THE OMAHA DAILY BHE : SEPTEMBER 2-L 1801 , TULSE OF WESTERN PROGRESS A Gigantic Pool of Utah Interest Repre senting a Capital of $10,000,000. , RAIL OUTLET TO LOS ANGELES PROMISED Xrn pector Contradict tlio flliwlnir He- ixirtn Alton I I lie Ulntnli llnncc They IHl- cover it IMiiiiiinntli Joe Cnvo nlVnli - ilerlul llomitjr WcHtcrn Tlia magnitude of the deal whereby tlio Salt Lake & Los Angeles * Railway company , the Saltalr Hooch company , tlio Inland Salt company and tlis syndicate owning vast de posits of coal In Summit county liavc pooled their Interests , with a capitalization of } IO- 000,000 , will lie more readily grasped , * nys tlio Ball Lake Tribune , after the reader lias Btudlod It UH outlined by Mr. JUIIIOH Jack , one of Ihn principals and one of the promot ers , Interviewed by a reporter , Mr. Jack stated that theassttH of tlie consolidated companies furnished better evidence tlinn anything lie tulglit say cone mlng ttjo nblllty oC HID torn- pany to prosecute all ot Its projects to a suc cessful consummation , Tlio Initial move , Bald be , would be DID extension to Coalvllle. that the revenues now slumbering In ttic coal mines of that locality may be aroused and brought to Hi ? early assistance ot the com pany. To tlilM end the company the Ulnl > company , under which title all these preat Interests are now consolidated will liesln at once to raise moans , disposing of such Mock and lloatlug such bonds as may be necessary to provide ample working capital. This brunch , which In tu link tb city with the coal llelds , covers , he says , a distance of forty mllca In round numbers , and with evi dent gratification ho noted , would be taken to 0110 of the many lines now reaching out for Suit Lake from the east , that the Utah com pany was at lenst willing to in ct It part of the way. The tapping of the coal deposits , unions which ore those of the Old Church or (3rasa Creek mine , through nn Independent outlet , means cheaper fuel for Salt Lake con sumers ami a iiialty | ! of coal that engineers on the I > os < \iipi-l i railway who were orig inally prejiidju-d against Its use now declare generate * mate steam than any they have used. Hitherto their prolltabl ; operation has been prevented by a fz-a-ton turlrt which the I'nlon I'flclllo has Imposed upon them. Through their own line the company expects tu control the Suit Lalo market und , thai the fields may b- tapped and the market reached before another spring has opened , negotia tions for stcM have been opened with the JiCHScmer Ste I works at I'uchio. One of the results of the consolidation , jilid one upon which he waxed enthnsluMIr * . In dwelling upon It , waa the employment It i SHU red lalior that la now Idle during the winter , and which they hoped to see take up < ? vtry ; man In JCInii who'wanted to work. The Coalvllle branch having been com pleted , Mr JacS stated that the Los Angeles would then seoure the attention of the com pany and bs pushed wastward as cnrgctlc- -ally us conditions would Justify. At the same time It Is no secret that the company has Its eye on an RVCIIUP that will admit them to the reservations , whose resources have r crntly been thrown open and an effort made to com prehend them as the pioneer road. Mr. Jack waa not prepared to deny or au- thentlcata u report which has reached the Tribune through most reliable authority that in the yards of the Itlo Qrando railway at Pueblo was a consignment of steel rails from the Ileasetncr company , sufficient to lay 100 miles ot track. He did admit , however , that negotiations for stEel were pending and that the order might be released very shortly , The Tribune's Informant concerning the 100 mile consignment not only beheld the steel Itself but was Informed that they were consigned to the Los Angeles Hallway company at Salt lnke. TIIK UINTAII COUNTHV : Smith Eliengrr , James I'earcp , Frank Jlooro and "Doc" Barnes returned from an extensive prospecting trip along the north ami south sld ? of tlu Illntah range , says the 1'nrk City Record. To the writer Mr. Klicnger raid it ' .vaa the hardest trip ho ever took In Ills life , and the poorest results , so far as finding mineral was concerned. The weather was b'aBtly during their entire trip , and they liud cither snow or rain almost every day. Tlio country , especially on the south side. Klves very few Indications of mineral , and though they panned every promising bar and every creek cl ar through they failed to get a slftgln color. They found a yellowish substance that to the naked eye looked very much Ilka jrold , but a close examination with a glass proved beyond question that It was not ; and this substance , whatever It Is , Mr. Ehenger Is convinced. Is the explanation of the many colors being found. For miles and miles along the northern boundary of the reservation the country Is covered with stakes , while there Is not the slightest showing for mineral anywhere be tween the first end last posts. The only favorable looking ground encountered was In Dliick'n Fork , where Mr. Ehcnger says It Is possible Eomc good mines may be found , though they prospected the middle and east forks without results. The north side ot the range Is the mcst favorable looking , mid one point they Intended to visit they had to aban don owing to the fact that they were short ot irrub and that Mr , K'arco became BO crippled up with rheumatism that ho refused to re main any longer ; und the party came home. It U the Intention ot one or two of the party to return In the near future and prospect that particular point. In reference to the recent letter of Case Illto- and the discoveries mentioned therein , Mr. Rhcngcr says the only place that Ilile could have been and ba fifty miles from the fake DeaJinan mine , and they have not found a trace of him , would have been the west fork of Dlack's Fork , and even then he till it its they would hav ? known It , for Illte could not Imvo very well gotten Into the country \vltn- out goliiE by Coe and Carter's camp , near the