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Show 3 2 THE SALT LAKE TIMES. TUESDAY FEBRUARY 10. 1891 . , GIRLS AT THE CAPITAL Walter wellman writes of wo-man AND HER WAYS. Cfc Typical American (.Irl Anything lint a Shrinking and Helpless frealllre. BVlv the School Tearliera Took the dtp-- ( It) - A Woman lit I In) Monument. (SlWlft1 Correspondence Washington, nit) American Woman is si en to very good advantage fc the Capital City. Of course sliu is gen to good advantage everywhere, but here we seo her mora strikingly than iaqwhore in her modern characteristic f Independence, self assert.iveiioss. Hern Washington the American woman ap- - True, tail last mentioned altitude is ground, and a strong, locked gato bars the way from the top of the dome; but it was not a very high gato, and the more adventurous and athletic of these fair visitors boldly mounted it. In one particular these schoolmis-- I tresses exhibited a characteristic which is common to their sex who visit the Capitol. I havo noticed in my daily rnmhiings about tho great building that the average woman is determined to dis-regard ull rules, defy all doorkeepers, and go in npou the floor of tf house, bhe observed common looking congress-men, pages and other persons entitled to the Hoor passing in and out unchal-lenged, and nuturully concludes that she may do likewise, Tho doorkeepers are nearly always busy with the. requests ol those persona who wish to we members, mid at limes tho entrances are left prac-tii-al- ly uiir;.iarded. Even if the sentry observe the woman inading the secret ' precincts, sho is generally within the door beforu he, polite, good natured soul that he is, can succeed in convinc-ing her that must retrace her steps. Thus it. happens that the Ug speaker and many of the members occasionally look up and see two or three- women branding in the rear of the hall, notwith-standing 'the fact that no living woman lias the privilege of the floor, and Muilo as they watch the doorkeeper po-litely inviting the intruders out. While it is trno that no woman has the right to enter tho houso during its sessions, 1 am reminded that one woman, and only one, may enter tho senate whenever she wishes. This favored ono is (he wife of Senator Reagan, and her right is found in tho fact that she is her husband's pri-vate secretary, drawing n salary of $100 per month from Uncle Sam. Women visitors ro tho Capitol are always much interested when they per-ceive one of their sex sitting in tho press gallery, hard at work with pencil and WILL GO IN ON Tilt! FLOOR, pears to know rather more about taking cure of herself than she does in other elties, develops greater facility for get-- u what she wants, going where nho wishes and ascertainins what she de-air-to know. We hail a very good example of this trat a few day ago, when four or five hundred women school teachers from Kew York and New England descended wpon the capital in all the haste, eager-Bee- s and jollity of an excursion party. They arrived about dark, and the man-e- r in which they surrounded the hotel registers, wrote their names with a businesslike uir and heid the poor clerks p sharply with demands for tho best that could be had, was a surprise to many be-holders. "Aba!" said ona of tho clerks at Willard's hotel, after the last of his newly arrived guests had been disposed Of, "that is the hardest job lever under-took in this house. 1 have handled many, parties of men and women in my time. but for knowing what they want, and ticking to it till they get it, commend mo to an excursion of scliooltiiu'anis." After dinner that night the streets of tho capital took on an unwonted air. a:....... n1,,ul. ...n-- .. A.rul.,,,nl,mA lmf. t I .r.