OCR Text |
Show v. Mil OF fall Into It from die overhanging perThis fclieel of Icapetual snow-tWlnid water Prof, tthxney called Summit lake. The view from Chaney gla-le vaJley cier down the Belly river Mr. simply Indescribable, exclaimed "It la both Shepard, the photographer. beats anything beautiful and grand. It I ever saw before. George Bird Urin-nel- l, editor of the Forest and Stream, a little who has visited the region and has southeast of Chaney glacier, height gased upon tha calls this Tie region which guard it, Crown of the Continent." lr. SperrI aays that "Mr. Grlnnell'a appellation CONTIHEHT THE Region of Scenic Beauty plored. d. Ex- Party Report oa Magnlfleant.. DUoorarlM In tha Northern Mon-pMountain, Hltharto Unknown to Any but Trappara and agmu.illnwlu anr.rnniHtffl." Indiana Vav Lakes Nam ad Great Elizabeth Stuart Phelpa's Girlhood. The life of a professor' daughter In Oountry far Sportaman. a university town la always a llttla different from the lives of other girls; but tha difference aeems to meunlm H like Trlbana. she lie by nature entirely alien to It -continent On tha main d.'vlde of the In favor of the girl. Were I to sum croaaea In one word my impressions of the Inwbara tha Oreat northern road fluences of Andover life upon a robust natural of a great region Montana, young mind and heart, I should cull and brought been explored haa beauty them gentle. waa laal It saw to public notice recently. Aa soon s we lieguii to think aa the wua known a community engaged in studying aeaaon that what As soon aa we began to fori, Bporry party vlalted tha region, and thought. we were aware of a neighborhood that made a report on It discoveries. The did not reel superficially ; at least. In When we Tribune haa been fumiahed a copy of certain higher direction. tha report Drat publlahed in tha Bt. beiran to ask the "(Juestloiis of Life. all Intelligent young people ask Paul Globe, by Mr. C. W. Pitta who which or iHter, we found nursvlnn in sooner Helat Northern repTaeenta tha Great a village of three Institutions Slid their ena. pursuit dependencies committed to thewlib-no for Bealdee Dr. Sperry, the party conalel-e-d of ail tdeul of education we Imud-e- r call or whet of Ister, amount of Prof. I tV. Chaney training, ever gives ua any to r and college; A. I Sperry of Owatmuia, word than Christian. H. R. Sheiard. photographer of Much things tell. Andover gi'la did At Lake McDonald they scnot waits, or suffer summer iiignze-menoured pack train, and two camp-hatst Bar Haris, r, a new ni ewry Tlie primary object of the exneither did Kiev read Ibsen, or yrar; careful mure pedition wae to melee a yellow novels; nor did lliev hundl-- tlie examination and r mlnary euri-e- of French stories that an- - hl'Men from were excellent Avalanohe baaln, which Dr. Sperry and I a rents, though tln-n French scholar in tlmir day. earlier. a almilar party had vlalted found AvaI do not even know licit one r.in rail thlb aecnnd trip the party cit "scrlmtH" than lln-llanche baaln even more Impressive and them more or we wits a merry lid: at aistera-flirat waa at repreaented. beautiful than bias!, my lot were. But they were. I Prof. Chaney and A. U ierry deterd albelieve, especially mined, hy careful triangulation, the gills. -- Kliabclh Si mu I Phelps. titude of the more conspicuous peak whtch aurmount the ereala of till pre- In Meriurc Magaslue for January. the height of MIRACULOUS CURES. cipitous baaln, and alan tha larger cataracta which pour over the cliff and ruah tumultuously Into M. I.ittre of Viirls. who iceenlly intha lake. The average altitude of the vestigated a number of alleged nitriic-- u the of exclualve creat of the baaln. loiis eii res, says that they can ha acmore conapicuoua peaka, waa found to counted fur without supposing a mirabe a little over ISOO feet, while the highcle. lie explains that in many of sueh er peak mee from tuOfl to more thana cures there is a muscular action of the contracts The miiai-l4600 feet ehove the level of the lake affected part. by Kl energetically; it bn aka down the i a h greater altitude than la reached anil reCapitan,-Glacie- r Point, or any other logical adhesions, tf they eaist, violently to their place. of the rocky height which overhang store the hum s on York New the this, In ciimiiieuting the floor of the Yoaemlte valley. Medical Record says: "What the surSTRIKING SCENERY. geon has to do with his hand Is here done by an Influence exerted on the The Matterhorn, the meet etriklng aentl-nela muscles themselves, ami In a farcaninure Avalanche balin peak of all theover efbeneficent manner than surgery 4000 feet high, while la a trifle The exciting rimse of llicae enerCathedral Splrea art 606 feet higher fect. cotilruclioiiH is that which we find than tha Matterhorn. Avalanche lake, getic all miracle of tins sort a strong the turquoise gent that la act in the in a complete confidence. t persuasion, midst of the flocr or the baaln. la but Is hrnln and reeling generated by the end In mile a