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Show The Saet Lake Telegram. QUOTATIONS M ARC MINING 8 BATTERED RANKS BEFORE CHEER! NG HOSTS 00000000 Imposing Array of Vet-:rans in Grand Parade Of G. A. R. at San Francisco. 0 derness, Gettysburg and Appomattox swung into line at the appointed hour, ready for the command to march. Headed by the detachment from Illinois, the Grand Army detachments appeared in full muster at their appointed stations, ready to move with the main column, which started punctually at 10 o'clock on the route of inarch. Following came Pennsylvania, then Ohio, New York, Connecticut, Massachusetts, New Jersey, Maine, Rhode Island, New Hampshire, Vermont, Potomac. Virginia and North Carolina, Maryland, Nebraska, Michigan, Iowa, Indiana, Colorado and Wyoming, Kansas, Delaware, Minnesota, Missouri, Oregon, Kentucky, West Virginia, South Dakota, Washington and Alaska, Arkansas, New Mexico, Utah, Tennessee, Louisiana and Mississippi, Florida, Montana, Texas, Idaho, Georgia, Alabama, North Dakota, Oklahoma anS Indian Territory, California and Nevada, under command of Maj.-GeW. R. Shatter, brought up the rear. Throughout the parade was strictly military, no women, children nor grotesque costumes being permitted in the column.. Carriages were also prohibited, and the few which appeared, not exceeding two to each department, were occupied' by disabled veterans, driven in all cases to the left of the column of their respective departments. The scene was one of wild enthusiasm all along the streets, old and young turning out en masse to greet the ranks of the veteran AmeYioan soldiers, who in compact organization will never march here again. ng TRAGEDY IN CLE VELAN Man Kills His Sweetheart and Then Himself in a Lonely Spot. 0 0 0 ev-hel- n. The arrivals now are computed at 21,000 people from Kastern points, with fully So.CCO persons in addition from California points. 0 0 0 0 0 AJax Hulilon-Hec- k $ .... Cariia. Conjrar Comolidattd Mercur 0 Anatomical Changes in Man. In the remarkable work of Dr. Evans end his helpers on the long despised island of Crete, a fact has come to light which is not commented upon re-in the important volume which we viewed yesterday. Dr. Evans has discovered several statuettes which delineate precisely the arrangement, to the minutest detail, of the muscles and surface veins of the Cretan arm of those days. It is worth pointing out that these now constitute the earliest of all records of human anatomy. They might serve as teaching apparatus today, so perfect is the detail, and the point is that four thousand years of evolution have not effected the minutest change in the structure of the human arm. This is no such small period if man be only 250,000 years old, and the deduction is that physical evolution has ceased and that in the hidden and inner qualities of brain alone is future progress to be recorded. London Daily Chronicle. Artificial Respiration. Prof. Schafer has presented the report of the committee appointed by the Royal Medical society in 1002 to investigate from nhnnomena attending death " drowning. a view of deExperiments made with air of amount that can be the termining taken into and forced out of the lungs bv various methods of artificial respira tion were first attempted