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Show , TOE SlOItMMi EXAIIIXUU: iKillliX, AMUSEMENTS. GRANT, Manager PRESENTS Win. Collier THIRD SEASON Direct Fran Hia Tour af Auatralia la Hia London and American Triumph, On The Quiet BY AUGUSTUS THOMAS. PRICES: $1.50. $1.00, 75c, 50c, 25c. Seat Sale Now Open. T THEATER UTAilNA TONIGHT WITH The Utahna StockCo. " PRESENTS BONDMAN OPERA HOUSE R. ALEXANDER r GRANT, Manager Saturday and 2930 Sept Sunday, JOHN CORT PRE0ENT8 r Stewart Opera Company la the . Moot ' Elaborate Pioneer Nvadsi4 and a Msch.n.st 1 Comedy Opera Ever. Produced. The Two Roses Costumes, Scenery, Proper! ire and Effecta the aama aa were need at the Broadway Theater. New York City. Mabel Day, Bertha Shalek, Beaaia Pairbalra, Wm. G. Stewart, Carl Haydn. Geo. W.Lea-lle- , Bowman Rnlaton and the Greatest Choma in America. PRICES: $1.60, SUM, 75c, 50c, 25c. Seat an Sale Friday. Of cirrhosis of Fuutwal services ovtr the remains of l2ry E. Robinson will he held at the Lynne Ward meeting house, at p. m..Frldf y. Remains may be viewed tonight from $ to $ oclock aud Friday from 10 a. m. to 1 p. m.. at the residence on the corner of Recon d and Washington avenue. Interment 1$ the City cemetery. Wiliam OYonnrtl of Ugden. met with a painful accident at Promontory Point. Wednesday while placing a rifle In c wag-un- . OTonnell is employed by the l,a Relic Mining company. which is linking oU wells on the point. Wednesday a party from the point weat out hunting and Ofon-ncll- . In placing the gun into the wagon, accidentally discharged it into his left hand. The bullet glanced and entered his arm above the wrist, ploughing a ragged wound to tha elbow. He was brought to Ogdea by friends. IV. Gordon dressed the wound s and pronounced it not dangerous, blood poisoning sets in. The bones of the arm were aot Injured. un-lee- A transient passenger by name of 8treeper waa taken suddenly ill at the union depot yesterday afternoon and waa removed to the Ogden general hospital, where he received mediae! attention. James Woods, alias K. U. Lane, and Everly Wilbur were arraigned before Judge Murphy on charges of fraud and grand larceny respectively. Woods pleaded not guilty. His bail waa fixed at $50 and hit ease continued until Friday morning. Wilbur was Inatrwicd In hia rights as a prisoner and plneed under bonds of $5U uni 11 hls preliminary trial ia called. Requa and party left Ogden on a pariah train at noon yesterday. Attached to Bupt, Manaona titivate car, Buena Vla, was Nevada Northern engine No. 4. Just turned out of the R. P. shops of Ogden. hTe special will make th trip to Ely: and ia the first train to leave for the copper camp. M. Th"e United Labor Party met at the court house yesterday afternoon and adjourned until 7:30 in the evening. !H POLICE COURT Thirteen Butchers Entered a Plea of Not Guilty. Thirteen butchers entered a plea of ndt guilty of disregarding lha hutch-er- a license in police court yesterday. They were permitted to go on their own Identity and standing in the dry until the city attorney Investigates the charges against them. Not a few of. the butchers have employed counsel to defend their pleas, ao that the legal contest promises to be spirited. Already 'there la a difference of opinion among the meat cutters. Part of them are In favor of paying their license if certain provisions are conceded by the license collector, acting upon the advice of the city attorney, while the others object to paying a license on any grounds. Tha preliminary trial of B. Armstrong A. Tucker. C. Jonea nnd Jim Couttea waa ednduded this morning. Coutts was dismissed aa no evidence could be obtained to Incriminate him with the other three. Jndge Murphy took the case under advisement. Ogden Sleam Laundry Both phoaea X71 437 15th SL man WANTED1 Somewhere near Ogden to aralst nn m showing and wiling properties. No experience necessary, if willing to let teach you the real estate business. 1,17 ,0-0per mouth, to honest Jtsn, willing to devoto psrt of his timo Duslneso. COOPERATIVE C0- Bld$-- MinnespeUs, Minn i. INSURED FOR A FENNY, Hties of Victim of Railroad Accldsnt Gat $10,000. Tort. Kept 27. A apodal '.despatch to the Times from f one of the ''luisof the GrtnUjim disaster harp "JJired $10,000 insurance, which was 1 f one penny, rne Leaving a Latter Stating That the Cauae Was Deapondeacy. f hicaggl Record-Heral- Sept d - Jina:" " the liter. J. ELV Consolidated placi before a l.'ti Ks. pt gate ooe.tks l- i- :(': r:e '!' oi s Syren.