lea than length, a little the mind which give strengthA to the Ibout half that distance in width. Ita person gouty who thinks strongly. surface la $910 feet above m level. a man. who has long liohhlrfl aland on The Increased melting of the find hia lega and imwer to hla crutch, upon the heights during the sumrun wTth them If pursued hy a wild mer had Increased the number of cas- bull. Tha feeblest Invalid, under the cades from two to seven, besides add- Influenre of delirium nr other atrong excitement, will astonish her nurse by ing a number of ephemeral laughing of strength she Tills, too numerous and tranltury to tha sudden names. The disappearmay exhibit." Justify specialenow areas since June enance of large Appraisers' Report. abled the parly to ascend the southern Washington. Jan. 6. Secretary lluke lope of the baaln directly to the base Smith today sent to the House tlie reof the Matterhorn, where they found port of the Board of Appraisers apthemselves, at an altitude of about pointed under the act of March I. 1MU, T000 feet, on a ledge of rock ao narrow to appraise the Improvements made l.y Intruders In the Cherokee Nation. The that, standing In one place, they could AvaInto down look northward directly board made swards in 117 cases, aggremodithe fare and lanche basin, by turning gating $74,000. This amount wasrecomsouthward, they could gaae equally fied by the Indian office, which well down Into another valley almoet mended a total of $69,645. In tt esses. aa striking as Avalanche baaln. On The modification was approved by the account of Ita shape they named this Secretary of the Interior. latter valley or pocket Horseshoe Will not Press It. basin. Jan. A Senator F.lkino, Washington. GAME. PARADISE FOR whose resolution last Friday, declaring Looking down the valley, which against the sale of bonds by private Arabia Horseshoe basin, acmes Ita two contract caused a sensation In the Sentoday very well satisfied, and amillng lakelets and over about ten ate. a isthat he will not press It further, rnllea of fir and cedar forests. they say oould distinctly see almost the entire as the result for which It was inIntrothe duced haa accomplished surface of the charming Lake McDon- call for a been bond sale. public ald. smiling In the sun. Thle Horae hoe baaln looks like a veritable paradise Balfour Will Talk Soon. for gamr. It waa evident that mounNew York, Jan. A A dlspHtch from tain goats make use of the steep and London to the Journal says; Your narrow pass at the base of the Matter has received a courteous boro for travel between the two basins. note from llalfnur. who, next to SalisTo enable the Sperry party to get is the ninet Important member bury, their surveying Instruments and camp of In Cabinet. this note, while the equipage Into Avalanche haaln, a trail deploring that hia position ns Minister waa cut from near the head of I .eke forbids him from eoininunlrating diMcDonald to Avalanche lake. As soon rectly on tlie subject with any newsaa ttys trail was passable, parties of paper. he conveys the Interesting and nature's lovers began to visit the baaln. exclusive Intelligence that he Intends So fur, tha tourlata who have penetaking an early opportunity for maktrated to this spot have been largely ing a public pronouncement of tlie from Kallapell and Great Falla, Mont., who subject. Balfour has won the of both Liberal and Irish, though a few from aa far east aa U os-t- confidence Ills own pnrty. In a remarkhave already been attracted to It. aa well as What imsltlon he will All who have gone In there pronounce able degree. to conjecture, but it Is Is difficult take It a marvel of scenic beauty. known that though he Is hold and conFOUND COPPER VEIN'S. fident on the line of settled policy, lie Is very taetful In navigating "twisted'' After spending ten days In and about currant. Avalanche basin, the arty proceeded nillea furnorthward about twenty-liv- e BRADSTREET'S BUSINESS. ther, following a trail that haa recently been cut to some very interesting exore aerie of a of and copper posures of Activity Noticeable Tha promising Incipient mines. When only Slacking Outlook for th Future. a abort distance from the copiier veins, New York. Jan. - llraiMrwl's tunoi-n,and within about leu inlles of the will ssv: The wiek shall elided British line, they came uton mountain lSis anil lias Imn very ushered in iwti , as is usual at scenery even grander and more Interin mereaiitilw lull baAvalanche business lias than that about I of Thu volume Ilia period. esting sin. These northerly mountain peak fallen aasv sharply, uwln to the Ni-In trade the uulel and more ara aot only higher, ragged and Year's holiday, and at a lime alien s.,.. kt.il.iiiK morn unique than those nearer Lake Ini r Hau lers fur ci.mim samples MoDonald, bnt they are more striking ara I be aiteiuiioi el jebls-iand taking In form and In commissliiii Ileuses. In geological structure. color. A little north of the "lutorna-tlonA slaekening ef activliy in Home lmmir-tuiiuliee-ablo