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Show . .. .... ( FIVE CARLOADS OF NEW GOODS ! I Just Received at No. 13 WEST FIRST SOUTH ST. coisrsiSTiua of ihinese and Japanese Goods, Crockery and Novelties. mmmmmmm ' mpuajL". ihj ui'i "fi'"! We have added a New Department to our Store, which embraces a Full Line of TEAS, includinir the Finest Brands of tag', English Breakfast, Gunpowder, Imperial, Young Hyson, Baskct-lire-d Japan, Uncolored .Japans, Sun-dri- ed Japans, Ihi-doz- en brands of Green Japans, which we will sell from 25.16 33 per cent, lower than these Goods ever sold in Salt Lake. Our Mr. S1EELL, while in California, purchased at San Francisco a Carload of Goods in Job Lots, consisting of ecorated Lamps, Chinese Decorated Ware, Imported; English and Japanese Ware, Japanese Baskets in all Styles and Grades. " : I. SPECIAL SA3LB-I-ra't Forget the Place : 7 pj No. 13 W. First So. st. Telephone, 382 jf P' ' BX' 701' OlRIIRANDSi nfnll 'fjfell TONY FAU8T. fiKfit )n llffl ANHKUBER. ORIGINAL 'Ttfi BURGUNDY. BvDWEISER. $&tydLtyj IRLANOER, 0E T r AW tE I..rml nd 1, . ir,.,,.. on "?.' H,U. W. My Trurkt. Walker tale. K g nod Buttled Jli-i- in any quuntliv hlilpx"l Prmnjitly to OnlT. PMrUl Attrutiou linen lo I'ily luiuily Trade. ANHEUSER BUSCH BREWING ASSOCIATION. Fitzgerald &. Hofhcimer, ... Sole Agents, Real Estate I In all Classes of Froperty. ACREAGE A SPECIALTY j LEADING ADDITION I E 1THEWANTLANdJ St., Salt Lake City, Utah. I Utah Title Insurance & Trust Co. C8 West 'ud South St., Halt Lake City, Utah. Olfkera nn 1 John E. Dooley, Froeldont. L. B. Hill, Vico-Prealde- A. L. Thomas Secretary. JniuriHiitiloiM y. II. AUkHIUrM. M.n tiant. ! I W.H. M.fBl IUnkr. K. '. I HAXMr.iw. Cmurlo Wining Co. W. II. . ri b. JollK 1. IMI.Y, .!tiill't. J xm mmhiv t th iolral Killr-- ! .1 K. INioi.tr. ('whirr Wtll. Kargo k Co, V.. A Hunts rhlr ! r- -l In. Naajg W (' ll.w.i, Att.ini.y. ahiim'b I. Th... tr..i)l 1,14. I, H"mimji. (WilT National auk. J K. Waikta. lut-t-t Naibnal Uaiia. Joan A. MaIuhaU ITurmWi Jwiw. T. O. W tjunta. U(t. 6. C. M. i. Attorney, John A. Marshall. j SALT LAKE CONSTRUCTION Jgg STEAM AND HOT WATER HEATING 53 ' 15y our gravity s.yslrm of wo avoid any per- - jgtyvSK Jxi 1 deposit 'from the waU-r- , it buinjr used vr and lt4wS5C' ov' r i",l,l,iKt,'ly- - Hot air furnaces hi! at lt HlH-er- - IstoaJv &j&tW tain, while we can always jruuraiit' (hat a or hut ' water apparatus put in by u will work. In mild St" weather also u hot w ater heater can he regulated to a iiieetv. while, with a titnmger (ire, comfort can m r r cured throughout tho Imjiiw'oii the coldest day. II y tlii ft lH uvbtein economy of coal, minimum of attention, and free- - ' ctoni from diist i atMired. "epence" :THE -:- - SPENCE -:- - HEATER:- - HOT WATER HEATER. Ca(1 U; s,,vn al 0ur storc IllKmj al lb k 61 FIRST EAST ST. SALT LAKE CITY. WHAT WE CLAIM FOR THE North Star Refrigejiatoes For COLD, DHYNKSS gad PLHITV Of AIB It stand unsurpussed. It will maintain a lyr T-- rature with the me atuuunt of Ua than any other n frigerat'T. For HuiUotiality , l'rrlw t Workmanship aarl Handsotne Ieign it i A it i nllcl with tvry Air ONLY" it will not iufvoiuv rauci-- I and sur m other IiVfrij:Tstor that are fliled with .Jawduat, Stiaviti? and t'oarcoal. It La larr ?"t.)rag Capacity ad lc ChamUr, with the same outid uitamurtnifiil, thao may other lUfrig-tra'- r inU Sold only by th SALT LAKE HARDWARE COMPANY. 32 West iwnd South, (Opra Houae Block). Sigtt.'cf tilO "BIG-- O-TJT- ." Headquarters for LAWN MOWERS. GASOLINE STOVES. 6AHDEN TOOLS. RUBBER HOSE and HOUSE FURNISHING HARDWARE . of all Descriptions. mail aufl Montana MacMnery Company C. P. .MASON, Manager. ' Headquarters for a!! Glasses of Machinery. Kno-inesan-d Boilers from Ahorse power ana upwards in stock forimmo diatc delivery. Fteam I'umps, Injectors, Home Whims, Hoisting Eueines Rock Breakers- - Wall's Roll, Ingcrsoll Air Compressors and Imll, Lubri-cating Oils, Mine, Mill and Smeller Supplies, Silver, Gold and Concentratr il g Mill erected and delivered in running order. Maine Office and Warerooms 259 S. Main Street, Salt Late D. S. AGENCY. BUTTE. MONTANA. SHSHh if the Interesting Things Which y be Found in the Land of British Columbia. US FORMATIONS OF ICE. Bridges in Rivers Old Indian