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Show n . . . ' ' V . - J 1 DeetelUuve,4-ty''- - ( I s y WW 1 1 y 1 i La I J? I tLss i XB Published TrifWeekly. Vol. II. Ephraim City, San Pete County, Utah, Tuesday, Juno 30, 1831. ' Ho-10- . members of the "Mormon" chu.cli who have musical talent an d are willu g to devote the same in ihe seivues of the choir under winch thev leceive their in-- I si ruction 'I he invitation at present is more for young men llian ladies; though very good supianos and altos will be madj welcome. Those wishing to avail themselvei of this excellent opportunity should not hesitate until it is too late, as new memheis cannot be admitted once the class is in working older, and it a ill doubtless be two or three years befote another sim.lar class is started. The instructions will include a course n read ing music, foiming and contioliii g the voice, chorus singing and oratorio. The Juvenile class will begin at 4 o'clock 011 Friday next. Childru must not come if their nams have not been pieviously given to brother Stephens by either patent or choir ineuioers. Dtsint A'tws: TA13ERNACLE C1I0IK. There w is a g od attendance of the Tabernacle choir last light. About iweuiy-riv- e young men (bass and tenors joined, and tils fust night ol the naming school will lie next Monday, it should be understood that while this school is open to a l choir members and such others who have cood voices as will a ?p!y in tune, it is not ihr wn open to the public indiscriminately; but only t suaimons. In the Juure's t'ciirt of Poiintau Gresn liciiut, San Wte t.uh Teriil.iry. Junn Out! rlaiDiiff, I ' V Demand. Jt.imDot J'eferi'la.it. ) vts. To John Due. me n.mt is otherwise unknown, Von aif hereby iiimminrj to awd before me tliaurKei.igiisu.ai i.iy oiiice inKountaittCreeo pre-cinct Saa wir couniv, . is.i lerntcry, on tri.lay Hit 3id day t! July A 1 ),:)i at 10 o'c Iik k a. in. to tD-- i fcwer a canir'amt i;iin you by will plaintiff uo lutle send A il, TBlJl. haid actim: i bi..ua;ht to re from you the mm of 50 coh i.n the foliowia desrtiued animals, for damages dona on saui riaiiiliK s property in Fountaiu oieen pieciiKt. together with cots iu feeii in auL.care at said animals and cost, of tint suit tu: i Cn Sarre! horse ahaut2 ar 3 year o!d, white it.tr in tore.head llranded m on left thigh and ry 0,1 rit,ht thigli. Said arimaii ara now held at tha premises of Geo' C'rowiaert premises in Konutain leen I'tecinct. And jp are hereby nou'ied that if yau fail to ap-pear anC1 answei a auuve required, the plailititi vriii taka julinent availiM you for the said sum of 50 CIS. t"getiiej ith feeduij and caie of said animals atjd costs afth,, ktlit. Civaa uader tny hand this ath day af Juae A. I. h. r:. hank n,)h. iustica of tliepaaca Fountain Ciretu 1'tai.iact Rupture can be Cured w& Guaratntet givn whn liMirel. or Citculir. U"rit or Cil. BIRCH TRUSS COMPANY, OTFICLS: Room 206 & 07 Second Floor, Connthution Block, Main St., Salt I.ak. Citj, Utah. TO THE FRONT AGAIN. The (Jbampion Binders and Mowers at J0I111 WilHaras Supt MnyfielJ Co-op- . Grant Bros, company, General Agents. SBuy tlio Silver Brand Crackorej They Arc The Best Made at the Utah Cracker Factory, SALT LAKK CITY. H. WALLACE, Uinacm. Gil fn.ii I! 01 1 il, . Salt Lake city. Dealers in Groces, ardware) and --7:,- Always on Ilan.l of th First Quality a full line of StapU and Groccriei, rruviions, '1'obacco ami Cigari. rcj KjOHLtt Woccbhad. c.Kia l3Uair..i.h.d.bro. mc'JVa Briakfaat, dXTJ, OurNew l.,s,,,,Up konay Vounf by.o.. japii Season Teas art tuarantead to jivs parfect aatlsractiaa In varf raap lunnington co GrOCeiiSS. ,Salt Lak CitY ?Ur SDiCfici Dric(i and Canned Fruita. o(INt JHAC$T)o A full fresh and .compleU HHortraent of everything uiullyi gold in ous-lint..- buy our good direct from firit hands far canh, and connqu ntly. b"7 at th Very Lowest Prices. Kru ,llak our custc.nvtrg' interest! our owa, by warrentlng evary art!