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Show OGDEN DAILY COMMERCIAL: TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1. 1891, AS 3 jtSE. YOUTH f fehaa S.U tLr i nrlt W roan. U4. ai.4 3 ti l 4 fjtjt, tbroe& which Uc tie a irvp i water l A &a ti dcl foe ai.1 I aa ujTi it Lm a tear. La been ran over Usually wLee a a tg-.- t traia vl five cars the ly o-- r ucl aits oa what is left of hiia. With the ci tL c:rj-r- ' inqoebt. that l what haj yeul U Jacob Ka?,n. NcTertiK.lt be is uoc t'--e worse for bis remark Ae iper.CL?e. Nature mde EJ.H very thin man, aul to this fact he owes Lu kfe. Khn i shout twenty-tw- o years ell, and is a jonrneymaa baker. He is not very Uli, bnt hi thin-nee- a is a standing joke ia the neighbor- A4 t(ci7FMMtiu.Ud.u vcryUcat VYi.it Lad JrEcy been about ia the rid Cm dfaJ woman's Louse? YVLfct was aL t.jre. i rarryiuguS beueaih Ltfr ciuai? Way was tU C(KU, Iki. TB tGOd BbUSt ber heart lUng? Why dii tie ta-f kn l with mh treuillic to Ler own VVi J1 ti wuruj u old. U4. fcad Lt tree cabin wiiho&t dans; to back? r brows. bed be she What ber did ova ia bii JL&d J im purt fa cui. Ud. i all ti hind the carta: lJ What Lai aLa Uxa re down; TWm i--r lur boot rut r. ui -- lwi. i&4 u cut tii Creep botiMt ud tau. LLf (,Uc l&era. trtobda aatoiig-Cod (raat ) tt tur tber U vaa jiMiMg. Tor Baoordec Hw tij tu fc Mealing d JENNY. It ni The cabin, poor Let warm and cozy, vu fall of ft Lalf twilight, thracgb which the object of Le interior were but dimly visiUd by tint glimmer of the ember which Bickered on the hearth and reddened the dark rafters overhead. The fisherman's net were hinging on the walL Some houidj pots and pica twinkled on a rough ahclf in the comer. Beside a great bed with long, failing enrtaina, a mattress waa extended on a couple of old benches on which fire little children were asleep like cherubs in a neat By the bedaide, with her forehead pressed against the counterpane, knelt the children's mother. Che was alone. Outside the cabin the black ocean, dashed with stormy snow-flake- s, moaned and murmured, and Ler fcuhband was at sea, i From his boyhood he had been a fisherman. Ilia life, us one may say, had been daily fight with the great waters; for every day the children must be fed, and erery day, rain, wind or tempest, out went bis boat to fish. And while in bis four sailed boat be plied bis solitary task at sea his wife at home patched the sails, tnended the nets, looked to the books or watched the little fire where the fih aoup waa tailing. As aoon as the five children were asleep she full upon ber d knees and prayed to heaven for her in bis Ktrule with the waves and darkness. And truly such a life as bis waa hard. The likeliest place for fish waa a mere speck among the breakers, sot more than t svice as large as his own cabin a spot obscure, capricious, changing on the moving desert, and yet which bad to be discovered in the fog and tern' jiest of a winter night by sheer skill and knowledge of t.':o tides and winds. And there while tLe gliding waves ran punt like emerald serpents, and the gulf of darkness rolled and tossed, and tlu Btraining ringing groaned as if In terror there, amid the icy seas, he thouut of bis own Jenny; and Jenny, in her cottage, thought of him with tears. She was thinking of him then and praying. Tiie seagull's harsh and mocking cry distressed her, and the roaring of the billows on the reef alarmed her tonl. But she was wrapped iu thoughts thoughts cf their poverty. Their little children went barefooted winter and Bummer. V'heat bread they never ate, only bread of barley. HeaveUo! the wind roared like the bellows of a forge, t and the echoed like au nnviL She wept and trembled. Poor wives whose husbands are at seal Uuw terrible to say, "My dear ones father, lover, brothers, sous are in the tempest!" Bnt Jenny was still more unhappy. Her husband was alone alone without assistance on this bitter night. Iler children were too little to assist him. Poor mother! Now she says, "I wish they were grown up to help their father!" Foolish dreaui! Iu years to come, when they are with their father in the teiujiest, ehe will say. with tears, "I wish they Were bat children still!" night bus-ban- scot-oas- ! Jenny