This is an appeal from an order of the district court of Shoshone county refusing to continue until trial an injunction theretofore issued in this action. The facts, in brief, are as follows: The plaintiff is a railway corporation engaged in the construction of a railroad through a portion of Shoshone county. Prior to the ninth day of January, 1899, the plaintiff surveyed the definite line (its proposed) line of railroad ovrr the land in controversy, and on or about the twenty-seventh day of January, 1899, filed with the register of the United States land office at Lewiston, in the state of Idaho (that being the land office for the land district where the land in controversy is located), a profile of its said road located over the said land, for the approval of the secretary of interior, in accordance with the rules and regulations of the department of the interior, under the act of Congress entitled “An act granting to railroads the right of way through the public lands of the United States,” approved March 3, 1875. Defendants claim that on the twenty-second day of August, A. D. 1898, they, being citizens of the United States, made a location of a quartz mining claim upon the land in controversy, under and by virtue of a location notice as follows: “Notice is hereby given that I, the undersigned citizen of the United States of America, conforming to the mining laws thereof and of the state of Idaho, and the local rules, regulations, and customs of miners, have this twenty-second day of August, 1898, located, and do claim, 1,500 linear feet on this lead, lode, or vein, bearing mineral in place; the same being 750 feet in a southeast direction from the discovery stake,
It is objected by appellant that the location notice of defendants is fatally defective, in that it does not give the direction for the distance of 600 feet from the discovery monument to the mouth of Big Canyon creek, the natural object to which it was attempted to tie the claim. Section 3101 of the Revised Statutes of Idaho, as amended by Laws 1895 (see Laws 1895, p. 26), providing what shall be the requisite of a mining location (i. e., what the location notice shall contain), provides, inter alia, as follows: “Sixth, the distance and direction from the discovery monument to such natural object or permanent monument, if any such there be, as will fix and describe in the notice itself, the location of the claim.” The mouth of Big Canyon is the “natural object or permanent monument” to which it is sought or attempted to tie the loca