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Show THURSDAY EVENING, AFKIL 'IT,- - 1890. ' I I y . . 'LitC SALT LAKE TIMES, Propeller J. L. Davis-- 77 - 01 . 1';! ' k '!' j, ; , pereAL ESTATE Frmr 1 Xots, Bloclss a,rci Acreage. QENTEE STREET cmSg ' .. sue division ! I 180 Residencejots, RANGING IN PRICE FROM $150 TO $300. These Choice Residence Lots are on the Main Business street ( Provoand are Now on the Market, j' Call on or Address, PROPELLER J. L. DAVIS, ssPROVO, UTAH. JlPf? iMi-fiif- c VihS' wo jbjjz SYSTEM. j MOUNTAIN DIVISION- - 1 KlNull ALl I Uill lu The Only Line carrying the United a overland Mall. Direct Connectlunj be tweeu all Points North and East, EAST, WEST, ' NEWTIMECAR NORTH and SOUTH March 2, 1890. THE CUY TICKET OFFICE. UTAH CENTRAL OISIII Passenger Trains Arrive and Leave at Salt Lake City as follows: FROM XHK NORTH. GOING NORTH. Atlantic Fast Mail 9:40 a.m. AtlanttoExurgs. AMantlcFast . ?: Park City Utah & Northern Local.. 10 :50a.r. and Tj imcm.- -- Atlantic Express . . . . IS : 1(1 p.nj. Local Express .......... j Portland ana Butte Fast Mail 7 :00 p,in, Park Clty.Portland and Butte Local Express ; J'UOM THE SOUTH. UOINO SOUTH. Mllford Express 10:10a.m. Juab Express - J;, Juab Express '.. 6:50p.m. MUford Express SOUTH LAWH ADDITION. Now On the Market. LOCATION: Oor. Tenth South and Ninth East. ON THE CITY LIMITS, TWO MILES FROM P. O. LOTS FROM $400 TO $600. THE SITUATION IS GRAND. Overlooking the Valley. Call Early and Get Choice of Lots. CHOICE RESIDENCE. BUSINESS AND ACREAGE PROPERTY. TJtalx and Wevada District. OOISO WKST. FROM THE WEST. Throturti Mtxed,dally(except Sunday) 8:10 a.m. Through MiXea.dal!y(ex-T- t Sunday Suburban Passenger, dally 8:00 a.m. Suburban Passenger, dally 9;, " 7:40 a.m. " " " " Mixed, daily 9:10a.m. " Mixed, dully... " PaswiiRer..,. ..-- l:30p.m. " Passenger j: i; " 4 an p.m. i; ;; w 8:10p.m. Salt Xjalse Sc "Western. 3District. Passenger Trains leave Salt Lake dallr (except Sunday) for Ironton, Silver Cit!'.l" etc., at 7:10 a, m. Returning, arriving at B ."50 p. in. - EQTTXfcElTr The Limited Vast Mall," leaving Ogden at 8:56 a.m.. Is equipped with Day Wf' E to Chicago; Day Car. Port land to Chicago: Pullman Palace Sleepei. Portlaua Pullman Palace Sleeper, San Frauetsco to Chicago; Pullman Palace Sleeper. aj Council Bluffs; Pullman Palace Sleeper, Butte to Green River; DlntnftCai.Jo- - Chicago; Day Coaeues (8). Salt Lake to Green River; Colonist Sleeper, Portland1"-..-.- Ut train " ill, carry ouly Passcngei-- s having Pirst-elas- s Tickets. o. Atlantic Express," leaving Ogden at 10:30 a. m.. Is equipped with Day I 'Df: P, to Council Bluffs; Pullman Palace Sleeper, Portland to Council Bluffs: Pn"""0 Sleeper, Denver to Council Bluffs; Pullman Palace Sleeper. Salt Lake to CneJU through Sleeper to St. Louis) ; Pullman Colonist Sleeper. San Francisco Pullman Colonist Sleeper, Portland to Chevenue, (this is through sleeper to h 1 his train will carry Passengers holding either First or Second-clas- s Tfckets. J. V. PARKER, C. F. RESSEGUIE, - Asst. Cen'l Passenger Agent. Ceneral W BURTON, GROESBECK & CO., Sole Agents, 269 S. Main St. GEORGE A. LOWE, , '.A 'Dealer in All Kinds of First Class Agricultural Implements, SCHUTTLER FAPM AND FREiGHS WAGONS, GoMus Bok Mobs ai Roafl Carls of every description. Steam Engines, LefFel- - Wheels. WAREHOUSES STATE ROAD BETWEEN. FIRST AND SEC0XD SOUTH. UTAH STEM UUNDRY 45 S. West Temple. Branch Office, Gardner's, 141 Main St. Agents wanted in all good towns. Telephone 419. Fine Work a Specialtr Winter & Co., coal merchants of Swanscombe, England, have sued the owner of a menagerie for&'SO, the value of a horse alleged to have died from frighi at ihe sight, of one of the menag-erie elephants. The horse was being driven along the road, when it saw the elephant; it gave one spring into the air and dropped dead. Go, M. Soon, Prest. Tab. C w.NniNMiJtt, Vtoe-Pres-t. ' H.S. BOTun"''' :E::::::::GEO. . M. SCOTT & CO.,2 (INCOEPOBATED). --DEALERS IN-- Hardware and Meta loves, Tinware, Mill Findings, Etc, AGETSim the Dodge Wood Pulley, Eoebling's Steele WW Vacuum Cylinder and Engine Oils, Hercules and Powder, Atlas Engines mLl$K?TXAl Scales' Jefferson Horse Whim, Kate Tools, Etc. 168 MAIN STREET, Salt Lake City, . Uti Mow. ' The sun goee up, the sun goes down In this great world forever; Th tide r- -e high, the tides link low, To one height eomUot never. But now begin 'mid biuy men, 'Mid (action's etruggllng war, The question ot the baseball crank: "Who wont" and "What's the score t" was at a ainnttr ac tne Russian eiaossy and I could not help falling in love with the oilet worn by the young Duchess de Bligny. Her robe was cut high in the nock and with long sleeves, because, her shoulders and arms are so plump that it would not be keeping Lent strict- - pack of cards he is glad to match coins or make the most absurd wager. Emperor William II sent to be placed on the grave of his grandfather, on tho recent anniversary of the lattcr's death, a wreath of violets. Several hundred other persons in Germany had tho same idea, and by ovening the grave was cov. ered with violets, which had come, some of them, from distant pavts of tho em-pire This is what Queeu Victoria took with her recently on her continental tour' Three coachmen, nine grooms, eight horses, one donkey, three carriages, seve-nty- two trunks, three special beds, t speciul cooking stove, two physicians, two Burgeons, three ladies in waiting, nine women servants, one lord, two equerries and seven dogs. Princess Theresa, the only daughter of the Prince Itegent Luitpold of Bavaria, has recently published a valuable work on her recent travels to the North Cape Tho princess is an experienced traveler, who has visited many countries, among them Brazil, and who published five years ago a record of her travels in Kussia, which she undertook under an assumed name and accompanied only by a few attendants, in order to obtain a truer in-sight into tho characteristic features of the country than is generally possible to royal travelers. TUILKT OF THE 11'CUE88 I& BLIOSY. ly to display them. Her dress was of pink surah, embroidered delicately with silver. Over this was a train of navy blue velvet, also embroidered with silver. The arrangement of it across the front was peculiar and very stylish, as you j, will see. I noticed a nrotty and decidedly stylish WOMAN'S WORLD IN PARAGRAPHS. Work, Will and WaltThe Chanced Ideal of lremliilneBeauty. Copyright, 1890. The change in the ideal of fominine ' beauty in the last generation is striking. The present generation will remember the pictures hanging in their mother's parlors of ideally beautiful women. These pictures represented a female with a large, bulging forehead, hollow chest, loping shoulders and a thin neck, curved something like a crooked necked ' squash. A general oonsuraptrve, expres-nio- n pervaded the female's face, the more consumptive the more lovely. Long- curls drooped about her cheeks, and generally a full Mown red rose was perched in her hair above the loft ear.. The picture usually bore the name "Isa-Vall- a," "Rosabella" or "Angelina." But all this, which may be called the crooked necked squash style of feminine beauty,, has vanished from the earth. The tailor made girl is now the beauty. Bhe has square shoulders, a foil necrk,. a flat back, aud carries her head rect. The anoient sloping shouHcr line, which artist of that day considered the onrve of ideal beauty, in onr time would stamp a girl as round shouldered to a de-formity, and send her in haste to the gymnasium to practice exercises that would send her out again flat of bank, square of shoulder and full and deep of chest. The ideal feminine beauty has now a suggestion of strength that it has not had in modern times and which brings it nearer to the ancient Greek model than