OCR Text |
Show ' I APRIL ,24, 1890. - THE SALT LAKE TIMBs THURSDAY EVENING, a ' (.. . ( , Propeller J. L. Davis ESfATE1-- I . iMf)v) REAL XiOts, jBIocIes guid. Acreage. CENTER STREET comprising - B( Residence Lots 180 SXJB - DIYISION ! RANGING IN PRICE FROM $150 TO $300. 'Those Choice Residence Lots are on the Main Business street Provo, and are Now on the Market. Gall on or Address, PROPBLLOR J: L. DAVIS. - sssPROVO, UTAH.ss KELLY & COMPANY Printers, Blank-Boo- h Makers and Stationers. No. 46 W. Second Soutn St., , Bait Lake, - Utah OUR facilities for doing first-cla- ss Job are uf the newest and best, QOOKS Kuled, Printed and Bound to Order, D Samples of Railroad, Mining, Bank and Mercantile Work always on hand, COMPLETE line of Office Supplies, most approved labor-savin-g and economical inventions, PRICES LOW. CALL ON US. -- Commercial National Bant:- - OF SALT LAKE CITY. Capital $250,000.00 No. 11 E. First Booth street. DIBECTOBS : H. G, Raich, Pres't. R. M. Downey, Vioe-Pre- Phos. Marshal, F. K. Hcrymser, P. H. Auerbaoh, Y. O. Bacon, John J.Daly, W.P.Noble, J. W. Donnellan, Cashier. Transacts a general banking business in all branches. Sella Sitfht Drafts on the principal cities of the world. Issues Circular Letters nf Credit and Postal Money Orders on oil parts of Europe and the Orient. Collections promptly at-tended to. Loans money at the lowest rates and on the best terms prevailing in this market. '! ' --EXCLUSIVE DEALERS I-N- 3 111111. Sole Agents for James Means $3 Shoes. ; 11, Spencer & Kimballjp 160 Main Street, Price Sc Clark, Dualers in Poultry and all Kinds of Game FKTJ1TS, VEGETABLES, ETC., IN SEASON. No. 58 V. First South Street, OpposiU Kimball Block. Capital Fully Paid, $400,000.00 Union National Bank, UNITED STATES DEP0SIT0BY Transacts a Genera! Banking Business. Safe Deposit Vaults, Fire and Burglar Proof. Rents from $5 to $25 per Annum. J. It. WALKKR, President, M. II. WALK Kit, VU 31. .l.CHEF.SM.VN. Cashier, I.. II. FAKNSWOUTII, Asst.Cnuhlor, J. KWALKWt, Jr., Asst. Cashier., WE HANDLE Business, Residence aM Country Property, IMPROVED AND UNIMPROVED. Parties wishing to buy or sell Realty, had belter see us. Our motto: "Small Profits and Quick Turns." Correspondence bolicited. W. L BARRET & CO., 207 S. Main St., Salt Lake City, Utah. P. AUERBACH I BE WE CARRY AN IMMENSE STOCK OF FINE DRY GOODS Millinery, Cloaks, Ladies' Underwear, Ti mings. Carpets, Curtains, Ladies' u Children's Shoes, Boys' and Chi-ldren's Clothing, Jersey Suits, Kilts, Etc. We Offer This Week 300 Child's stylish Dresses, just received, at the following tempting prices: ' e years at M.7h; 8 years, M; 10 years. S4.25, and 13 years, $4,50. The materials, v workmanship of these Dresses make them THE BARGAINS OF THE SEASON Iff YOU WANT AN INFANT'S COAT OR CLOAK NOTE THE FOLLOWING PKICI Infants' Union Cashmere Coats in Tan. Blue and i 'ream. at $1.50, 11.75 and fine Coats in Cream and Tans, fci.aft. &i.7F. 3. W. Hrt: Splendidly embroidered Infants' Long Cloaks, at fci.75, 83.75, W.50, ti.iS, m Cream and Tan. 3) pieces don Me wide Dress Goods.ln new Spring shades, at 2iVtn. a yaid. 1 lot of Ladles' fast Black Hose, full regular, at 90c sold everywhere at .Ton. 1 lot of striped, fast Black Hose, colored toe and heel. Wc.. cheap at ' 1 lot of Child's fast Black, ribbed Lisle Thread Hose, sizes 5 to 84, at 30c.. e?"I?,,.frV 1 lot Boys' fast Black Bicycle Hose, full English, double knee and toe, at II. jfa, 1 lot each of Ladies' ribbed vests, just opened, at 12iic., aoc., sc., 30c-- . UP 10 value in this cltv. 1 lot each of high Novelties in Ladies' Windsor Ties, at 3Bo., fiOc.., 75c. f; . j We have received quite an Assortment of Ladles' ready-mad- e Calico ana saw which we oner at very LOW PRICES, from Wuc. each upwards. ,di 30 pieces each Colored Modras Scrim in latest designs and colorings, at 10c., JX- 1 lot of Black and Colored Silk Panels, at $1.35 each, worth $3. Ouv Carpet Bepartmes Has received beautiful Gobelins. Moquets, Velvet, Body Brussels and Ingrains, 3Sc. per yard to JS..S0 pur yard. Mnt Also new Curtains in Swiss Tambour, Nottinghams and Silk, ranging from tl to OUR CHILDREN'S CLOTHING DEP Has received a splendid lot of Jersey Suits ranging from 4 to 8 rears, and Kilts tW&' to 6 years. For variety of style, taste and workmahshly they are unsm passed. Prices ranging from 3.50 to 18 each. Mail Orders Solicited &om Fai and Hear! We Guarantee Satisfaction, or Monej B ESTABLISHED 1864, ONE PRICE TO A F. AUERBACH & BR AGENCY WARWICK HIGH-GRA- DE SAFETY BICYCLE. I oarry a stock of SAKJ2TY BIC VOLES at $35.00, $:l.1.00, $10.00, $110.00, $7.1.00, $113.00, lo3.00, TKICVCL1M and In pnrchaslnK from me you have a stock to select from and do not have to wait. Largest