on dead bodies, but rigor mortis prevented any trust The experiments were worthy results. ihpn made on a living subject, the con ditions being that he should remain pas sive without making any attempt at natural respiration or by involuntarily closing the glottis prevent a free pas- yaee of air in and out of the lungs. Ten methods or arunciai respiration were tested. They included, first, the Siltraction method recommended theby chest of enlarging vester, consisting XT Daly West 4- - 4M.3. .18 t Horn Sliver t Ir.rsot TT Little I'.ell Mammoth s,i Mas-- Day Mammoth Northern Light Ontario Petro 10', '4i Ex- Sacramento Shower Consolidated C?.fi Silver King Sliver Shield f1; c Would South Suan.xe.i K Star Consolidated P Swansea ' Let Ft ah Prole S.im Consolidated .. SO 15. F. S. Minim? Co PI Va!eo L. B. Rogers, an insurance expert, In California 13'; commenting on the reports made by the i t'nilurv fire department as to explosives stored Dalton Kmerald in the city, Raid: Jo? Rower In Rlnc "Two hundred pounds of black powManhattan .01 der is enough to wreck the building in Martha Washington New Ix-'we- r EMEN ci-l-t- G Rocco-Homesta- ke Insurance Expert Says ploding Shells Flames Spread. " 43.9 .i:'; l.oi inrtlnnd 2. M .70 BANKER HERE TO RECEIVE TREATMENT Turo Victor Wabash Yankee icv at i. hr-- I 7 -- Cor.-e'.?4.'lp- al:r .ia Fo t t at II. I 14. at ) I" il; :' at tcram-n'.- o at - 1 at - at 15- . s: 1 f;',:o!f -- ml Vft. 1. l i7; 111 Sam nt WC ARC unch-inged- ut .IS .M .t-.- u .') .r. rr.!. fjTial r.J riurn at i.i'j in K hr-ir.orr.lr.- nt,A &l WALL STREET IS HEAVY - tr.- Four M.atf. rninarrr cf fh lvthin cr.f to of Dug a ay nr.d of th imrar;y of Nevada. h Omaha to join Srrrtary Hi'.'.. l and tmlllon f tl!rr.r.t 'n ,r-- ril" . ymtcrdAy, .n rirtrtl by M'-rrifo nmountr to o. b ff!:o: h'.l-C)r " Selling Orders Send Prices Down, With a Slight Rally r. Illackmar. profjis-li.d. cd I ar.l copter bu'.Uon. M.t '1, State University of Ka;raf. I returned laH evninjjt from a two crkV Manager II. II. Chanr.tr.ff cf th Plah visit to the Shb. and nurroundlnst .r.oli !a'l. arcenu ar.lf 4 by Pr.girerr 'r:g jc. Fjjrhrr propftilo In th Humboldt dim t rict cf n v. Sn!:on. the corr,pAr. Nevnd.i. Prof. Utackmar is morf th.in and H. S. rr.c5r.--rJrfl fnr Uutt ar.l F. V. of econom- r rr-- 1 . ics in th .ii Cn-ilruft:- J' l nr . jk, nt (; 1 - - nnr.ui.AU call. at ?.20. igc. Daly UVt, 2 at 111. Silver CO 1 t Ktc. at Shtopl. Star Con.. fJ at 17c; So: nt P.'4c: .'o at oi "j at lu'c; isw at 16c; tu at 134c; at sller SOim days.21c. lnc!e S,im Con.. at New York. 70 at 25c. 1 nt 14Hc. Victor, 2-- 0 lic. Nfv, Th rl lr.t.il!l. which will will JilfO J. (:. '"f th Di k. ret r. who r" tract from th thr boundary 1 r. 1 about miles of railway line, not the double tracks or th sidings. there aro laid at present st'-e- l rails which i ..Xo,io tons of steel. That aggregate total l.i hard to imagine, but it fin be said that it would make an immense mountain if all th. material could be path-ro'- l into one place Th F rails make the highway of the nation, th re:vl roads over which the commerce of the country is hauled. Twenty years or less ago the maximum rail weighed sixty pound to th' yard, except on the mountain divisions, whre there were much heavier weights. In thes days 100 