Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, February 9, 1903, Page 5

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MINING 1§ THE BLACK HILLS| I Bdward Haoscbka and Otham Buy the Hogan & Anderson Group. THIRTY THOUSAND 1S THE PRICE PAID few Owners W Develop the Prop. Systematic Ma Has Telephone Connection. DEADWOOD, 8. D., Feb. 8.—(Special.)— | The Hogan and Anderson group of claims, wltuated on Bare Butte creek, about tem ‘nilss south of Deadwood, has been sold o Boward Hanschka and associates. The frwt payment on the ground was made yosterday, §5,000 in cash being handed over 10 the Jucky owners. The price paid for the property is a big one, $30,000, when it is considered that ‘he ground 18 prac- {cally undeveloped. A lot of work beea dane on the ground, but it has prac- tically fatled to develop i, and had the lebor which has been put inte open outs, whallow shafts and tunnels been concen- trated in places where the best showings of ore have beem made it is doubtful if it could have been purchased for the price 4t which it was sold. In one of these open cuts they uncovered the apex of & well defined quarts veln, fully six feet in width, with & southerly trend and dipping slightly to the east. Upon this vein thes had sunk & shaft about fifty feet deep, drifting south fitteen feet and cross-cutting on this level, showing the ledge to be twelve feet wide at that depth. Samples taken from across the twelve-foot face give an average of $10.50, the samples ranging from $8.40 to $12.60, which would show that the values #re uniform throughout the vein. The footwall of the vein is slate, well defined and free from the ledge, and a cross-cut into the hanging wall shows that to be & Elate also, heavily mineralized. It 15 be- Neved that with a hoist erected at this point and work of sinking continued the | ¥ein would develop into & large one, carry- 1ing even better values in gold as a greater depth would be attained upon the ledgr | proaching a point #hatt has been sunk to a depth of fifty feet on the same vein, and samples taken at different depthe. the average assay return of which is $10.50. A contract has been let to sink these shafts 1o a greater depth and crosscuts made to ascertain the width of the vein, which on the surface is a large one. The Provo ls &aother group belong- ing to the company embracing about 100 ncres of mineral ground. This ground has not received very much development, the most extensive béing a shaft which has been sunk on the vein for a depth of twenty-five feet. Good mssays have, how- ever, been recelved from the ore tested | taken from the shaft, €0 4 contract has been awarded to sink it fifty feet deeper and | ther to crosscut the ledge. The London | £Toup, situated about three miles west from | Custer City, is perhaps the most valuable | group owned by the company, and em- braces an area of 300 acres, a large part | of which is choice mineral ground. As a | tree milling proposition the London is probably ae rich as any group of mines in the southern Hill. The London has re- ceived a grea: deal of systematic develop- ment and s in good shape to receive a treatment plant, and it is the intention of the company to erect upon it a ten-ton | etamp mill this spring and later on to add either a chlorination plant or a cyanide annex. Work on these improvements will | be started by the company Just as soon as the weather conditions will permit elephones at Sherid, SHERIDAN, 8. D., Feb. §.—(Special.)— This camp and the copper camp at Sher- | idan hare been counected by telephone, 8o both places are in communication with all | the principal town: of the Hills. Sheridan Is getting to be one of the liveliest camps in the Black Hills, the Maloney Blue Lead and the Dakota-Calumet company employ- ing & large number of men in their opera- tions. Last month, besides the other work accomplished, the miners on the Blue Lead drove 135 feet of tunneling, and for part of the way through the hardest kind of ma terial, it taking three shifts to put in one | round of holes. The southeast drift from the main tunnei, which is being run toward | the ore deposiis exposed on the surface of | the ground 600 feet above, is rapidly ap- | which will be directly | underneath them, and the material now coming into the working is mixed ‘with a | NONEY (ONDITION BETTER Ourrency Beturning from Interier and Bank Reserves Inoreasing. IMPORTS ONLY UNCERTAIN ELEMENT Heavy Customs Pay Means Locking Up of Vast Sums in the Public Treasury Which Does No Harm Now. NEW YORK, Feb. 8.—(Special.)