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Show THE SALT LAKE TIMES. 12 PAGES SALT LAKE CITY. UTAH, SATURDAY. MAY IK), 1691. c ' VOL.5. NO 208. Cl'SWAY, FISH S?,1lliS, EEEP CREEK fSTAGES WUI leave (WNSiill I'.Kns. HOTKL DAILY on tho ami ai ni tin; Utah & No-va 111 Ttiuil. The.ro Will be Stations for the Benefit o9 Taeiecgen oa the Stag Lin. Parties wishing information In regard to the Iroad will call at Couuor bios. pt.we It sta re line from Stockton K) leent k tV mt'.M Kroni Sio a, n t Scrlbner Kanch. W " " KT,'itj.r s it.in'-i- 10 lingway... " " Ini'w iv to Spr ma S " " Hi. Sprin to I Lit m s " CXtou. w Ue.p C'r.eu W " Connor Bros. Stocltou. Utah F AUERBACH&BRO Greatest Muslin Underwear Sale Begin) Today anil Will Continue Until livery Article is Sold ! LADIES! Why Stitch, Stitch, Stifch and Crook Your Hack Over the Sewinu Machine When You Can Buy Nicely Made and Well Fitting Un derucar at Less Than Cost of Material? Ladies' Night Clown. Chemises, Hrmri Pkfrts. Comet Covers, Misses' dreua' 8li., Traw.ru, Chll ii,-.fl- hinris, 1 tc. at the uniform price ot lie, Kuo, 3I.C. duo, Toe, II, II. Xi. tl.-J- . H.7t, 1st, ti.'do, fi.,0, fj. ; j, 3 and tipwikrO. This Sale will comcrfe finer line of .mods than weresver before pnt Into a Salt, and will suojoct to our and uuatsmbie ruie in.it Only iMiarmcnts of Each Kind arid Price , Will be sold to on. custoiner. Pleasr.Rrmemder 1 This and do not blame our Salesladies Mid Salesmen for obeying our POSITIEV KULEl Our Bargain Sale TheflREATFST SACRIFICE of rholr. and Desirable Dry Goods ever known In Salt Lake City wtll bo continued lu all our Depart menu is okii;k to ciose out All odds and ends at a greater sacrlfl.ee than heretofore. Our goods are all new and every article warranted as represented. i lr.OO Xewand Choice IWRASOL8 are Included In this Sale, gave money and buy your Parasol now. -- Dentist- ff-- v Teat. e,. at pain by tb i 'V l .1. V T-- J tze:t air. AllV V fiev4 iZjrS workarraui- - J?F T f?XS Kuom T6, Commercial lilock, suit Lake City. Health is Wealth! DK E. C. WF.PT'S NERVB AS'D BRAIN Treatment, a (ruarautned apclflc for Hys-teria. IM.lue.., Convui-loO- Kit., NerollS Neuralgia, Headache, Nervous I'roicratlon. caused by the use of alcohol or tohaceo. Wake-fulness. Mental Depr. Hoftenlng of tha Hrain resulting In aud leading lo misery, decay and death. I'reniature Old Ag., Harrennefs. Loss of Power in etttier sex. Losses and Spermatorrhea cau-.- l by over etertion of the brain, self ahu. ar Fach box contains on. month s treatment: Ft box, or six boxes for ta, sent by mail prepaid on receipt of prlc. WE OUARANTEE SIX H0XE3 To cure any case. With each order rerelv.4 by us for six boxes, accompanied with la. w. will send the purchaser our written guarantee to refund t'ie money If the treatment does not affect a cure. Guarantees Issued only by JOHhson, 1'katt A Co.. Druggists, Main ji ism:uuiti:wiN co. 6alt Lake City. Manufacturers and Itottlers of l Aport Lajjcr Heer. Spe"lal attention gtven to V amily Trade. Or-ders left at. or telephoned to, our dejKit, 109 South Main, will receive prompt and earful attention. Telephone, 1 .5!. Soetrfs-- e Box, W5. Brewery and Office Tel-ephone, litia. Sunday dinner at the Saddle Rock. Our Shoe Department ' nan made CUTS IN PItlCES to astound you. It will pay yon to lay In a stock. ONK THOUSAND AND ON ft BARGAINS Will pay you to endure the crowd and crush In our otherwise cool and well TentU ated store. Our Cloak Department Is closing our t.adles" Caria Ladle.' and Children's Flazers and Rsefers, I.adi.s' an4 Misses' Jackcs, l.adu--s elegantly tilling ready-mad- . tresses, lovely Tea liown. comfort-a'.l- a Wrappers, Cntidren's t;!ng-ai- Itresi-.s- . Commencement Dresses, Surah Waists, .Houses. Ac Ac. All Stylish and Beautiful, at a great saving to you who avail yourselves of this opportunity. COM 12 ONE I COME ALL! for wa can not continue forever selling new goods at less than cost, F. Aiierbach & Bra 'EARLS MTDII 4 CARPET CO. 207, 209 aad 211 State Road, corner Second Soutb. Are showing the meat elaborate line of FURNITUREeCARPETS Tapestries and Upholsteries in the city. We make a specialty of furnishing private residences ttirongti-f- zt Everything' now and modern. Oi"- - are Hifrelow and Scotch Axiuiusters. 8tc!;!tlps In Carpets Royal 'Wiltons. Kidder-miuMcr- s, Jx,v,, vc Also a large Una CHINESE AND JAPANESE MATTINGS EARLS FURiimiRE 1SD CARPET CO, Tie Ilpluie Building, Corn.