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Show PERSONAL. A. E. Koch of Ogden is in the city today. John Southworth of Tooele is in Zion today. to-day. W. F. Shirver, jr., of Eureka, is in the city. Frank Smith is in tha city from Leadville, Colo. J. E. Cosgrove of Provo is at the Continental. Conti-nental. A. F. Storger, a St. Louis business man, is in the city. Mrs. James Cole of Evanston, W'yo., is at .i LUG VU11CU. W. WToodland, a Chicago business man, is in the city. A. D. Morrison of Idaho Falls is at the Continental. J. M. Alexander of Lawrence, Kan., is at the Walker. Ed Kafman, a cigar man of Cheyenne, is at the Cullen. Drs. Hoshaw and Merrihew of Lehi were in Zion yesterday. S. H. Higginbotham, an Ogden business man, is in the city. Postmaster Charles H. Roberts of Bingham Bing-ham is in the city. H. M. and L. Durbrow of the Ogden Stand, ard are iu the city. Dr. A. L. Osborne and wife of Norwalk, Ohio, are in the city. William Hatfield, a Tintic merchant, was in the city yesterday,. The Harrison Republican elub meets in its nsw quarters tonight. Edward K. Wats, editor of .the Singham Bulletin, is in the city. Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Babcock of Moberly, Mo., are at the Walker. J. F. Jeral and wife of Huntington, Neb., are visiting In the city. Edwin Anderson, a sheep man from Mount Pleasant, is in the city. George H. Champ has been rusticating at Logan for a few days. Charles Wiifong of Philadelphia is among the late arrivals in the city. A Colorado excursion will reach this city on the 15th of next month. Miss Gertrude H. Laws of Lincoln, Neb., is visiting with Miss Hollister. A. C. Berry of Unionville, a physician, is in the city for a few days' visit. Territorial Auditor Pratt is convalescing, and once more on deck for duty. Attorney William II. King of Provo was in the city yesterday on business. Ex-Senator Saunders of the L'tah Commission Commis-sion returns to Omaha on Thursday. P. T. Farnsworth of the Horn Silver mine, from San Francisco, is at the Templeton. C. W. Lyman of this city was rearistered at the Palace in San Francisco on Friday last. E. H. Rathbone, editor of the Tintic Miner, and a straight Republican, is in the city. Mrs. M. A. Cutler and daughter. Miss Cora, are at the Knutsford from Albany, New York. Colonel Deep Creek Murray still has confidence con-fidence in the ultimate success of his Deep Creek road. E. H. Moise, H. Shaw and W. L. Mason, New Yorkers, are in the city "doing" the golden West. . The regular meeting of the Y. M. C. A. Debating club will be held in the gymnasium gym-nasium tonight. Tfiomas Gahan and wife and Joseph Wallace Wal-lace and wife of Chicago are at the Knutsford Knuts-ford ec route to the coast. Edmund Russell will address the members of the Press club at their rooms tonight on the subject of "Art ou the Stage." Conductor J. M. Morris of the Rio Grande Western has taken a thirty days' leave of absence and will visit friends in Iowa. E.'M. Friedman, the Main street clothier, departed for New York yesterday, whither he goes to purchase his stock of fall and winter goods. J. P. Gardner purchased a one-half interest yesterday in the Ella A. mina, located at Clifton Springs, from W. F. Zabel and George Murray for $500. The Federated Trades completed arrangements arrange-ments last night for their Labor Day outing at Garfield Beach. The Times forecast the programme several days ago. A. E. Hunt and wife, S. II. Hill and wife, Mrs. Harmon and W. H. Staley, wife and child of Pittsburg compose a party of pleasure-seekers at the Knutsford. Mr. and Mrs. Bert Seaboldt returned last night to Fort Duchesne, accompanied by Ex-Governor Fletcher of Washington, D. C, who will be their guest for two weeks. The Zion's Savings bank will assume control con-trol of the Templeton hotel on the 1st of September. Alouzo Young, tho present manager, will remain in the same capacity. Rev. Dr. Utter of the Unitarian church is back from a brief vacation spent in California, Califor-nia, the particulars of which he has recited in The Tixes in two most interesting letters. All is quiet in gas circles. The American Natural Gas company Is laying low for something big and the Indiana folks are awaiting the action of the city council upon their franchise. F. D. Brown, Miss Mabel Brown, Miss Louise Squires, Mrs. G. M, Clayton and Master Harry Clayton arrived In this city this raomlne from Omaha to spend a few days in the city. Deputy Sheriff AT L. Heaston, of Bingham, was in the city last nijrht. To a Times reporter Mr. Heaston said that the political outlook in Bingham forecast the disruption of the Liberal party in that, camp. - He said that proselytes to the national parties were beinar lnaoe every day and that it was only a matter of time until they all would be Republicans and Democrats. Demo-crats. He predicted a close division on party lines when the final flood tide did come, w ith possibly the Republicans in the lead. |