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Show I THJj SALT LAKE TIMES, WKDXiDAr KVKMXO, Al'KlL ltf, isuo. 7 . rHElQNERS of the following Pieces have decided1 J J;' ;V. ? ;: V , TO MAKE A PURCHASE OF SALT LAKE PROPERTY, In order to reach the larger Investment, they have authorized us to Sell same at RIGES FULLY 20 Per Cent. Below the Market. We can show you conclusively from the Records of the County Recorder, that property has sold, in immediate vicinity, each piece, except one, from 15 to 22 per cent, higher. We can give you list of Owners' that ask from llh to 30 per cent. fher prices. - 5XI rods on 2d North, near the University. house, 20x20 ' corner 2d North and Ninth West, - ..... t.$an . . . ... . . s.coo 10x20 " " on 5th North, .'ooo 20x20 " " on 6th North, - -- . . . . . . 6.000 7x10 " 011 E street, good 2 story dwelling, - . . . . 6,500 -- .. m S1 5 ft-- , comer 7th and K streets, - . . . . . . . -- i5oo " HAVE YOU SEEN OUR SUBDIVISION 10x10 rods " 9th and L streets . t900 WE KEEP b2Kft-- frontage on 2d South, near 2d West, good Buildings, ...... 27 per foot mr 2d West and 10th South, and MISS 42 3d South, " " " bo " 2 Teams, 3 Single Drivers, with JO Salesmen USSLE WATKINS' ADDITION on the East 82" 3rd West, near 2d South, fair " - - - 140 " I in the office, it will be convenient to show you oulevard, 35 rods south of Liberty Park, of 49" " 2d " m good " - . - 260 Property almost any moment you may find it bich we are the General Agents? 49 V' " South Main street 75 convenient to drop in. 60 ' East 1 st South street ".-- . . 300 40 acres, half a mile south of the Garden City additions; good brick House; irrigating ditches on each side; , Gravel road on North and East line; perfectly level; half a mile to Postoifice; church, school, store, etc., only - 60 per acre 20 " ?4 -- mile southwest of the Penitentiary, near the Calder Farm Pleasure Grounds; good brick House and Outbuildings; fine Orchard; double Water-right- ; adjoining land held at $700 per acre; k this can be bought for-- - ....... 500 " MB $22,000 HAS BEEN REALIZED OS ABOVE BALANCE WILL BE TAKES FROM THE MARKET. PRICES GOOD FOR 10 DAYS I MESS A0l T IS S00UR RAISED. DAVIS & STRINGER, econd Door East of the Cullen. 2 23 W. SECOND SOUTH. Startling ANNOUNCEMENT Haying Bought out the Entire Business of Messrs. Bartlett Bros. known as the yMTTHALTRAROAlN HOUSE No. 5b "W. Od. SOT7TXI ST At a GREATLY REDUCED PRICE From Fartory (.'out, f pnpw to clone it out at GOSTs 'u ot''t convert this JliiHiiirxs into a First last FURNITURE HOUSE Which ban been my line for the pant flftem yein. My ulJ? t in making thin announcement i to call the attention of the iwoply of Salt Lak an-- 1 the country at large, to where they can BUY GOODS, either in SMALL or LARGE LOTS, AT THE MANUFACTURERS' COST The Fto k comprise iu part : SUrrrvraif liaidrsLia, .n.S. Ttsvwr.j, m.xi& General XXaiKc:d riiaiivLac, X-a-rp, Aiovuas, Itetvue. nmi, 7vrlzy, laxgre Una Cf XJlii C&tres, 2sUjb, Csr". Ouery, etc etc.. and in fact sa- - h (Jool i generally kept in m FIRST-CLAS- S BAZAR. THE GOODS MUST BE SOLD! REMEMBER THE PLACE: No. 54 West Second South Street. J. M. PEARLMAN, PToprtetcr. j Disgraceful Comparison. Romeo What's the matter, Brutus? Brutus Why, that man down the street called that dudu a cur, and I'm mortified to death. Smith, Gray & Co.'s Monthly. Annie Leconey placed the little half drowned chicken in the open oven to re-suscitate, and this act abne was suffi-cient to prove that she was alive after her uncle left the house, and at the time when it was claimed she had perished by his hand. Philadelphia Record. A Ufa Saved by a Chicken, Along with the cock that crowed thrice when Peter denied his Master and the geese whose cackling is said to have saved Rome, the little half drowned chick that saved the life of Cbalkley will go down in history as a famous fowll The Lcconey bird is no longer a chicken, however, but in the months that have elapsed since Anne Leconey s sad death it has grown to a sturdy fowl, and it now stalks proudly among the lesser barnyard birds on the Lswonejr farm. Tho Dart played by the littlechick was simple but tbe slender thread of evidence that it furnished was strong enough to establish Chalkley Leconey