Newspaper Page Text
uiield News liVKRV FRIDAY h • Editor aad Proprietor . tio.w ftvtn.1 m Aovaxcb W • fj.ao Three Month* - $1 ij < Month* 1.50 * mtfle Copm • .to Commensal advertisement* $2 jo u inch per l.onal reading notice* 13 cent* * line. Kntcred *t the Goldfield postoffice tor trans Aiasion through the mails at second class rates CECIL RHODES ON MINING. ! It was Cecil Rhodes, the mining king of south Africa, who said: “I speak advisedly and say wlia every man who lias investigated •knows to be the truth, that less m« ney is lost proportionately in mining and in investment in min ing stocks than in any business 01 investornt on earth. A goodmin ing stock will pay the investor more e tsily twenty, thirty, forty, filty oiul one hundred per cen annually than municipal bonds, railroad bonds and stock or gov eminent bonds can possibly p.\ five per cent. Money invested in igriod ^mining stocks is safer than iu a bank, than.i.i mortgages, rail road securities, municipal or go\ eminent bonds. 4*Thc security of a good mining stork is the law mateiial o' mone> itseli; it is what we call in Afric. •the ‘stuff’; it is the ‘stuff at whose feet governments, cities, banks, railroads, mortgages, land corpora turns and all forms of busiius kneel. “I speak only ot the gold ami silver mines, from the metal o which blooms and blossoms tin everlasting dollar; the crude meta in our gold and silver mines is tin first and best security in all the world. This is what makes bank and banking a possibility, that b ,what gives legs to a municipa.it> spine to a governme n,and create the business of the world into ; living, .breathing, active creature of liie. “Buy a good mining stock—bu it low; when it has doubled 01 quadrupled sell it; buy anorlu good mining stock; pursue thi policy and belore you dream of it you will find that >our dollar have imr.-ased to thousands,. >ou itettSSTrf§To~rm11ious, and durinj S' all this time your dividends hav> been ioo per cent higher thui they would have been in an> other'investment ‘you cou’d bavi made.” NEW PROCESS FOR TREAT ING ORE. Herewith is given a short dt scrlptton of the new process foi reducing ore which is being trie, with considerable success on tin 1 o i der county Col., product, ai.< which promises a complete rev< lution of mining in that section It is an electro chlorination [ r< cess. The ore is crus ed to tu el\ mesh, roasted thoroughly in straight line reverbating tuniat of special invention. It is the: placed in large leaching vats o ioo tons in the cyan de proces The solution is then applied. 1 hi so ution is electrolyzed by th electric current and charged w i: chlorine and bromine compound 0 strong solvent fi r gold. 1 1 gold is precipitated from this soli tion by the cunent. At this mi jhey expect to treat ioo tons pc day yt a cost of $1.50 per ton j.ih extr ict go per cent of the value? The company treats ore at $5 pt ton and pays 90 per cent ■ f as»a> yalue.” We congratulate the Rem papers on the fact that they ha\ at last recognized that knocking doesn’t pay. A late repentance is better than none and that they have truly repented of past mis deeds and fabrications is shout by the fact that they have at las commenced to publish the trut! about Go dfleld and Tonnpah. The Reno Journal heads one < f its recent articles, ‘‘Iruth Abou the Tonopah Country.” Rather a blunt admission that previous ar ticles on the same subject wc re well, not exactly the truth. Wanted— Bartender— A tlioroutibly r.