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Show oaten. A- - a rite W otm CM bfcwliB f-c-t WUMtbii kf si nt uo uH U - A1 m hi a that had abaadouwi cnrw affaiaat me lhu. but aliuunt imwediatrly aa if to rebuke me for my wickedness, I BOtaoed a piece of wreckage floating toward me. Hope once more filled my Imi ss, and I swam toward the piece of' deckhouse, sa it proved to he. and dsasla-nu- g on top threw myself mi my . face and weitt for very Alone on the wide ocean, a piece of wood the only thing between tue and death, dazed and weak from usv last terrible experience, what els c.uld 1 do but weeji-- Soon I bean to fcvl an hanger. By the lowest crJcnhv ti.jn I must have n comt? for three dAys. so for that time I had bad nouoiir-ishiuen- ckac teite IU late wai. bearta, arfaoaa . . cfl-m- ae I looBM. cvr-- Tl proudly .tr - fr (1 iuy ."! l, wret'-hediirsa- urn ha oj'tly UjucttfA. ar.1 et " asc-na- a ieai. etiKfJ eoy vrr it all afcuar fory rra: Tia ii tu "i TWa. Yaa. tl red of Aad ruiMtSaMor: a propkery CM Uw beyond a limit to Hope rtni a T .prll I!x jroM. tAe fBJ Aad. And n cam-- I be bp of light hale told: . -And Ihca i!i Jiv.'.j. jrralidclir j' ' At (be approach of Nlbv aiaier tay 1'lillaoeipnia 1 1 get-tiiir- nn-et- Ml head. I was When 1 recovered lying in a bunk in the hospital. Still there was a thick mist before my eyes. 1 could indml see everything ,so as tc recognize where I was, but wimvhnw my 1 could ivjHi refused to move about, anU i at the Un up straight not. To r"ak,,. in ..... hnria .a Aid L i i ened mind. I perceived at last tha was in a perfectly cataleptic trance. The strange part of it was that my mind was almost as active as ever. I knew all that was goin; on about me. and 1 felt an overwhelming terror at my fate. It was soon made known to me. The captain entered my mom. I could MM indistinctly, M if it were afar off. his on the deck. Then the steward also came in. I heard them consulting kfCMfi Mai both came to the concln- sion that I was dead, that mv neck was broken bv the fall. "Tell Baiu to 00OM in ami take his measure. We must bury him while tho fine weather lasts," I heard the captain say, and presently the sailmaker came in and tneaGTtred me for the last hamiuock I should ever sleep in. I could not feel him, but I knew by his motions what he was doing. I will not describe how they laid me out on the cabin table and left me there, while Sails, close by, made my shroud. Stitch, stitch, stitch went his needle, seeming tocnter into my brain every time instead of the thick canvas. 1 cn:i distinctly remember that while 1 lay there the steward tried to (dose my eyelids, but, thank God. they flew up every time and left me the poor consolation of seeing the preparations for my doom. At last all was finished. The canvas was spread on the deck and I was laid in it. Then the sailmaker began to stitch me up. 8b had stitched up all but my face when I hoard Mm say he had lost his knife. A rigid search waa made everywhere, but it cov.id not be found, so Sails returned to work, and all that time I was thinking in my dull way what fools they IMM for not looking into mj,shroud for the lost knife. As I afterward learned, it was next day at noon that I was carried on deck and laid on a plank preparatory to being shot over- board. The men one by one took a look at my face, and then it was covered up forever. The burial service was read by the captain, there was a little delay, and then the plank was tilted, and 1 shot into the biUer cold water off the Diego Ramiivz. It must have been the shock Mfet brought me to my senses, for as 1 sank down, dragged lower hy the shot at my feet, I felt my feeling and ac tion return. At the same moment my