Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 19, 1894, Page 5

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AN | \ | ‘ > | } ) { 4 > i 5 : L] M ! { " | oy 3" ‘ | 8 3 ‘l { i ,‘ | gold he relates his experience of a single day. In preparing ore for the arastra It is necessary to crush it by hand. In the course of crushing sometimes nuggets of _gold are thrown out. In one day in this PULSEOF WESTERN PROGRESS A Dakota Gold Mine that Has Produced Over Fifty Millions, HISTORY OF THE FAMCUS HOMESTAKE Wonderfally Rich Ledge Discovered in Fool's Cunyon, Arizona—The Florence Petro- leum Belt — New M Nows of the xiean Mines— thwest. Mr. George a well known civil and mining of Lead City, 8. D, has been for a number of years employed on the famous Homestake mine which is probably ot producers in the country is now on his way to Arizona of A large property recently purchased by an English syndicate, located in the moun- tains near Phoenix. For several days past Mr. Majors visiting a brother Aspen and stopped off in Leadville, haging heard of our wonderful gold deposits, Herald-Demoerat rdly be fair,” ter, “‘to make any comparison Iville and the Black Hills as ducers, one reason belng that the been producing for many years ville has come to the front Majors, engineer near Lead City, the richest gold The gentleman {0 take charge one has been in says the Leadvill “It would he said to a o) between o1 pro- latter has | while Lead- only within the past elghteen months. 1 should Jjudge that the Black Hills have produced more than $100,000,000 in gold during the past eighteen years, not including othe ecious metals, The greatest gold mine of that section, and probably in the United States, 18 the famous Homestake, which has paid fts owners about $50,000,000 in divi- dends during the last sixteen years, Thero | are still ore reserves in sight to last thirty years longer at the present rate of operation. 1 first came to the Black hills in 1877 from ifornia, there being then only a few small properties in operation, although at that i passed California. tively trifling sum of § tha property had been opened up and into the hands of Senator Hearst of He secured it for the compara- 2,000, Another prop- «rty next to it, known as the Deadwood Terra, was bought for $50,000, as it was sup- posed to be the better property. When the real value of the mines came to be discov- d Senator Hearst secured (hree other propertics—the Caledonla, Father de Smet and Highland. The product of the three mines averages $225,000 in gold bullion per month. Tho various shafts on the different prop- les are connected by about thirty-five ailes of narrow-gauge railway. There are ovr 3,000 employes and the pay roll amounts to $200,000 a month. The Homestake ore is of low grade, yielding only from $2.50 to $10 @ ton, but it occurs in such quantities and admits of such a simple and inexpensive treatment that the profis are enormous. Tt lies in a bedded deposit, often exceeding 200 feet in thickness, and the vein in places is over 400 feet thick A town of between 2,000 and 5000 inhabitants has grown up around the Homestake mines, known as Lead City, and the people there are engaged either directly or indirectly in the employment of the company, which owns the land, but leases the building sites free of cost to the men. There is really only one store in the place, but this is of mammoth proportions and is owned by Mrs. Hearst herself. It is general wholesale and retail supply store ud one can buy anything there from a piano o a paper of pins. “Thero are 700 men working night and day, with ten-hour shifts, at a depth of 3,000 feet below the surfa When the ore is 1ifted to the surface it is taken to the stamp mll “I do not know of any place In the world where there is such an immense body of free milling ore as It exists in the Homestake mine. Ore that does not run over $2.50 is not touched, but this is marvelously low grade and shows to what perfection the process of treating thi ores has been brought.” LUCKY MEXICANS. The truth of the marvelous wealth of the Grijalva mines, on the Hassayampa, is com- ing out by degrees, says the Phoenix Repub- lican, The wonderful ledge was discovered by accident less than three months ago, and ifs discovery lay among a lot of Mexicans. They were so jealous that they guarded