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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (March 25, 1895)
! ' - ' - I. : : - - ; ; - - : - 'p.'I. ; - ; . : . . . . . . . C. - - ' . ' . - . " " " -y' ' " - " ' . " " . .1".I. ' . . " . . I - . T' , _ " . . : . . . \ , . " , . " . . = . 7 - - _ _ - - - - THE 01l DAI.YIEE [ ONDAY , 1lROI _ 23 _ , 1s9S. _ _ . 6 , PUISEOF WESTERN \ PROGR SS - Ocean D ! nh on the Pacific n Vast Store- hOMo of the Precious ! Mot1. - MINERS NET $2.50 ON EVEY TON OF SAND The Won.Iirfii1 I.AIH Iln to 1 New Method of NlnlnA thin Ooll-llnenRn " ' .nlh In the nt AtUIO 0011 ] ellLod l'epleg ! Mine J.oeated-Now. of thn 'Vlt - Things are looking lively along the ocean bench month or Sutro fleghts. Gold clnlms are being Btake out there and for weeks put two mnchlnel for savIng the gold from the h\ck Rand hnve been at work lays the San Francisco Examiner. On or these Is run hy John Sherhnn and Albert Thomns , : who have five men oniplayed. a Four mIles farther on , In 0 gorge empty Ing Into the sea , and just beyond Mussel Hock , another machIne Is at work. It Is owned by W. S. Dillon , Martin T. Mead and S M. Clemmens , who work six men. The MusKel Rock minors arc confident that from eIght ; and a hai days' actual working they have from $300 to $400 worth of gold. Sheridan all Thomas , from two wceks' work , estimate they have $1,000. They say the sand pays $2GO 0 ton M. A. Kerr , the su- perlntenlent of the later mine and mill , said that by the nol method of saving the gold the whole ) . beach would be mate productive. ' 'nle black sand , " he sid , "II found all along the coast from Oregon to San Diego. Though the miners have tried the sand hItherto for years and years they. could not ; , make $ a day. The ocean shore now , wherever - ever black sand exists , Is as good as any quartz mine. J only costs about $500 to 'rig up ' and I Predict a great many men will be .worklng along there Inside of a wcek. "It looks now as though duty or some such machines would be put on here , and that we will have a biG cnmp One machine will treat from twenty to twenty-five tons of Band a day. 'Ve , could have handle much more thane dill , only that we werG getting started end experimenting. . "Only a small force of men Ia . required. 'Ve have one man to shovel the sand and three to attend the camp and wheel the send RII . one to do the cooking. This force answers for both day and night shifts , as one man to wheel the sand and another .to shovl It In are enough to keel the machine \ going. " Some Salt Lake men , encouraged by the reports of the large amount of gold In the sand ] , are bringing a new sort of machine from Uah . , which will be set up on the beach In n day or two. I hal the claims ' , ) of the gold hunter prove true there wl bo additional excitement aiong the beach very soon. Many claims are already stalled err In different places. TI KEYSTONE GOLD I3ELT. The work on the Keystone all Holy Terror mines and the starting up of the new custom - tom hull and cyanide plants have brought this place to the front as the liveliest mining , > camp In the Black 111118 . says I Keystone I dispatch to the Sioux Falls Argus-Leader. With the present facilities for the reduction or ores only about 250 men can now be CIfllIOyed. With a sufcient number of mills for reducing the ores the camp could easily give employment to ,000 men , The Keystone gold belt extends over an area about three miles In length by one tulle In width There are on this belt about fifty claims that are developed and ready to pro- duce or.r . . only three of which have now any milling racltes , These are the Keystone and Holy Terror , which have mills or their . . . " own , and the Dsmarck , which will be treated at the new custom miii. Either the Key- atone or Dsmarck can furnish five times the amount of ore that can now be treated at the two plants. , An estimate or the amount or are that could be produced daily by the leading mInes of the camp shows a total of GGOO tons. The Keystone probably I bas not as many veins of paying ore at ! Bome other camps or the west , but no other . plac can show 10 many well defined Its- sure veins. With the sIngle exception of the , - Holy Terror , whlcl Is three feet In wIdth , I there Is not a small vein In the camp. They E p' vary from twenty to nearly 100 feet In ' .r. wIdth , with a probable average or about forty feet. A few of the mines are free milling or have tn them free mUlng streaks - All or them show some gold , hut DO per cent I h' . ot all the gold of the carq ) will be found In the arsenopyrles , which wIll have to be con- , cntrated and treated by smelting . chlorlna- , ' 4. 1 ton , cyanide or some other process. The concentrates vary In value from $ :0 up to more than $5,000 per ton. . PACK TRAIN TO THE YUKON. An Alaska packer intends to put on a I packing .traln of twenty horses and trans- port the outfits at thE YUkoners over the t lummlt from Juneau to Lake Linderman for 7 cents a pound says the Seattle Post.ln- teligenccr , which derives Its information from late Alaska papers. A zlg-zQg road will be built up the steepest part of the summit 10 that a hors can pack from 250 to 300 pounds and make the round trip In four lays ( This new IJroJect wi place the Yu- koners independent of the Indians , who have charged heretofore at the rate or 1 cent per pound CaptaIn Healy has Induced the North American Trading end Transportation company to purchase a IOOO-ton steJmer and place her on the route between San Francisco and St. Mlchaell to connect with the P. B Weare which Is to make two trIps to Forty Mile from the mouth of the river. The Juneau Record of February 18 lays : The crowd the Chlkat brought up this morning Is another evidence of the large Im- migration which we are to have flits sum- mer , notwithstanding nine out of every ten , viI find that there Is absolutely nothing for a them to do when they get here. The best advice wo can give any one In starch of employment - ployment of any kind Is to stay away from Alaska. 