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Show Tllli MOIiXIXG EXAMINE!! SWINDLERS RUN OUT n. Mrs. A. B. Dolbeer of Bauertiil, Idaho, ia in the city for a short vi-i- t. hard-earne- , hihiiiiihh H. Bullen is in tlie city from Richmond, Utah, on business. Mira Marie Drabble Ml for the this morning. Funeral ea- -l over the remains of will be held at the family residence, 2347 Madison Ave Thursday, Match 2, IMS, at 2:20 p.m. Friends wishing to view the remains can du so from 10 to 12 a. m. Thursday. s Mr. Fred Wright Articles of incorporation were filed in the office of tire secretary of State by tlie Mount Hood Railroad company, w hich ia capitalised at $250,-00and the headquarters of which i at Ogden. The avowed purpose of the corporation is to construct, owu and operate railroads and atenmlioats iu the states of Oregon and Wsshl.igion, and to do, a general construction business in lTlali. Tlie incorporators are David Eccles, Thomas Dee, Hiram H. Bpenoer, William H. Eccles, Charles W, Nibley, W. W, Riter aal George Romney of Balt Lake, and David Henry H. Kolapp and Joseph A. West of Ogden. Monday The death of Mrs, Hanley, mother of Mrs. L. Baville and Tboa C. Hanley, mi. . wr weap-- i,.,,.,,! - .MARCH 1, 1U03. iu c of Rite A. ii Farn-w-.i'- ug; lVteraou. She 1 . TAKES HIS OWN LIKE. lot :t. block 50. lli D. rai n, 4l,i,.t As r ( ji t.- tl, s.tli Like City survey. While the woman no loved was com the withdraw to ing to him. seeking BENT TO MENTAL HOSPITAL. . proceedings r hicli tie had s a La Plant, Kapok-oj Frauk Lew i. known a j who resided nt 252 South Wr- -t Dad Lewi, who vuk exaiuLted Jan.' Vues Temple street, committed suicide ' 11 iu tlie dial rtf cimih bclure Judge day woraing by taking a slxuvnili ini to as anii. wait yeaU-rof an ounce of strychnine. Tlie mau Aiiusiruug was craxt-with grief, believing that uay ordered taken to the Stale Mental J Provo. ut hia wife waa to he hi- - no lodger, lrrs-e- d hospital It was hoped 1.V Judge Armstrong:1 was found a picclosely to hia ture of 'hia young wile aud by the that LewiiT coaduinu would show mi-- 1 bed waa discovered a note to her with proveiiieiit under treatment by County instructions written upon it that it be Physician Whitney, and ro hi delivered to her and uot opened by wa continued ludi'tiuuely. During the he lias been growim; adione rise. His dead body van not lust few da diacotered until shortly after mum, wore, and h wa- - nraerad taken from when the chambermaid went to tue the comity jail to lYntu. room to set it in order for the night. Besides the note to his wife was an ANOTHER BOY HELD I P AND oilier one discovered near the bed. It HOHliEl). ! ran as follows: I belong to the Woodmen of the World, camp No. 58, Flor Two big burly men lust night held cure. Colo. little cudie Fitgililam-a- l up 'N. P. Plant. 1 give my wife all my Fifth South and Bala street ami uch as trunk, drawing bclougiugo, table, grip and drawing board, and all took his week's wage away from hint. let my The wage amount to only $3.50, but that ia ia iny trunk. wife know this at once by wire. Iter addresa ia Mrs. Bessie LaPlunt, 921 (o Eddie they uienut a gieai deal, lie had worked hard for the aiouey and he Macon avenue, Canyon City, Colo. A fool note said: William A. lav, almost cried when they took it away. 427 D. F. Walker block, know about ilia story fold at the police atatiou all niv troubles." was the story of a little mau, however. was trade a Lalanl by Hia eyes alione as lm related the lie wss lately employed si tin- - smeland deecriln-the men. He ovens. id He was said: lers Murray building man not a of mean, but as far as ran "1 got through my work at the be learned waa a sober, industriuus Penny Areadn at ti o'clock, up went and citizen of good lutbita. lie wa 2ti yearn got a hut pie and with my week's ol age, a member of tbe Woodmen ut wages In my pocket 1 started for the World, and carried besides the home. 1 live at 631 South Weal Tcm-plinsurance id that brotherhood some inwent but down Main, with street, surance lu one of the old line eompau the Intention of ernramg over when 1 lea. Hia wife, who was stopping with got house. opposite tbs her father at Canyon City, Colo., start