OCR Text |
Show 1 i 1 DAILY COMMERCIAL: SA1UKDAY. AUGl'ST I. 1691. -u 6Vi Oh. sms, utia. fc.es Bw tm Kill Sk. a aaa Bt. ajrrp. E nra ratier (LKir tavoat.y The cf ttj Riral Near York ..ct. ti this wuxvizg Lmj'X iti atiOllta that Le Li ja;J diarT-- i a OC. DEN fcvti THE HEW WEBSTER art jot (k U iJK,'ri-iTiAt ksiera n,ai tm fccA, t i c.Ba(d UatAi hvt yo aay. Eje of fray In your a'.rra abd -aatotl wayt s os ara ux e.ta be a (wtray. a of fray. Otu a cu. tiow ar. yocf Eyes of tcau4iiLa yosYa yosa Eves o? Successor of the Unabridged. Uc-K- rti i. t Ai-f- c. t-al WEBSIHCS tma. 1NTERNMI0NAB tnr,am ni Eow oft fom sris aaea yaa do woo, Ua, tya of Uua. DICTIOXVKr; AGRAND INVESTMENT raaniJy,ttfirhBiil.eta. LAsry. Ta we ef muua ax? aver tea taw wanaw ku4t(Milwul a Bavin-Ihui employe u aeiur. law Am nf juo.Oo eiaa44 was ileal MBptltm rlsrtat., with Bay CET.THE BEST. ' a BooK&tixeits. AdeaeriptiTvpMiphJatciMtaimiitctpMttrow pacee, UlvuniMu, inncu ' smtAeal re vie we, et eamjaveat pew. fe cpuuiu ap applicaUoa. Be,ec.. tC & C. MERRIAM & CO., Sold by PUBLISHERS, Matt., U.S.A. SPRINCFIELD, DRUGGISTS. J. IV. McNUTT & CO., Druggists: KEPERFLTIES and TOILET ARTICLE. IMPORTED AND DOMESTIC CIGAES. Orders by Hail Promptly Attended to' Near Young, OGDEN VUtH Bt, say agents D.ailii If ler sale la yoer place a.k fur tealer, laaaaa a a far raialetee, swear, la sB-rgee Ihm lor oa. for W. I.. Anal irTAHK MBTlTlTE..eU SO 1 a i tobaee. ff .so i tral IS THE WHY i V. L. DOUGLAS SHOE S3 BEST SHOE THE cENfPcVN IN THE WORLD FOR THE MONETf It la a seamless tho, wli b no tacka or wax thread to aurt tat feet; made of the best ttna calf, ttvllub end easy, and oerauM we make more mhoet of thtt grade than amy other manfactMrer, It equal, shoes coatlnc from ai.uv to avtio. the (Inest calf CR IMHienalae llaad-aewe- band-ewe- d d, ataoe evr offered (or V(I equals Krenca Imported shoes which coat from tH.imtotU.iu. Uaad-tewed Welt Mioe, fine calf, stylliih, comfortable and durable. The best ' sno ever offered at thtt price ; aame (Trade aa iale ta.ee.tln from as.OU to fn.n), Hallroad M.n 50andPolice fhoei ail Hi's Lettor Carrier t'unm weartbem; flnecalf, Owe enaaaleaa, emooln In !(), heavy three soles, extension adze. One pair will wear a year. shoe ever offered at 489 thisoneprice i oneno better wa&a trial will convince those wha want a the for comfurt and service. SM and hi. Mi Workliiaiann's ahoea are wry strong and durable. Ihote who a trial will wmr uo other make. iave given tntm i.00 and SI. 73 achnol shoes are - V worn by the buy everywhere: theysell on their merits, an the InrreaaiuK sales allow. 'LOO llnnd-erwr- d shoe, best BwMVS Uiinxola, verv stylish: equalsKrencfc Imported ahoea cosllim from ei.uiitii.jn. Ladies' K.00 and 1.5 shoe for Ji.M. tseeeare the bent fine Dongola. stylish anil durable. See tht W. L. DninilaV nnme and t'aatlAB. pnua aro atampcl on the Iwttom of rui-- shoe. W. b. UOVULAS. Ctvcktoa, UaM. 24 SO HnVfi' J nr lga ltJ HoI.TJ Bt W. H. WRIGHT No, fcd-Jt- & Waxhineton ll SONS CO. Ave.. Oirilnn. GEO. A. LOWE. I- N- -- DEALER Agricaltural - Implements Wagons, Buggies, Rood Carts. Blackboards! Turbine Wheels, Engines Saw Millet. Wagon Material, Heavy Hard ware, Iron and Steel. .Jkker Barbed Black Wire, smith Tools, Etc OQDKN "CTTA.IT. PRINTING INKS! To Printers and Publisher : The Commeecial PcaLiBHiNO Cohpani us carrying large and awleet stock of Standard, Fine and Superfine Poster and Job Inks. Boiler and Tablet News, in- - Composition. Sizes and Varnimhes also kept in stock. Those in need of inks will do we I to buy of Tea OnuMsaoiAT., BE A .1AEJ APOLLO WAS A PERFECT tvzy rnntl II FOBa! "i I MAN. MATCHKSt II WAR) Mr tuivtn aica tbal h nni wcrt pat t. d.tta. tA" a a. STK0K8 aavT TlSOaODB la all r..i,.rt. Y0UK8 MEN OR OLB. t.rln (ram BICVOUI SI. kad. rhvaleU IzMaaas, Htatal Worry, Stau4 Dtvil.patat. at aay KMOIAt WIAKIIU. eaa at rattwad ta FERPECV HEALTH ..a Ma HOBLI TXTALITT ei ST0 MIS, tha rrlda aaa fawtr af Ratlaas. w. claim