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Show , THflSAlVMiAKE TIMES, TUESDAY KVF.vrvr, MAY 13. 1800. ?t - --Propeller J. L. Davis ' ; : ',:"v" jifai. l;stati-- : X-iOt-s9 Bloclss and Acreage. ENTEE STREET 7 - compI" ; 1 1 SUB - DIVISION ! J80 Residence Lots 180m RANGING IN PRICE FROM $150 TO $300. hose Choice Residence Lots are on the Main Business street oi vWfB Provo, and are Now on the Market Call on or .A.ca.dLress, PROPELLER J. L. DAVLS. .ry':'-- hesproVO, UTAH. . Ib --'SALT lake construction STEAM AND HOT WATER HEATING jSM' H' our graviiv 8 st f beating we uvm'uI any per- - JteS" M'&W eepliible deposit from the waler, it being used over and tSOx, jSHtfSK (L over indetiiiatelv. Hot air furnaces are at best uncer- BjMrgrT 'hil we can alwavs guarantee that a steam or hot rS&ff&lF water upparalns put in l.V us will work. In mild Sa weather also a hot water healer can be regulated to a nicelv. while, nilh a stronger tire, comfort can be cured throughout Ihu hoimo on the roldest day. Hv this ffl system economy of coal, minimum of attention, and flue- - dom from riust'is assured. " thespexce --:THE SPENCE -:- - HEATER:- - HOT WATER HEATER. can . ,.vu .,1 our Store Room at jg 61 FIRST EAST ST. SALT LAKE CITI F. Auerbach & Bro. Special Sale of Embroideries In 44 yard lengths, at prices to make you regret not having bought more of them, " ! 200 tiirocs of 42-inc- h Swiss Flouncing in l.ttest t!r-- . " $ signs, hcmstiU hed, rtc, at 35c, 80c. 1.10, i. oanill 5 $1.60 per yard. 300 pin cs 32-iru- :li and 27-i- m h Child's Kmhroidc ml iH jjj SkirtinRS, in Hamburg and Swiss, newest t !f:cts, atf gbs 57 Ac 7m" 'x--1'1- 1 JH-- r yard. 'uuvviUd C v jastonishiMl. "1 J 1000 pieces Kinbroicbru-s- , raningjrom one-halt- ) --r's Jjincli to incites wide, at 1 5( . sitcjtfc, 6:.;Si: t 45C 55 6 antl 75f . . . - . ' " We will ofTer 2C00 pairs of Ladioss ancI(,Mk-.r(- Silk' S S Mitts, only 2 pairs to each customer, at'.iocu pair. f Kid in ail tin l$C) P'l,rs ai!icij' Gloves, S Z leading shades, at tjoz a pair; of Rvalue at $ 1:50. 2 ' J Our Cloak Department offers all- - its rich S:ll q Wraps, All-lac- e Wraps. Cloth Connennras, (:i,thj .2 f Newmarkets and Headed Wrajs etc., at heavy re.', ductions,' to make them sell iitii kly. I " $ o Wraps mark d d nvn to $20, and so on in pro-- . ! 0 portion, at 115. ito, 17.50, $6, $.',.25 and :.$. .m I lot each of Ladies' 1 louses at 60c, : and $1. . I M " l lot each of Ladies' Summer Skirts at 25c and.' 7j 45c less than the cost of material. ; Mil VQfjJ TO PRINCIPAL POINTS EAST, WEST, NORTH andjOUTH THE CITY TICKET OFFICE. Union Pacific SYSTEM. MOUNTAIN DIVISION- - Tlie Only Unt carryltiff th Cntt4 Btslil Ovnrland Mall. IHrn-- l eonnwtlorii hv vrnrn alll'olnu Nortli and ISast, NBWTIMECARD March 2, 1890. ; 1UH CEMTRAL DISTRICT I I jWe ofler 5 Bargains in Dress Goods Come and nee them an l you are urn to ayanI l? p!eeJ! 6 lots of Children's New and Stylish Lace and Iimbrokkry Caps, also Infant's Christening Caps, etc., at 15c. 20:, 25c, 35c, 50c and 75c, worth 50 per cent mere. i Passenger Trains Arrive aa1 Leave it Salt Lake City u Mm: (lOISli KOBTII. thom thk NotrrH. .r K . A,unt(: t Mall Allam!-KaslMal- l - and ttat i Nrlhro : Park City A Ctah & Northern Local . .WM a.m. r P-- Atlantic Expn-w......