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THE OMAHA DAILY BEEX D{O\'DJ\Y OC e —ree . ——— S—— — 4 ] [ » ) - broader clalm to the attention of investors. | yards said that it was true wolves were fn-| The company is phittisg in $20,000 worth -rf' lULSFOF ES ER\ -.y- the Denver News vading Las Animas county and killing oft | new machinery. Ytah, capital is behind the | he present occwpants of the Cochit! dis- | many calves. They are not molesting cattle, | enterprise. | - r mr-r are mostly old miners from Creede, | although it is expected they will do so when| A ranchman froM Rock Springs will clear Th’lt s US o Cripple Craek, Virginia City, Ploche and the food Kets more scarce. $2:000 from his yekelables this year, and yet S, b o Rese! '“n"k Hills. Cochiti’s boom started all right LEADVILLE'S GOLD BELT. it is said that Wyoeming, or that portion of Tuvasion of the Puyallup Reservation by the | Il ®pring and hundreds of prospectors, | ey K, 15000 RN T 1 Northern Pacific Repulsed. ihany"GE e Trom Cotoraan radhes s ani atly extonded Alosg the Hods Tadriated og | A foros of sbow B men and teanip has located everything in sight, It was easy to | cs orce of s eological research. The Silver Standard | been put to work 4t Dome lake, near Sheri- | locate claims, becauso the croppings were too | neri- | . ! 5 thiseN v e outfits staked |#nd Minnehaha placer schemes are in pro- | dan, intending to fit_it up for a beautiful ) HED MAN'S TITLE 18 NOT. TRANSFERABLE | S5'Syio 0% fiseed, nd Some outfits staked | areas of formation, says the Leadsine| ploasurs aad SRGE S cenr & — |men to do assessment work. Capitalists | Herald- Demor rt and it le very Wkely that| W, 8 Irwin distotéred two veins of oo e L Tl t \r b from Denver, Chicago and other points went | the shafts will be started before the snow | fifteen miles west: of Casper. One is a — 1a our ¥ruit Ralsing on the Const—Prices Scarcely | (o the camp and wers about 10 buy claims | files. ~ Manager Shinn is pushing his plans | three-foot vein apd, {he other a six-foot | 3 Vald for Frelght—Falr Prospects for |mn| put up mills, when the land grant scare | With vigor and energy, and is more than| The coal 1s a good domestic artiele | " 86 Cockitl { was sprung and the boom collapsed. The |Satisfled with the proposition. Not only | The finding of ‘Hold near Big Piney, on sl el oy grant claimants talked loudly about trespass, | 1% there an opportunity for the striking of | Groen river, has vaused a great deal of ex- | alms—Western News. damages and injunctions, and although there | the big gold ore chute of the lower levels, masy people are going there - was nothing in the scare to hinder anybody | but there is also the pi of striking b ome of the men are making | 3 | from working a mine, the capitalists were ;!I;va':r;: T t"h\]l;v of :‘wk h‘fl wn | from 85 to §10 per day | | | The United States ecircuit court of ap-|afraid of buying lawsuits, and Cochiti's boom | found in the Roc and Dome, Stone, 0 The Colorado Diteh com & putting a3 | e —_—We bg 44 a - g, ¥ sVer SO . S 0 Deais has decided that the Puyallup Indians | collapsed for the time. Many miners fin- | Point, Pinnacle, Nisi Prinu, and other | Th a mpany 18 Yes, indecd, we are—we are always “‘pushed for money ut never so much as now, | bons ppen - . ¢ [0 a big reservoir south of Sheridan at a ssment work and returned to bonanza properties of the early days. Mining | & BIE FERIVIRE ROWL of Sherldan at 4 acres ani Wil supoly water 1o We invested a whole lot of money in the great dissolution stock of Hammerslaugh, Saks & . 5 shed their a have mnot the power to allenate the land | &\ a The few hundred remaining in | men will watch the developments in south | JEL Ot 19 gronted to them In severalty, and has @p-| oy, built cabins, bought bacon and beans |lowa gulch with Intense interest, for it remaining one-fourth is taken work will be commenced on the plant !( Juote you January price right now—before the season begins=-=V Battle is being made on the Russian thistls | . ) = ‘ g has been thoroughly ,.,-a...fiifi‘.-.a“"‘:f.ff »'\’.l-]xh;-’ LAy i P gL L l"‘"""““"ll' we can't get a fair price we'll take less this timz. Yourchoice of the finest overcoats and proges ind o) PR he biggest | where is evidence of ractically inew. | Wherever found and recogniz here are | ticated Tndian and th Aw or heard of. He says it is t ¢ a P y ¢ who do not know the weed when| . . . 0 . low grade proposition on earth, and by low stible supply of gold bearing ore many who do n n I 3 & . AR » srslaugh's ¢ Fie Puyallup Ludians sabiabit & fertle Val | gl ‘average of about 340 per | tediam e rungio one a0 0 1| they see I but 1ue pespla are becoming | SUits |ess than 50c on the dollar, including our own and Hammerslaugh's clothing, dey o the stato of Washington. The lands | (on. it Is not a poor man’s camp, for the | ton. This ore is free milling and so soft | (45t acquainted with it M < o el g i PR | irrigate 25,000 acres of land g e : 3 i i B rorkma Tt o Of the ament whe drove |and et about prospecting theit leads and (large chutes ate found there It will opan up | TR0 00 setip o and, (,o.. and although we bought it so cheap—it's not going fast enough to suit us—We can't wail the workmen of the Northcrn Pacific off the | piling up ore while awaiting the settlement |4n entirely new field for operation. R R A ek T | g g g servatio decision is one o ost | of the great and the advent of capital | LA BELLE GOLD CAMP, r b el b P ) Sl Wi Ao ysebifhoripyed P s i | The recent gold find in the Costiita dis- | o ratie) PULon the market a short time | for the weather to wake you up to the fact that another winter is coming—We're going to - Hrigaat it oAy (BN DRl endersd bimos e | i o iyl wtione tima ownes oF the tamous | et M., from present indications 18| remaining. one.fon oty | | | 0 g atio @ cou says the Ba 1 y D —— Orgunization of the court, says the "‘"’ Lo ymond-Ely mine in Nevada, is a Cochiti | among the most valuable discoveries of re- he wu- 5 cisco Call, and unless reversed jspector, the present owner of a numbe' | cent years, says the Wyoming State Trib- preme court of the United States, will be an | of claims. He declares that Cochiti's sur-|une. An area of about luipregnable barrier between the unsophis- | face indicatious are the greatest he ever pushed for money and enterprising white, | more granted to them in severalty @ few years | mining and milling must be done on a large | that the cost of reduction is very low | There is a hitch between the Union Pa s ago, and t pration forthwith began to | ¥ and the ol le 8o fuc that it must| The new camp has been named La Belle, | cific and the lesseos of the soda lakes near ‘ . okt % e e 1. The | e saved by amalgamation It is about forty-five miles southwest of | Laramie, and the spur to the lakes may T o IERLO, SR BOIRG rt says the leads of Cochiti are true | Catskill, on the Union Pacific, Denver & Gulf [ 00t be put into repair at present. The com g Northern Pacific Railroud company decided | jigqure veins in porphyry, quite liberal in the | road, south from Pueblo, having dally stage | bADY Wwants & guarantee that 1,000 ions of | 1o construct a branch (hrough the rese matt of size “Brosion has left ledges of | connection with Catskill. The present popu- | soda will be shipped, and this the lessees MEN'S OVERCOATS—-REAL BLUK CHINCHIT LA tion and a contractor named Ross was quartz fifty feet thick cropping to a height | lation of the camp is about 700, with daily | are not prepared to give. with fancy worstod linings, warm and durable (Gt (o vecdrs 1he Hght of W of fty fect, and even ten feet above the |arrivals numbering seventy-five to 100, many | A representative of the Denver and Pu worth $5.00 & G g! 7 Aionj ollie fhenibers ‘of Uhe Lribe: Hoas | BYOURA these croppings assay high in|of whom are locating there permanently. |smelters has made u proposition to | Sals Btios o o 2 ook Ry i and silver from the moss down. | The little camp presents all the bustling ac- | gwners of three of the iron mines at Hart- | 8 ey DI AR S r met Johu and Suste Cook, who sold him |Tiore e halt n dozen main paraliel | tivity of Creede and Cripple Cresk in iheir seventy-five miles north of Cheyenne. | \VC W (+] the right to use their share of the reserva- | Joads running north and south for miles, be- [ haleyon days—residences and business houses propose taking out 100 tons of ore a tion for six months at the absurdly low | sides many smaller veins, all of them trace- |are going up rapidly, and on every hand is day, paying the ners of the mines 10 cents 200 PYINE SHETLAND AND FRILZE STORM rato of $1 a month. Ross brought hix able by the croppings across ridges and |promise of a brilllant future for La Belle. a ton royalty the output. The ore will ULSTERS, three shades—go in this sale at...... " work camps and implements and pitched | canons from any high polnt where timber | A committee of mining experts who have | bo yged for fluxing purposes in the reduc- ] his tents on the land obtained from the | does not obstract the view. How these giant |only just returned from La Belle make the [y "o gold and silver ore. If the proposi are are Dbline - ity Wotk oF GFaiing To |ine. call. | MAEEN of skyionsd ore evaded discovery |most encouraging reports, which more than | o ot BECL SRS LEVET CE0 (R CAe BERPERE o 2 SR S . road had commenced, when Indian Agent | during the 300 years that have elapsed since | Justify the clalns made as to the great rich- | yo"riven employment and a spur fourteen 00 FINE ALL WOOL CHEVIOT SUITS, IN SACKS « Is came (o the rescue of the dispossessed. | Vhite men bigan ransacking New Mexico for |ness of the new felds, and.hold out great | b, BVE) FMACMEL B & KPR JOUG et only, dark effects, go in this sale at the cxtraordi He drove Ross-and his men oft the reserva. | 8old is one of the nnomaiies of mining his- | romise for 'thr f:fl:n’" St Badger, on the Cheyenne & Northern rail- DALY PEITE O e edi | Pasbmnanetonni iasi 5 A tios d forbade them to return, but his | (OFY. e 3 A SURPRISE TO ASSAYERS. road, to the mines pushe(l pUSth triumph was painfully evanescent Rose S rh;-‘r T minr m‘vull(«:t;!'m: SI"’.'!‘K;“’."..n'J.’ { lmrr fi Ah. I(Iurrl'l;‘ul 1. H : ln‘l’n.-hrnnm OREGO U ol ed an injunction from the | one of he hlo smel , ranged e | two of he best metallurgists in the west b ) q o o ] - ;. 