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The Salt Lake Herald from Salt Lake City, Utah • Page 3

Location:
Salt Lake City, Utah
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Jj Pp1 SLT LAKE HERAii l1JESDAY DECEIBER 12 1893 BRIGHAM CITY IN ARMS INDIGNATION OVER THE INCREASE JX IXSURAXCE RATES A Court House Proposed for Sanpctc County 3Iaikti Preparing for Floods General Items The people of Bingham city seem to lh thoroughly in earnest in their protest against the increase in fire insurance rates and in their movement to establish a home mutual company Commenting on the matter the Buglar says The fact is the grasping monopoly has not taken any notice whatever of our improved facilities for fighting fires That is heaping insult upon injustice Considering this why should we only to the extent of protecting home interests put one or two thousand dollars into tire paraphernalia and why should our sturdy volunteers train so zealously to save money for these palpably ungrateful gentlemen robbers Remember every time our volunteers save a building insured for 5000 that Is the same as putting 5 00ft into the pockets of the ungrateful insurance men We heard one insurance agent remark last week The rates are so high I am ashamed to ask a man tr insure Some claim additional exposures axe raised the rates In afew instances such may be the case but not in the majority Then anyway should not the water works fire department and electric lights have a counteracting effect But no they are snubbed they are too insignificant for I consideration of these men of gold linedpockets fame they want to I squeeze more money out of the people I of Bingham city therefore they increase our insurance nearly 1000 a year Every yjaar the people of Brigham city pay in hard cash probably 54000 to 000 into the pockets of these ungrateful insurance companies The I city does not average a 500 fire a year Keenly feeling the insult and injustice 1 done them by the insurance combine I the busines men of this city are now talking strongly of organizing a home mutual company and as far as possible let the ingrates severely alone We have spoken to nearly all of our busines men during the past few days and without one exception they i arti ly endorse this movement It woud result in keeping something like 5000 cash in the town every year At the present outrageous rates we cannot insure is a common cry The people are ind ant and their indignation is righteous Injustice admmstered with a kick may kill but It can neither silence nor convince I true Americans THE MOUNT PLEASANT LOTTERY How the Officers Obtained Information of Its Operations Postofilce Inspector Nichols wired the Denver office yesterday that he had I arrested the officers of the Savings Investment I company of Mount Pleasant Utah upon charges of using the mails I for lottery purposes and to defraud I says the Denver Republican The officers I are Web Green Jordan and Ralph secretary Ralph is postmaster I master at Mount Pleasant All three of them are under indictment by the federal stand jury The Denver inspectors began the war on these bond companies They started on the case in July and made a fight against the Denver Investment Bond company This company was issuing bonds of 1000 each payable with 10 cash and 2 a month SHAKING THE BOX There was a chance to get 1000 if the holders of a bond held the proper number The bonds were numbered I consecutively The applications were numbered cqnsecutiveiy as they ar riv a at the office of the company I Bonds were redeemed in the order of i 1 3 6 up to a certain number and then 2 5 8 and so on The money to pay these bonds was secured from the S3 1 per month from each bondholder Fifty II cents of this amount was for the expenses Ii of the company 50 cents was held as a general reserve and the 41 for the payment of bonds When 1000 holders of bonds had paid their 2 aj Ie then a bond was paid The Denver authorities investigated and found that a small number of bonds had been paid and that friends or relatives of the officers held the lucky numbers Frequent complaints however led the inspectors to investigate and the officers were all arrested indicted by the grand jury arraigned pleaded guilty and suffered to 50 after paying a fine of 100 and costs and giving a promise to quit the business ALL BROKEN UP There were five investment companies in Denver however including the Denver Investment Bond company These called themselves the Phoenix Loan and Investment company the Colorado Guarantee and Loan company the Guarantee Investment company and the Workmans Investment Bond company In Pueblo there were two the Modern Investment company and th Rocky Mountain Investment company The Denver inspectors wrote to