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Show ' fl ,. . THE SALT l;AKJi TIMES. TUESDAY. JANUARY 1!). 181)1. ' S : raiBi I mmmnnm WALKEKHOUSE. KfZ, General iMfil.a StU REH BT1TE, liMWf MltataPtwls 4 telit feXHt " PPillCONTRACTORS 4 BUILDERS. uam, Mm&J JSSttSKSJgi: P IIW JM&Sl ' OFFICE: 239 Main Street. CRRISTEISCI t JElitli ffif ASWV -- - - jiyM f3Mfl8-- l --LIPl ttBS 1 Loan & Trist tow. ffipgHi lillis pll Cho,ceFan,ll''Groceries PFSST1 thead,no broker. IEsSEE g Mrs. FOVSPARLORS 'X'C-'S-r I ' I MONEY REAL ESTATE " fUSBfeS "rf X t to SHASlEiERiCkSOfc SZ&SSS?" tmM Mortgages tobh 1 MiIH,,cry iPHS ..,.. fegS lit HUM., Slit U. SSflgffl To bo found in the City. t4lfflmSj w 39SaR ' !" Sill Lt CtT r BSraSIJ.M.Ciabbe&Ca IMMBB OMMSEHflt Pffl" HgOTSi" jPfQP) SAVE YOUR VALUABLE TIME ! I iff . . TOW,M I will do --onr rn.i.r:ulenca dally In short- - 1 T AKMf Bank, MfetaNhl HHaM JZ2&Z IWWi '4. iA?1" IN USE. hour. ;ft rer.ts: ov.r one hour. ;0 ut an 4 , 1li!!wU ttHBMummuceieaia. MwiV&mm MW&wEePfii BSCS"-- -" t Sl VgMF-- REPRESENTING THE BKST AMERICAS V&jy$&Wi 1 70 W. Second South St. .'Tfc Cfflfelifelb -o- hkcou.anie, mWM&MM COULTER S SNELGROVE, $0$ Exclusive Dealer for the National Typewriter &&J 7 "pjg--v Steam Dye Works! IgV - "THE :: TAILOR." EJ-;r- ::i., Eiclusive Hatters and Furriers. IVjjSiiiSY? nMiohw V5!. w.to.,.M. jrJSSgAO' aS6JSSS5-- - bB.otc..,. . VJ3liffjJt5Hto Work.iMartia-.AUey- . W. l.t Booth. AMEWCU (LOTHI.XG & SHOE CO., feet Fit GnMtMl 14 Kr3. F. E. PatterSOl F. M. Shad teef!laAilmT ISO South MatnBt. 1- - -- . WMI FURS J!!? fpfflff2ra9 Spencer & Kimball, fdyeP AxThB lleC55 -- l E-- behest, f IjMrOTTOro ScT H&. I fininFN riilr razaar ! iSrWhKlrii rslW.f--f Illusive PnutUal Furrier lrV C ft f" ; ilVSl - At sipr t till cfrr W& VARALL-- jSt8 MvimtJ?MdWi?CP Repairing, Cleaning, Altering and Redyelns Itt$m"IMn&Jp$frJ oMa IFS j. m. pearlman, : : prop'R. frwMmm. Dealers Fine Shoes " ' ' Etabli.hed, 1872. r., T I XT OA f The Occidental.ibPdSWSlrff w.J. KIG, iPHpif ROCK SPRINGS COAL F.u CO. MKr forsale, iuiRiinispHT, i , PBopfs ! ft-R--fra Biirinarf, Stan, Tinwira i jcfatjiiiilwelffl D,. .,, f&iyftSftA l'l PiH Lbecan not be ' 3rd West and tod South. 279 S MdlllSt Silt L9 C'tj. 'JhJ corner "lS' HUE BAB GOODS CT AIL mPsjll , Ei '"' jfjl, 09 Main Street. ts so. M. Scot Jam. Glbkith4 fl B. RmrmcL Pre.ident. Vice-Preside- Secretary. GEO. M. S'DOTT & CO., (INCORPORATED.) --DEALER.B IN-- Hardware and Metal, Stoves, Tinware, Mill Findings, Etc, AGENTS FOR the Dodge Wood Pulley, Roebling'i Steele Wire Repe, Vacuum Cylinder and Engine Oils, Hercules Powder, Atlas Engines and Boll ers, Mack Injectors, Buffalo Scales, Jefferson Horse Whim, Blake Pumps Miners' and Blacksmiths' Tools, Etc, 168 MAIN STREET. Salt Lake Citv - - Utah THE WONDER OF THE AGE! The Grand Oil Heater! 4 Cheap, Safe, Economical, and Dur-a- b e. No Smoke I Pii Ko Smell! No Soot! No Pipe to Cuss! No Scrip-pf- j ture to Quote! No Coal to Lug! ffflmi No Dampers to Reguliitet No Ashes to Empty! Just the thing for vour Bedroom, Bathroom, Ollice, Dining Room or Parlor. JBrMJL DO NOT FAIL TO SEE IT1 Sold only HUIMDIMCOMl by the 32 West Second South Stree Sign of ihe "Big Gun." - - - Utaii it Hitana MacMnery Companj C. P. MASON, Manager Headquarters for all Glasses of Machinery. Engines and Boilers from power ana upwards in stock forimmt diatc delivery. Steam Pumps, Injectors, Horse Whims, Hoisting Engines Eck Breakers, Wall's Holla, Ingeraoll Air Compressors and Drill, Lubri eating Oils, Mine, Mill and Smeller Supplies, Silver, Gold and Ooncentrat lg Mills erected and delivered in running order. Maine Oice anl Warerooms 259 S. Main Street. Salt Late D. S AGENCY, BUTTE, MONTANA. :B.E.Bioch&Co. -- 7"l2.0lCC!CllO LIQUOR 8c CIGaTTmERCHANTS. 