Newspaper Page Text
NEWS TO DATE IN PARAGRAPHS ■CAUGHT FROM THE NETWORK OF WIRES ROUND ABOUT THE WORLD. DURING THE PAST WEEK A RECORD OF IMPORTANT EVENTS C0NDEN8ED FOR BUSY PEOPLE. WESTERN NEWS. The $-100,000 worth of bonds voted by Kansas City, Kans., 10 improve the water plant in that city, were sold to Trowbridge & Niver, a Chicago bond firm, at a premium of $15,500. The bonds will run thirty years and carry a premium of four and one-half per ■El -cent. ™ The T. H. Bunch company, a large grain concern, at Little Rock, Ark., has filed a petition in bankruptcy. It is reported that local banking institu tions arc involved to the extent of f.300,000. The annual business of the concern, it is said, has ranged between $4,000,000 and $7,000,000. Kenton, 'way out in Cimarron coun ty, Okla., is so remote that a bald eagle sometimes gets lost in trying to find it. Yet Kenton has a newspaper, the News, owned by L. A. WlkofL Moreover, when Wikoff was in Okla homa City, last week, he bought a big motor car and rode home in it. Two California women. Misses Al len and Pearl Curzon, are among the first to Invest In an airship, having paid $8,000 for a machine that is said to be on its way over from France. It is a Faruum, in which a record was made at Pau, and the Misses Curzon flew in it there and are anxious to re peat the experiment. The richest woman in Nebraska. IKjHsibly. Is Mary Bronson, who owns 20.000 acres of land of an average value of $50 an acre, more than 1,000 head of cattle and 250 head of fine horses. Mrs. Bronson is the mother of four sons, who are almost her only companions on the ranch on the Black Hills line of the Northwestern road. Plans and specifications practically have been finished and the contracts will be let In a few days for a new office building for the Atchison, To peka & Santa Fe Railroad Company at Topeka. The new building will 1-e erected immediately south of the pre ss'bent office building. It will cost about $200,000. The structure will be six stories high and 76x152 feet in dimen sions. It it to be fireproof, construct ed of steel and concrete. It will ac commodate 600 clerks. The Root & Siemens firm or Kantas City designed the building. GENERAL NEWS. A shoal of herrings is sometimes five or sik miles long and two or three miles broad. Over 3.000 pounds of rose petals arc ; usi*d in the manufacture of one pound of attar of roses perfume. The ratio of pauperism in England per 1.000 was 24.1 at the close of January. At the close of May It was 22.4. A heavy wind and rainstorm visited j Arkansas and greatly damnged cotton and other crops. Some damage was done to buildings, windows being blown in and street signs being blotfn down. The Y. W. C?. A. has built a hotel , in Toklo for girl students, which will b«- managed by the organi/.ution. Miss A. Carotin MacDonald, the nutionul secretary, makes the announcement or ; the completion of the hotel. While St. Louis is so well supplied with school buildings that they are not ns well filled as some desire. New j York has a building famine and CO.-! children have no place to go ex %’o'pt to attend half sessions. A hair new buildings have been fin ished during the year, but with an en-| rollment of 675,000 children there arc i not enough. Prince Ching, head of the foreign . department of the Chinese govern-; ment, is pictured as an eminent Oriental grafter by the Pekin corre s|K>ndent of the London Times, who j writes: “Since the downfall of Yuan Shih-kai the Wal-wn-pu (foreign of- 1 flee) has relapsed into its former. state of incapacity, and for this | Prince Ching is to blame. Amiable I but corrupt, he has stood for a gen eration for all that is worst in Chin ese officialdom. All stories tell of his rapacity, his greed, his unscrupulous sale of office, his indifference to th • affairs of state. His wealth is enor mous, yet no generous or charitable action has ever been recorded In his favor. Every new minister In every office' of emoluments has to pay him toll." Tigers (American breed) are said' to have eaten up two naturalist ex plorers in Costa Rica. If the polar i bear were anthropophagous like the j Central American tiger. civilization— but why pursue the subject? There is In London a school for 1 mothers. One poor woman was dis- 1 solved in tears when her baby was undressed at the hospital and its j wasted limbs revealed. She ingenu ously • explained her grief by saying : that “it was a beautiful child last time it was undressed.' I 9 King Leopold’s latest whim, prao tically completed, is a private railway leading from the Brussels surburban station at Laeken to the palace, about a mile away. This railway, altogether hidden from sight, is