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Show ' HIDING A WHALE AT SEA SEA A TftP OTTE Off THE HARD OOAST. HUWTEft? FACiTiC aiii WUW- 4 at r -- attention ptaji&g -i f ra Eiu Xi.' Xirtm Can 1 a lasrselleia ctbb a reporter attract! W a innguUx bo stood ia fruct of a LiJ a very katui-ftuiri mil in) 9 FiMt4 ij m otter akia far svx erhva buii ia tb uiuw. liisaairwaskxtg, a&lbksfaoa cvrerod writ a fall grwwta U tcari of a rvJi suborn bme, mticfc kobg djw oa uof strange lusbreast. HicluUa&Uut trin-Ll- e UitXe mi material, aul ouo a idc was ejaculated t LLt niw UJ Eoaa of Murmso had jost cum totown." tie window, aad aU-- r pausing a - fc-U -- Ttert-purUajtoafh- mo-trirf- amid: "That ia a very handsome kkinT "Yra," aaid ue. Tu-r- e tle stranjj, "it Uiat ia , ia erjr produces letter fur luaa tias eoa otter. I have " ; fcbt uumr of M Mfhl I ak wberr said tha rfpurt-t-r- . "TU ara ntu-- r it a rareamuiai now. 1 Umj ara about all killed off boji by this tiiae oa thu count,' aaid' the "It waa lea years ago wImb I Strang. wa shouting tbefa oa the coast of Waah-inKtterritory, aad they were nut very namttuw thro, bat in Um coarse of two Tears I had killed over fifty, Untdes a good many far seals, and had saved tip over tj.ou) ia cash, when I waa suddenly broke op in business and taken to a Strang country by a very singular acci not-'uii-g tht-tu.- dent." On Mng pressed for au explanation the strange told the following remarkable story: "Ten years ago I was hunting aea otters on on of tha wildest parts of the coast of Washington, several miles north of tha Quillayuta Indian reservation, between Destruction Island and Caps Flattery. It is one of tha wildest and most out of the way places oa the coast I had been shipwrecked on De struction Lilftud, and bad been rescued by the Quillayute Indians and had been living with them several years, and had married the daughter of one of the head men of the tribe, f A DANOU0CI PERCH. "I was happy and contented, for, after years spent ia the forecastle of a ship, the Uf I led among the Indiana waa comparatively pleasant and luxurious. Besides, as I told yon, I had saved np several thousand dollars, when in a moment, by the freak of a stupid, bull headed, humpbacked whale, I was torn from my home and family and cast penniless on the shores of a stranger and wilder country than the one I had so unceremoniously left, among people compared to whom my Quillayuta friends were civilized and intelligent "You kuow, of course, how aea otters' are shot by the hunter having a stand rigged np away out as far from the shore bb possible, by setting up three tall poles, so that they cross a few feet from the top, and by building a kind of crow's nest in the top of this frail structure. I had rigged up one of these stands away out at low water mark and made it as comfortable as possible, and sometimes spent two or three days out there, my wife keeping a lookout and securing any otters or seals I shot. I was doing first rate, owing to being so far out, and, although several times badly Beared by rough weather and by schools of whales, which came around my lookout, I could not think of giving it np for a place which might be safer, but where I could not kill so many otters. "The last time I got into my lookout was early one morning. . As the weather had been stormy I waa expecting that otters and seals would be coming near the shore, so I took along a good supply of provisions and water and plenty, of tobacco and ammunition, expecting to stay out two or three days. As soon as it was light and the tide was near the flood, I saw a number of otters lying asleep in the water just beyond, range, and while I was waiting for them .to drift down toward me along came a school of half a dosen or more of the email whales common on that coast. , "OF TO 6BA Otf A WHALE. "They came toward my lookout rolling and spouting and playing, and at length I saw one of them making right for the lookout I was afraid he would upset me, and yelled at him, but, whether by 4 MtiHowatrVa prwacfciaj Hm4 111 kUMT W la lb.. OGDEN DAILY COMMERCIALS WEDNESDAY. APRIL 22. 