'fhere are now four men for over : ' position to be had , The Silica Alaskan or February IG says : The Indian section of our town continues _ I to hold man meetings to discuss the owner- r ship and extent or their claim , and they still adhere to the decision or the first mass meeting that the real estate should belong I to them colectvey and the dwellings , while having Individual ownerhip , could not bo disposed of In any way without the consent ' or the other Indians . They further maintain j , that their ground extends from their village to the lake. They admit that they have not cultivated the ground , but say the berries grow wild there amid alorll them quite an annual harvest , which satisfies the present generation , but their children will aballlon the wa's or their parents and will erect homes on this berry patch , LOST MINE OUND. Charles Achtl'mann , an eccentric oh Ilros- ptor , Is Just In front the mining country In the southeastern Ilrton or the county wIth 11Itvo Information that he has at last dls- o\'ero the lost Peg Leg . mine , says a lvershlo dispatch to the San Francisco Chronicle , and that H Is In the Cahnla reservation , In a saddle on time San Jacinto range of mountains Aehtermann says ho was driven from time place by the Indiana , Ho Is trying to make up 1 strong party to gO to the mine In spite or time opposition or the Cahmuihias. Notwithstanding Achmtermann's IIeulalles , he Is regarded as a very shrewd prospector by rninimmg men , and It Is very Probable several wi go with him t time 4 lllace where he beliave3 ho has found the hllslng I'c Leg . - A NEW TISTLE UURNlfl. Farmers In ibis section of time state are deeply Interested In a new cactus burner that has Just been invented , says I Formaim , N , D" , dispatch 10 the Sioux l ala Argus- Leader I Is constructed of sheet steel , abput . twelve feet wIde and thirty fee lonc twenty to thirty inches high and wi weigh about n ton. I Is furnished with a drat by means or tans at the rear end , after the tallol or the Underwoo,1 burne but II'er In that It has I burner the width of time machine. In the front end , which Is kept I alight by means of crude eli , furnished through IJlles rrom a reservoir on the top or the maehln , and the fame from the bummer Is thus distributed along the whole leiLgthm of the machine and made a continuous - OUI blaze . The fro II kept rrom escaping on the sides by flexible runners , which plow / ' n furrow along the ground. The rig Is to . , b drawn by four Iiones and will burn J from twenty to thirty acres In a day. I II r "o\ed ! by lion. II. B. Desem and other i . ' . .r " . . _ ' " tA Mourt county men , who claim that I Is superior to any other and has given more Kven satisfactory rmll In practical test ! . CIJPLE CREEK'S MILt1OS. IZuh R. Steele , one or the mot conservative - BerVtvo mIning men of Cripple Creek and at time same time one bet posted on th mines of the district , informs UI , says the Denver Republican : , that the ore now being put out from the many mines working In the camp wi aggregate between $650,000 and $700,000 each month. Enthuslssts , he says , claim a production of a million 8 month , but ho hardly thinks the figures will reach that sum , though he thinks probably they will when time summer season fully opens. "Last year , " ho f'S , "Cripple Creek was credited with over $3,000,000 , and this was really the work or but six months or work anti before the railroads were complete to the camp. With the many new properties that have ben opened thIs year I think I safe to say the camp will put out close to $9,000,000 this year. I may even go above that. ' that."Three hundred tons a day Ie a safe estimate - mate of time shlpmenh from the camp , all $0 a ton II about what the ores will average from all over tie district. Then there are , the local reduction plants , , which are handling time lower grades amid getting out time gold In the shape of retorts to be considered In addi- ton to the ore lent to the smelters. "There are oe great mines In CrIpple Creek as. have even ben opened anywhere , and the camp la earning its way Into the confidence or all men. Take the Pike's Peak mine , that produced $ SOOO last month , and consider the many In the camp as yet mere prospects : as cOlllared wml time producers of older distrIcts - trIcts , and I can readily be seen that Cripple Creek has but begun to show Its metal. " TI LOS ANGELES OIL FIELD. The State Mining ! Bureau at the request or the Los Angeles Doard of Trade has been making an investigation or the oil fells or that vicInity , says the San Francisco Call. Mr. W. L. Watts , an assistant of State Mineralogist - eralogist Crawford who has been for some months at work In Los Angeles county , gave an address before the Science association In Los Angeles on this subject. After a general history or the oil industry In California time speaker said at least ten times as many oil bearings hall been male In Los Angles and Ventura counties as In the rest or the state. Time local wels are all Inoa range or his extending from Santa MonIca to Puente , with a break at the Ls Angles river. An Inter- eating welt Is being sunk just west of West- lale l'ark , whIch will determine the value or the slabs at this point as oil producer North of the lalman wells In the west part of town the rocks arc almost horizon- tal. The wells In this section have been troubled with water. At Ivanhoe sand- stone or a bur color , Impregnated with bitumen - tumen , Is round. East of the river the for- maton Is much more disturbed than on the west side. On the Hunter Tract an Interest- lug well Is about to be sunk. Here the sandstone and the Imerock arc mixed In a anl manner similar to that In the Puento region. 'ho Second street regIon Is probably a more recent formation than the main oil- bearing formaton of California , but It must lie remembered that time attendant physIcal conditions have much to do with oil produc- tim. The lecturer gave a short description of the Puente region. The his consist of short folds of rocky formation. Ho observed deposits - posits of petroleum at two places-at the Puente wels proper and In Urea Canyon , about two miles Ilstant , The Puente Oil company has twenly-seven wells , twenty- three being In operation at present and producing - mIncing about 320 barreL of oil a day. The , al Is of very excellent quality. The Puente : and Los Angeles oil deposits are closely related - lated NORTHERN WYOMING. The resources of Northern Wyoming , certaIn - taIn or speedy development at the hands of enterprisIng capital and the ever ready home seeker , are attracting widespread attention . There Is a vast terrier surrounding the Dig Horn mountains which only awaits trans- formation. Down these mountains pour from numberless spring and from snow-capped leeks a volume of water sufficient to make ! the arid lanls a veritable garden. ' All the valley country