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Show SPRING VILLE CITY DIRECTORY. S !R I XG VT LLE has been an Incorporated city since lSCS. Its original area took in an empire. which lias ben reduecd under the g-neral Incorporation act. The corporation now covers all of section 33, township? south, range 3 east, and lots 1, 2. 3 and 4 of township 8 south, range 3 east. In Utah county, Utah. The city is on the Rio Grande Western and Short Line railroads, and from this point direrges the Tlntlc branch of the Rio Grande Western. Springvllle has a population popula-tion above 3.C0O, has a bank, seven general stores, a commission house, grocery, two meat markets, two hardware stores, two jewelers, three drug stores, two millinery establishments, a weekly newspaper, two job printing establishments, Ave blacksmiths, two implement houses, three livery stables, three hotels, grist mill, feed mill, planing mill, marble works, marble quarry, woolen mill, Deseret and Western Union telegraph lines. Wells Fargo and Pacific express companies. com-panies. Bell long distance telephone, creamery, cream-ery, two barber shops, three Latter-day Paints meeting houses and two more in course of construction, Presbyterian church. Baptist mission, four ward public schools. Central high school. Presbyterian Hunger-ford Hunger-ford academy, two doctors, a dentist, two funeral directors, tailor shop, three shoo shops, tin shop and bakery. OUR city Is one of the leading ones in Utah in silk raising, bee culture, sugar beets, food roads, general appearance, thrift and enterprise. VE want a sugar factory, silk factory, an Incubator factory, nut and bolt factory. Kachine shops, canning factory. irriCKKS ar: Mayor. James E. IT all; recorder, re-corder, P. E. Houti; treasurer. Mr3. Luclla Harmond; marshal. F. C. Gaiimiell; justice. K. H. Thorn; councllmen, Joseph Loynd. H. T. Reynolds, Loren H. Manner. O. B. nautlngton Jr., Joseph H. Storrs. BUSINESS DIRECTORY. T. II. Peterson, Blacksmith. Jefferson st. Molen & Caffrey, Farnlture, State street. G. E. Anderson, Photographer. State street. Ertlman & Son, dealers In meats. State st. H. T. Reynolds, general merchandise, State street. Fred Carter, contractor and builder. Monroe street. James Wigmore, tinware and grocerier State street. The Independent, all kinds of Job nrinttag. State street. Peal Bros. & Mendenhall, g sacral merchandise, State street. Wm. B. Roylance, harness, dealer in harness fixtures. State st. Alfred Whitehead, drugs, chemicals and confectionery, Roylance Roy-lance street. Q. S. Wood Mercantle Co., wholesale and retail dealers in general Merchandise. Dr. C. J. Peterson, druggist, dealer in drugs chemicals, books, stationery and wall paper. Wrra. M. Roylance, W IIUiTti.tia a f ' train-, bicycles, Studebaker wagons, btate street. '" Bpringville Creamery, John A. Mobbs proprietor. State road. Whitinore & Son, Batchers. State street. T. Child & Son, Proprietors of the Springvllle marble works. Three blocks east, two north uf meeting house. T. Tame, Harness maker and dealer in harness trimmings. Pexton'8 Notion Store, Headquarters for notions. State st. Chicago Cash Store, General Merchandise.; Mrs. E. N Weaver proprietor, State street. I tat new-will. ' CAAfi find Professional Cards. IR, F. DUNN, ' PHYSICIAN AND SIMEON. All Calls Promptly Attended Damr Will: Surgeon B. G. W. R. R. Office and Residence Resi-dence wlta J. V. Brlniihurst. Telephone connections. G EO. SMART, M. D. Physician and Surgeon. Office and Residence, 1 Mock north of Packard's store. PrtrNGVTLLE, : Utah. P. E. HOUTZ Ming Pen Artist anfl Sip Writer. Designer and maker of Family Records, Birthday and Calling Cards; Etc. BPRINGVILLE UTAH. James caffkey, NOTARY PUBLIC SriUJfGVILLE, UTAH. : : J. S. WEAVER : : LAWYER AND NOTARY PUBLIC. All L?al Work Carefully Attended; to. Sprinqville Utah. Societies. K. 0. T. M. , Springville Tent No. 9 meets In re-gnilar re-gnilar review every Saturday evening at 7:30. Visiting Sir Knights made Welcome. T. It, Kelly, Com. Elliot N. Jordan. R. K. WANTED Several trustworthy persons in this state to m linage, our business h thi lr own andnenitny counties. It is alnly office work conducted at home. Salary Sal-ary straight "JO0 a year d expanses definite, defi-nite, bona