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Show ' 8 ...... THE SALT LAKE TIMES. TUESDAY OCTOBER 21. 1890.. ; - JHi hstf turr. ra"": sss "M s iii"ter --ssss-i ipw1" " trwwt "wjiaF?" vpAvw1 81. 22 E. 2nd South. ((SHlljy Telephone mQpfl 35,000 Weber Pianos In Use. e vty "', fcVt 'ta.W:. " ' ' .WfV ssssusssst A &fo'wm COULTER i SNELGROVE, m&tn, o &z , W tejj-P- I lU I j ' U ' r ' w6u,jj 8 I 7 Ml0 Street. Salt L.. City. fLtffsW jsSTi 1H90Qijft flitti imm y I real estate I Jjfflffif The Latest and Most Wearable gMlMflt EmkMME - - uoa,;. . , Guaranteed Mortgages for Safe Millinery- - , , - Wo,. f .0,,,; 126 Main St., Salt Lake lill- JWa . To be found in the Ci. flip f.,f;V;,; ' 4W!lffiflMRl& 153 Main St. Salt lake City. I ?fkynillJ'&ull lawr ll IB IIpss? 1 3Esn3siss s5r ffM " WmlMa f ' 'S1:. " T. M. SUR81UGH1 iSi i t w IRanitalnf , . $22,000,000. I I - I 75 W. First Sth St, Salt Lake. I I mmmmmmiKmmammmmmmmmmmm mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmtm bihhhmhhmmhmmmmmhmmwhmm mmmmmmmmmmmmmimmmamammmmmmmmi mmmmtmtmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmtmtmmmmmm 'iBaMHHMaaMBHMHMHHMHHHaHHMMHHHHaBHHaHMMiMiMHiMMM ;::;rWwwot- bw ;iv 0 . Steam Dye Works ! "THE :: TAILOR." mi? : ' ' -- k,- f V ap3rrf"V?H tr.X-- i .T r Embroidery, Silks and Linens, Design- - J : Exclusive Ratters and Furriers, R(T MjtC, U Thomas McKeivie. propi , V mJ .. w.Bt. aaSr ; : 198 Main St , . Ladies' and Gent'a Clothes Dyed, jQOTelegraph M Styles WReceive! Per- - 5 The very es, Turb,nes V 'tt;8S Pl-1- 1 Cleaned and Bepaired..: XAKEEP ' - . fewfcflfesRl tt Also a nice une or (Kffir . iJIC IW WBbIIUrtta,IJUlv;- - ,W8 X Y0EUvh ; feet-Fi-t Guaranteed. ,fc!sr4 Mrs; F. R. Patterson.;5 .Mlf;H. -- 3' VARIETY HALL. r. RSLr . foihg&tnfa SS Ctefi r k ' SeollJaeibiebBld'j, Sill lull CItJ, ''iSnVflUKf lteS tfM I J3m J j, M. FEA8LK&N, : : .PROP'S. 1 ..JSlljB I Dealers in Fine Shoes. , I : i l , Established, 1872. i " - I T" 1 TT S TV 'vT "TT' ' ROCK SPRINGS COAL CO. P -- v tW il WM l J O; i The Occidental. W.J. KING, w,,.,-,-. ,,--, PEf orsalei 6E.RrSt South. SlfifM " JUwJsWa-filfrf- V SCENTS. . Hardware, Stoves, Tinware & I 3 1 Deai to k lp. a "' ' ' gWteBjaC ,BBKV,ift "fls!-- ""' WfllMlJJt K-- Furnishing fl P iiwmr IM1V Our cellars stocked with flrst-olas- s Roods only J l uo,,us" ' , J Ift All! I HT vWI Wihiltoi"itiaalffl?irii,f coWsa (s4iiMsm U. Hi. niilUMUlJ, use cau not be Evened. 279 S Main St Salt Lake Citv :.. : FamnyTradeEecelvesStriotAttention. ' IfetUli W5WI Z . 0 TelePh0n8 " ' H' M illOi ; ' PINE BAE GOODS OF ALL KINDS. I I ": I ! 209 Main Street. IM and Hontana MacMnery Company C P. MASON, Manager. Headquarters for all Glasses of Machinery. Engines and Boilers from power and upwards in stock for imm diate delivery.; Steam Pumps, Injectors, Horse Whims, Hoistinz Enginei Rck Breakers, Wall's Rolls, Ingersoll Air Compressors and Drill Lubri eating Oils, Mine, Mill and Smeller Supplies, Silver, Gold and' Con'oentrat I g Mills erected and delivered In running order. Maine Office anfl Warerooms 259 S. Main Street, 'Si Late D. AGENCY. BUTTE, MONTANA. uflnjlA Union -- Pacific System. J1F The only line Carrying tlie United States Mail. Direct Connections Between all Points North and East. NEW TIME CARD, OCTOBER 8, 1890. .H-- 1 UtaJa Central District.. Passenger Trains Arrive at and Leave Salt Lake City Daily as Follows : ',' 'v. rBOH TUB NORTH. ..' ; , L . GOING HORTB. ' ' AtlantlcFastMall. .' S:9).ra At!ant e Fast Mail and TJ, &N. Local. 8:ll)vtu itv-v- i Utah & Northern Local. 10 :50a.m 'Local Express l:30p.m A a-- Express..........' .v.L9:30p.u tt Portland Butte and Atlan - Portland a'nd .Butte Fast Mall, tto EPre8 6K o,m , r , i Local Express..... .. 7:30p.ra ';,-- FROM THB SOUTH.. "T;V"'. , L- - j . .. GOING SOUTH. . MilfordExpress ...,8:45 a.m. Juab, Provo, Lehi, Ironton and Eu-- Juab, Provo, LebJ,.Ironton and Eu- - wka Express 7:10 a:tn ' reka Express. d:45p.m, Miiford Express 4:U0p.m Utah & Nevada District. ' ; GOlSGWKST. " II V FBOMWBST. Through mixed daily except Sundays. 