OCR Text |
Show THE WEEKLY * f We sh cht eS '¢f : SALTYF LAKE ibinite 5 : i CITY. ; ——oTne Great built | built Commercial hundred, at a and Business lente mambots Metropolis ef the Rocky ; SAU WAKE: duringS the year igsi variously i estiestii during the year is variously $2,500,060. something of cost Home-burnt brick REN RANG QEAND Mountains. mae oe ee eae TOE : HOUSE. OPERA like a Finest cf Season the just west of Tum TRIBUNE there has been erected this season the finest build28 ithe city. It has been informally own as ;the Academy of Music, but it is 20W Gefinitely named The Grand Opera House. It has a magnificent front, is oe ot Mier wate eis cae three pried hes. Wor Cee ‘ i been aa. k cy wacaner ; One | years pao generally prosperous business inj an depot in the city, at his old stand on First nents of business and has been ee East street. His has always been a solid | !@rgely cash. he owners of real estate | 8 cheered by an enhancement a ve been ‘ of | establishment, but the past year’s busi- price ss and the householdersa have enjoyed | i i been eminently i 3 their dwellings ines aand busi-i | ness has with him satis-is- | good rents for r their factory. His field of operations has been | 2ess more extended than ever, and the demand for his goods has : ieee cee number Eee of new the coming several novelties, at Re, well] worthy the attention of the public, and toned as heretofore, exclusively in the to. which special attention is directed, These are as follows: The Chicago Screw Pulverizer,a ma- | chine which, with four horses, may be ; taken to an unplowed field, and the driver fontured: of the scart (aide f ne faaaal antecedaces oe nee he ee steal and the liquor fight. The canal steal began in the Legislature of of 1878 authorizing issue by vent, the city $250,000 in pouds,theae fees can with it pulverize the soil to a depth | interest, to of six inches, and at the same time sow | Utah Lake the agrain, neas -there is a grain box and drill | ; seeding atiac ment. Highteen to twenty | acres daily can be prepared and seeded | ait Oe machines The Chicago Tongue Scraper and Ditcher, the best tool of the kind pay for building The uy tee city. i i beneath With huge peer eens. Tor of the oid | The Chiee reataielee che building is the Rio Grande | opera hall. This will seat twelve hundred | de i on’ * G 7. case te which | persons, and/is. divided into : the usual | and shops | parts of parquette and dresscircle. . : There | ares: bee lead in developing the résources of An: Gh ORE 1e surrounding country. ORE SAMPLERS AND BUYERS. This branch of business has never been | more prosperous. There has been an | excellent ‘market in Salt Lake the past | ; season for all classes of ores, enabling the | a canal from | to 0W2¢rs of low-grade mines Lead near hus at. hand | law provided work them at aprofit. been that the first submitted yote for thein | issue, and peopleshould the question was , tricky way. But, in spite of all, there was danger the people would refuse to sanction the» bonds; so some of the Twelve Apostles of the Church, with > faira large price.amount Consequently there and has || been of ore handled, Salt Lake City has been the best general | poe lee inthe ¢ountryy 0" a oe perhaps, the leading business Cade prox Ee a grow to magnifins as the mines open up throughout . There are the country. MANUFACTURES. several branches et the es. oY lesjs iake a - Co rotitite an Saran; people with the Holy trading has been Jtah COMpaly)tah the pistson. going forward | iany pee eb Bea supply paren | such ‘ocalities, surveying localiti parties hayeated | i arti @ large portion of the contemplarailroad system in the Territory,apme | a . iron has been laid. The company se- | HAST FORK. a cylin- Some aR Aes Reet OF good we being devel- are prospects (30g onthe East Fork of the Salmon river; which aubes wich Lhe Mein sikeand cape BeN Et tarnaces Rear Clayton. ESTATE 3 Sales of Heal Hetate tn Salt Lake Neco: tiated by Eli B. Kelsey & Sons January 1, 1881, to De- osteo: that Pa held a timein‘reserve are used inwhile voiodes babin extent cembeor 17, 181. 23 by 30 miles case theof | dee other aes ooon6 of country one’is : accident, / 5 ; ’ e 6 and are designated as follows: |The Custer mine, which is Onevofdhe | jis north =vd situated on BayThose toreat ; : largest exposed bodies of.ore in the] G.oocand vicinity: 2d. The Poverty Flat| . sales by Hli B. Kelsey & Sons made beworld, is an Hpmmense ledecenesing abeye Broup isd. Phe Kinickinick cen Hee tween January Ist, 1881, and April 1st, : it is only necessary to ices Sean j ata the se Upetaea of Uinine A ane ee ee aa a ne : : tunnel runs into this great ore body ata! ist. 4in Those alone the line of Sade Ouse and lot in Eighteenth Ward to tend ae Water and } Timber fhe sttsee oneor vo hon | ORG tat Ua ren seo ude | 2, ae Mehara Gh fo W. J. inves | dredBE Rinnl feet above, in which ore is sent down | tom two to three thousand feetabove| Ad- ae Bt a a ag oes tea) ine pe tiie Bley ountay for furnishing Scripture. tae eval get and siten gold and silver has Pounao te. way out to market. Salmon | eae dinate the tonext three easily years be, is thus exposed sighttwoand or can torial’ "iL ae pr oeeice in the Saw Tooth Range, | mined as required, it only requiring two canvass, so.that streams of beneve- | and The Bible House at Be tea wenaenite in a long distance makes a curve and | of an endless steel wire rope alongpret the east flank of the2 distr ay ae ae i Ee ee suspended Serres ani BneEee oe Vi 569, ee Ee Miller to Jansen = ee Saat gradu ent Ae pees eto ae oe Lp weap eth de . oe eee OO% a a Warde2Thaniad and E.'Jansen, f ay ay $600. oi Dre ae He 8en, ‘€ $375. eo ee Dot 10x10 rods ee or the district, notably ee oe | D. aetingd e ae ae alias dareehitiank qbattpites? iiatioa ama slawee’ We vet tant nOG de a sea cae aan” rae ote ‘ ite each family cane and “individe individua ie the @} country, atest and flowing northward twenty } b break down enough ore t to a keep the society authorizes and pays for | or third miles, aings around tothe east, | stamps running. The tramway consists jence are opened in every village and | i i neighborhood for the enlightenment of | the peopleand the purification of society | by the pureX wordZ of life fone ea a eae ue ; Sage Legs Cpe Lee in Nineteenth Ward— Louis Mariers to A. Linholm, $650. finally flows northwest and empties into i |-on’towers and held iimposition by ‘Suitai ae i eo Snake River. It is oni the inside ies of this | ble “tow wheels over which ititi passes.” This ce ph ine of Sante Ww ene future for all ' |. House anddot in Nineteenth Ward—Abcurve that we find the principal mines | tramway is 3,300 feet in length, in which this part of the Salmon River country, 7 } 182! Hovey to 8.8. Newton, $1,000. : j 4 7 ° : and mining operations. distance it rises 1,300 feet over the lower } 44 only capital and enterprise are want.