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Show ir goes M mil Mims MSJM 1 K TO EIIER POIITOL LIVES LOST Steamer Cypress Wrecked oa lake Superior sad of Entire Crew III Labor Leader Urges His Followers to Go on Record as Opposed to Government by Injunction. The Central Federated Union has received an appeal from President Gompers of the American Federation of Labor, which has been aent to ail the affiliated unions, asking 'Bolt 'Survivor ts Washed Ashore and them to request all political candiis Unable 'to Give an Account of dates in the present campaign to comthe Terrible Accident Founmit themaelves openly as to government by Injunction. dering Was Probably Duo Gompera said that the misuse of to Sudden Leak. the power of Injunction occurs constantly and ia dangerous to the libIt was the duty erty 8a!t St. Marie, Mich. Bound down of of the people. unions to investigate all the labor from the head of the lakes on the secfor judicial and legislative ond trip she had made since being candidates so that they can be put on recoffices, launched at Lorain, Ohio, on August ord aa to how they stand on the ques17 taut, the One steel freighter Cyprus, of government- by injunction. tion 440 feet long, and owned by the Lackawanna Transportation company of OIL TRUST DECEIVED PUBLIC. Cleveland, foundered Saturday night In Lake Superior off Deer Park, tak- Sold Its Products Through What Peomeming down with her twenty-twple Believed to be Independent bers of the crew. Second Mate C. J. Companies. Pitt, washed ashore lashed to a life New York. Hampton G. Westcott, raft, is the only person left alive of of the Standard Oil the ship's people, and his condition la of Kentucky, testified on mo critical that since he was found on company Monday in the hearing of the federal the beach he has only been hle to suit against the oil combine that In name sunken of the the out ship several gasp of the southern states the o liven and the fact that twenty-twcompany had found it were lost. The Indications are that Standard Oil to sell much of its products expedient to a sudden was due the foundering through companies which the public leak. believed to be independent The pracindeGERMANS WOULD GRAB TRADE. tice of selling through pendent companies, whirh were owned British Merchants In East Africa by the combine, was discontinued two years ago, according to Mr. Weatcott Have a Kick Coming. Mr. Kellogg, counsel for the governLondon. Winston Churchill, under ment, drew from the witness that tha secretary of state for the colonies, Standard Oil company of Kentucky, who has started on a tour which will which acta as selling agent of oil in take him into the Interior of Africa, Kentucky, Georgia, Mississippi, Louiswill, when he reaches Nairobi, on Vic- iana, Tennessee and Alabama, had numerous small independtoria Nyanxa, hare presented to him purchased ent aelllng companies and through a problem that has been causing very conmany of them sold oil to serious misgivings to those Britishers sumer. Some of the plants the of these themselves established who have upon companies were dismantled and the the shores of the lake and have in business taken over by the Standard. many cases built up large business In SALT LAKER GETS PLUM. trading with the natives of the adof These pioneers jacent territory. SecreAfrica fear that a scheme which the la Appointed First Assistant tary of the Interior. German government is carrying out to divert the trade of the country from Washington. Thomas Ryan, for British to German ports on the east nearly eleven years first assistant seccoast, which is now carried over the retary of the interior, will retire from Uganda railway, a line subsidized, will that office the latter part of this not only hurt the business, but will month. He will be succeeded by Frank seriously hurt the navigation of the Pierce of Sait Lake City, Utah. The reason given for hla resignalake by lowering Its waters. tion ia that hla health has become imLiberals Are Making War Upon the paired by the work of his office. The announcement House of Lords. of the change was made Monday by Secretary of the Infor London. The liberal campaign restriction of the power of the house terior Garfield. Mr. Ryan waa former of lords to alter or reject bills pro- ly minister to Mexico and ia from Kansas. posed in the house of commons, which Frank Pierce was born In LondonSir the was Inaugurated by premier. is now in derry, VL, April 3, 1857. He came to Henry Campbell-BannermaUtah in 1883, and has lived here ever full swing throughout the country. since. addressare I Members of the cabinet Great British Fleet Aeeembling. ing meetings almost daily, the subLondon. There ia now assembling jects of their speeches being the government's complaint of the treatment in the North