OCR Text |
Show 01 W n i 0rCH OF THE FAMOUS of the Greatest Horse Descendant of tw! World ft c:. Uoe M - a ?. LON-s- K DON SPORTSMAN. s.na -- TATTERSALL..' a Famous Is an Able Horsemen Ion1 1 Market In Aue- - , HE name of Tatter-sa- il is synonymous everywhere wi t h y things appertaining to both the horsey and the spotting worlds. It would he hard to find a Iman i u who has any great- er claim on the fections of the wet f,r n jty It It. I Hurstwod Ridge, squires as back as the fourtfar Burnley fler It was after taking eenth century. themnsuccessful Stuart rising in kart in Tattersalt the then j45 that Richard; i fled to of the family, representative Ihohdon to escape the consequences of kis devotion to the cause of the Pretend-an- d of verel why Is- sue I sa the s Lon-- i talk dol-en- afen- firm, Edmund Tattersll.j Edmund Tattersall is descended from a good old Lancashire family and hiaj ancestors U la ouj. ; than the present head of the ultimately started in business auctioneer at' J Hyde Park corner. Old Tat, as he was universally called, diefd in 1795, and about fifteen ears later tlie hammer passed into the hands of his grandson, Richard. Richard Tattersall died in 1859, and was succeeded and his nephew by his son Richard U oney Mho raise Sing ldes i BROKE TO WN IN A DAY In a conversation with Treasurer THE REMARKABLE LUCKOF AN Abell, of Brooklyn, the other day, them ALI NIGHT GAMBLER. was revealed a former scheme, that. If it had been successful would have Until Every Faro-Bo- x Turned placed the New York base ball club Flayed Since He Then Has Lost Every Time, In Mr, Abells possession. It will be He Returns Once a Although Always remembered that; in 1892 Mr. Abell, who n. Yea ,was then and is now a stockholder In the New York club, proposed to the OR A WHOLE other stockholders, Messrs. Talcott, twelve months the McAlpin, Spaulding and Rush, that the faro dealers of Se best way to rid the club of its finanattle J have been cial entanglements would be to place It In the hands bf a receiver and sell waiting and watch it off at auction.; Mr. Abell made the Ing fof him. For the maq with the proposition repeatedly, but as the other d face stockholders believed they could get no and the reasonable pricej for their stock, degrave, clined to entertain the proposal. Now, quiet eyes, who one for the first time, Mr. Abell has exday, fifteen years ' ago came down plained why he made the above profrom Xlaska and the fields of gold position. He declares he had formed a broke every little silver faro bank In syndicate composed of rich young men. the little town. Thus Including1 Harry Astor Carey and William Astor Chanler, to1 buy the New writes a Seattle, Wash., correspondent York-club- . He iiad agreed to take 50 of the New York Press. Once a year per cent of the stock if the syndicate since that, night when he came in wanted him to, but desired no office. With a shoestring and went out with If Talcott & Co. had agreed to sell their rolls, the man with the wind-tannface returned to Seattle searchthe club at aucjtion, said Mr. Abell, we would havej it up. But ing for the golden fleece that he had as my proposition snapped was not accepted, of found 'fifteen-yearago and lost again. course J could not showjmy hand then. It has eluded him ever since. SomeIf I had knowm that Mr. Talcott and times he has had it almost within his others were going to sell to Mr. Freed- grasp, but each time it has slipped out man, I would have put the hid too. and he has gone home with his little But as long as Mr. Freedman bought satchel empty. He is a strange charit I was ready to congratulate , him, acter, even in this young land, where and I want to say here that he has strange characters are common, and made what will prove a profitable in- his failure to make his customary pilJ grimage this year has awakened in the vestment. minds of the veteran dealers the memSTERLING ELLIOTT. ory of the time when he broke the The Nen President of the League of town. American Wheelmen. j It was in the old days--o- r the new was flushed If love of the healthy sport' of cycling, days, rather when Seattle was her first and with playof interests prosperity thorough knowledge cycling gamand thorough knowledge of the mechan- ing the host for all the tin-hothimble-riggeblers eastern and and ical development of the wheel were qualities and quantities desired by the black sheep that came within her gates. League of American Wheelmen in their They were wild and boisterous days of affluence until he came and then they president, they qould hardly have chosthe