' r\-\r A TT A v A TT "Vi - > -mtn. * -vr * TT/-iTrtim "Syfaxlni ? . " he nays , "means to court anil gallivant over the country with your best girl Ji It * ycry common thins In thin country to .ice A fellow nyUxIng around with hH " Jii-spccy. Perhaps the Swati are Imbued with the lilu.i that KnglanJ would enjoy a little more of that "splendid Uolatlon" of which It boaftli. Thai's Swat their action Indicate * ) , The ( ink of reconciling ft political farmer with tlolltir wheat Is a hopole a one. To him the saddest of all things arc hli empty bins. Hut bin jaw Is doing business nt the old stand. In tumn California towns the * chief social diversion 18 firing watermelons nt trolley parties. The one drawback to the enjoy ment Is that Innocent parties receive the bouquets Intended for the horn blowers. The Cleveland convention of lawyers dc- clircd that a uniform divorce law would remedy one of the great moral evllf of the time. Hut , knowing legislatures as lawyers do , the convfntlnii did not wax enthusiastic over HIP propped of securing It. Tim lair .Senator George of Mississippi had the * ouibetn acecnt In his npccch to a marked degree. "Son , " ho would say to hla committee clerk , "taln't y' shut th' do' ? Tears r me. In reason , y' could 'f y'd try right habd. " rnstolllro authorities have dropped onto extensive smuggling operations through the medium of the malts. Hereafter any sus- plrloim package of mall from abroad will be Mi-Id In the poitnfllcc of destination and the owner requested to call and open the pm-Kapi' In Hie prfsenco of the otllelals. .lust aa newspaper readers had become fairly familiar with the Jaw twisting names of men and places In Asiatic Turkey they nro transported to the "roof of the world" ami tbnr tornl nerves given a fresh wrench. It Is pn.viblo to gra p some of the Afghan titles without Injury , In others lurk the germs of lockjaw. Some features of the re port frum Khyber pass are calculated to stir the fighting blood of every manly man. Wo nro told , for Instance , that the Afrldls Btirroundi d nnd captured Maud and that the Oruluals are assaulting Marnl on the Kohat border. This Is thrilling news , but there appears no Immediate prospect of rescue from n deplorable fate. Such conduct In this country would precipitate a lynching bee. A SMII.I : on TWO. Town Tnples : JeeniH The rustle of n fklrt Is the most attractive sound to a niun's t-ars. " Deems "Of coursu. There's always a woman hi It. " Philadelphia llecord : Nell "Matches are not mini.In heaven. " Hell "No ; all the brltn.suiiu' Ifi In the other place. " Trlluinn : "What has become of that rare horse Previous ? " "There Isn't any m 'e linrse Previous. After the race his owner ciangcd his name to Subsequent. " Detroit Journal : "Time , " remarked the observer of men and things ) , "la money ; anybody who lnirn.s money certainly ought to have a hot tlinu. " Truth ; Listen when you're with wise men , nnd you'll learn how to grow xvlso ; listen when you're with fools , and you'll learn how to escape folly ; and never listen at all to ell her wise men or fools , and you'll have such a jolly good time of It you won't care u darn what you learn. Star : "Dab's only one pun- Bon , " Hil < l Undo ISbcn , "dat I has my doubts of mo' dan de man dat keeps ) talkln' 'bom , how good lit ; Is ; an' dat's de man dat Hourl.-'hfS a razzer and tells how bad ho Is. " Detroit Free Press : "How I dislike the word 'ci'onomy. ' " "On what grounds ? " "It Is such a queer thlnK the world con demns us If wi > don't practice It , and de spises us If we do. " Indianapolis Journal : "It Is a touchlnK sight when a little child learns to stand alone , " wild the sentimental boarder. "It Is also a touching affair when a man stands a loan , too , " s.ilcl the Cheerful Idiot. Chicago Tribune : Aunt Kczlah Joahaway , you haven't forgot that the county fair beRlns to morrow , have you ? t'nele Joshua No , of course not. Why ? Aunt Kczlah 'Cause I want that rain water bar'l fixed so's it'll hold water , an' 1 want It done rlKht now. Cleveland I > ader : "Why Is Hint man drngKini ; that poor little boy along that way ? Gracious Koodnecs ! He'll Jerk the poor , weeping little fellow's arm out of iUi Boeket. What do you suppose Is the trouble ? " There's a circus parade up on the next street , and the man Is probably afraid that the little boy will miss It If they don't hurry. " TonUers Statesman : Yeast That man Dotighton Is very HkOptlcal. Unless he sees n thing he won't believe It exists. Orlins' ' nbeak He never ran Into a rocking chair In tin ; dark , then ? Washington Star : "Have you any modern engine * of war ? " asked the visitor. "Yes , " replied the Spanish general ; "we quit running our printing presses by hand long ago. " Jtidije. When Nansen left his ship , up north. Deciding overland to chance It , With lug ? he traveled back and forth A kind of Arctic rabid transit. THAT FKTCHKD IIBIl. ( * le\elnnil I'lnln Dealer. "You are dearer to me , " I said to her , "Than the diamond bright , or the sable's fur ; You are dearer to me , " I softly said , "Than the Klondike gold" yet she tossed her head , But I caught her smile when I said , "My mveet. You are dearer to mo than a car of wheat ! " THIS 01,11 cA.vruisar. Denver Pot. I often gaze upon It as It hangs upon the wall. AmoiiK the treasures in my home I prize It more than all. It IB not neat nor handsome. It has no In an trinsic worth. Yet it has ever been to me the dearest thing on earth. Ila roundud sides are battered from rough as usage In the camp. Its blanket coat Is tattered , like the gaj- ment of a tramp. It bears upon Its body many a deep , un- t lghtlv scar- That faithful old canteen my father carried a through the Wur. to Sometimes In scouting they would find a hidden mountain still , And lUiiiDr which , like lltbel lead , was often known to kill. Then each canteen was loaded for the for olllccrs of rank , I ern IJocauHC. my father would explain , the private : ) never drank. lie said the stuff was worsts than any light ning ever seen I don't see why It didn't eat great holes In Is'his canteen. But there It bungs , yet watertight , though for bearing many a scar- the That wonderful canteen my father carried through the War , I've heard him tell hl comrades of the times when he was sent On special extra duty to the commissary's tent , And -it the proper moment when the ser are geant's back was turned , He'd practice on a barrel head a gimlet trick ' on he'd learned. Then In their Jolly mess thaUiilght a camp- ers llro they would hold , AVhen fongs of battle would be sung , nnd of warlike stores told In The rousing fun would never lag , nor seem to slumber for They often passed the old canteen ho carried through the War , the On muny n big plantation , too , the water ho has < ppllled , and And when he went