pounds to the yard in the standard, and this Sx on an average twlc. as much as formerly' was in use. slnco indiscreet manacers the many new Invention of a ball rail thought made light pound afs" economical. Many of us can remember when ther-- were only iron rails in use. We presume that there are Fon" laid down at the present timeMn some of the y corners of the coun-trj- -. but for twelve years steel rails have had the call and seem likely to hold the palm forever. Our ancestors tell of the time when there were only wooden rails, or those on which a thin strap of iron was laid, and of many disasters that occurred in consequence. Th:s generation remembers when trains went: slowly and time schedules were subject to change without notice. The point we are making is that the traffic of recent years has been so heavy that there is now a demand for S.OO.v) tons of steel rails to replace those which have been worked to the limit or which will bo within the next year. This is nearly 12 per cent of the total and at the prevailing rate means an expenditure of $4.M",t-0- 0 in this one industry alone. a id means This simply spells that the country is prosperity fcoing ahead by leaps and bounds such as was never before contemplated. We mention this in t ho hope that it will be remembered next year when there be those who will try to convince the unwary that the country is not prosperous and that conditions are far from satisfactory. Of course, we would all like to he millionaires, but If we were in that condition all would be poor. Next year only those who have been letter off in the last eixht years than before will be asked to vote for Roosevelt. Those who have suffered will be permitted to vote for any old candidate whom Democracy may nominate. Philadelphia Inquirer. Tn the Good Old Days. William Kemp, an English comic actor who flourished during the last year of Queen Elizabeth, and who belonged to the same company as Shakespeare, 00,000 out-of-the-- wr v,-i-ll and '"created" Dogberry, danced from London to Norwich, a distance of 114 miles. Ho was accompanied by a servant, an umpire and a man with a taCrowds hindered his bor and pipe. start on February 11, 16S0. and many met him at every place. Several tried to dance with him, but none could rival his pace; the most successful were women. Although delayed by a snowstorm, he did it in nine days, and on the way accepted a challenge or two, each time coming off best, except when a Chelmsford maiden of 14 danced till he was "ready to lie down." On his return he wrote an account of It. which ends with a warning to those with whom he made wagers that if did not pay up he would publishtheytheir names. The "Nine Dales' Wonder," as the title runs, is a merry, readable pamphlet. Among other curious information in it is the statement that the customary way to deal with pickpockets at the theater in those days was to tie them to a post. Kansas City Journal. the arms being by raising the ribs, and upward forward forcibly dragged comsecond, of the head; by the side and Howard recommended by pression, Marshall Hall, which depends outon the principle of squeezing theonairits of the parietes thorax by the pressure to pass in by and allowing fresh air means of elastic reaction following the third, removal of