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Show f "' ' - WmWIra - - ; ' .' . ,. DescSft of University LAKE SALT - Provo VOL. 3 G. W." SHORES, M. D. Office at Residence. THEY ARE One blk east of Roberts House A. d. Shores, M. D., PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Pajaon. Utah. Offloe Residenoe, Up Stairs. act. Is Wightman Building, Attends all calls toy or night- - F. F. REED. Resident Dentist, NUMEROUS NOW THAT CONGRESS IS IN SESSION. It la Easier to Visit Washington m UTAH. r Asadoorian, H. B. M. D. physician 0- Surgeon, Now Than It Once Was The Ilotunda of the Capitol and Its Tainting John Trumbull The United States Senate. Time was when Washington was the most disagreeable city in the country. Now it is, perhaps, the most agreeable thanks to the much abused Doss Shepherd and other blessings in disguise. Perhaps it is a misnomer to call the Washington of 1800 and previously a city; it was rather a great, sprawling congress of villages. Around each public building and on each favored bill a village; between them streets very Bail BuiMinz, Ho. 10, Esau, FROVO, CAPITAL SIGHTSEERS. 4r mteL Office Next to the Drug Store, Ttao well known Dentistthe Surgeon again Haa opened liis Office in in rsoms formerly occupied by himsorts to do all Proro, and is prepared most approved in the Work of Dental style. Cental Room No. 2, ,v Bait Mini, Utah. rrT0- F. H. SIAWONS. v K D. 4 doors north First ey National Bank, and at residence, Office two Prove, Utah. Office konre 9 to 11 a. m.. and 3 to 5 p. m. JOHN B. MILNER. Attorney - at - Law, Hines Building, City, Utah,. Friday, December 27, 1889. And to add to the interest the figures are nearly all actual likenesses, for which Bet thi the subjects sat to tlie artist. From It Will Doubtl Em. Thomas Jefferson, John Adams and sevnew gun, called the Brown wire eral others the artist' received the most by Mr. John Hamilton minute details of the position of the gun, invented Is proposed, which will undoubtBrown, members while the signing of the at loggerheads. The Declaration of. Independence" wg in edly set the experts an of inner consists tube of longi-;udin-al pm out all these details brought progress steel wound about segments, in the picture. So the so called Trumw ire under such a strong pressure with bull Series in the rotunda have a never that the expansive power of gunpowder failing interest; he was America's panot force them apart. Outside of will triot painter, and the visitor should study I the wire is a steel the series with his history in hand. jacket, to contain From the gallery of the senate the visand protect the itor may look down upon the greatest while whole, law making body in the world and tlie is within a steel most (K)werful for that is what the lining tube. The United States senate now is. No other wire wound senate wields the power of so many peoabout the segple, nono oilier lias such extensive funcments is with a tions. Tlie British house of lords is a tension capable of mere group of figureheads. Only he cross section. a press-t.r- e resisting 1 woman senate in its best days, before to tlie of 133,000 pounds Bquare inch. the coming of the Cmsars, can be com- The circumferential is all thrown strain pared with the American. In its hands on to tho wire, yvnich has an elastic are the inauguration of war and making and a strength of of peace: the incarnate force of forty-tw- o limit of 133,000 to the' tensile inch. 267,000 pounds Bquare states, anil the acceptance or rejecThe wire is wound by the aid of an tion of all federal officials. Let the vis- electric tension regulator, which governs itor gaze lung at these men, for they rep- the tension at which it is wound to resent many a hard struggle and success an ounce of uniformity throughof in every walk of life. The venerable entire out mass, the Edmunds, of Vermont, who helps to repTlie steel segments are made six inches resent a third of a million Americans, of an inch thick at the wide and the sturdy Hiscock, of New York, inner and a quarter less than half an inch and edge, who has nearer six millions behind him, at the outer edge. are here but the equals of Jones anil thick The lining tube will be inserted in two Stewart, whose entire state has fewer the joint being slightly in advance pieces, people than one ward of New York city, of where tlie base of the projectile rests w while tlie genial Cullow, who on honor of moment the at greatest pressure. in the war for the Union, is but the colIt will readily appear to any one that, if Louisiana's who as of is, Gibson, league can be constructed practically, as tlie paragrapliera say, pockmarked with the gun plan is con-- , bullet wounds received for the souththeoretiern Confederacy their here