OCR Text |
Show f In 1900. "You advertised for a coachman, sir said the applicant. Published Every Saturday at "I did, reped the merchant. "Do you want the position? "Yes, sir. :npmt "Have you had any experience? "I have been in the business all my THE DIRECTORY. life. "You are used to handling gasoline, JFrank J. Cannon. then? U. S. Senators Arthur Brown. "Yes, sir. Allen C. E. to "And you are posted on electricity? Congress Delegate "Thoroughly. STATE OFFICERS. Of course you are a machin"Good. .Eeher M. Wells. Governor. Hammona. ist also? James Secretary of State ....... . . Janms .kipm Treasurer. "Certainly. Jr. Morgan A.Richards, Auditor. "And T presume you have an enC. Bishop. General Attorney R. lajk. j Supt. of Public Instruction... John gineers license? course. "Of . G. jjfiri er" Judges of Supreme Court... "Very well. You may go around to V. Rifinf-Senator- , Judicial District. .E. Judge Fifth the barn and get the motocycle ready. Seventh District. James P. Lazier. Ad elbert wife wishes to do a little shopping. Member Lower House...... . Groo. My Office .Bryon Land Registrar Post. .Frank Harris. Receiver Land Office. f THE BLADE. Jr GAY SOCIAL WASHINGTON SOCIETY IS NOW IN THE SWIM. utail i f I .,.. ... Kin Susan Quay Makes Iler Debut The Shlras Family Congressmen Flschew Hotel Life Some Fashionable Turnouts. ' I . SEASON. Washington Letter. HE social season now at its 1' height an(l the de-- I Is Mantes are the , center of attraction everywhere. Among them is Miss Susan J & hr" J , Quay, daughter of the senior senator from Pennsylvania. Miss Susan is a petit brunette, her are though eyes large and blue. Iler Quick Perception. Probate Judge-...- Is She fond of when at the courr-tr- y riding "You are concealing something from home of the senator in Beaver, Pa., Belectm P.'JfflS me! does but TSullivan J. Sheriff Hi3 words were bitter, his accents are two little of it when in town. There W. Cazier D. and Collector.. Assessor young ladies already out in the So sharp that the maiden whom Oletk and Eeoorder......... sharp. and now this is the last Thomas Quay family William Burton, Wtmj he addressed started, as though frightof the daughters to leave the school Attorney and blushed deeply. SuVveyor. room. . William Ockey ened, ... .. ... . ...... Treasurer. ."It is no use denying it, he reCofonSr The home of Mrs. Mat Scott, sister T. Miller peated, with more sadness than bitterSuperintendent Schools. of Mrs. Adlai Stevenson, will be among ness now; you are concealing somethe gayest of the season, for her young MILLARD COUNTY DIRECTORY. from me. thing Miss Julia, has just made her Probate Jadg. The girl hung her head in silence, daughter. debut. is a very pretty girl Julia at denial, Selectmen. feWrdner. and made no lattempt with brown hair and eyes, dark,-wavhe left her without the a after, Shortly creamy complexion. She has a stylish .Alma Green wood. usual Assessor - A A. Hinckley Collector figure, which she dresses in handsome to the quick with his reproach.Tho. O. Callister. Clerk and Recorder- -. Stung gowns from abroad. For some months .m.Juo. M; of his accusaAttorney...-- .. es truth the and realizing -.. .Willard -a lUgera she has been traveling in Europe and surveyor. Treasurer..-- .. Joseph D. Smlta tion, she received him the next evenshe returned a few weeks ago on the Sidney TpPl deCorouflr... .D. O. Callister ing, when he! called, in , her most Superintendent Schools. ship La Champagne, which encountered collete evening gown. As the the tidal wave in Scott mansion is a fine one and its is a lady of wealth and taste, hostess Prof. Dyehe, the distinguished natresides of the highest social position, When uralist, is entirely it is safe to say there will be no more 13 years old he had not yet learned the popular home in the city. v alphabet. JUAB COUNTY DIRECTORY. r K. ' I i - j y j good-nig- ht ... .- -. .- j .- mid-ocea- n. . self-taug- ht. j CJubas tobacco crop has been greatly decreased by reason of the war, but there seems to be no diminution in Ha- vana cigars. The consumption of milk and cream would be greatly increased if it could be delivered in a pure state to the patrons of the dairies. England cannot very consistently compel the Turks to stop killing off the Armenians, when she is engaged In killing Boers to get their gold. Dear Mudder: I wont be home next England seems to be rather pleased week, for I got the grip most dreadful that the Emperor William made yesterday, and de doctor says I wont enough noise to drown the echo of the be out for ten days. JERRY." presidents message on the Venezuelan question. Interested In Kgrgs. The- man with the fur-lincoat The name of the speaker of the house stopped before the principal grocery in f representatives of Maryland is town and casually inquired: Mudd. He was among the defeated How are eggs candidates, for the United States senWell, theyre a little high, replied