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Show ... SPRING-VILLE - CITY DIRECTORY. PBITfOVI LLE has ben an Incorporated city aloe 18KJ. Its original area took In an kuplrc, which has been rt'duecd under the g etieral Incorporation act. The corporation new covers all of section , township 7 south, range S east, and lots l."2. 3 and 4 of township south, range S east. In Utah county. Utah. The city is on the Rio Grande Western and Short Line railroads, and troni. this point diverges the Tlntlc" branch -of the Itio Orande Weetern. Sprlng-TlUe has a popular tlea above S.B0", has a bank, seven general lores, a cotunilattlon bouse grocery, two seat markets, two hardware stores, two jewelers, three d rug stores," two. Bollllnery establishments, a weekly newspaper, two job printing establishments, -Are blacksmiths,. - . - . .. 1 . Ice ' two implement, numRHvun u'j three hotels, grist mill, fee. uillL planing sslll, marble works, marble quarry, woolen aslll. Deeeret and Western Union telegraph llaee. Wells-Fargo and Pailflc express com- aanlee. Bell long distance telephone, create ry. two barber shops, three Latterday ai.ta meet In i bouses and twx more. In coarse of const ruttloa. lfsby teflWn church Baptist mission, four ward publlo schools. Ceatral high school. .Presbyterian flunfcer- ferd academy, two doctors, a dentist, two feeeral directors, tailor shop. thVee' shoe heps, tla shop and bakery. OCK elty Is one of the leading ones In Utah i silk raising, bee culture, sugar beets. good roads, general appearance. tLrlft and enterprise. . - . ... wyB want a sugar factory, silk factory, an lacabator factory, nut and bolt factory, taeniae shops, canning factory. trriCKRS are: . M ijxjry&aanoa E. flail; recorder. re-corder. P. E. Houtt: treasurer, Mrs. Luella Haymoal: marshal. F. O. Ganuiiell: Justice, at. H. Thorn: councllmen, Joseph. Loynd. H. T. Reynolds. Loren H. Hariuer. O. B. aatlagton Jr., Joseph U. Storrs. BUSINESS DIRECTORY. T. H. Petereon, Blacksmith, Jefferson st. Molen & Caffrey, Faraltare, State street. . . G. E. Anderson, ' rWstograpbsr. State street. EM man A. Son, Isalsci In DtiU, Mat at h .t. Reya.rr . -J Fred Carter, " Mlrsttsr pfiairrlHrHB"- Jam. Wigmore, 8 itws sad trocar! tt street. The Independent, 11 kinds of Job nrlnllagj-SUte street. . Pl Bros. & Mendenhall, fMral merchandise. State street. Wna. B. Roylance, harness, dealer In harness fixtures. 9tate st. Alfred Whitehead, drags, chemicals and confectionery. Roy-leace Roy-leace street. Q. 8. Wood Mercantle Co., wholesale and retail dealers in general aserchaadlse. Dr. C. J. Peterson, .ragglst. dealer In drugs chemicals, books, tattonery an4 wall paper; . Wm.M. Roylance, v,,.!.,.. l. fruits, nroduce. seeds acid j2.- t - - rraln; bicycles, tudebaker. waicouk. Statu street. 8pringville Creamery, John A. llobbs proprietor. State road. Whitmore-& Son, Batchers, State street. T. Child & Son, Proprietors of the Sprlngvllle marble works. Three blocks east, two north of meeting house. T. Tame, ry " J Harness maker and dealer In harness rimmUgs. Pextou's Notion Store, Headquarters for notions. State st. Chicago Ca&hStore, General Merchandise,; Mrs. E..N" Weaver proprietor, State: afreet-, . . - . , . . Professional Cards. )R F. DUNN, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. . ill Cam PtokpUt Attnit Day n IizH : urceoa K. O. W. R. R - Office and siesi-stance siesi-stance vita J. W. Brlnghurst. Telephone ceaaectlons. t, . JEO- SMART, M. D. Phyaieissn s),nd Suegeoa. OfSce and Residence, 1 blocks north ef Packard's store. ' .; t rKnrom.LJE, J AMIS CAITRKT, NOTARY PUjBLIC SPR12?G"VfLIiE HTAIL2S r- l . s : J. S. jWE AVER :1 r- UYYER ANDl NOTARY PUBLIC. All Ial .Work . Carefully Attended: to. ,-tf , SPBINQTIIIC y i : UTAfUffj.-f -.t Smingville Teit No. 9 ixirtfi re-j cular review eveVy SaturdjTeTtBmV' tT:30.. TlsitinJ'.Sir Krits. juade sreJoome. 