shock for didnt fully recover from en a better representative to their high' two months. est office than Sterling Elliott, whose He was different from association with bicycle affairs date back twenty years. Mr. Elliott was patrons of the joints. If he carried a born Michigan ii 1852, and so is 43 years gun he never exposed it and he showed old. His father was a miller. His a distressing want of taste' in the diafriends say that is the1 reason why he monds which he did not Wear. When takes to the grind of life so easily. As he wajked into the saloon,1 where, right a boy he was always tinkering with opposite the bar, the biggest game in water wheels and contrivances about town was dealt, and in his quiet voice the mill. At 19 jhe learned the trade of asked what the limit was the lookout smiled and the dealer pdinted to the carriage building. He was once Thomas B. Jeffrey in the ceiling. It was an old pantomine and he understood it. Tq ask the limit was manufacture of one of his inventions machine for leather carriage either a greenhorns trick or a would-b- e astjtching dashboards. Then he invented the only sports attempt tq plunge, and when successful machine in use for tying a he placed only a ten spot on the square knot in thread. It is a pamphlet high card the lookout smiled wisely stitcher and is used in book binderies. fegain and the dealer winked. One of his inventions, which are various But the man with the grave eyes and numerous, is the electric chrono neither smiled or wihked. He watched graph for timing races to the sixteenth the dealer caress with his fingers the dead card on t top,i as all dealers do before slipping it from the box. The first card was a jack and the chances of his winning were just 2 to 13. The dealer looked at him with pitying contempt and then exppsed a king. "How do you want it? he asked. : Ill let it ride, he apswered, and ten-spon the high card rode that until it had 'swelled, to aj hundred and the deal had reachea the last turn. He leaned over and placed the whole stack on the deuce and king to win at 3 to 1. They took some interest iii the quiet man then, and they took more when the deuce and king were the first two cards out and he had called the' he eing irate 3ont 'rice, hinj faro-ridd- en ed s rn iay rs oney will Italy the ' iwr A. Sing )arts lised Jthe TATTERSALL. Edmund: Richard did not surviVe his father for many years, and Edmund then became the chief representative of As the lease of the Corthe family. ner expired in 1865, Edmund Tatter-sa- il built the far more commodious premises at Albert Gate, where ,thfe business has been carried on for,; the last EDMUND p of tical ility heir He t in e is will P thirty years. ! , short speech with which he prefaced an important sale was always a model of its kind, and the humorous re- imarks and smart repartees with which he would enliven the proceedings were always in the most perfect taste, Until well past 70 years of age he never. shirked a days work that would have severely tried many a man of 50, but during the last three or four years he has been content to leave matters to a great extent in the competent hands of his eldest son, Mr. Somerville Tatter-sil- l, though never failing to be present a Newmarket, Doncaster, or wherever a great sale might be taking place. (The res? ited .ort- - tern ght per )rei The in , . tig :sota and 3,000 very city in h of .sing tich St of oday ring rices II he ears that he can at sire way por the SIR JOSEPH BARNBY. The Noted Composer Whose Heath Was Recently Recorded. The death of Sir Joseph Bariiby of London deprives the official musical ' world of almost Important servant of art. Like. nearly every English-musi-ia- n of consequence in England, (Sir began life as a chorister. He wai horn at York, and it was at Yorfc Minuet that he sang as a boy. He was Lpaten in the for the competition t asso-ciatedwi- ot turn. STERLING ELLIOTT, a secon. He has seventeen patof part ents on the pneumatic trotting sulky. He has more than' forty patents on smaller devices. For ten years he has been a member! of the League of American Wheelmen! and for six years one of the Massachusetts board of officers. In 1894 he 'was president of the national highways committee,1 which sought good roads for wheelmen. He has been a member of the national assembly since 1890. In 1894 he was made chief consul of the League of American Wheelmen in Massachusetts, when the unanimous vote of the diin the same vision, and wis manner to starve during the present year. hn -- g, j er j re-elect- ed tMe stage. his wife, Albina de