TOE OMAHA DAILY HER : : SATURDAY , JUNE 23 , ] U. Discovery of a Sparkler na Large as a Bern ExciUs Lcndvillo Miners. \ISIONS OF A POSSIBLE DIAMOND BEL' nxcltcnunt Ht Dodge ( 'lly Hitril Tlmrft Con vert Montitm' " .Mllllotmlru" Into u Aery Common "Coon" III * Queer tnpers NorthucKtcrn N The mining expert * will have an oppor [ unity of puzzling their brains over the itue ; lion ax to whether the Lentlvllle dlstrlc does not produce real genuine diamond ! The ( insertion that Lcadvlllo may yet be come a diamond producer , rind that ttio en tcrprlaliiK gcolnglftl may yet find a dlamon belt , la Lnsi'd on the discovery made by prospector nulnud Dentils Magtilre , v\lio ha levpral claims In Union gulch. Magulrc ha bceji working on them ! claims for Severn tnurflhs , In company with another man nami J'liillp Henderson. Hclnltrnon.is In Den v r and showed a number of parties a curl ous specimen of crystal , that had unoug brilliancy and sparkle about It to make nn think It was tic | genuine article. The men , It seems , were running a tunnc In through Uie'porphyry. . After going fo fifty feet they came Into a soft mnterln that resembled decomposed porphyry , bu Imdj a dectdely clayey appearance , being ver toft. The ground became so trcachcrou that they had to timber It up very clo e , am even then progress was difficult. One da ; us hey4 were working In this material ther wax notlccd a bright spick In the fiice of th drift. Supposing this to be an Imllcatloi of mineral , Magulre reached forward an < pulled Qutr the costal , for such they not \ t > aW 111 vnn. It was about as big as.d bean end the edges were rough When washei thoroughly tha crystal appeared to be a bright and sparkling as a diamond , and th in tit felt KntlKflccl that this was whatthey hai Htruck , TJfo tirysjal was not perfectly cleut but of a' peculiar bluish tinge. A reporter examined the curious crystal which bad been carefully cleaned. If 1 wasn't a "diamond , It certainly had all tin glitter of oneIn order to make an expert nient a pleco of window glass was sccurci and one ofl ls \ sharp rough edges applied ti the glass. * . The crystal demonstrated It : liardnesa by making a very tiny mark aloni the glass , which could then be easily brokci along the Hnc- thus nude. BASIN'S GOOD LUCK. The Lone tar , after four months of un ceasing toll , has cut the sought for lead Bays tha Basin ( Mont. ) Times. This mini belongs to Samuel Mulvlllo and others o Butte and Is situated half a mile noith o Uasln on the cast side of the creek. There , was a perpendicular shaft on the claim to tjie forty-foot level some jears ago The oxidized ores were sloped to the sur lace and most of It worked In Pat Dough' crty's arastra on Basin creek. The cross' cut of twelve feet on this level was on tin contact between the base and the free mill ing and no part of the former was evei worked , though some scattering bunchc' were In the bodies of ore near the surface , The free milling wps very remunerative , bill wh.en the base had to be resorted to wort was suspended until Slsley and his partners took the bond for $50,000 for a period ol eighteen months , with the privilege ol .working 500 tons of the ore. A new chute of ore Induced them to sink nn additional sixty feet , making the shaft 100 feet , from which they run a crosscut twenty-one feet and cut the rich body ol ! K ere In which lies stored a fortune for the owners. A station has been prepared and conveniences arranged about the shaft , EC euro were the boys that they would cut t rich body of ere , and they advanced on the lead that realized their brightest expecta tions and added one more producei to the list of permanent gold mines of Montana. The ore Is of the same character as that contained In all the rich mines of Basin , and It demonstrates beyond a doubt that the mines of the Cataract district arc exceedingly rich in depth. Another rich strike was made last week in the Saturday Night , situated two mlle up Cataract creek and owned by John anVJ James Wall. It was leased and bonded In Febru ary to John Hallahan of Butte , blnce which time n force of men has been developing It. There is no question but the ore Is very rich. Being of a base chai actor the proper , vray to determine the true value Is by a lire assay. This makes two very Important strikes In one week and puts confidence In those who were doubtful as to the future of the Montana gold fields. Bid LARAMIU PLACERS. 1 Excitement still continues on the Big Lar- omio at Dodge City. The last two weeks there were nearly 1,500 acres more of placer ground located. A Chejcnno party located 340 acres and a. Denver yarty located eighty acres. The Denver outfit will commence sluicing next week , as all necessary material will then be on the ground , writes a corre Irf spondent of the La ram I o Republican. The Dodge City Placer Mining company will complete Its ditch this week. Then they will commence sluicing. What kind of machinery they will put In has not yet been decided on , but n'Pccatullo gold having machine may bo tried here about the last ot this month. The Lovett company of Laramlo is expected In the camp this week. Wo un derstand It will tiommenco work on ts claims at once. * The camp will bo booming In the coursol'of a few Weeks' now , If the machinery that Is put In will save the gold. In this connection It may be said that the patent ees guaranten