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Inyo Independent, October 20, 1905
FUNERAL RANGE
The following districts have been organized in the Funeral Range: South Bullfrog district, recorder C. Kyle Smith,
presiding at Keane Springs, Inyo county, Cal., postoffice address, Beatty. Echo Mining district, recorder J.P. Poe,
postoffice address, Beatty, care H.G. McMahon. Death Valley Mining district, organized by the Pacific Coast Borax Co.
A fair sized force of men is being utilized in the development of the Kean [sic] Wonder mine in the Funeral Range. The
claim is located about 18 miles south of Rhyolite in the South Bullfrog mining district. At surface the ledge is from
four to twenty feet in width and is traceable for a distance of 500 feet. The rock is free milling and is said to
assay from $40 to $200 in gold.
Inyo Independent, November 3, 1905
SOUTH BULLFROG
A G. Kyle Smith and Jack Keane came up from the South Bullfrog
district Monday, says the Bullfrog Miner. They report things lively in the vicinity of the Keane Wonder mine in the
Funeral range. It is hinted that Mr. Keane is in camp by request of a certain big Bullfrog mine owner, who is said
to be desirous of becoming interested in the wonder. A small force is working on this property, and some ore is
being sacked. John and Wm. Sharp and Fred Fredericks are reported to have verbally agreed to give a bond of $50,000
to a Goldfield party on the property near the Keane Wonder. They have ore that assayed $400 in bismuth, besides
values in copper, gold and silver. If the bond negotiations fail it is the purpose of the owners to drive a 200
foot tunnel. Superintendent Allen, in charge of the Chloride Cliffs property of the Death Valley Mining & Milling
Company reports the uncovering of a vein that runs from $40 to $60 per ton. Five men are working. John City, better
known as "Johnny Behind the Gun," is up from Ballarat to look after the Big Belle group, adjoining the Keane Wonder.
Crowell, Franklin and Freefield, officers of the Cliff-Bullfrog Mining Company, are preparing to do work on that
company’s claim on Chloride Cliff.
Inyo Independent, November 10, 1905
SOUTHERN INYO NOTES
John Y. McKane, the well known Goldfield mining man, has a deal pending for the Keane & Etcherren mine at Chloride Cliff.
It is reported that he is operating the interests of Chas. M. Schwab. This is the property upon which Capt. De La Mar
had a bond and did considerable work. Johnny City is at Ballarat to complete a deal for an extension for the
Keane Wonder mine, which is said to have stood a rigid examination.
Inyo Independent, February 9, 1906
Thomas McCauley has just returned from a trip to the Keane Wonder and Furnace Creek sections, says the
Rhyolite Herald, and in speaking of the trip he says: "I was more agreeably surprised at what I have seen than
what I have heard about Death Valley. I cannot see any excuse for any person being short of water or getting
lost. There are wells and springs all over, and signs at every crossing and turn of the roads. The Keane Wonder
is certainly a wonder, and should be made one of the largest mines in the country. The Death Valley Lone Star
Company has a very good showing on this property, which adjoins the Keane Wonder. On the Bonanza claim, which
was recently purchased from C.W. Tyler, there is an exceptionally good showing. The Bonanza ledge is from 6 to
8 feet thick and will average over $20. It joins the east side of the Poso claim of the Texas group. The Texas
ledge averages over 12 feet in thickness and crops for over 1500 in length and is exposed for over 900 feet in width
on the Poso and Bonanza claims, where the canyon cuts through the ledge. The Texas group was sampled by Mr. Lowry for
Eastern people and his average assay on the whole ledge was $22. Taking all conditions into consideration, the Texas
group is liable to turn into one of the wonders of Death Valley. The property is easy of access, being at the bottom
of the canyon. The ledge is flat and there is enough ore uncovered to run a mill for a long time. The owners of the
property are considering a proposition made to them to put a mill on the ground. They have plenty of water for milling
purposes." Messrs. McCauley and Phail, on the recent trip, found a spring of good water, which Mr. Whince and Mr. Phail
proposes to develop for the Lone Star Company. The property of the Trio Company is looking very good, and the boys have
some high-grade ore in sight. Anthony and Laugan have bonded the Nevergiveup to Los Angeles capitalists for $25,000. The
ground is between the Trio and the Texas. Tyler and Phail have made a strike on the Golden Horn group. They located four
claims on January 1st, formerly the property of P.F. Harmon. Mr. Harmon failed to do the annual work required by law, and
forfeited the ground. On January 7 he arrived there with a bunch of men who wanted to look at his property, and when
informed that he had lost his claims, he said that he had figured he had done more work than the law requires, as he
camped on the ground for a year, and considered that every trip he had made up into the mountain was worth $25. His
people did not see the property. The ledge is bigger than the Keane Wonder or the Big Belle. The present owners are
prospecting the ledge and have found some good values in several places. Mr. Harmon said that he had made ninety-four
locations near Harrisburg. Messrs. Patrick and Wedekind had A.P. Rogers out to sample the Keane Wonder, on which they
have an option. Mr. Rogers would not make a statement regarding the property. C.W. Tyler has located two claims formerly
known as the St. Louis and Great Western. The ledge is over 4 feet wide and shows gold the entire length of both claims.
