SALT L KE J IID JI3 T HERALDl Ii I j1 VOL XV t r T I f t TTTr < fJf SAM j > LAKE CITY UTAH TUESDAY t JANUAE v11 j 27 1885 flj Jy NO 198 j THE BLOW UP I < o < I LOllkill Over the Effects of tIle Explosion 1 T THE DAMAGE ABOUT 700000 A 8URlect with a Number of lh50J Held in Custody Cr the Crime The Blowup f > NON January 25 The west end t W fuiiitcr Hall is full of wreckage casetl uy yesterdays explosion The dctrur on of tbe magnificent stained iuo the end of the hall is greatly jimenlP < l lG 1 > believed one of tne conspi ators entered the crypt passing < policeman at the entrance and de josM i an infeiiil inacninc at the bot f0n r tlie s > triM The policeman re moveJ the parcel which exploded UJkirgt hole in the floor three feet in duia fr twisting the iron railings and < ashing the iron and lead work of all the windows in the hall The police mans hair was singed and his face burnt J j his clothing was torn from his bo hv the force of the explosion j he js still ihve but no hope is entertained for 1m recovery The man and woman who move from the Parliament buildis immediately before the eiplo < ion and who were ar reiUl on suspicion have been liberiii > cd the evidence being insufficient to hul1 them The foundation of the bail U i uninjured but the roof is badly damaged The bases of the statue of William IV and George IV which were overturned are greatly injured An inspection of the Parliament build ings today showed that excepting the beaut f > l window overlooking the stair case ttau south end of Westminster Hall carcclv a pane of glass escaped de strucfT The foundations of the build ings w ere sadly shaken j the roof of the crypt in spite of its massive strength was gi eatlv damaged rifts being visible here 11 d there The floor cf the House of O mmons presents a strange spec tace being covered with heap of mas sive fragments < i the elaborately carved oaken wall behind the seats beneath the allcv was completely thrown down Tho flooring or the strangers and SpcaKcr3 galleries is so torn up that it is deemcl unsafe to venture across The peers gallery suffered the most damage The side gal leries and reporters gallery were not injured The parcel which caused the fir explosion was wrapped in a brown cloth and was two feot long by one foot wide A gentleman complains that the shock of the explosion broke one of hi blood vessels Tut Queen sent a telegram today in iniriag as to the condition of the in jured policemen Cox and Cole A re ply was sent stating that both were pro gressing favorably The greatest indignation prevails throughout the provinces The explo sion were referred to and de nounced in all the churches today Air C S Read member of the House nt rirrntnns fnrTiv insnpnfprl tliR 1n t alitv of the explosion in the Parlia ment building and says the damage is immense > e It wilt take months to re pair the injury Thousands visited the cenetoday but were not allowed to enter the building Temporary repairs Jiave been ordered to allow the House of Commons to meet on February 19th trict regulations in regard to the ad mission of visitors have been ordered 10 be tiken in future The policemen who were on duty at the entrance to the P irliament building on Saturday state that they examined the parcels of Ill viltlrs that day without discover ing an j thing ot a susnicious character and that nobody carrying a parcel like the one described las containing the ex plowe wa seen to enter the building Udy Erskine and her children had a narrow escipe from injury They were lunching in the Deputy Sergeantat nrss dining room which is situated in it Stephens the porch door of the room Va burst open by the force of the eplo lon and the centre panel of I another i100r was shattered a man < oervant was W9wn across the room and the children Were greatlv terrified The ntmost Precautions are being taken to protect public tidings especially feovernmcnt offices then general post office central telegraph office and rail Oa statIons SUSIJicious travelers are narr1wly watched Search JJarties to day 1I1specCed all public buildmgs from bas top I bottom t The press association informed government that it has reeel v d a letter inclosing a plan of perations contemplated by dynamiters tnu famishing rin > nnt n of active 4 JlbeU m uescriptions j memberspi thedynaurifc factioiiSeveral important buildings which had hitherto eseapcil were according to the above mentioned letter includedin the scheme Ii destruction Steamers arriving at British ports are subjected to minute I tinr 3rh iit order to prevent the importa I win 01 dynamite into the kingdom amh burg earners arc especially atcned One wan was arrested todav in con I auuoni with the explosion at the Tower of v