that they can save all that can bo saved with a pan. The Iron .Mountain company will put In machinery as ( soon as It can get the water to supply the machine. Those Interested arc going to liHsfvwJater with a wheel , but they have not the material yet on the ground for the flume. Theyvnro waiting for the river to fall , as the water Is too high at present for the work of putting In the wheel. There arc fOLJr or five companies that will com mence ' operations now In the course of a lew wdeks , , f MONTANA'S TAKE MILLIONAIRE. A letter from Lexington. Ky. , * received In Butte by one of the mining stock victims of Charles Porter Grove , alias "Blue Dick , " the colored ' 'four ' times millionaire" of Mon tana , of whom mention has frequently been made In The Bee , tells about the downfall of thaV mighty fraud. It seems that his downward course began with his struggling advent In" the national capital , where he , circulated hhi fables through the columns of the colpred people's newspaper. His remarkably fishy stories about fabu lous w&iUU , his rich producing mines and the booming growth of Grove City , located somewhere beyond nowhere , did not go un challenged very long. They teen caught the eyes of sonio colored men who knew a little more than Charles Porter Grove gave them credit for. Ho was exposed and was compelled - polled to leave Washington , and from that time lil downfall was rapid. When Grove's fathcr-ln-lavv heard of the Washington expose and learned that "Bluo Dick" was nothing but a big black fraud , ho sent for his daughter to come home , but warned her that It she dared to bring "that Montana nlggah" along he would shoot htm. The daughter heeded the warning and left Charles Porter , and she has since begun suit for divorce. Qrovo started out In search of new fields , but hti reputation preceded him everywhere and his luck was bad. Although ho robbed poor colo.'ed people out ot thousands of dollars lars , ha saved none of It , but spent It as freely and easily as ho got It , and now , the letter states , ho Is In Cincinnati and Is hav ing a hard tlmo In getting enough to cat , and Istno longer anything but a very com mon "poon. " Ho made an effort to organize a now min ing company In Cincinnati , but the colored people were "all dead on" and It did not paii out The letter also states that If Mr. Grove should over venture back Into Kentucky It would go hard with htm , as the colored pro- plo have thicatenrd to stretch his neck It they ever get hold of him. Cornelius Hodgei , the man who received the letter and who had some dealings with Grove , tells of a few of the "four times mil lionaire's" tricks that have never found their way Into the papers. One U that ho reached Lexington during a big revival meeting In the church. He became converted and In a " perlcnce mectln * " declared that liU heart bad been BO thoroughly opened by Mlglon that he proposed to taku all the poor people Into hlv mining scheme out of a purely philanthropic motive He wanted to do good and hln scheme caught on. lie learned that there was a mortgage on the church and volunteered tu give $ f 00 toward lifting It us teen us ho returned to Montana , and then hu gold the paRtor $50 worth of stock and pocketed the cash. TlltniJ OF AIIMY LIFB. Practically all of the Sioux who enlisted lu the regular army ab.ut Uirco years ago will shortly he ajaln at home on the.r rcser- \iitloiie leading the old ft ml Indolent llfiA Port .MiMile correspondent of the Sturgla Advertl'pr sa > s that by the middle of this month the greater number of the Indians of troop L , Third cavalry , the best Indian troop Id the service , utatlcneil at Fort Meadc , will have laken advantage of the three months' furlough granted under the provision' of gen eral orders No SO of IS'.x ) , and will return to the rm'njilon , and at the expiration of their furlough It IB expected that they will lake their d ncharge. Should such be the c.iso the trorp will have tu be recruited or disbanded. The prevailing opinion among a great ninny sot-ins to be that the Indians will never be satisfied with the restraints Imposed upon them as soldiers , and that upon the completion of their three years' service they will bo only too gbd lo quit the serv.ce of Uncle Sam and leturn lo their 'original pursuits. Some of the In dians of troop L ( those who have nerved liolh as soldiers ami scouts ) , when ques tioned upon the subject said those of their brethren who arc about to take their fur loughs and * elurn to I'lne Itldge agency will weary of their eld life and be dissatis fied and 8ii\Iniifi tu return to army life be fore the eplratlon of their leave. NAVAJO DHPUnDATIONS. Henry Smith of St. Johns , Apache county , one of the Territorial Live Slock commis sion , E.ivfi that the ranchers and stock men of tin districts adjoining the Navajo reser vation nre worked up over depredations com mitted by the Indians. The litter refuse to remain upon their reservation , says a Phoenix dispatch to the San Franc fro Clirolcle , but Insist upon ap propriating the best" watering places , and frequently drive off and destroy tock. A serious tupture has so far been averted only by grtnt forbearance. CompblntB hyo been pouring Idto the office of the governor. ' He. will at once bring the mutter to the at tention of the Department of the Interior , whence It will be transmitted to the \Var de