OCR Text |
Show THE WEEKLY ForthWletiv tae TRIBUNE: SALT LAKE, SATURDAY MORNING, JANUARY ~ 7, 1882. Been & BATKGES, Seg om Eig ae a coe !s6 a JONES, BANKER, pena a WALKER BROS, BANKERS, Fg Peg peer ey a eee eee oe 3.3 DOK BANK Unfortunate UTAL bem a S oo active. Amongst the results, aside from silver, gold, lead, iron, and coal, are sulphur, gypsum, red and yellow ochres, galt, mineral wax, soluble salts, manganese, antimony, bismuth ,copper, zinc, arsenic, cobalt, cinnebar, mica, molybdenum, brick and fire clays, tatty, potter’s, and porcelain clays, and fire stone. Granites, sandstones, and time stones for buildin g, occur in profusion, and marble in great variety, some kinds taking a high polish. Antelope Island affords fine beds of green and royal purple slate of good quality. Volcanic products, and fossils of all the formations abound. MANUFACTURES. pron —The es of Utah have grown from $300. n value in 1850, a $5,000,000, i ork The chief items, are flour, rough and finished lumber, leather, bootsand_ shoes, harness and saddlery, woolen fabrics, yarn and hosiery, charcoal, brick, lime, beer. There are a hundred flour mills, more saw mills, twenty tanneries, twenty boot and shoe factories, woolen mills with five thousand spindles, ten furniture factories, two foundries. The manufacture of bullion from ores, employing one hundred and fifty stamps and a score of smelting stacks, doubles the above value,-making it ten millions eas Opportunities, Tron.—It is believed that Utah affords unequaled facilities for the manufacture of iron h materials abound, labor and supplies: are cheap, there isan ample market— the entire Pacific Coast—and it is far enough from ironee Europe and America to prec their movin their product here on selling it chea p er than it can be produced here. The. works should be calculated to reduce the ores and to manufacture all kinds of iron and steel. Metallurgical | Works.—Probably four-fifths of the ores in the Rocky Mountains are neglected for want of proper metallurgical works in_ this valley, equal in capacity and appliances to treating them. With an establishment possessing the means and skill to separate all the metals from their gangues, however coitibined therewith, an incalculable stimulus would be given to mining, which in turn would deluge the reducing works ith various and rich ores. The man. ufacture of drugs and chemicals, of oils, paints, pig and sheet lead, shot and le ead pipe, would naturally grow out of such works. Other Manufactures-—Three-fourths of our wool-clip goes Hast to be manufactured and then returned to us, while the mills work on half time; because the business lacks capital, classifying or specializing. The best woods for furniture, wagons, and ponies) implements are not native. Nor the tan barks, but we shall soon ia leather withont barks. With cost of moving raw material Hast and product back as a protection, lead and its products, and all woolen and leathern fabrics needed by Utah, might be profitajy made here. The products of our fine clays, marble and slate beds, have the cost of one carriage across the continent as protective tariff. There is one paper mill in operation, there should be ten. Mulberry trees and silk. worms do well in Utah, and silkspinning and weaving machinery is being introduced. These and other branches of manufacture offer liberal inducements to the enterprising invesor. er As the channels of intercourse between CLIFT HOUSE. F. AUERBACH & BRO. the surrounding young commonwealths eee ee necessarily stretch across Utah, the Its Great Success Under the eee Their Mammoth, Three-Stery Dry tide of population and’ business prosment of Samucl C. Ew Extent and Riekness of Its Gold and connecte Goods and Clothing Mouse, perity, rising in these, must corresponCounting one hundred thousand ego oe at o DAKE. ———_»—_ Silver Mines. dingly rise in our Terrritory like water acres in hay, fifteen thousand in mishe This popular hotel, situated on the pinsee Messrs. F. Auerbach& Bro., starting seeking its level. Yearly our people cellaneous crops, ten thousand in fruit, BATURDAY,. 33055150222 JANUARY 7, 183°. more and more engage in mining, corner of Main and Third south streets, in early times in Utah, in a email way, ve have two hundred and forty-two 4 Few Facts Regarding Its Great lumbering, stock raising, speculating, thousand acres under cultivation. isone of the leading hotels of Salt have, as time rolled along, grown with Coal Fields. whatnot, beyond the Territorial limits. Lake City, and from the fact of its be- the country, until they now stand in There are nearly ten thousand farms. MINING AND ELECTRICITY. the front rank of business houses in Yearly our trade, drawn by ever-exten~ Unoccupied Land.—Improved land eyes ing always crowded, the measure of its the interior. Close attention to “busiding railroads, finds new channels, 8 worth twenty-five dollars to one-hunExtracting Metals from Their Ores, and broadening and expanding on every Or aalacily may be judged. This is also ness, toresight and discrimination in Mou atains of the Finest Iron to be sored dollars an acre, according to locamaking purchases, and liberal and fair hand the theater of its operations and Separa‘ing Them from Each Other. Found in the World. tion. Although one-half of the arable evidence that the proprietor underdealing with customers, are the open influence. Commercial pre-eminence land has been entered, nine-tenths of 14 stands his business thoroughly and secrets of the great success of this firm. among. the future great mountain pier gue is yet unimproved. Its ssettlement is {London Mining ‘ournal.] well, hey have been established a decade, States is easily within the grasp of better undertuken in colonies than Col, Hollister, who has made personThe successful application of elecand in that time at frequent intervals Utah’s business men. The Clift House has been under the individually. Irrigating , chanal examination of all the leading intricity to industrial processes by Mr. they have added one or another can usually be made EDUCATIONAL. management of the present proprietor dustries and resources of Utah, fur- nels Wiliam Elmore, of Blackfriars-road, ppecily to their businé8s, and have with plow and scraper, each adjoining nishes the following carefully prepared School System.