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Show ' 16 ; silver Foreign Load Utr ant Cl USE ..14a 49 va Now York) Lou la Aa (w (East 8t. 0pltr livery, spot) $S.7S$.S6 ......fAHYS BUrar tia London) S9 344 ..iH,..,, NEW TORIJ. August 19. By HARDEN COLFAX. (Copyright, 1922, by Salt Lake Tribune,) WASHINGTON, Aug. 13. Rail and coal troubles hit business their hardest blow during ths present week. Every report coming Into Washington tells virtually the same story. Troubles besetting industry as the direct result t the pro longed strikes vary- only in the degrees From the harvest of their acuteneeo fields o the middle west to the great of the Pacific roast sections and the' factories of the north Atlantic es hoard, activity slowed down. The Only hope of bettilment, according to reports to the government and to .private agencies here, lies in a s erdy settlement of the railroad situation nrpl a Quick and decided increase in soft coal production. Contrary to the gentml belief, the soft coal mines have not resumed operations ,0n the grand scale hoped for. s complished for copper production. The oil froth proces has recovered hundreds of millions of value in copper and line Ores jhat would otherwise have gone to waate. It blows oil upward through a tank in which pulverised era is present in water. The agitation of the water and Ua contents results In a froth in which the most minute particles of metal attach themselves to minute bubbles of oil, and are thus salvaged. Tba new coke oven sponsors have proved that it can produce metallurgical coke from the vast coal deposits of Illinois and Indiana, which have heretofore been known as coals, and have had until recently no part in the production of pig lrtgi, which in turn is dependent on coke. Coke is a familiar term, but most people known only that coke is made from coal lust as they know that charcoal is made from wood. General knowledge frequently atops at this point. Most people know that H. C. Frick, among others, made a vast fortune out of coke. They know that-- coke Is used (instead of coal Itself) In the manufacture of Iron and steel.. Then they reacfT another solid wall of Ignorance as to why coal must be transmuted into ooke, or wood Into charcoal, before either eeal or wood can be useful In the production of iron or steel. non-coki- - fruit-growi- -- , lc, Many Coat Miners Idle. n The treaty of Cleveland." signed this Week by the warring coal operators and 0U0 their men, still leaves 350, men, or thereabouts. Idle in the bituminous coal fields. letss than 15 per cent of the signed the countrys soft coaj production The other 85 per cent, with agreement. ths exception of the nonunion fields, la Still on strike.. To Insure It must increase at least requirements J.OOO.OOO tons more, and to prevent a serious shortage of soft coal this w Inter It should Increase at least 5.000,ii0.u Ions more weekly. . Indiana and Illinois mines. jkT well ns those Idle In central Pennsylvania, are expected to resume opera turns within ten h m-- The great produpfng field in the (lavs. Is noKgoing to sign the there is a tmnnl-ttmwage agreement unU-Jchange of bt'art among its open-torNeither wHf the operators of southern Ohio. likewise the unton operators of ths Mtuhaest Arkantis, Kansas. OkUhomaXand near-b- y fields will g oef.ise to sign up on the basis of the dvwveland agreement. (ithia the next three weeks thew: fltla be exported to a nonunion b.iM? rtmpt araoperations onalmost at present whfeb unicn They Pittsburg section s. -- Rail Trouble Problematical. The report has been vvldelv d'strihuted among striking shopmen that the railroad labor board stah!s five to four Against the restoration of seniority rights In the present situation and vou'd vot That mav explain in part accordingly. the brotherhood's unwillingness to have - the issue nlared before the board for