OCR Text |
Show 0(5 DEN DAILY COMM EHCIAL: THURSDAY, APRIL 16. 1691. MUTILATION HUsCS QaaUaeaU FOR CAS1L FEET CUT OFF TO ACCIDENT INSURANCE. AH GET Fim4 kj KatraarJiaary AttrsspU Mm la fmlUr; IHmtrrt r Tm Uij Left Bu4 la tka Ma t W h m4-Nu t ClaJaa. FnuM7 in ti irr;-aj-r- t Everybody Laj frost tuae to tuae of tLe mu; aiit-g- tj frauds atumpu! npuo the life wenranoe computi, but few,isprobably, mrUmaware acri-drt- it 4 the claim which nude by ccanpanie thai the fraudulent cLairni against tk-iin proportion to the number of jrrautu insured, utnsnibrr thote against the life coup&uit tea to rd te. Recently there wm held meeting of the reprtsenUtire of eome cf the ld-i-n coiDjiniiirs doing n aocident bui-we- e for the purpcaw? of dtviaieg mtaun of relief in the mattT. Some insurance men Advocated the strict enforcement of the law punishing lf mutilation, while others say that legislation could be enacted against the to companies, who, in tbeir get biwiness, invite fraud by the large iiideniiiitie offered and the liberal time limit given. In 1N"9 the uutJ pulit ie giving .',500 fur the Img of a leg, arm, foot or hand. Thin has be?n worked, it is claimed,, so extensively by persona who did not mind maiming themselves in order to secnre the intra ranee money that it has become one of the greatest evils in the business. eag-rnes- acx-ide- ' a coio-Iian- ie LOSS Or HAXDS AND FEET. "We found," said A- - N. Lockwood, president of the Accident Insurance Provident Fund society, to a reporter, "that in every single claim received by us the indemnity ked for was for the maiming or loss of the left hand. This naturally excited our suspicion. The claimants were all found to be persons pecuniarily embarrassed, such as men out of work, men who, rather than work, preferred losing their left hand for 3,500, and men who had seen bettor days and who had large families to provide for. We minced the indemnity for a band to $1,200, since which time we have not bad one claim for the loss of a hand. "This, however, did not end our troubles, for immediately claims for 'foot indemnities,' which had remained at 12,500, grew more numerous. Other companies have had the same experience. A president of one of the accident companies told me yesterday that he was satisfied that not one claim had been genuine in all the claims presented against his company in a year. As a rule, the other companies pay (3,500 for the loss of either a hand or foot, and the number of people who are willing to lose a hand or foot for that much money is astounding, and there are more fraudulent insurance cripples in the United States today than war cripples. Why, yon have no idea of the business of self mutilation that is being carried on for the purpose of beating insurance companies. "There is a case before the courts which is exciting the interest of every accident company doing business in this city. It is the case of a professional man who, it is believed, maimed himself deliberately to recover 133,500 insurance, I10BKIBMS SERVE. "He was insured in thirteen different companies. He intended making a trip west, taking his fowling piece with him, and on the day before he proposed starting on the journey he let his gun fall and shot off one of his great toes. The companies hearing of the accideut, sent their best doctors to his assistance. They think they have evidence to show that the man intended to have the foot amputated to avoid blood poisoning and collect the $32,500 indemnities. "Another case is that of a man who lives in Broome county, this state, who was known to have deliberately chopped off his left hand with a hatchet, striking it two blows. The inau's explanation was that he had been attacked by two thieves, and that while holding