OCR Text |
Show fFIVECARLOADS OF NEW GOODS HI - SOUTH ST. ' ; ooisroiSTnsro of , linese and Japanese Goods, Crockery and Novelties. We have added a New Department to our Store, .which embraces a Full Line of TEAS, including the Finest Brands of olong, English Breakfast, Gunpowder, Imperial, Young Hyson, BaskeWired Japan, Uncolored Japans, Sun-drie- d Japans, df-a-do- zen brands of Green Japans, which we will sell from 25 to 33 per cent, lower than these Goods ever sold in Salt Lake. Our Mr. STEELE, .while in California, purchased at San Francisco a Carload of Goods in Job Lots, consisting of )eco rated Lamps, Chinese Decorated Ware, Imported English and Japanese Ware, Japanese Baskets in all Styles and Grades. A SPECIAL SALH3I-- ( lon't Foet the Place : J No. 13 W. First So. st. Telephone, 332 flPl p' ' Box' 701, OI RBKAMDSI flftf 'O jCIS j "S AD TONY FAUST. Miwff AHHEU8E1. oeiqikal wtfrzzwa' 8U?R. LAGER. W ?AXE-- Ppnl nd tr ninM on 1UG. Vt'.llrTr-k.- . NJv. ..?'.. Cart. NTJX Keg and Bottled Bw la nv Quniifv Khlnped Promptly to Ordr. SpwUl Attentlou Given to City I muily Trade ANHEUSER BUSCH BREWING ASSOCIATION. Fitzgerald &. Hofheimer, - - Sole Aftnts. Real - Estate I In all Classes of Property. ACREAGE A SPECIALTY LINCOLN PARK7 I THE LEADING ADDITION I C. E. WANTLAND, I 201 Main St., Salt Lake City, Utah. Utah Title Insurance & Trust Co. 68 Weat 2nd South St., Salt Lake City, Utah. Officer ill lockiioldersu John E. Dooley, Freuident. L. 8. Hills, Vico-Prwlde- A. h. Thomas Secretary. Iioorioriori t ABTHCIt l f Hf" t.'VWIV " L . k iwvir irH NMtooal Bum. ', '''W. . "" ion A. MAW.HAJX, I'robalejud. J T. it. Yi Sup.. v. Attorney, John A. Marshall. fiSALf LAKE CONSra .STEAM AND HOT WATER HEATING pl$5 ""5 rA our gravity syntcm of hnatiiiff we avoid any per-- jK3SS5'2:3ia cciJtal.le doposit from the water, it Uinif utd over and msfrflk '''SK& over indpfinately. Hot air furnace arc at bent uncer- - iSifiiT??r ta,n' wnil(: we cun alwa' (tuarantee that a nU'aui or hot "3&&Zp water apparatiiH put in by im will work. In wild weather also a hot water bair rau be rfgulntwl to a . r niettv, while, with a stronger tire, comfort can he w ft cured throughout the howw on the oldet day. By this 8 "j nvHteiu economy of coal, minimum of attention, and free-do-from dust is awured. EZSPEHC- -" --:THE -:- - SPENCE -:- - HEATER:- - HOT WATER HEATER. CaD be f.eu at our Store Kooru at k 61 FIRST EAST ST. ' SALT UU CITT. WHAT WE CLAIM FOR THE North Star JJEFEIGEEATOES For COLD, DRYNESS and ITKITY OF AIB It .UwU unnrped. Lower Temperature viib tbt aoiiat e( ie It will roaioUin a mjm relator. For SuUUntUtity. Pf ; Wmaniihlp and UndwL Uemgn it i. uDcqualed. A it i. tiled Pry "JTlot become rancid and nr oth- -r B.Wjfer.tor. that are filled with awdtwt gbavlngH and Coarcoal. It Us Urjer Storgo Cp-cttyt- acl IneCbamWr, with tin tame ouUide me4areiDeat, than ny clhtt Kefrfe. i rsormadf. t'old only y SALT LAKE HARDWARE COMPANY. 21 Wct 5ecoDi goatb, (Opera ilonw Block). sign, cf too "si& G-Tjz-rr , Headquarters for LAWN MOWERS. QtSOUNE STOVES. BkHDEH TOOLS, RUBBER HOSE and HOUSE FURNISHING HARDWARE , of all Descriptions, 'itali id Ionia Macierj Company C. P. MASON, Manager. Headqaartns for all Classes cf Machinery. Engines and BoUer from power ana upwartU In stock forimme diate deliverj-- . Stem Pumps, Injectors, Horae Whim, n"? Rock Breakers, Wall's Rolls. Icgcrsoll Air Compressors InH, Luhn-eatin- g Oils, Mine, Mill and Smeller Snppli. Silver, Gold and Concentrate ir g Mills erected and delivered in running order. Maine' Olce an! Varerooms 259 S. Main Street, Salt late D. S. AGENCY. BUTTE. MONTANA. pla cames miles to see mo. Sly fattier informed them that he had concluded to call me Woodford Mills. He referred to the solicitude of his neighbors, and while thanking them said he hoped the name he had selected would be satisfactory. One of the crowd got the floor aud said Woodford was all right, but he wanted a middle name. Others followed in this strain, and finally my father, yielded. He asked what it should be. Several names were suggested, but