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Show r The Utah Pioneer Jubilee. SftltLrtke City. May 25, 1897. For the pioneer trnin, which will enter the city, in the pld way on July 24th, tho last dny of thu great Jubl&o,8evoiiLy- ! two Yolunteers havo been called for by Ohrtrmnn Clnwaon. "It it) intended," reads tho advertisement calling for ( volunteorw, "to make this feature of tho colobrntion very attractive and as far as possible to reproduce the original s pioneer train, with ragged, Imrofootcd y ' "men and boys, women and children with ennbonnets and calico dresses; old wagons, with raw-hide wrapped tongues, wator-barrolls, chiclctm-coope, trypans, ill-matclicil teams of horeas, oxen and cows, and dust and all." Persons de-airing de-airing to volunteer can receivs full information infor-mation by addressing the chairman, Spencer Clawson THK l'RKBIDJCKT W'lt.h HE HEIIK. i Today the telegraphed ticked the pleasant intelligence across the conti nent that President MeKinley will surely visit.Utnli during tho Jubilee and that ho is already planning tho trip. The presenco of the nation's chief exosutive" in Zton during tho Jubilee will be an -advent which wili please the two 'hundred thousand people who will be hero at the time to bid him welcome and at the same time give him an in- sight into the character and fie enter- .prise of tho people of the West. JIHHLEB NOTES. A gratifying feature of the financial part of the Jubileo is tho liberal contributions contri-butions which are being received from eastern merchants. Sirs. Mary Maeks of Tocqueiville, "Utah, is the oldest living Utah Pioneer. Her age is 05 years and her health is romarkably good. "W. F. Ocdy (Buffalo Bill) in a letter to the Utali Pioneer Jubilee Commission predicts that the cowboys' tournamo t will be a grand success. "The old-time1 cowboy N'i he writes, "is very scarce in my State (Nebrabka) but there is some yory good material left in Wyoming, x western Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona, Idaho and Utah. By 0fTe1ingpri7.es you should have no troblo in getting up . a great show, even at this late dale. |