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Show you free, to prove merit, samples of my Dr. Shoop'a Let me mall Restorative, and my Book on either Dyspepsia, The Heart, or The - Kidneys. Address me, Dr. Shoop, Racine, Wls. Troubles of the Stomach, Heart or Kidneys, are merely symptoms of a deeper ailment. Don't make the common error of treating symptoms only. Symptom treatment Is treating result of your ailment, and not the nerves the cause. Weak 8tomach Inside nerves means Stomach weakness, always. And the Heart, and Kidneys as well, have their controlling these Weaken or inside nerves. weak have and you Inevitably nerves, vital organ. Here Is where Dr, has made its Shoop's Restorative fame. No other remedy even claims Also to treat the "Inside nerves. for bloatlijg, biliousness, bad breath or complexion, use Dr. Shoops Restor atives, sold by World Drug company o NOTICE OF ASSESSMENT NO. 10. The Blizzard Mining & Milling company, principal place of business at Spanish Fork City, Utah county, Utah. Notice is hereby given that at a meeting of the directors held on the Cth day of May, 1907, an assessment of one (1) mill per share was levied upon the capital stock of the corporation, payable on or before the 30th day of May, 1907, to John J. Banks, secretary, Spanish Fork, Utah. Any stock upon which this assessment remains unpaid on the 30th day of May, 1907, will be delinquent and advertised for sale at public auction, and unless payment Is made before, will be sold on the 10th day of June, 1907, to pay the delinquent assessment, together with the cost of advertising and expense of conducting sale. JOHN J. BANKS, Secretary. Spanish Fork, Utah, May Cth, 1907. MAN WHO TRAPPED 'FRISCO B00DLERS HAS FINE RECORD CALLED KING OF DETECTIVES William J. Burns, (Most Clsver of the Secret Service Agents Employed by Uncle Sam, Has Earned Proud 7 Hie by H s Many Suczesacs in Running Down Ol fen- ders Against the Law His Methods Are Shrewd, rect and Straight Forward, and He Has Yet to Record Failure in Any Ccse in Which He Has Been Employed Land Crabbers, Bocdlers or Counterfeiters Ail One to Him. Di- San Francisco. William J. Burns, the United States secret service agent who trapped every member of San Francisco's corrupt board of supervisors Into a full confession of their guilt, is called "the king of detec- tive." Pur-pos- read: Sec. 9. There shall be held annual ly on the second Saturday of Febru ary in each year, at 10 o'clock a. m a general meeting of the stockholders of the Institution, at such place in Spanish Fork City as the board of directors shall provide. Notice Is hereby given that a meeting of the stockholders of said corporation will be held at the City Hall, In Spanish Pork City, on Saturday, May 18th, 1907, at 1 oclock p. m., for the purpose of voting on said amend ment. PET Kit NIELSEN, JOHN MOORE, President. Secretary. First pub., April 25, 1907. pub.. May 16, 1907. o- PROBATE - AND GUARDIANSHIP NOTICES. Consult County Clerk or the respective signers for further Information. In the District Court of the Fourth Judicial District of the State of Utah, sitting in and for Utah County, Probate Division. In re estate of George G. Hales, deceased. Creditors ' will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned at the law office of A. Saxey, at Spanish Fork, Utah, on or before July 9. 1907. HIAL B. HALES. Administrator. Saxey, Attorney for Estate. First publication March 7, 1907. A. li CD isM Mned Society is reflected in the floors where the housewi e knows about 7 Tin mod! gw finish ruts a hardwood finish on soft wood floor rejuvenates woodwork, furniture, metal work, picture frames, etc. everything about the house that has or had finish. Stains and finishes ready for use easy to apply. Dries over night. Washable and A$k daUrforfr4 aampta and picture bookUt. "What tcilA MJfcofe." Pratt Rt & Tort 3 Lambert, Vtrauh laffilt Sold I did by Nitm Ckksft ' CENTRAL LUMBER COMPANY Spanish Fork, 1ayson, Springvillu ami , Provo, Utah. SAMPLES FREE FOR CALL hundred dollar bill-"Ifound three the letter I opened I sent to were betng which bill of tbe & Kendlg by Briddell Taylor and In Jacobs, cigar merchants I ter Pa , with whom they operated. 