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Show f' 4 , I 9 i - i S S' v-il- TESlIa l - - e Per wesk, fey 4 carrier One month, by carrier One j esj, by mail, post paid Sis months, by mail, post paid Three nreuths, by mail, post paid Ob month, by mail, post paid 53 7s; cent nts cents SI 00 4 23 2 3 73 - s office. OlARLK? m. SilTSa. Eilitor. TJ I SATURDAY, JUNE 23, ' r i - ., One cf the most curious features of tL lata war in the south vves l La variety i - - , re of expedients to whkla tie veszti which beported to supply the. came prating. Not until ccrnreutijcaften with th noth"! - I L& a ext cl! did tin 1 t I f, e If. 'If i it, 1 1 :!.; lly J that the sxxtli pendent upon the northern maufxcturir for hundred of articles ia duly u i. Factories were tew, and the. in th main niatlo only the commoner hiaN of tvl ecu mid cotton rk ths. Every article found hi a troro iu lbU wk sure to Ik of not ti ern rmmtfacture, ami wi h that always higher epireclitimi cf cUu-- r peoples I andiwoi k or talents, was-. held iu nado. highsr c :em tLsu anythlr-- lexEach Chrution, in Hick d.13 , shews wer A common qv tio:i weq, given the iicgnx-s-. Who icaJe ilem shoes f Dry wasnt made,' coma cuiea da y would be tie reply; ktore. Ey ths cloie of IS 11 l.om n;a 3goo.ls cam into ue, mainly from pure n.'CfS-ity- . Tbo latter being the mciLi r of imention, it speedily followed that in North Carolina, inventors and clever invent ions became qui' k!y numerous and varietl, Fait, shoe?. cJothing and Lats wora pi :r:3 nwititu. x TLo demand two for fait wax very great. Tl.cra sourct's of supply the sea ami th? fait works in Virginia. Dot thi could do Lttld toward supflyui)? tho demaud at tird, though later their output was larger. A .fack of sold for at tlr-- t salt, wLKIi in gold, and even then roe to f'-it wit a pi iviVyo to obtain it. Tdany families tL in in the indior unde a!t . This earth 1 a.1 gntheml their snick? In th court cf 3'Mtrs muthfalt from the meats which wer smokl in su.--h houses in thoea days. It was dug tip and lachl in a for rude ft?b hopp'cr, jct ns allies p.vp E w sn lye. A brine, w it U njore or stiegth, cbtrduod. Tids was concentrate 1 by boiling aud then allowed to eryfiullli. It was not the Lett article In th world, hut it was udt, which was tho one thing noedrul, TL govtrnu;-ri- t toik chargu cf the salt work an I s.c; speciiliv trsinsii men in of that larps cumfcrs ti the by mili I.y, Inj.leo rsi tary rule0;, n 1 it beenr. ir.cro abundant and ci far better quuiity. For clothing, homespun vtas the only wear. In tbos daj's rude spinning v. heels and h nid looms of antique pattern were common. Those who had relinquished the use of these, or who had used them only in the manufacture of servants clothing, speedily found Others it necessary to us them themselves. were made, with some improvements in dedyo-i- n sign, and tlier J was an eager search Tlnwc were as a rule vege5 materials. table. Indigo, barks of various kinds, ere., were largely used. The count i y a cover who made a good article of brown jeans, with as in great cotton warp and wool fillincr. demand. Many of tho ven!thist and nest culture! women loth made and woie the coarsefct of homespun doth. For underw ear rough factory cotton or cotton made on the hand looms was the best thing to be obtained. It was said by very old people that time I of a been turned back centnrv, and that jople in the main resorted to us primitive methods of living and pivpar-- u g clothing, etc., as were in U'.eiu the dns of tl. revolution of 1770. Leather wasm great them is nothing like demand, and sine leather, it was found that it admitted of no JIany farmers Lad tan troughs mad out cf large logs or of planks, and largo enough to hold a dozen hides. In tlies they rudely tanned with onk bark the .skin-- , of their own and their neighbor d cattle for upper leather. The solo leather, as a rule, was made at th regular tanneries. fck very urgent and constant was the demand for shoes that frequently the liidts Were not allowed "to remain in th troughs long cuoukIi to Lecoiua taiuie I thoroughly, but had to bo taken out uml used while partly raw. They t. were utilized while of a brown or g color, and were not black. Attempts at such leather vvre inirequ-u- t. Tho demand for sole leal her overtaxed the capa.