| Adobe house of three rooms and lot THE YANKEE FORK oe at the ap png ae oh ube epee ed to make grand results in the production | 6x10 rods, Nineteenth Ward—Dela H. @nd the work of further exter it 'to this city is being energeticallyjhed with the hope of completing it y in February of this ear. The sury(are all made and located. Whom- | says the line : pleted, this line will put us in contion | With the Pleasant Valley coal fieand will introduce a competing sourcrom oat Satin rai te Hsia olis and is | Hee 6 ult of divect Banaue of Christ- | beh tn and women for a specific pur- | pose. The managers and principal offibars have their headquarters here, and | from this great centre of Christian beney- | oes forthof “with ever assing | ee a copy the eeeiGes taok a Tises in the mountains within this curve, and flowing southwest in its general’ course, finally enters Salmon htiver and | adds its volume of water to the stream.| Ten miles above the mouth of Yankee | Fork, Jordan creek enters. Years ago} Jordan creek was a rival to Loon creek | and other Eobett! Rone oh aitdinatit mbenine fills | 0 millions in wealth. : Wetzel to B, Lamott, $1,200 tPo‘uckets with ore they moveby along. Challis, on 25 the miles,is east side ikot, Sven é Seven een th Ward— a a newof a i ine Guia distant rods | ,sa“®Ston of et suspended hese buckets are as ilate Y. Decker to —— Smith, $300. istrict, called +5. the ‘rope and each bucket holds .1ou4 950 pounds of ore when filled. The THE BLUE WING, House of three rooms and lot 5x10 rods Veiont of the loaded buckets operates | inthe Pahsamari country, where seventy | in Twentieth Ward—Jas. F. Wilson to i164 tramway. Atthe lower end the house | locations have been made work during Feathe Heen past John Sherran, $900. is RO uttated that one man can unload'| year and considerable : It will painting, have uponwhile it an elaboratethe land. scape to relieve eye | the panel above the curtain (9x27 feet in} size) will have an emblematic figure | peated in the highest style of art. The | pent ot ne pero is 40 feet, and its width | eet. will be fitted with every con- | whichcitythethecoalcompany supply have may be In | this the dra’ deand Shop grounds—a tract of ninetires, embracing the old adobe yard. Tand | Was mostly got at reasonable res, | much of it quite low. In but fewian- | Ces was condemnation necessary, the life. The Society does notin the least partake of the nature of a great commercial | or money-making institution. Its work | jg charitable and missionary. It lies at the foundation of all charitable and gos-| pel work. ‘If the foundations were oP PLACER MINING DISTRICTS. Many miners were at one time scattered | along Jordan creek, and the mining oper- | ations carried on by means of ditches | and sluices were quite extensive. To the | present day, evidences of this work re- | main in the shape of ditches along on | the bucket into such bin as it is desired, | so thatthe ore may go direct to the | crushers or be reseryed for future crush- | ing. The ore once in the mill passes | through crushers, thence goes through the drying process, is then pulped by the | twenty stamps and afterwards conveyed | by ais ements and taste. can suggest. The GE ca heat sin oe Sulpa : ed a the lawful method on the 10tiDe- Bible reading and teaching were to Sid fhe res fallen into anes. Ana io fail to again descend through the on one ae Paine) ate the | cease how could the gospel be propagated | placer mining is now being done along | ers and afterwards treated in the and adornment that modern re- | last lot to square out the tract wasur- eupied by the mapnificent pat unecteae | Tel PAD Y AA NeR GAO: x tye nows whether at a discount ora pre- | Solid footing and which haye’ prospered country, and with either of them hay can | mium (five per cent. bonds elsewhere | handsomely in the year. Among these be loaded-at one-fourth the expense and |COmmand a premium) and the cash | the foundries and machine shops have description by a : An engine with REAL DARE ] SALT AL with magnificent curtains, and elaborate | finish will be the rule. The orchestra | railing, | will be enclosed with nickel-plated an entirely new idea, and a gorgeous one. The hight of the ceiling of the sittshall is 46 | ‘ feet 6 inches. The drop-curtain is 27 feet | wide and 24 feet. high, and will slide up | entire, instead of rolling up as is usual. venience of manu- prevares these bonds were sold, nobody | facture in the city which are now on.a ooThS opar atone oT his ee very active Pe ihe pablichily-acipea in it. PoulW IHL HSIN Obie ore Ree ee Aerie @ alnded ae es ee Pega ee Whe te canta ~ ee ne flanks bene ees Becd but perhaps of greater immele uct, | 5; sn district hich ar int- and Yankee suleoharork ie countries canniesn in Idaho, are h ave been te run in in'from 2U¥Saszecun He many éticable: places by tines: ob as) ; és ‘ » | eighteen districts over which are appoin from this thi chute. and the | Cane roadwava because the completion of tihatto the } ed district superintendents, who are ex-} by no means new to the mining world, as | ore is taken out, leaving large chambers Beas ; sides ee en to the puerta city is expected to: break up} ; pjcglmo-'} pected to organize in each and d every r | they have been prospected now for sey- | A supply sufficient to keep the mill1 run; i ; unyee on each side, projecting forward | more certain a fair anu constndply | ~~ Where counties cannot canvas by em- | River heads fe of whatis but ee the amount we I have no t} Gpandate®i Tai | Ibis /and humanitarian ‘ean: be ‘sent with 4 | - eckCee.six miles westot The | “/vim; Cummings to“i Bascha, $1,000, at philenthtopicce1t|if A Country Possessed ti : He 2 oF All the | point from:which ore : aa Kinickitick, eee ‘are also first and second circles. A noy- | Ropoly