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Show NALK OK T 1 1 K K HI M A SILVfcll M 1 X K . I'rli c 1, -,00,1100. Mr. .lames M. Pay, of this city, one nf the (ordinate nwiiers i,f the famous liuiuia Silver Mine, ivtvivnl a dis-paleli dis-paleli to-day from Mr. Chi.-holui, one ot' the partners, stating thtit a sale of the mine hid been eihcled fr jl,-;,i jl,-;,i iii.iii n i. The pureha-er is Mr. Ten llyeli, of New 1'ork, who has been somewhat luuinus a- the owner of several sev-eral fast hor-es. We staled some two mouths ago that the mine, had been sold for 1Jiki.ihki. This was correct; but the purchaser, Mr. Lent, of San Fran cisco, failed to raise the necessary funds, and the property was not transferred. trans-ferred. It was fortunate for the owners own-ers that the sale was not consummated, for they have since taken out vast quantities of ore, which employed w hole trains of cars in its transportation transporta-tion to New York, and they now sell it for iJtiO.iKM more than the figures then agreed upon. The lucky owners of this mine areas follows: Warren 11 us-ey, a banker of Salt Lake City, one-fourth; Kobert B. Chisholm, of lllgin, Lis., formerly a printer iu Chicago, one-fourth: James M. lay, of Galena, one-eight; four Walker brothers, Salt Lake merchants, one-sixteenth; Captaiu James Smith, of Salt Lake City, formerly of Chicago, a little less than one-sixteenth; Mrs. Minerva Cnnnington, wife of a Salt Lake merchant, one-ninetieth, and Mr. Cliff, of Salt Lake one-twenty-fourth. G'llrna, Jit., O'azrll':, March lor.. "Go from home for news." Some of the foregoing information will be interesting to various and sundry par-tics par-tics iu this region. |