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Show : ; , limestone Imvinu w h.t ! . rv .In'lznt nu. The underlyind (Unrti!i' -a In'inil on r a lnrife extent nt country in 1 j - I intiih district. An j illusti ntlim w as irivi n by irii'B n of a torn pi nf paper, of the curves which A rein would a-uiuc, hi thr crnsinn of the surface. 'I III witless te-tilbd tn pructii aily the same f n r-1 ; a those wlin hml proee ili'd him, namely to u contact between wall of qtiartzilo, the tilling In i n tr n limestone. IIih direct examination bnd md been con- -Muled when tin- court took noonday re. rc-s. .THEY TESTIFY ALIKE MANY MEN WITH MANY MINDS HOLD ONE OPINION. A KeinarUal.le I nanlniitv In Ihe Slnrjr Told by th Mavfloner VMtnesspa I'rof. Kfa Net IVrinllied to OrHte i - Trio llefrnse (o lose Tomorrow. Hostilities in the I'aik City mining eon-! troverfwere. reopenrd in the Third ditii' I court this mornlni;. 1'rofcssor W. s. Key. who had hecn on the witness stand nearly all I of jrter,1nv afternoon, and whom .IikL"' j Kaskin accused of "orutinu." was pla Ion I the witness stand for his i Tns examination. There can he no mistake but what the profesaor tells pretty story to a a jury. He haa trained himself iu Hint nit liy experience In souv of the most noted cases of mininir litigations of which the ree. , nrd speak. His confidence iu his ability to . Impress tlir oecupsnt- of the jury box is sii- i preme, and he siieak, in sudi n mnnncr as , to convey it conviction of Ins sincerity in the j theories he is ildvancinp,. I The conrl room nnibcii. e is composed al- I most exclusively of miiiins; men. These j Hand on tiptoe to henr lh evidence. Ihe tiial is riiearv. There i no' "tie flash ! isnliment to relieve the monotonous re-diindency re-diindency if niue-, slope and drifts, of limestones and iiinrliles. There whs a siu'h of relief this mominc w hen ludtte lieiion informed hi honor that the defendant expected to i .include their rase tomorrcw , p-of W S. !ce was called to the stand, and' was put on He lack of ct o.--r vamina-tlotl vamina-tlotl Parley Williams tilled the run- of ini,u!Mtor ami directed Hiu prnf-s-orV atlentioii lo a piece of rock and asked him what he . alleit il. That I- a piece of blue lime tilled with crv'tnlired carhonali of lime." :,1 Met hi ue lone 'he hanuinu' w all of the ''in?" , "It is the 'iinit, as at present known, of U.e m;neriili?alion.'' "t,d Ihe lower wall'''' "Ihe itirt.ile is the prc-enl known limit of ti.e ore." " id the true wall of the vcinV" J. the oveihaiiitlim iiuntite what is known a-ipinrl.ite No. H.0 fe-t above the foot wnll.1' on hl ilireel cxaiiiinii'ioii. I'rof' a-or Keve- was very posilive on the point of the Mavtlower haviu a continuous vein with cone apex on the Tenderfoot. I'rof. Knvc. w ill V 'U take a pointer and indicate the slrike of the vein'." I'rof. Kcvcs took a jioinler and laid the vein nut" acros the Mayflower, Neva.li Mid Wooilside at an uciite iiiil'Ic to their Iciiirll'. Th" examination c, intituled ' on Ihe point of the limit-, of the vein: but the wit-lies wit-lies could not be shaken from hi position, Hint 'he liii'-.stonc was the real vein, the overhani.'-ius; wall iieiiiir iiinrtitc and the liuderlvini; wall rock of th- same character. 