to camp again the old good canteen was tilled With old blackstrap molasses , or with t-reamy , unskimmed milk , of Or cherry brundv which he said was finer tons fur than silk. It never shirked a duty , never grumbled not with a bit MoUissca milk or water made no difference to It- $17 No mortal could enumerate the many things Is It bore- That faithful ° 'd canteen my father carried through the War , Ho uped It for a pillow In the wayside for bivouac. of For maul to break the spirit of the stubborn this old hardtack , And fwmtlmes a a weapon when the dogs would Interfere With expeditions after hens beneath the the muonllL'ht clear. ucts Its knotted Hlioulilersllnff U soiled with serv. Ice In the Held , Its sides are dinged and battered as the year olden knightly shield ; It And yet I dearly love It , prize each deep of Indented scar been Upon that old can teem my father carried Ihroufh the War. the Pulse of Western Progress.,1 , Colorado fnrmeni will Ritlitr In well oil' toward $2.000,000 $ more from their nhinl crop this y vr than they did last year , thanks to the bountiful crop and higher prices. The' wheat crop of the state last year was about 3.500,000 bushels , from which the farmers scarcely netted more than SO cent * a bushel. This year there l a larger acre-ago and the corp IK more bountiful. An cMlmate of 5.000,000 bushels Is must conservative. The price In the Denver market Krlday was J1.10 hundred pour/da , which nt the rate of pounds to the bushel -was CO cents a bushel. This would mean $5,300,000 for the crop , Hut the farmers arc likely to get more than 66 cents a bushel for th lr wheat. Ad- vices received by the News from Prowcrs county arc that the milling companies are raying 75 cents a bushel there. Montrose county ndvlsea that new wheat was oclllng there for 72 cents a bushel. The wimo price ruled In Delta county. At Del Norte In the San Luis valley old wheat was polling at 78 rents a bushel , and It Is expected the new crop will open at 75 cents. Krom Alamosa In the same valley cornea the report that the new crop Is expected to open at J1.25 a hundred or 75 cents a bushel. In Douglas county the farmers ore even more optimis tic and expec : to get $1.33 a hundred for their new crop. There is nn exceptionally heavy yield In northern Colorado and the San Luis valley thla year. The main portion of the product In the northern section comes from Uouldcr , U'old and Larimer counties , and that section Is expected to produce at least 3,000,000 bushels. The San Luis valley Is good for at least 1,000,000 bushels , and 1,000,000 bushels Is tn exceedingly moderate estimate for all the other counties of the fitate. At yesterday's Denver price the wheat account , an compared with lost year , would stand aa follows : Farmers' receipts , ISM $1.7..0.000 Farmers' receipts , 1S37 3SOO,000 Advantage thin ycnr $1,350.000 If the farmers realize 70 cents a bushel the Increase of their receipts over last year will bo $1,750,000 , which U equal to all they received last year. In other words , the farmers' revenue from wheat will bo just twice what It was In 1807. FREIGHTING IN UTAH. Freighting is a distlrct business , Just as much no as the mercantile Institution Is , says the Salt Lake Herald. A man without brains can no more succeed In the freighting fair. The only chance In favor of freight ing ! . < that he can get Into It with less cap ital. A man with brains will not always succeed In freighting. To all those who are casting a longing glance toward Milford - ford , and are figuring on coming here to enter the race as teamster , freighter , etc. , the following information will bo worth n dollar per line , If taken correctly : All of southern Utah and n great scope of Nevada gets freight by team from Mllford. This is nn Immense business. There are now on this road eighty-three teams , twcnty-thrco of which are four or six-horse outfits. The balance are two-horse teams. At the pres ent they are not working half time. They pay expenses for all the time. An outfit leaving Mllford on Monday morning with 10,000 pounds of freight for DeLamar , Nov. , would reach that point the second Tuesday night , eight days' journey. He would then unload and start back empty the next day at noon , nnd five days would bring thld out fit nicely back to Mllford. For thlrt trip ho would get $125. Ills expenses would be $17.50 whllo on the road. The wear and tear of his outfit 1 at Ica t $10 and often It will reach $25. When he gets back to Mllford lie lajy there from three to five weeks before Ills turn comes around again. This Is one of thi > misfortunes arising from the forward ing companies being too tender-hearted and $ liermittlng surplus teams to enter the field. The month's layover at Mllford ie not so cxponolve as the same length of tlmo on the road , because the stock can bo fed cheaper , but when the freighter finds him self again loaded and ready to move out hla bill has run up to about the same figures as for the two weeks he was on the roail , which la $47.50. The two $17.50 o and the wear nnd tear expense foot up to a little more than $100. U everything has gout well with the freighter he has now cleaned up nearly $25 for his wages and that of his outfit for a period ranging from five to elx weekA There I not one single outfit on the road that has beat these figures during the past twelve months. Of course they are not working more than half the time , but the expenses go on all the time. These figurcfi are not a theory , but are taken from recorla which show the business correctly. MONTANA CATTL13 SHIPMENTS. to From , now until the cold weather comes a Montana will fieud cattle to the eastern markets. Just how many will go forward It la problematical. Some few shipments have to been made already , and the prices have been good. Should the market continue fair , not many cattle will bo held back. But should It slump when tha big rush comes , as many fear It will , then the ship ments will bo much lighter. Prime cattle are expected to command good prices all the season , and they undoubtedly will , but the great bulk of the shipments will bo of average cattle , and It Is that class that will break the market , and when they go In with a rush It stays broke. Cattle aa are not In prime condition all over the the state this year. Up In northern Mon tana they are reported to bo in excellent shape , and the few shipments that have by been made to market from that section have commanded good prices. In eastern Montana they are reported not to bo In as coed condition , and some outfits , who hart Idea of sending a good many cattle to market this year , will not send any , for the reason that the nnlmaUrwIIl not be such to command a fair price. Beef roundups are now In progress , nnd but few reports have been received from them , so that It Is