orld is to-day a series of thriving mining camps on the Yukon
try had never been heard of. It was on this day th
d erecting the first house in this region and called the pl
next it cannot be less than 25,000. It has a saw-mill, stores, churches, of the Presbyterian, Baptist, Methodist and Roman Ca
hat the prospector fil
mmissioner, in the
ion of the Klondyke River with the Yukon River. It is here where the most valuable mining claims are being operated on
ntion is now being paid to these valuable minerals, as every one is engaged in
what the end will be. From January to April, 1897, about $4,000,000 were taken out of the few placer claims then being worked. This was done in a territory not exceeding fort
ays, and some who mined in Australia, what they thought of the Klondyke region, and their reply
the greatest mining camp in th