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Show w6u THE SALT LAKE TIMES. WEDNESDAY, J AVITAUYU. 1891. Gcnc--l iPg SELL ECU KT1TE, liCMWnhpiWll 4 CQNTBACTORS & BUILDERS. ffM K 3 llfSSlI S.ESSSI'S CWj&lf j OFFICE: 239 Main Street. !5te?f! CHB SIUjU 4 JUttl f&nA)yrt&2$& to t ttU Ml ; . mffllBiKKS. j -n-.J j I . C3-- . g.zR,i3 jpropr.j ryr .f .a pl iiBl PSSST2l iM0NYi Hb.F0.YS PARLORS FofitSKIfI f'"'M" rri j lfH! UB,I1., h UPpMpPf I MONEY ; 'Agn Crane Building, 2338. Main St. I""" I l.Jfctfar .JWP SIMWiPSE HuM? ftsafeSS" Guaranleed Mortgaes for Sale Millinery MmWimm& , L'a-ff- i " Pm W!. 126 Bain St., Salt Lake r, MMSM " I IftNPIlWP c'"u",u 030$ 133 Bala SL Salt Lake City -- 1- --L.JliJ tkZjJli,JkfiM jS.aa- - llaWQ HWPW t7T7u SAVE YODR VALUABLE TIME !WjW OPFICR ! Hqra Lake Music &7mrlffi1 , llnl!j GENERAL INSURANCE AGENCY. Wi!' MSlimV-- W1 " m0Wm I 95RiUm9V feliyijnffW' 35-00- Weber Pianos in Use. Ja'flaf 1I(ARHSU.I., ' &MM$ MHAJr3rV RErRESExnxo the Best American f?4W ' mi lLt a.nu foheion coMPAMia. MfefM COULTER 2 MtLbHUVt, f 1 ,,w-"--- sflMsl4 t$mtMW J Jt4 W'4 Exclusive Dealerfor IHeNational Typewriter WfM lOBLEilMD'i'CpJi PBfift SALT LAKE m fHIUPmt. HN jlfffiWEpM M Steam Dye Works ! :MV "THE :: TAILOR." '. JlftiS iMKttf'B- -l uc WOtD d0.& fK Jl,r,,rf- Sarqne, and all llffMit?IZE. ' " Filll StvH JllSt RpfflVfil Pff. Vtti , , , ' The very Intfrt m ToquM. Turbines kinds uni made f ardor, on r Cleaned and Repaired, AT THE OIJICS V a jS-- ti I and Hminrt Hata. Also nice Hue of tho nioRt oxporlonceu lurrle'rs ever ... V I Mournlnu Uoods. ' " ' ' "" IMERICAS (10IIIIVIJ i SHOE CO.. lert Fit narati faul$BJ5& I ,, P. B. mm r.tu -- I '- - - J tJjlaij ?SjSJSL ''PAWgWll SpcncerMWall, fMS COLDi RULE BAZAAR, M Glrara FINEFURiT.ttEWESTI IL, '''if nJV mgamun VARIETY HALL, yftlkJ ,OTg:sagrs, " , WSmm Msli The Occidental. m WJ. KING. t j tlL atjeb 4 murphy, i .peops'3 rgU, lian!a Moves, tare & tl5 SiMiMW cUrre,lar.sw,tunr,t.cIaMsolr JSUWillt13 House Fumishuig Jp oramHoc AIMIIItsl V iff HTITlf Hill Curl'iuoOhlCaltMruia ami Imi.orte4 (Ml OCt -- yon Coal. I iy ;4 i ""W toBfil KK.W2as- r- Aiji b-- , fc- - "AiuLAltll, 25, 8.111.1, Family Trad. Recolvf. Strict Attention. hftll A IflAjifl, LlIJ. t ' " iMMmmmMmmmLl&ia r 1 fSSuiW 209 Mai" Str6et" Clio. M. Scon; jAs. GnNtEWwrN(4 II. B. RrrvrrHt Preiident, Vice-Preside- Secretary. GEO. M. SCOTT & CO., (IHCORPOItATED.) --DEALERR I2S- T- Hardware and Metal, Stoves, Tinware, Mill Findings, Etc. AGENTS FOR the Dodge Wood Pulley, Roebllng's gteoie VTiro' Rp Vacuum Cylinder and Engine Oils, Hercules Powder, Atlas Engines and Boll ers, Mack Injectors, Buffalo Scales, Jefferson Horse VTuira, Blake Puun. Miners' and Blacksmiths' Tools, Eta 168 MAIN STREET, Salt liaise ' - . Utah IRTwONDEff OF. THE AGE! The Grand Oil Heater! A Cheap, Safe, Economical, and Dur- - able- - NoSmokeI fm No Smell ! No Soot I No Pips to Cuss I No Scrip-- , ture to pucle ! No Coal to Lugl jmmF'' l Ko Dampers to Eefrulfite! No Ashes to Empty! Sw' 53 !Ei "flt tnR t'1'"!? fr your Redroom, Bathroom, Office, j"!-- " Q Dining Room or Parlor. J I DO NOT FAIL TO SEE ITI Xa rfe only by the Sign of the "Big Gun." - - - 32 West Second South Stree 01 ai Iflntana MacMnsry Company C. P. MASON, Manager Headquarters for all Glasses ef Machinery, Engines and Boilers from power and upwards In stock forimtnt diate delivery. Steam Pumps, Injectors, Horse Whims, Hoisting Eugiae, Hck Breakers, Wall's Rolls, Ingorsoir Air ' Compressors and Drill, Lubrl catirjR Oils, Mine, Mill and Smolier Supplies, Silver, Gold and Ooaoaatrali tg Mills erected and delivered in running order. Maine Dies aafl Warercras 259 S. Main Street. Salt Late D. 3 AGENCY. BUTTE. MONTANA. B.KeBloeli&Co. 7"ln.olesGile LIQUOR & CIGAR MERCHANTS. 