Lmdon ue was taken to Scotland Yard and examined and will probably be barged at Bow street police court to morrow The opinion is generally jes ed that the time has arrived to put a preure upon the United States gov iiniejit to stop the operations of the jMiiutcrs Among the visitors to the r larlniuent buildings today were the Ii lanjuiM of Lome and Princess Louise Ie > Ji < d Cambridge Marquis of narungton and several other cabinet I uu ttr > and numerous members of Jiiouoof Commons Cox and Cole d < Ij KMiijcri poicemen hitve recovered nr eI to make a statement It is I tI 1 11 1 the police found near the pot wh the first explosion occurred I ar ile ot a peculiar nature which I tley Illdle to describe It h believed tat Ute thi rticle will furnish a clue to I RaysOI guilt persons Inspector Denning berall ieanng I the second explosion the ZT tile spot und SaW not IL soul m I by place > Tho entrance was blocked j I I ulnl debris > Ite notced a small parcel of i < ole ph r and gunpowder Cox and It IS behevcu furnished certain Ieripgll wliid will lead to inquiries that may result in the discovery of the authors of the outrage Colonel ilajendie today made an inspection of the explosion at the tower of London i as well as the chaos would permit The Martini rifles which had been hurled from their stands remained in confused heap on the floor and rendered im possible a near approach to the exact spot where the explosion occurred The scene will be photographed tomorrow Colonel llajendie says he is satisfied that dynamite was used to cause the explosion He says about four or five pounds of explosive property com pressed would only measure four or five cubic inches and could easily be con cealed in an overcoat pocket or in the folds of a womans dress The tower officials believe a woman deposited the dynamite in the building The police sometime ago had reason to believe a woman was constantly passing back and forth between America and Eng land for the purpose of importing dyna mite She was frequently watched but evidence sufficient to warrant her arrest was never obtained The Canon of the Catholic cathedral j I at Plymouth in his sermon today de nounced the London outrages yester day as the work of American emissaries It is learned that the mysterious Irishman who is described by the police as Cunningham alias Dalton alias Gil bert and who was arrested at the tower yesterday on suspicion of having been concerned in the explosion at that lace has not been released He is still de tained in Whitechapel police station The guard in front of the station was doubled in consequence of the gathering of an enormous crowd of excited citi I zens in Leman street in the vicinity of I the station Loud curses and ominous threats are continually heard and there is no doubt that a desperate attempt would be made to lynch the prisoner if it were not for the presence of the police and military Cunningham will hr nrrniomorl nf flip nnlini pntirf in 1 < > r Vhitechapel road tomorrow morning An American traveler name un known was in the train of the North I western railway going from London to Liverpool yesterday when an excited discussion arose over Americas res ponsibility for the dynamite explosions The opinion was freely expressed that the United States was greatly to blame for harboring such men as ODonovan Rossa The American defended his country in vigorous language and was attacked by a crowd of passengers The American drew a revolver and kept his assailants at bay until the train reached Chester where he jumped from the car riage and escaped Tne explosion yesterday caused the greatest excitement in Berlin Vienna Rome and Paris The News says editorially The dam age to Parliament buildings by the ex plosion is so slight as compared with what was intended that the attempt may be looked upon as a failure The choosing of Saturday when the place Was filled with innooont sightseers is evidence of diabolic cruelty There can be no doubt that the dynamiters if caught can be lawfully hanged on the ground of high treason in levying war against their sovereign It becomes a serious question whether England will not join with Russia and Prussia in an extradition treaty Even in America where the greatest jealousy in relation to suih a question has always existed steps have been taken in the right direc tion LONDON January 26 Officer Cole had several ribs broken and Officer Cox is suffering from concussion of the brain It is estimated that 100 persons were in the Parliament building at the time of the explosion Of the three clocks in the lobby the hands of one over the entrance of the House of Commons were blown out completely the one on the left side was stopped and the third on