OCR Text |
Show J j ' THEXTAKE TIMES. TIIUKSDAY. OCTOBER 2. 1890. . V i THEWEST SIDE MOTOR CARS Rs s . NOW RUNNING TO ! - ' l M 11 "V : JJavis, Sliarp and Stringers r n T" - ; , i i Addition. ! CORNER SECOND WEST AND TENTH SOUTH. ' - SQJ the Time . 7T YcOi Buy on Your Own Terms M J and stable at a big TO SECURE ONLY ON MONTHLY PAYMENTS hour, n 1 hird : S- -. ...... ,4 F Lofc - - or wi Six or Twelve Months - blocks West ot the V From the tin- - Kmuml gyg; .. IN THIS POPULAR ADDITION --- --- Or Longer Time if You Like. ij'iT Come and See Us and Take a Carriage Ride, "p WEST SIDE RAPID TRANSIT MftMiSB 23 West Second Soixtli Street. - " J Office, 213 S. Main fitr.et. steam cari'et cleaning Jrry 7''fTCr7 r Caipelii Made and F.Hid, It.- - rpliiUi-riug- , Ftiriiltura Kb- - ?:SK!5JU I. S. WHITEnSAD Utah Stove & Hardware Co Whull "1 l("(.U Dn.lrr. to ' STOY liS, WANG ICS Stove Furn'shinjs, t'anths, Crates, &e. SI4 atit Ci' K. VUl Mouth Ktw SALT LAKE. CITY. Gorr.8poad.nco Solid ted Tltt'lJiiioii Iiicilic ' XT1T&X TO A --- - MOUNTAIN I.IVI-JIO.- . PRINCIPAL POINTS iBr EAST, WEST, Inewtimecard NORTH and SOUTH j Jul3r Z3t lcoo. ' i HUH CHiaHL OISTBICr. THE CITY TICKET OFFICE.: i ' Putter Tr!ni kttUt tsl Inn i! St Ci:j u fn.Tt r.'i n '.ne noiriH. .. .mm. M..vr-- Mi rr-V-': ,''-- -.- I." .( '' JJIlra viiUtt--alliw 'wt WU Sj- i.Mtf,i -j ptMUt tW Til .t !ll .! VlWiH. ' '.. --" ' X7t.i orl ITo-aOa- . Satrl S. W. ECCLES, C. F. RESSEGUIE, Wl Pmn- - Ajf-it- . wl . Tickt-- for S!e io W.-U- h Huildiof. 201 Mia Strt, and at Dpot Fare tot Hound Tru WtecU ji t . I don't think now that I could possibly pot myself to fool as unembarrassed as 1 did that afternoon intho bay of Halifax. Youth and ignorance of Old World wero on my side, so I talked to tho prince with cntiro lack of restraint, and what was mora to the purposo, ho talked to mo. This was shortly after Beaconsfield and Salisbury had returned from tho Berlin conference and brought back what they called "pence with hon-or." The prince talked very freely of this great achievement, and as he was and is very much under the Russian influence of his wife ho was not full of praise of those who had represented Great Britain at the congress. I made a two column dispatch of the interview which 1 had obtained entirely in a professional ca-pacity, and which I felt thoroughly at liberty touse. Thonewspapercontaining my interview reached England before the duke of Edinburgh did. When he Kot there ho was hauled up before tho boar'l OLD fWl 11-P-OM Narrates Some Amusing Experiences of Other Days When a Exporter Was an Encyclopedia. ACTRESS' TALE HEE HUSBAKD i Husband's Sister, and a Scribe Who Had Trouble-Olos- e Eektions With a Banker. never served very long as a reporter, i some of my experiences in that ca- - ity were interesting. I fancy I could ' have been a very skillful hand at sonally gathering news, for very soon fer I begun y newspaper career I was sinoted to an executive position and , "m the direction' of those who had a :ter knack at that kind of thing than in op gee returned. " He was given my card, which stated that I was a reporter. He came in after a brief parley with the woman who had been watching me. The gentleman was excited, not only by his matrimonial perplexities, but by some- - tiling else which has the capacity to stir one up even when the domestic horizon is fair. My youth and embarrassment must have appealed to him, for soon he was in a most confidential mood and be-gan pouring out to me the whole of his sido of the case. As he got along with the story his voice became louder, so that any one in tho house could hear what he was saying. At a most critical point in the narrative an acrid voice from the dimly lighted dining room called: "William!" He stopped at once and sobered down. To encourage him 1 said: "You were saying" The voice ic sharp command inter-rupted again: "William, come here. William went. There was a long col- - loony in the dining room. I endeavored not to hear what was bejng said, and if I did hear 1 have long since forgotten it. William the sitting room. You say." he said, "you are a re-- P"Yes of course," I responded. that are not a re-porter -- My sister says you at ail. but a lawyers clerk come out of me. ow to worm my story I irint vou to get out of here. This was said in a most threatening; way, and 1 arose from the sofa on which 1 had been seated. -- Your sister is mistaken, I expostu- - lated. "Why does she think I am a s clerk?" The lady had entered the room now, brothers side and and stood by her for herself: can't fool me. I know who you look like a reporter You are layer's clerk. 