one of them in the grip of his left hand the other severed his harnl with a hatchet. The wood npon which the hand rested when chop- off showed plainly the marks of the terof the blade only, proving that the rtchet had been brought down straight l deliberately. Vases liko this are coming up right J?g. A man recently lost a foot on a Jlroad. He claimed that he had fallen the train and had got his foot caught tider the wheels. He was subsequently fund sitting beside the track with hia I t on. There was nothing to indicate Jhiat there had been an accident except the loss of the foot. His clothing was (Tree from dirt or grease, and there was itimony to show that he had walked p to the train and thrust his foot under ' the wheels." "There is no doubt," said Richard M. Johnson, agent of the Travelers' Accident Insurance company, "that since the accident companies offered an indemnity of 12,500 for the loss of a hand or a foot, there has been a great increase in the number of accidents to the left hand, and it was found that people were maiming themselves to get the insurance. In the preferred class of risks, though, these cases are extremely rare. There have also been cases where people with shriveled feet and hands in which there was no life or feeling have chopped them off to get the insurance." New York World. J According to Herr BJattner the optical effect of incandescent lamps increases with the temperature of the filament, which can be raised so as to make 10 per cent, of the whole electric energy of the lamp take the form of light. Ordinarily, however, in a lamp of sixteen candles the optical effect does not exceed 5 to 6 per cent. There is one applicant for a pension who deserve to have her claim pushed to the frout. This is Mary E. Dewey, of oshen, InJ..,.who served through the .nw .III- - IV" I .1.1 II n i wnn 5. 41.. Ohio regiment under the Twenty-sixtV alias of Charles Dewey, blie now for a pcnoioa under her real name. 1 h ap-pli- j 1 es as? a M "V-- j Egbert J. Pcrdftte bay you ier v.l a dut&dttic, ufnl wutuxa as your wJt. If that it to niarry Nora Mailigaa. your LaoodrtW daogfcter. Sk cowhide fcLoM, u gnilileuk jf cur-trnever La J a ekk day ia ber Lfe, take is warhicg, got Oct boose cleaning and ojc Iu f jr a family of teres cLU-d- r, mm her mother ax J tLrwi sx-t- k who board with her. 1 don't think tl would tuarry you. because Con Reagan, the track walker, is her style of man. "Ltt ns examine into your qnahfica-- t iou a a bukbaad after yoar own matrimonial ideas, my boy. Can yon shod-dr- r a barrel of floor and carry it down imHnr! Can yoa saw and split ten cords cf hickory wood in the fall to as to have ready fori all winter? Can yoa spade cp half an acre of ground for the kitchen garden? Do yoa know what will taka the Line taeteoutof the cistern? And can yoa patch the Irak in the kitchen roofr "Can yon bring home a pane of glass and a wad of putty and repair damages the sitting room window? Can yoa hang some cheap paper on the kiUhen? Can you fix the frunt gate so it will not sag? Can yoa do anything around the house that Con Reagan can? My dear, dear boy, yoa t Nora Mulligan wants a higher type of true manhood. Von expect to biro men to do all the mau'a work about the booi, but yoa want your wife to do anything any wuitum can da "Believe me, my son, that nine-tentof the girls who play the piauo and ting so charmingly, whom you, in your limited knowledge, set down as mere butter-fli- r of faahion, are better fitted for wivea than yoa are for a husband. If yoa want to marry a first class cook and experienced housekeeper do your courting in the intelligence office. But if yoa want a wife marry the girl you love, with dimpled hands and a face like the sunlight, and her love