-- if of l hose ati'll UsTn,.ei had ' Vit many tern-.- ! wo-in Helio . r ! column Caring thought's-.(- t one is prone to ov. l.i..-- Tin tact that this TiemendouK pi.'.. unlike other equsllv high column. m cur sland, as no, U) ent height by stoiir iieina 'aid upim atone, or block being upm irt-block, until the height an.l l"ii form were attaine.1. from the first thfw was hewn oui of rs place iu the nuii. quarry la one enoiuMvis ! the difficult therefore. undertaking If would h, to remove such a weight of ituime from one when steam place t the other in was not In use. The quarries of Banilofrom Hcliopnll. yrons were 7nh In aa Intereating lonk on this subject written hy the Rei. .lames King land to Mm 1 am indebted for much of this Information!, we bse an account of how in those early times the task of cutting out and removing this column was effeeied. He tells us that in an old quarry at Ryrene there la to be een an obelisk pr. (l. M. OUen W-ca- unrii-rM.im- upon which the workmen were busy, when for some reason hey were obliged to leave It only partially cut out. From thla It appear that when the quarrymea wished to abstract a huge mass, suck aa ths Needle would be. they worked out the form by cutting a deep groove. In which, at intervals, they made oblong hole. Into these boles they firmly wedged blocks of timber, and then, filling the groove with water, the wood in time swelled and thus the granite rrarked along the outline from wedge to wedge. Next came the difficulty of taking the Needle on Its first journey, 700 miles up the river to the city of Heliopolis. Whan it lay ready for removal in the quarry, rollers made of palm trees were laid so that the column could be placed on them, and hy this means tt could be pushed down to the edge of ihe river, and there a raft waa built round it. When the Nile overflowed Its Iwnka thla raft and Ita bur den floated, and the stone waa to the nearest and most suitable point from, which it could again be conveyed na roller as, before to the pedestal which was prepared for II lu stand upon, and hy the help of ropes and lever mails from ihe date So palm it wa placed in position. fault lew was the work done by those men of old that when the enlumn wa DENVER & RIO GRANDE erected on the pedettal, both had been IS PREPARING TO KEEP PACE ao accurately leveled, when the one fitted on the other, that the Needle With tha West. when standing was perfectly true In the perpendicular. Weekly Telegraph. Ria A For this end of the Denver Grande railroad a consignment of 5U sweethearts sweep. locomotives and 1$ elegantly appolated paseuger coaches for through traffic between this city and Denver, la on Girls and Young Man Are Paired Off the way from the East. In a few by Lottery. weeks the entire new equipment will be In service, no that several additionRir J. George Scott has a paper in al cars and engines will he available "Blackwood" oa the curious marriage locally for excursions and any occacustoms In aome parts of India. It la sion that callr for more than the or- nnt at all unusual tor young people to dinary number of trains. he married In aarordance with tha General Manager. Ridgeway gave judgment and orders of their parents, Ont the Information. He is on one of hut against beok and ledger hia annual inspection trips over ths system therethaay has often been revolt, entire system. and the marriageiAle youths and maid In speaking of the buslnea of th ena Lave devised plana which have bethe mated that road, general manager come customs. every effort to increase the rolling Up la the north of Yunnan once a atock Is being made In order to keep year the marriageable youths and with the exceptional development maidens aseemhle on either aide of a pace of the western country. That tha narrow ravine and throw halls of cotWeat ia undergoing a wonderful de- ton across tu one another. If a girl velopment ia suhetantlatod by the In- catches tha missile the metier ia setcrease In the earnings of the road, tled