up and down blossomed - earned wIth unfaIling promIse , and Ir the raIns came not the little channels were opened In the Irrigation ditches , and man became his own raInmaker without ' chemicals or fireworks. The great range of blue and while mountains furnished moIsture for millions or acres and a very little capItal had made a few thousand acres as valuable and pro- ductve as the bet of farms In older states. One of the first surprises Is to see how comparatively - paratvely Ito expense will lead the water Into channels which will water thousands of acres There 18 not for ten miles below Sheridan the first Item or heavy expense In the irrigating streams , all following the natural contour or the ground wIthout single acqueduct or heavy excavaUcn. . Good form houses were abundant , crops of grain alfalfa , ptatoes and vegetab'es were the most luxurIant , while such a thing as a crop failure was unknown. Alfalfa fie'ds were dotted with the riks or the first crop of hay , the second crop was being gathered and water was running In the trenches , prepara- tory for the third crop. The complaln or one farmer against the country was because time season was , so short tha only three crops of alfalfa could b secured. From the little country now Irrigated the lmarv- Itll cuntry Irrlgtl crops hav- este much more than the same crops In older state and one of the certain promises In the future. development of n9rlhern Wyom- lug Is that hundres or thousands of acres an , _ be developed _ . and still the demand or wyommg ana ! onana not le met. This glimpse of what Is being done only In a limIted way on the east of the Big Her range , enlarges to the Investigator the possi- bites of the great area wrt of the nmoun- taln8 , In crossing the range streams run east north.and west , while n score of snow-cappe peaks lift theIr sUmmis to the sky , never giving UII a major traction of their storel moisture. . When the Big Her basin Is reached time number or small streams that contribute to the Big Her river havt never yet been numerate and they thread through the foothills , acro.s the plain and Into the broad valley on every hand. Here 'Is a stretch of country 200 mies In extent from norlh to south awaiting development. There Is imot elsewhere in the entire 10t II entre north- west such a virgin territory and It Is tour told more promising to the agriculturist than millions of acres In the prairie states that have ben settled upon and sold over and over again at a profit within time last fifteen years , J Is slgnilcant of the future that Wyoming has just secure from the general governmcnt these unbroken lands , and the vast territory will now le subject to purchase at a less figure than the mlnlmnm cost of government land J Is a statement In no way exag- gerated that there are 1,000,000 acres or land In time Dig Horn country that need only to be at enc settled Ullon all cultivated. The fIrst step toward this consumaton must come from cpial , The wasting waters must be gathered Into Irrigation channels , and the construction work wUI not b com- Illeted before the setter will bo there waItng to secure his water rights. There can bi no doubt when capital once views tIme field and Its certain assurance of moro than ordinary profitable Investment but that the Inveltments will be malle and the Ilevelopment or the now unknown lanl , progress - gross with magical swiftness , I has been demonslrated already , and I Is an open hook to mill obsen'er that where irrigation hiss been establshed In the Dig Horn country I has been done at nominal cost. In re- suits It has equally been demonstrted that every acre at irrigated land has Increased In value ncarly thlrt-fohl. When capital through rar.slghted Investment - ment In IrrigatIon canals puts water rights within reach or the public In that country there will be Ilroft sharing only equslcd by tIme surprising development , B. M. 11. IOWA . Knoxville Methoists wi erect a $20,00 church edifice this year. The largest maccaronl plant In the world I now located at Davenport The Odd Fellows of KnoxvIlle have decided to erect a $25,000 business block. Farmers near Albla are organizing a colony for Louisiana amid will settle near Jennings. POleshllk county Is erecting . , a building at Montezuma for the counts Incurable tn- sane. _ The city debt or Dee Moines II now $89- 058.05. This L In excess of the cnsUtu- tonal limit . Farmers of Done county have decided to sow a large acreage or wheat before the close of Macelm . The capital stock of the Iowa Trust and Savings bank or Dubuque hiss been Increased from nOOOo to $30,0. Some youlg bloods at Martngbur broke Into a car house , stole a handcar anti ran It out to l'eklnhero a revival meeting was being conducted by 11ev. C.V. . Wilson . The . _ . . - - - - boys raIsed such a disturbance : that the meeting . Ing was broken Up , but no arrests have been made. DubnQue's city councIl refuse to extend the charter or the street railway company fifty years , or until 1965. Robert Sanford aged 85 , an old settler of O'Brien county , fell down an elevator shaft a Prlmghar and broke his neck . Rev , G. W Skiing or tbD People's church at Princeton , 1. , hM accepted a cal ' Decorah to the People's church at D C. Field's general clothing store at Cal- umet was burglarized and ' $200 worth or stolen. jewelry and other goods were Fairfield Is tD have a larger postofce and better accommodations for patrons and Increased - bter accommoatons creased facilIties for handling the malls. Mn. Marguerite McDonald has sue the Democrat nt Davenport for $20,000 damages for allegIng her husband was a blgmlst The Odd Fellows or Dubuque will dedicate the new temple on AprIl 26 , and at the same time celebrate the anniversary or the order. Mrs. Galen at Toledo , G6 year of age Is teaching her twenty-sixth consecutive year In the primary department or tbe Toledo schols , Cashier S. M. Leach , ' iio was wounded In the Mel 1. robbery , Is rapidly reovering , Merchant C. D Halley , the other victim , Is still In a critical condition. Herman Ihlnney , near Waehblrn , split Ms knee cap In twain with nn axe while chopping wood. Some or the Joint Water was let out and he will probably g lame the rest of hIs me. me.James Taylor aged 75 years , who resided near Fairfield . died at his home after a short Illness of pneumonia , and was burled. Whl attending the funeral of . her lmuband . tIme ! aged wife became suddenly ill and died tie day following. Mre. Benjamin Hershey , widow or the late Muscatino millionaire , hM eupplementell her gift or $20,000 to the Lutheran society of that city by a $10,000 donation to Wesleyan uni- verity at Mount Ileasant , to be used for the erection or a woman's dormltorrl A sad accIdent occurrerl near Carbon , about seven miles northwest or Corning. The sons of J. Cole were chopping down a tree and In some way It lodge on another. In trying to dislodge I one of time boys got under the tree when It fell , crushing his skull , which caused Instant death. Louis Dciii jr. , of Dubuque Is looking for a traveling man who sold him a mileage hook for $20 and then applied to the Illinois Central for a new one , saying he had lost the or"lnal. When the man to whom Mr. Drln sold the original present It the conductor took It up under instructions from the com- pany. NEBRASKA. otoo county teacher meet at Syracuse April G and G. Apri The Dawes county fair will bo held September - ber 4 , G. 6 and 7. Johnson county teachers wi meet at Tecumseh - cumseh county April 12 and 13. Custer county teacher will hold their next session at Westen'le March 30. Rev. 3. M. Woolam of St. Joseph has accepted the pastorate or time Auburn Daptst church. General Van Wyck Is having an observa- tory erected on his house at Wyoming , In Otoe county. Petitions are being circulated In Tecumseh for an Issue of school bonds to provide better school accommodation. Chadron Recorder arc The editors or the I about to establsh n daily paper to help on the boom of the town. A consignment of 100 song books for the Methodist church at Ogalala was solon from the waycr at Kearney Gates & Son's bakery al David City was entered by burglars who took $50 In money and a quantity of cigrs , Farming operations are already under way In Boone county , and a large acreage has al- ready been sown to wheat. Judge Keysor wIll address time Sarpy couty "Um- teachers on May 4 at Gretna on the - ver3al Supremacy of La\V. " SuperIor young men have organized a social club with fifteen charter members to start with and a limit or twenty-five. Lung See was brutally ' ssauled In his laundry at Blair by two men with blackened faces , who secured $ G and escaped. " Already 17G acres or sugar beets have been contracted for In the Wayne strict , and It expected that 200 acres will be planted. A telephone line Is being constructed from Oxford to Beaver City by way of Edison. I may eventualy extend to Cambridge. I All dog tn Sutton are being kept muzzled just now , for time reason that many or them have been bitten by animals known to be rabid. at the Nebraska City Revival [ meetings Ciy Daptst church have resulted In the admis- sion of thlrty.fve new members to the church. Dr. Wood has tendered his resignation of the eoronerhlp'of Colax county and George R Doughty has been appoInted to flit the posItion. Several acres of land east at Cozad were Inundate by the breaking or a temporary dam around the headgatb of the rarmers' and merchants' ditch. Re\ P. Spellel has resigned from time pastorate of the Evangelical Lutheran church at Seward , having accepted a call from a church at Creston , In. Rev. n. F. Pearson or 'Vakefeld conducted communion services at the Presbyterian church at Ponca and twenty-two new members - bers were admitted to the church. Emerson has accepted a proposItion by WIlliam 'arnock to build a creamery In the village. A bonus of $350 has been raised and the mik of over 400 cows pedg.d. : Sate blowers at Seward entered the alike of C. C. Davis & Co.s elevator , but round nothing for their pains. They scatered about the floor but there everything foor , was nothing that was worth takIng , Nuckols county farmers held 1 two days' session at Nelson and lIstened to papers hy Prof. Lawrence Drummer on Insects that are destructvo to farm and garden produce , and by I'rot. Wagoner , on Irrigaton , Two Ito girls at Carleton were bitten by a mad dog the other day One of the chill- den was taken to the nearest physician and the other was taken to a mad atone about Ifteen miles away Time dog bit a number or hog before It was kied ! Wood Houseman went down from Genoa , to Columbus to meet his brIde and get married. The girl , however , did not see him when his train arrived , and went ror- ward to Genoa , while Wood hung around Columbus for two days before he discovered whet had bappened. They eventually were married , however A man who lives over In the west part of town , says the Albion Argus , went Into his cow stable the other night and by mIstake mixed the gentle kine up a nice mash In a box full or sawdust Instead of bran The cow merely supposed the hard times was ' The cause or the economy , meekly ate her supper , I and the lan liever discovered his mistake until the . next m rlng : when ! he . milked . time cow ana sne Jet aown name a glen or tur- pentue , a quart of shoe pegs and a bundle of latlm Cheater Young , the son of a widow living In lied Cloud died during an operation for the removal of SOIO necrosed bone from ono or hue fingers . Three doctors had given time boy anaesthetcs , time operaton was al- most completed , and the Ilwer or the drug had apparently al but run Its curse , when the heart suddenly and unexpectedly began t show signs or failure , and the Patient died within a few minutes , In Iplte of all that the doctors could do 1 restore conscIousness ! - I ness . The mother or the boy was present durIng the whole time . TIE DAKOTAS. Articles of Incorporation have been fed at Pierre for the Corn Del exposition or Mitchell . A farmers' creamery has been organized at Imendale , N. n" , with capital or 5000. Time city gives a bonus. Articles of incorporation ba\'e been filed for the Yankton Electric and Manufacturing company , capital stock $40,000 , The honey C-pertve Creamer coin- has disposed of all its stock pany ba dispsed nearly al Il , i and work will be begun on the building In I the near future I One or the most important measures passed by the legislature wu the ablshing at the grand jury system In South Dakola. Under ) the new law all comlllaints are drawn by time county attorney , who may hear both sIdes of a case to determine I the facts will justify or warrant a probable conviction , The case II then tried by the petit Jury In the usual way It I sId that this measure was Introduced - troduce for a special purpose where large stakes depend upon tl ' Ictlon ! or the prosecuting - cltng IUorn 1. I 1IIIIIIIh easier to bur up the attorney thnn It "oqld bo to secure