2T ITS e v 3 e “,'I erstrsih court for nocthern | from $100 ta. §700- per ton. Cochiti is not| have Leet testing the La Plata ores by the| The first cargo of lumber to leave Coos 300 STRICTLY CLAY WORSTED SUITS IN ALL Washington, restraining Kels from interfer- | 0n a raflroad as yet, and the cost of wagon | Beam process, and the results are astonish- | bay for a foreign port will be shipped on the styles of the garment, to fit all shapes of men, 8 OO Ang with him or his workmen. lc prepared | haul is somewhat expensive, but can be| ing, says a Hesperus special to the Denver |he new vessel On , lately built at North fOl' sucks or frocks go in this groal smlo Bt . v iveiiiii . fOl‘ Lo letus to the reservation, but Bels, unwill- | Jarkely reduced - by improving roads. | Times. Their tests prove that the La Plaia | hend £ Ing to give up the batile after one bout, | AN tnalysis of . Cochitl ‘ore = shows | ores are ot entirely free milling, as claimed | guiiiam county fn receiving bids for build h carried the case to the court of appals, | that It is exactly the same combinatlon | by many. The Montesuma ore ‘s supposed | ., 140 COUnEY 0 Soteiving s for DI CHILD'S 2-PIECE ALL WOOL SUIT, IN SKV- A hich dissolved the decree and reversed the | Of Mincrals &a the OB Of the Oométock 88d | to be the netrest to & tree milling propost-{ (18 B CUURLY, SR ST BUUSE, JoRg Trott eral styles—just the thing for boys' school wear, a © 1 Judgment of the Washington court | amenable to the same treatment, ahe | tion in the district. Of this ore ten pounds | (i o0 mone regulur 82,00 sult on sale at mone The contractor did not deny that the lands | WODeE or westerly veins gold predominates | of pulp were made. Five pounds wers seantod e ST RS s ol Y- regulur § i ale at.. Cheneiiii Y. wpon which he had entered were part of | M value, the general proportion being | by the Beam process and five pounds of raw Vi hed et R e silver e rock carries no base me per ton. By the Beam process the tests ¢ 4 Pendleto, e is work YN e 203 A WAk oy Fortiy exoked | e vonandng (bohydl | dnd s tree miiling. Cochitt miners learned »nr»3 560 ‘on the (hres: Aatave TeniiTy | enoligh alisad!to keen them busy &l winter CHILDS JUNIOR SULTS, [N CHEVIOT ANDCA 2 50 ,“‘“,’ ot IAnNG $h daveralty canh afterward | (At after the old Comstockers arrived in [ ores show the same remarkable increase by | The Wallowa Chieftain figures that the re ill"rl: i ;': l‘\m.\ l-l ‘,'., L }I",‘ 8 J L0 7 yoars, ; making the Indians citizens ssarily had | (e camp. Previous to their arrival it | this process. Every test made proves that |ceipts of that section from cattle will enable regular $6.00 suit, now goces for teesenss AT 05 FevOK S, Piasivatian, | held that the ores should be smelted there is immense volatilization by the old | the farmers and storekeepers to pay their \he court of ‘appeals carefully considered | cause gold could not be found always by | methods. Metallurgists and a ers are all | debts, leaving the proceeds from hogs clear the plassible argument made in behalf of | crushing and panning ore that showed gold | at sea, and this is a nut for them to crack, | profit - the rallroad company and its contractor and | in the fire assay There is intense excitement among men over | Fifteen ounces of gold dust from the d 1 against it. Cochiti camp is fully six months old. It | these tests. Ore from Junction Creek tested | Loiselle placer claim on the Grand Ronde It is clear,” the decision reads, al- | 1s doubtful, however, if the ore treatment | by the Beam process shows a wonderful | river was recently deposited at the La Grande totrient alone could not have the of | problem has been settled as yet. ADy| increase of $600 per ton. The tailings from | National bank. This is the output of thre making the Indians citizens, unless citizen- | kind of ore be handied in a smelter, | the Walker mill ran $100 per ton. This |weeks' run of three men witip is held 10 be inconsistent with the ex- | and with this as a general rule the special | method of treating refractory ores will trans. 4 €. Swanston lrmn Sacramento, has within ivtanco of 4 rescrvation. It is not necessarily | methods of treatment will be compelied o | form heretofore low grade mines ino mines | < S% ! S PORNRSAIE TR Kb aiath < So; some of the restraints of @ reservation | (hi for positon, The camp hus u €0d | that will pay handsome dividends to the own: | e 185t ! R e may be inconsistent with the rights of cit winter climat which assures the continua- re. An effort will be made to secure a dig s, 300 ead the horhood ¢ ® L ] fzons | tion of work from one end of the year to | mill of this precess for the La Plata dis. | Lndians head fn_ the nelghborhood of 9 The power of the government to impose | another. A railroad spur is the next item | qrict, Bly, and 250 head in Langell valley, making in all 725 head, for which he paid from . . the restraint not questioned, and its pur- | In order. S el THE DAKOTAS. , 3 8 Wi’ Suceessors to it e ot ques oned ‘and s pur- T ST iy TR | o g L suceessors to Columbia Clothing Co., 5 with the Indians—the allotment of [ The latest gold excitement along the Yu- One of the never-fajling features of the thousands of acres in the vicinity of Huron, | 3 _ 5 8 in geveralty—all had the purpose of | kon has been caused by a discovery at Birch | oy T USR8 grease factory | CUTS0ES_Which the San Francisco steam- em in permanent homes, creek, some 200 miles below Forty Mile, | "o oS by o UL B® B8t G ey | ers _carry away from - the tiele 6 of the treaty the privilege | says a returned miner in an interview pul | e put in place. When in .operation it is (3th and Farnam Streets, Omaha. fixing “By @ Coos and Carry county ports is poultry There, thrifty of allotment can only be availed of by those | lished In the San Francisco Chronfele. | ! farmers and ranchers of the creeks aud Who will Iogate)/on 'the same as's permanent | Thove are stions 100 men there, and they say | ®Xpected to employ 300 people rivers are always turning off sometd company