the pressure; and, modifcombinations of the above, with patient. ications of the position of the were comThe results showed that all of sufficient a effect change to petent maintain of the to oxygenation air blood. The smallest amounts were yieldand simed by the traction methodofpure traction the The combination ple results gave pressures and alternating othin than much cases larger some in amount as the ers and nearly as large pressure alone in tidal air. Intermittent of effecting means proved inadequate respiration. combined with pressure on Rolling, strikingly efficacious. the back, was also that this, and considered The committee of rhythmic method even simpler the the subject with back on the pressure a hold should prominent placed prone, in all recommendations for the re- () place suscitation of persons who are appardrowning. Berlin Cor- 0 ently dead from Sun. York New respondent BANK CLEARINGS. Today's clearings, flTj.lSo. Same day last year, S352.459. 0000000000000000 M!-- rr tl ' 4 1 j r !, r. ! to yrvy ;vrr.n.r.t f th Plr.tah rr-vatio- :-- ' rf f.-- f I . J A - rt-- rtt tv er v i " r- h 1 1 ffrm r- f fa" tt' c ,' sr r t e t J A i t . 1 . t i I t I . "1 -- c - t . " f r ' - I '' ?;' far n i. -- t A, . . i!r - : - V ' t. If A fr " . - r- TT : 1 . t.t I : tc 'srr D' 1ri , . r:-- V i ( "a . - f-- f r j- a . t:-- ' . r- - ' T TT r mr h " t in f ri--- t ferrr --I 1 r ! rf u.an ; ' r i ? ; ar-- ' tr. 5 al t r i In 1 rr r ls!r tr rn .::.! rn Fri ..; ral..if for - " f a f f tc , r. I - v 3tn l t-- rm. t ut f-- - e r 1 1 la?- - r f 5"iO rr,-.- The lovvr tunnel, tap th wjth a. lrc crrp cf contact vHn In th property at a dpth day Wabash. 1CM at 16c; 7v at lic. r.rt. of 47j fet. I now in ii d,.flar.' rf (Z1) OPEN HOARD. t t to driven. Air TODAY'S BOSTON MUHNO ST0C1IS feet, with 175 Kagie Xc Blue Bell. 2X at V. In are drill uied thU rork. compressor : at JV50; 7G nt UVSTS. Daly Wst. Ei'O r rr.r.d dally. Mx to and four frtm at 14r. Cnlifprnla. Af , Ha Th entire rc!on. Prof, pj irkmar deN"ew York, ZCO at 2c. lr ! " t r PUnk I. jkike Is highly mWieraJlJtrd. and th fcKc;, clare. tt, TOTAL SALES. ftrlke of thrt gr it vln fronj which th An .air fr.l"l ...... .... Mffr.;r ... ll.r,2 fhare nt t2171.75. Sheba management Begulnr call, fan b. tino'lda!rv estrarting j (i l'AO , .,. call. p? at 12.". !". tharr thef)pn 12.422 Phares at l"4l.7o. hurface for more than a traced along Total. ' " "' mil". Prof. lUarkmar return t Omaha i trut r1' h'. .V;: V ir but tonight, .;yji ho w, t t.tck to OPERATIONS IN THE SOUTTI; rp-nhl future vica!l"r.s In the ;P. NEW YORK METAL. vnda rain p. ALHEBABAN'S GOLD STRIKE. ASSAY RESULTS SPEATC RICHFIELD. Aug. 19. At the NEW VOUK. Aug :: WELL FOR TIiE EMERALD. where Manager It. T. Aahby In nt tr. i . e the helm, a chimney of ofe Is J. E. OcWby. prenidrst f th Emn ml It ? winze. of uncovered Five feet by being erald received th Mining company the vein averages all the way down certificate this morr,!r.g on "tn say about Ml In gold and silver. John ore samples which h brought in from .mo Is one of the main w ,i King OI S jr. lay. r.e .imp that LOCAL QUOTATIONS. owners In the proposition, and for v- - takenprorrty from a drift being run from th foot lvej. In whkh n f?Fnr four eral days has been making an examiwi Inches made ; le its 'ar.u-n; nation of the mine. -. I f N r Y tk ! ' week. An average H f h'iw ' A. The tunnel being driven at the Annie In gold. U A. . 