1 accident or design I knew not, he plunged between two of the poles on which my nest was perched, and striking the other with his nose shoved it away in front of him, and over went my nest, landing on his back, one of the poles sticking straight ahead and the others straddling him as a man does a horse. " When I Bawl was going I jumped and landed astride the whale's tail, and quicker than a wink with my keen sheath knife I cut the muscles on each side of his tail, which prevented him from going down. I then clambered up to my nest, and there I was afloat on a whale, with provisions for three days and neither sail, oar nor compass. "The first thing I did was to cut some loops in the thick hide of the whale and secure my nest by lashing it firmly to his back. He struck out from shore and made the best speed he could with his partially disabled tail. I husbanded my provisions and water, and as I had some whisky and plenty of tobacco and waa used to living in my nest, I got along very comfortably for a week, when things began to look blue. Fortunately a Russian ship bound for Vladivostok came along and picked me np. "I was so uncomfortable onboard that as we were passing the Kooril islands I stole a boat and got ashore, and, after spending about six years there with the wild inhabitants, succeeded in getting across to Japan 'and finally in a ship to South America, and arrived here a day or two since on a ship, and am now bound for Callam county, Wash.; to sea what has become of my wife and the' twenty dollar pieces we bad when I went" ' away." Portland Oregoniaa. at3 is l cLsrf.2 gvrM gjt .ki"jififlf; CCD sviLUE-- Tlewa, as at, th. of which is that "ar-jia- a wfaUh aiwcU be cccft.Vred a sacred trust to be administered fcj tfcda into whose Lands it falls daring their fcvt for the good of tha eommiuuty. It is true there art those who basis that lis wriJlh luiti better be la the habit of the com ina nity itself to administer -iuowmaelTa it think best, but this is not fur a mometit Hillio&aire Carnegie's Bobuo. BepuUicaa thoagh he is, owing au he has, as he gratefully acknowledges, to a country where men have at least aome-thia- g arfroechi&g equal opportunity to make the best they can of themselves, Mr. Carnegie apparently cannot still divest himself of the old idea that there must be a boat or master to "administer" things for people, even though be does it fur their own good. Ee aeems to forget, this benevolent millionaire, that the only way a community will ever learn to be capable and forceful, to take care of iUelf, is to have experience for itself. Through mistakes and pain aad darkness, oftentimes through sin even, men and women grope upward into the tight We most all have our own experience for oarselvea, Dut Mr. Carnegie deserves the thanks of this community, which he is benevolently desirous of assisting, for demolishing one popular fallacy, and dwelling earnestly and emphatically en the proofs that it is a fallacy. This is the belief that while the rich grow richer the poor must necessarily grow poorer. lie quotes from the United States census to show that while in 1850 the average size of farms in the United States was 303 acres, in 1 880 it wss 134 acres. Some