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Show I THK SALT LAKK TIMES. MONDAY. SEPiEMRKR 1. IfiPO. T i .Rowland Hall. (Official StctJrcc. j A Select Home Hoarding School for f ; a-iiis- - ; Special Attention to Music. licrmau ami Frtncli iu aUiliou to the ordinary liram-he- . department tin dm- MIS-- ; H.VYDKN, n't St. .M irk's Ciiini'dml. Term 7M'l- i). 1?wr-f- or pvitir-nUr- addri-- s Bishop Leonard, or Miss Adele Coleman, l'ri i 1 I ) Mkk SALT LAKE CITY 1 " iJWr Cardfa City, Plat T : lJjTv!!Lt uioisa ABornor L 1 F GZIII-pJSyO-in 04o, 1st I Baal ef t teaaUe Eife FW i Jill 1 wiirTiousE The Walker is Located in thi Bminets tenter of this City and has all thi Modern Improvements & Conveniences Pertaining toa strictly flrst-clas- s houss It Is manaawl . iu-- ; m h Wust nd is, strictly the But"uewi nd Tour-ist Hotel of Salt I.ko City, ransenger Klcrator. TheWalker&the Metropolitaa Are the Two Lradinar Hoteli of Salt lake City. Gh S. ERB Propr. T H E cljIlTlTe N THE Modern Hotel op SALT LAKE CITY. S. U EWING, Proprietor. St. Mark's School Will tegln its Twenty-Fourt- h Year on September 1st. A Fvl! Court of Instruction from 1'iimai-- i Grade to Hiyh School. 8pecial Attention given to Bjyiwho Desire to fit thcmbelvci for Eastern Colleges. J. I?. Howard, Principal. CoPYRICHTta 1 sSjMCLu Perfection in Hoots and Shoes. JOHN WETZEL, Tatentee. Boot and Shoe mad from thi bent material, twrfwt In fit and comtortahlo to w:ir. Call and ic me or nnd for prlr lint and for Hnpalring done. SM south Stat road, opp now holal. GlO,M.SroTT, JA. il.!rK'ISJ II. 8. RCHfTILfa, PreaideuL Vlcw-l1- !! lent. ticcrotary. GEO. M. SCOTT & CO., itXVORPORATED.) --DEALERR IN-"- Hardware and Metal, Stoves, Tinware, Mill Findings, Etc. AGfcVTSFOUlhe Dodge Wood rullry, R.tUn,r ,ttMle Wlr Rp, Vacuum Cylinder and Engine Oils, Hereult luwJr, AlU KngioM m1 Boll eri, Mack Injectors, liuffalo Soaltw, JefforwM lion Whim, illaka 1 ape Miners' and lUackiiutlbV Tools, Etc 168 MAIN STREET. Salt Lake City, - - Utah SALT LAKE HOUSE. PARK : : CITY. : : UTAH. Th Modern Hotel. First clasa in every particular, The rooms are larue. Unlit and alrv. Tablea Firat cla. aerved with the beat the market afford. The large addition lust built to thla houe makes it one of the Hneat hoteia for touriata and pleasure aeekera in Park Cltv, MKS. K4 CON NEKS, Vroprletreaa. PARK CITY HOTEL. The only first class hotol In Park City. ' SIXTY ELEGANT HEW ROOMS, Cool, pleasant and nicely furnished. THE I'TAII rOlLTRV COMPIXV, Wholesale Produce liealera, General t'omnilsalun Merchants. Sole Wffltorn Ajrenta for the Heaton and Hell Spring Creamery llutter. lw West Unit South at. Telephone 71); P. O. buisil. Urani a home Park City, Utah. THE HOTEL GROUNDS are decorated with and shade trees, making it the moat pleasant summer resorts In the mountain I.. SIMONS, Prop. .WALKER HOUSE CAFE. The Cafe has Jimt chnnged management, now being tinder the care of the two beat caterers In the city, Messrs. llerets amlGuthrie. Tour-ists or patrons desiring an early meal or lunch put up. can obtain the same at any hour, day and night. All game kept In season and east-ern oysters In the shell. Call and try us. THE Sacramento Bakery and Coffee House AS CHANGED RAXIM Erdman & Myer, the new proprietors, will endeavor to please the most fastidious. Glvo us a call. SO west Beeond South. A. L WILLIAMS, Beoond Door North of PontoClce, gox-x-- vsiit' roxi R. G. PLEASANT VALLEY, CASTLE GATE AuUirtfUe, Charcoal, Mar kmnith anil I'lirlroiu Yards Cor, Fifth West and Sfr ond SoutJu Telephone) No. I 7U. Incoporated. April 10. 1800. Totman House 6oilii Compai, J. T. I.TMrn, f, P. MOUKN40N. It. It Ilicamc. President. Tri)uror. livaoral Moa(fr. Salt Lnkn, Utah. This company U purely a home Institution, oruanlted t stay, and most r. spitcllully iuvllci tlie attenllun i( tlinse do. innrf cutiage, fur hmura or tor sale, to the neat, tasty and attractive appearanoo presented by this clam of col-taif-when ooinplntcd. We claim that they arn stronger and warmer than Ih ordinary rustic bullilltig. tho s all deiiig made and put together by thereby making; the: work perfectly lilit S e ar now rrparet to fur-nish rsllinates, take conlriti'.s and cnnipleie ImlldlnKs on lliort tune. Tlio l of iho pulilio U moat respectfully solicited tlilice and yard Xo. Vi'J West North Ti'inpla slri'ot. Examine Oar Hans and Trim Before Ton Bail! 