1 1 - ..' THE OREGON , SUNDAY JOURNAL. ; PORTL AND, SUNDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 27, 1D07. 63 i ANIMALS HAVE GOOD. FRIENDS IN OREGON ' ; . ' ' ' ' ' L ( . r To W. T; Shanahan Is Largely Due Success of Humane Society Cruelty of Driver Moved Correspontf k ins Secretary to Take Action. Th Orefnn irummi socltty If dolns mueb good and noble work In the all vUtlon of the suffering, cruelty and i torture hitherto Inflicted on Animals, The society was first started tn this city In February, 1S72, and the story of Its birth Is well worth repeating. W. T. Shanahan, now its corre sponding secretary, and the one to whom the success of the society Is largely due was on his way home from work down Washington street when he waa at tracted by the sight of a great crowd on fitark street. Elbowing his way through the throng he found a oolored mun beat ing his fallen horan while the people, ninny or wnom were women ana cnu dien. looked on without protest. Mr. Hhanahan . raised his arm threateningly and ordered the man to stop, which he did, remarking In some surprise that "he guessed he had a right to kill the uie animal ir ne wanted to. Prom that day Mr. Bhanuhan aet about forming a society which would alleviate the needless suffering of anl mals in the charge of vicious und rruel owners. He succeeded In Interesting a number of Portland's leadnr cltlseni In the project, anions them William M Kadd, Henry Falling. Dr. Card well, Ur. Strong, ftarney Goldsmith, and many others. It whs not until four years later. However, that a Mil whs passed ly i ne lesisiRture mamnr cruelty to an (male an Indictable offense. The pen alty provided for such offenses Is a fine of from tSO to 1100 or Imprisonment of not lees than six months or over one year. Thirty Tears Work. For over 80 years Mr. Shanahan haa devoted his time, energy and ambition to the furtherance or the work. it seems Incredible that his labors have not met with better reward, an In all this time the books of the society show only a little more than a membership of 150. and this In a city the slie of Port land seems almost beyond belief. Mr. Bhanahan attributes this to the fact that no concentrated effort has hith erto been made to bring the society be fore the public, but that Its power for good has been left largely In the hands of Individuals who have not had the time to devote wITolly to the work. Mr. Shanahan belloves that the socle- ty could be Increased through the me dium of the public schools, and tlmt the children attending these achooU shouM be told of the society snd Its alms. He believes the teachers In thee schools have much to learn In methods of Im parting those f. principles which go toward the making of nobleness of char acter and that too much strefis Is laid upon book knowledge, and not enough on heart knowledge, thus leaving the affectlona to ossify. 'i'dnt there Is good material to work upon the fol lowing Incident will show: One day last summer some cows were brought to the slaughter-house In this city. The day was hot and the poor animals were suffering from the heat. One row seemed to suffer more than the others S she lay npart. her tongue lolling from her moutli. A small boy happened to be passing and stopping to look took In the contllt Ions. Instantly his coat was off and doubtling it up he filled It with water from a small stream nearb and brought It to the suffering animal. Various sjocletiss. Various societies for the protection of animals have been formed not only Jn America, but In almost every civil ised country. The late Queen Victoria was a member of the first humane so ciety started In Ioodon In Ills. The flrat humane society In America was founded by the late Henry Hergh some 40 -years ago, Mr. Bergh was ap- return to New Tork the following year Instituted the first society, becoming Its president and guiding spirit up to the time of his death,' Mr. Itergh'a flrat caae In the N York courts excited much press torn ment at the time and keot cartoonists' pencils busy. The esse was tn refer noe to several hundred larse green tur tlos which had been brought to the city by a foreign steamer, and In order, to Insure their