OCR Text |
Show THE SALT TIMES, FllIDAV EVENING, APRIL It, 1890 . j women companions wnose faces maeousry nomely were tho joke of all the wits for a He never could bo mado to under- stand why he was king, or what the English wanted witn hun. His only son, George II, un-- OYAL TROUBLES. Victoria Dpsires to jieen Change the Succession. iKLUMENT ALONE CAN D IT. spotMd Family Becord--Wh- y Itoyal and duble Families Hasten to Decay, aud g0 They Are Renewed Precedents for , Chans' ,n tne Succcslon froua Stephen to Gears I TDe Fted House of Iiruna-lc- k ' ' ' The king is dead 1" "hong live the queen I" , Such re the contrasted cries hoard at findsor castle and Kensington palace on the loming of J8 w ml-- i001' cld King raiiam IV, third son of George III, lay a) in the former palace, and in the latter, rji before daylight, Alexandrina Victoria, TOE PRIiSCE OF WALH3, PRINCE ALHIKT VlO TOlt AND FKINCE OKOItOB. derstood English, hated his fat her and showed signs of insanity. His grandson, George III, was nominal king from 17(X)to 1S10, but lived another ten years under mild restraint as a lunatic. ' His oldest 6on, Ooorge, violated nil the laws of morality imd decency and soma of the laws of tho realm; privately married a Catholic lady and then repudiated her, married his cousin Caroline, of Brunswick, aud persecuted her through many years, and dually died in 1S30 without legitimate issua The next brother, uncle of her present maj-esty, was a little too bud for description, and died without legitimate issue. Tho next sod succeeded his brother George as William IV. He was a riotous lad und a disobedient sailor, but became almost respectable iu middle life, and did no harm while king. The next bro-ther, Edward, duke of Kent, married young, became the father of Victoria, and died soon after. He had some good traits. The fifth son of fieorgo III was tho notorious Ernest, duko of Cumberland, who inherited the elea-tora-of Hanover because a woman could not hold that office, and took himself off, to the delight of all Englishmen. If ho had been guilty of ordinary sexual immorality like his brothers, the English people might have for1 given him; bis vises vrerof a far darker hue, those of Tiberius and Elagabalus, with brutality addad., The Duke of Cambridge, sixth son of George III, managed to maintain ft happy obscurity. Tho last two had legiti-mate offspring, but they came in order after Queen Victoria. With uch a family record it is not sur-prising that rumors of hor majesty's insanity have often found believers, and that Prince Victor is a very unpromising heir apparent One set of correspondents announce with con-fidence that the IViuce of Wales has Bright's disease, and cannot possibly live a year; another set say it is something else, and that he will recover. Ho is 48 years old, and the father of two sons and three daughters. Four other children of the queen are parents, so the royal hue seems sea ire for some tuna, MURDER OT 1UCBARD IL v child of the fourth son of George III, her nigbt gown and with a shawl around ," was receiving the homage of the lord nterlaiu and the Archbishop of Canter- - :s stalwart sous did old George III see .r to mature manhood, out of his fifteen jlren, aud from the first four but one child survived one "fuir haired !;hterof the houseof Brunswick." Prof-c-y and insanity, intemierauce and a i'uIous taint, with a strange sequence of Jents and unnatural aversions, had done r work, and the direct lino of tho English lswicks was almost extinct. Princess