took her lantern and her cloak. "It is time," she said to herself, "to se3 whether he is coming back, whether the tea is calmer, and whether the liiit is burning on the signal mast." She went out There was nothing to be seen barely a streak of white on the horizon. It was raining, the dark, cold rain of early morning. No cabin window showed a gleam of light All at once, while peering round her, her eyes perceived a tumbledown old cabin which showed no sigh of light or fire. The door was swinging in the wind; the wormeaten walla setuied scarcely able to support the crazy roof, on which the wind shook the yellow, filthy tufts of rotten thatch, i "Stay," she cried, "1 am forgetting the poor widow whom my husband found the other day alone and ill. I must see how she is getting on." I She knocked at the door and listened. Ko one answeeed. Jenny shivered in the cold sea wind. "She is ill. And her poor children! She has only two of them; bat she is very poor, and has no husband." She knocked again, and called out, 'Hey, neighbor!" But the cabin was Btill silent. "Heaven!" she said, "how sound she Bleeps that it requires so much to wake her!" i At the instant the door opened of itself. She entered. Her lantern illumined the interior of the dark and silent cabin, and showed her the water falling from the ceiling as through the openings of a Bieve. At the end of the room an awful form was lying a woman stretched out motionless, with bare feet and sightless eyes. Her cold, white arm hung down among the 6traw of the pallet. She was dead. Once a strong and happy mother, she was now only tha specter which remains of poor humanity after a long struggle with the world. J Near the bed on which the mother lay two little children a boy and a girl Blept together in their cradle and were smiling in their dreams. Their mother, when she felt that she was dying, had laid her cloak across their feet and wrapped them in her dress, to keep them warm wheu she herself was cold. How sound they slept iu their old, tottering cradle, with their calm breath and qniet little faces! It seemed as il nothing could awake these sleeping orphans. Outside the rain beat down in floods and the sea gave forth a sound like an alarm belL From the old crev- i t! f P it si fi. fs ei P Tt fo is m ei ha At Ai Ti he . t When she entered the cabia the eLSt were growiiig w Lite. She u.k upon it chair beside the bed. She waa very f ie; it seemed as if the felt repentaace. Iler f jrrhewl fell cpua the pjlow, and at with btvkea words, the mur-mato terse X while ouiaide the cabia moaod th savage tea. "My po-r-f man! Oh, heavens, what will he aay? lie Las already so nint h trouble. What Lave I done now? Five children on our Lands already! Their father toils and toils, and yet, as if he Lad not care enough already, 1 must jrive lam this care more. Is that ho? No, nothing. 1 Lave done wrong he would do quite ribt to beat ma. Is that be? No! So much the better! The door moves as if some one were coming in; but no. To think that 1 should feel afraid to see him enter!" Then she remained absorbed in thought and shivering with the cold, unconscious of all outward Bounds, of the black cormorant, which passed shrieking, and of the rage of wind and sea. All at once the door flew open, a streak of the white light of morning entered, and tha fisherman, dragging his dripping net, appeared open the threshold, and cried, with a gay laugh, "Here comes the navy!" "Vour cried Jenny; and she clasped ber husband like a lover, and pressed her mouth against his rough jacket "Here I am, wife." he said, showing in the firelight the good oatured and contented face which Jenny loved so well. "1 have been unlucky," be continued. "What kind of weather have yoa hadr "Dreadful." "And the fishlngT "Bad. But never mind. I have yon in my arms again, and I am satisfied. 