ap- proaches to it _and men armed with shot- guns warned off inguisitive visitors. It was only known that the face of the country had been washed away by a June flood and that wealth hidden perhaps for centurles had been brought to the surface, and that Fool's canyon was likely to become famous The other night Jose Peralto came to town and told a story about the mine which has never been told before. He has been work- ing for the Grijalvas, but has quit, but he eays that the mine at KFool's canyon is the richest mine ever discovered in America; the chest, at any rate, he has ever seen, and he has seen all the big mines on the coast since the first one was discovered by white men. He says that they are working the ore from a four-foot ledge by means of thre arastras, and that no ore which does not run $150 a ton is handled. The production is $1200 a week, at an expense of $25. But $150 a ton has really nothing to do with the richness of the ore. = Peralta has no idea how rich it is, but as an Instance of its wealth of way he discovered nuggets which amounted 0 more than $200, saying nothing of the rest of the rich ore left for development by thearastra. There is, Peralta says, no appar- ent limit to the extent of that wonderful four- foot ledge. A GREAT OIL REGION. Colorado’s annual petroleum output is val- ued at $1,000,000 a year. It is for the pres- ent limited to the district round about Flor- ence, although there are indications in many other directions. At Florence there are some fitty wells in operation, says the Denver Times-Sun, which produce about 2,000 bar- rels of crude petroleum a day. About 150 shafts have been sunk to the oll deposits. The oll belt of this section extends 'from central Wyoming south beneath western Colorado as far as the Grand valley near Grand Jnuction. It is confidently expected that petroleum will be found in paying quan- titles near Denver, while natural gas has been discovered near Grand Junction. The progress of petroleum and gas de- velopment In Colorado and Wyoming during the year just closed may be summarized as follows: New oil wells, 12, i New refineries, 2. Increased output, daily 500 barrels. Number of men employed, 300. ! Men employed in Wyoming, 6. Monthly pay roll (Colorado), $15,000. Annual output of oil in cash, $1,000,000. Present daily output of oll, 2,000 barrels. Several gas and oi} shafts sunk, with sat- Asfactory results, near Denver. Natural gas discovered at Grand Junction, Colo. RICH MINES IN OREGON. Willlam Muir, the veteran prospector and geologist, who has been doing development work in the Grand Ronde district in Oregon, has closed down work for the winter, During the summer months, says the La Grande Chronicie, development work has been driven 80 hard that suitable preparations in the way of buildings, etc., were not made for the wiater, and the work was therefore aband- oned until spring. Mr. Mulr has therefore been very conserva- tive In his opinion of the upper Grand Ronde a promising mining district. He has maintained tho idea that any misrepresenta- tion of a mining district is an injury, and he has always declared that he had no opinion to give untll he had made a full and satisfactory investigation. He now gives It as his opinion that the Grand Ronde district will become one of the very richest camps in the northwest. He ways that it is not & “poor man's” mining | country, for the reason that it will take in | almost every instance a great amount of money to reach the ledges. The ledges are covered to a great depth with an eruptive formation, and this must be penetrated before the deposits can be reached. But when they are once exposed they are rich in mineral | gave a return of $9.80 per ton saved on the end almost inexhaustible in extent. The | eharacter and quantity of the ore is what leads Mr. Muir to belleve that this is to be- come one of the very richest mineral dis triets, The prineipal claim . in that district, and the one on which the most development work was expended Mr. Muir has named “The La Grande.” Concerning the placer claims in that sec- tion, Mr. Muis says that the ome worked by Paul Bozzini ylelds half an ounce of gold per day to the man, and he considers the claim located by Joseph Truesdall on Limber Jim creek one of the most promising of that section, REVIV. Goiden, N AL AT