The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, October 16, 1904, Page 28

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28 THE SAN FRAN Julius Kahn and E. A, Hayes Gam Friends al Meeling al Alhambra i e Continued From Page 27, Column 7. Democracy denounces protection as the robbery of the many for the benefit of the few. Further, they denounce the | action of the Republican party in ref- erence to the lands we have taken un- der our protection as being imperialis- tic and despotic. Now, when they say that they mean that we have not ex-1! tended to the people of the Philippine islands all the same political rights | and privileges which we enjoy here, they mean that we do not let them elect their Judges and chief officers, nor send Senators and Representatives to our Congress—that, in short, we are gZoverning these people as colonies, and that our government of them is tend- | ing to the destruction of all the funda- mental principles upon which our Gov- ernment has been founded. Now, there , is nothing in all this. It is merely the veriest political buncombe. To show this we do not have to go farther than to our own earliest and most funda- mental laws. | PHILIPPINE QUESTION. i “When Thomas Jefferson was Presi- dent, a pretty good Democrat, or at Jeast so usually regarded, we made the Louisiana purchase. And did the fathers extend the constitution, that is, in the sense our Democratic friends would have it extended in the Philip- pines, over that great territory? No. The Congréss and President inaugu- rated such a government as in their | wisdom they thought best and most serviceable to the people. am not one of those who is will- ing to see the American flag pulled down any place when it has once been put up. I want it to stay there. Especially in the Philippine Islands. Don’t let us run away from our na- tional destiny. I would be ashamed to see wus falter in the course which Providence and our own futuge as well as a regard for these people who have placed under our care has i out for us. I believe that the will come when these Filipinos 1 thank God for the blessing which American Government has to them. In that day thc landers be ready to fight for our flag just as we are ready to fight for it, because they will have learned 10 love See what an opportunity is offered 10 the 2 n people in the Orient. the A trade richest in the world, which reaches up into the hundreds of milljops which will some day ETOW ms of dollars, is waiting f to h across this Pacific Ocean of s and to take it. Our Pavific Ocean, for I believe that we n claim it as our sea, and in the will make good the claim, let us ross this ocean and take up which is going to surpass world ever known. has the TALKS OF PROTECTION. Now T am going to talk about an- other subject, one that will make you feel as soon as I mention it, for ite va phases have been more thrashed over in the last generation of American politics than anything else. But I cannot pass it by to-night, for if is one thing that is the core of nism more than another it The Democrats de- ion as the robbery of the benefit of the few. for t us look at this matter plainly for many tle while. Manufacturers have to more for their labor in this coun- an they do in y other. Now me of these manufacturers may say if labor here were on the same as in European countries, Great n, Germany and the rest, they cculd sweep the markets of the world. Now I am going to give you some homely {llustrations of the way our protection 1 work. laws These ADVERTISEMENT Permanence of Cure the True Test. Many so-called pile remedies will af- ford the user slight temporary relief, and the majority of those afflicted do not expect more than this. The average sufferer, after having tried every preparation recommended for the cure of piles, comes to the con- clusion that there I8 no cure except by an operation, and rather than undergo this “last resort” he suffers on, re- signed to the situation, so far as may bLe. The attention of those interested is invited to the following experience: “After ten years of suffering from blind, bleeding and protruding piles, and after using every remedy I couid hear of without any benefit. I finally bought a fifty cent box of Pyramid Plle Cure and used it with such good results I bought next a dollar box, which finished up the job. That was mearly six years ago, and as far as plies is concerned I am cured and have never felt a symptom of them since. “Many others have used this remedy by my advice, with the same results, and I always recommend it to sufferers with piles.” C. H. POTTS, Burlington, Kans. Testimony like this should convince the most skeptical that Pyramid Pile Cure mot only cures, but cures to stay cured. It is in the form of a sup- pository, can be applied in the pflvacyl of the home, directly to the parts af- fected, apd does its work quickly and painlessly. Druggists generally sell this famous remedy for fifty cents a package and sufferers are urged to buy a package now and give it a trial to-night. Ac- cept no substitutes. A little book describing