3a.nag- - epartm.ent Utah Title, Insurance and Trust Company Paid-u- p Capital $190,000 Surplus $10,000 Pays fi per cent interest on time deposits; acta as Trustee, Guardian, Administrator and Executor; transacts general trust business, Insures real estate titles; insurance fee covers all charges for attorneys and abstracts. STOCKHOLDERS. Banker. C'uiiitulMt. J. E. Dooly, R. C, Chambers, T. R. Jones, Kelsey 4 Gillespie, L. S. Hills. James Hharp, M. H. Walker, John J. Daly, W. S, McCornick, R. Mcintosh, E. A. Smith. A. L. Thomas H. T. Duke, Gov. of Utah, Joslah Uarrett, Merchant. Hyde S.Young, F. H. Auerbach, M. S. Ptndergast, T. G. Webber, T. A. Kent. Hugh Anderson, W. T. Lynn, W. H. Rowe. J. R. Walker, A. W. Carlron, Lavym. 8. H. Auerbach, John A. Marshall, W. V. Cnlton, Win. C. Hall. James Anderson, Taft & Kropfpize, CONTRACTORS 4 BUILDERS. Salt Lake City, : Utah Territory. Office: Headquarters at Cor. Sixth and A Sts, GEO. HUSLER. H. WALLACE, Manager, Utah Cracker Factory, Manufacturers of the Celebrated .:S1LVEH BRAKD OF Fiji. CRACKERS:- - 27 E. THIRD SOUTH ST. Salt Lake City, Utah. AGENCY WARWICK HIGH GKADE SAFETY BIC3TCIL-E- - FIRE !aFIRE IaFIRE Franklin Fire Insurance Co., Of Philadelphia. Organized 1820. -- ; Charter Perpetual. Assets, - - $3,174,357.04 Insurance Reserve, 1,705,204.71 Continental Insurance Company, Of ITerw TotJC Cash Capital, - - $1,000,000.00 Insurance Kenervo, - '.',4 70,313. 21 Assets, - C,17,773.0i When you purchase a policy that you expect to bj worth J20OO in case of fire, you should investigate the com pany with the same care that you would use in lending that sum. No States, in the Union have as good insurance lawf as New York and I'cnnsylvania. Call at our office for copy of the Safety Fund Law. This law prevents the failure of a company by Rrcat confla-grations. Under this law none of the surplus fundi can b divided among stockholders. Both have t be held for the security of policy holders as long as a policy remains in fore DAVIS & STRINGER. Atreats. cuiieo Ho,e,. -S-SPEGIALEE I Our Addition corner of Second West and Tenth South, with fine trees on all streets and alleys, is the choice subdivi- - sion adjoining the city. Ties are nowl distributed and cars will be running on Second West and Tenth South within sixty days. Lots at orijnal prke until Aupust i st only. i ... Davis & Stringer, I carry a stock of SAFETr HICrCLE a tltS.OO. 35.O0, 0.0O, 60.O0 75.0f, Sllfl.OO, $138.00, TRICYCLE and la purchasing from me you have a stock to select from ami do not have to wait. Largest Stock and lowest Prices on Sport, ing Goods, Guns. Cutlery, eta. SHOT-GUN- S AT COST. Bicycle and Onn Repairing. AgentCALIGBAPH WRITING MACHINE Carbons, Ribbons and Paper. M. R. EVANS 22 AV. 2d South street. Salt Lake City J. C. Gonklin, STOCK BROKER, STiniiie Stocks and Other Securities' Bought and Soli Dealer in REAL ESTATE AHD Mil Member of Salt Lais Stock Excharvj and of Salt Lake Heal Estate Kxchawj Seventeen Tean m resident of Halt Lakt CUg Correspondence SoIIoiU-4- . Refnw Union National Hank, Deseret I 'tail Nation! Bank. J E. f.iy Manner Weils, Fargo k Co.. Bait Lake City. - Boom aa aeeoBd floor. Watfch buildls. CITY BONUS FUR "SALK. " Fitly Tliont-n- tl (8.V,CO0) TolUw f Five (3) (h r rent Salt Lake City l.oniK a'e. I V'OTICC IS HERKUY OIVFN traT ON -- i the th day wf September, A. r I'M. l tlnoTicof the r iv treasurer of Salt I.se cliy af;y bonds of salt th lsiicof r l. iv. w:l, .11 1 (he highest r or hi.ldor f ir csli. Si .1 hod. ar of lae m.ust.. n of (Inn. pi,vabL twenty yer alternate, but anlije t lo redemption ahv time after (.ipu-mu-- l.lw.at the,.-- , t.o-io- l aaidcitr. t cupolls if. Sand 4 hedc'si he.l from ssld touiir previous to the sale thci-eo- f so that the bouds will bear Interest September I. 1n-- utitil pud. th iiii.imi bein, nsnbe on the flr.it J. ; M r !i ml ih rtm 5? i.l vi.r ItitW w.n h- - nvplvM bv ui (or tiir (lan of ia b.u'.a. or r jr pr I '.io oof dom n. iiy o! A'inu.t li un-til l.locKx'K n.'il. ol lb 9 Ih itv of ttopirm-ir- . ml Th riciit to rvjrri ny n I l WJ 1 hfrt'bv ra.Tv. I m of iha. uv. By or .lor ol the rttr cmiiull of m!.i eity J.'SLi'H U. Wai i'XS. i lty Tri.ji.lMr. Salt Laket'lty. Aiimut IX V. S -- A piliitM iHtuiiit of t" flnni-t.