Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, June 27, 1891, Page 11

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

. A PANORAMA OF BUSY LIFE. Pen Sketches of the Industrial Activities in the Great Northwest. ILOPMENT IN ALL DIRECTIONS. PROGRI @ Montana’s Relations to Nebraska and the Necessity ot Railroad N Wyoming’s Mineral Anaconda Property, Its Extent, Value and Purchase Western Connections THE OMAHA DAILY BEE, ATURDAY. JUNE 27, I801-TWELVE PAGE loss productive. But the bulk of tho busi- ness is done by the Anaconda syndicate and tho Boston and Montana Company, Butte and Boston Company, Parott company, Butte Reduetion company, Alice eompary. Lex- ington company, Moulton company, Blue Beard company and Colorado and Montana company. Thoso concorns oporate forty miles, and the output of them for ten years previous to 1550 was $67,502, 250, From esti- mates on the business since and up to_date it is caleulated that the grand total of the out- put is over £126,000,000, of which more than oue-third is profit, Slanghter of Kabbits. The wholesale slanghter of rabbits (hares) in Californio during the past fow years has become quite @ business, ospecially in Kern county. The remarkablo focundity of the genus Lepus makes it necossary, oven impor- Convention--The Great News, grant was decided in the federal district oourt in Helona recently. The case In point Involves grourd near the oity of Helona The decision of Judge Sawyer was to the wffect that to exempt the land from the rail- rond grant, its mineral quality must have been ostabiished at the timo when the line of tho road was fixed. *“Under the decisions of the supremo court,” says Judge Sawyer, "1 am satisfied that, to_oxclude the land from the operation of the grant, its mineral quality must have been known at the time when tho line of the road became definitoly settied aud tho plat thoreof fled in the general land oftice.” This sort of talk, says the Anaconda Stand- ard, bears hard on thoso who want to save the mineral lands to the peoplo of Montana it is not at all in harmony with the letter and tho spirit of the grant to ¥ho Northern Pacific 88 the intelligent layman. construes the lan- come the appropriation of water from the Platte and its tributaries, A large number of sot- tlers came in to make proof and very little trouble has boon exporienced so far in tho | matter, as ali seem disposed to adjust things The Platte s still very high immense quantity of ~snow the mountains during the winter harmoniously. nw|nF to IKO that foll in and spring. The news from (told Hill continues favor- able, thero being no doubt as to tho ledgo fn- dications all promising & good and permanant camp. Tho shafts aro full of water now and as the ownors have no pumps they are unable to work in them. A report came down Friday evening by stage that a big discovery had just been made by F. O, Sawin, formerly of Laramie. Someo samples of tho ore were sent down to Colonel Downey, who oxamined them, saying they differ in appearance from any other ore yet discovered in the camp and look fino. The exact location of the ledgo was not stated, Probably by the high altitude aud the change | of feod. The ownor of the horsos intends to cut out the well ones and rush them to & lower altitude as quiok as possibl Utah, An olectrio railway is bolng builtat Ogden. Logan is shipping large quantitics of hay to Montana, The Sampson mine at Bingham was sold for 65,000, The Rio Grando Wastern is building a road to Tintic, tho great mineral rogion of wost ern Utah A brass ring peddlor has beon fined £50 and sentoncod to thirty days' imprisonment at Logan, Notwithstanding the reports from all over San of a good crop this fall The noxt annual meeting of tho Mothodist Episcopal church of Utah will be held at rasshopper plague, Peto give promise Provo. Il s00n pass fato the hnuds of the Burliags on. The Black Hill has added §34,000,000 (n gold to the world’'s woealth. The annual output is 3,000,000, rack layars on the Hot Springs branch of the B. & M. are laying track at the rato of ouo and a half miles por day. Sioux Falla deniea tho allegation that saloons are running wide opon the 1t 18 the drug stores that supply internal irrigants, Coal has been discoverad on the Timmy farm, six miles novth of Rupid City, Tho veln is four feot thick and eighteen feot under grouna. T'ho directors of tho Haruoy Peak tin eom- pany have decided to erect a concontrating at Hill City, with a daily capacity of Work' will bo commenced immoai- T'ho total product of the procions metals of the Black Hills for the year ling 1851, Aceol tor 1o tho lutoly published report of tho dir of tho miut, dward C. Locch, wias approxi- atoly &1,278,000—gold, &,112,000; silver, 51,00, guage of the grant, but ‘Mo good can from quarreiing with the court, and there is nothing left to do except¥o wait for the judi- mont which the supremoeourt of the United States will render. “Honanzas in the Black Hills." S0 it hias boeen voted at Ogden, Six Mormous have taken the vlaco of a like number of geutiles in the Salt Lake city council. Ono of the retiving members was Worden P, Noble, a prominent stockman [ A and capitalist. Park City 1s going to havea baby show, and will give to tho handsomest baby-n baby carriage, to the largest one a silver sot, and'to tho smallest a silver cup. None over two years old will b allowed to compete Tho grasshoppers are very thick in the western part of Benjamin aid Lake Shore. The farmers have destroyed a great many of Aty A them by taking a harrow and harrowing ke A Lortianc them to a center. Thoy would then scat- [ Surveys have beon comploted for tho rail: ter hay or straw over them and set the wholo | T0d from Goble to Astoiia, a distanco of on fire. fifty-six milos Che coming of the Rfo Grande Western from the east will increaso tho interost in and valuo of the immense iron dvposits enst of Jureka and Tintie district, ‘There 13 no such thing ns a suceossful contradiction of tho us- sortion that within the limits of Tintic areto be found tho most extousive fron doposits in Utah, if not in the eutiry west. Yarmers in Utah valloy who have a portion of their land to sugar beets aro con- gratulating themselves with the fine appear 1co of the crop and the almost cortain re. sult of being one of the best paying products they can raiso. Samples of tho beets, which have been sent to Salt Lake City from tho Lebi bench, show that the yield will be as but it {s believed to be closer to the rango than any other claim. Tho ledgo s said to bo a big ono and has beon traced far enough for two or threo claims. Everything points to a large deposit of mineral, Colonel Downey saw James Sterrill, tho surveyor, who safd that ho and his two'sons have asaw mill that thoy are going to move ative, to rid the country of them, and to this ous means uro employed, the most suc- cessful of which is to form a large company