the causes; and cure of piles is published by the Pyramid Drug Co., Marshall, Mich., and the same will be sent free to any; Mdreu for the an‘ The Itch Fiend | That is 8alt Rheum or Eczema—one of' * the outward manifestations of scrofula. It comes in itching., burning, oozing, drying end scaling patches on the face, head, hands, legs or body. It cannot be cured by outward applica- tions—the blood must be rid of the im- purity to which it is due. cult cases. Accept no substitute for Hood's; no substitute acts ke it. - work just the same in San Francisco as they do in Springfield, Illinios, or | Springfield, Mass., in all the Union. “There is another way American la- | bor is threatened in this country, espe- | jcially jn this western part of it. I be- lieve in the exclusion of Mongolian la- | bor from it. And I want to say right here that I have always carried out this doctrine in my own business and always will. Aslong as there is a white man for the work I do not think him a true American- who would employ a { Chinaman to do that work. But even more; by destroying protebtion of American industries we would be doing just that very thing. It Is just as wrong to employ Chinamen in China to do the work which Americans should be doing in America as it would be to bring the Chinamen here to do it ‘What kind of a man is he who would turn aside a fellow American who says, ‘I must have $1 50 or $2 a day to sup- port my family,’ simply because a Chi- naman offered to do the same work for 70 or 80 cents? And I can assure you that I would never come before an as- sembly of American workers and ask them for their suffrages if I had ever done such a thing. 1 would be ashamed to look an bonest American working- man in the face. RECORD WILL BE CLEAN. “Just one word more as to my own position here to-night. By this time I suppose you have discovered that T am a Republican, and if T am elected on the 8th of next November I shall stand by and help to carry out the national policies of the Republican | party. At the same time I want you | to remember that I was nominated not | that I/ at my own solicitation, and will go to Congress if the people of this district elect me with pledges to nobody except to do my duty by my constituents, Republicans, Democrats or Union Labor. If I go there, my friends, I shall strive to so conduct myself that I can have the approval of my own conscionce and of the whole people I represent. Further, I promise that my record will be as clean and as straightforward as I can make it. I thank you for your at- tention.” At the conclusion Mr. speech Colonel Pippy said: didn’t I tell you he was all right?” “You bet he's all right,” came from several parts of the house. Continu- ing, Mr. Pippy said: NEEDED NO INTRODUCTION. “They have made out a programme for me, but there is one part I am go- ing to omit. I do not believe that Jul- fus Kahn needs an introduction to a San Francisco audience.” Mr. Kahn accepted the novel presen- tation of his name to the audience and immediately took his place at the speaker's stand. A great cheer went up and it was several minutes before the Republican candidate for Congress could proceed with his address. When of Hayes' “There, | quiet was restored he said in part: It is my intention this evening to endecavor to give you a few reasons ¢ the people of the State of Cali- furnla should continue to stand loyal to the principles advocated by the Re- publican party, and in doing so it is my firm determination not to descend to vituperation and personal attacks. 1 strongly deprecate, and in fact I have always deprecated and condemned, such tactics, and [ desire at this time to beg my friends not to tolerate that kind of politics. REPRESENTS PRINCIPLES. “For the time being a candidate sim- ply represents the principles of his party. The man, in the course of years, dies and passes on. The principles of his party, however, still live and con- tinue to live until new conditions arise | that create new principles. “I have always contended that in a political campaign a candidate can af- ford to b= perfectly fair and honest and sincere. Men differ as to politics—that is only natural. And yet we should be broad-gauged enough to respect the views of our political opponents, even though we may not believe in those | views. “In the present campaign, among the | leading issues raised by the other side are the personal characteristics of our standard-bearer, Theodore Roosevelt. We are told, in the first place, that he overrides that great palladium of our liberties, the constitution of the United States. How the Democratic orators love that word ‘palladium,’ For years they have fondled it and toyed with it, and written it into their party plat forms—because, I suppose, it sound: well. But when they charge the pres- ent President of the United States (and, by the grace of the people of the United Etates, the President-to-be for four years more, after the fourth day of mext March) with usurping powers | not granted by the constitution, they | not only misreprésent the facts, but they show a woeful