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Show THE SALT LAKE TIMES. THURSDAY. OCTOBER 36, 1890. KELLY & COMPANY Printers, Blarih-Boo- k Makers and Stationers. No. 4fl W. Beoond Souths St. Salt Lake, - Utah, Our facilities for doing Flint-Clas- s Job Print-ing are of the neweHt and best. Books Ruled, Printed and Bound to Order. Samples of Railroad, Mining, Bank and Mer-cantile Work always on hand, Complete line of Offlce Supplied, embracing ta most approved Labor-Savin- and j Economical Inventions. Prices Low. ' Call on Ui. !''kaTABLI8HED,: I860. D. 0. CALDER'S mb 1 mm mi You are respectfully invited to call and examine our large stock of Pianos a,rd Organs, ' The Finest Ever Shown in Utah. Pianos and Organs sold on easy time payments and at prices " within the reach of all. ... ? ; Our $300 Piano Is being largely sold, it gives the best of satisfaction, and in price and quality it is a marvel. The cases are elegant and warrant , ' the material and workmanship hrst-clas- Our ORGANS, MASON & HAMLIN, W.W. KIMBALL &. CO, Are so well known to be the Standards of the YVorld, and recommended ', by all First-Clas- s Musicians, it is unnecessary for us to , sound their praise. Prices from $70 and sold on easy payments. . We have everything to be found in a first-clas- s music store, and at . , PRICES THE LOWEST,. 45 Ss &7, West First Soixttai Street. Salt Lake City, : : : ; Utah Territory. fait & Kropfganze, General ' CONTRACTORS & BUILDERS. Salt Lati City, ' : Utah Torrltorr 0 OFFICE: 239 Main Street ifBeautM --Woman : SMILES 8WEET- - ?jSS. LV at the thought ' her own lovcli-$fj- J neM- Every woman smiles sweetly who L use" Windom'i Ro-- pts JSS-- bertioe, lot it gives yM riZA o her a clear, trans- - (ai parent, bes u tit ul vxfe, ll'u' beautiful ' I T """"Pi''011 lone ii v ijff often sufficient to S& - 1P S,S.V make a woman T&i? beautiful. A woman PSffJMC. T"" wno ha a beautiful H&vV Viji complexion should Vriff J xpfitcrve it ; the one fMlWW I e" fortunate In i"rIl 1&kA' x&VmV athhoisuldpobaeaauetaifayloint. ' H W Wisdom's Ruber--I tine doea just what la claimed for It It not only preserves and beau-tine- a the complexion, but rcpaira the damage! done by the use ot the many dangerous com-pound now in the market, by ita tonic effect, re-storing the akin to a natural, healthy action. Read the teatimoniala from famoua artiste, cele--bi aied chemists and eminent physicians. . . - . r : F;AUERBACH&BRg I. '' ' ' ; ' ' v .' ., F. Anerbach & Bro. Will Occupy this Space Tomorrow ' , . . ' y . With a New "Ad." on v Fall & Winter Goods. E: SELLS, J. TUCKER. H. W. SELLS. Sells & Gorripany, Wholesale and Retail Dealers in Lumber. First South street, opposite 14th Ward Assembly Booms; F 0. Box 1078. Old Pioneer Yard of Armstrong A Bagley. The People's Paper! Newa ,R$gi T J E ft Hits the Mark! it The pailf Tones. oJVfii5 i Keep Yqur Eye On jtt The Paper of Titis Best "Ad." Medium! rfon Smtw'oa. Skookam !?oot 4 2 Grows Hair Rapidly. , Eradicates Dandruff. Stops Falling Hak . ' Is a Preventive ' ' ' IjmJmm ' of Baldness.' S'iwrl Grows Hair on WSV . Bald Heads. 'ImiSfn I 811 Exquisite (IWjtl ..Toilet Article. ' I if 1 ilij I I Is Free from' all nlM''f It coloring matter. Ttademarkrtgistered.) i ' ' Contains no Mineral or Vegetable Poisons It is an honest and meritorious preparation. Nature's Own Remedy, Skookum Root Hair Grower Go. NEW YORK. pow Sal by all bt uggUts). ' ' ' uracgT) Union - Pacific - System. JlwX . The only Line Carrjing tlie United States Mail. Direct fil rt Connections Between all Points North and East. .. mmW''1'-- NEW TIME CARD OCTOBER 8, 1890; XJta.li Central District. Passenger Trains Arrive at and Leave Salt Lake City Daily as Follows : FROM THB NORTH. GOING NORTH. AtlanticFast Matt 8:30 a.m Ar'antle Fast Mall M V. AN. Local. 8:10 .ru Portland ani'ButFast MaliV....,.,. V20p,m FROM THB SOUTH. , GOING SOUTH. MllfordEicpress.f..';.. 