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Show i . 6 THE SALT LaKK TIMES. MONDAY. J ANUAKi lL'.lbUl. K2TTSaL PSSSl fBMwi-M- r IPSOT WALKER . HOUSE. rfrtrti A SmI? General sllilPl SUL mi estate, WSSMn. Improvements t Cta 4 MJCOHTRACTORS 4 STOWS, SM&IW 1031 "' S !! ' i J xaj--m j g;,, ... . I gamiBfroar, S v SlLat. Valley 11 S I LADIES ---- -t- Ml E. N, PMpS, Tt OPU. HB IBilllll HSH!SB !WiSW THE LEADING BROKER. j money i wm$mm Mnmmm WmQiMnM 'tifotomffi - W&M m.-- mxjim, "iE""'''li,i MSFbIP I MONEY I REAL ESTATE MMmk J feffi SCHAS;; ERiCKSPfc .(tfgfatofi: nHABr1 Guarantecd Mortgages for Sale St (feiSfglt,! Millinery fijS . f w.,i. LJil'yfe mtlJaw.fr .Iti.! L & 'BOBBI J.M-Crabbe&C-o. mMMm IBllfISi MMkWM, HIST mpte u , sKmBt TBE! feZ NkKJI mo,mthA! aiffl -- h inWWiP I 6aMSaMry. 1NC9E. IVYTfflftfffi ! IT KdSrTrf: bour, 7ft rents; ov.r one hour. ;0 cents an I LlWife GENERAL INSURANCE AGENCY. W W'B3Mm!r'' V TUT" Tr"8ient cm- 1gfy 439 T ; !Pwlp ... iMl w FKp,stE, ' T illPPI T T c .? I - IgiTI NOBLEi WOOD i CO." f'M! SALT LAKE FHiuemr. ff la " BCSTONAFIT ROOMS "lipipf ; Steam Dye Works ! n, "THE :: TAILOR." If ii Exclude Hatters and Furriers. MJS n-.-MWl fW, VPW I aSa ....... - Ww' jtmfgfiX Lsdies' and ConfB Clothes Dvcil. v f nW rT1TM!UHrl4P "iVtfiCV iiJfu31' ci..d.di!,1iri .the Fall Stjles Just Received. Per- - M&r.jJfr LKB'SS ".iWtl'CS swBtaar--- ..iJ .,lll,M,. "SSSK t'Tu.w . LgqM .lSo,- aonim m co. L ktnwi QBgOzijLi: MIFURS. JURS FUBS.VagKa Spcicer&Kimball, Mj ' fKiffi" JKItfi'"aiVifJlll34V' In Salt Lakn. raiTloi the Largest. Finogt and . r .3 Ws''' A 9&kJ i l3rlfyv .'.v tR3 rfSLTfSS 5.. ilfe&J nZr::rsstlm Dealcr? in Fine shocs-- ' m laMIS irafMt?l T "BpiPMPWiMP ' rflWI HOMES E0CK SPBIKGS C0AL co The Ocridpntnl W T ' PMteft o..,lr IPB W.J.Wo.Stenboim.4R.P.Morr.s, FOR SALE! auie & mtjepht, i , pbopb'3 j I hjf Hardware, Stoves, Tinware & WjMlSi - ''tWfefe - L'lse can not be KiccllBd. P U ' ' ' I fWll$VitSmi VIJJI'iWliaSlEW4iul1UWJ liSri coOmffeicre.3rGdortbew-Pltte- 8f and imDdnipsoSuttohr.e. Yard fMMSMmiM WHBsffmixfrfa-- V) U II HI HJAilJJ ' rimlly Trade RecelTes Strict Attention. I JHWKMBXWf i0.MlHbl., Mil Tn Illy. 4riSlSte T.--r; . J Cko. M. Scorn Gi.jewT)! sin lit 8. KTOrrnL PrtiidenL ViceyPresident Becrotary. GEO. M. SCOTT & CO., --DEALERS INT Hardware and Metal, Stoves, Tinware, Mill Findings, Etc, . AGLNTS FOIl the Dodge Wood Pulley, Boeblinir's Steele Wire Repc Vacuum Cylinder and Engine Oil, Hercules Powder, Atlas Engines and Boll era, Mack Injectors, Buffalo Scale, Jefferson Horw Whim, Blake Pumrx Mineri' and Blacksmiths' Tools, Etc 168 MAIN STREET, Salt Lake City, - - Utah THE WONDER OF THE AGE! A The GrandGil Heater ! J Cheap, Safe, Economical, and Dur- - able. No Smoke I lll No Smell ! No Soot! .No Pipe to Cuss! No Scrip-tur- e to Quote ! No Coal to Lug! lifflp ' Ko Dampers to Kegulte! Xo Ashes to Empty! CaSSmS Just the thing for your Itedroom, Bathroom, Ofiic'e, W&'&il Wining Room or Parlor. fcdlSi DO NOT FAIL TO SEE IT! (tfgH Sold only by the Sign of the "Big Gun--" - - - 32 West Second South Stree i Tennyson's back yard Ss nid to tie strewn with clay pipes that he 1ms used and dis-carded. The poet la a prodigious smoker, end, like Carlyle, lie prefers the humble clay pipe, rarely smoking a cigar. fflali and Molilalia laclarr Company C P. MASON, Manager Headquarters for all Classes of Machinery. Engines aad Boilers from power and upwards in stock forimra diate delivery. Steam Pumps, Injectors, Horse Whims, Hoisting Angina- -, llck Breakers, Wall's Rolls, Ingersoll Air Compressors and Drill, Lubrl eating Oils, Mine, Mill and Smeller Supplies, Silver, Gold and Conceatrat I g Mills erected and delivered in running order. Maine OUcs anl Warerooms 259 S. Main Strain, Salt Late 0. S AGENCY. BUTTE, MONTANA. LIQUOR & CIGAR MERCHANTS. 