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Show : THE SALT LAKE TIMES. MONDAY. JANUA RY TP, 1891. ' ' - ' mm MHpEKIB1BM1'IS1 lAIDIDBiTiPIOIBMlS ", i mmm mmmmmmmmmmm a mm mmmmmmmmmmm !T" 0 Before ? !JJg "urrounclings and character ol neigW;or'10 I self and m' f..ou decide to locate m - 3T! mistake ,1 . --make no , Q XD XJilSi----- L, ---a --pT Tf T S - rTTcheanertoive in Your I will then come to the office and uc expense what doing, J l - --l sce OFFICE, 23 W. 2ridjTO G. L. CHAMBERLAIN & CO. Ega yS r KELLY & CO. Printers, Stationers, Blank Book-Maker- s. No. 46 ff. Second South tiu Sat Lake City, - - Utah. Our facilities fordoing Hrst-claa- n Job Print-I-are of the newwt and but. Hooks ruled, rr.nted and bound to order, banples of Kail-roa- Mining. Hank and Mercantile work always on hand. Complete line of oflii'e Sup-plier, emhriicluK the mnit approved Labor-savin- , and Kconomlcal Inventions. Prices Low ! Call on u The Ancient Order of United Workmen meet every Monday and Thursday evening at '7 30 p.m., at the A. O. U.W. hall 38fr Went Tample street. ' J i M. R. EVANS, 22-2- 4 W. 2nd South St Sporting Goods ! Guns, Revolvers and Ammunition. Bicycles, Tricycles & Velocipedes Razors, Pocket Cutlery, Shears and Scissor Strops INDIAN CLUBS, BOXINC CLOVES. DUMB BELLS. DOG COLLARS. THOMSON BOOTS AND SHOES. FIELD AND OPERA CLASSES. Examine my Stock Before Purchasing ! AT THE AMERICAS (LOTIING & SHOE CO. ISO South Main St lilfiy COHN BROS. . SALE OF LADIES' it iliislin Mannar j . On Monday Moinn? we shall Ofer for Sals the Larger and Mo ;t Complete Stock i f Lad.es Muslin Unde w-a- r ever tijp'ayed in the City. i LOW PRICES SUPREME! SEE OUR WINDOWS! MuSlin Come in nd Inspect the Stock! KUSIID Underwear 0er 500 Wo,,ln Se,ect From-- . Underwear Every garment carefully selected from the very v . best know manufacturers. The stock comprises all . the most elegant designs in 7, Lies' Night Cons, Unde wear Drawers, demises, Skirts, ' Underwear and Cfflt Covers Ask to S ?e Cup Special Lines at 50 Cents, 75 Cants ai d $1. They are Marvels. Muslin Mus'iti llnrlom'oir We have opened a beautiful line of higher priced Mus- - 1! n rt UIIUeiKEai )in Underwear from $1.25 to 3.00 each, by far UIIU.IUCQI the most beautiful line we have ever j; shown. They will be offered during this sate AT EXTREMELY LOW PRICES . - COHN BROS. ,;v " ' Rudolph Alff" Importer of CHINA, CROCKERY, GLASSWARE, Plated Ware, Cutlery, Lamps, Vases, and ....Statuary.... 40 Main St, SALT LAKE CITY DR. HODGES, DENTIST I 31 W. lit South, - Salt Lake City. TEETH EXTRACTED WITHOUT PAIN1 By the Use of Vitalized Air. ALL WORK WARRANTED ! 39 Main St., Salt LaksC ity. II Tlil. JUST OPENED. THE OttY FIRST-CLAS-S HOTEL LV THE CITY. Cop. Main and Sonth Temple St. t' . begun shootin' the children and other domestic animils. While she was oat the fire in t.ho kitchen went out. but my lucky shot broke up the combination, beside loading me with game, and the only serious consequences was supper being about, fifteen minutes late. Ban-gor Mews. I BAG OF GAME WITH ONE SHOT, j Hew a Wild Cat, a Fox, a Martin, Weasel and a Mouse Were Caught. Speaking about pot luck, said a refer- - in hunter and story teller one day, I luppose I have had some of the darndest itrenks of luck ever had in the state of Maine. Everybody knows how I once irove a bear np a tree, and then felled the tree into the pond where the bear was drowned, at the same time scaring thirty or forty trout, to death which rose to the top of the water, and the way I sot a bear trap and canght a fellow who was there to steal sheep; another time when 1 sot a trap for critters what was arter my turkeys, and ketched a young feller that was hangin' round to see my darter Mary. And the story 'bout my going to the courts to prove that I hadn't cetched trout in close time, by showin' that the line and hook the trout was on had been left dangling in the brook one day in the legal season when I was fishin,' and got called away all of a snddent to drive the cows outer the corn. In the excite-ment of the moment I forgot the hook and line, and when one day arter the law was on I was passing that way I found that the hook had captured a trout weighin' fourteen pounds and eeven ounces. I reckoned by the appear-ance of things, as the fish was uncom-monly