Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, September 11, 1893, Page 5

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r— GO0 WORDS FROM TIE WEST | Rich Ooal Mine Discovered on Wild Hors Oresk in Wyoming. BLACK DIAMOND VEINS THIRTY FEET THICK Other Mineral 1+ in Wyoming — Black Mills Winzo—Lendville Mines to Keo sume- A Callfornia Bonanza scraps from Lverywhere, Feuix, Wyo., Sept. 7.—[Special to Tnr Bee. ] For the past year prospectors have been much interested in looking fc o in the country tributary to Wild Horse cre as this region scems to be the central a tlchest part of the Wyoming coal flelds. ( is abundant from the source of the cr its confluence with Powder river, and many veins show croppings in the gulches opening into Wild Hozse valley. Some of these veins are twenty-five to thirty feet in thickness and of good qualit But the belief has existed that, somewhere in this district, would be found a vein of co which would surpass all others, and such n vein has recently been located one mile from Felix, and is now being opened to supply win trade. I'his bonanza is known as the Hstler mine and {s being operated by the Felix Min ympany. The work of developient is being pushed as rapidly as possible, and the coal already taken out is pronou by experts to be fully equal, if not superior, to any coal vet discovered in Wyoming. It is « fine steam conl, as has been pro y repeated tests under the supervision of practical engineers. Coke makers from Pennsylvania and from England have pronounced it to be the best and cleancst coking coal they have ever seen. ‘The supply is mexhaustible, as the vein is twenty-four feet in thickness, and is certainly underlying a largo tract, but its extent is difiicult to ascertain on account ot the steep dip of the vein, which has a down ward incline to the south of about twelve foet per 100, Pumps are required to keep the mine free of water, as the coal hus a considerable amount of ‘'water in it It is underctood that eastern capitalists are quiotly ating for a purchase of the property, but as no agreement has yet been roached it is impossible at this time to give any names. This coal will be sold at differ points in r t about the same ades now being used hof the coal in Wild forse mining district tales tiro spontancously after being mined, this being due to absence of water in the veln. The coal from tne Hustler mine has been thoroughly tried in that respect, and is found to he proof against spontancous combustion The Felix company belicves ft has made a great find, and” that further work ‘will prove the mine to be the best coal ever found in this state Mica and Aluminium Clay. One after another discoveries are made of minerals in Wyoming, until almost every one known to scicnee has been found withia the boundaries of that state. Among the latest discoveries is u ledge of mica of the purest quality in Converse county. Mica in large quantities has been found in different parts of the state, but too impure for commercial purposes. Judgo Glafeke of Laramie has also re- cefved specimens of & clay, an analysis of which shows 40 per cent of aluminium Clays containing 5 per cent of aluminium have been successfully worked at a profit, so that the deposit of 160 acres from which Major Glafcke's specimen is taken should prove a bonanza to the owner, though forty miles (rom tho railroad, m the Medicine Bow rango, Another Strike on Iald Mounta Joe Orr, one of the veteran prospectors of the Deadwood district, is showing a small specimen of gold-bearing rock that coutained 150 colors which set out from the quartz and glittered in the sun like dismonds. 