right hand, released from its dread inertia, grasped what I instantly knew to be a knife. Mechanically 1 forced the blade and ripped my canvas shroud so that the shot fell, and I began to rise to the surface. In a few seconds, I suppose, although it seemed y ears, 1 opened my eyes for it is a curious fact that while I lay in a state cf coma they remained open, yet when my feelings returned with the shock I closed them at once and saw once more the light of day. which I had never expected to see again. I win an excellent swimmer, ami bad eox5;i my breath, and cast from me the canvas which impeded my movements. Then I looked around over the waters, and saw that my miraculous jsis-sibl- e - h-- ' . cn-st.i- l. ' gy 1 1 ......... I. .r 1M l!!eleerled. B mm ed to relate my storv. which I did in a weak and quavering voice, 1 can assure you. Then the captain told PM that, after burying me. as they thought, they had kept1 on their course for t wo days, when they encountered a heavy head Rah- - which drove than back na tb. .le niiMiaa mmmlm Tl,..,. ul.ln.uul .. terrible sea. who h rnrninf nw;, v lsmrs MM koMM tonrMd. but it was the last exertion of theuale. for afterthat it diet! away. When the waist was sufficiently clear of water to enable the men to walk there they hail disc, vered mv bodv en- tangled in ropes lying iu the lee scupper. At first they thought my corpse had lieen washed aboard again. M has been several times done, but on lifting me up they saw unmistakable signs of life, and with great awe and wonder carried me into the cabin. As to my t omatose sleep, the captain Mid he hnd never seen anything more like death. He had doubted if the m ist skillful could have discovered any life in me. He was confident my neck had been broken. F. D. B. in Alta doc-lor- The Voting Kaiaer at of keejiers' m WW H rWWBrT:. union, all i plan iiiefhersl pledging themselves to abide b) He nJli Btab hshed. They establi?he a tripled scale of prices, to oe deternmiea by the ciipac- ity of the girl ami the length inf service in one family. This will wjrnk much U the Plan ,S "nctly ailhered to. A MMMMWM? protective urlion is one of th" ""edetl organizations of the na tion. It should extend alii over the country. Philadelphia lathes have (riod a system which is working admirajhly They have a course of instruction cooking and housekeeping To girls who can pass a satisfactory examination in the housekeeping course a certificate is granted. This will readily obtain a situation for any girl. Then the scale of wages is graded. The longer a girl lives in one family and gives good satisfaction the more her pay becomes annual The girl ly. till it reaches a maximum herself must bind herself by written contract to remain so long. The mis iresa, too, on ner pari must sign a con tract, in which she agrees to treat the girl somewhat as she herself would wish to be treated under like circumstances. The system takes into account the depravity of mistress as well as hired girl Under the Philadelphia system petency among household help is said to be diminishing rapidly It is worth try ing in other cities e o.tend. The Emperor William has never yet received a moredelicate compliment than to: t paid htm by the kingof the Belgians, rhO vacated the royal chalet at (istend la his favor, and allowed the imperial standard of the Hohenzollems to replace for twenty-fou- r hours the national tricolor. At the last moment the projected military display in the streets and the presence of the German consuls at the wharf were abandoned, but the first visit f the impetuous ruler of Germany to Belgium created, on the whole, a very favorable impression. The unwieldy IJohenzollern experi-enm- l some difficulty