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Show f J THE SA IT LAKE TIMES: TWuY. JANUARY 2ft 1892, enemy dread more than an expres-sion of the people of this city at the polls in the near future, henee their almost frantic efforts to secure postponement of our municipal elec-tion until November next. They rea-lize very clearly that an election held here next month would be equivalent to the driving of sev4l nails into the ooffln containing those twin relics of trickery and duplicity, the Faitlkncr-Cain- e and Teller bills. TiitKfc is nothing that our friends the PERINI BROS. Manufacturers and Dealers in Umbrellas, Parasols, Walking Canes, A Fine List of KID GLOVES. Everr pair fitted to the hand. Umbrellas and Parasols and repaired on short notice. Parasols made to math( Knntstord Hotel, 26 State St., Salt City, Utah. Main Store--. 833 Sixteenth St., Denver, Colorado. AMERICAN RATIONAL BANK Capital, $250,000. Surplus, $25,000. Successor to the Bank of Sal? Lake, - - Salt Lake City. INTERESTS PAID ON DEPOSITS. Jamis H. TUcnx Pi sident Skcrltaky E. Ssi.ls T. A. Dayts H. M. Bacon Gov. A. L. Tuomas M ,f (",rat W. L. Holland , Cashier S. M. Jar vis D. G. Tcnniclifp W. B. UuLLAM) Ast. Cashier J. W. JuM) F. W. Koij C. F. LoOFBOCKOW. Money to Lend on improved Real Estate by James H. Bacon. I Expert Dental Co. I B. R. MOAD, Manager Expert Dental Company. j Yours For Aids to BEAUTY & COMPORT By my method I can make artificial teeth with the gurascrved, colored and go shaped M to restore the RJttttfft expns Hion of the face in any care, co matter how badly the cheek. my be snsken or the lips wrinkled, I win guarantee to :nik them bO natural that a critic cannot detect tliflm. Reetoring lost expression is 9 an nit that oveiy dentift does ftOt notice or 3 understand: simply makir, a set uf teeth 3 to fit pertX'tly nnd lnj durable dnes nol J complete tliis branch of dentistry by M L means. Itreaulreu tho skillful eyo and fl can ding hand of out who has devoted R much tune and practice to thl particular jf science; also an extra 'nurse of higher fl studies not re .... tu the regular denial fij tchooL DENTISTRY : SUNDAYS y Office in Central Clock, 'A No. 46 West Second South. TEETH EXTRACTED I Absolutely Without Pain ! Sets of Teeth .... $5,0C I I Teeth Filled - - - - SI. 00 I BANK OF QOMMERCE. CPEEA HOUSE 3LOCK, SALT LAKE CITY. Five Per Csnt Interest Paid on Savings Deposits. Transacts a General Banking Business. --DIRECTORS : i Bor- - fAr.K President Wa. H. McIxttue ,T. B. Farlow W, ". Cuiseolii M. K 1'arsin8 C. L Hannama.v K. F. Walkeu Cashier W. 11. IiiTi.vu E. E. Kica B. H. RUM, jb Ast. Cashier E. 15. C'kiti hlow. yELLS, pAKGO t QO.'3 BANK. LAKE CITY UTAH P'JTs AND SELLS EXCHANGE, MAKES 1 telegraphic Irausfers on the priDeipal cities of tltn ru"-.- States aad Europe, and on all points on tiiij Pacific CcasC 1(''ips letters of credit available in the principal ifties Ol the world. .'lal attention given to the selling of ores and bullion. Advances made on consignments at low-- t rates. PGitl"u!nr atUmtlon plven to collections taroarth-a::'- . Ctah, Nevada and adjoining Territories. Ac :aunts solicited. CORRESPONDENTS: .Voile, Fargo A Co London '.Veils, Fajjio & Co New York National Hank 'if the Itepnblic Boston ftrsi National Baak Omaha i'frst National Bank Denver at ite National Bank Denver Merchants' National Bank Chicago Lbatmoas1 Bank. St. Louis frails, l''&rgo X Co San Francisco J. E. Dooly ... Cashier. JIIIF. RATIONAL Bank of the Republic. CiFiTii, $500,000 Poixt Pans r Fjunk Knox President L. C.KsRiiicK Vice President J. A. MM Cashier 47 MAIN STREET. Transacts s general banking business. Money-loane-on taveruble terms. Accounts of mer-chants, individuals, firms and corporations so-licited. Five per cent interest paid oa savings and Unie deposits. D1P.ECTOUS: L. C. Karrrlck. C. S. Bolmee Eoul Kabn J. a. Earls W. E. Smedley Geo. A. Lowe. Frank Kaoz II. L. A. CulmsrJ J. G. Sutherland. JNION RATION AL JJANK. Successor to Wulker Bros., Bankers. Eatak!UhJ 1860. te.;:;:;:;;;:;::;;;;;;;;; United States Depository. Transacts A Qencral Banking Business. Safe Deposit Vaults. Fire and Burglar Proof. M.H. alker il. J. C heesman Cashlos J.K. Walker, Jr Ast. Cashiej T OMBABD JNVKSTMENT COMPANY. Of Kansas. City, Mo., and Boston, Mass; Branch Office for Utah and Southern Idaho. Camer l'i ; South and Main street. Salt Laka. City, Utah. W. H. Dale - Mttcarer. Makes Loans on Farm and City Piocarty all Kar Pstnt. M. R. EVANS. W. Second Soath. JSP0 RT i N G G 0ODST Siiir)-fe9l?e- i,s and AmiiiQE. Bicycles, Tricycles and Velocipedes. Barors, Por k?t Cutlery, Shears and Sclegor Strnpp, IrUiaii Clubs, Boxing Gloves, Dumb Bolli, Dos CoIIhth, Tiiompton Bootu and SUoes, Fwld and Opera Glares. Examine Stock Sefore Purchasing, HOTEL KNUTSFORD, Opened June 3. Now and Elegant in all ita Ap- - pointmenta. 