1
PAOTCfl. THEIR VENGEANCE GLUTTED , Omaha's ' Ball Players Dot Even with the Outfit from Wisconsin SHANNON'S ' LAMBS ARE ONLY WOLVES , They Surprised nnd Conquered the Jlrcwnrs Oilier Western "Winners American AHSoulallon Games Homo HporlhiK Gossip. Omaha , ft ; Milwaukee , 2. Minneapolis , 0 ; Lincoln , 0. Kansas City , 14 ; St. Paul , 5. Sioux City , C; Denver , C- .A . largo and cnthuslasil c crowd took a half holiday yesterday to go out to McCormlck park and sco the Lambs nnd Brewers try conclusions again , And the people wore not sorry they made the Journey , for they saw the homo team win ono of the most brilliant nnd exciting con- tests ¬ over waged In these parts.- It . was n ' 'lavcii liinlnper.- Tno . day was again Just right for ball play- ing - bright nnd breezy and the audience at- tracted ¬ to the purl : won n representative ono. And the ladles were there In goodly num- bers ¬ nnd transformed the usually forbidding grand stnnd into a bower of radiance nnd- beauty. . Of the 2,000 people on hand every ono had gone more to cheer Omaha on to victory , and they did it- .Milwaukee . was royally wollopped.- In . the words of Count Tolstoi the game was n lily. The Ilrcwors went into the light with the best intentions in the world , but they dis- covered ¬ tliat Shannon's "Lambs were only wolves In shocps1 clothing. They not oniv used the stick with effect , hut played a field ¬ ing game that fairly sclntilllatod.- Kitcljorg's . pitching was superb.- Davis' . was very good , too , on nn average , but Omaha irot his range Just nt the proper times. Twltchell , Halligan , Sutcliffo , Shan- non ¬ , Walsh and Eltoljorp fairly plastered themselves with dust and glory- .Sutcliffo . drove in the llrst run , Halligan the second and Walsh the third all of them earned good and solid. Lot mo toll you that tbls is hall playing. Hut the bright particular star of the day was Jimmy Donnelly. That boy has Just clambered up hand over hand into popular favor, and tlio bleachers would dlo for him. His phenomenal stops nnd pickups and light- ning ¬ throws were of the indescribable order. Maybe Ids last achievement , tuning n red-hot Hut In the exuberance of praise the Brew- ers ¬ must not bo overlooked. They wore in the thickest of the fight from the opening pun to the last dying wail. Petit, Schoch , Dalrymplo , Schrlver , and In fact the whole gang, played as if their lives were nt stake. Ana poor Gush "He's in the asylum now. " There was another individual present at the carnage also , and his name was Knight Alonzo Knight , the groat. His umpiring was of the order that deserves commemoration , bolncr as clean and perfect as such a diftlcult- plcco of work could be , and as impartial as the sun Is to the earth.- Ho . is as impregnable to the roarings of Captain Schoch and his oleaginous lieuten- ants ¬ as ho Is to their blandishments or coaxings.- In . n few words , ho is an umpire. But the picnic- .Twltchell . led off with a strike out and a murmur of incipient discontent oozed through the stands. They wore metamorphosed the next Instant , however, Into n bubble of de- light - by a safe drlvo by Colonel Hntllgan from Buffalo. Then "Old Cy" Sutcliffo was Introduced. Ho took his position nt the pinto and swung back his telegraph polo llko it- woodchopper at a rail-splitting match. Mr. Davlos , after taking n good look at him , aimed the sphere at his lower vest button , hut Instead of hitting the mark it How against Silt's ' club. The concussion sounded llko a peanut sack when yon blow It up and set down on It , and while Mr Davlos was still wondering what had happened the hall had landed among the loft Held carriages , Halli- gan - was homo nnd "Old Cy" was blowing his hollows on bag number two. You ought to have heard the mad shouts that greeted this exploit. But the fun was short lived. Petit threw McCauley out at llrst and Griflln filed to Dungan , It was a profitless inning for the Brewers , Burke , Petit and Schoch going out in rapid secession , Donnelly making n miraculous ono hand stop of Burko's vicious grounder , nnd throwing him oat nt Hivst , Walsh attending to Bobby In nllko manner , and .Hintny get- ting ¬ In his elegant work a second time on little Georgia Schoch.- In . the second Manager Dan wont out from pitcher to llrst , but Walsh lined her out fora- counlo of acks and another eruption was im- minent ¬ iu the stands. But it didn't erupt worth a continental , for Donnelly hit one to Duugan and the big California !! , by a deft throw , doubled Walsh up with him nt third. For the visitors Dalrymplo filed out to Halligan , Campion made a slnglo and after Schrivor's out to Twitchcll , Kltoljorg hit Grim a smash with the ball. But neither man got homo , for Halligan made ono of the finest catches you oversaw off of DunganM long ily- .And'how . happy the people wero. Eitoljorg began the third by taking his base on a Juggle by Mr. Schoch. A sacrifice by Twitchcll moved him up ninety feet , but in attempting to score on another ono by Halli- gan ¬ ho was caught at the plate. For the Brewers D.ivlcs struck out , nnd Burke , after being presented with Jlrst on balls , was caught trying to steal second , and Potlt Illed out to McCnuley. And the people were happier still. But n change came over their fair dreams In the fourth , for after retiring the Lambs for a blank, Milwaukee came in and by n llttlo lax playing on Omaha's part scored two runs. Actually , tlioy looked as big as houses to the spectators , for they thought that the neony was over. This Is the way they got these tallies. After Schoch had boon retired on a pop-u p to Shannon , Dalrymplo took his base on balls and Walsh's fumble sent Campion tlioro- also. . The crowd looked glum , and glummer still when Ettoljorg hit Scdriver nnd filled the bases- .At . this critical moment "Old Cy" can ght Schrlver napping at llrst , nnd cut him off : then as the three runner. ) wore all between the lines ttioro was ono of the funniest fox-aml-Rooso chases you over hoard of , but no good came of it nil. By somn hook- er crook , after cavorting up and down be- tween the bases for several moments , with the Lambs all about thorn , every Ucor Jerker got bac'.i to his base without bolng touched , nnd the crowd as one man groaned : "OhI oh ! oh ! " Grim Death right hero made a single , a fit- ting ¬ cllnwx to the play Just made , and both Dulryinplu and Campion ran homo. Schrivor , too. had the gall to trv and got in , but Don nelly got the ball and came within an IICH of dislocating the big catcher's nook by the em- phasis ¬ with which ho put it on him tjchrlvo was awful mad , but there was no help for It. Then there was n string of .shlrrod eggs up to the seventh , when Omaha , amidst an up- roar ¬ of wild applause , lied the scoro. What made It so nil-tired nlco was that U was done after two hands wore out. Hero Is the story : Donnelly and Kitcljorg wore quietly ro- tlrod - , then Twitchell made a single and Hal- Ilgan 1- drove him homo on a throo-baggor. It was ucloso call at thoplato , Lurry skating in on his milled shirt half way from third to the Plato ; but Mr. Kntgiit was right there and ho cried "safe. " The crowd yelled and stomped and tcroamcd , while Captain Schoch and his merry imn fairly tore their hair. Then the battle wnxud llorcor still , and not until the last man was out in ttio eleventh tuning would it have been safe to hot either way" . It was one , two , tbrofl n the tenth for both : teams , but in the eleventh there was au ox- plosion. - . Captain Shannon was the first mau at bat for the hlto Sox. and with llttlo ceremony he belted out a three-bagger and tin ) crowd ; yellml and laughed and clapped their hands ns If In wild delirium , for they know that another run meant victory sweet , a wool vic ¬ tory. You V : or we are playing Milwaukee. W H. Walsh wai the next man up , nnd "Now, .Too. hit her ont' ' " was the cry that greeted him from an Hundred throats. And what did .losoy do ) Why , ho hit her out , so out that It made the Brewers turn palot It was another thrco-snckor , but If you think I'm going to try * to depict the scene that ensued in the grand stand , you'ro fooled , that's all. Hut I wilt say that the crowd went all but daft- .It . was so boautlful to do tlioso nasty Mil- waukcans - , who had no llttlo regard for our feelings lost summer. That hit was worth n trip toKuropc , and it came Justin the Nlcodcmusof time , for thu next thrco men furnished easy outs. The Brewers came in to do or dlo. They died , but game- .Dalrymplo . led off with n safe ono , and it began to smell llko brlmcstono right away , but everything was inndo ns sweet as the breath of Araoy in the same Instant , for Hal ¬ ligan after recovering the ball , throw Aimer out to Walsh , the old man having essayed to stretch his llttlo slnglo Into ndoublo. Friday , .lack throw Dal out on third tire snmo way , nnd hereafter you can bet that lio'll have n very healthy rcs | oet for the young man from lirie'.s fair shores. Campion followed with nn out to McCauley but Schnver for the second tlmo hit the ball , but ho had his pains , or pain rather for nothing , for Jimmy Donnelly took Grimes' rifleshot , and thu Brewers wore in the sewor- ."HoyI . hey ! hey 1" yelled the crowd as they broke poll-moll for the gates. Wasn't ' that n iruino though ? The statistic follow : OMAHA. Total 40 'I 3:1 : Z ) 2- MU.WAUKKI : . scour nv CNi.va. ; Omaha 100 u * l .Milwaukee ' 2 Runs earned : Omaha , 3. llaso on balls : Off Kltullorff , 2 ; off Dnvlci. 4. lilt by pltehur : Ily Kltoljoi-tf , ;i. Htruok out : Hy Klteljorx 'Is by lavlc. , ' !. Double plays : Inmnolly to Wulnn , DilliKitn to Orlm. Two-baM) hits : futulllTo , Walsh. Three-bant ) hits ; Hiilllcnn , Shannon , Wul.sli. Kiins hutted In : Hiitulllfc , I ; Unlit- gun , 1 ; Walsh , 1. Tlmo of iramo : Ono hour ami llfty-llvo minutes. Umpire : Alonzo Knight. WfMMKK Kansas Cily Flails St. I'nul In Ap- proved ¬ Style. KANSAS CITY, Mo. , April 18. [ Special Tel- egram ¬ to Tun BnK.I The Blues looked very much moro like champions today than they did yesterday. They defeated St. Paul cos ¬ ily , winning by the wide margin of 14 to 5. The Atiostles after the fourth inning were out of the game. There was n crowd of about twenty-live hundred present and the game scorned to satisfy them perfectly- .It . was not a well played gnmoon St. Paul's- part. . Their pitchers were decidedly on * . Osborno , a left-handed pitcher , now to the Western association , was put In at first. Ho, did pretty well until the iiftli inning, whetr ho began to got wild , giving two men bases on balls. This , coupled with two two-bag¬ gers , n slnglo nnd n sacrifice hit netted live runs. Ho was then replaced by Dalton , who gave eight men bases on balls. The scoro. KANSAS CITV- .u . In I'D A i: KIn ro A K MnnnluK, St . . .l 1 :i Oooclon'li. m..O II 1 u I loKrlovor , rt.2 I 0 U 1 Alilioy , rf.0 0 1 0 0 Smith , If 1 I a U I ) ( Vllourko , 3D.2 llourur , IM..1 U U U 0 O'llrleiitb..O 2 l.F 1 0 Hloiirnr * , 11)l ; 3 II 0 0 Kly , 8 0 2221 IMrkott , D8.3 1 2 II 0 llnmliure , lf. . ( ) b 0 0 0 Carpenter , 3tI ( Conley,2b 1 o 4 Ii 0 CllnHoii.c t 2700 llnllwlno .. .U 0221 l'oirs ; , | I 0060 Osliorne , 1 0 0020 Dnllon , p 2 1030T- olnl Total K 10 27 12 2 5 7 S7 17 4 1 V INM.VCS- .Kani.li . City 1 0 0 3 6 1 2 2 0--1I Ht. I'aul 0 0 0 0 i- bCOUK SUMMAKV. Huns enrnccl : Kiuisna City , 4. Stolen baios : HoKrlovor , Hoover , ( iooili-noiiKh , O'llourko. llnses on hulls ; Oil txilton , 8 ; oil Oiborno. 