- l riuiillthin o( ilio oil v in i fumuiir.1 nv on di vr.nft lnf .ii ,u tbo lr ..f bulilltx uiHin in ivv Alipiy tor male at tiv.HUrr'oit'. JoskPH U. Wai ikx, Ctly TTrr. NOTICE TO IKEIUTOKS. F.fUlo of llnaohl W. C!io, dri. N'OTH'K IS I1KREI1Y tilVKN V THR .!. a.lmtnlxtmtiir o( the of PV in W. I'linn. rtprfnnM, lo tint rrlltra of. unit all vr.in havlnx clklun alu.t th hhUi torxliilut i!imu. with th nt.'.-sar-voiit hcr liliin irn month aiinr Ihi-- n tmtilli'atlon of Dili, notlrp, lo tlio s.il.l ilinlnl. trauir ; th oipo of hla norniv Vltr Murphy. No HIV xnith Kat Trirpl tlruft, Sail Lake city. In lh of Sidi l.ako. Uuh trrllory. W ai tkh H. ONMtn. A.lmllllat rator of tho etUta of lU'iionl W. 'lii. diH'ntiwd. Datfrt Aiiif. T, F00L1SHJRACTO. jie Children of Culture Taught the Art of Lovemaking Instead of Venerationi THEEE TOTJNS LADIES OP HEEVE. juried After Twenty-Fiv- e Tears-M-Us James' Twenty-Si- x Cameras BfotesofNews. Very few people are cognizant even Is western Pennsylvania of the rapidity of development in the petroleum busin-ess from the time, thirty-seve- n years K0 when it waa known as Seneca oil. Active operations began in 1858, when Col. Drake, of New Haven, ?ae emp-loyed to sink an artesian well forBis-je- ll & Eveleth, who had leased the Titus-rill- e oil springs in 1854 from Brewer, Osteon & Co., paying them $5,000 for a jinety-nin- e year lease. A few years before the land Had been jfjded to a man named Chase for a cow. At first Bissell & Eveleth had trenches dng, which tilled with water and oil, ,nd this was pumped into vats. The well drilled by Drake struck oil at a depth of 691 feet. It September it pumped forty barrels; a day, which sold it 50 cents a gallon. If began to hurt the coal oil distilleries which made oil from shale and cannel coal. Operations spread down Oil creek, and In December, 1859, a well was struck at the Buchanan farm, near Bouseville, but it was a small one. Mr. Harper states that the first crude oil delivered in Pittsb-urg was from the Albion well, on the Allegheny river, owned by Phillips, Frew Co. This well made fifty barrels a day. The oil sold at 80 cents a gallon, with the provision that the barrels be returned. The machinery, supplies and men necessary to drill the well were shipped in the old canal packet Crystal Palace. WHEN WELUJ MULTIPLIED. In 1860 the petroleum trade began to be recognized as a business worth somet-hing more than curious mention, but its magnitude had not Impressed itself, for the people rated production of crude in gallons and not in barrels. There were no oil exchanges to rouse public att-ention. Some big wells made their ap-pearance, but not many. The two miles above Oil City, started off at sixty gallons a min-ute, and was worth 83 cents a gallon at the wells. The Economites began to take in shekels at Tidioute, and refineries began to spring np in various places. Crude sold in this city at 60 cents a gall-on. Royalty to land owners, now ranging from h to one-four- th delivered in pipe lines, then ranged from one-four- th to three-fourth- s, and the oil was famished to the land owner in iron hooped barrels, which ranged in price from $3.50 to 3.25 each. This arrange-ment bankrupted some operators in 1862, when the price of crude dropped to 10 cents a barrel, and they allowed many thousands of barrels to flow into Oil creek and down the Allegheny river. Aa Senator Ingalls might say, their irides-cent dreams of wealth were speedily dissipated. In September three-quarte-of the oil in barrels' furnished by the operators was paid for the lease of a lot seventy-fiv- e feet front at Titusville. In 1861 the greatest wells ever struck were brought in on Oil creek. One in Butler county, on the Marshall farm, eome years ago made a larger flow at the outset, but it did not hold out long. The breaking out of the rebellion and conse-quent panic prostrated petroleum busi-ness in the early part of the year, but a revival of the industry took place duri-ng the summer as the prospect began to grow for increased nses for oil. In August there were 800 wells between Oil City and Titusville. In September the Phillips No. 2, on the Tarr farm, was etruck. Its first day's production was 4,000 barrels. The Empire was also flow-ing 2,500 a day. The oil was so plenty that wells were plugged, when they could be thus restrained, but many thousands of barrels were allowed to run into the creek, and the Allegheny river as covered with oil for many miles bel-ow Franklin. GROWTH IN 1862. The Woodford well on the Tarr farm Jras struck in December and made 3,000 barrels a day. This well ruined the Phillips No. 2, and in turn was ruined, jhs water was not cased oil in those Bays, and when the tubing was drawn t the Phillips the Woodford began flowi-ng b. s. The same trouble developed at nt time on the upper end of the Blood inn. It is said the boring of the Wood-wdwe- ll was instigated by pure intent to ruin the Phillips "0. 