luxuriously ap pointed; from It. his majesty steps in to an elevator Which conveys him di rect to hla apartments. The railway, tunnel and fittings cost $1,200,000. James Kelr Hardle, member of Par liament for Merthyr-Tydvll, outlining the policy of the Labor party in the general election, says that he believes the Liberals will emerge from the con flict with a working majority. The Labor leaders, he says, are confident of increased strength in the House of Commons from 54 members to be tween 65 and 70, although supporting the budget. Eskimos are all children, contented, peaceable, honest and hospitable, with out rulers, and without ambition for fame or power. They live almost entire ly on raw animal food, and this explains the absence of a number of diseases which are common to civilization. Salt water contains iodin, and all sea an imals, as well as all who eat them un cooked, absorb more or less of this fickle chemical substance. The Spanish bark, San Antonio, with 15,000 bags of salt aboard, has sunk in Havana harbor. No one <an truthfully say that this salt is lost; it has emerged its individuality with that of the capacious deep. All the owners of this salt need do to re cover their property is to await the slow but sure evaporation which sci entists tell us is drying up and disin tegrating the earth quite after the manner of the shredded codfish of commerce. One of the reforms which have been placed to the credit of the Young Turkish party in the Ottoman empire is the abolition of the “red ticket regulation." Until this took place a red card was issued to a Jew on arrival in Palestine, the possession of which entitled the holder to a th.ee month’s residence. If the red ticket man wished to remain longer the cre dential had to be renewed, and this naturally led to abuses in the nature of graft. The abolition of this re strictive measure was urged upon the authorities by Israel Zangwill. j Scurvy, so common and deadly j among early polar explorers, is total . ly unknown among Eskimos who eat ) raw meat. This iodized raw food | also explains the absence of en l larged tonsils, glands and goiter, j Their perfect, splendid teeth and strong lower Jaws mark them com i pletely carnivorous. The exclusion of vegetable food has shortened their in | testine and indigestion is unknown. | One would suppose their pure flesh | diet would cause biliousness, etc., but ' the large percentage of oil in their food acts as a gentle laxative and ) protects against all harms. The Ks ; klmo eats with relish old rotten blub i her that would stagger a buzzard.— , New York press. Twenty-five thousand Chinese Cool ; ies are wanted to finish the Canadian Grand Trunk railway at $3 a day and | board. Chinese cooks get $75 a month ! in New York, as against $3o to $45 paid to Japanese cooks. Chines# laundry men make $18 a week here. A Chinaman as much In one day in a house as the average servant t;lrl does in six. The wages which the Chinamen’s untiring industry, honesty, intelligence and loyalty command are the measure of the yellow peril we teel when he is here stealing our Job. By offering this work and big wages to coolies the officials of the Canadian Grand Trunk are discouraging that ! American labor which is inclined to turn over on the park bench for an other snooze until it is time for the bread line to form. NEWS FROM WASHINGTON. H satisfactory arrangements In the matter of salary can be made. Man ager McAleer of the St. lx>uls Ameri can league team, will become man ager of the Washington club next sea son. Almost side by side with the bodies of Generals I-awton and Wirt, the j body of the late Lieut. Gen. Henry C. Corbin was buried in Arlington Na tional cemetery in the presence of the members of the distinguished officer’s family and his close personal friends. “Where should the children of the i soldiers of the United States army be I sent to school?” is being discussed by : Indiana public school authorities and i the scholars at Fort Benjnmin Harri son near Indianapolis. About twenty ! children of the officers and privates I have been sent to the town school, near the army post. The school is I overcrowded, anil the state superin j tendent of public Instruction thinks tho township taxes should not be ex tended to cover the expense of edu cating the children of the alien sol diers. The state attorney general, however, has given an opinion that the army post children proper ly should be sent to the school in the township In which the post is situated. It Is possible a | test case in court will be instituted by barring the soldiers’ children from the | school. ! General Weston. Department of Cal 1 ifornia, recommends in his