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Show More About Arizona. Here we went to work’ with a will, CORRESPONDENCE, | but Iam happy to say that with two or THE SUPERB my wife teaching the women to make three exceptions they are all recovering, : yeast and bread and bake it; and how to though the kind attention of Mr. T. S. Lurrived a few days since from the| wash and mend, etc.; while my son and | Epiror West Wzzer, Aug. 80, 1878. Oapen JUNCTION: Wadsworth, who has spaired no pains in Arizona Mission, and have heard so il were grubbing, plowing, sowing, Dear Sir:—As an Arizona missionary, his endeavors to aid the sick, and great maay surmises and opinions in regard planting and irrigating, and were pre- I huve considered and concluded to offer | credit is due to him for his kindness from to the apparent failure thereof, and so paring to build a good stone house when a few notions in relation to that adven-| those thai have receive a medical advice BY FAR THE LARGEST FACTORY many dark hints and murmurings, that the Oribees told us the Mormons were ture, that peradventure I may carve for at his hands. IN THE WORLD! {think it well to give a few facts returning, that they were homesick, | Parties come to the lake every few that came under my personal observa- which in their language is “ge la moke.”’ myself a niche on the pyramid of fame The Most Popular Instrument in use, ang aspire to a place among the Joshuas days on purpose to have a boat ride or tion. The returning company camped about and Calebs of the enterprise. For, alSwim in its briny waters, There are WhenI joined the missionaries at sixteen rniles from-me, and I went and SALES 10,800 Per Annum! though I may not claim to have turned of accommodation to carry those Kanab, I noticed a portion of the com- visited hem. J found thenf much divi- my back on the Little Colorado, with | boats that wish to go duck or goose hunting, C. W. STAYNER, Agent, panies were well fitted out with fine,| ded in opinion, which was natural; some congestive lungs from excessive sighing, and we hope ere long to have every acMain St., Salt Lake City, Near Savlarge American horses, accustomed to were for returning at ence to their nor to have left a-brown stone front all | Commodation on the banks of age’s Gallery. rile the lake tame hay and plenty of grain; that the homes; some were desirous of seeking ready [s76-t£ Great praise is P. 0. Address, Box 587. wagons were loaded with from twenty- further, and some were indifferent which Coppee, forstillthe quarrying on the Moin | both for man and beast. I possibly may hunt up some | due to J. Fowers & Co. for their skill five to forty hundred pounds; and that way. lucky item in my illustrious southern ca and management of the boats under their they had traveled from Salt Lake City to To give an idea of the feeling in camp reer that may commend even one to the control, when ladies and gentlemen come Toquerville and thence to Kanab, which | I will quote a few words of one of. the is at least 120 miles out of the way, in a-| speakers at a Sunday meeting: ‘Where inexhaustible clemency of your august to have pleasure trips on the lake. tribunal. With the general managemelit The Flooper Irrigating Company provery hot, dry climate, and 150 miles of} isthe man among us but would be wil- of the mission, from its inception to the pose to let out to the lowest responsible the road is alternately heavy sand hills, | ling to part with what he has here for rocky, and deep sands, with but little | the privilege of returning’home.” TI felt latest speculation on what might possibly bidder the work on the canal, putting in have been done, I will not presume to head, gates, driving spiles, etc.) at the good water, very little grass, and less| a spirit in camp not congenial, and in hay. It was therefore no surprise to me speaking I could not help saying, “I am meddle, deeming the subject altogethor Weber, which will amount in the ageretoo important and grave to be badger ed gate to about $9,000. The Hooperites that some of the teams had already given | put in mind of the children of Israel about as & newspaper sensation. Theejim are taking Time by the forelock for the out, and some had been obliged to ex-| they were led up to the pronised land chaage for fresh animals; while those!and could see it in the distance, but of this communication is to review brief- coming