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Show UIIGLE JERRY'S IIDL1E FAHL1. THE BAILY: TMBUNE SAIF T AKT5 CITT, UTAH, STJOTAY MOUNT&G, IE033MBEB for it, when, with a little elaboramyself. Ain't very farm, and at it years of age left to rnn DOK'S LITERARY LEAVES. ?200 his could serve as' the It and he tion, the same sorry to It. I'm a Democrat sajr,. many of u$ here, though, but we did knock emout last time, and maybe we can again. That don't make no difference 'bout Jerry, though, and we're always mighty glad to see htm back and Shake hands with htm. If we don't. agree: with the wisdom of his politics. !Taia't like it might be, you see.' Jerry, he's one of us, and he ain't ashamed of It. f Ain't got no cause to be, as I khow.;btft It's different like with some folks what gets; to be somebody and then noes back on their old friends. Hut here's Vlroqua, -and as yon" get no further Just drop out- and look at the mile out. old man's farm.' Taln't but-First house yon como to; you can't miss i it." l:h Vlroqua can step to his Everybody front door and point to the wind mills that mark the farm ofIn Uncle Jerry. much everybody town, it may Pretty be remarked, ias either a newspaper cut or a more pretentious portrait of the Secretary of Agriculture pasted, up or hung up agallst the wall somewhere in their house, store or office. Perhaps the inhabitants, too, look wlthalittle different and same greater interest On the weather signa that is raised to the flag staff of the principal business block every; morning at lOio'elcck, than would tub . support mother, naturally i V' knows a thing or two about' the business. When, he was there last summer every day found' him busy at work on the farm. Daring the haying season off went the eoat of Uncle Jerry and Into Sir Ediria Arnold to Write Dis Infri-- n the fields he went, one of the hardest Inprcssionsi workers there. One of Uncle Jerry's fs an In unalterable belief the hobbies, value of sub-sling. This Is the great to impress on his help, thing he strives and he. has now got them so that they "BILLY" FLOREKCE'S LITERARY PLAWS. will plow deep enough t satisfy him, and to make him feel secure at the faraway capital that the richness of the land is in no danger of giving out. Everybody whoever worked on the farm He Was Wrltlne HI Memoirs III "Manual on Draw Pizfr' to Apfor Uncle Jerry says that the "old man" had an idea about practical farming and Well pear Actors Who AVrit succeeded in carrying it Yes, we 1'oem Ward Btccher's ()ne Henry always got along very well together," " The Revival or ttio Short said one of his former helpers, now a Fiory Tor Chiitlfeu. blacksmith In Vlroqua. f The old man, Books Roliday though, always had his views about the to do things. proper-waSome one tells a story On Uncle Jerry to the effect that he was one time ICoryright, 1S9I, by thV cirii. New twitted about belne a farmer, and replied that he was not a farmer but an CoRetroxDZ5cx agriculturalist. N t.v.- Yokk, 91. " What Is the difference?" he was Sir Edwin asked. pi I :. .'..ut thef " Well, said' Uncle .terry, with a Information to his .frlen is hat he in-- i of! twinkle, in his eye, " a farmer Is sup- tends writinn Jiis his bservationS( America, baed ported by his farm, and an agriculturalist supports his farm." during his present foirr in tihis country.! Whether this be true ojp not there isn't It Is Sir Edwin's intention jnot so much much of the impractical or play day to portray tho American jpoople, but! kind about this farm, fit Is run just write a study of our institutions. The about as all the farms "surrounding it prospect of such a book will; meet with a are run and for about the same purpose. great deal of satisfaction. jAs a people, It is a dairy farm principally. There we are written up by evjery foreign are on it .at present thirty-eighead of visitor, of note and otherwise, who cattle, twelve horses and the pigs and comes to these shores, and the thing has poultry. The last season 100 acres of become somewhat tiresome and unintercorn were grown, 160 acres of hay, and esting. But an intelligent study of : acres of oats. The rest of the American institutions, as. ir.Edwin is; thirty ..... TIlc,,r'ARSItfOtTSE." i land consists of pasture, capable of making, will b a distinct! contribution to literature, in which Sumner M. Curtis. people of othjer cities and towns, liut thousands will bo interested. people elsewhere would probably like to know something about Uncle Jerry's FLORENCE'S I.ITKItAKV PLANS. farm. It lies only a good walking diswas scarcely a iweek! before the It tance northward along the road over death of William J.I Florjence that I which its owner In years gone by used to was talking with him! on tihe stage of I drive a stage. Descending from the hill the Arch Street Theater, in Philadelto the edge ofl the town the big white and his sudden death will rob phia, Wind mills looyn above a grove of maples of a unique contribution literature that hides frojjn view the farm buildings. which actor the proposed nlaking to it The farm occupies the highest point of a a year past Florence! within For year. In land all thai country round, and from in been had engaged writing his it a view cf awide extent of landscape time he could what memoirs, devoting is commandecf. The road from town, a to the, task, but not enough,' I am afraid, series of gradual ascents, is bordered on be found completed j to warrant will either side bylrows of maples three "I have had a busy life completion. years ago by jTncIo Jerry himself. And a long one," he said to me, in our and locomes then the maple grove where Is last talk, "and I ought to! have somecated the far (h house.