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Show . Lf LAKE EVENING CHRONICLE iATUHIAY- 7......N - ANI II.1NK4 N. iVEMUKIl !" II.INKKIl4. - Him. L. P. Poland, of Versiioal, a Banker'" An member nf the sociuiiuii, adilreatied ila lwt August ihwI in; in cmintctinn with ilia nwilulitai whU'h wwh imr diuxil &ul re f lh ferretl lo a cummin.' at oiib nmociulinn. ilia of meetings proviunx ComJliiolivJ, "That llie Executive mittee be directed to ascertain: (1st.) The laws in the several States in reard to commercial paper, and especially the .21.J variation and differences therein. Whether. under the constitutional power commerce given to Congress to ''regulate comamong the several Slates, it is not law enact petent i'r Congress to governing commercial paper drawn in in one State upon a another, or made in ono Stale and in another; ao that am-- laws shall lie uniform throughiml the nation. (Ud.J Whether it be expedient for Congress to exercise eucli power if the Constitution (oofers it. .Tu.lge'lolauri staledjliiut a voliiininous hill had lieen prcjiartil and sent to liitu at the last session of Congress, covering the minls embraced in the aforesaid res olntion. It remained with many oilier hills unacted upon. It is well known by business inen having 'connection with banks, that great einbarrasNincnls have ' fXricnocil the thromjh liccn diversity of the laws in different Aini-ri-n- ity inv-abl- uegntiable pater, eswlicre pecially jiaper is drawn by a party living in one State upon a party in another SlJtc, or .where all tho parlies live in one State bill tho paicr is payable in relates largely another. This tlivcn-ilto days of grace, to paper falling due on Sunday or legal holidays, and ns to how anil wlicn notice is to lie given, with ail the various stejw to charge cinlurxers. In lcganl lo such iitvsuh1 paicr there exists diversity of decision in State cuiiiisas lo the law of which Stale should the imsseaseJ govern. It Congress ami or I'arlianicnl Itritisli tho power could' constitutionally pass tho hill in ipirstion, or if every State would jaw, it ami thereby make it uniform throughout the country, Judge Poland of expressed the opinion that it would iucalculable benefit. The gcuaral subject of contracts, who may make them, how they shall be made, how evidenced what are legal and what illegal, etc., are allwiihin the legislative jiower of the States, lint in the niwer given to Congress, "to regulate commerce with foreign nations nml among the several Stales," Jmlge Poland found ample authority lor Congress to leg'slale with regard lo !hI,;-Ihpaper, that is, when drawn in one Stale oil a party in another, or when all tha parlies live in one State amt the paper is mule payable in another. In such cases it reined eloar that Congress may provide hr a uniform national law, as lo presentation, notice, days of grace, As to paper which is not , protest, etc. inlet Mitts on ils foiv, but which is lined and negotiated in connection with commerce among the States, the same power, in the judgment of Judge Poland, may So long as a bill of exbe exercised. change drawn in Xcw York upon a hulk aeroLM the river in Jersey City mic4 lie treated us a jmviij, i bill, so long I here will be uecessiir of a general movement towards the unification of tha law of hills and other branehe-- ' i f the law merchant in the transaction of banking throughout the I'ninn. Slaton fllhi-tiii- T1IK ONK THINO LACKING. Thu exuri.ises at tho funeral of J'r. McKenxie yesterday were every way ami interesting, and theie has but one tiling lacking. 