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Show Juab County limes THE UTAH BUDGET MEN OF THE CATTLE RANGE The Ducks dying by the thousand la the report brought from the Boar country. NEPHI UTAH river The city officials of a.Mntl have ad vertised for bids for the erection of OFFICIAL DIRECTORY. the Carnegie library In that town. Work on tho Bingham & Gartleld railroad, which was begun about two District. months ago, Is now progressing satisJudicial District Judge, Fifth factorily. losaua Greenwood. Tramps sot firo to the D. & H. OAttorney M. 11. Ryan. V. U Cook. railroad section storehouse at Helper, Stenographer Btate Senator J. A. Hyde. causing a loss to the raiiroud company Ktate Uepreeentatlve liraxton Bar of over I l.OOU: eett. John McDonald, a pioneer manufac Forest Supervisor. Nebo Forest Returer or Utah, who died at his home serve H. F. Studley. U. 8. Expert In Charge Experiment In Salt Lake City a few days ago. left an estate worth UC,000. .Station P. V. Cordon. bluie Kurezuan Kxpcrlment Station Despondency following a period of Btihen i)o8wU. hard drinking caused George II. Rleck, a carpenter, to end his life In Salt County. Lake City, Bhooting himself In tue I J. County Commissioners Mc-une- . Superintendent County Infirmary II. D. Allred. W. W. County Physicians Dr. Bennett, Dr. J. A. llensul. EAST COUNTY MUNICIPAL FICERS. OF- 1 NEPHI CITY. Mayor O. M. Whltmore. Councilman James Garrett, Jr.. Alma Hague, Alonzo Ingram, Enoch liurton. W. O. Orme. Kecorder Peter Sorensen. Treasurer J. H. Iatlmer. Marshal W. A. rtrlj:ht. Watchman J. E. Memmott JnBtlce ot Uie Peace Jacob Colo Light pig-raisin- A. L d Jarkman. Adelbert Bohh, I II. George Francom, Swen E. Trustees Mor-tenst- Iilalmgren. fiffK Orson Nlelson. llarUiol Albert Bosh. Health Otncer James E. Taylor. EAST COUNTY SCHOOL BOARDS. 1L M on a John T. Kay, Epbralm Ellertsnn. Nebo Thoa. W'm. Jones. Booth. Edward Jones, Hague, T. I Foote, Nephl Aim Rosco K. t rover. I.rvan II Try Hendrlckson, James E. Taylor. Adelbert lUish. Juab James A. Kelly, R, C Steph enson, T. T. Taylor. PRECINCT EAST COUNTY OFFI-CER- Nephl. 8. Cooper. Constable Alvah Stout Health Officer Dr. D. O. Miner. Levan. Justice Orson Nlelson. Constable Richard Iverson. justice Constable Ik-doI- s tary. Cl-Tk- . F, No. 1C mpets every Sj tirday cvenlrnt In I. O. (. F. hail. VIltlti brothers cordially lnvitd to at O. tend. - II. JA.'KHOtf. X. O. J. 8. COOI'EH. Secretary. JAM. Saints' Meetings. ward fnnday ftrhnol. 10 a. m. First meet-Ins; Latter-da- y t- t Taheroacl; KeH-on- souse. ward at M. I. A Sunday, 6:9 p. m. Firs' vnsra' at taherrsacle; Second ward at tient!ns. house. Primary First ward st Relief hall. 4 p. tn. Tueiday. Second ward at tn'tlrit bmis, 4 p. m. Prlthoo4 fneetlnes p. rn . Tusdy. Monday. at the respective ward me-tls- bouse. Relief Society First ward, Srfnl nd fourth Tritsrsdays of each month at 2 f m. Peey,rii ward, first and third Thursdays t,f vh month st 2 m. at the respective meeting f, bonses. Re1irlrm etaFirst ward. 3 p m very Friday at Relief tiall; Second svard. 3 p. ro , every Friday at met- - tnt bonsa. 1 h-- a pr I lo Ibe t w'sh S'1t e. .ofwV,e ; ! ,' , v'e-"e- o.. I1. r j i i j i ' ; n -- s Licensed Abstractor and Notary Pubtlo I buy and sell Real I2ttate. Loans, Insurance, Mining Stocks, Dlue l'riuts. Room I, Winn Bids. Phone No. 13C-- Enoch Burton I. 8. OSTLER. President L. 8. Architect ar"e's of Residences HILL. Vice Pkisidext K. R. BOOTH , Cashiib a Specialty. Room No. 6, Winn Bldg. That New Coal Yard and Livery Stable.... George W. Booth Merchant Tailor Suits made to last aud fit at reasonable prices. Long experience la eastern tailoring; bouses. All Kinds of Job Hauling and Drayage Most Reasonable Prices Hay, Grain and Stabling FORREST HOUSE Headquarters for Traveling Men. New elegantly appointed 8 room addi tion, steam beat, balbs. etc. One block south and one east ot court house. Phone 22. Harris & Mecham Stalls Me-as- Black WtU ef Ceart Hoots City Barber Shop COCRTKOCS TKr.ATMF.NT AND F1KST CLASS WOKK M. A. NIKSON, PitomuETOH -- Three Doors North 6f Post OCice He Builds Wisely Who Builds Well" TO BUILD WELL If it's first class work you are looking ior go to The Modern Barber Shop finest sni most op f !! hsrber shoe. In SVpUi. bot Hisck lsn'1 eni hatha to mnnectiaa. 