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Show THE SALT LAKE TIMES, THiIsIdAY EVENING, APRIL 3, 4890. 2 BUSINESS DIRECTORY. Etnt Dealers, W Progreiw , BnildinB, Ral for tale refinance property in all parts of the city; alto choice bargains in bumnew and farm properly. H. C. LETT k SOX, Ral Estate, City and Coojitry, No. Dslrin Main Hlreet, opposite the Walker Honue, Salt City. THE MIJJLAXD I5VESTMEST CO. in Real Estate, Loans and Inturance. Bargain Main Street. . W. H. WHITE & CO., Estate and Mining Broker, No. 78 East Real Houtn Btmot, Salt Luke City, Utah. B. 0. BURTON, JH. J. A, OBOttSWtCK. W.B.ASBBKW BURTON, OltOESBECK & CO. Estate, No. 8S9 Main Street, Bait Lake Real Utiih. Notary in ollioe. Telephone R. M. JOHNSOS & CO., Estate, Loans, Minr. Irrigation and Manufacturing, 28 Weet tiratttuutli BtrewU iXvlLlNlT&IJEX BY, Enfticoers and Burveyors. Additions laid Civil and platted. Koonn, Bit and 1115 Yro. (tress Building; F. O. Box (Til, bait Lake City, Utah. , . SOUTH LAW ADDITH Now On the Market LOCATION: Cor. Tenth South and Ninth E? ON THE CITY LIMITS, TWO MILE8 FROM P. 0. LOTS FROM $400 TO 6 THE SITUATION IS GRAND Overlooking the Valley. Call Early and Get Choice of Lc CHOICE RESIDENCE. BUSINESS AND ACREAGE PROPEET siToiiiiciH Sole Agents, 289 S. Main St, F. AUERBACH & BROS. WILL SHOW ON Monday, March 10th Spring Importations in Tarious Departments, including Additional Novelties in Silk and Dress Goods. NEW GOODS ARE ARRIVING DAILY, and among those already Jn we can Boast of THE FINEST LINE OF MICH AND AMERICAN SATEENS Ever brought to this city. Also a beautiful and varied assortment of Zephyr Cloths. We have, taken particular pains i I I with our Carpet Department I 011110' 1 1 Oil 0Will OUT We only request an inspection g A JH 11 Ml III rill of our handsome Axminster, g 1 1 1 I I i 1 III I Body UUipUl JJUjJUl 1111 UU I Moquette, - Velvet, - Brussels, Tapestry and Inorain Carpets, and you will admit that they are the best and cheapest in town. ' OUR RfinT And MflF DEPAETfflEST IS K0TV COMPLETE, and liUUI QifUuilUL we are prepared to Fit all feet and pockets. , K. M. BIEiE, FRENCH HAIR DRESSER, Anil Manufacturer of STYLISH 11 AIR GG0DR, Room 10, Scott-Auerbao- h Building, Salt Lake City, Utah. Take the Elevator. whiteITijlmeb, Architects andlSuperintendents. Rooms 410, 411 Progress Block, Salt ' Lake City. ADVERTISE. for spaces on the fence enclosing the new Bast Sido Hotel upply to UTAH PAINT AND OIL COMPANY, 1st South St. Kast, opp. City Hall, LAKUAN & CO., Morse -:- - Srioers, Old Eaglo Foundry, cor. 2d South and 1st West sts. Twenty-fiv- e years experience in Colorado. This only in the city where horse shoe-ing is made a specialty. dTb. stanwood, Real Estate and Investment Broker. The handling of Real Estate for non-residents a specialty. N. E. (Jor. Main and Third Sts., Basement of St. Elmo Hotel, Bait Lake City. ALFRED DTJNSHEE, Real Estate Loans, Investments, 161 Maine St Rear of Jones' Bank. SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH. J. G. McAllister. D, H. MoAixisTia. McAllister bros., Real Estate .and Lands. 265 S. Maine Street, Under Abstruct Office, SALT 1ALK CIT GREAT SLAUGHTERING SA OF Heating Stoves loo HEATING STOVES MUST BE SOI Regardless of Cost. You can Save Fifty Per Cent by Buying Now of the ALT LAKE . HARDWARE COMPAQ .. . 3i0test" Second Sonth. (Opera House Block). I? r; Sign of. tlie "BIG-- GrTJJXJ Real Estate and (VI ine 156 Main St., Salt Lake City, Utah. Ill Spencer & Kimball J 160 Main Street. y --EXCLUSIVE DEALERS I-N- ' Filllll ' . . ...S.ole Agents for James Means $3 Shoe W. II. McCLURE & CO.. K.EJuILi BSTATI SMALL PEOFITS AND SCJI?E RETUfiNS. 