1 r. ire Will, ii is true, made brief mention of the fact that Dr. McKenxie iiad been a Union sailur and t flicer, but it is nut lo lie expeclel that a minister or layman who has never iarlici paled in the purils, the and the nieniorus f a prlriotic I'nion soldier's life, can ever fully under-t.nbow iiiiivli that life euiints with biui, wild her living nr dying. It is the duly, and it should lie the privilege, of every Grand Army Post, especially where the relations request it, to p2j proper raped to a dead soldier l.y atitendisg in a body and reciting At Lis funeral the beautiful burial service of the Oilier. The service itself, aside from its reference to the soldier, is so much su)rior in its insentispiring and elevating religious ments to the average dreary anJ deexerei-'es- , that pressing extempore funeral it might well be used in every possible case, lint when a veteran union sailor like Dr. McKenxie, warred by wounds received in fighting for the llag, is permitted to go lo his grave wilhout a soldierly word or farewell prayer by comrades in the war, there is something essential and appropriate lacking. A Post of the G. A. P.. should stand fur something beside regard for numbers or like Salt holiday show. In Luko, where there was not pstriotism sufficient to furnish a singlo Union soldier, and where at present there is baptised and priestly endorsement and teaching of disloyalty to the government throughout tiie entire Islimaclilikh ranks, it is not to I ex)ieetcd that Union lint those soldiers will las plentiful, who are here arc doubly responsible for the doing of their whole duty to their living and dead iiimrades. The flag lieiiculh which they periled their lire slmiilJ wave over their graves anil soldier voices lieiiealh it should sicak and rlmnt the last xoieiun words of farc-el I. The true soldier is an anointed priest at llie altar of patriotism, it is his right and duly to magnify his profession and speak as lie uione can for a brother For ourselves, soldier at his grave. when the final end shall come, we desire that the old flag shall enwrap our coflin and that one soldier ul least may be found ( read the burial service of tho Grand Army of llie Republic, and place the white ruse, tiie wreath ami the laurel in their appropriate places, nuJ this, we it is tiie iHuindeu duty of every do if previously desired by a deto post ceased soldier or his friends, and this too of the uidir or whether he be a not. bus-ini- '" Admitted assassination and murders in this city a:.d cold-blool- Terri- tory stand as tho ineffaceable monuments of pricstir iiatrctl and sectarian venom. They are not so common now as formerly, hut the vindictive spirit r inanifiMrd hr tiie Clinreh nra organs of this city towards Mr. J. M. Goodwin sliows Imw easily a crop of murders could spring up on such conI'nless Mr. Goodwin lias genial noil. !:' evidence iminling toward individuals, lie does wrong in charging the mysterious death f his son 11)1011 Mormon or Gen- tile. Iut lie lias the right, in with hundreds common of to ia (ids city, others Micro that Ids non came to his death hr foul means rather than by his owu hand. Thu suicidal theory is surrounded with more difiieulties and open to more iliuii the o)iMiile one, to the eil'i i t that the iiiifortiiuatc man waa ir carried to the daee of conceal muil Iht hi- - lusty was fonnd, and that eidil Mimd was ell'ected !ii murder i ii'i.l hi ule to in lieale a suicide. Time w'lth its revenges, and remorse with its diseliotires. may h rvafter throw light ii;uu this MihhIv work, l.et its wait. 11 Welcome to glon. Rev. .1. R. of a whose recent ac n'.l to the pulpit of the tl.nri-- of this citv has Thrall, veplnni-- Cmgregsti-'iia- l already Mii am o meed to the readers of the Ciii'.