annual re port that the Monterey school of mus ! ketry be moved to a post in the Mid dle West. * Nearer to the earth by 15,000,000 miles than It has been for fifteen years, tho planet Mars on September 22nd was the object of immense Inter est to the astronomers throughout the world, particularly at the United States naval observatory at Washing ton. Its average distance from the earth is 50.000,000 miles. Its dis tance from the earth Wednesday was only 25,000,000. DR. SYNTAX CHINA Worcester Woman the Possessor of Famous Collection. Btory of How Rowlandson Drew the Pictures and How Clews Came to Put Them on Hi» Well-Known Dark-Blue Ware. Breton. —Among the various kinds of old blue Staffordshire china- there ia none in greater demand or moro difficult to find than that bearing the famous Doctor Syntax designs. The pictorial ware can readily com mand a fancy price, for It is not un common for S4O to be paid for some of the plates and from S2OO to 1 S3OO for some of the platters. Mrs. Emma De Forest Morse of Worcester. Mass., is the fortunate possessor of nearly all the subjects, included in this series. It is not only a most remarkable collection, but It is by all means the largest and most complete known. Each one is a per fect specimen of the beautiful dark blue printed ware made between 1820 and 1830 by R. & J. Clews, the well known English potters. Doctor Syntax’s three tours In search of the picturesque, of consola tion and of a wife, were created by Rowlandson, the famous caricaturist, who made a series of drawings rep resenting an old clergyman and school master in love with the fine arts and who traveled during his holidays in quest of the picturesque. The first-named was made In 1810 and taken to Mr. Ackerman, a print seller of the Strand, who, in turn. In vited William Combe, a most prolific writer of those days, to furnish a text for the drawings, resulting in the schoolmaster’s tour, as ft was called on its appearance in the Poetical Mag azine. Doctor Syntax instantly sprang into widespread popularity, to the ex tent that Syntax wigs. Syntax hats and coats soon became the proper thing. Doctor Syntax was next reprinted in book form and after several edi tions had been exhausted. Combe & Rowlandson together prepared a sec- The Harvest Home. ond series called “Doctor Syntax's Tour in Search of Consolation.” This was in 1820 and the following year came Doctor Syntax’s laughable “tour in search of a wife.” which undoubted ly contained some of Rowlandson’s best designs. , It is said that Combe used to pin up the various sketches against a screen of his apartment in the King's Bench and write his verses as the painter wanted them. He was a most prolific writer and between the years 1773 and 1823 he wrote and edited upwards of 100 books, contributed to u score of journals and furnished, ac cording to his own notebook, fully 2.000 columns of matter to the maga zines and newspapers. It happened that about the time of the vogue of Doctor Syntax. Clews was making his lustrous, dark-blue ware for the American market and he immediately seized the opportunity to add to his fame by reproducing the various Syntax designs with an accu racy that characterized the Clews china. One series began with the doctor** preparations for his tour of the lakes accompanied by his mare Grizzle: At length the lingering moment <*nmo Th.it gav<- the dawn of wealth and fame Incurious Ralph, exact at four. I/h| tirtszle. saddled, to the dour. And noon, with mon- than common state The doctor Stood before the gate. Behind him was Ids faithful wife. "One more embrace, my dearest life." Then Ids gray palfrey he bestrode. And gave a nod and off tie rode. •‘Good luck, good luck," she loudly cried “Vale; Oh. Vale!” he replied. This story is distinctly portrayed within the limits of a dinner plate, or in the larger scope afforded by n plat ter. Then follows a list of calamities which befell the unfortunate traveler In rapid succession. First he loses hit way and then lie is stopped by high wuymen and finally bound by them to a tree. Here he remains in dur ance for a while, until liberated b> two buxom matrons, who are seen ot their trotting palfreys riding to hb rescue. Doctor Syntax setting out in scare! of a wife is the beginning of one set of drawings. Others of much attrac tion are the garden trio, the harvest home, a noble bunting party. Doctoi Syntax with a blue stocking beauty Doctor Syntax star-gazing : nd many more. The Syntax dishes are occasionally seen in colors, as in the case of the specimen in the Morse collection, which illustrates “Doctor Syntax's Travels." These are probably of a later period than the Clews china. Must Be So. “I.ook here. Jane, It seems to nu that you’re asking me for money all the time.” "That’s a delusion. John. dear. II you'll think a minute you'll realize that I’m spending it part of the time.' CENSUS OF THE CHRISTIANS A HOUSE-TO-HOUSE CANVASS 18 TO BE MADE BY SUNDAY SCHOOL ASSOCIATION. A 6REAT CAMPAIGN STATE WILL BE DIVIDED INTO DISTRICTS AND NO MEM BER WLL BE MIBSED. Denver.