without benefit of and their which Mr. Ridgeway said came not future doings Interest clergy, themselves only. aa a surprise, aa the phenomenal If any youth In agile enough to cutch growth Includes every form it busi- the ball thrown by a particular girl, ness. there Is no doubt he must be desperPreliminary plans for the new Rio ately In earnest, and capable of anyGrande Western Pacific depot to be But this la a comparatively erected at Balt Lake were sent back thing. game. east for revision laat night. Aa quick- elementary Up la the Rumai country every year, ly aa a few minor details are decided about the month of October, a marbe upon, work on the building will a sort of sweet heart a commenced. The company has pur- riage lottery la held. The namea of all the chased the necessary property. The sweep marriageable girl and of the yo:ing depot.. Mr. Ridgeway stated, will be a men oT the circle who want to get beautiful structure. married are written on slips of paper and thrown tn'o separate earthen pota. From these they am drawn OCOEN ARMORY against one another by the local wise man. Adjutant General Raymond C. NayThis simply determines the fact that lor returns to RaK Lake City Wednes- the Rums! girl has come nut end ia day after having been la Ogden two ready to be married: and the youth days, Inspecting the furniture upon whnae name la drawn against hers which bida had been nthmlttsd by therebyobtalns a particular letter of various dealers of Belt Lake and Og- introduction, with the authority to dea for the furnishing of ihr new make love Immediately .with whal. ararmory building there. The furniture dor and succesn ho la capable of. waa submitted with the bids in orThe actual drawing of the lota ia der that Ihe bida might be more in- preceded by a prnceaalon of the young ' telligently judged. men who want to get married to the Inspection was also made of the elec- houses of all the eligible girls. All trical fixtures which will he placed in ihnaa who can play mnalcal instruthe rew building. Associated with Ad- ments take these aong with them and jutant General Naylor In the inspec- perform according to the skill that ta tion and examination of bids wa Cap- In them, with no regard whatever an tain IV. E. Kneaaa of company B, the1. to what their neighbors arc doing or Ogdea organization. The new armory has been com- thinking. Those who ay.not play either sing pleted and Ihe building has been ac- or dance, or do whatever they can to soon aa Aa state. the posby cepted show off. so as to attract, the attention sible it will be fitted up for Ihe men. of th grils. The pleasing of them ia This cannot be done until the armory another matter to be thonghl of later. hoard of which Governor Cutler in London Chronicle. to the chairman, Owing absence of Governor Cutler from the STRAIN TOO GREAT. state, the board will not meet until earlv next week. f Oqdan Readers Find "The organisation in Ogden is In ex- Hundreds Daily Toil a Burden. cellent condition,' General Naylor said, "and the moat satisfactory feelThe hustle and worry of husiucas ing of interest exists among the men. The officers are efficient and men. The hard work and are first class leaders. The men are workmen, with them, and they work together The woman's household cares. wlih the best eaplrit de corps. Are too great a strain on Ihe kidA new company will he organised In Ogden in a short time, and it ia neys. Backache, headache, eldeaclie. believed now that It will be filled as Kidney troubles, urinary troubles soon aa the lint a can be circulated." follow. An Oadco citizen tells how to cure LONDON'S MOST them all ANCIENT MONUMENT. H. IV. Eld red go of 779 Twenty-eveastreet. Ogden. Utah, says: In London, on the embankment of "For a long time I suffered severely the Thames, standing majestic in It with pain and aching In my back and great height and solidity, la that won- loins. The condition of the kidneys derful column of red granite known to plainly Indicated n disordered condiall as Cleopatra's Needle. What a tion of those organa. The trouble was history la attached to the obeiirk. a worse when I myself or ljlstory which la as wonderful and brought too much strain on the musstrange aa the Needle Itself la antique, cles of the