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THE WHITE PINE NEWS Published by the WHITE PINK NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY. A. VALJEAN Editor OHces: East Ely and Ely, Nevada. Entered as second-lass matter November 24, 1908, at the postofflce at East Ely, Nevada, under the act of congress of March 3, 1879. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. One year (by earner*.110.00 One month (by carrier). 1.00 ■tngle copies.06 East Ely's star is the brightest ever. Get aboard. Crops are looking so well in the United States that Uncle Sam is not worrying over minor troubles. Become a home owner. The in-1 stallment plan of the Ely Securities Co. makes it easy, and the time is mighty opportune. Mr. Rockefeller says that giving away his fortune will injure nobody. Perhaps a fear of doing harm re strains Mrs. Hetty Green from rash benevolence. The continued advance in beef and pork prices is the packers’ way of asking the federal grand juries and the meat boycotters. "What are you going to do about it?” Originality may be some lacking in the Caruso Black Hand avertis-! ing, but it is nevertheless delivering the goods. And that is the main I point. Admiral Evans is afraid that the railroads are plotting to ruin the Panama canal. By the time the canal is completed a number of things may happen to the railroads. DIMINISHING RAX COR. It still remains true that the lan guage incited by sectarian quarrels s more violent than it is in political 1 iisagreements, but even in such dis- ! putes time is bringing improve ment in temper and expression. This is shown by a comparison between the Fairbanks incident in Rome and some of the earlier denomination j divergencies. Some inflammatory epithets, such as “pernicious activ ity,“ “offensive proselyting," “reac tionary religious spirit,” “vulgar in heritance,” “mediaeval intermed dling,' and other fighting phrases have been used by a few of the churchmen and laymen on both sides. But the violence of the sectarian feuds of half a century ago or pre-^ viously has been softened in a large j degree. No longer are churches de stroyed and pastors maltreated. The ! old Know-nothing party which would have excluded the members of one particular Christian church out of the privilege of office holding in the United States, and which aimed ul timately at excluding them from the MINES AND MINING ADVISES SALT LAKE ABOUT ELY PROPERTY — The Salt Lake Tribune of Monday j had the following: Fred Dern, local mining engineer, who is in the Ely district for the purpose of inspecting the property of the Ely Centennial company, wired from the camp to local interests Sat urday to the effect that he had found conditions at the mine up to every ; expectation, and that it had all the j earmarks of making a "big one." As a result of Mr. Dern's finding, it is practically assured now that the Dern interests will enter the company and | push it along with their other prop j erties. There is much activity at the Cen | tennial at the present time. The new machinery is being placed as rapid ly as possible, and all plans are be ing laid for a campaign of extensive development work. The crews have Seen averaging from four to five feet daily, with hand work. When the new plant is placed, they will aver age from ten to fifteen feet daily. The tunnel is now in a distance of ; 500 feet. It is the intention of the company to continue the tunnel to a distance of 1000 feet from the surface and then drive east and west drifts on the ore, at the same time sinking on the ore. The drifts will eventually be carried to the shaft and the other tunnel, uniting all the workings of the property. It is ex pected that shipping will be com menced about July 1. franchise, has no counterpart in our ' day. It had a feeble and sporadic j echo In the “A. P. A.” of two decades: ago, but that Irruption of intoler ance is forgotten by most persons i who were old enough when It was here to know what it meant, while the younger generation has not heard of it. This proscriptive spirit, even in its latest manifestation, had some pffect in politics, but it is now only * reminiscence, and probably