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Notion of Application For U. S. Patent. Minins Application No. 018177. Miner ad Survey No. 19420. U. S. Land Office, Denver, Colo., March 21, 1913. Notice is hereby given that in pur suance of the Act of Congrem, ap proved May 10, 1872, N The Illinois Mining and Milling Company by I. B. Scott attorney In fact whose post office is 1820 Champa St., Denver, Colo., has made application for a patent for 1500 linear feet on each of the Illinois No. 1 and Illinois No. 4 Lodes situate in Wisconsin Min ing District, Gilpin County, State of Colorado, and described by the of ficial plat and field notes on file in this office, as follows, viz: Illinois No. 1 lode. Beglnnihg at Cor. No. 1, whence the N.E. Cor. Sec. 24, T. 2 S., R. 74 W. of the 6th P. M. bears N. 79° 35' 45" E. 4283.81 ft.; thence S. 43° 30' E. 300 ft. to Cor. No. 2; thence S. 46° 30' W. 1500 ft to Cor. No. 3; thence N. 43° 30' W. 300 ft. toCor. No. 4; thence N. 46° 30' E. 1500 ft to Cor. No. 1, the place of beginning. Illinois No. 4 lode. Beginning at Cor. No. 1, whence the N. E. Cor. Sec. 24, T. 2 S., R. 74 W. of the 6th P. M. bears N. 60° 57' 43" E. 4448.21 ft; thence S. 24° E. 300 ft. to Cor. No. 2; thence S. 66° W. 1500 ft. to Cor. No. 3; thence N. 24° W. 300 ft. to Cor. No. 4; thence N. 66° E. 1500 ft. -to Cor. No. 1, the place of be ginning. Containing 15.136 acres, expressly excepting and excluding all conflict with Surveys Nos. 12736, 18043, 18421 and 18456 and forming a portion of the N.W. % of Sec. 24, and the N. E. *4 of Sec. 23, Twp. 2 S., Range 74 W. of the 6th Principal Meridian. Adjoining and conflicting claims as shown by the plat of survey: The surveys above excluded. Date of poet Lug on the claim, March 18. 1913. C. D. FORD. Register. Ist pub. Mch. 27; last May 29, 1913. NOTICE OF FORFEITURE. To Adbert Rogers: You are hereby notified that we have done the work on the Dublin lode in Lake district, Gilpin County, Colorado, as recorded In book 164, page 82 of the records of Gilpin county, for the years 1912 and 1913, In order to hold said claim under the provisions of section No. 2324 of the revised statutes of the United States, and the amendments thereto concern ing the annual labor on mining claims, being the amount required to hold said lode for the period ending December 31, 1913, and if within nine ty (90) days after the last publica tion of this notice you fail or refuse to pay your proportion of such ex penditures, your interests in said claim and each and all of them will become the property of the subscrib ers, your co-owners. C. Julius Nordlien & Co. First pub. Feb. 27; last May 29, 1913. Our Sympathy I* always extended to those in distress, but we hare no sym pathy to waste on the man who borrow* hi* neighbor'* ( paper when he can hare one of hi* own at a mere nominal expense. Your home paper Mtomd* for your intmstj and the interest* of your home town. It deserves your moral and financial support. If you are not a member of our family of readers you should begirt now by sending in your subscription. *♦• 4-*+*+*+*+*+* +*+•+++ The ARCADE SALOON Tony Andrsatta, Prop. —Finest Of— WINES, LIQUORS and CIGARS . . . Nlos Place . . . To Spend a Leisure Hour. Main Street Above Post Office. Get busy everybody and put In a garden. You can get a large variety of fresh flowers and vegetable seeds at Hawley's In- any Quantity desired. Green vegetables anmvdng daily at the store of the Phiilpps Mer. Co. Hawley's is the pl&oe to buy the best in the line of groceries. Take a look at the 10 cent assort ment of granite ware at the Lekliing er store. Edmund son block, Lawrence street. TO THE PUBLIC. •Henceforth and during the summer months, moving pictures will be shown at the opera house on Sat urday and Sunday evenings of each week. Admission 10 cents. Big mid season millinery eale. One fourth off on any trimmed hat. For four days beginning Saturday May 10. and ending Wednesday, May 15th. Over 100 hats to pick from, every one a -bargain af the Rose Millinery Parlors. Hawley carries the freshest lice of fruits in town. ST. PAUL'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH Sunday, May 18th: Trinity Sunday. Evensong and sermon at 7 p. m. sub ject, “The Three Trinities”. The death of the young son of Mr. and Mrs. H. J. S'tahl last Friday was a great shock to their many friends. Gajvin Henry Stahl had been ill for but a few