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Show 2 THE SALT LAKE TIMES. THURSDAY. MAIICII 5 1891. jjM WHERE IS CHICAGO ADDITION? p-- Jj CHICAGO ADDITION is between Third and Fourth V Hast; just south of Tenth South. O. CHICAGO ADDITION is only 2 ordinary City Blocks f V 3 II ZJ I N from Liberty Park. fC x Q CHICAGO ADDITION is only 1 miles from the Temple. WS j Q O CHICAGO. hH I O w y v j 23 W. Second South, I (JjJj()! ) 2ndDoor East Cidlen. 1 g 5- - 0 s most csirac Residence Property offered on the I O "0 market today. It is just the place you want on which to build a Home. R. $400! ? PER i LOT! $400! RH T. R. JONES & CO., IEiBAMER8.Es 161 MAIN STREET. BUYS ORES AND BULLION. j--j ENRY F.CLARK THE TAILOR. 29 E. First South St. CO 33ast First Soutli. M'l WS5T TEH7kE Hair GrcxaetT. f'ff Crows Hair Rapidly. jj Eradicates I andru& Stops Falling Hair, Is a l'reventive oi iialdne (' WX, j- - - ' I Grows Hair on Cj-j-j iiaid Keada. It f l Is Tr?e from all JUO M matter. tou'iaius ... . i'ue'ral or WrMable PoiSOM it u an ..o-(- M' an: ::cnturioi pcparaliou. , Nature's Own Remedy. Mism Root Hair ErsworEo NEW YORK. SEASON, 1891; Spring Novelties in Dress Goods, TRIMMINGS ! Our Dress Geo Is, Silks and Trimmings are arriv:n? daily, and we can boast of having the best and most complete Stock ever t brought to ti e City. We have more than 200 French Robes already in Stock, which arc per-fectly moerb; among' these are some exquisite patterns in Gold and Silver Embroidery, which wi.l be one of the leading features this season. We have also an elegant lino of English and Scotch mixtures. & Splendid Lol of C!i:cks, Plaids aid Slrpss in Famy Spring Materials ' Without doubt wo have the most boautiful importation in High Art Fabrics and Novelty Pattern Suits. k French and Scotch Gingham, Satines, China and Surah Silks, Challici and Lawns. O ir St ick of Trimmings is now complete, and includes some of tho most exquisite designs in Passementeries ever produced. h Early lnsp:et'oi cf Thes3 Coo's Will Repay Vou. , . The Closing Cot Sale! or THE Entire Slock of Cli!liiri2 at the Amer-ican Clothing & Shoe Co. 1'. S. We will continue Furnishing Goods, 11 its, Caps, Boots and Shoes, Trunks and Vflises. American QotMnc & Shoe Co. 120 Main. Silt Lake. Geo. M. Sooth Jai. GnwDsnrsra C B. Emmmm FrMideut Vice-Preside- nt Secretary. GEO. M. SCOTT & CO., INCORPORA. TED.) --TJEA.I,EK.S IN-- Hardware and Metal, Stoves, Tinware, Mill Findings, Etc, AGENTS FOB the Dodge Wood rulley, Koebling's Steele Wire Rep Vacuum Cylinder aud Engine Oils, Hercules Powder, Atlas Engines and BoU ers, Mack Injectors, Buffalo Scales, JeJerson Horw Whim. Biaka Pamnt Miners' and Blacksmiths' Tools, Etc. 168 MAIN STREET, Salt Lake Ciiy, - Utah DREDHL & FRAHKEN, PRESCRIPTION DRUGGISTS 8 e cor. Mtn and Third South. We rarry a complete ltno of Dracrs, Chemicals, Proprietary KumedicH, Trusses, impure-porte-ami domestic ferfuuiex and Toilet Articles. The Compounding of rhralolan' I'rucrlp-tion- a itnU Family Keclpea tur Bpaoialty. Also a fine line ot Trusses, Ifnw:e and crutches. Special attention given to orders by mall. 1J S?- 239 S. Vain si. Salt Lake City. F. IL Warren Mercantile Are now la their Spacious and Elegant SKW HUATEk8, OM Trihnne Unildin?, W. 2nd So. PIANOS TiGAE Highest Qualityl Largest Variety ! LOWEST PRICES! Cash or Time Tavine nts at Bargains. Desirable information cheerfully furnished those win) fmtcnijMat buying a w or eee-oi.- h.'itM t!iUio ur tttxan. t'orrcsponclenfe pnin.tly nttriiued to. Vistt-r- always wel-come. 1'olHe and competent a.iletmien. - CIMCKKKI.VG FISCHER . KNAHK ...EVERETT I DttKUt SMITH 1 STONY & ( I.AKK OKttANH. I One - rice to ' --A.11 ! PIUIW BUFFET CARS Between Salt Lake Cty and Buttex Commencing Tuendav, December oth, the Jniou Paciiic will operate Pullman Huffot Cart twen Salt Lak city aud liuMe without ir.insr-r- . City Ticket Office, an M:iin Street. B. W. ECCLE3, Uvn. Paea. Agl S(. Mary's Academy, For Yonnjg Ladles. Conducted by th Sisters of the Holy Cross, fait Lake. The oecnnii session for hoarders berf n M February std. Terms uioUerlo. i'orcal-liOKUt- j aUdre&a aa above. E. J. SMITH, printing House Court. Job Printing, Bookbinding and Lithographing. Bank Offict and County Supplies. Legal Blanks. 