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Show r OGDEN DAILY COMMKRClASi: Til I'll DAY. Al'Gl'ST 5 RAILROADS. Rio Grands Western j tt Tear 1 rgS one c--f she crrw rltiis tirvrj br.g Ad.'jux-bL:.: wi i'irvryizz The ti c! sit Sabi-:cjrvup. K:ciaa tt- ai, PIiiiyr isit:'l ssi v.brr ta'. Railway. alt-fci- i GAUGE. JAi ai Bcyci. ia-- r ia vt l trB iluwr'y ur OTrrr-Cie- it ail Art strict diocii.'zBe. Aoout tii So. . Auue At'.u'ie Bvt rfre speiiiirs u.e :sa work. Tt Lr.f ra crali And beit? A Vc f Brrre I. I sit. Ko, 1 ti tifcB, w Lil w lai'idle of September Br t Factic; iiiaal, wiirB a heavy F'.e came ep from the wet, and we .';; j to rua I jt ti.8 c jea rA to tLo taaL Tlif gi!e truck oi About 3 o'clock in the Aft rrcxa aud huLg to cs cliJ Dixa tbt tMrxt day. DoriLij tLiA tiiae we ft little ta?t of north And Laving All w cv do, AD'l when th file br kc w were At ?jJ mlltA to the north of oar iiliiiil It wa mi laftersiKiti Mom we got tii brig a'lout. boJ she CTKREXT TIME TAELE latfert Js'jr e a - wert-rjDLiE- Imm Ori ,"v..i L.le Atik LmmSk! Lm p. :W Lhh I Anir lirvrti Rjwr i i fciix .jrLun Juirtna....! t Amn luud t Urn irrii Juar(t aurt v' Imii ... tmn r. S ' ImnfiHiM At. L'oi't cnij Am ot WBST Lriae LM Arr. LM i Pl L.liU 1 a. m 1 p. p. u lu li p. ; u bi 11 li p. I l .tu p. tu a. m a. . ... .. .... . ai A. , I p. a iu p. ft p 4 4b p ........ Prorc Arrive Hall Lak it Arrive 0i.m l'rmt ExprA iA j Uriuti Juucttuii... Lr Amr So. w i: . nr ?:,' I'ariDe At ad l"rt 4 tjruM ima K Iirwa K' r rx,.... -- ! So. 1. TBliSiA. D ui ) -- SM B Ml.a. 11 I'J Bt ! Bit I I t . & re-ll-- p. p. p. nil iip. bi U :.u a. m U '1 4 oil 1 ' m I in a. m li UXAL fKAISS. AKDBU.T LAKE. a. m., n. m.. OODE La.T.CVteu, :t" :30 m. . tteiuriuu arrive luufcp. m,t:uOp. am. Ji a, wu isaiAM. a. m., retaralur, arrtr. Lake. Lav Bait Lata :UU p. m. ilWCU FOBB. PBOVO. rISOVILLt.TBHTL. Og-ie-n 8't S.-o- M4BTI ABO BALIS A. MT. rLIAHAMT Leave Oudea H M p. m biho a p. m. l. i rxturuiii. arri J. DOlKiK. Uau. W uarr. H. BENNETT, (inn. Faa. Aft tJtali Central Railway 3 ?ffi tort Lina to Park C'it.J PANORAMIC LINE OF THE WEST. a'tr "On and (Vtober traiua will run fn ia-t- I'M, u fulluvi paaasutTer , tad : USSKNUai TBINi. Sfflin LaavaSaltLak Hark i'ny laaa I'arkCitjr rriaat Arrifa at Salt Lake 4i)p. ra lU::Wam (JUp.ni BBE10BT TBAirl. 7 M a. a Halt Laka 4 3Ja. Lean Park ( it Arrive at PnrB I'ity 12:Wp, .Tire at Suit Lake 3:, p. aubnrliRn tmiui daily betwnn i LaksCitf aul Mill CYk ami Suamr Hoiixt. All people goiiitr to Park l it will tiuii it to thtir liiUtrw.! Ut take tliia Una. Jtliooa and lVot: Coruer 8tb Soatb Bad M ain etreet, Salt Lake City. T. J. MarkluUith, 6. T. and P. A. Last rwle Wiii iwb fiMjia SOLID VESTIBULE TRAINS' JDenver, St. Louis, Kansas City, .Lincoln, St. Joseph, FREE ftmiNIND CHAIR CARS ON ALL TRAINS. Oar Famous Dining Cars Attached to au. Tbboush Tbaixs, For farther lntormatloa ooncerninK thU to arjT ncBet Agent, or aaareeB . E. WALKER, (ien. Agt., Salt Lake City ass. anniT PIKE'S PEAK ROUTE STANDARD GUAGE BBTWEEN DENVER, COLORADO SPRINGS PCEBlX) AND 'ALTLAKE CITY, flfiflpV PACIFIC C0AS1 weit iwints. andallmrth- - UUlLl, VIA id a , , r.E ADVILLE. ASPIM and GLEN WOOD SPRINUl R JIPMGNT SCENERY L'Doqai lied. Cnuurpaseed Thronith Pullmao Sleeport and Pallmac Tourist cars betwwn DiDveraidSan Franciseix rbroueh the heart of the Ho. .y Mountains tin most comfortable, the B ifnst, and the frrandeet of all trans continental roo'ee. For rates, discrii)t ive pamphlets, ,tc, call on oi addrewi J. 1). KEUWORfll I, geueril agent. Santa Fe Route, Salt Lake ('iff. H. COLLBRAN, ( eneral maaairer, Colorado Bprines, Colo. CHAS. S. LEE, general passenger UenTer, Colo. aitentj GEORGE W. JONES. if ember of the mrrican Ticket Railroad and Steamship TICKET BROKER Railroad Ticket bantrwl, to all points. ANTEKD. lwmity fifth Strict onght, Ro'rt ana LLL, TlCI.ttf a Tulephone. scarcely btvn heuJtxl Lck whea a whaWUat came dowa cpon u from the northwest, and wben we gut Ler crew aboard we Lrard a ery interesting stury There were eight of theia a fir-- l mate, two Larpoobers aud fire haiiU. All bel jiag-ito the British whahng b.tik Fenrce, of LirerpooL Twenty day previously the had run ibto Honolulu and discharged half a cargo of oil and lii;ij4 thr I'ortnsueswbet-- sailor to o loct At fcca hiii is who had Ua leaving Honolulu the had cruiaed lo the southward, taking a w hale occasionally, and