lack of knowleige of the history of the administration of | the father of the Democratic party, Themas Jefferson. For, if the annals of our country have beem writ true, it is there that when Jefferson, through | his Commissioners to France, accom- plished the purchase of the Louisiana | Territory, he openly and publicly ad- mitted that there was no warrant in tbe conmstitution for his action in con- suinmating the’treaty of purchase, and he gave it as his honest opinion that a constitutional amendment would have to be adopted in order that the pur- j chase might be properly and constitu- tionally confirmed and ratified. But to this day the constitution has never been amended in that regard, and if Theodore Roosevelt has at any time ridden rough-shod over the constitu- 1 tion of the United States, as our politi- cal opponents would have us believe— . a propostion, however, which I em- phatically deny—then he simply has marched hand in hand with that other great vivlator of the constitution, Thomas Jefferson. And, fellow-citi- zens, 1 am patriotic enough to accord to Thomas Jefferson all the honor that is due him as a great, loyal, fearless and undaunted patriot and statesman. DEFENDS ROOSEVELT. “But our antagonists also claim that Theodore Roosevelt is not a safe man, that he leans toward militarism, and therefore is apt to embroil us in a for- eign war. mmumgm m-fl-mamu_m-u-u or any place else | CISCO CALL, SUNDAY, OCTOBER. 16, 1902. D ADVERTISEMENTS. We Have =-1,800,000 PeOple Who Are Users of Liquozone. who write us. your friends if they use it, and you will be surprised at the number who do. Ask a few what they think of If they say it is wonderful—that it does all we claim— then let us buy you a 50c bottle. Try it at our expense ; see what it does for you. you find it effective and needful, tell others about it, as we have told you. Your own neighborhood is full of Liquozone users. it—ask them what it does. Not. Medicine. | Liquozone is not a medicine. It 13‘ not made by compounding drugs, nor is there any alcohol in it. It is made | solely from gas—largely oxygen gas— by a process requiring immense ap- paratus and 14 days’ time. This product has, for more than 20| years, been the constant subject of | Scientific and chemical research. The | object of its discoverers was to get the virtues of oxygen in stable form | into the blood. Their reason was that | oxygen alone can kill disease germs | without harm to the living tissues. | Each cubic inch of Liquozone re- quires the use of 1250 cubic inches of | the gas. And that is all that goes into it—the gas, and the liquid used to ab- sorb it. The result—after 14 days— | is a germicide so certain that we pub- | lish on every bottle an offer of $rooo for a disease germ that it cannot kill, | Acts Like Oxygen. The virtue of Liquozone lies in the | fact that it does what oxygen does. | Oxygen is the vital part of air, the | very source of vitality, the most essen- tial element of life. Oxygen is alsol Nature’s greatest tomic, the blood | food, the nerve food, the scavenger of | the blood. It is oxygen that turns the blue blood to red in the lungs. It is| oxygen that eliminates the waste tis- | sue and builds up the new. You could not live three minutes without it. And half the sickness in the world is caused by having too little. Liguozone acts like oxygen. It gives to every nerve center just the food that it needs. It gives new power to every function of nature. It brings back vitality at once. No other known {ree. product can compare with it as a \|-| talizer. And Liquozone is the only tonic that never leads to reaction. Kills All Germs. Another fact is that an excess r)l'\ oxygen destroys any = disease germ. | The reason is that germs are vegeta- bles; and an excess of oxygen—the | very life of an animal—is deadly to.| ! vegetal matter. So with Liquozone, but the vital difierence is this: Oxygen is a gas, and an excess of it cannot be main- tained in the blood. Liquozone is a | liquid, concentrated, stable and pow- erful. It goes wherever the blood | goes; and, as no germ can escape it, and none can resist it, the results are | inevitable. To the human body Liquozone is the most helpful thing in the world. | But anything vegetable instantly per- | ishes wherever Liquozone goes. The | fact that germs are \eguablcs has en- | abled the discoverers of Liquozone to | solve the great problem of killing germs in the body v\ul-out killing the tissues, too. And there is no other way. Any drug that kills germs is a poison, and it cannot be taken inter- nally. In that fact lies the great value | of Liquozone. It is the only product known—the only product man can conceive of—that can destroy the cause of a germ trouble without harm to the living tissues. : | We Paid $100,000 | | For the American rights of Liquo- zone, and the British Liquid Ozone Co. paid the same sum for the rights ! in Great Britain. That is the highest price ever paid for similar rights on| any scientific discovery. We did it—and There are millions of other users of whom we don’t know. We learn only of those