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Tonopah daily bonanza. [volume] (Tonopah, Nev.) 1906-1929, April 05, 1911, Image 3

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THE TONOPAH DAILY BONANZA. TONOPAH. NEVADA. WEDNESDAY, APRIL .", mil.
HALL LIQUOR CO., INC.
...AGENTS FOR...
Tonopah s Vicinity
International Clear Havana
Union Made
Best on Market
WHISKY s WINE
All Right
Grades Prices
Phone in Your Orders
Family Trade Solicited
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
Dry Climate
Cordove
M. & 0.
HALL LIQUOR CO., INC.
Mizpah Hotel
A Modern Hotel where ery RoasoL
able Tariff Prevails. Hoi and ColO
Running Water In Each Room.
Rooms with or without prl?at
baths, single or en suite.
COMMERCIAL RATES
Wittenberg Warehouse &
Transfer Company
COAL! COAL! COAL!
HUILDING rAPER, ROOFING PA
PER FOR YOUR OWN PRICE
'PHONE 1062
claims. The location certificates of
the above claims are duly recorded
in tho county recorder's office of
Nye county, state of Nevada. Said
expenditure was the amount neces
sary to hold said mining claims dur
ing the aforesaid years. And if
within 90 days from the date of the
first niihlicatinn of this notice YOU.
W. V. Richardson, $95.83 for the
year 1910, and N. E. Otterson,
27 T.n for tho year 1908. 1909 and
1910 fnr vniir nronortionate share
in the uommnation, me uomDinauou
No. 1 and Comhinatlon No. 2, fail
nr refuse tn contribute vour Dortion
of such expenditure as co-owners,
which amount $400, together with
tho post nf this advertisement your
interests in said claims will become
the property of the subscriber, your
co-owner, who ha3 made tne ex
penditure and improvements as
above mentioned.
Dated at Tonopah, Nevada, this
24 th clay of February, 1911.
.IAS. A. HILLYER,
McGlll, Nevada
First pub. February 24, 1911
Last pub. May 26. istii.
of the State of Nevada, in and for
the County of Nye, for a judgment
rendered in said court, on the 5th
day of November. 1909, in favor
of Cook & Fleming, a partnership
composed of George H. Cook and
T. A. Fleming, and against said
Bullfrog West Extension Mining
company, a corporation, for the
sum of $GS6.90, in lawful money
of the U. S., together with interest,
costs of suit, etc.; and third, an
execution issued out of the said
I District Court of the Fifth Judicial
District of the State of Nevada,!
in and for the County of Nye, for
a judgment rendered in said, court
on the 31st day of January, 1910,
in favor of II. D. Porter and L.
D. Porter, co-partners, doing busi
ness under the firm name and style
of ' II. 1). Porter & L. D. Porter,'
and against said Bullfrog West Ex
tension Mining company, a corpora
tion, tor tne sum oi ?sd.ao, in
lawful money of the U. S., together
with interest, costs of suit, etc., 1
have levied nn all tho rieht. title.
claim and interest of said defend
ant, ' of, in and to the following
described real estate, to-wit:
Jumbo, Ethel, Delaware No. 1,
Bullfrog Fraction, Delaware No. 3,
Teddy Oversight and White Rock
No. 1 lode mining claims, situate in
the Bullfrog Mining District, Nye
County, Nevada.
Notice is hereby given that on
Tuesday, the 18th day of Anril.
L9ii, at i o ciock p. m. or saia
day, in front of the court house
door, of the County of Nve. State
of Nevada, for cash in hand to
the hiirlipst and lipst bidder. T will
sell all the rieht. title, claim and
interest nf said defendant. TtiillfrnEr
West Extension Mining company, a
corporation, or, in ana to tne anove
described nrnitpi'tv. nr so much
thereof as mav be necessary to raise
sufficient money to satisfy said
judgments, besides costs, interest
and accruing costs.
Dated this 2 3rd day of March
A. D. 1911.
ED MALLEY,
Sheriff.
By T. W. HOFMANN,
Deputy.
HATTON & HATTON,
Attorneys for Plaintiffs.
3-284-4, 11, 18
POINTED PARAGRAPHS.
KASHIOXAKLK TROUSERS.
Take anything that is given you
except advice.
If it wasn't for woman's curiosity,
man wouldn't be such a liar.
.Repeat slowly the name of your
favorite coroner, and leave the rest
to fate.
A happy way to croak. Your
grave guaranteed to be kept green
if there is any paint in town.
If you are too old to enjoy what
you get, think of what you missed
by not taking it sooner.
If you have ever been in a rail
way wreck or kicked by a bucking
bronco, you will be wise to the
program.