1t was taken from the claim adjoining the Sheboy- gan property, located on the north sido of 3ald mountain, where a fairsized body has heen encountered, and is honeycombed with free gold. ‘T'he feather edge of the ledge hus been driftod 1 on enough to determine a8 to whether it is in paying quantities, with eucouraging prospects of the body widening and of higher erade as they get fartherin. ‘The average of what they have takon out thus far 18 £25. More interest is_being manifest in pros poct round on the apex of Bald mountain these days than in any other part of the dry ore belt. 1t is thought by some that Bald mountain is an upheaval of mincral wealth. While we question this, it is a fact that somo valuable prospects are being ovened up, und Bald mountain promises to outstrip anything uround it when capital is once in- terested in the development of her pros- pects. The Gold Bug Wil Be Worked. One of tho most surprising facts about the La Plata mining cawp is that gold ore is being found in even greater abundance than silver ore was discovered thero a year or more ago, says the Laramic Boo Dan Shockley, Jack Richards and confirm all the information of the gold rich- ness of the camp reported s0mo Liwe 4go by Judgo C. W. Bramel Richards and Shockley have been prospect- me for gold exclusively for they report i imports v. The !l Gold Bug. This two and i balf miles southeast of the | ke, down in the cdge of the granite formation. In the lime formation the silver at_the Lo Plata is found, The Gold Bug is in eranite and slate. The ore is the same as the old Centennialore, but is not It is estimatod that it will run on ove §10, run an 'neut sixteen feet across the and have ore the entire dis- 3 tis believed the lead is twenty feet wide. There is a very rieh streak of ore next to the south wall. ~C. B. Ritehio pros- pocted at this very same point two years ago and says that ho secured essays wh run §0 Vhis claim was located the 1st of August. An important fact in connection with this gold discovery is that S. K. Davis of Den- vor, an exnoert miner, has beon out to the La- Plata and camein from the camp last night accompanicd by Phillip Beck, another Colo- rado gentle They went out there a soveral wecks ago with Mr. Burbank of Den- ver. Th ame in from the camp ten s agoand returned to Denvor, taking samples of ore from the Gold Bug with him Littlo Spenrtish Fire, The timber at the head of Little Spearfish ereek is for wiles o seething mass of fla The fire start near Barr's ranch and Bucned to withu a short distance of his dwelling, but was prevented communicating 1 the builaing by the heroie work upon the part of his neighbors amd the from the ne b, A1 which burnea bris its way nearly four miles \Luckily the cour hence the dama paratively slight to property, but the loss in cordwooil o many of the wood contractors will be heavy. From a gentleman who arvived in Deadwood from that vicinity it is learned that the bluze started from fives built by berry pickers ud prew rapidly until it was @ veritable tidal wave of fire. Owing to the fact that this section is thickly covered by underbrush and young tr the bills having been denuded of timber years ngo—the fire must continse until it burns itself out, as the underbrush is as dry as tinderand all efforts to stay it are fu The path of the sea of firo avies from three to four and five miles in wadth, I'ie heat is intense 1 can be felt for wiles, while the smoke is suffocating At Bald mountain, ten miles away from tne five, whon the wind bears in that direction, the peoplo say the smoke is hardly endura ble. At itochford and Knglewood the under- brush is also al but thoy are minor fires compared with the Little Speartish tire aud will soon burn out. The smoko from these fires settlod down iu this gulch sy thickly that for some hours the sun was partially obscured. The day had the appearance of & hazy Indian summer day. Since then the wind shifted and the smoke was drifted off in a wortherly direction Good Prospects for Leadville, | Ridgeway Horald, recently el Charles T. Grifin, formerly editor of the | for the past two months, There was an important weeting held at Leadvillo the other day, reproseuting on one +10 0o miners of the GamI AN 00 ho GLhOF } bo leading mine owners, bere. The com. THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: MONDA\ .HTEMBFR 11, 1893 [:l I ISSUES A E l [] CORDIAL INVITATION & To the People of the UNITED STATES, CANADA and MEXICO to visit it during the AUTUMNAL FESTIVITIES Seventy-five Thousand ELECTRIC and GAS LIGHTS are required to nroduce the Magnificent Street Illuminations Which excell in extent and gorgeousness