At the corner of Fifth South two ed for Salt Lake a day or two ago, It men stepped up to me and raid 'Give ia understood, sad wiil arrive In this up your money. Lid. T aint any city today. Sire had instituted divorce money I told em, and then 1 got maned some husband Iter proceedings against to ruu. Tha biggest fellow of tha two time ago, but wss going to return to grabln-- tue before 1 gut t artel, the man aud live with Mm. The di- aud began to kick me, aofairly I still. vorce waa sought for on the grounds of Then they want through mestood ami look incompatibility. La Plant adored her, what 1 had. I followed them until llu-aud hit affection was in part returned. got down to Sixth Suulii, hut there 1 Had be lived, it is possible that old tost track of them, differences could have been forgotten amt that many year of happy life PREMIUM PAID ON WATER BUNDS. would have followed. of this city, which occurred at Clark, Nebraska, was announced in Ogden yesterday Mrs. Bavdle who has been at the bedside of her mother for several days, is expected iu arrive this evening with the remains and interment will be made la Ogden. Announcement of the funeral will be made later. MAZEPPA iuti-tuled- r: E has been asserted around town that we are putting out a new label and have to make it up on putting inferior stock in our 1 ! -- iu-a- Ph-a-- e HIDE ENDS IN DEATH. H. W. Edgerlon. travelling agent for Strapped (o the hack of a half wild ia in Ogden horse, which waa turned loose ua tlie today on business. desert plains of Texas, Pauline Seliula, formerly a chambermaid at the Kuut-forhotel iu Salt Lake, was found dead CCLDFIELDjS RICHES miles from any settlement and still tied to the horse. The particulars of Ore Se Valuable That Ouarda Watch the woman's tragic death canuot be Over the Gold. learned, but it ia believed that she wa found by a couple of nnclu-rWilbur J. Hall, writing to this paper who buried her. Word of her death from Goldfield, say: came to her fricuds in Salt Lake yeslit all the wonderful district of Gold-flr- terday, blit tlie account was brief aud Nevada, there to no more remarktoe circumstance are not known. able mine than the principal one.lu the While she was working at the Knuls-for- d group belonging to the Siinuierone hotel, she fell in love with an emcompany. There the ore is of such fab- ploye there end it ia understood that ulous value that Ilia superintendent site was induced to go away with hint. has i cloned the properly with a high She left suddenly about six months ago board fence, placed heavy hinges and without telling an of her frinid. hut padlocks on the one gate, uud station- aim was afterwards beard from iu Texed a heavily armed guard on the prop- as. erty to watch it day and night, while Blauv of her friend objected to her the niinera delve into the earth for the marrying the nutn she met at the hotel gold. and tried to induce her to hare uothlug The Sinimerone is located two miles to do with hint. northeast of Goldfield. The ledge struck Mias SchuU waa converted to tka Is several feet In width and runs in Mormon faith at her home iu Beil, valua from $5,000 to $50,000 per ton, Switseriand, and rente to Salt Lake some small pockets having been found about two years ago. After she that are even more valuable. When City had been bare for a abort time she this rich shoot was first discovered left tlie church and her a say visitors were in the habit of filling that it waa on account of thi mas their pockets with the dirt, which they with whom she had fallen in love. would later pun out and get $10 and Miss Schula was shout 22 year of $20 buttons of gold. This practice age and had no relatives iu this conn- became so common that the property was enclosed, although at a lieavywmt,-lumbebeing very high in Goldfield, i WIFE SUES HUSBAND. pvery ten days sacks of this ore, heavily guarded, are expressed out of Christens Morgan is suing her forthe district to be milled, and already the company it very wealthy although mer husband, John Morgan, for $10,- court. the mine ia down but fifty feet. De- 000 damages in the district were married in Salt Lake In velopment work is being pushed and it They when the plaint Iff wa 10 