250 Rooms, Single or En Suite; 75 Rooms with Bath. 6. S. HOLMES, - - Proprietor. WALKER HOUSET" AFirst-Cla- ss European Hotel. Tks Watasr Is located in tha business center of the City and has all the Modern Improvements & Convenances Pertaining to a strictly first-clas- s hnnse. It Is managed as well as any hotel in the West, and is Itrictff the business and tourist hotel of Hull bttmOHe. PASSENGER ELEVATOR. XS Walker nnd the Metropolitan are the cm, leading hutals of bait Luke City. 6. S. ERB, - Proprietor. HOTEL TEMPLETON, Just Opened. rH TUB CITT. Center if Main and South Temple Streets. Electric Motors! Of all Sizes kept in Stock up to 500 Volts. mam and from Power to Power. ALSO Electric Light Dynamos, ncandescent Lamps of the Best Manufacture. Suitable lor any Sockat, 50 Volts to 110 Volts, 16 CP. to 750 CP. Also a Full Assort ment ot ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES, QTEAM PUMPS, HOISTING ENGINES, AIR COMPRESSORS, ROCK DRILLS. Fraser k Chalmers, Chicago. --MINING MArmwrpy L. C. TRENT, Director and General Western Manager. Salt Lake City. Utah. - " Helena, Montana. Salt Lake Hardware Co. Sipr" otTJifr Gun. 42 and 44 West Second South. GREAT OFFER To the Utah housekeepers during the next 30 days. We propose to dispose of our entire stock of Parlor Stoves! r AT COST. Call and examink these goods. Our Prices are the lowest of any house in Salt Lake. New line of Mechanics' Tools, miners and contractors supplies. fa ion twM thf Hints of tan' I Furnace. the following toasts were responded to: "Robert Burns," by Kev. George Leslie. "Bait Lake Caledonian Club," by Judge McDowell. 'Our Ladies," by David Nelson. "Oar Guests," by .(nines Stephenaon. "The Land We Left and the Land of Our Adoption," by Scott Anderson. The President of the United States," by Governor Thomas.. After the toasts there, were old Scottish sotlgl In the vcrnaeular by Peter Eliot, John Bibson, Mrs. Brown and William Hunter. One of the most interesting features of the evening was the dancing of a Highland fling by Mrs. Hunter, aged years. Notwith-standing her advanced age Mrs. Hunter dani ed with an agility that would be envied by many a younger woman. The Scotch folk bad a good time and the Caledonian banquet of 18!U will bo long remembered. 1SOSM' M OTI. iMl s MEMORIES. Anniversary of Knbert linens' Hlrth Ob-served by the 'nleiloiiiuns. Old Scotland's sons and daughters to the number of loo enjoyed themselves and hon-ored tho birthday anniversary of Scotland's f'linous poet, "Bobby" Burns, at tho same time last evening at a banquet given at the Continental. The affair was under tho aus-pices of tho Caledonia club. After a ploas-au- t hour spent in conversation, during which reminiscences of childhood scones amid the crairs and peaks of the highland wore related, and old times lived over again, the club and its guests adjourned from .he parlors to th. 1 dining room at 9:30 o'clock. The spacious banquet hall was beautifully decorated and the long tatdes were most etc-- i gantly arranged with fanciful displays of j tahleMarc and 11 profusion of cut (lowers. famous as Proprietor Bcardsloy is as a cut-- ! crer he outdid himself last evening, al-though it is likely that bu secured the ser-vices of sonic excellent old Scotch cook for this occasion. It was dec idedly a baniiiet of Scoth dishes and reminded all of the days of 'auhl lang sync '. The menu waa as fol-lows: Hunan lladdies, Uaiides Itabhlie, Juck mid .leliy. Lobster Salad, raid Hani, t'ald chicken, Tongue. Beefsteak Pie. rHioKt Onions, Potted Head, Sweet Pickles, sieved Tripe, Celer), IlsL'is i Burns' favorite, CbappteTaties, Apple Pie, tSliurtbrsad, Oatn.eal Cukes, Homo-il- l