by years of practice by our eiclnslv. methods a uniform auauroLT or lacOESI" In treat-Intal- l Dltaaiet, Wtakatuttand ABlctioat of Ma. Testimonials pii.y my. "ore.Bealed, BUOIV paid, fora limited time 8 rill Ezplanationt for BOMB TREAT-- . Toa ,aa ba rOLlT RESTORED at Tboataadl amkMaayaa. Road oar tatUmoalalt. Ad4r.it ,t onct ""'-Voaet- RIE MEDICAL CO. BUFFALO, N.Y Cen- ol It was the girl who spoke as the pair "Umr and Edgar nodded his head affirmatively. "A German, who thought his body and bones worth $1 ,000. " . She looked straight before her, kicking the point of her parasol with her boot tips as she walked. "The laot steamer brought 500 emigrants, Georgia. The price of substitutes will go down for a bit. It is a pity I did not wait a little." "Yes, it is." She said this quite seriously, and stopped before the door of the house she lived in. "Well, don't look so serious about It," he added cheerfully. "I have put tl.000 to a worse use before now, Georgia." "Never in your life, Edgar," "Ehr "Never in your life, I say, Edgar." She jumped up two steps, and then turned to confront him. "All the substitutes will be gone after awhile, and then they'll have to call upon us girls to go to the war. If I were drafted Td not buy a sub- stitute; i4 W-x.- ' wurls ia iwart fcT li'.Ji.iJ bcart that aetai jbe sl.: to ciand tt: 11. ax.i tb.es to iroi u.tJ kxrr trwr.a fa. lei "That rill be a ksavetaiiiig. wofc't ky The red leAf that tad altered Urtwt-tLeia rue in ber memory, az.d the wori, a&d tie lock that aocompanied them. q lw-I-y Lt-- r tool that measures every Tartatioa of fctelhgebc to hia marks whea the of surprise dissolves into the straigeut new shape of recognition, when the hari-neof pais clears np into the diruuct-Q-e c f cotnfurt Not a word is spoken. Only the two faces he there touching on the pillow, and only the eyes move, aarching every line of each face, sarin?, in nnspvkea language, "We are together." Together? Yea There abound be no more lcavetaking till the final one. So Georgia resolved, and while death italked on every side around Ed-a- r B 's bed he lived. The surgeons said that Georgia saved him. His discharge caine. The war went on. but his country could spare him bow. And so he got home at last to New York all that his omnivorous country could spare of him as be expressed it, and then a low fever attacked him and the medical men assigned all that remained cf him by anticipation to mother earth. There was no pain; life would burn out gently, but there was no hope, and Georgia would not believe them. She pitched her tent against the shadowy foe, and drew out the spear and buckler to fight for her lore. She conquered, too, and when she had saved him the doctors declared he had a constitution of cast steel, and condescended to take the credit of his recovery. It was not much of a recovery after alL Only a tottering from the couch to the window, a lifting from the carriage to a bench in the park, but that was a very great deal to ber. With a faint touch of irony all by a smile of good humor, he had said to her: "Never mind, Georgia; yon will have to get a substitute now." And she, brave with a true woman' courage, wise with a true woman's tact, made reply: "My wedding dress is ready, Edgar. When shall we be married?" She kneeled, and he propped himself upright upon his cratches before the altar. He will never kneel again; the patriot was exonerated God knows where his knees are and then they went away. The bride and her cripple? Not a bit of it the wife and her hero. He likes that seat by the lilacs on the north side of the lake. The sunlight glitters on the water fringe that trickles from under the feet of the angel of the fountain, and he says it is a figure of his own life, which is running away over the basin watched over by an angel The shadows of the lilacs lengthen out across the path and touch the grass plot, so she lifts the softly padded crutches and smiles her meaning, "Time to go