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SECOND GOLD RUSH - STARTEDIN WEST Rich Strike Made at Old Mine Site in Colorado, Twice Abandoned. By the Associated Press. | DENVER, Colo., M bow—with gold at both ends—today spanned the Continental Divide to hold the interest of hardened prospec- tors as well as tenderfoot treasure rch 11.—A rain- seckers | Weepah, thriving Nevada tent city, 40 miles west of Tonol was the Western base of the rainbow, while the Little Annie claim loomed in the treeless expanse of Snow west of Del- | norte, to form the second treas ¢ chest. "ivhile a badger, burrowing for a home, was credited with re mnm:’nh- onopah lode to two young prosi pec: R bring hundreds to the district, the Delnorte discovery was carefully | guarded until yesterday. The mine is | focated on the face of a cliff in the | mountain country nearly miles | southwest of here. Ore Gives Rich Yield. J. C. Wil d John Pickens. Jessees, said they were paid more than $100,000 for ore removed from the Tittle Annie shaft in two months. The | ore was assayed and smelted by the American Smelting Co. of Omaha. The | first shipment of 625 pounds brought nearly $14,000, Wiley declared. He said the richest consignment, 259 pounds of selected ore, vielded gold | valuad at $16,03: Upwards ¢ olo., 300 Judge tons. of high ';m.:.vw re is now sacked in the Little Annie [ntil Spring, as the country is covered | awith 12 feet of snow. T\||1|vt‘!> “,N‘ being driven ‘below the cliff in an effort to “pick up” the rich veins. The mine s discovered in 1871. It was worked until 1898, when it E abandoned. The Wwiley group I it July, last. Only threc men yed to work it. 3 | 'mAp:\((,)'thr mine of the “Annie” group | is located near Silverton, San Ju(x: Basin town which has been maroone for a month by snow slides. Weepah Is Treeless Waste. In cont: Colorado gite, which only those exper! Sse’of snow shoes can reach, Wee Sontinued to draw scores of pro fors who came in flivvers to shiver through long nights in tents because fuel is scarce. Both camps are alike in that they are located in treeless S ectune seckers choosing to spend the nights at Weepah instead of the base at Tonopah, found only sage brush to burn in the camp stoves, as few trees grow in the desert country of the Silver Peak range. While the Weepah _discovery brought an influx resembling the early-day “rushes,” there apparently was little possibility of such a condi- tion at Delnorte, or Summitville, where the Little Annie group of mine centers. The group is owned bv T. N. Barnsdale and the A. E. Reynolds-Morse Corporation, _while virtually every claim in the district is patented. The ground has been thoroughly propected and treasure- seekers would depend mostly on luck, ©ld miners say." Found Near Originaf Strike. The original strike at Summitville was made within 300 feet of the pres- ent find. Activity. generally slowed in 1884, when the high cost of treat- ing low-grade ore, found after the rich Jodes were exhausted, wiped out the profits. The camp was reopened again in 1897, but closed a year later due to prohibitive cost of operations. Frank Horton, on whose claim his ®son and a companion found the ore that started the Weepah rush, has withheld plans for development. The youths have refused $10,000 for their claims, but the elder Horton, an ex- perienced miner, is generally non- commital. SO AT i Boy Wounds Self With Rifle. Upton Leo Gulick, 14 years old, 3 Clark place, accidentally shot him- self through the arm with a .22- caliber rifie with which he was play- ing- on Canal road near the old Aqueduct Bridge last night. He walk- ed to Georgetown University Hospital for treatment, where it was found he suffered a slight flesh wound. He later went home. ND NATIONAL BANK, WASHINGTON. . C. pebrulry 9. 1927.—By order n;“:hi of Directors, olders of the "’d:" stock - jon will be and is hereby called. to' be held at vank. No. 509 th street northwest. 1 Cr‘éfl ©f Washington, D. C.. on Tues: . March 15. 