OCR Text |
Show DAILY PAGE TWO. UTAH STATE JOURNAL, FRIDAY, APRIL 7, 1905. $25.00 PRINCE ALBERT COATS AND VESTS FOR $6.98 $15.00 FROCK COATS AND VESTS FOR $2.98 $1.50 DOZ. LADIES FINE FAST BLACK HOSE FOR 89c at Putnams At the Chicago Salvage Companys Sale Your Old Front Door hCW to a change, and . STELLAR WONDER A FORECAST IN MEN'S STYLES so you should call see the Spin,h,t Doors Just received, as well as a large IIne of P,ir,.h CAUGHT BY LENS Utah VENTY-FOURT- BARNARD LOCATES PROFESSOR NEW SYSTEM OF STARS. Nebula of Inconceivable Extent That Cannot at Die-tanc- e Be Meaeured. LOS ANGELES. Cnl., April 7. The telescope which haa Just been erected on WilHona peak by Profeeaor R. K. Barnard la already turning out material of the highest intereat and value. One of the moat striking of the professor's finds was made recently. Upon a plate taken during the night, with a long exposure, covering the region of Sagittarius, there waa revealed In the lower left hand corner a whitish appearance, with edges sharply defined, and presenting an appearance not unlike the gausy wings of a fiy; the dimensions as projected on the plate being about half inch In length by. a third of an Inch wide. But this gausy white blur was In truth s faithful picture of a celestial object of Inconceivable magnitude, and which, until that morning, no mortal eye had beheld. It was an hitherto unknown nebula, unknown even to the professor himself, and whose presence upon his plate he had not suspected until the chemicals acted on the plate. The nebula Is so well known that no accurate estimate of its breadth can be made; the light traveling from It at the rate of 178,000 miles a second, might take half a century to reach ua There Is no doubt that a thousand solar systems like ours might be spread out within the confines of this nebula and show but as an Island In the ocean. And yet this Immeasurable cosmic phenomenon existing In space from a period so remote that the history of mankind appears In comparison but as the tick of a watch to the slow hours of a day, has escaped all human observation until the professor's lens, searching through the universe, stumbled upon It and brought it to the sight and knowledge of today. Of the bearing of this discovery upon astronomical farts. It !s too soon to speak; but It Is discoveries such as these that advance mankind to a knowledge of the secrets of the universe and the origin and destiny of our own sun and planets, and possibly this unsuspected nebula may bring consequences which will vitally affect the welfare of pur own race. NEW YORK, April 7. Fashions decrees as usual are subjected to fads anil follies, but Just now there are innumerable novelties and attractive things to interest the sober citizen as well as the social hulerfly. Many of the latter class have taken up the habit of wearing the moat vivid ahadea. Yet hrown, that much abuaed color, and oft most men, referred to as still holds on to popular favor with a tenacity that seems passing strange in the face of all the sad things said about It. Blended with more brilliant shades it has been brought well to the front again for the new season In far richer tones that the old wood and leather browns of the past. Now we have the more exquisite golden shades, deftly blended, as well as the monotones. Then there are purples, subdued and rich, and again almost luridly red. And such an assortment of blues no other season has dver before favored In mens neckwear; we see the whole range, from sky to navy. There never has been such a medley of colors In cravat silks shown at the inception of the season. Though solid colors are the most pronounced feature of the spring showings, and technically we may Include all the pretty two-to- ned lrrldescents in the category of solid colors, yet by far me most beautiful scarfing it has been my pleasure weave as to behold Is a three-colchangeable as a chameleon, reflecting from the same piece of goods. One sample of the waistcoat shows some style distinctions new this season. The material Is fancy French llunnel with cannille silk stripes. The edge of the garment and the overlapping flaps of f the pockets are bound with white allk braid put on about an Inch deep. The flaps of the pockets close with one button. While there are live buttons on the front, only four are used to close, the lower one being left unbuttoned. The low drooping points of the front show a style departure In the cut of the lower parts new this season.