OCR Text |
Show TUB Utah National Bank. DEPOSITOR!. UNITED STATES OGDEN, UTAH. HAS BAD WEEK FnaUeat Jobs E. Dooly Horace E. Peery Ralph E. Hoag Foreign Stocks of all Kinds Were Demoralized a U DOMESTIC sad FOREIGN Balia drafts , point FATS INTEREST ON POSITS Feb. 51. Th question M to bow lung Russia will l fclIe to bear iiir financial .(rain cautd by the war foreign without ha vine recourse to loan exert a great luflueaco in the 1 the general ct luouey market. It - TIMS DE- E L be-li- condition that owing to resulting front hud harvest and other idUM it will he difficult for Kueaia to raise internal loan, and that if the war laatu beyond a couple of year that inuntry will he hound to raise money r- - Advertising Scheme of Newspaper 064163 Excitement experienced a abroad. Ibe stork exchange very depressed and nervou week, due argely to the fear of trouble in the Talkana Ff.ielgn stock of all classea were (lcnuMahtsl. quantities of them being thrown upon the market from both Faria and Berlin, where 0ieratore were overloeded by recent heavy purchase made under the belief that peace In the Far East would be maintained. The other markets were dull and Jn sympathy with foreign markets, while American eeruritiea were characterized by an almost complete absence of dealing. Ijindon, Feb. 5. Ii waa found nee esaary for mounted troop to dlsirne the jar-bap- green-cover- off-han- d, fp-n- n, pro-poee- excellent. tion that the rival journal promptly went one better by burying 100 metal tube each containing $100 In gold, or $10,000 In nil, these tubes, like tbe other Journal's medallions, being accreted la absolutely public places. Of rouree a, this gave an Immense fillip to the but things came to a climax when It was announced that the first newspaper had "laid down a further series of medallions representing an additionbuul-nee- al 915.000. . believe, he said, "that very shortly, from Monday even, th market will 1 strong end will rcaume Its normal "1 course." EMMIES The old Brooklyn la a steady shipper of about 100 Iona dally. A nice grade of ore la romlug from (he 1.600 level, drifting both way. ningham Bulletin. At 1,060 feet depth a month ego the Dalton A Larks main Incline sprung a leak" and farther siuklug waa suspended awaiting action of the Mascot tunnel, which lowers the water level at tbs rate of about feet a month. Work waa resumed tins week and tue Incline will be put down to 1,000 fret, g'hera a new level will be established. At Isittom it la making a fine abowlng. Bingham Bulletin. 20 IT IS TO LAUGH f WHICH WAS FAR WORSE, Williamson Poe your wife always have the last word? Henderson Well. If aba doesn't, old fellow, she looks It. VEAN8 TO AN END THAT'S ALL. H la not necessary lo gel married, fust run In debt It's much the same. Willie Auntie, are tha angela homely? Wlllie'a Aunt-- Oh. no, Willie; they Ire beautiful beyond expression. Then bow will I know you?" DID HE STILL HAVE THEM? Gerald A fellow threatened to blow my braina out today. Geraldine Did be do It? v- i- HIS UNCERTAINTY, "I wonder," dubiously cogitated Mr. Walker Farr, the eminent tragedian, "whether He paused, a the clamor of the dience rose higher and higher. au- they are applauding my effort, me to come out?" or daring THE REPORT UNCOMPLIMENTARY Mr, lioyle My husband la very surd to please. Mrs. Doyle One wouldn't Judge It to look at you, dear. ANYTHING WOULD DO. ou were wrong In that quarEthel rel wi.h your husband. Maud That doesn't matter. He has Ho Ides what I wa mad about. JUST HELP HIMSELF. He If I tried to kiss you. would you rail for help? , She Would yoit need it? THOSE BOSOM FRIEND?. I feel he is the first man who has ever really understood me. Bella Ah! then he didn't propose. Rtrla Milton. Mas. Feb. 19. Malcolm I'orbee. widely known aa a patron of light harnH racing sad n a yachtsman. died today at bis residence here. Vr. Forbes had been suffering from an Internal malady for about week. Two operations performed ac a Iasi resort fulled. THE CLUES. to the hiding place of