sep. and the English of measures considered of first import- channel for maneuvers, under the comance by the upper house. mand of Admiral Charles Berea-fora fleet of British warships repPublications to be Censored. resenting an aggregation of naval Home. In pursuance of the papal power surpassing all the immediately encyclical, pubhsned September 1, on available resources of any two other the subject of Modernism," con- countries of Europe, and yet not a demning books or newspapers of single ship of this fleet has been modernist tendency, which must not drawn from the reserves, the Mediterfleet or the Devonport and be permitted to reach any pupil of ranean ' Portsmouth The home the universities or seminaries, twelve fleet, which isdivisions. now assembling, conexamine to will be appointed censors sists merely of those ships maintained all periodical publications likely to in the vicinity of the British Isles, and uniCatholic the into find their way which throughout the year have been versities or schools, and all Catholic engaged in war training. It numbers dally newspapers are ordered to sub- 110 penants, and is composed of twenty-fifteen armored battleships, mit to these censors advanced proofs six of any articles on subjects which are cruisers, several protected cruisers, various auxiliary vessels and forty-eigh- t likely to arouse any controversy. torpedo vessels. Telegraph Companies Obdurate. EASIER FOR THE GIRLS. New York. cuarles I. Neill, United States commissioner of labor, was Typewriter, to be Run by Compressed In conference with officials of the Air, Will Never Get Tired. Western Union Saturday, making a New York. Typewriter girls may final efTort to ascertain if there was find their occupation gone if what Is the any chance to make terms for said of a new invention turna out to All strike. on out still operators be true. It is exhibited at the busiconsidphases of the subject were ness show, now in progres in Madison ered, hut he was assured that the Square Garden, and la an automatic not would of the company pcsition run by compressed air and typewriter bn changed under any circumstances. capable, it is said, of writing from Mr. Neill's call was ou account of the 6,000 to 10,000 woida an hour for petitions and twenty-fou- r receipt of a number of councils hours at a stretch. The askresolutions of common invention is the work of A. McCall of ing for his intervention. Columbus, O. 'Only One Escaped. New York. 1 o . - lrd d, B HUH ro Off ID ANIMALS SAVE THE RANGE STOCK THE SOUTH DIES Cuiiif tad Packinf Interests Fun The Forest Ssrvics Has Employed Eleven Experienced Hunters and Trapper to Destroy Predatory Animate. No Friends In MiDioB Dollars. Washington. Substantial Company Will Operate a Float of Fifty Boats and Employ One Thousand Hands. Now York. Announcement ia made that an important deal involving the combination or merger of some large southern packing and canning Intert cots has Just been completed through George A. Young and associates. The deal involves the acquisition by the of the tobasco Mcllhenny comiuiny sauce business of E. Mcllhenny's Sons, and the packing and canning business of the Mcllhenny Canning ft Manufacturing company, which ia said to operate one of the largest modern canneries in the United States. The capitalization of the new company will bo i; 0,000,00(1. E. A. Mcllhenny will be president and Frederick Kopf vice president Mr. Kopf. in Bieaklug of the enterprise, said: When the company finally acquires other factories, of which a number will be taken over, some prominent Jobbers and wholesale grocers will be elected to the board. The company's lands and factories are situated on Avery island, Louisiana, and it has offices in New York, Francisco, - Portland, Chicago, San Montreal and London. In the produo-tioof its specialties, .the company will operate a fleet of fifty boats and upwards, and will employ over one thousand hands." activities of Uncle Sam in planning the eradication of predatory animals which destroy anually thousands of dollar with of stock running on tho ranges In the forests. moves experienced hunters and trappers, whose knowledge of conditions and training In the great west qualities them to hunt wolves, cougars, mountain lions, coyotes and wildcats successfully, have breu assigned to the work of exterminating these destructive range animals in national forests in eight western states. , These supplied with traps, poisons, guns and ammunition, are going at their work in a way which is beginning to show its useful effect, and tho foresi officers believe that the losses raiised by the animals which make stock llielr prey, have been cut down very materially. uu-ii- FIRST PHILIPPINE CONGRESS. Proceeding Will Not bo Opened by Prayer, But Taft Will ba There. Manila. Great