06 West Second South Street, Salt Lake City. In endless variety, and all stylish goods. In fact, we have scoured the Eastern Markets for the Latest and most Fashionable novelties. fin ' ninnlr Tl n-w'- Eas Just Received a Huge Mil -I-nvoice of i ulll uluuft 11 up I New Spring Wraps aii Coats. Better come early and get a good selection. The best and the choicest goods go first. We can guarantee the very lowest prices consistent with good qualities. ISPJIail orders promptly attended to. lyiiHiBii GEORGE A. LOWE, Dealer in All Kinds of First Class Agricultural Implements, SCHUTTLER FAPM AND FREiGHS WAGONS, Collate Sups, Mods M BoaH Carts of every description. Steam Engines, Leffel Wheels. WAREHOUSES STATE ROAD BETWEEN FIRST AND SECOND SOUTH. Union National Bank. SALT LAKE CITY. Capital - - - United States Depository Sate Deposit Vault, Absolutely Fire and Burglar Proof. Boxes from S5.0C to per Year. Careful and Prompt Attention Given TO COLLECTIONS. S. P. SPENCER & CO.. Real Estate, Loans, Investments 267 S. Main St., Salt Loke City. Complete List of City and Acreage Property. HARTENSTEIN & SHEETS, Fashionable Barbers, (In Anor & Murphy's New Building.) HAIR CUTTING, SHAMPOOING, ETC., No. 16 E. 1st South St. Salt Lake City. I. Watteus, Broker, 31 E. FirBt South St., East of Deseret National Bank, Salt Lake City. MVt Lon on WHtchps, Diamonds and Jewel-ry. Honte Collected, linilroad Tickets Bought and Bold. HuirineBB confidential. EstabliBhed 18WJ. All Unredeemed Pledges Bold at very low ratb . W. A. Taylor, Merchant Tailor, NEW SPRING STYLES JUST ARRIVED. 13 and 45 E. Second South Street, Salt Lake City. J. C. MURPHY & CO., Rubber Stamps and Notarial Seals. Agents for the Abbott Check Perforator Salt Lake City. M. E. McEXASY, Attorney-at-Law- . Progress Building (Fourth Floor). Q W.POWEBS, Attorney-at-Law- , Opposite Cullen Hotel, Beoond Bonth Street, J B. CR1TCHL0W, Attorney-at-Law- , Rooms 37 and i8, Bnildin?. FREEMAN & BUKKCKVS. DRS. Spectaoles Accurately i ittod. Kye, Ear, Nose, Throat.. Rooms 17 and 1R, Bnilding. yEADONAHEATH, Real Estate and Loan Agents. No. 150 Main Street. Kelercnnei " McCornlck V Co., Bunkers Correspondence Solicited. i Geo. M. Soott, Preat Jab, QuunDufama, Vice-rtoe-t. H. 8. RcuruoJ), "::::::::::::::GEO. M. SOOTT & CO.,:::::::: ...." (INCORPORATED). --DEALERS IN-- Hardware and Meta Stoves, Tinware, Mill Findings, Etc. AGENTS FOR the Dddge Wood Pulley, Roeblirtg's Steele Wire B Vacuum Cylinder and Engine Oils, Hercules Powder. Atlf.s Engines and ersr Mack Injectors, Buffalo Scales, Jefferson Horse Whim, Bloke P Miners' and Blacksmiths' Tools, Etc. ' 168 MAIN STEEET, -- Salt Lake Git . Uta E.8ELL8. J.TCCKEB. Sells & Corriparry, -:- - Wholesale and Retail Dealers - ia Lnmber Streel' Ward Assembly Rooms.1 P.O.Box 1078. - - Old Pioneer Yard of AriDrtron. Bit f Ssarlli Dial Fine lies, tei, Silverware Solid, and. SPlated., and an Endless "Variety of Jewelry j If ami Artistic Hasp Qur Stock of Sonvernirs are Beyond Question CJuperior to any Heretofore Shown in This Country, Qall at Our .Koonis and Seethe Ofl'eringa 0. L ELIASON, .. 3To. 220 Ivain St. - - Opposite F. O. UTAH STEAM LAUNDRY 45 S. Westf Temple. Branch Office, Gardner's. 141-Mai- n St Agents wanted in all good towns. Telephone 419. Fine Work a Specialty t . i . J. W. WHITECAR, Designer and Engraver on Wood, 121 'S. Main. St., Salt Lake City, THE OCCIDENTAL. Pure Goods Only and of The Best Quality. STUDIOUS ATTENTION. AUER & MURPHY, Proprietors. No.19.Eant Ftrat South St.. - - Salt LakaCity puma .''HH'ij.'aa ARL0W, 1 IJh Statistics and careful estimates of the increase of population in the United States since 1880 indicate that there will be a total of 67,000,000 people at the .time of the next census, July 1, 1890. Ststesmau. ....... T Torn-- MttU Alphnnsn XIII. I often say that poor people must be fonder of their children than the wealthy are of theirs. There is Btich a poignant interest in a child who will have to face a wa of troubles. Poor little Alphonso XIII must be invested in his mother's eyw with an interest of that kind, being th posthumous son of a viveur of a bad constitution, who, having used himself up at the age of 28, died of a gulloping consumption. A Spanish deputy told me last October that the poor little boy had no chance of a long life and that it would bo rather a misfortune if he grew up. The