so long existing here elty in this hall are the proscenium boxes, | Sen the price of coal, as well BANKS ‘ John days Taylorbefore at the thehead,election issued eeenttod a card a in the market. | few in thts throughout Those arteries of the business life of Be sean Foust?s Hay Loaders, and the Champion vinaallt commanding the people to yote Hay Ricker, Loader andGatherer. These | he bonds: So they were voted. When| misthtnds, dtp poh entirely! ew season. THE dwell- tah a — that the old sipleibonee UDhGHS! wills Be ae € -), | OUS year. oney has been so plentiful | -,~. é Z : ye eee oe ee ae that they haye een been Sera. d with Sabaopen apne OA a eed fret-work. e latest style of use for the accumulated bh d th new; dweliings and vacated d rented ones » | have 1 cumgHiabed consequently refused cash to pay and interest they |} | operaichair °P us willill _bbe provided, rovided and the | which were instantly occupied. on. deposits, “Tha amounts ae postted and | Comfort of the audience provided for in | THE MUNICIPALITY. every way, | 4 The whole of the interior | now remaining on deposit are very heavy.| — : é a y & i and: able YOUY, to takeY*| will be handsomely decorated, and the | The municipal government has con-| The banks are strong . introducing pae tendency irannachions is the Beh ane adobe yards by the Denver & 3 y Western Railroad Company, they propose ro erect depots i corresponded with the | none of them are idle and in general they increased field covered, as well as partaking s old of the general revival of business in the fields, } ~ Aside from his general assortment, he is is upward. mill can best be judged es of tho Richest and Largest | der eighteen inches in diameter and 48) Mining’ € tri 4d fecddahie inches long propels all the machinery. This is one of the great ‘ Christian ; Perestory: penevolences” which characterizes the ae to civilization its resent age id : a h anke § and impart Pmost Pp features distinguishing and activi. | Description of the Mines of Yankee . The Society is broad and general Pork, Bay Horse and Other oo and workings. in its purposes, ) Districts inati i E -sectari¢ : Rit ceoenabsern pha ig sdstaitiad: By, ; all the Christlan churches of America. in bloat in. Utah Teritory, base | sina to, bat dan esti vaad net | Duane fo ponanach mevovements | Sonne See aoa gpenel hagBtJe | [penn Jaduet opeleghy Lake the Metep an || aceyea boundaries of Frond:Gal avelern nations and most extensive wagon and machinery | at all forced.’ It has prospered alldepart-| Among the most important of these | House : den and. publishes the Bible George A, Lowe, Esq., for eleven a i ‘se. i course thr gravityi ee makesits its the || pastseason, through Pity seibacting. The the duis to size of the LEE RIVER. \ of the We Mourtaias. | So: ic and solid, and the inner supports massive Besides the substantial partiand firm. 7, 1882. :y J nee SALMON Hi eben | |The New Route From wer and | tad the East ast te to S Sait P| aie SU One Million Dollars ‘Spda Utah | 2 the Past Year ° aE had | through, and those noere supporte eee running JANUARY —-e— | Progress of the Largestle Road | 72° iw this Worl been brought | MORNING, AMERICAN BIBLE SOCIETY. : Building i : =f Beside the pe Briones proper there JANUARY 7, 1882 | Some Points Regarding fis Location | have been a large number of additions | a at cate made to buildings up, and con& already JD) Navura Advantage and d Natural Vanuag es. siderable sums spent improve- | in general GEORGE A. LOWE. aT ments.” c It Takes a New Start on the Broad REAL ESTATE SALRS S 5 Extensive Machinery and Wagon DeRoad to Presperity. _As will be seen by our real estate re- | posiiory and AVarerooms. peeone piey of sales, there has been | The city of Salt Lake, has enjoyed a | actions, : The a SATURDAY c ) & RIO|ANDE,| DENVER Drawing Near Completion, ROR “1, ——SARURDAE Fo. = SALTAKE, ° the | =he {number of 38,000,000 have been usel, and from 400,000 to 500,000 adobes. . Large ~*= TRIBUNE: ea oy pete se Ie i eads ae aedirect Tlboae wide, and into theieee maintert auditorium. ; ; : Dut a mithounay, a what could the righteous do?” i : " x elevators to or charity organize eleemosynary institu- | the stream, except near its confluence | gamating and thé upper part settling pans. of the | done. We know that there are rich} mines at the head of the Salmon, in the | Saw Tooth district; that Stanley Basin has } yielded largely from placer claims; that Loon creek, Jordan creek and other streams entering the Salmon hayé had good placer mines; that the Yankee Fork, | Bay Horse and other 1° acres of land, Fifteenth Ward— Emily H. Little to John H. Pitts, $1,300 : Bri Tet Eons a 5 TCSP RSS Ol A008. Teoma sand: lonin Eleventh Ward—J. P.Freege to J. S.Johnston, $2,050., roastamal-| good quartz countries, and may we not expect that the whole country through e Gat Spieg stg ase) |: Oglesby to —— Kolcher, $700. districts have proved Probably | which flows Salmon River isrich in min-| Tbs & vo passenger depots, mine | tions? If the Bible should become an | with Yankee Fork. ‘The most remunera- | n0 other silver stamp mill is so economi- | eral ? son eon depot quouses..on They obsolete | to and Sonphilan2nd || the tive claim placer owned miningby here been done His on || in ¢al the in process labor as of the CuSter.. is Salt, for use, i SALT THOTLAKE aah eects € ke passenger the wihild cor of || Man wouldwork, cease; loyalty patriotism J. @. hasMorrison. reduction, hoisted to’ ACADEMY i : ; i m House and lot %}¢x165 Tole feet—Mark Croxall to W. Price—$4,750. one-half b 210Twenty-cight feck TaN a andeaten Wells feetiy front aie thropy would be ‘unmeaning and unin- | claim reaches from the mouth of Jordan | the top of the mill and placed in a bin,’ mises hi ley a aac oe aM oie ase the 1 i md lot kinds of mill and been eminent. has || smelter sum The Sed onbeenthem, methods. | never required. by =e the usual givenbutlaketothecaused theprecise public. work andand .atAll hoisting ; andoo Fourth eight Southdepot ; as eee es : nit)Ee (0.Rh : evenly does thefed work apparatus, net tee hee been Bible should 4 be intelligently fibdae But thenames. hey | spiring streets bieen main | Third To the right of theee circles. aare secondReise cheaner prices machinery | made here the overflow of Utah implements for damming creek upWALone-half mile,Aoneupontke which