24 W. 3rd South St Salt Lake City, Utah. by a sharper. Ha tolls the following story: "1 read an advertisement in the Denver Republican offering employ-iiieu- t to a responsible man who could furnish references or make a good faith deposit. J answered the advertisement. The advertiser occupied room 1, No. (il 1 .Sixteenth street. He said ho wanted me to ship cattle for him, and would give me $101) a month if I could furnish references or make a deposit of $HM. As I was a stranger in the city it was easier to make a deposit than to furnish references. 1 told him I was a deacon in the liaptist church, and ho assured nm that he was of a religious turn of mind also, being a member of the M. K. church. Well, w hen I went around this morning to take my job the ollice was closed. Several other people wele looking for the same man, but none of them would acknowledge that they had been swindled. " - COLORADO NOTES-The Millington murder case now on trial in Denver promises to bo the most famous aud expensive trial ever heard in the courts of Colorado. A conserva-tive estimate of the costs entailed on Larimer county whom the crime is al-leged to have been committed foots up to over 840,000. At Pueblo tho residence of Frank Hill, a well-know- railro.n cr living on ,1) street, was burgiariziM by two tramps, and $ir in money aud consid erable wearing apparel taken. Helore departing they cut off Mrs. Hill's hair close to her head, kicking and beatiug her shamefully. She was found uncon- - scious by her husband. Hill ott ers a big reward for the arrest of tho miscreants. In the hope of catching the burglars Chief O'Connor ordereu the arrest of all men found on the streets aud in the saloons last night after 13 o'clock. Forty arrests were made, but the woman could not recognize her assail-ants. All but three of the prisoners were sent up for thirty days. W. H. Mill, and obi farmer from Stratford,, Ontario, wno is in Denver for his health, was swindled out of $100 stretched the aro of a second cireleL brilliant ami sharply marked. Away to the south was a lunar rainbow pos-sessing all the beauty of the conven-tional bow that follows a pleasant sum-mer shower. An enormous loss among rango cat-tle is reported from central Wyoming. This is duo partly to the stormy weather but more to a disease atllieting the animals with something like paral-ysis of the left side. The brutes wan-der about in a gradually narrowing circle until they fall and expire. A few sheep aro similarly affected, but upon being bled recover. So many of the cattle are weak that the coyotes make them an easy prey. 11. M. Jones of Salt Lake is expected in Laramie before long. Mr. Jones was formerly superintendent of the Laramie electric light works and at the present time is superintendent of the Salt Lake Electric Street railway. When the Laramie flour milt was sold a short time ago Mr. Jones purchased it for$8."00. It will be remembered that its cost was We trust that Mr. Jones' trip here will result in starting the mill. He undoubtedly hopes to as he did not buy the properly for the pur-pose of having it stand idle. I Laramie Boomerang. WYOMING NOTES. Trainmaster Larry Malioy has been appointed assistant superiutoudent of tho Wyoming division. Tho Newcastle . mines have received nu order for eighty seven cars of coal from the Nebraska legislative commit-tee for the relief of western settlers. Tho Union Pacific will spend $75,000 nt Green river this season in building a depot aud new yards. They will spend S'.'y.OOO at Cheyenne on a' company's storehouse. Newcastle Journal: One thousand pounds of the Uriar hill coal were sent to England about six weeks ago to bo thoroughly tested and it is thought Mr. Holweil's trip to iJeudwood is to com-plete a deal with representatives of an English syndicate who will operate the mines for the Eikhorn road. Mr. Z. T. Stocks of Big Horn, says the Sheridan Post, is engaged iu carv-ing some of the native marble. Thi9 Marble is quarried in Little Goose ( reek canyon, where it lies in a vast bed fourteen feet in thickness. East-ern men w ho are experienced cutters say this marble is equal to the Teunes. see product. An atmospheric phenomenon of un-usual interest was noticed on Thurs-da-evening. A halo of wonderful depth and breadth appeared about the moon. Across the ehadod tield was pVte OFJMD 1 1 AY Gathered From the Best Crop Grown in Various Parts of the Territory of Utah AND INTER-MOUNTAI- N STATES. Clipped With a Pair of Editorial Scissors That Wore Sharpened Up This Morning, The opera house at Springville will lie rebuilt at once. 