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Show RICH TOTS’ NURSERIES MARVELS MOTHER Infantile OF LUXURY WITH GOOSE PAINTINGS. Dens Cost Playthings and $5,000 Represent penditure of Apiece—The an $2,000 Annual Ex- surprised More—Beauty It is a very pleasant, as well as a | home is use. set The aside same for that the best millionaire’s the attention children’s is given nursery as to the drawing-room, doir dining-room. or Skilled to the bouartists are hired to decorate the walls of the play room of the wealthy little tots. In some padded of so the houses that when the the walls to find them on the : are MED : ieee Witn Results—A the nose had- dropped off the svatue, and had not been maliciously knocked off; the matter, therefore, concerned the Prefecture of the Seine. It was then August, 1891. In October a committee of three was appointed to decide which department had to ' he oN SIMPLIFIED. ~ Experments ad put the nose on again. Acetyleneseir | inspected Gas That EvCan| and : second San ba eae ena ool Neue floor. On one side of Mrs. Astor’s magnificent bedroom is her boudoir, and on the Sixty-fifth street side, which is quieter, her room opens into. the night nursery. Beyond that comes the day nursery, with its unequaled collection of every kind of toy which a boy of 3 can understand and enjoy. Besides the attention which his lovely young mother and his father find time to give him every day this young member of. the Astor family has a trained nurse, a head nurse and a rosy-cheeked nursery maid to care for his well-being. F..F, Comfort, very truthful thing to say, portion of the New York BY A NEW to sleep every night or all thefurntture which this model room, planned by a trained nurse, contains. In the grand new palace which John Jacob Astor has built on Fifth avenue and Sixty-fifth street the nurseries have received the greatest amount of attention and are really wonderful in their beauty and simplicity. Mrs. Astor does not like her little lad William Vincent far from her at any time, so one is not ese The astonishing announevas nade at a recent meeting ofiety of Chemical Industry that rful ; . iuminating gas could béac- they duces land bruises on soft and cuts to a Jent This JAY re- minimum. AT THE BOX “Sold, by Thunder,” s Man With Whiskers. U IN their sisters, and fun all around. South side. The them then there is great Floods of - sunshine pour into the room nearly through the large bay walls are for you,” said box-office man. “A large, rectangular smile all day lon he oy the | Cred the farmer’s countenance covered with put his money down the to * aniSlowy they be its penetrating moved. fh g From a my the not itself was road time, + when in summer, sufficient, the Address: to touch “Sold, by thunder!” “and that sort, too.” thei customarjiy morning by the dainty picture. The dado has the A. B. blue Dresden china, holds all the dainty baby clothes of silk and mulle and filmy Jace; the bath, powder-box and all of the appointments of the baby’s toilet gre of white china, flecked with forgetme-nots. The night nursery is as plain ag it can be and there is not a bit of superfluous furniture to be seen. The little white and gold covered cradle has @ sanopy and curtains of white silk mulle, lined with soft, blue India silk to keep off any possible draught from the little sleeper. The coverings are of wool and down, surfaced with silk, and fust as light and soft as any coverings san be made, the for The nurse’s brass bed by: little crib and a Mrs. Ladenburg big rocking to rock her chair baby combined long. heavy center piliow 4n a little attve sleeps the nur- sery maid, who guards her young charges night and day and attends to their real and fancied needs. Beautifully colored rugs lie in front of each little bed, and there are white and rose curtains at the three windows. the mantel hangs a painting of the “Blessing of Little Children.’ C.’s both in small letters and capitals. There are bird cages in the pretty low window, which has window seats and soft pretty cushions all in baby pblue and white. A white chiffoniere of white mahogany, with knobs of white and there know he that the mixture he had mtv- tGe. bucket was a substance . calcic carbide, containing fortrts by you ejaculated, | weight of carbon. seemed to ments Electricity, the bridges will be 279 work on either shore. feet road but in was All . in the father’s bald head, Satisfied nowadays where there fathers “children are unless they left off.’’ not begin Mrs. Gray—“Funny that she should marry another dyspeptic husband. Her first husband, you know, was for years a martyr of indigestion.” Mrs. White— “Yes, but then it will come handy to have somebody to take the medicines he must have left in the house.” “What's this parrot saying?” asked the visitor in the bird store. “It doesn’t sound like ‘Polly wants a cracker.’ a qi of In the which separates and HOUSE Headquarters for MINING MEN. carry ages place lated will brightness and. be pres- r,, its liquij, 4coninto the, ‘ious a most , erful dazzling |; | the steadfastness: its flame, and when compared wit dinary coal gas its superiority ¢ derful, the latter appearing 1 flickering. There is no dark q, vonand ir to dinary jme- the flame, as is the case withy{ gas. The illuminant or- iv what peculiar, viewing it from”, popular point of view, in ‘hat it giys only one-half the heating . ‘wer of be-ordinary gas. It is also impossibliil ‘use it in the ordinary burners, for th jare too large, but this apparent fa)\\ has been easily overcome by consti, ' ing burners which admit a smaller 4, \unt of gas. It has been proposed 1? \ro- of the enterprise to dc,- lray with gas piping through the st Sts, for they say that lamps can be hd containing the necessary chemicl by: which the gas can be generate, ind: consumed on the spot. This m 10d may be a solution to the car-lig .Ing problem, to which the elevated an ‘urface railroad authorities ‘have de ‘ted ‘considerable attention of late. { ihe cost of the gas is dependent upait,-he ‘cost of the carbide. It is said b‘4she ‘company which is about to placy the carbide on the market that if thés:bstance is sold at $50 a ton the gad an be furnished at 50 cents per 1,000; which will give light equal in am’ et, int Im to that given by the ordinary ill! ai- educating the bird for a Boston lady.” Morton—‘“‘Are you sure that Penman and his wife really love each other?” Dortan—“Yes, I’m sure of it, for she reads what he writes and he eats what nating gas. Of course this would iot represent the actual cost of the actylene, which has not as yet been decided, but the cost is sure to be ony 2 “No. It’s ‘Polly wants a bean.’ she cooks.” i Blobbs—‘‘Why do you call one of your relatives ‘Aunt’ and the other ‘Awnt’?” Slobbs—‘Well, the other has money.” : Russia” small proportion of the cost of theor- dinary gas. It has been found that when the gas is passed through a tihe heated to redness that benzol, the sibstance Women. The Russian ladies experience littie of the rigor of their long winter. The fashionable lady dines late and does not appear in her saloon before 2 or o’clock. not too low, she will generally take an hour’s drive in her sleigh. On her -eturn she will find her salon lighted and the curtains drawn, and she will then be prepared to receive her visitors, whom she regales with tea. If going to the opera she dines early and returns at about 10 o’clock. If going to a bail or party afterwards, she rests till it is time to dress, so as to appear at the ball or party at 12, from which she does not get home till between 3and 4. Suppers are the great fashion at St. IPetersburg. They continue until an early hour in the morning. ; which is the foundation aniline colors, is produced. of the Hven this feature alone would serve to make the discovery one of great value. TYRANNY OF RED TAPE. It Is as Powerful Was in in France as It Eyer England. British red tapeism is bad to beat, but the record just now is with Paris, There the front of the Ecole.des Beaux Arts is adorned with a statue of Puget, the once-famous tenor. Four years Upper slit in right, under slit in left ear. ee oncka: we mage ee Tower Sevier. a the as mails may and falls be ago a passer-by made the discovery that the statue’s nose had come off. He called the attention of the policeman om duty to the fact. The policeman reported to his brigadier, who reported to the commissary of the quarter, who reported to the Prefecture of Police, The Prefecture of Police decided that to nlace Stage unless to break requires Sounds and in wait through in show- such for the in the Grower and Dealer, RANGE: House Mountains and Lower Sevier. Bank Building, i Address, Wn N! ! - Oasis, 5 Utah. ae is Gibbs nies Stock, > RANGE: Lower Sevier. Address, - Deseret, Utah. tiverson Brog Se FRANK snow, ington, WHITEHEAD, Manufacturer the} * ef _ Horses Will also do repairiug of the articles on short uotice. PRODUCE TAKEN SHOP, Opp. IN above EXCHANGE HINCKLEY station on the U. P. Ry and Le Addr ess, Leamington, Millard