season, as they don’t want to go Is Re-Opened for the Ma aufacture of who traveled up the Sevier had a good| were turned back; and again they went ly and lightly (perforce) the corres 'pon- “dry” any more. Superior €loth, Blank dence of the Deseret News and Juncr1ox Respectfully, Crrizen. Solid road, and an abundance of grass| toward it but could not enter in, This in relation io this matter, and to defend and water everywhere, and arrived at| time you will return home, and perhaps ets, Warm, Batting, my fellow-soldiers from some low flung Kanab in excellent order. Many of the| come again, but if you do not come with though rather covert insinuations. Care. mis-lonaries were very young men, who/a different spirit you may be driven Another Man Killed, . had always lived in Salt Lake Valley, | back next time.’? The fact is many were ful readers of the correspondance of and this was their first experience away | looking for another Salt Lake Valley as Messrs. Holmes, Hamblin and Bolton _ Between 11 and 12 o’clock on Tuesday from home; and they had no idea of | és at preseut, and would not stop any- will not fail to mark that they ‘agree as night a tragedy occurred in the lower Bring on Your Woo! at Once what they were destined to encounter, | where, unless they could have at least to the inhospitableness of the desert be- part of town, near Pritchard’s fast freight Upon being told that the road beyond | 160 acres of land, a good big chunk of tween Kanab and the Little Colorado, office, in which a man named Kistell; a RECEIVE AND was very heavy, some lightened up their mowing ground and pasture ad libitum. also to the drying up of tha stinking Cornishman, was shot and killed by a hing for river I don’t call it, and the colored man named D. W. Cherry. Our Geods in Return at everloaded wagons by depositing several | As to the order spoken of, many could It continuation of desert beyond it, and of thousand pounds of flour. Advaatageous Rates. en working for not see it. Two messengers had been After leaving Kanab, water was not|sent to Kanab from the Little Colorado our explorations 150 miles ‘up it, but it Cherry, but had not been in his employ is at the terrible things done and the plenty, and sometimes the springs were| Wash with a letter to the presidency, A. RANDALL, SON & CO. a week or more. Cherry claims to s62-3m] long distances apart, the grass was very | stating that no location for a town could have had, some barley stolen, and froin dry and searce, and the nearer we ap- | be found,and they wanted further orders. Coppee that’ the leadings aid concentra- the evidence was on guard with a doubleted pith of their correspo:a dence is di- barrelled shotgun. proached the ferry over the Colorado, | These orders did not come, and toa Seeing a man enter the heavier the sand, the heavier grew | much praise cannot be given to the boys rected. Now the facts in t,he case stand the corral Cherry fired upon him, but In that camp two or three men, without much effect, the skot striklng the loads, and the heavier grew the spir- | for the happy, cheerful manner in which thus: desirous of exhibiting boundless its of some of the boys, but the lighter | they waited day after day zeal him in the left leg. The next shot hit and week and great practical ability, discovergrew the teams. Under these circum-| after week for the return ot the messened a mare’s nest, and developed a him in the neck and face, producing alStances a very small number felt desir-| ger. most instant death. Cherry went to the As for myself and family, we water scheme that consisted ous to return, but did not exactly like} kept on at work at the Oribee in’ farm, daming up a little spring-fed ‘slough, Sheriff's office and surrendered himself. BUR to. ‘ LE The body of the deceased was subseuntil it was resolved to return home, as exposing © UT? a larger surface to evaporating Upon reaching the ferry, one or two | 10ur was getting scarce (as also oysters Owing to the in- By the influences, thereby producing such an quently taken careof. LATE CONFLAGRATION. ; Thereby Y infe inform teams of fine big American horses, had | #24 canned fruit.) ability of Coroner Deal to act, Justice my OU.D PATRONS A council was then increased flow of water AND THE PUBLIC GENERas would aston- Stoutenburgh summoned a jury and held ALLY, that I have given out entirely, and some more felt | held in my case, and it was considered ish the natives and render oo possible the an inquest yesterday.. The evidence very like it. It became, therefore, nec- | !