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Show . THE SALT LAKE TIMES, FRIDAY. JANUARY 30, 1891. U"" I PGRKINS' APPITIQR pjl , Come in and let us Shoiv You the Plan of the House - H $ ec aT Building $ PERKINS' -:- - ADDITION I I FOR FRANK T. HIATT. N J - . S f I 1 1 Li 1 1 1 This House Costs i r) uUU.UU 1 s ouse Costs 1 j I U I 1 L 1 aA In Queen Arr Style arcl is a Beauty. Q H 1 61 RenenBSR . 91 X ., THIS WILL BE THE . I J - 1 We will publish a diHe en, ! BON TON I w times names, I fe- - l iwl.V styles and cost J j I nJ J V 0f houses ue are Vt PORTION OF THE CITY. I f Ti; constructing. ' aisTiii G, L. CHAMBERLIN & CO. 11 1 John Green, ICOHN BROS." Sanitary Contractor. Eicarationi for Sewer Connection! a (Specialty, AtJ. W. Farrell &Co., 137 South Main St. Trlephone BOO. WALKER . HOUSE. The Walker it Located in the Butinett Center of thit City and hat all the Modern Improvements L Convenience! Pertaining toa ttrietly ftnt-ela- tt houm It Is managed a well as anr hotel la the Wsal and ia strtrtly the Business and Tom-tit Hotel of Bait Lake City. Paaaenger Elevator. The Walker & the Metropolitan Art the Two Leading Eoteli of Salt Lake City. O. S. ERB frors. . KELLY & CO. Printers, Stationers, Blank Book-Maker- s. No. 40 W. g.ooa geath At. Salt Lake City, - - Utah. Our facilities for doln? flmt-claa- s Job Print-ing are of the newest and beet. Books rilled, I r nted and bound to order, Samples of Kail-Ma- Mining. Bank and Mercantile work always on hand. Complete line of Offlre Suo-pllf-embracing the most approved Labor-Bavln- i; and Economical Inventions. Prices Low ! Call on u M.R. EVANS, 22-2- 4 W. 2nd South SL Sporting Goods ! BeantifoUVioman BMII.KS SWEET- 23&v ot tn though' j(TJlwJ. of her own loveli KrCN ness. Kverywomar jPWrVj!-"-?! smiles swtetly wht L ftKfifT uk Wisdom's bertlne, for it gives iferrtyJ to her s clear, Irnns. w, '4'T"l- - t parent, beautiful skin. A beautiful y pv? v complexion slone is I often sufficient to , fti TKfY make a woman Jkajr beautiful. A woman KS l;V25r Etjle, who has a beautiful complexion should r(g A vvN. Preserve 'l ; the on rf'i4.fis vj less fortunate in ill' ff Itfcja M W L'1'B possession it ISP VV should besutily it. i Wisdom's Rober- - tine does just what is claimed for it. It not only preserves snd beau-tifies the complexion, but repairs the damages done by the use ol the many dangerou" com-pounds uow in the market, by its tonic effect, the skin to a natural, healthy action. Read the testimonials from famous artistes, ceintstiisnd eroinrnt physicians The Balance of Our STOCK ofCLOAKS Is Offered at the Greatest Sacrifice, "W Q-aot-s a Pew Prices to Give an Idea Plush Sacques at $ 12.50, wer. $ 23.50 15.00 " 25.00 " 20.00 " 35.00 " Jackets " 10.00 " 18.00 " 12.50 " 20.00 Alaska Seal Jackets at NO. 00 " 125.00 100.00 "' 150.00 All other Garments in Stock sold at tho same reduction in prices. Children's : Gretchen : Cloaks! Ages 4 to 12 offered at 12.50 to $5.00; Abont Half Eegnlar Prices, All other Misses' and Children's Garments reduced in the same proportion. j GREAT BARGAINS IN BLANKETS 1 100 pair 10-- White Blankets at $1.75 reduced from 13.00 50 Wool Blankets at 4.50 " " 6.00 Higher priced Blankets offered at marked reduction in prices. Ot r Entire Sfoek of (IiiMren's Thish Caps, Bonnets and Ilats ata Eegnla Discount of 3 from what they are Marked. Ladies' Black and Colored Boucle Jerseys in all sizes at $1.25, redce4 from ii. Ladies' all wool Blouse Jersey Waists at $l-.0- reduced from $3.50. Guns, Revolvers and Ammunition. Bicycles, Tricycles & Velocipedes Razors, Pocket Cutlery, Shears and Scissor Strops INDIAN CLUBS, BOXING CLOVES. DUMB BELLS' DOC COLLARS. THOMSON BOOTS AND SHOES. FIELD AND OPERA CLASSES-Examine my Stock Before Purchasing ! RudolphTlff, Importer of CHINA, CROCKERY, GLASSWARE, Plated Ware, Cutlery, Lamps, Vases, and ....Statuary.... AO Mam St, SALT LAKE CITY T. R. JONES & CO., m MAIN BTREET. BUYS ORES AND BULLION. Hair Grotaeir. Grows Hair Rapidty. Eradicates Dandruff JZ, Stopn Falling Ilak, Jfe3';: Is a Preventive ysr,;--- ! ot Ealdnesa. i W.Jfcy1; j." f I Grows Hair on KjS t) lia'd Headi KSr-yr- i Is au Exquisite l louct Article 'it S'' Jl fl Is Free from all JJ'js.VI li coloring mattes. Couiaius r.o ..i.nei al or Vegetable P0130H3 It is an ).onet and meritoriota preparation. Nature's Own Remedy. Mom Root Kair ErawerCa NEW YORK, ' COHN BROS, DR. HODGES, DENTIST! !i W. t houtb, - 8lt Lk City. T cETH EXTRACTED WITHOUT PAIH1 By the Use of Vitaliied Air. ALL WORK WAERANTED ! ', 234 s. Mm SU, Salt Uk City. stove and had pnt the stuff out to harden. Turning his spyglass to the window ledges of other houses on the block he noted these exhibits: j A milk jar partly filled. A large pot of some face