8:10 a.m. Through mixed daily except. Sundays .8 :15 p.m. ; EQUIPMENT: : .; i " The Atlantic Fast Mail," leaving Ogdcm at 9:56 a. m.. is equipped with Puhman Palace Sleeper from San Francisco to Chicago; Pullman Palace Sleeper, Salt Lake to Chicago; Day Coaches .3) Salt Lake to Omaha, ' , f . " Tit Atlantic Expresf," leaving Ogden at :30j. m.. Is equipped with Day Coaches and Through Dining Car to Council Bluna; Pullman Palace Sleeper- Denver to Council Bluffs; Pullman Palace Sleeper, Salt Lake to Cheyenne. This is Through Sleeper to St Louis; Pullman Colonist Sleeper, San Francisco to Council Binds. C. F. RESSEGUIE, . S. W. ECCLES, General Manager. , " - Qnsral Passenger Agenti "' '. .''' ' ., -j:' ; . :1 .f; " caoin aead iigiits. , From thence he reached the lashings of the stern boat, but here weakness again overpowered him, and after working his way into the boat ha remained some time insensible, but at length he revived and came on board. He had ;tried to speak, but he could not. When the helmsman fled from the wheel he had sense enough to see the ship's danger, and from the impulse of a sort of instinct he seized the wheel and brought her up to the wind. ..v The morning dawned, and the next day passed, then another, and another, but the death fiend came not againl He had lost his first intended victim and he left the ship in peace.-Sylvan- us Cobb, Jr., in Yankee Blade. ' times Capt. Johnson inquired the mean-ing of this, but the natives were either unable or unwilling to give any plain answer, and it was not until the last lot of tusks had been conveyed to the boats and the natives had been remunerated for their labor that the least clew could be obtained as to the cause of this strange desertion, and then for the first time the captain received the startling intelli-gence that the cholera was sweeping down the rivert As soon as this fact became known to the seamen they wildly huddled into their boats, as though the fearful death angel was at their heels, and silently, yet with powerful strokes, they pulled down the fatal stream. At length they reached their Bhip, and' though they breathed somewhat more freely as they trod their own deck, yet each counte-nance bore the stamp of deep fear. The ivory was soon got on board, and with all haste the old Vulcan was got under way. It was nearly night when the ship got off, and with a good breeze from the northward and eastward she stood well on her course. . On the next morning, shortly after breakfast, and while tho crew had begun to think that they had no occasion for further fear, a young man named Walter Addison was taken suddenly sick, i ' : Young Addison was the favorite both of the officers and the crew, and as it was reported that he was thus ill a gen-eral consternation soized upon all hands. The young man felt at first a giddiness and a sickly chill, and in the course of two hours he sank into an alarming de-bility, the countenance assuming a deadly paleness and hia skin tearing all tho appearance of a corpse. ; Poor Addi-son suffered till noon,' and then the startling announcement went through the ship that he was dead. , This was the first, but who should be the nest? A panic had seized upon the men; the cholera was with them, and none dared remove the form of their dead shipmate from his berth. Night approached, and with it came an almost dead calm, but the corpse still remained in tho forcastle, nor did the men dare to go thither. The captain urged that the longer presence of the body would breed more dangerous contagion, but tne only answer he received was a mournful shake of the heads about him. At length, finding that all arguments were useless, he turned to his mate and askod him if he would assist himself in throwing the body of the dead man over-board. The mate at first hesitated, but in a moment he signified his consent, and together himself and the captain went down into the forecastle. They dared not remain long enough with the corpse to sew it up, nor even to attach to it a sinking weight, but throwing over it a single blanket, they managed to get it upon deck and lay it across the bul-wark of the starboard bow. .A moment Capt. Johnson hesitated he opened his lips, breathed a prayer for the soul of the departed, and then, while a shudder ran over his frame, he let the cold form of young Walter Addison slide into, the blue water! Instinctively he cast Mb eyes over the side as the deed was done, and by the pale phosphorescent light he could just see the corpse sink, then rise and sink again, and then with a heavy step and a still heavier heart he walked aft. "'..'