-r:- :--.ij a woman's peat in' thb moni-mfn-paper. There are many women in Wash-ington who write for the press, and some of them earn large incomes too, bnt only one ha entree to the press gal-lery. This lady, Mrs. Burke, is the regu-larly accredited and very industrious correspondent of a western paper, and she takes her place among the large number of newspaper men and manages to get all the news in which her employ-ers are interested, but the fact is she meete with no very cordial welcome at the hands of her fellow workers. The newspaper correspondent here have al-ways been opposed to letting women into the gallery, and while they couldn't keep Mrs. Iinrko out under the rule, they have managed to exclude her name from the list of correspondents printed in the congressional directory. These school mistresses of whom I have been writing saw Mrs. Burke at her work in the senate gallery, smiled approvingly at her, and I dare say gloried, one and all, in her spunk. It would be easy to write two or three columns about the manner in which our schoolnia'ams explored every nook and cranny of the city of Washington, paid their respects to the president and the members of his cabinet, interviewed officials of all degrees of rank and use-fulness about the details of their work, and left liehind them in snow and air and the memory of all with whom they had coine in contact one large, insistent, persuasive interrogation point. But be-fore going any fnrther with this pleasant recital I want to retell a story which was told mo by the man at the Wash-ington monument, and which is f iirly illustrative of what a woman will do when her predominating propensity, the curiosity of sightseeing, is fully roused. the women, by pairs, trios, quartets, fjronps and parties, were out doing the town. They went over to tiie White House grounds, and browbeat the watch-men nt the gates into giving them ad-mittance. They stopped at the base-ment of the treasury, where a sentinel it just within a great barred door ono of the many guards of the hundreds of millions of dollars in Uncle Sam's vaults and endeavored to jiersuade him into letting them in. For once they failed. They trudged down toward tho monu-ment in order to get a new view of the greatest of obelisks by moonlight. They surrounded tho big equestrian statue ot Andrew Jackson, and threw snowballs nt the broiizo bend of tho hero of New Orleans. Attracted by tho brilliant siectaele of a moonlit cnpitol at the other end of the avenue :i cnpitol which seemed but a few blocks, though of course it was more than n mile, away many of them walked thither and mado the new ter-race and the grand old eastern portico, on which so many presidents have taken the oath of office, resound with their laughter. Not till near midnight were the streets cleared of these eager, romp-ing, curious, merry, but very pretty and very proper tourists. Bright and early next morning they were on the move again. The C'spitol and the monument were the first objects of attack, as they ara with most strangers within our gates. Their visit to the national state house proved to be a mild sort of sensation. They overrun the big building like birds on a black-berry bnsh. In the senate chamber, as the telegraphic dispatches havo already chronicled, they startled tho good old AHO CICIlUUllIlil ItlllS Uill C 1UUO lll Mllll down, and walked up and down, taken views from the top and bottom and of the interior with their kodaks and flash lights," said the man who stands at the door of the big olielisk, "but the queer-est case wo ever had here was that of a woman from Vermont, who came one day last summer. It happened that for several lumrtt that day something was wrong with the steam pipes in the power house, and the elevator wasn't runnin , nor tho electric lights which illuminate the interior of tho shaft. When our lady from Vermont arrived we told her how things was, and advised her to come again the next day, when the steam would surely be all right, and she could le taken up. But she wouldn't have it that way. She said she had come all the way from Vermont, was going home that night, and must see tho top of George Washington's monument or her trip to the capital would be nothing but a failure. Couldn't she walk up? 