-ni- i i.k, we learn is a graduate of AnibeniK'.illi-uand Yale Theological Seminary, and a minister of fire His work hitherto standin;. yean been has mainly with a church in IVrliy, LVnn , numbering about ICO members, and wliieli lie took under disand held until couraging circniusinni-eit was thoroughly united and on ils feet. Ilia resignation was a surprise and 1 great atrrow to llie whole community. But all along his heart has been in the West where more abundant growth waa From a possible. number of invitations lie cluae this one, and comes to Zion credited with a large and generous public spirit, abundance of enthusiasm, ami hunger for hard work. Several article from Ida ien hive recently appeared, which indicate no slight independence and originality of thought, coupled with a Idling way of Ami certainly Mr. iMliug things. Thall'Will find in Salt Lake a fine field ill which to expend Ids aggressive energies, as well as appreciation for his lied efforts. W are pulpit and that every good work will 1 new impulse from bis advent among iw, a al f,l FROM ALL QUARTERS. A More Colonization of Colorado by Mormon Converts. Cholera tons by tlm Slate Lillie CIiuukm iu llie Unviiwil Itrt liras. Tho Mautl Muriltr. Sjieclsl to Chronicle. Mami, Nov. lo. The case of John charged with Farmer and John the murder of liana Ottosen, ii just completed in the Justicell Court, apd both are bound over to await the action of the Grand Jury; bail ii fixed at 0,000. The Tvuu tooto JKsmAii for Colorado. St. Lons, Nov. 15. A large number of Mormons were at the Union depot thi morning who "had arrived from Chattanooga, Tenn, and were op their way to Colorado. The crowd was a pro inUcuoui one, in which the fashionably dressed mixed freely jvitli those who were shabbily clad. Nearly all the men in the party car red babies in their arms, and numerous other young ones hung abnnt and clung to their mothers apron strings. Flder Roberts, one of tiie party, said the reason the Mormons had changed settlement was because Colorado offered more advantages to people of their sect. The Mormons have established erma-nesettlements in Colorado, and no doubt a great number of those who belong to that sect will follow the present emigrants. In fact, from Elder Kobert'i conversation it looked as if there was going to be a genuine influx of Mormons ' into Colorado. Tho Jlaguo of Farit. The municipal Pa ms, Nov. 15. council yesterday voted an appropriation of 50,000 francs for the furtherance of tiie adoption uf sanitary measures in houses. A nun who had been Jirivate attending patients at asylums, succumbed to the epidemic yesterday. The Itnssian Embassy announces that a days will be quarantine of twenty-on- e required at tiie Russian frontier, in the case of persons arriving from the infected country. Cholera Freeautlouo. Washington-- , Nov. 15.' The Department cf State has directed the United at London and States Paris, to appoint medical examiners to inspect nil vessels leaving English and French ports for this country, with a view of preventing the introduction of Constiis-Ciener- chub-ru- . A per tho Count. 13, 2 p. iu. A hasty computation by the clerk in charge of the city returns, of which a canvass lias just been completed, leade him to stale tlint the plurality for Cleveland in the entire State will be 1,147. He figures that Blaine nude a net gain in tho city by the canvass of 120 votes. 13, 249; Illaino, 13,325. New York, Nov. CssMinnl Jtetnriio. New York, Not. 15. There was no material change in the count of the The THICKETS. Keulptor's Idea or What Coast itiitca a Woman. White House. v willingness to ''accompany Mr. Cleveland to Washington 0:1 tlm Lmi I h of March. of course with transportation and subsistence furnished. That dandi lied "Brigadier General I'. S. A," !. 15. Dandy, gives utterance to the waiting iniptiiencc of the ariuv which lie says, will welc.mic as Commundcr-in-Cliicf.