home, Edgar." Sweet, serious face. Verily the martyr has his consolation. That is the the idyl Percy Robinson in Harper's Bazar! ss ark. turned np Lexington avenue. a a He, i!e, emaciated, oce of those i&ca rbo carry a tkket for Charon ' ferryboat in Lis put'ktt, and is orJy loitencg a little by tha way. fche, as full of tif. as the lilacs near which they ait, grate-fto the ey in her beauty as th-- to the aeuse in their fragrance. He the weakness, the the strength, of the partnership. She as upright as a tall lily Etem, with health to pay Time full rent through alotig life, he stooping painfully over the two sticks that prop op lis rjervelend body. Thooe are the crntchea, Now for the idyL There was a fereruhness of life in New York city. North and south had grappled by the throat War was whipping the tops of commerce until they Lulu med again. The gorernment cried, "Give! give!" and merchant, manufacturer and artiAan toiled and moiled. Even man as man had a value in the market; flesh and blood was dear. A youth and a girl met at a church door, and strolled away together. In the course of the service for it was the Sabbath day the minister had invoked the divine bleeding upon the Federal arms, and made a pasirionate appeal to the congregation to aid with purse and person to keep intact the grand old flag, that not a single star should be rent from the union, not one stripe from its field. And hearts had throbbed and eyes had welled over with tears that morning. There were dollars for the wounded and volunteers for the war in that sermon. "Is it true that yen hare bought a sub- stitute, Edgarr bst Ho i am Td go," "1 understand you," said he slowly, and leaned against the pilaster. "Yon love your country more than all besides eb Georgia?" Khe looked down at him with a half perplexed expression in her hazel colored eyes; and just then some leaves from the creeper that clambered the front of the house came fluttering to the ground between them. Stooping, she picked a red one up and held it up to him by way of diversion. "Is not that a beautiful colort" "It ia red a very suggestive one just now, and quite apropos of our conversa tion, Georgia Give t to me. That will be a leave taking, won't it?" There was a tone of bitterness in his voice; it was not hard to see that he was angry. "Yon understand me In part, Edgar. It is the worst part that you understand; the better escapes yon." "No, I think not, Georgia." He posh ed his hat back from his face and gazed steadily at her. "You believe honestly that it is on my account, for my good name, that you are solicitous. Come, now, some of your girl friends have been twitting you with my inglorious proclivities for a whole skin, contrasting the patriotic nobleness of their sweethearts with the selfish pusillanimity of yours. The thought has grown up in your brain that by and by it will be said to yon, 'Your husband bought a substitute wheu he was drafted; you married a man who, when old and young were going to the war, sheltered himself behind his dollars.' Well, now, Georgia, listen to me." "Stop a moment, Edgar. Tell me, have you never felt any of this for yourself? No one has ever twitted me as you say, but I have thought, not in my brain but in my heart, where all my thoughts of you grow, Edgar" her cheek flushed, but she spoke resolutely "that hereafter men may twit you, and you in turn may twit me, because when our country cried out loudly, and fathers and brothers, aye, even to the very school lads, took their lives in their hands and answered the cry, I perverted love to selfishness, and so stopped your ears that 1 left you to be one that men could point at and say, 'He stopped at home,' " ." The hospital aid read "Edgar B the name from a pass presented to him by a lady who applied to see a patient , No. 5 ward, madam; sixth "Edgar B bed on the right" The hospital was clean enough and tidy, considering Its crowded state, but the smell of chloride of lime and