the right side was uninjured Some of the windows in Westminster Hall were blown bodily away while others were riddled as with shot The only atom of consolation to he found is in the fact that several stained windows sur vived the ordeal tolerably well None of the statues of the Stuart monarchs was injured Several minor disasters occurred in the poets corner chiefly tiie breaking of glass At vesper service in Westminister Abbey constables gave heartfelt thanks to Grpd for the preser vation of their lives in the dangers of Saturday I The man arrested on suspicion in connection with the explosion at the tower of London is described as an IrishAmerican He gave his correct address he had lodged some months in the vicinity of the tower The man had 7 in gold in his pockets he gave his name as Collingham with the aliases Gilbert and Dalton The explosive force found vent at the roof of the tower blowing out the sky light of thick plate glass The explosion wrenched off the Irish harp which forms part of the orna mental work on the panels of Parlia T n 1 n 1n 1 iI f lUIU lluut > uu v p uUl1 the seat of a Parnellite member Mr Fosters seat was ripped up Of the god letters U R on the desk opposite Gladstones seat the U was torn away It is now known that threefourths of the glass roof of the chamber had been removed pre vious to the explosion There is much rejoicing over the fact that the down ward force of the dynamite failed to reach the gas metre of the House of Commons which is directly below the ventilating chamber The latter was badly damaged The latest inspection shows the damage to have been much greater than at first reported Half the length of the front opposition bench was torn away The magnificent window in the > smith nf St Hecrners porch can be restored complete copies of the designs having been preserved Commenting on the dynamite explo sions the Daily Telegraph says Eng land cannot expect the United States to help in the extermination of dynamiters while the English government is afraid to handle Parnell The Standard says England cannot I lose Ireland notwithstanding all efforts of dynamiters Independent Ireland would threaten British security every day Theee are not the deeds of an Emmet or a Fitzgerald The excitement and anjjpr cntindled by the dynamite espl > lOllS still con tinue A rumor was current last even ing and this morning that Cunningham who was arrested at the tower would I have a hearing at the Thames Police Court The report caused the court and streets in the vicinity to be crowded i I with excited citizens Extra police where placed on duty to keep order The feeling against Cunningham is bitter If the crowd once got hands on him he would be lynched Shortly after noon it was lear d that detectives have arrested another man in connec tion with the explosions and he and Cunningham will be arraigned together at Bow street Police Court People in the vicinity of the Thames court then left in the direction of Bow street court The letter received by the police yesterday is now believed to be a very important document In addition to the other valuable informa tion it states that St Pauls Cathedral and the office of the Daily Telegraph are among the buildings which the dynam iters will blow up Westminster Hall and the tower are closed today to everyone except government officials engaged in inspecting the structures Many persons carrying parcels on the streets today have been slopped by the police and the parcels examined The approaches to all public buildings were rigidly guarded Nobody is allowed to enter without submitting to the closest scrutiny The tower and Parliament houses are surrounded with sentries Colonel AInjendicis minutely examining the scenes of the explosions Immense crowds of people are attracted to the vicinity of the tower and Westminster The two policemen injured by the ex plosion in Westminster Hall are making favorable progress Hope is entertained for their recovery The Irish newspa pers denounce the outrages in vigorous terms Freemans Journal says Only one feeling prevails throughout Ireland re garding die fiendish crimes and that is deep and earnest sympathy with those injured no less than an earnest wish that the diabolical authors will bo brought to justice Any man with the touch of human feeling must regret the escape of the miscreants The police have arrested another man oh suspicion of coiriplicity in Saturdays crimes Cunningham was conveyed to Bow street police court today by a strong guard of police charged on the sus picion of complicity in the explosion of the Tower of London The prisoner is 25 years of age medium height dark hair and eyes sharp features and sinis ter expression He smilingly