safety were fastened to the dock by means of nulls driven through their feet. Mr. Bergh had the captain and crew of the vessel arrested, and for soma' time thereafter was the subject of much gnodinstured banter Use of Bleotrloity. The discovery of thci uses of electric ity by the human wlxard, Thomas Edi son, has been a veritable boon to the humane societies In their endeavors to check needless cruelties. This waa fully comprehended by an old darky down In Natches who gaaed with breath awe at the first electric car pro pelled swiftly over the street by Its unsesn power, and raising his voice he exclaimed: "Bresa de Lawd for de Tankee! He ': ' y r If ' 'A A Jt ' - t tr4 . - X vX ' Kit J' f k OREGON FOR I, SAYS PORTLAHDER Jamestown Expo Verses That Appealed to 3Iany "In Virginia." Jamestown feels keenly the failure of Its exposition, but not half so much as do the concessionaires. No concession made much money, and nearly all were absolute failures. This Is the Informs' tlon conveyed In a letter from a Port land man who haa been visiting In Vir ginia. Ha writes that a wit had fur nished the following verses, which found rrtuoh favor among the concessions: JAMESTOWN. The Juleps nowhere sprout so green as in Virginia. The wood hogs nowhere are go lesn As In Virginia. ' The mud creeks nowhere have the amen, And nowhere else, the truth to tell, It Is as hot this side of h As In Virginia. Nowhere such storms obscure the sun As In Virginia. Nowhere so slow the rsllrosds run As In Virginia. And when my time Is marked tn go. Just take me tnere; because, you know, I'll longer Uve 1 11 flle so slow lown in Virginia. Nowhere can soil so well suffice As in Virginia. Nowhere ancestors cut such Ice As In Virginia. And I believe this laxy land Of fleas and nlggera. heat and ssnd. Is simply fashioned to be in old Virginia. The Portland man also closes his let ter with thes words: "Give me a home In Portland tffat Is the place for me. No more east ss long ss there Is a west." Weak on Rpr-lling. From the Baltimore News. Professor Samuel O Cook Instructor In a high school In Fast Ht. Ixuls. dis covered that but six out of eleven pu pils were able to spell President Roose velt s nsme. Modern Wisdom. From the St. Louis Olobe-Pemncrat Be careful, and you will be con sidered good. W. T. Shanahan, Corresponding Secretary of Oregon Humane Society. pointed by President Lincoln as Amer ican council at Kt. Petersburg, which office ho held until 1864, when he was forced to resign on account of 111 heaLth. Before leaving Kngland Mr. Bergh became acquainted with the Earl of Harrowby, president Of the Royal So ciety of Prevention t Cruelty to Ani mals. Mr. Bergh became deeply Im pressed with the work, and upon his south for to free de nlg- now he'a come'd for to free de come'd down gers an mewela! ' Mr. Shanahan Is of the opinion that before another decade the heavy team ing upon the streets of our city will be largely dona by means of electricity. During the next year a number of drinking fountains are t be erected In various parts of the city. These foun tains have been secured through the In strumentality of the humane society, and have been donated by Messrs. James W. and Vincent Cook. KMIera riano house; Mrs. W. P. Olds. Edward Hol min, Mrs. X. F. Falling, Dr. Louis Buck, Mrs. George Langford and little Miss Annie Russell, daughter of Mrs. Ooorge Russell. This young lady's fountain Is to be placed In the children's piny ground. The cost of thesp fountains ranges all the way from 1 1 50 to $1,000. Besides these there Is one on Its way to this city now from New York, where It was manufactured. It is the gift of the estate of the late Herman Lee En sign, founder of the National Humane alliance of New York, a philanthropic society with hoadqarters In that city. In his will Mr. Ensign left Instructions that various drinking fountains be erecteil throughout various cltlt-s. So fur 14 cities have been remembered. The fountain to be erected In this city Is built of Maine granite; its weight Is five tons and its cost Is $1,000. The electric Ught company have promised to furnish electric lights free for these fountains, snd Mr, Shanahan Is also