Assistant AttorneyGeneral Tyner describing the business in detail and asking for a ruling Almost simultaneously with the ruling a fraud order was issued for the stoppage of all mall addressed to these concerns This put them on their guard and all except the Denver company quit using the mails for lottery purposes such as their business is claimed to be The Denver company showed defiance and was an easy prey The other companies including the Pueblo concern evidently scared at the poor success made by the Denver company in fighting the inspectors drew off and Quit using the mails ON OLD CHARGES The order received from Washington yesterday reads that if these companies are still doing business without the aid of the mails they can be prosecuted for past offensesthe time when they did use the malls They informed the inspectors that they had quit best ness but with the new order to back them they will find out whether or not they have done so There are three concerns of the same I character doing business in Utah The Denver inspectors in whose district Utah is located opened correspondence with these companies as prospective agents of the company The officers of the company very naturally fell into the trap and Inspector Nichols was there to grab them when they fell Officers of the Pacific Coast Bond and Investment company were arrested Thursday and yesterday the officers of the Savings Investment company were arrested There still remains one small concern in Salt Lake which when broken up will clean up this district 1 A Court House Needed The question of building a county courthouse in Sahpete county is about to be agitated once more It is now over three years since the people of the county decided by their votes that the county seat should remain at Manti and there is every reason to believe that another trial would result in a more emphatic answer than before Four years ago the court decided that a courthouse was needed and the financial condition of the county justified the expenditure Since that time conditions have changed but little in these respects We need the building even worse than before and we are in a better condition for building Sometime ago the Pyramid raised the cry that the southern members were apt to take advantage in case one of the northern members were absent During two sessions Mr Sund wall was absent but no move was made until his return It now looks as if a vacancy might soon be in the court as Jlr Sundwall will leave for Europe Manti wants the county seat but does not propose to use any unfair means to keep it nor do we need them Notice is given a month ahead so that all may have a chance to speak up Manti Sentinel Msintl Preparing for Floods The committee mentioned in our last issue who were to examine the two routes by which the city council proposed to carry off the surplus water during floods called a meeting for Tuesday evening Two reports were presented the majority favoring the route along the South Hollow and the minority favoring a canal around the southern portion of town After considerable discussion it was decided to clean out the South create and run the surplus water in that direct Manti Sentinel Territorial Items The Sanpete Valley road has an op ton on the Edmunds mine at Sterling for 40000 payable May IManU Sentinel There are 520 school children enrolled this term and they will fill the new school house to overflowing and slop over a little at that Manti Sentinel Springville has raised 178 car loads of beets this year the cars average 20 tons The price of this is 1691000 The average yield is ten tons per acre Manti Sentinel The store in Gunnison field was burglarized a few nights ago and about 2500 worth of goods stolen Mr Fjelsted is the proprietor and is well satisfied as to the identity of the burglars Manti Sentinel The Manti football team left on Thursday morning to play a match game with Springvlle If they carry away the honors the next match we hear of will be with Park City whose team have never been defeated Manti Messenger John Rich the banker has iust i sold his farm north of town and several other pieces of real estate in i Brigham City and vicinity for property i in Salt Lake Real estate prices i in Salt Lake are way down at present Brignam Bugler i The little girl of John I Chipman I who had her foot cut off in this city by the train a few months ago I and of which mention was made in i these columns has been brought home from the hospital at Ogden where she was taken by the company for treatment American Fork Item i Last Monday Drs Olsten and Hos Lord held an examination on Christine Maria Jensen a native of Denmark born on the 28th of February 1851 says the Manti Sentinel She is the mother of six children She has been I