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Show f . THE SALT LAKE TIMES. WEDNESDAY. MARCH 11, 183U 3 WHERE IS CHICAGO ADDITION? I CHICAGO ADDITION is between Third and Fourth 1 East; just south of Tenth South. O. 'O As. CHICAGO ADDITION is only 2 ordinary City-Block- s CS d ( Hr from Liberty Park. " ' CHICAGO ADDITION is only 1 1 miles from the Temple, y ffl IS l . P7" . I . ( ) GHIGAGO. - DA ' l--H ' O . W O f :' ' vcA v : 3 23 W. Second South, i (jrjjjrjrj! j 2nd Door East Cidlen, 5 r-- OHIGA--J XVV p 3 's most desirable Residence Property offered on the V market today. w It is just the place you want on which to build a Home. $400! PER I LOT! . ? $400! WALKKK . HOUSE. Th Walker it Located in th Pusinom Center of thit City and hot all th Mm Jmprovemenfs k Convenience! Pertaining to a itrictly flnt-ela- tt houm It la managed as wa as any hotel in th WnI aud la strictly ths Muslneis and Tour-ist Hotel of Salt Lake City, i'assengar Elevator. The Walker & the Metropollt&a Are the Two Leading Hotel, of Bali Lake City. S3t. S. EK.I3 Proor. Hi Tiltti JUST OPENED. THE 05LY FIRST-CLAS- S HOTEL L THE CITY. Cor. Main and Sonth Temple Sts. The Cullen, THE H0SERN HOTEL OF SILT LAKE, s. c. i:vin (i. - - ritopit. F, Auerbach & Bro. $50,000 Worth, of Winter and. Surplus Stocks at A.liTost Half Price. I Black Silks! 1 Black Silks! Best qualities in Satin, Rhodames, Gros Grains, Fancy Weaves and eleganl Brocades at Otic, 65c, 7oc, t)0c, 11.10, 11.23 aud H,4o; worth 80 per cent more than quoted. Colored (iros Grains at GOc, T2Jo and 90c, and Faille Franctise at 11. 10, worth 40 per cent more. i)5 pieces of all wool Sorges, new shades, at 45c; regular price flflc. 8!) pieces all wool Dress Goods in riaiu, Fancy Weaves and Plaids, worth from $1 to tl.M, reduced to 75c. 60 Elegant Combination Suits at a reduction of 83 per cout. DotTioBtic Dopartmont; 100 pairs of Curtains and Portiers, slightly soiled in handling, will be of-fered for one week from 75c to $13.00 per pair; worth 63 per cent more than NOW being offered. Blankets &: Quilts. , At a reduction of 33i per cent. 500 full size Crochet Quilts at bOc each. 350 full size Crochet Qnilts. Mar-seilles Patterns, at $1.10 each. ;!00 Genuine Marseilles Quilts at $1.00 each. 200 Extra Size Marseille Quilts, choice designs, at $2.00. Blankets. Our Celebrated full size white California Blankets at $3. Extra Quality White California Blankets at $7.50 a pair; worth $12. Special Attention is called to the Great Bargains in Anderson Import-ed Scotch Zephyrs at 25c per yard; usually sold for SOc. 1500 Manufacturers Short Lengths of Anderson Imported Zephyrs at lfiJCj worth 00c per yard, GiaOak Department. To Close the Jialance of Winter Stock Tremendous Reductions I Ladies' Plusli Capes reduced from Jisto IT. Detiartm'-nt- s offer Both' SulM at It.ss. I1.7S, ' " " " !?..') to W.50. fa.UK. tti.. S.50 and Si; worth U percent mora. " Black Cheviot Jackets reduced from One lot each of Boys' Knee Kant-- at iiOc, jc, (1 IO to t! 30c. 4Pc. and Mc; beat vahif In the l 'My. LadtM' Astraehaa Faced Jackets reduced Hoys' Outing Cloth Waists at Ho, reduced from ffi to to. from ibe. Misses' Gouts reduced from t'.OO to II. 8S. Same at 35c, reduced from41c. " " " It.Mlto I. SO. " :U)r. ' " Hi- -. ' " 4.00 to 1.75. Miiib' Vn aunflrted White Shirts at 3714c. Ladiec' Cashmere and Flannel Tea Oowns one lot each of Mens' Overshirts at 340, below cost. fc and 6Uc. Ladles Calico Wrappers at 90c. Merino Half Hose reduced to cue Ball the Our Child Clothing and Gents' Furnishing regular price. 