THE CttrATTA DAII/T BEE : MOTTO AY , OYEMUEH 2n. IS'M' ' . 5 Pulse of Western Progress. rar5iT5T ! f ? = ; H f finn f New strikes At Grand Encampment min ing district occur weekly and the rush to the camp null continues drsplto the fact that mow covers the ground at a depth of from ' eighteen Inched to four feet nenr the top of the range. This mining district , from every Indication , Rays the Hawl ns Journal , will prove ono of the richest discoveries for a number of yean. Some eight or ten clalron with quartz veins varying from lx Inches to as many feet In width , between good wall rocks , show free gold. Some of the upocl- mens of honey-comb quartz , filled with Iron rust , eeemed literally alive with gold. . Some fifteen or twenty other claims with good quartz leads do not show free gold , hut by pounding up the quartz and panning It n trail of gold follows the , black sand In the pan. In claims lying north and south of the gold belt proper gold .mil copper are carried by the quartz. In panning this It li neces sary to cover the quartz with salt , then roast It and repound the panning , nnd In nearly every Instance gold \a \ seen as tlu % result of the operation. Claims have been located covering an extent of country about two and one-half miles wide by some twelve or flftwn miles lone. Mr. Doan'a copper mlnn nt liattlo lakn Is In the Grand Kiicampmoiit mineral belt. As says from various claims In the Houston district run from $30 per ton gold to $3.000. "VV'hllo prospecting has ceased for the winter a number of shafts arc bulng sunk and tunnel nol work Is being done and by spring the camp will be In flhapo to prove Itsrlf. Watc Is plentiful and timber abundant , nnd tlu fact that the mining district ! ) not over nix miles from the stage read , makes It ac cesslble to every one. A stamp mill wll ho put In next spring , nnd things will hum From loiters received by owners of the claims , a rush will ensue which will cove that mineral range with men , and the pros poets for next scanon to the residents o Carbon county are unusually bright. SHKKP HUSUANDHY IN COLOUADO. The cattle business has always been i great source of revenue to Colorado , am up to within the past flvo years horses wefo bred and dealt In qulto extensively , but the sheep business has been , as It were , nn obsolete Industry , nays the len\er Times To thoBU who have lived In the southern hiu southwestern part of the state , the sight o a cloud of dust rising In the distance .IH < heralding the approach of a Hock o ( the small quadrupeds Is a familiar sight. The Mexican population , of that part of Coloiado Is largely made up of sheep raisers aud their herders. The flcld for woolen mills In this part o the country Is good , but so far no ono has cared < to enter Into the project , although I has often been discussed. Removing the tariff from wool cast a damper upon Anier lean sheep raising , and slnco that time , In stead of Increasing , It has sought a mean level , perhaps decreasing year by year , bu already the prospect of a high protective tariff under the now administration has been felt , and as a consequence , sheep and woo have recorded a slight advance. It Is safe to presume that the Industrj will revive slowly from now on , and. In fact will take the place of the revival of alive mining for which Colorado prayed , am which might have been accomplished. Mutton Is consumed to a largo extent and , of course , Us price has not been sub jcct to political conditions and has no varied greatly , although It has fallen It proportion to all prices during the pas tow years. Fnt sheep sold on foot for fooc purposes always bring" a good price , am just now the local stockyards report an advance of CO cents a hundred ou the choic est meat. Uvcry fall hundreds of thousands of lambs nnd choice mutton sheep are boughi from iNow Mexico , Utah , Wyoming am Oregon Into the feeding , districts of Colorado rado , Kansas , Nebraska and Missouri , am there sold In the spring. It will surprise many people to learn that Fort Collins am Larimer county In general , particularly the country along the Poudre river , is ono of tht largest sheep-raising districts In the west. It Is estimated that this winter fully 10.000 more sheep will be fed In the I'oudro vallej than la t year , when the total reached about 00,000. Larimer county will feed over 150,000 sheep this winter. Lambs especially are handled to a great extent about Fort Col lins. SIERIIA PACIFIC IIOUTE. Superintendent of Construction Potts of the Sierra Pacific road , the ono which Is pro jected Into the southern mines section , with a strong possibility that It will be completed before the close of another year , lias Just returned from a trip over what may and possibly will bo the route of the road out of Stockton and through the garden