—“Go ye out into the high ways and hedges.” "Go ye . . . and 10, I am with you.” you.” The- above quotation from the Bible is the motto of the campaign of visita tion organization, which under the auspices of the Colorado State Sun day School Association, is to visit ev ery home In Colorado and make a census of all Christians who are not affiliated with any church. The organization in Denver and throughout the state is being perfect ed by the officers of the Sunday School Association. Workers are be ing enrolled in the various churches to take the census on Friday, October Ist. The object of this census is to give the churches and Sunday schools ac curate information about the resi dence and the religion of everybody, so that they can give attention throughout October to |ieop!e of the state who have no church connection. The pastors and the superintendents of Sunday schools in each division are the committee of supervision. This committee will divide their district Into smaller districts, each with a chairman, und will estimate the num ber of families, pass upon the returns of the census and do everything to facilitate the campaign. This is the greatest religious cam paign ever undertaken In Colorado and is fust gaining in favor. The or ganization is nearly completed throughout the state. The headquar ters are at 208-209 Empire building. J. Shreve Durham, international su perintendent. has come from Chicago to assist in the work.' Durham Is now making a whirlwind tour of tuc lead ing cities of the state, but will re turn to Denver to assist Dr. Carmen and other leaders In the work. Dr. Cook May Sue Peary. New York.—Dr. Frederick A. Cook contemplates bringing suit against Commander Peary to recover damages for slander and defamation, accord ing to statements tonight by friends of the former. I)r. Cook himself had nothing to say regarding the proposed suit, but his secretary. Walter lAinsdale, ad mitted that the idea was seriously on- j t.-rtained both by Dr. Cook mid by John R. Bradley, Cook’s backer. He said that affidavits had already been prepared in ease It was definitely de cided to bring the suit. “But certainly nothing will be done at present In the matter.” said Mr. Lonsdale, and. ns a matter of fact. It is doubtful If anything will ever be done unless it is in retaliation.” A La Peary and Cook. New York—A controversy of dis covery that might now he waging quite as hot as the polar dispute were Henry Hudson and the Italian explor er. Verazznno alive, was recalled at a mass meeting in commemoration of Verazzano’s original discovery of the Hudson river eighty-five years before Hudson sailed from Amsterdam. At this late day there are few to dispute the Italian's claim, but be cause bo left no records or map of ac tual exploration of the river, he Is get ting little popular recognition in the great celebration now on. The Italian colony, however did their countrymaii a great honor In historical addresses and other appropriate cere monies. On Oct. 6 the local Italinn so cieties plan to have a parade and cth er festivities in the quarter. Ground was broken here recently for a statue of Vcrrazzano. Three Die in Cavein. Goldfield, Nev.—The three miners who were Imprisloned by a cavein at the Combination mine, are now be lieved to be dead. The rescue party broke Into the shaft where the acci dent occurred and there found the body of Evan Reese, but could find no trace of W. J. Bertsch and M. C. Matt, who were believed to have taken re fuge in the same cross-cut. Government Officer Arrested. Atlanta. Ga.—The clas.t between the state and federal authorities growing out of the trouble over the collection of Internal revenue taxes came to a climax in the arrest of H. A. Rucker, collector of Internal revenue at At lanta. He was served with a warrant for contempt of the Superior Court if Georgia. Bullet in Girl’s Head. Santa Fe, N. M.