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THE SUN MORAY FEBRUARY 15 1904 J t j A I J 1 0 it I I v < TRUST COMPANIES TRUST COMPANIBB Morton Trust Company 38 NASSAU STREET Capital 2000000 Surplus and Undivided Profits 6000000 Aots as Trustee Guardian Executor Administrator Receiver Begiitrar and Transfer Agent Takes charge of Real and Personal Property Deposits received subjeat to cheque or on certificate Interest allowed on daily balances Travellers letters of Credit Israel Foreign Eiohange OFFICERS LEVI P MORTON President THOMAS F RYAN VicePresident Secretary CHARLES H ALLEN VIotPreildent A Treasurer JAMES K CORBIfoB Vicepresident T B MINAHAM Treasurer H B BERRY Trust Officer Oouniel BLIHU ROOT DIRECTORS yaen Jacob Astor 00 Haven George Baker Joseph 0 Edward J Berwlnd James N Jarvle- Fre Vrr Cromwell Walter S Johnston jamcs n Duke A D Jullltard Henry M Flagler Joseph Larocque LEVI r MORTON F EDWARD J BEBWIMD D 0 Mills Ellhu Root P Morton WintbropRutherfurd Richard A McCurdy Thomas F Ryan W QiOakmao Jacob H Scblff Foster Peabody John Sloane Samuel Ra EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE 0 O HAVEN JAMES N JACOB HSCHirr OEOKOE F08TEB PEABODY FINANCIAL FINANCIAL TOT HE HOLDERS OF THE PREFERRED STQCK- OP TUB Chicago Alton Railway GV A large amount of the preferred stock of The Chicago Alton Railway Company- has been deposited with the undersigned subject to an agreement which may be seen at our office authorizing the sale thereof on or before September 30 1904 upon such terms and at such price as shall be approved by a preferred stockholders committee consisting of Messrs John A Stewart Edward H HarrIman and John- J nitchell Holders of preferred stock of said company who desire to participate in any sale which may be made under said agreement are requested to promptly deposit their stock certificates duly endorsed In blank with the at office No 52 William Street New York City The right Is reserved to tee initiate the privilege of deposit at any Depositors of stock will receive transferable receipts of the undersigned entitling the holder to a rata share of the net proceeds of any sale and in case no sale is made on or before September 30 1904 to the return of the deposited stock without expense New York December 29 1903 Kuhn Loeb Co I no n uu CON Nf Alt F Hen rl George TAN AnI J I u L WAfl IPWflSWlAAAWfrafijS CHARLES Levi ELIITTI ROOT < < < ¼ BAD STATE CHARITY LAWS AID ASSOCIATIONS REPORT GOV ODELL flames Him ror Mining the Illll Which tola Local Authorities Stand In the Way of Proper Consumption Hos- pitals Old Laws Safeguard Enough The annual report of the State Charities Aid Association to the State Board of Chari was made public yesterday It con- tains among other things a review of the that before the Legislature last year affecting the States charitable instltu It says that the legislative session while lees momentous to the wards of lie State than that of 1902 waa charac- terized by a considerable number of im- portant measures affecting the welfare of tim poor in their homes and public de- pendents In institutions One of the most disastrous measures passed by the Legislature and signed by iov Odell the report says was that which forbids the establishment of any hospital or camp for the treatment of suffering from pulmonary any town without the consent of the towns governing board and of the Super- visors of the county In town Is The effect of this law says the report- is to make it impossible for any city in tim State or any fraternal order charitable society or philanthropic individual to es- tablish a hospital camp or other estab lislimcnt for the treatment of consumptives outside the city limits except under con- ditions which are practically prohibitive Tho report says that in the opinion of tho association the country districts were HifTicientlv protected by the laws then which forbade the establishment of ally Institutions for consumptives In the State without the approval of the State j Board of Health and which laid down other restrictions Tho report asserts also that tho disease inslreid of Increasing decreases in tho dis- tricts in which institutions for Its treat- ment are The report adds Hy the this law the thousand- sr sufferers from pulmonary tuberculosis In b receiving- the car nnd treatment which result In tii ir or improvement More than PT cent of the State live In fitifs or 40000 Inhabitants and it is among al nt It 14 deplorable that the interests nf these should be sub orrllnated to local Interests which were already amply protected by iirevioiisly I came ton patents Boar I I locate I hIs In that the Is most v I p CON- DEMNS IPS hills ex- Iting Stat curs I hA poor cities disease ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ < iov Odell the report the bill In spite of the protests of leading chant fraternity of the State The Governor report says must have been misled A rate to the report be misunderstood the relation of not to tlio nxistliiR association expresses the hope not at all ii vr during the present that the Legislature of 1003 deserves greater for the measure which It for the radical amendment of the Child Labor laws than for other affecting the States charit- able work Speaking of Bellevue Hospital the report Mrs steadily nnd bj no means has followed betterment the refreshing the spp aranre of its and with con it effort to lay the foundations for n in the attitude of the torard ll Hellenic of the sensational If Milne but tho of the hospital in urcnmplish this The hoard of M progress In to cecure a new plant foi MiiiliOIDiUl- Ilm emphasizes the f minded the Idiotic and the recom- niools Unit the State Board of Charities have the to transfer inmates ono State charitable institution to and to determine the capacity i oarh institution and Indorses liar forth to Improve the features of the KILLED nY FALL O TIlE ICE rv lolm QuInn Slips ttlillf on Her Way Home and tIles AI most InstantlyII- RAVOE N J Feb HMrs John Quinn rn f Assessor John Quinn of tho Refund District of Orange was killed this aftoriKKin l y slipping on the Ice at Bell mid ilebo streets while on her way to liorno at 75 Boll street She struck on UK hack of her head in falling and did not ns she was a Dr J was sum Wn Mrs Quinn dead She j Probably had been killed almost inatanUy a of that the law may be nlor PI u Iho rIOt urgent nod r np fri S alI b ln Sta s Irti ulons r care house and Francs I lie and nlo repealed report hin0 trustees CiV vor sraild hr L ra i ¬ > > > GOV MURPHY GOES SOUTH nil Bereavement Will Cause Adjournment of New Jersey toflilatore TRENTON N J Feb 14 Gov Murphy and his son Col Franklin Murphy Jr loft for Florida this afternoon The Gov mor will spend a week nt Ormond before resuming his official duties at the State- House There wjll ho no session of the Legislature tomorrow night as by agree ment both houses will adjourn immediately- after convening out of respect to the Gov ernor in his grief over the loss of his wife In the temporary absence of the Execu- tive President Edward W Wakelee of the Senate will tinder the Constitution be vested the of the Executive but unless something unforeseen should It not him to the office even temporarily To do so President Wakelee to take the oath as Governor and relinquish- his place as of the meantime choosing a new presiding officer PREDICTS THE WAR Congressman Gardner Says It Will Be Between England anti Germany BOSTON Feb U Congressman A P Senator Lodges soninlaw at dinner held under the auspices of the Swamppcott Club in that town last evening that war between Great Britain and Germany in inevitable and added that in his opinion this nation would be- come as a matter of selfdefence was made in a speech which the Congressman delivered upon tho Merchant Marine and caused surprise An soon as a war breaks out said the speaker they will sweep each others commerce the seas who la to take countries enjoy Wo could not that event being involved in the mael strom of strife our only salvation would be to join in that MARINE INTELLIGENCE UlNIATTRK AULtSUC TDtS DAT Sun rises 65Siiuii sets V33Moonrlses lD man WAtKII THIS OAT Sandy Hook0571 Gov Id 7391 Hell Date 2- JArrlrfd SiTODAT Feb 14- S St Paul Southampton Feb 0 KIUnltoti inclon Jan 78- S3 nudnoj Alru Genoa Jan 21 Sj Saratoga Cleafuejos Feb 4 Us Tanaera Portland Feb 12 Si Northman Tort Arthur TeL Feb 3 S3 Colorado Galveston Feb t- K3 Monroe Norfolk Feb 11 Dark Juteopolls Hollo April 28 ASUVXD OUT our Garner n involve the of the which thee two war Feb ne NEXT ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ S3 Etrurla from New York at Liverpool S3 St from New York at Southampton S41UD THOU FOKZIOir Ss Campania from York S3 Amsterdam from Boulogne for New York Jefferson Norfolk Sol TOtnorrou Main Bremen Palatla 730AM Cltta dl Nopoll Naples 830AM Mlvla Newfoundland City of Colon 930AM of Macon Savannah Monroe Norfolk Kl Alba Galveston Arapanoe Charleston SaO Wetrutdav Feb 17 CeUlc 230AM Oscar II 00 A M Parlma at it Cherokee Santo 12 30 p M Colorado Galveston Proreu ew orlfani Jamestown Norfolk Eastern Prince Pernam buco IOOPM- derli Atrmllo VestaiC- onsuelo Arannboe- Kieter City La nretairne- Ilordraux of lu Uita Prins Ivernla- Muaba Cavlc- Calderoo El Dorado Denver Philadelphia sutendam Pith Dakar Sfguranco Proteus Slblrta Furnessla- Wlldcroft Algonquin Slclana- FI Valle- Cedrtc Chemnlti- Fowhatan INCOUINOHTEAUBRlm put Tpitay- filbrallar Cadiz ve Hull Jacksonville iSwanse a Havru- Havre Savannah- s Liverpool London Liverpool St Galveston Galveston San Juan Due Tomorrow i Genoa i Antwerp Naples Cmon New Orleans Tort Limon Due Wttnetilait Feb 17 Guantanamo DarbadoA Jacksonville Out Thursday Fib lit rt vGlbrallarC- ioJveston flits Frlrtaii Ftb 19 Liverpool Bremen Gibraltar 7 Feb i Feb 4 Irb 8 Feb s Feb 9 Kth to Feb 10 Feb 6 Feb 10 Feb o Feb li City ofUemphlJ Svanntn Luis PITS OtTOINO 301 00 100 U S A lOP M I PU P M 3 PU U 2 P WPM P I 1 3011 30 11 Ian 22 Jan Hal ttpool isn 2 lsr Feb 10 2 tb 12 Lao ttb 4 frb reb I e ttb t I eb 10 Feb 1 Feb 4 Feb y 1- y y ITXALSsIr3 Today Mails Isseia Close Salt M U ii fleA U 20 itt 3 00 no 00 SOOA Copenhagen II ix U sOoU 3 no si 3 00 P 2i Feb ai eli ea Ieb eb iWUt 4 > + THE PLEA FOR GOOD ROADS ft CRITICISM OF ODELLS FQL1CY OF ECONOMY How It Contrasts With the Policy of llarapthires Clovernor Odells County Will De Taken Care Of Whether the Appropriation MUllen ALBANY Fob 14 There is much adverse crfHclsrn In up State counties of Gov OdellH policy of economy In connection with the construction of while favor- ing the 1101000000 State canals Gov of New Hampshire s- an Invaluable man to his in looking out for the develQpment an the bringing of prosperity to its peoplo New Hampshire classed as aa agricultural or a manufacturing State but it has mountains sunshine and air and here is what the Governor is forth State He says Within a days ride of our summer capital Mount Washington there are 10000000 people Wo would like to have at least onetenth of them visit its every summer and in order to get them and keep them as long as we can we are planning to im- prove our highways so as to a impression on our visitors on foot by horseback by boat by bicycle in automobile palace or steam yacht They are welcome they ore all welcome and the welcome is equally hearty for and all In order to enable the visitors to see- the State of New Hampshire Gov Bachel den has appointed an engineer who is at work mapping the roads of the State and under the Governors direction a com- prehensive system of permanent road improvement Is being out lined with such exactness before a dollar Is expended in its completion as to clearly show where tho permanently improved roads are to begin and end and the expense to the State for their construction together with the annual expense bf maintenance The improved highways are designed fo provide every section of the State with at least a well ballasted well drained and well road whose cost using the for a base will be from JSOO to 1600 a mile On this calculation by the State ap propriating 100000 a year for six years tho State at the end of that time would have 600 miles of the best roads of the world for light travel and mountain scen ery traversing the State from its entrances II One goo lder Stat mae god one surface New or Two Bach l doing car ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ at southwest to w- It is intended to divide the cost of com- pleting the roads among the State county and towns the same as in If the Governor of New Hampshire can get 1000000 visitors to como to State within the State during the summer months Who canestimate the amount cf money which would be in New York States lake and mountain If this State had a system of improved highways- and a Governor as in the as tho Governor of New shireWould not we have 3000000 people spend IJO each and leaving In country during the summer sum of 30000000 as the 110000000 estimate made in New Hampshire Would not all Europe- be at our we had good inns The 350 to the recent State highways Improvement convention from fiftythree have asked for 2000 000 to be spent during the coming year on the main There are thirtyseven counties now waiting and have on part 3558 000 as the States Under resolution of the convention Sena tor han a bill to of the convention that the States revenue would permit him to ap- propriate only 1000000 year he a tax on the State- If the appropriation Is only 1000000 the the would be fifteen out of the entire thirtyseven have appropriated their of the of The list and mileage- are as follows Counllei Mllrs CouChes Httti Albany 41 Delaware I t Ontario 28 Yates 4 Orange 2A Schenectady 4 25 Otspffo 3 24 Montgomery 3 JrlTcrson 17 2 Clinmnjo in llroome 12 Total 221 Dutches 7 It is interesting to note that the first counties would receive 192 miles of highway the next seven counties only of highway and first taken care of by William Barne- sJr tho next Senator flames for a representative while Orange county is the Odpll Senator Armstrongs county is next and has always led in the of aiding nil of the in thoState to roads EiGov then comes in for twenty four in his State Engineer Bonds and Senator Browns tAke Hflvcnteen miles off the Sena tor Allda takes one milo less while Chair- man Dunn nnd Rogers havo to put up with twelve miles If a 2000000 appropriation of money could ho the following counties would also be In above list making thirtyone counties out of the during the year and leave sto he for the of lon Ham goo Introduce unl mone tat lon e mil Back apiece 10000000 in- line road appropriation ap- propriating 2000000 while ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ asking for roads and 430 miles of roads would be built Tho fountiea are Ilkter Oneida Clinton Saratoga Erie Os these counties State roads this If the Governor holds the appropria- tion down to 1000000- It is for Gov Odell to say No to distribute 2000000 among the thirty nnn counties because county is going to get twentyeight of road on the1 31000000 and is takencare of Orange county keeps getting more roads 2000000 were spent this year would highway improved and lead all of the in total mileage of Improved roads and it line for county may so mum of good advance of the other moan she will obtain an undue advan- tage by increasing her farm values but of course as is no direct tax now this wont aid tho State In obtaining rev- enues from Orange county TOCKS OF QUAIL PERISH Cold and Starvation Hare Been Fatal to the Birds In Connecticut GBEENWICII