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Show JL .v DAILY AND MINING ADDITIONAL NEW5 OF CARISAS STRIKES RESULTS Of E The new strikes at the CaHaa of Tlntic are all that has been depicted, Manager Joseph,who came In from camp yesterday morning and departed again last night. The disclosure which level, is fifty feet below the 100-foshows on level of that proper, instead no less than live feet of ore with the second class maintaining an average of IS per cent In the red metal, while some of the rock compares with the best ever hoisted from the hill. On the level below. Manager Joseph says thirty Inches of ore exposed when he left will average S3 per cent copper and that it has the appearance of widening out All the rock contains as much as $!.S0 gold, with an average of about seven ounces silver to the ton. It is understood that the company has a balance in the treasury at this time and that apprehensions concerning an assessment are entirely without foundation. The management has decided on a very active extraction while it looks at this time as If an ore body was to be encountered on the level in a short time. ot ai t1 j 700-fo- GUFFEY-GALE- ot OIL WELL. Y When the few Joints of eight-inc- h well at Farmpipe In the Guffey-Gale- y became skewgeed the other ington and repairs of the substitution day, of the six-inpipe became necessary, says the Salt lake Herald, Superintendent Rumbaugh at once notified Mr. Galey of conditions and suggested the plan of action to be followed. Yesterday he was advised by wire to go on' with the work acocrdlng to the plan he had outlined and which comprehended the substitution of six for ch eight-inc- h $ casing. Agreeable to the instructions received, the droppolng down of the six-inpipe was at once begun, and within two or 'three days the drilling will again be under way. There Is a pipe on the big supply of six-inbe and ground, rapid drilling will made, the substitution of the smaller pipe greatly facilitating the work. Mr. Rumbaugh stated yesterday that there had been no Intention of abandoning the well, and nothing of a nature sufficiently serious to necessitate It had occurred. Mr.. Galey was consulted for the reason that he did not wish to reduce the slae of the bore without the sanction of his superiors. For the first well In a new field it is felt that conditions have been all that could have beei. expected, and unusual good luck has so far attended the opch ch a erations. The pri sent well. It is understood, will be continued down until results are attained or until It has been demonstrated that a well cannot be brought in at that particular point In the latter event It is not the Intention of Messrs. Guffey and Galey to abandon the field, by any means. They have reached the. conclusion that oil and gas are to be had, and prospecting will be continued until results are attained, no matter how long it takeh nor how many wells have to be driven. MORE UTAH DIVIDENDS. NAMES OF A FEW WHO HAVE MADE MILLIONS. Century Making Money New Finds at Tintio Latest News About Guffey- -Galey Oil Well. and runs for hundreds of miles northerly and eoutherly. Here is a list of millionaires who got their wealth from mines: J. B. Haggin, William Sharon, Mark Hopkins, John W. Mackay, J. G. Fair, George Hearst, D. O. Mills, C. D. Lane, Lloyd Tevis, A. C. Whitcomb, Thomas Blythe, Walter S. Hobart, Thomas H. Williams, Edward Coleman, William S. OBrien, James G. Flood, John P. Jones, E. J. Baldwin, Alvinsa Hayward, James R. Keene and Peter Donahue, all pioneer miners pf California and Nevada, none of whom made leu than $5,000,000 and some more than $30,000,000 in the mining business. Then take Montana, with Senator W. A. Clark, whose Income approximates a million dollars a month, Marcus Daly, (now dead) F. Augustus Helnze and a number of others. Colorado, with Governor Tabor who In a few years accumulated $8,000,000 from a grub stake of leu than 840 and then died broke and In debt; David H. Moffat, Dennis Sullivan, Senator E. O. Wolcott, W. S. Stratton, who In the short apace of twelve years from a pennileu carpenter became so rich that he died, leaving $15,000,000, and a dozen others who might be named. The mines of the Pacific coast and the lntermounfaln country, besides making millions for a few, have made hundreds comparatively wealthy and have placed thousands above want And the wonder la that many of the mines from which this wealth has been taken are yet producing largely and paying profits. But the Pacific coast Is sot the only place where mining pays. Wherever the industry has been carried tu.'ig on business lines and by competent men the results have been remarkable. Cooperation in mining as in other industries, has had much to do with the phenomenal success and the results obtained from mining operations.' Th.t big mines, of the world. could never have been opened and developed were It not for combinations of" capital which enabled the many to attempt and accomplish what the individual would not and could not for financial reasons. A glance 'at the list of dividends paid by mining companies since the beginning of the year will give one an idea aa to the profits paid from that source, as the published amounts represent but s portion of the total, for there are many mines operated by private parties or by clou corporations, the profits of which are never made ore-bodie- Growing Aches and Pains. Mrs. Joels' Sumner, Bremond, Texas, T have used writes, April 15, 1902: Ballard's Snow Liniment In my family tor three years. I