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Show ) 1 . U THE SALT LAKE TIMES. TUESD AY-- OCTOBER H 1890. " ' ' ; NOW RUNNING TO I , If i CORNER SECOND WEST AND ENTH SOUTH. ' i You Can Buon Your Own Terra I IfsafT VV TO SECURE V Y ON MONTHLPNTS : bargain, on Second J ' f H J?- - BOCfo) ' OP .. OH SlX OP TWOIVe WOtfflS. ; WesC Will sell this , South street, only, 2 . 'I 1 CW' LsOtS V I - ' ' " property for just what blocks West of the ; From tlie ,7 v T, ' ', .X V- V .: : the ground is worth ' K"f" IN THIS POPULAR ADDITION iXMS - Or Longer Time if You Like. Come and See Us and Take a Carriage Ride, 1 orifyp west SIDE RAPID TRANSIT,RTWW 33 West Second Soztli Stretet. . RSTABLISHRD, . I860. j . D. 0. CALDER'S You are respectfully invited to call and examine our large-etoo- of Pianos arid Organs, The Finest Ever Shown in Utah, Pianos and Organs sold on easy time payments and at prices i within the reach of all. OjpLX' $300 Piano J feing largely sold, it gives the best of satisfaction, and in price and I quality it is a marvel.. Tbe oases are elegant and warrant . ykll ' material and workmanship first-class- ., , Our .&GANS, MASON & HAMLIN, W. W. KIMBALL & CO. ! Are so well knwn to be the Standards of the World, and recommended by all FyisT-CxAS- S Musicians, it is unnecessary fotusto , , sound their praise. Prices from $79, and . ' sold on easy payments. We have everything to be found in a first-clas- s musio store, and at . PRICES THE LOWEST. 45 Sc 47, West IFixst Soutli. Strest. - Salt Lake City, ; : :v : ; Utah Territory. CiaWjiClM' to .at.t. PRINCIPAL POINTS EAST, WEST, NORTH and SOUTH THE CITY TICKET OFFICE. ; Passenger Trains Arri?e and Lea FROM THK NORTH. AftautlcVastMaU:.'..' ' "Vi. Utah & Northern Local a;tlcltio Express... ia'nS' Portland and Butte Fast MaU rsopim,' TROM (THO SOUTH. MllIortExnress..., . . . Jnab, PrT Ironton and En- - Express.. .....v...-.......,..,- . ep.m. iii-Pacif- ic . SYSTEM. -- MOUNTAIN DIVISION The Only Line .carrying the United St jtsi Overland Mail. Direct Connections all Points North and Si3t, NEWHIIMEOARD I ' m KHTRM OlSTfllCr, re at'Salt take city as follows: . ' " GOING KORTR. Fast Mall and Utah Northern Local : 'Local Express......;..... l:30p.O I'ast Atlantic and Portland & Butte Lcressi::::::::;:::.::::::;:::::? '' . GOING SOUTH. Juab, Provo. Lent, Iroaton and En- - ' wk Express. l:lzm HUoN Express... . S. W. ECCLES, ; Wl C. F. RESSEGUIE, PasMnser AjenU ' J " V ' . ; . Gmmtd Tickets for Sale in Wasatch Building, 201 Main Street, and at Depot. Fare for " ' Round Trip. 50 cents. v : man or preferably, wltn a man or with a friend. The conversation will tell whether your friend was a man or a woman. The good old word "lady" has been vulgarized, until now it means almost the opposite of its old meanings. You read about "two ladies" being arrested, of "society ladies" who know no more of what the women who are in society are doing than they read in tho newspapers. "Gentleman" hasn't been so vulgarized, but it's badly treatedi and with "lady" should be put aside to recover. "New York Sun. The Expression "Lady Friend." You don't need to explain that you're doing this or that with a friend you wouldn't do it with an enemy; the only thing you do with an enemy is to fight her, so there's no need of explaining that you were walking with a lady friend; you were walking with a ladj or with a gentle- - three surviving Confederate generals, the other two being Gens. Beauregard and Johnston. His erect and soldierly figure, topped, as it were, with a crown of strong white hair, attracts general attention. Joseph Medill, editor of The Chicago Tribune, is reported to be one of the richest newspaper men in the United States, his fortune being estimated at from $4,000,000 to $5,000,000. He is 65 years of age, and spends from eight to j ten hours a day in The Tribune office. ' A gentleman who was recently visit-- j lng Edison's laboratory, and whose son was about to enter upon his first em- -' ployment, asked Edison to give him a motto for the boy, go that he might have it as and guide. Mr. Edison laughed a little at the novel request, and then said, "Well, I'll give him this, 'Never look at the clock.' " MEN . YOU HEAR OF. The late Pope Pius IX occupied tho papal throne from 1846 to 1878. This was the longest reign of any pope on record. . William B. Irwin, who died recently in Harrisburgr. Pa., was ; delegate to the convention which nominated Lin-coln in 1800. President W. A. Qualt, of Baker uni-versity, Baldwin, Kan., is only 30. He is said to be tho youngest college presi-dent in the world. Gen. Noyes, of Ohio, who dropped dead in Cincinnati recently, lost his leg :. while leading a brilliant and successful charge during the late war. Professor F. W. Newman, brother of the late cardinal, is now 83 years of age. At 62 he turned vegetarian, and since then has needed no physician. ' Dr. Carlos Pellegrini, the new presi- dent of the Argentine Republic, is 48 years old. He is the eon of an Italian