-- r State Road and Second South St EDHESTTIIBaS aTHCKEST P7.1CE5I Read Our List! Of Celebrated IManos: Chiokeriojr Cloupli & Warren Kinibe At Co Jlecker Bros A. It. Chase, J. At C. dsdier Brings At Stytcsaut Lverett ALSO THE Story At Clark, A. B. Chase, Lor lug At Biake and Bridge-port Organs. We sell snv of the a'wve Instruments rn long tlm. aud easy payments. Old lustra-nii'iit- . taken in exchange fur new ones aud their real value allowed. A guarantee of fioal live to seven s accompanies each pl.no, We will pay your fa'-- fiom anv no:us in Idaho or Utah to halt Lake City ana retai u providing you buy a piano trom ua while in ti e c ty. This vlll enable pr 1 s living m tuLhtioring towns aiu cities to seie-- t fi m t .e iiuuituse stock wuicli we always have ou hand. We take pleasure In sikiwIu uu guids whether or not jo i intend to buy. Correspondence solicited aad promptly anawered. F. E, Warren Mercantile Co. Box 1717. No. 78 We; t Second Bout. vsv M t pm f ffiirfff p v s"? ss vMv MV ' "id ''' ' ' t ?iUb' ' ' "x V -- x , i 'Wr'V XVfVs f I "4 Croqnct Sets tVk-- i x;A'A 4cv T-'-V,' u:' Henry I Clark, "4te TAILOR;" 29 E. FIRST SOUTrk M. R. Evans. 4 W. B.eond Souta. Sporting (jooos, Guns, Revolvers ni Ammnnltion. Eieyclcs, Trir-ye.e-s & VekeipeJes. Fa-or- s. Pocket Cutlerv Sh.ars and fs1ssri Indiaa C lubs, Hoxinit moves, numb Hells. Dog eniurs: Th mnson Boots and fciioi Field and Opera O.aases. taine my Stock Before Purchasing, GEO. A. LOWE, Dealer in all kinds of first-cla- ss AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS! Buggies, Surries and Road Carts. Handsome, Stylish and Durable. Steam ' Engines, Saw Mills, Etc. Railroad Contractors' Supplies. T77"areHo-osQ- : 133 to 15 2?irst East St, VENGEANCE MR. The Terrible Sijht Wbicb Met the Gaze of a Husband Upon Rsturniag Home From Work. AWrUL BRUTALITY OF A TEAMP. Tio Wife Found Dead oa tiia Tloor With the Eaba Plavins With Hsr Riir. I It is a peaceful, happy household in the suburbs of h great city. T!.e glad June suu Hoods in through Jibe open door and over tlio crowing baby just able to sit alone on tlio floor. There's a ruse-bus- budding at the porch, bluebirds sin if in the niapie live and a little l.ilui.'-uye- woman, wit and mother, stops in her morning house-work, at brief intervals to laugh wit it !ier first-bor- as he throws hie play-things about. A milt away a husband and father ha pulled o!T ctiat and vest, pushed up shirt sleeves and begun the work of the day, wiii.-tii- because ho has ttevr a care, light-hearte- because he has just kissed his wife ami played toss wiih his baby boy. say-- ' M. Quad in the New York World. He sings as he uses the plane and saw, and there is a touch of pity in his heart for those men who have no homos. How quiet the street! How good-tiature-every sauntering pedestrian! How blue the summer sky iiow grate-ful the warm sun after the titful weather of spring? Hirds, buds, bli.u8oms, green leaves peace on earth. "I'm hungry." Something blackened cut tho rays and spangles of sunshine which baby was grasping at with his chubby hands. Something cast a shadow over the mother beyond and brought an icy chill. She turned about to sea a man in the open door a burly, man, whose grim face and dress proved the class to which he belonged, iiaby lucked at him with great blue eyes wide open in wonder aud fear, and the brown thrush which came to light en the rose-bush (lew away in alarm. "1 say I'm hungry." There was a menace in his tones, a warning of violence in his attitude, w nich made tho woman turn pale as death and which kept baby's eyes fixed upon him as if fascinated by the fiery orbs of a rattlesnake. Without a word she placed a chair for him and then turned and began to prepare the table. B He sat down and scowled at Ah! there is a smile on the face of tha brute who struck that woman dead as he reposes au his prison couob. What's that? Through the thick walls of the prison comes a sound to startlu the guard, who had just cautrht himself nodding. The wind? No! The ruuibltt of a heavily laden wagou! No! The mutterings of a thunder-storm- No! Did you ever hear it? It is like no other sound ou earth. Jt startles you it makes the heart leap it chills and territies you. "Tramp! Tramp! Tramp!" Not as soldiers inarch not with the rhythm of martial tread tint as a mob, bent on vengeauco and determined to have it at the cost of a hundred lives, inarches. Afar oil' at first as you hear the surge on the soashore when a mile of forest intervenes. Nearer nearer now you hear the low mutteriugs of a thousand men marching to demand such justice as the law never metes out. "Awake! Awake!" It is the voice of tin guard crying to jailer, guards, prisoners. He has heard that sound before ho has seen the people risu up and demand vengeance. "It's mo they want!" gasps tho burly briuo as ho jumps from his cot and