- - Nothing in that thing Interesting to tell," and the. farmhouse or its surroundings is indicator two which he read to me last chapter ive" of fashionable farmlntr. Just a to carry out this promised spring plain but nciit frame building such as Florence wa3 no stranger to prophecy. tho majority of prosperous fanners live Die wielded it easily, although the pen. in; not a country villa. There isn't any he had but little confidence in his I rod paling, but a plain, wooden picket skill. Some four years ago he literary fence Inclosesithe yard.' The barn Is as. me to collate the short stories allowed a as barn could be. There Is a simple he had from time to time Written, and milk house and a lot of plain sheds. were by the Uelfords. I published they "You see the Secretary has got just a MARQUIS OP DUFFERINANDAVA of matter the publication away kept No public man in England or on the from his common sense, farm," said Albert Rusk, until copy of the knowledge I more is Uncle Jerry's nephew, a man of about continent to book was complete, and I aremember frequently brought his 50 years of age, who run things while the attention of the people of the childish at the close of a surprise when, to the proprietory IsTn Washington. While United States and Canada than the night's work, his dressing-rooI went" everybody els calls him "Uncle Jerry." Marquis of Dufferin and Ava, whose was He undressed, partially his nephew, who has the right of rela- brilliant career of uniform success is as I gave him the book he looked it and almost without a parallel in the annals over, turned it over, fondled it like ala tionship to usfT'the term, always -refers of to him as '.'th Secretary." politics and diplomacy. As orator, toy, and exclaimed: ' Well, well! you "If you would like to look around as administrator, diplomat, author, and don't mean It," and at the risk of catchman of the world, this remarkable man good a farm af there is on Round Praicold the draughty little room he ing rie (that is the name given to the coun- has attained equal distinction. Lord sat downInfor hour, in his nearly a halfover try) though, I'll go with you," continued Salisbury has recently recognized Lord neglige costume, leaves looking as Mr. Rusk. 'fNo, we haven't got any Dufferin's political value an adherent of the volume. The sale Of the little the; fancy name for it; it just goes by the and supporter of the present ministry by book was very satisfactory, land Florence " name of 'Rushes farm.' Warden of appointing this nobleman liked to speak of it. His style of In a large meadow back of the farmthe Cinque Ports at a large salary. The always was as graceful as was his act writing house and outbuildings is a favorite Marquis of Dufferin is fortunate in havHis "Manual on Draw Poker ing. in the was so far advanced spot with Uncle Jerry when ho is at ing a wife who stands that its publication home. Standing there as a Great he cansee every aristocratic society of ' Britain a is win it prooahly appear certainty, nouso ana tree for miles around, and hostess and entertainer. Lady Dufferin is , about to publish her "Canadian within a month. ACTORS WHO WHITE WELI. Journal," In which she will relate, as of Mistress her experiences Speaking of actors as authors, it is the Vice Regal Palace in Ottawa. Some quite surprising how many stage favorf time since the Marchioness made a hit Ites there are who can write as well as her book entitled, "Our Vice Regal they can act. Richard Mansfield has as by "''''"' t Life in India," and it is expected that much literary ability as he has dramaher second venture In authorship will at tic, and could easily make his way least equal, if not eclipse the bWlllant through the world with his pen.- Joseph sficcess attained by her first publication. Jefferson has demostrated how well he Frederick Temple Blackwood, Rrit Earl can write. Fannyt davenport is exof and first Marquis of Dufferin ceedingly clever with the pen; only a THE FARM BUItniNGS, SHOWINO nilt, IN andDufferin Ava. was born In 1826, educated at few days ago I was convinced of this BACKOBOUNli ON WHICH UNCLE JERRY Eton College, and succeeded his father while reading a manuscript by her son EXPECTS TO iUlLD. as fifth Baron Dufferin and Claudeboye. to be printed. Georgia Cayvau- wields i the pen very gracefully, and the little when ' he tires of looking at the quiet He began his. career as a Lord in Wait- she has written has been every successon 1846. In Victoria His Queen little city below him a mile to the south- ing Madame Janauschek Is' a master ful. were in diplomatic 