13, 15, 17, 19, Oommercia! St., Salt Lake City. Have in stock the largest line of Imported and Domestic Wines. Brandies, Li quors, Liqueurs and Cordials in the Inter-Mountai- Country; are Headquarters for Pomery Sec, Cliquot, Q. H. Mumm & Co. and Monopole Extra Dry Cham-pagne. Agencv for Carl Upmann New York Cigars, Straiton & Storm and Eduardo H. Gato "Key Wet." SOLE AGENTS FOR CHARLES HEIDSlCK SEC. Trblwne 865. MAIL OMRS SOLICITED. P. 0. Box 553. Inter-Mounta- in Electric Com y. 13 Broadway, Salt Lake. Electrical work and supplies of all kinds. Wiring for incandescent lights a specialty. Electric and. Coiribination Fixtures. Airents for Western Electric Comppny's'dynamos and Akonite Wire Com-pany's goods. Hotel annunciators, firs and burglar alarms, electric motors, etc., etc. Electric Light.; Plants Installed. E. SELLS, J- - TUCKER. H. W. SELLS. Sells & Coiripahy, Wholesale and Retail Dealers in Lumber. First South street opposite 14th Ward Assembly Rooms. t. 0. Vtx 1078. Old Pioaeer lard f Arautreax A Baf ley. ranyor of Colntuhns far some time and I city attorney four yeata lie was elected to the Fifty-firs- t congress, receiving 1S.210 votes against 17,506 for Henry Clay Duncan, Republican, and over 1,000 votes for other candidates. Of his contest with Commissioner Raum he says that he aims to be "th ' champion both of the soldier and the taxpayer," and though an unusually strong fight was ma le against him in 1890 he was by a greatly in-- I creased majority. CONGRESSMAN COOPER'S RECORD. Something; Abont Mas Now Conspicu-ous In Pnblie Life. The Hon. Goorge W. Conper, of Indi-ana, who has recently enjoyed himself bo greatly by having a "monkey-and-parr-time" with Pension Commissioner Raum, has been in his way a fighter from youth. In fact the surroundings of his early life in south central Indiana wade it necessary that he should fight bis way up if he was to go up at all. He was born May 21, 1851, in Bartholo-mew county, and had just reached the declaiming age in the common school vhen the war broke out. Indiana is al-ways intensely political. During the war it was fiercely political, the south-ern half of it peculiarly so, and the re-gions around Columbus rao,t political of itU. The youth, therefore, gained an early reputation for political oratory, Entering the Indiana university at Bloomington in 1868, Mr. Cooper took high rank from the start as a ready speaker and a good scholar in tho cla- - eics. The Hon. V. D. Bynum was in ' the senior class while Mr. Cooper was a freshman, and their classmate say that 9w(mmmm! HO!f. GEOEOE W. COOPER. both had their aim fixed era congress then as determinedly as at any subsequent time. Mr. Cooper's father was a merchant in Colnmbns, where the son still resides. Since graduating in 1872 he has been in the actire practice of the law, with poli-tics as a frequent diversion, and having got rid of the harsher features of his early oratory he has been a most effect-- I ive speaker before the people and a "bad i man to run against" in politics. After beiuz yrouecutintf attorney four years, GIVE3 PROMISE OF SUCCESS. Debut of Famona Presichor'e Son a an Orator. Frank De Witt Talmage, aged 24, and ' son of the famous Brooklyn preacher, has just made his oratorical debut in St. Paul, and the pa- - pers of that city naturally have a good deal to say about his style. As to the matter of his address his subject was "First Impr e s t here is not much room for difference of opinion. It is evi- - denlly the result F. dk