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Show << 1 S.J v ‘ g ee Sein = gehen» ~tee- se = ele Silver Reet Miner. | or ‘ “ % - Seed } oe Fs Sammi Ta) eee BEAR 1e LB [ch siengo hoped-fur boo ET EEE RET Mining better. | ive ly ee sete ek eee The President. The latest TUN MrT Tht ng ua news ¢9'from’ Long Branch A few days ago he was taken matters, _Jinge rs hupon the monntain tops’ | ’ 1 2 ie . } oe c | lt valuahle mining claims to 4 in-a-reclining} large extent are jndiffergady worked, | from 1! it capital needed to ' for the reason tha ehair. He enjoyed the change, and | 3.) make them pro ii tit 4 ne lies ich y rusting has fetY no ill effects from: it. Br I n-Eastern atid foreign wnarkets. is in} We talk of the sayacious foresight Bliags states that the wound eplendid condition, and expresses a | of capitalists, bat the distinguishing| and bed placed = A cin sueeced where hundreds have When a new aspirant starts failed: out in a mereantile enterprise, there are no shakings of the head and no ifto the neatest, wittiest 2nd most “vigorous journal of that section, aliké creditable to its publishers and the community it-represents, Long may of the Arizona ficid Geod U to businessmen and and incoming spring sill soon merge | to present the truth. and prove that it| partment ‘into fruitful suinmer. prespee tts; pon Ww te i i\ Time has its revensres, j is true, is by no means and ith it i Seale gue stion has labor lost. been aske d why ¥ for arms and ammunition for volunteers, but, as Secretary Lincola is absent from Washington, he is | ' the plucky miner may also have’ his} t no pains are takent tanrove agriculture dime MiTtY it getting ! exper ienc ing some t oO It is being | them. on the idiotic n yoncy changer, AS) ho a legitimate business. It would create some surprise, fails to note the signs of the time anc {| done, and in many places itis found were it not the custom among Federal } ent of capital to develop into great i oe and where | necessary to use arguments: to thisi officials, that the Governor of a Terhis money a No one in this country will| | ritory Shou end. mines, can be bought for compara-., t willdo the most goo. remain. away from his ively In other cases All along the. aetn al and project: a} | deny that the steel plow of the pre s- | post when his people were threatened . ; lines-of-railroad.iu 0 tah.the miner entis.an improvement oyer the shap-_ | : 7 controlling’ interests can be obtained | pes) eet aee sie mnuel on cr Ss ened fi k that 1 bee " -}asith annihilation. by__Indians,.and Fingle-handed miner has lust’ dolar. and which spent await his the ad- | li oy zt stall * ye | ha us plntced his cost, sud the original owner | eral tre: sure. IOS oy 2 retrined as & minority with representative, , r t buyer. benefit of his and And skill at the the service of the| ' the Comstock, and is esteemed by the disgrace. ' igembers of those fraternities. We ——Owrnc to*the increased dewish Joe success in his new venture. mand for mining information throughne ——— Ir is estimated that the produet out the East, the New York Daily of gold in California for the year 1881 American Exchange on. Monday last will amount 1o0.$19,000,000, which is enlarged its mining department, and in excess of ibe annual product of promises to give the fullest and most any yearsince 1871. If the present accurate reports from the various seceHekens war/does not materially in- |, tions. As a mining and financial _yerfere with! gold mining, it seems” journal the Exchange has no superior virgre than“prebable -that. California: in America, and we are pleased to siate. a mx ag the ‘the Géldea prevents: the ae foie athe PRerensing Sapa prosperity. ¥ : erats, with indebted for the quiet proeedure of its high prosperity mae Ww hatever is to come, man left for.a few minutes to go to the smoker. Returning, he found that Mr. Hayes had vanished. ‘Look ahere! saida granger joining seat, “‘the ,——Pexsacona, Florida, with a: population of 7,500, and a continual ~ influx of strangers, enjoys an. extensive trade. It is now one of the fore-;. most ports of the country for export business. ‘The chief export is timber; of which alone upward of 1,000,000 feet per day are loaded upon vessels of all descriptions and natioualities,, but the bulk goes to Europe, of which from an ad- feller that was a-settin’ with you is a thief; he took your satehel.”” Mr. Daggett found Mr. Hayes ina rear car. When Daggett laughingly opened the valise, revealing deck a of number cards and of soiled shirts, # three bottles. of whisky, Mr. Hayes exclaimed: “Gracious! Suppose S had taken your satchel to my house The fact that the President was a dead shot and sat with two-revolvers in his hand, kept the society in comparative quict while the questions, “Ought a* flush royal to beat four aces?” and “Is it wicked to lynch Mexicans on Sunday ?”’ were debated. But when they tackled, the questions “Ought you cago and being lécal | rate that city. between Chi- Other-points on road can be r ached ee a ——THe last “Ohio idea” ts likely yt to be a tuking one, and is. embodied jin the decision of-a country Justice religion of the multitude in China, that “courting is a public mecessity, while the Jearned® men of that most and’ must not ;be interrupted; therefore, if 4 young man wanted to kiss a gonservative mace cling to the more ewer tL 3 my hich girl he. amight: 2 tjier father f me of the room ‘first if bel liked.” “he date back only ‘some 651 years ye ¢C race, Atthe present time it is th in a flat, kepther apartment as writers indulge in about Mrs. Garfield is simply “jiauseating. ~ These~sentimental scribblers seem to think -be‘rause Mrs. Garfield has watched by her husband's bedside during his long illness, because she has not eloped with any one or gone on aspree, that she is an exceptionally noble woinan. Mrs. Gartield has done no more than the wife of any other inan would do under similar circumstances. She has done her duty; thatis all. She needs no mnonument for that. and lamentable man for less than the Pennsyl- the Pennsylvania in the same way. _— "Tue followers of Ppacdae are said to outnumber those of all other Buddhisin a ——A FAIR ILLUSTRATION of, the extremity which the railroad war in the East has reached is afforded by the fact that by using a Baltimore and Ohio $5 ticket from Chicago to New York a passenger can reach, Ptttshurg combined, fire when sult. herds the religion of two-fifths of the human to reaches for his hip-pocket, or are’ you bonnd to wait till you see whether it’s wrevolver or a bottle he’s drawing?’ the President couldn't control them, and five funerals was the re- vania road’s religions 80- ciety in Deadwood a short time ago. view to domesticate now remaining. small In- rounded by a chain tattooed in green. ; protection is jystly called for, with a the England receives the largest share. oe ee ee —— CAPITALIsTs are at last beginning-to.see. the advantages of inyestment, in. the South, and a wellinformed correspondent of the New York Herahi estimates the capitak now directed to the development of that section of the Cuion at not less ‘ban $100,000,000. “This is entirely independent of local capital. ~> <e Motives for marrying are varcr jous. ‘‘Probably marrying to gel rest,’? says the New York Ledger, ‘is more common than is generally supposed.’” That sounds poetie; but the man who marties to get ‘‘rest,”” will get left. 1f he has any rest after he gets married heli have to borrow some, or else get somebody to seratch | | around and feed his family in summer and 4i1] his coal bin in winter. There may be a motive for every | marriage—bat the absence of any | motive is eoperally, more SHEETS to } thre nist sted tor who doesi*t stead of a frame, the picture was sur- organized a debating reference to the threaten- referred to, will the country be largely LETTER from Naples an—aA fan. asylum for exts a dogs. The ene the captnre recently of a) | other persons living in the house daring brigand, Gennaro Salzano by| nese and recently a magistrate name, who was the terror 6f all the| | Pa her to turn into the street people inthe district, When stripped Wall SiGe feiss, which consisted of preps ratory to clothing bin in the , thirty-three cats and fifty-four dogs. prison garb he was-found to have his | | What the people in the neighborhood body tattooed in a remaraxadle man'theught °° having this battalion ,of There was a large pieture on} ner, “quadrupeds Jet loose on them is not his breast, representing him standing told. Possibly if these people could in a commanding attitude, a pistol in have been heard they woald have teseach band, and the corpses of several | tified that they regarded the old gendearms Jying around, In the | Woman as a publie benefaetor. backgrouud was the sea; to the right was