facts in his aper in The Nineteenth Century are well worth careful consideration. Me contends that the increase of millionaires necessarily means increased prosperity for community at large. While millionaires are rapidly increasingas they certainly are in onr time-- Mr. Carnegie points to statistics to show that pauperism is diminishing. In the United States in 1880 the whole number of persons dependent on publio charity was five in a thousand, and there are more millionaires in the United States than anywhere else. Ia Great Britain the publio charity charges at the same time were thirty three per thousand, but happily pauperism in Great Britain is diminishing so much that it is now only of what it was formerly. At the same time millionaires in Great Britain are increasing in number. The economists who contend that a the rich grow richer the poor roust nec essarily grow poorer do not take Into consideration one factor in the computation, and that is the constant additional creation of wealth through the industry and enterprise of man. They go on the supposition that the supply of wealth is a constant quantity, that there is only so much money to go around, and while one person gets more of it everybody else' must get lees, but no supposition is more erroneous. Mr. Carnegie also calls attention to the fact that the fortunes of millionaires are not made chiefly when times are hard and employers are compelled to pay low wages, but when affairs are prosperous and the workingmen's wages are highest Among the great advantages a poor boy has over a rich one this cheerful millionaire counts the having of a father and mother of his own and the not being compelled to be brought np by He says on this nurses and governesses. point: one-four- th A aWwery T. WHrTAai.Jt, Chrwr Tbare's a clxracuj," aaid the clerk of a twee tr five cent Bvwer hotel, indi-casag a ahabbtly dressed oil toaa who W tir stood with dm back to tl atora, be. com over here a ininnir The old man by the aWve evidently answered to the dimiaauve name, fur he glanced np to see who CaUeJ. abd tbca ehuSod quickly over to the daak. Tail the gUetna about yourself, Willie," aaid the clerk. Willie took off his dilapidated hat to the stranger, and aaid: "Twenty-fiv- e yean ago I had a daughter, (taeday she went away and left me. She was mighty pretty, and not more'a fifteen years old. Where had she gone? No one could say. I began my search one uiht in March,' twenty fire years ago. I hunted fur tea years and never found her. Then one night ia winter I saw a man and a woman crossing this very Bowery. I looked cloaer, and there was my chill I called, 'Julia! Jobaf She turned her head and looked at ma I was hurrying np to take her hands, when I saw that she was leaving me. She and the man went fafit through the crowd, and I followed, calling, 'Julia! Juliaf A policeman stopped me, and then they all laughed. I had lost her again. That was fifteen years ago. I've never seen her since, but I'm still looking, and I'll find ber yet" "Well, life has gone hard with you, haxn't said the stranger. "Yon look cold." "Thank you. I'm not o very cold. The trouble ia my kind friends give me a thin coat to wear in the winter and a thick one to wear ia the summer. That's the way it was with the Italian that keeps the fruit stand out on the corner here. He gave this little blue coat to me, and I pawned the old thick one that the cigar man gave me, because it had the most boles in it" "Are you very poor?" "Not as long as I stay right in this neighborhood. The cigar man lets me sleep on the floor in his shop, and this good young man lets me have the use of the hotel office." "Where do