Conn Feb and wealthy New Yorkers who own private game poservefl have found during the past week that hundreds of flocks of quail have perished from cold and starvation Dead ones are lying In stone fences and at mouths of muskrat holes Charles and Fred Louder carve across a riumbdr of tho lead quail tho other day and no signs of are to seen It that at least a hundred flocks The will b William Rockefeller Charles D Lanler N Witherell George Louder Jr and J H Gourlie Fist Fight Proves Fatal Walter Ossa 22 years old of 223 Sixteenth street at St Vincents lbs pltal yesterday he received in a fist with John a fellow clerk in tho employ of the Savannah Steam hip Company on Saturday The police arc ilex But none of more the 10 die f I Niagara Herkmer Suffolk Nnssau 14 Sportsmen est ¬ ¬ > PRISONER SAYS Mean Looked Up For Larceny Im r an Officer Edward H Keen of 415 East street who said that he was employed in the voBfce but whose name is riot on the lost civil list vas ar raignedyesterday In Side police court on the double charge of larceny Mid personating a police ofllper Magis- trate Barlow put the examination over morning jn rder to learn If the In any wy in the service of Mr Jerome The complaints were made by Mamie Turner and Mary Drayton of 20IM West Fortysixth street Kean according to his own story visited the Druyton woman- a week ago to get evidence against her house According to the woman before Keanleft went Into an adjoining room occupied by the Turner woman and took a and locket worth 750 The Drayton woman said yesterday that she pursued Kean but him nyenuean- inalwranglo over the alleged theft of the Thirty seventh street station put Kean arrest The complaint of personating nn officer was the Drayton woman saId that Hpan showed a and threatened to lock her Keen was obstreperous when arraigned yesterday to one in but was locked up under pending the examination HIGHWAYMEN ATTACK TWO John KerrlBan Beaten and Robbed Drags Hlnueir to Hospital While John Kerrigan an Iron foundry foreman who Wyckoff avenue Williamsburg was in Morgan near John- son avenue on his way home early morning ho wcs set upon by three men who came from behind n truck They rUled his pockets and got his gold watch and chain and ISO Kerrigan broke away from his assailants and shouted for help They stifled his cries and dragged him toward Newtown Creek a few yards away Ho fought hard and they left him lying near the edge of the creek and ran off dragged himself to St Catherines Hospital and rapped feebly on the front door He was helped inside Dr found that arm was broken and that he had concussion of the brain due to several wounds Kerrigan told the police ho was attacked in a was unable to faces of the highwaymen An hour after the attack Victor a cooper 25 years old of 37 North Eighth street hr and nUns thlrd the West w h Friday the woman met Klan at Eighths pot yp ld bal JEROME MAN erg until this prisoner In under yester- day see- the ¬ ¬ ¬ was waylaid at Wytho nvpnue and North three men one of whom him white the others tried to rob fought lila assailants vigor- ously and one of slashed his a knife Tho three men ran away and were pursued by a policeman but escaped was to the quarters 112 In avenue injuries were bandaged by Am- bulance Surgeon choke I ¬ A MAN WAS tNDER HER RED The little Girl Screamed He Jumped From and Was Ought the tenyearold daughter of Arrighi a welltodo Italian living at 508Union street West Hoboken heard a noise under her hd while she was undressing in her third story room on Saturday night She took a peep man lying flat oh his stomach screamed The man started to wriggle toward her from lila hiding and she ran out of room met her father coming up the stairs The foot arose threw open the window anti struck against the shutter a floor window and was cut on the left arm Otherwise ho escaped injury He was temporarily dazed did not arrest Ho described him self as Frank Braun old of believe that ho entered the HAD 1MW HAD CHECKS Htuscher Arrested on a Lawyers Charge Well Known Names Signed Magistrate Mayo in tho Tombs police court yesterday held Irving Hemcher 19 years old of 111 East 112th street under 2000 bonds for examination today on a charge of forgery Leopold Maschko wltz a lawyer at 151 East Eightyfirst street alleges that tho young man forged his name to a chock for 34 and sent it to Mr Schwartz of Lilxirty Hall in East Houston street with a note requesting tho restaurant to cash It and give the to George Keegan a messenger boy to whom note and Iwen When the police arrested they found a number of checks in hi to which the names of welltodo men wore signed All these were declared to bo forgeries FOUND REAP nor UNDER CAR Newark ilotorman Unexpected Discovery After a Collision petting ofT n Newark trolley car to see what damage had been done in a collision Ann law a lace Jump r 3 year house for the of t the Wlnituw Phila- delphia purpose robbery 1beu her ¬ ¬ ¬ > with u grocery wagon late on Saturday Motorman Frank Bellis found to dead body of a boy jammed beneath the front wheels No one had seen tho boy killeu and although the street was throntred with people no one heard the out The boy was elevenyearold Albert of 0 avenue Ho had probnMy on thin hack of tho wagcn l h had hewn nt his home Tews tlanter IndIcted for PeomgeL- UFKIV Tox 14 Tho Federal Grand Jury of this district has ben in- vestigating tho charges that the practice- pf pprtiarn oxistH among planters In this art of the Stats As u result of the inves- tigation li Bonner of LnUin one of the prominent plontors of owiorn TOXBM on charg lug him with that offence Other arrests aw expected The list of Rnfrccrs The following Is llit oT referees appointed In casecln week By Justice niichprr- OjtiM niffrtti- MrCreerjvs MfltojeHeal Thtortoro L sMaller of Hastings Kdward 0 Whltnkor Cltv Itral Co vs De NyUe HenryW Boolislaver Same v Thrall Ilrnry W Ilookstaver Hlllyervs same W Hliirz vsuew MCJellsndMllnn- rhi e vs A Ucllos Slump Matter of Harlem Coop Hulldlnx and Loan Asso- ciation Iwils P Doyle Ktitilinblr Life Assurance Society vs OConnor John A Walsh jstaten lie Insiir- anceCJVvftuaJ Samuel V Magulr- ell Justice Dnvli- Sporry 4 Huteliln Co vs Chu rlcs V Solomon Mattcr of Federal Union NurclJCo- nrousvvi Brouse- llfewntir v H amllton w MrOllnld John RdniundJTln dal- InhnF Melntyrr- AlfredtTallcy Ooorite llurnhitm Jr Mnurlce Cioodmn- nritiittvui Rswwr Rdward FrnncNI MmetH lan Adam vs Vanderbilt U n i ui t v Pollock K Jones Matlerof Flailrr Mlnitny vs Mlngay n- ny Justice Clnrli- clusk vs Miner William I Turner McGovrn vs Parnura JobnC Coleman ny Justice nurrctt Hidden v Oodfrry n n Town nd- Hchappen viKonnrmannThomas F Donnellr- ny Jtisllce Ieventrltl Schwartz vs Vollracr Emll Uoldoiar- kt nigh been riding Jut Feb mol it tit Palate rr Matter Ado vs I wr j 1 an Indict air at Court Iat SleuternfCitroenter i u ¬ ¬ ¬ > RUSH JOiNEf NEVADA CAMP RICh TIlE COCO tfCMO DISTRICT Important I evelopm nti on the tfearmarite Lode of the Lake Copper Country Cripple Creek Increasing It Output Good Reports From Alaskan Fields HKNO Feb 8 A great rush of prospec tors hits set In for the tocomuneo district near Cherry Creek rich free gold claims have recently money right front tho rnss roots and the reports of these lucky have led to a stampede from nil the surrounding country Among the best producing mines in the new camp are the Little Johnny MriKgle Maud and Joauu Tho nioiintiinH iiround the camp Hwarni wIth prospector PT An option has been by B J Roberts- on tho Cleopatra mlrio near Tho led so is fifteen feet wide end the ore which is free Is of high grade Butlers cyanide phnt In Six Mile cOtton near the Comstock hn f made H cleanup of the worked over tailings iimi are vnlmfl nt 83030 Th siicccfs in thtaplant- will probably lend to the working over of till big heaps of lilings at the mouths of the mines F It McNamee of Salt Lake has leased the magnnneso mines fourteen miles east Vegas near DPI Laiii r In Lincoln county Averages from the surface give 42 per cent manganese and 27 per cent Iron The ore will b sucked and hauled seventy miles to Mnnvel Co It will be shipped to Chicago for practical test The Ophlr Mining Company Ht Virginia City received last week 2t i84fll at net pro ceeds of the sirte of five railway car loads of ore shipped to the smelter A1VSKA- SEATTIK Wash Feb S On lower Domin- ion Klondlkn cilotrlRt a second pay streak parallelling tho llrntlws been struck and Is giving great promise A great many dumps have accumulated winter at the old and new and there is water enough to iissuro cleanups On Quartz Creek about 250 men owners and laymen operating this winter taking out big diimpM one company having taken out about ioo cublo yards on Nov 21 Good wages are assured all along this creek al- though it is feet to pay dirt- A good deal of work Is under way on Little Blanche Creek The last strike was near the head of the stream and this has resulted- In the rostaking of many of the abandcned claims Early as the season Is many are coming In from the outside to participate In the spring cleanup and Dawson is assuming- a livelier appearance The town has been unusually quiet and orderly all winter By the way of Rampart late news has been received from the diggings on the Koyu kuk where new strikes are reported on Fay and Rattles creeks resulting in a stam- pede from the older camps Gold is found distributed through the gravel as well as on bed rock Capt Irving has struck It rich In district and Is making a shipment- of 150 tons to the Crofton smelter on Van- couver Island This Is coppergold ore Sever pun red n which the tock r- IM where 8plen id Eti FINDS ej miners tutlp are Sri White- horse ° > ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ anti runs high In both metals There a movement In this district In both and placer claims and the production any season In Its history Port- land anti Seattle men have Invested heavily In property that has reached the shipping stage and a great deal of new machinery- will be sent In this spring for milling hydraulic and other purposes Within a short distance of Dawson near the mouth of the Klondike an extensive vein of asbestos has been discovered and Is now being opened up This Is the first discovery of the kind in Yukon territory The coal mines below Dawson are oper- ating successfully and are able to dispose- of the entire output nt good prices Capital enough has been secured to push construction on the Alaska Central a line exclusively In American territory from Seward on Turnagain Arm to Fairbanks on the Tanana This money has been raised in Chicago and work will begin on the road about April I It IH the Intention to construct about fifty miles this season When com- pleted to the Yukon terminal It will be 413 miles In length passing through an excellent agricultural nnd mineral country possessed of n cllmntn as and attractive compara- tively us the Washington Twelve rigs for sinking oil wells In Kayak anti other parts of the Alaska oil region have been sent north within the past month CALIFORNIA SAN FRANCISCO Feb Hill claims which tare sixteen rovlll In Butte county have been bought by im Eastern syndicate The company proposes to erect a 200stamp on property which consists of a mountain of quartz A crosscut tunnel of 10 feet has not Cut through this Immense ledge of good gold bearing Star mine on the middle fork of the Feather River comprises fourteen claims with n vein 40 to 100 feet wide which crops out above the surface from 40 to 50 feet ore carries a large percentage- of galena worth 1835 to ton nail 57 ounces of silver Eastern hus been secured for the development of tho Djlta mines In Shasta county thirty claims have been and of work has been performed on ten parallel veins A win good ore has been developed n the WllllnniH ranch near Kewtown In Nevada county tire deposits which have never been worked a surface way although the results showed that the ws very Now u liim been formed work of development shows a ledge which pieces of copper that run as as n cent of pure It Is expected that the real topper ledge will he a depth of ore also carries Quart mid 8The Roomer OWl ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ranging from S2SO to til a ton IAKK StTPBTHOR COPPED HouonTov Sllch Teh develop- ments now under on tho shaftsof the calumet lleoln aria of more more Importance to the Lake copper Industry than In tho of new the generation except the opening of thin mines on Baltic lode i where first cut the vertical exploring shaft of the and Hecln was The lode Itself was wide end richly charged with mineral- In addition to footwall was chargec with tine for several feet below the contact The Impregnation of adjacent trap tim exceptional metallic values In the mines of arf the dense trnn rocks are not nil favorable In structure carrying of m titus been utilized The Calumet and Hecln are saying very little about the find ns it is too to say that n bill mine has been opened because one shaft struck rich rook management Is conservative ir Its Mutcnmnts But there is much quiet satis- faction over finding this lode so AH the Keanwnie underlies some six square miles of Calumet and lleclal- iindH and ho mined to i depth of about two inllofl the 1o its nvprn e richness would give time Calumet mid opportunity of opening an- riytrrlnlold productive than the or ii The find Is also of the utmost Im to the Centennial as It shows the In rich a of n south of- i boundary line Hitherto the i tnnliil has hion wouthermiioHt mine iid on heel At present mints are l Ing ten of the strike nf this great which M- tun the most persistently ore of any In the the Hole exception of the great gold bearing ol the nlmoft continuously for a dlfltuncci miles now producing froiri the Krnrsargo bed are the Kpnrsnrffp and Kouth KfiirMrgo while the Centennial will producer within a few months tad tho in Inc a rich mine soon hecln limited production from rock secured exclusively work In addition to the already enumerated Alloupz and Mlsk are opening promising on the sumo the has Just a mint Tamarack in producing an nf about 1000 tons of and has a record of 1800 tons hoisted In twentyfour hours Considering that this shaft U lflin tact deep a remarkable rerorri Fun Tnnmrnck Company which nwnsthn old Cliff mine In county the first dividend prop- erties diamond on ny arge for t for the ore nepr esrrying or t e thp r I I I I rbl bod tP tn rra II minEs bIt Mlnrn naw y r liThe this eund the full capitally had t ttijtv flee lie t1arter mile title proved tttiiit where mines mite opened Nt a th nec htu i ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ I search for a lode with an especially keen watch course for north t r The Arcadian sold has t Arcadian as dead defunctof the neo In the 409by the Jotae ra of the district The Mast U now working about NO men and Is economizing direction both mine operated bv shifts 11 IAKWIIKniOVlItONMINKH Minn the United States got hold of the I Mansfield near It been concentrating effort on development to which u shaft In Iron county better grade thnn most to be found thatdlstrlct the Iron Company of Toronto on Hunters Island a deposit of Iron though known of extent company has been thriving n tunnelall winter ledge n fair quality is the host exploration ever onIn West from Minnesota and la of the highest Importance region Seven been taCt at work In a new field In Altkin county west Duluth land on what Is to be the ore bearing formation has been taken concerns whom United Steel