—An annual Territorhas already been several times referred foraterm of three years, ending last from time to time to enlarge the land-owner contributing his quota an ial tax of three mills is levied for ordi- July. At the end of that term Mr, Ewtoin the Mining Journal, and a pro- paper for Tus NEw YEAR’s TRIBUNE: oF ieity of their quarters, till a year having perpetual right to proportional cess which he has recently patented nary school purposes, and the school GENERAL VIEW. ing took a new lease for a term cf five ago they purchased the imposing threeuse of water at the additional cost for district trustees may levy such a tax for extracting eopper and other metals Area, Topography.—Utah Territory repairs. Under the desertland law a This years, commencing July 1, 1881; and, story building they now cecupy. from their ores, and for separating not exceeding thirty tills per annum, lies” fn ‘the latitude of Missouri, about is one of the largest structures in the erson is entitled to preempt six hunas may be thought necessary for judging from the success of the past, city, having three floors and metals from each piney wili, it is be two-thirds of the way from Bt. Louis to dred and forty acres, paying one-fifth a baseliéved, proye of gre commercial school purposes, 1f approved by two we predict a prosperous future for him San Francisco. It embraces fifty-four down and the rest in three years proviment, and being 175 feet deep. From value At present the Ticken ore—cuthirds of the voters of the district ata million acres of land. Only that which top to bottom it is filled full of goods, and a pleasant and Ce time meeting called for the purpose. There preous pyrites, for instance—is, after ean be artificially watered is really ar- ded he bring water on the ground. embracing everything conceivable in Fruit——The climate and soil of Salt are near three hundred and fifty district for his guests. the sulphur has been burnt out, ground able. The Wasatch Mountains inter- Lake Basin are peculiarly adapted to their lines of.trade. Their retail busischools; nominal value of scheol proto fine powder and roasted with com. A short description of the ‘hotel will ness is very heavy, and their army of |: sect it from north to south, dividing it fruit-growing. The trees are vigorous mon salt, then transferred to large into two substantially equal parts. Of perty, four hundred thousand dollars; not be out of place. The hotel contains obliging salesmen and saleswomen are tanks and the chloride of copper is the part lying east of this range and growers and generous bearers; fruits children between six and sixteen, thirty. kept on the jump throughout the day large, fair, and fine flavored; the cro dissolved and. washed out by boiling five thousand ;attendance fortyper cent; some sixty rooms for the accommodadrained by the Green and Colorado in waiting on the throng of customers two terms of twelve weeks each year, tion of guests, the rooms being providwater; chloride, sulphate and other rivers and theit tributaries little use remarkably sure. The higher. valleys, always to be seen at the counters. It having shorter seasons, are less favorliquors are also obtained in other ways one ofthem paid for by tuition fees, ed with gas and electric bells. The t is mountainous, has yet been made. is a curiosity to watch the extent and which average four dollars a term. well known for extracting and sepa- its valleys are a mile above tide-water, able for fruit-raising. In the South, on dining room is not excelled in Salt variety of these sales, which embrace the Rio Colorado, grapes. do well and Other Schools, Churches.—These fating metals from the ore; it is with it has some arable and considerable Lake City, either in roomuness or ap- a perfect museum of collections in the wing indust comprise the Deseret University pee liquors, however obtained, that grazing land, with extensive coal-fields wine-makin dry goods line. The customers, also, The climate Teehbiee that of southern Brigham Young Academy; about thir- pointments. “fhe dining room tables Imore proposes to deal. lying along the southern slope of the California, where cotton, tobacco, orare treated with such courtesy, liberare furnished with Rogers Bros.’ triplety private and forty mission schools pe are allowed to. settle and are Uintah and the eastern slope of the ality and fairness that they all go away and have ample with five thousand enrolled pupils, one plated silverware, then run off into clean tanks, over the Wasatch ranges. The settlements are anges, and semi- tropical "products genon completing their purchases with erally, are successfully cultivated. Aphundred thousand dollars worth of space to seat sixty guests. We noticed top of which are arranged connecting few andsmall. The enver i the perfect conviction that nowhere ple crchards bear one hundred bushels school property, and paying salaries an air of neatness and order about the else would they have done as well. rods from one of his improved me Grande Western is now constructing a er acre; smaller fruits somewhat aggregating sixty thousand dollars a room that gives it a homelike appearnamo-electric machines. From railroad through it, joining Colorado hen that is the feeling about an ance, and if the public have any doubts, year. Tuition in the mission schools anode rods he suspends thick plates of and Utah, which wili make if accessi- . more; grapes, five tons Timber.—There is a “fair supply of all they have to do is to give the Clitt establishment, there need be no fear is eight dollars a term. They are gradspelter or zinc, and from the cathode ble and its resources available. bu t that it will prosper. Accordingly, timber for ordinary rough use. The rods he suspends sheets of copper feil. ed, and really primary schools, al- House dining room a trial. Settlements.