Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, August 12, 1895, Page 5, Image 5

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    . ; '
. . .
- V
; i-
- - - - -
. . _ -2---- ; -z"
VV V 9
. , ' "
' "
\ ,
, V
V
' ' V - V
, I'
V i , V V V 'I -
, . ' > . . '
r r- ! _ _ : ' 'ITE OJ\rAIIA \ DAILY ; nEE : : MONDAY , AUGUST 12 , 1895. n
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- - - - - - - - - - - -
I r I Pulse o Westrn = ,
- - 4 1 @ 1- j
Worlc on the Pliget SOll11 . nn. Lake W ° a1t.
Ington Ihlp canal , wMeh In this tate hn
r.wket In Imllortnnco with the Nkoraru :
canal , hnl been mnl0 the luue of n Etat"
'ratpnfsn and Vha reeAYd " tie ntenton and ;
'
reconlcndnton of" United Stntes ! enaton ,
c'nre".ren and vermnent cnllnccr.1 , h:1
Ictunly COltolcel , la1 n Seattle IIpatlh
to the ean Irnlclllo ChronIcle. I II to bo
\llt ly Iutern caplal.t < , who "I Ijend
$ ; , OMIJ In I ! eor.truvt1nn .
. - . The J eject I l or ultol Imprtal p , both
( I"I n cumnlerclal on,1 , naval Etllpolnt , nnJ
for ) cat hp been t1Icis.4 b ) the people
of the couiitry.
The canal will run through n neck of ln,1
10.:2 : f'et whle , anti , will LI vxtndci1 ; , through
thc lat ! on 1llltonnl l'lrf feet , so that Its
length from deep water In the "oul1 to deep
'ater In the lake will ho :0,78 : feet , cr : ,9
rnIIo. 'fho ! hii ) lecl'l II l projected through
the high lands duo out of the natl It
1lunes , Intn 1 bill Dt glacial drift , where a
cut at :08,1 feet will be . required : then I
I Intel n valley , In which the lowcst point
,1 he ; 31 .4 feet : then Into another ' 11 ! rls.
Ing H.G I feet above the be.l . of the canal ,
. ' . al.1 . finally through a IloURh Into the lake.
td 'fhe canal will be eighty feet wide on the
1)\01 and twontY-llx feet deep nt low
water. Near glot hay , on the west , aleck
lock wi be built , 400 feet long and nfy
feet wille.
Lake \nshlngtrJ 11 twenty miles long
and of \\'llh varying from three to five
mies , anti II I from fifty to Faventy.fivo feet
deep. I les ( Itxteen feet above high title.
and with Is lumerOUi Inlets and quiet
wlter" , where the shlll of a nation might
rest In Iccurly , will afford an Ideal harbor
Naval mtn have looked upon It as one
of the mORt Ilerfect havens to be found In all
the world.
I I ; sal(1 ( that the canal , together with the
J a waterways to be built through the tide flats
at the mouth ot the Duwamlsh , will afford
a means by which the annual freshets can
bo controlled.
'fhe canal will open up a large area ot
country on the shores of the lake : It will
contribute 1 large and convenient acreage
for railroad yards antI manufactures ; I will
vastly Increase the deep water frontage of
the city ; It will supply n fresh water harbor
where 8hlps may ride In 11erfect safety
and unchlfed hy the rising and falling of thE
tide , and where they may become rid of the
destructive terldo : anti , all told , I will en-
dow the city with facilities for commerce
enjoyed , by few of the malt favored sea-
Ilolls nf the world
TllYING TO HAISE FLAX ,
t , Exlenlllll investigations of much Importance
, . to the commercial interests of the country ,
having In view the determination at the pos-
Ilbllty ot successfully growing lax for fiber
In this country , have been decllld upon by
the Agricultural department , says a Wash-
!
Inrton special to the Oakland ( Ca ! ) Tr'bune ! '
The work will bo begun at once anti will
cover this season , and doubtless will extenl
to next year. The experiments wi he can-
duct ell ( at last Farndale'aslm. , Agricultural
officials hel eve that this region Ie best
Idulltet to fax growing , In view or Its damp ,
lolst clmat ! alI } the best fax raised In
this country , practically all of which Is for
oil purposel and none for use lS fiber , Is said
to le raised In the vicinity or Puget sound ,
The Investigations will involve expanditures :
. Investgatons wlinvolvo e'I ndlures
aggregating at least $900,000 and will be In
charge of Dr. A. W. Trenton the agent of
# . the department there , who wilt be assisted
. 11Y au expert Delllan , who lisa bon In this
V country some time.
; The experiments are regarded al of great
Importance 111 will be watched with much
Interest by manufacturers The work wi
ho begun at once , and the flax , after being
grown and treated , will bo sent to fctorIes ,
SI.K CU.TUIE ASSUmm.
Mr. S. Ban In Intelligent . educated Japanese -
ese , who speaks English Quent ) has just ex-
hlllell In the ofce of the secretary of the
exposition a skein or silk raised on Portal11
Heights , lays the Portland Sun. Mr. Dan
bas a ranch of aleut sixty acres on the
heights near Mount Zion , anti three years
. . ago he began the experiment at cultivating
. ' . ] , ; t 11 ( , Ito was advised that the experiment
I , e wo1111 result Iii failure ; that this coutrry ant
" climate were not suitable , ant other reasons
were nlsh I1I. however , being a practical
man , ant having a knowledge of the culture
In Japan , three years ago he Imported 1,000
mulberry trees from the old country all set
tbtm out on two acres of his tand. The trees
tool root readily without the loss of one. Last
February Mr lan secured from Japan silk-
worm eggs sumclent to stock the trees , and
the result Is now that he bas a sample of
the finest silk that has ever been ralel lie
has demonstrated the fact that silk can be
raised In this country , and he Is anxious to
show It tn the people , especially skeptics , at
the exposiion , I Is certain that silk culture -
tlm can now be added to the other industries
of this vallY , and } there will be money In It .
The experiment tried In other portions - of
this state proved an entire failure from the
start , hut In tlle cases It was the fault of
V tilt climate , The climate of the lower Willamette -
? ' Inmete aplelrl to be suitable.
4 GmmN PETROLEUM.
WELL OF PETIOLIWI.