thee Cluee" prizes sr published every Sunday by tbs newspapers responsible for the s, scheme, but not, a was done by In tbs shape of allusion in tbe count of n continued story. The medallions and tubes of treasure were hiildea in the different lorelltlee by newsapcclsl representative of the papers, and In the columns of the Journals these men. after naming the pacific London or provincial district chosen by them, give rather vague description of the exact nelghlmrhond In which they had treasure. Here, for example, is one of these rlura, which relates to Morllake, s small London suburb: Will hugging my tube containing 20 ($100), I Inspected the neighborhood. There was n railway line, which I rrosaed and went on peat some shops and small common, until I arrived at n building of only passing Interest to teetotalers. Turning down pert this place, I found myself between two rows of small bouses, at tbs end of which stood an educational establishment. Tbe spot ana most timely discovered. Not n soul fn eight, so. without let or hindrance. I qulvkly buried the tube and afterward mads my way back to ton a." Amazing scene follow promptly on tba publication of inch clues, With n prurienca that haa stood them well In hand the newspapers had been careful to asy plainly that the medallions or tubes of aoverelgns" had not been hidden on private property, and the result waa that In practically every section of London on the morning following the appearance of the first batch of "clue" a street, alley or public square waa taken Into possession by a crowd rum posed of from a hundred to a armed with all sorts of Implements of search and all fired with tbe ambition to gather tn $250 in return for a mornings digging. Tlt-Blt- treasure would be hidden. In order to bt able to repeat the "dues" lo them and thus gain luug start on rivals. A the minutes went by. tbi mob grew more and more excited, and any employe In tbe newsiaper offices who happened to show his face wa overwhelmed with offers of anything from quarter lo live dollars for an advance copy of the paiier. When tho Journals actually made their appearance liter waa something like a riot. Men, women and children fought with each other to get to tbe window where tbe papers were being sold, and those who had secured copies hardly could get away with them. Newsboy who had received bundle of the Sunday Journals charged what they pleased for them. One buy demanded half a crown, or 60 cents. copy eud couldn't hand them out fast enough. Meanwhile the folk who had got paiier were setting off on foot iu 11 directions Unuid for the treasure ground, while the street of the sleeping town were beginning to resound with the newslioya' cries of lo the hidden treasure all the clues!" ALL SORTS OF QUEER IMPLEMENTS. acSome of these treasure-seeker-s tually begin work on Sunday morning! before it is light using lanterns, and even candles but most of them wait until dawn to begin hunting. Thla la about 4 a. m., and 9 oclock from that time until 8 or folk of all sorts keep pouring fnto whatever unhappy neighborhood the newspaper clues" . have seemed to Indicate until orten there are more than n thousand of them. Implements used in the search have Included garden trowels, umbrellas, gouges, walking sticks, carpenters chisels, gimlets, serewdrivers.spadcs, penknives, tableknlves and forke. One latch man even sallied forth with key, and another with a corkscrew, while among the searchers too, was a woman with a tablespoon! An Ingenious Individual appeared In Brixton last Sunday with a divining rod, and to show how the craze ror this sort of thing has grown, it may be added that one of the most ardent searchers tn the Chelsea district was a blind man. In some localities, too, friends and families have formed themselves Into syndicates In order to be able to search more systematical- and before long the badly damaged field waa clear. It la nn in the leant an exaggeration lo any that literally the whole country for in all the big provincial