GOLDEN. M., district is well known T to the pioneer miners of this state. It had a boom many years ago, but decreased its | production on account of the cost of ship- ping to the smelters, the bulk of the output being of medium grade. But Golden comes forward for its share of the revival. The New Mexican News announces the establish- ment of a smelting phnt in the district at a cost of $100,000. One of the promoters of the enterprise, Mr. C. C. Fitzgerald, esti- | mates that there Is $30,000,000 of gold in the district adjacent to the proposed plant, and that fourteen of the mines near Golden ex pose 1,400,000 tons of medium grade gold worth' close to $22 per ton, in addition | to somo values In silver and copper. | The present condition of things in the dis- | trict has necessitated the shipment of ores | to Cerillos and Pueblo for treatment at a | ost. of $8 per ton. With the smelter at hand, ays the News, the transportation of the min- | eral from the mine will cost not more than 50 cents a ton, thus glving a margin of $7.50 a ton, which will be saved by the es ment of this smelter. It is certain that th effect of this step will be to bring to the | front the great resources of a region in which | there are fifty known fissure veins, partly | developed NEW MEXICAN ORCHARDS. Colorado and New Mexico orchardists are exempt from all disaster from drouth, such as has diminished the crops and profits of ar, writes a New In the far western growers must depend wholly on irrigation for moisture for their orchards, the expense of ditching is compen- sated by the good result that they can abso- eastern fruitgrowers thia yi York Sun correspond arid_country, where lutely regulate the water supply the trees shall receive. The soll of the Rocky moun- tain slopes Is peculiarly adapted fors fruits, grapes and berries, and the people of those regions more and more are en- tering upon . this branch of farm- ing. In New Mexico orchards are being planted on a scale rivaling those of California, with the advantage that a finer quality of fruit can be raised to be sold in a much nearer market. A scheme is now un- der way to plant a 10,000-acre orchard in the Pecos valley, near Roswell, with the intention that 2,000 acres of trees shall be set out this fall. A Missouri firm will plant 1,000 acres of land to apple trees this autumn in Chavez county, and In several places in that county the preparations for setting out hun- Ireds of acres are being made. The ship- nent of grapes to the east from the upper and middle Rio Grande valleys has for years been an important and increasing item of railroad freight, and this fruit commands a price usually a half higher than the Califor- nia grape: A CALIFORNTA FREAK. San Jacinto has a first-class sensat'on in the person of a big Indian named Eduardo ata, who lives across the river in the famous village of Saboba, says the Search- | light. REduardo's peculiarity is that he has | the power of distending himself at will to most_enormous dimensions. When Eduardo has been persuaded to give an exhibition of his expansive properties he arranges for it with due solemnity and dignity. He loosens his overalls, unbuckles his suspenders, shakes out a reef or two in his shirt, takes a last look at the world, and starts in to pump him clf full of atmosphere. It Is a sight to see him swell up. Eduardo is no sprinter to begin with, but when he has successfully en- gulfed a tubful or two of air he would put Groyer Cleveland to the blush. He keeps on bravely until the spectators get nervous with the momentary expectation of an ex- plosion. Just as the suspense becomes un- sarable Eduardo ceases and displays his on proudly to the assembled throng. We have only one tape line, so haven't tried to measura him when inflated, but his ¢ reum- ference is something appalling. ~ When Eduardo wishes to reduce himself he merely makes some mysterious folding motions of his arms and shoul when presto! change! Richard is himself again PECULIAR COUNTY SEAT CONTEST The most unique thing in all the unique things of the Washington state campaign 15 easily the Snohomish county seat con- test. Everett is giving $30,000 and a build- ing site for a court house, which Is, ac- cording to the point of view, an act of generous public spirit, or a damnable effort to corrupt the franchise of