Interest ia shown In the first Philippine 'congress, which will take place this week, and the arrival of Secretary Taft, which comes at an opportune time In the inauguration of the Pliillpninn home rule. Already the contending political factions are showing great activity and at the caucus recently held the first brush occurred over a motion to have the assembly proceedings opened wiib prayer. This was defeated by one vote, on the broad ground that church and state should be kept distinct. CANT HANDLE THE BUSINESS. Guerrero, one of the native leaden in Manila, backs Gomez in bis promRailroads Not Keeping Pace With De- ise to secure the repeal of the drastic flag edition laws. If this repeal ia velopment of the West. carried through oilier radical measThat it will be useless to ures probshly will follow. The conChicago. attempt to develop the weal with in- servative element declares against apy adequate railroad facilities was the as- extreme legislation and tlm better sertion of transportation officers at b class of politicians favor an ultra conmeeting in Chicago on Thursday. The servative course. The governor general and the ofconference was of general passenger of the Philippine commission ficials western and the of railroads, agents waa low think that the chief activities of the question for consideration will be devoted to the enacthomeseekers rates during the coming assembly ment of legislation for the general im' winter and spring. It had. been pro provement of the Islands. posed that for the aake of developing the THE TELEGRAPHERS' STRIKE. country the usual low round. trip fares should be authorized, which rates have had the effect Men Refuse to End Fight Despite Advice of Their President. of helping to settle the great district during the past few years. New York. New York lineal of the After a thorough discussion It waa telegraphers 'union on Sunday ' voted the consensus of opinion that it woiilu unanimously to continue the strike he useless to go ahead with low rates against the Western Union and Postal and attempt to populate the western Telegraph companies. states when transportation companies The vote was taken upon the sugare entirely inadequate to handle the gestion of President Small, who, In present business. messages to subordinate officers pointIt was a frank confession on the ed out the Inability of the general asdepart of the railroad men of the sembly to further finance the strike plorable condition or transportation and requested that the locals in the lines, showing (bat. while the weHt various cities vote upon the advisabilneeds people, the railroads are not in ity of the men returning to work. a position to handle the traffic. The meeting was characterized by bitter exchanges between President Sultan is Getting the Best of His Small and the other speakers. The latter charged the national leader Brother. with inconsistensy in first claiming Washington. Private hut authentic that the strike would be snccciuifiil'y reports received In this city from Mo- financed and later admitting that rocco indicate an early collapse of the the general asnmbly was without rebellion against the sultan, headed funds, and with having conducted the dilatory manby hla brother, the pretender. These fight in a advices say that the tribes that first ner. Small replied, trying to explain rallied under the latter's banner are his position, but was interrupted by hisses. When he suddenly left the falling away ao that he now has little hall, In the midst of the siieechmak-ing- , support, and that the anitan has been cries of "resign" followed him. making a triumphant campaign into The men In a number of other of the the southern provinces, which were lareer cities also voted to eunlinne the the pretenders own districts. strike. n ri Bodies Hurled Fifty Feet. Laytnu, Utah Two boys in a buggy were struck by southbound Oregon Short Line train No. 18. at a crossing Just out of Layton early Monday morning. They were hurled fifty feet from the truck. Both were unconscious when picked up. One died soon after reaching Salt lake. The other Is expected to recorer. The dead boy was Roy Sessions, 19 years old. of Fairfield. His companion was Leo Suudall, 19 years old, of I.syton. The e boys were driving in a one-hors- buggy. Board Decide to Take Colorado Dynamiter to bo Tried. Tainted Money." Colo. Kemp V. Bigelow, Denver. Norfolk. Va. Thomas W. Phillips, the young clerk, formerly of Bryan, and a wealthy oil and gas magnate Ohio, who created a sensation here by former member of congress from sending dynamite packages through western Pennsylvania, has made an the malls to Governor Henry A. Buch-tel- , nnsncrcsRful effort to have the fort Carld II. Moffat and other promiof elgn Christian Missionary Board of nent etthens. and who