-liable man who understands every de tail of the aaktoii business a first-elasr m>x T, a craok a-jaek at the bu-ines-. d wres employment in good minim t iVD I .quire at tbis office. Wanted—To buy interest in unde veloped minint; rininis near Gold ield. Most bear close investigation. Address with lull particulars, Milton Jen ions, Beal estate nnd mints. .Mining stocks iu*i O i isjUimission. Box 644, Riverside, California. * MATH VALLEY ORE. Prospector* Halt Good Find of Gold lock. Martin Ryner and Nels Standish, two experienced pros pec tors, recently ar rived at Calientc, on tire Cl >rk road with samples of gold rock and aluminum from claims which they had located in Death Valley. They bad a rough trip into that feav fttl district and almost perished from thirst before getting out of the desert. They were two days absolutely without wa er under a blazing sun on account of their burros tipping over their wa er barrel at night, and when they arrived there llyner was nearly blind from the effects of a sandstorm which overtook them on their last day in tin* desert. They claim to have h>eated a live-f'«»t ledge of free gold from which tile sam ples show n were taken, and show chunks of coatse gold as large as a kernel of wheat all through the ore. These sam ples will go into the thousands of dollars and the question of accessibility to wa ter is all that stands between the nervy prospectors and altluenee. They found the -keleton of a man. on whose bones the skin and fh sh had dried and liaked into (lie -einMance of an Kgyptian mummy. Three brass but tons. such as arc worn by I'nited States soldiers, were all the clues to identifica tion, the clothing having entirely disap (■care.l. They buried the remains near their camp and named their claim Dead Man’s mine, after their gruesome liml. ! IN LIGHTER VEIN. Physician—You may take a drink .vith each meal. Patient—I ilnn’t think it woul i agree .vith me to eat as often as that, doctor. Town Topics. ! i trass willows may, of course, be blue, i But 1 have never seen | No more has any of you) A single one that’s green. —The New Yorker. “I understand that when they are di* i vorced they will divide ten million dol lars.” ‘‘Well, that is enough for four people to live on.”—Town„Topics. \ n exceedingly careless old stork tot lost making calls in New York; le dropped in—ves, he did— Where he hadn’t a bid, tud he really caused no end of talk. —Town Topics. Mr. Swagger 1 don’t think your med icine will agree with my wile, doctor. “I shall be surprised it’ it doesn’t.” ‘■Not half so surprised as 1 shall be if I ,t does. Nothing that is not superhuman an agree with my wife.”—Town lalk Residence on Wheels. All the w y front Kansas where tin nnflower blooms came a'voting mao. is slet-k Henry Clay stallion, Hereford lersey milch cow a hundred Plymouth 'lock chickens, nn.l two cocker spaniels ogether with nil manner of household : ods. The yonng man is traveling in a char med boxcar, for which be paid S‘20 \ well -applied larler nit 1 a gnsolin* tove enable him to live like a prince vtii.e on his way to Sacramento county there he has a forty acre ranch. Except fo- the all t ervading animal dor. the car is a pleasant mode of coti .•i-yauee. This perfume ami the slow ■ess of the rip were too much for wifi ml hnlties, who survive! ii fora dm ltd then hoard.d a passenger tram foi heir El Dorado.