-itof the tanneries, and the farm weio ransaeked for any article- - in which heavy was used. Old ti unks Were cut up. and partieuim ly tLc aiiipli skirts, th.n iu use, of Middles. If tl. owner ol mdi u sadil-- i did not spei iiiy uiiiiz- i!s heavy Haps- lor Ids f0 riziTT Tenant desiring the Dam.Y Union served at their hotn oan secure it by postal card request, w order through the telephone. W here delivery it irregular, pease rail immediate complaint ( the bvtmeex 1'ond and Clothing, la th War Period iu the Southern states, Were Dlteteult te C et The lather cf Invention Filed Her Wits. . tit d-- 1S3S. PHENOMENON. AN INTERESTING YTben Forsker wgs making his speech iu placing Senator Sherman in nomination lor the Presidency, he said that , nominee, whoever he might would at least be a gentleman, a scholar, n patriot, and would have some eocial etaud irp ia the cominauity. What ha meant to have hi hearers understand was that occupant of the White Hons in all these qn ilitiea ad cations. Foraker and log Uls ure not far apart in their estimit of Grover Cleveland, as will be seen by the following quotations from Ingalls contribution to th North American Review. The arneb-fajsb-- i-- fr-'i- Lo-ass- qa-vlif- i : 'The alleged election of Grover Cleveland to the Presidency in 1S?4 was th most astonishing phenomeuau in American politics, and it is doubtful whether ire parallel can be found in the history of any catien. Obacure-men- . ignorant men. de- graded men have been elevated to power, but it ha never before occurred that man possessing every acknowledged disqualification has been selected because of theta, and elevated from the lowest to estate without ever having exa pressed recorded opinion upon any public question. It ia not known that made apolitical speech, tried an important cause, wan a meaib-- r of any legia remembered paralative body, wrote or an intelligent expressed graph, idea, and after three years cl admin ifctr&tion his political views, if he has any, are a matter of surmise, even to hie partisans. It remains uncertain to thi hour whether his predilections in the war were for the North or South, and except that he furnished a substitute when conscripted, whom he subsequently to die is the poor house, it is certain that he sustained no personal relation, cither in sentiment or deed, to the most momentous eontroveray of modern times He has no perceptible connection with the category of accidents to which his elevation ia duo. He has neither personal following, popularity, admiration, nor respect, because he has exhibited none of the traits nor attainments that inspire regard. lie was not eloquent, nor learned, nor cultivated, nor agreeable, nor enter taining, nor attractive in mind, manner or person. His enjoyments were those which are found iu the unrestrained indulgence of th appetites and passions, and his chosen associates were the companions of kis orgies. It ia impossible to excite popular enthusiasm for an Executive who confessedly reached the dim n ol his great powers in refusing to approve an appropriation for a public building in a country town, and vetoing in a ghoulish glse a two dollar pension bill for a mutilated and disabled Union veteran. Paradoxical as it may appear, the administration of Cleveland ha reiTited in an inestimable advantage to the It his peopl of the United States. an additional evidence, if puch were necessary, of their capacity for There ia no longer occasion to despair of the perpetuity of the It public. est h-e- ver pei-tsiU- fur-psh- ed sd r tr '! tkree-euavter- s sub-titut- o. ru-e- j1-ishin- s - - ,. would some one ten! th. in. SLioele-- s nn-could not re-- ithe femnt.