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Show 6 THE SALT LAKE TIMES. WEDNESDAY, MA RCIT 18 1391. IF YOU W-A-XT-T 909999 ! A FINE BUCGY, A ROAD CART, 5 5 A DELIVERY WAGON, Buggy Harness, Spring Wagon, 9 GO TO THE a ! CONSOLIDATED IMPLEMENT CO. Io STAT21 ROAD. CQ39QQ Have Now on Sale QNOYELTIES !Q In Silks, Wool Dregs flood. Satines, Zephyrs, Ginghams, Jewel Pas, atnentericp, Embroideries and Millinery. THE LARGEST I.H0 CHOICEST EVER EXHIBITED III THIS CITt Special Offerings Monday. Silk and Dress Goods Departirient ! So. M.Scot" Jit GLiiTKNra II. 8. RtrsrriKL rntiJent. Ylco-Preside- Btcretiry. GEO. M. SCOTT & CO., (1XCORPOBA TED.) --DEALERS IN-- Hardware and Metal, Sieves, Tinware, Mill Findings, Etc, AGENTS FOR the Dodge Wood Pulley, Roebllng'i Steele Wire Rer, Vacuum Cylinder aud Engine OIl, Hercules Powder, Atlaa Engines and Boil ers, Hack Injectors, Buffalo Scales, Jefferson Horn Whim, BIJli Piunpt Miners' and Blacksmiths' Tools, Eta. 168 MALN STREET. Salt laalso City, - - Utah Vs 6RQtRIE$ 6 , B.KBloeli&Co. 77"2iolccalQ LIQUOR & CIGAR MERCHANTS. 13, 15, 17, 19, Commsrcia! St., Salt L&h City. ITave in stock the largest line of Imported and Domestic Wines. Brandies, LI quors, Liqueurs and Cordials in the Inter-Mountai- Country; aro Headcpiartori for Pomery Sac, Cliquot, 0. H. Mnmm & Co. and Monopole Extra Dry Cham-nagn- e. Agency for Carl Upraana New York Cigars Straitoa & Storm and Eduardo H. Gato "Key West." SOLE AGENTS FOR CHAF.LES HEIDSIECK SEC. Ttloplione 3S5. MAIL ORDERS SOLICITED. P. 0. Box 553. E. J. SMITH, Printing House Court-- Job Printing, Bookbinding and Lithographing. Bank Offic and County Supplies. Legal Blanks. 24 V. 3rd South St Salt Lake City, Utah. At 47 1 -- tic per yd. 40 pes Colored Surahs; regular price 80c. At 75c per yd. 60 pes Colored Surahs; regular price 9Cc and $1.00 per SAt 77 l-- 2c per yd. 10 pes Black Satin Khadames, regular price $1.00 Domestic Department ! 2.V Fine Soft Fi"!rh German Linen Towels. 22 in. wide and 44 in. long regular price 40c each. Also line Damask Towels, with deep knotted fringe, wt r.h 45c each. At liOe French Satines; actual value 83c. At 1 -- :5c per.vl. American Salines, 27 in. wide; value 3jc At 9o per vd. Germnn Pr nts, 31 in. wide. At JOc per pd. Outing Cloth in check, plain and stripe; yalue 20o. At 5c per vd. Twilled Crush, 17 io. wide. At lOe per yd. Kxtra heavy Twilled Crash, all Linen. At , 8 l-- 3 JOc per yd. Chuck Nainsook; reduced from 10, 15 and 20c per yard. -- HOSIERY! Tlie Greatest Sale of Silk Hosiery Salt Lake has Ever Soeu. You enn buy ladies' all Silk Black Hose at GO Cents per pair. GLOAK DEPARTMENT ! The best manufactures in the World aro represented in Jackets, Wraps, Newmarkets ana Conemaras. liovs' and Yout lis Clothing Department ! These goods have been bouelit at prices that enable us to otter them at half value. t.ii5e Hoys' Percale and Outing Flannel Sliirt Waists. At UO, 23, SO, :ir.e each Hoys' Knee Pants. At $1.75 All Wool Suits in newest Spring shades. At$1.00 Ele-- i cant fancy combination Suits - At ftCJ.'-J-u Fancy combination Kilt Suits. At 1 5 Jersey Suits, ex-tra Cue. i j Special Attraclons in Oar Carpet Department ! 1 i Spring Styles now open in all the Various Grades. One. Trice to All ESTABLISHED, 1H04. i 4' --' i V 5' ' 71 S1 !' iailli.l2i'Qil'i-JS14l-8l32ll21i2- h if',- " J I I I I I I !l t I I I I ' LI jf 'J I- - -r- -BSt ' ' y r"" r .w'-r-'jaf- f"7.'"r' - t- - ii3jviV? fPy1: XyjftrA nTdi nntil very recently proudly niiea nor -e of show woman without remission. Sho 1ms received in h;r time any num-ber of royalties aud celebrities ami hosts of American pilgrims to this shrine, who will mall her. It seemed, and doubt--! less was, a positive pleasure to the old lady to show travelers through tho little ' wood and plaster two storied cottage in Ktratford-on-Avo- and to point out with prido and reverence the room in Which the "divine. William" lirst saw the lijjut, Now York Times. ; X p tli Qnet. Mrs. Isabella liird Bishop, the nnthor ' of "Unbeaten Tracks in Japan," has ro-- I turned to Kngland nftev a futilo endeav-- ! or to visit Lhiutsa, the capital of Thibet. By her late husband' will Mrs. Bishop wan required to establish ft hospital "in one of the remote corners of the earth," and ho bequeathed a large sum for this 'j)urHiso. It was on her return from founding this hospital in Cashmere that Mrs. Ilishnp made the attempt to pene-trate into Thiliot as far as the holy city of the Buddhists. No violenco