Corporation Is credited with foremost The officials of the company to talk about this departure that titers Is possibility or Undine ore or at least an ore neigh- borhood MONTANA f BUTTE Feb 7The old Ophir In Butte owned by Eastern men principally has been cx Hall the manager who bat an ex- haustive report of his examination to the president company A woodl Mr toys In his report From seen and to learn by a thorough examination the work- ings of mine I of the opinion the Ophlr n future long or work and study of the great silver mines of covering a when th silver mines were com- manding the of all mining men I found a fart None these mines became a of ore until after- It had been developed to a below the 300 foot level except the and Magna Charts which had ore bodies from the mir ing the their best ore between the 300 and l oo levels mid the character of vein fissures to Iden- tical with those of the Alice Moulton and Lexington three most famous silver the Butte district I also find a gradual Increase of a solidity of veins as depth is attained and surface behind The None Huch claim In the northwestern part of the Butte district Is being operated years- Operations areto be resumed on the of Mineral Land Develop- ment Company In the Oateract district county One of the claims Is the Eva May has been worked off and on for and some good ore The mine hits been many month- sIt is developed to R of MO and levels driven at the 400 500 and GOO foot marks The owns a mill and the plant will be enlarged sufficiently to treat ISO tons of ore n day also b deepened 200 feet A men have organized- a company under the laws of ng tho meat Mines Company This corporation Will U property a short distance from Vlr Owing to a shortage of coke the smelter he ore of the I mil t land mot eve he under I n now to bevel depth new hRS I level doubt the ore laof a b nothing- s hn the i Iars folio face A majority of the sliver Includ I valullI and Anialgitinated Copper Company mine had not bn for a has yielded Idl loc s working check b Corporation large Is better mind is without beat Its and of ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ company near Apex Beaverhead county was for more than six settlement of the strike In Utah has enabled the company to resume the smelter Is now turning out its usual amount of copper matte about four tons a Tho now worked depth of 485 feet but In March a new shaft be sunk to a depth- of 800 Considerable Interest is manifested In the working of the new Soden process for saving values in low grade ores now being tried with Joe ores at means much to low grade properties The process Is designed to of ores all the old methods through a system of of the ores ores to be treated are crushed to a certain fineness and placed in a large steel cylinder somewhat to a caldner In a furnace after receiving Its la made to revolve and the Introduction of noted All the mineral values In the ore are thus retained and the product which for H better name might be a con- centrate In then In the usual manner If the Is a success In this preliminary plant It Is destined to work a revolution In the world of min- eralogy than did the cyanide process fifteen years development of oil ground In Montana Is receiving attention Two companies of Butte men are operating In the Lake district The Com- pany has 50000 In slaking wells and encouraged at the prospect The oil found is of the finest a tine base and is a lubricator The of this particular brand has been diminishing for years the is not to the demand which constantly Increas- ing The Klntla Lako company oil in its well nt a depth of 1000 feet but it is still sinking and expects to bore 2000 feet The well of the company Is 1400 feet deep and from It there conies a strong flow of Illuminating gas Butte men are also In In the Moorcroft district of ming where the Butte Crude Petroleum well from which the flow of oil is estimated at ten barrels a and it Is only 600 deep not through the first The in which oil has been struck extends through Montana and the oil IH 8 a Martin hsvesn mired control of the Union Mao and several adjoining properties in the irly days the was Moo tnnns gold producer and nt n less than 300 feet more 15000000 was extracted Orders have hen placed for machinery for sinking MX feet crosscuts will rim front tthe old 100 foot nt least tiooono In development work nother Gould IR being operated with splendid results This l west of hundreds of thousands of dollars In the yellow metal and was a regular divi o and da the Old the lit Pan t Is the first commercial of the kind ever put up InthQ United States and Its success concentration hlch b siectrio S the Is Eltml mill heg a l1ataA Feb most noted ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ dead payer until n the resulted In apparently Inter litigation was secured Jrst head of which Is 1 Campbell Cory a former New York newspaper man So satisfactory havebeen that the company is eicptlng ten about to a ton and can be handled very economically the fig Indian the Whltlaoh Union n of free milling ore has been found which runs 13 a ton and ns the Big IndIan officials tire treating ore cheaper than anywhere else the 47 cents n ton H hand will resu It claims In the CorhlnXVIckes copper district to Clarence McCornlck a Lake menu for liaooo There I tare twentynineclaims in the groups which tire except for representation to 300 feet In width hiss been fftimd- mm ut no place wheredepth has been sought has there been n to find sul phides and FVen the surface wnter In the ts wfth copper arid mining men are predIcting other It Is In Montana mind New ork Corn Is conducting operations- Ii 0 Greater New York have secured a bond on the Indian Queen In Beaver head county Id that where the miners are now at work twelve sets glance are the shoot being two wide and six sets long a showing unex- celled In southern Montana COLOIIATO SpniXfis Feb II The out record of Cripple Creek U gradually In- creasing due to ered In n dozen or more mines M e e carrying TO to MOO a ton The panys under the nninw Isabella Mines Company Is nn event of much importance begun the erection of a mill to treat the dust obtained from ores hy the TeUurfde Works The Is known M the pneumatic cyanide method MINING STATION Ic SINKING MINING PUMPS Over 40000 CAMERON pumps la dally tatlsfac tory use all over the world gives tangible proof of their merit tad confirms the claim for their superi- ority over all others Tbcyare conceded to be the molt durable reliable and effective mining purnpi- nn tbe market today and while often Imitated are never equalled For proof Inquire of any raining rflrlneer catalogue and prices write say of our resident agents or direct to the A S CAMERON STEAM PUP WORKS Foot B st J3d St New York fy V S A IT i i fall the Ore at the an additional 1 B MCCabe bias uthird interest in two work In the n front values a t i comMnnno and atid disco rho tttnte mineis ore fran henry New and Issoni- ittC for ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ > ¬ Fire Insurance STOCKS dealt BUNNELL BUCHANAN CO Tel 22732274 Broad 44 BROAD STREET DIVIDENDS AND INTEREST TWIN CITY RAPID TRANSIT co New York N Y Jan 28th 1W4 k declared a quarterly dividend or one aod one quarter per cent on common stock of tnt com- stock win closn on thl atthree oclock P M teenth of February 1 All dividend will be mailed C jGOOIniCH Secretary Omce of the American Coal Company No t Broadway New York February 1904 The Board of Directors of the American Coil of Maryland day declared a Five Per Cent upon the stock of the Company payable at this office on Tuesday 1st j the morning of March M 1004 vx- EO M BOWLliy Secretarj TOtS TRANSFER OF TH GENERAL Mtge 41 Per Cent Registered Oonds of the Chess peake Ohio ny Co will close at the ofllc of the Central Trust Co of w York Wednesday Feb M preparatorytothe payment of the Interest thereon March 1J90I will be open March 1st at 10 A M- n E POTTS Tress Itlchmond Va Feb 13 1904 NORFOLK WESTERN RAILWAY O The Board of Directors has declared upon the Adjustment Preferred stock a semiannual of TWO DOLL A US PER SHARE payable at the office of the Company Philadelphia Pa on after February IB 1904 Preferred stockholders w erg lstered at the close of business February B 1901 A J Secretary ELECTIONS AND MEETINGS THE PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD COMPANY General Office Dread Street Station Philadelphia 15th IBM The ANNUAL the Stockholders this Company will be held on TUESDAY the Eighth day of March 19OI at eleven oclock A M In Horti- cultural Hall Broad Street below Locust Street Philadelphia Stockholders can obtain copies of the Annual of the Company necessary tickets of admission to tim on and after the 1st of March neat by personal application or by letter to Street Station Philadelphia Secretary THE DELAWARE AND HUDSON COHPANT NOTICE IS HEREBY O1VEV that a special meeting of the stockholders of The Delaware and Company called order of the Board of Managers be held at the once of the Com No 21 Cortlandt Street In thai of Manhattan and City of New York on Monday March seventh 7thi loot at 12 oclock noon for par of the capital stock of the In the amount of one thousand shares- of the par value of one hundred dollars each By order of the Board of Managers F it OLYPHANT Secretary February M 1904 Greene Consolidated Co New York February 10 1094 Pursuant to a resolution at thestock holders meeting of the Greene Consolidated per Company February 10 1904 authorizing an Stock bv amount of t 4 f 2- w The directors of p6111 and after 010 flfeenth of Jebat d 1004 The tranaftrbooka1Or ubacQmtnnzn Lbs of ia and ilI on the all at tea oclock A U I f SIb bare t semIannual flocks wtllbs Qa Frtdstr i February 10th at 3 oclock P U i- on 1 1 semiannual s- and E e Arcade i j I I r LEWIS NEILSON 1 y pose of conoitlerimig and acting the ques- tion Corn u < ¬ ¬ 144000 shares and that tine new stocK be offered at to the stockholders whose names shall appear as such on the books of ito Company at close of business February 331004 Trans- fer Books of the Corporation be closed to trans fers at the close on February 20 tool an- on February 29 1904- GEO S ROBBINS Secretary t A SPECIAL MEETING of the Stockholders of The Aldvn Speares Sons Co will be held at the office of the corporation room 702 In the build ing No 100 Street In of Matt hattan City of New York nn February 16th IBM at ten A M to take action on a proposi- tion to Increase the capital stock of the Company from 120000001 of two shares of a par value nf f 10000 each to 150000000 to con- sist of five thousand shares of a par value of tinon each and for the transaction of the other busi- ness set forth In the notice mailed the stockholders LEWIS R SPEARE President E RAY SPEARS Secretary and Involves the nlr patent ax applied to the tanks re told Tellurian mill to the General Metals Company of New York but the terms of sale not prevent the treatment nt dust The American Inc and Chemical Company Incorporated with 730000 over Denver Ore Purchasing dally at t2oooo outlay WABHISOTOV SEATTLE Feb 8 made last week In the lower workings of the Apex mine Miller River at a too The ore In the facts of the main tunnel Is about three feet wide and ioo mostly in gold The shipments from this property are now being half going to smelter the other to Tacoma The first shipment from the new strike will be made next week A plant of 100 tons is In contemplation for the second ore rapidly accumulating This marries from Sio to 12 gold New York Boston capital is invest fating the Iron and coal resources of thn a view of starting an Iron furnace and rolling mill up the enterprise known ns tho Swnney Furnace BRITISH COLUMBIA SEATTLE Wash Feb SIn the Skeenn district which was American territory unto a few months to England Important work Is under way mire the property of Americans Tho most the Blue Bell consisting fourteen claims mainly on Portland Canal the vein Is only six teat In width it carries from to the ton In gold sliver and and the mines are so favorably located that vessels have no The Bonanza in the satan district embracing twelve claims Is also very prom ising property the ore assaying too a ton UTAH SALT LAKE Feb 8 Thn crop of copper bullion containing gold silver January previous records The will be reopened at the openIng of business c and Smelting Company of Jenver increased to 100 tones was > concen- trating Vhiht 30 ¬ ¬ ¬ < ¬ output forwarded by the various In Salt Valley to the Eastern refineries during that reached a total of 3478150 of which 2803150 came from the independent plants the American Smelt ing and Company reporting the of output wIts estimated nt 1750000- Jn old Summervllle mining district which UPS about thirtyfive miles Cnstledsle morn are being located than ever before and the mining are preparing for season of great activity Court Calendars Till Day Appellate Division Supreme Court Adjourned Feb HI P M Supreme Court Special Term Part J Motion calendar 1030 A M Part II Ex matters Part III Clear Motions Demurrer No 410 Preferred rausesNos 4Kfl M 8 4274 1517 4529 46494MI 4512 4M3 4MS General T 3774 S8SO 500 3330 3307 3405 3531 517 eta SIR SIll 520 521 522 3809 3SI2 3818 asia SW3 3S2S tsai 383H 3S3I 3H40 3 41 1842 3MR 4024 4033 4040 Part IV Case unfinished Owes from Part III Part VCasn unfinished Cases front Part III Part VIClear Elevated railroad cases Part VII Case unnnlshed Cases from Part III Part VIII Clear Cases from Part III Trial Term Part Short 1440S- 12x28 13733 12334 13283 14104 14437 13847 4031 4835 4043 4876 4087 4015 6001 4384 4341 8181- 430S 459 4240 1442B 5040 SOI3 5044 621S 14441 13047 4411 3709 2515 4709 Part IV Clear Cases from Part III Part V Clear Cases from Part III Part VI Case unfinished Cases from Part III Part VII Clear Cases from Part Ill Part VllI Clear Inquest Nos 4745 4909 Day calendarNos 4W3 HW 4SH2 13059 4074 anal 4MO 4852 13072 HOIK 5035 5007 5108 4MS4 4M7 4337 2105 4915 4979 4007 4541 4743 4953 4271 5214 5223 4377 131X11 4730 4BIB 4077 4801 44M 13745 12112 IS778 4903 S7SS 51W 4791 MOO 4949 12372 tOM 4MB 48 4 4073 4719 473 1721 4722 Part IX Clear Cases finm Part VIII Part X Clear Cases from Part VIII Part XI Cl ar Cases from Part VIII Part XII Clear Ouri from Part VIII Part unfinished Cases from Part VIII Surrogates Court Chambers For wills otCharles i Lrcuyer Caroline Schwart- Antonle Ijbatut C Conlan Caroline VVelmtock frank C Rack Mary Iranneilc T Cirenell Paul Ziegler Samuel Levy at 1030 A M Frederick A Antcll M V A Jrant at 2 P M Trial Term IDOl IBM 1005 lOIS toll City Court Hpcrlsl Term Court opens at to A M Motions at lOuin A M Trial 1 Clear NOS 1105 1933 IMS1 1352 lOIS 1275 1205 rt183ly Wi IMS HO tOT XW2 42M 088 4934 7017W laiR 4053 4052 047i 107i- 4S Part II Clear Not 2IM 2209 l m 2159 22NI 74 sLID 21B3 2179 Part IH Ca1- 0unflnUbedNos 1701 2K4 2145 234 2343 2OU- 2W 2f3 2017 203H 2030 23B2 2SIW 2WO 2371 1814 Part IV Clear Kqulty rises Nos 470 47fl Ill Short reuses Nos 03SO flW AA44 MAI 428A 817 line 83 BHW usa CWW claws tots 5M4- S07S B204 774 StAll 0X13 8HB2 6022 1855 H8B3 8032 6033 B034 O35 ffl2A 8 27 B028 8930 8031- 557H 8384 5000 MW 0177 8070 V43e- Nos 2290 3295 2207 2100 2303 2304 230S MrM 104 2310 2311 23I8228S 20721032 3287 t02fI7 2076 l T caiendarNos 3417 343I lOtS 3295 stam sa aim It Clear causes No Part llI Clear inquest No 4524 flay calendar Sos liIl 4822 4840 4M53 4005 t900 4531 4DlOka 13074 4055 4559 4020 4004ti 3t53t 34183 4308 4550 ltI Case eorgr Va lOSS iOu I 4 men lan 301 iotai Ii ¬