1 have caught nothing at alL I have only torn my m The deuce waa in the wind tonight. At one moment of the tempest I thought the boat waa foundering, and the cable broke. But what have you been doing all this timer Jenny felt a shiver in the darkness. "I?" she said in trouble. "Oh, nothing; just as usual 1 have been sewing. I have been listening to the thunder of the sea, and I was frightened." "Yes; the winter is a hard time. But never mind it now." Then, trembling as if she were going to commit a crime: "Husband," she said, "our neighbor is dead. She must have died last night, soon after yon went out She has left two little children, one called Wjlhtlm and the other Madeline. The boy can hardly toddle, and the girl can only lisp. The poor, good woman waa in dreadful l want" The man looked grave. Throwing into a corner his fur cap, sodden by the tempest: "The deuce!" he said, scratch-- 1 ing his head. "We already have five children; this makes seven. And al- ready in bad weather we have to go without our snppcr. What shall we do now? Bah, it is not my fault; it's God's doing. These are things too deep for me. Why has He taken away their mother from these mites? These matters are too difficult to understand. One has to be a scholar to see through them. Such tiny scraps of children! Wife, go jind fetch them. If they are awake, they must be frightened to be alone with their dead mother. We will bring them np with ours. They will be brother and sister to our five. When God sees that we have to feed this little girl and boy besides our own He will let us take more tish. As for me, I will drink water. I will work twice as hard. Enough! Be off and get themt But what is the mat ter? Doer it vex you? You are generally quicker than this." His wife drew back the curtain. "Look!" she said. Translated from the French of Victor Hugo for Strand Magazine, Guldei at Vesuvius. A correspondent writes from Valle di Pompei: "The death of the Brazilian journalist in Mount Vesuvius has rather damaged the reputation of the guides, but it is unjust to blame all the guides and their agencies. It is true that some of them are unfit to accompany strangers, especially in times of eruption, and even the permit of the police is no security that the excursion will be a safe one. But the chief fault lies with the travelers themselves. The guide who accompanied the Brazilian correspondent has been regularly authorized to conduct visitors for the last four years, and waa considered no inexpert guide, "But, as I have often had occasion to observe, foreign visitors, and especially English young ladies, rebel against the cautions of the guides and often run and jump about on the very edge of danger. It is therefore difficult when some accident happens to define the responsibility of the guides. They are certainly not to blame if the people they conduct will not listen to them." London News. Rock Crystal. Rock crystal is plentiful in various localities of the United States. A mass of it weighing fifty-on- e pounds from North Carolina was sent four years ago to New York. The original crystal, which must have weighed 300 pounds, was unfortunately broken iu pieces by the ignorant mountain girl who discovered it. One very useful purpose to which this mineral substance is put is the manufacture of mirrors, when it can be found in big enough blocks to be sawed into slabs of snfficient size. Its superiority over glas li.-- s iu the fact that it does not, like glass, detract from the rosiness of the complexion. Every pretty woman should surely have a hand glass uf rock crystal. Washington Star. hood. Being good natared. it never angered hiia, and be waa wont to Uugh and reply that o;i)e day they would envy him for being slender. Abcnt 7 o'clock he was talking to some acquaiatances at Second and Oermaiitown avenue, when a shifting engine, drawing five heavy freight cars, came along. Just at it was almost opposite to him Kahn stepped right between the track. A doiea people shouted and screamed, and Kahn saw hi danger. Whether he suddenly realized that his remarkable thinness might be the means of saving his life, or whether it waa merely fright is not known, bat he fell Cat on his face as the engine came cp and passed over him. The engineer coold not stop and went right on, while the people stood transfixed with horror. The five cars passed over him. A policeman and a big crowd ran into the street to gather np the mangled corpse. Imagine their surprise when Kahn jumped up, spparently unhurt, brushing the dust from his new trousers. Philadelphia Press. !rt la several cf the