Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, July 5, 1895, Page 5

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4 THE OMAIIA DAILY piEl pripAY, JULY 5, 1895. — == = ' = = = Tz e e — — e B . W i B o, B TR O B s, W i D o ¥ buying ctape und matertal tor 4 mouen' {TUO - BROTHERS WNLED | siees tied, twenty, $1.610; reloased, twoive \ (AUSE iNC LD 4 dall ing dress. When she reached home she ) ‘ A\ $4.143; city mortgages filed, five, $1.080; re- | LHIL AV | R1U ALY | found her husband making a pot cf tea at} J | lease e, $1,800; chattel mortgages filed the Kitchen fire. | po— 102, $12,459; released, thirty-four, $: | sanimsa $50.000 demanded by Manager Graham to | Thomas and William Fisibura Meet Death Miiabiint bt b SIS A | Dismissal of Police Has a Good Effect on - bulll the Roseburg & Coos Bay raflroad n the Platt | LINCOLN, July 4.-—(Special)=The fol 1 Who I | B Bl - el Bl Bl B et e o TR ; % | TAntaw. G HNEE Y5 O W | M RAIN WATER MAKER. 1t M tkinson, who Is chi t ey 3 in E ki ol Prom Pesc Bprings comes the story of orrants 1he. shat that the | vale: males a" tour of the saioons. betors | WHILE SEINING TH.YREACH DEEP WATER | Jiiiidsor it - B Tliome *man | PACING A BEAT BECOMES REAL BUSINESS i the finding of a nugget, or bowlder rather, of Golden Ilecce was due to the | sorvice and Invites those present to attend t ‘the Fourth resting in this [ Is the Symbol of Suceess, Tt Is In pure silver, such as there has been no record | ) . $on U3 & \"'l s church. He does it in such a gentlemanly —r dlte e Every Houschold Today, and of in the hi ST fo the. Weat ; ; munner that the invitation (s quite eneraly | gather of the Victims Witnesses the Strug- He: at WO, Little Tatk Awmong tho Men tegarding the | Thousands Have Testified To Its a Hackburg, A. T., special t San Fran- | ' Whie Nt wettlenflnt of Mekiey: 16 Cerry gles of the Toya_Lut 1sUnable to WYMORE, Neb., Jily d—(Spocial Tole-| Mecent Decapitation — OMcers Afe Gront atid Well Known Merits, clesco Examine The bowlder welghed about doin Hins establistied foad Sommiunicktion i Them the Nee ey ° gram.)—One of the best Fains of tha season | fected Plotting How to “Get Even' half a ton, and valu ywh from | ith the outside 1 at last, a wagon road Assistance, ame tonight at 6 lock ne nly | ~Citizens Liko the Change, Rain Water Maker is an article that $5,000 to §10,000, It w 1 by W o | &5 roud o Custer having been opened u Eckley o lasted about thirty min T nd i for washi lothes is the King of wash- Hueker and John Doyls, both old prospectors. | & o L, : has been settled since 1854, and pack mules was thoroughly soaked, and crops wers given ing compounds, for it holds colors from e B W mads tHs 166 of § 106 Lar Antoes il e H ¢ | Bave been the only means ol (ransporta-| ALDA, Neb. July 4—(Special Telogram,) | another benefit that was badly neoded | day yestorday, but if | running or fading in printed goods, 1t Wl Wbk had b ap I the Bkth reoming innumerable obstactes, completed | U eraging | —ON the Platte Tiver this atternoon, whil - iy Ibrated the Fourth by | Is also valuable for removing staing of Valley mining re ad started across ; ”"" road ""- t lans ‘L"l’”"ll L dghedad ‘H‘-"”'_‘_ "E o party of young m om thls vio! DELIBERATELY PLANNED SUICIDE | shade it was not u 1. | all kinds form ws of the tinest tes- s g a San Cristobal, three miles | 4 2L — } ture country to the Grand Canyon of Colorado | | S ate ¢ M oe | Serverance's logging chute on Wilkon river | Were sein near the nine bride ormer Newspapor Ma 1s 11 Wite ana | 1t 13 8 Ime since th s b s a e 1 - ! rthe T long 1o b B Bt e | el : LA Chitd wadt Then Himsel | sre nak for it ummier w g it | . Atk i | oo y thers, Tom a MEADVILL July 4 clos: obse could | ; . They were camped on the an i of his | oo et 26 it Not| BY Both were ;m 1 swim. Th untll vee oF K up in consequenc y S DR & R ¢ Mo., cut the throats of his wi “ ’ e the low rol ) 1 § o 1 "‘1':‘-In quent stage robberies on the route | tively, and unmarried. Their comra rked | a razor this morning and then ended his wssumed, was out of about n Pea and | wa Del Norte | from Klamath Falls to Ager have resulted in o save them. Their father, W. H.