would not be without It In the house. I have used It on ny little girl for growing pains and aches in her knees. It cured her right away. I have also used It for frost blttenfeet, with good success. Tt Is the best liniment I ever used" 25c, Geo. F. Cave. MAY 1904. STATES & MORE ORE FINDS MADE AT CRIPPLE CREEK DIVIDENDS. The Cripple Creek, Colorado, mines show a splendid dividend record for the first four months of the year. When the total has been added it will be found that nearly, if not quite $1,000,-00- 0 have been distributed by Its ten or twelve leading mining companies. M TINTIC We Samples of ore with which George Robertson came in from Tintic yesterday morning afford evidence of one of tbe most sensational strikes ever made in the properties of the district, the beneficiaries none other than the lessees of the Garnet group adjoining the Sunbeam, and consisting of Mr. Robertson and his associates. It waa In the face of a drift about eighty feet distant from the tunnel on the prop erty that the ore was broken into, said the visitor, who has been serving the Tintic Alining ft Development com Iuny as superintendent of iu Tintic system of mines, and while assays had not been obtained last night, there is no doubt of the presence of a thousand ounces or more of silver per ton. Mr. Robertson reports sixteen inches of this class of ore in the fissure in the porphyry and with stoplng ground enough to afford most profitable picking in the event it continues to the sur- CENTURY til Hammocks and Porch Furniture ADJOINING are displaying one of the most Complete Assortments of Porch and Lawn Hammocks Furniture Ever shown In ail in this city When mining is prosecuted In a business way by practical mining men there is no other business which yields so much profit for the amount invested, says the Mining and Engineering Re view. Ceratinly no other business has made so many millionaires. Iu the Pacific coast states a score W men might be named who made from five to twenty millions of dollars in mine operations, and as we look down the face.line it la astonishing that more enThe Gurnet la among the oldest locathusiasm has not been displayed in tions in that portion of Tintic and la unlocking the treasure vaults in the owned by a company, although it has mountains of the mineral bearing ter- been idle since the boom in that localritory which rises up from the Pacific ity. Tintic will distribute the regular dividend In the usual sum of $25,000 on Saturday, the transfer books to close today, said Manager Lock, who waa up from the bonanza again yesterday, accompanied by another big consignment of ore of which the management, forwarded over seventy carloads in April. While the members of . the official household are not exploiting it, It is said that the treasury of the company reveals a larger surplus at present than at any period In several years while the condition underground ex- public. ceeds any since the search for wealth LAKE 8UPERI0R MINES. was inaugurated there by the big felWhile the unfolding of virgin fields lows The directors of the Utah of Fish and the evolution of new mining camps Springs in the Deep Creek country, Is more productive of the spectacular yesterday posted h dividend of a cent the development of the Lake Superior a share, or $1,000, for distribution May copper district In the last few years 25, while on the road from the mine Is has been greater than that of any Ima consignment of ore, thdvjpro cedes of portant mining section in the country. which alone will provide the means with The growth of the lake copper Induswhich to make it. Reports from the try Is well illustrated by the number property indicate a most satisfactory of producing mines, and within sixty condition among the while days two more properties will Jojn the the output of the present season prom- ranks of the producers, making the ises equal to that of any previous largest number in the last fourteen year in the career of the proposition. years! The Grand Central of lc- - $1. STATE JOURNAL, FRIDAY, UTAH AND mines u UTAH I the newest styles and prices $1.75 to $10 at Small Prices See Our Display Window Ogden Furniture and Carpet Co. HYRUM PINGREE, Manager. MAKING GOOD MONEY. MARRIED A Daily reports which are now reaching Manager P. W. Madsen of the Century disclose the fact that the mine and mill are now producing at a rate exceeding $400 per day, or better than $12,000 per month, says the Balt Lake Herald. From the plates an average of a little more than five pounds of golden laden amalgam is being collected every twenty-fou- r hours. The gold thus gathered weighs over one and one-ha- lf pounds and Is worth something over $350. In addition to that, sixteen sacks of concentrates, weighing over 1,000 pounds and worth $50 per ton, are being secured from the Wilfley tables, while fifteen pounds of concentrates, worth $2 per pound, are being collected In the 'panning" room. These figures obtained v.jHtrr-ila- y from the official report sheets which are mailed every night to the we principal office, and are therefor unquestionably co root. The daily assn record also make a fine exhibit. They show the ore coming from the mlr.e to lie malniali .cg a wondeiful'v high iveragc. In the iong string of ns&iys made every day It is hard to llnd any running under $5 a ton, while many of them show values crowding tlie S s r. mark, and any number runnii'g PEANUT VENDER. Wealthy Michigan Girl Wads a Man Twice Her Age. KALAMAZOO, Mich., May 13c The marriage of Henry Chamberlain, aged sixty-nin- e, and