-tio- u of such a xaddie, am! is were where the own-'i- , imvmg I ft hi- -' Inr-- e raddled and tied to a p !. i tunesl to rind lii sad He iinu went of kirt-. Such tlieils occurred even outside of Hum le s. The fi ip of the saddle went out ol use, and the mw nuie saddle without it catn in vogue universally. Mole leather finally became so searco and high that the people resorted to wcl 6sasulti-tut- o for tho soles of shoes. The-- o wood-- u of a bottoms, us they were calleii, con.si-L.sdo aud heel all iu a solid piece, i It was cut own e)-- ti-i- e -- n n fru-que- nt -- Hl out of maple or gain wo. xl as a rule, sometimes with a knife, again by rude machinery. La Ur fcueh wood bottoms were sold by a number of exiert makers, who kenr. on hand various sizes lor mens wear. Farm hands wore them largely. From the middle the sole turned up toward the too, so that The White Pine (Nev.) News, an out- the foot iu walking would have a rolling motion forward, which was necessary, as Cleve spoken Democratic paper, says: the rigid sole could not. bend. Into a groove land and Thurman. These are the stand around the upper edge ot the woodmi Iwl-tocut nrd bearers put before 1 he people for Pres the upp-- r leather was secured bv means ident and Vice President of the United of wooden jiegs or iron tacks, when the latter States by the St. Louis Convention. If could be had. It was found that tho wood bottom made a dry, warm shoe, and, after a the name were reversed, and the platform little practice, one which was worn without not dictated by the Wall street gold bugs special inconvenience. The heel and sole Hont as tbs grave on the most important were always protected by narrow straps of iiauo before the country, the financial iron around the edges, to prevent rapid wear. iboes inside a great deal of noise when isaas we would bring out our rooster and The used in the houre or on hard ground, and on filcg the Democratic banner to the breeza. nights when there was a stillness in the air As it is we have no heart to do so. The and the ground was frozen hard, the of bri-- k walkers thus shod were easily fact that the greatest and purest statesman of half a mile. Old men heard in the conntry is made the tail to the kite had d at a distance i l Lt coming a to t .is of a very ordinary man a man whose rr r 1 i .7 f : v financial administration of the government nmn declared ILut be wished the plagued has been death to the silver mining indus- thiogs had never been agitated. In snow, walking with these shoes was ilklieult, as the tries of the Pacific Coast does not snow balled as it dors iu r orsea hoof. enthuse us to any great degree. We M would like to eeo th Democratic party win Kerosene oil had not liccn in use a great oa manly, honest iwue; but a party that while when the war lxgan, but hml vtt pracThe lav k of oil is too cowardly to set forth in its creed tically displaced the candle. rendered the lamps usea-ss- , and the tallow what Deck, Boland and other Democratic candle became supreme. In the matter of apostles Lave fought for for years, does light, us iu ofh r things, there were invennot deserve success. We dont like the S'. tions. Ono of thesj was a tajwr, which was by drawing a thick wait of Louis crow, and we dont intend to par- mad tw cotton a pan of im Itml beestake thereof, no matter bow tecirtiog the wax mid rosin. through This operation was- rejmnted tail ia. We ahull wait and see what kind until the wick, which vs ,s generally twenty of a dili the Chicago Convention will to fifty yards in length, ws the size of a and looked like a toji of yellow wax. out. If that is no better, well fast a pencil "While it vvus jet vvurui this wick was wound Lilo jot. ou u UtCo u' ou a tvrocul, titcu Iu luktE nt. -- m foot-stej- w .'i.-ul- cu-ton- 1 loo-el- - st y Oce end, tunie.! up, was lighted, and the t s;sr was place! upon th table at suppsi time or for a reading light. Buck a tc;r burnod slowly, but yet had to be w itched and turned up. Trcin time to time tls burning end was unwound and pulled up. Seme-time- s there was carelessness and the entire taper caught'on fire from tue wick. Another device for light was a sau:. ? or platter of molted lird, in which fioated a ball from the TLe.sc balls, sveamore or C0i.fi l wood which were dry and absorbent and quite in- fiiromble, burned readily, acting as a wick cu pfcpir the Isnl meltd. One ball gave fuEy as much light as an ordinary kerosene Lirys Th tallow dp, tL wax tap'r and tho'ci.