years to thought that within a short time the 1855, full value of this property will be 01 age, and have had eight children, known. Tlio company is a dose cor- all of whom except two are living. The youngest i 23 years old. with poration nothing to sell. Tbe plaintiff says that tliejr lived toThere are other mines iu this disgether as husband and wife until 1880, trict that are very rich, some of them and at an ecclesiastical trial in having ore that runs even higher than Mill that Creek Ward, Dec. 14, 1904. tbe that on the Bimmeronc, but although all are guarded it is the only one that defendant made statements reflecting has ao far been fenced in. Every day on her virtue. new strikes are reported and the disSEEKS TO GRAB WATER,. trict bids fair to eclipse every other in the worlds bistory of mining. The Utah Light A Railway company Tlie Standard-Goldfiel- d Mining come pany of Ogden has a property adjoin- Tuesday morning sent a gang ut near the to mouth a ined the point 8iinmerone that has every ing a promise of being s great group. It is of Dig Cottonwood canyon to make showing of protecting It alleged $100,-00- 0 the of Patrick property. part water right, which it has offered to swap to tho city In consideration of CARNEGIE FREE LIBRARY. 11m extension of its street railway and electric lighting and power franchises Again tlie library speaks to the people Of Ogden. Many of the renders have for fifty year from the time of their called- for books they could not gel. The expiration. A short distance below the combnafd la happy to say that some of them are found in the following Hat. pany's power house at the mouth of the canyon is a piece of ditch that wa These pay lie had now. More will folyear sen, and which was never dug soon, low, used. Why it wa dug, where it wa llacheller, Irving Vergiliua intended to lead to, or what purpose It Barr, Amelia E. Belle of Bowling waa expected to mrve, no one seems Green. able to explata. But It existence was Barr, Robert Chicago Princess. known to some one connected with the Brady, C. T. Qulberon Touch. and when the offlrial of the Crockett, S. R. Loyes of Miss Anne. company, read in The Herald yesterday Dunbar, P. I. Heart of Happy Hol- rompany Its right that the city would low. to a portrait of tho water flowing from C. G. Evelyn Byrd. Eggleston. Hig Cottonwood canyon, they derided Fraser, Mrs. Hugh Stolen Emperor. that tin1 ditch could be made to nerve Lot. Common Robert Herrick, useful purpose. So they illsiwtclied a London, Jack People of the Abyss. n foreman and twenty-fou- r d Mfvtoren, . Ian Young Barbarians. . . workmen to the mouth of the canon Rives. H. E. Castaway. end put them to work extending the Tli wing. Eugene ditch. Traev. Louie Pillar of Light. It is intended, so the mayor and city L. E. Jack Raymond. Voynich, understand, to run the ditch Werner Susan Clegg and Her engineer below the Butler end Deseret mill sites Friend Mrs. Laihrop. and connect it with the ditch that supWhite Biased .Trail Stories. plied them wih water when they were in opernt ion. SMALLPOX CATCH TO HOPES COURT NOTES. SALT Chicago. Feb. .Many perrons have tried to get out of the Isolation Hattie Belie Garrett lisa filed a petihospital, but until today there waa no record of may one attempting to break tion in Hie office of tho clerk of the In. Hence the surprise of the Health district court asking that tbe marriage she entered with Bruce Department today when a man. appar- into which at Mankato, Garrett Minn., July 8, the to be to asked tent sane, ently be annulled. She asserts that place where smallpox patients are kept. 2888, ia n who the defendant, Veterinary sure The man was John Adams, a liarber. I have a disease of the skin. he gnon, ha failed to protlde bar with tlie necessaries of life iace July 10. 