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Show ' ' ; THE SALT LAKE TIMES, MONDJ A are proor against suaaen chills. If yonr circulation is poor make your sleeves come over the wrist, as fashion fortun-ately allows, with trimming of fur, ewansdown or feathers. English women are sensible. Thoy keep fur jackets out to wear the middle of June when a sea turn comes, furs never feeling so good as then, when fires are out. Do not he ahove carrying one of the little Japanese handwarmers, its lighted carhon smol-dering in a tin case with cloth covering. The whole thing with fuel only costs twenty-fiv- e cents and can be carried in the pocket like a portemonnaie. It is an advantage to persons with weak chests to carry the case in the bosom raw days. The warmth is so mild and constant that It keeps the clothing dry from prespira-tio- n without overheating. The differ-cnc- e in color this invention makes with sorao cadaverous women is remarkable and it has beneficial effect in case of heart disease, which is greatly aggra-vated by cold air, food or drinks. Shir-ley Dare. The Craie for VloleU. The craze of the day as regards head-gear is for bonnets of a diminutive de-scription. So far the preference has been given to violets. Sometimes it is a scrap-ing lace with a bunch of purple violets on one side, sometimes a wreath of vio-lets with no crown at all, but most fre-quently the whole crown, made flat to the head, is covered with Parma violets, while a bow of ribbon matching in hus is placed erect at the back of the bonnet. So universally worn is this flower that a little niece of mine amused herself one Sunday at church parade in Rotten Bow by counting the violet bonnets she passed, and in ten minutes she had ar-rived at seventy. As a result violeta threaten in a few weeks to be mal portees, and I was told the other day by Lady Granville Gordon, who trades under the name of Mme. Lierre, that several of her most elegant customers had already declined to be seen wearing the prevailing blossom. . Its place will be taken by other spring flowers, espe-cially lilacs, hyacinths and cowslips. London Cor. Philadelphia Times. Mn. Bradwell's Patience. Verily "all things come round to him that waits," and to her as well, as in the case of Mrs. Myra Bradwell, who twenty-on- e years ago applied to the supreme court of Illinois for admission to the bar as attorney at law. She presented proofs of requisite study and proficiency and certificates of recommendation, and tho justices of the supreme court refused the application. But the world moves on, and about a month ago tha lady received the distinguished compliment of having the justices reverse their former decision upon the original brief, now twenty-on- j years old, and, without application or solicitation on her part, direct a license as attorney and counselor to be issued to Mrs. Myra Bradwell. In the interim the lady has busied her-self editing a very excellent legal paper, and when the law was passed providing for the admission of women to the Illi-nois bar on the same terms as men Mrc. Bradwell declined to make a new appli-cation. Exchange. ous, Deautiruiiy colored creme fle menthe. It's delicious nectar to taste, but look out for it! Cor. Chicago Herald. The Dreu for Girl. Now that spring is with us, I wish that more young girls up to the age of 20, at least would gown themselves in pure, soft white, with collars rolled back a trifle, revealing warm, round throats tinted like rose leaves. Young girls are like flowers; and instead of rustling with silks, and jingling and flashing with jewelry, they should wear only simple gowns gowns soft as their eyes, pure as thei consciences, and white as their souls. The man does not live who could look at such a maiden and not be the better because of the reverent thought her pure presence awakens. Cor. West Shore. For the Houtekeeper. Buttermilk will take out mildew stains. Bottles are easily cleaned with hot water and fine coals. A dampened cloth is better than a dry one for dusting furniture. If the hands are rubbed on a stick of celery after peeling onions the smoll will be entirely removed. If a cucumber is cut into strips and the pieces put into places where ants are found, it will surely drive them away. A Hint About Spring