13 Hi i II I h BIGGEST GOLD BRICK Exhibit From Nome Alaska at Lwis and Clark Fair WEIGHS ABOUT 2UNETY POUNDS It Is a oot liontf Four Indies Deep and Five Wide NnsnceiH That At truct Attention of Other Minerals Which Tell of Noinea Un told Wculth The biggest gold brick ever cast nearly as large as two building bricks placed end to end which contains 25 000 worth of gold that is purer than the gold in a twenty dollar coin re cently arrived at the Lewis and Clark exposition in Portland Ore and Is be ing exhibited by the Nome district of Alaska as evidence that Nome is still a great gold producing region says W E Brindley The gold brick is a foot long four Inches deep and five Inches wide and It weighs approximately ninety pounds The city of Nome on the Seward peninsula In the extreme north of Alaska beyond the string of Islands that stand out like the bill of a snipe contains a population of from 2500 to 3000 people in the winter time and ten times as many people In the summer The town has an enterprising chamber of commerce which in fifteen days got together the most wonderful mineral exhibit ever displayed by one region While the gold brick which Nome Is showing has attracted more attention than any other single article In the United States government building at the fair three nuggets worth In the aggregate S000 stand second in pop ularity These are exhibited In a small wire cage and a man who wears in his belt a revolver of the size common to melodrama and wild west shows stands guard over them The biggest nugget of the three which weighs 182 ounces Is worth 3270 There is a hole In one side of the cage big enough for one to put his hand through It but not large enough to enable him to take out the nugget Over the chunk of gold there is a legend which reads You can lift the nugget but dont take it away and all day long people crowd one another for a chance to hold 3276 worth of gold for just a fraction of a minute The nuggets and the gold bricks con stitute Nomes most Interesting gold display They are owned by the Pio neer Mining company and were found in Anvil creek near Nome Near the nugget cage is a table on which under glass are small boxes of pay dirt This display Is not so spectacular as that In the nugget cage which by the way Includes a host of smaller nuggets in nddition to the three big ones but It Is remarkably interesting The pay dirt shows no gold and looks like ordi nary gravelly soil One box of it Is labeled Pay dirt from Anvil creek Average value 120 per bucket One at once begins to figure how many buckets an ordinary man could fill in a day and the figures are startling Another box contains broken rock and is labeled Portion of bedrock from Portland bench claim 421000 result of work of seven men for sixty days But gold is not the only mineral resource- of the country round about Nome Some 150 miles from Nome at a place called Cape York on Buck creek there is a mountain of tin where 25500000 worth of the metal is in sight The tin is found in a substance called cassiterite crystals which con tains 72 per cent of metallic tin and from 40 cents to a dollars worth of gold to the ton There Is a whole moun tain top ten miles long by two miles wide of this cassiterite which is worth 441 a ton at the present price of tin 80 cents a pound Last winter 500 tons of the ore were taken out and the magnitude of the Industry is hardly to be conceived Then again at Ears mountain on Shismaroff inlet 180 miles northwest of Nome there Is a ledge of cassiterite The ledge is ex posed to a width of 15 feet and runs 1000 feet up the mountain reaching an elevation of 400 feet From this it is presumed that the ore vein is 400 feet deep And then there Is quicksilver anoth er new proposition and a very profita ble one from all appearances Quick silver ore is found on the Kuskokwin river distant 800 miles southeast of Nome Some of it runs 400 worth to the ton but 100 Is probably the aver age The ore is found on the surface It Is burned in an Immense caldron so that the quicksilver vapors rise and are afterward precipitated or con densed into liquid quicksilver by be ing immersed in cold water At tho exposition the richness of the ore Is demonstrated by a piece from which the quicksilver has been smelted The rock Is honeycombed like a pumice stone It costs 20 cents a pound on the aver age to transport coal from the mines in British Columbia to Nome hence the Importance of the discovery of a coal mine which produces a fairly good grade In the far north The coal mine fs located on Chicago creek which flows Into the Kugruk river which In turn flows Into Kotzebue sound At the surface three tons of coal were found to be equal in heat producing power to one ton of Wellington coal Now a shaft has been sunk 300 feet and two tons of the coal at that depth are worth one of Wellington By means of this coal which Is essential to i winter mining In the far north 250000 worth of gold was taken out last winter The discovery of the coal thus opens up Immense possibilities in winter mining It assures a regular year round population for Nome Such are a few of the things exhibit edby the enterprising city of Nome THE DOG DAYS In the Conrftc of Time Sirlnw May Rlne In Midwinter Dog days begin according to the tra ditions of boyhood in certain parts of the United States when the green scum algae begins to appear on the surface of the lakes and rivers Then It is supposed to be unsafe to go in swimming And it is then that ac cording to the tradition of