surveyed the court and crowd which congregated within to get a glimpse of the alleged dynamiter Inspector Abberline de posed that he examined the prisoner at the tower that he the prisoner was confused and gave contradictory an swers to the questions propounded to the prisoner The inspector said he first gave a wrong address as to his place of abode then he stated that he lived in Scarboro street Whitechapel worked in the docks at Liverpool until the beginning of the year when he came to London to try to better him self He formerly resided in America made vovnges on the steamship Adri j atic of the White Star Line The in spector further deposeff that the i prisoner was knawn at his lodgings in hitechapel as Dalton I Cunningham arrested on Saturday is still in custody A box and bag be longing to the prisoner have been seized by the police The contents have not yet been made known Inquiry by telegraph revealed the fact that Cun ningham was unknown at the alleged lodgings at Liverpool The proprietor of the house there said that he could remember no such a one described as 1 Cunningham The prisoners hands i I are horny indicating that he is used to i hard work In speaking he has a 1 strong IrishAmerican accent He ad mitted that the constable was correct in his deposition but refused to say any thing Further He was remanded until Tuesday LONDON January 20 Official esti mates made by government inspectors place the amount of pecuniary dama ges wrought by the explosion ih West minster Hall the House of Commons and the tower at 700000 220 p mIt is reported that the police have discovered an important clue which they are following with the utmost diligence Already eight men are under surveillance It is rumored that several arrests will be made this afternoon Special precautions have been taken for the protection of the stock exchange and the new law courts against dynamite attacks The examination of Cunningham tended to convince the police that they had secured the prisoner who had guilty knowledge of Saturdays crimes It was proven that Cunningham was a native of Cork that he lived at least five years in the United States and had arrived in England during last autumn he came directly from New York His pretense that he was an Englishman was well carried out for a few hours after his arrest his appearance favoring it and liis drawling stammer being pe culiarly Cockneyish but in the excite ment under tha close crosvexarnina tion of the court he forgot himself for a moment and spoke rapidly and dis tinctly as an elocutionist and clearly demonstrated his Cockneyism was a clever piece of dissimulation It was shown that the prisoner had been known Prisoner in Whiteshapef as Dalton His state ment that he lived in Liverpool was entirely disproved LONDON January 20 When Cunning ham was first placed under arrest ho declined to give his address Being pressed he gave several addrctses to different questions each of these wi visited by the detectives The result was the discovery of a suspicious box and bag at a number given by tho prisoner as his plare of residence in Scarboro street Whitechapel The PaU Moll Gorctte publishes an article in which it says that it javrvrls at the fright and Hurry exhibitPtl by the morning papers when the whole damage caused by all the dynamite outrages amounts to less than 10000 sterling and no loss of life has been occasioned by them The Gazette says It is both undignified and foolish to scream about America If ODonovan Rossa was hanged tomorrow and the collec tion of money for a skirmishing fund made a criminal offense it would fail to stop the outrages It instances Russia and Germany where notwithstanding the silencing of speech and papers the outrnges cannot beBtopped Ve must keen cool heads > it savs strengthen the police force j sharpen the wits of the detectives and punish heavily the as sassins and those who aid them Vc must discriminate Tbetween social and political reforms by legal agitation The St James Gazette speaks in a similar strain It advises a modified suspension of the Jialeas corpus act Notice was issued by the police authorities asking all the visitors to the Parliament building Satnrdav to give the police any possible information re garding the man and woman seen in the building that afternoon under sus picious circumstances The woman is believed to have carried the dynamite under her cloak The notice givtS the following personal description The man age 35 to 40 years height 5 feet 10 inches sallow complexion chin shaved air whiskers and mustache rather pug nose wore a long brown overcoat I dark trousers and biliycoek hat I i Woman age 40 years hort stature sallow complexion wore a dark dress and sealskin