|own life in the same man The 1 1 buttoned their s T the nugget was lying ! he | a everybody | »\‘\‘"W i:::»rl\r‘xln.l l‘v:u"‘\wh\}""w‘i" Py from hburn, one of the best known and re- | were found in a garden about 200 yards shoulders and paced railroad track and not more than tact : o “‘ 0| Gaie oMus 1 T nakle Ta0ls. THe ‘ll,":: gpected farmers, was an eye witness to the | the residence of his mother-in-law, who lives meanor of men who fro ! W road. It projected | 0 e | company withdrew from business over a |Aaffair. The bodies were rescued after float- | near her | that lease of from W i) pisin view the road, | oo one were r ved, a wil1 stampde ensued | Number of stage lines in northern California g some distance down the river. The de- | Fields, his wife and little wers visit eternal Bhe 1 1k & Dosition that more tha | for the new Eldorado. Other loca were | and southern Oregon a couple of yeirs ago, | ceased are brothers of Daniel Fishburn, | ing his mother-in-law, Mrs. Willian 1 the decapitating | Vi SR GO e A 1t ¢ of San Juan, and the | it to accommodate the Klamath county peo- | teacher in the Grand Island school | two miles northeast of this 1 to discuss the fate | poearane Nundred fx, | [ORRAIAR oF Toaka OUY forlowedy il il o | EetviSe: fromuARAr 15 eI | ptorment will take plac 1 Tsland | Went out fn”the pasture this 1 1] of theie £ ! that ¢ t had eseas LT LG, JHth Brest W AUTNHTAR cometery Saturday morning at 11 o'clock. | the supposition is Pields cut his little box's | the dicipd They O v ile, but. In s ; M L ien his wife's an is own. | oluaed t1 ; s hand upon It ane ALY L T ally 2,800 PROBIN CONVENTION ADJOURNS, | N0 reason the doed. A note | FHCE Y are old miners, and Ly s el has bein 5 [ was found on e, Fields suying evorything | traokc with the b e ! a n A Wrangle Over the Financial Plank | [hey had was to t to her mother, Mrs. | are atten I H famliar with the form | PIOY® 1] on wa in | ¢ r “\»HI to be on and Defeated Free Sivor. TLow ‘] "I Ll "M“ SIIEK ‘“" his wife | A Y a8 Mack ota oun ch f 1 ary [ black col! f vay is en (CO| '3 Qn N P had planne: ragedy r she went into " neomp! ice TeRlbhe o e Makal nine 11 | AB80; 1. thin unpatented | rising apparently from its summit | LINCOLN, July 4.—(Special.)—The prohibl- | tho house after thoy went out and put on an | The incompetc and almost fntuitively it struck | 2n4 no work n it dur- | rhe Ta Mill company has placed an | (100 State convention clos:d its labors at 4 | old dress and then returncd to the pasture missed was well kn fim that hore was a plece of the same black | 108 the p al., relo- | order for 00 Lot cholce timber, to | P- M. today, after nomina the following | 5 i force, and it has Bim that i as a plece of the #a | cated it O e AR Talioaghoe k tickets | TOF JLIoG OF Ehul Kuprerms oottt | Kined by 1 Lado Whisky. SORAEE: (TX0 Hieved & He had gone out to ! Wik Horses It nd 0| “rie Blue Canyon Coal company has re- | A. J. Wolfberger of Lincoln; regents of the | MAYVILLE, N. D, July 4.—M. Helje and | from as long as they i Mahogany Sibeboards. camp when the rock attracted his atten W ved a trial order for 260 tons of coal for | State university, J. J. Bryan of Polk county, | Martin Kolborg died here res y of some| S0 the men are concerned whos 5 b | t Polk ¥ ; tion, and trying to break off a tragment h » on the steamer City of Kingston Mrs. Anna R. Woodby of Omaha unknown disease, having many of the pe. | §iAr% Were taken away, there s varia Regular 885. discovered tha e rock was solid meta g y e Wikeonsin Brage. com k8 oon ! L : 2 L A . fon ¢ Some of them declare that | s il if o E L s nad A C D 1 steel approaches to the Grea iancial plank of he platform, fberger | since died the people began to be | 58 oLl i e wert and brought Doyle out to help him. | peattdly published e | Northern Columbia river bridge at Rock gt E6LtHS IhSCrLiom eI lah fnce died and the people bogan to be | work at some other occupation when CHAS. SHIVERICK & CO A little digging disclosed a bowlder in the | LOST CABIN” FOUND | Island. A largs crew of bridge men are on | favorable to the coinage of free silver at | LG G EC LU O Ll ahltibitla d Gl b (ML IR — — shape of an oblong oval, something like the | Willlam Murray, who has a mine at the | the ground and work has commenced | the ratio of 16 to 1 without regard to any | DeCh auarantined as a means of allaying the anticipations of reinstatement | back of a turtle, about two and a half feet | Junction of Kosh ereek and river, about GHENT WHAKE HERTAEIVAS CHE Palouse favms| ctlab RALIoH A" ENALHL KhH Q. R Bantisy bpe| (98F8 their naighbors. It became known co law goes ¢ | long, cf tie same width, and c ¢ thick: | Sixty miles norihosst of Nere, says & Tad- | ere Inin. R TaIomE Mol el e e | et Mho. amandmont of Wolfberans | yestorday, however, that one of the mer come into ab ’ 'l‘u|~ top was smooth and lustrous, m\l the | ding Colo., dispatch to the Denver R publi- | mated that in Whitman county alone there | was lost by a tie v £ 61 to 61, The |had been n the habit ;‘r wm-him{u' / n of th |”§"”" of I]':\va‘l 1 under wu:face was coated with scales of the | can. brings AR IRETe e IR S B R B R A Tolione | whisky of his own manufa and that nd - sca pec black metal | rickiest mins in this county, a 1639 | tegrat the stab 1E'Dork Guoitries 1n Brice an it | . “Tiis money of Wie country should be . | te dead man had patronized him Iib- | spread on the minutes beforo ex-Sergeant Mr. ‘Pucker says the et hos all the | the orig “Lost Cabin” mine, which has | threatens to do. | sued by the general government o through | era s whisky contained such ingredi- | Haze, cx-Sergeant p and one or two | appearance of ‘vlwmu‘ been t w:‘u u;"l]v m | been searched for duri th t thirty TMHo' tats fieh committes hins dacided. att government banks of loan and deposit, di- | ents as fusil oil and tobacco, both containing | Other agitators whose positions on the f | a great vein and smelted by the flow of lava | years SAFATAlIY S THVEALIBATI N N el Teotly to the people upon adequate security | active poisons, and it is believed now that | have been recently terminated held a pow- | which abounds in that region, cooling in the | Ho has discovered a lode 800 feet wide and | FIETHIY, JANERUE ‘,":':M"“;v\“_: U otret® | and at a uniform rate of interest. It should | all the men were slowly poisoned by which they unanimously determined | form in which it was found, and this theory [ 400 fet high, impregnated with fron ore, | gl SRy, 10 Th Colmbia pver, 1o locate the | full legal tender for the payment of King this stuff, Some of the liquor has | tha would seek revenge when the new | i« borne out by the find of at least a dozen | which bears gold and silver to the value $50/0005 WA AtE BYitHe ataas NI T ot bis, public and private, without excep- | bee for a chemical ‘analy board came in. The question of bringing | similar picces, though much smaller, in the | from $75 to $150 per ton. The ra e | e egislature, at | A vBE 6L GORLH stipulation, We | proceedings to oust Chief White was | same vicinity, These pleces of pure silver | this mine was discovered tinuation [ fome point on the Kalama river favor a m composed of legal tender wre. ussed, but action was deferred, as J welghed from five to fifty pounds each | of that upon which is t t Confi- | The Farmers' Alliance Implement company | treasury notes based upon the credit of the | pp WLL he danger of this| SCOtt was out of the city and his assistan Tucker and Doyle have located a mining | dence mine, or what is r ywn as | may have trouble collecting insurance on its | pation. coin being usel bsid | YOu L ¥OUIQ Al WS el Sl e AL 8 R O , nation, coin being used for subsidiary pur- | areadful disease and escape without even a | Was deemed material to the maturing of their claim wi the bowlder was found and in- | the Tron Mountain. It was recently sold to | warehouse, recently burned at Walla Walla, | p Jers et A e b kv | Rl G shatt and) abite i sagecn ot | kn: HAELNN aynaleate for $800,000 because the building was on leased ground, | = All of Woltberg free silver amend- | pightly used it positively prevents all con- | The general impression among business men | the main vein. | SOUTH DAKOTA. and was mortgaged, without giving due no- | ments were knocked out by majorities rang- | tagion. A pleasant, personal disinfectant, | $eems to be that the shaking up was not Mr. Tucker said today that in 1853 a plec chtning damaged the Yankton Coliegs | tice to the insurance company ing from 44 t to 61 to 61, the latter being | desdorant and germicide—purifying, cleans. | only necessary to redeem the good name of | B3 of smeltetd silver weighing four pounis was | o ‘Stienca’ hall several hundred dollars by | The miners on the Grey Eagle and also | the tie vote which defeated the most radical | fng and healing i | the force, but will have a salutary effect on found by William Hooker two miles west of | boring a hole ten feet in dlameter {rom roof | several other mines in the Methow. district | one. | B -— | those who remain. The announcement that | k! Poach Springs, but attracted 1o atte the | (0" col have stopped work and filed a Henm on the| When it cama to the business of naming | Salmon Cannery Destroyed by Fire. Jther removals are under consideration is | 8 “Could I have another supposition being that it hat been ‘0| Citizens of Charles Mix and Bon Homme | mines for money dus them for work. This, |2 ticket, for which the convention was| yANCOUVER, B. €., July 4.-—Fire last | sufficient to p the men from going to| B /o from a Mexican smelter and subsequently | gountios have been holding public mestings | added to mining operations baing discontinued | called, nobody wanted the nomination for su- | SRR EE B (o Il and Laid. | Sleep. and it is the opinion of some of the | &3 Glass of that lost by the thief | to devise means for inducing the Chicago & | on Slate crock, is giving the camp a serious | reme judge. A, G. Wolfberger nominated | HERL Cestrove e e A e | superior offcers that several of the patrolmer L LO'S BUSINESS INSTINCTS | Northwestern railway to extend its Yankton | setback. B P77 | Martin "I Bower of Nar and he em- | law's salmon cannery at Westminster. The | have been more or less in the “agitat- The trib '”"ll Makah Indlans, llving | branch inta these countles this fall, €0 that | gSherift Stinson s on the trail of 5,000 | Phatically declined the hon and nominated | ba Kundaleer and Northwest were load- | business will see the error of their : Quillayute, Clallam county, have temporarily | the jmmense crops can be marketed sheep that are belng driven into and through | ¥ olfberger. The latter sald he wouldn't |0 jumner, and the former was cast adrift | ways and attend strictly to police duty now | abandened gealing and embarked in the smug- A RGemer it ide s Ay s yglas and!