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Show ' e THE SALT LAKE TIMES. SATURDAY. .IAXUAKV 3, 1891. J$ P-- rt Fail to Sec This I BEAUTIFUL ADDITION ! Before Deciding Upon Your Location for a Home. Remember, in Selecting I I A Place of Residence for Yourself and Family, The surroundings and character of neighborhood should be carefully considered. You will make no mistake if you decide to locate in F YOU ARE PAYING RENT, sec us and let us build you a bouse. Under our plan it is Cheaper to Live in Your Own House Than to Pay Rent ! Call at tbe office and see photographs and plans of houses we have built in Denver. Our additions in Denver are admired by everyone. We shall build even better in Salt Lake. No expense will be spared to make our addition the pride of your city. Take the Ninth Avenue Electric and go out and see what we are doing, then come to the 'office and we will give your terms. G. L. CHAMBERLAIN & CO. Office, 23 West Second Soixtli Street. KELLY & CO. Printers, Stationers, Blank Book-Maker- s. No. 40 W. Second South St. Salt Lake City, - - Utah. Our facilities for dnlnit tlrst-clas- s ,Toh Print-Iti-are if the newest and Iwnt. Hooka ruled, pr.nteii anil bound to order. B.impleH of Kali-roa- M infill. Hank and Mercantile work always on band, (.'nniplt-t- line of Office Sup- - einbr.icltijf the moHt approved Labor-avln-and Economical Inventions. Prices Low ! Call on u John Green, Fanilary Contractor and Scavenger Excavations for Sewer Connections a Specialty, Special terms for monthly fork tonoteii and (ainllleH. LWt Main Street. Telephone 138. Fostofflce Hox 5W. Utah Optical Co. 167 Boutli Main St. THE ONLY RELIABLE! If you have defective vision, remember that we make a spednlty of meamirlnK all imper-fections of the eye, and tlttlng the same with genuine Alaska Crystal & Brazilian: The only place In the city where glasses are lltt"d to each individual eye, and ground if necemary. Also a large assortment of Field and Opera GiasHes. Call at Larsen's, opposite City hal John Weiser & Co. for tine shoes and good repairing. Silk hankerchiefs and mufflers. Bast-Tekk- t Mkhcantilk Co. M2 Main street. - ,4 ks j tY" " I T cjft Of' ... ......... ' Cloak SalR! IT W lit TV T O 3 Great a I Ctab r COHN BROS, y fJfJ Every33lAPlusPher Gcaernmt entessin otiuarn stofcokrmeart jjr f prices. yg Braided Cloth Wraps 25 per cent, below cost. Every variety of Cloth Jackets at actual manufacturers' cost. 1 1 AH Misses' and Childrens' Garments marked down to seventy-five- . cents on the dollar. Ladies' Tea Gowns Below Cost. I 23 We have just four Real Alaska Seal J X Jackets left. They cost before the ) rise in seal $So, $85, $100 and $120. are to-da- y worth 90 per cent. OThey but can be bought at the 4z prices during this sale. P l I t--4 COHN BROS, ft O ' k - T I T Cloak gmo Each. Fourth South street addition is located one and one-fourt- miles west of tho postollieo, on Fourth South street, one-hal- f mile north of Poplar Grove, forty rods southwest of Highland Park, on a level spot of ground giving beautiful view of the city. Lynch it Glassman offer the entire addition consisting of thirty lots for sale for $125 each, one-thir- d cash, balance to suit purchaser, or $1 10 all cash. This is tho cheapest property offered in Salt Lake City by one-hal- All tho lots adjoining on the east, west, north and south are bought and sold for 8200 to $;i"o each. These lots of ours will bo sold at the price given. There is no buncomb about this; it is real. We offer these lots at this remarkable low rate for thirty days only. These lots must be sold be-fore January 15; the prices arc 100 per cent less than anv other lots offered. Remember. $110 takes a 25x125 foot lot; we give warranty deed and good title with each lot. 'Lynch & Classman, 221 South Main. The Che.pe.t Y.t. We will sell Fourth South street ad-dition, consisting of thirty lots, for $110 cash each if sold before January 15, 1801; or $125 each, one third cash, "ba-lance to suit. The cheapest prices for the adjoining lots are $200 to $;)50 each. Hence we will be giving to each buyer tho benefit of a $100 reduction. We mean business, and will sell the lots at the prices given. "Money talks." Come and see us, and we will convince you that we have the cheapest lots in Salt Lake City. Lynch & Glasmann. Rudolph Alff, Importer of CHINA, CROCKERY, GLASSWARE, Plated Ware, Cutlery, Lamps, Yases, and .... Statuary .... j i m Main St., SALT LAKE CITY HODGES DENTIST! 31 W. 1st South, - S.lt I.ke City. TEETH EXTRACTED WITHOUT PAIN! By the Use of Vitalized Air. ALL WORK WARRANTED ! 