4 Ca M'.n iiit.!.r,i our ceii nijver. I per rent Laurie Extension is in 25 feet, and Is lead. Hti 2 ? t np er. Upn. H!h. r C; . , ... Kt. a In soon to fvink win?" for Mrt the the frm ledge, tap expected were tnkrn frm n thr--lIS sricj'rrw i ... ... :s t: ', which It Is aiming. Foreman Harney some Mmp S n h f!vur' which phow in goi 1; 14 . ir. i!v Middleman, spending a few days with r'-i: his family in Richfield, boldly claims ounces rllver. ard J per v. tt .' a f:n roj Nrf " "'"'. 7" that if this tunnel ptrikes the ore rone while nn e xreptior.ally rtrh i Imen Heck lUr, r .: . ...... i t.i as Indicated by surveyn on th Annie picked out carries as much n 1124 In lTrfrrr4 ;' Ti r.ii "...ti a. If n t: Laurie, it will develop into a mine sec- grdd. m .. . n ti r.' f ;i The management of the ErnTat ! ond to none In the district. i rrf.rr. ! . , :v. A recent strike of rich ore nt the saying but little reUtle m tho ; a. ....... "s i Nver!h ! i!ti-!-s ?t-- ly1 ' oirntior.. .. Wedge is the rau?e of much Jubilance I r .... l nr. j H"r. r .... . ....t:: .. amonc the owners of the I'erjue. Sur- develiptn.Tt :r, p: llrg 'l . . a , f l . j f pf- - a mr prise. President Anthony Soyka. who the Tlntlc i.iirp t. j ' I'.'-'-t Tr. tmn is now nt the diggings driving a new ptomlflng prcp"' . t it u !r'nHii .... tunnel, ewhich has reached a length of M t . . " t' tn iv seventy-fivfeet, states that the Wedge COLORADO FUEL & IRON ; i ;i .... .,....,..14. u r u: , ? : , 7" . r, ledge runs directly Into the , , ?! COMPANY'S ANNUAL MEET. p.' ni.Ts ....... . Airh mmi-':ts Practically no ptock was found delint . tK P.;,it ii Tli. annual meeting of th cYdorr.do S '.A,'in quent at the recent sale of Golden Reff. irt fx,....,.... Mi" r What there was was taken In by the Fljel and Iron company v i:i hrM in Tel. pAMfii- - .... ;s t com: any. .n picifsc ......... :r i; f Denver trs this afternoon and the on Athe Ixg Cabin Is The long tunnel ........ 'r. v.' i awnited by 1'tnh mining N w Y f k iVr.t . nearlng Its objective point under the are rag-rl- y . Snow Hird. p;.j . V, r.r t tr . men. It Is Intimated thnl the ownerJeff Howell Is preparing for an early ship of srue of the valuable lnn K arm & Tf is.... to of Iron ore the smelters Afconsignment till inn In southern. Utah nny ..... Urd4fci from his prospect near the old Ante-lopfected nt th The tV.!c.,ado P. t JUS.v.ay . Fuel company now has Henry district. 'on rf P. tct Operations continue vigorous at the the;,e tlalrns. an l the pu j oii p,n j Nh h', Wedge and Treasure Vault, under the they wp pa;4 un ter the rontrol of John fiitAis Pii!(A;i k direction of Manager G. F. Dalton. an ! hit C. Oso'-k iati ' v . i & P. W. Madsen has m,de Manager .......... i thorough InspUTi ff the Trapper's WIDE WEST MILL WIIX Pride, where Superintendent A. D. BEGIN CRUSHING ORE. Is making repairs and cleaning up the old workings to lw ready for th new campaign that has been ir.nppe.1 a ;c : ritKWrp. Th' Wide Went mill wd be in ! r. i '. t out by the new management. ri this week nnd rre from the : t rr th 4"vJ I '1 r. ; P' company' rl h tro;rtie w SWANSEA HAS CALLED run tlifouh Itjf e:u!:r. Su- - ("r