nervous system was so bad that the doctors were afraid of having him bathed in the sea. A shock of any kind might knock it to pieces. His mother comes of the most epileptic branch of the imperial family of Austria. Poor little Alphonso has, said the dep-uty I quote, fleshless little legs, with bones no thicker than a chicken's. They bond under the weight of an abnormal-ly big head, which points to hydroce-phalus. Altogether the conformation of the little monarch is a thing rather for an anatomical museum than to bear tho weighty trappings of regal state. His mother is always in ear shot of hira and the doctor handy to her. A corkscrew stair communicates with his and her bedrooms, and there is a speaking tube close to his bod, so that were anything the matter with him the nurse could at once tell her and the doctor. The king's two waters pvomise to be winsome, and have fairly good constitutions, though their flesh is slow to heal. Mercedes, to whom I told you so early as November Spaniards here were beginning to make up as shown in "homages' of French toys, still nurses dolls. They noticed on the sands of San Sebastian what a weak-ling the poor brother was, and jumped to the conclusion that the crown would soon drop down on the head of his eldest sister. She and Theresa are very pretty and cheery. Mercedes is very like the queen of the Belgians, who was never either one or the other. Her majesty is an aunt of Queen Christiana. Mrs. Crawford's Letter in London Truth. California" stories. The I5t uf the Mustang Grtoslles end Frontiersmen. The mountains of San Luis Obispo otfer Bome of the strangest frontier scenes and types to be found on the Pacific coast. The region was one of tho last strong-holds of the native Californians. Helen Hunt Jackson collected a good deal of material a few months before her death v in the old town of San Luis, from the Spanish priests there, and would perhaps have written auother California novel if6hehad had one more year of life. She thought that the region combined to a remarkable degree tho peculiar charms of northern and southern California, and she often spoke of its "waste wealth of literary material." My thoughts were turned to San Luis the other day by the news from there that a man had found a band of wild horses in tho mountains and had cap-tured about twenty in a corral. There are four or five bands of wild horses that take care of themselves in tho unfenced mountains of the upper Sierras, but none in the coast range, north of San Luis. They are descended from Spanish "mus-tangs," and are as wild and worthless for any kind of work as it is possible to im-- . agine. In one case, in early times, a Spanish land owner was persuaded to buy an American plow and sow some wheat. He had four or five mustangs tied to the plow beam, put boys on the mustangs, and ran them across tho fields with several Indians hanging to the plow bandies. Every now and then the mus-tangs flew out on the plowed ground and kicked "for all they were worth." Aft a little while tho old Don was heard to say: "What men these Americans are! How hard they work for nothing!" And ao he went back to his brush harrow. One of the characters of San Luis died a short time ago. He was a frontiers-man, known over thousands of square mfles of mountain and valley as "Uncle Billy of Josephine." He was a griszled giant, certainly the coolest and strongest man in the region, and he kept a post-offi-and a store. He was a blacksmith, a school trustee, and a few things be-sides, especially a wheel horse at camp meetings. Onenighttwo Mexican miners tried to rob the old man. The door was shut, bat he threw the foremost Mexican through the panels into the road, and then, putting his arms about the three others, shoved them en masse through the splinters and fragments of the broken door. "One or two of them Mexicans stuck their knives into me," said Uncle Billy afterward, "but I never allowed I was hurt, and after they were throwed out they crawled away." In fact, one