Ow, Utah. Parley Allred Harness, boots & Shods same brand “on~ fett . Cattle— close crop in left and slit in right ear, Range L Address, eret, Utah. Si "gaa 0O-Op. practice. Trees and GENERAL MERCHANDISE AND PRODUGE AT distance. Quickly I saw the shadow of a moving figure, which I madeout to be that of a fox. How stealthily the sly fellow crept along! He made no noise, not a twig broke beneath his cat-like tread. As he turned, for the first time he noticed me. He looked at me, and I looked at him. Then Reynard revealed the cunning of his kind. Still keeping his eye on me, he sidled away until he reached the dark shades and recesses, when he disappeared in an instant. I knew Reynard was out on his nightly foraging expedition. Perhaps he was looking for a wild rabbit or a fat partridge; or, perhaps he intended to rob some farmer of his choicest fowls. The fox is a night traveler; he makes his journey after dark, finds his dinner, and retires always before the break of day. Later, that night, I was really startled by a sudden, barking cry, so loud, so hoarse, so strange, that I jumped to my feet to see what manner of bird or beast had uttered it. This peculiar note was repeated, and then I laughed outright at my momentary scare. I recognized it as the voice of the yellow-breasted chat. This bird has unusual ventriloquial powers. Its songs has been described as tones resembling the barking of young puppies, with a variety of gutteral sounds terminating in something like the mewing of a cat.—Our Animal Friends, — e aK side of D oods TE on left thighs game brand on lefé hip of cattle. Range THE at bottom prices spot cash. Willow Street, - - Springs. for UNO. DEWSNUP, MER. Hast Main 9 Mtg. ; also sow! Address, Sinai ville, Mill DESERET CASH STORE Bushes. mountain Horse Drum Springs, Detroit Mining Distriet. a the Utah John Y Smith | pack- “Sit still in the woods at night, and look and listen,” said an old time naturalist to me one day, “and you will see or hear strange things, not to. be seen or heard, save by rarest chance, in the busy hours of the day.” thought of the remark as I sat perfectly still, resting on a stump in a small opening of the Adirondack woods at the close of one day last summer. It-was twilight, and out of the dim, uncertain light loomed the outlines of the trees in the valley, and of Ampersand & Wormwood, N F I Y I O Sevier. Deseret, PELTS BOUGHT, M. LAIRD. A, BYNIGHT. Among Lower UTAH. DON’T FORGET that I have a eomplete line of MERCHANDISE and SUPPLIES suitable for your needs. SHHEP DIP a specialty. FOR TRAYBLDBRS I have COMFORTABLE QUARTERS. MHBALS AT POPULAR PRICES. Hay, Grain and Stabling. water- considerable Sights in left ear. Range: Cricket / Mountains ~ Miners and Sheep Men, |ss% ois of express WOODS - Utah. Under slit in right, under slit Horned Like skating, it requires natural strength and dexterity to become an adept. All through the mountains are to be found men, and women,. too, whose skill in using the Norwegian shoe or skate—called “skae” in Norway—is little less than marvelous. MAGGIE M. KEOGH. THE - ATTE which, as stage lines are few and the snow everywhere, would amount practically to a suspension of all. travel on foot for weeks at a time. Climbing the hills is not an easy matter, yet it is rapidly done by an experienced skater. Snowshoeing is an art, an *o become an expert in the use ot these implements Deseret, Jos Dewsnup i communica- they a road - ® Rooms in First National Provo City, Utah. ne parts leading transported - Water Right Cases a Specialty, of later such Address, Prop. ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, in The snowshoes is the mounIt is the only means taineer’s friend. can go from by which pedestrians pressure gas Jno Dewsnup winter copious which J. F. GIBBS, Thurman Manner. Dped mple ithe the the across Deseret, Utah. - Application, DESERET, mountain-locked by on MRS. form Ray. z er Sevier. Address, Diseases of the Kidneys and Bladder Testimonials tion is maintained for long periods only by messengers on snowshoes, who sure, and put in cans that can } . when the gas is needed. A ver 5 device has been arranged by Ww, of and the refreshed courses, SB the jas is while changing from dition, and then pass pipese Acetylene is illuminant. It is earlier season, are in the A nal under slit in left ar. Range: Cricket Mountains and lew DESERET ers, while at the top they are whitened with snow. The heaviest fall of snow occurs on the ridges or “‘divides,” this the fact that it can be liquified, V. eas eee and slit in right, diage- TEL EG the buried Moisture altitudes the rainy valleys lis living-in-the eoantly.