A MORAY 1904 0 Morton Trust Company Insurance Eti …THE SUN MORAY FEBRUARY 15 1904 J t j A I J 1 0 it I I < v TRUST COMPANIES TRUST COMPANIBB Morton Trust Company 38 NASSAU STREET

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  • THE SUN MORAY FEBRUARY 15 1904

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    TRUST COMPANIES TRUST COMPANIBB

    Morton Trust Company38 NASSAU STREET

    Capital 2000000Surplus and Undivided Profits 6000000Aots as Trustee Guardian Executor Administrator Receiver Begiitrar andTransfer Agent Takes charge of Real and Personal Property

    Deposits received subjeat to cheque or on certificate Interest allowed on daily balances

    Travellers letters of Credit Israel Foreign EiohangeOFFICERS

    LEVI P MORTON PresidentTHOMAS F RYAN VicePresident SecretaryCHARLES H ALLEN VIotPreildent A TreasurerJAMES K CORBIfoB Vicepresident T B MINAHAM Treasurer

    H B BERRY Trust Officer

    Oouniel BLIHU ROOTDIRECTORS

    yaen Jacob Astor 00 HavenGeorge Baker Joseph 0Edward J Berwlnd James N Jarvle-Fre Vrr Cromwell Walter S Johnstonjamcs n Duke A D JullltardHenry M Flagler Joseph Larocque