in approaching the landing stage, but King Leopold, who. iilce bis brother and nephew, had donned the MMMfhat unpicturesque uniform of ;ne PlTimiltfi cavalry, iesseced the of the wait by conversing with his guest across the bulwarks in stentorian tones. The bluff geniality of the young kaiser won all hearts, and his progress through tho streets was marked by an am mnt of enthusiasm which Bel- DMHJMBk i H inc-ot- It is not a very burning question at this late day whether Daniel Webster drank more than was good for him and got hilarious in a ponderous, majestic way. It is a good deal more of a live issue, as we are reminded by The Boston Herald, that one of the most eminent members of the senate at Washington today drinks more liquor, and drinks it more habitually, than Daniel Webster ever did And yet. where is the newspaper that will mention his name? This is a point of tenderness, for some reason A few years ago a prominent politician to lie addicted to his cups, drank known tritllll is; 'll "li.r.itllcf I1ll......l.-t- ,'H. Tlwi even to ihv IK)'Ilt of being overcome .....oernr ..ever frcil t .tm with liqmir rlo his speech making don individual ity World. campaign, yet not even an opposition newspaper alluded to the fact, tither that's tVliat It Spelled. A farn.ers man brought the village and still more prominent instances doctor a note the other day, and with might be cited, yet no mention was MMedtfk (lit Medicus spelt out, "Please made in the newspapers, although it send DM a bottle of lizzie." was common gossip in private Is this "Hello!" exclaimed the doctor, a good or a bad sign? doeo.1 Ball physic." "Don't it?" answered the rustic: "what Nice citizens, those Mormon saints lo it st ".i thenr" At every term of the district court numThe doctor gave it up. Chatter. bers of them are sentenced to fine ami imprisonment, not only for living iu Th 3 lacoae derived by Pretxsh px-,polygamy, but MO for refusing to prom who rear f.nvls, according t.v'oou-iathat they will live in any other way hv ts lOO.OOO returns, francs, of which 'i !.. M) i) tn ici rentes latsthsvalanef yet the Mormon authorities constantly tl h and i83.oki.oi Crapca that of mme it to be given out that polygamy ' - ,. felt.-Lon- l Si tha cttj. :h longer i- - L'fih, lime l' Sl.-- Plans and sj cifiaiut funiehed. I" tab. box al. East side 'ss!iiuirt.ai Mx,a,.l and letit;.-tar- d i'. Sew Voas. Oct.H. as fuiiims: si I'.nar-- lii'j I''s resr d Ws L.S.fVc.i.i-L'. . I'. ... LS', T. K IT B .s Faciftf 1'acibr i. fan. Southern Cestni I'acilic i witty and agreeable.'" French men and women make the most delightful old pei .pie in the world al to appreciate that, as waj s They other attractions fail, extra effort is required to keep Up apliearances and to cultivate fascinating manners, intellectual graces and a pleasant, merry temMine per. They are right, and the aged iu this all French is like Couderc bni.ht. i cU-s- IV. ..ill VS Itt Iii.ir...m't i hubs:.- - ' 1 Las Shore Ltiuis'e k Nadi ! .ik lie .It'nion Pacitic Se . fi.lli.U- - Yobs, Oct. f. .. I H. WOUm ; t . r. V. ti '..n.pai.), u. Ml T .r . KALIS, A CIVIL ENGINEERS & SURVEYORS ami ealiiuab prepi Plans. ri.iieiHiisi, aie I work Mat. plats, trarin.:.. blue print... etc., notic. eKuted on short avenue. Ollice. -- il" Washiba-to- l. waeoasam. c. a ! .ill..:. .i.-- ut S si, 1 Minlnif Stocks. Miiiius toets close e oiLt. Iladeu, E.tUNCERS. Hice with Hsloi Abstract itional Hauk Lmldiuc. $tt ' MM entraJ IliehicaB fiSWellaParcoExp He, Pacing I men t7.Weteni Northern Pacific 7a jAm. I 'ottou Oil N. P. 'd 'lis. I'. . Kxpr.