'AnQ BFOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, JUNE 3, 1923 I lk 0, THE WEST SIDE MINING COMPANY (Continued from Page One) lunch and I acquiesced rather than the Dry Gulch activities in any direct enter into an argument. The lunch or personal way. They appointed was no great acquisition as I discov- trusted agents to represent them. ered later in the day. George H. Haskins, a club man and. We reached Bagga at two o'clock an expert on clam bakes, was elected that night. My circulation had prac- general manager. George W. Perkins, tically stopped some time before we formerly milk inspector of Providence, arrived at our destination, so we was appognted as assayer Unlike Iroused the clerk at the hotel and had Charlie Perkins of Dixon, George him heat milk and do other things to represented science rather than busi- stimulate signs of life. I was met. ness andsdiplomacy. George T. Mar- theefteasnt no tn Wnest SidemChi tin, whose real name was Abraham tug Coampany. As tareast i cd Mn Mack, a broken down sardine sales- ing Company. As far as I could tell man and friend of Haskins, was sel- he was perfectly sober. I never saw ected as book-keeper and accountant. him in that condition again. We ar- These men with others became linked rived at Dry Gulch before noon. The together under the name of the W-~t houses of the little settlement were Side Mining Company, a corporation not built to provide the best kind of organized under the laws of Rhode shelter from the normal winter Island, for the purpose of placer min- weather of the valley. My arrival seemed to stimnulata renewed interest ing. in the creat adventures which had Although discretion had been cast called these typical New Englanders aside while John Hardinburgh had from their quiet fireeldes, their clam the floor, the new company, under bakes and milk inspection, to live in the nfliuence of Haskins, became very the sagebrush along Dry Gulch. The conervafive If not over-cautious. He accountant, Martin, was assigned to doubtless felt that since the horse me as a computer. The first task was had been stolen it might be well to to Sod the state boundary. The re lock the barn, is first duty was to to fmndetofsteerlbostsaywe re-un find some one who understood pacer ater somevsearch.postsehugh ote mining. Inquiries were made of we- lands in Colorado, in the vicinity of tern railway officials and the Burling-Dry Gulch, were supposed to ave ton Road finally recommended a reaniDyGlhwr7tposdt ae been surveyed under the direction of by the name of Miller. This recom- the General Land Office, no one bad mendation was doubtless made with ever found a monument, and the gen- entire safety since Millers placer iral impression seemed to be that the mining activities had been confined j urveyors had fudged their notes, ad largely to South Africa. When Hasyafter a pleasant summer, spent in fish- ou learned that awater su ing and hunting, they had made their would have to be provided he souate affidavits, drawn their pay from a the advice of Ewood. ead, then State trustful government and gone their' Engineer of Wyoming. It was foundi way rejoicing, leaving it to the entry- that an existing ditch, diverting man to fit maps and notes to the water alost oppostelbd tn x ground in any way the law and lo- Dixon, could be enlarged and ex- cal customs and manners might ap- tended to Dry Gulch at a cost of about1 prove or permit. $1,000. About five miles of wood taveM ly field party was of nondescript pipe were installed in the neighbor- character. Haskins and Perkins ac- hood of Thornburgh Gulch where a companied me the first day as ob- bad land formation presented obsta- servers. They never appeared in the cles to open canal construction. All field thereafter. Charlie, the driver, of the money for this canal work was attended to the team and spring wag- advanced by one of the enthusiasts 'on and was besides, the custodian and in Providence, who was willing to chief consumer of the whiskey sup- leave the funds invested until placer ply. It seemed improbable that he mining operations produced gold had taken any part in the naming of enough to reefinpense him. The ca- Dry Gulch. A half-cast Uinta Indian nal was finished by the middle of from Utah acted as rear chairman; a Atember, 1895.r half-breed Cherokee Indian from Although the tLittle Snake River; Tennessee was head chairman and a Valley might have been a place where Noreianeld hed rod. The ci angels feared to tread, fools had not Norwegian held the rod. The i rushed in prior to the year t895. It dents of the first day were typical of is necessary for oe to aptiii how many that followed. There was bad! I became entangled with the affairs blood between my chairmen, but the of the West Side Mining Company.i Thetconstruction engineer, Fret Bond, left immediately after the ca- = nal was finished, without even saying - goodbye to Mr. Haskins. While Bond had spent much time on the western fringe of civilization, he had never' seen anything just like the Little Snake River Country. At about this time it occured to the local manage- ment of tie company that theimining claims should e lad out on ther ground so that some of them might= be found. Mr. Hardinburgh had over- looked this detail. His deeds seemedE to describe something, but there was\ no evidence on the ground that would support any description. Inquiries made by Mr. Haskins finally reached me, and, much against the kindly ad- vice of Bond, I agreed to go to the Little Snake River Valley and see' what could be done. I took the Union Pacific Railway from Cheyenne to Rawlins and a stage= from Rawlins to Baggs. We left' Rawlins at about six o'clock onel morning early in November. The wind was blowing a gale and ther was snow in the air. The stage was a light affair while the horses wer dead on their feet before we tarted.= We had lunch at the Willows, about half way between Rawlins and Baggs. This was simply a place. There was water and a few willows; also . tent where a half-breed Indian woman served what might be called! food. I had lost my appetite, along with my breakfast, during the morn- / ' l Ing due to the motion of the stage, and entered the tent to get warm rather than because I had any desire / for refreshment. I found the lady manager under the influence of whis, key and consequently a little arbit- rary. She suggested that I eat my .uguiiinsniiitiniuiiiiln INTELLIGENT AND INTERESTED Your bank should be sound, accurate and efficient. But that is not enough. Banking service to be of the most use to you should be also intelligent and interested. That is what this bank tries to be. 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