architect who emigrated to Euenos Ayres in 1825. . Dr. Reuben Samuels, husband of the mother of Frank and Jesse James, is one of the best housekeepers in Mis-souri. He can cook, bake, wash and iron, and employs his time mostly in the performance of domestic duties. ' William Waldorf Astor has been elect-ed an honorary citizen of Waldorf, the little German town in which John Jacob Astor the first was born, and to which Mr. Astor sent 50,000 marks for an Astor memorial in memory of his father. Col. R. C. Batchelder, recently made quartermaster general of the American army, when the war broke out, being unused to riding, used to practice on horseback at night on a New Hampshire farm till he felt at home in the saddle. Gen. E. Kirby Smith is one of the i' - i I diroctlon of the merry thought or wish bone, which is displaced by lifting tho bone and pressing backward. The collarbones! which lie on each side of the wish bono must be lifted up by the knife at the broad end and forced toward the breast bone un- - til the part to which they are fastened breaks off. Cut through the ribs on each Bide and remove the breast. Now turn up the backbone and press the knifo firmly across it, near the middle, lifting tho lower end at tho same time with the fork until the bone gives way, then turn the lower end from you and removo tho bones from each side; this is not difficult if the coin of the knife be used. Cor. New York World. Women and Their Teeth. "Dentists have some decidedly funny ex-periences," said Dr. Howard Magnusson. "Not long ago a German woman came into my office and wanted to know if Bhe could get a set of up stairs and down Btairs teeth. Of course I knew what she meant, and she was speedily accommodated. Another woman applied for the privilego of renting a set of false tooth for an evening. She had been invited to an entertainment, but had no false teeth of her own and had no money to buy a set, so she thought that she would rent a set, that she might be able to do jur-tic- e to tho viands that would bo set before her. Another woman had an Ulster on her tooth, she snid, and wanted to have it removed. The latest funny inci-dent that happened to me Was the visit paid to me a day or two ago by a woman who wanted to have her teeth sharpened so that she could oat beefsteak. That party had the true carnivorous instinct." Chicago Post. THE CITADELOF WOMAN 8ome of the Evil Effects of Mrs, Martinets Infancy Drill To Give Money to Children! WOMAN'S MISTAKE IN SHOPPING How Bab ia Pod The Young Woman of Today Feminine, but Neat. The infantry drill in some households we wot of is subversive of all the inoRt on- - gnging qualities of childhood. Look, for example, at Mrs. Martinet's family. Every-thing like impulse has been disciplined out of them. Mrs. M. herself is said to have been very strictly brought up on tho auto- - matic principle, and tho strait jacket system of education which made her tho statuesque creature she is she faithfully repeats upon her children. People say they are remarkably well behaved. They never romp or laugh or do anything ob-streperous. When spoken to they respond in set phrase, as if talking out of a book. - If in their babyhood they exhibited any germs of a rollicking disposition tho said germs were carefully extinguished. No signs of them at prewmt exist, and looking into the dull, untwinkling eyes of Mrs. Martinet's children Ono can hardly fancy that even in their long clothes they ever ventured on a chuckle or a crow. And yet, as we have hinted, the little Martinets are considered model children. So, in fact, they are in one sense, for they are about as unimprossibla as if they had beon molded out of wax, or cast in plaster of paris. Th'oir mother, who, in hor cold way, is somewhat proud of the little "pre-cisians," in making honorable mention of their negative virtues, assures her ac-quaintances she is too much of a machine to have friends that they never make any noise. The idea of noiseless boys and girls! What do children come into the world for but to make a noise to whoop, whistle, sing, danee, run, jump, fight, yell, roll in the dirt and spoil their clothes? Ahl Mrs. Martinet, your repressive system is all wrong. The enthusiasm of childhood should be gently and wisely guided and directed not cheked down. . The boy is father to tho man, and if the boy is sys-tematically snubbed into silence bo as-sured the man will uover "make a noiso in the world." New Yar'i Ledger. ping." A little forethought, and eepecially the remembering what so many women forget, that it takes time to go from place to place, and that street ears are not light-ning transits, would mako a vast differ-ence in many cases. Harper's Bazar. How to Give Money to Children. Give your little folks a weekly allowance as soon as they are able to stand before a cundy counter that comprises what an al-lowance would mean to the average child giving thorn to understand that just so much is the limit of their pin money. (I believe I began with