1855, can turn from he and bdgun triumphs this behold, ward, of and her contemporary, Ristorl, was diction, when he to attached the Austrian bird's eye view the vast stretch of mission. same. is the Francis Wilsou write so was 1860 Comhe In British flecked! and with cattle farms, sheep. seeema well a pity he refuses all the It On this spot the Secretary long contemcome to him. Mrs. inducements which a a plated building mansion, pretentious book Kendal's of "'Dramatic Impresa plan which he has country hous, sions" has shown the literary ability on of in hill favor the the up given she possesses. Edward Sothern might other side of the road from the-- ' present turn from the stage to literature, easily is of crest the which buildings, higher so chose. Emma Sheridan, of the if he fwind mills in the yard. than the tall Boston Museum Company, writes- a found out how The way Uncle Jerry and readily sells everything. deal, t a little bit novel great was hill this high Maggie Mitchell has written a number and will boar repeating. He was standof things, but never permitted their ing there one day last summer whhlng publication. Sarah Bernhardt has refor a carpenter's level Thero was none cently finished a Christmas! story, to be to be had, but Uncle Jerry sent, for a Wil published this coming Yulja-tidwater so as to leave bottle, filled son Barrett often takes kip the pen. a small air itjwith bubble and corked it up, Modjeska has often shown her literary laying this on a rock on the side of tho, and few Jwomen are more assidability, was and until it the hill, edge tippiug uous Clara .M orris has written readers. horizontal, the Secretary of Agriculture a article here. and there, but only stray got down and Sighted along the machine even In she has these demonstrated her was It Exactly tho discovering i&at of actors are busy with But the pen. gift the windmills the optops hoight qf and rare is it that they find people, . j posite., time to write a story or drop into poetry. Noxt year! Will seo a. fine mansion MR. BEECmSH'S OSE POKM. crowning this hill, and preparations for a large barn of; modern construction on MARCHIONESS OF DUFFERIN During the days '.of Henry Ward tho abrupt side of the elevation are alAVA. AND Beecher's it. is related by hi3 courtship, ready under way. Some fine horses 'will once wife he that and in entered the missioner dropped into.poetry, Syria," Ina find home here, for the Secretary as Under Secretary for India In and wrote a few lines of verse, teeming tends, to gd djbwn into, the blue grass Cabinet 1864, becoming Under Secretary of War with affection for his sweetheart.. But several head of fine two regiou and later. In 18T2 Lord Dufferin the verses were always kdpt sacred by Kentuckyd brod mares. A herd of was years Governor-Gener"of Mrs. Beecher, as they are at the present appointed is thorough-brellolsteins another Canada, and his administration of that day, and" nothing can win them from thing in contemplati.ou, to replace the V , showed him to be possessed of her. cattle now oh the farm. Years ago office Mrs. were One Mr. and Beecher wonderful and day tact, persuasiveness Uncle Jerry tjsed to keep shorthorns,' who was In office of Robert the Since of Bonner, view. Canada breadth leavlag but when he w&3 elected Oovornor and in 1878, Lord Dufferin has New !Fbrft the then been British Ledger. conducting left the farm In other hands the blooded Minister at St. "Why don't you write a poem, Petersburgh, Constanti- Beecher?' stock was sold. It must not bo forsaid the acute publisher. "I also and and of Rome, Viceroy nople gotten that Uifcle Jerry keeps pigs now India. Lbrd Dufferfn was created an will give you more for such a poem than that this little "misunderstanding with Earl In 1871, since which time his peer- I have for Norwood. come an to 'ond, and 100 Germany has He did once, admitted Mrs. Beecher; head of Poland Chinas, registered stock age has been raised to a Marquisate. and at oace Mr. Bonner's eyes sparkled. at that, roam about tho fields. Now that It for me, won't you, Mrs. Recite thero Is another market for American he asked. Beecher?" hog products, the raising of swine will the But eyes of the great preacher on be made more bf a feature Rusk the on his wife, and she knew were riveted - j was When we bar sick, Baby Csstaria, gv farm.: J silence. meant that With all the modern Improvements Come," said the persistent publisher, that Uncle Jerry contemplates there When aha became Kiss, she clung to Castoria, "111 give 55000 if you will recite that will be no changes otherwise to spoil When aba had caiadren, aba gave them Castor, Mrs. Beecher. for poem me," addressing the rustic picturesqueness of the farm. r-- " the it j began Why. The Virginia rail fences that divide the wife. preacher's different fieldsiand the rustic gates and Eunice," simply said Mr. Beecher. bars will be left as they are." ' While It And, roalthough Robert Bonner offered la has been said that there nothing Stand Up to the Old Uinl to double the sum first offered, he never mantic about this farm mention must be t; tGeorge, you may ask papa," she said; got