| & £ | have and for awhile it looked as th | \ % |obts ¢ s -] mbark novement is under way and|[iiTtifay colinty! from WitHout: the atate, faF Ll €0 | and escaped the flames, but the latter caught | that the main instigators are out of the way. gling business, says a Port Townsend special | charjes Mix countles to establish a new town | the purpose of collecting the tax pre L oF | the nomination would go by defauit. Finally | gt SRt o0 i o e ek - . 0 eel" t0 the St. Paul Ploncer Press. The trafic has | on the lands ceded by the Yankton Indlans. | tho last legislature on migratory stock. The | ticse two gentlemen agreed to submit their | m€ Q00 FCC LG o1 6100,000, Insurance | PERSONAL PARAGRAPIS =8 ;i bean SOlhg o (OF soveral vears, and Bevel:| Tna jowns will bt Jochiad midway berween Ar. | Lig 1ast loglslatute on migratory stock. Tt | names (o a ballot and Wollberger was nomic | The logs ls estimated st $100000, invurance | e b | Give the children as much oped into such huge proportions as to astonish | mour and Yankton agency, a region of coun- | the assessment a levy an b toti s etieal )vx“v\ h_\' .;‘\ux 3 r;r I|I4-_ ,.|‘ s s o St REbWe L I00 M BARANE OREL 6t Work Thi | % ) y e 4 | Hires' Rootbeer as they waunt, customs officers when Uiey bugan an Investl- | try that is not surpassed in South Dakota. | it S IERENC 6 f4Y aid | e D e an aireament of D | iofs on' the cannery, which had fust com- |jarg, _cony °f Fellerton is at ihe Mil-} [§ Taleasmuchasyou want, your gation. Two Indians were arresied near Capo | The Volga Creamery assoclation recelved SCE s | sitve ducing this resolution | menced the season’s operations, will be $40,- [ - o | self. There's no harm in it— o) a 1 v MIS SLLANEOUS silv by introducing this r lution he season P - | 5 o »! veste! Flatterv with se al hundred dollars’ worth | raturns for their first consignment of butter | 2 H. W. Findley of Norfolk spent yesterday ingt rood, of merchandise which they had purchased at | and distributed the money among the farm- | . Almost very town in Montana is making a | “So long as gold }unl silver are used as [ 000, The Phoenix 'l'mll“ly was also de- |, Omaja, | uuthuu_: but good. Victorla and smuggled across tho stralts of | ers, netting them 131 cents per pound, a | 18It for the new Soliders’ Home | menny we ddvatatie drebeccitage abiflisitals | aLEEEd o8 i e o | el Maion Tk (6 regiNtirel at, A2 entpmskimmares prhBR Juan-a-Fuca In einoes, and were peddling | galn of about 5 cents over the market price | Sapphire deposits ara reported twenty-five | S i ik ks Rt E AL Dy anTomplALio voter and (L) Lk gk il e the Millard The Chas. E. Hires Co., Philada, around among farmers and settlers when ar- | for butter. They are now receiving about | miles west of Phillipsburg, Mont., 1,400 acres |\ %00 o 00 aajonrned PR P A mg a| The only complexion powder in the world| Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Carter of Tekamah ANV Testdd. The Indians freely confessed they | 6,500 pounds of milk daily. In_extent. | I§tiNG foan eaTioo T HEERWIERY OlWA BEATIY. | Khath (s rr CRE NV UGy R TENOH LR TUEY are at the Arcade. e = T had been in the business for years, and sald | The annual spring round-up for branding | The rumor of the discovery of brilliant | ¢ i head il the user, and without doubt a purifier, is| Fred Hoyt and W. Thompson of Gordon | ' they were ignorant of the fact that they |at Pierre has been finished and cattle men | dlamonds at Mount Edgecome, near Sitka, | breagnemss 7T & . Pozzoni's, are Arcade guests. aW e) S violated the government laws. Further are more than pleased. They report their | Alaska, was proven to be without foundation """ BUELESTHAUAIDUA [CONOLUBED | ssiamt e H. J. Carpenhopt and wife of Surprise are vestigation shows that the practice has been | losses for the winter at a percentage so| The White Ash mine in New Mexico is| o Two Marderers Krought Back. PR R L RO L et R general for many years, and as many as|small as to be hardly worth estimating as a | producing an average of thirty-seven cars | Ten Thousand People Present During the | Npw YORK, July 4.