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Show THE SALT LAKE TIME"VVTbXESDAY YKNINtJ.ATOIli 0,1S00. N' N? Propeller J. L. Davis - v r jbTrEAL ESTATE! tas .... XjOts, Blocks and Acreage. ENTER STREET T comprising 1; sub division ! 180 Residence Lots. RANGING IN PRICE FROM $150 TO $300. liese Choice Residence Lots are on the Main Business street of Provo, and are Now on the Market. - Call on or Address, PROPELLER J. L. DAVIS, ssPROVO, UTAH.& Union 'National Bank. SALT LAKE CUV. i Capital - - - - 400,000.00 United States Depository Safe Deposit Vault, Absolutely Fire ami Burglar Troof. Boxee fiwra lo.OG to 125.00 per Year. Careful and Prompt Attention Given TO COLLECTIONS. GREAT SLAUGHTERING $LE - 0.IT -- - T:Lt; Heating Stoves! t loo H EATI NG STOVES M UST BE SOLD Regardless of Cost. . You can Favo Fifty Pit Cent y Buying Now of thi ALT LAKE HARDWARE COMP4W 32 West Second Sontli. (Oira Houms lllotk). SigXL Of tlio "BIG 0-XJ2ST- ." ,( "WE HANDLE Business, Residence and Country Property, - " IMPROVED AND UNIMPROVED. Parties wishlnR to buy or wll Realty, had better se us. Our motto: ''Small Profit and Quick Turns." Correspondence boliciteii. W. L. BARRET & CO., 207 N. Main St., Salt Lake til), Hah. MIDDLEMISS, VAN DYKE Sc CO.. Real Estate andMines, 156 Main St., Salt Lake City, Utah. GEORGE A. LOWE, " Dealer in All Kind, of First Cla Agricultural Implements, FCIH'TTLKK Y.WA AND FBKltfllS WAGONS, Columbus Bnspiittees and Roai Carls of every tti'8:ri"tiou. Steam Engines, Leffel Wheels. WAREHOUSE STATE" BO.ID HETW'KEX FIRST AND SECOND SOUTH. .. !- J-W. II. McOI.UHE fc CO., IRE-A.- -. ESTATE, HUALL PkOKITS AND HI! KtT!lt.VA CG West Second South KUeet, Salt LakeCitr. UTAH STEM LADNDRY 43 a Wert Temple. Br-a-ch Office, Urdner'i, 141 Mila St Agent wantH in til good towa Teief houe tJA Km Work Sneouit wrote, lectured antf maue money.-- ; And Anally they marrisd in tho highest ranks. Tennie C. Claflin Lady Ctook, Vicountess ot Moiiserrat (Portugal) divides her time be-tween ber London residence and the Palacio da Monserrat in Portugal a wonderful old Moorish castle on which her husband has ex-pended a million dollar in repairs. The parks, gardens, terraces and foun-tains moke up an earthly paradise; and there the once reviled Tennie, as vieountoer, hat entertained many of the noblest in Europe, including King Luis of Portugal and King Oscar of Hweden. What novelist would venture to portray such a traiH'-jjiatlo- n? Lady Victoria - Claflin - Woodhull Blood-Mart- in tgive ber all the titles she bas won) occupies a somewhat inferior position, but her husband is a baronet and weal thy banker. tferlng old im beetle." if they do, there will be fun. Chief Inspector Thomas Byrnes has lately completed tweuty-si- x years in the police de-partment of New York city, where he began Dec. 10, I8G3, as patrolman. His promotion has been rapid and his success phenomenal. In 1871 be led a large section of the police during the Orange riots and won high encom-iums. A little later he unearthed the mys-tery of the Manhattan Savings Institution robbery, which proved bis skill to such a de-gree that be was made chief of the detective bureau. Some of bis successes in that de-partment are more interesting than any de-tailed by the most sensational writers of detective romances. In more than one noted burglary be has been able, within six hours after seeing the work, to narrow the search down to four or five noted burglars. Like all great promoters of justice, he has Such is, in brief, their life story. But the end is not yet, and many people, especiallj journalist wbs were active in 1870-7-6, are awaiting with interest the beginning of the interesting suit. certain ineories, or rather works on certain principles, which be cannot well put into words; but that part of his work which ho can ex-plain is really fas-cinating. In the case of one great burglary, for in-stance, he prompt-ly decided that it was doue by a "first class band;" j be then showed by I the records t hat there were but six "hands" at large that is, out' of the penitentiary, and an v ways near New IMIED. American Women, Outcast Hated, Are Now Titled. WOODHULL AND CLAFLIN. t Aatonikhing Social Transforma-Slnc- e Theodora Married the Em-- ' Justinian Their Threatened Snit ! "'t Inspector Byrne for Libel. once noted "Woodhull and Claflin"! Jiia into public notice again this time :iinj suits for criminal libel. They I Wished the nubile bv orjenine a brok--1 in New then pub-'- I a japer kpui as a :" sheet" and greatest ' of the P their 30 career "m in jail "'Id protest ' existing institutions; "t into ';land and aor amaied py world ari7iig two "nt English. ealthy Tixsm c. York. In a day or two he located five of them iu other places at the date of the crime; 'the sixth was, there fore, his man, and he "nabbed" him at once. His book, entitled "Professional Crim- - inals of America," is one of great value to officers all over the country. With all this be is a gentleman of some culture and geni-ality, and a very pleasant companion in the social circle. All the romance of the inspector's career, however, pales into the commonplace com-pared with that of the Claflin sisters. Their history may be said to begin with a sod mis-take of their mother, an extremely bright and lively lady, who died last June at the age of 00, at Lady Cook's residence, near London. She brought about a marriage