Mer, are going into the , continuous performance! business. A. M. Palmer and Nat C. Goodwin have entered Jntocopartnership for the production of the German comedy called An Absent Son. after Signora Duse will act In London this in completing her engagements Lane country, appearing in Drury theater in May. Nat Goodwin accepted a three-alast week. It play by a Chicagoa writer class comedy, high is described as on the located scenes with two of the top of Pikes peak.fact that one of the It is a singular season marked successes of the present of a French in London is an adaptation thirty-on- e years ago, over play, which, in Paris. failed on its first production des This same version of "LAmi was precalled The Squire, sented in New York for the first time John recently at Palmers theater by D is now playing with Daisy Dixon, who Twenty-fou- r Robert Hilliard in Lostsoon to E. Fox Hours is to be married a graduate of York, Leonard, of New of the purchasers of Cornell and one owned the yaiht Ethelwyn.andformerly the winner of by Cornelius Field, race with the international yacht 18 and a nv Dlwtn Is Spruce IV.1 Miss tivo of Nashville. - ct SIR JOSEPH BARNBY. ;cifivenesg and a determination to all difficulties. He mechanical qTuer be sorely missed, says the London '"Ltrated News. , -- r $ec- - , flC & Quite Different. It was simply a blunder of his in and she should have known cr; but there! women are such "' r things! and she got as mad as l be about it. You see, he meant ' fuak of her laughing eye3," and, k would have It, he wrote laugh- eye That was all. Boston -- taript. servants In Paris are the 'gatees of their mistrec3, who women 1 died pooced of $129,000. . He had a chance to plunge on the next deal, and when it tvas half over La had all. those guessing. His stack had been doubled four times, and when the turn came around again he repeated, his query, Whats the limit? the dealer winked hard with both eyes. Anything youve got; dust er dollars goes here. Every penny of it went on the cards and the rounders gathered closer. Youve broke us! announced the man behind the box. Want to play more? any The man looked at him and smiled. They got another Bring em on. ate into that more he and fund banking fiercely than the fir,st one. They changed dealers on him and before the night was over every man in town who could bank a game had a try at him, and he broke them all. Far into the haggard dawn they sat there and watched him quietly draw a stream of gold they were powerless to stem. He played them hard and mercilessly, and when they1 had to confess that the town was broVe he left them as quietly as he cama. He had won between $50,000 and $60,000 and he ex pressed neither the customary sympathy for them nor offered to treat'. He walked, out and they talked about him for two months and then forgot him. Just a year afterward he came around again, as calm and reserved as when they had first seen him. He.played his game in the sapae manner, and, though they treated him with the utmost deference this time, he had no luck and lost steadily all night, and when he left it was his turn to announce that he was broke. That was fourteen years ago and the old days have gone, and with e them many of the gamblers, mah who broke ttm the each but year town has returned. Sometimes he has won heavily for hours; but only once, about six years ago, has he approached anything like his former coup. That one time he was playing against the iginal clique that he had made penniless before, and for a little while it sefemed as though they were doomed again. He was $12,000 to the good, and half the town was watching him. He played with all his olden daring and Ncklessness, but the little silver box wtM too strong for him and he went old-time- Scholarship by Sir Arthur Sultan a strange enough meeting. As a oung man Barn by gave great promise s a composer; and it is certain tfiat his Sweet and Low, is an exquisite thing of its kind. Later in life, omposition became absorbed in con-- , He succeeded acting and teaching. Mhe posts of music-mastof Eton, President of the Guildhall Schoolof Mu-ia- l, and director of the Royal Choral 'ociety. . It was in this latter capacity hat he was perhaps best known! to the outside world. As a conductor he was conscientious, firm and uncompromis-- i nS. If he lacked a little in inspiration jne never wanted for straightforward tart-son- J. 0. OSTLER, Oil? 1 will continue la each ntnatWi publish brands under yearly contracts Bonalnal price. to lbe stockra!er cf fasitl Th.8 the public with hi. brand and larlztn; are to