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Show J 2' ZL1 APRIL 3, 1890.- - ' 7 jeal Estate! " Real Estate! ' - W ea,l Estate ! a )S West Second South Street Second Door East of the Cullen Hotel. " OTJ--R C1LJT3SL: 1. In ten years Salt Lake City will be the largest city between Chicago and the Coast. 2. In five years more people will visit annually the Great Salt Lake than any Bathing fiesort in the world. 3. We have the Largest and Best arranged Real Estate Oflice, and most Convenient Location in the citv. 4. We were early m the field and have sold more property in the past year than anv (inn engaged in (he business. 5. We have the largest list to select from, (462 pieces now on the list), being the only firm that employs competent men who 0 nothing but solicit property for sale. 6. We offer by far the best opportunity for making quick sales, having' associated with us the following persons of large cx-lerie- nce in handling real estate: Alfred E. Duncan, William Hixon, Miss Cassle Watkins, W. W. Stoddard, 'J. 11. Watts, Harrison Mders, J. M. Downing and J. J. Alter, Book Keeper and List Clerk. 7. We include in the following list, only pieces tuaimve know to be below the market: - acreage; PROPITTY ' YACAXT 1KS11)KNrKi acres, improved, full water right, sec. 22 t. 1 s. r. 1 w.t $175 per acre. , Xt-UOJ-XXj- X VJj J-- XI 10x10 Ninth Knst between Fifth ami Sixth aouth, lino orchard, llv Tfarf 0 acres near Garden City,, improved, $80 per acref . : : : : . (o pay out (acres near Garden City, five-roo- brick house, $60 per acre. - 11 tlx 10 corner Seventh and K street $1,000. ;0 acres seven miles west of Main street $100 acre. BLv l8treet' gd tw' ' ',., dwelling, 10x10 corner hiirhth and L, ........... 4 20. acres near city on line of iort Douglas R. R., big bargain, $500 per acre. 5x10 corner Seventh and O, 3 V front corner I nod First, with frame acres 2 miles from postofflce, in cultivation, house, barn, etc. $625 " tW Sap wittuhehou house, 1,750. 10x10 corner Ninth and I 3,50... per acre. 4x10 Eleventh East -- ear First south, $4,500. 2Jxl0 Seventh South, IwtwerrrvSecond and Thinl Eat.... 2,500. r locks 31 and 32 plat C, on Third South, this side of the river, $3,500 per six room brick, cellar, bath, fruit, All block 12:i plat. D ' ... 24 000. acre. shade, stable, ete., cheap and good " 4x10 Twelfth tot, near Urigham, brick ' terms ?a,7oO. ' ... Lots 5 and 6 bl(Mk 00 plat C....... ...... 0.OOO, 10 acres over Jordan, part cultivated, buildings, shade, fruit, $150 per 5x10 four-roo- brick nouse, snaae, rrun, etc., H5 000 atre, and Rood barn Lots 5 and fi block HO plat 0..... .. 7,Oi0, on Brig-ha- street, . . ... . . . PB0SPECTIVE BUSINESS PB0PEETI: Zuee Wafi' ft,? 3x10 First Nrth.le Kourth West, 8 b,k ' 3,000. room rexnns, summer kitchen, ST.,500. 10x10 rncrSoventh and II..... 0.0OO. I feet on Main street, south, $200 per foot. 10x10 corner II and Tenth... 3250. feet on Third south ....... 30CIper foot - brjok; ' "" V Ixl o North Tea.,,1 4.750. 1 feet on Second West 260 perfoot. hot and cold; new steel range 81,000 Liberty Fark, rive new elegant residences in plat D. 7x10 auth front on Seventh South, cant 3,100. i feet on Second South ..... 300 per foot. , ' ' fttCTat.1" tW yei" '.' ood terms. a 4x8J First South between Seventh and Kijchth West 2,5ou. feet on Third West....... 150 per foot. ... 18' r ; Choice lots in Davis, Sharp & Stringer's addition. ' ...... . . m ... . IMJRAM ft DON ELL AN, Real Estate Agents, 11 YY 2nd South Street. Headquarters for Kant Bench prop-erty. ' Look at our list: 125 acres in. .Plat C, at. . $ 600 per acre 20 . " Block 5 " c- - (KX) " 10 " " 0 f (ttO " 10 " " 15 " , !HXI " 15 " " 2" " 1000 27 " " 27 " ' ' 1000 " ' 10 " " 28 " 12(KI " 5 " " 15 " 700 5 lota in Ingle wood, at $150. 