—Unconscious with a bullet wound In back of her head. Miss Gertrude Montgomery was ac cidentally discovered in the brush near the reservoir east of town, by a little girl. Miss Montgomery had been mis sing five days. It is believed the will die without regaining consciousness. The authori ties believe that the crime was com mitted by an Indian. Miss Montgomery came here recent ly from Shreveport, la., and her par •vita live in California. A GREAT ANNOYANCE. Kidney Disease Shows Many Painful and Unpleasant Symptoms. George S. Crowell, 1109 Broadway, Helena. Mont., says: “1 was troubled with a disordered condition of the kid neys, some backache and irregular pass ages of secretions. At times I was obliged to get up out of bed at night, and the urine was unnatural In appearance. On the advice of a friend I procured Doan’s Kidney Pills and began using them. This remedy helped me at once, strengthened my kidneys and corrected the disordered condi tion.” Remember the name—Doan’s. Sold by all dealers. 60 cents a box. Foster- Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. OLDEST LAND IN THE WORLD According to Scientists Our Earth Had Its Origin in the Lauren tian Highlands. Stretching across Canada, north of the St. Lawrence, and ending in the regions about the source of the Mis sissippi, is a range of low granite hills called the Laurentian highlands. These hills are really mountains that are al most worn out, for they are the old est land in America, and, according to Agassiz, the oldest in the world. In the days when there was nothing but water on the face of the globe, these mountains came up—a long is land of primitive rock with universal ocean chafing against its shores. None of the other continents had put in their appearance at the time America was thus looking up. The United SUttes began to come to light by the gradual uplifting of this land to the north and the appearance of the tops of the Alleghenies which were next in order. loiter the Rockies started up. The United States grew south ward from Wisconsin and westwafd from the Blue Ridge. An early view of the country would have showed a large island which is now northern Wisconsin, and a long thin tongue of this primitive rock sticking down from Canada into Minnesota, and these two growing states looking out over the waters at the mere beginnings of t lountuln ranges east and west. They were waiting for the rest of the Unit ed States to appear.—The Atlantic. They Didn’t Have to Change. During the. years in which our pure food laws have been put into effoct there has been a great hurrying and scurrying on the part of the food man ufacturers to change their methods to make them conform to the law. The Quaker Outs Company Is a con spicuous exception. It was admitted that Quaker Scotch Oats was as pure and clenn ns possible and that It was an ideal food. It is so cheap that any one can af ford It and so nourishing that every one needs it. The result ot last year's experiments at Yale and other points where food values were tested Is that Quaker Scotch Oats has been adopted by many persons as their food on which they rely for adding vigor and endurance of muscle and brain. The Quaker Oats Company meets all demands In the way it parks Quaker Scotch Oats; regular Rlze packages and the large size family package; the latter, both with and without china. 4 As St. Louis Lawyers Talk. Circuit Judge Reynolds had an nounced flint he would hear jurors who had excuses to offer for not serv ing. and a dozen American citizens crowded up to the bench to tell their troubles. Their excuses were as varied as those who were hidden to the feast that the Bible tells about. One had an ini|>ortant engagement and another could not hear very well, and anotl ei had sickness In his fam ily, and another had duties to per form which nobedv else on earth could jn-rform, :.nd another was going on a Journey. And st» it went. The last man in line wanted to be let off because he was u German. He might have been excused if he had not presented his excuse wrong end forward. "Judge,” he said, “I can’t under stand good English." “Oh, you’ll do nil right.” said the judge. “There is no good English B|M>ken In here.’ —St. Ixmis Post-Dis patch. Snake Story. “Before he went Ashing,” said the town story-tellgr. he swallowed ’bout a pint an’ half of snakebite rem edy. an' of course you know what that is? Well, after the snake bit him, the reptile cut all sorts o’ capers, kaze the remedy went straight to its head. Last thing It tried to do wuz to swal ler Its tail, an’ it got Itseir In the form of a hoop, an’ I’m a liar ef the chil dren didn't roil It around all day!"