Veteran oilmen from ' foreign parts and
pIoneer borers of local repute have had theIr
Interest aroused by a discovery of vast Importance -
portance to the local oil industry , says a Los
Angles Ilspatch to the San Francisco Ex-
aminer. Joeph E. Cook , the well known
broker anti nianufscturers' agent , has struck
I so rich In his well on Metcal street ,
near Temple that hI I the envy of all the
, fortune hunters In this district. About six
weeks ago ho bought his well , which I near
the Strauss plant , and has ben boring with
varying success Iince. At the level at which
nil the other wells Iud run Into the full
few of petrolelm , Ito or no result was
achlevCl , But Cool resolved to "fM It
out on that line If It took eli summer. " 'and
cntnuell his boring In the next 201 feet
11 kinds at obstacles were encountered
Sam buckets fell Into the bore , casings
woul Ilck , the hole would become jammel
anti promllln ! indications would end In
nothln . Nine hundred feet down , In the
thlnl sand stratum encountered by the per-
alltent borer , what looked like quantities of
, liquId green paInt was brought up. A little
further and clearer quality came up In a
aledly anl , and InvestgJton discovered 1m-
V mealurable quantities behlml. The stuff
I was1ssayed and tested , anti was found to be
of a vastly different quality from the ordinary -
dlnar1 petroleum of commerce. The black
j Ietroleum , which Is on an asphalt base , II
_ _ 'care ' situ } of a gravity as high as fourteen
or ffteen , The flow from the Cook well la
' _ - green , on a heavy paramne hale , and I
. strng with Its quantity of kerosene haying -
Inl a twenty-ehht gravity. In fact , the
t borers who wash the black oil out of their
V hands with ordinary kerosene can take this
raw lroduct and wash themselves equally
clean Oil men claIm the discovery to be
. fully II Important al the first strIke made
her ! and Ierhaps even more eo , because I
Indicates an inexhaustible basis under the
. haul , anti deposits below the Ilresent depths
ao rich that measures will bo generally
taken to eeo who can strike It next. The
gauge of the bore will have to ho increased
to make the ' ,1ellth , and machinery all methods .
ods will bl re\'olutonlzed.
mcn IN } 'EE OOLD.
The richest gold strike ever made on the
Colorado river was that just made In the
l'10eho mines , 11s a Yuma special to the
Io/Ier News. Somme ; miner working about
twenty feet from the line of the Mars mine ,
In what has always been supposed to bl
. barren ground , began an open cut In the
great vein of quartzite which crosses ' the
foundation. On the surface no gold wu found
In the rock . At the depth of twenty Inches
they struck $5 to $8 ore , which at the end of
the distance of twenty felt increased to $15
to $ U. They then sunk a ahatt on the ore
At the depth of five feet the rock run $ S to
$25 , at ton feet from $25 to $50. and from
le\'enteen to twenty feet It runs from $50 to
-150 per ton In free gold ,
- The ore body a now opened Is twenty feet
wide of this rich ore , showing neither vhi .
At the bottom of the shaft the ore contnu-
ally grows richer a depth If i attained. The
cropplngs on the surface are 70 feet wile
ht and show for I long distance In length.
V When they enter the Mars line and party
V ) acres that mine they are more than 700 fet
.1'V % In wldlh. All the ground conrad by the
new find has been located , I II regarded by
V. . mhlng men to be the richest and mOlt 1m.
lortammt strike enr male In Southern Arizona
V ! , or along the Colorado river.
I.UCICY OnE 'IND.
Several important discoverIes 'Iavo been
made In Iorongo mlnng ! district lately , says a
r
I San lI'rnardlM dispatch to the San Frncisco I
I Chronicle . The greatest IXclemNlt prevails
lt the ; Ioronlo King mine of that district
because of a big strike , and the richest ore
yet uneonred 1 being hohttl from a lenl
that ha been running over :0 feet.
The new find Is a leven.foot Jedle of rich
ort From the frt thirty ton which were
milled at time mine Ulne ball at gold bullion
were m3Ie , , one ot which "ent $1,30. The
other two are abeut the Mme , so that the
frt thirty tons netted a total of $1,00 Judge
J. J. . Campbell , one at the owners , had an
a ! a ) male that eho\\cl S2i2 to the ton But
the fanples were from the lame body of ore
II ( lila just discovered.
Thil mine 11 10cate(1 about fifty miles nort' .
east . uf this city , and has on excellent supply
of witcr and wood.
ant
VETERANS STflh1E IT BCI
Two old.time miners on the Pacific slope ,
who are ale veterans of the Ilte war and Inmates .
mates Df the Soldiers' Iome , four tithes south
of this cIty , have been putting In some of
theIr leisure time respecting for gold In the
mountains north of there , with the result of
finding some fob looking quartz , assaying
more than $100 to the ton , says a Santa Ion-
lea dispatch to the San 'ranclseo Call , They
began sinking oo . the ledge , whch was a well-
defined cropping , a year or more ago , and
from time to time relumed work untIl they
have atained a depth of thirty feet , at which
depth the new are was fount\ The are body .
Is about Ilx Inches In wIHh ! and Is runnlug
perpendicular with the walls . which are lme
and porphry. The ore Is black and whie
) with pyrites of iron They
spar , Intenperslwith \ p'rles
have also put I to the telt at pan and mortar
and sope beautiful colon were obtained ,
which were visible to the nake,1 , ee. There
)
I a great deal of float Iluartz In the gorge
below Wand I wag by this means that the or
was traced to its origin The new find has
stimulated the discoverer to continue work
ae rapidly as possible , and to this end they
are putting up a cabin at n spring In the
vIcinity of the claim anti hereafter will camp
on the ground. For many years prospecting
In these mountains has been indulged In , but
with no results like the present , anti many
have gone out to see the new discovery and
look for mor" .ee
OIL IN TIlE FOOTHILLS.
A company Is beLg forled here for the
purpose of developing the rich oil beds believed -
le\'ell to underly the foothill land In the
Coast Range , owned by Selma people , lays
a Selma dispatch to the San Francisco
Call. Near Coalinga . In the extreme southwestern .
western part of Freanto county , A. Bnrlcou , a
merchant , and Mien lcWhorler . , a Methodist
evangelst and newspaper man , who Is known
throughout the state In connection \ with the
Sunset Irrigation district , own lanl , In the
footimills. A streak of oIl rock crops out on
thIs land , I hnl been prospected wih pick
and shovel , and such surface work as could
be tone with the most prlmllvo tel In
this way A. Barlcau has eeured many gallons
of lubricating oil , which cOles from nature's
laboratory all ready for use. Many well
known farmers In this vlcry have used
It In the past season on their machinery , and
pronounce It superior to the commercial ar-
tide. The petroleum , which hal heen secured -
cured In the same primitve way , Is black
and odorous , but burs well , and could be
made available for fuel without rennlng. A
sample has been sent to the east to be tested
In the lame vicinity natural gas has been
dlseo\'ered A jet In a fissure by the road-
sde ! accidetaly lighted hy a smoker's
match , burned for days , a weIrd torch In n
lonely and unfrequented reglon.Captaln liar-
rett . Captain McCurg and W. D Lagrange ,
nit of whom have hail experience In oil development -
velopment In the aU rellons of Ohio , recently
visited the Barlcau land and were more
viied
than satisfied with the prospect. The om-
pony now being formed Includes thee gentlemen -
tlemen , together with other experts ali cap-
italists. A Plant will be procured and two
or three experimental wells sunk within a
short time.
tmc.KILLED
KILLED BY A BRAI1.
