McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 7 Nov 1901, p. 2

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

C o n ̂ L o n g A g o , (Republish^l by Request.) fx' 1WI me the tales that to me we*v ft dear, -7 • Ivonsr. long- agt>. long\ Tonjgr, agro; Sins' me the songs I delighted to heal1. Long, lonp ago. long ago. all my grief i« re- have Now you are come, movrfi, Let me forget that co long you i . roxed, LCT me believe that you love as you Idved, Vv' Long, iong ago, long ago. Do you remember the path trbere***^ met, • -- - ---i-w- Long, long ago, long, long ago? . Ah, ye.s: you told me yon ne'er woQld forgot. Long, long ago, long ago. ,<*•' • Then to all othersmy smile you pre­ ferred. vy-^ . Love, when you spoke, gave * chartt each word, Still my heart treasures the pr&lseB I heard, Long, long ago, long'ago. . Though by your kindness ray fond hopes were raised, • Long, long ago, long ago. Tou by more eloquent lips havt been praised. ' Long, long ago, long ago. But by long absence your truth has been tried. Still to your accents I listen with pride. Blfrt as I was when I sat by your side, ' ISOhg. long ago, long ago. -T. IT. Bai'ly. ' Iv Ti- •fsass •0* -*»:•> rh s«»7We4| ( t«w« "Will she manage yw, Tad?" Aliee asked alter the storm. "I hope so, Lai," ha answer**. at ka polled her curls. "You, too, I The family dlscuMdCM* turned into reminiscences of Brooks' charms And reflections upon the danger of trying to avert another's fate. Miss Stewart never understood why her Mend. Miss Brooks, greeted the announcement of the engagement with such rapturous delight. A RAT-TRAP EXPOSITION. v&'-: * I ritiing wim Fate. BY FRANCES S. HODGE. (Copyright, 1901. by Daily Story Pub. Co.) Ted, the adored; Ted, the only male 1ft a family of nine, was ill. Mrs. :£aker hung over him in all the moth- s agony, vainly beseeching him to take his medicine, while down in the library the,other mepibers of the fam- ir huddled in a terrified group, speak­ ing in whispers or gazing blankly at the certain misery of the future. "A bad case of pneumonia," Dr. fiewman had said. "I must have a fturse. One will be here in an hour." '^hen he had started out of the door. - Now, in this family of adoring fremen were many prejudices. They jkad no "advanced ideas," and to them vill nurses were "bold mid forTr?rd •reaturee, not fit for Ted to meet" Be­ tides, hadn't they read only last week *f a man who had married his nurse, Ana didn't that prove that all mem-" ftcrs of the profession take advantage •f a man's wreak and susceptible con­ dition to make love to him?" Was Ted, Whose matrimonial prospects were inknown to him, the subject of numerous family discussions, to ike coerced into marrying a nurse? Bid not each sister have a best Attend saved for him, and--why, Ike whole future' happiness of file family depended on the sort of firi he married! A. nurse! Cousin lizzie, a tiny . woman of uncertain years, rose to the emergency as she fceard the click of the door-latch, and hurst out, "Oh, doctor, a nurse! Con- fider our feelings!" Dr. Newman had no time to under­ stand, and he answered shortly: ' Feel­ ings? I am considering your feelings. The boy is very ill. 1 am unwilling to trust him in any but a trained Hand." Miss Brooks wondered why she was *ept in the parlor, and why the family game in one by one to bring her a gfjtis iyf water, to offer her fruit, to at£>w h*tr photographaof the Paris ex- josivem. She began to And the situa- flrtn Merrsting. "Maefee? says she can't leave Ted, *ut Eiiit sake a change." reported we "cJte ycmgesi daughter, in the •brar? Ac jiff maut tine Cousin Lizzie came flnm iht aiip»u>t in the parlor. She |u ante a« ̂ xtrxae of finding out the pion. «m Kiat Brooks had answered T-tf~se lc.*Ia rs a we^k as a rule Jtifr tar tia'asioos diseases and •&' 36# of the humor fcfei -;ysm is* Ccu«i£ Lizzie, and now tfb* «iGd; "If fee doesn't die he will aer. ' is the manner of oqe who §t*t±:sb*4 to determine which contin- jeatr would be worse. At last, with •S* eipressloa of conscious heroism, .