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Show ItV MARCH 13, 1801. - jLy --4 WHERE IS CHICAGO ADDITION? Uf yVS. CHICAGO ADDITION is between Third and Fourth Vf J f"N East; just south of Tenth South. I I O--. CHICAGO ADDITION is only 2 ordinary City Blocks O jS ' I C CHICAGO ADDITION is only 1 miles from the Temple. yS Q TC CHICAGO. r!s i -- " fcd 1 VV X V HH StWSoHA, ( CHICAGO! ) 2ndDoorEastCuUen. I H W V LOTS, S400 O " wi-- OHIGAGO--1 xX g y' It is the most desirable Residence Property offered on the y' market today. I V It is just the place you want on which to build a Home. J j. ffl $400! PER LOT! ' $400! RH j WALKER .'. HOUSE. Th Walker it Located in th Buiinm Center of thit City and ha all tht Mm I'mprovements & Conveniences Pertaining to a ttrietly first-cl- houM It la managed a well as any hotel In the Wa and Is strictly tbe rltmlness and Tour lat Hotel of Salt Lake OH7. Elevator. The Walker A the Metropolltai Are the Two Leading Hoteli of Salt lake City. jProtar. ifiii JUST OPENED. HE 0XLY FIRST-CLAS- S HOTEL IJ TOE MX Cor. Main anJ Sculh Temple Sti The Culien, THE VmM Ulil 0? SALT LAKE. S. C. inYINO. - - PKOPIt. F. Auerbach & Bra $50,000 1 Wortli of Winter and. Surplus Stocks at Almost Half Price. Black Silks! 1 Black Silks! Best qualities in Satin, Rhodaraes, Oros Grains, Fancy Weaves and elegant Brocades at tyo, b5o, 75c. UOe, J1.10, $1.25 and 11,45; worth 30 per cent more than quoted. Colored Gro. Grains at COc, 72JO and 90c, and Faille Franc&ise at $1.10, worth 40 per cent more. 85 pieces of all wool Serges, now shades, at 45c; regular price 60c. 80 pieces all wool Ureas (loodi in Plain, rancy Weave, and Plaids, wortli from 1 to $1.50, reduced to 75c. 00 Klegant Combination Suits at a reduction of 33 per cent. Domostic Departmont; 100 pairs of Curtains and Portiers, slightly sailed in handling, -1-11 be of fered for one week from 75c to $13.60 per pair; worth 60 per cent more than NOW being offered. Blankets 8e Quilts. At a reduction of 33J percent. . 500 full size Crochet Quilts at 80c each. 3j0 full size Crocnet Quilts, Mar. seilles Patterns, at $1.10 each, 300 Genuine Marseilles Quilts at $1.50 each. 200 Extra Size Marseille Quilts, choice designs, at $3.50. Blnnlcots. 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 '.'5c per yard; usually sold for 50e. 1500 Manufacturers Short Lengths of Andersou Imported Zephyrs at 10JCJ worth 00c per yard, Gloak-- Department. To Close the Balance of Winter StockTremendous Reductions t Lamas Plimh Caws reduoed from lib to 17. offer Hoys' Suits at 11.85, lt.7 0 fe fj m, W; WQrth 50 percnt m(irs " Black Cheviot Jackets reduced from On lot each of Hoys' Kn(i lnts at iWo, Dio, aoc. and ; tt value In tne t tty. Lad"' Astrachan Faced Jackets reduced Jk.jr,- Out! g Cloth Waists at Ibo, reduee, ' Moves' emits reduoed from 13.00 to ll.ss. "sfmfit , rednced IwnHOs. " ' " 3 SO to 1 'r9 " jOf i)Ut- 4 00 to its! Mens' Un,annrld Whit SUlrte at7He, I.a,llos' Caxhmer and Flannel Tea Gowns One lotw. r Mens' Overulrts at Wo, ttt, beiadi!"c'aUco at 9nc. "htertno Halt Hoi redm-e- U on. hall the Our Child's cUlln. and Gents' Furnish, regular price. tfc and c Doys' Overcoats at a Reduction i'3." per cent. Our Shoe Department Will Continue the 25 and 10 Per Cent Discounts. SPIKING NOVELTIES! For all of Our Numerous Departments are Beginnlajr to ArrlTel ONE PRICE TO ALL! ESTABLISHED, 1864 Ms.il Ordsrs Bscelva Prompt and Careful Attutioal F, Auerbach & Bra Morrison, Merrill&Co. WholeHals anl Ratall LUMBER i All kinds of Material pertaining to tha ' Lumlier Yard hiitin, and spe cial (aclliilsK for handling GET THEIR PRICES. Third West, Between First and Second North John Green; . Sanitary Contractor. Excavations' foi Eewer Connections a Specialty. At J. W. Farrell & Co., 137 South Main Bt Telephone U0. DR7H0DGESr" DENT1STI St TV. lit South, - Salt I.aks City TEETH EXTRACTED WITHOUT PUN! By tbe U of Vitalised Air. ALL WORK WARRANTED t J7ffiTi A SPECIALTY Pender shut off steam.' As the train came in contact with the bear his hind legs opened, and