fa Copper Mine," and almut inaiiuraeiuring lines renti-imiles from Lake McDonald, Telegrams from meres mile le'inu be al eiders. slew came exeepliun a upon which, the party glacier report Jobbers a few pellill ill Boutin-il- l Hlair. are with Ita anew field, completely fills an In milt-rline St many dileading antphltheater nearly four mile in as lo the niiihs.k for Had In llie ameter. and dischargee ltaelf eastward fltlanl feme near future, aliliuiigh in into the valley of the Delly river, a tu- ara expressed of an Iinfavnralije rff.sT, multuous stream which rurvea northlegisdo to Inabllty tn secure ward sad flows Into the Saakatchewan. lation on fliianrlal qiiasllon. flour. Isdli ccasis Prof. Chaney spent two days study lug Kxporls of a heat amilids week aimnmi thla glacier and making notes and of th United Hlntes, with X.I42.o In I lie sketches of Its peculiarities. In view lo S.N6.71I. roilireri r. and I.lK.od weak last yes of hi being, aa the irty believe, the corresponding two year age. Bret scientist to visit this Held of anow In Asth laweek usual at this season, there Is a and Ice (If not. Indeed, the lirat white rnnslilcrabte Increase in the tiumlier of man who ever crossed It), and In view business fa Ihnes In Ilia fulled Slates, of tha fact o far as the iwrty could tho total rraehlng OS lids west,onesaslnsl year learn, that It has never been reported lie Iasi week, 372 in lbs week or gamed, the party agreed to call It ago. 41 two years aga and 111 In the wask thrss ago. years "Chaney Glacier. FOUR NEW LAKES NAMED. MATHEW ARNOLD AND BARN UM Clou to Ita terminal moraine Ilea s beautiful lake, rendered turquoise In YVhen Mr. Arnold returned from the sol or by the turbid glacier water that United States full of delight nt tho unfoe da It; and further down th valley bounded courtesy and hospitality with lie several other lakes, artistic In form which he hnd been received, he tidil an of clearest sparkling water. Trap-par- a with glee and gurlo a story uf tlie lute who have vlalted that country say Mr. Bnrnuni. The great showman, he that tho lakes are full of mid. had Invited him to hi house In and gamy trout Tho four larger lakes the following terms: "Y'ou, sir. lire a wars named respectively "Glacier. celebrity. I am a notoriety. YY ought Long" and Emerald." It la to lie Centeg "I couldn't go." he said that In the same valley, close to added, acquainted." "hut It was very nire of him." the four lakes above named, are sev- Herbert YVnoiltlelil 1'uul, In the Janueral other email lakes which were inForum. visible from tha points of outlook ary Queen Mnrgherltn of lluly now nmkee reached by the party. long excursion on her bicycle. Iter exCROWN OF THE CONTINENT. ample Is being followed hy the court North of tho Chaney glacier, and at led lea Senator Wolcott of Colorado and Mr. about tho same level, I another charmenowa Wolcott were passengers on "La ing lake, fed by the eternal which arrived at New York which lie about It, and flecked with numerous losbergs that crumble and yesterday from Havre. fl parry I la iV.1 r.'gra.'Rr.'a wj-i- A A 8 TART LI NO FORECAST. Of all forecasts that can be mads today regarding the future of the Untied buttes uf America, none senna mure reasonable than that the civilisation uf thla Nation will be essentially Germanic in Its fundamental characteristics. It may tn truth be said that, from the loftiest iHdnt of view of universal in history, the moat liuortuiit event the nineteenth century at least so far aa YVentern civilisation is concerned-in- ay easily prove to be the reunion hundred after a cratlun of fourteen yeurti) of the Germanic race Anglo-Saxo- n k and Teuton upon the vitglu A century Midi of the new continent. describes Kidd Mr. u graphically agu, It waa to In hi "His-ia- l Evolution, century. prciliimliiiite in the This question wua answered for Kurotie hy the cxpani'lon of England and the of the purely Celtic people. Ho for ns the I'nlled State waa Hi" wit never doubtful: and it v.a settled for all time when i Austrian and of Geinmn. tide gri-sthe Hwl emigration to thin country set of those sturdy in. The lieseenilunt and eiiterpi lelng trib.n who hade fure-weto eiirh other oil the bleak Khote f th X' tli sea In 44!) are belay the for undisputed masters, offorthisgissl or conex II. I.r the great i beautifully tinent. A Isird ii iu In inaugural lecture at ua well of the forI'nmluiilNe. "the tune of man I woven without a void: In HiM'ieiy. a In nntiiro. the structure nnd we rau trai-- things is buck uuimeri tiptiMlIy until we dimly 1111 Itcclaiatiiui of independence descry Mr. Fredin the forest of Germany." erick William lloll. In tlie Jimimry nliii-teenti- d. lue ll d-- e - I'd mu. gentle-minde- iqicn-henile- d. -- snow-fleld- A STUPID DRIVER. A driver In the employ of one of the big dry good More in Fulton aireet was dlMchurgcd lust week under novel for over circumstance, lie hail it yeiir in the employ of the Unit nnd Wit full hf ill anil honest, and hi dismiss. iistiuilsheil