'Cer-tainly, madam,' says I, 'but you are lame, and I don't see how you could ever make it.' Vou see, she was on crutches, poor tiling! 'Oh, I can walk it,' said she, 'it you'll just give me a chance.' 'Bnt,' I argued, 'the interior of the monument is as dark as pitch. Look up and see; it's a great hole of blackness, with a mere speck of light barely visible at tho top.' 'Well, can't you lend me a lantern?' 'Haven't a lantern about the premises.' 'A candle, then.' By this time, you may imagine, I was interested in the woman. I liked her spunk, and so I went down to tho engine" room and brought her up a candle. She thanked mo for it, took it in her hand, seir.ed her crutches in a determined sort of way, and slowly dis-appeared in the darkness overhead. Well, sir, in about three-quarte- of an hour fche came down again, radiant and tri- - nruphant, tho only woman that I know of who ever walked to the top of tho monument on crutches with only a tal-low candle to light her way." Walter Wellman. asEtgjir ' . tTTE ONE WOMAN IN THE PRESS GALLERY. statesmen by stamping with their feet iu an impatient effort to hasten the of the session, like the gallery gods in a theatre noisily expressing their wish to see tho curtain rise. After tha sejiate had begun its deliberations the visitors applauded what they liked, and sow and then shook their heads in dis-approval, in defiance to all the rules and in utter indifference to the n.ppings of Vice President Morton's gavel and. the warning glances of that patriarch and piuk of srnatorial propriety, Capt. B;is-Bet- L In their rambles abont the Capitol thet,e pretty schoolma'ains were much like all the other American women who come here that is, they were not inclined to pay out their good dollars for the serv-ices of guides, but were much more prone to ask questions of every man they saw, be he justice of the supreme cc urt, senator, newspaper correspondent, or janitor. It is aafe to say they learned more about the Capitol than any other party or visitors ever ihd in so short a time, and that the his-tory lessons of the coming year in the schools of New York, Brooklyn and thereabout will be embellished by many illustrations drawn from personal ob-servation. Theso pretty pedagogues explored every part of the building, from the crypt, in which it was tho intention ot the forefathers to deposit the remains of Washington, and the still lower and gloomier precincts in which state pris-oners were once confined, to the famous whispering gallery at the top of the rotunda, and even to tho tnnthorn at the very feet of the Goddess of Liberty. DR. HODGES, j DENTIST I 31 TV. 1st South, - Salt Lake City. TEETH EXTHACTED WITHOUT PAIN I By the Use of VitalUed Air. ALL WOKK WABRANTED I $500 Reward ! VE will p.y lh abor. reward for any esse of tl Ciei plaint, Dyipepsia. ttlrk Bdsei.. IMifsstion. or Cnittv.nM wm e nn"t euro wiia Wrst'. Ve.lablI.lT.rPtlt, whrn the eire'llnns are strli-tl-compiled with. They ara purely rtabl., and neer fall to Kir. tlfcti'in. Sugar Coated I.rno botes, rontsinlntf SO eilln, z rent.. nwar. of romiterf.tts and Imitations. Tho pnnin rnsnufRrtured only by THK JOSS 11, WEST OolUUNV, tHIUlli). ILL For sa'c by Johnson, Pratt & Co., Salt Lake. T. R. JONES & CO., Ul MATS STREET. j 3DYS ORES AND BULLION. E. J. SMITH, Printing House Court. , Job Printing, Bookbinding and Lithographing. Bank Office and County Supplies. Legal Blank's. 24 W. 3rd South St Salt Lake City, Utah. " E. SELLS, J. TUCKER. H. W. SELLS. Sells Sc Corqpany, Wholesale and Retail Dealers in Lumber Firit South street, opposite 14th Ward Ajsembl Rooms, F. 0. Vox 1078. Old Pioneer l ard f Armitrvog A Bafflej. 