any illuminations ever attempted in any city of the World. The spectacle includes miles of streets brilliantly lighted, with many colored globes. ELECTRIC FOUNTAINS, MYRIADS OF GAS I1IGHTS, ELECTRIC BULLETINS, ELECTRIC PANORAMAS, GAS TRANSPARENCIES, ELECTRIC PORTRAITS, ELECTRIC REVOLVING STARS, GAS ARCHES, COLUMBIAN TABLEAU, ELECTRIC FLAGS, GAS COMBINATIONS, FLORAL ARCHES, ELECTRIC ARCHES, GAS CLUSTERS, COMBINATION EFFECTS. SPECIAL ILLUMINATION DATES: SEPTEMBER 4, 1, 14, 21, 30. OCTOBER 3, 5, 12, 19. THE TENTH ANNUAL EXPOSITION The only successful Annual Exposition in the world, will open Sept. 6th, and remain open until October 21st. Four Ccncerts Paily b? SOUSA’S Grand Concert Band, Vocal and Instrumental Solos by Madame SCALCHI And orther artists of international reputation. Magnificent Paintings and Pictures in the Art Galleries. Splendid displays of Manufactures and Liberal Arts, Electrical and Mechanical Departments of Exceptional Interest, And a general array of exhibits valued at many hundred thousand dollars. INCLUSIVE ADMISSION FEE 25c. NO EXTRA CHARGES. THE VEILED PROPHET And his gorgeous retinue will parade with Oriental Splendor on October 3rd Maghificent Palaces on wheels—Grand Ball in Merchant's Exchange Hall. THE THIRTY-THIRD ANNUAL MECHANICAL AND AGRICULTURAL FAIR WILL OPEN OCTOBER 2nd AND CLOSE OCTOBTR 7th. Countless added attractions and new features. Exciting contests in the spacious amphitheater. Racing on the World Renowned Mile Trac! # Greatly Reduced Railroad Rates from All Points. == One, or one and one-third fare for the Round Trip on special dates during the Carnival. ALL RATES REDUCED. VISITORS TO THE WORLD’S FAIR are especially invited to secure transportation via St. Louis and spend a few days in the great-Metropolis of the West and South-West during the Carnival Period. For further particulars as to rates apply to nearest Railroad Shtxon Agent, and for programmes and lists of special attractions on forty consecutive days, to BUREAU OF INFORMATION, AUTUMNAL FESTIVITIES ASS’N, Mermod & Jaccard Building, ST. LOUIS. mttees on both sides met to discuss tho | recently, ] 4 is o steady producer, | stopping tho cow, but Mr. Groen was in- Tabor situation, aud they were anxious to | giving the owners moro than $100,000 every | sensible and he 'was taken to the Inman approach the subject from & reasonablo | month, and rock is in sight for soven years' | hotel, where a doctor was summoned, who standpoint more work for the 100 stamps now running. | pronounced his ankle only sprained and lns A plan was partially agrecd upon based on | The vein is ifty fect wide, and is now being Deing internal with bruises ubout 4 ironeral reduction all along the line. The | worked ata depth of 800 feet, whore it _is d and body. His wife was sent for Yesultof the conference was a sort of tacit | growing better. o mino’ costs to run | and when she arrived he had gainod sensi- Undorstanding that the mine managers | about §40,000 a month. bility, but was suffering intenso pain from would, as far as possible, start up on a new Some Oregon Devolopments. his internal injuries. “The doctor oraered a ages, . provided ey could . 2 that he be not moved for a fow days. s O ight ehansos | W, P Ely, editor of the Cowlitz Advocato, Djoe g f f Custle Kok, Wash., has returned from an Colorado, anc all the supplies used about/ O ock, ) urned f ! tte "\t was felt that labor should notde | trict, in which he has several valuable | of the Bussick, Silver CIff. A concentrator nskod to bear all the burdens, but that each | clafms, Speaking of muning prospects in | is contemplated . ory fac st aid in Sustaining the | thatsection, he suid: f ) BB O it 1o >rospects in the district have never been | i (:_j,'::}‘;’l?