hopeful of getting the city to furnish free water for them. BESELENA. Benny-DuSinliningCompaai Goldfield Mining District, Nevada Mines at Gold Mountain; Home Office 303 Wclls-Fargo Building, Portland, Oregon, Phone M 8397 , Director: Alex. Sweek, Dr. Sanford Whiting, Thomas O'Day, I. Aronson, J. H. Yatet. , Will Sell a Limited Amount of Fully Paid Up Non-Assessable Stock at 10 Cents a Share The Denny-Dulin consists of a Rroup of five gold and copper claims in the richest mininfr territory, that ever has been discovered by mortal man. The Denny-Dulin has been prospected, and one of the grand est bodies of high-grade ore in Cold Mountain is ready for the smelter. We will dispose of jut sufficient stock at 10 cents a share to market our product, as follows: I Buy Necessary Machinery and Back the Pay Roll We guarantee to place the product on the market in less than six months after installing the machinery. The Denny-Dulin is not a prospect. All stages of doubt hav been passed, all elements of chance elim inated. It's only a question of how great can we make the returns to those who hold stock. (Ooldfleld Review, Oct 1. HOT.) Gold Mountain Property Passes to a Syndicate A. D. Blmford has sold six claims at Oold Mountain to a syndicate composed of Oeore F. Knight. E. H. An thony W. H. Paul and C. 8. Stolle of Ooldfleld, K. W. Olllette of Los Angeles, and Henator C. J. McCarthy of Honolulu. The property, which Is known as the Sun shine group. Is In close proximity to the Great West ern. Denny-Pulln, Kenan Cameron's and othtr ship pers. At a depth of JO feet a three-foot ledge that will average 188 has been uncovered. The company wilt be known as the Adora Mining and Milling company. A contract has been let for sinking 70 feet. Several engineers have reported favorably on the property. Qrecnley & Crawford, Assayers PORTLAND, OREGON Samples of Ore deposited y DENNY-DULIN Cop per Mininij Company: No. 3273. No. 1. Gold, ounces per ton 3.92 Value $ 78.40 Silver, ounces per ton 10.58 Value 7.08 Copper, 15.56) At market Lead.3111bs ). value 78.12 Silver at 67c per oz. Gold at $20 per oz. Total $163.60 Note the Location of the Denny-Dulin Properties The very heart of a gold and copper district that's making all the world wonder. The Denny-Dulin, the pivot center, offers a limited amount of fully paid-up NON-ASSESSABLE STOCK AT TEN CENTS A-, SHARE, preparatory to sending its wealth to the smelters. The assay in this announcement shows the Denny-Dulin gives up ore that carries sufficient gold to give a net profit of $53.40 per ton, exclusive of all silver, copper and lead; $78.40 in gold alone, and the product can be marketed at $25 per ton. To those who cannot call during the day, the office will remain open on Monday and Saturday till 9 p. m. Assays, specimens, ore and full information cheerfully given. Address all communications to home office. ONE GOOD INVESTMENT EQUALS A LIFE OF LABOR! Ihe FAMOUS Nancy Donaldson Mining Co f GOLDFIELD, o NEVADA Yon Buy Into a MINE-Not a PROSPECT AT 25c THE, SHARE, GRASP IT NOW! DO IVOT DELAY! $600,000 OF ORE IN SIGHT The Goldffeld District Is Now "Putting Out" Over $3,000,000 in Gold Per Month$40,000,000 Per Year. Do You Want Your Share of This Enormous Prosperity? THE DISTRICT. Goldfield has come to be a magic word. More great fortun.es have been made here in a short time than at any other place? The fame of the Mohawk mine reaches to every land. But this property of but a few months' age is surrounded by many other great mines, for Red Top, Florence, Jumbo, Combi nation, Combination Fraction, Daisy and Great Bend are at Goldfield, and each alone would attract gfeat interest and be a center of active operations. The mil lions that have been taken from these mines in three years is but a prelude to what is yet to come forth, and one can not number the mines' which will be opened in Goldfield in the next few years, nor hazard an estimate of the un told wealth of the district. Engineers who have examined the great Mohawk are of the opinion that at a depth of 1,000 feet it could be relied upon to pay the nation's debl. The greatness of Goldfield is not alone in the richness of 'the ore deposits