or uitation sealskin jacket Fifteen detectives arrived at Dover from London at midnightlast night Several of them have since departed for various railways to keep a lookout for suspicious persons that may have taken part in the London outrages Two of them are in close consultation with the French detectives Keys were found in the posscsion of Prisoner Cunningham which exactly fitted in the door of the residence in Whitechapel It is claimed by him as his place of abode There were also found keys which fitted in the lock of the suspicious hag and box Cunningham is onlv suspect now in custody It is now known that the infernal machines used to cause the disasters were ignited by sulphuric acid which worked through the cotton wool and ate away the cap beneath The process occupied twenty minutes time and this allowed the xonspirators to escape before the explosion took place Otncial notice is posted at the entrances to the law courts empowering thft r nlinn I tr < ipnrr > > i nmr V or n j7i before the hearer thereof shall be C lowed to enter The police behtve that the arrest of Cunningham is very important and hope to be able to establish his connec tion with the dynamiters in America The police of Liverpool are unable to trace his antecedents and it is believed he never resided in Liverpool The Queen has summoned the con troller of the royal household to the Osborne House the Queens residence on the Isle of Wight to describe to her the nature and extent of Saturdays disasters in London In the council chamber of the Tower of London whole cases made of plate glass a quarter of an inch thick and contain ing armor were shattered by the force of the explosion The wall against which the dynamite was placed is six teen feet thick notwithstanding which plastering on the opposite bide of the wall for a radius f several feet was shaken to the floor leaving the side walk bare Several good photos of ihi errectr ur the explosion have been se cured Special detectives are detailed to watch all outgoing steamers and especially steamers for America All vessels are strictly searched It is reported that Cunningham has made an important revelation in con I sequence of which all trains leaving London for seaport towns are acrom i panied by detectives I Tho Capitol Fire WASHINGTON January 2QThe first I discovery that a fire was in progress was that a few large sparks were ecu I to fall upon the floor of the House from the roof above which in a moment in creased to quite a shower A few Repre I sentatives were in the hall and the I i officers and pages rushed fpr the doors j I and for a moment they seemed to expect an explosion and see a repetition of Satur I days scene in the British Houses of Parliament There was no water and i no way of getting at the fire except up i the steps and the narrow iron staircase I running three stories upon which two men cannot pass each other After somtj delay however buckets of water were passed up and what came dangerously near being a serious con flagration was averted In tho room to which the fire was confined were stored the records of the first session of Congress with all the original reports of committees of the proceedings of the House and reports of the various b ads of the departments including some valuable reports dated 1790 The close proximity of the fire to thes6 volumes rendered it most miraculous that they were not burned They would never have been replaced and their loss would have been a great misfortune Mem bers of Congress expressed surprise and iineafincss that there should be such a lack of means for extinguishing u tire breaking out in this way The fire is supposed to have been started by elec tricity as a number ot wires used in lighting the hall pass the point where the fire began Insane Murdrdss nnil Suicide CIXCIKX ATI Ohio January 25 About noon today a terrible tragedy too place in Newport Ky Jlrs Carrie L Winslow choked her son sevenyear 1 old to death beat her 10yearold I daughter so seerel with a baseball i i club that it is believed her injuries ar I fatal and then cut her own throat with a razr producing speedy death Mr > i Window was 32 years old She wa iVing with her brother and his family at theporner of York andTaylorstreeU i New ort She and her husband Geo C Winslow have been separated for I I several ycrrs he living at present at I Lewitton New York A few mouth 1 n oSMl Winslow returned from a s joutnih u sanitarium for treatment f r US lt I Burned at Sea I Bxs Frarrcisco January 26Tb JJritlsh bark Gvwden Laic from England for San Frajichco i burned at sea four hundred and fifty miles south of here on January 10th The captain and crew were pScked up by tho French ban T eofold and Marie