on the day the gale broke ehe lowered for whale about SoO milea north of the grouji we had been survey lug. TLn boats were down at once as the bark ran into a school. As the breeze waa light only a tliipkeper was left aboard, and he was a sailor who was recovering from a hurt The three Portuguese were in the captain's boat, which made faat to a big bull whale within a quarter of a mile of the bark and wan immediately fctruck and disabled, and the line had to be cut Meanwhile theother t 'o bouts had gone to the eastward after the school, and they had no sooner made fast than their victim ran off at full ieed. Owing to the direction of the wind the shipkeejier could not work down to the captain. Ilis boat waa a wreck, but was acting aa a float to sustain the crew. In this emergency the three Portuguese offered to swim to the bark and return with a spare boat, and they were told to go. They reached the craft in safety, but had no sooner got aboard than the yards were trimmed, her head was brought to the south, and she sailed within aiK.' feet of the captain as she made off. The dark skinned rascals made no bones of the fact that they were running away with the ship. Indeed, they boasted of it nnd derided the men bunging to the fa&i . s u. ta. X B. i . i. k l iJ - I --4 A. -i lt-- t-- i A. rn. l 1 t. A. 11 aa . p. i 11 . - Ji 3U.. tVA.au . A- II a. at li J ' Irmo I Arr A. m : Ex jut stove n boat It was a heartless, cold blooded thing to do. The two other boats were five miles to the eastward, and it was an hour after the bark made oft before the men cut loose from their dead whales to fathom the mystery. They found the wreck of tu ctptain's boat, to discover that only one single man remained with it, the others having been pulled down by the sharks. By the time they had beard his story the bark was more than bull down and just then the gale broke. The boats were laid head on to the sea and drifted slowly to the east, dividing their men so as to give each an equal show to live out the gale. During the night the 6econd mate's boat was lost sight of and as it was never heard of again it must have been swamped. Had we been running a course the surviving boat could not have fetched na, but as we brought about she got the chance to do so. As Boon as the story had been told our captain decided to go in search of the stolen bark. It was a question, however, whether she had outlived the gale. She must have received the full force of it, and being so short handed she was liable to disaster. The main question was whether she would scud or drift. We had adopted the former course, as the brig had a habit of flooding her decks when lying head on. The mate of the stolen bark, whose name was Cumminga. felt certain that the Portuguese would let her drift. In that caso we would have to cover a hundred mile9 of ocean to the westward before beginning to look for them. What did they want of the craft? What could they do with her? There was only one reasonable answer. They would run her down among the southern islands, find some safe spot to lay her away and then "have a good time." This meant eating, drinking, smoking and having no work to do. They would not dare to try a long voyage nor to put into any prominent port I was Mate Cummings' belief that the Portuguese would head for Christmas island, a hundred miles to the south of where we had been surveying, and the brig's course was accordingly laid. On the afternoon of the third day after picking up the boat we sighted the bark dead ahead. We were then not over miles from the island. The twenty-fivstolen craft had evidently been taking things pretty easy. She was under short sail when we first espied her, although the weather was fine and the breeze fair. The thieves had no fear of pursuit, and perhaps all were captains except tiie shipkeeper and would not obey each other's orders. We had her almost hull up when the fellows became suspicious, then they set everything below and aloft, and to our intense chagrin we discovered that the bark was a f;ister sailer than the brig. It was 4 o'clock in the afternoon when we sighted her, and as darkness fell she had gained a couple of miles on us. Having got the alarm it was hard to tell what they would now do, but after a long consultation our captain decided to round Christmas island and lay a course for Jarvis island. The bark was headed directly south when we last saw her. Next day at noon we were to the west of Christinas and running down on our course, when we suddenly discovered the built on our starboard quarter, standing out from the southeast end of the inland, where she had been iu hid-i- in S'.ie not r5 r,'-'s e i AWXC.t.t Cf A Blak" rs w td tt riitc--: cilrs, ail we ft'i f r c- -l U-- 5 ia a l it and put tie at a t4 a L-- r x. ; s lef tii ) wt Bt s l.t g -- 191, eoiLti- - Ti wi&d frt-ta b.t of A j There Are tic distinctions ia law aji-et. Bh tietricAlA, It La Uu jjbtogTt th tng Al.