6io. M. Scart Jas. GLaifDEnrrNaj IT. 8. Rmrmrr , President. Ylce-Prerids- nt - Secretary. GEO. AL SCOTT & CO., VSCORPORATZD.) -D-JC.AT-iKiR.H IN-- Hardware and Metal, -S- taves, Tinware, Mill Findings, Etc, AGENTS FOR the Dodge Wood Pulley, Roebllng'g Steele Wire Rep. Vacuum Cylinder and Engine Olla, Hercules Powder, Atlas Engines and Boll ers, Mack Injectors, Buffalo Scales, Jefferson Horse Whim, Blake Pnmp. Misers' and Blacksmiths' Tools, to. 168 MaIH STREET, Salt Xiolso Cit?, - - Utah jrffe. T H E IPopnIar Route Jt ' To all Points East. Only Ono t'liange of Cars I'tah to Kansas City or St. Louis. Elegant Pullman Buffet Sleeping Cars. FREE RECLKKG CHAIR CARS. Be sure yonr ticket reada via the CHICAGO SHOUT LINE. cniciw MILWAUKEE & St. PAUL i. Is the rrnivI'M rnnntoig fnlM VeaHhnied Steam H'wtea aad '.l'-tr1- Llrkted Tralai Dally, harweaa Oklrayn and Omaha, corapoiaa of M.rnln-n- t Sieepln! Car and The Finest Dining Cm in the World EVKKYTIIlMi riHST-CLAS- S I Any fnrther lnfonnaltna will ba cheerfull run,,.hedhy MITCHELL, Commercial Agent. li 8. Main St.. Salt Lake wty. T. . POWatlX, Trav.llac Acnt, John Green, ' Sanitary Contractor. Excavationi fo Sewer Connections a Specialty. At J. W. Farrall & Co., IV South Main St Telepkon 900. BBantifaUWonian 8MIXKH SWEET- - aftiSTV. LV at ike thought jwJ5- - ei her own lovrlt. wYJNT?5r aeea. Every woman PK arnllea nweetry who L it'S'v'Lm ue Wisdom's Tv, 5b''7xl " bertine, lor it girt Ci??!rSavJ to her a clear, trans- - S f $3 ' parent, beantitul I. Stlt&lJ skin. A beautiful TsLAfcA complexion alone is t 4 ISri'' ft'n sufficient to Vf'Ak mslte a woman KjMS-a- beautiful. A woman TiTfe who n" beautiful VNifc cornplerisn ahouM JiavvX ) ,Prewrve ' o1 r Il1HkVI l,ems's pfoosrtsuensasteionin l itr should besutify it If A if Wiwlem's sober. ttne dees fust whst is claimed far it It not only wreserres and beau-ua-tke. eanrltaasn, but rrsairs the damaKes Aime by the use ot the many danfersus new in the market, by its tonic effect, the skin to a natural, kealthy action. Kcad tke tssrimonlals from famous artistes, d chtssjsu and eminent physicians. MISSOURI PACIFIC RAILWAY. H. C. TOWNSENO, S. V. DERRAH, G. P. ft T. A., St. Louis. , C. T. ft P. A 1S1 8. Main Street. SaltLaks City. CM Colorado Midland By. PIKE'S PEAK ROUTE. Standard. Gaugre. BETWEEN Denver. Colorado rin;s, Poehlo, Salt Lake Qtty. Ofdrt, Wariic Coa't and all Northwest Feints, via Man: ton, LeaavUls, Aspen and elm wood Springs. SCEAERT HE "IA LIED. EpFMSr SURPASSED., Throtiirh Pnllman Sleepers and Pullman Tsntrlst Can between Denver and Sin Francises. Through lhskaart nt the ocky Mountains The nsaart fOiafsrtable, lbs safirt and the uTuadeirt at all t Rentes. Fot rates, dererlptloa, pamphlets, etc, call open or address J. D- KENWORTHY. Oe I Ag't Proirrsss BId'jr, Salt Lake City. H. COlLBRAN, CHAS. S. LEE. Ceanral Msnsger. General Pass. Afrnt. Colo. Bpr.ncs, CMo. . Denver, Colo. S20 22asrt jTirst Soutli. , Wholesale and Retail LUMBER All kinds of Material pertaining to the Lumber Yard business, and spe-cial facillt es for handling GET THEIR PRICES. Third West, B.tween First and Second North 1 WIST TMKVkE H ENRY F.CLARK THE-- - TAILOR. 29 E. First South St. PUIMAS BUFFET CARS Betw sen Salt Lake Cty and Butte. Commencing Tnetdav, December Wh, the Cnlon Par.ido win rperate Pullman Buffet Oars etweea Salt Laka City aad Butte without lrsnsr. City Ticket Offlre. Sri Ms'B Street. S. W. aCOLES, Gen. Pass. Agt THE Denver & Rio GraMe ' RAILROAD. SCENIC LINE OF THE WORLD. The Favorite Route to Glen wood, Aspen, Leadville, Pueblo, Colorado Springs, Denver .And all Points East and South. TWO DAILY. Elepant Pullman and Tourist Sleepers, and Free Chair Oars on Each Train. For full Information, call on or address A. N. OLIVER, Freight & Passenger Agent. rrfv. -- nd South. 