1 o doers eciitli ot Bstcikelor Bros , USE Nephi Plaster i flire. Has No Equal iToi-rietor- s Livery and Feed Stable Bus Meets All Trains. Livery Rlra. Good Iy and Eipresa Wagons. A cents for Coal. Phone Us. No. 44 M D. 2. The Largest and Purest natural deposit of Gypsum in the World. 1 Nephi Piaster & Mfg. Co, COLDSDROVCII. Proty.etey J uab County Mill and Elevator Company MANUFACTURERS OF i. to hr n e-- , bis t rt. i Flour and Mill Produce Everything New and up to date Our Leaders Gold Coin Flosr and Fresh Ground Crab am s.' ,1, , omrr-it, cr, roefi cf the -- te, tr-- provide - the N'rw Ihem-- j a j h'ev-mer-a- , j ommmoratlon of some !n'r,Mn flTtjre that have appeared n !h s'age of Ameevan Ufa. A stat-iahen'd be ra'eed to ftem- Inr'on bv f ro. reallv flrsd class setts. tfere at f'.evcene In the gstherlnf reanr hundreds ,f men enroe wre ihernsetveabaetyp'Kl together sin tesdees In S -- d 'res of the life a" i h t!e- - onon an portrayed vtf that tt will t hope that these v. men w'l! Jeaj tog-hearrange the p. of a committee, and art t ra se funds for the erection ef wueh a e ; j ) rep-even- 's e r. eta'e Krotit'cr Days" Is ttn drmbt the most characteristic Afrerlcan ethlblflon lvfi. It bed Its Incepflori a tout H tf when a few Cheyenne dt- years ens conceived tbe idea f preacntlnt a western show " SCENIC LINE OF THE WORLD moo. r!t the em ef rt,r'nf suchand.a fa--above r-- a s , ef fron'tef far-ne-r. oy wsgm or rou'e-fesanall appear. men that te4r e 'lv'"e a all. rpr-rtof the m',s ever I a ''dr iKbtrrt'r t td r.t-h n f r er !.f - r to l't"T-- ft T, eed i.e rlalos and ttey Te fivortte fyp. b't the m'nfVe tTiTtee e -- 1 , a- tl' i An-e'- fn j - te as s n I .!? were set ferth. and roen of coaboy , t snd p'oreer t'fe t motto-irI -- n "Ttf-orS- I'1 eotr'to- rft a' fc--- er - Ise It. While lbs. '. r-- nm-ng-oe-- i -- prt if' - vl'l-- t tt.-n, fv-- e,f r- C fT.e n.j. -e Interest paid on Time Deposits at the rate of 4 per cent per annum Thos. H Burton V!on-s,,- i ha-'-- e - 130-2- tr -fi -. No. e 'r-rs- tc Phone 1BANK Winn S, . s r- -. rrit Dentist foe-nn- f.f e-t-- NEPHI NATIONAL V- e-- co-- A. BOOTH Office Rooms Nos. 2 and Building. real eVIIty infortvniteiv bad the'r eyes turned towards fnrop and lacked the rot Co-rbust or"g'na'lty which the ef showed to see where "heir rhnnrm laIn our ftcrt. in do a great work Hut e a tv-a- f t'on. for cur rood ri't eroso who was cf e'ft and tf recnt-t'nthe eOo1s p'ef ..nes tenesa pf the life of the pls'-i- e and the ttocklce, tuloiy of Reaalrof on. Of course t ep"aV r r"dr'e tori, lie was ooe cf Americans who bv b's acti'ev tpentS dt'n tly deserved well of America He wor'-w'b --ex W't h brush W!'h cbiet, was both a and painter and a s"i'pof it's pv'-ircl is few brorrea iiattv good Vhen rov own reg'roent, a western reg'toen' recrui'-- d mstr'y 1Vfrom the mfi - enoen'a'os, cf h- - eTat f' ''" st as A s'.0'1ed o to'.t not-et's- s f- coeeemorate In M-n- - . ade-ius-- e. - I O. Dr. old-t'm- e forr-stat-Dshin-g M'dero Woodmen of America No. 1000, meets every Wednesday evening at I. O. O. F. ball. Visittns; Vxd men eioomeri. fjeorgo Small, Consul. JU II. Lowest Possible Prices of Croldsbrough Block. a m-r'- '- Me Lawyer Practlcs In all tha Courts. All legal matters Riven careful and prompt attention. Office secoud floor esp"-c'sll- e mountain Office Lumber, Lath, Shingles and Also Builder's Hardware Coffins and Cement, Coal, Caskets, at the at Court nous n. she-pm- en NEPHI COMMERCIAL CLUB. Meet first and third Tuesdays of very month at the club parlors la the I.unt building. VlMting mem- Ikts