stands trembling aud shaking. Ah, ha! my giant, you who gave six strong men such a light who boasted that you would laugh in the hangman's face! Why do you turn as pulo as the face of the woman you left lying dead on tho lloor beside her baby? Why tilts trembling, this looking about you with helpless, beseeching glance? So, ho! It is different! It is not tho hangman, but a mob not the tardy course of law. with opportunities to pose as a hero, but tha twift venge-ance of uien who look upon you as a reptile to be sacrificed without mercy. There's your iron bedstead. Tear it to pieces aud secure a weapon and make a fight! Jieat them otfifyoucau! Die lightiug, if you must din! Courage and desperation will redeem vou some-what in the eyes of men. They will have your life, but make them pay well for it! No! Trembling, shivering, gasping moaning in helpless terror, you fall back upon j our couch as the doors are haltered in and tho mob enters. Vou do not even menace them as they bat-ter at your gratings. Vou whine and plead and weep as they drag you forth. Vou big, burly anil possessing the strength of three ordinary men, rail forth the jeers of boys as tho nooso is placed over your neck and you are run up to bo choked to death and your body consigned to a spot of earth which no man can ever poiut out! Choke kick struggle die as the crowd stands watching and guarding! Vou deserve it! They have committed no more crime against the people at largo than the shooting down of a mad dog which was running the highway. the frightened babe, followed the mother with evil eyes as she moved about, and a glance up and down the street showed him that uo one was near. A'silver watch the hu-sband'swas hanging on a nail. Ou the she'f beside the clock was a purse. Hunger was his excuse robbery or worse his intention. The burly villain rose up and strode forward and possessed himself of the valuable". The woman turned on him and cried out. As he laughad in her fece she even reached out aud clutched his sleeve nnd cried for help. "Curse you for a fool!" With his free hand he struck her a savage blow in the face a blow which would have settled the strongest man, and as she fell to the lloor he gave her a kick and walked out out into that peaceful and almost holy sunshine created by Cod! A terrible sight for a husband who had come w histling home at high noon with a heart full of love. The wife lay dead on the lloor, killud as suddenly and surely by the blow of that ponderous list as if struck by a cannon-ball- . The child had cried itself to sleep had awakened hail (tried and slept antl awakened again, and his wee hands were now pulling at her hair and he was laughing in glee. Such a sight never kills a strong man. It freezes him produces a dumb stupor which ha throws off alter awhile to utter such a cry for vengeance that the echo is heard by the angels in heaven. He feels a thirst which even blood can not quench, lie feels a strength which would bear him ten times around the globe in search of the man who had wrecksd his home, happiness ami life. An alarm a anarch an arrest, j There could be no mistake. They found the stolen articles on his person, i a did not submit tamely, but fought like a savage beast surrounded by dogs, and when ho had Ihislly been secured and tiio haif duzen olhocrs were panting like wohes after a run of miles to overtake a quaay, ho scorned and cursed and reviled them and defied tho law to its worst. Well for J in Ihat (he husband was not, there! Well for him that he was behind tho strong bars of tho jail before ii. was noisetl about that he had been arrested! lie cursed them as ho rode lo prison afsor the iron door .had closed upon him iu his stout cell. Ho had the strength of a giant; ho boasted that he feared not police, judge, jury nor the gallows. The law.' What is it? Justice sometimes. It may punish the guilty, or it may turn him loose to prey again on the community. A biased judge, a corrupt jury, , a tricky Jawyer. can thwart justice and delay public senti-ment The prison and its restraints are a lit punishment for a robber; the gai'ove and its dangling nooso and i;s grim hangman saLislies us when murder has been done. But there are crimes which men feel in ihpir hearts ire beyond ven the death inflicted by Hie hangmau. They only kill the crim-inal, to be sura, but in killing him they istisfy a certain thirst for vengeance which does not come to the spectator at the foot of tho gallows. It is night a starlight, summer night with a gentle breeze stirring the leaves of the trees in which the robins have built their nests. Thousands of tired popl have sought their beds and ate dreaming Here and there an of Ti rer pas-e- s his beat with regular step now and then a carriage rattles sw iftly along or you catch sight of a belateii pedestrian. Al the jail only the guard sitting in his chair .n tho corridor is w akeful. The thief sleeps the burglar dreams of his innocent aad youthful days, perhaps. THE Slliill GIRL Eh is Gorgeous as a Esinbow, but Decep-tive ai a Draam The Old Avoid Hr Tha Young Adors Her. THE PLEASANT SUMMER SEASON. Women and Flowers Begin to Gladden the Pltaiiiiitest Season of All the Year. 