Check your name with the secre
tary for fear of losing it. Your
wife might ask you who you are
when you return.
Should your feeling be divided be
tween holy joy and fear of the fu
ture, ding to the joy while you
have it, you are sure of that.
On your road down from home,
scatter yellow paper along the walk
and thus blaze the trail back; but
don't show any yellow after ar
riving at the outer gate.
Everything will be as coherent
and conducted as decorously as a
female sanitarium for the hope
lessly insane. When you come out
of it you will never afterwards
cherish revenge.
All kinds of ruling and binding
at the Bonanza.
II
NOTICE OK DISSOLUTION!
The co-partnership heretofore ex
isting under the name and style of
the Pioneer Blacksmith shop is
dissolved by mutual consent, J.
Cloke having purchased the entire
interest of J. C. Peck in the con
cern, will continue said business.
All persons who are indebted to
the firm are respecfully requested
to make payment to J. Cloke, who
is entitled to receive the same. All
the liabilities of the firm will be
paid by J. Cloke.
Tonopah, Nev., April 1.
J. C. PECK.
J. CLOKE.
4-l-4t
NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC.
NOTICE OK DISSOLUTION!
NOTICE OF FORFEITURE.
NOTICE IS HERBY GIVEN that
nn anil nfter March 1. 1911. the fol
lowing rates will be charged for
sewer service in tne town oi muu
pah, Nye county, Nevada:
TQoiionooa f 3 0(1 Lnhra-
Tlolrerv .... K.0Q tOl'y .... 5.00
aarYiar ohnn in on Liverv-
Billiard room 5.00 stables ..10.00
nnardine- ' Offices .... 2.00
10.00 Photog'uh -
Rrprv ...10.00 gallery . 5.00
Tnvai ihnn ft On Restaur
I I . W..V. w.v-
foriri.r tant'v K00 rants ...10.00
Cigar manu- Rooming houses,
factory . . 5.00 1 to 10 rooms,
Club rooms. 5.00 per room per
nnn fortinn. month . . .75
ery 5.00 School houses
Saloon . . . .10.00 and public
Halls 5.00 building, free
untoia ... .2K.no use eiven
Ice cream Soap fact'y. 10.00
parlors .. 5.00 Store 5.00
If payment of such rates is made
fnr fine year, the Darty
or parties paying said rental so in
advance will receive a discount of
10 per cent on the rates cnargea
ah tho fnreeoine rentals are pay
able at the office of the company
at the Nevada First National nans.
of Tonopah, monthly in advance, on
the first day of each and every
month.
r n vacldonpoa n discount of 25
an
per cent will be allowed if paid at
v,t nmoa thB mmnanv on or be-
fore the 15th day of each and
every, month.
The foregoing rates and rules will
ha etrintlv adhered to and unless
payment of rentals is made during
the current montn me service. W1W
be discontinued on the first day of
4hA aiifipoaHlnff mnnth.
TONOPAH SEWER & DRAINAGE
COMPANY,
By J. G. CRUMLEY,
President.
Dated at Tonopah, Nevada, Feb
ruary 18. 1911.
To George Turin and Andy Plana,
your heirs and assigns:
Ynn. Oeoree Turin, are hereby no
tifled that the undersigned has ex
pended in labor and improvements
nn tho Marietta lode milling claim.
situated in Tybo mining district, Nye
county, Nevada, the sum or 4uu
for the years 1907, 1908, 1909 and
im. of which vou are a one-third
owner. I have also expended the
sum of $200 on tne Maryland lone
mining claim, situated in Tybo min
ing district. Nve county. Nevada,
for the years 1907 and 1908, of
which you are a one-half owner.
io you, Andy Plana, l nave ex-
nendod the sum nf $200 in labor
and Improvements on the Marietta
lodge mining claim, situated in xyDo
mining district, Nye county, Nevada,
fnr the veara 1909 and 1910. of
which you are a one-third owner, un
der the provisions oi section Z6H
nf tho Revised Statutes of the Unit
ed stntes nf America, c.oncernine an
nual labor on mining claims. The
location certificates or tne aDove
claims are duly recorded in the
county recorder a office or Nye coun
tv Htato nf Nevada. Said exnendi
ture was the amount necessary to
hold said mining claims during the
ofnrosnld venrs And if within 90
days from the date of the first pub
lication of tnis notice you iau or
refuse to contribute your portion of
such expenditure as co-owners,
nrhieh ommints tn JKOO. and $200
respectively to each of you, George
TnrU tho Marietta S1R3 33 1-3:
Maryland, $iuu; Anoy nana
nn tho Marietta. Sfifi KR 2-3. together
with the cost of tnis advertisement
vniir Interest in Kftid claims will be
come the property of the subscriber,
your co-owner, wno nas maae tne
expenditure and improvements as
above mentioned.
