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Show THE SALTLAKE TIMES. TUESDAY, JANUARY 27, 1891. . 3 wfi IHElBlKlfllNl'lSI lAlDIDifiTiSlQlM : a p"i li ADDil I V-- 1! . Bf-- i iJ B I I " . . rtin,r , nlnCe of residence for your-- PR "F r - -- - Under rnlonitisChcaneI rtoLiveinYour R-- TTeuTand let us huikl you a house. I If you are paying M even be Own House vr)"10ng in Denver are admired by everyone Ye shjjMbu TlTaiAMBERLlOlQr ' fc ICOHN BROS. T. R. JONES & CO., ttl MAIN STREET. BOYS ORES AND BDLLIOIL Haii Gtocaeif. m Grows Hair Rapitfly; Eradicates PandnuX, Stops Falling Hair, Is a Preventive Vsjl8 o'Saldaess. C.VSSS' Grows Hair on VS?fV UaldHeadfc ,$'vr I an Exouisite onet Article HWT 4 coionug matter. Contains no i meial or Vegetable Foisona It is an honest and ineritorioui preparation. Nature's Own Remedy. tata Boot Hair Grower life I NEW YORK. KELLY & CO. Printers, Stationers, Blank Book-Maker- s. No. 4 W. Second tooth 4U j Sat Lake City, - - Utah. Our facilities for doing: first-clas- s Job Print-ing are of the newest and hest. Jlooks ruled printed and bound to order. Samples of Kail-- ' road. Mining, Bank and Merrantlle work a ways on hand. Complete line of Offl. e Sun-pile-emhracluu the most approved Labor-bavln-and Kconomlcal Inventions. Prices Low ! Call on u M. R. EVANS, 22-3- 4 W. 2nd South St. Sporting Goods ! Guns, Revolvers and Ammunition, Eicycles, Tricycles Velocipedes! Razors, Pocket Cutlery, Shears and Scissor Streps INDIAN CLUBS, BOXINC CLOVES. DUMB BELLS. DOG COLLARS. The Balance of Our STOCK ofCLOAKS Is Offered at the Greatest Sacrifice. "W-- e Qucte a Pew Prices to Give axx Idea : Plush Sacques at $ 13 50 were , 22 50 13.110 " 25.00 20.00 " 35.00 JcifetB ti 10.00 " 18.00 ', 12.50 " 20.00 Alaska heal Jackets at w).00 " 125.00 " " " 100.00 " 150.00 All other Garments in Stock sold at the samo reduction in prices. Children's : Gretclien : Cloaks! Ages 4 to 12 offered at $2.50 to $5.00; About Half Bogular Prices. All other Misses' and Children's Garments reduced in the same proportion. GREAT BARGAINS IN BLANKETS! j r 100 pair 10-- White Blankets at $1.75 reduced from J3.00 0 Wool lilsnkets at 4.50 " "6 00 Higher priced Blankets offered at marked reduction in prices OLr Entire St ork o' UiVrrr's Plush Caps, Bonnets and Ifats at a Regul Discount of 3 from what they are )hM. Ladies' Black and Colored Boucle Jerseys in all sizes at $1.25 reduced from $2. Ladies' all wool Blouse Jersey Waists at 1.50, reduced from $2.00 John Green, Sanitir? flor.trp.efar. Excavation! for Sower GsaziDctions a Ppeciilty, At .r. '.v. Parrel! & Co.. t.f; S mth Mala St T lflho :6 ifflu. WALKER .'. HOUSE. The Walker it Located in tht Butinem Center of thx City and ha all th Modem Improvements & Conveniences Pertaining toa strictly flrst-cla.- it haum Itltmanagftd as wen as an? dotal in tt WmI and la atrtrtly the BiiHlnees and Touf let Hotel of Salt Lake Olty. Passenger F.levator. The Walker & the Metropolitti Are the Two Leading Hoteli of Salt lake City. G.8.ERB Proor. J Beau tif qI Woman KMd.Hs SWEET fyJv. LV r.i the though her owu loveli neM livery wumm jxM ennleH sweetly whi beitine, lot it g.vei A to hrr a cle.--, , beautilul ti akin. A beautiful 5"!7 complexion a ionc ii iPiL'v. olteii eufheient to EQj)'' m.ik.e a woman X!i';: beautiful. A wornno C'",r mbo h dutiful 'jlSyVV iv& comtilexion ahoui.: Uri'A I preserve it ; the one ' 'Hj 'i V le lortunote in U. i '" poaseaaioti I li iV. nhould beautily it. v f Wilom Rober- - tine diiea jum what it claimed for it. It not only prewrvea and beau-Une- a the completion, but repairs the damagea done by the uae of the many daniferoufl now iu the market, by ita tome eMect. r atorine the skin to a natural, healthy action. Kead tne teatiruoniats from famoua artistea, cd ) tataxed ciieioiauj and eminent pojuciau , . THOVSON BOOTS AND SHOES. FIELD AND OPERA CLASSES. Examine my Stock Before Purchasing ! Rudolpniff, Importer of CHINA,' CROCKERY, GLASSWARE, Plated Ware, Cutlery, Lamps, Vases, and Statuary 40 Main St., SALT LAKE CITY DR. HODGES, DENTIST I SI W. 1st Sonth, - Salt Lake City. TEETH EXTRACTED WITHOUT PAIN I By the Use of Vitalized Ait. ALL WORK WARRANTED ! it i j, ,i i( ait lkiJ ii, 'COHfNJ BROS. wnenever a wronj Is perpetrated? i Epoch. ' Women in I'oIlHca. It is pleasant to know that wo have in this town a regularly constituted body known as the Society for Political Study, by which women ncrjn.'