-cl- e w Bell, and if it does not prove satisfactory, rafund tha money, IfflTWe tan and do tell tha Bait Good- - for tha I.tatt mon.y, and ara cos ii!!iiii'a convinc verybody of that fact jjho will giva ut a tria Ounningtoa co ifllSJa IllFFefl! IllFFll HllFFel!' Wire-Work- THE II, A. TUCkETT Caiidj Co Salt Lake City Uts.li Lave a Whole Car Load of them Wait for oar quotations. Spci&l attention to town display orders. ' Big Discount 011 large orders. . Euy H. A. Tuckstt's Candies. Simon Bros. WHOLESALK . Millinery Furnishings Agents for the Doscret Wcollsn Pullman Palace JfellfeSfe I). C. DODGE, Jllpr Wli-llWWa- w I.OCAI. SERVICIi BKkAILWAYv. ' I jo " ?faulf l.vl:o y Time Till)!, r. Efffft June 14 . En tt Bound. wast Sennet. Aitoetic Uail Atiaotie Facie Mall Paslic tipra 8.30 a m 0,45 p 111 l,v 0ticaf Ar 3,15 am 6,00 pm i 9:40 " 9;?!) " Ar Sat Lake Lv t;io " 4143 " " 9,50 " io;i5 " l.y " " Ar i;55 " 4J3S " I ii;i " it;4o " Lv Prcvo Ev UJ30 ." 3;ia 5o5lJni 5545 a ni" Green River " SoS P m !45 ( 9i3 " c:45amAr Grand Junction " ;3o " 4J40 " h - i;o; , m 1525 p m " Gleir'-'oo- Springs " njiaara ij8 5i35 " 7)2 " " " 6,55 " 9;00 P 12:35 pm 2;3oam " Pueblo " ii;45Pm JiS " f ;25 " 4J20 " ' Colo S; riv.S3 " to ;15 " U.SS ' I ' 1 155 " 7:30 " " Denver " --jW " 9;o a j Claims For Indian Depredations. The undersigned ate now pre-pared to recover compensation to persons in Utah Territory, fur the loss of property through Indian de-predations V'e will collect your claim or make no charges. Call a once. Jacob Johnson,olTice Spring Citv, Utah. f Ferdinand Enckson, office Mt. Pleasant City Utah,. Spring City, April 22, a. d. 1891 out ol his pocket a packnue of letters and tned to shove them in the cook stove, but McN'air was too quick for him ' and seemed the letiers. He brought him to Olvmph.a, and he is hjvv in the steel cell at the old jail, lie is a small thin, insinifie.-in- specimen of the noble Roman. He dot-- s not deny now that he is wanted i'i Colorado, to which place he will go as soon as Sheriff Steward arri-ves. A very sad accideat occ tred vesierday (Thtusday) nvjruiiiir, at Ivist I Cteek. where .Samuel W Oliver, the nineteen year old son of Brotner Samuel Oliver, jS acc dontally drowned in the upps-- canal, i lie residci.ee of the family is near the water. About half past seven o'clock the deceased h td just made to go with the Sunday School on an excursion to Calder's larm, and went to water the horss. His father saw him at that fane standing; pn the biid.'e. A few minutes later the hotse came toward the house, but the boy was nowhere to be seen. A search was im-mediately instituted, with the result that the dead body of the unfortunate lad was found in the canal more than a quar ter of a mile from the place where he had fallen in. He. was slightly bruised on the forehead and also on the nose. The suppos.tioii is that the deceased, while watering the horse was seized with a fit a malady from which he had oc-casionally suffered since lait Christmas, and had fallen into the water in tliis con dition. H jti. John L. Sullivan, the actor not a actor nor an actor has decided to abandon the stajje w hen tiis present en-gagement expires and to the proles.suin ol prize fighting. At least thi is the gentleman's latest ultimatum, as expressed bv telegraph the other Mr. Sullivan says he has hen waiting to see what the result would be between Corhett and Jacks, .n and Slaviu and Killraiu before announcing his plans He felt that Kiltiin would come out vic-torious in the contest with Slaviu. He ihinks that which ever man wins will leel anxious to meet the Coibett. If the battle takes place in the neu future Sullivan says that he will meet the win-ner. Sullivan expressed himself as well satisfied with his present position. He has made a great deal of money in his theatrical venture the past season and fee's tli.r n Aa tialian trip will net him a Rood sized barrel. But John's future fiiht1riilW-t-Uiirtuilen)a- ii order with small chast gloves and a stated number of rounds. In behalf of the pro fession Mr. Sullivan weextend the of the season; when you retire from the dramatic profession you will leave a void; a void that may nor. ache but one that makes others ache, and ihat cannot