10x12 cor 5th Sand 12th E, $!)00O. 10x10 4th 8 and 4th E, 18,000. 10x10 3d S and 1.0th E, 812,000. .'KIO feet by 3.')0 feet near new hotel, east side at $100 per foot. Bat buy in the city. 8x20 block 20, 1st South, $15,000. (iood 8 room house in block 100, plat A, 1st North and 5th WoHt, $.V0o. New patterns in silk and ailk mixed negligee shirts. Bakt Marshall, Mkr. Co., 142 Main at. , Pembroke quick job printer. Conference Visitors Cannot Afforfl lo Miss Calling at tfie Fair Because they will lind there an immense stock to chose from in Fancy Novelties. J:ipane' C,iU, Toy. Turvf, Chatelaines, Stationery, Wooden-w- re, Tinware, Crockery and filassware. Ml kind of Urunhis ami Ilaaketiu etc,, etc., and at PRICES THAT BEAT ANY IN THE WEST. ).! T J'OIUJKF THK PLACK KIltST DOCK WKST OF TFIK CLOCK. We will Surely Have you Mom y, l.'l Went 1st rioiith. 1)0 YOU WANT To Buy House and Lot Within the City? I have two big snnps in empty houses this week. First $10,000; the very finest modern residence on the North Bench, only 20 rods north of the electric car line on the corner of Fouth and J streets. The lot has 165 feet east front and 82 feet south front; finest lawn on the bench, choice fruits and elegant shrubs and flowers, large barn, carriage house and stable yard. The house is new, all hard brick, not and cold witer bath, electric bell, well fitted wtth halls, closets, both room, pantry, cellur. $4000 cash, S.'iOOO in six months, and $3000 in twelve months at 8 percent. (Second -- $2000; for an Hdobe house of two large moms and summer kitchen, nearly new, on corner of Fourth West and Ninth South etreets. Near tho rear door is an artesian well over 200 feet deep, flowing a steady etream of pure water; the lot is a 50x158 foot rorner enclosed Lv a picket fence. Terms $1200 cash, balance one year at 10 per cent. The above for sale exclueively by the "Original Greene," at 271 Main St., near Clift House. Our stock is complete in the line of gentlemen's silk and linen handker-chiefs. We invite your inspection. Bast Maiishall Mkr. Co. 142 Main st. RUDOLPH ALFF, IMPORTKK OK CHINA, CROCKERY AND GALSSWARE, Plated Ware, Cutler)-- , Lamp, Vases and .Statuary.' A FULL STOCK OF CHINA AND I'ABIA-- 'OVKLTlEfl, 140 Main Street, Salt I.aLe City. Utaii and Montana Miry Company C. P. MASON, Mtmaycr, Headquarters for all Classes of Machinery. Engines anil Boilers from 3 hore power ani upward in U k for irnmn diate delivery. rHeara Pumps, Injectors, Home Whims, Iluintinif Kn2tm Bock Breakers, Wall's Bolls, Injji-rtol- l Air Compr-or- s and Irtll, Luhri-tatin- s; Oils, Mine, Mill ami fimeller .Supplies, filver, lUl ami Concentrat. it g Mills erected and delivered in running order. Maine Olce ani Hmnm 259 S. Main Stref Salt late D. S. AGENCY. BUTTE. MONT A, IDTAH HOTEL. Commercial Street, on the European Plan. This line Hotel, strictly first class in every respect is now offering induce-ments to the local and traveling public which cannot be excelled in the west. Central location. Restaurant in connec-tion for short orders at all hours. E. E. Fbjehch & Owes Phillips, Proprietors. Mme. Lamb would like to see the ladies of the city, sure, next week. New Styles in JHillinen May be seen at Mrs. If. Christy's, No. 31 West First street New novelties and designs of spring fashions daily received. Rio Grande Western Railway. SCENIC LINE OF THK WOULD The only Transcontinental Line pass-ing through Salt Lake City. The only line to Denver with no change of cars, and with only one Change to Chicago. Corral Um 'abin In effact on and from Nov uth,im. EAST IIOISD TRAINS. No. 2 No. 4. Atlantis ' Atlnutic Mail Erpna. Lear Ok'Ih H l' . ro, S p. m Arrirn Huh Ik 10 r) a.m. 