    LEVI r MORTONF

    EDWARD J BEBWIMD

    D 0 Mills Ellhu RootP Morton WintbropRutherfurd

    Richard A McCurdy Thomas F RyanW QiOakmao Jacob H Scblff

    Foster Peabody John SloaneSamuel Ra

    EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE0 O HAVEN

    JAMES N JACOB HSCHirrOEOKOE F08TEB PEABODY

    FINANCIAL FINANCIAL

    TOT HE HOLDERS OF THE PREFERRED STQCK-OP TUB

    Chicago Alton Railway GVA large amount of the preferred stock of The Chicago Alton Railway Company-

    has been deposited with the undersigned subject to an agreement which may be seenat our office authorizing the sale thereof on or before September 30 1904 upon suchterms and at such price as shall be approved by a preferred stockholders committeeconsisting of Messrs John A Stewart Edward H HarrIman and John-J nitchell Holders of preferred stock of said company who desire to participatein any sale which may be made under said agreement are requested to promptlydeposit their stock certificates duly endorsed In blank with the atoffice No 52 William Street New York City The right Is reserved to teeinitiate the privilege of deposit at any Depositors of stock will receivetransferable receipts of the undersigned entitling the holder to a rata share of thenet proceeds of any sale and in case no sale is made on or before September 30 1904to the return of the deposited stock without expense

    New York December 29 1903

    Kuhn Loeb Co

    Ino n uu

    CON Nf

    Alt

    F Hen rl

    George

    TAN AnIJ

    I u L

    WAfl IPWflSWlAAAWfrafijS

    CHARLES

    Levi

    ELIITTI ROOT

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    BAD STATE CHARITY LAWS

    AID ASSOCIATIONS REPORTGOV ODELL

    flames Him ror Mining the Illll Whichtola Local Authorities Stand In theWay of Proper Consumption Hos-pitals Old Laws Safeguard Enough

    The annual report of the State CharitiesAid Association to the State Board of Chari

    was made public yesterday It con-tains among other things a review of the

    that before the Legislature lastyear affecting the States charitable instltu

    It says that the legislative sessionwhile lees momentous to the wards

    of lie State than that of 1902 waa charac-terized by a considerable number of im-portant measures affecting the welfare oftim poor in their homes and public de-pendents In institutions

    One of the most disastrous measurespassed by the Legislature and signed byiov Odell the report says was that which

    forbids the establishment of any hospitalor camp for the treatment ofsuffering from pulmonaryany town without the consent of the townsgoverning board and of the Super-visors of the county In town Is

    The effect of this law says the report-is to make it impossible for any city in

    tim State or any fraternal order charitablesociety or philanthropic individual to es-tablish a hospital camp or other establislimcnt for the treatment of consumptivesoutside the city limits except under con-ditions which are practically prohibitive

    Tho report says that in the opinion oftho association the country districts wereHifTicientlv protected by the laws then

    which forbade the establishment ofally Institutions for consumptives In theState without the approval of the State jBoard of Health and which laid down otherrestrictions

    Tho report asserts also that tho diseaseinslreid of Increasing decreases in tho dis-tricts in which institutions for Its treat-ment are The report adds

    Hy the this law the thousand-sr sufferers from pulmonary tuberculosis In

    b receiving-the car nnd treatment which resultIn tii ir or improvement More thanPT cent of the State live Infitifs or 40000 Inhabitants and it is amongal nt It 14 deplorable that the interestsnf these should be suborrllnated to local Interests whichwere already amply protected by iirevioiisly

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    hills

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    I hA poor cities disease

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    iov Odell the report thebill In spite of the protests of leading chant

    fraternity of the State The Governorreport says must have been misled

    A rate to the report bemisunderstood the relation of not totlio nxistliiR associationexpresses the hope not at allii vrduring the present

    that the Legislatureof 1003 deserves greater for themeasure which It for the radicalamendment of the Child Labor laws thanfor other affecting the States charit-able work

    Speaking of Bellevue Hospital the reportMrs

    steadily nnd bj no meanshas followed

    betterment the refreshing thespp aranre of its and with conit effort to lay the foundations for n

    in the attitude of the torardll Hellenic of the sensational If

    Milne but tho of the hospitalin urcnmplish this The hoard of

    M progress Into cecure a new plant

    foi MiiiliOIDiUl-Ilm emphasizes the

    fminded the Idiotic and the recom-niools Unit the State Board of Charities

    have the to transfer inmatesono State charitable institution to

    and to determine the capacityi oarh institution and Indorsesliar forth to Improve the

    features of the

    KILLED nY FALL O TIlE ICErv lolm QuInn Slips ttlillf on Her Way

    Home and tIles AI most InstantlyII-RAVOE N J Feb HMrs John Quinn

    rn f Assessor John Quinn of thoRefund District of Orange was killed thisaftoriKKin l y slipping on the Ice at Bellmid ilebo streets while on her way to

    liorno at 75 Boll street She struckon UK hack of her head in falling and didnot ns she was aDr J was sum

    Wn Mrs Quinn dead Shej Probably had been killed almost inatanUy

    a of

    that the law may be

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    GOV MURPHY GOES SOUTH

    nil Bereavement Will Cause Adjournmentof New Jersey toflilatore

    TRENTON N J Feb 14 Gov Murphyand his son Col Franklin Murphy Jrloft for Florida this afternoon The Govmor will spend a week nt Ormond before

    resuming his official duties at the State-House There wjll ho no session of theLegislature tomorrow night as by agreement both houses will adjourn immediately-after convening out of respect to the Governor in his grief over the loss of his wife

    In the temporary absence of the Execu-tive President Edward W Wakelee of theSenate will tinder the Constitution bevested the of the Executivebut unless something unforeseen should

    It not him tothe office even temporarily To

    do so President Wakelee totake the oath as Governor and relinquish-his place as of the

    meantime choosing a new presidingofficer

    PREDICTS THE WAR

    Congressman Gardner Says It Will BeBetween England anti Germany

    BOSTON Feb U Congressman A PSenator Lodges soninlaw

    at dinner held under theauspices of the Swamppcott Club in thattown last evening that war between GreatBritain and Germany in inevitable and addedthat in his opinion this nation would be-come as a matter of selfdefence

    was made in a speechwhich the Congressman delivered upontho Merchant Marine and caused surprise

    An soon as a war breaks out said thespeaker they will sweep each otherscommerce the seas who la to take

    countries enjoy Wo could not thatevent being involved in the maelstrom of strife our only salvation wouldbe to join in that

    MARINE INTELLIGENCE

    UlNIATTRK AULtSUC TDtS DATSun rises 65Siiuii sets V33Moonrlses lD

    man WAtKII THIS OATSandy Hook0571 Gov Id 7391 Hell Date 2-

    JArrlrfd SiTODAT Feb 14-S St Paul Southampton Feb 0KIUnltoti inclon Jan 78-S3 nudnoj Alru Genoa Jan 21Sj Saratoga Cleafuejos Feb 4

    Us Tanaera Portland Feb 12Si Northman Tort Arthur TeL Feb 3S3 Colorado Galveston Feb t-K3 Monroe Norfolk Feb 11Dark Juteopolls Hollo April 28

    ASUVXD OUT

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    NEXT

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    S3 Etrurla from New York at LiverpoolS3 St from New York at Southampton

    S41UD THOU FOKZIOirSs Campania from YorkS3 Amsterdam from Boulogne for New York

    Jefferson NorfolkSol TOtnorrou

    Main BremenPalatla 730AMCltta dl Nopoll Naples 830AMMlvla NewfoundlandCity of Colon 930AM

    of Macon SavannahMonroe NorfolkKl Alba GalvestonArapanoe Charleston

    SaO Wetrutdav Feb 17CeUlc 230AMOscar II 00 A MParlma at itCherokee Santo 12 30 p MColorado GalvestonProreu ew orlfaniJamestown NorfolkEastern Prince Pernam

    buco IOOPM-

    derliAtrmlloVestaiC-onsueloArannboe-Kieter CityLa nretairne-Ilordraux

    of lu UitaPrinsIvernla-MuabaCavlc-CalderooEl DoradoDenverPhiladelphia

    sutendamPith DakarSfgurancoProteusSlblrta

    Furnessla-Wlldcroft

    Algonquin

    Slclana-FI Valle-

    CedrtcChemnlti-Fowhatan

    INCOUINOHTEAUBRlmput Tpitay-

    filbrallarCadizve

    HullJacksonville

    iSwanse aHavru-HavreSavannah-

    sLiverpoolLondonLiverpoolStGalvestonGalvestonSan Juan

    Due Tomorrowi Genoa i

    Antwerp

    NaplesCmonNew OrleansTort Limon

    Due Wttnetilait Feb 17

    GuantanamoDarbadoAJacksonville

    Out Thursday Fib litrt vGlbrallarC-

    ioJvestonflits Frlrtaii Ftb 19

    LiverpoolBremenGibraltar

    7Feb iFeb 4Irb 8Feb sFeb 9Kth toFeb 10

    Feb 6Feb 10Feb oFeb li

    City ofUemphlJ Svanntn

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    30100100 US AlOP M

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    THE PLEA FOR GOOD ROADS

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    CRITICISM OF ODELLS FQL1CYOF ECONOMY

    How It Contrasts With the Policy ofllarapthires Clovernor Odells CountyWill De Taken Care Of Whether theAppropriation MUllen

    ALBANY Fob 14 There is much adversecrfHclsrn In up State counties of Gov OdellHpolicy of economy In connection withthe construction of while favor-ing the 1101000000 State canals

    Gov of New Hampshire s-an Invaluable man to his in lookingout for the develQpment anthe bringing of prosperity to its peoploNew Hampshire classed as aaagricultural or a manufacturing Statebut it has mountains sunshine and airand here is what the Governor isforth State He says

    Within a days ride of our summercapital Mount Washington there are10000000 people Wo would like to haveat least onetenth of them visit itsevery summer and in order toget them and keep them as longas we can we are planning to im-prove our highways so as to aimpression on our visitorson foot by horseback by boat by bicyclein automobile palace or steam yachtThey are welcome they ore all welcomeand the welcome is equally hearty forand all

    In order to enable the visitors to see-the State of New Hampshire Gov Bachelden has appointed an engineer who is atwork mapping the roads of the State andunder the Governors direction a com-prehensive system of permanentroad improvement Is being outlined with such exactness before a dollarIs expended in its completion as to clearlyshow where tho permanently improvedroads are to begin and end and the expenseto the State for their construction togetherwith the annual expense bf maintenance

    The improved highways are designed foprovide every section of the State with atleast a well ballasted well drained and well

    road whose cost using thefor a base will be from

    JSOO to 1600 a mileOn this calculation by the State ap

    propriating 100000 a year for six yearstho State at the end of that time wouldhave 600 miles of the best roads of theworld for light travel and mountain scenery traversing the State from its entrances

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    or Two

    Bach

    l

    doing

    car

    ¬

    ¬

    ¬

    ¬

    ¬

    ¬

    at southwest to w-It is intended to divide the cost of com-

    pleting the roads among the State countyand towns the same as in

    If the Governor of New Hampshire canget 1000000 visitors to como to State

    within the State during the summer monthsWho canestimate the amount cf money

    which would be in New York Stateslake and mountain If this State

    had a system of improved highways-and a Governor as inthe as tho Governor of NewshireWould

    not we have 3000000 people spendIJO each and leaving In country

    during the summer sum of 30000000as the 110000000 estimate made inNew Hampshire Would not all Europe-be at our we hadgood inns

    The 350 to the recent Statehighways Improvement convention fromfiftythree have asked for 2000000 to be spent during the coming year onthe main Thereare thirtyseven counties now waiting

    and have on part 3558000 as the States

    Under resolution of the convention Senator han a bill

    to of the convention that theStates revenue would permit him to ap-propriate only 1000000 year he

    a tax on the State-If the appropriation Is only 1000000

    the the would befifteen out of the entire thirtysevenhave appropriated their of theof The list and mileage-are as follows