none suited. Finally one man asked; "What is the 'Woodford' for?" My father said it was for some relative of his. The man who had asked the question said he thought maybo it was in honor of the county. This suggested that a "C" be stucli; in after Woodford, and that it stand for couuty. And that is my name Woodford County Mills. The reason for so much commotion about my birth and name is found in the fact that I was the first white child born in Woodford county. Chicago Tribune. CltrKUminc th Baby-- ' Woodford said W. C. My name is MmL I was born in Woodford county tois state. After the excitement inci-dent occasion such as a bth the toan themselves about began to bother called l a tbe mv name. Delegations to know what I was STdaMd. Aslamreliablymform a dar was set for the cereraonx and mo-- fngs, it was evident that t bey must have been guided by men who knew the country well. Hare was a soldier in the American army, and had been released from jail to enlist in the service. In the same com-pany was an Irishman named Farren, who was a British deserter. He sounded Hare as to the possibility of seizing the president and taking him down the Po-tomac to the English fleet. Two other men were to be secured and the project carried out. Farreu wanted money, and to get it undertook to rob a man on the road near Washington, but his intended victim was a powerful, res-olute fellow, and shot Farren, who died the following day. He had always claimed to Hare that he had been offered a thousand pounds for securing the pres-ident, and that Gen. Koss was in the scheme. Hearing of Farren's mishap, Hare got apprehensive that the Irishman had be-trayed him, go he stole his captain's horse and escaped to Baltimore. After a reckless career in company with his young brother Louis and a well known criminal named Alexander, he stopped the mail at Havre de Grace and got $13,-70- 0 in specie and note The entire party were captured in Hunt's clothing store in Baltimore the next day. Alexander and Hare were hanged, and the brother was given a ten year sentence. Phila-delphia Times. . ne, the Hlehwayman. t - was the Dicfc Turpin of his day ! ate of Murrell and Mason, sissippi bandits. The principal attached to his career was his -- on Wit the alleged plot to kid-- . --'"t Madison and deliver him f Admiral Cockburn, the com-,''tl- e British fleet. When, in the Britisn. under Gep. jred Washington and burned llD BY SKULLS. ,; the ' Ignorant Indians are Kept Away from tho Precincts of Bellinglianii MODEEN DICK TURPIN. Curse of Fame Killing by Electr-icityA Musical Poodle-Ot- her Matters. . e very noticeable peculiarity of the ngham Bay cities is the absence of and Chinamen. The former are in seen here and the latter never, the Indians avoid this place is not u, but some of the sjwashes said the natives held this part of. the state perstition through an event happen-Jrin- g the Indian war about 1806. an thus: One night during thetrou-it- h the savages a certain camp of ' settlers were expecting an attack, "bites were informed by a friendly lf witted Indian, who had received sums of money from the settlers '.asional services he had done them, e white men, finding that the sav-v'ou- ld far outnumber them, resolved fart them by stratagem, and this is 'V it was accomplished: hdians. on their way to attack would have to pass "through a r wooded ravine that lay on the ade of the Noosack river, known e "Devil's pass." Anticipating the march, the white men concealed wes in the gorge. They were l, and carried with them six human belonging to the surgeon of the e whites had resolved to play upon "Perstition of the red man, and for purpose especially had they chosen ;k retreat, of which tho Indians JCg been timid. J ffM 10 o'clock at night (JIarch 11. 