well known to Deed attention. Ittrar ia t tokm&a as r&luatle a an adTert'.sf.r.sit U to the merchant. AND SHOES. s Frank ed Stoskraisers roumru Ctai F. D. Hobbs, et!i. i RANGE i Sexier and Sink of Beaver. Lower Addreaa : Utah. Oaala, . Correspondence solicited. Twenty-threyears experiences SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH. SOME SPRING FABRICS. e r What Women Will Wear and How It Will Be Made. It actually gives one cold chills to go into a jshop all muffled up to the eyes in furs and flannels and see the counters heaped up with sheerest organdies, mulls pmd cobweb lawns, BIRD &, LOWE, and yet here they are, says an exchange. The winter season, only just fairly getting the pace, and the new not worn off our imported gowns, and now we must hustle to get the pick of the newest1 shades and patterns for our Lend Agents ;& Attorneys. JEOteSMI) Upper alit in ief ear. Range :Crioket Mountains and under alit right, In Loweijr Sevier. Address, Deaeret, Utah. JcsDeran? SALT LAKE CTY. UTAH I summer frocks! Have you seen any of these new V., HALxUJbi, fabrics? Positively, It is as good as any V display, in an art studio. No water-col$ ever showed daintier handling than that exhibited in the flower sprays and wreaths on the lacelike fabrics that are designated organdies and no Gobelin tapestries were ever more cunningMutton, Veal,! Chipped Beef ly devised than the Persian effects that and Bologna. come in soft silks and lawns for summer wear. It seems that stripes will Tour patronage solicited. be the rage. ;A delicate ground of lilac, or blush, or canary, with long, graceful flower strands in continuous chain, If you are going to stripe of separated by a quarter-inc- h black, or a much darker shade of the same color as the ground, is the style you see most of now. The stripes are three or more inches wide. This prefigsages the advent of tall, sylph-lik- e ures again, or else that skirts are to be KANSAS CITY, full and flowing, with wider effects than Under lilt U right, under slit in left ear. Range: Crlakah A. or Mountains an& Lower Sevier. Choice Fresh Meats, ever. Modistes do not talk much yet, but one who studies those things must conclude that long, straight bredthg in skirts will prevail, for to cut those stripes in gores would present a most bizarre appearance, and a waist that was cut in side forms and seams down the back would make one look positively grotesque. The blouse waist will be here in all its force, and with new charms, early in the spring, of that you may be sure. Other lawns have a shimmering kind of a lightning-struc- k stripe in dark color on light ground that makes you think that crepon weaves have invaded, the domain of the cotton. Some of the exquisite-colore- d organdies have blossoms scatof bunches bright great tered over them, and others have the flowers printed in just as they are on the taffetas, with that shimmering, elusiye effect that is perfectly bewitching. orThen there are the sheer-whias look though gandies and lawns, that thin air if in melt would away they Of them. breathed upon heavily you colstuff presages course, all this thin ored linings. India silks will be used for slips to wear under these flower gardens, and you can have no idea how very pretty the effect is. If the color to go under is wisely and artistically chosen, it heightens the effect of the flower coloring, adding brilliancy and charm to the material. ST. OR Deseret, Utah Address, A j rs Oasis, Utah. Address, urerson Ere: LODIS, fie sure and ask for a ticket that reads VIA Breeder dealer in Short born Parham. Ilorael anno brand 3n loft thigh, tattle er alop in eacn ear. Itanf j , old-tim- rlvo Sevier and moDTtalnt between Mil on the lT. P. Ity and Leanv ttion lngtofc. Addieta, 1 eamington, Millard 0., Utah. 2 f J Horeea same on left thigh.1 Cattle-cl- ose brand fropin left and elit In rigat ear. R a n g e , W e r Sevier. DesAddreaa, L eret, ytah. RAILWAY. V M oCdta L on left thigk$ hip of eattlo.RagS" mllow Springs. Address, No tiresome layovers. Close connections in union depotf, F. the quickest rout And positively O T on left thigh double swaIIow Rivers and Elegant and thoroughly modern Equipment and fork In left ear. Range, Lower Address Oasis, Millard Cm. Utah. ... V ?P o ,t. ' Same thigh-o- Sims Walker OR Nothing is more vital to the ChrisH. TOWNSEND, tian life than hope. Hope is the echo of the soul, refined and etherial. Heaven is but the crown to the consummation General Passenger & Ticket Agelit of hope, hell the sepuchere. Rev. G. S. St. Louis,1 Mo. Williams. Address, Oak City, Utah. G