OCR Text |
Show OGDEN COMMERCIAL: WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 19. U31. D-VlLY Grande Western Pvio New York JCoi'J: Oae Lk tout iuuut Mt ti:.T v George a oti.tr dy W"1 CArr4 oup th ru!t; TLe rrt day tLjr tx diniE rxxxa arm ia fcrt u-- i U tL fcud tt e5y Railway. 14 fcu-U- wife; seoueJ day lirfj arm ia aria but tl wit tLe y cm 10 uywter ti wic; ttirxi diy i cay; m oe It aai in LubLuJ eam fourth dy good rt, L wif f tocood. llv-- a ody kooat vbcr woud fcara hmJi tlem tadtL.-a-th n ckLiirr kept aeaoutt fur itiecit W dava. Uridal coupiw rown with bath. X yort couple l . m ar cpeodtTsr their Looeym jbn tJ Lt-rJ uii ty g in U'Lt UuiA. !ut Lke Gorg s douUe caou. eJ ttem to Soo ani lty STANDARD 1 SOLID SEWS PAPEB ADVERTISING. Cbam-lIraTt-- l Lett Opiiea Ajtii. bit Ik. ......... L. frvu.. Fruvo Arn? Lett M Iivs yES, VESTIBULE THERE ARE OTHER Lt ft 11 s m: Denver, to B iM ti m m m m m n p.p. i. m, l A at 11 Ji p. m 11 :w p. p. m I ft p. mil ft ii . at ft JU p. ni . at fc:iw p. m 1!?A" ai ja t. ...11ft 26 Arntc Irrwa Eifer Lm irrwa hi Am Grau.i J uutlK :J ii (inuui JuurtH.... Ivit lmnbii'H6ifln.. ft 5i a. an Bjl'La LcMxlwiU i Jv- m Imn u ArriePo-(4u- . m I i . . tm II iu tmrt Llmvr lulu. Ar. -- ' St. Joseph, un Omaha. maiiTcHAiR cars 0 p m ft :H Kodakian Outrage. Xesr York Commercial Advertiser: One of the stuffed ted unedited Sunday alnewspapers printed on Marbattan I and, yesterday, by ft masterful stroke, ouUlid even iteelf by printing picture of New ork women in their bathing auita. Boneatb tbeee picture came of modest girls and wires of retiring citizens are printed. Theea pictures are evidently the result of kodak snap shops or the hasty sketches of an artists bidden behind an umbrella on the beach. A greater outrage upon decency and the private rights of citizens could hardly be imagined, and that ft public journal making any pretense of respectability and asking any place in respectable homes could be guilty of such GftVnding is inconceivable. The ideal "summer girl" and her bathing costume hare been pictured in the Sunday iournalr until they have long eince palled on the taste; but better girl be drawn and reIhit tiein ideal drawn line of impossible loveliness than that the wives, daughters and sisters of the citizens of New York should be caricatured in this outrageous fash- Match. Making. New York Ledger: The matches of which it ia our cue to speak are not of the kind supposed to be made in heaven and which some libelous person say are tipped with combustible elements in a lower locality. In short, they are luci fer matcher, of which so many billons are manufactured annually. of Austria, the principal mutch-make- r the old world, produces no lees lean 2,500 tons of them every rear for expor tation merely. In this country we use, it is computed, between 500 and 600 millions of matches daily, at the rate of ten per day for each unit or the sum total of our population. In England the individual average is only eight per day; but then we are such wholesale sale smokers. A Human Jlermaid. Philadelphia Record: The Xatatorium can boast of a veritable human mermaid in the person of a winsome maid who can truthfully lay claim to only eighteen summers. She mastered the difficulties of swimming in three lessons and then took to long distance diving as naturally as a fish. Now Professor Payne is will ing to wager any amount that she can stay under the water longer without tak ing a breath than any woman in the world. On a trial dive the other day the little lady remained under the water three minutes and five seconds. She has frequ Jntl f swam under the water from one end of the tank to the other and then back again. The girl's parents are well known society people and are proud '. " Only One London Season. New York World: The world at large has four seasons, but London only one, and this is now at an end. The ministers have eaten their annual white bait dinner, parliament is prorogued, My Lord Tomnoddy and the Hon. Chawles Pomposity, M. P., have rushed frantically of to Sootjaud to kill grouse that cost more'than the expensive guns that slay them, and the whole fashionable world ia it of town. John Bull boasts of the Hritish constitution, but is governed in fictbsome extremely grotesque fads. - I J LTraj.i ten tempteth the small