Hue, no more, no Ws salarr. Monthly 73. Reference. VScluse self-addressed stamped envelnpu Herbert E. Hess, President, Dept. M. Chicago, It mW with yea whether you centime -- -, ,, BWrrs-fclilingtobaere habit. l0-T.liACjiE?S raiaoyea the deir tor tobacco. tiJi-WTI. I I Mlneroo.aucreM,eipeiioico-B II t! W iioe, purifies the blood, rv -T H k lJ"sT' 1 stores lost mauhood. -T 1 fj I .jsac boiaa ia healtfc. nareJT l W lliws conSTTftjF PHflfcVl ILVAO TO H A C fro. .T'-a i 1 lJtTJionT drnpRlst. who -asfjl H 1 1 fipwlllowch for as. Take it with 5A:,11I.IaMeBtly, persistently One I JmmJt bo.l, ana ally core; 3boxes,Me, StTitoa tiH) Cs., tahiisi, satrsal, Itw Iw4 The Independent. William P. Gibson - - - - Editor-E. Editor-E. N. Jordan, Easiness Manager. Entered at the post office at Pprlngvllle Utah, for transmission through the mails as second-class matter. Issued every Thursday morning. TERMS OF 3UB3CRJPTION. One year. Six months, Three months. $2.00 1.00 .50 Ask for Advertising Rates. q ... . p. T5EHBER orTV ASSOCIATION Another week has passed and no .senator has been elected. Saturday saw a Utile excitement injected into the contest, however. how-ever. If the Lexowing committee of the Utah Legislature applies a coat of calamine to McCune, what will they do to the other fellow? Councilor Huntington and his reservoir project for Spring-ville Spring-ville remind us of the legend attached to the picture of the baby, wash-bowl and soap in the advertisement of Tear's Soap, i. e., "He won't be happy uutil he gets it." And still more snow. The growls at the watermaster this summer are likely to be because there is too much water, and someone's garden is being drowned. It is far easier to dispose dis-pose of too much water than it is to get along without enough. The City. Fathers may as well make up their minds to build a reservoir for irrigation purposes. Assuredly, Councilman Huntington Hunt-ington will give them no peace until they do. He brings to every eouucil meeting a new talk on the subject. Between times he goes about among the farmers and agitates the proposi tion. Those Grenada women who stoned the statue of Columbus because they considered the discovery of Jfaierica the principal prin-cipal cause of Spain's misfortunes misfor-tunes acted 'thoughtlessly. If they wished to show disrespect to the man who was the real cause of Spain's troubles they should have stoned the tomb ol Adam. A very interesting an1 instructive in-structive program has been prepared pre-pared for the session of the Utah Central Farmers' Institute at Brigham City, on February 23, 24 and 25. The speakers on the various lopicsare known authorities authori-ties on their subjects, and the meeting will no doubt be of great benefit to the farmers in that section. The indications at presrnt are thatSpriugville railroad builders will be strictly iu it this year. If current reports are true, the Rio Grands Western has many miles of new track in contemplation, contempla-tion, -and Springville people are usually on hand when contracts are to be given out. Railrod work puts several dollars in circulation cir-culation here each season. ... Recently several tramps broke into a church over at American Fork, made a fire iu the stove and spent a comfortable night. For this offense the leader got thirty days in jail. He remarked remark-ed that it was the first tinio he had been in church in twenty years, and he bad thought it rather hard that he should be given thirty days for it. It does look a little- like hard luck. In Albert D. Richardson's "Beyond the Missisiippi," published pub-lished more than a quarter of a century Jago, occurs a passage which, iu the light of recent events and their ulterior possibilities, possi-bilities, seems, almost prophetic. He points to the fact that the "Spirit of Progress," emerging from Egypt aud China, has passed on through Greece and Rome and Western "Eti rope; across the Atlantic, through Jamestown harbor, over Plymouth Rock, and on the Pacific. ''Ere long," he continues, con-tinues, "through the Golden Gates of San Francisco, it will go out by the islands of the sea to that dreamy Orient where It was born. And then what?" TURNED THE LIGHTS DJW.. i At the meeting of the City Council Monday