hlui. inn or th- - tirin' ).irgel eustniners I the wife uf a retired wholesale liquor living In Wnshliiglon avenue. Her house I a lino one. anil style and lavish display of wealth lire kept at the front. This woman vlalted the store on Saturday and naked to --e oiie of the proprietors. The conversation which followed was In le-c- r suli-atsnc- "I want the driver of wiigoii No. at once, and If you don't dlrtelmrge him I'll to trailing here." "Why miulnm, said the iistoulshed tneivliun:. "If he ha Insulird you or Invn dishonest we certainly shall discharge him. 1ray whin ha 1 he done?" "He don't give me all )ay for," snapped the fair lunplulllaut. will We make "What! ImimsHlble! t, good the haw at once." said the milling: "Now, Mi. Hlank, give me ii nieniorandiim of what he ha fulled to deliver." "till, i got all the good I ordered," ll, he said she, coloring, "hut don't deliver the good right, or aa a driver should, anil I've lust all patience wllli hint and want hi:.: discharged." "I'lraae explain, madam," said the perplexed storekeeper. "Well, said the woman, "if Just this way. That driver has been in the liubit of lute of stopping his horse In front of my next door nelghlsir, a horrid. stuck-uthing, anil day before yesterday, when he delivered that pluno stand, lump and the carved for which 1 paid $lu0, hia wagon wasn't In front nf my house at all, hut In front of the house next ilisir. YVhen I called thut uftenmon on Mrs. O., across the street, she said: 'l)ld you set the perfectly exquisite piano lump and e table your nelghlsir, Lira. , received today?' "It mortified me so I almost cried, continued the grieved woman, "and everyone on the street thinks It was who siient $1(8) for a hrlc-a- Mr. hrac table and not me. YVhen 1 Biend my gis'd money for good I Insist that the wagon which deliver them toia right 1 In front of my ihsir. anil that'a why want that driver dlNchnrgrd. It's my right, and I Insist upon iny rights." The merchant with difilculty kept from laughing outright, hut he almula-te- il a syirqiathy amt Indignation and in tiered the driver discharge forthThe woman' with. wrath was apwill prohuhly The driver poor peased. Is; reinstated and put on another delivery route. N. Y. Tribune. iner-ehun- but-we- p lirlc-a-br- bric-a-bra- elr-el- a ut ul-- a Gno-CHig- HEWLETT BROS. TiffiMfoSSWs THE PUREST BAKING POWDER ANIBE8T HARE. TH It T N TRIPLE PICKS FLAVORING ag BUT EXTRACTS . igaaie they"? ara uud fresh every IUI USDS GFTHIS . AUDKLIClOUa. Try Them ERAXD EOAF.ANTEED KFT OH HONEY TO BE EQUAL TO THE REFUIDED BEST m THE MAT mm A correspondent writing from Suit Lake City to the Chicago Chronicle, under date of December SUth. makes the following reference to Mercur and Its bonwnsas; tah "Balt Lake City, Utah. Dec. has upset many geologi'Wl theories," said an old miner to a representative In tlie liibhy uf one of of tlie Clirunii-lBalt Lake's hotrla, watching a crowd of exeiled men talking uf the new gold Held ut Mercur, or. us it is euininiinly called. Camp Floyd. 'the "1 remember," he iniitinued, geulugiata all suld that silver could nut be found in sandstone, unit uled their position m ieiiiffii'ally to tludr uwn nalisraellon. Al the same lime at Silver lleef ore was being milled that was mulling but sandstone and silver, and an old fiieiid uf mine sold a iis-- house he hud lived In for had not years fur $ll,0rti, which cost him tu build. Slid wasn t 11c hail woilli for any purpose been housed in u pulaee of silver, and bail lived iu poverty und want. When a fellow down South found gold In a Id it WHS vein of eisil, tile geologl an iiiiHilhlllty; that l. ime. even in a iiioue-n- t uf forgelfulue. s. would never do sneli u thing. But the man who owned the coni didnt take their word for It, and went on mining 111 c:il and gold, too, and gold. It wus good yellow . The .Ylereur dismnile the owner trict is also a puxxle to geologists, and none of tlicin dares suy whether the lepusit Is sedimentary or whether it lies tn fissure or contact veins. "The gold tlebla of Mercur are the one tuple of conversation in the hotels amt upon the street of the Mormon capital, all talking of 'gold.' sedimentvein, ary deposit,' 'cyanides,' 'contact and many who apparent ly are wanderers, compare the (.'amp Floyd and Mercur fields with the Kaffir hill anil the Johannesburg district nf Africa. Cripple Creek, loo, Is often referred to. unit It seenia tlie Impression that Cripple Creek although the values nt are not nearly ire higher, the deposits so vast nor an permanent. Camp Floyd, or Fairfield, ilea fifty miles from Balt Lake City. Here the Union Fact tic train goes on 40 the silver ramp of Kureka, Hllver City and Tlntlc, and r' line goes up the a little hill to Mercur. The distance by the Balt Lake A Mercur railroad from Fairfield to Mermiles. Aa the cur la ten and crow files It is live; but the crow flies over the hills and the railroad cllmlis around them. Kach passenger puts a silver dollar into a buckskin tack held by the