the grand jury. The Fourth District \eteran association , which Includes Oran" " ' , hry 1)0515 , RelIef Corps and Sons or Vfterana' camps In the counties of Beadle , X Xd Hughes , Peter , Hand , Faulk , locale , tdgir , Snborn , Miner , Davison , Aurora and I flub , will hold Its annual reunion antI encampment at huron July 3 , 4 and G. I - - A meeting of South , D.lkota druggists was hel at luron and the 'Drugglsts' Mutual Fire Insurance comjmn organized. The i company headquarterl\1 bo nt Lake Pres- I ton. All members or the , fouth Dakola Phar- maceutcal association , mna' become members or the Insurance mar time pa'mtnt of $2. ,110 oranlzatolbt1lmls Insurance to $5OOO-not more than thlt 'amount will be written for any one member Applications for Insurance to the amount of 335,000 have already ben made , COLORADO Bull ll , In the Cripple Creek district , Is pestered by hold-ups. A Joint trackago between Victor anti Crip- pIe Creek , to bo used by the two railroads which enter the camp , Is being considered. The latest gold bolt strike Is In the Great hope . 4,000 feet northwest of the Ibex com- pany's property at Lealvle , The ore car- rice four ounces gold , also shiver and head It Is reported that pay ore has been found In time Ruble Combination , adjoining the Longfellow at Cripple Crcek The ore was found at sixty feet and It said to run $130 a ton. ton.The The McCourt brothers are said to have purchased n twenty-stamnhm mill at Silver Cliff , which they will remove to the old camp that bears their name , Late test or this ore show a saving or $3 per ton and better , under stamps. McCroskey Bros. & Mum , who ere working the " 'Ide Awake at Cripple Creek under lease , are confident of being able to make a big producer out of it. The ore which has been taken out and pled up for shipment assays better than $200 per ton. A land deal between the Canal company or Monte Vista and a colony of German Bap- tsts In Nebraska and Wisconsin Is about consummated , Involving a 5UI or $100,000. . The buyers are sober , Industrious peollle. The ) ' will locate about six malice northeast of time town The Cripple Creek placer , managed by George F. Daclllder , Is now being worked by fully fifty men. The policy of the management - agement Is to let out the ground In slal blocks to lessees and upon this plan I large 110rton or the ground Is being worked and In most cases with marked success. There Is quito a minIng excitement at Oenbrool ( , a eaton three mies north or Wilbur on time Florence & Cripple Creek. At a depth of sixty feet In ' shaft situated 1.00 feet west of the track and a few hun- , ' drel yards noth of the staten there Is a big body of ore which Is represented to run $ GO per ton Some or the quartz shows free gold gold.A A recent strIke of rich ore In the Jessie mInI has caused a great deal or excitement In camp at Yankee. At a depth of seventy feet a streak of ort one Inch In width on the hanging wall was encountered. This ore gave fifty ounces gold per ton In addition i to this rich streak the Jessie line two ret of solid ore that mills three ounces per ton In gold. The new gold strike at Iezorr on the north of Goose creek dlstrlcliis' causing a rush of prospectors to that lo aly , and the success- rul tes of the Iron Cap ore Is giving re- flowed confidence to those who were heroin- Ing weak In the adding ' faith , and active work Is now being done on many prospects that have laId Idle a4 wimter. Goose creel distrIct Is destined to bo a booming district from this forward. I I OREGON Phlomath Is to hnv 'a fouring mill. The dam Is to be buiit.by subscriptions of day's work and rorty-tw . acres of land have been ' donated. ' . Gold Hill hai a barber ' hop conducted . by tnree women , elY ooeor them 011 mar- ried. I Is needless tp. atd that they get nearly all the business In their line. One day recently r&'l ) ' ) ily different parties . . ties werei catching suCkers on Lost rIver. Many took away fourhorsl , wagol loads of fish. The Indians arc lhlng them .by the ton. ci ton.The The city 'marshal ' or Pendleton has had to provide hllselt with a wheelbarrow to use In wheelng the drunicen Indians to Jai since citizenship. their advent Into all the right and duties of Hayes & Swlnlen have picked up about $1.500 worth ot coarse gold at their placer mine on Oscar creek , Josephine ounty . this season , exclusIve or time fine gold they will get when they clean up. Captain Ian has been notified from San Francls to resume work on the Bonanza quIcksilver mine near Oakland , Cat The tunnel Is being straightened out and prepara- tons made for rurther prospecting. Notwithstanding the low price or wheat , a larger acreage I being sown In time north part of Bentcn county than ever before. I Is usual to summer fallow a part of the ground , but the entire area Is being sown to grain this seaon , The farmers are nearly through sowing , W. R. Calowa ) having 250 acres nicely. or wheat above the ground and growIng I having been customary for Coos county prisoners to bike "French leave" when they did not relish their treatment , the following statement or . the Marshfeld MaIlS may be understood : "Whie work Is progressing on the Jai the prisoners have been placed In the town jai , where they have had a reception every evening Geol music Is furnished by Canning's string band , anll songs ali dances make night hideous. I looks as If the pris- oners arc hell In high esteem by the county officials , and everything Is being done to make their stay as delightful as possible " WASIHNGTON. The spring run of salmon has begun jumpIng - Ing already II Rogue river Cigars are beIng , made at \\'lla 'Vala out or tobacco grown In that locality. . A new shingle mill of GOOOO capacity has been put In operation at New Whatcom. There Is a rumor that the Great Northern will Rock bnld to . Elensburg , branching off at Thirteen men arc employed at Aberdeen making plats and calculating areas of tide lands for the local board or appraiser Onl or the moneyed men of California Is expected at Jataha soon In the Interest of a projectell [ ilant to condense . milk at that point. L H. Wheeler , formerly IJresldent of the Commercial National bank or Seattle . haa leased the Caine and also time Pearly shingle mills at Blame , which have been Idle , and will start them at once. A dam of rocks four feet high and twenty- five feet long bas been built across time mouth of a small stream emptying Into Silver lake , the object beIng to prevent