you get your food?" "It comes to trie from various directions. I have the same trouble with that, though, that I do with my coats. I get a piece of sweet rice podding for breakfast as a rule, and buckwheat cakes for dinner, when, of course, the order should be reversed. It ia left over in that way." "Well, yon expect to find your daughter some day?" "Yes. I'm seventy-si- x now, and I think I will live ten years longer. In that time I shall meet her again. I am always on the street, except when I step in here or at the cigar store to get warm. I will bid you good day, sir, and start out again on my hunt." The old man hurried out into the Bow ery and disappeared in the crowd. "The worst of it is, remarked the hotel clerk after he had gone, 'Old. Willie's daughter has been dead for ten years and he's never been told of it" New York Sun. Utah Loan &T Trust Co. - lti.OOU.OO ID E. ti. AJAfLfcaus, QuIaJt ALTtJuiUK. c Urmia Pruat. i w. BrilklLiU', t J. iahUMA. later est allowed oa Tut Deposit. M. J. C aaaeTBOa. fnt. Hiu, ieafc'r. UUtXUtAtU. LAsfVERS. O. iihM Frallts. Surplus 75,100. Waaluagtua Are, D1RECTOKS: Ametroea;. J.C T. A. V J H. O. Harkaecs, halre. M. ttuchouiier. Henry Coosut. 1svh1 fctrk. ImliKk Html, BANK, Capital Paid in, Sarplns, - - - H. C. BIGELOW, tTetidoot. JOHN A. HOYLK, Vice President A. P. BltiKLOW. Ceoluer. Ogiln, Utah. CAPITAL. 8UKPLUB, 1 gis. t buiSlS. L. B. f I OO.OOO, fXCS.OOO W. N. WsasKM Banxmo, Vice President. Cashier. W.Cobit, Prenident. Tbbo. Bobibon, Vim. V. Vice-Pre- s. brut., P.U. a J ATTORN OfflceBpHStaira, No. Usxrairn, 'miliar. and Manager. MUS CITIZENS' BANK Woman's Power Without the Ballot. D1BKCTOR3: No earnest woman can embark in any humane work without having the truth Warren W. Corey, R. A. Wells, Sidney Steyens . fc. Wurtele.H. auoon. ti. ttuencer, borne in upon her of the helpless condi- TUns.t TUeo.Eubinson Ad. Kubn, 8. b. Bchrauu, tion of a citizen without a vote. Put a single profligate qualified male voter in OFFICIAL DIRECTORY. one scale, and, a score of conscientious, disfranchised women in the other, and WEBBS COUNT! OFFIOEBS. we know which scale will kick the beam. Probate Judire A. ('. Hinlion. So every struggle for the uplifting of the Selectmen Lewis W BhurtUlf, John Pinoock, race which enlists the support of woman Fred roy. Clerk --J. P. Ledwidge. is a sure preparatory school for her comRecorder John U. Tyler. Assessor Edwin Oix. prehension of equal rights. Julio A. Boyle, Treasurer There is a fable of a company of bearCollector John V. Mutu. on B. Rogers. L. consoled themselves ers who Attorney parting Bberilf Gilbert K. Helnap. because they would ail meet again in Coroner Marehal Alien. the hatter's shop. And the unthinking Surveyor R. W. Fsris. who deride women the thought of voting ' Superintendent of District Scools Jos. Peery PRECINCT OFFICERS FIRST OODKN PBBOfNCT. and still interest themselves in social re Just ice of tbe Peace K. A. UcDaniel. form will be certain to find themselves t!ouBtable E. A. Koch. of fine in woman the camp some SECOND OODKN PBEINCT. morning but with a wholeness which Justice of the Peace B. Ternes. Among many advantages arising, not from suffrage, Constable Phil Kord. the transmission of hereditary wealth and po- the beavers lacked. William Lloyd GarTHIBD OODKN PRECINCT. sition, but from the transmission of hereditary rison. Justice of the Peace A. Perrin. 