1904. said: and I rant get rid of 1L A phyThe damage anil of Carl A. Ouaw-sician told me if I could get smallpox against Salt Lake City and tlie ConIt would cure me. and I want to try. A Power company. . .Ton .go down and live In a tene- solidated Railway 825.000 damages is claimed ment on Somh Clark street, and if you In which there you cant in for the loss of an arm. Is on trial befant get smallpox said theSttrwtaiy. Tbea fore Judge Lewis and a jury. friAUMpiUl The following persons scented of the rlsilor went away. were arraigned yesterday in the There is a general idea that small-re- crime division rriminal of the district court: pox will cure oil Wood diseases, "It vrtll curs John L. O'Brien, criminal knowledge marked Dr. Spalding. of of not guilty, 1ro. A female; pies some, but not psoriasis, which iht Aldrich and Jacob Karrs, a -- mult with man h " d s frh-ltd- s r twen-ly-flr- ablc-liodie- It waa derided by ihe unanimous vote of the member of the council present at last night's meeting to sell to the Mutual Life Insurance company of Nw York tlie $850,000 water and tlie 8150,000 sewer bonds to be Issued by tbe city In accoidanu with tha decision of a majority of the duty citizens quallflikl who voted at the special election held Jan. 3. 1905. Of nevetal bids submitted, that of th Mutual Life Insurance company offered the city the most money for the bonds. Its bid was to take the bointo at par with accrued interest, ami to pay the city a premium of 115.100. It wa apparent tnat the other bidders were offering to take the bonda nut to be held by them, but to be deposed of to others, a instead of proposing to take them unconditionally at par or to pay a premium for them, they iinpuaed coudltluna and asked for rebate and cranmlaUus. The 8rat bid opened was that of the Union Havings Bank and Trust company of Cincinnati. It offered to take the $1,000,000 Issue of water and sewer bonda at par, tbe city to pay the expense! of issuing and certifying the bonds, and also all other expenses attendant upon their issuance. Mason, Lewis A Co.. Chicago, offered par if the entire $1,000,004 bonds were delivered In one lot, the company to lie paid $49,425 by the city for handling them. Should the bonds' be delivered In four lots, the company wanted $87,500 aa compensation for iu nervlces is dis- posing of the bonds to other parties. E. II. Rollins Bona and Farma, 8 Co., put In e combination bid for the $850,000 water and $160,000 sewer bond, offering par on delivery and accrued Interest. In case tbe bonda were delivered in one lot, they were to receive 4 per rent for placing the laaue, together with attorneys' fees and other expennes, and if delivered In four Installments they were to pay par, leas I per cent. M. W. Halsey A Co. made an offer of $943,251 and accrued interest for the entire Inaue of $1,000,040, to be taken In four installments. Then came the bid of the Mutual Life Iiianrance company of New York. It wae followed by the bid of Dennison, Pryor 4 Co., of Cleveland. O., who offered par. . lera a rominlaalon to hs agreed upon, t MRS. CROMER SAYS GUILTY. Mrs. W. H. Cromer, through her attorney, pleaded guilty yesterday afternoon in the police court to assaulting Harry Mitchell and Lia wife by throwing cayenne pepper In their eyes. Mrs Cromer did not appear In court person- ally. Her attorney after entering the pies in her behalf said that In mitigation of the offense he had only n few wonla to nay, but he thought that a light sentence should be Imposed. His client had had a great deal of 1 rouble, he raid, and then intimated that. Mrs. Cromer wae mentally unbalanced, or not quite rewpousSle fur what ahe had done. Assistant Cily Attorney D.O. Willey, replied end aid that the offeuee alleged In the complaint waa not the Mrs. only aimilar trouble in which Cromer had been Involved, and. on behalf of ihe people of the city, he asked that aa heavy a lta be Imposed as the gravity of the nffenwe demanded. The wss continued for senient-- until todny. Tlie asuult upon- Mitchell and hi wife is alleged to have occurred lust Friday night when h and his wife were coming out of th Utahns the- - Jr., CIGARS This has proven only wind as we defy the bearer of such knocking to substantiate his assertions. Our Wesslers Best Cigar is as good today as ever and better because they are Spanish work. open-hea- d We Will Move About March 6th to Our Old tand, 375 23d Street Ind. Phone 619 UNION MADE IWessIe? Cigar - the Chicago North western, . diaily MORNING. harm: ph- cl nut Oscar t arii-ii- and tbar!i K gjtjjy. niri. buigiarv Mar. ii adunr-4 udlti !o rendered