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Show -- 4 ' " - " u on supEmiATunAL. up, critically examined and properly branded. This great work is to bo don by the Society l for Psychical JiesearcU In England, assisted by th branch ad United States.! The resul cicty in the will be published of the round-u- p in the Jlevtaw of Tlcvlew, which magazine will shortly publish art account of many apparitions of vari ous kinds, all well authenticated. . Peof pie throughout- the world are 'appealed to and asked to send la for critical ex ainlnatlon their ghost experiences. All family spooks fu' gorkl standing will bjy well received ahd, properly in vestigatea. Pennsylvania s alone ought to be able tp ocean steamer load a goblins. and other such tattle.' Phantasms of the living as well as shadeis of the dead a rot to be Investigated. Iievlng that where there is so muc smoke there must be wme' firO the 8 ciety named Isinakinga thorough Inve tlgation of all supernatural phenomena oncientitic linos. Ghosts the shade's of the dead are reported to have appeared from ttoie to time in alTcountrlcs and from the earliest ages down to the present time, but heretofore only to be stared at as an! uncanny sort of cattle; now they are to be studied In tho ligtt 11 , of science. There is something about the shades of the departed that, interests all members of the human family in spito cf at the subject as themselves, pooh-poowe may. There is a something about ghosts that comes home to "men's business and bosoirts," as Lord Bacon would say. Tho human soul has si, sort cf creepy longing! for ghosts. We seem tb come Into the World with the soil ready si prepared in which a belief in things at once take root. In child- 1 peruatural hood we may bo told stories about a manner of monsters, human andnima , but these soon! fado out, while all tb ghost stories stick. Sir Walter Scott says: "The genera or, it may be termed, the 'universal be lief or the Inhabitants ox lie earth in the existence of spirits separated from the encumbrance and incapacities of the body, Js grounded on the consciousness of the divinity thatv speaks: in our bosoms, and demonstrates to all men. except the few! who are hardened to tlilo celestial voice,! that th'ero is within us portion of the divine substance whichdik- not subject to the law of death! and solution, but which when the body s no longer fit for its abode, shall seek its own place as a! sentinel dismissed; from his post." 1 Leads to the uiznilXlalcwayjTbt ; - WlIE "CENSUS OF GHOSTS. ti PROPOSED I f Old World Flood The Coralhff nailroad A Vaet ItesTou That la (ow Unoccupied 4jTb Great ;vtTh .V first-clas- -- -- 8omcIIInt of Ghot Itound-Up- " V for the Society far Psychical Re- - search. 1 fCOBRESFOUDCXCB v ' Vikoimia ' TiinB.l Cifrr, Nor., Nor. It. 1801. Tne storm preuictea dti Mencrai risu, Nevada Wlssrlris, failed to material ,the d clerk of the weather ize. The has alio Riven a bUckfoye toseveral note who had mounted iprophets of lesser the storm horHe.1 sTheli bones of tho the barometers of the 'pioneers and scientists have allko been at fault. AM signs fall in idry feather." The self-wille- i with-spooks- h! ."conditions have not been unfavorable weather," as was herofora falling or tvfo ago bjr a slight hown day shower resembling ;a Scotch mist, but cannot ram an over tnei woria at onqe. ,,jlt fli'or KotnA limn nant the iOId World has jhad a monopoly of4 pluvial downpours. . In and upon this mundiine sphere like attracts like. Could we view this littio j Rlobo of ours from mo me point upon the moon with a1 telescope of the Lick Dattefn we should tirobabl y see encircling ''It in the latitudo of Kurdpe a E.ysterious 'belt not unlike those puzzling bars that streak the face of the Upland Jupiter. In the