sketched a small village, sur=r ace gush whieh some TueY Party. of the D2mocratie party. To the unselfish and proinpt, action ofthe men —Ir isperepotted that not long ago ex-Congressman Daggett was sit= ting on the same seat in a car with ex-President Hayes, an@ the Nevada | lived —— Old ing dangers of unsettled legislation, all attest the deep regard and loyalty ————— rounded with trees and-gardens. to the otic auctions of Senator Beck, of Kentueky, and other prominent Demos: — TRAIN- ROBBING appears to have become one of the established devices of the highwaymen. Judging from the latest accounts, it is becoming ds dangerous to take a trip by rail as was tormeriy a stage ride, There is only one cure for these attacks, and that is a well-directed dose of lead or steel, supplemented. by the judicious application of hemp immediately beow the cars. When this prescription is faithfully administered the results are always particularly beucficial. A) — ED —— Ove of the biggest “hauls” recorded in’ municipal. police annals was made in San Franciseo one night recently, when two hundred and fifty Chinese gamblers were surprised-and captured, Unfortunately, while the officers were waiting for reinforcements to take the prisoners to the yi upafire broke out in an alley by! The swarm of Chinamen siiiie arush for the door, and-in the capfuslon, oft except Beye cnty: five cece ped: emai ~ $ —---oe —- ——ReEceEnNrT letters from. Mobile, Alabama, say that the onee proud, Vealthy and thriving city is now absolutely dead. Its conimerce is gone, and its only excitement is the advent of the yellow fever at the usual inter= vals. Mobile is one of the Southern cities which the war’ruined and the railroads have crushed. i a ——Jamrs Gorpon BENNETT, pro: yrietor of the New York Herald, is: represented as looking weary, wornuid bored. Notwithstanding he has in income of $300,000 a year, and keeps Up eXpensive est: ‘GEHeNS AE Paris, Pau, London and Newport, he evidently. does not enjoy himself. c new avill regitin her — plains t ¥ Greatt It will be set down to the credit of the Democracy that.at the greatest crisis of the nation’s trouble the voice. sgn miznucl ea iain-| ened stick that has been in use tor | that the Secretary of War should be These ees cover | ages, yet it takes time to prove the | absent from Washington et a time floox at the matter from a_rostate the etern: al hills, and Uncle Sam is y¥ fact to the inhabitants of $ South Anier- + when he was labie to be called upon | standpoint, or gaze at it through a |; romantic pair of specs. ape busy writing on parehment his li and other lovalities. The people | atany moment for assistance in sub- | ———— | patented right to wealth as enduring | of this country-have been convineed | jugating the savages | Aw old woman a Paris, who ea mining expe-| | | 1 as the mnotintalns enclosing it. It is that railroads possess lirgt advantages processes for; | older than the race, and will last ull aS i means of transportation; it has extracting the precious metals from time shall be no more. The man who } taken someeffert to induce the citizens | ® -? * }j The min- jor India T ant Mexico to acceyt the | low-grade ores render the investment | | owns it’ean afford to hu me ict. ‘Vhusii will be seen that | cf capital as certain of success as rea- | ie industry. in pecard with tue royal metals IL hancies, stunds secure amid | alt op ih a truth may be self-evident| | ronable men can ask. to those wha can comprehend it, there | . ' eae mutations of the financial and inWe invite the waiting capitalists , dustrial world. Corn and wheat may is some effort required to open the| | znd idle businessmen of the East to rot in the flelds; the silence of death minds of men so that they may behold| ‘Fhe miningo interest in | visit our mines and examine for! tay rest upon factory and forge; By and accept. snread their themselves the opportunites for prof- | chips hips may may fai fail to spread their white white | this couniry owes its rapid advance| : ; wings for port and a market, and the ij tent tor the position of a respected itable. investment. The guarantees | \ 1 towering but flimsy superstructure of | and Jegitiinate enterprise, strong in the ef suecess are fh their own hands. (speculation may. fall rl crush its | confidence of substantial businessAn economic administrati ion of affairs i| thousands: buat the Tesurrection of jmen and established as one of the and personal attention to business, | precions and useful mnétals goes on, | future leading productive industries and its metalic currents péenctrate the.