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Show THE SALT "LAKE TIMES. T1IUKSDAY. SOVKMBER 13.1800 iMMfci i BmPB aifesf r ii ... V JHBfc illlt!!taiy UM Assaj OFHGt v - SiSr jbi.wM.lslisiljls&4IU". f fMPf? 8f., ..i." ?m?jjmA ciess npte vX - , j 1ZIXG OHKS. mmmrnM - j. 55afflBl aJI -- jMy iu & Trait Comjaay. . MM(pl!lll! -- -- rMIIIVll H ,4;; theiadinq broker. . r-- immX. ln'mSmm tmttMl$ Fruit3 and Vegetables, Fres"i Buttar M -- - temfc - I MONEY 1 TO LEND ON GKf Crane Building, 233 S. Main St. , 'y yaLXAtj f,7V ' f ' V real estate"!"" WSM Tho Latest and Most Wearable hSf&M EW&MmME ' ';'pA H J ! I 1V Kinds of Personal Securities. 3 Guaranteed Mortgages for Sale m, n I MllUnery f w i '.. oPpo.it. ' T' - J , MalBSt,SaULa, To be found in the Cit,. "fe . '4 La.Ct, "' . --1 -. mvinnill-- ' "" " 11 --I - f ' . i-- ... ..---J J.M.Grabbe&Co. fM I I rrrifr. I gpfl E best bargains ftlH Ml (f1inHP .... --TT.D 1 SELl EEAl ESTATE, WfPll , , ilBll II IjLZy. GENERAL INSURANCE AOEHCr. jlj. BOllEOHf BOiET, Pp(?i? --,t- . " MSm . WjWP .. iiliiw rMW' "ciTsTimsEii PW 1 iPplf Capitftlof. . t22,000,000. I mmw I """"isil jy Mil 7J;t !L feLa Si . . , (31 fl WfiR zt-- , mUI,Sm-- ' VWf&H BOSTON ART ROOVS . : 0 Steam Dye Works ! THE :: TMdl rflffei ,58MainSt 'J -- Mfili Ladies' and Genfg Clothes Dyed, XfCJiile3r Fall StvlCS MRCCCKei. Per- - iSdt?' The very Wst In Toques, Turbines '.. ofrioW Cleaned and Repaired. X.uV KEEP ' IWMvlSt , tta . JUasCTJ'' 3lM't- oaiVi wolk.,Martin,AUer. 26 w. i. Bonth, l) feet Fit Guaranteed. 30 Ers. F. R. Patterson F. H. Shadell, ' a-- ' n m-,nfa!Xi- n THBTiie J L ll ' LWJ,SrkJSltL. DMreissssmSa.kHingarg: Proarvloer,s. L lM, , VJJ -- telfel "- -' Mpffi r Salt Lake City. UifJ0 s J H. PE&RLHAN, i : PROP I J m3n??!T j Dealers tn Fine Shoes. ASMktLLA - " MMZMmMzM C E.tab,.Shed,.872. I "1 I :XJTOAT "T? T. nA W T KING' i wP11 liSlWU- - Stoves, Tinware & liranifliTillPiS Deaie m Hock sprm Lnmp, Hock '' ATTEB4MUBPHT, , , PBOPB'8. jgggrBQ & 4ffJ!jM fl TJ W1 TTfTiV VWT1 PIHE!BAE G00D3 OF ALL' mil a. I I --- Li-i-i jlL--J , L---- --L " 209 Main Street. M anfl MoiaflrtiacMiiBry Hpanj C. P. MASON. Manager Keaiprto for all Clsssss of Machinery, Engines and Boilers from power and apwards in stock fori mm. Kg Mills erected and delivered in running order. ' d CoaceQt"S Maine Office asfl farerosi 253 S. Iain Street, Salt Late D. S AGENCY. BUTTE. MONTANA.' THE WONDER OF THE AGE! The Grand Oil Heater ! Cheap, Safe, Economical, and Dur-able. No Smoke I No Smell! No Soot I No Pipe to Cuss! Ho Scrip-ture t to Quote! No Coal to Lug I . No Dampers to Regulate! No Ashes to Empty! Just the thing for your Bedroom, Bathroom, Oilice, Dining Room or Tarlor. DO NOT FAIL TO SEE IT I . Sold only wwwmmn. by the Sign of the "Big Gun." - - - 32 West Second South Street m$$k Union - Pacific - System Tlie !y Mae. Carrying the United States Mail. Direct WMmMfj ConBCct5ons Mw3 --SI Poinb North and East. ffmj NEW TIME CARD," OCTOBER 26, 1890. . TJtali Central --District. Fassenger Trains Arrive at andLeaveSalt Lake City Daily as Follows ; FROM THE NORTH. T. GOING NORTH. AtlantlcPast Mail 3:30 a.m Atant c Fast Mail and U. &N. Local. 8:10 nl r.iinfV''Exnf' eLstsa.u..&. INortheriiLocal.10:n1(8i:a:l.Oian.n IL'ao-cal Eitxpress.... l:30p.n . Portland Bu'tteand Atian- - rortland aud Butte last Mail TMn.ax tic Express ....... 5:(P Local Express. 7:P- - FROS THE SOOTH. ' . . UOBO SOUTH. MlUExvwM........ 9:45a.m. !jnao. Prove, Lehi, Ironton and Eu- - Juab. lrv,). LtU). Irouton aud Eu- - rcka Exoress reka Express 6:45p.m. Miltord Eipressl'.".'.."."..".'.".,""".".".! 4:u0j.a Utah. & Nevada District. GOlNUWEST. I1' FROM WEST. Thror.iTh mixd daily except Sundars.8:10a.m. j Through mixed daily except 8undays.3:15p.m. " -- SfJu Zyi,? 'D ,?:35 luiPPl with Puhman Palace Slew?' .ktlSSlS OSS"' PuUmU SiJ'. Salt Le to Chicago; Dot " romiarHSS,CruSg,'p? S ts l"ipr.a with Day Coaches aid Throng Pa ilJi"5?AnUmM'1 Jace Sleeper Denver toOonucll Blufls: PullmaJ C. F. RESSEGUIE . S. W. ECCLES, General Manager ' . Geneial Passenger Agent. f 19.