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Show IS VERY DEAfi; lJAX THE ONLY FEATURE ment of .lead-silver ore from the' old working of the property. ' The . Record of Park City reports twenty tons of ore a- day being- broken In development work at j the Daly-. Judge, - j ... : - Ed Freud en thai has resigned as superintendent su-perintendent of the Majestic company and will devote himself .to his twn Interests In-terests at Ploche, Nev.. departing for that camp Tuesday evening. i Manager Rhodln of the American Flar of Park City has returned from the East . :- ; The Honerlne mill is at present running run-ning over ag-aln a lot of tailing while waiting for the roads to set better. . The New York marketed forty-one tons of ore Monday which . will net about 880 per ton. -' ' . It is reported that a'lnlnor accident to the .compressor bas; delayed matters at the Columbus Consolidated milL t C. O. Elllncwood leaves Tuesday night for 'the properties .aofvthe Twin Falls Land and Water company, accompanied ac-companied by P. L. Klmberly and L. C. Huck. All of the party will return to the city shortly where they will take a look over the mines In which they are interested. The Taylor-Brunton . sampler reports the arrival of ten cars of ore from Tin-tic, Tin-tic, Ave from Frisco, two from Bingham Bing-ham and two from Tonopah. METAL MABZET. ?? BBSBBMBaSBBSBW The metal market Is un- changed Tuesday, silver setting- at 60 cents per ounce, copper at 14Vs cents per pound, and lead In ores at 13.50 per 100 pounds.. The A. 8. & R. Co.'s actual average weekly sales price for desllver- ized domestic lead In New York Is 84.45 per 100 pounds. j it the brokers are experimenting as tf . nowjaadhe business on the mining-, ex-. ex-. change can be they very nearly reached the limit Tuesday morning. ; The entire morning's business amounted to but 425,and so' far as demand went ther was no such work In the knowledge of the traders. None of the higher pricea stocks which have been attracting at-, tentlon for some weeks waa dealt In, and the market presented but one. feature: fea-ture: outside the unparalleled dullness. That feature was the advance in AJax. That stock has been In some demand for the la.it few weeks, and has-been fairly steady and strong around 14c and 15o, but Tuesday morning it shot up without a break to 20c, with fully .2000 shares changing hands. May Day was fairly steady at 12c, and that price was freely offered for the stock, with few shares coming out' Silver Shield was to be had at 12ttc- and Little Chief was held at the regulation price of 2c. - The closing quotations follow: . Bid. Asked. AJax :............$ .18 20 Alice-.. ..: , 60 .80 Boston Consolidated 6.26 7.00 Bullion-Beck .) Beck Tunnel 10 . .12 Butler-Liberal 13H .13 Carisa H Consolidated Mercur .36 " .88 Century 04 .07V4 Creole .'-. 20 .45 Daly 2.65 Daly-Judge 6.00 7.00 Daly West .. 16.62. 17.87 Eagle Sc. Blue Bell .77 .85 Galena 12 .30 Grand Central a.17 S.26 GoldfleW Bonanza .03 ' Horn Sliver 1.60 2.00 . Ingot .0H4 M Little Chief 02 . .02 Lower Mammoth OMi .10 Montana Tonopah 2 -9 3.05 Mammoth 1.18 1-25 May- Day. .13 .12 McNamara .65 .... New York .57 .69 ' Ontario 4.00 Richmond-Anaconda -03 Swansea 30 .35 South Swansea .04 .07 Sacramento......... .09 .09 Silver King 60:00 Star Consolidated 12 -15 Silver 8hleld 13 -13 Tonopah 13.00 Tonopah ' Belmont 95 Tonopah Extension 4.50 6.25 Tonopah Midway 05 .... Tetro I .1S 21 United States 24.75 25.25 Uncle Sam Consolidated 30 .31 Utah 35 Victoria 1.76 1.90 Victor Consolidated 08 .044 Wabash 1.25 1.80 Tankee Consolidated S3 .35 MORNING SALES. AJax, 600 at J7c; 600 at 19c May Day. 500 at 12c. Silver Shield. 400 at 12c. Little Chief, 2000 at 2c. 1 QPEN BOARD. AJax. 400 at 19c; 100 at 20c TOTALS. Regular call, 3900 shares for 8329. Open board. 600 share for 886. Total, 4400 shares for 8425. Child, Cole A Co., Brokers, 100 Atlas block. .Both 'phones 325. BBSBBBSSaBSBBHBBSB STRIKE IN CENTURY. Manager P. W. Madsen of the Century Is In - receipt of a letter from that property prop-erty Tuesday morning which states that a four-foot vein of fine ore has been opened up by the crosscut to the north on the lower level. This news is most encouraging, en-couraging, ' as it shows that the development develop-ment work, which is all that la being done at the mine at the present time, is fulfilling ful-filling its object The ore which is being broken by the miners In blocking out the . ore bodies is going into the bins, which - are almost filled, and It will be but a lit-w lit-w tie time longer before the mill will be nble to start up with the assurance that there will be enough ore to run it continuously. con-tinuously. ' PIOCHE-NTTVADA CON. ' DEAL HANGING FIRE. The deal for the big block of shares In the Pioche-Nevada Consolidated is still pending. It I understood that C. E. Loose, who was on of the prospective purchasers, desired some concessions from the Pioche-Nevada which that company was not willing to grant The deal Is not definitely off and it is likely that the sale will still be made. This Is made more certain cer-tain as It is definitely known that Messrs. Loose and Hatfield were most pleased with the property, which they examined closely last week. The stockholders of the Pioche-Nevada Consolidated. did not wait for the action of the purchasing syndicate, but held their delayed meeting Monday evening and elected Messrs. Cornish, Burton, Zink. Gardner. Joe Reeves, Ben Reeves r.d Brady directors for the coming year. The director have not as yet chosen officers of-ficers for the year but will meet for that purpose within th next few days. ' "WORK AT DE LA MAR. Assistant Superintendent Arthur Parsons of the Bamberger De La Mar ' tnlnea and mill Is up from the south on g short visit and reports the property snovlng as smoothly as possible. The work of excavating for the new slimes lant which is to treat the Immense tonnage of tailings on the De La Mar dumps has not as yet been begun owing ow-ing Xo a slight delay in the preparation 0t the plans. The contracts for ' the tanas and construction hove not been 1st thus far, but the company Is receiving receiv-ing bids and the plant will be rushed to completion. Mr. Parsons, who with Mr. Fetter-gaan Fetter-gaan of Caliente, owns the Fetterman property at that place, states that there is at present no work going on at that property and that things are rather quiet at that point. ' y-rr T Tmrw to PI0CHE Oaorge F. Mllllken, who has been elected to lay out the policy of development devel-opment &t the properties of the Utah-Nevada Utah-Nevada company, leaves for Ploche, Nev., Tuesday night to make a thorough, thor-ough, examination of the properties owned by the company in and around that district He says that as soon as b bas determined Just what line the ' work will take men will be put to work getting the properties in shape. The Ploche properties Include the Manhattan, Manhat-tan, the old Raymond tt Ely. the dumps at. Taylorsville and Bullionvllle and some - minor properties. As soon- as he has things running at Ploche Mr. MUliken will go to Beaver county to start things going at the Imperial Im-perial and the Comet and will wind up Els -trip at-the Last Chance at Bingham. Bing-ham. . ' , 2tlNTJrGr KOTES. Superintendent W. D.' Page of the Red Elephant of Halley, Ida., is in the city conferring with the local directors. He was accompanied by a rich ship- .". 'V. ' . ". . |