- " Mr. Whiteman, of that far off precinct, Duliilli, grow Mack in the face as lie inje Is an implied request ft r otlice inio his congratulatory and somewhat costly telegram informing Mr. Cleveland that although lie, the said the LegislaWhiteman, is defeate I ture hr a small majority, tiie election of a l'em.K'ialic President is glory enough for one year." One extreme follows another, as ill d g said whin his head circled ro-- I in pursuit if lii tail. So Mr. Whiteman would console himself in his defeat by a "small majority, by congratulating Mr. Cleveland on his election by a still smaller majority. Rut Mr. Jacob A. Wei ford of Chicago had evidently been inhibing when lie penned his telegram informing llie disappointed Gove: nor ilrat, as 1'iesidciit-eloc- t of the United States, I hc( leave In lender my enng al illations. 'Rah for Ilciident Wcltbrd ! AIM Ii A t. Tlu-- New York Central Railway lias announced a reduction of first-clfnre lu Chicaipi and Cincinnati In 10.5ii. t. SAHIB AID The Scenic Line of tlieWorld WALKER DENVER & RIO GRANDF Established BR0THER8, Of Detroit free Press. Define a good figure?" said Mrs. A. Podlwch & Co., Prepr'a. n Detroit sculptor. the Well, a good figure is a rarity. There are so many girls w ho come to me topoee as models, end so very few who are of Haiti street, Salt Lake Citv. the least use. Their knees ure crooked and llieir arms bent and their waist j pinched in there is always something RATES (2 00. wrong. See tiiat head and trunk? That Site is shrinking away is 1roserpine. Special rates by the week. from Pluto, who is about to carry her bis be to away to the infernal regions OKS rPH! BAS IS REMOVED wife. Now, do yon know that it lock south, and Is kept first class la ev sitting! of five models to make that one ipeei. Xpree Billiard Tsblec, for tbs socomnu.il piece. Now, yon can imagine how hard it is to find a really good figure. I did tlonof guests. see a good figure once. She wu aloctxt A hut lunch will be served dallv bom 7 to perfect. You know the Venus da U p. m. Medics is supposed to be the perfection Well, this girl's figure wu of form. Had I almost identical with hers. wished to make a full sized statne I would not have changed her one iota. MAIN STREET. She wu a very wealthy girl and very indolent. Sitting always in her room in MThe Leading Family Hotel In Salt lake negligee costume and taking so little exercise, she grew to be the very perfec- City. New Hotel and Erirnilure. tion of grace. Every pose wu a study A. GREENWALD, and every move beautiful. And do yon Proprietor. know that girl laced terribly so? Site compressed her waist, I should think, uven inches smaller than it naturally was. Rnt then she wore corsets for only HOTEL, two or three hours each week, she went NEW MARKHAM out so little. She wu a very attractive HOTEL LACK of The PA Denver, Colorado, not very prettv very ruawwiihlr girl, hut will I give good figures seldom are. MISCELLANEOUS. you her dimensions. She was five feet four and a half inches high. Then che inches about the measured thirty-on- e and a half inches about but, twenty-siinches over the the waist, thirty-fiv- e hips, nine inches from the armpit to Ahe waist, eleven and a half inches around the ball of the elbow, anil six and a half inches around the wrist. Yon see, she tsnered four and a half inches Lata or Chicago, from the bust to the waist that is right. Small waisli and large hips looks horOPENED A TAILORING ESTABrible to an artist. Then her hands and LISHMENT at An artist feet acre good and large. always looks for good extremities. The foet of this girl were 91 inches long. Whit an immense hoof, do you say? Well, not to very large. 