ailing about four weeks She was adjudged insane and taken to the insane I asylum on Tuesday Died at her home in this city on Friday afternoon December 8 Mrs Elizabeth May Holland aged 21 years and months Funeral services will be held Sunday afternoon at 2 oclock The news comes to us but a short time before going to press which prevents a more extended notice Coal yule Chronicle The second number of the ManU Sentinel is at hand It enters the field of journalism in opposition to the Messenger politically and otherwise and 110 doubt with proper grooming will show well in the race It is understood that Ward Stevenson is handling the quill and from present indications will publish a better paper thao heretofore It seems to us that it has crowded in on a narrow margin but if it can be made to stick we have no wish to the contrary and hope that its efforts may be united with others in upbuilding the grand excelsior county of Central Utah Mt Pleasant Pyramid OUR LITERARY COLUMN i Silence and Love They two untried together met When the world was young There was not wan wild weather yet Nor word of tongue Naught to remember or forget And Dawns first censor swung But love In language without nameV I Spoke That I reach I Far lands and near of frost and flame I pray you teach One thing to me who straightway came From pain and JoyTheir speech Then silence looking far away Across that land Dimmed by the dew of its first day An untrod strand Upon her lips a finger lay And smiling took Loves hand Virginia Woodward Cloud Are AVe Unpatriotic Walter Besant in his American i Notes a la Charles Dickens has opened I the way to a more severe criticism I than did the latter famous author after his first visit to America At the time of Dickens visit in 1842 the country west of New York was comparatively sparsely populated The now great west was not even dreamed of Mr Dickens found much to criti cise and in some cases very justly Fiftyone years later TVvhen the crowning triumph of our wonderful progress has been achieved in the celebration df our five hundredth anniversiry Mr Besant calmly takes up his pen and tells the world that were it not for the continual flaunting of the stars and stripes before the peoples eyes the United States would soon become the disunited States Think of Ital ye unpatriotic Americans You do not love your country for countrys sake Noyoure whipped into line by the great political parties youre taught from your cradle not to loc Ojd Glory but to fear it Was rver a grosser insult jtfered tc American citizens Mr Besant says In co at a population spread over so many states each state being a difertnt country there win always be ignorant men men ready to give up everything for a selfish advantagethere must always be a danger uiles I it be continually met and beaten down Where in the world did this vrltcr obtain his Siberian education in the United States unless he possibly spent most of his tim among the Chicago anarchists Well may he say that the ignorant emigrants foisted upon us by his own and other foreign countries have to be taught what citizenship means It is through this element that a score of brave Americans met their death at Chicago some years ago We dont want them We take them simply out of charity because they stand at our gates imploring us to have pity on their poverty brought about by the conditions existing in their mother country It is comforting to reflect that he found the country full of youthfull of energyfull of enterprisewith no fear of poverty such as exists In his own country We have no apology to make for our choice of history either Why should not the history of the United States begin with the Union If we were English we would possibly have more appreciation for the very beautiful and noble history before the Union shared with Great Britain but we are Americans and glory in it and as Mr Besant says Our country must be all our diva Then why disruption if you please The United States today stands peerless in the history of the energy and enterprise of the jvorld We venture to say that Mr Besant could not employ his time to better advantage than to come over and catch a little of the youthful infection of the country Possibly by the time hed visited in the great west and a few other places besides New York Buffalo and Chicago hed take back with him to his native soil a little more important plunder a he calls it than the astonishing perpetuity of our youth and the homage we pay to Old Glory Retrospective of the White City At first glance I was not favorably impressed with the Christmas Cosmopolitan A glance at the index Indicated a superfluity of Worlds fair literature It needed however but a short review of its pages to prove its superior rank among