| of the nation, more to the efforts of efter—# Judicicus pnrehase has-been nerveless body politic, and restore to | Inining papers devoted faithfully” to raade, will satisfy every doubting one | ‘life and animation the working ener- | its highest good, than to any other zmong our Kastern friends that: min- i| gies of the race. | ageney.. Mining papers have proved ing in Southern Utah affords greater| The man who owns land, be it min- | mining to be ligitimate, profitable and certainty of sutress than any legitt | |} eral or agriéultural, holds in his grasp | permanent, stripped off.the false robes in which it had been decked by those | the elenients of success; and though ate business in thecrowded avenues ! handicapped and crippled for | Wwho desired to prostitute a imagnifi\ he be of trade and manufactures at the East. j want of means, let bim keep good i cent power to advance their own in| courage as with stout arms he turns| | terests, broken .the bar of the prison— THE Winneruees 8Silver State| ; the sod er follows the sinibus track of ; house of speculation in which it was ts our authority for the report that! | gold and silver, for as sure us day fol- | bound and forced to grind, and placed “Joe Harlow, for slong time fore-| ! lows night, capital will beg for a foot- | at last the light of truth upon the man of the Virginia Chronicle job! hold within his domain. | brow of a most generous and gracious vffice, and later foreman of the State ; | queen, who will bestow sure and rich’ Printing Office of Nevada, will shortly | upon rightly-directed skill that | reward —— THE repert now. comes take eharge of the Carson Appeal. and energy. ‘The world to-day reaps i Shinkel, one of the principal oarsmen, Sam” Davis, the present editor, will sold out the Cornell crew from first to the benefit of efforts made to-preve taove to Salt Lake City, having, it is | last, and he started out with the in- the truth true. understood, accepted a situation as tention of making the tonra failure. local reporter upon the Tribune.” If this is the ease, some of the hard — Tne Ogden Pilot says about _Lfarlow was a member os the Nevada things which have been said concern- 150,000 buffalo robes have been shipped ienate two years ago, and introduced ; Kast via Bismarck this vear from the ing the erew in general will have to and succeeded in having passed an’ region north weet-of that point... Mill. be taken back, and it will be interestAct creating the present State Printions of buffalo have been slaughtered, ing to calculate what direct influence ing Office. ‘He was also for some time Shinkel’s treachery may have had in and ifsthe present rate of destruction President of the Printers’ Union and ‘the various fouls 2nd other mishaps is continued, the race will be extinet secretary of the Mechanies’ Union of which have brought the erew into within “@ few years. Government rrence the © has brought condensation into rain of whatever humidity may be carried.in the winds from the Gulf of California, but the White Mountains interpose a barrier to the further course of these winds towards the northeast, and it, may), reasonably be inferred ‘that the slopes of the mountains and the plains below are well watered both by streams and rains, Indeed, this is clearly proven by-the existence of extensive and valuable forests in the region uuder consideration. — * i capitilists. A Country. into prominence the character of the country oceupied by them. It appears that the Colorado plateau fs the | of its able exponents was lifted to ‘alni.the waves of discord and soothe best-timbered und best-watered porthe wildest and gravest apprehensions, tion of Arizona. The White Mountchivalrous words of*General ains from the background of the pla- The Hancock’ changed the sentiment of teau rise to the higkt of over 10,000 the country, which was loud against ‘feet t, and the streams which fertilize Viee-President Arthur,-and removed tlie plains below are fed from the perpetual snows on their summits. .the fears that existed in many quarters that his succession would bring anThese. mountains also catch atid conarehy and ruin to the business of the dense the vapors borne by the southcountry. The supplementary_patyiwest winds. The heated atmosphere aa its banner wave.