conductor, for passage money, a the conductor is also ticket seller, baggage-mastand brakeinan. "The town of Mercur consists of frame buildings on either aide of a wagon road In s guleh, every other building being either s hotel or saloon ar the two combined. The range of mountains the Mercur district la in la called the Oqulrrh. anil contains some of the richest gold and silver deimsita In the West. Not far from the Mercur gold fields is Bingham, the oldest mione thr.t has ning camp In Utah, andsilver In 1'ge produced both gold and Kuquantities. In the same range Is reka. Tlntlc. Hllver City, Ophlr, Stock-toand others, rich In mineral and ul! midcontaining paying mines. Hvre, way In the very heart and center of this range of hills, is found the strangest, richest problem nf them all. If all the mining camps of Utah were hammered into one, all the vast deposits of mineral were now massed in solid pyramids of gold and silver extracted from the one refined, Mercur could in ten years out-to- p every pyramid with solid yellow gold, and then have deep In the bowels of the earth beneath her untold wealth, ao vast la the great mineral xone that Ilea concealed ben hills. neath the In 1X70 silver waa discovered near what Is now known aa the town nf Mercur. It waa found In the old flpnr-roHawk and Carrie flteel mines In produced paying quantities, and both about $200,000 each. The silver deposit soon worked out. however, and cinnabar waa found In some of the workings that carried a small amount uf guld value. After many thouannd dollars had been expended In the district trying to extract tlie gold from the ore, and endeavoring to find bodies of ore carrying silver, the district waa abandoned and for twen: years remained In that condition. BOUGHT BY NKBRABKANB. "In 1891 Nebraska capitalists bought what la now known aa the Mercur mine, the ore carrying at that time a value of $8 er ton. They could find no process for extracting the ore, aa the ordinary process of milling would not separate the gold. They had become iliscouvageil, when they heard of a process of extracting ore with a solution of cyanide. They sent some ore to lie tested, and found that tt was successful, lu fact, the only process known thst would extract the gold in the Mercur district. In 1882 the Mercur company put In an ore crusher and cyanide plant, and up to this date has paid about half a million in dividends. There are now five large plants beside the Mercur In tlie Uiimp Floyd district. la it. wuy Pfiwaw J PSTfl CALIFORNIA for Qrape Juices I Just the thing i Winter Gatherings, Gan be served hot. - - - Fhe Organic Remedies !IIHrfl linn I A $1 boxie uarsatard to do you m re good tt an s gallon of any cine you ver took. tor Omr Doiitflartft' lurdtur tivery li liitfh urt lmiti4r . Huilly thing tlHiM(i imJi matinMuJil rrlrttitljlfl for lifu ly Aluminum or tli ailjuttini'iil uf e'luiu croft im. SETS OF Wr. Itlilu rcurli uf ull. irred lar ytur aptiraml. ta.'elM. aad hands. a. Homnpatli c twll.t.6 Ware pasadsl ! csre dii- - T OSkiril E. (KiMR lf er n mm. thin any al thi aiureoui allcpithic j at- Attorney - Law ire uver think, nodi: fia Tolnl III 34 Stales and Terri- Ti.ititmmiAL GKoura IM 1.72. 36 hpmmart. No. Slates. Lines. Miles New Kmil.md group Middle Atlantic group... Hoiilhwcalern group Northwestern group Uacllh: group Total REMEDY FOR RAILROAD WARS. RATE After deaerthlng the case of rate wars, Mr. Mhlgley, chairman of the Western Freight association, Indicates a itosslhle cure. He gnya: Of necesthe law; theresity It must be within fore. as matters now stand, pools, as a It mny remedy are excluded. be found In the words 'responsibility anil 'linacrountnblllty.' The resiMiiisl-lilllt- y for each disastrous break In rates should be located, and the punishment due should be Inflicted without fenr or favor. In order to make such a remedy effective, there should be constituted a board or syndicate of bankers, representing Investors In corporate properties. flurh an organisation would be In a position to aay to each company: We will commend your securities so I'dig as your prniwrty Is managed conservatively; but If It should apimir that your officer are acting reckliwsiy, or are willful disturbers, we will advise the public to let your flocks and A statement of that bonds alone.' kind, from men of authority In financial circles would speedily sulslue the most belligerent, and presumably compel the director of the company concerned to give their Immediate attention to the troubles, with the probable reaull that the disturbances would cease. Tho remedy la simple; but there need lie no doubt aa to Its efficacy. No man, however rich or powerful, would disregard an Intimation of the character desert lied; while the possibility of its receipt would restrain those who depend on the cnnltdcnce of other for their employment." Mr. John YV. klldglvy, In the Januury Forum. aredi THE ORGANIC REMEDY Evening Train Leaving S p rin g vine at 9.00 p m Wu torn rad4uarlera CO. KALT LAKE C1T