im-| from which which it is carefully to a drying Oa. EOS ofa considerable quantity of farming land | such work ean be jim orted. » Besides | “Ritance is a ladies’ retiring parlor and | will also build warehouses to storate- | yead, “ If ever God made a direct revelaears. worked The lower énd of a his ‘lait fromis || from and without cost for fuel,usedthe forspent Progressive Educational | Stringham ee estate ee to W. J. Montgomery et pur-, | 4 Young and Institution. the gases being the roasters tunnel by running “But there | heine ek done in Salt | (essing room, fitted up. with every. re- | tial which they will bring in hifor | tion to man it is the Bible.” in Utah county and involved the city in a | this, the quality of the WAGON DEPARTMENT. time These are very desirable farmers: A full stock of P. Schuttler’s Chicago quarrel with the people who had been so | Lake is not excelled anywhere, damaged. Whether this matter has been | efficiency, durability or finish. wagons always on hand, of all sizes, with | entirely settled or not, and how much ies | There ‘ spring and and buggies, of every unexcelled wagons Pe John ‘Taylor, the not own ’ variety : ENGINES AND MACHINERY. Always in stock the following ma. | light on the point are ever published, it chinery: isi impossible amount : ; i : to be sure of the : : mes engines. a. heavy stock on hand | paid. It may have been more. Dur and at the | the past Stier at Mount Vernon, Ohio. quantity, hardly worth mentioning, and Lane saw-mills, made at Montpelier, } it was found that the canal had been du Vermont. -- = : through sandy and porous ground fora Knowles’ steam pumps, in full.stock | portion of its course, in which, moreover, and of all sizes, together with pump reholes Itwhich allowed paletatacon eee escape burrowed of the water. was claimed, | face have now here twenty-six miles deel | power of volition.” God says: “Behold, | heq’rock, I set life and death before thee. Choose | No || wilt serve.” day whom ye manthisis bound to do thou as Abraham, or David or Noah did. Oe thy duly. fib, Daag hor i i the tic de Revere ppp ley ie Bepaeonon This tunnel has been com. | seems to haye been gained to a remarka. pleted for several hundred fect, and gravel now being taken out through shafts jsabout twenty feet deep, and the washings of this grayel in a flume, with riffles, dei i paying i iti posits gold in quantities. Thisi old is principally in the form of nuggets, The Salt Lake fall of 1878, See Academy opened inthe: The original idea was ~ al., $5,000. Lot 241¢x270 feet, Main street—Isabelle to | Anderson to Walker Bros., $6,100 | ble degree by making machinery do the | make it a parochial school and have it] Af f 10 Behe Win. Site Ay Pete fete Assays are | under the immediate control of the Con| work usually done by men. ¢ Hi rch: | madé from samples of ‘the whole pulp. W. J. Bautten, $1,000. ae ie ae tee ton in’ eae troseie aot ne renh Sy acaaeaeee nas Four acres of land—F. B. Evans é y - of saltis required, inci | Only 3/4 percent. be-| z yf, Benner, the present principal, and | Mathenal Goodman, $250. | cause of the free character of the ore and ; aes i T eae Just now, by reason of the terrible loss | Supply in great measure the rails fdhis | contained 215,675 souls, and there had good ground, and the pay has been un- | first bar having been shipped on the 11th | oficial connection with any Church s dry goods merchants Lake | Of :life in the Ring ‘Theater at Vienna, | road as wellas for others in the yun- never been a canvas made of the Territo- | ugually large, showing that there is profit | of that month. Since then the’ mill has Rey. W. M. Barrows a first presi: havehe made heavier sales than ofeverSaltbefbetore. attention is Da paid to. the Daepro- } tains. he Ag Caviler sales j universal: at : { : some. local4 work1 had been egularly turned out one bar of bullion : . : j in pl i i 2 water was turned into | Jbei jobbing trade has been heavier gden. house. _ | the canal, intended to reach the city. It . & G. Cooper & Co.'s saw-mills, manu: | did not do so except in a very minute factured of other | 2°uS Water-closets and wash stands are | manufactures, but mostly in a small way 0; can juet iata var yopnaetiohl adgHiOd of hoGet ity miles at Provo, and argo | about a week) in | tons arrived addition || Ot San 1,05 Franciseo is a very practical House provisions and by private houses for their own trade. | to Par? the usual for the accommo: There is almost an unoccupied field here «of : . + from : England for 6m. | in the gem manufacburia g line, and in ee patransjaeid will she wnugh BD: ee ee Fe aterce te = maahMany : : 30C} departments, such as glass, lead nder : the stage are eight elegant | cupied and cannot furnish ’ steel raiex; Ce : . head of } in its various forms, soda and others that it, was | Might be named,the manufactured articles dressing and toilet rooms, and the green- | cept in filling orders already filed.’he | . : Bible Society, at its ninth annual | ranging in size from that of a pea up to | excellence,of the furnaces, Ninety-three Chloruils College: owiee Bian cavatted. pOtel ee taser age aa Ee vents paidé the sum ofwh $40,000 for the part of the | of which are now imported, there ought | Costis qeenee ne eed, UP, with water. | Principal men of the company are im-| can meeting in May, 1880, created the | six or eight ounces. Quicksilver takes | percent of the assay value, of the ore is | Ti was decided t¢ draw @ chatter for an | aker to Bergen Lamott $1,750. old canal reports which was But as anyno | to be largeSimeand ares paying factories here. ren in elaborate and || ing Sélvesmills interested in ironandworks anoll- || Righteenth District composed financial of Utah, || the yp all whichtaken. could give finer the or grain Duringin| } Saved ue bullion. started :last February, the | Control urnished finished in the most luxurious style, academy of and manner. at Pueblo, under faciperpetual} they wilbon Plat of ground,2 Main street,ae 291x165 tdano and Montana. These Territories past theseason. drifts gold. have been _ This inmillwas pers place bf ittiated ie by any make, Coherent) both in Sait Take either in | dui™ement for a cloak room, with water- | their use. They will get in some ,000 | are two parties to it—God, an intelligent | the Yankee Fork up the bed of the Jor-}| pose. Allthe