A. Gardner, WATCHMAKER; ' . NEPIII, UTAH. Watches aud jewelry promptly Klclted. paired. Mail ori-s CAUGHT ON THE FLY. Coal Is $10 a ton In South Africa. OSTLER & ALLEN It takes two tons of rags to make one ton of paper. Spectacles were first used in the latter part of the thirteenth century. In Canton, China, there is a company1 which insures j Dealers in and Manufacturers of against robbery.. Safes rendered burglar-proo- f by elecare one of the latest tricity sugges- tions. Last year no fewer than 1,584 derelict ships were discovered, most, of them in the North Atlantic. The greatest bell is that long famous as the giant of the Kremlin, in Moscow. Its weight is 443,722 pounds. Nearly 100 women graduates of Ober-li- n, of O., college, are missionaries, are in foreign lands. whom one-ha- lf Theban mummies have been found which give proof that in the days of the Pharaohs there were dentists who filled decayed teeth with gold. A young man In Holland has been asleep for aver 220 days. The doctors, who say it is a genuine case, regard it as chronic hysteria or Some harps have been discovered in Egyptian tombs. The strings in several instances were Intact, and gave forth distiact sounds after a silence of 3,000 years. The wafer card, which Is in favOr now, has only one thing to recommend it and that is a greater number of cards may be compressed into small space. On the other hand, it is easily bent pd crushed. During the reign of Queen Ranava-lon- a III and her predecessor In Madagascar, 1,000 schools and no less thaa 1,200 churches were established. Th churches are Roman Catholic and Protestant, tnd toleration seems to b the watrWn-- ef the government HOPPLES, Horse Furnishing', Goods . auto-suggestio- n. d NOSE SACKS, ETC. We also carry a fall line of Sheep , Mens and Cowboys Outfits. WE GUARANTEE Perfect Sadlisfectio srjMsusiiiwii X I I MANHOOD RESTORED,"; i CUPSDCriE great Vegetable cure ou orprescripall nertion of a famous rreneb phj'sieian, wiil quickly organs, each m Lost Manhood. vous or diseases of the r'merauve foemina! , Back, .Emissions, Kervo'is Insomnia. Pains in the Unfitness to Xfsrry, Lxkanstintr Drams, hooiwh Io pwi looses by day or niehL P event onick-dv- s Constipation. J t 6topva.il of discharge, which if not cheeked leads to Kpermstorroa a end i horrors of Impotencr. ofUIMOfUcleansesUieiivcr, th&. BEFORE AND AFTER ej the orpans all imparities. and the urinary v n. SmiL a rcr q r a i are Cnt troubled wir 10 cure wnuout an operation. L 0 CUPIDJsLN is is tneoni y known i te? ItnonU .... Deoi.m-Pimples- kjd-iev- s Add,es3 X1ELICISE CO, P. O. Box 2D70, Ban Francinco, IA VOL SALE BY LIcNAL LY & roil n Creak. Utah, 0. left Horses. Upper slope and one under slit inleft ear, and under silts In right ear. RANGE :Oab Room 21 Morlan Block, Paint of Life. P. N. Petersen, Osete Utah, Range, Leva er SeTler. PASSENGER - en left brand honlder en horse Address, , Salt Lake City, --- eft ! COMMERCIAL FREIGHT AND i Mark, silt taa and two aUt right in ear. Eanw i .. . H.B.K00SER er. Cluls. Tkannta Chair' Gars Call on or address Utabu . To Ocean. In which the seats are free to holders of regular train, tickets. J. Kearny. Flak Springs, Juab County. 'U taTj Fronq Atlantis the Great Reclining brand en 12 t&me ' .yHHillSs - .rta Parley Alin i 1 Office Seekers. A Vital Y Snilfe ' te The office seeker cannot possibly become ,an offiop filler. He does not descend to that search until every other place is closed. Then he concludes to be a statesman and afflicts himself upon the community. Rev. Myron Reed. Join Ilorse Grower and Dealt: RANGE: IIou Mountain and Lower bevier, j M, B Curtis and 3 th Jo-se- ph Men-elsso- back penniless and unconcerned. The M. game must have reclaimed all of his on that night, but he has winnings never shewn any more regret over his Manufacturer and Repairer of losses than he did delight when as a winner he sewed up the town of Se- BOOTS attle. Perhaps the Yukon country, with its All kinds of shoes made to order. wild torrents and its wilder crew, has Workmanship second to none. First door south of Tabernacle, claimed him at last, as it has claimed hundreds of others who have been lured MAIN STREET, NEPHI. to its fields of gold, but as long a3 there is a faro-bo- x and a man to keep cases left in Seattle the memory of the man with the wind-tann, (Late Ji, fitter U. S. Land Office.) face and the grave, quiet eyes will live. Land and Mining Attorney. , wind-tanne- tire sporting f rater-- i . A SCHEME THAT FAILED. Abell Tried to, Bring; Social , Baseball. Cal. Kile Kv LUNT, DUGGI3T3, NLPII1. |