OCR Text |
Show OGDEN DAILY COMMERCIAL: SUNDAY, JANUARY -- dm yos," auJ a vuaoe ostsde toe door, I eta cos in. I hare a dcjH:t fcr d- I bare, and if yo doat aym U THE REASOH. t Ttifl a wilL" Mr. faun Bii4. "Miady. hiiiii f m aw. tarn. mmvz i hu a. ! Heralpaaaa. of Xut, fc dox Jl 1 voaal I wjU a b4 I aouid ajut trd tauucfc I Cuuai a-eaa ua kuar. bx CUK1XQ A CKAX r thai tbe vrorld ahouli be Cj-t- o ult ril cf my Nj on carva f jt me." Oh. don't say that, oacle." sai l Silver bething!r.- "Yoa know I love tool You am th only frieul I hare in t!i worM. and if yoa were Li-x- k - die what would become of irn--f '1 suppose yoang Oay Cheerer woal-console yoo for tuy loaa," cai J Mr. "At any r.tti?, I don't care. I will end wy trouble ajud aurrow tomorrow at 13 m." And with these fearful words he strode oat of the room, Itaving Lizzie sobbing, with her curly black head resting on a diiiwr plate. -- What' the matter now, Bess? Has the inillintr disappointed yoa in your lore of a bonnet?" asked a warm, hearty dice, which waa the property of "yonnjr Ony Cheevera," aa Mr. iladdox called him, ai that gentleman strode into the room. Oh, Goyr Bobbed Lizzie. "Uncle at 12 Cyrna ia going to dio o'clock." "How do yon know?" asked Gay. "He aaid aa" . "Bat bow doea he knowr "lie' going to kill himself." "So aa to make himself a true prophet, ehT asked Gny laughingly. "Oh, Guy, don't joker cried Lizzie tearfully. "lie will I know he will." I doubt it," aaid Gay skeptically. "But ho tried to commit suicide several times," penasted Lizzie fearfully. "Once he tried to smother himself with horning charcoal, bnt he forgot to stop up the keyhole, and I smelt the smoke and got some neighbors to break open the door and saved him. Then he tried to hang himself, but the cord broke; and he fired a pistol at himself, but he forgot to put any ball in it, so that failed; and then" "GraciousP cried Guy, as Lizzie stopped for want of breath, "what a determined man he must be! Such perseverance deserves to be rewarded. Have you any idea what plan he will try nowr Tm sure I don't know," said Lizzie "Something mournfully. suppose." ; "Duo - yoa aej I ni Oh, I know." Bid Gny. "wUt yoa lJ are aboct U ioi Hun thu.k 1L But begoing to interfere dot at s I wiah t fore yoa make yoor quk-ttllisvw w f a atk yoa questions, ?a " 4 for yoor tites futuro wcil!.-"WLat's that to yon?" ConsilerabK I am about to niirry Mi Silver; ao Lr inturtU are natonJ-l- y iu:oe." "Th"U the is provided for aiaply. "Thank yoa for your iufonaation. Very gld to bear it. And now txenad the aj ; arnit impertinence of the juea-tkbut where i your will" -Here," aaid Ir. Xiddox. laying his hand on it Supiow you gire it to me to tike care of "Give it yoa! Why, p"v?" It illicit become unplaced," explained Oay. "I'll k,ep it myself," said Mr. Mad dox rou0'!:ly. "Then just leave a memorandum on the table," sail Gay earnestly, "to tell where it is. It will save trouble, perhaps." "Get out" cried Mr. Jladdox angniy. "Ah. I see!" aaid Mr. Cheevers coolly; in a hurry to begin. Well, I won't de tain yon; but I Lave a little suggestion to offer." "Welli" said Mr. Maddox impatiently. "It iat'ais," said Guy. "Misa Silver informs ine that you have made several previous efforts to cut short your trouble and your breath, and always unsuccess fully. low it seems to ue you uon t go tho right way about it. This box." and here he opened the box before allnded to, contains several little plans that 1 think might please you. Here's one," and he showed a little steel instrument "What's that?" asked Mr. Maddox curiously. "This," said Guy, "ia an article that you can place round your neck like a collar, then, by striking your hand on the left Mde of your neck, a sharp spike is driven right into your jugular vein" "But that would kill me?" said Mr. Maddox, storing. "Well, ain't that what you want?" demanded Gny sternly. "Now, here's another," he went