knife thrust was clear through his arm; but, on the other hand, he crippled most of the Mexicans for life. There were plenty of grizrlies around the mountains fifteen years ago, and I hear of them, even now. Every one in the mountains has an immense respect for the grizzly. An old frontiersman tells me that a few years ago ha was hunting stray cattle, and he came on a new settlor's cabin beside an oak in a mountain valley. He stayed with the settler over night, sleeping in a blanket before the fire. During the night they heard a great noise outside. The settler looked out and reported that a large bear was at the meat safe, which hung under the oak tree. The frontiorsman was asked to shoot it, but said he would not risk it, with only a revolver and a shot-gun. The wife of the settlor remarked that they were both cowards, and she would drive it off with a broom. They locked the door, prevented her from going out, and shortly after heard the meat safe fall and roll into the gulch. In the morning they found that an old horse had become entangled in the ropes of the meat safe, and finally torn it down in his struggles and dragged it down the ravine. The old frontiersman and the new settler were obliged in self defence to retire to the headwaters of tho San Antonio within a week and stay there until they had killed a grizzly apiece. New York Tribune, Preaching Against Fortune Tellers. The Rev. Father Wall, rector of St. Paul's cathedral, scored the people of liis parish yesterday, particularly tho mar-ried women, on the practice of patroniz-ing fortune tellers and wizards who read the past, present and future. "When a person visits a fortune teller to ascertain his fortune, he goes to find out what Qod alone, and no one else, knows. When you give to a fortune teller your presence, and make him or her believe that they have a foreknowl-edge of seeing the inside view of the future, you adore him and moke him be-lieve he has power not 'given to the devil. If you think he can peer into the future you make him the equal of God. Therefore you have strange gods before Him, and violate the first commandment. "We find youths, young girls, and es-pecially married women, making a prac-tice of this sin. If you deliberately visit a fortune teller you are indulging in a mortal sin. If you go out of pure thoughtlessness it is not so bad, but it is a sin nevertheless. It is the same thing as going to au idol and giving your heart to it. This is idolatry of the worst kind. ' I would like to impress on your mind that fortune tellers compose the worst characters in the community. One class of the business is fortune telling and the other is the seduction and ruin of youth. To my own personal knowledge I know of persons who have been ruined by consulting these people. I warn all per-sons of the congregation, and hope you will extend this knowledge, that it is a mortal sin against tho first command-ment. Avoid them and their nefarious business, for the designs they have on the morality of youth." Pittsburg Dis-patch, Growinc Demand for EImcMo Motor. The uses of the electric motor aro mul-tiplying daily, and one of the indications that iU adaptability is recognized by the public is that machines for both con-stant potential and constant current systems have been manufactured during the past year at the rate of upward of 250 per week, and their rating will ex-ceed 700 horse power. In Bpite of this great output of electrical apparatus, every portion of it finds an immediate sale, and nearly all the factories are be-hind lin their orders to such an extent that it is nearly impossible to fill orders under sixty days. Motors have been for all conceivable purposes to which power can bo applied, and small industries run by electrical power have started up in many places where steam power could not have been utilized. The use of the storage battery is also igrowing rapidly. --New York Telegram. Tho Bumano Fad. There has lately been much tribulation about astrakhau in England, owing