OCR Interpretation


Salt Lake evening Democrat. (Salt Lake City, Utah) 1885-1887, March 24, 1885, Image 1

Image and text provided by University of Utah, Marriott Library

Persistent link: http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn85058117/1885-03-24/ed-1/seq-1/

What is OCR?


Thumbnail for

ffc
t
r atti Xaki 11 u f7v <
= =
VOL 1NO 20 SALT LAKE CITY TUESDAY MAEGH 24 1885 FIVE CENTS
nfSISESS CARDS
RSO IS LOCATED IN TIlE
street
Main
FRJfs 1t Lake house
J L WJYTOCK DDS
s cn u DENTISTS WALker
UAFNA t WIIYTOCK Anrosthctics adminls
CII opera hOUSe In office
ed TelephOne
lIIGGINS CATAIUtII
A W 3 Dlt ifS
warranted to cure all cases
NO 1m d is Main
Remedy followed Office No 272
directions ate
MAL STJIEET TliKKK
arvTT rJALN
TOLAT > 0 frith House and see Dr
1 Cliftilo
doors north licrosopIC of and Anal tic Physician
the iicrOsC0P taking medicine of
lligpinsthc
iiggiflS before
gV1S SpeCiRltSt filled
laD the fPccIAVSdersbvinall promptly
anyone else Dr C All V Higgins No 272 Mttn Street
Address
nah
City
Salt Lake
LEWIS B ROGERS
INSURANCE
INSURANCE CO
LION FIRE
TnE Capital and assets
England
London
01 t4694993
INSURANCE CO
omE T
T nnpjicut Capital and assets
Of Hartford Conncggt
1SITINGTO v F M INS CO
Massachusetts Capitalnnd assets
OiostoD 1551850
NO MORE
sending East
FOR
UNLAUNDERED
SHIRTS
We Will Give You The
BEST MADE
PRICE
ONE DOLLAR
A GOOD OXE FOR
Seventyfive Cents
Mail jracrs Must be Accompanied by Cash
postage on Each Shirt 12 cents Money Re
landed if Goods not Satisfactory
Rules f < 1r Self Measurement Furnished on
Applualu a
W H YEARIAN CO
142 Main St Salt Lake City
U S DEPOSITARY 1
Deseret National Bank
SALT LAKE CITY
Paid in Capital = 200000
Surplus 200000
I
H S Eldredge President
Am Jennings VicoPrcbt I
mamorz Little
John Sharp 1 Directors
Wm W Riter I
LSHHIJ Cashier
Jts T Little Asst Cashier
faceitcs Deposits Payable on Demand
Buys and Sells Exchange on New York San
Francisco Chicago St Louis Omaha Lon
don and principal continental cities
Makes Collections Remitting Proceeds
Promptly
McCORNICK Co
BAJSJKEELS
SALT LAKE CITY UTAH
And Hailey Idaho
Transact Every Description of Banking
Business
CORRESPONDENTS
nporters and Traders National Bank N Y
Commercial National Bank Chicago Ills
First National Bank Chicago Ills
Chemical National Bank N Y
Omaha National Bank Omaha
First National Bank San Francisco Cal
Kountze Brothers N Y
Elate SaYings Association St Louis
Crocker Woolworth Co San Francisco Cal
JZity National Bank Denver
Ut JONES S J LYNN
T R JONES Co
BANKERS I
Salt Lake City = Utah I
Transact a General Banking Business in
all its Branches
Dealers in Foreign and Domestic Exchange
Urefui attention given to Collections and re
mittances made on day of payment
wag Loans made on City Real Estate at low
tales of interest
rxccai attention given to the Selling of Ores
loiiu I1ii1fl Of which Consignments arc
Advanu a1c jj ore Base Bullion Gold
Silver bars shppd for refining
COERESPOr >
ew York JB Colgate Co
tnaha Omaha National
c Bank
SanC IO FIM Xatonal Bank
Dener < ranchco Ea k 0 f California I
r Colo ra d 0 ational Bank
Wells Fargo Cos
aA NK
HL
T LIKE CITI UTAH
I
cncrat Sanlin > Business Transacted
old Forel < gn and Domestic Exchange bought and
ae Special of attenti0 Riven to the purchase and
fiilen
Relures and bulficn
rent rates8 for collect ms promptly made at cur
jelefra hic transfers made and commercial
veiers rrom issued available in the
I1att CitIes I of the world
in
Ponden addition to our Bank correspond
ton lVe Cms of nn Express Agency in almost every
0 the Roc
Pecial f nii Rocky lountains affords us
eXeeutin mnnnn for making collections and
Aeeon0j commission
and eeoun lUan Sof Banks and Bankers mercantile
jug manufacturing firms corporations min
teCtle lfes stork glowers and individuals
° niaorablc terms I
e CORRESPONDENTS
ew York
Sau Francisco Wells Fargo Co
Ioston sco Wells Fargo < fe Co
Chicago Maverick National Bank
< Inclnllati Merchants National Bank
Deuter Third National Bank
° lIIllba First 1atlonal BaRk
S LOUis First National Bank