for Victoria' which proved an uuhappy one, and the daughter formed an alliance for herself with Va1: Blood,' of; Missouri. Tennie was meanwhile developing rare powers as a fasci-nator, and in nSil) the New York career of the two Eisters began. They surmounted prejudice so rapidly that the most eminent ar-tists, writers and lecturers cf the country be-came their associates, including Beecher, Til-to- n, Whitolaw Reed, Mesdnmes Stanton and Hooker and Hisses Dickinson and Anthony. Mrs. Woodhull appeared lief ore congressional committees and won great applause as an ad-vocate of woman suffrage. This wai the Ur nith of tbeir success. Mrs. Woodhull next appeared as a candi-date for president, and ao her life was "ven-tilated." She lost her temper and attacked indiscriminately many prominent people. u, uap- - ' ' Uthean-- womanhood, since the days of the PresB Theodora. there bas been Lj t"UKtanceof fortune's caprices; Lii tba'nt sensational romances lek be found. C'Sflin tnat was- - Victoria Lit'?" wm Uter Mrs-- CoL Blood, is tiiddulph Martin, of Hvdo Park, d Tennie C. Claflin is now Lady Wcountess of Monserrat, wife of k, Cok-- To Americans who read f'aPer3 from 1870 to 1876 it is not i' of 607 rhetoric to heighten the prlented bT tb'5 p' a'e issued from their retreat with , . "'Prosecute Inspector Thomas in th X8W York Vohce, who. they na SDoken of them Wrentaresses" and that was the hat k I- - BiddulPh Martin (Victoria) tort band wU1 tkenoaso in - r-- ? and Prwre.c,nte bv wholesale, i Prtecute toe and ".-t- n - k-- Sh .Z-- She delivered lec-tures in favor of what was called "free love" and was ostracized. She and her sister published the famous "Beech-ei--TUt- Article" of November, 1873, and were thrown into prison. Tho scandal ran its coa. the sis-ters were in effect driven from the country. They went to London, kMtiM ftomewhat eoorTativ. msrxCTOB iyR-t- --' A JOLLY WIZARD. jarj dwelt in a cave by the sea, ind a dreamer of dreams was he, vaves' roar as they broke on the shore, are him mirth and jollity. . people the rocks and the sounding deep aataales weird as tho products of sleep. mmed of a maiden fair as a star, '!io came o'er the rolling sea wy crest of the billow's breast; t'itli airy head walked she, face was as white as tho driven snow, loice was like music sad and low. ans; of love, and of lovers' pain, md she sang of a dream so sweet uwd her soul to a desperate goal. To,- the sake of a wild heart beat, lover she loved in her fondest dream : as the glitter of brook and stream. . iritard dwelt in a cave by the sea, And a dreamer of dreams was be, i phantasies sad and phantasies glad, Hb kept his jollity; iream ia a dream, and not life," quoth he, a which is life ne'er a dream can be." Something Was Wrong. "It was in the old days of the wet plate method in photography," said a photogra-pher, "and when an exposure of twenty sec-onds had to be made and a sitter bad to be absolutely quiet. I had my subject as I wanted him and took off the cap. I left the room for a moment, and returning, found everything all right apparently. Apparent-ly, I say, but when I went into the dark room and developed the plate I found it most terribly blurred. It looked as if the sitter had turned a handspring or thrown a somer-sault. When I went back I was mad, " 'What did you dor I asked. " 'Nothing,' was the innocent answer. Whyr " 'Look at that plate,' I said, 'and then tell me you didn't move.' "Here my sitter began to laugh at his pict-ure. 'Well, I swear I wouldn't a' thought that just going over to the window to sp.t would have done all that, because I sat right down again.' "Philadelphia Saturday Re-view. Done Up for an Overcoat. "I was coming up from the depot," he was explaining to a police officer yesterday, "coming up from the depot with my $50 overcoat on my arm, when a feller runs agin me. I wasn't to blame, but be called me a chump and a slouch and a hayseed, and added that he would lick me for a cent. Well, yon know, I didn't want any fuss, but a second feller comes up and says to me: "You go fur him and shatter his system. He's an awful coward and is just "I see," mused the officer. "With that the man took my overcoat to give mo a free swing, and I hauled oft to smash So. 1. He began to back off and apol-ogize, and when I let up on bim the other man and my $j0 overcoat bad disappeared. "Put up job," observed the officer. "Will I ever see my coat againP "Prebably not." "What's best for me to do go tearing around and give it away that I was played, or walk around serenely and try and look in-nocent" "It's for you to say." "Well, IU adopt the latter course, and if you should meet me anywhere and there is any one around don't say a word about the coat. Just ask me if we have bad lots of rain and mud in our town; kinder talk as if yon never saw me before, and 111 sort o' stroll op town and whistle and try to look as if I knew the ropes and was np on all the latest tricks." Detroit Free Press. Bosworth Smith, in a report on tke Eolar old field, in southern India, records some finds of old mining implement, old timber-ing, fragments of bones, an old oil Ump and broken piece of earthenware, including a rracible, tke remains of ancient mining iperations. He expresses astonishment at the fact that the old miners were able to reach depths of 200 or S00 feet through hard rock with the ample appliances at their com-mand. |