the trout with which the lake has me : ! mplante from escaping - ' 1 caping , ym : A telegram from 1\\11. \ Crito announce that the main vein In tb . Mystery mlno has widened out so that this output of that mIne alone will be Incresed HOO Ins a day , and will bo sufficient to rub time concentrator to its fullest capacity , 20ttOlls % or ore per day , without taking into a iunt the Wlmans and the Pride of time MounMnf mlne3 ; ' Farmers and randiem' ' In the Iuyalup , Stuck , Green and Wht rh'er'aleys are jubilant over time pro9fcts or an early and extra large crop or 1fap4 produces 1101) ' gr2wers are looking r r'WJrd to an earlier Illcklng this Ylr. 1m'9r.J. J. Crlw Of lent estimates time acreagf , rqrmlrly devoted to hOI ) raising which thhtoyear will be given over to the rliing orJoeber varieties of farm produce at onethird time . t'ta acreage or hop land of last YEGr. , At a meeting or the bard of trustees or the Chamber or Comm rce h"ld at Seattle I copy .of the map b'ten up and arranged by the telegaph and signal service or the Do- minion or Canalla In 1883 , at the time Sir Hector L. l.ngevln was miniter of public works was exhibited. This map shows the line of demarkaton of the Russian treaty or 182 exactly a laid down on our maps now , which the Canadian goverment accepted al correct twelve years ago. Thll shows conclusIvely - elusIvely that the Canadian government Is going back on Its word In this dispute. MI5CELLNI1OUS . It Is reported that a' branch road of tie Southern Pacific II to b h built from Shorb'l to Pasadena , a distance or four miles. Julan Rapport , the New , York journalist who la makIng a touror the world on fet , aB the result or a warier on his ability as a walker made wIth waler Dwyer , hi reached Maryavihie . Cal" , having traveled over GOOO miles dime , , Ils fnances consist Or I mlked Halibut fishing In Britsh Columbia waters ha closed for the season with a total catch or 900,00 pounds , the price realized being about 7 cents per fsh , J. J. 11 , a prominent railroad bulkier 01 : fontal , announce that ls will erect glass works In Great Falls that will cover forty acre and give employment to IGOO workers . A large California lioness was killed l ' near 1 slaughter house on the Monterey county road. The animal meaure,1 seven feet In . length and was accompanied by I mate , which . escaped. There arc two government schools at Slkl -one for the natives or Indians anti one for natves white children. Besides these there arc two Russlan.Greek schools , a kindergarten school and the Slka Primary school for natives . The woman suffrage proposition , which has passe(1 both hOlses or the Nevada legislature , will have to be approved by the next legislature - lattice In 18D antI ratified by the people In 18D9 before I becomes operative , J I e\'er- thing goes smothl ) the ladles can vote lu 1901 1001.Time Time Colorado river from Yuma to the needles Is proclaimed as a country womler- fuly rich In geld , silver , lead n111 Iron. An expert or some note says that within the next five years the country between Rimrenberg and Yuma wl surprise the world In its output of gold , silver and lead. I Captain Jo'l R. Dc Lamar of the Dc Lamar mines hl Idaho has n new Ilroces8 for work- Ing gold and silver ore , which has proven satisfactory on a small scale , all experiments In 1 larger way are being tried. As usual with all time new processes , I Is to save more and cost less than the old ones. Time Calvada ColonizatIon company has been Incorllorated tn Denver for the purpose of opertng colonies In Colorallo , California , Utah , Nela , Arizona and New Mexico The directors are Miton D lays , Charles C. Marble Albert C. hays , Frank Ooodnow. The company ha a capital or $50,000. $ Al Acton , Los Angeles count ) Cal. . II. C. Reno Is extracting gold with a team gold amalgamator , working Ul [ old tailings . and Is taking out $10 per day. I takes six men In two shifts-night and day-to run the machine This Is a uew plant and has about six months' work on the present dumps Careful estimates place the amount of fsh killed b ) the February freezing In time shallow - low bays on the Texas coast south or the mouth of the Brazes river at 35.000 tons 'he shore has been lined with fish car- casses for a nmontim and It Is thought that most or the red lieu spawn and young are killed. The mining along the Yulin Is placer entirely. A large number or claims were taken UII last year at various points , ani the output of gold gave an average return of $2,000. Of course there were many dlsap- polntell prospectors as some of the claims produced very heavily . while many others were worthless. But that Is encountered In every mining countr ) A good ninny miners wintered In the Yukon camps this year , but most or the men returned to civilization. Exhemlses arc very heavy In tlat region and no miner should leave here without funds enough to keel himself well supplied and ; have a "stako" to get back with In case of ' had luck. . Dangers from Artificial Teeth A gentleman who wore artificial teeth , says the Sanitarium , suffered from pains In his tongue , which defied the diagnosIng powers both or his dentist and his doctor. Finally nn electrician examine the plate on which time teeth were fixed and found I that two different metals had been used to : secure them , and b ) attaching wire to each end of the plate and placing a gah'ano- meter In the circuit a "considerable current" of electricity was found to bo passing. In fact a battery had been rorte In time mouth by the two metals , the moisture of the tongue acting as the necessary acl < , Im- mediate relief was experience when the metals nish. were covered wih an Insulatn var- - . Florida's n"cul.frDUVo Powers. Florida has wonderful recuperative powers. When the last cold wave visited the penin- sula , vegetation suffering from the prevIous one' had already greatly revived. Frost- bIten orange trees had put forth new leaves and were developing fruit buds and early vegetables bad been replanted all were In a flourishing condition . Frost that would leave Its marks for years elsewhere Is for- gotten In a season down In Florida , IN EVENT OF WAR - WIIl Our Near Nsy Could 10 with the 111"I.n neat [ , In an attempt lo reckon tbo amount 01 risk 01 war , 'Ih Spain the factors to bo taken Into consIderation are party sent- mental and partly practical. I the hAUGhty hidalgos or Culo should suddenly break Ito , 'rall over the somewhat peremptory demand of