“id°’l,l})“‘r" “;‘l‘l‘;""wf;“v Vet been dotermined upon, but it will pe | 80 bright ’:'r‘;cv"j”{“\‘;“')(:‘\‘\J:‘m';'l‘\’;(“‘ CItY | Jast Monday, putting $40,000 in circulation. proportioned on the \»{-u grlifll:'l' :“”:: Aftor Mr. Knott loft the o _Amended articles of incorporation of the to sag, if silver jumps rom 0 Lo 50 conts tho | 8k tiiing becatno quit, and it was only re | Union Mining and Leasiog company - have men’s wages we t E "mtly that work was resumed upon ' the | been filed. The capital stock has all been centage. S St o s ant voly ap- | Diid up aud hias boon placed at 80,000. D O e anititha ranco, there being several hund Alogal conflict is possible between the ings yethe ! ully st e Novor: seting there, The Auuie o o Goiden Fleece ard the Compromise, the S TR . W aro under the managementof | driftings 1 come 80 close together that 1o both partios concorned, and A Davis, are turning out | the men in one shaft can hear the work in ting Is_ e mfm woro hopeful than | € core. The surface indicates sul- [ tho other, it has been for some time, is plenty of free milling | Threo shifts are pushing work on the gold, Somo of the prospeciors have taken | Morning Glory mine, near Barry, owned by Tho Gold Belt Lode. out #0 of gold from a singlo pan of quartz, y. The ore, a good sylvan- 3 e ¢ quartz | Enough developient work as been dono 0. ito, runs 8130 gold 1h smelting and $0° from A now discovory of Kold bUnINE g | Show that the mine Is ‘permanent, and there | the stamp mill. s I oaon & Co., numed the Gold | 18 1o sign of a drop.” No new capital bt 1. L. dgerton, a harvesting machine Dtt lode. The vein has been opened up | been introduced into the district as yet, und | ggent, and a novice at mining, accidentaily Mlong the surface for a distanco of thirty [ Uhe mincs ure being worked by stock com. | struck n lond of hematito ana pyrites of iron feot by an opon cut that is twenty p | panies. whicn have held them for several | on Milwaukee hill, Duncan, runniug beavy at the breast, and it has disclosed a fino | YO4rs o with free gold. looking vein of honeycombed quartz from Neurnska and Nebraskans, The Tellurido Republican reports that clghtoen inches to two and one-half feob | The Madison county republican conggntion | leasers on the Montaua have recently struck wido that shows conrse gold in the pan. As- | has been called for Septomter 30, at” Battle | a small streak of remarkably h gold., It siys give & value of from ¥ to 815 & ton in | Creck. is suid to be 114 inches of quartz that shows d twenty ounces of silver. A run of | i Srate grango will probavly meet at | free gold throughout. 1 is to be sent to the Black Hawk | melyah sometime in December with 500 | The Goldon Treasuro, Gilpin county, a s o tost in & aays, and if it corrob- orrob | delecates. vroporty for a long time abandoned, in Au- say w.l],.\ )\nlmxu:m_““‘\ ‘::x:‘:‘f’ Burgiars entered Early’s fewelry storeat | gust yiclded $1,440 in rotorts, §1,350 from '""."“\f : f'mx'u"\\\lm.";,“ ulel 1.‘|1T‘.,', will cup | Wilberand sceured §0 worth of goods without | smelting ore and $20 from tailings, a total e e hy '8 donth of 500 foot, through | 1eaving u clew. ; aiust 1 pay ol of $50) uind au ex- whiich it will be worked C. R. Lange, who formerly resided at account of & i Seribner, was killed by falling from a horse The Pueblo smelters received forty-four PR carloads more ore during the woek ending Mossrs. Kennedy and Wilson have cut fnto [ = The Sutton Advortiser has enterod upon | Sebtember2 than for the prevoius week, and what promises to be a large vein of rich ore | its soventh year. It is prosperivg under the | JWEEH ERENRE 1@ SR TEREL FIORE F in their Compromiso shaft at a depthof | direction of Dr. Clark insilver. The Pucblo smelter is about to about 150 foet, suys the Lake City Times. ik Shaoen of consumption, and Mrs. | piiueR CSHE PUERE B Some of the ore takeu from the new strike A. Patrick of paralysis, were two ! I OO O ibision, 1t Jooks_ yery finc, cone | de at Stanton i ono ay homas . Culllaou-of Donver lss just taining lots of ruby and some pietzite. The | A nundred dollars reward has been offereq | Mo & big, siriko in who Silver teminer shaft s & porpendicular oue and cut jnto the | roliilo urrest of the partics who attempted | M8, alston Oroek oangh. he jiey om tho hanging wall side, the vein 8 sath 1 streak is well defined, and the ore runs be veiu from th to burn the Catholic church at Hooper res Naving o strong dip toward the south. It is 5 tween fifty and sixty ounces in gold to the Baviug a strong dip foward tho souti M8 | Fire in Paulsow's fuinitare store at | ton with abouu por ceat of copper. This it lining the shaft with the piten of | Arlingtoncaused damage to the extent of | s the first valuable gold mine over found in oot 1a on Hotulukios | ELO00. 