\Vord was recently received of an unknown
man being ked by a bear at Berner's. h,1)
The , man wag James leDonahl , an old-time
miner and prolpoctor of Juneau , says the
Juneau Mining Heeord , The story goes that
while he and William PrIor were out pr03-
pectiimg the lay upon which the death occurred -
curred they gave two Indian boys the rifle
whIch they had with them to go imp al the
mountain sl1e to hunt for mountall sheep ,
Soon after the Indians had left McDonald and
PrIor saw three hears , Olre old and two ypar-
hug cubs , coming after them at full speed
The men started to run , hut IcDonal , who
saw at onco. that his fate was certain. told
Prior , who was In advance. not to walt for
him , hut to save his own life. The large
bear soon overtook McDonald As she was
about to come Ipon' him he turned anti raised
a prospecting pick to strike , but the bear
with one blow from her paw sent him whirl-
log In the aIr. No sO'ler done than she
started In hot pursuIt of Prior. Prior was
headed for a deep gulch , and upon reaching I
he fell over a clump of buslo- , . landed on the
snow and shot down the moult11u side like
an arrow. When he reached the Inlch the
bear was but a few feet from him but here
she seemed to have lost all track of him onll
turned back to finish the woundel , man , anti
before leaving him she saw that life was
! leIS
extinct. The Indians were far up the moun-
taL sIde and saw McDonald meel his fate ,
but were unable to render any aslslance ,
Prl.r landed at the bottom of the gulch not
a Ito bruIsed , but feeling rather satisfied
with hIs unpleasant ride. The bear soon left
and Prior and the Indians brought the remains -
mains of the dead man to Juneau , where he
was buried. James McDonald was born In
Nova Scotia In 18H. and came to Alaska
from Colorado In 1886 , from which time he
has been engaged In mining and prospectng ,
lIe served In the late war , and was a member -
ber of the Grand Army of the Itepubllc.
.
NEDRASKA.
Red Wllow county claims to have 8,000
acre of alfalfa this season ,
Thurston county h organizing an agrlcul
tural socIety and will have a fair.
Emerson will have a new Methodist church ,
to be built of brick and to cost $2,000.
Thresher at work In the vicinity of Wake-
field report that wheat Is averaging twenty-
five bushel per acre.
Wa'yne II to have a new enterprise In th
shape of a shirt factory to be operated by
E. C. Cole ' , recently of Omaha.
The two days' reunion of the old soldiers
at Hooper was a great success. General
Thayer was one of the aUractions.
G. G. Ialer' < reslderf2 , three miles from
Wlnllde , was entirely destroyed by fire dur-
log the temporary absence of the occupants ,
The directors of the Cuser county fair
hove decIded to permit no political Ipeeches
on the fall grounds during the annual ehow
The seml-annunl statement of the treasurer
or Plate county shows the county has $37-
693 cash on hand and only $11,265 In outstanding -
standing warrants. ,
The railroad company has eomplele a new
sidetrack at Ponder In order to make room
for the grain cars that will be needed to haul
out Thurstol county's cropl. '
Mr . Duel a farmer near Meadow Grove ,
threshed 230 bushels of barley from two and
a half acres of land , the grain being machine
measured and the land lurveyed.
Fred Schram , a 14-year-old Columbus boy ,
climbed onto a frleKht traIn switching about
the yards for a ride. In Jumping off be was '
thrown under the wheels and kied ,
I'ostmaster Kerns of Tekamah will resign
In order to enter the newspaper business lie
has , In company with Chales Conger . , pur- ;
chased a newspaper at Casper , Wyo .
Norfolk's military band II figuring on going
to Boston with the Nebraska Knights Tern-
plar. Incidentally , twenty or thirty other
bands In the state are hoping to make the
same trip
Sparks from a locomotve let fire to Joseph
Oraham's fell of shocked oats near North
lend and Ie now has to guess how bIg the
yield would have been had the grain not been
deltroyed.
The 3-yen-old son of Mr. and Mrl Marshall .
shall was lost In the sand his of Frontier
county for twenty.four hours . The little one
was found nearly dead from heat and thirst ,
having wandered seven mmillee .
The L'ons Mirror figures the vahle of
Burt County's crop something like this :
"Wheat , $33SGSS : oats , $387,600 : corn $900,000 :
hay of all kintis , $2 OOOO : potatoes , fruit etc. ,
$50,00. This makes a total of ,366,188 ,
and doe not Include hogs , cattle , poultry ,
eggs or butter . Some Idea Cf the agricultural
importance -f Burt county may be gained
when It I known that I & this year
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
.
1112.000 acres at corn , 42:3 acres of wheat
T.ti,000 Acres 01 oats and 60,000 acres of hay
lands
I. E . Ash II the fret Custer county farmer
to pay for the cecil furnlbe , ) him lat spring
Iy the Broken Bow Relief association. lie
wa loanell ffEen bus'.ie : , anti from the seed
he raised 200 bushels of fine \h at.
; [ rs. Anna DeLarlo of Fremont received
word that her brother , Charles Iramel , had
been killed at Laramnie'yo. . lie was at
work In a mine anti . a heav hoisting
bucket crush'td him , death being Inltantan'
eOUA.
, " 'arme. In time vicinIty ot Table Hcck have
contracted to cultivate 2,000 acres of sugar
bletl next year , and the citizens of that lmmms-
tng town have formed a Joint stock company
and subscribed $ ,000 In cash toward a sugar
factory
LOUI City people are enthusiastic over the
! \ \ Ilch hieing constructed hy the Sherman
County Irrigation company. The ditch tpa
the Middle Loup river near Arcadia and Is
thlrtY'llx miles long. I will Irrigate 30,000
acres ot rich bottom land ,
John Ihrig , a Beaver City man , Move Into
a shoal ot water at the head of the mill race
to water his team The hores , plunged Into
a washout twelve feet deep and lung was
nearly drowned ( before he could extrIcate him-
self from beneath hIs buggy
Three tramps broke Into a Beaver City
store Their identity was establshet and a
pOIse of citizens gave chase. The tramps
took refuge In the corn fields , and the corn
stood so thick and high that they hail ' no dim-
culty II secreting themselves.
North Ilend has had another baptism ot
fire. The flames started In ! er per's haress
shop , anti before they were Extnulshed
ICruz3's new grocery store and Mrs. Scott's
millinery store were entirely destroyed The
total loss foots up to about $8,000.
Oscar Brown , a man 60 years ohl , Is under
arrest at Fremont for trying to make a crimInal -
Inal osu : al Clar Dalstrom , a little girl j
y\at old The child Is an orphan The court
offered to release Irown on $300 bal , but the
sentiment against hIm was S ( slong that
no one would go ' 11s bond.
Work has been commenced on a new grain
elevator at Wakeneld The Mlsnlc lodge
has purchased a lot and will at , nce erect a
two-story lodge building , a new hotel Is to lie
Hectell rllht away , and new grain Is being
shipped out of time town at the rate of a car-
load field a day. Times are pety god II Wake-
IOVA.
The pontoon hrlge at Sioux City Is prac-
tc31y completed.
The Onslow Old Follows are building a
two-story brick hal ,
An electric Ilhtng plant Is one of thc
probablles ! for Ioclford ,
Aim artesian well Is beIng sunk at the Fort
Madison state penitentiary.
Work on Indlanola's new system of water
\'ork
works Is to he commenced at alce ,
Fort DJdge Is to have : a Catholic academy ,
to be conducted by the Sllteu of Iercy.