    Counllei Mllrs CouChes HtttiAlbany 41 Delaware I tOntario 28 Yates 4Orange 2A Schenectady 4

    25 Otspffo 324 Montgomery 3

    JrlTcrson 17 2Clinmnjo inllroome 12 Total 221Dutches 7

    It is interesting to note that the firstcounties would receive 192 miles of

    highway the next seven countiesonly of

    highway and firsttaken care of by William Barne-

    sJr tho next Senator flamesfor a representative while Orange countyis the Odpll

    Senator Armstrongs county is next andhas always led in the of aiding nil ofthe in thoState to roadsEiGov then comes in for twentyfour in hisState Engineer Bonds and Senator BrownstAke Hflvcnteen miles off the Senator Allda takes one milo less while Chair-man Dunn nnd Rogers havo to put up withtwelve miles

    If a 2000000 appropriation of moneycould hothe following counties would also be In

    above list making thirtyonecounties out of the

    during the year and leave sto hefor the of

    lon

    Ham

    goo

    Introduce

    unl

    mone

    tat

    lon e

    mil

    Back

    apiece10000000

    in-

    line road appropriation

    ap-propriating 2000000

    while

    ¬

    ¬

    ¬

    ¬

    ¬

    ¬

    asking for roads and 430 miles of roadswould be built

    Tho fountiea are Ilkter Oneida ClintonSaratoga Erie Os

    these counties State roads thisIf the Governor holds the appropria-

    tion down to 1000000-It is for Gov Odell to say No

    to distribute 2000000 among the thirtynnn counties because county isgoing to get twentyeight of roadon the1 31000000 and istakencare of

    Orange county keeps getting more roads2000000 were spent

    this year wouldhighway improved and lead all

    of the in totalmileage of Improved roads and it line

    forcounty may so mum

    of good advance of the other moanshe will obtain an undue advan-

    tage by increasing her farm values butof course as is no direct tax nowthis wont aid tho State In obtaining rev-enues from Orange county

    TOCKS OF QUAIL PERISHCold and Starvation Hare Been Fatal to

    the Birds In ConnecticutGBEENWICII Conn Feb

    and wealthy New Yorkers who own privategame poservefl have found during the pastweek that hundreds of flocks of quail haveperished from cold and starvation Deadones are lying In stone fences and atmouths of muskrat holes Charlesand Fred Louder carve across a riumbdrof tho lead quail tho other day andno signs of are to seenIt that at least a hundredflocks Thewill b William Rockefeller Charles DLanler N Witherell George Louder Jrand J H Gourlie

    Fist Fight Proves FatalWalter Ossa 22 years old of 223

    Sixteenth street at St Vincents lbspltal yesterday he receivedin a fist with John a fellowclerk in tho employ of the Savannah Steamhip Company on Saturday The police

    arc

    ilex But none of

    more

    the

    10

    die

    f I

    Niagara HerkmerSuffolk Nnssau

    14 Sportsmen

    est

    ¬

    ¬

    >

    PRISONER SAYS

    Mean Looked Up For Larceny Imr an OfficerEdward H Keen of 415 East

    street who said that he was employedin the voBfce but whosename is riot on the lost civil list vas arraignedyesterday In Side policecourt on the double charge of larcenyMid personating a police ofllper Magis-trate Barlow put the examination over

    morning jn rder to learn If theIn any wy in the service of

    Mr JeromeThe complaints were made by Mamie

    Turner and Mary Drayton of 20IM WestFortysixth street Kean according tohis own story visited the Druyton woman-a week ago to get evidence against herhouse According to the woman beforeKeanleft went Into an adjoining roomoccupied by the Turner woman and tooka and locket worth 750 TheDrayton woman said yesterday that shepursued Kean but him

    nyenuean-inalwranglo over the alleged theft

    of the Thirtyseventh street station put Keanarrest The complaint of personating nnofficer was theDrayton woman saId that Hpan showed

    a and threatened to lock herKeen was obstreperous when arraigned

    yesterday toone in but was locked

    up under pending the examination

    HIGHWAYMEN ATTACK TWO

    John KerrlBan Beaten and Robbed DragsHlnueir to Hospital

    While John Kerrigan an Iron foundryforeman who Wyckoff avenueWilliamsburg was in Morgan near John-son avenue on his way home early

    morning ho wcs set upon by threemen who came from behind n truck TheyrUled his pockets and got his gold watchand chain and ISO

    Kerrigan broke away from his assailantsand shouted for help They stifled hiscries and dragged him toward NewtownCreek a few yards away Ho fought hardand they left him lying near the edge ofthe creek and ran off draggedhimself to St Catherines Hospital andrapped feebly on the front door He washelped inside Dr found that

    arm was broken and thathe had concussion of the brain due toseveral wounds

    Kerrigan told the police ho was attackedin a was unable to

    faces of the highwaymen An hourafter the attack Victor a cooper25 years old of 37 North Eighth street

    hr

    andnUns

    thlrd

    the West

    w

    h

    Friday the woman met Klan at Eighthspot

    yp

    ld

    bal

    JEROME MAN

    erg

    until thisprisoner

    In

    under

    yester-day

    see-the

    ¬

    ¬

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    was waylaid at Wytho nvpnue and Norththree men one of whom

    him white the others tried to robfought lila assailants vigor-

    ously and one of slashed hisa knife Tho three men ran away

    and were pursued by a policeman butescaped was to thequarters 112 In avenue

    injuries were bandaged by Am-bulance Surgeon

    chokeI

    ¬

    A MAN WAS tNDER HER RED

    The little Girl Screamed He JumpedFrom and Was Ought

    the tenyearold daughterof Arrighi a welltodo Italianliving at 508Union street West Hobokenheard a noise under her hd while she wasundressing in her third story room onSaturday night She took a peepman lying flat oh his stomachscreamed

    The man started to wriggle toward herfrom lila hiding and she ran out of

    room met her father coming upthe stairs The foot

    arose threw open the window anti

    struck against the shuttera floor window and was cut on the

    left arm Otherwise ho escaped injuryHe was temporarily dazeddid not arrest Ho described himself as Frank Braun old of

    believe that ho entered the

    HAD 1MW HAD CHECKSHtuscher Arrested on a Lawyers Charge

    Well Known Names SignedMagistrate Mayo in tho Tombs police

    court yesterday held Irving Hemcher19 years old of 111 East 112th street under2000 bonds for examination today on

    a charge of forgery Leopold Maschkowltz a lawyer at 151 East Eightyfirststreet alleges that tho young man forgedhis name to a chock for 34 and sent itto Mr Schwartz of Lilxirty Hall in EastHouston street with a note requestingtho restaurant to cash It and givethe to George Keegan a messengerboy to whom note and Iwen

    When the police arrestedthey found a number of checks

    in hi to which the names ofwelltodo men wore signed All these weredeclared to bo forgeries

    FOUND REAP nor UNDER CARNewark ilotorman Unexpected Discovery

    After a Collisionpetting ofT n Newark trolley car to see

    what damage had been done in a collision

    Ann

    law a

    lace

    Jump r

    3 year

    house for the of

    t

    the Wlnituw

    Phila-delphia

    purpose robbery

    1beu her

    ¬

    ¬

    ¬

    >

    with u grocery wagon late on SaturdayMotorman Frank Bellis found to

    dead body of a boy jammedbeneath the front wheels No one had seentho boy killeu and although the streetwas throntred with people no one heardthe out

    The boy was elevenyearold Albertof 0 avenue Ho had

    probnMy on thin hack of thowagcn l h had hewn nt his home

    Tews tlanter IndIcted for PeomgeL-UFKIV Tox 14 Tho Federal

    Grand Jury of this district has ben in-vestigating tho charges that the practice-pf pprtiarn oxistH among planters In thisart of the Stats As u result of the inves-

    tigation li Bonner of LnUin one of theprominent plontors of owiorn TOXBM

    on charglug him with that offence Other arrestsaw expected

    The list of RnfrccrsThe following Is llit oT referees appointed In

    casecln weekBy Justice niichprr-

    OjtiM niffrtti-MrCreerjvs MfltojeHeal

    Thtortoro LsMaller of Hastings Kdward 0 WhltnkorCltv Itral Co vs De

    NyUe HenryW BoolislaverSame v Thrall Ilrnry W IlookstaverHlllyervs same WHliirz vsuew MCJellsndMllnn-rhi e vs A Ucllos SlumpMatter of Harlem Coop

    Hulldlnx and Loan Asso-ciation Iwils P Doyle

    Ktitilinblr Life AssuranceSociety vs OConnor John A Walsh

    jstaten lie Insiir-anceCJVvftuaJ Samuel V Magulr-

    ell Justice Dnvli-Sporry 4 Huteliln Co vs

    Chu rlcs V SolomonMattcr of Federal Union

    NurclJCo-nrousvvi Brouse-

    llfewntir vH amllton w MrOllnld

    JohnRdniundJTln dal-InhnF Melntyrr-AlfredtTallcyOoorite llurnhitm JrMnurlce Cioodmn-nritiittvui RswwrRdwardFrnncNIMmetH lan

    Adamvs Vanderbilt U

    n i ui t v Pollock K JonesMatlerof FlailrrMlnitny vs Mlngay n-

    ny Justice Clnrli-clusk vs Miner William I TurnerMcGovrn vs Parnura JobnC Coleman

    ny Justice nurrcttHidden v Oodfrry n n Town nd-Hchappen viKonnrmannThomas F Donnellr-

    ny Jtisllce IeventrltlSchwartz vs Vollracr Emll Uoldoiar-

    kt

    nigh

    been riding

    JutFeb

    mol

    it

    tit

    Palate

    rr

    Matter

    Ado vs

    I wr

    j 1

    an Indict air at

    Court Iat

    SleuternfCitroenter

    i u

    ¬

    ¬

    ¬

    >

    RUSH JOiNEf NEVADA CAMP

    RICh TIlE COCOtfCMO DISTRICT

    Important I evelopm nti on the tfearmariteLode of the Lake Copper Country

    Cripple Creek Increasing It OutputGood Reports From Alaskan Fields

    HKNO Feb 8 A great rush of prospectors hits set In for the tocomuneo districtnear Cherry Creek rich free goldclaims have recently money rightfront tho rnss roots and the reports of theselucky have led to a stampede fromnil the surrounding country Among thebest producing mines in the new camp arethe Little Johnny MriKgle Maud and JoauuTho nioiintiinH iiround the camp Hwarni wIthprospector PT

    An option has been by B J Roberts-on tho Cleopatra mlrio nearTho led so is fifteen feet wide end the orewhich is free Is of high grade

    Butlers cyanide phnt In Six Mile cOttonnear the Comstock hn f made H cleanup ofthe worked over tailings iimi arevnlmfl nt 83030 Th siicccfs in thtaplant-will probably lend to the working over of till

    big heaps of lilings at the mouths of themines

    F It McNamee of Salt Lake has leasedthe magnnneso mines fourteen miles east

    Vegas near DPI Laiii r In Lincoln countyAverages from the surface give 42 per centmanganese and 27 per cent Iron The orewill b sucked and hauled seventy miles toMnnvel Co It will be shipped toChicago for practical test

    The Ophlr Mining Company Ht VirginiaCity received last week 2t i84fll at net proceeds of the sirte of five railway car loads ofore shipped to the smelter

    A1VSKA-

    SEATTIK Wash Feb S On lower Domin-ion Klondlkn cilotrlRt a second pay streakparallelling tho llrntlws been struck and Isgiving great promise A great many dumpshave accumulated winter at the old andnew and there is water enough toiissuro cleanups

