OCR Text |
Show nymnz: t,attt: city, tjtatt. sxrxnjcs: roirsxa, ovusxcim 15, 1001. galt yj b w l i 'lojuljluiJulc, J.1: oliOBIMO OUT AT AUCTION !l ..a - :- L u q Li au LO u U W -: h 'Y 1 SSSSSSiSSSSSSsSSSSSSQSzSS TUEBDA-- - MEMBISR g THI3 BOSTON CIiOTHTN"0 COltfPAiry likis inaugurated a sale of Clothing:, Underwear, Neckwear, Hats and Caps, Oloves, Boots and Shoes, never equalled in Salt Lake City. our newly pur;ha and carefully selected stock will positively be sold at Auction to the highest bidder. POSITIVE It m AC3D ' HIRING FROM Til UJIEIY V' ! ii4 f&gl 35 uvJ lyj U G L 0 T 3 ! '! G Every article Jin iESS I C Item ember this is not limited to a few articles It embraces everything in our store. Quantity at option of purchaser in large or small lots. Stoves, fixtures and show cases for sale. No reserve; no delays ; no excuse ; no preference. Sale to continue Until entire stock; is disposed or. NO. 73 MAIN STREET, 1st BOOR NORTH DESERET NATIONAL BANK. to each other's existence. S3 store. Perkins did not make a great GAMES. ference the teachers get up what Is known as success at first, but after enjoying the A MAIi'S FIRST MATRIMQIiY. benefit' of Willard's Instruction for "acqnaintance sociables" at the beginofabout a month, he began to improve, so ning of the school year. Prizes axe fered for the greatest number of Intro- that one night he emerired from Biggs's ductions. If Ward McAllister could see rear door with all Deacon Brad all's One Study cf a Peculiar System of . Bio- one of these sociable she would say that ready money and' an I O Ufor seventeen iltbongh His Second Slarriage wood. too was of oords the for person good perdition of Eqaal Iflection, raliiy. The next day the Deacon, in an anonywho invented it. The usual procedure r, ta the matter of an j Introduction Is not mous letter to Principal Robinson, dicourse at the vulged the secret that Willard's new taught as a part of the school. The girl game was nothing but draw poker in a Cove ndrmal (South sociable this thin, disguise. ' This act of revenge led won who at the the IN A prize MUCH SHOWING THERE IS NAME, DOES HE EVER FORGET HIS FIRST WIFE? SOME UIHOGENT! i j. JJ!' ' ' fall Introduced another girl to twenty-sevemen. Including. an aged colored who assists the janitor In tak4"' person" Ing eare of the furnace. Another device for securing the advantage of social Intercourse for the pupils is a grand march around the school room. fThei gentlemen, take partners, and somebody drums a march on the piano. One of the teachers leads hand-bel- l. When she off, carrying strikes it, every gentleman drops behind his partner and marches with the next In order. Jlf he doesn't know her, he asks: "Is this your first term?" and cases out of a hundred In ninety-nin- e n i Especially in tho Rurtl Districts, and That It la Possible to Carry the Customs of Country Town Too Far Backwoods Etiquette. a--5 by Jm ICopyTlfrht. W. Johnson. 1 'of Lonrf ago. In the melancholy days VirK that ruirlrut hn th. f! I rfif 111 consciousness of ouf Incapacity is not by the cowardice which yet amelorlated will not let us be honet with ourselves I was intimately acquainted with South Me. Cove, We both have irrown since then. The town has grown smaller, and I have grown thinner; thuj town has grown poorer, and I have gone In debt; the town has grown more beautiful with age, and I have grown a moustache which conceals a portion of my countenance. Thus we sympathize with each other, and the town "whispers Its confidences to rae as o an old friend. I propose to make the Customary betrayal of that trust. . South Cove Is typical of a thousand towns. This sketch ;bf Its development would fit the other 000 as well, and therefore 1 am the better pleased, because In saying disagreeable things about South Cove, Jl make myself of- besides my own immediate friends and relatives. This Is the true vocation ofas any person In that prothe writer, foBalnn oun Inum tw In t.ArvlA winr thnSA whoso characters, woven by him Into by the fiction, have been 1 originals.' ..'','The storm center!! of jthls narrative hovers over the head of (a young man lis gradunamed Willard C Martin. ated from Yale last!, spring, and spent the