many adults as well as of boys dogs most frequent ly go mad All nations and races of civilization apparently have had a pe riod during the summer known as dog days when many maladies were sup posed to be common But the madness of dogs hydrophobia was never associ ated with dog days by the ancients Dog days are a rather indefinite pe riod according to this green scum rule but there is a disagreement of authori ties as to when dog days really do be gin and end According to the diction ary dog days are part of the year about the time of the heliacal rising of the dog star Sirius that Is when the dog star rises in conjunction with the sun or as nearly In conjunction as may be observed Various dates from July 3 to Aug 15 have been assigned for the beginning of dog days and they are given various durations of from thirty to fifty days It seems to have been from the helia cal rising of Sirius that the ancients most commonly reckoned the dog days Thus at the present time dog days would begin July 3 and will end Aug 11 Sirius is the brightest star in the heavens and it was easy to associate the mutual heat of the brightest star and of the sun with the hottest and most unkindly period of the year Hip pocrates 450 B C declared the dog days to be the most unhealthy part of the summer Dog days are continually dropping farther back in the calendar Now they are twelve days behind the sched ule to which they held in the period of the pharaohs In time Sirius may rise in the dead of winter The Egyptians maintained that the first indication of the rise of the Nile took place on the morning of the longest day when as they said the sun and Sothis Sirius rose together They attributed the rise of the river entirely to the great heat generated by this star in conjunction with the sun Sirius is situated in the mouth of the constellation Cauls Major the great dog The Latin name of dog days was dies canicularis and from this comes the term canicular year which was known among the Egyp tians and Ethiopians It was computed from one heliacal rising of Sirius to the next and consisted ordinarily of 3G5 days every fourth year having 3G6 days Chicago News Giants of History Turner the naturalist declares that he once saw upon the coast of Brazil a race of gigantic savages whose av erage height was over ten feet some individuals exceeding twelve and a half feet M Thevet of France In his de scription of America which was pub lished in Paris in 1575 says that he was once present when the skeleton of a South American savage eleven feet and two inches in height was disin terred The Chinese have a record of several giants between twelve and six teen feet in height which have lived in the Flowery Kingdom within the last 300 years Josephus mentions a Jew who was ten feet two inches and Pliny was well acquainted with Ga bath the Arabian giant who was nine feet nine Inches In height Coming down to modern times we find that John Middleton who lived In the time of James I was nine feet three Inches and had a hand seventeen inches long by eight and a half broad Murphy one of the celebrated trio of Irish giants Charles Byrne and OBrien be ing the other two was eight feet ten inches and OBrien two inches taller Old Thunder Notions The Prognostication Everlasting of one Leonard Digges published in 1556 tells us that thunder in the morn ing denotes wind at noon rain and in the evening a great tempest He goes further still and declares that Sun days thunder should bring the death of learned men judges and others Mondays the death of women Tues days plenty of grain Wednesdays bloodshed Thursdays plenty of sheep and corn Fridays the slaughter of a great man and other horrible murders Saturdays a great pestilent plague and great dearth The BInzer The name blazer was originally applied to the bright red uniform of the Lady Margaret Boat club of St Johns college Cambridge The bril liant scarlet which was the invariable characteristic of the Johnian blazer doubtless suggested the name and as an expressive slang epithet it proved a hit In course of time the application of the term widened and is now ex tended to any bright or pale colored flannel jacket striped or plain wheth er for cricket football tennis boating or seaside wear London Standard Distrusted Him I dont believe Windys tips on the races are any good Why not Well he said they were a sure thing and then he wasnt willing to lend me the money to bet with De troit Free Press The Main Point Victim What has happened Where am I Doctor You have been serious ly Injured In a trolley accident But cheer up you will recover Victim How much Cleveland Leader The man who tries to hide hi3 reli gion will soon have none that any one could find n 11 n H The i t WT MCIOO X JL XLiJL JlJ W F r -- V I M1 BBB H H H eman e - - wyj 9B Wkirag Has completed arrangements with several large eastern buggy concerns to make a great display of buggies in McCook during the carnival week August 28thSeptember 2nd And with each buggy or spring wagon sold for cash during that week a round trip ticket to Denver will be given free These tickets will be good to go from August 30 to September 4th return good to September 12th This is the opportunity of your life you cant afford to miss it mm m i m Fair and Carnival August 28 - September 2 sblisilsi ells sbSas M H alil Worlds HHH Greatest BALANCER - 1 - w ii a m m 1 m - - - mr m w j j - 9 - i m 1 it ibt r m v With C W PARKER AMUSEMENT GO sr OUND TRIP t 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