9:45a.m. Juab, Provo. Lehl, Ironton and Eu- - Juab. Provo, Lehl, Irontofl and Eu- - rka Express 7:10 a.m reka Express. 8 :46 p.m. Mtlford Express 4 : OOp. m Utah & Nevada District. OOlNCJWEST." '' ' II FROM WEST. Through mixed daily exceptSundays.a:10a.m. ThHongh mixed dally except Sundays. 3 :15 p.m. I EQUIPMENT: . " Tho Atlantlo Taut Hail," leaving ORden at 9:5ft a. m., is equipped with Fuhman Palace Sleeper from San Fraucibco to Chicago; Pullman Palace Sleeper, Salt Lake to Chicago; Day Coaches (a) Salt Lake to Omaha. " Tbe Atlantlo EioreBS," leavlns Ogden at 6:!p. m., Is equipped with Day Coaches and Through Plutug Car to Council HlulTs; Pullman Palace Sleeper' Denver to Council BlufTs; Pullman Palace Sleeper, Salt Lake to Cheyenne.- - This Is Through Sleeper to St. Louis; Pullman Colonist Sleeper, San Francisco to Council Bluffs. C. F. RESSEGUIE, SW. ECCLES, General Manager. General Passenger Agent R Auerbach & Bra Health is Wealth -- j '' jTBEATtnrrTTTl Da E. C. West's Nkrvb asd Brain Treat-ment, a guaranteed specific for Hysteria, Convulsions, Fits Nervous Neuralgia. Headache, Nervous Prostration caused by the use ot alcohol or tobacco, Wakefulness. Mental Depression, Softening of the Brain resulting In insanity and leading to misery, decay ana death, Premature Old Age, Barrenness. Lobs of Power in either sex, Involuntary Losses and Spermatorrhoea caupeJ by n pf tbe brain, e or Eich box contains one months treatment. II.OJ a box, or Blx boxes for H6.U0, sent by mall prepaid on receipt of price. WE GUARANTEE SIX BOXES To cure any case. With each order received jy us for six boxes, accompanied with 1T.00, we will send the purchaser our written guarantee to refund the money It the treatment does not effect a cure. Guarantees Issued ouly by John-son, Pratt & Co., Druggists, 48 Malu St., Salt Lkf"-- - ;tS' " 3 - 7 ' '" "" " ' "' i.L , FARRAND & VQTEY: ; ' SALT LAKE MUSIC COMPANY, : 75 W. IstSouth . . ...... I DrHF H I i"t"HK'"faui Electric Co. I ' 1 I Has removed to their new store In liJJlll 1 f XlJJ Roberts Block, North Commercial St I n L Where they bare laid In a full line of Electrical Supplies of All Kinds Agents for Western Electric Co.'s Dynmnos and Eddy Motors. Electric Light Plant3 Installed.1! All Kinds of Electrical Work. The Inter-Mounta- in Abstract Co. Incorporated. Capital. $100,060, IITIT HAVE a complete set of Abstract Books of Salt Lake countv am prepared to Ornish abstracts on short notica " 11 11 11 ij U$Kthe onff Abstracts examiners that will pass athoiough examin.tto. II v SHOW all taxes, judgments, mechanics' liens, suits pending we ex- amine tho original papers and the records in probata mattera. an J also examine the papers and records in district court proceeding. . We are the only coiapmny making complete abstract; w show.!! faotiAt every nature affecting the tide, and to ofiiBion a bo wtorf iatlui iS"j without the recdrSs. . TII08. HOaER. Mift?ar? OstatSM Mala street, nnawBaikaf SsjtLaka. ' fflali aDfl Mia; HacMnery Coipany ' p. P. MASON. Manager. V Headquarters for all Classes of Machinery, Engines and Boilers from power and apwards in stock toe i mm liate delivery. Steam Pumps, Injectors, Horse Whims, Hoisting Enrrinai Ssjck Breakers, Wall's Rolls, Ingersoll Air Compressors and Drill Lubri ating Oils, Mine, Mill and Smeller.Suppli-js- , Silvej. Gold and OonceatraS ig Mills erected and delivered in running order. Haine Office M'fafSoi 259 S. Main Street, Salt Late 0. S agency; buctEs'mqntan : An Attraotlr Kovelty. In a leading pipe and smokers' sundries house at Philadelphia is one of the most aitistio novelties of the year. It is in the ghape of a perfect imitation of the coli-br- i, the smallest singing bird in the world, and found only in Africa. The imitation is the exact size of the real bird, even to the most minute details of the plumage and legs, but what is more marvelous still is the lust that the imi-tation emits