4; oft Tours , 2. lilt by pitched bull : Oalinrno nnd U'ltourke. Struck out : Ily , : ; bjr Dnllun , 8. Wild pitches ; Ily Tears , lbjr ; IMIton , I. Two-train lilts ; Hraltli. Oim- nnn - , Hti'nrns , Hourlovor , Osborno , O'llrlcn. Tliroo- liiiso - lilt : ( jtmson. Hncrlllro lilts : ( Jimion , 1'carn , ( loodeiuiiik'li , O'llourko , ( 'onloy. I'tisnud btdla : Ily ( iiui80ii,2 : llalilwln , 2. Tlmo of Bumoi 2:10. Um ¬ pire : ( ialtnoy. ________ tlic Scapegoat.L- INCOI.X . , Nob. , April 18. [ Special Tele- gram ¬ to Tun BiiR.J There Is n strong sus- picion ¬ In Lincoln that John Irwln can't play ball-that the talent in that family was mo- nopolized ¬ by Artio. John's ilrst Daso play today was largely responsible for the third victory won by the Millers , and ho was aided greatly by Stafford's wildness. Shugart emulated this pair , but his errors were not so- costly. . The game was not Interesting at any point. Lincoln had it well In hand up to the eighth inning, when the comedy commenced , and ondcd only after Minneapolis had scored live runs and the gnmo. This diagram will give some idea of the scene of the catas ¬ trophe : I.l.M'OI.S MINXKAl'OUS. U 111 I' A K Hill I'O A B Irwln , Ib . 2 2712 Murphy , cf..l 0300 Itnymomt , 3b,0 0030 tfliUKiutss. .. . ' , ' 2 1 2 4 J. Howe , m..l Mlnnchnn , rf.O 2310 llurkclt , lf.0 Ityn , Ib . 0 0 2 0 I'atlon , of . U 0 ( (1 2 Carroll. U . 0 0010 Tomney2b.2 0 I n I Karl , 3b . I ). Itinvf , rf..O 12T- rnDlay llciiidc , 2b.l 2122 , c . 0 04 10 Iloimn.c . I 0210 Htntrorcl , p. . . .I 0000 Ilnrtson. p. .. .2 3 0 II 0 Hnncli. P.-.0 0000 lliiKilulo. o. . . Purllnt , ' , Ib . 221 Total ! . 0 OS ! II Totals ) 27 10 7- SCOIIK IIV INXIXflS- .Ilneoln . . 0 A Minneapolis . 2 0002005' 9 HUMMAH- V.Kuns . earned : Minneapolis , a Two base lilts : Hart-son. Karl , llonulo plays : lltitton to Irwln. Huso on balls : OiT Stafford , r ; otr r llartson. 2. lilt by pitcher : Hanson. Struck out : Ily Stafford 4: l> y llartson , a Wild pitches : StulVord , a. Tlmo of game , ono hour and fifty minutes. Umpire , Kinsllu. Lost HIM I'1 ! rut.- Dr.NVKit . , Colo. , April 18. [ Special Tele- gram ¬ to Tin : BKI :. ] The grounds nt Athletic pork this afternoon wore rather too damp for expert ball playing, but both teams put up a good game. Kamsoy , who made his reputa- tion ¬ with the Louisville's years ago , was In the box for Denver , Uoynolds supported him. Dowald pitched for the visitors with Strauss behind the bat. following is the score : DK.VVKU.- II . SIOUX CITV- .Klllt . lilt I'O A K- McC.lono I'D AE , 3b.J 3 2 4 1 Ti Strums , c I 4 1 I 0 bonnof.0 0000 Hhultx'clcs-.l a 0 1 I .McCJullan. 3b.O 0000O- MIrlon VunDjrku , cf..O 0 3 0 0 , Ib,0 0 U 1 0- .MdJarr Hwartwood.rr.U 1000 , s. . .0 0 1 H 0 .Morrl er. Ib.l 0 U 1 1 White , us. . .. Nicholson , 2b.O Curtliof tiennltu , Ub..l 2 3 2 U UojruoMa , o. . .0 0 0 4 I Kurt. If 1 1010 llnmioy , p. ... Downl.l , p I 1 0 3 0- Tolnl Tolnl 6 821 ID 3 0 l 27 Ti 2 sllKIIV- Uuuror 1 3 Sioux City 0 * 0 Standing ol" tliu Teams. Appended will bo found the standing of the Western association teams up to data : Won. Lost. 1crOt. Mlmiounolls 0 1.000.- CM ) Omaha . Sioux OHy 3 1 VI Kansas City l . .00- 0J St. Paul 1 Milwaukee. 1 3 , : $ Dnnvur 1 . .aa- ooa Llncolu 0 , ) A MKltMCA X ASSOV1A TIOX.- CoIumljiiM . Wins n Model ( inmo from Cinulnnntl.- Couwnvs . , O. , April 18. [ Special Tclo- grnm i- to Tun Bui:. ) Throe thousand pcoplo saw the opening of the championship season here today , Both teams played a model guino , but Cincinnati lost by poor The featurot of the game were the batting of Lohanc. Duffeo and Andrews and fielding of- Vhltnoy , Duffco nnd MoTainaiiy. The score : f'olunibiis 0-3 Cincinnati. 0 0-2 Hits ! Cincinnati , 4 | Columbus.o. Krrorfti Ono ouch , Hutu-riot : liwyi-r and Kelly ; Knston and Dowie. Umpire ! Knell.- WAXIIINOTON. . . April 18. [ Special Telegram to Tun HKK. ] Ttio game was sharply played by the fielders , and wlillo the batting was not heavy , there was enough of It to keep up the interest of the ; i,000 spectators. In the eighth Inning the garao was called on account of rain , The score : Wilmington 1 1 0 2 , 1 2 U-7 llalllhiore 2 1 0 1 0 0 1-B lilts : Washington ,7 | llaltlinorn. 8. Errors : Washington. 2 : llaltlniore , 2. llatti-rles : Oar- ny - nnd McOulru ; Cunningham nnd Townsemr Umpire : . .lone- s.Loi'i.svn.u . : , Ivy. , April IS. [ Special Tele- gram - to Tun BKB. ] Although the Browns made moro hits , Melded better and ran the bases hotter than the Loulsvillos , the cham- pions ¬ won the first game of thu season from St. Louis. Doran was very effective at crit ¬ ical times , and twice when the bases wore full , by good work , struck out nnd llclded out the side. But for Hoy's magnificent work St. Louis Would have boon shut out. Cnhlll played n great game at short for the Louis- vllles. - . Tno score : louUvllle I 0-fl St. Louis I 0-2 Krrors : St. I.ouK 1 : Louisville. I. llano lilts : Louisville , C : St , Louis 12 , llntti-rles Louis- ville ¬ , Doran and Uynn ; St. Louis , Stlvutts and Iloylo. BOSTON , Mass. , April IS. [ Special Tolo- grani - to Tut : Bii.j : : The Boston team ( Amer ¬ ican association ) played the opening cham- pionship ¬ game today with the Athletics. Governor Kusscll and stall nnd Mayor Mathews were present. The Boston club won by superior all-around work. The score : llosion i 0 Athletics 0 000210003llu- su hits : UiHton , 7 : Athletic , 7, Krrors : Huston. 2: Athlnllo ft. Hatlorles : Haddock and I'arrcll ; Woyllnj ? and Urois , Umpire : Hnydor. US SJ.'ft It TS. Players and IMayors. Yesterday the following correspondence passed between Ilobort B. Monroe , manager of the Comedians , Monroe & Kico , Daniel Shannon , manager of the ' Omaha baseball club , and U. H. Cusbman , manager of the Milwaukee baseball club , whoso teams are at present playing the opening championship scries In this city. The correspondence Is- seifexplanatory : Daniel Shannon , Dsti. . Manager Omaha Unao- biill - t'luh Dear Sir : Vein and the members of the Omaha team are respectfully Invited to occupy a box at thu final performance of " .My Aunt ilildgut" by Monroe & Kiev , nt lloyd s opera house on Sunday nlRlit , the 19th Intl. , on which occasion tlm player of cither the .Milwaukee or Omaha club making the host playliiK avoriK : durliigtlionpGiiingchampion- Hhlp series wnl bopresciiited with n srold medal by Aunt Hrldtfut fiom the SIUKO. I'lcuso sig ¬ nify your acceptance Immediately , respectfully , KOIIKIIT II. MONIIOK , Mii iirni Mmirim & Kirn. A similar letter was sent to Manager Cush- mnn - of the Milwaukccs. Manager Shannon responded ns follows : Messrs. Munrno & IJIce , Gentleman : Your genc'rous proposition and courteous Invitation In behalf of myself and men to attend u box party at your uluihiK performance Sunday livening is n pleasant surprise and of course accepted , lours respectfully , DAN SHANNON , Manager Omaha llascbalt Club. And from Manager Cushman ns follows : Holier ! It. Monroe , Dear Sir : Yours of this duto at hand and contents noted. In reply I will siy : that the Milwaukee club accepts your kind Invitation and will expect you to accent an Invitation to witness our amo on Sunday , April 20. Thanklm- yon kindly I am , Yours respectfully , C. II. UITSIIMAN , Manager Milwaukee Baseball Uluh. The badge was finished last night and is a- very handsome trophy , which the lucky win- ner ¬ may well feel proud of. Knees.- Mi'Ml'ins . , Tcnn , , April 18. The track was in good condition today- .Twoyearolds . , half milo : Powers won ; Hlcholiou second ; Henry Jenkins third.- Tlmo . , 62 . Three-quarters of a milo , heats : Holey Boloy won first boat ; Tramp second ; ' Ked Sign third. Time , l:17' : . Second heat : Hod Sign won ; Koloy Boloy second ; Cris- plno - third. Time , 1:17 : U5. In run-off. Hod Sign won. Tlmo , 1:19. Cotton stakes , $1,000 added : mile nnd one- eighth : Bertha won ; Brookwood second ; AUicus third. Tlmo , 1 : :53i <f- .Threeyearold f. maidens , three-quarters of- a milo : The Major won : Kuharma second ; Tom B third. Time , 1:19 : 45. Milo : Insolence won ; Sorrlro second , Jack Murray third. Time , 1:47 : # . The Gnmo This Alt. Omaha nnd Milwaukee will close their Ini- tial ¬ series this afternoon , and the prospects nro that a tremendous crowd will turn out to witness the 11 nal bout. Omaha has taken two of tbo three so far plaved and will put forth superhuman efforts this afternoon to take lu the lost of the series. Following will bo found the positions and batting order of the two clubs : Omaha Twltchell , loft flold ; Hnlllgan , right Held ; Sutcliffo. catcher ; McCauley , llrst base ; (jriflln , mlddlo ; Shannon , second base ; , short stop ; Donnelly , third base ; Clarke , pitcher. Milwaukee Burke , mlddlo , Potlt second base ; Schoch , short stop ; Dalrymplo , loft Held ; Campion , first base ; Schriver , catcher ; Grim , third base ; Dungan , right Held ; Vict- ory ¬ , pitcher. _ :, Tonn. , April IS. [ Special Tel- egram - to Tim BKE. ] Over ono hundred and fifty horses are now.in the stublos at West- Side park and nearly all the horses now taking part in the Memphis moot- ing ¬ will arrive hero next Sunday morning. There will bo cloven days of racing and ns the stakes are ull filled well great sport is anticipated. The S'.OOO sweep- stakes - Is the event of the ilrst day and it promises to bo ono of the hardest fought eon- tests over scon on the Nashville ( rack. The probable starters nro Willow , Sir Abnor , Kthel , Dundee , Llnllthgow , Apex , Dong , ICnapp , Laura Doxey. Too Sweet , Miss Courtuay and Chimes. Llnlithgow Is thought to have the best chance to win. Downed llnj MlHsonrlan. NEKIUSKA CITV, Nob. , April 18. fSpocIal Telegram to Tun Dm; . ) The much talked of wrestling match between M. Blake of St.- NASUVII.U . Joseph , Mo. , and George Harschman of- Avoca , this state , took place at the opera house this afternoon. There was a largo crowd present and n crent deal of money changed hands , the farmers backing the Cuss county man for all they hud. The match was for $100 a side. After the first round It was evident that Blake was not in it , Harschman throwing him In ono minute and thirty poconds. The two succeeding rounds were oven shorter , the Missouri man biting the dust each time. Hot WM lo It- ST. . P.u'i , , Minn. , April 18. Dick Moore of ' this city, n mlddlo weight pugilist , knookod out Jack Stanley of Philadelphia In the ilrst round In n fight for a $ :! 00 purse tonight. The light was very hot while it lasted- .CollejjM . Have the Kover. There was n game of baseball between the Omaha business college and the Omaha com * merclal college yesterday. Score : Omaha Ilunlno.ss Colloio.7 1 24 211 0-30 Oiiiiilm Com. College . 3 10 00 1 0 6- I'itz HUM ConHiunjttlon. Sioux CITV , In. , April 13. [ Special Tele- gram - to TUB BUB. ] The doctors soy that the illness ot Pltchor l-'lUgorald is consumption and that he cannot play ball. JUG FlilK AT ItlTTI K HOCK.