basing surpass in extent and quality tho fam. | A0d round them up and corral the mmuch tho od fields of Pennsyivania, samo as cowboys and stockmen gather in A moro inviting fleld m»mv{}v' al and energy | cattie during the spring of each year. Dt wiis:tho - conolas¥l: arrived ab by & does not exist in the west. To make known | Tho siaughter of the rabbi thasn cold facts nd form b pormanent orgrie | oo o SmuRHtor of tho rabbits after thoy 4to f yaporter yesterday aftor ‘8 bout with Major [ into tho camp at once. Tom ityan, who al- ization for tho public good, s the chief duty | COrrated s brutal in the extromo. The round- |y, 1 Sinimons of Rapid City at the Paxton. | ready has a saw mill somo eight or ton miles I " v ers climb into the corral and with clubs beat | v . o | away from the cs will leave his mill on of tho coming miniug convention, Tharough | ¢o terrified animals to death, The rabbits [ Tz Brm expert oxpiorsd the oldutmer's | JUCR O LG KRR SNER JIIVE W B0 04 devel Lol the stata's resources dopend | 4o not undertake to run away from their pur- | mineralogical laboratory of kuowledge feom | .o RTEEIRG, (et b WEEPEEG ERCE | the “grass roots to badrock,” from which he scemed to instinctively understand was ro- | papnad out, concentrated and reduced many | got ready to use it r the way toward se vod Tt o made clear, measures will bo takeu to in- ossontials, - [t will have | S6rved for thom. Hundrods of them skulk | ., 00t of bullion, — sure the mutually beueficial resuits. | 1 o grand work for Wyoming and | 3t 40 €round under the vory feob of trole 0% | i "ie an acknowlodged fact,” said the A Fish story. Montana is essentinily # stock country. It | for the industrial development of tho west. | bodies ana crouching as closo to the carth as | major, “thata hundred square miles of tue | Ex-Fish Commissioner Miller is known to l;’nm homo ur’mn rases nynrlllw:"'fl:;ll;[",l)\: G ty. thoy posaibly could, n tho confusion inel- | Bluck Hills contains o greator vaviety and | b unlt-wf the .;'m-}t .\klllh;l‘ anglers f tho of dry atmosphere, good water and healthy is for | dent to the wholesale slaughter many om | o onsity et St okt country, says the Laramie Boomerang. Sun- cllmnylucumhlmr\!n make it without doubt tho [ 4o oo AR the arent \mw'm“:_""“f are wounded, and the piteous cries of theso (l'l“_'_“"-‘ “1! ing ":""T‘"_‘ A ‘:“"l“l“‘“,""y Ui ho aaNAEaAE 00 000, TRIE teoR T TrO ! the et A1 stison s L o reat / Prob- | injured, helbless and ‘dying creatures is | other equal aras on the face of tho globe. foybas 20, v b est section for cattle, horso anc e ey | Crty--minesund mills—in Butto and Auacon- | touching. Some of them aro helpless with IME BONANZAS. atchery and took them out to restock Hut sodng in the world. These facts aro best | g, afontana, The Rothschilds are said to be | broken spine or shatterod legs,and thers thoy The Homestake mine, ho continued, has | ton's round lake. While out thero ho cast {:ru\'wl by the existence at prosont on vn," e purcliasors and $25,00,000 tho price. To | 14y, momning and writhing uitil dispateied | poatan tho rocord of il gold minos | Ms 1ine into the lake and succeedod in book anges of tho state of the large number of 0st people the fizures seem enormo by the oxecutioners. 5 R o ing a four-pound trout. [t measured twenty- y,r\(;.mu)‘-mnv.. ),000 horses and nearly two :',:,L‘u'.‘,l‘v,p,‘,y_l,,»l:fi:.-ll ":f:‘\-m zrll:lnle]yln:"'fl;:.' After a recent slaughter all the rabbits :_"‘Imm“‘","“" l"«r::l‘“.“"‘_‘“r ““‘I‘l* di‘::"“_w:" bl longth, Besides this, Mr, snd o half million shoop, With tho BUSINGSs | Anucondaecompany has 5,000,000 1nvested in on May 25 last its 154th consecutive monthly | Miller hooked two splendid carp, weighing dividend, covering u period of nearly thir- | four and two pounds. = He kept these alive, were counted and stacked. An actual count L revealed 1,500 dead rabbits, besides those that confessdly in its infancy. I)nl BEAVBYB0N:. (171G NTRaILaMs Wy A NAGoRAR: o 0 Pt talns 146,000 square miles or nearly twice as | | B e PRy 7 ik cneating | ANd they aro now in the aquarium a i 1 of the kind in the world. toon years without n -siip, oggregating | WO IREX 358 Row ity RAREEA AL VG £,705,750 to its shareholders, which repro- the largest plant | were killed in tho field, which must have 1t is situated noar | - between 200 and 300, . oh land as Nobraska. ‘The castorn half is | yp"yo o : id by S Irives aro now beiug given wookly, enc mmllln land as N ':uln ; IN W Tea the town of that name, founded by the com- [ ¢ on o0y 00" 8 KO L G ehtered round pond stceked by Commissioner O O A ohioh wiiilo 1l | Pany, twenty-ive milcs trom Butte, and the | overy 'week by the samo procsss in that [ sented the net profit. It had in tho mean- | Gramm five vears ago. — Ho also states that D o el #00d ranwe for stock. | cauipmentis o marvel of mechanical com- | neighbortond. Aftor each drive tho ranch- | timo yiolded more than doublo that sum, | the Hutton"long pond is apparently alive [ hoqyy'ag in'any placo whord they have beon T o B i Morhern Dacific | Pietenoss. ‘There are two smeltors, one buily | men who are most beuefited by the destruct: | o wont for oxpenses, principally tabor | With bass, as he saw them jumping two feet | o ‘tor this purposo. Y IO of 1ron, the other of wood, about a quarter of A ATk e praont Showing tn. | bove the' water the anday,- J. B, Reed, L R down o } leaton n porlad 'of stitl "graater. brosperity | however, hooked th fish ‘of the Montana. PAci of the Colambin Hiver up 10 Juna 1 s Tt A Gaan s mohntulnaTaid Hore ion of the posts spread a froo collation, of :Il:l»:dl“v.\m'f.'.r' oS iy ilo apart, and built on theside of a bill. A | which the compan ko, after which ) it o X oAt e it railroad runs on the crest of the hill, from 5 season, Tt was a trout woighing four pounds 5 N g forjtu et and twolve ounces and was taken from the | A $35,000 bridge is being built at Groat | | ht i 3 dates are fix drive. ain ranges of Montana are not as_in : B o oresipition. rocky for. | Which the orois duniped Ushers akilled 1w Kern county - S R tot U3 hoperly bo_ calld | o1 the top floor. m of water is [ during the past two months more than 10,000 Larawie river. alls, R O e ot o atr avorago | carried along the crest to tho mills, and it | juck rabbits, und they are so troublesomo s Helonw's 400 haye decided to build a §60,000 Ot tonatnd feot lower than further | PAsses with tho ora through successive floors, | still in some localities that the ranchmen A Well Posted Novice. club house. Bouth. swhilo the shapo is that of & gradual | Washing and separating tho minoral. The | employ mon by the month to hunt and oxter- A miner named Wolf who lives asortof a [ Horselifter Wyman SUSERUVEY UG eitire BUT{anei biitollyTee mills employ over two thousand men and | minate them with guns and dox hermit lifo at the minos near Atlantic in | labors in Helena’s jail. ‘erod with Inxuriant natural grasses, Con- | have a capacity of 5,000 tons a day. T Wyoming, and who for years had been spend- | Placer mining is taking ronewed acti trary to general impressions, n wagon ean he mines of tho company. comprise the ARMushoyMashed, B RN et ts in_devouring Black- | in the Flint Creek valley this season. oo B L moat iy motntain in | Anacouda, tho St. Lawrence, the Muuntain | Mrs. Rose Perkins runs a notion store In i his loisure woments in devouring Blac e i ead i IRe thar four. O e B v of | Con., Modoc, High Ore, Walke-Up-Jim, and | g, M SHSs eavaanazt " stone, took it into his head o few years ago (b il B0 g 1L ontana. With tho vory bost quality of | G0y Modoe, High Oco, Wake Upim, a0d | Butto, Mont. Sho is bravo aud buxom, ara fo apply for admission to the bar. Judge | Le0Nth annivocsary procession of the Miners i olo supply, whether green in > % productive iitles, Ana- | e evora 3 AT AT y d . Jud # he spring v‘r SUIIDETOL "‘.