ad" llanuoks, Cheese, llu bae Scones and lb. -, Ml) l ake. Oranges, Apples, Tea, 1 offce, The tiagpipes were an important feature in the evening's enjoyment and ut frequent intervals the strains of the "pipes'' kept tin; enthusiasm of the evening at Its height. Peter Kliot acted as the toaatmastor, and SALT LAKE EVEN I N GJJjVI ES, pTYrirTTMES PUBLISHING COMPANY". Tar. Times is published every evening (Sunday azreutMli, and 1 delivered by earner,. In salt Lake CiK, Lcran. American Fork, Pro'-- and Far'k City at s Csatsa month. The Tucks contains the fait Associated Press Baport, and haa Special Teleerapb Service eover-Inj- r this Entiro Region. Tee Times is entered at the Poetofnee in Salt latlcaCin for trinsmlMlon through the mails aa second-clas- matter. Persons desiring The Times delivered at their boii'cs ran secure It by postal card order or through telephone. When delivery is irregular moke immediate complaint to this ofllee. (Subscription to The Daily Times. (ALWATJ IN ADVANCE.) ISmonths $s 00 " 4.00 !! " S.OO 1 " g Weekly, year 1.90 (Address The Times. Salt Lake City, t'tah.) The Times' Telephone No. is 481. TUESDAY, JANTAHT 20. 18U2. The gentle young editor of the Amer-ican Fork Independent dabbles his hands in the water where the befouled linen ul the Logan Nation' editor DM Iain to soak since yesterday, and now the fair hand of the editor of the I'rovo Dispatch presses out lovingly the stained garments and hangs them on the line. Verily, it is good for the brethren to dwell together In peace and unity. Jerholii K. i.rn iikr, formerly a representa-tive from Ouray county, is now chief clerk of the l'tuh !tltatnM. Missniirians and mormons al-ways amalgamated nicely. Solid Muldoon. The Multloon is nothing if not ironi-cal. But wait until we become a state, and if we don't pay off some old scores against Missourians, treasured up since 1888, then you may set us down as being anything except saints. Tin: I'KKSS AM THE PUBLIC. The newspaper press of the state of New York bare been demanding the re-peal uf that clause of the electrical exe-cution law which forbids the publica-tion of the details of lOob. executions and a resolution has been introduced in the rnate bearing on that question. Tho commiMiontrs insist th.-- the shall he rntninod, anil tho.v their position liv ussniling tho mo-tives of tho press. "The object of the jiewspapi is.' hays the report, 'is lo ob-tain material for sensational articles in order to iucrcace its sales and enlarge its profits; and when it is remembered thai ':! new -- papri's are extensively read by the criminal classes, who glory in the description of the BOUVM shown by their colleagues nadorgOing the sen tcnee of death, and whose minds arc repeatedly stimulated to fresh acts of violence by 'he reading of such dis-gusting .letaiis--, the need of keepiug these details out of the public prints is more apparent." It is the object of ( he legitimate news-paper to gather all the facts, sensation-al cr otherwise, which make up the tlayV doinffs, and of which tho public demand a fair anil reliable aocoun: It need not lie questioned that a small minority of the press do seek profit by presenting to their patrons unsavory and disgusting dishes, but this does not alter the fact that the respectable jour-nals of the country give the news in the least objectionable form and with a proper regard for the public morals. If the New York commission has hit upon tho true principle in dealing with the press, then both laws and constitu-tions will have to be recast. The same argument which is here advanced in support of the legal right to mii.le the press at executions of the death penally, might lie urged at every stage in the history of crime and its punishment. Why Should the de-tails of a murder bo permitted to be published? Why the circumstances of the arrest, the testimony before the inquest, the proceedings of the trial, 11 u i, uud the .seotei'iejiy ..Thorn, .r nthor grutU's of crime, bolides murder the ac-counts of which are "extensively road by tho criminal classes," but this does not afford ;'t sullieitmt or reasonable argument why they should Dot be read by the al classes. Reduced to its logical conclusion, the doctrine of the commission would demand the placing Of the press under