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Show LAKKTIMESATUUDAY, AUGUST 2. 1890 2 THE SALT GE0ESBE0K 4 CO., simply as unfortunates, and are encou aged and he. ped on their feet again. Very few men hold out there. The victor, of last year are overthrown this year. The laurels of smntner are nipped by the winter frost. Leaders regularly appear and disappear. Ho who made such a noise, who gained repeatedly the golden prize, nine or ten seasons since, is already forgotten. The coming mania always going. The Napoleon of the time is ever meeting with his Waterloo. The annals of the street furnish a dreary record of extinguished leaders. What becomes of them? Some retire with a remnant of the wreck; more die poor. Borne end in injwne asylums; others commit forgeries, or swindle their cred-itors, or steal securities and run away. Some get into prison; others blowout ABOUT WALL STREET. The Great Financial Center of This New Western World Its Outside and Inside, GREAT MEN LOSTIN ITS VORTEX. The.. Tragedies . It Causes A Letter " From Junius Henri Browne. their brains. But the wave of oblivion speedily sweeps over U. No worship or reooUection there of the tun declining or declined. Success alone begets idolatry. Often men who have been prosperous, who have had seats at the board and had a following, tumble and sustain hurts beyond healing. Conscious that they cannot recover, they still limp around they are known as lame ducks held to their old haunts by the grate-ful, torturesome memory of the past. Their figures are melancholy, depressing. They are ghosts of their lormer selves. Countenance, dress, manner are wofully altered. Their look is dejected, distrust-ful, half appealing, half submissive the look that come from permanent failure, from expectations crushed. There is something pitiful In their shabby gen-tility, in their hollow effort to appear what they have been. Many of thoir old associates are kind to them, aid them iu little wayg. But they seldom last. They cannot bear the mortification of irre-trievable defeat. They are missod for a few days, then their death is announced. Perhaps a subscription is raised to bury them decently. "Poor Jones has gone. He couldn't have cared to live he had lost his grip. Let's take a drink. West-e- Union's up two points."' The streot keeps a brave outside. It seems so pleasant under the sunshine, so pros-porou- s, so promising. What vast wealth it has, what temptationsit offers! Brown and Thompson, Smith and Robinson had almost nothing when they began, and see where they are now! Beautiful town houses, villas at Newport, carriages, boxes at the opera, sumptuous entertain-mentsyes; but where are the hundreds of others that fell while they rose? The many never think of the defeated, who are not to be counted in the reckoning of hope. It appears very easy to make money there. Watch the market; get a few points; venture boldly and the thing is done. The thing is' done, done every day; but how? Not as the venturer hopes and desires once in twenty times. Contrary to popular opinion, the great mass of speculators, big and little, lose in the street in the long run. The out-come of gambling is generally disas-trous tinder all conditions and in all places. It is natural that the battlefield of the bulls and bears should externally com-mand interest and admiration. Every-thing moves so smoothly and regularly. Everybody is so neatly and elegantly at-tired, so agreeable in manners, so buoy-ant, so cheerful; even when most excited it ia a quiet sort of excitement. The brokers appear, whether old or young, like boys at play. Americans possess a degree of stoicism that other peoples cannot reach. They smile at ruin; jest on the brink of the grave. The