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Show THE SALT LAKE TIMES SATURDAY, JULY 5, 1890. - j KA1LBOAD3. ' THE ' Popular Route To all Points East Only one change or curs Utah to Kan-- j sas City or 1st. Louis. Elegant Pullman Buffet Sleeping Cars Free Keclinmc Chair Cars. tie sure your ticket reads via the Missouri Pacific Railway II. C. Townsend, O. P. & T. A., St, lMM.it, S. V. Derrah, C. F. & I A., Iionmm. I'ruurcu Bldg Salt Luke City, Utah, Boise City, j, jt) MEflil iBHStlKflt El, Boise Cit Have the finest city property and over 3000 acres of firstclass under water, with water right, r Parties desiring acreage to live on and till can have their own tint which to pay for it at a low rate of interest. For particulars, address IDAHO LAND AND INVESTMENT CO Central Subdivision BOISE CIT1T, IDAHO, rntiT BLOCKS from Main street FOUR blocks from Postofllee and city Han . M. G. CAGE, "EAST SIDE; Thne-fourt- hs of a Mile from Business Center. most elegant, residence property In Botse City. Situated at. THE the upper blKhext part of the town, Wertng the Vapor Spring Bj.ulevard-.th- e flue", 1 " ' Idaho. Lots in this beautiful location during the next 6) days sold fr s $ $ t front foot. Correspondence invited. M. CAGE, Boise City, J. BKUMDACK. JOHN M, U;, Attornsys at Law and Bsal Estate Agsnts. ' BOISE CITY, IDAHO. " FRONT rooms. Broadbent block, upstairs. We have the only abstracts or real estate in n a ad Ada count y. If you want to invest, wj are thoroughly acquainted with to real estata. We have some of ihe choicest properties sale. We will also assist you i ing fiom others, if we have not properties to suit vou. uuu. IDAHO, ;(WS ftSf 10 T) is the largest and wealthiest city in the territory. DUloL It has railroads, electric lights, electric street rail-ways, good hotels, opera houses, schools, churches, etc. P j mines, paying over $1,000,000 per year in precious JVlLll metals. T inrl Offices, county, state and U, S. courts,' Legisla-LclIl- U ture, U. S. assay office, Boise mint, military post, ooard of trade and hot springs are located there. T7'ci. and extensive irrigating ditches are now being put V ClJt through the county, which will open ,up for cultiva- - tion the finest agricultural valley in the West. looking for place to invest should not fail to 1) ClI ULj visit Boise. Business, residence or farm prop-- . ' erty cheap. It will double within the next year. i.n... For information, address The Secretary of the Boise City Board of Trade. M M llai lacMnery Com C. P. MASON, Manager Headquarters for all Classes of Machinery. Engines and Boilers from power ana upwarcU in stock forimra diate delivery. Steam Pumps, Injectors, Horse Whims, Hoisting Engitte Eock Breakers, Wall's Rolls, Ingersoll Air Compressors and Drill, fub eating Oils, Mine, Mill and Smeller Supplies, Silver, Gold and Concent lg Mills erected and delivered in running order. Maine Office and Warerooms 259 S. Main Street, Salt Late HI AGENCY. BUTTE. MONTANA. D. VAN BUSKIRK. OFFICE T. C. STEB3W TheVan BuskirklnvestmentOo GENERAL REAL ESTAlE BUSINESS TRANSACTED. SPECIAL ATTENTION TO 1H FORMING OF SYNDICATES. AGENTS FOR EASTERN CAPITAL We do not handle SNAPS, but GOOD BARGAINS! EXPERIENCED OPERATOKS and Moinbyrs of the REA& Estaih Eichash 179 MAIN STREET, corner Second South. Incoporated, April 10, 1890. Totman Hsuse Building Company, J. T. LvNcn, - F. P. Mogf.nson, B. It. Hickok, President. - Treasurer. General Manager. Salt lAtiko, WtaLh. This company is purely a home institution, organized to stay, and most re-spectfully invites the attention of those desiring oottages, cither for homes or for sale, to the