free-born American “citizens. Snohomish has the seat of government now, and views the effort to dispossess it as a form of brigandage. Ever- ctt, on the other hand, prides itself on its life and contributions to public improve- ments. An interesting feature of the fight 1s the attack made by Snohomish upon Everett in connection with the Standard-Oil company. The company is said to have deeded the sixteen lots in Everett to the county, and to have raised the $30,000 cash bonus. The Tribune, therefore, breaks out into such exclamations as this: “Yes, let us give the county seat to John D. Rockefeller Then let's throw in the county, for John only has $150,000,000 and he needs 'it!” “To him that hath shall be given, and from him that hath not shall be taken away. John D. Rockefeller, the only man who will be bene- fited by removing the county seat to Everett, has $160,000,000."" RICH VEIN AT RICO. In the Mount Wilson district, which been prospected extensively this season account of the gold in the ores, success has been scored by a hard work- ing miner. John Anderson, owner of the Palace vein at the head of Blk creek basin, has spent the past summer crosscutting for the vein. A few days ago, says the Rico News, he was rewarded by striking the veln, has on another which is five feet wide. He immediately commenced drifting, but the quartz looked 80 good that he thought he would have an assay made. The assay proved very satls- tactory, but being a miner of experience, he decided to make a more thorough test. He extracted what he thought would be two tons of ore from what he considered to be the pay streak, which is elghteen inches wide, packed it on burros to the railroad and then shipped it to the Rico Public Sampling works. The ore weighed just 3,208 pounds, and after de- ducting freight and sampling charges netted Mr. Anderson $56.63. The sampler assay shows the ore to run 8.9 ounces in silver and 276 in gold per ton. The ore is tellurium and there Is a vast quantity of it. Mr. An- derson says that his is not the only new property in the district that will be a shiprar the coming season. THE DAKOTAS. Contracts have been let for sinking two wells in Bonilla township, to be used for irrigation purposes, A large consignment of trout have been recently distributed in the streams of the Black Hills country. Articles of incorporation have been filed at Pierre for the Hot Springs & Windcave rallroad, a short line of twelve miles. The capital stock Is $150,000. Parties from Osceola, on the Great North- ern_rallway, about thirty miles northeast of Huron, deny the report that settlers in that locality ere using horse flesh for food on account of a scarcity of other meaty Beof cattle, sheep and hogs are plentiful and cheap, and’ there is no ground for the report | abovo referred to. The largest brick ever shipped by the Golden Reward Mining company of Dead- wood for an eight-day run was sent east via Adams express the other day. It weighed exactly 1,000 ounces, valued at $18,000, which is equal to $67,600 for a thirty-day run. The product of this company will be nearly | doubled when the cyanide annex is in suc- cessful operation COLORADO, At Cripple Creek rich ore has been found in the 400-foot shaft of the Raven mine. Near Siiver Plume the Mary Etta mine has developed a fair amount of gold in its ores, which run high in silver. Forces at the Lamartine mine, Clear Creek | county, have been recently increased. The output of ore is larger than ever. The first ten tons of Baker Contact ore, La Plata mountaivs, run at the new mill plates. Splendid results have been obtained by the Beam process on ore from the Cowboy mine, located in Poverty gulch, Goose Creek | district. A sample run returned 23% ounces | We have now over 300 OVERCOATS AND SUITS, in every size and style, all in one lot, tor $5. window, worth two and three times our price for a five bill. double - breasted dollar The Overcoats single and kerseys, silk and Farmer's satin lining, and Suits are cassimeres and cheviots, single or double breasted, and in four different patterns, this week’s choice.... They are displayed in our a with tl re 1€ M. H. Cook Clothing Co., successors to Columbia Clothing Co., 13th and Farnam Streets, Omaha. gold and 16% ounces silver per ton. The property will be worked at once If the dis- agreement