2. The attempt was successful, but didn't pay the owners of the Wood-ed. The Coquette was also one of the spouters of great renown. She owned by Dr. Egbert, who now does business at 96 Fourth avenue, this city. t "he year 1862 was more memorable trade agitation regarding oil than wrge wells. The market in this ttuntry broke down this year, though a allon of refined cost in this citv as much Js a barrel of crude does today. The 'M of hauling was immense, and pipe projects began to take shape. The teamsters and their friends in the f Gantry were a powerful party, and "ey opposed the pipe line proposition, lnd some lines were destroyed in places a& there were riots. Congress proposed " wy a tax of five cents a gallon on ;nide, more than twice what it sells for and ten cents a gallon on refined, lnd meetings of producers were held to Potest. Titusville was then the center "r the producers. The cost of sending barrel of oil to New York was $7.45, "A steau-boat-s charged $3 a barrel for '.Jing it from Oil City to Pittsburg, ranged in price this year from 10 :ets in January to $3.25 per barrel in Member at wells. Some people were nedand others made colossal fortunes feby, but the Standard hadn't been m. and the surplus was only 100,000 'Seisin October. Pittsburg Dispatch, . .EUROPE'S MANY CHANGES. HotT'th.V.rion, Countrie, H.v. B Cut Up tad Divided. Rumo of a European war on a grand wale are a way, rife, and it may resting to recall the many and stu- - rZ CDgeS WUch hav year? the kst The French revolution, con- - fanned by .Napoleon I. overturned every nation and modified every frontier limit m Europe. Between 1815 and 1830 the restoration of the eldest branch of the Bourbons in France and the Vienna and Verona congresses had nearlr hshed the ancient order of things in the European world. Butin 1830 the .revolution which crowned the Orleans cadet Louis Pb.il-lip-as king of France, and proclaimed nim the representative of modern liber-alism as agaiust clerical reactiouism ivs personified in Charles X, was the signal of changes all over Europe. The heroic eons of Greece had already begun the struggle for modern liberty and for na-tional independence. They were suc-cessful, and tho treaty of Adrianople was agreed to by all Europe, and Greece was recognized as a sovereign power on Fob. 3, 1830. Moldavia, Wallachia and Servia were constituted by tho same treaty bb autonomous principalities, and Turkey ceded to Russia the month of the Danube. Belgium separated from Holland and was recognized as an In-dependent power in July, 1831, after long conferences held at London. In 1834 the kingdom of Poland was suppressed as a result of the heroic but unsuccessful fight of the Poles for lib-erty. In 1846 the republic of Cracow was suppressed and incorporated with Austria. In 1848 the principality of Neuchatel, which had been given up to Prussia by the treaties of 1814, declared its independence and became a canton of Switzerland. This independence was officially recognized by Prussia in 185T. After the Crimean war, in 1850, Russia lost the southern portion of Bessarabia, along the banks of the Danube, which portion was given to Moldavia. The Solferino victory, in 1859, caused Aus-tria to surrender Lombardy, with the exception of Mantua, to Napoleon III, who made a present of that province to Italy, or rather to the king of Sardinia. In 1860 the same king came into, pos-session of Modena, Parma, Tuscany, Romagna, Umoria, Naples and Sicily, giving back in exchange to France only the county of Nice and the Savoy. One year later, in 1861, the kingdom of Italy was definitely constituted by the re-union under the same scepter of all Ital-ian states formerly separated, with the exception of the pontifical states and the Rome Campagna. In 1861, Moldavia and Wallachia were united under the name of Rumania. In 1864 the Ionian Islands, which formed a parliamentary republic under British protectorate, were ceded to Ureece. The Gastein convention of 1865, after the war of the