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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (April 14, 1907)
THE OREGON SUNDAY' JOURNAL!., PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING. APRIL 14, 1CC7. 3 Our Lalcsl Assays; Show Our Ore a! Filly Feet !o Be WorHi $81.03 lo Hie Ton, and It Would Pay at One-EIfjliIIi oi Hint An Expression ol fJIncr J. M Ross, Here from Goldlield ; ! ! "The Butte Boys ore does not have to improve an atom for the next 75 feet to1 make it: worth $1.00 per share on either of the Goldfield stock exchanges; People over there know thev value of. such rock as yours. It has made poor men millionaires. I believe it will prove one : oi the best' properties in the camp,'. -'.V ' v- 1 i::r'.''','.t.V ,.-' ; i r vI: ' Stilliclent Ore to Pay the National Debt ' - "At a thousand feet I am confident that the Mohawk could be relied upon to pay the na tion's "deht. It ie. m v" h1!rf that- nnn11v riierri trriiA-rr will he enriinterr1 in vrv nnv'ifnnt ill el.. .-1 .' - ...u j tu : t ixr r n f .'i-u .11 n r : : r? : t . Fully Paid VOU MAY PAY TWENTY-FIVE PER CEINT DOWN AND TEN PER CENT PER MONTH items 5 vine uoianeia juauy iriDune says mat , jvioaey nas come trom tne eartn to: our people in' wad vThey speak of millionaires m a minute. A few dollars made a few thousand in a few days in many cases. And the opportunity is still here for the" same, merry multiplication Goldfield has morc-inillionaires-than anyplace, of thesame-' populaUon Jn-theworld."-' : - "' OUR SHARES ARE OF THE PAR VALUE OF $1 EACH, ARE NON-ASSESSABLE AND WE ' SELL f ;-.v:-;.-v ' ; -t?; V ' ': ,',.; v -THBM NOW; AT 10 CSNTS rPSR skarsl-. ; , , We cannot tell what day or what tiour these prices will be advanced Wo shall not, however, merely to take advantage of somebody. This mining proposition was born of honesty and equity, and no act of ours at any time will take it from that class. The oeoofe have believed us. Our advertisements have been read and honored with public credence, hence SALES OF OUR STOCK HAVE ' BEEN WITHOUT. PARALLEL IN THE - HIS , TORY, OF THIS STATE. All persons at all cognizant of the facts acknowledge that we have broken the rec-. ord, and this all has come about by our friends relying upon our statements and. sincerity of our purposes. ' Mr. "Ross, whose opinion is quoted, thoroughly inspected our ground, was instrumental in our securing the property, ' furnished part of the material and superintended the building of the miners' house, and when paid $1,000 that we owed him for moneys paid out and his services, immediately invested that $1,000 in our shares. This speaks that gentleman's opinion of our enterprise better than they could be deliniated by any . words that we could write. THE TRUTH IS, WE WILL SOON HAVE A GREAT MINE OVER IN GOLDFIELD, and those ladies and gentlemen who own our stock will have occasion to rejoice that they ever bought, our shares. J . -: We have a clear title to our property, and owe not a dollar to any one. We invite Inspection of our books at any time. Not an officer of the company receives pay for his services-rnow! . His reward will come when the dividends begin or never ' com at alL All moneys received from the sale of shares is exclusively used for development of the property. All of our busi ness is conducted open and above board. We have 00 secrets t keep from our partners, the stockholders, of the- Butte Boys.1 We believe we are a family of friends banded together to mine from the earth the precious metal a kind Providence deposited -beneath its surface, that St may be had for the enrichment of man and the betterment of conditions here in this world. In our ,. company is found all classes and conditions of men and women the rich and poor the merchant, banker, laborer and tht . gentleman of leisure. All must meet on a common level in this enterprise. We know no distinctions. We have no prefer cnees. We shall treat all alike kindly, fairly, honestly, equitably. This is a