sao'irina Victoria, born, at Kensington e May 24, 1810, was popularly regarded m exception to the innate tendencies of line. It was hoped that she inherited the temper and moral nutureof her mother, bad reared her in seclusion; and so it proved. years have passed, and now ths lish people are anxiously asking them'- s: Was not her majesty the sole excep-an- d have hot her descendants reverted fold typo! What of the Prince of Wales! what is more importaut, what of his ; son and heir apparent, Prince Albert ill It i now freely admitted that the ii expects to outlive her heir apparent, that she looks upon his heir apparent would naturally succeed her as almost 1, or something worse. It begins to be ;red about that she desires a "break in accession," such as has several times oc-i- i, and that parliament inay soon he to declare Prince (Jeorge, second son of rinceof Wales, the rightful heir, to it all in all, a monarch's life is not a y one. They intermarry so much, and in such close degrees, that a poison like which killed Francis I and practically Mated the best branch of tho Bourbons, fTofulous diathesis, such as the daugh-i- f "Crazy Paul" distributed through so royal families, threatens one aud all. a father should outlive all his sons strangely sad aud unnatural to the ion man; yet it is almost the rule in royal lines. Louis XVI of France was randson of Louis XV, and Louis XV te great grandson of Louis XIV, while 't, the "Great Louis," was the first i his parents after they had been mar- -' enty-tw- o years, and so became king In f.incy. " Jgland there have been nine monarch ' n Charles I and Victoria, of whom six Lildless, uud the son of another, James u excluded from the throne. Victoria lueca of her two childless predecessors, wge IIlTras the grandson of George rge I was so remote from his in kin and from his English t in blood that ha never mastered (anpiage, and "wont home to die" to Germany. Before him Queen died childless, though seventeen times low. Before her William of Orangs lfX0 Ot RICHARD HI'S BEDSTEAD. ''aicnarch and vrite Mary both died ' liefore them James II was driven " toone, and, though ho had two last cf Uis descendants died a few f- forehim his profligate brother, 'I, left no legitimate issue, though "e toases in England boast an irreg-sn- t from him. 'Zaiag monarch in Europe except a of Tm k?y is doscended on one side 'tiier from one man, who lived but 'a go and was never a king. This Gaunt, son of Edward III, and 'T& was perhaps the most melan-?--o of all tha kings who have oat-- sons. X personally, but case; ftr it was the ex- - bis direct lino which opened the ine "Wars of tfcu Roses" the strug od nearer to Queen Anns, ao-- 1 laws of descent, than the Electres they were all Catholics or mar--. , tbolics, and so tha parliament eiy all asida and decreed that the crown should be "in the Princess the heirs of her bo.lv, being Prot-- was further provided that turn-o-r marryins Catholic should '"store of the crown. And after fitig act as that, and acquiescence ;!UsJ people, sureiy no one could "u 'S principle that parliament l disPose of the crown. They I " ou Gladstone's son if they J, 'J won't w7 not overly wise son of Sophia, "-I'- to be kins, brinsuss two uow seldom appears. $10,000 being the "and secured in advance for each performance. A young couple of Bradvsville, Ohio, were married twice iu two'davs. Thev ran away from homo on account of the objections of their parents, ami were married ly a squire at Aberdeen, Ohio, hut fearing the inarrisigo was illegal they returned home ami the next morn-ing the ceremony was again performed by a local squire. SuiitaCruzhasahur.se that is lift years old. Ho came to California m 1848 with William Haudlev. and was called an old horse then. 