owning the mines is called, Is there A Yome, and the purpose s 80 care- | they have very good prospects. Reports from Miller say wolves are be- | grain, wool, hides, butter, cggs, fruit, chick-|to make a thorough investigation of the FROM ful. Invistent and dominant that the pres-| The main gold producing diggings are at|coming very bold in some localities, one|ons, ducks, geese, turkeys or hogs. property, with a view to ascertaining ' ident 18 iven power (o prescribe such rules | Milier creek, which is really tributary to | farmer losing twenty-five sheep in one day. | 1 okeon of Omaha purchased last week | whether it can be worked ai a proft i anl rogulations as will insure to the family | Sixty-mile creek, but everybody gocs up Forty- | Raids upon colts and young stock are also between 800 and 1,000 head of steers in Wal-| There are about 150 men dry washing “ DIRECT FROM THE TANK in the case of the head thereof the posses- | mile to get there. There are about 750 miners | Teported. lowa county, which he will feed for the|in the Dolores district in Mexico, and a sion and enjoyment of such permanent home, | nile creek. Some claims t Miller | The county seat contest between Deadwood v as high as $4 and §5 to the pan. It[and Lead City has been settled through a is all placer mining on the Yukon. There |decision in a case before the circuft court nd if issued may can- | is quartz, but it is buried so deep under | that the election of 1877 was legal, and winter market. He paid $21,000 for them. By this sale about $20,000 was left in the hands of the stockmen. Mr. Jackson will considerable amount of the ers are in demand at the present tim No Boiler. No Steam. No Engineer, and he may issue a patent only to such per- | son or family who has made a location for a permanent home, spend $10,000 or $12/000 more in buglng hay | . M. Potter brought In from his placer } [BEST POWER for ('orn and Feed Mills, Baling el it it such person or family rove from | te ice and moss that it cannot be reached. | Deadwood thereby permanently made the| 4ng grain, which otherwise would have been diggings in Potter gulch, sixteen miles from g Hay, Running Scparators, Crenmeries, &o, o \ plice to place. | The ground there seldom thaws ;m more | county seat. a drug on the market Helena, fifty-seven ounces of gold, worth $18 2 It follows, therefore, that the contract of | than about eighteen fnch It takes some| The gymnasium of the Baptist Younz | rye phenomenal barl il iatar | The largest nugget washed out TT ‘ A | L e phenom arley yield reported of {an ounce. The largest nugg sl \ Ro-s with the Indians was vold and’ that he | Lime to open up the placer mines, bec AUEE | People’s union at. Vermillion s being ntted | ¢.000 D UAHEIN FINEL OniLbir, veoras ot eand th13 Ly oot ikl WOne 438 oad (inces twace orro GASDLINE ENGINES Jus properly removed from the reservation. | you must get down to bedrock. The gold | with all the more common calisthenic impl by Steel e . | v smaller es wortl FET S G | by Robert Steel, near Airlie, turns out to be | many smaller ones worth from B s ukiets of o Tudlans o free aud course. Labor is worth $10 a|ments. The young men are wholly independ- | 4 fact, The heaviest part of the field, a The Western .Union Telegraph company Sltflt(‘!)onapy:, Portable. of commerce to remove the restraints on | day. 4 ent, relying for funds solely upon their mem- | pjece of” less than five acres, could only | pag & force of men stringing the wires be. 7ol m“mmlfl lll-_l’- 8 to 20 H. P, alionation congress will no doubt do so if There are no mi :‘ump:‘nuus in nru» d!p.;~ bership fees and dues. be cut with a mower, and 1400 bushels were | ween Sheridan and Billings, Mont. Two g, Prices, ete,, describiug work 1, hwlunh apolied to, and In the latter case it will be | zings, everything being done on_prospec fhe executive board of the James River | threshed from it. It is a fine grade of brew- | yire e use The company will b enabled to provide for the interests of the | [ heard of a miner on Miller creek who, It | The executive boa L wires will be used ! I eleared up all the way from | Valley Fair association has decided to hold | ing barley, the price of which in the Port- Indians "“""'f than they have seemed (o "'“m;;“‘l" ](‘f;“m'““ e will eome. out this|a fourtl state agricultural fair and race | land market is now 8 cents per cental | which time the Burlington will begin running i BaRr Mn o (hesm sajres. fn.-LhG oombral | MO0 0 B0, meeting next year. Active steps will be| Some dogs ran a deer into the Santiam |its turough trains ith Ross, ¢ om now out to make the enterprise | at Breitenbush, near the ferry. Arthur, the snt in Idaho i YACIFIC O Y 6 W st tell you some of the prevailing taken: fram now out to'ma Ly » ik 0 The total railroad assessment in aho s PACIFIC COAST FRUITS. O eV ALIOR | s iindatac [siisoamatevaW LA (s “ZA1zE HIA |11 o A e saw the deer | g5 960 730, exclusive of property off the right- ~ The pres: year has afforded very little |y i) know what to expect. Flour is $20 | September 25 to 28, inclusive. and rushed for a gun, which he secured, and, | ;"o o The total number of miles of rail- atisfaction to fruit growers on the “fic |4 sack, or $40 per 100 pounds: bacon is $80 | The Sioux Falls Jobbers association has | taking good aim fired, but failed to stop the | road in the state is 1,079.40 There are anywhere, for 1 have recently re- | 100; potatoes are very scarce, but when | jssued an important campaign document, | deer. He was himseif knocked flat by the | 50817 miles of telegraph lines in the state, gived o' lotter from_the e ¢ i | they are 10 be had in the spring, when the | There has been formed a producers and | kicking gun, He fired three times In all, | pacoil A0 o6 SR04 o0 T fitner of idlers in Chicago and the east that says first boat comes up, they sell for T Chicago, 245 Lake St. = THE OTTO GAS ENlGINE W9 A, PA. | ready for business about the 150l inst, at| Omaha,SheeleyBlock, 15th & Howard Sts. 33 & W aln ut 5 ILADELP WANHODD RESTOK ED:Semiteese o prescripe o ases Of thie Gencrative orguns, sUch us Lost Manhood, 3 cents | shippers association, with the jobbers' as.