—Henry Clews in his weekly Wall street letter says The best feature in the stock market i the improvement in the monetary Situa- u All indications now point to com- paratively esey money until the usual de- mand for currency sets in next fall, except- ing, of course, the temporary disturbance | Incidental to' April settiemer which usually reaches its climax the middle of the month. Currency is returning more THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: MONDAY, | freely from the Interior, and bank reserves | | in the fact owing to the reported advance In made in the United States Yarne no material change. There was & Steady miscellaneous Inquiry and the market was firm. Transactions were moderate. UPHOLD MONROE DOCTRIN (Continued from First Page.) heavy penaltios are to be imposed for any delay. The importance of this contest )es that can build & warship as well and as quickly as the Cramps it will add to the facilities of the Navy department for promptly in creasing the stremgth of the American navy when need may come. In this con- nection, one of the Crampe said the other day in discussing the resolution offered by Mr. Joy for the immediste building of twenty-five battleships: “Ten years ago such a bill might have seemed absurd today the shipyards of the United States could lay the keels of twenty-five battie- shipe within three months, znd if labor could be secured the entire fleet could be completed and put in commission within show & rising tendency in coneequence. | four years. Legitimate de demands are large, but | these are readily met o long as syndicate Mrs. and speculative operations continue on as . i.mited a scale as at present. There has | The Dext annual congress of the been more of jess expectation of goid ship- | Daughters of the American Revolution, ments. but tiese have been deiaved by | which is to conyvene here within & few eve onsiderations. 1n the first place | o g our commitments abroad, though sti) iarge, | WCek8, will doubtiess take cognizance of nave been much reduced, in the second | the fact tbat the founcer of the order, piace, the principal foreign money mar- | Flora Adams Darling, has at last kets are comparatively easy because both the French and Transvaal loans have been temporarily postponed; and, fnally, our exports of domestic produce have been sufficiently heavy to ward off any outward movement of gold. The French ican. which was expected early in 1903, seems to have been indefinitely dela 3 . apparently vecause of unsatistactory domestic political conditions; and the Transvaal loan when it appears is not likely to ate any disturb- ance, being largely a matter of turning a temporary certificate of debt into a more permanent form. Only Umeert: About the only unc monetary outiook. so tional exchanges are co Eleme. rtain element in_the ar as our interna- cerned, is our con- tinued large imports. These are NOw Fun- ning very heavy, and seem likely to remain large for some time to come. This I8 & perfectly natural sequence of the high level now prevailing in thie country; 1t the inevitable ve follow abnormal conditions. Europe | has been depressed and prices are low. readjustments that | received partial justice at the Bands of congress. Barly in the '60s Mrs. Darling, who was a nattve of New Hampshire, and the wife of « confederate brigadier general, asked for and recelved e pass to carry her through the lines in order that she might meet her husband, who wae wounded end in hos- pital at Dalton, Ga. Mrs. Darling remained at her husband's side until his death, and in November, 1863, applied for the protec- tion of & flag of truce that she might re- turn porth. Thie request was granted and a paper signed bv Generd] N. P. Banks, commanding the Department of the Guif, was given her, which guaranteed safe con- duct of herself, sefvant and effects. In spite of this governmental assurance that she should met be molested, Mrs. Darling was compelled to give up her things and to submit to the abstraction from her trunks FEBRUARY if the New York concern | but | I never knowed a boy with sich an appetite as Tim! It seems t' me he’s always hungry—and that slim, you wouldn’t think there was room enough to hold it all in him. Lands alive! I used t’ bake all day—just Timmie's Appetite for Tim— Aunt Amandy always said “It’s just a pesky whim”'— But then I knowed his father and Tim ’s just like him. So I kept on a-bakin’ ’till one day I got some light as to how the other neighbors kept the waist bands tight. Instid of bakin and mixin’ half the night They kept Uneeda Biscuit on the cupboard right in sight— and that' the way I finally conkered Timmie’s NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY America has been progressing marvelousiy | q ~ 1l of her personal property. For forty e el o pected | and prices are high. Prices, like water, | ® . The property is well timbered and is but | €004 l""d| ot pser o ’; ;‘ o ": Seek ‘thelr level; Mence we may Joox fof | years the lady has been appealing to con- ;“;m dl!:‘nne; from l‘br:noh of the Bur- ::" '::pk:“."‘m"‘;r_"‘m:"r'.“""o( Drogreas, | large imports uintll conditior 8y Ve, been | grese for redress. Such men as Fernando ngton ralroad, to which a wagon | . | more nearly eq elthe by p v, 7 G | s a The propette ia. (%8 YA | The company s putting in 800 feet Of air | prices Bere of & Tise in values . abrcad: | Wood. Willlam M. Evarts. General Bragg Delt with the Clover Leat, the Finlander piping and making other arrangements to Moet lkely it will be a decline in values here that will first check the growth of im- of Wisconsin, had the bill in charge at varfous times, and General Banke himsolf Tine 484 other properties which have good | Fun poer (il o the workinen, the fn | pere, s uril, il Boicnf WG Rt B | when o congress siaied that he depiored | AFFATRS AT SOUTH (MAHA | ciniiss, Wegkmen odse No. 21 witi ve| yopp IGPUTE