partment. There are 7,000 Navajo war riors , arid njarly all are supplied with Win chester rifles and ether first class acpjutur- mcnts , w th the use of which they are thoroughly familiar. RUSSIAN OIL FOR THE WRST. In connection with the current stories out lining the plans of Russia and American capitalists to establish a line of steamships to be operated on the Pacific In connection with the great Russian railway soon to be completed lo Y'adlvostock ' , It Is now stoutly nss ( rted that the principal American port for the stcamShlp company will be estab lished at Pan Diego. It has heretofore been claimed that capi talists largely Interested In the Santa Fe railroad are closely Identified with the Rus sians In thoscheme. . General Thomas S. Scdgwlck , San Diego's harbor engineer , gave further Information of the scheme , says a dispatch to the Denver Times. He states that since , August last he has been furnish ing the Interested parties with technical and complete Information concerning San Ulego harbor. lie had been required , how ever , to keep the matter a secret. Now that he Is free to talk , ho gave the substance of n letter recently received by him from a friend who Is an engineer connected with the land department of the Santa Fe. His friend , Informed him that representa tives of the Santa Fe company , the Standard Oil company , and the Russian Oil company , had just held 'a conference In Chicago with Ivan Qavetsky , representing the Amoor Navigation company of Vladlvostock , for the purpose of organizing a steamship line be tween that Russian port and San Diego It Is a well known fact that the Standard Oil company , not a great while ago , formed a combination with the Russian Oil company for the purpose of controlling the world's supply of petroleum. It Is claimed that It Is the plan of the two great companies to have' the western part of the United States sup plied from the Russian wells , an undertak ing that would , In reality , be more economi cal than the present method of transporting oil across the continent from Pennsylvania and Ohio , The Amoor Navigation company Is owned by Slblrlakow , who also Is the principal owner of the Siberian Transcontinental rail road , which at present handles the greater portion of the oil output of that country , as well as. other commerce with Siberian ports. determination of the oil combine to establish a line to America has evidently caufced the Santa Fe stockholders to take advantage of the situation of affairs , and endeavor to secure the tremendous tnifllc which would naturally follow the establish ment of such line of steamships. DOOMING ARIZONA MINES. The new railroad Is now completed almost to Wlckenburg and Increased activity is noticed among both mlno owners and pros pectors In that vjclnlty. Goodwin , Majer & Co. have , a ledge of cinnabar e ght feet wide assayjnp 20 per cent quicksilver and rich In gold.-says a special to the Denver News. They".clalm It contains native quick silver In pa } Ing quantities. Ow ng to the scarcity of quicksilver mines containing any quantity , they think they have a bonanza. Many others have located In the Immediate neighborhood. A large lot of mining machinery Is now ut the Prcscott depot awaiting transporta tion to tJio Red Duck mine. It Is very probable that' work-vyi ! ! commence on this In a few days A few days ago an employ o of this company discovered a small etsiak of gold bearing quartz running parallel to the Red Buck vein In the Immediate nelgh- boihood , and after digging eight feet was bought utvby the company for $1,000. Charles Capqlll 1ms 100 tons of s Iver ore on the dump-'of ' his Perry mine , which will run $200 tp the.ton. RAISING MUSTARD SEED. S. D. Cone , agent for the Great Northern , Is making ah experiment In farming vvh ch will bo watched with considerable interest. Ho has leased "forty-five acres of land one mile north of the city , says an Aberdeen dl patch ( o tle , ) Slou'tS ' Italia Argiib-Leader , which he Is having sown to tame mustard , a stcd used to great advantage by all pick ling and splco concerns , and cultivated lo n very limited extent | n this country. It Is claimed that the tame variety will not tcat- tcr and rcfeed Ilko the wild species , so much dreaded by the careful husbandman , and that It can bo threshed out and marketed with the snma machinery and appliances used In handling flax. Mr. Cone Is very Into In sowing , and for this reason cannot make the test In as thoroughly and satisfactory a manner as ho would like. The need , which cost $18 per 100 pounds , which represents , It Is said , the actual market value of the product was shipped ta Mr. Cone from San Francisco several weeks ago ; but ow ng to various delays did not reach hero In time for earlier seeding. With anj thing like good weather from now on , and a respectable yield In the fall , the crop should bo very valuable. Mr , Cone has already contracted fifty bushels at $10 per bushel , and Is cer tain of a good demand for all ho can ralhe. He sow sin the neighborhood ot one peck per acre , and ought to get an average ylel 1 of ten bushels to the aero. In sonio localities the crop averages twenty and tvventy-Qvo bushels. NBDRASKA. Alfalfa Is becoming the popular crop In Flllmoro county , Norfolk Is becoming metropolitan In hav ing a Jack the Hugger. Hastings Is emploj Ing only homo labor upon Its public