the poem from Mrs. Beecher, and made of what are . called the "sinkwhen you ask him don't let him no one has since been' ft whit more "and, sink-holare not know that holes," These feo called '' you are afraid of him. lie successful. . name the forbidding things the Implies. a few call names, yon. may disagreeable . BJ5VTVAT-OT TUB SHORT STOBT. TUX Great . crater-lik- e things tliey are, and strike you once or twice; but If you formed by terrific convulsions of tho let short The story Is going to havo its know you aro afraid of him he earth; In ages past, and now from the mayhim at least, if a careful canvas aain day P'ucJe. kill you." bottom of them grow great live oaks the of leading magazine editors proves and maples. As sylvan u retreat as could A. UtUe Ctrl'a Within the last year or two, a ta anything. XJlKxparlaaea be wished for during the hot days of midIf we except the work of Octave Thanet, laotta summer and just strange enough to be Mr. and Mrs. Lorn Treaott mrm r f tm Richard Ilardlnjr Davis, George IL Hlb-baVpr at r,f and Jinaca. lilca ar all the more interesting. Near one of Gov. Lighthoua du-htt,iJ tad 11 try H Vil kins, there has with four jv.tt oi l. t,ai Is the grave of. Old April aha these sink-holbesn but little elert etcry writlr.. trcrthy was tVn dawn Wink, one of the pioneer stage horses lowed with a dreadful Coura tai turrit t?f s a cf tl.3 us. c. 3J:it 3vercl nsT7 t :r3ts : Fever. Doctor at bona ad at rc which after tho railroad ruined his vothe c;l cd bat ia vain, nba rrew worn t . 'r, t i Live cf lits t'T'-T- 1 1: cn cation roamed kvcr. the farm, tho king br. ra era tL3 cir.zTj cr. : cf bewMirm tea." -of the herd, and lived to a ripe old age. triad lr. liia'a 1 w 1 f i r t i f: ;.3 cl iz:.-rt t tll 3S -aal t. . Yry us of ' t r aaJ Uncle Jerry is as hard a worker as 3urM. ( .m . ' ' . ! . lis . . w t. z 'i i i c: any one on the faro, when ho Is at wnrtb t:T herfirMrrt lr. i ' a i , Yd L .". ex the a'cood fcotUa ti j t C trial fc!rcj.iat.a i hoae,".nl.rsti C j cs ha was oaa ttora. ampla of Industry. ' Ik:-rL . tLo of Secretary 'IgrieaUnrt Tills His Own Soil. t S THE RUSK HOMESTEAD jlN WISCONSIN. ' .syfi - ol - III Nephew Keep film Posted Abont Cattle and. Carthe Crop and the I J" Hi Uncle JDIreetlon ries Out the liar Field III Jerry $nu Farmer-lwhat ods a his MethNelgh- - bora Say About jlilni. . ICepy Right. 1.V91, V. Jams bjr Johnson. W EN T Y yo a r 8 ago and rn,ore I'nele .Jerry V Husk, In all proba bl iity never having dreamful of n portfolio of agri- la HiN'fc culture the Treat x'jrC- &&&:SZS-- dent's Cub! net, p hundred i u i- - and chased a farm of ouu twenty ;v:res, border ng on the outskirts of the littler city ofiVlroriua. ini Vernon this y degrees county. Wl3!on5ln. farm has boon aldM to by purchases from nolptUborlng f fir mors, until It now consists of 400 acrtfs.l Ifc still belongs to Bocrotary KUalc, Who, although busy wllli official caroaf Jit Washington, attends to the managciment of it, being kept advised by Ibis nephew,1 Albert Husk, who, with Ills family, occupies the farm house, oi he arrival of now calvos.-hothe cbrii 1$ gottlng along and all the othor ' jJilngs that a farmer would want to know about affairs at homo. When Unclej .ferry visits Wisconsin ho goes direct!)! o his farm, forgets politics for a while! rtwijlets the polltl-clai- n In Uhe cltlesj vait until ho gets roady to loavo thrf fitriri and talk, with I i . ! fUB OLD 8TAOK JtOAn, WITH FARM OH TIIR HILL. IJ'JSK'9 Not only becauso It Is a good farm is he proud qf lit, but because the associations of othnrjdays are connected with It and becaulo( hoi expects as long as he lives to call he place home." Vlroqua Is not a'reat place either In the world of bulioes or society. If i it has any Importance that carries its name beyond its owii borders than being the home of Jerry Jiisk It 19 only that it is the county seat.) II 1b nothing more than a village,1 butt the people are pros- prosparous not through fiorous but from living in the heart of as fair a farming country as there is anythorn. v, ) where. From twenty-fiv- e miles In every direction come the Crural people to do their trading, and by noon on any pleasant week day the main street Is lined and the sidewith big wagons of walks are as thronged as the pavements of a big commercial-cityHandsome business blocks testify to the richness of the soil and the prosperity of the farmers, for it Is upon the farmers that the little clty'deponds entirely, and when such a town Is prosperous the farmers must be. When tjnele Jerry Rusk settled there, and fori a good many years afterwards there wasn't any railroad. Those were the Stage Idays tlt'ey3$ell about when of ipijesent to brack aSecretary about Agrlcultureifeed whip e the heads of a team, con from travelers Prairie du veying Chien, on the M ssisslppl river, to Illack River Falls. in time he was more than a drlvef, for he owned two or three of the twenty pr ..more' lines that centered at Vlroquaj 'and, too, he kept hotel, the Uuckeye, hamed in honor was eventusf his native Statd, , .after which he ally destroyed, byfl-eourcliased and' managed the