el Orl Boatmens Savings Bank
Paris cans Louisiana National Bank
Loudon Lherbette Kane < tCo
Wells Fargo Co
Kcspectfully
J E DOOLY AQent
DENVER HOUSE
OPP D R G Depot Salt Lake City
JJ KEENAN T
Proprietor
1 kf ERS WILL FIND SUPPLIES OF
CIgariland It Tobacco in Eatables and Groceries Choice
Firstcla8li Qutp
I A VALID LAW
The Constitutionality of the Ed
munds Act Affirmed
The Registrar and Not the Com
mission to be Sued
Congress Has Supreme Jurisdic
tion in the Territories
Supreme Court Decision in Polygamy
Suits
WASHINGTON March 23A decision
was rendered by the Supremo Court of
the United States today in the series of
five cases known as polygamy suits
brought by certain Mormon citizens of
Utah forthe purpose of getting a judicial
decision as to the power of the Board of
Commissioners or Canvassers appointed
under the socalled Edmunds Act of
March 22d 1882 to supervise elections in
that Territory The appellants in these
cases are Jesse J Murphy Mary Ann
Pratt Mildred E and Alfred Randall
Ellen C and Hiram B Clawson and Jas
M Barlow The defendants and appel
lees are Alex Ramsey and others
constituting the Federal Board of Com
missioners and certain registration
officers appointed by them The princi
pal question raised by the suits is
whether the Board of Commissioners ap
pointed under the Edmunds Act had
power to prescribe as a condition of regis
tration of voters a discriminating test
oath requiring the applicant for registra i
tion to swear that he or she has not been i
living in a state of bigamy or polygamy
The court examined the cases separately
and holds the complainants Mary Ann
Pratt and Mildred E Randall were
clearly deprived of their right to registra
tion without authority of law since by
their allegations they exclude them
selves from the disqualifications of the
act of 1882 Ellen C Clawson Jesse J
Murphy and James M Barlow on the
other hand were the court holds in
cluded in the disqualifications of the act
and had no right to registration In
reaching these conclusions the court in
its opinion makes an elaborate review of
I the act of 1882 for the purpose of giving
construction to some of its provisions
I and showing how they apply to the
present cases By that act the court
holds it is made the duty of registration
officers to see that persons offering to
register are free from the disqualifications
defined therein Justice Matthewd con
cludes Counsel for appellants in ar
guments seemed to question the consti
tutional power of Congress to pass the
act of March 22d 1882 so far as it abrid
ges the rights of electors in the Territory
under previous laws But that question
is we think no longer open to discus
sion It has passed beyond the stage of
controversy into final judgment The
people of the United States as the
I sovereign owners of the National Ter
ritories have supreme power over them
and their inhabitants I
I In ordaining a government for the Ter
ritories and the people who inhabit them
all discretion which belongs to the legis
lative power is vested in Congress and
that extends beyond and controversy to
determining by law from time to time
the form of local government in a parti
cular Territory and the qualifications of
those who shall administer it It rests
with Congress to say whether in a given
case any of the people resident in a Ter
ritory shall participate in the election of
its officers or making its laws and it
may therefore take from them any right
of suffrage it may previously have con
ferred or at any time modify or abridge
it as it may deem expedient The per
sonal and civil rights of inhrbitarts of
Territories are secured to them as to all
other citizens by the principles of con
stitutional liberty which restrain all
agencies of Government State and Na
tional Their political rights are fran
chiseswhich they hold as privileges in the
legislative discretion of the Congress of
the United States If we concede this
discretion in Congress is limited by the
obvious purposes for which it was con
ferred and that those purposes are satis
fied by measures which prepare the