flooded regions of the Old World there must be such a gathering and of the aqueous vapors rushing togother of the earth as has caused a dearth of toriu material hi therward. The rainfall in parts of Kuropo In the past few weeks has certainly been phenomenal, but whother it will rt'sult in a Cessation of pluvial activity jfor a time or In a more shifting of the Hold of It remains ; to be seen. When 'he rains across the ' water coaso S(ain must; be hung up to wl)l need to be wrung dry and England out, while to Hhovid -tho snow off liul- I . -- I : i - ' i THE ; OF SOIfirAMBUtWM. MySTEt" In 1884, a writer on Apparitions Nineteenth Century magazine sug the Mb.a be will big garla j; that a rolloction of facts- should gested 1 )AlMUAUi bo made as tho basis of further sclentlfio Should tho scenoof this Old World investigation. I The trouble wUl .be to sneteorologic demonstration .bo shifted, determine what are facts. Unless' more V.aud we bo given In this region the than one persdn can be produced tobei.r nnutva.likiif nf thn Hhwnniitr i it unrtur. t.lin witness to the appearance of a the ' Sierra .Nevada range would be burled phenomenon- will always be spirit liable io t out of sight. For tho Central Pacific be looked upon as a mere hallu, railroad to be completely buried one cination. The society' which' hi.s whole whiter would probably be a good undertaken tho Investigation of tfc e result in a road being occult mattsers will probably, r first to thing. Jt would Salt Lake City through able to touch fairly solid pushed out from when Nevada, and across the desert region of they have made a thoroughground of the study San llernardlno county .California, to of the ilfing man at times when Los Angeles. The Mohave desert may spirit acts of the body, when it by rather "sultry" n summer, but no the bodyIndependently is In! a torpid condition; and worao than the '"submarine" deserts the mere flesh! is as near being dead unnoticed by matter as it is possible for it to become, passed through (almost, the traveling publi)" ort the Southern and still retain .vital spark.! The Pad lie road. In nof pi ace between Salt mind would seem the times to be capable at Lake and Los Angefes would a railroad of doing wondsrful things without the between thoso points pass over ground aid of such bodily organs as it seems Jylug below the lovM of the soa. The ordinarily. A day or two route would bo much pleasanter in ago I sawupon an apparently well authentisummer than that across tho Colorado cated account of a woman who is able to desert, and In winter passengers would do the finest kinds of embroidery and be free from the jfear of avalanches. other fancy needlework in thodark while and blockades felt in a somnambulic state. This woman as crushed by those who brave the nigh Sierras by described is a natural somnambulist, the Central Pacific. and while in the peculiar condition f Tho natural railroad route from the body which accompanies her Atlantic States.to California lies through sleep Is insensible to the bddily pain thi.t tho .Mohave country ana tne urst road w.ould naturally-- ' attend with Across the continent woum nave gono pins and other similar pricking: usagp. rough that way from Salt Lako had It not been Her body Is is in precisely the for the silver mlr.es of; the Coma took. condition of the body of one under ti e It was tho Immenso frelght demands of lnfluonce of artificial soranambuUsm, caused1 the scaling of the generally called hypnotism. In this j,our mines that great range at the altitude tit 0800 feet. condition tha mind appears to be able ,o II ad tho, Government constructed the go out and See of itself without ti e road at tho Xlmo (during the war) when assistance of the eyes of the body it Init became necessary! to connect the