29 M am St., Salt Lake City. Martin Schmidt, The" Tailor, iturning out the prettiest dress an d Prince Albert and nobbiest business suits in the city. Sole agent for the "United Service" trouser stretcher. - A matchless show at Franklin avenue theater. See tonight's performance at Frank-lin avenue theater. Rend Till.! Choice lots on line of Rapid Transit in Prospect and Hyde Parks, in south-west part of city, and Kensington Heights on tho famous East Ueuch, from $a00 to $300 each, $35 cash and $10 each month, without interest, title per-fect. Shade trees, school houses and good water. These investments will yield you large' profits, careful selec-tion made. Uuy now. Choice busi-ness, residenco and acre property for sale. Coal lands, mining propeity and government lands a specialty. Loans negotiated. Correspondence" invited. Twenty years' resilience. Reference, Union National bank. B. A. M. Froi-set- h & Co., B TO E. Second South street. Salt Lake City. - Special lino of umbrellas and walk-ing sticks for the holidays. Last-Tekk- t Mercantile Co. 143 Main street -- - Once a customer, alwavs a customer. ANNUAL MEETING T" Salt Lake Chamber t Comm.rci 6t orI Holder!. The Fourth Annual meeting of the stock holders of the Salt Lake Chamber of Commerce, will be held at the Cham-ber of Commerce, on Thursday, Janu-ary 8th, 1801, at 7:30 o'clock, for the purpose of electing a Hoard of Directors for the ensuing year, for hearing an-nual reports of officers of the Chamber of Commerce and for the transaction of such other business as may properly come before said rnoeting. ' Signed: Fkki Simon, Acting President. Attest: Frank K. Gii.i.EsriF., . Secretary. office rooms which will banitedfor commission offices. f Stock Yard Hotel. Another important building is the hotel, which will bo large enough to accommodate the handa working in the yards, who have no dwelling of their own. It also will be the headquarters of storkmon when they come to the city while doing business at the yards. A large stable with eighty-fou- r stalls is provided by the plans where the farmers, stock grower and men with business to transact at North Salt Lake can store their horses. Tim yards, it will he noticed, are di-vided into twelve divisions subdivided for the convenient handling of the horses, cattle, sheep ami nogs, by the different railway lines. The cattle coming in train lots are unloaded into the main pens where they are graded for halo and shipment. There are feeding and watering troughs in all the pens. Tit. Tacking: Houne. An important adjunct to the. stock yards is the immense packing house which White Sons & Company will erect and which includes a cold storage plant and artificial ice factory. The cost of the (lacking house plant will be from $U,"i,0U0 to !r0,000 exclusive of the land. It will have the capacity for slaughtering 4(10 cattle and 2000 sheep and hogs daily. The great advantage of the Union Stock yards and packing house will be the building up of a local market and making this city the cen-ter for all dealers in livestock in the inter-mountai- country. Mr. Kodofnr Iirs been greatly as-sisted in his labors in putting on foot this great enterprise by W. C. H. Allen, who has been the moving spirit in a great many other projects that promise great things for Salt Lake. " UNION STOCK. YARDS. The Plans Completed and Work on the ' Tracks and Buildings to Begin at Once. THE LARGE PACKING HOUSE. The Buildings and Trucks Will Cover at Least Twenty-Fiv- e Acres of Ground. The biggest enterprise put on foot during the past year was the Union stock yards and packing house. It means the acquisition to this city a new industry and one that will gradually develop ane expand, and it is difficult to predict a limit to the possibilities of these enterprises. The gain to the ag ricultural interest! of the territory by the secu ring of the stock yards and the sugar beet works can net be computed in money as they will stimulate other industries of a like nature. J. W. Kodefcr of Omaha spent many months in the city Inst summer and on the 17th day of October succeeded in organizing the stock yards company with 120 incorporators, including the leading bankers and business men of this city, together with a large number of the live stock men of this territory and surrounding states. The grounds selected for the location of the stock yards is located 1J miles north of Beck's Hot snriugs lying west of the tracks of the Lnion Pacific and Kio Grande Western railways. These grounds were selected on account of being on the diroct lines of the two great railways, the Uuioo Pacilic and Kio Grande Western, and for their ac-cessibility. The capital stock of the company is $250,000. Mr. Kodefer also interested a syndicate of eastern cap-italists, including prominent railway fficials, in the enterprise. The board of directors is composed of the following named gentleman: Messrs. D. C. Dodge, manager of the Kio Grande Western railroad: John W. Kodefer, of Omaha; and of Salt Lake City, George A. Lowe, John K. Doolv, John II. W hite, W. P. Noble, K. C. Chambers, II. F. Saunders, H. M. Wells, Fred Simon, M. K. Parsons, W. H. Remington, Charles Crane, and of which W. C. B. Allen is acting secretary. The plans for the stockyards were piepared by H. P. Childs, superintend-ent of the Union stockyards at Kansas City, and a man of twenty years' ex-perience in the business. Great care has been taken to insure perfect