— Peis most remarkable quality of th; moters Family. Father, showing off his: baby boy to bachelor friend—‘‘Well, what do you think of him?. Fine boy isn’t he?” Bachelor Friend—‘'Yes, very fine boy; but he’s bald; but then,” glancing at that good seat. snow. would undoubtedly be a béo fami- One great advantage about the new method of construction is the cost. The city engineer, who designed the bridge, or bridges, estimates the cost at less than the appropriation by $95,000. The material used is steel. There will be a clear tunnel in the center of the river of 115 feet. Close to the shore on either Side of the river huge stone abutments have been raised, and they are: surmounted by steel caps supporting two leading beams, upon which the entire structure rests. Hach half of the bridge revolves upon thirty-two wheels. The motive power consists of electric mo-" tors located in each turntable. The power will be furnished by electric railroad companies. It will be transmitted to the motors through cables inclosed in a trench four feet below the river bottom. Before the bridges are Swung the safety gates will be sent into position and the locks will be loosened by means of compressed air. It is the first bridge of importance in the world to be operated by electricity, and the introduction of compressed air is also new. proved a high calcic carbide would yield ibic feet of acetylene gas, which ediately gave it commercial value, a company was formed to manture the fas on a large scale. Froneconomic point of view this gasof great value, for it has been founat. it can be generated in a house as needed by a very simple appas. This The bridges will be poised on stone piers, will, meet yabove the of the river and will look into stone soon form those }¥ Will be pleased to see all old and new ous ice-encrusted and suow of the pines, and I saw those same shakes just far enough above the snow At thiat Prof. a A novelty in bridge construction and operation will shortly be completed in Cleveland. The new Columbus street bridge will be a double Swing bridge— that is, two bridges operated in one. Cleveland is a city of bridges, rendered necessary by the fact so many important streets crosses the river within its navigable limits, The roadway over and plicate of the first, the two little sisters sleep in their white and gold cribs. Mrs. Gould has a trained nurse for them, as well as a nursery maid, and her bed is elose to the little cribs. In case of sickness Mrs. Gould, who is a devoted mother, always takes care of the children herself; but she says she feels better satisfied to have some one in the house who knows just what to do in any emergency. Opening out from each night nursery are exquisite little bath rooms, with every convenience, made on the smallest scale. The little bath tubs are of porcelain and all of the fitings are of solid silver. Harry Le Grand Cannon’s little 2year-old daughter is lucky in having an artist for a father. He has designed and partly executed with his ewn hands the most original nursery any baby ever had. The walls are covered with drawings of the different countries of the world, and around each is painted the flora and fauna peculiar to the country. The effect is indescribable. The coloring is so beautitiful and the arrangement so clever that Mrs. Cannon often receives her own guests in the room which was built and fitted and decorated solely for the pleasure of the little baby daughter. Mrs. Adolph Ladenburg, one of the most attractive and beautiful of the married belles, has a dear little baby daughter just 4 weeks old. She has not had her candle party yet, so nobody knows her name. The tiny little maiden has a day nursery and a night nurgery, which are models. Sunshine comes to both all day long, and there are lots of windows for it to pour through. The floors are of hardwood covered with large rugs, which can be moved and aired every day if need be. The day nursery is papéred with the most beautiful designs from old Mother Goose, with the rhymes in quaint, old, blue lettering around and above the chap man nice »Venable, of the Universi? North Carolina,.took up the mez and it was there that experimeniking to A DOUBLE SWING BRIDGE. the ‘utilization of acetylenan illuminant were first carried «MxperiNovel Structure, Which Will Be Moved breaking their limbs when they indulge in