'For manv years Jerry worked iu thy brewery, but was turned out to rest last year." His favorite food is the refuse 'malt from tho still, and he does not disdain tj wash it down with a bucket of warm beer. WilliamMusoil, of Bluehill village. Me., tbinkshe has a cold mine on" hij farm. Ho keeps ducks uud tho ducks spend most of their time iu a certain newly-deepene- d pool of water not lV.r from tint farm house. Several ducks killed this winter- have had hits of gold in their crops, and William thinks this rich food comes from the pool, so he is going to digjt out this fall. In New York u life insurance com-pany has lent SU0,0W) to a church, and the church has had the lives of a num-ber of its members insured in favor of itself. The life insurance company has agreed, every lime nun of the member v ho is thus insured dies, to reduce the debt of the church by the amount of his policy. Every lime the church has a funeral of one of these it lops off a slice of debt; in other words, members' mid debt disappear together. A Pole named Ciurbowski, who wai thought to be a pauper, and had just died of inihieua at the Chnrilo hospital in Paris, has left IWOO.OUO for founding in Paris a polyglot gazette, $40,000 for erecting a monument in Paris to testify the gratitude, of the Poles to France, and a. largo sum for continuing the Polish diclionurv begun by Lind. There are other legacies ainoiiuting to $70,000, and more assets it turns out than will suffice to pay thesu different bequests. CMI'I'KI) AND rOMJKNSEI. Pom Pedro wants to return lo Hrazil, but there is one trouble: Brazil does not want Doin Pedro. The latest turnout of the Onn.-t- em-peror is ail open carriage drawn by four 'while Hungarian stallions. Europe is a soldier ridden country. Many have a tendency to make, times hard for the laborers. ' A surveyor gies out this rule: Measure 290 feet on each sido and you will have a square acre within an inch. The socialist have quite a parlv in Italy. They w ill Iuia e thirty candidates iu tne field' at the coming election. . There are fears since the retirement of Bismarck that the ship of state in Germany is sailing without a pilot. There are a good many women in Chicago who seem to be legally in-clined. Thirty-seve- n women there have been admitted to the bar. What is really needed now is a watch main spring that w ill not break. There is a eliauge here for inventive genius to distingusn itself. Sarah Bernhardt is studying for the character of Cleopatra. She is a little too tall, but otherwise will make a very good "Serpent of the Nile." Sardon, the French dramatist, was at one lime a professor of mathematics. But ho lias done better as a playwright. Fame .and fortune both wail for him now. Of tho inmates of the penitentiary of the Empire state, nearly two-third- s are from New York. ' It is a wicked city aud abounds iu the criminal classes. In a back district iu Manitoba there is in the tax books this entry, referring to some crown lauds: "Owner, Vic toria; oceujiatian, queen; residence, EuKlaud." Tho czar of Russia indulges in hypo-dermic injections of morphia. This is safer than any kiml of injections of dy-namite. The hens of Canada seem to be do-ing a pretty good business. Tho Uni-ted Stales bought over two million