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Show . THE SALT LAKE TIMES. THURSDAY .NOVEMBER 13. 1890. 3 6lo, M. Scorn 3is. Ghwdiskik II. 8. RtnrrrnLj President Secretary. GEO. M. SCOTT & CO., (IXCORPORATED.) PIT. A T iTTTRR IN-- Hardware and Metal, Stoves, Tinware, Mill Findings, Etc. AGISTS FOB the Dodge Wood Pulley, Kotbllng't gtoelo Wire Rep. Vtcunm Cylinder and Engine 011a, Hercules Powder, Atlas Engines and Boil ere, Hack Injectors, Buffalo Scales, Jefferson Uorst Wtuin, Blake Pumpa Miners' and Blacksmiths' Tools, Eta 168 MAIN STREET, Salt Lako City, - - Utah COHN BROS. 111 LADIES' MPiPl Berlin and Sew York Xovefc in ll'rap, Jackets and Flush Saps. EXPRESS - BRINGS - US - NEW - ADDITIONS - DAILY. Handsome Wraps In Reaver. Corkwrvw anl Silk, elaborately trimmed! and embroidered at $ 18 Ot). tt.VOO. $17.30. I.'O if" aud I.M.St), Plush Wrapt at tin tot. V3 ) Ovl ami .". 00. SiiH-kine- t Jit'kt. lh Iwst tiiit can 1 pmduivd in this country, at $.1 75, U.50. 1.1.00. 00, 7 00. IS .V). 110 OO. l 00 sue" 13 no. I.ateM St ! in Cloth Jackets (rum J" 0) an I upwarde. I'.ush Jackets. 11..K) In l.'l 00. Plmh S.ii.U.t, llS.OO to .U 00, Finest Alaska Seal J rickets, 1110.00 to f.'uUM. All Exceptional Values. If you see our Stock and hear our prices you cannot fail to verify our claim to superior assortments and the best values possible to find. liAROUAS -- 1. - TMWJS-A- M MAPPERS, Wt are offering a very choice new lot at $10.00 to $ -- ! 00, MISSES' AND CHILDREN'S CLOAKS QDPTIIF QUIP ct Children's rSralchena, plaid and plala colon, at OlLUflU 0iLL 11 M forsie4, 17 AO for else 12. ThM are exceptional bar gains, aud wlieu sold out cannot be rrpUii-d- . Mimes' Plaiu Cheviot and Plaid Newmarkets, the most complete) ami rimcut evar brought here, at i OO and upward. Infauts' short Costs, plaids and plain colors, two, threes and four Tear, cuormout vani-iy- . 13 00 to 110 00. It vi' Kill Suits, for agot two to Ore, at 14.50 and W.0O, Children's Fur Sett at tow prices. LACE CURTAINS We hare Just placed on sale a shipment of Curtains direct front Glasgow and Nottingham, and we are prepared to otter great bargains. This oiportt-nlt- y Is not likely to occur again on of the change In the tariff. W offer Scotch Lace Curtains, handsome designs, all new, ml 11.00, lt.2. 11.50, 11.75, '.'.00. 13.50. 1.1.1X1, 1.1.71. II. UO. 13 00 and In m a pair. Irish I'olnt Lace Curtains at IH 00. II j 00 and 117.00. Tamboured Mwlas Curtains at ID 00. IM.AO, 113 iW. II 00 and tX) 00. Chenille Portiere at 13.00, 11.00, 17 . W.S0, III 00, VI 00 117.00 and 130 00. We are showing Elegant Hew Designs in SHAWLS this season. We arc Sole Aficnts in Salt Lake City for the cele-brated Dr. Jaqer's Sanitary Woolen Underwear and Hosiery for Ladies' and Children. COHN13ROS. (7 Office, 219 S. Main Street. 1. 1 ftJJ Vnder Poet Offloe. A. r!ymtm CARPET cleaning ' ppc, 'l I titter end Mattri Eenoyatlng IfflXfPVS) Carpets Made and Laid, Furniture Re iJk5r i pairing and Cleaning. 4f "SELtoJU 2--. S. WHITEHEAD David James & Co,, TINNERS, PLUMBERS, Gas 1 Steam Fitters Dealers in Plumbing Material, Pumps, Pipeiand Fittings, ' Steam Heating Supplies, Tin and Iron Roofing, Galvan-ized Iron Cornice, Guttering, Garden H e and Lawn Sprinklers, Filters, Etc Iffo. 67 i main Street. aV.&t f m i tl . jld, &fWw f --, F. E. SCHOPrE & CO. mmmmmm ff' ' Wholesale and KnUI! D'iilm(a Urgn 1 ftiMtortim-n- t of : L Ranges, Cooking, Parlor & ifJ ( Heating Stoves m fortisril or Soft M Si. ItolllMI fimilKiilnir Roods A Q4 Sole local ugeuU tor th Celebrated " M & D" Wrought Steel Ranges v fik- - A"11 Ra(lllllt Hiri BoiDe Coa1' J """" Boynt(n's Fiirti-- e for llsrd Jjp 11 orBoftCoal. ,fJt I Osll nd fstlsfy jroiirwlrnn. We Inks n- I p WJfAil! tire in liowiiiuoiir go"!". Ourinotio- -' guli k I re.A'iLJrlef!J J Bales sod bmall 1'n.llts." r S&2S& F, E. SCHOPPE & CO, in y B3Mln"l.- - Halt talis City t'lh. Pabst Brewing Col (formerl PHIU BZiT t Export, Bohemian, Hoffbrau and Select Blue Ribbon Keg and Bottled Beers shlppod Immediately upon order. THE FAMILY TRADE SOLICITED FREE DELIVERYI TELEPHONE 3S5I B. K. BLOCHX'Co.; 15.17COMMERCUL ST. --A.con.t3. r-- ".'