neat, tasty and attractive appearance presented by this class of cot-tages when completed. We claim that they are stronger and. warmer than the ordinary rustic building, the sections all being made and put together by ma-chinery, thereby making the work perfectly tight. We are now prepared to fur-nish estimates, take contracts and complete buildings on short time. The pat-ronage of the public .isjnost respectfully solicited. Office and yard No. 209 West North Temple street. ' Extiiiiinc Our Tiaiis aud frii-c- s KuiM. Patronize a Home Industry. Salt Lake Lithographing and Publishing Co. Lithographers, Printers; Blank Books Maker; and General Stationers. Engraved Calling Cards and Wedding Invitations. WE ARE NO IV IN OPERATION and ready for you ZHordcrs.'ZZ- - Elegant Work at Reasonable Prices, s No. 11 West First South street' H. H. VAN CLIEF, Manager. NORTH STAR & Refrigerator Sold. Only "by til Salt Lake Hardware Co., 32 WEST SECOND SOUTH STREET. Headquarters for Rubber Hose, Lawn Mowers, Hammocks, Guns, Fishing Tackle and Sporting Goods. TAKE tieie IMmAUKm CIIICAC30 MILWAUKEE & St PAUL FOR ALL POINTS EAST. Is tho only lino running solid Vestibule, J'.leciric l.iit ltcri. Steam lleaUd trains between Chicago. Milwaukee and Council HlulTs. Oma-ha. St. JosHjih. Kansas Cit v and Soitlx Citv. All trains composed of Pullman magnificent HleepinK cars and Tbe Finest Dining Cars in the World. For further Information apply to the nuaroat ticket oliioe, or ALEX. MITCHELL, Commercial Agent. 3G3 south Main street. Salt Lake City. --EXCLUSIVE DEALERS I-N-wmmmmmmm'mmm'mmam': Km'mtimx,lll,ma Sole Agents for James.Means' MSIk Spencer & Kimball, 160 Main Street. HOTELS. jWALKKK . HOUSK The Walker is Located in the Business Center of this City and has all tha Modem Improvements & Conveniences Pertaining toa strictly first-clas- s house It l managed as well as anv hotel in the West and Is trict.ly the IlusinesH and Tour-ist Hotel of Salt Lake City. Passenger Elevator. TheWalker&the Metropolitan Are the Two leading Hotels of Salt Lake City. G.S.ERB --Prop r. THE CULLEN. THE Modern Hotel OF SALT LAKE CITY. S. C. ETV ING, Proprietor. Mil PRINCIPAL POINTS EAST, WEST, NORTH and SOUTH AT THE CITY TICKET OFFICE. Union Pucific SYSTEM. MOUNTAIN DIVISION The Only Line , carrying: the Unite! Statei Overland Mail. Direct Connections all Points North and East NEWTIME CARD Tune 29, 1SSO. UTAH CENTRAL DISTRICT. AT T -- "Mgjnji American laoMjjili Clotlilflg and Sh'Oi MCompany lsoMjjal Alarm Clock With Eveiy $ia Suit and Qyer. ALSO, REMEMBER THE BIS STOCK OF SHOES, at American Clothing and Slioe fo. 110 Main Street. Passenger Trains Arrive and Um at Salt Lake City as follows: ROM THE NOHTn. c.omc. NORTH. Atlantic- - Fast Mail 3:30 a m. Fast Mail and Utah & Northern Local 810 a m Tjtah& Northern Local 10:.H)a.in- - Local Express aU-adi.- Kxpress M:S0p.m- i"t Atlantic and Portland' Butte 1,Jup ul Portland and Uutte Fast Mall 7"0p,in. Kxpress m Local Express.... ,'..'' FROM THK SOUTH. OOINO SOUTH. MlltordKxpress M5a.m. Jnab Express Juabhxpress 4:15p.m. MUford Express. . .J . ...V." . .." "V. " Vff J; "CJtals. and. ITerrada IDlstdct.""- - ' OOIN'ti WEST. FROM THE WEST For Oartteld Beach, daily S:ina.ni From Garfield Beach, daily..'