——The settled part ce we find that Auerbach & Bro. have a valleys are bare of trees, but the mounkitchen is arranged and fur though the teachers rank with highHe suspends the zinc or spelter anodes, along the western base of the Was: double portion of the business prostains are quite well-wooded. The best nished in first-class style, mie all the alter having been amalgamated in Bo. Mountains, between them and Balt school teachers. The Deseret Univerperity and activity which have been so trees produce lumber practically almodern improvements for cooking, sity, Brigham Young Academy, and rous cells of suitable size, whic. Lake and Lake Utah, in Cache, San- though not technically clear. Red and the best the market affords con- marked a feature of the year just past. pieces in the depositing tanks ated about six of the mission schools may ete and a score of valleys; wherever The four floors (including the basepine and black balsam are the most stantly finds its way into this part of be called high schools. Utah affords gthe chloride liquors, the porous indeed a stream flashes into the sun- lasting woods. e people cannot the house, to reappear afterward on the ment) of their mammoth building are the ordinary religious and educational ele being filled up with a mixture of, shine from the gloom of mountain duterally packed with goods, so much acqtire title to wooded mie, but they say, one part of sulphuric acid to facilities of the Territories. One has dining room tables, prepared, in the eorge,is caught and trailed in a use the timber, paying stumpage under 0 that they are crowded for room in most appetizin g ways. choice of Protestant services in the about twenty-four parts of water by t housand rills upon the thirsty land. certain circumstances. one of the great spac2 their building Rough lumber The office is lighted with a Brush measure. ‘This effectually prevents principal towns of northern Utah. Salt Lake Basin extends from beyond | ; t doll thousIf they keep on at their affords. electric Highs and is certainly a comthe disposition of sub-chloride. The The Mormons, who constitute fourdre to Bear River Gates, two hun- asand; rerte twentyandtrefinishing collars, Der, present rate of expansion for but a flooring lumber Wasfis modious and cheerful room, where current is passed, and asa result the re miles. fifths of the population, have nearly It includes Salt Lake and imported and costs forty-five dollars. short time longer, large as their quarcopper in the liquor i is thrown down, two hundred buildings for public wor- obli ae clerks, along with the propri- ters are ney will have to add to them. h Lake, has the general ae yi Pasture, Stock.—There ismuch land ee, can at all times be found to welan equivalent of zinc or spelter having ship, exclusive of the Great Tabernacle the Alleghany Mountains, and is It. might have been reasonably supon mountain slopes and river terraces in the meantime been dissolved in so- paradise of the farmer, the poricitan at Salt Lake City, the temple at St. come guests and make them feei at posed that when they moved into this which cannot be irrigated and yet 1s The office lution. He now syphons the liquor ist, and the fruit-grower. George, and the temples building at home as soon as theyenter. Cache Val- not cut off from water. The native is also used as a reading room by the building they were amply provided into large rough wooden precipitating Manti, Salt Lake City, and Logan. ley lies to the northeast, Sanpete Val- bunch grass is second in quality only with room for years to come, but this tanks (leaving the deposited or precipTheir ‘ordinary churches are plain, but guests, and as itis connected by tele- expectation was wrong; already they ey to the southeast, of Salt Lake Val- to the buffalo and gramms grasses of phone with the livery stables and all itated copper behind), where he treats no expense is spared on the temples. y. hey are noted grain-producing the plains. It grows in the most barren the principal business houses of the could utilize more room, and soon they it i” ‘Deccipiteting the Zinc in solution ATTRACTIONS. sections, but having colder winters and will be obliged to have it cures standing, retaining its nucity, the guests need not leave the room therein. The zinc solution liquors al- shorter seasons.are not so well adapted | spots, irjent qualities, and heir stock is full and ample, emSalt Lake City—Of pleasure resorts to seek for what they may want, but has a pyriform ways contain sulphuric acid in combiIn Salt Lake too fruit-growing as Salt Lake Basin. seed, very fattening. bracing everything in theirline. They in Utah Salt Lake City ranks first. can give their orders then and there. nation, which acid it is necessary to The Sevier River rises in Panguitch wars keep it full, by closely watching Enjoying a delightful climate and Connected with the office is a beautiremove. To effcct this the liquor is Lake, far south, and flows northward, Basin, and southward, stock in generat e Eastern markets, and buying from good markets, amply laid out, em- fully arranged bar, presided over by J. winter without fodder; in the more brought to boiling point, then he adds finally breaking out of the mountains They and first hands. bowered in trees, it is connected by M. elevated valleys north they require Fallon, who is always ready to see rete chloride of lime in quantity sufficient and losing itself in the sink of Sevier food and shelter, and the stock-raiser rail with oint of that none go away dissatisfied or dry. also make a specialty of importing to combine with ali the sulphuric acid, Lake. Its upper course is_ settled, does well who provides these against interest in the Territory. There are As the office and reading -room are certain lines of goods from Germany, so forming a sulphate of lime which wherever tributaries enter from ad. emergencies anywhere. warm medical springs in the suburbs. and have an agent in Europe to kee Ordinarily a principally for the gentlemen guests, readily falls as a precipitate, leaving joining mountain ranges. supplied with the best and newest From. Fort Douglas, perched like a we find a handsomely furnished parlor | then five-year old steer, worth twenty-five t chloride of zinc in solution, which, afThe Desert.