appointments of the mill _ closets, wash stands, etc. The gentle- ee oflumber and store it here. hey spirit; man, an intelligent creature, with | gan, so as to drain the water down to the | appear to be perfect and economy in labor are a large number all the extras and appurtenances. He | @Ozey has been spent on this account, | carries these in heavy lots, and in num. | H¢ people are not permitted to know. | bers and varie : i A section. of the old Big Cottonwood | Also, wagon aa "of exoe neacditer pe was nm some ey Corea into | in large supply. * ew enterprise, sees an Peeeey it is currently | full line of Courtland lhanhine siieele. however, that this would. soon be ae and | Visions for. exit from, buildings of, this] The line has been completed fromro- aoe ha earadieny service. * Saesaaiss, eroded out? A OTe w sO onee ee day eons two, the product its field is extending, The fact that this | Kind, and to the facilities subduing | VO to Springville for some months,id a ey, H.D. Fisher appointed Dis- | At the mouth of Yankee Fork extensive | being about.one and / one-fourth bar per elby is the natural business center of all | the flames. The house which foris the surest | Considerable time prior to the compiion | trict Superintendent inwasAugust, 1880, and preparations have been going on the past | day. The value of, this daily product is he interior region. is becoming more | Of saving the lives of its patrons in case of that portion of the line, traingere | at once entered upon the duties of the | year for working the very large placers | about $4,000, making well up towards | and more apparent. Our merchants, by | Of accident, is the one which deserves | running from Springville to the Pleant | office with characteristic activity and knownras : = 1,000,000 for the ten and one-half months’ purchasing in immense quantities and b and will receive the public support. It | Valley mines. This road now uns izati r organization . t shipping in through ears without break. | is gratifying, therefore, to know that the | through Clear Creek to Schofield, thtervue ‘aftected rad a éey cmele at eonpal of | ReMi AN RE BQRE 2G RAY Ele, MININGLOO} ater ata for theming Bad wilt and all or change of bulk, are able to sellso as | Most ample provisions are made. in. this | minus, and this will continue the tmicolporteurs was secured who were every- | the stock of which is owned in:the East. | other expences, of over $500,000, in an en'© ™ke it to the advantage of the small- | Opera house for every emergency. The | 2US,of the coal road. But the maiiine | where received with kindness and due Long ditches and flumes have been a littlewasover producing two years, legein | er dealers. throughout this Territory, | @ain auditorium will have five large through to Colorado will will strike f at | consideration by the people and authori- || structed to conyey the water on to conthe | terprise which theof only property eae, ae peas Pa f. eee liste a udees Ee n Whilkore Maior Tynch feet and a near piece of land 5x10 rods— Wm. Jennings to Walker Bros., $10,000. ee i ne ate ea av Zi °T, ee Bradley Hon ‘ong |. Leasehold, saittions 6 Gall: a vat Ret a Goddard amie tay utter to J. 1st ee South W. Jones, 8 i: Bay: street—George $850. Col, Hollister, aie hig nde table ene House of four rooms, lot 314x10 rods Hi ergy-and no brilliant prospects'so plead, | Taehtietn” | Ward-—Wakdrobb: to" L.''J, pee i sont aaa ee $3,000, with Sharp, $1,600. ©gational Hie Teese os made. rae tothe Congre. chapel were Perhaps Col, , fou Lot 55 ft.EY by 20 rods,Fourth Ward—Feteter A full stock -of circilar saws for saw! | right, but it never was, and the canal is | 14#20, Montana, Eastern Nevada and | ¢Xits, two on each side, besides the main | Clear. Creek, twenty miles thissitof | ties of all the churches, More than | grounds to be used through giant ma. | than one your, Bosiet boreto asbe much Carating Gato lot 10x10 and the best quality of rubber | useless. It is presumed, moreover, that Western/Wyoming to lay in their, stock exit or entrance in front. The first circle Schofield. From Clear Creek the mte twenty thousand copies of the Scriptures chines, to separate the gold from the great On ‘Guster mountain “até a number of ve entitled called ciecuiice ene Fearsamd of i6Ae the | Hangouvp Cottage rows of 20 Bragiary rooms and here rather than buy in the East. (In that | Will have, besides the stairways ‘in’ front, | ‘Uns over the divide and down Price wer, | have een brought into the Territories, | mass of gravel, bowlders and earth, | other mines, which: may prove as valua- | the ubited offers lta é Heo by —Mr. Dougal to John Masters, $2,000. € money is all spent, but, though ret . . ‘ Y : cea mills, a eas IMPLEMENTS. : ou s 4-barbed fencing wire in-large'| A ee ee : an eehs pe : reshing machines, and itanero a ie Threshers, and horse- | pe oe es a spectfully for, no itemized of stateee aecalled precont CONUTAOh A | canal fund has been given. With the | money all spent, the canal leaking so hadi. tatdtevill nob deliver one-fourth of itg carrying capacity, and the portion Monfiar engine, | through the city yet untouched, it looks | V2Y,they get for morelessseasonable and priate goods money. This appro: at | 8 immensely on the increase. Pee retail trade, also, as the country | isup, ison an exceedingly prosperous | pastes The sales are mostly for cash and | the trade is on a very solid basis. tWo sidecircle exitswill to outer stairways. The | upper haye the same, inde-| pendent of the exits from below. The | doors all open outward. It is thought | that the building can be emptied in two Minutes, though packed full. In view | also of the Vienna calamity, the hall-| thence across the Cedarto’ Mesas, almost due toeastward Green thnce Iyer, thence substantially on the old Gunton | trailto Grand river, near the Utahmd ‘Colorado line. This line is finished, tack || laid and in running order fifteen mles | east of Clear Creek, and is gradedind lve thousand have been Which the lies work in thesewasbars. It was this too Fall, late, FN mor ee ee anna five hundred cop- || after completed jes given away to poor families and indi- | to do'much in mining, hence the success | viduals. have Morebeenthanvisited twelve of the placer enterprise future.of |} families and thousand supplied. || These bars remains lie along