|each time being kicked down. The third| (alophone lines is forty-two and one-half i'x’:z‘:’x‘a'f:\m\Awux:::‘t"fl:fi;‘flmunflx} (vmunu:;m]:\, B el s, TooTary Mave ol dcteally £6- | pound; onlons ato S1 & peund: sugar, 50 | soclation as tho leader in the movement, for | shot brought tho deer o time, and it was | yles, assemsed at $17,103 : S o arlooce! ceived payment for ¢ the froit ark 18| cents a pound, and very ordinary tea $1.50 | the purpose of securing from the coming | taken out of the stream dea o e A at Loy e i e packed in, to say nothing of the fruit, writes |, r'uuudl Little coffee is u; Some of | h’;,'txl‘mu‘ru laws which 5m abolish grievous WASHINGTON lo:}fl‘ ”"p&':-yv”m 1o buid 8 flouring orgsas of all impurities. iyl m & correspondent of the Portland Oregonian. | the men are raising potatoes and onions up | abuses which the railroads, it is complained, oy s mill. Forty thousand fes of lum- onirthons and reatores amall weak orgnns, It would no doubt have been better to have | (here now, but they are doing it under cover. | have foisted upon the state The Sprague roller mills shipped eight | Bl Horty | Stousail Tl ol IR BUTIaRTS e 09, cuired by Doolors |n bocuiise nitioty par cen: are troubled with dried thelr apricots and peaches, but all | Personaily, I think the country s over-| A meeting was attended lately by repre- | Carioads of flour to China. Verd! Mil and Lumber company for the A weritton guaranion given and moncY NG 17 a0k boen dors i 00 e Pk el Tl (n Bope of Impeovement. of | Lony Y0 Wil Red oihers who will ot |yeqialives from ' Cierk, Spink, . Fauik,| Tho Carpenter creamery. at Yaklma Clty, building. The mill will be of the capacity of manent cure. $1.00 a Hox KX [or &5.50 by mail. send for sixeuinr and tastimoniain L > LT ping their fruit in hope of improvement of | agree with me on that proposition. I think Brown and Beadle counties, to take | has begun the manufocture of limberger fifty barrels per day. The latest improved Address DAVOY. MWEDIOINY 0. . 0. s 9076 San o 1 lo by the market llmnlou pears t”w. been ur:T-: there are enough n]\"n there now. There Is|gcijon regarding coal rates from lake | cheese. machinery will be put in. It is expected to GOODMAN DRUG CO., 110 Farnam & trset,Omal:a. s0ld for less than the freight. They, too, could | any quantity of gold, but there is so much kg JortE: frepiny N = oy LN s e Bave been dried easily, and w0 would have | prospecting and there is such dificulty in | 204 mining poln Agents of the North-| A 100-barrel flouring mill will be erected | bg in running order about Y western road were present and offered to | at Marshal Jun ship coal, that was bought for free distribu- | near future tion, at half rates from any mines or docks | on its line. The offer was promptly rejected, realized something, especially since the east- | getting grub that it is dificult to do much ern apple crop is a failure. “Shipments com- | work. I think the mines are excellent, but menced from Oregon in July, but they did | the severe conditions under which they mus fot pay, and so were dlscontinued. The rea- | be worked are certainly against their devel- | {iloir aim being declared 1o securs 4 ball T S olive flourishes at an adjacent farm and son for this collapse of eastern markets has | opment. rate from all roads for all coal used by that | S oY e tyaan The Dbeen that money was not in eirculation and | I wish to say one thing about the diggings | | The Snake River Fruit Growers associa-|bears fruit, at the age of five in the hands of well-todo mechanics and | Mile cresk. ‘T think it Is the moat | WNeE TeDresentative class of oliixe :‘_a"",:,!:(’ tion will ship his season 150 carloads of | ollve tree ‘ncreases in fruit-bearing F\.x]'](q:l" worklug poople, us Is the-case in prosperous | orderly mining camp in the world. We have | byt feel that they are Justly entitled o son. | frult to eastern points. has seen about n,l\ umoiers. I Europe e PN fhose wvho are usually afuent | no law except miners' law, and that s Well | coggions at the hands of the rallways of | The salmon cannry at Cosmopolis employs [and Asia it is said to atiain the age of 2 SISOl e prasicin olose ‘econiomyimany)| cheerved:: b Miners iloave ' thelrs cAbInas will|igohth Dakota by eason of cron sailuces and| sixty Chinamen and! twolve (white sasn, snd | TEars: are going without deficacies and luxuries who § ¥ bags of gold dust on the floors and the doors | oy prices, from 250 to 300 cases of black salmon are put | News of the accidental breaking down of usually buy liberally of fruit. The times are | wide open, and nothing is stolen, 1 slept ar Plaza, out of joint, decidedly, but the fruit-grower | one night in a cabin belonging to the trading tiou, Spokane county, in the | on' the Heights, at