SEEMS OVER reputations as mines and producers in the g s | preg-- gty “‘rk'm. tunsel. flux, one of which will soon show itself in | the act and favored full indemmity. All * AT There will be a meeting of the city coun- | © district. The ore is free milling and will s 3 N largely augmented customs payments and | these efforts were without outcome until cfl tonight. Some action may be — Eyanide to perfection. The new owners| The Mount Aetna “'mI:tzfiwu;x‘-n:r“ l:l“!'mn‘( onsequent _absor ")‘\'x':‘ns”l. 53‘"33533257 $s ndnter, Wit W, 8. Matthewh & Thw: ‘lhe petk commissioners’ communication. | { ‘will at once begin the work of development ':"Hm"; g e g Mown o the 180. | that ehould not be losi sight of: It may | yer of this city, after tireless efforts, suc- | Hammonds Said to Be Negetiating to| Mrs 1homas Neeier died at ber home, | Bolivia Agrees to Temporary Occupation by e cky e o 2 v o N " 1 ¥ a8 @ 8 Sytamatic manner, 804 take advast- | 00 TR D o this level & Grift will be| whn th Sutm e e Seein Ca | 9004ed 1n getting a'bill through which gives Rogain Their 0ld Pisat. bR R D R g Brasilian Foross. : \ Age of the shotring made by the poor work | . t the ore body exposed 1n | pInch wiil surely be Teat. a0t & does | Mrs. Darling about a third of the value of | residence. Interment at St. Mary's ceme- ] St its former owners, who knew little or | M0 :3:-‘::1”:'::' foot neater the surface, | it¢ duty and meeis the now very popular | the property takem. Of course, like all 4 | ¥ ot DiRetncasiof o Howt Aeoutit ‘ 3 H Pothirg sbout underground work, and had [[te tonnel W0 ecr BORTEr SR RO | demand for an elastic scintific curtency | other cleims, Mrs. Darling gets no interest (ARMOURS NOT ANXIOUS TO SELL IT | ,\ehs, ey, ERTIRent, 26 he adi' ive'™% | MAY REPUDIATE * CONCESSIONS GIVEN :T“;:n'h;: :’;o‘:: :z:::-g;:::h'l:h: boen opened up in the tunnel la very rich, | desire to be returned by their constituen- | for the forty years, but fortunately she ha masquernde reception at the association old-time Missouri river printer. and has and eome think that it will rival the Holy cles, can overlook this necessity is utterly to pay Do fees to her attorne: parlors Saturday evening of this week All : | beyond comprebension, except on the score IDE.I May Be Brought About if Parties | of 'l:‘;\_\'l are !!Iwr:t "t:dl'lelld in cos- | Anglo-American Symndicate May Find | Terror, which mine it is near, In the same | of ignorance of the country’'s real ne.s. tu e i o of Territory Declared V. fubbed many a weary might on The Bee, | ottt ™ eting, wo far, haw been done | The beople are rapidly learning (hat such PANCAKE RECORD IS BROKEN CUL) T SRERGGRY - Lease ¥ pasted up stuings on the ola Republican | ! bucket. but cars and cages | & Measure is in the interest of the bor- ment as te Who is to WANT 7,200,000 BOTTLES. When Two Nations Finally and Herald, and knows many of the old | With @ steel bucket, bu 998 | Cwar And nktiomal Geveispment, snd oot — % pe iourists who edged them up in the early | Pave been ordered, and as soon as they | wolely in behalf of the banker. A very re- | Michigam Mam Devours Thirty-six Make Repairs, gree om Terms. -+ 4 arly | o orive they wil! be instailed in the shaft. | markable change of sentiment on this sub. Enor Order for Produet of = ddys. He stayed by his property for many Jon has beem cut on the 180- | JECt 8 finally coming over the south. once Lung Protectors of the Buek- years, awd while he may not have been | After 8 station has the stronghold of silver heresies: and It extra good with the pick and shovel, he has hud an abundance of patience, and is about to be well rewarded. Developing Lula Mines. The Lula group of mines, owned by George Mullen and Tom O’Brien, situated | on the phonolite belt, half a mile south of Garden City, Is undergoing a system of foot level and a drift started sinking be resumed in the main shaft and con- tinued to & depth of 500 feet Dectde Bullding Loan Case. DEADWOOD, §. D., Feb. 8 —(Special)— The case of M. C. Clark, receiver, agafiat M. C. Conners, a suit on the foreclosure of a mortgage glven to secure a note und seems like sheer folly for congrese not to take heed. Shoulu the country be called upun to suffor from this neglect it is easy 1o say upen Whom public vengeance would a May Effect Momey Market. There is just one other factor in the sit- uation that might possibly affect the money maiket unfavorably, unless good judgment prevails, und that is the movement cbliging wheat Varfety. A novel wager resulted in the pulling off of a remarkable pancake-eating contest in Hopkine Station, Allegan county, Mich., one night last week. Ed Foot, who is the vil- lage genius, lost the wager, but established a reccrd as the champlon pancake eater of From Chicago comes (he informstion that the Hammond Packing company is now negotiating for the purchase of the plant here from the Armour company. Some time ago the entire plant here, which had been closed for some time, was secured by the Armour interests. Now the Hammond people seem to realize what they lost by Pittaburg Comcern. PITTSBURG, Pa., Feb. 8.—(Special Di patch to The Bee.)