--••4 a Siurmur of "protecting the dear fcoy." she walked grimly back into the jparior. Miss Brooks offered no help. The gtylish figure and the waving auburn &air loomed as dreadful danger before the nervous little lady, while the .Ah&rmi^g manner was conclusive proof asked, "Shall I have the office send you a nurse ttalft is not good looking?" As the door shut Cousin Lizzie sank exhausted into a chair, while a sympa­ thetic crowd offered her water, a fan and appreciation. An hour later Mrs. Baker was strag­ gling with the delirious Ted. "Lie still, dear, and let mother smooth your head," she implored^ help­ lessly. v "Oh! Mummie, don't bother so. The fellows are waiting for me," and he sprang half out of bed. A tall figure suddenly appeared be­ fore him and strong hands laid hold of him. "You must lie still," a strange fe"; bad case of pneumonia." 8C* that she stood between Ted and de : atruction. She found herself dashing «adly trojn subject to subject in her 1 effort to come to the point, when a v«nod reached Miss Brooks' ears that brought her professional duty before IMT. She rose and said decisively: "Will you shQjw me where I can change my dress? I think the patient needs t; Cousin LizzlSfsprang In front of the j. door and the tiny form quivered with V excitement. She laid a trembling hand ' OA Mies Brooks' arm and looked up ap- v^?>f«rtl»gly. "My dear," she said, "we let you nurse Ted. He's all we've and--and--you're too pretty." Vhere was a twitching of the face, otherwise Mi ass Brooks controlled Ittrseif perfect!* In a calm tone she ^om KUkd of an Exhibition Jo.** »t Copenhagen. The first international exposition of rat traps recently closed at Copen­ hagen after a most successful display o¥v rodent exterminating devices. As might have been supposed in such a momentus affair, America would not bo overlooked, and it is equally «er- tain that Yankee ingenuity would be suitably recognized in gold-medal awards. As a matter of fact, two gold and one bronze medal actually did go to American exhibitors. In all these were 100 sovereign exhibitors, to whom five medals were awarded in addition to the American awards, while all the makers of rat traps in Denmark, as well as numerous inventors, took this unusual opportuni y to exhibit their contrivances. Rats have become such a pest in Denmark, as well as In Swe­ den and part of Germany, that an ex­ position yras decided upon as the only adequate way in which the public could he made acquainted with the 'atest appliances. That it was no sec­ ond-class exhibition is proved by the royal patronage of Prince and Princess Christian of Denmark and the visit of an official representative of Germany, Count Schwerin. Preparations for this curious gathering had been under way for over three years. It was organ- zed by the "committee for the ra­ tional extermination of rats in Den­ mark," which for a number of years has carried on a crus.ide against the rodents. The most successful meas­ ure has been the payment of bounties amounting to about 3 cents for every at killed. In the course of eighteen weeks 102 000 rats were destroyed in Copenhagen by the bounty claimants. Sweden offered a s'milar government bounty beginning Mfi ch 1 list, and In five months 103,000 rats have been killed and paid for in Stockholm alone, lhe alarming multiplicity of rats Is videnced by the record of some of the mailer towns in Denmark, where as many as five rats per inhabitants hayc been destroyed in less than two years. --Chicago News. A-f ihe World THE MISSION OF MR. REDMOND. John E. Redmond, member of the British Parliament, has come to the United States, it is said, in quest of funds to defray the expenses of the Irish parliamentary party, who, under the British constitution, are not paid for their services to the empire. The American people have always been in hearty sympathy with Ireland's aspir­ ations for home rule, and, although the feeling of prejudice against Great Britain that once prevailed has abated,, there is still among all Americans a kindly teling toward the land from which we have derived so much that is most valuable In our citizenship, and which was so long the victim of rank injustice at the hands of its stronger neighbor. But the Ireland of today Is not the Ireland cf forty or fifty years ago; if it were Mr. Red­ mond would be more likely to be now occupying a cell in Kilnsainham than in first class American hotels. The time has probably gone by when the Irish in America could be Induced to give up' their money to. promote 11- lusionary schemes of revolution. There are heavy enough drains upon their liberality without contributing to the support of professional con­ spirators, who exploit the trusting patriotism of their countrymen for their own emoluments It is because Mr. Redmond is not the man of that class that he will receive a hearty wel­ come to the United States.