- Us c? cli L 1 tl .Ir aivocstcu. Other powerful lilumi-tAtIpop i, w h 3 l) dred a ret irnel to an evea more primitiv irzl T,l:h in the mlklH. Ia a rooai all fix; v sJjh' i ,. i light. Pecfte, la tli country particularly, were I at to pres t Fr!t13 for writing paper and i. All old 1 Lera were rasurrected and dertra s'.c'i of i ?r removed therefrom. written oa on side of th peper Cli vira 6 Jn brought out and the other sida used. Old becks wtrs cut tip Jid th paper taken for this purpose. Eavetepcs were cut cut cf tmy kind of paper ly th us of a fehrrp kuu end a wooden pattern. Cherry tre or pes.:h tra gum farni-he- d th mucil-i- f t . .'i dl .solved H vinegar. Th:se were often r.u.1 by children aud sold rst from 3 to 3 per j ack iu Confederate or state currency. Many letters wgr mailed ia the cl I style cf a century tire, without envelope. Goose quills furnished pens, a of yore, aud buzzard and turkey quills were abo used. Polk I? rriefl, elderberries and the galls of the red oak tire furnished ink, being ued in the solution sharpened bars of lend were ufed rs ncii.s, while for slate HUH'ils old slates were cut up into narrow s!i ijs find munilcd vvifli a knife. a j art tally cinderod Ivon of a chicken v as d as a slat pencil, but proved rather fix) fcoft. As for school books, any kind were many of them being lmlf a century old. Occasionally in the country schools no two tlmpcs. SOM 2 OF THE EXPEDIENTS FOR SUPPLYING NATURES WANTS. SUNDAY UTAH TIMES. 3 W t) year, by mail, ) ost prid.... AdvsrltsiRjr fUtes made known at the Office. Ks- 13 CsrSsSi Click. f!xin fmae. i;cr":r. IDiF. ilAiiFSiilFiS. AVAR ,-- Eir.CZirTIOS. F UTAH DAILY UNION. copy. Eleifl '"tc? U A Jle.uUe Trl?s In Vain to riml an Open Door, t ' oi . lUr ! ca-vrkq-'es lr as ; took could U found alike. J .J - 1 .... 0? 79 J j I I O' I UiiiUba Call A GENERAL LINE OF Uphcistorod r.nd Pcrlor Cnitfi, Oliriro, Lounpso, Etc,, E!;c. Gall and GNamina T.ly Otoe!:.' f1aln Street, L. Z, C. opposite drove to C nira! park soon afrer noon, with lion. John IV. 1ooi waiter, the well known m, aiuiacturor, of Ohio, and the signs of distress nt various places showed that the sudden drviirss had caught many unprepared. It soem d to bo taken for granted man would certainly know that a could of some pliie, whore the refre-li- ; but, tor weal or for woe, niovsj.api r men were as ignorant ns common p pie. The universal testimony was that not on' hofi-in tho city had sold so msu-lof v ine so fur or a pony of beer; and police pretty nearly confirm It. Verily, iL wasN.-Yoiks day for perfeef v.. m'ei , ihe first he r more, and pib-ftbl- y has had for sixty the la--t the will mi for for a cenlmy. But the park was nt its J. .v Hiest New Yorkers wy it is lovelier laov than ever Iwfor. anil tbo array of fine turm.ips r.s well ns of people was tho greate-- t for years. This is perhajv the mot e ivm n k. d!c. since som I. or hy 31oin, iJJaltliani and i ipats In the manufacture of shoe blacking lampblack or the charcoal of burned wheat or oat with tallow and beeswax, was straw, Hied. Soul used buttermilk, into which all th lampblack it woulJ dissolve was mixed. In tlie manufacture of hats and bonnet Loth ingenuity and t&eta were shown. Boys well a women, devoted much and girls, time to braiding long rolls of wheat, oat or rye straw for hat braids. Palmetto was split and braided. Artificial flowers were homo mnde, of bathers iu their natural color or For ordinary wear dved, and from mn-IxMincii were made iu "poke st le, of marsh j rushes, dried, cut ia proper lengths and woven in an open warp cf cotton. Buch bon-- ; nets presented a really tidy apiearnnee. Wheat or rye straw was also lsel the samo way. The making o such bonnets was had to be laborious, as tlic straw or 3 laid in t he warp one by on by Land. Old buttons wet covered and recovered, and in vv oik-- vu re i,ist from pewter. Bhajies cut fro, ii small, thin gourds were covered with loth and did goml duty ns buttons. The repair of corsets when ribs were broken was a but for only a little while, for it was pnl', found that hickory splints served thepurpos wul, and whit oak was as service able. I nd-te- 4 -- V ' . ' e. vet XJ a J9 ft K .n- h I H. ru-he- d authorities psti'nnte tint r.t.rxK) or lOO.ixM extra excursionists left the city on account of prohibition. Mr. Book waiter, after returning yirly t Iris year from his third extended tour inllah, Egypt and the far cast, has thrown himself into burine.