f BRYAN IN ; ILLINOIS i $ Bears No Secret Mes ij sage, but Hopes for hi Settlement ol Dead ly lock i b field, III., March 1? Secre-1 J nr. of State Bryan. . h, ii g i,,.. i'p'.ei. .!.: the authority ol tjl Wilson administration to settle the J : lier.ncratic fiehi over the lllino g Bi n t. n -. n declined today to dlsi the matter bctore ttr nvii'nr Imiio; wtc wa taken jf. The secretary of State had no ' se rial L rret message" fmm President Wilson j.l F anonr the Illinois senatorial situn H I tion, he told the joint session of the I Illinois legislature, Mr Bryan said that he came more I as n private citizen, "speaking to tij, ihose who are Invested with great rc B ; fponsibilirleiv4- ratii.-i tlia.i as an of-I I f!cl! of the federal government Mr Bryan heard the vote on tlu f genatorships which resulted In no E choice for either the long or the short I term Onl) In lite most general terms did I Secretary Bryan refer to the complex J' Illmoi' polnica' problem, and then -J ch i r f I as an illustration of cltlsen kgw ghip duties "1 am not here to tell you what f you oncht to do." he faid i decline I I to tell, even if I am asked, for two In the fir-t place the respoti6ibil l Hy is not upon me; it is upon you In the second place, your knowledge I must be more complete than mine ! One from the outside must rely on those who communicate to him, and if their communication is for any rea son Incomplete or Inaccurate he then ii'1 is not well informed." Concerning President Wilsons at- ; titude Mr Bryan said 1 "I came with no secret message 1 I from the executive. The president represents the ideal of publicity In 1 si politics, not the ideal of secrecj ' 1 oo U J TWO HOLDUPS I GET A MAN'S I WATCH I Francis Brown, residing at 151 Thirty-second street, reported to the police earl this morning that he had been held up b two masked men on ; Washington aenue near Eighteenth 1 street, shortly after I o'clock and ' ; that the robbers had secured valu ; shies to the amount of S50 His loss i consisted of a gold watch, a fob and ) I- so in silver. Mr Brown was escorting home a friend who was intoxicated and could J nr.i find his way alone Wheu he ap proached a point on Washlncton avr- in.e near Eighteenth street, a tall man and a short man stepped out and 't. ordered him to hold tip his hands The police are working on the case y biit there are several points it. Brown's storv that have not been cleared up sufficiently to give the po lice other than ft confused Idea of the holdup. I oo TESTIMONIAL AT THE WEBER ACADEMY Jj A testimonial given by the high H council and Weber stake auxiliary K organizations In honor of President L i W Shurtliff, President C F Mlddle Ml ton and President John Watson is be- Ing held this afternoon at the Weber academy and will continue until 'j o'clock this evening The testimonial was arranged with the view to showing ihe appreciation felt for the long and active years of 'j service by the presidents Beginning at 4 30 o'clock, the pro gram wag as follows: Invocation. Quartette, Taggart brothers and Goddard Eulogy, Bishop W O Rldps Solo, Mrs. Mrrtle Ballinger Hig P ley Remarks, President Joseph F j Smith. Solo William 8 Wright. Saunders' Courtship. Belle Salmon Rosa Responses, Presidents Shurtliff. Mlddlelon and Watson Presentation of flowers, little Miss es Bccles, Scoweroft and Rich Congregational hymn, "We Thank Thee O God. for a Prophet After the introductory program re freshments are io be served by the domestic science department of the 6chool. and the refreshments are to ho fnllnwed hv an old time dance. where such dances as the quadrille, Pl lnneers reel nnd wait, will be Riven H preferencf The dancing will contin I ue until 9 o'clock. Tbose on the committees are Jame6 W I're Mrs David Rccles y'- and aides Wiley Cragun and Mrs S Christian Flygare A L Scoville, Jo-i sepb Ballanfyne Mr and Mrs C. J H Ross W W Henderson, Wlllard D. ff 1 Kills, John F Sm-daker, M Charles ,l Wood. Joseph A Fife. G W. McCune. T A. Shreeve, C. J Brown. . tilt ' TRANSFERS OF I REAL ESTATE The f-illowtog real estate transfers I hae been placed on record In the county recorder's office: i honi as E nd wife I o J ... '. i to 2G ln lu- H . k 11. and lota i. inclu- I'Kif'nn ccJen survey. Consideration, : 1 V. J. CrltcHlOW and wife to Dais- B Me aw a part o. lot 2, blo'k 38, plat ( Ogden survey Consideration, 600. ; The Realtv and Rental companv to , John Bmedlng, lots it to bo, Inolusivfl block 2, Vailev View Addition, Ogden s " e Consider. iflnti. 