    On Quartz Creek about 250 men ownersand laymen operating this winter takingout big diimpM one company having takenout about ioo cublo yards on Nov 21 Goodwages are assured all along this creek al-though it is feet to pay dirt-

    A good deal of work Is under way on LittleBlanche Creek The last strike was nearthe head of the stream and this has resulted-In the rostaking of many of the abandcnedclaims

    Early as the season Is many are comingIn from the outside to participate In thespring cleanup and Dawson is assuming-a livelier appearance The town has beenunusually quiet and orderly all winter

    By the way of Rampart late news hasbeen received from the diggings on the Koyukuk where new strikes are reported on Fayand Rattles creeks resulting in a stam-pede from the older camps Gold is founddistributed through the gravel as well ason bed rock

    Capt Irving has struck It rich Indistrict and Is making a shipment-

    of 150 tons to the Crofton smelter on Van-couver Island This Is coppergold ore

    Sever

    pun red

    n

    which

    thetock

    r-

    IM

    where

    8plen id

    Eti FINDS ej

    miners

    tutlp

    are

    Sri

    White-horse

    °

    > ¬

    ¬

    ¬

    ¬

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    anti runs high In both metals Therea movement In this district In both

    and placer claims and the productionany season In Its history Port-

    land anti Seattle men have Invested heavilyIn property that has reached the shippingstage and a great deal of new machinery-will be sent In this spring for millinghydraulic and other purposes

    Within a short distance of Dawson nearthe mouth of the Klondike an extensivevein of asbestos has been discovered andIs now being opened up This Is the firstdiscovery of the kind in Yukon territory

    The coal mines below Dawson are oper-ating successfully and are able to dispose-of the entire output nt good prices

    Capital enough has been secured to pushconstruction on the Alaska Central a lineexclusively In American territory fromSeward on Turnagain Arm to Fairbankson the Tanana This money has been raisedin Chicago and work will begin on the roadabout April I It IH the Intention to constructabout fifty miles this season When com-pleted to the Yukon terminal It will be 413miles In length passing through an excellentagricultural nnd mineral country possessedof n cllmntn as and attractive compara-tively us the Washington

    Twelve rigs for sinking oil wells In Kayakanti other parts of the Alaska oil regionhave been sent north within the past month

    CALIFORNIA

    SAN FRANCISCO FebHill claims which tare sixteen

    rovlll In Butte county have been boughtby im Eastern syndicate The companyproposes to erect a 200stamp onproperty which consists of a mountain ofquartz A crosscut tunnel of 10 feet hasnot Cut through this Immense ledge of goodgold bearing

    Star mine on the middle forkof the Feather River comprises fourteenclaims with n vein 40 to 100 feet widewhich crops out above the surface from 40 to50 feet ore carries a large percentage-of galena worth 1835 to tonnail 57 ounces of silver

    Eastern hus been secured for thedevelopment of tho Djlta mines In Shastacounty thirty claims have been

    and of work has beenperformed on ten parallel veins Awin good ore has been developed

    n the WllllnniH ranch near KewtownIn Nevada county tire depositswhich have never been worked asurface way although the results showedthat the ws very Now uliim been formed work of developmentshows a ledge which piecesof copper that run as as n centof pure It Is expected that the real

    topper ledge will he a depth ofore also carries

    Quart

    mid

    8The Roomer

    OWl

    ¬

    ¬

    ¬

    ¬

    ranging from S2SO to til a tonIAKK StTPBTHOR COPPED

    HouonTov Sllch Teh develop-ments now under on thoshaftsof the calumet lleoln aria of moremore Importance to the Lake copper Industrythan In tho ofnew the generation exceptthe opening of thin mines on Balticlode i where first cut

    the vertical exploring shaft of theand Hecln was The lode Itselfwas wide end richly charged with mineral-In addition to footwall was chargecwith tine for several feet below thecontact The Impregnation of adjacent trap

    timexceptional metallic values In the mines of

    arf the dense trnn rocks are notnil favorable In structure carrying

    of mtitus

    been utilized The Calumet and Heclnare saying very little about the find ns it istoo to say that n bill mine has beenopened because one shaft struck rich rook

    management Is conservative ir ItsMutcnmnts But there is much quiet satis-faction over finding this lode so

    AH the Keanwnie underliessome six square miles of Calumet and lleclal-iindH and ho mined to i depth of abouttwo inllofl the 1o itsnvprn e richness would give time Calumetmid opportunity of opening an-

    riytrrlnlold productivethan the or

    ii The find Is also of the utmost Imto the Centennial as It shows the

    In rich a of n south of-i boundary line Hitherto the

    i tnnliil has hion wouthermiioHt mineiid on heel At present mints are

    l Ing ten of thestrike nf this great which M-tun the most persistently

    ore of any In thethe Hole exception of the great gold bearing

    ol the

    nlmoft continuously for a dlfltunccimiles now producing froiri theKrnrsargo bed are theKpnrsnrffp and Kouth KfiirMrgo while theCentennial will producer within afew months tad tho inInc a rich mine soon hecln limitedproduction from rock secured exclusively

    work In addition to thealready enumerated Alloupz and Mlsk

    are opening promising on thesumo the hasJust a mint

    Tamarack in producingan nf about 1000 tons of

    and has a record of 1800 tons hoistedIn twentyfour hours Considering that thisshaft U lflin tact deep a remarkablererorri

    Fun Tnnmrnck Company whichnwnsthn old Cliff mine In countythe first dividend prop-erties diamond on

    ny arge

    for t

    for theore nepr

    esrrying or t e

    thp

    rI I

    I

    I

    rblbod

    tPtn rra

    II

    minEsbIt

    Mlnrnnaw

    y

    r

    liThe

    thiseund

    the full capitally

    had

    t ttijtvflee

    lie t1arter mile

    title

    proved

    tttiiit where mines mite opened

    Nt a thnec

    htu

    i

    ¬

    ¬

    ¬

    ¬

    I search for a lode with anespecially keen watch course for north

    t rThe Arcadian soldhas t Arcadian

    as dead defunctof theneo In the 409by the

    Jotae ra of the districtThe Mast U now working about NO men

    and Is economizing direction bothmine operated bv shifts

    11 IAKWIIKniOVlItONMINKHMinn the United

    States got hold of theI Mansfield near It

    been concentrating effort on developmentto which u shaft

    In Iron county better gradethnn most to be found thatdlstrlct

    the IronCompany of Toronto on Hunters Island

    a deposit of Iron thoughknown of extent company

    has been thriving n tunnelall winterledge n fair quality is thehost exploration ever onIn West

    from Minnesota and la ofthe highest Importance region

    Seven been taCt at work In a newfield In Altkin county west Duluthland on what Is to be the ore bearingformation has been takenconcerns whom UnitedSteel Corporation Is creditedwith foremost The officials of thecompany to talk about this departure

    that titers Is possibility or Undineore or at least an ore neigh-borhood

    MONTANAf

    BUTTE Feb 7The old Ophir InButte owned by Eastern men principallyhas been cxHall the manager who bat an ex-haustive report of his examination to thepresident company A woodl

    Mr toys In his reportFrom seen and to

    learn by a thorough examination the work-ings of mine I of the opinion

    the Ophlr n futurelong or work and study of the greatsilver mines of covering a

    when th silver mines were com-manding the of all mining men Ifound a fart None these minesbecame a of ore until after-It had been developed to a below the 300foot level except the and Magna Chartswhich had ore bodies from the mir

    ing the their best ore betweenthe 300 and l oo levels mid the characterof vein fissures to Iden-tical with those of the Alice Moulton andLexington three most famous silver

    the Butte district I also find agradual Increase of a solidity ofveins as depth is attained and surface

    behindThe None Huch claim In the northwestern

    part of the Butte district Is being operated

    years-Operations areto be resumed on the

    of Mineral Land Develop-ment Company In the Oateract district

    county One of the claims Is theEva May has been worked off and onfor and some goodore The mine hits been many month-sIt is developed to R of MO andlevels driven at the 400 500 andGOO foot marks The owns a milland the plant will be enlarged sufficiently totreat ISO tons of ore n dayalso b deepened 200 feet

    A men have organized-a company under the laws of

    ng tho meat Mines CompanyThis corporation Will Uproperty a short distance from Vlr

    Owing to a shortage of coke the smelter

    heore of the

    I mil tlandmot

    eve

    he underI

    n now tobevel depth new hRS

    Ilevel doubt the

    ore laof ab

    nothing-s

    hn

    the

    i

    Iars

    folio

    face A majority of the sliver Includ

    I

    valullI and

    Anialgitinated Copper Companymine had not bn for a

    has yieldedIdl

    loc

    s

    workingcheck

    b

    Corporation

    largeIs better

    mind is without beatIts

    and

    of

    ¬

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    ¬

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    ¬

    company nearApex Beaverhead county was formore than six settlement of thestrike In Utah has enabled the company toresume the smelter Is nowturning out its usual amount of copper matteabout four tons a Tho now

    worked depth of 485 feet but InMarch a new shaft be sunk to a depth-of 800

    Considerable Interest is manifested In theworking of the new Soden process for saving

    values in low grade oresnow being tried with Joe ores at

    meansmuch to low grade properties The processIs designed toof ores all the old methods through asystem of of the oresores to be treated are crushed to a certainfineness and placed in a large steel cylindersomewhat to a caldner In afurnace after receiving Its lamade to revolve and the Introduction of

    noted All the mineral values In the oreare thus retained and the product whichfor H better name might be a con-centrate In then In the usual mannerIf the Is a success In this preliminaryplant It Is destined to work a

    revolution In the world of min-eralogy than did the cyanide process fifteenyears

    development of oil ground In MontanaIs receiving attention Twocompanies of Butte men are operating In the

    Lake district The Com-pany has 50000 In slaking wells and

    encouraged at the prospect The oilfound is of the finest atine base and is a lubricator The ofthis particular brand has been diminishingfor years the is notto the demand which constantly Increas-ing The Klntla Lako company oil inits well nt a depth of 1000 feet but it is stillsinking and expects to bore 2000 feet Thewell of the company Is 1400 feet deepand from It there conies a strong flow ofIlluminating gas Butte men are also In

    In the Moorcroft district ofming where the Butte Crude Petroleum

    well from which the flow ofoil is estimated at ten barrels a and itIs only 600 deep not through thefirst The in which oil hasbeen struck extends through Montana andthe oil IH 8 a

    Martin hsvesnmired control of the Union Maoand several adjoining properties in the

    irly days the was Mootnnns gold producer and nt n

    less than 300 feet more 15000000was extracted Orders have hen placed formachinery for sinking MX feet

    crosscuts will rim front tthe old 100footnt least tiooono In development work

    nother GouldIR being operated with splendid results This

    l west ofhundreds of thousands of dollars

    In the yellow metal and was a regular divi

    o and

    da

    the Oldthe lit Pan t Is the firstcommercial of the kind ever put upInthQ United States and Its success

    concentration

    hlchb

    siectrio S the Is Eltml

    mill

    heg

    a

    l1ataA Feb

    most noted

    ¬

    ¬

    ¬

    ¬

    ¬

    ¬

    ¬

    dead payer until nthe resulted In apparently Inter

    litigation was secured Jrst

    head of which Is 1 Campbell Cory a formerNew York newspaper man So satisfactoryhavebeen that the company iseicptlng ten

    about to a ton and can be handledvery economically

    the fig Indianthe Whltlaoh Union n of free millingore has been found which runs 13 aton and ns the Big IndIan officialstire treating ore cheaper than anywhereelse the 47 cents n ton H hand

    will resu It

    claims In the CorhlnXVIckescopper district to Clarence McCornlck a

    Lake menu for liaooo ThereI

    tare twentynineclaims in the groups whichtire except for representation

    to 300 feet In width hiss been fftimd-mm ut no place wheredepth has been soughthas there been n to find sulphides and FVen the surfacewnter In the ts wfthcopper arid mining men are predIctingother It Is InMontana mind New ork Corn