8. T. SMITH, A. S HUGFE8, General Manager. " Traffic Manager. S. K. HOOPER, P. andT. A. DREDHL & FRANKEN, PRESCRIPTION DRUGGISTS S e cor. Main and Third South. We rarry a complete line of Drusrs, Chemtcals, Pron'rtetarv Uemedles, Trusses. Import-ported'an-domestic Perfumes and Toilet A tides. The Cempmindlnr of I'hrsleians' Prescr'p-tlsnsan- al Family Recipes oor Also a tine line of Trusses. Traces and Crutches. Special attention given toorder by mall. The Cullen, THE HOTEL OF SALT LIKE. S. C. EWIMG, - - FIIOPK. WALKKK : HOUSE. fh Walker i$ Located in tht Bwtinem Center of fats City and ha all tht Mm Improvements & Conveniences Pertaining to a strictly tint-clo- u haum It la managed as well as any hotel In ths West and Is sirirtly the BuefoeM aad Tour let Hotel of Silt Lake City. Paaeengvr Blavator. The Walker the Ktropolit&a Are the Twe Leantin? Eoteli of 8ai lake City. Gh 3. KRB Proor. AT THE AKEMC.H aOTHIJfl & SHOE CO. ISO.South Main St. Grows Hair Rapj(HyJ Ja4 Eradicates Dandruff. Cft. Stops Falling Hair, $t Is a Preventive Grows Hair on StlC Jiald Head ri7 Is an Exe-iisit- fin$3 iouctArtic5 nPf'fi co'onngmattee: Coutaiub no ..u.neral or Vegetable PDlSOUi it is an honest and mentoriooa preparation. ls'atnre's Own Remedjr, Miini Root Hair tar Ct NEW YORK. Jnto Tpiplpjnii lUlul 1 ullljjluluil. JUST OPENED. f THE OXLY FIRST-CLAS- S HOTEL H TIIE un. Cor.' Main ml Soutli Temple Sts. KELLY & CO. Printers, Stationers, Blank Book-Maker- s. No. 4fl W. Second South 4U Salt Lake City, - - Utah. i Oor facilities for doing Hrst-r'.as- i Job Irlnt- - ' Ingareofthe newest aud bast. Hooks rulerl, printed and bound to order. Samples of K:nl- - road. Mlulnx. Hank and Mercantile wor always en band. Complete line of unti e Sup- - embracing the most approved Labor-avln-and Economical Inventions. ' v .' ,' Prices Low I Call on u j wS!MtoIAatisinc. m Hiy!tglvr Specialty. Jgy Utah Optical Go. 157 S, Main, - - - Salt Lale, THE ONLY RELIABLE! If yon have defective vision, remember that ws matt a specialty of measuring all the eye, and fitting to. same with genuine Alaska Crystal & BraziliangE' The only place In the city where glasses are lltted to each Individual eye, aud ground if necessary. j H a large assortment of Field and Opera Glares. ; John Weiser & Co. ' SANTA FE ROUTE. AteMscn, Tojeta 4 Saita ft R R Buns the finest Trains between Denver, Cooradi Sitlnts. Pueblo and Atchison, Topeks, Katsis City, St. Joseph, Gaiesburg, Chicago. These Trains are Solid Vestibule DINING CARS, FREE RECLINING LIBRARY CHAIR CAR3, Leaving Denver 5 p.m. dally. MOST POPULAR ROUTE I To reach all Eastern Points, either via Chicago or at. Louis. A ik any ticket agent for tickets over this line For further Information, time cards, etc, call upon or adores. J. D. KENWORTH . Oen'l Ag t, Pregresi ld'g, Bait Lake City CEO. T. NICHOLSON, Gao. i'as. Xkt ft, Taysla, $ idea of the revolution of 1843 than he ever got from book, with romantio reminiscence of ths roup d'etat t Plassans thrown in by way of dessert? Yet that was my good fortune the other day. As I entered the restaurant its one waiter rose reluctantly from the book he was reading and awaited my order. Glancing at the volume which still lay on the table I Haw that it wan a novel by Zola, of which the strategic maneu-ver at Plasrians is tho mainspring. "Ah," I said, "and so you are a lover of Zola?" "No," Mid the waiter scornfully, "I am not a lover of Zola; I am a lover of Alphnnae Daudet." "But you were just reading Zola." 'True; but because I rend ono of his books in no sign that I love them ull. This book contains something that inter-ests me, that is all --but wait till I get your coffee." The waiter brought my coffee and sat down nt tho opposite sido of the table. "Yon have read tho book?