deKing , . cision. There Is nothltigitutfin Unlive, Judm 31 Jt 3L tiion course, te the report any more ko94n there would he ts a report tbit the su- kMH'bC . . preme court of the t'nlKd Hales srxvl faI hi Tintlc Sonora Jive to fetir on a certain cie yet tn he mil nig hit . decided, but It is genetuily believed among the shopmen. .Development of the week InchiUe an Order to divert thousands of tons of coal from' the nonunion fields to northwest. This coal which wns hnillv needel In tha territory supplied by the mines. Is etill more bndly needet. or wiP be. ,n th - northwest. and must bn rent Thrr'Wile the Great lakes, over which It i transported, are navigable. y , 1 .21 4 00 .33 .04 .01 .01 .20 8,K .20 .92 . .61 eVi .13 .04 te Purdlasli agents of all clasps of roal consumer still storm the nonunion mnos --hot tr The Hoover smithereens Iluvers have hid fnnev pricee against one nnolher for ieel vet tmmitted. In' one fiell puce risen more than 50 per cnt r r pet coat Since Aprl. Government !ec ration of coal prices in the prcMnt emergency seems extremely hl.eiv III the face cf the confused buxines-- ! situation, interest rates continued io fall Ionev, except for a few sections here and there.-i- t a drug n the market. Investors found difficulty In obtaining e securities at attractive rates la vel. om4 fuifhient to meet reqtHien.erci, and during the six months ending with this week placed- - more than ,0ft nno.ftoo in the bank as time deposits to draw 2 and per cent Interest, for lack of better bargains, according to the latest flguiec of the federal reserve board. rices-nave-been hte gllt-edx- Ivhi . V !. low tr TiMt-r- yiinrT. nno at Ji 23110 IMP 1M Ilf Main, looo ut Ht i rr 2tt0 tt'WMllaMB. At Ut t U4c; t THc. 1300 At 12c; LNL1S1ED. it loo Jib BOSTON COFFEB CLOSE. bv 1 A A C ) .... ... AVuvrk Com'! .. RiHfhAttt Mine Ken-uck- A- -t At A ( . fal 4 Hrcla I ( o per . tfitn Butlc . . . .v . Imiy Hunfork Inland Cmk do fd . R'jral .... Kerr Lak Lk (njpvr .... Mrn alloy . lsd M Con Mich Copper Mohawk North Butte Nfpisdtaf Now t onto ha ... . . . Old Dominion . . . Vnd Crock , Shoo Machinery . Boston Rup Hop Copper Tuofumue Itnlt Apex ... .... VW .oi-J- Utah Metals Shannon 8t Mary ... Although many millions bad already Z. Belter, John W. been spent by Gate and other In unsuccessful efforts to coke Illinois coal, Arthur Roberta of Chicago persisted in trying to overcome the difficulties He Interested George W. Niedrlnghaus, of the Nationsl A Stamping company, Clement Stqdebaker, Jr., and other capitalists. They poured more millions into the apparent vacuum, but at last they hav succeeded In coking the coat of Illinois and Indiana Mr. Niedrlnghaus, Mr. Studebaker and their associates atooif by Mr. Roberts, and In 191 under government encouragement, high grads coke was successfully produced from a Roberts coks ovV at Canal Dover, Ohio, ths purpose at the moment being to secure explosives for war usea from th Almost simultaneously tha signing of the armistice resulted In withdraws! of government were no longer support. Th of pressing Importance in the war. g Tha possibility of coking the coals had. however, been demon- Ktrited. Th Mr. of barker a)etatd Roberts thereupon organised the American Coke & Chemical company which took. overalL the right- - and ptente--e- f the Robert coke eve n procee. Uke the Mlnerelg Separation, Ifd.r of England, the purpoae of the American Coal tt Chemical company U not to oper-at- e Rcflsert oven, feurtolicehs4 the license has been is- proces. Only-on- e .... non'-cokin- will buy or sell any Isaus at tha market at net price for cash, baaed on Pur current New York Stock Exchange quotation I. A. ilOGLE Wt specialize CO. In $50 and $100 bonds and In alt Invaztmant In email lota. , . . r t POCATELtO bonds sad -- stock' .LOS ANGELES V, be most willing and courteous in assisting you to