states, notably ia of the National Penitf yivacia.the Guard displayed this summer a proficiency ia drill aaJ a gractrtl bearing that Some of the regiwere gratfyicg ments showed improved drill and discipline since last year. t. ' Cashier, Put Him Oat. Lucien Saniel, a foreigner, is editor of a little socialist sheet in New York city. He is also a delegate from America to the international socialist congress at Brussels. So far as our information extends, Mr. Saniel never did an honest Aaotbar War Bibla 61017. George Althisar, a veteran of the war month's work with his hands in his life, and now filling the place of letter car- though he calls his paper a workingman's rier at the poetoffica in Port Jervis, at advocate. He gets his living by howltended the Grand Army reunion at De- ing at society. troit, and took occasion while there to He professed to Bpeak for the people of restore to a comrade a loug lost Bible with America in an oration delivered at the an interesting history. The Bible was socialist congress. He told his auditors originally a gift to David Webster, a Michigan volnnteer, from his mother on that in the great nation of the United the eve cf his departure for Virginia in States $70,000,000 waa yearly stolen from 1861. Webster lost the book at the sec- the persons who produced it He also ond battle of Bull Run. enlarged on the enormous wealth of this It Ml into the hands of a Confederate country. Then he made this stupendous soldier of Stonewall Jackson's command statement: "Amid all that wealth, misnamed Hayes. Following the mothincreases so fast that the bind of the er's inscription to her son on the fly ery leaf the soldier wrote a brief statement free and home of the brave is in reality of the circumstances under which it ahelL" Now, it is altogether probable that if came into his possession. He abandoned his knapsack containing the book on the Mr. Saniel was forced to make choice battlefield at Bristow's station. between going to the place he mentions Althisar picked the volume np and or continuing to sponge his living off hia had carefully preserved it for twenty-si- x fellow men iu America, he would elect years as an interesting relic of a des- to stay in the United States awhile perately fought battle. He was for- longer. Such a test would show his estunate in finding Comrade Webster at the Detroit reunion and in restoring to timate of his own truthfulness. But it him a relic doubly precious because the is a pity such fellows as this should be mother who gave it had died. Cor. allowed to land in America. As a nation we are not perfect, and there is sufNew York Sun. fering among the poor partly through Swarmed on the Farmer. their own fault mostly through their Peter Gross, who lives near York own ignorance; but it is a fact that Springs, Md., had been working hard there is lees suffering from poverty here all the morning and about 10 o'clock than in any other country. It is a fixed concluded to take a nap under a cherry tree. He had just fallen into a doze fact too, that in this republic everywhen he heard a buzzing sound. He body who is willing to work honestly awoke to find a hive of his own bees can in time "catch on" and make a livswarming on his head. Rushing into ing if he tries faithfully. This country .the field he thought that by covering his is very much what people make it for head with earth he could get rid of themselves. If Mr. Saniel thinks it is a, them. But that did not have the desired hell he ought not to come back to it effect. We can certainly spare him from our Being on the crest of one of the high midst j hills which Eurround his house, he then threw himself on the ground, gave his A neinarkable Letter. ' body a shove and down he went, rolling from which we clip the followA letter over stones, sticks and bushes, until at hist he reached the kitchen door. By ing extracts was read at the funeral of that time the bees had left him, and, al- Colonel S. N. Wood, killed some time he was very much cut and since in the county seat war in Kansas. i though bruised, none of the wounds were seri- Away back in the Kansas border trouous. Baltimore American. bles Wood was a fighter and a free state as determined and desperate as the