OCR Text |
Show 3 - s .i , . . I Uwt a-bwil c...l-i- , ktlJ k.,' ,C A. w fric-- Wm. Irr tt A ri? f- - .'-- It i it lf'.'l. cr4i.; axJ rrt,ue liriiidj Lrrljr4 .? . f. tv 31 B- - lrt Usading W Sul fl0. I SO. t 7ii I ha tn u aii-- to aiy. koo. wt, eity suile truta room fruK bBe !" 35x1 and ue a eurtutt. H eaeli. Full arrs witliio oas aUU of eity UU- Tm rr with wan--r, nul. rux il. Fruit lot good ran lout '! No aikaii. and ekeP aul on easy terms. efnid buUMt rliap ami on J 1it bartfatut in farms auJ frm j.njj-rt- i' vLk-- 1 ran t uruit on, nl.il to cap nil. 1 am srlliii Uxti tuu. It u aiit v t iu at low irics, buy now. mure iiki. jr for jroirii for mi Bill iir-a- r brfurr luti if uu wait Ui buy. I J. 2101 Wiilutrfaa A.w. D. GILL. QGDEX. Special Attractions ! A rare chance, for sale, one of the best milling privileges in Utah. The mill can be run night and day for the entire year. No lack of the best wheat. Mill and machinery new, and situated in the best wheat growing region of Utah. Several Houses for Sale on easy payments. Insurance written in First Class Companies. Money to . Loan on Real Estate. 11. P. HUNTER, 2414 Washington Avenue. NOTICE. SALE DELINQUENT Utah Powder Company. Location of nrinci- place of hainfs, Hnu Fraucixco, California, ocation of works, Weber county, Utuli territory. Notice: Thpre are dolioqnent upon the following described stork, on account of levied on the loth day of Juno, lsKl, No. the several amounts set opposite the aames of the respective shareholders, as follows: ckr?h. SHARE 9. amount. 50 Kit So Bearer, G. W, Tr 100 50 " " .... 82 asoeoB-mo- " ' " .... SB " ....1H " ....11S ' M ....117 ' " ....118 " " ....119 " 113 " " ....1M 50 50 " " " ' ir,5 Bradley. Oeo.L.Tr...HS Barker, T. ' L 42 " 44 144 Brown, R. Q. Tr Cooper, (reo. D. Tr. . . 141 Dupern, N. Tr.......l05 141 51 50 1 Buckbee, S. C. k.ui tv irw4 as Circe. LrlijmtxMil Jy silO ii r"!ir,g yvB j Lais cjr 25 25 50 KlO 50 50 100 8 13 2ft 25 S 19 50 50 50 4 6 50 l' liO 50 30 8 50 23 50 15 2t 15 15 2 3 30 91 500 100 30 13 10 41 100 100 100 100 100 100 41 100 25 15 4 25 1150 Oray.A.Tr 25 Hayes, D. E. Tr 7 50 " " ....147 " 100 Howard. John L.. .. 83 7 50 143 Hoath, E. L. Tr 7 50 149 Herman, A.. Tr 13 Kin. Homer AS. Tr... 152 156 1M M. Laveaea, 15 150 Main, ( has. Tr 50 45 143 Meyer, Daniel Tr 2 50 Northam, E.F.Tr... 7 50 Soontag, H. P.Tr...l2 " " ..13 15 " 6 50 Soontag, Chas. Tr... 156 5 "..157 20 50 139 Btoin, Daniel Tr 50 19 8cotteld, C. W 50 " 20 50 20 " " 22 50 " 50 23 " " 50 24 " 20 50 118 SntroACo.Trs 50 Wadsworth, H.Tr... 55 And In accordance with law, and an order of the Hoard of Directors, made on the 10th day of June, 1801, so many shares of each parcel of such stock as may he necessary, will be sold at public auction, at the officeon of the company, San Francisco, California, Friday the 7th day of August. 1891, at the hoar of 11 o'clock a. m. of said day, to pay said delinquent assessment thereon together with the cost of adverthe sale. tising and expenses of A. Chkminant, Secretary. Office, 328. Montgomery street, room 13, San Francisco, California. SUMMONS. In the District Court, of the First Judicial District of Utah Territory, Weber county. Mary 'J. Froer, plaintiff, vs. James D. Freer, defendant. The people of the Territory of Utah send greeting : To James D. Freer, defondant. in an acYon are hereby required to appear tion brought against you by th JuFirst of Court District ine plaintiff, in the dicial District of the Territory of Utah, and to ten answer the complaint filed therein, within after the days (exclusive of the day of service)served withservice on yon of this summons if out of this served if county, in this county ; or, but in this District, within twenty days; otherwise within forty days or judgment by default will be taken against you, according to the prayer of saidiscomplaint.to obtain the judgment This action brought of this court to dissolve the bonds of matrimony the now and heretofore existing between that the