was of-fered her, but she was assured that every official who assisted her would to exe-cuted, and every district that received her lined, so that she reluctantly relin-quished her design. London Letter. Mum. ISernhunlt't 107 Trunk. Mine. Sara Bernhardt eclipses any passenger who has arrived at this port since the foundation of the government in the matter of trunks she brought in. Nearly everybody remembers the ar-rival of Mr. Blaine in the fall of 188. The distinguished secretary of state, with nearly all his family, brought in otdy thirty-fou- r trunks, and that wag considered by tho customs department as almost the biggest personal baggage up to date. But .Mine. Bernhardt comes in with 107 trunks, two or threo dogs and her Astounding personality, She ia way ahead. New York bun. The color luncheon, variotiesof which in tho form of pink teas and orange tens have lieen popular at church sociable fur some time, are now said to bo at the very height of their popularity. One of the latest in fashionable circles is the violet luncheon, where everything pos-sible is of that color, and where hot-house violets are used in profusion. Here may lie a hint for the managers of fairs to use next spring to give variety to the strawberry festivals and (similar social gatherings. . There are twenty free law scholarships for women in tho University of the City of New York, and aa yet only rive art taken. Any young woman in America who desires to study law and has not the means to do so has only to pass the ex-amination prepared by Dr. Kinily Kem-pi- n, LL. D., and avail herself of tho op-portunities tho university affords. Before knitting colored worsted shirts, if the wool is well soaked in boiling water and then allowed to drip dry, not wrung out, it will be found to shrink very little after it is made up. For some reason or other white wool always shrinks more than any other. All woolen underwear should be pulled into shape befure it is quile dry. Mrs. Sonthworth has written as many novels us she has lived years (seventy), aud is ono of the best paid novelists. She lias received for some time 10,000 a year from Tho New York Ledger, and now has a royalty in addition; but when she liegau writing for the newspapers bho was paid only 1 a column. Inazo Nitobe, a member of a. dis-tinguished Japanese family, and a grad-uate of Harvard college aud a German university, bus just married Miss Mary Elkinton, a cultured young Philadelphia Quaker 'ss. Ho will take her back to Japan, where ho is to till an important government office. Nothing shows the caprice of the fickle world of fxshiou sooner than kid gloves. Just now they must bo worn quite loose-ly; in fact, so that tho hand may be laid out Hat instead of being compressed as it has been, until to hold anything while gloved was a difuVulty for some women. Nearly ?3,000 has been raised by Mrs. Virginia T. .Smith, of Hartford, toward the sum needed to establish a free homo in Connecticut for the poor children ia that state who aro sulTorerM from incur-able diseases. Fanny Davenport is the cleverest busi-ness woman on tho stage. She was the brains of the "Cleopatra" production, and she is an authority on the most details of stage and star manage-ment. Mrs. Kate Taunatt Woods, of Salem, Mass., has been elected a member of the London Society of Authors. j WOMAN'S WORLD. STRAIGHTENING UP IN ADVANCE OF THE SPRING CLEANING. footwrar of Iximton Women How STi Conquered f.l Duke Mullffnml B1-- ij ;lrl Nnt 8rKin'i Buttoni Urfc Whitney's B! Tension. Hero we are almost, tip to spring honsa clonnin!! npain. There are many kinds f work that have fjrown much asier ince our grandmot hen)' days. Washing and wiinpnir machines, patent meat choppers and apple parent, carpet sweep-ers and so forth havo greatly reduced the labor of washing, eookins and sweep-lu-and so far ns these go are helps in house cleaning; but where is tho labor laving apparatus that will help in sort-ing over drawers and hosts and clothes looms the very worst part of the nr.