13, 15, 17, 19, Commercial St., Salt Lake City. . Have in stock the largest line of Imported and Domestic Wines. Bran dies, Li quors, Liqueurs and Cordials in the Inter-Mountai- n Country; aro Headquarters for Pomery Sec, Cliquot, G. H. Mumm & Co. and Konopole Extra Dry Cham-pagne. Agency for Carl Upmann New York Cigars, Straiton & Storm and Eduardo H. Gato "Key West." SOLE AGENTS FOR CHARLES HEIDSlECK SEC. TVlrj hone 365. MAIL ORDERS SOLICITED. P. 0. l!oi 553. Inter-Mounta- in Electric Corny. i;$ Broadway, Salt Lake. F.luctrical work and supplies of all kinds. Wiring for incandescent lights a specialty. Electric and Combination Fixtures, Agents for Western Electric Comppny's dynamos and Akonite Wire Com-pany's goods. Hotel annunciators, fire and burglar alarms, electric motors, etc., etc. Electric Light Plants Installed. E. SELLS, J. TUCKER. H. W. SELLS. Sells &c Coixipaxiy, Wholesale and Retail Dealers in Lumber. First South street opposite 14th Ward Assembly Rooms, r. 0. ttsx 1078. Old Pioneer lard of Armstrong Bag-Is-faca It is not what we would call the jnst and righteously indignant back, which is straight and noble, n fine thing and a vpcerable. It lx the bulldog shoul-dered back that deuctas tha domestic seer. TUb bald head ubinefl. (Hie known that in the front the reins ere bursting. His mustache has been i twisted ta sharpness by anpry f!ng?rs. His hnnds are clinched or pushing might-- i ily agiiinrt his hardset knee. He could strike, but he haa too much pride, and hia orders are harder than blows. He has a habit of getting his arm crookedly bent to his knee in self restrained wrath, j There are, indeed, many b;u'kn thiit are more gladly aeen than the corre-- ; sponding faces. The back of the bore is a goodly eight, while, on the other hand, when good-b- y is jarrievous, how much j precious regard is wnsted on the dev.r characteristic, well known back that never knows what loving looks went after it. Toronto Truth. ASTUDY IN MEN'S BACKS CHARACTER IS SHOWN THERE A3 WELL AS IN THE FACE. A Meeertatlon cm tha Virion Kind mt Back That One I Acruntomed to See. Icicrlptltii of tbe Thoughtful Baek, the Purse Proud Back and Other. The back of an individual is an easy itudy the whole of him, his figure and walk, his shoulders molded by the habits f bis life, the carriage of the head, the wearing of the clothing. Fao to face we see the man as he desires to be seen; but behind his back we take him by snr-- ; prise, and catch sight of his character. Follow the thoughtful man as he wan ders through the streets, seeing nothing. While he walks his head and shoulders i bend; one knows that his eyes seek the ground just as one sees his feet linger on it. In this manner it mrtst have been that Macauluy walked ia his famous night wanderings, when he traversed the London streets and saw nothing, a contrast to the night walks of Charles Dickens, who trod the same streets and saw everything, with head cliaracteris-ticall- y held back and slightly to one side, an energetic observer rather than a deep thinker. Very different from what we may call the refined and intellectual back is the back of the broad and vulgar figure who BtruU past us as if ho owned the street. Ilia glory is not in his mind or heart, but in his pockets. lie has a habit of sticking up for bis rights. Even his collar sticks up, and his hair, to corre-spond with his inner self, is bristling, lie thinks he can buy anything, from a picture, of which ho knows nothing.' to an elector, who knows nothing of him. The purse proud man will never hand money out of that pocket for charity, onlees he is pretty sure that his name is in a printed list of subscribers. TUB ROGrjE'S BACK. j Not so the wealthy man who has a heart above gold. Look at him. a back Tiew, as he stands ut a public meeting j called at some time of calamity or need. lie is sure to be there. If the hall is overcrowded you can see him Etanding, . never complaining of the lack of seats; he is there for the comfort of others; he ' i forgets his own. He is a large hearted j man, and everything about him is Urge, The big hands are only waiting behind sum to give freely, the broad back can bear a goodly share of others' burdens, j As for the back of the rogue, it is of j infinite Tariety. If there wers only one sort w might all make what Boldiety i wonld call a reconcoissance to tbo repj and detect and outwit him. There is the sharp dealer of the business world, who is remarkably spruce at the back, and the adventurer of society, who can bow like the first gentleman in Europe, and ten thousand more varieties, from the wolcher on the turf up to the gentle-man who ought to be a baronet, and who has lived for the last thirty years on that statement and on charitably col-lecting for the savages of Borrioboola. He could straighton his body if he liked. but his mind is fixed in curves of cun- - ning. Ho and bis principles are as crooked ao wriggling eels. He can press others to his will, too, as he presses his cane to a curve like himself. His spare form is not tho thin, bent back of the student. The back of a bookworm is another kind of bend a curvo to be respected. Nor is it the stoop of old age. The back is an index of age as well as of character. The small child stands a square, upright atom of humanity. The man grows straight to his full height; then his shoulders broaden; then his shoulders come forward, and his head goes down. BACKBONE. There is an old saying to describe a man of weak character that he has "no backbone." There is not much back-bone in the man who walks as if not quite snre where he is going to, who drois his letters and never cares to straighten his shoulders. Follow him and note hew his hat points backward, and you know from the angles to which he has set his hut and his whiskers that, seen front face, his aspect is not wise, Still ho is a good natured fellow, and by some iustinct we read on his back that he has an ambition to be amusing. One is perfectly certain that the man with such a back sings comic songs, and equally certain that he never knows when people cease to laugh at the song and begin to laugh at himself. j But there is such a tiling as having too much backbone, and that is rather worse than having too little. When a man luss Ux much backbone his heart is j cot, as people say, "in tho right place." Sometimes there is no room in him for a j heart at all. Now, there are some men in whom fcrce of character is carried j into the extreme, and becomes hardnesi and habitual severity. A severe back is J a plcasauter night ' to see than a severs A Meun Villager. Mrs. Donblehouse Jake, our darter wants a cabinet organ. Mr. Doublehou.se Wall, I'll git her i one. I don't like them new neighbors of tUT8 fer it cent. Wood New. FASHIONS FOR MEN. ' With the Prince Albert the waistcoat must 'positively be adhered to, a rulo that it; to the better taste with the dress coat. In the mcrniug a littht weight and nat-ural woods '.ick, uceordinn to tlio formulur, must be worn; and in the eveninir or after noon a more decorative example. Black suspenders, black linen handker-- chiefs and black bosomed shirts are amonq the extreme novelties following the all black craze, while black hosiery and undtr-we-ar lias become oue of the fixtures. The subdued tendency in dress militates ' against any of tbe flashy jewels for men's neat. The diamond and sapphire and ilia- - mond and ruby combination scarfpins are i now passe, while the pearl, boili white and j black, has come strongly to the front. It is the province of the vulgarian to ' make a hue display of shirt front with bis everyday attire, but it is slso an error to hide tl.e shirt front completely from view. There is even a HHKKtlin of un- - cleanliness in the latter course. The scarf should always be worn so that a small ex-panse of the shirt bosom limy be discerned after it is adjusted. Clothes aid Fur in bar. |