s innocence of the murder of hi of wonder what' the little Salem hands were doing that they did not pick out those staring London eyes, pound that bullet head against a Salem wall and get the gorgeous apparel onto some pet Sa-lem cat. But let us hope that while this London production of seventeen hundred and something was calmly growing yellow in the cedar chost the Salem child knocked the stuffing out of innumerable rag dolls, and took off and put on their clothes as many as ten times a day, and clasped their pudgy forms in their little arms all night and threw them out of the window in the morning, as all natural children have done since the creation; otherwise the Salem doll from Loudon would be a wonder greater than all the results of the Egyptian exploration put together. Boston Gazette. An Old Salem Doll. ' e a doll on exhibition that was V ,Ior a Salem child in seventeen ' and something fills one with "ae for Salem children, and re-- a rT'k Story of tho Kood girl who f WPerciiBt candv for ten Ma nnally died without a'bite. To .80TPral generations of children :Lm ?Ut0 admiration, but with ir t ? iad them. this London ' . tmnk of several generations "ui cautions and vou mav-look- "i'tn't-touc- h cries that must didin quiet Salcm homes-- , thed ii m children really play od and were Salem children b j i in ,,E!ntletha t has come down immaculate rigidity of oUof t'f1 ' instC!ld of '"3 like worked Boston child, sans 5 q e?s sns arms, sans every ae Qndera with a nitiful sort MEN YOU HEAR OF. The Duke of Bedford has built a pri-Tat- a crematorium at Woking. The Italian faster, Sued, Is said to have abstained from food for over 100 days. Sir Henry Parkns, the premier of New South Wales, began life as a to) maker and then he became owner of a news-paper. Gayarre, the late great tenor, left an estate of $800,000. His nightly salary for some time had been $1,400, and he lived very modestly. P. T. Barnuni has presented to the pub-li- u library of Bridgeport a scrap book containing all the illustrations and com-ments of the London papers on his show wbilo it was in that city. Prince Bismarck is a man of many trades. He is a miller, a paper maker, a brick maker, an Iron master, a coat miner and a brewer all these industries being followed on his various estates un-der his own direction. Lord Acton is considered the most learned tunn in England. He isaltoman Catholic. His library contains no leu than 100,000 volumes, all of which are carefully selected and number among them tome very rare books. Remington, tlio artist, is a man of more than average height, with a blu.ide head of hair, blue eyes arid a roy face. He has had an adventurous career, and his knowledge of Indians and cowboys was gained by actual experience. Eiiin Pasha now speaks, counting Af-rican dialects, no fewer than twenty-seve- n different tongues, and he certainly is able to write and speak at leant balf a dozen European languages with as great ease and fluency as he spaks hi native German. Senator Brown, of Georgia, is a de-voted member of the Baptist church, and lias proved his real by frequeut large contributions to the enterprises of that denomination. He made a nift of $30,000 to the Baptist Theological semi-nary at Louisville, Ky. Perhaps the most inordinate smoker in the United Htates Is Thomas A. Edison, who also believes that chewing tobacco Is a good stimulant for any one eugaged in laborious brain work. He U rarely seen without a cigar in his mouth, and he has learned the art of chewing and smoking simultaneously. Professor R. Btuart Poole, of the Brit-ish miueum, is one of the most learned men in Kngland. He is tbo first numis-matist in the world (being curator of the department of coins in the museum), one of the first Orientalists, the only man in the United Kingdom who reads archaic Persian, and one of the chief Biblical scholars of the day. Dropped Stitches, idy Howard de Walden has expressed intention of endowing, at a cost of 000 or 13,000, a ward at the West t hospital, at Maidstone, as a thank 'ing for her recent recovery from a us illness. t a recent boll ia London the electric t was arranged to vary in color, being raately red, bluo, green and yellow, ladies didn't like it, as it ruined in