'Sho s enmtngwlth t'.ie ttowers that will bloom for us once more, Sue's coining with the breezes that will Mow alonir the shore, The sun will uiss her rlnnluts and will tlngo h. rchu'-k- with brown, Wbllo in; who loves nor madly grapples fate and t ills In town, And Cupid, with tha arrows that he's given our to twirl. Will uuiird nnew tUe footsteps ot the sprightly bummer (,'trl. "When tho robin redbreast hops around while yet 'tis early dan. And tennis players dot tho green of grassy hYld and iwn. We'll see her d In percale with a walk-lngsik- k lu hand. And In her brother s necktie will Btio stroll alon the sand, And where the crowd Is thickest In the sum-mer hotel w hirl, Will bloom ou'-- more th bsauty of the charm-lU-summer Klrl. "With flossy collar shining In the light of summer days, Wllh vest, and sash, and blazer we will learn anew her ways, Vouug cupld w 11 tnstiui t us how to pierce tliis thin Of mas till.ie attire that bides the maiden heart we pi i.e. And when once more we Cairn boras the sum-mer's pi li.iess pearl. We'll hall the smiling features of the Jolly summer girl." . r - Million of the laminir Girl. Women and flowers with all their smiles and graces, begin to gladden the pleasant and advancing season. The summer girl is already in evidence and soon will assert her changeful, chame-leon like glory. The very prominent part that women, aud especially that type of the sex who stands with uncer-tain feet where womanhood and girl-hood meet, has assumed in the life of the great cities and the festivities and activities of the summer season at the various resorts, is prob-ably the most striking illustration that can ba had of the advanced position taken by the onca weaker and retiring half of humanity in the modern civil-ization of the day. It is not so long since even among English speaking people it was tha men who, as a rule, went oil on trips while the women remained at home. It was the masculine who, as in the feathered tribi. wnrn thfl finerv. whilrt the women in raiment and in all thiugs, occupied a subordinate position. Now all is changed, says a writer in the Omaha Bee. it is the" women of the family, the mothers and daughters, who take the initiative in going away, and are most considered, and who, no matter what sacrifices have been made the rest of the year, are decked forth for the summer in the best that the recources of pater-familias can afford. He, on tho other hand, in a majority of cases stays at home, and while Mrs. X. and the Misses X. are luxuriating at a summer hotel, free from the cares of housekeeping and the enervating and exhausting in-fluences of the grimy city, be keeps at his desk or sticks to stocks as a lly sticks to molasses, content to make short visits to Washington Lake on fish-ing expeditions or maybe to Spirit Lake for the Sunday, where the family sum-mer nest is built. It is a most generic term, that of the summer girl, and is not at all confined to the belle of fashion or the daughter of wealth. It includes the great major-ity of girls in every condition of life. There are girls who drudge behind counters ten months of the year and young women who bend and sew nearly ail the brightness and energy out of them solely that they may be able to dress according to their desire and pose for a few weeks as genuine summer girls. We have seen them on the piazza of the Hotel Orleans or arrayed in the nattiest of bathing suits disporting themselves in the waters of the Atlantic. High up in the White mountains they have made their presence felt, while the Garden of the (iods has seined hap-pier with their coming. They are a multitudious animal, aud like the s haunt the place where light and gaycty is uppermost. 'They are purely a product of the summer days, and iu marvelous custunies Hit over the face of the globe making a vanity fair of life. They are intellectual girls as well as tennis girls and tlirt.itig girls and eques-trian girls among the bright spirits who will each in their particular sphere illuminate and add interest to the com-ing season. 