dol-lars worth of eggs from the queen's last year. Some one has tried to lake the census of the habitual opium eaters of the United States. lie figures thu number up to be (500.000, more than half of them being womeu. Mr. Edward Bellamy is to be editor-in-chie- f of the Nationalist. The an-nouncement was made in the March number of the magazine, and it is ex-pected to give a great impetus lo its cause. When Prof. Max Midler went to Eng-land a few years ago he knew no Eng-lish. Kow'he is one of tho greatest lin-guists in the world. Vii this branch of knowledge he is authority. Aptness and study did it. Mr. R. I. Young bro'tght to the office of the Press at Middletown, Pa., a glass of apple butter that was made by his mother's grandmother in the year lHiO, making it" sixty-fou- r years old. It is a little tart. Europeans are becoming alarmed overstatements that another epidemic, also of the "ncro malady" kind, is fol-lowing in the wake of the influenza. It has its home in southern regions, and its symptoms are a feeling of paralysis iu tne limbs and a tendency to lethar-gic sleep. A Bridgeport Conn., newspaper rec-ently printed the following advertise-ment: "(,'hu Fung would likee smally nice Melican lady. .She no have to work, as Chu Fong got lot of money. Chit Foiig will do the washce and the cookee; wife she can dress up every day. Prize, $10 for best girl. Chu Fong." Charles Ness, of Searsmont, Me., w ho was partially blind for tweuty-fiv- e years from a bad fall received during the war, fell while carrying a pail of milk into the house one day last week and again struck the back of his head heavily uu tho iee. Strange to say, his eyesight has been restored, and now he can m-- to read as well as before the first ac-cident. Telephone, 332. fmMM:P.OrBoxT70l. out iiK.VM.Si Ngjj AUmm ru n.imx I0UY FAUST. Ilfil)ASHEUSER. ORIGINAL tSfi BURGUNDY. BvDWEISER. VfeH ERLANGER, i?" PALE. K. C. W . K Tracks. llouae Car.. Keg and Bottled Beer in any (jiiaulity Shipped Promptly to Order. .Special Attention liivcn to City Family Trade.' ANHEUSER BUSCH BREWING ASSOCIATION. Fitzgerald & Hofheimer, Sole Agents. - . . j i i i : Keep Your Eye on TIMES' The Salt Lake Daily Times 1 NOW AN 8-Pa-ge Paper. Mitt 1 TO uT, PRINCIPAL POINTS EAST, WEST, NORTH and SOUTH AT THE CITY DEPOT. Uiii-Pacfe- ! i SYSTEM. MOUNTAIN DIVISION' The Only Llu currying the United State Overland Mall. Direct ivnnectioim be-tween nil Point North and Kant. NEWTIMECARD March 2, 1890. UTAH CENTRAL DISTRICT. Passenger Trains Arrive and Leave at Sail Lake City as follows: FROM THK KOHTII, tiOtNU MOMTH. Atlantic Fust Mali S:u.m. Atlantic Kxni iw. Atlantic Kat Mail j'.uk city & Utah & Northern Local. I0:W a.m. n.l Utah & Nurtai-r- L.k l H:W m. Atlantic Exnrmw . Wrliiii m. Kxprmw I T l'urtlauil ami Butt l'ast Mall 7:U0p,m, UrkClly.l1orllaiiiln.tHtittfcxi.r.'i. J:u p.m. Local ExpresN to p.m. KHOM THK Sut'TII. QOINU MOltll. MIUrd Express in:0a.iii. Jnali Kxiukhh I:!f!'-ra- Juab Express 6:Wp.m. Milfnnl Express I' '" THE TIMES PUBLISHES THE ASSOCIATED PRESS DESPATCHES & ALL THE LATEST City and Territorial News. THE TIMES is printed from Serotype Plates, on a Goss Perfecting Press, costing $10,000, and capable of turning out 10,000 copies of an 8-pa- ge Paper per hour, "CJtali and Nevada District. (illlNU WEST. IMl'M tUH WfcM1. riimiiKliMlxed.ditllviPxi'i-ptSunilav- :IOa.m. ThroiwuMisnHl.iluHvtexrept Sunday) S i:p.m. fjutiinbau Paiwuccr. dully .'