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Show DOTS AM) DASHES. PERTINENT PARAGRAPHS FROM THE PRESS OK UTAH. With Pointed News Notes- Also News of Interest From Our Neighbors All Boiled Down and l'oltshd I'p for Times. Headers, The Park City duds killed the fire ordinance ordi-nance without debate. During the year 101 Spanish Fork bought a new Curlew bell. It cost 1808.60. Volume 1, No. 1, of the Spanish Fork Iti-du Iti-du is at hand. It is newsy if it isn't big. The editor asks for two young ladies and one boy to learu the art of printing as a starter. Will Boyack of Spanish Fork has a great attraction in his front yard a bald eagle and a large owl. The eagle is a youug one, and his wings measure seven and a half feet from tip to tip. The owl's measure three feet. Papers have been served on twenty men wlio had registered at Logan, objecting to their right to vote. The objections were made, some by republicans aud some by democrats. Twenty catM of this kind wen heard by Register Goodwin Thursday. In eleven cases the objections were sustained and the names were stricken from the list. IDAHO NOTES. The Idaho Falls Ti. is now under the control of Messrs. Momoreaux et Chapin. W. B. Kyle, mayor of the city of -Moscow, died very suddenly in that city on the 99nd ult. The Salubria Citizxn says: Frank .lenney of Welter is the candidate from Washington Washing-ton county for the wardenship of the Idaho penitentiary, and his chances for the position posi-tion are very Mattering. There will be plenty of work for the carpenters car-penters of Boise to perform during the spring aud summer. Hie city is certain to experience a building boom. Nearly every , architect in Boise has from three to a dozen i " '-jobs" on hand. Mr. Cartriglit of Emmott informed a reporter re-porter on the Idaho Daily that surveys for an immense ditch to tap the Payetlc. river near Enunett had been commenced. The ditch will be thirty miles long, fifteen feet wide on the bottom aud thirty feet on the top, and six feet deep. It will carry a great volume of water. A firm at Washoe has alii al-ii ady offered to pay 115,000 per annum for the privilege of floating logs down the canal. COLORADO NOTES. People in the North jun k section want a railroad. Ecker lias been returned to the Denver jail from Castle Rock. The Clarendon hotel at Aspen has been sold to Messrs. Doming; A: Phillips. The Aiken brothers of Fort Collins have removed their apiary to Lovciund , Excellent progress is being made on the new toll road from Cation City to Cripple Creek. Peter Harteiisteln, a prominent cltlien of Buena Vista, died there of consumption yesterday. yes-terday. Neil McGlnlty. a workman on the Klor-ence-Cripple Creek road, fell over a cliff and was Mriously hurt yesterday. Star mail service on route Garrison to Lockett i. changed to run from Garrison by Loekett to Qtmett from March 16. The BreckeiUldge Electric Li'bt company have their wire about all up and the power house is rapidly Hearing completion. A man named Heinrlchs, while painting the Central hotel at Canon City yesterday, fell from n ladder and broke one of his yv rists in two places. Tho people of Meeker have ordered nineteen nine-teen dozen email for distribution over the field! in Kio Blaucii county. It is proposed to stock the country thickly witli quail. In the contest for the most popular railroad rail-road conductor at Pueblo the prize, a silver lantern, was won by William Zimmerman of the Missouri Pacific road. b.-B: Hunter killed a larjre mountain lion on his ranch below town last fall, and now has It mounted. The beast weighed ninety-live ninety-live pounds when killed, and measures m urly nine feet from tip to tip. Luke City Phonograph. While the family of Constable Ed Barnes of Pueblo was absent yesterday afternoon three men kicked the door of his residence open and stole a lot of clothing and Jewelry. About 7:30 last evening the constable discovered dis-covered two of them trying to sell the goods mid at once arrested them. NEVADA NOTES. The Humbolt river is now literally allre with carp iind cattish. The Mountain Queen company's mill at CohunbtM ii running steadily on ore from their mines and it It said to Da doine guod work. There are about thirty men at work at JtHnbo proepecttag and developing, and , (food results are anticipated during the coin Ing season. Green grass end spring, onions .ire sprouting, and the good Jumboltes eat their regular beans and are happy. A company titt:, been organized at Susan-Viile Susan-Viile to build a telegraph line to Reno by way of Amudce. The Nevada, California and Oregon r ailway Is said to lie the only-road only-road of any considerable length in the world without a telegraph line. The Pioehe Reeord says: The furnace Is about to be shut dow n and the forces on the mines of the P. ('. M. & R. Co. have been considered reduced. The close-down is more than likely either owing to the low price of silver or tho early prospect of a railroad mure likely the latter. A man named Dyer, at Colfax, has been planting bis money in his dooryard for safe keeping. Some thief discovered the cache this week nud took therefrom. The thief was considerate, however, for he left a 30 piece. The ends of the high bridge on which the Southern Pacific railway is to cross the Pecos Pe-cos river will be joined next week. Its aiti-tudc aiti-tudc is 3S7 feet, making it the highest struct, lire of the kind in tin- World, The Pecos at loin point Is about seventy-tlv.' yards wide, has rock bottom and Is 311 feet deep. The water is clear. A parachute man has decided de-cided to make a jump from the bridge. |