(‘“'; Il readily be | Butte. Both mines are opened to a depth of fa which is not overlooked by floating tate e el el W. A. Clarke, one of Butt. tho ground for winter o i gty at his | 1:000 and 1,000 feot, respectively. At inter- | mashers. Rocoutly a drummer for a Now e S et bator b Lo rantdia FOWaFIGE 8110001 owieh been run, exposing bodies of ore varying in | yo o = Hiinssiie AT o4 ked the cor Ll ekl ticll EVERY FAVORAILE CONDITION width from forty to one hundrod feet, und | ¥ins' place for tho purpose of disposing of a ! of the first questions asked the invocent | "o gsiessed valuation of Silver Bow th 0 ¢, Thor o y fow wagon loads of buttons. While stroling [ reached there wouid be a_continuous output [ looking Wolf was: “What would bo tho | < 4 L rhud hat nature van supply, There 15 one element wi 1 i county, including Butte, is $15,000,000. au in: of tho metal. Theso winos would give em- | first thing you would do, Mr. Wolr, i s eliont. | Gl 5000 over Tnst yo sought your _advice” “Well," replied tho =lhitdod) i future lord chief justico after a moment’ A car load of ore shipped from the Benton hesitation, “if I was governed entirely by ono olom rrying from 10 to 40 per cent coppet and ; f wh ol mbsent from his busincse, the lack of which | much native silver. Tho coppor occurs as a | about tho storo he approached oue of thq ho v ines vo e s soveroly folt, namely corn, The thorough- Drotty clorks, swith whom ho bogan to make | Ployment to 10,000 minors, aud HillCity, in 3 ) >onnington county, the center of the tin d dRLEor group of mines in tho Neihart district the the actions of other attorueys as_exemplified | other day netted the owr by the members of this committoe, about the i horou sulbhide, T places it s rieh enough, 1o pay bred (which in’ effect they all are) shorthorn | for reduction in a crude state, much of it T TN oy AT [ ston ot of d SeeE JaRilio bRON kY LR £o0HIWIEN EONILHO || baInEIconneri FIah HiIA Ass 3 Lig: LFORLIB) D T} | nre L excted IngLy; numorous fon gshory turbance, was dostined to become the largest nutritious grass, but his boef when ready fo quaintance. The lady paid no particular at- | mining camp in the wostern country. 3 = .« s tention to him, and finally the fellow became BITUMINOUS COAL, b 1 is a section of country down in_Mis- first thing I would do would be to hold my county which is going to add, in the client up.” He was admitted next few vears, hundreds of thousands of phur, gypsum, bismuth, graphite, asbestos and fire-clay abound, while the petrolenm Montana's Appeal to Nebraska. Herexa, Mowt, June 24 @enco of Tur Ber.| Tt having b Lortuno duving the past three weeks to travel ovor much that constitutes the state of Mon- tana I fool o desiro to wunicate to my friends in Nebraska the improssions gained, 0 far as they may rel tho iutorests of ;ny own state, and in the hopo that tbo ad- vantages of closer communication boiug |Correspon- on my good Dakota corrospondont, writing abous ator Farwoll's rain_thoory, says: “Wa loded about one hundrod pounds of dyna- mite & wook or ten days wgo, and it hins beon raining ever since. Now tho question with us is How to stop it. 1f the senator has any patent stopper we should like to know it." o 10 Oregon. A distilling plant costing $100,000 is undor proves Extonsive building oporations hava been stimulated by tho consolidation of Portlsnd and its suburbs. Chiof Peo of the Umatillas fs not in favor n!‘ allotting lands to the I[ndians undoer tho February act, for the reason that 1t gives to women as well as their lords eighty acres each, while the Slater bill, which he favors, planted | Bives the head of the familios 160 acres and the womon none, “Women's rights no £00d,” is the torsely exprossed opinion of tho chief, Rogzarding the Salmon says: The slack catch continues, Not alona on the Lower Columbin is there a searcity of fish reported, but also in tho Middle Colum- bia. The tish wheels of tho Cascades have had no better luck than the seins farther down or the mill nots and traps in this vicin. W Anaconda Proy There appears to ba a substantial b p tho _Astorian THE TIN. Tho tin mines of the Hills would take rank as one of tho most valuable mineral discov- eries of modern times. Aftor fiv s of exploration, development and acquisition of property, in which hundreds of thousands of tons of ore nad been placod ou the dumps, and moro than £3,000,000 expended, tho Har- noy Peak company bas let contracts for the erection of large reduction works, which meant that Black Hills tin was finally to be placed on the market. The deliboratd, con- sorvative aud substantial oporatious of the Harney Peak company in tho past bo regarded as a certain guarantee that when the point of production had been Nevada, The weekly output of the Comstock min avarages $140,000 Fifty thousand young trout have boon o v | posited in tho Carson river, F'rom 200 to 500 po.nds of fish are boing caught dwmly in Indopendenco lake, near Truckee, is resting from his Tho rogents of the stato university have let the contract for constructing tho labora- tory building to L J. Walker for £5,325, Samples of marble from ledges near Zirn show colors of pure white, gray, bluo and mottled. ‘There are solid blocks of the mar- ble from ten to fifteen feot square lying on the surface. The world's fair commissionors of Nevada would like to mako a creditablo represontas tion of Nevadu's resources at Chicago, but as the legislature mada no appropriation for this work they aro unanle to do enythimg toward guthering aud making an exhil The old minfng eamp nround Austin is en joying a revival. All of tho Austin mines Aro true fissure veins, very small in size, in mayy instances not more than a foot thicl, but'the ore thev produco is rich and shipt ments that will run from 200 to 1,000 ounces are notat all uncommon, s millionaires, tha capturo of No clue per cent of the pure metal. = The concentrat- the market lacks that tendernoss and flavor | ing grades of ore, however, which constitute H which cht erizes the corn fed product of more bold and made a remark that grated “Another wondezful discovory,” caid M. rather harshly on her delicate ours. Simmons, “and of searcely loss’ importance the great bulk of the Anaconda reserves, tho Nevraska prairics. 