among the owners can be patched up satisfactorily. The vigorous prospecting being done in the Balfour district is having a teliing eflect New mineral finds of importance are chrou feled almost daily. The placers on ve been made for keeping the ma- water again inter- ments ha sons at work until high feres. Excellent sand' stone for buflding pur- poses has been found within a few miles of Ontario. The stone:is of first class qual- ity and, of an unlimjted amount, It is found In layers varylng from two to ten' inches i thicknéss. the Dolores river where e extens | Recently 176 head of cattle were sold at| News from Alaska says that A. Hayward | Beanscioe e u‘fim‘-flu’é e V’nltxsny wnder execution. The cattle were|and C. D. Lane of San Francisco have pur- Ll e - ¥ | hot in the best condition, and, with the| chased twenty-one of the richest s e rotyihonpar i ounts. | exception of about mine head, all went to | claims fn the Silver Bow basin. The Alaska | The ""l”’,‘""‘:'lll :'r":‘l;‘“ 2 ’:’I':hlsr,‘;,"l;"fn"‘,'|“, | one bidder at $10 for all ages—sucking calves | Newa of Juneau states that it is the biggest are noted for their liberal yields il | thrown in. ing ore. The Onelda "”;',“"‘ ":,",'"" {:‘“b[f,};. Deer, driven by the snow down from the | It is said that England has laid claim to | Sluciontes cminihg R T OANDeS cold, blue Cascades, are now working thelr | the head of the Chilkat inlet, 400 miles | TAD!dly pushed alead; 5 Innocent noses into the shrubbery of the foot- | northeast of Juneau and near Mount St. The twenty-five stamp mill at MeCourt, at | "Gy e vandering over the divide toward | Blias. This claim is made as a result of the southern end of Cripple Creek deposit, | 3 ™ 4ct and hunting is highly spirited, | the international boundary survey work for is expected to start up in about ten days. It} g, yo the Klamath Star. | the purpose of establishing a coallpg station is claimed that the enterprise witl pay if the | **X® T8¢ SR R | nave tett the | there ore averages only §2 per ton. Enterprise valley this season for outside| Arrangements have been completed The Champagne property, located over the | y,pers, The Chieftain says there are not i whereby the construction of the San Juan Ir- range from Bird's Eye guich, in the Lead-| yore tilan one-third that number of calves | pigagion company's system is an assured fact. ville district, worked for several years on ac-| oy the range now, and considers the outlook | yw' i, gastiand of San Francisco is at the Sount of its silver values, has developed gold | for 'the industry ‘somewhat problematical | pneud of the company. The system will cost | in paying quantities and is again a producer | "y oo Gave ago a Sherman county farmer | $250,000, and will irrigate 10,000 acres. The | on the new gold-silver basis. drove thirteen hogs into Rufus which | griginator of this enterprise, George Gates, | One of the fine properties in Spencer | weighed 4,960 pounds, and eight of them |lus, after two years work, achleved a grand camp, Gunnison county, is the Superior lode, | weighed 500 pounds cach. For these he re- | guccess. now down forty feet. At a depth of thirty | ceived 5 cents a pound, and they were fed on | qy. oamer Princess Loulse, just down feet, says the Spencer Times, the vein was |damaged wheat that he could not sell at alre: Th a share of who recently died, leaving an the appraisement 0 be $15,000,000. Africa, e Steen from the north family the brings intelligence of a estate ore was struck about three weeks ago. mine is bonded for $35,000 and The the owners four inches in width, but in te last ten feet | any price. This is a very succetsful exper- | (TG0 (3G 0PI an_ enormous body of ore was cacounter | iment of feeding gran to hogs, and one that | (T uver island, which the vein now averaging four feet, the mass | will pay better than selling wheat at 30 cents | [ o 000 (oot rocently belng_about $100 rock, although picked as- | a bushel. s e AL s says have ylelded upwards of $2,000. Bear hunting is the principal diversion ‘on | ot PO M p PGk oment The Silver Queen mine, near Silverton. |the Upper Deschutes this fall. C. B. o o Skoreiny ylelds rich gold-silver ore. In sinking the | informs the Prineville Review that Jam 1y, in an appearance Dillman succeeded in bagging a large gt the first one that has put on the