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Show I THE SALT LAKE TIMKS. FRIDAY. MAY 8, 18'Ji 5 II. )OTPi)M B'BMTll'l H . CARPETS, VrW' DRAPERIES, iiWitftt FURNITURE, h'iit WALL PAPER, REFRIGERATORS, j;tffeir BABY CARRIAGES, &$&s&:iU The Alaska Refrigerator, by actual test, used only 12-1- 7 as much as its best competitor. 'Z. G. dur M. I. Qheat Annual One Weeks Sale ! Coiimioiicos 31 outlay. May 4. It Includes Press (,'oods, Silks, lileaohed Table Idne.n, Towels, r.inehams. Victoria Lawn, Hosiery. Corsets, Ladies' Wight Drosses, Mens' Wb'ito, Night and Ovorehirts, Etc. In tho Cloak IoarlnMit T'pstaiM. by Elevator Ladies' Blazers. Jersoy Jackets, Jerseys, JSilk. and Worsted; Hornet Mouses, and Cbildront' Jerseys, Klo. Glothing Drpartmrnti In the C'lotlilntr lopartniont Suits, all sizes; Tants, all sizes; Childrani; Wear Hats, Lie. In the Carpet Dfpartniont Chenielle Curtains, assorted; Chinese Goat an. Smyrna Hugs, Etc. In tho Crockery Department A Long Line of Useful Goodi) Milnjj Imr perfect Sets and Odd l'ieces, Which Must be Sold. . COME AND SEE! ,A For the Half Has Not Been Told.) Z. C. T. (!. Webber, Snpl M. I. . , " I CUUmHGTOU & COMPANY. The Leading House In Salt Lake City lor Mining and Family Trade Dealers In , r-- Dealers in STAPLE FAMILY GROOMS. mMkif SUPPLIES. Have removed their Mammoth Minintr and Family Supply Housa to more commodious quarters, und are now located in the Hooper Block, 21 K. 1st South GEO. A. LOWE, Dealer in all kinds of Ornt-elas- is AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS! Buggies, Surries and Road Carts. Handsome, Stylish and Durable. Steam Engines, Saw 31111s, Etc. Kailroad Contractors' Supplies. WarelicuGO : 133 tc 1L5 ITirct East St. XT FID 1 A S5,OOQ WAGER " We will deposit $5,O0( with Wells, Farpo & Co.'s Hank andl ' wager that "CUPIDS." X"" Our New 5e Cigar, has a filler of full Vulta Abajo Havana, the finest ITivnsa tobucco grown in Cuba. It is beter than the average bit oigar, and niuft be sold for Oc, strictly. Ask any dealer lor it. B. K. Bloch & Co. WHOLESALE LIQUOK ANDaCIGAR MERCHANTS. Commercial Street, Salt Lake City. Consolidated Implement Company. If You Want A FINE BUGGY, A ROAD QAKT, A BUGGY HARNESS, A DEL1VERY VAG0N' A spRING WAG0N' BTATK TO AT. QQ JQ THE .g At5.T. T.'A Consolidated Implement Company Restaurant Franeais. 18 Commercial street. First-clas- s in all respects. KING A"D YANKEE, DEALERS IX Hardware, Stoves, Furnishing Goods, Carpenters' Tools, Bronze Goods, Etc. A Full Line Always in Stock, 213 Stale Street, Silt Lake City., For Bale. Only $195 cash; 110 per month for 12 months, balance 4 years at 6 per cent, for six room house, with closets, cellar, threo verandas, city water. Elegant location; only six blocks from business center. Davis iV SruiNGHK. 23 West Second South. . e Every house in Deskey's second ad- - d it ion is occupied. Choice warehouse sites on railway track. Wautland, 2o3 Main. "MEN AND WOMEN" LAST NIGHT. A I'osrorful Drama Pres.ntsd In the tint Artistic Manner br I'erleet Artiste. "Men and Women" Is a powerful drama, and as presented by Charles Frohmau-'- company nt the Salt Lake theater last evening left uothing lobe desired. It was porfuct in every detail. The auditorium wan crowded to its ca-pacity by an intelligent aiidienco, but even the most critical could cutest nothing that would add to the finished and artistic presenilation. The cast" of characters was an follows: I.srm-- Cohiri pre Meat of the Jefferson N.iilouiil tijim Krederte - Ueilevltle WinCim I'leoit. I he cashier. W.liiaiu Morris Kuuurd-fcuat'iiry- u.o aiBl.ml i rim Johnson Mr. R.'vimI K I ,,..,.., I W.ll.Till.wd Mr. W..V1.W. f toelauH. ( .r.u.rh Ford I'ltlvui Katjiuftn. counselor it. A. nol cria Lym.uiU. w !.,, bam examiner Ili'iiry Tillxit fcti'i))n'U It. dney, governor of An onii, I'r.iiik Morduuut Colonel Zaefcarv T. H tou- - 1 rsn iimiii i.e,v J.mH'J M. A. Ivunne Ijr Sam IMa.'ielu. uued , etdii-t-- l lu tuo army o( tuo cUurrii iiulHaut .1.0. HnrU-Mn- o Artinl.l Klrkf. a dork hrokvr liiunut C.irii an .': a ford, deputy inn: nh.il K. J. y.fV tllutuh Di r:i-- uiv niriir So M M.iM. r J. an Itraun'.es I'oVr's, Mr. Cohen's am r. nry A ii. Newton A tut K,Hiiuu, (.'f'M'r.tn.