13, 15, 17, 19, Commercial St., Salt Lake City. Have in stock tho largest line of Imported and Domestic Wines.Brnndies, Li qnors. Liqueurs and Cordials in tho Inter-Mountai- Country; are Headquarters for Pomery Sac, Cliquot, G. H. Mumm & Co. and Monopole Extra Dry Cham-pagne. Aeeucy for Carl Upmann New York Cigars, Straitoa & Storm and Iduardo H. Gato "Key West." SOLE AGENTS FOR CHARLES HEIDSlICK SEC. TYlepbne 365. HAIL OSISLRS SOLICITED. P. 0. Ros 553. Inier-fflounta- in Electric Com'y. IH Broa.lvray, Salt Lake. Electrical work and siifplie6 of all kinds. Wiring for incandescent lights a specialty. r Electric and. Coiribination Fixtures, Aeonts for Western Electric Comppny's dynamos and Akonite Wire Com-pany's goods. Hotel annunciators, tire and burglar alarms, electric motors, etc.j etc. Electric Light Plants Installed. J E. SELLS, J. 'TUCKER. H. W. SELLS. Sells Sc Corqpany, Wholesale and Retail Dealers in Lnmber. First South street, opposite 14th Ward Assembly Rooms. F. 0. Un 107. Old Pioneer lard of Armstrong A Brlr. ' " v : l . are obvious. The experiment will be watched with great interest, and if even partially successful will incite many to imitate it, as they can avoid auy errors due to want of experience. A BELLAMY EXPERIMENT. Undertaken by Hnslnem Men at a Suburb of Chicago. W. W. Catlin, J. W. Howell. E. L. Brooks and other Chicago business men who reside in Evanston have organized and paid $ 10,000 for four acres in tho latter place, on which they will soon erect a hotel, homes, club house, etc., to be run on the plan. There are to be eleven residences surrounding j a central court, with kitchen, laundry, etc., all lighted and heated by a central plant. The system of cooking is to be ad libitum, so to speak. That is, tho cen-- j tral kitchen will cook for all as each may j order, and so each family can bo as ex-- ' elusive or as as it chooses. Each of tho eleven families pays $3,000 at the start, which insures private own-ership of its own residence and a twelfth interest in the common plant. j It is evident that many advantages art) secured: the building can be done j s?s5?'yb tr ' THE SITE PURCHASED. cheaper, the provisions car. ba had on better terms and better preserved, all tho washing and card of grounds can bo similarly cheaeued, and much can be done by machinery that in single fam-- i ilies must be done by hand. Other gains vania with only 500. New England and New York are the far northern states, and the Pacific states are as yet scarcely affected. The total membership is set at over 1,200.000. The Alliance has al-ready done much in buying farm ma-chinery at cheap rates and securing bet-ter terms with railroads. THE FARMErt'S ALLIANCE. The Decent Big Meeting at Ocala Strength of the OtjCauization. "The Farmer's Alliance has come to itay." Such is the emphatic declara-tion of all its organs and the expressed belief of the Bhrewdest politicians; and the rcceDt convention at Ocala, Fla., did some very systematic work tending to make it a permanency. Every one knows what the Farmer's Alliance did in the recent election. It swept Kansas, Tenn-essee and South Carolina, gained a bol w88' PEFFER WTLSOH POLK. nee of power in some other southern