ate. Whats in a name, did you say? the grocer. Because of a big demand or a small a rich and influenitial supply? asked the man with the d Jim Cash-Cas- h, Umatilla Indian, of Oregon is suing for coat. his wife a divorce on the ground that Small supply, answered the grocer. ' is The hens seem to be taking things husband paints her face. Every case with re- easy in this vicinity just now. watching Cash-Casmarkable interest. coat The man with the fur-linnodded his head as if he approved of the There is great indignation in Okla- action of the hens and then asked: homa because a new judge refused ninejAny bad ones? for teen out of twenty-on- e Bad ones! exclaimed the grocer. applications divoree. At that rate, the Oklahomans Yes. Any of the ancient, odorous will morals of rich argue, shady people variety that we all know so well? to for a civilized in country apply stay No, sir; not in this shop, returned divorce. the grocer emphatically. ed to-da- y? fur-line- hs ed The Texas circular advising the planting of less cotton has to go against the high prices of the present crop, and the agriculturists are likely to be much exercised mentally before they enter fully into the spirit of this judicious communication. fSure? Mrs. Peckham, wife of the new justice, is a woman of middle age and of handsome appearance and gifted with gracious manners. The family will live at the Arlington till they have settled on a home to purchase for a permanent residence. Mrs. Justice Shlras is one of the most retiring of the ladies in the supreme court, but she is one of the most popular. The home of Shiras is on Massachusetts avenue and is a large square brick up on a high terrace and surrounded by a wide yard on three sides. Mrs. Shiras is a woman with gray hair, bright blue eyes and most kindly manners disliking to have any publicity for herself, but always gracious to the members of the press. Young Mrs. Shiras, of Pittsburg, has been spending the holidays at the home of the justice, hut has left, taking with her the two grandchildren, George Third, as he is called, and the girl, Eleanor. The Shiras home is comfortably furnished, hut not in luxurious style and the judge spends most of his time at work, going out in society but little. Mrs. Shiras, who is not possessed of of any desire to usurp the domain of man, is still a woman well up in ,the topics of the day and glad to see that rt is a common the'tdea'of She apone in the feminine world. a for education of business girls, proves but is herself a motherly, domestic body, not caring for show, or society, or any amusement outside of her own pretty home. Years ago when she was a student at New Haven and the Judge self-suppo- Sure! Of course ed fur-line- ed , f News-Tribun- e. Ne-ac- ha . ci to-da- ri -- - y. TIIE OLE BLAINE IK LIE IS BY BEING TORN .DOWN RUTHLESS AUTHORITY. Place Where the Great Statesman Eaw the First Light Day Put on Canvas by a Chicago Artist Some Re minis cences of lirownivllle. -- Chicago Letter. N this city resides an artist. Miss E. J. Bennett, who has a finished oil beautiful paint- just ing of the birthplace of James G. Blaine, at Brownsville, Pa., and a representation o f the picture Is here presented. one MISS JULIA SCOTT, at Yale, they met, then the band, taking the advice hus- Horace Greeley, went west to grow up with the country, but concluded that Pittsburg was the best place,, so returned there, where they lived till coming to Washington to make their home. Mrs. Waite, widow of the late Justice Waite, has been very ill for two months, but is now believed to be almost entirely out of danger. Mrs. Waite is the president of the Mary Washington association, and under her care the society has succeeded in gathering enough funds not only to erect the monument, hut to build a neat cottage in the grounds. During the illness of her mother Miss Waite, who is one of the most charitable ladies at the capital, was obliged to abandon all her work outside of her of own home. Mrs. Justice Matthews, widow of the late Stanley Matthews, is living in a beautiful home on I street and is one of the most popular of hostesses. One of the sons of Matthews is a young clergyman and now traveling abroad in company with his sister. Miss Eva. Another of the daughters is married to a Mr. Cleveland, a distant relative of the president, and a son, Mortimer Matthews, is living in Cincinnati, Ohio. Mrs. Matthews is a woman of fine appearance and refined manners. The French legation is in receipt of a handsome portrait of Madame fresh from the hands of the artist, Benjamin Constant, vho was in town a part of last winter as a guest at the embassy. The painting hangs just opposite to the fine one of M. Patenotre, which is regarded as one of the master-pi- e eLJ of the Frenchman. Since the return of the Patcnotres the house is a Pa-tenot- re, JL.tr; fll COLT AS x . fi Sense of I'nt.n,Ullr, I), nhr TLe