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Show CREAM OF THE NEWS- The weather tomorrow will be fair and warmer. The new garbage ordinance will be rigidly enforced. E. W. Tatlock departed for Wapello, Iowa, this morning. Tbe grand jury this morning ignored the charge of robbery against Fred Fuller. The city council will again tackle the job of revising the ordinances this evening. Formula The LJtaa baking powder costs you nothing if not absolutely satisfactory. Only ten carloads of the watermalns recently re-cently purchased by the mayor have arrived. ar-rived. One million dollars to lend at 6 to 9 per cent. James H. Bacon, at American National bank. Grass Creek, the finest Weber coal in the market, at J. H. Morse & Sons, 209 Mam street. The new Eagle building will be one of the prettiest small buildings in the city when it is completed. Mortuary Clerk Browne issued during the week just past ten burial permits and three permits to ship away. Mrs. Reese, the national organizer of tha W. C. T. U., addressed the city prisoners in the police court yesterday. An open faucet in the board of trade building Saturday night flooded a few of the books in the Pioneer library. A fir p. station will be established at the corner of Sixth South and Seventh East streets, on the exposition grounds. Another saloon has succumbed to hard times. It is that of Peter Turnes, whose place of business Is on Commercial street. Justice Gee disposed of ninety cases in the police court last week, and the fines imposed im-posed were the heaviest in the aggregats of the year. W. C. Glissan, an old Nevada pioneer, who was well known in Utah, died at Pioche last week after an illness of two months. He was 65 years of age. Three cases of diphtheria and three cases of scarlet fever were reported to the health officials last week.. No deaths from contagious con-tagious diseases were recorded. The requisitions of Governor Thomas for Frank Wilson, William Riter and E. T. Yealon, who are wanted here on the charge of assault with intent to rob, have been honored by Acting Governor Story of Colorado. Colo-rado. "Dr." Matthews, who was recently ar-rssted ar-rssted here and taken hack to Denver for alleged swindling, is bsck in Zion once more. Last night this fellow "lectured" on spiritualism at the old federal court room, aud some 300 people went to hear him. Funny, isn't it? The Utah Title, Insurance and Trust company com-pany pays 5 per cent interest, payable quar- terly, on savings deposits, insures titles to real estate and issues abstracts. Directors, J. E. Dooly, R. C. Chambers, A. L. Thomas, W. 8. McCornick,T. R.Jones, J. J. Daly and E. B. Wicks. A letter was received at the postoffice this week addressed "To the only ticket broker of any consequence on earth." The post-office post-office employes were puzzled but a moment, when it was delivered to Gros hell's ticket office, Wonderland Museum building. Nothing Noth-ing like being well advertised. Simpson, the incandescent young man from the effete East who did up Mr. Annett some time ago by means of a fraudulent draft, has been brought back from Omaha and will probably have a hearing before Commissioner Greenman tomorrow on the charge of obtaining money under false pretenses. pre-tenses. The Santa Cruz Sentinel says: The bitumen business is very good at present. It is probable that the bitumen plant at Salt Lake will be moved, as the freight rate is too high, being $8 a ton from here to that city. Up to tbe present, 10,000 tons of bitumen have been used in , the Mormon capital. The Bitumen company is willing to pay $7 a ton, which is all that the traffic will bear. |