a cen-sorship to determine what was proper ami what was improper for publica-tion. This would he a step backward to-ward which no state would tolerate. The press is one of the great moral and intellectual bulwarks of civilized society, and it hits been left free to publish everything not in tlero gation of private rights. Freedom of the press is one of our boasted rights, and it is not only essential to the mater-ial interests and intellectual demands of the age. but it is the great conserva-tor and lialance-whoe- l of organized so-ciety, it has a broad charter and high dmies, bul in the performance of its functions it is held responsible for tho abuse of its privileges both by the law and by public opinion. The truth is the press eannot be muzzled, and there is, uo uac to attempt it. THE "TIMES'' GETS THERE. It Held the Town Dp by the Tallin Great Shape Yesterday. 'Was Tun Tixxs in it? Well, rather. Thi Times was most decidedly in it. It was the only paper that gave the President's message on the Chilean imbroglio to the people of Bait Lake City. It was three hours ahead of Its contemporary, arid even then Tub Timls alone had the message complete. Did Tin: Times sell uud was its enterprise appreciated? You bet. When the first edition came off 2000 papers were out on the streets, and within an hour every one was sold. The newsboys were in their glory. They could scarcely wait for the second edition, and when it was ready a strinir of hoys .that reached from Tub Time office to lUW South street was waiting their turns. And the regular edition, that contained the message complete, the correspondenec and comments, was out ahead of the enemy which, when it did finally get on the street, had only the epitome of the Chilean corres-pondence, without the vital part, the presi-dent's Comments thereon. The way papers sold! By S o'clock every copy of The Thus was gone, and there i as a constant demand for more. The Times gels thero, you bet. COMMUNICATIONS. a Wort! to Mr. Hum. EDITOR Tin TiMMId rending your isBiir of the 22nd inst. I sec that my liberal friend has made a reply to my communication to you, and thai he has tried to make fun of it, and has not only spoken of my polities, but also of my religion. I will Iry and make a reply to his communication in said issue if you will allow me space to do so. Mil. Bnv, M. Mi nn: You started out liy say-in- '; that ) was an Infant ttpttbUMfl anil that you an old une. ai:ree with yov thorp, for I am only nu infant rnpabliran, and if you had been a trii" republic in you would not have tfifd to make fun of what I Miid; but yon would tiuvo heen out in t!i flold :ind at work, not .'ojriiii; behind us you aie doing at the present time. Agabt, you mentioned tith, wjiere i said that uiv faith as talUng. did 1)01 ray that my faith was failing in ttie repiibliean party, but in Thk Tnfisa, if they did not ciiiiK to their colors. My faith in the republican party is stronger today than it ever was, for I have cejirched for kuowleilee in regard to it Ithe republican party) and I have found it. I therefore speak now from knowledge and not from faith alone, but I have faith thai L7tah will become a republican state yet. s your next sentence yon tried t.i criticise me in saying wa u republican to the bitter end. 1 am Sorry von should know no tetter for w hen it conn s dow n to the point 1 did nut -- ay bitter end, but I raid that 1 was a republican to the very let O r, ami the change wa- - made either by the editor or some one after I gave my communication to them. I have no Utterance toward any one, and as for being a republican until the mormons get con-trol, h, you tatd, have no idea of such a thine, for I am not a man of that kind, and when join a party ami tod it to be true, as I have found the lepublican purty, I never go hack on it, and never Intend to ro hack on the republican party. I also should like to call your attention to tho Gonstltntion of the United Btstes and to the re-publican platform, wherein it ays that every per-son shall worship God according to the dictates of his own conscience: and here you have been Intruding upon my rights, for which I t'o rot thank you. Yon also referred to the 1'une Faulkner bill as a mormon sophistry, both on the part of renubli-cans and