$WIHIVl M V M ill j^lVU 11UOil.^ At the mouth of the gulch is the Golden Gate Hotel owned and kept by Mr. F. It. Kline, though the dining room of the institution is kept by Mr. and Mrs. Smith. Proceeding further up the cabins of miners and prospectors are found at intervals along theway. On the left hand sideis the boarding house of Mr.E. Morris which ho calls the“Miners’ Home,” and the surroundings are all neat and tidy. On the right and further up stands the old hoarding house of Burke Honsinger, which is now vacant. Ahead is heard the rumble of the heavy machinery in the stamp mill, situated at a sharp turn in the road which here leaves the courseof RoedCreekand after winding arounda hill leads up a valley with mines onY either side. The residence of the company’s representatives and managers, Messrs. Atwood and Reynolds, stands on an eminence over-looking the quartz mill. Near here too is tho residence of of Dr. Boyee the popular physician of the camp, and adjoining it the apartments of Messrs. Forbes and Ilind. Following the main road through the .camp, the next reaclunHs t he large store of Mr. \V. T. Thompson, in which is a very large and varied stock of goods suited to the mining trade, for Mr. Thompson has been about mining camps since boyhood, and understands thoroughly the business of outfitting prospectors. Passing several cabins a few hundred yards further up is theAt005000AO00nt