summer (and his fow Remaining dolAs lars) In choosing a , profession. Journalism, medicine and the law were overcrowded, he decided, (early in July, to earn his bread by,being a good husband to some woman worth not leas than a million In her own right. On the 1st jj ! h lf YT7. ' 1. Li 11 Jt I 1 THE ORJLITD MARCH. he doesn't make another remark. The spectacle of h IV: misery while he Is try lng to think ot something to say would melt a heart of stone. Then there are games. There is the "Shaker Dane," which is almost ex actly like the Virginia Reel," only it isn't srnf ul. And there Is another game which anybody 'who ever danced the old fashioned con 'would recognize las of thet Lake." In the South "Lady Cove normal school this game may be played to any music except that which was intended for It. All these things the new instructor observed, and he came to the very natural conclusion mat tnere was good deal In a name. Being a young man of cheerful disposition, and do slrous of promoting the happiness of others, he proceeded to Introduce several new games into ; the school. One o these he called "Disappointment." It is known, elsewhere as the "Nine-pi- n it was an instantaneou (juaariiie." success with teachers and pupils. A the next sociable he .Introduced the flower figure and 0ne or two others of the germaiH The weird and somber march: took. the place of the waltzing but the new gaine made a hit in spite of this disadvantage. Willard was becoming very popular. Sociables were teld weekly, and he de vised something new for each. His Inin adapting the unhallowed genuity amusements of society to the requirements of South' Cove morals was worthy of a better cause, I believe he would have worked In the skirt dance before Christmas. But his greatest triumph 1 proved to Involve his' rain. , He organized what he called the Au thors' Club for the young men. This association met once a week and played a game which! I will briefly describe. n Willard selected thirteen authors, and three; works of each. They were graded according to their promi nence. An author's name or the nam a of one of his books was printed on a card, the back of whjch was exactly like that of every other card used. There wen, m in all. of course, fifty-tw- o The young men! sat down at tablet, eaoh aocommodatipg about five playexi. Thevcards were dealt'one at a time till each suan had five. Then the nan at the left of 'the dealer put one bean on the table. The next man, if he had a good hand, chipped in too. Shakespeare and "Hamlet" beat Milton and "Paradise , tf-a- s j , j ' THE VVLIZK. 1 - lXTltoWUCTlON. I i of August he cut the estimate down to Three weeks later, ae all signs seemed to point tola hard winter, he decided to accept an Instructor's position In the , Normal School at South Cove, with a salary Of 84 J 3 a year. The moral code of South Cove has always been peculiar. For Instance, It Is held sinful there to go upon the water on Sunday, while driving; which directly Violates the commandment. Is regarded as an innocent pastime; Driving Involves work for the! horse, at least, bat going upon the water is different. The young people who Indulge In that pastime simply drift up the river and then drift back again. It's no work to keep a pretty girl from falling overboard. Dramatic performances used to be wicked bocaose a play was essentially slaful; but we could have acted "Camllle" In the orthodox church vestry by calling "'t It a charade. Some of these peculiarities Impressed themselves early on the mind of Willard C. Martin. Although many of the old absurdities have been entirely outgrown In the town, they have all survived in the school. If anybody laid the Jack of spades on Principal Kobinson's desk he would probably say, "Take this card back to the devil and say that I am not at home." lie prides himself on repartee. Although Wl Hard's orthodoxy was vouched for by several people who had known his grandfather, he fs In reality a young man of distinctly liberal Ideas. Some of the practices of the, school amused him. It must be remembered that the scholars range In age from 15 Tears to baldheaded and toothless. The vi gorous rules or the Institution succeed "idrfully In guarding; the morals of ancient maidens and tedate farmers rora the Interior villages, but they fall a i;o leas Interesting and instructive with such of the younger fry as r to be giddy aiposd nclnsr Is held to be a most pernicious lion cf tbe Enemy.' However, sonae-X r f th. a f art is soon to be necessary o':.o pupils. c!it:ilty among the 1. ful . retiring nature of Karae description. : cr C ?y vou!i Ut?r Is. lit- 575,000. -?r i 1 '. ! rr-t!