Deschutes since in e shaft to make connection between the upper and lower levels good ore has been encoun- teerd as far as the shaft has been sunk. It Allen | | | y d Wil- e wa twenty.ive feot, and assays kave | lam. Vandevert kified two Iarge blacks re- |a blg rush of travel over the new Burlivgton | |\ L SIS L Gor it roturns of 1450 ounces’ silver and thirty | cently, and Johnnie Hinton haa killed v I et ke | Into Tronble tuneos gold, and 2474 ounces silver and |all large bears except one. These animals | the extension is fortunately In the great Nel-| - = fnto Frowd SRS e o ounces gold. This means an av- | cem to have Increased wonderfully in that | lowstone valley, one of the richest agrioul-| “I always was fond of little children, 2 : 3 60l he last few s tural and stcck regions of Montana, and this |said the retired burglar to the New York erage value of $1,600 per ton. | section in the ¥ f a A v q s ASHINGTON. cetion of the state should get a largs Influx | gun, “and I once served a term on that ac WYOMING. ASEIIAT AN v of Immigration the coming sexson. If the | oounp [ had gone Into a house in the west- A lead of cobalt and nickle has been dis-| A new creamery of large capacity is aboul| . 4" 0 oy on into Meagher cou next | &% o B b it bt covered in a mine near Laramle. completed at Tenino. o {spring other rich valleys will be opencd up, | & part of whe state and rummaged about ey aran o Sxcursions of home-séekers are being run | e Buslingion 18 soing to bo a Ereat factor | 10Wn stairs, and finally got up and got Into A stalk of celery grown in the Big Horn ur 0 bakeraare belnig Fun | wne Burling g e a K AR MRS, Aplennaliy KDWMINR AR apL LY basin measures four feet In length. from South Dakota to & St Big Horn settlers have circulated a peti- |48 to Oregon. The oy | in the bullding up of th ——— - of William stato in South of which iy have taken out 1,000 tons of ore, run- ning from $30 to $40 a ton. of Boise expect to get McKay, is said mining deal in the history of that city. quartz | | land completely established Co- . Tea cures il kidney tr Trial size, 25 cents. A LIBRARY TUNNEL. ri 2 ice between | A Walla Walla county fruit grower shipped Saxifas o) Hgyprayigs ore dally. malh sy b 5,000 totes of appies o Victaria, - recelving | Oregon Kidney that place and Casper, 000ibaees ob: A The platinum ore discovered In this state | $3. or them. o 4 is said to compare most favorably with the| The Everett Herald says 140 tons of paper best ore of the kind from Australia. will be shipped from the Everett paper mill E . . | to Australia by the next steamer. o Dumben cEeheenila BWAsERIECO0 T N. N. Brown killed a swan on Crab creek | Distributing Hoo is estimated at 350,000. With the exception of two herds the sheep are reported entirely free from scab. The syndicate of Chicago capitalists who are now operating the Four-Mile placers are having & survey made for a large ditch and will commence work at onc There are twenty men at work at the soda jake getting out soda. A number of men ars Tdesday that was nine feet from tip to tip of wings, and six feet from bill to toes. Davenport reports that numerous teams loaded with people and mining implements have been going through that town to the Hunter Creek flelds. It is a noteworthy fact that the country in and about Pros:er expects to winter about | The plans of Libraran Intendent library building, says the Include | bocks to the capitol the demands of senators and membe Grey an in) en B ¥ of the ne nlous devic Underground They expect All druggists It was at the foot of a big mountain, near the shore of Shushartie bay ning of spring will undoubtedly Spofford and Super- | Congres: Washington O for supplying nal to meet s of the that is if :m); one visit us, anyway, Jeweler and Optician | Cor. 156th and Douglas Sts. perative | can help you. class, Y0UR EYE GLASSES--- Do they work just right —is your sight failing— when you patronize a first experienced opti- cian such as ours are your ' eye troubles will be over Cost you nothing to Raymond “A HAND SAW IS A GOOD THING, BUT NOT To 4 | the northwest mm:‘ SHAVE WITH.” POLIO 1S THE PROPER THING FOR HOUSE-CLEANING. saving an immense amount of time to both reader and library employe. - — THE RETIRED BURGLAR. and a little in a cradle t Not far from all asleep. The baby was | stood at