-s- s Northwestern.. Nof.liwesteni p'd le. V, . m.I 1. I'm-- -- . riiur-- i. i Late ,Wt fit) Eoffineri CIVIL ENGINEER A D SURVEYOF Plans, estimates, irritTHtiue iliirhe and diviasais. : la'tei.ti.ip i.eu to I lie layuia" l' Y.t'eotral in.. tU'LLliMiK, 11. l Sliult Line USlPariiic Unii Keadins 1, . Hock Island. . is St. ram. 1." Si. raid a im.aiis. - Krie....r o. if. ..r No left... UK 1,1 Lacswaiias A ,N. :i jIta. Or. HurbturluD ! Jell. V.bl . ' euuu.Hl market . . ' CIVIL StM ui l MMMk Voi:K.Ort..-Ttie.o-- k as follows i 111 American Ex v. s. 4 f.KAKKASI. T CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERSl ai,! lieMspl !naie and Bonus. l.n.l-c- iiniue, bat stieet. nsagnwa, . AKK)S 1 "-La- IMai -(- Kv-ntmit IKIWSIIN. CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS . bci--- . It is now no rarity to p rsons over a century old. Mme. Couderc. in the town of Uer.rerac, France, has ivlebrat ei her 11 1th birthday She is said to be respect. CONTRACTORS 'Tl: a 6ilver. Copper. Lead and Tin. Ssa V us. Oct. W Bar ler. MM Uruer, Tin dsll:4..trait. untie. e Holvlng tin- Servant Girl Problem. i. . K. the women of ev mV been driven to expreJ ti. fs nub- . The terror liclv on the servant . V-"imt ladies of Asheville. MolfenHipaU( lately and formed mH!ammrm it MfkMrfu, against terns who destroj I i'at. IMA LKi.fclt IatlNHAh'l'i a v still a. ii. f". the shaitteial coa'.ilum indiciited exists shoal 1 take this uiot.xtrotis igno-rai.ein hand at oace and straugL it. or in ti.ni- - it will strangle them There should be no let up. ui,'ht or day. wh-r- ftmud ' Miadanl ml The fact thM illiteracy is increasing in a few of the slates, of the uuiou. in spite of our vaunt! public schtad system, is disgraceful enough It i almost euouirh to make one wish that something very l.ke the cele!.rated Blair education bill The autli' ..ith-- s in the states v. as a law and is farok-un- a aitt bad been eatablisbed eatead-kn- j Toararoa the close, s sharu to 4 pa rally occurred and not uol) sere iwe it but MU atorks renamed m ost actualsan over uoetiina IW"7 - etablud.l ua an- about euuall) inanj oitiers- - Final charta ditlded between saJis and biees New York Monev . vorni. on frawssHSSttV asrr.-Mt)-d; and steady. exci.amse. jua . u iuaiHi l- a.-r- e diiBe u'eluek. 'D ex of man TMej of the iclorioun achievement have round birth and jrniath iu the resiuna so VM envied by (he (Tumblers alio so loudly bult--tini- f of our i Mi.Oain of the eNBVevM W'liere aere born and uurtured tha climate" nmelisu, erieMMk mn psal iHs. aJafasa iuveuuns. mtin, stalenmen. dramatlsta. aainois ei)luren if earth" So u v ' sir no Uaitil ksnti h froa-t- i Und no cliauKelesa them SUirma sa uni- - llieircradle; clime inlm-erocksohatru. they were UM-uliout at the eyort iiudahim of uatuie In her liveliest aWodai relael hy hent and then be numUil by cold; clouil and aaualiit:e folluwed each other saiftyover their puthaay: they had f r tlo ir .ery existence, not purge f ik1 tofl.-h- t ready nt their hunda or fallen St their feet Thus were their natures made robust and capacious: thus they Isvame such men sn no tepid, placid. chaaa'elesa reKioiis ever saw hail as soon over ma MJBtgQ '" not lionrrtl of ' Ashevill The lav, but on the nett B tafe Henry equals the ksst atiere a . 7 t gnrnur they brought nth theui from Litrburwn that they an- - fam-i- ; for loufevity Th re js such a tluug as a utau worry iiik himsell into hu grave by taking too , ,, a- - -- k.. I... . - I.r . , tn-- . , u.iu.-n.