-- s again with renewed activity, and is projecting extensir impiovem nts on his lands in the west ns wadi as further investments. His recent articles on economic, subjects, esprH'iully on tin' general decline of price and danger to the American grain trade, have attracted great attention both here ami abroad. At the Bt. Vincent lio,,l in the park we met Dorsey with Mr. Lake, of The Tribune; and after u careful comparison of nobs ami an earm t oj tli, waiters Ihotwoiaiblic men and t wo journalists sntdown ton lilile of a)xil-l- i it nans water! This settles the fact that ion was indeed tlioi ougli last Sunday iu Nov York, for when two nevvsnaiier un n, a traveled millionaire and Benator Dors y can- n,t lilu u spirituous, you can safely swear -- ques-tionin- g pro-lim- Coffee was treasured, but after a time th supply gave out and store coffee lecamo that none was to bo had. J. H. Beadle. with not ft few a mere memory. Only tin ougli the blockade runnels could coffee be obtained, and of cour-- e the great mass of I oplo had to go without it. The same rein c k iqiil .s to tea. A a for cofAn Interesting Bit of Long Island nt-- . fee, rye. wheat or OKra was roasted, ground tory. u ml boiled in a coffee pot or kettle, or sweet .Special Correspondence. were raw diced and roasted, then pmatots ilc pood lino and ground. Bran and bread In Gardiners bay. Long Island, during th era us were nl-- o used, and not a few used tfio sisd- - ot the pu'sLiuinou and dried apple. As war of 1812. lay the English fleet under Admiral Hardy, watching for Decatur to coma n substitute; for sugar, sorghum or cane syrup out of New London, which he managed to do whs the sole reliance. Cane was cultivated here and gave good v ields. In tho while they w'atched. ev The English kept the Long Islanders in a autumn the cane ci uslinv, mad In a rude state of alarm by landing and killing cattle. with of rollers wood, big way placed Our people kept Ilardj- in a chronic fluster le by bide, made freaking noi.-e- s with the tido w Inch could le heard at great distam-es- . as by sending torpedoes to drift s. They were the mules, walkisl in a circle around the a,gal 11st fcis war made tilled of with which, 111 kegs cru-heor bianu. which sweeps pulling th rollers. The cane was cut and powder, floated on tho surface and went off by an interior clockwork. Thy hauld' to tho crushers, and there children never blew up a vessel, but tho scare they v.el gave the English was worth a good many ,1 cents. Our folks got wind of this and sent caught, the Laud or hands of a urele tesler, fi followed a loss mid then there one harmless cniptj kegs and barrels as well ns charged with powder. The empty ones or both arm-- . The lane juice wn Itnihd in those were as good scarecrows ns the full ones, and woo, leu or iron tanks, generally th former, when the Engli-- h saw a flotilla of barrels which was provided with a siu.t iron botcoining along with the tide, there was a gen tom. In many places the loiling was. don upheaving of anchors and scuttling in ordinary pots and kttle, and three were era! to out of the of Item way get rows seen m to hung on wooden poles over boxc-- . Ilardv a log flr. in the woods near the crusher. barrels and oven cracker swore was a of it mean, contemptible Aft r b diing the syrup was run into barrels or kegs. It, would not crystallize, and make fighting. It was quit natural he should led riled when a cracker box, evni a board, sent Msgir like tlic Louisiana cane Juice, but it a panic through the fleet. Our folks got n was Us id iu its fluid or semi fluid state deal of fun that way out of the blockadgood for all purposes. There was often great ri-One Penny, of Three Mile squadron. ing w between as to hose i'.iia neighbors airy boss torpedoist. was the IV ny harbor, of syrup was th best, and the "long sweetbed about clam knew Gardiner's ley ening," as it was called, wa3 duly tasted and and eveiyturn and vagary of the tide, as every upon ly critical neighbors. Bom pi ed as