'They are the real rulers of the year and their advent is hailed with delight. With spring and the approaching out-ing season the summer girl lakes the central place, obliterating the ballroom girl, the Browning girl, the amateur theatrical girl and all. She is the type of the rejuvenated youthfuiness of the world; the embodi-ment of that vigorous damsel Miss Co-lumbia, to whom the nations will soon extend their compliments at Chicago. The eager enthusiasm of the glad sea-son is seen every where, but especially at such interesting places as the rail-road station, where the summer girl nnd the summer young man take the train for their scenes of pleasure. The men walk with a springy step; their hats are worn with a jaunty air even when they rest upon silvering locks The women with their flower laden hats and bonnets; their clinging, sweeping skirts; their natty jackets, with fancy bordered vests and Venetian sleeves, elaborately wrought and embossed! sometimes with jet. carrying flowers in their hands, unless they are holding over their heads dower bedecked parasols, gay as any boquet all look as if thev had qome into the streets at the beck of the sun, and they pass and repass the doors and windows of the shops, paus-ing and chatting in couples and groups before the fascinating displays in the great windows, all iooking as if en fete, all so gay and, under their veils, all seeming so young, nay. i Mas f'uuud New stetal. George A. Clarke, an experienced iron-worker of Boston, claims to have dis-covered an ore in the Eocky mou.itains which lie believes is new to tlio world. Ho says of it: "I took specimens of the orn to Cincinnati, Chicago and Boston, and no one of them could tell me the name of tho mineral. Then I began here a series of experiments myself, mix-in- g it with molten iron. It combined perfectly with tho iron, and I found that only a small qnuntity was necessary to increasa the fluidity of tho metal. It rendered the iron ductile, and in low grades acted as a purifier. The product of the alloy was a homogeneous metal of very fine pores, capable of higher finish than before. The slag expelled by its use contained no metal, and was very light. In tho treatment of iron with only one per cent, of this new ore tho former's tensile strength, was from 10 to 25 per cent. Using only half of one per cent, of this or in a mixture with copper, 1 found that it gavo the metal greater density and u great increase from GO to 100 per cent. of tensile strength. Tho result-ing metal, too, is cajiable of a high polish. In a word, I found that tlio ore increased the tensile strength and tho fluidity under heat of both theso metals and makes them both of finer grain. It i3 Sir. Clarke produced a handful of the ore a sub.-tanc- e that looked like a fine sandstone, save that it was black, and many pieces of it presented highly pol-ished surfaces as smooth as a bit of glass. Mr. Clarke refused to state the location of the field, which, he said, was exposed over tho space of an acre, as he is trying to get control of it first. Cor. Chicago Tribune. Hhot the Horses to Knd tlio Runaway. Deputy Marshal Tom Smith has re-turned from the territory and tells of a thrilling experience o bis a few nights nro. Ho and Deputy Marshal Booker were driving across the prairie between midnight nnd day. In crossing a ditch Booker, who was driving, pitched liea first over the dashboard on the ground. The horses became frightened and ran. Smith was in the buggy helpless, as tho lines had fallen ontside. He had uo knowledge of the country nnd did uot know what moment bo would go over a precipice or into a barbed wire. Hj was afraid to jump lest bo should break his neck or a limb. So h leveled his Win-chester and began firing at the horses, nnd three or four shots brought them down. Tho horses cost Smith $150 apiece, but he got the man he started after. Dallas News. Fervent Lightning. Quite a strange freak of lightning was witnessed nt tho homo of Mr. William Henry Morton iu Athens. During the rainstorm that came up alwnt noon a flash of lightningstrtick the rod over the house, melting it instantly. The cur-rent was not content with this, but leaped to tho tin gutter and melted it all around the bouse, pouring the molten metal in heavy streams to the ground below. The lightning then flashed through one corn-er of the house, paid a visit to the people in the room below, ran out along an iron pipe to a tin basin on the back piazza and melted it completely, nnd followed an iron pipe to the well, fully fifty feet from the house. The damage to tho wood-work of the house was very slight, but all of the metal with which it came in contact was melted. Atlanta Coustitu-tiou- . |