on. "Here's a wheel, you observe; you place this band round your neck, pass it round the wheel and give it two or three turns then let go. The recoil will twist your head almost oii your snouiaers inu yoa to a cer tt j j ; i pro-tid-- ian.' sail Mr. ft Biiae raltl MadJY'X gUjsai!r, "anj it I mm rody. -- W. feariaT IB Krouiiym Kafa. CaULarui iladljx lie jlaoJ ke box oa the taUe, and tHea took a swat ppueiw Mr. JUdlox and etartd bhuiklyat Ura. "Whit dt yoo uruat" aie! Mr. Jll- - id Lad. U ; asvsy, ilrtKirn intot Ifbllaa j : ruse and tmlxkel tbs Mr. Gny Qjertrft and dote frtaked into tb room, carryits aa ob- I JOE. boX UIiArT Id TO. ker urt aad at. f Aa4 att Wr reraa tew tr; SB taa, Itnaoth, aa wm; Aa MilUoaairt. dreadful, 1 "But what does he want to make tainty." Mr. Maddox stared at him with nn r away with himself for?" asked Guy feigned horror. BAntneTl crW. "here"; went on Guy coolly "Then," "Why, he says he ia a miserable man, a a torpedo. It w a burden to every one, and that life has little package, You place itln yonr no joys for him, and that he is weary of mouth, Hnsp your teeth on itf and off this world goes jour head, smashed intomillions "And so would like to try the next?" of 1 atoms." a&id Guy. "Perhaps he won't find it so esclaimeiVaxIr. Mad"Good heavens!" pleasant as the one he is quitting. What dox fearfully. "What a terrible idea!" an unreasonable man he must bo! He is "Not at all," eaid rich, talented, healthy, and has a very "Beautiful invention IGuy soothingly. quite pride mymoment of pretty niece" and here in a self on it scientific suicide, you see! abstraction he allowed his arm to wancan take poison or blow their der around Miss Silver's waist "and Anybody brains but to do it scientifically reout, somo what more can he want? But peoreal talent. You have it, and 1 quires ple never are satisfied. It reemahois am confident that you will reflect credit determined to pry into futurity, and it skill. inventive on Now," he conmy so laudable seems a pity to disappo. ut "if could use all tinued you confidently, an ambition, but duty luty to myself three of these inventions at once cut dislike interfere. me to I r.ny compels and blow your yourself garrote jugular, scandal or excitement. A coroner's jury head off, all at once why, I'd thank would cause both, therefore we must your you." balk his little game." ' "What!" cried Mr. Maddox fiercely, "But how?" asked Lizzie curiously. "do I'm crazy? Do you think "A prudent general," said Guy haugh- Tin you think to use any of your infernal going his confides his to "never plana tily, inventions? Get out of this room, you army, particularly when the army is cold blooded villain, before I throw you of the feminine gender; so excuse me; out of tho window!" mum's the word. But rest assured, my "But I have a great many more to dearest Elizabeth, thnt unless your show you," remonstrated Guy, "and you worthy uncle shuttles off this mortal coil see I want you to try as many as possiin a surreptitious manner before 13 m. ble. Well, well!" he added, as Mr. Madhe will not do it afterward the poker threateningly, of course I mean illegally. Farewell till dox grasped But Til leave this box here, "I'm going. and before you get rid just concluded this address Having Guy strode off in a tragic manner, leaving make a memorandum of what you will Lizzie greatly surprised, but still quite use and leave it on the table, because know there will probably be nothreassured, for in her opinion what Guy you left of ing you to draw conclusions from, couldn't do wasn't worth doing. tt ut The next morning Mr. Maddox inade his appearance very saturnine and gloomy, and ate his breakfast with a mournful air that was terribly impressive. Having finished, he then took leave of his niece in a feeling manner. "I am about to leave you," said he cmournfully. "I am about to end this life of misery. I hope that you may be