..' w.m,nn, I! Kp.m . ... ........... .i,.w - " ; : " J : " ? '.isg : : : :B-- t t " 1 Except Monday and Tueiay'. F.xcelt S.mdy! W:,5-- Salt XiaSxi s5 "W"esterK. District Rcg:rnTviaar?ri,',.LakC Ji"y tUr lronlon- - SllvOT at T::o a.m S' WVE oLES' CF71? ESSEG U"l E, Passemrcr Azent. , . , Conoral Mana lOBLEJOMGO; mam s$K?j The bo!j ExcFusIve Hatters In Salt Lake i oilman's Celebrated JIais. me iii offering you a position. Come hero whenever ym can." Next night thore was no bulletin from Water Valley. Instead camo a brief messago to the editor signed by Mrs. Apthorpe, "Havijust found Willis ly-ing dead on the floor of tho office." Overwork, devotion to dnty and mias-matic surroundings had done their work and at the moment his future was in-sured and a field for his ambition lay displayed before him the modest, young southerner was called hence to receive from a higher power the diploma he had earned on earth. So life's lesson must be learned and life's honors gained sometimes in the class room where no dangers lurk greater than those connected with tho wrong demonstration of a problem or the faulty construction of a sentence, and some-times in stern combat with a visible foe or with unseen but equally deadly dis-ease. All honor to tho student who liks Solomon seeks wisdom, but let us keep as well in memory the ones who have graduated on other fields than those of learning. S0ME.PJ1IZES OF LIFE Many of Them Are Worthily Awarded to the Student, aud Some Are Hot, THE MEANING OF GRADUATION. Diplomas Have Been Won By Those Who Do Not Graduate From School or College. The transitive verb has the "To definition admit to GRADUATE. standing." So young man today completes college course creditably, and some cloud-less June afternoon leaves the ros-trum amid a shower of bonnets and with diploma in hand, he pr she has a right to feel that 'J1it heat aud sterm and battle cries They bravely sought to carve their way( Tbey fought, and fairty gained the prlie That marks manhood's commencement day. Tor them no broad and lettered scroll That tells of bookish triumphs won. They found where war's deep thunders roll The guerdon of their duty done. Or elae in swamps by fever swept They grappled with an unseen foe; And by the sick bed vigil kept Until the summons came to go. No rosea of the June time bloomed Beside the ghastly paths they trod; They walked, serene, sublime, yet doomed, Aloti the appointed ways of Ged. Feed C. Dayton. 6EBOEANT BOBILLOT. Hdnest endeavor has met vrttn wen earned recognition, and that the parch-ment, pompously phrased and numer-ously Bigned by the president and pro-fessors of the institute of learning, is of value chiefly as recording tho fact that work of a certain nature has been dons in a manner advantageous to the student and satisfactory to the preceptor. But in the ordinary acceptance of the term a largo number of people never graduate. That is, they take no scholastic degree, not because of lack of inclina-tion so much as lack of opportunity. Yet life graduates them, or sometimes death, in the broad moaning of the definition "to admit to an honorable standing." Who, for instance, could ask a grander diploma than that award-ed to Jean Bobiilot, soldier of France, hero of Tonquin, who died on the field of Jionor, and by the sacrific of his life in firing a countermine secured the safety of a thousand leagured comrades. The torn and mangled corpse of the young brave rests beneath the sod of a foreign land, but at the capital of the re-- JpSil DEFENDING HIS CAPTAIN. public he loved and for which he fought stands a statue of the gallant sergeant na a perpetual reminder of the fact that Franco honors those who fall in her ser-vice. Bobiilot is depicted as loading a forlorn hope, an act of heroism which brought him the cross of the Legion of Honor. The cross arrived after his later end fatal deed of daring and was placed upon his heart when the torn form of the gallant youth was laid to rest. Courageous as Bobiilot but more for-tunate in the event was Steven O'Con-nor, a