of not possible nt thla time to say definitely what shnpo the beef cattle of the state as whola are In. nor what the outlook Is as ba the number that will probably be rhlppcd. If the prcsant demand continue1 ! . deal Montana cattle growers whose raiigo stock Is fish not In such condition as to entitle them to be The classed as fine cattle , will get almost na much them as feeders. Reports from the east luga markets , and especially from Omnlm. show that the demand for feeders U such that they are shipping from as far east an and Buffalo , N. Y. , to Omaha and then making money on the transaction. Omaha Is In the a the center of the great corn growing region , and that reason , when the crop Is good , It to greatest feeder market In the world. Reports received by ( Montana cattle men from Omaha during the past week show that the demand for stockens and feeders from tli.it They point since a big crop was assured Is w and heavy that prices for that clasj of cattle have reached unheard of priced , The yards gets besieged dally by cattle buyers from No- brnfka and Iowa who pay the highest prlceu ment record for feeders. More than 100 buy cine are on the ground , and the competition an between them U sharp. Hundreds of cars other Texas cattle are being received dally , and neck addition Canada Is sending in a lat of poor cattle. During the week a train load of cattlt ) came all the way from Buffalo , N. Y. , ami which had been bought In that vicinity for Nebraska feeder market. They were Hills purchased In Buffalo ' for $4.15 a hundred , eold on tho'market for $5.15 , leaving a margin of profit for the speculator. of These are high prices for feeders , but the farmers of that section , who have thousands ical biMhflu of corn In eight and hundreds of of hay , are ready to pay It , Compared not the prlcee paid for Texas cattle a few years ago , tlioso now offered are conildercd enormous. Texas calves bring $12 , yearlings , 2-year-olds $24. The demand , however , good , and at thesa priced the supply Is not equal to U. A PROSPERITY IN WYOMING. out Nets One of the first Indications of better timed made the agricultural elates will bo the Inflow week now settlers. In the prosperous days of country there was a steady flow of Im made migration from the older settlements to the but newer eectlona , and It will be eo again. While the upward tendency of prices for the prod herd of the farm Is a blessing of great loss value to the farmers of South Dakota thla , Its greatest profit lies In the attention bo will attract to the agricultural advantages this new etate. While wheat has not rich an average crop In quantity la the southern counties , the quality is good , and body failure la quantity la due altogether to luea 1 the pcrtillar a I except onal weatiicr anJ floods that so generally prevailed last spring , | U will pay the ttnte to do some advertising ! ' In the eastern and middle states of the union during the comtag fall and winter. RKDWOODS OF CALIFORNIA. The redwood , says John Mulr In the At lantic , Is the glory of the coast range. U i extends along the western slope In a nearly continuous bell ten miles wide , from beyond the Oregon boundary to the south of SantA Cruz , a distance of nearly 400 miles , and In massive , sustained grandeur nnd closeness lies ! of growth surpnssed all the other timber woods of the world. Trees from ten to fif leer feet In diameter and 300 feet high arc not uncommon , nnd a few attain a height of 350 feet or even < 00 , with a diameter at the base ( of fifteen to twenty feet or more , while the ground beneath them Is n garden of fresh , exuberant ferns , lilies , gaultherln and rhododendron. As timber the redwood Is too good to live. The largest sawmills ever built are busy along Its seaward border , "with all the modern Imurovcmonts , " but so Immense Is the yield per acre It will bo long ere the supply is exhausted. The big tree Is also to some extent being made Into lumber. Though far less abundant It Is , fortunately , less accessible , extending nlong the western flank of the Sierra In n partially Interrupted bell about 2SO miles long , nt n height of from 4,000 to 8,000 feet above the sea. The enormous logs , too heavy to handle , ore blasted Into manageable dimensions with gunpowder. A large portion of the best tim ber Is thus shattered nnd destroyed , and , with : the huge , knotting tops , Is left In ruins for tremendous fires that kill every tree within their range , great and small , FULL OF PRUNKS. _ The magnitude of the prune Industry of California ' , writen Los Angeles correspond ent of the Chlrago Record. Is llttlo rea lized by the people In the eastern states. In ft decade the growing of prunes has gone forward in California by leaps and bounds , nnd today $20,000,000 is invested In It that Is , in lands , trees , Irrigation systems , agricultural tools and packing houses. Not withstanding damnglng frosts Inst spring throughout the lower part of the San Joa- quln valley , nnd all over the horticultural valleys of Pomona , San Gabriel and Santa Ann , the total product of green prunes now on the trees In this state Is estimated nt SH.OOO tons. Of this quantity , about one- fifth will bo shipped cast ns green fruit , for sale at fruit stands and for canning purposes - poses , the remaining four-fifths will be dried for market , making about 24,000 tons of dried prunes. Ten years ago the total area of bearing prune orchards In California was less than 7,000 acres. In 1SSS there were 11,000 acres of bearing prune trees and about 0,000 ncres more of young prune orchards. There was an Import duty of 2'd cents a pound on dried prunes In those days , and the growers sold their crops on the trees for sums varying from $35 to $50 a ton. In 1S90 the total area of bearing prune orchards was 13.000 acres , and there was an enormous planting of prune trees that year In all ot the fruit growing valleys of California , because of the large profit In the Industry. Twelve thousand acres of prune orchards were set out In the winter of 1890-91. nnd 21,000 acres more were planted In the next two years. These orchards have now come Into bearing , and the State Board of Horticul ture finds that there are 53,000 acres more to come Into bearing. Conservative esti mates put the total crop of California prunes In n favorable year at not less than 00,000 tons. In a few years more a full yield In this state will be more than 110- 000 tons of green fruit. TUB DAKOTAS. The Methodist Episcopal church at Bloom- ingdale has made plans for the erection of a $1,500 house of worship. Captain Jack Crawford , the poet scout , Indian fighter , prospector and teller of stories , Is going to the Klondike. A movement Is on foot by some of the charitable church people of the Black Hills to establish a Protestant orphans' home at