will teach her all these things, my boy, long before yoa have learned one-haof your own lesson." vt AJi AMERiCAN STEAMSH.P U-- BANKS. L ImhiUii lUal tt fi'M a rku Un.a4 Ikrirt It War. The nmi impijrtaitt Aiurri n rival vLka cxjrpccau.jta have ia tra&satihc tteaa aari;-tio- T. Cullm bu Ul bc-itu- H1TAAES. A. F. 4 A.M. ifXHUECT 1X0 Sl'FERIXTESDEXT. Crat abd ttiri Knlr asca atauaJA, I. C aVaaama. Euoaar. ti, Grasd Gsra Bubx. TIitkiat. W. U. T. r. boo. Uia, OGIES. CTAH. iil&l tlUPTtK. U r OGDEN, UTAH. Mr. E. K. CoIIim La--i growB e? ia th fjvi-t- .t between N-paaBecger York and Li Terpen 4. aitd ia IH7 be brgaa to interest New Yurk merchant is a MASCNIC. a a tw tae famocs BUSINESS CARDS. ! a AJ.TSO.. Capital, - - - 8200.000.00 - 'Surplus, 12,000.00 plan to taUirh a new steamship tw. GENERAL BANKING. Two years laU-- r a company wLich Le Lai rgaoitnl lauachrid f jut vnrls the Atlantic Pacific", Arctic and liItic Tbey wer LhrriHy nibtiiiit-- l. th U W. eilf KlUiKTWrWidwrt. J J. M. LAi lJsKiU. taLM goreraojetit paying the company ..' yearly for earryin g the mail; cooditiij&t IciereM a!3oe4 oa Tiaia Deposit. feboull iiuptierd being tnat the Trafe-lmake twrcty-tfivoyages every year, and i. C. AuuTaoa. O.E.HHA. that the parage frotn putt to port ahoold laTt. be better ia point of time than that male T ! 1 . The Collins line uit-- t by the Cnnardt-raoiiAn.i Kane win the condition acccewfaUy, it veebrls i making westward trips that averagrd OGDEX, VTAIL eleven dsys, ten hours and twenty-on- e niinutfS, a compared with twelve days, ninet-miuott-- s hoar an 1 twenty-tiraid in CspihL, CONTRACTORS ASD BUILDERS. PU&a. tisriiauibi, aa4 eetissaus farmklied. -- $-.- s o ED FOR HEaDSTC.NES Jtoa Titira x n by the eteann-hip- . ve-lof the Citfiins line cxt-- t fcdlvlu'-FrtEls. of fTo0,0"0each. TLu was a grtt Surplus de-of money to put into a st!uuhip ia DIBECTOKS: thM6 days, and as the Urgent cf the H. O. narknei J. C. imitrr. ema!'-- r flVet was cunsidc-rablW A. the T. than Lrrit. bali. at. buUilItf, Henry Cooact. Patrick Ural Mnalirt of the that now ply New York a:d European ports, there was catarally a good percentage of cost iu the apioiu!nients for the comL STATE BANK, fort of the pasg-t- i Many feature that have riwe corns to be regarded as indispensable on board ship were introOGDEX, UTAH. duced by the Collins none them more attracted Among eotnm-n- t when the A'lantic arrived at raid in, - $125,000. Liverpool, at the end of her first voyage, Capital - - 7,500. Surplus, -May 10, 119, than the barber shop. English visitors to the vessel, as she lay at anchor in the Mersey, saw for the firxt H. C. BIGEI.OW. lTilent. JOHN A. HOYI.E. Vim Preudeot time the comfortable chair, with it A. P. BlOtLOW. Caiur. movable head rest and foot rest, in which Americans are accustomed to recline Interest Paid od Tim and Savin while undergoing shaving. Another Depocit. novelty was a smoking room in a house Actor Tool and th Cabby. Anent Mr. Toole's visit to New Zealand od the afterpart of tho deck. John IL LTAI1 NATIONAL BANK one or two amusing stories have come to Gould in Scri oner's. hand. Just before leaving Napier he had Ia Tw foil atrip. a difference of opinion with a cabman as Oguen, TJt&h. In America my neighbor can own a to a fare. The matter arose from a misunderstanding on both sides, but as piece of land adjoining my house, and United States Depository. Toole was determined net to pay the can, after long years, build on his land in a such as take to the way light away amount, which he considered unjustly . demanded, and as the cabman was from every window in my house which CAPITAL, . lOO.OOO. equally determined to have it, a sum- overlooks his lot In England, after a . . SUrtPLUS, 125,000 man has had the