—The western third of dollars, is produced at a cost of five white bird on the plateau above, the up stairs, for the accommodation of la- gcods as they make their appearance. ter being drawn off clear of the. sul- Utah is mountain, desert, sink, and Their wholesale trade in Utah and Jordan Valley, the city, and Salt Lake dollars. The yearly drive outward is dies; and for their pleasure a fine piano phate of lime has added thereto sufiid head valued ] ake, with few oases of grazing or of lie spread out under the eye, a pretty adorns the room, and, contrary to the | * he surrounding Territories is rey cient boiling milk of lime to precipipossible arable land. In the northern Se A CE ee Sagtbirts picture. From the city the Wasatch thousand dollars. general rule, it is in tune and ready for 1 arge, and special attention is given to tate all the zinc contained in the soluart of the territory the Wasatch is By cultivating lucerne, practicing enRange presents a mountain view of The farnishio gs ot the parlor are | the jobbing trade and to the filling of Pp use. tion. Itis important the chloride of igh and massive, there is great accuunsurpassed interest. elegant and comfortable, and the room or ers. In this department, as in all zinc solution and the milk of lime be mulation of snow in winter, and the silage, and pushing things, this outSait Lake—The American Dead is spacious aaoiee ao that all may be | Others, their fair dealing is conspicuturn might soon be increased ten-fold. kept at or about boiling point during {reams are correspondingly large and The strain of blood in cattle, horses, Sea is reached by rail from the city in ous, and their customers ee once are accommodat the precipitation of the zinc. The re- | © D gory minutes. Containing some twenIn the southern part the} and sheep has been greatly improved The up. ‘aPaike department is presided | their customers for alway sulting oxide of zinc is then dried and R umerous. ange is lower and less in mass, it is | jn recent years. Their magnificent tbe “of dry goods, ty per cent of solid matter, oniey salt, over ; , who gives her is ready tor distillation, with small warmer and there is little snow, smallwith no outlet, studded w mounSheep, Wool.—There are probably personal superintendence to the outfit- clothing, boots, shoes, hats, caps, ladies’ coal or coal dust in the ordiaary way, er and fewer streams, and more desert six hundred and seventy five thousdress and finishing goods, i is displayed tain islands, destitute of life. havinga ting and the general arrangements; and the zinc is melted and made into rise and fall resembling a tide whose The isolated ranges im j and sheep in Utah, shearing two miland this is a sure guarantee that ali} im an elegant manner, and one enteranode plates fur re-use in the next th Braporiiogs period is an unascertained series of ioes well. The rooms ae are furnished ing the store is struck with the hare Great Basin give rise to no streams | ion seven hundred thousand pounds working. arrangement and _ artistic years, it is a great novelty. The of importance, and the valleys are of wool, part of which ranges with the throughout in a substantial and taste- monious The refuse of amalgamating zinc RAILROADS AND TRANSPORTATION. largely desert. southern shore affords fine bathing. But all the mountains | pes; California wool, part is inferior. The beds are supplied | throughout. The trade is thoroughly ful manner. from the -porous cells 1s put into a reapppear to be full of mineral ores, and | One fourth of it is manufactured in the In July and August it is deliciously Railroad System.—Utah has seven with box-spring mattresses—the best systematized, each department being a tort kept for the purpose, and by the th warm, its density sustains the swim hundred and fifty miles of railroad in in the world—and beds pu bedding eeu of itself, and all forming 2 comere is usually water enough to mine | Territory. It realizes to the producer application of heat all the mercury is ation pleasing to the sense and filloperation, four hundred and fifty in mer, thg exercise, the stimulus of the are all new and first-clas about twenty cents. Sheep are worth distilled over, and recovered for use in and reduce them. CLIMATE. two-and-a-half dollars, as they run, re- process of construction, and as much brine, t e freedom trom danger, the This hotel furnishes the finest front ing the strictest requirements of busithe next working. Should there haye crowds, all combine to make it ex- and most delightful view of any hotel | 2 ess accuracy. The gorgeons display Statistical.—In the lower valleys the | quire no feed or shelter in winter, are more projected, duplicating the excellbeen inthe ore any zinc it will be in the show windows} a: the ado Tiiceedingly pleasant and beneficial. ent system of Territorial and county limate is mild and salubrious. The | not liable to disease, and yield an anin the city. found in the chloride liquors and reMedicinal Springs, Canyons.—Utah roads, three thousand miles in length. tmosphere is dry, elastic, transpar-| nual profit of 40 per cent on cost. Its terms are reasonable, and the ments there never fail of nitectine the covered by treatment in the same way The Generally Speaking, the railroad sys- abounds in mineral springs. nt; and -bracing. The temperature | Many are driven in, and out, yearly. main object is to afford satisfaction | #dmiting eye, and whenever a new aras the zinc which is dissolved from the rangement is made, there are sure to be Warm Springs at Salt Lake City, the and comfort to visitors. tem consists of a north-and-south ompares favorably in respect of equaConclusion. —Agriculvure ig in avode, as before described. The same Red Springs near Ogden, Soda Springs trunk line, three main transverse lines, the country at | comparatively primitive state in Utah. ility with that As we have given somes of the lead- | Cfowds ot people looking on. series of operations are carried on Auerbach & Bro. are the style of and branches into the mining canyons (in Idaho) have been improved, and arge, and certainly with that of ad-} Whe eat, flour, potatoes, eggs, butter, ing attractions of the Clift House, we when sulpbate or other extraction men whose success is a good thing for with great will bid youa Happy New Year, and acent Territories. The following | chickens, seeds, dried fruit, beef and and coal fields. The Union and Cent- are frequented by liquors are being ‘operated upon. Ia benefit. Allthe larger streams have ral Pacific roads, meeting at Ogden able gives the annual and seasonal mutton on foot, and wool are exported, say, if you wish a pleasant hotel and | the