-gai Wrii,t and measure finally becomes an mtpral, hunle-- to himself, and dies uh sheer weariness, ( tilere is that in the spirit which de-HII(, b, stmnvr than u,,l.hrh. the MioW. the san. the wind and storms. the person w ho has this something will live tiirougn all epiiiemics aim in regions so called, and gniw stronger by it r.ll. llr. Scarle glows eloquent and jioetic thinking of wdiat uiunkind owe to a changeable climate: au-Ti- t-r S1J mmem AJBrTKa a Sf I a AND BUILDER. roat tteatiua to ui frurrw uuroduattus aual inteout Saade COMRAaOR York Sherman was couunander-in-chle- f of the army the infantry was the care. pet. and lt w. nits With Sheridan it was the cavalry that was particularly looked after Now. at last under St hotield. the artillery it iunings getting Wh ena -- I. ua BUSINESS CARDS AND 10MMKKCE. FLVAMt td .t Mankind are apt to make a superstition of goial haUts of im: . But the fact remains tliat those whose sanitary ambits are the worst sonetiun'- - nve tiie sre notei (or flyinx in yet face of idl the rules of g.aai such Is the Jsi.verful bold ou n:: :;re tiiat U-i- i, SSJMgK 1890. -TW m tefcla Hi l. III l II M J 11 I market tola, Vis Tubs. On. Caroline Wilkinson, the fiaanm Ul. Mure active tbao ua say da) of tkja of Alexander H. Stephens. diel Lately at and waa imcsiar and feienali frua otsmisr u H. MUOkE Atlanta. They were never warned on eloaa vitki raeult leaf uaf hat irrarulai. esaied balanosd enl Haa er beiiiaaccount of his ill health. Stephens was gaias and k either ) B chatie. itLfea -ifupurtaat HELP his of AGENCY, heart weet one faithful to this of fiaeuuue had baes aooa all iJi kini all uf Sjr4 aad furnish And ueeasalife forty yira. But then. Alexander m41iii sal abd later the -u nottar kinds an invalid. trated and twtau. stocks a.-tuf rare tak las naacr. vuri. result uat before tSurX. SOU) went crazy as the day wore on. ltd t :w terror! At -t n:,'ht fell and of the l.ladkMB of darkness to the pangs I could never l the hor- of honp-r- . .t won li r rors ..f th : lir-- t ni 'it. It when mad I a. not stark, staring HP i ke. The sectwl day iiissel lilreth tiivt. Kotuiag to eat. BoiaethiiiT tJ i t. ii my lip, bat no sail in H- - thirl day broke with an ar.irry sea. aatl 1 Kaw that and ....... , , , l.i me uhv ci.imii a uoi with its attentl.iut slu t and cold. I tremldtil then, for 8T t .titrh I waa almost d- a.1 and quite without Bv ' lha.1 ris ., trvmendons y. and it wa, v. . . ecj. 'ivat iinncuiiv inat. i iiiau..-,...r. 'u. ..;,rif .11 t. .ni.. w :ia Oil III. rating fiercely. and I was expecting moment to be enjrulfe.l in one of th terrible abys-e- s into which my raft diped constantly. awful r.i;:!it I ever This was the most I all ipent worsu MM than when l.;y to of table cabin on the dead iipiiearances theOsprey. The living spoondrift cut me to the Isme. Tho great waves ndled their phosphorescent heads high dlsive me. who. sunk in a black abyss, heard the gale shrieking overhead. 1 felt soon that it could not last much longer. Numbed and weak as 1 was 1 clung to of desperamy refuge with the en-rtion and waited bitterly for death. Finally an immense wave, higher than raised its wild ill that had gone le nd and PoQed down on me. was swept like a My time had come. child from my raft and carried on the rres'of the monster as supposed to But once again the hand of the b ath. Almighty was stn tched out to save me. I was dashed with inconceivable violence against something solid as a rock. Ropes were floating all around me. I grabbed several and then swioned. I awoke ami recognized the old hospital of the QHWjr. Then I ihonght my burial and suliataainfMMaaaXiF1,'lr''s w,'n . only a beT U it tv ai.J aaUua tiiao Uir arorld Uaa am. un.1 tlr maiUa of a lanaule Ward Brarker uaeal to aay tual aaa du a as Uw land uf T'ue thick mist that suddenly came down mmmi my thirst, but there was I nearly n t Uiu to eat . not It ng to e.;t ' smtaiatt. BSgasBV aiucii t. year tht It was in my twenty-dxt- h niv shin, th OlJvy ownt-- d by Fowler Brothers, was cUarterea tocotne u mo We anived h re