1 them the hills. rep,.cl the let the envelopes and remalled 4 Wilkie "Later, when Chief Blddell s went to search Tayler and nr1,61 under them place and put in their desk. I pried open a drawer bills I had three the of two found marked. and taken from the letter me "Wilkie was standing beside loud to him, said I aftd at the time, under arrest enough for the two men to hear: Jacobs told us Thats funny. bills. these of three were there "Briddell bit at the bait men Bunts, he said, how many this in arrest have you got under case? "I named every man who was connected with the case. None of them was under arrest at the time. Thats enough for me, said Briddell. We don't make any more trouble for you. "He gave me his full confession on the spot. It was opening the letter that did the trick. Of course Jacobs had told us nothing. Countsrfaiters Caught. An illustration of careful detective work 1b Burns' method In running down two counterfeiters from Central America. They were Gen. Freder-Ic- o Mora and Ricardo de Requlsens. These two men had been making counterfeits in the United States of the 100 peso notes of Costa Rico. Our govsrnment was asked to apprehend the counterfeiters, and Burns was entrusted with the Job. Others had worked at it before, but all Burns had to start with was a sofa wrapped up In burlap In which $3,000,000 of tho counterfeit notes had been stuffed for shipment to Costa Rica. On the burlap was themark, "XX 1634. Starting from this, Burns found that the burlap had been originally used In packing a shipment of overalls from a factory in Newburg. It was the shipping number. In Newburg Burns went over the books of the factory and found that those particular, overalls had been shipped to a dry goods store In Long Island City. There they told him that they had recently sold a piece of burlap to an old lady by the name of Mrs. Cbevlns. It did not look promising.. But, when Burns learned that Mrs. one RicarChevlns had a do de Requlsens, who hailed from Costa Rica, he thought the trail was getting warm. De Requlsens was living with a young widow from Pittsburg at the house of his mother, Mrs. Cbevlns. Burns placed De Requlsens and the widow under arrest. Then he sent one of his men to the jail with an alleged message to the effect that if he would produce the plates of the 'counterfeit notes the government would abandon his prosecution. After the messenger left, De Requlsens was visited by his mother-in-law- . When she left him Burns followed her to her home In Ixmg Island City. o r. Although Rurna baa this International reputation as a detective, it la hard for hla Intimates to remember always that Burns Is a detective. Thus Francis J. Honey, the prosecutor with whom Burns has worked o " through the land fraud cases In Oregon and In the San Francisco boodle NOTICE. ensos, finds his associate a source of of the continual surprise. Of Meeting of Stockholders e "Burns amuses me, said Ileney for the Spanish Fork Co-o- p one day recently, aa he looked out the of Amending the window of hla office In the unburnt Constitution. "Western Addition of San Francisco, At the regular meeting of the board of directors of the Spanish Fork Co9th operative Institution, held on theresoday of April, 1907, the following lution was passed by said board of to the directors, to be submitted stockholders for their actioa on the 18th day of May, A. D. 1907: Resolved, That so much of Article 9 of the Constitution of said Instltu tion having reference to the time of meeting, be amended by striking out the word May" and Inserting the word "February," no that it shall " out Into making ,nd tfien branched and weardisguised In false whlekera a disuse never I ing blue goggles. clothes. But of a change except guise, let I can take one of my men and him In you talk with him; then bring and let you see him and would not believe him the same Here In San Francisco every one knows me at least all the graftto ers do so It would be useless a try disguise." Burns' methods all through the Ruef case have been surprisingly