Junction of the forks , und the- man In charge said he had seen truces of nothing but In dians. Mr. Ehenger Is rather skeptical about lllta'a discoveries and wants to know why he wrote from Strawberry bridge Instead ot going to Hcber , which would have been his most natural objective point for supplies. Ho la positive Illte found no mineral on Itock creek or any of Us branches. Though they found no mineral. thy never theless enjoyed the trip and saw someof tno most wonderful sights , among which Air. Ehenger says was a magnificent lea cave of mammoth proportions , and which wns Oiled with the most beautiful ami fantastic Ice pic tures that the human mind can conc'lve , They explored It for many feet , but as It was very dangerous and they were poorly equipped for the work , they gave up the task. In the handa of a company , made * easy of acc.'ss , lighted by electricity , and supplied with con veniences for exploration. U would prove the Mglilli wonder of the world , SAN JUAN GOLD FINDS. Mr , C. C , Kocnnecker was down from the upper country , say a the Sllverton Miner , and exhibited a sample of ore from his property In Maggie gulch. The ere Is what Is called a maple sugar rock , similar to the high grade ere of IlouKler county. U Is a tellurium ore , and runs from twenty-eight to llfty ounces In gold. Very llttlo work 1ms been done on ( he properly , but a two-foot vein has been unearned that contains the kind of ore above mentioned. The property Is called the Gold Nugget , and U owned by Messrs , Kocnnecker and Gottlieb. Directly across the Gold Nugget of Galena mountain Mersrs , Koennecker ami Gottlieb have two prop erties , the Columblna and While City , thai with only a small showing have produced $500 ere and have much more In sight. For tome reason the atetlon of country Including Meg gie gulch lias been but little worked und prospected. Uut llttlo Interest has been man I fe ted until the recent dlecovcrle4 of. Keen necker and hla partner. GOOD ST1UKKS AT IDAHO SPUINQS. The best strike made for coma time was that In the. Hlslng Sun , where a vein of } 7t ore thirty Inches wide was encountered aboul flfey feet In. says an Idaho Springs special to the Denver Newa. At the time u trade was on the tapis , and Ilila was Immediately consummited , a controlling Interest being sold by 1'erly Langdell to J , G , Harris ol Omaha for JIU.OOD. Mining men say that the ore Is similar to the I'lutus and Stanley , niu ( hat for the development It Is the beat strike that has ever been inado In this camp. I has id ren the din ' rent prospectors much en couragement and caused inoro activity will Ul development work. Following tbU came the report of a new strike In the Silver queen. An eight-Inch streak has been nnfo covered which runs ISO ounce * In silver , nnd with th other good striken heretofore reto ported , a number of capitalists from the cast havr arrived nnd are trying to secure propth .orty. Tlie Bates which have been made were 'ter rash , and this : means n great amount of additional development work. There him been some talk recently ot conIII strnctlnc n tramway up Virginia canon to connect with the ( Jllpin county tramway , no that the low gradeores - ot Qllpln could be brought hero for concentration , This line could be built at a nominal cost and Gllpln could furnish enough ore to keep nil of the Idaho Springs mills running night and day , It Is paid that the railroad company cannot make satisfactory rates and the mines will never be developed unless better facilities and more encouragement are given them. The recent reduction ot rates to nn cents has not Increased the shipments by rail , but the reverse Is the case , and contracts have been made to haul the ore by wagon , The Qllpln county people asked for a rate of 50 cents a ton on this low grade ore nnd the railroad company gave a compromise rate , which was as unsatisfactory as the 70 cent rate. As long as the present rate Is In e fleet and the wagon roods good , the ere will come by wagon from all those properties whcr It Is possible. A fo'.v of the mines will ship by rail and a greater number will not ship at all. as with such rules tli5 e.irnlng ! > are more than likely to bo on the wrong side of the ledger. ANOTHRIl I'JIOSPECTIVE IIAIUIOAD. From Information received here from a highly reliable source It IH IcurneJ , says the Han Francisco Examiner , tliut I ) . 0. Mill * , tlie chief owner of the Carson & Col orado rallw.y , which now tuna eolith to In dependence , In Invo county , Intends to extend th.j line lo Mojave , probably within twelve month ! ! . This will give h.m two entrances Into LIIS Ar.geles , one. over the Southern I'nclflo nnd the ether over the Atlantic & Pacific and Southern California roads. He ban Just liad the survey completed nnd but ono thing Is keeping him back. The gap is only 125 miles between the two places , and ltd ccnslruetlnn would provide an out- let for mni.'h ot the low grade ores which do not pay a profit. If shipped lo San Franu cisco. Mr. SIlIls Is only walling lo see how the English syndicate progresses with its big 110-mile Irrigation canal , and If they make .1 showing that Indicates good faith ho will rush tlio construction ot his road. This nnnal commences twelve miles above Independence , and Is Intended to convey watT to Indian Wells , where It will be turned upon some 400,000 acres of rleli Und. It is being liullt by the California Water "Works and Irrigation company of London , and c'ghteen miles are partially constructed. It will be thlrty-rtve feet wide tit the bottom tom nnd will csrry slsc feet of water. Mr. Mills desires first to see a gosd pros pect of this undertaking being carried out before ho commences his extension. As soon us the eighteen-mile section Is completed - pletod ho will commence his work. This road built to Mojave would divert from San Franclscn to Los Angeles n large trnde. be sides developing a remarkably rich country. WHEAT PKICE3 IN OHI3GOX. The Oregon roller mills nl Union , Ore. , are running day