ho full forward on the cowcatcher, clawing 'avagely at the hard wood. He seemed stunned or be-wildered at the strange occurrence, and did not manifest any inclination to get off. Ho rode into town on the cow-catcher, ami was shot and killed. Cor. St. Louis Globe-Democra- t. Another Hear Caught hy Cowcatcher. As the Louisville and Nashville pas-senger accommodation was passing through Wade's cut, a deepvmd narrow passage through the rocks, about eight miles east of Milan, Tenn., Engineer George I'endor was surprised to see a big brown bear come into the cut at the west end, about ten rods away. The bear stopped directly iu the middle of the track, facing tho engine. Tho loco-motive bearing down upon him seemed to paralyze the bear, and he was perfect-ly motionless until the engine was with-in thirty feet of him, when ho arose on his hauncbes preparatory to a spring. The train was runniug at the rate of twenty miles an hour through the cut, and seeing that he might wreck the j train by a collision with bruin Engineer i only was able to prevent them putting the handcuffs on her, but, taking the officer and his posse one by one, flung them out of the house and closed and locked the door. Baxter, in particular, is accounted a man of unusual Btrength, and is of large build, but he says his muscles were as a child's when compared with those of the black Amazon. The woman, whose name is Caroline Jenkins, is about 30 years old, and is the mother of seven children. SSlie has been seen to pick up a barrel of flour and carry it a distance ef several yards without appearing to overtax herself, and when tested was found to be able to break with ease a new grass rope an inch in diameter. Since her exploit with the police it is said that a party of gentlemen propose traveling with her, if she will go, and give exhil A ons of her strength, which is to bo ascribed to no electrical or mag-netic process, but to her muscular de-velopment alone. St. Louis Glole-Dein-ocrr- A Illark Fetualo Saitiinn, Freedman's Town, a suburb of Hous-ton, Tex., boasts of a female Samson, who has tepeatedly proven herself a match for any three men that havepittM their united "strength, and who a few nights ago successfully routed Officer John Baxter and three of his assistants, all men of fine physique. The woman is a negress, as black as night and of a stature slightly above average, but mag-nificently built and extraordinarily ac-tive. Her grip was such that she was able to break two of the bones of the hand of the woman with whom she had a fracas recently, and it was on .the po-lice attempting to arrest her that she not The Deceiving Safety 1'nrne. A safety purse lias made its appear- - ance over the ocean. It can be laid down without any fear that the con- - tents will disappear. Many women have an unhappy knack of leaving their purses about, and it is to these that the safety purses appeal. They are a puzzlo to the uninitiated. A purse with silver mounts will have the opening spring hidden away in one corner, yet all the comers look the same. The way to open another is to turn tho spring right round. Another purse deceives you into the be-lief that tho bottom is the top. New York Journal. PRIMW1VE PEOPLE. METHODS THEY PURSUED IN COOK ING THEIR FO3dS. A Synopsis of s Lectnre by rrofessor MnrM-T-ha Antiquity of Cooking Orig-inal Manner of Applying Heat to Met nil Vegetables Esqnlmanx Huts. Professor Morse gave his second lect-ure on "Primitive People" at Academy hall, and spoke particularly of fireplaces and stoves. In opening he briefly re-viewed his first lecture, making special reference to the fact that men and ani-mals adapt themselves to their surronud-ing- s. Thus dogs and cats in civilized homes eat com and oatmeal, while cows in Iceland will eat salt fish as a steady diet, though neither of these animals would cat such food in the ordinary natural Btate. Proceeding to the subject in hand, Professor Morse cited the finding of baked cakes with the Egyptian mum-mies as evidence of the antiquity of cooked