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Show j LOCAL JOTS. I Wells, Fargo & Co. to-day received ore shipments valued at $500. i J The "Mystery" hold their first social . in s Calder's musio hall to-night. ' ;' To the Hon. John T. Caine, Territorial I Delegate, we are indebted for inportant i V pablio documents. ! The Democbat is the first paper in the city t to publish the new Edmunds bill in full, j ' ! The publio will please note this fact. ; Alice Harrison, the well-known comedi- i, enne, will be the next attraction at the f I Theater, in her new musical comedy, "Hot Water." j , I The houses of ill-fame have started a j ' .! reformation. Hereafter they are to be lodg- I " I . . . ing houses. This is what might be termed a i j distinction without a difference. I : The ninth annual ball of the Odd Fellows ! will take place to-night in their elegant hall . I i in the Union Block. It promises to be a , j . ' ery social and enjoyable reunion. j . j Dr. Clinton reports two new cases of diph- j l theria located in the Nineteenth ward. One J I j , is in the family of Joseph Hadley and the I ' other in the family of Mr. Eainey. J . I Two cases of scarlet fever are reported in ! the city, one in the Ellerbeck residence i I above the Theatre, and the other in General I I j Agramonte's family in the Eighth ward. I I . Both cases are quarantined. f I j ' Mr. Alex Mitchell, Jr., traveling agent of I f the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Grand i f ! Trunk system, has ornamented the front of .; t his office on Main street with a new sign, , i which "Mitch" says will never fail in either ii wet or dry weather. f pious suggestion of the Deseret News, . ' that the arrests go on, appears to have been I adopted. It is expected that a batch of sev- I t eral prominent citizens will.be run in inside F j of three days. The 3 o'clock freight will ; f ( run as usual to-morrow. f I A special D. & K. G. train left here this i i i morning with the Masons in charge of the ' ; ' body of Alfred Gauchat. It will be met at I ,1 . I ' Bingham by committees of Masons and the I'l' A. O. D. W., under whose auspices the last ; -j sad rites will be administered. i ' i The Kiralfys produce their swindling - t' "grand spectacular" at the California Thea- j tre, San Francisco, during the holidays. ' j J They will not advertise their consolidated aggregation of nothingness by any reference ,':" to 'be press notices the concern received in I 4 ' ' Salt Lake. ! The Democbat, with its usual enterprise, I -! is the first paper in Utah to print the full I j text of the bill introduced by Senator Ed- V munds in the United States Senate, which it s i is claimed will olaoe the Monnon nhnwh ' f "in chancery." The bill will furnish interesting inter-esting reading to both Mormons and Gen- J tiles. lit ' The Philemon Debating Club will ro'd 1 . ' , their regular meetingto-morrow (Friday) : evening, at the Ninth Ward schoolhouse, at . ; ( 8 o'clock. Besides a very interesting mis- l I cellaneons programme, the following ques- i i j tion will be debated : " Were the Crusades I j a Benefit to Europe?" A general invitation f , j is extended to all desiring to attend. I j '; j .The remains of the late John H. Eice, who ' . , s died at Tombstone, Arizona, last week, will f arrive in this city to-morrow morning over ! ' the D. & E. G. from Ogden, and funeral ; services will be held at 2 o'clock at the - residence of Mrs. Spencer, near the Eagle j Gate, to which friends are invited. The f . I ooay win oe interred uy the side of his wife . v ! J in the City Cemetery. ' ; ' j i . The following, clipped from this morn- - i i mg's Tribune, reminds one of Mrs. Bardell's i pathetic utteranoe: "To single gentlemen, j : then, shall my lodgings be let!" "For Eent, ! . elegantly furnished rooms, en suite and sin- i gle, with or without board, at reasonable j ' rates. Inquire of Mrs. Emma Fulton, Sec- i ond South street, opposite Walker Opera ! , House." - f Owners of unpatented mining claims are at present busy in many Utah camps doing j the annual holding work required by the j United States mining laws. This annual j . holding work is productive of considerable I revenue, as in many cases veins of mineral bearing quartz are uncovered while sinking J or running tunnelB, and the claims ulti mately become bullion produoers. I Sheriff Groesbeck this morning arrested I Frank Foote, the assayer, on the L. and L. , count. The complaint sets forth that the offense was committed on the 2d of Septem-; Septem-; tomber with Fanny Davenport, and is sworn j to by B. Y. Hampton. At 2 o'clock Mr. I Foote appeared before Judge Speirs and was placed under $1,C30 bonds, S. C. Ewing and A. Hananer signing the bond. This arrest ' is attributed to spite against Foote, he being j an "open venire" juror. |