- Tlio . Arkansas Capital Sutlers Half a .Million Loss , LITTLE HOCK , Ark. , April 18. Fire origin- ating ¬ In the dry goods establishment of Blass- it Co. , late tonight destroyed tbo old Grand opera housa block , burning out Blass , Loven- son's - liquor store , Florist Smeaman and ICuttmors millinery. The loss will reach $*XX)0 , ( ) , with Insurance of about J-JUO.OOt ) . Car Worku lluriiml , Si-m.somi.it , Mo. , April 18. The Spring. field r kr and foundry works burned tonight. LCDS , $ ,000 ; Insured. COLD HllLlS GREAT PROMISE , n ia Some General frnfonnaUon Concerning tbo Now ' 'Wlimlng Mining Oarap. tont- PROSPECTINGON THE "LEVIATHAN. " ti el. , la. no What Sonic-1Into Doveloiiincnt Work linn Outho : IaraS- urveys. - . [ Staff Corraponilence of The lice. } GOLD HIM , Carbon County , , April 15. However conscientiously n disinterested parson might prosccuto nn Investigation of this now mining district only n partial descrip ¬ tion ot a few of the clnlins already located can bo nttoinptcd at this ttmo. It would scorn like doing nn injustice to the owners of rich prospects to slnglo out particular properties as specimens of the camp. Some of those which must bo dismissed with n mere men ¬ tion or ignored altogether may yet turn- out to bo moro valuable than others which nro now much discussed hero mid have obtained n certain reputa- tion ¬ or notoriety outsluo the camp. Only such persons as have visited Gold Hill during ttio winter and it must bo borne In mind that that season or the effects of it still lingers on , here can appreciate the disad ¬ vantages in trying to measure the importance of the mineral discoveries that have boon made. To say that everything is snowed under gives but a faint idea of the extent to which the elements tiavo contributed towards the mystification of those who have tried to study the camp , and how effectually the snow Iting has guarded the treasures which ore confidently believed to bo locked in those hills , lint there Is n duty which the representative of a nowspaiier Is obli ¬ gated to perform for the public in thu way of a plain statement of all that can be seen here. At the risk of depreciating the importance of rich pros ¬ pects by withholding publlcltv as to their worth as estimated by others , all that can bo expected of n visitor hero now is to talk about what has como under his personal ob ¬ servation. Only Looked for Gold. There Is no discredit attached to a state- GEOGRAPHICAL LOCATION GOLD mcni or incts. t omo 01 tuo early prospoo- tors - hero had not had the bonollt of much ox- porieuco - in locating loads. In some in- stances ¬ they had never seen practical service in the development of mineral llnds. That those men recognized the value of the sur ¬ face indications is but another proof of the richness of their .finds. Every ono in the party appears to have boon impressed by the belief that if they found any leads worth locatintr they must bo gold-boaring. Gold nnd gold alone was what they expected to find. So when a plcco of float was picked up that returned 2OOU ounces to the ton In silver they took it for granted that it came from somewhere else. They hunted for lodges that would prospect for gold and when such were lound they wore satisfied. That is only ono incident of many that forms part of the history of the campaign which resulted in the establishment of this distr'ct. Ono of the most notable of the early loca ¬ tions , Judged by the showing so far uiado , was that of the Leviathan. It was struck well up toward the crest of n high hill in the last days of July of last year. The location was made by L. D. Chase , W. I. Frank nna P. P. Woods. They staked off 1.150 feet in- a northeasterly direction from rich outcrop- pings - and fifty feet to the southwest. The reason they did not talco the full 1.500 foot to which they wore entitled was because they subsequently followed up the lead and traced it along so that they were able to locate an- other ¬ claim adjoining ttio Leviathan on the northeast cud. This is a full claim COO by l.BOO feet. The name , Little Giant , was given to It and the locators were Woods , IJrako and P. C. Arcndoll. Afterwards the Leviathan No. - was located to the south west of the original Lovlathan and beginning at a point fifty feet from the first strike extends 1,500 feet to the southwest. Likely to Find Silver There. These claims are important for tlio reason that there uro evidences that rich silver deposits are likely to bo found underlying the hill. Al- ready ¬ they prospect high up In sil- ver ¬ , although little woric has boon clone on any of the claims , except in the case of the Leviathan No. 1. On that a shaft has been sunk to a depth of 100 feet. On the surface this showed a well defined lodge fully six- teen ¬ foot wide. The owners went down on the load , leaving a streak of quartz four or llvo feet wide to ono side. They timbered down to u depth ot twenty feet , packing in pay dirt hack of the shaft , which is 4 by 7 foot. Going down on the ledge matter till they had sunk seventy feet , they struck an- other ¬ streak of quartz. Leaving that to ono side , they continued down on au Incline with a slope of two' foot in ten. When they reached a depth "of 100 foot they began pros- pecting ¬ for tbo load ! They are now engaged incross-cuttlngfitullnd out the width of the ore body botwood iboth walls. Several good veins hnvo boon found. Ono that varied from ono to two : and nearly three foot was followed for upwards of sixty foot as the shall was sunlc ; 'Other well defined veins from two Inches to a footer moro were struck. Save for a shorttdistanco all the roclc taken out of the Leviathan shaft shows rich In gold. Whore the woijlfuwas stooped there wore good indciatlons of , ijilver. It looks as though carbonates mighTIn ) found on the lower lev- els ¬ , There majUbd a cessation of work on this claim for a while for it is reported that Chose , ono of thetQriglnal locators , has parted with his intercit tp L. G , Davis , who has been n largo Investor here. Cliaso is known to have boon itf'titgotlation with pcoplo who have becii Impros'itd by the good showing made by the Lc'iiihthiin the deeper the shaft was sunk. This those folks saw fqr them ¬ selves. The Otras mining company also has n conditional interest in the claim. By the terms of the bargain made with this company it will bo required to prosecute tbo develop ¬ ment work energetically and provide a mill for the treatment of the oro. Practical Test * to Ho Made. Interest , therefore , Is naturally centered In the Leviathan , because whatever the de- velopment ¬ company propose to do will bo do- pondcnt largely on the report hereafter to bo made by practical men, who will make It tbolr Dusluess to canvass the chances of good returns to bo made oa the investment neces- sary. ¬ . All that the bravo fellows want who have pinned their faith on the future import- ance ¬ of this camp is to have the loads worked honestly. If there is any borrowing done to expose ore bodies to bull tbo piico of claims , It will bo by speculators- to who have been able get a foothold hero when necessity forced locators to part with an Interest to keep themselves n going. This early no prediction * ought to bo has- nrdcJ - as to the probable character of t.ho cnmp. Hut with indication !! no encouraging as those found In the Leviathan It would bo reckless on the part of its owners to ignore them or to delay for long its development. The approaching .WHOM will , under tbo most favorable conditions , bo n short ono for the sort of work requisite in determining whether gold or silver will bo the predomin ¬ ating mineral to bo extracted from the hills. When proper provision ha * been made for It the mines that limy bo developed can bo worked all the year around. IJut what the owners should llrst satisfy themselves about is as to the kind of workings they have to deal with so that machinery can bo brought In before it Is too Into- .Vhlletho . Lovlathan promises much in the way of solving vexed problems the natural locution of the Llttlo Giant or Leviathan No. U may afford means for an earlier determina ¬ tion of the extent and character of the ore bodies In that neighborhood , The Little Giant now has merely n prospect hole on It , ten foot deep. Kook taken out at that depth shows moro tlmn a trnco of silver. It panned out well in gold from the grass roots down. If returns on the rook are not misleading thorn Is assuredly gold in paying quantities As for the Leviathan No. 'J , that possesses some special advantages for prospect work. Some ItOO foot from the shaft house of the Luvlatiinn a tunnel has been driven. The men went in with It twenty-two foot on n northeast and southwesterly course ana the appearance constantly Improved , They have boon encouraged to continue the work and will undoubtedly devote their attention to It when they are free to suspend prospecting on the Levia than. Another Treasure llouio. Another group of claims that shows up well llo on the lilll above the postoflluu. The Laramlo has n sixty-foot tunnel which shows up a four-foot lead. The farther it has been driven ttio morn cneoura lng have been the indications. Work on the Laramlo has been systematically done. Thu claim extends 500 feet cast and 1,1)03 ) foot west from whcro prospecting began. About ono hundred feet bovomi the mouth of the tunnel a shaft has boon put down ton foot. The work turned out so well that the tunnel was started and wiioii they are Joined there will bo a good opportunity afforded for rapid development w irlc. North of the Laramie tunnel , 200 foot , Is the Little Honatiza , and parallel to it. That lias a llfty-foot shaft with a twelve or thlr- tjocnfoot - lead. Good prospacU have been ftnd all the ,vay down and now the rock looks better than it lias at any previous time. The Gold Hill , south of the tunnel , 1ms only boon prospected to a depth of ten or twelve feet. At the surface it looked so well that Its de ¬ velopment would have been pushed could provisions for that work have been mado. But the locators had to quit work on asovon- foot load without getting one wall. There is a cross load known ns the Jack Pine located 500 feet west of the Laramie tunnel. Suf ¬ ficient work 1ms not been done on the Jack Pine to properly estimate the value of the claim , although copper carbonates nro said to have been found in the pros ¬ pect shaft. Parallel to the Llttlo Bonanza is the Snow Flake , which in a twctity.foot shaftshowcd up promisingly and from which rich rock was taken out. All of these claims were located by Alex Lute , Domtim Poutro and E. J. Lewis. They sold the Snow Flake to L. G. Davis , Carbon county's representative in the state legisla ¬ ture. Larnmlo people hnvo purchased an in ¬ terest in the Llttlo Bonanza and are waiting to mniso n mill-run on the ore before deciding to what extent its development will bo car- ried ¬ : , In the Jack Pine , V. C. Ferguson , who runs the stage line from Saratoga to Gold Hill , has acquired nn Interest. He Is so snn- gulno - as to its ultimate high commercial value that ho has refused n sum which might bo regarded ns excessive for a mere pros ¬ pect. But ho did not act on his own judg ¬ ment ns to the desirability of holding onto it , being guided by the advice of an experienced milling man- .In . the neighborhood of Greene's camp , which is the present terminus of the stage line , are several promising claims. Tho. Acme Is down fifty feet or moro and is showing In ¬ dications of carbonate. Its appearance has been encouraging all the way down , nnd the load shows a number of veins varying in- thickness. . The rock makes gratifying re turns. Work was recently started on the En- tcrprlso - , which having boon squared up and timbered , Is now lu good shape for energetic development , lUnoh Work Already Dono. There are only n few of the many claims taken up. Up to the present tlmo eighty-two have been recorded. As the Wyoming law requires