7 THE YELLOW MEfAL HOW AMD WIIKKR nuiiDI9DI9-CUVKU1CI). Curious Form In Which It l Knnnd ltlch Deposit Heattered Kvei-y-where Urent HoiiriU In In din I1I3 : Nuggets. I AM surprised nt tha stories 1 daily hear m to tbe now develop nicnts of our gold territory, 4 write Frank U. Carpenter in the Chicago Times-Herald. Old districts are being roprospocted, and judging from the result it is safe to say thnt the best of onr mining regions have not as yet hern tonched. The great mountain chain running from Alaska to Nicaragua soems to lie an almost unbroken mineral bed. (lold nml sil ver are found in tbe continuation of the chain in South America, and min ers are working to-day at intcrvnls all along the western part of our hotm phere from the Yukon Iiirur even to Patagonia. Mot of the gold which hits made the . world rich in the past has come from nuggets and from reins so large that you could see them, Tha Hood of the precious metals which is now begin ning to deluge the tarth comes from infinitesimal particles, so scattered through the rock that not a gleam nor a glint of them can be detected by the naked eye. According to some scien tists this gold has been deposited in CALtFOBSIA'H nil NfOdBT. (WelKht 19J pounds. Worth 14:1,0 X).)' the rook in the form of gas. Ages ago, say they, there was an cruptiou in the bowals ol the earth, nt which time this gas, ruixsd with gold, rushed up through the vertical fissures with great force acd soaked its way into the porous rock in which the gold is now being found. It wis by this means that the little bits of gold were dropped throughout the rock, the preoious particles being so small that they oould not be doteoted. Many of the old miners had no idea of their existence, and thoir extraction now is only possible by moans of the cyanide process. There is plonty of gold in salt water. Scientists say that gold is generally diffused in tha waters of the ocean, and one eminent chemist states that the tea water of tbe British coast contains one grain of gold to every ton of water. The proportion is much larger in the Great Salt Lake, and the man who can invent a cheap process of getting out suoh gold will Lave a fortune. GOLD CRYSTALS (ACTUAL SIZE) AND T-rtTTK-n TV Pew people bave any idea of the queer forms ia wbioh gold is found. Dame Nature is tbe most wonderful of i'ewelers, and she has deorated the ioom of old Mother Earth with gold in thousand different sbapos. 1 saw box of gold nuggets and crystals taken from the Little Johnnie mine near Leadville. Many of them would have made beautiful brooohes without redeeoration. Some appeared frosted, and others had been torn from the rook in the form of sheets and plates. A great deal of gold is found in crysf tala. Not long ago there was brought to tbe Philadelphia Mint f 1000 worth of Australian gold. It was made up of little gold oryitolf, ranging in size from that of ft marrowfat pea to that of tha head of pin. Gold is also found in cubes and eight-sided crys tals are common. Soma of tbe gold nuggets from the California mines are - shaped like moss. The Little Johnnie baa produced great deal of wire gold. I have seen bits of rook from Cripple Creek npon wbioh, when subjeoted to . an intense beat, the gold would bub ble ont and stand up like little gold rin heads npon the dark atone. Gold is, ita natural state ia usually mixed r:'h silver. Tha new Utah gold da f xaite are associated with arsenic In s 1 Mercnr mine yon find tha yellow ia aoonectioq ita quicksilver. MIL IF 4 Y&V s w & and In South Amerioa it Is sometimes mixed with bismuth. I have spent sometime watching the placer miners in different parts of the West, l'lacer mining was the chief source of gold production in the days of 1819. It is still carried on, but the output is much less than in the past. The ohiof placer mines of to-day are in Siberia, where tho earth has some times to be dug up In a frozen state and melted before the gold nan be ex tract n1. This is tha case in some of the Yukon ltiver mines. The faotthat there is a gold placer is evidence that there is gold-bearing rook near by, and miners pretend to tell from the character of the gold of tho placer as to the nearness ol tho gold-bearing rock from which it comes. If the gold dust is very line it is supposed to have come loug distanoe. If coarse it is thottght the lend is not fnr oft. Home of the first mining of California was of gold scales which measured loss than 1-lllth of an inch in length and one millimeter in diameter. Placer miners usually find their biggest nuggets in streams where the bowlders are large. Where the streams nro tine gravel the Sold is generally line aud scaly. The biggest nugget ever discovered in this coun try was taken out of a mine at Carson Hill, in Calaveras County, California. It weighed 195 pounds and wits worth more than $1:1,000. A number of other large nuggets were found in this same ragiou, ranging in value from $1000 upward. Jn 1855 a nimget of gold was discovered in Sierra County, Cnl., worth ?l0,()l)0,aud in 1850 a mass of quartz