country along the banks of the Calaveras river as far as Itellota. Ho went by ono proposed route and re turned by another , and stilt has a third to examine , says a Stockton dispatch to the San Francisco Examiner. The route which lie favors Is along the upper Sacramento road to the section line on which Is located the little hamlet of Waterloo. lieyond that point the rails would be laid along the side of the county road for several miles and then extending eastward along section lines Into the llttlo hamlet ct Dcllota. > The reason given by Mr. Potts for favoring the route described Is that It can bo followed with advantage ttl a greater number of people - plo and to tlio disadvantage of less than any other route that could be selected. The country through which the road will run be tween Stcckton and llcllota Is very much of a garden spot , and hundreds of acres are devoted to gardening and other hundreds of acres could profitably bo used for the t > ume purpose. The mountain mining section Into which It Is proposed to build the line Is a great user of the product of the valley gardMis. During the fruit and vegetable season the road to Sonera Is lined with vegetable wag ons carrying produce Into the mining coun try to dlspctjo of. It gets thcro In pretty poor condition , but It Is all that the people of that section can got , and therefore It finds a market. HAILS TO UOSSLAND. The Columbia & Ited Mountain railroad , the new line which Is pushing Us way into the new mining regions around Hossland , 11. C. , has progresed rapidly In building The last advices from Uossland say that the tracklayers are within a couple of tulles of that town. The completion of the line will bo hailed as qulto an event In the north and as Spokane Is to be greatly bcne- lltcd. the Falls City people are very Jubi lant. lant.Tho The tracklayers , the Itosaland Mllicr says , linvo arrived at the O. K. trestle and the \vhtstlo of the locomotive now echoes through Hossland. "Ono or two passengers came up over the line- recently , among them being M. II. Galuslm , manager of the Jumbo mine. This was through the courtesy of Mr. Ilob- crts , chief engineer of the road , Mr. Hob- crts sa > s It will take ten or twelve days to build the 0. K. trestle and tha ono on the loop above It. It will take two or three days to complete the laying of the track Into town. We may reasonably expect that trains -will be running to Itoseland by the 20th. "In the meantime arrangements may bo made to deliver freight at the present O. K. terminus and use wagons for the remainder of the distance to town. Some thing of the kind may also bo done for passengers , "A representative of the Miner has been over a portion of the Ited Mountain road between Nortbport and the 0. K. trestle , and ho can say without hesitation It Is one pf the brat pieces of rallioad work on the I'aclflo coast , If , Indeed , It does not stand without parallel. Kootcnay and all llrl-- Uh Columbia ought to bo proud of this road. There Is no better evidence of the esteem In which capital holds this country that the fact that ouch a road should ha\o been built. " SQUATTUftB SiCUHR : THEIR niflHTS. The United States land olllco In this city as at last iccelvcd the plats of Gregory county from Washington , says a Chamber lain , 8. I ) . , special to the .Minneapolis Tri bune , and the settlers In thut county will now receive the Justice which baa boon dented - ntod thorn for nearly suveu years. Klght fractional townships of land In Urogoiy county which wore formerly a part of thu I great Sioux reservation were -ipencd to { whlto settlement on February 10 , 18PO , lit ' the tlrno of the opening of tlio Sioux reser vation , The ceded land In Gregory county was not surveyed , but hundreds of Battlers entered that region Immediately nftcr the opening and took land AS squalten. Tbo expected survey of the county was delayed from year to year until the spring of 1895 , when surveying parties were phced In the field , In the meantime- hundreds of squnt- tcrs have remained patiently on the land without being able to procure Mllon to their farms , nnd have made Improvements amounting , in Individual saaet , to as high ns several thousand dollar.1) ) . It la pre sumed that whi > n entries nro tendered at thn local land olllco many of the claims will conflict and that much litigation may result before the ownership of some of the land Is clearly determined. UOMANTIC DISCOVERY OP COPPER. Wlion n cow kicked over n lantern and precipitated upon the city of Chicago n flro which will long bo remembered on this continent the bovine rpcclcs tame In for n largo share of execration. Two members of the fiamo species have reccii'ly , In nn equally accidental manner , brought about a dlscovnry , says a Vancouver dispatch to the Snn Francisco Call , which