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Show DAILY COMMERCIAL x THURSDAY. MARCH 26, 1691. 00 DEN T TW tMmtmem of High Life. EGGS BY MACMXERY. TVs wnairrc.inffi that fteaJf former A PLAN TO MAKE THE BETTER ASO CHEAPER THAN HENS CAH. Ttal w ta MaMb(tin4 XWtU ar Ite SJmU akiaf wr. rtM C aea4 tlTka IcU- - Is BwUj PktntshT Wn granted to Janx Btomy, of Kan Gtv, for th ejrg. An th monairy aiachiriery, vhicli M But worm more than fVJ at tit oct-is la rediae to begin tLia eompetatioa with the Aoeri-r- u meo. If m much mooaa attend the net Ttntore m ii antiapatwl by Mr. Storrry, the contest betwo the and the bm fur mprmtacy in the egg producing boaoM will I abort, wiih the rktury to the credit of the Bino-letnre- of K, ma-chi-na fanner. Mr. Stomft process is Trry simple, he ie prepared to mannfactara sad aa artificial rfo? that a connoirtir will find it difficult to diatiognUh either ta appearance or taste from the prime product of a Plymouth Bock or Leghorn. lime, water, blood, milk, tallow, peat aid ot or two other regetalar are the ingredients of hi compound, The abefl aid the yulk will not be difficult of manufacture. To make a good imitation of the "white" of the egg is the part that has required the most ingenuity to conquer, but Mr. Starrer has succeeded in solving the problem successfully. yt MAJUSO THE TOUC The yulk of an egg is composed of 90 per cent of yellow fat, 14 per cent, of caseine, about S per cent albumen and water. The fat is common animal fat. and beef fat, which is rery cheap, will be the chief ingredient To this a liberal amount of cawine, which is that portion of the milk which produces butter and cheaw, will be added, and albumen mainly from beef blood, together with water, will be mixed in small quantities. The color, already a yellow, will be treated with a chemical which will spits a doable purpose of deepening the color d and preserving the mixta re in a state until it is cooked. The "white" of the egg is about one eighth pure albumen, and is a difficult substance to produce chemically. A substance that appears to the eye exactly similar, and which hardens and whitens when cooked, has been produced by a mixture of legumin, or vegetable albn-meextracted from common peas, and of the peas, a whkh forma little albumen from beef blood, a trifle of sulphur, considerable gelatine and a chemical solution to prevent rapid decomposition, and which also whitens the whole bulk when subjected to heat, just as the egg becomes white when boiled. As beef blood will be utilized in very large quantities in the big egg mill, a few special cars will be fitted up with tanks to bring the blood front the Chi cago slaughter houses. VAKEtO Till BHCLL. The shell will be nerfwtlv Imitated br a simple solution of lime, water an4 gln The machinery that is required is needed mainly in putting the egg together. Every yolk will be first ran into a mold to be properly shaped, and then dumped into a second mold, where the right quantity of the white is placed previously. This latter substance, being a gelatine like matter, will incase the yolk very readily. By a unique machine the meat is there enveloped in the shell; The shell is only partially hardened when the egg is put into it, and as there is a liberal amount of glue added to the lime, the edges of the shell soon adhere to each other very tightly, leaving no traceable mark where they were joined. In order to make the imitation more completely successful, molds of several aises will be introduced, making the eggs vary in bulk as do the products of any respectable flock of hens. The color of the shell will also be of two or three shades, rendering the likeness to the original still more striking. Tests have been made which show that the artificial egg can be preserved for month tinder proper conditions, and still taste as fresh