and gold was picked up in Tuolumne County which was worth $(0,000. Outside of California some of the largest lumps of cold in the United Hlates have come from the South. North Carolina has produced three nuggots ranging in sizo from thirteen and a halt ponuds to thirty seven pounds, and in Georgia a num ber of big nuggots have been discov ered, the largest of which weighed 737 penny weights. J urongu tbe mining engineers whom I havo met hero in the West and information which has rocently come to the director of tbe mint at Wash ington, I am able to givs some facts as to the mines of Africa, wbioh are maMng such a change in the gold product of the world. These gold mines are a snrpriso to geologists. One fnraom man said he would have rather expoctod to find gold in tho feus of Scotland than in the Jtand District of 8011th Africa. William Wostou, a lending mining engineer of Cripple Crick and a graduate of tho lloyal School of Mines of London, tells mo that ho believes that the South Afri can gold deposits originally consistod 01 the bed of n great laUc, which, having been dried up and solidified. was by tho action of the elements so heaved up that it Mood halt on end, The upper half of this great gold do posit is now being mine I, but as the region is further developed the miners will have to go deeper aud deeper into the earth and tho cost will be much greater. As it is the prospects of an enormous quantity of gold from south Africa are excellent. Hamilton Smith, wbo is perhaps one of the best mining engineers of the world, and who was here not long ago as the agent for the Kothschilds to look up their Amoriosn invest meats, estimates that the Hand gold district of Africa will produce a billion and a quarter dollars worth of sold. He says that gold has been found there as far down in the earth as U5U0 foot, and that it exists in all probabil KCGGET OP BHEET GOLD (FULL SIZE) flTlVADUII lty to a depth of 3000 feet. Much of tho mining will have to be done at tnis depth, and according to his OHti mato it would take about 3,000,000 to equip a mine working at a depth of 3000 feet. He expoots the product of the African mines to exceed 600,000, 000 a year by the close of tbe century, and he believes that they will be profitable for years to come. To-day all of the Africau mines must be economically managed in order for thorn to pay dividends. A great part of the gold has to go back into tbe mine in tbe shape of machinery and labor,' and up to the present only about one-fifth of tha gold gotten out has boen dear profit. There are now employed in this Afrioan gold distriot 5000 white men and 80,000 blacks. Wages are low, and everything is done on tha largest and most economical scale. New mines are being discovered in different parts of Australia, and re cent report to onr direotor of the mint states that tha gold fields there have hardly been soratobod. Some of the best mines of to-day are in West Aus tralia, in distriot where there ia lit tle water. In tha Coolgsrdie gold re gion, for instanoe, water sometimes brings at muoh as twenty-five oenta a gallon, as there era no great quanti ties of water within 300 milts of tat gold fields. There is a great gold reef in this distriot. II was discovered by two yonog men, who found forty-five ounce nugget stioktng out or a moun tain of quarts. They took ft bag of nuggets off ft single claim and name baok to their camp loaded with gold. The Merour mining district, south of Salt Lake, is also affected by the lack of water, but this has been remedied IV..' MOH9 OOI.D FttOW OltEOON. (Aotunl slxe). by forcing water over the mountains from a stream on the other side. The parties who own the waterworks have a fortune in them. Water, in fact, costs so much in Merenr that the mills using it do not allow the steam to escape, but run it oil into pipes up the mouutnin. As tho Bteam strikes the cold pipe it condenses and flows back so that it can be used again. An enormous amount of gold of the world is locked up in India. During a visit to that country a few years ago I found that gold had gone out of cir culation. Tho people seemed misora- bly poor, but they bad quantities of jewelry. Girls dressed iu cotton often wore gold and silver bracolets and auklcts, and many a barefooted girl had gold rings and gold bolls on her toes. I or ages the Lust Indians have been oppressed. They hove not dared to loan their money for fear they would lose it, aud they have preferred to put it into ornaments. This cus tom prevails to-day, evon though there is now nnder the English secur ity of property. Among the chief hoarders aro the Indian rajahs, who wear tho most expensivo of jowolry. I saw many gold rings sot with preoious stones worth (1000 and upward, and I found gold ohains for salu everywhere. Sir David Barbour estimated tho amount of tho gold hoarded in India during the half century provious to 1883 at $050,000,000. This was tho accumulation of only fifty years. He estimated that $R0l),000,000 woarth of silver was hoarded in this time, and states that nearly