1 think it wu OPPOSITE POSTOFFrCE. a No. 4 shoe she took' Tiie hand, too, mast be long and taper, with a enrve wishes to inform the Ltdies thit he mixes Women have lie backward at the tips. besides Gentlemen's Clothing, come to me so proud of llieir hands, such tiny hands, ana yet perfect deformities, with every finger warped and crooked. COATS, LADIES TAILOR-MAD- E I should have uid, of course, that no figure can be good unless well rounded PERFECT PIT AND CORRECT STYLE. and free from angles. I must confess, that a fine, statuesque figure though, would not look well draped in the present fashion. Yes, 1 will give my idea of Samples of Goods to Choose from Two Wholesale Chicago Firms, a fine figure in the present fashion: Bust meunre, 32 inches; waist 24; 9 inches from mA8K for.. armpit to waist; long arms and long neck. collar-bone to By neck I mean from the the chin; and recollect this, I would far rather see the waist 25 incites than 23. This figure shall be 5 feet 4 inches in bight. I once saw a figure I admired a great deal that wu 84 about the bust and 2G about the waist. No Old Stock. Every Sample New. Kel-Lig- g, RAILWAY. S(f i DO A GEN KRAI The New, Popular, 224 MAIN STREET, P. VAN HOFEN, Merchant Tailor. Draw exchange on all the ROUTE Great Britain, Aufak. Denmark, German Empire, VrAJ, Ireland, hQ Bl Italy, BETWEEN Americas OGDEN, CsrrtipN . . New York, Chicago Imp,ATafo iwl. BtLoola - BtauBsitm Omaha Ban Francisco Denver SALT LAKE, GUNNISON TRY THE Merchant Tailor, Our ladllUea lor oolloctln..., lngeoimpondenta in ws and adjoining TenltertS Trans -- Continental ST. JAMES, P. VAN HOFEN, A. 0, and wdloit aooMnffi SK companies and conyjj . OaahiL , iu OenuiXi McCORNICK & CO, LEADVILLE, SALT LAKE Pueblo and Denver, 6 CITY, Transact a General Cl Bukiq At which latter points TIONS are made with trains for DIRECT CONNEC- KANSAS CITY, OMAHA And all Principal Points in the United Hlatei and Canada. On express train.com. B Butfct and After Oct. 12, 1884, PAY SPECIAL AYR) parties iwlfo WE city, and invite comofouiSr Vrcouuta. Csrefol attention given totke and bullion. We smicit esah anteeing highest nurketprira OoUeolon made, wifoiMH lowratmtra Kxeeate orders for pucksaw, and bonds at New York sal Ra Wesell exchange and Mini on leading cities of tts a3Sl fornish sight drafts or art And 1 TIIE ATLANTIC aud loopnf tiie Celebrated Coaclid and Dublin, Paris, Berlin. aMfiT(! ing Qua, also Elegant Elrst-clu- s Emigrant Bleeping Cam, will leave Ogdon and ell other promlsrtMrtta Certificates orDeyatthmsAw dally at fcOO a. m. (on arrival of train from Ban Francisco) and Balt Lake City a. ltkTu connection direct at m., making Csrrstpnaiak. atPuetdoand Denver with trains for the East, New York - Importers ATaia North and Smith. New York THE PACIFIC EXPRESS TRAIN from DenCommacUl ver, Pneblo and Eastern paints will arrive iu Chicsgo Balt Lake daily at 40 p. m. and Ogden 6:10 BanFrancisco - FlntKffia Oen-tra- l Omaha Oaiki) p. m., making direct connection with the Slat lata Pad fie Trains for Ban Francisco and tiie Btlamla Pacific Coast. LOCAL TRAINS leave Bpringville 7:15 a, m Balt lake 9:10 a. m. Returning, leave Balt Wells, & Co,' Lake 4:15p.tn arriving atSpringvlilc &25p.m. Leave Balt Lake dally for Bingham and Alla at 725 a. m. Returning, arrive at Balt SALT LAKE CITY, Fargo Lake dally (except Sundays) at MO a arriving si Pleasant Valley Junction at 45 retnmlng, leaves Flessant Valley Jumv p.m.: uisn at 7:00 a, m., arriving at Belt lake at (LUO p.m. W. H. BANCROFT, Receiver. . ' 8. Y. EGCI.KH, Para A Figt. Salt Laxc- - r.Uv. B.K. HOOPER. Oen.P AT. AgL To the Public. TAILORING. Six-teen- The hungry outs are so excited over llie prospect nf a new political deal that they overwhelm Mr. Cleveland with the exliiiberaiu'e of their