: Ir. and Mrs. Edward erlvan were serLo
ously ton. Injured In a runaway accIdent at Cliii-
Three well known citizens or Waterloo have
been fined for shootng prairie chickens out
of leason.
The Women's Bicycle club of Mason City
has seventy-eIght members , and they all
wear bloomcr :
Good prOrel Is being made In the CJn-
structon of the new electrIc street railway
at Fort Malson ,
The contract for the now $80,000 Marion
county court house at Kuoxvlo has been let
to a Chicago man.
Time college at Iulboldt Is to b reopened
with ten regular instructors. I has been
closell for some time.
tme.
John Beecher of Burlington was ked
hy a traIn while crossng ! the track on his
way home from work
Twenty-five hundred old soldiers and their
fSmlles hell a monster picnic at Greenwood
park , near Des Moine
GrInnel has Just laid the eJrner stone of
a now Methodist Episcopal church , to COt
when completed 30000.
Jmlge Orlnler of the supreme court Is to
bo married scan , the brIde being the daughter
of Judge GIven of Des loln s.
Clinton People are all worked up because
Genevle\'o Flood , an emlloyo In a millinery
store , has married a Ch naman.
Calhoun county has a IJre3cher who rles :
I a bicycle , or rther , dll ride until sam
thief In the night rode It away.
Isaac H. McQuown , GO years old , and a
highly respecleJ farmer near Burlington , was
gored to death by a vicious bull.
Wlum P. Bares , a prominent citizen of
Dubuque. died at the age of 7 lIe hal
been connned to hs bed five years.
The deadlock In the Illanola school board
over the choice of a superintendent still con-
tinues. Over 100 ballots have ben taken
with no resuls , .
Prc Jones cashier of the Merchants' Na-
tonal bank at Clinton , was nearly alphyxl-
ate,1 , by a gas heater In his bath room. I
took two hours to resuscitate him
Charles Phillips , a Rock Island railroad
conductor , went to a hal game at Trenton
and yelled so enthusiasticaly for the winning
club that he ruptured a blood vessel and
diet
dlelt.Mu.
Mu. C n. While of lJnloy was thrown
from a carriage and bad her scalp torn com-
plelely from her heal , She L Itll living ,
hut the physIcians have but little hopes of
her reco\'ery.
Miss Emma Hanson , living near Malone ,
went to a dance Saturday night and danced
over Sunday. She was sleze(1 wLth heat disease -
ease the next day as the result of over
exorton ! and dIed
Ell Clolkrey , an IS-year-old boy al Tama ,
llug ! through the basement of the Methodist
Episcopal church until he uncovered the cor-
nor atone Then he chIseled through to the
tin receptacle and stole the trinkets that had
been deposited there when the stone was ,
laid. He put In several llays' hard work
ali sold the stuff for 6 cents
The census returns are revealing a number
of centenarians now living In Iowa. Among
these discovered the past week are Breaker
Ford of Otumwa , 102 years old : Nancy
Crulhan of Monroe county , 100 yean old ,
and William Kennedy of Monroe county , 100
year old. All claim to be enjoying good
health. The first named Is a negro preacher ,
who can neither read nor write. The later
two are Irish Cathelics.
COLORADO ,
A new gold strike has been made In the
Batty near Idaho Springs. The smeler re-
turns show $35 to the ton.
A Detroit syndicate Is about to commence
the construction of a $100,000 chlorination
plant In California gulch near Ward
The Oold Standard mine In the Cripple
Creek district Is tq be driven another 250
feet. I Is now 70 feet In the mountins ,
At the depth of over 10 feet a big veIn of
$100 are was opened up In the Champion , enRich
Rich hi , on Alpine creek , about four miles
from Duncan camp
In the Smuggler mIn at Aspen , 90 feet
below the surface , one pump Is installed
which weighs 14 tens , cost $5,001 , and
throw ! to the surface 850 gallons of water
per mInute
The Grand View management hal struck
two feet 0 $300 gold smelting ore In the
Great Western , whIch they are working
under lease. The ore Is laid to be almost
solid copper ,
The LIncoln Placer company , situated on
the welt side of Olett , has nearly completed -
pleted the dam for water storage and contemplates -
templates running a fume from Oil creek to
obtain water lupply.
Placer dirt running l high al HI to the
ton has ben uncovered In the vicinity of
Second street at Victor. A 'Iand-rocker has
been called Into requisiton and the ground I
will be thoroughly prospected. I
luerfano county Is attracting conllderable
attention on account of too recent important I
and extensive discovery of tin ore nlat coma-
cOi-
talnl a greater percentage of tin than any
yet discovered In the United States.
Sam Hubbsrd , Jr" , of Prescott brought some
ore from a recent strike In the Queen mLe
on Spruce mountain for assay. At a depth
of thirty. two feet a drift was started , and In
'the nut ten feet a vein of aulphuret are
W& encountered Samples were taken from
I , and the assay ShoWS $45 to the Ion In
glt1. The vein wIll bo followed In the hI
lof that I will g6 w richer . 8 depth . at-
. '
tainemi "J" "
The hahn's peak tclement I spreading
and a number of'rolpcetnl Illrtol have
left I.03d\'llo for til r\lv eabana e camp. ard
other pates are being ftell omit to eXllloro
for silver bonanzas H f : the r , GO order .
Reports Iho that ' IMlhoppcr RIe doing
much damage smear , UIlele1. Whie sOIO of
the farmers are dOln5thelr most ( to kill them
with bran mlxelf \ \ lth { paris green . their
nehhbcrs are laklnk no effort to suppress
time evil . .
evi. I " t.
Swan Anloron , rcpqrts th\ find , of a rich
mine about three a/II / onc-hll Iles lrrtheat
of Victor The ole h polng at a depth of
)
three ftet. Expetts' say t Is one of the
brightest pro ( ec\ \ struck In the district In
the past ) 'e3.
A large holy of I/gh 'mle ( arc was uncver d
In the ( bid Stanlrll : property , at Ilne Creek ,
In the bottom of the nlnet-tot shaft , ruim-
nlng from $200 to $300 , and has practically
dlonltrate,1 the fact that ninety to 100
feet will put other mInce II good lY.
News ha reached this tity of a very Important -
portant strike In the Waler Scot property ,
In the , \lcante district , says the l.eadvle
llcrald-leimmocrat. The are , I Ii stated , will
average $65 per lon , anti there Is a breast
of It nine feet wide opened up. I this be
true I Is the malt Important strike made :
In recent years In that district
01 Antelqle creek the nh' ( \scover ) ' of
gold Is attracting large crowds of lr08Pcct-
ors , CJlpS arc eslablshed amI tovnsite' -
\'eed , anti altogetlmer. flOI the assays ob- I
talne,1 , frol the surface rock , there Is god
reason to believe that tluLm . too , I going
to make another of the now Isn ) ' gold calps
of Colorado , pays the Colorado Sllrlngs News
In fact , the Greenhorn 10untln. 10le particularly -
tcularly on the \\sl sle ! , has never been
Iione justice to by the lrOallector ; the f rma-
ton that exist hmere If found In the west-
er Ilnlng region , would long ago have
been prOslete1
TIlE DAIOTAS
The postolilco at Orand View has beep discontinued -
continued al11 mal for that point will h
lent to Hillside ,
The tenth annlal convention of the North
Dakota pharmac"utsts convened at Fargo
last week anti olcers for the ensuing year
were electe ,
The city counci at Pierre , finding the
preslure of time water lalns only hal the
requlremlnt of the contract , passed a resolu-
ton vlrtlaly annulling the sanme.