witt tai.maoe. of much reading and study, rather than of original observation, and therefore "smells of the lamp." j Whatever freshness there was in the lecture must therefore have been in the delivery, and as to that the reporters are unanimous it was coldly, classically correct, and therefore not "magnetic."" Every gesture and tone showed evidence of the most rigid training. The young man is as yet a very clever pupil "in the school of oratory; but he is young and evidently in earnest, knows a good thing when he sees it, and so there is reason to hope that by and by, when ho gets ex-- j cited on some great topic, ho will "come out streng and bring on the rousemetit." Through all the didactic portion of his lecture the points here noted were prom-inent, but near the close there was an encouraging break when he set forth his first impressions of the Grand can-yon of the Yellowstone. Of course the son will long labor under the disadvan-tage of being compared with the father, but it should be noted that the latter lias been some forty years in reaching his present eminence, an,d in intellect the son cannot begin where the father ;jrca oC, as fee ,can in commerce. Where Anderaooirille Prtaon Wat. The site of the old Andersonville prison is now the property of E. S. Jones Post, O. A. R., of Macon. Commander I. D. Crawford, of Jones post, has re-turned from AmericuB, where the formal transfer of the property was made. The purchase, negotiations for which were begun a year ago, included eighty acres of land, on which were located the stock-ade, fortifications, rifle pits, etc., of the historic prison. The land was bought from George Kennedy, a negro, and the purchiiso price was $1,500. In thirty days the work of converting the site into a national Q. A. R. park will be begun. The money for this purpose has already been contributed by G. A. R. men in Georgia and elsewhere, j The purchase will be surrounded by a j hundred foot driveway, and a wide ave-- ! nue will lead to the railroad station; j walks, drives, fonntains and bedsof flow-- j ers and rare shrubs and berries will be plentiful, and in the center on an eleva--j tion will be erected an elegant club house for the uso of members of the G. A. It. and their guests. Each point of special interest will be marked by a suitable monument or building, and at Providence Spring a large amphitheatre will be erected for tho holding of Deco-ration Day exercises. Superintendent J. M. Rryant, of tho Andersonville Na-tional cemetery, will overlook the mak-ing of these improvements. Cor. Phila-- delphia Press. Snake Swallowed the Baby. i George Wharton, of Brown county, tells a blood curdling snake story. Mrs. j William Hiixelly, living in a log cabin, was making soap in the back yard, hav--'. ing kissed her sweet little babe , to sleep in the cradle. Presently the baby screamed, and she rushed in and was horror stricken to find a hideous black snako of enormous size trying to , swallow tho child. It had eugnlfed the hand and swallowed it up to the armpit, and was writhing in its contortions and efforts to make further progress j Grasping the hideous reptile in the ' middle, it seemed to relax its hold and disgorge the child's arm, then tnmed upon its mother. She (lushed it to the floor, and in her wild frenzy stamped it to death. It proved to be of the black racer species, seven feet two inches long and measuring six and one-ha- lf inches in circumference. The babe lived, and the only inconvenience it suffered from its terrible experience was that ite arm and hand were blistered as if scalded iu hot water. Cincinnati Enouirer. .' |