well us a weather tint s it was neai ljv black in color, and of u affected by Amoon or wind, neighbor of Penny's, v. bo drove rank ii tasta when burm-d- j but iu other almanac. esses it was golden and equal to any syrup in a surreptitious and profitable trade with th furnishing them with milk and tic world. People soon learned to like it. English by told Hardy of Pennys doings in vegetables, saw ( 'mldiou never sugar, and the story i; line. Hardy rent told of on little Coniederato who In lefic, tho nail keg torpedo one cut Penny rut 01 ashore crew boat's night, ! r.lo-th war ended, was given a lump of his lied, and mad him a prisoner. When th mi' ay cut loaf and held it in his hand, eye- -j fleet sailed, away he was released. II in; it anxiously, but not knowing what remembered his betrayer. Thirty jeara an r of ; .tiff it ws. afterward old Fenny would com to Harbor with his jackass and Bag An odd thing du.mg in war was The factories a load of clams. It was the pnly four dinning of cotton yarn. .oulil not supply everybody, so it was found legged jackass in our parts and was u curiosbest to let people, women esjeein!ly, draw ity. When old Penny had sold his clams station los, a d the oms who drew a ticket with a and loaded up with rum he himself in front of his betrayer's oftie and nu tidier luid th pnvilego of going to th factory when jam was spun, of presenting call out, Who sold an old Penny for a cent This witn an occasional tho card and the projier amount of money to th British and taking away tho much desired five pound bray from the donkey mud quit a liv ely bundle of cotton Many thousands of kick up in the main street of a summer's aftercotton people picked by Land, carded it with noon, and furnished entertainment for us hoys hand cards into rolls, then spun it into yarn on as well as many of th leuding citizens. When old fashioned spinning wheels. The blockade old Penny died they buried him among th runners always brought over thousands of ' sand hill of Lis . loved and lone Three Mil cotton cards, which were sold at cost to the i harbor. It was a pretty stiff afternoon's , one of the few mourn- women. Though all this inventive genius work, so Judge II was shown during the war, yet when the ers, told me, for tho hearse got stuck in tha struggle ended the people abandoned the sand, and both the minister and tho judge yvere obliged to put their shoulders to tho makeshifts and returned to store good.- A Ci na field is now a great curiosity, th ' wheels and applr legal and theological mus- cular power to fetart the corps on its waj'. noise of tL mill is no longer heard, and th loom and th spinning wheel are mere Just as they were about to cover him upon curiosities, two la tha ' most out of the way of Pennys digging colleagues was heard to mutter: Better chum 111 a few Fred A. OteDS. neighborhoods. hobble atones for ballast, or hell never stay TL hundreds of Ug tin cans which com to P. M. put. filled with milk and th city before da cream are returned to tha milk yards of th Must the Hntahe Get railroads before 10 o'clock each morning. It A11 iconoclast, who is evidently out of a is the popular impression that tha milkman raises a slogan against th mustache. makes a little rnilk go os far as possible, inas- job, it should go, in th .interest of much a the fluid often bears prinia facie evi- H,sajs There is room for a wid beauty. manly dence of having been slrctcho I by the libon th question of th of differeuca opinion eral us of water, There are a certain das? ornamental character of there hirsute apof jieople, however, who have much faith in o woman test ted to the submit If the milkman.' They are the poor women and pendages. tho chances are that they would suffrage, children who live in the squalid stay, for the Spanish women have an adage lying on cither rid of thu great railroad paying that A mustache is to a kLswbafc tracks. They come to tha milk yards" overy gait is to an egg. The titillating ' morning os boon as th milkmen Lave rs Yc: I turned their cons and with 1 iteteeps stud psjla purely twdli Vi Lzi.rl'z,x dreg tl 3 tgJii t their ifid drop. i siitv-titn- fe l MAIN AVENUE, 5 ki W r r I C? i k U U IA I Trains will leave Ogden for SYRACUSE, daily, at 4:45 p. m. and 6 p. m. ; returning, leave SYRACUSE at 8 p. m , reaching Ogden at :40 p. m. An extra train will leave .Ogden on Sundays, at 10:00 a. ra.; returning, leave SYRACUSE at 3:25 p. m., reaching Ogden at 4 p. m. Tickets for round trip 50 cents. Frances Cote, John Sharp, Gen. Frt and Pas. Agt. Gen. Supt. ia S. M PAE-I- I ! 