- - The first watch had been set, but the other watch dared not go below, and huddling themselves beneath .the long boat they sought the repose which they feared to seek where their, companion hud died; but each seemed to fear his neighbor, for none knew Where the con-tagion might be. At 11 o'clock the slight breathings of the air which seemed for the last few hours' to have had no settled point, began to eather more force from the nortnward and westward, and ere long a good fresh breeze filled the ship's canvas and started her through the water. The wind con-tinued to increase, and before midnight all hands were called to take in the At 13 o'clock vth mid watch was set, and all hands were for a few moments brought in contact with each other. No further symptoms of the dreaded pestilence had appeared, and they began to take hope, t ; It was half past 13 o'clock. An old seaman named Bill Shippen had the helm, while the remainderf the watch were either in the gangway or else for-ward. The wind continued .fresh, but yet steady, and the old ship was close hauled upon it, lying some two points off from her true course. The Bhfp'a bell was suspended over the binnacle, and old Shippen reached over and struck the first half hour after midnight ' He had just resumed his position, and was gaz-ing intently at the compass, when he felt a hand laid upon his shoulder, and on turning around he beheld by the struggling beams of the binnacle lamp the pale, deathly features of Walter Ad-dison! . For an instant the old sailor remained rooted to the spot, and then, utteripg a i v.- ' , ' i I snarp cry or fear, he let go tne wheel ana j darted forward. In a moment the ship began to fall off, and as she brought the flat surface of broad canvas to the wind she heeled over alarmingly; but soon the pale specter that had frightened the helmsman from his post caught the wheel, and laid the helm hard down, and ere long the ship was once more to the wind. r Shippen's cry had started all hands from their listlessness, for they thought the cholera fiend had assailed him, but from his broken ejaculations they soon learned what was the matter, and in a body they crowded aft, and by the dim light from the binnacle they saw the specter helmsman! Every knee trembled, and every Sngue clove to the roof of its mouth. None dared to approach him, nor did any move back. At this juncture the captain came on deck. His eye caught the corpse like form that still held the wheel, and he, too, was riveted to the spot where he stood. "Shipmates, relieve me from here, or I shall faint. I am cold and weak!" at length came from the lipja of the seem-ing specter, in faint, agonized tones. Capt. Johnson hesitated an instant,, and then he rushed forward and laid Ms hand upon the trembling form before him. It was cold and wet, but he knew that it was a living man. , One after an-other of the men gathered about, and before long all knew that young Walter Addison still lived. The captain had him conveyed to the cabin, where every-thing that could be thought of was ad-ministered for his comfort, and it was not long before he sufficiently revived to give an account of his strange escape j from the cold, deep grave to which he had been consigned. ; ' . ' I , It seemed that young Addison had fallen into that deathlike lethargy which not infrequently results ' from sudden j cholera, and which, as all who are ac-- t quainted with the disease must bo aware, ; so nearly resembles death that even the best physicians have been deceived by it. The sudden immersion in the cold water had revived his dormant senses, and as the Bhip had but a, slight motion at the time he came to a partial realiza-- j