Connecting cialiy with System. nn j ) DRUG CO., .cneral Wliolnsale ELDEX-JUDBO- A-- for Utah. L ru.l string band In one instruail ltiyed at the same time and 1 tic pci, n. The gieatcst lnven-o ot the nineteenth century Is the Everett Piano with the plectu plume, r er bettor kiuiwn as the mnndolin, and lmnju attachment, utud only e is the famous Everett, the n .st arid only complete piano u It is sold at exce.talnglj low pslces and on very easy ter us. A' large and well selected stcck ol these eleguut pianos always kept in stuck at E. N. Jenkins Temple of Music, 23d South Main street. Pend for catalogues and prices. We are also agents for ChicklriiiK & Son's and II 'rvard i ment m BURLINGTON gui-tai- ' ROUTE du:-abl- Train No. 2 a. Di.ivs Omaha, Kansas City, St.Lcuis and Chiceto 1 h rough Pullman Sleepers, Free Reclining Chair Cara, Dining Cars Ala Carte. tSocurs Tickets at Pianos. W. F. McMILLAN TAY. PASS. AOT. UKXKIAI. AUKMT. Room ll,over No. POTLATCH. PALOU-SE- 10 AV.2iul So St . Salt Lake City, Utah. England's Dangerous Situation. New York, Jan. T. A dispatch from London says: South Africa so completely occupies the attention of the English that the controversy with the United States la for the day at least forgotten. If It cornea up again In Its serious form of three weeks ago It will be because Lord Salisbury is too stubborn to learn the lesson of the German Emperor's message. That the Kaiser's telegram to the President of the Transvaal means avowed hostility to England Is universally accepted. He flouts at Great Britain's suzerainty over the Transvaal. To surrender that claim would he the most shameful concession in England's history for two centuries. The proiect of It la scornfully rejected by the entire English press. Tory and Liberal alike. Hut while that vital question remains unsettled, war with Germany i constantly menaced. Nor Is the secession of the South African cnlonlea made less threatening by the unexpected resignation without full explanntkm of Cedi Rhodes aa Premier of Caiie Colony. Rhodes only make way aa Premier to a tried and loyal lieutenant. While in office he waa a roapun-albl- o iifflcinl of the Queen and rould only traitorously conspire agalnat her Hia silence and Inaction government. while another lieutenant Is in mortal lieril In the Transvaal remain unexplained. If he haa absolutely surrendered it must mean that he has lost his nerve If not his faculties. The conviction that this Is not the cane la atilt general In London and thst the dispatches ilo not tell the real truth nf the situation, in any event the comTUB CY'ANIDR PBOCKBS. plete Isolation of England, on which In the cyanide process the ore Is there seems no possibility uf Improvecrushed until It will go through a wire ment In the Immediate future, makes to niosli front three-eightIt Incredible that she will pursue of an Inch In alxe. It Is then herquite quarrel with the United Btatea thrown Into large tanka, where a soluwhile the threatening attitude of Gertion of cyanide Is poured over the many. nf Ituasta and of France la crushed ore. The ore remalnn In the tanks from maintained. Dont Think it Will Succeed. thirty-si- x to forty-eighours, during Washington, Jan. $. Up to time nf which time the guld lu the ore liecotnes a part of the solution. The solution Is rlualng the department today, the then drawn off through long troughs Treasury officials hail received only a or boxes containing sine shavings, in few telegrams concerning the new loan, these were not of a character to passing through the boxes the gold and was them. Indicate how the announcement gathers on the shavings, coating It is then called amalgam. Tills amal- received throughout the country. Althe some President constrained call though whs as is It, gam, or cyanide, sent to a gold refinery, and then to the to make thla a popular loan as far aa United Btatea mint. The coat ot mi- possible by soliciting Individual subIt Is understood that neither ning and extracting ranges from $2.60 scriptions, he Mr. Carlisle place any reliance to $3 per ton. In Ita success, except through the aid The formation la country lime, with the syndicate, not because of any a porphyry dyke running through it. nf The veins of porphyry or ore bodies lack of cnnflilence, hut for the reason are a chert lime, carrying from $3 to 65 that the gold of the country is very in the hands of the bankers, per cent silica. The chert lime gives largely unwilling to part with It. exway and changes Into tha ore, which who are to their own material advantage, carries the gold presumably by the cept In a hot mineral solutions when plastic especially nt this time when It Is at a state forcing their way while In erup- premium. tive action. Thla formation has been An Editor Appointed. traced fur fifteen miles. The ore In Jan. $. The President paying quantities la usually found at Washington, a depth of from 2U0 to 4i0 feet. In has appointed K. Lrupp, editor of which runs Good Government, publlshefl In every