the perio3icals of the day The charms of the White city are exhaustively and admirably portrayed in all their difficult aspects by the most clever writers of the day Paul Borget John Ingalls Hop kinson Smith Robert Grant Marklv Boyeson Taylor and A Hardy Lyman Gage discusses the financial side and interspersed I throughout each and every article are very clever illustrations To those who visited the fair as well as to those who missed the opportunity I would say the December Cosmopolitan is one of the choicest souvenirs of the recent reat exhibition The Christmas Magazines Has any one thought what a valuable and acceptable Christmas present the various holiday magazines would make We have them all here on our local booksellers shelvesmodels of artistic beauty both inside and out Superb editions of the most refined and representative literature of the age And when one takes into consideration the pictorial luxury as evidenced In the illustrations from the pens pencils and brushes of the leading artists of America would he not gladly pay twice the price for such typical American literature Literary Notes A new serial novel will shortly appear in Harpers Bazaar It is the latest of William Blacks entitled Highland Cousins A new novel Trilby is to begin in the January Harpers The manu script is by Du Maurier and said to be something remarkable The Pall Mall Gazette is right inline with the American magazines Its Christmas edition is handsomely covered and full of good literature Scribners will publish George Mere diths latest effort The Amazing Marriage some time during the coming year It will be a serial in the magazine Jerome Jerome well known as a successful author is about to start a weekly magazine in addition to the monthly Idler which he already publishes Marion Crawford has named the heroine I of his latest book Marion It is generally accepted that the name as pronounced is adaptable to either sex but distinguished by the spelling When used as a girls name it is spelled Marian The third edition of Madam Grands great success The Heavenly Twins published in a threevolume edition Is coming out in London This is said to be a rare circumstance in England and shows what a notable production the novel must beThink of an order from one news company for 100 tons of one certain magazine The Commercial Gazette commenting on this order says It is almost an event in the history of the world and certainly an event in periodical literature A like order has never before been made and if past ratios be maintained it means considerably more than half a million dilation for the magazine PORTHEUS Amid the many Christmas books no new illustrated edition of Poe has thus far appeared The public has evidently been satisfied with Dores drawings for The Raven and the artists have lacked enthusiasm or fitness for the task It is time that an effort was made to illustrate this most unique and imaginative of American poets Mr Vedders vein is sufficiently weird for him to attempt it but if he will not then Rops in France Khnopff in Belgium or Ricketts in England could produce a good accompaniment to the poems Mrs Stannard who is best known by her nom de plume of John Strange Winter has ventured upon an entirely new field of literature in The Soul of the Bishop which is issued by Selwin Tait Sons of New York This book is in marked contrast with Booties Baby which established the authors reputation but that it bids fair to receive as hearty a welcome may be assumed from the fact that the first edition was exhausted on date of publication The Soul of the Bishop is in somewhat the same vein as Robert Elsmere and John Ward Preacher but like the authors portrait in the frontispiece it has a strength and individuality peculiarly its own Queer Accident to a Lighthouse Under somewhat extraordinary circumstances the Dover promenade pier sustained extensive damage some time ago when a full sized shipthe Christine of Bremenr into it between 8 and 9 oclock The pier was opened last May and the head which is now extensively damaged was only completed a short time ago The Christine a new iron fourmasted vessel of about 1500 tons was on a voyage from Dunkerpue to Philadelphia in ballast The captain states he had come into the bay to land a French channel pilot It was a clear night and the form of the pier could be distinctly defined while the regulation board of trade light in the lighthouse on the pierhead was burning brightly About 830 a heavy crash was heard ashore and the form of a large vessel was seen at the pierhead All lights on the pier were extinguished the gas mains having been fractured in the collision The public were with difficulty kept off the pier but help was quickly despatch to the pierhead with