—Pittsburg has won an- other eignal victory over foreign competi- tion. A deal has just been closed which places an enormous crder for bottles with | a firm in this city, the largest of the kind in the history of the firm. Were the bottles RIO DE JANEIRO, Feb. 8.—The Bolivian government has agreed to Brazilian occupa- tion and administration of the Acre terri- tory pending the settlement of the dispute and has offered to send a minister pleni- potentiary to Brazil invested with full powers to negotiate a settlement. NEW YORK, Feb. 8.—Assis Brasil, min- . losing the works here and are anxious to | to be placed end on end they would make & | yyter from Brazil to the United States, who the trust companies to carr reserve, | the United States, having devoured in | % | 4 development that promises flattering re- |8 balance due on a loan, has been decided | This is & step in the right Brattsct nok \hl'flr-!lx mlmlu-: P8 _:\ u‘;" “;r .: buy back the property from the Armours. |string about 1500 miles long, from New| s in thig city, received a cable from his - B e e’ getemgth n put to| by Judge W. G. Rice In the circult court in | one already In effect in concerns which v . While the plant has been practically | York to Chicago and then back to Pitts- work on a vertiez! ledge, which showed ®00d indications at the surface, and which @s it has been surk on has continued to improve. At a depth of twenty-five feet the ledge has grown wider, and now fills the hottom of the shaft. Besides the main shaft, which will constitute the principal favor of the defendant. Clark, the plaintiff, is receiver for the American Building and Loan association. It was alleged in the complaint that Conners ~became a sub- scriber to the association in May, 1889, for forty shares of the assoclailon stock, for which he bid 850 a share, receiving a loan plece sound banking methoas above the de- sire to present record-breaking statements. All the trust compunies should be obliged o carry a reserve in thelr vaults of not less than 5 per cent. A somewhat greater swia would do no harm, but if anything be- | Yond 5 per cent is imposed it should e { done graduaily. as the sudden locking up of 340,000,000 or more of reserve would create' a very undesirable and unnecessary average thickncss of a quarter of an inch and covered with a gemerous spreading of maple syrup. The fact was witnessed by large crowd, who paid 10 cenis apiece to see the fun. They professed to have gotten their meney’s worth. < Fest felt the effects of his venture a little, though he has re- covered sufficiently to be around town | have used closed for several months, the Armours the Hammond house here to tank cattle, hogs and sheep. Should the negotiations go through, it is thought that the houses here will give work to at least 500 men. This will bring back men from other points who left when the plant was burg. William Lanahan & Son, Baltimore, Ma. proprietors of Hunter Baltimore Rye, awarded the Pittsburg concern the comtract for furnishing 50,000 gross of bottles dur- Ving the year 1903. There are to be shipped | fitty gross per day, and no less than three government today confirming the Rio Janelro dispatch relative to the dispute over the Acre territory in South America. Minister Talks of End. Senor Brasil sald tonight: 1 recelved cable advices from my gov- | ernment today relative td the Acre matter. Bra; The Erazilian government sent an ultima. development on the ground, a mumber of |of $.000 and giving 4 moTtEwge On POD- | yiringency. The vaiue of Teserves In to | iy i N e e T s Ty e 1 e | Gum Bolivia sarly ih January 1o the .| really use them in emergencies, and - ts se s i o o roduct from via other shafts and tunmels have been sunk | €rty in the town of Spearfish for security. | FToCY ust, IhCR In Cmergencies And &8 | "5 all came about because Foot went into n the reports sent ous mp! o y P e effect that should Bolivia attempt to take Conners made monthly payments to the @nd driven, and the work shows a general mineralization of the ground. The owaers are very well satisfied with the exposures of ore so far made, and will continue Ge- association up to the time the assoclation went into the hands of a receiver, in 1896, having paid in $2.900 during that time. It ficient in this respect they will be & in- evitable element of weakness and suspicion. The movement is an eminently proper one and if conducted on reasonable lines will | serve to strengthen confidence where it is Ed Mclntyre's barber shop the other morn- Ing to get his hair cut. Barbers are talk- ative, and in the course of the trimming-up A. H. Noyes, who was formerly manager o the plant here, will return and tike charge. An officer of the Armour company said yesterday that while there was some talk i i timore, or four ordinary freight trains. | Each bottle is twelve Inches long. There will be 7,200,000 bottles, which will make a line of bottles about 1,500 miles long. A possession of the disputed territory, Brasil would occupy and administer it until a reasonable settiement of the whole dispute had been effected. 1 am informed by to- | day's cable from the Brazilian minister of velupments on the ground until it has | Was claimed by the assoclation that COB- | most needed. 