ceired to ' it ought cally, a sublime monument to a reunited counone-tent- h - SPRINGVILLE, UTAH. Dr. J. N. Christenson, CITY. UTAH BIGIITSEERS IX THE ROTUNDA. muddy in wet weather, very dusty in dry weather, and not at nil attractive in any weather. Now Washington is the Mecca of bridal cuuiles, the delight of the tourist, and a place sought by men of menus and leisure. In tho good old times aua, anil Marshall, of Drowning, of Jllinoi.i, leagued from all the central west made up little parties for the journey to for it was rather n ted.Dos affair by stage or canal lo tlie river, up llie Ohio by steamer ns far as they could go, and then by stage over the mountain and down to Washington, and it was important to have good company. Nor did they fear the loss of much time in a session entertaining their callers from home. Now the constituents of their successors come by thousands during the year; tho excursion to Washington is as common ns the little trip by steamanil many roads sell er was in 1830-'4- 0, tickets from New York to the west with a via Washington if desired. And the middle, western or southern man in Washington still calls on his member often feels it a social duty to do so. The visitor is usually an early riser, and when he has paid his respects to his member, lie hastens away first to the rotunda of the Capitol anil gazes long and earnestly up through 160 feet of mellowed light to that wonderful concave where Freedom, Victory and other goddesses are playing ring around the rosy about the head of the immortal George. If he is stalwart and enterprising, he wants to go up there, and, after a wearisome climb, reaches the little gallery, which is ir. visible frny. Qaqp there, his first feeling is apt to be disgust at the figures which looked so lovely from below. Close at band they look like coarse smears of tallow and ocher. Brumidi painted The Apotheosis of Washington to look well overhead and 180 feet or so away. In a few minutes, however, the visitor finds that he is repaid for tho climb by the view of tlie floor below. A comical effect of the vertical sight is the distortion of figures; a man walking directly under the observer looks ns astronomers tell us a man would look on tho face of the moon if we liad telescopes sufficient to materialize him and there was a man there. The observer sees but the top of the man's head and his shoulders. Ilis body Bcems but a few inches in length, while his legs, swinging to front and Vi'a.-di-ingto- Thnm luuk like tho workmanship of heaven; This Is the iiorcolain clay of human kind, Aud therefore cast into such noble molds. Many days might profitably be spent in the galleries of the two houses, but for the short tiuie visitor there is too much to see in Washington. Aside from the public buildings, which are perfection of their kind, these places demand special attention: the Smithsonian Institute, the Corcoran Art Gallery and the Patent Office. The first two are largely the fruit of private benefaction; the last embodies the genius of a nation aud the liberal statesmanship of congress. But, aside from nil these, Washington itself, as a city, is well worth seeing. Every American Bhould embrace the earliest opportunity to see tlie beautiful capital of his country. MARTIN FARQUHAR TUPPER. Author .f "l'ruvr rbiul IlilloMoiiliy, Who JMcil Recently. Utah. Provo, Martin Farquhar Tupper, who died recently in England, lived to discover that, after all, lie had only caught the public attention for the hour. Fifty years ago he was in love with his cousin, who his wife, and it occurred to liim.ta out bis notions on matrimony. It write By buying your occurred to him to put them in the form He extended of Solomon's proverbs. them to include love, friendship and edWhen publishod they comucation. mended themselves to the people of that day, anil Tupper suddenly found himself famous. N. 1. Willis, who then edited M. Of The Home Journal, got hold of a copy Utah. and supposed the work was something gp.slsh Fork, antique. IIo quoted it frequently in liis journal, arid this largely contributed to Tupjier'H reputation in America.. While Tupper wrote nothing else that PROVO, UTAH. became widely known, his Proverbial The most riiilosopliy gave him a line posiPLEASANT LOCATION tion in literary In the City. circles, a n d li e lived to a good Everything old age enjoying a lateral therefore and rear, presenting s. ns tlie friendship of as in long view, proportion appear First,-01a.sm a n y eminent of The those of a spider. great painting Katra Iteasonablo. Drumidi is on a canopy G3 feet in diame- persons. He went ter and 203 feet in circumference, cover- to school with BROWN & STONE, Proprietors. ing, therefore, an area of 4,004 feet. Its Gladstone