and night , Eighty barrels of Hour are milled every twenty-four hours , Kays a special to the Boise Statesman. OoDil wheat Is selling for 23 cents per bushel delivered at the mill. One farmer has 90,000 bushels anil has sold 15.000 bush els at tlie above price. Many farmers have turned hogs Into their wheat IIthis this season , the low prlco having made harvest * Ing unprofitable. The people of Grand Hondo valley have succeeded In raising a bonus for n sugar refinery. The Chicago parties who con template starting the enterprise are ex pected hero some time this week , M. L. Cnusty of the Eastern Orcgn Land and Improvement company has a splendid collection ot agricultural products en ex hibition at tlio hotel. He stales a large party ol Illinois farmers will reach Union in n few days. They expect to visit all points of Interest In this section , and some ct them will , no doubt , locate permanently In the Grande Krndc. GOLD IN NEVADA. Gold bearing veins assaying from $180 to il.OOO a ton have recently , bc n discovered n eantern Xevida on Sheep mountain , at ; he lower end of I'ahranagat valley. There Is a rush from Ferguson district und ether polnt.s to the new strike. Even the ranch ers of I'ahranagat have caught the fever , says tlie Vlrg'nla Enterprise , nnd arc 'mounting In hot haste , " and heading their iiiistangs for Sheep mountain. Indeed , the > Ig find win made by two Pahranagat valley men. It therefore ! s a ranchers' find. This , witli a big gold discovery some dis tance telow. at St. Thomas , and the rich miner at Ferguson and Osccnla , shws that LIU Immense gold belt exists n eastern No- yjdn out toward the Utah line. Nevada Is fast becoming a "Golden state. " SOUTH DAKOTA STOCK. In nn p rllcular has South Dakota made more rapid strides than In stock raising , and In no yesrs has Its Importance boon felt more than the ono just past and the present one , when exceedingly hard times are prevalent nil over the c.untry. The opening of the vast stretch ot grass land west of the M.ssourt river four years ago made I'leirene of the principal stock shipping points In the United States. The range this year has been In excellent con dition and the shipments will by far ex ceed tliose of all former years. Since August 15 the Northwestern rallrcad alone has carried to Chicago 132 cars or 2,772 head , and the season Is just opened. It Is estimated that before January 1 there will havco gone from this point alne 20,000 head of cattle. There will be .mo re tlun this If , as the stockmen here fear , there are vast numbers of steel ; cattle from the drouth in fected lrcalltles of the eastern and southern states driven In here for wlntr. Cattle are in the best cond tlon they ever were. The range , while In good cndltlon , has been burnt off in many localities close to the water holes , and will necessitate the moving of large herds of cattle to different localities , While the range would stand largo numbers mere ot cattle If their owners would drive them past the lands already lo cated , the Importing of any great amount of cattle lo this country this fall and winter would cripple everybody , those already hero and those to come. It has been owing lethe the vast amounts of money brought Into this country through the stock Interests that 1'lerro and Hughes county have not felt the hard times to to great an extent * as other parts of the country. HACK FROM DEATH VALI.EV. Special Agent II. H. Martin of the United Stairs land nfllce , Washington , I ) , C. , has returned frctu Death valley after a four and a half months' absence , says the Ex aminer cf San Francisco , Ho went In to do some surveying and for Information re garding claims o ( private citizens on a portion tion of the country , Mr , Martin and his party entered the val ley by way of Tule canon , and examined the country for sixty or seventy miles to the south , They were at Town's pass , and camped fr some time near Furnace creek. The Btamlstorms prevailed almost daily , and the heat was Intense. Part of the time they could irt get water and they lisd to bring It from a distance on pack horses. "Our nmln stock of meat was bacon , " said Agent Martin ; "we couldn't get a par ticle that was fresh , so we ate the big liz ards of the desert , which the ; Digger Indians eat and are known as Chawallahs. They taatoJ a good deal like frgs. All our po tatoes rotted In a curious way almost as BOOH as we got Into the desert , and we. had no vegetables of any sort. The one thins that helped us out. was canned fruit. "The crdcal was so rough that each man lest from fifteen to twenty pounds of flesh , and all grew weak. Ileforc I would go Into a country like that again I think I would icsign. There ere many strange In sects there things I never saw before. There are also many horned rattlesnakes or side winders. We killed fourteen of them. There are also many poisonous scorpions In the valley. One cf our men found one In his bed. "At a lonely place In Melinite valley , nn offshoot of Death valley , we found an old wagon bed , a lire and several old Iron * , relics of the famous emigrant train of 1851 , forty people of which lost their lives. It ws a , trip to try the nerves and strength of Iho nver ge man. I'll never forget it. and I never want to traverse that track again. " A NEW METAL. Prof Sadtler. for several years connected with the Stale School of Mines , says the Denver News , declares the metal nionazlte contains IS per cent of thorium , associated with Komo tin , lend and phosphorus. It Is found In Connecticut and the southern states. Sever * ! minerals containing thorium hive , bean found In Colorado , in the Plke' Peak district , nnd there Is every geological reason for ( heir occurrence in other parts of the state. . The demand has not been sufficient to stimulate search. Thorium Is an Iron-gray metal of nbcut the specific gravity of Iron , but more re- tiemblliig tin In Us properties. At a high hit it It burns In the o'r with a brilliantv flame , and would probibty become