back. One day while readfor its age datea back aa far aa 1.50A ing of Doan's Kidney pin f was inyears before the Christian era. Wa duced to go to R. W. Badcon's drug are told tha "the child Moses may store and get a box. I look them achare played around the foot of this cording to directions and the remedy pillar: the Israelites looking citywards benefited me more than I , expected. from the brick fields saw the sunlight It corrected the condition of the kidglittering on Ita tapering point; the ney accretion, removed all pain and plague of darkness clothed It ns with backache and In every way proved n garment: the plagne of frogs croaked to be just the right thing Tor the kidand squatted on Its pediment; the neys. Doan's Kidney PiTla are worthy plague of locust da abed themselves of anyone's recommendation." in flight against it. and unto tit hardFor sale by all dealers. Price. 80 ness of heart Pharaoh was likened. cents. Foster-Milbnr-n Co., Buffalo. The sight of It takes ua back to n time New- Tork, sole agents for. the United when the Plmnh night of Canaan j States, waa but a promise with a desert and I Remember the name Doan's wad between." ' Cncnerilna rears the ahe no ether. forty ron-veys- d 27. A despatch to the from Kenosha, ' Wls., says: Fred B. rosier, supposed to be from 8aa Francisco, committed suicide yesterday by shooting himself. Foster left a letter to the coroner. In which he ashed that the Jury mmmnned to view find a verdict of suicide Sis remains to despondency. He also asked that the coroner accept his watch aa a foe. for the trouble and that hia remaining trinkets be divided among the coroner's Jury. A letter waa left addressed to F. B. Steffen of Ran Ftpn-ctoIn which Foster stated he had determined to commit auidde and had hafcn in hard luck ever since the earthquake lit Ran Francisco. He left taro cents in hia letter to the coroner to poat the letter. BRYAN IN INDIAN TERRITORY. over-exert- d e Traoe Mar.. HEALTHFUL and DELICIOUS Cempsay. With Launched. Wit'lii ibc next da (ini.iiriii ,.r i..,, A tie will be ::i.iiri-- i iu n j Griddle Cakes Salt l.gke tin qierre in :hc Ei nbniu dis'rle:. Whue Pine ro'in'.. Neva. Is. j; will ie knuaii t the Ely t'uUM'ltdaied 1','Hiei rompan;. . with I. nun iHhi vba:es iiii' par va'ue li. The lnr,'iiii K iir ll Inrluiie Wi.'.Lm F. Rnyder. Walter G. Filer. lrb.i!a TrraeeL and oilier Salt I. Kethei with Olau llel.lner f Sotkane. Wash. The ne company's of nine claims. Muffins Plum Pudding and Boston Brown Bread ljk e-- s. and I'umber'and-El- This group of claim was last February and since (hat time development work has been ground. steadily progressing. Tinea shafts are going down and. iu addition, the company now has a diamond drilling outfit at work prospecting different portion of the giound at depth. The comabeolutw pany begins it career in ownership of every' inch of its ground and without a single dollar's bonded indebtedness. Since getting under way with ths campaign of development, the company's American shaft has been sunk in a depth of 540 feet, the Zack shaft is do n Sid feet nd tlie RrilUant abaft had reached the 156-fnmark a day or two ago. The latter has been the first shaft, owing to lu location, tn drop Into the oie bodies and for nearly a month now It hag bran going down In ore that averages around 4 per cent copper. The other ahafa will soon be tn ore. while the work of the diamond drill will be an Important factor in quickly determining what the country will show at greater depths than has ever been attained la lha ramp. Tito deal by which these properties have been acquired waa not consummated or entered upoa uhrtl different engineers representing the big operators behind the proposition had made thorough examinations of the grounds and conditions aurrouadlng It. These reports all showed that conditions ware ideal for the making of big mines and the jSJr rnnii of mineral-bearinterritory flanked on one side and one end hy the possession of the Nevada methods to Allens PACIFIC FACTORY, Flour Co. SAN JOBE, CAL Weslers Best CIGARS Strictly Union Made By special request we make Weslers Best ' at 375 Twenty-thir- d Street, Ogden, Utah, a in be employed Estets Doctor Specialist . Croas-cuttin- g of the Given under