'The new building will cost '.'i),flo'j. Provo is congratulating itself that the Itio (irando Western is going to build a Hew depot there. I'rovo Lodge o. 14 I. ). O. F. will give a social in their hall, Friday even-ing, to which their married friends will be invited. Peter Suudwall. manager of the Fair-vie-co- o- store, has 7000 head of sheep in the desert, from which he ex-pects to clip not less thau 35, 000 pounds of wool. The Fairview flour mill has been run-ning without interruption all winter. It has a capacity of tifty barrels a day. 'The compauy has 40 to bushels of prime wheat ou hand which cost them 6U cents ier bushel cash. The attention of the Ephraim city niaishal is calied to the gang of young hoodlums who hang around the depot and make the lite of the agent a bur-den to him by reason of their meddling with things, and in some cases pilferi-ng- Ifon. S. O. Nielson has all the men he can biro getting out ties, it will take some good work to have 30,00;) ties ready by April 1st, when it is con-sidered that the men are obliged to work in snow up to their waists. San 1 ete Kegister. There has been a greater number of deaths recorded in Fairview this winter than ever before for the same length of timo in the history of the settlement. The major part were children, taken o!f by that fell destroyer of budding humanity, scarletina. NEVADA NOTES. A bill has been introduced in the Nevada legislature making it a penal offense for state or county ollicials to send outside of the boundaries of their respective governments for public printing. The silver mines of Nevada have not been all profit to her shareholders, nor made many of them, comparatively speaking, millionaires. Outside of Con-solidated Virginia ami California, the Comstock mines represent an actual loss of $3(.00).0(0 in assessments in twenty-fiv- e years. Sierra Nevada is the banner stock for assessments, hav-ing depleted the cash assets of its stockholders by $(',?50,000 and returned dividends in "scarcely a sixth of that sum ( )f other stocks. Union has drawn .$2,310,000 in assessments and never paid a dividend, while Justice has belled its name by taking $3,500,000 from its stockholders and not returning them a cent. MONTANA NOTES. There were ninety-nin- e deaths in Hulte during February. The la grippe cost Butte sixty-liv- lives, for that num-ber of deaths were the consequences of influenza. The rumor has been around for some time that the liuttc and Boston com-pany is about to follow the example of the Boston and Montana company and remove its smelter to Great Falls. A prominent sheep man of northwest-ern Montana says that out of some 20,000 head of sheep, he has ouly lost ho head thus far. lie has only fed two days during the winter, and his sheet) are in excellent condition. H. S. Dudley of Medical lake, while scalding hogs last week, slipped and fell into a tub of boiling hot water. He was badly burned about the arms and back, but managed to keep his face and head out of danger. He will prob-ably recover. "Patience and perseverance conquer-et-all things." Anyway that is what Dick Rock of Henry's Lake believes, for he has broken two elk and a moose to work in harness, and takes a daily spin around the lake, much to the as-tonishment of his neighbors. NEW MEXICO NOTES. Some of the Colfax county farmers have begun their spring plowing. The melting of the snow left tho ground in good condition for sod breaking. The bill for the creation of the new comity of Guadalupe out of San Miguel county, was vetoed by Governor Prince, but it was passed over his head by the legislative assembly. A freight train which should have left Albuquerque at 2 a. m. the other morn-ing, could not get away until 10 a. m. The engine was frozen up. Albuquer-que has but two seasons winter and n 1. There is a sad state of affairs in Lns Vegas according to tho Optic, as wit-ness the . following: "The 'scarlet' women have usurped the hacks of tho town, till a woman of uublemished rep- utation fears to ride in one of them. Now. the question is. shall they usurp all places of public entertainme nt?'' |