highly Illuminotis , without being consumed , under the action of an electric current In a vac uum. There has heretofore been no com mercial demand for the metal , and whllft found abundantly In pl'ces It ban simply been regarded as a scientific curiosity. Two ether minerals , thorlto and orangeltc , contain a much higher percentage ot thorium than docs mon.i7.lle. but have not been sys tematically searched for. The percentage of thorium oxide ( thorld ) In thorite and orangclto Is G3.74 , against IS in monajilte. Monazltc Is n red of a Will-brown or brown or brcnze mineral of a semi-metallic , appearance. It looks om - thing like a dark garnet , but In much heavier ' nd Is often m staken for tin ore. THEIU FIRST GOLD IIHICK. The new ten-stamp mill erected recently at Mill creek , In the Clear Creek camp , pro duced the first gold brick ot the cam p. weighing exactly fifteen ounces live and one-half pennyweights. This as taken from about two cords of mill dirt mined nnd milled by HIP Mill Creek Mining and M Illng company. The result cf this excellent showing for both the mill and the mines was celebrated by an Immense bonfire , built on the extrcmp summit of Los Chlccs moun tain , and the exploding of some fifty pounds of glunt powder. The camp Is In a most prospTOiM rond'- llon and bonsts of over twenty houses. tl I * situated ene mile south of the Alice mill at Yankee hill , and flvu miles from Dmnont , on the Colorado Central rnllrcad. THISTLE MUST IIU EXTERMINATED. The occurrence of the Russian thistle In Idaho Is regarded by the botanist of the De partment of Agriculture ns a very serious Ii ( natter , ami he urges Its Immediate ni'd com plete eradication from that state , The region already Infested by the Ilimlan thistle lie * In Hie plains vast of the Rocky mountains nnd : Is , therefore , separated by this gnat nat ural barrier from the wheat-raising areas ot Idaho , Washington , Oregon , Nevada and "tab. The only way In which It can enter tl : ils area Is. by Introduction in Impure seed a nd by transportation through the passes of tl IB Rocky mountains , especially along rail- oads , Every endeavor should be used by the irmcrs and civil authorities of this region to xtermlimte It along the railroads , and to use nly th ? cleanest and best seed wheat ob- alnablc , If the Russian thistle once Infests ils region Its next step will bo to cross tlie lerra Nevada Into the wheat areas of cen- ral California. The Importance , therefore , of r = catitlonary measures along the great inoiin- iln chains IK clearly apparent. From about the 15th of August to the 1st of cptcmbcr the liusslaii thistle begins to prone ne- ? Its seed , nnd , being an annual , the cf- cctual method of checking Its progress Is to III the plant by cutting , plowing nnd har- owing during or bfore this lime. In cajc f wheat fields which are already Infested , ho grain should be harvested as early ns 'Osslble ' , the stnbblu left long , the whole field iiowud close to the ground , and aft'r a few ays drying burned over. Fields thickly in- ested may rcaulre In addition plowing and hnrough harrowing. A copy of bulletin No. 5 will bo forwarded to any applicant , nnd u penlmcn of any plant supposed to be the tuislan thistle- will be positively Identified pen receipt by the Department of Agrlcul- ure. "MILLIONAHIE" GUOVE RETURNED. According to tlie Unite. Miner , the "multl- ullllonulre , " Charles Porter Grove , who Is Ikewlse known us "I51ue Dick , " is back In he KtatJ. He will be remembered as the cored , - red man who gained &ch a reputation a few uonths ago by selling worthless Montana nlnlng Hharea to colored people and others liraiighout the cast , The Miner says he re- urnetl to Untte roc'ntly without a dollar to his name and Ills clothing reduced to a mini- num. "It Is understood , " says the Miner , 'that Grove was backed In his scheme by lirec or four finite people who got the bulk if the money Ii3 derived from the sale of the vorthless paper und lived fat on It whi'o Grove shouldered the responsibility. He Is now here In raga , and for fear ho will give hem away they arc making a desp rate cf- : ort to get him out of town. When ho first struck the city he was given $5 and told to skip , but he did not skip worth a cent. " A RICH SAND I3AR. About a mile above the lulfw.iy house on More creek , says the Boise Statesman , C. H. lark , J. D. Spargo , E. O. Ny ? and George Urcen are working on a bar of wonderful richness. The bar Is about 2,000 feet In lepth , fully nine feel of which Is the richest lay dirt that has been struck on More creek In some time. The bar prospects 4 cents a pan. A rt- port wa * mad ° a day or two ago from the re sults of four men's work In one day , as a lest , all the dirt having to b& handled ( wire. For this they received u check from the assay office for $108.75 , splendid remuneration for one day's labor. Th ? owners are confident they can average ? 1'0 or more a day to the manTho The retort of the teat run > Vas made In u rather unique way. A large potatn w.n halved and ono of the plecs : hollowed out The amalgam was poured Into the tuber und the whole Inverted on n shovel , under which a fire was darted. In a short tlmn the pa- t.ito ; ibsorb d the mercury , leaving a chunk of vehow bullion that looked nice enough to eat. NEBRASKA. Cholera Is rtglng among the swine In some partr of Colfax cocnty. Ex-Mayor Hamlllon Cooper , an old citi zen of Auburn , died last week of heart failure. Rev. C. P. Hnckney end wife of Ashland were married dtty-elght years ago , September 1C , 1S3C. The new flouring mill at Ponca Is nearly completed and the machinery Is expected In a lfdays. . There Is n building boom on at Craw ford and the citizens of the place hope to have It continue Into next year. Rev. Mr. Storm of Lincoln has been called to I ho Congregational church at Springfield and has already begun his pastorate. A son of Henry Miller , at Emerson , was playing with a gun ; "he did not know It wjs loaded , " when It went off , badly Injur