for the themouth Throughout the Territories all the pul- | the Yankee Fork a short distance and ex- | ee eee ine. ae ° feotan with, and levels have been run on it fora dis. tancesamples of aboutup to 250 nearly feet. $1,500 The first-class ore pér ton; second-class, $700, and the third-class pits have been open for the superintend- | tend along Salmon River for miles, rang-| i the ieee oe ae ee such House and lot, Nineteenth Ward—M. gee prOeEee Vite oer ers rie the | Cummings to Mrs. Hannah Reese, $1,000. Neca. a Total sales to April 1, 1881, $57,077.50. i p Pe atinthe Terie eery yea, by theirof edu: a Cra thereat a dt yee vere coon is Sales by Eli B. Kelsey & Son made be- from from $100 to $150. The superintend- | Gus academy, the lower Aan Aone tween April Ist, 1881, and December 17th, Soeih ieemarket. oe arene atarniit ae eb machines, | To very carry much the as if work the endthrough had been the reached. THE GROCERY TRADE . free will main have a hall, separate sourceno ofmatter light || miles bridgedon totheGreen river, graded<ht ent. andcommendable his colporteurs, many || ing to wide. ent, James W. Hamilton, is driving must be featereit ® reparatory de- | 1881: city oe the so that eastern side.and The Plesant || places zeal hasandbeenin shown and from up to narrow a depth strips of- thirty feet, bottoms, in all of | tunnel to develop the vein ata depth of|a | tion partment. therefore. has Beentic ore : ; Thaiae 5, uae oe mowers. would necessitate the cutting of lots and The Salt Lake grocery houses have ex- re at happens there, the people can see | Valley mines will supply an abundane of | py the citizens. Everywhere the greatest | which goldis found. Gen. B. E.Cunning- | 959 feet. The mine is supplied with nec- aes eetlederae i Gals Oh tcoige tne iS oa: House of four rooms and lot 37 feet by paltes Te header. blocks into every conceivable shape, in | ¢¢lled themselves in the magnitude of ce way out. There will also be nine | Coal to the road, but besides this coahas respect has been shown the workers, de- | ham, the Superintendent of the Yankee | eccary buildings and a good road reach- ae Oe a eieca hes nealing: me | 10 rods, Thirteenth Ward—Mrs. Spencer Furst && Bradley Bradley pi plows RRAdn REET: Furst South Bend chilled pi wae Honeiapeas Bartens ee Aen for blydRinite ene le os Be stacking hay or | adie ea se sd er ie eed aay gy of | Abor, 3 fl y operated, cme pulverizing harrow, 8 Seay clod-crusher | ae hae eee aia HeTIOWs do sheik wotlk wore aridiy ane’ Loner eit ae poems rare Be pe TO p r the above in large | supply to meet.all calls Baling-ware nd baling ties. se pee and it to isget likely the grade eost of forit, the including whoesale all the with in1,000aera feet of parts, hose, always ready || Jus? order a proper canal, | 8tOceries ‘heir tradeby for 1881. to They are dealers selling | 128, hydrants of the build. discovered road williere inirice | haye veloping the book, latent which respectall Americans is’ confi: | ing nzto it,UNKNOWN is yielding some ore, | this enterprise, of philanthropic to N. Groesbeck and H.: W. Lawrence Tiver been canyon. In fact,on thethe road for that regard as | Fork dent ofGravel success,Mining and heCompany, has, in connection Christian conth a society yee Ohi: | $2,800 : right of way, would be as heavy as the | ™ the mountains. They can do this be- | f0£ immediate use. Itis proper to state, | Open up a vast district of countryzery | the foundation of our civilization. The | with J. H. Hall and brother, secured other | put has not been worked much the past, licegh under the mais of eHow 7 W gle restine ‘ of the otherthatpartaboutof the It } Cause they canthan buy a cheaper and freight iswhole proper to add the canal. middle of be ees moderately extensiveat | December a brief general report was | ‘¢aler is able todo. This fact is becoming made to the City Council that there had Bengrally understood, and so the jobbing een expended on account of the canal | ade concentrates here more and more. some $166,000, but there were no items | : 1” the retail business the same remarks | 0 K given, and it’ was not claimed that this ties of goods here, and uses it as a ship- | accepting the offer Made at first. ; ; a : ; Buying and importing in large quanti: ‘ eee fore Sell at the very lowest prices. : ——___>0<«___—_ j BAMBERGER el As ly i & CO, Wholesale Merck Lake City. asomewhat : unique 5 Fi i De bias ey preat American Bible Society more “has than pub-| | Placer in that | season, lished since its organization Vicinity. claims along the Salmon é Tun Suumir is proving to bea good | forty million copies of the Holy. ScripSTANLEY BASIN. property. There are probably twenty] tures, and, notwithstanding the opposiStanley Basin is farther up and some | Claims in the immediate vicinity of the tion of skeptics, of 5 the | piles to the worth ofad the || ing Custer are good eat i : gar : i j eather es | veins, worldly,minded mentheandindifference the disagreement southwesterly direction from Salmon, Bonan. verywhich rich ore. Thistas strong district is a havrich ae City to the upper Sevier toun- | of secfarians on minor subjects contained reece the oe paid oe dpenint ee aoe a or for damages to owners of land over- | 2} ; ing districts have flowed in Utah county, nor was it claimed | helped both the wholesale and the retail | that the balance over and above the sum .| hed ee re gn a a dat foe: tied bit HARDWARE : AND MINING SUPPLIES. And 4 fullline of everything in the line | tey Retat th in fra ie. tless ordinances and2 $ fool-| & | of : farm machinery. se jy 4 aad is ree’ eeillegal enforce HARDWARE AND CONTRACTORS’ suppiing. | against tae saloon Leaps: The latter | “Hardware, iron, horse ape shoes, and | Offered at thebutbeginning to pay $200 || blackuaiis! aidessteel, estan er quarter, the proifer was cach refused, Furst & Bradley scrapers and other | £2é litigation has been hot and continu: | : at OW i ifi : eee REL hina of railroad’ contractors’ sup wholy Rasendclauie ce the pikbiae the : of all kinds. : FA city Gi : plies : dropped the matic and,tue sorty | _ Besides the Biers ete STaee Me: anes statute. YFhis was found to be nojbetter | mee PeCotboeieh feck a Aine Baa area than the ordinance, and so the county | pees e hich He etores Gahande quantimade the compromise early in December, | ate tetne. pa apply as to the