some point In the northern hllla The total assessment returns from 1S70 to this year , in South Dakota , show that there was a steady increase in valuation up to 1S90 and a steady reduction from that year to 189C , but this year ehows a slight gain again. E. AI. Crary , editor of the Crary Courier and deputy game warden. Is Introuble. . He went hunting Friday and failed to provide himself with the necessary permit. Com plaint was entered against him and he has been arrested. The Agricultural department Is preparing make an experiment In the Dakotas with $ new forage plant which is thought to be adapted to the semi-arid regions of the west. Is the bromus incrmls , a grass Indigenous the Rut-sian oteppes. The Redfleld Creamery company's supply of milk has fallen off to such an extent since , harvesting commenced that the expense of & operating the factory would not Justify the company to keep running , eo It decided to close down on Friday last. to W. E. Swan has signed a contract with the board of directors of the Gas Well company to sink a well to a depth of 2,000 feet , as dt Is supposed the gas How can be reached at that depth. The work will bo commenced as soon material and machinery can bo got upon ground. ! ' $ Last Tuesday was South Dakota day In Sioux City , and two excursion trains run the Milwaukee road brought 1,685 people from a range of country extending as far on west as Running Water and as far north Mitchell , the towns on the respective the lines reaching to these localities each con by tributing largo delegations. rol Judge Amldon at Fargo has rendered a de cision in the Bismarck water works case holding that taxes are valid , but he granted a temporary injunction restraining the treasurer now Burlelgh county from selling property re strained on the ground that only part of the plant lias been seized ; that the plant can only ere sold as an entirety. The government has practically closed a for the purchase of property nt Spear- for the Hoon-to-bo-bullt fish hatchery. Is ground will ccst about $4,000. It Is trict hoped to have $15,000 more for the bulld- ponds , etc. It will tnko six or seven months to build the plant and put It In running order. Water , climatic conditions all surroundings are very favorable to will hatcliery and it will be one of the beat in country. Work will doubtless bo com menced this fall. A number ot Indians on the Sioux reser the vation near Mandan have lately been af and flicted with a disease peculiar to themselves. good call It swallowing the wrong way , lead declare that their food , Instead of fol lowing the proper channel to the stomach , | mile Hidetracked half way and sticks Eome- for where In the neck or ribs. This peculiar ail Ings is Incurable except by their own medi men and medicine women , who make incision , remove the extract of dog uml erty provender from the region ot the place , plug up the remarkable Hide tube , and who Lo la himself again. pert Two of the moat eminent mineralogists chemists In France , who arrived from Paris a short time ago , coming to the Black for the purpose of Investigating and reporting upon the uranium deposits of Bald mountain , this morning with the assistance .7 Stein Bangs , at the assay office of Bangs Brothers , have completed a series of chem analyses of ore from the mines of that section. The result of the analysis , whllo he'i positively stated , was such as to highly at please the asaayers and to warrant the assertion that in Bald mountain the mineral occurs In quantities which will pay an Tin enormous profit to work. tan disease resembling blackleg has broken til a herd of cattle belonging to I/on 1110 , ten miles east of Redtleld. It first no i Its appearance on Saturday of last eve and since then twenty bead have died , Complaint of tbo same disease bad been the by stockmen earlier In the season , the herds affected have been small and tin damage comparatively light. The Ncs consists of nearly 1,000 head and the let t even It confined to this bunch will be heavy. Calves and yearlings only seem to letD affected , and , though It becomes a con D ) tagion , It is apparently brought on by very feed. Its appearance Is marked by a swelling of one leg and a bloating of the as the disease progresses. Death en- in from twenty to forty-eight hours , State Veterinarian Elliott hnn been called and will make an examination. WYOMING. "Iron Jaw" Lewis of Antelope creek caohed In 100 wolf scalps nftrny Converse county clerks oflH-e and after calibrating the event In a spirited manner , went back to net his traps again. " " ' " The Union Pacific flepot nt Granger took fire on Wednesday , caused by a epark from nn engine. Had not the fiamea been Immediately - mediately discovered the building must have boon destroyed. A bucket brigade was or ganized nnd the fire extinguished. Several ehccp men are at Hawllns from the Savory , forty-five' miles south. They re port that over twenty camps have been robbed during the last week of all provisions and grain. Several guns have also been taken. The robberies occurred In the day tlmo , when the herders were absent with their cheep. No one baa seen the robbers , but It Is strongly suspected they are from the Powder Springs outfit , who nro known to bo roaming about the country. The great exportable products of Wyo ming cattle , eheep and wool have bad a marvelous advance , equal , Indeed , to the rise In wheat , and certain to be more per manent. Cattle have advanced 66 per cent within the last year. This means n gain upon the 500.000 cattle In the state of $5,000- 000 : Upon the 2.000,000 sheep of $3,600,000 , and upon the 16,000,000 pounds ot wool ot $610,000 , or a total of $9,240,000 gain In' values , actually realizable In cash. Captain Chlttcnden of the United State. ! engineer corps left SherlOan Saturday , Au gust 21 , for the Big Horn baein and Jackson's Hole to look over locations for sites of government reservoirs. Captain Chlttenden was accompanied by State Engineer Klwood Mend , State Treasurer Henry G. Hay , E. S. Ncttleton , formerly state engineer ot Colorado rado , and Clarence Johnston , assistant to Mr. iMoad. Captain Chlttcnden will examine pro posed reservoir slice In the Big Horn r.inge near Dome lake and also at the head of Tongue river and on the Gray Bull In the Shoshoue mountains , Engineer Mead will take measurement of the Nowood , Shoshone. Big Horn. Gray Bull , Wind and Snake rlvero to ascertain the low water flow. Two prospectors are washing out gold from the sands of the lllg Horn river by an In- genloua process. The sand Is shoveled Into a large box Into which water Is pumped with an old-fashioned hand pump. The dirt then runs over a set of rllllcs and goes Into another . box In which an old piece ot carpet ls stretched. ' The wash passes over this carpc.t . , which arrests