plaintiff plaintiff and defendant and and of control the be given the care, custody, to minor child, described in the complaint, which reference is hereby made ; and for such court to the as relief may other and .further seem just and equitable. Plaintiff alleges that she is entitled to the said docroe on the ground the consent, and that the dofendant without this plainwithout any just cause or reason of desert and and wrongfully tiff, did willfully abandon this plaintiff; plaintiffof further seven alleges, that during tho period the defendyears since said marriage ant has contributed nothing to her supimrt and been she has compiled maintenance, and that herself and child by her and obliged to support own means and labor. For further and fuller to the made is reference hereby particulars complaint on tile herein. notified that if And you are hereby you fail to appear and answer the said complaint as will apply above required, the said Plaintiff to tho court for t he relief demanded t herein. A. Witness the Hon. James Miner, judge, anil the seal of the District court of the First Judicial District, in and for seal the Territory of Utah, this 25th day of July, in the yearof our Lord one thousand eight hundred and ninety-on0. H. McClvbe, Clerk. By L. B. Bust, Deputy Clerk. Laascngor & Loar, Attys. for Plaintiff, above-name- d iul fur ri'.i. willfaL Una Liom J a luu mudi Oi-i-y nut to Uks Uas. P.J. ia Ttco I: rt O'it Crtstor. Ttun'rt a slap to tvLl a Ufa la; tu UALuig ' I o-- r V lout!, 1 GOT BARGAINS FOR ALL. frame suites astil rM i tv.ti y ju. m.-- idev, edi bcoibii.. Sinks thee? HAS SURE sw "idcr. i o-- ct ttiLt. twitm LUm P.miLf Ws-- D. GILL II .ML four roots Frua 11 REAL ESTATE. J. At t.y wisidow ert-- r T Sun aid ail ,r a of i'. TLe exjre-taini- -l ni of ijsx e, bat I co! i t : tvtne&bfrof 'h.na. 1 i: J u A a mc like O tLisat one, f x I 3.1 t loz at tL oil jcttlrBuaa, t- -t i teed tot Lave troatlcJ myself. ;' his yr trots. tti w. Brvtr rJ Tte ereiiitj drew on. the diyi..'.' fkleiini the Um; were ligttrl . till r kept Lis eye fiiel and ol the window into the darkness. Wiethe dim light of tts oi! lamp shone don bis pale feature, and 1 siuuiei Lu: and said ncthinx. 1 think 1 mtiit ttr dozed for a lit'1. while, then 1 heard the gnard eala "Aehtrtdge road! A&Lbndge roadf" auJ I started up, grabbel at my portcc Wan and prepared to pet out cf the car riage, for 1 had reached my destination, but ray companion also rose, turned ul looked me full in the face with a k k which seemed to make ray blood grjw chilly, stepped ont before me and 1 foleo'l&r BROTHERS. !i tes i?rjtiJ ku.''..' Froni iut and To the PbIIw. T . . - J.i i j gmiw. ll jrtuB !a Harper's, MY GHOSTLY COMPANION "Come at once. Mr. Thomas Wtrrinjf-toU dacgcrooaly ill and vi&he to tee yon." This ws telegraphic message which I received one cold January morning about hi years aga Surprise wa tr.y cbitf fethng at the moment, fur Mr. Thomas Warrington had never bet-more than a name to me, although lie wa mjr nncle. I had never een Lira, and had never felt auy particular desire to do so, not from any dislike or grudge 1 bore the old man, tut simply because 1 had forgotten all about uim. Certainly he was my nncle, my father's elder brother, but for years before my father's death there had been a feud between them relating to a small estate which my father claimed, and which my nncle, though a rich man with much property, also claimed. A court of law settled the matter after much delay and anger on either side. My nncle was able to pay for expert counsel, my father was not, for, except this Fmall estate which caused the quarrel, be bad nothing but the precarious income of an anthor. My nncle fought hard, grasping old man that he wa, and won his case. But tlus had all happened so long ago, in the days of my extreme youth, that I had never given a second thought, certainly never a serious one to the story. Hard words had passed between the brothers, I believe, very hard words, and my