open. Ruef When he started out to capture arter his friends, the sheriff and the had been pretending to coroner, search for him in vain for a week, a Burns assembled his posse In half s dozen automobiles in front of Heney but offices Ruers with lawyers office; half a block away. He had ten men with with him, but the open way made Job the which he went about the attorneys for the grafter think It must be all a ruse, and no effort was They went made to follow the party. Troca-derthe at resort to the straight In the outskirts of San Franciswas co, where Burns knew that Ruef Burns had the house surin biding. rounded; then he walked in and surHe had his prised Ruef at dinner. man back at Heneya office within three hours. Surprising a Bribe-TakeOf his present work Burns himself says: "This San Francisco case Is one of the most Interesting I have ever bad. Of course municipal graft cases are all somewhat alike. You know who tbe men are whp have got official favors. The first thing to do Is to single out the official who you think will accept a bribe, and then get at him by Inducing him to accept what he thinks Is a bribe. Of course your money Is marked. Then you surprise him In the act. After that you have him cold. Through him you get at the bribegivers. "When I started In on this work in San Francisco I expected to get after each of the supervisors singly, but one of the newspapers got wind of It and published the story how we were working on one man. That spoiled things for us, and 1 had to resort to other methods. What Burns had done was to induce the proprietor of a skating rink who had fallen out with Mayor Schmitz to have an ordinance in hla favor introduced In the board of supervisors. Then he arranged to buy the vote of one of them Lonergan by name for 8300. Burns was concealed in the room when the marked money was He pounced forth at the psypassed. chological moment when Lonergan was taking the bribe. "Take the money, said the trapped boodler, pale as a sheet. "I am done for." "I'll take the money, and Ill take you, too, said Burns. With that he srnred his man Into a complete con-- ' fesslon. Previous to this he had secured another confession from one of Lonergan's colleagues who was 111 and thought he was about to die. A Boodler Trapped. With the Inside Information of these two confessions Burns got to work on all the other supervisors. They were so scared that the whole 18 came through with a rush. When Heney Boodler. while Burns was whirling by In his automobile. "Look at him!" he exclaimed. "He Is aa rtacld and dignified aa a lord In hla carriage." Burns was leaning back at hla ease In the rear seat of the big tonneau. Immaculately groomed, with a look of Imperturbable boredom on hla face. The lawyers associated with Ileney In the prosecution of Abe Ruef and Mayor Schmlts were In the room at the time, and they fell Into a discussion of the man. Methodical in Everything. : "What Interests me most about Burns is that he never misses a meal," said Cobb, lleney'a partner. "I never saw him In too much of a hurry to. take hl8 hour for dinner at the regular time. He Is methodical In everything. It Is all in a day's work with Burns, and when ho turns In at ntght he sleeps like a top." "Yet he never procrastinates," put In District Attorney "1 Itngdon. sked him the other night If he thought he could get a man we wanted and bring hliu to the office In the morning." '"What's the matter with getting him now? said Burns. Taking down the receiver from the 'phoue he called up a saloon. Ills ntun was there. Burns told him it would be better for hla health to surrender himself at our office without delay. The man came at once." "What Interests me about Burns, put In J. Dwyer, another of the attorney of the graft prosecution, "Is hla personality, lie gets the men he la after to like him. Ruef likes him hew better than, any of his own men. Those two swap atorlea to each other until you can't believe Burns Is working all the time to land Ruef In San Quentin prison. "He can mimic a Frenchman, an Englishman, a Dutchman to perfection, and the stories he tells sound like good fiction. I