street is eminently stoical; but stoicism ctinnot annul the perils and terrors of gambling. The street is leprous as to speculation. Albeit it shows but a financial strife, a daily rush and crush and commotion, a frantic effort to win at all hazards, it in-cludes the gravest questions of morals. Nobody can estimate thesum of nnhappi-nes- s it causes annually , not here alone and in the large cities, but in every nook and corner of the land, direotly and indi-rectly. More than half the defalcations in the east may be traced to speculations there. We may know the crimes it en-genders by newspaper reports; but the silont suffering, the moral deterioration, the blasted hopes, the conquered virtue we can never know. But the street is less responsible than the weakness of hu-manity. The street is here because the metropolis is here. Every great city in Europe has a similar evil, growing out of the greed for money, which cannot be removed while mankind is what it is. The mass of men are gamblers when the lust of gain is aroused, and the habit formed, it is stronger than principle or pleading. The street, like some mighty monster of fable, devours every week hundreds who dare to trifle with it. But no one learns by the experience of others or by his own. Fresh victims are ever forth-coming, and they go the way of doom serene and smiling, as the host of their predecessors have done. While the wife wails in agony; while the children are deserted; while the pistol of the suicide sounds; while the defaulter flit from justice, Wall street, which has wrought those tragedies, looks innocent and staid Trinity invites to prayer. Junius Henri Browne. Bpeciai correspondence New York, July 8. Famous as Wall street has been for more than a genera-tion, it has never been half so famous as during the past twelve or thirteen years. The extent and variety of its operations is so constantly and rapidly increasing that some of the bulls and bears of 1870 and 1875 would show to very little ad-vantage now. Wall street has always been national in importance and influ-ence, but recently it has grown decidedly international. London has become al-most as closely associated with it as Chi-cago is. The Bourses of Paris, Amsterdam, Frankfort, Berlin are often seriously af-fected by its feeling and quotations. Its throbs, indeed, are communicated to the furthest reaches of civilization. Its vol-ume of business and its audacity in en-terprise are liardly equaled anywhere. Its methods and manipulations, its de-vices and schemes are wholly and pecu-liarly American, often arousing the ad-miration and wonder of the entire mone-tary world. The street it is commonly so spoken of has changed as much in its archi-tecture as in ita transactions. Both tend to the colossal. Where a briof while ago ancient, grim, solid struct-ures stood, today superb, lofty, com-pletely contemporaneous piles are reared. It is not a street, though called such; it is a quarter, embracing lower Broadway, Nassau, Cedar, Pine, Will-iam, Pearl, Hanover, Now and Broad streets and Exchange place, a territory more than half a mile square, one of the Tery richest on the globe. Trinity church old Trinity blocks the street proper at one end and the deep East river cuts it off at the other, illustrating at once the mockery of what is known as religion and the reality and sugges-tion of suicide. If consolation cannot be found hi a theologic creed, peace the peace of death may be sought in the tidal stream. How stuffed with hwtory (much of which will never be revealed) Rnd prolific associations that quarter is! It looks very calm and restful after the day's business has ended, like a bat-tlefield when all traces of the strife and carnage have been removed. But