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Show HlilMMHIHl!jt i In Hole! Corridors f H f M M M H M IIHM M M M- GEN. CHARLES WARREN and. W. W. arron of Rtittc. Mont., aro lato arrivals UV.."- Ijn10' a,,d are stopping at the llson. Tho Wcrrens aro In direct from Tcnabo, Nev., at which place thev havo acquired somo valuable mining propcrtv. W. W. Warren. In speaking of tho Tonabo -district, said he had traversed Nevada from Carson to Searchlight: was In Tononah anil Gold Held before ore was struck In either place, and ho gives It as his opinion that Tenabo Is tho most promising sulphide camp In the State. I The' formations, he says, aro excellent for copper. There are twelve producing mines in tho rllstrlct at this time, from which a good quality of ore Is bolr.g shipped. Everybody has monev, and there, aro as yet no hobos to disturb the comfort of living there. People vilh money aro coming In dally, and capital is eagerly seeking investment. Mr. Warren says Tonabo is tho first place In six years that ho has liked well enough to- leave his digging clothes. He vlll return In a few days. A. W. HONEY, president of the Pricj town board of trustees. Is In the citv, a guest of the Wilson, lie. In conjunction with J. M. Whitmore. president of the First National bank of Price, on Saturday Satur-day purchased for ?450 a streot sprinkler in this city, Prlco Is on the eve of a boom, and the authorities are taking time by the forelock to make their town a ploasant place In which to live. It will not be long until the principal streets ma ue ui&tuy impruveu. iiiauy u ine streets are already nicely shaded, and well sldowalked. The educational facilities facili-ties of Price are excellent, the. public school building being ono of the finest and most commodious In the State. Tfc development of tho coal mlnos and tire I placing of 20,000 to 30,000 acres of the ! very finest land to bo found anywhere under Irrigation are bound to mako of Price one of l:tah-'s second class cities in the near future'. e CAPTAIN FRANK JD. ELT of Denver, paymaster. United States Army, acrom- an led by his wife, arrived In tho city unday and are guests oNthc Knutsford. Paymaster Ely comes here to meet the July pay roll of the troops at Fort Douglas. Doug-las. On August 1 the Twenty-ninth regiment regi-ment will leave Fort Douglas for Manila. P. I. A battalion of the Twenty-first regiment from Fort Logan is on Its way, Captain Ely says, to occupy Fort Douglas Doug-las until the arrival of the Fifteenth regiment regi-ment of infant ry now on route from Manila Ma-nila and which it is oxpected will reach the fort by. the middle of August. Captain and Mrs. Ely are no strangers In Salt Lake. . When tho captain commanded com-manded a company In tho Twenty-ninth regiment they wero stationed at Fort Douglas for some time and while here made many friends. S. G. PHILLIPS, a prominent merchant mer-chant of Bozcman, Mont., is In the city, and Is registered at the Knutsford. POPE Y EAT MAN of New York, of the Guggenheim staff, came over from Ely, Nev., Sunday, where he had boon on a vlHit of Inspection of the Guggenheim interests in-terests at that place. He Is registered at tho Knutsford. A. D. AND MRS. CARVER and C. N. Carver, who havo been touring the West, spent Sunday in Salt Lake on their return re-turn East. They wero guests of the Knutsford. BARON K. NAKOSHIN1A. T. Furuka-wa. Furuka-wa. T. Hosegawa and M. Otugawa, prom-.Inent prom-.Inent Japanese, arrived In the city Monday, Mon-day, and registered at tho Knutsford. Baron Nakashlna and party arrived In San Francisco' about two weeks ago. Tho object of their visit to this country Is to inspect the American mothods of treating treat-ing copper ore. From San Francisco tho party went to Butto and Anaconda, whero they spent a week making an Inspection of the smelters and concentrating mills in those camps. They will spond two or three days here, and will visit Murray. Bingham and Garfield, and the mills and smclterx In those places. This Is the baron's first visit to American, and he expresses'' ex-presses'' hlmsolf as highly pleased with the country and the courteous treatment accorded them by the peoplo. The gentlemen gen-tlemen are all largely Interested In th Furukawa Mining company, the largest copper mines In Japan. Mr. T. Furukawa Furuka-wa Is the principal owner of the property, prop-erty, a very bright, Intelligent gentleman, gentle-man, and graduate of the Columbia School of Mines. The baron and party go from here to Denver. WILLIAM BATES and wife of Champaign. Cham-paign. 111., arrived In Salt Lake Sunday and registered! at the Cullen. Mr. Bates Ik an engineer on the Illinois Central railroad, rail-road, and, with hia wife, Is making a pleasure tour of tho West, Mr. Bates in very favorably Impressed with Salt Lake, and believes It hns a greater future' fu-ture' than any other inland, city in thin country, and certainly, he says, It Is tho best laid out city on tho continent. From hero Mr. Hales said they would probably go to Los Angeles. Spoaklng of Central Illinois. Mr. Bates said. "Tho country hi teeming with wealth and prosperity. The Illinois Central rondbod between Chicago and Cairo, a distance of 3US miles. Is the best In the United States. It In now under the Harrlman system, and Its cquinmont is kept up to the top notch of efficiency. The traffic is greater this years than for many years 'past, but the road la equal to all requirements," R. S. SHOWERS and wife and J. Sha-fer Sha-fer of Pittsburg. Pa., arc guests of tho Cull on. A. D. CARVER and wife and C. N. Carver arc guests of the ICnutBford. They are on their wny to tholr home In Now York, after making a tour of tho West. at COUNT MICHIEL of Italy arrived !n tho city Sundny. and Is a guest of tho Knutsford. The count lc accompanlod by lhis servant. |