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GOODWIN'S WEEKLY. 5 M I Anon a groat sioluiess shall overwhelm thee, I and unto theo shall almost come knowledge oE I thy neighbor's menu. I Nor shall the morning soothe theo much; but I wis is he who lassooth the first water faucet that I danc'oth by; I For therein lieth comfort. I WHAT DO YOU KNOW ABOUT THESE? I Some "Opinions and Observations." I Written by Dooley and Published by Harper I Brothers. I A ditchnary is a book that tells ye how manny I diff'ront things th' same wurrud means. I The' printin'-press isn't wondherful. What's I wondherful is that annybody shud want it to I go on doin' what it does. I Why is England losin' her supreomacy, Hin- nissy? Because Englishmen got down to their jobs at iliven o'clock flgurin' a goluf scoor on their cuffs, an' lave at a quarther to twelve on a I bicycle. I P'r wan man that goes to a wurruld's fair to see how boots is made, they'se twinty goes to I see th' hootchy-kootchy, an' that's whore th' wan I lands fin'lly. I A vallay is a retired English gintleman hired I by millyionaires who ar-re goin' into bankruptcy I to wear their clothes. Naked a millyionaire comes into th' wurruld, an' naked his valley laves I him. I The las' man that makes a joke owns it. That's why mo frind, Chancy Dopoo, is such a humorist. I In th' coorse iv his thrainin' a lawyer larn3 I enough about ivrything to make a good front on I anny subject to annybody who doesn't know anny- thing about it. H Histhry is a post-mortem examination. It fells H ye what a counthry died iv. But I'd like to know H what it lived iv. H Thoy'so wan thing about th' supreme coort, if H ye lave annything to thim, ye lave it to thim. H Ye don't get a check that entiles ye to call f'r H it in an hour. H They used to toll me that Napoleon Bonyparte H was a champeen chess player, but he was on'ly H good because annybody that bate him might as H well go down an be measured f'r his ball an' H chain. H If th' Christyan Scientists had some science H an' th' doctors more Christyanity, it wnddon't H make anny diff'rence which ye called in if ye H had a good nurse. H An athlete is a man that is not sthrong H enough f'r wurruk. B "Can a man- marry on twinty-flvo dollars?" H asked Mr. Hennessy. "Ho can if he can got th' H money," said Mr. Dooley. M A married man .can always find wurruk to do. H He's got to. H Omveo, which is th' same tiling as ingrowin' m money. H Thoy'so nawthin so hard as mindin' ye'or own H business, an' an iditor nivor has to do that. 1 I don't think we injye other people's sufferin', H Ilinnissy. It isn't acshally injyomont. But we feel f'r it. m Th' autymobill season has opened, an' wan iv th' delights iv th' summer oolony is to go out iv an ovenin an' see th' farmers iv th' neighbor H hood pluckin' their horses fr'm th' top branches fl iv threes. m Manny men lie because they like conversation, m an' they feel they can't impress th' man they're talkin' with without pilin it on. m If ye don't use wan iv ye'er limbs f'r a year or so ye ca nniver use it again. So it is with fein' H rosity Thoy'se as manny dimmycrats out iv th' party H as they are In. WHHHIHHBilHHHI Vice is a creature of such heejous mien that r th' more ye see it th' bother ye like it. What's wan man's news is another man's throublos. RAWHIDE VALUES. By J. J. Plynn, E M. (Note. Mr. Flynn was for five years geologist for the Amalgamated, and for over three yeais superintendent of the Mohawk and Combination of Goldfiold. Ills word goes in Nevada. Editor.) I have spent the last three days in making a more thorough and complete examination of Bal loon Hill, and any doubt therefore entertained of its containing millions of the precious metal have been dispelled. Squat on the hill are the min ing claims known as the Balloon, Balloon Frac tion, Grey Eagle Fraction, Mascot No. 1, Diabase and March Rose. The Grey Eagle Fraction Is as yet unincorporated. So is the Mascot No. 1. The Balloon claim, the Balloon Fraction, the Dia base and the March Rose are the property of th Rawhide Queen Mines company. The formation is porphyry and rhyolite. The rhyolito J p 'arge, intrusive dike about 300 feet wide, rum par allel with the hill. The contact witl por phyry on the west, side is being prospected by nine leasers. Among the most active at present are the Worden, on the Grey Eagle Fraction, and the Kearns No. 2 and Koarns No. 1, Reynolds Ogilvio, St. Ives and Nat Goodwin. All these leases have remarkable showings for the amount of work done. The most remarkable, and, in fact, one of the greatest prospects I have over seen is in the Kearns No. 2. On this lease there is a shaft down G5 feet, with 22 feet of crosscut at the bottom towards the hanging wall. There are values from the surface to the bottom of the shaft, but the richest ore and best showing are in the crosscut. The first nine feet of this is in ore running from ' $100 to $500 per ton. The rest of the crosscut j is in ore of' a good milling grade of from $10 to $20, and the hanging wall is not yet reached. The mineralized part nf this vein is a secondary sili ciflcation of porphyry and is very soft; that is, the silification has not been completed. Within this ledge and running parallel with it are talc seams. The mineralization of this is what might be termed "banded;" that is, there are bands of very rich ore alternating with the leaner or poorer grade of corresponding width. Those talc seams separate the enriched zones from the leaner ones, and poihaps form the hanging wall of the channels of the gold-bearing solution. I see no reason, geologically or otherwise, for this mineralization not to extend to groat dop'h and along the entire length of this contact. I feol confident that developments in the next 90 days will open up mines that will rival any in the i state. , W The 16th Anniversary Sale of I MONEY BACK 1 SHOES I You can save 10 to 50 per cent on every Shoe, 1 WM Oxford, and Slipper in the "MONEY BACK" 1 H establishment for one week. All lines includ- &H ing Spring 1 908 styles. ffiH DAVIS SHOE CO. j I wm Silk & Dress Goods Mil ffi ! Sale at M IJf Keith-O'Brien's fjl I lw Begins Monday, Mar. 9 W l!!?ep!?i?ent Phone mWisPMrfJl A A BeU phone No. Ex- SH No. 227 calls all W W I th yAm change 22 calls all wk departments Ar WwAr &ty departments $P fi.i!U.iaL-nfji, iwr' M Standard Patterns I , Wk 1 0 and 15 cents each, none higher ffi I1