dry goods trade. ‘The #Oreover, that theie: most theof these Httle areexamined, and its minerel possbili- | pelt eahn Viennaprecaudisas- || ties Bebe unknown. fe ut additional safeguards were added rom the Cedar Mesas another linehas | p a alates this Grand Opera House Eee southwest'to Salina, through hive | aake City is/as well arranged in | Which canyon a good deal of woithas | this ‘ matter as Ford’s Theatre, Washington | been done, ‘ This will be the roadfrom POaG. The) money isPits thereforedf HHOnow Cliepayable to *the the bub aie ounty instead o e city, bu 3 governing power here has but one sack. for all the cash, this wi 1 be immaterial. Aéeotan te ane snd theathce BRIBES ee cre eeu ee bese ee in the Bible, cies oat aces ; ‘ ’ ; fl 5 ab | more devoutlyitisreadBaand studied and more tere are two very handsome and large ae point, where the canyon retx, isonly | universally respected to-day, as the rooms, one on €ach side’ of the main en- | wide enough for one track, the passis Oc- | standard of morals and true religion,than trance, whichMtge will pusir eupied and t i i j y ; ; 4 purposes. cae me phewecte ain Penwee THe Ine Toni vet HEL: peony Science al philosophy oe ? fecti vide to Cove creek, th : se 5 In ’ these8 anddepartments the increase in f room, restaurant , with basement, sement, for for hi his,confectionery reek, andthence out ti to theopen P e. L l countr y westward, tward d curving tea eas gear ee: business : of | and Tes . bus siness, and a a gentleman southaeRD been very Breiih wealt Lave Gea the ‘from “the East has engaged the other, | Ward, terminates for the present at last in BARRSTT BROTHERS. : the ‘generally recognizedBeing meadelarters be the Union rooms andof the Escalantes beie Seu chee : uit for “all these articles, rainy bf Above Young these Men’s will Christian the || ing.the iron desert, district,theas objective -far as atpoint present great weight, the difference between’ the ee ae the third Pe ia e oat ange onteneen sae 2 EE ee Oe Dae. thasitlol ie hia ore : to various secret Orders. e aras Panguitch, but is loi a Slt lake Gorebne ee a bo abe ve baling wil) bee cated bya. sited ASRS “Elie sneer ef ‘Salt Lake “Hduse has eae‘tars aig through : HUDSON. tenidtpictherefore, 1616 we PULPOSe. ae a and cross the Cio L “property : “Tt running 1a$ “o 8 leimias se nie full loaded. is Altogether, we have here an | teen or : twenty miles, facing of some ninety feet, and very marked over the rates which would | opera house and theatre which will yie | ado ata bridge six miles below Lee Sr BEnt to the next strest. | “Dheir ‘rei oWa have to be paid by a purchaser ofa singles! with any in the land. In convenience of | ferry. At this bridge location, two par- | was to build to thé line on Main street, | lot, wanting it got through ina hurry. -j arrangement, beauty of finish, size of | ties of workmen have been engaged the | putting in a glass front the entire width, | = | wagons AND HARNESS. stage and perfection of stage apparatus, | Past season; having first settled on the | thereby gaining a room 24x80 feet. Next| ndv'ana placer inide there has paid | one in minerals, and we hope the day is ttse” baodsento tm tend of in” hope it may also prove a profitable yeu- oe to ees He tae inet, large show-room On the north and new POwattally y “uided pone mmelrodsy Weird —Mis. ; ace a be Oe triad) te | Habeion to HawardNineidently Hunitr $200: centre ofan im Griien work in different | House and lot, Main street—Z. C. M. I parts of the ee Schools ieee to Frank Foot '$3 500 oan to it ’ are now :in suiecessful operation E ES ; in i 5x20 ees : Nissen Ward—Dan- Hopper, Rermington, Leb aS se eY iel H. Kimball to E. W. Hunter, $400. something for years. During the past | notfar distant when a large number a * only at on have b sd, | stamps will bein operation. Wood and | Alo plea ance een nieseety abundant, alate oHeuE: ning drifts on the bed.of the placers, | est drawback'is the fact that it is nearly | : ’ i : Sate baking out only se eat as will pay fo peine at tes ge saa ee? mercer an wash. 10 do this to be j res This tais class ctlahs e ce ground mini has goes difficult, andwh jae yet_ ale t considering wellell timbered. timbered. of of mining ! g the country : through eth d : bel eee puiieaars ete bea ihe poe! Baa Hef TB. BARES: NE, TORGAE.BY howottaste water A in spring! edcy Beeeeet ae and aa Dio dui comel 17 CrOsseS awe Bodiiyeadd divides one ofChats which ig sdud very | pany of four men oaane up about $4,000 | long and tedious. Pulte ; a A Ses a e e Nee ee ‘ , seers BONANZA, has lately become the seat of justice for ‘ Berk if‘ the valley Phenen i Where Bonanza'iis located, count yeh ee ee Bountiful. In addition, we expect shortly | Lot 5x10 rods, Eleventh Ward—J. M + ‘ Ie. 5 aaa. ae be ep cance oes ont Wha aan ere Larsen to Maurice Wilcox, $800. ¢n$ dee CARRIED Oi Hewvibérowsand one House of four rooms and lot 4x10 rods, rienced teachers. Moral: instruction is | Eleventh Ward—W. W. Rhode to Wm. not neglected. The people where these | Sharp, $1,050. i oe schools are established do what 3 nea they can Twenty-five feet by 165 3 feet, Maini street to aid them and take much pridein them. | John $, Barnes to Gideon Ryman, po° sonoels furniinre are provititd Racine | gi590. perforated and wittt the the best appliTwenty-five by 9984 teet, Second South Bae te ida nara eee D. Watt to Gideon Ryman, saree Ma 5 D" Widens:out 60,86 60 fuiiiatva fae Whi pam r e in Pe a oe ¥¢C| a city. Evergreen trees line the streets rd teh ie districts BoRanaeea Cae and stand in the lots, to giye shade and | ter Hay Hore Bté ’ chapel and the rooms adjoining. These | to A.T. Christensen $500 i : are commodious and well-arrangd rooms, House of five rooms and lot 5x14 rods but are not intended for permanent oecu- | Fjeventh Ward—aA. J. Cushing to W. Hi. ornamentation to the place, and the i hase Pas ‘the year seating capacity, and especially in safety have bridge been preparing the they¢ enlargeder thee t openings between. haye ye been well constructed of loos The sales of wagons during ! ut Lite a f | location, approaches.they The will be just | Se, j the ee: | houses ‘ been well gi Paes by but few office, ESOTreading-room andlumber, There 3 is 3 a degree of comag been astonishing, amounting to} to the audience, it is equaled a bo] hi : the Great Colorado Canyon a ‘ and saaddining-room.