Judge Arms! rot. g Hie I1 jiiiigtiicul for iu the case ie Hunter VTVlWEDXLSDAY sly Scheme. OF TOWN eoo-iroc- lJ a opinion that the best thing to do was to get them out of the country a ml uh ever effort in their power to give as gn-a- t a publicity to the affair a poseiblc auJ thus ecqnaiut people iu tlie country districts of the swindling The four residents of Ogden Valley, two living at Liberty, one at Edeu and one at Huntsville, were: Warren Campbell, John Ward. T. I. Fuller and Binion Jes-eaud all the contracts called for $300. That the swindlers were foiled before any of their victim actually lost money is due to the clever work of WERE SHADOW. tire rivE GRAFTERS city and county officers working POLICE. THE SV ED uaitedly. It la a feather in their eag of which they way well feel proud. Caught it Their hoo graph FraudsValley Warnand Work to Ogdss ed to Leave tha County. rfforta of the city and the sheriff, office toiled the party of phonograph grafters town Mutay ath ! of he-Idea of defrauding reoldenU Zi county out of their to d aign shekel by getting them which called for twenty time, vlcilmo the amount that the for. Notthought before they were contracting Valley had been Ogden fow resident ofenwoth-tongueswind taken la bv tha the oth-m- t dle, was this accompliahed, butcontracts succeeded iu getting the were signed by those remdente vbk-who and will return them to the parties einedthem. By this time the grafters are t y miles from here. ae they were with given an order to leave Ogden show their bag and baggage and not three in this city again. Monday morning five men stepped eff the Oregon Short Line train, which arrives here at I oclock, and immediately they were spotted by Officer John Hutchins who, like all the other officers, had been ou the lookout for men of their description from advices reCouncil Bluffs about three ' ceived from weeks ago. They fitted the description of the grafter who made such a rich harvest in Ban Pete county and In the northern portion of. Utah county and Officer Hutchins lost no time In notifywho in ing chief of Police Browning, mid Deturn called upon Sheriff Bailey tective Fender and a consultation waa held as to the beat method of circumventing the efforts of the swindlers, and if pomibia get a eaae against them ao that complaint could be filed and a prosecution instituted. The result of tue conference was that Special Officer Eggleetoa waa detailed to shadow tha men and keep In elate toscb with their opesstiou. It was noticed that when the five mca cams into Ogden they had a much hggge as the average theatrical fact troupe, and this wag one of theattenthat directed Officer Hutchins Black-hetn'e tion. The baggage waa taken to Livery stable and rigs were engaged by the quintette of swindlers for their country operations. The large trunks were stored in the barn and it waa evidently their idea to use the barn as their supply headquarter. Hearing that two of them had engaged a rig to go to Huntsville, Special Officer Eggleston was sent to that place hot on their trail. While there he posed as a buyer of hones for the railroad and waa busily engaged In pricing horses The swindlers never had an intimation that an officer was shadowing them. Officer Eggleston reported to the three officers mentioned Monday night the result of his Investigations which disclosed the fact that four contracts hsd been made out in Ogden Valter, all to the tune of 300 each. This morning as the five were just ready to leave Blackhama barn to go out to tha scene of their operations for fresh victims. Sheriff Bailey and Detec. tlve Pender appeared at the stable and notified the quintette that they were wanted over at the police station. When accused of the affair at the station the (windier! did not deny it, in fact one of them was frank enough to say: Were out for the money. We need it in our business, and evidently he thought it no ones business how they got it. They were charitable enough to admit, nowever, that they did not blame the officers for the little part they played in the drama In getting them out of town and thus foiling their efforts to get a little easy cash. The men's names' ware Baker, C. E. Wilson, Joe