days. Pneumonia was the cause of death. His age was four year«, ten months and sixteen days. The funeral was held Monday morn ing from the Catholic church, inter ment in the Catholic cemetery. Today the time of leaving of the afternoon train was changed for the summer. The train now leaves tral at 3:35 p. m. and Black Hawk at 3:56 p. m. It is expected that the late Sunday night schedule from Den ver will be in operation by the mid dle of June or before. Harry Foster has sold his ranch on Smith Hill to J. M. Gearheard, of Longmont, for a consideration of $3,000. It is Mr. Gearheard’s inten tion, to raise cattle on a large scale as there is 12,000 acres of pasture land surrounding the ranch that is without the forest reserve and not subject to onerous restrictions. C. & S. Conductor EM. Clark has been transferred to the Boulder run, the popular puncher of tickets, Chas. Sandstrom. having been delegated to fiß his place. NOTICE OF PUBLIC TRUSTEE’S SALE Wheraa, default has been made in payment of balance of two hundred dollars on that note for six hund red dollars from Isaac Haill to Wil liam C. Matthews, trustee, dated Aj>- ril 10. 1906, secured by deed of trust of that date recorded in the records of Gilpin County, Colorado, in book ISO ait page 288. there being now due on sudd note two hundred dol lars with Interest from -April 10, 1906 at elghit per cent per annum; Wag ner & Askew being now the owners thereof; and Whereas, default has been made In the payment of that note arid the Interest thereon for $628.65 from Isaac Hall to Wagner & Askew and dated August 14, 1906, secured by a deed of trust of that date recorded In the records of Gilpin County, Colo rado, in book 159, page 232, there being now due on said note six hundred twenty eight and 65-100 dol lars with Interest from August 14th 1906 at 10 per cent per annum, and Whereas, default has been made hi the payment of that note and the lntereet thereon for three hundred dollars from Isaac Hall to Wagner & Askew dated May 9 1907, secured by deed of trust of that date record ed in the records of Gcllplu County, Colorado, in book 159, page 251, there being now due on said note three hundred dollars with Interest from May 9, 1907 at ten. per cent per an num. Now, therefore. the holders of sold notes having declared the same due, at their written request, I, the un dersigned, public trustee in and for said Gilpin County, Colorado, will sell at the hour of eleven o’clock In the forenoon of Monday, the 26th day of May, A. D. 1913, at the front door of the County Court House in the Ciiy of Central in sold County and State, for the highest and best price the same will bring In cash the prop erty described In, eald deeds of trust, viz: The Hall mining claim. U. S. M'lneral Survey, Ix>t No. 16025, with all buildings, improvements, fixtures, connections, appliances and machin ery thereon or used In connection therewith; and the New Discovery Jode mining claim, the location cer tificate whereof Is of record In hook 164, page 192, Gilpin, County records, and all improvements thereon, both situate In, Russell Mining District, GIL ipln County, Colorado, and all the Tight, title and Interest of the snid Isaac Hall, hla heirs and assigns therein, -for the purpose of paying said notes with interest, taxes, costs and expenses of executing this trust, and will deliver to the purchaser « certificate of sale os provided by law. HENRY P. AX/PVATBR. Public Trustee, to and for the County of Gilpin, Colorado. First pub. April 24., last May 22, 'l3. WASHINGTON NEWS By Edward Keating. Washington, May 13. —The passage of the Underwood tariff bill through the house (has established some new records in* the legislative history of this country. It was the first tariff bill ever passed without the application of “gag rule”. Four years ago when the Payne-Aldrich. bill wae under consid eration, the rules committee brought in a rule which permitted the Demo cratic minority to offer just, four amendments to the more than 4.200 Items in the measure. This time the bill was read paragraph) by paragraph and the Republican minority was per mitted to offer as many amendments as it saw fit and the discussion, was only limited by the application of the five minute rule. If an orator could not complete his remarks in five minutes he was given unlimited space in the Con gressional Record, and his constitu ents thereby received the