Improvements. Farmers from all parts of the country re port crops as never looking better In Duftalo county. The stage of water In the Platte river con tinues about the name , being the highest known for jeara. A movement IB on foot at York to build a monument to tlio old soldleis of that county to cost from $10,000 to $18,000 , The rainmakers did BOIIIO work up at Drokcn How and the rain fell , whereupon the fellow pocketed his wealth and departed , The cherry crop IB almost harvested and has proved a very remunerative one. Good ytuds at an average price of $ . ! .25 per bushel has been the rule. Mlsa Eva Woolford has brought milt In district court ut Kearney against Isaac Llonbergor for defamation of character , placing tlie damage at $5,000 , A band of g > psles , consisting of about thirty persons , among which were about twelve women and a whole raft of klde , arrived In Fullerton last week. They had four beam , about a half dozen monkeys and scvcrnl dogs. They gathered consider able money by ilnglng , dancing and iloln the ugitnl exhibition * with the heart. A party of surveyor * arc at work nort of QothcnhurR , making a preliminary surve for an Irrigation ditch to water the flra tnlile Inmla north and cant. ' The June rise In on and the Missouri I up and booming. The rlter U eat'ng awa ; the banks at a rapid rate and Is sw allow In up many acres of valuable land on the No lirasUu side. The Fiillortoii Milling company secured th contract for furnishing flour to the Gene Indian school for the year beginning July I Itvlll require about 110,000 pounds to fit the contract. A number of the farmers living along th I'latte river are considering the question o Irrigating their land. It Is estimated tha dltchei along the bottom can be constructe for $1,000 a mile. It Is reported that the Plckard farm , o the I'applo , Just across the road from Sarp ; Mills , has been sold to Omaha capitalist foi $200 per acre , and a paper factory v\\ \ \ be erected upon the premises. George Lowe and Kd Tlppen , while drlvln near the fair grounds ai Kearney , came upo a whole Oen of snakes , Using their bugg whip they dispatched fourtsen garter snaku and brought them back to toun. The people of Olbbon secured the service of the rainmaker , who was to make the ral come Inside of one ueek. If the splondl shower that came last Thursday nlf-lit wa some of his work ho ought to get his $20 without a kick. William P. Gochenam , a peddler , has suei the town of Hooper for $2,000 damages fo false Imprisonment. He was arrested thcr last August charged wltb peddling wlthoti a license , and taken to jail , where he re malned three hours. William Palmer was bltte'n on the nan by a rattlesnake at Stella. He killed th snake and hurrldly ramc to town. Di Andrewb treated the wound , but Mr. Palme was a mighty sick man for a short time He Is now all right , however. Thirty-five acres of beet ground wer plowed , dragged , replanted and rolled li two days on the O'Shea farm at Madison Fourteen teams were-at work. Hihas takei sl\ty-n\c pounds of beet seed to replant th beets Injured by frost and wind. W. S. Locke of Riverside township In Gagi county has a bunch of oats absut four fee In height , with the heuds generally flllei out , and Indicating an tmusuaJ ylejd. Mr Locke says he has ninety acres ot oats Jus like the sample down on his farm. Ill ; wheat will average up still better. The n. & M. and Union Pacific Uatlroai companies were asked some time ago to pu In a transfer switch at Scliuyler. The road ; set up several reasons In their argument ! why they should not build the switch , bu after hearing the pros and cons of the casi the State Hoard of Transportation .held-tha they should comply with the law'and ' bulk the switches. So far the roads have takei no steps towards complying with the board'i demand and that body will bring'the cast before the supreme court. THE DAKOTAS. The Central Baptist association fs in seS' slon at Huron. The annual meeting of the South Dakota Homeopathic society was held at Huron , lasl w cck. Mercury touched 105 In the shade at Ellen , dale last week , which beat the local record for this time of the year. The South Dakota Medical society wilt hold Its thirteenth annual meeting at Huron on Wednesday and Thursday , June 20 and 21. Squatters have been driven from their homes on an Island In the Missouri river op posite Vermllllon , S. D. , by the sheriff , and their places burned. A large artesian well has been struck In Grandvlew township , in I3rule county. The water Is already rising more than a fool above the top of the casing , and is In. creasing rapidly. It Is a gusher. The well Is ICO feet deep. The water Is very warm , having a temperature of 80 degrees , being different In this respect from any other ar tesian well In this section. The committee appointed by the mayor ot Grand Korks to canvass the city for pur chasers for the $30,000 worth of city or ders to bo Issued soon , are at work , and re port encouragingly. The funds derived will bo used In the construction ol a water sys tem for the purification of the city water supply , which subject has been agitated since the fever epidemic last winter. The citizens of Jefferson township , Mc- Cook county , are on the war path. Thq town board purchased a road grader , paying about $290 for It , including freight. The voters circulated a petition and secured about