It will aot be revived. Nevertheless, as shown by other disclosures besides the Fairbanks episode, there is more of the un-1 Christian spirit among some Chris tions than is pleasant to think of. In some of the denominations the di visions of the slavery days are main tained. Slavery has been dead for| forty-five years. Nearly that length . of time has passed since the lastj of the eleven ex-Confederate states were restored to their old places in the Union. The politicians on both Bides are willing to let bygones be bygones. But in some of the churches j there are still divisions into North I and South branches. Nowadays we' often see union among the churches in charitable undertakings and in movements for civic betterment. These demonstrations are commend able as well as effective. In sec tarian controversies, however, there is still room for the cultivation of tolerance. In Every Home 1 at one time or another the need of a good, wholesome stimulant is PB felt an absolute necessity. For just this purpose jjfl Sunny Brook I Whiskey m I on account of its highly developed medicinal properties L * ■ is especially adapted. It is the concentrated essence of the f richest of golden grain and the purest of sparkling spring water, scientifically distilled, and mellowed by many years f of ageing. Under the “GREEN GOVERNMENT ' , £ || STAMP" it reaches the consumer in its natural purity, wi'h JUCaS its delicious flavor and health-giving strength ummpaireo. The SECRET of the popularity of SUNNY BROOK The iuPi PURE FOOD Whiskey -is INSIDE of the bottle. J~^jbj~srg SUNNY BROOK DISTILLERY CO.. IsRsrson County. KENTUCKY AM OMbr. MmmdUmm OOOO I fg.rsrs M H. 9. i. KIE8KL * CO.. OGDEN, UTAH. -jnuiVlftr-1 A Boston dispatch says: It comes from reputab’e source that the next copper merger will be a consolida tion of the Chino, Ray Consolidated and Gila copper properties. As Gil* and Ray adjoin, and are controlled by the same interests, it has always been understood that these two properties would some day be opera ted jointly. The same interests that own Ray and Gila control ChiDO. In jail of these properties the Gvggen heirns have a large interest, and they desire to have all their copper hold ings merged into one company. Eventually it is said that all the Guggenheim mining and smelting in terests will be under oue manage ment. In this connection it is claim ed that a desire has been expressed by the Guggenheims to have Daniel C. Jackling take the operating head of all their interests in this country, Mexico and Alaska. Several years ago the management of the Nevada Consolidated was offered to Mr. Jack ling and he promptly refused, claim ing that he must devote his entire time to the properties held by Messrs Jackling, MacNeil, Penrose and as sociates. Since that time the Gug genheims have become more heavily interested in all of the Jackling prop erties. BAD MANAGEMENT. Such Is Cause of Smelting Failure* Says Expert Concerning Small Plants. In a recent discussion on the smelting industry written by Herbert Long. Frank Hall, a mining writer of note, makes the following comment: “Herbert Long, an eminent au thority, contributes to the Metallurgical Engineer an interest ing article entitled “The Uses and Abuses of Small Smelting Plant.' He has prepared a list of fifty-one retir ed smeltin plants of various sizes and capacities, of which he has i knowledge, and set down causes that in his opinion led to their disuse. Eleven of the fifty-one plants failed from defective design or construc tion. The lack of ore to smelt kill ed six. The unsuitability of the ores prevented the success of two. Ftve became outgrown and superannua-| ted and were then dismantled. Diminished prices of metals retired seven. Prohibitory freight rates blasted the hopes of three. Three more were drive* out of business by objections to their fumes. Personal reasons, such as the lack of ex perience, internal wrangling o> individual idiosyncrasy were respon sible for the death of four. The remaining ten died from a combi nation of causes, among them lack of capital and adverse competition. "Some bad management figured in the list. This latter cause may