combination of trustful ones, and we shall see to it that no confidence will be betrayed. Our shares have sold so liberally that there is not any longer doubt of our ability to penetrate the earth sufficiently to uncover its treasure, and when this is done we will all share its bounty. We have heretofore published the personnel of our company names and -oecuDatkn-of its officers may be profitable to repeat the information hers, as new -ones continually read these advertisements Our mines were named the Butte Boys by their discoverers, because the srentlemen wer oriirinallv frnm Rutt. Mnniini The president of our company, Dr. M. G. McCorkle, is a well-known physician, and the head of the . Mount Hood Electric ' Railway project, for which a franchise was recently obtained in this city. George W. Bever, vice-president and manager, is a vigorous young man, energetic and enthusiastic in his work. He has W. McXechnie, secretary of the company, is the East Portland representative of the Postal Telegraph Company, and for years been engaged in real estate transactions in this city and the farming region hereabouts. well known in business circles. A. W. Lambert, treasurer, is cashier and a principal owner of the Citizens Bank, one of the' old and substantial banking houses of this city. Mr. Lambert is likewise largely interested in real estate in all parts of Multnomah county. Geo..W. Wetherly. one of the directors, is proprietor of the Wetherley Creamery and part owner and operating business manager of the Crystal Ice Company of East Portland. This is one of the largest iceompaniesinJ3regon.and.ii t' time erecting an addition to its plant that will nearly double' Its capacity. ' " -: . .-. unaries juautz, director, is tne bast Portland constable, a native son, a bright and energetic gentleman and well known for uprightness and integrity of character, W. Fairclough is an old-timer, a substantial citixen, and there is no more reliable in Portland.. We Own 100; Acres of Mines n!; ' The divided into FIVE miners claims of 20 acres each, and we would, not sell any one of the five for all it will cost to develop the first so fully that it will pay for the develop ; ment of the other four. All about us' are half-acre, acre," five-acre,1 etL, claims, - but 'OURS WERE LOCATED-EARLYMND-whAVE-100ACRES-OFTGROUND WE BELIEVE AS RICH AS ANY IN THE GOLDFIELD REGION ;'.:"-.-V:;: .-r,:,i - your money grows;;. A person employed at a salary of $50 per week for ten years would earn exactly $28,000. Forty dollars investedJ in aviuuwK snares isits.ca years ago couia De casnea in now, at 7,000. anus a $40 investment in the shares of this mine has earned more money in THREE years than the laborer in TEN years, even on a salary of FIFTY dollars per week. It is everywhere conjectured, and we believe generally acknowledged, that WITHIN A YEAR THE BUTTE BOYS MINES WILL PAY JUST AS LIBERALLY AS THE MOHAWK :..,,.;.;? ;,-;..,.?:., '.HAS -PAID INVESTORS IN ITS STOCKS ; I . '. -v v , It don't pay to drudge along forever and ever for a "start" in life. ;. Why not take the short cut, as did Mr. Weber, who went to Goldfield from the circulation department of The Journal three years ago, landing in Nevada with out a dollar, and is now worth a million? The person who' GETS THERE is the person who has the courage to make the effort. Have you? ' : '" - )'.-.. v .'' ' - . AN ASSAY MADE APRIL 6 OF A BUNCH OF ORE TAKEN FROM OUR SHAFT DISCLOSED VAL ';v ' ' r'--:' T" A i" UES OF $81.03 PER TON .':--.., ' r '. V - .-', .' Our surface rock went $24.' We have had as high as $2,600. We have had $1,500 ore. " We have had plenty of $60 assays. Not a sample tested, sovfar,has proven arren. ; Better and better is our showing-constantly -bet-" ter -continually improving. - , t , ; ; i:y '"v'- p-'''." .