towns exactly the same thing haa happened 1 by the ear over this thing. The daily papery have columna of letters proteat log against whet Is generally described aa a nuisance. Magistrates everywhere, too, are anxious to grant summonses againi the newspaper proprietors who have brought all tho trouble about, but so tar no one baa been able to discover any section uf tbe law under which they can be prosecuted Meantime, every few days , some lucky wight hits upon either one of the medallion or one of the tube of sovereigns. The names and addresses of these ere published promptly, and so the excitement I kept at fever beat. The proprietors uf the two newspapers responsible for it all are Jubilant, especially Alfred Harmawortb, who said In an interview tbe other "bidden day that by means of the treasure" idea be had " resuscitated a sheet which In newspaper circles for years had been considered a hopeleas corpse.'' The employes of these Journals, however, arc mt no happy. Their lives are being made miserable by all sorts of Inquiries regarding the treasure." At the office of both newspapers the telephone hell la kept ringing from morning till night by folk all over London, who are anxious to know If the medallion or tube hidden in their MADNESS GROWS RAPIDLY. The first week such treaaure-srcker- a mostly rontented them Helves with getting their Sunday patter In the regular way sdiI then act out for tbe thousand men, women and children, neighborhood in their district to which the published clues" seemed to point though in some place dense crowds gathered on tbe railway stations to secure the papers as mam as they were thrown off tbe trains. But n week later several lota of treasure having been successfully unearthed In meantime the madness became more acute. The medallion and g newspapers are published at 1:45 Sunday morning, end betore II oclock on the second Saturday night following the opening of the iroaaiirn quest, crowds had begun lo gather about the office of the. two Journals. By the time the newspapers were published each of these crowd numbered at least 5.000 persons, of all sorts and conditions, nr enough entirely to block up the street and make it absolutely tube-plantin- Impassable. These treasure-seeker- s had all aorta of vehicle waiting for them, too cabs, bicycle, tradesmen's light cart and even motor cars, so that they could dash off In the direction of the nearest treasure trove the minute that they bad got a paper and ascertained Us whereabout. Some had pe stationed st the telephone in suburb slide it had been announced that district hod been found. A sort of panic seems to have seized the whole staff of ihe Weekly Dispatch, the Journal which is responsible for the burled medallion. You can pick theta out ou Fleet street by the way they shy off If a stranger tries to apeak to them. HAYDEN CHURCH. KEW YEAR more than half the capitals of Europe, said a friend of the writer, but for downright riotous revelry not one of them all can hold n candle to Vienna. In the Austrian rapltal Christmas Ere Is domestic and dreary, but on New Y'eara Eve Yienna for once In a way takes leave of her sen sea and winds. The flings decorum to the whole city abandons Itself to an orgy; every theater, cafe chant ant, and dining establishment la parked to suffocation with the gayest, noiaeat crowd In Europe young and old, men and women alike, all wound up to a state of boisterous gaity. In the theaters and cafes the din la deafening; the performers are so many and orchestras gesticulating mute struggle In vain to get a hearing. Meanwhile sea of beer ore ' flowing down the throats of the revellers, even ihe children swallowing huge pots of the liquid. Thfin, a the clocks point two minutes to. midnight, a dramatic change cornea over the turbulent, riotous Vienna; every light la turned down and a profound silence tails on the city, until at the first stroke of midnight the much-travel- to say, It I hardly a true Sabbath calm that rests over these crowds of eager