evening, the electric light franchise, asked for by a local company, received a blow in the solar plexus. The Council declined to grant the prayer of the petitioners, Messrs. Clark, Harris and Norris. The reasons assigned in the report of the committee, given in full in our news columns, were to the effect that the Council Coun-cil believed in the municipal ownership of electric lights, ami that as the city has already taken steps in th'i matter of obtaining ob-taining a plant of its own, it could not consistently grant a franchise until its ultimate action ac-tion in the matter should be determined. de-termined. This is all right so far as it goes but in the meantime we are all paying tribute to the coal oil trust when we might just as well be keeping the money at home and encouraginglocal enterprise. The Independent favors the municipal ownership of electric lights, but at the same lime thinks the city should either move in that direction or get off the trail. The present Council Coun-cil has troubles of its own, and there is no assurance that succeeding suc-ceeding Councils for an indefinite in-definite number of years will not be in the same fix. The water question and certain street and sidewalk questions will take up its time and money, and in the meantime the electric light question will be chasing itself around outside in the cold and wet. We are of the opinion that the franchise should have been granted, as it contained a provision pro-vision whereby the City would have been enabled to purchase the plant and revoke the franchise fran-chise after eight years.' The Council no doubt believed that it was acting for the best interests of the people, but the real, simon-pure simon-pure economy of the matter is difficult to realize at present. FARMERS' UNIONS. Farmers in many portions of Utahare begining to organize forme purpose of securing protection pro-tection for themselves in a busi--nessSvay, and by co-operation to endeavor to realize a larger return from their labor. The movement move-ment is new in Utah, but in older states it has been tried with varied success. There is no reason why such a movement should not be effective, unless it be that farmers as a class lack the business ability required. We hardly think, however, that this lack exists. Farmeisas a rule have less opportunity to aquire a business training than men have in other walks of life. At the same time many of the most intelligent, energetic and solid citizens are found among the tillers of the soil. In the proper hands, we think a farmer's' organization could be made as beneficial to those interested as are like, organizations or-ganizations among business and professional men and mechanics. A Farmers' Union has been organiz-'d at Ogden, and one a' Mt. Pleasant. The workings of both will be watched with interest. in-terest. Mr. S. llodsonj business manager. of the Utah Home, a farm journal published at Ogden, has been instrumental in forming form-ing these unions, and was here Saturday looking over the field for one here What encouarge-ment encouarge-ment he received from the people likely to be interested - is not known.,, J ;.v. ..,:). . . If it is demonstrated that , the Union will be liseful to ' Utah farmers one sUp.uhl be Organized here. It seem to us that it could be made beneficial in e'duca-tional, e'duca-tional, financial and social ways. It is a subject worthy of consideration con-sideration at any rate, and .one on which Mr. Ilolson is no doubt anxious to e Heard... He is well posted, and' can furnish all necessary information. It has been suggestively said that what is shoplifting among the poorer classes is kleptomauia among the rich. Thi3, is: the irresistible logic of social conditions. con-ditions. It is conceivable to the average mind how a man or Beet Cough Syrup. Tastes Guod. Use CliRfS WHtRC Ail FISt FAILS. WMgwiaiaiMg- g In ttmfi. com pt drmrcriMs. Faith injood's The Great Cures by Hood's Sarsa-parilla Sarsa-parilla Are Indeed Marvelous. "My husband suffered with stomach trouble so bad at times he could not work. He has taken Hood's Sarsaparilla ancHt is helping him wonderfully. He also had a scrofulous humor but Hpod's Sarsaparilla cured this and he has had no trouble with it since. My little boy, too, ha3 been taking Hood's Sarsaparilla and it has given him a good appetite. We have great faith in Hood's Sarsaparilla." I." es. J. II. Edwabds, SO Edinburg St., Rochester, New York. Be sure to got Hood's because flood s Is the best inflict the One True Blood Purifier. Sold by all druggi sts. $ l ; si x f or $5. ii.,i) Dillo are the best after-dinner liOOCi S f lU pjiis, sad digestion. 