1t ie one of the most reas Drocess Mclatyre remarked that he B | of (he Hummond people busing back their | uming that there are an average of thirty- | foreien aflalre. ‘Beron de Briance, that in been thoroughly opened up. | ners was paying this assessment on his s\gl movements of the day # S property, the Armour company Wwas not | two drinks to the bottle the order will | granted the Brazilian military occupation Superintendent Morrieon of {he Desd- |etock and mot to be credited.on the loan. |, Siock exchange transsctons continge on | fast - particularly anxious to sell. He eadded have a capacity -of 230,400,000 drinks, or and adminietrgtion of the contested terri- oot | unt of which, $2,000. was |chiefly the result of proieasionai operations ‘That's nothing,” said Foot. “I can eat |y .o "hoe if gatisfactory arrangements | about three drinks for every person in the | lOrY of Acre,’ to the west of the Vaco ‘wood-Standard company came to the city | the full amoun - ¥ 7 - more than that every morning.” | river. The Bolivian government advises Thursday evening, bringing with him the | claimed to be still owing. Comners, on the ;{:f";.\:f ‘:n‘-";,':f:?',‘.‘( Jindertone 1g the mar ¥ oy could be made the trade would go through | United States. In all there will be a ca- semi-monthly cleanup of the company’s cyanide plant on Johnson gulch. The clean- up amounted to about $10,000. The com- other hand, contended that the a share bid on the stock was not a free and com. petitive bid, but was a rate fixed by th of leaderehip 1s not conducive to activity. The situation is en | tirely in the hands of those whose Interests are on the long side. There is no chance Before the talk ended Foot had bet Me- Intyre that he could eat a gallon of bat- ter made up into cakes and & quart of m | One point and that the plant would be opened again of contention seems to be the question of repairs. Most of the Hammond | pacity of 1,440,000 gallons in the 7,200,000 bottles. that ‘they e sending to Rio Janeiro a minister on & special mission to reach an agreement. or by submitting the dispute to arbitration, as Brazil itself had proposed N | days before f successful bear campuigns while busi- | ple syrup poured over the cakes. The ar- Shelby's Sore E: g po ; eparstion, the contract s re old and the machinery is Shelby's Sore Eye. Rt o s iast Belt 4 Mscdats 000 » month, .-nn ".’."':.TT“...""' e ..‘h“:' .::\u:fl = ’u-‘::;'h-’ndm:::‘mc payments | centrated. . Those n control ‘ave evidenly | TRAZement was that the contest was to come :::m:unnfl;e:ed out of ‘date. What the| ] R. Sheiby of Sheridan, Wyo., was ar- | lerritory which was heid by the Bollvian X ! seen that it = r 0 Ha . na | Off in a hall and there to Ye charged an - h » o sy e sl oy _ | troops against the revoiting Brazilien in = : ? the | satisfied to allow the market to rest and & the plant placed | rested last night by Patrolman Cunning o «as & good margin of profit. It is the iu- | should be applied to the disclarge o | harden gradually in 4 natural fashion, until | admission of 10 cents, the winner to take | LAm@Onds want is to Bive the DIt PIoCCe | L The prifoner had. o sore eye, which habitants. was held by the revolutions tpntion of the company to Aouble the loan. The contentions of the defendant| ongitions call for renewed operations. So in the sawue condition it was when the sa under Plucido until January 3. Castro ha: capacity of the mill this summer and were sustained by the court. There were | long as this state of affeirs lasts the .noney. Foot succumbed at the thirty- he accounted for by telling three separate i o see: . It is asserted that if the Ar- | gtories, all of which dealt with a holdup. been proclaimed governor by the victorio to | B h cake, th 911 being 1 WS Ne8h - revolutionists and is ready to acknowledge | d questions | likely to have a safe trading mafket, iu | Seventh cake, there st eing left a dozen t lant soon will be | The version which he seemed to prefer re- 3 treat 300 tons of ore a day. The company | (WO cases in whlrLlhe ur"nf- Satawmiind 1N R Aty Eatete § aakns 4t & Bertiett of the wyres. ohd Mo | MO agres to this the plaa inted that he had come from Lincoin yes. | Brazilin authority. With the fall of Porto Las one of the largest shoots of ore yet | were the same, the (ne - on declines and £o0ld on sharp railies. {ntyre walked off with the receipts. opened | terday with two bad citisens, who had be. | Acre there are no Bolivians left in the ter- fi exposed in the flat formations of the walici- | Conners and one of Olark against Zoellner, | Hiing e £ Need More Jail Room | come acquainied with the Tact nat he was Fiofy and the %o Bolivian prisoncrs o |3 | h disposed of by the deci- Forelgn neial. 3 | Just returned from the Klondike and ha % ous ore belt, which carries values ranging | and they are both disp - | ¥ s y Conseco and Ibanez, the latter two from 86 to §10 a ton gold. The goid f.rur: | alon in the Conners case. DON, Feb. §.—While the, condition of No Time to Fool Away. On Saturday night at the city jail a dozen | money ME';;BQ :;: tnhnudl :\:‘ "vl;nmfo'l.l?':;g wounded, have been sent by the revolution- h Shin' Slotréet. & 1 precis semi-stagnation prevafled on the Stock ex- 3 Ragged Top, is almos pure, an ounce of it being worth a trifie over 320, so a small brick is much more valuable than a large one from some of the other districts, where the ores carry quite Protest on Closing Depots. SIOUX PALLS, S. D., Feb. 8.