the particles ot fine cold , The carpet Is then shaken and washed , quicksilver added , and the resulting mass is washed. This takes out the quicksilver nnd loaves the gold dust , The dus-t Is extremely fine and could not be saved with the ordinary apparatus. The men disposed ot several ounces of the dust here In order to purchase supplies and will work all of the bars of the river. They are molting about i$4 a day with but very little work. COLORADO. Lcadvllle , since the early seventies , hns produced $200,000,000. The Tom Boy mlnoiwas twice abandoned before ore was found , but , now pays $ CO,000 In dividends per month. Del Norte Is planning , an extension of the proposed farmers' railroad from Hooper to that place and thence by Summltvlllo to Pagosa. > A band of horse thieves , has been operat Ing lu the northern part of the state and the Cripple Creek district has suffered from similar depredations , .i i slmT There is a secret organization In the city which now has a membership of fifty the object of which Is to close up the gambling houses In Glcnwood Springs. The Aspen Mountain Tunnel and Drainage company has let several leases on Its property on West Aspou mountain and work will be , begun by the lessees shortly. . Gold was first discovered in Colorado In 185 , and since then the state has produced $530,000,000 in gold nnd silver. Out of the fifty-six ; counties of the state twenty-six are gold producers. golT The marble mill at Marble City is sawing out slabs of marble. It is running day and night. Sixteen men are employed at the quarry and several teams are drawing the sawed stone to Carbondale. thoI In ; the Smuggler Union mine a block of ere has been discovered G.OOO feet long , 1,000 ( feet deep , and from three to five feet a wide. It contains about 2,000,000 tons of ore and will require at the present rate of oper ations ) about thirty years to mine. A band of tramps Is camped below Aspen near the brewery. It Is said that the brewery cry proprietor profits to the extent of from $10 to $15 dollars a day through the hobo encampments. Members of the gang "work" the town for nickels and dimes and then acHe Ho around camp and drink beer. an The Grain Belt railroad projected by the J farmers In the center of the San Luis valley * will bo built from Hooper on the Denver P'1 Rio Grande and will bo run on an econom- of leal scale. The engineer will also run a "P flour mill and the train will go slow in order avoid accidents and damage suite. ho The first sold discovery at Cripple Creek el' was made January 20 , 1891. Two mining men from Colorado Springs took trom abanInf doned claims twenty-five ( samples of ere which sec assayed from $10 to $200 per ton. The folbai lowing year $600,000 was taken out. In 1893. saj $2.010,000 ; in 1891. $3,080.000 ; in 1895 , $8cot 100,000. and In 1896 , about $15.000,000. val The eand stone cutters of the Colorado wa Paving company at Denver , who have been coi a strike for several days , have now agreed yle with the company to refer their dispute to rec State Board ot Arbitration and to abide tha Its decision. The chief point In the qiiar- the between the two parties Is over the employment - ployment of outside workmen by the comAn nany. oui The Hoffman smelter at Marble City is clal running full bloat and working very fi5 satisfactorily to the management. They are age caving all of tl.e silver and lead from the ale and treating thirty-five tons per day. Mr. of Buckels. nunnaer of the smelter , Is highly Cop oleased with the camp. He has been In May nearly all the silver camp * In Colorado , and pro of the opinion that the Crystal River din- orj will rapidly come to the front as promv ducers of the white metal.'i UTAH. vcr The United States court will convene In 1,2 Ogden September G , and in all probability year bo held In the room of the county court out house now occupied by the county commiaclli sionera. ' the Several of the producers nt Alta , Including baa Flagstaff , owned by. an JJngliah syndicate , Loington and City , Rpck , are making production records. They are heavy produccis. , , ' A 200-ton plant Is to be p.ut in In Sixteen- canyon , two inlla * , or B'P below Virginia , tho.purpcae of treating the pile of tail- known as the "Park ' tailings" by the bank electro-peroxygen process. " It Is said that an examination of the prop fair. ' of the North Mtrc'ur , has Just taken In the Inttreat of Now York parties to are now awaltlngtke..report of the exdai who made It. it : itai claimed by the of owners that assays from the North Mercur the IM i-iJ nhotv values all the way from ft cents to $32 per ton , the latter having hern oh tailed from picked wimplcn. R Bradahaw of Lehl recently ohlpped over 2,000 head ot wcthcra to Chicago , and ban received therefor prices s high n $3,40. The sbeep are said to be the finest ever shipped from I'lnh atid will probably be sent through to England. George T. Kldrldgc of the Reographlcal survey has returned , to Fort Dtlchesno from n trip to the gllsonllc deposits , whore ho has been establishing the reservation lines , and hns settled beyond n doubt that all the valu able beds arc on the reservation. Ten men have been laid off at the Grand Central and sinking on n winze Is being commenced. It Is said that there Is an abundance of gold-bearing rock , but the- high-grade ere is not plentiful , the general average being only about $15 a ton , which will hardly pay the mnoltlng charges. Eastern men are boring In the valley at Mllford , Denver county , under the Impres sion that the old lake bed there will ehovr placer gold when bed rock Is reached. The depth of the soil and gtavel overlying bed rock Is estimated at from 500 to 1,000 feet. A great augur in need In making the bore hole. hole.The TheVnleo officials arc Jubilating over a new strike In the mine. H Is teamed that aomo very fine ore has been encountered. The work at the lower tunnel Is stilt pushIng - Ing ahead , and In the near future a big alrike Is expected. Several parties arc leaving the park on prospecting trips and to do assessment work on uapatentcd claims for 1S97. 