'f, R Kei.V; Gbicu Bxxiot If . Joi)AH.JL i wetk sm aaetkee as siai sawn nr w m. os.ses Hos TO-it AC frsi ULnmdk tr mm. TO. ttwlt . BMatl. Mt. OfA . St, uull; cans; b.iw,KM, e tnM, or w rcfBss mtmtm. fru.finm.n itw tmi. Provo Steam Laundry Beet work and reasonable prices. Clre os a trial; guarantoe ssttta-f ssttta-f action. We do the finest of flue work, sad make a specialty of family trade. T snsxlry called for aod de-n-rere4 wiUioat extra charjje. J. N. CULICK, PROP'R. PBOVO, UTAH. . . XMlBBjMn .lilt msuaij m smb. iii'i rstim The Independent. William F. Gibson - - - Editor-. Editor-. E. N. Jordan, Business Manager. Entered at the post office at Springvllla Utah, for transnU.ssion through the mails as jeccnd-Class matter. Issued every Thursday morning. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. One year.- -31 x months. Three months. . $2.00 1.00 .50 A6k "for Advertising Rates. i . u j BEK OF TJ$Si ASSOCIATION . . s,.week tlie: Wasntcli Wave' closed its tenllr-rear. .1 he iet?er City people .-.It new f when tlvpy had a good thTnjj, 'aii'l l.hey.kejit it going". vMfttbtP; ;Wure t'Ojo- tinue to.nroapefi. ; . . - A school trustee got gay with the editor of tlie " Randolph' Rouiid-Up,-ani--ws -jn-oiriptlv thrown, out of the print shop. Last" year the- &tah editors nearly near-ly all got licked. This seison itbiddfafr to he the o her fellows. In one California town the teachers pre not allowed to wear mou-minjg in the schoolroom because be-cause of its depressing effect, on thpupi.lsu , PerJiaps the time will come when artificial signs of'so'rrow'wMlI be regarded as a pagatf survival and a" violation of the finest altruistic sentiment. is.alaxmed-0.vr. -tbexolvs - of people from Sanpete county, and wants to know the "reason. reth&p&Ms s 'Pieasaiit, like Springville, has a City pasture in wbrcn 5 ufrjQ teii, aerofarms are tied up, and re'itterptising youngmen have to go elsewhere for a'chance to establish themselves. them-selves. '' G u ri ni so it b uldfn g h i gli f o r a newspaper, according to a report re-port brought byre from there by a Springville citizen. Her business men are offering as high as $100 per month in advertising ad-vertising for one year. That would tempt most anyoantry editor in the Staie to throw in his forms-and move toGujinison. After careful consideration the Flemish Academy at Antwerp has officially invented, authorized and promulgated, as the liame of the motorcar or horseless carriage, the poiten-tous poiten-tous word, "snellpaardelooszon- Iderspoorwegpetroolfijnig." Af- that we may- well be reconciled to our own .English, tongue, even if it is a trifle clumsy and illogical in its spelling. " Newspaper " riien some "times geVC'itehjie&rei itiib' Vtfa rige situatiqL.-.. itqr rmith of OgdeTi'tjied to seji the X Rays io Mctki ire, and people said he .wasiooking for .a bribe? Editor Taylor of the Broad-Ax wouldn't sell Bis 'influence toany candidate, candi-date, and he is in just as much tcoubJeias EdilpF.-. SmM-h. No otbJeV fitvi " Ji3B ;;' iU w6l and y anitwiri e trqu bits' litre 'thote of a newspaper man in politics. With commendable enterprise enter-prise the fJaltLtfke 'Herald " has published and "" distributed in pamphlet form complete stenographic steno-graphic reports of the testimony before the bribery investigation committee of the Legislature. The Independent has been favofed wUUVV- ; .X t TheTintie Jdihey and Silver CityStaravpa8ed?rom the control of Fred Nelson to that of tfie - Tin tic Publishing Co. jwithC. F. Spillman as . manager, mana-ger, I We are ,ghi4tq note that KMf. NeIson:is rmyir.r a. .fixture in Utah county, with headquarters at Prero. Wo wish Mr. Spill-man Spill-man success, and hope he will put ua on his exchange list. ; Hon, Joseph 'Chamberlain, who fouud bis wife on this side of the water, knows "a hundred reasons why England and America should be friends, and none why they should be otherwise." other-wise." Why. may' not the same formula apply to all the nations of the earth? Unless there has been a false ring in oar . Christmas Christ-mas songs-and a note "Df insincerity insin-cerity in every prayer hat the Kingdom may come, ye auust desire tho universal! reign of "peace aud good-will. "1 : "" , fc' 4,V EXCELLENT OUTLOOK. The outlook for the year to come in this city