benefit of his veiwß. ****** Many Democrats urged that we give the Republicans at leaist a dilut ed dose of their own medicine, and that some limit be placed on amend ments and debate. Speaker Clark and Leader Under wood wisely rejected the suggestion, and patiently bore the verball assaults of the minority. The wisdom of this course was amply vindicated, when, toward the conclusion of the debate, the Republicans and the Progressives joined in prolonged ovations to the two great chieftains cf the majority. Throughout the discussion there was *a noticeable absence of the bit terness which has marked other tar iff debates. The Republican, attack was stubborn and well sustained and the Democratic defence was brilliant and convincing, but when the daily “talkfests” were concluded the com batants linked arms and found their personal relations unimpaired. ****** These tariff debates offer splendid opportunities for the making or mar ring of political reputations. To my mind, many men, on both sides have added to theh* laurels, but one fig ure looms far above all the rest. I think it was Paul Jones who used to boast that he was captain of his ship by virtue c I the fact that he was the best man aboard the ship. So Oscar W. Underwood, of Alabama, might say that he wns the leader of the Democratic majority by virtue cf the fact that temperamentally and intellectually he Is without a peer in the house, with the possible exception of the beloved speaker. At this supreme moment cf Its na tional opportunity, the Democracy is blessed in its leadership, Wilson, Bry-j an. Clark and Underwood have ap parently put aside all thought of self-! aggrandizement and of the sharp dif- j ferer.ees which have divided them j in the past and are working should-, er to shoulder for the redemption I of Democracy's platform pledges, j I came down to Washington just a little predjudiced against Under wood. He had clashed with Bryan and we of the west more than half suspected he was a reactionary. We were disposed to hold him at arm’s length and put an- unfriendly con struction on his aots and words. He had to win, his way to our hearts and he has won it. I do not think there is a man on the Democratic side today who does not trust Underwood. And among the warmest of these supporters are the men who have unwaveringly follow ed the Bryan banner for the last twenty years. Underwood is not a great orator, but he can eay more in five minutes than any man in Washington. He is patient and diplomatic but when H is necessary* <to fight he can strike harder and) oftener than any member on either side of the chamber. His courage is of the calm, unshakable variety. He smiles and to adamant. His home is in Birmingham, Ala., and the greatest steel interests in the world are in his district. When the steel schedule was under consid eration these interests attempted to “put the screws” to him. They call-1 ed on htan to “protect his home in terests”, they had the Chamber of Commerce promote a protest meet ing and finally they threatened to close their works and throw thous-’ and» out of ‘employment. Underwood called l their bluff. “This tariff bill is for all the Ameri can people”, he said. “Their inter ests, and their interests alone, will be considered.” It i» needless to say that the Birmingham ateel works are still op erating, Just as Colorado’s sugar fac tories will be operating after Messrs. Morey and Boettcher find they can not bul Id acre the Congress of the United fjtajtes. Six w< ago I said 1 in one of my reports that the tariff bill would pass the senate with the wool and sugar schedules intact At that time the Colorado organs of the sugar trust were very confident and were Inclin ed to laugh «at my predictions. I •thick they are taking a little differ ent view of the situation now. The people have been heard- from, and the people of this country are with President Wilson, and the House of Representatives. The Coloradoans who were on here to attend the hearings on. the Re claim atlon Service went home with a very favorable Impression of the new Secretary of the Interior, Frank lin K. Lane. He has much to learn- of the west and western- conditions, but he is willing to learn. That is the most hopeful sign of (the times so far as our land problems are concerned. ****** On the final passage ‘of the Under wood bill through the house, every -member from Colorado voted “aye”. As was to be