Dated at Tonopah. Nevada, this
20th day of February, 1911.
M. ANTU1MAZ.Z.A.
First pub. Feb. 20, 1911.
Last pub. May 22, 1911.
The co-partership heretofore ex
isting under the name and style of
the "Frisco Store," is dissolved by
mutual consent, C. Coblentz having
purchased the entire interest of A
Service in the concern, will continue
said business. All persons who are
indebted to the firm are respectfully
requested to make payment to C.
Coblentz, who is entitled to receive
he same. All the liabilities of the
firm will be paid by C. Coblentz.
Tonojiah, Nev., March 29, 1911.
C. COBLENTZ,
A. SERVICE.
3-394-5,12,19
Don't
Kick
Yourself
in case you
get in bad
I'ROFKHKIOVU ri:;tH
CAMPBELL METSON & BROWN
ATTARNEYS-AT-LAW.
Btate Ibiiik and Trust Co. ItuiltliiiK.
TONOPAH. NEVADA.
C. H McINTOSH H. R. COOKE
Mcintosh & cooke
ATTORNEYS
Offices Tonopah Blk., Tonopah. Nev
NOTARY IN OFFICES .
J. A. SANDERS
A ttnfn.vnt-T.nw
Will practice In all courts of the
State.
Office: Tonopah Block.
PIdV safe
Be on the safe
side and invest
in a
Display
Advertisement
in the Bonanza
and you will
have no oppor
tunity to kick
44ttf-
NOTICE OF FORFEITURE.
To W. V. Richardson and N. E.
ntiorann vnnr heirs and assigns:
You and each of you are hereby
nntifle that tho undersigned has
UUllUVU v ia .
expended in labor and improvements
$400 during the year 1908, $400
dnrin the year 1909, and $400
during the year 1910, on the follow
(no- named nnnrtz claims: The Com
hination. the Combination No. 1,
ho rnmhinatinn No. 2 and the
n.ov lr'ao-lo in Mnrev Mt. Unorgan
i j uinim, nintript Nve county.
state of Nevada, under the provi
sions of Section 2324 or tne Keviseu
Statutes of the United Ctatea of
America, and January 22, 1880, con
cerning annual labor on mining
SHERIFF'S SALE OF REAL
ESTATE.
The Daily Bonanza reaches the
oeople.
The Daily
Bonanza
is read by
the People
Try it Once
Right here and now
We speak our mind;
We will not wear
Tne skin-tight kind!
Birmingham Age.
'l he reason why
We're free to tell,
In summer time
They cling like glue.
Springfield Union.
We'll never wear
Sure as you're born,
Pants to slip on
With a shoe horn.
Allentown Democrat.
These fashions, sir,
Patience exceed,
When they reveal
That we're knock-kneed.
Scran ton Tribune-Republican.
To us that skin
Tight fad is stupid;
We're built too dog
Gone much like Cupid.
Houston Post.
What: Have us look
Like Ruth St. Denis?
What would we do
At playing tennis?
St. Louis Times.
We would not mind
Fashion's decree,
If all of us
Could shapely be.
San Antonio Express.
These pantaloons
Have their renown;
They won't ride up
Nor yet fall down.
Albuquerque Journal.
I'm sure they would
Not fit, you know,
For in some legs
They'd show the bow.
San Bernardion Index.
But lord, suppose the
Women persist
In following fashion's
Latest twist!
Caliente Prospector.
Those harem breeches,
Why truth to tell
On women they would
Look like
CO'loIOCIi MAN
KINDLY (ill HH II
BY ROOSEVELT
REMEMBERS C. A. A HERN, WHO
TOOK RACK NEVADA'S VOTE
I OR THE PRESIDENT.
Con A. Ahern has reason to know
he trait of Colonel Roosevelt in
keeping those whom he knows con-
tantly in memory. It is six years
now since the favorite of the Coni-
stock took the vote of Nevada to
Washington for the then president
of the United States.
He was warmly received then
and on the colonel's visit here on
he campus Roosevelt spied Con
hern on the grounds, instantly
recognized him and demanded to
be taken to him.
He greeted Ahern effusively, re
calling his last meeting. Later
Con brought three beautiful speci
mens of Comstock ore to the colonel
and after expressing delight the
colonel asked that they be for
warded to his home. Reno Journal.
RAISING THE ILL-FATED
BATTLESHIP MAINE
COLUMBUS WAS A DR.