will do Bomo- thing to remove the stigma under which Mm fnmllItna rnalml en InMT A fnrmnr driving along tlio road near Kamloopi , a station on the main line of the Canadian Pacific railroad , within a day's Journey from Vancouver , came across two bull , ' en gaged In what appeared to bo a deadly struggle , and , as one of the beasts was his own property , ho made a stics .ssful at tempt to separate tlu > m , Tn Hie course of their struggle the bulls had dlilo-lgcd fccv- ernl large chunks of rock , which , being of A peculiar appearance spotted blue and black aroused the curiosity of the farmer , who took some of It with him and after ward submitted It to an nssay.jr. with thu result that he found It contalnod copper to the value of J15 per ton. Subsequently staking a claim and proceeding with the dovHlopment , the lucky finder exposed a largo and well defined vein of oto , and now the entire locality has been staked out. DRON'OHO IinKP FOH A CHANGE. SomethliiE of a sensation Ins been caused In the rcblde-nco uarls of town remote from .the markets and v.'hrro traveling venders of toothsome steaks nnd roasts are regularly patronl/pd , says n Los Angeles dispatch to the San Francisco Chronicle , by thi > dl&cov- or.v of the Hoard of Health that much of the alleged beef which has been sold for an Indefinite period is nothing clso than the remainders of southern .California bronchos after the period of usefulness of those cqulno friends of man Is past Health Ofllcer Sled- dom today laid the matter before the Board of Health nnd a long and earnest discussion followed the recital of the sensation by the health officers. Dr. Steddom told how his Inspectors had first discovered that horses wore being butchered and sold as beef In the city. Ho said that enough evidence had been accu mulated to convince the health otflco that horao llcsh was really being peddled about as beef , and the industry is believed to be a largo and growing one , as bronchos are considerably cheaper than bovlncs In this part of the rountry. The evidence , however , was not of such nature an to admit of Us use In convicting the guilty persona of the offense. ALASKA MINING OUTFIT. G. n. Swlnehart of the Alaska Mining Rec ord , In reviewing to a Seattle Poat-Intolll- gcncer reporter the work of the past season among the gold mines of Alaska , reports that excellent progress has been made , and that the output Is larger than that of last year by nearly $1,500,000. His estimate of the output of each district , beginning with the quartz mines , Is ns follows : Nowpll Gold Mining- Company , 33 Htamps * 1GO.COO Uerner's Hay Mining and Milling- Company , 40 stamps lli.r.CO Alaskn-Treadwell Gold Mining Company , 240 stnnni * tOO.OCO Alaska-Mexican Clold Mining Company , 120 stamp * 450,000 Alaska Commercial Company , 40 Htnmps GCO,000 Ilnlil Kaglo Mining Company , 4 stumps MO.GOO Ebner Gold Mining Company , 10 stamps 33,0-00 Jutipait Mining Company , no stamp1 ; uj.OCO Jimlln Gold Mining Company , 10 stamps .0,000 Alaska WIlloUKhby Gold Mining Company , 10 stamps lj.000 Green mine , Norton sound , 10 stumps 1-.000 Total output of quartz mines.$2.VM.OOO ; Lltuya bay placer mines : r > .00 > ) Cook Inlet placer mines. . . . liri.OK ) Illrch crook district. Yukon mines. . 1,300,000 Other Yukon districts 800,000 From several small creeks In vari ous parts of the territory , worked by urrastres .3.000 Total output $1,070,000 Last year's estimated output was $3,000- 000 , so that this year has exceeded last year jy $1.670,000. The number of miners baa been largely Increased. Over 11.000 people went to Alaska this season , of whom 00 per cent were cither directly or Indirectly Inter ested In mining. Of these about 8.000 went : > y way of Juncau to the Yukon , and about 1.000 from Junemt to Cook Inlet. Juncau las grown considerably , at least 1,000 being added to the number of Us residents , also Douglas City , on tbo Island of that name right opposite Juuoau , has had a large In crease of population , owing to iho Increased activity at the Ticadwcll mines there. THE DAKOTAS. Gold m In err ; of the Illack Hills expect to nako a total product of $12,000,000 this year. Ice In the river at Sioux Falls Is over six nchcs thick and perfectly safe- for skating , n fact , they have already begun to cut the S9G crop. A crazy Sioux Indian , belonging nt Lower Hrulo agency , escaped from the reservation ind terrorized thu white settlement along theWhlto river. IIo was pursued and over- > owcred by the Indian police before any atalltles reunited. Grand Army men have presented the name of Dr. C. II. Clark of Huron for department commander , to (111 ( the vacancy caused by the death of General Acklcy of Aberdeen. The council of administration roeota In Sioux 'alls to choose a commander. In spite of the drawbacks