food, and of the universal prim-itive fashion among savage or primitive peoples of cooking food iu vessels resting on three rounded stones, which man very early found out were better than four.. This method was employed by the North American Indians, the Esqui-maux, the modern Finns, and even by the Irish in the Seventeenth century. Another method employed was the cooking of meats in baskets of water with hot stones. Some tribes of tho North American Indians cooked corn, grasshoppers, and perhaps other delica-cies by placing them in clay lined bas-ket, with red hot coals, and shaking the baskets back and forth and blowing off ware portable stoves, about tho size of bean pots. Other stove9 are rough clay or brick affairs, with openings for wood and varying numbers of holes on top for the accommodation of cooking uteisila, and nonu have arrangements for the di-rect escape of the smoke out of doors. EARLY METHODS OP OETTINO FIRE. Some of these eastern stoves have shrines or symbols over the fireplaces to keep out evil spirits, and in some of them a light is kept burning, or a little food or 6ome other trifle placed by way of in-voking the care of some good spirit over the food that is to be cooked. In closing, the lecturer had something to say about primitive modes of creating and preserving fire, followed by some in-teresting experiments with crude appli-ances. The origin of fire is not known, . nor its first discoverer, but the discovery must have been followed by a tremendous stride of advancement by the human race. Probably fire was first used as a religious ' rite, and by many savage nations it has been worshiped as a god; after that it was probably used for cooking, and then for other purposes. Some people never learned the art of making fire, but took good care never to be without it. Emin Pasha, whose rescu from the heart of Africa Stanley sought, vouches for wondrous tales i n that region to tho effect that in some sections of Cen-tral Africa bands of chimpanzees occa' sionally raid the native villages with lighted torches, - Professor Morse illustrated three meth-- 1 oda of starting fires one by rubbing a piece of bamboo with a sharp edged stick; aaather by rubbing a stick in a gruore on a piece of wood, and a third by means of a fire drill. None of these methods brings a direct blaze, but will produoT) a Bpark from which a fire may be broight by coaxing with tinder. The fire drill was the mst successful of the experiments on this occasion, and was ac-companied by considerable smoke, but no fire. The drill is a simple arrange-ment of wood And cord, by which a stick is kept rapidly revolving on a piece of wood, and in a fraction of a minute cre-ates smoke and sparks. Salem Gazette. the ashes and cinders till the content were done to what the Indians probably considered a turn. KSQOMAU HCTS. The kitchens of New Zealand and Cey-lon are but rough primitive forms of many that are seen in Germany and Eng-land, except that in the former cases the fires are out of doors. English and German fireplaces are far behind the American stove and cooking range, and are really survivals of prehistoric times though the hearths for the fires are raised and arrangements made for the escape of the smoke. Succeeding the period of placing pots on three stones over the fire comes their suspension bv some support, a familiar method being by means of three sticks fastened together at the top. The Esqui-mau susienus his kettle from tho ceiling of his ice hnt by means of cord or hide. And hero the lecturer departed from his subject to describe how the hnt is built-spira- lly, with blocks of ice and of dome shape. The hut is lined with skins, so that what little of the ice melts will not drop down on the occupants in the form , of water. These huts are wanned by open crude oil lamps, in which is moss saturated with oil, and over them are suspended the kettles. The oil comes from the blubber of the whale, seal and similar animals, and is obtained by the women and children, whoso principal business it is in the