two habits. , ) t sides of the continent It would not have In- - May, 1859, was published by tbo over tho baekbono of the Sierra Royal Academy of Medicine, Paris, tit gone KTikWr. rl a CMffn li'imli Matt T Ira. l of the, caso of Madam' Plan ti i, have struck for audi paired through the report whose left breast was removed on a level and Snowless region lying to the caunt of a cancerous tumor while sbe southward of tho j range the region was in a hypnotic sleep, at that tihio. Tlia bordering the Colorado and the Mohave. known as animal magnetism. This great natural route still lies un- patient felt; no pain wou d and occupied, but it Is a great gateway to have recovered had she otherwise .the paclUc Ocoan that will not be much been j sound, However, she died n longer neglected. Tho advantages it pos- about sixteen flays, owing to a diseased sesses over a road that scales the snowy condition of vital Internal organs. The " Sierras are too great to be ignored by of the case is what is repart now roads in search! f a rohte to Call - curious Madam of Lngandre, a daughter ported ffornla. Eastern capitalists havo doubt-iles- s of the patient. Sho resided In the cou been deterred front tho fav9rable and could? not be in Paris for some f consideration ot apropositions f6r the days after mother had undergone construction of j road through this the operation. It was known th southern gateway because of the opinion J Madam Lagahdre was a somnambulistit that it is and In view of this fact, "Dr. 'prevailinganon the Atlantic aide uninhabitedi but also ah un- proposed to Dr. Chapelain that Cloquet only she he, (not inhabitable region. To this the latter assented. magnetized. This vast area of j country is uninha- und after placing her in the bited because of the isolation consequent state,. ne maae many inquiries magnetic; respectupon its being devoid of, means of com- ing Madam Plantln. Her repltej were with' munication aijy of the tradecen-- ' as follows: tors of the land In a word, because it My mother is verynmuch reduce!; has no railroad btiit it; s by no meaus she no longer lives but by magnetism, Even the parts now which sustains uninhabitable. her artificially; she h ts supposed IncapablojDf being inhabited no life in her.jV the purely desert rt?Ioh about the Sink Do young mother's U fe of the Mohavo 4woJuld J&oon bo. peopled can bo saved? thinkjyour 'Hi' '':''" to a certain extent Iveruthere a railroad ' Xo; she vfill die mornin g passing through it. Mfm would be em- early, and without agony or; suffering." tho extracseveral points' ployed at "What are the diseased parts?' tion of borax1 and kindred minerals from upon e the soil, and in the very places now Itself;Therighlungisshrunk,folded i surrounded by a s it most absolutely desortj The more ab membrane, and is floating in water,. tho desert the greater tho store off But it Is chiefly there,' said the somnamject Hoda, salt, borax I anai other mineral bulist, pointing to the inferior angle of wealth It contains. the my mother sufferls. ftbat Air this desert region? may be watered, The scalpula, no longer breathes; It is right lung bv means of artesian Wells as ls shovwn'. Is healthy; It is by; the loft dead; lung . At Ia wjilla ouun infa nABtK'V11rl ayaawu uiiv; j j t j annbaaavaj j j ttaav oases may do estapiisn.a almost any- wat-e- in the pert cardlum.' - ; where except immediately within the ! 