be filled. Faiewell! St. Louis, June 12 Police investigation has developed the tact that the riot at Chains of Kocks Sunday m iming was not the re-iii- of a factional fight between Italians but arose from hard leelings caused by the arrival of Italians at the camp. A raid was made by the Ameri can workmen. Tne Italians were driv-en Irom the camp, their valuables and nioney coi.fiacated by a gang ol Ameri-can laooiers making an attack and a rice panic inaguraltd. So serious were the pioporiinus asssumed bv the affair that the Italian consul, Giniochi, Harri-ga- n at the lour couits demanding police protection for his countrymen and the beginning of an official investigation. The contractor at the works has also asked lor police protection. There are likely to b serious consequences arising from the bodily anti-Italia- n raid and a rigid and searching investigation is now under way. Some of the American lab-ore-thought to have been implicated are alieady under arrest. The Italian laborers duven irom the camp are now iu reluge in this city Whisky played a prominent part in the plav and the "Ala-lia cry" was used as a means of exciting the American workmeti to attack the Italians. THE OILY MORMONS. "I can tell you this," said Mr. C II. Schen of Salt Lake City, at the St. James last night, "we have in Ulall the coining state ot the West Eastern capital is a little chary just now on account of the Mormons but the Vormons are the most pi a.edofailthepiopleto welcome stran gets aud aie rapid.y becoming convert-ed,- " Mr. Schen is the leading silver mining man in the Tintic district, eightv miles from Salt Lake City, and was formerly; located at Aspen. The Tintic il stncl.lie found r.;h. At a depth 335 ' iriJl was struck and the transportation t f ore by wagon to Salt Lake caused tne mines to be abandoned. A year ago thev were opened by Colorado parties and are proving very tenumerative. Sev-eral Denver captitalists are inteiasted in the new district. Reverly, Mass., June 32 A horrible ciime was committed in lieverlv Waren A Shaw, whose wife keeps a boarding house on Home street entered it and shot Robertson in the back while be was talking with Shaw's 13 yar old daughter iu the kitchen- - Arthur C. Mor gan, another boarder received two bul-lets in his breast aiid"one in the thumb. Shaw's daughter inteifered and was beaten over the head with the butt of the revolver The would-b- e murderer fled and was collarded bv his daughle; Lizzie, at whom Shaw fired a shot which lodged in her leg. Officer Raymond pursued Shaw and caught him, when Shaw turned the revolver on himself and blew out his brains The cause of the shootins was iea ousy, Shaw claim-ing that Morgan was intimate with his wife and Roberts with his daughter, the story having been told hirn by a servant employed in the family Washington, P., June 22 While bath-in- ' in Roa ;'s pond near here this after-noon, John McKeown, Walter Jones and John Challis, bovs ranging in age from 8 to n years, were drowned, young Chal lis dived from a plank, strikmi: the bot-tom and was drovvned. when John Mc- Keown dived to save him. The half un-conscious boy grasped McKeown tightly fettering li s aims. Heroic little Walter (ones did not l.esitate a moment, but leaped in to save his two little friends, but was himself overcome, and all three clasped in e.ich otheis arms wiit to the bottom Y'.uiik McKeown was son of late John McKeown, the ten times mil-lionaire oil king and the boy was worth i 1 his own riht 54.000,000, being his lathers favorite son. Challis was a nephew of the dead Mi-llionaire, and Walter Jones the son ol Kev. J. I Jones. prs:dir.g elder bf the Washington district of the Methodist Episcopal church. Olympia, Wash June 20 Sheriff Prino to-da- y received a telegram from Sher f! K. C. Stewaid of Cannon City, Coo, to arrest one Frank Salvo, alias Loienzo Auninona at Bucado, as he was wauttd i n murder. Deputy Sheriff McNair w; s dispatched to Bucado and found Saivo in an Italian boarding house. He had been there for some weeks, having come from Oregon, "Your name is Salvo and sometimes Auninoua," said Mc Nair to the Italian when he had arrested him. Salvo began lo tremble adJ made denials, lie pu!i- - News Iiemfu Cole CitV, Ga June 32. The prisoners at the convict camp twenty miles Irorn Chattanooga, Tenii at tempted to c -- ape this morning and in the mslee ti. . fol-lowed two guards and two convicts were killed. Houston, Tex., June Caldwell was sentenced to d tv to be hanged in private on July 2t. He Is the man convicted of the assassination of Dr. Shamblin; in Foit Band county Aug-ust ibiiS. St. Petersburg, Jane 22 Yesterday a x.