city. They are a solid firm, and practice it is found that every trace of their Alpine valleys in the Wasatch but their value is counterbalanced by | giving Utah important advantages reasonable rates, stop with Sam Ewing | #!ways attract travel and trade; having copper is electrodeposited from the mean temperature ; its maximum, minlarge interests, they embrace an ex. and their canyons where they break Hast at the Clift House. copper haners. in a state of chemical] | um,m, and range; the annual and sea- nearly ten thousand tons of corn, oats, from the competition between tensive region of country, and draw to out. To enjoy this one must have and West, stretch across the northern sonal rainfall, percentage of moisture | beans, cheese, hams, bacon, lard, sugar, purity, and it is thus separated from ai amen eer rent Cae the city the wealth of all the mounThe Utah & | camp outfit, his own conveyance and the iron or other metals that may be in | nd number of days on which there is syrup, currants, raisins, wine, ‘starch, Pp art of the Territory. aoe belonging to the Union Pa- time, saddle. horses, hunting and fishSINGER BRANCH HOUSE. tains. Besides this, they do not fail to tobacco, canned Pp recipitation—all being the mean of} crackers, mustard, solution in the extracting liquors, ual an active hana in building up the ing tackle, all the paraphernalia of ns northward from Ogden fruits and pickles yearly cific, t e eight years 1873— 1880, observations | meats, while the soda, which is always abun>) and improving it; so that their To such rough Cable Valley, eighty miles in the tourist and sportsman. imported, hardly one of which need daatly present in these liquors, being z t United States Signal Service Station, “ sees good fortune is in a measure there is small use in pointing out at- The Regular Mees of the Original Utah, and into the heart of Montana, his indicates the scope Utah alt Lake City: be. free from copper very readily crysialSinger Manufacturing Company. a localities, since the Range is public benefit, and should be a cause t ractive intersecting the Northern Pacific en farming offers to capital, enterprise, lizes out, and may be used as a bye. full of them. From the lakes of Big of public congratulation. route. The Utah Central, controlled pr. Pe I Precip. and skill. There is enough water and L. E. Hall, Esq., manager for ten by the Union Pacific, runs ‘south from | Cottonwood short excursions may take rd The exceeding simplictty and nom- | “°"*°"*\ien jaas.|Min.| R. |r ot| i [Ds | rich land, the hOme demand is great Ogden through Salt Lake City to Mil- in Parley’s Park, Park City, Alta, and years of the Singer Branch House of inal cost of the operation for working | Winter.) 315 | 513 | 82 1.1) 67.4 | 4.16) 3) | aod prices stiff enough to make agriBlasting in Collieries. the original sewing machine comcom mand ford, two hundred and sixty-five miles, mountain height s which Mr. Elmore’s process must at once | Spring..| 48.4 | 75.8 |25.3 |50.5| 45.4 | 6.74] 38 | culture, instead cf mining, the prime It seems somewhat strange that after recommend it to, the attention ofeop. | StmOmet B15: | Oot ieee ee \aeed industry. It should not need to bring with connecting roads to Bingham, magnificent views. The succession of peny, reports a greatly increased business for 1881 over any wild gorge and wooded vale make of | seeing the remarkable difference in Alta, Figen, A eley 8and a branch to per extractors by the wet. way—in fact, | annual. 503 1742 127.6 |46.6| 46.4 |16.95| 93 | food tor man or beast to Utah. years in which the|p roduct arising from the use of powder Frisco. The dto Pleasant Valley | American Fork Canyon exceedingly at- the twelve it must immcdiately supersede the _MINING. agency has been established in this in mines, that the nossibility of doing The Utah | tractive. Utah County has a fine sheet belongs to the Rio Grande. present method of extracting by use of Mean of highest thermometer for eee Area—Mining began in of sweet water with grassy borders and city. The Singer company is the only | without it should ever be considered. he output has been & Nevada runs from Salt Lake City scrap iron, which is not only trouble. | ei ighteen years, 97.4; lowest, 3.8; €X-| Tish in 1870. WwW estward via the Lake shore to Stock- | full of trout. One passes hence up the one which hasa branch here in this | Yet for many months the subject has some, but is over four times as costly tremes 104,10. Average daily’ vari- fifty-six mitlion dollars, lead, sillver, The a old. The yearly product ton, and belongs to the Union Pacific. Sevier to Panguitch Lake, two miles city, and this branch has other branch. | been discussed in Great Britain, in working as c ‘mpared with Eimore’s | a tion of temperature, 13; monthly, 46; es in Ogden, Logan and Provo. above sea, a noted summer resort. The government considers it a necessary A branch from the Union Pacific at process. The new Elmore Dynamomean temperature of four hottest averages six million dollars. _ The Echo sales for the year 1880 amounied to] step, in order to preserve Bae life, runs to Park City. The Utah | Beyond is the Rio Colorado plateau, Electric Machine can be seen in opemonths at 9 o'clock p.m, 57; humid-| wining area is coextensive with the eastern parle the latter from Park burrowed deep by streams from far off about 1,200, and forthe year 1881 to | to insistthat no one shall in the ration in London,and is considered one ity insummer, 70 per cent less than mountains. Mines have been found in City to Coalvi mountains, a dreary, ill-logking coun- over 1 (300 Spee in Utah, | mine when shots are fired. “Tt seems ~ of the most wonderful scientific appa-|s aturation; precipitation nearly one- every county. There are eighty minrepresenting business clese the matter cannot be left to mine ownRoads Building-—The Denver & try but not without grandeu ratuses which has yet been brought be- half the average east of the One Hunding districts embracing five million Summing up.