have placed six plants where there was not enough ore. Railways put a number of smal1 smelters out of business by discriminating against them in favor oi larger plants located at a greater distance from the source of supply, < “Many small plant, says Mr. Long, j have undoubtedly met failure be cause of faulty design and construc tion. In an era when the smallest details and refinements of other pro cresses have received the most! anxious care and thought, the build ers of smelting works have often: been content to follow the beaten; track and to erect their works in a traditional style quite out of keep ing with the spirit or modern prog ress. "As a rule the smaller concerns are inferior in methods and practice, as well as in design and construe- i tion. As compared with the better' examples of larger plants, the small' concerns are in general poorly built, and still more poorly run. Larger] plants, as a matter of course, have' better transportation facilities and j cheaper management, which mani fests itself especially in a more sys tematic and effective organization. It is invariably noticeable that the: shief weakness of the smaller ones1 consist* mainly in the lack of economical methods by which to bring the smelting materials to and remove the smelter products from the furnace. The capacity of a plant will have much to do with Its success. The failure of several is traced to the work they had to do, “It is supposed by many persons that smelting furnaces of a capacity as small for example, as ten tons | dally, cannot be successfully opera- i ted, but this is error. Up to within comparatively recent years the whole of the lead and copper smelting of the world was done on as minute a scale, and the ruins of the furnaces in which the work was carried on may still be seen in many countries. It is true that such small affairs are difficult to run, requiring, if any thing, more technical skill and cer tainly more attention than larger furnaces, and they obviously cost more per ton of ore smelted. The balance of Mr. Long's article devoted to the consideration of the more technical questions relating to the operation of smelting furnaces, economical ways of handling ore, etc.” VOIIUIIMA C’lTV LIVELY. Virginia City Is looking up to such an extent that reliable authorities say the town is going to resume high rank. The Sturgis policy is proving the salvation of he old Comstock. The removal of luxurious superin tendents and expensive secretaries is ’ the secret of tlutiew movement that promises to sts't the ball rolling again. Three arloads of timbers are going dai>’ into the mines that many imagin' are off the map, and ; 500 men ar> on the payroll which j means an eitlay of $2,000 per day in a small community. This is an other trib*te to the effectiveness of | the asses»ment plan, which has i brought aver a million dollars Into the cam> within the last six years. The fat that Virginia City is on the rise irstead of waning is another evi dence of the growth of Nevada min ing nvestments and the renewal of con'dence that has been recently ac certuated by the revival of interest in the stock of southern Nevada nines.—Tribune. Sheep at the Chicago markets reached the record price of $8.10 per head. Twenty-five families living in a Thirteenth street tenement In New York were driven from their homes when a bomb exploded in a fifth-story room occupied by Italians. PHYSICIANS. EL. WALLACE. M.D. . PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office Hours—2 to 4 p. m. 7 to 8 by appointment. Office Rooms 20 ft 21 Northern Hotel DENTISTS. R. WHEELER, DENTIST. Expert in Porcelain Dental Art. Rooms 2 and 3. Northern Hotel, Ely j^EVIN & GRAHAM, Funeral Directors and Embalmers Lady Attendant. Pheby Block, Aultman Street, Phonj 1033. ATTORNEYS. J M. LOCKHART ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Suite 2, Capitol Building. Ely, Nevada. Office phone No. 81, Residence 106-Y Nevada Northern Hotel L. T. LARSEN, PROP. Recently remodeled; rooms newly papered and everything first-class. Reglar meals, the beet In the district. Also carry li* e of general mer chandise. EAST ELY, NEVADA. Ely Lodge No.29, F.ftA M Meets second aad last Wednesday nights of each month at Rockhill Shallenbarger Building. 