-- i t-- , well-kno- w to a fearful scandal, and a general inall Willard's amusement vestigation of An expert on the wickedenterprises. ness of this world was secretly employed; and his revelations turned the Ella Wheeler Wilcox Discusses This principal's hair gray. The effect upon Unique Question What Doe Conthe town was so great that nobody can stancy to Ills first Love Mean for snggest a novelty of any kind now withav Man? An Article Which Will out laying himself liable to the gravest jnglori-ousl- y been has Willard suspicion. Probably Provoke Discussion. "'bounced," and the organizers of sociables at the" school have fallen baok on such good old reliable games as Twirl the Cover" and "Copenhagen." Copyright, 1891, byNewthe Bok Syndicate Pres, York.l It is said, too, that some of the South Cove people begin to see that they have CoxsasrovDSHea Tbubons.1 been beating the Old Boy round a "Will you love me always, as long as I stump as the phrase goes down there. live?" questioned the fond young wife. Howard Fielding. "Always," answers 'the adoring husband; "alive r dead, you will be the One HeBoited the President. of my existence to me. I could Abraham Lineoln was always the woman never love another. If you should die .j friend of the man who did his duty, as life would be a desert to me a lonely ismany a good soldier and official discov- land, where I should wait and watch for ered to his lasting benefit. Mr. Chitten- the ship of death to come to my rescue ' den, In his "Recollections." tells a story and bear me away to you." that illustrates this fact. It was when He means what be says and when she the President paid a visit to Fort Stevens, dies on his face is as deep as the an was . attack when expected upon the bandgloom on his hat ?la wide. of crepe ill Washington: Yet months go by the band narrows A young colonel of the artillery, the the and Where at first gloom lightens. officer of the day, was in great distress he women to compare noticed other only because the President would expose them with his dead darling, himself. He had warned Mr.. Lincoln and tounfavorably wonder they, were bittorly that the confederate sharpshooters had spared and she taken, hewhy now to begins firing at him, notice them individually, and to comrecognized him and were and a soldier near him had just fallen ment upon their charms, and before the with a broken thigh. The officer asked band has wholly disappeared from Mr. Chittenden's advice saying that the crepe his the gloom" has lifted enough hat, President was in great danger. to let in the sunlight of his from heart me would do under another woman's "What with, you smile. He struggles asked Mr. similar circumstances?" which assails the temptation against Chittenden. his heart is he himself tells that him; "I would civilly ask you to take a burled in the grave of his dead wife, but position where you were not exposed.' his heart insists on quickening at the "And if I refused to obey?" of the new woman's face and (at "I would send a sergeant and a file of sight of her voice. The dead face sound the men, and make you obey." hidden six feet of is The under as "Then1 treat the President just you living face smiles near. Oneearth. cannot sit would me or any civilian." of in the tombs forever on's by pride offnot. He is "I dare my superior was too unselfish manhood.. Ills icer; I have taken an oath to obey his to desire him todarling mourn his life away In .,, orders," would tell him to Jbe loneliness. She "He has given you no orders. Follow could she speak. He can never happy my advice and you will not regret It." i can never love as he he her, forget "I will," said the officer. "I may as loved her, but he needs a companion to well die for one