that n ten-foot hole must bo put down before this formality can legally bo carrlo ;! out , it is rcaionnblo to Infer 'that nt loait this nmouiit of work has In each case been done In compliance with the law. Therefore , It will bo soon that enough has already been done to demonstrate whether or not there is mineral hero. So far ns I have boon nblo to learn there is not A slnglo Instance whcro the nppoaranco of a le.ul has not Improved the farther down on it the owners have gone. That Is noticea ¬ bly the case with the Omaha , which has just been surveyed after a shaft was sunk. That is the property of W. B. Hugus & Co. , in which Messrs. Heals , Mulllson anil others nro Interested. Ono of the moro recent strikes was that in the ! Volghtlund owned by U. P. Arcndoll and Messrs. Mngoo mid Murkul , That prospects well and some rich specimens nro reported to have boon taken out , but 1 have not soon them. This is encouraging , for it is tlmucht that the Volghtlaud Is an ex ¬ tension of tho.Lovlathau. Some mention ought to bo nindo of the Buckeye , on Gold Uun , located about n milo from the postofllco and Just below the Patent lilght , the Jlr.st , claim located lu the now dis ¬ trict last .summer. To B. P. Arondoll belongs the credit of the original find which started all the excitement that has boon created. Both of those claims nnd several In that Im- mediate ¬ vicinity prospect well , Tlu- Wyoming is the claim which has fur- nished ¬ most of the rich specimens that have helped to advertise the district among those who have not had n chance to como hero to- sco for themselves what has been found. That is as yet merely n prospect. It has boon snowed under lor some time nnd n per- sonal Inspection of the 14-font shaft ran not bo made now. The Wyoming rock that has been exhibited is marvelously rich. Those who hud an oppor ¬ tunity for investigating it are all unanimous in the belief that the big vein from which such richness was taken out is not likely to pinch out , but that a strong llssuro vein has been uncovered. The ownership to this claim has bct'n so largely Increased as to the number of ititorost.s that it is dlfllcult to hoop track of all the holdings in It. If the Wyo ming continues as goo , ! n claim as It has hitherto prospected , enough mineral can be taken out to enrich the owners. Guarding Against DUHoiiNious , There has boon much sagacious forethought displayed on nil sldo for making this a proi- l.orous - and orderly camp , should the de- t.nsit4 - ttivtl nut. na ntitti.Mtntnil A1..1 OF HILL has already boon made in a previ- ous ¬ nrtlclo to the voluntary agreement amonc the miners to restrict their claims to smaller dimensions than they wore entitled under the United States milling laws. They agreed to take 150 feet on each side of the load , instead of , ' !UO foot. That was to avoid contentious that wore liable on account of the crowding of the loads tosrethor. Some question arose as to the right of ono or moro of the owners of tlio Wyoming to bind their associates to this agreement to which then- assent had not boon asked. An- other ¬ lead was found a few days iigo' J5 foot from the Wyoming shaft. To avoid trouble or complications of any sort , It Is understood that some of the owners of the claim have nl- roudy - consented to deed tbo property oiitido- of the 150-foot limit to the finders of tbo now lead , In law probably the Wyoming owners could claim all of the ! t)0 () feet guaranteed them under the United States laws. But it is Indicative of the spirit of the camp that such proffers of concessions such as that named should bo mado- .I'lnoky . SiirvcyorH Work. Another fortunate thing has been done which will have a tendency to prevent , or nt any rate lessen , the possibilities of litigation. That was the erection of n monument to which claims can bo tied and their dellnlto- location determined. Only n plucky surveyor nnd ono experienced in mountain work would have dared undertake the task which Charley Bellamy of Laramlo e-of for himself. Ho is- an old-tinier and favorite among Wyoming minors. The difllciiltics encountered in hunt ¬ ing lor section corners In n wilderness of snow ton to llftccn feet deep on a level , with big drifts scattered abou1. indiscriminately can only Iw appreciated by a far-western sur ¬ veyor. Hut Hcllamy started out to do that and ho didn't give up till ho had succeeded. This having been accomplished a t'nltod States land mark rfas erected. It Is In the southeast quarter of what will bo section 0 , or to bo exact , feet south of the center of the north boundary of the township , wlltcfrl- .s - six nnd n quarter miles long , The menu ¬ ment is mnrkcd on the accompanying map , pmimrcd oxprtssly for Tnr. HKB bv Mr. nellamy. Township 10. In which Oolil Hilt is situated , lias been survcved , but not soo- lionized. - . Without doubt that work will done as soon ns the snow goes off, Hut It will not make much difference , for the pies- cut nt least , If the divisions have not boon de ¬ fined. The law provides that iwhoro claims nro located moro than two miles from n section comer thor may bo tied to some monument whoso location has been accurately delimit. As most of the claims In the district sirfnr- taken ii ] ) nro moro than two miles from tlio section corners the monument is all that U needed to describe thorn. Surveyor Hotlamy has boon engaged for several weeks insurveying claims , and this work will keep him busy for ten days or moro to como. Since n rush of prospectors Is expected these safeguards are rendered al most un absolute necessity to claim owners , who appreciate the necessity for having their property accurately laid olT. Hut their action is in the line of evidence that tends to prove that Gold Hill Is bound to become a good camp. Giomm : T. CAMS. : ALTOX IIOV1OTT.- It . In Work I ni ; A dmlrahly anil ImrcaH- Int - : I lie Itcmd'w ItiisliicMs. Ciiirioo , April is. Alton officials are very cheerful. They asjcrt that the trunk line boycott Is working admirably , and that bust ness was never better. A prominent oniciat- of another western road , commenting on the situation , said ho had assorted" from the llrst that the boycott Is the best thing that could have happened for the Alton. Thousands of people to whoao American Ideas the word "boycott" is repugnant , will sacrifice convenience. If need be, to give the Alton business , and certainly the ticket agents outside , who nro forbidden to sell , will do all In their power to help the Alton. If the fight is kept up long , it is not unlikely to rosiit in a bitter rate war. Tbo Alton is bound to protect its business , and may not long be able to do this wlthoutshiuhlngiatcs.- A . Union l acjllU ? Denial.D- KXVIMI . , Colo. , April IS. In nn interview hero tonight General Manager Chirk of the ing freight from the Chicago , t Northwest- ern ¬ and says the innimircmcnt is disposed to live up to its contract. Ho says there Is no truth in the assertion thnt.Kd Dickinson has been appointed general manager of thoUnion Pacific in place of Holcomb. Ho would not say , however , Unit such appointment may not bo made In the future. The Pacillc Short Line. Sioux CITV, la. , April IS. ( Special Tele- gram to Tin : Bii.J : : Kecoivcr Blorbowor today states that the finances of the Pacillo short line nro getting into nice shape, that the road is moro than paying expenses and that arrangements are being made for the use of the Chicago & Northwestern , it has leaked out that negotiations have boon in progress whereby the Pacillo short line may become Identilled with the Chicago & North- western road. v Preliminary Work.- CITV . , S. D. , April IS.-fSpcdal Telegram to Tun Bii.J :: Chief Kngincoi- Halnos , of the Hapld City. Missouri Hlver A; St. Paul , the now local company recently or- ganized to build across the reservation , loaves Monday with a complete corps and outllt t i run n preliminary line to the Cheyenne river. Local subscriptions to the company's stock already exceed ono hundred and llfty thou- sand ¬ with the capitalists of the east end to hear from- .CoiiHiilur . Seal System Suspended , WASIMXOTOX , April IS. Secretary Footer has decided to suspend the consular seal sys- tem ¬ on cars and adopt the systdm of locked CUM nnd manifests , which , It is believed , will suit of an investigation instituted by Secre- tary Windom , which showed that the gov- ernment ¬ was lo-ilng money and the mer- chants ¬ losing goods under the seal system. Nearly the whole tlmo of United States consuls nt some ports In Canada Is taken up in scaling ears for the transportation of goods In transit through the United States. Moreover , the traftlo 1ms grown to such proportions that it is beyond the ability of the department to make sure In all eases that goods are not dropped at point : . within the United States. Under the now system cars in transit will bo stopped at the nearest port on the border and examined by treasury olllcors , who will place upon the cars treasury locks. Home Uneasiness WASIIISOTOX , April 18.Tho prospective largo payments on account of pensions , pub- lic works , maturing bonds , etc. , nnd the rather low ebb of receipts , with the resulting possibilities of the disappearance of the su1- plus , is causing some uneasiness among the financial officers of the treasury. Besides endeavoring to put in circulation subsidiary silver coin , Soercn iry Foster has In vlow an- other ¬ plan concerning the 4> per cent bonds amounting to $ . 0,000,000 , which mature next September. The secretory believes the national bunks , which hold $12,000,003 of those bonds , would ho glad to retain thorn as- u basis for circulation oven at a reduced rate of Interest. It is regarded as feasible , per ¬ haps , to llont these bonds at 2 per coat. The secretary llnds u precedent for the plan in the action of Secretary Windom In 1SSI. > The Best Spring Medicine If you have The peculiar requirements We confidently Never Tak- enHood's * spring medicine are so- preeminently Recommend possessed by Hood's Sarsaparilla that is by Hood's far the best for this purpose.- We . Sarsaparilla know that by it's Pecu- liar ¬ Sarsaparilla Combination , Proportion Why not try it and Preparation it possesses If you need a This Spring ? It unequalled curative powers , Medicine wh- ichPurifies and b } ' its results it is con- stantly ¬ Purifies proving its positive merit- .Hood's . The Blood from the blood Sarsaparilla all the impuri- ties expels ¬ The Blood which have accumulated Cures Scrofula , during the winter , and also Aids Digestion Salt Rheum cures scrofula , salt rheum and Cures Dyspepsia And all Humors , other severe forms of blood Sick Headache , disease , inherited or acquired Makes the liy its tonic and eliminativc Makes the it assists qualities so the Weak Stron stomach and digestive organs Weak that it cures dyspepsia , bilious- ness ¬ Strong , etc. It also gives such And Creates strength to the whole system And builds up A good Appetite.- Be . that it effectually overcomes The Nervous System sure to g- etHood's That Tired Feeli- ng.Hood's . Be sure to g- etHood's Sarsaparilla Sarsaparilla Sarsaparilla | Hold by ull druggists. II ; six fortt I'repircU fold by nil drugzl'itH. ' IU six for II. l'ropir : cl Hold by alldru i5l t . Ill ilxrorfft P t ; .aie4 only by U. I, HOOD CO. , l.ownll , Mim- .10O . only by U I. IIOOU i CO. , Lowell. Mat *. only by U. I. HUUD& CO. , { .enroll , MM *. Dosog Ono Dollar 100 I50BPB Ono 100 Dooea Ono Dollar