duchies, decreed the an-nexation to Prussia of the duchy of Lauenburg, the title of which was con-ferred upon Bismarck after his retire-ment from the chancellorship. In 1866, after the battle of Sadowa, the kingdom of Hanover, the Hesse electorate, the free city of Frankfort, Schleswig and Hoi-stei- n were annexed to Prussia and the confederation of North Germany was established." In the 'ianle year, and as another consequence of defeat at Sadowa, the Vienna government abandoned Ven-eti- a and the fortress of Mantua to Italy. The first defeats of the French in the war of 1870 compelled them to evacuato Rome, which then became the capital of Italy. The Frankfort treaty gave Alsace and Lorraine to the newly founded North German empire. In 1878, after the Russo-Turkis- h war, and through the operation of the Berlin treaty, great changes were made in the map of Europe. Russia exchanged the Dobroudia district for southern Bessa-- . rabia. Servia, by the same treaty, was enlarged and constituted as an independ-ent kingdom, as well as Rumania. Bul-garia became a mere tributary province of Turkey, from which in 1885 sho snatched eastern Rumelia. Montenegro received an increase of territory, and Bosnia and Herzegovina were surrend-ered to Austria, which was authorized to occupy them temporarily, a word which means in diplomacy rail posses-sion. Such is the present international map of Europe; how long will it last in that iliape? Philadelphia Telegraph. (Official lloticc. SI MMONS O.N' AMEMDKUCO.HI'UIST In the niKtrlct Court In and for the Tti'M Ju-dicial IUtnot of Utah Territory, County ol Salt l.aki. Jatnea Dergan aud Thomaa plaln- - tlita. va. Cbarlea H. McMaater and A. J. Parker, de ftndmta. TIW. PEOPLE OF TflK TERRITORY OP 1 Ctiih aend greeting toChar.e II Mi'Mm-l.-- and A, J. Parker, drfeiidunia: . on are h ruhy required to ap,ear In an ac-tion broitKht agaluat you hv the above named plulntira In tho dlairlct cotirtjof the third Jia.lt rial dlntrli't of the territory ol lliaU.aud W the complaint tiled therein within ten daya (em lualve of the day of ser-vice, after the aervtce on you of this summons If served within this county; or if aorrpit out of thla county, but In thla dNirl. t. within twenty dava; otherwise uithlti foil y days or Jiulginsiit iiy default will be t.ike.i aalnat you according to the prayer of aaid coiuplalut. Thealil action la hrouifht to recover the sum of iH,.M. with tiileresl thereon at ten per ciul p r annum fn u August 10 IfH.i al-- o die further sum of i.tt i an ait' rnev fee and for costs ofmll, and (or a d i re.' of th. rutin for .aleot the north h tlf of lot 16 In block 41. ten acre plat A." I'U K.eli.i.urvey, In Halt Lake county. I tah t"rr lo:y, und-- r a luortgake ciecuteii and de Ivered hy defeti.r ant Mi Master March so. IH in on s.ild premises. to serum pijrmeut lo plain-tiffs of a certain nom saury note of even date, ficrtited and tlelvered by said defendant to planum, for auiil sum ol ivi;.io, p.iyaMe on or before March 'JO. pou. with Inter el from aale until pild. which mortgage pro-vi-d for the pavmeul of a rcasonnbe al'or-n- Thai said ilufctidanuaud all uihera tlalmlngsild auliseiiicnt to plain-tilt-morlgai. e may Ih barred and foreclosed under said i.e, uud tliat the proceeds of such sale may be applied to the p tymcntof .mount due plaintiff alter pay tig all costa exiienaes and attorney a fees, and for the usual statu-tory relief and for such other and further re-lief as may be Just. And you are hereby notliled that If you fall to appear and answer the said amended com-plaint as above required, the said plaintiffs will apply to the court for the relief demanded therein. Witness the lo. Charles 8 Zane, judge, and the seal of the district (a) court of the third Judicial district, stau V In and for the territory of Utah, this j r-- 1. th day of August. Ill the year of our Lord one Thousand eight hun-dred ami ulnetr. lit Kar II. MrMll.l A Clerk. Fbark Pikri-r- , Attorney for plalnlllfa. Notice of Timber luiiure Content. IT. R. Lan'iOfFb-i- : I Salt Luke City, Utah, July 1890. f COMPLAINT HAV1NU IIF.EV ENTERED bv William 8. IieArmond against Patrick llamill for ,'illure to comply with law as to timlier culture entry No. 77.H, dated June 4, IHH7, upon the northeast quarter section ia, township 8 south, range U west, In Salt Lake couuly, Utah territory, with a view to the cancellation of said