carbol ic acid could not altogether quell tb sickly odors that drive In waves through a military lioepital Rio Grande Western over-wrapp- . Tli. Rnaalans Good Charles Emory Smith, United States minister to Russia, speaking of incidents of his residence abroad, said: "1 should say that the Russians were a contented people, and 1 may add, from what I saw, the stories of the nihilistio societies are greatly exaggerated. Of course, it must be remembered that I am judging only from cities like St Petersburg, whose population is 1,000,-00and Moscow, whose population is 800,000, while the total population of the country is something over 100,000,000." "Did you find any difficulty with the language?" he was asked. "1 did not have to try," said Mr. Smith with a smile. "Russian children generally have a German nurse, an English governess, and French tutor, so that by the time that they appear in society they are masters of these languages. The czar himself speaks English remarkably well." Philadelphia Timea Llng-alsta- 0, Cost of Garters for New Tork Women. A class of women with whom expensive and beautiful garters are a fad are the wives and daughters of some rich and showy folk, and even of those not very showy. Counting these thousands, a large garter dealer tells me that $30,000 is a low estimate to put to their account In other words, to sum the total cost of garters for this city for one year the amount would not be far short of $250,-000. Tie them all together, the cotton and the flannel ones, the plain elastic with the gorgeous bands, and we have a string aboit 400 miles long, worth a quarter of a million dollars! Why, it would support 500 families of ,500 souls for a year. New York Cor. Louisville Courier-Journa- l. "Aujuated" Watches. Not one watch in a thousand is adjusted. Not one in a hundred is full jeweled. Examine the watches for sale in the most expensive cases, and it will be found that very few have the patent regulator, the full jewel mark, while the search nay be long and vain to find one marked "adjusted." New York Truth. ; Colorado ilidiond Raiiraa re wy of k'.it.g the ro hug or rose The cLaf.r wi:i.o- -t u.;try to fl-v- c bug Laa P1KE-- S PEAK E0UTE' rpuT.y in tie lact few i th'jsaaila of years. acd La dcTa.- -' rinej-ardaThe editor sa vs: made dsr.c the preset Expenmer-week prove that thia iiisrvt ceoo survive a temperature of over Iti drs. CrLOAlX PCEBLO FahreriheU. The ttext step was to ascertain if this method of dratmon jo coul i be put to an eay, practicable use. mis, CTEBOT TIME TABLE Water was heated to 170 degt. and via force-pumpoured into a paJ. A small Land ata . tt P. rJUDVILLE. AgpM la July 1. 1SS1. aadGLM with eiLt feet of hot and a half inch iron tube of five 6CEXEBT BMrTPiiB-(thirteen feet Ko. I No. . ta all), terminating with a cyclone no tilT BOTliD TIAJA A Atiacuc AUaaue ile, was then used to force the water Mail t rureaa Throart Pnl!aa Slaepers and PMlaaa upon the rose chafers of the magnolia Leave a. one in of which there were not Arrive rranrsaiai. flower, r. Lake a. av p. .uiwtwB u aean .1 aoeay Moutau lee than 150 of them. a. B. Hi 16 p. The first spray Leave Salt Laaa tk. and taw ''tbia. Mftt. f"1 Arrive frovo. 11 11 m 2B a. STaiwWt of ail 3j Bi p. upon the beetles was shown by the ther- Leave Proeo roa'a. 11 a. U :o p. or rau oWrrii uve i.Aieu. Arrive tireea River gn mometer to ba 130 dega. sufi p. ', lirm tfiver i a. Ii5 p. sui banta re koote.talt Laael ilv wr" The rose bugs receiving the direct Leave Arrive (trand Junction... au' I as a. lOLLbiUS. auanacw, Cajlorane draad Ja&otjoa... spray were dead in about one minute. ALeave p. an l(i:ll a. rm a biwoM hTI 1 n a. a. The others recovered. The temperature Arrive Leaiaill. 