expected, some differ ence s developed in the Democratic cau<ns concerning a few schedules of the bill. When the measure was brought out on the floor of the house, the Colorado members voted solidly with their colleagues from other sec tions of the country on every record makir g roll call. The Kitchen Cabinet 11 C OMORROW the sun will be brighter; Tomorrow the skies will be fair; Tomorrow our hearts will be lighter; We’ll cast aside sorrow and care. Remember, when heartsick and weary. The sunshine comes after the rain; Tomorrow is time to be cheery— Tomorrow we take hope again. A FEW RUS8IAN DI8HE8. If these recipes are tried they will prove altogether acceptable: Russian Hash.—Chop two pounds of uncooked beef from which the fat is removed, with a fourth of a pound of suet, one large onion, and a half a cup of bread crumbs. Season with salt, pepper and parsley; add a pint of good soup stock or beef tea; mix well, season with salt and lemon juice and sprinkle well with bread crumbs. Bakp until well browned, turn out on a platter and garnish with mashed po tatoes. Russian 8oup.—Put two tablespoon fuls of butter or suet In a soup kettle, and when hot add two large onions chopped fine, and a pint of tender cab bage chopped fine. Fry brow’n and add two tablespoonfuls of flour. Sea son with salt and pepper and minced parsley; add a quart of stock and sim mer for an hour. Fry a few small balls of sausage until brown; add the sausage to the soup with a cup of tarragon vinegar, and serve. Coullbac.—Have ready a rich pastry dough and roll it very thin. Spread this with a savory meat of mush rooms cooked and chopped, hard cooked eggs, and cold veal; moisten with butter and broth, and roll it like a roly-poly. Place in a baking dish, sprinkle with crumbs and bake one hour. Slice and serve with a sauce, seasoned with vinegar. Rocks.—Cream a cup of butter, add one and a half cups of sugar, two eggs, two and a half cups of flour, a teaspoonful of soda dissolved in a tablespoonful of warm water; add spices, dates and walnuts, a cup. Drop by spoonfuls on buttered baking sheets. Sounds Like Football. -She threw herself at him." "She must have heard that ha Is s good catch." “So she bad. But he dropped her, It seems. ’’ —Loulsrllle Courier-Journal. When we look upon a glorious i»M scape, It Is every blade of grass, ev ery minute detail that counts In ths make np of tho bseuttfuL—Stanley J. Dark Silk Hat Is a Century Old. Last year was the centenary year of trousers, this year sees the high hst a hundred years old. As a matter of fact, the top hst is much older than that, but It Is exactly a hundred years since the variety known as the silk hat was placed on the market. It at once became the fashionable form of headgear, and has retained lta position ever since. The Inventor of the silk hat waa a London hatter named Ben nett Prior to his day top bats were made of beaver; but he Introduced silk and fabric as an alternative ma terial to beaver skin for tall hats, be cause the great Increase In the popu larity of the tall hat caused a famine In beaver skins. Since that time the silk hat has shrunk two inches, for the top hat of today Is only different to the founder of Its line In being about two Inches lower, with a correspond ing reduction In the size of the brim. The fabric of a modern tall hat Is of gossamer soaked In shellac to give It the necessary stiffness. The Arm founded by the Inventor of the silk hut still conducts business In Piccadilly, London, and, according to their re ports, the centenary of the high hat finds It as popular aa ever. HERE’S NEW TYPE OF DESERT Those Who Mov, »„n tho Root Thing Would So Surprised at Pictorial Representation. Those who have lived in Egypt will And > source of unending surprise In the scenic offerings of -high class vaudeville" which accompany the throaty howling by a near barytone of "I Shall Love Tew Till the Hot Des ert Freezes Eternally," Illustrated with pictures from the East (side). It should be noted here that It la hardly fair to call a locality a "desert" at all, when it Is so plentifully peopled with the cosmopolitan races presented to the public on the screen. The plctureu show a wild profusion of Bedouins,. Chinese, Arabs, Moore, Qreeks, Armenians, Bulgarians and Turks, with a fair sprinkling of Ro man senators, In every conceivable garb, ancient and modern, lounging comfortably around the pyramids and