Secretary Oresham they will return 1 sharp aner thereto and refuse to apologize or give an , nuurnnces such as tha UnIted States would be wilng to accept : satisfactory - factor , , Two deterrent reasons against such 1 course on the part of SpAIn , . sa1 time New York Ierald , are her poverty and her Insufcient feet , The Spanish people ore not likely to be a greatly influenced by these facts as the ) ' would be If they were well informed ' concering the financial resources of the United States , and also I tle ) knew the strength of the latter's imavy : for , being 11roU1 and self-centered ] , even time rulIng classes of Spain are general ) ' Ignornnt or this coun- try's wealth and reSources. In tact , so su- prior Is tbe great republic to time once pow- crul but now decaying kingdom that the critcism has ben made emi Secretary Gresh- am'l dispatch that In It lie has taken nn almost bullying tone , which he would not have used toward one of the great IIOIers or Europe. Inasmuch as hostilitIes between time two nations would be confined to the ea-xcellt I a probabl brier and unimportant campatgn In overrunning Cuba by United Slates troops -the naval strenth or the two belligerents would lelermlnl the result of the var . Silaln'8 navy In 1873 , when the Ylrglnlus affair took place , WS luch superior to that of the United States. Iosslbl ) our Slanlsh friends In Madrid may remember that fact and fall to recollect the growth of the Amer- lean fleet In the last ten 'ears. Except the slow moniorse then hall no armored ships , alit ! our cruising craft were wooden cor- "ettes , carrying smooth bro batteries , Sllln , however , hall several tolerably efcent battle- shillS , and her gums were superior to ours Today time situatIon Is reversed. Our lii- diana , Massachusetts . Oregon , Maine , Texas , Puritamm . Monterey , Mlantonolah , Amimhitrite Terror and Monadnock-most or which , I miot l now In commission , could be made really for sea In a few weeks-have no worthy antagonists - onists In , the Spanish nan' E\'en the best of tIme Spanish ships could hardly hOle to hold her own against the New York , while the general ruin of Spanish cruisers could be matchell , one by ammo . with something every way superior In our service Under these conditons time result of a war between Spain and the United States could not be otherwise than humiiatng to the older countr ) ' . Indeed , It Is probable that .oia this side there would net hl much cTlange In our every day peace conditiomis. Congress would meet aud vote a sufficient supply of mone ) to carry on the war ; n few thousand men wO'Jld be tbrown Into Cuba ; the Spanish gunboats In the West Indies would bc quickly captured by superior naval force and that would be the end or the first act. Spain cOlld not malte an attack upon any United Slates Interest , for the slmplo reason that she could not get at us Ilr fleet . as specifcly descrIbed - scrIbed below , could not come to the American coast becuse I would be met by I stronger feet ; her cruisers could not attack our comnrnerce bEcause we ha\'en't enough In the foreign trade to make It worth while to attack I , anti our coastwise shlpplug would bo well protected by faster and stronger cruisers - ers than the Spanish could send hither , and besides - sides , when we hmad captured Cuba. Porto Rico and otlmer Spanish lmocsesslons in time West Indies , time Spanish ships would have dimculty itt getting coal. SpaImt would find herself deprived of her chief sources of revenue , a ithm no insane of getting them back. Time United Stales might timen sit still amid do mio mnore , collecting time revenues of Cuba and I'orto Rico to celia. burso us for our war expenditure. But if further punishmmmment for Spain shmould be deemed desirable , cur fleet of battlesimips wIth suItable arrangements for a sufilcient coal supply , could go to Cadix amid destroy the dockyard there , or dornolisim Ceuta and turn it over to the Moors. Our fast cruisers could wipe Spain's coinmrerce oft time ocean and bring her to such financial disaster as would make her only too glad to sue for peace. A Sensible Woman - 4 , She's putting the washboard S 'where it'll do some good , She has suffered with it long - 4 enough ; broken her back over it , rubbed the clothes to pieces on it , wasted half her time with it. ' But now she knows better , Now she's using Pearline-and when a woman uses Pearline , the only way to use the washboard - board is in the kitchen fire. There's no nore hard work , no more ruinous rubbing , but theres washing that's easy and economical and safe , . Millions ofwomen arejust as sensible as this one , Are you ? S end Peddlers , and some unscrupuloums grocers vihi tell you ' ' this is as good as " or I time same as i'earljne , " IT'S FALSE-Pearlinels newer peddled and if it Back your grocer sends you something in plac of l'earhine , do time lmonest tlmimig-cnd it t5ack , 3I3 JAMES PYLE , New Yock. I. "O\F \ "ITS just like finding $10"-- when you order your suit from a house like "Nicoll's" % 7 E study how to make the best possible garment for the least money. D ID lnow it was possible to get an Imported Scotch Cheviot Suit made to order for $20.00 ? Trousers at . . . , . . 5.00 ? Our fabrics represent the manufacturers - urers BEST thoughts for 'c $ b-$6$7-$8 $ $ $20425428-$30 $ $ For Trousers , For Suits. 4' 'Shoddy" and Nicoll al'e unacquainted. " SANPLES 207 BY South IhIAIL. _ _ 15th St. - ThEIR MEMORY STIRRED. A hiemaclactor of ( ) ( imerVemmre , BeltigNeecieui , giuhIi , Is aim ilamimi for Imuiy , A nation tlmretttene.t with war looks rmhoumt , for leathers , anti naturally timrmus its eyes to 'etemnns who hmmmvo fought welt In Previomme vOmitst. 130 hicOplo nttaeked Li ) ' ( lisoitSo nntt seeking ii remedy Inquire what imn ht'lpCtl thmmmi 1mm other yctarim. Tlm pm iii Is hmero ngmiImi , anti in eomo Places hiatt nesumeti is fommim more immnhignamit than ever. It will doiultiesmm vrowi about looking for victims until time settled wefttimer of spring. Now , it is a liautter of mnc'.hienl histor' that when grip vae hmt'v before It was quIccl' thrown 01 ! by lodhemt that unit lxem * stremmgtmemietl ) im' a stimmmmilaimt of tii highest order of excellence , 'l'o hasten complete recovery lifter time grip DtmITy' l'tiio Malt \Vlmiskey vns emnployetl. That thin mtnrno remnetl' is ilolimp the caine good work totlay flhPeai's frommm mu letter vritteii by Mr. Timommmas hiarrett of Seanamon , Kansas , viio says : ' 'l Invimig been continually cougimitmg , sviilm .paiiie rtmnnluig timm-oumgii may hotly. ahmtl being mimmable to work , I took t'o bottis of lmiiTy'mm l'uire MnltVhiielcey. . I mmmii not' nbl' to work. 