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Show THE SALT LAKE TIMES. THURSDAY, JANUARY 29, 1S9I.T 3 I rSRKIKS' APPITIQK M ". .. CT . w and let us Show You the Plan of the House EL w Building 1 7V PERKINS' -- :- ADDITION f I ' FOR FRANK T. HIATT. N " : S t j i I c u : I i This House Costs I U hyjj MM I This House Costs I 1 ! ! 1 a , In Queen Ann Slyle ard is a. Beautj. I TF ReneMBeR - .-- 4 g X THIS WILL BE THE 1 i We will publish m(jf HT" ..different I BON TO N I ! ' L f r times names, t I A V styles and cost I I V 0f houses Wc are J PORTION OF THE CITY. constructing. X . . . sotG. L. CHAMBERLIN & CO. 1n Y I I fr KELLY & CO. Printers, Stationers, Blank Book-Maker- s. ISn. 4CI W. Reenntl Month 4t. Salt Lake City, - - Utah. Onr facilities for rlnlntr flint-da- Job Prtnl-- ! .rg are uf the newest and hesf. H"nks ruled, r nted and bnund to order. Samples nf Kail-i- i ad. Minliis. Uanli and Morrantlle work always on hand 'nmpli-t- l,ne of otMVe Sun-pile-embracing the most approved Labor-i-Hvit-and Lv., nomic.il Invention. Prices Low ! Call on u M R. EVANS, 22-2- 4 W. 2nd South St Sporting Goods ! nil rVt ttfirV hr I Guns, Revolvers and Ammunition. Bicycles, Tricycles & TeMpBies Razors, Packet Cutlery, Shears and Scissor Strops INDIAN CLUBS, BOXING CLOVES-- DUMB BELLS. DOG COLLARS. THOMSON EOOTS AND SHOES. FIELD AND OPERA CLASSES-Examine my Stock Before Purchasing ! i John Green, Sanitary Contractor. Excavationi foi Sewer Connection! a Specialty, At J. W. Knrrell Co.. i 37 South Mam St. Teioi'roie ". WALKER . HOUSE. The Walker i Located in the Butinem Center of this City and ha all th Modem fmprovetr.ents & Canyenisnces Pertaining toa ttrietly flrtt-cla- $ houm St ia managed aa wen aa any hotel in the Wea and i utrirtly the Bualneai and Tour- - lat HnMl o( Salt Lake City. Paitaencer Klevator. The Walker & the Metropolltaa Ara the Two Leadint; Hotels of Salt Lake City. O. S. ERB Proor. BBantifaI Woman SMTI.KS SWUKT W'.jAvtw. 1.V ot the thiiUKm tnMjv vt nt.r owu ccii " Kverywomai STilfV aniilcn stitrtly wh( LST UBt" WtvJriin'a Fo fc'.'1. brrtine, for it (ivei Ikt'Sv toliCTacle.Mrna-- W, 'Jtjt-'- i fmrent, brautilul V4 kJ A brantilul y s 'i cwinplejiion alone i (. 'iR1J ftuinneat to t1::' wiiike a woman krifr'iy beautiful. A wnsaan who has a Uenuttfui ffo&fJtTys, ) .preseivr it : the one K ffl'i'i' lortunale in if l'Jlv tni posesslOD I flrVi a'lionld bpaiiiifv it, f 1 V Wiadom'a Kober- - tine dca just wrtot ia elairaed for It. It not only preserves and bean-ti-the cnuiplerion. but repnirs the dmie dure by the ne ol the mr.ny dancerous now in the aiaiket by ia tonic edict, the skin to a nstural, healthy action. Kerd tne teattruotiiala trom tamou. aniKtra, cele- - COHim BROSf t The Balance of Our STOCK of CLOAKS Is Offered at the Greatest Sacrifice. "We Quote a, ITew Prices to Give an Idea Plush Sacques at $ I2.no, were S 23.50 " 15.00 " 25.00 30.00 " 85.00 ' Jacket! " 10.00 " 18.00 12.50 " 20.00 Alaska Seal Jackets at ho. 00 125.00 " " " 100.00 150.00 All other Garments in Stock sold at tho same reduction in prices. Children's : Gretchen Cloaks! Ages 1 to 12 offered at 92.50 to J5.00; About Half Begnlar Prices, AH other Misses' and Children's Garments reduced in the same proportion. GREAT BARGAINS IN BLANKETS! j: 100 pair 10-- White Blankets at $175 reduced from $3.00 50 " " ' Wool Blankets at 4.50 " " 8.00 Higher priced Blankets offered at marked reduction in prices. t Oir L'niins S'ock of ( Liloreirs Plush Cars, Cuiinets and Hats at a Regula Discount of 3 from what they are Maied. Ladies' Black aud Colored Boucle Jerseys in all sizes at 11.25. reduced , from $2. Ladies' all wool Blouse Jersey Waists at $1.60, reduced from $3.50. COHN; BROS... . Rudolph Alff, Importer of CHINA, CROCKERY, GLASSWARE, ; Plate! Ware, Cutlery, Lamps, Vases, and ,. . . Statuary . . .. ,40. Main St, SALT LAKE CITY T. R. JONES & CO., 161 MAIN STREET. BOYS ORES AND BULLION. jal Grows Hair Rapidly. fe!5f A Eradicates DondnnX Stopr. Falling Hair, aCi3". Is a Preventive K. S,jf?r I Grows Hair on VPV Bald Head Artie! UrS",! I? fo Free from all I hi' fc- '4 l coloring matter. Contains n.. meral or Vegetable PoisoW It is an l.n"t mid meritorious preparation. Nature's Own Remedy, Boot Hair Gnnnr Co rrl YORK. A V.V- - DR. HODGES, DENTIST I :i l W. lat Sonth, - Blt Lake City. TEETH EXTRACTED WITHOUT PAIN! By the Use of Vitalized Air. ALL WORK WARRANTED I 13 S. Mai" SU tatt take City. long. Hope yon get her there all right." "Oh, 1 guess to. But she's a mighty slippery customer, anil 1 have to watch her like a cat." The good looking man was a deputy sheriff, and was tak-ing back to Richmond an unusually clever shoplifter