thing as another. If he look his comfort and to keep blm were shot I should hold myself responsi- from after desolation and to be a mother utter , ble." his children perhaps. ' He walked to where the President So and marries. The new he reason! StOOdl ." j' a&d affectionate. She Is wife tactful "Mr. President," he said, ."you are knows more of fthe world than his first SOO of rifles. within range standing she ."manages did, amaybe, and astonishes Please come down to a safer place. If wife him. skill with that blm" you do not, it will be my duty to call a What began as a "good comradeship" file of men and make you." a marriage of convenience develops "And youxwould do right, my boy," and a love match. into said the President, coming down at once. who knew the first wife and Those "You are in eoiuinand of this fort. I an ideal marriage look on this it though erasashould be the last man to set an with shocked surprise at second union ble of disobedience." afterward with resignation; but first, ' The President was conducted to a to and to those who themselves say they was vlevr less extended the where place of the early marhim in the knew days wae no almost but where there exposure. riage, "He can, never forget his first He a was love match; it wife, perfect Tbe Biobstt Mas In Australia. married again merely for convenience. Mr. James Tyson or, as he is fam- It is all right,! of course. She makes iliarly, called, "Old Jimmy" the Queens- him a good wife, they say, but he must land millionaire, and reputed to be the have many sad hours when he "thinks (of wealthiest man in Australia, is .well that first wife.? known throughout that continent. ' He Alas! for sentiment that this is so selis at present making a most determined dom true. The fact is,' he rarely thinks stand against the Queensland Union of the first wife at all, and when he shearers. The Narrandera Ensign does he thinks of her in the same way thinks it Is an appropriate time to call he thinks of some incident in his childattention to some of the doings of Mr. hood; she is a vague, sweet memory, no Tyson. It says: We find Mr. Tyson in more. The dead are so very dead; the j New South Wales, at the recent finanare so much alive. cial crisis, offering to take up 4,000,000 living At the very first, after he has married worth of Government Treasury bills at the second wife,' he received a shock a moderate rate of interest. As the now and then! when he looked at the of his fir3t wife, or came across public well know, this offer was declined. A few years back, when the large cathe- portrait a souvenir of their love life; but even dral that adorns Brisbane was in course those things cease, to affect him after of construction, the collector for the a little. The finer sensibilities become n building fund balled upon a easily dulled 1 by custom, especially mercantile firm foe a subscription, but he when the passions are satisfied and the was politely, told that he should go to the heart and stomach filled. rich people, who might be in a better 1! I recollect being in the house of a position to help the work along." ""Go widower once, who had to be restrained to Jimmy Tyson,, he has more than any by force from going to the! grave of his Of us." (Up to that time "Jimmy's" wife at midnight in a pouring rain. His name was never seen on any list for devotion to her in life; had been sincere more than 1.) Well," sai4 the col- and unfailing, yet scarcely a year later "as lector, Tyson is a rich man I will he brought home, another wife whose go to him for a donation." " Do," said love and companionship caused him to the head of the firm, "and whatever he forget1 the second anniversary of the gives you we will guarantee you the other's death. Her portrait hung same amount." .The collector, a few in his room, yet I have seen his days later, meeting Mr. Tyson, related eyes rest upon it without seeing it, to him what had taken place, and con- while be upon, the wit and cluded by saying, "So, Mr. Tyson, I do charm of expatiated his living companion. not know what amount the firm Is A bit sad, perhaps,- this seems to the going to give until I have your name on sentimental and romantic, but a sadder