'What Is the condition of the organs x basins In which- lie the sdtja and others of the abdomen?' ' mineral deposit, houftii the sail of The stomach and intestines are these deserts may appear' toba almost healthy;j the liver is whito and diacol. ;i pure sand, yet ioit ;is not sterile when, ored on tho sdrface. ' it. It is not leached water Is applie4 "Dr; magnetized Chapelain powerfully sand, such as Is found On the ssa beach the several times during Monor the shore of a lake J but Is gand con day, patient and hardly succeeded In makintr. taining minerals suitable for the support her When he Tfreturned on Tues ; rl liaw.. m fin of plant life. t Waterf dissolves these aWJv sleep. a'aiaaV isii w avaa oaaw mi va wwwv Miuf minerals and the plant! f 'does theirest. Jqfst expired.' ,'. The two physicians were The foregoing relate! to' but"a small, 'desirous ot verifying the descriptions of would bo open patch of tho region that sonambuljst as to the interior cond i railroad from Salt ,'the to settlement by of the body,' and obtained the coii-setlon whole conLake to Lps Angelas. ,T of the family to a stitutes' the largest area of unsettled Several physicians of Hie country new to be found anywhere in Academy of Medicine were invited to be the Union outside of Alaska. Outsldo pGfiscnt on the occasion. These deslrt d of the deserts tha road wouhl open upa to hear from Madam Lagandre's own lips country .rich In: the preclou and the the description of the internal condition useful metals, vast ranges of grazing Pof her dead matter. She was lands and many cuitlvablo yalreys alter- and In a firm! voice, without hypnotized hesitation,:, with rugged bridges of metallifer- repeated her former description. nating i to was ous rocks. There Is less and Madam Lagandre was then ted into a worthless land in this region than would roam adjoining that in which the autopsy was ,it first appear. In the mountains will was to take, place, and the door Lo the towns and camps of the miners; la in closed. continued She carefully lu the valleys the farmers and orchard- - state of .somnambulism, 'and notwithand on the elsvated plains tho stock The barrier that separated hjtr rowers. Railruii men may look at this standing the from surgeons, she followed t r ioa and shake their head "because of knife in the i Lands of the operator. H! o'n unpcsplod, butthis condition (to With the first stroke she cxclxlmed: wMi'li tbuy 'object)? is sowing; solely "to Why do they laaka an incio in tike V rc. which Is withheld. raidctle of chest when the - disease is 1n-a r !ro.!,-- cea . give it lt on the rishtthesiie?.? hibltilo for any Hera fellows in tie pablisLcd' rtr-- :rt of the case fclos.Ctscrlptloa in CS OIZOSTS. i. r.C iKD-t- n ; r tLa intar- ': t.? ' h II it - IV , - 1 ' ' do-pend- snow-shed- , After tha examination a the daughter. full report of tha a was written out and signed by all tb physlclana. Many instances equally well Authenable ticated of hypnotized persons feeingWJtb than some otherwise see In way 'to the natural organs of sight what is p freetha casaWI ing at a distance. This' being It would seem that it wound oe wen xor the Society for Psychical Eesearch to persons employ in their investigations artificially soma ambul! zed. As human their natural, condition ara beings in see and unable to through , closed doors of a Into the interior through solid flesh diin the bo ft may right patient, rection to employ the faculty of observation developed In the somnambulistic state in the search, for ghosts.: For instance, as Madam Lagandre was able to see the condition of the vital organs of her mother, and eveu when the solid wall of a roonfwas Interposed, would she not have been more likely to have been able to see the ghost or spirit of her of anyparent (In case of the existence persons kind) than wouldwood thing oftothe and see through walls of unable walls of flesh?. When the mind or soul Is In such a condition, of Independence as to be able to go out of the body and enter into arid dearly ttote things in closed and dark places, it should" be able to take seme note of brother souls that have wholly severed their connection with the