—0n board the Clyde | 0% S o 3 Ulll ue forty or firty Indlans are this summer en- | loss, less than one-half on 1 per cent, many [ Of coal a day, and of better quality than | Closing Hour lino. atoamer, which reached her pler at 1| g MF: and Mrs. H. M. Miller of Soward wore q gaged in the work. The two Indians now | with hundreds of head not having a | ever before | BEATRICE, July 4,—(Special Telegram.) o o Sy LA G L CLERLGIE) A (LA, under arrest will be prosecuted vigorously, | #ingle loss on record. A flow of natural gas has recently been | Today closed the Beatrice Chautauqua assem o'clock this HlH‘rhl‘IL. \\x;’i ’H\” prisoners Mr. and Mrs. Willlam Smith of Nebraska though it s believed that the Interior depart- | Work upon the great Kildonan mill at | discovered at Santa,Paula, Cal, two miles | by for 1895 A fios |y hannayeRfigntoadin unooENthe Snosk MenaRsHOILYRaTl GUGELS NIALLE DEIont C lc ment will Intorcede, for the reason that they | Pluma is progressing rapidly. About 100, | South of the town. The jet was lighted one | DY f0r 1895. It has been an unusually £uc- | yjonal murder cases that have occurred in! Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Giles of Avoea, Ia., uriene. are wards of the government and should have | 000 feet of huge timber has been received | evening and illuminated the town | cessful one. The attendance throughout the | recent years. The prisoners are Thomas were Dellone guests yesterday. been more closely watched by the agent.|from Oregon. Some of these timbers are e horse canning factory up the Columbia | SiXteen days has been larger than in former | Gray and his wife, Hattie Gray, both Can-\ Ny oand Mrs. A. Z. Moore of Glenwood, 15¢ Per Bottle. Several more Indians will bo arrested in a |16 by 18 in sizo and forty feet long. Tim- | river is in full blast, and it is stated by | years and the program has been made up of | adians. The murder for which they are 10f1a, spent the Fourth in Omaha few days for the same offense. | bersof this size could not be obtained in many that even experts cannot tell the dif- | the best talent the country affords. Today be w»vl\“ s committed iy ‘.»‘.”",' They Dr. J. H. Williams and wife of Blair were | This Is the regular 25¢ si EXPECT A BOOM '\h‘l‘: Tun;.;‘,. Im are n:-fi.n . This u‘))fll i r:vll; J l; ptween horse flesh and beef when it | ayorcises began at 9 o'clock with the usual | 2T .;, charge ‘I’W C ‘I' adian detec WO | among the visitors in Omaha yesterday. A mining boom of no mall proportions 1s | hills, having a capacity of 250 tons a day. | The new jury law In Washington went | PTAYer services, followed at 10 o'clock with saom | Charles Mack, Ed Haywood and George | st opening up for Wyomiing,and T belleve | ““\iuyark hns quits a movelty. i the way ot | into R8st on tue 1oth ot Jure nucon W the annual inspection of the Beatrice fire Prominent ; Eator D MeNiece of Creston, Ta., took dinner at the | 0 that the Gros Ventre country in Uinta county | 4" ariegion’ Iake, formed from tho surplas | in all civil cases that fen of twelve jurors | dePAFtment by the city officials. *No city 1 AUBURN, Vg A4 w1 | O LONSEY SR tT Az, SR | 5 fs uestined to be the | st mining camp water from the ell recently sunk at that | will be su it to decide the questio) the west can boast of a better department | 1it 1 propriet f the DBulletin Tagobicinvaeel0tERalloriin Iy NA S T1se R0k = TRLS stath of Wyonilng, writes & otres-| aor Torh oo o LK A R | e tde- e question | Uy i ane, and cartainly none could pro. | Moses, edtor and proprletor of tho Bullehh, | sipion, aud A, . Gablo of Hartingion are | pandent (o the Cheyenne Sun-Leader | and has already formed a pond of over 100| The Yuma Indian reservation includes | SC0¢ & better appearance on dress parade | died at his home today of poplexy. 6| registered at tho Merchants | 1513 Dodge-st,, sccond door west of P, This locality as well as Snake river acres, varylng from four to eight feet in | 11,000 acres of richer valloy land 1y 0 ‘l' eS| than they did this morning. At 11 o'clock | was 73 years old. He was p aster under Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Currier, Mr. and Mrs. | Anseparably associated with the yellow metal, | depth. The water Is of remarkably good | tho west bank of the Colarado riverc Con | the aker of the day, Semator John M. | Cleveland in 1884 and held a high place | E. B, Currier and Mr. and Mrs, J. W. Currier [O. The place where they sell as good a and not a ploneer or early writer thus far | quality, being very clear and free from | gress has ra (kiile bo surveyed and | Thurston, was presented to the audience | in the counclls of the democratic party, both | of Salix, Ia., were at the Merchants for | o dloaminoanie S known has ever faled o tell the world tha | alka similar impurities; . Apbllcation | apanca!to ssttlement by tho fudte y and | amidst applause. He spoke for a little over | stato and national dinner yesterday. [ s of Tee Cream Soda us you can get the great gold fields of our country must ul- | has b made to the United States f Tnaiba icnR ek ool tos A Pantse