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Show i THE SALT LAKE TIMES. THURSDAY MARCH 12 1831. - 8 , " " ' : i kfcj .WHERE IS CHICAGO ADDITION?, p CHICAGO ADDITION is between Third and Fourth " I East; just south of Tenth South. O. . CHICAGO ADDITION is only 2 ordinary City Blocks j 8 from Liberty Park. iS 1 Ihr VVSX. CHICAG0 ADDITI0N is only 1 Y mllcs from thc Temple. f h I L0400 I hi J g OHIOAGO. S J 2J W. Second South, . ( (jgOJ j 2ncl Door East Citllen. j I ' HH r S ' . J O I H t LOTS, S400 Oj). S 1 "IN vO 8 M CHICAGO. V S ( jj O Is themst sirable Residence Property offered on the D market today. v It is just the place you want on which to build a Home. ft W $400! PER t LOT! $400! W WALKER . HOUSE. The Walker it Located in the Buiinem Center of this City and hat all the Modern improvements 4 Conveniences Pertaining to a ttrictly flrtt-cla- si houm It 11 managed as well ae any hotel tn the WmI aud IB xtnrtly the Buxlne and Toul lt Hotel of Salt Lake City. P&HBenKer Elevator. The Walker & the Metropolitan Are the Two Leading Hotels of Bait Lake City. 0.8.ERB Proor. Hotel Tiili JUST OPENED. THE O.UY FIRST-CLAS- S HOTEL IJ THE HIT. Cor. Main and H Temple Sis. The Cullen; THE MODERN HOTEL OF SALT LAKE. S. C. EWING. - - PKOPIt. j F. Auerbach k Bro, j j $50,000 I Worth, of Winter and Surplus Stocks at Alrnost Half Price. Black Silks! Black Silks! Best qualities in Satin, Rhodamei, Gros Grains. Fancy Weaves and elegant Brocades at 55c, 65c, 75c, U0c, 11.10, 91.25 and 11,45; worth 30 per cent more than quoted. Colored Gros Grains at OOe, 72Jc and 80c, and Faille FrancaUe at $1.10, worth 40 per cent more. 35 pieces of all wool Serges, new shades, at 45c; regular price 60c. 89 pieces all wool Dress Goods in Plain, Fancy Weaves and Plaids, worth . from $1 to $1.50, reduced to 75c. 60 tlegaut Combination Suits at a reduction of 33J per cent. Domestic Popartmont; 100 pairs of Curtains and Tortier. slightly soiled in handling, will ba ot fered for one week from 75c to $13.50 per pair; worth 60 per cent more than NOW being offered. Blankets 8e Quilts. At a reduction of 33 per cent. 600 full size Crochet Quilts at 80c each. 830 full size Crochet Quilts. War scilles Patterns, at $1.10 each. 300 Genuine Marseilles Quilts at $1.50 each. 200 Extra Size Marseille: Quilts, choice designg at $2.50. Blankets. Our Celebrated full size white California Blankets at $5. 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 50u. 150(1 Manufacturers Short Lengths of Anderson Imported Zephyrs at 16c; worth 50c per yard, Guoak Department. To Close the Balance of Winter Stock-Tremend- ous Reductions I LiUas' Plush Capes reduced from HMofT. Departments omr Boys' Suits at 11 35. .1f, S"" .. X i7.so to mo. I2.i. S3.. t.m and s worth W ircn more. BlacU Cheviot Jackets reduced from On lot each of tf'y' Kns PanU at liuc, 860, II 150 to ib 30i 40e nd (Wc; Kst valnc In th I'ity. iJadlW Astrachan Faced Jackets reduced Boys Outing Cloth Waists at lo, reduced fromWtoS. fromSSc, U isms' Ooata reduced Irom 13.00 to il.SS. Same at c, reduced Iromjtio. ' 3.fi0to 1.50. " 30c- - '' Wc. - 4 iio to 175. Mi-n- fnaundrled White bhrts at STc Ladles' Cashmere and Flannel Tea Gowns One l"t each of Mens' Oveishlrts at 85 c, 46. fcelow cost SO Uli I.adics' Callco Wrappers at 90c. Merino Half Hose reduced to one half the Our Child's Clothing and Gents' Furnishing regular pries, W'ic UOc aud asc. Boys' Overcoats at a Reduction of 35 per cent. Our Shoe Department Will Continue the 25 and . 10 Per Cent Discounts. SPRING NOVELTIES 1 For all of Our .Numerous Departments are Begrinninr to Arrive! ONE PRICE TO ALL! ESTABLISHED, 1864 Mail Orders Receive Prompt and Careful Attention I F, Auerbach & Bra Morrison, Merrill & Co. Wholale and Retail LUMBER All klnd of Material pertaining to ths Lumber Yard bnHitiHflH, and apo dal facilities for handling ' GET THEIR PRICES. Third West, Between First and Second North i . j John Green; Sanitary Contractor, Eioavatioai fot Eewer Connections a Specialty. At.I. W. Farrell &Co., 137 South Mala St Telnidione )J, 1DR7HODGES7 DENTISTI ' 31 W. lt SoHtb, - Bait Lake City TEETH EXTRACTED WITHOUT PAIN! By the Use of Vitalized Air. I ALL W0KK WARKANTED! " 'No; the powders had nothing to do with it. lie died half an hour before they were received. '"New York Ledger. 