all of tho gold and filver which came into India in return fnr its exports was thus kopt. The Hindoo buys little from other countries. He lives on rico or coarse grains. A cotton rag in most cases forms bis olothing. AH the tuonoy he gots he keeps, and if this hoarding is to continue it is certain that a great part of the gold will eventually be absorbed by the East Indians. The English have realized this for a long time. They have attemptod to remedy it, bnt in vain. About ten years ago they tried to get tho hoarded gold and silver into circulation by offering high rates of interest for money, but the natives would not respond. There are about 300,000 native bankers in India, who lehd to the peasant, but the most of their business is done in kind, tbe money lender advanoing so muoh grain with the understanding that he shall ruoeive so muoh back whon the crop is harvested. Another gold board was discovered not long ago npon the death of the mauarajau of liurdwan. This was opened up on the death of the mahara- juh. It consisted of seven rooms filled with gold and silver and prcoions stones. Three of the rooms were looked and tbe doors brioked up. One room, forty-eight feet long, fourteen feet wide and thirteen feet high, was filled with gold plates and cups, gold and silver ornaments and preoious ntonos. Iu nearly all of the rooms, vaults, were found containing money, and in one vault there were 10,1'UO gold moburs. All of the vaults were so protoctod that it was not possible for tbe Government to find out exactly bow muoh they held, and even tho exact number of tbe vaults isnotknown. This treasure is now in the hands of the maharajah't descendants. There is undoubtedly a vast amount or gold in Chiun. ihero are mines in different parts of the empire, and a great doal of gold is brought down every year from Siberia. It comes to I'ekin and, and is there meltod down into small bars of about the size of tbe little cakes known as lady fingors. It is almost pnre, often running over KiAOSB GOLD FBOII TUB BLACK HILLS. twenty karats in fineness. It is oaat in this amall shape iu ordei that it may be hoarded and easily passed front hand to hand. The offl oialswho in luany easea make for tunes oat of their offioet, buy these gold bars and secrete them. They do not dart to pat their money into tat or banks, for fear thnt their brother offl oials may discover their wealth and confiscate it. The result is that suoh gold bars will bring two per cent, more in Pokin than they will in Shanghai, There are said to be more than 100 places in China where gold is found. In Mongolia there nre a number of mines, and ia the south western part of tha oinpiro there f'-iKySA vsrsj -JUG A CALIFOIWtA. NUGGET. (Aotunl slso). are gold workings which are 100 feet doep. A great part of the gold of both Japan and China comes from Korea. The Korean mines are said to be very rich. Korea is mountainous, and nearly all of its mountains contain minerals. During my visit to tho oountry eight years ago onr Amerioan ministor told me that he believed th gold produot amounted to $'1,000,000 a year. General Clarence Greathouse, the American foreign advisor to the king, described the mines as ver valuable, and foreign morohants showed me quills of gold dust and lit tle nuggots which had been brought to them by tbe people. So far nearly nil of the gold gotten ont of Korea- bat. come from placer washings. There are few quarts mines, bnt these nre worked in tbe crudest of ways. The loose rook is pried out with picks or crowbars. When suoh means fail 1 fire is built npon the rook, and when it is hot wator is thrown upon it to oraok it. After the ore is gotten out it is ornsbed between two stones, the under stone being flat and tho upper one somewhat round, so that it can be rolled bnokward aud forward over tho oro, crushing it. After it is crushed the metal is saved by hand panning. No pumps are used, and blasting pow der and dynamite are practically un known. Thore is no qnioksilver to gather the gold, and in all probability the most of it goes to wasto. Tho mines are the property of the king. but those who work them nndoubtodly steal a greater part of tho produot. A number of foreigners are now trying to get possession of tho mines, and within a few years they will probably by ownod by English, Amoricans and ItussiaiiB. CHAMl'IOX WOOUIAKEIt. Dearest, Illggest and Woollost Ram on Kurtll Just Sold for $840U. Behold a fine likeneis of the most distinguished member of one of the most useful families in the world. He is the champion Merino ram President, and was reoently bought in Sydney, New South Wales, for the enormous prioe of SH101). This is be lieved to be the largest prioe over paid for a ram. His championship is there fore an honor, wbioh ha claims rom the whole world. If any American ram has any claims to make let him step forward and state them. In size aud in quantity and quality 01 wool be surpasses any rain now be fore the public. His horns are also remarkable for size and symmetry, and would make a lino household