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Show THE INTER-MOUNTAIN REPUBLICAN, What, the "400" Ar e Wearin SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1907. ~ plished wonders along that Ine without interfering with the discipline of penal institutions, Thousands have been saved for better lives. simply through wise and just treatment durjing their Incarceration as prisoners. By Mrs. Cholly Knickerbocker. | There are so many fields where their labor can be turned to most profitable account for the state which has been |; put to .so much expense on account |} of their crimes that it seems just and | good financial management to derive diseased lected, citizens and has been wholly neg- the conditions surrounding oF | them are exactly what they were a quarter or more of a century ago, "Render unto Caesar that which is Caesar's" is a Biblical edict, and. is as obligatory now as when it was promulgated centuries past. Major Sylvester, one of the ablest ehiefs of police in the United States, Says truly: "Crime was, is and alWays will be, and it will follow in- | as much revenue as possible out of crease In population and advance with | their services. prosperity in these progressive, if not } According to the reports of the extravagant, times, as did excesses and j authorities as to the present extravadissipations in the period ef ancient gant methods, it would be a matter Rome, unless the preventive, detective of economy for the government to inand penalizing measures are modern)sist upon there being a modern peniized to meet conditions." tentlary and jail located some distance Washington has recently received a east or southeast from the present |severe~ excoriation from Eix-Mayor j location of the jatl, where more land |MacVickar, of Des Moines, Iowa, on j could be secured cheaply, and sell the|account of the condition of the streets | present property for industrial. pur-)}and sidewalks, It is difficult to im- ; poses. The poor people who bought] agine. what he might have sald had their homes in the section where the|he visited the District jail. He would j jail was subsequently. located have /have assuredly added the jail to his been obliged to keep them, as no one] list of things to be condemned in this would live near a jail if they could do}city of "the greatest possibilities and | otherwise, and these people are obliged | worst resulis of any city he had ever to endure all the unpleasantness of | visited,' | proximity as a jail to a and thing so objectionable If all enterprising and law-abiding its accessories. he | citizens will exert themselves in bring- probabilities are that if judiciously | ing these all important matters before managed the present property could] congress, it woes without saying that be sold for a Sum that would go far| congress would be willing to appropritoward liquidating the expense {n-|ate the money to enable the District eurred in buying the MAnd and build-| of Columbia to keep abreast with moding a twentieth century penitentiary] ern humane methods in the handling and jail that would be some credit to] of undesirable citizens who violate the [ine District of Columbia, the seat of; law and must be controlled and supthe government. ported at public expense, What is Much has been done to make Wash-| done must be done quiekly, or the reington one of the most beautiful efties! sults of present methods will produce Jin the jtary world, that and the it is a sad all commen-| important work of} such be a crop of criminals impossible to MRS. that it will or better restrain JOHN A. LOGAN. Wu Ting Fang as He Is The report of the appointment of, exclusion laws by our congress, It Is Wu Ting Fang as Chinese minister to! pretty well established that when he |} the United States has called out some! returned to China he designed and set | } very frank comment on his personal-|on foot at Shanghai the boyeott of ity Perhaps the best pen picture} American goods, which was so disasfollowing from the} trous to our commerce and which put in peril our good relations wit the and erratic career] Chinese government, n this country is well known to the | Mr. Wu is bright and witty; his |} American public He was popular; European education by the mission|} With the newspaper reporters and cor-|arles grafted on his Oriental cunning, respondents, for he delighted to be | makes him an interesting personality; interviewed and have his views ven-|he is amusing, even through indis} tilated in