an hour and every sentence was full of | for 10¢ anywhere clse, timately be found b hatchery for a supply of German carp, with | in the mines at Pinos Altes. N._ b Juy | Patriotism. Rev. Robert Melntyre, billed for | S===——r— s =k S The Gros Ventre Gold Mining company has | which to stock the pond, and the thriv- | now there o o scareity o ooy M. Just | poth last evening and this afternoon, wired 2 | A ld f' 'h. d Toeatet between 3,000 and 4000 acres on the | g 1ite own bids fair (o blossom into & | hoped there’ will b cuch wertor o e | e manngament yesterdiy from Goodlund. | TONFWYORK 11 olG-iashioned way rlor e Gros Ventre river, and several clalms on the [ POPUlAr summer resort el i er for all | iy, that he had been delayed by a wash 5 ) 5 i a 0 a S A e GOLORADO purposes after the rainy season commences. | gyt und since that time all efforts to reach ai MILES «7 | of getting there. Slow and safe, but hard AR G 4 s 4 It is estimated that there have been | him by wire or ascertain his whereabouts i e 5 S e e i eat ineralogists and min || The water in the mineral springs at Morri- | auibped out of Ulah for eastorn and ROrthorn | hive een wnavaling. - Tho fima was inte work. Most women, have got beyond this kil nd in the country, son Is to b> shipped to Denver in tanks. oints 2 the pasi CH Afgart 3y ¢ . s all this property is to be made this summer. | was made by the Smith-Moffat ¢ e works ong t ¥adal kng A et elsceily withe g Qraslon uRan Eho e Lile J ? ‘ 1 Sne e broperty 18 to be made this sumuier. | was made by the Smith-Moftat cyanide works | among the Nevada ard Idaho growers have | Gharacter of Lincoln Now, why car't you look at that other old A e i ) Flor S 1 hundred and fifty ounc been corresponding! active, This evening choru cholr gave it s oL s N B s e ol quentities | ot g '11\“"‘ taken U Ine ¢ From Flagstaff, Ariz., In one week ro-| closing concert, followed by a display of fashined proceeding in the same light-— 4 s N0, 1 have he gran P, s of Box Elder has been ar ntly, 20,000 fead of cattlo were shipp orks, both \ich were somewhat in aah) L : St 3. ot the re and Snake river cey portion of the public domain embracing a | simply allve ; 1 SRt L et ¢ o q ' S (Riis i ¥ tries. Eve lro requiste. tor imimenne | back ot Wbout 15,000 aorenr " CMUMACINS 8 | simply alive with immense herds. “Tiio | Ten thousand people would be a conservatiy That's slow cnough and tiresome ecnouch, 1 R RaTo 98 8% g : cvenuie ¢ o g town from this | wate of the crowd in attendanc Ry i P S dlacer vor i here, with millioas to| A r urn_recelved from the stamp | cource is considerable, and there is an air of - — cverylody knows, and it's not as safe L spare, and if we were given tho poy mill in Black Hawk gave an | prosperity there. Given a Jail Sentence., e Sy : s ) mandaclure 4 ‘camp 1o order we could not | averas inces from the stamp mil rmers are charged with having dammed| FAIRBURY b, July 4.- -- as_washing with Pearline. It's rcally ake a more comple’e and perfect equipnent | ore r $25 per ton : L LT damme e ! : o P AL R pumslela ans posteet anuipinent o1, e M. e the i, | [ ROTLR branch of the ¢ algveray river v“.! ony Hagerman, a hot tamale ven, - destructive, in fact, the wear of that Bt R b 4 Ity In Cres v : is- |y bove Betlota, Ca he dam, it al- | pooked for twenty-five days' reside e LT C ey tion. l"! Xhaustible w PPy, whole town- | covery of gold on Froze creek, about twelve | lowed to stand, will turn all the water dows | Po0Ked for twenty-five days’ resid constant rubbing. Break away from ps of dense pine timber, porfect dumping | milos southiwest of Silver Cliff. The ore is | the main stream, and the most of ft will | the county jail yesterday morning. He stole i 7 8 1 Brounds for tho ilings, und a river of frro: | abundant and runs up (o $40 per ton nter Mormon channel. It Is feared that the | several hides from one of the slaughter these antiquated ides Use modern ble power to earry the waste away, broad Anaconda s sending o n the big | throwing of this additional water into Mor- | houses and was trying to sell them at Beat . P e il ([ Alid Ik bonche { land for a city, and 1'to the cyanid> mill rence. It [ mon channel during the winter time may | rice, when the theft was discovered and kb "“Ctflwl Pearlinc saves at cvery Batly a w power suflicient to operate all from $10 to $20 per ton, car o1 | cause Stockton to be flooded, “ | was brought back for trial, o1nt. the Taachinery it will aver. be roqui. any | HIEN Erade went betiar than $100 ner-ton i Hicakian 5 | pabeangns back endislak G e S point, P iy Regular $10 and $12, B i B ke o aran e il $100 pee ton. - |4t workimen fat the Barton winery, at | d o D =tudanteqnon S Peddlers and some unscrupulous erocers will tell yon “ this fs as good as 9 A & rato that will make pay dirt out of eoll g Ol leakgiseeek meks gl e uton s | Eratng CHAXRIDRE Foamulataga ink catic | BRI e e iniesr €11QA o “ihe same as Pearline.” I1'S FALSE—Déarline T peddled, July Specical $5.00. ylelding only 10 cents per cubic yard, if turning thirteen ounces gold to the cord, says | famous. ¢ ‘ gallons .more thansthe JiA0% watlisetif b SePS ] s and if your grocer sends you s slace_of Pearline, bo r cublc d, 1f per hirte he cord, says ous tun of Heidelber, ich has long | cif tgages, ten filed, $2.826; two re B k A PR R il ihinged) ko 14001 i w8 o o oL ey | Che Lok Soriaes g i Bevcing L | Lumous, fua of Hetdlbarg, uch nas long | oty moriesgnm, s od, 3E0s o v it Back Teeiadiss 6 i RVl | CHAS. SHIVERICK & CO, of the sallent points in the great mining |3*me streak he obtained an ounce of gold [ ouilt under tho orders of Colonel H. Trevel- | flled, $11,200; seventeen released acheme of northern Ulnta county from nine pounds of dirt. yan, manager of the Barton vineyard, who is | §2,757 THE SAN JOAQUIN RAILAVAY. . Late last fall Messrs. Warren and Leslic | one of the few survivors of the famous charge 5 7 - Well Prancisco & San Joaquin rallway have now | ke ot bk DG Like, 0 Bridal Vel | Threo Americans, Louis Demond, James| CRETE. Neb. July 4-(Special)=A laree Been surveyed from Stcckton suth, says ths | oot th thorominy erict. Before they were | crismore and Hal Jeftrey, have fitted out an | €OWd 18 taking in the Chautauqua assembly Ban Francisco Examiner. OF this distance the | winter set i asd drove thocs coe!" piocation | expedition at ~Escalon, ' Mex., bound for | hers today. The new steamer is liberally twenty-five miles to the Stanislaus river have | now at work anl ki ot s oo AT€ | the Sierra Madre mountains in Search of the | patronized, and tennis receives much atten been located, and two preliminary lines hava | gold quartz, which runs Suntes ileey | famous lost mine, La Fuente, which, ac-|tion. Dr. Bayard Holmes of Chicago d2 been run from the Stanislaus to the Tuo. | and $15 in Eold silver § cording to tradition, contains a vast amount | livered his opening lecture this morning, Tt lumne river. The Graham party of enginesrs, WYOMING, of ore of fabulous richness. The mine was | was an introduction to his course of daily which bas that part of the road in charge - 3 | abandoned by the Spaniards, on account of ! discussions on sociological questions. Mrs. B Tt Toived five mlten sonit oy V-TA Seven young antelope, captured in the Ar- | the Italians, over a ceniury ago, nd al- | Dreler, a contralto of (‘hicago, gave her first lumne, ' ) e Tuo | buckle pasture, near Cheyenne, are being | though many attempts have been male to re- | recital tonight. Colonel Edward Anderson umne, and will work from that point toward | trained 4 t, nune k L ! s ¢ 0 RIRRE A il work ttom Ahas poini owara lizcover it, nune have been ruccessful told soma “army yarns” tiis afternoon. He engineers are between ten and NG ALIES Laramie Peak gold mines are in full blast Ben Buckley, the famous Sonoma county | was a colonel of the Twelith Indiana, a com north of th by which they et on MUed | yight and day. 1t is reported gold is found | “wild man,” fs now in the Ukiah insase | panion of John Rrown, and an fntimate riend three or four days, when thay will brocea | ! the ore taken from the mine asylum. For the past twenty years Buckley [ of Schuyler Colfax., Miss Chandler sang $5 kurvey the sitea within the m'-“ o | It is reported on what appears to be relia- | has ‘x»-n living in an open pen on the Cun- | patriotic songs. ., , They have only run one proitminarly | ble au y that a big gold discovery has [ fingham ranch, ir Blucher Yall “ He re Ked Clovd Will Huve Saloons, Fresno south been made not ten miles from Douglas “H'; R "“H\” ,vi.ml l'“‘]\‘-“ ‘.“ 2 "y'm"""" RED CLOUD, Nep., July 4.—(Special) Though the contract for the cars has not [ WOrK has been beguu on a sea {Tie in a hole in the ground during the hardest | The question of salaon license, which has | et been completed and signed, J. Ham- | 3t Green River, in the expectation of e v AR i R e ot oaiaet \taat might | mond & Co. have aiready begun the construc- | fuel or oil. = The work Is conduct to suit him he would bail it cut with his hat. | tion t t] L] tion of the rolling stock mpany organized for the purpose b e O e gt oThih Uls hat. | Tho 1iconse and osouptigh tax were fxed CARELESS SURVEYS W. C. Knight, professor of mi cooked anything. He imagined himself to be | 100 (The three saloans offered frst § o Sl { C b ), and finally’ $30h, and two of them Carclossiiess on'the part of miny of (he | SIALe university, and W. H. Reed Mo president of the Unitod States, and said | | - And ApMIARHn, Al ine- ot L government surveyors who surveyed por- | Of much noe o' the: Wyomis he bad bee dent - since time of | N last nigh! R OF Dakot toveire. "iuo, durveved BOF | have gons k, about 150 m Washington. The