Eddy, N. M., and on several Tarms the plive of compieree s Srow- “WHERE DIRT GATHERS, WASTE RULES." The State Agricultural college at Pullman |ing finely and there is no visible reason has opened with ninety students and en-|why it may not be dtabla, The Mexican GREAT SAVING RESULTS FROM THE USE OF COLORADO. up daily. They expect to put up 22,000 cases | the bridge over North Pine creek, n ot Ve of salmon this seasor A has reached Spokane, The structure was 12 \ must “pick his Aint and try again.’” company. It had over $1,000 worth of | The coal mine at Newcastle is about to o oral M of the Hverett|Years old, but was considered safe for or- ucLAs e Peraps the prune-grower has the best | provisions in it unguarded. On the door |b® opened up. per mill is happy over the receipt of an | dinary trafic. A harvester attempted ko £, &, ros for a faic wmarket price for his| was a sign reading: ‘“Walk right in, gen-| Silverton district is improving gradually as | baper mill is happy o e e S R 4 4, der for 30,000 pounds of railroad manilla | © JS THE BEST, ducts of any of the soil-workers the pres- | tlemen, and make yourselves at home. Be | a gold producer. QRQRE. L0849, hounas nd government. | the bottom with the machine. He was pin- Nosuunxma. | ent year ~To predict high prices would | careful of fire and close the door.” A man| Florence will soon have electrio Hghts wcelved from Aus. | ioned under the engine, and would have .5 CORDOVAN, be absurd in such a financial time, but therc | is entitled to a bunk wherever he can get it. and water works. “777 | perished had not some railroad section men FRENCHA ENAMELLED CALF, * reasons why we may expect at least fair | You may also get a meal at any cabin. That [ he: ! iv. i 0 . come to his rescue. $x50 ces for our prune is the law of the country, but see to It that | There I8 great activity in mining proper 545350 FINECALF& KANGAROR. It is generally considered that the Mis- | you take mothing. The penalty for theft is|'1®¢ 0 Goo 2 paper for the Another large order wi tralia. George Reibold was laughed at when he re jant| Frank Stewart of Fish Lake has made an located and began work on the Little portant discovery in the White mountains, 3 3.30POLICE, 3 SoLes. sissippl valley markets and those of the th. Pay day called for §110,000 In the Cripple | mine, that had been abandoued on three | Important discovery in the White mountalns. | . pog |NTPENAL AND EXTERNAL USE. +2. WORKINgy, While (e oy ke Ahelr Prunes in sacks | Like all miners, those on the Yukon are | Creek district, a gain of $15,000 over the | occasions previously, says the Asotin Senti- the Hawthorne (Nev) Bullstin. He hrought CURES AND PREVENTS ExTRA FINETENG i While the far east prefers all choice prunes | great gamblers. During the winter that is | Previous month, nel. This season 3 . jeorge Reibold can do the o Candelaria ber o 1 specimen 7 $2,41.75 BovsSt ms;«fl in the twenty-five-pound boxes, nicely faced | about all they have to do, except to drink | The Fortland mines, Cripple Creek, are | laughin the Little Giant has netted him {“d‘":;:‘“L‘f‘ru‘;g;'““:l'”lm;fi‘L)H inecinens, O)ld‘S, Coughs, Bore Th:oats, Influenza, Bron- 2, |§B°V on wax paper, and the boxes lined with white | and smoke. There are twelve saloons at | credited with smelter shipments at the rate | $50,000. counts he had not found the ledge, but ohit's, Pneumouia, Bwelling of the ,znug Pr' Baper. " The trelght on sacks being 20 cents | Forty-mile, and_ whisky I8 %0 gonta & drink. | of twelve carloads per day. This implies | I is reported that in Camas there will be | sl that ‘he can find It The couniry is Joints, Lumbago, Inflammations, 435 g T DO! per pounds more than on boxed fruits | At Miller creck whisky 1s $40 a gallon. Most | an output of from 120 to 180 tons. about 2,00 tons of hay that wi main ch ineral and it is not unlikely he ALOGUE * {ho differcuce almost pays for ne boxes and | of the liquor Is smuggled in. A8 to gambling, | * e Cebolla Placer company Is putting | uncut this season. The reaton is that the | (it i, GUECEAL AOS 4 RHE“' ITISH "E“H‘LGI!; Wb DOUGLAS € ade P d v b . o exte a e ot| v 3 a year ago b; the better in twenty-fiy What Is becom- | very quiet for a mining camp. Bad men are | PIACEF al the mouth of Goose creek. B3t onto the mendow lend.. They aze talk Tams. Aris. Jothind ahout 8 Tesr Jxe by TOOTH‘\CHE, ASTHMA, You can anve money by wearing the Ing absolutely necessary is to have prunes | given an invitation to quit the country, They | The Denver & Gulf managers are con-| [ of organising for the purpose of draining | Nonresident E EUAR SaUIA A RS bevd BT DIFFICULT BREATHING A Douglan 83.00 Shoe. carefully graded as to size, for, other things | usually accept it | sidering the advisability of reopening the | & Of O aliens, have all been relocated by parties o Beenuse, wo are ‘ho largest manufactarers <1 belng equal, size governs price.” Very small| Four Chinese tried to get In last spring. | Alpine tunnel on the Gunnison lin which The Spokane bureay of immigration {s mak has been closed for thres years. This will g ela e arra ants for a fruit show enable them to run trains from Denver | 08 elaborate arrangem AINS in from one to YOT ONE H( at need unyor backed by Montana mining capitalis s, upon | CURES THE WORST the ground that the mines are held and| enty min i grade value by stamping tho 1d,and guaranteo tholr prunes will go over 100 to the box, aud thus | They were told at Chileat name and price on the come into comp: R after reading SUFFER WITH pass to “pull itlon with the cheap| their freight,” aud they did so. They never owned by aliens, contrary to the United | PAIN batiom, whi Jou agaiust high prices sad Turkish prunes that come over in 1400- | came back to Gunnison 0 Ue kel 1 RpokailesOctonor 34 Lo ‘,""l":-l‘.