17 the Montana stock 1 \ f 1 “Tho lady satd nothing at tho timo and_the | 1 the whole northwost, was the Newcastlo assay from 10 to 20 per cent. Iach level of betoro consumption, could havo the benefit of | the Auaconda mmo has the appearauco of a acourse of feeding on corn which is cheap | vast covered forest with the tops of tho trees | traveling man soon left the store, but after | coal mines on the western border of the the added value of the carcass would be cou- | cutoff. Each day from twenty to thirty | hisdeparturo she informed Mrs. Perkins of | hills in Wyoming. These were the first R ;iderabl thousand feet of timber is sent down tho | What had transpived. Mrs. Perkins wi kreat bituminous coal fields found in the P' And right here comes shafts to support the vast spaces from which | dignant and mado up her mind that if the | yorthwest which would produce coke equal braska. the ore is extract®d. Tha Anaconda s illu- | fellow returned to the house sho would | {5 the Pennsylvania articlo. This character Itis said that this year there will be | minated by electricity and & large force of | thrash him. Mrs. Perkins is quite a large | of fucl was indispensable in the reduction of shipped to market from Montana 200,000 fat | men is employed in~ its vast caverns, the | Woman and will fight at the drop of the hat | gres, Connellsville coko had been traus- cattle, which are handled by the Northern | number re ng sometimes five hundred [ if she has occasion to do so, nationality, size, | ported to the Hills at 322 per ton laia down Pacific and Great Northern railroads. Those | each mine. It is estimated that apove the | strength or religion cutting no figure with | 4y the mine. Newcastle coke,he was informed, two systems run parallel at some distance { 1,000-foot lgvel enough oro is in sight and | her if the cause be just. So, when Mr. | would be supplicd at a cost of $5.00, apart with their natural shipping point at | availablo for extraction to insure a product | Masher returned to the store an hour or two | whicn would admit of the reduction of ~vast Chicago, hience that city without competition | of 1,000 tons a day for ten years, later, with his mustache waxed and his hair | guantities of the low grade refractory ores of secures tho trado of this entire count The wages paid by the company in both a surprise in the shapo of u thumping | tne Hitls heretofore unprofitable. Thero was 1 have been much impressed with the fact | miils and mines aggregated $250,000 a month. | @waited him. Roso was behind the counter | 5w being mined and shipped from the Ney that if rail connection could be had dircct | 1u the process of smelting when the Anaconda | When he entered, but she dropped everything tle mines 1,100 tons of coal per day and with the interior of Nebraska an enormous | was ruuning it used 400 tons of coal daily, | and came forth with an umbreila in one hand [ gyens were being erected for the extensive trade would spring up with great reciprocal | and 700 tons of salt wero. consumed every | and a rawhide in tho other aud began to bom- | production of coke. Thoe mines were extons- advantages. The Montana cattle would go | thirty days by all the mills, The works | bard the man in a manner that made his hair | {vgand practically inexhaustiblo and would to Nobraska to bo topped off with corn, aud | were said to bo paying millions a_year, Tho | curl. After receiving a few cuts with tho | outa most important figure in the develop- thon reach a market at Omaha, while for r whip aud scveral smashes with the umbrella, | ment of the northwest for gencrations to the fellow ran out at the door and at last ac | eome. This great fuel supply would bo a mines are inexhaustible, and there oro turn loads tho cars could carry the hog pro- | enough in site to keep the mines runuing for duct, corn, poultry, oggs and dairy goods so counts had not again shown up. Primo factor, in tho rodugtion of tin and the = great silver deposits of the Hills and in con- { ; forty yoars. Tho main velu is 100 foet thick, argély consumed ' in tho rapidly growing | and its extent cannot be estimated. > T pities and minlag camvs of Montana. At ST A ~ Consolidated Portland. noction with the vast deposits of iron ono's present the only railroad from the south ! A briof dispatch recently announced that | yind -was staggered in contemplating the Feuching Montana is tho Utah Northern | Though attracting less popular attention, | 8t special loction tho pooplo of Portland, | manutacturing and inuustial possibilities of Draueh of the Union Pacifie whieh termi- | ¢ e €0 TS LI G0 G ey | and Albina, Oregon, had decided to unito tho [ tho future for that region. mates at Butto City, with track vights over i eTae L 2 il TR SnEHasAURRS. Tho Montana Central to Helena. This lino | in Montana has been no less remarkable than | tbree municipalities undor a single city 3 iR RE S, ki e > i i T government. This is an event of more im- These, said the speakor, were some of the but deficiently answers the purpose of agri- | the development of its mines. Though the Ao T aRE oty . bortanco than this treatment would indicate, | Pheuominally great produgtions of that won- ot | derful rogion. “Phere were hundreds of lesser mining operations being prosecuted, many of cultural exchinges as its traflc is lars settler bas beon comiug in and appropriating poade up of coul and ores used in the siel- | pudreds of acres to settiement aud agricul- | for it advances Portland from the sixty-first to tho forty-first city in the United States, to | them successfully, and the late discoveries of galena oros in_connection with tho coal sup- . © mining regions which it travorses persianshalining aalodewnlgniit ray ture, the number of sheep upon our ranges say nothing of the probable effect upon its 0 3 ply gave a great impetus to mining and met- Communication is demauded in a line further e ¥, gast, and in_respect to focation the service | bas constantly increased, until the resuluing | 57 nothing ¢ i zan best be met by the B. & M. railroud now | income has bocomo one of the most marked | future development. ! X 2 \ Ha Sy A Bl s allurgical operations. Oustias of the metals g 1ts Black Hills extension at Merino, | sources of wealth in the now state. The £ ll::::ls:l;:fxllhv‘\)nl:leo];lu:\:llmliu:)}u:tl‘l:;e“glxnln S T T G O T e ot pass st soss cgon 1 A S iiighdd material such as building and paving stone, islaturo, authorizing tho voters of whe | MAIOTALERCER 18 BUICUE TG BAVIOE SOS, n odslorn Wyoming, From this point to 3 h ol depender ow days ago gave Tolona about four Indred