which the Christine lay entangled for a long time A harbor tug was obtained and the lifeboat was got out in readiness to be launched if necessary The vessel struck the pierhead at right angles carrying awaythe lighthouse as fairly as though she had been steered for it making a wide breach ror a distance of about forty feet tpne of the windscreens was also cut through and a large quantity of the iron rail and seats of the pier were broken The damage is roughly estimated at about 4000 There was a fresh easterly breeze blowing in shore at the time and it was nearly low water so that the ship was about 800 yards from the shore As the damage shows the Christine was heading as nearly as possible right in shore when the blow was struck the vessel taking the ground just after the collision The tug however succeeded in getting her off when the tide rose and as she had sustained little damage she was able to proceed on her voyage An accident under such circumstances is said to be unknown on the coast Deal pier was once run into but that was during a terrific gale when the ship was help less London Telegraph A Novel Business Barometer I The posted list of most New York I clubs is a business barometer Such lists unusually long and their items are unusually persistent in times of depression But with the return of business I sunshine they melt like snow at I the approach of spring It is a point lof pride with some men never tp be I thus posted for debt but there are i snobs who contemplate with satisfaction the appearance of their names once a month on the bulletin board I I along with the names of distinguished I men in whose company they would be glad to be seen New York Letter POLICE DEPARTMENT I TPHO3IAS HART HELD TO GRAND JURY FOR HOUSEBREAKING I Mrs Campbell Adjudged Sane SHc Will Be Ifeld for Housebreaking HnuswlrtU Will Be Tried Soon I Thomas Hart was yesterday held to the grand jury in bonds of 5500 on the charge of housebreaking by Justice Gee in the police court Hart was arrested at the same time as Shoemaker on suspicion of having been implicated in the robberies of the Taylor block and the Brooks Arcade but the prosecution failed to make out a case and he was cinched for carrying concealed weapons only However Casper Beisler having identified the revolver as his property taken from the Telluride block the fellow was again arraigned on the charge of housebreaking and held Walter Tilden aged 11 years was arrested yesterday morning on the oharge of petit larceny he haying been found with a number of ore sacks in his possession The boy claimed that his father gave them to him and the charge was dismissed Young Tilden was arrested some time ago for stealing a box of candy from McDonald Bros Chris Larsen charged with disturbing the peace John Hamilton petit larceny John Smith petit larceny Mike McBride drunk and John Doe gambling were all discharged The charge of assault and battery preferred against William Henderson was dismissed Pat Kelly forfeited 5 for being drunk and Joe Showatter put up a similar amount for the same offense Henry Smith arrested on suspicion of having been implicated with Hart and Shoemaker in numerous robberies was given five days for vagrancy William Wallace will labor for the city for the next ten days because he declined to work for anyone else Michael Crowley pleaded guilty to a charge for disturbing the peace but sentence was suspended WITH THE DEPARTMENT Tom Jones and Charles Clark held on the charge of breaking into a carat Pocatello Idaho and stealing a north today case of guns will be taken day The necessary papers will arrive this morning John Cassidy was arrested yesterday afternoon by Detective Hegg of the Rio Grande Western and lodged at the city jail last night He is charged with having broken into the station house at Spanish Fork two weeks ago and stealing a case of shoes The charge of obtaining money under false pretenses against A Shepherd or Sharp the employment agent will be investigated this morning by Justice Gee and that of purchasing goods from children against Phelps will receive attention this afternoon John Hauswirth over whose head hangs a charge of assault with a deadly weapon with intent to commit murder will be tried this week in the police court His wife the victim of the assault has nearly recovered from the effects of the terrible blows administered with a revolver Stone while half drunk yesterday afternoon kicked in the door of the Enterprise house and assaulted I the proprietor As a result he was arrested i and at the station three charges disturbing the peace destroying property and assault and battery rebooked against him Joseph Hamblin the young man arrested last week while endeavoring to sell several pieres ff goods