But each user tells others about it, and those others tell others. | sands of the most di Ask to buy it. If We tell you this fact because it best indicates the valwe of Liquozone. Claims are easily made, but men of our class don’t pay a price like that | save for a product of very great worth to' humanity. Before making this purchase, tested Liquozone for two years through pl\yuumh and hospitals in this country and others. We tried it in all kinds of germ diseases, in thou- cult cases ob- tainable. We saw it cure hundreds of sick ones with whom everything else had failed. tient brought back from the verge of the grave by it. We proved, to the satisfaction of the best physicians, that in germ troubles Liquozone did what nothing else we | could accomplish. We proved it to be of more value to sick humanity than | all the drugs in the world combined. Then we staked our fortunes and our reputations on it. Every member of this Company uses Liquozone daily in his family to pre- | vent sickness, and millions of others are learning to do likewise. Liquo zone is now employed by hospitals everywhere, and by the physicians of | nearly every nation. Germ Diseases. We give here a list of the known germ diseases. Each of these diseases is caused by germ attacks, or by poi-| sons which germs create. come only through killing the germs. All that medicine can do for these troubles is to help Nature overcome | the germs, and those results are indi rect and uncertain. They depend on the patient's “condition. some of these diseases which medicine never cure: In all of them, the re- And we saw many a pa- | | germs. A cure can | There are! Each of those 1,800,000 people suffered from a germ disease. if Liquozone cured them—if it destroyed the germs. Liquozone, then do as they say. Liquozone has cured. Millions of people use Liquozone constantly. sults from drugs are doubtful slow. Medicine is mot proper treat- | ment for any form of gerh attack. Liquozone goes directly to the cause these troubles. It attacks the wherever they exist. A germ disease must end when the germs are killed; nothing is more certain than that. Then Liquozone, acting as a tonic, quickly repairs the damage done, and restores a condition of per- fect health. Dis sisted medicine for years yield at once to Liquozone. And it cures diseases which medicine never cures. stage of any disease in this list, the re- sults are so certain that we will gladly send to any patient who asks it an ab- One Full-Size If you need Liquozone, and have never tried it, we ask you to send us the coupon below. We will then send »u an order on a local drugist for a c bottle, and will pay the druggist ourselves for it. We have already done this with 1,800,000 people, and it has cost us over one million dollars to announce and fulfill the offer. Don’t you realizs that a product must have wonderful merit when we spend $(,mo.ooojust.m let the sick try That is our only method of making Liquozone known. We publish no testimonials; we tell you of none it has cured; we use no physician’s dorsement. try it, at our expense. yourself what it does. If you have already used Liquozone, this offer, of course, does not apply to you. But if you have not used it—if of Then judge for and | ses which have re-| In any | in- | We prefer to ask you to | _ All of these people asKed us tobuy the first bottle—a 50c. bottle—and give it to them we will do it for you. Ask some of them Ask if they adviss you to take Half the people you meet know some one whom Yet we have never asked a person We have asked them only to let us buy the first bottle—just as we ask you. They have continued its use because of what Liquozone would. Won't you—for your own sake—be one of those millions?> Won’t you write for a bottle. to-day ? did for them—just as you solute guaranty. Hay Fever—Influenza Kidne; Diseases La Grppe Leucor:hea Many Hnmrt Troubles Piles—Pleumonia Pleurisy—Quinsy Rheumathm Scrofula—sSyphilts Skin Diseases Stomach Tiwubles bles Dysentery—Diarrhea Dandruff—Dropsy Dyspepsia Eczema—Erysipelas Fevers—Gall Stones Goitre—Gout | Gonorrhea—Gleet | _All diseases that begin with fever—all in- flammation—all _ catarrh—all _contaglous dis- | eases—all the results of impure or polsoned | blood: In nervous debllity Liquozone acts as.a vi- talizer, accomplishing what no drugs cam do. Bottle Free. you don’t know its results—please send us this coupon to-day. Do that in justice to yourself. The acceptance of this offer places you under no obli- gations; and it will introduce to you a product better than anything else in the world for you. Liquozone costs soc and $1. CUT OUT THIS COUPON for this offer may not appear again. out the blanks and mail it to the Li Ozone Co., 438-464 Wabash Ave., Chic il 14 My disease is I have never tried I will sapply me a S0e. take it. on bottle fres I will 514" Give full address—write platniy Any physician or hospital not yet usin | Liquozone will be gladly supplied for te which we owe allegiance makes a man | then perhaps these criticisms | are true. But when in the history of our country have the American