'poverty and health," there is one which, to D. O. Sullivan. Constable The Superior Cape Cd Poke. my mind, overweight all the others combined. FOURTH OGDEN PRFfTINCT It ia not permitted the children of king, milla are us? "What Justice of the Peace Val (iuieon. you givin' yelled ionaire or noble to have father an4 mother in Constable H. E. Steel. the close and realizing sense of these sacred down town grocer in an excited way to HDNTSVILLE PRECINCT. d terms. The name of father, and the holier an Auburn friend who had just Jnrttee of the Peace Angus McKay. name of mother, are bat names to the child of his hat down on his head and Constable ticorge E. Ferrin. the rich and the noble. To the poor boy these whirled him around so EDEN FRBCrNCT. he that violently are the words he conjures with his guides, the Justice of the Peace E. B. Frorer. anchors of hlssouL the objects of his adoration. fell on a potato barrel and skinned his Gould. John Constable Neither nurse, servant, governess nor tutor has elbow. NORTH OGDEN PRECINCT. come between him and his parents. In his "I'm takin' boxin' lesson.;," said his Justice of the Peace James Storey. father he has had tutor, companion, counselor friend, "and that's the marine swing. Constable James Deamer. and judge. It is not given to the born millionas HARRI8VILLE PRSCTNCT. is it?" said "That's the it, grocer, aire, noble or prince to dwell upon such a Justice of the Peace William Q. Bawson, heritage as is his who has had in his mother he grabbed the Auburn man, jammed Constable James H. Taylor, nurse, seamstress, teacher, loapirer, saint-li- is him under a meat bench, kicked the visPLAIN Cm PRECINCT. all in all. of him ible his and hit anatomy portion Justice of the Hereditary wealth and position tend to rob Josiah B. Carver. father and mother of their children, and the hard with a broom. "How do you like children of father and mother. that? That's the Cape Cod poke, other BIVKKDALK PRECINCT. wise known as pot luck. Next time you Justice of the Peace Richard Dye. Constable John Parker. The U nited States ought to buy an island come round with your new tricks just UINTAH PRECINCT, somewhere a good sized one and go to remember that there's a few of us old Justice of the Peace Timothy Ken. all. who two knew ones left twist when or a raising its own coffee. Sugar may be Constable Byron L. Bybee. we were young." PRECINCT. SANE8VIM.K cheap, but what is that if one must pay Both men were flushed and both were Justice of tbe Peace cents for a or pound quite forty nearly ConMable Wilson Ponlter. mad and both smiled. Lewiston Jour ' PEE A 8 ANT VIEW PRECINCT. "best mixed" coffee? This high price is nal. ' Justice of the Peace W. H. Crandall. because the countries that raise and sell Constable George H. Mayeock. Mr. Everts' Famous Pun. coffee have placed a heavy export duty 8LATEBYILLB PRECINCT. some readers the remember Probably blessed Yankee on it, knowing that every Juntiee of the Peace James Hutchins. Mr. Evarts made at a beautiful that pun Constable John J. Hatchins. of ns must have his coffee for breakfast dinner at Delmonico s some years ago. MARRIOTT PRECINCT. Terhaps reciprocity with Brazil will In all the constellation of his famous Justice of the Peace Simon F. HalTerson. But somewhat down the Constable Caleb Parry. price bring puns this is the brightest star. The din LIKStB PRECINCT. why can we not produce our own coffee ner taking place about Thanksgiving Just ice of the Peace Peter L. Sherner, time Mr. bvarts when he arose to speak upon our own soil? Constable James Uarrop. WTX.SOM PRECINCT. began in this way: "Friends, you have just been having a Justice of the Peace P. P. Bingham. How would yon like to live in Russia? Constable Daniel N. Drake. The censor of the press there has or- turkey stuffed full of sage; now I present WEST WEBEB PRECINCT. a stuffed full of with sage yon turkey." dered all the newspapers of the land to Jastice of tbe