One of the most wonderful sights in Death Valley is the Furnace Creek Ranch, owned by the Pacific Coast Borax Company.
They can raise almost anything there. They have fresh eggs and milk the year around. The weary prospector may put his
hungry burro in the corral, and fill him up with good alfalfa for 35 cents per night. There is plenty of water, over
fifty inches running in the ditch, and more in a pipe line. Another garden spot is Cow Creek. There is a hot spring at
this point, and Mr. Beatty has done a lot of hard work in cleaning the ground and developing and gathering the different
streams. There is a small spring at the mouth of Cow Creek in which the water is very good. Cow Creek and Furnace Creek
are only 14 miles from the Keane Wonder. The Keane Wonder camp is liable to be one of the largest on the desert in the
near future.
Tonopah Miner Inyo Independent, March 16, 1906
THE KEANE WONDER SOLD
John F. Campbell, who recently purchased the
Keane Wonder mine, situated in the Funeral Range about 16 miles southwest of Bullfrog, was in Tonopah this week on
business connected with his company and will leave early next week for the east to complete the organization. The
Keane Wonder is pronounced by all who have seen it to be one of the biggest gold mines in the state. It was bonded
in 1904 by Captain DeLamar for $150,000, who made a cash payment of $10,000 to the original locators, John Keane
and Domingo Etcharren. DeLamar expended about $50,000 in developing the property, and would have made the final
payments if it had not been for the misunderstanding which arose between him and his expert, Cohen -- the man who
"turned down" the Mizpah because she "didn’t go up." The property consists of twenty claims and a number of
fractions, and four or five very large, strong ledges have been opened up. The work consists entirely of tunnels.
On the Keane Wonder claim about 40,000 tons of ore have been blocked out that gives average assays of $25 a ton, and
it is estimated that by running the tunnel 300 feet farther this ore reserve can be increased to 80,000 tons. All of
the ledges are from 10 to 25 feet wide and crop for the entire length of the claim. The company which Mr. Campbell is
organizing to operate the Keane Wonder group is composed of some of the most prominent men in the country, who believe
that the property can be made one of the biggest free-milling gold propositions in the state.
Tonopah Miner Inyo Independent, March 23, 1906
DEATH VALLEY STRIKE
The strike reported last week in the Bonanza claim of the Death Valley Lone Star, near the Keane Wonder, has been
verified this week. In fact, the find is really greater than at first reported, and the Lone Star has been one of
the sensations of the week, says the Bullfrog Miner. Fred C. Miles, the assayer, and Frank W. Combs made a special
trip to the property, returning Wednesday with many pieces of the ore. This rock shows free gold in large quantities.
It is a beautiful grade of white quartz and full of life. The open cut is all in quartz, with a well defined streak
in the breast of the cut that is from 12 to 18 inches wide and carries the free gold. President Phail, Secretary
Kerns and other officers, of the company, are of course, highly elated over the turn of affairs.