is without doubt far more promising than for a long period. There is likely to be more money in circulation, cir-culation, and a correspondingly larger volume of business transacted. trans-acted. The fruit crops this year will be more than the average, on account of the increased acreage and the abundant water supply. The acreage of beets to be pl.tn'-ed pl.tn'-ed has been increased nearly 40 per cent, and present conditions are more favorable thin ever for a good crop. All farm and gerden products will respond t the unusual water supplf. - Railroad development will keep Springville labor pretty Veil employed on the grades and in the tie camps. Business men will find their trade greatly stimulated by the various movements, move-ments, as a laboring man and his money are soon parted. The prospect now is . that the sugar factory will be built here the coming year. . Not much talk is being indulged in now; consequently somebody is at work quietly, and when the time comes more talking will be done. There is no especial "boom" in prospect, but merely a solid, substantial and withal a fairly rapid growth for 'Springville. Every croaker, moss-back and pessimist in the eity should re-lire re-lire to his chamber and keep out of sight of busy people. Had these, back-capping individuals any self-respect, days of prosperity pros-perity would be days of remorse and shame for them. Men with hopeful faces are an inspiration; a croaker's dismal countenance throws a shadow over all. THE POLL TAX QUESTION. The people of Springville are very sensitive on the subjebt of taxation, and if money is to be had for any purpose of improvement, im-provement, they inujtbe handled han-dled very carefully and it mus tbe all right from every point of view or something is heard to drop. For instance, witness the poll tax business. For many years, it is said, the Hoard of County Commissioners has been charry of giving this City road appropriations because the said City persisted in collecting collect-ing and "expending its own poll tax. In consequence the County' road leading to and" from this city is the moat villianous piece of quagmire in the county excepting ex-cepting only the little piece down to the. Short Lino depot. As a remedy for this state of affairs, Mr. Harmer, supported by Mr. Loynd, proposed that the work of collecting and expending ex-pending the poll tax be turned over to the County, and a small property tax be levied to keep our own streets in repair. Being relieved of the weight of maintaining main-taining the County road, it was thought this could be easily done at small expense. The County would then take its road in hand and makethe necessary nec-essary repairs. It was thought, on the opinion of the City Attorney, that the City could resume the right to collect poll tax any time it wished. This measure was 'opposed by Mr. Reynolds and Mr. Whiting in the council and later by Mr. Huntington. They advocated the holding and direction of all this labor at home and under our own control. Mr. Huntington ;said;no road tax could be levied until July, and in the meantime we would have bridge and reser voir schemes to carry through, as well as street repairs to make, and. no available funis with which to do it. Then the timorous, tax-fearing citizen took alarm. He saw visions of a double poll tax, a county poll tax payable in cash, a cash property tax, etc., for all of which there was no foundation in fact. A huge petition, sign ed by 130 citizens, was fired into the council as a protest. The City Fathers then considered what they had in u viear, the funds at their disposal, etc., aud concluded to hold onto the poll tax for another year anyway. Thb Independent believes that, in view of what they hare MM I -i Mf! imonaewax -dtuia mnn Sinn i' "No Eye Like thejfy Master's Ei$' You are master of mar health, and if you do not attend to daty, the blame is easily located. If your blood is out of order, Hood's Sar saparilla 'will purify it. - v It is the specific remedy for troubles of the blood, kidneys, bowels or liver. Kidney My kidneys trout! me, and