1 JU p. iii- ap. Bllas tS of the water was then raised so that the Arrive Pueblo u lM a. Ar. ik l. K,,riftft p. sn tau a. mercury rose to 140 dega. when the therArrive lirjiver 15 p. as tau a. mometer was placed within two inches of the nozzle. This was sprayed into a No. I. No. 1 WEST HAD TEA Ufa. Pacifie Pacifi partly open magnolia flower containing kail Expreaa more or beetles. All were alinoet fifty . a Leave p. aa instantly killed. Neither foliage nor Leave IVrvet oix cWuic m 10:11 ti. aa p. .. . flowers were injured. Leave Pueblo bi 11 5 p. na Leave Leadviile p. sn t.S I. B Leave ilenw.MHl Arwi'M a. m 1110 a. SB l "Moat CrtataM OoUasa. Junrttuo .. 1 1) a. mi 110 p. m Leave lirax.d Junction... i rfAl p . in "Mont Cristo" may uideitsdiminUhed Arrive tireea R ver a. ai i p. m head. What was the "find" of Edmond Leave (ireeu KiveaAS 8 a. m :l5 d. aa Provo. t it p. m UM a. Ba SOLID VESTIBULE TfiALNS Dantes compared with that of the dis- Arrive Leave Prove 1 10 p. m U M a. SB covery made by the contractors who en- Arrive Salt Lake t iSi p. m HA a. m Leave Salt Lake. 4 45 p. sn t 10 a. ra ' gaged to demolish the castle of San An- Arrive Oiplen tit) p. m 9:15 a. m tonio, at Rio Janeiro, for the Brazilian LOC AL TRAINS. In the cellars of that ediChicigfo, government? OODBSI AMD SILT LA EE. fice they successively dag up twelve iron LaaveOeden, a m., 50 p, m., 8:15 p. clamped chests and sixteen sacks, coni. Heturuina arrive 1U :X p. m., 6 J0 p. u 1 :1 a, ai. taining 70,000,000 old Spanish dollars in BIXOB.M. gold, plus a leaden box filled with papers. Amcoln, . i t Jt iMn Rait f One of these documents was a receipt Salt Lake B ;0u p. m. given by a Father Anton Deearte, sujie-riorMER1CAII rORR, PROVO, SPEINOVTLLR, THISTLE the Jesuits' college at Rio, for HT. FLIASAST HAXTI AMD SAL1KA. 20,000,000 gold dollars, to be paid by him . l i IjttM n ..i..n L 'ta roiuruiug, arrive as a tribute to King John V of Portugal ORden p. m. FREE RECLINING CHAIR CAilS when he visited Brazil. Gen. Pass. Aft to. Manaser. It is supposed that when the Jesuits at OS ALL TRAINS. Rio learned how, in the Eighteenth cenOur tury, the Marquis de Pombal was expelling their order from Portugal, they hid Attach id to all Tbrodse Trams. the treasures which have been discovered. A list of the wealth so concealed I31.rt Una to Park City. For farther Information ennjM.nm. .hi. has been found in the leaden box. It K. a. WALkfc.lt, Gen. 8alt Lake City mentions the $70,000,000 just brought to THE PAXORAMIC LINE OF THE WIST. 0 light, 2,800 pounds of gold dust and pounds weight of gold ingots. To a taon On an! ftr rw.K whom, it is asked at Rio, does the treas- rrr t trains will run as follows : ure belong? Is it to the republic, the afembar of the ameriraa Ticket Broker PASSEMOaa tea i its. aasavtlIHUUII king of Portugal, the Jesuits, or the peo- Leave Bait Lake 8 fl) a. ra :u0n.m ple who contracted to cart away all the Loaverarkdtr Railroad and Steamship 10 JO a sa at Park Citi materials of the castle they were em- arrive Arrive at Bait Lake :80 p. m demolish? to Cor. Paris London VREIOBT TRAITS. ployed -- jiy ANIDUtTPONTEUTCIIES. It U to t iea cfva ecoogh in - kEkw." He epted Li eyes atid another are tooVii into thein. A pair of eyea? Ah, no; a euul is lJking throca them, Eyeaof broara vLy look yoa dowt--? Vbcsi aUd 1 ever acc yea f roatl An yoa aot aull asy tr lova crvars On. ryea of UxL? Brown rtrrisua la VajAea En. a. lav- s' putattd at RAILROADS. Railway. te-- STANDARD GUAGE STANDARD GAUGE. rta, er-aiN- itilt1- Ztt p, ft o " i-- al ai:l. a trai f. 1 3UU Denver, St. Louis, Kansas City, St. Joseph, Ot-de- 1 Omaha. 