as one laid by an ordinary hen. As all the ingredients of this reform egg are exceedingly cheap, it can be manufactured at the rate of about three cents a down. There will be no limit to the capacity of the novel mill, and families and boarding house keepers can be supplied in any quantities at prices so dazzlirtgly small as to warrant immediate popularity. Cincinnati Enquirer. semi-liqui- n, one-four- th Strang- Want. They must have a strange herd of sheep in New Zealand, where' a settler announced that he wanted "an industrious man to take charge of 8,000 sheep who could talk Spanish." He must have been related to the young lady who, announced "that she could do all kinds of sewing and embroidery except music" A western "ad," reads: "Wanted an energetic young man for a retail store partly out of doors, partly behind the counters." A contemporary asks what - will be the result when the door is Providence Journal. shut la a Jewel. There is a story told of a French savant who was shown a priceless jewel by a great duke. "Thank yon, my lord duke," said the man of science, "for allowing me to share with you the possession of so great " a treasure." "In what wayr said the duke. "Why, your grace can do no more than look at it, and yon have allowed xne to do the same." All the Year ' . , , Round, ... A Share ' Spoka Too Quick. ,, Mr. Eepplier (playing cribbage) What a very fine crib board, Miss Pas-ne- e! ... Miss Passee (playfully) A gift from very first sweetheart. Mr. Repplier, when I was only 15. , , . my ,. Mr. Repplier (with polite interest)-1-Inde- ed! That is quite the oldest crib board I ever saw that is er I . West Shore. xct&n wfc jmt & orr the soul of A moraTirarfon a great La fa subjected re- ta the trtcptarkns of wealth and laxory Las ever been the thro for the moralist's pea. Sad beyond dotcriptiun it is to see, for instance, a man cf views and earnest purpose elnctrj to congress by aa admiring ronsritrrsry and sent to that ftrocghoU U wickedness, Washington, in the expectation that he wiH be the Moat who will kad this nation to the promised land, At first be stands on hit great principles firmly. Be is invited to receptions and sees low necked fair women who at first bring the bluab of shame to Lis virgin cheek. Then, ala! he gets over it, and. to teU the troth, rather likes it Be eats canvasbatrk duck and terrapin stew a Be grows familiar with the sparkle of champagne. Great principles cannot stand before it Lilts the pious country boy who went from home to the city and gradually left off saying his prayers, it is soon aO over with the member who went from Squannequohasset to Washington to reform congress. It is congress who reforms him, in the seoat of shaping him all over. Be ends by going back on all the convictions that he held before and becoming as great a dude in bis dress as he was homespun. A negro in white gloves waits at the door at his wife's receptions and tubers in visitors after the method of the bloated aristocracy. Be even takes to eating with his fork. Will it be thus with the new members of congress' who wear home knitted socks? Will their brave voices crying in the wilderness be choked off by the Roman punches of Washington high life? Beaven forbid! But we shall see. We are told that some of the new members who have visited Wsshington have already pnt on white shirt fronts and had their manly beards shaven off. Let them beware. The wearing of a silk hat among his rural constituents is said to have come within a hair's breadth of losing one of the Texas senators his seat Steel Cars. In a suburb of Chicagoextenaive works are being erected for the manufacture of passenger, postal and freight cars of steel instead of wood. These cars have already been made to some extent, but when the works are fully completed they will turn ont fifteen steel cars a day