people been so respected and honored in lorelgnl lands as they are to-day? When has the country ever had the prestige abroad ; that she enjoys at the present time? F years American citizens have blushed to think that our compatriots traveling in foreign lands have fre- quently been compelled to appeal to the diplomatic representatives of foreign governments for protection and sup- port. I have an abiding faith in the in- telligence of my countrymen. I remem- ber how the entire nation was stirred a few years ago when Grover Cleveland issued his pronunciamento regarding the Venezuela boundary dispute. Our countrymen want at the head of their government a man who has the cour- | age, the patriotism and the independ- | ence that will say to all the world, “We i do not intend to meddle in your affairs, but we do intend, at all hazards and under all circumstances, to protect the rights and the interests of the Ameri- | can people.’ That is true American doc- trine, and that is the doctrine which in- spires and actuates Theodore Roose- velt. “Another issue that seems to agitate our political opponents considerably during the present campaign is the tariff. They denounce protectionism as a ‘robbery of the many to enrich the few.” As my friend, ‘Uncle Joe’ Can-| non, the present Speaker of the House of Representatives, often remarked, ‘talk is cheap, but facts are stubborn | things.’ Let me for a few minutes con- | trast the conditions that prevailed in | this country under the last Democratic administration and under the Republi- can administrations of the past seven and a half years. In 1892, while the country was in a highly prosperous condition, the Democratic campaigners and stump speakers succeeded in mak- ing a large proportion of our country- | men believe that they were being taxed | to death. “The result was a complete Demo- cratic victory at the polls in that year. Not only did they elect their candidate for President, but the Senate and’ the House of Representatives were for the first time since 1860 In complete control of the triumphant Democracy. Mr. Cleveland, with the independence that | always characterized his official ac- tions, had sent at the close of his first administration a message to Congress strongly urging a decided reduction in the tariff. hen he unsafe, was re-elected, with a - __ ADVERTISEMENTS. e 7” ‘ curesq:l_gand COLDS However often we take Cold, we sel- dom recognize the first symptoms: the | languid, tired feeling; the lack of en- ergy and strength; the blues, and dark forebodings of some impending ill- ness. This goes to show what a! wrench the system gets by the checked | ‘ circulation of the blood when a Colll is: taken. The next time you feel so, uk. dose of Dr. Humphreys' “Seventy-sev- |en” 1t will restore the circulation, start the blood coursing through the veins and break up the Cold-—m-.klns life worth living. «77” for Grip, Coughs and Influenza. Druggist's, 25 cents each, mailed. 2 Jiicine 01 o Willat ana | ment came into the hands of the Re-| { how did the citizens of San Francisco Senate and House of Representatives of his own political faith, the manu- facturers, realizing that the tariff laws would now bé altered, began to curtail the production of their facto- ries and workshops. Men became idle and were unemploved. With the opening of the regular session of Con- gress in 1893 tariff tinkering began. More mills and workshops banked their fires and closed their doors. Af- ter many months of wrangling and !’ contention the Wilson-Gorman tariff bill was passed. It became a law without the President’s signature be- cause, in his opinion, it did not go far enough. ““And then came Coxey's army and the tramp of the unemployed rever- berated throughout the length and breadth of the land. Samuel Gompers, the head of the American Federation of Labor, gave it as his opinion that 3,000,000 of our fellow citizens were out of work. Free souphouses had to be established in every section of our common country. The distress of our people was complete and thorough. And then, in 1896, after as severe and costly' an experiment as our country- men had ever indulged in, they re- versed their actions of four years be- fore, the lamented Willlam McKinley was elected by an overwhelming ma- Jority and again the executive and legislative branches of our Govern- publican party. Within a fortnight after his Inauguration President Mc- Kinley called the Congress of the United States in extraordinary ses-' sion for the purpose of framing a new tariff law. Within a few months the Dingley bill was written on the statute books of the United States and in an incredibly short space of time a wave of prosperity swept over our country that has never been equaled in this or any other land or clime. “During those four years of famine and of the State of California fare? And what has been their portion of the marvelous era of plenty that we enjoyed during the last seven and a half years of bountiful abundance? I have here some official statistics which were furnished me by J. Cal Ewing, secretary of the Board of Bank Commissioners of this State. During the four years of Democratic administration what with a tariff tin- kering agitation and the Wilson-Gor- man tariff act in force there was a|’ decrease in the deposits of the three largest savings banks in San Fran- cisco, to wit., the Hibernia, the Ger- man and the San Francisco Savings Union, of $4,059,208. Now the sav- ings banks represent the surplus of the money earned by the working peo- ple. And according to these figures the deposits dropped over $4,000,000 from what they were at the close of 'the administration of Benjamin Har- rison at the beginning of 1893. 