Franc-- - c- ftjf wfcmf saf. !y, 1 i 't, ac 1 turn wore outside of tl.e ;olden t!ate beading fir snio. thly. and home. Fv, n ihiiig w-- ..t '"'-- ' i to foreman m' of the nothi:1 r a :t.l - - 1 .. . ..M u fnt,im hMil 111 terrini su.ni.uir store for me of Valpa- We were to the south raiso when 1 fell BL It was a kind of faintm- - that would suddmlv and with- out warning come upon me. so tlist and lay there un- often fell o:. the til some one could come to my assistf ance. This continued without my MOk worse until we got down off the Magellan straits, in the latitude of Cajie Pillar or thereabouts. (hie tut, a gluOf forhlddili,' d.tv. s with such as tiie marin-- r often I watch, afternoon the had down then. one of my men and was w ho was tixiii;,' a rut line in the weather mizien topmast rigging. The fellow was erv clumsy, to say the least of it. I got annoyed watching his awkwardness: more annoyed, in fact, than was warranted, 1 think, now that I look back. and more But I was growing irritable every day, which was probably owing to my fainting spells. Suddenly into 1 became so excited that 1 jumped the mizzen rigcini;. and was into the top in a trice. I w.is about to pull the fellow away from his job when a fit came on. A sudden mist clouded my eyes. My senses left me; I reeled and fell from the top t the deck. In my descent I struck once or twice, which caused me to turn over, with the result that I fell on my D.j,strngI At last the truth Ttae l--- BURIED IN THE OCEAN. TO Sit Up, ad and eojoted OCTOBKR seal left When there is not a bk-e- d in all those Bearing sea fishing grounds we shall have wute pean.v. What la Good Cttaa A changeable climate is the best to in the world when one geta Dr of the is least that argument it At W S. Hearie in The North American Renew. He finds that nothing so waJue a person up and brings out all that is in him morally, intellectually anJ phys callv as the fierce alternations af iiinU to which we are subjected hidd. the doctor contends that if not moat, of our oudrrfu- owe nt in America to our cbmV iHBlmani Hr writes: TbeeaareuUxvaad "orthkr wsy f swssur LUr. ui itr lr.' life tuac kg oumfcsriaf BB data au.1 ra bona and (nutf ulueaa. u Jeej falST had LvenaQ fur nothing The Uutang like great swan, waa mn-uk-a sway, getting aniallrr and SUNSET. THE TOP AY, DAILY QU&Wm EAL: OGDEH .in a lioss. ti; t.t.i 70 Crown Point CIVIL ENGINEERS & SURVEYORS I in iw Iron Silfif... QunllllMaWl Wardrobe. Honiestake .... .. General eiwiieeriiu: practice, t otmull i: : Com. North ltntriu were hi invit.sl. If the Lomloti fine gentleman 4 iu Qeeietatsl.... Otihir 1 3U OtlU-Sutter Creek n'm ;i Kny . iirdeu t ity. Put feel what is the true object of life he Sierra Nevara W Deadw.MHi would reply, if he were honest, "To LAWYERS. dress." He wears a tweed suit in the Boston Stocks 11 M N. WOK S. frock coat suit in the after morning. BosTos.Ort.e. Tbe.t.ark market closed as J ATTORNEY AT LAW, noon, an evening dress after 6 o'clock, fll.W BXIMei. boa4 sulA.. and perhaiis finishes off the day with a Ate l.. A Top Hrs! mortitarfe Mel. Ave. 24hs m Ovden. I'tn VahitiKton Kuril iirt . Mex. Central com Jl M lh'o suioking suit. & MLRI'HY, p.UNTER His wardrobe costs himfl.NKto00u Petroleum. ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, a year. There was. not loug since, a Nrw hHi Oct.". Pnnnstlvania .etrolenm London tailor made man who had a new "U'.. msl mls w i "it. Noo oi iisiiiiiiri'.ti avenue, iieiien. iitnce, :it. openml '.'.', closed i.air of trousers for every day in the elosinK '"I'o iR, W 111 I.. He became bankrupt MM the vi nr. . A 1 bl.K-k- e. . 1 1 . . I season i Chicago Cattle. loseil. atnl left his tailor out iu ior a i hundred pairs of the The oaUnary numioaabie ... ........ u"Iler siims. wi.au8 w me ..oi..,-. ........ .... .ti .i r sx .V'.:i .ill Ms Me must buus al "lr iy f Hi T neitunng. ..oj timmm ml swaM i. ::. 1, .::'." Ul,t th man mana;ca for clothes. mm " :leiastTs, 1""1"'"' JMgyJjs mrU c.TMmr cost, M Wr P millik' d;ra a yrarH tHkb alou' on .,'. . BANKS. Bi t CAPITAL, COMMERCIAL it may. contemplates ecstatically the presence in that city of over 400 of the most beautiful maidens in Texas to welcome to the agricultural fair "Mrs. Grover Cleveland and her distinguished husband." They will be the very "pick and choice of Texas beauties." selected from each district by the unerring eye of Texas congressmen, though one pities the judges when he thinks of the maidens who get left. This gorgeous show of incomparable loveliness will come off in October. Looking at the dazzling scene prospectively The News poetizes thus: Such asii;htwill in.leed be mcr t entrancing, before in the history of the republic At no period tn the life of the c nintry Mi crvnt state nasemhleil its fair ihiueliters. choften especially for their licauty, on like nor KXtcatled sticli a unique anil occasion any d iihjr.iishe,! courtesy to a w elcomed c;iest. Mr alio .'Irs Cleveland must feel the (treat IK IM such a greeting w ill confer, nnd the res ni the world will doubtless emphasize it bv i;,tions of the now ble rent. To adequate tl from the smrotmding galleries of lb iu.' down anas would be great Mafc bafl upou ana worth a trip half around the world to witness If it were (xissible to this scene upon imperishable canvas tho artist. of the should to state it that this he Mas The in sit ettataeeSM photographer will doubtless find here a noble Held for his work The reportottal stuff of the country will find an item that wi tax the genius of its mos. feltcilo.is an.l hrflMM writers to do it justice: Bad Uatlaa. queenly Vtu Ins. ni' .us ga'l nu ev.r leiilla'ilii. v.ij wear u.-.- i an pnwiiy the tnat hless Inn' r gion ii'tist tttui one never witnessed tht einaouo. Ssiirplus and vapiwi, Undivided Profit, f.r0,OOO. 0. E. J. C A.BM9TROWO, Hill. Presidont. W. V. Cashier. Active Aooonnts invited. Mmm Ass t Cashier. aohcitod. iit.a Twcnty-fd- l - . 125,000 Iaterest Paid on Time Depoeit. J. E. Doot.T. President. w. N. BaitUaa, Cashier. Viee President. & itlln jii i tan. Mffl TTnililiM TTi li. HKTWOO0, A ATTORNEY-AT-LAW- Otlice. Mt IMRM S1 . street. IVden, Twenty-fourt- h SMITH. it SMITH. ATTORN H. PHYSICIANS I). VAN D W.SMl EEYS-AT-LA- Office, rooms Nos. 6, inKtoti arenne s. No. MS) W; anil AND Vlt'KLK. M. SURGEONS! U. ECLECTIC PHYSICIAN. Tronts chronir iiise'is.'s tnd disease of cli then, ticiieral practice will receive i.tomiit tention. Private diseases a specialty. Offe anexiiericnre of 25 ynars in the practice of me icine. Otlice 107 25th st. Residence 2Ktn Lincoln at1 DENTISTS. L. U. MEADE, I)K DENTAL SURGFON. KorrnerH of San Francisco, ralifornia, hi opened hi dental office at S10 Twenty-fif- e ureet. up stairs, front room. Twenty-si- x j practice, liitracting and tilling teeth a spel Bridue. ore' taitjr. All work guaranteed. nnd Diate werk uneotialed. Dr. Mamie enn found nt his otiioe at all noors, day and nighl K SN0WDEN, DENTIST. Washiairton arenue over Horro tvitis store. Teeth without platee and .bt natural teeth a upocialty. No teelh or roots to bad to be saved by SUiag or erowninf Specia anen una fives to ahildraa s teeth. Office. S427 JT. WOODS A CO., THOMAS, ARCIITECTS, tareet, room 16. over 1 ontoe. tiden. L tali. O. WBSELBR A CO.. h J. ARCHITECTS AND BUILDERS, Plans and specifications supplied for all . ions of script buildings. Ortice. room IS, StereM hiiildinsr.oppositeCiti nan, warning ion avenue, ttmlen. I