ing the fleshy part of hla hand. S. W. Fletcher of Central City has been taken to the asylum. His lunacy appears to be due to a breaking down of the mental faculties , Induced by old age. The old man Is a hero of two wars. Sarpy county teachers have nn interesting program In view for their next meeting , which Is fixed tor October 12 and 13. Among other things , Mr. John Speed IB will explain the new Income tax system. Schuyler has a very prosperous Dorcas society , having for its object the care of the poor of the city. Its president Is Mrs. Bryant and good work Is being dona In preparation for the coming winter. Al Woodward promised one day last week to build an opera house for Wlnslde if the people of the city wouU raise } 250. The money was raised by the next morning , and work on the opera house will bo begun at once. It Is to bo 26x71 feel. Last spring Adolpb Brauer lost a pocketbook - book while plowing in a Held near Crete , and alter a thorough search he gave up hope of ever seeing It again. The pocketbook contained a note for $25f ) and $35 In bills. This fall he found the pocketbook. The money was stuck together nnd he sent It to Washington for redemption. In return he received $35 in new bills. Since Custer county four years ago Insti tuted a bounty for the scalps of wolves cap tured In the county the number of applica tions has been growing at an Increasing ratio. Not many aj-j ago 101 scalps were brought before tlio board. In 1891 $1,159 was paid In bounty , and In the first halt of the present year the amount waa no leas than $3,911. The question of rescinding the bounty offer Is now being agitated. THE DAKOTAS. I irge numbers of horses and cattle are be ing brought Into Hand county from Iowa and Nebraska. One hundred and twenty-five delegates at tended ths convention of the Women's Chris tian Temperance union held last week at Aberdeen. The county commissioners of Pembtna held a meeting at which It was decided to sub mit to a vote the removal of the county seat from Pemblna to Cor.deer. The rafHIng craze has struck Alexandria in full blast. It started by the rattling of a olcycle , which waa followed by the raining ol several o trier bicycles , a J1GO new car riage , new haicess , three guns , and a lot of other articles. One man U now Belling tlcli ets on his farm , wLJph- , , ! halt a mile north of town. The farm consists ot only forty acres , without biiliiliifi ; , and lie expects to sell i 1,200 tlckcti atil ench. The supreme court , , < ? t North Dakota has d ° clded the state drainage Ianunconstitu tional. The teit casc"A-.is ' from Cuss county , where $30.000 of bouds-ihavo been Issued nn' dor the law. Pemblna county Is also Inter ested to the extent of about $10,000. A very rich strike lids' bc n made at Deadwood - wood In the lower workings of the Decornh lode , belonging to loha Orecnough , William Mosler and I-'red Harries. At the depth of fifteen feet they caiman contact with ore that ] Is covered with * free gold and assays from , $75 to | 3SO p < y ton. The county seat fight In Hamlln county , which has been pending before tlie supreme court for nearly two years , has finally been nettled by n decision sustaining the lower courts. Ily Oils decision Castlewood continues flu I he county seat , and Ilryant people will continue lo drive thlrty-two miles across the prairie to pay their taxes. The supreme court ot North Dakota has handed down a decision of much Importance to the JuMlce of the pence. There Is no statute In North Dakota requiring tlie county to pay the costs of Justices of the peace ; they must render the services ill-signaled as "their ofllclal duties. " nnd must hear and determine all actions for breaches of the peace. At least such lias been the cao until now , but hereafter the county will be obliged to pay justice fees. The jecoml annual exposition of the Interstate - state Grain Palace association at Aberdeen opened with nn attendance of several thou sand people. The special event of the open ing was a grand concerl by soloists from Sioux City. Milwaukee und local points , sup ported by u grand chorus ol 250 voices. The Iowa Sato band arrived from Des MolntJ and took an Important part In the exercises. The decorations and g ncral effects , electric fountains , private and county displays , etc. , greatly surpass those of one year ago. The city of Yankton will b ? connected with the state ot Nebraska and the southwest by means ot n combination railroad , wagon and foot bridge , which Is to be constructed across the Missouri river at this point during the ensuing year. Plans for such a bridge have been approved by the scretary of war and the Missouri River Bridge company of Leavenworth , Kan. , has made a proposition to Yanktun which has practically been accepted and work Is promised to begin this fall. The bridge site Is especially Inviting and only 1,109 feet of bridge proper will be necessary to span the channel. It will cost about $100- 000 to complete the structure nnd the Great Northern railway will cross It first. COLORADO. The Geyser mine , Silver Cliff district , em ploys sixty men. La Plata City reports $1,200 net from eight sacks of Com stock ore. The Scuaca mine , . Lendvillc , Is shipping galena ere lo the local smelters at $3.05. The Ruena Vista mine , Cripple Creek , will noon be n liberal shipper. The ore runs will In gold and copper. The grape crop at Boulder Is exceedingly large this year. 22,000 grape baskets having already been re'elvtd by grape owners , A flno body ot ore , yielding forty ounces in silver , und from 27 to 33 per cent lead , has been opened up In the Hcnrlett at Leadvllle. ' The Sheridan mine\imler the management of Louis Ilab-rman. Is1 ! proving one of the richest and largeUj producers on Telescope mountain , llegular shipments of six to eight cars per week are1 'mrfde to the Durangu smelters. Tlie or ? body Is large , and uniform In quality and value ) | The syndicate tunnel of the Rico-Aspen Is now known as 'the ' 'Consolidated tunnel. The concentrator