1927, one’ o'clock, pm.. to an: e the question of tn- the capital stock in the sum of two fifty thousand dollare’ ($250.000) ing the total tal seven hundred thousand dollars ($750.000). the share: to have privilege of nrll one hundred WaRIAEED, TN NIy ashing A President. WALTER W. ”MAlleOW’:)V c!..fiu' VHO SAW ACCIDENT B Hudson WANTED—, 0) R ture trom New York Philadelphia or Balti: DO oM D' STOR SE . IBLE FOR ANY other than'my 1 WILL NOT BE RESP( debts contraected by any self. G M CLOCK_REPATRING BY FACTORY ods. We call and_ deliver. BHOP." 902 12th Main 52 1 NEVER DISAPPOINT _ BYRON S. ADAMS PRINTING IN A HURRY b Grade. but not hi Bish Q8 B sibene "y Priced: APRIL SHOWERS BRING LEAKY ROOFS Talk with us today ab your Toof anue and. fighs. out making Call“Norih 26 or 27, 9ith & Evarts IRONCLAD gt T Company A MILLION DOLLAR —printing plant equipped to handle every | kind of printing job. ‘The National Capital P M. 650 01212 D ST. N.W. o M. Press | ! | 5o far as it is the wedge of fc automobiles ~on | 605 Florence Christianity Must Begin THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., RISE OF A NEW CHINA | |DEATHENDS FIGHT Anew in China, as Asia Resents Influence Workers Have Exercised. Mission Property Seized. ARTICLE VI BY UPTON CLOS! hristianity is to stop right now, eign influence driven into our country by foreign money and organization, con- trolled by foreign personnel and backed by foreign guns. Christianity will have the same opportunity in our new China as, say, Buddhism in your America, so far as it is a teaching relying purely on intellectual and spiritual conviction. Although I and most of my associates are scientific agnostics, we will see that it has full protection, but it must start all over again on this new basis.” Dr. Wang Ching-hui, the president of the New Nationalist party at Can- ton, thus summed up for me the atti f the dominant young minds over he presides. to the urgent schools and , “What is work in south Asia, by Turkey question a those interested in mi the future of mi: Asia?’ The people of who we own the wa when she expropriated mission proper- ties and brought Christian institutions under rigid governmental control, are swinging into line behind the leader- | ship of China. Religions of Asiatic Origin. Wh asked Mahatma Gandhi of India hen I visited his headquarters, “should you self-styled whites get it into your heads that Christianity is vour s interpret? You have made a mess of it yourselves. As a ter of fac Christ was originally Asiatic; as were all founders of religions, and I think we understand Him much better than you do. We would have thanked Him for bringing His gospel before us had you not mingled it so much with your Western culture, dress and machinery. We will go on and present the true Christ to India. Gandhi has ordered the New Testa- ment read in all Swaraj schools, for which he is being roundly jumped on by old Brahmins in the Indian press. Chinese leaders do mnot so much object to the Ford cars, modern plumbing and button-down-the-front trousers which _missionaries have spread along with the Christian gos- pel, but they highly regent the influ- ence forcign nations fhave exercised over Chinese officials ¥and populace through their missionaries, the re- peated infringements of the powers on Chinese sovereignty ‘“to protect the missionaries” and the sectarian- ism which the missions have tried to carry over into China. It is significant that many native Chinese Christian churches have thrown off the mentorship of the for- eign missionary and have vigorously joined in the Naticnalist movement, as witness the recent anti-foreign proclamation of the Hankow group. Mission school graduates are in the forefront of the campaign to end the privileges of foreigners. Taking Over Mission Property. The great mission leaders of the past half century thought themselves strategists when they undertook edu- cational and medical philanthropy to “put over” Christian dogma. It helped them collect money at home and got them favor in “heathen” lands. It has proved a boomerang. The “natives” discovered the dis- tinction between philanthropy and re- ligious propagande. In this they have been greatly aided in recent years by such non-religious works as the China Medical Board of the Rockefeller Foundation, which has virtually ab- sorbed and “denatured” medical mis- sionary work in China. 4 Now missionary investments of $80,- 000,000 to $100,000,000 in schools and hospitals in Chiha, three-fourths American, are being taken away and secularized. Within the last three months both the Peking and Canton governments have required that mis- slon schools shall register with the government and cease to make chapel attendance and Bible study compul- sory for graduation. Japan has en- forced such an idea for years and in Korea practically wiped out the mis- sion higher schools’ system following the accusation that they were in part responsible for the Korean uprising. Buddhists Use Methodist Hymns. Although admitting that Christian schools have kept alive higher educa- tion during the period of disruption, Chinese educators object to their con: duct under such titles as “Peking University,” when there is a national university in Peking. Christian in- stitutions have tried to avert feeling by taking the special religious