- ;.-- THE " SCia'W--lI'?2-3- Rj CLOAK and SUIT C o P . 55 Mam Street, Saft Lake Citj The Only Exclusive Cloak " and Suit House in Utah. T NEW GOODS 1 --N-EW STYLESI .. .... ... Lawn chairs 75 cents, nl the Fair. ; buu are seldom worth repairing. Better to buy lower qualities in solid skins than rich looking furs made from pieces. . , Sable and skunk, as well as the bearskin and mink, may be cleaned with heated bran. Rub it on carefully the right way of the fur, using a piece of perfectly dry flannel. Then shako the fur and brush it in the same way with a long haired and very soft brush, all with the utmost gen-tleness and care. To keep away moths make silken bags and fill them with the following mixture of aromatic shrubs and flowers; Lavender, thymo, roses, cedar shavings, powdered sassafras, casaia and ligucs, with a few drops of attar of roses thrown upon the whole. Keep these sachets in the drawers and on the shelves. Olive Logan in St. Louis USEFUL FUR NOTES. Be careful not to wet sealskin, but if it should become so accidontly, rub it softly down with a silk handkerchief, and dry at a distance from tho fire. Theoretically ermine is never stained; practically, it becomes dirty, like all other white surfaces. The best cleansing agent for ermine is powdered pipe clay. Greaso spots can be removed from seal-skin with the old fashioned blotting paper and warm iron; nnd stains of sugar often disappear, on the application of a weak solution of spirits of wine. With seals, as with every other fur, it is best to select garments made from solid skins, as these always have a value, while articles made from pieces, however skill-fully joined, are generally worthless after a short time. Although moths keep away from seal-skiu- s, it is nevertheless unwise to keep them in a warm place when not in use. A hot atmosphere renders all furs harsh and shabby, and entirely destroys the smooth softness they present when kept in a cool room. . Piece goods are muile from small cut-tings of inferior und damaged skins, clev-erly put together, but as they contain so many different skins cannot wear evenly. In Anvnmnul Honrs. Bummar has gone, yet splendor hovers still O'er the wood and data, each wood and fenj Horn's purple mint enfolds each distant hill, While nlgtilly moonlit shadows flood each glen, Each autumn flower, while clod In richest hue. Floats royal pennants on each pawing gale; ' The cardinal glows In red, gentian In blue, While gold, from golden rod, gilds hill and val Rare sunset views enrich the glowing sky, Amber and opal clouds pile in the went, While weird like moonbeams floating Idly by Proclaim a twilight nllod with royal rest. All tilings look rich, from ap is red and bright To purple graphs that cluster on the vine, 'rom fields of corn that rustle, crisp and light, To tuft of thistle and to cone of pin. Rich glories And we In autumnal hours, A sense of fullness and completeness, too; A chant of pruiv broods over fruits and (lower For beauties added ere they fade from view. Sophie L. Bchen)k hi Ladles' Home Journal oi mm, and ran over his head and shoulders and even through his hair. Actor Crane is said to have made $70,000 in 1889 out of "The Senator." His entire fortune is reckoned at tUSO.OOO. A dozen years ago he was playing leading comedy parts on a salary of tlCO a week. The president of the Kentucky constitu-tional convention, Mr. Cassius Marcellus Clay, Jr., is a grundson of Ilonry Clay, a well to do farmer of Bourbon county, and a graduate of Yale in the class of 1800. Lieut. Brownell, who avenged the death of his commander, Col. E. E. Ellsworth, of the New York fire zouaves, at Alex-andria, Va., near the opening of tho war, is now in tho pension department at Wash-ington. James Red path, who began life in tho United