happy." "Oh, don't go!" said Lizzie, tearfully clinging to him, and looking into his face pleadingly. "It's useless," said Mr. Maddox firmly. "My mind is fixed, and nothing you can do con persuade me to relinquish my purpose. But you, my dear child, shaU not be unprovided for. I intend to make my will in the few hours that are left me, and you will not be forgotten. Good-by- , my dear child, farewell!" and then, after embracing his niece fervently, Mr. Maddox rushed from the room frantically and becurely locked himself into his own room and began to prepare himself for his last journey. "Nine o'clock!" he said to himself, looking at his watch. "Three hours yet! Enough to do all I have to do! First to make my will!" The last will and testament of Mr. Cyrus Maddox was evidently not a long one, as it was finished in less than an hour. "Eleven o'clock!" said Mr. Maddox, "and I have finished. How slow the time passes, to be sure! Now, what shall I do until 12 o'clock, for I am determined not to die until noon" A knock at the door. "Go away cried Mr. Maddox angrily. "Ton can't come in." . "I aiu very sorry to disagree with r and so" Here any further speech was cut short by Mr. Maddox seizing his visitor and hustling him out into the passage. "Well?' said Lizzie, anxiously, to Guy. "I think it's all riht," said Guy, grinning. "Get the lunch ready. Your uncle is all right He'll be down." And sure enough, so ' he was, and though ho spoke not he ate most voraciously of everything. "Lizzie," saiu he suddenly, after an hour's pause, "did you ever see an infernal old fool and an idiot?" "Never that I know of," said Lizzie. "Why?" "Because just look at me and youllsee one," said Mr. Maddox grimly, and he stalked upstairs. Up to the present time of writing Mr. Cyrus Maddox is still alive, enjoying remarkably good health, and he seems to be on friendly terms with Mr. Cheevers and his wife Lizzie. He probably forgave that gentleman on account of a discovery that ho made that the torpedo contained nothing more dangerous than salt, and the other "infernal inventions" were infernal in about the same ratio, but Guy etill maintains that when persons are weary of life they should end their troubles by scientific suicide. Boston Globe. nitro-gly-ceri- Beware of Thorn. There are no less than 3,000 "little in- cidents" about Stanley going the rounds of the papers, and at least 2,999 of them are all in the eye of a correspondent The other one you can believo or not, but you'd better not Detroit Free Press. MASONIC. BUSINESS CARDS. in UVt reported fy&&aat is cos The Nrw York Woril hM pabliabed a f jfiond nt Englishmen aal American U Axaericans who are w jnh $.(mL fc bey c? a3 the type fuondrv ia the Cij-3- Eulishmea saceeod ia bey-V-- Z M or orcx. Th tit ia a loc aad The Wuril inform as that there oar type, but they thill &erw, cevtr are tbxxiaa&d pejvjtia ia America who iv.il it pell "labucr" and "hoooor." are worth f 1,m,0) or tu . Th rkh-t- X A Isminoo crayon La W-- invented individual ia Europe i ih Duke of WcAtmicater, whoa furiuae i fSJ,0.-OX- L wiih which speaker can write npua a It u Ute inherited accaiuulauon blackboard ia the Ltrk when explaining of ceo tun- - of aa entailed tta. The lertort that us iHn&tnOcd by um views. 5EetLing similar to riehnst utt--a ia America are Joha D. Ltcfe-rBovkefuUrr anl William Waldorf Ast Jr. tUi lunibuo CTijua is what frau Illicit tch t limited to have fl2j.