— * parks Headlight. Tonopab-Ooldfield Meat Co. The articles of incorporation of the ronopah-Guldfield Meat company, w hich s to conduct a wholesale amt retail bu-i* ness in Goldfield ami Tonopah, have been filed.with the Secretary of State at ‘‘ar-on. Mention of the fact that the company had ueiptired the Andrus A n v butcher shop in tioldlield and that f Watt & MeCourt in Tonopah wit uade in this paper two weeks ago. Tin ■Ians of the company include the build ing of a big cold storage plant in Jon - wh. The company is capitalized at •■100,000 and the stockholders are as ollows: George Watt of Tonopah, .1. E. Huni ■ hrey and H. G. Humphrey of Iteno. F. luniphrev of Sattley, Cal., and John Josta of Downeville, Cal. Montana-Tonopah Officers. At the recent annual meeting of tin dontana-Tonopah company, held in >alt Lake, the following officers and di rectors were chosen : Charles E. Km x, president; A. C. Kills, Jr., vice-president; It. 1*. Dunlap, secretary and treasurer; George F. Bad ;ett, second vice-president: Cliailes K. Morris, C. W. Whitley,George S. Nixon and George A. Bartlett. At the organization of the board 1 >• -ii ild P. Gillies of Butte, Mont., was se Vcted as general manager nd eu]«rit - tendent. Nothing on the Market Equal to Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrbcea Remedy. This fact Is well-known to druggist every where, and nine out of teu will give their customers this preparation w hen hp hest is asked for. Mr Obp W ifrnei, ■ prominent druggist of Joplin. Mo-, in < •ircular to his customeiss ,'s: “There s m.iljii g on Mm m oke in the w.iy of intent medicine which equal.- Cl.aml>e' uiliV C lie, t'lu le a a d dinrr.i >ea leii. dy f r bowel complaints. We sell end recommend lids | re. aration.” For sale iv artm Mailer. * Lodging House for Sale. Bath in connection. Good loealiotion Main Street. Lot 2-r>xl00. I iiquiie at '".sineralda Lodging House. The tiuest of job printing at this office • i CLARK RDAO EXTENSION. Probability that Another Road Will BolM Here. When interviewed in Reno tlie other ■lav in regard to tlie rejx>rt that the Claik road will build into Goldfield and Tonopah, F. E. Itugg of the Ny e County Metvantile company said that 1 e knew nothing fif tbe correctness of the story hut that there was a strong probability of a road being built to connect Tono pah with the Clark road. “The mine owners of Tonopah, Uuld.ield, Reveille and ;.ther points are extremely anxious fora more direct connection with Salt Lake” he said, "and they will have it tiefore many years. Shipping charges are enormous as well as inadequate, and if steps are taken to organize a railroad company to place another line into Ton opali it will get strong financial support from the mine owners. Then, 1 under stand, there are a number of wealthy Salt Iaike men who areinterestod in su li I a project. I look for something of this nature to mature before long.” j Wheu the uew Merchants' hotel at Go umbia is completed it will be second to o other Imstelry outside of Reno. * INCORPORATE Costs 1 >nt little. LAWS MOST Ll | !E AL. No personal liability for cor po ate debts No a linal tax. Offleial i ow pmliibited from serving companies Ion. I. T. Stoddard, who has organize. hree-fonrMia of comp ir.iea. resigned ftii-e of s< eretary of Arizona io coi.tinui lim mess of iucorpoin ing I '"l'* of law a d forms furnish, d fri e. Address Stoddard Incorporating Co. PHOENIX. ARIZONA. ARIZONA Ahern, Coburn & Jarvis Main Sticet. - - Columbia Nev. A FULL LINE OF EVERYTHING HARDWARE, CROCKERY, GROCERIES, TOBACCO. LIQUORS, CIGARS, FURNISHING GOODS. Supplies for Miners a Specialty GOLDFIELD Lumber Company DEALER IN VLL KIND* OF Dressed and Plain Lumber, Shin gles, Shakes, Ltc. MINING