later con leased that he was the author of threatenAmerica, a branch of the Disciples Christ, return $25,000 given by John ing letters demanding money, received D. Rockefeller, ou tin ground that It in August Inst by officere of the Burwas tainted money. This money was lington road, the Adams Express company and a nuralier of local business accepted with s final clsuite providsolicited bouses, will bsve his preliminary be would that-nmore ing October 34. from the same scurre. Missionary or Relatives at Bedside . Claimed to bo Daughter of Andrew Carnegio, and Succeeded in Buncoing Financioro and Bankero Out of Largo Sumo of Money, Woman Colunihue, Ohio, M re. wick, whose financial Caosle Chad transactions Blackmailer Makes Confeaeion. Denver. Kemp V. Bigelow, the young clerk from Farmer, O., who mailed dynamite packages last Monday to Governor Henry A. Hnchtel and several other prominent citizens of Denver, confessed on Thursday that he raa also the author of letters mailed on August 29 last to the Burlington railroad, the Moffat road, the Adams Express compr.ny, the Daniels ft Fisher Stores company, the May Shoe ft Clothing company and to Postmaster Paul Sours. demanding n amounts varying from SlO.nnt) to and aggregating $190,009. $59,-tiu- Collision Between Steamer on Detroit River. Detroit. One man was killed and the steel steamer John W. Moore waa sunk early Sunday in a collision between the Moore and the Queen City, in the Detroit river, just above tlie Lime Kilns crossing. The two steam-ermet almost head on and the Queen City crashed Into the bow of the John W. Moore aa far back as the pilot house. W'hcclsman Duncan McIntyre, of Sombre, Ont was asleep In his room on the port side of the Moore, and waa crushed to death. Head-e- n a New Auto Was Death Trap. Morencl, Mich. Arthur Onwailer, a merchant of Lyons, Ohio, waa killed In aa automobile acr blent Sunil:iy afternoon, five miles east or this city. Mr. Onwailer hail purchased a automobile and was taking his first ride in It. His wife and two children were in the machine with him. While driving at a fair rate of speed, he lost control of the machine In some way and it ran into a deep ditch, turning turtle and rmshlng him to death beneath It Mrs. Onwailer and one of the children, a boy. were Injured. Panic-Stricke- n Crowd Pushes in Front of People Train. Warsaw, Ind. Westbound Pennsylvania fast train No. 19 plowed into a crowd oI people at Bourbon station Friday night, killing Tom Sloan, a Warsaw saloonkeeper, and Injuring A thousand several other persons. persona were standing on the platform awaiting a westbound passenger train. Somebody yelled "Here ahe comes, slid the mass of humanity surged toward the track, several persons being thrown In front of the locomotive. Bulky Transcript in Schmitz Cass. San Francisco. Attorney Charles Fairali has received from the printers copies of the transcript of the testimony taken at the trial of Eugene E. Schmitz, which, together with the brief, will be filed with the clerk of tlie court of appeals. The transcript Is a bulky volume containing many pages, and ia supplemented with a brief almost as voluminous. It is the purpose of Attorney Fairali to ask for It Is antician Immediate hearing. pated that several days will be spent fn the arguments. ii-- v Father Burned to Death With Hit Five Daughters. Gloversvllle, N. Y. Six members of the family of Solomon Frank, a glove-cutte-r father and five daughters were suffocated by smoke whim tb'-l- r home wai destroyed by flixi early Sunday. The father lost bis life in endeavoring to save his children, following di wo very of the flumes by the mother, who. with two small sons, made her escape. The bodies of toother victims were found by tho The oldest daughter was to have become a bride early In minated in the wrecking of an Oberlln bank, died in ihe woman's ward in tho Ohio penitentiary at 10:05 o'clock Thursday night. Mrs. Chadwick had been In a comatose condition for soma hour previous to her death, and tha No friends or end came peacefully. relatives waited at her bedside; only the prison physician aud her prison ai tendants. Mrs. Canale L. Chadwick, whose maldi-name waa Elizabeth Biglcy, was a native of Woodstock, Canada. In the latier part of 1902 or early in 1903 Mrs. Chadwick, In the presence of her husband, gave to Ira Reynolds, cashier of the Wade Tark bank of uotea Cleveland, a box containing signed with the name of Andrew Carnegie. These forged notes are alleged to have amounted to $7,500,000. Reynolds gave to Mrs. Chadwick a receipt for the pnpora, which deacrUxHi the notes and the signatures upon them. Mrs. Chadwick left with Reynold! aa an explanation of the existence of the notes the statement that she was a natural daughter of Carnegie. With the receipt of npynolils