preparation with French label, the words of which were not easily discernible. Two baskets of oranges, apples and grapes. A wooden bntter tray, the paper covet being turned np by a breeze, and dust sprinkling itself on the butter, A German seltzer jug. j Two bowls, each covered with a plate, i Another bottle of wine. A cardboard box, such as ia used for ice cream. Besides all these things which lodgers had pnt on their window ledges, the sweep of the spyglass up and down the row of houses showed seven tin pails and eight pitchers. New York Sun, Tho Whitlows of the Block. A tired young man stood at the win-dow of his room in his house on one of the uptown cross streets on Christmas afternoon, and looked at the windows in the big, long brown Btone block on the other side of the street. He saw on the ledge of a third story window of the house directly opposite a bottle of cham-pagne. It had evidently been placed there to get cool. On the lodge of a sec-ond story window of the same house he sawn photographic frame with a glass exposed to the light. Another ledge was the rstin plaoi of a pan filled with something which he could see was smok-ing hot. The yenng man owns a spy-glass, and looking through it at tli smoking pun he innebided Unit the girls ' in ht room across the way must have hee'il making molasses cagdy on a gas The Faultless Work of Great Poets. It Is usually said, in hasty generaliza-tion, that the poetry of the present age is unique in the extreme refinement of its exterior mechanism. Those who say this are not aware that the great poets whoso virile simplicity and robust care-lessness of detail they applaud have al-most without exception been scrupu-lously attentive to form. No modern writer has been so learned in rhythm as Milton, so faultless in rhyme arrange- - ment as Spenser. But what is true is that a care for form and a considerable skill in the technical art of verse have been acquired by writers of a lower or- - der, and that this sort of perfection is no longer the ball mark of a great mas-- ter. We may expect it, therefore, to at-- j tract less attention in the future, and although assuredly the jargon of Walt Whitman will not be accepted, technic-al perfection will more and more be taken as a matter of course, as a portion if the poets training which shall be as indispensable and as little worthy of notice as that a musician should read his notes correctly. Edmund Gosse in Forum. NEW YORK'S WATER TOWER. I A D.purtinent Chief Explains How tha J Anuuratu Is Worked. In principle the towers are very sim-ple. There is an iron tube so pivoted over sue end of a truck that its top may bo raised to a height of sixty feet above the street pavement. The upper end terminates in a nozzle. Connected with the bottom of the pipe is a very large hose. From two to four engines may be coupled to this hose, and their united streams forced up through the pipe and out of the nozzle. The nozzle is con-trolled by a man on the truck, so that a solid 2 inch stream may be directed through the top windows of a six story building with ease and certainty. The newest tower in the department differs from the older ones in several important details. The old tower had to be raised by hand power, and it was a slow and tiresome job. Moreover, the old tower was made in sections and had to be screwed to-gether by the men. The new tower has a twenty-eigh- t foot pipe suspended in-side of a slender steel derrick that is twenty-tw- o feet high. Tho derrick is pivoted over tho forward wheels of the truck and when not in use it, with the pile inside, lies prone upon the truck. At a fire the derrick is erected by means of what muy bo called engine power the piston rods of two cylinders, which me very like steam engine cylinders, connect with the 1xttom of the derrick. Instead of steam, however, carbonic acid gas, which is generated in a retort sus-pended near the rear axlo of the truck, is used. This retort is partly filled with soda and water, and when the time comes for raising the tower a small quantity of vitriol is spilled into this mixture. The gas is generated in sufficient quantity to create a pressure in the cylinders of above 101) pounds to the square inch, and it is this power, exerted through the cylinders, that raises the derrick. The pipe is elevated above the derrick by means of a stout, metal rope working over pulleys and a hand winch. The stream from the tower can be swung around in any direction and thrown up or down through a wide arc John B. Spears in Scribner's. Lost in Newer. Gnstav Larson is employed by the city of Minneapolis in the sewer department. In company with two fellow workmen he proceeded to Twenty-sevent- h street and Tyndale avenue to make an