man, Remarkable Growth of Tobacco. led by old John Brown himself. band J. W. Cook came in Saturday and told about some tobacco ho is raising. Last After the troubles were settled Colonel Wood remained a fighter. It was in the year he raised a crop of the weed, and after he cut it in tho fall suckers grew blood of the daring frontiersman. Local out from the stumps. These suckers requarrels stirred his soul after state and tained their vitality all winter and in the national ones were stilled. There were spring began growing with increased not many years of his eventful life in vigor. Mr. Cook pruned them down to which he was not mixed up in some kind one to the hill and cultivated the crop. of squabble. He says it is just as good as the crop he a man of such character the Being last leaves the being planted spring, at his funeral seems strange. read letter broad and heavy, instead of narrow and of peace, a peaked as the leaves of suckers usually It breathes throughout 6pirit are. Elsberry Qlo.) Advance, gentleness and good will that one might expect from a cloistered priest or preachA Mean Swindle. er living apart from the world and rapt Newark, N. J., has a man with a novel in spiritual meditation; but from a idea of the installment plan. He sells a fighter and a lawyer, never. It clock for one dollar down and fifty cents stormy written five years ago, when Colonel was a week. In a couple of days he visits himself on his deathbed: the buyer, saying that his employer had Wood believed Mr To Family Let my funeral be as quiet sent a clock which had not been tested, possible. I do not want any show or parade. and therefore might not keep good time. as Would prefer if no show were made of my Then he takes the timepiece away, prom- body. Don't wear any mourning. I am not you see of me is only my body, ising to bring another next day, but dead. What I no longer have any use, and I cast never shows up. TJiere are about a for which It off as i would a suit of old clothes. I wish dozen cases of this kind charged to his there was a furnace where it could be reduced account in Newark alone. Philadelphia to ashes and thus dissolve itself into tu origiI , j lit - To Those Who Wish To Sub scribe, Grett in jr. A colored man died in a pauper home in New York lately, aged IU years. FILL OUT BLANK. THIS Bat what was the good of his bring so long? Life is to be counted by tha work men do, not by lmgth of days. Many SiiTn Ynr Same and Addree and acoompliah more in fifty years than Send It to L. B. Adams, other people could in a hundred. This year's crops of grain will figure away cp in the billions. Nothing less than that will suit America, the Land of manifest destiny. An agricultural paper has been making an estimate of forthcoming crops in which the corn product is put at 2,000,000,000 bushels, the wheat at half a billion and oats at 622,000,000. This will make the sum total of these three grain crops 3,122.000.000. There is not only increase in quantity of agricultural products, but also advance in price, so that the profits of agriculture for 1891 are expected to reach 1, 000,000,000. " ' ' STOVES Ve O&rden. can show you over 30 different varieties of Gasolene All who wish to give something to the ITtah University now being built in the Stoves, and of these over half City of Ogden from donations, are re- are Exclusive Patents owned quested to fill up the following blank by "Dangler's" and cannot be and hand or mail it to L. B. Adams, found elsewhere. cashier of the Utah National bank, who is treasurer of the University fund. The subscriber will fill in such amount as he wishes, and feels he can give toward such a great educational institution. ifi t1 order. y. 3 Ci K 3 Ut 3 r 3 a n" ft r n o 3r 3Ci O cr c t (A n' 3 O Ci 3 P 3Ci C o w . rO 3 . o ft 3-- 3 ft1 -- ft cr nin rr 2. 0 ft v 3 3 3C- 3- w C w 31 Ln T3 ft " - - ft in ' TJ Ci Ci . , 3rr , V- ADDRESS: - ft M to . W. W. FUNGE rrejiariiiff for Hot Weather 2441-2447-24- The following telegram from White-wrigh- t, Texas, indicates that the people in that vicinity do not intend to be caught unprepared: Whitewrioht, Other Seasonable Goods at Bottom Prices. c Ci '. HAVE A FEW, 1 small and medium sized, Solid Oak Refrigerators, we will Close Out at less than our Wholesale Prices. If you have not purchased yet, it would pay to see these. They are the Celebrated "PEER-LESS.