public But he' was a con- | creet, as an after-dinner talker, and ;Stant source of anxiety to the state| great fun for the reporters; but he fs at partment, because of his utter als not such a representative of the great disregard of diplomatic proprieties, his| Chinese empire as is needed now more flipy it vay of discussing interna-| than ever in Washington, and not such flonal questioi and the intercourse|a diplomatic character as would be of diplomat vith other departments/ consonant with the ‘straightforward t the government His unannounced and frank inte recourse of Secretary visit to the capital to remonstrate with] Root. The affairs of the orient are be- the senate tlo attracted brought of B-Mrs. nel By C-Miss, Wagstaff of Good Wears of Pale on appropria- untversal upon and had him attention,| the would have any other Blue Appears eniffon to the United to publicly States he repudiate in the repeal of the of her wisest men, not fa did not| coolle KANAKA PRINCESS nia is It harder At no time re frills It of is not = urious Alfred that Re ee summer yet time ee relbioworn¢ to appear wel! hea int Ee have eee been for was, ae eer Ww the quite : rerethat ae of an white eee ares a lukx-|and i@eal coun-} : PEN PeeE omer nary. A the k conr-| veer eae 15 waistsimppart: ery l eieereéshoulderfullress. under of1 wit 10. This give was under front. The eibow, the drawn sa-narrow, slipped the plait frock t ne to|saw arf down stitched the inir "w Lug belt, ry af Pp below cuffs the] A] turned-down collar of flannel] was tached to the waist, and with it me. Ky at-| was] ke as to color. te On Par-! You | a ob of tlthe ; ee papper , i tthane ' Sat age ter ~ | on closely leeves to the figuré were rather 0gan iS ; S . an BY MRS. JOHN A. LOGAN. The citizens of Washington are debted to Mr.. Robert N, Harper ealline attention' to' the unwise humane and. extravagant way criminals accused erie handled in the capital ¢ In the first place, tt the District have had a ol peng oe ceecwntt ea ciletee vp lad yet ant gies boring é sini Mi audeeitle ‘criminals that could ake th t pon-| at ar or: | avoided if the past. and women efficient often long should * not: and term the. capable splendid District the penitentiary, RO eT aoe repenitentiary MOP DBA best ern possible prisoner: iat could BO are the And ne people actual and eat ,eaulpned. « ee yt Wien no tn Petarn 20 Cony ws oom rea- Ren ay the Gtplomatic motor approved be put in Its owner nprals to of the hearse. The eh pers use hearse and en last ° te appropriations { Por bulacan hot time IN NEW that is now necessary. a Was Kind ‘on' C , effect : \ Scottish | thereby fill up | ly they that means for their time have commit. | ica "] discourag- * form. Ve ng oy {umanitariay of and f a ah One of tl influences the jail. y a with rh moment they they thay a are ee shi Idi te uty aan a for recreathem, and with ey eG om ‘the | oe appro lations why be ‘Col mation are . 1ay Boston, of the merry glory ph ay a oVverde = Harris a man,.of ertence, claims the jail was ee t 200, whereas, with long ex-| with intended) the mul-| enouch have to the a eda oh jail, Holy his ialf wide-was ner few has no ere bt alt Umer oa a under wheat at the jail alternative but -s the best he dog," ade on such from cell ecessary It is conditions the tares to the jailer | chances of put quite to two and) nals sort the} the impossible) reformation. by keeping hopelessly Murnish kinds of steady | bodied yurchase of separate in land, opportunities employment ahd of all at the same ar Sl hosule Ee papel att Be horee h he| She Cre for alka desire cross tombsable; heads formed CaS aa to procure information, ten arms in feature. nt on family pedigrees with Utah, His- cents. and Research blazon of work cvoats-of- their proper colors a special Address Miss Lexington, care The Inter-Mountain Republican, or 44-66 East Twenty-third street, New York City. Sg eee Ownership of Railroads. (nformation developed by the prelimne rrangements for the coming anidl Peni PAMOCETRMEA COnICnIdGranar | Some of the the country big railway corporations of throws a striking and sig- Horas! nificant light on a change that has been ack, | solng on ® year in the ownership poh a align magnates have year in or sre by by for and "one one so after Hee Gardi-} lies. gun, a large,; stance, ue been The , to the land was confirmed} May ofITE Lord Sterling, and by|The Ta TRL ean eee in no rallway ¢ lah fin or 2 wise de-! really stocks become and Pennsylvania reports that Gar-/individual L635 Lion was : : 2 tribe of by Gardiner Gardiner ae +were. stockholders $8,898, an large securi- rallroad, for the number of increase has of inits increased 3,000 since last and an inurease of 8,000 In a year. New York Central, it books {s an-20 days before the payment of the next practl- ee Indians, Island, of of off but like her! by a rescued an Ee hen stabledA an In.