8uipenn. "One night," said a chemist, "a doc-tor came and woke me out of a sound sleep to prepare morphine powders for an old gentleman named Martin, who had been ill for some time. I weighed out the morphine and put it np accord-ing to direction, but thought while I was doing so that the powders seemed to be unusually large. Next morning, when I was arranging things in the shop, I found that there was a ten grain weight in the scale beneath the one the prescription called for, and each of those powders was ten grains too large. "A cold chill ran down my back when I realized the mistake, for it meant al-most certain death. A short time after-ward the doctor came in, aud I thought my time had come. Bracing up as well as possible, I asked: " 'How is Martin this morning, Doc-tor? " 'He's dead.' " 'Did thosti powders kill him?' I stam-mered out, and in f iir and trembling awaited the answer. But the first word i relieved met hy the back of t ho neck as Be rose to the surface of the water hissed in his ear: "Will yon renounce the Prophet and become a Christian?" "Alkih forbid," sputtered the Arab. "Down yon go, then," said the Irish-man, and he ducked the Arab under again. In about a minute ho pulled him up and shouted: "Will you believe in the Christian's God?" "No," gasped the Arab feebly. "Drown, then," yelled the Irishman, as he ducked the unfortunate Mussul-man again. For the third time he pulled the man up and asked, "Will you believe?" The Arab, almost dead, was just able to whif-pe- r "Yes." "Drown, then," yelled the man, "be-fore you lose your sowl by recanting!" and he put the wretch under once more and held him there till life was extinct New York Tribune. Savins; Sonla In Africa. They tell of a powerful Irishman out In Africa who seized the wretched Arab who was paddling him across a stream, threw ltiin overboard, and grabbiiui him A JieBro'i Key to Heaven. The Herald is in possession of a cane with quite a history. Tom Goodyear, an old negro, aged about 86 years, died. In his deathbed was a common walking stick, on the handle of which were two leather straps, to which were attached two keys one large and the other small. The old negro carried the cane during the last twenty-fiv- e years of his life. He never went without it, and always proclaimed that the small key would open his way into the better world, and that the large key, should he not go to that desired land, would allow him to escape from the doors of that land which is hotter than this. But when Goodyear died he left the keys and stick by his side while his spirit departed to that un-discovered land. It matters not to which place the good old colored man went, ha will find the doors open for his reception. Palatka (Fla.) Herald. As a coppersmith he got work on thoj old La Crosse road and became an engi-neer. Ho "filled" the first locomotive ever ran in Wisconsin, and stuck to until one night he mistook a i swinging lantern for the conductor's sig-nal, and starting his engine just as an old lady was boarding the train, threw her down and cut off her leg. He resigned and set about inventing a conductor's lantern that should be unmistakable. i The result was the half green, half whittr lantern that is used now the world over. The glass could not be made in this country, and it was three years be-fore be got ono made in Europe. While working on the La Crosse road ho invent-ed the railroad lantern with a movablo globe, which is now universally used. He offered that invention to two Mil-waukee gentlemen for $200, but they laughed at him. Since then millions have been sold and fortunes made ont of them. In 18fi:i he went to Chicago with $250 and started a business that became the Adams & Westlake Manufacturing