25c. woman suffering from poverty and want should appropriate to themselves those things which they most need and desire. It is inconceivable, however, how a woman with every want supplied and money to purchase her heart's desire should deliberately steal that which is of no material ma-terial value to her and by so doing: do-ing: court the risk of social ruin. It is not well to deal too carelessly care-lessly with the word kleptomania. It is a disease. It has ruiiud hundreds of homes. Kleptomania Klepto-mania in its actuality is shoplifting. shop-lifting. But all kleptomaniacs are not shoplifters. The topic i f times this week is the bribery charges planted against A. W. McCune by Representative Rep-resentative Law of Cache county. The entire case has a suspicious look about it, and may prove to be a trick to defeat Mr. McCune's senatorial aspirations. Should the investigating committee decide de-cide that he is innocent, his election is assured. Still, far stranger things happen in Utah politics than the mere purchase of votes by a candidate. The Independent would like to see Mr. McCune clear himself of these charges for the sake of Utah's reputation, but we are not especially anxious to see him go to the Senate. What about that Springville sutrar factory? Has it died iu eiubryo?-Payton eiubryo?-Payton Globe' Header. No, sir. People have mereh stopped talking and settled down to work. There are strings to be pulled and wires to be laid, all 9f which, should be done in peace and quietness. The men now. ."at work on the enterprise believe in working . first and talking afterwards. See? The Springville Independent is using its editorial cohims to piKh up its delinquent subscribers. Evident! y Brother Gibson is in a "'hard row of stumps" as we are. Untie Miner. When the ice cream season commences Gibson, will need a new spring suit and a picnic overcoat. : He therefore wishes to have a few . of the profits of his business where he can get 'em when needed. See?. Blsmark's Iron Nervu - Was the result of his splendid health. Indomitable will and tremendous tre-mendous energy are not found where stomach., liver, kidneys and bowels are out of order. If you want thes-j qualities and the success they bring. wg.Dr.'Kintf's New Life .pills. They devciOjje every power of brain and body.,-: Only 25c at Dr. G. J.iPeterson'M drug store. .,- . Gone and For sot ten. First Plague (on the way to a city) What are you? Second I'iag-ue (traveling in th;e same direction) I am Cbtrirn'on'Cold.;" - FiFst Plague loftilj )-HYou might as well stay away. Nobody recognizesyou 'any more. I am the Grip. X. Y. Weekly, . . . ' . . He Mad Had One. "I thought he had been advised to go to Las Veg-as for the mud baths." "Quite right; but they found it was all a mistake. Ile.didn't need ore." "Why'not?" .''- i . . "He had just been through & hot and slose political campaign." Chicago Post.! ' " 11 ,: ' " ' : -': A Marked CaangW Assistant Here "is :a testimonial which might tie worth publishing. Talent Medicine' Man--What is it? Assistant ; (reads) "Before taking -our" valuable specific- I swas afflicted weak Jungs, but to-day I am a po. .iticft , orator." N.! Y. Truth. y :. Tb Canat, , . . Askins What has caused the charj'ge tt Maj.' Stiff's appearance, jof late? .He lsed to look like one borrr to command . :,Q.r.hawII. is. married now, aVd' . as inyde the d:scorerythnt he wasn't,; xrn f or .any such purpose. Puck. '. , Gossip.. , . . "You,ng Mr. Van Dabbs says that he s wedded to his art." ' '. "Yes," answered Miss Cayenne; "but judging from his pictures, I shouldn't ;ay they were living very happily." Washington Star. 1 .. The Poet'a Songs. The poet sang of woodland ways...' i!. ' Sweet singing birds and such aa that; The poet's- wife then sold these lays'. And bought a stuffed bird for iier hat. Chicago Record. - - -'':' On Every Bottle