—The nheceal features see $75, 000. This shows the]}ers to decide, whether the mine is Rio Grande Western is extending the fore the public. It should be inspected | r edth Meridian; mean air pressure at acres. are now abandoned, but Pleasant Valley road via Salt Lake | of Utah, mountain, desert, and salt sea, popular appreciation of this old re-|d by all who are interested in any kind Salt Lake City, 25.638 inches; water with etter { facilities of intercommuniCity to Ogden, and eastward to Grand | are peculiar and of perennial interest. liable machine, and demonstrates that | -v of metallurgical operations. boils, 204.8; average velocity of winds, cation and more experience in reducing River, to meet the Rio Grande building | The Territory has the resources of an 546 miles an hour against eighteen on ores, they will be revisited and work Its climate is pleasant and superior to all imitations. They rely westward. Same company is building | empire. the ocean. resumed, not again to cease from Salt Lake City to Park City to | healthful. The main routes of inland The Seasons.—The spring opens in BOSS LIVERY STABLE. Productive Districts—These are onnect with the Utah Eastern. The commerce traverse it. Its valleys are which involves norisk in the purchase, March, the atmosphere becomes clear popularly known as Park City, the fertile, its psunisine full of mineral as no cheap competitors or imitators Sanpete Valley road will soon be comas a dew di rop, deciduous trees burst Cottonwoods, American Fork, StockRew Livery eevee of The ores. "Its farms and mines are contigpee from Nephi to the Wales coal into leafy bloom, and the green of the ton, Bingham, Tintic, Frisco, and Silulloy & Pau uous. nee stream makes a way for and utility. The people also know that nes. The Utah Central will be exvalleys pursues the retiring snow-line ver Reef. The great mine at Park a railroad. Labor and food are cheap. the Singer branch houses are here to senda to the- Pleasant Valley coalThe summer up the mountain slopes. City is the Ontario, in quartzite; pa Messrs. Mulloy & Paul, feeling that No better mines or facilities for workelds, an al to accompanied is pleasant in its onset, four feet thick by twelve hundred feet they could do better than to continue future | ing them are known anywhere, no betin the. aiear by fragrant airs and full streams. long ; ore milling one hundred dollars Springs in their old quarters, bought a lot op There is chines and such repairs as are needful, where it will connect with the Califor- ter market for the farmer. Springs of sweet water, fed largely a ton; finely equipped and dead work posite THE TRIBUNE cffice and have nia Central, running (when built) di- unlimited water power, and a fine field without. waste of time and money. bubble forth every: | kept well ahead; product to date, nine- rect to San Francisco, and also to the for manufacturing. ut up @ building to their notion—one irony the Bucs, coal, Timber, But as the season advances ty-two hundred thousand dollars: divi- Rio Colorado to meet the Atlantic & in which their large business can be iron and building stone are plenty. the beat increases, done comfortably, compactly, and with the winds become donde paid, thirty-seven hundred thoucordingly. One hundred and fifty thousand hardy Pacific from ‘“Albuqueraue. The are CTY) | sand dollars: no signs of exhaustion; the greatest saving of time and labor. laden with dust, the storms and industrious people are on the Union Pacific is building the Salt Lake the springs fail or become brackish lowest, (600- foot) level the best. The Their lot is 50 feet front by 250 feet ground. No State or Territory offers & Western trom Lehi southwestward from concentration of their mineral larsac Company has mines, a mill through Tintic, to connect with the greater inducements tothe enkerprisin 8 deep, and they have also 10 rods square and vegetaalts, the streams run low, 8 and smelter here; the McHenry Comto the west in the rear. the manufacturer. Supplies and fixCapitalist, artisan, laborer, or farm California Central in Pahranagat tion parches unless orlifcially watered. On this they have built a two-story any a mine and ‘mill; Thereis a great tures for machines, ined needles, alley. Other very important > —____—. Still, from the rapid radiation at the Ppmine in Pinyon Hill, and many other stone front, 110x40 feet, the ground extras, Darts of machines, etc ,constantroad in and through Utah have been KAHN BROTHERS. rospective mines, eight of which are determined upon by powerful floor being devoted to their office and earth’s suriace, the nights are agreealy on hand. corPp ee being opened and employ steam macarriage room, the up stairs haviog two | bly cool and give strength to meet the porations. When they are completed, heat of the days. In October the air chinery. fine front offices and large storage room 2,000 machines a day e actual reevery part of Utah will be easily ac. The Cnly Exclusively Grocery EstabCotton woods, Bingham, Sanly, Tin- cesssible, and we shall have choice in the rear.. There wili be tio posts in cleears up again asin snring, and the lishment in the City. landscape softens with the rich- colors tic.—The mines of the Cottonwoods, at competing lines East and West. this large room, the whole weight oR gcc of the dying vegetation, which reaches Bingham and Stockton, all accessible being supported by the ak trusses. TRADE AND COMMERCE. - The grocery business of Kahn Bros. of this is a stable #85x35 feet, up the mountain sides tto their sumfrom Salt City by rail and semicircling mits in places; but on them the gorBusiness Statistics—Before the is one of the institutions of the city. eau HOn the people to beware of imiwitht‘stalls for fifty horses, and harness he city within thirty miles, ship their completion of the overland sal Pen room, all arranged in the most con- geous picture is soon overlaid by: the res to Sandy and lose their individual Col. Kahn has been here in business tator venient manner. Above this is the first snows of the approaching winter. ut-put in that of the smelters—all but the imports and exports of Utah d since 1859, and his friends are numThe fall is delightful and generally not exceed twelve thousand tons pee grain room and hay loft. he Stewart the Jordan and Stewart No. Central Branch -agency by Mr. Hall} i annum. Since that, they have ayer- bered by the thousand throughout all An elevator is in the southeast cor- li ngers nearly to the end of tbe year. at Bingham, which have mills and ave shown that with Sanitary Advantages.