TIMBERS A SPECIALTY au»h. Doors, ami all kinds Huilding Material constantly ou hand Goldfield Transfer Co* U'e are equipped l<> do a general Dr.ijing and Hauling business iu all part* of theGoldHrld District. OUR SERVICE IS PROMPT. Leave orders at E. Marks «te C«> V *toie. MANUEL & BERRYMAN, Prop’s. BARTON PITTMAN & CO. MINING BROKERS Goldfield and Tonopah Stocks Bricks Bricks Bricks COLUMBIA, NJiV. We make the best quality of Vlobe bricks. Price, $H) per thousand. Per sons who intend to build are invited to fall at the yard and etc the kind of 1 bricks we are turning out. For any further information apply to J. J. MOSS, Goldfield Agent t MAIL ORDERS I r v l Dry Goods J ! T Women aud Men's Furnishings J- Men's Clothnig and shoes for all i i t RYAN & STENSON | T TONOPAH. NEV. J. H. SPIKING Mining Properties Examined Development Work Managed om *■ with II- 1 i«. it Jordan, As avers, Ma.n Si. Dissolution of Partnership. I The firm oi Ixefkovit* Brin, conducting h general mer« hniidise huMne-*. ha> this «.a> ' t* eii ..ssoived t»v u. itual < • ;. .nt. Mr. Br .i (retire*1 from 11»«* tai-ness, \vh*h will h>r* i a.t^r l** eoii-iu r***i » • l.e.kovits iJrofher*. i h j lJ. . ni.i. »*e-* .1 i v «. : ■ f..- till > It t collect a** *uvouni* due tic* old firm. I.t.l I' I.Ll'KuVITS, U. M. tili.N. Goldfield. Nev.. Sept. 1. l‘J04. ALTER \V. K11 VAN. M. D. Late of the City and County Hospital, Columbus, Ohio. Office—Corner Columbia and Rainnev avenne. Gold Held. Nevada. Office hour-*—S to.Q a m . 2 to 3 p m . and T to a p. m. ■0HAS L. HAY1S A rtokn ky-at-Law office In Dr. Howland's Building [GOLDFIELD - - NEVADA Physician. Surgeon and 1 ’enlist Lnt** of R >die, Cal- and Virginia City Defective vision corrected with glasses. Office temporarily at Esmeralda Lodg ing II >n:-P. < Soldiicld, Nev. I? J. HuWLAND, M. D. Physician and Su geon Ma< removed to his new building on upper Mam Street, opposite Goldfield Lodging House. .0 G. GORDON, M. D. Pliyscian and Surgeon, Goldfield - * Nevada 0 L. II \M.MONO Physic an & Surgeon PtiNOPAH, Nevada Kenneth M. Jackson. Hugh H. Brown. Campbell, Metson & Campbell Attorneys and Counsellors at Law GOLDFIELD, NEVADA. Golden Block, Crocker Building, Tonopah, Nevada, Sau Francisco. YJTLTON M. LM.TCH A*r TOR N K Y- A T-1. A w lo.NVFYA.VCINO IWCOHroRATI.NO Mining l.itigntnin a specialty Nevada Got nrtP.LD, Nevada ! L. JOHNS l,\WVKR (j OLD FI ELD, J J B. LIN'D Att rnfy-at-la\v AN DR KW F. BURLEIGH of New York City Associate Counsel MINING AND CORPORATION LAW Qoldtield, - - Nevada |£kv Pitt an & \V. B. Pittman ATTOi-NhVS-AT LAW ! Golden Block, T«>n0Pah, Nf.v. C. KING, D. I>. S. DENTIST OFFICE: CUTTING BUILDING Tonopah, - - Nevada 77 K. C< 'Ll. I NS Justice ok the Peace Goldfield, - - Nevada QI.AUDli M. VMITH UlSTR CT KeCOKDEK COLDFIELD, NEVADA 'onvryr.nccr find Notary Public. Typewriting DI N PICA ^LMAN MINING PROMOTER fonopah. Nevada L. W. DAVIS Victor, Colo F.. A. BYLEK Goldfield. Nev. JJAY1S & BYLER Mining Engineers and U. S. Deputy Mineral Surveyors North «iu street Goldfield — — Nevada JJENRY C. MARCUS Mining Engineer Claim* Examined lor Responsible Parties and Reports on the Camp Furnished pLMEK J. CHUTE. M. E. Eng IN EE RING AND MJKVEYING M ipsot the C.oldfield Mining liistrict for sale QOUMTEI.M ASSAY OFFICE KOHT. I.AN'KA J. W. McC.Al l.IA IJ j VfcLAl GUUN & 11AR f ASSAYERS Main Street, - Gnldfie’d, Nev. — 1 I n AH Kinds ot — Carpenter and Cabinet Work By Pay, Pie cor Contract. Your money'* worth for your money. \V. L. McKjONACJILL. op|*n*io* O’llrien'n