entry; contestant alleging that said Patrick llamill failed to break, plow or stir or cause to be broken, plowed or stirred any portion of said land dur-ing the Hi st year after making said entry, and failed to break, plow or silr any portion of said land or plant any porllon of said land to trees, tree seeds or cuttings or to cause the same to be done during the swond year after making aaid entry, and failed to break, plow or stir any portion of said land of lo plant any portion of aaid land to trees, tree seeds or cuttings or to' causethe same to bedonedurlng thethlrd year after making said entry, and has failed up to this time to break, plow or stir any portion of said land or to plant any portion of said land to trees, tree seeds or cuttings or to cause the same to be done, and that at this time no por-tion of said land Is broken, plowed, stirred or cultivated and no portion of said land la planted to trees, tree seeds or cuttings, the said parties are hereby summoned to ap)aiar at this office on the IW.lv day of September, law), at 10 o'clock a.m., to respond and furnish testi-mony concerning said alleged failure. Frank 1). Uonua, Register. NOTICE. ALL PERSONS ARE HEREI1Y WAR V ED the penalty provided by ordlianca not to remove the body of any dead animal or offal or Hlth of any description, without first notifying the city scavenger, who will tssun directions for Its disposal. WILLIAM (SHOW ALL, City Scavenger, April 17 I WO. Room 6, City Hall. IS HERKHY GIVEN THAT THE NOTICF, having bsen appointed by the city council of Salt Lake City a boird of Equalization and Review, to hear objections If any. to the assessment mid levy of local as sensmeuts for the paving of Commercial street also for the curbing and suttering of said street In Salt Lake I'itv: that said board will sit at the cltv hall for live i.'o days, commenc-ing on Thursday, the 4th day of September, turn, and ending on Tuesday, the wth day of Hcpiemiier, mo. during usual business hours for said purpose. H. PKMIinOKK, W. P. LYNN, W. II. H. KI'AFFORD, M. K. PARSONS A. J. I'ENKl.tToN. Rait Lake City, August '.Shirt, I mo. SIJIMONS. In tho District Court ! and for the Third Ju-dicial District of Utah Territory, County u Salt Lake. 8. P. Armstrong, Plaintiff, vs. Thomas Gollghtly, Joseph J. Gollghtly, Mar-tha II. Smith, I'llir.alieih G. Walt. John 1). Lay ton, Jacob G. I, ayton. Richard Ls'tin, Rachel G. L. Warren, bamuel (1. Layton, Kli'abeth Connelly, Lucv O. L. Hone, Janu l. W. Evans, rrlzabeih O. Winter, Sarah G. Whiter. Thomas G. Winter Richard';. Win-ter. John 1. Winter, Nora May Winter. Jo-seph G. Winter aud Mark Gollghtly, dclend- - THK PEOPLE OF THE TERRITORY OP send greeting to Thomas Gollghtly, Josepn J. Gollghtlv. Miirtha H. Smith, Ella beih G. Wait. John O. Layton. Jacob O. Lay-to- Kichsrl Layton. Has-ne- i G. L. Warren. Bamuel G. Layton, Ell;.beth Gonneilv, Lucy G. L. Bone, Jnue (I. VV. I',vans, hllzahdh O. W inter, Kaiah G. Winter, Thomas '. Winter. Rlohard O. Winter. John G. Winter. Nora May Winter. Joseph G. Winter and Mark Gollghtly, defendants: You are hereby required to appear In an ae tton brought againnt you by the above namd plaintiffs in the District Court of tlw Third Ju-dicial District of the Territory of Utah, and to answer the complaint riled therein within ten days, lesc.lusive of the day of service), after the service on you of this summons If Served within this county; or, If served out of tills county, but In this district, within twenty days; otherwise withiu forty days or Judg-ment by default will against you, ac-cording to the prayer of said complaint. The said action is brought to have a decree of this court adjuiUii.g'Mid deleudfiits to nave iioesti.teorlniwtesl wc itever In that certain property situate In r alt Lake city and county, Ut ah. being lot 4 blin k I'U. plat. V. Salt Luke City aurvey. smith! they and each ol thm lie forever enjoln-'i- l and debarred from asserting any claim whateverln or to said property ad verse to p a nl IT adjudging and drc!ar.n plaintiff to I tte owner Jn tee of said prop-erty, and that the several claims of defendants operate asa cloud on plaintiff s title: quieting and confirming plaint!!! In his tllle to the pos-session of said and for other and further reiltf. anil foi costsol suit. And you are hereby notified that If you fall to appear and answer the said complaint as above required, the said