.-- J the ummm m mm coslm.it , urn"'' st, M M" i HJJ,'"1 ' yJWMi.' ' ' iCf'& F . . V j i . , TtWtoMSU; : : 421 WIST Wt S31TJ. t : .a lull MflRE! I Franklin Fire Insurance Co., Illlllll ,OF PHILADELPHIA. . Organized 1829 Assets, : $3.174,357.0 t Charter Perpetual FhTbvE 1.765,2)4.71 B-r- " fantinental Insurance Co. wl 1 III II 111 NEW YORK. Illlllll mEU " I. You purchase a.policy that you expect lo be worth about 12.000 in case of fire, you 11 should investigate the company with the I same care that you would use in lending Illlllll t'iat sum' III No States in the Union Hill Have as Good Insurance Lawg as Now York and Ponn. - ' W ' Of fbm CaustourOfflc, V1T JE& SAFETY FUND LAW. at mr omn tW TblL prfu th fllm of t Corner T 3L (1Hjrll.tK. lna-- r ibis i,.,.. to tnplu. fnrdu rn h MrhM it" Wi both bar. to be brliMr M u polity bokleni sa tuog a s i.U y rwi n m rsi DAVIS & STRINGER, I 8twt I ""' f!i,HaHtt. ) Agents SPEGIAL :r ttri lit b running oa 8 aw West n3 Ttb wuth wttam ar- - DAVIS,& STRINGKR.I f W. J. KING, Dealer In " " HARDWARE7sT0VEa TINWARE k HOUSE FURNISHING GOODS. 279 SoctH Kiln Strut, MliXi Qij, GUi E. SELLS, J. TUCKER. H. W. SELLS. Sells & Corrjpany, Wholesale and Retail Dealers in Lumlier. First South itrect, oppnaita 14th Ward Aivsmbly Rooan, P. 0. H 10. Heaeer larl rf Arautraaz k Batiey. Salt Zialic Transfer Co. PATTEN & GLENN. Car. Lots a Specialty. Kt-- ziHi Off US W.lirU South t " .ICJ r 3 TtkphemtKL ' ,,rr just been taken from a dusty closet. The pillars to tie grand saloon of the steamboat Puritan, of the Fall River line, are adorned with floral hammered leaves, from which hundreds of lights jut out. An immense electrolier, twelve feet high and sixty-seve- n feet wide, is to be seen in a Roman Catholic church in Montreal. It is made principally of bronse and has 400 lights. , One of the three light fittings has one light on a globe pendant from the center and the others at the arms with cut glass drops calculated to increase the brilliancy of the reflection. A light hanging from the mouth of a bronze fly is a small but one of the prettiest fittings. These flies are placed at irregular intervals on the walls, and make a curious and pretty effect. The electrolier in the capitol at Austin, Tex., is fourteen feet high and eight feet in diameter. The lights are arranged to spell and are in the form of a star, the "Lone Star of Texas." The most expensive electric fixture ever made was an electrolier which hangs in the drawing room of James Rothschild, of London. The design is of the Louis XVI period. It is twenty-eigh- t inches in diameter and about five feet high. It is made of gilt bronze and rock crystal and cost 3,000. ELECTRIC LIGHT FIXTURES. Anino lightoak leaf electrolier of pierced china, withcolored metal, is one of the mat recent fittings designed. The small globe lights are now beauti-fully ornamented and the glass is of var-ious colors; formerly it was transparent. Cupids holding cut glass balls, with drooping lamps of bronze and containing twenty-fou-r lights, are among the finest of recent productions. Little electroliers of gilt and white metal and oxidized silver or copper, with rose reflectors, are favorite fittings for small rooms. A fixture still seen is a chandelier, made of wrought iron. It has four lamps and is held by a bronze boy, who is peering down into the lights. A very pretty fitting is a wrought iron lamp, with a dragon twisting himself around it and flames in the form of electric lights pouring from his month. A fixture made of oxidized silver is a boy's face with light shining from the mouth. Another of the same pattern baa two lights coming through the eye. Bracket lamps, mostly in the Louis XVI style, are made to look as if they had been stored away for bandied yean and bad Miss Caroline Wilkinson, for forty years the fiance of Alexander H. Stephens, is dead at Atlanta. They were never mar-ried