fhe Jeannette had | manners, and the root of domestic gathering up the stars in a cluster been heard from and that her lover janmd social happiness... To be sy Mpaee to be belptul, to be paubout our heads, dream out the end- was safe, is described as one of wild ient, to be loving, to be_ tolerant She is now in San-Francisco, in judgments, gentle in bearing— less dream of eternity.”” And thé joy; fellow. wasw’t: hauled up before an and. it is said even contemplates a trip these are character istic attributes of the best ‘men and women. When, ecclesiastical body and tried for here- to Russia, ‘there to meet her betrothed. et added to these, we find grace, culture, hares ei sy, either! self-possession a ee > A’\man breathes elzhweet tltloves a serenity,, equipdise, and elegance of speech and action, we entlyv. and ‘Street, Silver Reet PENDRAY,. ‘--«Proprietor BEET OF Liquors And Lager Beer & on CIGARS, Graught, Beer, - - - - -= 12) Cents ExchangeCalon, MAIN(OSTREET 4, onove~yaie SILVER A. LEVY, REEF -..+..... roves ----Proprietor At.this popular resort none but the choicest Wines, Liquors and Cigars Are dealt over the bar to patrons, t~ Private Club. Rooms attached to the establishment. Wels Brena ae ne NOW PREPARED TO SUPPLY the Trade. Families, and the public generally, with a Choice _— icle of ee by e Keg, Quart or Bot er deliv- rad free to any part of Siivee Reet | and adjaces Vicinitics.~ea ge The Danfhng PaPavilion at the Brewery is at all times at the service of the public for the purposes-of-soctal-recrention:-@a- No improper characters tolerated. PETER WELTE. LIK Forn Saloon “Next Nain door Street, to the drug store,} Silver ry Reef, Utah i .+-sAlways on hand the best.... WINES, LIQUORS AND GEORGE CIGARS MILLER. ‘CAPITOL. Main St,, Silver Reef, THE BEST . Wines, Liquors & CIGARS rich man, who, having been a spoiled the full flower of eat California Brewery struction-is only partial, and its un- see BEEN e but the very Silver Reet, October 5, 1281, Gentleman. Why. is it that parents sometimes tell children that it is nobler to become a useful man or a good woman than to become a fine lady or gentleman? Than a useless fine lady or gentleman, we admit, sotar they are right. And yet this well-meant in- + JUST - [erThe anon b Hiard table Pc Silver Reef. The Card Room is neat and: tomfortable, and the enjoyment the greatest aim, and, abuse of tobacco, aided by the pleasant perfume of the much eee ed nicotian comforter, The HAS opened. and is the flnest accoutred finest brands of Liquors and Cigars wil) be furnished to customers, anda trial willprove my assertion trué a man think like a sage and act like a Samaritan. One side or the other maybe, it does not follow that either must be right. Meanwhile moderate votaries of what Charles Lamb ealls the “plant divine of rarest virtue”’ xre at liberty to consider the entire EE Rafferty...----Proprietor li shimerit in Silver Reef. elared that the insidious weed ripens child, had the manners of a boor: “It A, Romance of the Jeannette, The Los Angeles ‘Times tells of a is discipline that ‘makes the scholar, | romantic story connected with the | disstipline that makes the gentleman, Jeannette. It appears that in 1878-9 and itis the want of discipline that a young lady of that city, then spend- makes you what you are.”’ By the unwritten, and not the writing the winter in San Francisco, met and fell in love with Lieutenant 1ten, eode of deportment and morals N 0 one is ever fatigued after the minute, and uses 3,000 cubic feet or reise of forbedranee.~ mem [ore hogshesds- oft air per hour: Cabinet Saloon, dyspepsia, irregular circulation of the from . refine line.” It happens that the lively Gaul, as represented by a small body of antitobacconalians, has lately set up a society entitled “The Association against the Abuse of Tobacco,” and by dint of much persuastion as extracted from. the French acadenry: ¢ report.. from ‘which we. learn that ity result ee Sutoons, “Smoking is a custom: loathsome to Thaual for se ae Various Subject. the eye, hateful to the nose, harmfal tothe brain, dangerous to the lungs, and the black, stinking fume thereof nearest. resembling the horrible Stygian smoke of the pit that is bottoinless.’? So said Ling James in his Countér-blaste or Misocapnts. ~ —It-mnet be remembered, however, that King Jamies did not smoke, while the genteel poet Cowper, an equal authority and fond of ee EPs deCTATES THDALCO “ Does . . ~ Opinions Writera General Garticld delighted to dwell and NO. SMOKING. May Spent. upon the thought of the value of leisure. Not idleness, but the opportunity to: improve the mind by selfculture. His estimate of the value of leisure feninds us that there is a peneral failure to appreciate fully the advantages of, winter, with. its short days and long nights, and opportuni“ties” for atiidy” vit home.” Asa rule; through this season the mechanic and farmer, the employer and employe, -hayeimoreleisure than during the-re++ mainder of the year. All this spare ume might be inost profitably employed. Cheap books, periodicals and libraries are accessible to all. A prearranged plan for reading and study will be found gs profitable and ecoiiomieal as in any other enterprise. If it is found that one or two hours daily while the long evenings last ean be spared for general reading, it will be well to settle definitely beforehand the proportion ef historical, scientific ° LEISURE. Evenings ay sine 3 N. B.—Ouragents are authorized to collect moneys due this office, take sceers ee and ee to all 0otber bi : SATURDAY, be her lips Vivian Mahoney, — Utah. 7 THE Mr. en ‘You have brokén my heart, Vivian.’?, It was a fair-haired girl who from life broken straggled Each Gibson pinion Rytthe soul witha broken pinion | PARSONS, Lake : seductive art; him Ife lived Land Agents and Attorneys Salt each morning the broken Meeting of Southern = {Chicago go Tribune. } wing. and And touched with Christ-liké pity, Ctah Peculiar Peterson so high again. a youth, sin’s WASHINCTON mosses its old, sweet strain; But the bird with Min- to all. BusiCare. the wotind; It sang Never BAILEY on a bed of A Interests : “THE TROUBLES Wing. A bird with a broken my Building, Broken REEF, in the woodland and meadows, sweet the thrushes sing, IT healed Collection Agent Business and Dwelling Houses, ing and other Properties to Sell or Lease. ‘Careful Iwalked Where ee to the Mining : Ky OF S UBSCRIPTION ear. Biz ‘Months bait, TERMS Oney Sa Cras. W. Crane. 318 Pine st., Room 39, 8.F. L. P. Fister. .21 Merchants’ Exchange,8. F. d.8. LIRIMAT, aon ss sores seeeenn ye PFhneO, Ut rete HERBERT The Silver Reet Miwer. i jases LOUDER BY a tlaNeate PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY I The Silver Beet Biner. Obtainable in the UNITED STATES, J. H. CASSIDY, M. OW. Qrurg. BasrHoroueEw QUIRK J. Quirk BROTHERS The Pioneer Billiard Hall Finest Biltiara and Pool im the Territory, Tables First Class Liquors " ae and Cigars én hand, : |