Instance where ore, to be s member of the hoard high enough in gold to pny. tins been found. It la In vast quantities, so vast. of Indian commissioner, vice YVIlllam In fact, that it has been hard to comK. Russell, declined. pute the value of tlie deposit. Aa one old miner said, after visiting the mine: T have been In mines where I knew the mineral could be found In two directions, but when I E. MEIIESY got down the shaft of the Bttnahlne I found the ore In every direction. Acres Mmufsrlurlail Furrier. Fu nf It with an unknown depth and area. l I found it ao In all the Mg mines In the Txxlilumiwt-lllghedistrict. rmh prices for OPINIONS OF MINERS DIFFER. Raw Furs and "Nearly every miner has a different Idea as to the formation of the desediIs a Borne it claim that posit. Game Heads. mentary deposit, and that the veins of lime and porphyry running through U Ciirrpci'-iiHasd ccnslga IN MiNk p have been forced up by volcanic erupmean mltvlird. tion. Others claim that the veins ore Office and (ileiMom, regular. Immense contact vrlna extending for nillea, and only of a certain KNUTSFOKI) IIGTKL BLOCK. width. Others will have It that nt one time, when all this portion of the coun- Kxrrerjr sad Wurrtui, under Msnlluu lln try was Lake Bonneville, the ore wns Annex. deposited In the seams of the hills, and U s.ti.r lykk ctrv the whole country Is filled with the ih pualt an. mly requires digging tu And low-gra- ht nr YYash-Ingto- n, Bun-alil- llnwM-rasi- tl Reliable NE, PERI'S, R. O. W. Ottice. 19 R. F. NESLEN, u 'l a three-fourt- tories ; cine and dactare fail. R. G. W. Ry. SERVICE rs DISEASE. Csre ahaa ail sthar TAKE XEW n hy aupplyinf ta the .yiUai lacking vita elcmtnti. THE 4 ss.wniy rati sal ot combattini had h.t Faysuli, -- one-ha- , A. : 'Jerk-wate- rciaudy la sack diMZia. lika them ever st- isparal TEETH TlTns They how ilie-ipower fur good Quickly, You don't Imvu 0 Uku nix iu Iwnlvo uosen before you mu uml i ft giuann ns tu whether ll In helping ou or uut, cels dny or two lelU the alury. lie Lnvt evpftrule reiuedlr for Cough nud Onliin, fur Stouinch Liver ud llnwel IrnuhJ Nurroun Kxhnuiitlou, Acute Influiuumtury Rliu e nud Chronic luflftuiiuulurjr uiniUiu. kluUtnniUui MuK'ulnr KhcumntUtu nud Neural gin. Chrome Cough 4'hronio Dinrrtioen, Keiunl trouble. Cm ker. The fluent bnby Colie Cure lu the world, muituliiing no outnten or other unruolU.' drug nnd In boUUly bnruilrM tu the inOft drltvnti? tnfnnt. A wet nud ft alrjr Cntnrrh cure, t tore euro fur LnOrippe, nnd the Ideni cure for the Llquo hnlilt, which in Jcnt right, ftbnoluteljr the beet end cunu but fiA If your druggbt hm aot yet gut our ritoedtoit, dou't kt bln sell you kmu-lliiJuist nn good," because there la uothlug in ibis wide world no good nud hnrmlo, hat tend your monuy direct to u nud we will de:lver your lupdh'luo tu you prepaid nud refund your money if you think we have esngorated In the taut. Our prhv--i n re, f:r the Magnetic Collo euro Cough and Cold cute SO cent, fifty Cullen Canker eure, 10 ceuU: Catarrh care, ILK; fur enough interna' a ml local n mediae lu laet eii for week. aud for the balance of our care from two week , two mouth ' treatment, mak . tin the world. Ingtherkeapea'.'. : lr ih-h- il IMVSilN CITY DKNTIHT. ut price About Them. SALT LAKE CITY SODA WATER C0..SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH. J. H. EAVNS BEST Write Us k WE' are Distributing Agents. Notary Public. IN BASK, mrm Hewn The New R.S. WIM YER, OK KICK mt it. w Railroad Building's Low Record. The Chh-agRailway Age publishes a table allowing that railroad const ruction In the United Btatea haa reached a lower point thla year than for twenty years past. Only 1763 miles of track were laid, a tremendous decline from the great year of 16x7, when almost 13,000 miles were put down. The following table will show how tha trackage In til during IxH has been distributed: pre-arii- at -- Hula consequence wimi pluut-peculiar It is there, and no one know ur UPSET THEORIES realize the extent or rlchiieks ot It. When the nations are calling for more gold to carry on the commerce uf the Miirlil, nature reveals to man the bidstorehouse where the wealth haa Utah Formations Have Sur- den been alured ready against the day of need. prised Goldites. "Brlghoin Young once said, looking at the mountain peaks that wall lu the Vity of the 8iiIiiIh.' The hills A u ore tilled with gold and Correspondent of tha Chicago silver. Poms day It will lie brought Chronicle Writes of Camp Floyd secret Its from places to help beautify Tha Sedimentary and Volcanic Con- nnd build up Eton.' Ores was Mohawk said btrfor either gold or "That of troversy Assays had been discovered In I'tuli; to-I11 Confirm Previous Report Mc- silver day thousands find employment Queen Goes to tha Sampson. bringing from the secret places both gold snd atlver." $- -'' rlu-leo- twen-ty'-elg- ht 'aia'fwjtjj..1 It of nature ibis iwi-nt- ts y. - -- r v- --; xt PE0I6REED FRUIT TREES . These arc the names of thnni great agricultural and fruit growing districts in Idaho and Washington, reached hy the Northern 1acittc railroad. They each adjoin the other and together Torin a region hard to equal. The lolouse region has been noted for Its marvelous grain pnsiuetion. The Potlatch country Is analogous to tlie Ialouse. The Nex Perce region lies south of the others and has until recently been a part of a great Indian rescrvrtitin. 