—(Special.) —The principal business transacted by the State Board of Raflroad Commissioners change during the last woek the firmness | displayed by the general list of securities was remarkable. The public is not inclived to trade while these guestions concerning Venezuela, South Africa, Macedonia and Morocco remain unsettied. A certain ac- Coughs, colds and lung troubles demand prompt trestment with Dr. King's New Dis- covery. No cure, mo pay. b0c, $1. For sale by Kubn & Co. or more prisoners were hald on charges of more or less serious character. Two cf the cells were occupied by women, one col- ored. 1In the corridor were the men pris- oners. More than once a Tequest has been | corner of Tenth and Howard streets. They were, however, frightened away by the timely arrival of other persons, before they had obtained the money. Shélby had $6 | and s gold watch when arrested. The police think that he had been fighting and ‘when ists to the Brosillan city of Manaos, cap- ital of the state of Amazonas. They have reached there all right and are unanimous in acknowledging that they have been treated with much kindnese and humanity. This is the substance of my cabie today | questioned in Tegard to his eye by the I will say that there is every likelihood a little silver. during & recent meeting in this city was uhvlty in some sections, lhh\ve\'al_‘ rellfl'?d BLIND GIRL MADE TO SEE mad: of the city .:am:':“::n::;‘ s:!;n:l,e | Spewtioned In: TS 10 A y ge the | o e ‘-m hfil.u vm%& ton m: From the Penobscot Mill the consideration of a number of protests é;n%m}lggum‘z. Ko o B o % quarters be arranged fol . 3 sy — with the Anglo-Aferican gyn bg g = The first cleanup trom the Pemobsoot | ®Will at Garden City was brought into the which bad been filed from towns along railroads where depot agents and tele- graph operators bad beem withdrawn by dividend on third preference shares. The decision favorable to the Steel corporation rendered at Trenton, N. J., Thursday had Remarkable Operation on the of a Litt'e Girl in Bingh Eyes fort has been made to do this, as the ad- ministration is opposed to any additional expense. Some time ago it was stated that Funeral of J. Marti Jease of the territory, the control of the territory by Brazil and the nullification of the lease will end the trouble. ity Fride: - 3 v g . The funeral of J. B. Martin will be The minister was osked what Brasil e 4 7 afternoon. Although the mill | yuoP e SUTCTL (e interest of economy. | hafton Stack ad Americar oasl ShEr e Sew Sodl. a basement room sdjoining the jail could | The funersl, of T B Martn wil e N e R emnity (o the Anglo. Bad not been run at its full capacity, the | omia) metion in at least two of the cases | showed activity. Mexican silver 3s lost e wecured for $7.50 per month and fitted up | hotel, 1721 Davenport street. The remains cleanup resulted in & brick which will welgh over $20,000. It has always been claimed that the Garden City district pos- sessed the richest cyaniding ores on th ealicious belt, and the cleanup made by the has been rendered unnecessary by the vol- uptary action of the Milwaukee company in deciding to reopen its depots at Ros- well and Virgil. The former is on the their previous advance, which resuited from President Roorevelt's message on the pro- posed silver conference because of the as- mertion repeatedly made here that little will come of the conference. Argentines were another feature of the market They By a remarkable operation by Dr. Fran- cis M. Michael at Binghamton, N. Y., lit- tle Helen Kingsley, 8 months old, who was at little expense as quarters for women. The rate of rental was considered too high. Now the women are locked in cells, while the male prisoners are allowed to run at will be sent to Arthar, Ill, for interment American syndicate. Deceased was transfer clerk ut the Web- ster street station, a position in tne rail- way mall service ““That is not Brazil's business,” he re- plied, “since the contract with the syndi- cate was made by Bolivia and mot by Brazil. Brazil has nothing to do with the | born blind, has been made to see. Before tathe corridor. | southern Minnesota division west of Madi- | improved becanse of the removal of the g large in PERSONAL PARAGRAPHS. syndicate, not having dealt with it in any :“’ would go to prove that such is the | .., “wpile the latter is on the Jim river | Eriten restriction on (he import of the the operm:n lh; eves .pw;r'-d n-'“r;'l» Charity Ball Tonight. o | way.” ct. The Clover Leaf also brought in its . | Argentine cattle and on the crop reports. | excepting that the reflex, as ordi- H. A. Dawson, an Indlan trader of Pine 4 > g . 3 rick from Kb creek the veralt of 4 |lne porth of Woonsocket. The members | pURCIMCN ciher The tone of the mArket | narily seen, was white and glistening in | At the Exchange building tonight the | plige 5 Dy s ‘at the Millard | WASHINGTON, Feb. 8.