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Show V THE SALT LAKE .TIMtiS, SATUHDAY EVENING, APRIL 20, 1890. J ww Quick Sales and Small Profits is Good Our Product Should be in Evt. Cheer to the Heart. fe l Home. Bodega Family Wine House XS HTCW OPEIT TO THE Xn3T3LXO --A-Ctfss Department for Ladies and Gentlemen FOXS ufLXj F.CHj-g- - ' Monogram Ports, Sonogram Clarets, B"0 DEG A Shenies, hfA Nectar Eye, 1881, QQ Q Q - - - Moiiogrmn Angelicas, V I and -- - Monogram Malagas, g Nectar Bourbon, 1881. A full and complete assortment of the Oldest Whiskies, Brandies , and Liquers for Medicinal Purposes in the West. Our Goods are jl guaranteed absolutely Pure and Unadulterated, and the Prices the Lowest of the Low. . "Purity and Strength" Our Motto. Positively nothing sold by the Glass. - :Free ZDeii-ver- y to sill ZFstrts Bodega Family Wine House, ; oft3aeCit3r. Telephone 365. , No. 19 Commercial! WE HANDLE Business, Residence and Country fn ' IMPROVED AND UNIMPROVED. Parties wishing to buy or sell Realty, had better see us. Our mote Profits and Quick Turns." Correspondence bolicited. W. L. BARRET & C( 207 S. Main St., Salt Lake City, Utah. WELLS, FARGO &C0'S Salt Lake City, ........ Utah BUYS AND BELLS EXCHANGE, MAKES transfers oo the principal citim of the United States and Europe, and on all points on the Pacific Coast. Issnee letters of credit, available in theprln. oipal oities of the world. Special attention given to the selling of ores Advances mads on consignments at lowest rates. Particular attention given to collections brongbont Utah, Nevada and adjoining Terri-orie- s. Aocoante solicited. OOBBI8PONDKNT8! Wells, Fargo ft Co London WeUe, Fargo4Co....... New York Maverick National Bank Boston First National Bank Omaha First National Bank Denver Merchant's National Bank Boatmen's Chicago Savings Bank St. Louis Wells, Fargo ft Co San Francisco J. E. rOOLV, Co to P. W. Madsen, 51 and 53 First South street for anything wanted iu the way of carpets, wall paper, bedroom suites and line furniture of every de-sign and finest liinish and there you w ill lind the best Jin the market and at prices guaranteed to suit. Ceullenien should leave their orders for custom shirts at Bast-Marsha- Mek. Co. 143 Main street. Tamis H. Baoow Vbahi L. Holland President. Cashier. Bank of Salt Lake, 3ALT LAKE CITY, UTAH. General Banking Business Transacted. Interest Paid on Time Deposits, Exchange Bought and Sold. Money to Lend on Real Estate from one to five years time. --EXCLUSIVE DEALERS IN 'ill Sole Agents for James Means $3 Shoi 160 Main Street. Central Park, close to the city, free from dust, best artesian water, no high taxes, lift eon minutes drive from post-otlic- Dkwitt B. Low & Co. , Hli West Second South, The sale of lots in Central Park w ill commence Wednesday, April B0, at 10 t. in. at the office of I Wilt . Low & Co., West Second .South. , Troy ! Troy Steam ! ( 'elobrated 4'roy Steam Lauudrv ! Telephone 11)2. 143 Main St. Baby carriages of all styles, highly finished and boautifullv upholstered, at I. W. Madsen's, 51 and 5a East First South St. Two carloads of fine bedroom sets just received at P. W. Madsens 51 and 53 First South street. Central Park lots, every lot perfect. Dkwitt B. Low Co. iti West Second South. The sale of lots in Central Park will commence Wednesday, April 30, at 10 a. m. at lhe oilier of Dewitt li. Low West Second South, Elegant lines of summer neckwear in bows, scarfs. Windsors, etc. Bast-Marsha- Mek. Co. 142 Maiu street. The Troy Steam Laundry guaraiees its patrons excellence of work and promptness of delivery. 142 Maiu street. Telephone 102. Wall paper in every style and of tine texture at P. W. Madsen's, 51 and 53 Fast First South SI. Central Park lots, every lot perfect. Dkwitt B. Low &Co. till West Second South. We invite your inspection of our ele-gant and complete lino of Spring and Summer Underw ear. Bast Marshall Mek. Co. 142 Maiu St. Attend our opening sale of Central Park lots eduesdav, April 30. Make a memorandum of the date. ' Dewitt B. Low & Co. (523 West Second South. l he best refrigerators manufactured are on sale cheap at P. W. Madsen's, 51 arid 53 Fast First South St. Central Park, close to the city, free from dust, best artesian water, no high taxes fifteen minutes drive from post-offic- Dewitt B. Low & Co. t6 West Second South. MIDDLEMISS, VAN DYKE & CO, Real Estate andMine 156 Main St., Salt Lake City, Utah "a-"- r" - - - iir- "" - We carry a full line