and give employment to TOO men. The advantages claimed for the steel car are lightness, superior strength, economy and indestructibility by fire. A steel mall car In use4 between Chicago and Louisville has received even more than the ordinary share of, encounter with accidents that fall to the lot of American railway trair.s, yet it has stood its ground without being smashed . or even damaged by more than mere surface scratches. There would certainly be one marked advantage in the use of the steel car for mail and passengers. That is that it could not be destroyed by fire. The demonish car stove might npeet and born the unfortunates in its immediate vicinity, or it might suffocate people with its smoke, but it could not set fire to the whole car and roast a hundred pinned down passengers alive. A wooden car lasts eight years. The steel car is "estimated" to endure wear and tear for twenty years. Further, the repair of wooden cars constitutes 10 per cent of the annual operating expenses of all railroads. Steel car would save nearly all this expanse. In freight carrying the steel car, on account of its greater strength, will hold twice the weight that the wooden one will convey. The most t)arbarously destructive creature on earth is the civilized white man. Before his advent on this continent the forests swarmed with song and food birds, the streams were full of fish, and wild animals fit for food roamed the forest in abundance and without fear. The Indians used all these creatures for food, but they killed only what they needed, and so the supply never diminished. Civilized man came, and all this abundance vanished. The waters held out till the last, but they yielded finally, and' American rivers are nearly bare of fish, except where, with infinite pains, the fish commission has been able to propagate a few artificially. At length the oyster beds of the Chesapeake, that ought to have been a magnificent food reservoir for man through the ages these, too, are giving out Unless "prompt and decisive measures" are taken total extinction will overtake the oyster in the Chesapeake. The civilized man's cruel greed of gain annihilates all nature's gifts to her children. Just before Christmas there was opened in London the City and South Ua MOCK! 3 Few immm - BlP-iy- , ViwM It t mwi4 It's Csrsw ; BANKS. IXSSCV. tap, groant-- Mr. i There be g ASaiar Gtorge Pttafr-- i. a wealthy rta<&t of -- Was ever iota ctrsrd Eighbridge. wna snch a bird? "Birdr exclaimed Mr. Phalea's visiter - Why, yo 1 t in astoniahment. mean to say yon keep a Urd with a3 those cats in the noose? Porthesodles rhorns of hiitang. spitting and mewing that floated in from the rear room aretaed to indicate that an animated feline argument was in progress there. "There is no rat under my roof," was the reply. "All the noiae yon hear is made by a single Blocking bird. Just step into the otaer room and look at him. A more woebegone creature yoa never saw." The Urd, indeed, looked aa though he had seen bard and loos; service. Bebad no vestige of a tail left, and on of his eyes was gone. Bis few feathers were ruffled, and all his aWk and glorious beauty had departed. "Three years ago old Xkk (that is hit name) was a remarkably handsome bird," said Mr. Phalen, "and his numerous made him a great favorite aud very valuable. Be could whittle The Campbells Are Coming' and a don--n other airs with wonderful clearness and magical precision, and be was so clever that he ccnld learn a new tone in an hoar. I would not have sold him then for fjOO. "Bnt one night everybody in thehonse was awakened by an awful nproar in the back parlor. The laotking bird was shrieking, shouting and swearing like a human being; a cat, that must have entered by the cellar door, for we harbored none of his land, wa3 spitting and hissing furiously, and the sound of