--Brooklyn Times. DR. OLADDEN'S NEW ROLE. Rev. Dr. Washington Gladden, who has just been elected president of the American Missionary Association at its fifty-fifth annual meetipg, is a dis­ tinguished American preacher, writer, author, lecturer and poet, whose books and Words have entertained thousands Jll*wsn y increasing _ y growth in jjiogMiian"ity laeofcVOM among all classes of [e in every pairt of the civilized show conclusively what remedy to® l*9gA$?P!P«,1or their Rheumatism and bodUy achee and pains. Facts speak, loudir than words, and the fact remains undisputed that the sale of St. Jacob's Oil is greater than all other remedies for outward application com^ blned. It acts like magic, cures where everything else fails, conquers pain. 3 Foolish ai suffer from For they catt «$**¥» and cure thsawelyeg. The farm products of the United States this year are worth about $406,« 000.000 more than last year's outturn. EDWARD'S SPECIAL TITTARD. ' William Melville, a member of the famous Scotland Yard police detect­ ives, has been made a special guard for King Edward -VII. He has under his supervision a squad known as the Royal Guard, all plain clothes men. TO MAKE PUMPKIN PIC. *T "You're too pretty/* voice said, and he found himself look­ ing with amazement into a pair of gray eyes, disputing his will. "Must?" he asked. No one had ever said must to him. "Must," was the answer, with a tightening of the lips. He lay still to puzzle out the state of affairs. His head was raised and a glass held to his lips. He had not said he would take anything. In his amazement he drank the medicine without protest­ ing. Miss Stewart's best friends could never call her pretty. The Baker fam­ ily did not care to see what was in her face, being merely on the guard against certain qualities supposed to be irresistible to the stronger sex. The family was terror-stricken into full appreciation of her professional quali­ fications in the ensuing days. As the sound of labored breathing or of pain-i ful delirium rent their hearts, they felt the value of her calm, alert strength, and took comfort. When the crisis was passed and Dr. Newman an­ nounced, "He will get well, thanks to his nurse," they could find no words for their gratitude. During the days of convalescence she proved as resourceful as at the critical stage, and the family now no­ ticed her non-professional qualifica­ tions--at first with considerable awe, later with much appreciation. One day Ted, bundled up in rugs, had been taken to the piazza. The sound of voices came to the family. She's teasing him again," said Alice, with satisfaction. He had always teased her, and she found the situa­ tion delightful. "We can rest assured he will never fall in love with any one who manages him as she does," said Cousin Lizzie. "How thankful we should be that I was able to save him from that dan­ gerous ncrse!" If the family could have seen Ted's face at that moment, when Miss Stew­ art wt-s saying, "The man is getting maudiin; 1 11 send some oi his adoring family to him," there would have been doubt in their minds. Fortunately, Miss Stewart had perfect control of herself and of him. During the next year Ted worked as he had never worked In his life, and during the last six months the importance and the irregularity of his engagements completely mystified the family. The mother understood. She had been the confidant of a frenzied | son during the six months Miss Stew­ art had sternly forbidden him to call or to write, "so you can forget me if you want to, and I