con: notation out of their names as well as curricula, “Canton Christian' Col- lege” being changed last year to “Lugnam University.” Reaction against militant Chris- tianity is shown by formation of the “Red Swastika Soclety,” which I found supplanting the Fed Cross in China, and the powerful Young Men's and Women's Buddhist associations of Japan., Turkey has her “Red Crescent Soclety.” Buddhism_ has taken a cue from Christians in Japan in forming church and conference or- ganizations and conducting Sunday schools in which the good Methodist hymns are sung with Buddha substi- tuted for Jesus. These ar¢ symptoms of reaction | APARTMENTS IBOQRE:gnont Modern building just com- pletely repainted and re- decorated. The most desirable apartments at reduced rentals being offered in Columbia Heights. Two and three room apartments; rentals $50 up. Open for inspection. Sullivan Brothers 819 15th St. Main 7821 TONIGHT You should take a few minutes to inspect the unusual opportunity offered in a house ON CONN. AVENUE SOUTH OF MILLION DOLLAR BRIDGE at the Remarkable Price of $15,500.00 —containing eicht rooms, two baths and can_be bought for $1,000 Cash and easy terms Immediate Possession ROOFING—by Koons Qur thorough knowledgo of repaire often puts off the cost of new roofing for_years. Roofing 119 3rd OONS &mpany 3 Window Shades & Screens | Made to Measure Get_an carly start on your Sprin housecleaning. ~ Call us today for esti- mates of facfory prices 1ith & B KLEEBLATT 48" W, 'l 2114 Conn. Ave. Open 4 to 9 Saturday 1 to 9 Stone & Fairfax 804 17th Street Main 2424 “Over Forty Years of Real Service” Window Shades and Screens, Phone Linc. 879 | Christianity with 1 largess to distribute and | the general flood of foreign s overwhelming Asian people. In addition to the general feeling, which is more anti-foreign than anti- Christian, there exists as well a defi- nite but small anti-religious move- ment, affiliated with that in Russia, of which the head is Dr. Tsai Yuan- pei, chancellor of the National Univer- sity, venerated for his learning and decried for his submission to Russian influences. The movement was given a big push by the British agnostic Bertrand Russell during his year's stay in China in 1921, Objected to Favor to Mott. Sentiment turned primarily against when the college built Boxer indemnity funds due America suspended nd its build- ings were turned istian student volunteer inter con- vention under Dr. John R. Mott. Had an association of any other religion or of agnostics asked for its use they would have been refused, maintained the anti-Christian students, and only the evident political influence of the Christian churches with the American and Chinese governments could have got this unusual favor, which they as- sailed. The “era of missions” so lauded in modern church history is at its end as surely as is the era of the white man’s political domination. The day of hundred-million-dollar drives on heathenism, of the fund-raiser who promises that if contributions are raised from the grand total of $10,000,- 000 a year to $20,000,000 China will be Christianized within this generation, is gone. Awakened Asia will no longer submit to foreign “drives” of any kind, though these drives be most philanthropic and Christian. Yet there is much left to encourage ardent followers of Christ’s parting injunction to spread His gospel to every nation. There is now in every nation of Asia a hardy native church. Indigenous Christianity, which does not care longer to rely on the white man, has able and devoted leaders, and will survive the present wave against everything savoring of the West ex- cept material benefits. But it will break the hearts of our sectarian dog- matists, (Covyright. 1927.) The next article will deal with the huge property losses Americans face through the rise of nationalism in China. MARINERS’ SERVICE. Baptist Church Beacon Will Be Seamen’s Guide. BEVERLY, Mass.,, March 11 (#).— A night service for mariners will soon be conducted by the First Baptist Church here. By agreement between Federal and church officials a sunset-to-sunrise bea- con will be erected in the spire, tallest in the town, to supplement the Hos- pital Point and Baker Island lights as a guide to seamen. BOOKS BOUGHT BIG BOOK SHOP, 933 G St. N.W. FOR SALE 8-Room, 2-Bath Co-Operative Apartment One Block From 16th and Columbia Road This is _an unusual opportunity to obtain real co-operative home. {n a location overlooking the Zoological Park. artment has three sides exposes b consiate of 1 r."a." r- "iichen reception room.’ 3 bedrooms. % Daths: l'n“d-‘!gegilwl’:l“:dp.rhr' b aldl'lh room ‘hasement. _ Priced_ exceptionally” rea- sonable. Terms arranged. iy Call Adams 9900 COAL! coal and efficient service. FRIDAY, ed and Frick continued to live, even appearing to improve at times, physi- clans grew hopeful, recalling that medicz 1 records described one case in which a victim of the mysterious mal- ady was kept alive for 41 days by ar- tificial respiration, before death. That 20-year-old girl at a St. Paul hospital. Food Is Injected. FORFRKS L Chicago Youth Expires Aflerlnour(shment R s tion injected into his paralyzed legs, 60 Friends Pump Air Into [Put Wednesday his condition was so Lungs 4 1-2 Days. improved that he could swallow food in small quantities. He also became !able to talk more freely, with a little faster pumping of the numbed breath- ing muscles, and encouraged his com- By the Associated Press. rades with cheering gasps, directing was in 1898,“and the patient was 2 [ MARCH 11, 1927. the youth continued to smile in the face of death, jesting with the men laboring to save his life. Almost his last word was an agreement to attend a home-coming party his father pro- posed. Dr. E. T. Conley, one of the attend- ) aid he belleved the battle would not be in vain, if for nothing else than the fact that it would attract Nation-wide attention to the value of artificial respiration by persons without use of pulmotors. Mechanical aid was avoided because of the drain on bodily energy. The parents consented to a post- mortem examination early to which demonstrated the correctness of the dlagnosis, and a section of the spinal column was removed. The tis- sues will be subjected to a series of | tests which doctors believe may be of i 2 Fine Granulated CHICAGO, March 11.—Game to the last flutter of a stalwart heart, Albert Frick yielded to death last night, four and a half days to the hour after the 22-year-old youth began a grim battle with the mystery that numbed his lungs and placed his life in the hands of threescore valiant friends. He died as two of them ceased the steady compressing and relaxing, pressing and releasing that for 108 hours and 12 minutes had pumped the breath of life in and out of the body chilled into helplessness by creeping paralysis. Attending doctors, amazed at his ability to live more than half a week, although powerless to breathe, knew the end was coming, but the last phrase through Frick’s parched lips was a halting assurance that “I'm all right.” Died 2 Hours Later. Two hours later, the two men then forcing the paralyzed diaphragm into action stepped back from the bed to permit a doctor to read from his stethoscope tubes “it's all ove and with streaming faces slipped from the | room to tell the 54 comrades waiting for their turn to continue the fight. One of the men who lifted his tired hands with the physician’s announce- ment, Harry Reynolds, was a member of the fi pair of volunteers who began artificial respiration last Sun- day, when the advance of Landry's paralysis halted the _life-sustaining action of the youth's diaphragm. Medical science knows little of the disease except that there have been a few instances of recovery, byt when Frick's breathing ceased ‘Sunday physicians swiftly started artificial respiration, hoping to keep oxygen fed to the body tissues until the youth rallied from the paralysis which had set in three days after an attack of intestinal influenza. Dozens Respond to Call. ‘Working feverishly, they dispatched a call for volunteers to aid them, and within a few hours dozens of cmployes of the Public Service Co. of Northern Tllinois, for which Frick had been a salesman, appeared at the hospital and offered their service: Organized into shifts of two men each and instructed by the company to remain as long as necessary, the band of volunteers took up the exact- ing work, two at a_time, forcing the lungs to take in and expel air. After 30, 40 and then 50 hours pass- FLAT Ti ? WMAIN 890 LEETH BROTHERS Watch for the opening of Tedges & Alddleton (Ine. Realtors (Ine.) 1412 Eye St. N.W. Frank. 