when it is aroused, full of financial fury, as it commonly is from 10 a. m. to 8 p. m., it is a strange, bewildering spectacle. Mes-senger boys, most of them carrying tele-grams, dart here and there over carts and wagons, directly under horses' heads, between men in close conversa-tion they have no time for manners as if their life depended on ten seconds' time. They are never slow there, what-ever they may be elsewhere. Their or-ders are always to hurry, and hurry they do. Besides they catch tho spirit of the quarter, the feverish restlessness of thoBo about them. There seems to be more electricity in the air on the eastern side of the lower end of Manhattan Island than in any part of this highly charged republic. The excessive electricity affects the nerves and quickens the blood to an un-healthy degree. Men who walk leisure-ly and tranquilly in Fulton street or Maiden lane, no sooner turn into Wall street than they accelerate their pace and get excited. They may not have any interests there, but Ihey are in-fluenced by the locality, nevertheless. They cannot be distinguished in the driving throng from the great specula-tor whose fortune ia at stake on the is-sue of the day, or the small speculator hurrying to his broker to make his mar-gin good before his stock shall be sold out. Not every one gambles, as it might ap-pear, in that district The big bonks are conservative and carefully managed. If they were not their credit would be ruined, and no bank can dispense with credit. But even they make large call loans on stocks, the prices of which con-cern them nearly. They are secured against loss, under all ordinary circum-stances, by the amount of their collat-erals, but when these decline to a certain point their demands are inexorable. Iealing in money hardens the heart, and hundreds of millions are locked up in their strong vaults. The gray at Wall and Nassau streets, where stands the bronze statue of Washington on the site of his inauguration as first president of the United States, is burst-ing with gold and silver and sfcuffed with bank notes. What innumerable eyes must look every day with hunger and envy on those firm walls shutting in that prodigious wealth! How impossible to the Father of his Country would the re-ality of today have seemed to him when he took the oath of office in tho spring of 1789? A well dressed, .well bred woman, though occasionally a feminine operator is visible there, is a rare sight in the street. She attracts much attention, . consequently, among the female fruit vendors, the scrubs, the janitors' wives and assistants. Now and then a new wife comes, radiant and beaming, to her husband in her carriage after 8 o'clock. As he drives away with her, submissive and sentimental, the older and more seasoned lordssmile and say, "Hell soon get over that." Tho temper of the place is plainly not uxorious, but it is gal-lant; out of bnsiness hours, gallant to a fault, as the liberal purchases of flow-ers, bonbons and jewelry by its frequent-ers for their sweethearts after a lucky turn amply attest. All the exchanges, metal, cotton, coal, coffee, petroleum, produce, stock and real estate, are in that region, but the two stock exchanges, notably the older and bigger one, in Broad street, are generally active, and frequently the scenes of wild excitement. Failures are continually occurring; fortuues are con-tinually made and lost. Firms whose credit has stood high, unshaken through years of revolution and disaster, which are supposed to be very, very rich, sud-denly go down, and then it is known that they have long been crippled, un-able to pay their debts. If they are honest and honorable much is forgiven them tho street is generous and its way they are regarded