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Show City and NeSg&borfiood x A. J. DA VI EL prwldSht of the city oouaoll, h&a r6t-urad w the oltj aftor fta fLbn&noo or pcvanil woolen. Mr. Davis flAfl baett In Ohlcaco on bu<oB. ONH OF the lait at the Domoontte to Rrnoo a neat In tho Sonata pharnbor ot Utah, Q, at. whitmoro, oi fcphl, wart In thn city Friday on buDlnonn. MR0. JOHN ARDINN, who underwent an oporation at tho Salt Lako prlvata honpltoJ two weako aaro, hojs boon r-loasod r-loasod from tho hoopltal and la at hor homo. J. W, GRAY, veterinary nurgoon of tho Stato board at health, has oraorcd tliroo horsois found to bo cufforlnff from gland-aro gland-aro to be Hilled at onco. Tho dluoaaod animals aro in Emory county. BTBVH BOBICH and Miko Gulorlc woro arraigned In the District court, Friday, on tho oharge of Inciting a riot at Bingham Bing-ham Junction last May. Through an intorprotor oach ontorod a plea of not guilty. Thoy will bo tried noxt wook. HARRY MoGUGGIIS wa3 brought In from Garfield by Deputy Bhorlfr Rood. Thursday night, on a charge of nocona dogroo burglar- and placod In tho county Jail. McGuggln le charged with ntcallng clothes from workmen's touts at Garfield. Gar-field. Ho Is -10 years old. COLONEL ED LOOSE, of Provo, waa In the city Friday, on his return from a visit to his brother, who resides In San Francisco. He roports bustnenH as being brisk there and that a vast amount of building is being done. San Francisco, tho colonel says, will eventually come forth a grander city than before the disaster. dis-aster. .ML'I3ES WORKING on the 700 foot lovol off the Eureka Consolidated mlno, on Ruby hill, found a man's skeleton a few weeks ago. Investigation of tho records show that this man was In nil probability Timothy Leahy, a miner who with four other men was killed in a cave which oxtonded from I he second to the seventh Jovel. ORDERS HAVE boon Issued by Shorlff Emery that nil gambling throughout the county must coosc. The sheriff and his deputies have boon going the rounds of the different towns delivering the orders hi perron. Mnghnm canyon was vlsllod Thursday, and the gambling places thero were orderod closed, lo take effeel Saturday Satur-day midnight. IH'SINESS WAS practically blocked In some departments nt the oily and county building. Friday. Not a complnlnt was tiled In either the district or city courts, and lawyers having cases coming com-ing up for trial found some excuse to ask for a continuance. The fact thai 11 was Friday and the thirteenth of the month was the supposed reason. JAMES LITTLETON PRICE, of llnlley. bin., who served a term as judge of the 'Viurlh district of Idaho, died at the omc of Mrs. Grant. 1(51 East Sixth South creel, this city. Thursday, of Blight's disease. Ho leaves a wife ami son, who were at his bedside. The- body will be taken to the Idaho home for burial. Mr. Price was GO years old. He practiced law. In Idaho. A TYPHOID WARD has been established estab-lished at St. Mark'3 hospital exclusively for typhoid patients. Heretofore typohld patients have occupied wards In the most convenient part of the hospital. Now typhoid patients will be segregated from the other patients. The ward Is provided pro-vided with all necessary equipment and conveniences. There are fourteen Inmates In-mates already. SHERIFF M IKE MAUS. of Murray, had an encounter Thursday with six men. each having a long knife and a pistol near by, when the sheriff attempted to serve a warrant. Maus looked at tho knives and then went lo secure assistance. assist-ance. When he 'oturned his man was gone. He has not jeon found since. The warrant was Issued to attach a horse which another Murray man had tnided, and which ho wished lo recover. FRANK GRAY, of Alia, a minor, was sentenced. Friday to twenty-five days In the county Jail for attempting; to evade a ten dollar board bill. Gray was arrested at Park ,Clty by Deputy Sheriff Alfred Paulsen, Friday morning, and brought to the county jail here. The complaint, sworn to by Mrs. John Mat-son Mat-son of Alta, tho propletor of a bonrdlng house, was tiled before Justice Anion Lundberg, of Sandy. THE OREGON Short Line railway, through Its claim agenl. has attempted to setilo with John Jones, one of the mall clerks injured In the wreck on that road a few days ago. for his Injuries for ?50. The offer .whs rejected .by Jones. Jones Is getting along only tolerably well and It will be three or four, weeks or longer. It Is said, before he will -be able to get out. His back and right hip were Injured and his kidneys are seriously af-ftced af-ftced from the accident. COLONEL, the Hon. dc la Pocr Berres-ford. Berres-ford. an attache of the English diplomatic