shan't seem to my­ self to be taking advantage."' When he explained to his mother that Miss Stewart had done work in the world and he had not, so he must make him­ self worthy of her, the mother could only mutter bitterly to herself, "Worthy of a nurse!" When, however, she watched the spoiled boy come into his manhood and heard him pro­ nounced a rising young lawyer, the bitterness lessened. The announcement of the engage­ ment was a painful occasion to the family. Ted's remarks, when he caught Cousin Lizzie's "A nurse toget inent Pastry Cook 8»ri IS Kut H»v« No Upper Craii • Here is a recipe for pumpkin pie given by the head pastry cook of one of the most famous hotels in the United States: Take one quart of well-stewed pumpkin strained through a sieve, add half a pound of sugar, two ounces of melt d butt?r, nine eggs, half an ounce of ground ginger, one- quarter of an ouncs of g-ound cinna­ mon, one-eighth of an ounce of ground cloves, half a teasp-)onful of grated nutmeg, a pinch of salt and a table- spoonful of molasses; mix and beat well together, add a pint and a half of milk. This will make fl ing for'two large pies; bike in a moderate oven. To stew pumpkin for pies wash and dry the pumpkin, then cut In slices aronnd the pumpkin. Remove the rind and cut )n small piecrs. Place the pieces in a kettle with one cupful of water and let it stew slowly, taking care that the pumpkin does not burn. When the pumpkin is thoroughly cooked the water shou'd have pretty thoroughly boiled away. Do not pour out any of the liquid, as this contains the richness and fl ivor of the pump­ kin. Strain one quait of this stewed pumpkin into a pin and add a scant tablespoonful of ginger, one table- spoonful of cinnamon, a piece of but­ ter the size of an egg, five eggs beaten, with one and one-half cupfuls of sugar. WJien the ingred ents are we'l beaten together add two quarts of hot milk and a pinch of sa't. Place the pan containing th's mixture over a kettle of hot water to keep warm while the plates are being lined ,with paste. Then fill and bake wilhout an upper crust in a moderate oven. To Exterminate Aat*. Powdered borax sprinkled around the infested places will exterminate both red ants and black ants. Powder­ ed cloves are said to drive them away. Another plan is to grease a plate with lard, and set it where these insects abound. They prefer lard to anything else, and .will forsake sugar for it. Pace a few sticks arounl the plate for the ants to climb up on. Occasionally turn the plate bottom up over the fire, and the ants will fall in with the melted lard. (2.) Set a quantity of cracked walnuts or shelbarks on plates in the closet where theses ants congregate. The ants will collect on the nuts in myriad*. Turn nuts and ants together into the fire, and put fresh nuts on the plates. Then powder eamphor and put in the holes and crevices of the closet. WILLIAM MELVILL& This guard consists of twenty-five' of the best detectives in Great Britain. Mlniattir Wu No Traitor. The Athenians ostracized Aristides bemuse they got tired of hearing him called the Just, and were afraid that the general favor in which he was held was more than could be safely allowed to any citizen in a democracy, and now the Chinese want to recall Min­ ister Wu, who has done more for them than any other representative they ever had in a foreign capital, because they think that he is altogether too popular here. It is easy to laugh at the Athenians and the Chinese, but they are not alone in their folly. There are citizens of Brooklyn who hesitate to vote for Seth Low because they are tired of hearing about his civic vir­ tues.