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Show P1CKSONAL. G. O. Lamprecht and wife of Cleveland, Cleve-land, O., are at the Continental. Edward C. Billings and R. C. Hawley, both of Pueblo, Col., are at the Walker house. T. H. Edsall of Colorado Springs, Col., is in the city visiting his son who Is located here. Orson Adams jr., cashier of the Mesa National bank at Grand Junction, Col., is iu the city today. John L. Carey and J. J. Chandler, two Iowa capitalists, cn route to the Pacific coast, are in the city today. H. A. Fyier of Nebraska is in the city looking for a site for a mammoth dry goods establishment, which he proposes to locate here. J. P. Anderson and F. W. Hotchkiss, of Springville, came up to Salt Lake this morning. They are registered at the White house. CharleB S. Desky has returned from a trip throughout the eastern cities of note. He combined business with pleasure pleas-ure during his absence. C. W. Martin, chief clerk of the Antlers hotel at Colorado Springs, accompanied ac-companied by his sister is spending a few days in Salt Lake. They are guests at the Continental. Clarence E. Brown, of the Union Pacific Pa-cific passenger department at Omaha, is in the city. Ho is one of the most popular railroad men in the west. Next week he will pilot into this city from Butte a party of sixty-live Michigan editors. Geo. Look, a prominent real estate dealer of El Paso, Tex., is a guest at the Walker. Mr. Look is returning from a northern trip. He thinks Salt Lake City discounts any of the places he has yet visited, and predicts for it a brilliant bril-liant future. Mr. J. E. Dawson, wife and sister are stopping at the Continental on a brief visit in the city. Mr. Dawson is the general passenger agent of the Great Northern railway at Butte, and is capturing cap-turing the lion's share of the transportation transpor-tation business of that great mining city. J. R. Letcher returned to Salt Lake on Saturday, after a three weeks jaunt to Seattle, Victoria, Taeoma and Portland Port-land and back via San Francisco. In point of climate, natural advantages, and business outlook generally, he saw nothing giving greater promise than Salt Lake. Mr. Harry Fenn, the well known artist, is at the Continental. Mr. Fenn made himself a national reputation by his illustrations in "Picturesque America." Amer-ica." He is now makiug a trip over the old Fremont trail gathering illustrations illustra-tions for an article on tho "Pathfinder," which will run through several numbers of the Century. 1. B. Richards of the engineering department de-partment of the Missouri Pacific railway rail-way system one of the oldest and most efficient men in the service has been "doing" this region for some weeks past, and is now in our city. Like all men of perception, he predicts a great future for us so soon as more railway facilities can be obtained. He is stopping stop-ping at tho Walker house. |