of Stetson soft hats iu the latest styles and shapes. Bast Marshall Mek. Co. Hi Maiu street. Money Saved. Money can be saved in brick bv wait-ing a short time. The Anderson .Pressed Brick Co. will have an office in Salt Lake May 10, and will be prepared to deliver from their Ogden works, now in operrtion, pressed brick equal to St Loins, at half the price. Anderson. Pressed Brick Co., Ogden. Those w ho are interested in the sub-ject should call around and see our steam and hot water apparatus at lit 1' irst East street. Iu a house the appar- atus is inobtnisive, and during house-cleanin- g times the carpets can be taken up. The system insures freedom from dust nor is there excessive heat to crack and check the furniture. Salt Lake Construction Co. Tne perfect fitting bathing suit's man- ufactured by the Brooklyn knitting works, for whom e are sole agents w5 have now placed on sale for the eoniin" bathing season. Colors warranted au3 guaranteed not to shrink. Bat-Ma"sii.v- ll 'Mek. Co. 142 Main street. such useless argument is required at all. Business is so rushing with the Car-penter's Union that one night in the week is not quite enough in which to initiate all that desire to join the so-ciety, henee special meetings are being called every few days now in order to take care of the applicants. The 300 figure will be reached before the 1st of May without question. The plumbers will bo granted $4 per day of nine hours on or before May 1st, and plumbers will be scarce at that ligure. Somo of the planing mills in town say they will pay their men by the hour after May 1st and run ten hour if they so elect. They may run all night if they will agree to the union scale of wages that applies to a day of nine hours, after which, time and a half must be paid for all overtime. Here is where the milk iu the cocoanul conies in, and the Carpenters'...Union will see to it that the mill owners don't have it all themselves. : THE FIELD OF LABOR., There is Talk Among the Store Clerks of Organizing a Union, THE OBJECT IS EARLY CLOSING. Plenty of Work for the Carpenters Notos of Interest Concerning the Various Trades, Quite a number of store clerks in the city have expressed themselves as being anxious to form a union iu order to in-augurate an early closing movement that would become general all over the business pert of the town. Such a movement is not averse to the proprietors of the stores at all, provided that all the business places will closo at the same time and all keep strictly to the agreement. It is a hardship that falls equally upon employer and em-ploye, this seuseless habit of keeping open so late at night, for live nights in the. week, and so very, very late on Saturday night. It is all wrong, and there never can be any valid reason ad-vanced why it should continue any longer. 'The banks close promptly at 3 o'clock every afternoon and no objection is raised by the public; and why? Sim-ply because the bankers formed a com-bination to all closo at that time, and i no uung is uoue. The law courts begin at 10 a. in. and close at 4 p. m. The public, offices, city and county, do the same and who can prevent it? .Docs the public sutler from it V A long list of the various branches of business that follow this rule conld be cited as evidence that tho public innen- - enal is not to blame for, the shameful state of affairs at present existing in the store business, but on the contrary it can easily be shown that the trouble rests almost entirely with the store-keepers themselves. The brewers of Salt Lake until piite lately all worked twelve hours per day. At last they formed a union, and now these same brewers work but ten hours, and the beer interests do not suffer thereby. A union of store employes would bring about the same results, especially could they secure the help of the "Fed-erated Trades" to sustain them in their just demands. Let them go at it in the right way and they would soon be as-tonished at the good results that would come about through a little effort. The old plan of getting up a list of storekeepers agreeing to close at a cer-tain hour, has often been tried and just us often failed, from the very fact that it was not firmly demanded by the clerks as their just right, and hence, "one by one the roses fell." Six o'clock at night is quite late enough for stores to keep open, no matter what anyone says to the contrary, as can be shown by lengthy argument at any time, f c r poor and not