Of Sbiloh's Consumption Cure is this guarantee:"AU we ask - of you Is to use two-thirds of the contents of this bottle faithfully, then if you can say you are not benefited return the bottle to your Druggist aDd be may refund the price paid." Price 25 cts., 50 cts. and $1.00, City Drug Store. Press Opinions m WAS A SCORCHER. Living issues-Frank issues-Frank Cannon's speech was a scorcher. It is just the kind of a speech there is yet a demand for, and will he for many moons, or until suck time as such men as lleber J. Grant learn to keep their ecclesiastical oars out of politics. If Frank J. Cannon will have the back bone to stand his ground and not follow tha example ex-ample of . Roberts and Moses Thatcher, he has a great future before him. He is just the man to fill a long felt want. NEWSPAPER PATRONAGE. Grand Junction Star The Sentinel of Wednesday contained a just nd very timely time-ly editorial on the subject of newspaper patronage. This town, as every other in which a creditable paper is published, contracts a debt to the paper which it never pays and is not expected to pay. Every issue of the paper dues some good to the community in general. Its proprietor does at all times what he thinks will build up the general prosperity. A newspaper cannot be run as an eleemosynary ' institution. It must ' have financial support. No creditable paper asks some thing for nothing. It shows a want of common sense for a man at this day to say that advertising, ad-vertising, does not pay. The best business men on earth advertise liberally. If an advertisements docs not pay it is the fault of the advertiser. E ther he does not advertise properly pro-perly or his business methodsdo not fulfill the promises of his advertisements. ad-vertisements. A business properly pro-perly conducted pro6ts by ju dicious and intelligent advertising. advertis-ing. Almost every day each one of the papers in this town receives re-ceives requests from abroad for; sample copies. What for? That the person asking for one may judge from it what sort of a place this is. When he receives ; paper with very few advertisements advertise-ments he naturally concludes that the place is either unimportant unimpor-tant in size or is non-progressive dead in theshell. In either case the result is bad. Outside the fact that full value is return' d to the intelligent and judicieu? I advertiser, the paper has a right , . 1. ,3.. .... to support for the good it dues, in a general way for the cotiv-' infinity WHY, THEY DON t MARRY. Sevlar County Times I'robably our readers have not thought of it but there has b(:n a frightful decrease in marriages during the past: 30 j years, in tne united btates according to the increase of population. In conversation with a gen leman from the east rcc-en rcc-en 1, "lie placed the cause for this to the. fact, that too many women are occupying positions W. C; T. TJ. DEPARTMENT Edited by the Ladies of the Local Union. Wear Your White Ribbons. Sisters, if you can not do all that you would like to do for the protection of our country and our home, do all that you can do. Sure ther are pone who can not wear the white rib; bon all the time and everywhere thereby helping to ereat-ej f)irblio sentiment, and preaching silently silent-ly but eloquently, life-long ser mons knoSS'r 0nVfclfle belt the sight of a'white ribbon "such as mother or sister used to wear. x oeg-mr you'tw tvit many earnest workers have done, viz., buy wiiite ribbon and make up a lot of bows and sew them on .every wrapper, dress and outer garment you have.lso that every one' w hi? sees -' you niHy? know that yu are.- enndleijiu the army of noble" women whose purpose is to annihilate the liqiiflrT.cie,-rotect the home jhI Vis tiflf isii itji f lii and godli-TtresX-. 1 Ti rtfii&hi u t 1i fcbe land! llenrt. Van Irtew. "He alone by , Wii-pm- the hairs oTlpujliead'are . nuin.berjPtl, can' poun't-thr widows wli are wM-ojcaseof wM-ojcaseof alcohol ; the gra: headktliat-it jn4e gray; the sal e.hrtsihai it has . crushed with sadeJV;: the' ruineil familied that it'has ruined; the brilliant minds that it has quenched; the untold promises which it has cankered; the bright and happy bos and girls whom it has blasted into misery; the misery; the young and gifted wbqm it has .hurried into dishonor .And nameless graves Canpn Farrar. The destruction of the poor is their poverty, and the present licensing system is the chief cause of the present time poverty-debasement poverty-debasement of the poor. John Burns, M. P. for temperance; I have Lloon in the plce.". ,,tem njed , ftd-i? Uriwl ii ... . 