two cents, increasing in time to five.) Then add to that weekly whatever thoy may earn in little ways. Teach them the pride of having earned pennies. Many a good habit can bo incul-cated by at first stimulating it by a small reward. For instance, a penny for having clean hands, clean nails, cloun teeth, for well combed hair, for hanging up coat and hat in coming from school on nails put low and especially fur them, for filling the wood box, and so on for various things adapted to varied circumstances. But that is not all. Teach them what the money is distinctly for, and that if tho re-quirements are slighted or undone the pen-nies will not be forthcoming. Teach thorn that they cannot have the "hnlr combed penny" it they come to dinner with a frowzy head, or that the door mot penny Is not theirs if there are muddy tracks in the kitchen. Cor. Good Housekeeping. How Raby Is Fed. My baby nurses practically when she is hungry, every four to Bix hours, on the average. I am inclined to think that hot-tlo- d babies should not he Jed oftener than once in four to Bix hours. Our baby is never overfed, and we never allow her to nurse until we know that she is hungry. Nor do we ever interrupt her sloop to feed her. Not long ago Bhe woke up at noon, nursed, wout to sleep again at 3 o'clock and slopt till 10 o'clock at night 10 hours without nursing. The sleep was of as much benefit to her as the food given when she waked hungry. We hope that she will nurse until she is 13 or 15 months old, and we will not begin to give hor cow's milk until wo see that the mother's milk is actually insufficient. When she is ready to take solid food, which she will not be until she is Id or 15 months old, then she will gut graham bread with the milk and we may add a littlo fruit later. Many babies die of dyspeptic star-vation by overfoeding, and I don't intend to let mine. Interview in Boston Globe. The Young Women of Today, It is not enough that the young women of today shall be what their mothers are or were. They must be more. The spirit of the times calls on women for a higher order of things, and the requirements of the woman of the future will be great. I ' must not be misconstrued into saying that the future woman will be one of mind rather than of heart. Power of minu1 in it-self no more makes a true woman than does wealth, beauty of person, or sociul station. But a clear intellect, a well trained mind adorns a woman, just as an ivy will adorn a splendid oak; a true woman has a power, something peculiarly hor own, in her moral influence, which, when duly developed, makes her queen over a wide realm of spirit. But this she can possess only as her pow-ers are cultivated. Cultivated women wield the scepter of authority over the world at large. Wherever a cultivated woman dwells be sure that there you will find refinement, moral power and life in To Carve Fowl. Place the fork firmly into the thick part of the breast; take slices from each side of the breast bone, extending the whole length of the fowl; joint and remove the wings, and divide them at the first joint or pinion. Divide tho ligaments of the legs and twist them out of their sockets, sepa-rating them at the first joint. Now enter th Pi?t of the knife atJhe breast in lh The Finger Mails.' No hand can be perfect when the nails are not properly attended to and well kopt. They ought to be most carefully cut with a pair of scissors made for the purpose which rounds them off at the corners. Tho skin at the baso of the nails should be pushed down with a soft towel each time the hands aro washed. Never force tho skin dawn with n knife or any sharp in-strument. If tho alxve plan is adhered to thore is no chance of "rag nails" appearing; t hoy only come when ono omits to push down the skin. The nails ought to pasa beyond the finger points and not be cut too short. Clean them with a piece of .fino flannel well rubted with soap. This is a far better plan than using a nail brush. After cleaning the nails and pushing down the skin they ought to be polished. This is quite an easy matter, as the most exquisite little boxes are now sold for a few shillings containing all the necessary appliances for the toilet of the nails. Chatter. A Pretty Bab; Basket. I should like to toll how I made a very pretty baby basket at a cost of only a few cents. Procure some stiff pasteboard, cut ' two eight sided pieces as large as you want the bottom of your basket to be, cover both on one sido with pink or blue lining cambrlo and overhand thorn together neatly. If d more delicate,use thin white muslin to cover the cambric. Now cut sixteen pieces to be covered in the same way for the sides, having the bottom of each piece just wide enough to fit on tho eight sided piece, and slanting it out toward the top to make the latter about an inch wider than the bot- - torn. After these pieces are covered over-hand them together to form a circle, sew the bottom in, add cushions and pockets to please the fancy and edge the top with