The tournalent of the Bnck Ills Fire-
omen's association , to bo hell last week at
Rapid City , was declorell off on account of
dlsareement In the hoard of control , An-
other tournament Is to be inaugurated In its
11laco.
The secretary of the Interior ; has rendered
a decision which Practically gives time famous
Squatelvlo tract to the city at Aberdeen ,
belug adverse to all other climants , There
Is a geleral teelng that ths ! long drawn nutcase
case Is , to \ appearances , drawllg rally
to a close The lalll Is very vallable , as I
lies wihin the city limits , all a large por-
ton of I will be devoted to a public park.
Iosa Verona De Pdro Bare Is the long
Spanish name which , a hallmro brunette
toll Judge McConnell of Fargo was hers
when site appled for anJ \\'IS granted a
.lvorce time other la ) ' . leI former hOle was
In havana . Cuba , where II 188 she msrrlej
the wealthy Cuban 1lanter. , Juan De Pedro
.
laro , Fortune smiled on the pair and they
traveled extensively II France , Switzerland
and other countries , when , It Is aleeJ In
the compl31nt , Juan deserted time 111alntf two
years ago for mymotlmqr : Oman's wIfe There
were two children , the hsue nf the marriage
One II In the pdstsM.n of the father , an'
the , other Is ben ! cducte,1 In New Yorlt.
WYDtING.
A pOtomce Is labot to bo Itablshd at
Smith's ranch on the upper lug Luamh
for the accommOlloh ot the people of th3
vicinity. t .
I Is ported . lCt a. vein of coal ever foul
feet In w.tlh ha . bejn struck at sh3f No
ber"
2 al the Fort I Saunders reservation hear
l.aalte at a dlJlth 1f sixty feet Time eoai
I said to be of One ' quality .
A big strike was Vlm.0t15 ) by tIme 1 nnsyl'all
:1.lng COllny at'sellio In a new sham :
which It was mtintthg , an eighteen inch
vein of tree milling I gold ore being struck
that runs upwalt ! . ll $ OP per Ion .
A colony of abn hlrty ( Germans arc ex ,
poctemi to arrive so i h at BOnanza from Col
ondo , Time ) ' will settle 01 the north enl , o !
time Big Colorado flat , along time lug horn ,
where there are sveral lute sections of fin'
land yet unclahn
Time Uniotm Paclnc has 23,000 acres or coa'
land In Sweltwater 10Ulty , which It returnee
for' asessmelt at 1i cents p'r 3cre The !
county commls loners got after the company
and raised the land to' $5 per acre , making t
change from $3,450 to $ iil,000.
3. F. Stanley will erect a large stola ! (
resrolr near Casper which will cover fort )
acres. The dam across the ravine will he
1,200 feet long , fcrty-elht feet wide at the
bas anti Ieventeen feet high The water
stored II this reservoir comes down South
Casper creek and wilt he sulclent to irrigate -
rlJte several tholfnd acres.
The richest gold find In the 80lth Pass
mining district \s been made hy Messrs
Schulz , Davies and Swales , who are operating
a lasso I 01 the Franklin m'ne , They coot-
mence(1 to drift at a depth of sixty feet , Rnd
had ! enl hut ' a few feet when they came In
a vein of rock covered with gold Sixty pounds
of the rock was pounded alI , twelve pounds
of amalam , which will retort half , mallnl
the rock worth $43,200 a ton. The vein b i
six to eight Inches wide
OREGON
I II rumorell that Astoria cannerymen
wi huld another cannery - on Gray's har-
bor this fal
I II expected that 7,000 hores will he
shl\ped from Arlington this fall to time Llnn-
ton slaughter honse
- Aarly of copper miners has heen inspecting -
slleetng a copper mlno on Dear creek , In
Walowa county that Is said to be quite
rich.
rich.There Is a fig tree growing In g. Weide-
man'l yard , which , though ommly three years
old ! , had on It this year 277 white figs , says
the Guard , of I ugene.
In some of time gardens of Lane county ,
says the Eugehme Ouarl , tobacco has proved
a suecenful crop , being more generally raised
In the Nehalem couimty. -
S. II. Friendly shlppC a carload of cal-
cara from Eugene to Phiadelphia , contain.
log 28,000 pounds "hls Is the larlcst fhll-
meat of cascara hark east from thll state
ever made , says the neglster.
John Turner , who II mlnlnl on the creelc
abut a mile above Canon City , lucked up a
$5 mmugget thl other day , contaIning plenty
of white quarlz. The nugget was worn
smoolh as though It hal drifted for some
time. _
The first tunnel at the Santam mines
has been run In forty feet. and free goh1 ore
has been strwck Considerable activity II
apparent In the Santam region , and the his
are being thoroughly prospected for new
claims V .
The Oregon Ialway and Navigation com-
party II mining good twork In Improving the
\any ! !
road near aranmts ( ' , A force at mpn has
been busy for sOlne'tlme blasting away the
rock for the purpose/uf doIng away wIth time
curve near that mlace' , .
The SprlngnehlCLQwel ] mal route has 8
woman mal carrler'he Is a plucky woman ,
and mounts her ' se at 6 o'clock In the
morning , carring mnl a distance of over
twenty miles and-back again the lame tiay
She carries the man only on days that the
Kitson Spring stlK'does ' not run.
The latest freaks tn nature that are now
on exhibition In HOI burK are two malformed
plgl. They hav" no' hind legs at all , nor
rutliments of , "Thelr bodies
rulments hlpl boles taper off
to a sort of polntt ftl whIch the tail elongates -
gates like wel.forntU' ' ' pigs : otherwise , they
lok like other "oks 'Qf the porcine family.
A hen's nest ' founll )
'a , on Douglas &
Levlner's farm ' , ) above Springfield . which
contained 1,012'egg 1 About one-hal of the
eggs were good , and the remainder spoiled ,
The nest was fount u""r a barn which
was built five yean ago , anti ) I Is supposed
that the hens have been laying there ever
elnce.
WAShINGTON ,
From 225,000 to 250,000 feet of logs are
dumped Into the boom st Shelton daily .
I Is eilmatel } that the forest fires In
Whatcom county have burned over 60,01-
001 feet of timber , destroying about nne-
fifth of it.
The damag done by the fire on time Austin
track , near South lay , 18 estimated at 6,00-
000 feet of cedar and 30,010,0 of fir. For
three-llunter at a mie from the lake the
forest II perfectly clear of underbrush and all
debris I Is thought that 150,000,000 feet of ,
fr baa been 10 burned a to necessitate log- I
.
ging within two years. A present Prices this
woul amount to a forced marketing of f tint.
bar worth on Delngham bay $ iSO,000.