miles of construc- [ HO1OW tudependent & fow dave ago kavo | | MOTIBION Ly Neaubdlio Quen i s Ject gathored from the torritorial and stato | {re0 tows to docide the question of consoli- | oo, ‘to'supply the surrounding states for all A TRADE ENORMOUSLY PROFITABLE archives, It appears that certain old-tim ito Ity iF that shoald bodetormined upan. | ime. ~ Railroads, new mineral discoverics 1o tho road as well as its patrons. The lino | are authority for tho statement that the first | i xvr':\' lona'for the Subssyuent el _‘“m’l' ot | and developments, increased —production, tho ol VoW Bt G oy e prosperity aud enterprise of “the peopie all un entivoly now sot of ofticers to succeed to |}, " combinod to inaugurato n tho Black pf this extension, as rumor locates it, strikes | sheep were brought into Montana during the o Northern Pacific at Billings and cros of 1867 and_plac o eanch i 3 the Northern Pacifio at Billings and crossing | fall of 1867 and placed upon a ranch in the | i CALEEY BEWSCE 00 BIRARS K0, SUCCERE 10 Hills the greatest substantial prosperity and administered the affairs of tho threo separato | i (08 BRIEEY A0S TS BRETE TG follows tha Musscishell river i u wastorly | Prickly Pear valley, The territorial audit- 0urse to tho proposed terminus at Helena. | or's report for 1368 gives the number of sheep 2 LR IOIER 9L 3 This would put it in the heartof tho best | in the then nino countios as 1,753, with an | Jpunicipalities. =~ This election took “place | yorign in tho uorthwost, Al th eloments, cattlo region and at Helena as a distributing | assessod valuation of #),685.50. Tho next [ ’\”;mvh'“' o o Toan s G LA T h nature and man, said the major, seemed to point be able to supply all the urban commu- | ten years wo bR B IR ARSI (AL ],’””‘m]‘““d"\‘l‘:’,{l:‘; conspive at this time to develop this tavored abion:afi Bortiand.BnsliRopslang Alowa | gooion, There was an opening for capital as 02442 within corporato limits, and of } G "lubor, for enterprising men and women, required for the sheep men to hitios of the state. [t seems scarcely possi- | gain from experience the methods insuring Dblo that & system with such abundanco of 8 5 their immediato suourbs 6,815, so that the | & hotrn 1 3.0, g e | for investment in manufuctories and indu= consolidatod city numoers nearly an even | fof W¥Estnent succoss, and then the figures tell a story of resources would long rest idle in the faco of | growth’ which needs no embellishment of Fioh possibilities in the way of traftic, aud to R i Eumbor entlyp auiaven % side of tho Willizmette river, and Bast Port- AGRICULTURE, words: overcome any disposition this way should be NUMBHR OF SIEEP IN MONTANA. Fhason ofi“everytrado organization in No- land and Albiua on tho east. They ave con- | The Hills, continued Mr. Simmons, was o of tt Joth | > i nectea by several ferry lines, toll bridges | not exclusively a mining country, but that > ine, co | Shones and Avaphoes join hands in tho danco Omaha particularly nas o great stake, and ool by_assarelonylines rolli srdgesy| nor oxgluay 9, mining countey, bub that [ BSE eiGiey ho Poorman mine, Burk, is soon to have | WS ICH Yhinko or four days. Kverybody It is safo 1o say that no extension that could Y usicRes.c dnd.cundes, tha inow jiLhab iho plaink.an ) 4 JULLILH Famrltaaady i the lurgest electric plaut used for mining in s sufo tosay that no 13| Ay coult charter the eity will Bulld n wagg T d south contained s fino f g The Stinkingwater rogion in the northern e 11 bOLEloM is decked out in his finest war paiit and bo made would solargely stimulate its live cnax YaARIRUL Chaiyagoniand fooy ] [andamouthiicontainod faskno sy mingiand n tho world. T'wo 22i-horse power generators 4 i so lare 0 its bridgo which is to be free, and this will huyo | grazing lands as any in tho west, Much | partof Fremont country is attracting tho | tho work AL feathers. Thore is a sham battle, grand tock luterest, jobbiug trade and manufac- ELA 3 his will hayo | grazing o Much o (I3dison’s patents), which will bo run by o g tures. i the effect of suppressing tho tolls | attention was being paid to the breeding of | attention of miners. ator whools, will Send tho current ono. mily | Fushes aro made with cavalry charges and L3 on tho existing bridges. The separato school, | horses, sheep and “cattle. I that alti- | A massive steel bridge is taking the placo | 1" \ho mine, whoro an eighty-horso powor | JABCIIE itt which the wonien participate police, waterand fire systoms will be consol- | tuc the nutritious native grusses | of the wooden trestle spanning the nous | motor will drive the machinery. 5 After all the fuss is over, then comes a big idated under single administrations, and tho | cured on the stem and furnished excellont | chasm of Dale creek, O et vo full of pros. | foaste L'can look frowm “iny opon window, political existence of tho two minor towns | grazing for stock the year uround. The Rap ‘The Consolidated coal has securer ho Seven Devils district 18 full of pros- | niow, and see, two miles distant, this whola i ‘ ho Consolidated conl company has secured | 1ociors, They are the most ambitious stake I will be merged with that of the city of | id City land district, embracing the six coun- | a loan of 00,000 to prosecute development | | i alko | camp of Indians. I should say there must bo Portland. ties constituting the Black Hills proper and | of the Hams' Fork mines drivers '\"‘I““_"“‘}""‘;]‘”']',"““‘1" takon to bro- | at loast o thousand of tho ‘peoplo, ludging flocks e several unorganized counties, contained sev- r 4 spect any part of - the Pacific const. Viewed | from the number of the 1o fore thera ¥ S : Ono Dr. Pecl, a tenderfoot or fr B L o afl atalina AR bt Death Valley Exploration. Fiillion neros of UNADDEODIALOd Innds, | xSk, 10cke b tondortoot minister, from | from auy poiut, o 1o of stakes may bo ob- | aro troops of Tudians eallopine about with th railroad communication wo have been | Dr. C. Hart Merviam, oraithologist of tho | well watered by innumerable perennial | GU8 L TOlchy topics, and was hunted ont of | s o oo GoUNLEY 18 very | their pretty bright-colored Navajo blankots sending larger invoices of mutton to castern | department of agriculture, in charge of tho | streams Howing from tho mountans. This | §oeo™ 7 i b 4 rugged and Qiftou’s w0 prospack, | Tharo 18 o | thrown about . thom; thore 'a. crowd markets, and the quality of wool gr Doath Valloy expadition, reached Kellor, | 18nd had no cqual for grazing. It was a rieh | W™ o possibility of procuring a claim at any acces- [ of women ana enildron, 'then a group of co constantly being given more and mor 7 \ : ) alluvial soil and produced first-class wheat Tom Waggoner, a T ncher located sible point without in ring with some one | poys in broad-brimmed sombroros, mounted tion. Hore is » ereat wdustry which Nev,, from Utab, whore ho had gone to do- [ 24" Voetable products