    Is conducting operations-Ii 0 Greater

    New York have secured a bondon the Indian Queen In Beaverhead county Id that where the minersare now at work twelve sets glanceare the shoot being two wideand six sets long a showing unex-celled In southern Montana

    COLOIIATO SpniXfis Feb II The outrecord of Cripple Creek U gradually In-

    creasing due to

    ered In n dozen or more minesM e e carrying TO to MOO a ton Thepanys under thenninw Isabella Mines Company Is nn eventof much importance

    begun the erection of a mill to treatthe dust obtained from ores hy theTeUurfde Works TheIs known M the pneumatic cyanide method

    MINING

    STATION Ic SINKING MINING PUMPSOver 40000 CAMERON pumps la dally tatlsfac

    tory use all over the world gives tangible proof oftheir merit tad confirms the claim for their superi-ority over all others Tbcyare conceded to be themolt durable reliable and effective mining purnpi-nn tbe market today and while often Imitated arenever equalled For proof Inquire of any rainingrflrlneer catalogue and prices write say of ourresident agents or direct to the

    A S CAMERON STEAM PUP WORKSFoot B st J3d St New York fy V S A

    IT i i

    fall the Ore at the

    an additional

    1 B MCCabe bias uthird interest intwo

    work In the n front

    values

    a

    t i

    comMnnno

    and atid disco

    rho tttnte mineis ore fran

    henry New and Issoni-ittC

    for

    ¬

    ¬

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    > ¬

    Fire InsuranceSTOCKS

    dealtBUNNELL BUCHANAN CO

    Tel 22732274 Broad 44 BROAD STREET

    DIVIDENDS AND INTEREST

    TWIN CITY RAPID TRANSIT coNew York N Y Jan 28th 1W4 k

    declared a quarterly dividend or one aod onequarter per cent on common stock of tnt com-

    stock win closn on thlatthree oclock P Mteenth of February 1All dividend will be mailed

    C jGOOIniCH Secretary

    Omce of the American Coal CompanyNo t Broadway

    New York February 1904The Board of Directors of the American Coil

    of Marylandday declared a Five

    Per Cent upon the stock of the Companypayable at this office on Tuesday 1st

    j

    the morning of March M 1004 vx-EO M BOWLliy Secretarj

    TOtS TRANSFER OF TH GENERALMtge 41 Per Cent Registered Oonds of the Chesspeake Ohio ny Co will close at the ofllc of theCentral Trust Co of w York Wednesday Feb

    M preparatorytothe payment of theInterest thereon March 1J90I

    will be open March 1st at 10 A M-n E POTTS Tress

    Itlchmond Va Feb 13 1904

    NORFOLK WESTERN RAILWAY OThe Board of Directors has declared upon the

    Adjustment Preferred stock a semiannualof TWO DOLL A US PER SHARE payable

    at the office of the CompanyPhiladelphia Pa on after February IB 1904

    Preferred stockholders w erglstered at the close of business February B 1901

    A J Secretary

    ELECTIONS AND MEETINGS

    THE PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD COMPANYGeneral Office Dread Street Station

    Philadelphia 15th IBMThe ANNUAL the Stockholders

    this Company will be held on TUESDAY the Eighthday of March 19OI at eleven oclock A M In Horti-cultural Hall Broad Street below Locust StreetPhiladelphia

    Stockholders can obtain copies of the Annualof the Company necessary tickets

    of admission to tim on and after the 1st ofMarch neat by personal application or by letterto StreetStation Philadelphia

    Secretary

    THE DELAWARE AND HUDSON COHPANTNOTICE IS HEREBY O1VEV that a special

    meeting of the stockholders of The Delaware andCompany called order of the Board of

    Managers be held at the once of the ComNo 21 Cortlandt Street In thai of

    Manhattan and City of New York on Monday Marchseventh 7thi loot at 12 oclock noon for par

    of the capital stock of theIn the amount of one thousand shares-

    of the par value of one hundred dollars eachBy order of the Board of Managers

    F it OLYPHANT SecretaryFebruary M 1904

    Greene Consolidated CoNew York February 10 1094

    Pursuant to a resolution at thestockholders meeting of the Greene Consolidatedper Company February 10 1904 authorizing an

    Stock bv amount of

    t4 f

    2-

    wThe directors of

    p6111 and after 010 flfeenth of Jebat d1004 The tranaftrbooka1Or ubacQmtnnzn

    Lbs of iaand ilI on the all

    at tea oclock A U

    I

    fSIbbare t

    semIannual

    flocks wtllbs Qa Frtdstr iFebruary 10th at 3 oclock P U i-on 1

    1

    semiannual s-and

    E

    e

    Arcadei

    jI

    I r

    LEWIS NEILSON1

    y

    pose of conoitlerimig and acting the ques-tion Corn

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    144000 shares and that tine new stocKbe offered at to the stockholders whose namesshall appear as such on the books of ito Companyat close of business February 331004 Trans-fer Books of the Corporation be closed to transfers at the close on February 20 toolan-on February 29 1904-

    GEO S ROBBINS Secretary t

    A SPECIAL MEETING of the Stockholdersof The Aldvn Speares Sons Co will be held at theoffice of the corporation room 702 In the building No 100 Street In of Matthattan City of New York nn February 16th IBMat ten A M to take action on a proposi-tion to Increase the capital stock of the Companyfrom 120000001 of two sharesof a par value nf f 10000 each to 150000000 to con-sist of five thousand shares of a par value of tinoneach and for the transaction of the other busi-ness set forth In the notice mailed the stockholders

    LEWIS R SPEARE PresidentE RAY SPEARS Secretary

    and Involves the nlr patent ax applied to thetanks re

    told Tellurian mill to the GeneralMetals Company of New York but the termsof sale not prevent the treatment nt dust

    The American Inc and Chemical CompanyIncorporated with 730000

    over Denver Ore Purchasing

    dally at t2oooo outlayWABHISOTOV

    SEATTLE Feb 8made last week In the lower workings of theApex mine Miller River at a too

    The ore In the facts of the main tunnelIs about three feet wide and ioomostly in gold The shipments from thisproperty are now being half goingto smelter the other toTacoma The first shipment from the newstrike will be made next week A

    plant of 100 tons is In contemplationfor the second orerapidly accumulating This marries fromSio to 12 gold

    New York Boston capital is investfating the Iron and coal resources of thna view of starting an Iron furnaceand rolling mill up the enterpriseknown ns tho Swnney Furnace

    BRITISH COLUMBIASEATTLE Wash Feb SIn the Skeenndistrict which was American territory unto

    a few monthsto England Important work Isunder way mire the property ofAmericans Tho mostthe Blue Bell consisting fourteen claimsmainly on Portland Canal the veinIs only six teat In width it carries fromto the ton In gold sliver andand the mines are so favorably located thatvessels have no

    The Bonanza in the satan districtembracing twelve claims Is also very promising property the ore assaying too a ton

    UTAHSALT LAKE Feb 8 Thn crop of copper

    bullion containing gold silverJanuary previous records The

    will be reopened at the openIng of businessc

    and Smelting Company of Jenverincreased to 100 tones

    was>

    concen-trating

    Vhiht30

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    output forwarded by the various InSalt Valley to the Eastern refineriesduring that reached a total of 3478150

    of which 2803150 came fromthe independent plants the American Smelting and Company reporting the

    of outputwIts estimated nt 1750000-

    Jn old Summervllle mining districtwhich UPS about thirtyfive milesCnstledsle morn are being locatedthan ever before and themining are preparing for seasonof great activity

    Court Calendars Till DayAppellate Division Supreme Court Adjourned

    Feb HI P MSupreme Court Special Term Part J Motion

    calendar 1030 A M Part II Exmatters Part III Clear Motions Demurrer

    No 410 Preferred rausesNos 4Kfl M 84274 1517 4529 46494MI 4512 4M3 4MS General T

    3774 S8SO 500 3330 3307 3405 3531 517 eta SIRSIll 520 521 522 3809 3SI2 3818 asia SW3 3S2Stsai 383H 3S3I 3H40 3 41 1842 3MR 4024 4033 4040Part IV Case unfinished Owes from Part IIIPart VCasn unfinished Cases front Part IIIPart VIClear Elevated railroad cases PartVII Case unnnlshed Cases from Part IIIPart VIII Clear Cases from Part III TrialTerm Part Short 1440S-12x28 13733 12334 13283 14104 14437 13847

    4031 4835 4043 4876 4087 4015 6001 4384 4341 8181-

    430S 459 4240 1442B 5040 SOI3 5044 621S 1444113047 4411 3709 2515 4709 Part IV Clear Casesfrom Part III Part V Clear Cases from PartIII Part VI Case unfinished Cases from PartIII Part VII Clear Cases from Part IllPart VllI Clear Inquest Nos 4745 4909 DaycalendarNos 4W3 HW 4SH2 13059 4074anal 4MO 4852 13072 HOIK 5035 5007 5108 4MS44M7 4337 2105 4915 4979 4007 4541 4743 4953 42715214 5223 4377 131X11 4730 4BIB 4077 4801 44M13745 12112 IS778 4903 S7SS 51W 4791 MOO 494912372 tOM 4MB 48 4 4073 4719 473 1721 4722Part IX Clear Cases finm Part VIII Part X

    Clear Cases from Part VIII Part XI Cl arCases from Part VIII Part XII Clear Ourifrom Part VIII Part unfinishedCases from Part VIII

    Surrogates Court Chambers Forwills otCharles i Lrcuyer Caroline Schwart-Antonle IjbatutC Conlan Caroline VVelmtock frank CRack Mary Iranneilc T Cirenell PaulZiegler Samuel Levy at 1030 A M Frederick AAntcll M V A Jrant at 2 P M Trial Term

    IDOl IBM 1005 lOIS tollCity Court Hpcrlsl Term Court opens at to

    A M Motions at lOuin A M Trial 1Clear NOS 1105 1933 IMS1 1352 lOIS 1275

    1205 rt183ly Wi IMS HO tOT XW2 42M088 4934 7017W laiR 4053 4052 047i 107i-4S Part II Clear Not 2IM 2209 l m2159 22NI 74 sLID 21B3 2179 Part IH Ca1-0unflnUbedNos 1701 2K4 2145 234 2343 2OU-2W 2f3 2017 203H 2030 23B2 2SIW 2WO 2371 1814Part IV Clear Kqulty rises Nos 470 47fl IllShort reuses Nos 03SO flW AA44 MAI 428A 817line 83 BHW usa CWW claws tots 5M4-S07S B204 774 StAll 0X13 8HB2 6022 1855 H8B38032 6033 B034 O35 ffl2A 8 27 B028 8930 8031-557H 8384 5000 MW 0177 8070 V43e-Nos 2290 3295 2207 2100 2303 2304 230S MrM 1042310 2311 23I8228S 20721032 3287 t02fI7 2076l

    T

    caiendarNos 3417 343I lOtS 3295 stam sa aim

    It Clear causes No

    Part llI Clear inquest No 4524 flay calendarSos liIl 4822 4840 4M53 4005 t900 4531 4DlOka

    13074 4055 4559 4020 4004ti 3t53t 34183 4308 4550

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