diplo-matic service. Is a visitor in the city, and Is slopping at the Kenyon. He arrived ar-rived In tills country from Japan, where he was stationed. He hab been in tho Oriental diplomatic service for a great many yeais. Is a splendid Oriental scholar, and speaks Chinese and Japanese Jluently. He came over hero for a rest, mil expects lo be called back to Japan at any time. S. IT. ANDERSON, a passenger for Salt Lake, was hurt in a runaway on the bus line at Rlchtleld, Thursday morning. Ills lace was cut serevcrly, and his nosft badly bruised. A large piece of flesh was cut from his chin. also. Mr. Anderson came on to this city and received medical attention at the Kenyon. where hu Is staying. He was shoved from the bus In the runavay. Although the vehicle was crowded with passengers and va& taken down the country roads at a terrific rate of speed no one elao was hurt. JOHN B. BL'RBIDGE, captain of police; po-lice; C. A. Quigley, and James Foley are home from a week's hunting trip near Clarkslon. Cachccounty. Dangling at the captain's belt were three chicken, about the Identity of which there, Is some uncertainly un-certainly and dispute. The captain Insists In-sists that they were prairie chickens, while others say they were barnyard fowls. The captain's backyard Instructions Instruc-tions to his companions in the use of deadly weapons was so effective, It Is siaid. "that one of them shot the other's coat tall of!" JL'lXtJS M. L. RITCHIE, or the District Dis-trict court was engaged. all day Friday iu tho trial of Ihe case of Otto S. Good against ihe Utah Light and Railway company com-pany for alleged personal Injuries received re-ceived sovcral months ago. The testimony testi-mony shows lhat Good was driving a becr wauou on Ninth South street, when a trolley car of the company collided with his wagon, tearing the vehicle to pieces and throwing Good to the ground. The amount or damages sought Is 320,000. The case will not go to the Jury until Saturday morning. THE FIRM of Bailey & Sons, wholesale whole-sale and retail bags, grain and seeds, has been succeeded by Bo (ley i Sons Co., Incorporated. In-corporated. The capital stock of the new company Is 100.000. The officers of the now company aro J. H. Bailejv president. P. E. Ranker, vice president; S. N. Bailey, secretary and treasurer; Bert Bailey, manager and J. Y", Good-fellow, Good-fellow, director Mr. Banker, who enters the company as vice president, has been In charge of tho local Bradstrcet agency for the last three years. He will devote his time to the company with which he Is now allied- FRED F. MADSEN tiled a petition iu tho Probate division of the District court Friday, asking that he bo given letters of guardianship for four minors. Madsen caj'B that ho Is an uncle of the children and that each has an Interest In a life insurance policy for $3,500 which cannot bo paid unless a legal guardian be appointed. ap-pointed. The petitioner affirms lhat the parents of tho children wero dead, and that the children aro at St. Ann's orphanage. orphan-age. Ruth B. Christcnsen, Esther 'E. Chrlctenson. Perry Chrlstenson, Ernost Chrlstensen and Xenla Chrlstenson aro the namos of the children. UNITED STATES District Attorney H. E. Booth will leave for Denvor Saturday, Satur-day, to be presont at tho hearing heforo tho appellate division of the Federal court tn the case of tho government against Richard 13. Shepard, of this -city. Shepard was convicted by a Jury, Judge-Marshall Judge-Marshall presiding, for usinjj the malla for unlawful purposes. He was sentenced the Stato prison. Ills nttorncys. Jesse n. Root and II. O. Shepard appealed from this verdict and sentence, on the grounds that the Indlctmont did not coincide with the facts adduced at the trial. , WHEN A TJOV wanted io be "real bad" In former days, he would go out and steal a melon from a neighbor's patch, or lift a gate or two from the hinges after night. Such amusements are entirely too tame nowadays for the reader of Jesse James and Dick Deadcyc. There seems to bo a mania for stealing automobiles and bicycles among the wayward boys of Salt Lake city. Several weeks ago two boys, tho older not yet eighteen, stole an automobile from Main street, running the car nB long as the gasoline lasted, then abandoning it out near Farminglon. Four boys, all under eighteen, will bo tried by Judge Gowans, of the Juvenllo court. Tuesday morning, for Ihe larceny of bicycles. bi-cycles. Ono of the boys, Leonard Powell, has admitted stealing Ave since Now Year's day. He will probably bo sent to .the Stale reform school at Ogden. The three others charged with the theft of bicycles arc David ck, Charlie .Bosticlc mi O-ng.O |