-: !', . v , V Bondreds Hive Invested In Onr Stocks and VTH1 Prosper Wia Us. J ; ';v We have just as favorable a proposition as the Mohawk had at its start . ' , ' . .: -v t V - . . Speaking with the manager of the Butte Boys Consolidated Mining Company, on March 9. they stood besidt the shaft being sunk on one of the Butte Boys five claims, one of the lessees cf the Mohawk used this language: Your, prospects are fully equal to ours when our mine was at the same stage of development as yOurl; youf ore is of the same character as ours, and I see no reason why your mine should hot equal outs in all respects. My only criticism would be .that you are selling your shares too cheap. otv 'position is different from ours at the beginning. We had no criterion to go by in fixing values. No-other mine m he neighborhood had been developed sufficiently to establish the quality of the rock, and Our only information as to the richness of tur claims was contained in our assays, and your assays are, 7n all cases, encour aging as ours, and in some better. You people can determine, to almost a mathematical certainty, the productiveness of fnnn boTTOS i-'Lw " n"r hkf. ?? r? 'B,T?Vt " pe" ,r ,ike one another. YOUR SHOWI&MS JUST AS ,w;?r JSr rr?X "! ru"I!iK,rf ,t we know I,?.;.""1, !n? w.i,l:f ? ih" Predictions were more than serious! TfVFi n'A ! I' "S nu ociore a year wc wii, riAVfc A AllNt, THAT WILL OPEN THE PEOPLE' -U"-. .Richest In the History of the Worlds uoiatieid nas tne palm for valuable ore. earioaa ot ore ever snipped ShtiJgVJfLr" Do collet Els ecnortnnltr nass von hr. ' Come inwIuTtis while van have fii rhnr ; itwU.-t' r. m.f'-Z L 1' : : : ';. - - - 'v - V:-:" S:' w , , ' " , , , ivu nui waiMUj iui IUUI U1VJUCIIIJ IUC IWUUCSt UdJr J Oil UVC. THE i ', Make Checks Payable te the Compajry 1 ' ' Persons vmnlttlna' money by mall (or Butt Boy atoek - are re- 5usUd to make ail chocka, cz press or money order payable to the utte Boys Conaolldatod Jllnlna Company, and NOT to any member of tbo company, Tbla rule must be rigidly adhered to. In order that the books and accounts ot tb secretary may always be kept free from error. , -. . .. . . INCORPORATED UNDER TOE LAWS OF OREGON Capital $1,000,000 in 1,000,000 Shares at $1 Each Fully Paid Up and Non-Asscssablc 360 Sast forrlson Street, Corner Cast Third. : ' Portland, b'reon Officers and Directors DR. M. O. McCORKLE, President. Portland, Or. GEORGE W. BEVER, V.-P. & Mgr.PortIand Or. F. A.' McKECHNIE, Secreury. . . .Portland, Or. A. W. LAMBERT, Treasurer . , . . Portland, Or. G. W. WEATHERLY., . .. ,i . .; ..Portland. Or. D. W. FAIRCLOUGH. . ....'.V. .Portland, Or. CHARLES MAUTZ . ... . i . . 4 . Portland, Or. ! I' - ......... .... ..,...,, t. , .. ..... ..v.,...; ' PRINCIPALS KEEP OUT OF SCHOOL BOOK WAR One Member of Association Saw Another Member and a Text K book Cbmmlssionerat Swell Dinner" APubiisnen Agent, so Other Pedagogues Keep Skirts Clear. "Bhuri evO eompanlona, c - ; t v ' Book aaent disdain, i ': XmX banqueta are dangerona, - , Don't do- It again.- ; flreirorka was expectad teH)-ex- tloded eve tb . textbook .question at the regular monthly meeting- oi we : MnelDala association held In the high l . i i . i a ft.rn nin Kilt cawn Buiiuiui y,.iwi - 1 6U4 not blase, instead motion meoe : of nncipai 0. J. uowam lu mo . eontroversy . to aieep qaieuy. oecvouy and In order. After the meeting had , been called to order and the minutes .. ot the previous aeeelon had been read and approved. Profeeeor Downe aroae ; and made a motion something- to uis ;. effect: -v,! .. v "I move." he said, 'that thla asaocia' ; .M. finally at thla Urn. that It -will give ae xurther consideration to ',i the request of the textoooa comrainsion ' that we make recommendations regard' , . 