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Show the MORxixn rxAMixrn: Monday or, Dry, .moiixi?;-:- . v- Latest Labor News From All Parts of the World Interesting and Conci-- e Complete and Authorized to Be lished Exclusively in the Morning Examiner Tile American an average of $22t a Will w.-u- i s l s ai oar stock, not aim, in p, wits the hot to loot it to ji!j Do pro-ssioH- always hare in we foods )" and test ol He newest jjmce. liyonwisheat- -i and reliable goods in goods, yon to lead the tic procession ml enable headquarters are also We for everything in the way of Ik finest California fruits which we receive daily, also the very best obtainable in below and all U--- i I Report of cases incomplete. The league, organized .Includes 4 drrth due to complicameetat 8an Francisco, held its first with measles. were tion D.legates ! Includes deaths due to measles and ing on May 7th. Ialwr from organizations many present pnenmonla complication. and civic bodies Anti-Japane- Phones 137 Both Mortality. Prolhers Co. Governor McDonald of Colorado, has Mil, passed at signed the tho late session of the llslature. This measure was strongly advocated by the Citizens' alliance and was vigorously opposed by labor organizations. Violation of its provisions, is punishable h." fine, or imprisonment, or ooib. Anti-Boycot- t. Grocers 2344 Washington c; Avenu( tv h v A sajn A general Advance of 10 per cent in wages- was anhounccd by . the Manu- facturers association of Pittsburg, Pa on Aprtl 22. to become effective on June 1. that will embrace in its beneconsisting of fits 8,000 workmen, blackmachinists, pattern-makersmiths, molders and others connected with the machinery and faundry trade of the Pittsburg district. UllilONS I3UZZLE AMERICA'S of the ORIENT ffliTHE SPLENDOR h 100,000 ISTERI0US s, Gargsou INDIA Incomplete return of morlnllfy from 23 cou'itira, with 30 cities 13 incorporated towns and 0 villages, having an estimated population of 173,669 reporting. show a total of 256 death from all causes, representing a death mte of 14.79 Per thousand, dniHlflod bv' type as follows: General diseases, 54 ; nervous disease, 29: circulatory disease, 33; respiratory diseases, 59; digestive diseases, 1G; genito-urinardiseases, R: the puerperal state, 2; dlseasra-nthe akin, 1; malformations, 2; diseases of infancy, 16: old age. 17; external causes. 18: diseases, 23.; total, 256. "i'rematura sqd still births included. Original return of 19 deaths not accessible for report. -- of Ergllsh emigrants to the number os MINE. Canada recently j,04E, sailed for board the Dominion liner Vancouver, with the Salvation Army flag at tae Ogdenites Make a Vieit and Report on tho Property. masthead. The emigrants were gathered by Salvation army agencies, and the Drs. Baker and Skeen. David Jensen majority are workmen. and Chris. Aadneaon, stockholders ln mine at NewfoundThe advisory board of the National the association recently land, accompanied Manager CunningLetter Carriers' to the properly this week. All took the first official step toward the ham establishment of the proposed home for were agreeably surprised ln the presof development work. invalids, aged and incapacitated letter ent showing There is every reason to feel that carriers, when a committee was ap- this property is no longer a prospect, pointed to look into the matter and mine. The recent returns from a but at convention national the to report mill, of over $40 to tho Portland, Ore., In September. Three the sampling sltea have been 'offered for the home. ton, in value, together with the apThese are at Colorado Springs and pearance of highly mineralized ore in Ihe tunnel offers much encourageDenver and in Texas. ment. The presence of wide parallel minThe Joint arbitration plan between fissures, Employers as- eral veins in characteristic the Building Trade sociation and the unions of the build- the dikes of porphyry and seams of York talc, with a contact of quartzite and ing trades of the city of Newhold hi limestone, combine favorable condiwas adopted at a convention, of the unions, tions for a large- ltody of ore at a that city by twenty-eigh- t regreater drpth. by the representatives of the four of (he tunnel of only a An ezteni-ioand by individuals as unions maining feet will cut the larger thirty-on- e cf the organizations of ths few hundred mineral veins at. sufficient