States by engaging with the free state men who went out to redeem Kansas from border ruffianism, is employed in his old age in helping to prepare the memoirs of Jefferson Davis. Gen. W. U. Enochs, of Ohio, was one of the youngest enlisted soldiers in the Army of the Potomac, and one of the youngest generals, too. He is said to have com-manded i n battle more than 4,000 men when he was but 33 years old. Presldont McLeod, of the Heading rail-road, will now receive J40.000 a year as sal-ary. This is tho largest compensation given any railway official in tho United States, it is asserted, except that paid to Mr. Depew by the New York Central, who gets $50,000. PERSONAL GOSSIP, Dr. John Mackintosh, tho Scotch histo-rian, is a seller of second hand books at Aberdeen, Scotland. Archbishop Kenrick is the oldest Catho-lic prelate iu tho United States. He is 84 and was consecrated in 184L Archbishop Corrigan was born in New-ark, X. J., whore his father was proprietor of a popular hotel on Market street. Edwin Booth's manner toward those who treat him with undue familarityis aid to be chilling, if not petrifying. Beu Butler once supported himself by waking chairs for thirty cents a day. His annual income now is stud to be $:X'0,000. William Lowery, who died at Williams-burg recentl", was the engineer of Com-modore Vauderbilt's first steam ferryboat. He was 8L President Horreji y Obes, of Uruguay, bas no palace, aud lives modestly in rooms over a milliner's shop on one of tho princi-pal streets of Montevideo. - Simeon E. Baldwin, who has just been elected president of the American Bar as-sociation, has been professor of constitu-tional law in Yule since 1843. Senator Hearst and W. L. Scott are said to have won enough mouey with their re-spective stables to pay their campaign ex-penses for tho next five years. Hannibal Hamlin is an inveterate club man and card player, and enters into a game of whist or auction pitch with as much grit as though he was a sophomore In college. Congressman Kennedy, of Ohio, entered the war as a private and roso by successive steps to brigadier general. At the close of the war he studied law aud has since prac-ticed at the bar. At one time Gen. Custer tamed a tiny Held mouse, and kept it in a large empty inkstand oa his desk.. It grew very fond C. " r . LITERARY LIGHTS. Mark Twain received $00,000 in royalties from the play iu which the famous Mul-berry Sellers appears. The two most notled American authors of the century, Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes and James Kussell Lowell, are sons of clergymen. Lord Tennyson has recited the "Charge of tho Light Brigade" into a phonograph, and the instrument has been laid away in a place where it is to be kept for 100 years. M. Paul Bourget, the most popular novel-ist of the present day in France, was mart ried recently to Mile. Minnie David. The ceremony was of a very private and simple character, and took place in the little church of St. Francois do Salles. Frank Stockton, the novelist, lives in a roomy house at Madison, N. J. He is a methodical man iu his literary work, the early part of each day to his writing. At times he suffers from weak eyes, and on such occasions he dictates his stories to his wife. Professor A. S. Hardy, the author of the "Wind of Destiny" and "But Yet a Wo-man," is of an athletic frame and fond of sports. He is an agreeable host, and espe-cially delights in gatheriug congenial about his table, or in taking them into his st udy, and with the help of a fr.Hruu6 cigar bringing out a free1 aud unconven-- oal intercourse. A Shining Success. There," said the old gentleman earn-estly to his son, as he pointed cut a sub-stantial looking citizen, "is a shining ex-ample of a successful businessman." "Yes," replied the youth, who is pain-fully deficient in respectful regard for his superiors; "1 believe he invented a stove polish, didn't he?' Washingtoa Post |