nation the effect of all their cos- 's. rabeL'a Goddard, once a famous pian-l;a- s recently been discovered in ex-l- e poverty in London, and a benefit sort for her has realized 88,500, which, other contributions, makes a total 0,000. ic question of how to get clothes tied is agitating the British matron, declared that the laundries are ex-iiv- e and do poor work, and it is sug-e- d that "penitential laundries" be Miahed, where the'work shall be done omen convicted of petty offenses, daily papers have started a regular tment for letters upon the subject bead it "Washingiana." My are telling in Vienna of a female iberof the family of a diplomate who i recent gathering asked the papal to let her look at the diamond he wore on his neck, and then, it about hsr own neck, went to effect in a mirror before she (the it. The jewel is regarded as a emblem by all Catholics, and they majority of the clerks in the house snate of the new state of Washing-- women. ? the spirometer, or lung test, the n3e 'unS capacity when corsets were a nas 134 cubic inches; when the s were removed the test showed an a8e lung capacity of 107 cubic inch-a- m of 33 cubic inches. Philadelphia .Women's Medical graduated forty physicians one a Sixth avenue, near Twelfth street, ', or there are two sisters under ao conduct a very profitable jewelry One is an expert clockmaker, wtn repair watches, mend jewelry, "e and sell goods. taK'8nd women patentees are far ; ?LUmerous thii they aro here. As 'he inventions of our women are e attire of women. A dozen or Patents for garters of an improved . for instance, have been granted 1Qw to time by our own patent "Washington Letter, Only His Grave Remains. A friendless old man in a small town in this state, after suffering many years from a cancer and using all his bard earned money, mortgaged his small farm last fall for a sum sufficient to get him into the Maine General hospital, and went there to die, but has lingered through the winter, suffering acutely. A few weeks ago word was sent to the town authorities frpni the hospital to make arrangements at once for his burial, as he could not possibly live but a few hours, and his body would need immediate attention. So in the lonely village churchyard was dug his grave, which still awaits its occupant. Strange to relate, the condition of the sick man has since changed for the bet-ter, and there is a possibility that he will recover sufficiently to return to find n house and no welcome save the opeij grave on the bleak hillside. Cor. Boston Record. Too Mu.ll of a Good Thlnf, "George!" It wasn't what she said so much as the way in which she said it. She took the word and dre.w it out until it was a long, tremulous filament of sweetness. Yet there was a tinge of reproach in her tone. "George!" She only said it once in reality, but it is customary with story writers to say George twice under these circumstances. "What is it?" "You have been squeezing my hand with great regularity and emphasis for some time." "I know it," he replied, with the frank-ness that was characteristic of his manly nature. "Please don't do it any more," and ber voice dropped almost to a whisper. "No more?' This sounded like heart throbs of anguish (whatever they are), and his form shook with emotion. "Why not?' "Because" she faltered. "Go on." "Because I'm getting a corn on my little finger." Washington Post. A Sow Color in Class. A now color has been introduced into Venetian glass; it is amethyst mingled with gold. A rnoro popular color, how-ever, is a tender shade of soa green. The newest design in flower stands is model-ed like a handkerchief caught up at the four corners; fvua the center arises a stem with a snake coiled around it. A pretty dish is in the shape of the three cornered hat worn by priests.' Another novelty for flowers consists of two drag-ons supporting a trumpet, one, pretend-ing to a knowledge of music, having its mouth to the instrument. Eugene Field's Letter in Chicago News. Professional Wter 1 hiding. A Bavarian engineer is waking a pro-fession of finding water. Within the past few years he has reside in Russia, where he accidentally discovered the principle of his apparatus. The first tpsts in this countrv of tbe new in6tru- - ment