and execution at such a height involved sev- T h a c k cray. A F- - TurrERnumber of liis eral years of arduous labor. The paintings below, ranging around schoolfellows, including Gladstone, Lord ; the walls of the rotunda, are not yet Elgin and others, formed themselves into complete, but they are interesting, in- a social club, which, in honor of .its Just opened in American Fork, Gladstone, was called the W. structive, and to some people amusing. founder, I ! near the Young Mens IN to the about Critics have had much (J. say Ilall. Mr. Tupper was in America in 1831. in some of those pictures, and coloring Everything new and it is humorously suggested that tlie art- - That was tho time Jenny Lind set every nnRST-COLiLS-S one wild nil over the United States. Our Parlor, Tupjier called on Bnrnum, who introIn all its appointments. are and duced him to the songstress. She told Dining-ltoothe author how much she had enjoyed the second to none in the Daniel his Proverbial Philosophy. County, being centrally located. It will be of as afterwards spoke Webster, Tupper to the advantfeeble browed, a colossal, unhappy, age of all Commerdark, angel looking sort of man, with a cial Travelers to stop depth for gool and evil in his eye unhere. It is also the best Mr. Tupper made another fathomable. companies, place for Theatricalnearest in 187G, when he reAmerica visit lo tiie place to stop at, being much ceived to the Theater. attention, as before. was a volume of poems work first Ilis TERMS REASONABLE. and Other Poems," Geraldine called Theatrical to troops. Special rates and his second the Proverbial PhilosoJMrs. C. Af. Afterwards lie wrote plays and phy. more poems, but lie was deutinsd not to catch tho popular fancy but once. Mr. Tupper was born in London in 1 dealer in 1810. Consequently ho was 70 years old Home Made and Imported when he died. SIGHTSEERS IX TIIE BEX ATE GALLERY. and York-tow1st designed in the Surrender at The Use of Flint. t).t. 10, 1781, to show how the Done. Furs are much used as trimmings on Repairing autumnal sun of Virginia had affected 1 tho contestants French, English and every garment where they can be put, liOSer Goods Repaired. from commanding general even to under petticoats. Many of these Rubber and Leather Cement Americans I to drummer buy, being of a rich, dark are made of eiderdown flannel with an But no sarcasm can eight inch border of coney around the red complexion. For sale at the sign of the lessen the patriot's interest in the pro- iKiltom. Tea gowns have long bands of BIG BOOT, of John Trumbull; and the fluffy fur. Wraps have every kind imductions , T Street. - half block West of Hunk. more he knows ubout the artist the more aginable, and many that I should never will he study the pictures, for tlie paint- think of. DrcRS skirts and waists have er's life was itself a truly American epic, hits and bands here and there, and if it and ho has.. .wrought his character into keeps on tho women might os well turn into cats entirely and be done with it. tho paintings. DEALER INJohn Trumbull was a son of the fa- Fashion Ix'tter. mous Jonathan Trumbull, Revolutionary What Puzzled Willie. governor of Connecticut and staff officer in born 1730, Little Willie has been summarily corof Washington; the son, one as and thus rected saw, and, 1843, till by bis mother for repeated acts of UTAH lived of United the Tho punishment being' evolution the felt P naughtiness. may say. States. lie was present at tho surren- r over, Papa," ho sobs, in tones of ander of Gen. Burgoyno, Oct. 17, 1777, guish, how could you marry such an ill Medi-cim- al gTPure Wines and Liquors for and and made a sketch of it in pencil a tempered woman as mamma? Neve and Family Use. Imported sketch he amplified into this panting. port News. g DmesticCigars.-)- i Patronize INDUSTRIES be-xani- -- MONUMENTS TOMBSTONES Mickelson, ROBERTS HOUSE, - - TBoiey House.! Bed-Boo- m lioloy, - Jrop. Alex. Hedquist, Boote J31TlOS. JOHN EGAN, -- Wines, Liquor- s- and Cigars, vf3 UNCTION, a very tough arm. Tlie rigidity of a gun cast all together renders it liable to a number of defects. But can the gun bo try. n, , B be practically, constructed? The' difficulty great seems to be uniformity. Can the wire be wound by means of an electric regulator uniformly? And even if a uniform tension is obtained it is claimed that it will not answer, as in that case the outer No. 39 DAINTIK8. CHRISTMAS FULL LINE OF BY MAR1V PARLOA. At Christmas-tid- e both young and old expect some special table luxuries. More time anil thought are given by the housekeeper lo the preparation of such dishes as will please the house-ioir than at almost any other time. Iere are a few deserts and cakes which may help the housekeeper in making