-ut- , femart as th.t were. TLe bark was aUs!U tremiit KAge kiaaicj doe not count as kL:cg c3 a we Lcsded f r Lex. fcb couldn't in the proper sense of the term at all, g'i to tLo Wot; EC were ther taea Avi tLat a jealous knsbanj or wife can Alxrd to tarn Ler en Ltr heel Las bo kind of An Action oa tii pr kl.1 beat Lrrr baxk to the CunheAft Her only recourse was to stA&i to the fruix.al kiss." as it is called. Aouthwcet, beAliiig direct'y f jt n, or U And pork export for the Our fsli off And run drd to the wet We All looked to &e Ler bAi into the wind j rjotth of J one were a third leoa than for Ai.d w Ait to be bo&rdel, but u r&c! j the corrteponding month last year. Per bot tbongLt of it Sii suddenly La; tha rime predicted by the eoono-fchifted Iter course to the And hop- OiistA is Already near when we shall ne-- d ing to cut ber off we tAiftcd our north all our meat And grain At home on ac- Each was cow tha leg of a triangle. It was iliin from the start that we should b within A cable's length of The territorial supreme court of WaL. ber At the meeting point, tvea if we d.d decided three year ago that not cot her off. fche would Lave shore itgton woman suffrage was cnconstitntional on one side Aiid ns on the other. Each craft had ail sail set When ''This decision disfwnchited the women f within tbree mile of the bark we fired a of Washington, who were already vot gun for her to heave to, bet cot the ing. I ntir case Las teen carried to tae slightest tiotice was taken of it Our supreme court of the Cmted State, two piece of ordnance were then shifted where it will be decided during the Octo the starboard side And loaded with tober term. solid shot li the rascals refused to surrender they uiuet take the consequncei. A new municipal law in MassachuEach craft held dead to its coarse, but setts will be watched with interest Dy Again the bark proved her better sailing this law cities and town are permitted qualities. Instead of cutting ber off a to own and operate their ga works. If we ho;ed for, we were still a quart'-- r of the point the eow-n- t of two successive city couna uiile away when she The three Portuguese were .houtiug and cils is obtained in the shape of a two-thirvote, and after this 6iich consent is cheering, while the white man was at the wheel. Ordi-r- were g.ven to fire; ratified by the whole people at an elecand two solid shots went whizzing ait tion, then the city is empowered to buy her, but to p;iM over her without dam-Age- . or build electric or gaslight works. The We then fell into her wake and plant ia to be paid for by appropriation could not bring a gun to bear, and wa of public money, and will be operated had the further mortification to see ht-- r If regularly appointed officials. by us. from The Portuguese walking away themselves can furnish to citizens cities ran up the American flag and dipped it three times, and our crew fairly danced cheajier light than private corporation in their indignation. The only thing tve can they will now have in Massachusetts could do was to follow her, but we opportunity to prove it her early that evening and were all at sea as to where we should set eyes ou Mr. Booker, British consul general at Ler again. New York, makes this official report to Three days later, having had only his government on the execution of light breezes, we raised Enderbury Kenauler by electricity: "Notwithstandiisland, which is the eastermost island of the Phoenix group. The wind had been ng the efforts which have been made to fair for the bark to lay this course, and proclaim it a failure, and to invest it this group also offered the pirates a good with an air of repulsion, brutality and refuge and a beautiful climate. We ap- horror, it is confidently believed that proached it from the west, ran into when all the facts are rightly understood within