on advice took Hood Sarsiiparilla which ijave prompt relief, better appeUte. My sleep Is refreshing. It cured my wife also.' Micham. Botls, 3473 Denny Street, Pittsburg. Pa. Scrofulous Humor-" I was In terrible condition from the Itching and burning of scrofulous humor. Grew worse under treatment of several doctors. " Took Hood's SarsaparllU and Hood's Pills. These cured ins thoroughly." J. J. Lrtlc, Fulton, N. V. ZfbccCS SauafHUilfii Hoed Wis curs Uvsr Ills ; ths poo Irritating sn4 ealy Wtt te isfcs with aoeeV SwsssrUta. to do this summer, the Council did well to hold on toy- rOll tax At the same time it jhinka some means ought to be found by which the County Commissioners Commiss-ioners could be induced to do the square thing by thisity in' the matter of highway ' appro- priuations. If no other means are likely to be successfuljWc believe that by another year arrangements arrange-ments should be made to give them the poll tax, and hen the d maud be made upon them for the improvement of their County road is the vicinity, us well as for the opening of the road to Lake 8hore which ''they have never touched since Mr. Reynolds' retirement a couple of years ago. Springville should Uave a square deal in this matter r know the. reason why. A BACK NUMBER. Washington County is alleged al-leged to be partially represented in the State Legislature by one McQuarrie, a man who seems to be a fossilized relic of barbarism and ignorance. He has introduced introduc-ed in the house, and what is all the more suprising, has secured the passage of a law doing away with legal publications in probate pro-bate cases and in foreclosures of mortgages. This bill strikes in several directions at once. The press of the State gets it in the neck as a matter of course, but how about people who are concerned in probate and mortgage foreclosure matters? Are they not being deprived of the publicity which is in most cases a means of protection? McQuarrie's action is not hail ed with delight in his own county, as. witness the following from the St. George paper: Tlit News was astonished at the action ac-tion of tbe representative of this county in putting himself on record against newspapers. The only excuse wecan Ann for Mr. McQuarrie's action is that he hardly yet knows the value of a representative county paner, as Washington countr. tbe county he represents in the State Legislature, had been without st newspaper until Tht News established Itself here less than a year ago. Mr. McQuarrie is reported as saying that he "Thought printers were making too much money." With this statement of the Hon. gentleman in view, we propose making him rich by offering him The Washington County News at a bargain. A man by the name of Ahlstrom says he has discovered discover-ed a buried' city 'down " near Tropic, according to press reports. re-ports. Attorney Wearer of this city, who knows the southern country pret ty well, in commenting comment-ing on this discovery said to the editor: "Down around Orange-rille Orange-rille they make a . peculiar beverage out of sorghum. It tastes nice in one's mouth, and seems not unlike a mixture, of strawberry pop and ginger, ale. After a while man fee .-Is something some-thing wrong in- bis stomach; and for the entQmg' hn hours does not know where he lives. That's the time they see airships air-ships and discover buried cities A certain element of Richfield citizens decided that tbe recently recent-ly established high school of that city was an expensive lax ury, and that they would dispense dis-pense with it." The more intelligent intelli-gent element got wind,9, of ., Ihe plot, and stamped it out." Once on a time a Ninth, or High school grade, was established in tbe public schools of Springville. Very little is now beard of it. Wonder if it's still in existence! Tbe woman who goes upon the lecture platform to air her rights usually leaves a bus-band bus-band at borne nursing bis wrongs... . . v.j McCune has bad it nice, new calsonjiue bath. j .... Press Opinions K STOPPED HIS PAPER. Ogden Standard-Judge Standard-Judge Powers