spry, he had been hooked that very mornin", but as it couldn't be proved I got off. , Yes. all these and more, too, are well Irnown doin's on my part, but, as I said, the darndest thing of all happened not long ago. I took down the old rifle one day and told the old woman as long as there was nothing doin' round the place guessed I would take a walk. Wal, as luck would have it, I hadn't gone far when I spied what I surmised to be a wildcat. The critter probably got wind pi me, for he cut and run a little ways in about the direction I came from, and then took a sneak along a mossy bank jand hove in sight only to disappear round a large stump at the edge of my xlearin'. ' I didn't wait a second; I just up and Jet go, just as the cat got out of sight. The ball, I was pretty snro, hit bim in the hind quarters. 1 went forward to secure him if possible and then and there ! found out that he hadn't got wind of ,me arter all, but was on a still hunt himself, and ho got his game just as my ball hit him. That cat had a fox, holdin' ,liint with his teeth, and, you may be-- j lieve or not, the fox had ketched a ma-rten, I could hardly believe my eyes land looked again, and blowed if the marten didn't have a weasel. Hold on, ,1 hatn't done yet The weasel had a 'mouse by the hind leg, and the mouse was trying to escape through a little tjiole in the fence of my back yard where e had been and robbed my hens of a kernel of corn, which stuck out of the little mouth. One of the yonng roosters was trying to get the corn away from him. not that there wasn't plenty more, but that is a tooster's nature, you know. Now, I had a hound pup, and the antiee of the young roosters made him caper round arter bim, and this stirred np the old cat, and she joined the dance by roundin' up her back and spittin' at the hound pup. Meanwhile the youngest kid was trying to harness tip the old cat. and the old woman came out with the broom to see vhat all the racket me'nt She had beer'd ' my gun jo off, too, and didn't know by th rumpus but I had gone crazv-an-u. .- - ... ...... A NEW DEPARTURE. To Leadvllle, ' D-- nw and tha Itaet. The Colorado Midland railway, standard gauge; has through Pullman ears for Lesdville and Denver, leaving Salt Lake city on the Rio Grande Wes-tern at :50 a. m. and 10:05 p.m. If you go via the Midlaua you can se-cure your Pullman berths for the 10:05 p.m. train at Union Ticket oflice.corner Main and Second South. horrified to see the face and hands of what she thought greatly resembled a human being. It frightened her to such j an extent that she fainted. When she related her story to her husband he laughed her to scorn, but a few da's ago she induced him to go up stairs at a stated hour and see if he could see the supernatural beiug. He complied with her request, and was amazed to see the same face and hands, which had every indication of a human being. The supposed ghost resembled an old man, and as the house was owned and occupied by Jacob Anderson, who died a few years since, a great many people thought it was probably his ghost. Ac-cordingly Mrs. Mier, who is a stranger in this place, visited Mrs. John Golds-boroug- h, who is a daughter of the lata Jacob Anderson. An album was given her containing Anderson's photograph, which she quickly recognized on sight. Mrs. Mier never saw Anderson, and the moment she looked at his picture she recognized it as being an exact likeness of the face sho saw in the old Anderson house. The people don't take much stock in spook business, but Mrs. Mier'8 and other people's stories, who are accredit-ed with seeing the one spoken of, are certainly increasing the belief in this vicinity that there are such visitations. Mrs. Mier is an intelligent lady. Cor. Pittsburg Dispatch. A Ghost Identified by a Photo raph. What is said to be a haunted house is situated at Andersonville, half a mile wettt of Scottdale, Pa. The house is said to be visited by the ghost of its former owner, and for that reason a family has just vacated it The honse has been visited every night this week by many persons desirous of seeing the ghost. They say that in washing the residence about 13 o'clock at night you will see a curious light gleam forth from the up-stairs window. Mrs. William Mier, who occupied the house until a few weeks ago and