nncle had sworn loudly and deeply that he detested the 6ight of my father, and hoped never to set eyes on him or his again as long as he lived. Perhaps you think it was unusual for a young man of no means never to give a second thought to an nncle who was the possessor of money and lands, but it really is a fact, and although my uncle was rich and childless, I knew that he detested me and my connections, and his estate was unentailed. I myself was a very young barrister, with enough to think about, and, up to the present, as much as I could do to get through my examinations. Some friends of mine were talking the other day about strange things which had happened to them, and it Bet me thinking about the only really strange thing that ever happened to me, and 1 record the circumstances, hoping that some reader may be able to afford me an explanation. Well, to go back to the telegram. 1 was certainly very much surprised, and for a minute or two stood staring at the slip of pink paper in an absent minded sort of way. Then it occurred to me that I was wasting time. The telegram demanded my presence, and I had no time to waste. I looked at my Brad-shaw- , found that I had an hour before the next train started, so ate my breakfast calmly, and packed a portmanteau, feeling glad for the first time since I had become a full blown barrister that no pressure of work detained me in town. I soon found a corner seat in a smoking carriage, and resigned myself to a fairly long journey on this cold January day. I had taken my place in very good time, so amused myself by watching the people hurrying to and fro, and was a good deal attracted by a white haired old gentleman who slowly passed backward and forward at short intervals before the carriage in which I sat, and who, every time he passed, seemed to 'ook at me with a far away expression in I was beginning to feel inter-- t j is eyes. ?ted in the old fellow, when the train started, and I soon forgot all about him. By bad luck the train which I had managed to catch was a terribly slow oi e, which stopped at almost every station big and .small, and 1 was surprised always to see the same white haired old gentleman passing to and fro on the He platform every time we stopped. never passed without looking at me with the same faraway expression in his eyes. At the first few stations 1 scarcely noticed him, but after a bit 1 began to wonder who he was and why he paraded about in that manner, and took a sort of lazy interest in him, pitying the poor old fellow for having to travel on such a bleak day, The journey was certainly a tedious one, but I found a good deal to occupy my thoughts my nncle, whom I had never seen; the old quarrel; the chances of his relenting in the matter of my father's estate, for surely he would not summon me from London for no other purpose than that I might make personal inquiries as to his health. The day wore on, and the short winter afternoon began to close in. We had passed most of the larger and busier towns, and were coming to villages and small stations. All my fellow travelers had left the carriage, being mostly business men they had reached their several destinations in the larger towns, and 1 sat alone in my corner, when the old white haired gentleman, whom I was beginning to look upon as rather eccentric, turned the handle of the carriage door, came in, and sat down in the corner opposite to me. He said not a word, but gazed out at the landscape in a dreamy manner, while I took the opportunity to examine his appearance more closely. He was tall, thin and looked emaciated, with clearly cut features of a waxen oolor, and wonderfully blue eyes. He wore an old fashioned, low crowned silk bat, and a long, thick coat with a fur n n lowed. The station was certainly very badly light 1 and the night was pitch dark but 1 was rather surprised when I g t outside neither to see nor hear any si0'n or sound of my fellow passenger. How ever, I thought it did not matter to m