&it themselves with tho workings of politic. Tho'e is no earthly reason why women shoulA not be well up in the study of how we are governed, for ujion t!mt question de-pends the welfare of the entire family. Politics touches us at all points. It in-volves the way the streets are kept ns well as the prices ve pay for the neces-saries of life; it involves the way our public schools are run as well as the In-dian (juration, mid bo forth, and so forth. Nothing covers the ground in human af-fairs so completely us po'.itic3, and why should not the women understand all nbont it and niako their influence felt An j13'ib Picture. . Kow ror J retl roofs ntund ntrsct stocks arow; A Hotm-wan- l from gli'tniinK in the Btuhlily hwit, ' ll.U overhead the lianOi rook snileth slow, . Jid cii; less looms crackle 'ncath your tret. a Nu u Jreath, veereUi tlie ooaUiotiM I llOC'ln, ; Wlteneo the faint amoLr floats fragrantly away; ; An'l In Hip (lisi.uice the half bnzy woods t lilmv with tlm. barren Klory of Ilfcay. V;.inly the lirambli' ninves to drape the hedpe. Whoso lorzflrss calm kIiow niony an empty ntflt; I'll" chill pool Hacntitr-- s round the needed sedge. And us the rainset saiklrns In the west Fum-mi- l mist co:ui':t cwriin down the dale, 4d widowed Autumn weeps leliind her tell. Alfred Austin in Saturday Review. Chadbourn. He was an extraordinary hunter and retriever, with almost hu-man tact, and his owner valued him at eeveral hundred dollars. A few days ago this fine dog was run over by the train at Chadbourn, and his left fore leg was crushed off, leaving a piece of the bono protruding. Mr. Brown hated to kill his valuable and faithful dog, so he got Dr. A. to amputato the crushed mem-- I her. When the operation was perform-- j ed Sailor obeyed the command to lie down, and never even gave a whimper when the work was done. The poor ani-- I nials muscles were contracted with pain, but with a few sympathetic ca-resses from his master he lay perfectly still until the amputation was perform-- : ed. Wilmington Messenger. I Itarc Tortilnili' in a 1;:. I Many of the sportsmen i f Wilming. ' J ton will erhaps remember Sailor, the j Cue pointer dog of Mr. J. A. Brown, of ' I The Latest In Bracelets. Ox chain bracelets re the newest things that society girls have chosen by which to announce that they are fettered to a bold laddie. The chain bracelets are literally ox chains, being strong enough to hold one of these animals in abeyance. They can bo made in gold if one so desire, but the most approved ones are of silver. A very elegant affair of this kind came from Lyons, where the cunning smiths fashioned it of four shades of iron, grading from iron of a bright burnished hue to deeply, darkly, beautifully black. Gold won't hold fair misses any longer. They must have iron chains. AH of which goes to show that women aro to be held in still deeper bondage than they have ever known. Oh, the times! Oh, the laws! Paris Letter. Thd liar ill Authors. I reached London just too late fur the mimiiil authors' dinner, which is one of the events of the season there, and on this account, and because my time was almost entirely taken up by the law business about which I bad gone over, I diil not meet as many of the, literary men as I should have liked to meet. I taw a good deal, howeYer, of Edmund 'iosse. who one of tjiu most polished j.'.mI delightful of men, and has always iieen very kind to mo. His house is a sm t of 'enter, his .Sunday evenings bein;; delightful occasions where ons may jmt-- u score of writers, sculptors and l .rmintvM. i Vcasio;ir.1ly I met him at lunch at hia club, whore, he. would get Austin Dob-foi- l, who is. like himself, in an official position in Whitehall, and obtains there- -' ' from the substantial of life which ena-ble him to cultivate tho muses on some- - thing a little better than "oaten reed." j Roth Dobson and Gosse aro directly in line for tho laureateship when it Bhall fall vacant, though no one knows who will gei it. I am indebted to both of j them for much personal kindness. Gosse is a good sized, handsome man, of the blonde English typo, with the cheeriest face and voice, and wherever he goes it : (jrews warm and comfortable. Dobson is fomewhat older. Both of them strike rie as being among tho most cultured men t ever met. They have English lit- - ' eratnre lit their fingers' ends, and dwell i ; in au atmosphere which is redolent of the masters. Thomas Nelson Tage in Richmond Times. Full of Enterprise. A boy with a mowing machine called at a house on Second avenue the other day, and asked the woman if she wanted the grass cut. "Mercy, no!" she replied. "No one cuts gra-- s at this season." "I'll contract for next