Inyo Independent, March 30, 1906
EXCELLENT SHOWING
"The Keane Wonder mine has a million dollars’ worth of free milling ore blocked out and ready to break down
averaging from $20 to $25 in gold," says Thomas Keane, superintendent of the Goldfield Great Bend mine, who has
examined the property several times. Mr. Keane is one of the principal owners in the Great Bend, one of the big
bonanzas of Goldfield, and he was the man who found the ore in the old workings before he interested Loftus and
Davis in the property. In his report on the Keane Wonder he estimates over 50,000 tons blocked out, and gives the
average as $20 or possibly $25 per ton in gold, the ore being free milling, with sufficient water for milling
purposes on the property and wood only six miles away. Besides the ore blocked out, he reports that with 300
feet more drifting practically $2,000,000 worth of ore more would be blocked, as shown from the outcropping
in other words, the ledge crops from 750 feet, 250 of it has been developed, and the undeveloped portion of
the ledge shows as good values on the outcrop as the other. Besides the ore in this place, considerable work has
been done on three other big ledges, showing average values of $16 gold on one ledge cropping from 8 to 10 feet
wide and cropping on the surface for 250 feet. A two-foot shoot in the center averages $42 and contains streaks
that go better than $300 in gold. Another big ledge between 10 and 15 feet wide and outcropping for 200 feet a
verages from $5 to $9. On this ledge 100 feet of work has been done, showing up several thousand tons of ore. An
80 foot tunnel on another ledge from 10 to 15 feet wide and cropping for 200 feet gives an average from $6 to $10,
not counting 12 inches averaging $217. The report states that there are 20 claims, with about 1000 of development
work done on them, and pannings show values on every claim. The railroad now being built into Bullfrog will pass
within six or eight miles of the mine. But with the facilities for treating the ore on the ground that the mine
has, it is independent of any railroad or smelter. The Keane Wonder was located about two years ago, and about
$35,000 has been expended on it in development work. The ledges crop big and strong on the mountainside, on either
side of a deep canyon which cuts the property. The ledges are a pinkish white quartz and dip into the sides of
the mountain at nearly right angles to their slope, making flat ledges, and with the tunnels running in on the
ledge, as the work has been done, not a pound of ore will be raised, but it will all be loaded into cars and run
into the mill. The country formation is different kinds of schist, a garnetiferous schist predominating. Farther
up the mountain lime prevails, while the eastern slope quartzite predominates. This is the property recently secured
for the neat sum of a quarter of a million dollars by John F. Campbell of San Francisco, who has organized
the Keane Wonder Mining Company.
Tonopah Miner Inyo Independent, April 6, 1906
KEANE WONDER
Many Engineers of world renown have visited the Keane Wonder and all pronounced it a great mine. Men like John Hays
Hammond have visited the property and admitted the great showing. With all the chief topic of conversation was
whether or not the ledge Keane’s Wonder claim was the same that cropped nearly a mile farther around the mountain. If
it were, it would give a ledge which with those large values for over a mile would make the Keane Wonder the
greatest gold mine in the world. The ledge is starting that way, and in the works so far done no sign of any break
has shown, the ore holding out continuously, and undoubtedly more work will show the ledge to be the same continuous
ore body. Last winter, upon his visit to Bullfrog, Curle, the great English engineer and author of the book entitled
"The Gold Mines of the World," inspected the Keane Wonder, and to a party of Tonopah people he expressed himself
of the opinion that this was one of the great gold mines of the world.
Inyo Register, October 10, 1907
TOO HANDY WITH HIS GUN
It is reported that Jack Keane, one of the original owners of the Keane Wonder before the property passed to
the present company operating it and well known here, killed a man in Ireland and got 17 years in the penitentiary
for the offense. No details however are procurable and the truth of the report cannot be vouched for. Keane went
to Ireland some time ago to visit his old home.