-nn- al springand fall overhauling? Luckily one docs not have to wait for spring weather to do this work, as tho rug mak-ing nuw going on in so many homes fes-tt- ii j. But there aro other things than old clolhi-- j tliat accumulate on ou'''s hands. There are the Magazines and papers, for Instance. Any on who h;is sijiiply piled these away for several years knows how tho accumulation grows. But if these cannot b made into rugs there are ether ways in which they can be worked up to good advantage. Scrap books are Dot so much needed now a in the days when books wcro harder to get, but they yet havo their uses, and the greater wealth of material fortheircoiistrnction is continual invitation to such work. And, too, there are many things, much useful knowledge and much good litera-ture in almost every newspaper for which ono might search iu vain in books. It in not bad plan to go over these j'ilos of old papers, as one goes through the family's wardrole, selecting the best for longer preservation and carefully go-- j i:)g over tho others cutting out what cue wishes to save and keeping tho rest of the papers to nib windows with in house cleaning or to put nnder carpets. The clippings may bo sorted as cut, and limy then lie nsed to make cook books, books for use in fancy and needle work or volumes of poems, travel, etc. This is an inexpensive and easy way to add to one's library books of one's own editing, and so sure to be adapted to the tastes of the possessor as no other book can be. Lewiotou Journal. Footwear of Ixnilon Women. It is stated on excellent authority that English women intend to wear shorter dresses next season than any that have been in tho fashion for some time. Hitherto reproaches havo been hurled by continental sisters at the heads and feet of feminine England. Tho emanci-- 1 .,. jiation of the former having lieen satis factorily accomplished, our ladies intend that the latter shall also be given a fair chance of holding their own, consequent-ly much attention is to bo devoted to their dainty aud becoming incasement. Pointed toes will not go out, though Square, toes will come in, a sensible com-promise by which two separate styles of feet can bo suitably fitted. Hoots will bo built higher than heretofore, and will be laced inside tho buttoning to secure neatness of lit round the ankle. Shoes, however, will lie nint h nuiro worn than boots. Our cUi!?ate is fatal in a short time to the appearance of what aro tech-nically known as fancy shoos for out-door wear. The newest are made with a high tongue over tho instep. A buckle, which may be as antique, handsome and as costly as possible, is placed en a strip which buttons across below the i:i.;iep. Other shoes are cut quite low at the toe, and are secured to the foot by a single strap. 'With all these, it is almost neodlc.-- s to add, tho prettiest and most delicate silk stockings will bo worn to Match tho costume. Louden Times. How She Conqaoroil tlio Duke. The death is announced of tho Duchess f Malakoff. As a girl she w:ia the in-timate friend of tho Empresa Eugenie in fact, tho empress aud she were, as we recollect, near akin. Walking in the garden of the palace ono day, who should lieave in sight but Marshal Malakoif, notoriously the roughest and ruucct maa in all the French service. "Uugh! there is that bear again!" quoth the empress, with a shudder of genuine horror; but her young compan-ion said nothing. The marshal, approaching and bowing to the ladies, besought tho younger ono to honor him with the rose sho had jnai plucked. "Certainly, I will give it to you," an- - swered the girl, sweetly, "but how can a rose please you, who live only for laurels?" This answer completely staggered the marshal. In another moment he win hopelessly and wildly ia love with that 2irl, and it is to his credit that he prose- - cuted the campaign so diligently that a year later the beautiful young creature became his wife, tipeakiug of the epi-sode in the garden, JIalakoff nr;ed to say: "I thought I was hard to conquer, but in that case, parbleu! I surrendered at tho very lirst fire!" Chicago Xewa. A Wealthy Yunng Woman to V.'ed. Miss Marion Langdon, who will be-come Mrs. Koyul Phelps Carroll soon after Easter, is one of the most attract-ive women in New York society. "Wi t being a beatify in the strictest sense of the word, she possesses the greater endowment of charm, before which all go down. She is slight and dark, with large, dreamy eyes, graceful carriage and a manner and air wholly unlike that of anybody else. Her individuality, in-deed, is very striking; so much eo that her friends despair always in attempting to describe her to a stranger. Miss Langdon is much interested in various charities, and the surgical wards cf Bellevue know well her gracious min-istrations. Sho is a daughter, by a former marriage, of Mrs. Philip Schuy-ler, and li!!s a cifsidemblo fortune in nor own right. Mr. Carroll, who si long list of