Cleaning. It is not necessary to turn the whole house inside out or upside down at once. Let the cleaning be done gradually, one room at a time, so that the entire family is not made uncomfortable at once. Some women do not have this annual cleaning they do it by degrees, one room at a time, through the year. But each house-keeper must choose the plan that suits best with her family and circumstances. New York Star. Cashmere house gowns have five rowi of graduated velvet up the skirt, three rows on the bodice, velvet sleeves and a velvet girdle. The skirt is plain and gathered or plaited about the waist, the bodice softly folded and the collar of vel-vet. Old rose, with either black or dull green ribbons, makes a warm, soft, dainty little gown, and very becoming, too, to almost any type of womanly beauty. The grass lands in the parks are sprin-kled these days with boys and girls and some older people, who have a basket in one hand and in the other a knife. Every few steps they kneel down, jab viciously in the ground with the knife, pick up something, put it into the basket, and move on. There is nothing mysterious about it, they are simply gathering dan-delions for "greens" and salad. A home for women teachers was opened last fall, at Dresden, Germany, in a build-ing of its own. Teachers of any nation an stay temporarily for forty or fifty cents a day, and enjoy the benefit of a local teachers' association. Retired Ger-man teachers can live here with one room for $150, or with two for $175 a year. Such homes are not uncommon in Europe. After Miss Jennie Hart had been mar-ried to Henry Moore, in Tribes' Hill, N. Y., the other evening, she burst into tears, say ing: "I have married tho wrong man." I has been learned that both the groom and bis best man were suitors for her hand, and, although she did not like Moore as well as the other, in a fit of pique she accepted him. THE IMS WORLD. A New Benevolent Organization of Parm-er- s' Wives Becently Founded. BALTIMOEE'S PRETTY FEMALES. Something About the Ladies in the City of Monuments and Oove ' Oysters, r The jrarmers' Mutual Benefit associa-tion, widen was organized in southern Illinois less than four years ago, is now one of 1be largest and most powerful or-ganizations in the country. Tho order is composed entirely of farmers, and its objects and purposes are to act as a body, and by mutual buy and sell to abetter advantage, to exchange views upon topics pertaining to the farm, and to deviiie and carry out plans and pur-poses to relieve the burdens of the agri-cultural masses. Although the order is the members usually vote for only such candidates as are in sym-pathy with their wants, regardless of the political belief of the candidate, and sometimes in local affairs they find it necessary to nominate, a candidate of their own. At a general mass meeting held in this city in March a resolution was adopted favoring the admission of all farmers' wives and daughters to full membership in the order, and when the state assembly meets in Springfiold in October next the friends of the resolu-tion will ask that the rules of the order be so amended as to admit them. ' In viow of this action, and the unani-mous favor with which it was received, some of the leading farmers' wives and daughters conceived the idea of creating an organization of their own upon the same basis as the regular F. M. B. A., and on the afternoon of April 4, 1890, fourteen farmers' wives and daughters assembled at the residence of John S. Harney and organized the first lodge of the Ladies' Guild of the F. M. B. A. of the United States. Mrs. S. M. 'Gordon was chosen as president; Mrs. ' "Will Rankin, vice president; Mrs. James T. McEibben , secretary ; Miss Hattie Mc- Clelland, doorkeeper. These ladies are all women of energy, well informed, and are able to cope successfully with the problems of social reform pertaining to their sex and familio. in . the preamble to the resolutions adopted by this pioneer society its or-ganizers say: "While in times past the weaker members of the common people of the human race have suffered most irom oppression, tyranny and barbarism, we rejoice in the progress of modern so-ciety toward the equalization of bur-dens, and are in full accord with our fathers, brothers, husbands