He has been mixed up in several shooting scrapes in this part of the country, only recently having been engaged
in an affray of this kind at Ballarat in which he shot and seriously crippled a couple of men. When drinking he
usually resorts to his gun on very slight provocation. – Bullfrog Miner
Rhyolite Herald, November 25, 1908
’JOHNNIE BEHIND THE GUN’ KILLS C. KYLE SMITH IN FUNERAL RANGE
Summary: John Cyty shoots C. Kyle Smith at the Bell property. Coroner’s inquest held at the Keane Wonder mill.
No witnesses to shooting. Cyty asserts Smith was aggressor. Both owned properties close to each other. Friends of
both expected trouble for some time. Cyty claims Smith opened fire, striking him in the arm and glancing across
abdomen, before returning fire. Cyty and Smith both prominent figures in the Funeral Range section. Funeral Range
Cyty Mining Company owned by Cyty, short lived. By Jo, Lee Gold Crest properties owned by Smith. Smith had taken
Cyty to court over Big Bell properties and lost suit. Smith relocated property he felt was his, driving tunnel
75 feet. Cyty started work on claim he felt was his at tunnel’s mouth. It was here that shooting took place. T.T.
Kelly first man to learn of shooting. He was in Cyty’s camp when Cyty came in, exhausted from loss of blood. Cyty’s
left arm pierced through. Kelly then went out to find aid for Smith. Fred Moesser first to reach Smith. Smith had
rolled off trail down slope about 20 feet, if not for greasewood bush his body would have gone over 100 foot cliff.
Moesser placed Smith on trail and went to Keane Wonder to get more men. Ben Grant remained with Smith until he
died. Cyty carried down to Keane Wonder mill, where an auto took him to Rhyolite, placed in the Miners’ Union
Hospital. Body of Smith carried to the Keane Wonder mill. Justice of the Peace Frank G. Thisse, of Skidoo held
inquest. Body taken to Rhyolite Undertaking Parlor. Hope of locating relatives. Smith native of Virginia, about
40 years old. Smith came to area in early days of Bullfrog excitement. Located several claims in Funeral Range,
became recorder of the South Bullfrog Mining District. Considered a good citizen and peaceful. Friend of publisher
of the Herald. T.T. Kelley tried to stop Smith from meeting Cyty, but Smith said it was as good as a time as ever. Smith
struck with two bullets, one in the left leg and the other through the abdomen and out the back. Cyty is confined to
hospital but not seriously hurt. They will take Cyty to Independence as soon as possible, Cyty agreed to go
willingly. Cyty makes statement in paper, translated from his broken English. In tunnel doing annual work, hearing
someone coming. 4:30 in afternoon. Smith called out insultingly, then started to shoot. First shot hit Cyty’s arm.
Cyty pulled .32 caliber automatic from his pocket, safety on, gun did not fire. Cyty ran, while trying to release
safety. Fired multiple shots toward Smith, who was out of sight. Cyty didn’t know if he hit Smith or not. Cyty
snuck back to his own camp, bleeding profusely. Cyty said that partner of Smith, E.W. Cordes, came to Cyty with a
large gun. Cordes made no threats, but it worried Cyty. Cordes made statement to paper that Cyty had been
threatening to kill Smith for a long time. Said that Smith had only two cartridges in his gun because he was
killing jackrabbits. Smith inquired to T.T. Kelley if he had cartridges, but Kelley had none that would fit. Cordes
claimed that he went to Cyty where he was working and that Cyty was pleasant and showed him the mine. Cordes claimed
that when he asked Cyty for tools, Cyty became belligerent. Both had guns within reach. Later, Cordes claimed to
have dinner with Cyty. Cyty later complained about the big gun Cordes had. Cordes claimed to have left, walking
back to camp, when Cyty showed up on a hill and leveled a rifle at him, accusing him of taking tools. Cordes
claimed to have then returned to his camp. Cordes learned later of the shooting of Smith. Cordes also claimed to
have seen a bottle of chloroform and cotton at Cyty’s camp, wondered as to their use.