the suspire finance committee of the Third ward at Th'rd Ward Educational Institute, Friday evening, September 8, 1906. Prises will he awarded for best basket. Admission, s"f: ladles with baskets, free. Raskata will be sold by auction hy Thoe. Heller. STABS TWO PRISONERS fitato Penitentiary Fight in the Prison Corridor. Two prisoners in ihe slate prison are under the rare of a physician and a third baa been placed In solitary confinement as ths result of a cutting affray at the prison Tuesday afternoon. r Joseph Butllvan, serving a term tor robherj. made ait unprovaked aaatiH upon W. T. lewis, a fellow prisoner ronrlcted recently tn Balt and sentenced to one car's imprison- . Cures whan others fall. Madam methods. Fra eonaultatian far any Chronla Dlooaaa of any name or aaturo. Evary caaa guarantaad. CRAND BASKET BALL of B. B. B. COAST Wanted 50000 more men to smoke proving It were then outlined. A gasoline hoist lag plant wts recently Installed on one of the shafts and the other ahafta will he similarly equipped shortly In order thai the work of sinking and may be more expeditiously rarried on. Inmates Bo low Bioww made from A Ilea's Bread Flour. Tha ECONOMY iu huyiag. the BIMPLICITY In making, and the. AfifiURANCE of having a pure sad wholesome food are pouts worthy of your conoid ermlioa. Aak Your grooar far tt. Belf-Rlsin- arre 5'm) A Partial List of Diseases Cared Catarrh. Deafness, Ringing la tha Bara, Disease Hoad, Throat, No, Eyn or Ear. All Diseases of the Lungs, Bronchial .Tubes and Cheat. Diseases oT tea Stomach, Livar, Kidneys and Bladder. Heart Disease, Rheumatism, Asthma, Nervous Trouble, BL Vitus Danes, Piles. Fisr tula and all Racial Trouble, Tape Worm, Blood Poisoning from cause. Diseases peculiar to Woman. ANY PRIVATE DfSEASi v MEN quickly cut ad la atay cured. Remember tha asamlaatfoa and advlca is FEEL Tomorrow may be to lata. Call or writ. of th DR. ESTES, SPECIALIST five-yea- ike 245$ Washington At. OfflR hours. 10 a. m. to p. m. (Boyl Block I. Ogdea. Utah. Entrance Room II. Remember tha number. , ment. Lewis wu rut with a pocket knife, receiving an ugly gtuth in the left eheek and another In the left shoulder. The assault tank place Just before supper time and the priannem were In ihe wash ronm preparing for their evening meal. The corridor was crowded and In the mlxnp an inmate named Newton waa wounded slightly In the arm by one of Sullivan's wild They Fear the light slab. The guards quickly asperated the men. and Sullivan was immediately placed in dose confinement. Dr. A. C. Young, the prison surgeon, waa summoned and attended to the victim. Neither on ta believed to be seriously hurt. The wounds ware inflicted with an ordinary porket knife, the blade being about two inches long. Sullivan was sent up from Ogden and bears a had reputation with the prison official. He has served three years nf hia term and would have been released Oct. 17. 1907, had he not for- WHO DO THE WRONG Lewla, whose BURG- LARS, SNEAK THIEVES AND THAT LIKE. Turn on the Light ONE GREAT 'ADVANTAGE feited hia rredlt for gnod behavior by Tuesday's aaaault. , Deputy Warden Andrew C. t're has made a thorough Investigation of the affair and holds Sullivan entirely to blame. Rulllvan and Newton helong to the "hobo claia and were bent, on making trouble for OP ELECTRIC LIGHTS OVER ALL OTHERS. asso- ciations were of a different wort. CARO OF THANKS To all those who ao kindly enlisted and lent a helping kand during the sickness and death of my beloved husI wish to extend my band. C. L. sincere thanks. It - Is my earnest may all receive the prayer that same kind treatment their during hour of aurrow and berenvemenl. MRS. C L. IXnYB. 