jfe r F--F-- -J M. TOBIAS & SON, IN FANCY GROCERIES, BUT- - DFALER All good delivered to any part of the city. No. msouth Firdt East street. ELI L. PEICE, AND PROVISIONS, 3M MAIN GROCERIES .. INSURANCE. wvw. LOUIS HYAMS & 00. LIFE AND ACCIDENT. MUTUAL FIRE. ot New York. 614 ana 615 Progress Block. THE PENN. MUTUAL LIFE INS. 00. PHILADELPHIA. PA.. INCORPOR-ate- d OF 1W7, conducted for members by members, and having unequalled ec"nty ana greatest dividend paying ability. Taylor Stephens, general agents, 400 and 401 Progress building. LIQUORS AND CIOAB9. theTwophillSs place. CHOICEST BRANDS OF IMPORTED VJ Wines, Liquors and Cigars. Hchubtkk k Phki.ps. proprietors, 03 E. Third South street. Salt Lake City. B USINESS DIRECTORY. ADVERTISERS OF f'RSTCLASS CITY. The Times commends to its patrons the Business and Pro fessional men whose cards ap-pear below. ACCOUNTANTS. HAEEY R. BROWNE, EXPERT AND ACCOUNTANT, lHHtt, 1151 south Main at The very best of city reference given. BURTON, ESTATE, NO. 289 MAIN STREET. REAL Lake City, Utah. Notary In office, Telephone 484. . RESTAURANTS. FOUNTaTn lWoH STAND, TERRY T. SHIMOISAKA, PROPRIETOR, f) NO. lis, South Main street. Short order meals at all hours. Commutation Tickets 15, SALT LAKE WAFFLE & CHOP HOUSE AT ALL HOURS FROM 15 CENTS MEALS west Second street. JoNBS & Sen-ior, proprietors. : GLOBE CAFE, C F. BALL i Co. MEALS AT ALL HOURS O. No. 84 Main street, Salt Lake City. SECOND-HAN- CLOTHING. M. LEVEY, IN CAST OFF AND SECOND DEALER highest cash price paid for same; notice by mall promptly attended to;all kinds tailoring done. 88 w. First South street. STENOGRAPHY. fTeTmcgueein, STENOGRAPHER; ALL KINDS OFFICIAL and Typewriting. Dealer in Remington Typewriter and supplies; Progress building. Gko. M. Scott, V Jas. Glendenmno, H. S. Rumpuu President. Vice-Preside- Socratarj. GEO. M. SCOTT & CO., (INCORPORATED.) - --DEAlLiER-- IN-- Hardware and Meta Stoves, Tinware, Mill Findings, Etc, AGfiNTS FOR the Dodge Wood Pulley, Roebling's Steele Wire ft Vacuum Cylinder and Engine Oils, Hercules Powder, Atlas Engines and f ers, Mack Injectors, Buffalo Scales, Jefferson Horse Whim, Blake Pit Miners' and Blacksmiths' Tools, Etc. 168 MAIN STREET, Salt Lake City, - - Uta P. T. NY8TE0M. COMMERCIAL SALOON - FAMILIES K.J supplied. Cor. First South and Commer-cial streets. THE COTTAGE, WINES, CIGARS AND LIQUORS, (1HOICE opposite the Utah & Nevada depot, J. Sullivan, proprietor. B0UD0IB SALOON, 38 MAIN STREET, SALT LAKE CITY, NO.Utah. Hlllstead & Co., dealers in Wines. Liquors and Cigars. Salt Lake City Brewing Co's celebrated beer on draught. MOSHEE, FLOOD & CO., MIRROR SALOON, City. 136 MAIN STREET, THE PH(ENIX SALOON, TE. PEACOCK, PROPRIETOR, 888 STATE Ice cold Heer on draught; choice Wines, Liquors and Cigars. THE OCCIDENTAL, PURE GOODS ONLY AND OF THE BEST Studious Attention. Aukr MtTBPHY, Proprietors, No. IS east First South street, Salt Lake City. CL1FT HOUSE BAE, 07ft MAIN STREET. A. J. TAY8UM HO Proprietor. MACHINERY. siLVETBEOS WORKS, MACHINE SHOP AND IRON steam engines, mining and mill lug work. No. 148 west North Temple street; Telephone No. 4fiS. MILLINERY AND DRESSMAKING, A. H. COHN, THE ONLY LADIES' TAILOR IN THE LadieH desiring the latest styles and fashions will do well to call on him. No. 68 East Second South, rooms 3 and 4. , NEW Y0EK MILLINER & DEESS-- " MAKING. YOU WANT A PERFECT FITTING GAR-me- IF call on Ella Hills, 44 Wasatch build-ing. S. T. Taylor's celebrated system. Take elevator. MONEY TO LOAN. LWATTEB8i BROKER, 81 E FIRST SOUTH STREET, Deseret National Bank, Salt Lake City. Makes loans on Watches. Diamonds and Jewelry; rents collected; railroad tickets bought and sold: business confidential. Es-tablished 1H8A. All unredeemed pledges sold at vy low rates. ' ' 3 TAILORS. W. A. TAYLOR, MERCHANT TAILOR. NEW SPRING arrived. 