some heavy metallic object dashed frequently and violently against the furniture wu distracting. I went down stairs with s light and I found that the cat's paw was tightly wedged between the wires of the bird's prison, and the terrified brute was swinging the cage about the room, trying to release himself. Old Nick was nearly dead and badly dilapidated, as you tee him now, before I could disentangle the cat from the wires and kick him out into the darkness. "The bird's tail never grew again, nor did his plumage regain its luster. H was quite silent for a full week, and then be suddenly made the air vocal with a horrible series of caterwaulings, and he has kept them np almost without intermission ever since. In the few dreadful minutes that he passed face to face with the cat he learned every intonation of voice that his assailant could teach him, and utterly forgot all the songs and speeches with which years of careful tuition had enriched his mind. A poor exchange, it seems to me," New York Sun. . BUSINESS CARDS. Loan & Trust Co. L-tah Capital. - - - - 8200.000.00 - 12.000.00 Surplus CC rwit. RICH ED 1 W. fcHt KTU K. TNFrettdeal J. M. LkSteslAJkf. Caatuas latoeat allowed oa Time VtvuhX. J. C luimHt. leSY freat. 1 uuuvuui vMuat $150,000. Sarins k Udivided PruSts, T. A. hMirn. M. bacUauiiM', Henry Conant. lf I UlilllJ AMI 1111 OGDEX, UTAH. Companion. A Dreadful Threat. b A poet having loaned a small amount to a friend found it very difficult tocollect the same, as his friend failed to recollect London Electric Tunnel rail way for pas senger traffic in the city. The road passes under the Thames and the motive the incident Meeting his friend in need The first report the power is electricity. poet said: since the road has been opened was "If you dont pay me that $17 which made recently, and it indicates that the you owe me I shall have to resort to extunnel electric railway is a glowing suc- treme measures. " ' "And what may they beT cess. Nine hundred thonsand passengers Til dedicate my next poem iu your have already been carried. The fare is :; twopence, or four cents, yet even at this nonor. The friend turned pale and shelied out rate the returns are handsome already. . The directors declare that electric trac- abruptly. Texas Sittings. tion has here )een proved to be cheaper A Large DtfTerenre, than steam and satisfactory in all ways. "What was yi.nr lawyer's fee in that Dialling?"! Mr. J. R. Ruthven, an English engi jae, "It wasn't a fee, Totliug: it wi8 aa looks for the jet of water honorarium." neering expert, "What's the differencer propeller to make the next great revolts tion in ocean steamer power. He be "Well, an honorarium is about, tu lieve screw propulsion has reached its Hmes as muuh as a Ioj."- - Harper E tar. limit of perfection. . ' wi. T.f. XACHIXL MuM lOUMAAtifJtl. aO. Stats4 auaclav DAI. - Si 25,000. 7,500. c. if a p. tine. Aiwirua ariua4 casap. A DO JrOXHAEDT SOS. CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS. East side Vasfciaatea armaa, Tvecty-aeeun- d aad Twtit-W- i miwu. R. a wheel Es ncu OSess. JIDFJJTI O. m. LEONAIO, J. F 4otLl L Kccaxaa. Finer. caiuef Jtwtica BopreoM U. MACMH.LAM. I. Wilis it. W. Co THSO. Wm. T. President. Robisoii, Surveyor R. W. Faris. Superintendent of District Seoole Joe. Peer rUCniCT OFFICERS PIBST OODBH PIECOICT. Justice of the Peace E. A. McDaniel. Constable E. A. Koch. SECOND OGDEX PBEINCT. Jnstice of the Peace B. Temes. Constable Phil Ford. THIRD (XI DEN PRECTMCT. Jnstice of the Peace A. Perrin. Constable D. O. Sullivan. FOCBTH OODEX PRECINCT Jnstice of the Peace Val tiiueon. E. Steel Constable-- H. lXol WaAbinctoa MA. EDEM PBECINCT. the Pence E, B. Frorer. Jnstice of Constable John Gould. NORTH OGDEN PRECINCT. Jnstice of the Peace James Storey. Constable James Deamer. HARBISVILLI PRECINCT. Jnstice of the Peace William Q. Eawson, Constable James H. Taylor. Jnstice of the Josiah B. Carrer. Peace-Const- able BIVERDALI PRECINCT. rk OfflM SiVM WaahiliA7tin aVVSantiai JACOB Office, i AM A1 Jnstice of the Peace-Const- Warranty Deed, abort form. . Warranty Deed, long form . . . Quit-claiDeed Real Est aUMort'gebortf rm Option Contract Lease. Bond for Deed. Diacharce of Mortgage 571 8. BOREMaN. MB WMhingtoo arsons, 425 450 375 300 50 100 500 m Trust MARRIOTT PBBCTJfCT. ' Jnstice of the Peace Simon F. HaWereon. Constable Caleb Parry. LYNNS' PRECINCT. 