1 knew it the mo-ment a a brother saw you." Turning to her Rh. added, "William, don't say another "resolved not only not to say another word to me. but evidently de-- tt make me forget all he had said "r he took me roughly by the arm and toward the door As I left shoved me rt tSicer resounded around as h'oth a nrs. ass murder had been Unluckily for me a pohce-com- tted. anJ man happened g Rob. SJ hSodyof this of Jeey on a charge of nlt.ndbattoryndbngmi off to the station M heB n0 fair. --I acs twitted sister for consolation. initiation to the frater- - Tttwas my srss a reporter in New York who would go near him. I was the city editor, and the chief had directed that certain questions be asked of this churlish inagnato. There was in the office a very gentle-manlike young man who had recently been graduated from Harvard, and who had only that day reported for duty. I was sure that he would not shirk the job, for he did not know how disagroe-ubl- e it might be. I told him what I wished, and as he had only heard of Mr. Blank as an eminent financier and con-spicuous politician he was glad of the chance of seeing him. Arrived at tho Fifth avenue home of Blank, he was left standing in the vestibule whilo tho foot-man took in his card. Blank did not come down the stairs, but said gruffly to the reporter, who was in the hall: "What do you want?" The reporter told him. "Get out of here," yelled the angry banker, "and tell the man who sent you that all the fools are not yet dead." "But, Mr. Blank," persisted the aston-ished reporter, "won't you kindly tell me so and so?" "No, get out of here, I tell you. Why don't you go?" The reporter's dander had now arisen. He replied: "That is scarcely the way, sir, for one gentleman to speak to another." "Who said you wera a gentleman?" growled Blank as he hobbled down stairs. Reaching the hall he caught the reporter, who towered some ten inches above him, by the ear and pushed him tothsdoor. At tho door tho reporter caught Blank in his arms, carried him tenderly down the front stairs and the now writhing millionaire head foremost in the slush and Know of the gutter. Ho raised his hat and walked quietly away, while liveried footmen ran to the rescue of the astonished Blank. The reporter had taken first prize the year before as the best all ronnd athlete in Harvard university. We did not print any account of this encounter, but we had lots of fun over it, and this fun was not diminished when the chief sent to mo a letter from Blank complaining of the brutal rudeness of the new re-porter. Beforelhadgivenupoutsideworklhad a curious experience at Hali fax, whit her I had gone as a correspondent to report the arrival of the Princess Louise and her husband, the Marqui3 of Lome, when he came to Canada as governor general. The viceregal party were on a very slow and uncertain boat, and Halifax was filled with newspapermen long before The beautiful lit-tle the ship was sighted. bav of Halifax was alive with British men-of-wa- r, which had come to partici-pate in the display when tho queen's daughter and .on-in-la- should arrive to represent her in the Dominion. Among other ship was the Black Prince, in command of his royal highness the duke of Edinburgh. I had met the duke at dinner at the house of Kir Patrick Don"all, the commander of the queen s forces in Canada, and had had some tie talk with him. It occurred to me that the people la New York might like to hear something as to how a royal duke lives aboard boat and was rowed out ship, so I too a to where the Black Prince swung at her moorings. Climbing on board I sent my card to the commander, and very soon was shown into his cabin. At this been in Europe, and 1 time I had never did not know how much in awe all the people there were of a kind of royalty. I CARRYINO OUT MR. BLANK. of admiralty, which had while he was at sea promoted him to be a rear ad-miral, and questioned as to his object ia criticising the government. He got out of the difficulty by saying that he knew nothing about tho interview. It v.a-- i not of him, but another of his name. that the poet