where he had gone, so finding a carriage awaiting me I got in and in the rush of Other thoughts 1 soon forgot him. How is Mr. Warrington by this timer I asked the coachman. "He died this morning, sir," was the reply. And then followed the details tf his illness and death, which Listed until we reached Ashford Hall, my nacic's house. I rang the bell, and was soon admitted by a stout, comfortable looking woman, who showed me to my room, where I began to wonder what I had better do. It was rather an awkward position to come, a perfect stranger, at the bidding of another stranger, and find him dead on ar- rival At length I went down stairs, and the met me in the hall and gave me more details of my ancle's illness and his great desire to see me. Then she supposed that I should like to see the corpse, and so evidently expected me to answer in the affirmative that I did so, and she led the way np the broad staircase and down a long passage. At the end of this passage she opened the door of a dimly lighted room and we entered, she carrying a candle. We went together to the bedside, and she, holding the candle high with one hand, gently lifted the sheet with the other and disclosedthe white, clear cut features of my traveling companion. This was the first and last thing of the kind that ever happened to me, and is still unexplained. I stayed on at Ashford Hall for the funeral, and found myself, on the read ing of my uncle's will, sole heir to all his possessions. True Flag. same kindly looking woman A Negro's Terrible Revenge. In Hay ti and Martinique the venom of the terrible serpent indigenous to those islands, the formidable fer de lance, has been often en ployed by the negroes in A horrible, disposing of their enemies. but well authenticated inatanoe of cgro ingenuity and malevolence is told in Martinique. A huge negro, recently imported from the Guinea coast, had been whipped by the order of his master, one of the great planter princes of the island while it was under French rule. The victim made no complaint, but meditated revenge. By long search he found the lair of a pair of serpents in the garden adjacent to the house. Watching his opportunity he killed one and dragged its body to the house through a window that was always open and into the bedroom of the beautiful daughter of the planter. He dragged it to the bed, lifted the coverings and coiled the reptile on the sheet When this was done he carried the dead snake away and cast it into an adjacent stream. As night approached the serpent's mate followed the trail, crept through the open window and to the bed of the The latter, half planter's daughter. awake, made a motion to brush away the intruder. Instantly the fangs were buried in her neck, and in a few hours she was a corpse. St Louis h. Early French Playing Cards. The French are believed to be the first people in Europe to use playing cards, and, as first made, cards were supposed to represent the different classes of persons in the kingdom. The hearts were the "choir men," or ecclesiastics, and early cards of this suit have a cope which, in form, somewhat resembles a heart The figure by us called a spade was originally a pike head, and typified the nobility and soldiery; the artisans were represented by a stone tile, now known as diamond, while the farmers were symbolized by the trefoil or clover leaf, by as called a club. The four kings were originally David, Alexander, Caesar and Charlemagne, representing the four great monarchies, while the qneenS were Argine, Esther. Judith and Pallas, typical of' birth, piety, fortitude and wisdom, Argine being an anagram for Regina. The knaves were either knights or servants to knights, but which is uncertain, though the former conjecture is the more probable, from the fact that on cards of an early date appear the names of famous knights. St Louis ; 4nlH ilimti. kil . Cut i tn-acame ywiLg to I'tica ta n.j a dky'a irfct-- rt Ta-j j dtrvri lue d.y to teTitg ti aiA'.s. lA tLr.r y ta vn...u vs v Ttit-inrrmt.ja decided t jiwa tvro wa.