folk, moat of them poor, who are seeking for treasure in thla way. Fights and squabbles happen every taw minutes; double and all triple forces of policemen have they can do to keep order, and to people on their way to church tbe whole business is a abominable nuisance. It has proved safest for one who has chanced on one of the bidden medal I kina or tubes of sovereigns not to proclaim hi find from the housetops. A men who was only suspected of having lit on one of th treasure trove wa chased by a mob some hundreds strong, and finally shook them off by Jumping on an omnibus which, luckily, had only one seat empty.' For the most part thes gangs of treasure-hunters- " have borne In mind the newspapers' warning that the treasure s never to be buried on private property, and so confined tbelr efforts to rtre.ns, gutters and the neighborhood of public buildings; but In some districts private flowerbeds have been torn up, fences knocked down and lawns ruined by those who believed that, after all, the magic discs might be found in this way. Th first public protest over this sort of thing waa made. by a London householder, who wrote to the Time describing hi experience with tha Needles "Last evening," he aajd, "on returning home, I found a crowd of people, some of them actually engaged In digging down to the bases of the Iron columns supporting the rallinga in front of my own and adjoining houses, and others looking on at the mischief In progress. I collared one of the digger, and, as he refused to give m hi name and address, I endeavored to take him to the police station, but a mob twin gathered round ua and demanded that I should release my hold of the man. This, at considerable peril to myself, I refused to do, and thereupon I waa huatled by several men, who enabled my prisoner to slip out of hla coat, leaving It In my hands and to run away amid tho plaudits of hla companions. The crowd grew so threatening that the householder had to take refuge In a chem fat's ahop and. later, was taken home under a police guard. London district outside the actual business renters are literally being dug up by folk In quest of "treasure," and arrests are being made wholesale every day on charges of damaging public properly. In one case It was declared that the whole of the channel Ing on both aides of a street had been disturbed, all the Joints scraped out between the curbstone and part of the asphalt broken. Paving stones have been torn up all over London. On Tuesday morning a boundary stone weighing three or four hundredweight was dislodged and thrown Into a roadway, and alongside canal that run through the Isindon suburbs the tow Ing path has been grublied up for more than two miles. In the London parish of Marleybtmp a man was arrested for digging tip the roots of a tree. Referring to a street tn the Chelsea district, hous'dinlder writing to one of the newspaper says, pathetically: White now look like a plowed Horse field." Recently a man was arrested and taken into court charged with on a public picking at the mortar building with a corkscrew. At Reading. a town not far from London, two women were looking for "treasure" on the bank of a river when both fell In anil came near being drowned. CALLED OUT THE TROOPS. The assault on Woolwich Common, however, to check which mounted troops had lo be brought from the lnr-garrison, has shout brought matters tn head. Early In the morning, the clues" that day having indicated Lie Common as a spot where treasure had been bnrled. more than a thousand rersons descended on the locality and began lo prod and dig in good earnest. The more they hunted, too. the madder they got, and when it became evident that the whole Common would he dug up unless the thing was stopped the officer In command at Woola mounted wich barracks ordered force In clear the treasure-seekeraway. At first it really looked as If Ciere would be riot and blood shed, for the crowd was angry and determined not to ht dletuvlieii. but finally the seekers after gold were made to see thbt tbe troops meant biislnci-s- . 