The Best Medicine · SHANNON'S' LAMBS ARE ONLY WOLVES, They Surprised nnd Conquered the Jlrcwnrs Oilier Western "Winners American AHSoulallon Games Homo HporlhiK Gossip. Omaha, ft

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Page 1: The Best Medicine · SHANNON'S' LAMBS ARE ONLY WOLVES, They Surprised nnd Conquered the Jlrcwnrs Oilier Western "Winners American AHSoulallon Games Homo HporlhiK Gossip. Omaha, ft

PAOTCfl.

THEIR VENGEANCE GLUTTED ,

Omaha's' Ball Players Dot Even with theOutfit from Wisconsin

SHANNON'S' LAMBS ARE ONLY WOLVES ,

They Surprised nnd Conquered theJlrcwnrs Oilier Western "Winners

American AHSoulallon GamesHomo HporlhiK Gossip.

Omaha , ft ; Milwaukee , 2.Minneapolis , 0 ; Lincoln , 0.Kansas City , 14 ; St. Paul , 5.Sioux City , C ; Denver , C-

.A

.

largo and cnthuslasil c crowd took a halfholiday yesterday to go out to McCormlckpark and sco the Lambs nnd Brewers tryconclusions again ,

And the people wore not sorry they madethe Journey , for they saw the homo team winono of the most brilliant nnd exciting con-

tests¬

over waged In these parts.-It

.

was n ''lavcii liinlnper.-Tno

.

day was again Just right for ball play-ing

-bright nnd breezy and the audience at-

tracted¬

to the purl : won n representative ono.And the ladles were there In goodly num-

bers¬

nnd transformed the usually forbiddinggrand stnnd into a bower of radiance nnd-beauty. .

Of the 2,000 people on hand every ono hadgone more to cheer Omaha on to victory , andthey did it-

.Milwaukee.

was royally wollopped.-In

.

the words of Count Tolstoi the gamewas n lily.

The Ilrcwors went into the light with thebest intentions in the world , but they dis-covered

¬

tliat Shannon's "Lambs were onlywolves In shocps1 clothing. They not onivused the stick with effect , hut played a field ¬

ing game that fairly sclntilllatod.-Kitcljorg's

.

pitching was superb.-Davis'

.was very good , too , on nn average ,

but Omaha irot his range Just nt the propertimes. Twltchell , Halligan , Sutcliffo , Shan-non

¬

, Walsh and Eltoljorp fairly plasteredthemselves with dust and glory-

.Sutcliffo.

drove in the llrst run , Halliganthe second and Walsh the third all of themearned good and solid.

Lot mo toll you that tbls is hall playing.Hut the bright particular star of the day

was Jimmy Donnelly. That boy has Justclambered up hand over hand into popularfavor, and tlio bleachers would dlo for him.His phenomenal stops nnd pickups and light-ning

¬

throws were of the indescribable order.Maybe Ids last achievement , tuning n red-hot

Hut In the exuberance of praise the Brew-ers

¬

must not bo overlooked. They wore inthe thickest of the fight from the openingpun to the last dying wail. Petit, Schoch ,Dalrymplo , Schrlver , and In fact the wholegang, played as if their lives were nt stake.

Ana poor Gush "He's in the asylum now. "There was another individual present at

the carnage also , and his name was KnightAlonzo Knight , the groat. His umpiring wasof the order that deserves commemoration ,bolncr as clean and perfect as such a diftlcult-plcco of work could be , and as impartial asthe sun Is to the earth.-

Ho.

is as impregnable to the roarings ofCaptain Schoch and his oleaginous lieuten-ants

¬

as ho Is to their blandishments orcoaxings.-

In.

n few words , ho is an umpire.But the picnic-.Twltchell

.

led off with a strike out and amurmur of incipient discontent oozed throughthe stands. They wore metamorphosed thenext Instant , however, Into n bubble of de-light

-by a safe drlvo by Colonel Hntllgan

from Buffalo. Then "Old Cy" Sutcliffo wasIntroduced. Ho took his position nt the pintoand swung back his telegraph polo llko it-

woodchopper at a rail-splitting match.Mr. Davlos , after taking n good look at him ,

aimed the sphere at his lower vest button ,

hut Instead of hitting the mark it How againstSilt's' club. The concussion sounded llko apeanut sack when yon blow It up and setdown on It , and while Mr Davlos was stillwondering what had happened the hall hadlanded among the loft Held carriages , Halli-gan

-was homo nnd "Old Cy" was blowing

his hollows on bag number two.You ought to have heard the mad shouts

that greeted this exploit.But the fun was short lived. Petit threw

McCauley out at llrst and Griflln filed toDungan ,

It was a profitless inning for the Brewers ,Burke , Petit and Schoch going out in rapidsecession , Donnelly making n miraculous onohand stop of Burko's vicious grounder , nndthrowing him oat nt Hivst , Walsh attendingto Bobby In nllko manner , and .Hintny get-ting

¬

In his elegant work a second time onlittle Georgia Schoch.-

In.

the second Manager Dan wont out frompitcher to llrst , but Walsh lined her out fora-counlo of acks and another eruption was im-minent

¬

iu the stands. But it didn't eruptworth a continental , for Donnelly hit one toDuugan and the big California ! ! , by a deftthrow , doubled Walsh up with him nt third.

For the visitors Dalrymplo filed out toHalligan , Campion made a slnglo and afterSchrivor's out to Twitchcll , Kltoljorg hitGrim a smash with the ball. But neitherman got homo , for Halligan made ono of thefinest catches you oversaw off of DunganMlong ily-

.And'how.

happy the people wero.Eitoljorg began the third by taking his base

on a Juggle by Mr. Schoch. A sacrifice byTwitchcll moved him up ninety feet , but inattempting to score on another ono by Halli-gan

¬

ho was caught at the plate.For the Brewers D.ivlcs struck out , nnd

Burke , after being presented with Jlrst onballs , was caught trying to steal second , andPotlt Illed out to McCnuley.

And the people were happier still.But n change came over their fair dreams

In the fourth , for after retiring the Lambsfor a blank, Milwaukee came in and by nllttlo lax playing on Omaha's part scoredtwo runs.

Actually , tlioy looked as big as houses tothe spectators , for they thought that theneony was over.

This Is the way they got these tallies.After Schoch had boon retired on a pop-u p

to Shannon , Dalrymplo took his base on ballsand Walsh's fumble sent Campion tlioro-also. .

The crowd looked glum , and glummer stillwhen Ettoljorg hit Scdriver nnd filled thebases-

.At.

this critical moment "Old Cy" can ghtSchrlver napping at llrst , nnd cut him off :then as the three runner. ) wore all betweenthe lines ttioro was ono of the funniestfox-aml-Rooso chases you over hoardof, but no good came of it nil. By somn hook-er crook , after cavorting up and down be-tween the bases for several moments , withthe Lambs all about thorn , every Ucor Jerkergot bac'.i to his base without bolng touched ,nnd the crowd as one man groaned :

"OhI oh ! oh !"Grim Death right hero made a single , a fit-

ting¬

cllnwx to the play Just made , and bothDulryinplu and Campion ran homo. Schrivor ,too. had the gall to trv and got in , but Donnelly got the ball and came within an IICH ofdislocating the big catcher's nook by the em-phasis

¬

with which ho put it on himtjchrlvo was awful mad , but there was no

help for It.Then there was n string of .shlrrod eggs up

to the seventh , when Omaha , amidst an up-roar

¬

of wild applause , lied the scoro. Whatmade It so nil-tired nlco was that U was doneafter two hands wore out.

Hero Is the story :

Donnelly and Kitcljorg wore quietly ro-tlrod

-, then Twitchell made a single and Hal-

Ilgan1-

drove him homo on a throo-baggor.It was ucloso call at thoplato , Lurry skating

in on his milled shirt half way from third tothe Plato ; but Mr. Kntgiit was right thereand ho cried "safe. "

The crowd yelled and stomped andtcroamcd , while Captain Schoch and hismerry imn fairly tore their hair.

Then the battle wnxud llorcor still , and notuntil the last man was out in ttio eleventhtuning would it have been safe to hot eitherway" .

It was one , two , tbrofl n the tenth for both:teams , but in the eleventh there was au ox-plosion.

-.

Captain Shannon was the first mau at batfor the hlto Sox. and with llttlo ceremonyhe belted out a three-bagger and tin ) crowd

;

yellml and laughed and clapped their handsns If In wild delirium , for they know thatanother run meant victory sweet , a wool vic ¬

tory.You V : or we are playing Milwaukee.W H. Walsh wai the next man up , nnd

"Now , .Too. hit her ont''" was the cry thatgreeted him from an Hundred throats.

And what did .losoy do )

Why , ho hit her out , so out that It made theBrewers turn palot

It was another thrco-snckor , but If youthink I'm going to try * to depict the scenethat ensued in the grand stand , you'ro fooled ,that's all.

Hut I wilt say that the crowd went all butdaft-

.It.

was so boautlful to do tlioso nasty Mil-waukcans

-, who had no llttlo regard for our

feelings lost summer.That hit was worth n trip toKuropc , and it

came Justin the Nlcodcmusof time , for thunext thrco men furnished easy outs.

The Brewers came in to do or dlo.They died , but game-.Dalrymplo

.

led off with n safe ono , and itbegan to smell llko brlmcstono right away ,but everything was inndo ns sweet as thebreath of Araoy in the same Instant , for Hal ¬

ligan after recovering the ball , throw Aimerout to Walsh , the old man having essayed tostretch his llttlo slnglo Into ndoublo.

Friday , .lack throw Dal out on third tiresnmo way , nnd hereafter you can bet thatlio'll have n very healthy rcs | oet for theyoung man from lirie'.s fair shores.

Campion followed with nn out to McCauleybut Schnver for the second tlmo hit theball , but ho had his pains , or pain rather fornothing , for Jimmy Donnelly took Grimes'rifleshot , and thu Brewers wore in thesewor-

."HoyI.

hey ! hey 1" yelled the crowd as theybroke poll-moll for the gates.

Wasn't' that n iruino though ?

The statistic follow :

OMAHA.

Total 40 'I 3:1: Z ) 2-

MU.WAUKKI : .

scour nv CNi.va.;

Omaha 100 u *l.Milwaukee ' 2

Runs earned : Omaha , 3. llaso on balls : OffKltullorff , 2 ; off Dnvlci. 4. lilt by pltehur : IlyKltoljoi-tf , ;i. Htruok out : Hy Klteljorx 'Is bylavlc. , '! . Double plays : Inmnolly to Wulnn ,DilliKitn to Orlm. Two-baM ) hits : futulllTo ,Walsh. Three-bant ) hits ; Hiilllcnn , Shannon ,Wul.sli. Kiins hutted In : Hiitulllfc , I ; Unlit-gun , 1 ; Walsh , 1. Tlmo of iramo : Ono hourami llfty-llvo minutes. Umpire : AlonzoKnight.

WfMMKK

Kansas Cily Flails St. I'nul In Ap-proved

¬

Style.KANSAS CITY, Mo. , April 18. [ Special Tel-

egram¬

to Tun BnK.I The Blues looked verymuch moro like champions today than theydid yesterday. They defeated St. Paul cos ¬

ily , winning by the wide margin of 14 to 5.The Atiostles after the fourth inning wereout of the game. There was n crowd of abouttwenty-live hundred present and the gamescorned to satisfy them perfectly-

.It.

was not a well played gnmoon St. Paul's-part. . Their pitchers were decidedly on*

.Osborno , a left-handed pitcher , now to theWestern association , was put In at first. Ho,did pretty well until the iiftli inning , whetrho began to got wild , giving two men baseson balls. This , coupled with two two-bag¬gers , n slnglo nnd n sacrifice hit netted liveruns. Ho was then replaced by Dalton , whogave eight men bases on balls. The scoro.

KANSAS CITV-

.u

.

In I'D A i : KIn ro A KMnnnluK , St . . .l 1 : i Oooclon'li. m..O II 1 uI loKrlovor , rt.2 I 0 U 1 Alilioy , rf.0 0 1 0 0Smith , If 1 I a U I ) ( Vllourko , 3D.2llourur , IM..1 U U U 0 O'llrleiitb..O 2 l.F 1 0Hloiirnr * , 11)l; 3 II 0 0 Kly , 8 0 2221IMrkott , D8.3 1 2 II 0 llnmliure , lf. . ( ) b 0 0 0Carpenter , 3tI( Conley,2b 1 o 4 Ii 0CllnHoii.c t 2700 llnllwlno . . .U 0221l'oirs; , | I 0060 Osliorne , 1 0 0020Dnllon , p 2 1030T-

olnlTotal K 10 27 12 2

5 7 S7 17 4

1 V INM.VCS-.Kani.li

.