3 whn the white settlers reached the RT'ne. They hurriedly station-c-mselv-with their muskets cora-'- S the Indian trail, while four of ; fij hghted pitch torches and in-- ? them into the skulls after the lantern" fashion, thus giving most Rhastly appearance. Sid aUs were stuck up across tK . tl,e Indians would have to travel ' wy to attack the camp. ges came stealing along in mbers about midnight, and see- - f orthke.fireeyedskullsBtretch-thei- r very pathway, they took j t'or numan devils and fled in great ,ever pausing until the camping Indian8 wer8 reached. vh- - , teswere saved by stratagem, 7 Bdiaas have ever since held a rl'tous fear of this section of the -- Seattle Press. Divided by Chalk Lln. There are two young men in this city who have roomed together for some time past, but who now don't speak as they pass by. There never was any warm friendship between them, their tastes and habits being very dissimilar, but they roomed together for reasonsof economy. Upon taking the room it was divided Into two equal portions by drawing a chalk line across the floor, each agreeing to confine himself to his own half of tho room. They soon got used to this and when, in the course of time, the chalk mark became obliterated, it was not necessary to renew it, so accustomed had they become to keeping within their re-spective bounds. All went well until one Sunday, when a visitor called on one of the young men. The other one was out, and the visitor, knowing nothing about the division of the room, seated himself in the portion belonging to the absent man. When the latter returned und found him there he gruffly ordered him to go to his friend's side of the chamber. Then the fires of hatred which had smoldered so long broke out, and a rough-and-tumb- fight ensued between the two room mates, with the result that they now occupy separate apartments. Washington Star. The Cure of Fame. ' Poor Dr. Holmes! It is no wonder he wants people to stop trying to write poe- -' try, wbn, as he says, he has. for the last thirty years, received a volume of poems o'- - a poem, printed or in manuscript, near-ly every day. Then he adds, amiably "Of late I have found it impossible to read critically all the literary produc-tions, in prose and verse, which have heaped themselves on every exposed sur-face of my library, like snow drifts along the railroad tracks-block- ing my literary pathway, so that I can hardly find my daily paper-- " Can good nature go far-ther than this? Has the good doctor no energetic friend who will clear his ibrary of these drifts and bundle them all into a bonfire? -- Think- of the conceit, the im-pertinence and utter want cf kindly of thescndersl-PittoburgBul-l- etin. . - A Curious Birthmark. Joseph H. Eotherman, a carpenter, re-siding at Connellsville, Pa., has a cres-cent shaped birthmark on the back of his neck, which has aroused considerable curiosity , in that vicinity. When the mark is hard-ly moon is new Rotherman'a noticeable, but as Luna turns the first quarter it begins to turn red and swell. By the time of fall moon it has swelled into a horn like roll over two inches in thickness. As the moon wanes the mark decreases in size and color until it again becomes a bluish, crescent shaped mark, hardly raised above the skin. St. Louis Republic. How Doea Electricity KM? that just what takes An electrician says place in the human organism to produce electric current seems to death from an One of the be an unsolved problem. theories sometimes advanced concerning it U that when a beingsuffers electric shock, it is a pure case of internal rupture or explosion from the generation ofVaorrapoV. In support of this new the way in which telegraph poles are sometimes torn to pieces u, referred to. The lightning follows the mout portion of the pole- - which the core r hf?rt.'Ja this case the moisturt is vaporised an explosion occurs. The high heat, the beinjurn steam, and the steam York Telegram. . . , Previous to Julv 6, 178 English money was in use in the United States. On that date the continental congress estab-- ! lished the dollar, aough tb exact weight was not fixed until Aug. 3. 1.60, when it was made to equal that of tbs old Spanish dollar. Mi. Blinks (of tlixabeih, X. J. Now, my son, I want w see if you were atten-tive during the servke. What was the minister's text? Small Son What shall we do to I shaved: Xew York Weekly . |