12." I t'arl C Ramusson an I wife to 'IM"M E Carson and wifr., p:iri ol lot j, block 1, plat R. Ogden survej I uusideratlon, $:TiO. DELAWARE AGAINS DIRECT ELECTION Dover Del . March 18. With only four more states needed, Delaware '"''! ' refused in Join the affirm:iti ffates in ratifying direct election of United States senators The senate killed thr house resolu tion favoring direct election. uu MRS. GUTHRIE SUDDENLY CALLED At 1 O'clock this afternoon Mrs Mary B Guthrie, mother ol Mrs. A. K Hey wood, peacefully pasae l awa it the He wood residence at r,;. Twentv. fifth street, surrounded by her daughter and son-in-law and her grandson John Heywood. since tlm death or her husband the l"te J W Guthrie, in 1906, Mrs. Guth rie bad not 'enjoyed the hrst of health I hi or late she had appeared to be tn as good health as usual and her death today waa a sudden shoe' to the fam ily La6t evening slu- bad trouble with her heart and since "he com plained of feeling poorly. At noon today the lamiiy was called to her bedside and the end soon came Mrs Guthrie was horn at Cumber, inn'! Maryland, February 1842. Shel ent tn California In the earh das marrying J W Guthrie in that state In the ear ISOL" Mr and Mr. Guth-I rie came to Utah In 1 P69 and Mr (imhrle entered the banking and mer. cantlle business locating first at Cor lntie. then coming to Ogden. Mr Guthrie becoming one of the found- . o( th.- Commercial National bank of this city i Mrs. Guthrie was the daughter of William and Elizabeth flainnr of Maryland who have lone since de paited this life Mrs Guthrie is sur vived by a sister, Mrs .1 M. I,ings dorf of Vancouver Wash a dauuh MrS A. R. He v woo I and a Rr.Vif'son, John G. Heywood The deceased was loed by all who knew her and her life of usefulness is recounted hj many She endured I the hardships of the earlv life of the western country, always forenolnc pleasures in her earh married life t aid her husband in the work he had I i do She was always uncomplaining and with fortitude took up the taski of life Funeral arrancements will be an nounced at a later date TREES MUST BE TAKEN OUT OF ! CEMETERY The city boar,) of commissioners today appointed Patrolman H. C. Pet erson sergeant, to succeed the I rue c ( Brown Mr Peterson has filled the position since Mr, Brown's Illness anu death This afternoon the board will con sider bids for the refunding of $10". luOG cltj bonds and will likely award the sale Commissioner T C Nye recom- J mended that the city cemeten lie beautified this spring and to that end requested that the board support him in an order that propertv owners in j the cemetery be required to remoxe1 I ccttonwood, boxelder and poplar trees also the broken down fences land coping found in the cemetery 1 he commissioner stated that seed !benrlnc trees should have no place in j the city cemetery and that the larger trees should also be eliminated The j recommendations were adopted and, i if -wa ordered that ten days' notice h. clven the people having trees In the cemetery that unless thev remove them within a reasonable time, the city will take action Brokon down fences also are to be I removed, after serving notice no BETTER POTATO PEELER NEEDED Washington. March 18 Unless pome of the wizards who are Iraprtv i ing upon nature r an turn out a spher leal potato the navy must find a bet ter potato peellnp; machine than the i j electric device now in use Today the department sent out an appeal to in .entors to submit a device that will ! economically pare potatoes of Irregu lar form The official statement de rlarea that "It seems that the present mat hlnes Ho a most effective and ac ceptable Job on a perfectly round po tato, but when the mnrphv' arrives j long and slender, or sawed off and j hammered down the trouble hegins ! oo DAPPER BANDIT LEADER CAUGHT New York. March 18 Joseph Tay- I lor. the dapper, cane-t wlrllng young i man who boasted to the police In3t night that he was the leader of the taxi-cab bandits who have been terror gins the city, was expected today to j make reelatlons which would lead to further arrests. Eleven men were held today as tbp '.suit of the work of detectives who i e been trying to run down the rob bers. Asks for Divorce Tn the district i ourt Hendricks i Krumperman has commenced divorce proceedings aKaln.ji Mortlnaus Krumperman n the iounds of failure to provide The parlies were married at Salt 1-ake, April C. 1883. Advertisers