from its throat a song of wonderful beauty and sweetness, exact-ly like the original " The little bird is placed in an exqui-sitely colored tortoise shell box, 2 inches by 8J inches, and when a small spring is pressed a small silver lid on the top of the box springs open, the colibri jumps up like a thing of life, sings, swings, moves its tail and wing, and the beak works in a porfect manner with the harmony from its throat. After the song is finished the bird disappears within the box and the lid flies shut, leaving the box perfectly smooth. , This exquisite piece of mechanism is sold for $75. It is said that only one man in Switzerland can make these, and that each one takes him a month to per-fect and finish it. It. is a wonderful piece of work, and crowds are being at-tracted to the store. Tobacco. . CAUSE AND EFFECT. It ia the Accepted Axiom of Logic and Philosophy that Every Effect Has a Cause. THEY ALL WANTED THE EABTH, Viotor Hugo's Granddaughter Mrs. Yates' Visit The Growing South Notes ' of Interest. It is an accepted axiom of logio and philosophy that every effect has a cause. In our nationallegislative halls there has , been a fracas both distressing and dis- -' graceful. Columbia blushed rosy red to the roots of her luxuriant hair, and the American eagle was seen to put his head . under his wing. That was the effect. Now for the cause. Lard seems to have made all the sputter, but to find original cause philosophy suggests deeper study. It will be remembered that certain demo-niacs requested at one time to be domi-ciled in the bodies of a lot of hogs. They rushaU down a steep place into the sea. A pig cannot swim. If he tries to do so he cuts his own throat, but may it not be possible that a few of them scrambled out? The law of hered-ity is a fact, a physiological verity. 1 have always held that pork (at least some pork) was full of evil spirits. Now lard is a product of pork. All men are influenced by their environment, more or less! Congressmen are only men, so that it is just possible that the primitive cause of all this trouble can be traced to those devil endowed swino from the sea coast of the Gadarones. Put the blame just where it belongs. Pittsburg Dispatch. - An Imprisoned Fish. The writer of the following a corre-spondent of The Chattanooga News evidently wanted to fittingly wind up the fish story seasons My cousin owns a watormill, and in removing some ob-structions found an immense log im-bedded in the stream, which must have been submerged for a number of years. The log had to be cut in two to remove it; and much to our surprise we found it hollow, although it had every appear-ance of being solid. One of the negroes while examining the log looked into the hollow, and thought he saw something moving. He began using his ax, and soon had the log cut in another place. ; Imagine our amazement .when we dis-covered a live catfish of enormous size so completely wedged in the hollow as to bo unable to move, except to open its mouth and wiafele its tail. The fish was very lively and apparently in the enjoy-ment of excellent health. The question is how did the fish get into the log, as the only menus of ingress and egress we could discover was a small round hole, not more than two inches in diameter. We surmised that ho must have entered the little opening when no larger than a minnow, and grown great in his solitary confinement. ' Each Wanted the Earth. Several people have been accused at different times of wanting the earth, but only within a fow months has the de-- mand for it become so great that the contestants have taken the matter into the courts. In the operation of a tele-phone system or an electrical railway line considerable expense i3 saved if the earth can be used for the roturn circuit. Generally the telephone companies have been first in the field, and have taken the earth for their own use. When the electric railway