democrats; hut here I differ from yen, for do not believe that the republicans had to do with it except to oppose it. And us tor the llaaltl and the Standard working for the interest of the mormons, the Herald for tho deniucrats and the Standard forthe ronuhllcans-- J ." ' .i!n." mtrmldTnf!letTmeMlHic7e was a republican paper; sol will leave this to them and close, trusting that you will soon see your error. I remain, your respectfully, FKABGUK8 LISTER. Murray, Jan. 3d, 1KB. The copy of Mr. Lester's first cninniuniea-t'n-lias been lost. We think that lie is in error in ragjtfd any ebuft having been made in il. Tin; TtMKs never makes changes in a communication other than to correct grammatical construction or orthography. Bmtob. LIBERAL COUNTY CONVENTION. 1 IJ K A oor AHTr. its ) I.IBKKAL Cot NTY C'ENTRAI, COMMITTPC Salt Lai.e City, Utah, dan. 13, 181K. ) There will be held at Salt Lake City, m Thursday, February 4, 1802, at 13 o'eio , noon, a territorial convention of the party. L'nder the call issued by ic chairman of the territorial liberal a Salt Lake county will be entitled to 119 delegates in the convention. In orr to select these delegates a county convm-tio-is hereby called to meet in Salt I.Jte City on Saturday, January H0, 1802, at12 o'clock, noon, tlie place to be hereafter des-ignated. The precinct in tho county will be entitled to the number of delegates here-with designated: 1st S. L. City I'rct :t0 Silver i, 1 '1 " " ufllliig i ottonwood I 1 8d " " .... 2U Union I 1 4th " " .... 30 Butler 1 Mb " " ... 4(1 North Jordan . 1 Sooth Cottonwood. .. .Kiranite 1 Bingham Vi Granger 1 Sandy 4 Draper 1 Little Cottonwood .. . 3 South Jordan l NewJordan 2 Ft. Herrlman 1 Mill Creek a, UlufT Dale 1 Sugar :i Brighton S Hunter I Mountain Dell 1 East Mill Creek lj Farmers 3 The precinct organizations will hold meet ings nud sleet delegates In accordance with litis call. A. H. Parsons, Chairman. H. V. Mei.oy, Secretary. -. LIBERAL CITY CONVENTION. The Liberal city convention will be held at the Walker pavilion in Salt Lake City on Thursday, the 88th day of January, JSSI3. thlL. o'clock, noon, and will be hell tot pose of nominating; a mayoi 'H1'' treasurer, assessor and colle t' . marshal, to be supported at the entHlJ municipal election, and for the election Mxh chairman and rive members of the city 1'- - Thc city convention will be compose,, f ;.'HI delagatas and the representation frSm the various precincts will be as folio, : V'lrst precinct, 40; Second, 00: Third, m. Fourth, :',(; Fifth, 40. I The literal precinct conventions, hid for the purpose of nominating from ;h, three members of the Salt Lake City com b0 and to elect delegates to the city conv n. tion, and for the election of delegates to county convention, to be held on Baturd the SOtb daj of January, to select delegi tea to lie territorial convention, to be Id ; Suit Lake City on . irnary I. 1893, will fe held on the evening of January 18U3, at g o'clock, aa follows: Kn-s- t precinct, Nil th Ward school house Second precinct, at , Walker pavilion; Third precinct, at S. vi tl. teeuth Ward school house; Fourth precti a at Twentieth Ward school house, and Ki t)l precinct, nt the Twelfth Ward school hot S(. The First precinct convention will composed of so delegates, (lie Si n. ml of t!u delegates, the third of U delegate-- , t,e Fourth of 60 delegates and tho Fifth of 55 delegates. , W. PowKRS, Chairmni L Josei'H Lii'PMAN, Secretary. W. H. II SrFFoitn, n 1st Precinc HaVNKI P voE, President 2nd Precipe A. F. D'IKF.MI s, President 3rd Preeinc H. w. Lawrsncs, President Itli Prccin" Geouok M. Downet, President ."dh Preeint Silt Lake City, January 14, lnfl2. GHOULS RUN DOWN AND CAUGHT. A irler-St- i icken Father Kcomrs the Nude Hoily of His i.ntcly Poraiserl Dsmftita. Iiidiunupolts tlazctte Tribune. Miss Krnnia .1. t'osscll was buried last Sunday in Mount Jackson cemetery, west of thin city. Last night, during a Minding snow storm, hor grave wus robbed by gbools, A ncighhor who was returning Iminc late discovered the Crime and teitihed the girl's father, when seurcli was Instantly begun, "n foot the searchers followed the tell-tal- trucks iu the snow three miles to t'nc city, along the streets and to tin door of the Central College ot Physicians and