1L was causod by the explosion of ' | Jofforsou county T djoining the Golden Fleeco on | WP mountaln. slolblog " th Mrs. Martha Hyers of Plattsmouth, osterly oud, of k. W. Hyers, formerly warden of the state Cow Crovk Gold, penitentiary, died of cancer of the stomach Ruby nnd Siver Ore. An assay made this woek from a mining claim near Dumont gives & result of nearly ty-three ounces of gold to the ton. 1k longs to Colonel B. Van Straight wver, who have been working it though it had o for years The Little Blanchi mine, at the head of Silver croek, has a pay streak which shows s Whitcomb of Pender is minusn le olve inches at u denth of fifuy feet, There s gun went off while he was driving twenty-five tons of ore on the dump. An fect. Iif- | through a canon near Long Pine, and hus been taken from the vein, showing will strike the voin, and | jnflicted a wouud which wade amputation | s ) ounces in goldsad 200 ounces - sil- us fail tne | will 'be & | nocessar The Ross lode is an adjoining propery he rock now being taken outis | AT TN (oiived on the Fawmont | Which has recently opened a five-foor vein alized, uud cousiderable ore vunyli | opggter branch of the 15, & M. The passen- | that ruus high in gold. from £15 10 850 hus been encountered. Aho | o yeaiy from the soutd collided with th The Dakotas. load shows a gold value on the surface of an | ot WIS SO R0 ROELL CRUIITL HEE N b rage of £20, with some silver. Mr. Car- | (TUERE AR T WOE Oy angines [ncluding Sioux Falls and Yankton there a old time pro pector, was the dis met on the brid ,“A which '“ .,““‘“m bi are ten stations on the new Yankion & coverer of the properties in question, and u ]w:” A u«“fm.-n» Thk | Sioux Falls railroad. wade the locations on ground that has been 50" Hromen on both ongines re. | The canning factory at Sioux Falls has run over for years. augiie lieir posts of duty, fully realizing | PUL up 20,000 cans and began the other day Worth Milllons. the uncertainty of saving their lives by | Lo put up 100,000 '“‘""“ o oua T7¢ica auars mise ngels, | Jumping to the bed of tho creek, a distance The new ditch for the water cothe famous Utlca quarz mind 4% ABEELS: | oftwenty five or thirty feet. Hoth engines | Deadwood, on which u laree force of mon e tho Hobart ostate and C. D, Tane, | were badly wrecked and partly derailed. No | have been working for weeks past is co SSRGS A0 SIRIAELSMAI0 AR DL S D, owever, was injured beyond being | pleted to the syphon on McGovern hill a 105,000, which wus 000 more than the ightened and shaken up. the water turned 1uto the same, » owners' expected. nup was mad J. K. Green, an old _and respocted citizen Wonderful results are reported to have last Saturday, when Colonel ard, | liviog four miles southesst of Hroken Bow. | been obtained from the Hot Springs waters, James Cross, reprosent \ | had an accident 1 town that neaely cost hini | in the cases of tho votorauns sent there from and Mr. Lane were present, and the gold | his life. It secms he had taken two cows to | Leaveuworth Military hospital. Al of the bricks wero brought down by Messenger Mc- | Broken Bow for the butcher aud as he was | old fellows have been straightened out in Connell and two other shotgun guards of | tying oue of them the other started to run | good shape. Theonly obstinate case was Wells, Fargo & Co. This was the bigeest | away, the rope catching Green by tho ankle | that of Alphouso Lougveve, who was suf- cleauup at the Utica, and it was expected to | of bis loft foot and he was dragged for about | fering from locomotor - ataxia. Ho was pro- Lo Jargo, #s & rich chiute had boen worked | breo blocks, when some men succeeaed in Bounced incurable Leavenworth and The gold elaims on Cow creck, s at her hon George Carlow, A, D. McPhee, Kenn c- | Oakland Independent, has bicome the man- | previously been Donald and J. C. Boles, ave 1o agerof the Alliance Independent