came, how-ever, and also took the earth, there was music in the telephones of a sort not nt all pleasing to the subscribers. The leakage of current from the railway lino raised havoc with the feeblo telephonic current. In a great number of cases the telephone companies have appealed to , the courts to "make the electric rail-ways stop using the earth," but it has generally been held that the fact of prior possession avails nothing, and any one who wishes may have the earth to nse. The telephone . companies will generally construct complete metallic currents to get rid of their trouble, and leave the electrio railways in serene pos-session of the earth. Engineering News., Suicide of Portuguese Author. A German contemporary, The Voss-isc- Zeitung, draws attention to the number of suicides which have lately taken place among Portuguese authors. Last June the aged poet Castello Bran-c- o, the best liked novel writer of the country, shot himself. He was well off and had a numerous family, but had lately suffered from a malady of the eyes. Shortly before his death he had written a novel in which voluntary death was praised as the most beautiful close to an active life. His funeral was celebrated like that of Victor HugS in France. ' A few weeks later the author Silva de Braga took his own life after writ-ing many realistio novels in which the hero always committed suicide. On the 23d of July a school director and secre-tary of the municipality of Almada, Professor Arthur Mattos e Lemos, fook his life in a hotel in Lisbon with a re-volver. In a letter to his wife he de-clared that the earthly life offered him no more room for the development of his mind. On the 25th of the same month Professor Frederick Augustus Oom, director of the Royal observato-ry at Ajada, also shot himself. He was only 40. ' Victor Hugo's Granddaughter. Victor Hugo's favorite granddaughter, Jeanne, is about to be married in Paris. The Hugo family are queer people; they are thrifty to a degree. One of the first things they did after the poet's death was to buy up through agents all the manuscripts and autograph letters of old Victor that had found their way into the market, and these treasures are now hold for sale at exorbitant prices. But Mile. Jeanne, the favorite granddaughter, is really a beautiful, amiable and charm-ing creature. The loveliest relations ex-isted between her and the old poet. Eugene Field in Chicago News. Mr. Ytes' Visit. ' Since Mr. Edmund Yates astonished his friends by marrying liis amanuensis be has abandoned clnb life to a consider-able extent and entertains his friends at home. His conversational powers are brilliant, and he is an unequal ed maker of salads. Most famous Americans who visit London meet Mr. Yates, and the flying visit to America which he con-templates making this fall will be a so-cial event of more than usual interest-N- ew York Ledger. The Girls Stood by Him. Robert Smythe, the waiter who was placed in the St Andrew's jail for an assault on Manager Carter, of the Al-gonquin hotel, hnd his trial last week, and was sentenced to pay a fine of $4 with costs, $4.75 in all $8.75 or to bo imprisoned forty days. The female wait-ers in the hotel on hearing the result raised the amount, and in a body went to the jail and paid it over to the jailer, thus securing Smythe'a release. They took Smythe up in their arms and car-ried him from the jail to the street, and gave him three hearty cheers. They then escorted him to the railway station, and before ho stepped on board the car was embraced and kissed by somo of his fe-male admirers, and as the train moved off they saluted their protege with cheers, just the same as men would do. Bangor Commercial .; The Growing South.' The Railroad Record has made a com-pilation of ueV industries established in the south for the first six mouths of 1890, which shows 108 new cotton and Woolen mills, 00 iron foundries