smoking Havana cigars, English pl£es, hookahs and cigarettes and mostly chewing gum. But If In his choice of population the scenic artist has done well In Egyptian scenery he has cer tainly surpassed himself, for you be hold great clusters of pyramids, sphinxes by the dozen, camels, horses, sheep, deer, ostriches and even ele phants crossing the Boft sand of the alleged desert or resting beneath the English oaks, Lombardy poplars, cac tus and palm trees. And before you can get your breath a gallant knight in the uniform of the Austrian hussars, covered with a ki mono and a scimitar stuck in his belt, brings his sultana Into the moonlight and hugs her until the everlasting des ert Is removed and the applause of the audience freezes over.—New York Herald. WOMEN HOLD, HIGH POSITION Probably in No Country in the Worid Are They Favored With Greater Esteem Than in Servla. There Is no country In the world where women ocupy a more dignified or honored position In the home than in Servla. The Servian Idea Is quite different from that of the Turk, who keeps his women behind shut doors, or the German, whose ideal woman is a good haußfrau. In Servla the wom an is the companion of the man. A man is responsible for his unmar ried Bisters, and throughout the Bal kan states It Is considered rather a breach of etiquette for him to marry before his older sister. No Servian girl would feel she could hold up her head In society unless she could speak four languages. There is hardly a Servian woman who cannot play some musical Instrument. Em broidery, painting, drawing and sculp ture are all studied. Politics is a popular feature among women. - Servian women are very domesti cated and the highest pay personal at tention to trivial matters of house keeping. There are two women doctors prac ticing in Belgrade, and women teach ers galore. But public opinion, on the whole, is rather against women enter ing the labor arena. In Inatallments. They were experts In many things, but chiefly In the art of bragging. And at the moment they were discussing their own wonderful feats as vocal ists. "Why,” said the Englishman, blow ing rings of smoke from his cigar, “the first time I sang In public the au dience simply showered me with bou quets. Bless you, there were enough to start a flower shop!” "Faith, an' I can beat you!” cried the Irishman. “The first toime I sang was at an opeiralr concert, and, be gorra, the audience were that de lotghted they presented me with a house, they did!” “A house! You mqst be off your head!” Interrupted the Englishman, scofflngly. “Not at all,” answered Put. ”1 tell ye they gave me a house —but It was a brick at a toime!” —London ia awera. An Anodyne. "An anodyne,” patiently explained a well-known physician to a woman pa tient, “la a delusion. Any medicine that soothes pain has this drawback —lt relieves the attack, bat the next attack comes on much sooner. Under stand, It’ll cure your headache, but you're bound to have another head ache In a day or two." The woman pondered a bit. “I know Juet what you mean, doc tor," ahe eald. ”I've noticed It about Henry, my hue band, you know. A doc tor preecribed whleky for hla cough. My hueband saye It cured his oough quicker than anything else ever did, but I notice that he gets a new cough almost every week, now."—Louisville Times. Old Colne Really Broken. They had an ingenious plan for meeting a shortage of small change in the old days before oopper coins existed. Until the reign of Edward 1. the silver penny was the smallest coin minted In England, to the great Inconvenience of tho small purchaser of the period. But the difficulty was to some extent got over by the issue of pennies indented with a deep cross. The coin could then be broken into halfpennies and farthings. Our flrst real copper coinage oidy dates from 1672. and until the time of Edward VI. farthings of silver were coined, grow* ing smaller and smaller as the value of silver increased.