caused by early BIIOW South Dakota Is coming rapidly to the rout aa a stock producing portion of the northwcnt. Not only cattle , but sheep are attracting the attention of those wishing o engage In.a . safe , "lucrative business. On the farm of James Every. Just east of Ysscndiii , N. D. , a meteor imbedded Itself over eight feet In thi earth. Those who voro awake , say tht > y felt a tremor of the earth. Mr. Every was badly frightened , and Imost overcome by the ohock nnd sulphurous smoke. The deep snow of the succeeding evening almost covered the depression made by the great meteor , but It Is yet plainly llscoralhle. It will bo dug out as soon as ho weather will permit. Probably the most leisurely worked mine n the United States , ns well us ono nf the > fut paying , Is the Durnnso mluo in the Hack Hills. The last shipment of ore rom this mluo netted the owners , Sullivan , Foley and Cruslck , thou u in of $0,919. As n cash proposition t doubtless surpasses anything of Us ize In the country. The owners do not work ho mine steadily , but draw upon It as they vould upon a fat bank account. The ore , onio of It going 119 ounces of gold to the on , ls equivalent to su much money .to the owners , and they do not worry over the pos- Iblllty of the mine ever playing out. The men who own this spring of wealth were omuaratlvoly poor men and laborers prior o the discovery of this bonanza. Hon. W. D , McOnniia of Condo Is at the lead of a movement to get the Northern Pa- lllo Railway company to extend the line to ameutown and the northern branch from xreds to Dunaolth , at the foot of the Turtle mountains , a distance of 100 miles. Numer ous pctlllcns are being circulated In the ouritlc * of Pierce , llcnson , Towncr and Ro- ettu asking for the construction. The pro- losed Hue , a preliminary survey for which vas made In 1SS9 , runs through a fertile re- ; lon In which are located many lakes. The ind has been settled for ton years or more , The farmers and merchants within ten miles n each eldo of the line are pledging their rclght , In and cut , for a period of five years , The proposed Iluo la acrewg ficntly undulat ing prairies , and It has been estimated can bo built nnd equipped for not to exceed $ S,000 n mile. Dcsldra this extension , nnd a spur from Dunsclth to Cando , strenuous efforts will be made to construct the farmers' rail road through the north end of Towncr county. COLORADO. Rouldcr did herself proud last week with n crysanthemum show. Silver Cllft has a man who claims to have overtaken and caught a healthy deer. A , large matte smelter Is to bo erected Just north of Ouray and Is expected to be In operation early In the spring. Leadvlltc Is now shlpplt.g by rail about sixty tons of ore per day. The total output of the camp Is about 1,000 to 1,200 as against l.COO before the strike. Orman & Crook , the contractors on the Golden Clrclo railroad , at Victor , deny the story that they have reduced the pay of workmen. They are paying $1.75 n day. An assay obtained last week from the Llttlo Emmu mine at Dumont ran thirteen and one-half ounces In gold nnd eighty ounces silver , the total vnluo being $322. A reported strike on the Corbett lode of the Gold Pick company , at Lake City , has been verified by several of the officers of the company. A four-foot streak of ere averages over $200 per ton. A big strike was reported from the Llllio mine , located between the Vindicator and the Christmas , on the south slope of Dull hill nt Victor. The ore gave assay returns of $30,000 to the ton. The width of the pay streak could not bo learned. The total output of the Cripple Creek district from 1S32 to 1S03 , Inclusive , was $13,700.000. It Is expected that this year's output will reach $10.000,000 , making n. total of $23,700,000. It Is claimed that of this year's output $3COO,000 will be net profit to the owners. The Gulf officials have decided to con struct n trail up Ohio creek , In Gunnlson county , to facilitate the transportation of ere to the railway line. The country Is such that It would be impossible to build n spur , and there are several mines which have reached n good shipping stage. The railway company will build the troll for the sake of the business. There have been over a hundred wagons with pothuntlng outfits operating In the region contiguous to the head of Plceance creek during the last weeks of October , and some of the game destroyers killed every thing that got within range of their rifles. Ono Grand river party took out seventeen docs and fawns , and others did nearly as much In the line of wanton destruction. The "Squire" is dead , and the George town Courier tells about It In the following manner : ITc was otherwise known as Mc- Arthur's yellow dog. Although but sixteen years of age , he has had a mining experi ence that