uninterrupted use of mons was the result The evening paTim Deposits, Interest Paid on and for air he light sixty years announced acquire and stated the that fact, pers Toole would defend the case in person an easement, which is one of Judge Llackstone's heredita"incorporeal in the resident magistrate's court J. E. Doolt, President W. N. 8nn.Lnto, A large crowd asseuibhxl at the court ments," and this ha to be respected by L. B. Ansa, Vim President. Cashier. house in consequence, but Toole, having the owner of adjacent land, who, acseen the paragraph referring to the mat- cording to English, and, for the matter W. V. HEtraicF, ter, preferred paying the claim to being of that, Roman law, must so enjoy his WiliXM W. CpRBTt President. Cannier. own as to interpropt-rtnot rights.and made a free show. The crowd rapidly and Manager. Theo.B0BI8on, with established fere the melted away when this was announced, right and propbut the fact of the payment did not ap- erties of others. In England if my neighbor sees me pease the irate cabman, and when Toole drove down to the launch which was to building a house with windows overtake him on his way to Auckland, one looking his property, and in such a manOF OGDKN, UTAH. of the cabmen on the stand called out ner as to tend to preclude him from building himself at some future time, he for "Three groans for Toole." "Oh, make it four, do!" cried Toole, at onco sets to work to put up an obstruc: 8200,000. tion against my windows, which forces and four they made it It was probably the first time the fa- me to1 come to terms with him. This arranged by payment of a small, mous comedian had ever been groaned, may DIRECTORS: and he was hugely tickled at the dem- in fact, entirely nominal, annual rent of Warren W. Corey, R. A. Wells, Sidney Stevens . a few cents in recognition of his rights, C. E. Wurtele.H. H. Sfiencer, onstration. London Cabtmn, Ad. Kulm. and this will prevent my acquiring an S. S. Schramm, Tiieo.Rubinon easement over his land. Which of the Historic Bell. One of the most remarkable historic two systems is the more equitable I will OFFICIAL DIRECTORY. relics in Rhode Island is the bell on the not venture an opinion, but leave the to reader Detroit News. judge. WEBER fOrNTT OFFICERS. ' Butterfly factory near tho village of A. 0. Kishop. Probst Judee Around bell this about four Saylesville. Selectmen Lewis W Shurtliil, John Fineock, Serving Karly Wrlt. inches from the crown is this superscripFred Koy. It was not the easiest thing in the Clerk J. P. Ledwiclpe. tion, "Peter Secest, Amsterdam, Anno Recorder John (t. Tyler. 1203. M. E. Fecit." It is thus set forth world to bring malefactors to justice in Assessor Edwin Dix. in of the administration law the early AmSecest bell Peter made this in Treasurer John A. Boyle, that as Collector John V. Rluth. made the returns, following sterdam in the year 1263. The figures Virginia, Attorney L. R. Rogers. carved on the bell, together with other to executions, will illustrate. The exSheriff (iilbert R. Bcinap, Coroner Marshal Allen. authenticated facts, lead to the belief tract is from the "History of Augusta Pnrveyor R. W. Faris. that this bell was long used on a convent County." Superintendent of District Scools Jos. Peery "In the case of Johnson vs. Brown in England, and was sequestrated durOFFICERS FIBST OGDEX PRECINCT. (1751), 'Not executed by reason there is Justice of the Peace E. A. McDaniel. ing the Reformation. E. A. Koch. It ia also a part of its history that it no road to the place where he (Brown) Constable SECOND OGDEN PREIXCT. was used in the English navy on the ship lives.'" Jnstice of the Peace B. Ternes. exexecuted reason of "Not by Again: Constable Phil Ford. Guerriere, which was captured by the cess of weather." THIRD OGDEN PRECINCT. United States ship Constitution Aug. 19, 1732 Jnstice of the Peace A. Perrin. 