|., u@ an Ir | plain. of almost the other maied one "9 a8 | own te a: ‘chter daughter ern, Union in every = stock in some elghty of aneticen e of the population, e Z ee 3. ; meaning of all this The American people value of erel years American the | manipulated have change thefs realize railways. railway stocks {value on most ‘the tightening graze |been cell and the big systems. It Is now "estithat fully 1.000,000 persons, or ery a tena mipiiatore tthere; h org 300 Oecattle tle Pacific ‘or financiers and kept a of the market securities. money the been compelled squeezed out ab of Pipl ohh aie sevhave fictitious In ma- to sell MiInflated bah lo stocks age in its sunny pastures, and five times | and tue investors have taken advantage as many sheep. The island Is stillWIIG in)| Sere of the ania opportunity to buy sound stocks possession of descendants ot Lion, bletealiation: less | : all time' who ,; undertaken, cally king living In a handsome M&aNn-' or house, with wife and two ehildren, and a retinue of servants The prin-/ ‘ for| able-| a the island into a lordship! reports are made by the Chicago, MIlto be called Gardiner's is-/ waukee and St. Paul, the Great NorthGardiner and cipal Build} and and AANA ES Longone Island|the and a/ownerspeople of long plantation, erecting of and manor, care the of Maine. pending upon New England or New| quarterly dividend instead of the 15 York and its owner was empowered! days as ailowed heretofore, because to make all laws necessary to church;/the number of stockholders has inand state. <A few years later the §0V-/| creased from 9,000 to 15,000, a gain of ernor of New York consented to the 75 per cent in the last year. Similar | them separated confirmed erimi- agricultural Industrial prisoners, of sent sea, Phi purchased a caveat by the rc agents SSE BST a a penitentiary and a jail on the land Bulld) them on plans for the future to distribute| hardened can, it being;from the chief, genealogical Sepulchre, horse. a ma ee Sat from the Indians Dutch blankets, black piled sp pulation and rapid. increase land not barely sufficient for the pres-| ne treater they are now. housing! ent, and have them so. divided that ENHIA that and number fier of cach; male and so female prisoners be a ae er Day" the arrival the| classified, that there may becan some Maria" In Those traveling down the pages | '!5S left to e reade de-| Way poast. An island ound-nine miles " aa Sa: in Rhode Isiand one of the A Sey cee acne the housetops that the "Innocent inNo more romantic story is found In! vestors" were oe pe poe Cee ‘ur national annals than that of Lion, | !¢gis!ation, and pnet oe impossible Lyon, Gardiner, the only realj}to secure money fo railway bettera | is} ments, the Mies i investors storv goes, that of this} ments, the the investo country y have hs ( ory » the lord, America of ours has ever been able to! been buying raliway stocks,-and that | and had a grant 1785, 1 ie ony ray Dase | accom-)| the colony." prowess of John ye Mis ey a Airts a aca anything / s , -tofarm provide acreage in connection penitentlary of land, 2 Boston. aes our midst What is needed is that, without delay, a tract of land should be secured and |extensive } sufficient before! England over the to "al lian sachem-on the night nuptials She was carried old figures} and given:to 210m) BS ing a bride-the the of lovely woman, his wife.!or Hneages, should correspona long cavalier hat and/the Genealogical Society of and was never without; Anthon H. Lund, president. in site safety acres fe ; erased Christopher yn his back as easily aS ied off the gates of the Another memorable feat ‘ our showed founders of King's chapel, Boston, waz also the founder of the town of Gardiner, Maine. him. Boston, Py, ron er a bing and neces-| without mOGern cP een Man. ‘There Pare Sey eenaretinkg the accused OF t a ed, in any Was Sir in i friend to cateh ef ele alien y generous to picturesque was be eS and 1,000 very d as a su-/ The Gar-/ diner has been the theme of prose, if} lot poetry On one occasion ie walked off with ten bushels of wheat | should | a great | eed « we