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Show INTER-MOUNTAI- 4 MINING REVIEW. N listed mines that paid dividends in for operating said gates located in said recesses, and within THE twenty-sevesides of the car. OFJanuary, as reported by the Engineering and Mining the line of54G.theCombined miners tool and candlestick. A. O. 554, made journal, seven were Utah properties, and no other State Sjaholm, Negaunee, Mich. of feel to In a miners candlestick, the combination of a frame, a proud an equal showing. The new State has reason thereto and spring band having one end adjustably secured herself. provided with a perforation in its other end, said frame having portion arranged to pass through the perhundred and fourteen Park City voters havo joined a SEVEN of forated end of the band, a nut screwing on the frame outside made was Colbath W. II. president party. the perforated end of the band and serving to hold the same in other effected are being in place; two members, one of which is secured to the nut, the the club. Similar organizations surUtah camps, and the calculations of the old party politicians said members being provided with reciprocal engaging faces, and means for locking the swinging member to the nut. are likely to be upset in the next campaign. 551,551. Ore washer, C. II. Thomas, Sonora, Cal. In an ore lvasher, a surface of sand spread upon the separmen out prospecting in Kanosh Canyon, Millard ate soft of adhesive waterproof material and held in layer TWO and bones came across some human camp place by the drying or hardening of such adhesive material. utensils and the local paper states that they believe they A working surface covered first with paint, then with fine have found an ancient prospect of great value. If the sand, and lastly with paint. 554,563. Separating Furnace Fumes, II. G. Williams, of rich ore bodies indication is an bones of human presence Pueblo, Colo. to a run idea tunnel under a be good in that region, it might In an apparatus for the separation of dust from furnace-fumea consisting of the combination with a the town cemetery. and a discharge gate, of a funshell having a hopper-bottonel inclosed in said shell having a spout discharging near said Herald welcomes to its erchange table the a diaphragm extending between the funnel Mining Review, published weekly at Salt Lake gate, and the shell, an inlet pipe opening into said shell below the of is one and well out C. starts T. Review The Ilarte. City by and in a downward direction, and an outlet-pip- e diaphragm area leading out the best of its class that we know of. If it can keep up the of large initial but progressively-decreasinpace that it has set in the first issue it will not be long until it of the top of the shell. is a recognized authority in the region. SALT LAKE NUGGETS. n screw-threade- d s, dust-catch- er m Inter-Mountai- n wire-nettin- g g inter-mountai- n Kootenai Herald. A. M. Grant, of the Eagle Foundry and Machine Com- the pany, has gone to Denver. the Francis Smith and David D. Erwin, stockholders in the development of which has been made possible by the opening Anchor Company, arrived from Michigan last Saturday. of the Nez Perces Indian reservation. It presents one more Agent Jackson of the Consolidated Kansas City Smelting rich field for the army of prospectors who will swarm the hills & Refining Company is now in British Columbia. Salt Lake capitalists have bonded the Sunshine mine, in of this region when the spring suns have the Neal district, near Boise, the consideration being 832,000. melted the snows. W. II. Ryer, manager of the Rocky Mountain District of the Crescent Steel Company, Pittsburg, was over from Denver is into now world of the last week. THE vocabularyand even mininghas thrown asidecoming his bow and The Utah & Montana Machinery Company havo furuse, Cupid Ottumwa arrow and is dealing in bonds and leases. A Salt Lake bachelor, nished to the Daly West mine a a who may bo seen daily on the floor of the Mining Stock Ex- hoist, for use in winze, manager of the Rover, has reDorsey, Reof informed editor the the Mining change, confidentially turned from Nebraska, and a number of prominent Beatrice to enter state blessed of was the he about that matrimony. capitalists accompanied him. view, But dont say anything about it, he enjoined, because, Judge Colburn, E.G.Rognon and Dr. H. M. Warren reprewhile I have taken an option, the deal isnt quite closed yet. sented Salt Lakes mining interests at the opening of the New THIS issue will be found a description and map of IN Clearwater gold belt, a new mining district in Idaho, inter-mountai- n Ex-Congressm- 'T'HE Mining Review takes the liberty to publish the fol- - lowing extracts from a letter written to the publisher by Mr. W. S. Hunnewell, general sales agent of the Gutta Percha and Rubber Manufacturing Company, at New York: I have read the Mining Review from cover to cover and I wish to say that I think it contains more news than any edition of its kind in the West. I have been almost everywhere from the British line to Old Mexico, and I consider the chances in Utah better than anywhere in the West. 'T'HE Review points with no small degree of pride to the high character of its advertising patronage. The efforts of the reliable and publisher to give to this community a first-clashonest mining journal have been appreciated and nearly, if not quite all the representative mining men of this region are numbered among its subscribers. It has become, therefore, a most desirable advertising medium for firms desiring the trade of those engaged in mining. Many of the'foremost and most reliable of these firms are now represented in its advertising columns, and it is with pleasure that it commends them to the public. s, Hilling and Metallurgical Patents. List of patents relating to mining issued February 11, 1803; reported for the Mining Review by J. F. Corker, Patent Solicitor, office 311 and 312 Atlas Block, Salt Lake City. Copies furnished for 25 cents each. Number of patonts issued during the week to American citizens, 415; foreign citizens, 29. 551, 531. Dumping car. W. McMahon, Rahway, N. J. A car having a hopper provided with a lower opening, and gates to close said opening, said hopper having side recesses formed by housings sot in the sides of said hopper, and means an York Mining Stock Exchange. Many Salt Lake mining men celebrated Utah day at the Leadville Ice Palace, among them being George II. Robinson, manager of the DeLamar properties. The Daily Mining Stock Reporter, a sprightly little sheet containing the transactions of the Mining Exchange, made its appearance during the week. The Salt Lake owners of the Ophir gold mine, located at Humboldt, Nev., will erect a stamp mill in the spring. A large body of free milling ore has been developed, the two grades yielding 882 and 835 per ton. One of the most attractive prospectuses yet issued is that of the Mercur Mammoth Company, which contains a vast amount of information concerning the Camp Floyd gold belt. Thomas J. Barbour, representing the Risdon Iron Works of San Francisco, was in the city during the week. This firm supplied the machinery for the Daly West mill, and has recently been adding to the plant of the Bullion Beck. T. L. Dee, of the Sullivan Machinery Company, Chicago, is making this city his temporary headquarters, for the purpose of introducing the famous diamond drills manufactured by his firm. He states that the Sullivan Company is now sending drills to South Africa, guaranteed to bore a vertical hole a mile deep. The general mining revival has filled the hills north and east of this city with an army of prospectors, and many locations have been made. Some fair gold assays have been secured and a number of claims are being developed. The existence up City Creek Canyon of small seams of high-grad- e silver ore, and of larger bodies of low grade gold has long been known, and the city has grown somewhat accustomed to these booms. However, the fact that the country periodical foot-hihas been prospected over for forty years is no proof that pay ore does not exist in that locality and there are indications of the presence of a much stronger vein than any yet discovered up the canyon, and it may be possible that some of the low grade ore considered worthless in the past can now bo profitably handled by one of the thousands of new processes. ll |