will bo long remembered. A few years ago ho had the misfortune to fall Into a shaft. The fall , however , didn't hurt him much , or If It did ho never complained , nut It was missing his meals that went to his heart. He had been accustomed to three lunches n day. Ills stay In the shaft lasted twenty-one days and seven hours , and during that time ho had neither food nor water. When rescued ho wns some what the worse for the fast but still in the ring. Previous to this experience ho was peaceably Inclined , but afterward was fre quently on the warpath and grow ambi tious. He flaxed everything In sight. Includ ing Welch's fighting dog , Tom Sawyer. But Xerxes found his Thermopylae , Napoleon his Waterloo , George III his Yorktowu. Lee his Appomattox and "Squlro" his Joe Dread's Black Sampson. WYOMING. There are four feet of snow at Dald moun tain. tain.Lander Lander Is making preparations for a mer chants' carnival , which will bo given Decem ber 21 to 23. The new flouring mill In the nig Horn basin will bo completed nnd In operation within the next month. Nine carloads of brick have been received nt Cheyenne and taken out to Fort Russell , where improvements arc to made. The noston and Wyoming Mining and Mill. Ing company will do development "work on Us claims at Gold hill this winter. Excavation for the new mill at Morgan- vlllo has commenced nnd It is expected to have the plant In operation by January 1. Union Pacific mine No. 7 , at Rock Springs , which has been Idle for some time , has resumed operations nnd will give em ployment to a largo number of coal miners. The shaft on the Fortuna mine , In the Silver Crown district , Is now down fifty feet. At this depth the ere body Is nvo feet wldo and assays on the same give $9 In gold nnd silver and 25 per cent copper. Tno abstract for tlio silo of tlio now gov ernment building at Cheyenne is now com plete and covers 200 pages. The people of the capital city nro anxious to have the work of construction go ahead , as the appro priation Is said to be available. The onyx mine or quarry near Cokovllle , In Ulnta county , says the Casper Derrick , has really proved to bo a success and Is be ing actively worked by a company of Chicago cage capitalists who have secured an option on the quarry from the original locators. The West Side Mining company , operating at Four Mile , has closed down for the win ter. The company Is well pleased with the results of the season's work , though ham pered by the defective working of some of the machinery. Work will be resumed In March next. The work of constructing the largo ditch In North park for placer operations has been discontinued for the season. The work of getting out the necessary lumber for re newed early work In the spring will bo con tinued all winter. Thcro were ICO men and fifty teams engaged there. Much Indignation Is expressed at Lander over the fact that a large party of Indians from the Fort Hall reservation have for the past six weeks been slaughtering elk , deer and antclcpo In the vicinity of Hoback can yon without molestation on the part of the Ulnta county authorities. The only excuse given Is that there are no funds In the county ticasury available for the arrest and prose cution of the outlaws. Uawllns , the seat of Carbon county and cue of the chief business stations In Wyo ming of the Union Pacific rntlroad , now adda another leaf to Its crown of commercial lau rels , being the principal supply , outfitting and passenger point of the new and already famous gold fields of 'the Grand Encamp ment In the Saratoga , or Upper Platte val ley of Wyoming. From Rawllns to these auriferous regions thcro la now running a dally stage and mall route , while the wagon road U whlto with canvas of freight outfits the distance being slxty-fivo miles. OREGON. No. 1 wheat sold for 70 cents In The Dalles. Having secured the Coos county court housD , the Cof.iillle people are now talking of a $40,000 building. Ulacklog , a fatal disease among cartlo , Is reported as being thu cause of the death of stock In many localities In Grant county. It Is lutrdly possible for horses to go much lower than thu old plug that was sold at public auction in Corvnllls the other day for C cents. The Sllctz Ii.dlans , who have been working all summer and fall at the cannery In Wi'ddoburn , Curry county , have gene back to the reservation. The Heaver Hill Coal company has a force of men at work at 'Heaver Hill , Coos coun'y , laying the mains for a complete system of water works. The proprietors of the Ashland woolen mills are seHously considering moving their plant from Atihlaud to some point In Cali fornia , wlu-ro a subsidy has been offered them. The Indian school at Fort nidwcll now seems an assured fact. Tlio special agent who has been looking after the matter will proceed to open the school In a short time. It will require a corps of seventeen teachers In all. Thirty men have been engaged for the past few weeks rcsurveylng the boundary line of the Klamath Indian reservation. It Is feared by the Silver Lake cattlemen that the Slcan country will bo placed Inaldo the reservation. This In ono of the best grazing rQver ; $411,000,000 Paid to Policy Holders in Fifty-three Years ! 