Well, said Mr. Tyson fa a picture is the man who makes the living my itst." the dead one gruff voice. " give me your pen and inic wife miserable by extolling t and I'll give yees a bob or two." on every occasion. " I sometimes think It is mainly the "Jimmy" went into a private room aiJd wrote out a check for 5000, and gave It people who make a very hard thing out to the astonished collector. On another of life, and who are very unadaptable to occasion the subject of this sketch Sent circumstances, who remain constant to a lady a check for 30C towards a "par- first loves or dead companions. The man who takes life easily and sonage fund." The lady, la a jocular manner, sent the check back, and asked who adapts himself .to the people with Mr. Tyson If he had not forgotten the whom he may be forced to associate Is Zlr. by far the most agreeable man of the other "O" at the end of the two, stnd La raakes tbe better citizen Tyson felt a grieve J and imraediit-J- y burned the check, and did not suLcribe La UentiCss hluz If with Lis surone shilling. Although, ha hzs t.ci i er rer.-- i::i3 a l i scIJta known to refuse a swr :n:n a r -unless he was p?i 3 fcr it, he t is c tLe - -- , r I t ULsr :y ta fall.3 cf emi-- t' s it 1ivI::t . ;n t! ether hand been known to Ie1? jtv..? : a i' 3 C. 1 z end crptn-- to 3 tr 1 c 5 ? ; , ; .j .. , , ':- : - ; ' v , -- :7. well-know- $ ' . ; al-alw- ays ? ! f - . "xuthobs." "Nana" and the "Abbe'i TXXnTTSa TO WJkX Lost," but Zolai Temptation" were better than any two pair. The man; who had all the beans at the end of the game got a prize. " This Innocen pastime attained a popto the ularity quite out of proportion slseof the stakes. It was generally admitted thas Willard ought to have a he might now larger salary. IfPerhaps an unfortunate accibe enjoying it. dent had not deprived him of even the meaner stipend he formerly enjoyed. There was a young man named PerklntJ In the club who liked Willard's came so well that he played something very -r Brti&lTtT.d & rrlth sir--il- r!,,; man who is an ardent lover I to his first wife, if she dies becomes! an ardent lover to his second; and the man who. made a slave of his first wife becomes a slave to his second. From? this state- -' meat we might conclude that second wives have the best of it anyhow, and T yet I never saw the maiden who did not declare that on no conditions would she become a second wife. lt;is generally considered an undesirable and unhappy lot, despite the many instances where Improves happy and desirable. It seems prosaic to the romantic mind, albeit It often contains mere love and romance than the first. The dreaming maiden never figures as a second wife in her love visions, however she may figure in real life later on; yet a first marriage often fits a man to be a far tenderer husband and more devoted lover. He remembers his first wife only sufficiently to recall bis errors and mistakes, and to avoid them in his treatment of his second. Most girls, isr xy-however, would prefer taking the risk of hi 3. mistakes than deriving! the benefit of his experience. However numerous may have been a man's amours, a woman likes to think that she has brought a new experience into his life in the honeymoon. A man's first lawful possession of a pure and loving woman for his very own would seem to mark a era in his life, no matter what unhappineas may have followed; yet the human heart is a strange machine. A sweet and noble woman, whose nature was full of feeling, once shocked me With a confession. "I was but 23 when my first husband died," she said. "I worshiped him, and we had! been Ideally happy. All the Ihave 100 Lots in different parts of the Gty that I want to trade for world seemed a tomb after he died. I did not believe life held any joy for me. Brood Mares and Cows. I have retired from the Real Estate business My only happiness for years I found in passing whole days beside his tomb. and wish to close out some of my Real Estate. Yet I married again before I was 30 a man who had awakened, it seemed to me, a deeper passion in my I heart than the early love. And now year after year goes by in whtoh I forget to notice the marriage or of anniversary of my first so absorbed am I in my husband's death, " ! this man." an As opposite to this case I knew a stubborn and selfish woman who was in her violent persistent and constant her young husband. grief at the loss of no abatement of her Years passed with angry resentment at fate; and yet finally she entered Into litigation with the aged parents of her husband about the prop- WANTBD : , be-ciu- & V. mm -- .... wi-ar- tch 1 v.