boy, and the robin hunter, but the Newspaper rideth in the pocket of the ' ra. m. the crowd at the windows of the Newspaper Advertiser. iv 1LT LASB. AVD 30 a. m arm Ugoes & BMtu-uiii- f a, bea. The Sign Fence stretcheth far across the medow waste, 1 00 p, m., it) JO a. m.. Alauar tW suo V- - p. (iq, Paa. Ad Union Pflcific trains leave Ogden Lnion depot City When Interested apply toThe Commercial Publishioff Co. i.nil will arrivA as follows Wyoming Division. am am :10 e.;:j tu pm p m ft HU Active. raatmnu Park Utir.. ... Local Pacilic Exproea ha. Salt am am 8:10 11:45 4:.S5 p fj p m 'hfparm, zm am alley and Park City..... No. 8 No. 7 Aatuciauuftw 9:25 a m 6:10 p m p m TICKET BROKER Railroad Tickets Bonght, Bold aad vo au poutia, i 1L a, CIS Stras t4 Twanty-firtT&lephoaa. o r Finest Billiard Hall in Utah. Up Stairs, over 322 25th St COME AND SEE US. I. G. PROUDFIT. The New Brunswick. mmws Idaho Division. Thrifty Mark Twain. Indianapolis News: Myron Reed, now in Detroit, is quoted in an interview as saying that he met Mark Twain m Lon don and that he is "all doubled up with rheumatism but is the same philosopher He told me that he had quit as ever. for nothine and was going to and he is uo irfit. full nav for his work ing it" This must be regarded as Mark's hugest joke. He would double up witb Uucrhtar surelv if he could hear Mr, Reed solemnly quoting him as quitting wnrkini? Tor notninz ana going 10 irnt full nav for his labor hereafter, if ever there was a sordid spirit it is Twain. His grip on the dollar can make the eagle scream any day. He is a millionaire and insatiable. All of his humor he has carefully sold for tne nignest, mnrirat. value. One associates humor with a generous, or even prodigal, carefully weighs and n.oftsnres every bubble, and none gets away without an equivalent. Mozart's Musical Criticism. From a Berlin letter: Mozart was on a visit to a monastery, says the Dabeim Kalendar. During mass he listened to the feeble execution of the bear lo organ player, and could hardly Sit OUt the SerVlOO. Alieriuaeakuofiwi and took the aari Mmnrt to dinner, how he liked the to inquire opportunity "He plays quite in Bibical fashion," j; said Mozart. - These Writers Were Paid Well. trn.,T iothnt" ARkea tne prior. tiia Ian, hand does not know what the Cin3innati Commercial Gazette: The was the repiy. is largest sum ever paid for a single novel ight hand doing," is said to have been f'200,000 to Alphonse How Marbles Are Made. Daudet, for "Sappho," published in 1884. Cornhill Magazine: Almost all the Eighty thousand dollars were received muuoo v"o.u- by Victor Hugo for "Les Miserables" marbles wun wnicn uuio or season, on out season and (18G2), published in ten languages. Lord selvee in Beaconefield received 8tX,00) each for are in places, and shndy pavements "Endymion" and "Lothair." George mn.ln nt. OIorRtein. Germany. There Eliot received $10,000 for "Middlemarch," are many large agate quurrit s and mills and Charles Dickens $37,500 for "Edwin n that !iei?ntxrnood. ana me muse m Drood." urnod to good account in provum g me ... iron nail men of Worcester and Staffordshire thft TiTO- ViQvn ofmntf A(7flinflt, posed reduction of wages. The strike affects 8,000 men and may eventually auect other trades. rlinf rinfo Bardsley's Peculations. Philad3lphia, Aug. IS. Before the council's investigating committee today Governor Pattison told what he knew about Bardsley when he (Pattison) was president of the Chestnut Street bank. It was very little. The city opened an account with the bank, but no interest was paid Bardsley. The first intimation they had that the sum of money deposited was state money was when the bank was called upon to hie a f 100,000 bond. In 1889 Bardsley took out certain certificates of deposit, and it was upon these interest was paid. The first intimation Pattison had that the bank was paying Bardsley interest was when the cashier oame to him and said Bardsley wanted his 3 per cent, on money. The bank could notl afford to pay this and the account was withdrawn. Examination by experts was then continued. Their testimony showed ttiat Bradsley in addition to his various illegal sources of profit, appears to have had the use of It belonged 5054,000 for two months. to the sinking fund, being the proceeds of sales of loans to pay