people of the Territories to become citi
zens of States in the Union still the con
clusion cannot be averted that the act of
Congress here in question is clearly
within that justification for certainly no
legislation can be supposed more whole
some and necessary in forming a free
selfgoverning commonwealth fit to take
rank as one of the coordinate States in
the Union than that which seeks to es
tablish it on the basis of the idea of the
family as consisting in and springing from
the union for life of one man and one
woman in the holy state of matrimony
the sure foundation of all that is staple
and noble in our civilization the best
guarantee of that reverent morality h
is the source of all beneficient progress m
improvement And to
social and political
and
are more directly
this end no means
immediately suitable than those provided
by this act which endeavors to withdraw
all political influence from those who are
practically hostile to its attainment
Bailroad Pooling Sustained
CLEVELAND March 23Justice Stanley
Matthews of the Supreme Court of the
has delivered an
United States just
opinion virtually holding pooling contracts
Trust Company
tracts legal The Central
ot New York brought suit to foreclose
bonds of the
2000000 first mortgage
Ohio Central Railroad Company The
had at the time with
latter corporation
Val
the Baltimore Ohio and Hocking
Railroads entered into pooling con
ley tracts and the Ohio Central owed the
Valley 50000 under arrange
Hocking The Hocking Valley Railroad
ments
brought in an intervening petition
therefore trust
tion askihg for that 50000 The Jrus
contract
said that the pooling
Company illegal being in restraint of trade
was
and void as contrary to public policy
The case was referred to Special Master
referred
Ricks Who by consent of counsel
The
Justice Matthews
ferred it to
opinion of Justice Matthews has just been
received in this city He sustains the i
Hocking Valley road imd directs that it
be paid the 50000
Sullivan Does Some Talking
PHILADELPHIA March 23 John L
last
Sullivan said to a correspondent
night McCaffrey is a good man but he
talks too much He is always talking
Mitchell and Greenfield are excellent
pugilists but the latter cannot stand the
punishment the former can Mitchell Is
the most artistic fighter I ever met and
is brim full of
courage He fears no
mans fists Ryan is a greatly overrated
man he has neither strength nor science
and Idont know whether he can man
age to raise five thousand dollars but it
is my opinion that he cant manage to
rarse five thousand cents After Mc
Caffrey and I have met I will fight Ryan
and Burke on the same day in the name
ring one right after the other
Newspaper stories about my escapades
are greatly exaggerated It is a com
mon thing for me to lie in bed in the
morning and read about how I knocked
over a peanut stand at midnight when in
reality I was in bed hours before that
time The result is that the public
know me as a bad man but Im not
Rum Romanism Etc
NEW YORK March 23Rev Dr Bur
chard delivered a lecture on Men I
Have Met at the United Presbyterian
church tonight Dr Burchard said the
daily papers had mistaken him for a
C religious slouch an ecclesiastical
dude an old fool and c a mule
with ears like the mule Balaam rode
He had been called everything but a thief
and a loafer Only last week he had
been taken for a plumber He had also
been taken for head waiter of a hotel in
Venice
Referring to pride and riches the
speaker made use of the words Person
purse and palace and then added
5 You see I am given to alliteration
A Human Fiend
LAREDO Texas March 231n the
town of Nueva Mexico a Mexican was
jealous of his mistress a young Mexican
girl about 18 Going to her room in day
light he locked the door divested her of
all her clothing securely tied her to the
wall with heavy ropes then deliberately
proceeded to cut strips of flesh from
various parts of her body and under her
throat cutting out her heart He com I
pelled the victim to eat her own flesh
Her frantic screams finally brought as i I