13'ic, auu and n,"ic. IJoys' Overcoats at a Reduction of 35 per cent. Our Shoe Department Will Continue the 25 and 10 Per Cent Discounts. SPRING NOVELTIES! For all of Our Numerous Departments are Beginning to Arrive! ONE PRICE TO ALL! ESTABLISHED, 1864 Mail Orders Rscelvs Prompt and Careful Attention! .I.. - " S F, Auerbach & Bro, Morrison, MerriU& Co. i Wholesale and Retail LUMBER All kinds of Material pertaining to the Lumber Yard business, and spe-cial facilities for banditnK GET THEIR PRICES. Third West, Between First and Second North The Closing Oat Sals! OF THE - Entire Stock of UoHtinsatthelnicr-ifa- n Clothing & Shoe Co. 1'. S. Wc will coutiuuo Furnishing Goods. H its. Caps. ISoots nd u Shoes, Trunks and Vulises. American (Mini & Sta Co. 120 Main, Salt Lake. yon, but I assure you," she added hasti-ly, "this rejection dtxw not necessarily imply that you lack literary merit. It may be that" j "You've had poems rejected too, eh?" eaid Hicks, interrupting, and Fenelope blushed to think how she had given her-self away. New York Sun. What Was 011 Her Mind. "I am sorry to say, Mr. Hicks," said the Boston girl, "that X Cannot marry sioners to draw nearly $2,000 a year. The Dark Continent has a round dozen pensioners, living principally in Cape Town, South Africa, while Liberia ia represented by one lone widow v .ioso husband was freed by the emancipation proclamation, and who died of the inju-ries he received in fighting the battles of "Massa Linkuin." Youth's Companion. Foreigner YFI10 Receive Pensions. Ireland h8 2.r0 pensioners on the rolls, who draw an average of $12 a month, and a single county in England Lanca-sterhas fifty jtensioners. Thousands of miles away iu Australia are enough pen-- j only one whose servant was not laden with game. lie was left completely in the lurch, as it were, without having taken as much as a sparrow. "Well, well!" his literary fellows exclaimed. "How did they manage to get away from you?" "When game is so plenty as that," said Merimee gravely, "the merit of a marksman lies in hitting noth- - j ing. So I fired between the birds." Argonaut. If Wu Entitled to the Trize. In the time of ie second empire there had been at Compiegne a great and ele-gant hunting party, with a tremendous massacre of hares and pheasan t and other game. Standing in chosen spots the empe-ror and his followers had the game driven up before them, and had nothing to do btit shoot it down. These high born hunters had but to stoop to pick up the game that they shot, but they did not, even do as much as that. Their valets, dressed in picturesque costumes, went about picking "np their game for them. As the hunters returned after the day's f.port it wan noticed that Prosper Meri-ine- e. who vas one of the party, was the A Highly Colored Paradox. th I Admiring Neighbor I 'clnr fer it, Rhody, dem t wo t. weens ob yourn dey looks so svictly like 't I kyant toll 'em apart 'cept w'en doy'a togedder! Magazine. One in Over a Million. Customer (reading a newspaper)- - Here I see I am referred to in the paper again. Landlord Indeed? What do they say about you? Customer (reading aloud) At the elosa of last week Berlin numbered 1,573,421 inhabitants. I am one of the lot. Schorer's Familienblatt. A FR HAVEN. - - IToist tl'o rail and benr awoyl Of an island t have beard. Anchored iu the star sown deep. Whither IjOvo has pone astray. Vmg qjto he heard the roar Of hrenkers Tallin;? on the sand Of some imV.nown fcamarcand. Ami with no reluctant word Hailed away. In new meadows, by new seas, We must seek him with the breez ' Blowing from the Kates of sleep. I.istenl we may hiiar him call Where goldenrod o'ertops the wall. Or whn the moon across the night Bends her steps. . From that. Island in the sea We are fold of dreamily , By seers of the Orient I hear him call: What powers have ye lent To these poor ears, Spirit of love, That In perpetual banishment Live my dark fears 7 j And oft i seein to rove, When shadows fall, Toward the island, that far island of the sea, Where Ixvo doth dwell; And over the sea swell Comes a glad vision to the Inward sinht Of what I heard, O Kappa, and told thee. Annio