9503 COAL! Is your coal supply running low, and will you need a little more to carry you through the Winter? A trial order of our clean, high-grade anthracite or bituminous coal will assist you in determining where to place your order next season. ¥ Our prices reasonable, consistent with high-quality W. H. Hessick & Son Phone Franklin 8128 Main Office, Yard and Trestle 14th and Water Sts. S.W. Opposite Bureau of Engraving and Printing BHilltop 14th & K Announcing another of a series of talks by Edmund J. Flynn Authority on Co-operative Apartments to be given at Manor 3500 Fourteenth Street N.W. at 3 P.M., Sunday, March 13 Subject: “How Co-operative Apartments Save Half Your Rent” Any questions concerning Co-operative Apartments will be answered following the talk by Mr. Flynn. Hilltop Manor is open daily and Sunday from9 AM. to9 P.M. Have You'Seen It? CAFRITZ Owners and Builders of Communities M. 92080 them to “press a little harder, boys,” . fr s alue in science’s fight against or “not quite so hard. the baflling disease, which was first Yesterday morning, however, he|described in 1859 by Landry, a French grew weaker, and both doctors and his ysiclan, friends, although permitting no break S STUDENTS DRAW LOTS. in the respiration except for brief ad- ministration of oxygen, gave up hope. Medical Men Leave Higher Educa- tion to Chance. He dropped into his first lengthy sleep since last week, but it was from exhaustion, and last night he lost consciousness for the first time since MADISON, Wis., March 11 (®).- The element of chance entered the scholastic realm at the University of Wisconsin when 76 pre-medical stu he was stricken. At the bedside when the fight end- ed was Frick's father, Herman Frick of Crystal Lake, Il His mother left the hospital just before the end came. For months they had watched him [dents drew lots to determine who combating il health, which forced |should be enrolled in the third-year him to withdraw from Northwestern | medical school. University. Lack of facilities for upper classmen led to their action. Through his last conscious hours Phillips Terrace Apartment 1601 Argonne Place Just North of Columbia Rd. at 16th St. UST_A_FEW_OF THESE WONDERFULLY 5wy LE"A’.‘I;NGB;EAFAITME TS ALL WITH IDEAL LOCATIONS . KITCHEN, TILE BATH AND RECEPTION HALL ONE BN0N: Y FROM $45.00 to $52.50 ONE BOOM. KITCH INING AND FROM $60. i BREAKFAST ROOM. TILE BATH EPTION HALL AND PORCH FROM $100 TO $135.00 Ve MS, KITCHEN, DINING ALCOVE. TILE BATH TWO ROOME, B RECEPTION MALL. £75.00 FOUR ROOMS. KITCHEN. TILE BATH RECEPTION HALL AND PORCH $165.00 ALL_APARTMENTS HAVE ALL U TAIDR KooMS WiTH BEAUTIFEY, OUTLOOK AND EXTOSURES ™ <. 24-Hour Telephone and Elevator Service Inspect Them Today Before Deciding William S. Phillips & Co., Inc. Main 4600. Adams 8710, Wonderful Homes in an Exclusive Neighborhood Between 14th & 16th Sts. N.W. Parkwood St. N.W. The entire street is occupied by these “Lifetime Homes” of artistic' design. Nothing can be built around them to change the high type character of the neighborhood. 6 and 7 rooms; 1 and 2 baths; 1 and 2 car garages $10,950 and $13,950 Special Terms Can Be Arranged They are typical “Lifetime Homes”—worth from $2,000 to $3,000 more than the price, by reason of the big saving which our enormous building program enjoys and which WE ALWAYS DIVIDE WITH PURCHASERS OF CAFRITZ “LIFETIME HOMES.” Open and lighted from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Just north of Park Road and west of l4th Street. CAFRITZ Owners and Builders of Communities M. 9080 14th &K —_— R IR R R A R AR Reason For INSISTING On PiNT PACKAGE CONVENIENT! CARTON OPENS EASILY Break the outer seal—open an end of the carton—and out comes the Carry Ice Cream brick with ease, It was designed for your convenience— SANITARY! INSIDE PARCHMEN WRAPPER The cream doesn’t touch the carton in the Carry Pint Pack- age. Its purity, like that of your butter, is sealed In by a steril- ized inner parchment wrapping. EIIIOY this perfect ice cream—perfectly packaged. No for you at a '--»m’umcmri Ice Cream. In single flavors and three-flavor combinations. AT MANY GOOD DEALERS NEAR YOU S o SUGAR | { STANDARD QUALITY No. 2 Cans BEVERAGE Bottles Contents Your Choice 3 Abner Drury Light or Dark 6 !SPECIAL NOTICE! Our branch store at Ashton, Md., was com- EEEEEBEEEEEB:—E ol ! E_EEEEBEE Large Size Fruit 15—FOR C j—lol———lolc——]n]c——|olc————]o|c——|a| —— o] —— I———ol———|olc——|al——2la|——|alc———|0|——| 0] \c———o]c———=a|——[n] lc———o]——— o} BE==0 pletely destroyed by fire Thursday night. We re- gret this misfortune very much, as we realize that here will be inco!we.m'enud. For this reason may oo et el e stores? i, 10 25¢ 4to6 Average & Lb. 19c i . 6tol Strip BACON ::=< 1. 25¢ Vegetable Specials! TENDER, CRISP FRESH, GREEN ;:rnch Ioc Lb. 15c ICEBERG FRESH LETTUCE | Tomatoes w J5¢ Fancy Florida ORANGE SALE! Medium Size Fruit 15—FOR Del Monte Fruits at Special Prices DEL s?.f OJN TE DEL.M ION TE 2 ‘zx 45¢ 2 ca 35¢ DEL M(A)NTE DE[;)?_’QNTE 2 o 2 o 45¢ 8 OCLOCK COFFEE s, 3¢ Strictly Fresh s,i':g’;b":z!; 4 EGGS Doz. 2 gc RICH CREAMY CHEESE w. 33c Maine Campbell’s POTATOES BEANS 101 31c | 3 cans 25¢ CRACKERS ggggfgg_ 2rig. 19c | Fach 25¢ e A= R R R R U PURE LARD 15¢ ARMOUR’S SMOKED CELERY| PEAS 3 Heads 25c 35¢ Pineapple Pears T 35 Fruit Salad EGGS Doz. 2 7c KRISPY HOSTESS