Gray, C. E. Weston and Buck man. They promised the officers to get out of Weber county end never operate here again. The officers would liked to have prosecuted them, but one of the contracts vraa submitted to County Attorney Hulaniakl and he gave an opinio that it was a bona fide contract to every way. The contract were so worded that Instead of getting a phonograph and twenty records for $15, as the farmer thought he waa getting, ha really agreed to pay $15 each for the twenty records, thus signing a note for $30. Under the derision given by the county attorney the officers were of the OUDLLW -- ce The council is night pamed up to g future meeting consideration of tli petition of Ihe Utah Light A Railway company for a fifty years extension of it franchise. The same action waa taken with the letter of Mayor Richard P. Morris asserting the falaity of Hum Of the Statement in the petition, and giving hia versfoa of the proposition of the city to acquire water rights in Big Cottonwood canyon to which the company claims title. Action On the proposition of Samuel Newham tn build, equip and operate an electric light phut if given n fraa-rhiwas also deferred by referring hia eoinmnuirnttona I1 he - committee of the whole. The meeting will he held e when Mr. New home ttenda in hia ordlnsme. ee fran-rhle- CHdWHOfOOOOOOOOO I RAILROAD HAS HARRIMAN NOTES UttT I CONTROL? Bln Graude on March 1. aa previously announced Iu the News, h will retain hi position aa director of the Mogat road aud a aiu-- will be In a position to consult with Mr. Blmmona and other official whenever he la needed in an advisory capacity. David II, Moffat yesterday drn led Hist Janiea J. Hill, the railroad magMr. nate. Is buck of the Moffat road. Moffat reiterated 111 siaieineut that liia line would be operated ludepeadcnt-1- ?- A special to the. Salt Lake Tribune about control of the .Union Pacific la as follows: A report that K. H. Harriman lia lost control of tha Union Pacific railFur the first time since the heavy road gained currency in Wall street today, and th blh-- f was expressed in Htuiwa the blockade an the Moffat Hue conservative quarters that it wa not was rallied yeeterday by t be gnaw bucking Idle goBMip. It has been known for brigade, which proceeded from lieu-v- er some time tlmi H. H. Rogers and Wiltn Arrow Head. Tbe stalled train liam Rockefeller each jieraonally held with its two engines and tlie mammoHi probably as large s block of Union Pa- rotary plow with thriF mure ware rescific atock aa any our individual, but it cued after s lieup of more than a week. was believed that E. H. Harriman and Train are now. running from Denver to his friend retained sufficient amount Arrow Head on erliedule time, and no to secure them the complete adminis- fun her trouble with blizzards Is ex trative control of the property. peeled this winter- .- Denver New. Today, however. It waa pereUtenLl.V UNION PACIFIC SHORTENED. rumored that the actual control of th property lay In other quart era. Thera Denver will line a good portion of were two perrons named aa having been the buyers, on tire on hand It was Dm freight traffir over the Union Pa aid that Janie J, Hill and his friends rifle from Cheyenne and the Went to had secured the stock, and on the other Kansas City when the Improvement It was annerted that D. C. Reid and over ihe line now nearly flnixhed are completed. By the conutrurtkin of a Judge Moore of the Rock Island com- cut-off which conuocts the Unlun Papany had It. hsva cific with tlm Grand Island track at Mr. Harriman md bln frienJ not only will tha displayed considerable anxiety over the Marysville, Kan., between Cheyenne and Denver identity of men who were heavy buyers grade of the stork. While the block of stork lm obviated, but r the dintanee will b mile. diesppeared from the market, they are shortened ninety-fouThe Grand inland i now Union said to have made their appearsnr la property, and Ihe coukI ruction of certain large loan, and then tn turn mile of road cunaeci Ihe seventy-twled Mr. Harriman to believe Hint th Ing Marysville and Mesoken I of tho Rock Hand crowd bad been the buut most import no re. An cany water yer. will auon be given and Iba great grade