has slopped his subscription to the Salt Lake Herald, and the latter makes the announcement in the editorial edi-torial column, and in effect says: "Goodbye, Powers; don't stay away any longer than vou can. help." We have always looked upon Judge Powers as a great, big, brainy man. But it seems we have been in error. A man who stops his paper because he does not likethe edi torial comments in the paper. shows himself up as of small caliber. No newspaper editor in the world can write to suit every reader. The editor who thinks he can, will soon learn that his thoughts are fooling him, and the subscriber who thinks he can run the editorial columns of a paper by paying 75 cents per month, is fooling himself. No self-respecting, honest, liberty-loving man will stop his paper on account of what the editor says in the editorial column" of his paper. There are a few, a very few such tra;)ll individuals in Ogden, who stop their paper whenever an editorial edi-torial does not suit them. But they are so few that they can be counted on the fingers. Some people stop their subscription sub-scription in hope that the editor edi-tor will notice the loss of the profit of that subscription, but the sensible man knows that the profits of a single subscription subscrip-tion is so small that it could hardly be discovered 'with the naked eye. All papers that have over a thousand subscribers lease their circulation to outside parties, the same as the Standard has leased its Ogden circulation to Mr. R. M. Gourlay. If there is any profit in the Ogden Standard Stan-dard subscription list, Mr. Gourlay Gour-lay gets it. He pays the Standard for simply sim-ply the white paper on which it is printed, and that is all the Standard receives out of each subscription. Therefore, it will be seen that when a subscription subscrip-tion is stopped the newspaper loses nothing, as it saves its white paper, although the few cents profit to circulation is wiped out. So it is with the Herald. All they see ot Judge Powers' subscription is in, the Judge's eye. But there never W. C. T. U. DEPARTMENT Edited by .the'Ladies of the Local Union. Adam's Ale. . It is related of the late Emery Storrs that when silting around a wine table with a number of legal friends he insisted, on drinking ice water. They taunted him for his obstemious-ness, obstemious-ness, saying: "What is tber in water? You can say nothing for it." Picking up his glass he pronounced the following eulogy on water: "How do you expect to improve im-prove upon the beverage .Jfur-nished .Jfur-nished by nature? Here it is Adam's, ale abut - the only gift that has descended unde- filed from the Garden of JMen NwtureV common . carrier, , nttritai!els and the wheat is hillo-.v- created ' in the rotteniress f-fermentation, f-fermentation, not distilled dveK guilty fires! Virtues and "no' vices are its.. companions. Do.es it -cause drunkenness, disease, death, cruelty to - women and children? Will it place 'rags on the person, mortgages oh the stock, farm and furniture? Will it consume wages and income in-come in advance and ruin men in business? Nol but it float? in white clouds 'far up 'in the quiet summer sky, and hovers in dreamy mist over the merry faces of all our sparkling lakes. It veils the woodavidj hills of earth's land sea pestuS purple haze, whre filmy;Vciig1ita "atid shadows drifi hoorlirfter hour It piles itself in tumbled masses of eloud-domes ' and?; thunder-beads thunder-beads draws the electric flash from its mysterious hiding places, and seams and shocks All Men Make Mistakes sometimes when addressing their letlers, and their epistles ' go to the Dead Letter office instead f to the party for. whom they were iutended. This may be prevented by having your name and the envelope letters will come back to you then i( not - directed properly. We will print you 100 good envelopes for 60 cents, and furnish the envelopes. , Larger lota at rates correspondingly cheaper. Call on The Independent, Springville . , . is a subscriber who gets angry at something the newspaper says but that there are others