calculated to sustain a very largo population, such as is found elsewhere in China. Mr. Wisel remained at the Jchol mines until February 14, lHflO, when he started on his return journey, lie trav-eled as before, by cart to Tientsin. The river was now free, of ice, and at Shang-hai he went on board the Chinese Mer-chant Steamship Navigation company's steamer to Shanghai. Thence to Yoko-hama he was u passenger on the French mail steamer, where he embarked on the l'aciiie mail steamer City of Kio do Janeiro for San Francisco. No stops wero made between Yokohama and San Francisco on the return voyage, and iu eighteen days after leaving the Japanese port he arrived, April 20, 180, iu San Francisco, having been absent sixteen months. Mr. Wisel reached his home in Salt Lake last Thursday looking none the worse for his long journey and many hardships. He has some idea of return-ing to China in four or live months to engage in gold quartz mining on the coast of tho yellow sea for Russell & Co. This firm is composed of Ameri-cans, and has been established in busi-ness on the China coast for forty years. CHINESE SILVER MINES, The Travels of a Salt Laker Through tho Iuterir of China and Back Home. MONGOLIA AND ITS INHABITANTS, A District Barren of Interest to Ameri-cans and Not Very Rich in Ore, diaries Wisel left Salt Lake Decem-ber 3,188, under contract to Lee Hong Choug, the viceroy of China.to reopen, in a practical shape, some old silver mines situated iu the province of Mon-golia, China. He sailed from San Fran-cisco, December 8, on the Pacific Mail steamship (lily of Kio do Janicro, and on the passage called at Honolulu. At Yokohama he look passage on the Jap-anese mail steamer Tokio Maur, and arrived at Shanghai January 14, 1881), Owing to the frozen condition of lhe river Mr. Wisel traveled inland from Shanghai to Tieiilscn, a distance of 1200 miles. About ollO miles of this journey was performed by canal, and the other 000 miles by cart draw n by mules, lie passed through the Hooded and famine-stricke- district of Whong Hoe or Yellow river. Arrived at Tient-sin, ho again took cart for the Jchol silver mines, 400 miles further on, Mr. Wisel found that the mines were situated in a mountainous country al-most stripped of wood. At one limn it had been heavily covered with timber, but the natives had cut this nearly all down. In scattered patches, however, there still remained oak, elm, birch, chestnut and a little pine. The moun-tains are none of Ihcm lofty, the alti-tude not exceeding 3ri00 feet, and com-ing down to about 1700 feet above Sea level. The .pre 'is found in; small but well defined ledges, and is principally silvor-Jcad- , running from forty to five hun-dred ounces to the ton, the per-centage of lead being low. These mines have been worked iu a very primitive way by the native's for close on to a century, and havo;pro-riuce-large quantities of silver, accord-iu- g to Chinese reports from 10,000,000 to 18,000,000 ounces. . The people of the mining district and lhe surrounding country are called Mongols; after' tho province in which they live.' They are a' hardy, well-forme-race, larger in stature than the Cantonese of the south and of a more docile and a more even About half the men, wear queue. The chief food of these, people is produced from millet seed, rice not growing so far north. Their meat dietis beef, mutton, goats' flesh and chickens. Vegetables similar to those in tho United States arc extensively grown, and also u poor grade of pears, peaches and ap pies.' Wheat is cultivated to a lim-ited extent. The country is thickly but not densely populated. The soil is I Rio GrandR Western Railway. SCENIC LINE OF THE WORLD The only Traits- - The only line to continental Line Denver with no passing through v,tan0e f ears,and Salt Lake City, jfo Central Time tabic to take effect from SuTeinber p, 1889: , EAST BOCND TRAINS. No. U No. 4 Atlantic Atlantic Mall. Express Leave Ogden p:in srZ wSZTS"!!.1!? 10:80 m- tmr&E: 10:.W a.m. 7:15 5 m WEST BOUffD TRAINS. r NaT" No. .1 Pacific Pacific Mail. Express !ve SenI?r 8:00 a.m. 8:00 p.m. ArT. f '' Riv :) a.m. 10:35 n.m. Wiv.?XrnKlver 10:10 1': i Leave Provo 4:fl p.m. 8:00 S A ill TU, Arrive Salt Lake.. Mpm : Leave Salt Lake 7:(p m 7:wtm ArrtveCWwi am! Pullman Palace and Biuret Sleeping cars on Horton ."HthrouKh trains. recliniug chair cars free between Salt Lake Uty and Provo on Trains 1 and 3. . C. DODGR, J. H. BENNETT, Oen. Manager. (Jen, PaM. Ag, J |