-- 1 s 1 li ; -- $11 LOTS FROM UPWARDS. ...!. erty. The same dogged characteristics marked each event of her life. Stubborn n ess is often a s tron g element in constancy to sorrow. Yet I would not wish to be understood that only stubborn f and selfish natures remain; faithful to dead loves. lam on the trade if you are. Address me at my ranch. I also I think only selfish, natures Impose an outward expression of their; grief on all hftVA a trnnn rva qtti And nn a tva m modatft- Iflfl h part of hnrsm Fai those who come near them, but I have In I mind a 'man who Is the soul of unselfish. ness and goodness of heart, who has particulars address, remained true to the memory of a dead wife for more than twenty years. He is a very cheerful man, casting sunshine about him wherever he goes, but "she is always with me," he. says! "Never a day passes that I do not live over the four happy years of our brief wedded life. I feel her; presence always about me, and I am not unhappy; but I could not marry another woman for' I should feel that I had two wives, she is such a living presence to me always." BTJTPAI.O AILTT, TTTAI2 This is love In its most rarefied and find in spiritual type, which we seldom the hearts of .men. This man is really casting living In the spirit new, and; the aside of his body by death will be no more than thej crossing of a bridge, from one shore to another. Very few men love their wives with ; this sort of love; when they do there is no second marriage possible. Should any force of circumstances render a second marriage advisable with this man, however, and be pnee decided to take the step, I am not prepared to Z3w Ti ZJUOT. : C. P. MASON ) Paeaidaot. say that he would retain the memory of Z2. MITJCCDY; JAS. f Genaral Uanagsa his first wife to any marked degree. There is something remarkably absorbThe ing and obliterating in marriage. name CARRIES IN STOCK FOR. IMMEDIATE SHIPMENT living woman who shares a man's and home is more engrossing than the V dead angel, even if she Is only a wife of PUmps, convenience and not of love. Even if she irritates and annoys him, she keeps his thoughts from straying Etdck lar away from her. Women's hearts feed ; on past memories, bu men's seldom do more than nibble at such intangible food. A man i thinks of what he sees, a woman of what she remembers.; He is no more fickle or Hoisting Engines, Vertical Engines, Horizontal Engines, VTesiinhouss is more unfeeling than woman, but; henot Engines, Horizautal and Vertical Boilers, Blowers,! Fans, Know lea make of a philosopher, and he does Steam Pumpa, Jniectorg, CoTrnors, Falybanks Scales, j himself miserable over the' irrevocable. 5 1 - mm IM ; g , . UTM 1 lOrailA Vico-Presaicle- lACHDJERT C0.i nt. . ; Knowles' and Blake Drills and flir IngBrsoll'SBigeant Gomprassora ....... - ; It behooves the woman who would not be forgotten Jo stay alive. ' EiXJt. Whkeueb Wmcox. Garfield Tea for sick headache, dizziness Patent Crushing Pcnt Wall's Rolls, 7cod Pulleys, Ire a Pips Tlachinist and ElacksmiCi and Fitiics-s- ValYeii, UinlnT HdUs, Wire Rope, Lai3ic2.ters Cil3, Lubricatins: Tools, Sihl Fed; Drill Wire Dos Irca and Pacircj, Steel, Qeth, Roofing, Belting Horse Whims, Reck Brewers, J ; , W Bead tbe imrwl Trends tad BflMdr CALTHOS C'aitmm will lt"l proranteeUuit fr, IX: 0 Smeltsr, Hill and tlisirj Supplies, and Kajnesia Sacticnsl ' CoTcricr for Steam Pipt3. tr tt and. GcvtftaUsfifd, f i :rm. co.. Atdrm.vc:j J Ctfc IwicM '3 Asaafa. Sol SaDtij Wilro Fcv.In?, Gnps and FUes. r .3 3 :3 . t f ' '. I t y. rfi't 1:: . - i r 1 f ; . 1- - cows -- en never-to-be-forgott- i ; a ; " I 1 t : T. t r j i i i t, tcis . Hierr ... ' . '.!. IV i,' '5. Ac.-.;- ! rr'j jr 7T73t "ry?T rrv - 4. .i c:-- - - - r t rr-""v- r -- Tf- ""s.- ill o. - - c: " j i |