of-thls-tunnel Is now turn- log out live tons of .concentrates p < r day. They expect to handle about forty tons of crude ore per day.'The ' ore Is taken from the concentrate vein-where rich silver ore Is found In great qimntitle. The Chicago ami Cripple Creek Tunnel company , In Poverty'giilch , Is again workIng - Ing , and Hie morerls , , oow 1,000 feet. Mr. George Meacjiem. the , nipnager , has , returned to Chicago , after paying the wages of , the miner ? , and he state.'that the reduction works his company HwU | i build , ) n , Cripple Crock wllTbe started sUpr.tly. . . . , . The famous'Mining1 ' Tuimet and Improve ment com puny'at Aspen Is' shipping ore to Its co-nceutratpr tt'itli thlrty-sK head of horses and mules. It employs ten drivers and forty other'men. Manager Wluclcr has decided to increase the capacity of the mill. Two hun dred tons ot Little Annie dump ore and about 150 tens of Mollie Gibcon dump has been treated with success. Rtport ? from the La Platas continue to be encouraging. The Columbus company in driving a tunnel has xtrucU u body of line ore. It Is a green quartz with streaks , of pure white quartz running through it in every direction , and it Is literally full of tellurium. It Is the Intention of SupErlntcndent McDermott - Dermott lo erect substantial buildings , as quarters for a force of men who will probably work on the property all winter. A wonderful rich strike was made by John and Taylor Brownley in their properly ntar Alia Vista. It Is Impossible at the prei- ent to give the exact assays , but one ran away up In the hundreds. These two gentle men lia\t been mining In Colorado for the rant twenty ytars and have made and spent fortunes In teeklng the hidden treasures of the different mining districts. At one time they were largely Interested In Boulder county , and disposed of their Interests there for an Immense sum to eastern capitalists. WYOMING. Hunters icpcrt that ducks nnd alt kinds of feathered game are very plentiful this yea ? . \ A radish twenty-three Inches long Is cne of the vegetable wonders grown In Laramle Hill -year. The Cheyenne Turnvereln Is mail ng prep arations fr Its annual fair , which takes lilac ? on the 10th of November. The news that Evanrton Is to have new shops and that a large force of men will be employed there is pleasant to nil sections of the state. There Is every Indication that there Is gold In paying quantities In the Big Horn mountains near Lander. New discoveries are being nude there every day. The Republican asserts that there are at least 20,000 tuna of hay for sale on the Laramle plilns , and that fully 10,000 Ne braska cattle will be fed there this year. By guaglngs made In State Engineer Mead's ofllco It Is ascertained that the max imum ill-charge cf the Big Horn river is 53,000 cubic feet , while that of the PUtte Is 20,000 leet. Mr. William Hcmer of Otto. Wyo. , brought R carlcad of steers from the Grey Bull rlvor over the mountains und shipped them to South Omaha , They averaged 1,525 pounds and sold for $4.2.9. hundred. They netted him about $5'J $ per Ora Haley's recent'shipment ' of seventeen cars of cattle bicught J3.90 and $4 per hun dred , the highest m&r'ktt price paid the day they were sold , Thin'makes them worth abut $4S per head. > ijt ls said that Wyom ing range cattle are'ln ' demand. A number of resld fllsi In and arcund Fort Laramle , about 100 mllejj north of Cheyenne , near the junction of tbji Laramlo and North Platte rivers , report -mat devastaticn by grasshoppers. Tliijy' ' Hive eaten the grass for miles , ami the { -r.op'.of . hay will bo very short. They appew.Vpwever | , to be gradu ally leaving the neighborhood , but the dam age already done Is-very great. A gang of twelve"txpert linemen are In the vicinity of Cheyenne bmlly at work on the Transcontinental telegraph line. This line U be'ng ' put uii 'by1 ' the Western Union Telegraph c-mpany3 to ' 'handle ' the business direct from New jVOf'k to San Francisco. A No. 8 wire Is bqjng.placed on the Union Pacific telegraph iMleiJi The linemen are making over twenty-five mllea a. da/ , and It Is their intention to | iuve th * line open In another month. E. J. I ll of Laramle will try an experi ment with padded atock cars. The scheme proposed Is for the protection of fat cattle and consists In the 'padding of the cars so the cattle will not become bruised by con tact with the sides of the earn Incident to their transit to market. The Union Pacific Railway company has given Mr. Bell forty cars with which to experiment , and a force ot men Is now at wprk fitting thorn up. Stockmen believe that the experiment will prove a success , The Sundance Gazette &ayi a local cattle man has a curiosity In the shape of a 2-year- old Texas steer with three horns and one eye. Its only eye la upon the right side of the head In the usual place provided by nituro , but the place where the other eye should be U smooth and devoid of any eye whatever. The horni cf the freak are about fourteen Inches lone and u * three A la Sullivan-Corbett. Sullivan you remember him , don't you he is the man that licked everybody on the face of the earth and thought some of getting tip a scrap with the man in the moon. . Nobody could lick Sullivan no , indeed the boys up here bet all they had on Sullivan and then walked home. Corbett licked him , you know that. You will ob serve that above there arc 3 SullivailS and in Omaha there are as manv "old clothing houses" but there is above / o also but 1 Corbett , as there is but one 41livc clothing house" in Omaha. They've licked everybody thus far but at Jast they've met their match and we are the people who are knocking them out. We knocked them down in the o first round with a body blow in the shape of our all wool suit for $5 and when they gst too frisky we slap them with it yet awhile. Then there is that $8 Sawyer cassimere and the $10 silk mixed cassimere and the $4.50 fall overcoat Oh , we're in it with them and we're champions , too. None have trained so well bought