- " c 0 IA ad- fE re v ft c '. TJ pv 3 i ; c- ft Catalogue Sent to any dress on application. ft cr ci c t 3 n wO . nw Po v-P a Ci to for these. -- O " for "off' Brands than you have Ci P v DONT pay MOPE o C cr 3C "I 0 We will make our Prices so low that they will get your June Texnp, 49 Washington Avenue, Ogden, Utah 2, 1391. Chamlxrlain A Co., De Moines, Totra: Ship us at once one gross Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea rem edy, 25 cent size, and two dozen 50 cent size. We are entirely out end have bad . "t.L; nearly iony cans tor it mis weeK. O.Y. Rathbcn&Co. A rare chance, for sale, one This is just such a medicine as every family should be provided with during of the best milling privileges the hot weather. It never fails and is For sale by Wm. in Utah. The mill can be run pleasant to tak Driver &. Son and all leading druggists. night and day for the entire Special Attractions! 1 . vear. No lack of the best Mill and machinery wheat. Physicians make no more fatal mistake than when they inform patients thtt new, and situated in the best nervous heart troubles come from the wheat growing region of Utah. stomneh and are of little consequence. on 300 feet Washington Dr. Franklin Miles, the noted Indiana rods in his 20 has the Avenue, deep $15,000 proven specialist, contrary at w book on "Heart i iisease," which may of buildings on the ground, at be had freo at H. A. Walker's, who guarantees and recommends Dr. Miles' un $100 per foot. Insurance written in First equalled New Heart Cure, which has the largest sale or any heart remedy in the Class Companies. world. It cures nervous and organic on Real heart disease, short breath, fluttering, Money to A Fatal Mistake. - r- -, an pain or tenderness in the side, arm or shoulder, irregular pulse, fainting smothering, dropsy, etc, His Restorative Nervi ie cures headache, fits, etc. M.les' Nerve and Liver Pills. Act on a new principle regulating the liver, stomaeh and bowles through the nerves. A new discovery. Dr. Miles' Pills ppeedity cure billiousness, bad taste, torpid liver, piles, censtipa, tion. Unequaled for men, women, children. Smallest, midest, surest. 50 doses, 25 cents. Samples free, at H. A street. Walker's, on Twenty-fourth The Morninsr Cocktail Estate. R. 211i J. at Broom $850. bar. ushington Avenue. D. GILL New tour room frame honse, $100 cash. balance $iVU!i per month. New five room frame house, $100 cash. balance $25 per month. New six room frame house, Monroe ave$2,650 nue, $l,liiu cash, balance good terms. $1,700. New fur room brick, $700 cash, or will take tliiR amount in trade, balance of $100) at $16.00 per month. Who takes $1,100. Schooner beer oe a glass . IIAS BARGAIN'S FOR EVERYBODY, AND IS SELLING THEM, TOO. Taken before breakfast, creates a false injurious appetite. A wineglass full of Dr. Henley's English Dandelion Tonic taken before meals strengthens the digestive organs and enables you to relish a hearty meal without injury to the stomach. P HUNTER $1,900. $750. it? Full acre, near Monroe avenue. Snap. 50 feet wide near it ao,d for $'400. Ten acres, level, water rights, near canal, Rood soil. No alkali. per acre. 200 acren. There is money in This land. For comfort and durability wear the $20.00 Putnam mining shoes. Advertisers get results at home and If von want lot handy to business I have them nal elements and not have to be buried, filling Ledger. plan. the air with noxious gases, endangering the abroad when they usethecolumsof The onIfthe installment you want a house on monthly payments, I You can lives of the living. A Rrast Sewing Machine. bury only my body. Commercial. have them. as life from it. I always departs have departed If you want, a farm or farm property. I have A sewing machine that was exhibited Use Dr. Martin's Summer Complnint from death. I am with you. I witness your at low prices and on eay terms. in Boston a few days ago stitched easily every act. Choer up: "death Is only transi- Dysentery and Diarrhoea remedy. War- them Now is the time to buy property and I am kept and rapidly through layers of leather tion:" "man, though apparently dead, still ranted to cure every case. For sale by busy selling, for I have bargains. distinct entity. 