1ng"the hooka to be ohoaaa (or use in ' the schools." The motion was adopted . without a dissenting vote while a slow smile spread over the countenances of eersral of the dignified teachers of the - young. idui was tne posaiouny ot dlacord aad recrlmmatlona overcome. - wibiihiiiii mw jteqnewi. , ioe atory goes mat Some time more ' than a month a to the textbook nam. tntmlon Intimated to the Principals' as. . Boclatloa that it would he glad to re Meet ve recomraendatlona freta It aa to , tii, wh must eeeir&oie tor Me m tne schools. The reqneat ws Voted upon '' In the meeting of a month ago but -was wufc.. nciaH exiniieiv. : it. waa scheduled to ene up at the meeting of yesterday for final consideration. There was some objection to the as . enclatlon making the selection of the text books In the minds of some of the Instructors, It being armed that the ' work of the association had ce da with the best -methods of instructing the young and lint with picking out books for a commission appointed for that purpose. The objection, however, was rxt very decided and It was generally ix-uevea mat tne members ot the organ nation would censent to make at least some recommendations eat of the uundance of their experience for the gfv.a ei me caase. guaoe the last meeting, however, a belated friend ef .a member of the or ganisation happen past an eating re sort located oa Alder street which bears a name famous for extreme good times, so the tale runs, and there beheld with horrified eyes a prominent member- of we association ana a memoer or tne commission making exceeding ' merry with a representative ef a school book concern. The table groaned and creaked with good .thing to eat and bubble water and the decorum of the schoolroom had been laid aside for the nonce for the gaiety of the ban quet hall. Dark forebodings at once filled the mind ef the belated pedestrian. He sought out members of the association and told hia tale. "What." they argued, "can these two brethren, upright though they be, have In eommon with the official representa tive of the book companyr' - The de cision . was doubtful aad so it was quietly determined that the association would take no part in any book selec tions. : '. : V .are Oae Knows Way. "Why," a prominent member of the association was asked, after the meet lag had taken action, "why did they settle the book question the way the dldr 'I do hot know." waa the answer while a euboonsclous smile gleamed In the pedagogical eyes.. . T suppose that the association thought It was not - Its duty to pick books for a commission whose business uwaa to make the se lection. It Is a serious and responsible proceeding end it la better not to med al e In It" No mention was made of the squab, the quail or the bubble water. ACTIVE ROAD BUILDING : IN TILLAMOOK COUNTY Tillamook. Or April ii.-ah. tWIty Is apparent here In the construc tion elrelee of the P. R. a N. company. Besides the tunnel new being driven at HoheoaTtUe, eight miles north of this point, the contract for the long trestle from Tillamook north has been and a large number ef men are at work oa tne construction. - Thla trestle will be approximately four miles in length. JVeiv Books And jhclr Publishers i. uT1 H3 BATTtA Or THE WEAK; Or Gosslos Oreen" Bt . lira I ' ' Henry Dudener. The author el , haa written a wild, tumultuous atory ef passion and tragedy. ana upon the old, but ever new theme ef the Ill-mating of m and eantin. vtvm niti. written . it, however. In the usual and wuuuuiivmui eiriav wuion so frequently engages the attention of, the novelist, and. In real life, drags Ita weary length through the divorce eourtg te a aatla- The nattle w. t - began J the early-part of the iaet tw tlirv IfllM W I - miw uMuappiness was borne with fortitude and courage aa a visitation ef providence, and to endure w 1. 1 w;,i tb me neaveniy reward, and all of Mrs. Dudeneya characters were guwa. pious ioiks; out eerore the bat tlee are lost and won they prove them aelvea possessed with very much tho same passions, desires and Inclinations as those who live la the twentieth cen tury, indeed. It Is this strong element of human nature that haa helped to make thla a Mr. tintaKla kMii . w 1 1 - reading It one forgets that the lives of - Hf vn na 1. nave "way, ana several generations may have arisen since , the . battles whioh It records. v XJosalps areenrt ' the author says, "Svaa a vlll,. A I a-.la.uj V. . - -.