com-pany, which employs 3,000 men. Mr. ; West hike made inventions by the hun-dreds irid sold the patents, but he savs he never got 1 per cent, of the amount other people made from his inventions. "I sold ray stove board for $100,000," he said, "and the manufacturers make that much every year out of it." Mr. Westlake had on his hands a great many patent lawsuits, and getting tired of the worry six years ago ho sold all his patents remaining for $110,000 and with them the lawsuits. His home is in Brooklyn, and there ho spends his timo free from business cares. Mr. Westlake's patents are counted by the hundreds. Ho invented the head-light, the car lamps, the oil stove and dozens of other things for every day use. He has recently made some great im-provements in the headlight. Ho says that he has found that it is the little things that pay, and that there is no money in inventing costly machinery. He is at present amusing himself by trying to invent a substance with which to coat the bottom of his yacht which will prevent the formation of barnacles. He says he has made a sort of enamel, so smooth that nothing can stick to it, and it has worked very well on a center-boar- He thinks it will work as well on the bottom of the boat. Milwaukee Sentinel i PROFll IN LITTLE THINGS. A Riiocesiful Inventor Telle What He IIa Found Mont AdvantaffeouH. William Westlake, the railroad inven-tor, Viose patents have made a fortnns for hti, started in life as a roller boy in the Wisconsin office in the days when this paper, which now keeps the fastest of presses hustling to get off its daily edi-tion, was printed weekly on an old Frank-lin press. Becoming dissatisfied with his salary of $3 per week, he severed his con-nection with the establishment and tried his hand at several jobs, learning, among other things, tiiismithing, aad finally drifting into railroading. A Lake or 1' it oil. "Near where we live," said William Greig.of Trinidad, West Indies, "is a pitclflake. It's.at La Brea. It covers about ninety acres, and it is soft enough to take the impression of your shoes as you walk over it, but take up a bit of it and strike it sharply and it breaks off with a conchoidal fracture like a lump of anthracite. I don't know where it comes from, but I do know that it's most awfully hot there. The sun ilts down like fun, and the black pitch absorbs all the heat. All down to the coast and under the sea and across in Venezuela there is a streak of this same formation. The Britisli government owns the lake, and a monopoly pays a royalty of not less than $,'0,000 a year. Chicago Tribune. A Romance! Hence Giuitown. It was shortly after the Revolutionary war that an heir to a baronetcy in Eng-land, and possessing the warlike name of Gunn, proved himself a Tory o the most notorious stripe. Rather than live in commune witli the creatures of a repub-lic he joined the Chickasaw Indians aad became a chief. He married a fair daughter of the tribe, and by the mar-riage a lovely child was born, and Oka-lalla- h became the pride of the Chickasaw nation and was noted for her beauty, comeliness and modesty. Hence the name of Guntown. Memphis Appeal-Avalanch- e. .GIFTS FOR WOMEN. What Men May Give to Their Fair Com-- - panloim or ltlrtliduy Preent.' The platonioally friendly man rarely thinks of jewelry, and I am glad of it, for even simple ornaments a well bred girl dislikes to accept or refuse, and there are many other little remembrances she would more gladly welcome. For , instance, leather is an outlet for my men friends' generosity, and among other tilings I have a collection of beau-tiful card cases variotis persons have given me. They are made of the finest perfumed ami tinted skins, lined with silk, pro-Tide- d with silver screw pencils, some-times a tiny watch, and besides a pocket for cards one for change and little slips to pull out, on which are daintily etched calendars for the year. My last acquisi-tion came from Paris. It is gray green Veined leather, highly polished and dot-ted