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Show C. M. Freed CM. FREED, who died Wednesday morning last, had been a familiar figure in these streets for a score of years. He came here after fortune had been cruel to him, began business in an humble way, made a fortune and then practically retired. He was a kindly, genial, most intelligent and gifted man, one of the best of citizens, one of the best of husbands and fathers; a clear brained, warm hearted man every way, and he goes down to the grave sincerely mourned. May the peace that came so gently to him be everlasting, and may all sympathy go out to the family that has been stricken. Halt & McDonald, Archltictt in Los Angeles, St. Loufs and other metropolitan centers where home building on high-class residence resi-dence property is developed to a fine art. A distinctive dis-tinctive feature of the house pictured above is the tennis court and play ground in the rear. All residences erected on Haxton Place property prop-erty must, under the building restrictions, set back twenty-five feet from the sidewalk on either side. This provision gives a broad sweep of over one hundred feet between the house fronts and the effect is decidedly striking. It is an arrangement arrange-ment of especial interest to Salt Lake property owners, inasmuch as it suggests an artistic method meth-od of utilizing the interior of large blocks In the residence district, and is regarded as a matter of great importance in the growth and development develop-ment of the city. The owners of Ilaxton Place report a very active demand for property in the handsome tract, and their report is but one among the many that are coming from the owners of other fine home building sites about town this month. |