prociep date Miss Bennetts family were fellow townsmen and friends of the Blaines, and while the quaint old mansion, in its main outlines, is reproduced from a photograph, much of the coloring, as also the environment, come from personal recollection on the part of the artist's elder sister, Mrs. Louise Bennett-Crocke- r, with whom Miss Bennett makes her home, on Rhodes avenue, and who was an Intimate friend and schoolmate of of the eldest daughter, now deceased, of the Blaine household, Eliza, who afterward became Mrs. Walker of Helena, Mont, and whose funeral at Baltimore was attended by James G. Blaine, by a singular coincidence, on that March 4 when Cleveland was inaugurated, forty miles away, to the great office for which the Plumed Knight had been defeated, In honor of this sister, Mrs. Walker, was named James G, Blaines favorite son. Walker Blaine, who was his prop and support as Secretary of State, and whose sudden ehd hastened the decline of the great statesman. Said Mrs. Crocker to the writer who i , f Denton Offuts storo W e only know that f n j county coiniulsvionets fi mon county granted (if. retail merchandise at which he paid $5, a fM posed him to lune goods in stock. Wla a their drivers returned the store was opened ij l house on the brink of tl i over the river. Th frontier store fi" place. Usually It was a 'zt'.l and on Its shelves were the articles needed in a a pioneers. But to be a c sale of dry goods and crV not its only function, it intellectual and social ccdl-1- , The c re b their in the inclim in the1 ' very ish where hand, ren.or The know will b The U played park ate its as sue garded the common meeting h farmers, the happy refuge' 1 is mor cither lage loungers. No subject V fcn&wn there. The habit- m place were equally at hor- jv politics, religion or sport, told, jokes were cracked ai at, and the news contained est newspaper finding its tAT f wilderness was discussed store was that of Denton ohr coin could hardly have tb " ' roundings more favorable to th! est development of the art w . telling ,and he had not been tlm. before his reputation for dm",, 1 established. A man came into the store who used profane language oi1 in presence of ladies. Lincoln jcW to stop; but the man persisted ing that nobody should prevent saying what he wanted to. The t men gone ,the man began to Lincoln so hotly that the latter said, coolly: Well, if you nr., whipped, I suppose I might t whip you as any other man," aid ing out doors wJth the fellow threw him on the ground acd rd smartweed In his eyes until be lowed for mercy. New Salexg of chivalry was touched, and entr asm over Lincoln Increased. Ills honesty excited no lew adg tion. Two incidents seem to havg ticularly impressed the ccxe- -' Karins For - p pan la -t - y s ture, knowk tion to hy eacl on ear T TI ' 8 g on one occp cents too ir he waited u Having discovered, 6 from a customer, that he had taken r Ais- 1-- 4 miles that evening after his store closed,, to return the money. Ar he weighed out half a pound of ter he supposed. It was night; and was the last thing he did before ing up. On entering in the morr e he discovered a weigh the scales. He saw his mf'Vake closing up shop hurried off to d( - r four-ounc- the remainder of the tea. McCI Magazine. and OSTLER & OCKE ' ' - Im sure. there are any In you suppose ,Do town? asked the, man with the fur-lincoat anxiously. !No, sir. We pride ourselves on our fresh eggs up in this neck of the woods, and it wouldnt be safe for any one to keep bad ones. A Wichita judge heard twenty-on- e Im glad to hear it, said the man d divorce cases in four hours one day last with the coat, with evident ditwo of out the batch only week, and relief, as he continued his stroll down vorces were granted. The Wichita pa- the street. The grocer looked after him for a pers try to account for it by remarking one. new Members Is minute and then a great light suddenly that the judge a of the divorce colony have been busy came upon him. ever since packing up to go to OklaSay! he yelled. come easier. Well? came back the answer. homa, where the decrees TDid you mean eating eggs or theai A press report from Washington says ter eggs ? introof exclaimed Ohio the man Theater has eggs! that Mr. Northway fur-linduced in the House a bill directing the with the coat, stopping short to establish of in walk. his Agriculture Secretary Yes. The farmers never bring in six silk, flax and ramie experimental midone to be in the located, their theater eggs until the afternoon stations, dle states, one in the northwestern before the show. I was thinking of states, one at Washington, one in the eating eggs all the time, but if it's theanorth Pacific coast states, one in the ter eggs you want therell be eight or south gulf states and one on the Pacific ten crates of them on sale in about an coast. The bill provides that the work hour. y at the stations shall be carried on by went back into his store and he Then Agriculappointees of the Secretary-otold his assistant that any jay actor ture. For some time experiments in who tried to pump him was bound to growing ramie have been going on In get the worst of it every time. the public grounds cf Washington, and it has been shown conclusively that Not a Great Deal. ramie can be grown successfully in this Im engaged to three just at preslatitude, three crops cf excellent quality Yes. 