Miss Julia Damon, aged thirty, which took place here last week, became known today. The bride is one of Kalamazoo's most wealthy young women. Chamberlain for the last ten years has conducted a little peanut stand in the street Aa a result of a crusade for clean streets all stands of this sort were ordered removed. As this was Chamberlains only means of livelihood he refused to go and the city council had arranged to bring ejectment proceedings against him this week. In case this was done it was feared that Chamberlain would become a county charge. While some of the aldermen were looking at his stand this afternoon they saw this placard: Closed; are on honeymoon." Investigation revealed the fact of the marriage. The couple are spending their honeymoon in Chicago. Miss Damon has been prominent in local social circles and her marriage to Chamberlain mystifies her friends. WORLD'8 FAIR RATES. To 8L Louis via Union Pacific. At the present Mme between forty-fiv- e Effective May 3d, the following and fifty tons of ore is bei' g hanrates be made to St Louis and will dled at lie mine every day, whib the return: to bulk be supplying the mine is said To St Louis and return (direct of the rock from the openings that are counted as lending to the development route), $42.50; to Chicago and return (direct route), $47.50; to Chicago and of the ground. return (one way via St. Louis; or to St Louis returning, one way via ChiANOTHER L08T MINE STORY. cago), $50.00. Even so correct a newspaper as the Tickets on sale ivery Tuesday and New York World can be Imposed upon Friday of each week. May to November by the old chestnutty" lost mine sto- Inclusive. Transit limit of ten days ry. The following dispatch from De hi' each direction will be allowed, final Lamar, Nevada, furnishes a fair sam- limit sixty days from date of sale, but er In no case later than December 15th, ple, which will make every laugh, and in which there is not one 1904. In addition to the above rate there grain of truth. It says: Frederick Sendee is outfitting an ex- Is also on sale round trip tickets, Ogpedition here to seek a lost gold mine den to St Louie and return at $50, in the Bull Valley range of mountains which Is on sale daily to November close to Mountain Meadows, Utah, the 2d inclusive, limited sixty days from scene of a massacre of emigrants by date of sale Mormons over half a century ago. He GOOD INVESTMENTS. has a map given to him by the discovhouses and lota; first-doFour erer, John C. Hawley, of Eureka, Nev., railroad location; pays 10 condition; quarts Hawley took out gold-bea- ring E. S. ROLAPP, Eccles cent net per running as high as $65,000 a tori. Bldg. He discovered the mine years ago. He tried to Interest others In the propRIVERDALE OR PHOENIX. erty, but the samples were so rich they suspected fraud and declined to have anything to do with him. He worked the mine secretly, bringing out ore himself. Finally the Mormons, who had been approached by him previously realised that the discovery was genuine and conspired to kill him and take possesion. Mrs. Hawley discovered the plot and traveled all night alone to warn her husband. Mrs. Hawley died of hunger Wm UNION LABEL CLOTHING UNION LABEL CLOTHING Putnams Lines of Goods Union Label Are Far More Extensive Than Any Other House in Utah Call and examine quality and prica and you will be'a euatomer of The Putnam Clothing House 2345 WASHINGTON AVENUE. $9 to $20. old-tim- ss and privation, but her husband reached a settlement They never went back, but left to Seades a map showing the location of the property. NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS. BIDS WILL BE RECEIVED . BY the undersigned up to the evening of Wednesday, May 18, 1904, to furnish material and sink a four-fosteel, iron or wood shaft to the depth of ISO feet on the property of the Utah Oil ft Liquid Asphalt company near Rosel. Box Elder county, Utah. The right to Good solicitors for the Utah Stats reject any and all bids is reserved. J. J. DRIVER, President Journal. Apply to Horace S. Foster, 2383 circulator. Ave., Ogden, Utah. Washington city ot WE FEAR NO COMPETITION the milling and sale of flour. Doesn't take a book to tell why the Riverdale or Phoenix brand holds Its own, gains new friends dally. First blend of wheat not to be excelled: second, milling machinery the best modern Ingenuity has devised; third, miller who know wheat, milling and how to make such a fine flour as the Riverdale or Phoenix. Made by In OGDEN MILLING & ELEVATOR CO. : ) Dow to Save Money Just buy your CROCKERY and GLA8SWARE from us. This wssk w havs a lot of apodal values in odd piecas DECORATED GLASSWARE and DECORATED DINNERWARE. All nica new ware, but they are decoration! that wa are cloaing out You will aave monay If you buy them. - WHEELWRIGHT BROTHERS GLA88 AND HARDWARE. CROCKERY, PHONE 147-- 2476 WASHINGTON Z. AVENUE l Summer Comfort Is governed largely by what we eat and drink, and the healthful condition of the ystem. Quenches thirst and allays internal fevers. Its a delicious beverage for all occasions. Nothing like it for lemonades. a CO. Distributors F. J. KIEvSEL Jtaszers and Bells and Elec Me Clocks, Electrical Batteries with electric shocks. In the electric line; Everything Electrical work In electrical time. Superb a Cut Flowers h'-r- Those Lite Men COMMERCIAL ELECTRIC CO. Orders car frilly filled and promptly delivered HolbrooK Greenhouses Phone 430-- Stan R. Stevens, Manager. THE STATE Phone 514 X 2279 Wash. Ave. Eugene Holbrook, Vgr JOURNAL NEW8. FOR THE J |