501 la Medicines, Master ic Surgery, L. 8, A., London. Jnstice of the Peace P. P. Bingham.. Constable Daniel N, Drake. 502 379 Q and show cause Citation for Garnishee 2 Affidavit for Citation for Garnishee. 572 Writ of Execution PI8TRICT COURT , A A A A A A A Office, M27 Washington arenne orer Horrock and Sell A store. Teeth without plates and saving natural teeth a specialty. No teeth or roots too MISCELLANEOUS BLANKS. bad to be saved by filling or crowning. Special attention given to children's teeth. 377 Official Bond and Oath A 75 Chattel Mortgage C 323 Marriage Certificate A CIVIL ENGINEERS. Promissory Notes, Books of 50 and 100. C. A. TC8H. R.W PARIS. Receipts, Books of 50. A FARIS, Rent Receipts, Books of 100. , rpcSH Drafts, Books of J.00. CIVIL ENGINEERS & SURVEYORS. Other Blanks constantly being added and estimates prepared to the above list Plans, specifications and work superintended. Maps, plats, tracings, blue prints, etc., etc, executed on short notice. Rooms 3 and 4, Union block. No. 362 Twenty A TEAK t 1 tmrlntast to brteftr Fourth Street, Ogden. Utah. teach ny fttiry iittrlliaent pfrtoa of either ex. w ho can read and i,rtt. and who. will work after A Sons $3000 f NOTICE OF FORFEITURE. Ogden Citt, Weber Co., March 19, 1S81. To Oliver B. Adams. Yon are hereby notified have expended (SKX)) three hundred dollars, in labor and improvements upon the Superior' Lode situated in the Willard Mining District, Box Elder County, Utah, as will appear by certificates filed in the office of the recorder of said district, in order to hold said premises under the provisions of section Revised Statutes of the United States, being the amount required to hold the same for the years ending Dec 31st, lssg, 1qo. And if within ninety days after this notice by publication you fail or refuse to contribute your proportion of such expenditure as a your interest in said claim will become the property of the subscriber under said section 2324. that I Instruction, induttrloatly, how ta Mm. Thraa Taaaasai lanilar ear iB their o wd localitiet.whelVTer th tWe.I will alan fnmiah the ituaUoDoresnpIoymetitjit whirh you tan earn that amount. Ko moner for roeanlt wuucceaafulaa aiiov-e- . Eaaily and quickly learned, f dettre lut nne worker from earh dltrict or county. I have already Uua-t-i anrf provided with impLoytnent a lira number, who art makintr orer flOOO a Teare h. and HO 1, 1 Full lArtlculan Addreai at onca, K. C, 1. ALLF.. ltiEW FREE. Ilox 41tO. Amriiiui, Maine. Fred. A. Shieli.s. MARKETS. ROBERT BR0GELMAN J yV A pamphlet of Information sndsb-,-7 straot ot the laws. Stowing How to V. Obtain Patents, Caveats, Tradey V Marks, 4, Sausage Works 1 V, Coprriftbti, ssnt int. MUNN GO- VW1" ) N361 BrsaiwaT, A Brogelman) CHICAGO Ifew sarkvs V .- f f ! Foot of Twentieth St. City Office at Cream City Meat Market, 25th St. OODEN, UTAH. In 4 S hours Gonorrhoea am m unnarvoi iirwtl"ch,rira" from (ftilUi hnuissrearre bySsatALMid: rnnmmcc-nventTice- MAKING OF JLL KINDS SPECIALTY. tion1 rift! A A 325 Mining Deed 350 Notice of Location of Claim. 400 Proof of Labor 401 Power of Atfy to Locate OF SAUSAGE on: v. tfjx rum, . new L. B. tten- - Balch KINDS OKS38 ' Fresh Meats, Fish, Poultry and Game in Season. ' Orders taken at your door, and poods deliv a Our Meat P&LIVEHY Waon is a Market on specialty. wheels which calls at your honse so that yon may select your own Roods. It runs north of 23d St. on Washing-to- n Avenue and the Bench. Tel. M-- mn. , ttmrtCffirPt A. E. WETOERB1. A KKALL lift A A BLANKS. Crescent Novelty Works! 