—The dry air aged nearly twelve times as much; two the mining regions. The present firm ner of the main carriage room, which ast bodiesof gold quartz. At Sandy adapt thirds imports, one. haif meidental to has been in business in the city for will raise up to the storage room a and slight rainfall peculiarly nd vicinity are the Mingo, Germania, mining. The value of the yearly imwagon or carriage for storage, or the ee to that out-of-door living, tram pnd Hanauer sroelters, the Germania fourteen years, and in their present ing, and camping which so quickly ports and exports ig not far from sixgrain and feed to the grain room. efining lead also, whose united monthteen million dollars. Jobbers and re- line of trade since 1874. They are the To the west of the first stable another renovates a broken-down nerve appary product averages about eight hundatus, and through that all organic protailers do a yearly business of ten mil- only firm in the city which confine extends, with dimensions of 100x35 ed tons base bullion,-worth one hundwholesome cesses. Pure water and Perhaps three and one themselves exc'usively to the grocery feet. South of this is the corral, and dand twenty-five ‘thousand dollars. lion dollars. > ood are abundant in all the valleys. At ete the Mammoth, a vein forty half millions are Nal in trade; west of it cS sheds for ’busses ard trade. ne has achoice of altitude ranging hesvy wagon feet thick breakIng through the lime- most of it is done by a few houses. The In this line they have everything heaviest is Zion’s Co-operative MercanThere will yi stabling for 100 horses, b etween forty-three hundred and. ten stone across its bedding and producing thousand feet above the sea, access to one hundred thousand dollars per antile Institution, of Salt ae City, handled by any grocers, and they do and room to stand 50 carriages. Three ee mineral springs with remedial quali}. um, is the leading mine. which, with its branches gden new carriages have been ordered The Tin both a wholesale and retail trade. tiic IMining & Milling Companyis at a cost of $1,5U0 each, and they will ties for many “ills, and in Salt Lake a and Logan, imports one- third ofall the Their goods are strictly selglane and Basin, containing 60 per cent of the steady bullion producer. The merchandise used in the Territory. It ae sell at small margin be here by the letof Ma eke population, the ameliorating influences has eight hundred stockholders, and a In the stables there is a ventilating Hill mine ships its ores to Sandy. A specialty is made of furnishing of twenty-five hundred square miles of flue between each two horses, which Frisco, Silver Reef—At Frisco, the cash capital of seven hundred and fif- supplies for mining companies and for Hardly any form of dis- Horn Silver, after much preparatory 8 alt water. ty thousand dollars. There isa co-op- those businesses requiring extensive orwill serve to keep the air pure at all evely times, the cfluvium being carried off ease criginates or proceeds to the work, including erection of steam hois- erative institution in nearly ders in their line at mines or mi chronic stage in the Territory, and up- ting works, extension of Utah Central settlement, buying of the big institucompletely into the air above. The Great attention is paid to the family on man who come here diseased tion at Salt Lake City, and selling to it trade, and especial pains taken to see arrangements for keeping the stables Railroad to mine, and building five in perfect condition otherwise and for mere residence has a pene effect. stacks at Francklyn, near Salt Lake, is the country produce they take in for that all goods are strictly as ordered. AGRICULTURA cleansing | ae carriages are of the most ready to begin paying a long series of goods, but they are not branches. eir wholesale trade extends Arable Land. Ee ten million perfect| dividends. Thepay chimney is fifty They have thousands of stockholders, throughout Utah and adjoining Terriand most of the people balioune acres of public Jand have been sur- feet wide by one hundred yards long; There i eed in these eee ae tories, and jobbers can rely upon getFifty insurance companies veyed in Utah. The urea of arable the capacity of the mine and furnaces them. 000 feet cf lumber and 300,000 ting terms and such goods as they ] and is governed by the amount of wa- is at least a quarter of a million per carry four hundred thousand sas The main front is of dressed Be oe wish. Orders in their line receive the Calculatter available for irrigation. presents a fine appearance, month. The Frisco Company has one insurance on buildings, and perhaps on prompt and careful attention. fifteen hundred thousand on merchaning the duty of one cubic foot per sec- stack here and the Cave and Carbonate Dealers can stock up from this house dise in stock, representing, it is esti- on the most reasonable terms and withond at one hundred acres, the streams } mines, It turns out about twenty-five mated, threefourths of its average valwill water fifteen hundred thousand thousand dollars monthly. At Silver OVERLAND HOUSE. out delay. acres. The land farmed without irri- Reef, the Christy, Stormont, Leeds, and ue. There are two national and twelve Inasmuch as they buy exclusively Seven Years Under the Management of private banks, with an aggregate capi- from manufacturers and original packgation (one third) and what may be Barbee & Walker companies prodW. A. Pitts. tal of nine hundred thousand dollars; watered from springs and wells would uce together a million in fine pute ers, they get the lowest rates and best ee eee average deposits, three eee aver. bargains, both in quality of goods and swell this to three million acres, of annually. A mill ae just started ne The Overland House, Salt Lake City, nee age loans, two millions; perhaps one-tenth is under Ogden, and one is being erected a prices. Buying also in great quantihas been for seven years continuously Ree drawing thirty Paine rohan rio the long continued Marysvale. ties from first hands, they are able to under the management and control of fenceie gation. —Generally, yearly. irrigation development of certain mines, the ship in car lots, and thus secure a deMr. Pitts, and in that time it has gainRereane, Taxes.