&X',wl matrrulizing Uelituos have been rubbing cpoa their face when Evtrrycent of Bockef clip's money La been made within a few year in standthey wished to puse as alaning aogtla. ard oiL il oriintc4 the pipe hurt It now look a it the four years' colfor petrolema. He begaa life a a newscourse mat go. Stndrnt will then paper reporter, and when the Lax py lege one year less of stc2iug Grerk roots get thought of doing something in oil the inflection cf the Tuioe ftirack hiia he was the keeper of a small and rale ark Jooesif it is ar.M Smith Then ttor ia Cleveland. O. The EothacLild of Europe are togeth- morning, and that mat h more of prepawhose first requireer worth nearly a billion dollars, but ration f jr the there are so many of them that no indi- ment is that the graduate ahall cnleara cf what te acquired a tout r.iae-tf'ntvidual has over $10.COO,00a The so machpin and trouble at with properties are valued at but held in'ao few bind that, alliance of the Disof the jroungvr generation, Coraeliut The wa K. 73.. trict cf Colaiabia petition congress to h and Willia-fSO.OOO.O) 000,000. . permit their delegate to have a aeat ia The Cuitl Etatei Li the richest coun- the national house. They say they have try in the world and contiins uore mill- elected a delegate by 43,406 votes, and ionaire than probaMy all the nations of they want him to ieprosnt them, since Europe together. We arw not the most the alliance vastly outnumber it emwealthy per capita of population, how-eve- n ployers and the district has no represenAustralia has that distinction. tation. The delegate the wageworkers But there are numerous American citidesr to seat in congress U known as zens, plain or otherwise, according to ilahoney, the puperhanger. the degree of snobbery to which they A vro;-j- in was bound, ".gad. malare inclined, who are richer than any treat jd ia a horrible mina'.T and robbed monarch of Europe, Queen Victoria herself not excepted, and she is the richest o 7.003 franca in a railway train on the vay from Nice to Toulon rjcently. She ruler in the world. Jay Gould, the strange, silent man of was ia one of those locked compartment iron, heaps np wealth with as much de- which our European fellow citizens pride termination as ho did when he began themselves on for railwr.y travel. The life as a partner in a sawmill that short- woman had been hxtked up alone in the set apart for women travelers. At ly become bankrupt causing Mr. Gould's box she was supposed to be alone. least partner to commit suicide. Jay Gould is already worth f 100,000.000, bat it is When the guard unlocked the door at his ambition to become tho richest man Toulon she was found lying gagged and in the world. For this he toils on day insensible. Such a thing could not have where passengers by day, and there is every reason to be- happened in America, in one all sit long cor. Eurotogether relieve his modest ambition will be alized if he lives long enough. The rich- peans, particularly Englishmen, object est man of modern times, perhaps of any to this because "there is no privacy," time, waa William H. Tanderbilt, whose but traveling safely in public is much better than being gagged and robbed in possessions amounted to $100,000,000. private, or murdered, as has occasionally realThe Astors' estate is in lands and ities. They draw their rents. Their es- happened, in these separate comparttate is the oldest great one in America, ments in the cars in Europe. and perhaps managed in the most conThe Business Outlook. servative way. "Only an earthquake The Timet says: Philadelphia could wipe devastating Manhattan island Of tba commercial failures that hare bera down P. in Coliis out" it within the past fx Huntington, rx& it will ba tho list at $10,000,000, was the son of a found that this greater number Were of flrraa thaj were actually bankrupt long before and bad onljr small farmer in Connecticut He began deitrred liquidation In tbe boJ of some improT kn t. O. t. t Vuiru.Ui Aw Ft fract iral . S A.r.4a.M. KEEP. SETS CF ESCXST0 T - El'IUER- i t..itir: t.at. tj. 1. at..l Adas- - UHAiii,I a lu.