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Show which returns 20 ounces iu silver aud Co per cent lead. HUlpniMiU from Centennial Knraka. Tbe daily records of shipments of ore from the Centennial Kureka, shows that the property is capable of making the highest grade production of almost any mine in Utah. A sale was made yesterday yester-day of twenty-four tons which returned re-turned Mil ounces iu silver 11. 5, lead and 1 ounces aold to the ton netting the owners 7i00. Miuaa l Miliars. Harry Donovan will leave in a few days for Minneapolis on business connected con-nected with Tintic mining property. It, will be two or three weeks yet before be-fore the tramway to tbe Crescent will be cleaned out to permit the transportation transpor-tation of ore by that method. Six thousand and five tons of Horn Silver ore was purchased by local buyers buy-ers yesterday for the Globe and I'hila-delphia I'hila-delphia companies of J'uebio, aud the works at Aurora, Illinois. l'ark City will soon have another big propertv working in the ..Massachusetts, ..Massachu-setts, which will make some expensive improvement in its machinery and will employ a largo number of men, and will doubtless soou become a large producer. A M1NINGMKENKG. A Veritable Epidemic has Set in Caused by the Splendid EoporU Which are Coming. PROM ALL THE MINING CAMPS, Utah on the Threshold of a Wonderful Season of Excitement Backed by Subetaittial Discoveries. Kven the pouring rain and lowering clouds yesterday seemed to be powerless power-less to cool the heat of the mining excitement ex-citement or dampen the ardor of the enthusiasts. Jt will only need one more shipment of rich ore from Fish Springs or Dugway to lill every manly heart iu the western states with a consuming con-suming desire to test his fortune iu a battlo with the gold-ribbed "d silver-lined silver-lined mountains of the Deep Creek country. t THOSE Ml I I'M EXT COM I. Nrt. It is believed that tbe consignments of ore which will lie necessary to clinch the facts already published of the riches of llugwav, Fish Springs and Kagle.are now 011 ttiu way; and that when the test hare been made they will show a greater value thin any pre viously received. This seems reasonable reasona-ble from statements which have been made by several entirely disinterested parties who have arrived here within the past few davs and who have visited and examined the bonanzas belonging to Sam (iilson. Chipuian and (irantas well as the property of a dozen cither miuers who are opening up claims of nntut i.TMinim. and have been piling ore on the dumps from tho first tucmeut a blow was struck with a pick. IT IS COMING. It is certain now that nothing can prevent the boom, and it also seems positively assured that Salt Lake will receive such an awakening from its drowsy slumbers as to thrill all the old mossbacks from cuticle to marrow. i'hcisi'kciuks auk oi'tkittin. Scores of blue-hhirtcd and canvas and corduroy coated prospectors were seen yesterday buying grub, supplies and tools preparatory to making a campaign cam-paign iu the mines. These are only waiting now for the sun to pierce through the mantle man-tle of overhanging clouds to turn their faces and set their footsteps towards thestar which is leading them to the mineral meccas of the western empire. MORE (IILSON OKI! COMISU. A son of Sam Gilson, w ho has been so indisposed for sometime as to inca-pocitalo inca-pocitalo him for a journey to Dugwav, received a letter from his father yesterday, yester-day, stating that ho had mined four cars of ore from the liuckhorn since he went out tho last time, and that a shipment of one car was now on the road to this city which was better shan any which he had previously sent in. MINE lll(iiKll THAN F.VKK. The mine is not only opening up better bet-ter and showing larger bodies of ore with every explosion of a blast, but it is becoming better defined and gives added add-ed confidence that it is the making of a great property and possiby a grand bonanza. bo-nanza. FAHl l.oi'S ASSAYS. In the same letter from Gilson to bis son. he says that he has made some assays as-says within the past week from ore taken from the deepest workings of the mine, which returned all the way from .')(I00 to i:(0OU ounces in silver, with the usual amounts of gold, in some instances in-stances running as high as $000 to the ton. IT W II.I. SI'KKAliTO EVKItVCAMI'IN t'TAII. None of the old camps of tbe territory need feel jealous of the wonderful interest in-terest and great excitement w hich is being generated by the glowing reports of the rich strikes which are being made in the Deep Creek mountains. The honors of the old districts like Bingham, Bing-ham, Tintic and l'ark are assured, and the grand records they have made in the past and the brilliant showings they are making today, will always give them a great prestige. CAI'ITAI. WILL FI.cn V IN. Money w ill How into this city from the financial coders of the east, all of it seeking to get a slice of Cue gold ami silver riches. That infusion in-fusion w ill permeate every district from the Colorado river to the Idaho line, filling every gulch and mountain side with bustle and energy. No one locality local-ity or one camp can monopolize all the a'.teutiou or absorb all tho interest. (lltKAT STUIKKS have become so frequent within the past few weeks, scattered ail over the territory, that it is even now difficult for a man to decide which district oilers the most allurements to him to come to them and make a fortune. M Iniiifr E .'hng. Today's sales were an improvement over those of yesterday, and a better spirit existed. Davis sold 1O0O of Ma-lad Ma-lad Consolidated to Stevenson at i!c Woolley let KM) of Mammoth go to Murray for T."i. Stevenson sent 100 of the same to Murray at a like figure-Davis figure-Davis took 500 of Mammoth from Woolley at :!.;). TOIMYS'S yroTATlONS. STOCKS. rr3 J 'i f i, ? ; c. a r" ' A!re j ... ' I 1 el Alliatve 2 .' I Alienor . ! (I '') Ai It I l'i!; II Hara -s Suli-h'r Ul I (t Id Hut Hole I'lac r ii." Out- Kureka W ml Coturo 81 "I '.'ii ('resent ' Jialv is Oleiiro - i 4 vi Horn sliver 3 la j :i 1 . .M ilad 1 til ii; I 3 la 0! Mammoth :ue 3 8) 0! JiO Northern Sy j t :VI Ontario 40 :o Stanley 17UU 1 U. L. .4 C. Co .... 8 jr. Cfili o HI Woodstde 9 ho Mlvwtvrtirs. . ... .. .... ..... ti:'-t To'a sliares sold, ;nw. Good Ora In Old Tli(raph. Leasers working on the Old Telegraph Tele-graph are nearly ail of them doing splendidly, the grade of ore produced being of the most satisfactory char-icter and much richer than any the mine has yielded for sometime. Two hundred and twenty-three tons which have been shipped and sampled this week have Itiven returns of ! .:. 37.'! and IS.i ounces in silver, 12. IS and 4S per cent lead and from $1.00 to $T.',,0 a ton in gold. Deep Mining fa Hlnch&m. The more developments are being pushed to reach a greater depth in the mines at liingbam, the more fixed becomes be-comes the know ledge that the bodies of ore are permanent and that thev get richer. Ou the 1500 level of the Brooklyn Brook-lyn there is opened a body of almost solid iralcua which is two feet wide and |