1 ed 22, bands lights blaze forth again, the crash out the opening hart of the National Anthem, and the yuung year that haa come on the scene is greeted with deafening volumes of cheers. When they have shouted them Belvex hoarse, relatives, friends and strangers even tall on each other's necks, and hug and embrace one another os If they were so many returned prodigals. Glasses are filled and drained by tens of thousands, every glass as it is emptied, being dashed to tbe ground and smashed into fragments. Long hours aft. tbe theaters are closed the streets ,are black with streaming crowd of people.' .singing Year shouting New songs and wishes at the top of tbelr voices; grave, elderly men In the exuberance of their spirit always hot after midnight-will rush into one another's arms like so many long lost brother though they have probably never seen one another uutil that moment, and horso-plx- y, d everywhere singing, shouting, and embracing are rampant. At every cafe the regular guest may drink tbelr fill from steaming bowls oi punch, which for this once cost them nothing; end thus, hour after hour, the revels continue until the dewn reminds the revellers that there le such a place as horns Berlin la a good second to Vienne In its boisterous welcome to the Intent year. When th Berllneoe have feasted sufficiently on their carp boiled In beer a dish sacred to 8L Sylvester and have surfeited themselves with dough-nu- ts and hot punch, they pour out In their thousands to th theaters and tha streets on enjoyment bent. But the fun really begins on the stroke of midnight, when the streets are pecked with hundreds of thousands of excited, jubilant Oeamana. singing, shouting, struggling nil In the highest of good humor. Thousand of windows are flung open and filled with spectators of the boisterous crowds In the streets below, and the ulr la full of shouts of Prosit Neujahr! (Health to the New Year) Prosit Neujahr! Time was not long ago when any girl who was found between Fried to and Uliter den Unden. had every pay the penalty of a kiss to recent reveller who claimed It; but of ao years the street scenes have become rough that every modest and Berlin maid keeps within the sanctuary of her home, and there is. unfortunately, work for the police to good-humore- rlch-atraa- ae SHOT HIMSELF IN OFFICE. Canyon City, Ore., Feb. 20. C. J. Martin, county treasurer of Grant county, waa found dead In hla office today In the county court bouse with a bullet hole In hla head. On the floor beside him lay a revolver. On his desk Martin left n note asylng he was unable to account for a number of drafts No drawn on tbe county treasurer. intimation of the amount of the abort-ag- e was given, and It will be some time before this can be ascertained. The note also staled that hla estate would amply reimburse the county for hla mistake. lUf. THE INSULTING CLERK. (From the Philadelphia Frees.) Mrs. Nuritih 1 want to get her a pair of swell white gloves to wear to a bslL Clerk Yesm. . How long do you want them? Mrs. Nuritch See here. young man. 1 aint talkin about rentin' 'em. I went tn buy em. Keep Clean SHARMANS CUT RATE TICKET OFFICE a 102 B. Only member of tbe American Ticket Brokers Asan.ln Ogden, which means to tbe traveling public low rates and perfect safety. Special rates to and from Europe via all lines. Highest price paid for used tickets, mileage, etc. Phono 174. ' 437 iiOEBINtWESlil a ChasJ, A. Lindquist R. Q. W. TIME CARD JULY 271H, lft UKFARI DAILY. Xa f, Atlanta Mail U peSala FUNERAIFURNISHINGS Na Xa and Embalming OPEN ALL NIGHT. 2620 Wash. Awe. 620 X. .7:11 XL Balt Laka beat . 