Fields in Harper's. InVStork. Stranger (at great music box' and or-chestrion emporium) I am a dentist, and it has occurred to me that a musio box or orchestrion would be a pleasant addition to my parlors, to amuse my pa-tients, do you know, and Dealer I see. You want something to keep the waiting patients interested and sort o' help er drown any noises in the operating room. Stranger That's the idea. Dealer Step right this way, sir, to the steam calliope department! Good News. Authoritative. Big Sister Dick, I think it is time little folks were iu bed. Little Dick (on Mr. Nicefellow's knee) Oh, it's all right, Mamma said I should stay here until she came down Btairs. Street & Smith's Good News. Accommodating. Chollie Lad just purchased his first razor. "If your father doesn't find it jus What he wants," said the cutler, "o course we'll change it for him." IIar per's Bazar. Proud of Ills Work. There is a story told of a French poet who inquired of a friend and flatterer what he thought of his last work. "I have arrived at the fifteenth cauto," he replied with enthusiasm, "and think there is nothing more beautiful and har-monious in the language." "Pardon me, there is one thing," said the poet "Ah, perhaps you mean Chateaubriand's "Atala'C " "Certainly not. I mean my sixteenth canto." San Francisco Argo-naut. The Feminine Prescription Clerk. ."What are you making, my pretty maid?" "Nothing much," with a smile, she said. Hut for the result I prew rather afraid. As the wonderful "nothing niu.'h" was made. With strychnine and quinine she gently played, And arsenic was just as good unweighed at weighed. Gay dashes at oxides and sulphates she made And sizable drops on the mixture were laid. On potassium cyanide she then made a raid, While my hair did npriso and my eolurdid fad "What is it, now that it is done, fair maid!" "Ohl nothing much, sir, I guess," she said. "And who did prescribe It, my drutr store maidf "Nobody buta lady M. D.," sho said. "Tis truly a marvelous doso you've made This nothing from nothing, oh, mixing maid." !(,.,., utk-tt- l lira. Chinese Flays. No manuscript is written of the plays produced at the Chinese theatre. A synopsis of incident is prepared, and the ctage manager stands at the entrance and instructs the actors as they go upon the stage in regard to what they are to do, but leaves the entire dialogue for them to extemporize Boston Tran-script. IIow Ue Built Ten Stories. Capt. Ed H. Webster, of Kansas City, e;iid: The ton story building of the west-ern city is what somebody In the town mnstrect. The somebody is ordinarily g wrecker. Ho knows when lie begins the schema that he will never live to en-joy the income of the structure, or be a victim of its collapse. He just wants to 'have it said that he built the ten story uitair and he is ready to quit. I know a ten story affair that was built oa the fol-lowing pattern: The man had $5,000 cash, lie leased a corner in a block and put in his foun-dation. Then he mortgaged it for 0. That was to cover the foundation aud three stories. Then he put on a sec-ond mortgage of $20,000, and with that the structure was run up three stories higher. Then he placed a third mort-gage on the building, which put it un-ti- T roof. Ho finished it off and rented every oflico, and every tenant found himself confronted with a garnishee by the mechanics who had liens. These mechanics collected the rents of that building until a rich womnn came along and bought the whole edifice, in-cluding the lease. Cut the ambitious fellow who had run up the sky scraper had his name on a stone over the en-trance, and he seemed to be happy. There is a good deal of that sort of thing going on iu the country. Chicago Trib-une. An Easy One, "Edgar!" There were italics in her voice that sent a thrill of apprehension through him. "What is it?" he cried. "A hair