In her possession Mrs. Chadwick went to different banks and many eapltallsta, making loans ami paying not only high interest to the banka, but heavy bonuses to the bank officials who loaned her the money. The extent of these transactions will never be known fully, but they ran up into the millions. They Involved men of high standing in Ihe finanelul world and caused heavy lossea to many banka. In November, 1904, she waa sued by a nmn named Newton of Brookline, Mass., from whom she had borrowed a large amount which she was unable to pay. Other creditors pame down upon her and within a short time she waa placed under arrest by the federal authorities on 'the charge of consplrlna with Charles Beekwllh, tlie president, and A. B. Spear of a national bank at Oberlln, Ohio, whirh had been substantially looted. Mrs. Chadwick had obtained from this Institution such large sums of money that it was compelled to close Its ' floors,-- causing heavy losses to the depositors and ruining many of them. Mra. Chadwick. Beckwith and Spear were Indicted for a variety of offenses against tlie national banking laws. Beckwith died before coming to trial. Spear pleaded guilty, was sentenced to seven years In the pen I ten Gary and is now serving time In Columbus, Ohio. Mrs. Chadwick wai brought to trial on March 9, 1905, nnd after a hearing which lasted for two weeks was found guilty of conspirnev to defrsiul a national hank and wsz sentenced to ten yesra in the penitentiary. Her health, which was not good t the time of the trial, failed steadily after its conclusion. n OCEAN 8TEAMER ON FIRE. iire-mo- Crew Fought Flames While the Panic Stricken Passengers Prayed. New York. The Austrian steamer Giulia, which arrived Thursday from Trieste with 7C3 passengers, had a narrow escape from desl motion bv fire In mldoccan during a violent slre-n- i on October ff. Tlie rrew fought On flames all day before they were extinguished, while the panic-strickepassengers prayed for help. At the moment when the condition of the Giulia was most desperate, as I the energy of every man was beees-aarto fight the fire, several or tbi rrew lert their posts and began to lower one of the ship's boats. The first officer headed off the lit tin panic by threatening to shoot the first man to start to lower the boat. The mm returned to their work, in which many of the men In the steerage wore compelled to assist. n y Systematic Robbery of Burlington Cara En Route to Denver. Denver. Over $500.(100 worth of merehsndlse hns been stolen on the Burlington railroad In transit between Chicago and Denver during the past year, nnd 3'0 Ilnl'iin laborers who piln dislaged freight ears have charged. aeeoiding to a rojmrt published in the Denver Times on ThursIf Is satil that seeji t service day. siren's ferreted out the system by which the robberies were constantly lint failed to secure evidence sufficient to nuvh-- t any of ihe thieves. le-o- Easy Mark Fram Nevada. n Fraiirb'civ - Ired Sniiih. r of Gold fir lil. NVv . piny dip ns th- - result of a finciurcd skull in a house on Wnsliincroe street, where be was beaten and rohril f.r $775. a watch, a and a pin. Smith arrived in the a city Wednesday nud men t niiin who, sto-- Inrl'lug him tu . 1 drink. Intrndiietd him to a you-- ; t He wns imivlcon st hi r home, a tel while there be was frock on the head with a shot iid rubbed An Fan ml-re- d g'.-li- l dla-iiun- rl-i- n.--- con-jdil- wo-mn- The organization of a stock company at Welser, Idaho, Is in progress, It being the intention to bore for oil in that vicinity. The rumor from Park City to the effect that the Daly Juilgs company would close its mine down within a few daya has no foundation la fact. The Nevada Dredge company's dredge and property at Orovilie, Cal., waa burned last week, rauslng a loss of $1,900,000. The fire started in tbe transformer. If the United 8tates is to produce enough nickel, cobalt, and tin for its own consumption, new deposits ninst be discovered, for those now known, while individually rich, cannot supply the entire demand. During the past month the two mllla of the Utah Copper comjiany reduced approximately 100,000 tons of or to a e concent rate, and there le every probability that that figure will be ecllps-- d during the present month. The output of the mines and leases of the Goldtteld district for the week was 3877H tons, entllug October having an estimated value of $382,$5U. This is something like 100 tons mure than ihn output for the preceding week. Vanadium, one of the rare metals, is used principally for hardening steel, In connection with chromium. This rare metal le to be found In small quantities in Utah and Colorado, as well as in some of the southwestern states. Four Utah mines posted dividends Inst week that will call for the checking out of $94,500, They were: Colorado. $90,000; Beck Tunnel Con., $20,-00Grand Central. $12,509, and Utah, of Fish Springs, $2,099. Rich returns were received last week from assays of rock aunt from the Keystone mine, a property almost within the city limits of Weiner, Idaho. A Baker City aasayer found that tha rock carried $174 to Ihe ton, and tha Boise assayer found $198. The average cost of copiier producretion from Bulte mines under th stricted output Is todsy not less that 12 cents per pound. At Ijike Superior the cost will probably average close to 10 cents. The cost of Calumet ft Arizona la only 5.71 cents. Considerable excitement waa developed In Izigan, Utah, mining circle last week by reports concerning a recent find in Blacksmith Fork canyon, by Captain Silvey and H. J. Smith, two Ogden prosiiectora. The discovery la said to lie an extremely rich one. Two of the largest up to date and modern quarts mills In the state, with a daily rapacity of reducing 250 tons of ore are now in course of completion for the big mines of tha Monarch and Bugdad Chase Mining companies. In the Atlanta district of Idaho. The Record of Helena. Mont., publishes a story to the effect that numerous Montana and Washington .Inventor have been mulcted to tha extent of more than a third of a mlHIou dollars through the discovery that certain placer mines near Landers, Wyo., had been sailed and that the property In question is worthless. it Is learned that during the next few days Ihere will be a number in experts in Utah who represent great I ondun operators who tackle the fields of the world In cnmiietlllnn with the Standard Oil coiiiiny, but who haw not become very aggressive in American ns yet. Tlielr coining looks good for the Utah oil fields. George W. Boggs, one of the lessees and general manager of tbe Old Peacock mine In the Hcven Devils dismen trict, stales he has twenty-on- e employed at (he mine, la taking or from the new strike and has a number or tenmn hauling ore from the dump to Council, where It Is shipped to the Sumpter smelter. T. N. Barnsdale of Pitlsburg, the owner of the Monarch group of mines at Atlanta. Idaho, has expended nearly a million dollars in developing and blocking out the ore bodies of Ihe Monarch mine alone before even placing a mill on the property. This alone assures ns of his confidence of the grant possibilities of the camp. There are millions of tuna of ora of commercial value blocked out iu the mines of the Allaulii district, Idaho, and the future or the camp has always high-grad- cul- half-hearte- d - Strike Situation in Milan. Milan. Work in all the factories here has coaspd and traffic on the street railway has stopped as a result of the general strike, dne to the encounter between a mob of striking gaa workers and a body of strikebreakers,, in which the carbineers interfered and fired on the mob. The railroads to the north are still running. but the newspapers of the city and nearly all the stores sre closed. All the public building and railroad stations are guarded by troops. PRISON Reputation as a Swindler. evidence that the government is determined to put forth every effort to bring the national forest lands to the highest the Production of Its Specials the point of development Is given In the trans-Missou- IN of Woman Who Gained National Hag e Coatbisatioa Witk Capital Tea MINKS AND MINING CASSIE CHADWICK esM-elall- y 0: been dendf'nt on the giicccs.-fi-il winking of these ores, which tn the mist has been a failure on account or bv not having .be great loss Ihe proK-- r process to treat the ores. Through a compromise reached out of court, civil actions lnvolvlrg $500,. Andifl, pending In the courts of geles. Boston. Duluth, Tucson and Tombstone, Ariz., have been ended, 'ihe actions Involved large amounts ot stock In rich copper properties, nolo. y Idy the Cnnnnea Central Mlns and the Greene Cananca Cupper company. The Minerva mine, in the Atlanta lisirirt, Idslin. fur the past two years 'iis Ivcii producing steadily and hns Inexliuiisilve bodies of ore in reserve, i is staled ihe company will enlarge :lic present 10 stamp miil. whirh Is not of sufficient size to reduce the vest, bodies of ore In sight. From $15,900 'it $20,000 has ben iwuimled mu uonthly by the present. 10 stamp mill. Tbe stockholders of the Blue Rock Minin'; company, at a meeting held in X:ir-pn- . Idaho, last week, decided to Increase the capilal stock of that from $300,000 to $3,000,009 'ini made arrangements for pushing ihe work at the mine stronger than ever. A day and night shift are now em ployed at the Mint mine fn the Pearl district of Idaho, and the tunnel la now in 1.050 feet. According to measure-nirnt- s Ihe vein should be reached at feet. The vein Is twenty feet '.( Hide on tie and is a true (is- rnm-piin- sn-fa- re 9ta. |