Burgeons. At 3 o'clock this morning the futher pounced on the door of the college and aroused Ihe sleuping janitor. The latter claimed thai no body had been received ho re. The scan hers then went to the house of Dr. J. B. Long, a member ot the college faculty. lie admitted t lint n body had been received, but said it came from the poor farm. The police were then called on nnd searched the college building, where they found the body laying sturk naked on the table. The outrageous crime is creating a great scusa-tio-in the city. IVAXi ami MICE. Thero is au alleged ilt imocratio paper t published at Provo thai attempts to liiiptiKii U10 repubUeanisoi of Thk Times, ami sayl "rats'' In :'. way that i forcible uud cotivinciu);. Of oourae, as 1111 argument, "rals" is so ilinchini' that The Times most certainly has nothing more to say. If Thk Times were lo oppose the repeal of the sugar bounty clause of the McKinloy act of course our esteemed neighbor would say "rats;" wore it to oppose free wool it would again hear the echo "rats '' This is all notod, bat :i little communi-cation reached the CtfDct of The Times last evening. It is to the point and wo offer il. TlM Dames of tWO well known men were mentioned; they tiro with-held, but will he furnished to any one enough interested to Inquire for them, Oominii Into the city from Hurray by the Klec-tri- c there cm the iisiuil number Ol passeiuxera in the car, and divers themes were discussed amoag them. Politic, however, seemed to be uppermost, and, eenoerolag the last named topic the following is worthy of note: A good brother saint, a str ing democrat, hap-pened to spy out a gentile, whom he knen t be divisionist 0:1 national party linos, but it sie ns he had forgotten which side Hi" aforesaid divls-i.mis-had aftlllated with. Moving soma distance Um where he had been seated, the brother sot by the republican dlvlslonist and said; "The demorrats have a fur" thing this time; I'm sorry you're uot iioide tho city limits to help us out." The dlw'ionlst, looking Tory sheepish, replied: "Bat I'm uot a democrat; I'm a republican."' "Well," was the rejoinder, "that makes no ' difference; it's all tho same. The divlsionlst speedily changed the topic of conversation and tool; up a mure c ingenial one, This is one of thu peculiarities of pol-itics in Utah, and it is the republican that does not differ from a democrat that The Times is not yet ready to ac-cept. Go to, dear neighbor, thou and thy rats, too, for they are after all mice. AMUSEMENTS. Krentu This Vek. Wonderland Big attractions in curio hall mill line sta'u show every day. At the theater Kolund ltecd Thursday and Frtdsy nights in ''The Club Friend'1 and "Lend Me Your Wife." "t'nele Tom's t'al'in" Saturday nijrlit. LIBERAL TERRITORIAL CONVLNI c' ' E SADQV ARTKRS a Territojiial Libkral Committsk, j. Halt L.AKB, I'laji. .'an. I, I89U. i There will lie bold a Territorial C01 Lg. tioaofthe !.ibcrl party to take fte-1- ' defeat tho ruinious legislation propose. Sor Utah, K Th Central Committee desire the k th) party in tln crisis, and let the rcsp ,. DO SUC& thst the attcnipt of (v few mo to band 0W the absolute control of this tury t0 the hierarchy wo have so lorn.-- m posed, will lie shown to be against the and judgment of all true Democrats Q Kepulilicaus of the Territory. The 0 ' tionmcnt uf delegates to eountiei will lj a for the lost Territorial Convention ar.i 0s follows: Bcster 11, Box Elder 20, Cache S, Da s, Emory s, (iarrleld 5, (irund 8, iron 5, Jual 17 Kane ft, Millard 8, Morgan 8, Piute 8, K'n n" Salt Lake 119, 8nn limn ft, S:m p. ( n. Her 8, Summit 83, Tooele 8, Uintah ft, I lu 30, tVatati ft Washington ft, Weber ."id. County committees should at ones Jl conventiens to elect delegates to this T j. torlsl conToatlon, Where this is impr. county committees should so'- lt. delegates to which their county is entitle The convention will be held at Ball I m ( :ty on Thursday, the 4th day of Felum: yt ls'.H!, and will be called to order at lSn'cl noon. The Tcrrit irial Committee will n ,,t at the Walker House at 8 p. m. Februafj 3, INI 0. W. Powers, Chairmi) C. E. Ai.i.r.N, Secretary. fctatteawea Keit flippers at COet at cost at coat I Matteawaa v Seamless 9xl m ppaai at ee at 8eri pit fc Lvni n, 100 Maiu street. |