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Show I TTTE SALT LAKE TIMES. TUESDAY. Al'JIIL 7 18BI, 3 ' " ; 1 13V " A Mothers, Look to Your interests! Commencing Wednesday"", Shirt-WAISTSl-- Shirt --Mornin, we place on Special Sale one of the finest lines of BOYS' H cnW -i- pcs and CLOTHING ever shown in the City; in light and medium foofiy " weights in perfect shies, just what you want lor a Spring and J Ml KNEE PANTS ! KNEE PANTS! Knf.k Pants! 250 pairs noys Knee rants, from 4 Summer Suit, comprising all the latest stripes, plaids, checks 0 I V to ,4 year, sold everywhere at 50 to 60c; take them along this week for 25c. and pin checks, ranging in ages from 10 to 1H years, and until I 1 ; Sujts s . Overcoats, Hats, Shoes and Furnishings, we display for your in. Saturday night vou can make your own selection irom oUU ; ct.tioi;all t'hc Latcst Novelties at prices SUITS AT HALF T1IKIR ACTUAL VALUE. I Your Choice for$5.00 UlLLLthe Reach ofM! , 'I'llC "0. K." The Birthplace of Low Prices! U7 Main St, G I:0. A. LOWE, Dealer in nil kinds oft'trst-clas- s AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS! Buggies, Surries and Road Carts. Handsome, Stylish and Durable. Steam Knjfines, Saw Mills, VA: Railroad font motors Supplies. warelioiiss: 133 tc 1-4- First East St. London Tailoring Co 53 AVost Sooond South Street. Latest Kovelliss. MODERN PRICE TAILORING. Correct Styles. Fashionable Attires t SUITS TO ORDER, ) SATS' ( PANTS T0 ORDER, $20 & Upwards, J -- $ und I'juvards-- 1 $5 & Upwards. It is our business to dress you becomingly. It matters not the price; nor the occasion; if large experience, plenty of goods, and honest prices will do it (and it will), you'll eonio to see us. Hundreds of wise purchasers are dailv selecting from the thousands of Fabrics arranged in our novel and con-venient way. Lockers become buyers and amply paid. Our capacity for uiakinn to order is broad; but we advise you to order early. Gome and Price Our Goods. Store Open Kvery Night Until t) O'Cloek. The London Tailoring Co. EAGLE FOUNDRY & MACHINE C O Hv 2P j&m "3T 121 WEST FIRST S0LTI1. : SALT LIKE C1TI, IT.l Cxo. M.Scot Jas. OtiKDKitwm B. 0. Rowmm President. ti. fiecretary. GEO. M. SCOTT & CO., (INCORPORATED.) --DEAL.ERH IN-- Hardware and Metal, Stoves, Tinware, Mill Findings, Bo. ' AGiNTS FOR the Dodge Wood Puller, Roeblinu's Stwde VVlr H-- , Vacuum Cylinder ai;d Engine Oils, Hercules Powder, AUm Engines and BoU ers, Mack Injectors, Buffalo Scales, Jefferson Hors Whim, Biaka Piuu Miners' and Blacksmiths' Tools, Eta 163 ISAIS STREET, Salt Italic Qltg, - - Utah Lynch k biasmann. J Real Estate Brokers. U We Offer the Following Bargains for a Few Days Only. They Must be Sold at Oncg, Tlie Following Are Genuine Bargains: 3r?T 1 SO ft Lot, with new Frame Cottage, it rooms, laree puiitrv and olosol. oily water, fruit trees: ou Alameda W. j. urine s- - "anises KING YANKEE, 1M3ALKKS IN Hardware, Stoves, Furnishing Goods, Carpenters' Tools, Bronze Goods, Etc. A Full Line Always in Stock, 213 State Street, S..!t Lake City. Avenue, W'twern JJrijsnam anu i-- irsi me. East 9 1,4UU 5(v i rso ft, 4 blocks north from MeCorniek's Itesidencr , nicely located, fruit trees, ets SOxl 40 ft Lot, on Capital Hill, nicely located, beautiful view - 25x1 40 ft Lot, on Capitol Hill, good location, fair view.. 400 3 lxt, SOxl 40 ft each, on Grant street, between 5th & Oth North; each Atu 4CK11B 1-- 2, on Main street, 1-- 2 block from Temple; this is a snap lO Lots 2,-,xl- 2.-i ft, 3 blocks north of Poplar Grove; the 1,-o- Kf bunch for 330x 1 05 ft, double corner, 4 blocks southeast of Warm Springs, hue peach orchard on ground....... ,v O.wv We Offer the Above for a Few Days Only. Easy Terrqs ! Lynch k Glasmann. SAMPLE C0PY OF THE ST. LOUIS WEEKLY Globe Democrat! i SENT FREE TO ANY ADDRESS. EST Send Your Name at Once to Globe Printing Co. ' St. Louis, Missouri. oaron has a fortune which some peoplt say amounts tolihl,(Vm,iHiO. Others put it at f.'lMt.O.K), iiiio, but the difference is immaterial. Wln-i- i a man getsup above ."i0,llii(t,0l0 nobody will bother about his skill with writing tools. In fact some of th( critics