43 and 46 east Second South street, Salt Lake City. TRUNKS. HULBEET BEOS,, MANUFACTURERS OF FINE TRUNKS, sample trunks and cases to order; repairing a specialty; 27 west First South street WATCHMAKERS AND JEWELERS. AD0LPH HAUEEBACH ft SONSr" 1JRACTICAL WATCHMAKERS. lewelry repaired and cleaned. A full line ot Waterbury watches. No. 16, E. First South street, T. M. SUEBAUGH, FINE AMERICAN WATCHES, CLOCKS, watch repairing a specialty; prices reasonable ; 76 west First South street Salt Lake City. Utah. MISCELLANEOUS. JOHN GEEEN, 7ITH GREEN & CO., SANITARY CON-- T tractors and scavengers. P. O. box 6T9 WM. MOEBIS. EMYE EYN0N. C" ALT LAKE STEAM CARPET CLEANING OWorks, corner 8th West and Hazel streets, telephone 473. Firet class work guaranteed. Orders taken at J. O'Conner's drug store, 858 Main street. P.O. box 540. THE ITAII POULTRY COMPANY, Wholesale Produce Dealers, General Commission Merchants. Sole Western Agents for the Heston and Bell Spring Creamery Butter. 133 West and 8 juth st. Telephone 79; P.O. box 811. Branch house Park City, Utah. Real Estate Exchange 29 Commercial Street. M( )NEYTX) LOAN On Good Real Estate Security. F. REHRMAN & CO. A.L.WILLIAMS, Second Door North of Postoffice, SOLE TTl ' R. G. PLEASANT VALLEY, CASTLE GA1 Anthracite, Charcoal, Blacksmith and Pigiron. Yards Cor. Fifth West and Second South. Telephone No. lVO. - ' ARCHITECTS 0. H. LaBELLE, Iff EAST FIRST SOUTH ARCHITECT. Lake City. I am prepared to furnish all manner of plans In the most Im-proved style of architecture, such as churches, opera houses, hotels, banking houses, private residences and business blocks of any descrip-tion. Host of references given as to my stand-ing. J. HANSEN, CI.ATK OK CIIIUAOO.l A HCHITFCT AND SUPERINTENDENT, A has removed his unices to East Second South, room as. FEED A. HALE, (LATR OF DENVKR.) ARCHITECT OF COMMERCIAL BLOCK, 110, Wasatch building. WHITE 4 ULMER, ARCHITECTS AND SUPERINTENDENTS. and 411, Progress Block, Salt LakeCltr. ATTORNEYS. WILLIAM CONDON. ROOMS FIRST FLOOR IAWYER, First South, between Main and Commercial streets. S. A. MEEEITT, ATTORNEY, ROOMS 510 611, CITY building. John M. Brntuzn, Jam ks A. Williams BEEEZE & WILLIAMS, ROOMS 814 315, ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW- , 0.W, P0WEES, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW- , Second South OPPOSITE street. GUMMING k OEITOHLOW, LAW, ROOMS 4 AND 6, ATTOHNEYS-A- m Main street, M. E. MoENANY, ATTORNEY-AT-LA- floor. PROGRESS HOOT AND SHOE MAKING. E0BINS0N BEOS., SHOE MANUFACTURERS, 49 W. FIRST street. Our own make of 13 shoes are forging ahead. Repairing neatly executed THE PAEAG0N TS THE BEST AND CHEAPEST PLACE J for Shoe Repairing. 11 west South Temple street. ' CIVIL ENOINEEltINQ, hTvIlTnD & DENBY, ENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS. (11VIL laid out and platted. Rooms (114 and (lift Progress building; P. O. box B7, Salt Lake City, Utah. CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS. OHAEMsTrriELDS CONTRACTOR - BUILDING MOVER, and general engineer, llrlck, adobe or wooden houses raised, moved or repaired. All work guaranteed against cracking or other damages. The only practi-cal building mover west of Chicago. Omce and shops 749 to 7;M State road. Jncoporated, April 10, 1890. Totra House Building toiipf, J. T. Lynch, F. P. Mogenson, B. K. Hickok, President. Treasurer. General Alamg Salt Lake, Utah. This company is purely a home institution, organized to stay, and most spectfuhy invites the attention of those desiring cottages, either for homes or sale, to the neat, tasty and attractive appearance presented by this class 0(1 tages when completed. We claim