litions-Mi- ghty Chasms and GorgeBOtnar Points. ' are a few very curious things British Columbia rivers. Every-no- w tliat they flow in the wrong m while they are young. For in-th- e Peace and Liard persist in o the Arctic ocean, in defiance of w mountains and the laws of while the Columbia, Fraser and a7 only consent to travel seaward in the opposite direction some us of miieSi But they also have u!iar ways of making ice, quite ! to that laid down in the text in the Skeenalhave observed 'a autumn to form on the river the bowlders in globules, like tf fisb spawn, this of tep growing " reef actually reaches the sur- - aicin't wish tney were at the funeral feast. He looked up and found the canoe out in the open again, the glacier behind them, and the world pretty much as usual. They got ashore, cut paddles and poles, and prepared to go home again. The old man began to be hungry for the grease boxes; the old 'lady set her heart on grease and berries, and they both deter-mined to get home for the banquet, since they bad assisted at the funeral. Well, by dint of making the old lady work, while he steered and gave good advice, they succeeded in making their way up through tho tunnel and home, and were in ample time for the feast. In fact they lived happily every afterward. But how shall we condole with the relatives, whose sweetest and most picas traditions had been shattered about the sweet by and by? A DEEP GORGE. Not least among the natural wonders of the coast is McKenzie passage, a little to the westward of Kingcome inlet. It is a chasm about six miles in length, lead-ing to the base of an isolated and broken peak, 8.6G5 feet high. The walls are very close together, vertical and snow crowned. The sun never shines in this awful gorge; the vapor from its waters hangs dark and bitter cold, unmoved by any wind, and no living being enters its solitude. I find but two records of this place having been visited by white men. Scarcely less wonderful is an inlet tributary to Dean's canal. Some of the tide sluices are very dan-gerous, and many lives have been lost in them. A great puzzle they were to early travelers, who found cataracts of sea water pouring into many of the inlets. They are explained by the existence be-hind them of large basins filled by the flood tide, the outlets being too small for ebb. Some , its ready escape at the of these salt --water cataracts are as much as twelve feet high. There is a imma-ture example at the gorge, near this city. On the Yukon river the upper waters are rendered quite clear by the deposit of all their silt in a chain of lakes, but lower down a stream called White river enters from the south, so charged with Clacier mud that the Yukon from thence to the sea is too dirty for even the bot-tom of a cupful to be distinguished. Gravlings rise readily to the fly above-n- o fishing without nets is possible below. Moreover, where the great river crosses the tributaries from the the Arctic circle like rivers of tea, so tundra lands are deep is the stain of vegetable matter fromthe moss swamps of the far south. Victoria Times. 'more often it breaks away in m and floats off down stream, Pebbles and even bowlders for lies. 1 we many natural bridges on our In the Kicking Horse, three :I0W Rcld station, there is a rock m a slate formation which is in- -' to present sharp edges very "it to walk upon. Every obser-ver on the Canadian Paciflo noticed the snow bridge onf u lewaet, but there are records '"gee also. I think I have heard " we Homathco river, but of the arvelousstoryistold. Hiere 'glacier descending out of the 7'fleld t0 north, and this in 'm?s aed right across the et'ng a lesser ice stream from .'"opposite. The Stickeen flowed ce in a tunnel, and at very 'he Passage was too small for the water must have been UP mto a lake at the spring ' SATTEKED THADITION. e Sicane Indiana of the upper a to regard this tunnel in the .gng to the "sweet by and' Jere therefore very the place. But once the Kmped not far above tbe "ml there was a very old man e with them who were too ita if8USe of the "Peseof &v-- i They were very rich ,tUi.and had large appetites, ,. 