5 ijig trehgth4neiU 4Hdif TKe'iiidmlr-ot.t he" Women's tJ orer har.l-placi-smstlj-y ioiirfttia'uirape Union of of trustihat sjjuld be filled by males. Many honest and industrious indus-trious young men are not able to get married because they cannot can-not secure steady employment. The Times is opposed to young ladies with good homes, going out into the world and occupying occupy-ing places that should be rilled by some deserving young man. Not long ago the (Ireut Northwestern North-western railroad declared its intention in-tention of discharging all i;9 women employes and rilling the pesitions with men, and the wives and svveelheaits of officials and employes are of glee. This railroad has an example that will some the full set day be emulated by all otlu-r great railroads and corporations of the United States. TOTE US LOVE FRANK. ThdSnlimi Press The sensation in Salt Lake City last week was the speech of Senator Frank J. Cannon in the t heat re on Thursday Thurs-day night. No 'such an audience aud-ience ever assembled in the building. Ogden alcne sent down a delegation of 400 persons and the residents'of Zion turn-el turn-el out en masse. Senator Cannon paid bis respects to lleber Jay Grant, John Henry Smith and Arthur Brown, whom he flayed alive. The Mormon church and tile D s ret News were vigorously" vigor-ously" assailed ami Frank got rid of a load of gall which had been accumulating on his stomach for weeks, lie declared himself a Mormon, and at the same time roasted Mormons on a bed of coals. He did. not dei y the charges of immorality preferred pre-ferred against him by the Women's Republican Club, but admitted that he was a bad man. The audience waa in sympathy vith the speaker ami it simply went wild. Frank made the dry bones rattle. lie showed his manhood and his coiitrm, t for church' methods. It was the big sensation of the fear, it lo ks as if Frank is beyond the p de of Iiome .missionaries. But there are thousands of voters in Utah who love him more than before. Lehi Banner Tiioso telegrams that came ft . few di vs from Washington Q(Tn elinu?illir ,rm untti nf sPI, r;p.j Cannoji two years ago . . " ai-e the most hcri tful to him at P'e eht time of anything we h;-ve read. Surely he cannot rui'der anv circumstances ex pect to i receive republican support after such a showing. Neither can he hope that the democrats" will favor him with their vetes after him telling them he was" still ai "republican last, fall while on the stump. To say the least of it Senator Cannon has placed himself in a sorrowful position and it will tak" some shrewd manipulation lor him to set himself right with liber party.! Saloon (cts One-Sixth. " The Chicago Record vouches for following: "Of the ifG"),000 paid to the men of the Fourth regiment at Firt Sheridan a week ago; $10,-000 $10,-000 has passed into the tills of the six saloonkeepers of Iligh-wQo.d, Iligh-wQo.d, tthe adjoining village, ac-cording'to ac-cording'to E. A. "Welch, who owns and runs the biggest sa- Utah are making an earnest effort to secure for our new state k So W rii i tvS Tv rrf 'pgikto 1 6- - B d u ca - tion law. Triisfctaw has been enacted by forty-one of the forty-five states. Only .four left outsi le the pale of' tjjts wholesome statue, and 4&.VJVj$iPl !!&i'lr 'fg1',: lation has ben atily presented by Mrs Alice Home in the house and Mrs. Martha II. Cannon in: the senate. "A-briating was giyerv.t he-si file offieers, Mrs. FranciA C- iSnilth: :'TSi)gden,.8tate prftlIent,.' MrsU Cg. Allen. Mrs. E.?S, Richard anijrs, G,. Coefvu,'. of Saft Lake, by the coni'njitiee. The business st'etof . Manils the beautiful Ecolta--whicl) co.nta.in.ed the large retail stores, e o i n m e r e i a 1 o ffi ( es , os to ffi ce, e J.c. , is being converted into saloon row. . An agent of an American brewery sold 5,000 barrels of beer in one day. , "Ob, My America!'' - There is only one place that you can inform the government that you are against the saloon, and that pUee fs at the ballot-box. ballot-box. Dr. II. J. Hall. If I could, I would inaugurate a strike that would drive the liquor traffic from the face of the tartb. P. M. Arthur. Legal and Probate Notices. 