in (ho register's ofrico skilled in such matters gave the baron's signature n little praise They said it was prettier than Jay Gould's anyhow. Xew York Times. A SlKimture Tht t:rnpe Crlfielnm. A document which was filed in the reg-ister's office recently bore a signature which would puzzle an expert to de-cipher. There was a bold 'start, a wild zigzagging of pen marks up and down, and finally a tangle which might betaken to mean anything that suited the fancy j of the reader. Vet nobody felt called j npou to criticise the penmanship, for the signature was Ht the bottom of the trust ' deed by which Baron Maurice de Hirst h ' gave fc;,4oo,0im to ameliorate thecondi-- ; tiou of Hebrew immigrants to this conn-- ! try from Russia and Koumania, The I party wearing ono of the rings. Oeorgn IV gave a geiniuel ring to Miv.. t. Tho toadstone ring was another quaint media-va- l conception. It was an outcome, of superstition mid died when superstition died. Tho idea of the toad-ston- e rintr was to prevent mothers and small children from the evil inflneneesof th" fairies. The smallest wedding ring ever fashioned was that used at the mar-riage of Mary, the infant daughter of Henry VI 11 of F.nglainl, to the Dauphin of France, son of Francis I. The marriage was performed by Cardinals Wolsey and Cumpeggio, the bridegroom being 8 months old mid ilie bride 1 year and 10 months old. D iston 'Globe. ' KINGS OF THE ANCIENTS. J STYLES WORN BY THE EGYPTIANS, J ROMANS AND HEBREWS. I Itln-r- t Am Uc";ardc(l OilTerclitly N ( I'liun Formerly Worn Not So Much for Ornament a fur Their Intrinsic Value. Some Kanioim King III Hintory. j , Looking at the exhibition of modern , """""'finger' rings, the old timer is forcibly struck by the fact that, whereas n tho good old days the decorative art and de-sign were almost wholly expended on ' the gold band itself, modern jewelers confined themselves almost exclusively to combinations of valuable stones. It ,is a very ungrateful task to spoil a ro-mance, but cold truth compels the ad-mission that this is a practical age, which looks largely to the matter of convert bility in rings, watches and valuable presents. Actors and actresses on their ' travels are seldom seen without a diamond pin, brooch, necklace or solitaire ring, be-- I I cause these articles represent a condensa-tion of money in small bulk and undo-preciab-form. The finest workman-.- ? ship on the gold itself goes for nothing. t?1 It is simply "old gold" sold by weight. I . i It was very different in "the days of J f old," though there were plenty of stones available if they had been fI needed. The Phuraohc and their states-- . " men, Hie princesses of Egypt and their fa-f- i: vored attendants, undoubtedly wore Ji rings, for quite a numlx-- r of mummies V have been found with a dozen finger rings liberally distributed on the eight s r , fingers, besides the indispensable thumb rings. For it is a singular fact that for hundreds of years after the Christian era the enstom still prevailed of wearing V the wedding ring and tho masculine i token of wealth and power on the thumb. I EOY1TIAM KINDS. I The ring is so frequently alluded to in I the Old Testament as to make it plain i that the greatest importance attached to it, even in the pastoral age. In Cten. xii, i'2, it is stated that "Pharaoh took off his ring from his hand and put it on Joseph's hand," as a signal mark of favor. In F'stii. iii, 10, mention is made of King Ahasuerus taking his ring from his hand and giving it to Haitian, and the context shows that certain written documents were "sealed with tho king's ring." The old time rings were made of all sons of material. Pliny mentions that won rings were commonly worn by be-trothed peisous. It seems tolerably cer-tain that rings of gold and silver were worn only by kings, princes and nobles, while less expensive, circlets of brass, ivory, iron und porcelain or gluts were worn by the average citizeti. The oldest gold Egyptian linger ring actually preserved belonged to Aran- - Iioph III, who reigned over Egypt foiir-- l teen centuries before Christ was born, i? Rings of the date of Osirtasen and Thoth- - k