and sons in their effort to secure the betterment of "human conditions. The rigid economy and self denial forced upon us, having to begin at home, falls most heavily upon woman, and as the American norm is the hope of the nation we realize the need of the education of American wo-men, on a broader basis in the practical every day business of life, as well as in things which pertain directly to the nar-row sphere heretofore assigned to them. A. perfect between all mem-bers of a cluss is necessary to secure the beat results, and the Fanners' Mutual Benefit association having been organ-ized for such purpose, we now believe that, for ourselves, self help and thor-ough organization are the first adequate means to be used for the betterment of our condition and the improvement of our homes." Australia (Ills.) Cor. St Louis Globe-Democr- at i ' What Virginia Girtt Know. Several gentlemen from the north have been in Fredericksburg with the view of purchasing saddle horses. One day last week one of them took a notion to try one of several horses in the stables of the gentlemen who had them for sale; but as he was not familiar with either the horse or mode of saddling and bridling him, was about to forego the pleasure of a horseback ride when one of our local beauties came to the rescue, and in a moment showed the northerner what a true southern girl was capable of doing. Entering the stall she removed the hal-ter, adjusted the bridle, led the animal out of the stable, and, throwing the sad-dle on his back, buckled the girth and ordered the blushing northerner to mount while she held the stirrup for him. He was stunned, but enjoyed the ride immensely, doubtless surprised that a woman so fair could be so handy. Fredericksburg Free Lance. ' Aniye Beade, niece of the deceased novelist, Charles Reado, has begun in London a crusade against the men who train children for the circus ring. She has held meetings to arouse public senti-ment, she has enlisted numerous clergy-men in the cause, and she is very stren-uous in declaring that the abuses are out-rageous. . . ). There is a good deal in the cooking of a dish as to its digestibility or indigesM-bilit- Take Welsh rarebit, for exam-ple. If cooked by an expert you can eat it at midnight and go to bed happy, and what is more, wake up happy; but badly cooked it would be deadly at high noon. Mrs. Annie Williams, aged 85, has a contract for grading 6ix miles of the Evansville and Richmond railway, and she has thirty teams at work at Eliza-bethtow-n, Ind breaking ground. The contract was originally let to her hus-band, who is now dead. Mme. Le Roy, mother of the Duo d'Abrantes, of France, is one of the most intrepid explorers of the day. She has been several months in the east, and suf-fered much privation while visiting Babylon and Nineveh. A young lady who was recently ad-mitted to the Massachusetts bar secured a client, and last week married him. She is now going to apply for admission to practice before tho" United States su-preme court George Gould is building a cottage for his wife at Furlough lake, in the Ulster county Catekills. It is to be constructed of logs, and will be 84 by 70 feet and con-tain sixteen rooms. Womanhood Regnant. The proceedings at the election of president of the General Federation of Women's Clubs in this city indicate that the world is not yet to be deprived of the charming illogic of woman. There lias been some fear pervading masculine bosoms that Sorosis and other clubs and participation in the active affairs of life would harden lovely wo men into unlovely mannishness. But this is not to be the case, and the election proved it. When Mrs. Charlotte Emerson Brown, the successful nominee, was named, the principal argument in her favor was made by Mrs. Thomas, who said: "She has" a husband who sympathizes very much with her work for woman's uplift-- ' iug." Now this is a reason for choosing a president, wo venture to say, that would never have suggested itself to a male mind. i, Mrs. Ella Dietz Clymer was urged on the ground not that she preside efficient-ly or ably, but in a "beautiful and gra-cious manner." There is a great hope for the human race in this recognition of the supremacy of beauty and grace. Mrs. Kenney, who uttered it, warms