I’onitll. GOLDFIELD BOTTLING WORKS Hathaway, Gkahi-Man an: Cr<»j»«y, I’rops \!anufacturtrr•* ol j ure cr~ECi;r.TiL. beverages »iUt|arillHuitd 'i in.tiiiigu Alt*. I tsuon. Crtra*n, &tfHwl»tny :u»d invitee Oumpague .11 k.ml-. o -ofi diinks* Dilvtml and Ink** Water* Sf*cl*ltlw BUY A LOT IN Phenix North Addition TO GOLDFIELD CLOSEST PART OF GOLDFIELD TO THE MIMES All travel from Tonopah must come through it and a main cross street pointing directly to the Combination and January mines. Lots on Main Street selling fast and hr.uses of fine construction being erected. We have only a few more lots left on Main Street every one of them level. SIDE STREET LOTS FOR RESIDENCE $30 TO $50 A well 100 feet deep, with pure water on the grounds. Buy before too late. For maps nmHnformation, apply to G. S. PHENIX GOLDFIELD “W. S. WILLIAMS CO. Tonopah and Goldfield Stage Line MAKES ROUND TRTP EVERY DAY. . . . Leaving Tonopah at 6:30 a. in. and air ving at Goldfield at 11:30 Returning, leaves Goldfield at 1:15 p. 111. and arrives at lon> pali at 6:00 Fare Each Way $3.0 JOHN O’KEEFE, Proprietor. The Peerless Cafe THE UP-TO-DATE RESTAURANT OF C.OLDFIEED : : : Main Street, next door to Postoffice Short Orders a Specialty OPEN OAV AND NICHT WILSON, WAGNER & CO. Proprietors j. L. WOODWARD Manager C. C. INMAN J. P. SANDERS Sanders & Inman CONTRACTORS and BUILDERS Correspondence Solicited Estimates Furnished MAIN STREET j Goldfield, - - Nevada j For Mining Timbers, Stulls, Lagging, Square Sets, and Cordwood, see E. R. COLLINS, Agent WONACOTT a HALL Gold&eld and Tonopah Undertakers, cmbalmers and Funeral irectors Coldfield Biaucli Uflk-e »ith E. Marks & Co. Our mmw Hiarat hae recently arrived . . i I J. F. MITCHELL Mining Engineer. Mining Properties Examined and Reported on. Good Mining Claims in Goldfield District For Sale. THE Goldfield Feed Yard M. S. Sharp, Prop. Cast Side, South Main Street Eighty-foot Shed and Free Water in Corral for patrons HAY AND GRAIN FOR SALE Water delivered to any part of the district at reasonable rates 1 GoUfaM Drug Store | (§ Pure Drugs and Chemi cals, Patent Medicines, Perfumery. Toilet Arti cles, Soaps and Cigars, M ed ici n al Wines and Liquors : :::::::: Prescriptions Carefally Compounded M, MULLER, Druggist DISSOLUTION OF PARTNERSHIP The firm known as the Nevada Art and e orative V out'.any and ownul by E. II. , ouley and F. Megmier, have <lis>oive«i j j ai tiK-r>hip. L. II. Conley to have mil m»ii- J .roi of T. :»«»| dih business ami to b. i\ spoils ib e ; «»** ..if bills against firm in Tonopib, amt to . oti«‘> t all bib" in iavor m iirtu n ioKopah. j •\ Megmser to have • nntrol 01 ut! biisiio ss a;; •oitiiit.id and Mill Tow 21 1.ml « oilc* t n.; out- j .landing bills at Coldfieid ami pay all bibs ugmii.s! firm at Gnldiieio. b.Kiicd: I . II. CONLEY. ] 1. fcTEUMIEK. ! Witness: E. <i. OSfiOl N. < lonopali, Nevada, August 1®, 1U04. J.A. Kesler John Shirley W.A, Inf THE PALACE The Finest Gentlemen's Resort In Goldfield. COR. MAIN ST. and CROOK AVE. Fine Wines, Liq uors and Cigars. A Gentle Tijer in Club Roorai. rwv. Cashed. Thejoshua Club Brearley ft Troxel, Props. Cor. Main St. and Crook Avenue Not the Best of Every thing, but pretty fair drinks and cigare. jyClub Room in connection. —THE Goldfield Saloon | main street HOST. BONN. Proprietor 1 he- Pioneer Saloon of the Goldfield district ::::::: GIVE US A CALL=^ THE Te ® L. Restaurant «d Saloon MILLTOW N, (Goldfield District) NEVADA C2IAS. THOMPSON and 0L1E LERVOOG, Preps. FI RST-CLASS MEALS Liquors and Cigar*