to to a "regular terrible story" invented by somebody as to the dovice by which the wool was made curly, and sealskin was attacked the other day by Canon Bell, of Chelsenham, who told his congrega-tion that each jacket represented some half dozen dams, who had "been more or less skinued alive, while their little ones were left to dio iu all the agony of starvation." Whereupon a trade journal dryly rejoined that it was tho bachelor seal which was killed for its fur, and that, as the calves were not present, and as their mothers were not killed, being much too valuable to bo slain, there, was no slow agony of starvation in the case. Apparently, persons and parsons desir-ous of an effective subject for lamenta-tion must take that poor creature which in annually half drowned and then de-prived of its warm coat and sent shiver-ing back to its young, who. unnblo to recognize it, utter the most, pitiful cries. If tho subject were well worked up, doubtless every man to whom the caso was stilted would cease to wear woolen garments and dress in cotton, linen and silk until somebody told him about the grief of the silkworms, foreseeing the fate of their cocoons, when he would fall back on tho ot her two materials, holding himself ready to give up tho cotton to the army worm whenever requested to do so. Cor. Bostou Transcript. Violet. Violets sell in New York ahd some Wber cities nowadays for $1.50 a bunch. There are about fifty violets in a bunch. Notwithstanding tho price there is a great demand for them, nnd llorista say there would still be considerable sales if they wore $10 a bunch. In every florist's establishment there are men and girls employed whose chief work is to fasten Artificial stems on flowers intondod for large bouquets and floral pieces. Ordi-narily flowers do not require much hand-ling, but, owing to its frail stem, every . violet must have a support, even for a small bouquet. This is ono reason why violets come so high. The end of a bit , of fine florist's wire is inserted into the flower from below and twirled around the stem. It takes a good while to pre-pare a very small bunch for sale. New York Ietter. A Cow with Hydrophobia. Last Sunday evening an exciting scene occurred in a railroad camp in North Kort Worth Rnd Beveral pistols were fired in rapid succession. Tho officers repaired to the scene and found a great riot in the camp. Lanterns were moving around amid loud talking, and a man named White was cutting a fierco cow with an ax. Ho was soon joined by other canipors with hatchets and other weapons, all at-tacking the cow savagely. Explanation was soon given. A fine horse lay on the ground horned to death and six other horses stood near, all bleeding from wounds made by the cow's horns. The animal had gone mad and the campers were slaughtering her. The cow was a blooded animal worth $300, and the horses killed and fatally wounded were worth $600. Fort Worth Special to Kansas City Journal. CoDsolatlon. He Comfort yourself, dear Miss Maud. Kings and emperors are down with la grippe. She (brightening) Sure enough! And wasn't there a King Louis Quinze? Pittsburg Bulletin. A Cheap Affidavit. It was shown in a lawsuit in a New' England town the other day that one Ebenezer Skinner made affidavit that a certain remedy had cured him of rheu-uiat- is of twenty years' standing, and all he charged for this swearing was fifty cents. He had never had the rbeuinatis in bis life. Detroit Free Press. The stir in Montgomery county, N. C, over the ghost scare continues and the mystery deepens. About three months ago the wife of Thomas Fuller died. It is reported that her married life was not happy, and since her death Fuller says her ghost torments him every night. When he retires he can hear all sorts of noises In his room. Fuller cannot longer sleep alone, but has some one to remain In the room with him. The mysterious ghost gives him a great deal of trouble aud has rendered him. wholly unfit tot business or work of any sort, Rich-tao- ui Dlnxttch, |