depth to Employers associa- ensure Duildlng Trades of higher values and a larger this, the adoption With general tion. the amount of ore. There is on the dump plan the prolonged lockout against cease. a largo amount of very promising carpenters and other unions will ore awaiting satisfactory transportaThe first cloak and suit manufac- tion arrangements. turers' association organized in New .LETTER LIST. York City since 1894. when there was a general strike snd lockout, . has been e Lltt of letters remaining in the formed on the open Rhop at Ogden, Utah, May 16, which, for if not called for in two weeks, will be leaving Colon A steamer New York recently had on board a sent to the Dead Lett-- r office: who, Gentlemen's List ' large number of canal employes the on Cost. conditions with Aropos, dissatisfied Murphy A Gibbon. Allen, O. P. works, quit in disgust. Psrcguali, Bill. Borat, Frank. p , F"e!; It is now possible for three men, Bryan, Fred. make Farent, F. E. Geo. to hand Bowman, machinery, working with Powers, John V. 3 0041 cement bricks a day. A recent- Brown, R. five ly Invented machine, employing the Ban sen, Harloig. Parks, J. H. Curtiss, llaroid S. Roms, Herbert. men besides those . who mix Roger, J. L. cement, will. Its inventor asserts, make Chee, Hairy. Rambo, M. Corak, Tom. C,00 bricks in an hour. Erwin, Wallace. Randolph, W. F. employes of a Enter, H. A. Read, J. II. Two hundred girl on went V. Fitzgeraid, T. berwran, Arcsteder Michigan knitting factory of tlie Fields, J. B. embtiya, I. strike owing to the management depart-menta Slevia Flaherty, T. E. plant refusing to ventilate the tne Creefibalgh, E. Abnider, A. L. by raising windows from (2 letter) Grant, Alex. bottom. 8 tore r, Charles. Haxsctt, J. F. Slmpenn, T. All 'the blacksmiths of the Norfolk Hu ib, John H. & Western shon- in .Roanoke, Va.. Hichenlnoper, Jno. Silhaugb, 'm. Scaririt, Goo. B. went out on strike because then com- Handley, J. J. btanfli-ld- , E. L. Hayes, Geo. pany refused to discharge a Jacki-on- , Arthur H. Thalin, Martin. . worker. Kenrns, M. I. Tutton, O. S. Luchuii. Mike. Taylor, T. H. The breaker hoy In the anthracite H. Thomas, W. !I. coal region 1 likely to be froed from L:c. J. Lawrence. the Morey, Varfoeseu, IV. A. his laborious and weary toil in lie Morgan. James. While A Murphy. near future. Gradually he will Wright, 8. M. Myers, C. R. eliminated from the forces which or Me Adam. A. H. Wood. D. N. make up the operating employes C. 8. Wipfler, Anton mine and breaker. Rnd will no longer Martin. M. L. mine. ths Marker, Wilson, Arthur. about of a feature be MrMiiiiis, Leonard Yoursos, Steirauos. isB. Home Culture rlub The Japanere govniment has an Ladies List. sued an order forbidding lror,J GMrA. KnsuJT, Mrs. Geo. H 100 Japanese laboreia taking passage Herd, Ml 11 or. Mis Catn-FiEfllcr. Mr. M. from Japan to Hawaii on W. Mrs. wnw arina. the in past rule steamer. The to exceed 6'W Green, Mrs. Lizzie Manning. Mrs. Geo years has been that not Hefferon. Mrs. M. J.VeLon. Mis could go ou any one steamer. Mvrue. Hoage. Mi May. Smith, Mrs. Henry branchy of the Hefferon. Mrs. The Fan Franri-cIni'-- has Muynte E. Graiilie-Cuti'T'- s Sliorkex, Miss National to Johnson, Mr. Grae. y,oija petitioned the Iioa:1 THOS. H. DAVIS. P. M. incorporate a provision in the rpeemUTAH-NEVAD- -- Utah-Nevad- a HMwal hub Ill Im In bl ta tanl CaWb tab it Mi Ml IbMi mt jarar Utttwt wwlaillulhimibi. XWBwbSM taWblwri MMMwh Eiclitli, MrtM. (unwAiM. tots hmli i - ImwH, Na..ii)iniH towriadkilirt. hub IhbkbbiSUIIlH., faifc isSSS1, (HE FAIUDE TELLS THE STORY - WBV MORNINQ AT 10 A. M. n DijEgMFimsrin, Fim Bom Shew ft ths Cirwi 6 round hhrtnuta Diily, 2 nd 8 P. OKU ONI HOUR KARUER hi OGDEN ba-iu- Admission Reduced to cforThis Day Only SONFESSES TO PRIESTb, THEN CUTS THROAT. ,ffg,i21TA. traRic discovery be Albion Hotel taf. the' t a roo ."I be a word Pc no1, irilT But be- - B- - c X dVlLV? ' xrai' friends to s.jr,lT18 her i Ea Bfd-lookiii- g s fWr!, Thu. "" " hwf a'y thaia,, K ltsan.