the foot of the bed. | the cradle, standing against | | the wall, was the bureau. I transferred what ever there was of value in the bureau and | then I turned to the baby; I couldn't help it. I turned my light on the kid to look at him . | end it woka him up. It stared at me a little { and then he began to smile and double up its fists at me. . ‘Well, he looked o funny that I chucked him under the chin, and that seemed to | tickle him immense; he threw up his legs and his arms, and laughed more'n ever, and tried to say something; all he could say was ‘Goo-—-0-—o0— but that was enough. | You've heard of women so tired you couldn’t | this _aay 4 > rateiel 30,000 head of Oregon sheep. AS a winter re- | house for literature from the nation’s vost | wake ‘em up firing @ cannon in the next ?.'".'..“fn:fi.f",,f.'"u'.fif l"l"«f‘.i.'!..‘.',‘.\‘vi"éi‘.. :-‘».”::.fi sort Washington furpishes an unexcelled | store through an underground conduit con :w;l-: ”.nf ‘\“-“Id(\w‘!\‘.' mv Y‘H\‘{‘“{;,I-,.ml ”y'yh\ | over the track to haul in the soda. \‘lvlfmlv- i T | structed between the two buildings, and they 1:“»‘\ said ‘G .' e £ it's ]“uinur“xm:l ...:w\“. Ore from the Miners' Dellght mine returns | The salmon cannery at Cosmoballs employs | paitevo that it can be done in this Lot L DT from $50 to $60 per ton over the plates, and | SIxty Chinamen an i Gt to involve very litte if any more delay than | hefore she was fairly ake; and all the | L b 4 from 260 to 300 casés af black saimon ars put [ from a shatt 225 feet deep, with levels at bt \ 22,000 o is now experlenced in securing books from | time she looking toward the cradle, and Ixty, ninety, 160 and 200 feet from the sur- | up daily. They expect to put up 22,000 ca-es he saw light long before I could douse | SUAY IR SN b o of salmon this season, the present quarters of the library in th f t K suld douse | face, over $500,000 has been produced. | AT e building. At present the bool p | It Then she screamed, and T made s great e worlk of killing wolves which have in-| There 18 a rush for lands fn Chehalls capitol building. At | he books aro | 1% Then she screa fested the state this season is being pushed | COURLY. As a resuit.of the decision Uf_”"l' obtained by personal application to an assist i i an got there before I aid; and, | vigorously by northern county ranchmen. It | secretary (553 e hLpior, sevs ral thousand | .oy Wprarian, who When a book is called for | Nosides heing very quick, ho was very able is stated that the animals have been drivcn | aores of land whigh have 2 past 8IX | o Dly goes to a shelt and gets ft; but | bodied and not the least bit afraid; in fact, into Wyoming from the burnt out districts | Years becn held by the Northern Pacific rail- : oy o R R s il e WU Toad as Indemnityi ads have been thrown | owing to the extent of the room oceuplod ; isties. a e of neighboring states. 3 o] by it considerable time fa often consumed in | POt OF thi business was that I got four The Mason mine at Lewiston, on which B a0 T L ars and #ix months Just for slopping to shows 4 lead ninety foet wide of BA¥ OF |man, in the Whatcom feevellle, is interesting: | yards from the capitol building | DR R P A 0 Some of 1t Is high grade and some low, but | iy" "charged withobeing a stockholder in | belloved by those who have given atiention " ua's: “Shilos Catarrh emedy ts the the averago runs over $20 (o the ton. A, golingham Bay |#@oom company. If 1| to the subjct that the obitacle of distance | i’ mitiome 1 ha St i twenty-stamp mill is being erected on the | o1 deny the sofe fmipeachment I should be | can be overcome by the consttuction of an | 0¥y G50 P00 property and 1t will be kept at work crush- | .o o by 6,000 fyhiéh I brought with me | underground passagewny and the use of a ing all winter. s and earned in my’ piifess on, every cent of | pulley with an ingomivus car which was Half el Malf Fish, ORBGON, which nas gone to the laboriug men and d especially for his pur A DAY [iern (e i S R e The Empire Clty cannery has closed down | merchants. We have spent In four years matic tube s uls> Lo b cmpoyed for the can be seen a beautiful sounsg girl wh with a season’s run of 9,600 cases. twico as much as the government in keaping [vlu(m ¢ l«rl ordering boc !