Inyo Independent, November 27, 1908
FATAL SHOOTING SCRAPE AT KEANE WONDER: C.K. SMITH SHOT TO DEATH BY JOHN CYTY SUNDAY AS OUTCOME OF TROUBLE OVER A MINING CLAIM
A Rhyolite dispatch to the Tonopah Bonanza of November 23rd, says: A shooting scrape, resulting in the death of one
man and the wounding of another, occurred yesterday afternoon near the Keane wonder mine, the participants being C.
Kyle Smith and John Cyty.
The trouble arose over ground which was being worked by Cyty and which is also claimed by the Gold Crest Mining Company,
in which Smith, Senator Stewart and others are interested. During thd [sic] duel Smith wrs [sic] killed, being shot
four times, and Cyty was wounded slightly in the arm and stomach, both scratches. News was telephoned to Rhyolite
and Dr. Bowen took an automobile and brought Cyty to the hospital. An undertaker went out and embalmed the body
of Smith and it will remain at the Keane Wonder until officers arrive from Independence, California, the affair
occurring just across the line in that state.
C. Kyle Smith, the dead man, was a pioneer in the Bullfrog district and was interested in many properties in the
South Bullfrog or Keane Wonder district. He was also district recorder for that section. Only recently he returned
from a summer’s trip from the northern camps for the purpose of doing the annual work on the ground in question.
John Cyty, the other man involved, is also an old-timer here. He was the original locator of the Bill Bell property
and only recently lost control by losing 200,000 shares of stock, worth at the time 10 cents per share at a roulette
wheel presided over by Dick Jones in the Stock Exchange saloon.
Smith, the man killed, was widely known over both California and Nevada and has relatives in the former state.
The trouble between Cyty and the Gold Crest company is of log standing and it has been feared for some time that
trouble would be the result of the mixup.
Sheriff Naylor and District Attorney Dehy left for the scene of the shooting last Monday morning. They are expected
to return this evening.
Inyo Register, December 3, 1908
KEANE WONDER AFFRAY - ANOTHER MURDER TRIAL AHEAD: SLAYER IN CUSTODY
Summary: Participants were C. Kyle Smith and John Cyty. Trouble arose over two pieces of ground worked by both of them.
A duel ensued, Smith killed. Cyty was hit in the arm and stomach, scratches only. The bullets which struck him on the
arm plowed through the flesh of his forearm but broke no bones. News was telephoned to Rhyolite. Dr. Bowen took an
automobile and brought Cyty to the hospital. Undertaker went out and embalmed the body of Smith and will remain at
Keane Wonder until officers arrive from Independence. Smith was the pioneer in the Bullfrog District, interested in
many properties in South Bullfrog and Keane Wonder District, and also District Recorder. Smith was known widely over
California and Nevada and has relatives in California. He was popular where known. Cyty was also an old timer in the
area. Original locater of the Big Belle property. Lost control of it by loosing quite a bit of stock. The trouble
between Cyty and Smith was long-standing. It was feared for some time that trouble would result. Cyty claims that
Smith had a revolver in his hand when he came to the claim where Cyty was working. Cyty waived extradition proceedings
and was brought to Independence at the end of last week.
News articles contributed by D.A. Wright
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Inyo Independent, October 20, 1905
FUNERAL RANGE
Inyo Independent, November 3, 1905
SOUTH BULLFROG
Inyo Independent, November 10, 1905
SOUTHERN INYO NOTES
Inyo Independent, February 9, 1906
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Tonopah Miner Inyo Independent, March 16, 1906
THE KEANE WONDER SOLD
Tonopah Miner Inyo Independent, March 23, 1906
DEATH VALLEY STRIKE
Tonopah Miner Inyo Independent, March 30, 1906
EXCELLENT SHOWING
Tonopah Miner Inyo Independent, April 6, 1906
KEANE WONDER
Inyo Register, October 10, 1907
TOO HANDY WITH HIS GUN
Rhyolite Herald, November 25, 1908
’JOHNNIE BEHIND THE GUN’ KILLS C. KYLE SMITH IN FUNERAL RANGE
Inyo Register, December 3, 1908
KEANE WONDER AFFRAY - ANOTHER MURDER TRIAL AHEAD: SLAYER IN CUSTODY
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