on account of his ill health. A successful broker on the open board of trade in Chicago is Miss Fannie A. Bliun, a young Vermont girl, who was a clerk in an insurance office a few years ago. Miss Mildred and Miss Mary Lee, the daughters of the great Confederate leader, are tall and stately women, of command-ing figure. They are reserved in their manner. Sara Jeannette Duncan Is a young Cana-dian authoress who has been gaining a name for herself by a book of travels. She is quite a prettj woman, of alight figure, withbrown hair and light blue eyes. Mrs. Custer's most Intimate friend is said to be the actress Clara Morris, be-tween whom and the widow of the brave and handsome cavalry officer a warm at-tachment has existed for many years. Ouida, the novelist, has abandoned the beautiful villa of Scandicei, where she has lived for many years and done much of her best work, for Florence, where she occu-pies the first floor of a spacious old palace. By the will of the late Mrs. Frances Brownell Holland, of Hartford, Conn., the sum of $100,000 is devised to the proposed Episcopal cathedral of New York city. Mrs. Holland was a daughter of Bishop Brownell. The Countess of Aberdeen, who contrib-uted so much to the popularity of her hus-band's viceroyalty of Ireland during the last administration of Mr. Gladstone, will edit a new penny monthly magazine for women and mothers. Mrs. Henry E. Perrine, the mother of Mrs. Grover Cleveland, is said to be a splendid housekeeper. In Buffalo, where she lives, she can be seen with her husband every Saturday going to Washington mar-ket, each with baskets. Miss Clara Barton, the famous Red Cross nurse, lives quietly in Washington, shun-ning notoriety. She has an income of $8,000 a year from an estate she inherited, but she spends only $3,000 of this sum, de-voting the rest to charity. Miss Margaret Blanche Best, of Mead-vill- e, Pa., to whom was awarded the Sar-gent prize for physical symmetry, says she was not a competitor in the sense of work-ing for the honor. She thinks her natural form was aided and developed by a careful course of physical culture. Mile. Louise Gautier, a young lady who was born deaf and dumb, but, taught by the Grosselin system, was able to go through successfully all the examinations, both written and oral, of the National School of Fine Arts at Paris, has been ap-pointed teacher of design in that institu-tion. Mme. Leverine is a French woman well known in Paris journalistic circles. She recently created a sensation by visiting the scene of the calamity in the coal mines of St. Etienne. Her thrilling a ccount had the result she desired, that of procuring help for the families of the ISO men who perished in the disaster. DAUGHTERS OF EVE. Mrs. Langtry has H50,000 invested in mortgages on New York city property. The Countess of Paris is a crack shot nd never allow the attendants to load bx gun. Tie new Paris daily newspaper. The Union Franco-Russ- e, will be edited by Mme. Juliette Adam-Carme- n Sylva, the Ronmsnian qneen, was admitted into the Bardic Circle at the receut Welsh Eistedfodd and given the blue ribbon of the order. ' IN WI1ELE. , A Grept Gathering of Brawny Fellows at the National Capital on Oct- -' ofcer 1st, MALOOM W POED'8 F0BE0AST. The Well-know- Athlete Desoribcs the Events and the Entries and Gives His Views as to the Probable Visitors, The amateur 'championship games at Analostan island, Washington, D. C., Oct. 11, will be an unusually important event i in the world of athletics. There will be nineteen events on the programme, includ ing six distances at flat running, two at hurdle racing, two at walking, one at three at weight throwing, three at Jumping and two at tug of war. The great rivalry among the most prominent athletic clubs of the United States will be settled for the ensuing year on this day, and these organizations are leaving no stone unturned to strengthen their teams. In the 100 and 220 yards runs the most prominent contestants will be Luther Cary, Fred Westing, Mortimer