anticipations with congratulatory telegrams of a most startling chat actcr. From message published by the New York iShh we select a brilliant low specimens: Dynamite Ibissa O'itnnovan congratulates the Governor of New York on bis proof tiie. Presidency to motion C. E. Ecclcaine, the United States. red man, in bis exultation informs the We are short of red governor that paint here; all used in frescoing town. That Kentucky rooster, Carter Harrison, kindly tells Rmllier Cleveland that The beginning of the cud of the This Republic lias been staved nil." must have been written when Garter supposed himself to have been elected That pious mnn, governor of Illinois. The J. J. Jewett, T Omaha, says: Isird hath v'nPiid and redeemed bis people." evidently referring to the Laltcr-daAnother saintly Saints. messenger informs the startled governor that the angels arc rejoicing in heaven at your muvc.w," probably on the theory of the single repentant and returning sinner mentioned in Mr. Wei ucr assures the Governor of bis .1 RAILROADS. H0TEL8. FFXIAI.K 1 K.UtE. well-know- w I'OXti It ATl'LATOUY mrECT A 15, 1884. JNfOVJjMBillR SATURDAY, C11UOMCLJS, rJVKNIAt JAlvi5 SALT exchi Buys and bellb tnnafius ai cities af the United States sail all point of the Pacific Coart lanes letters of credit, irt principal cl tin of the world. Special attention given to th and bullion Advance, made on comigsa Particular attention atvai tbrangbont Utah, Nevada aati rllortea. E. S C HI F. district, which waa completed at Wholesale and Retail Ii 10:55.' Monroa county, official: Cleveland, The seventeenth assembly district wu completed all 1:50 a. m. The count of the first district of the eighteenth district was objected to on the ground that tiie total number of votes as road was shown to be 193, whereas it was votes were claimed that 22G tho district ami really cast in that the Republican electoral ticket received 81 votes instead of 54, as re corded. The vote of the first election district was therefore referred to the .committee on corrected returns. Tiie election district of the twenty-firs- t Eighteenth Assembly district has lieen reached without tiie discovery of other errors. The canvass of the Eighteenth assemNo bly district was finished at noon. errors were found than tiie one in tiie First election district. The Nineteenth assembly district was completed without any incident. I was resolved to request the committee bn corrected returns to give the preferThe canence to tiie electoral ticket. vass returns qf the twentieth assembly at 12:20 were entirely completed without any objection being mule. FORT IIOVGI.AS XKtVS. Drill is susiendcd for tiie season ao.l from now until next spring tiie soldiers life will be a very quiet and monotonous one. A lot of condemned public - 1884 ? ? FOX & RESPECTFULLY INVIT gentlemen to an early Inspection of my Ielection! in WOULD FALL PHOTOGRAPHIC THE HARD GOODS. SYMONS NSW S22 and Winter 188f Fall PARLOR AND WINTER WOOLENS.' CH ICAGO, u TIIOROCGHLYBATISFACTORYGARMENTS Opposite the fit. Janies Hotel. James Price, Residences, Mills, Horses, Etc Photognqihed on Miort Notice. MERCHANT .S w No. U Milwaukee RANGES Tin and Iron Hoofing, Spoil ing, ta Latest and BertDafp from 253 S. ST. PAUL Main Sal Street, T.G.M.SK NANCFACTUIB Railway Comoanv, Tents, Should call on Street, Ri And foe Largest Variety ia tk AND Suit of Clothes First-Cla- ss WB0UGI Stoves and TAILOR, WHO DESIRE A ELIASONS proerlv, AND Work, 218 Main Street, up stairs, Opposite the Fostofllcc.Salt Lake CSty. AT- COM Tin, Copper tad Si GENTLEMEN 142 Main CAST togetnp MAIN STREET, -- SOFT Stoves I will My price will be found moderate. Ii low make it a point to keep them consistent with good material, good worn care and and the attention requisite mansblp u AND including horses and mules, will be sold at auction by the regimental quarter- master on tiie lOlli of next month. Condemned government mules ought to l sold at n low figure. Tiie following programme will he rendered the Sixth Infantry Rand tomorrow nltemoon al ":30. 