her plans for the holidays: English Plum Pudding. The materials are one quart of cracker crumbs, hree pints of milk, half a copful of nitter, or half a cupful of beef suet chopped fine, one pound of stoned raisins, half a pound of currants, half, a pound of citron chopped fine, one ablespoonfnl of grated nutmege, one ;easpoonful of salt, anil one cupful and a half of sugar. Mix the spice with the cracker crumbs. Ileat the milk to the boiling mint and pour it on tiie cracker and spice. Now add tiie butter and set away to cool. Beat tlie yolks of the Beat eggs and the sugar ;he whites to a stiff froth and stir anil stir them into the yolks and sugar. Add tills mixture to the cold cracker and milk, stirring well. Butter a deep earthern dish thoroughly. Add the ruit to the mixture and turn it into .lie pudding dish. Cover the dish, and, after placing it in a pan of boil-n- g water, set in a inodaratn oven. Jook for five hours, being careful to ,o beep the temperature of tbe oven moderate all time. At serving time I urn the pudding out on a hot dish and decorate with a sprig of holly in dt AND Clotliiaa Over-Coat- and s fIens Furnishing at S. S. JONES. to-getb- er. ' the centre. A-X.i- I T C3T . A T?.reTn Sc Co. Garten City Beal Estate Agency. Street, Half Bl'k South of Roberts House rrovo City, We invite - - Utah. Many people like to serve this pudvisiting strangers and others to call and examine ding in blazing brandy. In that case, the list of City and Suburban property which we offer at when the pudding is turned out, baste of brandy, Special Bargains for tlie next 't with six DAYS- etting at least half the liquor flow Visitors with all available informacheerfully supplied nto the dish. Just before the pudtion ding is placed on the table, liglit a respecting this City and ounty free. a match, and when all the sulphur is Hirned off. touch tbe match to the mindy in the dish. The liqued will ilaze up at once and envelope the WM. JOBNBON. This pudding may be ALBERT SINGLETON. mdding. cooked several days before it is required and then be heated in the steamer, allowing about two hours for this. Same for English Plum Pudding. Seat one cupful of butter to a cream and beat into it, a spoonful at a time, wo. generous cupfuls of powdered sugar. When the mixture is light and MANUFACTURES AND D1ALXR3 IN creamy, add the juice and the lightly rated yellow rind of one lemon, aa veil as the juice of two orangeB. Seat well again, and then place the mwl in a pan of boiling water and stir until the sauce is smooth aud creamy, which will be in about two minutes. Brandy or wine may be used for of all sorts have just opened up with n flavoring instead of the fruit, in which case beat four of milk nto tlie creamed butter and sugar, and theD gradually add six of brandy. Stir over the IN boiling water for two minuter. The sauce should be made the day t is to be used, and should be placed n the hot water only a short time before it is served. we are prepared to furHaving Purchased for Milk Sherbet. For a small family use one quart of' milk, three lemons, nish the and most at a scant cupful of sugar, half a paint of of corn- the lowest possible figure. Call and examine our stock and water, and one starch. get a perfeotfit and save money. Reserve a quarter of a cupful of cold milk and heat the rest of the boiling-Miin- t. Mix the cold milk with the Sc cornstarch and stir into tbe boiling milk. Add half the sugar, and cook or ten minutes. Squeeze the lemons, and add the remainder of the sugar to the juice. Put the peel in the lialf-iiof water and Bimmer gently for lalf an hour; then strain. Put the h cooked in freezer and pack with finely powdered ice and five cup-'uof coarse salt. When packed, turn the freezer for ten minntes; then Carries a full Lin of Choice wipe the cover and take it off, being careful not to get tlie can or beatsr out of place. Now add the lemon juice and sugar, and the water in which the rinds were simmered. Mix well with a spoon. Replace tiie cover and beat again for ten minutes. Now take off tlie cover and remove the beater. Work a large, strong spoon up and BOOTS AND SHOES, down in the sherbet until it is smootli table-spoonfu- 30 ls I Singleton " Goods Johnson, Clothing & Gents Furnishings would layers have a tendency to loosen the inner layers. It is table-spoonfu- ls table-spoonfu- also asserted that there will be a difficulty in tempering so long a piece of steel as that require for the segmenu.