cause of his astin | HasENs were sy ) HAnst ninh causing endless strife and litigation to deter Laramie, to take a fossil s was a blow received on the lead twenty| Y Issue licensay lg, | i | oottt <SS mine the ownership of thousands of acres of | they discovered ther years ago, while on the road home one night, | foF $1.000 license tax. Two b e | , valuable land, says a Chamberlain dispateh | Mike Evans, a L 032 creek ranchman, | Ho was assaulted by robbers and badly | meey on t Tha bas not de- u: the Sioux Falls Argus-Leader. Many of | has imported 100 h pheasant | beaten. | terminad whether to,#pq r oo | L4 these surveys are misleading as to the boun- | Which he proposes under his | S | = M Grand Isla | darles, ani in every instunce where new | 1f hateh proves M | Why Nos ¥a [t siianaling M E,geand 1nl surveys have been ordered by county author- | will turn the phea | Bein | When thousands of people are taking Hood's | CGRAND ISLAND, July 4.—(Special) | f i 2 itles :the cld surveys bave been found to be | stocking the country with this gam Sarsaparilia to overcome the weakness and | nighb Scott Seals of this city, the champion | wholly wrong. Persons wio took government | The Wyoming & Mlissou Ve Jaq | 1anguor which are so common at this season, | wrestler of Nebraska, and Sullivan of Kansas fuse to permit the lines to be chanzed Lo | with & vapital stock of $500.000 1o conetract | Know that Hood's Sarsaparilla has power to | plonship, Sullivan winning. Two out of conform to the new surveye, for the reason | yo " ! | cure rheumatism, dyspepsia and all Qiseases | thrae were to decide the event, and Sull | and operate a railroad from Aladdin, Crook L J that many of them would 10s> quantities of | county. In an easterly direction fo the east. | cAused by impure blood, why do you continue | won in two wrestles. The first was a catch land by the transaction. Burke township, | o° e 0, e ed%t- [to sulter? Hood's cures others, why not | as-catch-can and was Anished in twely ! Mianehaha county, has for years been the | o i R T e e T onds; th 4, & Graeco-Roman, took ter asene of bitter sirife fn this eounection. | of, South Dakota to & polnt on the Missour! | — o With the hope of adjusting the difficulty y " SATAP QOLOrIS | Hood’s Pills are prompt and e t. 25 | —_— a Rew survey was made. A majority of the | OREGON | il { Poman Admiriad 14 ‘Dodgh (] people of the township and the fownship| A €ood many railroad ties are being Eot | gcalaed ro Death b i . | FREMONT, July 4.—(8, 8 | officers are in favor of the new survey, but [ out in the middle fork of the Coquille &nd 9 A or Exp'oslon. | Gray daughter of Hon. E. F | a number whose property flected by the | shipped by steamer to San Franeisco. BUFFALO, N. Y. July 4.—T crown | eity, was admitted to xthe.bar yesterday. | A ~ o g ehanges in 1A linss wro strenovaly opposed | Arrangements aro being made o bore | sheet of the boller of the ug Wilian | Mies Grar. olaset B8 Rt loatat belng It is prepared with the utmost care and skill from the choicest leaf grown ; 0. it, and a very bitter feeling has been en- | fo al in the marsh land adjoining the | st e o o 4 the first lady ever ac 1 to the | SS e s st 2 , . W fatlk and & vory § haa boeu su: | for oot In the marsh Isad adiolaing the | Stov blew oul yeslerdsy sttoruoan, fa- | the 81 L 1ady_eyer: puitted 1o th | possessing a flavor and substance that makes it dear to the heart of every g has cause ber persona 0 the ein il groun = | tally ding engineer, ( S n | a & he s s CO chewe is 3 3 a i fepling has caused mber of personal ¢ | the vein lies under ground F SCANIBR LIS WA Heora griversity, and has for the past tw tobacco chewer. It is made by the oldest tobacco manufacturers in eople can come to| Ap Astoria woman whose husband had been | * DA Foyie. 396 men's | 1 wlint in her father's off 3 : N 3 some amicable agreomen n the malter serl- | missing fve duve, hearing that tho hody of | fesh was Mierally parbolled and pected omr{ -0 - =" : America, and the largest in the world, and cannot be excelled. Try it R e his 1s Uabia to snaus alog §ve days, hessing that the b ot Lo gl i il | ncoln County Mortgage Record s A i AN NS Ml o . TRUN STORY OF THE GOLDEN FLEECE. | Seciiod 1 wan tone e e oL, o o | i vet The e Clothing was Dolng fe-| NORTH PLATTE, Neb., July 4—G@ You'll agree with the many thousand discriminating chewers who use it exclu- Apropos of the recent robbery of ores in | mediately went to town, and without troub- | Fitch hosp'tal, where Sutton died soon after | ¢lal)—The followimg fs the mortgage record sively, and pronounce it much the best. 'S Lo, llard’'s. Ahe Golden Fleece, Henry C. Oluey, as an old | liug hersclt to identify the remains, spent | Boyle cannot live, | tor Liucoln county for June: Farm mort- » P It ri

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