that a pull, Opening out on. each side of the day nursery are the night nurseries— one in old pink for the boys, and one in delicate blue gray for the little maidens. --~---fights. did and Utah: ;, At Bottem Prices for Pay Down.) ey QO too fine for baby fingers how Sevier Sink of Beaver. lacksmithing and Wagon Repairing, | oss bon bk “John, as an advertisement RANGE: Lower will do all kinds of . driver, since at € Chas. F. (ebb. of the river bridge, where he snow. : “They look high, don’t they?” said he, “but come along two months from now and you can sit down on them.” And so I found it when I returned; for, in i a few days, storms ren dered the Suminit impassable, and whe , at the aiVeieeable as valuable is to the merehant. MOUNTAIN. the contracts Has removed to his new shop just north mae juraines ht He end of two months, the stage took me Soft, gray cartridge paper, withfigures a friezein || interested of delightful 3WaY. | Thelistener Kate Greenway wife, towhothe had been an || Mr. Wilson began conversation, became his mediately intiyspmd Tharations. im) O14 the of frozen the mountains, surface highwe upglided amongacross the exquisite coloring. The border near the | 8'abbed her husband by the arm and | He repeated the experinoln| found | ' ad laden branches floor is practical as well as ornamental, | $414: for it has the alphabet in raised letters running around the wall, just on a level with the little baby faces. A fairy-like bassanette, just like the big ones in the night nursery, curtains, ribbons and all, holds the dollies when they have been rocked to sleep by the patient little mothers. An immense Persian rug covers the hardwood floor and gives a delicious coloring to the dainty apartment. The best thing of all is that none of the furniture or hangings on this floor are the stockman Lady to in each number yearly ment ignorance routs, continue norhe aduiitaee to the stockraiser of famil. farizing the public with his brand and mark are to well known to need attention. It is te Of Deseret, that facetious terror to inquisitive travelers, I studied the problem for some time in silence. I was compelled, however, to fall back upon the driver, who proved to be gracious, and informed me that they served to mark odor. he the CALIFORNIA express fe athe ars On applying a li “tWilson ‘ found that the gas p Urey al pewath embroid- and 2 upon Pioneer BLACKSMITH 1892, that Tue BLADE will to publish brands under 1 price. Gity and county Newspapers from all parts Traveler’s Interof Btah. esting Letter. Ore specimens from Detroit and else Yate 4n November, a few years ago, | where. I took a stage ride into one of the Every thing RESPECTABLE. mountain-locked valleys of California. A Flowing Well of As we followed the winding grade that led over the summit, ‘I observed “PUREST WATER ON EARTH. weather-worn shakes nailed on the Om the Premises. This Water is a GUAB trees, far above our heads. Every few ANTEED CURB for all reds they appeared, and, disliking to i : attacks Extract ® 4 e in January, pecomneh i+; want of public spirit. The next-day the same passer-by who had reported the absence of the nose happened to ass again. He discovered that the nose ad aat been replaced. He reported o the policeman on duty, who, etc. he ee of Puget is in for another found. OFFICE. Said the Straggling in the present cost of gas. the| body else took up, the report. a discovery prove as practicalmed | January and December, oe 4 es lt will revolutionize the nture| got into parliament. nm Heb. ’ i : 1895, the house sat upon it, and MM. eee Es that gas n the Jaures and Carnaud got off some viru- ; and it is expected youngsters spots. statue The committee tured by a newly discoveshod | yarre with its nose on. In July he was at a reduction of nearly ol Of | decorated for special services. Some- on sale near | process new future. The will new be illuminanlled acetylene. It has been kni the] themists for years, but thulty of its manufacture prevehem A theater treasurer bumps up agaimst many adverse forms of human nature. from utilizing it. It is the gas if some bright box-office man were to in the series of hydrocarbid is embody the many humorous incidents honest enusually’ manufactured by ig & jJoyment than he tenement-house child which happen at his window in book stream of hydrogen throughbe in with its $2 worth of toys form it would be an interesting contria year. which the electric air is pit. bebution to light literature. One evening rs. George Gould has the very