to reronrera used tlrelr If these men from western Nebran, purchase Union Pacific atock they graina shipment well as the trade from the Orwould have to leave Rock Island atock ka, will now be Jlvertad from Denver temporarily without more than the ab- ient, over tbe new route. solutely necesrary support, and that is line In addition n much hotter the condition In which Rock Island from Ksii-City to the Pacific coast common has been for many months. to given for the passenger t raffia and faster time is now promised across HOUSE. RAILROAD CLEARING the continent. . . While Colorado is not faring as well Eastern and western railroad presas Kaunas In tbe expenditure of lit idents are trying to perfect a plan for Union Psclfie millions, Ihe line in this tbe establishment of a national railroad state Is receiving a portion of the clearinghouse, by which It In expected money that 1 being eeni. Block signals that the railroads of the country will are teing improved where they now lie saved at lead $10.100,000 annually, exlat and wliere they do not, they will ' and poeaiblv double that amount. be uaed in the future. The presidents wlm have interested The betterments along th Union Pa themselves tn the matter, and who rifle are being extended everywhere to W. J. bring thi big trunk line runs. A double Mtdgley have rmpktved lue. are: W.Siuv-H.- track line which will do away with It to a. iuiindnti-- track where tbe Kw river veaent Ft all. Illinois Central: Newman, New York Central lines; F. overflow s I being ranstrucled from K. B. Tlioma, D. Underwood, Erie: Kanta City to Topeka At a coat of Ke; Thi will hr .completed by lathlgh Valley; K. P. Ripley, Santa Samuel Hienr, Houthern. J. P. Mor- August 1. Bince E. H. llarriniau. fpok. ! gan A (V. also have given tbe matter ion of the Union FmdOa early in 1890 their approval and promised their suptlie he hss completely rehabilitated port. e it road. It ban been a stupendous task, The scope of the elm rlng-hoiIs being planned will Include tha et- -t involving tint expenditure of pinny millenient of nil clnima for loss and lion! of dollars ant Including such notrespect able engineering feat, as the building damage to freight. In this cut-ofThis cutSlone It Is estimated the railroads will of the Ogdcii-Lucinoff shortened the main line forty-thre- e lie saved millions or dollars. Tbe mountain crease In the damage claim L one f miles and changed it from climb to roadway across th Greet the most menacing feat urea of freight reHaltLake, with a saving of traffic. A claim agent of one road for loos and hours' time In the operation of train. cently said that the claims f The finished 400 cost $8,000,000 damages had increased over now ier anil wa the difficult piece of most is profew It a Within year. cent the railroad engineering of tlie last twenty posed to have all claim adjusted by lean. Several mile of bridging across Clearing lumse and passed upon liy the lake required spliced piling 130 feet of that lady for the rallroada. Thi project coinplutcd Hie reThis will be dime mticn in tho manner tong. building of Hie iiiiin linn from Omaha of tattling demurrage claims. to do to the coast. Denver New. The new bureau wiil have ' with all accounting between railroads SURVEY OF UINTAH. RAILWAY, with respect to the interchange of care can road one ami everything for which busiCintah railway Vernal, Feb. 28.-i- 'be owe another. All interchange of buthe was completed to Vfrnal yeetrr-da- y. bandied through urvry be will ness the termlnti . befog" on what I reau. eliminating the necessity for the as the ol.