11 R. S. LiM & CAMPBELL General' Manager Railway Co. E. W. WADE, Agent thr me'. Ylnita. I. T., Bept. 27. William J Lon-h- ir Bryan peot a atrenuon day in the teiTitery today, sue king here, at Chelsea, Clareqiore and at other point! on hia trip northward. Mr. Bryan u Vinlta early today from insured waa s regular subscribe Muskogee, .where he finished ,0 Indoii penny weekly which to a crowd from the rear ofspeaking hia car i accident at 1 o'clock this morning. At 7:10 .nVJ" ?L this morning he was escorted by four his beg, containing s current hundrml horsemen to si grove,' near T - Anly. Hgned. to the town. C There he spoke for an hour ??erand aicb enthusiasm was displayed He. departed from Vinlta immediately after he had concluded hi speech. During the afternoon Governor Jeff Davis. pf Arkansas addressed a crowd ANT ADS. YIELD BIO RESULTS. at Hie- - grow at Ylnita. "s .i4V of died at 9:30 yestetday morning, at hia residence on IJncou avenue. I'ntil two days before bis death he declared that he was nor iu danger and would not die. Hia lilnees commenced iu a mild form three months ago. Medical skill was powerless to check the disease. which is classed among the incurable. The deceased leaves three daugh-Mla- s Emma Olaen. Mr. A. E. Kay and Mrs. Charles (). IVe. a wife, and one son. Will Olsen, employed In the smelter at Bingham. Funeral services will be held Run-daafternoon. Mr. Olsen was one of the oldeai employes of the Southern Pacific in I'tah. He flvat worked on the Inion Pacific when the shops were at Terrace. He entered aa a mechanic. For many years he remained there. Afterward he was master mrrhanle on the Eureka A Palisade road ia Nevada. He returned to Terrace and when the shops were transferred from there to Ogden. Mr. Olsen came with them. Hia specialty waa eBglne vahea. In this work he was probably unsurpassed by ony one tn the wesiern country, ao when illness prevented him from performing hls duties In the shops an expert from Saa Francisco was summoned to set valves. lie waa held In high esteem by railroad officials and was regarded as a man of reliability. At. one time Mr. Olsen was masier mechanic at the Eureka Conwolidaied mines in Eureka, Nevada. At the time of death be wa 67 years old. He waa exceptionally hale and strong for a man of hia years and performed the work of a young man without any great phyalcal effort. . Inquire for our new rstes n family washing. iti-- v'rn l There is msnj a slip be DEGREE OF POCAHONTAS. tween the cup and the lip but LEKOTAH COrXCTU NO. 3. D. of P., there is no slip in oar laundry meets every Wednesday evening at $ o'clock, Eagle hall. Dues can be ork. Every little detail In to Susie Alden; C. of W.( 112 paid connection with the proper at 2h turning out of laundry work is ,' MAMIE J. PLAXZ. Pocahontas. ALICE COLLIN 8. K. of R. carefully attended to and the result is people are well pleasCOMMITTED SUICIDE. ed with the class of work we da .' it we hive Its I been - nn. ABICCOMPm e ie.il.ze now i , 1 flrsi-clas- Rook and Lyrics by Suaialaua Btange. Muaic by Ludwig Englander f . polis. i h GRAND standing. pies of the sun ONE OF THE OLDEST EMPLOYES OF S P. SHOPS. The funeral af Frank Hunt will lie held from the First Want meeting hnute Friday, at S p. m. The remains may he tewed at No, 539 Twenty-nintstreet, on the day u the funeral, from iO to 12 o'clock. 10, 20, 30c. lead e k. '.i tKl'TKSI .More-Whe- ae: up before otic William Glssmauu left fur Ely. Nev, on yesterday morning's Rom hern t.ra'D. He goe as advance agen: of the Ogdon business men's aeeit. When askc if he would be back In rime for the county convention Saturday, he replied. "No, not this time. 1 hare no as to grind a; the county convention, and. having full confidence In the wisdom of the delegate s ticket elected, I feel Thai a will he named, which all good Recan publicans support." - pi-- Thothmei. ' greatest king. couiicatid for anv Th l.e CH OPl of the and erected bj th AWAY Lee Jim, the Chinaman, waa yesterday afternoon by Dra. Forbes and Fernlund and commuted to the State Mental baeptral at Provo. THE PRICES PASSES Bowman deputed Rund-t.- ' for Chicago, where lie will t ndj mu. it at Ibc Northwestern Uni terrify'. Andrew Edward . Petercun left Ruuduv for Chicago, where he will cater upon : rollege course in the Northwestern Unh ciity. TONIGHT CHAS. FROHMAN JOHN OLSEN IHUAY I cf the l BiblLal fsets ee.thrw rcally aged the N- - : still to ' to even-many hundreds n he days of birit-i- GRAND OPERA HOUSE R. ALEXANDER UTAH, BARBERS Of CONVICTED Canducting Barber fihops Without Ucens. . Within an hour board member IMg goii. in liehalf of the stale xaminera of burbersj won hia cate against J. E Coulter and Nellie Hanson two Ogden lonaorinl anlsr. who refused to renew their certificate hy paying the yearly license of:$1. The cane waa