—London Chron icle. MUCH VIRTUE IN GOOD YAWN Beneficial Exercise, Though It Might Ba Wall for On# to Select the Time and Place. Yawning may be rude —especially In company—but It it a good thing for you to do. Fbr one thing, it ventilates the lungs. When you take an ordinary breath the lungs are not completely filled, nor are they thoroughly emptied by an ordinary respiration. There ie* a certain quantity of air left in th» lungs always, which physiologists call “residual air.” Thlß air in time becomes foul and affects the blood, and through the blood the nervous centers. Certain nerves get tickled, as it were, and the result is a yawn, stretching the lungs to their fullest extent, filling them with clean, fresh air and driving, the foul air out. That’s one reason why it is good yawn. For another, yawning opensr and stretches and ventilates all the? various passages leading to the lungs. You will perhaps be surprised to know that yawning is even beneficial to your hearing. The cracking sound which you so often hear when an extra big yawn is due to the stretching and opening of the eustachian tubes. These tubes communicate between tho ear and the back of the throat. If they are congested, which happens when you have a bad cold in the head, people complain of deafness. If you feel inclined to yawn, then, do so. It is Nature’s way of cleaning out your lungs and air passages. FOUND OUT WHO HAD CORNS Itinerant Merchant’s Method of Doing Business Somewhat Rough, But He Got the Money. „“My stars!” exclaimed a man, push ing someone who stood near him. “you have trod on my corn!” The fellow snatched out a box of ointment and replied: “I can relieve you, sir, in a few min utes. Only a quarter. Endorsed f the medical fraternity everywheitt- There’s no use in suffering. One box? Thank you,” he added, as he put the money in his pocket. “It was an accident you found him,” someone remarked to the salve dealer “Oh, no. It wasn’t. If you ask a. man if he’s got corns he don’t want to talk to you; but when you find out that he’s got ’em, the chances of sell ing him the medicine are good. I ad vertise my medicine by going into crowds and slyly feeling for corns- Yonder stands a fat fellow’. When tbe* crowd gets thicker I’ll go over aatf tap his hoof. Oh, yes, it may be pain ful, but, my dear sir. the business of this country must be carried on re gardless of sentiment” Playwrights Miss Chance. It is curious that in none of the patriotic plays now running in Paris, all revolving on theme of the lost provinces, is there any representation of life at La Schlucht. Its chief feature is its apparently cultivated resemblance to what might be a stage imitation of itself. Here France and Germany meet in the middle of the main street, and as the boundary line follows a slanting course it is possible for, say, a Ger man and a French soldier to stand side by side in the center of the road between the boundary posts of their respective countries the German' post on on« side of the road, the* French post on the other —and pose together very amicably for a joint photograph, each soldier of course re maining carefully within his own ter* ritory- From the commercial point of view this is an admirable arrangement—lt does much to maintain the staple trade of La Schlucht —the trade in picture post cards representing pre clsely this incident. —New York Sun. Knew His Work Wolf. Some years ago an ass was employ* •- ed in the Isle of Wight, in draw halt' water by a large wheel from a very deep well. When the keeper wanted water, he would say to the ass, “Tom, . my boy, I want water, get into the wheel, my good lad,” which Thomas Immediately performed with prompt ness that would have done credit to a nobler animal; and no doubt ha - knew the precise number of tfcaes nee*' canary for the wheel to go arouoduon its axis, to complete his labor, becaniae * every time he brought the bucket tc* the surface of the well, he constantly stopped and turned his honest head! to observe the moment when his mas ter laid hold of the bucket to draw it towards him, because he then had just one more turn to make to bring the tope to the top. It was pleasing to observe with what steadiness and regularity the poor animal performed his labor. Undiscovered Interior. A magazine editor recently return* ed a story to an aspiring contribu tor. Immediately the latter wrote an in dignunt letter to him, saying that be fore sending her manuscript she had slightly pasted together several of the Inner pages. When the story was returned to.her it wus in Its original condition. She had always suspected editors of neglecting their duties; how she was cure of their careless ness, for her own story had not been read. To all this, the much berated man made reply; “Dear Madam: At breakfast, when 1 find that an egg is bad, I do not have to eat the whole of It to make Sunday Maga zine.