'if, p. m, lnlMl Lake. l'ia. in. 7:15 p.m. Arrive I'rovu 12:10 p. m.t l p. in. lmn (Virr. .'. 12JC" p. W.i p. m. j ArriTeOrwo I'.iw p. m 4 'a.D. tMe (iriTi Him., ;. " I'' p. to. 4 40 a. m. Arriro PwtMo .....tti p.m. 2i a. in. Arritlnv--r 7 (.' p. m.'i.Mm. tu. WEST KOIKU TUAIN. So. 1 No. . Pnrifio Pacific Mnll. r'xffM Imk Deonr HUlm. m. Hti p. m. ! Lntra Pufblo M p. in. U ma. m. ArriT(irwc lllm HM' a. in. ID i'.p. m. Lraraltrw-- u Rir 0 lua. m. IK p. n.. rril'roTo l.,.Wii.i.r jmra l!rT .'. ' p. ro. n.m. ! Irrire Halt Iml p. m. 7:10a. m. Lt bait Laka ' p. m. 70 a. m. . ixrita OhiI-- d a a p. ra. 10 a. m. . Pnllaaa I'al and ISuCct Hlwpin ar on ail rhrwiflh Train. ; Morton Oiair ar Praa hwao ! Salt Laie t ito and Pruto us Train t. ami i. j a.C.VUlKit.. i. H . Hr.KXt.TT. Oca. H4Mr. Ci. Paa. Afl. j I-v- . v!!. L COLORADO AGESCT L0UI8IAHA STATE LOT TEET 00SPAJT. Tickata aold and Information famiahad. report received tl anna day of draw. Ing and forniohH to all who piircliaaa tickata of roe. Oflieial lista of alt djawiiig-- fnmiahad on application and maikd to ail out of town pur. rfiaaer. 1 will rah prizaa Uiat mar ba drava by ticket told br me. in full without discount. Order by mail given prorop attention. IBANK L. VL HMITH. Agent. 1 1 Tnrf Eichatia. Worrth PneMn NOTR'KTI) Clt:ilTOH. ISTATEOP DAVID M. KIN.HHV. DWEAKKD ia hereby gjvf-- by tf.c uth1''T- - j aigned. adiuiniraior of tlie eat ate of David H. . Ktnaey. deeeal, to the creditora a!, and all per-- mn. havina claima affainet Uie aaid iloetil, to t exhibit thetit. with naaary voachera, within i ten month alter the nrat pnblirjtfion of fni ' notice, to tlie aaid ailmiilratir. at tlie Law olhre of I'. U. Whittenior anil 8. Y. Armstrong, --it H . Main atreet. Halt Lake City. I 'ah, in toe County of Salt lako.' Dated. March ZS. 10. ; CO. WMtTTKMCHE, AdminiMrator of the tatate of David H. Kinaey. I Deceaaed. , The best lot of corn-fe- d beef ever brought to the city can now be had at S. S. Dickenson &. Co., cor. Main and 3rd South stiejt. The wise man catches on to a good thing and gets rich. Moral Keep your eyeou the 12.5o lota offered at 274 Main street The improvements contemplated will make everyone of the! 12.00 lots worth 300 in one month. 271 Main street. ' Watch those "snide?" lots that you can buy at 120. 274 Main street Drs. Whitney k Bather's Dental parlors next to Cullen hotel. You can only get those lots this week at 81'i50. 274 Main street Utah Title Insurance 8c Trust Co. iS Wet '.'nrf South .St., Salt Lake lit, I tab. orri'TM tun ttrtu khouh.k., Jonn E. Doolov, l'rlent L. M. Hit!, A. L. Thom, ScrUry. t5'(tjgHt)KtOK. F. II. AuerW h, Mer. hant. j W. S. M.:('.rni- - lt. Banker. j I:. ('. ChHmtrx.UnUrwj Mining Co. W. it. IUe, Juhn J. Daly. Capitalist James Sharp, t'Uh t'nl.rl lUtlnxatl. i J. K. thuAfj, Citsbier Wells, Farg'j k Co. j K. . Smith. Caahior Dn,t Savings j W. C. Hail, Attorney. j IWik. L. K. Hilis, Cashier DHkret NatKmal Arthur t Thnmaa, Governorof Utah. Hank. j . I. IJ. Walker, Union National Bank. J.jin A. Marshall 1'robate Judjfe. T. O. Webber, tiup't Z. C. M. I. Attorney, Jh A- - M.ia-HAL- - Boys' and girls' bicycles-Pembr- oke geant IftDEfiTAKERS' SHOP FUNERALS. my of Them Now and They Are Ex. wcted to Becomo Yet More Common. iuccessful undertakers in New York tva3 have to be prepared to furnish Iiurch and clergyman, along with the ler requirements for a funeral. Not 7 long ago it was on exceptional thing funeral services to be held in an shop. Only the bodies of the ndless or of those whose friends were ' poor to afford any better accommo lioni were then taken from the under-er'- s direct to the grave. Of late, how. r, the phrase: "The funeral will be id at