cf nelehtoriri(t enmmercial clubs cordially welcomed. U. E. fJrover, President. T. H. Burton, Financial Secretary. Wood. Corresponding Secre- No. 5. HENRY ADAMS Wrong Doers and Wrong Systems. In rontfnunlly and earnestly striving for thl betterment of social and economic conditions In our comn'eg Industrial we should work In the old frontier sp'rlt of brotherly comradeship and go.l will. I do not mean thaton we should the conrefrain from hating wrong; trary. I would preach flrey wrath against wrong. Ttut I would not preach such wrath against the wrong doer. sa.ve In those cases where his wrong-doin- g realty la due to evil moral attributes on his part and not to a wrong or false svs-tsof which he Is almost aa much tha a victim aa the beneflclarv. Sometimes wtcked-ner- s wrong represents the In which casa of tie wrong-deer- . the remedy ts to pua'sh Mm. but sometimes It represents the effects of a false social system. In which case the light course Is to alter what Is fals In tha svstem. llolb nr'ncinlea need to be kept In v'ew as guides to our conduct, and It la necessary sometimes to work In accordance with one and sometime In accordance with the other. n-- f' re end'er t wish to av a word on y which T believe should ""tli'nInterest all men who live In the cnen country, and esnerlaHv all men who cVr'ng the past thirty years have I'ved or have done snd worked on ranct-etheir life work In the wilder parts of our on the great plains or among the land, motmta'pa The phase of our national life In the atoekmsn. the mining prospector, were the chtrf characters was ontv not a very Important but ato a very ptefnreeque phase. Often such a phnse passes wt"bout any great artist s rising to commemorate tt. The for backwoodsman, the man of the back eotintrv who lived In the eastern forest tbrouyb wb'rh the wa'cr ran e'wed to the AtlsnMe and westward to the M'es'aslppl. pae-o- d awsv without spy pVntey or sctt'pfor eriMng a who possess,.! st once both the keenne-of vls'on n see what a v'tal and Mcturesoue f the backwoodsman wss and the gen'tis lv to present that figure. The artist who saw that ptotiireaooeneas of the back, woodsmen leered the renins adeouatele n' roi-nlr- C. Stephenson. Robert Mommolt. 'Phone Now so fnr aa possible these qual'tles nnd renditions that bring about these nunlltles should be kept In the creat rtntes which are growing out of the old We need to strive frontier communities. for the general social betterment of the people ns a whole, and yet to encourage Indlvldimt liberty and set high reward on Individual Initiative nn to tho pilnt where they become detrimental to the general welfare. mu'e-sklnne- Juab. TL Stock-erowet- County Attorney ranted. 1 Mona. J. n, Don't Buy from ns unless 70a want to get Sash and Doors, Attorney at Law self-hel- m-e- d Justlre John fates. Constable Ellas Molyneux. Health Officer N. V. Ellertson. Jostle rlvill-latln- p Sextou N. W. ..s r Al- fred Gowers. Ksr. The Cheyenne, Wyo., car Republic, bearing Theodore Roosevelt and party, rolled Into the station on time morning, and no sooner had It come to a stop than the sturdy figure of the colonel appeared, for be was anxious to see again the cattle men with whom he once lived As he stepped down to the ground a great shout greeted him the real yell of the range, uttered by an escort of 1,000 cowboys and cowgirl;; detailed to act as the That It sounded bodyguard. good In bis ears was made evident by the happy Binllo that spread over bU countenance. Mr. Roosevelt's visit and the speech he delivered later In the day formed the culmination of the annual Frontier Days celebration wich had attracted to the city thousands of persons from alt parts of the west and a large number of tourists from more distant sections of the country. Colonel Roosevelt's Speech. Out In the open air, under the blue sky, a vast crowd assembled to hear the former president speak, and It heard one of the most Important