sani-tary facilities by laying out a sewerage system and ample water supply. The plans cover twenty-liv- e acres of ground and more land has been reserved for an extension of the yards as soon as the business will demand it. In the center of the yards is an im-mense scale large enough to weigh a car load of stock at one time. The smaller pens are intended for hogs and sheep while the larger ones are for cattle. Th. Exchange Bnllding;. The most important building outside of the yards proper is the exchange, a two-stor- y structure 50x100 feet. The ' first floor will bo litted up for the offi ces of the company which will include a branch bank, of one of the Salt Lake institutions to facilitate the sale and consignment of stock without requiring the parties to come to the city to tran-sact their business. The second story contaius eighteen Special Stockholder' Meeting;. Notice is hereby given that there will be a special meeting of the stockhold-ers of the Wood River Mining and Mill-ing company of Idaho, (Malad Consol-idated) a corporatfon under the laws of Utah, at the office of the secretary, room 101 Opera house building, on West Second South street, in Salt Lake City, Utah, at 3 o'clock p. m., Tuesday, Jan-uary 13th, 18111, for the purpose of amending the articles of incorporation of said company, by striking out of and eliminating from Sec. 10 of said articles the words "and no assessment shall bo levied," also from Sec. 2fj, "that none of said working capital stock shall be assessable," thus leaving and making the capital stock of the corporation sub-ject to assessment. Jamks A. Pollock, Secretary of the company and of the board of directors. Salt Lake City. Utah, Dec. 20, 1890. CLEVER MORMONS. i THEY KNOW TOO MUCH TO LEAVE UTAH JUST NOW. A. ft. da R c(le Tell. a Detroit Journal How Smith'! I)loipl. .re They Real-ize the Klrhnea of the Country and Will Han- - On. A. E. de Ricqlos never loses an oppor-tunity to put in a good word for Salt Lake. The following is from a recent number of the Detroit Journal, which interviewed the young Frenchman when in that city. "Somebody said a little while ago" that the Mormons were going to move to Mexico and settle in land purchased by John W. Young. There is a live citizen of Salt Lake City in Detroit now. He is A. E. de Ricqles. That may be a familiar name to many Detroit people because Mr. de Rie(les is an old Dntroiter. It is hardly probable that there is a shadow of truth in the rumor," he said. "The Mormons are the owners of im-mensely valuable lands in Utah, which yield a good living with but little effort on their part. Their Salt Lake City property has increased nearly ten times in value during the past six years, and the mining development has also added to their prosperity. The Mormon people are too shrewd to leave Utah. They can see us readily as the gentiles that the combination of agricultural and mining resources, together with the delightful climate and several health resorts, will make that territory the leading western s late before many years. "John W. Young is a son of Brigham young and a very bright man. Mr. Young is the and gen-eral manager of the Utah Central sys-tem. This road was built by him and at the present time be is constructing a very considerable mileage of new line. "The business mon and owners of property in Utah worry less about the Mormous than do the newspapers 2000 miles away. The prosperity that has followed the Mormon downfall in Salt Lake City has been a great lesson to that people throughout the territory, and will do more to destroy tho power of the priesthood than all the legisla-tion and opposition the United States government has from time to time of-fered. From only one standpoint can I see a grain of truth in the Mexican move-ment, and that is only a theory. It is possible that the Mormon church, see-ing its power slipping away, may un-dertake to establish a colony in Mexico where its power will be as absolute as in days gone by." Mr. De Ricqles mentioned incident-ally that the prosperity in Utah today is greater than in any other section of the west. The mineral output for 18110 will be about $16,000,000. The wool clip was over 12,000,000 pounds. The cattle interests are in excellent condi-tion. During the first six months of lSdO the real estate transfers of Salt Lake City amounted to .$18,000,000. In the same city during the entire year buildings and dwellings to the value of $7,000,000 were erected. 40 miles of electric street railway lines built and equipped, and a complete system of sewerage put in. The busi-ness passed through tho banks is over $',000,000 per week. R. G. Duu & Co's reports, he says, show Utah to be in better condition tnan any othr section of the west. , R. M. Itlele, French llalrdreiier Specialist in bangs cuttitig, curling singeing. Dealer in and manufacture of fine wigs, tanpees, hairswitches hairjewelry and hairwork of every de scription. Parlors 27 and 28 Scott Auerbach building. Once a customer, always a customer. J |