so well none can deliver as O hard hits genuine low priced bargains. Watch the boys hedging they're all coming to our side now and are falling over each other to see the finish , make and style of the best and lowest priced clothing on-earth. successors to Columbia Clothing Co. , 13th and Farnam Streets , Omaha. In number ; two hornu grow out of the head In the usual manner , but the third horn grows directly up frcm the top of the head , giving It a most peculiar appearance. A syndicate of Salt Lake and Minneapolis capitalists , organized as the Diamond Ccul and Coke company , Is opening up a magnifi cent vein cf coal at Dlamondsvllle , Ulnta county , about three miles frcm Ham's Fork station on thft Oregon Short Line. The vein Is twelve to fourteen feet thick. The coal Is free from slate and Is a fine domestic article. The company Is putting machinery In with a capacity to Ii audio 500 tons of goal a day , and exptcts to have a force of 150 miners at ork by the first of the year. OHEGOX. Salmon trout are furnishing fine sport In Hood river. The estimate of the Harney valley hay crop this year Is SO,000 tons. Farmers In the vicinity of Corvallis re port many fields of grain yet untlireshed. A black bear weighing 200 pounds was killed near Elgin by a ball' from a 32-callber revolver. The South Bohemia wagon road has been completed to ultliln 'our miles of KM ; Meadows. A Washington company Is said to be ne gotiating for the purchase of the lodes May Queen and Queen of the West" In Union county. | The Grant County , News says that snakes are being seen In Umatllln county with heads on each end , and yet I'andlcton wants a distillery. The Baker City Democrat says that the money realized from recent sales of mining properties has considerably Increased the circulating medium , and Its beneficial effects are plainly felt In the channels of trade , The placer claims known as the Jordan ranch , on Burnt rlvsr , have been bonded to a Utah syndicate. It Is the purpose of the new company to equip the mlnea with machinery. A pump capable of raising 200 Inches of water 200 feet will bs put In place. P. V. Cullen and C. P. Graves , two Ameri can Hallway union men , once In the em ploy of the O. It. & N. , being out. of work , went prospecting along the Unmtllla river and discovered a cmartz ledge , the first ever found -In that vicinity. They have flled a claim and will develop the lead. Corvallis has a. young lady 1 < 5 years of age , who , for a walker , is hard to beat , says the Salem Statesman. One hot day she walked Into town from her country home , a distance of twelve miles , In three hours , and after a two hours' rest made the return trip In the same time , or twenty- four mile * in six hours. The second big cattle shipment of the season from the Elgin stockyards consisted of thirty-two carloads. The cows were bought In Wallowa county by an Omaha atockdcaler , and the steers belonged to stockmen - men of that county and were shipped to Omaha , where a part of them are sold at J3.10 per cwt. Parties from the mountains cast of here , says the Eugene Ileglster , report that In dians are slaughtering large numbers of deer there. A few days ago a gentleman saw three ; Indians with ninety deer nnd three or four bears. Indians conio over from the reservation every fall and kill large numbers of deer and cure the meat In different ways for winter use. The white people feel that the Indians are being granted more privileges In the matter of hunting than arc granted them. Win Johnson's sluice-box was cleaned up for him by outsiders , without hla knowledge or consent , and between Jl.OOO and $1.800 In gold and quicksilver purloined , says the Pendleton Tribune. Mr. Johnson has been operating an extensive placer claim In Crane gulch , seven miles north of Canyon City. Ho employed four Chinamen to assist him. When he commenced operations three mon'.iis ago ho deposited fifty pounds of quicksilver at the bead of his sluice-box , but when became came to clean up the other day. be only found ten poumU. ] je generally cleans up about 14,500 as a result of thre * or four months' run , WASHINGTON' . Forty-three head of Polled Angus ciltle have been shipped from Kllensburg to Hon olulu. A petition' to congress for the Improve ment of I/swU river Is being prepared In Clark county. By a vote of 12G to C7 In a district having 000 voters North Yaklma school district has decided to Istuo ? 20,009 ot bonds for plying Indebtedness and Increasing school facilities. The patent for lands In Spokane county , flled In Spokane by the Northern Pacllk- , contains 20,000 words. H Is rumored that La Center Is to have a distillery and starch factory In the near future , and that the necessary capital Is In sight. The number enrolled In the Deaf ami Dumb Ipstllute and the School for the Feeble Minded at Vnnccnver Is something over 100 , nnd Is dally Increasing. Work will soon be commenced on the Wide Hollow canal by the North Yaklma Canal company. It will be sixteen miles long and approach within one mile cf North Yaklma. Tho'rallrcad car shcps at Sprague are now running on full time and with a full force of workmen. There are about fifteen damaged engines to be Tepslred and over fifty cars , so thrt the force will be kept busy several months. R. C. Flaher arrived from Orondo , Lin coln county , nays the Spckane Chrcnlcle. He says the results of the gold excitement in that vlclnlly cannot yet be determined , as n final test of the Oregon man's new pro cess for saving fine gold has not yet been made. It Is claimed that It will furnish good pay for white men at all places where Chinamen have been able to make a beauty living. A test was made with a per water supply and fcur men took out P worth of gold In ninety minutes. It IK claimed two men cnn handle tlio process when u suitable supply of water Is provided. The Skamokawa Eagle Bays that Mr. Ilob- crtscn of the San Francisco firm which Is now loading the cigar-shaped raft of piles at Stella , reports the binding of the