2360 Washington Avenue. Boston Meat Market. Electric Wiring and IT1 A A A A A A A BLANKS. MI.N-I.N- DENTIST. . ' OOCRT BLADES. 475 Summons. 476 SherifTsSale 76 Constable's Sale 377 Order for Deft to appear 525 DENTISTS. SOOPBB PRECTXCT. Jnstice of the Peace James Johnson. Constable Francis M. Belnap. SPECIALIST. R. SKOWDEN, WEST WEBBB PRECINCT. Justice of the Peace J. W. Hurt. Constable Joseph Hogtrs. Executors' Bond Letters of Guardianship Order Appointing Hearing... Testimony of Testimony of Applicant..... Order appointing Adm'r.... ery personal property Undertaking on Claim and In eonneetion with general practice, gives Delivery of personal property diseases to females attention 526 Undertaking for Return to special peculiar to ousease of the genito urinary organs, diseases Deft, Claim and Delivery of thi rectum, vis. : Piles, fistula, fissure and ulceration ; diseases of the ear, nose, throat and personal property chest. Consultation free. 77 Complaint on Claim and DeOffice orer Postofiice. Telephone 200. livery personal property.... AND C 10 Affidavit for Claim and Deliv- A. COTTINGHAM, 'PHYSICIAN A B A 78 R. Royal College of Burgeons, England : Fellow Society Ana and Science, London. Formerly quarantine officer and superintendent for New Zealand and Melbourne, Victoria. Address or call at Washington Are. r A A A A' Administrator! Bond 1 125 ATTORNEEYS-AT-LA- B.THOS. 8. BCLMER, D Doctor Justiee of the Peace Peter L, Sherner. Constable J araea Harrop. WILSON PRECINCT. 1MITB. COMMISSIO.NT.BS PEBASANT VTEW PRECINCT. PRECINCT, ftah. a. w. 300 376 (Successor to Fritz Jnstice of the Peace James Hntchins. Constable John J. Hntchins. street, Ogdrn, A SMITH, SURGEON-ACCOUCHEU- A A PROBATE OOCRT BLANKS. PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS. Wilson Poulter. SLATERVILLI Twenty-fourt- h A Deed. 3 Assignment of Mortgage.... 51 BUI of Sale. Office, rooms 35, 8S and 87, First National Bank bnilding. able Justice of the Peace W. H. Crandall. Constable George H. Mayoock. Aveona, Ocdea. Utah CLASS. 570 D.kk 1 r .m anri Twaatit vJonrtli V ANsrorn sarra CINTAH PRECINCT. KANE8 VILLI PRECINCT. CO, COXTEYAXCntO BLAXK8. E. HEXWOOD. Jnstice of the Peace Richard Dye. Constable John Parker. Jnstice of the Peace Timothy Kendall. Constable Byron L. P j bee. PCEUSHLXG EDWARD M. ALLISON IMBALL A ALLISON. , HCNTSVTI.I.E PRECINCT. Jnstice of the Peace Angns McKay. Constable George E. Ferrin. t rrautBED axd for sale JAMES N. KIMBALL. Hn-mc- Cashier. and Manager. Vice-Pr- e, ahiata h gMITH W. N. Bbilliko, Vie President. ma. LEGAL BLANKS nm lOO.OOO. President LODGE, Ul. tl. Practices in the District Court and all tha evnna. Personal attention to collections. THE COMMCLIL Bememoer tue place, la reery s wowlm builti-innear meat shop of C. H. UreeuveU A Bros., r.l 4 Twenty-fourtstreet. Ofdeu, I" tab. P. O. ieo,ooo Caahier. CGEX'RCEUON b ATTORNEY-AT-LA- J. E. D00LT. EOX8 OF ST. GEORGE. Ka. K. WHITE. United States Depository. Interest Paid oa Tims Depoalta. W. fmuu. luc d r. et. loan, aeiada. JJDOXARD A aUCMILLAX. ATTORNEYS AT LAW. Offlee: t4Dt WaUunftoe Are.. Ogdea, Ttaa. OgdenTiTta!'' STJUPLUS, C Tha above ainety will bold Ha saeeia la of Pvthias ball. Twwtt-foartstrevt. iover btaadard auiidicc every TkorMlay eveo-iti- g at baif sitajv, anttl farther ao-nAm licatiuB foms nay be vbtamed from W aveana. Perry A. uuk. Bojoortoiia brotierrurt:aliy invitod. PiariVAL J. Bass in. Pmidect. Harrt Giuart. hecretarv. Wt Wash At. ATTORNEY-AT-LA- Lk B. AOAMA, W. Kaia-ht- s I. Ugumi, Utah. . . L 0. U. W. Tisitinff MetaswnTMadayaMitatTdB. brvtiacrs edi''j uvtud to attwd. M. RICHARD Ogik-nTtta- UTAH NATIONAL BANK Wedaestay eack t'wUiol Ol A fjOIMil Katinul Rank M. 11 aiwi IS . ATTORNEYS-AT-LAlotereat Paid on Time and Barbies Deposits, . SECRET SOCIETIES. QKDEX LAWYERS. a. P. moELOW. Catluer. . J. 1. 