-urUti wrre in turir aud I y a:teii.j,tw.s to d tLu tLtjr fell into t ue t'atti.c-- of tLe l&tr c;-.- i At the j.jliee they said tiKrir eVrrrXUralXi, M;tLl PrfTy al,J Hattie DjuWr, of Cu.itota. Ld piwn them tie watches, and Cuitf of iVlioe DaWtJ Uid the trit-- J iKrtid tO tlid out whether tuesury vu true. The yoocg women iuiin-iutrswore ont wamiiis for the arrest of the young men, claimloaned lieui tW ing they LaI hiu-jiwauLes, and United State Marshal J. B. Stiin&on tame to Cries Tuesday and took the twam bck to their native town. Jartioe They were arra:gne4 bef.-iNorthrop, and the young women were not able to establish their charge of larceny. It a however, that wluie they had given their hearts freely and wholly to the young men, they Lad only loaned them the watehes, but the crime of larceny was not proven, and the young . men were discharge from At this point of the proceeding a consultation took plaoe. Keiiiur was displayed on both sides, and eotne one of the four proposed that the wholo affair could lie nicely arraii-ia a fe w uaiuut. s by a couple of weddings. The parties UKt interested agreed to this pleavint and Jnsti.-- North way ont of the rop tied the double knot with diwtcb, Mias Dailey became the bride of Mr. Jones and Mi-- Perry was wedded to Mr. Smith. Utica Observer. IRIS! y i;-ni. i TWs W Olivia J M.ay t 'xilL, twa Cij-t.j'.- iu-.-- s a. !y The New Shape in White Granite. Iliveyou seen it? If not, ask for it next time you are buying. We carry a full line. The Lightiest and Most Durable rattern made. liHAMMOCKS AT COST! y Is a sign now displayed by us. We haYe a lare stock which we don t intend to carry OYtr and will sell at cost until they are cleared out. SILVEK QUEEN PATTERN Is a magic seller in glassware just now. GLASS SETS in this pattern are in great demand, and as the factories have closed for the summer we will not be able to duplicate this pattern. BUY AT ONCE if you want something nice. d m-s- e 3 Ha Kept His Youth. There was one man in New London before the college boat races bad ended who was a refreshing treat to those who were in the Connecticut town. He had a son who was rowing in one of the big university boats, and he was an example of the paternal college spirit which may grow old, but which seldom dies. Here was a man sixty years old, who spent three weeks in New London following college oarsmen from one end of the town to the other. You might see him with a couple of young men whose arms were locked in his. No years could Mb him of the sentiment which hnng around his memory of his college days. He was an undergraduate again with the undergraduates who were classmates of one of his sons. Whenever he saw a college man whom he knew, whether the youngster were 100 or 500 yards away, the old man would hurry off, crying after the other. "Halloa, old man, wait a minute," That college boy forty years a graduate was one of the most popular men to be found near the famous old four mile course on the historic Thames. New York Tribune. THE FAIR Iiiipto, 2443 and 2445 Mb and Washington AYenue, Retailers. : Ogden, Utah : The Central Meat Market GREENWELL & FRONK, Props. Aa Indiana Snake Charmer. Joseph Freibur, of Cincinnati, has acquired a reputation in this vicinity as a snake charmer. Yesterday was his first opportunity to display his powers. He and Samuel Benz hired a rig, and acl, companied by Mrs. Bens drove to seven miles distant En route they alighted to gather some wild raspberries, Fish Every Friday. Poulf ry and Game. when they were attacked by rattlesnakes. They were in a rattlesnakes' den. A small terrier which accompanied them Deliveries made to all parts of the city. was bitten, and almost instantly swelled No. 2422 Washington Avenue, Ogdcn. to twice his size, Mr. and Mrs. Benz fled and called for Mr. F. to follow, but he stood his ground, and the snakes, which appeared to gather from every quarter, began to huddle round his feet and act