J i Devoted to the Mining, Iuiabcrlng and Forming Interests of this Community. COTTAGE GROVE, LANE COUNTY OREGON, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 15, 1906. VOL. VIII NO. 30 (If M A NUGGET, BOHEMIA MIN ING NOTES And General Mining Now (lathered from lixcliangcs. Mix ; M.ig.'jio 1 1 r ' 1 1 I went un to I!o!i.Mni:i the Hint of tin- wek to Hp'Mi I tin- Hiimnifr with her futli-.-r, who M 'it work iii liis Sweepstake litjh lVli'iMiu nul J. S 'ukv went up into the hills thin week to do tin ustrsmnent wotk on the Col 1 St;ir Croup c i l.iiiin Hitnntrd on th f ist nid- of l-'nii vimv iiiotin t.im. I'lotence, Idaho 1 h ntij' iug a milling liootn. That omt at one tin)': wns bunou tm n prer deposit inn! ii'iw a tii'h vein lm lr.cn lound in 11 lnlj.;e tb:it iuf:' :dutig the iiiouutaiii lur !i0 o let, in which fjpo gold uhoiinds. Tin- otc is ho W11 d c otnpohed tlmt It can lc washed out in a n i, without crush ing through a mutter. Mr. A. 1 Churchill, of Cult;lge (love, who his licen engaged in the it iheini.i 1 1 - t i i -l lor m.-v.t il yen-; find "'vih sotm- valiri'ilc tl.iimiu disttitt. i in Rone- burg tins week making in range nieiits I n u ttip in Curry county to investigate a grotipnl copper claim owned lv Rose-Inn purlieu. Mr. Cliurcli 11 is an experienced miner and in very favorably impressed with tin wimple r ore taken from those elaiiiH. lie experts to upend a month's I into in thoroughly Iuvoh tig'Uiui,' the piopejty and will tiikc three or four men aloii to do tho nccestry work to determine the extent of the ledge. .Vows. of Alaska miners, wh'se name i arc . withheld, for .;oo,ooo on a three' years' bond. I'epn-i nitut ivs have1 examined the mines and nn- nt is- ' lied with the prosper!,. They1 Imvo a nyslein for having the gold j lucking bi foie an I will in tin; lull; begin aetive opeialii ie. tunning tlio ( twenty .stamp null and ;iMing jfiyj,- i ooo r f ','uo w ith ol iirii liiiiery. I It means a good de d to th" S"ii-j tiam district. One of the m n li ft hint night (or S i:i 1 ' t i m : .'( i. A 1 ' bany Dctnoi rnt. A Rli Strlk lo llio North Kalrvlcw Herbert I.cigh, nceretriry and general manager of thi North I'air view Minim' Co. operating in the Bohemia District Saturday revived from the company's mine a number of samples taken out. of tho district, a n'W stnke h viig'jmt hem in id". No iiNhay of the ie hasas i t bi en made. Mr. I ,ti j.-li . who is a gr:idulc MHsuyor, estimates that it will run between '2." and f, 50 to the ton. He went to I'ottiand Sunday, tak ing the ore with him, nnd will ex hibit it to mining men there. Monday (lu. ud. the spring flowers of four inontliH I :.. il . ..-ii . . 11 ! 1 Ho 111 ine vaiiey are oiooming neru now, the wild currnnts and blue belli urn! there are rhododendrons, oceans of them, cresting these ridges and mountain Hides as foam fpruy docs the ocean waves. That sunset last evening wan tho grand est ever. 1 Inv-j often watched ths great Kin' of J)ay, f-hrooded in a Hood of golden ruist, dip down iDto the wav'.H of the Atlantic or the Pacific and then appear aain aH if loath to yield his supremacy, but . lit .. ,i:..;.i,i .fir.nru 1,. wne eyes nave never oeneiaa ft mil west ol & a u U1 " w"c" . i l'..!..t .,...: 1 -... a . rtn willi Inn ui dujjiuh nrfar iu uuu un ACCIDENTAL SHOOTING Harvey LcJoy Puts Cocked Revolver in Pocket, and Bullet Enters Le. I Sunday morning Harvey Lejoy, Joy, who lites about Wslkwr Station, was i unele Torn Johnson, when they saw , a 'digger squirrel" in a prune tree : on the Van Simons place and the uncle nhot at it with a 22 rifle he tho landu of the Vesuvius mine, they witn's.rd tho sutlirno disap pearance of his celestial majesty. Unknown leagues away, with no less than thirteen ranges of nioun- tic i-'irruiniT tliA tinv wnn rarrv ing an old st'vle $1 revolver in xis billow in their srten and dark front pants pocket, abd drew it out ' b U? r.rc? s abov? t,IC Hh3'leH and rocked it expecting to get a whot at the Bouirrel, but his uncle j killed it, aud the boy in his excite ment put tho cocked pistol in his ' nants Docket, and started off. Ue-' , tore lie had taken three steps the ! pUtol went off and the bullet en tered his right leg on the inside cIohc to the hip, ranged downwards and lodged under the bone back of ' iho kuee, where it was located and Off l or hi Hunt. Kx. Muvor Hob Veateh headed a 1 : ' . : r 1 :.. I i..t... v '.,.1. lemoved by Dr. Kime assisted by niiun IITIIII il'i'i IUIIII .ll'n, -'i. ,, ,, I. . J