1 all of an inch in thickness. In a lives:" Ilives as a conscious, druggists. feul as write this no concern for the future. 1 second trial stitches were made evenly am persuaded by study and research that life e and rapidly through a piece of birds-eyIn the spiritual world commences where It ends J. D. GILL, 2404 Washington Aw, OGDEN MANHOOD RESTORED. s of an inch thick, here: hence the advantage of well spent lives, maple "8ANATIVO," the works. of full good sewed and in a third test the machine Wonderful xpmilith Since God sentenced mankind to "eat bread KemMr, is sM Willi ft of through a layer of brass FOR INSURANCE GO TO Written Guarantee In the sweat of their own brows," It has been a to cure all Neivoufl an inch thick, placed between pieces of struggle to make somebody else do the sweatWen as such Heaven and hell are conditions, not ing. leather. New York Journal. Mfniory, Loss of Brain Power, Headache, places. My religion is a sincere desireIn to do Lost ManWakefulnpa, this right to do the most possible good hood, Nervousness, LasA recent order from an Australian 1 In I the "fatherhood believe sincerely world. situde, all drains and firm for 20,000,000 feet of lumber will of God and the brotherhood of man." As 1 Before After Use loss of power of tiie AGENT FOR Generative Oreans in PhotOKraphfil from llfr. have lived, so I am willing to die. For these large vessels to carry reasons require tveuty-fiv- e either sex. caused hv I wantno my religiousceremoniesover or the excessive developments in body. Let ministers and churches quit worry- ase of totmceo, youthfulor indiscretions, it Recent extensiveCentral stimulants, which ultimately opium, Office and South ing themselves about tho after life and go to lead to Innnntty, Consumption and Invauitv. tut up mining interests in form to carrv in the vest pocket. Price America have led to large shipments of work and solve the problems of this life. If in aconvenient we a 6 order for With or f" every H. give package, AND possible, prepare the people to live here: teach written guarantee to cure or refund the timber from this country. five-eight- three-eighth- one-eight- h W. R. WILLIAMS Sun Fire Boys in Crawfordsville, Ind., have a balloon parachute craze, and cats are daily sent np. the parachute being so arranged that it will detach itvelf from the balloon at a certain time. The cats are not taking kindly to this aeronautic mania. The famous manufactory of porcelain is likely to be closed. The sale of this style of china in said to have fallen off so greatly as to make the manufacture of it uiiremunerative. at Sevres us our duty to each other and to mankind. I cannot conceive auy commencement of this world. I can not conceive its end. Generations may come and go, but the earth will continue forever. Matter and spirit may change their form, but there Is no such thing as annihilation. I believe firmly In a future life, or rather I know there is a future life. I must quit, I hail the separation from the body, called death, as a joyful change. Read this. If you will, as the reason for rejecting all ceremonies at my funeral. I realize the hardship in parting with friends here, but 1 have hosts on the other side waiting for me. I am, beloved, yours. 8. N. Wood. Went by mall to any address. Circular free Mention this paper. Address, in plain envelope. MADRID CHEMICAL CO., Brunch Office for U. S, A. SSS Dearborn Street, CHICAGO, ILL. FOR SALE IN OGDEN, UTAH, BY money. Wm. Driver & Son, Wholesale & Retail Druggists. El? O Is scltnowlfvljfj the leading- lemertv for yiT06liAY8.J rf 1 I 9sdm Suiotor. MMonivfcT THEf.VsH8uHEM",M ONCIMNkTI.O fe bieej. t'Onnrrtica The only Faie rcmdlvfor Leacorrhora or Whites. I prescribe it and feel sfe In rvoimraemi2il PfV .femi GACRDIAN ASSURANCE CORPORATION to ell Btiflerem. A. J. b 1 ON C.K, M. D, 1 'B Hit. H, IUj, U Bold by brupuisitf, mica f .w A esots, $47,000,000. Room 11, First National Bauk, Ogdan. lor Softeninsr the Skin Allaying irritation, removing roughness wind tan and like troubles, there is nothing equal to Wisdom's celebrated Violet Cream |