- - arrlve- V," y0,,n 1 " a v he, Coi,r,,"i. directed Jtprleior nr th 2 fte non-unio- nsl1 " boule of h.r, feWD!ns o life !!;J ,t0 'ebe J41 W- "r hpr Is ft arm. V Unw in C- P9Di,.S . V A p,u he .21 B-- hr , - J? - PK th !a J om ear', r,n her body. wr,. '"tit. . le . - poot-oflic- I n.i 12, Loao "V. e, . for "d SoaUi maLon and booklet. rn MII-'t- V, t AS m ii rrTiTgrgnp: gaM3EHi nagarysrsEn r ! non-unio- price. I Ca July 6th tlia Standard-Examineyoung ladies will start for tha Lewis aid Clark Centaontaf Exposition at Portland. The party will leave Ogden in a Fullman Palace car ever the Oregon Short line Railway, passing through southern Idaho to Huntington, where the Oregon Railway A Navigation Co wili take charge of tho pauy to the Dalles Oregon, where one of the famous Regulator line ef steamers will t.ke the party down the mighty Columbia river to the mouth ef the Willamette River, then up the river to Portland. ur-gat- Efforts of a determined nature are to n the be made to organise miners in varluos parts of Pennsylvania. This is specially so ln the Pittsburg district. your peddler's -- mmm ern-ici-:- ! e which you at our store recn groceries will always find r w mot giganiic of the go in pri-gIrrigation eouMm.-iit1 the Salt Rite: n ' Ui.cvcll" mil-bu- n : wns,' ta.Tr: i Chief Engineer Stone of liOconuiMvc Monthly Report of Diisases and Deaths who took irom th" . etr in State. Engineers, York subway strikers thei- - "hnrtr and .ho .is is broke the strike says: Report of cnntastoiss and infectious first time ln the history of :h. brother- diseases to the S'. t Board of Health hood that our members have repudiat- for tne month of April, received from ed their agreement with any raiiroad." 153 local hrnlth on-'Pin 2t count im, 67 of whom reported their communiThe Sixteenth Annual Convention of ties tree front uil contagious and inthe United Mine Workers of America fection difcas.s. tq the adopted an amendment making the per capita tax international to ths organization cents per month, per memtwenty-fivbership, Instead of ten cents per month par member, as i: has been heretofore. ii you buy procession r.rr c..t-LIm- r us. We lead call on i by, dem in Anzoua, sn-- c .jcuti Mlii,- r i.i. courae of ha, hern made invn-in it-; i..iary of ti e iii:g atiiie fcetween iluee and .'ur lucb will didihib for This luu only no public kiiid,, liiuse a'l iiy in prla:e owusXmUP, afcily ,.:c.vaing, ol couiw.iheir vaJye. The work whicn the gciirnment will do under this project v. ill dauble and j , and lu luci qua dm pie land valui-aj now practicalmake much land that ly unless worth iroui $iu 10 $100 an arte. Suir.r 2n0.tH)U ucrei will be un.li-these uoii.. and the reservoir to be tunnel by the RiM.u.eve!t dam will be by far the th-i- it die lowest obtainable price, ri arj-ik- .wr.La A Form a Vest Lske Holding Four The ! lith the Procession n a-- Gallons. fur food. er Hi Pub- spends on cBiious for ibe new pubiic jiii. ihui all tii uoik uii huliding iequii-ii'- i it abii',1 be done in San Fi;ir.i ;ri .i. ua.m of ;h-- ' The third anmi:-.- c church associaiin.1 Cor the aJvjno-mt-n- i in Alias: a Union uf the i&ieri-'of labor. an i out on a strike re vnsly. allied wi'h t.v Episcopal organizations in BoK'.on. church, was ier,ml of she isal- Owing lo an aycm-icu- t if.n government to couaidt-a x iienie Of the 2 15.742 Porto Rican of arbitration bv whirls the liilf :v:n-.s who are engaged In icuhural works wish riaj t e rerun.1: ted, a tout, twenty p?r cn: ar cryanizeil. the la slat niry has and fifty per cent taw received ended by the enirliiyc. of the labor movement. When the operator., and miners of Los Angeles unions will soon have the Karra dUtrlrt next meet in joint the finest labor temple in the world. conference to adjust a miring untie. the battle will be one of figures The Railway Switchmen arc semlim; and sia.isiirs. Each Ride i alie,:dy out their revised constitution. preparing an array ol , figures, ami preand tiie rid.1 paring for the ronii-vtD. C. Cummins, general aerntarv of with the best showing of KtasUsirs will the Boiler Makrrs and Lon Ship be In a good position to v. su their Builders' Society of Croat Britain, point. has published a history of that society from August, 1S34 to AugnM, 19'ti. It i reported that the dork workers on the Volga have si ruck in the r In addition to the labor troubles at the in3':!rrp of fillows in the which are at the present time shaking Black Sea rorts. toe city of Chicago to its very foundation, there threatens to be a strike of The Coal Mines Employment Mil, rstabliebed an eight-hounearly 2.5U union bakers. day for hoys under IS ye.tr of aj,e, recently pexed -t of the Cigar the ancond The financial repnin the llri'lRh Makers' International Vni