000,000 acres of It have liccn thrown open tn settlement and its lands ran lor bought upon cheap prices und terms. Write to Charles S Fee, General Passenger Agent, N. P. K. It., St. Paul, Minnesota, or F. 1. Gihlis, General Agent, Spokane, for folder and rates. PIONEER NURSERIES CO, SALT LAKE CITY, CTAU Grow Only and High First-cla- ss Grade Stock. A (ah 900 Steel Range for EXCELLENT IN EVERY RESPLCT We have an Immense line; of Stove. Ranges and Heaters to Select From. THE KSELEY INSTITUTE, bmt hot a hi rcaBAcs is axexica. direct, authoris'd branch of the parent house at Dwight, ill., ha& opened at IM W. Second North, Kail Ul&h Stove & Hardware Co. Lake City, on the line of the street railway running to Warm Springs. real on apaliaa'lsa, Owiar Com-n- r For the treatment of the Ihtior and r.ial anj Flrel Sonia Ita with Lesley Eytteelley 15,.x 12S. opium habits, Salt Lake City. double chlurlde'of golr Company's remedies. The Institute is under tho management of Dr. J. W. St. John, who ha. DONT LIBRA'S Iieen at work with and in the employ walk atralbt Wa taka flu of the Lesley E. Kecley Company for lar of pari wit fast a the past four years. The treatment comfort Rpnclsiuta la and daAnaai akoaa and management of patients will bo aripoM RuU breaw aa4 arOtclal Identically the saute as at Dwigh llaiba ef rmy areeriatlna A fn'-lna- i C Hilgert Deformity Shea Co. GOLD AND SILVER PRODUCT. 19 I Tklid Rntk BL, Mint Director Preston's Estimate of the Output. SALTUKE CITY, UTAH Washington, Jan. A The Director of the Mint has received approximate estimates of the gold and silver product of the United Btatea In 1895 from the G. P. CTTLMER BROS. mint officers and other agents employed to collect these statistics. Maaafaetarara of The value of the gold and the number of fine ounces of silver produced by the MMU OF EVERY several Btatea and Territories Ir esti- onun PICK UnOLO DESCRIPTION. mated to have been aa follows: The Director of the Mint la of the TAamaBss, oilb, Gold, Hllver, Source. value, fine oss. Alaska Arizona L'kiT.li) 1.0nn. not lRt.mo 15.a0.cni Csllfomla Colorado 15,in.i. 22.kOi 4,1810,001) 2.780.710 Idaho 6,1881 4n.iki Michigan Montana 4.282.?8) 14.Mi.aoo 1,700.1881 Nevada 022.0.) 1.076.000 15 4.718) New Mexico 7.TU0 3,2nu,iV Oregon Smith Appalachian 1.201 Sintra 816,20) ILiuih Dakota 4,2fi5,i.0 K.38) Texas 94.uo Utah ). 852. SCO 9,!22,d 11, or.) YVahlngtin 9a.i.) All others 25.000 M) Total $52,614,000 6),(8M.(80 opinion that the estimate for the gold product of Oregon la $600,000 too high; of Montnna, $250,000 too high; of South Dakota. $100,000 too high, anil that when the final figures are compiled the production of gold by the mines of the United Btatea In 18!5 will be found to have been from $46,000,000 to $47,000,000. nnd the allvar product alout 46,000,000 fine ounces. The product last year was $29,500,000 In gold and 49,500.000 fine ounce of silver. S l.WD.OH rinn,rauasaa, rrc. SO E. lat South, Salt Lake City. QtutaliAAil diaicnooa 11 absubrd. BYBItr IwralMt will aoed rafcttr iioairn g, J. GRIFFIN alaofspftlra arerjrikiaa aadwakafl 4 RMStrenl, oubail, UTAH. J. iUhliuft W- OP- - iHla aad ki wo-- k. edtla.Wri.e la CURRIE.fM uHkHby ftallmupffii, giVFft nil U. BALT LAKE-431- 898 at Cslltornlh MONEY LOANED rral lktak, 14 UolUt Mala 6 sit Lsks. ad awl nCabl plaaa la tba tsrrlMrv.lstim WATCHMAKER, JEW1LE8 Am J. Wyatt. AND OPTICIAN; ga Main Street. Farm Loacs f r wle J" MiUoruick r.lk.,.ialt I Luke. Cblldran Burned to Death. Dallas. Tex., Jmn. 1 Two children of Leonard burned to death ala John McBride, the retiring president nf Abram mile the American Federation of lailmr, will and south of Dallas lost night. Mr. Leonard were at church a Sir. Into the newsjiaiier business, iirotwldy r an offer uf tin eillluishlp mile from their house, which caught of the Inlior depart monl of one of the fire from some unknown cause. The New Y'ork m wsimpers. children. It la hollered, were asleep on It I now iitininineed that the rrrollee-tlon- a the llnnr. The origin of the fire Is beJ. J. Tngblls have lieved to have been of sparks flying from Iieen writ tin. nnd will soon bo piiblislnsl. an or fireplace grata evidently tlie tliinneial surer of Beiialnr Hlierinnu's lllernry venture lias enei.ur-nisi'- d from Kaunas tu tiy tlie Th Turkish Governmont has his hand nt tho snme gme. In assignment of Howard K. the offer of repreoentaUviia of thoaccepted puwnrt Herrns, a New York stock broker, since tn mediate IxMwoen the Iorlo and the Inliabilities of $155.24; nominal a.nvta kR' surgent of Zttuun, who are i.irroundod Uhl; actual aaseis, 1122,7 by Turkish troop. |