Remington, of the Manhattan Athletic club; John Owen, Jr., the present champion at these two dis-tances, and Harry Jewett, of the Detroit Athletic club, and perhaps C. H. Sherrill, of the New York Athletic cltib. These are the fastest men in the United States, and the championship at both these distances will not go outside of them. It is thought that Cary, Owen and Jewett have the best chance of coming to the front. Remington and J. S. Roddy, of the Man-hattans, and W. C. Downs and W. C. Dohm, of the New Yprk Athletic club, are the most formidable contestants in the 440 yards class. The chances are that either Downs or Remington will be the victor. These same men, with George S. Tracey, of Halifax, and J. W. Moffat, of the Montreal Amateur Athletic club, will combat for honors in the 880 yards run. Tracey won the American championship At this event in 1887, and has not competed for the title since. Tracey, Moffat, Downs and Dohm will battle the fiercest for the event this year. The one mile run will produce a great field of distance runners. A. B. George, T. P. Conner?, W. McCarthy and F. M. Carr, of the Manhattan Athletic club; W. D. Day, the cross country champion, and Ernest Hjertberg, of the New Jersey Ath-- club, and perhaps & C. Carter, of the York Athletic club, will be the best IJetic in it, although the latter may be from entering on account of his be-ing the paid handicapper of the A. A. U. It is freely predicted that the best Ameri-can record, 4m. 21 will be crowded by several of the contestants. The same men, . with the addition of some lesser lights, ' W. 0. DOWNS. J. P. LEE. J R. K. PRITCHARD. E. HJERTBERO. OEOUGK SCHWEGLER. ! will do battle for first place in the five . mile run. It is generally conceded, though, that first place in this event will lie be-tween Day and Conned. The one and three mile walks will have E. D. Lunge, C. L. Nicoll and J. Gregg, of the Manhattans; W. E. Burkhardt, of the Pastime Athletic club, of New York City, and the old time champion, Frank P. Murray, of the Acorn Athletic nssocia-- ' tion, of Brooklyn. Burkhardt is the first choice for one mile, and Nicoll seems to be ' the favorite for the longer event, but all are flyers. The two hurdles 120 yards, S ft. 6 in. high, and 230 yards, 2 ft. 8 in. high will produce great timber topping, and the rec-ord in either one or perhaps both may go. George Schwegler, H. L. Williams, A. A. Jordan and J. P. Lee, of the New York Athletic club; F. C. Puffer, of the New Jersey Athletic club, and A. F. Copland, of the Manhattans, are the most expert ones. Many athletes think Copland will win. The running high jump will be won in the neighborhood of 6 feet, for R. K. Pritch-ar- d and H. L. Hallock, of the Manhattans (holding records respectively of 5 ft. 11 tf in. and 5 ft. 10 in.); J. E. Morse and Dan-- , iel Long, of the Boston Athletic, associa-tion (the respective records of whom are 5 ft. 11 in. and 5 ft. 11 in.), will be the best entries. These four men are so evenly matched that few dare conjecture which will win. The running broad jump will be almost as close. The best competitors will be Ernest S. Ramsdell, of the Athletio club of the Schuylkill navy; W. Halpin, of the New Jersey Athletic club; A. F. Copland, of the Manhattans, and A. A. Jordan, of the New Yorks. It is thought that 23 feet will be done by the winner, and each of these four has. done in the neighborhood of that fignre. If H. H Baxter, of the New Yorks, is not a competitor in the pole vault, first honors will lie between E. D. Ryder, of the New Yorks; R. Gurry, of the Boston Athletic association and Z. A. Cooper, of the Manhattans. Ryder has the best rec-ord of the trio, his figures being 10 ft. Putting the 16 pound shot, throwing the 16 pound hammer and throwing the 56 pound weight will turn out half a dozen men put together like the mythical Her-cules. They are James S. Mitchell, W. L. Condon and George R. Gray, of the New Yorks; C. A. J. Queckberner, F. I. Lara-brec-and H. H. Jaueway, of theManhat-tans- , and