forty names , and presented it to the board , urging them not to purchase thOjgrader. But It had already been ordered 'and shipped , and the citizens will now try and compel tha members of the board to foot the bill them selves. Edgemont has a good reason for having a big celebration this year on the Fourth of July , and she intends to haveill jOn that day the last shovel full of dirt which will complete the mammoth Irrigation ditch will be thrown. This ditch , besides furnishing water to irrigate a vast extent of , country , will also furnish a supply of water to run i number of Industries. The principal of these will be a woolen mill , s > lnce the great exodus of sheep from Wjomlng into this state , and particularly the western part of ' the state , has made the vyool 'Industry a very important one. This will be the Ilrst woolen mill In the western part ot the state. William McDonald , aged 107 years , has re cently moved to Tyndall to live with his son He has the appearance of being about SO fears old , being still vigorous and healthy. Ills father , Donald McDonald-fought- the British army at the Battle of Bunker Hill. William w anted to Join the American army luring the war of 1812 , but his father was too good a Britisher to allow his , soh to do inythlng ot the kind. Donald Mdl/onald died it the age of 114. being crushed between two fancy horses , of which ho was -very proud. The family record a.re Very1 ctfm- ileto as regards dates , an examination 6f them showing clearly that the ago ot the gentleman Is as stated above. * ' ' ° COLORADO. A Grand Junction committee Is vvpfking itltli the railroads for Peach day rates * Work at Yankee Hill Is greatly Impeded jy the heavy fall of rain , Hall and snow. The Fort Morgan Times denies that crops mvo been damaged in that locality by the storm. Berthoud will this year have a high school Tlireo teachers are to be employed and nine 5rades taught. The Iron Cap mlno In Goose Creek district s taking out ore for another shipment which s expected to average $100 a ton. In Lake City district the Ute and Ouray nines shipped 1,275 tons'of ores and con- : entrates during the month of May. The first train of the Pike's Peak Cog road , vas run to the summit last week. U was ex pected to open the road a couple of weeks igo , but snow prevented. It Is said that the experts sent Into La "lata district by the Daly-Haggin syndicate- , vill recommend the building of a mill for ; ho purpose of testing , on a , large scale , the > res of the Baker contact. About twenty-five women stoned the miners , vho attempted to go to work at the mines it Soprls. A Mexican was badly beaten , 3no woman and a man are supposed to bo ho leaders of the attacking party and were irrested. > A Prowcrs county farmer Is growing al falfa for seed and Is seeding with theor - llnary drill In rows fifteen to twenty Inches ipart. Ho cultivate * and Irrigates between ; ho rows and clalms'a y.eld of fifteen bushels .o the acre grown In two crops. William Lawrence Is shipping ore from a nine recently leased at Idaho Springs at the ate of a carload a week. The ore Is valued it $250 per car , and Mr. Lawrence hopes loon to Increase the output to a car every lay , In which event the mine will prove a iplendld Investment. There was shipped from Qeorgetovvn dur- ng the month of May forty-seven cars con- ilnliig 1,237,000 pounds of ore , of which hlrty cars , containing 715,000 pounds , went 0 Denver , and fifteen cars , containing 37-1- 100 pounds went to Pueblo , and two cars , lontalnlng 48,000 pounds , went to Argo. The horticulturists about Do Beque , says ho Grand Junction Star-Times , are already > reparlng fur next spring's planting of fruit rees. A Utah nurseryman has told to Stewart & Eaton 13,700 prune trees , next ipnng delivery. This firm set out 7,000 > runes In April , which have already1 made 1 growth of eighteen Inches. They are so veil pleased with the quality of the trees hat they now buy enough uioro to fill oat A 120-ncre ( netThltiwlll make the larg est orchard of a single variety In the state , William Harris , also lof te Ilcque , bought 8,000 prunoti He h > Already a growing orchard of this variety and thinks the prune IB the th ng toiralse. Several papers have stated that since buy. Ing the Monte Vlnta tand Moscn mills tin Mullen Milling company own all the mill ! In the San Lu s valley , except the one ill Del N'ortc. They overlook several smallci mill' ? which mnke n Urge quantity ot flour Conejos , Saguachc , M'.umR'w , Lei Ccrltos and fan Luis each have a ll'ur mill. The Ovee , on Hast Battle mountain , OUMCI and operated by George Bow land , records the strike of the week In tfte Red Cliff dls trlct. Ore running 7GO ounce ? In silver ha : been produced for some time , when a recent - cent shot disclosed an Increase , and now i body of ore which has tie thcr top nor bet torn , ls opened and the vein lm Increasci to four feet In width. . The new strike li 370 feet from the surface and Is mixed wltl ore carrying tpur , sulphurets and galena. WYOMING. Carbon county shcpp men have adopted tin plan of plac ng lanters around the flocks ti protect them from the ravages of wolves am coyotes. There were 231.000 sheep sheared It Natrona county this eason. The price pah was 7 cents n head. One hundred and flftj tjiearers were employed. The cattle and sheep men about Saratoga Wyo. , are holding