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Show 4) FINE CLOTHING iND e GENT'S. FURNISHING GOODS J. P. GARDNHSIt'S Ml Main at. Salt La!;u City M&MEW i v 4 A. .T 3 Institution SHOE SHOP FIISIT CLASS WOIIK RETAIL WHCLESALi-.f i LALh.iiN 7 DRY GOODS Ai V.5--, V : V- tj A. - -- 'Ki- - . .if v & Wm.WOOD&SONS DEALEK IX ALL KINDS OF TEE LEAD? KG- GROCERS - WHOLESALE Fiufiis & RETAIL Delivkky To All Parts The City lie Qv 4is ii. i ljaia r W A i i Ti'lC5iao C.O.IiO!LCl. 107 G U A1 1A N T E E D product ssors. It was ahoat 18G2 that First Sleeping C The 11 rat sleeping car was invented Wagner arid Gates built tJicir firs', car. the same general features ls by Theodore T. Woodruff, who sot up having lbilway Age. his model in theoificeoIJameaTillmg-bast- , those now spsd. The at Home, N. Y., iu 1851, the J alter being at that time in the service of the Statistics of tho Deaf in the schccls. The Annals lor January sas. There Mr Home and Watortown railroad. are 4,1 id u iyp and 6t.y.n pupils Woodruff endeavored to interest Mr. girls in 59 public schools iucluding the Tillinghai-- suillcentiy in hU invention uoj'esj una olv m j to advance the cost of sccuiug a patent iianonr.i denominational and schools in from the government, but he did not the Unite d States andprivate 750 in 8 schools have suflicent faith in its possibilities in Canada. There is an exceus of girls and declined. over boys in Virginia, North Carolina It was while in a eort of dazed con- and MisiH.-ippi Horace dition of mind, resulting from being Mann School, Institutions, (Mass.) St. Joseph's ksocked off the top of a freight car by lp.stltutihn(N. Y) and Cincinnati Oral an old fashioned inclosed bridge, that School. The total number of deaf-mutMr. Woodruff conceived the idea of a who have received education sleeping car. The model which he conn the United States is 28,253. There structed in Mc. Tillinghast's clilce was are G15 teachers 245 males and 370 fe carried to Springfield, Mass., in an old male S deaf-mutand 76 semi- fashioned bandanna handkerchief and mutes 208 teachers of articulation. submitted to Mr. Watson, the car rhc total value of buildings and builder, who, notwithstanding an alexceeds $9,000,000, Pennsylmost universal expression of disap- grounds vania leading with $775,000, and Cal proval by his employes, built a trial ifornia, the seventh with $508,000. car, which made its first trips on the The annual; appropirations for the New York Central and llosae and of the pupils in public schools Watertown railroad, and later was support amounts to about $1,000,000. Thirty-si- x to Cincinnati and taken Cleveland, different trades are taught in other western cities. of which carpentry, cabinet-makinThis car afterwards became the pro- schools, sewprinting, of the Oaio and perty Jississippi ing and dressmaking are the most on whose line it numerous. News. Kailroad company, was regularly rue. Woodruff sold the The great and wonderful ice cave right to build and use his sleeper on the New York Central railroad in Utah is now attracting much to Mr. Webster Wagner and on attention. It is located at Ashley the Buffalo and Erie road to Mr. Geo. which is dtuated in the Gates. The "Gates" sleepers ranf rom Valley, of the territory. 1859 to 1873, when they also passed into northwestern part Wagner's hands. Pullman gsleepers On August the 28th , there was were introduced in ISiU or 18G5, he found in the cave a cone of ice 25 eet high and 35 feet though at the having made a numberof inprotant improvements on the productions oi his base. Tourists were in tho cays Who!i:i!o& Iktail GRATES STONE MANTLES & BUILDERS HARD WARD SO t es es g, ehoe-makin- g, Dear's la & 88 K. Firat ttouth S ovtr five liours and had to mo binding twino to keep from getting lost In on: rcom a man went to the end of tho string, some 1 200 feet and found a sm:ill lake, hut could not get any fish It is n wonderful discovery, and if the hopes of the parties who made tho explorations are realized tho Mammoth cavo in Kentucky will bo i:i danger o being eclipsed. Park Record. We have in successful operation in this city, boot and shoe, knitting and overall factories, woolen and paper mills, tanneries, confect ioneries, fenca and mattrass factori es, cracker factories, show-cas- e maker?, brick makers, aerated water works, toiler grist mills, cigar factories, vinegar factories, soon making, salt refining, chemic al Yt'orks, glass works, wood work ing, printing, book binding, brew ing, etc., which give employment to upwards of 1200 operatives, two and a half millions of money and produce over four million dollars iu merchantable annually products. |