--Washington Post Aotr«M at Ml - Mrs. Anne Hartley Gilbert.' th« "grandma" of the stage, is still indus­ triously pursuing her fgpfesaton a* the advanced age of 80. Mrs. Gilbert is with Annie Rus­ sell In "A Royal Family." Sbe 4s frankly and de­ lightfully old, biit time has dealt gently with her and her powers of endurance are re­ markable. Her debut was made with the old school of actors, when she was a mere girl, and now as an old woman she playe in a modern company. She has out­ lived the manager who once called het "grandma;" she has outlived the as­ sociations of youth, but Mrs. Gilbert at heart is young, and perhaps that i» gecret of her success.' "ife. Whan tha Woan Bala. The witness was Just getting to the thrilling part of the story when the judge interrupted. "There are extrane­ ous matters," she said, "that are dis­ tracting the attention of the court and preventing her from giving evidence proper consideration. We will take a recess of fifteen minutes in order that the court may retire and find out whether her back hair is really coming down."--Chicago Post. Oaa Person** Idaa. Daintiness is ta woman what eofrtesy is to man.--Chicago Newa. • Chicago bank clerk has iavented an apparatus which photographs bank Checks at the rate of 10,000 an hour. New laces of every description ap­ pear this season in beautiful patterns Entire waists of Uses are In the height of fashion. r; _ Women In Now York. .? . The Women's Municipal League ol New York is actively engaged in rais­ ing funds to further the interests of the fusion campaign against Tam­ many. They are distributing pam­ phlets showing how vice Is being pro­ tected under Tammany rule and it is for this purpose chiefly that they '* raisin* a campaign fund. Is a Dowager Aadim. The dowager duchess of Newcastle Is one of the great ladies of London who is actively engaged In philan­ thropic works in the east end, where •he is simply ador­ ed by the factory girls who come in for so large a share of her care. Many years ago she se­ ceded to the Roman church and she Is naturally most in­ terested with the charities connected with that body. The duchess has been twice married, her /--second husband being Thomas / Hohler. ^rho •died in 1892. Her father was the late Henry Hope of Deepdene, Dork­ ing. Deepdene is now the property of Lord Francis Hope, the duchess of Newcastle's second son, and is iet by him to LUy. duches of Marlborough. Motor cars of a designedly heavy build are to replace a railway projected In the Kongo Fr*e flt»t« (j., MV. DR. GLADDEST. of cultured persons. Dr. Gladden's merits as a man of thought and of magnanimity may be gathered from the fact that the University of Notre uame, a Roman Catholic school, has conferred upon him its honorary de­ gree of doctor of laws. His books all treat of live subjects and are written for popular reading. Such works as "Burning Questions," "Who Wrote the Bible?" "Things New and Old" and "Tools and the Man" are addressed to men and women who think for them­ selves. The new head of the American missionary movement has served foi many years as a pastor in Columbus, Ohio, and he Is probably the most ac­ tively working socialist in this coun- a:;*'5 ' MILLER'S 8UOCE8S<*. -i Major General John Denton Pink- stone French, who has been appointed to succeed General Sir Red vers Buller as commander of the First Army Corps is one of the comparatively young sol­ diers who have risen to high positions in the British military service. He had fought in the Soudan a&d in the east previously to his appointment in 1899 to the command of the cavalry division Jtin Natal. He is one of the two or three British generals who have fought the JtJoers witjb success. He was in command at < Elandslaagte, at Heifontein and Lombard's Kop, and was the commander also of the oper­ ations around Colesburg and In the r f- , M iss Lillie Degenkolbe, Treasurer South End Society of Christian Endeavor, 314^ Michigan Ave.,, Chicago, III, Cured bjf L y d i a E . P i n k h a m ' s V e g e t a b l e C o m p o u n d . 5 "D ear M rs. P inkham : -- When life looked brightest to me I v^4l sustained a hard fall and internal complications were the result '̂- I was considerably inflamed, did not feel that I could walk, and lost . -I my good spirits. I spent money doctoring without any help, when relative Visited our home. She was so enthusiastic over Lydia ̂ 'f 'b Vegetable Compound, having used it herself, thalf V! % ... Pinkh nothing vtfbuldsatisfy her until I sent for a bottle. I have thanked',,. her, a hundred times for it since, for it brought Wfiggfd health t*> ̂ •ad cured me within seven weeks. _ - I now wish to thank you, your medicine is X friend tb sufferhig& - women."