Stock and Lowest Prices on Sporting Hoods, Guns, Cutlery, etc. 81I0T-ti(JN- N AT COST. Uicjtle and (Jim Kopairing. Agent CALHiKAPH WRITING MACHINE Carbons, Kibbona and Paper. . :m. K.. EVANS 224 W. 2d South St., Salt Lake City. MIDDLEMISS, VAN DYKE & CO.. Real Estate and Mines, 156 Main St., Salt Lake City, Utah. WELLS,FARG0&C0'S baitz:. Salt Lake City, - Utah BTJY8 AND BULLS EXCIIANKK, MAKES transfers on the principal oilies nf the United States anil Kuropo, and on all points on the Pacilio Coast. Issues let tors of credit, available in the prin eipal cities of the world. HpeeiRl at tention given to the selling of ores ana bniiion. Advances made on consignments at lowest rates. Particular attention given to collections hroughont Ctnh, Nevada and adjoining Terri-orie- s. Accounts solicited. OOURKSrONDXNTS: Wells, Fargo & Co London Wells, Fargo & Co New York Maverick National Bank Boston FirRt National Bank Omsha First Nationsl Bank Denver Merchant's National Bank CbicaKo Boatmen's Savings Bank St. Louis Wells, Fargo A C o San Francisco 7. E. X3COIj"Sr, Jg'Ont. NOBLE, WOOD & GO, hwmJi The only Exclusive Hatters In Salt Lake Yonman'a Celeprated Hats, best in the World, Spwially Manufactured forttoble. Wood A Co., Salt Lake CiLr, D tan. Iamks H. Baoor FbaniL. Holland President. Cashier. Bant of Salt Lake. 3ALT LAKE CITY, UTAH. General Banting Business Transacted. Interest Paid on Time Deposits. Exchange Bought and Sold. Money to Lend on Real Estate from one to rive years time. THE BOY . AT EIGHTEEN. The Thine Be Should Knew, Become of the Great Advantages lis Him. A youth of eighteon, who is to hare the best chances, should know how to study, and how to do it with enthusi-asm also, because he has learned the les-son at least five years before. Enthusiasm, guided and controlled by knowledged as to the use of the powers, is the true life of a living man, ajive with the spiritual forces. Everything else is in sleep, or is dead. I make my starting point, and my guiding thought, the thought that he should learn how to stly, and should gain enthusiasm, at the beginning. In the first place, as I think, the study of language may bo most hopefully and successfully started in these earliest years. The boy moves joyously where the man finds only labor and weariness. The children of our households today may gain the some thing that we gained at five and twenty, and far more than we gained, when they are ten or twelve; and the progress is like the joyful song f their childhood, when they are led along the rational method. They grow up into French or German, as it were, 8 they grow up into English, and talk, and read, and sing in these languages just as they do in their own. Why should tbey not breathe enthusiasm with very breath of their learning? It was with a great price, indeed, that we ob-tained this freedom. But they were free "born. Let me say here that, in my judgment, very boy who has the best chances ought to have the mastery of the French or German language (I should say of both) before he is 18 years of age a mastery kindred to that which he has of English, He should, also, have such a .knowledge of Greek and Latin as will mean power in and over those languages, and will enable him to read them witli ease and with satisfaction as he enters upon his college course. The man who knows the ancient languages as he ought to know them, will never contend against their holding a place in the education of all widely educated and roundly edu-cated men. The boy who has the best chances ought, in the years between twelve and eighteen, to be sot forward on his course in history and the beginnings, at least, of the literature of his own language. My feeling is that the boys who have the best chances should know something of music, and should, at least, see the opening of the door toward art studies. The opinion is now well established, I suppose, that all persons can be instruct-ed in Tocal music with a measure of suc-cess. I believe that the same thing can be accomplished iu the line of instru-mental music. That the mathematical studies should be pureued energetically before the youth has reached the age of which we are speaking, I may add, is admitted by all. The men of the former generations and the men of our day agree at this point. President Dwight ia The Forum. STT-tapea- re is well appreciated Dy the higher educated natives in India, and last year a large number of his plays were Dublished in the vernacular. "As You Like It" and "The Winter's Tale" were translated into Tamil and Telegu for Madras; "The Taming of the Shrew" came out is the Punjab, and "Humlet," "Much Ado About Nothing" and "The Comedy of Errors" were great favorites in the northwest provinces. |