inspec-- i tion and clear the sewer of a jam which seemed to exist. He entered the sewer ' alone, his two companions remaining above ground to give help if necessary. The sewer at this point is sixty six inches high. His companions figured out that they would not be needed and walked off. Without a light Larson lost his bearings, and his shouts for assistance brought no answer. Finally Larson gave up shouting and endeavored vainly to find another man-- i hole ont of which he could crawl. There were plenty of them, but they were out of reach. After walking nearly two hours Larson noticed the passageway was growing smaller, and this gave him hope. Soon after he managed to find a manhole that he could reach, and by the aid of the sewer walls reached terra finna in an exhausted condition. The escape was made at Fourth street and Cedar avenue, about three miles from the place of entrance. Cor. Chicago j Herald. The Odd People of Shetland. The stranger will still find many cu-rious and interesting relics of olden days und ways in Shetland. The ancient vil-lage or "toun" of Souud, two miles from Lerwick, is a veritable nest of odd old folks and things. The inhabitants pique themselves on possessing the exact spot of ground on which their ancestors dwelt for more than a thousand years. They bhow tine scorn for "oopsiart Lerwick" in the oft quoted couplet: Sound was Sound when was nane; Sound 11 be Bound when Lerwick is dune! and the "Sound wives" still visit Ler-wick on Saturdays with their "kashifs" on their backs, their knitting in full swing, and their noses high in lofty con-tempt, waiting on one another until all are done with their errands or shopping, and then returning to Sound, the em-bodiment of haughty toleration. Cor. Boston Transcript. Ylnltorn in the Sirk Room. One of the most difficult things to manage is, not unfrequcntly, tho matter of visitors. Comparatively few persons can visit the sick without doing more harm than good.' Bedridden people and confined to their chambers or their homes by chronic ailments may rften be greatly helped by friendly calls, by various littJe tangible expressions of sympathy, and in general by sunshine brought from the outside world, al- -' though even in such cases wisdom is re-- quired. Youth's Companion. Gnme Pftrifthtng In the North Wonflft. A gentleman who returned from the North Woods Saturday says that the snow has not fallen to a great depth among the mountains yet, but that the mercury has gone very low on several occasions, and has thus caused much suffering among the deer and other ani-mals in the woods. He says that some of the young deer were frozen by the intense cold, and that lumbermen report that numbers of the smaller animals sought shelter in the logging camps. Last winter will be remembered as an especially favorable one to the animals in the woods and mountains, but this winter will be a very hard oue for them. The trappers are having good success in catching the various small fur fari-ng animals in large numbers, as the winter is so severe they are easily lured to the bait of the traps. Utica Observer. I'lMlentradimte PcrMirslty. It owed its existence to a passage in "Charles O'Malley," in which Mr. Frank Webb disguised himself as an itinerent organist and went about the streets of Dublin playing on a hurdy-gurd- y and collecting , "coppers. The government ought to have dealt very generously with our novelists, for few men have sent so many into the army as Charles Lever or so many into tho navy as Capt. Marryat. I have known more cases than one of university men who have imitated Lever's whimsical notion of a practical joke; several university men have gone about the streets with blackened faces as Christy minstrels. A little gamin of the streets was, how-ever, too sharp for the undergraduate, although he was got up in the most ap-proved hurdy-gurd- y style and worked away lustily at the organ handle. The short street boy followed him for some time with great, admiration, but with a se-rious doubt in his mind. Then he walked up to the itinerant musician and said: You're not n hurdy-gurd- y man. Look at your boots. Look at your hands. I'll go and tell the proctor." The discom-fited undergraduate skedaddled to his rooms, and sent his very moderate eaiju-- . UlgS to honit1 Tuninln R y a. ... Stncrs Attention. The Salt Lake CIiomI society is abo.it to commence work upon the May fesli val programme. All sineers whoar desirous of joining are solicited to do so ;il once. A new term opc.is Monday. February 2d. Initiation fee f 1 for ;il! new meinliers. Monthly tlurs of ."" ' cents gentlemen, ladies free. Apply Ml Coulter ii Snellgrove's, at Spencer & Lyticii's or. at door of Assembly hall, Monday at ,7:S0 p. in i. ' |