North Star, the railroads have how ended forever ihe day of the stage-coacbut Vlroqua y remains an out-o- f place. It .Is the terminus of .a spiir from one of the pasgreat northwestern lined, with one coach a day, senger train of a) single It will and that train Isn't stuck-up- . attach Itsolf to a car of lumber, cattle or merchandise, and hul it along to the next station, Ktid wcjuld as soon take on a crato of chickens pr a firkin of butter as a passongor. When Uncle Jerry goos out to visit his far in ho can't ride in palace cars like a 'great many big men when they go toj their country seats. This section of coUutry Is not dotted with the estates of city farmers, but the farms are 'owned ad operated by the Thero are people who live onorthem. lakes to delight not any mountains and attract the lojrers of the .wildly The Iscner Is exceedingly picturesque. tame., liut to pdrsbns loving a truly revealed pastoral scene, the landscape in traversing thc'coiintry is exhilarating; As the conglomerate train puffs swiftly up the sllght'grado toward the terminus . miles thlrty-fi,v- o souths, of the main line, on a bright October morning, that most delightful sdason of the year when not a tiny cloud spots the deep blue of tfutumn skies, the reason of Indian summer, a panorama! suggestive of rustic quietude, and prosperity passes slowly before the gaze. Nf t on;e of those views which excite paslojns op emotions, but one that Is drcamf Inspiring and is calculated to make oni Satisfied with being alive." As far as eyo can see there Is the 6amo succession Sol rolling meadow!, fields of shocked brown stubblo-Qeldcorn, yellow and sere from frost and sun, the horizon 'bordered by maple growths wearing the brightest fall colors. And'g to complete the picfcure herds of cattle are scattered over tho.exof pastureJflocks Of sheep dot the panse low, rounded hilltops, and frisky colts dash away from tho disturbing steam cars and turn and look after them with wonder in their gaze. The richness of the country and the fertility of the soli are apparent evert from the window of a tn the heart of this passing train. Andthe farm of Secretary located is country pf-oduc- e . jhe foijr-hors- . " w-hlc-h h, jthje-wa- 1 i j l j - S, sleek-lookin- - . llusk j ... 1; Everybody in that country knew Uncle Jerry long before his was Govern or of Wisconsin, and JoIltlcsdoe3 not ctit llgure'with the feeling for him. . It tny is not particularly, a feeling of regard cr esteem In the sense those terms are t rsierally applied In Connection with v .iLIIc men. Friendship Is. a better term the and country people are proud rit,a nan developed t among them has f as! Jo from he political com-,- f i I : - It. , r:r, i r;'.-i-i , where Jerry halls ti'.lltatjve man,,of u it characteristics, r t, c litt: 3 tlatloa. f i s,.nd hero. I ta':a 13 t!-!- . - , - ' 1 . . out." ; 1 y 1 Trrr.T-vz.- T - I'-i- t - A:'ili:t J i ii-- j tir-ss;o- ui-o- i ht " j st j m. 3 pre-emine- nt - - ' : . . . j - o. . i ' i gt al 1 - ' : " , ; ; - " : , -- 7- es ,' f j - rd es bld to "t'ul t ii- -e tit ! . f ci ' I i ; i Z , , i ; . . -- -- i ; j. it 1 . r 1891. G, plot basis of a novelette, and the Income increased three-fol- d with but very little extra trouble. But it - has proved in several case to be the fact that a good short story writer cannot always write as equally and with good a part-storthe - rising competition of new names, the skillful are the more easily induced to go back to What is really their forte. So, between the revival of the old pens and. the coming of the new, the editors are hopeful that the jj'pares of their magazines will once more bristle with the life and snap of good American short-stor- y writing. O - All Bight! ST. JACOBS y, ' UOUDAT BOOKS FOR CIIOftRSX. As Christmas approaches, more and more interest is manifested in books suitable for holiday presents, and parSupposticularly In children's books. would be ing that trade in the latter booming soon, I asked a large retail bookseller the other day whether his books were beginning to sell juvenile more rapidly. His expression was a disappointed one. "Children's books," he said, "are beginning to be very precarious stock, aud if I can't do better this year than last, I shall give upr trying to handle them. I'll keep nothing but the old favorites. The fact is, the market is greatly overstocked, and, unmindful of that fact, the publishers keep rushing: in with more now juveniles every season. The trouble lies just here. Children don't choose their own books; parents choose them: and they will not buy anything unless they are sure it is good and safe. N'ow, they know about tho books tbey read when they were children; they know the old favorites, but they are shy of new things. Tho result is, that if a book is fortunate enough to establish a place for itself in the It and home nursery. holds on, and keeps selling year in and year out, while the new books, as a rule, have to go to the wall. Out qf hundreds of new books, only one or two are lucky enough to win such a place, and of course there Is a fortune In them if they do. That Is the bait that lures publishers