but in the wide extent of the mineral ground as well. " OUR LOCATION. From the city of Goldfield one may drive past the Florence, Jumbo, Red Top, Mohawk and many other mines over gTottnd containing the richest gold ore ever discovered. Leaving the region around Columbia mountain, where are located these great mines, those of the Diamondfield section are soon reached, including the Great Bend, Daisy and Other famous properties. Continuing northeast from Diamondfield the road rises on an even' grade until the divide is reached, and turning around a point of the hill, there is suddenly seen a desert view that can hardly be surpassed. At the left, and but a little distance away, stands Red mountain, clothed in many colors, a sentinel at the entrance to a dry valley some 12 miles wide, and extending fba pyramid-shaped mountain known as Cactus Peak. Far away the Kawich range forms the sky line, while the whole scene is rich in various hues, showing clear in the bright Nevada sun shine. THE FAMOUS RED MOUNTAIN. Around Red mountain is the Red mountain section of the Goldfield mining district. Near the base of the mountain is a strong dike from 40 to 80 feet in width which can be traced for over a mile be fore being covered with the wash. This is one of the strongest croppings in the Goldfield district and is so prominent that it is a landmark, and is known as the Nancy Donaldson ledge. The dike in place is much altered and highly silicified and at other points it is a coarse grained gray porphyry showing large crystals of quarjz. OUR PROPERTY. Located along this formation the Nancy Donaldson Mining Company owns the Nancy Donaldson, Nancy Donaldson No. 1, Nancy Donaldson No. 2, and the Nancy Donaldson extension lode mining claims. These claims are situated in sec tions 13 and 24, township 2 south, range 43 east from Mf. Diablo meridian of the Goldfield mining district. All have been surveyed for patent, which will issue within a short time. The total area of the property is about 75 acres. THE MINE DEVELOPED. A large amount of development work has been done to discover the trend of the numerous veins, and locate the ore bodies. A shaft has been sunk to a depth of 75 feet from which considerable high-grade ore has been taken. Drifts were cut in on the vein, exposing $600,000 in ore. This ore will be milled as soon as the machinery is installed. The ac companying table of assays was made from the ore just as sacked for ship ment, while specimens gave values high into the thousands, and equal to any thing found in the Goldfield district. The management has had the property thor oughly examined by some of the best mining engineers in the country, and all have pronounced it a property worthy of most energetic development. The prop erty will be equipped with a 25-horse-power gasoline hoist, and work will be carried on and the property will be de veloped in the most thorough manner. Enough of the treasury stock will be sold to provide all the necessary equipment for deep mining. A LIFETIME OPPORTUNITY. The Nancy Donaldson Mining Com pany owns with perfect title the property which they will develop, and all proceeds from the ores mined will go into the company's treasury, none being royalty to some other company.. Those seeking a sure mining investment in a Goldfield property, which gives promise of large profits, may find it in the Nancy Donald son Mining Company. Those who did not become interested in Goldfield early enough to make a fortune from the other big mines now have their oppor tunity in this property. OUR OFFICERS. The company is organized under the laws of Wyoming with a capitalization of 1,500,000 shares of a par value of $1, full paid and non-assessable. The treas ury allotment is 750,000 shares. The of ficers are J. C. McCormack, president, who is also president of the Bullfrog Golden Sceptre Mining Company, and is largely interested in many mining camps in Nevada; Louis Schloss is vice president. Mr. Schloss is secretary and general manager of the Goldfield Ke wanas, one of the big mines of the camp. The secretary and treasurer is Walter E. Fratt, who is also secretary of the Montgomery-Shoshone Extension