The Yakima river a Elenlhurgh 18 running
at low ebb , The editor ot time Capital says
I II lower at this time than 'l any Ilmla )
Period for ' .
twenty-three ) 'tat.
The women ot OII\la are taking heM of
the work of establishing nn Ol'mpll branch
of the State Ce-operative society , a society
)
to encourage hOle Indultrlu ,
A large forest lire II raging near South
flay , hakeVimntcotmm , antI 1 eon.lllerable
amount valuable tmber Is being destroyed .
)
No other damlge Is roportel ,
) lrvetln In \ 'aila'ahla has ) ) roe tIC1
far enough for the farmers to conchilo that
the crop this year will he little , If any , less ;
than last year , and that more will be sllppO ,
out because of better prices. '
The Lincoln County Tlles Is Inter ncII' '
that a colony of United , Brethern rrum time ;
state ot Ohio hal determined to como to ;
I.lncoln county , anti Is arranging to purchase !
about 10,000 acres ot land In the neighbor- i
hood of : lon.lo\'I. ; I
The Sllokane Times says that a well known
cattle buyer was rescued hy I troop of United !
Slate cavalry , at Fort Spokane , Just IS a
crowd or Indians wits pre\3rln ! to string hll I
UI to a tre ! The Indians chlnll the men h.ld ' '
outraged the 2-year-old J'rl ' of ( the tribe.
Mount Adams , ! , In this state , Is 12t02 feet i
high , according to figures bssell on calcumia' ,
tons male by Prof 1'dgJr ; lcCure ot the I
University of Oregon , who carried 1 mimer- I
curial barometer to the IUlllt July 10 , with ;
the heliographic party From the figures i
t.ken at th's 1)18cl Portanl ami Eugene , '
Ore" , he finds the above result as a mean. ;
heretofore the mountain has . been thought to i
leretofcre
'
be only a little more than IOOO feet , but tho'
new figures make ; I 19 reel hlrher than
Iount Hood , Oregon : .
IISCm.I.ANIOUS : ,
The survey for the coast line of the Southern -
era Pacifc has been comilletld to Blmwooll
F' , A. Smih of Santa Ana , Cal , has n sunflower . ,
fewer stalk that Is fourteen ant one-hal ,
feet high anti Is "stl a-growing. "
The Maricopa & Phoenix railroad will reach
Mesa , A. T" , In six weeks GroU11 has been
hrolen at Ttmmmpe for the new extension
Tun\e
-I Is an opeim secret ) that the San Jose
o\en ecret
hoard of Trade has olere,1 Colonel Jones
a subsidy to extend the Monterey & Fresno
railroad to the Garden Ciy , The road will
bi connected at Fresno with the Vule ) '
rout , - , . , - - .
Time Southern CaliFornia Pacling company
of Los Anleles will limit UII this season
about GOOOO case of canned fruit. The
Ilacll will comprise apricots , hears , \ellChls ,
blackberrIes , strawberries , raspberries and
iluins. ,
A farmer near ; Iar'svle , Cal" , I author-
fly for. the statement that every day he I
cblget to feed from four to six tramp I
he refuses them they threaten to bur his
ltroierty. The river banks are IneJ , with
them , amid their camps plainly show that
chickens are stolen ant cooked almost Ilaly ,
A new woman Is at work In the mountaln
of Tulare county , sas the TulJro Heglsler.
Site Is running an engine for 1 bhake mi
above Mountain home. She I the practical
manager of the outfit , and when the machlne
gees wrorg she dltets the riIring , She h s
her husband and two somali boys at work
and keeps things mavin/
The English syndIcate that recenty pur-
chasetl for $20,000 the Iron Mountain mines ,
the rlche gold , silver anti copper mlnO In
this part of the stat , located nine miles
norlh or Shasta , Cal , will soon hegln to erect
a smelter and other works at the foot of the
mountain , two mUes from town They will
also loon begin grading for a railroad from
the mine to the works .
Two men who have been prospecting on
Trinity mountain for-the past month fouul
a pocket.V a few lays age near the foot of
the mlunlaln , about midway between Shasta
and Trnity ! Center , which contained $11,200
In gold dust. . Some of the old pioneers 1\'ln.
here believe . this gold to have been buried
hy robbers who In early days robbed Wol !
Fargo & Co.s pack trains quite flcqnenty
In the nehhbcrhoJd of this ilud .
\Vondpcckers In time mountains of southern
CJlorla do cabinet work that cannot be
equaled hy time Inmost skilled or Ulan. The
crafy birds gather acers , drill holes In the
trnnka of pIne trees , into which they nt the
nuts so closely all snugly that squirrels are
Inabl 10 pull them out. I I discovered
that , after being lntmpiammted . a worm appears
in the ICOII , mind It Is for the purpose of
getting I this worm later on that time crafty
bird stores away acorns In this unique
ma nm her.
The Tucson Star gives the folowIng to
illustrate the troubles of the slack raiser :
One frm of stockmen , not so very 10ngalO ,
unk a wel anti ' made other Ilrepartons
antI then put out some 2.000 head of stock
Recently they hunled UJ all the cattle to
he found that bore their brand , and alhough
they had sold nnne yet , about 400 head
was all that could be got together. Another
man could find but ninety-two out of 1,500.
I Is said that the dll.relatons of the
l'apagoes will account for much of the mlls-
Ing stock ,
The California cotton mils In East Oak-
land ha\'e under consideration a move to
Japan on the other sIde of the Pacfc , The
company of local capitalists behind the cln-
cern was organized In 1883 with a capital
at $600,000. and has given omplo'mont to al
many a 300 boY and girls at a tme , hit
owing to the future possibility of having to
compete with prison labor antI the set-back
given the industry of twine , rope and are
bag manufacture , time works have no outlook ,
anl In casting about to see what could be
done the Japan scheme was broached to the
stockholders
.
' 0 Cl.u.\ tim e M yst ' '
Effectually I yet gently , when costve or hl-
lemma , or when the blood Is Impur or sluggish -
glsh , to permanenty cure habitual constl-
const-
Illon , to awaken the kidneys and liver to
a healhy activity , wlhont Irritating or weak-
nlng them , to dispel headaches , colds or
fevers use Syrup of Figs ,
. -
ft I'I I'I'IG : 'JOIS . AmIiIOAD .
l.ull ( Co H"Id , 'Jul.llJ I I I.ook le
11m'it'immii Voiimeit's luehh'J Grolnd ,
The ) tel a good story on a party of excursIonists -
cursIonists who went 01 a personally eon-
Iucted tour to Mexico last winter , says the
WashIngton Post. The party was In charge
of Charles Gates of Toledo 0" , but Includl
promlnont people from other cities. They
traveled In a special train , which stopped
at all the interesting places en route long
enough to give the excursionists ample tune
to lee the sights , ant sometimes they saw
some not down on the hiiis. This story
concers one of them They stopped at a
small town near the Mexican frontier-name
omnitteti , lest after this tale Is printed excursionists -
sionists should swarm to see I. While
strolling along a little stream half a dozen
or the male members of the party care
across an Inclosure wih the legend : "Uath-
log for ladies-Do not look. "
No more was necessary. They were out to
see the sights. and this sIgn was sumcllnt
The fence was not too high to climb , anti
when a greaser policeman happened along
that \a ) ' he found six Itah } and supposeulmy
respectable heads of families hanging UHr
that fence , gazing with all the strength of
" Ilr dozen eyes Accordingly , he Iath.red
them In and escorted them dOIn to the little
adobe Jai , where they were lockel Lp to
awaIt bal" As the time for the tra'n ' to depart -
part Bllproached the wives of time six .
tll pr''J- '
en began to look about for their worse
halves Then a Mexican official caln to
tl.e traIn and notified them of the troulle ,
Mr. Gates , who had luckily stayed wIth he
train , at once went to the rescue. Flra . 1.1
Interviewed the prIsoners , and then he w/.r.t
before the local alcalde to plead ! for thmxmi.