-- ' Jarre haloun was being inflated with g-- s when it escaptd and earned upward four workmen. vVheti at a great height the baloon burst and the four men were thrown to the ground and horribly man-gled. Munich, June 22. An explosion of gas took place last night iu the Munich thea-ter Three men were severely injuied bv the explosion. One of the injured men cannot survive. Immediately after the explosion the theater was discover ed to be ou tire, and before the tiames were extinguished the building was bad-- y damaged. Petersburg, June 23 A band of brigad-es attacked and robbid a nia.I coach near the villageof S tian in Russian Cac-casi- a killing two travelers and seveilu wounding the postilion. The brigands then attacked ai.d robbed the coacu and ihtn escaped wuh Ihe booty. A squau-dro-ot Cossacks have been sen. in pur-sl- it of the outlaws. O'den, Utah. June 24. -- The cily was startled this moinmg with the cry of fire and it was soon ascertained lhat Uie Territorial Reform school was ab!aze. Tnt fire brigade was promptly 011 tne scene of the confligratiun, but too late to save the nui'ding, which is in petiect ruins Tne loss is about $50,000. All the inmates escaped with their lives, 1 he ori "in t the tire is not known, but there is a"siloug suspicion that it was slatted by an incend arv Ogden has been in-fested by a lot of evil disposed people and tramps of late, and it is thougut the crime may yet be traced to its origin. Our citizens greatly dcploie the loss, '. UPvattnd though the building was partly 11- 1- tusiil, ii is also a loss to the territory. The inraites will oe giVen temporary rooms in the county jail. j SUMMONS. In th4 Justices Couit of Fountain Graan Fracinct San lVgt county, Temlory ot Utah. Arch L.fiuk'slon rlainlilf, J vs Demand. John jl', lcfen. taut. ) 50 els. t'n Jqhii Due wliusa name is otheru iss unknowa Greeting. You ic hereby summoned lo be aiui appear hefiira me the un.i.er..iiieil, at mv oitn.e in Kuutain tjreen Precinct, sail i'cle C.oumy, on the. 3rd. day of July A. O. 18 ji at o'i lock t. in. ot said dav toaiuwer a comtitaiiu filed against you by said plaintiff, ou June 2znd. A. It, ian ' Said action is tmiiiiit 10 recover from you tha sum 50 cents.iiei tie.ol fui diiiiMes done hv the followiutf describe i.niml on sid t.laiutiffs nopi'ity ta rri inrt.toeilier wall ( onts in lrai;in and care of batd animais and in tins Couit, w,.-- Osc dai k bay marc aWul 7 yeani old, rijiit hinJ fot hhte. branded .S It ou telt ihibh. Hai i animai is held-a- t tieora l'reuuses in Fjuataia Gretn lixin:t. Andyouare hereby notified lhat if vou fail to so appear and answei a alioe reiiiiied, the pUmtifl will take judgement ai;Aiust you for the laid Sum of fitly cents together with costs in feeding anst cure at said animals and rusts of suit. Givafiyuder uty hand ;hut ii4th, day of Jant A. D. IScji. j :' H. C. Ham Both t Justice nf tha Paare Ft. tireen lhecmct. I JOW ABOUT DISFRANCHISEMENT? We put this question to the leaders ol Liberal party, individually and collec-tively: How do you stand on dislian-c- . i ement? 1 tiey have said the Liberal party has vet a mission to preloim, What is that musioi.? It is to attempt to disfranchise and outlaw the whole Mormon peoole? What is it that the Libeials are urjjed to hold together loi? W hat is the mean nig ol the oft repeated expiession ol the Libeial otgan that the victory is now almost wot ? What "victory" is ihit? Do the Liberals still assent to the fol-lowing doctrine? 