--t - t re-a- l lij Van-derb- ilt East tH CalifbV out - v u - U- these miUiol aires have done good with their money. They have cultivated and refined the taste of Americans by bringing into t le country noble rany of works of art They ha re also Unproved American live stock to m immeasurable extent The Jersey cattle, blooded sheep and turf horses, as well as the magnificent Clyde and Percheron horses owe their general distribution over the United States largely to the interest American rich men have taken in improved live stock. Let cs give them their due. Among persons in The World's list worth 5.000,000 or over are two preachers. Rev. Charles Hoffman and Rev. Dean Hoffman, who have $5,000,000 each. Here is the list of those who have as much as $10,000,000 or more: &m. oi-a- . f.;r'i t . TfiV John D. Rockefellor William Waldorf Astor... Jay Gould Cornelius Vaudorbilt William K. Vanderbilt Coliis P. Huntington Russell Sage John L Blair William Rockefeller LeUuid Stanford lira. Hetty Green William Astor Darius O. Mills. Philip D. Armour Mrs. Mark Hopkins Charles Crocker estate Henry Hilton K. 8. Biggins estate George Westinghouso, Jr. Anthony J. Drexel..... J. Pierpont Morgan Andrew Carnegie Olirer H. Payne Frederick W. Vanderbilt George W. Vanderbilt Mrs. Elliott F. Shepard Mrs. William D. Sloane Mrs. Hamilton McK. Twombly Mrs. W. Seward Webb George M. Pullman John W. Mackay Robert Ooolot , Ogden Goeiet. Percy R. Pyne Mrs. Moses Taylor $125,000,000 1x3,000,000 100,000.000 80,000,000 75,000.000 40,000,000 85,000.000 80,000,000 80,000,000 80,000,000 80,000,000 80,000,000 85,000,00) 85,000,000 83,000,000 2.1.000,000 80,000,000 20,000.000 15,000,000 15,000,000 15,000,000 15,000,000 .'. 15.000,000 15,000,000 15,000,000 13,000,000 .... , 1,000,000 12,000,000 12.000,000 12,000,000 10,000,000 10,000,000 10,000,000 10,000.000 10.000,000 Street car and railroad companies ought to make themselves a Christinas present of a million or moro or cuspidors for the beneSt of the hogs who travel in their cars. The enspidora might be fised in the floor somehow, and pijes from every 6eat might be made to lead to them, so that when the hog expectorates he need not sicken all the rest of the passengers, by compelling them to. witness the operation. Cnspidors are cheap now. Yon can get a heavy nickel plated, hand decorated one for sixty-nin- e cents. Electrical welding has hitherto been experimented with, but never practically adopted on a large scale. A Chicago manufacturing establishment is now. however, about to introduce it in all departments. There are some metals that have never yet been successfully welded by any known process, bnt the electrical method makes them fit together as though they were one and the same substance. Even cast iron has been united to lead, copper, tin, aluminum, silver and brass in this way. 14. I. f. .i- a. Hi, Au i U. r". S.U. i -- !, J. Mia. tWilf i aw. -t jijt 1 E. fc t. t o. Km. rlLl 1M AP.CHITECTS, Ofws. room 14. IT btai In, tf. Oii, a. I tail. c. 0. A. a WHttl.CE Ji LOiHiE SO. J. IJ'lL'ELm tail. ad 15 Natial Buik L ErrLt. to Uillt.-- Finer. W. U. att-lM- t ui Lfc ta. Ere a r. W, TTIXTAII ENCAMPMENT XO. Prtm ai4 Ke Ofiaikkjic tho Tint . A. O. lT. W. b tl M tlii. 1 1 h.ir FU f r&rh uuuiit. 1 8. F. ATTORNEYS IV.Ito. Y j car, CRESCENT i EVEESOX, AT Ritm It and tX First L Knran 4. Tpion T Oiien. I tah. bUk, Xi t3. NO. LODGE All anjuuru-iu- c ttrei-t- . atenue iirar fotjr-foartbntlMT are curUialijr invited to ait-t.F. W. Law is, X. O. W. L. Adahr. !!.. Sec'jr. h liaui Cui!J-Uu- ;. I. aa fUNION ATTORNEYAT-LAW- . stret-t- . Lrr a, C. P. II.)11 rerular ow'tineT'rT Monday niulit at in A. O. 1. W. liitK, ahiiis't4i ilk u'rl-- LW. Xatkmal lah. firt aoi tL Visitim jn.liTii areroHijlly inveii. LAWYERS. JIiUEEE t, I. 0. 0. F. ARCHITECT. Tweaty-fonrt- h 6. L0DCEN0. SIfyU every Wednexlay In A. O. C. VS. I?all, Waktiinelon avenue, near Twentr-fourt- U street. ly Sojourning britl-- n in good Manding are W. 11. Uax, S. (j. invited to attend. U. WHITE, ATTORKEY-AT-LA- Pretir la the lMtrirt Court and all th NO. t, courts. Pi ixmal attriition irin-- to CANTON. OGDEX FATKlARC'H MILITANT. M,Jikn buildHnmimiN'r the iuCA in II. lifvnnfll a Bro., ing, iiii'at timitof I. 0. 