laureate wrote: "Truth teller wag tho royal Alfred calleiL" "TOU CAN'T FOOL ME." j J.VJ. Olt.MCIt Sl'EED. .Tlf had. Soon after I came to New and while 1 was learning somo-c- s of the city previous to talcing a on one of the great metropolitan I was one afternoon in the office tlle paper which had engaged my serv-aa- d the city editor was looking ' a man to go to Elizabeth and get ae Particulars of a threatened divorce f. a brief mention of which was in an ;m? paper. He was short of men, 4 th the zeal of youth 1 volunteered I have forgotten what it was all t Eut there was an injured wife, 2 actress, I believe, and her husband in Elizabeth. To him 1 went for wmation. 1 arrived at his home in ' outskirts of that town about 8 o'clock we evening. He was out. but might I was told, at any time. ivig permission to wait for him as shown into a sitting room near the ;nt door. Another door led into what Peared to be a dining room, dimly I could hear during the hour I ,utsi a soft step constantly moving ;Jla the dining room to the hall, and 1 J Painfully conscious that a very alert of feminine eyes were keeping watch Thi3 waa not pleasant, but I do nothing else than bear it. At the gentlexnaD I had gone to 'tnuskraU, tho greater enemies of the la-- I vee, to iiicriii.se at un alarming rate. A double wedding on hornetmck took place out in Arizona Territory. Tho grooms were cowboys, and the ceremony waa witnessed by 200 persona, all mount- - cd. j Tho longest American railroad tunnel 'is tho llooHiic tunnel, on the Fitehburg railroad, tour and three-quarte- r mile. The St. Oothard tunnel, in Europe, la nine miles long The miraclo working wells of OalgooK, In the district of PresHbiirg, Hungary, are attracting o many thousands of pil- - grim that the authorities have been forced to call in the military to keep or-der Marseilles, France, 1 tho headquarter, for the sale of false hair. Twenty bale of Chinese human hair recently arrived there, and will be manufactured into curls, frizzc. and crimp for American ladies. It is cited as a remarkable fact that not an island has risen or mink from sight in tli Pacific ocwi fur thirty-fou- r years, and geologist nay that nature is resting for a starling movement in that quarter A New Hampshire farmer' man wm scared almost into convulsions while listening t a phonograph in Dover, and explainer when he cam - to that he rec-ognised the vol; . of a man ho had stuck In "how" trail The best remeJy for bleeding at the tiort-- . according to an iiiin-t- it medical authority, ts a vigorous motion of tl jaws, as if in the pet of mastication. It has never lx"'ii known to fail not even in very severe tnn- I CRISP CONDENSATIONS. i An auction nalo of coffin took place recently in Bartow, Fla. A mountain of ia supposed to have been di?covcrcd 150 miles n.rJi of Denver. Colo. A German physician pay all who watercress consume at the same time a full assortment of miuute insects. Frederick, Md.. i trying to rai-- e fiO.000 to bnild a monument over tl.e grave of Francis S. Key in Mount Olivet cemetery. A man at Langhorne. Pa., Is fitting to ecommoate a np a pigeon houwj thonsand bird. I: will be the largir.t flock of carriers in the country. An enortnoBS flow of natural ga wa struck at Snmmerlar.d, three miles from jSanta Barbara. Cat The flow fati-mate- d at 3.000.000 feet per day. Halsted street. Chicago, is one of the longest streets in the world, being abo.it eighteen miles in length iu a perfectly straight line within the city limit, j ttfuwiana planter are finding out that the alaughtcrof lliatori La allowed iToi,ii r iui. 3IM Art &SPf'iQ&. J ftp Officer (to dime mn-i- m Indian) What attraction hav t.ey Rot 4. O'lUftVrty. that U drawing nucii i crowd? I Indian O'ltaT.-rt- Shore if man ! who iii- - crexj ri ! a:i opinion v.l: tii r iKfii.inl.-rwiii.-r.--- l any U,r h diet. i Iwintlrfotilyiniitt-- r tliokind titer U j Ut. Texa .Silting. Aftr the tloneymann. nefl'itta-lv)Yii- . know nothing. hhi e.WM.ivM know you pretty well, dmt W.-U-y. ! Uenu I'ralrlB CblrfccM. j Young ; rairw chick'-- are roam oloat fx raveaou have they l:co::se tliat r.'-rl- nery j;f ntle-ma-n who go orasi I of tho city i;U for a walk crrie a Irwwh loadia ? hjt-gn-n to protect himwdf , and i compelled to IrUl Larjf number in ntlf defense. The bite of a prairie chicken can an u?ly wound. North Platte 'Xeb.) Tribune. |