1 lie Saints must either come within the law oi must find Some otner ,spot in which to cany out their puiposes Did they ever stop to think that theie persecutions have not yet really com-menced? Suppose the next step shall be to deny the Saints the light to enter iands, and to attack the tittles and allreadv secured lo land? the government through the machinery ol the law, may outlaw and disinherit them Tribune, March 26h liiBq. Is it still proposed, "the machinery of. the law" to"oullaw and disinherit" the Mormon people? Is this the pun shment contemplated by the lanatics w ho are leading the Libeial party intlict upon the Mormons for their latest "crime" dis banding tne People's party? Let us hear at once Iroin the Liberal party how it now stands on dislrauchise-men- t. 4 J The heads of men aire growiriif Jarg'ef," said a Broadway hatter to a New Voik Telegram repoiter, as ne sold a 7J hat to a small man. "Thirty year ego." ha continued, "when I fiist went into the business theaveuge size ranged lrom6j to6j. Ol couise, there were plenty oi men with laiger heads, but that was the average size. Alost of our custonieisbuy his nowadays 111 size fiom 7 to 7J, aud yet the men thirty years ago seemed to Have just as much brains as the men of Tne moat singular thing about the hat trade is the ability of a firstclass salesman to jtid,je of the nationality of his customer by the shape of his head. We Americans have long, narrow heads. It used to be that when an American head came in for a hat, if it was long euough tor him it would be very likeh too wide at the sides, or if it fitted at ill sides it had to be pulled out at the ends. Hut we now have hats fcr the heads of alll nationalities. "Where a German head comes in we jump tor the boxes filled with hats es-pecially made lor round heads The ueads of Englishmen are irregular in shape, notwithstanding the c r.serva:um ol the nation, lush heads are the most easiiy fined. They are oval iu shape. Most small men requite large hats, aud there are a great many large men who wear small tiles It is a noticeable lact, huwever, that as the wotld grows older the heads of Englishspeaking people are growing more and more alike, aud the siiape is tending towaid the long-heade- Ameiican head, all teports to the con traiy." 4 I NOTICE of intuition to tnalc application for a permit to cat umW upon the Public iliueml land. undr act ! Manh ird, it.;!. '1 v all whom it may emicarn. Kotite is herelty given that immediate. y afttr tha jHtV.tta.tion hereof fur thi re wnk. as required by saki ot, the tmeersigncd will make application t the Htm. Secretary ofthe Interior t Washinytan U. C.or a permit to cut and nmuvs pino & fir i imber ftAsa tract of the unsurveyed Mineral Landi f mtJs;ULeji, liiusited about evn milt in rrc Parliild:,r'y described luilows, twit: I Vemniig at a rock monument on the Souta, RR?rVii Usk 0ek about four inilea easterly ana. above the point tvhere said creek ciom the Kanftt line between J'p 13 b. K. 4 c I K.; theuca up nid crct-- alioiit kifchty chain! l the junction of tut sec-ond fork ofsaidcieck abave tui motminent; thenca up said Fork nbout tweuty chaini, to a second rock moaiimcni, thence sout1iwsterly about 15,00 cliaiat to a third monument thenca westerly along a iina 80 chainsihuiih of and parallel with said k Creek and second fork, to a faurtu monument; tbencs north 5.00 chains to the plata of beginning containing auuut B50 acres. Swen Ole Nielioa Gorf. Tucker i'ost otfice Adress Fairvicw San Pete Co. Utah T. C. liailey Attoiay for Applies First I'ubl canon June 6th ifli, NOTICE. id intention to make application for a permit to cut timbor upon the Puulic Mineral lands, under act of March jr3. 