1S97.The The rumor that the headquarters of the Wyoming division of the Union Pacific arc to be removed to Ogden , took another lease of life last week by the report that Superin tendent Mclloj- had rented a house In Ogdca and that he was preparing to remove the shops to that city. The story comes from a railroad man who runs between Ogdeu and Evanston. The work at the dnm In Ogden canyon is being pushed as fast ns It Is po.'slble to push It with the force at command. It appears to bo Imposaibln to got a sufficient number ot men to go up there to work , although the wages paid range from ? l,7fi to $250 per day , nnd board l furnished at $1 per week. This would eccm to discredit the statement PO frequently heard that there arc any great number of men In this community seeking employment. The cmtlnucd downward course ot silver Ls carrying consternation to the silver pro ducing sections of the west. In those proper ties whore the proportion of lead produced Is heavy there is no danger of close-downs with lead at $3.60 , but where the main metal values are In silver the situation docs not look so well. The closing of the Ontario nnd Daly at Park City has caused much depres sion ta that camp , COO men being thrown out of employment. Many of them are obtaining work In the gold districts. MONTANA. The Rurelan thistle has Invaded Silver Bow county. In 'the future no one will be permitted to carry firearms In Yellowstone park. A fierce feud has broken out among the Armenians of Belt. One woman has been seriously wounded , n man is In Jail nnd a bloody battle Is predicted. Helena men have struck a good thing In the Stray Hor.-e. It Is now believed that they will divide $30,000 between the owners as a result of his month's work. The Helena city council has ended the water light for at least five years by adopt ing an ordinance giving tha company a con tract for five years at $18,000 a year and a settlement of past differences on the- same basl , ? . Edward W. Parker , who has charge of the United States geological survey , has CO that portion relating to Montana. In It he says that the total coal product of the state Is 1,543,445 short tons , of n spot value of $2,279,072. The annual coal product of the state has shown an uninter rupted Increase each year since 1877. ruMi Montana have notified the State Board ot Equalization that they propose to take ex ceptions to the board's assessment of their respective properties. The Northern Pacific , through Ita tax agent , G. B. Fernald , and thin Oregon Short Line , through Its tax com missioner , J. B. Evans , have filed formal protests with the board. Both Intimate that resort . , will be had to the courts if n reduc tion la not granted. lArtlcIes of Incorporation of the Yukon- Montana ( Gold Mining company have been filed with the secretary of state. The pur poses of the company , as set forth In the articles - , are to mine and reduce ore , transact general merchandising business , and to transport passengers nnd freight. Opera tions are to be carried on In Alaska , and the . principal olllce will be in Helena. The capital . stock Is placed at $10,000 , in shares 10 of the par value of $10. Placer ] mining by dredging promises to be one of the moat Important of Montana in dustries within a short tlmo. Just now in up addition to the work going on nt Bannock , another < dredge Is being successfully operated as by a man named Johnson twelve miles from Avon. It differs from the dredge first put ' in in that it runs on a track Instead ' being on a boat. The operators bring a drain behind It as they go and have tin dredge on a truck. Mr. Johnson believes can work on level ground or on a gulch equally ' well. The encouraging reports from the farm Inf centers continue to come In , and there seema now no doubt that 1897 will be the Ing banner year for crops in western Montana , on says the MIssoula correspondent of the Ana conda Standard. The Bitter Root. Grasa bo valley , Frenchtown valley , Plains , Clearwater - water , Camau prairie , as well as the section contiguous to Misaoula , all report that the yield this season will exceed all previoun In records and the prices bid fair to be better than was at first expected when the size of crop was first apparent. Last year the output of silver from the Anaconda ; mines amounted to fj,433 S2G ounces. Comparing the present commer value of silver with that of a year ngo , The anil GS'/fc , It will lie Keen thari the shrink In price on the Anaconda's production able alone would bo $750,000. This Is equal to 6-16 of 1 cent per pound pn 125,000,000 pounds ot and copper. The Anaconda copper product In was 12,262,000 pounds. A very heavy production of copper will be necessary In order to pay the company's 10 per cent dividends ou the capital stock of $30,000,000. time the decline In the bullion value of sil the ( Anaconda will have to produce 1,250,000 ! ounces nioro silver than It did last to obtain an Income equal to lt 1897 output of silver. Every cent that silver de clines In prlco per ounce means a loss to fair Anaconda company of $51338 on the 13 of last year's output. tlon IDAHO , both A Lowlston company has gone Into the In business of polishing opuls. The Lewldton head the and of Chicago , In which $1,513.59 of state Kl : funds was. tied up at the time of the World's yield . The total paid to date Is 75 per cent. ising forty The Salmon river country In Idaho seems Min bo giving up Its gold treasures In abun dance. The Grangevllle Free Press tells bn two prospectors who have come In from twi middle fork of the river , a section that were yard | fust boar this In inlndt-that whllo Drox Shooinan Is tin * KrojiliVjt tan .shoo bar- In giver Omaha hu .iJypf known that 'H not tfolnu to alway's soil tan Khoos the prollt-loslng priori lie has all ( lur- S August for promptly at 0UO : p. in. tosday , AiiRiiflt the Hist , his Rrcnt 1S97 n shoo clearance sale will be over no nre tan HIOL-H ! then at prices that are prices at all so you'd better think It or anil inako up your mind to tun &hoc o whole family before Us too late a eat many people have wen the oppor- nlty and Rraspud It Are you going to It fade away ? rexel Shoe Co. . 1419 Farnuin Street has never 'been explored , bringing n quantity of gold taken out there In a few weeks' work. The amount of their cleanup wan clnjo to $1,000. The Idaho Avalanche ays the best mlno In Owyheo county Is owned by John Scales. Ills mint Is t old W Ron town , About two miles below Do Limar. Ho ban a body of ere that runs $7 per ton , and has lots of It being 160,000 nud 160,000 tons and the ere keeps coming. The report of the referee In the litigation between DUInp and Lincoln counties. It Is said , will make a reduction of about $10,000 on the court house property In favor of Ulalno county. Hut what Lincoln county loses on this reduction It more than makes up by A reduction of Interest on thp debt. The referee strikes out over $27,000 of compounded Interest , o tha net gain to Lincoln county Is about $10,000. The commissioners of Lincoln county luivo retained counsel to test the constitutionality | of the stock assessment tow passed i nt the last session of the legislature. ' Lincoln county loses n largo amount of revenue , ns Its sheep range In Blalne somo' eight months of thp year. Moreover , the rate i In Blrtlne Is $7.40 , while In Lincoln It Is only ! $2.60. This works a hariHilp on the Lincm coin sheep owners. The law will be fought under the recent decision of the supreme ' court In the fee law caw. If th.it decision stands. If