winter time to chew blubber to get the oil Under the hut there is usu-ally a large supply of blubber stored for Winter use. Professor Morse describes the stoves of China and Japan, and showed two patterns of what appeared to be earthen-- The original She of Rider Haggard's famous story is said to be a swarthy po-tentate named Majajai, whose kraal was lately by certain unprovoked captures from a neighboring tribe. For this offense she was fined 300, and for the greater offense of refusing to pay was mulcted in the sum of 1,000 and 300 head of cattle, which the native com-missioner of the Transvaal has now set out to collect from this d efiant Boadicea with two cannon and a force of armed men. Edwin Booth is much broken in healtli. His friends attribute his condi-tion to excessive smoking. All of Mr. Booth's waking hours, save those em-ployed in eating and actiug, are devoted to the cigar and the pipe. Out I'Brtrlilffo Hunting. "Did you ever go a partridge hunting, and tramp all day through the brush, tear your clothe half off, get wotter'n a drowned rat, fall in the mud and never nee so much as a feather?" queried a well known gunner. "No, indeed. When and where did all this happen?'' "Up in Sardinia the other day. Ed Andrews, the crack shot of that town, invited me to couie up there and go Khooting, claiming that tho birds were thicker in tho woods along Cattaraugus creek than honey bees in a sweet clover patch. Of course 1 went; but I came home all broke up." "And you didn't get a feather?" "Nary a one. Tried to shoot a chicken on a hen roost, but tho farmer caught me at it and chased me four miles with-out a let up. Andrews killed a chipping bird and a red squirrel, that's all." "But you brought home some birds?" "Very true, 1 bought them on the market, the same as the other Buffalo boys do. Let's see, it cost me about $20 in cash, and I've got to buy a new suit of clothes and a new hat. Bet your tioots I don't go partridge shooting again. Tired? 1 can't walk; am lame all over, and feel like u second edition scarecrow. Andrews walked me all over four towns; wanted me to invest in real estate, too, and all that; talked about their great race track and the metropolitan Sardinia city of 1990, and filled mo so full of glorious enthusiasm that my head is cracked from ear to ear. Fun? Well, I should snicker, but one dose will last the lifetime of Methuselah!" Buffalo Com-mercial. Stanislauf Eobrinsky began suit re-cently for $10,000 against the Illinois Malleable iron foundry for the loss of an eye by the explosion of a molten iron kettle two yp.-- rs nu'o. Queer Remedies. For cramps a ring is frequently worn upon the finger, but to possess the re-quisite virtue it is necessary that the ring should be made of some metal taken by stealth, without dijeovery. The great Boyle recommended for certain diseases "a little bag hung about the neck, con-taining the powder made of a live toad ,Vurnt in a new pot."- - --London Tit-Bit- s. Heavy Liabilities. "Say, girls," naid one of a trio of young ladies, "let's go up on this car. The walks are very slippery.'' "Oh, I prefer tho exercise of walking," answered one of her companions. "Well, I don't," said the remaining one, a tall blonde, "I'm going to ride." With little parley the three boarded the car. They conversed pleasantly un-til near Pearl street, when, as the con-ductor approached for thetr fares, two of the girls began nervously unbuttoning their gloves. j "Blanche, will yon please pay my fare?" said one, turning to her neighbor. "I can't. I have only ton cents. But," said she, turning to the imperial blonde, "will you pay for us?" "I haven't a cent." sententiously re-plied the blonde. And with burning cheeks t young ladies signaled the con-ductor and stepix-- silently but thought-fully from the car. Their liabilities ex-ceeded their assets. Albany Argus. I If you put a spoon in a glass before pouring in the water tho glass will not crack, even if the water is boiling. But if there is no spoon used it takes a new glass to every hot drink. |