m has been House of Cornmcis hy 190 roles to issued, and shows that tile total sum 131. handled by the officers of the union HEALTH OF UTAH. reached the sum of J2,5S3,KC4.74. jejr a-1--, 1 Ill irm. 22. MAY lai'giat in Our Portland Home street, At Portland the young ladies will stop at a private residence, corner Irving and Twenty-lhlr- d a modern colonial mansion of twenty room conducted by Mrs. S. V. Hill, aa elderly lady whose Klal standing ia among the best families in Portland. She does not conduct a public rooming house, but rente a few rooms to partite, famishing the best of reference. It was a piece of good fortune that permitted the management to secure with Mrs. Hill rooms at one house for ell the young ladies. The lady further has consented to furnieh breakfast tor ths entire party each morning. Tho other meals will be taken on tho fair grounds or wherever otto red aa good rates ae does Mrs hunger overtakes the young ladies The beet hotels ia the city of Portland owa ia cauaed the management to what all will their a home have ladiss but fact the that the young Hill, (elect tho colonial mansion located In the heart of Portlands best residence section. the I'uileu Sial.s. with the j of neatly 4ot Is thiv: limes the capacity of the great Maeauseti reserand voir which is to supi'iy twice tiiai of the famous Croton .Luu of New Yoiks new waterworks. to of buildThe criticism lefeirt-supply ing government works io water to such a sect mu as the Sait River valley wnere the lands are all of going ln private ownership, iiit.-aout onto the desert and reclaiming public lands is one wiilcli will not hold upon second thought. The Suit River valley has been a fainotia tuviion ol the arid weal. Twetiiy years ago il was a vast, flat plain, skirii-- hy mountains reflecting the wonderful colors and tints of the southwest, but imur lulling only the cac:u.. and other desert plums. The Suit River cut i:a center, n sparkling, life giving str um, and private capital under'ook to utilize its waters for irrigation and build Dams were up a great community. const ucted, and built, cnunla were thousands of acres were planted to oranges, lemons, tig., dates, raisins sod wine grapes, altnonda, pomegranates. and all the fruits and flowers of not to mention broad the fluids of emerald nltslfa where fut cattle stood knee Jeep in the luxuriant growth. But the valley is today crippled and sick. The canal system laid out was Imsed upon the heavy annual rainfalls which prevailed ut that time, snd sufficient data had not been gathered to show that the period was one of fat years and that the Iran years of drouth would surely follow. They came, however, over the whole southwest, ns can lie seen by a study of the rainfall charts of thsl region, and the of result has been that thou., antis seres of orchard and farm have returned to aridity. The Old Mnn of the Desert came in sad claimed hack hls own. It is simply a qtirstiun then, in the Salt River valley, and In some other sections, as to whether it is not as good or better policy for Unrle to save the home- - of several thousand pioneers, who are perishing for want uf water, as it is to reclaim new raw lands and put rnw settlrrs upon them. From a Brook to a Torrent The flow of the Salt River valley is variable 1a the extreme. At low water periods It runs something like 100 cubic feet per second. In one great flood the river swept down the valley at the rate of 300,000 cubic fn-- t per The 12Gi annual report of second. the geological survey describes the flood of 1891 sh follow, all of which ijcrcditle capacity gallon. This lul-lio- Urj-to- n The Fair and the Each morning after breakfast the party will leave for tho fair grounds Just ona mile distant from Mrs Hill's residence. The public exhibits art all free after yon get Insida of tho fair grounds But tho 'Trail" la the day time the will have a largo number of exhibits that will coat from 10 certa to M cents each, will seen. be After the exhibHa idark on "Trail after the the shows and exhibit! view the will publio party young ladies, then other ecexea will b and tha "TraM" hava lest nil charms tor the Standard-Examine- r sought The Portland Heights Loop Four houra will bo apent In taking a trolley ride up Portland Haighta to Observatory Paint, whom la In tho foregrounds tho Colanv presented ono of tho moat beautiful scones on