Peace J. W. Hurt. no made difference what he said It Constable Joseph llogge. keep silent as to the movements of after that; the best thing he could have HOOPER PRECINCT. fronGerman and Polish on the troops said would have been nothing at all. Justice of the Peace James Johnson. " Constable Francis It. Belnap. tier. Imagine such an order being given Washington Star. to American newspapers! In this counA Happy Retort. try all the news gets Into print, and When Pie revenues ofKjrig Louis XV more, too, and the only way to keep a were at so low ah ebb that even the serv thing from being known is not to tell it at court could not draw their wageej ants .. !.. j ' - time," "the opera singers at theregularbe to believed, If signs ad reportsare a petition to the prime minuter presented one may begin to indulge a trembling asking for the payment of their arrears hope that we are going to have some of salary. "Gentlemen," said the minister, "wa peaches this year. will first satisfy those who weep, it will f Jill j. 1f People and parties sometimes swallow then be the turn of those who ging."- Dluatrirte Chrouik. things they cannot digest Peace-Const- able mj H.MsUM4A Sf sM, aad . i t iaaa, aVaMUat, t4r 1 uteau. law "ifl Asa feuta. ar mm4 its wis. In Vs avian, m0m a aVBiaf Saasm S4 M rwin af MaWat bW fimtm t AUifta, im n Ssaj mmWf Lt 4VataM Ma ttmm ftaatsetaf tiVsa. W asal o.oWft.! U fwrAXmm4t M mimm Mawt fvm- MJ Ua MsM. h I rAS THE CHICAGO street, Ogdaa, Utah. Twenty-fourt- h a. SMITH A SMITH, ATTORN Offlr... Nwunji Bank buUdHST flft SMITB W. Milwaukee .iuI 1M St. Paul & RAILWAY EEYS-AT-LA- IT? FJJCJAISjfcfpjai Is the only line ruuuinc Solid VestibuUd,Btin. ueeted and ktvctric-lwbtelraiui iiatly between I uirau and Omaha, composed vt MairuincDUt tUoepiiis- - t are and PlHBv d RGEO N S. rinrst iMalaif Cars la Th thit World. A. COTTlNGHAaf, EVERYTHING AND SPECIALIST. I ri AmnMlLui rpDSH a . Any further information as to Rates of Fare tc., will be cheerfully furuibttd by ALhX raais w aim HKLL. t'onimercial Agent. T. K. POWELL, Travaliuc Aeut. 161 a. O. A. TUSH. FIRST-CLAS- i j lcl&J attention to diseaMS peculiar to t nmales of the geuito urinary orans, diseases of tin rectum, vis. : Piles, ostula, Assure and ulceration ; diseases of the ear, nose, throat and chest. Cons' tation free. Othce over Poatothoe. Telephone BOS. dueaee & Main Street, THE Salt Lake City TRUNK FACTORY OGDEN PARIS, CIVIL ENGINEERS 4 SURVEYORS. Plans, specifications and estimates prepared lep". P'au. tracings, blue prints, etc., eto., Rooms 3 and t, Union block. Fourth Street, Ogden, Utah. No. s&! Twenty MARKETS. ROBERT BR0GELMAN (Successor to Frits A Brocelman) CHICAGO Sausage Works! Foot of Twentieth St. City Office at Cream City Meat Market, 2ith St. UUUSA, U1AB. MAKING OF ALL KINDS OF SAUSAGE A SPECIALTY. All orders by mail or wire riven atten tiou. Telephone &3. P O. Box (JOi.prompt A. S. WSTHBRBT. L. B. Balch aiannfactores the Best Tniaks. Repairing; prouiutly attended to. Old Trunks Taken in Exchange. Orders called for and Delivered to all parts of the city. KLINR A OPPMAN, No. 270 Twenty-nfti- i St. PRINTING INKS! To Printers and Publishers : The CoMMEBCiai. Publihhi.no t'uHPANi is carryiug a large and select stock of HtandaTd, Hue and Huparnne News, Poster and Job Inks. Holler and Tablet-in- g Hizes Composition. and Varnishes also kept in stock. Those In need of inks will do wait to boy of Thb I'ommbroiat. I bitiUf Boston Meat Market. $3000f ATCAKt lo Fresh Meats, Fish, Poultry and uame in oeason. w.u.. red to inauu tab ;uur liwir, andvteltF to UrfaBr eat pntm ot tthr tny tsurly cua raaid and i,rit. aUid mhv, wtU work imamutoiuif, auatnsctlun, IsvsMk