. . :im a.m. Huimrlian lWeuui'i, ilally ti.ui. 7:iu.m. " '" .iu.m. " Mixed, dally U;loa.i. " Mixed, dully I'J:H in. l'asn.'Ilirer 1;Ulp.m. " I'HMM'Ilner II: ,i p. til. " 4:! p.m. " " 5'""- 6:l(ip.m. " " T:(ip in. Salt Late Sc ""Western. District. PasM-npo- r Trains leave Salt Lake d'.!y (exeept Hiindny) for Imulon, Silver City, Kureka, etc., at 7: iu a. in. Ketiinilntt. aiTlvlim at B;fiii p. m. DQXJIITlvirDiTT The I linlleil Vait Mall," lenvlnu Duden at U:M a in., niiilptml Ith Pay Cda. h, rorthind nriilcann; Day far. I'drtland to Chlruidi: IMillman Tnlaie Sleepei, I'ortland tn flileimn; Pullman I'uliue Sleeper. San tYanelfeo toChlraiin; I'ullinan I'alaee Sleeper. Salt l.uke In I'ounrll HlutTs; I'lillman 1'alai n SleepT llutle tn ilivnn Ulver; Uliilnm'ar. I'urtmiid tn i liieaijo; Day Coai lies i Hall l.alie to (ireen KHer; CnlonUt Si.'cper, Port ltm to ( hp ID. This train will cam-onl- I'asseim'ers havlrnt Klrhtii'lass TlrkelH. wTlie Atlantic Kxpreiw," leavlni; Onden at Iii;i u. m.. h eqiilppeil with Day ( nachen. Oodeii tn Council Ulnfis; Pullman 1'aliue Sleeper, i'ortland to Cimnetl llliifrt; l'nltmnn I nl Sleeper. Denver tuOmnetl HliKTs; I'lillnian I'alaee Sleeper. Salt Lake to clieyeime itm In tliroiiKh Sleeper t St. I.duIhi; I'nllman CnlimlMt Sleeper. Sail Knuiei-uto- l oiim tl llliilTn; Piilluiau t'olonixt SleipiT. t'ortliuul to Chi yenne. HIiIk In thnniKli r to Kaiu( Uvl. This train will cany Piimwiwih holding either Klmt or Becond eliwn Tlrlcetii. J, V. PARKEr7 C. F. RESSEGUIE, Asst. Cen'l Passonger Agent. Central Managtr. SPECIAL NOTICES. Advert inemenlji underlain head will beoharjred the rate of ten cent tier line for each inert ion. No advertisement will he taken for l than 'Hi cent. Partie advert iHinv in thi column can Iihvo their nn(wor nddrenxed eare nf 'Vhk Timkh. CtAWIMINK PAINT AND WIUTKWASH cost. 11. U. Hoover k Co., UH S. Main St. ' o ALT LA KB CITY C()HP()ltATl6N WANTS O lo piirchnwia quantity of !' n k in llw Mult Lake l ily (inn Co., any partle hsvinit "m for Halo who mill innle fmimu lo lieo. M. Heolt, mayor, on or before tho Ifilb day of April, l"W, nmy be able tn pttent n wile, liy rnlur ol th city ronueil. LiltjIS HVAMH, ily Iteeorder. Ci r Hall, Halt Lake Cm, Moron iW, lilMI. loined on (liamnmU, watehe anil MClNKY K. MrCarrirk. 210 Honlh Main t. one doir north of Walker Hoiim. Alw a Aha line of waU'hea, Jewelry rovolvera anil ehnrnia for aaln, cheaper thnu anywhere in Iha wmt. THE TIMES IS A METROPOLITAN DAILY NEWSPAPER IN EVERY RESPECT. IT IS PUBLISHED EVERY AFTERNOON, EX-CEPT SUNDAY, AT 4 O'CLOCK. THB TIM ES in the Paper of tho People, It is opposed to Monopoly and Extortion, but ita Policy ahull bo to treat every-body fairly. I'KIIMIMAI.. (i KNTS Oil l.AMIKK. im YOU Wlrtll TO J rorronpi'iirt with miynnrt If . wmiiI ttitf two cent Ktiimifoi iiirtculiiin. Ait(trr Mill ContlnKlit, liurr.au uf CorriM.jKinitiuii , Vl t'onuneirliit Htri'nt. H:ilt Lake i:uy, I 'liih, BOCIKT1 EH. MANONIC. No.Hlll connioitirin. of liur I, it. A. M , nrni. W'HdniiwIpr of rory mouth. HojoaniUuiooimiHiiion ronlbli invited. J. J. GniciirwAi D, . U. K. U.P. PntLip Bum, Bmt fOII NAI.K. ft(UU HXI0 COHNKR. BMX.'K 111', "P," f, 'OvM IvJ cltv wali-r- . Wry v tnim. i'lUll llifrll FKKT, WOl'TH fKIINT iDWWIJ ,in Mh. hct. I and ,t. i:v 4XwoNfrru koi.'th, k in. 3pZOWU wilt h front. Simp. &rjrr FOR 3 OF HJCIST LOTS IN I'ARK 3i UU View. Ki,y lrrmn. Lk thin up. I'NKIN LAM) COMPANY, Kooniw 8 anil , Scutt Auirrhach lilork. Vtpplioiu No. I. joli printlnir "fHco for h1c. I1RST-CLAH-S on time, hnquiro at Th Timkh otlice a;AI,L PAI'KB HOnLlKIl CENTFK t