- - l.'nK'!.t-- r .. sv .u- v Armsiron Horn, Wllil tin l'rt's i.ti's Mau l A la us Mrs Kale , Wilms, J: ham's t tier ,),,-t- , Tyler Main ry Knox, uur from t e wmh! I. tta Hawkins Mrs. Jans illiam's mother. Aniii" Adams Min. Kirks, wile of ArnoM Kirk..Kt Massl 'loin. rvaat at Mrs. 1 'iwoit s K. Mauay To mention the indiviiltial actors will be but to multiply werds of praiso and appreciation, lo Miss Syduey Arm-strong, however, toe lirst place must be granted. Her acting wss exceptionally line. The daughter of an ex convict, who under a new name has made him-self rich, powerful and respected the governor of Arizona she discovers that her lover is a detail. ler, tho very crime lor which her father Miilered six years imprisonment. Not only this, but to shield himself he is allowing the guilt lo fasten itself to an innocent man his sister's betrothed. Her horror is something ton terrible to describe, but she clings to her lover and her love saves him ami sustains him in his effort to again make for himself a name, W illiam Morris, as l'rescott, tho de-faulting cashier, presented a powerful-ly portrayed part, and Frank Mor-daun-as the ex. convict governor of Arizona, pictured a noble character worthy of the deepest admiration. Around these three the main plot clus-ters and the characters call for art of the highest order. In not a single in-stance was any failure noted. The .secondary plot is one of genuine comedy and relieves the somberness of the leading incident of the play. Col. Znchary T. Kip, member of eougress from New Jersey, is in love with Mrs. Kate Helaliold, a charmiug young wid-ow, whose stepson Sain is in love with Margery Knox, a breezy young beauty from Chicago. Sonio of tho scenes are exceedingly funny.. Sam is a genius. The widow is charming and Margery is ail that is lovely and bewitching. "Men and Women'' holds the boards tonight and tomorrow night and Satur-day matinee. ILlflllNEIlFSHIITEl), Preparations Being Made to Have Har-ri- -i ju Stop off at Lebi and See the Suar Wurks, DUE TO THE MCK1HLEI BILL, Commencmint of Work on two Stato Stunt Buildings The Metropolitan Syndicate, Twenty. two cars of machinery for the Lelii Suiiar works were shipped from the works of tho Kebby Manufacturing company, Cleveland, O , on May 1st, ami oniiiit to arr'ne at their destination by the middle, of next week. This amount is not more than one-tent- of the whole machinery w hich has been ordered, hut until this is set up the will lay in the factory. Tho shipment consists' boilers, engines, fillers, etc. That II g ejriuj'oat. Allhimsh it is not settled that tho big syndicate of width Ueo L. c'haiuberlin in the head, will or will not invest a million or upwards in realty in thlapi'y. it looks a Utile as if they Would. To a reporter s question this morning, Mr. Ch iinbrrlin admitted that Tim Timks was on very nearly the right track in the matter. The rumor as given in these columns a few days ago, was to Ihe e fleet that negotiations were pend-ing for a large tract of land in the southwestern part of tho city on which several hundred homes were to be built raimiiig in prico from a thousand dol-lars up w hich were to be sold on the installment plan. (' K. GritHth, secretary of the Metro-politan Investment company, leaves to meet his father ill Seattle, where he is president of the Seattle Na-tional bank. Both the younger and elder (,rillilh are interested iu the fccheme. and it is believed the appoint-ment is for the purpose of talking over tho details of the venture. Should it co through the syndicate will embrace New York. Chicago and Boston capi-talists, and tho amount invested will not be less than a million and perhaps three times that sum. Not Coullnsil to Homo Talent. There will lie somewhere near a dozen different plans submitted to the joint city and couuty committee on the lo h inst., for the building on Eighth Ward square. Home architects have received inside information that at least ten outside contractors are anxious for 1 he job and will submit designs. All of the home talent who are figuring on the job are working bard to pet the work completed by the appointed time, and it is making tiiem hustle to get the work out in a creditable manner. Thy Want tt IUciv Harrison. Messrs. E. II. Dyer and C. A. Gran ger, of the Lebi sugar works, are in the city endeavoring to arrange to have President Harrison slop off an hour to see tho new sacharine plant which is so nearly completed. They would also like to direct bis attention to the fact that were it not for the McKinley bill such an institution could not exist here. They