spring," contin-ued the boy. "But I may bo dead by that time." "Then I'll contract to see that your grave is .kept green! ' Detroit Free Press. Women as Lay Delegates. Nearly a hundred Methodist societies in the Chicago districts have voted upon the wisdom and expediency of admit-ting women an lay delegates to the gen eral conference. The vote at each meet-ing represented a minority of the church members, but such as it is there is an overwhelming majority in favor of the women. Pastors and others promi- - nent in tha church declare, however, that the silent majority will "table" the proposition and swamp the movement. Miss Frances E. Willard and her large following do not seem to entertain this opinion. Chicago Journal. Tlie youiifr women in the Salvation Array tvbont tho streeta of New York sflliiiK tho Salvation Army journal, often after a hard day' work in tlip Mnuitt or barracks. Like tho Sisters of Charity, they go in couples and circulate a combined average of 20,000 copies a week, the entire circulation of tho paper being 600,000 a week in England and America. Miss Marion Talbot, secretary of the Woman's Association of Collegiate Alumna', gives this year a course of lectures on political economy to the stu-dents of Wellesley college, in which the jjirls ere unfailing in their interest and jttend.-mce- . Ainonrj the new pupils ut ho college i a young Japaueso girl, 'iadzu Saglye. ' Tho Romans deemed it an ill omen to wieet certain animals whilo on the way .o have the marriago ceremony pro-nounced. A hare, dog, cat, lizard or serpent were extremely unlucky animals to meet upon such occasions. A wolf, toad, ox or horso waa lucky, Women clerks aro invading oven the heart of tho city of Lotidon. Iu a large financial bouso in Graeeohurch street a Ktaff of female clerks hiia been engaged, and tho managers aro delighted with the success of the experiment. Standing vases pr.raiiso to rival stand- - ing lamps in popularity. These vases , iu-- designed for long stemmed flowers, ' and in sorno instances stand as auch aa four feet high. Mrs. Welti Escher, of Zurich, ha made a donation of 3,000,000 francs to the Swiss confederation for the creation of n federal institution of plastic art. j Miss Kate, Marsden sailed last month in the Paramatta on her mission to tho lepers scattered throughout Russia, even i to the utmost trt of Siberia-- A search for the oldest clergyman in England shows that (ho Rev. John Elli-ott, vicar of Randwick, will bo 100 in three months. IIo preached np to the ago of 95 n gularly, and occasionally last year. He goes to church now regularly every Snn.lay, and occasionally visits parishioners. The 5th of November, which, even iu the memory of those who do not con-sider themselves old, was generally ob-served in England as "Gunpowder Day," is said to bo now almost ignored, even in London. After exhaustive experimenta the French postoffico has decided to substi-tute a copper coated steel wire in place of the ordinary iron wire for telegraphic and telephonic service. The epoch of bigness bus extended to every phase of neckwear. Some of the dress bows even are of unusual size, while the big ;iscot butterflies simply break the record. Pcriquo tobacco, which, it i.i said, grows to perfection only in St. James' parish, La., will be but n scant, crop this year, owing to the late floods. A boy of 17 and a girl of 13 were mar-ried the other :lay at Columbia. Mo. Among the wadding gifts were a doll and a Flobert nrfe. fitulw I'lifita from a Cemotrry. f That too ingenious person who stole bronze and marble baste from the ceme-tery of Montparnasse, touched them up and sold them as efngie-- i of famous he-roes, statesmen or orators, lias at last met with the punishment which his lugubrious labors deserved. Moreau, for so the new kind of "resurrection man," to adopt the phrase of Dickens, is called, came up before the eighth tri-bunal of police, find was soon sentenced to three imprisonment. The singular tiiefts perpetrated by Morenu in the cemetery long passed He was accordingly able to make some money by his dismal and transactions, and it is consid-ered probablo that many of his trans- - formed bust now adorn not only tho humble homesteads of artisans in Paris, but also tho libraries and museums cf '. p:!no provincial townn. On one oceo-- k Kon he is r:u to have sold the e.Tigy of "' k'"rthy profi.-F.so-r of the Korboiine as - f a famous general of the revolu-diil- e on anot her iie passed off the . .'presentment of a departed grocer at of u Demosthenes. Paris Cor. Jam Telegraph. |