believe It Is hts magnetism as much as his persistence that wins for him." Hla First Important Cass. This Is the story of Burns first Important case, as told by himself: "It was In 1890, In 8t. Louts, a number of firebug and been burning down houses for Insurance money. They rented these houses; then they put In velvet carpets, elegant furniture, pianos and so forth, which they Insured. As soon as they had their policies, they would move out the furniture. Then they would light a r candle, and at two o'clock in the morning the house would burn down with a complete loss. In this way they had got hundreds of thousands of dollars out of the insurance companies. "When I was called Into the case it had been pretty thoroughly gone over by Pinkerton men, who had located the suspects. The difficulty was to get legal evidence. Jim French, who later fled to Honduras, after having served his first sentence, which 1 got against him, was the leader at the gang. "Tbe difficulty in hll such cases Is to uncover the tracks of the criminals while avoiding direct methods. Instead of going out to Induce some of the marked men to come to the front with a confession, I went to them under the name of Wlllama and told them that I had been sent by the Insurance companies to investigate the detectives that had been working on the case who were accused of misappropriating their expense money. While carrying on this 'special Investigation I was able to gather around me all the gang. From them I selected tbe one man who, I thought, could give me the evidence. This fellow, John Rudd by name, never knew until tbe day that be was called Into the grand jury room that he had been aiding In the apprehension of the Incendiaries. 8uspected Informer Killed. When all was ready I went before the grand Jury and explained the case. The Insurance agents told their losses and then we called in Rudd and ex plained to him his part In th casta, After Indictments had been brought la there was a terrible uproar. Some member of the grand jury told the man by the name of gang that Burns had come before them and told the whole story. No one knew Burns. I had been going under the name of Williams, but the following night one of the gang wag suspected by his fellows of being Burns' and was shot dead in a saloon. They never knew until the first day of the trial who two-hou- son-in-la- in irrscT mar( SOUTH-BOUN- No. 61 No. I I(04 ' ia BauuqufaJij-.i- l no. NOKTH-BOCN- No. 62 No. 66 No. 64 O For Provo, PI G rove, For Provo, Salt intermedia,. For Provo, Sail ' Am., EW Star Lag "iKi el 1U4 Intermediate points prds. -Jill Ps'ntisi trains are , tween Salt Bake and the Pacing UTAH COUNTY ta lo direct tiS.11 Beat local trnm see- o- l greatH.cities HtTKTNSK. tjet bet' of . J. District , N. Petekhkw, Depot Ticket div ..fo ill eon j tl pan: itit ilDGRANDWE5ltN( erei .leg Arrival sod departure of trains fan ru. No. 7 For Sprtnrvtlle.ProTo.Sait r.k. and all points east No. 2 -- For pringvTile ProvaSaiVuti1 l and all points east and west j.vM No. 6 For Eureka, Mammoth and ouv?r City 28 Ne. For Eureka,Mammoth ndsi'L l,i ver City Connections mads In Ogden UnVos dil'jl u trains of Southern PaciUe and OregoTsI! Line. I OFFERS CHOICE OF i. it Oil out loot - Ft FAST TBROUCH tbe slua1 be off rodu sped DAlLTj TRAINS AND THREE DISTINCT 8CENIC 1 1 ch E0CT1 Pulman Palace and ordinary Slwolu Denver, Omaha. Kansas City, ht. H Chit ago without change Free Reclining Chulr Cara; Permoil!,, ducted Excursions; a perfect Dining Cuk tion . For rates, folder, etc . Inquire of P. K, Ufi HckatlA., or writ LA. BENTON,kinq, O. A. P. li., SaltLakeOtj C. O. EIRIKSSO! TELEPHONE No. 14-- the 3 ben Spanish Fork. of m KH Cash Dealer in $100 nee ..General Merchandise Cheapest Price on in the State. Silt $180 tep Groceries e a dm ill "The Scrip People Dont Like Ui' it ft ke !i. bet Eczema and Pile Curi Free Knowing that it oth will give FRF.K OK CHU5, to any afflicted a positive cure fori oi a. Salt Rheum. Erysipelas. Pile, Skin Diseases. Instant relief. Dot suffer longer, Urite F. W. WII.LIA 4K) Manhattan Avenue, New tort En lose Stamp. Buffer, i e u 1 :e a hi