and machine shops, 85 blast furnaces, 78 mining com-panies, 15 potteries, 63 cottonseed oil mills, 10 rolling mills, 75 wood working factories, 50 ice factories, G3 electrio light works and a number of other in-dustries. The Youngest Professor In the World. A youth of 14 has been appointed a teacher of English literature at the Scot-tish academy in Alexandria. The name of the infant prodigy is AlciWdes i, who was a pupil in the school where he now discharges the duties of professor. His capacity for the post is proved by the fact that the appointment was mMe by the British and not by the Egyptian government II Corriere della bera. War Against Doctors in Spain. The Spaniards have a strange method of showing their gratitude to the medi-cal men who are risking their lives in the present cholera crisis. In Valencia a physician has been killed by a stiletto stab in the back. At Mogente another doctor had his head split in two by a hatchet wielded by a woman, while in another district near Lerdo a third was set upon and killed by an infuriated mob. No doctor can move about with-out a military escort, and even then cases of assault are of daily occurrence. The reason assigned is that the peasants are opposed to precautionary regulations. Strange people, the Spaniards! Table. Kept His Word. John Charles, of Florida, sent word to Andrew Case, of Mississippi, over ten years ago that he would kill him on sight. Mr. Case sized Mr. Charles up for a liar of the first water and didn't let the matter worry him a bit, but the other day as he sat on a salt barrel on the steps of a grocery Mr. Charles caine along and popped him over. Detroit Free Press. i Crabs Foretell a Hard Winter. Ice men and others will be glad to learn that the coming winter will be an old fashioned one, with plenty of snow and ice. Capt. Isaao Houghtaling, of Poughkeepsie, is authority for this state-ment. He says that the lower Hudson is full of crabs, and he never yet in all his boating experience knew it to fail that when crabs were abundant in the river an old fashioned winter did not follow. Albany Journal - A Frise Essay. The French Temperance society of Paris has offered an international pre-mium of 1,000 francs for the hest origi- - nal .work on alcoholism and its cure. The competition will close on the last dayoflfeOO. A Georgia editor who is building a railroad says he will soon be able to fur-nish his brethren with free passes. But as the road will only cover a distance of ten miles, and it is far removed from many of them, it will take them six mouths' steady walking to get to it. Hopes to Make Ills Mark. It is reported that one of the nominees . for the legislature from a district south of South street can neither read nor write, and that in signing a check he makes his mark. Philadelphia Record. The naval exhibition to be held in London next year will display the pro-gress and evolution of the navy from the earliest times. The guarantee fund is already mounting toward 30,000, and the queen and the Prince of Wales take part as patron and president Mistakes in rnnt. "Did you ever notice," said a newspa-per man the other day, "what strange mistakes writers will sometimes make? Why, a day or two ago in one paper a column was devoted to a discussion of the seal fisheries question, in which Sir Julian Pauncefote was repeatediy called Sir John Pauncefote. Was it ignorance or temporary aberration, or what? Probably what.' There is an old story of the one perfect book ever printed, after almost infinite pains had been taken to make it typographically cor-rect. When it was finished the word 'book was found on the first page print-ed with three oV New York Tribnna, One of the habits of Prince Bismarck at Kissingen is to get weighed every day.. His weight is now 205 pounds. In , ' 1879 he reached the highest point, 247 pounds, but of late years he has been losing flesh, slowly but surely. |