--' ho asked. "Yes." "And remember the account of the coup d'etat nt Plassnns?" "Surely." "Very well," paid the waiter, Incoming very impressive, "my grandfather was the chief actor in t hat drama. But for liiin there would have been no Second Empire!" I expressed proper astonish-ment, and bogged the waiter to explain. "But, dear me," ho said, bhaking his head, "my grandfather had no idea of what he was doing for Napoleon. IIo was as good a Republican as nuy of them." "Then how did be perform such signal service, for Napoleon?" I inquired. "Ah, that is it; because lie was an ass." replied the waiter, who evidently would have been something of ft Repub-lican himself if he had lived in those times. "My grandfather was an igno- - rant, foolish old man and a fanatic. Ho wns an under gardener in the service of M. Possart, who had always been a stanch Republican, but was now actinjj secretly against both the Republicans find the Legitimists. My grandfather did not know this, so he made a very convenient tool. "The grounds of 31. Possart's house at the rear were separated from those of M. Tegneur by shrubbery and a low i palina: fence. M. Tegneur was a lead-ing spirit among the Republicans, and ' knew all alxmt their strength and their plans. M. regneur employed as gov- - emess for his children a pretty little Parisienne with whom M. Possart, be-ing young and handsome, had flirted desperately over the bonndary fence. Her name was Nanette. One day Na- - nette came to the fence and spoke to my grandfather, who was at work in his master's garden, 'So, so,' he said, going up to the fence, 'you and my young master have ejuarreled. You no lenger meet as you used to.' " 'No,' said Nanette, 'we have not quarreled. Listen. We are going to marry! But we can't meet here any more. Your master is suspected of being a traitor.' " 'Never!' said my grandfather; 'it is false. . He is no traitor.' " 'It is true he is suspected, and we are watched. But you can help ns,' said Nanette plaintively. 'Do you have a good appetite?1 " 'Very,' said my grandfather, which was true, for I have heard my mother say he was an old glutton. " 'And are you fond of sugar cakes? " 'Extremely,' said my grandfather, licking his lips. " 'Well, then, listen,' said Nanette. 'Quite often, maybe every other day, I will bring you some sugar cakes and hand thtm over the fence; but von must eat them at once, for we shall be watched. But do not eat the little piece of paper in the centr of one of the cakes. Conceal it in yonr hand, and after a while take it to M. Poahart.' "The very next day Nanette brought some sugar cakes to the fence, and called out to my grandfather: 'Old man, old man, are you hungry? Here are some nice sngar cakes for vou.' My grandfa-ther went up to the fence at once, took the cakes and ate them. In the center of one was a little hit of paper which" "Your grandfather could not read," I interrupted. "No more than a cow, of course not. He took the piece of paper to M. Possart, ' who seemed very glad to get it. Nearly every dav for a month ray old fool of a grandfather took those pieces of paper to M. Possart." "And then what happened'---' "Then there was the coup d'etat." "M. Possart never was in love with Nanette?" "No, certainly not. She was a spy, just as he was." "And the little pieces of paper" "Contained exact information abont the plans of the Republicans. Ah," said the waiter, with a pathetic shrug of his shoulders, "but for ruv stupid old grandfather there would have been no Second Empire." LIukuy Allen. HISTORY HIDDEN AWAY. A Descendant of Ono Who tlad to Do Willi the Coup d'Elat or '48. Special Corri'spondeuc New York, Jan. 8. There is many a choice bit of history Ridden away in corners of this metropolis where one would lea.st expect to find it. Who would think of goiii? into a second cla-- s trench restaurant for a cap of coffee and a roll, and poming out with a better i I m 6RAHDE kmMIESTEeiMILWIll CURRENT TIME-TABL- E In Effort January 1, ISfll, No. 9. No. 4. EAST-BOUN- TRAJN8 Atlantic Atlantic Mall. Express. Leav.Oglrn 8:l a.m. :f p.m. Arrive Rait Lake a.in.j l:M p.m. i t H.lt Lake V.10 a.m. KrSf, p.m. Arrlra frnro ll'XI a.m. Ilitfi p.m. Leave l'tov 11:4(1 a.m. 11:3' p.m. Arrive Oreea River f 3 p m.i ft:M0 a.m. lieareOreen River R:Mt p.m. B:.V, a.m. Arflve Orand Junetion. .. 0:f0 p.m.j 8:4'i a.m. Letve Cir.tna Junction... 11 p.m. I0:ij a.m. Arrive l'ubio 3:'J0 p.m. 2:',0 a.m. Arrive Denver 830 p.m. 7:i a.m. Airive Colorado Springs. :p.n. 3 :.V a.m. Arrive Denver..... 