the parlors of under-m,- " is frequently seen attached to i:h notices, and even more often the-c- e where the funeral is to be held is ignated by its street number only, a times out of ten the place so design-ed is an undertaker's shop. The way this has come about has been "2y through the increasing reluo-c- o of hotel and boarding house keep- - to have a funeral in their house, lends of those dying in such places ' generally given to understand that immediate removal of the body would highly appreciated, or, if the friends lar within a few hours, the proprie-suamio-an undertaker and has the ly removed. Unless the deceased per- - 'has near relatives in the city it is gen-- a matter of difficulty for the ads to find a place in which to hold funeral, unless they wish to go to eipense of a church funeral, and e a claim upon some church of which ? can make use. In this vay it has 'orally come about that bodies have a left to lie in the undertaker's rooms, ' at the time set for the funeral the ;ls liave gathered there and listened 1 met servico pronounced by some 'oTmaii, supplied by the undertaker, periaps, and thence have borne the directly to the grave. 'I 'th the increase of this custom the ertakers have been compelled to in-- the size of their rooms and to fit " UP better and differently from or-- shops of the sort One city un-- r has gone 6o far as to clear out wnoIo front of his store and leave a j'9 room nearly seventy-fiv- e feet deep, Paneled, church like ceiling and A Thiohcan be filled with chairs if asary, where the services are held, aot unusual for as many as two or hundred persons to gather at fu-- services held in this shop. Somi s well known persons have been bur--., ro:a there. One. a woman, who u ueeninlif0 a well known advocate wemation, went from there to tha .natory only a few days ago. undertakers think that thiscus-- e v wntinually increase in a city dmT ' and tnat ia tune ever allit nave to teeP a sort of tU 1 in nnection with his shop use of his customers. At present no have the facilities for allow-.apice- s to be held in their shop tetra charce for the use of the ltnj l tka' purpose, but competition tdo'ng away with that New StradiTsrliu.' We are always glad to pick up any Items relating to the eminent Stradiva-riu-s and his fiddles. There is a dispute pending in the court of sessions, Edin-burgh, upon the merits 'of which we would not breathe a syllable, even though we bad an opinion to breathe; but, in the course of a prolonged inquiry, some in-teresting details have come out. The plaintiff is a wholesale fish salesman. Music has always been associated with the sea and often with fish. The story of Amphion recurs to every mind. The plaintiff bought a "Stradivarius" seven years ago, which he now repudiates upon tho ground that several inches of the run are not genuine. In support of his grievance various ex-perts have been called, who enlightened the Edinburgh jury upon things in gen-eral connected with Stradivarius. They have learned in particular that he was an "eccentric genius" who never made fid-dles "one after another all alike" this information, we should think, must have been rather embarrassing than sustain-ing to the good men in their responsible position. As for the particular instru-ment in question, its belly was made by Stradivarius, and the varnish on the back was imparted by the same immortal hand. About the other parts or limbs we are not informed, excepting "the left side top," which emphatically "was not that of Strad." Another expert de-nounced the liberties so often taken with this grand name. It must be a very poor specimen and badly "doctored ' that pells for less than 400. Tho population of Edinburgh have