- u.-t..u.4 . 1. uaiongea by right to the home counties; to those K"lv1" u"'i '-mu ana au w-. -in. uuu iiiui oijon vil lageswhich are Influenced, made arch and evil, by nearness to the great olty." It was walled on one side by the great wfwu ,w niuin, vii nignt or the never to be forgotten storm, was thrown a young woman, "she was beau tlfnl and atranare- aH t K ..lid. I a bits -of sun seemad to lie In the sodden crimson or ner siuris." inuring that wild nignt ner ins went out as tne wall of a baby boy raised the echoes In the km.. ble home of - Samuel and Betty Jay, where the unfortunate 'woman had ta.n aArelejt rir. Vlrnfl alia . hmA V. . called te attend the woman, gave the Hn. arair the ftama that 1ftft - - - - m " uim through - life, charging the ehUdleas woman Betty Jay to keen the bov snd breed him a good; Protestant The mother, poor thing, waa a papist by this" pointing to a email crucifix which hung around the dead girl's neck, he said, "And call him Quaker, mark re.' The name will be lock to the bant ling; tbla stray, thla wild fruit of the eoeat, Quaker, Quaker aa excellent name for him. He has been born In an earthquake, or as good ae one, Listen to the thunder, now, good women." And Quaker the boy's name waa, and hla entre te life was but a fltuag pre. lode to hla career. Into Dr. Vernon's own home had "come about that time son, but the good doctor passed away too aoen te know how the Uvea of those two would be Interwoven the wild. Im petuous nature of the foreign born, who Inherited hla mother's passion for color and papistry, and the cold. Impassive English blood, cooled and hardened by discipline and aelf-abnegatlon. . 1 About the time of the birth bf these two boys a sweet courtship, in the eear and autumn time of the Uvea of two of uossips ureen's gentlefolk was running Ita fervid eourse and when the story again opens Lucy Bertram, the daughter ef the good old captain and the once ansa Louisa Woodaway, waa the fiancee of young Richard Vernon and the object of Quaker Jays adoration. Before Lucy became the bride of the cold. has. alonlesa Richard, Quaker had etolen her heart away In one Impulsive,-passion-ate Interview. But the wedding was consummated aadthe girt became ths wire or the one man while lovtna an other. Quaker was born to greater things than Gossips Oreen and went out Into the world to find the use for which he had been, created and became what today would probably be called an agitator, a free thinker or a soolallst but from time to time returned to have a atolen interview with Lucy. Id time Samuel and Betty Jay died and left their considerable fortune - to- Quaker who came back to Gossips Oreen, where. aa master of the Jay home, he could surround himself with the luxury and Oriental 'coloring that aeemed a part of him. . Here thlnge cams to a' ellmaa which showed Richard, whom the reader had learned to detest, in the beet light In which he had yet been-presented, snd In the end mads him a rather ftne char. acter. Throughout the book he la, If not lovable, at leaat a. study of sup pressed emotion, while - Quaker la a atudy ot Impetuosity and unrestrained ebullition. .The author has not drawn Lucy with any of the - atrong trait a which characterise the two principal man ef her story, but she haa no doubt made her consistent with the times In which she lived when the clinging vine was the most approved type of woman. While these three plsy the most prom inent part, they by no means occupy the entire book, or, In fact, ae character sketches, give It Ita beat features, for the book is full of excellent character atudy. ' Miss Joan woodaway, Lucys maiden aunt. Is a lady ef the old school, dainty as a Dresden figure, but the philosopher aad the humorist of the book, and she Is so full of good and original eplgrame It glvee the stimulus of sn Invigorat ing tonlo to the etory. The many quaint eaylnge of Miss Jean and the homely wisdom of the eommon folk that help to clay out - the tragedy of Gossips