best of nurseries, as she has of most tween two carbon points. | this while the Bostonians were N of the good things of life. In,October every York, a couple bearing unmistakable method the gas is made inute ear, as soon as the air grows evidence of pastoral life came up to the least quantities only, and servesz for bit frosty, the children go to the Broadway theater, New York, box Lakewood experimental purposes in borato remain until the spring days office to buy two seats for “Prince Ancome, tory and lecture room, Jained and then they go abroad with anias.”” The man was a wizen-faced, their parfor T. L. Wilson to discoyieans ents. The air of this balmy piny dried-up specimen, with funny stragely wood Fegion is very by which the gas could Wuced good whiskers on his chin like the Reuben for children and in sufficient quantities fcctical Glue of the topical song. The woman makes them strong of limb and stout was a counterpart of the Aunt Ophelia and rosy.. Mrs. Cleveland spent two purposes. Mr. Wilson disd the of “Uncle Tom’s Cabin.” The man apwinters there with little Ruth before method by mere accident. was proached the window adjusting hin she went back to the white house. All working in his laboratory y elecspectacles and probing in his pocket fc. of the third floor of the Gould cottage, tric furnace, endeavoring m an money; the woman fallowed close at his Hilltop, belongs to the children. First, alloy of calcium from some comheels. ai coe comes the great, roomy day nursery, pounds, when he noticed thexture “Got any seats for the troupe toin which Marjory and’ Helen Vivian night?” inquired the man, play all day long with ‘their doll babies. of powdered lime and anthrunder “Yes, sir; two good seats in the middle They have tea parties and the tiny doll the influence of the electrirrent, Spoons, as well of the house,” replied the treasurer. as some of the little pees dishes, are of solid silver. fused dewn to heavy setallic ‘ : . They have : I’m a little particular just where I mass. This substance wasd not a little cooking stove which burns real | Sit, when I come to town,” the man to be the one sought, and itarown Set but Marjory is seldom allowed Co are two into a bucket of water. trange of the best in the diahes, ee ae ae house—right on the aisle,” responded {results which followed i gaé with the treasurer. the water immediately ygid Mr. “Sure they’re good seats?” hesitated | Wilson’s attention. A wa given the jay. boys of 6 and 7—share the nursery with off whose chief charactierseemed “Sure; I saved fall the Fepanyed The able to report. e OT aranry, 1893, this report reached the department of public works. The head of a room found it in June, and made the lives of his subordinates so many burdens to them with it. Somehow or other it got into print that, but for this zealous official, there would be ardly a statue in France and in Na- ose Our Stockraisers’ Column. S. W.. WESTERN, CT on left double saw alles in lets DHSHRET, Rubber Stamps, Branding Irons, S. J. GRIFFIN, Twenty-fifth St.. Ogden, Utah. meena of Rubber and Metal Stamps,also Otarial and other S Branding Irons, etc. SO fe oe Bahines etc., and is agent a ent for vauls Work, O. Mark, Hern Steel MARTIN, SALT Same left thigh on Horges, LAKE. se Sims Walker General Commission Merchant —Dealer E im -Hall-Marvin Co, Safes and Fire-proof Box s, $7. 8. FRUITS, slit right and two slits } i ~eft ear, les, Address, in— VEGETABLES, Poultry, Game, Veal Oak @ity, Utah. J F GIBBS, BUTTER, Notary and Pork and WT peat, Ruoked cad’ Brash Thk, Conveyancer our, Hay and Grain. {% will pay 10 you to ship your goods tome. ue cent. for handling goon as’ goods are sold, country J and renait as Can give first-class references if desire: Deeds and Mortgages made out ang signatures acknowledged; affidavits and depositions taken; mining deede and business a specialty. PROMPT W.G.M STEWARD, ASSAY Desuret, EHR, OFFICE: 56 W. 2nd, South, SALT LAKE CITY P. O. BOX 4.449, Hand Samplos.............. ..91.00 on Assay 7 4000 oOo ee ceee ATTENTION. Office with MILLARD ®* oe Copper: Assay..-.+-.....sec00Bottle Samples .............20- 1.00 1.00 9,00 CO. BLADE, Uran. Rubber Stamps, Branding Irovs, Ss, 3. Twenty-fifth GRErHIN, St., Ogden, : Utah, Manufacturer of Rubber and Metal Stampa, alse of Notarial and other Seals, Badges, Stencils, Branding Irons, etc, : Punches, Numbering Machines, etc., and is agent for Columbia Bicycles. Agent for vault work. Herring-Hali-Marvin Co. safes Steel fire-proof boxes, 87, ang |