that they are stronger and warmer than ordinary rustic building, the sections all being made and put together by chinery, thereby making the. work perfectly tight. We are now prepared to! nish estimates, take contracts and complete buildings on short time. The p ronage of the public is most respectfully solicited. OlHoe and yard No. 259 North Temple street. Examine Our Plans and Prices Before You Build. MUSIC TEACHER OP VIOLIN, GUITAR AND Olson's nrehPBtra and brass band. Residence, Hft M street, Hist ward. Leave orders at any of the music stores, or at Sharp & Yonnger's Palace drug store. PAINTERS AND DECORATORS. PETERSON 4 BEOWN, SIGNS, S3 WEST FIRST SOUTH STREET, Lake City. PLUMBING. A. .T. BnTTRnr.TTT. nn J.W.Farrell & Co Plnmliers, Gas & Steam Fitters Dealers in all Kinds of Lift and Force Pumps Orders taken for Drive and Dug Welh Cesspoolt built and Connections made am Main 6'lrerf, opo. Auerhach Bros. Telephone X, PLUMBERS. STEAM AND GAS FITTERS Jobbers. 16 east Second South street, Salt Lake City. Telephone No. 431. JAMES PENWIOK, PRACTICALPLTJMBER, STEAM ANDGAS 81 East Third South street. Salt Lake City, Utah. P. J. MOBAN, STEAM HEATING ENGINEER, 850 MAIN Salt Lake City. PLATING. NomTANuTTOri(5o GOLD, SILVER AND NICKEL PLATING the Dynamo Process. All kinds of repairing done with neatness and dispatch. Kkouson Bbos, 61 E 3d South. PHYSICIANS. DE. G. J. FIELD. 57LoulsASATCH BUIL,DIN3' LATE OF ST. BOBINSOH & SJ0BL0M, (CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS. OFFICE general jobbing, pattern making; AKents tor self heating folding bath tub, 174 west First South street. J. 0. D0WLING, CARPENTER, CONTRACTOR k BUILDER, executed ; fitting up stores ami counter waking a specialty, im W. First South street. GE0SGE BOGGS k 00., CONTRACTING AND BUILDING, FITTING a specialty. Arhltecct-nra- l wood carving, lf7 State road, between First and Second South street, DENTISTRY. db7bisohof, DENTIST, m SOUTH MAIN STREET, and V. Teeth extracted without pain. Teeth extracted plain Itt cents, with cocaine 60 rents. Durable fillings fto. 75 rents and upward. Best set of teeth 110. All work guaranteed. Open from 8 a. in. to Dp. in,; Sundays from 8 a. m. to 1 p, in. Cut this out. kngravingT" ' Frankin Fire Insurance Co Of Philadelphia. Organized 1829. -- :- Charter Perpetm Assets, - - $3,174,357.04 Insurance Reserve, ' 1,765,294.71 Continental Insurance Company, Of ITe-w- r "2-oiI-e. Cash Capital, - - .... 1,000,000.00 Insurance Reserve, - 2,470,343.24 Assets, - - V 7 ' 5,217,773.91 When you purchase a policy that you expect to worth $2000 in case of fire, you should investigate the co: pany with the same care that you would use in lending tl sum. No States in the Union have as good insurance If as New York and Pennsylvania. Call at our office for copy of the Safety Fund La This law prevents the failure of a company by great corf grations. Under this law none of the surplus funds can ! divided among stockholders. Both have to be held for t security of policy holders as long as a policy remains in fee DAVIS & STRINGER, 23 West Second South st Two doors east of Cullea Hotel. AgfeiltS, SPRCIAL ' Our Addition corner of Second Westl and lenth South, with fine trees on all streets and alleys, is the choice subdivi- - dJ"unS1 the city.' Ties are now and cars will be running on Second West and Tenth South within sixty days Lots at original price until J August i st only. Davis & Stringer. 