— Atlanta Constitution. Old Poets Knew of Automobile. "The old iioets knew about the auto mobile." “How, now?" “Macaulay siieaks of Lars Porsena and his Ivory car." “Well?” "And Poe cites an Instance of the air growing denser. Evidently an auto had Just passed.” Identified. Police Sergeant—Can you give me a description of the person who ran over you?” “Oi can that. He had on a fur coat an’ an autymoblle cap an’ goggles.” Dr. Platen'• PleaoMt Pellet* an<1 IhtI*- •m,. ti liter . fid h,i*#U Hurirnitlrtl oral* atoinarh. Iivrr and bowel* Sucar-eualrd. Uof |r»Dul*» Baiy to taka a* candy No man can pray right while be lives wrong. In Pittsburg. The City Editor —Here’s a mighty good story about a young fellow who runs away with a chorus girl. The Night Editor—What’s that? A good story? Why, it’s been done to death. The City Editor—This one hasn’t. It’s an absolute novelty. The young fellow is neither a millionaire nor a Plttsburger. “What would be a good name for my flying machine?” “Why not call it ‘The Cost of Liv ing’?”—Houston Post. Followed Directions. Two street urchins were having a controversy over a spotted pup. “Gimme my dorg," said the tall one angrily, doubling up his fist. “Give yer de dog?" retorted the other one sarcastically, “Why yer can. whistle for it.” “Can, eh? Well, that’s just what I’m going to do. Come on, purp.” And the next moment the lull hoy and the dog were vanishing around the cor ner. Too Suggestive. “My poor man," said the kind housewife, as she handed out a cut of prune pie, “how did you come to fail if you owned a condensed milk fac tory?” “Ah, ma’am," responded the tall tramp, “it was de fault of me partner. He called de inilk de ‘Globe’ brand and we went up.” "And the name ruined it?” “Yes, ma’am; you see de globe Is two-thirds water.” Possible Explanation. Hlxon— I “My tailor lias sent me two bills for one suit of clothes.” Dixon —“How do you account for it?” Mixon —“He evidently uses (ho double-entry system of bookkeeping.” The Perils of Propinquity. "How did that freight boat of yours pay this season?” • “Not very well. Still, her record in one way was highly satisfactory.” “What way was that?” “Out of the total number of guests carried in her cabins during the sum mer, twenty-six became engaged, and there have been seven marriages.” “An aviator cannot boast of his fam ily.” “Why not?” “Because in his profession there In no cause for boasting of descent.”— Baltimore American. The October Century. The most timely feature of the Octo her Century is the Clermont chapter of “Fulton’s Invention oi the Steum boat,” written by the Inventor’s great granddaughter, Mrs. Alice Crary Sut cliffe. This second of two valuable historical articles Is devoted to the Clermont’s making, launching and his tory; and the narrative includes many of Fulton’s, own letters and manu scripts, now published for the first time, in addition to autographic plans for the Clermont, recently discovered. Other timely articles of the number include Mr. A. Barton Hepburn's dis cussion of the question: “Is a Central Bank Desirable?" contracting the rig idity of the United States currency with the flexibility of the currency of other uations: also two articles on the growing use of the “finger-print" sys tem of identification in governmental and easiness circles. Charles 11. Brewer tells of their use In the United States navy and elsewhere; and Jay Ilamhidge “lias much of interest to say on the remarkably successful use by the New York police of this new meth od of Identifying criminals. DENVER DIRECTORY t«er«h»r- for 1:7.1*. Send for our alo*ue «>f -addle* and harwoM. I-»»••* BON I. LOOK ('11.% MUSK. Mam mot li «it a (••X mulled free for. l«th and HUIe, Denver. THE AMERICAN HOUSE Depot American Plan, t • «■> and upward. RUGS & LINOLEUM Hh !g£JS at nrholenale price*. \V" pa' - the freight. lte*t <-afiil<>* In Denver mailed fr.-e THE HOLCOMB AH«RT LEARN TELEGRAPHY Graduate* earning a* lilxb a* U.«'» yearly. • Moo* guaranteed. »r.'e for rSikwa. <ln U Munvon. Pi*-. MOIIKKM M IHKIL TK- I.MiltArtiY. Weal l.*llh mill llruwlwiij. Denver. D7l M T TOUR BUILOIN6I t* A I N I WITH THE BEST l-here I" Mountain A- Plain Paint. ••elliuaflrall> rorrert," and fully guar anteed. It In made by Mel’hee & Mi- Ulnnlty C«», Denver, whose reputation rtnndn behind tlieae Rood*. Auk your dealer for furl her Information or write to ua for latest ••Fashions In Painting." MrPIIKK * WmiXNITV CO-. lIKNVKIt PIANOS its If you Intend to buy a Plano this fait get thin offer now. Have 1100 to lIM. Liberal Payment Plan. TIIKKKIttHT (AtIPDKI.I. MUSIC CO, Denver, the Weat’ii oldest and largest music house. Katabllahed 1874. E7 E. BURLINGAME A. CO, ASSAY OFFICE »>u N MMrasT Established in Colorado.lBo6. Sample* by mail or aviHinC VESTS 100 lb*, to earload lota. CYANIDE TESTS Writ* for term* 1T34-ITM Lawrence St.. Door, Ceto. HOWARD E. BURTON, ASSAYED k CHEMIST LKAUVILLB. COLORADO toelmin price*: Oald. at t ear. lead. It: said. Silver. 71c . gold. Me: *lao ®r nppar. |l llallla* envelop** aad full prle# lint **at on application Control and wmplro work ®.»- Srltod Ileferenc#. Carbonate Nattoaal Uanh.