will be arraigned for trial this morning on the charge or petit larceny it io alleged that the young man was associated I with Medlar and Rice the selfcon I fessed burglars and house breakers i and John Hauswirth claims that the cold found in Hamblins possession is I I the product of the melting down of several nieces of jewelry stolen from I his residence during his detention at the city jail On that charge Hamblin will be tried A charge of hous breakIng may develop Doctors Worthington and Meacham yesterday reported to Probate Judge Blair that hey had been unable to find any evidences of insanity in Mrs Minnie Campbell the woman who was sent to the probate court by Justice Gee for examination as to her sanity and recommended that she be discharged on the insanity complaint Judge Blair accordingly entered an order to that effect and this will again throw the woman back onto the tender mercies of the police judge Mrs Campbell has had her preliminary hearing on the charge of housebreaking and will be held to the grand jury according to the statement made by Justice Gee at the time he sent the woman to the probate court Even testimonial regarding Hoods Sarsaparllla is an honest unpurchased statement of what this medicine has actually done 55 Pure and excellent whiskeys at the Chicago Liquor House Very large amounts of private gold coins were formally minted in this country by individuals Reid of Georgia the Bechtlers of North Carolina the Mormons in Utah and several banking firms in California all once did a large business in this lineSt Louis GlobeDemocrat I WORKINGMEN EAT QUAKER OATS 1I Dr Lindsays MEnIGAL llISPENSARl Permanently located at OJIeara block 63J4 I Second South strict Dr Lindsay Physician Surgeon and Lecturer formerly of Philadelphia Specialist on all diseases of Men and Women I Dr Lindsay devotes his especial attention to the scientific treatment and cure of all Chronic Nervous AND Private Diseases RUPTURE PILES FJBTULA ana RECTAL ULCERS CUBED without pain or detention from business STRICTURE safely and radically cured I RHEUMATISM the result of Blood Poisoning stiff and swollen joints Neuralgia Catarrn I i Bronchitis Asthma Fits Paralysis Cancer I I Tumors Eruptous Salt Rheum Scrofula psraltco Tape Worm Dyspepsia Constipation and all 1 diseases of tho various organs of the body speedily and permanently cured at lila dUpen i sary Diseases of women a specialty Married persons or those entering that happy I state aware of physical weakness Jose oi pro oreatiro power impotency or other Uisqualiti i catons can have speedy and permanent relief Nn matter what your comulaint Is or who has tailed to cure you consult this skillful physician who isable to effect a cure where others foil Charges moderate and within reach of all Patients living away from the city who Cannot conveniently call may describe their troubles by letter and have medicines sent to them FREE from observation to any part of tto country DR LINDSAY is a CONTIDKKTIAII and SAn PHYSICIAN In whom all may confide is regularly graduated and legsily qualified to practice i medicine la DOSt widely and favoraoly I known bold enough to 0 lvertfse his skill to the world so that all persons consulting him may be I assured ot honorable treatment in al cases ol ailments the most delicate and difficult Offices OMEARA BLOCK 63Vi West Second South Street StreetSALT SALT LAKE CITY RIGHYILLE I 156 TEMPLE ST rEALER IN ALL KINDS OF SECONDhand goods Highest Cash prices paid for an unlimited amount of Furniture and Household I Goods In large or small lots Buyers will find tho best assortment of first class goods which will be sold at lowest prices Parties having furniture to dispose of will I do well to c5il before going elsewhere THE CULLEN HOTEL NOW CONDUCTED ON THE AMERICAN PLAN Bates S200 to S250 a Day Also European Plan GEORGE OULLINS Assignee HOTEL i OUTSIDE I 250 ROOMS The Most Elegantly Equipped Hotel Between Chicago and the Pacific Coast HOLMES Prop PALACE HOTEL LOGAN UTAH Tfl only Ars class commercial Louse In the Hy Electric lighted heated by steam throngioui Bath and closets at each floor Fine oar and billiard rooms sample mows Everything pertaining to a first glass establishment Special rates to theatrical aad commercial ran ROBERT MURDOCH 1 Owner and Manager The Manitou NEW MANAGEMENT BED HOED RATES Electric Lights Steam Heat ID every ltoon Cuisine of peculiar excellence rate S3QO to Si00 per day I ARMAND PAGE Prop THE WHITE ROUSE Reopened under now management Steam heat Rates 150 to 200 per day BIULFORD Prop I THE WALKER The Only FirstClass American and European Hotel I 1 European Plan 50c to 3350 per day naics i 1 American Plan 200 to 400 per day SALT LAKE CITY UTAH BEGHTOL SANDS PROPRIETORS STEREOTYPIN G1 I