4:8pm. :5D a.m. No. No. S. WEST BOUND TRAINS Haotflo ' l'.u inc Mali. Exvres9. I.esve Denver ll:l a.m- 8:15 a.m Leave Cilorarto Springs.. 13:S0 p.m 11:10 p.tn Leave Denver R:(0 a.nv. 7:00 p. m Leave 1'ueblo 'i:4.i p.m. 1 1 f p.m Arrive iranil Junction. .. l:liin. 8:00 p.m Leave Oranrl Junctlou. . . 4:Hp.m. e:1S p.m Aerrvivee Dreen River S:fl0 n.tti. 5:M) p.m Green Klver 8::l a m. p.m Airiv Provo., j;v p.m.;l'J:i a m Li ave I'rovo S : 10 f m. 12:30 a m Arrive Slt Lake m p.m. I 4.', a.m Leave Salt Lake. 4:45 p.m. t:0n a.m Arrive Ogrteii.,, s n p.m. 8:i a.m LOCAL T22AIIT3. ' LOCAL TRAINS SALT LAKE AND OGDF.N. Leave Salt Lake, 2:00 a. m., 11.15 a m., 4:4."i p m. Returning, arrive Salt Lake, 9:40 a. m., 4:45 p. m., 0:55 p. m. H1NGHAM. Leave Salt Lake. 8:'.,.'i a. m. Return-ing, arrive Salt Lake, 5:i!0 p. m. AMrRK'AN FORK, PROVO, SPRINGVII.LE, TniSTLK, MOPS'T TLF.ASANT MANTI Leave Salt Lake, 4 :."5 p. m. Return-ing, arrive Salt Lake, 11:03 a. ni. I). C. DODtlE, J. H. BENNETT. Gen'l Manager. Gen'l Pass. Agt.' West Sid: Rapid Transit Co TiME TABLE. To Take Effect January 12th, 1S91 t Loral tmins for th Joril.in River Oirden City. Uilghion and Eldorado: Leave Eldorado. Leave Salt Lake. S:JUa m. f 7:10a m. TMJa.m. sn.m. ::.' " 10.jna.ni. ll:9ia.m. 13:S0p.m. l:10p.m, 2:0np.m. Jt:00p.in. 4:i0n.m. r: IP p. m. fl: lu p.m. City Station rornfr Seventh South and hocond West. J. G. Jacobs, - Gen. Manager M Centra! Railway. Tint Card in Effect Oct. 2B, ISM. Patssneer Trains leave anl arrive at Salt Laha City and Park City dally as follows: SALT LASS OITT. Train Heaves Eighth So and Main st i s j " tarrlvsa " 8:S0p.m ask crrr. Train l arrlvsa Park City 18 :S9 a.m ' tlaaves 4:0Op.m Freight tralna leave and arrive at Salt Lake anil Park City daily, exrept Sunday, as fol-lows: Train No. 5 leaves Salt Lake T:00a.m " arrives " 3: 5o.m " 'leaves Park City 11:00 a.m " 6 arrives " 1 : Op.m Ko passengers carried on freight trains. FAasxseas katbi: Ketween Salt Laka City and Park City, single rtetween Salt Lake City aud Parit City, rouad trip, IS. Jos. H. Yeiing. T. J. MeKlntotH, Gen. Superintendent Gen. Ft. ftPa. Agt i For Hygienic Instruction. j A structure for hygienic instruction ns an annex to the University of Pennsyl-'- ; vania, to cost $."0,000, the entire expense of which will be borne by Henry C. Lea, ' will be erected at the corner of Thirty-fourt- h and Locnst streets. It will be the first structure of the kind in America. The plans previous to their adoption were carefully gone over by Dr. John S. Bil-lings, United States army, the director of the university hospital. The investigations of the students will take in everything bearing on the sub-ject of pnre food and proper sanitation, from our daily food to the proper soil pipes to be used in house draining. Philadelphia Times. j iew York's Colored Novelist. New York boasts a colored novelist n woman who has not yet, however, found a publisher for her manuscript. The senior member of a well known firm was more than surprised the other day when a lady as dark as Othello walked into his sanctum aud said she had called for her manuscript, which she believed he had found "unavailable." The "read-er" who read the manuscript said there was nothing in it to indicate the com-plexion of the writer no local color, so to speak. Critic. .. Lady Rosebery's ralatiat Home. It is said that few houses in the world are more magnificent than the palatial j home left hy Hannah Rothschild, the late Lady Rosebery. All Europe had been rifled to make the place one of un- -' rivaled beauty, and from its tapestries, once owned by Cardinal Mazarin, to cabinets filled with priceless cameos, it? splendor and sumptuousness surpassed belief. The young wife and mother left a prodigious fortune, bequeathing im-- ' niense sums of money to Lord Rosebery and each one of her children separately, Illustrated American. . J |