Luckily , that official spoke Eliglsl and aloe :
enjoyed a jole.
"Tlics \ men are all American rentel n' "
Ulwl Mr. Oatel. "Highly respectable c'tl- '
iens of sonie of our largest conmnmunitlja , "
"Well , timey should not imave looked over
the fence ; they saw the sign , "
"I am convinced they did not see the aig.m , "
Insisted Mr. Gates.
"Why ? " inquired the alcaide.
"Because there were half a dozen moore In
the party , and if they had seen that sign all
would have been there. "
"Release the lirisoners. " said time alcalde ,
while his sides shook with laugimter.
Site 1)1,1 Not W'tmimt mm loclur ,
J.v , Johnson , editor of time National
Traveler , Chicago , says : " % 'ben at the Iowa
State fair last fall my wife was taken vhs-
lently ill with cholera morbus. I asked ,
'Shall I go for a doctor ? ' 'No , ' ahmo said.
'Go for Chamberlain's Colic , Cholera and
Diarrhoea remedy. ' I followed Instructions.
The result was that in twenty-four hours
my wife was about again and enjoyed the
fair. "
-----------------V--- :1 : 'V
I _ - w- -
. .
V. V V
_ : fl
y.&S V V [
for Infanta and Children.
HflTYyenrs' observation of' CnstoriauJtheatrcn _ n
I rnl111on ot'aescnmmjmx'nmttilstnRpeaknflt xvlthnnt
Itisnnquntitlonnblythobomitreniomly for Infants nucl Chtlclro
timeworlilhnse'rerczmnvn.1tfshmarnmJei _ , , Clmildrculllsn It. It
glvnsthnntlionlthiItmylhl mmn'rntmeirIve. , lit It Mothers linen
uiornothingwlmtohlu ssbsn1utol' afo nnit '
V
sneuilohme ,
Caitorla tlomth'oys Worm. .
Cnnmtnr1t nl1tys Povorl'ilmnes.i , V
Cnstnrla ivonts vontitlu SourCurci.
- V
Camitorla niaros flhrirrhmemi nud Wind Colic.
Cnatorift rolinve. Tent1mln Troubles ,
Castorla cure. Conittipatlon antI Pintemlency.
. _ . snlr
Castorimt locs not oontn1nsnorphaInjp1ummi , or other nareoiopportv
Ca.torln ninslmllatoq the footirogimlatos them stonmach anti
giving healthy and natural sicop.
Castorla I. put up In one'.slzo bottle. only. It Is not sold In bulk ,
Don't allow any one to soil you anythinff olin on time plea or prom ! . .
that it Is "justnsioouI " and " will answer every purpose. "
uo that on p-nt C"A'-S'T"O-R-I-A.
The fiso-sindlo _ _ _ _ _
_ mtignimturo _ _ _ _ _ of _ wrapper.
Children Cry for Pitcher's Castorla.
pg. - _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
V
' _ _
taintcr FROM THC TANK.
CIIEAFETHANSTEAM
' - Xe 73011cr , Nut Steunm , VoRmgitmccr.
- Host. I'owor for Corn immitl Food Mills , limiting
' hay , Rumimmiimg CromummarlesSopmurtmtors , ste.
t ' V OTTO GASOLINE ENGINES
- : . V
. i : . S
- Stationary or PortabI.
? - 1 to 12011. 1' . HtohO 11. 1' .
r ' ' Seat ! for itaIogite , l'rlces , ctdaorIbhimg svor to be dens
.r V TIIEOTTOCASENCINEWORK8
.1 C - , ahml : \'nlnimt hta. , 1'mI1I.AIIL1'hh1F , PA.
Chicago , 245 Lake St. , Omaha , 321 So. 1.5th St.
j- MANHOOD RESTOH ' "CUPIDENE
- Vlnimmzrtimeltrvsc iii.
tion . of a fatuous French physician , ui ! ! qulckiy cites t , ttm ci miii omem'
: \ - . .ou3 or dbt'ames of ( be geueratmve .rgutts , pt'chi cc
Insommiia ' l'hns iii thu 1htckS3enmtttah , imimlatn : , 2prvotti 1)pbiltt )
. , l'imnphet , 'tJimhltiicst to Marry , Jiimtmitlmmu _ Imiitts , Varicoesho tit.i !
- Cotiattnatlon. 1 t tOp5 mitt louci l , ' tiny or mtlght. l'rent qolek'
It ( , , of tilectitirgo , which if miot cli'ekpi iattia to S.rtnittnrriumptm ; an I
all time hiorrori of Impoti'nc , svIa 5)IE ehtatm.ca tl.moityer , II a
DFOR AsIc AFTtR ictdneyeaiiti tItmitrtmtaryorgmuhtsof mmihhznpuriies.
( iJI'I1)Ef ) , tretmttiiemmsittm,1 re5toreac'mnall vetk organs.
'l'hmt rituohi suflerer. ore mtot ciiel by iJoetors 1.1 hecittitto ninety per cemit are trnubletl vhtl
' . , , S I' , . OUI'IBEOUG Its Otto emily known rerneh v to cure a tilmout miii ottrmtttutm. ZA'o ttlnmimml
VbLI. A wrlmtt'n guiuantm'ogIven and mimoney retnrnt'tt I ( pmx hoxe'm mines not emiee % mm 1crniatmcnl cura
, iemt hot , fir 5.lXt , Ct ) ' ninth. 8etttl for pitxm : tircumlar and testImonials.
. . ,4- a 1ZDTCT1" ( (0. , 1' , 0. liox 7tLtlanFretc1sco , Cal. " " "
FOR SALIO BY GOODMAN DRUG CO. , 1110 11'mmrnmam St. , Omabs. .
- - - - -
"A HAND SAW IS A GOOD THING , BUT NOT TO
SHAVE WITH. "
SAPOLIO
Is THE PROPER THING FOR HOUSE-CLEANING
1111 % 'AS NO'l' SIIASICIC.
'l'ii Is 'nzimm'r's l ; eiiem' S'lts Novel a imil
jtmtmime.'ii ( itt' l'mIeehii.tt'rs.