over with tiny bright silver fleur-de-li- To match it was a scrap of a purse provided with many little nooks and pockets, and decorated with the silver flowers. Another good friend gave me what he calls my set of books for daily business. They are three square, gilt edged vol- - limes, boupl in leather as fine and sweet smelling as rose leaves. On the covers my crest and monogram are deeply Stamped in gilt, and on the title backs are written respectively accounts, en-gagements and addresses. Inside the one for accounts is comfortably ruled off and noted, so that ono knows where those puzzling lists of figures should go. "Engagements" has stated pages on which one jots down memoranda of events to come, "Addresses" has the leaves alphabetically arranged, and the three books are held together by a little Btrap and catch button like those on books of prayer and hymnals. A gift of that kind is in constant use, and one is always reminded of and pleasantly grate-ful to 'the giver. Another pretty leather toy for a worn- - an is a traveling inkstand. They come in numberless devices, and nothing is more unique than a miniature Glad stone bag, perfect in detail, even to a ' bit of a silver plate, on which one's initials can be traced; and by pressing a knob it flies open to reveal the inside g'ass bottle. Then if you are going on a journey he can give you a lovely suede leather writing portfolio or one for holding the loose photographs to be picked up in traveling. Some thoughtful souls give girls leather bound books, on the backs, stamiied in black, the title Uiwy and her name. A screw pencil slips into loops, and on the gilt edged leaves she can jot down a heterogenous mass of no8 and reflections, for reference at another day. For a journey by rail he will perhaps buy a cut glass tumbler, glass being cleaner than a metal cup, set in a leath-er case, and marked with her name and address, and for a sea voyage it's no im-propriety for a friend to beg her ac-ceptance of a flat glass leather covered buttle filled with a clear golden fluid that for conventionalty's sake let us call the traveler's companion. Interview in New York Sun. James P. Voorhees, of Detroit, a son of the senator, is an author, an ai.'tor and a sculptor of acknowledged merit, and ho has written a play whk h those who have read it are confident will prove a success. Mr. Voorhees' well known piece of sculpture, the "Head of the Saviour," was ssid by Cardinal Gibbons to be the bet expression of the subject he had ever srou. Avoiding Taxes. An amusing example of the expedients resorted to by people to escape taxation is afforded by a prominent farmer of Lafayette, Ore., who claimed an offset of $'.'00 against his assessment on account of indebtedness. Investigation of his claim by the board of equalization showed that he owed the $200 sure enough. It was due the county for back taxes, which he had refused to pay. Philadelphia Ledger. Too Literal. Teacher When the wise men came to the king what did thty say? Bov They said, "O king, live for-ever!" Teacher Quite right; and what then? Boy And immediately the king lived furever. Life. In Russia the bride must not eat of j the wedding cake unless she wishes to lose her husband's love. If a dog be-longing to the family of the brido should howl on the day of the wedding or the day previous to the event, he must be shot by the father of the bride and no one else, and, besides that, with a bullet made from u silver rupee. Dental Note. A professor in the New York dental college asked one of the new students: "What is tho name of the teeth that a human being gets last?"' "False teeth, of course." Tixas Sitt-ings. It is said tjiat to drink sweet milk after eating onions will purify the breath so that no odor will remain. A cupful of strong coffee is also recommended. Sticking to HI Color. "lie may be a tramp, but there's some-thing good in him after all. He sticks to his colors at least." "I don't understand." "I mean that he never washes." Phil-adelphia Times. |