—The Acre dis . of the board are o have conferences with wus good and financial writers generally ¢ ve. South Omaha Hospital association will have | Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Burgess have gone | Pute has caused considerable interest here fifteen days’ run. The brick was of usual | ..y 00q offictale In Chicago during the | hold out the hope of an eariy resumption | the pupil of the eye harity ball. Th who have | to Kansas City for a short stay. and the news that there is & prospect for weight, 35,000 wook, when it 18 believed sovera! | Of Active business, when the presenc causes | Dr. Michael gave the child chloroform | its anoual char e ions COY o g R b 3 e coming J _ 1 of nervousness are removed, as are prom- " drawn back by the | charge of the tickets say that quite a num- | O. L. Glibert o ance, \lynn ts settlement without recourse to war is The cyanide mills of the Wasp and Alder | giper gepots will be reopened anl agents and while the lids were drawn back by the Meadow Grove, M. H. Barnes of Cody, B edioat it g A s Creek companies on Tellow creek last | iain | od loed RLIN. Feb. §—An irresular tendency, | assistant be inserted a narrow Graefe cat- | ber have been sold and it is expected that | BN, "Gr emont and W. 8. Collett of | Xceedingly gratitying to col L month contributed $25,000 to the gold out. | “EnP IRtAll ageompanied by & diminished volume of { aract knife through the other portion of | the hospital will derive money enough from Trenion are among the Nebraskans at the | T{h'hBD”"T“ mnwnah:nb;ne Iowdnllnlly " | trading, prevailed on the Stock exchange 2 = | the tickets to help slong. An additfon to | Murray. | ot the territory never n in dispute, put of the Black Hills. Of this amount the Mach Bullding at Aberdecn. | {2dinE prevalled on the Siock exchan® | he cornea. then, throueh the pupil mnd | the tckets to help sloag An wddilion fo | MU, oy the Merchants: T. Morti- | Tuat its sovereignty has been Acknowledged ‘Wasp produced about $15.000 and the Alder - 8 | were slightly higher. while foreign loans | Dext through the “white membrane, making | the pr ' 2 | mer, manager of the Marshall Fleld ranch y Brasil by t in 1867, by th Creek about §10,000, The miils are working | , ABBRDEEN, 8. D.. Feb. S.—(Special)— | Lord om0 exfent lower, owing to reall- | a vertical incision through the eyeball the present the sssociation will remain | M€y BEIASCT OF the MATSNAL FNGE TARCE | by Brasil by tresty in , by the ap- on Cambrian quartzite and porphyry, with | A large amount of tuilding is alreally | ;5¢ion sales. Spaniards advanced upon At that point in tne operation Dr. Mich- | where it is until suitable financial arrange- Eu(h-—rlu‘n.d,”\\ u“unumx a l\ men‘(u;e‘:l- pmm.mtnfll I;y B"hm of consular representa- # - - > ro nd_Spi o tornes atheson, {mplement dealer | tiv ¢ : some shale. The ores are excecdingly, low | 2126 “:"l""dm:"'_;,m'.1'::..?“’ ":rn!: ‘1.::: P e wer v e ang beine | ael found that the eyes had Do lenses; but |:ments for a new bullding can be made | from Pliger: M. 1, Putney. in the imeur: tives and by other acts. in value and thelr profits lie in economical bl . - | particularly quiet. Home inaustrials were | in their place was a hard, demse, white Treep Dance Tomight. ance business at York; E. M. Proudy of | handling and treatment. The two mills, | 51OTA8Y house of the Hub City Storage and | mostly firm; Canadians were particularly | ooy es o Belladonns was dropped into | Kimball; W. 8. Ashton of Shelton: H. C.| Piso's Cure for Consumption is a pleasant | Trancter company is nearly completed and | quiet. Littie trading was done I iron - The South Omaha cavairy troop will hold | Spaulding_of Algeria, W. H. Reynolds of ang effectus] remedy for coughs and eol IPSE fuve bein @ o siving bede o] o, be for business. C. F.|Shures. but the tendency was siightly up- | the eyes to enlarge the openings in the | lar monthly dance at the armory | Chadron, Frank Coats of Gerdon and W. C. { 30 a long tme and are firmly established, as | Wl 4008 - ix mew resi.|¥4rd The Dusseldorf ‘Iron exchange re- | membrane, and the eves were bandaged | I's FREUIA? ™0 T ted that all of the | Elley of Madison | 30e. there 1s ore abead In the mines on which | Faston plans on BUNGIK WX Mew Pedlc|poris a further strengthening of the mur. | 4ng left for two days Fowiat- 5 36 SRS A e — they are working to last for years. | an ab moon as. completed. Work | SoTAD iron are increasing. A Hamburg | When the bandages were removed a hand | treobers Wl BUSER O SOLUO [ ! [ New Company at Custer. CUSTER CITY, §. D., Feb. 8.—(Special.)— not in s « | trical shares were strong on announcement | Festure was repested snd again the head The Extreme Mining and Milling company | as soon as the weather will permit. Scores | 7\cal Shares were wtrong on announcement | Festate Whe FepeRied 00 SEUE PR FERC | omaba, the dancers are assured that it will W the name of & new corporation recently [ of new residences ibd several Dusiness | Cement shares showed & further rise: WBIE | har ayes with the same effoct be up to the standard in every respect. , > r tiong in machi toc : | JRRRE e ovutor Sher e S Vevps 1K1 Viiuhr O/ ¢ YRS 9 tomiag seames | ranaa bore- Ameticas And ‘Novm | Sinve the operatjon many evidences of | Hesek Resting Easily. riing grou German-Lioyd | securities wi e o : chael . this vicinity. The new company bas pur- | Woedmen Selecting Delewntes. At Tiahier. Whes Shee S ] | SN R e . e e s | [k Reatk. whe was befly et 1a & chased the Golden Mortar group of clain SIOUX PALLS, S, D., Feb. $.