sistance just as the human fiend had
finished cutting off the end of her tongue I
The brute was arrested and jailed His
victim is dying this evening I i
So Change of Tax I
SAN FRANCISCO March 23 Governor
I
Stoneman has refused to sign the bill
amending the constitution whereby the I
railroads would be taxed 2i < per cent of I
their gross earnings instead of being
taxed manner on their property in the ordinary I
I I
NEWS OF TIlE DAY
Oregon officehunters are coming
home disgusted Cleveland is a surprise
party to them He is also President
Sweden has no Bismarck Yesterday
the Swedish Diet voted to admit Ameri
can pork grain and meats into Swedish
ports free of duty
Secretary Whitney telis candidates
for office to go the civil service commis
sion Secretary Manning sometimes tells
them to go to the
Col Beiuji j has be jailed Madrid
as a conspirator He and others had a
wild idea of restoring a Spanish republic
A Spanish dungeon will be his reward
The London journals part with Min
I ister Lowell with much regret But as
Phelps is somewhat cultured too
they may be able to stand the change
Before the election the alliterative
Burchard made the Republicans very
tired Now he appears to be making
everybody else tired He should be re
tired Senator Fair of Nevada is reported
to have considerable influence with the
President He tells him in smooth tones
what the people of the Coast want and
evidently makes an impression
Cleveland has yet made no appoint
ments for California He is reported to
be thoroughly disgusted with the conten
tion of both factions of the Democracy
and will let the offices slide for the pre
sent
A cablegram says the feeling in Ire
land is that the Prince of Wales is a jolly
good fellow and that Irishmen will dis
grace their reputation for proverbial hos
pitality if the royal vistors are insulted
The President yesterday received a
telegram from B B Smalley of Bur
lington Vermont saying The Dem
ocracy of Vermont sincerely thank you
It is
for the nomination of Mr Phelps
an appointment worthy of you
Gladstone stated in the House of
Commons last night that the Egyptian
finances had come to the end of their
tether Egypt is bankrupt and the
whole financial burden would fall upon
England In other words Egypt is
Englands whistle and she has got to pay
for it
Senator Stanford of California has
unbosomed himself to a New York Herald
reporter and denies many rumors con
cerning himself and wife He intends
carrying his beneficent plans for the
youth of California into effect and wants
his estate to go to public and good uses
and not to lawyers
Five thousand people met in Chicago
match which
sparring
last night to see a
ended in a draw with no knockdown
This is very tame business for a place like
Chicago and if the people there really
want someting fine in that line let them
Montana There is
come to Butte City
no monkey business about Butte pugilism
further evidence for
It required no
that Col
to believe
the Salt Lake public
H1M 0 n lmmlmQ than the manner
1s 10 b uuu tin
iuapiuboii
in which he bilked thepeople here when
he passed through with Her Majestys
Italian Opera Company but if any fur
ther evidence could be needed it will be
today And
dispatches
found in our
looks as
Pattiit really
Patti = the divine
if she is in with His Nibsthe Colonel
I
IN THE SUAKiM
The British Advance to be Des
perately Contested
Arab Women and Children Sent
Back to the Hills
o
Maples on Puts Up a Job on the
Chicago Opera Festival
The British Columbia Boundary Line
OTTAWA March 24111 the House of I
Commons Gordon moved for copies of i
all correspondence bearing reference to
appointment of a joint commission with
the United States government for sur
veying the boundary line between British
Columbia and the United States Territory
of Alaska He stated today that the
boundary was practically undefined So
long as there were no troubles there this
was all right but a New York paper
had stated recently that an American
armed expedition under Lieutenant
Schwatka had traveled thousands of
i
miles into British Territory east of