im, ir r. i . first to i t i ; l.:i f: . WOfkr i rf . f; in '': FOR $15,000 ASSESSMENT. perinler.der.t . t , i . f f. i: , : "" r.Katf.f t the adver rtrrurr M.ir.. i Ali-bara- ECect of Enormous Traffic on the Continuation cf Prosperity. There are at present in this country !r,d 1 . n. Hv? :tl v. 1 clv',1 l a h'.g r ir-u- a 1 .n t-- u:i-know- n r,l!y i.; Urn of T ' : c A 1 Bmv,iit t' th" 1 tracted. and there t n furr.clrt amount In fight to th plant going for an kfp Only jc Indefinite tlm". two table nre hnw In operation, lnit th to li making prrparatlon nar,agernnt put In nr.othr one at one, nnd to supply the nc ?,iry power n new watrf-whe- vor.ic. r.siV'! NEW ph apod with condition at th Shba. Ar.aror.dA lat right. and xpct to ee that property dvrl-opInto a big proiucr. Th Whlte Ptn' rnrr; p.ny I lh I opjrbla In th upjr tunnel, a Iron which l nt pr Hop I.;! I. mt supplying th- tor.nsK for the r.'W Mfk w l.5 It Jtn 171lh p; rf sr. Inn y. mill, a go tmrth. n ir ?uth cr"ut grade of oir U Ixirg fX .OO .14 etiieet. max:; 1S3 . t r-x- 1 S0.t .r-- J.Will Gray & Bro r-- rrty d PROF. BLACOAR ON THE SHEBA PROPERTY .to lU. t-- M-ta- TJ.oi j Sr-t- th" tMum t' ?.5cht frm F'.r c r... hr forh anhalU!'rn x;rtlr,p a i r i:i run n xr jr'--Tl.f Ri ilrju-.H.jf d! . Th" tfiln to Ihifka A. Til L M. t rnirire Iju'lr.r. Wt r;;;r.. - t'.- f'.rh!1' 4r lh O. r, ill . n.nr.MT ore opened inrure the regular paysr.er.t for some time to conif. 6.7i ChlMJnf 11. SCUT AQLHT? f-- Jes?e Langsdorf, cashier of the Salmon City, Ida., tank, was brought to Salt I.ake this morning to be treated for two dangerous gunshot wounds, received while camping out on the Salmon river in Idaho. A shotgun was accidentally discharged, a portion of the load in the striking himand the right ofeye. destroying the organ, the charge making a danrous resi wc.und in the thigh. The victim Is the son of a prominent banker of Salmon City. ii i! "" '.4 4 Iil F Juds - . at Tftro 14. At 1 r n. J Vj. 14'.. .!.rf dividend i.r M .14 Daly-J- u 6 nflM li'i. the rjrnn l Ccr.tml ha friely clrcu!atfl. I hl h a I York for b-ir- ... -. Vide- - 1.4 -- which it is stored and the adjoining structures. The shells and giant caps would not do much damage to the building, but would prevent firemen from approaching near enough to work in case of fire. This would give the flames every opportunity to spread." ftr-r.ootM coins at $49i!i m.t; 10 at Silver declined another fraction toI.iy, tf.e quotation llr,a i4r ccnt. a against t" rnt o yesterday. Of j er ar,d lei I r" 1. K. (irand Central r - Mammoth Iyrr Vrraker,:d. !) itltlnc At ?. I May C4. ahS FO At t: r in. TYLIsS .n'i 2 9.ru JL 6wn ,M thatfi ?S 14).:- at IS .10 .C7T .45 Daly Wen Dexter Eagle & Ulue Hell WOUL DD DIVE IVL l.Ort t AFTERNOON CALL METAL MARKE: 1.51 Creole Daly Daly-Juds- e WEARING OF THE KAILS. CLEVELAND, O., Aug. 19. The names of the alleged murderer and his victim in last night's double tragedy was learned The man was William Leutbecher, today. 