two miles of the beach, and then the first execution by electricity will be worked slowly along the southern shore. regarded as a successful experiment, and The charts showed no haven of refuge that in time due credit will be accorded loon either the south or west shore, but to those whose duty required them to cated a bay on the north. We hoped to act as principals in carrying out the law, were if there, by making trap them, they a circuit of the island and coining up i the establishment of whicli is destined them from a different direction unex- in the not distant future to be regarded as a step in the direction of a higher civpectedly. Next day we had to work up the west ilization." shore against a head wind, and night The Worst Blow to Matrimony. came again before we had fairly turned While Christians and sages have been the corner and headed to the east We came to anchor again, but such was. the deploring the decline of marriage in our impatience of Mate Cummings and his modern civilization, a foe more insidious men that they set off In their whaleboat than every other agency to the good old to explore the coast in advance. Ten ordinance of marriage has been working miles to the east they found the bark in their under their very nose9, midst, anchored in the bay laid down on the without their opposition nay, even in chart She was within two hundred some cases with their approval. It is feet of the beach, her sails furled and stowed, and was heard of before she was the technical education now being introseen. The Portuguese were drunk, as duced into the publio schools in many they were 6inging and shouting so they cities. In these manual training departcould be heai I half a mile away. ments a girl is Actually taught to drive a The mate i jould have returned and re- nail and to do it well. Wood carving ported the case, but he did not He be- and the simpler forms of carpenter work lieved his party strong enough to recap- are in many cases taught to girls. On ture bis craft, and he therefore pulled is si y leaking out down to make the attempt He did not the other hand, it in same these ma that nal training desurprise the pirates, as he hoped to, and when he tried to board her was driven partments boys, real boys, must learn to back to his boat in great disorder, nearly sew on buttons, to darn their own hose every man being hurt by blows of cap- and to put patches neatly upon their stan bars. It was nearly daylight before trousers and underwear. the boat returned to the brig, and as it In England this innovation of teaching was a perfect calm we decided to wait to sew first The little felboys nntil daylight before making any further lows of the beganclasses were instructed poorer move. As day dawned there was every with a view to making them independprospect of a continuance of the calm, and 'wo boats, each containing eight ent when they departed for the colonies arme. men, were dispatched to get pos- to which they were destined to go. But session of the bark. Our first mate had the experiment worked so well that, all charge of one and Cummings of tin boys at length were put into the sewing other, and I was in the first boat. Our classes and taught the mysteries of the instructions were to board at any sacri- needle, even to the feather stitching of fice, but to spare the pirates for the galpatches. lows if possible. Well may one ask, What are we comAfter a row of two hours we came to the entrance of the bay, and there was ing to? When boys sew on buttons and the bark before us. She had a snug an- darn stockings, and girls know how to chorage and everything aloft was as tidy drive a nail, what more need will they as you please. She wasn't over half a have for each other or for matrimony? mile away, as it was not a deep bay, and we were no sooner in sight than we Those Kansas Mortgages. heard a cheer from her decks, followed The public is not quite unfamiliar by the boom of a cannon and the sound with the tale of how eastern monsters of a round shot over our heads. In waxed fat and bloated by gathering in rummaging the vessel the men had dis- the farms on which they held mortgages cannon which covered an old had lain in the hold for many years. in the west, and particularly in Kansas, This they had hoisted out, loaded with and driving the poor agriculturist to a shot intended for the feet of a dead ruin and suicide. But a