—j{ Wood River Times, prophets of evil to foretell ruin and Haile ¥, Idaho. disaster. Mining enterprises, Which, ‘THe SILVER REEF MINER, published. under ‘all the obstacles which they at Silver Reef, Utah, has entered upon LEAT aracteristic. aaadinara his nonered . of t MRLsmoneyed menry salt i have had to contend, have. returned its fourth volume, and donned a new belief es in the ultimate recovery of the | SUIHETET oh aa ek 2 good profit for every dollar invested, patient. ; their regretful hindsight. Upon the dress: It is one of the brighest and | ascending wave of speculative prices, have almost universally been regarded| | spiciest little papérs pitbilshed, and The Advantages of Southern Utah: tt they Tousen their purse-strings with with suspicion. It is claimed that we are glad to note signs of its prora discordant lamentation of figures abundantly show that every perity. ‘Phere is no more. legitimate indus- imany Long may it live.—{Idaho ‘what might have been” had they dolar spent in the search of gold and Avalinche, Silver City. tiy than miniag. It«has stood the i. silver bas. returned five dollars, yet nvested when mining property was From away out in Utah comes regpst of m: nay trying days, and comes | at zero. | ° ,this great industry, which can give ularly to our exchange tadie THE Siout of the ordeal ahead of any of the positive proof of security. and. There are properties that co beg- ‘such veR REEF Mrxer. It Is, recently productive industries of the eountry, }4| ging for buyers: to-day in Utah, and | safety, is by a large m: jority of people entered its fourth vofume, and is a at! regarded as worthy the attention of he men who turn up their noses with larger profits and a better show- | t neat and wilty paper—a credit to the adventurers and reckless parties only, } them and refase to buy at-any price Territory it represents.—[Rural and ing for the future.” And Southern| will, in less than two years, go down | and practically on a level with a lotBrighton Gazette, Long Island, N.Y. Urab, among all the mineral districts | on their marrow. benes to obtain them | tery scheme. ‘Tur Su.ver Reer Miner, published ef the country, to-day offers better . at double ‘the present rates. It is ad- | Thanks to the united efforis of the at Silver Reef, Utah, has entered inducements “than anyother. Soons4 nitted that. mining is the Jexuding in-, leading mining journals, publie epinion has been so moulded that there upon--its- fourth. veolume,...It.is..a to be eonnected “by railways , with it erest in Utaly: on this imperial inbright and interesting journal, and is dustry all others depend» and wait. i has been a marked and rapid change marke S$ east and west; with cheap | , doing good service to its patrons.— in the minds of capitalists and busiThe agricultural, raifread, mercantile / Yuma Sentinel, Arizona. and abundant supplies of horses and| j and. banking interests aré see ondary | | Ness men, and the enterprise that vattle, and dairy and farm prouiicre. ‘and subsidiary. But while our me would naturally have taken years to The eve Indian Wax. | eek ‘the very doors of the miner's | leys aad canyons xre alive with the | Attract attention and gather momenRecent reports s from the scene of ‘abin; with a eupurd> climate, afford. skirmish line of the oncoming rail- | tui, has, by these strong aids, been; the Indian outbreak in Arizona show | Way army, and ou farmers and | enabled to raise at once into promiinga larger proportion of clear, sun-| ie = aye. SH i : ee ot that the number of Apaches on: the e ; j herdsmen are extending their -stakes+ nmence, where it-eonld -prove—its. own dare ape > aye at} . 5 ar ae Ww arpath has been greatly exaggerated. iitfr days than any other section of the ;and enlerging their borders, the | value and importance. A carefal eotint of the Indians at the country; wiih light taxation; with a ‘doubting capitalist sits, Achilles-like 1 Some have lield that there is no agree : : San. Carlos reservation shows that for mining papers, and peaceable and industrious population ; 18 ulking in his.tent, instead of plant-| | necessity | there are 4,105 in and drawing rations, with immense fields of coal, much of ing seed that would inevitably result | others. bave rediculed the persistent and only the White Mountain band, _in golden harvests. There are pres-| efforts of the mining press to prove it ‘sultable Yor coke; irom—in~equal e nt opportunities for investment in| that this business was profitable, re- numbering 700, including women and quantities, and all the necessary flux-| mines awaiting quick-moving capitals | children, absent. In this band there liable, and legitimate. are only 250 bucks, which is the maxingo aterials for successful smelting, | ist s, Which, in the inighty current 6f} That athing is true by no means pushing —ttah—to- thes proves that people -wih-aeeept it as j imum number said to be on the warcombined with immense bodies of ore } cvents” ow a i truth until it is presented. in many ! } Governor Fretiont is absent from easy of access &’nd remarkably free ' EIST OVI RES eters gf ses | : ; | mercury in our mining thermometer | forms, and its truthfulness urged and i the Territory, and Jobn J. Gosper, irom refractory elements—all these, The | proven over and over again, The | Secretary, is Acting Gerernor. hae s touched its lowest point. He with other advantages, offer a most | winter of our discontent is vanishing, | effort to prove a facet, and: the labor | | has made requisition on the War De- laviing Premising The Apache outbreak In the great sandstone-silver district of Southern Utah, hag entered upon its fourth volume. -Uiider the able Inanagement of Messrs. Louder & Steele, ‘THR Mrxer has developed *joeund of Colorado,| 7 Miner." THE SILVER REEF MINER, published ReviewJ 4s in effect that the President is much ett eae **The good ambhority that statisties prove the failure of 05 per cent. of mercantile enterprises, yet the business is vet Very sensibly affect but does hot > . 1 he. mine owners. and workers in } comsidered legitimate, and its avenues | Utah, Opened mines and* prospects4 a ce"CrOW, led by-those who think they is PE Vindicated. It is stated upon what is considered {) The expected and hope J-fat boon! ETT eke Trit bene.}j expe VET | Time. [Salt Lake eat SATURDAY... snows SEPTEMBER 17,18 1}, aan 4 eae ; - 255 gar hs ——- <> 2 ——A FASHION WRITER remarks chat ‘there is a. struggie to revive Iuced shoes? If there is to be any strugele about this lacing business, a great many young men would like to tend a hand. ; Why the <—_ Chinese = ----—_--—— do The penal code of provision’ Which an correctly translated persons renouncing devising the means not Naturalize. China containg a exchange says is as follows: ‘All their country or thereof shall be beheaded, and in the punishment of. his offense no distinetion shall be ade between principals and acces<ories. The property of all such criminals shall, be confiscated and the wives and children ‘distributed as slaves to the great: ofiicers of the State. ‘The parents, grandparents, orothers—and grandchildren of such criminals, whether habitually living with them under the suine root or not, shall be perpetually banished listance-of 2,000 leagues. 4 to the All those who purposeiy conceal .or connive at this crime shall be strangled. Those «. who inform agsinst criminals of thisclass shall be rewarded with the whole of their property. contrived but cipals are to If this plan is not executed, the prinbe strangled, and the iecessories punished with blows and banishinent.’? This provision, which has only lately plains why John become has no known, desire naturalize, cut off his queue come a real ‘*Melican man,’’ as Se What the ex-- to and be- earners Microscope Says. Insects of various kinds may be: seen in the cavities of a grain of sand, Butterflies are fully feathered. Hairs are hollow tubes. ‘The surface of our bodies is covered with seales like a fish; a single grain of sand would cover one hundred and ifty of these scales, and yet a scale covers five hundred pores. ‘I‘hrough these narrow openings the perspira- tion forces itself like water through @ sieve, Each drop of stagnant water con- tains a world of creatures, SW mming with as much liberty as whales in the sea, Each grazing Even shows leaf has a colony of ingects, on it like cows in a meadow. the ugliest plant that grows some remarkacle property wherclosely ‘Been examined: Gach iene ect ——- You can ‘alw ays tell when an editor son avacation. Ite walks about ee streets as if he had lost a thread of thought or something, and nothing will “bring him back himee}f 80 quick as to!haye some one gall “go oopy’™ Z herbs C8 on i re i me ee Soiree sepa | |