native of Now York and a resi-dent of Rockford, Ills., who entered the regular army beforo the war and fought through tho great struggle as a private. He won his diploma in a peculiarly gal-lant manner by saving tho life of his captain on the fiold of battle in the last year of the contest between the sections It did not take the form of a degree ol master of arts, but that of a second lieu-tenant's commission, and O'Connor in a higher rank still enjoys the honors gained by daring. But "peace haa its victories as well as war," and Commencement day comes as well to the enduring civilian as to the un-daunted soldior. With sorrow and ad- - I s : i i i rim iiisPs-3 DIED WHILE ON DUTY. miration I recall the story of Willis self sacrifice. He was an ob-scure but ambitious telegraph oi?rator, stationed at Water Valley, Miss. When the yellow fever desolated the southern country some twelve years ago he stuck to his post while others fled. He nursed the sick, he buried the dead, he gave 'courage to the living. Night and day he toiled, one hour at the key, another at the bedsido of tha suf-fering. The Chicago Times asked him ior daily reports, and no more pathetio stories of endurance ever fiVd northward along nnres than thoso ho sent. One day he telegraphed Manag-' ing Editor Dennett: "If I live through this may I have a place on The Times?" Promptly the answer back: "Cer-tainly. Your splendid work warrants SaBiariKE3 Game. EAST BOUND TRAINS. No. U No. 4 Atlantic Atlantic. Mail. Kxpress Leave Otfdnn 9:80 a.m. 5:40 p.m Arrive Suit bake 10:-t- a.m. 6 : "5 p.m Leave Salt Lake It :U) a.ra. 7:10 p.m Arrive Provo 13:.Klp.m. U:a0p.m Leave Provo 12:fiup.in. V:'M p.m Arrive (ireen River 0:40 p.m. 4:50 a.ra Leave Ureen River 7:f)p.m. 4:W a. in Arrive Urand Junction. .. :J p.m. :30 a.m Leave Grand Junction. .. 11:1)8 p.m. 10:110 a.m Arrive Pueblo ,1:05 p.m. 2:00 a.m Arrive Denver 7:45 p.m. 7:15 a.m WEST BOUND TRAINS. N.7T No. 3 Pacific. Pacific Mail. Kxpress Leave Denver 11:00 a.m. 8:00 p.m. Leave Pueblo 1:S) p.m. 12:40 a.m. Arrive lirand Junction. .. 5:30 a.m. 6:00 p.m. Leave tirand Juncwjn... 7:00 a.m. 7:15 p.m. Arrive Green River :Hf a.m. 11 :5M p.m. Leave Green Kiver 11:50 a.m. 12:05 a.m. Arrive Provo :S!5 p.m. 7:l.r a.m. Leave Provo b:50 p.m. 7:)0 a.m. Arrive Salt Lako 8:30 p.m. 8:15 a.m Leave Salt Lake 8:45 p.m. 8:S5 a.m. Arrive Ogden 10:00 p.m. 10:40 a.m. LOCAL TRAINS. SALT I.AKK AND OUDEN. Leave Salt Lake: Arrive Salt Lake: 8:ii0ft.m. K:'i5a.m. 10:45a.m. lli:IOp.ra 4:a0p.m. 8:46p.m. :56p.m. 8:40 p.m SAM LAKE TO BINGHAM AND WASATCH. Lv Halt Lake. .7:40 a.m ILv Wasatch. . 10:00 a.m Arr Bingham. ::ifi .i.m Lv Bingham.. 8:5ftp.m Arr Wasatch. :1& a.miArr Salt Lako 4:ai)p.ra . C. DOIIOB, J. H. BENNETT, Jen. Manager. ien. Pitas. Age Kie flot a Fotnter. Two men were playing a gwme of encbrc in a drawing room car on the Erie road, and a little woman who had a seat near by watched the play with great in-terest. Finally, sn certain play wm made ahe oslcedt "Did he take tAt Wck with the king o! hearts?" "Yes'm." "Ho took your queen with his king?" "Jtiiit so, ma'am." "But a quen is high than a king." "Oh, no, ma'am, the queen ranks ono below the king." "Is that so everywhere?" "Yefi'm." "Can't be no mistake?" "Not the slightest. Don't you play?" "Not much. My husband set out to learn me, but I took all his kings with my queens, and he got mad, and quarreled about it, and, and" "And you don't play any more?" "N no, sir, but I'll telegraph him within tho next ten minutes that I was wrong, aud that all in forgiven, and that I'll return and let liim even take the bowers with ten spots if he wants to!" New