T1 f Murkley, Imis 'iiove, (Ico At Drs. Hockett and B;st Monday I morning. The bullet was very hard to ex tract, but the wound is not at all finds Gold Mine In Cellar- The Vesuvius (lold Mining Co. has anew find. Iint week whil couple ol men wero at work dig ging out a cellar under tho board ing house they found some big hunks of quart, full of free gold. Just how valuable tho oro is has not been determined, but it pans free g'ld. It is not every day that a young initio is found in a cellar, even in JJohemia. .Saotlivm Mine SolU for $200,000. W. 15. Lawler, in the city an nounced the sale of tho niinos of th Lnwler Oohl Mining Co., cloven line claims at Auideni, iu the Santiani dit-ttief, to a nyndicato develop, the boy will soon be around Thus again it the moral of care lctiH handling of firearms exempli kiiison, Iv S Hohl'inian aii'! h'lank '. het , ho st a : I ! 'IV.es day mottling for tlu- hi 1 1 -. A team ill take a wagon hud 0!' tents, and trappingM ;m far nu Mineral where the luid will be divid"d be tween fo'M pn'k holies and the tiLjht men. and Irom that point to r , . 1 1 1 . . hed. U1C ll'pp,' niiiilinj; ;ioviihis mi'i . on the Steamboat river the teuts j . ' 1 Hnd proviHi(ns w ill all be paokod Hop Pickers Wanted over, a distance of about 25 or 301 Hop picking will commence at miles. At one point a narrow j j; l Hayes hopyard on; mile east ledge only a few feet wide and kov- : Gf Creswell on or about September rral hundred ynnls long, t!io divid-! lbt. Good camping grounds, Price of Good The walls- o this I clean vard. nice larsre hoos. vard of perpendiculatlv on;about filty-three acres. Send in aul Mayor Mtcli I .ntmlication at once. General Store lungerous. yarti selling at Creswell prices. of their intervening canons ho sinks slowly, steadily, majestically, with his robeH of gold that die away into purplp, aud ho is gone! and an other day with iU opportunities and all its possibilities has gone with them. But all theso beauties of earth and sky and air would be of little interest to tho average man of sense were it not that he could turn from them to the more substantial ones to be found beneath the ribs of these mountains. Why is it that Nature has deposited her richest treasures among the mountain dangerous, and if no complications l9PsJ 1 do not know which do not seem likely, f"c i"aJ3 . -"jnaj. those varieties are to be found ing line between the waters of the j plenty wood, good water. Willamette and tho Cmpipia. murt , picking $1 .per loo pounds. 1 . . 1 'iM -11.. ,1 1 ' . . . ' . lie traverse! ledge sink either hand, says that in the most spot on the long hard trail, but tlio magnificent hunting ami unhing; far more than pays. Deer aro thiek ; aud bigger game is not hard to 1 find. The mayor's party expect to i bring back some uno trophies R. A. Brady. The families of Hoy Welch and Lawyer Johnson are camped out up at the end of the O. & S. K. line and are having a royal good time. Tho men folks go up Saturdays for A Trip lo BehtmU A bright July morning none fairer o'eu dawned, or followed a wunset that onco seen could never be forgotten the air so clear and the sky so bright that we seem to be way up uuder the domo of heaven when iu reality we are only a mile above the level ot the fertile plains we left yesterday! We have come fifteen miles away and one over Sunday Call on Oriflin & Veateh Co. and ! mile up, or is it the other way, one oxamine their line of sporting good, j mile away and fifteen miles up, and right among thefie summits. The Riverside, for instance, is not far away and shows a rich variety of 1 the finest ores. F hen there is the Vesuvius, the surpassing richnesa of some of its ores I am not at lib eitv to Kate. Nor would 1 be be lieved if I were to tell the nlain un varnished truth about them. The Champion and the Music are yield ing larg; quantities of good ore anil the Uregon-Loiorado, wuen its reduction plant in installed is ready to do the same. The Bohemia dis- drict undoubtedly has a great future and nov only awaits further developments in the way of access and handling the ores which it is bound to yield iu large quantities. It can 6afely bo said of the whole region that it is only yet begun to be prospected. Dr. J. N. Goltra of N. Y. ANOTHER L0G GER HURT Fred Jones Cut off Three Toes With Ax. Fred Jones, a youDg logger work ing for the Chambers Lumber Co. at Dorena, Lad a bad accident about ten o'clock Tuesdar morning. He was going up the log chute and stopped to