speeches he has made since leaving the White House. Ills address was as follows: When, at the rlos of my hnntlnic trip liefl the hnrdt-rof In AfrW'.t, I tlie firm. Invitation I accepted was this, to viHlt tho rniilltil of Wyumlng on the duy when the people of the frontti-r to their ranio aeltlnvtitienls; I was Khxl It wan so, 1 hiive a peritUnr footing for the men and women of what used to be called the "Kar VM." and especially for those of tho cattle country. Kor a number of yeim I lived on a ranch on tho IJttl" work a.il pity, (rood Missouri, fortune and bad fortune, wlili. my neighservlnic bors; worklnir on the round-upus dVlccnte from the I.litte Missouri round-udistrict to the Montana association, snd even at times irtlnit as deputy alter' IT at tnv end of the county. I count those years as amonv the ntont valuable of my life, because nothing breed auch community of f, eUntf ss to work with one's at their life tanks, and to learn to know their feehncs by actually sharlntr them. Tho man of the weal. throiiKhotit the successive staees of western srowth. has always been ona of the two or three most typlcnl flif urea Indeed. I am tempted to the most typical ft sure In American sy life, and no man ran really understand our country and appreciate what It reslly la and what It promises unless he has the fullest and rloaeat sympathy with the Ideals and axp'ratlnna of the west. The be found In pr'me reason for tfcta Is Isto an rood an the fact the westerner flr"t and American He an la American. foremost: for this Is the great lesson, to learn and friends, that all of us to Keep, the leaser) that tt Is unimportant or a Uvea north south, east whether man or west, provided he Is Remi'nely and In rood faith an American, teat he fee's every part of th t'nlted Bts'es aa 'a own. and that he la honestly desirous to uphold the Interests of all other Americans In whatever sections of the country they may dwell. when men spoke A hundred year of the west they meant the country between the Atlephantea and the M'slss'ppl. sen the whtte man's west Pfty Inyears M'nnemita. Iowa and Kansas, and tvk then skipped across to California and Oregon. The country of the creat pta'ns and the rtorlttea. the country In which you whom I am now addressing lad your Uvea and do your work, has grown up mvstf saw within mv own I'feilme and took pari In the closing years of tha Pioneer period, and It Was my great privilege to work s'd by sMe w'h the Ve ranchmen, the m'nera. the hu'l the sfbacfrera who actustlv opened up the t have Seen foe herds and sunn'ant of ihe cattlemen, and the game; I h"- - sees the fortunate bv sh'eti the sma'1 farm hsa meve-ei- t to take the ptace of the tended ran-- h I now trivet in great iii'n-t cor-fron lands rallwsvs across every the-n- . wMch when t first rode -- fi eee s!1l h tieme rf the fed'aflj and the toRi-tlie- MelHon. N. C Nlelson. LEVAN TOWN. President Board of Trustees courage tha development of new abilities which can be brought to high oerfectlon only by a kind of tralnlnif useless In pioneer times; but these new qualities can only supplement, and neer supplant, the old, homely vlrtuos; tha need for the spei'lul ant distinctive pioneer virtues Is as (rrcat as ever. In other words, aa our civilization trrows older and more complex, while It Is true that we need new forms of trained ability, and need to develop men whose lives are devoted wholly to the pursuit of special objects. It is yet also true that we need a greater and not a less development of the fundamental frontier virtues. These virtues Include tha power of together with the power of joining with others for mutual help, and, what Is especially Important, the feeling of comradeship, of social llownMp. Any man who had the good fortune to live among the old frontier conditions mum. In looking back, realize how vital was this f cling of general comradeship and social fellowship. There are good men and bad men. In