- XV ' to the wire, ex- perts fear that it will be found impossible to get wire men to furnish large quantities up to standard. Mr. Brown, tlie inventor, is confident as to constructing the bility, and thinks that it will be proof against longitudinal wearing of furrows because of the give to the gun. Lieut. G. N. Whistler, of the Fifth United States artillery, has spent much time with Mr. Brown in making the mathematical calculations incident to the invention. (l'Apirj'i Decoration. Tello dApery is the name of tlie youngest journalist in New York, and one of the youngest in the world. He is only 13 years of age, and is already editor of a monthly journal for boys and girls. The journal is less than a your old, but lias already made its mark, and won numberless compliments for its youthful editor. It has been the aim of the young lad to do good with his little paper. It has not been started with the intention of making money, but rather for aiding poor little ohildren by calling attention Tello to their wants. Tello has received letters and contributions from some of the most noted people in the world, Among them appear Ferdinand de Lesseps, Gen. Beauregard, Sir Pounce-fote- , 1 ian Ju Baron Rothschild. Marshal L&pouujaki, of the Greek army, and many others. II e has also received con- tributions several from royal Choice Stock, ls Cash Fashionable Goods Best table-spoonf- ul Johnson. Singleton nt West End Store corn-starc- ls GROCERIES, DRY GOODS, Hardware Queeiisware, HATS, CAPS, NOTIONS, Etc and liglit. Place a piece of paper over the mouth of the tin can. replace the cover, and put on the crosspiece. Draw of the water, and repack with fine ice and two cupfuls of salt. At serving time take the can from the salt and ice anil plunge it into a pail of cold water. Wash off all the salt and ice, then wipe the can dry and turn out its contents on a flat dish. Should the sherbet not come from the mould at once, heat a long-b- l ailed knif in warm water and slip it between the sides of tlie mould and tlie sherbet. It is better to wait a minnute lor the sherbet to slide from the can than to use hot water. For the cake itself Orange Cake. use half a cupful of butter, half a cupful of cold water, one cupful of sugar, two copfuls of flour, the juice of an orange, two teaspnonfuls of the yolks of three eggs and a pint of wine. Beat the butter to a cream and grad ually beat into it the sugar. Adil the orange juice, and beat a little longer; then gradually beat in the water. Next add the eggs, well beaten, and finally tlie flour, with which should be mixed tlie Bake this mixture in four deep tin plates, in a moderate oven, for about fifteen mi nutes. Be careful to have the cakes spread and baked evenly. When they are done and are cold, them one on top of tlie other, place having a thin layer of icing between them; and finbaking-powde- r, baking-powdehands, and the accompanying cut Is of a medal sent to him with a letter from the president of Bolivia. U is the "Deeoratioi of Liberator" conferred for good deeds. Many ladies of literary fame have also contributed to The Sunny Hour. Mary ally rover with icing. To make the icing, put in a sauceMapes Dodge, Mrs. Frank Leslie, Ella Wheeler Wilcox, the queen ofjRoumania, pan on large cupful of granulatef Amanda M. Douglas, the oountees of sugar andhalf a cupful of boiling water. andYoil until a small quantity Martel (Gyp), etc. Tello is a good student although not a will, if dropped in cold water, harden and enough to lie rolled into a soft ball begrinder. lie speaks Frenoh fluently tween lingers. It must not liof is showing marked progress in Greek, until it the is when cooled in this brittle the language of his father, Thelemaque way. Have the two whites of eggs d Apery. beaten to a stiff froth, and gradually on them, Among the contributions to a recent fiour the boiling number was a poem by Nicolas, prlncs all the time. Continue beating until the mixture is thin and creamy of Montenegro. then add the juice and graded rind of an orange. If the sugar and water be Considered the Fltnaaa of TWnffi- to much the icing will be cooked cheatIIow could you tell the medium coarse and hard. The sugar ani ed you? lie stirred while cookmust water not Because tlie spirit spoke in English, ing. This icing may be need with any ne should have used a dead language-li- es other kind of cake, and flavor may be been dead ten years.1' Boston submitted for the orange. r. snp ome and Examine OUR LARGE STOCK OF GOODS. Courteous Treatment and Low Prices. JOS. HARRIS, Proprietor. A. Provo City, f Utah. ntf re Street, STM IT THE And We are Going to Stay there. Tiis is Out Busiest WHY? Since Its Advent, we have not had Year. a Dull Day. Because We have earned a Reputation for furnishing the very best and the Very Cheapest Furnitu And All Kinds ot AIo HOUSE FURNISHING?, . Doors, Sash, Mouldings, Shingles, Lath am! Lumbsr At the VERT LOWEST PRICES in the Coui.lrv. Send all' Orders to . EAGLE v. Mills'.! FURNITURE PAYSON, a Ml UTAH. a E. V -- |