MT ...1... .m ..,tt..i .iiw vui'i..e nf :? un a m, n" vw..... - I Joseph and Moses, hare been found, bar. ( they are of common mateiial and doubt ful authenticity. The scarahaeus, a beetle which fonned the Egyptian token of (from being a sexual) is a com-mon emblem in Egyptian tingoi rings, uad ono of Poe's most extravagant "tales of mystery, imagination and humor" lias a well established foundation, so far as the s ring is concerned. It seems to tie tolerably certain that Egyp-tian women wore as many rings as tliey could crowd on their fingers. ANTIQUITY OK KINGS. The Egyptians and Roni ins undoubt-edly preferred the left hand fur ring pur-pose- s, while Livy and Tacitus all seem to insist that the ( iauls and Britons wore their rings on the right hand. In any case, it seeifis to have been tacitly agreed that the third finger was the place of honor. The Hebrew rings worn in those good old days were very ornate and beautiful. Quite "a number of thein have been pre- - served, and they put the art of the mod- - ' rrn jeweler entirely to the blush. The most beautiful were, the pledges of or wedding gifts. The ceremo-nies in connection with these rings see in to be foreshadowed' in tho redemption process spec ified in Ruth iv, 7. The workmanship of these Hebrew bethrothal rings grew still more elaborate in the Middle Ages, when lowers and miinrets of gold were most, exquisitely built up on the hoop. The Jewish bride of this era wore the wedding ring on the first Ci ger. but in later days shifted it for Cor. e'lience to the third. The old style "gemmel" v "gerntuon" ri:ig(eviden fly associated with the French jniuelle, uncommon, meaning ' twin") is not fit all an object in col-1- ". : ins of antique rings. The iiii'.'iuiv;; of th" indivisible links is sell evident. Usually at the marriage of the parties tho links were severed, each jn Intercut lug F.nperlmeiit in Surgery. Will the skin of a black wan engraft-ed uimhi a white man's body turn white? That is the question Dr. John Ege, of Heading, is solving. He has just graft-ed eighteen small pieces of cuticle from a Boston negro's arm to the spaces that will not heal on Joel Saul's white leg, which has been sore for two years and which did not readily assimilate all of the thirty pieces of healthy white skin planted thereon Jan. 10. Ten of the white particles did grow, though, some of them from the size of a pin head to two inches in diameter. If the black skin should grow white on a white body it would give rise to en-tirely new theories ill surgery. Cor. Philadelphia Bocord. The Why of It. When some one bragged that only one public execution had taken place ill Turkey in five years, an Englishman in-vestigated and discovered that no culprit who could raise $100 to bribe officials had suffered death during the last twenty years. There is always a good reason for anything that happens in Turkey. De-troit Free Press. j Mi w York is ahead of all the other cities if individual riches running up into seven or more figures are meant. It is said that New York has over 1,000 millionaires, while London lias C00, Paris 600, Berlin ;"W mid Vienna nip. Weiim o. 19 Morrusln.. John Moriarty, who has been at work in Hamuel Hodgkins' lumlier camps at Black Brook, was in the city Monday, and while on the street attracted consid-erable attention. Hi; 0 feet 0J inches in his shocking feet, is 25 years old and wears Ho. Ill iifocca.-ins- . Ilia feat.iof strength i'.re renowned among the lumbermeii. He left for Brownville, where he made a contract to cut wood. Doubtless his swinginK "f the ux will compare with but few Maine chop-pers. Bangor News. j I'nre t.rit at Wounded Knee. The Indians fought desperately nntil they were annihilated, but their bravery was no more conspicuous than that which was unostentatiously displayed by gome of the soldiers. .Perhaps the most remarkable case was that of Private Kelly, who was shot near the heart. lie knew the mortal nature of his wound, and as he rolled over said to Private (iirbach. "I'm gone, sure; roll mo around and make a breastwork of me." That was courage. Private McKinzie of troop B was hit hard in the left shoulder. One of the surgeons saw he was wounded, and sent a litter bea.