iriod before Jneiic C J. Dtnamore of Nor-Ogdep, w ho fined each man $10 h and coats. It. will ha recalled that Judge Murphy returned a verdict recently He held In favor of the . barber. that the, ordinance creating. the 11 cense was unconstitutional and dlw misaed ihe case from, court. Tha board, not to ha discouraged, arrested Hanson and Coulter and transferred their cane to North Ogdon. Ro certain were they r mf an arqulttal that ao The case employed. counsel wa opened at 1 o'clock. Before 2 o'clock the Dtnamore bad dwrided agalnat . barber.. : "The law seems to ha clear, on lha point," said Ihnamore. "Hanson and Coulter admitted that they had not paid the llrenaa. which was evidence enough to me that they were guilty. I fined them the minimum under the law." . EXCURSION TO ELY, NEV. Friday, SapL 28th. - - Grand celebration. Ely. Nev., opening Nevada Northern Ry. Pare.ronnd trip, fe.ld. THE PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD TUNNEL baa nine doors la it, and through these comes the rock or aand. or silt, or whatever the material through which the tuba must be driven. Thirty men work in a gang, and there are three ahffta la the day of twenty-fou- r hours. The record progress ao far is five rings, or twelve and onahalf feet, in eight hours. Men cf all nationalities have built the Pennsylvania tubes under the Hudson, negroes having done n large part of the job. Luinesa la something the contract ora never had to contend with; they say there must he something about the compressed air which generates energy and enthusiasm. tor the muckers" vie with one another to make the record number of rings. Perhaps there has never been an engineering project in whiob theory and practice were ao nearly In agreement. The engineers calculated the difficulties closely and areally rrmaric-abl- e ayatem of reports has Seen in effect from the first, day. Every mom-ing Mr. Jacobs has known ths pragma made tke day before, to the Terr inch, nnd the amount of rock and sol excavated. to the cubic toot. The Pennsylvania railroad efllcera and the contractors hold tills perfect system and the thoroughness of etch day's work chiefly responsible for the promptness of the meeting of the tubea. Engineers say. too. that no project was ever carried nut where the emphasis was so entirely upon the results rather than upon the money it coat to obtain them. Records have been kept with unprecedented accuracy and full- -' nee, and they have been corrected, revised and rerevised with bewildering frequency. After two years and a half of continuous work the eaat bound and westbound shields in one of tha twenty-thre- e foot twin tube whtrh the railroad hus been driving nnder the Jlndxnn river to connect Naw York and New Jersey have met.. Now men may walk through dry .shod from one state tn the other. The second tube, a few feet to the south, ia expected to join about October 13. The meeting of tha shields marks the beginning of the completion of ono of the most astonishing engineering feats on record. It meana the realisation of the long time dream of the railroad to land Ita pnawea-gfer- a in the heart of Manhattan Island. Probably no feat of railway atrategy In the history of the Unfed Statea has attracted more a' tent Ion throughout the world than thla one. ita completion will mark a triumph over difficulties of tremendous magnitude, aa this will be the longest tunnel ever bored entirely under water. ' The tube Itself consist of a series of iron rings, and the Installs t Ion of every ring meana a progress ofandtwoa and a half feet. Were plate hey piece to go at the antop complete entire ring the circumference, and caat-Iro- n weigh about fifteen tons. The platas, or sect tons of the ring, have flanges at right angles to the surface.-antt la by thee that the successive rings are held together with holla. Hydraulic ram, placed agalnat he flange every few forties 'around the tube push the shield forward at a maximum pressure of 3.400 tons: if the pressure of the air In the tube he WANT AOS YIELD taken' Into account the pressure upon WANT ADS YIELD the shield la Increased to 4.400 ton. The tht-- M Iss'f weighs 101 torn.. It WANT AOS YIELD ienn-aylvan- Pena-svlvan- ln BIG BIG BIO RESULTS RESULTS. ReSULTS |