COOK. SAYS - VIGNAUD
PARIS, April 5. Simultaneous
ly with the erection of a colossal
statute in honor of Christopher Co
lumbus at Buenos Ayres, will be
published here on Saturday two
volumes of a work by Henry Vfg
nand, first secretary of the Ameri
can embassy, in which the discov
erer of America is branded an im
postor and a humbug, and placed
in a class with explorers like Dr.
Cook.
Mr. Vignaud retired from the
American embassy two years ago
and has since devoted his entire
time to the completion of a study
of Columbus, which consumed in
all fifty years. The author is now
81 years old. He is celebrated as
a historian and was recently con
sulted by the Pope when it was
proposed to canonize Columbus. At
that time Mr. Vignaud showed that
the explorer was anything but a
saintly man, and that he had at
least one illegitimate son.
In his study of Columbus, Mr.
Vignaud undertakes to prove that
the explorer's discovery of America
was not the result of his own
genius; that the expedition was not
based upon scientific data, but that
Columbus actually learned of the
existence of America from an ig
norant sailor, who had been there
ahead of him. In a word, that
America was discovered long before
Columbus ever organized his ex
pedition, and that he merely took
the credit from another man un
known to history.
One would hardly think that in
raising the Maine, engineering work
would be undertaken, the like of
which has never been attempted
before. Yet such Is the fact, as
we get it from the Engineering
News. That paper presents the
details of the work, and they are
interesting, even to the lay man.
The new and untried engineering
task lies in the construction of
he coffer dam about the Maine
wreck, which dam, in character, di
mensions, and conditions to be over
come, differs from any other ever
built. It is to be built against
steel piling so as to surround the
wreck of the vessel about 325 feet
in length and lying In 37 feet of
water. The dam must be strong
enough to withstand the pressure
n all sides, and high enough to
keep out the water in all tides
and weather.
This plan is considered the only
feasible one that will permit the
engineers to study tho wreck and
determine its cause. When the dam
is pumped out the wreck will be
pen to the inspection of the ex
perts just as it sunk after the
terrific explosion. It is only by
such methods that the experts can
get at the truth as to the cause
of the explosion so far as we wish
to determine whether it was ex
ternal or internal.
An additional appropriation of
$35(1,000 has been voted for this
work, $30,000 of which will be re
rjuired for the completion of the
-offer dam; $25,000 for pumping
mt the dam and bracing the ship;
$225,000 for removing the wreck
ind restoring the site to its orig
nal condition; and $15,000 for
taring for the dead and setting tho
main mast of the ship as a monu
ment at Arlington. The remaining
$35,000 will be used for returning
the plant used in the undertak
ing to the United States and for
incidental expenses. The only pos
sible credit to the account will be
some $70,000, to be realized from
the sale of the steel piling used
In the construction of the coffer
dam.
As an engineeing feat, and as a
work of national good faith and
fairness, to say nothing of the pa
triotic duty involved, the raising
of the Maine will be infinitely to
the credit of this countrv.
TTNDER and by virtue of three
U certain executions, to me direct
ed and delivered, as follows, to-wit:
First, an execution issued out or tne
District Court of the Second Judicial
rustrint nf the State of Nevada, in
and for the County of Washoe, for
a judgment rendered in saia court
on the 15th day of October, 1909,
in favor of George S. Green, and
against Bullfrog West Extension
Mining pnmnanv. a cornoration. for
the sum of $2484.72, in lawful mon
ey of the U. S., together with in
terest, costs of suit, etc.; second, an
nvnnndnn locitail M,t r f tho District
Court of theFlfth Judicial District
10N0PAH NEWS AND
STATIONERY COMPANY
We are the Agents
i.nnim mo niunv
ffTCUUFlALU d UAIWI and receive it fresh
from the Factory. Finest Candy on the Market
REACH SPORTING GOODS
Ued by the Profeitionali. We Carry a Complete Line
OLIVER TYPEWRITER AGENCY ME!SS3?
" MAGAZINES, PAPERS AND BOOKS
In Our New Home Jnst Below the New Postoff
For neat commercial printing try
the Bonanza job office.
MR. WINGFIELD RETURNS.
Mr. and Mrs. George Wingfield
arrived in Reno from the coast on
No. 10 Monday morning. Mr. Wing
field is ruddy with health and
states that he will remain In Ne
vada indefinitely. They have re
opened their beautiful home on the
south side, which was closed for
the winter.
Our "Want Ads" bring results.
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When everything scorns dull and uninterest
ing to you, it's ten chances to one that your
liver is not working properly.
FAMILY LIVER PILLS
make your liver work" well and your brain is
, more active, and life seems brighter.
Look at the sunny side. Get a box today.
Sold exclusively by
JOSEPH C. P1ERCY
PRESCRIPTION DRUGGIST
Day Phone 372 - - - Night Phone 145

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