cord, plaited ribbon or lace. One can make the baskot as costly as she pleases, but as described it is dainty enough for a princess, Cor. Housewife. Woman's Mistake in Chopping. No pursuit known to the feminine world so successfully and delusively disposes of time as shopping. The experienced hus-- j band and father knows that any engage ment with his family which stands at the end of a shopping day has large chances against fulfillment. Even a woman of dis-cretion in other matters who has hut an hour at her disposal will plan enough er-rands for that time to crowd & half day. "It is 3 o'clock," says the shopper. "Two hours more, and in that time I can easily call on the dressmaker up town, make sev-eral purchases at Bartle's and run in to look at the new etchings at the gallery, since I shall bo so near. I'll look at the book store as I come down and select a book for Susie's birthday. Then I can take a cross town car and get home in good season." When the great church bell chimes 6 she ' Is shocked, dismayed and ashamed to find that she must be late to dinner and keep the family waiting, and she frets herself Into such a nervous condition because of what she has done and what she has failed to do that husband and children learn to firead the Jaj's "whn mother oes shop- - . . Pemoline, but Meat. After your soup and fish you begin to talk with your neighbor. She is an American married to a French-man, and she toUt you this funny little story anent a famous little beauty who had been betrothed to, her husband before sho ever met him. Said she: "I was a little under tbe weather, and so when she called I had to ask her to come to my boudoir. On my writing desk stood a picture of my husband one he had given me when I first met him and which was framed very gorgeously in silver. After sho had talked about hersolf a little while sho went over to this picture, gave it the most loving look and said: 'Ah, he had that j taken for me.' Angry? Of course I was angry, but my native wit didn't desert me. I waited for a few minutes after saying. 'Did hef And then I reached out and got a little case from the table just beside me, opened it j and showed her the picture inside. It was the heads of my husband and myself taken together on our wedding trip, and then I announced: 'He had that taken for me.' I don't think she will bore me again." You couldn't help but laugh, it was such an in-tensely womanly thing to do. St. Louis Republic. ' Story of an Intelligent Cat. A New Hampshire physician sends me the following cat story, for which he vouches: ,. "Among other queer tricks Dick will take off my glasses very carefully with his paw, hold them with one claw and survey them with great apparent interest. "The first time he did this was one night when he had been napping and I reading. He is a great pet, and going to him I bent over, without indicating by any motion my meauing, and said gently: " 'Dick, if you want to go to bed take off my glasses.' "He immediately reached up a paw and took them off as defty as though it were an old habit. Thinking this a 'happen so' I put them on and made the same request in different words, with precisely the same result. After one more repetition he yawned and plainly intimated that was enough." Philadelphia Times. Still HuatUng. An energetic young man with a taste for newspaper work succeeded in obtaining employment on one of the New York da lies. He had said that all he wanted was a start, and ha was as busy as a buzz saw thereafter. One day a friend stopped him in his impetuous chase after fame Ions enough-t- o ask him how he was gettina along. "Oh, I am doing splendidly," the young man answered with enthusiasm. "Have you written anything yetf" "Yes, indeed I have. I wrote ten co-lumns and a half last week; all good stuff. "That is good. I am glad to know that you aie doing so well. Your last week's work must have paid you pretty well "' "No, not so very well," said the young writer hesitatingly; "you see they have not printed sny of TOy matter yet."-.Ne-w York Times. No oily substance, poultice or liniment should be put into the ear, because great injury is liable to be done. Warm water is the best possible, and about the only safe, "wash." Do not . scratch the ears with any metal; pin heads, hairpins or ear picks should be tabooed. Do not scream if an insect enters the ear- - warm water will drown it, and wash out the "remains." The ear is not nearly so liable to injury from the intruder as from frantic efforts to dislod-- it-H- all s Journal. la Cure f reckles. i, Freckles are of little acconut in children, who had better be left free to rnn and play in the sunshine; but older persons, beside guarding against unnecessary exposure, may need to increase the tone andTntri-tio-n of the skin, which can be done by washing it once or tvlce a day to tar soap and cold water, and afterward applying a lotion of borax and rose water Here and there person is troubled with rge, irregular patches, most frequent on |