plecws and extinninn, ut font. D. B. floovi-- r & Co., 1IVI S. Main Ht. 5Q" BilAKES OK UAH STOCK, in the Hall (Ot ljtke CilyOiw Co., i herphy offered fur hI lo tlio liinlii'sl bidder) bid will t nwivixl lor the mine up to anil iui'lujinx the !Mh day of April, 18'JO, by M. Hcott, mayor. The rinht a r'rvnd to rejwt any and all biila. " Hy order of of the city ramnril. LOUIH HYAMH. Cily Itworilnr. ('itt IUlu Salt Laki City, March 21, lrfUO. NKVHI'APEItTin7fiir'0Pt"aT-vnrlihin-g ty: includes two-roll- double Hiwllura Pottor preMi, nijo of lied ;124H, new four-iiori- ia boiler and enxiim. Will null ebnip nd on aHay teruia, Addresa "The Xlmin Co." Hail Luke W. . STORES on Commnrcinl atrflet and Third South Itevemm pnK,rt.y. For particular Will on t. E. Wanllanif, JIJ1 Main atreoL BALK.-IWiFK- ET ON R HoLiil ).ioK feet def p brick house, flood buy (lor investment, will pl cheap.' The Vanhurkiit tiiVKHtment company, 1?M Main atruut, cor it poutu. 'TE ARK CLOKISlToUT OL'B H'i'tX'K OF V wall paper stud window rnrtiiln at cwt. t'il and ixandue Uifore pmchaniuu D. H. Hoover tc Co., Irtl H. Main Ht. HAVEacboioelotofacirinteand city prop-erty for nale. All particular can be hud from the owner, at No. 419 East Second South .lri-t- , Halt ljuk l ily. OOCKY MOUNTAIN ORNKUAL IV AKnc-y- , IM Weil 2nd r.ulh St., Rait Uk. litali lurritory. W r Ui larxwl lalwir rain, imny on Uia 'a:ific Cout. W cbwrfullynar alt oorreKpondUfw rnritinir Wealrn lalwr niarket: are tho authorized UlKir tffnla for all railroad oompanim in tbl awtlon, and will aimwiir all oorreapomlpfire in our lin. (b'lieral awni for rialTn PatAiilM. W are II larKeftl liftfnry on th rafuttr: ( 'onat. SratllaOflic. b Front Hironl. TacomiOfliix. IU. Pantir Avniw. a Amr'lva I ifHcr. BU Hiailh Hi.rin Htraot. IliitlaCiiy OliiiM', MorriMin llliH'k. I lender Oflira, I11H Ht'Tnnttwutb Htreot. Call or write. . THE TIMES WILL ALWAYS ADVOCATE THE MATERIAL INTERESTS OF SALT LAKE AND UTAH. IT IS HACKED BY CAP-ITAL, RUN BY ENERGY, SAND-WICHE- D WITH BRAINS, AND IS .' SUCCESS FROM THE START. Take the Times for a Month on a Trial Trip, and you will never want to be without it. It is a Sure Cure for the Blues. HEI.I'VVANTED. A'OUNit LADY OF J'LKASlMi All-fX- . drH towli Mill wrtaieiu the city; will n.y very liij.' coiiiiuiMloiis or aulary. Inquire st ! Maiu tJirefiKi a om . WANTEO-- NEAT. SMART HOY:;ooD A iinclstcTly poal'l'iii for siune. Ap-ply In own band writing to Frank PIrce, out TfMBH oftice. WANTfcli. lirANTEH -- ATONtB A fiiirir) HJtoE MA-- ker. John LAwaos, PJ E. Hint, Hoiith. "TImrt.vfkixa t i mu.it haieaiwii.t fxliaiiMluceinciita pui rcd. Aoilr"a Hrt. B., Tim. a oiBco. Bl DS fir n. il- - of MwH irrad. WANTED to A. J. button, at oflica of J'lavia A btriuir,;5l W. Houtli atnttt. ITy YOUNll MASXlisifim-A- t R'ftSi bualnrii cntr, with or without l.urd. Adclr-js,;- , atatirn; tcruia, C, Tct ,m w. VERVIiObV to.lnrtim their want in tl.i fj deiiartment of Tur. i'iMEa I'ROI'ONAL I OK TOUT Ol TICK I'l CEALED l'KOHOSALH WILL UK KK-- celv.