earthly tenement and are flitting about in" the same condition as the soul that is Only temporarily abroad. The doctors Should have gone a step further, whil0 at it, and questioned Madam Lagandre in regard to whether, reafter the death of her mother, there coran immortal part anything mained responding to what we speak of as the soul or ghost. HAVE THESE THINGS NO INTEREST F0R YOU? Are ycii 'provided against trae winter's cold? Have you got your house in ordar? or aro you tne problem of ttxe If to a rooms to make comfortable, go in Strong for tne "HOWE winter Js it, be stove? so, and you have several heating lor ? VENTILATOR." Are you skeptical as to its great power and economy Call upon us and we will give you the names of those who used them last winter. It may be that some were disappointed in tho heater, but if nine out of every ten dpn't more than confirm our statements about the stove we will give to any charity cf this city the investigator may select twice the cost of the stove. now-ponderingo- -- a-st- , A.TA. LIFE A CHIP OFF THE SAME BLOCK. A curious thing is that chickens, pigeons, frogs and other birds and animals cari bo hypnotized. Lord Bishop Harvey Carlisle In an article on "The Unity of in the Nineteenth Nature," published Century, in 1879, Is inclined to believe that all life, both animal and vegetable, has proceeded from the same protoplasm, and says: "The oneness of the creative mind Implies a corresponding oneness in the created work." On this point DV All man, president of the British Assocla-tlon, in a lecture on biology, says: "All recent research has been bringing out in a moro and more dectsivo manner the fact that there is no dualism in life that the life of the animal and the life of the plant are, like their protoplasm, in all essential points identical." This assertion Dr. All man illustrates by a curious fact, namely, that pjants, like animals, are capable of being acted upon by anaesthetics; the sensitive plant under the, influence of the vapor of ether loses its sensitive properties; and seeds under similar Influence are unable 'to but recover their vital power 1 germinate, as soon as the antesthetie atmosphere Is removed. Many persons of late years; acknowledge a belief In the existence of ef animals; the next step must be a belief in the souls of plants and trees. If all things having life, animal and vegetable, have proceeded from the same upon the protoplasm then we may look palm, the pine- and the oak as beirrg our brothers. People at large by Instinct often hit upon great truths and it would seem that this relation of the human animal to the vegetable is pretty generally acknowledged, for often they speak of certain men as being "wooden. Dak De Quille. - Have you in mind to buy a range this fall ? eftitl don't you think that one so .thoroughly advertised as the ' 'JEWELL" will please you7 You know it Is most unprofitable to persistently advertise an inferior iarticle; hence, any buyer is perfectly safe in, buying that which is well advertised, as it is certain as the day to be both good and cheap. The "MAGEE BOSTON HEATER" furnace is our hot air heater. It diiiers from other types of furnace construction in that it which provides perfect lcontrol of the fire and economizes fuel; a grate that crushes the clinkemnd does not has indirect draught, " ' P I ; uur r rrz.. i 1 -- try hr ; I ? j . ; . 4 j to-morr- ) I kin-lik- j j -- -- - a a i n i , 1 r j - i 'tf 1 rtd-v- i Inyestments XorTC tb SUCCESSOR Mining Property, Rel Katate, . at post-morte- m I ! : ; - i tciiri-caltrms.- r:-!