-» B A i s ey way's Keady Kellol 1s n nure Cure for | e jadioman’s profiia. O e ¢ € > clusive, with prospects ol 08 oce o | ot b jowed to work the mines until ory P | pound casks, and would be a terrible compe- | T want to tell you one thing about the| The leasers of the Bureka lode in Dubol i | will not be allow vory Fain, Spram, Brumes, Fains by the havo them #old overywhers atlower prices for § | a yo 0 2 Q e Eure ode 8 | affair. The Intention'is to give prizes for | o " B0 BC Goth At he courts g % | the valuo given thai ‘other make. 4 :Illzrr- ouly for the 1l cents duty left in our | yykon. It is absolutely the worst infested | are working the mine with a full force of i“" the leading spechyiens of fruit, roots ,‘" case is d v‘l‘ 1 by ”v‘ 4 "m‘ D nmu'.cn.»:u or L Tt was tue first xfi-ffl'.";”m:mum ...:‘,f.u..;u,,,?.f,k&'.g.:',b v N TS T L | country 4;n earth, so far as mosquitoes are | men ;‘ a depth of llu;ly fe ;x they en- | vegetables, grain and grisce:, and special cash | xm‘::: -“;-lr ln:.’-l 1::‘”; ; I”l‘m:”hg Quals ever }rm— e -‘n’-l- in Il e on y‘}n AIN n‘u;un‘ P 4 NDERFUL coneerned countered a cross veln of rich mineral. | prizes for the best fioral display | ate Montan s the re pu stantly stops the most excructating A party of prospectors a short time ago| The winter season s just closing in now at now have a car of ore nearly ready for | * About 100 men die now employed on the | Chase by an English syndicate of a group | paius. allays | RMAtION,, ANCL GHERS inAKe A. W. Bowman Co., 117 N, 181, discovered a series of caverns in the rocky | the mines. Last winter was the hardest . which, it is predicted, will yleld | onoott ditch Akima county, and the | Of Bold properties located in Madison WOLY, | glands or organs, by on n. | €.Jd. Carlson, 1218 N_24th, 8ides of Cajon peak, a spur of the Cuyamaca | known. It registered 82 degress below zero. |a handsome return. earth s being throwm up in & lively manner, | the price agreed upon belng given at $425- | *'A"Ji 8" 0500, by one A tumbler of Elies 8venson, 2003 N. 24th, wites cure Cramps, Spa ach, Hearthurn he properties are situated on the Big |"water will in n few m very warm. There| It is evident, says the Leadville Herald- | A is plenty of game along the banks, including | Democrat, that thers has been quite an in. moose, cariboo, bear and ducks. One has not | crease in ore shipments all over the camip plenty of salmon in the river. On has not [ This increase bas come both from silver ich time to hunt, though, nor inclination nd from gold properties, though no doubt v either, for where the country is not moun- | the great increase comes from the silver pro- . Kentucky in Interesting features, as well a5 | (ainouy it is boggy BT e s I8 accounted for by the fAct | "Gharles Kalous chinp 'into Tekoa with 43| Reports of wavages by packs of gray | DY RELL . 'fl_‘_llh» size of tho I:mmllwr\\ 5 o . DRIVEN OUT BY WOLVES. that since the first of the month, the begin- | head of cattle from (he, Nez Perces reserva- | wolves come from eastern Montana. Stock here are several external openings. from na 0 e las ol idind en Te olves N oh of which u vertical asoont Is made into| News comes from Las Animas county, | DiP8 of the last quarter of the year, many | tom ‘ate" Kelon sayp that he was over a|men report wolves mor e e e Fm.y oeuts l’%’,‘f‘,‘l/‘_“%‘if‘i .U"ng ist & chamber, with al laterals extending | Colorado, to the effect that much damage is | Mines have renewed or made new contracts | jarge part of the réserve, and finds a great | than ot any time during the history of to ot 5 - i with the smelters. . \- | Montana stockraising. Hundreds of head of and vigor quickiy chambers, some of them being of | being done by wolves this year. Adrian | portion of the tillable Jand taken by squat- | Mont ! sl reaored Vs tor T Aianmnah, soman ol Shere Relan ol | e A ik man A et sosntyha | Home'cepita) hax scared Another triumpli | ters, holding it ddwu. until the opening of | §TOWR stock have been killed, 0d Lhe Gum " 08 anmnoo llant with stalactites and stalagmites, and | Guoted as sayiug that the mortality of calves | in the Telluride district. ~ The Gold Moun- | the reservation to Seitlemeni, and that | ber of calves Slaughtered is M 14, A ey Wi i T INbALS. the g1 v | Although the investigations were cursory it | {rom this agency this year is the worst in (!aln Mining and Milling company, which [ any others are living with the Indians, so| I8 bands and cattie in herds have mot yet N o8 o . A. Fuller & Co., Corner 15th and Douglass Sts. , oo s | the history of the county. ~Mr. Alexander |purchased a group of gold claims near Te 10 be near to the lands selected by them. | been attacked, the wolves depending on 2 is Spparent m:u?.n“"ml:fladm\.:::lfl-yu BAR | 2% wave thal anry aiell cattie o are | luride last summer,>is shipping $2,000 per | *® '© "¢ | stock that strays from the herds, but cattle OMAHA, NEB which they were unablo (o ascertain, having 80 lights with them. Subsequently a party was organized for the purpose of exploring the caves, says the Denver Times-Sun, which were found to rival the Mammoth cave of quarter of a miilion feet of fine lumber 6 Blg | water Wil 15 | has been received for the flumes and tr Hole river, about ten miles from Melroso. | f Sour s and Alfred S. Congdon Paul is s The first payment of §20,000 ia to be made| tory ™ Collc, lntending the work, It there are no un-|in thirly days, and one of the points of | There is nol o remedial agent in all the world | T, &) Gressy, 2800 N at 8o, Omans looked for delays the:ditch will be completed | Agreement is that a forty-stamp mill will | that whil cure fever adn wgue and all other Ay e by the 1st of December. | at once be erected WAV'S PILLS, 80 quickly us RADWAY'S RIS Pusnens Ignatz Newman, 424 8. 