‘» v oclerk will be | aron ‘ll in u poram b u\.. ];w\u 3 llls are running night and |the river clear, and for an expenditure of | statloned at the capitol at a convenient place ton of Which Is covered.’ She has neve s A oe chder s the' CLAER' tres, $60.000 the company have the Tight left to | neir the conter of the baltling, for he equal hion oo autsido of thte, bugky except by The ' Qlkiat..oounty. Sitle £ LuNs Bl DOOm 108 SCRLLANEOUS | roceive all for Books and tranamic; POrfSet heaith during the sixicen yeuls of MaRey. DY DOSGRIBE" LT RS o kg There Is good clay for the manufacture of them to the library through the pneumatic ) at, and from her carriage thoroughly bountise. » vicinity 3 q | tube, and who wili also receive the books w4 the soclety of ycung people of her A seven-foot gray eagle has been captured | 116 In the vicinity of Eddy, N. M wihen sent on the cirrying mac (. The reason thut' the girl i domed alive near Scio and is on exhibition in a| The average value of the ores now being| —superintends en o that the to ‘pend her days in th orfines of h e e taken from the Comstock lode s about $60 o praest of ordering and procuring 4 hagky s that she is 4 reallstlo mermaid One of Newberg's wonders Is a cabbage | P°F 100 book fn this way will consume not to ex- fieiote hor, birth bee mother Wwhf baty which is bearing its seventh annual crop| The Arizona Gazetle reports the discov- | coed four minutes' (ime portion of the ‘CiEIN"Goldn “ahd " the lower DATC of the from its apparently perennial root. ory ‘ot ‘a temarkable ledge of freo milling | books now in tho libraryabout 0000 of | Suli hody T dat ofu fan. Wer fatner, T R at [ikas of Bold ore on the dividiug line between Mari- | them 1il be left fn their present quarter ton Zimrl is n highly sucoesstul wraps raska cattle buyers who are fattening about | 00Pa acd Gild countfes, ARt bf books of retarence in the main, but | 14 ccunted in this section, but no surgical 1,100 head of cattle in Wallowa, is gathering | Utah's sugar factory has passed the 2,000, | Hi8t Of R0OKS of Feurence I Che WL, Bt it has yet been found that can de up about 200 head of 3 and 4-year-old steers, | 000-pound mark of Its 1894 production and | (NN, N ey T thors, The carrying de 4 means for correcticg the deformity of which he will feed for the Omaha market the plant is turning out sugar with the | 41"ty bo used in the proposed conduit will | Bi3 daukhter. Bhe has mone of the char Two hundred men sre working at the | ususl recularity end fwithout & hitch | torm a festure of every-day work in the | ness for water than i usually possessed by upper part of the Cascade locks and are| The owners of the Bull Dog gold mine of | new lbrary bulldug lise It will be so | girls of her age. making good headway. The gates have all | Gold Field, thirty-five miles from Pho:nix, constructed that it will carry @ book to any ———— arrived and will be put in as soon as the| Ariz., refused an offer of $200,000 cash for | designaied floor or scction o/ the “uge struc- Oregon Kldney Tea cures nervous head- masonry work s completed. Arrange- | their lease, which bas still a yoar 0 rua. Rich | turo and cepusit It at the propec spot, thus | aches. Trial size, 25 cents, All druggista. & % £ FOR INTERNAL AND EXTERNAL USE. CURFS AND PREVENTS 05lds Conghs, 8ors Th-oats, Influensa, Brone cits, Poeumouia, Swelling of the Joints, Lumbago, Inflammations, RH UMATISH, FR05TEITES, CHILBLAINS, HEADACHE, HEUAALGIA TOOTHACHE, ASTHWA, DIFFICULT BERZATHING, CURES THE twenty minutes. WORST tsement n PAIN, wiy's P’AINS in from one ta NOT ONIZ HOUR after readin, ed anyons SUFFER WIT) ady Keliof is w sore Cure for - Kvary Piin, spram, Braiwes, Paius 1n the Back, Chest or Lunbs. 1t was the fiest and ix the onty PAIN KEWEDY, That Instantly stops the most excruclating v of th i org or wit Slet WAY'S DY REL Bilion PILI F.fty cents por bottla, DOGT SEARLES & SEARLES Treatmentby Mail, ther fevers alded by RAD: Kkly as RADWAY'S lays inflamation, and cures congestion: Stomach THowels, or othed application. nful t D internal pains. in all the world nd all other Mas REA- Sold hy Druggists Consultation Fres Catarrh, all discascs of the nose, Throat, Chest,Sto Skin anli ~Manhood eases of Men, Call on or nddress, Dr, Searles & Searles, nach, Liver,Blood Kidney discases, and all Private Dis Lost 1) Faroam Stroes Omaha, Nob

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