must hae their copy eady foi the Bveninr standard .he SUing before 'he day on 'bleb .he advertisement Is to appear In order to aisure publication PLANNING 1915SP0RT Sullivan Leaves for Coast in Interest of Exhibition Games New York March IS -In order to lorward the plans of the managers of the Panama-Pacific International ex position to make athletics and spoil general features of the exposln'on to j be held in San Francisco In 1916. las j E Sullivan, secretary treasurer of tl.e Amateur Athletic Union, will leave for the coast on Saturday, sailing on the steamer Momus for New Orleans j lie will confer w ith the officials of I the Southern Association A. A. U. In that city in relation to athletics, and expects to vlnlt the Texas association I nnd tin clubs in Spokane and Seattle after be has finished his work at the Golden ;ate Appointed director of athletics by the exposition officials. Mr. Suliivaii plana to make the sports at the exhi bition equal an series or Olympic games ever held through the attend-I .'n-e and competition of the most akilled athletes in the world At these gamei will be decided the amateur championships of Amerka for 1915 action 'n this regard having been taken at the A. A. U. a annual meeting last November. The exposl tion has also been honored with the award by the International Olympic committee oT the right to hold the modern penthate, a five event series which will be for the championship of the world. The modern penthalon consists of riding, cross-country running, swim ming, fencing and shooting. i oo KNIGHT IS ON IMPORTANT MISSION Kitty ' Knight, manager of the Og den baseball team, left this after noon at 1 in (i clock oer the W estern Pacific for California, where he will sign up several promising young play, ers for the local team "When I get through p will have B t.am that will make the others sit up." was Knight's parting shot as he left for the depot today. Knighl will return before April 1, but he will not ask the men to re port until later, due to the lateness of the season's opening The exhibi tion game to be played with the Chi cago White Sox will bo played with the men who happen to be in Ogden and others that can be picked up Ogden s manager has made arrange ments to sign up with as many as i". players If necessary and the In formation that has been given out concerning the boys Knight has bis eye on would be sufficient to send the chills up and down (he spines of the other managers in the associa tion. "Kitty has promised to keep the fant of Ogden acquainted with his operations b means of night letters uu- OUTSIDERS MUST QUIT MEDDLING Chicago. Mar. 18. Rev . Nestor K Clarkaon Of the White Cross Midnight Mission, declared last night that there would be no reconciliation be tWOen himself and wife, who left her home and children for Owen D Conn, the 'gentleman burglar" arrested In California, until the public stopped meddling in h!3 affairs During the dav Rev Clarkson ' preached a sermon at a gospel mis sion and at that time made ;i State -: ment that no outsiders could be in jslrumental in bringing about a recon ciliation between himself and his wife, partes, while doubtless well meant, would only widen the chasm between 'htmself and Mrs. Clarkson. Mrs Clarkson. who Is In retirement at the honi' of friends here, said that t she believed her husband would make overtures for a reconciliation when the public Interest in ihelr domestic j affairs had abated uu CRUISERS NEED MANY MORE MENi San Francisco. March 18 The Uni ted States cruisers Maryland and Cal ifornia start on a southern cruise to day short nearly one-fourth the com plement of men The cruiser Colora do, flagship of the Pacific fleet, now I in Mexican waters, lacks xu men of a full crew This same eondiiiou applies to ihe Pacific resene fleet, and ther- will be s further shortage when the gun boat Yorklown is put into commls sion. When the P:-u if, fleei assembles at Guaymas, Mexico, the California will become the flagship uu GENERAL AUBERT DEFEATS REBELS Monterey, Mar. IS A column nf K'i'i federal troops commanded hv ' Oneral Aubert defeated 50n follow ers of Carranzas at Potrero In the si.iU' of Kuevo Leon yesterday. The' reports received here todaj sav that the federals lost seventeen killed and th relvels twenty, eiht The rebel;. 