51m m \ t > ilt n I l 'I ! RICHARD A. McCURDY , President , diM ' . it. < Who will pay that mortgage on your home if you die before it's lifted ? A life insurance policy will do it , and the cost to you is only the annual premium paid to the company. It is like pay ing a little extra interest on your mortgage to insure its re lease if you die. Security- " The resources of the Mutual Life of New York exceed the combined capital of all the na tional banks of New York City , Chicago , Boston , Philadelphia , St. Louis , Cincinnati and Balti more. A duty delayed is a duty shirked. Let a man convinced of responsibility secure adequate protection and 'at once. INSURE NOW IN THE MUTUAL LIFE. A Policy of Insurance in the Mutual Life 3is the quickest asset you can Jeaye. flections In the upper country. The boundary line commission Is ndiv stationed at Sprague river. ' ' Farms for1 renting' in 'Coos county arc hard to get hold of this fall , and many men who desire to rent have been unable to got places. Usually there are moro farms than renters. On the bank of the Willamette slough , near Scappoo&o landing , there are porhapa moro than 5,000 cords of wood , which have been placed thcro by people living In the vicinity of Scappoosc. This la the result of one year's work. Grant's Pass Is to have a custom quartz mill scon. Dr. "W. II. Flaunagan of that city bus a ten-to.n mill with all the neces sary appurtenances , and ho also has a boiler and engine at Talent , which ho will remove to Grant's Pass end place in position for use. use.Klnncy's cannery suspended packing for -the fall season with the close of last week. The boats are now being -hauled out of the water and stored away for the winter. The Hailing on the Columbia this fall has been a signal failure , neither the fishermen nor canners deriving much benefit from the operations. WASHINGTON. Many of the loggers In Cowlltz county took advantage of the freshet and millions of feet of logs are now In tidewater , ready to bo rafted. The Kalania river boom has caught nearly GOO.000 feet of logs during the recent freshet. It Is very strong and will stand the great strain for years. j The city n.amhal of Walla Walla has been authorized to collect poll tax from Chinamen , and 10 per cent was allowed htm for an Interpreter. Fewer than 100.000 bushels of wheat ro- m.Un In the warehouses In Garfleld , and what there la Is the property of largo wheatralscra , who can afford to hold. The other night a largo rock , weighing about 10 tens , came rolling down the hill and landed In Herring's warehouse in Stella , Wahklakum county. The fall of the rock shook up the whole town. Slnco the recent fall of snow upon the Huckleberry and Callspel ranges , many deer have been seen along the foothills over looking the Colvlllo valley. The snowstorm hus also caused other animals to approach tlu < settlements. There Is talk of organizing a coyote drive on a largo scale in Garfleld. It Is proposed to make a clrclo of six or eight miles In diameter , embracing 'U largo part of the country between Garfleld ind the mountains to the cast , and surround the "varmints. " The fishing season Is drawing to a close on Hood canal , and It baa been rather a poor year for the fishermen. The * run has been small. There have been about forty- flvo camps on the canal , with four or flvo non at each camp , but many of them have not averaged much moro than a half dollar/ / a day , boarding themselves. Right years FEIN JPTGTURRS PLH1ASA.NTIAY AND POINTEXDLiY PUT Promises those dnyH HCCIU to Imvo boon turned raced to tlio wall made to liu broken--HH It worn tlio HtroiitoMl part of our ndvortlHliiK In that wu fjlvo what wo proinlHi ; hotiPHt vtilui'H liiu'kod by oxt'luulvo Htylus In carjietri and curtains. Omaha Carpet Co. 1515 Dodge IS THE COMPANY IN TWO GENERATIONS 1843-1896 The Mutual Life Insurance Co. , of New York , has paid $246,000,000 to its living members. Has been the benefactor of women and children to the extent of $165,000,000. 