- v;-;- j ... cf a r n a k ojivi iain y , i ilUL -- Por Bargains Listen to 13Lo. 30D AND MANUPACTURTNO- - to-da- y, will Bespectfully announce that si no the Grand Opening. July J ! i -- Wholesale and Retail Clothiers, The Buildinfj of the Deep Creek Road Is an Assured Estate Is King-- The Boom Is Now On ! Pact MoDey invested in Salt Lake Real Estate, 'at the prices ruling IMPORTERS Lotni, 11 W. SECOND SOXJTH'ST., SALT LAKE CITY UTAH. surely return a profit of from 50 per cent to months. metal of u a Specialty. t9 ' with weight iv r- PROGRESS BUILDING. 24, of FALL AND WINTER CL0THIN G per cent within tho next twelve FOR MEN'S, YOUTH'S, 5 BDYS'AROCHILDN'S WEAR, ; 138x148 feetvoB Owen street, vacant. S4C0 32 lots in Wbtlon'i Addition. 38x145 rod. I Iet. per 10 tots In Iorth Inglewosdtfrom $31 K to tAQO ach. AJso 4 lots in South Inglewood at $450 each. 84 lots in FCTklM' Uraad View AUditlou at J300, $380. H00 and $500 each. Fine view, good water, and Biecevio ears pass the property. I'erma eaiy. I atveet $800 anb. 4 lets. 2SJ140 feat, on 6th 91r194 feei. corner 3 rd South and let West atreet. Sea this for a great bareain. VSt99 feet on 2nd South and 4th West streets, only $135 par foot. Nothing as cheap has been ofTarM on the nnaravct for tne last tnreroar8The chCapeM home ever o Here a on the Salt Lake market Is that eloeant croperty known as the i Koatn and 4tt Kast streets, Frica only $18,000. Nichete opnr,-En- J or aoreage property in all parts oi tn e ceunty. at prices that will be sure to list I baTa on look ins for a hause. large or small, I can suit you in price and location. If nlease too. H. vau-aryou wiut'to Uetrrow or loan money come in and make your wents known. ;" Et - . atllUscraater,. Deskenaa mxtlL norelUes. whloh wrevn.t . oulla nadir oiu oouIoe waek pr(osesu oootlue 6n a grander seale ta axtxawdlnttry a.bBition and sale which 00m mended Cbeq. TMsjwll? be decidedly the nM oetuprhnaro dlplhy,ln the olty ot High and MedkiBi-ijilas- s Clothing, designed in all tbo L.atBsfcJ3tyla&nd Unrlralled for ExooUenee of T&ate. Qrigloallty of Conception and Superiority of Workmanship. We beg that you will kindly pay a visit to our eatabjtshmant. auring you that you will be amply repaid for you trouble, and like hundoeds who do so daily, you'wlll bo amazed: First, at the e!nor mous size ef our business and the store; Second, at the immense display of Many entirely New tbat oevaaion, have been addftdV dwlog'-tb- - . e i jitttttmott mtiif """""rfrrrfrffrfrfffrrrrrrrr ton liSlfliW'S READ THIS. pound; for VAN HOUTEN"S$ COCOA ("6est 6V Goes Farthest") 8ems to bet high. Let us compare it with the price of Coffee: cofiee costs at leoat 30c, makes 31 hali-p1 lb. cups. ,., therefore 90c, S3 3 " 1 "V. H. Cocoa" also 10 90c, EZTWhich is the Cheapen Drink ? of-go- od j RETAIL. PB.IOK. aeond. eeaaa a sJssvraX. GENTS' AND BOYS' WINTER GARMENTS and anything and. everything in the Clothing. Line that can bO found either In thls country OT EnKTpo. ajad last, but not least,at tW vast difference be- -! tween the prices here and those askd by$t Meroh ant Tailors. Of every description, fOur Hat, Shoe and Gents! Furnishing Depart meats are Complete ! nt OO aUC,"(IBO Ixld Coffee, oupo 44 " of V.H. Cocoa! ! by every Ci racer. s IM OH, MAMMA X ,f: TtEAD TIIISIwFroni Monday, November 2nd, until Saturday; December 81. 3891 GOLDSMITH ft'bo. will give to every purcbaf er ef a Boys' Suit or Overcoat a ooopon( entltlincrthe holder to aeoure a BEAUTrFUL PRESENT to be given away New Year'oi . morning, January 1st, issb. IIA1ILIA, BUY MY CLOTHES AT GOLDSMITH'S. ; ROBERT III. LA FOLLETTE, THE BJLDOEB STATK 4 AffD TC STATE X3bI03TORK86MAJT TM-A-StTE- M. Robrt kas an Has added, to bis already well BOl0t9i StOCKI' -- ..!;! CAAAS. T" L Fol-lot-to J of Mdisont Wis., broach Ladies' and Children's Underwear, Hosiery,? Ribbons, down upon hintaelf the indicnatlon svnd wrath of Wisconsin Republicans by his charges against Senator Phi lot us Sawyer in relation to the State