the new communities Just as In tha old communities, and the conditions on the frontier Wire such that the qualities of the good and bad alike were rather more strikingly mnnlfested than In older communities, but among the men who tried to lead decent lives, there was a feeling of genuine democracy, which represented an approach to the American Ideal which we certainty should do everything In our power to preserve. We d'd not try to euy that men were equal when they were not equal, but we did our best to secure something like an rouril'fy of opportunity and an equnllty of reward ior good service; and moreover, each man expected to ha received, and, on the whole, was received wherever ha went, on the footing that his merits war- e prl-rat- Grace Bros Lumber Co L FOOTE T. Aug. 27. r man. Street Supervisor Jas. B. niches. Quarantine Physician Dr. D. O. Minor. Building Inspector Enoch Burton. N. A. Chief ot Fire Department Electric Superintendent Plant T. A. Carver. Former President Is Cheyenne's Guest at Fron- Ds O, Miner, M, Ds tier Days Cchbration and Delivers Physician and Surgeon PHONE NO. 84 Warm Eulogy of the Great West OFTICE AT RESIDENCE and Its Sterling irtues. r,-- NlKht Superintendent of Waterworks OFTICE AT RESIDENCE head. To tho delight of Helper residents, the old antique structure now used as the local postofllco will be torn down, and In Its stend a more modern building erected. The l.ehl sugar factory wl" B,art up this season about September 20. The entire mill has boon overhauled and Is being put In the best of shape for the fall business. Charles J. Stenbom, as'd 31, died In Salt Uike City, August i!0, as u of fracturing his spine on August 21, when he dived from a pier Into the lake at Saltalr. About SO per cent of the total school population of Suit Uike City was enrolled at the opening day of the school year, on Mopday, 15,000 school children being enrolled. The Snow academy at Ephralm Is making an energetic campaign for students for tho coining year, which begins September 13. and the prosattendpects favor a record-breakinance. A payment or Jif.,000 Tor coal lands In Emery county was made to the Salt 1 ake land office on Saturday for ronl lands located In southern Utah. The applicants paid $25 per acre for a tract of 100 acres. Thomas Webb, a big ranchman and stock-raide- r or Benjamin. Utah counbusity, has gone Into the ness on a large ncale and by early fall will have about 1.000 head on bis big ranch In Utah couuty. K. Oklnioto, a Japanese gambler, was shot and probably fatally wound-tCity by a countryman In Salt on Saturady night as the result of a quarrel over a pool game, his assailant making his escape. Survivors of the Ixit Smith company, which servud In the west during the civil war, are eligible to membership in the G. A. R- -, according to the findings of the special court of Just made public. Notwithstanding the unusually dry summer, the sugar beets In Utah county are growing rapidly and the farmers expect to have a fair crop this year. The first sample of the beets will bo taken this week. The fact that there are no coddling moths In the Green River fru'.t region of Utah, la explained by tho ract that the sand storms which prevail In that region kill off all winged insects, and the coddling moth Is unknown there. The biggest parade that has ever been Riven by organised labor In Salt City on Monday, September S. It Is stated that 6.000 union men of Salt IjbU and Utah will fall In ltne to display their unions to the public. Wtille returning In his rig with bis wife from Sprtngvllle, W. H. Ray, a promlu ut nal estate and insurance man of Provo, sustained painful injuries when his horse look fright at an object In the road and kicked the bug (ty to pieces. The first mile of the proposed interstate highway linking the capital cities of Idaho, Utah and Wyoming, by itoes where one en macadamized public road, buTalo; notand I fndcomfort, a well-laibut