'l'imo cough and soremmess omm mmmy chest are almost gone. " Time romigh , headache anti soremmess of untie- cle , foilowlimg thin grip , are ime'em' hmehfteei ii' locimi apithiention. hieing sigmis of general venkmies5 , hwy are thrown oft only when time wimole eymutemmm is tomieth anti timmiimimtteti , so that , miD organ does too much nor ton lIttle , , ,1 , , do thIs is time immls5ioim of lMift'y's Pure Malt Wlmim'ke' . Au who remnemmiber how it gave timoimt clear imemule , itcmmimmth stomnacims nimd a healthy cIrcum- iatlomi wimcn they were getting over time grip iii oilier sensomis ima'e stmpphied timenmeelvemu vItlm 1)tiffy's l'tmre Malt mmml immivet Poilmtetl out to tlmeir neighbors a wny to avoid misery amid loss of timime. Is imot time stmgges- tiomi _ worth listeimimig to ? 0Dc TO H SEARLES & SEARLES Chronic I ccirS crvons , 1iIvat DisiseS. ThthtitT.t % ENT IV StAll. . t2oii8flhtlttOU tree We euro Catarria , nil disoitson of the Nose , Throat , Ghost , Stomach , Liver , Blood , Skin and Kidney Disoaaos , P0- annie Weaknoasos , Lost Manhood , and ALL PRiVATE DISEASES OF MEN. wimc MN uum 'icrIsta TO 4F.RVOIB ! Debility or gxumatmtIoIm , W'a.ting'caimnetta. . hmm. vohUimtnr3' I.ose , . with hmmmiy Iecay 1mm ) Dung and huddle ngt'.t ; hacg oC vimim , vigor nmit veak- ent't prenmaturCil' In approaching ttiti mtge. All cielti readily to our new trecitmimemit for loss of 'itaI mo er. Cahl or niltires whim mttnmmmm ) for elrctmlnrs , free book antI receipts. r ° Soirlac 1410 Pitrmmammi 1) ) Sairloc d a Ut& & J Ull VL UJ1 'Jm.mmtimmt . Neb WI , L. DOUCLAS . . i5THfl5T. 5i.er 5 I1a FIT FOR AIlING , . COIDOVAN .1 , ! FRCHCH&ENAMCLLED CALF. 4$35 F1NECALF&KAuoARoa . t $3.iPPOUCE,3soLE , 40$2.wORiNGMt . - rxTRAriN"a " . 2.I7' BoYs'SdHDm.SHOE2. . $ , . -'SENDroRcATALOGUC . -d- . I ; ? . Over One Million People west time w. L. Douglas $3 & $4 Shoes All our shoes arc equally aatlsfactory They give the beet value for the money. ' They equal custom Shoes lii style amid fit. Thair wearing qualities are utm.urpaued. 4 The prlce arc uniform.stampcd on sole. Prom Si to $3saved over other nmnkea. 4 it your dealer cannot supply you wo n. Soidby A.W. RowmanCo. , N. 6thSt. c.J. Carison , 1218 N. 24th St w. w. Fisher , Parker and Leavenworth St. J.Newman , 424 S. 13th St 4 Kelley , Stieer & Co. . Farnam 4 and 5th St. T.S. Cressey , 2509 N St. , South Omaha. NEW SHORT LINE SPOKANE 3. FRANCIS , Gen'I Pass'r Agent , OMAHA , NEB. IIAIL\VAY \ rjj1j CA1ti ieave ; IIUIthINGTON & MC ) . ItlYflut. Arrivei Omaha Union icpot , lOtmm & Llaaorm His , Ommmm.mhmm. 1Ohtammm..hienver : 1xmtresm. . . . . . . . . . . . 5:40am : . 4:5pmmm.hiik. : lulls. Momfl. & iuget Hail. fix 4lepni : 4. : , . . . . . . . . . . . ) lxpi cmms. . . . . . . . . . . 4 ; ltpnm C45m.mmmNebrasks ; Lucah ( exccpt iunday.7:4mtnm ) : 8itanm..Lmnccimmm : LtituI ( ezceZtL flummdayhIZOanm ) : . 2:45pni. : . . , Fnst Mimmi ( ( or Immmeoln ) Daily. . . . ' . . IvhiICAbOIlUR1.iNGTOfi' & QTAmTIVC5 _ Ornaiiajtitmionlepot _ , lUtim & Mat.on bte.I Omimaha 44mnn..Chicano ; Vestibule , , . . , , , , , , 9:10am : 5:50am..Cimlcago lxI.re8s. . . . . . . . . . . 415pmn 7Wptmm. : .CIicago anti ift , Louts Express , 8:00am : 1l3lmtnm..aelmic ; Junction Local . , , , , . . UiOpma . . . , ' . ' . . , . ' , , , Fast Stall , , , . , . . , , , , , . , , : : eapmmm J.eavt's WLIWtUO , MIt. . & WI' , l'AULI/trrmvcs Omnaima Unlcn Depot. 10111 &Mason SLa , Omaha 4feopm..Chicago IJmnited. . . . . . . . . . . 5lOain : 11:10am. : . . .Chicago Ixprcss eeL Sun. ) . . . . 5:00pm : 1esIChilCAGO& NO1tTIIWEnT'NiArrives Omnatmaluimiom.Depot _ , 10th a Mason Hta.i Omaha hlOamn.T..Eastern : Express . , , . , , . , , . , 5:50pm : 4:00pm..Vcstmhuitd : Limited. . . . . . . . . tt:4amm : ( 6:15am..Mo. : Valley Local , . , . . , . . . , hO:3ipnm 1ttpni..Oimma : ha Cimicagoiipecla,5 ! ; Upmm ieam'ea CIIleItuO , nEi'ACWLC : , Arrives Onmalma Union 1)emtot , 10th & Masoim mit. , Omaha iAHT , lmtttiamim.Atiammtie Ealireas ( cx. . Siummdmiy ) , , 6Opmim ; : . . . . . . . . . . . . Izpremta. . . . . . . . . . . . OOoammt : 4Ummmi ; . . . , C htcugo Vcstiijuiod LimnItud. . . , 1:00mm : 11itmmmn.Oklaimoma Es , ( to t. II. cx , IUn.hi:3)pma ) : w'huT , Ttarn.OkhaImonma & Tezasits. ( cx , h4unhlZ0pnm : _ I :1Dmmim..ColoiDdo : Llmimhied. . . . . . . . . . 4OUpimm : 14oves C. , ST. 1' . , Id. & 0. ArrIves Omnaima Depot , 11th and Websterilta , Omnaima ts:20amn.Nemrmmska : I'asenger ( daliy ) . . , . SmiOmmni 4Zopmmm.iiioux : City Ixprew , ( vs. Hurm.lIr.tant ; 5iotmrn..iii. : l'aum L.tmnited..lOSOaum Leaves I li' , , Fi. & MO , VALLEV. lArrives Omimalmal Icpot , 11th un,1 Veimm.ter ilts. Omimatme. 2Iopmmi : , , . , . , F'mtttt Mail and izItrese . . , . . . 4:5mnmm : 2mumm.ex ; ( , iat. ) t'yo , Iz. ( ex. Imiomi. ) , , 45mpm 5Oamn. : . .Norfumk lIxpreas ( cx , HuazIay.h0:3Ozu : . .SLI'aul Express..lOSlsns : Lcave I K. 0 , , Irr , J , it C. hi.lArrivea Ommtaimtmjjmn i'pt , 10th k Mason dfls.i Ouuiima 'Iidi.Ic.ns : cmmy Immy gepresm. . . . . . 6:10pm : 5:4pnm.IC. : C. Night fix. via U. I' , Tramms. 6:50am : Loaves I MISSOIJICI I'ACIiIC. iderives Omtmammnjjeput. huh arid % Vebter Ht. J Qimmalma ; . . . . . . . . . . . , lmUtmi5 11xmmm-e , , , , , , . . , , , GOoamn : . : . . . . . . . . . . . I4muisi Express. . . . . . . . . . GOspnm : 1iGpnm..Nebram.Ita l.oai ( cx. Hun. ) . . . . . 8u0mm Leavtmi liiOL'X CITY & I'AChV'IU XTh Omnalimi lkgmot. 11th awl Webster 131g.Or.maha : , . . . . . . . . . . . l'aul Limited..ho 00aus LettviTThIOllX CITY at PACiFIC lAcrives .oimmalmainhdm ( IeiOt , 1kb & ? .Ias.m ta.J Ommmaka GOSaii : . , , . . Illoux City Passenger.hOii _ . . . . . . . . . . . . I'aui Ltimmlted..15:3pmmm Leaves UNION I'ACiO'Ii ( , lArrives OmmutmmaiUmmion itm.Ot. lOtim & Mamtomm liia.j Ommimaima. 10:00umm. : , . . . . . . . . . . Ktmmmmmey Ixiwesa. . . . . . . . . . . aT4hm 2Oomnmm..Overland : Vlycr. . . . . . . . . . . 5sOr.xn 2OJtrmihica.tce : it Hmromnetm'g 1x. : ( Cx , duo ) . 5:4pmmu : 7Supmn . . . . . . , . . , , i' urltmtm l.xmmrvss..10:51am : , . : . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1aIi. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4:10pm : Leaves I WMJA8II ItAlhWAY. IArrivi' OmmalmalUtmic.n Depot , 10th & Mason SmaI Umimatma $4mmn , , , , , , .hi t. Louis Cannon Ball . . , , , ,