—(Special) | SLFODEY 0N Teports of an improving freignt | "7 ! saloon row Saturday night, repor near this city after having thoroughly pros- : o market, the very much larger American | well as &ny person. | to be resting easily at the South Omaha | on the the government Hatz block, the court house and | bullding will be resumed —Members of the various Woodmen lodges | house has just chartered to carry oid iron the United States. Coa: shares tinue to display & weak tendenc e cor Elec- w eves. quickly passed in front of the baby's Instantly she moved her head. The the case the display of yellow and blue will be one of the features. While the music for this oocasion will be secured ETain export and also because freights were | The injuries on his pected it. The group comsists of seven | throughout the state are arranging for | Very heavy. The Hamburg-American com- | e e | hospital yastesday psciom pany sublet its contract for the transpor. bead are considered the most serious at the claims, oo all of which more or leas work | their county conventions, which will be | F&0Y act p tation of Swodieh iron ores because all Iis |, Electric Bitters invigorate the female | present time. Friends of Patrick Shea en- Bas been done. One shaft has been eunk | peld April 1. At these conventions delc- | steatmers are aeeded for the ey et sotele nvis B e e e s 1 & depth of seventy-Bve feet on the'| gutes will be selected 1o represent the |ice. Bank stocks were mostly lower. There | SYStem and cures mervousness, headache, | deavored to s slonse 7e ledge and a large number of assays made | Woodmen of the various counties in the | W88 N0 abaiement in the abundance of | backache and comstipation, or no pay. 50c. | terday. The amount demanded by Judge " o the ore, which give an average retars | nece paibering. which Wil be berd o | BOneKy ke, Beichsvank this week' effered | For sale by Kubn & Co King was $500. This was readily furnished, as well as J ). 000.000 marks of treasury bills for the re. a = Ot §7.96 » ton gold. On another clalm o | Sjoux Falls commencing on the firet | discount in the open market, in order to | but as Chiet Briggs was not "d beadquar: perpetual good Satnetiny T 2o A She Shats etheriag mn‘u.,.}., the diference between ine D,“’,.,., Means the Same Th { tore the rvl:uu was not secured until late bealth, isassured and private rates, but the ope > ’ delegates will be selected to represent the | effect. The pricate rate went el lowey | “He's a foo | 10 the evening Woodmen of South Dakota‘at the Woodmen national convention to be held at Indian- apolis in June. It is expected that several | Hence. it is believed that the Reichsbank will soom reduce its rate. It is understood that hundreds of millions of marks of Ger. “Oh, T wouldn't put it 80 brutally ¢ s that. There are better ways Of expressi.g your of man who's likely to have the simple in- dents Called Cudahy has called his superintendents to Superinte: to Chicago. It has an international reputation for blandness of e g = man credits have been ".m:‘n in Londo: 09";;"" "; ‘“':‘ ' | Cnicago for a consultation. Patrick Sheeby thouwsand Woodmen wi D Sioux Falls | and New ¥or The Jcewign enchinge | “New, for in | of the South Omsha plant, Dan Cameron of rates were slightly higher, but the danger | g, y 1% L THE BEER OF GOOD CHEER. to attend the state gathering, and elab- | 7¢'C8, WET SRR higher. B NEET | “Well, you might say that he's the kind | 1), Kangas City nouse and James Hale of orate preparations will be made to en- | tertain them in a suitable manner during their stay in the city. Seek Pardon for Robert . Dry Goods Market. MANCHE! L = TER, Feb. £—DRY GOODS- ere wis a distinct falling off in the de- for cloth during the last week and { the turnover was smaller. A fairly healthy seription on his tombsione the gas.’ "—Chicago Post. He blew out Sioux City are now in Chicago in confer- ence with the heads of the Cudahy com- pany there. It was reported here vester- @ay that the conference had something to do with the mew scale of wages 10 be flavor and for absolute purity. None to compare with it for the table. gold everywhere. JOHN GUND BREWING CO., - LaCrosse, Wis. HERMAN J. MEYER STURGIS, 8. D, Feb. 8—(Special )—A | Inquiry was in evidgnce, but the fact that l m m adopted shortly by the Cudahy company. 0 movement is ob foot now for the pardon ef | BUYETS yerv appurently mot disposed to en- 4 Magle City Gossl) " omaha, Nov. o wgements of am - . Robert Hicks, who was sent 1o the SIotk | tude prevented ane frmeies on the part of | Cures aColdinOueDay, 2Dy | Sy R Falls penitentiary for life for complicipy | the sellers. There were a few practical offers 99 Suiting &t Srpwmewr Jehe ssndinnes in the murder of » man Bamed Meyer a |0 Indis and Chisa and some unimport- é % MY 1350 T T e, W & 2w nt Levant inquiry. Trade in - wumber of years ago. “~ . 4 quarter will be stimulaied. it s exvected box. 2S¢ | As imvortant meeling of Anciut Order

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