1. Bat ah. Ese. 15D K05UXEITS Lambert. J4m uwm nsm sua Twsurts hmk. LaortM m to box H. C. BIOFXOW, Pnwidwit. JOHN A. BOYLE. Vi, pretideot CAPITAL, awwai li. . FOR HEADSTOJiES AY PLAIN CITT PRECINCT. This Can He Ioue on Nearly Every Farm. Given a flow of 100 gallons of water per minute and plenty of liver and scraps thrown in, and you can raise 1,000 pounds of trout in a pond 10 feet deep, 10 feet long and ten feet broad, replacing them with small ones as rapidly as tbey reach marketable size. It can be done very profitably too. The time is looked forward to, and it is not far away, when very farmer will look upon an acre of water as he does upon an acre of land, expecting so much yearlv yield from it, whether it is pond, lake, river or estuary. Washington Star. R.A.X. aossswratka ssrMjd Tae4ay eaca aui-H-- P. a. it. u Bat as. fits. ATTORNEY-AT-LA- Capital Paid in, Surplus, aa ogdex. R. O. Harkaaas, id Errka, Fetrica Ucalr. r il . Kesrsiar DIRECTORS: J. C Arnrtraec, W x QdLO liumJL a. JECOEITIOSI 75,(00. ." Several of the pupils in a certain "backwoods" district determined not to study geography. The teacher believed that they were old enough to begin the subject, and accordingly called one of the oldest boys to her desk and spoke to him about the necessity of a knowledge of his own and other countries. "I sha'n't study g'ography till I git ready!" growled the youngster. The teacher rose quickly and seized hi in by the collar, intending to shake hiin, when the yonng rascal hastily added, "Bnt I am ready now!" Youth's i b. CAPITAli mo- srvvisc OGDEX, UTAH. Paid in Capital, AF.&A.K. fUtm. aw! tWt m the market. Tot item M;sMa at ST w atfeiLftoa ! T 1 rt Ha. kit Ir.ii.irau. SVw l a. MASONIC. UiaiZ. VOL. frva 'HE -- FXDEElXiE B" Go O.E.HOX. ytii. HOTtL, 1 vtmiai pram. r Bita. f3TCmt tLis M fur fartfear wrfmtM. muji op oa: Presence of mind is not always i Iiaalr Ctxii GENERAL BANKING. CITIZENS' BAUK nopolized by the brave and wise, nor is it pniformly cultivated for great and good pui poses. r;aU5D WUjr. OGDEX, UTAB. Married Lovars. The affectionate man, who sits with his arm on the back of the seat when he rides in the cars with his wife, is always r, UTAH. open to the suHpicion that somewhere in the recesees of his self esteem he considers himself a sadly henpecked individual, : $200,000. and is excessively attentive to his better half in pnblic places for the simple purDIRECTORS; pose of side tracking any intimation of such a state of affairs that might be ap- Warren W. Core, R. AWells. Sidney Steren ... c. norieie.ll. tl. epenoer, a noon, parent if he didn't do his half of the Ibos.l Ad. Knhn. Theo.Bobiuson 8. S. Schramm, acting. But the exquisite way a friend of mire OFFICIAL DIRECTORY. directed his pretty wife where to go the other day as they parted at a crowded WBBEB COCMTT OrPICSaS. street corner contained no such intimaProbata Jndire A. C. Pishnn. as inasmuch he the word in tion, put Selectmen Lewis W Shurtuff, John Pineock, "dear" wherever ho could catch his Fred roy. Clerk J. P. Ledwidjre. breath, and concluded with, "Don't forRecorder John O. Tyler. Edwin Dix. Assessor take to a Park at err dear, get, square, Treasurer John A. Boyle, dear, and remember that the number is Collector John V. Bluth. three hundred, dear, and thirty-sevenAttorney L. R. Rogers. Sheriff Gilbert R. Bolnap. Boston Globe. Coroner Marshal Alien. Sudden. fkLXCE ! Elec- tric Supplies ot all Kinds Locksmiths, Stencila llade, Snbber Stamp to order. IRON FENCING. Models and Experimental Machinery to Order Ail kinds of Novelty Eepairin 1. S31 1 Washington Ave. CRESCENT N0YELTY WORKS v |