correspondent of the Chicago man, and fired from a carriage so poorly constructed that the gun dismounted Tribune tells the neatest story. He says itself. The bark lay astern toward us, that in southwestern Kansas a number as the tide was running out, and we of years ago some men, "alleged fannpulled to board her on either bow. claims. They ers," began Captain and mate had both left re- made known far and wide that they volvers aboard, and these were now used land. for their wanted money developing we the two of While were by pirates. sweeping up they killed two men and They sang a 6iren tale in the ears of the wounded a third, and a fourth man w as eastern capitalist, did these unsophistiwounded as we boarded. The Portu- cated rustics. They gave mortgages at guese ran to the cabin for shelter, ai d high rates, showing to the sharp eastern we found the white sailor dead at th capitalist how green they were to thins foot of the mainmast they having Tli" Rnrh interest ttipv s J " - rnnld ruiv clubbed him to death the night before. Ehrewd eastern capitalist smiled as he While we were planning to attack them in the cabin, they dropped from the win- thought to himself that in a few years dows to swim ashore. The alarm was he would have a snug Kansas farm, all on. raised in time for the boats to overhaul improved, to settle a on. was It as eastern went the Time so resisted one but them, desperately that he had to be killed. capitalist thought when he smiled that The other two were brought aboard smile. farmer The unsophisticated and made secure, and about noon the could not pay his mortgage. He did brig came down. They were transferred not He simply pocketed that mortgage to her, and that evening, while in the and jumped his claim. When cabin to be questioned, one of them at- money came to take possession of the capitalist tacked the captain and was shot by tuo he found that a grassKansas farm his Becond mate, who had them in charge. The other committed suicide, and tluu hopper would starve to death on it. the villains were got rid of without tiinl There never had been any idea of cultior expense. Queer Tales of tin Se;i. vating fie lan'L The rustic pioneer had simply been sharper than the eastern . Polly Tired of Tlit-mcapitalist, and sheared him like a lamb. Young Wife Polly want a cracker? Polly (moving over to the other side of And now the abandoned land claims go the perch) No; maybe John can stana to swell 'the account of Kansas 'em, but I c'.'r't. il.Tpcr's B;iz:;r. -- vt tie STANDARD &Q TUE STOLEN SHIR j C. Gas aut Albert Ciij CoBeramestA. writing in Tb Cei-tarreiinis n t- -it to Paria Aid we owe the remodcliLg the FrwK-of tie modern city, making it a bright cieau, LeiltLfal And beautiful Abode for tu&nliai An entire change La come over civilization ia modern time. A new race of niaikirid is springof city men instead of ing np, the countrymen. The majority of the cf a country Are gradneily drifting from tha farm to the cities ThU is true all over the world. Th.. French hare first recognized this fart and remodeled the city to make it meet the needs of the new race. on which the new Pans i the mo-de-l modern city mrnt be built, with celhuv-nnde- r its streets, with it huge, clcs.n. riverlike sewers, through which a boat mAy be rowed. Paris, with it broad ftraight. brilliantly lighted streets, ir shade trees, iu miles of parks and everything that can be brought to bear to ward making a city Lke a beautifu: country landscape, is the plaee aftei which the rest of the world mast pattern in city building. As for ns Amen cans, we may well sit At the feet of tinFrench and learn of them not only iL city building, but in municipal admini.s Mr SLaw, rc EvrrvloJr in Olfa SW1J 114 Tiii! Dr. Gee Wo tt to cciee m Ct,u.4i, CLita, grui ua!J And rwoe.ved Lis second in a cUa of tettT. '.u1jl2 lie practieied Iter f jt a few widely kdown. yisrLeAnd La been in iJetiTer be La beta very siiooeful in curu.g As: ha. a, bei-Ai- b-n- CoMuopu, liroecLU-A, Sit lUum, CatArrh, llieumAiism, Caner, Tumors, Eruption, In-- Scrofula, Tap Wofm d D speps-A- , CocstipAtAin, Neuralgia and aJ Private Disease. He take a specialty of Fever. Typhoid Fever "cured in twenty four gttion. Lour. Any lady or gentleomn calling on Dr. Wo ill tut Liia a perfect gectle-niaThese are few dt the testimonials gireo him by people whom Le La G n. cured: DfJfVEK, Dec. L 1X Dr. Gm Wo