the vi of tl It o chitl Whats the matter!) Marsnal McDonald was trying tbe case. I was sitting beside him. When Rudd was on the stand he was asked, on to whom he bad first told the story. To a man who called himself lie replied. "Do you know his true name? " I understand now that It la Burns. ! IDAHO with I was. of acres cf tJ Thousands beeu reclaimed to cultivation land b1 irrigation in that Stste dor: the past 10 year. Thoanr: more will be reclaimed mi: Tbiisw the next an openiug for niasy tbouo:' of homes. Wil-Ham- 10jar. ARl Thi il .tin Have You Investiqated It has been truthfully "'Oh, this mysterious Mr. Burns! How long Is it since you saw him last? r i IDAHO? we termed of Land of Opportunitie A Land of Homes "Just now. " 'Is he here now? " 'Yes. '"In this room? " He Is silting beside you. was the answer. "This was the first that Jim French and the rest of the gang knew of the part 1 had taken In the Investigation." As Hums sat at his desk telling tlio story, he had the appearance of a banker explaining a deal in stock. He Is as far from the dime novel as he In from the wonderful Mr. Sherlock Holmes of Conan Doyle's novels. "Cliler Wilkie of the secret service once remarked to me," said "that Burns was a man with aIleney, sixth sense, who could tell as If by Instinct when a nmn wus telling the truth and when he had told all he knew My experience with Burn bears this out. Once In the Oregon land fraud cases I thought a witness was holding something hack. Burns suld he had told all he knew, and Burns waa right. At another time I thought a witness had made a complete confession. Burns said: "Keep at him" sura enough the most Incriminating part of hla story came out afterward." "One thing that has surprised tne In Burns," added Langdon, "is this He never wastes any time In bluffing' Every one here In town know his automobile. But. do you think If ha wanted you he would stop block away and lend hla machine back? No, air. He would go etralght to your door. Toot, toot, and ring the bell." Never Wore a Disguise. Burne himself hss this to say about his work as a detective: roople seem to think that there la something uncanny about detective work. They Imagine we g0 sound ' r D For Parson. Santaqula Lo Angeles Tim Oregon Short Line Railroad he pleuseil to seuduescriptiv I e arlt l ter regarding Idaho's resource. D. to D. E. Burley, G P. A., or cer. A. (i. I. A.. Salt Lake Clty. toi re telr l etl Jde of B. H. BROWN, ier '.es LiivGpy an sail Food Stable. Hack Meets all T -- re rain1 'riioxi No. 12. . Bpsalsh Fork, held out promise of ultimate Immunity every man Jack of them was willing to squeal. It looked easy. All things are easy to those who know how. Burns has not been doing detective work for nothing these 20 years. Tricks of the Profession. "llut how about the trlcko of the profession that one hears so much about?" I asked. "Oh, yes. there are tricks. 1 ran let you seal a letter with your seal, and I will take it out of the envelope read It. and put It back, and you can-uo- t tell that It has been opened. "In the famous hundred dollar bill case in Philadelphia I Intercepted a letter to Taylor and Briddell. tbp gravers who had spent $100,000 In copying the paper oa which the money Is printed. They had begun by counterfelling cigar revenue stamps. They made $360,000 at that . Spanish Fork Thtoueh a window he watched her en t"r the front room, take off her hst with a rhatetlnlne bag os he I1;' Burn slid Into th. house H.ked Into the bag, and found a letter 'E ( tlci fo nil Co-Operative Me r il Ogu institution,- - 1 gn 'pen Von .. Hurtia In the dark whom It was meant for Later iu the afternoon ur. ShVeried I""'" ,olloJ ,,!!; wn . h Burn 'i theu,' th General Merchandise w turning Into g one of p d ' ,y Wi carefm: a tr being watched " Mi turned and left the Durmt fntryy. Immediately mmuh the, w,m an , "ur e f com,,. Burrs fflc'' And "n Frederlu, jj,,.got. . ,)! Ricardo d, Iteq iisens sr M h'd term pits m, tt tent ' Dealers la O met 10 t Flour, Grain I r Mo produce. and Kaailaoturers of Boots Shoes. JOHN JONES, Supt. Spanish Fork 10 , Harness, i mit a h v a a 'f 'ho mr ! |