ornament, but his owner hopes that it will be long before they suffer that late, lor too ram should bare many years of activity before him. It is not eay to decide whioh of the many apeoies of domestio animals is the most valuable to man, but it is not difficult to make out a good case for the sheep. We have many substitutes lor tne flesn ol tbe ox, bnt the wool of the sheep seems almost indispensible, Tbe world would be very uncomfort able u it bad to go in cotton, and that is the ouly other olothing material which the majority of men can afford. We should therefore gaze with deep rispeot npon this magnificent ram and the abundant coat whioh envelopes him. Shorn of this onoe year he will supply hundreds of human beings with warm and comfortable clothing, From hit wool will be woven the coats wbioh cover the backs of statesmen of dandies and horny-handed aons of toil, and also tbe more intimate oar raeuts whioh lie next to the skin and preserve them from tha deadly oold. -la will also bave a part in famishing iloomers to tbe new woman. Not only will he personally yiold all .is wool, but ha has already founded large family of sheep who will com- ji:ta with him in usefulness. Bams uuver fail to do their duty in this re- speot. Leprosy first apptared on tha Eft. waiian Islands in 1834. To-day there art about 1200 lepert thtrt, of whom ouo art women. "VJ-l fill CHAUFION RAM OP TUB WOULD. LIFE INJCELAND. Wondora of the Frozen Island in the North Atlantic Its People Are Hardy, Indopsnd- ent, and Very Intelligent Iceland belies its chilly name every now and thou. For years its lava flows gave it nil equatorial repu tation, aud now its earthquakes arc performing a like service. The Dan ish colonies are an extremely inde pendent class, and no cry for help has oome from tboui, although tho dam age by tho September shocks may be estimated at several million dollars. The farms destroyed number well over !200, and few buildings of Reyk javik, the capital of this Ultima Tbule of the ancients, escaped softie injury. But these Icelanders, while tbey don't mind the ordinary earthquakes, have a rare respect for such as shook them up in September. Iu fact, it is years since the little country has had any thing to equal it, but as for outsido aid it would tuko a sorios of such earlhquakos to bring thorn to seek it. They aro peculiarly hardy and ex ceedingly intelligent In fact, edu cation is with them of such import ance that where distances make it im possible for children to attend school the "mountain is brought to "Mo hnmnied" in other word, t lie school, or rather the itinerant feu-ber, comes to them. Almost every parish, if it is any distance from the coast towns, has a traveling podagogup, who, as a rule, simply directs the educational work iu each household, lays out the course of study, and leaves thu actual work of hearing lessons and of elucidating problems to tho parent?. It is a inro treat to go info tho home of 0110 of theso Iceland furmer fami lies mid during the loug winter even ing watch the cdticutionul work as it progresses. The purish priest Ice landers have been Lutherans since 1510 niny perhaps be on his monthly visit, and this menus not aloiio conso lation for the soul, bnt a rigid exami nation of tho younger ones iu their studies. At tho ago of 14 comes the final examination, and no child cau bo Confirmed until this has been passed. Education for the farming classes ends at this point ; but for the ambi tions tlioro nro tho high schools in various parts of tho country, tho School of Philosophy uud Languages at It jvkjuvili, and for maoy there is tho university at Copenhagen, for uo inconsiderable proportion of the high school pupils end up thoir curriculum of Btmlios in tho Duuish capital. Wheu they return they become the leaders iu tho political c intents which are always stirring up' this liberty loving nation. Nominally, Icolnnd is a dependency of Denmark, but since 1874, when their Constitution was re stored to thorn, thoy havo been enjoy ing almost absolute freedom of politi cal action. Tho Althing, or Iceland Parliament, meets every othor year, and of the outiro membership of thirty-six, only six nre numod by tho King. Theso six comprise just one hulf of the upper House, whilo tho twenty-four members of the lower House are elected directly by the peo ple. The LamUhofding, or Gover nor, is named for life by tho King of Denmark, but only upon tha recom mendation of the Althing. His power does not extend to the voto, for a majority voto of both Houses makes a measure a law, unloss, of course, it be a matter involving a changd in the Constitution, whon the King's voto is effective. But in its literary life Iceland in many respects even surpasses its so- cullod mothor couutry. Its scholars havo transplanted the classics of nil nations into their owu vernacular. Magazinos aud daily aud weekly news papers have excellent circulations, and Iceland's libraries are becoming exceedingly massive. To tho eye of tho traveler' Ioelund presents many features of interest. While it