at the ably well for the amount ) state capital work that ha being run on pply of also upon his arrivalat the Springs, and has | oxhibition ata Dalles drug store. The tre since died. on which the orange grew is about ecignt A grain palac 2 i 2 e inches 1n height, and the fruit isa little ono that on a small scale can equal the best | under the averago size. Aberdeen is ablo to getvup, and besic J. 8. Milliken of Owyheo marketea at Valo real stuff from which the collection is made | melons weighing fifty pounds, soven-pound can be seen in the Moody county ficlds, beets and twenty-pound cabbages. “Owyheo At the new county artesian well in Tory | valley,” says the Vale Gazotte, “against tho Lake township large quantities of o kind of for vegetables. ; conl are thrown up. The stufl burns readily, | William Miller of [ugene has consigned but on cxposure to air soon crumbles up. | his crop of 1592 hops to ‘Ihomas Unborne of The well is over 00 fect deep and a strong | England. He received an_advanco of 16 flow of water has been obtained ents por pound, He had 133 bales, or nearly Samples of ore from the recent discovery | 50,000 pounds. on the Chinese syndicato group wero shown he well known cattle buyers, Gerber, at Deadwood recently, and in appeuranceare | Reynolds and Short, passed through Tule high grade. The property is situated at the | luke scction, Klamath county, within the junction of Blacktail and Sheeptail gulches, | lnst ten days with nearly 1,000 head of cattlo a section well noted for its high grade silic- | enroute to the railroad ious ores. "he Pat Doneg anch, comprising 4,200 £ A projoct is now maturing at Yankton, | acres. tocatod twelva milos norih of Mot | _OURGEDNS which will result i thorough test of [ ford, was sold tie other day for 53,600 artesian wells for driviog powor purposes, | Fifty Polish fumilies from -l ansas and Ne. & A company of gentlemen with means pro- | braska will settle on the tract. h Doso to sink six_artesian wells, six fnches in | Major L. D, Fors - L illehin Specialists diameter, within an_erea of an acre or less, | about 700 pounds of Oregon grape root, -L-— guranteed Lo furnish 150-horse power. which he has had gathered, to n San Fran® e cisco firm of fucturing druggists for medicinal purposes. 1t will go_ by team W Four Snake Indians came fnto Laramie | Corvatlis and by the Oregon Pacific. the other day selliug horns and bad to dis vose of then: at unusually low prices. ven Lo is being touched by the pai Accordinie to tho Dorvick, coal discovered lihting. tho flames, sper s been analysoa and found to | and is having ereat dificully keeping thoul contain 0565 per cent fuol, while tho Kock | away from the sawmills. Springs conl coutains 87.55 per cent of fuel. B T s e e e Tioro is auid to b mors gold at tho hewd | whis vear than exor bofore, and aro alreaty of Green river than can be used by the peoplo | doing considerablo damage to fhe growing of the United States, only 1t 15 floay gold and | corn erop, says tho Asniand Tidings. Ten WEAK MEN too fino for pr appliances. Tho earth | years ugo o crow was a rare sight 10 south- | [yDROCEL] AND YARICOGELE permanentl for forty miles can be panned with a yield of | ern Oregon. Now the flocks ure almost as i AT and sucerstully cured. Method new and Wt og 0 cents to the yard. lurge as in tho old corn states of the cast. NT BY MALL & ap 1t is stated that tho Fortunatus company o MILES, F) SSURE, porm has had another cleanup and that the re- | . Mashiaston, Without {1 11 i e suatio sult 15 fully one-third better than the previ- | The estimated output of cannerios this | Al maladies ofu priviy L' natire, ous one, A letter stated that the plates | year at Port Townsend 8 : o or Addrons, With tamp. for Clroulara, were fliled with gold, This improvement | is a 20 per cent decrease 5 ar. Froe Book, Roclpos and Symptom Blanks, in the gold cleanup bears out tho oft-re- | A destruetive forest firo has been raging q anlps 118 Routh 15th S, peated statement that the deeper you go in 2 days past on the promontory Dr. Searles & Sedrlfln, Omahis, Neb- that peculiar formation of which tho Bald | nortn of Birch bay, destroying s mountain camp is composed the richer will | amount of tim} be the ground. Bedrock has not you been | Noah Beyer of Walla Walla BLOOD POISONING, reached, £ harvested from twelve acres 506 ba The 1i-year-old son of Thomas Southwood | chaff wheat, averaging 13% pounds each, And ovory Humor of tle Blood, 8kIn, and § ran away from his home in Red Lodge about | over ninety-cight bushels per acre. : With Toss of 1air, whether siuploy a year ago und Torts to find him | he Northern Pacific has brought in 105 acrofulous, ulcerative, or herd sved fruitless. 