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Show 11 THE SALT LAKE TIMES, TUESDAY EVENING, APEIL 8, ISOfr j Keep Your Eye on "IH TIMES' MIDDLEMISS, VAN DYKE & CO.. Real Estate andMines, 156 Main St., Salt Lake City, Utah. W. II. McCLUKE & CO., RE-A-I-- i ESTATE, SMALL V'KOIMTH AND HITIR l ETt'RNS. Oi West Second South Street, Salt Luke City. UTAH STEM LAUNDRY 43 8. Weit Tempi. Branch Office, tiardner'i, 141 Main St. Agent wanted in all good town. Telephone 4 I'X Fin "f k a tDoiJtjr GREAT SLAUGHTERING SALE OF" Heating Stoves! THE A. J. WWtE Cfl. We Hare the Oldest Real Estate Agency IX Salt Lake City. Have Been in Our 'Present Office Ten Years! We have beyond a Doubt the larg-est list of Property IN THE CITY! We Own and Control $1,000.00 ! loiofProjerty IK The City and County I Can sell Buyers property in any portion of the City. Terms to suit purchas-ers. We own the best addition to Salt Lake! We Have Ten Horses and Six . Salesmen, loo HEATING STOVES MUST BE SOLD Regardless of Cost. You can Save Fifty Tor Cent by Buying Now of the ALT LAKE HARDWARE COMPANY. 32 West Second 8onth. (Opera IIou Block). Sign of tta.0 "BIG-- GrXFXT." GEORGE A. LOWE, ' Dealer in All Kind of First Cla. . Agricultural Implements, SCHUTTLERFAPU AND FREiGH3 WAOOSS, Columljus BmiuiJ, Mns an Roafl Carls , . of every description. Steam Engines, Leffel Wheels. WAREHOUSE STATE ROAD HETWKE.N FIRST AM) SECOND SOUTH. , . - i Union National Bank. SALT LAKE CITY. Capital 1 United States Depository THE TIMES is printed from 8 ereotype 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. THE TIMES IS A METROPOLITAN DAILY NEWSPAPER IN EVERY RESPECT. IT IS PUBLISHED EVERY AFTERNOON, EX-CEPT SUNDAY, AT 4 O'CLOCK. . .1 ' THE TIMES is tlie Paper of the People. It is opposed to Monopoly and. Extortion, but its Policy sh'ali be to treat every-bod- y fairly, THE TIMES. WILL ALWAYS ADVOCATE THE MATERIAL INTERESTS OF SALT LAKE AND UTAH. IT IS BACKED BY CAP-ITAL, RUN BY ENERGY, SAND-WICHED WITH BRAINS, AND IS A' SUCCESS FROM THE START. You are respectfully invited to our of-fice, where you Kill receive a HEARTY WELCOME! We shall be glad to furnish information concerning the resources: and attracti-ons of Salt Lake a nd its surroundings, their agricultural, mining, stock and sheep raising and manufacturing in-terests, to all in search of homes or seek-ing safe and lucrative investments for capital. Our Carnages kre at the Disposal of Visitors. GALL AND SEE US, The Oldest Real Es-tate Office in the City. Estabtisaed in 1818. The iTiie Co. 34-Eas- t 2d South. The M &D- - Steel Range- - raw Sole Agents for Utah of Mason & Davis' Steel Ranges, with Eound Fire Pot, Anti-Clink- Grate, poised oven door, ventilator etc Made in all sizes. Call and examine these celebrated Ranges or send for circular with cuts before paying same price for old style Range. General line of Cook and Heat-ing Stoves and House Furnishing Goods. F. E. SOHOPPE&CO 223 South Main Ptrp Safe Deposit Vault. Abaolutily Fire and Durlnr Proof, hoim fwra HX to 133.00 mt Vear. Careful and Prompt Attention Given TO COLLECTIONS. 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. I Keep Your Eye on 'TI TIMES' 1 ry.inELJOQi TRAde: 'E HANDLE Business, Residence anil Country Properly, IMPROEI AND UXIMPFiOVED. , Partie. witbioc to buy. !! Realty, h.d bttr ua. Our motto: Sm3 Profit, and Quick Turta." Curcwpocden. oucitl W. L BARRET & CO., j 207 S. Saia St.. Salt Lake Cltj, Utah. AGENCY WARWICK HIGH-GRAD- E SAp-t- BICYCLE. I caro ' ' m uAJfti . ilLESet $15.00. 133. im, $40.00, 60.00, $75.00, $113.00, $18.00, TKICYCLES and VE-LOCIPEDES. In parchain3 from me jron have a stock to select from and do tot bars to wait. Largwt Stock and Lowest Price 00 Sportia Goods, Gam, Cntlery, etc - SHOT-GUN- S AT COST. Bicycle and Gun Repairing. Agrat CALK.RAPM WRITING MACHISE Carbons, Ribbons and Paper. M. H. EVANS 242 W. 2i South St., Salt Lake City .. Dropped Stitches. . Thre is great activity among the wo aaan suffragists of Kansas. A strong effort ia being made to extend the right women to vote at all elections. At present they vote oa school and munici-pal affairs. There are too raany invalid wives in this country, and not enough gymna-siums for women. The loss which was most felt by the Queen of the Belgians when her paiace it Laeken was destroyed by fire a short time ago, was the portrait of her son, the young Duke of Brabant, who died in 1869. Accordion plaited s'cirts in silk, tulle and net, and in plain and bordered tex-tiles, arc still fashionable; also straight evening skirts of rich lace or net, with two or three rows of rather wide ribbon carried in and out in the meshes of a border. Mrs. Pierpont Morgan, of New York, has recently entertained sixty members Of the Girls' Friendly . society. They were received with as much distinction as if they had been the most select mem-bers of the sacred Four Hundred. There was music from Lander's orchestra and Pinard served the supper. "To display a diamond properly," says a prominent American jeweler, "it must be worn alone. Few people seem to understand