'A good deal on having been grown the past summer ent, she said. at the botanical gardens, and the prod- hand? Oh, no. Not nearly as much uct is now on exhibition in Washington. as I have had. There is but one diamond in this lot. Upon a rough estimate she would put A prominent Nebraska sheepman is acted as recently raying: "We are the aggregate value at $150, Detroit eding at Wood lUver about 20,000 ead and at a conservative estimate Couldnt Stand Tt. 3,GC0 will be fed in Nebraska this to the best is Wool up which year Hanks and Saoggs hadnt nr, eve? had. Feed is very plentiful spoken for twenty years until last week. cheap and feeders who were eom-llto drop out last year are in it to Van Pelt How did it come about? We Intend Wool Hanks started to &l:e up for lost time. his ""expert our sheep direct this year, house and Scroggs wanted topaint dictate .d have already engaged space from the color. :ltirc?ro to Glasgow at the rate of of which 3 head every boat, one Mioi K I n . I think that 11 call every tea days. Elder Bern Joblot3 nearly threw 3 restrictions recently made by the wife into a fit at church his it! h government will make a dif- Mrs. Berry How? cf ;i per 103 to the American Elder Berry Whispered to the usher p x, end the outlook does not seem to put him down for a call at 12:20. .vcrable for the next two or three I l lie vs more sheep are cn a; Brooklyn has I1.SS4 mofo pupils 'a tl n v.crs ever cn feed before her schools than a year ago- very different one, as it is fresh and new in the interior and embellished with various curios and works of art. A great many of the new men have gone to housekeeping instead of putting up at hotels. McCall, of Massachusetts, has taken a home on the corner of Fifteenth street and Rhode Island ave.,and as he is a man of means it is expected that his home will be open to society this season. Mrs. McCall has a family of five children. As Congressman Simpkins has moved Into' his new home. Congressman Apsley secured a pretty residence, the Drapers have a handsome home and so has Senator Lodge, the delegation from Massachusetts Is very well represented. Of the Illinois delegation Mr. Lori-m- er has gone to housekeeping out In Mount Pleasant, in a pretty home In a big yard full of trees and shrubs, a picturesque place that will he a perfect bower In summer. Mr. Murphy has taken a home on Rhode Island avenue, just across the park from the Hadleys, who live In the home adjoining that of the minister from Venezuela. Mr. Prince is in a neat brick residence up on Capitol Hill and Is the proud father of four fine boys. Mrs. Prince, mother of the member, is visiting at the house of her son. Miss Murphy will not go out this winter, as she is still at school, but graduating. . She will be one of the buds next year. While the appearance, dress and Homes of our distinguished people have been often described, there are few, even of the old Washingtonians, who know the different teams that are such familiar sights on the avenues in the Of fashionable sections of town. course, the White House coaches are the most interesting and of these there are a victoria, brougham, spider phaeton and a beech wagon. There are four bays in the stables and Mrs. Cleveland, who knows how to handle the ribbons with skill, has her own set of harness and it Is studded with her monoThe president never gram in silver. i i Wholesale and THE HOUSE WHERE JAMES GILLESPIE BLAINE WAS BORN. Retail Butcljdn CURED called at her pretty home the other day: I remember that house, inwrought with my most intimate recollections. I played in .that house, on the top of that house, scaling it by the attic ladder. I BEEF played under those trees and in that f. wide reaching orchard, where a shower of purple plums and golden cherries rewarded each vigorous shake of the tree-truALSO . or muscular throw of a corn-coIt is all as sacred to me as my own old Sauss: home, because ever since I can remember I can see the two houses standing there, their hospitable southern roofs signaling one another in friendship. It & OCKE is right on the bank of the'Mononga-hel- a, with back of it a high hill, and NEPHI CITY, UTAH. locust trees all about it, while on a lower level in front passed the Free delivery to any part ojf tie: stage coach, and far below flowed the deep, wide river. You see down by the fowlhouse even the sunken barrels, on whose little lakes of yore the ducklings made sail, to the