were made em the line of the new aqueduct in the neighborhood of Sing Sing, the points having been selected by the division engineer, who was present at the trial. The aqueduct being here far below the surface, and no shaft be-ing visible from the points selected, there is no possible clew to its location, espe-cially to a stranger, and yet at two or three points a large body of flowing wa-ter was located with wonderful exacti-tude as to the position, though inexact as to depth. New York Commercial Ad-vertiser. An Uncommon Looting Glass. A wonderful pin to be stuck in an even-ing bodice is the fac simile of a hand mirror. The glass part is formed of that very unusual stone a flat diamond. It ia framed in tiny diamonds, and the han-dle is of diamonds a little larger. So clear is the large one that forms the glass that one could, with perfect success, put a miniature photograph under it and it would be exactly as if a face were repre-sented. New York Sun. lm Jlado Ulm. Yellowly Law ruins some men, brt it is a fact that it makes tjje fortune of others. Brownly Think so? Y. Yes. There's Whitely for instance, he never read a line of Ojke or Black-ton- e, and yet law has made him. B. Yes? Y. Yes; he has become old Money-bags' son-in-la- Boston Courier. The young women of Cornell university have notified the young men who are circulating the subscription book for the crew fund that the book is desired for a season among tlie women of the college. "If last year is any criterion," observes a correspondent, "this means that tbe 'Coeds' intend to do a very generous thing out of their allowance." Keprracntlng Influent. At the last fancy dress ball, attended by the nobility of St. Petersburg, the palm was awarded to a young lady at tired to represent the influenza. She was dressed in oriental fashion, and wore on her head a tall cap inscribed with the names of the principal doctors who h3ve studied the disease. The map of Europe was depicted on her skirts, and a gigantic spider occupied a prominent position on the shores of tbo Baltic; the lady's fat waa covered with the names of those chemists who welcomed the arrival of the fatal scourge. During the evening she distributed leaflets with poems extoll-ing its virtues; fever, pains in the head, aching of the bones, etc. II Caffaro. In Edinburgh it is proposed to start a woman's club under the title of the Scots-women's and Dialectical society. It is intended to be unsectarian and al in character, and that different subjects should be debated weekly or fortnightly for the intellectual improve-ment of its members. M Hd Painted a Fifctura. "I have painted a picture, Chawles." "Indeed?" "Yaas; quite an effort, I assure you. I want to present it to some one." "Give it to Blank." "Why! he's blind!" "Well, I'd give it to lum if I were you." Chicago Ledger. The Only Olxtaele. McFingle I hear you are head over heels in love with MUs Pert. Mcf 'angle Yes, I must confess it. If it were not for one thing I'd marry ber, too. "What's that?" "She don't care a rap for me!" Law. rence Americas. Dudley Foster of Billerira, Mam., hale, hearty and in his eighty-firs- t year, was elected for his thirty-sixt- year as clerk and his forty-firs- t year as treasurer at the town meeting in t&at plara a few days ago. He declined to be a candi-date, but wat elected to both office by handsome majority. At the Club toor. "Ta-t- a, dine with you Friday night" "But what if it rains Friday?" "Then we'll dine Thursday nige." Life. A Bold Saroaa for rortone. Young and struggling M. D. (glad to ret a small fee)--No- madam, you will not need me any more. Take care of yourself and you are all right. Convalescent Then allow me to pay you, doctor. Doctor-- Let me see. Ten visits. Well, say 110. Convalescent-O- nly $10? Why, doc- - toDoctor (seized with a happy thought)-T- en dollars a visit. Convalescent Ah, that is more like it. Receives his check and his fortune is as good as made.-'- ew York World. ,xsrf junta So. Mrs. Cumso Here' an account of a couple who walked fifty miles to a min-ister to get married. Cumso Now that was a roam antic wedding. Yeoowine's News. OUlea tbe U-- aa, "Brnoti say you owe him .'." "He's a liar. I was going to pay biji today, I wco't nam." Ouier. |