our hearts towards the women's clubs. Mrs. Sewall objected to be president because be was too young, and Mrs, Croly be-cause she was not tall enough. New ,T?ork World. j Baltimore' Prettiest Married Woman. ' Baltimore is like Paris, in that young married women rule society and receive the homage of the tremendous swells, who pass the artless debutantes by. A ; young matron whom no maiden can tival is Mrs. Jesse Tyson. Tennyson caw no lovelier in his "Dream of Fair ' , ' Women." As Miss Johns, of a family ' patrician and told, she had hardly the uccesses of a modern belle. Every one , knew her to be wonderfully pretty, bat ' she was shy, and it was not until her en-gagement to. the wealthy bachelor, Mr. Jesse Tyson, was announced that they awoke to- the fact that the loveliest maiden of the season was to wed. Mr. Tyson was worth a million or two. and two generations of belles would willing-ly have laid their hearts at his feet. Miss Johns was scarcely 18 when the marriage took place. There was a year's sojourn on the continent, and when a year ago Mr. and Mrs. Tyson returned to their stately home Baltimoreans found that the bride was even lovelier than the debutante.- Rather short, but with a per-fect fignre, an oval face, exquisitely modeled; masses of black hair, dark eyes, soft rather than sparkling; a mouth tender and wistful, of a manner match- - less in its dignity that is the pief ir of the young matron whom men admire and .women commend. Cor. Kansas City Globe. , . Keep Warm Even in June! .If you are chilly these changeful spring days put on a silk undervest and chemise of white India silk with silk knicker-bockers and stockings. Thus cased voa Rich Philadelphia Women. Philadelphia has within her limits prob-ably from twenty to twenty-fiv- e women who are worth a million or more, she has twice that many who are worth more than half a million dollars, and there are hundreds of women in the city whose possessions range from $20,000 to $100,000 each. The wealthiest woman in Philadelphia is believed to be Mrs. Anna M. Powers, widow of Thomas H. Powers, who was during his lifetime the head of the firm of Powers & Weight-man- . Mrs. Powers' possessions are va-riously estimated at from $8,000,000 to $12,000,000, and the latter sum is be-lieved to be nearer hor actual wealth than the former. She lives very quietly in a handsome mansion at 15b. 1,618 Wal-nut street. Much of her wealth is in-vested in real estate, and she owns row after row of houses in different sections of the city. Philadelphia Press. Whjr People Take Turkish Bathf. Arabella says the Turkish bath has be-come so popular lately that when she goes there she has to wait her turn. Wo-men take these baths for every reason under the sun. Some confessedly for the pleasure of it, for the delicious n that comes from being rubbed, scrubbed and manipulated and then laid away to rest, and with eyes half closed have their finger nails manicured. Others take them because they think them healthy, and others for beantifiers, or, as the Shampooer Tillie told Arabella, "Some takes 'em, Miss Ar'bella, 'cause dey's ugly, qthers 'cause dey's pretty, others 'cause dey's fat and want9 to get lean, others 'cause doy's lean and wants to get fat; some for the lumbago, others for neuralgia, an' I don't know what dey flon't take 'em for." And aa, these baths are taken for every reason in tne worm, every sort of people take thorn, from th shop girl, whose Uiin cheeks show hard work and poor food, to Mrs. whose thin cheeks show indul-gence in rich food, lack of exercise and late hours. Washington Herald. Simplicity in Street Dreu. It is very smart these days to be exceed-ingly simple in street dress. The swag-ger girl makes herself as smooth and plain and snug as possible. There must be no flying ribbons, no jingling chate-laines, no rattling bangles. The severe linen collar and cuffs have again ap-peared, and the swell young woman is going about again with her chin in the air looking for all tho world like a tight-ly enrbed horso. She must be simple, too, in her diet. So runs fashion's man-date. Therefore she goes in for brown bread and drinks vichy. A drink which many pretty women are imbibing in the secrecy of their chambers along with their "dearest" is the fasclnatine. insidi- - KT t Tm"" PAT" IREXTT When,YouCanBuy4Lotsin Davis, Sharp & Stringer's CORNER OF SECOND WEST AD TENTH SOUTH, On small Cash Payment, and within 30 days after Electric Car Line, already commenced, on Second West, is completed, sell 3 Lots for Profit sufficient to build nn remaining Lot. - ' -r-.