and all cereats | Miles southwest of Newcastle, aud a who has made a prior location e R N U T e B e to mark oven more wonderfully the destiny | termine the range of certain mammals and yraska except corn—the country | 10Us rounderof other people’s horses, IR is picturesque from beginning to end. It is of Montana. Go into the business and bank birds. His trip was a great success, moro | was not favored with thesultry weather now | SUrung p by lynchers recently a n 5 the county fair and tbe state fair, all com: ing houses of our cities, and you will find not | peing accomplished thun was anticipated. Ho svailing in the great corn belt, hence it was The Wyomireg oil and gas company has A thirtcen-pound trout was caught in Bear d for the mes here o few men whose first, thousands camo from | gooired somo raro specimens of mammals, ton corn. Mr, Simmons recommends | been orginized at Green River. Jolin W, | Vulloy I San Bernardino county, clow us, two milos, i3 the great hot the profits ofwool growing. The people of i e R h intey in the highest terms to those in 3 Malloy, Joseph Payne, T J, Railroad oficials now estimate the potato [ springs, 500 fect in diameter and 30 feot doen s stato will do woll in- rendoring all cn. | Somo ot which aro almost unknown. At | goureh of farms not only bocause of tho 5. Dodge are the trustees, crop of southern California at the large total | in certain places. A great column of steam couragement to an industry which has been | Pigeon soring some fifty specimens of a very | excellent quality of the land, but for the Y. Cowhick, who recently diea of 22,500 carlonds, i be seen rising 100 foet in the air early in s0 conspicious a factor in the makivg of its | rare mouse were taken. This peculinr Itis proposed to build an electric railway | the morning, and iv is worth coming all the species was almost unknown, but one imper- fect spacimen taken about forty years ago further reason that the farmer is insured a | Cho left an estate valued at 00,000, eseut prosperity first-class home market for bis products in the | The Peunsylvania syndicate have struck | from Sants Barbara tbrough Monticello to | Wy from Omaba to geta bath in the clear, ] the ot Spring beautiful not water. In the center of thé boing known to exist. mines. well of cruds petroleum on oty b L " Caspe It is said that the abundanco of monster | 11" 50 SHEEE YOI RS Dr. Moveiam and party will soon start for Bartlott Richards of Chadron, has pur- | turtles at Magdalena bay, lower Califor ]‘M‘l B A (iR L Ay s i | RS 118 lorre Novhda. HOGnthls. - ORa! satiy chased the Anglo-American cattlo herds and | has induced a company 1o go into the busit [ Ftb8 cOe I EPRE WEKS B vl ek (o Wil mike tho tecont Lhrough Walkor pie.on | the gentioman, must of necessity have a me- | property. Thiore ure about 25,000 head of | ness of caning the extracts for importation, | L Union Pavitic to Landor, the protty the eastern slopo, while tho doctor and | tropolis, aud ho declared the Hills were not | cattle in the deat, a lot of grazing lands and Captain B. . Myer, a 400 and a veteran | journey from Ra another party will pass around to Visalio and | lacking in this respect, and that Rapid City | the sheds at Oelrichs. RN R A BT TP [ st e A e R R g0 up from there. The heavy snow will pro- | Was the favored spot.' This embryo capital | Char cabin at Marip He was | ronch Lander you aro in God’s country, ¢ Vent active work in the high altitudes for | Was described as 4 substantial town of brick, | ¢ cleity yoars ¢ 1 a son of the most_beautiful mountain districts in time. There will be temporary signal | Stone and mortar, with exceilent waterworks, ghter in the the world, The lofty mountains ure covored ice stations established on the mountains | £88 and electric light systems, horse bat the | with timber and frequented v vy kind in one or two places to determine tho tem- | motor line, and possessing allof the quali th of carrying on the municil govern camo, from tho g perature and assist 1o seouring altitudes by | capitol, entorprise and push to keep it to th o W L'rancisco dur y yoar otty black fox s flow 1 barometric observations, The parties ox- peet o be in the Sierras until October, dollars to Montana’s mineral output. There will be a largor output from the placers in Moutaua this year than thero has been the past threo combined. Already tho returns at the Helena assay office aro away ahead of last ye At tho request of Governor Thomas of Utah Governor Toolo of Montana has ap- pointed a delegation of thirty Montanians to atteud the arid land convention which is to meet in Sait Lake September 15, There will probably be quite a stampedo from some sections of Montana to the Seven Devils, Copper couuty, Idaho, this year. A Helena syndicate has fnvestei about $1,000, 000 over there and from reports have a big i - thing. The Great Templ There is a great deal of excitement just now The capstones are in place on the two east- | in northern Montana over tho discovery of ern pinnacles of the great Salt Lako temple, | immense deposits of iron ore near the littlc flags are flying from them, and we presume, ":(\)\':; 't_'|' t' 5‘r“.“'u !. m-\;;"“':‘jl‘ggl\‘\" 'I{’"‘::; r;‘lll:(: says tho Salt Lake Tribune. the work on | 40 nlmlnvu-xe« 80 !m" cover about twelve that portion of the structure is about com- | square miles. pleted. For ocight and thirty years that work has been going on, and “when the ng shall be taken down and the windows put in, the tomple will stand a beautiful symbol of the patience, persistence and discipline of the Mormon people. 1 Fodder. The last congress appropriated 375,000 for laud survoys for the fiscai year beginning July 1next. The apportionments have been made by the interior department today as follows: California, $10,0003 Orezon, $20,000% Washington, $65,000; Montana, 30,000, and Nevada nothing. The secrotary of war has made allotments of money toYhe various states and ter: for arming and equippimg militia on entation in ; Idaho, ¥ £2,764; Washington, §2 £2,000. 'The funds will be available July 1. the interest of Ne- Washington. Tacoma’s new directory contains names. Sunday closing s Seattle, Seattle’s 225,000, 15,033 rigidly enforced in delinquent taxes amount to n Pacific has scoured terminal ttlo. ieval Russell A, Algor of Michigan is rustieating on the sound. “The new Northern Pacific hospital at Ta- coma will accommodate 100 patients. The Northern Pacific has decided to erect av Tacoma coal bunicers costing &0,000. Pierce county’s funding bonds, amounting to $200,000, brought a premium of £65,000), Bight hundved ncres of fine farming land was sold near Pullman last week for &24,000. The courts have decided against the re- moval of the agricultural college from Yae kima to 1’ullmau. e Wool Industry in Montana. 