'Not executed by "November, 1812. The bell was subsequently sold 1). O. Sullivan. Couttable reason of an ax' (the ax being in the FOrRTH OGDF.N PFFCINCT by the United States authorities with a hands of no defendant, uplifted, doubt, Justice of the Peace Val Gmeon. lot of captured stores, and thus came Constable H. E. Steel. to cleave the officer's skull). through the hands of the late Stephen HUNTS. VILLE PRECINCT. executed because the "Not defendant's H. Smith to its present place in the ButJustice of the Peace Angus McKay. horse was faster than mine." Constable Tribtieorge E. Ferrin. Paw tucket (R. I.) terfly factory. "Not executed, by reason of a gun." EDEN PRECINCT. une, "Emlen vs. Miller 'Kept off from Justice of the Peace E. B. Frorer. Constable John (jould. Pole Pulley fur Arc Lamps. Miller with a club, etc.; Miller not found NORTH OGDEN PRECINCT. Most of the arc lamps used for outdoor by Humphrey Marshall.' " Justice of the Peace James Storey. cord the because defendant are a from "Not executed, passing hung lighting Constable James Deamer. over a pulley, and their safety necessari- got into deep water out of my reach." HARRISY1LLE PRECINCT. Justice of the Peace William G. Rawson, "November, 175i 'Executed on the ly depends on the strength of this cord. James H. Taylor. Constable Usually there is another pulley fastened within, John Warwick, and he is not the PLAIN CITY PRECINCT. " this over man.' cord to the pole, and the passes Justice of the Peace executions "Angust, 1755 Forty-nin- e Constable Josiah B. Carrer. pole pulley down to a cleat or a windlass. As this pole pulley is rarely found to be returned 'Not executed, by reason of the RIVERDALB PRECTNCT. in line with the cord, the result is that disturbance of the Indians.' " Justice of the Peace Richard Dye. Constable John Parker. the rope scrapes on the edge of the pulKlo-trlCINTAH PRECINCT. Cur Heaters. ley and wears out in a short time. A Justice of the Peace Timothy Ken.1 ill. Ill many places where electric railremedy for this has been provided in a Constable Byron L. Bybee. sleet proof pulley, which fits the up- ways are in operation the temperature SANE8TILLB PRECINCT. turned end of an ordinary polestep, and falls so low in winter as to render the Justice of the Peace uncomfortable. Wilson Constable Poulter. cars on this support which can swing freely Why not, quite FEEA8AKT VIEW PRECINCT. It is evident that such a pulley is quickly under this condition of affairs, devote a of the Peace W. H. Crandall. Justice to of used current the the with line in will and propel portion always stay put up Constable George H. Ma cock. the cord. New York Commercial Ad- cars to heating them as well? The ordiBLATKRi'IIXK PRECINCT. vertiser. nary car stove is open to so many objecJustice of the Peace James Hutchins. Constable John J. Hutchins. tions that its use is practically precluded MARRIOTT PRECINCT. from the majority of roads. Electric Revenge. Justice of the Peace Simon F. Halverson. Home (to his frit-nat the concert heaters, however, can be placed underConstable Caleb Parry. who is applauding enthusiastically) neath the seats so that a uniform temLTNNl PRECTNCT. For goodness sake don't, man; that was perature can lie given to the entire car. Jnstieeof the Peace Peter L, Sberner. abominable! You'll bring that cruel Electric heaters have been made and Constable James Harrop. WILSON PRECTNCT. music butcher out again!" have met with some 'adoption. Whether Justice of the Peace P. P. Bingham. O'Bowie (with increasing enthusiasm) they would prove too expensive for the Constable Daniel N. Drake. , Good! Can't