say for themselves they do not tliink the tariff is an unmitigated evil. IWeti Coming-- I p Well. Nearly all of the acreage devoted to beet culture in Salt Lake and Utah val-leys have been planted and in seme in-stances tho crop is coming up well and the young beets look tine. Tbe light shower of a few days ago has worked wonders for beets and the crop can now stand a long drougth. Perkins' Improvements. Sheldon & Co. have secured a con-tract from the Metropolitan Invest-ment company for laying a mile and a quarter of water mains in l'erkins ad-dition. Curhetone t.oitelp George F. Costerisan let tho contract this morning for tbe Harris warehouse to Heeps & Williams. There are now 100 safes in the Com-mercial block. All of them were hoisted up by one man with a block and tackle. The surface is being cleared oil pre-paratory to beginning the work of ex-cavating for the Jeuniug's block on First South. Teams and mon were busy this morn-ing on the commencement of the work of excavating for the new Morton block on Second South street. The contractors will soon be ablo to tear down the scalTolding in front of the Jcnning's estate building, as the work is neatly completed. Messrs. Ross & Gray commenced on the work of laying the foundations for their row of one-stor- stores on the corner of Fourth South and State street. Architect Vin Kroland has gotten out plans for a $4000 residence for John S. Snyder, to be built on the East Bench on First South street. The same archi-tect has also drafted plans for a home for James Brown on Third West street. John J, Dolan and Vin Krolow have platted block 21 of plat A as a subdivis-ion. The laud lays between Third and Fourth West streets. Together they will build fifty-thre- e houses on the ad-dition to be sold on the installment plan. B. G, Sites;, ono of the heaviest opera-tors in Denver really is spending a few-day- s here looking over the situation for tho purpose of making some large in-vestments. He raid what he had learn-ed of the beautiful resources of tho ter-ritory had made an effective impression on his mind. M. J. Gray let the contract this morn-ing for excavating for the new block which be proposes building south of I'icketts' corner on Stato street and Third South. The building will lie of St. Louis pressed brick, two stories high, with a basement, and will contain live stores. The foundations will be made strong enough to bear two more stories iu case Mr. Gray should decide to make it higher. thought at onetime it wonld be neees-ar-to call in the police. Bamberger was w ild and wooley and bard to cur-ry. His bearish propensities were so pronounced that nothing could assuage hit rage. He yelled like a Massachus-et- s orator speaking of the benefits of the McKinley bill, evidently bo tried to make Harrison hear him at Focatello, but it is learned since the exchange closed that his voice did not quite reach there. The chief point of attack was Apex, but the stronghold refused to yield. topat's yroTATioNs. I "5 T P STOCKS. I I P e r r j Alice f t (Hi Ailance Hi Anchor ft 6 Apej 10 0) lt H ll liiini'-- Siilnh'r Ol Htp Hole Pir r. liniO OS 08 in Cunt. Korea 59 00 CilIKO UXW 1? I .'i f a'tteueat 15 35 luly I t) lilenCoe ... 2 Ml Horn Silver ;,r MaiaU HUi .W tM i:i Maiiimotti 3 10 Nonhrru Mpy 3 ti i'it:irio 40 :i Ht.uilnv : IVi V. C. Co B , rtahdlH.'K oi WiMxI'lllH Ml Silver ( nrti's I0HM I VH'i W'! THE MINING WOULD. A Contract waj Let Yesterday for the Machinery for the New Glencoe Concentrator. THE BIB BINGHAM BUDGET. More Rich OrB from Gilson's Bnclihorn A Big Strike in the Old f Eeliable. Colonel Shaughnessy on yesterday J lp' the contracts for tho construction of f the new Glencoe concentrator, the con- - tlitions being that it should be com- - ' pleted ready to receive ore by July 10. The works will have no innovations of machinery, but will bo equipped with double compartment H.ntz jigs ami some kind of sluice tables not yet fully decided on The capacity will bis 100 tons a day. The management are not concerned but what the mine cilu pro-duce all tho ore necessary to keep the mill running imlelinitely, as there is now more than a thousand tons on the dump. Since the big strike was made , two mouths ago, the level has been driven loo feel on a continuous body of mineral varying in width from two to six feet. Nearly all of this production is ol a couccntraling material. A UlDKhuiii