1. March, "lied KiliUm" Kcriirer '2. Select iuli, than VcnUV'AlliU" Ulsui Waits, "Kirit Kiss"...... launotlir I. Serenade, IHj I W eep lor Tln-c- " YOU CAN FIND THE LARGEST ASM.RT-- J mrfft nf H. LOWENSTEIN. New end most exrellenlly 1 rand Trumie-t"...........- G. HelacKul Tiie Silver March, . ....YirlHU lolxs, "Anvil"... .Psrlow constructed aud Minim equH Gold and Silver J. BERGEN. Superintendent and (hitter. WATCHES, TO ORD Short Line '' h. Awnings 224 Mala Strsst, spsotit Psstelca The Academy lectures. The first of a scries of lectures to be JEWELRY OF ALL KINDS, C. & given by the management of the Hal Lake Academy, wu last night delivered al Hammond Ilail by Trof. Allen, of that institution. Prof. Allen's subject An.l Everything Kcclt-- In that Line, at the NEXT DOOR TO l 8. LAND QFFICK and opiKsdtc the Tribune office, was Young Men in Politics, and his for miuoral patent, pre pare homestead, preemption, timber culturr lecture wu worthy of tiie theme. It wu wu desert land lionet. Write to them am, VERY LOWEST PRICES. listened In with interest by a largo and nelese stamp for information, and save All coirespondcnoe aniwrm appreciative audience. Hammond llali 2CX is a spacious and pleasant audience room, niunptly. luit we feel assured that if Indepcudenc-Hall, which, witli ils additions was the KSTABLISIIMKNT. cradle of tho flourishing Halt Like Academy, and which is more centrally lilua'el than 1 Iain mend Hall, could I MRS. J. E. GREGORY REFINED SULPHUR used in the future for tiie delivery ol other lectures in tiie course, it would attract larger audiences through ils central can uk obtained theth car Works out the f.xtibk Having rougiit . MK.BARM'M IntheMIlllm-rnear Cove (Woex, r sulphur T. BETWEEN 32 BAILEY BRO., Council Bluffs, Chicago Land Agents. and Milwaukee, WOOL GROWERS A dispiiU-- from Shanghai lo llie 'finite stales that minors of the of Tamsiii are current in that city. Utah. , e. Iain-do- n fall .. Oysler 'Grotto. Try tlioso celebrated fresh oysters rooked in every style. ! A lamdon dip.ttcli says Matthew Arnold is ulwnt in make an extended tmir in America. Tiie sms-esof llie house of Estimated payminti from the Treasury Utah, E. Auerbach A leading Rro., lies in living to the up present month on nneount of up faithfully to their motto, "we are p Vmns amount In 1 3,000, 0u0. never undersold." ijad By ii. - s No. 56 FERDINAND DICKERT, Balt Lake CUy.' ' .! . t :f i. Main Street ,'V . ' " j j,,1 JjS Pj, Ilaa reopened with a full andconipl vie Aort-- ' " .mentor. . J. ana Hair I i K-- An V Frknk' Foote, ASSAYER, s GOODS m""K8r. xat ... j 141 South Main Street, Silt Like ationtion given to all City. btulun. E. Second Sn I iUlleonirtl4 &S Boots TO IS THE MILLINERY huxlUi-M- McCDAlft AT WILUAM SATISFACTION GUARANTEED, REPAIRING 0H A M1 Public Bonanza Link PIONEER LUMK MfonUnonlal Hallway chain tfK.ht P,r Ul wluinn in tho saiutea foe sovereign po tile ol foe mildly Mighty West with the lmmdi ''.d00- - tL and Fansi-KHiTHrillclUng tha patronage of everybody, fos matter of tMMportalhHi of itsiwiiix aim WO IfMlire AlsL thAl flUIKilllKlI t?it JL.VLkul t l swastsss. -- ws SSCKBtSSiS'SiS't.i -. Chicago.,- WKKRIU (lone nil Manager.' Bnnerlutenuoul. A. V. II. CARI'IUITXK. and Ticket Agent 'JjhJt'amromY (1. 8 WA N, Htipt, Tnffir General offices, MUwaukca, Freight W'l. 5- - WILUAM ABEL, Metnpolllu Hawrisli ..I E...&'wrH LUMBER, - - .J, AS lith, Rustic DOOM WINDOWS, F WW OppMltotttfc Self SH |