1311, ok Headache, 1 a, Dyw W. W_.Fish>, 2925 Leavenworty dency and all internal puins. | Kelly, Stiger & Co., Farnam & 13t { range, In Southern California, the extent of | [n the spring it Is ofte | MISCELLANEOUS | " il i P, 45 Ty » | being forced into other districts to avoid the | Week in gold retorts. The company has \top | MO have fears for the winter, when the PR P! mren Siat, RN S Wincuons 40 KhA M Ay | e o iaat® 8 ATOR he | e i ot b ke MannTORNEr NSK| o eolendia displey o truit from the BILer | yogsta become desperate. ' The increase in NEBR A SI{ A o' commena W L oeymonsy "orl .h“"'_.‘nN_ e e e TR ;wlhp of |the pests it s said that vigorous war Is | Bradually developing its properties. After | Root country has been placed on exhibition | the number of wolves in the past two years | t clan, having been satiafactorily Atte \ strong saline qualities were found | belng waged upon them elsewhere. Ordi- | the first of the year it will need twenty |8t Butte 18 sald to be startling. and many men have e dor ustigmat erived @ Bl : maid ! ! e £ therefrom in my professional work g Ry Pt o | narily, the auditor's office is the first to learn | Stamps, and fhis will double its shipments. | The United States naval inspector has gone | been reported killed by them. In bands the ‘ AT 2 commeng afl of thy fouenst work 1 would jhet th?lflwnuu;n whies the entronces e, itte ot | of woit slaughtering, as fhers 3 & bounty | The Rext step will be ihe erection ot its from Victoria to Union, B. O.. to test Briiish | gray wolves have been known to attack at. | INATITONAL BANK [ iz, Very iy, * 3N AT R WALLAG Whick Is still vested in ihe government. A |UPou the scalps, However, but very few |OWn mill, with just such appliances as the | Columbia coal for naval purposes. WA Aamhiog | e A scalp bounty clalms are mow coming in. ore demands. company will bo organized to thoroughly ex- | i et U. 8. Depository, Umana, Nebras ore the caverns, which are said to be of | A WoIf scare is something of a new thing WYOMING | A pottery Is about to be started at Bols “ Idaho. Clay found there is reported su The first patient was received at the new | able for the fizest kind of earthenwars, in cluding glazed wa HEADACHE CAUSED BY EYB STRAIN. | DON'T TRIFLE WITH YOUR BYE! | CAPITAL, - - $400,000 | stuny persons whose heads are constuntly sehe mg have no idea what rellet solencifcaily fity SURPLUS, - - $55,500 | elusses will give them. Versally eatanl shed. b e le | In Colorado. When the scalp business was ase exteat, and lay the interior of th 8t its best huntors found they mountain open to the public. © able to | State Miuers' hospital at Rock Springs, make good wages in the fleld. Now matters | | OLAIMS IN THE COCHITL make go A turnip raised on the Haley place, near | Experiment made b the Utah experiment e« ged. The state is not buying bount > e city. W% The decislon of the United States court of | warrants. The best that can now be done | LATAMIE 18 being exhibited in that' city. | station showed that alfalfa hay was & more Whon Bab; was sick, wo gave her Castorla, Iy Nited giass il invariably iner th uble a mlo Whon shie was Chikd, she eriod for Castoria, —— fead 1o *FOTAL HEINDNiss. " Our Wiyt te land claims opening up the mineral | in the way of pay s a state warrant due two | It Welghs twenty-two pounds. suitable fe0d, both for stientug steers and| - " Ofiicers @nd Directore—Henry W. Totes, prey | *4Just glusscs wafely and correcily is beyond of the Cochiti district to location by | years hence. Hunters can make no money The Diamond Coal and Coke company, at | sheep, than efther timothy or wild hay. hen sho bacame Miss, she clung to Castoria, lo w W h_Dros ners and freeing it from the cloud of the | at this, and, as a result, the “varmints” | Diamondville, Uinta county, has made ar- It 1s probable that the poted Temescal tin hitl grant, is @ boon for the capitalists [ have inereased. rangements with the Union Pacific #ho have Invested In the district, and who | Inquiry at the office of the state live stock | comp bave, thus far, borne the brunt of develop !Muml ent s T B Collian A rasionei s Brev | Qutstion: Consull ua. Eyes tesied f1ee of ohargt: | 8 Reed, Casbier; William H. 8 Uugbes, erisi: | THE ALOE & PENFOLD CO, caabler. ani . Opposite Paxton Hotel, THE IRON BANK YO0K ¥OR THE GOLD LIOM. Whea sho had Childree, she gave them Castoria allroad | mines at Riverside, Cal., which have been ny for additional trackage and the | closed for some time, will be worked again fon shows no gemeral suffering from | erection of suitable buildings at the mines | before lonz. Herbert Praed of England, the wolf pest. One cattle man at the stock | at Diamondville on the Oregon Short llne, | president of the San Jaciuto estates, as the Qent, It ‘I“l this promising gold section