Oreen, keep constantly In the mind of the reader George Eliot, and the many famoue characters she created. Indeed Mrs. Dudeney resembles the author of Adam Bede more nearly than any writer of recent year a, and holds the reader with the same feeling that U one line Is skipped something good will be lost. It Is as a whole a book that will command a place among permanent fic tion, u. w. uiinngbam e Co. J. K. Gill, Portland. Price I1.B0. "The Tariff and the Trusts." By Franklin Pierce, la hla preface tbe author plainly, without clreumlooutlon or evasion states the purpose of hl book, saying: "Simplification Is the keynote to every public Issue wltht a moral eore, and the simple but compre hensive question which we shall discuss Is the Injustice of the Dingley tariff." The tariff haa become one of the public questions that ranks with our monetary problem, our race conditions, and -the issue between capital and labor; eaeh ao cording to his- own light end personal Interest forms his ' Individual opinions. But the author quite truly eays: "Our people are unfortunate In the manner and time of discussing the -tariff. Ws attempt In a elngle presidential cam-1 paign the work of popular Instruction which should be constantly going on. The people receive ' their Information on the tariff at auch a time when feel ing runs high and the . motive of the speakers and newspapers to mislead them Is strong. The Inspiring ring of a beloved partys war-cry, or of a trust ed leader's voice doee not Inspire a eon- dltlon of mind In which to reason calm ly upon the merlte ef the tariff. - It must be eonfessed. whether the reader be for a low or high protective tariff, hla education haa been received In very much such a way as Mr. Pierce describes, and when personal Interest prepares the soli . for ' this kind of In. struetlon, ths . opinions formed are ua ually adamant 1. r But to the atudent ef political econ omy, or the seeker after truth, who will take the time and give the matter ear nest thought the present book will be of great and lasting value. The author goes deeply Into his subject not from a partisan standpoint, but with a con scientious desire to bring to light facte and figures from which hs draws con clusions In a logical manner, showing the keen analytical mind ofth lawyer ana tne trained ability to present them in a legal and conclusive way- Mr. Pierce states clearly in the beginning of his Work his opposition to tbe Dlnxlev tariff, and quotes Governor Cummins of Iowa who recently saldi "All robberies and tbefta committed by elt the Insur ance offlcere elnce tbe life Insurance business was originated do not amount te the extortion due to the Dingley bill for one year." ia conclusion the author commends the referendum of Bwttserland and says: "If we would stimulate discus sion upon public questions end preserve our free Institutions, ths attention of to the merits ef ths proposed legisla tion; and no way will be found more ef ficient to attain thla end than the direct submission to the people of Important laws." , : With the Initiative and . referendum law in successful operation In thla atate Ing Mr. Pierce's suggestion and aabmlt ting the Dingley tariff Uw to a vote of the people. The MacmUlaa ' Company. 'Price, 11.10. t ; , ; m "Prlsonsrs ef Fortune: A Tale of the Massachusetts Colony" By Ruel Perley 8mrtn. The period of Mr. Smith's story la the beginning of the eighteenth cen tury, when the shores of the American eolonlee were harassed and the seas pa trolled ' by pirates and f buccaneer These robbed and - spoiled, and often Seised and put to death, the sailors and fishers and other humbler folk, while their leaders claimed friendship alike with southern planters and New Eng. land merchants.