( Dougherty place, on various in known force large accounting Ihe north able of town, and within the railroad. . city limits. . The survey, after entering the valley rilMMU.Nd ACTING MANAGER, through the Ulnlnh gap. on the west, of the res- follows the section line due east along announcement official The general the Jams Hanking street until tha Ridgeway ignation of A. C.Moffat wa mad. north side of tbe city fonts ia reached, road manager of tha new order Ironed, and then swings south Into the ground yeaterttov. Under the ban been Mr. above mentioned. The properly was who n gimmen. (j three years ago by Jot in purchased be will acting Ridgeway's assistant, superintendent, and Tom with the dutiea of general manager of tbe Gilson Taylor, foreman company, and the records WfF. Jones!in addition to being secbut the fact thet will become general show It In their name, ret are and the Uintah company the Railway other change traffic Irent. The only Mr. gllsoulte people are pracl (rally snnoumed to the .lepiilnre with cal account for the purchase of the Grande of hi Ridgeway to the Rio ' land by MrAndrew ami Taylor, It is ChmlraDutt. clerk. chief Ik prMUtuCil that eves at that lime the to will go Mr. Ridgeway While Pa-rif- le o i Go-- railroad project wa. lu rontemplaitou. Depot ground, ablings, roundhoiin Bile, etc., have all been laid out at the terminus, which la the nearest that Vernal haa ever com to having a railroad. i GATEWAY TO BE OPENED. Bordering tipun the acnsaiiuual ia the latest sews of impending changes In the traffic department aim iis policy on the great Hurrinmn system, P I now staled ill several quarters I hut Traffic Director J. U. Htukti will retire from Hull position, and probably w 111 go liaek In Ban Frsuciftco, where lu- - L morn ia touch wllh tbe situation. AH gslew'ays ore to tie throw u wide open Hint is to the broad policy of '97 and 98 will be again adopted, the opposite policy listing been tried in the balance nd found wauling. Who ia to succeed Mr. Htubh ia sot. included in the report, all hough such men as Paul Morton, Dariu Miller aud Ben Campbell are meuikmcd iu lids cuiiiiectioa. Hall Trfhimr. E. A. Cook of the Pullman company has moved hi family to (Jgden aging after having rroided in Hull Lake lor the past few iiiostks, AisUtaut Hupi. F. J. Carton of tha Pullman Co.. .went north ou No. 4 Monday jdglil ou an iiispoctlou trip. Two new tourist ter lides go lulo effect in lbs Pullmau service neat week. One i from hi. Loti I to lot Angeles on I'nhiu Pacific No.' 3, Weddeads yn and Friday only, and returning eout bound ou tlie name days. Th other I from Chicago to Oakland daily, westbound only, arriving over th Kto Grande on No. 6, Master Mechanic E. AI. Idickett the Houthern Pacific ia at vada, os a buainoM trip. PICTURE PURCHASED H park a, Ne- FOR $4,000. New York, Feb. :8. Original of Oliver Wendell Holme "Autocrat ot th Breakfiut Table, ha beta purchased by J, P. Morgan fur $4,000. The manuscript ia in good condition and In to be placed among the moat valuabls ia Amerkaa literature. It wae preserved by the publisher of the magazine la which th papers first appeared. On lire publishers death several liagcs were found to be missing but Dr. Holme them and they cannot be from Um re-- L The manUMCript eon lain about three hundred closely written quart pages and include the poems, The Wonderful One Horae Hksy, Th Cltambcrcd ftoraon TurreH'a LegaNautillius. cy, and" Tlis Living Temple ia lUt-of- ...... t PEOPLE. THANKFUL Thsy Are Found is Evsrjr Part of Ogdan. Many cirisrns of Ogden have gpod reason to In- - thankful for burdens lifted from aching backs, which they bora patiently for year. Scores tell about their experience publicly, Here's a esse of It: Geo. F. Wright, driver of 'th mail wagon front the depot to the postof-firliving at 375 23rd SL, says: Ha lulling heavy socks ot mail and exposure to all kinds of weather while following my occupation brought oa kidney complaint and limine hi. For pain years when the dull grinding which existed almost cuutiiiually ever let up it changed to sharp shooting twinges which radiated to the aboalii-c- r so that I never knew really when one attack Mi to' b followed wp by A sure indication of citha aucci?M-ur- . or ovorexrited kidney er was Hie action and condition of the -. When the kidney secret intiin the uie stage I iiiust have tried a hundred differeut reuu-dii-seeking relief, until 1 became discour-age- e, . a d. A friend of mine who had proa'as Kidney Fill-- at cured a box of 8. W. Badion's drug -- tore ini Washington Ave.. gave it to me and T commenced the treatment. I bought it Second box. took- - it, and the attack For Hole by all dealers. Fuster-Millitir- a ' agents for the United me Remember the take uo other. Y.. aole I iricc 3o Uo., Rnfftito. N. Btate. IV0i --sml |