1 1 1 - V Summons. - IN the district court of the Fourtlt'jmlicial district of the state of ITiuh. sit ting in and for rtuli county ; Kicliui d Ij. Hirri. plaintiff. ys. Martha Alexander. Eveline Sterle. Surah Mortensen. Alice Ulackett. Klor.-i Kryati. Lottie Oemiiicil. C'elestiu Sumison. CVles'ine Humphrey. Millie Alexander. -Martin Alexander. Alex-ander. Edith Kensen. Francis M. Mortensen. Lenal L. Mortensen. Horace M. Mortensen. Jesse l.i. Mortensen. William W. Morteiisen, UehcH'ca J. Alexander. William It. Alexander. Alex-ander. Helen Ha-vey. Eli Kii-har ls. fc". 1. Alexander. I.eona l). t'iark. Licv .1. t'ni-lelt. t'ni-lelt. Maud Alexander, Amsisu Alexander. Albert Alexander; and Mary .1 . Alexander. Horace L. Alexander. Winslow .V Alexander. Losanip E. Alexander. Charlotte M. Alexander Alex-ander Lamar Roberts. Bliss Huberts. William W. Roberts, and Claude Roberts, minors, defendants. de-fendants. The State of T'lah to said defendants: You are hereby summoned to upitfar within with-in twenty days after the service of this summons sum-mons upon you. if served within the county in which this action is brought, otherwise, within thirty days after service, aud rlefeini the above entitled action: and in cm' of your failure so to do. judgment, will lie ren uered aira.nst you according to the demand of the complaint. Kl.MKR E. f'OltFMAN. Attorney for Halntjff. Postofflce address: Room :s. first National Rank building, l'rovocity, I'tah. Auction Sale. IN the matter of the Kstate and GunwHan-ship GunwHan-ship of John Armstrong, an insane. The undersigned will sell at pu'ol tc :mct ion I T ;V acres of farm and meadow land, situ jte in I'tah county, Utah, described as folio v. s, to-wit; Beginning 9.SI chs n i dee w and l..'i." clis n Si1, den and chs n M desi 2." min w from the se corner of the ne 4 of se li in T s. S t :t F: of S L M. with' variations Id def M min K: thence runnln? s .M) de;r w !.V(ii chs. t 1imi n 7!)'i dec w 2.:VJ chs. then n Hi1, dee e 2.:'.' ( lis. then n IT'i dog 3 chs. then n 1 1 . det: e :i -'0 chs. then n 1 dea w Kt-IUU clis. then s sip (,.K i;i.5S chs, t hen s S( deB u'." min e l.'.U clis; area 8.!W acrt-s; And also bepinniiisr at 1 lie sw corner of the ne of sec.t. township aforesaid, ttif nee n detf 52 mill e 8.1- chs. then n ;i (li'ij w 1! N1 ehs. then s 5S dec w 225 chs. then n 74 dej; w I fnl clis. then u de w l is ehs. then n i ile e 1.32 chs. t hen n M' . di-sr w 2.Mi ehs. t le-n n 844 deir w tkl-lOU chs, O.eu s 'i de- e lj.Tti chs; area 8 .W acres; At Vi o'clock noon on the third dav of March. A. I), lsoy. at the trout do r of t he City hall In Springville. t'tah county, fiah. Terms of t-ale. cash. Haled at Springville, this 8th d.ay of IV))-ruary, IV))-ruary, 18lh. WiLi.iA.ii H. Hahi'i.ktt. . . , ..XJuaifiian. In the District Court of the Fourth judicial district. I'tah county. Utah, t'cobale division. In the matter of the estate of Ann U. Bi inahurst. deceased. Notice. The petition of John V. Brin-hurst for settlement of linal account and distribution and partition of the estate of Arm !. Itriti--hurst has been set for heat-ini; at 10 o'clock a m., Saturday the 2-"th day of February ibtl;!, at the Court house in Provo city, I taii county. State of Utah. Dated a' Provo city, Utah. Jan. 21. 1si9. Gko. Uavkkcamp. Clerk. John M. Milnor, Attorney fur Petitioner. Beauty Is Blood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathartic Cathar-tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all impurities im-purities from the bodv. Begin to-day to Danish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets, beauty for ten cents. All druggists, drug-gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 2oc, 50c. Wanted ! Reliable man for manugerof branch office I wish to open in this vicinity. If your record is (). K. here is a good opening. Kindly mention this-pa per when writing. A. T. Morris, Cincinnati, 0- Illustrated catalogue, i cts. postage. Provo Steam Laundry . . . Best. WQE.k and rensonahlo