cured mysrlf and boy of Rheumatism, and I would advis anyone tbat is ufentg with it to consult 'him and they w ill kever regret it J. It Hilu lsui Curti St. This is to certify that my wife, Mrs. M. A. Hamlm. La been ill for ten year with Liver Complaint And Kindred Troubles. It became chronic and in the stomach so she could Dot leep ber food. IShe employed in that time tea of the best physicians in tLe east and tmo in Denver ithout any satisfaction, so about four weeks ego J employed Dr. Geo Wo, ho Las helped her so she is about as e!l as ever she tration. Paris is governed by a council, elected was. He also cured me of Rheumatism. M us. AL A. IIamlis. by the people for four years. All come Mr. A. Hamus. in together and go out together, though Third St. W. Dener. The My little boy was brought safely they are eligible for council itself elects the mayor, and he is through a very severe attack of Rheusole executive officer under the council matic Fever in one week by Dr. Gee Wa I consider him unrivaled in the Every department of city administra- treatment of Diseases of Children. tion is under severe inspection. In the Mrs. iL LiNi-ATLhtet f matter of gas manufacture, for instance, DS. GEE W0. Chiness Physician. the French long ago discovered what Room 2. No. 205 Twenty-fiftstreet, many Americans have not yet found out, that no real competition can exist Ogden, Utah. The all bis own mediDoctor make between gas companies occupying the cines and uses nothing but geauiue same territory. Therefore the six com- Chinese Herbs imported from China. panies which supplied Paris with gas Hot tarings Time Card. were all thrown into one in 1850 and Commencing Saturday and Sunday, put under rigid city inspection. There is a municipal gas bureau, whose duty July 4, 18H1. trains will run to the as follows: it is to test the gas, watch its manu Springs Motor leaves Uroom Hotel at 10:10 e. m. facture and look after the excellence " " " 12::t0 p. m. " " 2:50 p. m. of the gas fittings that are put into " " " " 5:10 p. m. " buildings. There is a gas engineer-iu-chieUnion Pacific leaves depot at 9:'.,5 a. m. who has a hundred assistants. " " 5:30 p. m. ' ' M Paris under this system is the best " " " 7:30 p. m. lighted city in the world, and will beA Sure Catch. come still more brilliant when the presThe Ruby and lion Bon cigars are ent plans for lighting by electricity are winners and are the best half dime cigar carried out. on the coast. They are long fillers and There will be no question about trou- are made by union labor. For sale at ble from overhead wires, for in the the eign of the big cigar, Twenty-fiftroomy street cellars of Paris there will street W. S. Stone, Prop. be space fcf alL It must be remembered that to make these subways undei DRUGGISTS. the streets the enthusiastic French ruthlessly tore up everything that obstructed & CO., their way, and did not hesitate to destroy sewer or gas main or any existing work. The spirit of the French revolution was still on when the French began to remodel Paris. Meanwhile Americans may well read and consider how Paris makes a large nSEPERFDIER and TOILBTARTICLES. revenue out of thegaa company: is epas-n.oa- le f, h J. W. McNUTT Dkugutsts The financial aspects of this charter can be briefly summed up. The company must furnish pas to individuals at a price not exceeding a fixed maximum. It must supply gas for public uses at what is practically thecostof manufacture. It must pay the city 3U0,IXl0 (ultimately 350,OUO) francs a year for the right to pipe the streets. It must pay a tax of .Oci frano on each cubic meter of gas supplied in Paris. Fiuaily. It must not "water" its stock, but must keep IBPOKTBD AMD DOMBSTIO CIG-AES- . Orders by Mail Promptly Attended to" Its capitalization at 84,000,000 francs, and aftei per cent, out of netprollts as divipaying 13 Near Voting, OGDEN dends to the shareholders it must divide the Fifth surplus profits with the city. Finally, at the of the charter, all rights revert to expiration Ask my agent for W. I,. Douglas Phoe. the city, which becomes also owner of all tin for sale in your place ask year If not to etc., that pertain to the plant denier piping, subways, aeud for catalogue, secure The city's share in the profits has steadily inand set them for you. creased nntil the receipts from the gas comTAKE NO M HST1TITE.U pany have become a large Item of revenue. In 1870 about 5,000,000 francs were received For the year 1875 tin from the company. amount exceeded 8,000,0u0 francs. In 1880, -. 