on, and no doubt accounts for the overstocking of the market. I have to bo very careful in buying nowadays and I am especially careful about illustrated books for small children. Of late years, some very fine artistic and expensive work has been put into the manufacture of these books. It makes them handsome, and all that, but I find that parents won't spend 82 for such artistic work, merely to have their children daub and tear It up. They stick to the old and less expensive style of nursery books. You see those tables there, loaded with handsome juvenile ibooks? Well, L wish I could clear out the whole lot for a little more than what they cost me. If I could, I would lay in a moderate stock of the old favoritles, and leave, the new juveniles, for the most part, to the luxurious dealers that have plenty of money to risk and who are in business merely 'for their health.' " "i ' CALIFORNIA liht as day. to the mill fn was, almost as wandered when . res-pecti- ve wo j pairs or singly,, Certificate Namk. No, 119 J. IJr.ruett Mrs. George A. lilack .. U J. O. Ha vis, trustee ....... 1 17 I5'J J. CJ. lavis, trustee J. U. Davis, trustee. .... 15S J. O. Davis, trustee. .... 154 Ifi5 J. G. Davis, trustee M J. (i. Davis, trustee KJ J. G. I)avis, t rustee .1. G. Davis, trustee ISH .1. O. Davis, trustee !. .1. G. Davis, trustee 11 161 J. G. Davis, trustee 5(J It. Etnerson. .. Sfl Gillette Evnns. so as not to draw too much attention to wo number of millers--an- d tne unusual " waited. Soon Minnie, com ins: from Sacramento street, sang" out in her clearest soprano, Tho basso, Thomas, "Meow, in deepest tones, "Mul-row- , responds " and the music swells upon me-ow!- mul-row!- the air. Tho conspirators were hidden in the signal .from our garret, and at a, given we closed all the shutchief, Jim G ters and means of escape, and then there was fun and some scratching, but wo came, saw and conquered, and boxed up. to Julius C.'s little (That's an addition one more than Jim had Ten, script.) promised. Iu the morning Jim and I transferred the freight to a sloop going up to Red Bluff. I kept one a tortoise-shel- l for myself, and sent the Major the others, all of which ho received in good order, including James K. Polk of the Revenue Service. All was silent and calm at the mill, at thereafter and Jim would sleep if nights a guilty conscience could sleeep but wasn't there trouble In that block? Old women hunting, swearing and crying, ' and would not be comforted, for Thomas and Minnie Were not. Lager beer hadn't come Into fashion yet, so they had to steam up on Bourbon and Old Tom equally as effective and lasts longer. There was a watch at the mill for a week or! more, but the loved pets returned no more. In due time the slugs came, ten of them $500. There was something about those slugs that I liked. When you had them in your pocket, you felt you were some weight in the world. If you tumbled in the bay you would be fished out for what you "had, if not for what you were, and those octagons made you realize that you were hearer square with the world than when you had the little' eagles and eaglets which flew away so easily. Well, we had that dinner and spent the cat money on it, but it came near Bringing on a catastrophe .sure enough. at $3 per Good wine (Chateau-La-Ros- e doz.) could be had for a song, and some of our invitees were better acquainted with Ohio cider than with the wines of France. ' They got over It, swearing that they would never eat cat again.' But pshaw! Mehiak: good wine calls again. - mraiTis IS CAUSED DY A COLD Consumption. . ? BRONCHITIS ;3' ALL-CHRONI- - M 1 JMSSZl- . , 50 tO t 30. Oft' fifW oo.oor 'i.niio HtO NX) t : - x- - w ' I .. : i . : 60.001 WAV)' 60. (IV 60. on HX) NO MX) 108 400 N 16 40. 60.(l 60 OU. HXi .VW lfK) 10.00 10.(1). 10 00 KTO ino 1,W) 100.(0. 60.) 80.00 60. 0 auo.ui XI H NIO 3,(Mt 15.00 10.00 SIO.(I) 150 1XJ 8,(K)0 10.UO 11)0 10.00 KJ0 40.00' ) 60.00 woo 10. ou 6110 IOO 103 1.000 1,000 100 (X) 100. 00 7.0S3 7,084 100 100 167 100 117 V 600,00; 708.30 708.40 6,0(10 8 no' I IS 00V Woodward... 119 1S.70 Woodward. 98 F. S. .Bascom w.qo And In accordance with law and thelorder df the Board of Directors, of the corporation made on said 10th day of October, 1891, go many shares of each parcel of stock as may be necessary win be sold at public auction at the principal office of the company. No. 11 East First South street. Salt Lake Citv. Utah, at 11 o'clock a. tn. on the thirtieth (30th) assessment.-cost181. to par day of November, s the delinquent of advertising MOYLAN C. FOX, and expenses of sale. of the West Mining Co. Secretary King 1530 11. 