| 3 ‘ on ; theatres or opera houses in America. We | #Dove where'the Great ( A yon | The dining-room of itself isa good and } furt seen in every direction. Tr Goniiiteston: Cums ien Bonanza Hen teine ‘about 200 pats AY BAY HORSE. BAGS F, 2 : This district, lying on the west houses. Saimon river, above Challis, has paritory eeHoole a Lotouse :of these A aes rooms aa oeC ‘ gaeAeof op of Ward-otate an three eee 200 are ats in thecle Congregational | rods. Tenth pation. ' E Taylor, $2,950. In viewdetermined of the inoveasing H ouseof f fo four roows and lot 5xt0 fristeed to obias work,ita the \ eneeaeat: : " Pry , in a suitable | Twentieth Ward—A. Durnford to side of | Permanent location, and accordingly a | Miller, $1,200. attracted tH was purchased of Bishop E. Woolley, peat corner 10x? rods, : 3 rods, Mary Second There will no doubt be amended laws | 4.045 would be the word to express an | ture for the proprietors, for such a build- | be laid in Mehes jeadine ap. The Keieht | Side of the house, in the wing built by | Many are fine, two-story houses, and the | considerable attention the past two years | atthe corner of Third East and Third | gouth street-—W. H. Folsom ‘to W. passed by the coming Legislature on the | ;40. of the business. Each dealer makes | mg was much needed here. lon Sjappnoaehes leading up, Fue oMehG | Mr. Little, are twenty finerooms, These | Dodge Hotel’ is an exceptionaliy good | by the large output of ore and bullion. South streets, where a substantial base- | Godbe and H. W. Lawrence, $16,500. subject. his report in this morning’s TRiBuNE 0 fs Pov iee a be built Bae ney see are papered, carpeted and curtained, and | building, well-furnished in all its apart-| Tux IpAuo Sm@nirine Co. have.a small | Ment has been built. The work will go} Tot 8x10 rods, Sixteenth Ward—Louis In consequence of thisfight the city’s | and reference to those reports is made. feet, an ib eee ba on the at Pde | 2 most of them are set sample bed-room | ments, and conducted as a: first-class finances have suffered heavily, as there were many months during which there were no payments for liquor licenses. | , Salt | However, it borrowed money to get | along, and during the last season itis re. | ported as having paid out large sums of | . | money for irrigating water and for water | experiment in service. Inasmuch the way of men’s, furnishing: goods, ho-| jhom such siery and fancy goodsfgenerally, Messrs. | made, all hoi Bamberger d& Co. haye-succeeded admira: as there is nobody | DISCOVERY ON MT. ARARAT. Sunes ‘ q pu ous Ce ek 814@-| suits. The suits exhibited in this wing | hotel, worthy the name of stich, eyen in a | AGRICUL ECE UE Ee eMeN TS eee and supporte Py anchors a the b ee. are of the higher grade, prices from $75 | more favored place for securing supplies. | Very extensive sales have been made abutments, SA eee ae aCe to $450. The centre, having been en-| The population now is not so great as | in this line andall the principal makers'}|’ Hxperiments have proyed that, as a} 204 also ee Nate eaten hi a larged, has fourteen rooms, fitted in ‘the | one year ago, because mining operations | of agricultural machinery have their general thing, life can be maintained ie pel a fe fhe tidal ed toin eo same way, and containing samples of a| here haye suffered from various causes, | agents in Salt Lake City, The field isa Wet prides yo Us aceite Ha nh ‘oe ea z BEimsa Th i Je will | Wer Stade, still some of these new | and there is not that activity which the | very extensive one and is well filled. A | longer without solid foo OE LAO UILTUW.O} SUBDED CE aN Ges at x waore Wt | goods in ash are very handsome. Onthe|quartg claims in this locality merit. | to | great increase in this trade is reported liquid nourishment; but as we differ in payments can properly be | and the indications are that it will be 4a Gackt desires and surround6 reported were: doubt- | even heavier the coming year than the He ae cs dines E en e alee: Gout cover up improper ex-| last, andall the agricultural districts of | 288.50 We Gilterin the selectl iniager seo ee ae a ane Cae around floor gorth is where the fine up- With rich mines all around, there smelter on Bay Horse reek, fifteon miles | from Challis. “This smelter was started in October, 1880, and made a short run, | turning out 165 tons of bullion, in which | was 700 ozs. of silver per ton. e pro- | duct for 1881, up to October 15th, was 135 | tons of bullion, containing 265,000 ozs. of silver and some gold. The ore treated | ought | ran from 70 ozs. up to 1,000 ozs. per ton, 00,98 soon as the weather is suitable. The | building is designed by Mr. E. L. T. Harson, and will be of the best Cottonwood | Prick, with stone and red brick trim-| Mings. Particular care has been given | 0 hea and ventilation. Above the} basement, will be three large study rooms, | Principal’s yoom, recitation rooms, halls | Marier ta 8, Blomquist, $200. ouse of two rooms and lot 2)¢x61¢ yods—E. Olsen to Mrs. Millard, $400, Tot 5x10 rods, Eleventh Ward—John gharp to H. F..Collins, $22 House of four rooms and lot Wig x65 feet, Thirteenth Ward—Charlotte Young to A. W. Carlson, $1350.1; : and wardrobes; : Godbe to Marian Beat » $1,800. House of three fanins and lot Q1ex8lg in the basement, wash- , 89 ) holstering is one, and the better class of | to be that bustle and stir which the place | Since the ebove date, the smelter has | Ooms, chemical and cabinet rooms; in,! a 8 : from shore to shore, as no piers will be | mattrass work, while the commoner work | merits, and we believe the time is nb far | made a successfulrun, but J have not the | the second story will be a large study possible here, both from the nature of the | in poth these lines is done in larze rooms dist Lot 6x10 rods, Twelfth Ward—Mrs. May cpaated. ae eae a cae Ge BO Eee ees cad STL eee er rae ee ae oes ee ate ae eee a Pe ei pe a number Aine ee ADRES a cones ene a making ae ce a vena bas ees ee py ae aT Se eee enn tampons Ge en lng ee |e = aoe ‘navkch eee ST ah eee rom Le ay RS oe a OS ee oe ae ve eee ee evn oo eee a ae ee PL Ss ee ote oS aS ok ooh eM Ree ee Ie Au a ny ae eae wee Ce en oe eee ae i ee eae eee aa eee ee eon Hee ee Wee ee eng Oa eer ei Gare es Dura a Bros. Fe a Lae eo pee ee Cae Oe eee Uae ere a See oa ae ae et eo Ue He — oe oe a moe ee Pe oe =e rine a re 30 |