-with whom It la ati they frequently divided their spoil. Tne timee were stern- and the sola. nlsts were hardy, but they loved aa tru- y ana tenaeriy aa in more neaeful dava Thus, while, the hero's adventures with pirates ana his search for their hidden treasure 1ab Tecord of desperate en counter aad daring deeds, his love story and his winning of sweet Mary Vance is in nengnitui contrast' Ths book la told In the first person. and rarely has an author more exactly caught tho spirit and atmbsphero of the period. Ae an accurate depiction of pio neer ure in tne American eolonlee It will rank with history. As a romance It will take Ite etand In that select list headed by "Treasure Island." . Cloth decorative with colored frontispiece by Frank T. Merrill. L. C, Page A Co, Price ll.l. "Nearest the Pole' By Robert E. Peary. On. March 1 Deubteday. Pace A Co. gave to the publto Commander rearys boon, which la the first com plete story of the expedition that ear ned tne atare and stripes farthest north. The publication ef thla book ie of inter national importance. It ia the first com plete account of one ef the most notable of all Arctic successes Special interest attaches to the volume In the fact that the Introduction haa been written bv President Roosevelt, for whom Peary's ship was named. The Roosevelt's fight against tne ice, told In vivid fashion, Is really an eplo of the north. " , The frontispiece ef "Neareat the Pole" s In -color and by Opertl. the famoue Italian artist who accompanied Peary on two expeditions and who Is therefore better qualified than any one else to -do this kind of work. Thle picture shows the Intrepid explorer at IT degreee t minutes, the highest point ever reached by man. . - , . thaaa, wauid be little ansoaltlon to edmt. I It far au "Indian Love 'Letters" Bv ' Marah Ellis Ryan. In the whole ran re of In dian literature there cannot be found a more beautiful conception of Indian Ufa and character than has been given In mis ntue doom. The author haa touched a depth of pathoe while keeping- it en tirety separate and apart from the maudlin sentiment so often ' lavished upon the Indian: and while the whole book le a prose poem it lacks every In gredient that created the greateet of all inmao poems, Hiawatha, in Ite way. the eonoentloa eg Lena. fellow, who wrote In aa allegorical wa the fancies and the le:ends, as ha ha culled them from others. Mrs. Rya wn imm wiin a rm.i .a ....... - - w 1 1 i , ivui:u v personal knowledge, and with that Ir ....... numan xeeung mat' makes ' tli reader feel .. 1...1 ... - r " iviiiiHi an dtnpnlr that oomes to tbe pojr Hoi nuisn as ne wntee hie love letters t the "Lad at the Hi. unn- a. t, , ets-tswa Dawn Light) had been takr from the - Province of Tusayan- a educated la the eaat and had then bee returned to Arlsona. He left hie hear: nflwever. with the girl with th 'ern-elik hair- .-.4 . 1 ... terS 1 Which - ha i -vrltaa . ... ... not the Importunities or endear mente ef a hopeful lover but the en er protest and submission to tbe eon wam separate them. There I. f r?1r,rbrtl,,S truth, a deep pene t rating eens of Injustice ln these 1st .'SrTT? caiuiur-raHto osu f0rt sympathy for those who have been th victlme of a 'parental govern menL a moat tlAatta .v. . . . Im- - '."Ub" lJ!aatlon andth4 ! 1 . ana ne nwaxsn' iM.':'--0.8 Pt torthewor "The mf..iA...u. . - . .. . .. Of Trlnlt..." TIT ".".?. "J tB. ... : ' ' ' . ' . " in tne say ..rh? them,-but hJ TL fWr f r"er- the mualc o u wuo maaea the corrt and a moat ar. 1 1 . ' " IT . J given or that m, .n. it.,. . . 1 1- J'J1? p"w book that) k.. ,4 , r pleasure to- read hut It la whon In . aweet and anna-i . .DUt .1.4 rwaaer ia ear-i ;,-"'" umirauon by the beaotH tin'.; ' ""' v;o. rice ....... -,- . , . . . . Tha . KnMiMtt. n ...a. - . a. . IH.rat.re at th.'unt"?!"' will be published on Apr 11."' una ninth ninmi . . .l - t r-T.Vir. , " the most! eon... . . - mportant ARRESTED FOR FORRFdy -WANTED FOR MURDER, 1 ' Ve.nootiVer. TL r.. - . rl UUUlUt em TDUnaT TTia I1 Ptuvanrlw a. a. I. - - - ---- -.1 jy tvrraBtrM DT int IOCS. J nnlir-e. rKse.al taw i - W , gDUj Wllfl UI1 Brr. n vf-en laaniirud man wh wBDifwi ior raurair at Norfolk, Vtr-J ssena, . A UW UTIBUDir Will BX -a. m I a...a . . ' mMm-i