borders on the Arctic Circle, the Gulf Stream gives its coast a mild temperature, but iu the interior there it little possibility for varied industry. The low-growing grass makes the raising of pouict aud sheep remuoera tive. In fact Iceland exports 5,000 bead of pouies annually, and over half a million sheep. Six million pounds of cod fish aud 7,000 pounds of eider down exported lost year give ft fair idea of the iudustries of the country. Vegetables aud grain which can ripen quick make up the ouly planted crops, for the summers, though warm, are very short. In fact, almost all tha breadstuff used are imported. Bo ia the wood, for trees ara a rarity there. In tha neighborhood of Daltifoss. Iceland's Niagara, tha traveler fiud himself in oonttant wonderment at tba terrific power of the glacier streams, whioh, by the way, invariably forct the student of natural history to change his route. But at suoh times the hardy nature of the Iceland pony pulls one out of many difllonlty. The traveled routes ara lost in this flood, and the pony, with nnorrlng ac curacy, finds the shallowest way to the land. Bridges are now, however, being constructed over many of these streams, making the travel muoh eavier than a few years back. In fact, tbe two great iron bridges over the Oclftis and Thjors rivers ara marvels of engineering slid makes passage to tbe majestic Koljalsnd cataract very easy. Now, too, one finds Government employes busied everywhere in build ing roads through the lava beds, and this will, mnko easily accessible tbe famous Iceland geysers, now infre quently visited by travelers, beoansa of the hard, rooky roadway. In fact, it is strange that this work has only just been begun, for it is bound to make loelniid n muoh travoled couu try for summer tourists. Not alone will it make tho famous geysers of the Haukndair ncoessible, but tho entire couutry round about Mount Hecla, with its iuuumorablo craters, and the famous plateau of Thiogvalln, with its magnificent lake aud its wealth of historical connections. St. Louis Globc-Dumocrat. Straightening Chimney, The straightening of a chimney stack nt a brick nud tilo works located nt Earnest, Poun., was recently ac complished iu a novel manner. Tha ' ittack is one hundred aud twenty-two feet high, eleven feet square at the base, tapering somewhat at tho top, and weighs four hundred tons. ' Tho walls are thirty-six iuches thick. The lop was found to bo leuniug forty-five inches from the vertical line. To right tho chimney, ten and a half in ches of brickwork was removed from the foundation on tureo sides. At the bricks were removed, square blocks of wood were ' inserted, one after another until tbreo sides of tha structure rosted on tho block. Be tween tho blocks substantial brick -plurs six iuuhus high wore built, leav ing a space four and one-half inches betwoen thu top of the piers and the bottom of the uudermined brickwork. The blocks were then set on fire and kept burniiig evenly. If one bnrned f istcr than thu others, the fire on that particular block was checked, so that all were rnado to burn uniformly, and. as tho blocks wero reduced to ashes, the stack slowly righted. As tbe top gradually swung back through tho forty-five inch nro small fissures ap peared near tho base. Ii evory groove a steel wedgo was driven to maintain tho weight of the walls. Tho entire work consumed one day, and the re duction of tho woodon blocks to ashes required ouu hour. Electrical II J view. A Friendly Critic. The poetio young man was talking about autumn. "8 uo how tho leaves fall trembling to the ground," he repeated, softly. "That's something of your own, isn't it?" rcmarkod the person with a calloused nature "Yes. Is it not a sad, impressive thought?" "I dou't kuow that I oan appreciate it," wts thu reply. "It sounds like -poetry, "though." "Do you really think so?" "Yes. It jiukety-jinks along in first-rate style. But I don't uoo auy thing impressive about it. "Doesn't it appeal to your imagina tion V" "Not much. I dou't see how it's worth the trouble it takes to write it down. Tho public didn't have to wu it for y oil to bo born to fiud out that autumn leaves full to the ground. That's the way they always full. If you'll go out sometime and find them falling straight up or sideways, yoa oau write a piece about it that'll leave Sir'Iiuac Nowton a bauk number, ami make a hit with any editor iu the country. Aud yon won't have to pat it iu poetry, either." Washington Star. Meteoric Showers. Every year the earth passes into what is known as the meteorio belt. This modern exhibition is believed to be due to the esrth't crossing belt made up of minute bodies, the precise character of whioh has not been ascer tained. The earth goes into thie path about the 12th or 13th of November. These orbitt are supposed to inter sect daring November, 1893, or Novem ber, 1900. ' It is believed that the belt is about one hundred thousand mile wide, but as tha earth passes through it iu au oblique direotiou, only about four or five hour ara occupied in tho flight