City 1 0 0 3 6 1 2 2 0--1IHt. I'aul 0 0 0 0 i-

bCOUK

SUMMAKV.Huns enrnccl : Kiuisna City , 4. Stolen baios :

HoKrlovor , Hoover , ( iooili-noiiKh , O'llourko. llnseson hulls ; Oil txilton , 8 ; oil Oiborno. 4 ; oft Tours , 2.lilt by pitched bull : Oalinrno nnd U'ltourke. Struckout : Ily , : ; bjr Dnllun , 8. Wild pitches ; IlyTears , lbjr; IMIton , I. Two-train lilts ; Hraltli. Oim-nnn-

, Hti'nrns , Hourlovor , Osborno , O'llrlcn. Tliroo-liiiso-

lilt : ( jtmson. Hncrlllro lilts : ( Jimion , 1'carn ,( loodeiuiiik'li , O'llourko , ( 'onloy. I'tisnud btdla : Ily( iiui80ii,2 : llalilwln , 2. Tlmo of Bumoi 2:10. Um ¬

pire : ( ialtnoy. ________tlic Scapegoat.L-

INCOI.X.

, Nob. , April 18. [Special Tele-gram

¬

to Tun BiiR.J There Is n strong sus-picion

¬

In Lincoln that John Irwln can't playball-that the talent in that family was mo-nopolized

¬

by Artio. John's ilrst Daso playtoday was largely responsible for the thirdvictory won by the Millers , and ho was aidedgreatly by Stafford's wildness. Shugartemulated this pair , but his errors were not so-costly. . The game was not Interesting at anypoint. Lincoln had it well In hand up to theeighth inning , when the comedy commenced ,and ondcd only after Minneapolis had scoredlive runs and the gnmo. This diagram willgive some idea of the scene of the catas ¬

trophe :

I.l.M'OI.S MINXKAl'OUS.

U 111 I' A K Hill I'O A BIrwln , Ib.2 2712 Murphy , cf..l 0300Itnymomt , 3b,0 0030 tfliUKiutss. . . . ',' 2 1 2 4J. Howe , m..l Mlnnchnn , rf.O 2310llurkclt , lf.0 Ityn , Ib. 0 0 2 0I'atlon , of.U 0 ((1 2 Carroll. U. 0 0010Tomney2b.2 0I

n I Karl , 3b. I) . Itinvf , rf..O 12T-

rnDlay llciiidc , 2b.l 2122, c.0 04 10 Iloimn.c. I 0210Htntrorcl , p. . . .I 0000 Ilnrtson. p. . . .2 3 0 II 0Hnncli. P.-.0 0000 lliiKilulo. o. . .

Purllnt ,' , Ib. 221Total !. 0 OS ! IITotals ) 27 10 7-

SCOIIK IIV INXIXflS-.Ilneoln

..0 AMinneapolis.2 0002005' 9

HUMMAH-V.Kuns

.earned : Minneapolis , a Two baselilts : Hart-son. Karl , llonulo plays : lltittonto Irwln. Huso on balls : OiT Stafford , r ; otrrllartson. 2. lilt by pitcher : Hanson. Struckout : Ily Stafford 4 : l>y llartson , a Wildpitches : StulVord , a. Tlmo of game , ono hourand fifty minutes. Umpire , Kinsllu.

Lost HIM I'1 ! rut.-Dr.NVKit

., Colo. , April 18. [ Special Tele-

gram¬

to Tin : BKI : . ] The grounds nt Athleticpork this afternoon wore rather too damp forexpert ball playing , but both teams put up agood game. Kamsoy , who made his reputa-tion

¬

with the Louisville's years ago , was Inthe box for Denver , Uoynolds supportedhim. Dowald pitched for the visitors withStrauss behind the bat. following is thescore :

DK.VVKU.-

II

. SIOUX CITV-

.Klllt

.

lilt I'O A K-

McC.lonoI'D A E

, 3b.J 3 2 4 1

TiStrums , c I 4 1 I 0bonnof.0 0000 Hhultx'clcs-.l a 0 1 I

.McCJullan. 3b.O 0000O-MIrlon

VunDjrku , cf..O 0 3 0 0, Ib,0 0 U 1 0-

.MdJarrHwartwood.rr.U 1000, s. . .0 0 1 H 0 .Morrl er. Ib.l 0 U 1 1

White , us. . . . Nicholson , 2b.OCurtliof tiennltu , Ub..l 2 3 2 UUojruoMa , o. . . 0 0 0 4 I Kurt. If 1 1010llnmioy , p. . . . Downl.l , p I 1 0 3 0-

TolnlTolnl 6 821 ID 3 0 l 27 Ti 2

sllKIIV-Uuuror 1 3Sioux City 0 * 0

Standing ol" tliu Teams.Appended will bo found the standing of the

Western association teams up to data :

Won. Lost. 1crOt.Mlmiounolls 0 1.000.-CM

)

Omaha .Sioux OHy 3 1 VIKansas City l . .00-

0JSt. Paul 1

Milwaukee. 1 3 , : $Dnnvur 1 . .aa-

ooaLlncolu 0 , )

A MKltMCA X ASSOV1A TIOX.-

CoIumljiiM

.

Wins n Model (inmo fromCinulnnntl.-

Couwnvs.

, O. , April 18. [ Special Tclo-grnm

i-to Tun Bui:. ) Throe thousand pcoplo

saw the opening of the championship seasonhere today , Both teams played a modelguino , but Cincinnati lost by poor

The featurot of the game were the batting ofLohanc. Duffeo and Andrews and fielding of-Vhltnoy , Duffco nnd MoTainaiiy. The

score :

f'olunibiis 0-3Cincinnati. 0 0-2

Hits ! Cincinnati , 4 | Columbus.o. KrrorftiOno ouch , Hutu-riot : liwyi-r and Kelly ;Knston and Dowie. Umpire ! Knell.-

WAXIIINOTON..

. April 18. [ Special Telegramto Tun HKK. ] Ttio game was sharply playedby the fielders , and wlillo the batting was notheavy , there was enough of It to keep up theinterest of the ;i,000 spectators. In the eighthInning the garao was called on account ofrain , The score :

Wilmington 1 1 0 2, 1 2 U-7llalllhiore 2 1 0 1 0 0 1-Blilts : Washington , 7 | llaltlinorn. 8. Errors :

Washington. 2 : llaltlniore , 2. llatti-rles : Oar-ny

-nnd McOulru ; Cunningham nnd TownsemrUmpire : . .lone-

s.Loi'i.svn.u.

: , Ivy. , April IS. [ Special Tele-gram

-to Tun BKB. ] Although the Browns

made moro hits , Melded better and ran thebases hotter than the Loulsvillos , the cham-pions

¬

won the first game of thu season fromSt. Louis. Doran was very effective at crit ¬

ical times , and twice when the bases worefull , by good work , struck out nnd llclded outthe side. But for Hoy's magnificent workSt. Louis Would have boon shut out. Cnhlllplayed n great game at short for the Louis-vllles.

-. Tno score :

louUvllle I 0-flSt. Louis I 0-2Krrors : St. I.ouK 1 : Louisville. I. llano lilts :Louisville , C : St , Louis 12 , llntti-rles Louis-ville

¬, Doran and Uynn ; St. Louis , Stlvutts andIloylo.

BOSTON , Mass. , April IS. [Special Tolo-grani

-to Tut : Bii.j: : The Boston team (Amer¬

ican association ) played the opening cham-pionship

¬

game today with the Athletics.Governor Kusscll and stall nnd MayorMathews were present. The Boston clubwon by superior all-around work. The score :

llosion i 0Athletics 0 000210003llu-su hits : UiHton , 7 : Athletic , 7, Krrors :

Huston. 2 : Athlnllo ft. Hatlorles : Haddockand I'arrcll ; Woyllnj ? and Urois , Umpire :

Hnydor.

US SJ.'ft It TS.

Players and IMayors.Yesterday the following correspondence

passed between Ilobort B. Monroe , managerof the Comedians , Monroe & Kico , DanielShannon , manager of the ' Omaha baseballclub , and U. H. Cusbman , manager of theMilwaukee baseball club , whoso teams are atpresent playing the opening championshipscries In this city. The correspondence Is-seifexplanatory :

Daniel Shannon , Dsti. . Manager Omaha Unao-biill

-t'luh Dear Sir : Vein and the members

of the Omaha team are respectfully Invited tooccupy a box at thu final performance of " .MyAunt ilildgut" by Monroe & Kiev , nt lloyd sopera house on Sunday nlRlit , the 19th Intl. ,on which occasion tlm player of cither the.Milwaukee or Omaha club making the hostplayliiK avoriK: durliigtlionpGiiingchampion-Hhlp series wnl bopresciiited with n srold medalby Aunt Hrldtfut fiom the SIUKO. I'lcuso sig ¬nify your acceptance Immediately ,respectfully , KOIIKIIT II. MONIIOK ,

Mii iirni Mmirim & Kirn.A similar letter was sent to Manager Cush-

mnn-

of the Milwaukccs.Manager Shannon responded ns follows :

Messrs. Munrno & IJIce , Gentleman : Yourgenc'rous proposition and courteous InvitationIn behalf of myself and men to attend u boxparty at your uluihiK performance Sundaylivening is n pleasant surprise and of courseaccepted , lours respectfully ,

DAN SHANNON ,

Manager Omaha llascbalt Club.And from Manager Cushman ns follows :

Holier ! It. Monroe , Dear Sir : Yours of thisduto at hand and contents noted. In reply Iwill siy: that the Milwaukee club acceptsyour kind Invitation and will expect you toaccent an Invitation to witness our amo onSunday , April 20. Thanklm- yon kindly I am ,Yours respectfully , C. II. UITSIIMAN ,

Manager Milwaukee Baseball Uluh.The badge was finished last night and is a-

very handsome trophy , which the lucky win-ner

¬

may well feel proud of.

Knees.-Mi'Ml'ins

.

, Tcnn , , April 18. The track wasin good condition today-

.Twoyearolds.

, half milo : Powers won ;Hlcholiou second ; Henry Jenkins third.-Tlmo

.

, 62 .

Three-quarters of a milo , heats : HoleyBoloy won first boat ; Tramp second ; ' KedSign third. Time , l:17': . Second heat :Hod Sign won ; Koloy Boloy second ; Cris-plno

-third. Time , 1:17: U5. In run-off. Hod

Sign won. Tlmo , 1:19.Cotton stakes , $1,000 added : mile nnd one-

eighth : Bertha won ; Brookwood second ;AUicus third. Tlmo , 1 ::53i <f-

.Threeyearoldf.

maidens , three-quarters of-a milo : The Major won : Kuharma second ;Tom B third. Time , 1:19: 45.

Milo : Insolence won ; Sorrlro second ,Jack Murray third. Time , 1:47: #.

The Gnmo This Alt.Omaha nnd Milwaukee will close their Ini-

tial¬

series this afternoon , and the prospectsnro that a tremendous crowd will turn out towitness the 11 nal bout. Omaha has takentwo of tbo three so far plaved and will putforth superhuman efforts this afternoon totake lu the lost of the series. Following willbo found the positions and batting order ofthe two clubs :

Omaha Twltchell , loft flold ; Hnlllgan ,right Held ; Sutcliffo. catcher ; McCauley ,llrst base ; (jriflln , mlddlo ; Shannon , secondbase ; , short stop ; Donnelly , thirdbase ; Clarke , pitcher.

Milwaukee Burke , mlddlo , Potlt secondbase ; Schoch , short stop ; Dalrymplo , loftHeld ; Campion , first base ; Schriver , catcher ;Grim , third base ; Dungan , right Held ; Vict-ory

¬

, pitcher. _: , Tonn. , April IS. [Special Tel-

egram-

to Tim BKE. ] Over ono hundred andfifty horses are now.in the stublos at West-Side park and nearly all the horsesnow taking part in the Memphis moot-ing

¬

will arrive hero next Sunday morning.There will bo cloven days of racingand ns the stakes are ull filled well greatsport is anticipated. The S'.OOO sweep-stakes

-Is the event of the ilrst day and it

promises to bo ono of the hardest fought eon-tests over scon on the Nashville (rack. Theprobable starters nro Willow , Sir Abnor ,Kthel , Dundee , Llnllthgow , Apex , Dong ,ICnapp , Laura Doxey. Too Sweet , MissCourtuay and Chimes. Llnlithgow Is thoughtto have the best chance to win.