cackled terror of their R. E. L. COLLIEB, C.I hen mothers. Once. I remember, James fell into one of these informal bath tubs, and a spluttering time of it thy Engineering in all its had before they could get him out; Wes boy that bet was, although I remember Land and Irrigation Work i fca younger brother still, he was already an infant athlete. It was to develop Engineer for Centril eid Clear Ule Lnd his hook, education amid scenes less Co., Land i rid Irrigation Fillmore favorable to outdoor Indulgence that he Mountain Lanu and Irrigation po was packed away when very young Into Ohio, near Zanesville, I believe, on a OfHce: Court House, Filipp long visit to his cousins, the Ewings. General Shermans wife, as is known, was a Ewing, and a cousin of James G. THE DESERET D Blaine. ; j Of deep historic appeal to the many HA 8 FOR 8ALJ admirers of James G. Blaine, the picFULL CItEAhl CBEk ture has become in the past few days invested with even a greater value, beDeseret is noted for thlfo cause the ancient landmark depicted, and Cleese-and which dates back probably a cenpf its Milk, Butter tury and a half, has Just been doomed ur products a tiial. to demolition, as seta forth the followN. S. BISHOP, ing from the Brownsville ' Clipper, a weekly paper now in its forty-secon- d year. In. an article headed, Our Town Eighty-Fou- r Years Ago, and subheadRlaines ed, birthplace going; the famous mansion succumbs to the ravages drives himself. The ambassador, from Britain has four carriages and five horses, the young ladies often driving In the cart. The livery of the ema is bassy quite gorgeous affair of top boots, dark green coat, red waistcoat, yellow knee breeches. The French ambassador has three bay horses and two traps; his victoria being among the most stylish rigs in the city. His men wear a livery of dark blue. Senor Mendonca, minister from Brazil, has several handsome coaches, a brougham, victoria and landau, while Both his horses are four in number. of the young ladies have riding horses and Mr. Mario Mendonca owns a horse and buggy In which he is often seen. fThe minister from Japan has a large landau which is swung high on big springs and bright with red wheels. His livery is green. The ambassador from Germany has all imported coaches brought oyer with him and they are two in number, while his stables house three steeds. His livery is drab. Senator Brice has a lot of carriages and at least eight horses and his servants sport a livery of green and gold. Senator Hill drives a pair of long-taile- d bays' to a buckboard and Senator Murphy has a pair of trotters which he attaches to his light buggy for speeding on the road, and besides there is a pony for the children and a carriage and pair for the family. The Lamonts have a stylish turnout, the victoria being an elegant affair and the brougham a very fine one. Then there are two ponies for the childrens drag and a tiny Shetland for the basket cart that the smaller girls drive. Mrs. Bugher and Mrs. Washington McLean have splendid stables and a Mr. John R. Mcgood lot of horses. Lean keeps a victoria and a brougham and his wife has a duplicate set of coaches for her own use, her husbands horses being bay, while hers are gray. The little boy of the house has a tally-h- o team of four ponies, which he drives to a brake. Miss Bonaparte drives a tun IMS in ly in PO aw anc tur nk b. am Butter, Lard, OSTLER horn-equipp- ed tri 1 i - 1 s of time: The familiar landmark, the old Blaine mansion and 'the birthplace of James G. Blaine, will soon be a thing of the past, jand only the memory of it will remain to the good people of West Brownsville For years it has been an object of interest to visitors and was rf pointed out by the people over there with the pridq of ownership, as something that was a part of them. But its days are numbered. Foir & t long time it has been In danger of collapsing, and recently notice was served on the owner, Mr. James L. Bowman, by the West Brownsville authorities to the effect that the building was in a dangerous condition, and that he would ELEANOR SHIRAS. black horse to a cart and her livery Is be liable for any injury that would from a collapse. The building Is all black. Miss Leiter draws the lines result too far gone to be repaired, and Mr. over a black and gray attached to her Bowman has contracted with Aubrey her colors are & Son to tear spider phaeton an-the old structure down!. green. Mrs. General Grant has a lan- dau and a victoria, while her coach colCotton has not been so cheap at ors are blue and her horses bays. as it was recently, for 43 years. ; fa , ! d j TK23 DESERET HO OS j t EIiortsn ? aad clay uuh. tfhtrs. & fir HBlin - & ounty NawapaP41 L .j Dt cptalmeoa from Erwy thing RESPECTABLE , ri a FWwina 0. WATER TOE PUREST Ca tba Premlaea TUa rr.tr jLNTERD CUR Diseases ofthe Kidneys TmUmmrtMU on Application- H 19 sni Tr MRS. J. F. GIBBS, DESERET, B in In |