suitors for Miss Lang-don'- s hand, is a graduate of Harvard of R0. He is a man of wealth and leisure, and has distinguished himself consider-ably beyond the amateur in African ex-ploration. He returned only last April from the Dark Continent, and if his modesty were not so prominent a char-acteristic his tales of thrilling adventnre Might become public property, aa the privileged few who have listened to them attest they deserve. Her Point of View in New York Times. Shirt Waist and Uluunea to lie Worn. Shirt waists, blouses and round waists J I without end appear again, upon gowns of the very prettiest sort shown as mod-- I els for tho spring and summer seasons, j Light wools and soft silks are used for present purposes, and among the use- - ful garments are black satin blouses, made with high, full sleeves, with jet embroidered collars and dwp Cromwiil-ia- n cuffs. Blouse waists, with belts all around, and basques with blouse fronts and girdles, are favorite bodices on im- - ported dresses of light textiles such as crepaline, lace, veiling, challie.lndia silks and the soft, transparent, old fashioned lawns and muslins that are revived by leading French Modistes. The b'.oiu o basques are a compromise between plain and full waists, and they I ara found very generally becoming. They appear upon dresses both simplo and Ornate. Ciiini silk waists to wear with skirts of various kinds are made with "coat skirts," which are applied to the edge of a round waist under a belt and streamers of ribbon. Twelve inch l.u-,- flouncing is nlsn finely plaited or scantily gathered and used iu the same manner. Now York Post. Miillfc-ne-d Soeiety Oil-In- . The modern girl"' is a much maligned creature. People are generally taught to believo that the dainty, be-witching beings havo no time for any thing but dinners, dances, theatre par- - tics, balls, teas and receptions, and the absurditv of this notion is well illus- - t rated by a West Philadelphia young ;:dv, who not only "goes out" a good deal, but is uhio interested in church work, athletic. Kiorts, and finds timo for real work on tho piano and mandolin, besides executing dainty bits iu black a;id white. Since Sept. 1 this girl has carefully rad all of the works of Thackeray, Pickens, Shakespeare, .lean Ingelow, Tennyson, Moore and Eurns and per- - lions of liyron. Sho also finished tho I!ibl carefully studied (tuizot's "Eng-land" (six volume;,). Motley's United Netherlands" (threo volumes), Adlison's plays and poiins, Faerie ljueen," "Paradise Lost," "Paradise Regained," Kobert llerrick's verse, Ward McAllis-ter's 'Phenoiiieiiou," half a dozen light novels and Dr. Holmes' "Over the Tea-- enps." Philadelphia Preja, Neil brawn's llulUins. "Not worth a button" was an ex- -' pression wont to carry much Meaning. Next season, however, a bntton may lie worth a great deal. Latterly it has been the aim of well dressed women to dis- -' pense with any outward and visible fastening to their attire, merging the in- - dispensable junction in much mystery, Tho inevitable reaction now threatens, and buttons are to lie revived for orna- -' ment as well as for use. Tho more an- - tiquo they aro so much the more stylish will they bo considered. ' Consequently, to use tin language of Ilibernia, antiquo buttons are being manufactured in great variety. Minia-tures of the beauties of different reigns set round with pearls, enamels studded with paste, old silver, and gold in- - crusted with iewels, are all to bo iu favor. The smartest will be of Wedg- - wood china oi its best reproduction. Tho ground is to be the color of tho dress r coat, anil the lignro or tracery upon each button is white, cream color, or delicate relief. London Telegraph, Kxpenslve Saving. ' Household expenses have risen nearly 60 per cent, within a moth, and men of family aro distracted, it all comes of a feminine new fad the mania for saving ten cent pieces. When a wife mentions to her husband casually the fact that all her friends are saving tn cent pieces, and that sho thinks she will save them also, tlw husband rather commends than Uscouragesthee.jieriment. Fool! Little does bo wot the result of his thoughtless words. Wherever tho wife goes sliea,ks for dimes, lhiuding a five dollar bill to the butcher to pay for a dollar'; worth of meat, ho says, "As many ten cent : pieces as possible, please. The butcher knows enough to oblige her. He gives her forty dimes. By Wednesday of each week the usu:'.l stiend for housekeeping has