several outsiders. Gray, is picked for the shot, Mitchell for the hammer and Queckberner for the "56." The majority . of these men may also compete in the in-dividual tug of war, but Queckberner is almost a sure winner in this event. There! will also be a tug of war for teams of four men of unlimited weight, in which the Manhattans, Berkeley Athletic club and Acorn Athletic club will have the best teams.. M. W. FoBD. ARMY AND NAVY NOTES. The official report on the Peral sub-marine boat recommends that no more such craft be built. The fnstest spurt of the San Francisco was 20.6 knots. The steering, turning and reversiug- - are said to be perfect. At the Springfield armory experiments with smokeless powders, the Maxim powder gave rather better results than the Wet-tere- Emperor William praised the seaman-ship and gunnery and torpedo work dis-played in the recent German naval ma-neuvers. The new 7,300 ton cruiser is to have the power of. steaming farther under eco-nomical conditions than any other man-of-wa- r so far proposed. The English naval maneuvers of 1890, asido from what was gained in the prac-tical handling of the vessels, are pro-nounced a decided failure. Great progress has been made dur'tig the past two years with the target firing curried out by the artillery regiments both on the Atlantic and Pacific coasts. ' The steel lances with which the cavalry in the German army has been fitted out are not meeting with very general ap-proval; they are found to be too heavy. There are now only eight United States army officers of the line in active service who received the brevet rank of major general for service daring the civil war. It has been suggested in England to adopt the system wfth single screw vessels of having the propeller and rudder work together, or in other words to make the screw take the place of the rudder. The result of the experiment made with carrier pigeons at the Italian naval ma-neuvers surpassed expectations. Of 105 birds set free elghtf-el- arrived promptly, six with some, delay and only thirteen were lost. The latest type of torpedo has recently appeared in Vienna. The mechanism em-ploys the immediate action of compressed air on the propeller aud two opposing screws on a new system serve to keep the torpedo in a straight line. A prominent naval constructor, while on a visit to the ' United States, pointed out the urgent necessity of paying more attention to' the well being of the crews of American merchant vessels, if they are to be depended upon to man the navy in the event of war. ; PETS OF FAMOUS PEOPLE. Hayes is devoted to poultry. The British queen makes pets of Jersey cows. Henry living's constant attendant it a tax hound. Stoddard, the poet, 1b devoted to a little blind terrier. Gladstone wept like a child when his fa-mous parrot died. Julian Hawthorne has a pet cow and a hawk that dwell in harmony together. The late Henry Grady, of Georgia, had an exceeding fondness for Newfoundland dogs. ...... . ' Sam Johnson, Goldsmith, Leigh Hunt and Dick Whittington were all very fond of cats. Addison confessed to a love for birds, and so did Victor Hugo; George Francis Train feeds sparrows. Patti has a monstrous St. Bernard, and Aimee used to carry a miniature tan terrier with her on her tours. Modjeska used to carry two pet alligators with her, and Sara Bernhardt became' de-voted to a tiger whelp. Father Prout petted chickens and John Wilson ddted on the horse; James Hogg bad always a dog with him, and so did Ho-garth and Rubens. When he was a tailor in Tennessee Andy Johnson made much of a pet coon, and Gen. Grant's favorite was a stanch saddle horse. Chicago News. Robespierre bod a genuine passion for doves and pigeons; Sir Isaac Newton dallied with a pet poodle; Bismarck is an en-thusiastic dog fancier. Ouida has a parrot; Hannah More was very fond of her bullfinch; Cleveland's wife became very much at-tached to a marmoset; Watts had a pet magpie, and Ueecher loved canaries. WOMAN'S WEAR. Leather trimming studded with steel