prices. Give us tt trial; guarantee, satisfaction, satis-faction, " (!o the finest of lftiii work, antt ni.tke a specialt y of family trade. Laundry called for and delivered de-livered without extra charge. J. N. CULICK, PROF'R. PROVO, UTAH. The World of Almanac and Encyclopedia for 1 899 Illustrated History of the Spanish-American Spanish-American War J1 J JJ JC jtJtJt&JL&j J READY FOR SALE J 2 EVERYWHERE J JANUARY 1st, tS99. J Together -with The Battle Calendar of the Rqublic Compiled by EDGAR STANTON MACLAY Historian of tbU. S. Navy. THE STANDARD . AMERICAN ANNUAL. PRICE 25 CENTS. - Postpaid to any addres THE VORLD, Pulitzer BuHdine, - NEV YORK. m m w m t m n e m r a YETERIMARY SPECIFICS l FEVERS. Lung Feer. Milk Feer. CVftu jJ2jSPBAI.3i Lamenega. Rbeumtliiia. JJij EPIZOOTIC. Distemper " ctbSI WORMS. Dot Gr.H cuttM COUGHS. Colda. idQbcbu. JJjJEij COLIC. Bellyache. Dirrhe. G.ii. PrerenU 5IISCARRIAGE. " reJ 1 K'DXEV BLADDER DISORDERS. JlJi MAXGE. Skim DUeates. J. BAD COXDITIOV, Staring Coat. CCKB i gOc. each: Stable Case, Ten Specifics, Book. Ac, $7. At drueiHt or seut prepaid on receipt of price. Humphrey" Medicine Co.. Cor. Wiiliam John Bta., New York. VgrgiuwAaT Maspaj. Set fuEM. I. ERrflS .debility; and Prostration ,from Overwork Over-work or other cau&es. . Humphreys' Homeopathic Specific Mo. 8, in use oyer AO years, the only successful remedy. $1 per TiaLor 5 rials and large rial powder, for $5 Sold by DruKgWa, or ant po.t-p.i4 on ral.l of prln. BCHrllSEYS !!. CO., Cor. WliUw ithM St., htm fork " TIME TAULtt; FOR SPRINGVILLE. UTAH. GOING WEST To Salt Lake, Ogden and the Coast. No 1. Pacific mail Lv. 8:10 a. m. No. 7. from Tintic to Salt Lake City Lv. 8:15 a. m. No. 5. from Sanpete to Salt Lake Lv. 4:00 p. m. No. :i. l":e-itic limited Lv :2J p. ui. No. H. Passenger, from S-lt J.ake to Tintic Lv. 6:30 p. m. Nn.Jt sprinuviile to Tintic,. Mixed. daily exrept Sunday Lv. S;55 a. ' GOING EAST. No. fi. I'asseiiK -r and mail, from Salt Lake to Sanpete valley Lv. 0:33 a. m. No. 2. At lant ic E press , Lv. 9:41am. No. 4. Chicago limited Lv. 9.'IK p. m. Train No. S leaves Sail Lake at 12:30. and arrives at "Oiidcn 1:30 p. in. Train 10 leaves Ogden at- 2:10. aud arrives at Salt-Lake Salt-Lake 3:10. O. V. HODGE. General Manager, S. II. UAUCOCK. 1 A. WAHLEIG1I. Traffic Manaijer. Gen' PaswMicer Act The t , Colorado Midland Railway Has the lrest through car service in the west. If you are going to Colorado Springs, Denver, Cripple Creek or any other point in the East, itwill py you to -,use the Pike's Peak Route. : , : : : : : : : : W. F. Baii.ky, Gen. Pass. Agt. . Denver, Colo. WRITE FOR CIRCDLSRS Sewing Machines we roannfnctnre mt their prices btfore yon purchase ny other. THE MEW HOWE SFWING MACHINE CO. tS Pnton Snnaro, N. Y. rtii-pr. 111. ft TnKlla l i.i'm . iux. ban Francieco. i'fcl. AtlanUi.tA. FOR SALE B TAYLOR BStS. FaOVO, UTAH U5E tJ mi n Mlhccosl of 32-rlihre oarlrldzp for a Marlln. MJcl . 32-calilire cartridge lor any other rryeater J i roiri niv i.mi a iik umo'ih. made, i (12 UO meuuiii. Yon-iCan Rave the entire cost of your Marlln C on the tirst two tholifan I carlrWce. WliyUli' HRi Is. fully explained In the Martin liana cnrvartiw and hf.w- t use thin. How to loaa Ceartridt-e with the dllfi rent kin1aor iia ic an-i ' Sinn&eltl pt.wrifTK. It Kivft traj.'t UTK'S ; j l KjciiicK, penf-trations aim nu r (.11111? . . ' Interest to Kportsincn. l!8 pajfta. 're , if jou I ' will send stamps for postatre to THE H ARLIM FIRE-ARMS CO., New Eaen.Ct 1 Send J5c. far sample tube of ffnrlin Runt -.V;-H.-r. . EXPERStNCE Trade Marks Designs Copyrights &c e.ulekly ascertain our ophiion froe whether au itiTentioo-tsiprobnhly pntetstable. roromniiica. tions strictly coiinrteiitiBl. Hnndhookon Pateut9 sent free. OMent neeiu-y for aecuring patents. rteW taken throueh Mnnn A Co. reoelTa tprrial notice, without cimrite, in the Scientific American. A hanrtsomelT Illnstrated weekly. lJnfet elr-rubuiou elr-rubuiou of ahr acientiBc Journal. Terms. i a Tei: four months. L Sold by all newsdealer. FslUNN & Co.36,Broad"ay- New York Branch Office. CS F Bt WaablDKton D. C . A'nW.nA bMlln. a . k f ft Bud rieacrlDtton mar ra Est smmm mwm est Dining Car Service. ELEGANT EQUIPMENT. Chair Cars Free. TWO FAST TRAINS DAILY. i 1 i |