-e- to bring him in. But, McKinzie would not fro. He insisted on shooting away at the stubborn foe. "I know I'm getting weak," said he, "but I've got to have a couple of shots yet." He did fire once or twice more, and then he fainted from loss of blood and was taken to the rear. Sergt, Tritle, of E troop, has what some people call "grit." His first wound was in his left htud, anil a minute or two later he got another bad one in the hip. That would have satisfied the average warrior, but the sergeant was not inclined to retire. Just ihen Kergt. Kettles was killed almost at. Trifle's side. Tritle saw the Indian who fired the fatal and although his own left hand was shuttered, and blood was pouring steadily from his hip, he said, "I'll get that Indian." He did, and an instant later a hostile bullet; penetrated his left breast, "I gnesr, I'll get these wounds dressed now." was his faint remark as he crawled for the rear. Washington Star. "C;.lllii In" it Ni'uspaiier. There escaped the notice of the Russian censors in Finland the other day a small paragraph in a Swedish illustrated paper which, it appears, was not quite to the liking of the officials. When the objec-tionable paragraph was noliced an order came from the Russian officials that fill numbers were to be "called in." and the police act rally went from house to house and demanded that the papers should be given up. Loudon News. Jt Itii.tti.'l Fay. Out of fifty counterfeiters. arrested in the last eighteen months only twenty-thre- e of tlnm had passed "0 worth of the "queer," and only five of them had made a profit of per day for the time engaged. It doesn't pay as well as saw-ing wood at Mxty cents a cord, and ar-rest is sure to come within a year or two, Detroit Free Press. The queen of Italy wore a costu:n of extraordinary magnificence at the recent opening of parliament. The dress was of violet satin, exquisitely embroidered, over which was thrown a short violet velvet mantle of a slightly darker shade. Qneea Victoria's favorite dish for din-ner is well done beef, with which sba usually takes a glass of champagne, lltr ordinary breakfast consists of coffee or cocoa and muffins, of which f'ue is very fond. With her luncheon sbfc drinks a glass of aV'. The ilenvy fi agrdiun. " sAy "THrsOS ARE COMI.NO MY WAY." Chicago News, Wmi'lng Overshoes In Dry Weather. I have noticed during the dry walking many persons using "rubbers," as if the streets retained the mud and slush. I look upon the aberration of these wearers of rubbers n a result of yield-ing to th influences of a bad practice. For myself, whenever I have worn rub-bers undef stress ol weather, I have been only too glad to ca-s- t them oil at tho first favorable opportunity; but many persons persist in keeping them on even at places of amusement, where they foci ' particularly oppressive from the high temperature. This tamely yielding to the arbitrary infl'y-nc- of an uneomfort- - ' able article of dress should be a warning against letting lmbit get the advantage of principle in such matters. 1 have heard that in some places in New England, where tho winter's cold is ordinarily severe, "arctics" are a feature of iudoor gayefies, find that the "Port- - land Fancy," "All the Way to Boston," and similar dances are executed tinder the disadvantage,-- of these incumber- - nnees. Such experiences should lie heeded by wearers of "rubbers" in dry weather, lest th.a' fall under tho control of these oppressive foot coverings, and perhaps be obliged to wear them to bed. Boston Post. (n. of Spring. There's a kind of curious, lazy, lullln' fecftn' in the breeze. An' the. wly lmils are bemliu' 'neath tho weight (if honey bees; The downy denes ulu matin' la tho woodlands where the stream Is a clear an' ghiniu' mirror where the un- - btauiH leve to dream. Vou can see the buds on the brunches ouce so bnre, An' tho c;mlo- - they ure grazin' w here the ten-der lihules aj'tiou:" You ran In ur hn birds in their nests or on the. winis, But "InUewai plf aso hud a iiocm," is th urest bitin o' uurtiujl . finnl 11 Hajxn |