- 'li'Z' Pnrtland and Bull fcil.rApm. Poitiand uU Butte mJ Mall Jj, Ej(,rM1( 100 p.m. mihv(Fti.i 10:10a.m. Juab Expre aio'm '""" rnr-- WE',T- - r, iv- weit 4:..p m. , .., , H'jf ni. ' : . -: ? Salt Xxa-ic- a S "Western. Z3itrlct. for lrmWD, Wlnr CltT. Kar P.K-rTraiD- Salt L- a- dally -Pt uxliri etc.. at 7:iu a. m. Kturams. arrlTlwr at JO p- - m. : . x:scz,-CEiT- Z Blurt: Pnl"n TT p, 2K-- liiVt Lak to Ovr-a- a. th U Throne S.r P W K-- Cttr. jrvrpARKERr :C-J-RES;,- I. Atit Cen'l r'tnenftf AftM . ' ' ,: ' , Cb' Naluwk al (Or. t Blr ff 2-- U vr.tm If"!! th! Klu liwlla lAun W'. . , M'rflwrf I ci'l nUirtwHr, Itti down I)smk Tl at BlnrKi olifrst Ufm. mjijcioiS If" 11 , lr rbp a I adtTsfcirU, lo r Kit .iif. ii Tillrl lmz1 aad Hit M.liiil''.t"'l"e T;..tl..7,p-r.a;- P ".S'lta. UM a;,. ,oplf ra.h. K, y.nl. p 0. let rfc Wlw .. . nmCntli H Ji t HrDe. l.te, B;.K!!i'iiu,ui w ' .,' v lit,iHB4itnrk. ini4bii,)."tiiii..i!:. i lot ii-- of H.mf'Hob Bd- - arf rmAiti arrE , prradiat 7aa4ll.la. lutaaulla. Silk and Dress Goods Remnants at Half Price! Com One, Come All. - One Price lo AIL Established Twenty-si- x Years in the Same Block. F. Auerbach & Bko. Car lond wool and hair mattresses at ! S. K. Marks & Co. funds for dolls uuil toys to coax tho li !l(!.lliniii(H into school, confessing li thf columns of thai interesting journal thai they oven pay tho parents to a. low their children to come and l taught, rather than have the poor hiii, grow uji in ignorance. And, on the other hand, in Hie mean time, in our own beloved South Cam lina, nearly oiiP-lial- f I ho popu.atioi over 10 years of ago nr not read. In Louisiana, Ala bama. Georgia and Mississippi fron 40 to S3 pin- - cent of those, millions ar. as unlettered as the Hindu peasant, a superstitions as the Chinese, as 1111 washed as the Cossack and as ready t use the knife and pistol as the semi-sa-age of Corsica. And this is a country where "we hold it to be a nt trill li that all met al'J created equal." O tcmpom, C mores: What chance lias the southern con vicl had for a "pursuit of happiness?' Whatmeaning ha "life and liberty' tor the dead mind of the passion-c- Siavcd illiterate, surrounded from birth with a stone wall of ignorance and prejudice? Oh! most deeply shadowet' American pot. e m'st thou afford to de nounuo tlio black of the Rnsiiau kettle? WH.TY IN' CONVICT CAMPS. He Nlhcria In I nele Hum's Do- - peaks well for the generous iin- - ul the Americans that massi-ng are called and petition) eirou-l- o protest against cruelty to pris-on Kiis-ia- . while this svm-t'- - interest in a little talked of is attake, is it not now appropri. wbserves a Boston Transcript flto ask, if the e.af is to bo held msililti for cruelties committed on 'inn convict, whom shall bo held usibic foisiiniliiriTiiolties inflicted r to ithern prisons? a question that can not longer bj evaded, lor. already mil stories concerning tlntreat-"-I our convicts are ncMvely eir-- throughout ICirope, founded Anierieau rtieial reports. '! gone so far that in a' work irNMis mid Prison llisuipline." I'ub.isheil by a proinine.iit for-alte- r limiting troin these which have not boon the author acluallv concludes, T'iii niMiil.s many missionaries to , l Africa. Hut lhre is u vast! "' "Hwr in many of her own t ites '.vi'inoval of tlue. liorriblo prison l these jails in ValtU-ulii- r I'Plieil tin. wordsof King Oscar wwleii: In truth heathenism ls "nii'h