- The double fold collar shown, while not new, having been brought out several seasons ago by the custom makers, is a style to be found In only a few of .the expensive snops. The front band, Instead of meeting as in Uie usual form of fold collar, Is open, space from the top forming of the collar to the button. It Is a style 'particularly adapted to the weartied. In a ing of a broad large loose knot. In a matched waistcoat and shirt the waistcoat is a decided novelty In several particulars The material is the same as la used In the front and cuffs of the shirt. The fabric Is a heavily corded madras In an ombre or shaded color effect. The lapels are out of the ordinary in cut, giving the model a tone of distinction quite uncommon In The lower pockets have waistcoats outalde flaps, the left hand one having a monogram embroidered In its lower corner. In the shirt front the material has been put In so that the stripes or under the play of various lights three cords run across the bosom Instead of distinct shades and all the blendings the length of it. The combination Is resulting Irom such a combination. odd. d A year ago the The weave Is a heavy ribbed twill, the waistwarp green and shot with two colors, coat was reintroduced after having red and gold. been out of vogue for some time. The Not the least conspicuous of springs effort at novelty did not go further array of enticing things are shirts and than to have the binding put on narthe materials from which they are row and In colors harmonising with made. In the expensive shops we see the waistcoat material. This season new blues, dainty lavender, corn yel- contrasts are sought for between the low, pearl gray, reseda, leather tans, a binding and the fabric of the garment. few reds, light and dark grays, and The material of one waistcoat Is a much less of the gaudy than is cus- brown plalded cloth and the braid tomarily shown when there Is so much black, put on an Inch wide, and tthlo, color running riot In the things Intend- outlining the pocket flaps. ed for men to wear. One who is disposed to give attenEvery season the fancy waistcoat tion to the little details Indicative of grows more emphatic, and If I may fashion changes In waistcoat models Judge by what the common haberdash- for spring will observe that In the er and expensive tailors are showing, styles the neck opening Is then Hie fancy waistcoat Is In the as- cut rather lower than formerly, and cendant for spring. Of rourse there that' only five buttons are used to close are all sorts, quiet and hysterical. In the fronts both color and cut. The runny man at This. too. Is a good time of the year n public banquet recently, in giving for plaited shirts for day dress, While point to a story, defined the waistcoat htey have already been worn much thusly: The waistcoat of exclama- more In the west than In the east, a color and hysterical buttons Is in well made, plaited shirt Is today conThe Engl'sh and Irish old tory reality the sob of .modern civilisation sidered dressy for the street and In the grave of paganism. the semi-stifinish, quite proper with woman lives in a garret on over The twice around evening dress tie, the fancy waistcoat worn with busicomes to us from Paris. It noth- ness dress. All the authorities agree tea, and dies in a garret on which ing hut a freak; it Is not fashionable, that this Is to be a fancy waistcoat not likely to be. We may excuse season, and predict that more gartea ; and how did she get to end y tHe Individual who Impersonally looks ments of an kind will be on at life ns through the mat screen worn than were In vogue last year. be old? On tea. of a veranda, for adopting every freak The fancy waistcoat fashion should, No therefore, be an Incentive to wear more "brought out on the other side. one criticises him, because he can af- fancy stiff and plaited ahlrts, the time The Outdoor Christian. ford to do what he wanta But young and weather being most favorable to God. forgive me for an upstart That I do not plead for grace. men who have neither the wealth nor the combination. Nor bask within purring praises the personal prominence that usually Spring styles In hats are conservaface. of In the radiance thy warrant Idlosyncracies In social climb- tive In character, no freaks having apI am so busy living. Lord. And lnvlr.g. night and day, ers are. I am sorry to see, taking to peared. The probabilities are that soft And the cannot time I always this dress freak for the street, wearing hats will divide popularity with stiff To kneel me down and pray. twice around the collar hats, the former for less formal occat me a for God. forgive bungler. nnd tied In a huge knot. When we see sions. Both flat set and rolled brims That I cannot tune by chime such Incongruities we are certain to will be seen In stiff hnts. while the To the anthem and the chantry Of the dressy Sabbath time. admire so much more the unconscious, crowns are moderately high and both of sea and sky. I know the word 'nnstentatloua art of the correctly ap- full and well rounded. The various The note of dell and nook. catch the air man. But cannot seem to shades of brown are meeting with pareled. Of olden altar book. Returning to the shop wlndowa and much favor, as they afford a grateful their tempting array of spring Intro relief from the somber black, besides God, forgive me that I love thee As the flowers love the light. ductlnns In chromatic splendor, un- matching the popular color In