n convention to arrangi the lines of their respective gra/lng groundi and settle all d.Terence ( * amicably. The sheep shearing season about Rawllns Wyo. , Is over , and most of the Hocks have been driven to the mountains for the sunv mer. About 130 000 were sheared this spring. A deal by which Ferguson & Co. of Love' land , Colo. , became the owners of the Chas ( coal mine on Mill creek has about been coin pleted The coal will be transferred tc Laramle by a tract on engine. The state selections of land for the bllm asylum have not been approved by the lane oflice. Over G.UOO acres of mineral land an embraced In the selection and as It I : against the law to appropriate mineral land ! for state purposes the land was ordered re conveyed to the government. The crickets which wore devastating vegl' tatlon In the Lander valley a few weeks age are fast dlsappearlrg. Considerable damage was done to certain crops In I IIP vlclnllj visited by the pest . But now that they art leaving the formers hope to gut a scconi ctop and reap a fair harvest. A solid tralnload of Idaho sheep passed through Laramle for the Chicago market , Accompanying the sheep was the owner , a very prepossessing lady , who appeared tc be perfectly at home In a position that al ways proves a trying one to even those ol the sterner sex. The owner will take the flock to Chicago , where she proposes to dis pose of them at the highest market prices. WASHINGTON , The Great Northern track Is now passable from Leavenworth to Seattle. A force of seven men iias begun resurveyIng - Ing the Puyalliip Indian reservation. Whatcom county expects to have thirty- four miles of planked roads by the end of the year. Rye In the Palouse country grew eighteen Inches In one week. Hop vines grew six Inches In a day. Sinking wells has become quite an In dustry In Hoqulam. Three concerns of that town are now boring for water. The ( Sherry crop will be Immense In the Palouse country- this year. The trees are as full of bloom as It Is possible for them to stick on ; plums , pears and apples are equally loaded. There were shipped from Gray's harbor by water during May 7,410,000 feet of lumber distributed as follows : Fiom Hoqulam , 4,584,000 feet ; from Cosmopolls , 1,346,000 feet ; from Aberdeen , 1,450,000 feet. The Port Townsend. Steel Wire and Nail works are now running to their full capac ity , giving employment to forty men and turning out from 250 to300 kegs of nails a day. The company Is said to have sufficient business-hhead to keen too works gplne for six months. > George Miller captured a big gray eagle one day last week five miles northwest of Garfleld. It measures six feet and nine Inches from tip to tip of Its , wings. He has been feeding it squirrels , which It devours with evidence of much satisfaction. It will devour one in an incredibly short time , swallowing the head whole. Wilbur has a gold excitement of her own , and is fast being depopulated by. a rush to Hellgate canyon , on the Columbia , twelve miles away , where the precious mineral Is reported to be hllldeii in the sands In large quantities. Nobody has seen any gold yet , but the report of a syndicate's extensive ill- Ings has precipitated an excitement. The paper mill at LaCamas employs sixty for which Is paid at he mill $11.000 ; 1,800 It consumes1 annually 5,000 cord , of fir wood , for which Is paid at the mill $11,000 ; 1,800 cords o cottonwood , at $3.25 a cord , and 1,000 tons of straw. The dally output Is eight tons news print and three tons of straw paper. ' At present the straw manu facturing department Is , shut down , but this will only be to until the water sub sides. There were made In the Jute mills of the Washington state penitentiary during the month of May 1S0.003 grain bags , 1,701 wool tugs and 2,2.10 oat bags During the month the price of grain bags has been reduced trom 7 cents to G',6 cents each. The pen itentiary now has en hand subject to sale : 1,084,385 grain bags at 0 > X > cents * each ; C25 wool bags at 7 cents ; 2,100 oat bags at 7 cents ; 500 ore bags at 9 cents ; 10,753 yards liop cloth at 9 % cents per yard ; 5,161 pounds leece twine , live ply , at 8 cents per pound. Joe Scott , president of the Montana Cat tlemen's as Delation ; Frank Robinson , Henry Tustler of Miles City and J. T. Boardman of Deer Lodge have Just completed a cattle inirchaslng tour of eastern Washington. They bought 15,000 head , the prices averag ing $10 for yearlings , $15 for 2-year-olds , f20 for 3-year-olds. It Is estimated by cattlemen that 10,000 head will be taken out of Washington and Oregon Into Montana this year. The Montana cattlemen are prosper ous again , and these purchases will ina- : erlally relieve the financial stringency of eastern Washington. ORGGON. Marlon county's rock crusher is doing good work at Scott's mill. The hop louse has made Its appearance at Talrvlew , In Polk county. A swimming club Is to be added to New- jerg's already long llsi of Improvement so- clet es. The Pendloton scouring mills have started up , and already have 350,000 pounds of wool o operate on. Know Is said to be Interfering with mining operations In Baker county , and m'ncrs ' have been busy digging out supplies cached last winter. There are about twenty-five applicants for the position cf principal of the Albany schools , and about seventy-five for the posi tion of assistants. A little grandchild of Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Smith of Ashland , aged 2 years , died at Elk- .011 , Douglas county , a few days ago from jlood poisoning brought : on by a copper cent , which It swallowed several months ago. Surveying work Is being rushed on the > reposed railroad from the Seven Devils tea > a > ctte , Idaho , and Ed Mix , who has It In charge , says there Is ever.y probability that the road will be constructed at an early day The family of Mr. Thompson at Springfield was shocked last week , BO nays the Tidings , > y lightning running down the chimney nto thn stove and scattering the ashes , and t adds that almost any one would be shocked ly such an Intrusion. The Pendleton scouring mill uses 1,500 toumls ot soap a day. It makes Its own oap , consuming for that purpose some 250 munda of tallow. This makes a good home narket for tallow , As It Is , the tallow has o bo Imported from Portland by the car- oad. oad.Major Major Post has token charge of the fight o save the Cabcade locks , the government landing the expense. Six trains arc rini- ilng , hauling brush , gravel , rack and any- hlng that can be utilized to raise the bulk- icad. Some of the cut stones are being umped Into the works and seventy barrels t cement were used In one day In solldlfy- ng the sand and gravel. A storm of severe fury visited the lake ml settlement of Unite Creek , Jackson ounty. Barns were blown down and sheds arrled through the air. Hall stripped or- 1) aril a of fruit and leaves and pouuded growing and beaded wheat Into the ground , Some trees vvsra torn ofl at their base , Whole flocks ot chlckenn and turkeys were annihilated and the young ducks along the lake shores wcra blown about and drowned. The Davidson mine , on Missouri flat , Jo- Ecphlne county , Is digging out a rich pocket which pays { 21 a day to the man , The Bailey boys , ot the Mountain Lion , are open ing up n new ledge ot paying ore four feet wide , which promises to iqual the old mine In permanenc ) . A 16-months-old child of Mrs Shcpp of Ashland tumbled out of a car window while coming down the Slsklvotia last Monday The train was moving about fifteen miles an hour. It was stopped and the distracted mother and train crew rushed bai.k to the rescue and found the child sitting on the sand pile where It had fallen , screaming mad but not Injuied In the least. MISCELLANEOUS. The state reform school at Miles City , Mont. , has thirteen Inmates. The first car of new wheat was shipped from Pose , Kern county , Cnl. , last week. Carrier pigeons arc being used to carry messages from Ciitolina Island to the Los Angeles Times office. It Is said that on account ot the Sunday closing ordinance fifty saloons In Salt Lake have quit because they could not pay $300 quaiterly license these hird times. The report that the fruit , crop ot Lasscn , Ncv. , was entirely ruined by frost was somewhat exaggerated and It Is claimed by the papers as well as from other sources that whllo the crop will not be of wonderful magnitude , still there will be enough to supply the homo market and some to spare The faculty of the Nevada state uni versity hav-p taken hold of the matter of saloon men selling Intoxicants to students and propose to vigorously prosecute every such case. One student bus already been si-spendcd for conduct unbecoming to a young man wearing the university uni form. At Willow Ranch , a little town In Modoo County , California , there have been twenty- six cases of smallpox In the last few weeks and there will bo many more , for no pains arc taken to keep the patients Isolated. It Is said that people visit In houses where the disease prevails. Those who have been vaccinated had the disease In a mild form , but other * were very 111. Santa PC , known In military circles as Tort Marcy , Is unquestionably the oldest permanent military post on American soil The Spanish built a fort hero In 151.1 , and with the exception of the Interval follow trig the revolt of the Pueblo Indians In 1GSO , until the comincsl by Diego de Vargas In Ifi'JJ , It has been continuously occupied by military Fort Marcy Is now the headquarters of the Tenth United States Infantry and band. Work on the great Rio Verde reservoir and canal enterprise In Arizona will begin shortly. A contract for nearly $2,000,000 has been let that requires the storage and diversion dams and 100 miles of canal lo be completed by January 1 , 1896. Horseshoe reservoir , which will bo created by the storage dam , occupies the geographical center of Arizona and will cover 3,400 acres. This dam site Is sixty miles northeast of Phcenlx. The dam will raise the water 150 feet and will extend 2CO feet up and down stream , and 3CO feet across. It is to be built of hand-laid rock , with an impervious layer of asphalt on the water side. A lake six and one-half miles long and three and one-half miles across will be formed thereby. Popular music tonight Courtland beach. LIKELY TO SWAP CONSORTS. Troubles VV hlch IU Rultrd from Tno Couples Living In One Summer Cottage Behind two divorce suits that are sched uled for the June term of the court of com mon pleas at Philadelphia there lies a strange story which bears a strange resemblance to one of the famous tales of Boccaccio. The cases are those of Tunis versus Tunis and Henry versus Henry. In both cases the suits are biought by the husbands , and each names the