6i Famous Dming Cars utali Central Railway A-- 20,-00- ... GEORGE W. JONES, if-li- Dispatch. Where Backet's Booes An Burled. Thomas a Becket's bones are to the fore again, and this time it seems as if the matter were really settled, and that the saint's remains might henceforth be left in peace, JA will be remembered that when the small and bones were discovered, which lave rise to so much con- troversy in the antiquarian world three years ago, therJ were several objections urged against their being those of the murdered archbishop, the principal one being that the contemporary pope spoke of a "double sacrilege" having been committed by Henry, in that he had hot only murdered the saint, but had also burned his sacred bones. This argument has now been met by the discovery in the British museum of some notes for a sermon to be preached at Paul's Cross some time after the murder, in which the preacher jots down that he was by the king's command to contradict the statement that Becket's bones had been burned. Then come some lines which are crossed through in the manuscript, but which have now been deciphered and read as follows: "They (the bones) are buried beneath one of the central towers of Canterbury cathedral." This should be conclusive. -- Pall Mall Gazette. TICKET BROKER Leave Bait Lake 7:00 a. m 4 .00 a. Leave Park City Arrive at Park City mve at Bait L,ake 8:45 p. twelve suburban trains daily between Lake City and Mill Creek and Sujrar House, 11 to Park City will find it to people their interest to tak. this line. Jtficea and Depot: Corner 8th Booth and Main street, Salt Lake City. T, J. MaekU'ogh, 0. T. and P. a. , 1 i Fred . I Rsalll-tftaj- 44 l JM EEL WIIOIESALE Cycles In a Fir. Department. The Houston fire department has organized a cycle corps. The members News. carry on their wheels axes, ropes, hooks, hose and other light apparatus At a reOf the 219 B. A.'s of London univercent trial of this novel fire company the sity this year fifty-tw- o are women. Of results were shown to be most satisfac- the M. A.'s five out of twenty are mothtory. Outing. ers' daughters, and eight ladies have received degress of B. Sc. and nine that A Born Diplomat. ofM.a "Did you give your schoolmaster anyThe youngest daughter of the Duke of thing during the holiday?.?" "Yes," said the bad little boy, "I gave Argyle is to marry a wealthy Quaker him a bottle of lotion to soften hin cotton spinner of Lancashire. His name is Emmott hands," New York Epoch. - JT TelepBbns. -- Bawl Company GROCERS, F3; Liquor and Cigar Merchants Pocatello Idaho. No More Money Wanted bj the Pop.. The Catholic world of France is disturbed by the news that the pope will soon be obliged to make a new appeal to their generosity. The damage done to the Vatican and St Peter's by the recent explosion of the power magazine at Rome is calculated roughly at 32,000. His holiness cannot possibly apply to the Italian government, and has no doubt that he will not be placed under the hard necessity of seeing his palace and the church of the Prince of the Apostles falling to ruin for want of imperatively needed repairs. Paris Cor. London Uw..kaV fi.M cnwti swtinuu Street Twenty-fift- Ogde-,ntq- ri. Free Paper. The Western Union Telegraph company has recently adopted a new style of telegraph blanks. The new blank has printing on the back. The saving to the company through this change will be enormous. The old time blanks, with which every one is familiar, had a printed heading, bnt the back was clear, on which account the public became accustomed to using telegraph blanks for memorandum paper. I have seen men deliberately step into a telegraph office and take a pad of blanks off the counter to carry away for use elsewhere and otherwise than for sending messages. Newspaper reporters and correspondents used large quantities of the blanks for It was smooth faced paper, and copy. the sizing was well adapted to the use of a pen. Hereafter the public will not be accommodated in this respect as the rules of the company are printed on the backs of all blanks, and there is no surface for writing anything but messages. New York Press. Ttstlr.Bra. . AGENTS FOR CARL UPMAM'S k STRATTON BAlso for Wallis & Co. Mexican STORM'S- hand-mad- e, Custom house ilsC -I- G -A - R - S. WHOiaZSAI . DKALEK8 OF PABST BREWING CO'S MILWAUKEE BEER EXPORT, SELECT BOHEMIAN AND HOFBRAU, CORSTANTLY IN STOCK, BULK AND B0TTLEP. ALL CORRESPONDENCE TO BE ADDRESSED TO ODR "OGDEN OFFICE." Orders respectfully solicited and satisfaction guar anteed. F. J. KIESEL & CO. - |