-.V'. ' . If you prefer to move into your own home today, ' we . have Six Jsew Modern Style Houses just com- - pletcd,-si- x --Large' Rooms," Fine Closets, Three ..,-- . , .... Verandas, City, Water, Elegrant Location, close in, sss " splendid 'view,' ;near electric car line, ONLY $3800 EACII, and Five Years to pay out at only 6 per i cent interest. .... - Don't Fail to see Watkins' Addition icLjoin.in.g' X-iibs-rty Farlz on til Somtli. ; 1: DAVIS & STRINGER, ESS? v ;; 23 West Second:Soutk JPabst Brewing Co! (Formerly PHILIP BEST) ' MILWATJKEE, WIS. Export, Bohemian, Hoffbrau and Select Blue Ribbi Keg and Bottled Beers shipped Immediately - upon order. TEE FAMILY TRADE, SOLICITE-d- FREE DELIVERY! TELEPHONE 36 B. K. BLOCHCo., "" ' ST. " Agents. f.l :,' ....... : NORTH STAR REFRiGERATOR ' 00"- - -.'"...- S3. wuMtyjip 4 ' ... Mbr W JO, wfM "' J & Sold. Onl3r Toy tlia Salt Lake Hardware Co., 32 WEST SECOND SOUTH STREET. Headquarters for Rubber Hose, Lawn Mowers, Hammocks, Guns, Fishing Tackle and Sporting Goods. PRINCIPAL POINTS EAST, WEST, NORTH and SOUTH - ' ' A.T 1 THE CITY TICKET OFFICE. Uiiioii - Pacifi SYSTEM. MOUNTAIN DIVISION'- - Tho Only Line carryint! the UnifcJ S;i Overland Mail. Direct Connectloaj " .. - twoen all Points North and NEW TIME CAR 'May 20, 1390. UTAH CENTRAL DISTRICT, ; ' Passenger Trains Arrive and Leave at Salt Lake City as follows: - FROM THE NORTH. . GOING NORTH. rirtfritv 9lTHhK Atlantic Express, Atlantic Fast Mail Attvw&Nowal--10:a-m- . and Utnh i Northern Local - ., Povtln& ; Locrxrs,;ooiNo " Mm ,k 7; JuabExprma .'. .'TV 10.10a.m. .Juab F.xpresa JaJ. .JjgQp'n, Milford Express. , XTtaja and Tsvaa. ' Distdct. GOING WEST. rnflM TUB WKSI. ... aWSS' .. prouKhMixedilvPt Sunday, 4:, . " l: 0p.m . . " s:5( " ...1.., tfA p.m " " f.y SMOp.iu " - .:" - " u:F 7:40p.nt ". ' ... , " " Sal Lake Sc Western T3istrict. ',- - SQTJXPlvCSlTT Pnlbnan Palac SlLrSan!n t'hlraito; Pullman Palace Sl'ir P w' council puXihsrpLSflBi,"cotoS?lclu; pnii1.irfctf-pjrti?- Chicago; Davcoache", 3? siVVL81?-Butt- to Green River: Dining w clu.. This train will rny fVa n5? Gr1 iver: o'""l!,t s,eeper' --The Atlautic Ejpre," feavhwS hay111: First-clas- s Tickets. cxWSl to Council Bluffs; S?Kdeon,at 10:30 m.. is equipped with Sleeper, Denver to CouSi C'"',1 OvV'J' 1 hroufth Sleeper St Louis p, ,PuUman Palace Sleeper. Salt w , PuumancW.iust Sl Sleeper. San P?r't Kan'1 J. V. PARKER, c F RESSEGUlE, ASstCen'rPassengerA?en! , General mtf Hon. Caleb Caahing'i Timidity. Hon. Caleb Gushing, who, with the exception of the Hon. Rufus Choate (par nobile fratrum), was the best man to sit and listen to I have ever been acquainted with, was substantially dumb iu the society of women. He either did not not know how to talk to them, or he could not, and he could scarcely look in the face of one without blushing. He could not look them fairly in the eyes, in fact, nor could he men either, for that matter. There seemed to be an unac-countable timidity and shrinking about him, as there was even about Choate himself, great man as ho was. ' Mr. Gushing once, at an evening party in Newburyport, attempting to make himself agreeable, it is to be presumed, said to a pretty, bright eyed girl of 17 or 18 summers, and quite distinguished for her beauty and accomplishments in the circle of her young admirers: "Pray, Miss , can you tell me how love be-gins?" And she instantly replied with u merry twinkle and a smile: "With L, of course," thus discomfiting the dis-tinguished scholar and statesman, and getting the laugh of the bystanders upon him. Boston Journal. No Food for Nine Yearn. There is at Bourdeilles, in the Dor-dogn-p, n woman named Bouriou who is safti to have eaten nothing for nine years. The truth of this story is now being put to the test by a strict watch over the fasting woman, who has been under ob-servation for the last fortnight. She is rather thin, but is described as being in no way emaciated. Cor. London Stand-ard, ... ... . ... , |