8 years old. and the young woman Martha Faehnrich. The cause given for the tragedy is the opposition of the Faehnrich family to Leutbecher' s attention to Martha. Miss Faenrich was a clerk in her brother's grocery store and it is supposed that Leutbecher called upon her last night and induced her to go for a walk. While in a lonely locality and not far Irom the sirl's home it is believed Ieutbecher shot Miss Faenrich and then killed himself. ...J ... ... nti. .17 XA 2UL uJL- -J , i Arc.rsT A1LJL f Daly-JuOs- 00000000000 rrr JUL from $41 this ir.ornlnc a a reult of the Daly West went down to 50.07 decline In silver. Over half of the purchase money handed out for tcrW on the e let li call weht for Daly West, a total of S2 shares belnjc mid. shares go at 50.20, while the other high priced stock t remained under cover. Star Consolidated took a bin tumbl- -. landing at 1S rnt during the 4S0O of shares, and Silver Shield let 3000 shares ro at Si and b cent. New York held at 2Z cents and California at H. Wabash opened at 15 rent bui dropped to 144 on the scconl al white Victor braced up to 14Vj cents with the sale of 1CCO hare. Following are the closing quotations end lint of silc: SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 19. What tfith receptions and entertainments of all kinds the visiting members of the O. A. It. are having a most enjoyable time In this city. Train after train still add their complement to the army of veterans already marshaled here and the encampment now begins to assume the proportions of the largest in the history of the organi-aztio- X V DALY WEST WEAKENS; STAR CON. AT BOTTOM 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 n. visrroKS FROM THE EAST AT 'FRJSCO REUNION. 0 0 0 SAX FRANCISCO, Aug. 19. The parade today of the veterans of the Grand Army of the Republic in this city will be long remembered by the thousands of people who packed the streets along the line of march to witness it. With military precision these old soldiers of Antietam, Vicksburg, the Wil- fast-fadi- 21,000 FROM THIS AND OTHER CITIES. KVnNnV".. WKDNESZ.WY f- nr n, -- 4 r;u lt f jp-rirr-- 4- - rj-.- !! - -- r-r- ,t ,. s : a ; ; .. y i '. I -- . . ?VM mst ; .r a i rr r "7 ' t h . T- , !,., - , f r, do-pn- st f.' t. ' t 'k it i r - , ;-- ' ? : 1 I f r :: 1 M-- . V.-- . rulti k a' ' : S ' ti 1 m--- I h ije of phortaK" f l.! or, r.x- periet.r. d !.lp nr,I nctcravtlr. tb lax In the on the p.rt of freiciitrrs in de;t.rirr bulhilr.i; materl.d. but ha pl.ir r.e i;t v. orke ar.l nt p.tt rrn- M2fcfut!y rletcd th" little m!M ar.d ;?:; ! it with the most modern mncMr.rr f r 1 WABASH WILL SINK TO THE 1000-FOO- T LEVEL. I 4 j iii r. ! t'.ir ft. I 'i .' . 1. bn k f . w-J 5s . r rr. it ' ! It P a HrM. 5 : ; , nn P r , . X j Vr"r t. t Air r - t. at the property. r. , r. tr trr njr.j .rMVe Jfi. a trip to i , :. lvu e e He in r.n i the 5rt t n rrhrj. the m r t e .t tO t t h - I a r rf 1 j; New Yc:k 'P. .. N;;tv 'j : ' : zm V 1 i P 1 lt 7 r. ? '. ft : ., f! I ?r .' . - s I- - r- t 1 V. r.ey. I jT - : r ' - t' ' ; t' : f 1 C .4 j - 1U'"A t , .t e :-- n - t -- . ' i f i.w.tr, s f1 e he r-- fr'i-Cfa- Hf'.t ir H f Kf, A - t J ; - . 1 f I ! t.lllil! rr. r n r " " ct!t ! ir : '.;- Tk -- ? r C ' r. t-- rru 1". ? M, ' I ' t. "Ther,." t a! r:iy.fk "I "No. wcrth a rr. to Tir.i. pf f t!ir.-rh- w I" ah. t Cr.J ifP i -: am rr tKe run, "'.ar.' tr. , r-;- t! a ". rrfit rr. I 1 . 5 . j' Mtf I ' ; i 1 ' S X t "t! v , '' v t 7 i . S' . Pt - " .!' . " ? . '' , I 'f. A'.n't J.r tker, tt (;it o." .New Vojk ,f 1 C ' PT r P, t P. ' ' : ;.