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Show 5 " - HESALTJL A K E TIMES, FRIDAY. 'OlTBEll H. 18U0. 3 NOW RUNNING TO j I JJavis, Sharp and Stringer's dTi I T . --. gurJ I I 5jj i A n n 3 Addition. eypjI I 1 ' r CORNER SECOND WEST AND TENTH SOUTH. 'SecoaJ L " " mm " I" i 3 L?J7. is the Time .... Yo"C"n Buy on Your Own Terms I ttTL J U stable at a big TO SECURE OITLY ON MONTHLY PAYMENTS I Lrifk lioui on Third J largain, on Second j South .stivrt. tv.tr :d 1 Lth street, only 2 A 7? T , "H !2 ElCCkSf OP 07 0f' 0 TWelVe flOtlthS Will !! this of X 2 iC V pn-rt- for just what J batfjg: I IN THIS POPULAR ADDITION gg7 Or Longer Time if You Like. gg'&r I Come and See Us and Take a Carriage Ride, I lr if you prefer WEST SIDE RAPID TRANSIT BeWiM' I ' Efl .v; " 23 West Second Soixtli Street. David James & Co,, TINNERS, PLUMBERS, Gas l Steam Fitters Dealers in Plumbing Material, Pumps, Pipes and Fittings, Steam Heating Supplies, Tin and Iron Roofing, Galvan-ized Iron Cornice, Guttering, Garden Hose and Lawn Sprinklers, Filters, Etc. Ho. G7 ; IYXain Street. Utah Stove & Hardware Co V!iime ..id liotjll llaiirrt In STOV RS.T ANC, ES Stae Furn shinjs, Mantles, Grata, ie. :i-- t M.l MM K I'lisl Monlll !t., SALT LAKE ClTf. Correspond- -: Solicit?! --r':rTipM: I lr'' Vff) CN AL X 1 f J' i HO PmHCIPAL POEff s EAST, WEST, ; NORTH and SOUTH THE CITY TICKET OFFICE. Piiie.-g-f Trabi Ar:i? si l.u rsi" tnt, Simrit. Atlaiitl-r- ! M I t Ii.li A .Si.rfcC ! ' " ' , ,,-l,l- , WiM lijiw "! i ' j i ,. rim this '",t-,r'- l Kt;-r- . ' - Union Pacific MOUNTAIN iVI1i(IV- - tU Or.lf f. ri rv ir t.1 'l!!t y.t 0''!UIl M .1, ill;' ft .Ml '.ri .1 if teU 4.L I' 11 t . i NEW TIME CARD 1 1: Silt Lu? c;;? u fjsiiti: Mtl! r4 t't.sa A tl t I v,ii t.i;,f-- I K..t,.f- -- ...... . .,,!-!- I..,-- t.x ?!. t.l t. 1. f.-.i.- . i.-- E i tiff. . .. ............ T . Vi.iirfa ,itm r i i ...(. r..r. raeu f-- :ZZn i- t-.. '. " ........S.KM G. V. ECCLES, C. F. RESSEGUIE, Wtn'l Pinx Ainu - -- . T.ckeU for he ia Wnatch BuiMm?. 201 M n Strrrt, and at Depct. Fare fuf j Hound Trip. 5J teat. time he had not the slightest idea to what nn extreme his inclination would lead; but linding after a few months that he derived great pleiumre, and that his lieulth, which was well nigh broken down by excessive work, improved by autograph gathering, he continued to indulge his love for the fascinating amusement until the present time, when his collection has grown to the enorn.jns size of considerably over '.'0,000 autograph letters signed, repaired and in-dexed. Mr. Dreer takes great delight iu repairing and urranging his letters, which task he accomplishes with the aid of old paper resurrected at odd moments from attics mid cellars. So nicely is this mend-iu- g done (even the water mark being sorno-timc- s identical) that it is discovered with difficult'. Philadelphia Ledger. Health ia Collecting Antograph... has resided W Ferdinand J. Dreer, who Selpbia having bn born m th. y the 3d of -- 'wacture of gold waa engaged in ware and assaying, " It thst active business in.- - rf aQto. be first commen cgh ot NOVELTIES IN SILVER. A tiny watch is sot in the center of ft liver dollar. Shell bunds for the hair aro sot with silver flour-do-li- The new tell bucklo Is mads of an-- chors caught witliiu one another. A silver stamp hot has tho New York postmark and a (damp in red enamel, The lotos furnishes tho newest ns in onaniplud ornament for silver. A little round silver repousse cylinder has been made to hold a smm1 of cotton. A polished silver mutch box has a parlor mutch in enamel on the buck, and the legend "A match for you." An oxidized silver stocking Hnd gar-ter, looking just as if 1 had lioen pulled from the foot, makes nn ush receiver. Long, perforated cylinders of silver sro railed perfumers. They aro intended to be fitted with cotton which lias lieen saturated with perfume ami laid in drawers. Three face painted in 'lamcl arc used as lace pins. The lineament tire not those of the painter's cherubs, but aro everyday sort of faces, mid might bo thought portrait. Hairpins and bonnet romtm are re-produced in silver with lino jierf'Tatcl carvings, copying and rivaling the gold Combs and pins that wcro fir t in til. iue:ket. Jewi-Iers- Wecl.lv. A S0NQ OF Y,H SEA. ' j Tho mormaltls and mermen Mow the sea A wonderful uruan made: WUh the te iicleresc earn and loving art . Its ever part 'a '"Id. Wood tliey brought from the wracks