you see he's half faint- purpose is a question yet to be solved. WEST WEBER PRECINCT. ing with exhaustion? I want somj re- They certainly, however, offer advanJustice of the Peace J. W. Hurt. Constable Joseph Hogge. venge, my boy. Exchange. tages over any melhod of car heating HOOPER PRECINCT. yet employed. New York Telegram Jnstice of the Peace James Johnson. It should be remembered that the M. Belnap. Const A New Fat Care. deeper the well the larger the area from St, Agedore It is the easiest thing in which the rain water finds its way into it. No discharges or other secretions the world. De Mascus What, to reduce a man's from the room of a sick person should be thrown on the ground or buried in it weight? within at least 100 feet of the welL "Yes, to reduce a man's wait. The one thing needful always be punctual." St. Joseph News. ' Mrs. John Drew has been on the stage e She seventy-onis for sixty-tw- o years. If the pies eaten every day were heaped years old, and when a child of nine she appeared in several plays in the Louis- one on top of another they would make miles high. If laid ville theaters. She was born in London, a tower thirty-seveand was advertised in her youthful days out in aline they would reach frf a Now York to Boston. as an "infantile vhcD.cuiunin." Tb A CO-AR- ITECTS, Ofieaa, nrnoa M. IT aad IS WUltlUi. Cv-l-. L Kstinul BaU is. op-wa- I'd lf CITIZENS' BANK CAPITAL, Tit-Bit- ' d Office: 0! WatLinctoB aeeosid wt L c. tiii Wednesday J. BaTaa, Bac U . SECRET SOCIETIES. piL'tUTI IOVGE SO. i. A. 0. U. W. Tauut MeetseveryTneMiaysTeninatTaQ. brvtlxn eoruiaiij iutited to a'ued. V. loLLias. V. W. Fi tee'd'r. a. I. KrcHLU. Finer. ATTORNEY-AT-LA- Practice ia the District Court and all tna uurta. PenunaJ autwooc gi'rn to eoUttrtioes. Krmeoiber lue place, ia t'n-- r s svoodea btiild-in- , near shop ot C. H. (irewwell Bros, 1 1 weoij-- l ounk street, Ofdro. tan. P. O. bos MS. t '" . llaBALL. CdURDELION RICHARD x. CTAH. tra bo-tic- LEGAL BLANKS KDWARA M. aXXJBOl rcausBso akd torn ATTORNEYS-AT-LA- w Office, orer Utah Natjooal Bank, eomer of sjjiioftoc arena and Tventy-loun- TEE COiDIERCIAL ' 204 Washington ATeooa, Ofdea, Ctah 8. BOREMaN, JACOB n al ITELISHIXG CO, street. k QfiJea, (.tan. LODGE, ai. Tha abore society will hold its meetia ia Kaic-hl- s uf Pythias hall. Tweatt-fuurtbuilding; i every Tharxlsy him, ea-i- n (utratStandard half pact sharp, nntil further e. furies be obtained frosa may Aplicatua lr. Perry A. i'mk. Zl. Vi arhimru afpcne. Sujournuu! brothers cordially incited. Pim iViL J. BsaanTi. I're.ident. Hill! Giu.rrr. eVcretarr. iXl Wau Are. ALLISON. JIHBAIX SONS OF ST. GEORGE. OGDEX. B. WHITE. "y QRDEB flab. Are, Ogdro, ATTO RN E W, K" 1408 W4hinwn avrnns, "O. OrDTl'un?1' ATTORNEY-AT-LA- Office, 399 BAMsroRB Twenty-fourt- 4.V) street, Otfden, Ctah. h saira a. w. smtti A SMITH, gHITH ATTORNEEYS-AT-LA- n0?T! nrooms 35, BLANKS. CLASS. A ... E. HEVWOOD. A OOKVETAJtCIKO 570 Warranty Deed, abort form. . 571 Warranty De), long form 425 Quitclaim Deed and 38 building. Firrt 87, A A A A KealEeUteMorfgehortfrm 375 Option Contract 300 Lease. 50 Bond for Deed 100 Discharge of Mortgage 500 TruBtDeed. 3 Assignment of Mortgage.... A A B C A 51, Bill of Sale KaUona A PROBATE COURT BLAXKS. 1 125" PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS. dministrator'a Bond Executors' Eond..... A . A A A A A A 300 Letters of Guardianship..... 376 Order Appointing Hearing... 'PHYSICIAN AND SPECIALIST. 501 Testimony of In eofineetioa with (renerai sHres 502 Testimony of Applicant..... practice, special attention to diseases peculiar to females 379 Order appointing Adm'r.... onrana, diseases commissioner's court blanks. rectuta. PUe,. fistula, fissure and ulceration ; diseases of the ear. nose, throat and 475 Summons chest. Consultation free. Office OTer Poctonice. Telephone 208. 