l.ottei- within prisons, "iwnsdistaut tribes rtrn hHII are shut up in strong stockades, guarded bv bloodhounds and by watch-men parading around, armd with re-volvers,,- which they freely use with deadly effect in cases of attempts to es-cape." Atone place near North Caro-lina, 140 di'd within two years, anil nine were killed trying to escape. In Texas, out of 2'.'l deaths iu ten years, eighteen were killed outright. By all means let us have the electric light of pulilie criticism turned upon the d irk corners, even to the uttermost parts of the earth. Hut shall we make ourselves known as the Jellabys of the civilized world, whose own national Imuish is at sies and sevens, while wo are laboring to reconstruct all the rest of creation? If wo meet to publicly reprove the czar, have we no message to send to the governors of those states which rival Siberia? Is it not us pitliotic to read of a prisoner shutdown under a burning sun ' for goin out of lino to get waler as of oonvii t s killed in a land of ice and snow? Have we noth-ing to say of that infamous cstahl's'i-meiit- . so deadly in its effects that it has been known for many long years under the common life of "Tim Death Hole of Kentucky?" Verily we need not go abroad to liiid sentences of imprison-ment changed by ignorant iir brutal kfepura to sentences of painfully l'nger-lu- g death, nor lo hnar the counterpart of the. suffering Russian g sigh. ''God ate of natiit-u- . " , 'I'miivictciimpsof i.ur'Aiiioricii tlil women niV confined -- in lulsin) pns xvilh il Uordo of ninmns who ,roftWt'jiothiii Itaueii.V Truly l!ls ;.il bedl '"'i1:1' c"11 bo 110 itndoly .Will '.'' 'iHmusibio .Hiuiusrf-it.i!.- ; 'K'o ortvhitivmnli' H'm m mii.Vi c'li.miu uji ,.n,)lnv s w, okiinti t '; Wiuies of uoiiv.iou. which lias f ',;,;7 for cluldhood iior ilro, .' - weaker' sc.x.V. ' If'i . !" ''"'""' iliiit eon- - h, T,kei !in,l until iwlileudin their tlWs; It 7e"Hy iidmitte.l llmt in re-.,- , '"I'Piiik, "blm-- mid white. w"'neii, l,;lve been treated ;3T ."'P'n-l- timf Tonnowo world 11. .:. kl11'"!? convicts off iLttheen- - is ii heaven and tliu cmporoi- - lar uay."r' A looi'. ignontnt woman. in deorgui. oulfttgeouslv punished for Some offense biirii '.of destitution and itnoraniw. Js not tip picliiresgue an ohjiicU ii we and educlvtod womlin in Kiissia who eiminiits treason prkatti;mpts ussas-sinaVio-but fltill it iloet not sound well to-he-ar the;, world talking about Ameri-can lirutality to eft'n ;lgiMimnt convn wblneu, ov of. ffuldMll locked up at Intliil labor in seminaries of vice, or or niitle eonviets dmiberalelV beaten or Avoi'kel and started to death. VVe wAihl not liku'tiie civilred world to know of the discoveries made a month or two ftgo in regakl to the kin. ot food force I upon convicts in Kentucky. And as we draw tip our reolut ions, wondering thai the nobles of 11 issia do not rise tip to reform their prison sys-tem, do not let 111 forget that, Kugland thus likewise wonders at hearing m) sound of popular: protest from the American nobility against the bono , wil hin our own gates. It may maki s mnrn charitable to Kussia to remembei :.;e,,,i" r.,ll!! ot M7 per 1000. ,"l7'1 r. is in a country whose .,, rate has never been u!' ' ui 1000. MppL w are toltl. these oeatiircs "are worked with .''''Minder tho old slave-- , time, not only with '''Uith a double-bamde- d