And (Told where, the. sliiH went down j They used no nail;!, but fastetw.il it welt , With UmvulH from a baby's own. One pipe gave the sound of a song so swoot That wus sun by u beautiful Rlrl; A mermaid caught It. and kept it aafB, Wrapped round with a pilileo curl. The neat pipe's not wan tlw sound of a kin. That a mother Rave lmr , As he stood ou tlm deck of a ndhle ship That went down ero the day as doun. Tliis pipe Kara forth the sound of a prayer Tiiut was heard when tho Btorni wiia iiik'h; And next waa the Iuuku from noma chiidrei dear. Who saw no daneer nixh. A strong mnn's voice was hard In the nezt Anrl it was firm and clear. He salil, "Uod l,les you. to hU wife, j When lie saw that death n as near. j 6o tho mermaitls and mermen gathered a0 ' Of the voices hid In the : Tlety placed tliem in Hie pii and reed, To be roused once more from slerp. But the beautiful or.-a- a dii.pleawd the one Who nih the win :s and wave.. For the sounds that were placed lr, the organ's pljies Belonged In tho ocean's cave.. Bo he placed them back In th- - silent deptha, In the caves of the south and nor;h, i for the vol es lost in til.' s"a must stay j Until he calls them But if you listen, you hear th"m all Ohio up from the Bnar.'ih: sea The prayer, the none, tl lot, the laiiRh, That some time shall he free. - Iktot True Flag. to the sponge domain. On the banks of the canal you may see growing plenti-fully in summer tinio a green sponge, which is the common fresh water spe-cies. Now if you drop a living specimen of this species into a bowl of water, and pnt some powdered indigo into the water, you may note how the currents are per-petually being swept in by the pores and out by the oscula. ITS NOUEISIMEXT. In living sponge this perpetual and unceasing circulation of water proceeds. This is the sole evidence the unassisted sight receives of the vitality of the sponge colony, and tho importance of this cir-culation in aiding life in these depths to be fairly carried out cannot readily bo overestimated. Let us now see how this circulation is maintained. Microscopically regarded, we see here and there, in the sides of the little air chambers or sponge passages, recesa;s, which remind one of the pass-ing places in a narrow canal. Lining these chambers we see living sponge cnits of a type different from tho shape-less specks we noted to occur in the meshes of the sponge substance itself. The units of the recesses each consist of 3 linn" particle, whose free extremity is ra'sed into a kind of collar, from which projects a lashlike filament known as a flagellum. This lash is in constant movement. It waves to and fro m the water and the collection of lashes we chamber acts as a veri-table see in any one brush, which by its movement not only sweeps water in the pores, but sends it onward through the sponge, and in due time sends it out by the bigger holes or oscula. This constant circulation in the spongo discharges more than one important function. For, as already noted it of nutrition, m that serves the purpose the particles on which sponge life lssup-corte-d are swept into the colony. Again, the fresh currents of water carry with them the oxygen gas which is a necessity of sponge existence, as of human life; while, thirdly, waste matters, inevitably alike in sponge and in man as the result of living, are swept out of the colony and discharged into the sea beyond. Our bit of sponge has thus grown from a mere dry fragment into a living reality. It community in which already, low Is a bs it is, the work of life has come to be and fairly special-S.ao- n Illustrated News, El: OF A SPONGE. jDevelopmeat from Articles of Pro-- Si I toplasm How the Work of Hu- - I trition is Carried On. w IMAETICLES PECULIARITIES piliar Scientific Talk With a Noted llTan The Sponge A3 An Adjunct it I to Civilization. - first of all ve may note that a sponge, Ie know it in common life, is the fx skeleton or framework which was I' by and which supported the liv- - p. Iparts. These living parts consist of fate masses of that living jelly to I b the name of protoplasm has been M This, in truth, is the universal I'm of life. It is the one substance I which life everywhere is associated, I as we see it simply in the sponge, so o I behold it (only in more complex I?) in the man. " low the living parts of this dried, raway sponge were found both in its trior and on its surface. They lined I canals