THE WEST SHORE. dig through tho snow with lictter success in smirching for (im. The nntivn Imv in excellent, hut liieern in now ex- J r t''!!r'irc!y rn ivnfed. Tlii i cropjwd three or four ti iiioh n year, mid yields Iroin eight to ten tons to tno ncre. Sheep raising ltriH already made a niunlx-r of men ricii. An instance of this is 1'nlriek Hailey, who began n few years ago with almost nothing, mid now counts his Hheep hy the thousand, nml has a coinfortahle mnount plnt-od to Iii'h credit at the Imnk. ()thern might ho mentioned, hut it is Hiiflicieiit i wiy tlmt every mini who lum given his hheep proMT attention Iuih found tho business inimeiiHely profitable. Jluttcr making on u huge scale Iuih just heen eoiiimeneed liy the Hurting, near Knglu Rock, of n crcnm ery, supplied with the, most approved niiichinery and nil needi-d facilities. Alxmt KM) cows are kept, ami the but-U-r finds a ready sale at forty cents per ouiid. Ml NINO. IVotn where Snako Eiver deliouelies from the moun tains it cut it way through a continuous bed of gravel, from ten to fifteen feet deep, for many mileHof its eourHO. In fact, nearly the whole valley ih one immcnso bed of gravel n lew reel lieneatli tho top will, throughout which fine flour gold is unite evenly distributed. Almvn (I... ground produces hbiiudaiit eropH, below it holds in its embrace the precious metal. It in estimated that a strip two milen wide mid IKK) long, containing IIIH.OOO acres, will pay 1U00 to the acre, or n total of SfllH. lOO.OOO, and it is lielicved that workable ground extends from the lower canyon to ti, hcad-v-.tcrs of the river, a distance, o WKI mill's. 1'or some veins ehiiins lmvn lw..n u-,.il,.. near Shoshone Falls, where one gravel claim was recently noei ior n ,1,000 ui an ineoi crated company, with n eapi tal stock of r.HUMK). upon which nin,.....f it ;u handsoi.m dividends. Further up the stream miningwas ... k- u.mi mo past season, when n new departure was made. Kry ,wt npriiiK three men, named Edwards, y... .., v,myie, leii the Imrs near tho falls and located three claims of twenty acres each. ,,.,.,.. ..n i i aw, a bove l.aglo lUk, and convenient to the Snake nner n iner l oiupany s canal. I digging ditches an, getting ready to work they have n.rossarily W.i to i considerable exis'iise not rtsininid nn..n,.. i ... ' j'", vi'i our- . h p.u.t season they t.s.k out 212 ounces of Hd k bout (NX 1....H... .i , '.' . "icy cxjicei to realize $2,500 mwee.y an aero was worked over to produce "r1":. T,W they employe,! mm KTiuly to the dutno. All ,1..., .... . , h . n " rH.Wi with burlai., over which , for that pn. At R,anM W, near ' I nmchmery that yt thouMnuls of doll, J 1" uns simple c,u.H;:4,,:ri"r;,i,,.cast beon nicrtMis.l by the chm Tl ani,,'d have Irr .,. i. ,.,: jl ' - of acres have been taken up. The prospect that prosper ous mining camps will spring up along the course of KnnVA T?ivir is nrnmisincr. and that thev will be rjerma- . ....... - . O" V JL nent is assured by the fact that 10,000 men could not work out the ground in fifty years. ' Twn imnnnnina linva Vippn nrrfnni7efl wnrlr nn n largo scnlo one in Chicago and the other at St Paul. Tho latter has expended $2,000 on a ditch to tap the main ennui, imrl will beirin active operations in the snrinc. They sent out an expert who has had practical experience in niiniiiL' lieht cold, whose report was sufficiently en couraging to induce them to undertake the enterprise. ilie gravel beds as they now lie, including boulders, rocks and earth, contain some twentv-five cents to the. cubic yard. The quantity of gravel that can be worked depends upon the supply of water and the number of machines employed. One machine will gather about $45 per day if properly attended to. In Southeastern Idaho quartz mining has been little developed. Many prospectors have soucht in the moun- 111 Mil 1 - . uiins ino source or the cold found m the vallev. but as yet without success. Some float quartz recently picked up near the Tetons, which nssnyed . from $10,000 to !?20,000, indicates the presence of the rich ledges that have scattered their treasure over such a vast region of country. Over tho low range of mountains bordering the valley on the east numbers of quartz claims have been located, but none of them develoned. On the woef. oiMn i vuv . UAVW of the river, fifty miles distant, is Little Lost Kiver, an exceedingly promising mininc district, in which tho fW claim was located last spring. The rock, from several of the leads, assays well up in the hundreds. Th rn,'0 Mack has about 1,000 tons on the dump, and has made arrangeiiienis ior erecting a smelter in the spring. The Alice, Ingersoll, Bonnincton and Endo TWIt nra npninio ing locations partially developed Big Lost Eiver, still further west shows some rood lrvlrrot. attraction at present being a huge lead of copper. KAILIIUADS. The Utah & Northern narrow rmnaa U ki : he Union Pacific, runs north, through Eastern Idaho, from Ogden to the Northern Pacific at Garrison, and the Oregon Short Line, belonging to the same company, passes wes ward through the valley of Snake Eiver, from Granger, Wyomunr. to f!..U,n nii. t- . 'JpI?' t,U8 ycar 10 a section with the 0. E. it .N. (Jo. nt Mnrnf T?:- ... 1 . ., ... P,.;n ti u Iorm a tlirogii ime to the lautic, l"Pre is a prospect of vnt j ijpon. especially a branch line (o the NationafPark of Z S 7. T, 1W0 cnPnies have had sur veyors in the field the past. fi' . , , west ront,. ti n t . TOU"8 ior ea8i ana west routes. The C, B. & Q., Central Pacific and Denver lK.o Grande are all feeling i this direction. T1 EAGLE BOCK. ihe centre of the vnlloy is Eaclo TCZTT1?" slimw .j i til i ' 10 0X0 me extensive machine W00 famd,ie8 h Ued within twenty five miles of the town, nearly doubling the Nation lii