4110,000 francs were received, and in 1882 mort than 15,000,000. For several years past the annual payment of the gas company to the cil has been approximately 20.000,010 francs. with American cities, this large sum Is clear profit; for we do not In this country ordinarily obtain any public revenue from g;u companies. St, , IT The industrial and commercial reWHY IS THE conn-triesources of the Spanish-America- n are being developed as they never were before. In the same proportion their trade increases with the United THE BEST SHOE IN THE WORLD FOR THE MONEY? shoe, with do tacks or wax thread States, the country to which they all toIt is a seamless hurt the feet; made of the beat fine calf, Btvlish look up as to a protector and friend. and easy, and becaise tre make more shoes of this any other manufacturer. It equals Our commercial interests of the future grade than shoes costing from $4.00 to $5.1)0. tlaud-flpwthe finest calf ffifi 00eniiine shoe ever offered for $!S.ini; equals French point to Mexico, South America and the shoes which cost from $.00to 412.IK). West Indies more strongly than to Eu- Imported d Welt Shoe, fine calf,. 1A. 00 comfortable and durable. The best rope. This will be the case more and shoe everstylish, offered at this price ; same tirade as custoslrnes coating from tK.n- to fM.mi. more as we increase our manufacturing ice ShoM Farmers, Railroad Men 50 To.LetterCarriersall (JO wearthem; line calf, industries. It is plain, therefore, that seamless, pwi ana smooth Inside, heavy three soles, extenOne pair will wear a year. Spanish is the language to be learned by sion edge. line call i no oetter shoe ever offered at this price: one trial will convince thoan young people who wish to advance them- 52.3 who want a shoe for comfort and service. US and $.00 Worklnnmnn's shoes selves commercially. Spanish speaking are very v?d- and durable. Those who trial will we?ir no other make. clerks and stenographers are already at have piven them a strong 00 nnd $1.75 school shoes aro EijAVc' a premium. aJuPW 9 worn hy the boys everywhere; they sell ou snow. its s . L. DOUGLAS S3 SHOE cExtftVs hand-sewe- d ed Hanil-Sewe- m-made C) meir ine increasing saies unna-sewe- n menis, Lad ac oept shoe, tniri jift vtirfaf vllah- annola LVuiuih "Cornering" a staple, such as grain or imported shoes eostlnir from i4.t'i to jjo.tm. ...rtdleV nnd 1.75 shoe for .50, meat, is against the law in Russia, but Misses are the best fine$.00 Dougola, Stylish and durable. Co nt ion, See that V. L. Douglas tiamo and in the face of the famine there at prep orlca are stamped on the bottom of e;eh shoe. W. L. DoUUlaAS, ItaKkton. Mass. ent some speculators have succeeded in SOLD BY to an and cornering rye putting it up H. WRIGHT Sl SONS CO. immense price. They accomplished this W. No. Washington Ave. Owlon. In by bribing government officials. Russia anybody can do anything by simply paying a high enough price to public officers for the privilege. How thankful we ought to be that we live in a repab APOLLO WAS A PERFECT WIAM. ... : .ITBreCT .... . ill lie where no official ever takes nionej vnm ln CADri Iff WAK1 mniwnit)) An.i.uu aSouuioos vcr. tb bOTf.I fr War. th im,lrtB. for winking at an unlawful transaction birth puny A4.,..r r...t Vf A RMtVl The largest of all the summer assemblies has been the Christian Endeavor convention at Minneapolis. It numbered sometimes audiences of 10,000 persons, and the society has already a membership of over a million. On the way to the convention some of the members wore badges inscribed, "New York, Our Choice for 1892." Does this delicately imply that New York is regarded as a field that especially needs the labors of eood Christian Endeavor pecjilc? ud VIGOfinnn i. YOUKO MEN raffrlny from , .11 or Gin! HERV0TJB ma-- v I w a U.J i 1h DB. m ao- - autof FbriirU Exetiiei, Mental AfTIOT?m III. Or ""Jt rf caant Bo can Dfj mtMj lunovnau to PERFECT noe4, ritord HOBLE VITALITY HEALTH in of 8TR0H& viAuii wy yvum ui practice by our exclusive methods a uniform. V auiwruLi m treat-weMDMiriftnd ouut-tB- iinfuii Afflictioni of Men. Testimonials u,. ki (rnmblQtulai.R tr o.: OUUH paid, fora limited tine ,,L,, ot rBCBB. Fall Eililan.t.loin for HOME IB'". it, ban .brj.. and loor tntimonl.'.. Aim,,,, t |