2. Chicago, 6L Loula a Na Un k Intw al Atlanta Point East - ARRIVE DAILY. " Ka A Pacts Mall, Balt Lata and all points East ... .11:48 Ka 1, Chisago sad 6L Look a 1 Incubators Poultry men and all Intorootod In Poultry arc Invited to call at our store and examine tho (Irmas Celebrated Iifiia i2V from '2'V 11, Park City and San Pots Valley 7:Na. Se. 3, Fad fie Expmj from Na Incubator j ! BjJ St aago end UiNsa Leak, New iwtiaim chair Yt(4 an g tart dung mt Servian o trmia. ilJ all - L A. BUTTON, Gaa. Agt Ftp. RBalt Laka 0u A. ft HENRY, Ticket ft K. tULSOh, AfeetJ Qghq (? The moot reliable machine on tho market Adapted to any climate. A full lino of POULTRY SUPPLIES. Seeds Now stock Juct received. Dont order from cataloguoe and pay fancy price You can buy from coat and troubl and u at I b certain of getting RELIABLE WESTERN GROWN SEEDS. SKEEN & CO. 352 24th St 09 ictos' TIME CARD. Effective Nov. 22, 1ML OGDEN, UTAH . taaha, Cornell Bluff, Denver, Kaaeai City tad San Pedro, Los Angeles and Salt T aW R, R. Co, Depot, Third, Wort Btx, Salt good, and the safety of your family, you cannot afford to un Milk or Cream until It haa boon ver City (via Learning ton ent-ofFor Provo, American Fork, Lehl, Juab, Milford, Frisco, Caliente and Intermediate points ARRIVE. From Provo, American Fork, Lehl, Juab, Milford, Frisco, Callentea and Intermediate points From Provo, Lehl, Fair-field- , Mercur and 8en-P- t Valley Ry. points. From Silver City, Mam- moth. Eureka, Stockton, Tooele and Garflald if if if A dl 1:49 Expraes fa r tn . . - .... am 7:30 ag Denver, (kasha, Grand , Blrffe, Kansas CKy aid afi 7il0 p a points neat, daily . ARRIVE. ' . S Fsdfia Rxprem , , Xa ' Oeuaeil Bluff ..T I Omaha, Denver. Kaana City aid . f 2:99 4, R art, dally .. M 1 Overbad Xe Llaltad Coracfl Iran ' Omaha Kanes Bluffs, CUy. Dae- - : ver and all prints seaL'" IiS a daOy 1:40 p. Xa 1M Fast Mail t GA.HWKT, . Ikkta AftaL a.H.C0R8 T. Sil- d f) F. and W. A. W. OOLUXK T. P. L 8,00 a m -m .05 935 g qj 5.35 rm 5:35 THX OREGON BN tuMAt UX1 - CAROL JXov. V j' 1909-- 1 DEPART. Ka 7 Batts and Portland.. llil' Ka 9 Pocatello, Montpelier gpi Butte 7:11). pm fa 10:4is a ALL TRAINS DAILY. Ka It Salt Lake and Tinlic totar- and Lake Salt 6 Pullman Buffet Dally Sleeping Car Ka TsIVfcA diate point Service between Salt Lake, Milford, Modena and Callentea. Direct stage Ka fi Salt Laka Prova U and potato Milford connections for all mining districts in fttlth southern Utah and Nevada. Ka If ,sd iBt" pOlUta enaaseaeeaee I.Ppl City Ticket Office, SOI Main Street n-C- Valley uht . -- ltilM4lM 4 TeL 25Sl For particulars, call on or address sent. Salt Lake Route, or J. I DAIRY CO MOORE, COMMERCIAL AGENT. . W. GILLETT, Gen. Pass. OGDEN 4 P4 4 ifi Eureka-an- moth, PURIFIED by th Pasteur process. A sample of our milk will prove to you the difference. A phono call will bring our man. 37. THE PASTEUR Post Office Building. 1 (art daily Na 4 Atlsiitis . if For your own and South Tempi Lak City. DEPART. For Provo, Lehl, Fairfield and Mercur, connecting at Nephi for Monti and Intermediate points on Sanpete Valley Ry For Garfield Beach, Tooele, Stockton, Mam- 'Phone 167-- Z 2274 Washington Avenue, Between 22nd nd 23rd Sts 4 Ogden Steam Laundry , DEPART. SEE PRICES IN OUR WINDOWS 4 aid Ka 6 Mad mad Express ....7:19 h a Na 9 Overland Limited for .. KNIT SKIRTS. FOR LADIES 50 Cents Each 4i OF THE un- Examiner Telephone Number: Day, 234X; night, 56. ; Ogden Knitting Company Phone with the ENGLEHART, Malinger. 25th EL, Healy Housa Fhone 161X TIME TABLE .' s II AUSTRALIA I have "seen the New Year In" In ly. treasure-seekers- FEBRUARY OGDEN, UTAH, MONDAY MORNING, cab-lamp- on Moul-wic- h mob of treasure-seeke- r Common yesterday morning." Thla announcement waa made In n s ltndnn taper. n few day ago. and It may give a faint Idea of tbe extent of tbe madness which at present baa London In its grip. It waa some evil genius In tha office of a penny weekly, published by Sir George Newnes, who invented the now famous advertising Faria, Feb. 51. Prominent financier scheme and began the craze by burying bare been In ronsultat ion today and 92.000 In gold In a public place and inmeaaurea were taken which will b whereabout by mean of it put Into operation tomorrow to pre- dicating la a aerial atory. vent continuance of the depression "clues" embodied of the man baa to be which since the