—There are no debts cided advantage in freights over those cannot be dispensed with. It involves ed such a degree of public favor that preliminary outlay and the labor of building of new mills and reduction works, and the exteusion of railroads, on account of railroad construction. who ship in parcels and small quanthe house is always crowded with The revenue law is liberal. Rates of applying the water, but renders the guests. Whatever changes occur in cultivator independent of the weather’ there is a certainty of a large increase peels are three mills for Territorial, tities. in the-mineral out-put of Utah in the The business done by Kahn Bros. the other hotels of the city, there has d.three for school purposes; counties has always been good. They are popin seeding and harvesting, and enrichnear future. beensnone here. The same hand has oe levy i in their discretion not more es the soil by the deposit of salts and ular and courteous, and their goods COAL, IRON, OTHER MINERALS been at the helm for a greater length than six; towns are restricted to five and prices commend them to public earths from the irrigating waters. of time than in any other Coal, lron—Tue great coal field of for ordinary expenses, five tor openin g, Standard crops require but two or favor. They enjoy their full share of Meais are furnished for 25 cents, and three waterings. Utah is in the Wasatch Range, and improving, and keeping in repair the the business advancement of the counThe smaller streams itis the unanimous testimony of all have been utilized, but their full ca- high up on its eastern acclivity. It streets; while they are all empowered try, and this increase has never been that the fare is as good as any other extends nearly the length of the Terri- totax in their discretion to provide pacity, developed by good engineering, sO marked ina single year asit has second-class hotel where the charges tory. There are thousands of square water and water works. Real estate is been in 1881. They deserve all the has not been brought into requisition. are greater. roducts, Yield.—All the crops of miles—plenty for ages. _ It is a lignite, directly taxed upon assessment of val- good things possible, and no increase Board from $1 10 $1.75 per day, and the Jatituce are grown in Utah with like the other Western coals, and like ue. Mines are exempt, but improveof their business will be undeserved. comfortable lodgings a specialty. ents on mines are not. Personal them wiil no doubt make fair coke. succese. The following table is from Mrs Pitt is thoroughly acquainted a the census returns of 1880 crop of 18- Save the spathic, all ttre ores of iron property, although owned by non-resiToe New York Wining Recordsays: throughout ell the mining camps, and 1799. which was thirty-five per cent be- occur in Utah everywhere, the heaviest dents, is taxed if within the Territory. We must also warn the friends ofsilver | Baumgarten expert, and he will guarhis hospitable way of running a hotel low the average: and richest deposits in Tron County. From taxable credits, debts are allowed is celebrated far and wide. The con money, together with all Le on antee perfect fits; if any man‘is not well Stocks of incorporaHematites and magnetites crop out to be deducted. sequence is he has the patronage of the tions whose property is taxable, are any way in silver mining and Bore |"“[ i Foray7ye268eld. | there in a belt ? two miles wide and usix- exempt. lures, that while those who would put | Acres yheut...:. poiners. R Tn. | Pr Acre ee Tazable property, thirty a stop to the further use of silver as 8 | and The bar is well supplied with the millions. In no other State or TerBarley sek. 31,44 19% 2168 “Bs : = : best of liquors and the finest cigars. money metal in this country, have @/ filled an order for a suit where but ritory are the taxes so mederate. Om 3s. 12,°66 13% 164944 | tons standing. Professor Newberry, most formidable organization with | three measurements (breast, waist and Oo —The lecation of Uta Rye 1,14: | 8% 9719 | after analyzing, says many of these de. ae possibly a preponderating influence | Jength of leg) were given, and made a st always give it important San. | Buckwiene a : | 1 __. #8 | posits are first-class Bessemer ores. Iv is reperted in Winnemucca that both in the Cabinet and Congress at | perfect fit, without ever having seen eee It is in the heart of the Rocky Totals... 116993 | 16 1,978,152. | Water and coal are plenty and convencoul has been discovered some fifty or | ea = | Gent and wooed: for charcoal. Mountains, moderate in altitude, with| Washingten, the silver interest is virtu- | the Cananen = = =faaet a ee sixty miles north of there. The owners ally without organization or earnest,| ne climate, rich well-watered valThe precipitation of the twelve tant ir on fey ae oceur at Tin 1p of the mine refuse to give any informa- | months October 1878—September 1379 ; Cache Valivy about O: eden, Ba e n oth- leys, mineral ranges wooded and af- ‘ alert leaders in that quarter. In the , Other house in the city in his line, and { tion about their find i which made the crop given in the er localities.| fording limitless pasturage and water| | Senate there is no one likely to cope in } ———_—_——_>3+ i behalf of silver money with the oa Census Returns was 85 28 per cent less ther Minera'is——The entire basin of ower, sustaining a mixed industry,} oo are seven faro games in Eu.; than the average precipitation of the Utah has been a laboratory where the traversed by the natural routes of trade i adroit men of the other side of the! and it is his pride that his customers question at the coming session, eight years 1878-1880 including this primitive processes of nature were long and travel, rapidly filling with people. ; and the crop was corresponay | ce than the average, so intimately are precipitation and Production dry ye te oe ge or Pie Somes cea poe Bank, ae aes eg $500 aes Reward! ae cS DOOLY. FOREIGN NEGUS DR. SPINNEY, MISCELLASECURITIES, ee MIDDLE-&GHID <4 w SOs ee ht et ~p 9 Ro ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, ———— >< soe 2 ae i gs OURCES OF UTAH. 1" STARTLING WHAKNHESS. HIGGINs, ye a BISHOP’S Ge, ea oa Ret ASSA YEE, UPA —— | Oe | ee ee eee ere ee oe on REEDALL, gee a DAY; een Bes |