™prudent for myself and family to re- watering of the 500 acres that Bro. Ham- went to establish the fact that the wounds essary to lighten up the wagons again; | ™#in after all the rest should be gone blin might create. Our Captain saddled inflicted caused two or three tons more of unnecessary | Ut of the country. death, and that the I therefore threw a up, rode 15 miles, examined, returned shooting was done by Cherry. The jury flour, and some other articles not’par-| few things into my wagon, leaving the and had the tallced over, when it also found that deceased was a native ticularly needed at the time, were also | 7st in the care of the chief Tubee and all naturally matter evaporated, as the water Cornwall, England, and was about 51of |" left. These were deposited in four or | C#Me away, also giving him my crops. § OGDEN. would have done. This brings me to years old. Dr. Bergstein made a post Muwin Street, five wagons and several men leftto| , Upon thinking over all the strange guard them. BOOTS AND SHOES MADE AND REPAIRThe road on the east side | Yicissitudes of this journey, I feel pleas- Bro. Hamblin’s letter, where he talks of | mortem examination. The remains vreplowing, planting and. cultivating 18 sented a ED IN FIRST-CLASS STYLE, : horribfy mangled and shockins |’ of the river is along the base of a high|¢@¢.we did not succeed in finding the This, the West Jordan boys appearance. plateau, the face of which is a nearly rich country which the people east and acres. A Good Stock of Ready-Made Boots and Shoes on claim to have plowed, and I think, plant- will be held The examination of Cherry Hand. before Justice Stoutenburgh perpendicular sand rock, which ig conwest, north and south expected us to ed; and we all called stantly wearing away; and which yields find. Had we done so the poor and hon- acres; the forty little sprthe patch seven | t his morning -Cherry is 45 or 60 years Call and See Me.” W. S. READ, ings we never| of age, and has been a residcnt of this but few springs of water. This valley est would have found ng place for them, saw; they may exist at has been, at asremote period, covered and the order could not well have been ten, or twenty-five milesintervals of five, State twelve years or more. Ja 1861 he up this swail; lived at Virginia, established—eyery speculator and rascal and was thrrea man of with an immense forest. Subsequently for this I won’t answer. Bro Bolton | ¢ onsiderable means. wanted a finger in the pie. but by some throe of nature, it became a would have He jz represented tells of faithless unce-operative indicaas a quiet and there is another call it will tions that great lake; and then was drained by the But when his practiced eye noted in our | a nd as intelli inoffensive man generally, (Late ©. B. McGregor & Co.). require a great deal of faith, mixed wish ¢ at great Colorado bursting its way through | ; our. meetings. men ordi-i lligent aa3d 2 colored ‘ “EUUOLMOa oe 3 * good works, to plunge again into so desthe deep canyon, its pres®Mt heq. ‘ings, and never heard the semblance of| arrested some weeks ago for keeping a The trees.of that forest are lying at pany will be more select, ete. such talk; but heard men of experience} hog pen in the lower end of town and short distances over the surface of the azines, Pictures, Deceased A few more words and I have done. counsel the camp to save provisions and thereby creating a niusance. earth, petrified, and the species of the My experience of seven years in the hold themselves in readiness to go or was buried at 4} p.m. yesterday, Rev. wood can be determined by color of the American Desert teaches me to load comeas the answer to our dispatch Mr. Badgcr officiating. He has a wife at Albums, Stationery, Xc. gum, which has also been petrified, and CIGARS AND TOBACCO. light and haul only necessaries. Marble might direct. And I testify that the Devonshire, Mngland, and ason at Tintic, which, in this state, strongly resembles slab wash stands, and mahogany and boys generally conducted themselves in Utah.-—Pioche Record, 28th ult. diamonds; they are very brilliant when Wall Papers of the Best Patterns. black walnut bureaus, etc., are very ex- a most manly, obliging and co-operative seen ata little distance on a sunny day, cellent in their place, and with a proper way towards each other. And, I also. Subscriptions taken for all the Papers of the day, and will cut glass. One piece [I picked 3593m | Local, Eastern and Western. mill to grind them might make feed for cheerfully testify that Bro. Haight, as a Sleeping Railroad Employes up had evidently been smoked while in hungry fine, large American horses, As judicious leader, and a man of enterprise, the gum state. As no rain had fallen to for me, I want plugs that will fatten on who thought as little of a hundred and A narrow escape from a railroad disdo any good for over a year, the country sage, salt weed and sunflowers, for. a fifty miles’ exploration up the Little Colaster in Ohio, which was hushed up by of course showed it. There were abun- journey through the Great Desert. orado desert, as perhaps your local. dant signs of there having been grass would of going a block to hunt a news. the employes of the two trains which Curis E. Bouton. nearly everywhere, and also of springs item. And furthermore, with the ex- were endangered, is told by the Toledo having run toa considerable distance; ception of one or two whose uneasy, Blade. It says : but now it was a dry desert, except the Fathers,a Thought for You. self-righteousness he could not afford to ‘‘An eye witness informs that the train small springs few and far between, 7.e. nurse’ continually, he had the heart stopped at Oak Harbor, and then took along the road we traveled. good will and -entire confidence of the “What will you take to drink,” the side track to await train No. 26. As The ““Meun-Coppy” is a dry wash deboys. , they had arrived about twenty-five minbauching into the ‘Little Colorado asked a waiter of a young lad, who, Fearing that I have impertinently inaccompanied his truded, 1 remain yours, with all due utes before No. 26 was due, the employes Wash,” and extending easterly several for the first time lay down to get a little sleep. They did days’ journey, and about 180 miles from father to. a public dinner. Uncer- humility. not awake until after the time on which Kanab, to where the company campe * - James McoFarnanp. tain what to say—feeling sure he No. 26 was. due, and then started the near it, (Rock Point.) At this point 1 P.«s, could not be wrong if he followed was invited by Jacob Hamblin, missionThe two springs at the ¢outh-west train. They met No. 26 about half a mile from Rock Ridge, when ‘the. two trains ary to thesons of Lehi, to tarry with his father’s example, he replied: base of the San Francisco ‘ mountains, stopped about forty rods apart. The “T’}]] take what father takes.” him at the ‘“‘Moweabbee,” about four E ‘marble tops, American steeds, and other hands of each train held a consultation miles from “Rock Point,” up the “Meun The answer reached the father’s disjointed ravings, we hold in reserve to and agreed to say nothing about the afCoppy Wash.” Thisis a small stream ear, and instantly the full responsi- be-used as future developments may HE MONITOR HAS @AINED A FAR-FAMED fair, but some one who thought that if proceeding from several springs and reputation. No higher encomium can be Ge. Alc. bility of his position flashed upon warrant, the sleepy conductor were discharged it stowed upon a Cooking Stove than to say that cayable of irrigating about 85 or 40 im. And the father shuddered at would give him a chance to obtain charge every house-wife who. uses it speaks in its praise, acres of land. Hamblin is here opening and recommends it to her neighbors and friends, of No. 56, told the superintendent, who the history of several youhg men, Hoopsr, Sept. Ist, :878. up a farm, and I,. with my wife Sarah for economy, cleanliness and reliability in all its discharged all hands on that train.” | operations. and my son Ephraim stopped and helped once as promising as his own bright Epitor Ogpen JUNCTION: Dear. Sir—A terrible noise has been friend, Jacob grub and plant some ten or Jad, and ruined by drink, started up 31,314 MONITORS now in USE, twelve acres, which we plowed with my heard in our settlement for several days in solemn warning before him. Some Ohio couples are making a good ALSO, THE CELEBRATED mules, Jacob having no harness. past. I should not cal) it an earthquake, Rapidly these thoughts went The husTh A ] ic 7 After helping him awhile, it was conet it resembles if in some respects. thing out of the liquor law. his mind. “If the boy That is, when you rise in the morning, band buys whiskey, shoots at his wife, sidered not at all safe for my wife to be throught so much alone at our Willow wick-e-up. falls, he will not have me to blame,” say about 6 o’clock, the first thing you wallops his children, and the saloon For Coal and Wood, : It caused Jacob much uneasiness, and it and then in tones such a Demand through the Territory, tremulous with discover isthe dust at a distance resem- keeper comes dowa with a $100 rather Whichfor has Beauty and Excellence, cannot be . was determined that I and my family emotion, and te the astonishment of bling the up heavings of Vesuvius ; but than stand a prosecution. surpassed. should move to another similar stream, on nearer approach and closer exuminaAli our Steves are Kept and for Sake eight miles higher up the big wash, call- those who knew him, he said, ‘, Wai- tion, we find to our great surprise it is b Cc. M. E. and ali its Branch and from that Gwilliam’s & Co.’s new threshing maed the “Men na Coppe,”’ where the Ori- ter, Pll take water;” Stores. ESTRAY NOTICE. bees have a farm, and. where were seyday to this, strong drink has been chine, making terrible havock among the Also by all the Co-operative Stores in the i 30- Om straw and chaff separating the wheat eral women and quite a number of men, banished from that man’s house. HAVE IN MY POSSESSION THE FOLLOWEviror OcpeNn ‘SESTEY’? ORGAN Juncrion Cloth for Wool! EXCELSIOR MILLS, NEAR -— OGDEN crry, x Kte., Ete, EREAD’s SHOE SHOP! Ke- Opened Business OPPOSITE MY OLD STAND, GEORGE W. TURNER, Books, Periodicals, Mag- Ara =a e eee AN COOKING STOVE, STOVE SANTA CLAUS ) COOKING Tubee, the chief of the Ori- times inside.and out. They blankets and raise cotten and food. their the’mé¥e manufacture part of their glothing and own woo from the chaff at the rate of about 75 bushels per hour, and doing first class ; An Akron (Ohio)cat, relying upon work. “We feel thankful that we have some his nine lives to save him, allowed enterprising men in our settlement who his tail to swell, his spine -to curve, will furnish reapers. threshers and other and, with the ‘banner ery of hell” machinery to carry on the work that is -emenating from his jaws, waded into necessary for Hooper, without having to abuzz saw in rapid motion. The eall on other settlements to assist us in cat was never seen again, but the this respect. For the past three or four weeks there buzz sawyer, who always stood with been considerable sickness here his mouth open while at work, re- has among the children and also the adults. marked to his assistant that-he could Fhe summer complaint, sore throat, “taste fiddle-strings and sausage meat cholera infantum and scarlet fever, has | been raging considerably in our midst, in the qit that morning.” , —_—_——__+o———————— ing described animals, which if not claimed and taken away within ten days from present date, will be sold to the highest responsible bidder, at the District Stray Pound, at Ogden, Weber county, Tuesday, September 9th, 1873, at 2 o’clock, P * 10.t : 4 One red and white speckled ox, 6 years old, red ears, illegible brand on right ribs. and left thigh. One brown ox, 6 years old, illegible brand on right ribs; two under bits off right ear and crop off left; branded = on right hip. Ogden City, Aug. 30th, 1873. WILLIAM N. FIFE, District Pound keeper. 292-1 874-2 3a See. G. Whitehead’s Advertisement. 2-ly The world is: full of Children erying for FicLAIN'S Candied St DOP YRIGHTSD, ae notimpaired. MeLain’s Castor Itis delicious, effective ‘and harmiless.. The repulsive taste and smell of the Castor Oi! is entirely overcome. Hs cathartic powers are Price 25 cents. , Vermifuge Bonbons Are elegant and effective, They resemble Cream Bonbons kept in confectioners’ shops. Childrer love them and cry forthem. Price 25 cts. per box. - . For Sale by Z. C. M. I. And all other druggiata, g35-ly. anirhitins mieten including bees and his wife, ‘‘Ta lash nim ki,” (Dawn of the Morning.) . Oribec is one of the towns of the Moque or Pueblo Indians We therefore moved up to this Oribee farm. 2 It does not suit my present purpose to give much of @ description of these people, suffice it that I found them very industrious, kind, polite, hospitable, virtuous, just, cleanly and intelligent, living in neat stone houses with flat roofs, the walls plastered inside and some- |