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Show A PIONEER STORY I I Yes, son, I was just your age when I came down Emi- I 1J$ I gration canyon there in 1847 and looked upon this spot ; now so beautiful. Even then, though it was covered with "igS sagebrush and really a desert, this Highland Park, which oJ? now gladdens the eye with every modern improvement, jj f impressed me as the most nature-favored location for 0t homes. oJ$ Kimball & Richards aro niodorn tng restrictions. Business houses aro ro- itf clM Pioneers. Por five years they havo made stricted to a limited portion. A public ja fam a careful aUd extensive study of the school site is provided for. The streets 9 tnctfM1 , " aro graded to give terraced elevation to S $W esldonc real estate business. They tbe lotB ornamental shade trees lino 9 id 6 imProvert' developed and sold, for hoth sides of tho streets. Broad cement H m residence use fifteen subdivisions They walks are heing laid in front of all lots. g .avo etaM!aoa . Salt Lata City tho HUTS? j$U ?5l 3 K. jwst modem ideas in tho business. extended within the next fow months. M ml Highland Park is the culmination of No better investment for a young n XQtWl tllin experience. Here aro embodied the man's savings can bo found. It com- J mt boi- irioon ,mi , -u,,!- bines security with certainty of profit. $ I , VeJaB, and 1,lans bnovm t0 tuilclcr3, Now is tho time to buy before prices ft . or subdivisions. It is insured an excel- advance. Lots $140 to ?280 'each; temi3 im lcnt class of llomes by reasonable build- S3.60 to $7 a month. g LI5fj : I -K OPPORTUNITY COUPON, ' S MVU ? m"' Land Merchan T'23-11 Kimball & Richards i ti Salt Lnle Clty s f J"' b00klCt deta"8 abUt "LAND MERCHANTS," g lT Mr 56-58 Main Street I 1 Krcss , K J cupnuon Salt Lake Gity - - Utah PIONEER DAY EXCURSION TO OGDEN Via Bamberger Electric Line. $1 10 round trip. Tickets on sale July '22, 23, 21. Gooil return July 20. THE BISIVLAROK ANNEX. The coolest and one of tho plcasantost places to oat your lunch these Imt days, j I Tbe Certainty of Growth I I is nowhere more manifest than in the development of Salt Lake Valley since I the Pioneers first gazed upon it on July 24, 1847. The city which they found- I ed has now become the metropolis of the entire inteimountam West, with a fair I chance eventually to rival in magnitude of business any inland city west of the 1 H I Mississippi river. Millions are being spent in Salt Lake City every year in new I I homes and business blocks; and already the resident of discretion is choosing a I H I homesite on the most pcturesque bench in America. Educational institutions, H 1 state buildings, clubs and mansions are seeking these incomparably delightful I I heights. The center of it all, the final choice from the standpoint of beauty and I I convenience is 1 I I which is unquestionably the finest realty addition ever placed on the Western 1 j I 1 'market. Situated at Thirteenth East between Eighth and Ninth South, it is sur- j j I I rounded by a veritable halo of advantages such as the State Univrsity, the new j II I High School, the new All Hallows College, etc., etc. j jl Fort Douglas Grounds Are to Be Parked I I This is a certainty according to dispatches received from Washington, and j l 1 thus Douglas Park is to have another attraction adjoining it on the north. I Douglas Park Now Part ot the City j II On Monday evening last the 'district lying between Fifteenth and Seven- 1 l teenth East and Eleventh and Twelfth South became part of Salt Lake City. ; 11 Hi 11 s ill I I Laying the Big Eight-Inch Watcrmaiis in Douglas Park . j 1 I and building is -about to begin at various points in the tract. Some of those j M who contemplate immediate construction of homes are named in the following j B list of "quality" buyers in Douglas Park. Ask them. j 9 A PARTIAL LI5T F PURCHASERS: 1 1 Hon. Governor Spry, Mrs. Colonel Judge Thurman, Richard Thurman. attorne; E. O. Leo, attorney". Elmer J 19 1 15.. P. Holmes, Attorney General Sara B. Shields, A. L. Crlles. W. H. A. Rlckor, manager Equitable Insur- B I - ' ,. , . tt t Fairbanks. H. J. Smith, S. Kennedy, ance company; A. J. Miller. C. u. g MM R Barnes, Dr. C. J. Albaugh, Dr. H. J. Butto; Elizabeth Bond, Lottie Birch. Wilson, Charles M. Morris, assistant 3 D Smith, Dr. W. B. Branaford, Dr. Mary Elizabeth Mossmorc, C. H. West. Wll- county attornoy: T. P. Gallagher, P. j M 1 Gamble Dr Rav of BInehain Dr I'ird Kimball, C E. Rodman. S. B. J. Gallagher; JI. O. Eldrodge. J. Tj. B oamnie. iJr. Raj or Bingham. Dr. p. ' Clark, Henry Klpn, Eldredge. Jr., -L. E. Hubbard, J. A. 9 9 Stookey. C. D. Klpp. Prudential Life; Butto, Mont.: Mrs Frllz. E. II. Cal- Hcadlund. architect: William Worth. g Ernest Lambourno. H. P. Poll, George lister, Internal revenue collector: Hi- Butte, five lots; R- Tj. Conely. re- I H Mavor, R. W. Watt. C. H. Thompson, ram E. Booth. United States district ccivlng teller McCornlck i Co. bank; U I Charles Tyng, J. A. Summer, attornov; J. U. Eldredge. Jr. United A. J. Gorham, Troy laundry: Miss I m Professor F. A. Hinckley, Thomas States assayor, Mrs. J, U. Eldredge, S. E. Dancy, head nurse L. D. S. hos- n Holland, S. W. Fargo. Katlo R. Sll- Jr., W. E. Ware, architect: O. O. Tre- pltal; Ernest Smith. O. S. L.. railway I vers, A. F. Moodey, James H. Stearns, ganza, architect; Benjamin L. Rich, offices; Geo. M, Cannon. l(. Douglas Park Weekly Bulletin, July 23, 1911. S)ci I The big eight-inch waer mains are now laid JLjtcP J W University and water will be on tap within a day or so. The j I Education city council has annexed the district between &6&& 1 M Without a and irjast aucl lltl:L aud Soutl1 to fO B I n approaching Douglas Park. See Mgr. Wells' 9 I I Carare- announcement Tribune, July 21. . $600 9 ' WHAT A RADIUS OF fefalf PRK IN.GLUD j I HUBBARD fTj'fB&MTM ! I l INVESTMENT CO. 1 1 AMjF' "-1 210-211 I ! 66 VEST 3RD so. 1 1 I W BOSTON BLOCK J I 1 Both Phones 173 1?- Sjl Belu Phone 2622 f I u!i v . - I |