-i- l by me ht Halt Lake City until noon outlm ith day of April. IWt for lurtdhlnn the I'oatoa'e Depart rneni with iiilahie pruii. centrally Iwaited, whb h prvruiiwa iiball I of aufnclriit capacity, and rru,U-- i u to w ouniu'alato the p.uroin of tha Halt Lake I lly M,nuRlti. nal'l ireritiiwMi u a a iKmlJiltl'-- at rfult Laka i.'lly. Rnlt Luke county, t'tah. for a Unn not n exceed tlvi yeara from June I, P'.i. Theownem will tie reu:ri to j4rtiitoii the premtaea in aurh manner aa may Ije divided necessary by the I'oMofftce Iiepjtrt. liient. and funilMh a completer oiiintof tnrnl-tur-letter canea. coiiulwra. dlMtrlhiitin Ut'le, de-k- n. rarrterH' raea. et; an may oe nece-ar-for the pntfe rconductliiifof the lMitnef.or tha orlVe. and le.xe. dlvhird. i i artet Iwk boiea. and M a wrt-- inr-- drawers, of the latent Improved pattern. In conne. t.on wfth tha ahova. bliln will im i oiiid-rei- l !' fiirmat.!ijx the necewary he and liirht alao a tire prie.f .antt not le tiuit I'm Hi feet In the clear. ftirnlled with ltel trntirored (toor and i.o:nhinaUon P ka. Maid preniiea isttould be In th central, b'jal r.e.a part of tne city. Martin for prooaia ran t had hy calling tiji-- the posUnaater at Bait LakeClt.--. W. W. PATTKKPOf Pot;ln-- Inp-?.:Pr- , H T V A TION TW A N fk I . A HTTl' ATK JN. Try an ad vert um.jnt la Tan Tim km. SHfli'INIi CI.LliK or clerk in whoieaale ASor red.il (rri-r- or corninieaion houe. Heven yeara exueiicscc-- , Rood rfty ruforw ufc (5, II.. care Tuna otin:e. tOK JtKNT. I'ART OK HTOCE HCK'M, call at So.'.O weat. Second .Sx.ai Street. VLWLYKCKNISHKH K'JOMS WtTl! OH i without boanl. Apply to Ub t, i'irt iirtith. LOST. AOOLbKN opporrnni'y. i loat if yon do uA ill 1 HE TlMEi. Keep Your Eye on T!TIMES' I SALT LAKE CITY LOCAL UNIOM 439 or m. United Brotherhccd Carpsnfers Jamsfs OF AMERICA. MKCTi EVKRY WKOSKHHAY KVrviSO in the Tetf pie of Hixir Hall at m. offi'i at ei TnJrd pVrtiih bl . Kaat, Office hMir: J lo a a. m. : l a p m. J. M. t'onaaa. fet y. A. I. CfWLaa, l'rr. MIW W. . fVtANTED-Vo- rK HKALTHY Yirv; men with ri a.e-tilc- ani fair poe:-tion- a , deatre UMr tranl iu a pr!va! fainPy. not t oo far away frotn huiloo center, wh.--e 'the raeal cnlt o! lcuI. nre thu aoffefiiaKto and the landlady aoe f4 want ' II a man a aalarj- - and what be can brfrow No bb hotise pjptf tared apply. t TlXW otDce. K line a cigar a 1 ever auioked i j the Progrea. 1 INDIAN I.IKE. Tile Experience of s Jesuit MUatonar,' Aiming the Sliocliones anil Arapahoe. St. Louis Itepuhllc. The liTe of a missionary among the Indians of Wyoming is a peculiar one ami is lull of inceilcnts of interest. Father F. X. Kuppcns, who has been Imt'a lew weeks back from the north of Wyoming, gave u Republic reporter the, other day a graphic description of thu country, and people (hat inhabit the Wind River valley reservation. Then-ar- e two tribes on the ' reservation just named, the Shoshoues or Snake Indian and the Anapahoes; The former arc located at the. loot of the Rocky mountains and occupy vation tho Indians have numerous ditlh eulties to encounter in the management of their farms Just outside of tho terrh tory and on tho other side of the rive are large numbers of herdsmen and cattle dealers. They entrust large Hocks of sheep and droves of cattle, sometimes numbering several thousand head, tu the care. of cowboys, who drive them through the rich pasture lands of thu territory to graze. At arious pointy they cross the streams and turn thb herds into the w heatlields, 'potato gal'; dens aud oat crops of the Indians, anil lay bare every piece of land in Jim res-ervation. The raiders then defend their ravages, if satisfaction is souglu for, with their pistols and knives; con. sequeutly the poor Indians must silently see the results or their toil wasted and plundered besoro their eyes. This the ageiil could stop if he. used extreme measures by calling on the nheriff auJ military posts to drive oh" the cow boys. But his life aud his position would bo worthless if he did this. The large cat.