-- ' " .tt. ,,e ,A ' rf 1 " 1 . J - - C r r . .v - ! r s w r t r i IT-f'.- , : ? ;- with W. , s. " r'.T.rt I'.'frr W .1 -i - 1 r; r1 rr, ; - f.- t " associate I - r;"rr. .f r rs-- P.d Copley, who Is e rtrttrr U!i - : t. f tr ; ' tT: I The Crar.d Central director hav posted the usual monthly dividend of 10 cents a srwre. The dividend was de. clared last Saturday, and Is to be pill tomorrow. According to reports that are , r ? v.. 1 .- re r.rr.t Another lot c f Ily-Ju1t- e Th irate w aji parketrl yfiHfUv. consisted of no tr, anl hlpmr.t rl.owed th usu.-.- l taJuen. - 3 t. . . ; 1 : r '.r y . Jrf (C1 f , ' . P .. r. f r 1 1 i"- ri i p r: v P t e ' i p. r - -i t 1 -' i- I t r - ! . of rer-- v p.-t- )! prcin rt. f ' V ..' . cr ; - fC . d r a;r-Little hi cr.t. the AfrS.-: The thi the the With trJn tr..!rj levy Col. Nicholas Trewrek. tnanacT of ffjf el .j. the m . ; at to j r.l Hahf rontinu" p CI f?y roj o;raUcn. hl'-tyn the Wabash, has announced that the rtor! - to the t . Thff hv. ro shaft is to be sunk to the t'VXbfoot level. Joh.n J. 'n on-, th '' fr.ynd !r.i rr a n flMlr In r hs tf 1th ft !.r1rf 1, f Wtli fcr evr.l Wek. f.i tap, chlf At present the operations are beir.K conto - d Jt tJ n Cfrhrtrr femir 'f Whefn hi c thr'In ?, the nelshborhood rf the r.;!,'- f. tt by ducted mpanled c ; ruhrrt). w n k. level, and althouph there nre norrie fat "i;o;- - sirr m.in.iK'--menvorable Indications there, the Hrf3 !rV. rt.-- rt frr r Another p..yrr. nt t t err. dl? re, Atl realises that mot of the park's 1 r -r I c I f .r m CJr i r ! le- e.n th "Mutt mr. the "f mines are made at a Kreat depth. pir 'f claim in Wht: e PJr I r.ieMr :ruip ' It :r PA" !! " Nev. GRAND CENTRAL DIVIDEND. lounl), b-- ; . It i r - if, ' 7 ' - 3 ;.:. : Ki.iv Hit Vtluf. j CJil'-- f i: ;. ? i MININO NOTES. K'r.ri! mu.ner if . S f r r- c ! 1 jr ) . -l A- r i hrj). Kb f trar.sformtr.tr th rueh nuitd n- y?. t rurrln- d and r.lcht on the produce of Or ; l canyon and CO'cmungo ores.- - Cherry crr-Mirer. S'crtary lit rtturnS fiom piry er county. 1 1 ;r-- I r-- - i H , , 1 Her.shaw- of the City Cnt!!o. Jr ''. r ,;. ; If, 3 P '' i IP ti- - i ' InV t ; - "V '.t-- a Iuly-J- a 3 1 1 the P . 'i) J r I I u 1 : J ! . 2 U in J. : P. j , T O. y i e a t n"t low irold ar.d will r ."Vt TTT ' :; . 1 1 f t r K 5 :, . The directors of th" Swar.ea Mining company, which has been doed down for nearly two years, have levied an assessment of 15 cents a share. The notion tame as a big surprise to mining men. The company has here tofvre pal $20.0o0 in dividends, but now. accordlrg to Manner dedde. the obUTitlorm of the concern are rloe to $lS,oi. Among the smaller share hollers then Is not the best of feeling toward the rn.m.igerne nt. and when thee heard of the afje.jom r.t. and learned that It was not levied for the purple of resuming operation, they were rot slow In cxprcss!r.x r . t ' Me-La- . T , in tm-tlns;- t ' i ! - f ;te 1 r ! ;- e. ", f ! - t;,,'1t r rr.. r a, iff' ; !'!.;;' Tf ' .:. . t. A C ; H A. : i 1 . Ferjue-Surpri.s- -. ) ? r-- ? ! t ft;? 11 a ; : tr p.. : prt.-- " i r" t - f Si r ' 1 rf Aft..! 1 H;-..'- - T ! , i rf f 1 ' C . mfr.-par.y- 'n J ' ff 'f f ti P: i " TT- ' r , S P Jt: a- j 1 5 rs r-- ' ? r f-s I, 1 : ;tf4 i'tf !' tr.; ti-:- i i i '-(- high-grad- n 5 - V" ''-- IT ','.'' I I f' ?. r''ff. . P, '. : ' i j |