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Show mm HERE for lifts uplift An Acre and Independence to Be Had Within Reach of the City's Heart. It is (louhtful if any movement inan-guruto'l inan-guruto'l in rnrcut years in Salt Luke . real estatu circles has attracted so much attention from thu genoral public ay the "man and an aero and independence" activity recently started hero. Hie laet that carei'ul investigation has di.st-losed property within tweuty-. tweuty-. five ininulea' ride hy street ear of Salt Lake, wueio a man can install his l;unily in a new home on an aero ot " ft mi iirh soil and then put this aero ol ground under in terns iv cultival ion, win In at the same tiino tlio man retains his position in town, has resulted in a very large number of inquiries to the BotLilyuii Homo Builders company of Salt Luke, inasmuch as it is Mr. Bettilyon Bettil-yon and his associates who found the tract of acres in question. Whilo the location of the property itself has not boen definitely announced by Mr. Bettilyon, other important information in-formation has been disclosed regarding tho tract and Mr. Bettilyon baa announced an-nounced that the property is within twenty-five minutes' street car ride of Bait Boko, that it Uos just below the brow of the Wat.sa.teh foothills, with a peutlo slope from east to west, and that the foil is among the very finest and most fertile to oo found in any of Utah 's famous valleys. The property is not only reached direct di-rect lv by street car from I"Jalt. Lake, but H wfll proient, the added advantages of electric lights, U'lephouos, a splendid water system with sufficient water for culinary purposes and irrigation; graded " streets, sidewalks and other comforts and conveniences. Groceries, meats, coal and other merchandise will be delivered de-livered to residents nt' the property daily. Children oL' residents of the property prop-erty mjy bo educated at a local school but a block or two distant, or they may be sent to Salt Lake to schools by street car. " I cannot remomrjer a time in the past few years when so much comment and interest has been aroused by any movement as that which we are experiencing ex-periencing in regard to the tract of acres we shall soon offer near Salt Lake, ' ' paid Mr. Bettilyon yesterday. "Wo are being askod constantly, 'What can a man do with an acre of this soil?' "My answer is this that a man who is willing to work and who is tired of living on a city lot in town, where his expenses eat up everything he earns, cau move his family onto an acre of this ground, where he will have practically every advantage he already has in town, and if he will give an hour of his time in tho morning and an hour or two at .night, together with his holidays and Sundays, to tho cultivation of his acre lie can raise practically all the fruit and vegetables, eegs and chickens and other things his family will eat throughout through-out the year anrj have some left besides to sell on the Selt Lake market, while at the same time he can retain his po-I po-I sition in town. ! "There are only two conditions that are essential to such a success, one ie that the acre of ground must be in the right place and have the right soil; the other condition is that the man must be willing to work. "We have met and filled the first condition, for the ground we have found is of the finest soil in the state and its location is absolutely idea: and from the inquiries that are pourins in on us daily regarding this property it is quite apparent to ua that there art a good many men in Salt Lake who arc 'willing to work.' "We expect to announce the locatiot of these acres within a very short time.' |