Upon a recent hmomewardbound trip. says
the New York Herald , was a gentleman of
not widely extentied ocean experience , who
heretofore hail made only pleasant sunmmnmer
trips-tri * whment time ocean was as time
proverbial null pond for time greater portion
of time timmie , with a storm stmcim as time winter
brings fortim unknown ,
"Are you a good sailor ? " Ito asked of his
nearest table companion at dinner time first
day , -
"Reasonably so. " replied time other. "Are
you ? "
"Yes , lutieeml. I couldn't get sick. "
"Sure of dint are you ? For my own part
I've inamle a great ninny voyages iii all harts
of the world. I never imave been seasick
yet , but I don't think I ever steliped on
hoarti a steamer without having time tlmoughmt
timat title may be immy tmmrn , "
Time first speaker turmied at thisantl winketi
at the others at the table , as mulch as to
indicate.Veli , we won't see mnuclm of our
friend if we have rough weather. " Time
others replied with a simiile , as if they indorsed -
dorsed his views.
The first and second day uimtll midmmigimt
passed vieassntly , Then the eimip began to
piicim anti roll , amid well It. mlgimt , for it Imad
struck time track of a cyclonmic storm anti the
next morning it was in the midst of time
storm itself , When tIme traveler who feared
thmat "this might be lila time" found his way
to his seat , ime discovered timat his companions
were missing.
"It was rather a lmarti night , steward , " be
said , "A great many of the passengers
sick , I suppose ? "
"That tlmoy are , air , " answered the steward.
"All of this table sick , sir , but you , sir. "
"Vimatl Mr. Blank also ? " asked time voyager -
ager in mock smmrpriae , as ho mentioned time
name of time iersonm who couldn't get sick.
"Veil , I'll have to go and see isbn hater. "
A few hours later he found his way to time
cabin of the superior sailor , who was groan-
log wrotcimetlly , when not imploring soimmo one
to knock imimmi on the head and timrow imiimi
overboard.
"Why , how ha this , Blank ? You seasick -
sick ? "
The victim mafia an effort to collect him.
self , Evidently lie recalled tIme foolish re-
ummark of time first day , "Oh. " saId ime , "I'm
not seasick , It's only a .iiglmt nausea. You
see it was thus way. My tnothm brush was a
bit old , In cleansing my teeth this mmiornlng
a loose briatmo caught in my threat anti omau-
seated me , To be sure , I'm not quito my-
elf yet in time stomach , but it isn't seasickness -
ness , I antsumre you , and now go away , won't
yoim , olti nman ? for I don't. feel like talking , "
Four days later Mr. Blank pulled hmimrseif
together anti got on deck , very pale , very
weak anti mlejeete'h.
"Ab. Ihlank. i'm ghoul to see you aroimmmti
agaihi , " ' 'r.morkeml imis acquaintance. "By time
way , hOW'S that tootim brush with the loose
bristle ? "
'If- the tooth brimsh , " muttered time
man , "It upset mae completely , and I suppose -
pose every one timinks I was seasick. Hut I
was not. I can assure you ; it was only those
confounmded loose bristles , "
Time perfume of violets , the purity of the
lily , the glow of time rose , anti the flush of
Hobo combine in Pozzoni's wontlerful Powder ,
Ills Cnr ills hi'iirs.- ,
The remains of Motorinan Robert Senramn ,
says the San Francisco Chronicle , were conveyed -
veyed yesterday to their last resting piece
in Mountain View cemetery by time trolley
car tf the Grove street. line , wimlclm ho haul
operated since thern roaml was opened for
business , The car 'wan draped willm craps
anti was laden with many floral tribmmtes
from omimloyt's of time road , who were lures.
ant at the funeral In large numhmpre. Time
car moved in advance of the cortege and
was roiled up to time gates of the cemetery.
vkiiis
. Pills
Always ilcilablo , Purely Vegetable
Tcrfecthy tasteless , . V
ciegammily coated , purg. ,
regulut , turmfy , cleanse anti strenttten. meAl-
VAY'I ; l'IlLS for time eumme nt atm ttltorlers of
time gtomimacmt , hittweia , lchdnttye , imtalmer , 5'er-
VtUfl Discuses , Dlzzlmmeas , Vertigo , Costiuenes. ,
l'hIte.
SICK IIEAJACIIE ,
FJ1IALE COM I'LAIN'FS ,
III LIaLOUSNESS ,
INDIGESTI ON ,
1)YSImEI5SI4t ,
CONSTII5ATON
Amid All Disorders ( if tlmeLiven- ,
Observe titu , foihtwIng s'mmmltOina resulting fror
a1tsi'se ot time tilgeattve orgjnis : Constipation ,
mnward plies , fuiineas of blood Ia tue imemiti acid-
itir et time etnittchm , nammea , im'artturn , 'tisgu'tt
oC toot ! , fuiintt't' , , of % eighmt of mite tittiittchm. sour
oructatiommmm , itiiiking or hoLlering of tue heart ,
ctmiikhmmg or murf.teiitlng sensatton wimeti in a
lying j'oeiliorm , dhmmmness of visiomi , tiotS or vebi
iaetor. ' ( tie eIght , ( 'tier or dumhi pain in the imead ,
imCnmciency of persittrutierm , yellowness of time skin
ciii ! eyes , Pain in tite , tItte chest , ihmnta anus
'sudden hiutimem of hirut , ttmmi-nmmmg in hit , ' tieth.
A few dome's of mtAi'Ay's 1'ILm.14 wiii free
( Ii , ' ay.t'rmi of au t Its uuhuove imtthitt'tl dhtrlers.
PItICm bC A foX , 805.1) IIY iJttJUls flJ Oh
HI'NT Sly MAIL. .
Send to 1)11. 1CAIWAY & CO. , Lock liox 365 ,
New York. for Book of Advice ,
DOCTOR
Seres & Seares
1416 Vttrttnmmm St.
S I'ECIALIST3.
All forium'mof ] llooeI and
Skin 1)lsemm'su'a , Syphiolis ,
' cuintal tar life timid Clue pal-
a 1 bumm tiimtrutmglmiy ciommimsed
- trtmtim tim t4ystenmm ,
. ' t LADIES giveti careful
V
, ' , 'aamnti siecii mmttemtionm , for nit
tlV L 'timttlr mmmaiiy iuecIiimor nit-
imiuimtS.
V CATARRH.Oieot ,
V vra \1tt'lC)4UlO ilyd ruoutu , ( luim.
, , , rrlmonii , hos Mimimimood
by a special treat-
' huiotit ,
v EAK MEN ( VITALITY \'EtK )
immade so by too choseap-
plication to business or study , severe mental
strain om' grief SEXUAL FXCIISSE13 in
middle life or ! rorn the effects of youthmful
( allies , eli yield readily to our new treatment -
mont for loss of vital power.
WRITE Yotmr troublea If out of the city.
Thousantis ctmred at home by cor- V
responmlenc0 , CONSI h.'i'A'I'iON FItEE ,
Or Searles & Scaric Fmmrtanm
, Sm tmmmtaimmi , Nsii.
- - - . -
- -
Old Tobaco Chewers say
LLAflfl'3
1Ip1a )
PLUG
is mUch the best.
'