-ti-dealers of the state would communis cale, with Washington and secure hia removal from office immediately. The Arapahoe tribe which occupies tim eastern end of the reservation, nr an entirely diflVreut race of pcopk from theS hoshones. They appear t have been the freelances of tho Mi souri rives. They are a very bravj! and warlike race and oriirinally wur fiery tempered Mexicans that left thcit country over seven years ago, on u northeast expedition. Near tho mouth of the Kansas river they eucouulered small army of otherlndians, with whom the fought bitterly, resulting in tho breaking tip of the expe-dition, after which the trih travelled back and settled down in Wy.-omin- Territory, where they still are. The Arapahoes are steadily progressinu in civilization,' and are warmly urged to acttept and imitate the white man's way of living by their chieftain, lllack Coal, who has them entirely under hit, control. Their breed is very mixed ami tiio tribe is made up of various otliei. Indians, such as the Sioux, Mandaiuj. Ariclaries, the Crees, the (..'rows, Gras: ventres and Blackfeet. "lllack Coal, their chief, is a natural orator," in thb words of Eather Kuppcns, who has tencd to him many times with e; trcnic pleasure eulogizing hU people. During the past jn years they have become completely civilized aud williugly learn the whits man's way of living. They arc a sobei-an-industrious lot and unlike tho Sh; shones in the way of drinking liquor They are ahvavs digging canals, ipr-i-gating their lands, fencing their mead, ows, breaking tip farms, ' building houses, etc., and in many instances live in better style than thu while settlers. 'It was here," said Father Kuppeiia. that I spent most of my time." Tim Catholics built a school two years jtjt;n which had an attendance of over 1(K) children before it was established a month. In ' this school th,. usual English branches, reading, writing, arithmetic, etc., are taught and it hi surprising to see how quickly the little ones learned. Various trad4, such as farming, gardening, bm. smithing, carpentering, etc., are taught to boy.--, while the girls learn dairy work, housewifery, sewing and t.p principles of domestic economy. Tlmv have only half a 'lay to devote to sclmti). :is they must work the other part of daw ber-ide-s a short time which is to religious instruction. Al teachings are in Euglish, a law hai iiij.-- been pas-- A to that effect during Cleyp. iutid's administration. The cbiidrti,i live ami board al the nchnol. and ac provided with clothing, medical attend auce, supplies and other appii. aticcs by the govemujent. throtigh u agent, who lives on the reservation, Motile ( Contractor. Hmli'd propowl for the amnion in Salt Ijika City of th Commercial block, a aixtory bank ami oilina building, will tie ri:ivi until April l.'i, 14", 4 o'clock p.m. LirawibKa and may lie mm at the I ouimon ml Nailouul bank. Earn bidder ahall tnnlom. with hia hid a oartU m check for$l"l. payubla to ttta Comrnrrial National Bank, forfeitable provided h faita lo freer Into contract and t' fiiruiah Attnfact"ry lionrta if Ilia propoMil ttiould ha roplAd i'U rinM ia to irjoct any and all bida, AOdrcM propoaala lo yj'.ED A. HALE. Architect. Commarrial N'uiional liank, Hail Laka City. Lull. Perhaps the mcc--t famous of all m:it dors, lb'' espada primero "f the world, is FrauciM-- Sanchez (alias Lagartijct. He is probably the most daring, skiH-fu- l r that ever lived. His handling of the wild and savage bnll- - ol Jarama is aviucthing marvcloua. lie |