who applaud the same sayings of the newspaper. A stop always al-ways brings a new start. II you want to make a newspaper editor feel cheap, do as a New York man did. Editor Dana was roasting a certain Congress man, "skinning him alive." he called it. The Congressman coolly ordered sent to" his constituents con-stituents 3,000 extra copies. Editor Dana said that whs the time he came near being lized. para- If you slop your paper, the editor knows his words hav-struck hav-struck home. He feels thai his words are effective. He also learns the other fellow's weak spot?, and he pours vitriol, instead in-stead of oil, on the wounds. If you want to make an editor feel cheap, - make him believe that his words do not affect you in the least; and under (host condiliohs the editor will do the squirming. Judge Powers, however, is squirming under the Herald's caustic pen, and he admits, by stopping his paper, that the words burn deep. If the Judge were a little closer to Ogden the Standard would be willing to give him some healing balm, but as it is, we can but weep at the burning of the Herald's words into Orlando's careass- The Southern Star, Chattanooga Rev. T. C. Iliff, of Salt Lake City, has .visited Chattanooga,-lectured Chattanooga,-lectured and gone. He called on President Rich while here to enjoy a social chat with the 'hoys,' as he calls the office force. His lecture here was very mild in comparison to that given in Atlanta and other places on his itinerary. He is distributing a tract called '.'What the Mormons Teach," containing contain-ing a number of excerpts from our church works and authorities :hat seem to be of a benefit, rather than hurtful to the cause, as truth is right, anywhere and almost any time. Those extracts referring to polygamy and . celestial celes-tial marriage, of course, ar not paralleled with the subsequent instructions bearing on the renunciation re-nunciation or abrogation of the tenet, hence is not fair, but. (hern ;his might be expected under hM cic imsa ices all si ea in ' t hi be considered by the gentleman, gentle-man, the wide air with vivi l lines of fire. It is ran it d bv th- wind-. and falls in rustling urtain- of ' liquid drapery -all over the; thirsty woods and l elds ani i fixes in God's m stic eastern heavens his bt autiful bow f promise, gloritieo vviih a radiance radi-ance that seems reflected out mf.- h 'uven itself. It gleams in the I rost crystals of the mountain tops and the dews, of the valleys. It sflently creeps up -to each leaf in the myriad forests of the world and tints ea h fruit and flirwer: It is here in the grass blades . of the meadows, and '$ie re. ..w.here the corn waves its ingl - -It gems the depths of.the desert with the glad green oasis, winds, in oceans around the whole earth, and roars its hoarse eternal anthems on a hundred thousand, mile of coast! It clasps its hands in the flashing wavocrests .of the sea, laughs in the little rapids of the brooks, kisses the dripping mos9-covered old oaken well buckets in a countless host of happy homes! See these pieces of cracked ice, full of prismatic colors, clear as diamonds! Listen to their fairy tinkle against the brimming glass, that sweetest music in all the world to one half-fainting with thirst! And bo, in the language of that grand ojd raatii, Gough, I ask you, brothers all, would you exchange that sparkling spark-ling glass of water for alcohol, the drink of the devil himself? ' Selected. X address priuted on the corner of TTtan, 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 body. Begin to-day to banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets beauty for ten cents. All druggists, drug-gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c. Legal and Probate Notices. Estray Sot ice. I have In my possession one bay mare about four yeurs old. 1 f t ffl while, mlilte in fort-bran, branded IO on )?rt lliif-'li. If above described aninialbe not dniined and taken nwav before Friday. Man u I'li ' II will le sold to the hlv'h' st bidder on a- ove date at ten o'clock r. ni., at the I si i ay , found. Mapleton. I'tah. I I.AFAYKTTB .Ti.HNSoN. March I. 18:19. I'onmlkeeper Summon. IN the district court of the Fourth Judicial district of the stale of ( tan. Kitting in and i for Utah county ; Kichard L.. Hird. plaintiff. vs. Martha Alexander. Kveiine Stetle. Sarah 1 Monensen. Alice Blackett. Flora Bryan. Lottie Getumell. Celetia jmiiu'isoti. IVlesMne Humphrey. Millie Alexander. Martin Alexander. Alex-ander. Edith Kun-wn. Franc!.