gone, and more money must be sup- - plied. But every box in the bureau is bursting with dimes. New York Sun. Woman's Ailvanee in Forty Years. Miss Charlotte Yonge has been looking back over forty years and telling her readers in The Monthly Packet, an En-glish newspaper, what changes she has seen wrought in the isisition of Englibh girls. "In those days," she writes, "young ladies could not walk in London unattended, could not go in a hansom, did not travel alone by railway, nor, in-deed, were third class carriages used by any oneabovetherankof alaborer. Asto university training, hospitab'e nursing, public speaking, thesj were all as much out of reach as commanding a ship. Tho Sunday school, clothing clubs and cot-tage visiting were in those past days al-most the only forms of dealing with the poor open to ladies." lIi. Whitney's illtr Pension. Col. Clements recently paid out tho largest individual pension ever granted to a pensioner in this division. Mrs. Laura It. Whitney, widow of Col. Sam-- uel 15. Whitney, of tho Seventh Illinois volunteers, was the lucky person. The sum sho received was SB.o'v'li.iO. She is entitled to 10 per month from Uncle Sam's treasury. With ono exception it was the largest amount ever paid to one individual from the Chicago office. The exception was Mrs. Abraham Liincom, who received $1.",000. This, however, was by sieoial act of congress, and not under the pension law. Chicago Jour-- nal. Lady of the T.amb. At Kidlington. England, there is, or Wiis, a curious custom annually oh- - served on the next Monday after Whit-su- n week (May this year), wherein a fat live lamb is provided, and the maidens of the town, having their thumbs tied behind them, chase it through the streets, and she that with her teeth catches aud holds the lamb is declared the "Lady of the Lamb" until the same day of the following year, when another test is made. After the lamb has been caught by the fair one it is dressed by tho village butcher, and with the skin hang-ing on is carried on a long pole liefore the lady and her escorts to the village green, where much musio and merry-making follows the event. The writer last witnessed it in. llM7. St. Iouis Re-public. She Lived In Sluikespeare's Honse. There du d recently in England Miss Maria C. Chattaway, the elder of the two sisters who for upward of twenty years have had tho custody of Shake-speare's birthplace. Miss Chattaway had reached her seventy-eight- h year, but j i Thvi "I'rofunslons" Th.-i- t Puy. A discussion relative to tho choice of I profossion has hecu carried on of Lite in columns of the London newspapers. One of tu town's bisr woeklio3 mitfgosti that two of tho most important "proles, sions" huve been overlooked those ol Jockey and "strong man"' and goes od to ay that "cast's now exist where a jockey received a salary equal to that ol a secretary of .state, and jockuys even oi the second rank receive payments which place thorn in a position, fmm a finan-cial point of view, considerahly ahead ol tho hulk '.if their employers. Besides ;;;?.G salaries (or retainers, as thi'y ar called) the jockeys receive the author-iz".- l aud regular ridinjj fees, and it is m jxasgeration to say that at tho present moment at least half a dozen of them an earning, in connection with their riding In bhapo of retainers, riding fees aw! presents, i'o.OoO a year apiece, and in ono or two cases oven more. With vefcreneo to tho earnings of 'strongmen Sandow is reported to have said, iu with a cont-s- t in which ho took part, that hy his defeat he lost more than 1.000. the ."'ivings of onlv two yearn." oouiuey is considered to have been a trciierully well paid poet, lie received, however, but .jl) for his "Juan of Are," and only 115 for the first edition of "Tlia-l.iha.- Shelley's writings 4irouglit him in no profit, and Uoethe complained that his works er) a umit expense tu him. Hub-ert Hums aud Thomas Campbell both fared more or less badly, and were nearly nil liif ir livea eiiKaed iu a hand to hand fight with poverty. Campbell's "Pleasure of Iloie" brought him in only $J0. Loudon Tit-iiit- Mot of the jests which have been rur rent id EiiKlund fr centuries are know a also throughout Europe, tituilents of folk-lor-assure us that to a far greater extent thaa gauerally understood these jesus are of origin, many of thera having eome from as far east as China and Japan, borne of tliem are t housands of years old, and who made them first is a go uoa U.ut tua cov- -r 1m aairsdi |