Alaska and Lieutenant Allen was now
I
conducting an expedition three or four i
hundred miles into British Territory He
could hardly believe their statements I
true seeing that on the Pacific Coast
Canadians and Americans lived
very harmoniously He would like
to hear from the government on this
point and be pleased if assurance
could be given that the boundary line
will shortly be surveyed
The Minister of Public Works said the
attention of the government had been
directed to the article from a New York
paper lie inquired into the truthfulness
of the article and found there was no
foundation for it The importance of
having the boundary surveyed had re
i ceived attention from the government
it would not overlook the matter The
motion was carried
Put Under Heavy Bonds
CmCAGO March 24Judge Gresham
in the United States Circuit Court this
morning granted a writ of error in the
case of Mackin and Gallager convicted of
election frauds They were admitted to
bail in the sum of 50000 each and re
i leased from jail The time lor sending
the two men to the penitentiary expired
Ii at noon today and if the writ had not
been granted they would have been
I taken to Joliet The time for hearing
the writ of error has not yet been fixed
I upon On reviewing the case Judge
I Gresham said after examining the re
cords of the District Court he co nsidered
I the questions raised sufficiently grave to
I warrant him to grant the writ of error
which would also operate as a stay of
i proceedings This ruling however was
I not to be taken that he would overrule
the findings of the District Court on the
i final hearing In granting a stay of pro
ceedings he would feel it necessary to
I increase the bail of defendants to 50000
Mike McDonald the gambler qualified
as chief bondsman and testified that he
I owned 500000 worth of real estate un
I incumbered
i 1 Earnings of the Union Pacific I
i BOSTON March 24 A summary of
the operations of the Union Pacific Rail I
I road for the year 1884 will be made public I
at the preliminary annual meeting to I
morrow It is as follows For the last
I
six months the earnings excluding the
St Joseph Western Railroad were
14738000 expenses 6807000 taxes
549000 The surplus earnings of the
entire system for the last six months of
1884 were 7381000 Other receipts
from miscellaneous sources make a total
income of 7892000 as against a total
income for the first six months of the year
of 3849000 Expenditures for the last
six months 3795000 Of this amount
2674000 were paid for interest on bonds
Total surplus of the last six months of the
year 4096000 From this is deducted
750000 for the United States
l ilaplesons Usual Jugglery
I CHICAGO March 24 Colonel Mapleson
having telegraphed from San Francisco
festival
to the managers of the opera
here making changes in the repertoire of
declares
Madame Patti a local paper
that Patti is interested with Mapleson in
the contract to present the grand opera
here and that if she fails to carry out
her contract after such a great amount of
money has been expended toward arrang
ing for the festival the public will express
remaining away
press its disapproval by remaining
The declares It We well know
paper
what Madame Patti can do we are will
do it but
ing to pay liberally to hear her
neither Patti nor Mapleson must attempt
any jugglery I
Want the Land Back
WASHINGTON March 24In the Senate
today a memorial was read irom the
Legislature of Arizona praying for the
return to the public domain of lands
granted railroads in that Territory and
legislation to prevent organized raids from
Mexico referred The galleries of the
Senate were then cleared and the doors
closed It is supposed that the Weil and
Laabre treaty was taken up a large pile
of sheepskin covered books lay upon
Morgans desk and it assumed that he
will consume the day with a speech in
favor of the treaty
The Union Pacific Will Pay Up
WASHINGTON March 24The report of
the Commissioner of Railroads on the
Union Pacific railroad as revealed by the
companys books shows there was due