rfrasury ressman & a brothor-in-liease's. The of'Judge Sfebecker, before whom 1ND EMBROIDERIES, CHILDfiEN'S HEADWEA8 AND N0TJ9N1 the Treasury cases were pending, and he accuses Senator Sawyar of seekingr to A MOST ARTISTIC AND COMPLETE LINE OF 5 to use his influence with the ,?flb aim a decision agreeableto Jodie to render the Senator s wishes. Judge Siebecker i ? has since declined to try the cases, andi matter, in; great interest is felt in,jthe Comprising all the latest in Stamped Linen;I Embroideries. Sillc botji political partres. Governor Peck- Draperies, &x 'mSde the Treasury cases an issue in his IsTELSOIsT A. Jast year, and the re snitch en canjass the Democratic Stato hs" SOUTH tyjjfi. pail attention to xnal orders. administration to push the suits agalnsti. former Republican ' State Treasurer it "1 tion. . By . his charge against Senator Sawyer, La Follette has played lntotlje hands of the enemies of his party, a PT9r ceedins which wllr not easily be forgiven if'1'J.Ui. ZJITE ACCIDENT Republicans. E$ert by Badger Statewas M. I FoHette born in iTimros Wis., Juno 14, 155; rejeeivod a collegiate.' education and , wis graduated at the Unl-- i 1870;i9 a. varsity of Wisoon,sn in June, StetlSlishefcl 1 871. was ston IIo er eicteflff profef by Jwf and reflected to the to the Forty-iht- h Fifty-flrand Ckufcresses, as a,' Fiftieth xcepjiDiican. lie was , an .unsuccossiui pandldate'for renal ecIomlas year. ex-Oor- This refers to Salt'Lake store only. t3ETN. B. RANSOH0FF NELSON A. w ig Um . 'V' . ; - RANSOPOFP, i -- S- r rt no atisiBisiwsi is ii ' ii f . - i with Jl : . -- ACT BROWNING BROS; , lCi.Stt,"Hftit Uk Chy; 2461 Washington Av... OgenJ st . . , a a 1 , v n i joints; a fire-po- t ht nMnu wan tz. i THE MIDLAND INVESTMENT COMPANY ed s . i rv i H AjRYEY Cents a ' . ' T7 toj-pid- Vx i sj so-call- gas-tig- ' : i N - ' ; burn out; a cylindrical radiator, having great heating power and absolutely : sufficient to guarantee it won't burn out . the-soul- s n Clcyeloa, 'Moose aro so vory.plentlfnl innerth-- j era Maine that, as a Bpor3maa7ea'h legally kill but one in a season, it Is something of a disappointment to thTjw away tho only chance on an underlld or lean animal, or one with peor aatlrs. The boss hunter of Medway.v Llewellyn Powers, is a aaan who wastes bo powder on inferior game, and when he started out after his annual moose, iho other day ho was doterailBed 'toOret a rood one. Ho rolled his old slouch hat into a horn and called a moose to tha water at Pockwockamos lake but. the boll did not suit being too If an ad carry Ihg small antlers. Another aud another came in response to the hufitefiKiill, and finally the ideal raonjrch of tho woods appeared. This tull fell before l?owerss rifle. Ho weJfhJl over 1C09 pounds, and carried a"vrfect set ef antlers that spread fivo feet. Ko.f'"lt can be' found with a huntln grau. i which affords such opportunili--a- s tl 's 3. for takins one's pick aujbcJy can gst l iscii npper Penobscot region. Ts ot'er -- i.y a IIj.. tt j went boy Into t&o" woods alserCJled'&i1.V"!r3.a,' of-b-i; and drpFp-- i A at v nsa hln tt LJtZ2&, ev'vits"r In . Wi fv The 1 ;s t IT, - y!WJr and r; -- Hag Una tar- - 1 XUTZmiXSE'E. Co. . 1 7 j m Oliice and He tail Yard, 2nd Sou.Ua. Wholesale and Snipping Yard, . ) OH v. !. ) Lumber Carey-Lomba- rd ; IiOvrest Prices, Hiarcrest StocIc and mostv Assortment in tlio City. Complete Full Btocli of all sizes of Timbers., and Correct delivery. Prompt liCt 113 fi"uro oti 30 ur bills. ,vV cT-- C it J?o Sowti.V;aU ;;i3fra.n LtHiM aaa Z ZzMUa V?w&9T. XSaL-'On- . - Al-mojt -- ed , ' SsusobaU. !o,'WTd ?onclsmd. C.ymiiaoiTars. Dirliee, aiain Clubs, DimV SsU, ITIayiiig' Cux&mA Te?its, 23exir.ffs Gl9s, and 2nd West, opp. Court Ilcur. TX P. Trade, bet. 1st end 2nd ITcitti |