Mio. active he Doddridge. ; Sylvester Gardiner of the his whole! branch of the family, g ex-) la MOS RADE se most there A Feasbn obsolete of patriotic services he in Linlithgows] vouchafed times Knight one! ot the living From AOE no tinued at the capital ii] o otire Or that " running tint is born he became he regarded ‘enses of the jail, the present structure} and provisign for other races and so eee A adequate and absolutely} blind to tha€gheeds of the unfortunate and the mathoda Ther island . . i ~'The.Gerdbier, rdcot: tis paesuktneaene committee Who dropped upon this continent, As if his august presence lent | ¢ ethis of colonial to houne| f the lo district as~'ta' ii ‘int " descri MargaretFrier alge . Gardiner, con- follow tthe the his long Spanish rapier A melodra-! torian's office, Sait Lake City natic personage he has ofteh figured| a in the pages of romance, and Long-| Miss Lexington has published about fellow writes of him: 200 family histories and can supply "It was Sir Christopher Gardiner, | coples at a nominal price. List of titles ener cinee- | a e sent to cell-mated hart the. 4hinMaier etter law ind which of owas work, written by in youth, vision panied by a He wore a aeavy cloak, . it: haa! yerienct Mr a leave ony and for this reason has been, Special abode of the eeaee called the first: governor of he Massachu-| The arms cut on eeGardiner setts. He had extensive grants of land} Stones at Gardiner's Island are in Salem and Danvers. He married, In| @ cheyron between two griffins' blishme "hg taking was said he was a friend of learning flower pilgrim was Richard Gardiner.|in every form. the Roe Tala poe Thomas Gardiner came over in 1624! Bishop of Winchester was spoken of to "oversee the planting of the coi-|as "the seat of eloquence, and the England, = chance soldier, pernatural so completeno Be- In the colonial records the name ap-! Characteristic of the Gardiners are pears as Gardener and Gardner, quite! Wit, eloquence and learning, Of one it frequently as Gardiner. The May-| h aoe te : can Land as { ; and ‘ Scott's whose life was Very profligate prop- th of Mr. Gardiner to 4 mulberry tree. Upon Gardener er. fe changed, a vout after what { tne LEXINGTON. Gardner, "Wayerly,"" +h : ELEANOR the death of Colonel James Gardin Kirt. rh Grant Have history. Stephen Gardiner, born 1483,)one, Captain Jcseph Gardiner was in at Bury St. Edmunds, was lord chan- | King Philip's war, and Colonel Thomas cellor of England and bishop of Win arene: Jeli dh at eae et = , , Romance: and Family Heroism, called "the twilight ofdays fable," they poetically have helped make| used a Character . of ee of t were ver enh 1%. eae iI b and Reward Both The Gardiners have been prominent | and one gold bar, a éoral necklace and in affairs all along the ages, ae nine ty = of silk, somewhat ‘damnified' YORK. done through the pollee of this city in order that the juvenile and first ofifender may be kept from the con- 0 and has 1s to tremendously coren d yo muldn't find of thisthan ' of Members f . regular service Immediately. ] then, means a martial sound, or clash"six diamonds, rubies small and great, says that it will enable fuing of arms, or Gardyner, one who|67 green stones, 69 other precious De epee tone in one-third lead a martial life. stones, silver bars _without number, mm | to} ar t pape Ike - io! a no quoting| "Give a] other aor ne dy " Aint BY ruf- If Verse as Gardiner, trimming stripes, Record Picturesque Gardvier.. ara tks onie seviations atl" here he had buried a box of treasure, 7 Jer, , © d 7. and said that if he never returned it this name, which is derived from. the belonged to the family. To the lady Saxon words "gar,'' a weapon, and the manor he gave'a present of "dyn. a sound:an: alarm. \Gardyn,; cloth of gold, a bit of which fs still : , orn cis family relic. In the buried box wera orna- tucking y * ate is will give ee CLs e . WOOT a the District of Columbia, up-to-date ‘such: in Shire lene r of facilities for handling the : eimirial country RO ee otask rroperl|y eral stowed convention- by the police, in ~ onc : janine cs caauuaDanae Possibly as a guaranty of speedy] funerals Berlin has acquired its first electric Honorable ' Figured and aie al! FAMI statesnot a "tha mat fev an four he Ours 1 : ‘contact aren CWwenty-roul < . | ' t« sufficient erimina habitual the» { f 1 is the stablishment of} eeery | every , ton whe that | provide hours and tion and education stigma, adage, m "th: weit " many in this nongions