the United States for the year 1884
under the Thurman act 1135220
against which they credited for govern
transportation etc l13old
ment
I leaving 47 due the government for the
President Adams says the com
vear promptly the 917000
pany adjudged will due pay the government by the
Court of Claims
Active Work by the British
SOAKIM March 24Sappers are now
the
engaged in making a road through
brush toward Tamai A convoy of pro
visions and water go to Zereba the scene
I of Sundays battle Osman Dignas
famous chief Taggiah was killed in Sun
days fight
SUAKIM March 24 The Egyptian
troops will be shipped back to Cairo to
morrow A prisoner reports that Os
man Dignas men at Tainai are sending
all the women and children back into the
hills and preparing to make a desperate
resistance to the British advance The
Shropshire regiment accompanied by
convoys has started to join Gen Mc
Neill at Hasheen Zereba
New York Stocks
NEW YORK March 213s 1 4 4fs
113 4s 22U Pacific 6s 25 Central
Pacific 30 Burlington 223 Northern
Pacific 37U Preferred 40 > North
western 93 New York Central 903 Ii
Oregon Navigation 67U Transcontinen
tal 12U Pacific Mail 51U Panama I
98 St Louis and San Francisco 18 I
Texas Pacific 107U Union Pacific 423
Fargo Express 8 Western Union 57jg I
Money easy bar silver 106 stocks
weak the past hour but more active at
noon
I Stocks were feverish this afternoon the
feature being a heavy decline in St Paul
to 68 4 on renewal of the rumor that the
dividend would be passed The market
closed steady I
Chicago Grain Markets
CHICAGO March 24 Wheat moderate
ly active fluctuated rather wildly clos
ing a shade under yesterday 7476f
cash March 74 April 93K May 8174
June
Corn steady 3940 cash 37
March and April 41 May 4H June
Oats a shade easer 272a301 cash
27 March and April 317 May
Grant is Comfortable Tired I
NEW YORK March 24 Gen Grant
I
was very restless the first part of the
night but slept well during the latter
i I part and arose at 730 this morning and I
I sat in a chair near the window During
the forenoon he dozed and slept at in
tervals but this morning said that he
felt very comfortable although tired
ToDays Nominations
WASHINGTON March 24Nominations
I
Henry L Muldrow Mississippi Assistant
Secretary of the Interior Wm A J
Sparks Illinois Commissioner of the
General Land Office Daniel McConville
Ohio Auditor of the Treasury for the
Postoffice Department
I The Fish Trial I
I NEW YORK March 24The trial of
Fish of the Marine Bank was continued I
today The prosecution closed yester
day and the defense opened this morning
and moved for a dismissal of the charges
I against Fish on the ground that no of
fense has been proved
Todays Stocks and Finance I
NEW YORK March 24Yall street
Stocks opened irregular but generally
I stronger At 11 oclock the market was
still irregular but moderately active
I Lake Shore New York Central and
grangers strong
I Vicar Apostolic of Idaho
I
BALTIMORE March 26 Monsignor
Glorieux will be consecrated Vicar Apos I
tolic of Idaho the second Sunday after i
I
Easter II I I
The Bold Barrios
LA LIBERTAD San Salvador via Gal
veston March 24President Barrios is
advancing on San Salvador with 15000
men
The American Art Association has
sued the New York Evening Post for
25000 damages The Post discredited
the genuineness of certain paintings
and the Association claim that much in
jury to the sale of them If the Associa
tion can prove that the Post knows the
difference between a chromo and the
work of an old master perhaps it will get
damages Evidently the Post believes
the public must be protected
BARRATI BROSI
v
r
lw
II ii
1ItII
4
1
1 t I
rt
I I
I
f H
I T
I
f < jO f Ii
a oJ m i
I
I g 5
Barratt Bros
<
1
0
i
0
BOLIVAR ROBERTS W A NELDEN
ROBERTS NELDEN
DRUGS
AND
Assayers Goods
We offer to the Trade the Largest and Best Stock of
Drugs Assayers Material and Toilet Articles
Druggists Sundries
SUrgioa1 Instruznents Etc Etc
Ever Brought to this Market
We are Agents for all the Leading Lines of Goods we carry and can offer Better
Prices than ever given before
Entire Drug Stores Furnished at Five Days Notice