0. F. S.'d lr-Utfik-aL taU. P. O. Twentj-fourtbox M'i. Met every Tneday end Friilay evening at Latter Park PaviUiou. M"miier iuvit xi. AHES N. I1HSALL. F. W. Lkmu, Captain. EUWA1U M. ALLtSOH E.C.SiiEAD,nerk' lilIl.UX. 4 ALUSOX, EDEB SOX3 OF ST. CEOR(iE. AnciEYS-AT-UW- , "To at. beurge and Uerrie England. OWea, oer i National Bank, eorner of RICHARD C0ZURDE LEON LODGE, Waohincton and laenij-fourt- h street, eoll.-rtitm- 'ry't , t, L 0 ai.u Ogdeu. L taU. Xo. 831. & BOEEMaN, JACOB Meets every Friilay evening punctually at 7:30 o'clock, in the Thoinan building, Twenty-fonrt- h aud tirant, Ogden City, Itnh. 8ojmirniug brothers in good standing cordially invited. Printed forma of tiie "Aims and Objects of the Society" can be obtained from P. A. Conk, il Wanluncton avenue, or of any of the otti-ce- ATTORN Office, Britain, Ko. 1408 Wahington areane, Oifdea, Ctau. Pkrtttal J. Baiiatt .President. Habit Gillktt, BecreUry, i74 Wash Ave, E.HEYWOOD, ATTORNEY-AT-LA- Office, 369 Twent f KAKHPOBO ATTO Bank bnililinir. 35, X and 87, w rf f First National IIrlT--,1 n rarsT.1 I Arm Tiirrri Tl ra-Wrd- L a. I Railroad I Royal College of Snrireons, England : Fellow Society Art and Science, London, Formerly quarantine officer and superintendent for New Zealand and Melbourne, Victoria. Address or call at SL1S5 Washington Ave. DENTISTS. SNOWDEN, 1 Bought, SoM and ALL TICKETS GUAR- Street. Telephone 201. J. F. Feitz. ROBT. IiHOCELMANN. OTTTD A A. COTT1NGHAM, PHYSICIAN. In connect ion with Roneral practice, jrives special attent ion to diBeaxec peculiar to femalra d it eaMs of tho genito urinary organs, diseases of the rectum, vis.: Files, fistula, fissure and ulceration; disenxes of tbe ear, nose, throat and chert. Conf ultatiiin free. Office over Posto nice. Telephone 209. h 1 1 VI, Tickets ANTEED. 816 Twenty-fift- fill II 11 III11 IIIiTI i to all point. SURGEON-ACCOUCHEU- C.R B Railroad and Stoamslii Doctor in Meuicinea, Mar tor la a., ijonuon. mrKery, ;. Ticket Association. W, RNEEYS-AT-L- rooms OfT?M, ember of tbe American B. W. SMITH, glilTH a SMITH, W. JONES gp:okge street, 0den, Utah. UTTB physicians ifJm'.m. Schools of Prophecy. The Illustrator, a monthly commentary on the international Sunday school lessons series, has a paper defining the four schools of Biblical prophecy that hold sway. The first is the praeterist school It holds that the prophecies of Revelation were fulfilled by tho destruction of Jerusalem, and that the record closod then. The second is the present-is- t or historical school of prophetic interpretation. The Presentists claim that the prophecies cover all the period of the Christian church, from tho time of the ministry of Christ on earth until the day of his second coming. When he shall appear in the clouds in glory with the saint3 about him, then, and not till then, the period of prophetic fulfillment ends with the historical school of interpreters. They adopt the year and day theory as set forth in the book of Daniel, and look for the second coming at any moment. Then comes the futurist prophetic school. Its advocates say the prophecies are mostly to be fulfilled in the future within a period of seven years. During this seven years a personal infidel antichrist will arise on earth and have a great career for a time, at the end of which will occnr the literal second coming. The fourth school of prophetic interpretation is called the comprehensive, and includes in its beliefs the ideas of both the historical and futurist divisions. The Comprehensives believe there will te first a general and typical fulfillment of the sacred prophecies, extending over a period of years, and then after that will come a literal fulfillment extending over days. It is interesting to note in this time of crass materialism and money getting that the majority of professed Christians still hold to the belief in the literal second coming