luiiAn la saan UMarowk lxrtii.whmvr tlttr U.l will alaofunttah Ik BaitsaUiuQ ortmptoyniantit ohlna ummi tsiat bboubiI. No notiar fir bcubImi auoreswftil m bor. EaallvsaBd quliAi tMiMtl. I dsMin btsl nM worker Itvm mrm dtelrfa orcouauj. I a ftlrMd tauifSt saW srovtded wita snjJof nent tsur mbtr.ttbo svrt anamvua; OTr S1W ti T met. It. NKW M SOLID. FuUfjarUculBriFUKC. AdVlrraa t oac; Irlai 5CAII, KINDS OFJS3I slam-bange- - 4W raas ATTORNEY-AT-LA- Office, W UTAH. CAPITAL, . $200,000. ST. UiXULhU. CCEURDE LION LODGE, a a. sal. OuUKS. I TAB. Tke ahove aori4v eitl htM its soevtiua la KitAfbUi fitiiUMi kail. IrnvtityJuunti tnri, (uvar K4aadard touildibs; evry Thursday tm-iiLmlt at pawl kvea inarp. autil funlM so- lurois mat tm (tAmuma (ruAa nu. AuuttcMihtm A. ir. Paicy t uck. Mil, W uliltu ataoua. Dtiuurtaua' urmtMrs euraiaiiy luviuta. f kSl it al J. Bassati. fraaidetit. C. 1. Fu Baa. bomta y. awi7iti Sr. WaahJagtoa arsons, CIVIL ENGINEERS. OK OODKN, bUV a OF B. HEYWOOD, rj Doolt, President. Adah, DUiill ATT0 KN E W, OlBce, over Utah K'ationai Beak, comer of WathiturUm avenue and Tveeij-fuiunsuae. OgdemLtaa. At OB 8. BOKKMaN. PHYSICIAN E. euliacuoua, WOUOOSI Wu of ii wouly-foun- CUITH Interest Paid on Time Deposits. J. 0da, I'M. rWf UrwMutoU a C H. trM, LtkA, Ctah. UM ftMCV, Ul tug, Dear sueal BAMSPOBD United States Depository. . Fiacr. C Deposits. UTAH NATIONAL BANK . Taedsy eveeiu at 7 Jsl Tifettiu j r.iuLuti.s. w. JIMBALL $125,000. - 7,500. Interact Paid oa Time and Bavins QKiiAal so. a. 0. U. W. A. Meet every JAMBS H. BJMSA- UBDWABB M. alXUOM A ALLISON, OGDEX. UTAH. na RICHARD ATTORN HW.IM.IIM STATE Hill AM. B. WHITE. court. Panustal auebUua OGDEV Mil SJ. ATTORNEYS AT LAW. tut Office: . Wsinoiay as a. t i. a. LOUuM 1. KwraLKa. J. LBuSABO, Jaxace Bu(ene lwrt. liMada. JEOXAED A 1U( BULLA. CmM Paid ia B-- VU SECRET SOCIETIES. piltkUIl ARCHITECTS, ML II mmd H Katinaal Ku,k OGDKX, UTAH. I. ancubd BaiAH. Urn. aiir j tiflsv feeted f. P. UlMhXKT. tm U J .9, snsas sa4 IsmUiUsrtnkm. Umw tu 1 u lie: aii Mua J ti.Jty. K. T. ta (a bW. LEMMAS yLstuMfc j t R.A.M. Tuiif Offim. souaaa M ill tmc tsLAPIaa. au. . r- O.K. r i.t. bai.a, FOR HEADSTONES AMD MONUMENTS t. ft BWaiar euaveratfc mtmA each A-- k. aauata. Uatauub, at. a. H. CONTRACTORS AJiD EU1LDERS. JjEiXliUTIGS c. A. F. & A. M. an J--. GENEKAL BANKING. -- if SUmiXTLNSIST. fcular 7k. tirafcd Qer Ridn TLwjl, 1. OGDEN. UTAH. Suqilus, , UiCHlTECT ASD Bi Capital. MASONIC. BUSINtSS CARDS. BANKS. QUEST. ul fTIMKU (134 IT OH Tf SvSUUagVOn K. t), ALLKK. Hoi PKOMPT any part ol the city. ft specialty. Our Meat Wniriii im at Mia-lr- A LI.l CHllS at mibdv am truocu1. WUlt'U your house so that you may select your own liKIIVPlltV v iuus UOriU UI aUU Osm 4, Aiuwii, MMlae. Tel. No, 1. 8311 Washington Ave Wedding Goods, ) i. , Ij!) i$ ft A pamphlet of Information and ab- -II 1 V, street of the laws, showing How to VJvMarki, Sl 1 INVITATIONS, Programmes & Visiting 19 irs Breaawar. Jf( f J . In 4H honrs Ctonorrlraa an ll''lirtfes irom ue urtn&ry or or CAEDS: V Obtain Patents, Caveat t, TradeT OopfriBhia, wnt frt. af 'AI.LilVtitlIBM . New f 0. BOX . &H I forjj Crescent Novelty Works ! 2300 Washington Avenue. Commercial Publuliiog Co., 2404 f t ng the Wa.4 Ave. jrcursslBi iTo4uav. Q Is aesirawledfed leadlnr ramedv in BMrrto? Thaoalv aaia ratnad fc THttUMUHM.4i0 seta In rMwanmandlna' to all sufferers. ble. 1 DmimmIWIiI amesrrss0S)orwnitea I prescribe it and leei i UBCATDB. Electric Wiring and Electric Supplies ol all Kinds Locksmiths, Stencils Made, Kubber Stamps to order. IRON FENCING. M LU. Models and Experimental Machinery to Order All kinds of Movelty bepairing CRESCENT NOVELTY WORKS |