1 he limestone overlyine; the ore was only the local wall, or the point at which the ore e. nse-.l to pav. The limestone wani'iirt of the lode. It wak not an irupcriiiiiible bed am! wVerc il was cracked it was l'l.c') 'o l.e Uiine.inlired hy the impreirnatin" so'ut""i. Tlnw fur do you extend tin vein on ils ttrike'r" "As you come into the town tl .itk I itv) on the railroad, you can see n line of pits and iu those, the fragments of Ihe -tralillcn-lions arc the farthest point east w here the contact appears on the surface " "Westerly how far doe it extend V" "I should say that he fore it is Interrupted hy the upheaval of the noiphvrv. H extends to the Crescent, from there on the strata extended to the Cottoiiuoods." The w itne-s hud foum! ore on the ipiai t-He, t-He, both at the bottom and the top of the incline. He had ulo found ore iu contact with the (iiarlzite in the Horse incline, and In several other inclines which he de-i-. nated, and in some "f the w incs. The w itucs-said he liMd taken the dip of the ore beds in the drift and had found it to vary from alinol Hat to nearly Id deirrces from the horizon. The main incline had a dip of about '.0 decrees, v fair avenge of the vein as he found it under ground would he about J'.' desrrec. What kind of a vein do you call this?" "A contact vein, corre-pondiiur in its dip Willi the cnclo-in'r beds." The ttness admit!' il that the Northland .aise followed nearer to the tine did than that on the Mav How cr. . This concluded the cross examination and .ludirc Marshall mmine iceil the redirect ex alllinalioll by askinu the witno-s it he was familiar w ith Ihe Kureka-Hichinond cac iu Nevada, which was on.-e ps-cl iiiii hy Judi;c Field of the supreme court. The object of this itietioii was to prove 'that in tiie ca-e mentioned the lini' Moiic, several hundred !"'-t thick, was adj.ulued to be the v in. The (Uetion brought forth a quiet objcelii'ii from dud tic Uaskin, who held that Hie i U -t ion was irrelevant, and the conditions ei-tinir in thai cafe were no! illu-Irative of those in the one under trial. .Indue Dickson argued thai the Uiiestioii wii a relevant ami a com petcut "lie. Ill- court ruled airaiiist fiiestinii because if one side was permitlcd to in into .-uch fad He- ,i her w oiiid 'n- permitted per-mitted '." disprove tlirui Several ijiiestion were assed the w itne-s, w hy he had not none into certain workings ami the nieiui' "e uivcu that it w as because of dilllciillv in i.'"ttinir into thcin. and alo itheis as lo 'he fortuatioiis found below cer-siu cer-siu workinu- I hc-e ijiiestion. the w ilnc-a was pro. red-Jna red-Jna to au-wer in treat d' tail. .Im'ft iii Now 1 piote-i. ,nir honor, Against tin w itne-s "oraline. ' We have cone aloe": ipiiel!) and I do not want lo make this objection airaiu, let t In- w ilues. uuiline himsell to an nn.iv.-r. Hut Keve. could not be sulil'ici. a ml with te.ok. illli.tratcd to the jury, the hue- of the malitieat ion and Ihe fault.- which uianife-t pit themselves. Iu this manner the profes-;.nr profes-;.nr drew some vi y pretty mental pictures for the men in Ihe box nnd a he dot seem to b.- ".rtlius them on tire" Suilfe l!nkiu per niitlrd him to i ontinne w itliout makini: any nbiec'ion. When Piofe-snr IJeves hid tin islied Ins ilhi-trattor. lie was i xeused from the stand. Martin Harknrss was called and sw en--and was examined '.y Mr. Hrowu a to hi-f-vperiedce it: vein iiiiiiiiil'. Ihe witne-s had been enaed in Ihe business in 1 l:tho, ( nlifornia, Nevada aurl I lah. At pie-ent he v. a supci iuten.e nt of m.ninu proper:-, ii Cott.uiw I and hud pn-vioii-ly held the same position in l'ark ( itv . 1 1 1 i x perien . in I tali had been nearly coiitin.d to l,me. slouc formation. He is fanit'iar witii tin-(.round tin-(.round in conlroversy. h -th a to ii- surface and its undcrttroiind workini:. He tenue-l the vein a bedded vein, haviiiL' a fool wall ol i-uart.itc and the haiiiiu.' wall a hard bhic |