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Show I LOCAL JOTS. Marshal Ireland's term expires on the 12th i of next month. I . ':" The Grand Jury was wrestling with the '. Dean unlawful cohabitation case this af ter- , ; f noon. ' ! Wells, Fargo & Go. to-day received ship ments of ore, $4,400; base bullion, $4,760: ; I total value, $9,1G0. I The excellent programme for Mr. Weihe's I concert next Friday night cannot fail to draw out a crowded house. ; ' James Crouch was" selected yesterdav af ternoon to fill up the vacancy in the jury in the Morris-Mammoth case. i Treasurer James Jack and Auditor N. W. i Clayton have filed their answers in the mat- "' ter of the Governor's appointes. SMcCornick & Co. to-day received Hanauer i bullion. $4,310; sulphides, $1,740; silver and I 1 lead ores, $6,700; total value, $12,750. i The "Our Night Out" Club will give the ; first of a series of dancing and skating par- ' ties at the Pavilion on the evening of April i j 1st. ".' Mary Anderson and the Herald reporter : arrived via the Utah Central last evening. The occupied separate cars, it is needless to , If- add. ' 'l J. W. Horricks, who was committed for contempt Saturday, raised the necessary funds and avoided being taken to the penitentiary. peni-tentiary. 1 The transfer of the D. S. Depositary from the Deseret National Bank will not deprive :' the bank of any particular profit, it is un- ' derstood. , ; Mr. Alex. Rogers, Jr.. late of Rogers fc Wiscomb, and Mr. W. W. Wallace, former bookkeeper for the same firm, will open a whosesale fruit and produoe business in a few days. George M. Cannon, the County Recorder, who was arrested yesteday afternoon for contempt of court in attempting to influence in-fluence Juror Greene, will have a hearing next Monday. I M. H. Beardsley, the former proprietor of j the Broom Hotel, Ogden, has suffered an other disaster by the burning and complete destruction of the Green River eatinc hous j on the D. fe R. G. ! A private dispatch from Washington I states that the contest for the Governorship of Utah has resolved itself down to a choice between Colonel S. A. Merritt and Jndee Bybee, of New York. A horse and buggy dashed down West : Temple street this afternoon, at a terrific : rate, and when opposite the Pavilion col lided with a shade tree, literally demolishing the vehicle. The horse turned along Second j South street, in an easterly direction. The meeting of the Olympio Club was : well attended last evening, and several classes were organized by the instructors. : A splendid degree of enthusiasm was mani-; mani-; fested by all present, several new members t were added, and it is safe to say that the I gymnasium has taken a new lease of life. I Wilson T. Smith, the fruiterer, purchased to-day the property of Henry Van Horn, in i the Twentieth ward, for the consideration J of$3,00. The home formerly belonged to j Joseph J. Daynes, and i3 diagonally across from Mr. Dye's "Rosebank Cottage." The ! transfer was made through Mr. Fred. C An- j derson, the real estate agent. ! It transpires that the remarkable letter written by Mr. Fordham, of Franklin, Idaho, an? which in publishing a few davs ago the Tribune said had been picked "up on the street, was addressed to Alfred Best, the ex-inmate of the penitentiary. The letter 1 contained some interesting reading for the public, but it does not appear to have come into newspaper hands legitimately. In the Morris-Mammoth case to-day the . plaintiffs counsel placed him on thewitness stand and asked him several questions as to his seeing President Cunningham at the Mammoth mine when the improvements were being made. The defense int3rposed an objection to this class of testimony, and the Judge sustained it. Most of the morn- I 1R session was occupied in discussing the j point |