raft progressing finely , about 1,000 pieces of the 8.000 being In the. crib , and that the raft will be ready by October 1 to commence Its ocean journey. The piling Is logs which ccala under fifteen inches. This Is not a new ventuio for the firm , for they have already tewed ten such rafts to San Fran cisco. The coat of the Stella raft all told Is about $40,000 , on which there is an In surance of $20,000 , the Insurance running until October It , at a rate of 6 per cent. It the raft Is rafely landed at San Francisco the firm will clear over $20,000 by the trans action , as the piles find a ready market. MISCELLANEOUS. There Is talk ot starting a distillery at or near Bozemnn. The raisin combine of Fresno now controls 41,883 acres ot vineyards. RccelpU at the Helena branch mint now average $120,000 per week In gold. A telephone line Is to bo erected between Coalvllle and Park City in Utah. The alfalfa crcp In the Salt river valley ot Arizona Is unusually large this s .rson. An electric road Is to be built from Nevada City to Grass Valley , In California. During one week this month 2,295,220 pounds of fruit were shipped from San Jose , All the fresh water streams In Mendoclno , Cal. , arc being stocked with trout from the Slsson hatchery. The seal herds' ' of the Seal Island * are rapidly decreasing , and It Is estimated that In three years the herds will be totally ex terminated. The bucking bull ot Belgrade was suc cessfully ridden at Helena Wednesday by Joe Kirk wood , a Fort Benton cowboy , who won $100 by doing the trick. A disease la prevalent among the bees In southern California which resembles paraly sis , It Is said to be contagious , and hot weather caused it to Increase In virulence , The bees will lurdly make honey enough to feed themselven this season. Amos Leo brings the moat flattering re ports from the .Hidden Treasure mine at Ncal , Idaho. He says a 120-hour run of Hidden Treasure or In the Alntdlo five-stamp mill resulted In a clean-up of $1,400. The Hidden Treasure product Is all free milling gold ore , and mills an average ot $10 a ton. Another cyanide plant Is lo be built at Mcrcur , Utah's revived gold camp , where the ores are of a. sandstone nature. It will bo located at the Geyser mine end will have capacity for fifty tons per day. At the Mercur mine the pioneer plant will soon be enlarged to 160 tons per day. The con struction of the railroad branch Is being rapidly puihed , and when this la finished the new mill will be started , For the second halt of August the Morcur mine pro duced at a record-breaking rate , enough to Justify the payment ol a $25,000 dividend , making $150,000 elnoo tba oomp nv wu formed. For headache ( whether ICK or ncrvnuij , tooth ache , npumlcia. iheuinatlim , lumbago , pali.ii and neaknpnH In tlio buck , spine or kldnvyt. ralna arounU th * liver , pleurisy , dwelling ot t j jnnt ! and pain * or nil klmlltf \ application ' lUdtvay'B Ufndy Ilcllrf will afford lmrar.llai | ease , and IK continued uia ( or a fcnr days e ( < fecti a permanent CHIP. A CURE FOR ALL Summer Complaints , DYSENTERY , DIARRHOEA , CHOLERA MOKBUS. A half to a teasDoonCul Ot Heady Hellot In H lialf tumbler ot water , repented UH o ten ai tti dUchurgei continue , and a llannel saturated vltll Heady Itellef plnco.1 over tlio stomache of bowels will afford immediate relict nnd soon rt- feel a cure. Internally A half lo a teaepoonrul Iff a tumb ler of water , will In a lew mlnutri. curs Crumps , Spnnms , s > mir Stomach. Nausea , Vomit- Ins. llenrtbum. Nvoui ness. Sleepneimess. BlcK Hrariaclip. Flatulency and nil Internal pains. Miilurm in It. VHIIHI r'nrnit Cur.'il HIM ! Pr vnntrl. There Is not a remedial agent In tlio world that n-lll cure fever nnd ague and all other ma. larlous. bilious nnd other lovers , nld t by IIA.D. WAY'H 1'II.I.S. so quickly fts HAOWAVH UEA Y HKUKK. Trice CO cents per bottle , Bald by all druggists. IB THE BEST. NOSQUCAKINO. $5. CORDOVAN , FREHCH&ENAMEliED CALF : $ 3. PDLICE.3 SOLES. EXTRA FINE. I7-s BOYS'SCHODlSHOES. LADIES- SEND TOR CATALOGUE Wt-'DOUGL.AS BROCKTON , MASS. Ton cnn save money bjwcnrlne the W. T. . Daugran 83. OO Hhoo. RccaiiHS fro are ( ho largest manufncturers cl tbls grodeof shoes In the rrorld.nli J euarnulf o their value by stamping the nnmo end iirlc * ou the bottom , which protect you against high prices and tba middleman's profits. Our Bboes equal cuitom mirk In style , ear nttlnx and wearing qualities. Wehnvstliem sold ovrrywliero at lower prices for tbo vnlno given than any other make , TaVa no sub stitute. If your dealer cannot supply you , we can. Sold by A. W. Bowman Co. , It ? N. IQt'.i , C.J. Carlson. 1218 N 24th. EllcsSvonscn , 2O03 N. 24tl. Ignatz Newman , 424 S. I3t.i. W. W. Planar. 2925 Uoavonworn Kelly , Stlgor & Co. . Farnam & I5ti T- Crossy , 2500 N st. So. Omaha * . * LIFE Dr. E. C. West' * llervo end Drain Treatment mold under posltlTowrUien guarantee. lj ; author ized agents only , la euro Weak Jtemorj ; lot * ot Urala arvt NorTo l > CfWGrI ; 5tMaauoodQulr ! > l < iiefti ; Night Jjoftttj Kvll l > rnain < ; tick of Confidence ! NrrvouimuM ; Idsslludi * ; nil Drain * ; ijMtot I'OTTBI ot the Ouneratlre Orgntu In either no * , raucecl bj ovsr-oiertlonj Youthful Krrori , or KiccwlTo lire ot Tolincco. Opium or IJ'iuor. wblrti eooa load la II er/ , Con uinptlon. Insanity tn.1 Penth. Uyuiill. llabqi ; OioTti' with written KunrBiit to euro oj rotunarooney. WIWT'rtCOUailByjtUI * . AcorUln euro for Conch' . OMAithmn , JJronchltw , Croup. Whoorlwr Cou-h. BOTH Throat. Meo * nt to fise ! Hranll . . slxo atteoutlDued : olii.enc.ni , now35o. : oM , , fl , nor-We. i i * { 'i1 ix1 i-yuQ ) ) only \ > y qooaroan Drug Cto. , Ounniu BAD COMPLEXIONS I'lmples , LUckbculi , rril , roii h snJ lly Un nud tttudi , dry , Iblu , ami Julllng hair , and hojilo laby tleinlilirs are [ irovcntud nnd cured by C'UTf. emu H < ur , ramt offectlva sVlo. purlfylnu and beautifying soap la the work ) , ss well as purest and inccteit ot toilet and Durstnr oipi. Bold throughout Hi * world.