as if they had found a long lost W. K. HOLLAND, Proprietor, friend. Mr. F. now picked np one and ordered and Mr. B. to fjet an old barrel at a house 104-l- ft Twenty-thirWall and Lincoln. bet near by. This was procured and Mr. F. into and them the it Steam In Sealer brought reptiles put Engines Boiler, romps, Xto, I will famish and erect Injlne back to English. Wlr'le in English Mr. Boiler, Heater and Machinery by oontrao and do ray work n the best Banner. Sen r machine wo and F. gave several exhibitions of his power lrlng promptly attended to at shop. over the snakes, such as wrapping them round his neck and body, and stirring them around in the barrel with his naked arm. Indianapolis Sentinel. Tus-wel- Fresh Meats of all Kinds. J A Statue of Andreas ITofer. The emperor Francis Joseph has visited the sculptor Natter's studio to inspect the statue which he is completing of Andreas Hofer, the heroic Tyrolese who defended his country and was shot by the French in 1809. The statue is to be the central figure of a monument to be erected on Mount Isel, facing Innsbruck, With a tablet bearing the inscription, "Fur Gott, Kaiser nnd Vaterland." The figure of the handsome peasant in the picturesque Tyrolese costume will stand bearing on high the Austrian flag. The bearded face surmounted by the simple broad brimmed hat is copied from a good picture of Hofer taken during his life, and now the property of the Count of Meran, who has lent it to the sculptor. The emperor was very much pleased with the statue of the popular national hero. London News. Hero. A day or two before Frederick Brokaw lost his life there was enacted at Washington, Pa., a scene more tragic and not less heroic than that. Walter Jones, aged fourteen years, and three younger companions went in bathing and got beyond their depth. Jones could swim, the others could not. But, instead of saving himself, as he could easily have done, he set about trying to rescue his drowning companions. He succeeded in piloting one of them safely to shore and was in the act of landing the others Roma's Artistic Degeneracy. when the death grip of the boys about The Rome of 1870 was dirty but dig- him bore him down and they all three nified; inconvenient for people with perished together. Pittsburg Commermodern tastes, but most comfortable for cial Gazette. those who had adapted themselves to its mediaeval ways. The Rome of 1890 is A Cow's Motherly Love Betray's Iter Calf. comfortable for nobody, the acres of In a pasture on a farm in East Hartnew palaces that were to be are mainly ford, recently, one of the cows had a calf huge, ugly tenement houses, stuccoed which no one of the farm hands was flimsies, abhorrent without and inhosable to find the day after its birth. A pitable within a tasteless waste, where search proved a failure until some one the highest virtue is fragility and the suggested a novel scheme. It was to noblest destiny demolition. The trans bring a dog into the lot, when, in all formation of Rome during the past twen probability, the cow would return to her ty years is unique in the history of civili calf to defend it The dog was brought, ration for barbarism, extravagance ami and sure enough the cow started for a corruption; never since the world begat clump of bushes, and among them the was so much money spent to do so muct calf was found, where the leaves had evil. Atlantic. concealed it Hartford Conrant UNCTI0X CITY MACHINE WORKS, Practical Founder Machinist. d Fred. I Kiesel k Company, WHOLESALE GROCERS, Liquor and Cigar Merchants Pocatello, Idaho. Ogdert,Ursh. AGENTS FOR CARL IMAM'S ffl STRATUM STORM'S Also for Wallis & Co. Mexican A Companion hand-mad- e, Custom house C - I - G - AR - S. WUOL1BAI XBLAXER8 OF Globe-Democr- PABST BREWING CO'S MILWAUKEE BEER EXPORT, SELECT BOHEMIAN AND HOFBRAU, CONSTANTLY IN STOCK, BULK AND BOTTLED. ALL CORRESPONDENCE TO BE ADDRESSED TO ODR "08DEN OrTKT Orders respectfully solicited and satisfaction guaranteed. F. J. KIESEL & CO. |