vacated it on account of the fear ' of the supposed ghost, relates a thrilling story of her adventure. She says that about a week ago, late at night, she wpt( upstairs, and was Swallowed III Cigarette. Dr. LHpeyre mentions a remarkable case, in which an elderly gentleman, in consequence of a sudden slap on the back, unconsciously drew the cigarette he was smoking into his right bronchus, where it remained without causing any symptoms or in any way revealing its presence for nearly two months, when it set up pneumonia in a circumscribed area, and produced cardiac weakness and some oedema of the lungs. After this condition had lasted with-out much change for about two mouths more the patient expelled during a vio-let; ' of coughing the cigarette, envel-oped in mu usand waxy looking matter, and then remembered that he had never found hia cigarette after the slap on the back four mouths before. The pneumo-nia persisted for two or three months after the expulsion of the foreign body, and some nedema of the right lung, due probably to embolism, remained at the date of the report nearly a year later. This, as well as eome other cases that have been published, appears to show j that the bronchi are exceedingly tolerant of foreigh bodies, even when not encyst-- ! ed. London Lancet. A Ci of Trea Heiurrectlren. About 1873 a large tree of the elm ' species, growing on the fnna of Mr. Smyth, rector of Little Houghton, En-- 1 gland, was blown down, upturning au immense quantity of dirt in its fall. This large ball of earth had almost en-- I tirely washed from the roots on the up- -' per side when, iu 1881, workmen were i set to work removing the old forest monster. When they had sawed off sev-- j eral of the large limbs on the undermost side, to their great astonishment, not to say downright terror, the tree rose of it3 own accord and went back into the pit excavated by the upturning roots six years before, standing up in its original place, straight as an arrow. In 1S82 it threw out a fresh, green head and still j stands, even to this day, a curious ex-- j ainplo of a resurrected tree. St. Louis j Republic. The Watermelon Loaded with Wapa. There was a fnnny occurrence on Pratt street wharf Wednesday. A sailor on an oyster pungy which had been cruising about tho oyster grounds off Mogothy river landed with a dilapidated looking watermelon under his right arm. The mariner entered a nearby saloon and laid the piece of fruit dowfl. It being a little late in the season for melons a crowd gathered around to look at tho sailor's find, and several of them emphatically expressed doubts as to tho soundness of the melon. The sailor, in-nocent of what was inside of it, said to prove the melon was in good shape he would plug it before carrying it to his best girl, to whom he intended to pre-sent it. He did so, and upon extracting a piece of the rind about 100 wasps flew out and made things lively about the place. It soems that the melon was somewhat overripe, and while lying neglected in its bed a family of wasps had bored a small hole in one end of it and taken up their abode therein. The man who brought it to town rushed out of the place with several of the insects settling down upon his face, and in his hurry he knocked over an Italian fruit stand, fell on a cat, which was nearly crushed to death, and nearly knocked two police-men into the dock. The restaurant man put out his gas and left his dogs to fight the wasps. Baltimore Herald. In ALsace, not far from Worth, there is now a monument to tho young English-man who was the first victim in the Franoo-Ueraa- n war. Young Lieut. Winslow, who was attached to the Ger-man army, was shut while reconnoitering with the staff by one of the first bullets fired on the French side. Illg I'rotlu on Small Capital, Tramp (to handsomely dressed lady on the avenue) Please, mum, my family is starvin', an' I'll have ter sell my wheel-barr- er ter buy bread. It's just around the corner, mum. Would ye like ter buy it? Lady Mercy met WTiat could I do with a wheelbarrow? I live in aflat, my good man. But I will help you gladly. Here's a dollar. Tramp (to himse;f) That's $6.rve made ter day tryin" ter sell a wheclbar-re- r to kind people what lives in flats, an' I ain't got no wheelbarrer nuther. New York Weekly. , ' ' ' V. ,. |