other as co-rebpondent. The story , as related by the Record , dates back to last summer when Mr. and Mrs. Tunis and Mr. and Mrs. Henry , who were all fast friends , rented a cottage at Atlantic city together.each family paying Its share of the living expenses. In the latter part o : July Tunis was obliged to start off on i business trip , and , yielding to his wife's persuasions , permitted her to remalnot the seashore. In August , Mrs. Henry began to suspect that her husband was tea attentive to Mrs. Tunis , and , alter the whole party had returned homo in September , die claims to have obtained evidence of their guilt. Mrs. Henry did not make a scene. She simply ascertained Mr. Tunis' address and wrote him full particulars. This brought the absent husband home In quick lime , and on his arrival he was met by Mrs. Henry , who produced for his benefit the proofs she had gathered of the guilt of his wife and her husband. Mrs. Henry and Mr. Tunis then resolved to keep a careful watch In order to secure more evidence. The two watchers , having the same object In common , were thrown a great deal In each other'.s society , and It Is claimed In the libel In the Henry vs. Henry case that the same kind of an Intimacy resulted as that which Is alleged to have existed be tween Mrs. Tunis and Mr. Henry. Neither case Is likely to bo contested and the de crees of divorce will speedily follow the taking of the testimony. It Is vvhlsrered , too , that the divorces are likely to be fol lowed by two weddings In which both the brides arid " grooms will simply have changed partners. . Zoological garden Courtland beach. The runtioernph us u Witness. The phonogrdph Is being used with marked effect In English courts. Recently a railroad company vvaS sued by the owner of premises upon a street under which the road had run a tunnel , The complaint stated that the noise of the trains going through the tunnel was so great as to utterly prevent sleep , while existence In daylight was made un bearable by , life same cause. The railroad compan > 's attorneys produced In court a phonograph which they had managed to have placed In the premises In question , and when It was put In motion and failed to emit any of the terrible noises alleged to have been suffered by the complainants , and the fact that It had been on active duty In the build Ing occupied by the latter was sufficiently established , the Judgp dlsmlsbed the com plaint without further ceremony , virtually holding that the evidence of the phonograph was more acceptable than that of the Inter ested plaintiffs. Children Cry for ' Castoria Pitcher's * Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria. Children Cry for goner's Castoria. DOES WE HAVE YOUR „ _ A BOOM FOB rrvRTTqq - TRUSSES PLEASE and a YOU ? Large Stock The Aloe & Penfold Co. 1408 Farnam St. , Opposite Fasten Hotil. THE LION DRUG HOUS . PAINLESS EXTRACTION if tcoth without KUX. Teeth taken out In the Jiornlm ; ami new hot liiHurtud KIUIIO iluy A full Mil on ruhhcr J&.OU. Kent uliti.ua platu ' 11)00. Hllvt'r lllllllK li.OO , I'uio uolcl UlllllKX ! 2.00 mill up. llest worU ulwnyu. BAILEY DENTIST , - , Ird Door I'axtori UlocW , IGth and t'urimm Sl Kutruncu 16th btreet tide , l.nUy attvudaut L'olephouo 10b5. Ucruau ipokca. LINE SHE SALE CLOSING OUT Gmollno Sieves at less than cost. This b not for nhoildy goods , but for lit at v\n \ t Gusollno Stoves. Everyone warranted. $ < ! . < ) ( ) < iiisolinu Stoves for $ 2.7i\ $8.00 Gasoline Stoves for ; } .5)6 ) $10.00 Giisollne Stoves for 4.l ! ( ) ff SO Gasoline Ovens for. . SI.25 Oil Stoves for ! s 50 * : U-gullon WooJ.JncUet ( . .tins for ' 21- ( I5c n-f-ullon WuoiUJackct ( .tins for 150 DIFFER BNTSTriES of Bnbv Carriages from the best m.vni. facturors in tlio United States , livery- one to bo sold less than cost. $4.0 ( ) Carriage for $ i. < ) [ ) $0.00 Carriage for o.S7 $8.00 Carriage for ; 7.)0 ) $10.00 Carriage for 4,7(5 ( $15.00 Carriage for. 8.i5 ( $20.00 Carrirgc for l ° . ( i ( ) $25.00 Carriage for 1475 Refrigerator Sale EVERY REFRIGERA TOR and leo Box to bo sold quiok for le s than cost. Remember , wo never fcell anything that lias price only to com mend it. Our Refrigerator * are war ranted to give satisfaction or inonov re funded. $ 7.50 Ice Box for $ ; } < ) ( ) 10.00 lee Box for 4,85 lit.50 Itefrigerator for 7.8 ! ) 17.00 Refrigerator for 9.5)8 ) 20.00 Refrigerator for 12.50 25.00 Refrigerator for 14.50 Terms-Cash or Payment * ! Presents to All Purchasers , Formerly People's Mammoth Installment House. Close Evenings at G:30 , excepting Mondays and Saturdays. ARE ALL AT WORK ON "THE GREAT MEMORIAL HISTORY OF THE WORLD'S FAIR , BY THE MEN WHO BUILT IT , D. II. BURNIIAM , DIRECTOR OF WORKS AND F. D. MILLET , DIRECTOR OF DECORATION. ALL THE FORCES WHICH COMBINE TO MAKE ALL THE GOOD MAG AZINES OF AMERICA ARE AT WORK ON lp > v r" N < * { T Tlite A Portfolio tf OookU HDulaOrandlJ Srrte ProroJ Photo * "W < * AND THE RESULT IS THE HANDSOMEST WORK WHICH WAS EVER ISSUED FROM ANY PRESS IT IS PUBLISHED IN 25 PARTS AND SOLD FOR 25 CENTS PER PART. EACH PART CONTAINS 4 FULL PAGE COLOR PLATES AND 8 FULL PAGES OF ILLUS- TATED TEXT. SIZE OF PAGE 12x16. It is the Book for which you have been waiting ; jBBiBfsisreisaaaaiatbfl ! fliBiB DRING 5 coupons and 25 cants , or uoiit by mall B cents extra , In coin , stamps noj accepted , AildrcbS , Memorial Department , Omaha Bee. ,