1In other words, the working people had to draw upon the funds which they had set apart for a rainy day—and, in verity, the proverbial rainy day came with the advent of complete Demo- cratic administration in 1893. YEARS OF PLENTY. “Then like a transformation scene in some magnificent spectacle, came the four years of plenty under Wil- liam McKinley. Instead of drawing cut their hard-earned dollars, they be- gan again to make their deposits and from July, 1897, to July, 1901, there was an increase in the deposits in | these three banks of $21,977,774. Dur- ing the succeeding three years and lono month, from J\lly 1901, to August, Continued on Page 20, Column 3. ——————————— Wemullln: i ST e nmm I\in-ho er Pwn-w \lllgl[‘ Men. It is well known that Lord Kitch- éner prefers single men in the arm) He was twitted once on being a wom- an hater. He answered smilingly that he was just the reverse. Then he be- came serious and said that experience had taught him that single men, as a rule, make better soldiers than mar- ried men. The latter, he declared, are bound to keep in mind the wel- fare of their wives and children, and on this account are apt to draw back ' fu)m dang#rw that would not cause them an instant's hesitation If they had only themselves to think of. Therefore. a wife, though she may be very ambitions for her husband's suc- | cess," § s efficiency as a sol- dier in action. hicago Chroni ADVERTISEMENTS. ORE ARIZONA GOLD Big Strike on the Yavapai Mines Re- veals the Glittering Yellow Metal. Stockholders Much Excited. Additional Machinery the Only Thing Now Re-! quired to Make These Mines Big Pro- ducers and Dividend Payers. Only a few monthe ago development work was started on the property of the Yavapai Gold Mining Company, situated near Mayer, on the Santa Fe Raflroad, In Arizona, and a block of stock which was placed on the mar- ket for developmefit purposes was snatched up in short order. A few days ago the superintendent in charge of the development wired the officers in this city that a rich strike had been made, and that samples were on the way. The samples re- ferred to have just arrived and they certainly substantiate the telegraphic advices from the mine, The rock is fairly alive with the yellow €0ld, which can be seen at a glance with the naked eye. The specimens are now on exhi- bitlon in the offices of the company in the Crossley bullding, where stockholders and YAVAPAI DEVELOPMENT WORK. Already a shaft 120 feet deep has been sunk, and as depth is attained the ore increases in richness. A 40-foot drift north and a crosscut thirty-five feet west absolutely demonstrates the great bodies of ore that lie hidden within this group of mines, awaiting but further de- velopment and opening up to place it among the long list of Arizona's great dividend payers and yroducers. Particular attention is called to the atfidavit of Mr. J. R. Hagins, a mining man of many years' standing and possessing the highest in- tegrity. AFFIDAVIT OF J. R. HAGINS. 1. J. R. Haglns, being first duly sworn, de- pose and say: That I am the original dis- coverer of the group of mines now owned by A GLIMPSE OF THE GREAT UNITED VERDE PROPERTY ON THE SAME MINERAL BELT AS THE YAVAPAI MINES. others are examining them with great interest. The mines of this company are situated in the heart of the greatest gold district in Ari- 2ona and it will be a miracle If the Yavapai group does not become one of the greatest producers in the Territory, The report which accompanied the samples states that this rich strike was made in the development shaft at about seventy feet from the eurface, and while there was but a small this rich ore o far opened up, there was an_abun of good milling ore bétween the walls at thh point and that the nlm bore every evidence of development into pmaucer with depth and development. nes were originally discovered by Mr. o i o . ortune In enor- mly rich nnnml State that has fallen to luck and that pros- i pector. It was he that discoversd the ron King mine near t, for \which as ‘recently refused by the present i s b e short ' dis c' the world's f; producers, eén, one of rl ‘amous lucers, it Shally Nondi LalEh Vol s wi ‘conversant—how it raissd Senat from the Yavapal Gold Mining Company and the superintendent of said mines. I firmly believe that when they are properly opened up they Will be on a level with the best paying mines in the district and will surpass the “Iron King Mine,” which I discovered, and for whieh