it has ever been bofore. We begin to understand that strength com-bined with harmonious development con-stitutes perfect beauty. The women artists of Now York have set a good example to their sex else-where. A number of the strongest of theru have formed a club of their own, called the Woman's Art club. They have grown in influence and numbers till they are now able to give art receptions of their own, and very creditable ones, too. The newpapers announced that Bishop Hurst's wife "died at the residence of her husband." Cannot a woman have a home of her own even to dio in? A minister writes in Tho Chicago Ad-vance that he had lately attended a ban-quet at which 150 women were present, and many of them made dinner speeches. They had toasts and a toast master and a rule forbidding any woman to speak more than two minutes. The speeches were not only able and witty, but they were audible. "I shall now,"' said the minister, "feel more at liberty to urge the women to take part in prayer meet-ings." Mrs. M. O. W. Oliphant is one of the most versatile of writers. Once she pro-posed to the editor of Blackwood's Mag-azine to write all of one number, the serial story on which she was then en-gaged, and five other articles on differ-ent topics and in different styles. Wisdom teclti, Uie most variable of ail in size, shape and general character, are said to show hereditary characteristics more strongly than any of the other teeth. Claims are laid to the discovery of the method of raising sugar cane from seed instead of from cuttings. Tiie seeds were discovered by means of a microscope, ir the flowery head of the cane. Tho depth of a sea about six miles deep is reduced by 620 feet by compres-sion. If the ocean were incompressible the level of tho surface would be 116 feif higher than it is nt present, and aboix 2,000,000 square miles of land would hi submersed. Tue moliusks that bore Into the insula-tion of submarine cables are pronounced to be a species of teredo. The embryo is 6aid to penetrate between the iron wires of the sheathing and lurk in the jute un-til strong enough to cut through the gutta percha. Trials of the latest express compound locomotive in England with a special train of eighteen carriages developed the unparalleled speed of about ninety miles an hour. The highest speed, as meas-ured by a stop watch, was just over ten seconds per quarter mile run. oostumo on a young lady who is visiting 3Lme. Carnot. She a yottng married lady, and does honor to Mme. Carnot, who is not so very taste-ful as she ought to be to uphold the honor of her sex and nation. The costume in question is of old rose colored poult do soie, bordered with five rows of narrow velvet, in lighter shade; the skirt very slight-ly draped. A dainty basque wrap was worn with it of tan colored cloth, trimmed with brown velvet and F dark brown braid Parisian chic, and long flots of velvet ribbon. The hat was of Tuscan, in ton color, faced with brown velvet, and with old rose colored plumes. Just the last touch was added in the tan colored gloves, and the pretty wearer caught the grace and chio of Paris, and displayed it, too. Macquise d'A. DOINGS OF ROYALTY. The king of Greece is the best tennis player among the royalties of Europe. The shah of Persia has commissioned his ambassador at Berlin to engage en-gineers and workmen to go to Persia to put up gas works in the larger cities. Ex-Kin- g Milan of Servia is a most reckless gambler. Ho will bet on any-thin- e. .If he is not in nouauinn of "a ( Perl Fwhlona. rEifc, March 28. The other night I Mrs. Lowrie, wife of an Ohio farmer, has just given birth to four children, making nine that she has had at three births. All are living, and the last ar-rivals are both well developed and healthy. One of tne prisoners at the peniten-tiary in Albany, N. Y whose sentence expired April 6, asked permission to re-main for a year and care for the flower beds. |