It Is revcivcd some other ground of attack will be relied upon. The- stockmen of Caml * county , Idaho , arc organizing .to stop the wholesale operations ot cattle thloves In the country between Salmon Falls river nnd the llrunenu river. and there Is n large ejection of rmmtry about fifty mllcp square west of Salmon river that Is a vast ? afie briMh plain , nuking fine winter range , hut so short ot water In summer that It la totally unoccupied by ranches. Hero the stolen cattle are rounded up and driven north , to trail roads. The operations ot the thieves in ] ; C.issla and Owyheo counties are becoming ] so extensive that the cattlp business Is be- j coming unprofitable. Recently a strongo or- ' ganlzatlon ot the cattle growers In that section has been formed , and In a few days i a meeting will be called for the purvrjo of forming a state as'oclallnu. The prliiiS- , object Is to check rattle nte.illng , but In- ! cldentallv on effort will be made to cheek ! the encroachments of the sheepmen on those , ranges. Cattle stealing Is becoming so exteii- slve that ninny men are going out of the business. This , added to the fact that sheep are defiling the range nnd that poison weed Is growing In considerable quantity , lias In- ' dticed many of the rattle growers to move their herd ? , the Sparks-Hcrrold company havrlv ' Ing moved its cattle into Nevada , nnd i Swcetzer and Burroughs are now ranging ' largely In Colorado and Kansas. CALIFORNIA. The projectort of a beet sugar factory at Stockton ask a bonus of 3,000 acres of land from the fanners. Mrs. Hell of Sonora was > badly Injured In a stage coach accident near that place. It Is wild that she was driving the coach at the time. The bonds of the San Francisco llrldgc company for the foundation of the new postolllce liavo been approved by the Treas ury department at Washington and the work will bo begun at once. The two universities have leased for two years the lot on Klghth street , between Harrison risen and Folsom , and It will shortly bo fitted up as athletic grounds , with seating accommodations for S.GOO spectators. The enrollment of students at the State university last week reached 1,200 , but It is not thought the number this year will exceed 1,400. Last yaar's enrollment was 1,470. The main reason for the falling off Is the raising of the standard In the $ scientific courses. Last week a survey was begun of the Tularo Lake region , which Is the first step In a great Irrigation scheme to put water on the arid lands to the west of the lake. The survey will bo made by Caleb II. Davis , whose plan Includes the erection of pumping works In the lake and the use of electrometer motor force from King's river. The Pleasanton company hns over 400 acres In hops this year , which Is the largest hop field under one control in the world. From $25,000 to $30,000 Is expended on It annually before a hop Is picked. It ls > cal culated that It will tnko fully l.SOO hands six weeks to pick the crop this year. There will be no difficulty In getting the help necessary , as over 2,000 have registered. of Llvermoro Valley grape growers will be paid by the home members of the Wlno a Makers' corporation on , the first Installment of grapes an Increase of $2 per ton over to any other section of the state , or $7 there and $3 elsewhere , where oles are estab lished on .tho sliding scale. The balance will bo paid as soon as the price is set by the corporation. Grape picking In this valley will bo commenced about September and the yield is expected to reach about 10,000 tons. It 'Beet ' sugar will not be the only product of the Starr mill at Crockett when It starts , about January 1 next. The machinery will permit of the refining of cano sugar well , and the prospects are that it will take considerable of the Hawaiian crop not controlled by Clans Spreckels. Thla . year's crop la estimated at about 200 tons , and whllo much of It may be shipped di rectly east if prices warrant , a largo amount cut will find Its way to the new factory. Two carloads of manganese of twenty tons each were shipped this week to Llvermoro from Corral Hollow via Tracy. Lorin I thr Phillips Is superintending the work of grind- j a the mangancfie. There are several orders ov liaml from eastern Iron works for the I ' this Llvermoro metal , and mining promises to ' lively from now on. Representatives of Carnegie and the eastern manufacturers top have looked the ground over and are nego tiating for the purchase of manganese land. at the event of a sale they propose shipping metal from hero in Its crude state. OREGON. The fruit growers of Hood River have decided to hold a fruit fair this fall. There Is a largo forest fire raging In the wh ow vicinity of Cow creek In South Douglas. smoke Is so thick as to be very disagree- part both for trainmen and travelers wlillo passing through the canyon. The operation nnd trains requires considerable watchfulnecg 28. care to 'avoid accidents. At the Independent Warehouse company's warehouse In Pendleton there has been re ceived for the. last two weeks an average of will about 1,600 sacks of wheat dally. All the , six men are busily employed and the A warehouse Is kept open until 8 o'clock at night. than Umatllla county will send an extennlvo exhibit of her fruits , cereals , vegetables and manufactured products to the Bpokano fruit In October. Thla much lica been deter cific ways mined by the Pondloton Commercial at > cla- and Milton 'Dureau ' of Immigration , all organizations having become Interested the matter. Oats and wheat are as high as a man's on Indian farms on the reservation In Klamath agency division , in Oregon , there are about 700 acres of It , says the Klamath Falls Republican , The oatfl will fifty bushsls to the acre and wheat Me bushels , and there la not an unprom bcr acre among the whole 700. of I The flrot hops of the season of 1807 were 000 brought Into Kugcno Tuesday. There were rived twelve balea of the Fugles variety and they are grown on the Mrs. I. L. Campbell cur on the McKenzlc. The Fugles is an ass cirly variety , and Is not so heavy * pro ducer as the English cluster , the variety grown here with , the exception of it ver/ few yards. A new fruit drier Is In process of erection on the BclltoiinUlu prune farm , In Dcnton county. It U ft twelve-tunnel Allen drier , offer 300 bufthcls' capacity. It will be ready for operation at plcklnjt time. TheBell - fountain : orchard contain * 110 ncrcs of prune trees , five and lx years old , and forty acre * ot pear nnd apple trees , The prune yield. thl season la estimated at 4,000 to 6,000 bushels. but'J The fire department of Lafayette has re ceived n new ten-pump hand englno which cost about $200. Fifty feet of suction hosn was secured with It and 160 feet of discharge hose. H Is claimed the engine will throw a