cut a young maple out of the way, but hia ax caught in another tree and descending struck his right foot completely severing the Lig toe, and the two toes next to it, and badly cutting the fourth. Ue was immediately brought down to Dorena, and just caught the train which hurried him to town where Drs. Job and Oglesby dressed the foot. Bewing the toes back in place. A large artery was severed, and while a couple of tourniquets were applied the blood was still spurting vigorously when the train arrived. The doctors' hope to save all the toes, but the injury is a bad one. Tones cut his knee badly ast summer with an ax and haa several 6titches taken in it, also in jured his eye, which bad to be sewed up, but his latest accident wa3 much worse tUan the others. C. II. Uurkholder is making a number of improvements in his store, iu widening the aisle, and making new shelves for his line of the famous "l'eters" shoes, which he has just put in. Hunters Were Too Anxious Harry Hays, Jas. Hall, Jno Yo- kum, Wm. Miller, T. H. Kirk, were each fined $23 for killing deer out of season. Claude Clark was also fined for the Bame offense, and Chaffee Haines was fined $15 like wise, escaping the $20 by the Jus tice's error. Athur Miner fined $ 15 for killing grouse, John Grills for killing sea gulls $5. and B. T. Ayres China pheasants out of season $25. Aj Chinaman for selling fish without a license $50. H. T. Wilson and Anderson & Co. for throwing saw duet in stream, each $50, and Thos. Stitt $25 for chasing deer with degs. Three cases were all that escaped without fines. j west and north portions of th state became very smoky. The rains were not heaTy enough te extin guish tho fires, but they cleared the atmosphere of smoke and made it harder for the fires to spread. The mornings in tho coast counties, as a rule, were either cloudy or toggy, and the afternoons were clear. Elsewhere up to the beginning of rahs fair weather prevailed, with unusually high temperatures. Fri day and Saturday were very warm days, and in the interior of the state the maximum temperature ranged between ninety and one hundred degrees. The prevailing winds were northwesterly. Focirnf Liquor De&lers to Leotve Odd Fellows. Odd Fellows in every part of the United States, but especially in New Jersey, are deeply interested in the crusade which has been be gun by Wesley B. Stout, grand master of the grand lodge of New Jersey, againss all saloon-keepers, bartenders and gamblers who are members of the order. The grand master has started in to drive all such members out of craft. This means, if carried out, the expulsion of about 3,5oo men in New Jersey. Stout is acting under the law passed by the sov ereign lodge of Odd Fellows in 1805, but which has never hereto fore been enforced. Kach lodge is given until August 2o to notify all saloon-keepers, bar tenders and gamblers to abandon such pursuits. The failure of the men to quit such business will be followed by their dismissal from, the lodge. Many saloon-keepers ara threatening suit against tho lodge if they are expelled. The saloon element in the New Jersey Oddfellows has been growing-so rapidly as to threaten the in terests of the order. Portland Journal. For Sale. Good four-year old horse, broke single and double. Wynne Hdwk- Co. U. S Weather Bureau Summary for Week Ending Aug. 13. The long spell of dry weather Geo. McQueen is leavinsr for a I vacation on the Umpqua at the home of his parents and is antici pating having some very fine hunt ing and fishing1. was broken by showers on Sunday 1 F. W. Hopkins, who is now op- and Monday, which were heaviest erating the Combination Mining in the neighborhood of t'i? Blue mountains. The rainfall itf- the Willamette valley was very light, and barely sufficient to lay the dust. rorest fires mcreased during ti e week, and the atmosphere in the Co. group in the Bohemia district has been in town this week to meet his father, who came up from the south and who he will take in to the mine with him for a few days visit. B IG SALE- f BIG SALE .hi TO ansni Of o save money at IF (TlhT WOOB We reserve nothing, every article in the store must go for the next thirty days. Ladies' Oxfords worth $2.50, $2.00 and $1.75 now $1.35 Mens' Suits worth $15.00, $13.00 now $9.00 and $11,00. Boy's double knee Overals only up to 39 39 now 50c. double knee Overalls, 4 to 13 years 35c. Kaki coat going at $1.00 and $1.35. w Life I 1 Boy's m Ladie's Hose, the 25c ones now 19c, black and tan. p m :