We are Never Undersold
Writo for SPzrioes or onc3 a Trieal Order I
220 Main Street Opposite pos omee Salt Lake CUr Utah
Poatoffice Box 973 Telephone No 2C6
Eas A PASCQE
DEALER IN
Lime Cement Plasler Hair Building Rock Salt
TEBRA COTTA
AGENT FOR
The Utah Lime and Cement Company Sanpete Palace Stone Company Utah
United States Encaustic Tile Company Indianapolis Ind F Beck Cos
Lincrusta Hangings New York Manilla Building Material Mar
bleized Mantels Grates Architectural Sheet Metal Work
VULCAN POWDER COMPANY Etc
WARWICK BLOCK First South Street SALT LAKE CITY
CLIFT OI7SE St
SALT LAKE CITY
Rates r 150 to i 2 per Day
Corner Main and Third South Sts
S sJ 23 vv 3EKTG > Prop
Satisfactory Rates Made By Week or Month
THE SALT LAKE DEMOCRAT
Daily 430 P M EOR NORTHERN UTAH
Se eek1y EVERY TUESDAY AND FRIDAY
DAILY per year in advance 750 six months 400 three months 200 Per
month 75c Size 24x36 inches seven broad columns to the page printed with New
type New Power Press New Enginethe handsomest paper in Utah
SEMIWEEKLY same size as the daily 300 per year 200 eight months 100
bur months cash with the order
Agents Wanted Throughout the Territory
1 The SALT LAKE DEMOCRAT will fully sustain the principles of the National
Democratic party as enunciated by its National Conventions and exemplified in the
teachings of its great founders
2 It will advocate the doctrine that the people of Utah have wisdom enough
md patriotism enough to govern themselves that the affairs of church and State
ought to and must be forever separate and distinct and that every citizen should
bey the laws
3 We believe that all the difficulties which surround the people of Utah will
find a peaceful remedy if absolute freedom of discussion can be secured and inde
pendent individual judgment expressed
4 The SALT LAKE DEMOCRAT will use the language of moderation and will re
vile no man for opinions sake While firm in its advocacy of correct political prin
ciples it will respect the rights of all others to hold contrary opinions
La Full Telegrahic Dispatches from all parts of the world and all local news
of general interest
AddressSALT LAKE DEMOCRAT CO
31 AND 33 E FIRST SOUTH Sr
SrOlty
Sa11 Lake City
SIMON BROS
Wholesale ahd Retail Dealers in
Millinery Fancy Goods
c We are closing out all remaining Win
ter Goods at a Great Sacrifice and will open
out aa entire new line of
Millinery and Fancy Goods
SIMON BROS
Jennings Building Salt Lake City Utah
Stationers Booksellers I
Order your Goods of ns by Mail or Telephone I
or call at our store by the Postofilce
on Main Street
SCHOOL BOOKS I
NEWSPAPERS J
MAGAZINES
ARTISTS SUPPLIES
OF EVERY KIND
EIr Subscriptions taken for any Periodical
In the World
C H Parsons Co
i a Mrs Dr M B Mallorys
I Lz nIIodioa1 Parlors
No 24 W Third South Street second door
west of Clift House GENERAL PRACTI
TIONER Treati ll Diseases Acute Chroulu
Obstetrics Diseases of Women and Children
Pneumonia Scarlet Fever and Diphtheria
given special attention by combining internal
medication with our New Triple Medicated
j Vapor Baths Can remove all poisousmercurial
lead syphilitic etc Invaluable to Consumpt
ives Office Hours 8 Jo 12 am and 3 to 7 pm
C W Mallory General Assistant
c V References Messrs F Foote Assayer
George Davis Merchant
SALT LAKE CITY UTAH
I C
0
0
A FISHER BREWING C03IPT
Brewery near U C R R andD in Q Depots
Salt Lake City Utah
We aro now Prepared to Supply the
PUBLIC with
Keg and Bottled Beer i
Of a SUPERIOR QUALITY
At PopuJar rico
1 0 Box 1047 telephone 294
A FISHER BREWING COMPANY
SALT LAKE CITY BOTTLING WORKS
If ParsoX1S Prop
Manufacturers of
SODA WATER GINGER ALE SARSAPA
RILLA and CHAMPAGNE CIDER
Examine our Goods and Prices before buy
ing elsewhere
22 Commercial Street
THOS W JENNINGS
REMOVED TO
No 35 W First South Street
I J
First door east of Dlmroodeys store i
I
T
ZELIJLSOIsPS f
I 142 a ayx Street i
r
You can find the largest assortment of
GOLD and SILVER WATCHES
Jewelry of all Kinds
And everything needed in that line at
Q VERY LOWEST PRICES I I
J
J1
I
i i
> > 2 i l

xml | txt