men's With s seething, silent rapture. equaled by any former season, we find rlothfng. The lighter shades, such as With a dear but dumb delight. You bred my faith so Manch and that the smart shop Is disposed to car-r- v Java in stiff hats and nutria In soft, strong. the matching scheme to the limit. are the best forms. My creed so brave and say, The latest departure In this respect Is X dare to love and praise thee In Fancy bands are good form on soft Mine own untrammeled way I to have the waistcoat material match hats, some pretty polka dot efferts and Eleanor Abbott In Llpplncotts the shirt front. In fact, both are made hairline stripes having appeared. pe four-ln-ha- nd or . braid-boun- single-b- reasted TEA ff . ultra-fanc- four-ln-ha- ng BAKING ROYAL POWDER ABSOLUTELY-PUR- E Healthful cream of tartar derived solely from grapes, refined to absolute purity, is the active principle of every pound of Royal Baking Powder. Hence it is that Royal Baking Powder produces food remarkable both in fine flavor and wholesomeness. ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO.. NEW YORK. . H i Lumber Oregon 8T. loai l,ne. hy m. Cn pH0NE SCT FEET BENEATH THE SURFACE. RUNS FORTY System Twenty-Tw- o PUT MONUMENTS Miles in Length and Underlies Principal ness Districts. Busi- AT HORSES GRAVES Chicago has an underground railway miles in system some twenty-tw- o length and forty feet beneath the surface. It underlies the retail and wholesale business parts of the city, and Is used to transport the malls, packages, light and heavy freight, etc. The subways also carry the telephone and telegraph wires. The main conduits are eleven feet two and one-ha- lf inches wide and twelve feet six inches high, and the laterals are six feet wide and seven feet high. The system is now in partial operation. ( Dozens of little electric locomotives and minia- ture freight cars are rushing through electrically lighted tunnels. Tons of coal are dumped Into the basementa of furnace rooms of big buildings, mercantile or bank and office structures without noise, dirt or any other indication to the crowds on the streets as to what Is going on under their feet and out of their sight. Ashes, mud, refuse and sand taken from cellars and excavations are dally removed from the heart of the city and dumped into the swamps on the lake front. Day and night thousands of tons of merchandise are carried from the warehouses and wholesale establishments of Chicago's merchants to the retail Bestores in the shopping district. sides the freighting business the tunnel company has In successful operation what was to be its real business under its original charter and franchise an automatic telephone service, which has about every merchant as well as many occupants of the big office buildings as a patron. General Interest at present centers In the method of the tunnel companys underground transportation and the equipment for that service. The track system is composed of rail bonds laid on cast Iron chairs embedded in concrete. At the street crossings there are what are known as y Intersections. The track system connects with a three-wa- y switch, which permits the operation of trains east, west, north and south. A lt current Is used to operate the locomotives. The cars are of steel and iron construction throughout, and are twelve feet in length over all. They are of the double truck, type, and of a, combination arrangement which permits of their use either as gondolas or flat cars They are so constructed that coal can be dumped without removing either aides or ends. As box cars these vehicles are forty-eige Inches in width and stand Inches above the rails, while the length of the box Is ten feet six inches Ample room Is afforded by these dimensions for piling on big loads Merchandise of all kinds and coal can be handled on the flat cars, and In the smaller portion of the tunnel system enough room Is left at the sides and above the cara to allow considerable piling up of packages. The weight capacity of each car Is 80,000 pounds The electric locomotive Is operated by a single motor, and the whole Is of low and compact construction, representing the most practicable modern Ideas. In the tunnels the overhead trolley Is used. The electric motors have a capacity of carrying or holdtons on Inclines of ing seventy-fiv- e IX per cent gradient. The plan of the tunnel company In the use of the tunnels and the electric freight system now In vogue Is to transfer from the terminal freight yards of Chicago underground to the smaller cars of the company the bulk of the freight now entering Chicago for local delivery. The company also contemplates handling outgoing freight in the same manner, taking the congestion of teams from the streets, tripling the freight delivery and receipt service of the terminal freight houses, giving the merchants clear streets and sidewalks and reducing the cost of the present system of handling freight In the city more than 40 per cent