l mght they ui-- huddled 4. ,;! women hi a- ' log elose. ,llu f0l1 witr, "in T'i-nights- , their l ";lr,iiysof sickness are ,. .tf, ,l:lVk holes of ;,.! in food, poorly rfe.. f,,m) 'lnn until dark l iU.','1 V1"1 eontinuallv under .tla. ii.g d(,,,,.lsif,g ;. ' 'tin I, " 'lo ,,ot die serve out "ls t faut tbat mi'iiii ' are put to as u gPU )ignt p,,,,,,!, t0 M?'rl ,"ll,10l''inotes from the ': i,ni1(; - (who vis-- : , l"'iwns) that "In one ..vs ;s"'ent in (Jeorgia, two ars V lml "nder sentence T'a,.r ' stealing a Iwx of 1,1 association with ."iwchanu tera. In these Niiltntiery inadeiiiate atten-is- . . ,le separations cve of At night convicts that Wilkes Booth and Agnes h. n. are ever held in scant esteem m n own land; that such prop he s lind t uur honor alrtoad--if they tmd it anyw here, nd we might also do well to remenibe that our chief ruler shows no sign of either knowing ornng hat cnmmals m the w .Ids golw on amongst of Georgia. rebukes ' and on While on "public missionaries and our "million lm s nd Hh . slons" abroa- d- ke seraph.m ubim-contin- ually do fly. the t, side world is wagging its tongue over the "frightful illiteracy amount of crime ''fJ" mous of Lmla a tives in I he southern part hUtoriH.i is w ar..- - States " A Jaanese kin.lly people (see ine n i Kornhardt'it Literary V andalism. New York Commercial Advertiser. "I remember,"9itid my bookish friend with a laugh, "it funny thing which Saruh Hernhardt did in our store when she was last here, She dropped in one morning ul of course kjl were exceed-iugl-iinxioiis to wait upon her. Finally it resolved itself as iiiy duly nod I soli! her (tiite a bill of books-- . J showed Ihc (ireat bvery ill tentioii, and she seemed pleased. Just as sli was roIii out she reacliod for my, pencil and asked me soniethiiig i" French w hich I did not undcHlaiid. ' Sec i Aft that I did not catch he!' meaning she looked all amiind 011 the counters, but apparently did not see what she w Hilled. I hen quick as a Hash, before I could compre-hend her aim, she took up a volume ol one of the verv best sets of iseott in the store. Iionu I 'in tree, calf op.-- ed it to the bastaru uages. wrote somcihiiiff on it calmly tire owl the leaf, handed it back to me, smilo.l and went out. Oil looking lit the leaf, she had written on it a pass for two to her performance that evenini. Hut she did it at the cost of nearly ruining one of our best sets of books in the store." The Successor of Uaoiel Webster. New York Sun. Henry Cabot Lodge walked over from the house of representatives to the senate chamber Monday morning, accompanied by an old gentleman who wore a heavy gray overcoat, a hig h hat of the style of forty years ago, and car-ried a large eaue. The old gentleman said smilingly to the doorkeeper: "Oh. ve" I have tlie privilege of the floor I "was a senator once, but probably fore vo.tr lime. I mil also an ev of the house." Then he y r said that he wa Robert (,. Winthrop and that he was senator from July. 1W0. to rebruary. 1 . hav-int- t tilled the unexpired term of iMniel Webster. IKin- - His B to Krtp It. Washington Post. ' "Are vou keeping thw store?'; asked a customer who was tired of waiting. Well I'm doing my best. Ihere havi- - been 8 ixteen or geventeen men that I owed money to trying trying to take it away from me, but l m keeping it up to date. j |