Mining; Company operating property in the Bull frog district. Additional directors are Albert S. Watson and J. L. Lindsay. Mr. Watson is one of the pioneers of Gold field, and is among its most successful fortune makers. Mr. Lindsay is con nected with the famous Big Four, and owns stock in almost every famous mine in Goldfield. He is treasurer for some r CUT THIS OUT AND MAIL US TODAY NANCY DONALDSON MINING CO., 414 Columbia Building, Portland, Oregon: Please send me free, full information regarding your property. Name Street City State "I of Goldfield's biggest properties. All are residents of Goldfield and are in a position to watch the progress being made, giving the work a personal atten tion. The directorate is unusually strong. References: Any commercial agency; any state or county officer of Nevada; any bank or banker of Goldfield, or any other corporation, firm or person on earth who knows anything about either our officers or property. We solicit full investigation of every sort. "PAY DIRT." The formation of the Nancy Donald son group, while essentially the same as that which is characteristic of those por tions of the Goldfield district in which producing properties have been devel oped, presents some peculiar and highly favorable conditions. From develop ments that have been made eastward of the Daisy and Great Bend properties it appears certain that the characteristic ore bearing rocks of the Goldfield dis trict, after showing on the surface for some distance to the eastward of these properties, and then disappearing under a heavy overflow of volcanic material, again make their appearance in the terri tory covered by these claims, the over lying volcanic rocks having been re moved by erosion. COUNTRY ROCK. The main mass of the country rock in the Nancy Donaldson group is rhyolitic tufa which is one of the trffaracteristic. . rncks of the producing portion of the Goldfield district, showing the same zones of secondary siiicification and en- -richment that are characteristic in the better properties of the camp. . There is an outcrop of this kind "on the Nancy Donaldson claim about 50 feet in width and 500 feet in length, and another on the Nancy Donaldson No. 1 about 20 feet in width that shows on the surface for considerable distance. On the Nancy Donaldson claim this outcrop is cut diagonally by a basalt dike. In the dis covery shaft on these claims this basalt shows on the west side of the shaft, while the rhyolite country rock shows on east side with a vein of highly altered and mineralarized rhyolite in the east side with a vein of highly altered and mineralized rhyolite in the contact thus formed. OUR CONTACT VEIN. In addition to the above showing) . there is another contact vein between' basalt and rhyolite on the Nancy . Don aldson claim which so far as can be judged from surface developments is really an extension of the vein just de- . scribed wJiich extends from the Nancy Donaldson No. 1 into the ground of the ' Nancy Donaldson claim, where it strikes . the basalt-rhyolite contact and then ap- parently continues long this ; contact , line. So far as the veins and formation are concerned, there is no hesitancy in saying that this is the best Showing in the district, when the fact is considered that some 6t the best properties in Gold field have been developed i on surfaca assays running from $4 to $6 per ton, and few of them have shown surface values in excess: of these figures, while none of them have shown a better sur face indication than the Nancy Donald son. ,- - , , . ' ASSAY. ' V - ' i 0UUU Hv February , not Th Vaaey tonaKUoa SUals Company. Off lc Descrlp- 1 Gold, . (Silver, 1 ' Valu No. tton. I Oaa. On. Pgr Ton 16a I Wo. i' .sV j'"4fl4 'I' "113553 I 163 I Wo. 8 I 8.88 j 0S 181.70 Oold at ISO per ounct. SUvtr at .( per ounce. M. H. DOWNER. Aytr. THE PRICE OF THIS STOCK WILL, ADVANCE AT ONCE ACT TODAY! YOU BUY AN INTEREST IN $600,000 WHEN YOU BUY NANCY DONALDSON STOCK, AND YOU ALSO BUY AN INTEREST,IN THE MILLIONS TO BE DEVELOPED. ' f CALL OR, WRITE , j ? " , - ' " , - 1 ,., NANCY DONALDSON "BRANCH , OFFICE-r-4 1 4 Columbia Building, Corner West Park and Washington Streets MINING PORTLAND, r