tali. XtiTK KOF STOCKHOLDEKS1 L. B. Adams. S. LEWIS J ARCHITECTS, SIOO.OOO. -- ahfl oU rooms 16. IT and IS National building, Oirden. Utah. F. COLLINS & CO., t'tah. CAPITAL, J. M. Offices, T'nitod States Depository. SURPLUS, TMInr Twenty-foart- p Nil OjEden. Natbwsi ATTORN Bank. c. al Beauty at the Texas Fair. Al t. IACOBS.BOREM.aN. " The Kile Shaped ll.toe Track. Toward the close of the season the OGDEM STATE kite shaped race track was tried at the trotters' me ting at Indepoadenoe, la., 08DEN, UTAH. with tne result that cadi of the animals speeded over it lowered their previous 1100,000. records by several seconds. The tpiestion now is whether the kite l t'n.l.-- r Territorial shaped track for racing will become the InoorxrHtf-San! ine 1 awa fashion. It is a mile in length. Each H. C. BIliKI.IIVV. ('resilient. straight side of it is a third of a mile JOHN A. BOYLE, Vic. Prmidaat A. P. BIOELOW, Ass t Cashier. long, while the curve around the upper end is also a third of a mile long. The General talking Business grand stand is at the small end. where Transacted. the straight sides come together. W. B. Fasig, of the Cleveland secretary DIRECTORP: Driving park, devised this new track. S. M.BOARD OF' T. W. Joker, John A. Hovle, Its advantages ar all on the side of the Thos. Phekhaw, Habbinb. E. A. Reed. H. C. Bioei.ow horse. It gives him only one long curve Bbnj. Lombard, Jr. to turn, with two straight lines between INTEREST PAID ON TIME DEPOSITS. iu which to make his best time. On the part of spectators it is said that while Sell Exrhnnge on all the lending cities of the kite shaped track is not so handsome Europe: also on New York, Chicago, Omaha to the view, still all parts of it can be and San Francisco. seen all the time. It is so much better for the horses that it may creep slowly into fashion. Mr. Fasig himself claims every advantage for it, among others that it can be constiucted on grouud which would not be suitable for the common track. QGDEN, UTAH. The Dallas News, as well rtrt ntnum aTitnirton u.V'".'..'1' voun-M ll kememla.r the place, in ink', m ar nt. at sIm.ii of C. H. (Ireeiiwell A Hi I tali. II Tw. street, Os-ii-In.x "p.. l ' all I .. ..b-- Il'd't EI JAMBS N. KIMIIALL. IMI1AI.I. A ALLISON. " T BF aw tin. . - i'r.-- iu.w ' Court courts. Personal stteatioa iri.en toeouaolll mmmcHit protiucu Tk-Ml n ATTORNEY-AT-LAW- , Pract ic s iii the Ilistrict 10.000; Oct. H. Cattle Kccr-ipbi-. slow mid steady ste. rs. f4 4 ..c- s. i .oi.'i. tiwri.. ti SI o. n OflD rntlier Is'tter o II.'.....,,. pime heavy, SO.and' butchers' weights. t4H4S; liir'.t . $4.4 Sheep Keccipts,B,uw;actiTe, imw, fJllllin. t ie com tr,ms,''S- CO., DEALERS IN Diamonds, Fine Jewell)' AND WA TCHES. ITAH mkktim;. OtiPKS I'm, I'tah. Sent, tk 190. A meeting of the stockholders of the (ijrden Natural OasAOil Company It hereby called, fol the advisability of selling the considering leases, machinery and other proierty of tbe company, and for the transaction of Mirli other business as may c.nie before said meeting. lie h. Id at tha office of the company, in the county court house, in Oirden Citv I "tab Terri tory, at 7 o'clock p. m., on tho autii day ef Octo- oor, i "so. By order of the President. H. W. i ross. Secretary The Otrilen Military Academy. At a meeting of the stockholder- - of the Ogili n military Academy, held Sept. 2, lsm, the follow ing resolution was adoptedBnOLTBD That the capital stock of the Military Academy be and hereby is increased to fifty thousand dollars, the utuceedg from the of said stock to be used in the erection of further buildings and in making necessary improvements in the company's propA. H. Nki.hon. Pragldaet. erty. C. It, Howard. Sretary. 1B |