the city's debt. iiradsloy, instead of at once paying the money into the treasury, loaned it out at interest for the period mentioned. Wire Pulling1. Vienna, August 18. The Swiss, Aus trian and German delegates on Saturday last discussed the French-Swispro posals in connection with the projected commercial league, but it is now defi nitely announced they are unable to s agree and decided indefinitely to postpone negotiations. The news of the rupture produced a deep impression in political circles at Rome, Switzerland has been Italy's best customer the last two years. It is openly stated if Switz erland continues to refuse to grant the concessions demanded by Austria and Germany that the value of any commercial arrangements made at Munich between Auptria.Germany and Italv will be greutly impaired, as it was understood the arrangement made at Iierne or Vienna wera to form basis of the eDtire scheme. Italy is a large consumer of German and Austrian manufactures who naturally desire to secure her tra'V, while they buy little of Italy The lat ter b willingness to join a commercial league, which would injure her best customer for the benefit of her poorest, mystifies all outsiders, though it may be perfectly clear to those who are pulling the wires at the present moment. A Psychological Study. Something like twenty years ago a negro boy was born on one of the Sea islands off ths South Carolina coast. A human being more stupid, to have at the same time good sense, could scarcely be imagined than this black boy apparently was. He seemed as he grew Into his teens to be absolutely too dull to talk. He could not understand a direction that was given to him if it contained more than a few words. Yet this boy, Tony Hamilton, has lived to set at naught most of the theories about human education and training. He seems almost to prove that there is an underlying nat- nral sense or faculty in particular direc tions that is either above or below all the sum of human education and in struction that can be poured into chil dren. At any rate the faculty displayed by Hamilton, whatever it is, is outside of all human training. That much is certain. When Hamilton was old enough to work he shipped on a steamer that made trips from a South Carolina port to New York. The captain of this steamer sent the boy to a friend of his, a horse trainer, Mr. William Lakeland, telling him that Tony liked horses and wanted employ ment to work among them. Something was found for him to do. But he had no companions, never seemed to talk to anybody unless it was to the horses among which he spent his time. He did what "Mr. Billy" told him to do and kept his month shut After a while, nobody knows how, Hamilton seemed all at once to be a good rider for horses in a race. First a stable owner offered him $3,500 a year. Then the late Senator Hearst oflsred $0,000 a year. The strange boy would not make the change till he had consulted Mr. Billy. Next August Belmont attempted to get the boy for $10,000 a year. Once more Mr. Billy told him to take it and he did so. This contract ia still operative, and Hamilton is the most cele brated jockey in America. He earns aa much more riding outside horses, so that this colored boy, who to all who attempt to talk to him seems to scarcely comprehend the commonest' English, has an income of $20,000 a year, "and gets rid of the money as though be found it in the road." At the same time there are hundreds ef thousands of lawyers, ministers, teachers and college graduates who would be only too glad to get as many hundreds a year u Hamilton does thousands. (loo-tor- lBDn-I- 1 TlRPARTfl Butte No. 7 No. 9 No. 5 and Cactie Cache Portland Expret.. 