Muilcot. Tiik Tim ks a few days ago published some particulars about recent big strike made in the Fairview lode. Fur-ther developments on the vein nhows it ! to be seven feet wide uml almost solid ore. A line of assays taken a few days Muo returned ns high as 1J in gold and j! -- o5 ounced of silver. These w ho have ,i Been tho mine and the developments which have deen made, pronounce it one of the richest Mrikes ever made in Bingham. Regular and large ship-ments w ill commence next week and should the vein maintain its present strength for any length of time a daily output of from twenty to ftirty tons is thought to bo probable. SOLTIl GAI.KSA. This is the largest producer in Bing-ham nt the present time. The corn-- , pany is working U"i men, and is ship ping on an average of eighty tons of oro a day. VAf Tt NSIX. John A. V'au I'elt has commenced the work of driving on his HOO foot tunnel which is to cut the Winnemuc, Mo-hawk, John K. and Copper Queen lodes. All of these claims show large surface croppings and bodies of ore, ami the Winnemuc has a record of having produced iu excess of a million of dollars. the rKTito's mo outitt. For a young mine the I'etro is one of the most wonderful ever struck in Bingham. There seems to be no end to the ore as in every di-rection that developments are extended the show ing becomes greater. Almost all of it is a heavy galena devoid of sulphide, that will run over 50 per cent in lead; there is, however, some but it is not in large quantities. Eight teams are now engaged in mov-ing the output to the depot, which aKgregato close to sixty tons a day. As soon as the roads show an improve-jcn- t and more teams can be secured 'daily shipments of 100 tons are cx-y- " jpected. i t. I OLD TELEGRAPH. 1ihe old mine is still among the pro-ducers, and recent developments indi-cate that it would be just as easy for it to ship TiOO tons a day of ore and con-- 1 centrating material as the daily output of twenty tons which it is now making. KVA, HVKSOV AND III.KOV. Work will commence on this group on the 10th of this month. The mines ' are located near the Alamo. I.KAD MILL. These works, which are now concen-trating 100 tons of ore a day, are run-ning to their utmost capacity and yet havo the bins crowdod with a surplus. The mill has so much to do that it is soon to be doubled in size. j Total simp's sld, 1V.000. I "liiiyer 3u days. rai.es or 8TO'K. ln.fOfl sV.ams of Ai 0. He. buyer .10 days, lmm snares or IUk Hole 1'lacer, u. .0.1. l,oi s'iaiv of Oonuo (, . y.'MI phurtss of Con ro H IV. 'J. Ill ' shares of Stanley i:ll- e. 10,000 ounces of 8Uv-- ii Vln. I.ural ami tineral, Oro shipments are picking up, and the receipts this week go away ahead of thoso of iast. M. L. Towers, the Tintic miner and owner of the Eureka water works came in on last nights train. The Cottonwood concentrator will be started in the course of a week on ore from the Emma mine. The snow is fast being changed to water in the gulches of Cottonwood, and shipments will shortly made from the timber-lin- e camps. W. S. Godbe and C. E. Holt wore ar-rivals yesterday from I'iocho. A smelter will be builf in that camp by the Pioche Consolidated company. A reporter of ono of the morning pa-pers who probably couldn't tell the dif-ference between a pole-pic- and a winze, writes of a solid blanket of ore four miles square. The Venice No. 3 is a new and rich Bingham discovery iu the gulch ol Carrs fork. There is two feet of ore that assays twenty-si- x ounces of silver and sixty-tiv- e per cent in lead. A rich sample of ore was sent to Conklin's sampling works yesterday by Mr. Biddlecorne of Tintic. The lot was assayed and settled for on the basis of 1 ounce of gold and 1 5M0 ounces of silver. No petroleum is being produced by the well owned by the Utah Oil com-pany; in fact, the property is not worked nor has it been for some months. It is understood that the ma-chinery was all sold some time ago. There will be a good deal of atten-tion paid this year to the mines of West Tintic. The surface indications there are nearly the same as those on tbe lime bolt of Eureka and Silver City, only the ore is not of so high a grado. The object of W. S. Keys' visit to this city a week ago turns out to have really been for the purpose of negotiating for the purchase of the Sevier group of claims. But Messrs. Hyde, Beck, Miner and Hico were not anxious to sell. Considerable