1daho. A fifteen-foot vein of coal has been struck near Montpelior. The Nez Perce Tndian boys defeated the Lewiston select n in a game of base ball by a score of 16 to A syndicate of Boston capitalists offerod 25,000 for the hot springs property at ley. The owner wantod $150,000. It is stated that the recent cold rains have Killed great numbers of the young grasshop- pers recently hatchod on Camas prairio, A large number of the mmes of Owyheo county are working, ana the output for thi: year will bo mucn larger than for many yea Wyoming. Frequent copious rains insure a splendid crop. The rush to the Gold Hill camp is growing daily. Bob Taylor is shearing 6,000 by near Rawlins, Tho Hob Nl baso ball club of Laramio has been spiked. A half interest in two ranches on tho Big BEAUTIES OF WASHAKIE, How They Appear When Beheld for the First Tin Forr Wasnaxie, Wyo., June 16.—[Special Corresponaence of Wi Ber. |—This post is A t past. most beautifully located 6,000 feet above sea Laramio sold for $14,000. William Sweet has the shaft on his Muddy | level, just at the base of the Wood Liver A party of Sheridan miners ave out search- | mine down over two hundred feet, and is in | mountains and on a great brond plain, Gver ing for the lost Colin mine, u seven-foot vein all the way of ‘good freo | which aro spread the lodges of th *In Cheyenno but four watches were turned | milling vold oro. e R s e in for county and state taxatio Pack traius havo started for Sheop Moun- | D10SHOnG and Arapatoo iribes of In Union Pacific officials coucede that Lara- | tain and Seafoam districts, to bo used for | dians. The wholo ' place now presents mie needs a union depot, but—— conveying the rich ores of those camps to the | a grand scene. The great snow-clad “Thirty thousand pounds of farm machinery | railroad depot at Ketchum. Rockies in the background, the broad, suge- were unloaded at Sundauce recently. he opal mines of Latah county are turn- | brush plain, in the center of which is the A washout onthe Cheyonno & Northern | Ing out somo wouders in precious stones thi [ Hidian wgency and the pesy not, far distant ditchod four cars of stock, killing twenty | spring. E. C. Hall has taken out sevoral | Betwoen the latter and the biso of tha animals, thiousand dollurs worth of the most boautiful | Wountains bs tho bik encampment of Tndians A TR TS nered together to indulge in tho annua A Converso county flock owner has jJusy | $tones yet discovered. - In one day ninoty-one | ETHICIEE RRAN O NIAIEE - L0, W carats were taken out, valued at $1,080, un - dan hoshones. 3oth Sho marketed 1400 peits” taken from sheep lost ity Y8 i), 000 d of sheep 18T P 3 A AT 188 5 Cebi 240 1881 . . . o 260,402 158 Fld : i 18 1854 185 156 1887 ey il {tis worthy of note, too, that the vonotonly multiplied 'in numb TUR WEALTIE OF MONTANA. To afford a_cleaver idea of the monoey value of the products of Montana 1 an reliable nuthority that the exportations this year in the shape of gold, silver, copper,lead, Ccattle, wool, sheep, horses and hides’ will yonch tho enormous sum of 87,000,000, which [ na will bo divided amongst less than 200,000 population. To this showd be added the agricultural crops locally raised and con sumed, as well as several millions worth of lumber. Helona is the natural distributing point. of the state aud its trade is rapidly incroasing. fTho wealth of this charming capital is sou thing unprecedontod, tho possessions of its eltizens (UMbOrIng 4t presont not more thun 20,000) s estimated at £130,000,000. It has BOv ks with combined capital and sur- s O §3,500,000 and deposits approximating 5,000,000, Tho evident - fuct that Helena. is Nortly to bocome a great city Is argument e ctang to Inapire ho Ereatest oxetblons o1 he part of the citizens of Omahi to securo Lie cuorious prize of this trade Traveren s Mincral Con forty notor- was An Iron Mountain, Extensive deposits of magnetic iron and hematite have been discovered in Choteau county, Montana. The magnetic ore is about ation. ten miles northwest of Choteau, near the linary arrangements have been mado | ranches of Willi and is from ten mineral convention, to be held at | to fifteen feot thick ana covers an area of ten Choyunne, September 7 to 12, inclusive, Con- | OF twelve square miles, It forms the cap plderable futorest has been awakeued by the i of tha point of the high plateau bet.waeon uovewment, oven at this early day, and it is | Teton river and Muddy ereck. Unidernoath Bofo to prodict that the gathering will bo a | the black iron aro layors of vavied sundstone yeprosentative one. The railronds have | about six feot thick, below which iron again rauted reduced rates to all who desire to at- | appoars. Just how thick the secoud layer of Bl R ore is and what is beneath it is unknown. A The I Ak A RO0RE RRting of the dlala vory scanty soil is the only covoring of tho J. F. Jenkins, Hon, W upper strata. This will Tender the mining Knight irexpensive and greatly eahauce the value gr., Chavles . and . G. Coutant, | und importance of the find, Was appoluted to arrange ali dotails. Thd | Soveral assays have been made and tho ro },L_m of reprosentation is to appoint a trustee | sult ranges from 61,25 to 79.6 per cent iron. | honor to en > o copy of a resolution adop- for each coanty of the st Ihe trustees | Tuese assays mako the average per ¢ 70.4, | ted at a meeting of tha members of the cham- will anize brancoes of ug board 1n | and within 1.6 per cent of pure magnetic ore. | ber of commerce of Salt Lake City, held on tho several camps, and cich organization will Tho easo with whick this body of ore can | June 4, 1801, and in accordance thérewith ro - choose throe delegates 1o represent esch min- | be mined,its proximity to ample water power, | spectfully request that you appeint thirty fng camp in the couvention. There will also | and being within eigliteen miles of & railroad | delegates at large to represent your state at be del tos-at-large from each county, and | which runs dire to the greatest eoal fields | a eoavention to be held in Salt Lake City, doubtless ropresentatives of all commercial | it the northiwves! rs it more valuable | Utah, Soptember 16, 17, and 15, 1801, This organizations. From present indications the | than anything i the iron lina yet found in | couvention is cailed' to consider matters por- convention will open with from eight hun- | the west. The recent rains have loosened a | tainiug to the reclamation of the arid public dred to » thousand delegates groat body of earth on tho sida of @ mountain | lands of the wost, and to potition congress to ‘Tho enthusiasm which the movement has | Wbout twenty miles awuy exposing an eigh- | cede to each state and territory the lands ked Is gratifying ovidence of the | teensfoot vein fof red homatite, which is | within its borders for purposes of reelamation less confidonce of the people in the | especially necessary in smelting the magetic | for the support of its public schools, sud for al resources of the young state. Noris | ore such othe® publio purposes as the legislature his confidunce based o the speculativo or of each state or territory may respectively Poom spirit. It fs foundod on facts as firm as dotermine. The various commercial, agri- cultural and mechanical assoclations, to- ROPOLIS, itude and possessing the wealth of resoul s here outlined, said TIE ME A country of the ma, Wyon by stage Preli for the Hor with a \ith, @ ranchman on k, was knockod out in one round thunderbolt, but ho still lives. His clothing | was torn to tatters, nis right arw scorchod right sido of his head shaved of hair, and tho boot ou his right foot torn to shreds. 