that everywhere permeate the t 'ge like substance, and microscopic fiination has told us a great deal I their nature. For whether found lAe canals of the sponge themselves or l lded iu the sponge substance, the t-'- sponge particles aro represented lascmi-indcpendentma- of proto-S- o that the first view I would have f take of the sponge as a living mass is I ' it is a colony and not a single unit. Is composed, in other words, of aggre-1- 1 masses of living particles which II out one from the other and manufac-P'h- e supporting skeleton we know as t l--e sponge of commerce" itself. j I CNDER THE MICROSCOPE. I lender the microscope these living I no6 nnits appear in various guises and I P. Some of them are formless, and, I to shape, ever altering masses, resem-P- S that familiar animalcule of our P we know as the amoeba. The fibers of the sponge colony form the f of the population. They are im-- p in the sponge substance; they f r about through the meshes of the f"JP: they seize food and flourish and J; andthey probably give origin to I We course produced, pure characteristic, however, are cer-- P writs of this living sponge colony Pen livein the lining membrane of the IT8- - In point of fact, a sponge is a P1 Venice, a certain proportion of P inhabitants, like the famous queen I he Adriatic herself, lived on the f of the waterways. Just as in puce ve find provisions for the dent Pfuf the city brought to the inhabi-- f ts by the canals, so from the water, 1 5b, as we shall see, is perpetually cir- - at,ig through a sponge, the members e colony receive their food. I"00 at a sponge fragment You per-- l re talf a dozen large holes or so, each pgon a little eminence, as it were, fc? aPrtures, bear in mind, we call ra-- They are the exits of the sponge I --mon. But a close inspection of a Pgeshows that it is riddled with finer tJ smaller apertures. These latter are r" es, and they form the entrances Best. Two gentlemen were looking at a paint-ing of acorn field in France, a typical French corn field, in which poppies shone out hero and there arairan the corn. "It reminds me," said one, "of something Ralph Waldo Emerson said to me when I was a youug man. "I had told him that I was tired out, and wasguing away for a long rest; told him howl intended to occupy my leisure, spoko enthusiastically of my prospective travels and sports. 1 could enjoy a lifetime of such plans. "lie had listened with sympathetic inter-ea- t, but at my last remark something in his face prompted me to ask, 'You do not think those things a waste of time, Mr. Emerson?' j " 'Xo,' ho replied, 'oh, no; but the poppy should always pow iu the corn Held.' " In that exquisitely poetiral phrase the philosopher-poe- t and preacher fixed the truth that work is the complement, the fit and best accompaniment of recreation; the truth that inspired another poet to write: Best is not quitting the busy career; . Kest is the fitting of self to its sphere. Youths' Companion. Muliulr Itallillilt KiHU. The Ingenuity of the tmt inetilmn hi everi lHed to lirlll'J Ol t teivelti.K In hatliiim' suits. Niiiulierid With tliinis new this season are the suits iiia-- l of iioiiair. This f;.brie Is rrioiiiuu-ie'e- for slU'it figures. It is not only bitiit In weight and ititxpe-isiv- but i lintjH less liahily than does flaiiti' ou liiiiit wet. The bathing suits t inde In blazer flannel hav. not proven popular. j A Sardinian IVntu. In the Island of Sardinia the chnrch festivals aro a sort of r lijriotis junket-ing, to which pejoplo (lock from long distances with jirovisioiis and Tiiey camp out in the open or slei-- in caves or under their carts. 8rvices of devotion aro mixed with racing of horses, dancing, singing and bawiue'.ing. The traveler, pawing near a church ftftcrafesta lsholdsan unsightly lilt of ox bonis, rils and skulk of sheep, orange jel, Ix-a- sidns, peascoibi and olive stones strewn niiM the grawt I'll author of "Sardinia and the Kurds" pub-li.sli- es this record of the uinount ff fMsl consumed at a gatberingtocelebraUitha ordination of a priest; "There were pr.-Jien- 2,.V)0 peoil, and between them they at 2 cows, 3 calves, 29 deer and. wild boar, 7!0 sheep, 300 lamljs, k idlings and sucking pigs, WO fowls, C5 mca-are- s of sugar, 5) pounds of pcpTer and spices, I'sO inoasures of corn, a btm-dre- d weight of rice, a hundred weight of dates. 