1 r( treated toward the north, followed b the federals, who later occupied ! Vlllsldama. A gTotip of rebels has taken p06 session of Icsmole, in the northwest pari of the state of Nuevo Leoii. I THREE RAILROAD BRIDGES BURN Naco. Arlr . March 18 Three brld ges were burned during the night on ihe Southern Pacific branch below Naco, supposedly to prevent state troops Trom moving by rail close to the border town where Ojedn s feder als remain fortified. Twenty more federal Yaqul ln I disns have deserted Ojeda and are held by United States troops here It Is not expected that the constitu tionalist forces can combine their troops and attack Naco before tomorrow. PREMIER AND HIS CABINET RESIGN Paris March 18 Premier Brland and all the members of his cabin ' handed in their resignations to Preal dent Polncare at the palace of th. Elysee at 7 o ilock this eveninr. The French government under the premiership of Arlstlde Brland was defeated today on a vote of conn deme durine a debate In the senate OO WILSON WEARS THE SHAMROCK Washington. Mar IT The sham rocks sent to President Wilson by John Redmond were widely distribut ed todaj Secretary 0f the Navy Daniels called on Secretary Tumult and carried awas a bit or shamrock lii his lapel Generous decorations apiieared 1,1 Secretary Tumult'. B coat A a President Wilson's cabinet mem bers dame Into the office they were si pplicd with shamrocks and tmpo rarlly the white house became head quarters for St Patrick's da . Mrs Woodrow W ilson, wife? of the president, gave a shamrock tea at the White House to a select company of specially invited guests today. Mrs Wilson WSS a?s'sted by her daugh tei . Misses Marqaret ond Eleanor Wilson, while Miss Isabelle Hagner and Miss Helen Woodrow Bones pre sided at the tea table. Mrs Wilson wore a handsome gown of dark pur p!e brocade and the Misses Wilson were charmlnc'y gowned In pink and blue brocade crepe. V pleasing innovation as noied in ih fact that each guest was bidden to the feast by a nersonally written note froui Mrs. Wilson oo MINING NEWS ORENA WAS OLD SMELTER TOWN Few people visning the new Oreana thai bSS become the gatewav to the Roi hester district are aware of Ihe faci that thev are In a town which It among the oldest in Nevada. and which bears the distinction of bavin:; the first silver lead smel'er in the United States, says a Nevada ex change True, the location of the town is not the same, but it was not far from the present site of the town that is again to become famous b reason of Rochester The old Orea;ia was on the banks of the Humboldt river about three and a half mllc from the mines of the Arabia district which was organized and operated in lxn.l It was at this time that Oreana first came to the notice of the world Some Interesting facts concerning the old town of Oreana and the mines in the Arabia district are contained in a report just issued bv Robert Wal lace, mining engineer, who has been Inspecting tho Arabia mines recentiv at the instance of Boston people and known as the Blectrlo Mining and Re duction company Mr Wallace has been in the Arabia district nnd in Lovelock for several weeks and has Just forwarded his re port to his people In it he reaches the conclusion thai t hi mines of the Arabia district wfH bear further de velopment and that newer and strong er veins can possibly be opened up there These mines lay across the Humboldt valley from the mouth ol Rochester canyon m the western range of hills The following are ex tracts from Mr Wallace's report I The Arabia district was organized in I860 and soon after that smelting works for treating Montezuma ore I were built at a railway station on the ' Humboldt river, three and a half miles southeast of the mines This plant was the first silver lead smel I ter In the United States from which I lead was shipped in commercial quan tities, and Oreana was the birthplace of the present silver-lead smelting Industrj In this part of tho country. The method was to smelt ore In a shaft furnace by which means crudo ! metal was obtained amounting to lor 50 per cent of the charge of ore. land consisting of lead, antimonv and I silver, the silver amounting to from $160 o $20u per ton of metal The metal was then subjected to treatment ! in s calcining or Bubllmailon furnace j bv which means the antimony w as ! removed From the lead bullion re suiting Irom this process the silver way extracted by cupellaMon Virion: the products of the sublimation fut naco was an alloy oT lead and ant I mony marketable a' a remunerate. price for the production 01 ipe meiai. The Montezuma mine ami h;rn:p . s weer operated successfully