1801. November Salt Lake City. At a meetlnr of the board of directors of the King of the VV est Mining Company, held at the office, in Halt Lake City, Utah, on the company's 27th day of November, 1891, the date of payment and sale of the above described stock was extended from the 30th day of Novem1891. at 1891,'vto the 30th day of December, ber, same the hour and place. C. MOYLAN FOX. Secretary. - : :THE ANNUAp STOCKHOLDERS MEETING1 Osceola stockholders of the Gravel Mining Company will be held at the comRt W. 79 1st South Salt Lake pany's office.on No, Monday, December 7th, 1801. at 10 City, Utah, o'clock a. m., for the election or directors.. to amend Article 10 of the articles of incorporation, annual meetings, and changing the date of the such other business as may oome before the ltWO W. B. Kunhardt. Secretary. meeting. NOTICM FOB PATENT APPLICATION United States Land Office, Suit Lake City, Utah. October 10 1891 Notice is giren that the Sells Lime. Ce ment and hereby Rock Company, a corporation of Utah, W. and its by Charles Lyman, In faot, whose residence and and attorney postofftce address is Salt City, Utah, has made vice-preside- nt seo-retar- ' y for a United States patent, for the application Sells Cement and Limestone Placer Mining claim, situated upon the public surveyed land of the United States of and within the Hot . Sprtirrgs Mining District, Salt Lake county, Utah and of acres.describod Territory. as follows, t:consisting j forty The northwest quarter of the northeast quarter of section 11, township 1 south of range t east of Salt Lake meridian.-- ! The said mining claim being of record in the office of the recorder of said miniuir district at Salt Lake City, Utah, There-are no known locations in the vicinity ot said claim,! I direct this notice to be published in Tsn Lakk Tribune, a dally newspaper published Salt in Salt Lake City,- Utah, and nearest said mining of sixty days. claim; for a periodFRANK D. HOBBS, Register : Bennett Marshall and Bradley, attorneysfor applicant. Date of first publication: October ti'i 1891. -- . to-wl- - . ORDER OF TUB Cf" UNTY COURT OF BY Salt Lake county. Territory of Utah, sealed bids will be received by the County Clerk up to and Including Saturday, the 19th day ef Decern furnished Salt Lake her, 1891. for supplies to be from January 1st to December 31st, lfeyi. couaty a form a ill The following bas.sfor bids for ree- prds. etc., to be furnished THE OOtrKTT SICOBDIR, f pages, with laarglnat Mortgage, records, 600 ' ruling. ' Deed records with marginal rulings I as deed records; Mining records, same Lien and leases, same as deed records. ; , , Abstract records, same as now used. ,1 Direct and reverse Indexes to all except tb4 abstract records. 9 ;,1 Plat book. 9 feet inches by 1 foot 0 troche, of 1 indeand plain drafting paper for making plats, ' . lo same. ' j f Grantor and grantee.indexes. r. Entry book. as now used In) Receipts for documents, same 1000 each. the office, with stub. In books of and direct Indexes to Mining abstract .Jrecords . same. Some of these records have printed forms, and the amount can be determined only as the records are ordered. Accords are to be bound In full Russia circuit "hub bands," with loose Canvas covers and Russia corners, flat opening back. Paper to be medium ledger paper "P's." Brown's Prices to be given on records ruJed and printed, ' and on ruled only. Also, for the Recorder s office, letter beads and envelopes, per thousand. En velope Nos. Sand 10JCX, Ms. trag, with return eard printed thereon. t , ; collbctor. cochtt jron 40.000 tax notices. Fifteen tax receipt books. ' Letter heads ana envelopes by the thousand. Index for tax sale.. For style and quality of Index Information ' wilt be furnished by the Collector. Couaty . . roa cotott Assxseoa. Tax Rolls for ISS Style, binding, qnalltv, size and all other information concerning these rolls will be furnished by the County Assessor, rom tax cubk'i orricc Record books same as Recorder's, excect that they shall be of 600 pages - each and without , covers. Probate blanks oB SuperSne flat cap paper, or ofprinted equal grade, 150 of -eaeh t be furnished on order. Dixon and Faber's octagon pencils, per gross. Pens per gross. Ink per dozen quarts, ' Letter beads and envelopes, per thousand, 1 3 above. " F liber's rubber bands, put rross.All supplies to be furnUbed as es"l f . ' ! A bona for faithful performance such sum as tee County Court r i will be required of tirte stcreserves tte rl" t t eounty i C C. E. AL" LiJs. j i. LtVe Citv. Isov. Suit I - t t - .. 40-pou- . . ' - -- dr - 4 i S ... t ? Zzt a t z r - . 60.00" ' Hta ..130 . 60. (V NX1 . rtt:a eo.to w.no w.oo, HW B. It: -- to-c- 100. 00 NO . i. S. ao 5a) L-- . Mary C. Woodward S. H. Woodward S. H. Woodward S. H. Woodward Amount No. Shares. L. Her wood ..... 1J3 Joseph L. Ileywood . . 11 Joseph Joseph L. Heyvvood.,. Josejih L." Hey wood . . . . 1M wood ... . 17 Joseph L. Hey wood JosephV. Hey trustee. . TJX 10.1 John Irons, Hi Curtis P. Mason N. H. Osbrt-ii81 R N. 1. Osborne . 31 Charles Head ...KM Charles Head Charles Read Charles Read, trustee. 144; Charles Swanson..... . 4?i 97i A. C. Standart 78 T. H. Stanton 88 T. H. Stauton Geo. B. Tanner 8t 188 Geo. B. Tanner. ... i Caleb VV. West, trustee, flo Caleb W; West, trustee. 