--Lillie Degenkolbe. , , . ( $5000 FORFEIT IF THE ABOVE TETTER IS NOT CflElSTUINE.' When women are troubled with irregular, suppressed or painful -• menstruation, weakness, leucorrhoea, displacement or ulceration of th#§> womb, that bearing-down feeling, inflammation of the ovaries, backache^-h bloating (or flatulence), general debility, indigestion, and nervous pros* * tration, or are beset with such symptoms as dizziness, faintness, lassitude ̂ excitability, irritability, nervousness, sleeplessness, melancholy, "i " gone," and "want-to-be-left-alone" feelings, blues, and hopetessm they should remember there m one tried ana true remedy. Lydia Pinkham's Vcgviaioie Compound at once removes such troubles^- Refuse to buy any other medicine, for you need the best. " ": Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write her for adviC4i» Bhe haa gnided thousands to health. Address, Lynn,i. . 0 ENGINE GENERAL GEN, FRENCH. movements which culminated ia. tha relief of Kluiberley. He directed the cavalry troops in the campaign which ended in the capture of Bloemfontein and Pretoria, and was the officer in charge of Lord Roberts' left wing in the battles east eft Pretoria on June 10 and 12, 1900. In October last year he was placed at the head of the cavalry division in South Africa. General French is 49 years old, was born at Kent, England, and was educated for the na^jr, JL» .which his .Jabber. an officer. , -^v -"-W5 £>».- "fe" A Loaf Power Arm. Two and a half years ago the longest tfcctrfc power transmis­ sion line in this country and probably in the world was that running to Los Angeles, Cal., from the San Bernardino mountains, eighty miles away. Now there has been opened a line from the Upper Yuba river in the same state to Oakland, a distance of 140 miles, and at the present time, through a temporary connection to San Jose, power is actually being carried 184 miles. A double pole line has been built, and at the Straits Of Carquinez the current Is carried on a suspended span 4,427 feet long, which, according to the Engineering News, is the "long­ est single span of cable ever erected." The power, too, is transmitted at the surprisingly high pressure of from 40,- 000 t* 60,000 volts, an achievement which the same authority regards, as "an engineering precedent of great in- tersst-" • " • -- * n Philippe***, Mgr. Donatus Sbarretti, who Is re­ ported to have been selected by the Pope to be apostolic delegate ex- traoriinary to the Philippine Islands, is at present Ro­ m a n C a t h o l i c bishop of the City of Qavana, and an I t a l i a n s c h o l a r and theologian of renown. He came to the United States as auditor of the apostolic delefttion at Washington, and was subsequently appointed to the diocese of Havana, when the Spanish power was driven out of Cuba. The learned bishop was born in the historic little town of Spoleto, near Rome, in 1856, »nd was ordained a priest in 1879. ' Aalaubi of Om UilM Itatw. The total value of all farm and live stock in the United StatM is more than $2,000,000,000. Mord th*n half tkat value ($1,200,000,000) Is in Tha famous engine," General," which' obstructions placed en the iraekt»y tfti% --A --u -- * --*--1 =j--- -- ^ At Eto» played such an important pert in the Civil War, has beon sent to Chattanooga by the Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis# Kailwav and given a prominent place in the iTnion Depot, where it will remain as a permanent monument to American valor. On the morning; of April 12, 1862, Capt. W. A. Fuller left Atlanta in charge of the passenger train, on the W. <& A. B. R. When he reached Marietta a pasty of atraiigcia, drenoeu ia citizen's clothes, boarded the train and paid their feres to different points. They claimed to be refugees from the Yankee lines joining the Confederate Army, but were disguised soldiers, volunteers from Sill's Brigade,, Mitchell's Corps, U. S. A., com­ manded by Capt. Jas. J. Andrews. At Big Shanty the train stopped for breakfast, and most of the passengers and train crew left the train. The pas­ sengers had taken their seats at the table, Capt. Fuller facing the train. He saw