opening of war In the Tbe Identity concealed In these day, for Far Kaat mid particularly on Friday carefully he would aland In noma danotherwise and Saturday last, characterized the of being torn limb from limb by Inger operations on the bourse. owners. The serious toeult of the weakness dignant property Alfred llarmsworth, chief proprietor of the market Is shown by the estiso many other mates of securities listed on the bourse. of the Dally Mail and rouldn't he that periodicals probably Hints February g French rentes drop-lie- d waa tha first all here 3 franc and S3 centime; name them to ropy th scheme In his Weekly DisSpanish exteriors, 11 franca and 10 and then the News of tbd patch; con 7 Kusalun sols, franrs; World, another London centime; Sunday paper, and 30 cenBrazilian fours, g c H up. Between them treasure took M times; Bank of Paris, franc; credit to tha extent of $30,000 has been conLyon na lee. 37 franca; Sues, 200 francs; cealed In public parts of London and Thomaon-Houato60 francs, and Rio tha larger provincial towns. Only one Tintis, 64 francs. It la recognized that mmeihlng must of there Journals, however, ha burled sebe done to atop tha reck lees efforts to the actual rash, the other having In different neighborhoods email creted 11 All the financiers who dlucuesed uf of which enthe matter today united In stating that brae medallions, each or 9230. Its titles finder 56, to the crisis was produced To with twenty of three medalby speculation baaed on the general lions. begin representing 95.000. were plantfear of complications arising out of lb war between Russia and Japan, and It ed" by the first newspaper, ten being bidden la London and ten In the provI because of this that rapltal ha been inces' The Jhlng made such a sensa- timid of Intervening. The flnenrlem who have been cnnaulflng today act together to uphold the market tomorrow, and this, taken with the denial of the sensational report from Berlin and Madrid and by th government here, la expected to bring about a reaction or at least to produis a firmer market. M. Da Ycrnsnil, a member of a prominent company operating on the lionise, railed attention today to the tact that the tone of tbe bourse la Itself wa MORNING EXAMINER. Salt 4, Lake City, Utah. Ajt ARRIVE. 2:00prt Ka I Salt laka Ka 9 Butte and Poc,ullol,.11. Expraaa Kail Salt Laka and Tuitie- l:Hpm .....a Salt Laka and No. 7. tori Ka 9 Salt Md- Laka oad later- - mediate Na Na Ka The Name, Please 19 Portland and Butte.. Butt and Poet,Uo :5r lfi Cache Valley Traina south of Juab do art BUBd,C. A. HENRY, Tleket A CORSE, a H. Pees. A Ft' Ogden. VtA r. a .Lake l, OV a x. burlxt, aAft, Salt .. - Tell me th name and address of your friend tn tbo East whs might be Induced to come west thla summer. I will furnish him, or her, with complete Information regarding tbe low excursion rates and the best to make routes, reserve bertha, and do everything possible your friend's Journey cnmfo; Jbte and pleasant. 11 you're going east, I should be glad to do as murk for you. Flyer for Omaha and Chicago leave Denver at 4:16. p. m. and 10:3$ p. m.; for 8L Joseph. Kansas City sad Louis at. 2:00 p. m. and 10:35 p. m. A Sign of the Times! to Chicago and douhle-trac- North-Weste- Tleket Office, 76 W. Bacon South 8L R. F, NESLEN, General Agent. SALT LAKE CITY. the East over the railway between the Missouri River and Chicago. Excellent service in every particular. One of these trains, the Overland United, is the most luxurious train In the world. Electric - lighted throughout. Direct connections at Onaha via Tho Line to St. Paul and Minneapolis. only k rn Tickets, reservations,' and full information can be obtained from C. A. Walker, General Agent, ' Chicago & M-Wutsr- o Joa Santa MM Mratt, 3 Ry, ILUf W Uniu M Lake Ur, tub. fiHfiFWMKgrgi'l Sal H ATCKISOK, TOPEKA & SAIH Ff - - Utah to From KANSAS CITY and CHICAW. -- Also Direct Line Galveston. El Faso. City of Me tbe Mining Camp . Mexico and Arizosa-Ask me about reduced ra-. C. F. WARREN,. I Trains . "" |