earth. Portland and tha exhibition bla and Wl 'lametta Rivera in the distance, and far above the cloud appears famous ML Hood, standing out like a monument reaching to the skies The Willamette Falls A half day will be spent in taking tho Oregon Water Power Railway Company train ip tha Willamette river to tho Great Falls, Oregon City and Conomah Park wbers all klada of amusement may be ladulged la, aueh semi-tropic- as shooting th chutes, etc. , The Great Clam BaRe Several times during tha summer great clam bakea ore given on tho sea shore. Tho Standard-Examine- r young ladies will each be provided with a shingle and os the tide recedes will rush out on tho sand and dig up Thousands of people take part In theae great clam bakea, tha clams which hide an Inch or two ia tha aand. and Mr. A. L. Craig, the genial general passenger agent of tho company that owns tho majeatlo steamer party to ths Pacific Ocssn on ono of tho dayo when a "Potter, has promised to run tha Btandard-Examtne- r ef shoes clam bako ia to taka placo at $4 per head. The digging ef dams, however, only rulno ona pall which each young lady ia expected to provide Everything alee la free. Then for home. Hew do you llko Itf Sounds good. You shall have tt oil. - The Standard-Examine- r paya for oil ths. expenses of the trip wearing apparel and personal whims alono oxcepted. Wo pay cash, hence, everything will be first dais and of the best Si-.- - ran uselessly to the sea for lack of storage: "On February 17. the discharge was 885 cubic feet per second, increasing the next day to 154,000 cubic feet and on the 19th to 276,000 cubic feel. This greater was followed by a second swell, until on the 24th a maximum of 3O0.0O0 cubic feet was reached. The Rooserelt dam 1 to control and store such floods. Aliout CO miles from Phoenix, the Salt River enters a profound canyon, with lofty, precipitous walls and a narrow floor, in which is located the dam site. Above the dam the canyon open into wide valleys, providing the most capacious reservoir in the west. "It would pmlatbly be impossible to find anywhere in the arid region, said Arthur P, Government Engineer Davis, the projector of this magnlfl cent enterprise, "a storage project In which all conditions are as favoralde as in thl one. The capacity of the reservoir in proportion to the dimension of the dam is ettormou and the lands to be watered are of remarkable fertility, with a climate which may be classed as simnt Mr. Davis also made the important discovery I hat material for making lies good Portland cement ami brick He Immediately by the dam site. state that the masonry dam now tin der construction will be absolutely permanent safo, solid snd secure for all ages to come, s part of the everlasting hill of which it will become i Bn integral part. Finding that the price bid by the cement manufacturers would add an increased burden of $500,900 or more of the irrigatto the payment ors, the government constructed an Immense cement mill and will Itself manufacture the 200.990 or more barrels of cement needed tor the dam. A splendid roadway, rivaling the mountain roads of the Inca, has been built from Phoenix to the dam, at. a cost of over a hundred thousand dollar. The coat of the entire construction, threo million and a half iiollars, will he apportioned among the land receiving the water, to be naid bites to the government in ten iinrunl installments, and no water user can hold more than 160 semi-tropi- c. res a voir direr) ly on a succession of experiments, covering epillwny a period of more than twn years, he n diminution of thu water and sUi th allow for the dirchnrge of sediment from the resmoir. of the Lunlabu. This process of evapThe vellry Is already well provid- oration, Inmuumrijr cnntltiued for cened with transportation Ly thn Santa turies, will completely absorb the wau-Fa and th .Souinorn Pacific rail- in the marshes and pools, and decrease roads and the exceptional climatic con- the volume of the great rivers dition insure an curly markrt and However, this need occasion high prices for the various products no nlarm. On thu contrary. It Is beand of agriculture horticulture. lieved that it will aid materially the Tbe'dralnegc ana of the Salt and development of the country. Not pnly its tributarle aggregate some 12,009 will It dry the pestiferous marshes, but IL will also define the bed of thr rivnqunre