good ore lias been ob-tained this winter from the work done on the Emma, some of it being of a good grade, running as high as Vl ounces in silver and 50 per cent lead. The oro streaks in tho mine have not been regular, sometimes having a width of two feet and again pinching out altogether. Chemhcrlaln l o.' Report oe I.ieil. Tho lead market has show n a strong tone with rising prices and liberal sales, for tho total last week reached fully 2000 tons at tho Beveral points of dis-tribution, ami a net gain of a clean eighth in price. At St. Louis, where a.ilO was barely obtainablo, 4.05 was finally paid. Chicago ran from 3.05 to 4.10, and Now York from 4.10 to 4.20 wholesale, with some special brands soiling up to 4.25, and retail lots at 4.1!0, It is hinted that considerable of the buying was for Bhort account at New York which is covered with con-siderable basic, and this, added to a better demand for the trade, caused tho rally. A full review of the situation shows that the depression in price has oeen caused soieiy oy nun iraua at an ;, points, and in no wise by excessive sup- - ti plies, for the reliners have been sold up ! , flush with their make ever since Janu- - i. ary 1, and in most cases their output hat been sold from two to four weeks in advance. The Eastern Cartridge as-sociation has boon undergoing Borne changes, owing to stringent anti trust laws in some states, so that in the, in i interim the demand for shot has been nil. The London market has not shown any special change, although the quota-tion hardened from 12 7s Od to JU13 10s. There seems to be no feature whatever indicating any great change at that center. Glleon on Uck. There is ' something more to Sam I Gilson's mino than rich assays. His j almost weekly shipments of rich ore are attracting a good deal of attention to the Deep Creek country and con-stantly increases the confidence of peo-ple in tbe resources of Deep Creek, , M. Gilson arrived last night, with an other consignment of twenty tons of oro. Tho shipment which is now at tho Conklin Sampling works will not be assayed or sold until Monday. A I th lloiii.it. ko. Lowistou district comes to the front with the news of a big strike of gold quartz that is believed to be susceptible of treatment by amalgamation. The body of ore, if statements are true, is something astonishing, as it is claimed ;he quartz is at least as largo as 200x100 'eet. Assays made yesterday by shows it to hhve a value of $10 or $18 a ton, and the owners believe that they have at least 50,000 worth of oro in sight. Urltllth'i Claima. William Grillkh the Dugway assayer, came in yesterday, bringing with him the report of another rich strike a mile and a half from the Buckhorn. Ore taken from the surface, gave assays of 26 ounces in silver and 40 per cent cop-per. Some fioat from the claims went as high as 'M0 ounces. Mining Kichenge. Thoro was such a pandemoneum on tbe exchange this morning that it was HE TALKS SALT LAKE. Jam- - fi. M Ilonetil of this City Attend! a Convention at Nt. Louie, James (i. McDonald of Salt Lako City is attending the eighth annual convention of the National Confection-ers' association at St. Louis. He is, says the (Hobo Democrat, the youngest delegate to the convention. He is 2(1, and nn Mormon, having, been born and raised in Utah aud thoroughly instructed in the creed of Joseph Smith and lirigham Young. His lather was one of the pioneers in the Salt Lake valley, but never entered polygamy, though be had a family of eleven children. Neither is young M r. McDonald a polygamist. Ho says the plural wife business is played out in Utah, and every Sunday l'.'.OOO people hear polygamy denounced in the big tabernacle. Notwithstanding tho fall-ing off in marriage Mr. McDonald says the candy business is nourishing all around Salt Lake. He cun t cet us good prices for his pro-duct as i lie Denver manufacturers get, they recoiling l()o per pound, where the best he can do is Tjc but business is prosperous, and ne feels just as happy as if Bishop Clawson or l'res-iilcn- l Woodruff were to drop into his shop every day and order a wngon full of "broken mixed'' sent home to their forty-nin- children. Mr. Clawson is a smooth-faced- , good lookingyoung man, and in his light suit and gorgoous neck-tie presents an aspect, that the Mowers of spring might envy. There is nothing mormonesque about him, but he slicks up manfully for