50 sugared cakes, 3,f0 25 large barrels of wine, 8.X fish and a vast qnantity of conffe'tionery. The bampael lasud two or three days." How Onyx Is Mined. Onyx is got out in as large blocks as it can be quarried. The quarrying hits to be done with wedges and saws, as it cannot be blasted or dug out with safety. The grain and streaks are so delicate that a blast niipht spoil thousands of dollars' worth. One cave of onyx was ruined by the use of powder. The man who owned the cave started to get out the onyx by the slow process of saws and wedges. He got out several car loads, when the thought struck him that he could take all the onyx out of the cave at one blast. So be put. his men to work and drilled around the cave, arranging bis blast so that be would have 40 000 or 130,000 worth of onyx to ba shipped at once. The drill holes wer charged and the blast was exploded. JCono of tbe onyx was lit for use except in mosaics and such work. There was not a sound bit four feet long in the cave. This taught the other onyx miners a lesson, and no shocks and blasts or detonations are allowed in the cave or in the neigh W-boo- d for fcar that the onyx may be cracked or that some small cracks may be en-larged. -'- ew York Sun. I Itnllliili frhnr. For ln-- s tlient Is soft, klud of leather called "velvet calf," wbieii come hi numlif r of shades. New riding boot thero sr', t!i f st part made in patent leatlier, aud tli uiiju'r and l A 1" a "'t k'nd uion:ci( lie li U very tool and llexilile.. Chain of nil side and kinds prevail In bratel.-ts- . Thn different part t'f I lie link sru tie iteil iliil. reiitly. dim will I old, another pUtltnni; mis pi.iin, iImi o hef rhaw-d-. In tbs eent r ijim aru sunk, or then: will li a line of ruOi-- nd diainntid Hltri;a'ii)K. Ing rvlin.Jor of silver nn railed perfume-- . Tii' r are Inn iule l t'j be li!tel Willi c tttoti nhieli hit U'en fct-urat-! with p K.H1.0 and Isiid in drawer. Oold thimble ant covered with tnimitn d.iuita in rebel it,te id of U iii penetrated i'.h the usual neeUiU hole. The stay made f ,r the lt:t we.tliw 'id traveling are of very soft witil, and aro ru.ad! long, iura-v? form, t m il.le tha tight skirt to lit well oter !' F;t'its ar; to be much worn it. the futiirm, and liiey have nothing to ton.pliati of in t!.e uinter iif p..'r naye now. 11. le f.ri-lar-i: id mauve cutton, i: b white iit ... lirs u I are very ; ul ir. A few days since a man living mthe 6heaf of w heat 1 m COVered fnrt This suggested RDd 1D, Z Ohio coward, who tried the an idea KVme plan, and barn and m. the machma kmi n0 one. iTetroit Fn Pre Th biggest pickerel taken in Oiino-tic- ut waters during Ihi snc;uinb et to tbe wil'-- s of Mat M.M,5U'ui t Waure;ari lake theoth'-- r day. .U wtit ws n even ix ry-"- -'' Tanned Uamali hkfn. "The outrage at Canyon City remind me of a man's skin wliieb I onre aar taeked to the wails of n I g hon.fl at Fort Halleck," said .'ol. Hoyt at the Al!atif boud. "The work bad bcrn ertisticjdly done end reminded me men? of a jrigantio animal skin streK-bo- i out to dry. 1 li man had been cais(fbt in a dastardly set at the fort and a bullet from tbe commandant put a very sudden end to his caret.-- . Th" sum was for many months on the wall of the hut. b-- .t wa. finally carried o.7, piece by pfece. by rrlte hunters. Tbe body was cbucke-- i into a barrel, whi-- b placed on the prairie aijout WO feet ar tbe trail lesuini: to the weat. A time ptuuied a deep path worn by traveler livinK tb public ft.s-- U, take a i.danre at tbe strange pjuttuta of tbe barrel." Ieo- - ver JCewa. j Many Meehanleal AIJ. With the development of the boot and shoe industry there has been a correspond in" increase in mechanical aids to the shoe-maker who works on tbe bench, the manu-facturer who employs hundreds of bands, and the shoe repairer. Of machinery, tools and supplies for those who turn out foot eear there are now no less than If articles, all regularly listed snd catalogue! - Some of these articles are made in almost varieties. There are. for instance, twenty-thre- e kind, of shoe knives, over twenty varieties of button fasteners, lasts and iacks without end, hundreds of minor machines duly protected by .patents threading machines, twentv-fbzh- t shank, box. fudge, stitch cord and peg. bottom wheels there is a bewildering van-e- y Lewiston Joura' Kb I Happy. "Who Is nappy on thi mundane 'lpbere?, exilamifJ IVnimn. "The Kirl Ho her first ent'atri-inea- t ring." triumphaotly replte-- UpUau ; Jewekr' CituUr. |