through the window some strangers get on the engine in an excited manner and start off rapidly. Ha remarked to his engineer. Jeff Cain, and Anthony Murphy, then foreman of the W. A A. shops, that " Some one who has no right to do so has gone oM with our train.'7 AH three arose and hurried out of the house, just as the engine passed out of sight. Capt. Fuller, Murphy and Cain com­ menced pursuit on foot. They soon secured a hand-car and, in spite of the raiders, made rapid pr wah they found the engine " Yonah," and the pursuit then wasatsuch axai pace that serious damage to the oy the raiders was impossible. '**• The " General" was abandoned by the raiders at a point about hall way between Ringgold and Graysville, on account of lack of fuel and the close puipiit Fuller and his party. When the fu tives abandoned the" engine their lea<i Haiti, "Every one take iwrtidi and they left in squads. Four oi theUl were run down in the fork of the Chicly amauga River at Graysville, andone ws| > forcibly persuaded to tell woo they worst Later there was a trial by military eonrtt and eight of tlm uumber were exeentea in Atlanta as spies, six were exchanged, and eight escaped from Libby prison. The object of the raid was to bumi" **" the bridges on the line of the Western?" ' dt Atlantic Railroad and thus eat off thf .jt,:. Confederate Army from its baas ol sup. ~ , plies. The survivors of the Andrews Raiders , > A r ^ have erected a monument to their fallen comrades, and it stands to-day in ths National Cemetery at Chattanooga. Two ~. j -it- tablets have also been erected by th* > ,, W; Nashville, Chattanooga dt 8k Louis Bait - V way, one marking the spot at which thf > "General" was captured and the othet . 4.; where it was abandoned. A third tablet h a s b e e n e r e c t e d i n f r o n t o f t h e e n g i n e J " General" in Chattanooga. 3* The Greatest Consolidation of IN COLORADO OP THKSfrJ MINKS have shown large ore bodies and prodaoed high grade ores. Three large Tunnel* will open nearly 100 mines at a depth of from «00 feet to 2,000 feet. One of these onilies about OA anrl many nfhftfK from SIOO.OOO.OO tO fn)0i000.00. Only one of these mines is over 400 feet deep, leaving us rround in the main ore bodies, from our tunnel level. In a short tune w< Mu'bare the greatest or* reserves in the history or mining-- . "The Argentine Gold Belt" , • a n d t h e big lead-dKer belt are side by side at this point. • 1 ^ v '- 3;<; - * ^We o"wb about 8.000 feet by 8.000 feet, covering these two famou ndariifi^i at \heir most productive points. , • We are not looking for nor expecting to Una ore, tout we have large ore bodies now and arc openln* them at greater depthbyour tunnel^ The ores of the eompnuv run from MO.00 to *1.900 per ton. iThe aver, go of all ore shipped from our district last year was tlOB.OO per ton; the Ugfeesl i!v rutfi' tn Colorado f- -V - --but UK them at greater depth bv our tunnels. i of the eompnuv run from MO.00 to $I.9U0 per t rrgft of all ore shipped from our district last 'We TOtonly'oiwI thethfee large tunnels--the Stevens, the Tobin and the Argentine ( we own the mines along the tuni^gls. Our company has the fitron*wt tftfdorHemrr t ever Bankers, ore buyers, County officials. Chamber of Ct men. We will send ypu their lettera We are doing extensive development work and haw decided to seU a United portion of o«r Stock at 2R cento per share on easy payment*--us follows--. 100 SHARES, $ 4 CASH, f 3 A MONTH FOR 7 MONTHS. given a mining proposition from Commerce, and prominent business 290 000 1000 8 IS s 30 *0 150 6 «« 10 •* 20 W.­ JO m 85 «« II 7 II It • M M II N If «• II «i ' Dividends will help you make your last payments if vou minihssci OH of the blocks as we begin paying dividends in less than IS Months. It will only ®oet you a postal card to write us lor (omolete Information about Uveae mines and we inll send vou a prospectus und ma ~ lafcemoi If you Want to make money for vouraelfanSVrieads your community. See last week's issue. ioould |M ear acent la The Waldorf Mining ami Hilling Goaqnny 1031IMBUM SHEET, OEN VER, COLO. - wi- 7°- i*1

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy