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Show What Fairview Thinks of the Dispatch. Tiie Dispatch reaches us regularly now, and it is a dandy, I tell you. It It 13 hardly 'ike tha same paper that it was when I kst rs'.v i. iv. the first part CiJins. Yo-j i ;re doing weii. and an conducting r. paper row that is sure to "take." I wisii yov unbounded auo-ce;s. auo-ce;s. '.7c all fity the Enquirer. If ycu coi'tir.n?, yra hre sur3 to do, cur p-.tper found in every iio.'ue,' rcV Tin Dispatch merits the patr -ai;3 cr tiia people. Il'hio dreaded U'-ise, diphtheria, has visited Fairview. Some tew LI. victims to it, and it was thought that the disease had disappeared from us. But it has again broken out, and claimed another victim, five years old. There are quarantine "regulations," bitt it savors ,too much of the sympathetic sympa-thetic kind, and hasn't the proper effect. The city officers are censured for "favoritism" "fa-voritism" in this regard, and it is claimed that they are too neglectful of the needs of certain ones under quarantine. quar-antine. Uxco Voco. Fairview, Utah, Julv 20, 1891. |