THE GERALD Offle EIGHT CENTS A DAff Itf Enable Any Citizen to Amrte it Secure tits Sest Encyctepcta namely tha Americanized Ea cyclopaedia BriUnnlca i Three things ought to find a place in every American home Th Sacred Pcriptnret a good newspaper and ft thoroughly reliable encyclopedia The first we are quite aura every family in which our paper is takea already enjoys the second ithaa been tho business of our livsso furnish the third we place at ft dwpoeal ot ur readers from this moment Eight jentd day for eight months will hereafter enable any citizen to MOOTS a complete set of the American cod Encyclopaedia Britannica which after careful examination we confidently believe to be the moat complete reliable and altogether the beet work of its kind extant today This is another illustration ot Lb motto that lies at the hue of American institutions In union there iiI strength We have simply organized our readers into a club of encyclopedia buyers and obtained from the publishers the concession wmch so large an organization haa the legitimate right to demand Our rewarg will come in an increased circulation which again will probably enable us to secure similar advantages for our subscribers in some other direction This is as it should be the publishers and readers of a great newspaper should work together for mutual ud vantage What the publishers nsvs done la to tale the Encyclopedia Britannica to pieces and rebuild it with amendments and improvements The latest or ninth edition of the original work was compiled some fifteen years ago the American editors have revised it to the present year The original 1 1 work was crowded with minute D9 exhaustive descriptions of EnglisL towns cities counties boroughs 1 minor institutions and other matters of peculiar interest to Englishmen and to Englishmen alone while American subjects were treated with the same brevity as French or German The American editors have reversed this method condensed the article on distinctively British subjects withi 1 reasonable limits and utilized the space thus gained for exhaustive discussions of purely American topics The original work excluded from its plan all mention of individuals however famous who were olive at the time of its compilation it says not a word of more than half the men whose names are written on the pages of 1 modern oistory no word of Grant ot Sheridan or Sherman Harriet Beecher Btowe Julia Ward Howe or Elizabeth Stuart Phelps of Cleveland HarrLon of Elaine or Parnell Salisbury or Bismarck This woful lapsus too has been supplied in the Americanized edition A series of 4000 biographies each brought down to the present year enables the reader to learn at a glance the life story of every noted individual of the present generation To all this add a complete Bria oi maps and a number of wallezecuted engravings illustrative the text and the Americanized Encyclopedia Britannica is before yeta work iu whose introduction to our readers wa feel a not unwarrantable pie OUR PHOPO mos By placing a subscription to this paper for one 7er we will deliver to you a complete set in cloth binding of the Americanized Enoyclopsediz Britannica on payment of 600 and your signing a contract to pay 200 for ten months In all twentysix dollars thus giTing yon the oest Zncvelopwdia prtunt at a tdfliDv 00 Wa will sfto mIl DJUXT Haaii I fear and the sot of Encyclopedias for t8it f5 down and 350 per month till paid Tax 5BNDJLT HERALD and the sat far W22bl and TUB SEMIWBBKLT HEKAIB cad the set for 2300 also in monthly payments deSired JL discount of 5 per cent aU0Ke for catJi iho above offer la for the Encyclopedia ia cloth binding sheep binding 3M per set extra half morocco Sd per set extra These valuable books can only be cMainad 1 fcy subscribing for THE HBBALD The seta 1 are now on band and we will 1M pleased te 1 show sample to any oak wk will eU all our om I 1 12 A GETS THE SUNDAY 2 5 0 I 1 11 HERALD FOR A YEAR Tii 1 i ffi FIRE AND SMOKEof of I I Our Insurance has just been adjusted We are now prepared to give the public the benefit of the same and offer a lot of I GOODS AT TERYLO PRICES A rare chance to Ladies and Childrens Hose from toe up Dress Goods Ladies Skirts Ginghams in Goods will be on Gloves all prices Great Variety 0 Secure Bargains Ladies Skirts 15e and up Wool Goods Hoods Shawls Fascinators Bargain Counters 1 Ladies and Childrens Coats and Ulsters etc I EARLY ON AT i II at 200 and up I Lace Curtains in Beautiful Designs 1 Hard Times Prices Monday Morning firstchoico TEASDEL SO NS And will continue for balance of the Call and get first choice week Hr 0 0 0 theL.

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About The Salt Lake Herald Archive

Pages Available:
100,984
Years Available:
1880-1909