476 Sheriff's Sale 76 Constable'" Sale 377 Order for Deft to appear CIVIL ENGINEERS. and show cause o. a. TCSH. R.W PARIS. 78 Citation for Garnishee 'T'CSH A FAPI9, 2 Affidavit for Citation for p A. COTTISGHAM, ?ttL2ltr's,it,ri,,rr A A Garnishee. nVIL A A ENGINEERS & SURVEYORS, ', 572 Writ of Execution Plans, specifications and estimates prepared work DISTRICT COURT BLANKS. superintended. anj Maps, plats, '.racinire, blue prints, etc., etc, 10 Affidavit for Claim and Delivexecuted on short notice. Rooms 3 and 4, nion block. No. 362 Twenty ery personal property Fourth Street, Ocden. Cuh. 525 Undertaking on Claim and Delivery of personal property MARKETS. 52G Undertaking for Return to t ROBERT BROGELMAN (Successor to Frits A Broeclman) CHICAGO Foot of Twentieth St. SAUSAGE A SPECIALTY. tion" A. E. "Sefct vsrra.rompt Wetbgrbi. L. B. 8tten- - Fresh Meats, Fish, Poultry and Game in Season. at your door, A blanks. Mining Doed Notice of Location of Claim. 400 Proof of Labor 401 Power of Att'y to Locate and Sell A A A 3T0 A 377 75 325 Official Bond and Oath Chattel A n Mortp-ftt- A Marriage Certificate Promissory Notes, Books of 50 and 100. Receipts, Books of 50. Rent Receipts, Books of 100. Drafts, Books of 100. Other Blanks constantly being added to the above list Balch Boston Meat Market Orders taken A miscellaneous blanks. City Office at Cream City Meat Market, 25th St. OGDEN, UTAH. OF A 325 Sausage Works! MAKING OF ALL KINDS A Deft, Claim and DelUery personal property 77 Complaint on Claim and Delivery personal property.... MINING and (roods deliv- - 3000 "r tMcheny !ir; tnt.ilip. nt .rnon of pith.T , Httocti rnd find i.rite, And who, iiiitiiulloii,wt;l work ifiduBtrinn.1. nun m tmm mrr I turn.... Oollira m I Tfsrtnthirown lcKftiti.nh-ri-Y.rTWvHt... Iht .itu.lliir. orempMymouljil wlilrh t..u on ram ih ,roonnl. No for m unlri. , e..n,l p motuy jh,,,.. uick, Iramrd. I Jr,,r. bir. .in. nntkrr Inm, h dinricl orcountr "I hart Imdjt taurhi ,,J proflied .th .n,.l,,vnifiil Hrro L'S'.ihi' ?!' "ki"lf Il lKEW "irmh. V! V'.'I'lJ?.11 Ad.iiTM.ionc, . ,,) r, ' C AI.I.KV, Lr,,'"'Kfel2. Ai.trn.lu, Maine. iK 40, of the ci,y- - PROMPT a specialty. Our Meat a Market on wheels which calls at is "agon your house so that you may select your own goods. It runs north of 23d St. on Washington Avenue and the Bench. Tel. No, 1. S31 1 Washington Ave. rywwu- - V ' AGENCYfatN Wedding Goods, A pamphlet of Information and sb--. toil r. ' iua laws, snowing Unw rilADU. I AVMtL 'IValn ssarsa, iwpyngnis, sent jru.. ,aadrM MUNN CO.. UUIA1B INVITATIONS, & Programmes ,301 Broadway. , new-xsra- Visiting yln 48 boirrs Gonorrhoea snill Elites without inonnreniniire K1 IH1I1 1IIUT...11LOI. or P. O. BOX seOHI. New VorkJ :OAKDS Crescent Novelty forts! 2300 Washington Avenue. able-Fran- cis n a eacA a. f Viee-Pre- ooadaTsa r. T. i LAWYERS. ,. B. mnraiii a leoviid, lx tuef J astir Supreme WW. JEOXABD A MACMILLAX,Court, jtnada. 7o,(00. ATTORNEYS AT LaW. x Britii-- h WHIEB O. 6c AND IIOKCKEXTS Go to C. f. LAM WET. toner f avetia aitd strerc Usnonwkvs to b tn luu, lariuad tt.u.u. Ajaeirui icsxuic cnehsv JJ Tedy JLatO.TKC01tMASUOI. K.T. DAT. JEOORATIOK Kfcclar snatocatk mm4 A.&.fiaiauuo, X. P. Baiji, Commercial robHing Co., 2404 Wast Ave. Electric .Wiring and Electric Supplies of all Kinds Stencils ths ieadlmr . at Uleei. aoriaua omk ry Jr i orrSI presort K, lTHtf.CHEirirV fe OMHMUTI, VfV u t 5SfS' for io all A. J. jm"J Amid iii. ior or"hits. 11 sad foci siflrers. BTON KK, M. D., i'lCATiia. Iu. nrnindaM. Made, Rubber Stamps to order. IRON FENCING. Models and Experimental MRchinflry to Ordor All kinds of Novelty Kcimiring CRESCENT NOVELTY Y0RKS |