of the Christ on earth. Hundreds of thousands indeed think that the time is even now ripe for that coming, but they are divided again into two schools in their views as to what will take place on that coming. The Advent-ist- s are of opinion that then the race of man in the flesh will come to an end, and that only the glorified souls of the saints will inhabit the earth. The majority of Christians, however, hold that the human race will continue after the coming, bnt it will be glorified and redeemed, and the prophecy of the return of Israel will be literaUv fulfilled. - SECRET SOCIETIES. brth utfr and pffiUly have r raooot monetary stringency, which was of speculative rather than commercial origin, bull the fact remains that the most Important commercial failure have not been really due to present commercial conditions. This ia an otoervutiou important to be made, In order to correct tho timidity and distrust that ara the chief present obstacles to business activity Fortunately capital is recovering from the shock of the Barings failure. The dowmrarj tendency has been csecked. aim with the iueTitoble appre ciation of cound securities the banks are relaxing the rigid attitude which they felt compelled to adopt They cannot save those whose business is already undermined and who will continue to topple over from day to day, but with returning con- fldenco the general business of thecountry will bt round in a tou-l- y prosperous condition. A- f '.ilUilE C03tUAXI'L2T. K.T.. v, a ice W. M. - AF.CKniCTS, fijO,-000,00- 0: nt to aiujut. R.A.M. . frvliifc ! r" co!-Itfg- yndQnthn iiiweacfc tut-iu- I aai tbit4 r tcmr ffWBtiaiM a t.t'. b o a. IUXL04 a. COrOHACTOS de-t?ct- ,, nitre-glyceri- II. I MI Ci-C- t Sausage Works! Foot of Twentieth St. City Office, Chicago Market, 2254 Washington Av CKiDEN, UTAH. MAKING OF ALL KINDS OF SAUSAGE DENTIST. A SPECIAL,! Office, 2127 Washington avenue over Horrock Soim store. Teeth without plates and snvinir natural teeth a specialty. No teeth or roots too bad to be saved by filling or crowning. Special attention given to children's teeth. Si C. CIVIL ENGINEERS. C. A. TCSB. E. TUSH h All orders by mail or wire given attenprompt tion. Telephone 245. P.O. Box 657. - TT H. Greenwell FABIS. Wholes FARIS, CIVIL ENGINEERS & SURVEYORS. Plans. sTwcifications and estimates prepared and work superintended. Maps, plat, tracings, blue prints, etc., etc., executed on short notice. Rooms 3 ami 4, Union block. No. 362 Twenty Fourth Street, Ogden, Utah. S.M. PKESHAW, UNDERTAKER And Funeral Director Metallic Caskets and Wood Caskets and Collins Special Attention paid to Embalming and Preparing Bodies for Shipment. Orders by telegraph promptly attended to. I have the only Hearse in the city. Telephone No. 115 alb & Bros. and Rbtaii BUTCHERS. DEALERS IN Meat, Poultry and Fish Try our Pure lard, manufactured by ourselves and yon will never use any other. MaU orders and wholesaling a Bpecial business Twenty-fourt- h witnns. street L.B.DOEE, JOHN" WALSH. EXTERPRISE MARKET. HOUSE, 24th Street, Next to Thomas Bros. first-cla- ss Skookam loot Haii Qvomet. Grows Hair Rapidly. Eradicates Dandruff. 11 Choice Meats of 111 kinds. Poultry, Fish and non but tue Delivered Free. Our guaranteed. order wagon will (ymdsorders if desired. French and English spoken. Give us a trial. handle chilLl" f"f0niSatisfaction Stops Falling Hair. 19 a Preventive of Baldness. 24th St., Near cor. Grant Ave. fKTOX WATER HEATER ! The Most Improved and Economical Heater in the Murket, bit iff Grows Hair on Bald Heads. 1 ft If Is an Exquisite Toilet Article l HOT coloring matter. ( Trade mark registered.) Contains no Mineral or Vegetable Poisons It Is an honest and meritorious preparation. Nature's Own Remedy. , Mm Root Hair Grower NEW YORK. Fo Sal by &U Druggists. Go. Plumbing and Gas Fitting IN ALL ITS BRANCHES DOYLE &1IALVERS0N, 23M Washington Ave. Call and get prices. |