which arrived tin morning EXT white illuminating oil is charpestbecauie ifcwill not consume sc I fast Buy it at 0 F Culmer Bro Tiro Senate WASULIGTON January 2U Bayards resolution after a sharp debate Riddle berger only taking an opposite view was adopted 63 to 1 x Hiddleberger declared there was an open state of watbetveen certain of the Irish race and England He read an account of an assault on America in England Ingalls said the feeling was prevalent that England would endeavor lo bring some pressure upon America rowing out of Saturdays happening Jlewonld vote for the resolution not as an apoJ ogy not as an expression of sympathy but as an expression of abhorrence for such crimes Hoar and Hawley tpoke iu the same strain The resolution as agreed to is as fol lows Resolved That the Senate of the Uniied States has heard with indigna tion and profound sorrow of the at tempt to destroy the Houses of ParllaJ mentand otherpublic Luildings in Lon don and to imperil the lives of hmo cent and unsuspecting persons and hereby expresses its horror and detesta tion of such monstrous crimes against civilization The Senate paosed the bill to quiet and confirm the title to certain hinds in Saginaw Bay Michigan The bill in volves certain accretions and marsh lands in respect to which there are no conflicting claims Adjourned The House WASHINGTON January 26G D Wise introduced a resolution calling on the Secretary of the Navy for a report of the orders under which the Talta poosa was cruising at the time she left Washington and what places she visited up to the time of the collision By Sumner of California a resolu tion rec ting fhat the CaliforniaOregon llailway Company has failed to com plete its road within the time limited by the granite act notwithstanding this fact it had been brought to his at tention that the President had ap pointed a commission to examine and report on said line of road and request ing the President to inform the House of the reasons which impelled him to appoint the commission Forney from the committee on ap propriations reported the army dppro priation bill Referred to the committee of the whole It provides an appropria tion of 21429053 the estimates I r1lo 1h1 it lt nninnnfar to S9fi110490 A hill annro priating G000 to enable the commis sioners of the District of Columbia to maintain public order during the ceremonies attending the inauguration of the President was passed The House then went into committee of the whole Springer in the chair on the District of Columbia appropriation At 230 the committee rose and re ported the bill to the House but no definite action wis taken The Hense proceeded with the con sideration of the resolutions expressive of the regret of the House at the death of Duncan pf Pennsylvania Adjourned j I An Export Thief NabTjeil I NEW Yom January 25Ruf Miner alia Charles Stewart alias Pine alu i Gus Rogers was arrested in the National City Dank Brooklyn this afternoon He had taken a place in the line of depositors but dropped out as he came near the tellers window as he He wig locked had nothing to deposit Miner has I up on a charge of lounging II been wanted for two years He is an expert hank thief is believed to have I II stolen 120000 in money and securities from the Baltimore bank to have I robbed the railway depot in Phi adelI phia of 71000 and to have robbed the I government office in the latter city I The Oregon Ssenatorsltip I i POUTUND Oregon January 26Tbc I first ballot for United States Senator will take place tomorrow afternoon No I caucus will be held by the Republicans as each of the stronger candidates is I afraid of a bolt hence there will be a free fight round Solomon Hirsch of I Portland is generally conceded to be the strongest eandidatebut this strength 1 may contribute toward defeat as the I weaker candidates are likely to combine against him I Anxiety for Stouart Cvino January 26 8 aU1Ro news from the front regarding Gen Stewart but many unfounded rumors are afloat I The anxiety as to the safety of his force increases hourly I PLASHES LIGHTNING II j In England there is great anxiety t concerning General Stewart and his I army from whom no news has been re i i ceived since the 17th I A railway collision at Brussels on Sunday injured twenty persons some fatally I General Nelson A Miles will nslc that 1 i Captain P H Ray be detailed to ex tplore the Yukon River and adjacent country Alaska k I In France on Sunday fortyeight Ro i publicans and twelve conservatives wero elected Senators I The Chinese governor of Kashgar is I about to proceed to the scene of the j FrancoChinese operations i Italy has accepted the principle of the 1 French proposals regarding Egypt The Unite Stateshaadvmced