1 I pntstftWi a W AND SPECIFICATIONS LANS, ektimate furnished. OFFICE AMD SHO3 Next dcor west of the Z. C. v a S EAT T and l.Ri!;:! cf rxiAi m r;.ilv:;.v. THE OVERLAID CCUTE. The tlthi Lins Cssrrvirg ike Ur.Iiiet on?ir Hilt. : 1., on Through Pullman Sleepers and Msdsra Day Coaches from th JuUaourl Rlvsr. LX. dihect co:;fiECTic::s ' ' BETWEEN m tnaae fi- - Denver, Cheysnpe, 9Cr.sas Cuy, Coureil CtUff:, Omaha Chicago. S'. Lmiit, d 1 ffisat Udail Oca a vtie Uelf brafed FUher Peer, ic cool end stocA of w ir.es, liquor delicious. Hrst-claWm. and cigar. Frop, i.i:ADiriG V.I'.Dlcsuls - STREET, BBur. EienBE, MAIN mam::3 S A s staIch) Cverlund Fourth Street. a V Ogdon Cityf Utah. Nebraska, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, Washington Terri. tory, and Northern Pioiiie City. Baggage Checked Through to end front all Points E ist and West, end cencsctioss FRESH shd Salted Meats kept constanta Of AU kinds on b.nd. Sausages ly i made at River with limspecialty. Highest rrices paid for Fat S'ock nnd Poultry. Prompt attention paid ited Trains of Eastern Lines. to orders by mail. Persons wishing to Recuze b irgain in meats will find it to their adv intago to call st th Empire Market b for purchasing rlsw her.. s I will not be undersold. Fifth Hire t. Family Sleepers Booth of Broom Hotel, Ogden, Utah. Mie-aour- FrcccnT!::::;'; Pliil. Grill. Prop, A .$? - - Bail Trains. r. L. K BIEL. THE BUTCHER tn. fm Ttfifim, C.'f, , T. A. & CriASSA Cmm t p. F. A., 1. V. PARXEK, Leave Orders for any kind of J f. ttZALL, Actirj SALT LAKE C TV, UTAH. 9 iteiULi Ac a.a. c ro.',V Ogdan, Utah. Cr!- f ll iit it & & Fi-iii- r, I e a MAIN OAUsiiEfi, ! ts I Contractors and Builders. y;.!o;; pacific a ld ft t (cne J. F. BU3IIEH .W. I f v J fI STREET, tu'-m- f.v-hio- f rA '4 LEWIS' DRICi: B2ILCr:3 es-el- I UTAH. OGDEN, ri r- 4 vd And ir vvasdono. tru-twort- u-e- dl-tric- $ p Bun. lay I new-pup- a-e- jierix-n-dioul.ir- m nS t. Ocoa-tioiial- ly I - r n, cop-jver- - - V-. from Hudson to Ea.t l iver, not a drop of anything intoxicating could be bought by the jinot-talented cvi.iIit. 'The reas.ui rf this ex-- j teacril inn rv rigor lies in one fact. Tlie liquor Bleu were for oiwe in perfect accord wiih th police, the litter noil. mg like as anxious to caf ore tho law m the former were to keep it. j About dark Saturday the signs of a coming drought were apparent in nil the public resorts. Men who never bet. .re can a bottle were getting thiir flasks filled, and bottled beer w as going out of the big liars by the wagon load. When it was known for a certainty that tho hotels would not sell nny- thing next day, even to their regular gne-- t i, there wns something like a panic. Wont yon even send n bottle of wine to my room? asked an English American gentleman at the Hotel Brunswick. Not n drop of anything stronger than was th reply; "better got all apoHinari:, need you'll Very well, send up a pint Ixvltle of cocktails, n quart of prime whisky and a little go of brandy. Just semi em to my room, - en-vel- - Sunday was a day without precedent in the th;- - city the like oi it never was sine Dtitch Puritan rule was overthrown, and perhaps never will be again. On all Manhattan Inland prohibition was enforced with :i vigor and suece-- s unknown in an- - prohibition atato; from Harlem river to the Buttery, and 1 '' Sivcial C'orrespoudeuce.l , tit. ;u PREVAILED. DROUGHT CONDUCTED BY THS; rf PJ. f i -i L k tij i v, corsssE f all rtuoy rpiit: I thorough, the trancheo of solid .ati embracing m Gections Smokers and Comb accomplished FRED. FOUL QEBG Boys u to the se of butlillng. .aripaddress rr'lcuisrs. the In rouith talrctt, Ltlow litla. ed&iioa. vctal a3 tr.r.yy; tz':s fbee cf CHir.zi. laGLACES. Uiof.8, Dgiieu City Uteh. 11 years Tor terns .fira cf t le;-Foundatio- ns, rsiv &-- ?r v Aj |