5 FOH IOWA KRBRASKA , FIRST NATIONAL BANK BUILDING , SIXTH AND LOCUST STREETS , OMAHA. DES MOI3JES. Wanted in J3vezy County. H. S. WINSTON , Special Representative. Omaha. ago the run was as poor , or poorer. The fishermen nro talking very earnestly about trying to have n salmon hatchery estab lished on the Skokomlsh river. The farmers of the Colvlllo valley are shipping largo quantities of hay , potatoes , cabbages and eggs to Drltlsh Columbia. Shipments of farm products from Valley this year will show up as largely as from any othc'r town on the Spokane Falls & Northern railway. Several cars of lumber passed through Kclso the other day for Kalama , where It will be transferred to ships and taken to Africa. The lumber Is shipped from Alns- HP , and consists of long , heavy timbers. Ono million , three hundred thousand feet will be shipped via Kalama from this mill , all of which Is consigned to South Africa ports. A wood famine Is still threatened la Gar fleld , says the Knterprlse , Hut very llttlo can bo bought In Garfleld , and the supply of dry wood In the mountains Is said to be practically exhausted. Even the never-fall ing resort of sending to the Ilockford coun try for a carload Is said to bo very uncer tain , So far the price has not raised above $3 per cord , but It is likely to. Owing to the rapid rise In the Cowlltz river recently the Toutlo boom went out , letting -i.GOO cords of shingle bolts belong ing to II. II. Duff of the Duniway mill at Castle Rock , go down the Cowlltz. Most all of the day the river was lined for miles with bolts , the total value of which will amount to something like $8,000. About 100 cords ware caught In the boom at the mill In Castle Rock , this being nil the boom would hold , together with what was al ready In it. There were 1,000 cords caught at Ostrandcr and Kclso , the remainder going Into the big boom at the mouth of the.Cow lltz. The bolts In the Toutlo boom are said to have piled up forty or fifty feet deep , this , together with the rapid rise of the river , forcing the pier of the boom out , and carried boom and bolts down the river. MISCELLANEOUS. Cocur d'Aleno City is going to have an opera house. A young man , died recently In Sacramento from the effects of a spider bite In ono of his nostrils. The Nez Perco Indians predict a grand winter this year , a deep fall of snow and lots of big game. Ono of the busiest pliccs In EVko , Nov. , Is the Elko roller mills. They are grinding out over 100 sacks of Hour dally. Natural gas has been found at Summerland - land sea shore , Santa Barbara county , Cal. , and oven oil wells are now being sunk below tide water. An enthusiastic mass meeting was held In the court house at Napa , Cal. , and ad dressed by these prominent In projecting an electric road through Lake county. It Is proposed not only to build the road , but supply power to manufacturers from Lake- port to Vollejo. Capital has been procured Wo couldn't keep the trade of tlilH neighborhood if wo didn't keep up to dnto with ni'W find fresh devices now thlnpt In uhect iiuiHle In hrlc-a-lirac In holiday novc-.t-.cK In musical Instru- ineiitH while our pinnoH nro of the latest and most approved pattern , A , Hospe , Jr , Music anil Art. 1513 Douglas to undertake the enterprise , the only guar antee to bo given by the pcoplo residing along the road bcliiB that they will give a stated amount of patronage. Territorial Secretary Hruco of Arizona es timates the expenses of the coming legis lature to bo $21,230. The legislative cham bers ore being refurnished handsomely. The Horticultural commission of San Diego county , California , reports-that the season's production of lemons has brought Into the county $100,000 more than any pre vious year. If [ arrangements now In progress turn out all right Montana Is to have two sheep shearing stations , with a capacity of 2,000 sheep per day each , before the season , of 1S97 sets In. The claim Is made that seventy-three squaw men were registered In Tcton county. Squaw men , husbands of Indians on a reservation , according to n decision of the Montana courts , have CD right of suf frage. The deciduous fruit growers of Pasadena , Cal. , are proceeding slowly In their organi zation of a co-oporntlve marketing society. They propose building a line warehouse , with all the mout approved appliances for grading and packl.ig. The Chlno sugar factory used 1,431 car loads of freight for tjupidlci during the sugar campaign just dosed. The tonnage of beets worked up was ns follows : C'hlno , 47- 000 tons ; Anaheim 0,590 ; Dnen.i Pailc , 0,500 ; other points , 1.90P ; totil , 03'J09 tons. Two men at San Luis Oblspo , who had been at sea flshl.ig , found near land a large mass of substance unknown to them. Tno lump wns ambergris , worth $15 an ounce , and weighed ISO pounds a fortune to them of $30,000. Parties who have returned recently from Santlaga canyos , In California , Plate that the gold mlnos located there yomo time ago are Improving with development , tmd that oven now the ere extracted Is fciifll- clcntly rich to yield a profit above the co.U of milling. .The Mill Valley , Cal. , association for the Prorogation and Acclimation of Singing Hlrds , offers a bounty of 10 cents