for a num her of years, aud a' a time when ill supplies were hauled by tnni from Sacramento before the completion of the Central Pacific railway In 1SH9. In 18H9. according to a report of the county assessor the Arabia dis trie t was rated as being capable of yielding more bullion than any other district at that time known In 1S7S the ground now owned by the Electric Mining A Reduction com pany was worked bj the Hurricane Mining company, and in lRi by Stone Tinslow k Co., no built a smelter at Siege on San Francisco bay. opei ated until 1893 Fifty-six hundn d tons weer mined from the Electric claim, and 27.00 tonR shipped to San Francisco, gave a return of $7?.. 640 From 1897 fo 1900 the mines were worked bv the Blectric Mining & R-.in- Hon company end the ore treated ,i their plant In R'nn rubla ores have been smelted in so many differ ent places. Oreana Salt Lake it7 San Francisco. Reno and some in Swansea. Wales, that it a Impossible to get at the exact production of ihe district, but It l probably from two to three million dollars PLACER LOCATIONS GIVEN PRECEDENCE Washington. March 17. The su preme court today established a prec edent expected to be of far reaching importance in deiermlning th man ner of locating phosphate lauds In denying a writ of certiorari in the case of the San Francisco Chemical company versus Duffleld H Jeffs, ihe court recognized as valid the placer locations as against lode locations, although the latter were duly filed more than two years prior While the decision primarily af fects only the title to the claims In controversy located in Wyoming, the precedent established leads to the conclusion that as far as the courts are concerned the placer locations of phosphate lands are to be recognized I 1 both lower courts having held to the I opinion affirmed today Thousands of claims in Utah Wyo ming, Idaho. Montana and Colorado have been located under both plar,M f and lode laws, and a bill to recog nize the prior filing, whether placet or lode, failed of enactment hv the I last congress Appeal for the writ was based on the assertion that the courts had no Might to classify the land, that this right was vested solely in the secre tary of ihe interior and the commit ; sioner of the general bn (ri( :,, that the deposit was properly locat Bble as placer and not as lode, in any event. BIG SIX PROPERTY IS OPENING FINE V Official of the Big Six proposi tion ot ;h Lynn, Ne district sta that the management Is now engaged 1 in vigorously, developing the property, I and that a shipment of gold ore will ; he made to the Salt Lake markel I as quickly as possible The company j baa oiim of the most attractive of the I new yellow metal propositions of the state of Nevada, and considerable at tcntion if h. ing directed to the com pa n y There arc 29 feet of crosscut so j far on the 100 foot level, a streak of which Is very rich, and the aver J age of this will be $376 per ton. The balance Of ihe ore is of a milling grade and the management believes it will not bv long until conditions will demand a mill to handle the ore The camp Is well provided with tim ber and water ! RICH GOLD-SILVER ORE IS MARKETED Th1 first shipment Ol gold and silver' ore from the rich strike on the 10th level of the Seven Troughs Coalition companv of Seven Troughs. Nev . has been forwarded to the market, the lot consisting of eight tons The mine assays show this ore to run about ft ounces gold and 126 ounces silver i to the ton. The shipment Is expect ed (o average above $22") per ton. 1h' management is drifting both! north and south upon this vein, the , gold values being larger in Ihe norm face, with silver increasing as the 1 drlfi to the south continues into vlr- gin territory. The management has driven a raise I in this ore for over 10 feel, and the rich material held faithfully in this! distance of going farther and to depth as well The management for a brief j time was handicapped slightly with water, but this Is now eliminated and it s .xpected that 100 ton of th is 1 ore will be shipped during the montnj of March The company is preparing 10 in crease the stoping on this vein, and a 1 crosscut is being driven for the vein I at a point 125 feet from the present : point of development This Bhould b. In the ore by the end of March, fioni w hich time production will be j materially facilitated The property is In the best shape In over a year and Seven Troughs Is looking to this dis covery to bring back