12:20 p Mail Sid n Valley Valley Accommodation m MINERS! m am 2:15 Ex A-- ANT 12 :15 Lake And Omaha Express 1 M am No. 10 Cache Vsllpy Mnil 9:10 am No. 16 C .cbe Valley Accommodation ft :15 p m 2 Ticket Broker Railroad and Steamship AttlTU. Utah Division. No. i- -rii Mail No. -- Kutte, Cacue GEORGE W. JONES, 11 s uiraiwi r8ft Man io. No. Atlantic hiiiriiw...., No. 122 Park City Kii reft. No. ir No. Butte EjireeR No. B 1 aeha tallpyand No. o Atlantic r--i press London Strike. London. Aug. 18. The wrought thii Lau City oaearaiBf Asrv, Kail Uamber of ths americaa am zfi iW am L.imited last mau Pacific i'ipra Salt Lake Ezprtwa .no. l No. 7 No. 121 weed. Im, Mp.L ij T. TDIE TABLE. U. but the in his Newspaper. Railway traveler is engrossed Wherefore the use of the Newspaper is the beginning of Advertising wisdom. Printer's Ink. s, , ii BIXORia AKD WAlafTB. LaT SaH Lake. 8 0 a- - m., rtarcin, arrtr an ljlko c an p. m. mialCAM POBK, FtOVO. FkntOVTLLB. TBUTLS XT. PLIatlNT MAKTI AM01AL1NA Lmts Otfdra h Jfi i. m retamina--. arrlr Oguen 6 Au ii. m U. ;. J. H. BENNETT. lK)IHt sight he mingleth with The Effect of Dress. New York World: One of the topics circles proposed for discussion in reform the Sys Effect Its and Upon "Dress is, tem." There is o distressing generality about this, and the mind rather wanders in ottempting to ascertain what dress and whose system are intended. Looking to the contest as philological Assyranhwologists do in deciphering woman s it is clear that ian arrow-headdress is meant, but why discuss an effect which has been so often proved? At least 10,000 standard worns establish that woman's constricts her thorax, plnvs the deuce, scientifically conspeaking, with her diaphragm and for a verts that which nature intended walk into something little better than a wabble. True, ten times ten inouBana lnvlv creatures, all health and spright- liness. are found, but science says these are but beautiful exceptions. Some other system, therefore, must oe mf ant. and what can tnai, one De oui hnvs the crarment? ConBtnc tion of the chest is bad, but, paralysis of pocket is fatal. t. latoraatkta ALat-K- ki OGDLH . small balls for experts to "knuckle do wn" with. The stone is broken into small cubes by blows of a light hammer These small blocks of stone are thrown V. K ehnrolfiil into the honner of 8 small mill, formed of a bedstone having 'tin onrfrinii rrrml'Arl With eccentric fuT- rows; above this is a "runner" which is of hard wood, having a level race on un lower surface. The upper blobU is made baincr delivered ' " W " f W f lv.ofwntw where bedstone the the grooves upon the marbles are being rounded. It takes about fifteen minutes to finish a bushel of good marbles ready for the boys' knuckles. Une mm win iurn ouv ioo,-po- r tartr e. . Laare Ovdra. The Sandwich Signs man is sometimes in The penalty for such an unparalleled misuse of "illustrated journalism," aside from that which may be visited upon the ewspaper by the persons offended, is the execration of the entire public. ft Taaiva. - Thol"Wav"side Sign ion. Tax Trailine Dresses. Boston Herald: A tax on trailing dresses! How is that, Mr. City Authority? The sanitary board of Vienna seta us th example by proposirg this measure to restrict a most dangerous and unhealthy fashion. It is feared, however, that the most impost would be rather diflicult of collection, but, as a menace to the general h with of a great city, this sweeping up of mud and nastinees should be controlled by fair means or foul. The silly women who drag the dirt of the streets into bouses should be taxed, or punished in some way. Itidicule never has any effect on fashion. But suppose roadame was obliged to pay her dressmaker for this extro length of a street gown; how soon would it be 'ere she cut it short and voted it an absurdity not worth paying for? Let there be a tax by all means it might pay for an extra bench or two on the publio garden. UrePatio 11 j ml ? p. m p. m ft .ift p. m i B 11 :1ft p. m p. m' ftii . . to all Taaocaa Letr LjTill a piu &pri'-. I WJ L)T (iUtlWutal Hot Sprinja Time Card. 1 10 p. a Att'. ( rrau 1 Junrtxia ... t HUt.m 1 Junction.... 4 u The Union Pacific Railway eonipaoy mi t A'.Qf. m Amwdrwo U r. ....... run Lmt Orawu tiff. ....... h ti a. m followg: p. m Lftav train to the SpricgB 1 40 p. m 104 m. m Lear Hot Proia Ogdwi Loar Prove S :10 p. tu 10 a. 12 .20 p. m; 4 Jb p. m 12 JO a. at Arm. Salt Laka 8 5:0 p. m. . m, Leare Salt Laaa, 4 : . at p. m 12 7 ft a) p m' I JO a. m ArfiT Oirin 10:15 p. m. p. m. The motor ia not in operation. LOCAL RAINS. if sealed, deceiveth for a moment, but the Newspaper is read and hearkened unto. passer-by- I x. Tho Circular well-know- n Uul j TEAIM. 