the owners recently refused $5,000,000. In witness whereof I have hereunto nt my hand and seal this 11th day ol November, Sizned) R. HAO(\! Subscribed before me nu. um day of No- 1903, PRATT. vember, Notary Public nd_for the City and Couty of San Francisco, State of Californta. This property is situated on the same min- eral belt as the Great Congress mine and lies between that and the United Verde, o by Senator W. A. Clark. The Cungress mi enjun the distinction of having paid ns,ooo- 000 in dividends and still peoducing ae rich as While the United is said to be $300 hare, It was only a few years k0 that s same stock sold for less tham $1 per share, POOR MEN'S MINE. But for the fact that none but com poor men are interested in this proj would not be one doliace worth able stock placed on the market, tunatel; property to the' great profit which the stock- holders are entitied to, it has been decided to rlace another small block of treasury stock on_the market, only seliing just to puschase he necessiry 1L return the George A. Bethune, of the htest stars among mining eal’!h.-l on the cific Coast, who has been acting as consulting en- gineer-at this property, in his tember 1 says: - “After being fn charge af the property for over three months, during which time I have given the property and the djstrict generally the most earnest study and camsideration, [ have no hesitancy in saying that in my juds- ment the Yavapal has the making af a very rich mine and one that will in the end satisfy ¢very stockholder beyond his expectstions The ledge upen which we afe mow working is certainly a mammoth .mineral bearing body of rock. It crops on the.surface for a distance of from eight to ten miles and free gold can be horned from almost any portion of the crop- pings on this'property. The big strike, sam- ples of which I forwarded some davs ago, was made ‘&t a depth of about Seventy feet from the surface, and while we have opened up com- paratively little of that rich ore so far, the ledge carries a large body of lower grade mineral bearing quastz. and only depth is re quired, as I said before, to prove up the prop- erty. 'The ledge is a contact between porphyry and granite and the vein matter is about seven feet in thickness, consisting of white quartz carrying gold_end sulphurets. Crosscuts on the course of the vein in the two-compartment shaft belig sunk have encountered pockets of high grade ore showing wire gold. In all my twenty years of mining experience I never knew of a property of this kind where condi tions were more favorable. for the economical treatment of the ore. dgment, the Sntire coat of mintog and illind Heed net ¢ ceed $175 per ton, so that you can see th the mine has the very brightest promise of b coming a rich producer.” A good force of men is now at work aod in a very few months thousands af tons of ore will be blosked out. giving sufficlent tonnage to justify the erection of a large mill At a recent meeting of the board of directors it was arrdnged for the sale of this limited amount of the treasury stock at a price and upon terms which will be within the reach of every investor. The purpose of the company in offering i+ | stock for sale is to enable it to carry out the recommendations of its experts, knowing that by adding to its present machinery equipment it will be in a position to quickly reduge the vast ore bodies as they are hoisted from the | mine. It was determined at this meeting, how- ever, that not less than 100 shares of the stock should be sold to any one person and that the pries_should be 35 cents a share. and since 'he recent strike another advance I8 considered i u the next meeting. com: also agreed that any amount of . -,.a’ 100 shares up, could he % cents | PROTECTION TO m’m Gold Mining - Company was formed with men at its head whose honesty and business integrity cannot he questioned and who would not identify themseives with anything that had not merit and truth to recommend it. Every care has been taken for the protection of small_investors. The articles of incorpor ation and the by-laws of the company make stock absolutely non-assessable. It was her decided at this meeting that these small investors shall under no circumstances forfeit any money pald in for stock. That is, if one should subscribe for 100 or moere shares, lM fter making one or mare payments be to meet an Installment, stock for every dollar that has been paid I be issued to the purchaser. | It there are any readers of this paper who desire to stand in In a small way on this wor ly rich mine, they are advised to write to A. J. Chandler, Assistant Secretary Yavapai Gold Mining fonmny. room 611 Crossley building. San Francisco, and arrange- ments will be made to get a few of them in on this desirable mine. arfidavits information regarding the property will bo Turnisned. free win ap- plication. Yavapai . H. S. Foote United States Judge. South McAlesier, Tndian Territory. Hon. 8. H. Brooks. - treanver ok e Prat Hon. 8. C. ex- of Secramento, ~°u'-h,m* Francisco, - .

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