1891. To whom it may concern. Notice is hereby given thafimniediately after tin publication hereof for three weeks as re quired bv said rc(, tiie undersigned will make application to the Hon. Secretary of the interior at Washington L. C, for a permit to cut and ramove pine & fir timber from a tract ol the unsurveyed Mineral lands ol the United States, situated ab ut five jn;les north r st of Fairview ianpete County Utah Territory and in Tp. 13 S. 5 E. of Salt Lake Meridian. Uesciibed as follows to wit. commencing at a certain bridge in Oak Creek Cannon which is located just above what is known as the narrows, about one and one hall miles from the mouth of said cannon up the cteek, thence up said Oak Creek about one mile to the point Large Junction, thence up said Junction (or right band fork) about 300 yards lo a rock niotiuntneut, thence north one quarter of a mile to rock monument, thence east one quarter of a mile to a third rock monument llience south one hall of a ti ile to fourth reck monument thence west along the top ol the rise about one and one quarter of a mile to rock monument, thence north to place of beginning, containing about 300 acics mot or less. C. O. Prtersun, Ole Niklson. P. O. adiess Fair.Mew Sanpete Co. Utah. First Publication June 6 1S91. SUMMONS- - In the Justices Court ot Milbum Precinct ian Tctt County, 't erritory nf Utah. Kclorefteo, A. (abriskia Justice (the Peace. Isaac A. Allied Plaintiff. I vh V Summon John Poa, Defendant I 'i'ojuhn Doc wh.se name il otherwise unknown defendant . You are hereby requested to appear before this Caurt.onthe and day of July A- II- loar, at to o'clock of said (lay to answer a complai'it filed against you, wherein said plaintiff claims the sum ot ai.oo, dama-ges caused by your animals trosjiatsing on his prem-ises, at Milhura Precinct. Said animal is described as follows to wit: One bay horse about 9 years aid ear marked, also saddle marked braad restinblinie , on lufi tlnih. ' (combined) And you are hereby notified, that if you tail to sr appear and answer as Hoove required the plaintiff will take judgment against you fur ii.oj the aniouni of snid damage, the cost ot keeping said Muintal a4 cost of this suit. Dated this aoth day of June iSor. Geo. A. ZAFUtrHKlE. Justice of the Peace. A FLURRY IN SILVER. Dispatches from New V'otk stale that the execut.ve committee of the National Silver Association met in that city on the xyth ii.st. Its proceedings will not be published It appears however, that financial circles aie more or less excited owing to new development in the silver trade. The pi ice ot bullion in the New York market took an upward tuiii a few days ago. il is said that there are two European pools in silver at woik' The United S ales produced in 1S90 62 938. S3 1 ouiiccs oi silver.The Government Oought 54,000,000 ounces lor Coinage in accoid it.ce w ith the silver bill of 1690. Mexico produces annually 40,000,000 ounces of silver, of w hich 25,000 shipped ot Ch ua and Japan. The puce of s Iver bullio 1 touched $i per ounce on the 19th inst. What is the leal Sonne of this movement, financiers have not as ye, fully explained. The theorv, howevttt o na'.iis that European speculators n a tic pation of the passage of an mil mi jd Mlver coinage b.ll by the next Con grrss, are forming pools to control ihe aiivei supply .jI the country. Something s miliar was done by hume speculaiois before the silver hill of rSyo became l.iw, and the lesuit was a use in bullion, aiui lemporaty suingeucy in money centres. Vtseret AVst'i. NOTICE of intention to make application for a Permit to cut timber upon the public minerl under act of f larch the 3 1S91. To Whom it may concern, notice is hereoy given that immfdiatlv after the publication hertol lor three weks as re-quired by ai act. lh undersigned will make applic lion to the Hon. Secrmory of toe iuteiiot at Washington I) C for a permit to cut and iciiiove pine & fir timber Irom a tract of the public mineral lands of the United St e situated abuti'. Eight milas East of f air-vie- Sanpa'e County Utah te iritoty and being in Tp,H S.Sli of S.L.matrdian.dtt Ciil.'ed as iollous to wit. Regiuiiifiaiarock inonumant ion yards E frtnii a cirtain Saw mill owned byHaid applicant and located in tha N. fork of Boulger canyon thence 40 rods S.tlianca So rodsW. thance 40 rods N thtnee J) rods East to place of Beiinme con-taini-sbout ao acres more or las. Swen Oi n Neii.sow. P. O. Atlress Fairview Sanpete Co, Uta'a First Publrcation June 6 1891. |