1 ArtaCBaa llnm Lt Lett 4 Siruitf...... ALL n tJi. Our Famous Dining Cars j p. -- indi-ration- Hand-Bil- l litereth the vestibule, but the Newspaper talketh with every member of the family. Kansas City, jLmcoln, - WAYS OF ADVERTISING. Tho THUVS St Louis, LtnSnut ra to ctrtd and tLfn toallNiagara youc l alis, that gildl Mecca of feint Lnd Captain aumed eotnttaed of tLe llurioic the ii. factors of the comiry of cbangin the figurehead ar tLii-kicf the ship to n ima;e of Cupid. fh hundreds of bruin! Ilurioun cam. coupi each fason. The ehactre woulda be particularly appropriate, a the are that Captain John wul be bridal trip over the line on 1 UkiC own Ut one of these day. ! Chicago, U Lsricg jolly eiaiply go tbrxuii the lake Jn GAUGE. CTEEEXT TDIE TABLE lt al. wk crn-iic- mm I si utah Central Railway to Park 9 tort Line 59E PANORAMIC LLXE On and OF THE YEST. October 26. after tiasannrAr and ,i . ISM. n ; wiu riui mm iuuuwh; iitju. uuu PASSKNOHa Leave Salt Lake , Lieave r arit t;ity arrive at Park City WTive at oait L,ane : City. .1. Octagon Drill, Steel. Miners Picks. : TRAIN B. S :00 a. m o FEKIOHT TRAVS. i) p. m Portable Forges. Leave Bait Lake 7 KM a. m Leave Park City 410 a. Arrive at Park City 12:50 d. Lake mve at bait 3:45 p. rwelve suburban trains daily between I Lake City and Mill Creek and Susrar House. All Deoule oln to Park City will find it tt their interest to take this line. Offices and Depot : Corner 8th South and Main street, Salt Lake City. T. J. Mackintosh. Striking Hammers. 4 on n. m 10:30 am (?. Anvils. Vices. Tents. F. and P. A. Wheelbarrows. RAILROADS And evrvthing in your line at bed-roc- k prices at GEO. A. LOWE'S PIKE'S PEAK ROUTE 2320, Washington Avouue. STANDARD GUAGE Ask mr avenla for W. I,. Tlnnttln. If not lor sal. In Tonr nlncn n mltsi,... dealer to send Tor catalogue, securein.. the atfenry, and (el them for you. PUEBLO Ml PiUBSTITGTE.U BETWEEN DENYEE, CCLOHADO SPRINGS IT-TA- AND .'.ALT LAKE CITY, flGHFV PACIFIC COAS1 and all ncrth- - UUULil, W8et tK)iuts. VIA da. , r.EADVILLE, ASPIN aud GLEN SPRING!. WOOD SCENERY Unsurpassed LinequaUed. Through Pnllman 81eeten and Pullmari Tourist cars between Denver aa9 San Francisco Through, the heart of the Bosky Mountains tiie most comfortable, the safest, and the roo'es. grandest of all tor rates,J.D. descriptive pamphlets, etc., call on address KENWOKTHI, g;euer.l agent. eania r e aonte, wait Liaxe iy, oi H. COLLBBAN, Sprintrs, Colo. ( MAS. M, Denver, Colo, LH.H, eneral manager, Coloradr general passenger it agent, NIL WHY IS THE L. DOUGLAS SHOE S3 BEST SHOE THE IN THE WORLD FOR THE MONEY? It ) a seamles Rhoe. with nn tjulc nr w. thren1 to hurt the feet; made-o- f the best line calf, stylish ana easy, and oecaust we --nake more ehoet of Ihi grade than any other manufacturer, It equals hand-sewe- d shoes costing from A4.UU to 5.00. itand-sewe- d, tne nnett can vs genuine mi VmJm shoe ever offered for as.nu; equals French which cost from $H.oiito $18.00. Imported shoes Iland-Kewed GA 00 Welt lhoe, fine calf, Stylish. comf(trtobln and durable. The best hoc eTer ottered at this price j same (trade as custom-made shoes costing from W.()0 to f'J.OO. CO 0andPolice Short Farmers, Railroad Men Letter Carriers all wesrthem: flnecalf. seamless, smooth Inside, heavy three soles, extension edge. One pair will wear a year. cnii do Detter snoe ever orrerea d.nne this price i one trial will convince those who want a shoe for comfort and service. 8'i.OO Worklngman's shoes CO areand very strong and durable. Those who five given them a trial will wear no other make. S'A.OO and S1.73 school shoes are worn bv the bovn everywhere: they sell on their merits, on the Increasing sales show. linim-seweti snoe, ww aWCi VI I wS lMinirolft. vervstvllsh: etiualsKrench lmuorted shoes costing from $4.un to Sfi.mi. I.ndies' i.ML S'j.OO and 81.73 shoe for Hisses nre the best line Uoiigola. Stylish and durable. Caul lot). See thut W. L. Douglas' name anil price are stamped on the bottom of each shoe. 7a THE CHICAGO Milwaukee & St. Paul Vi RAILWAY Is Kn th only line rnnning Solid Vestibnled.Stnam- DeaTod and t.lectric-lii?lite- d Trains Daily Dexween i nieago ana umana, compose of Magnificent Sleeping Cars and The Finest Dining Cars in Dnuel the World. UWjo S. EVERYTHING Any fnrther information as to Rate n etc., will be cheerfully fnrnished by ALEX MITCHELL, flAG FIRST-CLAS- - T. CI S Main F. Street. 'ii Far Commercial Agent, POWELL, TraTeling Agent. Salt TjhUa f!itv HOLD W. So 3 BY & SONS CO. Wiialiiiiijton Ave., Utjilen. H. WRIGHT |