plaintiff will apply to thccotirt for the relief demanded therein. Witkkss. the Hon. Charles S. Zane, Judge. and the seal of the District court of - the Third Judicial District, in and for , . the territory of Utah, this Wh day of ' hiau I julr. In the year of our Lord one ' r-- ' thousand eluht hnrvlred and ninety. Hcaiir G. Mi Mll.t.AH, Clerk. Hy Geo. D.Loomis. Lcputy Clerk. BIDS WANTED. UTAH NON-T- XAiILK HONDA FOR The underatgued will rerelve Mil. at his oftlce. No. IttM Hi .nth Main street, Salt Lake City. Utah. Iietween Woolock noon of the mil, day of Heptember. and Hi odes k main "f the 10th day of tx'tolier, inyo, for one hundred and seventy-tw- engraved negotiable cooikiii lunula of Utah Territory, numbered from I Jli U SUU Inclusive, each for the principal sum of one thousand dollars, with Interest at 6 per cent per annum, payable on the flrat day of each January and July afterdate at the Deseret National Hank In halt I. like ( lty, or at the American hxi hunge National Hank In New York City. The bonds are dated July I. ISM), due twenty years from date, but all redeemable at the option of the territory after ten years, and provision is also nude by law for redeem-ing after ten years, bonds of the hifhe.t num-bers then out to the amount of thirty thousand dollars or more, whenever available funds to that amount are In the Ireasury. 'I bene bonds are part of a series of of which las have leeii negotiated, and the whole series Is issued for building ediH at onsl and charitable Institutions lu accordance with leg. Islative spproprlsulons. under the provisions of an set of the floverrior and lg:"ailve entitle,! "An Ad providing for the issuing snd disjweiliig of Territorial bonds," approved Mareh I.l I'M), and refeienee Is made to said act for details. Attention Is called to the facts that, lieslde this series, the Territory has a bonded lndhtedness of only ll 'O'ili, that by act of Congress It Is restrained from crea-ting such Indeiitednees to an amount ei.ee, I per cent of Its tasrd value, and such In-debtedness ran be created onl tor charitable and educational puriios . These honiW are by law sjeinpt from taxation for ny purpos. i within the Territory, and they cannot tie sold for lens than par and acerued interest, and any and all b.its may be rejected, Hid. will be opened at Ii o'clock noon of r 10. Istst, at the orrt'e aforeaald. and sales of the whole or any part or parts o' the bonds made to the hlk'ti'-- t bidder or bidders who w,ll be required to give security ti carry out the sale, and If payment Is deferred the Inter-ea-accumulating on the bonds during the time will be required. The bonds will be sold under a poser In the law. Hunted as to lime, and blddersare requested to make esarulnstlim before the day of sate and make their bids sjieritic in details. The bonds ran be seen by promised bidders. Hated August . 1 ' HOLIVAR ROflERTS. Territorial Treasurer. A Snow Plant from the Sierra. One of the rarest plants known to bot-anists has been brought to this city by E. L. Swartz and is 011 exhibition in the windows of a down town florist. It is known as the snow plant and was found by Mr. Swartz growing near snowbanks in the Sierras, 6,500 feet above tho sen level. The plant is indigenous to high and frozen altitudes and is a curiosity. It grows to the height of four or five inches, and when it blooms, which is soon after the spring thaw, it bears the appearance of a dark reddish pine cone set upright on the ground. It emits an odor that is not unlike that of the honey-suckle. The value attached to it is on account of its rarity, and the plant se-cured by Mr. Swartz is douotless the first ever brought to this city. San Francisco Exarimer. Saved from a Worse Fate. A man who slept on the government the first fish that bit m pier so as to get the morning woke up so suddenly that ho fell into the lake and Was drowned. It was lucky for his future state that his fate o'ertook him e'er he had time to re-late any stories of his day's successes. Fishing on Sunday is a trivial matter compared to the monumental mendacity Mail. which is its concomitant-Chic- ago Kutice of Deaert Entry toa test. V. S LAorri : I Salt Lakenty. t ub. July T. IW. ( COMPLAINT HAVING BEEN ENTERED by William H. IwArmond against Patrick llamill for failure Ut comply with the law aa todeert entry No. iflJ7. uied June 1. 