tion of his situation before she had i passed him, and by considerable exer--! tion he managed to get hold of the rud--f der chains. He tried to call for assist-ance, but his tongue was so swollen that he found it impossible, and after remain-ing upon the chains long enough to re-gain more strength he .worked his way np till he sot hold of the lanyards of the A SPECTRE HELMSMAN. In the summer of 1839 the ship Vul-can, under the command of Capt. Isaac Johnson, was on her homeward bound passage from the Indies with half a cargo of tea, and she stopped at Cape Negro, on the coast of Beuguela, after a lot of ivory to make up her load. Hav-ing gone on shore at the Cape the captain learned from the native con-tractor that he would have to go some fifteen miles up the Cannibal's river, as the elephant hunters had all the boats further up in the country, so that con-sequently they had not been enabled to bring the ivory dtjwn, Capt. Johnson was somewhat disap-pointed at this cause for delay, but with-out waiting to find useless fault he de-termined to man his own boats and pro-ceed at once up the river. It required . four trips to bring all the ivory down, but as they had opportunity to take ad- -' vantage of the slight tides the task was accomplished in four days. On the last trip the captain went himself, leaving the first mate in charge of the ship, and on arriving at the small village where M the ivory was stored he was not a little surprised to find that nearly all the I miserable hutg were deserted. Several WHERE SHE COMES. " With heavy elders overhung, Hulf hid in clover masses, An old fence rambles on, among , The tangled meadow irrasses. It makes a shade for lady fern ' Which nestles close beside itj while clematis, at every turn, nd roses ahnoa; hide it. In shade of overhangine sprays ' ', And down a sunny hollow, By hazel copse, and woodland ways, ;'.'.. The winding fence I follow; By rose and thorn and fragrant dew, . In search of somethiug sweeter ! The orchard gap, where she comes through. And I go down to meet her I i' " i The sunlight slants along the fence, Where lichens gray it over, And stirs a hundred dreamy scents From.fern and mint and clover; ' Butithough the air Is sweet today I know of something sweeter: 4 That she can only come this way, - And I am sure to meet her I, And so, while chipmunks ran a match To tell the wrens who's coming, And all across the brier patch T hero sounds a drowsy humming The hum of honey Booking; bees I seek for something sweeter: A gap amongst the apple trees, Where I am going to meet herl Charles B. Going In Scribner's. He Got tti job. Farmer Crane, who lives over on the town line, has some very unique meth-ods of examining the men who apply to him from time to tim'fbr work. One evening a tall, big bened fellow, in his shirt sleeves, asked Crane if he had any work to do. "I don't know,", said the farmer. "Can you tend horses?" "Yes, indeedy." I've worked about horses all my lite." "Come around here to the pump," said Crane, and he led the way to a common sucker rod, pump near the barn. Going inside he got a long, narrow pitcher, and placed it under the spout "There," said he, "pump that pitcher full of wa-ter." -- The big boned fellow complied, carefully pumping the pitcher full with-out spilling a single drop. it "That'll do," said Crane. "Go inside and get ready for supper; I'll give you a; job in the morning. . : About a week later the big boned fel-low asked. Crane what pumping the pitcher full of water had to do with his getting a job j - "Well, I'll just tell you. This is mighty dry "weather, and water is get-ting scarce. You must have thought that far, for you djdri't spill any water. If you hadn't pumped; hard the water j would have been spilled, and if you had j pumped too hard the water would have gone over .the pitcher, '" Now, the. way 1 argue is thiss If a fellow don't pump hard enough- - he won't work hard enough.- If he pumps too hard he'll work too hard for a little while, and i don't want either kind to work for: me. You pumped exactly right, and yon got a job."--Tole- do Blade. |