property own ers who were drawn away by rich surface finds in neighboring districts. SUNSHINE IS NEVADA'S NEWEST .1 J W illiams arrived this morning fiom Sunshine, bringing news of a inch strike on the Wlckiund propertv 1 Mr Williams brought a small sack of I sample-; of the ore, which have been examined with interest by local min ing men sn.s the Winnemucca Star 1 be ore Is a sliver sulphide and 'was struck In running a crosscut on the Morning Sun claim, at a depth of I about seventy feetr Mr Williams j stated thai the ore was struck yes j today and when he left camp this j morning the vein had been penetrat ed four feel without going through lit. The samples Mr Williams brought in were taken across the four feet I and show a surprising richness the 'entire distance. No streak richer than the rest of ihe ore in the lead ; had yet been encountered At the time of writing thi6 news no assays have been made, but mining men ex ! press the belief that the ore will run about $200 a ton some place the fig. ure even higher The existence of this vein has lon ben known, as It showed on the sur face, but for some reason no work I was ever done on it until Charles Clmstead started to work the prop erty off and on the past five years, but confined his work to another vein j parallel to the one on which the dis covery was made yesterday. The 'vein on which the strike was made SSterdav is between four and five feet wide on the surface and shows I some hlghgrade silver. It lavs be lt ween lime and porpbyrltic andesite. "Naturally the entire camp of Sun shine feels elated,' said Mr. Williams, 1 "and we all feel that Sunshine is go ilng to make good Many are coming fmm Rochester, and the? are drifting I in from everywhere The hills are full of prospectors and 1 don t be lieve yon could get a claim 2xt close :n. Qultr B crowd from Winnemucca I w as in camp Sunday Colonel J. P Hutchinson and L I Kaiser, mining men from San Fran ' Cisco, became interested in some 'propertv during their visit a few days I ago nnd It is presumed thev will get I hnsv soon "Jim Hayden has bonded his ground close to the old Gen UTAH MEN ARE IN CERO GORDO From San .lose a dispatch has been sent out saying that a plan of reor 1 ga 11 1 ration which members of three 'factions in the company believe will put the rich Cerro F.ordo mine in Inyo county on a paying basis after many years of losses, 1- being mapped 'out there In dally conferences among 'creditors stockholders, directors and others interested In the future of the property, which was at one time one jof the best-known In the I nked State" For several years It has beon the properly of the Four Metals Min ing company, but has not been a paying proposition : F J, Hagenbarth. a Salt Lake hank er. has been there conferring regard -in,- the financial arrangement md a rancher named Hogan of Modesto Islands ready, it is said, to put IT5.000 into development wort The proper ty is declared to be rich In lead and zinc, with some sliver and cold, but is expensive to work The mine has had a sensational historv and has made and lost several fortunes Itg leasee at present, Louis D Gordon. y a Scotch mining engineer and he will join the other factions in the scheme of reorgsnisatlon The company owes 400,000 to cured and unsecured creditor?, the j latter having recentiv forced the con cerr into the bankruptcy court, "henc It ii expected the reorgan ization plan will bring It safely . A CHANGE IN ADMINISTRATION BRINGS 1 U W1FE V ' 1 " : ". : ' : " '- "-:'-:-J I ' i .-. ' .''-':; . ' i t L . ( . Mr. aud Mr. WUllani Jeanlng itroa Jr., and tbrlr chJlUrea, .Marjr aod Mrlen. I Amonr the persons brouKht Into prumlnenc by the change In national I administration are Mr. and Mrs WilUajn Jtriintnjrs Bryan, Jr., son and ji daug-hter-ln-law of the new ,-ccretary of state. They, with their two chll- j dren. Mary 9 arrl Helen V.. are now living In Wasblng-ton. The young husband Ib pursuing law studies in 0-orgitown University. Hit wife la a daughter of Alexander Btrger. a Milwaukee nulllonatra. I Quarter of a million dollars Is In bonds ! for which the tlarden Citv- Rank & Trust i ompany is trustee. The rest are claims of unsecured creditors Most of the money Hogan proposes to advance wil le applied to the pay ment of debts and the bonds will be allowed to stand, and rlagenharth and Hogan will finance plans for develop ing the property. Since it was opened the mine has , pioduced $22,000,000 In lead. zinc, sil i ver and gold ore It w as Gordon, the (resent holder of the property by lease who discovered Us productive Iness in zinc and lea l. RICH ROCK REPORTED ON ROCHESTER LEASE I Rochester, Nev. Mar 15. Nothing Iims so nccelerated the all-conquering Interest in the search for gold In Lhe Rochester district a has the lat e?t nnd richest gold and silver strike made by Bill Borland, Charlej Dorsey ic.nd A Norland, a real pay streak tinder of the Rochester district, on the Supreme claim, owned bv Frank Fbrvllly, W Borland and Cliff De Lorme, says a correspondent of the National Miner. The strike was made some six days ago It was made on a lease block The ground or block iwas under lease to 17. N. Harwood, I who in turn disposed of a controllinc interest In the lease to Borland. Dor so and Norland upon condition that 'they would prospect for the pay si reak from which the rich float came found upon that decline of Lincoln hill After three days' prospecting the richest ore shoot yet discovered I in the Rochester district was found, i I ii three days from the time It was found 1. H Causten and assocuit' acquired the lease block by outright purchase for $lu,"ftn cash payment Tnat is going some. Here is the rea Isor why the promptness of gaining this premier gold price of the Rochester district. The find shows as strip;. ed iover sixteen inches of ore that will go better than $1600 per ton. Some samples across this srteak. not pick led, but taken as good sampling prompts to $3300 per ton NEW MILL PERFECTED FOR ISOLATED MINES J. D Barlow has returned from bis trip to Oakland, where he was looking into the question of getting a mill for his mining property in Fondeway can yon, east of Stillwater, says the Fall- I on Eagle. S He la very much taken with a ten- 1 stamp mill made by a company at l Oakland and If bis plans are carried I out he will probably have one of these nulls installed in the early summer. The mill only costs about $2000 com plete nnd is guaranteed to crush fif teen tons of ore per day. It is espe i ally adapted for the man of limited j meana In country liko Churchill county. It only weighs about 2800 jfl pounds complete and can be operated b B four-horsepower gasoline engine and will wort ore at a profit that rates from $7 to $8 a ton A very I small quantity of water is required Ihe ore is first put through the ' rollers and then passed down to the Btampc :ni'l over the plates The con centrates can be saved, and thus the vlll various grades of ore can be milled fill The largest pieces of the machinery l-l only weighs 400 pounds, so the mill I can be easily handled in a rough ;H ! mountain country. 'iH UU aaaaaaj LABOR NEWS OF ALL COUNTRIES Belgium has 200.000 miners. rill j There are more than 60.000 mem- J H bers of trade unions in Holland. H Coal miners in this country number I H almost three-quarters of a million I I Only three states have efficient 1 I protective occupational laws ill The yearly record of the indus- Jfl tries is 30,000 deaths and 500,000 se- Jifl rlously injured -isal It in probah!" that a child labor H law lor territories will be presented H to congress. 'lM Moose Jaw, Canada, metal workers i are demanding 55 cents an hour aud a H lo hour day. The three principal unions of Brit ish railway men have been merged In to one federation. Attention is being civen to the ' jH work of organizing the Spanish speak- I I ing clar makers in Florida. rfiafl A total member.-bip exceeding 75.- i 000 is claimed now by the painters, Tsfl decorators :md paper hangers' union. TH On May 1 at New- York. N. V. L'nlt- jl'H ed cloth Hat & Cap makers of North stH America will convene. E Five states have passed laws Urn- I W Ring the working hours in many prl- j H vate employments (iil Demands by Roston ftMalne rail- ! H road station employes for 8 wage In- fljH t-i, have been granted. Hisfl CUPID STUJ7HAS A KNOCKOUT PUNCH; JUST SEE TO JOE S lft to rlut. Jo RUi-r, Mr. Jor Itlvfru, Miw Uurolli? Levy, and JoaHfa j J. . MiininrrOclil. f That old Dan Cupid still has his knockout punch wua shown In Lo j Angeles recentiv Ho sent Joe Rivers, near champion lifbtweffh! pull ISt, down t..r the count Miss Paulina Slrt. ot Santa BionkM vyas tn brldr, Miss Dorothy Levy, sister of Rivers' manager, the brldesmaltt. Jus- BSBBB tlce J W. Summcrflcld performed the ceremony, , The couple are now In the -nst on fbir honcymo'in Rivers I snori- iSBBBj ly to commence training for his bout In New York wUh Leach f"1" I