1H7 upon the lots I.I H and K , Nf, and Sv XWU and SWv. a towmhip J south, range J west. In Salt Lake county I lab territory, with a view ,othernceiiatiofiof said contestant alleging that said Patrt'k Hamlll has (ailed during the three years after making said entry In reclaim said tract of dearrt land hyconductltig or eausing tone npon the same any watr whatever, and that said Pstneg llsmhl still falls In cmdiirt or toiaua to be eondtii ted npon said land any water, and Inst said tract of land Is st this time de-r- t land entirely without waier and without anv cana's for the conveying nl water Untr upon atd land, the sa'd psrtleaare hereby stimim net to appear at this ofili e the irtij dav of September at lo o clock a m , to rtof;d at,d furnish teettmony eoocernlng said alleged failure. Fba D. lioane. Register The Deadly ttttlo A southern mule trade has resulted Ir the death of two people, who.were .shot effect of the trans-action. and killed as an after This is probably the first trag-edy resulting from overfamdianty with these long eared anarchists m which mule has not played an active part The of not guiltr-Det- roit wurt directs a verdict free Press. lathe District Orart In nd for the Third Ju-dicial l'lsi. ict of Ctih Territory, Oountyof Salt LaUe, Kate DONtrKU Plaintiff, 1 vs. Johh D Defendant, J PBOI'LB OF THE TFHJtiTORY CV THE aend greeting to John I o e son, defendant. You are hereny repaired to appear In an action brought against yon by the aty.ve named plaintiff in the dintrlet courtof the Third District of the Territory of Utah, and to answer the complaint filed therein within ten days (exclusive i,f the day of eervice, after the service on yon of this summons If served within this county: or. If served ont of this county but In thlsdletrlct. within twentydays, otherwise within forty days or judgment by default will be taken against you, according to the prayer of said complaint. The aaid action Is brought to have a decree of this court dissolving the bonds of matri-mony between plaintiff and defendant, snd awarding to p.a nufi the custody of the minor chlid. Mary A. looei-o- luue ot said nvu-ra-granting to plaint IT all fa ther snd proper rel ef. and co-i- s ,l au:i. Above rei.ei raved on tiie ground that on the th day of S use. Ml. defebdint oeserted this plaintiff, acd ba eve s D'e ab sented himself. --artng plalnt'S IvTioraet as to bis addrrse or her ahouia an I furt ler that said da'e oe fen'Jant has not In manner contributed to lb supvn of I pa uti'! an 1 cbiid. And yon e herehy notlBed that If you fall to appear and anwer the aaid complaint aa above required, the id plaintiff will anpty to the court (or the relief l herein. Witness toe Hon. l.'harlos e. Zane, J on re and the aj of the dl.tnct I . I rmirt of the Third Judicial doc net Jiuul tn and for ;he Temt-wyo-f Utea thu I v 1 gird day of Aoklsu In the year of our Lord one thousand elgal hun-dred and ninety. H attar O. MdHit, Clerk. Sy Oeo D. Loo i, --viiU C'acxA. Wednesday of last week ws an event-fo- l day for many peop.e m Maine, Twenty-nin- e marriages are reported as thia state on that aving taken place dar. and the returns are not aUm.Tet- - Sold Again. "It's a bully at for a coal yardT What is:-- "Anthracite. "Now York Herald. The Count's Test or Geaoinenesa. Miss Boodle-Co- unt, how do yon know that your diamonds were genuine?Count Gitto GuitbeireByze adranc. of ze pawnbrokaire.-Jewel- er'a Weekly. j (No. U4 sotice or I'Re.i:sitii) ritoor. LiP orrr-- ar Sstv Laat Crrr. Aug lisl. ( IS HKMI.HV t.lVKV THAT THE NCTIfKfolioelsg named eettter hes fite. i notice l hie intention to make final proof tn support of to. rlaltn. and thel ealrt n.f will t tnl the Heg1t-- r ld Heeer at i Sail i.s ! tltr. fteh. on S--K . sn vis. pe-s- r A f'eterwm. . II " for lae W , NES- " and SK"s see. tpts lis. ! iu name the following witr.ee s to prove Ms cannuoos reenience upon and ruitlva'toa of ia::d. aameiy: Ha sea Anelt, Wil-liam Miller, fcdward KuMt A. P. Bten-fckir-ailol Sail Ijike I lty l.'ua. I fai U. iluao. Exoisl-- a. Satia tctorUy Arranged. taT58 ( tardy guest) I'm so glad to tnn! come; but you will have to take Me, 7 Gue-N- ever mind the seat Be--k t?0n Were kind enough in Inviting me npon you to tell me that I had ariUtion.pbiladelphia Prcsa. A Wish. "I am glad to see yon, sir," said the "Tour ob.tuary of widow to the editor. rnVfansbandwasbeautifuL I wish he could j readJtrXew Tork Sun. |