7:30 p. m. B. W. COLEMAN, W. M. W. C. GALLAGHER. Secretary. THE NEVADA MEAT CO. Keep Constantly or Hand a Com plete Line of Choice FRESH AND SALTED MEATS Magnuson Block, Murry Street ( Fiah and Oame In Season. Phon« Your Order—Main 49 CITY TRANSFER TOM MENKY, Prop. Express and baggage. Leave orders at Cascade liar. Phone lilO-X. 1 .\ unnelly block. East Ely, Nevada. GEORGE A. WILLIAMS ELECTRICAL CONTRACTOR All kinds, of electrical machinery furnished and Installed. A. C. A D. C. Armature winding, repairs, etc. Mine and mill work a specialty. Phone 131-Z, East Ely, Nevada. HAYES GREEN PARK HOTEL First Class Furnished Rooms Always Quiet and Elegant. Housekeeping rooms single en suite MINS HAYES. Proprietress. BECKER BREWING AND MALTING CO OGI>EN UTAH THE FAVORITE REEK THROUGH OUT THE WEST. THE MARKS-TALROTi CO.. Agents. S. N. RY. T.MR TABLE. Effective August 10, 1999 Daily Except Sunday—Leaves East Ely. North Bound. 7:36 a. m. Dally Except Sunday, Leaves Cobre, South I Bound, 1:20 p. m. _ MINE TRAIN. Leave East Ely, a. m.—6:40; 11:30;—p. m. 4:25. Leave Murray Street, Ely a. m. 6:50; 11:40;—p. m. 4:36. Return'ng, Leave Mixes, a. m.— 7:36;—p m., 1:26; 6:35. DAILY SUBURBAN TRAINS. East Ely for Ely. a. m. j 12:25; 6:20; 6:40; 7:10; 8:26; 9:60; 11:30; 11:60;— p. m.. 1:10; 2:20; 4:26; 4:36; 6:26; 7:30; 8:00; 9:00; 10:16. Murray Street. Ely. for East Ely, | A. m. 12:36, 6:30, 8:16, 8:86, 10:00, P.m. 12:01; 1:20; 2:19; 2:29; 4:46 6:16; 6:36; 7:40; 8:10; 9:10; 10:26 SMELTER TRAINS. Leave Murra? Street. Ely a. m. 8:20; 10:00; p. m. 2:28; 4:46; 18:86 Leave East Ely. a. m—6:40; 10:10;—p. m. 2:49; 4:ii; 19:26. RETURNING. LEAVE MrOILL. A. m. 7:46; 10:60;—p. m , 2:46; *:60; 11:46. EAST ELY BUSINESS DIRECTORY ANTLER CAFE. S. A. Glynn Proprietor Rear of Antler Bar. First Class Short Order Meals. ANTLER BAR. Best Equipped Bar In Nevada. 1st Door Sooth of Depot. COPPER NATIONAL BANK Capital, $50,000; Surplus, $10,000 Safety Deposit Boxes. Cor. D and 11th. Phone 47-y ELY LIGHT & POUTER COMPANY. ~ Electricity for Everything. Office Ely Townaite Bldg. Phone Main 99 SAMUEL W. BELFORD Attorneys at Law. Gunn*Thomp*on Bldg. Corner D and 11th Phone 110-k. ; ELY CITY PLUMBING CO. All Kind. of Plumbing Promptly Done. First'Class Work Guar anteed. Phone 47-k. ELY WATER COMPANY. Office* Ely Townaite On. Corner Avenue C and 11th Street. Phone Main 39. — ELY ■ ECUIUTIES COMPANY. General Office* Cor. C and 11th. Phone Main 30. FULMER & IVES. First Established Leaders in Business Agents Ely City Lots, l’hone I16y, J. P. JEPPE8EN, HAY, GRAIN AND PRODUCE, Eggs and Poultry, Phone lOfl-Y - East Ely, Nevada W. E. McKlE, Contractor and Builder 19th Street and Avenne 0. EAST ELY . . . NEVADA J. P. RUM BAUGH. Express and Transferring. Leave Order nt Antlers Bar. First Door South of Depot. Residence Phone 12 SOL J. F. A H. E. 8<’HRAVEN Contractors and Builders. Phone 117-x. HE 8TEPTOK HOTEL Francis Klein, Mgr. Finest Hotel in Eastern Nevada, Oor .E and 11th. Phone 47* J. C. WHEELER Produce, Hay and Grain Good Stock Always on Hand. 1*1 u>ne 57'k. WHITE PINE NEW*. Dally and Weekly Issues Main Office Ely City. Phone 116 and Main 64. I Steam Heat Electric Light* Hot and Oold Water NORTHERN HOTEL ELY, NEVADA Headquarters for Trarellar I'uimc. ELY NATIONAL BANK .. o —— ii A. B. WITCHER, Pres. JOHN WEBER, Cashier ;; ALBERT HEUSSER Vice-Pres. L STADTEELD, Ass’t Cash <► _ O ■* ----■ = TINGLtY BLOCK ELY, NEVADA ■ i Get ofi at East Ely and Stop at The Steptoe Hotel Finest Hotel in Eastern Nevada. Handsomest and best conducted Cafe in the state. Steam heat night and day. Hourly cars to Ely. FRANCIS KLEIN, Manage*. Formerly of the Palace and It Francis Hotels. San Franclaee. made bythe CU BAN CIGAR C2,denver,coio. \ ' \ ' The man who puts an electric sign before his place of business is not only Insur ing his own business in crease. but is assisting In the upbuilding of his town. Every new sign means not only indi vidual advancement, it u means a step forward C for the whole com- t munity. Send for the k Sign Man. \\ ELY LIGHT 5 ' POWER iV\ COMPANY By Helping Yourself