this. If a solitaire is pure it is obvious that if worn next to a ruby it will reflect the hue of the latter, and thus its value will be obscured." Th 3 wives of several congressmen have beeri interviewed on the cost of living at Washington, and they all agree that 5,000 a year is not nearly enough. Thirty-seve- n women have been ad-mitted to the Chicago bar. Mrs. Josepha North has just completed a bust of Mrs. Lillie Devereux Blake, which is a fine portrait of the woman suffrage leader. Mrs. North is now mod-eling the head and shoulders of one of the most blooming of New York's youug society belles. ' French society women have invented, to bridge the gap between luncheon and 5 o'clock tea, an entertainment which they call the "3 o'clock," and at which distinguished singers and actors are wel-comed as guests without being expected to sing or act. W0MENJN&INESS-- ' Wo"""1 Mae ton fr"', Ran"" Reitaumnt. ' told of the woman who an exact account of her t0 ,nd when asked to show liiU,reS;,Jv prCHluced what she call-- ap j book," a date and ' Tj-- on ono page, on the op- - date a"" "U BPent:" and i ' a na who presented a check V ot told that 8hB : lt all h money, produced that this could rfStiU had several blank fVmay illustrations of eonie womankind, but they SaWneral. . ' to han-- 1 Ionian has money transact and no inter-- ', in to tafter, naturally she does not Acuities in any of these direc-Whe- n necessity or inclination . in the channel of bus-- B, .S if she is free to carry out ewill succeed in what S woman in this city fur-;e- rr excellent case in point. "reared in the lap of luxury, but "overtook her family and the of bread became an imperative "Taking boarders" proved to Sterol in many ways. She con-th-opening a lunch room m one or department would be important ;laile, though it might not be an ,t employment. some difficulty she secured the " ; she hadn't a penny in or out 'tajik, hut she had more backbone . ,16 body than many a six foot a, boast. She borrowed money m friend who knew of her sterling and made the necessary outlay art in the business. Somo pur-i'we- re made that afterward proved and supplies furnished in excess demands mado in the beginning, i necessitated more borrowing and interest to pay; but she never j and is now on a footing that a man might envy.,- - She has lit her business to a cash basis, and bilitr and pluck challenge the ad-io- n of those with whom she has ss relations. is not making a fortune, but she ting a living, which is all she d to do. She lias succeeded where men would have failed. Wash- - iPost. Annie Desai.t. Annie Besant has given up her pro-jected American visit, and the reason for this change of plan is interesting. Mrs. Besant is a Socialist, and is interested above all things in the organization of the wage earners. She wished to study the condition of the working people on this side of the water, but has become convinced that social theories have no such future here as in England. The thinking mind in England, she writes to a Brooklyn lady, is more philosophical, more liberal, than in this country, where we are all absorbed in a scramble for dollars, and while money and work are plentier here because of our rapid growth, a Socialist has nothing to learn from us, and the chances of a satisfactory settle-ment of old, old questions seem to her quite as good at home. Detroit News. J Where She Was Useful. sCons illustrated recently the valu-ror- k which women may do as mem-- : the London county council. Ono girls employed at Barnum's show I to the committee complaining of At in their dressing room. It was I, sbe said, that scores of them had k candles in the ground and dress ?ir light. The matter was one of le importance, involving the safety enormous building and five or six and people. Yet the committee not themselves go and examine ressing rooms; it was not a matter could enter into. So the commit-ke- d Miss Cons to go and inspect om ono evening as their represents- - She did so, and found the state-quit- e true, and Mr. Barnum had itter rectified without delay. New Telegram. .... ' Poetry in Bracelet. America has invented the latest novel-ty in bracelets. This is the "poet band," and in p'ace of curbs and twists and chains a lady may adorn her wrists with wise axioms and tender lines from her favorite authors. The bracelets are usu-ally made in oxidized silver, with the let-tering in bright metals; and we are told that, while the Bible and Shakespeare afford useful "stock quotations," the eru-dite Boston belle selects her mottoes from the classics, and the young lady of ad-vanced culture chooses hers from Swin-burne or Baudelaire. No doubt the idea will largely commend itself to lovers, and may be of assistance to bashful pro-posers. London Graphic. .,,.A Noted Painter. i Merrick, the Kensington artist, ceived a commission from Henry mley to paint his portrait, which presented to the Royal Oeographi-cirt- y after the next salon, where it e exhibited. Jliss Merrick, it will uembpred,' went to Egypt to paint edive, and while there met .Verdi, :ave her a