oe is i Or. eee there is in District Be Withataneine. tH) pies oerml the ay and FE Atheeonginement *k:in | €5 If the there et DEC that nee ee denizens of Few ae ment ing ore ' o.8 a 14 taminating profit by the labor of this veriest dullard is obliged hel wat ata like ‘to tell of their exploits { mer wonderful smartness in evading |- --- Sskand .dodeine authorities, in-} of| houses, work| cony if highest States, example stripes * the Washington in V-shaped Insertion pattern, tucked emplecement t ‘bi of United to The ar- demoralize each other, concoct: offenders | *P!racies and schemes for st ofv-ha contracting for their)in| ruinOfj the young been ‘profitable what use Men intelligent, are and latla more the send and most sedate tricky politician, an ‘ Achievement; ‘ . ' P Viste ci un -and. dow ed #5 Stinds d? hbrizontaliy. at 4 ct "ine ipp ited ecam ahoulder Lo ‘belt: with. ye tter wriably claiming that once has. been in prison there is the ‘goyern- ae West Vir~| Betting eikonal are. taken. easily be ; the of yund @ try to get rid of the should| oftentimes the old FREE yon es having Sina the The penitentiary the contract also! of these prisoners has keep for the the. privilege labor: ‘which ble land: eae I; Auniahab entlary state. "AL present s contrat vit at victed pense hich | BOurG se "| L on noice in-j for} iy "| in» ing plisse eeetnae and to Possesses mischief or Hence accused and fi na "4 sor- | Vengeance are often. put with CORE Mt A There has been so much attention Tigibles who ar invariably : ot irt- | given to prison reform in the last to prey upon "ep ai : wg are with | decade that there is much less cruelty net splat A . a are ‘usually volu- jm i SR atch OF COnyicts than for- | Convicted ty. - i i absurd epi Pee r as deny « smar ‘better nd { , y rs. can't nec ff< | sood puffs,|& simple lace down finely used, and: the it eee put together on rather origina From the yoke downward at ie y finely tucked ant clung Tt of the .much rehe no lace yoke was repeated as skirt. The wide lace and ilkPale odel center , ee narrow of . gown of Miss Susan Stres In thi rown .the.aurer clever manired The hiffon, . che -tafreta| ma .& pram of erly. tive inte at arinne one cre the rin the up edging to| Pat tral i fror Tex Wine Sre SNe three jabot brim,|T@ngement : r with | mented the front of the waist. unusual chosen atof dinner a ne ee pale: Bane : h composed jing, line iy ean Peo A blucceyea| ‘Wetlowes.. But-she's| { Ps vf : la cusar Me | fiat rather ya} wonar --wear cl fe pwa plait sleeves came to just and had. turned-back aaa her ry | terial whict wide-box TS re me one's fo oP 1 | siik~etcenerous hat, to or eS Ek Cl Ps p(ordh | | cer », But, ietaied "ished fles....A quite concealed by para-|!0r was chosen for wear with|°D See Sto Carolyn Mis :fannel, ith Cae a sown box plait was running .made:7infrom ES neck GC tk' popes black crown o is er The' ranade of of tear nos plait: large reer saw Mrs. ;.)dise iol plumes, aeas Shoemaker Red scems smart-and fontanis"onaterlal, lade aside. more [ ing at made ee iald ae Sarsteriey winter garments. W: aff, Blanch {It was im t should liters Sie pit poh his early | been Chinese more importance China caused] persons/| faith, pose as a Contucianist and criti‘ise the missionaries in. China, In resentment for his failure to oe Taffeta. | cure | coming censure] Deen wutetr) on ate a Flan- | hesitate Lines. Carolyn:.;Fehowss. Gown press, dismissal aoc gh a 1 " ay __Althor lad i been ae educated] educated Striped Silk Made | from childhood by the Protestant mis for Miss Susan | S8lonaries and baptized In the Epliscopal church at Hongkong, when he} came Alfred Dress down the j his Seren a 1a rnd \ te an Effective Gown Street committee GARDINER ]- left it ter of this the fuss Princess Kawananakoa, capital of the islands and of courtiers and retainers, the favorite niece of Honolulu's queen, who, tiring of the unoMcial is now in New York, seeing the city quite like an ordinary person, court, flee from without all the to his story pirate helped and son David, Pryler. Without David. married : mention is of Julia, daugh- | President Jon incomplete. AM, j Captain When Poe the|/tent than the anchored in Gardiner's bay Sena enaen e himself to whatever he ae onan 0, o added (ea at insult to cree injury by ie of Luokow Cidd presides | sa tI over ere a dic diocese Kidd} aa . greater eater tying} Christians. whole of LDS deonaaet M whom only Great eae 1 in ex- Britlan, r o4 1 =, 0 48,~ ara nd j f bh | |