2 two weeks ago he ton locomotive to move grain trains through A ‘h’m’:‘(“”"". TN -‘mu. and locate 3 cowboys over in | the Palouse country. Over 500 loaded cars SrouoIhly QT W CUTIONES Big | . whero he was living s S JURAEY 3 SISE Sl AR ResEniEs, when e beat physt- of last year's are awaiting shivmen cians nud 1l other remedics fa with the Indiaus. He adopted their fail, 0. nals had adopted thels | " gopgennt Wilson of compny G, Fort. po e Coyicie “hom " uutment for ud was dressod 08 o e o o | kane, went out hunting, He was gone about overy humor everywhere, s, Attt oy o req | four hours and killed six rattlosnukes with Todgo the youngster eluded bis caprors and | Favies as followa: 16, 16, 14, 11, . Earle & Donolue arc haviug a sawmill Ll]s'l' VITM.”Y and g quickly Millions of locusts, fat and immenso In | Pulll of the most wodern puitern, 1 bo i E e ve mado their appearance on the """“‘l' r;;i}:hl:'“- '(‘L,; ‘L H have YAPO, o grent Hindoo . iy Hold with wriw slze, ad BRpeaLy on the | city of 50, 0 75,000 feet of lumber ANnALD L 0. Samplis wont froo. Addroas, ) ranges of the Big Horn basin, The | (aPacity i Orikutal Modical Cor, 68 P mouth 114ce, Chic ko, ts swoop down upon the sheep i | 48¥ LGS e il swarms when thoy are eagerly pursucd by | 4 from Supevintendent Patriok of the animals and devoured. As & fattening | the Blewett Gold Min company’s proper diet they are said Lo be superior to the best | U hustin district states that the - ; - A cadily and is_handhng fify ass upon the ranges, and sheepmen are | Mill is running steadily ! riously thinking of devising some means | tons of ore a day, and that all wovk is pro- the insects may be propagated aund siug satisfuctorily preservea, Lo be fed to the stieep during the —— winter months ‘When painand anguish wring the brow, | il EESERED SRR Oregon. A ministering angel thou"—Bromo. The White Swan's last ten days cleanup § N BE CURED IN 10 MINUTES alted in 3,000 gold. Shelton is indignant at wholesale ayna- READY MADE MUSTARD PLASTERS BY USING wite fishing iu its trout streams and lakes. Weo wero the first, manufacturers on this 10 shn Goodwan of Jordan valley, 12 yoars Contineut, Our latest improveus ik purpatted I[; 0[8 [][; {1 ol ed LW (1o : i two anything ever before produce 250, A ol kiliod kw0 tull Krows Bars: ang bu Jertin. Bosure toliave KEABULY'S. " Ask Minuto A or them epread on cotton cloth. The attempt to stock Powder river with i catfish has beon successful, and some were | SEABURY'S SULP| DLES: galdun as buan sucamful aud sows wofo | - SRABURY “.,,fi,,'-n,',‘""!!,m"fl,,,‘,,,fi, PRICE 25¢ PER BOX, il rloads of cattle have been shipped these candles had smells in basements, ¢losets, by Dave torn of Pendloton to Chicago on a | &0 arodeatroyed, and thuscontagiouddiscased Shecial trait, which will make the run on | arekeptuways alio wetul for cxpelling move | Asle Your Druggist A L in eighty-four hours. Quitos and Lrritating insocts. _ Price, b - Charlie lenz of Big Springs, Klamath To purify sick-rooms, apartnents, eto., nse MANUFACTURED 15¥ marsh, bus & couple of 1lue bear cubs weigh- HYDRONAPHTHOL PASTILLES, fig over sixty pounds caca. They are youug | Which in burning, disifect and produch & g ml.“ 3, but as docile as kittens and full of L{f}f:}!l;«:nlr&{:’“imi:‘mxmf:m« %o, per ‘ L ‘ spor BEABURY & JOMNSON, Probably the only orange that ever grew Pha tioal and ripencd. 1o Graud Honde vailey 16 @ Uhasnit ™ | NEW YORK, ONMAHA, = NBEG. st fires I tho Bluo mountaing west of aro causing gr .|l lmx 10 \lmln' DISEAYES AT, 8 oMA of

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