sitting while put.ing the mg notes in the scoreof his famous i." She. is said to be the best paid lit painter among the English wo-ari- d can get her own price for her res. Boston Record. "Swell" Stationery For Ladies' Vt. The swell note paper just now is either light cream, English blue-gra- or old French rose. These are all light tints. The paper should be medium sized, to fold over and fit the rather large and al-most square envelope, which, of course, matches the paper in tint! Violet ink is the choice. There are many reasons why violet ink has attained its great populari-ty. It dries quickly, flows freely, and does not change color with time three very good reasons. It conies highly per-fumed and imparts a delightful odor to the paper. These perfumed inks come high, but all the swells are using them just at present. Chicago News. etter Than a Photograph Album. ; of the new things in the home of ag woman with artistic ambitions holograph screen as tall as herself, ads in three folds, and inserted ly in each fold are cabinet and rial photographs of her best looking 'Is. The framework of the screen oak, and the folds are silk. One i folds is salmon in color, the second it blue, and the third copper brown. these colors for a background, the and white of the photographs out with striking effect. Ex- - e. - ' For Neuralgia. When one is suffering from neuralgia in the head, put him in a warm bed. Make a brick very hot and cover it with several thicknesses of flannel. Fold a coarse, thick cloth, and place it on the pillow. Lay the brick on this and wet thoroughly with rum. Rest the most painful part of the head or face on the brick and throw a blanket ov(,r the pa-tient, covering the head. Keep covered in this way until the pain ceases. When the blanket is removed, wipe the moist-ure from the head, face and neck, and then bathe in alcohol or rum to prevent the taking of cold. Housewife. " Bondage of Fair Women. smart girl of today clanks like a '"' in armor when she walks. She irilv weighted in silver and life is a to her. A - lorgnette is thrust in lress jacket, a bortbonniere is in one a"d seventeen or eighteen bangles rale the wrist of the other, while a chatelain hangs at her How she walks at all is one of things that no fellow can find out, le glories in her bondage and keeps idling to her oxidized fetters. n Eagle. Mourning Coitumos. ffiouraing costumes in different Jriss are very curious. In England '" walks looking like a mountain In America she is less oppres- - France she soon becomes coquet-Howeve- r, the most elaborate niing cloak heard of has lately been for the Duchesse d'Aosta. It is of 7 silk, trimmed with fiat bands of plumes, and having all its edges --ed with fringes of plumes that jet band as their heading. New 'Sua. It may have been noticed that the widow of Jefferson Davis, since his death, signs her name "V. Jefferson Davis." Many persons doubtless suppose she has added the name of Jefferson to her christian name Varina. But this is not the proper explanation. V. is the abbreviation of veuve, the French for widow, and it is the custom in LouWana, and perhaps in other parts of the south, for widows to place that letter 'before the Christian names of their deceased husbands. V. Jefferson Davis simply means the widow of Jefferson Davis. " . While two women were seated in a house in Emanuel county, Ga., they saw ancro trying to approach the house without being seen, by rolling along the ground like a ho;. He knew the ladies were alone in the house. Hiss Marie seized her fathers Winchester, drew a bead and pulled dflwn oa him. ," She did cot hit him, but at the report of the gun the rascal tamped up and ran like a deer. A Wealthy Actress. -- ta is rated as the richest single wo-- w the world who has earned her awney. Her wise mother, whois ;wnt woman of business, watches aarket3, and invests the actress 5 fast as she receives them. The "Marchioness" owns a hotel in 3 w apartment house in New ' td other real estate in V.'ashing-UlUg- o and Long Branch, besides bonds. Harper's Bazar. , 0 Promote Woman SufTrase. ;lfi??kfe11 (Mass.) introduced re- - wi! in the house to incorporate .(ical American Woman Suffrage .on and creating Elizabeth Cady Suan B. Anthony, Lucy Stone, faster Avery, Alice Stone Black-aJane- Sporlord a body cor-- ; sod politic, with power of succes-'- .' "? and dispose of property, ; if'13 nd adopt and enforce by- - r'6 cbject of this association ota 10 sture protection in their right tae women citizens of the ! tw by national --Kit Nation;-F-C-t A rturch rew with a History. The pew In old St. SlichaeJ's church,' Charleston, S. C, occupied, by Vice President Morton a few Sundays rince has been the property of the Vander-hor- st family for many years, and has-bee-occupied in the past by men whose names are familiar tec the readers of American history. The pew was once occupied by George "Washington. The Dake of Newcastle, Henry Clay and Gen. Robert E. Lee have "also been among its occupants, and rumor has it that Martin Van Buren was a tenant of the same pew. Cor. Chicago |