lnims j 19 land in the Fiji Islmil in behalf of its I i citizens who settled them before the an i nexation by the British The snowfall in Ute Italian Alps is tb 1 heaviest known It is estimated that WO lives have been lost by avalanches Clearance I BOSTON January 20 The leading clearing housts of the United States re I port that the cleaiauces for the week i ended January 24 were KM1548I921 a Decrease of 274 per cent SPECIAL NOTICES j p II LOST 1 ON FRIDAY NIGHT LA81 BETWEEN l EC B ClaWJonM reMdence Twelfth i Ward anu vic ityof the Kngle Gafet3 low i cut hiffh lice ladys slipper I ilioturn to ad t dress given F if Itl i Ou QltAY IIOl E DRADED T ON lelt shoulder Ihe fin er vill be snit ably rerard bleavingh t SlUDuel il jJ fchows fhud War r j g j A LATEIMPROVED COLTS REVOLVER XX hard rubber finish pocket size By eavJiig Jt at this office the Under will bo1e j warded I JOHN K C2ANE As MANAGER OP THE COSMOPOLITE J JOi Secondhand Store 324 South Main Street opposite St Junes Hotel has control of 10000 to bur Second hand Houy hold Furniture When you want to sclU leave orders or drop a line topostoffice lie trades la everj thlug I II I II WANTED 11 BOAKD IN A iKIVATE FAMILY NEAl I business portion of city Address I Hoarder this ofhce I i TO ANTIQUARIANS 1 i I HAVE ON HAND FOR SALE BOUND t volumes of the Dcscrtt WceUy Ahoy I j Emm the First to the Fourteenth volumes InclUsive The bct HISTORY OP UTAH for U t the first fourteen years of her Territorial I existence can be found in her orthodox w g publication < ELI B KELSEY I J Real Estate and Loin Agent No 25 and 27 II E First South Street Ii I 1 COAL I COAL I t1 ORDER PLEASANT VALLEY AND It Weber Coal ft Watson Bros tit AL VillIims old stand next door south of f Barratt Bros furniture store Telcohonein I office A L Williams number jlt LOST SIO REWARD LOST BEHVEEN MY OFFICE AND lfi residence a notebook codtainins sten ographic notes marked on cover Third District Court withdafeof filing Above II reward will be paid on return 01 same lo I I me A S PATTERSON 1 GEOC RISER PIONEER BOOT AND SHOE MAKER j L has moved to Market Row GGW First It South street Would be pleased to have the patronage friends and general public S300GO TO LOAN I CAN LOAN 20000 ON GILTEDGED securities on property situated In Salt Lake Cliy in sums of not less than 1000 I can also loan 10000 on good real estate security in this city In sums of J100 and up wards The interest moderate for the times ELI lo KELSEY 1 Real Estate nndLoau AgentNos25 and 27 E First South street PO Box 363 1 N B I have Dot quit business nor ns s > Iqned m > license but am j et upon the I r t quajtcjdeckatsffoJtLatanJ EB1 > I JOHN JV1ARCHL 1 I TOHN MARC HI WHOLESALE AND e retail dencr in rrnlt uul Vegetables es tablished in JS7 Grout experience in the f Shipping Trade Iiciflo Fruit Market 52U and o31 Merchant btteet San Francisco I DR COOPER IT COOlEIi 31 D OFFICE UP j stairs Prilicu iloiel Office hours from j I H to 11 am i Ui 0 pm Consultations free Ij rl from 8 to 10 PIANO LESSONS i i ni T RADCLIFFh TB CHER OFMU Ili ic removed tn 1iiM I South street second door eait of St Marks church Og I den failed Wedutednya and Sntnrdnys I fI DENTIST DENTIS1 i 1J J a 1CEYOR LATELY CON uccred ivitlt Dr J R VatfAukiu has re moved to TIm HKKAUJ New BuUdin where he is prop rcd ti > do dl tindsol Denfil work j Satlstictloii iriiarsnteeil j a t 1 TKSTIST F c NictroLs OFICE OP i JJ pose Walker House pifen Scixburj I Johiions drug store Anesthetics given I j I Telephone in onice H I j I E R CLUTE iI i PlUL fltArSFEltl AGENT 1OjulD GE from all depots experienced draycmn JI I satisfaction gurnnteed Stand Jaaln ts J 1 < Sons and liiinittzton Johnson lo I E K tLinE 1 f I THE STANDARD TYPE VEITB3 j 0 1 The Hsniii tonj I 1 AVnnaated Ii to do the 11 work o1 three expert penmen and I without se vere labor I Iteuso is be t coming a 4 necessity I with busi 1 ness and professional men I I WYCKOFF SEAMANS BENEDICT I Sole Agents for the World SS Madison btrt ct Chicago EDWARD E BRAIN Agent Silt Lake City BJA t I HOTELS lr 1 I rl W 3EE J T E Ii 0 U SE U I I I BEST FAMILY HOTEL J I Uam 3fc Salt 3uaiiu ± 1Y firJ I R YTESSL53 to 2CO pi D I Spccial u I tlw afc i c r xc3 t i 1 I AXJGlSTtJS PODISCE Fsj rr < 1 1I I MET ROPOLITl HE I I j Corner e t Temi > le ndTr orO P > v C SALT LAK3 CITV TJTAU 1 I Ie Brick and Jiril J7 1 I i 1 j Large and wellventilated rooms i ejt i Sttinpla room for Commercial Taveier I PATrs200to o pr DIY 1ih I SMcnlllJ1tcs by the Week r n llTOL WILILUIS ProDrfetorB 1th I I C L 31T1 2ZOTJS1S f l i S 0 ET7IH6 Prof etj > r I rnln St Salt TiiIce City t RATE ner Day ti < Spec < 11 Rxtva by Week or Month I 1 Firstclass SAMPLE lOOJI on jriouiul floor 1 r 1 ja3 I I If f