that be had tracked to Philadelphia and arrested. Washington Post. Deceived by Appear-iice- e. On a Philadelphia train that came throngh here the other day the pass-engers derived considerable amusement from the actions of a handsome young man and a worried looking but still pretty woman. They were so entirely absorbed in each other that they were not separated for a minute the whole trip. When she wanted to walk on the platform in Baltimore he promenaded tip and down at her side, yet they never epoke only when necessary, and the people concluded that a honeymoon quar-rel was in progress. Nobody doubted for an instant that they were bride and groom. When they got out here to change cars for Rich-mond, their destination, the conductor. ' Who kne? the man well, said: "Welt ao . ' j- - " WRE FANCIES. - i .J I a 1 attUn by my Bir-id- e. Iita warm and ruddy (flow, Wfile th day la skmly dying And the ahatowa eorne and go; Mid within the glowing embers Shadowy forma I aeem to aee Shadows that bring back to memory , Friends and daya onoe dear to me. And although this firelight dreaming j Pleasant is, yet atill there run j Through it ail deep tonea of sndnesa, i Like to shadows o'er the sun ; j For the dear ones whose sweet facea j Made my heart ao glad and gay. They with whom I talked and Journeyed On each happy summer day Now are absent: and I miss them As I sit alone As I see their dreamland faces In the dim and flickering light. Yet some day in the far future. If our Father wills it ao, I shall meet the friends I dream of In the firelight'a ruddy glow. But when they are absent It is pleasant Just to aee, In the glowing light before me. Faces of those dear to me. 80 1 alt and dream and wonder. In the fire flame's ruddy glow. While the day la slow' dying, And the shadows come and go. Good Housekeeping. Afraid of Iloing Buried Alive. I for one nm not at all surprised at the rather startling instructions in the will of the late Duchess Pozzo de Borgo that in order to make quite sure of her death her heart should be removed from the body. The dread of being buried alive in a condition of trance or coma is spreading curiously, and I have heard quite a number of people express a de-sire to be cremated, not upon hygienic grounds, bnt simply through a horror of being buried alive. The supposed neces-sity of such strong measures is not very flattering to the doctors, but that it is a growing idea is obvious. Lady's Pic-torial. A Gentle Voice. Tommy Oh, I'm so glad you've come home, papa! Mamma has been awful mean to me today. Mr. Skyflatt Ah, 1 am afraid you have been a naughty boy Did she spank you? Tommy No; but she scolded, and her voice sounded like it does when she talks at the ice man down the dumbwaiter shaft. Puck. But this bit of information lias at any rate some use in giving us the question why every woman in this country, where all are sovereigns, should not be as inde-- j pendent as the gentle princess is, and why we should all bo so slavishly ohe-- I dient as we are to every whim of fashion. No matter whether we era toll or short, stout or thin, one design and cut has to answer for all of us. In tho day of tour-mire- s the fat woman proudly rolled, about like a puncheon in her drer--s improver, because her next neighbor, who was thin as a rail, made herself visible to the Halted eye by her enlarged draperies. And now, when that day is done, the one thin as a rail has become again the shortest distance between two points, vainly imitating tho comfortable flow of the other's Fkirts. It innkes nodifference to any of us that our chins an peaked ami our heads are long, we will have no headgear but that which appears above the dimpled chin and the apple, shaped heed of our companion, and we even go st) far, when fashion has approved of a certain color, as to use that color indis-criminately, without regard to our blowzy or our pallid faces, our hair that quarrelu with it, our eyes that are put out by it. Perhaps nothing bnt a national cos-tume, an article which we never shall attain, and which it is hardly desirable that we sbould attain, will do away with subserviency. But ia it quite im-possible t hat each one .of us should mako Ute world a little less monotonous by the use of a variation of individual taste, and while obeying the general trend of the prevailing fashion, modify it to the exigencies of our own personality? If we dislike the short skirt, find it only be-trays ungainly feet and makes us bunchy and dowdy and ungraceful, why not, in adopting in the main the decree and desitfti of the arbiter of dress as far as may be best, lengthen the skirt if we wish? Or, if it is the long skirt