states and aided greatly in a political revolution in the northwest. It claims to have sixty men elected to the Fifty-secon- d congress who are pledged to maintain its views, five of the seven members from Kansas being Alliance men. Capt. Benjamin Tillman, gover-nor of South Carolina, is a very practi-cal and hard working farmer, and was scarcely known outside of his own neighborhood till he began to organize j the fanners. His wonderful ability then made him a power in politics in a short time. One of tho congressmen elect from Kansas is B. IL Glover, national j vice president of the Alliance. L. L. Polk, of Washington, D. C, has served some time as president; J. II. Turner, of the same place, as secretary, and W. II. Hickwann, of Missouri, treasurer, these having taken the initia-tive in calling and organizing the con-vention at Ocala. Judge Peffer, editor of The Kansas Fanner, and Oswald Wilson are other prominent workers in the cause. Last, but far from least, the organisation is truly nationxtL One of Its avowed objects is to drive sectional-ism out of politics, and Texas claims the honor of being its birthplace. In the number of Alliance members Texas and Missouri stand first, having 150,000 each; then come North Carolina, Georgia, Kansas, Arkansas and Tennes-see with about 100,000 each; Alabama, Mississippi and Kentucky with perhaps 70,000 each, and bo- -- Uowa to Pennsyl-- . A Critic lilt wllh llnttle. It will bo remembered that an English actress named Fortescue some months back received thumping damages fur breach of promise from Lord Garmoyle. Great stress was laid at the time on the young woman's ladylike character. During the potion scene in "Romeo and Juliet" ono night recently at an English provincial theatre Miss Fortescue (lung the poisoned phial from her and Rumeo dashed aside his hat. Strange to say, both phial and hat landed on the head of an obnoxious newspaper critic w.o had a seat in the front row. If Miss Fortoscuo's reputation for "gentleness" was not so well established, one might be tempted to surmise tiiat the smash- - ing of the bottle on the journalist's pato was premeditated. The newly elected treasurer of Clark county. Ills., has declined to accept the oftiee. He claims that th' salary of JflOO per annum, with iioo allowance for ideffe hire, is insufficin'it. Marluml rudding. A Maryland plum pudding, warranted to keep a year, is made from six pounds, of seeded raisins, six pounds of brown sugar, four pounds of currants, six pounds of stale oated bread, six pounds of suet chopped very fine, six pounds of eggs, two pounds of citron, six tabl rwxmfuls of flour, half h pint of wiuo, Iws'f a pint of brandy, three uu'. und a little mace and Kalt. Mix all well, let it stand over night and divide into twelve parts; tie each in a coarse cloth, plunge into boiling water and boil four hours; expose then to the sun for two or three days with the cloths on and when dry hang in a cold room. They will keep a year. When wanted for use put into boiling water with the same cloth on and boil for one ami a half hours. New York Hrruld. lpiclou PeH.liit Canity. Shell your ch p them fine; measure them in a cup and take just the same quantity of granulated sugar us you have peanuts. Put the sugar in a skillet or spider on the fire, and keep moving the skillet around until the sugar is dissolved; then put in the peanuts and pour into buttered tins. This is deli-cious, and so quickly made. Plviladel- - yhia er. j |