miles and some of the mountain i teak near tha oiirce the er, whoso courses, becauns of lit contraction of tbi-isky at an altitude of JO.tiJU frrL channel, will thus be rendered simpler and more definite, CENTRAL AFRICAN By tho disappearance of th pools and LAKES DRYING UP. lagoons now to le found In tli vicinity of the rivers, hundreds of thousands of Of hardly loss importance thnn the acres of valuable arable land will he rivers of th Congo are the lakes. Be- reclaimed. And as this soil, formed sides th larger and navigable lake of alluvial deposits, la exceedingly ferare hundreds ef smaller ones, as well tile, ths benefits that will accrue thereas thniiRands of shallow pools along from are Incalculable. Tho famous th couraen of th rivers, as those polders of Holland, and the lowland the upper Luanda. It was that of Egypt near the mouth of tho Nile, keen obcrver M. demonstrate the poKsIhllltlt-- s of such Delcommune, who prognosticated ihnt many of thpse soil. But it will nnt be to lakes will eventually disappear. He con- wall for alow processes of nature, tended that a combination of can kps, Vast acres can In drained by artificial chief among which being th dryness mesna, and this, sine the sun la forof the equatorial climate and the conse- ever assist lug, can be dons without quent evaporation uf the water, will great cost. Th lands no drained will beside gradually bring about, this result. By Imissct-ntheir extraordinary will enter bottom its them-solve- ph-rc- e r , Olds Runabout, fertility, other advantages, not tha least of which is tbei; accessibility. From The fctory of the Congo Frco Stale, by Henry Wellington Week. THE RUBBER PLANT. s. In the fonts! of tho Congo Free State the caoutchouc op rubber-bearinplant grown to a greet height, often exceeding 100s feet. It is commonly altuut six in diameter at lta Imku, nnd shoots upward to the light of tropical through a dense man growth until, falling to find further support, it falls uism the branches of the tallnst trees, and spreads itself over them. There are numerous other plants of the same genus which closely resemble it, but iheir.aap lacks tho qunlitte of true rubber. Fur several yearn pant Abe stale has experimented with these plan', and hi sent spec l metis of them to the antbwritlns at tho botanical gardenH at Brimnel. Kow, Berlin and Paris, for investigation. The ever increasing demand for rub her for use In the industries stimulates the inquiry a to whether or not It is lo mi treat what in now re garden aa fain rubber that it shall servo all the purposes of true rub her." From "Tim Story of the Congo Free State, by Henry Wellington g Iiu-hc- Wack. 4 $700 Olds French Touring Runabout, Thelor $800 It Doss ths Work wPo Olds Touring Car, rhc $!,500 More Value Than Any Car Made Today. Price3 F. tSend Ogden. for Catalogue. O. B. L, pur-pos- t Uu to supplement the r acre. The River to Build Ita Own Dam. An Interesting feature of thn con ruction work is the power canal which has already boon built. The regular flow of ibe river 1ms been dl verid I above the d.nn site, and at that tumble. over the rocks, genpoint erating some 19.090 electrical horse power to lie utilized In building the .am. It will ho required dny and night for drilling, moving great rock, pumping, grinding rook and clinkers, mixing an.1 handling cemct,: and ban tiling machinery. The river is thus living forced to erect It own dsm. After the construction, ibis power, added to large addition?! nower to be extracted from the heavy fall 0f tjie rVl,r Mow the dam die. will be electrically transmitted to lards not covered by the gravity canal for pumping Slid hy thl mean fully 60.000 acres ad llt.'onsl will be watered from the iind.Tgmnnd found supply throughout Hi Fr.t River valley. An ample epillwsy will provide an e flood esciipe tor cxces-.iWater, and a tunnel driven through nolld rrv.k Ocean The Great Then as a sort of farewell trip, the entire party will get aboard the palace ateamer "Potter" of tha Oregon Railway and Navigation Company and will nail down tha Columbia Rivar for a half day to tha Pacific Ocean, where the young ladles will be given aa opportunity to baths In th greatest ocean ea earth and dins at oaa of ths big hetelo In broesea coming from Japan. B2QESB2 j TBEjffaaaga COR. GRANT AND 24th ST. OGDEN. UTAH, We Have the Finest Equipped Repair Chop in the State |