lutir. In obtain will he built In Ogden during the 't- tblctv years nei the ptc beyond a 1g buj or a Oiod Road convention es not a bi Tt-- Ten who d'd this work ho,.e. which will be held In Ogdcn next oV.o'e were eneared In the fnel ef i . month. rtiirfn fte continent and It was ttefr of fo do one ef the reest wor-Altbmich the () :den lodgf of Uiynl tvHv'tne" '! thee to do h'r Pir 'n - n tt"". hs not been organ- anc. Order of In tv history of the ef an et.tc of marVf d. ised tnore than two months, prepars progre West Stands for Proceasa. tions are now being made f beve isd the a permanei.t hott.e. The mem prrr s "P-- to h f m ssnd foe hers have not definitely derided ectis the who'e fre"'in I p'' ' e w'sad rde-,,whether to bnl'd a home or lease a, v m-- t m'v . lo be e't,r geeat or tt Wttt S"or qua. no r eo .Tt'on r No Arm' 'f. While his Intant brother wv as!e-- f ntl-f'It. Tt eo"t eltef go ran s'ard a ao-t bo-ne?orwad ef go In bis cradle, unemtx tons of Its dan f T r- If f g'es Kfl, f son of Mr and per. th twrlve-- j esr-oi1 ttao-T'-e-t swt. ren e' Mrs. W. Ixiwery of OtrJ-performed 'or yoti, n ail men nmst stand slis re prorrealve a heroic act by ruybina; throueh the er fro M'tt I the burtiins -- The ptoners and smoke ntid fUlm-wen ctorv onlv br feoto,enrirte'-a home and rarrylr.g the eh ,. to saftv. the nre.f,. of V tea wt'h I'e at ff,e foio-,foThe parents had left the hmrt Im 'Vy e see T1 ttonst w 'I out. broke fire when the a moment, grea'ns reen cf In.-- ' As be was about to b re)eafd frorn e ta'V'e cr fiovtl t.-- i fhe- find the Utah penitentiary Saturday, where w o eee'r-f1'fe. and cf tr'altfte.fifin of ihren he had served a sentence tte'" 'hose AmerVan ' og ee an t wl'h- p'o-e- e years for foigrv, B. A Sleeum wa .. .., . a e- r tnkfn into enstory by the sheriff ot -- nl c is a st'M for a Kt'- - ' ! 'r-ri.Sf-aCounty, California, where he .nr.; doe- n h"'ltv ts g T- "1toirb (Mil ' Is wanted for hleamy. I o n 'flt1 r d ' tf, .ir'h r .rr. ! men "tts ,,ft".n. According to the opinion of the Sn-,r'-r'-''f wet r ,f former Nelson, f ttie--- t toto court, Joseph wo on'ln'eat poss.-seeIn tKe cashier of the Utah National Bank, f f cee nonwea?-h-- -s r e the v'r 'e ef "ll Salt Ct'y. will have to pay bis ltfi,' rsf o'eoiiree. -d f- -f 1 ro?t. note for $11250. given at the lime of Tt:e!r t ot at nd enwaterin? r"!"''on heat-a, A Ts-of InT'i-rffi $K6.2f0 ea, the discovery of th theft eeeptf,.n. was t from the reserve fund of the bank In bo'tgh thel rooat have nest -.typ'-aken January. and a ebera'-te"mticpot e.,n rVars a fey rong but lofty, hy Cattle mMlers are being rounded tp was a. e fi't that great re.w-of Boi Elder nan'ed In the northwestern fine etArrnlo-tobv b'gh ad county by Sheriff Jophson. A rreat ' o use this gTnf p '- -t fo the eoo,o-ioood. for the advan'efnnt ef df si of trouble Is experienced by cat In a fe-"he p'oneet davs are over, sare piitr.,j localIn owners that horse tie and Msres: nd t e moesi comn'et lf a' on ap fodav eal's for a greater variety of rwi ity, as thieves ara operating minllt'es than were needed on the frm-lleastcnslve scale. There la need at wesent to -- re ro-Bu-lt Complete Stock Burial Shoes. Fine Hearse la connection. Office at residence. Phone No. 105 red 6L TELEPHONE DOWNS Best Home Made Caskets Physician and Surgeoa WELCOME COL. ROOSEVELT Jacob Coleman. Editor nd Proprietor UeorgB Jones, Martin Nlelaou. Clerk T. W. Vlckcrs. Keeorder Wni. liurton. TreaHurer T. 11. O. Parkea. Assessor Win. Bailey. tSurvoyar Arthur A. Miller. Attorney T. 1 Foole. HherllT Gus J. Heurlod. Superintendent of Schools Oeorge A.' Snerry, Jr. Probation Officer Alvah Stout. Itoad Commissioner George W. Ws Bennett, M. D, J. R. A 1T) inorrinii of Natural Beauty all the way' CANYON of the CRANT5E EAGLE RIVER CANYON canyon of th cunnkon CARDEN of the CODS Ruby canyon manitou springs glenxood springs 11,12 ROYAL C0RCE PULLMAN AND TOURIST SLEEPERS TO DENVER and ST. LOUIS |