or gilt will be worn on winter garments. A ruffle around the bottom of the skirt is the distinguishing feature of all the new gowns. Two yards and twenty inches is the width allowed for a dress skirt made without a foundation. The fashionable winter colors are black, heliotrope, silver and iron gray, myrtle green and blue royale. A useful trousseau consists of a black silk, with a low and a high bodice, a black woolen, a blue serge and a light colored woolen. , Boots for the street, to be in good taste, must be plain black and neat in design. Shoes and slippers for home wear are in fancy shapes and in colors to suit the cos-tume of the wearer. Feather collars, ticketed "the latest Par-isian rage," make very comfortable as well as becoming neckwear, being not so warm as fur and more grateful than anything else imaginable for the same purpose. Laces are again very fashionable, and will be largely used as garnitures for so-ciety dresses during the winter. This re-fers mostly to Irish laces, which will have the preference in white, Honiton and Lim-erick. Street jackets are as fanciful as material and use will permit, and braids are seen in rich profusion. Greenish gray coats will be braided with fawn, pearl gray with lavender, stone color with gold, and dark blue with blank, A bonnet spring a band of metal which passes around the front and sides of any headgear has been invented which gives th wearer a sense of absolute security against any amount of wind, and does away with. the use cf a hat pin. OLD FRENCH CRIMINAL EXPENSES. Thirty-ei- x francs were charged for quar-tering a man. Fourteen francs were charged for impal-ing a man alive. Forty-eig- francs were charged for boil-ing a criminal in oil. Twenty-fou- r francs were charged for drowning an infant in a sack. Thirty francs were charged for tearing a living man in four quarters with horses. Twenty-eigh- t francs were charged for burning a witch alive and flaying a man alive. Four francs were charged for putting a person to the torture, for applying the boot and for whipping a man. Two francs were charged for burying a man, for applying the thumb screw and for putting a man in the pillory. Twenty francs were charged for an cution with the sword, for hanging a man and for throwing a suicide's body among the offal. Ten francs were charged for breaking a criminal on the wheel, for mounting the head on a pole, for torture by fire, for branding with a red hot iron and for cut-ting off the tongue, the ears and the nose. Chicago Tribune. ' LIGHT AND AIRY. A Ottl. Tragedy. Saacy' iriri isuublng eye. Handsome boy maideo splos, Pleasant bop shy glances ; Several weeks .bold advances. Twilight hour vows plighted. Cool veranda hearts united; Bugiry drive ruby lips, Happy fellow nectar sips. A little tiff fate reverts, Charming beau girl flirts; Empty purse lovers pert. Foolish boy busted heart! --W. B. P. a Uunsey's Weekly. ' Certainly He Might. "My object in calling this evening," he began, with a nervous tremble of his chin, "was to ask yon, Katie I may call yon Katie, may I not?" - "Certainly, Mr. Longripe," said the sweet young girL- - "All of papa' elderly friends call me Katie."- - , And he said nothing further about his object in calling. Chicago Tribune. Fncertelntv. Jennie has a wicked eye, ' ' Yet sbe is most wondrous shy, Butwbyf Jessie save sbe hates the mea. Still the'li marry. Artful Jen But wbent l"vn a rival who b) rich; With one of.us tw9t Jen win bltcb But which? Tom Hall in M unsey's Weekly. He Called. I called to see your father this after-Boon- ," remarked Charlie, aa be took a seat in the parlor. Hester flattered visibly. KeeOTering her-self with an apparent effort she said simply: "Did you?" "Yes," replied Charlie. "He baa been wing our firm a little bill for some time." --WashW2ton Pot . . - ' The Thistle has been queen among En-glish racing yachts this season. She has won fifteen and finished second in seven-teen races out of the forty in which she j contested. Her winnings were over $5,000. j |