on your coat lapel!" "It can't be any one's hut yours.", "Do not think to deceive me. My hair is brown; this isihlonde, very blonde." Edgar was silent for several heart-heat- s, and then, with a sigh of relief, said: "Yes, my dearest. But this is an old coat. Wiien I last wore it to see you blonde hair was the fashion." Wash-ington Post. An Absolute Necessity. Mrs. Mothcrleigh Dora, my love, was it necessary to spend fifteen minutes in bidding Harry good-night- ? Dora (furtively rearranging a rumpled collar) Yes, mother, it was a clear case of mussed. Pittsburg Bulletin. In the year 1200 chimneys were scarce-ly known in England. Only one was allowed in a religions house, one in a manor house and one in the great hall of a castle or lord's houso, but in other houses the smoke found its way out as it could. An Outrage A shabby looking tramp was in the habit of calling at the office of a local lawyer, and receiving a small sum on ac-count of former acquaintance. Last week the mendicant called as usual, but the lawyer said: "I can't assist you any longer, as I've got a wife now, and need all the money I can lay uiy hands on." "Well, now, that's just coming it a little too strong. Hero you actually go and get married at my expense," re-sponded the indignant tramp, Texas Sittings. Fleet street journalism has increased by leaps and bounds in recent years. In 1846 there were thirty-fiv- e newspapers and periodicals published in Fleet street, three of them dailies; in 1890 there were more than 800, and eleven of them dai-lies. Is Tbla u Gofiil Iilt a? Why does not some enterprising per-- son establish an intelligence office where it will be possible to hue fractional sery- - antts? Every housekeeper knows that ln work of a household seldom comes out in terms of an even number of servants. There is always a little too much for the servants to do or not enough. If there are two maids there is generally work enough to occupy the time of about two and a half; if there are six seiTants there is not more than wtmld suffice to keep five and a quarter busy, and in gen-eral tenns there is never an exact agree-ment between the labor to be performed und the persons hired to perform it. Now all this could be obviated by tfc plan of having an office for fractional servants. This might le accomplished in one of two ways. Either the time of a single person might lie distributed among different houses, or those servants who are in reality only tqnal to alxmt half the work a real servant would do, could le properly estimated and let out as half servants, quarter servants, or whatever fraction really suited their case. The idea is not so whim sical as it mijjht at first seem, and it is certainly one the carrying out of which would re-lieve the mind of many a housewife of no inconsiderable burden. Botton Cou-rier. , Electric Light on Street Can. Some interesting experiments were made recently in Bradford, England, on ie lighting of street cars by electricity. A car was illnminated by three incan-descent lamps of five candle power each. They were fed from three 6torage bat-teries placed beneath the seats, capable of supply inn; current continuously for six ''fiours. The light obtained is de-scribed as being about equivalent to that riven u.ider the best conditions by the oil lamps at present in use, with, of course,' the additional advantages of ab-sence of smell and necessity for triui-min- New York Telegram. Too Much Cloy. A "poor white trash" girl from the mountains of North Carolina was re-ceived by a Raleigh lady into her home for training. She was taught at first to Ik) orderly, second to lie clean, and third lo bo neat. Suddenly Bhe fled to her mountain homo. The lady found her (here "Why did yon leave me?" she asked. "Why, Mis' Blank, I just couldn't stay. I was just cloyed with neatness." Philadelphia Record. |