Downed llnj MlHsonrlan.NEKIUSKA CITV , Nob. , April 18. fSpocIal

Telegram to Tun Dm; . ) The much talkedof wrestling match between M. Blake of St.-

NASUVII.U

.Joseph , Mo. , and George Harschman of-Avoca , this state , took place at the operahouse this afternoon. There was a largocrowd present and n crent deal of moneychanged hands , the farmers backing theCuss county man for all they hud. Thematch was for $100 a side. After the firstround It was evident that Blake was not init , Harschman throwing him In ono minuteand thirty poconds. The two succeedingrounds were oven shorter , the Missouri manbiting the dust each time.

Hot WM lo It-ST. . P.u'i , , Minn. , April 18. Dick Moore of'

this city , n mlddlo weight pugilist , knookodout Jack Stanley of Philadelphia In the ilrstround In n fight for a $: ! 00 purse tonight. Thelight was very hot while it lasted-

.CollejjM.

Have the Kover.There was n game of baseball between the

Omaha business college and the Omaha com *

merclal college yesterday. Score :

Omaha Ilunlno.ss Colloio.7 1 24 211 0-30Oiiiiilm Com. College. 3 10 00 1 0 6-

I'itz HUM ConHiunjttlon.Sioux CITV , In. , April 13. [ Special Tele-

gram-

to TUB BUB. ] The doctors soy that theillness ot Pltchor l-'lUgorald is consumptionand that he cannot play ball.

JUG FlilK AT ItlTTI K HOCK.-

Tlio

.

Arkansas Capital Sutlers Half a.Million Loss ,

LITTLE HOCK , Ark. , April 18. Fire origin-ating

¬

In the dry goods establishment of Blass-it Co. , late tonight destroyed tbo old Grandopera housa block , burning out Blass , Loven-son's

-liquor store , Florist Smeaman and

ICuttmors millinery. The loss will reach$*XX)0, ( ) , with Insurance of about J-JUO.OOt ) .

Car Worku lluriiml ,

Si-m.somi.it , Mo. , April 18. The Spring.field r kr and foundry works burned tonight.LCDS , $ ,000 ; Insured.

COLD HllLlS GREAT PROMISE ,n ia

Some General frnfonnaUon Concerning tboNow ''Wlimlng Mining Oarap.

tont-

PROSPECTINGON THE "LEVIATHAN."ti el. ,

la. noWhat Sonic-1Into Doveloiiincnt Work

linn Outho: IaraS-

urveys.

-

.

[ Staff Corraponilence of The lice. }

GOLD HIM , Carbon County , , April15. However conscientiously n disinterestedparson might prosccuto nn Investigation ofthis now mining district only n partial descrip¬

tion ot a few of the clnlins already locatedcan bo nttoinptcd at this ttmo. It would scornlike doing nn injustice to the owners of richprospects to slnglo out particular propertiesas specimens of the camp. Some of thosewhich must bo dismissed with n mere men ¬

tion or ignored altogether may yet turn-out to bo moro valuable than otherswhich nro now much discussed heromid have obtained n certain reputa-tion

¬

or notoriety outsluo the camp.Only such persons as have visited Gold Hill

during ttio winter and it must bo borne Inmind that that season or the effects of it stilllingers on , here can appreciate the disad ¬

vantages in trying to measure the importanceof the mineral discoveries that have boonmade. To say that everything is snowedunder gives but a faint idea of the extent towhich the elements tiavo contributed towardsthe mystification of those who have tried tostudy the camp , and how effectually the snowIting has guarded the treasures which oreconfidently believed to bo locked in thosehills , lint there Is n duty which therepresentative of a nowspaiier Is obli ¬gated to perform for the public inthu way of a plain statement ofall that can be seen here. At the risk ofdepreciating the importance of rich pros ¬

pects by withholding publlcltv as to theirworth as estimated by others , all that can boexpected of n visitor hero now is to talkabout what has como under his personal ob ¬

servation.Only Looked for Gold.

There Is no discredit attached to a state-

GEOGRAPHICAL LOCATION GOLDmcni or incts. t omo 01 tuo early prospoo-tors

-hero had not had the bonollt of much ox-

porieuco-

in locating loads. In some in-stances

¬

they had never seen practical servicein the development of mineral llnds. Thatthose men recognized the value of the sur ¬face indications is but another proof of therichness of their .finds. Every ono in theparty appears to have boon impressed by thebelief that if they found any leads worthlocatintr they must bo gold-boaring. Goldnnd gold alone was what they expected tofind. So when a plcco of float was picked upthat returned 2OOU ounces to the ton In silverthey took it for granted that it came fromsomewhere else. They hunted for lodgesthat would prospect for gold and when suchwere lound they wore satisfied. That isonly ono incident of many that forms part ofthe history of the campaign which resultedin the establishment of this distr'ct.

Ono of the most notable of the early loca ¬

tions , Judged by the showing so far uiado ,was that of the Leviathan. It was struckwell up toward the crest of n high hill in thelast days of July of last year. The locationwas made by L. D. Chase , W. I. Frank nnaP. P. Woods. They staked off 1.150 feet in-a northeasterly direction from rich outcrop-pings

-and fifty feet to the southwest. Thereason they did not talco the full 1.500 foot towhich they wore entitled was because theysubsequently followed up the lead and tracedit along so that they were able to locate an-

other¬

claim adjoining ttio Leviathan on thenortheast cud. This is a full claim COO byl.BOO feet. The name , Little Giant , wasgiven to It and the locators were Woods ,IJrako and P. C. Arcndoll. Afterwards theLeviathan No. - was located to the southwestof the original Lovlathan and beginning at apoint fifty feet from the first strike extends1,500 feet to the southwest.

Likely to Find Silver There.These claims are important for tlio

reason that there uro evidences thatrich silver deposits are likely tobo found underlying the hill. Al-ready

¬

they prospect high up In sil-ver

¬

, although little woric has boon clone onany of the claims , except in the case of theLeviathan No. 1. On that a shaft has beensunk to a depth of 100 feet. On the surfacethis showed a well defined lodge fully six-teen

¬

foot wide. The owners went down onthe load , leaving a streak of quartz four orllvo feet wide to ono side. They timbereddown to u depth ot twenty feet , packing inpay dirt hack of the shaft , which is 4 by 7foot. Going down on the ledge matter tillthey had sunk seventy feet , they struck an-other

¬

streak of quartz. Leaving that to onoside , they continued down on au Incline witha slope of two' foot in ten. When theyreached a depth "of 100 foot they began pros-pecting

¬

for tbo load ! They are now engagedincross-cuttlngfitullnd out the width of theore body botwood iboth walls. Several goodveins hnvo boon found. Ono that variedfrom ono to two : and nearly three foot wasfollowed for upwards of sixty foot as theshall was sunlc ; 'Other well defined veinsfrom two Inches to a footer moro werestruck.

Save for a shorttdistanco all the roclc takenout of the Leviathan shaft shows rich In gold.Whore the woijlfuwas stooped there woregood indciatlons of, ijilver. It looks as thoughcarbonates mighTIn ) found on the lower lev-els

¬

, There majUbd a cessation of work onthis claim for a while for it is reported thatChose , ono of thetQriglnal locators , has partedwith his intercit tp L. G , Davis , who hasbeen n largo Investor here. Cliaso is knownto have boon itf'titgotlation with pcoplo whohave becii Impros'itd by the good showingmade by the Lc'iiihthiin the deeper the shaftwas sunk. This those folks saw fqr them ¬

selves. The Otras mining company also hasn conditional interest in the claim. By theterms of the bargain made with this companyit will bo required to prosecute tbo develop ¬

ment work energetically and provide a millfor the treatment of the oro.

Practical Test* to Ho Made.Interest , therefore , Is naturally centered In

the Leviathan , because whatever the de-velopment

¬

company propose to do will bo do-pondcnt largely on the report hereafter to bomade by practical men, who will make Ittbolr Dusluess to canvass the chances of goodreturns to bo made oa the investment neces-sary.

¬

. All that the bravo fellows want whohave pinned their faith on the future import-ance

¬

of this camp is to have the loads workedhonestly. If there is any borrowing done toexpose ore bodies to bull tbo piico of claims ,It will bo by speculators-to

who have been ableget a foothold hero when necessity forced

locators to part with an Interest to keepthemselves n going.

This early no prediction * ought to bo has-nrdcJ

-as to the probable character of t.ho

cnmp. Hut with indication !! no encouragingas those found In the Leviathan It would boreckless on the part of its owners to ignorethem or to delay for long its development.The approaching .WHOM will , under tbomost favorable conditions , bo n short ono forthe sort of work requisite in determiningwhether gold or silver will bo the predomin ¬

ating mineral to bo extracted from the hills.When proper provision ha* been made for Itthe mines that limy bo developed can boworked all the year around. IJut what theowners should llrst satisfy themselves aboutis as to the kind of workings they have todeal with so that machinery can bo broughtIn before it Is too Into-

.Vhlletho.

Lovlathan promises much in theway of solving vexed problems the naturallocution of the Llttlo Giant or Leviathan No.U may afford means for an earlier determina ¬

tion of the extent and character of the orebodies In that neighborhood , The LittleGiant now has merely n prospect hole on It ,ten foot deep. Kook taken out at that depthshows moro tlmn a trnco of silver. It pannedout well in gold from the grass roots down.If returns on the rook are not misleadingthorn Is assuredly gold in paying quantitiesAs for the Leviathan No. 'J , that possessessome special advantages for prospect work.Some ItOO foot from the shaft house of theLuvlatiinn a tunnel has been driven. Themen went in with It twenty-two foot on nnortheast and southwesterly course ana theappearance constantly Improved , They haveboon encouraged to continue thework and will undoubtedly devotetheir attention to It when they arefree to suspend prospecting on the Leviathan.

Another Treasure llouio.Another group of claims that shows up

well llo on the lilll above the postoflluu. TheLaramlo has n sixty-foot tunnel which showsup a four-foot lead. The farther it has beendriven ttio morn cneoura lng have been theindications. Work on the Laramlo has beensystematically done. Thu claim extends 500feet cast and 1,1)03) foot west from whcroprospecting began. About ono hundred feetbovomi the mouth of the tunnel a shaft hasboon put down ton foot. The work turnedout so well that the tunnel was started andwiioii they are Joined there will bo a goodopportunity afforded for rapid developmentw irlc.

North of the Laramie tunnel , 200 foot , Isthe Little Honatiza , and parallel to it. Thatlias a llfty-foot shaft with a twelve or thlr-tjocnfoot -lead. Good prospacU have been

ftnd all the ,vay down and now the rock looksbetter than it lias at any previous time. TheGold Hill , south of the tunnel , 1ms only boonprospected to a depth of ten or twelve feet.

At the surface it looked so well that Its de ¬

velopment would have been pushed couldprovisions for that work have been mado.But the locators had to quit work on asovon-foot load without getting one wall. There isa cross load known ns the Jack Pine located500 feet west of the Laramie tunnel. Suf ¬

ficient work 1ms not been done on the JackPine to properly estimate the value of theclaim , although copper carbonates nrosaid to have been found in the pros ¬pect shaft. Parallel to the LlttloBonanza is the Snow Flake , whichin a twctity.foot shaftshowcd up promisinglyand from which rich rock was taken out.

All of these claims were located by AlexLute , Domtim Poutro and E. J. Lewis. Theysold the Snow Flake to L. G. Davis , Carboncounty's representative in the state legisla ¬

ture. Larnmlo people hnvo purchased an in ¬

terest in the Llttlo Bonanza and are waitingto mniso n mill-run on the ore before decidingto what extent its development will bo car-ried

¬

: , In the Jack Pine , V. C. Ferguson , whoruns the stage line from Saratoga to GoldHill , has acquired nn Interest. He Is so snn-gulno

-as to its ultimate high commercial

value that ho has refused n sum which mightbo regarded ns excessive for a mere pros ¬

pect. But ho did not act on his own judg ¬

ment ns to the desirability of holding onto it ,being guided by the advice of an experiencedmilling man-

.In.

the neighborhood of Greene's camp ,which is the present terminus of the stageline , are several promising claims. Tho. AcmeIs down fifty feet or moro and is showing In ¬

dications of carbonate. Its appearance hasbeen encouraging all the way down , nnd theload shows a number of veins varying in-thickness. . The rock makes gratifying re

turns. Work was recently started on the En-tcrprlso

-, which having boon squared up andtimbered , Is now lu good shape for energetic

development ,lUnoh Work Already Dono.