stream over ordinary building ? a dlstanco ofbei half a block. This will afford much better fire protection than Lafayctto hns hfti . The old high railroad bridge across Mill creek , leading out of The Dalles , Is soon to bo supplanted by a new one , the engineer IIIR work for the new structure having been made and submitted In the chief engineer. The bridge will be run direct from the west end of First street to the locks beyond the creek , nnd will do away with the curve that not causes so inurh trouble In fitting heavy trains out of ( he town. The first home grown watermelons of the pen son reached the loral market In C'orvnllls las Saturday. They were brought In by C. F. Culver of Fall-mount precinct , who wa in again Monday with an other load. They were sold nt from 6 cents to 25 cents and went like hot cakes. Mr. Culver will have ' on his farm this season 3.000 melons and 500 bushels of tomntors. He also mar keted In their reason 15.000 boxes of straw berries. WASHINGTON. Washington's wool clip for 1S97 amount * to G.000,000 pounds , . Four ] vessels at Tnconu arc loading with 4,800,000 _ . foot of lumber for foreign ports. . The ruling prlee for pack hor.vs In Ellens , burg last week wan $20 , and the tendency of , the market Is still upward. Spokane Is having considerable trouble with the million-dollar water system ana patrons ' arc loud In their complaints. Just In time for hot weather the Aberdeen Ice factory began making lee last week. Tin plant was recently Installed by H. 1 * Cook .t Co. , of that city. The steam hr.itlng apparatus for the marine hospital In Port Towneonil has ar rived < and Is being put In by the contractor , who expects to have the work finished on tlmo. : tlmo.Warden Warden Catron of the State ponltontlnry contemplates establishing a clothing factory In that Institution to provide clothing for convicts nnd Inmates of other public Insti tutions of the ctatc1. Much of.the grain mound Colfiix Is yielding more than forty bushels U > the aero , llead- IIIK will be under full headway In a day or two. and with good we.itner practically all of the grain will be savt'd. It will bo lawful to kill moose , elk , moun tain sheep , antelope , caribou or goat la Washington after the 1st of next month ana until November 1. Deer may bo killed from September 1 to December 1. Walla Walla la to have a tussle with the nlckel-ln-tho-slot machines , the council hav ing authorized the city attorney to draft an ordinance prohibiting gambling by any de vice. Including the innocent-looking llttlo machines. The 'Spokane Spokesman-Review says that never In the history of Spokane has there been such a demand for harvest hands , ami that unprecedented wages are offered. From $2 to $4 per day and board Is tendered In many sections. The Hoe Hoes of the state will probably hold their annual meeting at Whatcom on September 9. 'It has to bo held at the ninth hour of the ninth day of the ninth month ot the year. There will bo a Hoe Hoe con catenation , and the liveliest sort of a tlrntt la expected. The third annual session of the school of farming at the Washington agricultural col lege , In Pullman , will begin September 23. The course extends over two terms of six months each , enabling students to earn enough during the six months' vacation to defray expenses. The Northern Pacific Railway company has been notified by the Pierce county board equalization that its assessment valuation will bo raised to $10000 mile on Its tracks In Plcrco county , and It has also been notified bo present at the oillce of the board to fllo Its protest If it has any to make. The Yakltnn Hop Growers' association last week decided to hold Its membership rolla open until September 1. The committee on transportation reported that a rate of $8 had been obtained over the Northern Poclflo for pickers , in crews of fifty , from Tacoina. was decided to stand by the former agree ment to pay 75 cents per box for picking. The Mount Baiter shingle mill at Law rence , Whatcom county , last week broke the world's record for hand-machine shingle- sawing , cutting 97,000 IG-inch and 18-Inch shingles In a 10-hour run. Gus Larson , .the ehlnglo sawyer , beat his own world's record , made last April by 4,000 shingles , and for ten months past his daily avcrago has been 77,000 shingles. From William Grecr's ranch , five miles southwest of Oakcsdale , comes a story of hay raising that Is hard to beat. On & three-acre lot ha grew enough grain to fill barn 24x30x20 feet , which would be a trlfio over nine tons to the acre. While growing wheat was so high that when walking- through It , It was necessary to raise your hands high above your head to touch the of the stalks. At least three new canneries will be built Blalno during the coming winter and at least seven different companies are Investi gating different locations In the county with n view of engaging In the canning business next season , Nearly all the can neries have closed operations for the present , owing to the cessation of the sockcyo run , which Is expected to be resumed the latter of this week. . Preparations for the Whitman county fruit agricultural fair , to bo held September I . 29 , 30 , October 1 and 2 , continue un abated , nnd the finest and most extcnslvo exhibit ever collected In the county Is promised. After the Colfax fair the exhibit bo taken to the Spokane fruit fair and later sent east , to encourage Immigration. feature of the fair this year will bo the poultry show , which will bo more extensive heretofore. The "Bicyclist's Best Friend" is a familiar name for DeWltt's Witch Hazel Salvo , always ready for emergencies. While a spe for piles. It also Instantly relieves and cures cuts , bruizes , salt rheum , eczema and affections of the skin. It never fallh. IiXCUHSI\.S A II HAT SUCCESS , Mcrrlinnlfl FliM-k Iiilo MenYorlc nnd Spi-iul Tlii'lr Muni * ) ' Fri-Hy , NBW YORK. Aug. 29. The officers of the Merchants' association estimate that tha benefit by the visit of buyers from all partu the country this fall will approximate $ M- 000,000 and way that the benefits to bo de In the future by the extension of trada incalculable. The ccond ncrlm of ex- . curalona from the territory of the joint trulllo association Is now well under way. Mnybo you think Klmh.ill pianos nro our only stock In trade You inj'lit ! think BO If yon'vo never bi'isn In our store lint tlu t ! that have been here know there was never before snrli a collection of art treasures shown at one tlmo anil at one place ns we show New additions dally and wo extend yon a cordial In vitation to come In and look at our pic ture pillory Its free open every day ex- cejit Sunday You are jimt ns welcome whether you buy or not Of course we'd like to have a souvenir of your visit but you don't have to buy. A. HOSPE , Music and Art. 1513 Douglas