18 years in Salt Lake City, Dr. C. W. Higgins The Well-Know-n Specialist, Has removed to moreslepant and commodious parlors, 17 and 18, . St. Elmo Hotel. A- - Dr. C. W, Higgins, Microscopic and Analytic Physician, Has practiced In Salt tne wonderful and welltaffied scientittc on which his remedies are compounded, diagnosis by thVild microscope enables him to detect the prUnary cause of the disease and effect a radl cal cure The Doctor has cured thousands XTS? Nerv Debility. Mental and Phv-ititS- Lo"' MnHl and Nervous result of early Indiscretions and excesses, and will forfeit Five Hi'sdred DoiiABs fcr any case taken under ment which he (alls to cure. .S1""1' onwhea.oieet. Stricture Snrt dl8"r vitiate theK ESred esys,am- - thoroughly and perma aLl classes or fi ts cured. Tapeworms aio?ed iltti Heid or bo Ft;. Choice maple syrup, the finest in the land, Hamond'sonoiue haras and bacon new goods and choice fruits arriving every day at C. B. Durst's, 72 and 74 2nd South St. J, JEPPESSON, PRACTICAL SCULPTOR AND CARVER, North Temple street. J. W. WHITE0AB, DESIONER AND building. ENGRAVER ON WOOD, HKNITCKK. SANDBEEO FURNITURE CO., MANUFACTURERS AND DEALERS IN School Dttsks, Screen doors and Windows. Jobbing and promptly attended to. 108 and 110 W. South Temple street. GROCERIES." W, E, D. BABNETT, Agent, GROCERIES FRUITS, POULTRY, Feed and Fresh Meats: W east Third South street ; telephone 4.M. E0GERS & COMPANY, THE LEADING street. GROCERS, 45 EAST FIRST FRED G. LYNGBEEG, STAPLE AND FANCY GROCERIES, Fruit. Vegetables. Poultry, Fish Game, etc 63 east First South street. Tele-phone 88. john Mcdonald & sons, TEAS AND COFFEES A SPECIAL-TY. Main street. J. H. CLARK, rjREEN, STAPLE AND FANCY GROCE-- J ries. Fruits, Poulty and Fish, No. 58 west First South street. Orders by telephone ' promptly attended to. 0. M. HANSEN, DEALER IN CHOICE FANCY GROCERIES Grain. Coal and Kludltui Wood corner Third South and State street. DR. J. S. BLACKBURN & 00,, TTERNIA SPECIALISTS; RUPTURE y ?ured without surgical opera- tion. First South St., opp. the Theater. DBS. FREEMAN & BURROWS, 1j YE, EAR, NOSE, THROAT. SPECTA-- J cles accurately building. ntted. Rooms 17 and 18. JREAL ESTATE AND LOANS. W. P. DODDS, IJEAL ESTATE AND Kom rt5 coU"cto4 6 sSSthtgSS: THE SYNDICATE INVESTMENT CO., Rift iE.flTAT,E' R0OM ' 0VEB BANK OF aspMlluty'. Investments lor non residents MONEY WANTED. A GO0D LOAN PLACED Ll2s?reet!Sti','' CM 0,1 S" m ALFRED DUNSHEE, REV mSTATE' LOANS, INVESTMENTS Lie CityMutnah. ' WK JneS BaUk' Sali J. G. JACOBS 4 00. REh.MlEwATE DEALERS. 147 PROGRESS in an LtU5' Ave ,or pale residence property business and2'fahrmrpttrop: erltsyo. endce bargains in H. 0. LETT & SON, rEALERS IN REAL ESTATE, CITY AND THE MIDLAND INVESTMENT CO. BA?AiLS9 01 REAL ESTATE, LOAX3 fo. 177 Main street Piles. Piles. Piles. Piles cured without pain or detention from business. No charge until cure is effertcd. Consultation und examina-tion tree. Refer to over oue hundred who have been cured by me in Salt Lake city with,iu the last two years. Fistula, fissure', stricture, ulceration and a 11 other diseases of tho rectum treated successfully. Dk. Chakj.es Thompson. h Building. Wanted. All kinds of second-han- household I goods at Ktchison & Webbers, 157 S. I First East street. rronoli restaurant, 57 State Road, op-posite Salt Luke theater, serves the tinest dinner iu the city, from 5 to 7.30. The Mug-let- of the Put. A thing essential to beauty in the old days appears to have boon a sot of curls. They all had their clustering, clinging ringlets that hung down over their ears and around their Blender, twisted necks, just as they all had dome like foreheads and an expression of mild melancholy. They appear to have been particularly proud of the curls, for through whatever vicissitudes they went the artist always kept those ringlets un-ruffled and looking as if they had just come from under the hand of the hair-dresse- r. They probably thought it would be very immodest and disrespectful to put a woman with disheveled hair into a picture. |