'ho Noweastle News intimates that the Sheridan and Buffalo branch of the Burling. | ton is to bo extended twenty-fivo mi vond Moorecroft. 'The grading outfics nt Morino have gone to the front, and it 1s said nd numbers it is estimatod frout and up to th ands of the S01-02 will be £4,600,000, In 1l uon and_boauti roul are country, It'could be reach tho Elkhorn ko R CREDTRE C | AT L I Al AR road over a first-class route and accommoda {Ras ‘; DA o i T iy 1‘ 1 y t tions in twenty-two hours from Omaha, It Ihe Sunset irvigation districy of i'r 'oAn Do, tao! prattl is situated on the east sido of the mountains s v vatad L 600,00 o hailcs £ T oy midway of tho range north and south in tho | tnat the Collins outfit will e ordered from | fj ,]‘.‘L”wf P A e from hore north to the Yollow. yallew Of the largest steoam Hlowlug out ‘,: | tho Hot Springs braueh to that poiat. largest irrigation scheme #ish can be caught tho Sl ‘Am:;\fu ;“““'\‘mr Joyon whion 1¥ ‘;L‘l Evanston and Almy are rejoiciag over tho | world under ono singlo manaic mate of the country can nob A s uhroatly. ‘boin pu Lo e for this | act that an order bas gono forth from tho | open to cultivation 400,00 air is 80 dry that you don't 8 A | headquarters of the coal departmont instruct ractically valueioss. intor nor tho heat of sum purpose. This place was ueither a min % P T )i |V bave week situated as to bo accessible o and com- |y P UEADY. Bllks PUEOR: R BURGIORY | ty 8 manded tha trade of all.® Two railroad com- | !”“ g ‘A' e ““‘ i OO B s v W i panies had been organized this year to build [ Jo¥. Phis will causc from it, one west into the mountains aud the | W0 BUBAEEG HeR S other eastward, A contract had been lot on [ 2 (i A SEIERLONE & ono and grading would begin on both inside | SCMC"RINg HKO 0,000 mior AR R Ranchmon say that notwithstanding Suci, In_briof, sald the juajor, was KRapid | Bbundaut ralns of this spriug grass City, called the Denver. of the Black Hills, | Fanges is not noarly so ligh as it aud it was rapidly justifyiok the appellation. | this season of tho year, Thuy attrib $ be- 1 iho gation Congross. The governor of Utah has issued the fol- towing call for an irrigation convention, to ve held in Salt Lake in September, and to be participated in by the states in the avid bol ToHis Excelloncy, ote-—Sir: I have tho has ¢ the con board of tee, consisting of Moudell, W. ¢ Wilham Sturgis, Phis stren. bo beaton, park in every I'he ¢ 'l ers from leaving after week of whe work reo it M b something where g sit'ont i the sun with your hat sat | A . and Just feel happy and oo ¥ tho | elad you are alive. You have | to this o Ao to this ol 10 the fact that wo have had s wany | v i rented P and now as 1 write 1b I as spring in sunny [taly nights, generally accompanied by frost. They | ¥t s i S0ft Saratoga and Gold Hill. Say that the grav grows at night and ot (n | 11,40 Tkl ws gavdoner. | s o cloar and transpirout the 1 Colonel 8§, W. Downey, who rewurned to | the avatime, and that it has hac show. 4o bad & g 6 worked | gy the distance so magnificent ¥, ne dyatime, and that it has Dad no SHOW. | [ii n sl e | Laramie last Sunday from Saratoga, reports | They think, however, we shall 3870 & | weok b RO P tho still atmos phere so teanquiliz ‘: countiess h\l!ln n\lx atural wealth of the city booming in earnest, says th good crop before tho year is ove 81,300, aud Padeg the great rush of ¥ W vor e stato is unlimitea. variety and extent gethor with each municipal corporation in | p, 3 Eight carloads of hor: from Oreg t the boulders in the stra to the tepublica 22d inst. Everyono is fu Jight earloads of horses from Oregon | Ibs Augeles bank Y ®f rosources, Wyoming is the peer of any the soveral states and territories wost of th | SePublican of the 22d inst. Kveryono Ia full | ) UK PR, O rS 00 e Gy | car, that oue fo had not tate in the unlon. Within it's 100,000 square Missouri river, are also requested to send | Of confidence in & prosperous seasou on 8c- | ong'for rost and water on Friday, On Sate sanyes onoukh Lo L al} 1 ; miles of territory may be found the precious delegates to tho convention. countof the mining outlagk at Gold HIll, | yrday, says the Leader, they commenced to Ihe A bilirating ang & jotereniing moraly as woll as tho basor ores. Coal is 1 bave the honor to remain respectfully, the merchants are already us busy as bees, | sicken, aud before night twelve fine animals | City w trip could be fo fram ound in every county. The extent of the Autuvn L, Tuonas, tho town s full of strangers and thoro is & jovernor of Utab. | 1oy of bullding going on, 5o that the contrac bis | had died. Dr. Holcombe was fnformea of A , . utpost of Unols 19 basa of $19 {:u]’nl'A‘ll is u&mm(o«i .nkm,m\m;u acres. | their being at the stock yard, and fe ,.m:,; ‘\‘ ar! .‘lo‘u‘v “v,"‘,‘,‘" arcl s are in ,H return. Joid, siver wnd copper abouna. Immouse — oy & o dying from some. cort | *POCHivg Sicux ially stoy denosits of irou are baown toaaiay TR{ORSC | olatms within nine square miles in the Montana Mineral Land. tors are a3 happy as auyone els that thoy might be dylng from some oon Deadwood has raised §20,000 as a b vicwity of Butte City. On most of these | Tho question whother the Northern Pacifio | J. A. Johuson, state wator commissioner, claiws wre mills, sud dach olalw is Wore or | bad a right 10 mwerai laud within its land | was o Savatoga last woek, recelviug proof of ntains are T'hie great ivon workers of Pittsburg, Car- negie, 1’hipps & Co., have make several as says and will s00n havo a maa on the ground who will fully invostigate the lodge, and his report is expocted to be followed by speedy action on the part of the company he repre- sents. 8 i Laramie fecling uth Dakota. Bk 0% borg group of mnes re sold for §100,000. near Custer Butto's Mineral Wealth, There are over thirty thousaud patented e SR sions nade at comparatively si And such an outing &8 it would be! nus to taglous disease, made an examination of the yrunite and sandstone exist a Inexhaustible hdrsos, | Ho found. tat they were dying | €linch au offer of a naw holo! costing §i00,000 borses. Ho found that they were dying from cougustion of the lungs brought o | It 13 reported the Dewdwood Coutral road luautities, Salt, sods, mlueral palut, sul-

Other pages from this issue: