VOLUME VIII. EUIIEKA, NEVADA, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 31. 1887. NUMBER
IHtekln Sentinel
18 rUBt'PUfiD F.VBUY SATURDAY BY
CASSIDY St SKILL MAH.
A. seillmam. qko. w. casbidi
terms FOB WEEKLY SENTINEL.
one copy, one year .*5 00
One copy, six months. J 60
One copy, three montliB.. I 60
By Ctrrler, per month. 60
AGENTS
EUGENE FITZPATRICK .Rnhv Hill
MBS. J. F. CUPID..Ward
j V WERTHEIMER.Pioche
WILLIE TIM SON. IUmllton
THE DAILY MAILS.
WILL CLOSE. WILL ARRIVE.
~~J i i~l i 9
5 ? i ! 2 s ?
s | & ! s 5 |
.1 ' s if
y ; a » f s.
i | ; j 1 j
A. M. V. M K
Monday*. 9.80 9 £
Wod'Aaya 9.30 9 5
Fridays... 9.30 9 »
j*
Tuesdays 4.30 .
Wed’daya . 12
rh’rudaye 4.30 .
Fridays. 12
Saturdays 4.30 .
Sundays. 12
1’IIK FAMILY MAN’S HOE.
You ask me why I am so sad,
I who was once so cay,
And why I look as if I had
Unnumbered debts to pay.
Why I wear such a gloomy face.
And heave such frequent sighs.
As If I felt some deep disgrace
And yearned for some disguise.
Why I so seldom laugh or amile
Who used to joke and jest
Until my friends, less volatile,
Plead plaintively for rest.
Wonld’et know, then, what the sorrow is
That’s eating out my soul ?
Alas! again the price has riz,
And wo are out of coal!
—Somerville Journal.
WHITE PINE.
Col. Grandlcmeyer Itoonls mo Oltl
Camp.
The Examiner of recent date lias
tlio following interview with Colonel
Joseph Graudelmeyer, the widely
known mineralogical scientist and min
ing expert. The Colonel has stood by
White Pine through all the years of
her existence. His faitli is as bound
less still as at any time in the past.
This is the way the Examiner quotes
him
Nineteen years ago Joseph Graudel
meyer went to White Pine, the now
silver district of Nevada. In two or
three months ho saw it arise from a
wilderness to a thriving mining section
of 35,000 people, nearly all of whom
were centered at the town of White
Pine. Tlie tamous KberhartU mine
was struck, which yielded from a sin
gle deposit 740 tons of ore that netted
$1,500,000. • White Pine was remote,
however, machinery was hard to get
in and work in the hard granite neces
sarily slow.
“Things have veered around again,
though.” said Mr. Graudelmeyer, who
had arrived in town and was telling a
reporter about it at the Lick yester
day. “The Salt Lake and Los Ange
les' Railroad is coming our way, and
all White Pine is on the quivive in
consequence oi it. I am down here
now to meet some New York parties,
to the end of building a smelter there.
We have quartz mills, hut we need a
furnace. 1 am interested with ex
Congrcssman Thomas Wren in several
properties. Eugene N. Robinson of
New York has 100 or 130 men at work
in his mines on the west slope of
White Pine mountain, at Seligman.
He is also building a reduction plant
that will cost from $100,000 to$150,000.
It will be finished about March 1.
“ Tlio depreciation of silver has
hurt us some, hut the road will reju
venate us generally. White Pine is
130 miles due south of Elko, but iMs
but 03 from Palisade and 43 from Eu
reka.” __
NEVADA AND II Ell CK 111 CIS.
A Uou.l wortl from Noma uniiiue
Voutemporarles.
The Boston Herald had an article of
abuse of Nevada. The Leadville (Col.)
Chronicle seeing it came to our de
fense in these words:
However, this “rotten borough’’
has only been a State a matter of
twenty-three years, and yet she has
added to the nation’s wealth about
$125,000,000 in gold and silver bullion.
Fairly well fur a young thing. And
this amount would have been much
greater stdl but for the persistent war
fare which the charming Boston man
and his friends have made against
silver.
Then Charlie Goodwin went
after them through the columns of
the Salt Lake Tribune in this vigorous
manner:
One deposit alone on the Comstock
gave up $110,000,000; the great lead
lias yielded quite $150,(Hit),000 and the
State more than $500,000,000. The
Herald talks of Nevada not from any
knowledge of tho State or its people,
but because its editor imagines that it
is a sign of brilliancy now and then
to air his own ignorance under a thin
mask of Boston “ eulchur.” He talks
of Nevada being a “ rotten borough.”
lie borrows that expression from old
1> anaof the Sun. He does not know
the fact, but it is a fact all tho same,
that while the city of Boston polls four
times as many votes as the State of
Nevada, the amount of money neces
sary to influence an election in Ne
vada would make Boston give an
overwhelming vote for annexation to
Canada. Since Professor Suhvan
was presented to the Prince of Wales
the manners of Boston |>eople have
become simply insufferable.
--- - — ——
Specimens liwolio.
We have seen several specimens of kaolin
brought into town during the past veek,
all of which were said to have been found
near Kureka. Pure kaolin is used in the
manufacture of tine porcelain, by being
mixed with feldspar and quartz. Impuro
kaolin is used for stoneware and firebrick.
Best brands of tea and coffee only at
Berg’s. t
THAT Ilf OTHER'S BIBLE.
John Kinney'* Little ntnry Bs
felt Awfully I'limny.
.Tolin Kinney, of the firm of Kinney
it Ransome, tells a little story about
himself which may strike a familiar
vein in some other man's experience.
“ When I was a young chap,’’ says
he, “ I got the Pike’s Peak fever
along with a lot more of the men and
boys of our town ; and as I was pretty
hard to manage around home, and as
some staid old friends of my father’s
were going to the new gold country, it
was concluded that 1 should go with
them. When we were all ready to
shut my trunk and lock it my mother,
who, bless her, was more than half
afraid to have me go into that rough
country, brought a handsome clasp
Bible out of her bedroom and laid it
in inv trunk on top of the other
things. “‘Now, Johnnie,’said she,
11 want you to promise me that you
will read this Bible every day?’
“ ‘ Of course I will, mother,’ I said.
1 I will road it every chance I have.’
“ ‘ And, Johnnie,’ said she, ‘ I want
you to study well the Sermon on the
Mount. It will do you good. You
will find it in St. Matthew and St.
Mark, and St. Luke and St. John, but
the best is in St. Matthew. You will
read it often, wont you, Johnnie?’
“ I promised everything, and I in
tended to keep my promise, too. But
somehow I never did. I never opened
the Bible; never even undid the clasp.
After I had been at Pike’s Peak some
time, and spent nearly all the money
that my father had given to one of his
old friends for me. I started with
what was left to come home, but they
left me at the Missouri Crossing and
I had a terrible time from that on. I
ran out of money and spent all I could
borrow on such valuables as I could
pawn. I would have sold that Bible a
dozen times if I could have found
anybody to buy it. Well, after a heap
of walking and all sorts of hardship, I
finally reached home. After the kiss
ing and the talking was over my
mother began unpacking the little
handbag I had brought back in the
place of the trunk l took away. In
Ihe bottom of it she found the little
clasp Bible.
lour Bible looks as if you
hadn’t used it much,’ she said.
“‘Yes,’ said I, 'I took very good
bare of it.’
“Did you read it, Johnnie?’ she
isked.
“‘Of course T did; read it every
lay.’
“ ‘ You read the Sermon on the
Mount then, did you?’she asked, with
i kind of peculiar expression in her
jyes.
“‘ Yes, very often.’
“ Then she opened the Bible to St.
Matthew and there lay the $20 bill she
tad put between the leaves. There
was a $10 bill, too, in each St. Mark,
St. Luke and St. John—$50 in all—
Hid 1 would have given every cent of it
to have been out of that room.
“ ‘ I told you St, Matthew iiad the
best account of the Sermon on the
Mount,’ was all my mother said about
the matter.”—Chicago News.
■—.— «--—■
TUB (UlitESE KVII..
Ulevelaml Becoming Arousoil (o Its
Imiiortnueo.
A Washington dispatch of Dec. 22
says; The Attorney General thinks
that Congress should see the report of
Special Agent Chalmers on the ad
ministration of the Chinese Restric
tion Act in California, if any new
remedial legislation is to be adopted
at the present session of Congress.
This report is before the President,
and lie will examine it during the hol
iday recess. The Attorney General
can make no report to Congress, lmt if
President Cleveland desires to do so,
Chalmers’ report will be an important
addenda to his message. The Presi
dent is just l>ecoming aroused to the
fact that the great question on the Pa
cific Coast is the prevention of Chi
nese immigration, and he feels dis
posed to take up and seriously con
sider the problem, that the adminis
tration has hitherto almost entirely
ignored. The sensational reports
that Federal officers appointed dur
ing ttie present administration will
be removed, or that a movement to
impeach the Federal Judges will he
oncouraged by the President or At
torney General, have no foundation.
The opposition of Collector llager
to the construction of the anti
Chinese laws as interpreted by
Judges Sawyer ami Hoffman is at
least beginning to bear fruit in
Washington, and there is now a hope
that the President may range him
self in line with the Custom author
ities as against the Federal Judges
on this question.
Tlie Alilcrinnai nml Ills Mayor.
Once upon a time an Alderman in a
certain city went to the Mayor thereof
and declared his willingness to make
affidavit that certain other Aldermen
were guilty of jobbery. lie felt that
such corrupt officials could not be pub
lished and punished too soon.
“Ah—exactly!” replied the Mayor,
“ but you are a little late. Those very
officials have already furnished me
proofs that you engineered all the jobs
and received the biggest whack.”
“Then, sir!” exclaimed the boss
boodler, as lie drew himself up in all
his native dignity, “ I shall at once go
to Canada in order to prove my inno
cence and establish my integrity. Ad
dress me at Toronto!”
Moral—If lie hadn’t gone the Mayor
could have had to.—Detroit Free
Press.
- — — -— • - "*
Not Unit Kluil ol i» NtulcMinau.
When Senator Hearst came up to
the desk yesterday to be sworn in he
had his hands in his pockets.
“ He’ll never be a thoroughbred
statesman,” remarked Colonel Musser,
in the press gallery.
“Why not?” asked a Californian,
with some indignation at the apparent
reflection.
“ Because lie’s got his hands in his
own pockets instead of other peo
ple’s,” remarked the Colonel, and
went on making notes.—Washington
Critic.
The only place in town to get fresh im
ported candies is at Berg’s. t
A LUCKY H1LLINEH.
• "« I Yu,lit. ,ii Sava- Fr„|i,
crl.v lu Knnsiis Clljr,
A well-known Cincinnatian was
over in Kansas City opening his eyes
to the almost fabulous stories of accu
mulated wealth which are there on
everybody’s tongue. lie tells of one
lady who was formerly a milliner in
Kansas City ten or fifteen years ago.
She began in Kansas City the busi
ness she lias followed in Kentucky,
and was more or less successful until
an old mud-hole oil one of the streets
of the city fell to her in liquidation of
a $2,500 debt. This the lady accepted
with a great deal of reluctance and
with the shedding of many tears, since
she did not think the property to he
worth half the money it had cost her.
She however rallied from the discour
agement and refused a cash offer for
the property, an offer which amounted
to u little over half the $2,300.
About a year ago the New York
Mutual l.ife Insurance Company be
gan casting about Kansas City for a
site on which to locate a $2,000,000
building. The property owned by the
milliner, once a mud-hole, was on a
corner, seventy feet on one street
and eighty on another. They pur
chased lots on each side of this cor
ner and then had a lot in the shape of
a capital L. They wanted her lot, and
offered her $125,000 for it. She re
fused, and they kept raising the offer
until they reached the enormous sum
of $320,000. Still she refused, and
then supplemented the refusal with
the statement; “ Gentlemen, you go
ahead and put up your building, and
no matter how high you go I'll build
on my lot one story higher than you
do. I’m going to raise a monument
to myself right on that corner.” And,
it is said, next Summer she will keep
her word. The $2,000,000 building is
now about complete, and is ten stories
high. The little two-story building
which the milliner owns on the cor
ner, and which she will tear down to
build greater, nets her an annual in
come in rentals of $21,000.—Cincin
nati Times-Star.
a rorntue m :in aiTULTM,
A rather laughable story is that
anent the origin of blue tinted paper,
once so much in vogue for commer
cial uses. The wife of an English
paper manufacturer, named William
East, going into the factory on the do
mestic wash-day with an old-fashioned
bluing hag in her hand, accidentally
let the bag and its contents fall into a
vat full of pulp. She thought noth
ing of the accident, and said nothing
about it either to lier husband or his
workmen. Great was the astonish
ment of tiie latter when the paper
turned out a peculiar blue color, while
the master was wroth at wlmt lie re
garded as gross carelessness on (lie
part, of some of the hands. His wife
—wise woman—kept her own coun
sel. The lot of paper was regarded ns
unsalable, and was stored for four
years. At length East consigned it to
iiis London correspondent, with in
structions to sell it for what it would
bring. The unlucky paper was ac
cepted as a happily designed novelty,
and was disposed of in open market
at a considerable advance in price,
.fudge of Mr. East’s surprise when he
teceived from his agent an order for a
large invoice of the despised blue pa
per! Here was a pretty dilemma; lie
was totally ignorant of the manner in
which the paper had become blue in
color, and in his perplexity he men
tioned tiie matter to his wife. She
promptly enlightened her lord; he in
turn kept the simple process secret,
and was for years the monopolist of
the blue commercial paper manufac
ture.—Science.
K«'W Void rielilN.
The World’s Cape Town correspond
ent, under date of November 10, writ
ing about the discoveries of gold in
tiie Transvaal, says hundreds are leav
ing by every coastwise steamer tor
Durban and the new gold fields of
Barbeton and Witwater/.randt. Most
of the new arrivals are Englishmen,
with a sprinkling of Californians and
Australians. During tiie next live
years the Transvaal, Swaziland, Zulu
land and Matahelle county gold fields
are going to astonish the world. Cali
fornia and Australia in their flush
days will be eclipsed by (lie discover
ies and output of gold in the South
African country, and that at no very
distant day.
One Ttioasuml Overcoat** «I veil
Away.
In New York, a few days ago, a
clothing firm gave away 1,000 over
coats to poor boys. Forty policemen
were necessary to keep back the
great crowd of lads which surged in
billows against the big plate glass
windows. One little chap handed a
floor-walker a dingy note, saying
that the bearer was the son of a
widnv. “Who wrote this?” in
quired the floor-walker. “ Me lad
der,** innocently replied the hoy; but
he got his coat just the same. The
1,000 overcoats melted before that
army like snowflakes on an oven.
.1 list Inti You Want.
P. H. Iljul in just io receipt of a Urge
lot of glassware and crockery. Also, a
iiue assortment of library and parlor
larapn—the fiueat ever brought to the
market. Also, a uioe assortment of silk
plush cabinet frames, ami fraiao mould
ings. Also, oarpets, oilcloth and matting,
bird oages. He has also just boon made
agent for the oelebratcd light running
“Domestic’' sewing machines, which are
now on exhibition at his store on South
Main street. They arc of all sizes and all
prioes. *
A Terror to a Mob.
Dr. Gatling, of Gatling gun fame, is in
New York, and has exhibited his new po
lice Gatling. It weighs, with the tripod
on which it rests, 159 pounds. It will fire
800 shots per minut \ and experimentally
05,000 shots were fired in one hour and a
half. The speed is increased by a new
method of feeding the cartridges.
Patent Hraee amt HU.
A large iuvoioo of the new patent brace
and bit, of Gavin & Oromor’s invention
is oxpeoted in a few days by ttemingtou,
1 Johnson & Co., they being the local ageut,
for the sale of them. Parties desiring
them should send in thoi* orders to secure
I early attention. *
winn: l'l.vF. county rnni.
Uvius of lutwrenl flijiiM.ii from Ilie
White Pino Newt of Doc. 31.
TAYLOR.
Sol Hilp tells us that his brother
Fred is now in better health than
for several years, and suffering from
no ailment.
J. M. Mateer, a former well-known
citizen of White l’ine, is now night
watchman at Tuscarora.
The Weber Bros, have taken down
the Grand Army Hall and are ship
ping the lumber to Ely, whero they
will erect a building.
Hon. Sam Piddle writes us from
San Francisco that he will start East
about New Year’s, and perhaps be
absent six months.
Wednesday morning was the coldest
of the season, the mercury in front
of Felsonthal’s store indicating 11 de
grees below zero at daylight.
Mrs. Peasleo and her two children,
at the Argus mill, are down with
measles. At last accounts they were
all getting along nicely.
John Martin, of Ward, has se
cured the contract from the Martin
White Company to sink a 100-foot
shaft on the Young America ground,
fie has started in on the work.
James .Sampson und Attorney F.
X. Murphy passed through from
Spring Valley Thursday en route for
Eureka. We learn that their mis
sion was to secure proof of Mr.
Sampson’s citizenship in this county,
on which depends the perpetuity or
dissolution of the attachment on his
property.
HAMILTON.
The old schoolhouse of Eberhardt,
a relic of former prosperous times,
which was falling in, is being taken
down.
We are sorry to state that our
townsman, Geo. W. Halstead, is ly
ing seriously ill at Seligman, his
present place of residence.
Our former resident, W. E. Landon,
one of us from away back in 186.8, is
reported to have died in toe Elko
county hospital, on his return here
from a trip to California.
As should naturally be expected at
this time of the year, it is quite cold
here, but otherwise pleasant. In this
high mountain town, at no time
lias the thermometer during the
present Winter touched as low
as you report at your town and
other portions of the State in your
last issue.
ELY.
Mike Cohen of Ely was married to
Miss Philippina Morris of Eureka at
the residence of Justice Munro last
Sunday evening. Only a small num
ber of invited friends witnessed the
ceremony.
While there is so much sickness in
the surrounding country, the health of
all the Elyites remains good. The
only disease prevalent is consump
tion—of grub. It is only feared by
tlic> restaurants.
William Horton, an old esteemed
resident of Duck Creek, has moved to
lower White River in Nye county,
where he has bought a ranch and will
permanently reside. White Pine
county loses a good citizen by his de
parture.
Our gold mine is reported to be
looking tine. Quite a large body of
high grade ore was recently found,
which continues to improve as work
progresses. There is no doubt but
some large shipments of bullion will
be made when the mill starts up
again. _ _ _
A NMTJSI) I'll AMAVTXH.
SiraatHlirr, Who A tiled In Cou
vlttliis ,'rtis. Snrratl, in an Vix
en viable Hole.
T he Baltimore, Mil., letter to the St.
Louis Globe-Democrat, says: Seven
months ago Benjamin Spandauer, who
was one of the most important agents
in procuring the conviction of Mrs.
Mary Surratt in 1865 for participation
in the conspiracy resulting in the as
sassination of President Lincoln, was
arrested for alleged conspiracy in a
noted divorce case here. He was in
dicted for alleged manufacturing of
testimony. The suit was that of Mrs.
Johanna Jensen against her husband.
Judge Fisher decided the case in the
wife’s favor, and awarded her alimony.
In his decision the Judge said lie be
lieved the evidence submitted by her
husband, for whom Spandauer was a
leading witness, was a tissue of false
hoods from beginning to end. Span
dauer was released on bail, anil re
cently bis case came up, and State’s
Attorney Kerr entered a nolle pros, in
the case of John Jensen, the husband,
who was indicted with Spandauer,
and also the latter. The divorce suit
lias been finally settled. The State’s
attorney was of the opinion that the
evidence in the case was not suffi
cient to warrant going to trial. Span
dauer had several times before been
arrested on similar charges. At the
trial of Mrs. Mary Surratt in May
and June, 1885,' Spandauer and
Louis J. Welchman—the latter’s evi
dence being corroborative—testified
that Mrs. Surratt, who then kept a
boarding-house, at which Wilkes
Booth, Harold, Spangler and others
met, had frequently been in the
room where the conferences of the
conspirators were held, and thus
connected her with the plot. This
was the evidence that convicted her.
For a number of years preceding
the war Spandaur and Welchman wore
lost sight of. Nothing more was
heard of tho latter until his death in
Philadelphia, in great destitution,
three years ago. Spandauer appeared
in Baltimore about four years ago, anil
first loomed up to public notice again
by persuading Heinrich Mulila, a
German, that the latter was one of
ten heirs to an estate in Germany or
England, valued at $3,000,000, and
agreed to collect Muhla’s share for
percentage. Mulila advanced him
$100, and Spandauer in all obtained
about $1,500 from him. When
Mulila found that the estate was a
myth he had Spandauer arrested,
and sent to prison for three years.
Spandauer is an old man now, and
not likoly to figure before the public
again.
Holiday UooilN.
The finest and largest stock of holiday
goods ever brought to Eureka, can be
found at tho Eureka Drug Store, very
cheap *
[NO. 868.1
Application for a Patent.
UNITED STATES LAND OFFICE, >
Eurska, Nevada, Nov. 25, 18 7. i
■\TOTICJ IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT
Xi Eugene N, Robinson, whoa-. Postoffl e ad
dro-*s is Seligiuau, Nevada, has this day filed h:3
application f»r a patent for fifteen hundred
linear feet of the Puvsell mine or vein, bearing
silver, with surface ground six hundred feet in
width, situated in White Pine Mining Dis
trict, county of White Pine, and St&tc of Ne
vada, and designated by the field-notes and
official plat on lilo in this office as lot No. 77, in
Township 10 north, range 57 east, of Mount
Diablj meridian. The exterior boundaries of
said lot No. 77 being as follow?;
Beginning at a post marked No. 1, U. F. sur
vey No. 77, the same being ide ■ Doni with the
original location corner, whence section corner
common t' sections 9, 10, 15 and 16, township 16
N., range 57 E., Mount Diablo modHan, bears
y. 83 deg, 48 min. W., 2,776 feet, and the
month of tunnel No. 1 on this lode bears N. 69
deg. W, 841 feet; tlienco running ft of course
8,01} deg. W , GOO feet, to a p at marked No. 2,
U, *. survey No. 77, the same being the original
i location corner; thence second course N,, 28}
i deg. W , 1,600 feet, to post marked No. 8, U S.
survey No. 77, the same beiDg identical wiib
the original location corner; thence third course
N., 61} deg. E., O^O feet, to post marked No. 4,
U. S survey No. 77, and identical with the orig
; Inal location corner, an 1 thence fourth coiikj
S., 28} deg. E., 1,500 feet, to post No. 1, the
! place of beginning.
Magnetic variation 16} deg. east, containing
20 66 100 acres.
The location of this mine is recorded in the
Rocordo?’s office cf White Pine Mining District,
in Book A of pago 58.
The adjoining claimants arc on the north the
Crusader, on the south the Pursell No. 2.
Any and all per ons claiming adversely any
portion of said Pursell mino or surface
ground are required to file their adverse claims !
with the Rigister of the United States Land '
Oflieo at Eureka, in the State oi Nevada, (luring
the sixty days’ period of publication hereof, >>r
they will be barred by virtue of the provisions t f
the Statute.
D. H HALL, Register.
It is hereby ordered that the foregoing notice
of application for patent be published for the
period of sixty days (ten consecutive weeks), in
the Eureka Sentinel, a weekly newsunp*r
published at Eureka, Eureka county, Nevada.
d3-60d D. H. HALL, Register
[NO 869.j
Application Jbr a Patent.
UNITED STATES LAND OFFICE, i
Ei'RBka, Nevada. Nov. 25, 1847. J
Notice is hid eby uivex tha~.
Eugene N. Robinson, whose PostofDce
addriea is Bellgman, Nevada, has this daj filed
his application for a patent for fifteen hundred
linear feet of the Pursell No. 2 mine or vein,
bearing silver, with surface ground ux hundred
foot in width, situated in White Pine Hieing
District, county of White Pine, and State of Ne
vada, and designated by the field-notcj and offi
cial plat on file in this office as lot No. 7y, iD
To wnship 10 north, range 57 cast of Mount
Diablo meridian. The exterior boundaries of
said lot No. 78 being as follows:
Beginning at a po.it marked No 1, U. S. sur
vey No. 78, the same being post No. 1 of U S.
survey No. 77, Pursell lode, and the original
location corner of this claim whence the sec
tion corner common to sections 9, 10. 15 and 16,
township 16 north, range 57 east, Mount Di
ablo meridian, boars S. 83 deg. 18 min. Yv\,
2.776 feet, and the mouth of tunnel N*. 1, on
the Pursell lode, boars north 69 deg. W.,841
feet; thence running first course S., 28} deg.
K., 417 feet, to post marked No 2. U S. survey
No. 78, the Fame being identical with the orig
inal location corner; thence second course H.
12} deg. E , 1,181 feet, to post marked No 3, U
S. survey No. 73, the same being identical with
the original location corner; thence 3d course
3.01} deg. W., 623 8-10 feet, to post marked No.
4, U. S. survey No. 73, and identical with the
original location corner; thence fourth course N ,
13} deg. W., 1,169 feet, to post marked No. 6, U
S survey No. 78, and identical with theoiiglual
location corner; thence fifth course N.
28} dog. W , 333 feet, to post marked No. 6, U.
8. survey No. 78, and identical with the original
location corner, the same being post No. 2 of
IT. S. survey No. ,7, Pursell imle. ami tneuce
sixth course N., 61} deg. E., 600 feet, along U.
S. survey No. 77, Pursell lode, to post No. 1. the
place of beginning.
aiagnt'i.o variation, ioj c.og. east, containing
20 63-100 acres.
The location of thiamine is reeordel in the
Recorder's office or White Fine Mining District,
in book A of page 59.
The adjoining claimants are on the north the
Pursell, on toe south the Dead Broke.
Any and all persona claiming adversely any
portion of 9aid Purcell No. 2 mine or surface
gr und are required to fi.o their adverse claims
with the Register of the United StaUa Land
Office at Eureka, in the State of Novad*, dur
ing the sixty days’ period of publication hereof,
or they will be barred by virtue oi the piovis
ions of the Statute.
D.U. HALL, Register.
It is hereby ordered that the foregoing notice
of application for patent be published for the
period of sixty days (tea consecutive weeks), in
the Eureka Sknunel, a weekly newspaper
published at Eureka, Eureka couuty, Nevada.
dU-GOd I). H. HALL. Register.
[NO 670.]
Application for a Patent.
UNITED STATES LAND OFFICE. I
Eciikka, Nevada, Nov 25, 1387.J
Notice is hereby given that
Eugene N. Robinson, whose Postoffice
address is Seligman, Nt-vj.da, has this day
filed his application for a pateut for fifteen
hundred linear feet of the Reef mine or vein,
bearing sliver, with surface ground COO IVet
In width, situated in White Pine Minin* Dis
trict, counvy of Wh'tePino, and State of Ne
vada, and designated by the field-notes and
official plat on file in this office ns lot No 79,
lu TowuBhJp 10 north, range 57 K.. of Mount
Diablo meridian. The exterior boundaries cf
Bald lot No. 79 being as follows
Beginning at r post marked No. 1. U.
3. survey Xo. 79, the same being identical with
the original location corner, whence the section
corner common to sections 9, 10, 15 and 16,
township 10 N., rungo 67 K., Mouut Diablo
meridian, bears N. 24} deg. W.f *2,270 feot, and
tbo mouth of the southwe*d tunnel on tide RnU
bears S 30) deg F... 7C4 feet; thence running
first course* S. 63} deg, E., 1,500 fort, to a post
marked No. 2, U. S. survey. No 79. the s»me be
ing the original location e >nier; tnenco se.com!
course 8.26} deg. W., (T-O feet, to post roamed
No. 3. U. S, survey No. 79, the same being tlif
original location corner; theuco thhd course
N. 63} dog. W., 1,500 feet, to a post marked No
♦, U. 8. survey No. 79, the same being the orig
inal location corner, skd thence fourth coursv
N. 26} deg. E , 609 foet, to post No. 1, the plac*
of beginning.
Magaotio variation 16} deg. east, coutair.L-*
20 66 100 acres.
The location of this mine is recorded lu the
Recorder's office of White Pine M niug D:s
trict, in Book A of page 119
The adjointug claimants arc on the soul!
Eugene N. Robins n s claim upon thebpiiu(_
mine.
Any and all persons claim ng adversely auj
portion of said Reef intuo or sn.fuc*
ground are required to file their auvorei
claims with tko Register of the Tutted St a u*i
Laud Office at Eureka, iu the 8t*»te of Nevada
daring the sixty days’ period of puli'leatloi
hereof, or tLey wili bo barred by virtue of tin
proviiiona o: the Statute.
D. H. HALL, Register.
It Is hereby ordered that the foregoing no
tice of application for patent be published for
the period of sixty days (ten consecutive
weeks), in the Eureka SKSTiV-*n. a v. v !y
newspaper published at Eurtko, Eureka
county, Nevada. D. H. HALL, Iiei/later.
liistrator’s ilia"
Notice is hereby given that d.
Dopaoli has been duly appointc i tho Ad
ministrator of the estate of \V:u. Evans, do
ceased, and all partied hoi ling claims against
tho estate of \Yni. Evans, deceased, aro hereby
notified to predent ihcsanio to D. PepaoH at the
office of It. M. Beatty, attorney for ^aid a<hnin
istrutor, in tho Oomthor.se buildnm, Eureka,
Eureka county. Nevada, duly c.rUttei as re
quired by law within eight weeks Iron* the date
of tho first publication of this notice, or the
said claims will thereafter he barred and Cease
to be a charge against the said estate.
D. PKPAOLl, Administrator
R. M. Beatty, Attorney for said AdmlnUtru
tor
Euroka, Nev., Pec. 1, 1887. d'J-lm
ma ffe||cau live at home, and make more
Willi money at work for us, than anything
]] llllelse in this work’ Capital not
| W w needed; you are sta»ted free. Both
sexes; sll ages. Any oue ©an do tho wvik.
Large earnings sure from first start. Costly
outfit and terms free. Better not delay. Costs
you nothing to send us your address and ndti
out; if yon are wise you will do so at cnee. II.
Haujctt & Go., Portland, Maine.
THAVEEEK3' GUIDE.
Eureka and Palisade t
HA .
ffi
fc
WKW .4KU.lNUKSf8NT(l.
HI
- li
On and after March 9, '85, t
*xpjF4.^Lxr^r^ l
For PaasouiferN, Mai!*, Kxi-rosa
nail I'rviifht
Will leave Bureha on MONDAYS, WEDNES
DAYS and FRIDAYS,
(On Pacific Standard time)
%a fellow*.
Leave Eureka at. .10:00; a.. at.
Arrive at Palisade at.4.00 l* m.
Making connection wall
out! tVo»t ilmiUil iinlnH oi *!»<*
Central Pacific tlntiroad.
Returning, will leave Palisade on TUESDAYS,
TOUItaDAYa and SATURDAYS.
Leave Palisade at. .10:00 a. m
Arrive at Eureka at .,.4:00 t m.
THE COMPANY
WILL DELIVER FREIGHT
....AT....
HAMILTON,
SELIGffl&N,
T5YL0R,
ELY. . I
nm.
BELMONT,
REVEILLE.;
And all points south, by te^ms, with cave !
aud dispatch, and at the lowest r&tos.
_B. GILMAN, general Sug’t. j
NEVADA STAGE!
.AND.
Carryiuir U. «. !DatEs and tVellu,
Far&i> 4V Co.'h EapresH.
Stages leave Eureka Mondays, Wednesdays
and Fridays for Hamilton, Taylor, Bristol and
Ploohe, making close connection with Stages
for Cherry Creek, Ward, Oecoole, and
Fares:
Eureka to Hamilton. $8 00
Return Tloket.. 1'2 00
Eureka to Taylor.. . 30 00
Return Ticket. 30 00
Eureka to Pioche. 33 00
Return Ticket.... . 50 GO
Thirty pounds of Bagg-ve allowed each
passenger.
Return Tickets go for 30 days.
Positively no ronato allowed comm*.* ltd
travelers on Round Trip rates
Railroad Freagitl anti I'raaaporta*
tloa Fine.
Teams of the above line will deliver Freight
at Taylor and points South, leaving Eureka
every 12 days, or as oft. n as the business de
mands it
OFFICE ON MAIN STREET, EUREKA.
Delinquent Sale Notice.
ttut'j Kill funnel and Nlttiutf C'oui
!>»*»*•.
IOCATION OF PRINCIPAL PLACE OF
J business. Eureka. Eureka county, No
vada.
Locatiou of w *r*ie, Eureka Mining District,
Eureka county. State of Nevada.
Notice.—There ar-« lelinquout upon the fol
lowing ileBcribed stock, on account of aes«'8u
ru^nt (No. 14) levied on the20th day of October,
1887, the several amounts sot opposite the
names of the respective shareholders, us fol
lows:
No. No.
Nani’e. Oort. Shares. Amt.
Ulewitt Ed. 25 3750 iJ7 60
Beatty KM. 73 NO l 00
Evans Win ... 338 NM><) 10 00
Jones J ir... i*23 5000 Cil 0'.'
•To:,;-*?* J K, Trustee. 21*' 3*00 80 GO
•Tones J E, T-uste_ 275 10350 103 50
Milchell U K. 1 6000 50 00
Kite hell U K. .. f-* 8750 37 50
Mitchell U K, Trustee . ?: 7 2000 20 0<>
MUc:.tll If K. Trustee... - 873 8 75
Mitchell II K. Trustee N»00 10 00
Mitchell II K, Trustee. . V 1000 10 03
Mitchell n K. Trustee. KOs f.iv) 5 00
MiUdvll II K Trustee.. . .no 5 00
Mitchell li K. TriMto. •HO 4 00
McDonald .1 1.. ', .••• NO 100
Withered Thomas.3825 8 25
Young US..... 2>.y 200 2 00
And ia accordance with law anil an order of
the Board of Directors, made on the20 th day of
October, 1887, so many shares c-f each parcel of
such stock as mar be neccasary will bo Bold at
public auction at the office of the com
pany, Hyland's Building, Eureka, Nevada, on
TimrMluy. the* 2'2tl iluy of Dmnuber,
1887,
At the hour of 1 o’clock p. m. <-f 6aiu day, to
pay the aaid delinquent assessment thereon,
together with costa of advertising and ox- j
ponses of the sale.
B. F. McEWEN, Hocretary
Office- Hyland's Building, Eureka. Nevada.
Eureka, Nov. 22,1887. n2G-td
POSTFONED.
The above sale is here!)* postpouod until
FRIDAY, Jan. 20,1838, at the same hour and
place. B. F. McEWEN, Secretary.
Eureka, Dec 21, 1887. d24-td
j NIGGER-HEAD JERSEYS,
In all colors,
1 For One Dollar,
at Morris & Levy’s.
MISCELLANEOUS.
PALISADE, IftfEV.,
. It. BAUM... .Proprietor
SAVING AGAIN TAKEN CHARGE OF
the ab"V6 named Hotel, I v i»h to pny to
iy old patrons and the traveling public that I
are refitted and refurnished the house with
very thing new.
Rooms, single ®r in aultes, with the comforts
f a stove in each room.
Travelers have no trouble with baggage, as it
i moved to a ul from the depot free of charge.
THE TABLE
i supplied with tile ■.cry best the market af
3rd s
Mi'SAX. 3 Only 30 Cents.
In fact, it has more ucco in mutation a for a
mall amount of money than any bouse on the
ne of the road.
Connected with the bouse is a firsl-clafis
JAR AND BILLIARD ROOM,
Vhere none but the finest brands of WIr.es,
jiquors and Cigars are dispensed.
Palisa.le, Ncv. Dec. 1, 1887. dlO-lm
, /
u
o
<
£
I
'<
•J
G J!k Jhi,
Manuiaotui-od hy
9
Key West.
The only Key West Clear
Havana Cigar where the con
sumer receives full value for
his money.
ESBERG, BACK^AN & CO.
AGENTS FOR THE PACIFIC COAST.
SAN FRANCISCO. CAL.
After Forty years*
experience in the
I preparation of more
than Oue Hundred
Thousand applications for patents in
the United States and Foreign coun
tries. tiio publishers of the Scientific
American continue to act as solicitor*
for patents, caveats, trade-marks, copy
_ rights, etc., for the United States, and
to obtain patents i:i Canada, England, France,
Germany, and all other countries. Thoir experi
ence is unequaled and their facilities are unsur
passed.
Drawings and specifications prepared and liloa
in tho Patent Office on short notice. Terms very
reasonable. No charge tor examination of rnodol*
or drawings. Advice by mail free.
Patents obtain* d through Mum A Go. are not iced
iuthe SCIEVT1 PTC AMERICAN.which h*
the largest. cirenUt ion and is tho most influential
newspaper of its hind published in the world.
Tho advantages of such a notice every patent©#
understands.
This large and splendidly illustrated newspaper
is published WEEKLY at $3.00 a year, and is
admitted to be the best paper devoted to scienoe,
mechanics, inventions, engineering works, and
other departments of industrial progress, pub
lished in any country- It contains the names of
all patentees and title of every invention patented
each week. Try it four mouths for oue dollar.
Sold by all newsdealers. .
If you have an invention to patent write to
Munn A Co., publishers of Scientific American*
801 Broadway, New York. ,• -
Handbook about patents mailed fro#. ’
Notice to Delinquent
Taxpayers.
COUNTY AUDITOR’S OFFICE, 1
Eureka County, New J
N otice is hereby given that the
Delinquent fax List for the year 1887,
containing ali delinquencies where the amount
of the Delinquent Tux, exclusive of Foil Taxes,
and penalties exceeds the sum of Three Hun
dred Dollars, has been deposited with the Dis
trict or Prosecuting Attorney, an*l that unless
tin.; Delinquent Taxes therein specified are paid
to the Treasurer, as * x officio Tax Receiver,
within twenty (90) days from the publication of
this notice, actit-n will bo commenced by the
District or Prosecuting Attorney for tho collec
tion of said taxes mi l • osts.
IV. S. BEARD, County Auditor.
Eureka, Nev , Dec. 8,1887. dlO-td
Beinwr.
lisSi&Niti DB. PIERCE'S New
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Suspensory, mi Hr an*
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iai. a-;- “hie nud perfect Ch in bat
tery in ti e world. Cures, without
Medi (ice,Nervous Debility, Pain in tho Rack,
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Weakness of Sexual Organ- Call or .-'end
stamp for Pamphlet. N-.». 2, MAC.NETIC ELAS
TIC TRUSS CO , 704 Sac-amento street. Ran
Francisco, Cal., or 304 N Sixth street, St. Louis,
Mo d3-Iy
NOTICE.
Merchants and other citizens
arc hereby nml:oned imt to throw waste
und gurharge upon the gtr -ts of Eureka. The
streets should, and ruust he kept free from, all
tilth. The lav. in regard to su. h nuisanci will
he strictly enforced.
j The streets will be cleaned next week and tin y
i will be kept so. an l when strar gors come
to town they will see that they are clean
M II. SWEENEEY, Sheriff,
i Eureka, Ncv. 18. 18^7. nlSFlin
For the
V ' K 1 Woak.Nerv
hree I reatise.™?»
How to re
gain
2^TS-hHome Treatment.
or Nervous and Mental disease. TRIAL SENT.
AddrOM, DR. .1 W. RATE & CO.,
283 S Clark stroo
d&w Chicago
Babbit metal-kbom 100 to 200
pounds cf babbit n eta! for aalc at the
Buimi otBce, Rurek#,Nevada.