that is decreed, and it seems to us unsuited to our needs, and we fuel soiled and drag-gled and stringy in it, why should wo not, still keeping the main lines in other respects, shorten our skirt to our con-venience? Not needing thus to depart from the prescribed mo.le widely and in all re-spects we should still be unnoticeable, but we should bo comfortable in body, and if others allowed themselves the same freedom wo should be comfortable in mind as well if when the fashion were not to our convenience we dared to dis-regard it, or to modify it to an extent sufficient for our needs, and not suffi-cient for conspicuous remark. It might very possibly givo us more work in the planning and cutting, require more at-tention to tho demands of the mode throughout all the rest of tho toilet, in order still to keep in touch with tho style, but it would at least relieve onr parlors and our sidewalks of dead mo-notony. Harper's Bazar. ' TO THE LAST WRINKLE. !' ' n Appeal for Individual Taste in tlie C'tionHlna; of Coattunea. It is perhaps a sign of the time in a . ' regard that is to be regret.ed in this countiy, if in no other, that it should be thougtt matter of sufficient moment as an item of news to send across the At-lantic ocean that the Princess of Wales still clings to the toumnre. It is qnite enough, and more than enough, that English women find that circumstance one of imiortancc; but when it interests American women generally we are led to fear a widespread servility, a rever-ence for rank and title improper to ns; for,' according to infallible newspaper j tests, items are published of the sort that ' readers are eager to have. Long, of Massachusetts, possesses the remarkable ability of recol-lecting what he has written without reading it over even by himself. It is said that during his most animated speech he has in his mind's eye a vivid impression of his manuscript, so that he knows where every page and every lino euds, and even where there are inter-lineations. A Beep Hole. For the last 200 or 80 years there haa been much speculation among scientific men as to the exact cause of the phe-nomenon of earthquakes, which has in-- 1 cidentolly added new interest to tire query: How thick is the earth's crust? In discussing the earthquake problem different schools of scientists have taken different views of the matter, one branch of them supposing the "quake" to be the result of an effort of the great internal heat to escape through a weak portion of the earth's crust; the others declare that it is caused by shrinkage of the outer strata on account of the cooling process going on deep down in the bowels of the earth. About ten or twelve years ago the Ger-man government made a gigantic effort to settle this perplexing question for all time to come by sinking a shaft near the city of Schladebach, with the object especially ef obtaining trustworthy data concerning the rate of increase of the earth's temperature with each succeed-ing 100 or fraction of 100 feet of descent. At last accounts the shaft had reached a depth of 1,302 meters, which is believed to be the greatest depth to which man has yet penetrated the substratum of the globe. The temperature of the shaft at the 1,300 meter level was 48 degs. centi-grade, or 120 Fahrenheit If thia per-centage of increase is maintained the boiling point of water will be reached at about 8,000 meters, and at 45 miles the heat would be sufficient to melt any known substance. St. Louis Republic Fowls have undoubtedly a larger vo-cabulary than any of the other domestio animals; yet in half a day you will proba-bly hear from them all the sounds that they use in ordinary life. But anything out of the ordinary is instantly expressed in unusual sounds, Possibly the most expensive cigars ever made were the 20,000 flavanas made for Spanish Marshal Prim as a present for Napoleon III, each cigar being stamped with the imperial N. in gold. They are said to have cost $12,000. Soundings in the Black Sea show that beyond a depth of 000 feet the water ia so impregnated with sulphureted hydro-gen gas emanating from decaying ani-- j mal and vegetable matter that living orsanisuui are not found tbee Turkey. This subject presents itself nnder many different forms. Geographically considered it lies somewhere below what-ever may bapjien to be the southern boundary of Russia, both in Europe and in western Asia. Politically it is the "sick man" who disappoints the predic-tions of his doctors and the expectations of Lis heirs. Uantronoiuirally it w been a source of eujoyinent to many generations of New Englanders. espe dully upur the end of iioveniber Youth's (Jbruwajit.n. f.; , |