There are only n few of the many claimstaken up. Up to the present tlmo eighty-twohave been recorded. As the Wyoming lawrequires that n ten-foot hole mustbo put down before this formality canlegally bo carrlo ; ! out , it is rcaionnblo toInfer 'that nt loait this nmouiit of work hasIn each case been done In compliance withthe law. Therefore , It will bo soon thatenough has already been done to demonstratewhether or not there is mineral hero.

So far ns I have boon nblo to learn there isnot A slnglo Instance whcro the nppoarancoof a le.ul has not Improved the farther downon it the owners have gone. That Is noticea ¬

bly the case with the Omaha , which has justbeen surveyed after a shaft was sunk. Thatis the property of W. B. Hugus & Co. , inwhich Messrs. Heals , Mulllson anil others nroInterested. Ono of the moro recent strikeswas that in the ! Volghtlund owned by U. P.Arcndoll and Messrs. Mngoo mid Murkul ,

That prospects well and some rich specimensnro reported to have boon taken out , but 1

have not soon them. This is encouraging ,for it is tlmucht that the Volghtlaud Is an ex ¬

tension of tho.Lovlathau.Some mention ought to bo nindo of theBuckeye , on Gold Uun , located about n milo

from the postofllco and Just below the Patentlilght , the Jlr.st , claim located lu the now dis ¬

trict last .summer. To B. P. Arondoll belongsthe credit of the original find which startedall the excitement that has boon created.Both of those claims nnd several In that Im-mediate

¬

vicinity prospect well ,Tlu- Wyoming is the claim which has fur-

nished¬

most of the rich specimens that havehelped to advertise the district among thosewho have not had n chance to como hero to-sco for themselves what has been found.That is as yet merely n prospect. It has boonsnowed under lor some time nnd n per-sonal Inspection of the 14-font shaftran not bo made now. The Wyomingrock that has been exhibited ismarvelously rich. Those who hud an oppor ¬

tunity for investigating it are all unanimousin the belief that the big vein from whichsuch richness was taken out is not likely topinch out , but that a strong llssuro vein hasbeen uncovered. The ownership to thisclaim has bct'n so largely Increased as to thenumber of ititorost.s that it is dlfllcult to hooptrack of all the holdings in It. If the Wyoming continues as goo , ! n claim as It hashitherto prospected , enough mineral can betaken out to enrich the owners.Guarding Against DUHoiiNious ,

There has boon much sagacious forethoughtdisplayed on nil sldo for making this a proi-l.orous

-

and orderly camp , should the de-t.nsit4 -ttivtl nut. na ntitti.Mtntnil A1..1

OF HILL

has already boon made in a previ-ous

¬

nrtlclo to the voluntary agreementamonc the miners to restrict their claims tosmaller dimensions than they wore entitledunder the United States milling laws. Theyagreed to take 150 feet on each side of theload , instead of ,' !UO foot. That was to avoidcontentious that wore liable on account ofthe crowding of the loads tosrethor.Some question arose as to the rightof ono or moro of the owners of tlio Wyomingto bind their associates to this agreement towhich then- assent had not boon asked. An-other

¬

lead was found a few days iigo' J5 footfrom the Wyoming shaft. To avoid troubleor complications of any sort , It Is understoodthat some of the owners of the claim have nl-roudy

-consented to deed tbo property oiitido-

of the 150-foot limit to the finders of tbo nowlead , In law probably the Wyoming ownerscould claim all of the ! t)0( ) feet guaranteedthem under the United States laws. Butit is Indicative of the spirit of the camp thatsuch proffers of concessions such as thatnamed should bo mado-

.I'lnoky.

SiirvcyorH Work.Another fortunate thing has been done

which will have a tendency to prevent , or ntany rate lessen , the possibilities of litigation.That was the erection of n monument towhich claims can bo tied and their dellnlto-location determined. Only n plucky surveyornnd ono experienced in mountain work wouldhave dared undertake the task which CharleyBellamy of Laramlo e-of for himself. Ho is-an old-tinier and favorite among Wyomingminors. The difllciiltics encountered in hunt¬ing lor section corners In n wilderness ofsnow ton to llftccn feet deep on a level , withbig drifts scattered abou1. indiscriminately

can only Iw appreciated by a far-western sur¬

veyor. Hut Hcllamy started out to do thatand ho didn't give up till ho had succeeded.This having been accomplished a t'nltodStates land mark rfas erected. It Is In thesoutheast quarter of what will bo section 0 ,or to bo exact , feet south of the centerof the north boundary of the township , wlltcfrl-.s -six nnd n quarter miles long , The menu ¬

ment is mnrkcd on the accompanying map ,pmimrcd oxprtssly for Tnr. HKB bv Mr.nellamy. Township 10. In which Oolil Hiltis situated , lias been survcved , but not soo-lionized.

-. Without doubt that work will

done as soon ns the snow goes off, Hut Itwill not make much difference , for the pies-cut nt least , If the divisions have not boon de¬fined. The law provides that iwhoroclaims nro located moro than twomiles from n section comer thormay bo tied to some monumentwhoso location has been accurately delimit.As most of the claims In the district sirfnr-taken ii ] ) nro moro than two miles from tliosection corners the monument is all that Uneeded to describe thorn.

Surveyor Hotlamy has boon engaged forseveral weeks insurveying claims , and thiswork will keep him busy for ten days ormoro to como. Since n rush of prospectors Isexpected these safeguards are rendered almost un absolute necessity to claim owners ,who appreciate the necessity for havingtheir property accurately laid olT. Hut theiraction is in the line of evidence that tends toprove that Gold Hill Is bound to become agood camp. Giomm: T. CAMS.

: ALTOX IIOV1OTT.-

It.

In Work I ni; A dmlrahly anil ImrcaH-Int

-: I lie Itcmd'w ItiisliicMs.

Ciiirioo , April is. Alton officials are verycheerful. They asjcrt that the trunk lineboycott Is working admirably , and that bustness was never better. A prominent oniciat-of another western road , commenting onthe situation , said ho had assorted"from the llrst that the boycott Is the bestthing that could have happened for the Alton.Thousands of people to whoao AmericanIdeas the word "boycott" is repugnant , willsacrifice convenience. If need be, to give theAlton business , and certainly the ticketagents outside , who nro forbidden to sell ,will do all In their power to help the Alton.If the fight is kept up long , it is not unlikelyto rosiit in a bitter rate war. Tbo Alton isbound to protect its business , and may notlong be able to do this wlthoutshiuhlngiatcs.-

A

.

Union l acjllU ? Denial.D-KXVIMI

.

, Colo. , April IS. In nn interviewhero tonight General Manager Chirk of the

ing freight from the Chicago ,t Northwest-ern

¬

and says the innimircmcnt is disposed tolive up to its contract. Ho says there Is notruth in the assertion thnt.Kd Dickinson hasbeen appointed general manager of thoUnionPacific in place of Holcomb. Ho would notsay , however , Unit such appointment may notbo made In the future.

The Pacillc Short Line.Sioux CITV , la. , April IS. ( Special Tele-

gram to Tin : Bii.J: : Kecoivcr Blorbowortoday states that the finances of the Pacilloshort line nro getting into nice shape, thatthe road is moro than paying expenses andthat arrangements are being made for the useof the Chicago & Northwestern , it hasleaked out that negotiations have boon inprogress whereby the Pacillo short line maybecome Identilled with the Chicago & North-western road. v

Preliminary Work.-CITV

., S. D. , April IS.-fSpcdal

Telegram to Tun Bii.J: : Chief Kngincoi-Halnos , of the Hapld City. Missouri Hlver A;St. Paul , the now local company recently or-ganized to build across the reservation , loavesMonday with a complete corps and outllt t irun n preliminary line to the Cheyenne river.Local subscriptions to the company's stockalready exceed ono hundred and llfty thou-sand

¬

with the capitalists of the east end tohear from-

.CoiiHiilur

.

Seal System Suspended ,WASIMXOTOX , April IS. Secretary Footer

has decided to suspend the consular seal sys-tem

¬

on cars and adopt the systdm of lockedCUM nnd manifests , which , It is believed , will

suit of an investigation instituted by Secre-tary Windom , which showed that the gov-ernment

¬

was lo-ilng money and the mer-chants

¬

losing goods under the seal system.Nearly the whole tlmo of UnitedStates consuls nt some ports InCanada Is taken up in scaling ears for thetransportation of goods In transit through theUnited States. Moreover , the traftlo 1msgrown to such proportions that it is beyondthe ability of the department to make sure Inall eases that goods are not dropped at point :.within the United States. Under the nowsystem cars in transit will bo stopped at thenearest port on the border and examined bytreasury olllcors , who will place upon thecars treasury locks.

Home UneasinessWASIIISOTOX , April 18.Tho prospective

largo payments on account of pensions , pub-lic works , maturing bonds , etc. , nnd therather low ebb of receipts , with the resultingpossibilities of the disappearance of the su1-plus , is causing some uneasiness among thefinancial officers of the treasury. Besidesendeavoring to put in circulation subsidiarysilver coin , Soercn iry Foster has In vlow an-other

¬

plan concerning the 4 > per cent bondsamounting to $ . 0,000,000 , which mature nextSeptember. The secretory believes thenational bunks , which hold $12,000,003 ofthose bonds , would ho glad to retain thorn as-u basis for circulation oven at a reduced rateof Interest. It is regarded as feasible , per¬

haps , to llont these bonds at 2 per coat. Thesecretary llnds u precedent for the plan inthe action of Secretary Windom In 1SSI. >

The Best Spring MedicineIf you have The peculiar requirements We confidentlyNever Tak-

enHood's

* spring medicine are so-

preeminentlyRecommend

possessed byHood's Sarsaparilla that is by Hood'sfar the best for this purpose.-

We.

Sarsaparilla know that by it's Pecu-liar

¬ SarsaparillaCombination , ProportionWhy not try it and Preparation it possesses If you need aThis Spring ? It unequalled curative powers ,

Medicine wh-

ichPurifiesand b} ' its results it is con-stantly

¬

Purifies proving its positivemerit-

.Hood's.

The Blood from the bloodSarsaparilla

all the impuri-ties

expels¬ The Blood

which have accumulatedCures Scrofula , during the winter , and also Aids DigestionSalt Rheum cures scrofula , salt rheum and Cures DyspepsiaAnd all Humors , other severe forms of blood Sick Headache ,

disease , inherited or acquired

Makes the liy its tonic and eliminativc Makes theit assistsqualities so the

Weak Stron stomach and digestive organs Weakthat it cures dyspepsia , bilious-ness

¬ Strong, etc. It also gives such

And Creates strength to the whole system And builds upA good Appetite.-Be

. that it effectually overcomes The Nervous Systemsure to g-

etHood'sThat Tired Feeli-

ng.Hood's. Be sure to g-

etHood's

Sarsaparilla Sarsaparilla Sarsaparilla| Hold by ull druggists. II ; six fortt I'repircU fold by nil drugzl'itH.' IU six for II. l'ropir: cl Hold by alldru i5l t . Ill ilxrorfft P t ;.aie4only by U. I , HOOD CO. , l.ownll , Mim-

.10O

. only by U I. IIOOU i CO. , Lowell. Mat * . only by U. I. HUUD& CO. , { .enroll , MM *.

Dosog Ono Dollar 100 I50BPB Ono 100 Dooea Ono Dollar