Bradstreets. fifty-six-pou- nd four-wa- 250-vo- eight-whe- el ht sixty-thre- $100 Reward, $100. ERECT TABLET8 IN HONOR OF STAB EQUINES. Ten Broeck and Longfellow Have Very Handsome Shafts at Tfeeir Tombs. LEXINGTON. Ky., April 7. Frank Harper, who died the other day In Kentucky, was one of the last survivors of that old type of turfmen to which the Bufords, Blackburns, Swig-er- t, Kinkead and Alexander belonged, who bred and raced tnoroughbred horses for the pure love of the sport. His famous Nantura stud produced some of the greatest race horses In the world, and for many years the Harper color were seldom lowered In defeat Mr. Harper waa a native of Woodford county, and. spent all hla life there. He waa a son of William Harper and a grandson of Jacob Harper, Sr., who 11. came to this country In 1795.Frank Harper, who was associated with his uncle, came Into possession of Nantura and the horses at his uncle's death. It Is doubtful If any other farm ever produced two such horses as and Tenbroeck. In a Longfellow career commencing at X years old and continuing four years, Ten Broeck made a record unequaled In the history of racing, and was retired to the stud, not on account of his physical disability, but because he had won everything that a horse could win. Mr. Harper loved Ten Broeck and Longfellow with an affection as deep and tender as though they were human. When they died they were burled with honors on a rnoice plot of blue grass within view or his dwelling, and their resting places were marked with handsome and Imposing monuments of marble, with tablets commemorating their historic achieve- Frank Harper was the nrst man In far as Is known, to place l monument over the grave of a horse. Mr. Harper has not raced any since about 189X, and for several years he has paid very little atentlon to the breeding of horses Mr. Harper, although the possessor of large means and amply able to provide every luxury, Uvea a simple, lonely life, attended by a few fathful negro servants - o. B Vice-Preside- nt "bone? The sum of $1 is a "bone," I explained, innocently. "She smiled demurely. What la a ham in theatrical slang. Mr. Bernard?' Commonly an Inferior actor, I said. What haveyou for breakfast? Maggie raised her voice malicious- X Parker Goal Go. I SSTSiWiSSWSi ly. 'We have a couple of boneless hams,' she said. New York Times. SHORT LINE Trip. Tour choice of five trains for conference, Salt Lake City. Tickets on sale Ogden Union depot April 4th to 9th, good to return until April lXth. 1 BOTH PHONES. Boll Telephone Independent OREGON $1.50 Round - Toledo, J how much we try to advance the to noss interests of our customer! h w sw ery legitimate way. In so doing w with tinctured motives may be ness, tor upon the prosperity dto k patrons He the success ofwfflthU you In every department prepared to serve you In a eon" manner. Waitress Witty Shaft According to Sam Bernard all waitresses have the gilt of sarcasm and little faith. "I remember one by the name of Maggie, who held forth In a theatrical boarding house, said the comedian. Maggie conceived a strong dlsliae for two brother actors who were stopSTATE B ping at the house with me. They had OGDEN lost their engagements and were necC. Bigelow, President. During the H. M. essarily economizing. J. Browning, stringency Maggie missed her tips. A. P. Bigelow, Cashier. One morning when I went In for R. A. Moyes, Aolstant Cashier. breakfast I took a seat at the same table with the impecunious ones, and Maggie approached for the order. Mr. Bernard,' she began, what Is the meaning of the slang word . First National Bank Druggists, 75c. Take Hall's Family nils for M Company A K E R America, as Vice-Preside- nt Bold by Pecry Bros. Milling ments The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there la at least Capital and 8urplus, 8225,000.00. one dreaded disease that science has to cure in all able Its been stages, and that la Catarrh.- Hall's Catarrh Cure Is tbs only positive cure now known to OGDEN, UTAH the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a DAVID ECCLE8, President Hall's Ca- THOMAS D. DEE, constitutional treatment. tarrh Cure Is taken Internally, acting JOHN PINGRBE, Cashier. directly upon the blood and mucous JAB- F. BURTON. Assistant Cashier surfaces of the system, thereby de DIRECTORS! atroylng the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by David Eeelsa Thomas D. Do Goo. H. Trib building up the constitution and assistBornard Whit ing nature in doing its work. The W. W. Ritor Wataon John proprietors have so much faith In Its Pattoroon Adam Clark Joooph curative powers that they offer One M, 8. Browning. Hundred Dollars for any case that It falls to cure. Bend for list of testiRespectfully elicits ttos accounts' of monials. and Indihaeka, mercantile firm Address: F. J. CHENEY A CO., viduals. - AM We pay Interest on tlma deposits Ample resources, courteous treatment, superior service. LIKE, Dr. Kings New Discovery JSElSS |