'elatives at last consented to ."hem. They were tjjgrefore a leaky canoe and consigned 'jf: ' aa all the people, con-- " sacrifice, stood on the bank 'ne canoe vanish into the r1 flt good. N0W, the old friRhtened and squealed J. but when the blue shadows 'osed over them they thought lad Indians, and behaved "( - Presently the old lady . 48 getting light, and became ,i0ked about her. Then she od maa and if be got to let you go. Git out,' said he, as h planted his No. 9 iu the seat of Pompey i pants, 'and if you ever come here ag4in, lawyer or no lawyer, you will git six months.' "Atlanta Constitution. 1 se gwtne to oe rested for steaiin'ot two hams out'en de cross road store.' "'Well, Ponipey.'I asked, 'did you steal the bams? " 'Mars John, I just took 'em.' " 'Did any one see you? I asked. "Yas, boss,' said the old negro dis-consolately, 'two ole white buckra's.' " 'Well, Pompey,' I replied. 'I can't dc anything for you under the circum-stances.' " 'Now, Mars John,' said old Pompey, 'here's ten dollars. I jist want you to try.' "Well, I consented to try," said Allen. "Tho case was to be heard before an old magistrate named Johnson. Ho was totally uneducated, and was moreover a perfect dictator, and no negro ever came before him who was not fined the maxi-mum penalty and sent to his field to ex-piate the crime in the sweat of his brow. "The magistrate heard the case. Every possible proof was brought to show that Pompey stole the hams. There could b no doubt of it from the testimony. I did not put a single question to any of th witnesses, but when the testimony was all in I arose, and in my most dignified manner addressed the magistrate: " 'May it please your honor, it would b useless for me to argue before one who would adorn the Buperjpr if not the su-preme court bench of this grand old commonwealth. And I may say that those who know you best say that you would grace even the supreme court of the United States, tho highest tribunal in the land. It will be useless to dwell upon the testimony. You have heard it, and know the case as well as I do. How-ever, it may not be out of order for mo to call your honor's attention to a short passage in the old English law, which clearly decides this case, and which, for the moment, your honor may have for-gotten.' "Then I fished down in my pocket and drew forth, with a great flourish, an old copy of 'Julius Ctesar.' I opened it with great dignity to the first page and read the line which is familiar toevery school boy, 'Omnia Gallia in partes tres diviea est.' 'That decides the case,' said I, throwing the book upon the table. 'That clearly acquits the defendant. "With great dignity and solemnity 1 then took my seat. - The old magistral was completely nonplused. He looked at roe a moment quizzically and scratched his head. Then, turning to Pompey, he raised himself to bis full height and said: - " 'Pompey ,1 know you Btole them hams, but bv the ingenuity of your lawyer I've LAWYER ALLEN'S . FIRST" VICTORY. J. Bad Caw Made Good by Profound Opinion from the Clawlct. "Private John Allen," of Mississippi, who became; the wit of the house of representatives with the death of Sunset Cox, tells a good story on himself of bow he came to be a profound lawyer. A party of members were telling yarns in tbe cloak room of the house, and when Allen's turn came he told this one: .'I want to tell you of the greatest legal , said Allen as he victory of my life," and propped his feet lighted a "cigar atrainst the wall in true southern style. 'It was down in Tupelo during the trying period just after the war. I was at that time a practicing lawyer-t- hat is, I prac-ticed whenever I had any caw to prac-tice with. One day old 'Uncle' Pompey, one of the old negroes of the settlement, came into my office and said : 'itMars Jobji. I wants rou to clar me. W hat Good Book In. A good book is the one that we want when weary of the people of the world; that we can read out aloud and discuss; that we can hand to our daughters that it may give them pleasure, and which will only be a stepping stone on the road of taste, not only to better and nobler books, but a better and nobler life. That is a good book and, my friends, there are hundreds of them. Ladies' Horue Journal. Took No Biaka. Won't you come into my parlor?" said the spider to the fly. "Yes," answered tbe fly, "but I don t want to go into the dinins room- - an Dora's. , ' . |