the Church of Latter-da- Saints, and says there must be something in a religion for which 173,(100 people are willing to give up everything and for which many wealthy men have spent months in a miserable jail. Ho says also that the polygamists of tho church have put away their wives aud are now living apart even from tin; first wife, whom the law recognizes as the lawful one. Mr. McDonald talks more enthusias-tically about the hill of Cumorah and the golden plates than be does about the. candy business Four hundred times a day he responds with a polite but emphatic negative to the question; "From Salt Lako, oh? Are you a m- 'NJ! fORBiSN OOODS CVZK i "PIN K8slRirM)MIN'l AT WA LI.ACE I A Company's nw tallorimt estatilishmeut, F.veryone is d,-l- ;hted witu our STOCK OF UPKl.NO SI'ITINti.S Tin- - fit ami fln sh of our g:irn;ent3 is far alii.;d of all compet.tor. WALLACEjfe CO. 7"'urnt-wttorel- 36 West Second South jirwt. IN RAILWAY CIRCLES. The Convention or Kellwejr Conductors at St. I.eole Next Week. Beginning May 12th, some ten days will be occupiod by tho convention of the national order of railway conduc-tors of tho United States at St. Louis. The divisions of this order number 2!1, embracing 10,000 active members. It is estimated that 2000 conductors wiil be present at the convention, the dele-gates to which will number about 300. Tho convention is of special import to St. Louis, owing to the effort that will be made to secure the removal of the order's headtpjarters from Cedar lisp-id- Iowa, to that city. Should St. Louis secure the prize, it would repre-sent the annual expenditure in that city of nearly $200,000 by the executive board, and the erection of a building to cost about $lo0,000. Kellroe.il Hippie.. The Union Pacific is angling for the Denver, Lakewood & Golden. S. II. II. Clarke has been elected a director of the Union depot company at Denver iu placo of W. II. Holcombo lired. The Midland is having a big picnic over its increasing freight business. The thing is growing like Jack's bean stalk. The branch of the D. & It. G. from Del Norte to Wagon Wrhcel Gap will not be operated this year. Too expen-sive is the cry. Ed Waugh, until recently local pass-enger agent of the Rock Island at San Francisco left for the east to assume a similar position with tbe company in Chicago. There is a probability that the Amer-ican ticket brokers will incorporate with a capital of $500,000. The associa-tion will meet in Kansas City next Thursday. 1'. D. McCarthy, passenger agent of the Atlantio & Pacific has been ap-pointed to the position of general freight and passenger asentof the little California & Nevada railroad. He will continue to bold both positions. The North Paoilic Coast Railroad company has taken new otliccs over the intended quarters of Wells, Fargo & Co's bank, on the corner of Market, Sutter and Sansome streets, San Fran-cisco. BINGHAM SOCIETY. Minn Sooville'e Conort A Ileneflt tar Mr. Antont. Special C rrespondeiice of Tho Times. BiNtiiiAM, May 7. Friday evening a benefit was given to Mr. Anlone, a blind man. Social hall was crowded with the best people of Bingham, and tho event was a financial success. Miss Leo Scoville, Miss Flora ibirton. Miss Mary Wallen, Miss Ellen Koeers, Miss Carrie Rogers, Miss Gwyne Clays, Mrs. A. A. Ganehet and Mrs. M. Fitzgerald were noticed among the ladies present. Miss Leo Scoville gave a social con-cert at her home last Friday evening in honor of Mr. George Squires of Wash-ington, D. C. Bingham has the prettiest girl in Utah. George F. l'cnhale, John A. Yanl'elt, and George Luighton of Salt Lako, were in the camp last week. THE GUARANTY SaTlnge and Loan Association of Minne-apolis. Authorized capital, $50,000,000; oper-ating under rigid laws and state super-vision; safest aud most profitable Jorm of investment. Salt Lake City office, 14 2Maiu street, up stairs. C. L. Hannamax, Agent. The Ktitvon Why Sam Levy's cignrs hold the trade by so firm a grip is that be never deceives his customers. When he puts a cigar on the market ho maintains its full standard of excellence forever. Ho does not charge an extra profit to in-sure risks, such ns are taken by nine-tenth'- s of bis competitors. All his goods are guaranteed and he will not allow a customer to keep any that are not entirely satisfactory to his trade. Sam Levy, Cigar Manufacturer. 171 and 173 South Slain street, Salt Lako City. Utah. |