for every three scalps of the hluejay killed In Mill valley. This Is to protect the Imported song birds thrushes , blackbirds , finches and larks that arc being colonized. They had a miners' meeting recently at the diggings near Six-Mile crook , Cook's Inlet , Alaska , to decide on claim-Jumping cases. Each litigant and their witnesses had to mount a largo boulder and tell their atorles to the assemblage. A decid ing line was drawn from a boulder to a tree , and those voting for theplalntlfl were to stand In line on the right and those for the defendant on the left. The men decided the case as quickly as possible , by thus voting , and no lawyers were wanted , i Ono "quack" lawyer came forward with a copy of "Copp's Hand Hook" In his hand l A man who holds his paper more than 15 Inches from his IIOHU has Homu- tlihiK the matter with his eyes thu HlKlit needs llxliiK If you'll drop In for u inluuto or two wo will lye you a lesson In slxht seelni ; worth knowing our optician knows hta business. Aloe & Penfold Co. 1408 Farnam How much will your admin istrator have to sacrifice your estate to force quick assets ? An Installment Policy for $100,000 will leave your family $5,000 yearly income for 20 years , in any event , and if your stated beneficiary is then living he or she will be paid $5,000 yearly during life , A 5 per cent Debenture for $100,000 will leave your wife $5,000 yearly income either for 20 years or until her death if prior thereto ; then $100,000 will be paid in one sum. A possible return of $200,000. 15 $1.500 $ , lim Pf Id fO'J ' ( Of The true business man acts oromptly. Get our rates at once * and annoucccd himself as nn attorney for the defendant , but ho was hooted olT the rock nnd his client lost his case by nn empty space on his side of the decision line. If there were other lawyers present they did not show up after this proceed ing. The cases on the calendar were all "original locators vs. Jumpers. " The decision of the United Stairs supreme premo court affirming the validity of the Wright Irrigation law in California Is re ceived at Salt Lake City with much satis faction. Utah Is divided Into Irrigation dis tricts ( substantially on the same plan as California by the Wright law , the districts being granted like power. It la expected that now life will bo given by this decision to the work of Irrigation by public means In the districts throughout the state. The excitement was Intense t Vancouver recently among mining men , owing to the fact that fabulously rich quartz had been found en Texada Island , on'the abandoned Lormlalo claim. Texada Island Is some forty miles from Vancouver , and It is but recently that gold was known to exist thcro In payIng - Ing quantities. The quartz In question was free milling , nnd thcro were chuncks of gold sticking out all over that could be cut away with a penknife. The specimens ran about $40,000 to the ten. _ Some very fine specimens of turquolRo have been found near Hatchlta , in the southern part of this county. Development has been going on thcro for about three years In a small way , but the stones were not equal In quality to those mined lu the llurro moun tains , near this city , and development waa not pushed until recently. The stones which were taken out of the Hatchlta mlno are said to be fully equal to the finest speci mens from the Uurro mountain mines. The wagon road from Clrclo City to Illrch creek has been completed and Is the IIrat work of a public nature over attempted In the Yukon region. While the course fol lowed by the road In order to avoid awampn Increases the distance to fifteen miles from point to point , the superiority of the route moro than compensates the extra travel and no ono now thinks of taking the trail. The. summer freight rates , however , remain at the old figure 10 cents per pound to Dead- wocd and CO cents to Mastodon creek from Clrclo City. The arrival of a largo quantity of lira and rails at the Valley road depot at Fresno lu hell to mean that the road Is to bo Imme diately extended southward. It Is believed that tli'J ' read will go to llakcrsflcld * by way of Hanfoi'd and not by way of Heed Icy and VUalla. Doth routes have been surveyed , but so much opposition has been developed In the country between Frcuno nnd Recdley that It Is thought almost certain that the road will go to Hanford , Kings county ban offered rights of way , and good work has been done by thu local commlttco in securing rights of way In this county. Tlio king of pllla is Hcccham's Dcecham'o A ninn JO\VH ) Krnccfiilly to n womnn whoso foot IB oncnm-il In 11 r. < tly HllOO HllU 1I1I1.V Hpcilll llOllTH Oil Illlt lit of JUT drees n ltd spoil llio wliolo effect liy nn Improper Hlioe wo fall your nt- tonllou to our new "Oth century box calf at ? 'I.OO. * , Drexel Shoe Co. Farnam.