- M. Mortensen. Lenal L. Mortensen, Horace M. Mortensen. Jesse L. Mortensen. William W. Mortensen. Keiiecea J. Alexander. William I). Alexander. Alex-ander. Helen lla-vey. Kliza F. Richards. V. II. Alexander. I,c. ma t. (.'lark. Lucy J. Col-lett, Col-lett, Maud Alexander. Amasa Alexander. AUx-rt Alexander; and Mary J.- Alexander. Horace L. Alexander. Winslow N. Alexander. Losanie K. Alexander. I 'harlot te M. Alexander. Alex-ander. Lamar Koberls. Bliss Roberts. William W. Roberts, and Claude Roberts, uiinors. defendants. de-fendants. The State of I'tah to said defendants; You are hereby summoned to appear within with-in twenty days after the service of this sum mons upon you. If served within the county In which tliis action is brought, otherwise, within thirty days after service, and defend the alHve entitled action; and in case of your failure so to do. judgment will be ren-dred ren-dred against you according to the demand of the complaint.. Kl.MKK E. OOUFMAN. Attorney for Plaintiff. PostoBiee address: Room 3. First National Bank building, Provo City. L'tah. H.G.Wood Tonsorial Artist. i All Work Done in the Highest Style "of the Art. Comfortable Bathroom Bath-room Attached. Fee 25 cents. .Shop. Union Banfc Bonding, Springyille- A. A. BROWN, FOB an easy sliavp and n artistic haircut, call on him. Iiicli3i - and - Children's nAIIt cuts a specialty. -' AGENCY for tho TKOV STEAM LACK DRY, Salt Lako. Parlor next to Postoffl e. Fprlngvillo. Wanted ! Rel iable man for manager of branch fttice I wish to open in th'.s vicinity. If your record is O. K. here is a ood opening.. Kindly mention thispapcr when writing. .'' A. T. MoTris, Cincinnati. 0- ' Illustrated catalogue, 4 cts. postage. WANTED-Several trustworthy persons in this s(ato rn tna;e our busirn-sH in tlieir own nml nearby count it's. It is "ainly ollil! work conducted at home, frinl-ary frinl-ary straight fM0 a year and expenws definite, defi-nite, bona fiiie, n more, no ley.i sal.ir" . Monthly T5. Itierences. Enclose -lf-m -tlres-ted s ainped envelope llTlxsrt E. Hfcis,' l'i esidetii S ii pi. M. Chicago, The World Almanac an d Encyclopedia for 1899 Illustrated History of the Spanish-American Spanish-American War J DPAnv x:ro catp J EVERYWHERE J. tmnrintr it . tw J j JkJkJtJt j jft j j Together vhh The Battle Calendar of the Republic. Compiled by EDGAR STANTON MAGLAY HMorUa at thJ. S. Nvy. THE STANDARD AMERICAN ANNUAL.! PRICE 25 CENTS. j JUM . j PosApaid to any ui&temi 9 THS VORLD, Pulttscr BaOdBab NEW YORK. HUMPHREYS VETERINARY SPECIFICS CTMjFEVEB8, L3 Fer. Milk Fever. -JSPBAIXS. Lameness. RheumatUm. EPIZOOTIC. DUtsmptr WORMS. Bt. Crsbs. . . fJJgjcOfGHS. Colds. iiDmiim. FJJI j COLIC. Rellrarhe. Diarrhea. CO. PktcbU MISCARRIAGE. H; H. 1 KIDXEY dk BLADDER DISORDERS. CrUBS y ,MA5iGE. Skin Disease. CTaaaj DAD CONDITIO. Starln Coat. tOo. each: Stablo Case. Ten 8 pert ties. Book, e., $7. At dru exist or sent prepaid on receipt of price. Humpnreys' atedlctne Co., Cor. William A John Bta., New York. VrrettniART Maicpal. fesjrr Krk. NEBTOUS DEBILITY, TITAIs WEAKNESS and Prostration from Overwork Over-work or other causes. HumphrT' Homoptliio Speciflo No. 8, in uMOVr40 years, Uie only ucoeastful remedy. $ l per TiaLor 5 Tiato and lax, wial powdaMor $ S eU Sir Dr(twJs,r seat ptmHanmiptmtrrM. IV VSUn' CV WMiiao Ma Ms., asw Issh . 'V. TIME TA33X.33 FOR SriilNGVlLLE. UTAH. GOING WEST To Salt Lake. Ogden and the Coast. No I. Pacini- mail Lv. 8:10 a. to. No. T. from Tintic to Salt Lake t'lty Lv. :IS. ni No. 5. from Snv t- 'i T.hI.v L v. 4 :0& ;. in , - :; !'-. : ; I ' .'.'4 p. : . I Hi i. ' Lv s.:;0 ! m. 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