York Sun, DiBconctrted at tha Turk. Brogin Phwere's the Facetious Iyeeper Eight in front of you. Brogin Doan' tell Kelly Oi seen it, Joanna. I laid him a five dolly bet lasht night they hod no wings. Puck. Utab Central Railway. Time Card in effect May 22, 1890. PaenKr Trains leave anil arrive at Suit Lake City and Park City daily us follows: SALT I.AKK CITY. Train leaved Eighth So and Main at 7:30 a.m ''3a arrives" "" " 150::00.0) pa..mm ', ' " " ?:30p.m PARK (jTY. Train arrives Park City 10:00 a.m " 3 " " 7:30p.m " 3 leaves " 7:.Hia.m ' " " 6:00 p.m Freight tra'nn leave and arrive at Salt Lako and Park City dally, except Sunday, an fol-lows: Train No. 1 leaves Salt Lake II :30.m li aniv.'s ' 3:lfp.m " It leaves Park City 11:00 a.m b arrives " 4:00 p.m No passengers carried on freiRht trains. PARsr.NUKti bates: Hetween Salt Lake City aud Park City, siiiBlo trip. ti. HHtween Salt Lako City and Park City, round trip, f3. JOA H. YOUNG, T. J. McINTOSIf, Manager. t'en. Ft. cfc 1'as. Agt. A lUuKteil Romance. "Miss Clara," began the young man, "it becomes necessary for me to speak to you upon a subject which deeply con-cerns us both. I will first aslc you to re-call to mind the List evening I was here. Woparted, if you will remember, upon tli steps. As I proceeded slowly across the lawn the full moon camo from be-hind a cloud and enveloped me in a flood of mellow glory. Suddenly, Miss Clara, it seemed to mo without a note of warning, 1 was overwhelmed" "Ona moment, Mr. Smithnrs," inter-rupted tho beautiful girl as she stuck in an extra hairpin aud turned down the gas three-quarte- of an inch. Then drawing her chair still closer, she indi-cated by a wave of the hand that ho could proceed. "I was about to observe, Miss Clara," continued the young man, "that I was overwhelmed by tho onslaught of your father's dog Grip, who ato up three weeks of my salary in half a minute, and unless your pa mites up for that suit there is going to be war." - "Say no more, Mr. Smithers," replied the young lady, rising slowly and pain-fully from the JenneBS Miller position that she had assumed but a moment be-fore, and pointing to he door, "Go. I will have pa send you a check for nine dollars by tha first mail.- "- ""othier and Furnisher. Hit First Kxperience. There was a shofttiiur party at Blank Hall, and among the guests was Sir X. Z., a very bumptious and overbearing man. His next neighbor was a quiet, inoffensive country parson who had not reached even to the dignity of a living, Sir X. Z.'s manner to tho meek little curat o was about as offensive as it could bo without leading to a breach of the peace. The curate bure it all with ex-emplary patience, and Bhowed no out-ward expression of his intense irritation. At the dinner table at night Sir X. Z. aud the curate sat opposite to each other, and the conversation turned on tho sizes of gnus and lengths of barrela. The curate shot with a small bore, and ex- - pressed his beliof in them. Sir X. Z., who had been in India big game shout- - hiS, thought to crush his clerical oppo-- nont liy saying: "I suppose you shoot with a really bie; bore?" "Not till ," replied tho meek one. The laugh that went round the table was balm to the curate's soul. Churchman. Preseut Addrenl Unknown. Visitor Can I see Mr. Coupon? Clerk I think not. sir. Visitor Isn't he in? Clerk-- No, sir. ' Visitor Out of town? Clerk I think so, sir. Visitor Can you tell me where Mr, Coupon is? Clerk No. sir. I cannot. He died last Monday. Munsey's Weoklv. " Merely uaoit. Relative Why did you remain single no long, Lucille? Haughty Bride It was always my I won't, auntie: Dry Goods Chroniclo. |