already picked up a great deal of miscellaneous information about fiddles in the course of the trial. London Standard. Bey u craft Cai?an. The way in which monkeys catch land crabs is described by a sportsman who made an expedition to the jungles around Singapore, and thereenjoyed sport which makes the contemporaneous records of Indian experiences pale into insignifi-cance. The monkey lies down flat on its stomach, feigning death. From the countless passages piercing the mud in every direction thousands of little red and yellow crabs soon make their ap-pearance, and after suspiciously eying for a few minutes the brown fur of the monkey, they slowly and cautiously slide up to him, in great glee at the prospect of a big feed off the bones of Jocko. The latter peeps through his half closed eye-lids, and fixes upon the biggest of the as-sembled multitude. When the crab comes within reach, out dashes the monkey's arm, and off he scampers into the jungle with a cry of delight to discuss at leisure his cleverly earned dinner. "Rarely did the monkeys seem to miss their prey," adds the describer of this scene. "I saw, however, one old fellow do so, and it was ludicrous in the extreme to see the rago it put him in. Jumping for fully a minute up and down on all fours at the mouth of the hole into which the crab had escaped, he positively howled with vexation. Then ho set to work poking the mud about with his fin-gers at the entrance to the passage, fruit- - Ie.'isly trying every now and again to jrecp into it." These same monkeys, the so called pig tailed variety, are taught by the Malays to pick fruit for them in the for-ests. The monkeys select the ripest fruit, and their masters, by following their movements, catch them in a cloth before tbey reach the ground. The monkey is too well trained to attempt to eat any fruit while at work, but when sufficient are gathered he is duly rewarded for hii Mr. Vaoderbllt'S Picture. self denial. London Globe. There seems a certain confusion as to the Venetian picture by Turner which Mr. Cornelius Vanderbilt has purchased. That he has bought it and paid the splen-did price of a hundred thousand dollars for it there is no doubt, but we may re-ceive with a very largo grain of salt the rumor that the millionaire was ambitious of acquiring Meissonier's "Eixe," which is one of the ornaments of Windsor, and that he actually offered the queen half a million dollars for it. The fact that the rumor came around by way of Paris is sufficient reason for fighting shy of it The art of "faking" originated in Paris, where it had already attained colossal grandeur before the first American jour-nal had been printed at Boston. Whichever of the Grand canal pictures by Turner Mr. vanderbilt lias bought he has got a good one. Turner understood Venetian color, and had a peculiar pro-cess of his own, taken from the early Flemish, school, and made his own by the extraordinary manner in which he applied it for rendering the exquisitely luminous atmospheres of the "Queen of the Adriatic." And he was true as true as any mortal can be in the ever vary-ing, evanescent glories of sea and sky. Ruskin hit it when he said of Turner, after accusing him of "exaggerating all he saw," that the foundation of all he did was truth. The vivid and warm colorings of nature he painted with the deepest reds and yellows; the grays he attempted to imitate with blues of too strong a tint; yet the whole was true in principle, both in general and in particu-lar. Cor. Boston Journal. . 5Iolern Hoblnon Cmaoa, witary sailor has been discovered - isolate island near Santa Cru 0"d from exposure. He give 01 KobriK-nex- , and claims to j "height year. oa the island. Et jiUot h0m8 6paln-"-" |