191 -- Rats! Cats! Cats!! Chile peppers and senoritas were not And if neglected leads to that disease very speedit. ily. A sharp, metallic eough eoonrapanies the only things Imported from' Mexico Take cure it in the S0's, for a Dutch captain who had with it in time andr yon can certainly, -' run down to Guaymas for a cargo of the above named hot article, found that cats SCHEHCK'S; were a surplus In Guaymas, while rats were a drug In San Francisco, and as a SYRUP, lady friend had given him a commission PULPQHIG to bring her a mouser on his return, he Which 1 Without an Equal for concluded to take up a nnmber of felines, be they of the Thomas or Minnie persuasion, as chance might determine. He arrived in San Francisco with leading up o- and including about fifty on board, and the anchor was and for all diseasesConsumption. was before down a there rush for hardly Dr. BCHBNCK'S Mew Hook on Diseases' cats. The first sold brought $50 each, of the Lasfa lilrsv sad Stomach, ' should and prices soon ran to $100, with none be In every home. Sent free. to be had at that, or, indeed, at any E. J. B. SCHOOL A S3V nUafelfUft, ra. price; the supply was exhausted. Mynheer, the captain, bad made a good speck In meow. But the demand seemed KVr ,' to Increase,' and many inquiries were made of me if I knew of any cats on board ships coming from foreign ports. About a week after the arrival from Guaymas. I received a letter from of Red Bluffs, begging roe, .FOR THE CUilH Ol' Major as I loved him, to send him cats, for the KSRVOUO. DLOOD rats were eating his grain eating him out of house and home. That was an appeal, and from a quarter I could' not resist, and so I took a I day, and went in my boat from one end of the harbor to the other, visiting every vessel lying there, at last having to return without success, the only game old Thomas bagged beirig a blind-eye- d cat sent as a present from the Lieutenant Tr. Itl commanding the revenue cutter "Polk,' to his ancient friend the Major. Cats was the: subject of dlscusllon that evening after dinner, when I gave an account, of my unsuccessful hunt after the much desired Thomases and Minnies. The Major had made .as an offer "550 a head, or any reasonable sum." for six to twelve. ; i Why" says Gridley, who was interested .In a flour-mi-ll just started on near Sacramento, 'that Kearny street, would give us just what we want for our dinner on the 1st. (We nseg to have an extra layout on the 1st of each month our feast day.) ; "So It would," says another of the All Letters Cirictly Confidential. saints, "and Jack, did you say that the Major wasn't a deacon of the church, - only a contributor?" OIJ ECCCIPT OF "Only a con., ray boy, was the an swer. Four cents in stamps .'and your Well, then, he wouldn't require a3- symptoms, xrs 7ill eznd- yen davits 3 to whether the felines shipped dsz crip lion cf cr bur- to hlra wcra bon-h- t, . . Elircd. rrouli La?" CT t 7." T7M .tL.3 tr.Swer. I,l3. Illn-sand j'cur cl:nc;3 cf recovery. cr rzzr-to ils .cr, 13 rnJt 1 o'e'e raiU ! t, I flew jrercitf atly 1 .at"! rt 1 :t3 r'l i - i DELINQUENT 'Twas not lia dark, stormy night," as it should have been, but then, "our beautiful climate," you know, won't always allow us. to put. oh the dress for heroics or extravaganzas! so it was as It which nettlei in and Inflames. th air tubes leading to the lungs. It Is the beginning of IT WAS. AS NOTICE. "KINO OK TUB) m corporation; location of principal Company," place of business, Jjalt Lake t'Uy, Utah Territory: locution of work; Aituras Idaho." county. Notice: Tliort ar delinquont upon the follow-int- f No. ' decrild stock on accountof assessment .r. levied on the K'th day of October;-1381the several amounts set opposite the imuies of the stockholders, as follows: .to-brin- cat-as-troyh- y. ex-Sena- Captain King is finishing a new novel, which will be a companion story of "Between the Lines," tlie scenes to be located in the southwest, from Chattanooga to Atlauta. Mrs. Amelia E. Barr is laying the groundwork of two novels, to be published during 1892. A new novel by "The Duchess" is now being put in type In London for simultaneous publication there and here. Edgar Saltus is back from Europe with two new stories In mind one well In hand Edwabd W. Bok. T NIININC NOTICES. hands, daut.ed around on tho while we, joining the table, and swore . , Nm IT IS THE BEST. A BUNDLE OF NEW 3TOVEL9. The first edition of Mrs. Humphry Ward's novel consists of 20,000 copies. Edgar Fawcett's new novel is called "A Romance of Two Brothers," after which will come another, entitled. "Loaded Dice," written during the author's recent sojourn in Paris. Ethel Ingalls, the . clever daugher of Ingalls, is writing a romance to be called "A Shadow of a Dream." Bret Harte hopes to complete a new novel before! the opening of the new year. The scenes of the story are laid among the laboring classes of rural England. Margaret Deland's whole time is absorbed in her next novel, of which she expects much.'. "It is so difficult," she says, "that I am filled with dread lest I may not do It well." it." Did OIL Did what ? All the world knows' it has done wnat it P '' promised. It has made jthe most remarkable, prompt and permanent cures of Aches and Pains on record. Time it"iiV rita is money. It will cure without loss of time. A single application often cures; half a bottle has cured the worst chronic cases. ! j 15 y i i ui-i'iii- f'PTfV '' s t a r.... Mix ! i. - t ' . ' u . |