find the information. We want you to know for yourself the principles of good investment and the rating of various securities.. Jn our reference library will be found at all times a complete statistical service, treatings all subjects Connected in any way with investment through the purchase of securities available in the market. Members of this organization ire pleased at all times to assist in locating information desired. You are invited to take advantage of our complete equipment and to thus provide yourself with data which will assist you in thb most profitable investment of your, funds. -- We will be pleased to send yon our regular monthly letter on financial conditions. If you are not already on our mailing list, send ns your name and address, and you will receive your copy regularly. -- Air Chamber Important. The interposed air chamber of the Roberts oven, not only permits the introduction of the fuel gas and air at any point' required to equalize combuz-ttobut It serves as a buffer against loss of temperature as the coal retorts are filled or discharged. In a battery of 40 ovens there Is of course rotation in the filling and discharging of the coal chambers. When the hot cok Is pushed out of an oven and a charge of green coal la subsequently loaded In, tlhe heat from chambers on either aide of tha two-futhe jcold coal rushes ta Ka new duty and cools off tha already correspondingly heated coal charges In the adjacent coal retorts on either side. Any house wife will testify that neither bread nor cake nor even roast beef Can be successfully cooked If the temperature of the oven slides up and down. The coke maker cooks coal. Ths interposed air chamber of the Roberts oven enables the operator to cook coal In adovens as if each were Independent jacent Ulg oJdsrPfocessas the situation Is more a if the house wife had to open the oven door, pull out a cooked loaf of bread and Insert a raw loaf, betweeen two partially cooked loaves. The result would be Indigestible. That is exactly what happens to highly velattzedcottl tn theWdtnary oven. The Roberts process is as If the housewife had separate receptacles In her oven for each loaf It Is what has achieved the coking victory ovef Illinois and Indiana coals. K -- n, . Ext Star Lod Bilrer Vick ...... ,v. . . .04 Coa .00 ManhattA Con White Cape Grandma Spearhead Gold ....... Cracker jack Great Bend Kendall Comstock Distric- tCon .00 .03 .IS .02 .01 .03 .02 os .02 .01 .03 .02 IS .19 .15 .01 vt .12 .09 Sierra .04 .10 .04 .06 .26 .03 Nevada .23 Lb (on Tonopah District - Belmont y la.h .11 .10 .17 Hale A Norcroaa Maxlcaa Ophir Strafe .04 .04 .00 District UAubattAO 1.60 .07 Boy Jim Btitler Hnllfsx Mid war Mon Fits Ext Micpah Ext MacNamara . North Star Kola Reacts Ton of Key Ext Touop Wet End .03 .15 .06 .05 .03 .06 .07 .35 .00 .......... Argentine 6s 194a do 5a 1047 Brasil 4a 1900 (rly rec ioan).. do Se 1903 1S ... Airea Sa . .. 191544 Buenos (lrg) do Sa 191544 (small) '4a 1901 Copcnhaaen Barit Orica as 6 1964 Cuban Gnrt 0s 104 (large) .... do 9a 1920 (small) 6ao PmiIa 6s 1907 do 5a 1905 Boeooa Aires SHe 19Q9 Japan 5s 1907 47 1903 - Norway do SH 1904 Panto Sa igeiidm) 1939 4a 1941 (small) Japan 4k 4V. a 1925 (small) 3d ........ Sa .17 .09 .03 .06 .OS .19 .he 1.62 1.15 1.10 UVUSTED rOKEIOM 00TEKKKXHT Aa Reported by J A. HojU A do 5a non-coki- LIBERTY BONDS SALT LAKS y, Many Millions Spent. ... ... . Ixsuea 1st SHs Vld 414s rd 414 Jh 4 4 e 40 grown to depend. Then began an era of development of coking furnaces In America to get explosives, medicines and dyes. Hundreds of coke furnaces of the newer type were Installed Some of the largest bituminous coal deposits In tha country are in Illinois and Indiana. Anthracite is not a coking" coal. Illinois and Indiana coals are highly volatile. That is. thev contain large quantities of gas. They could not be coked In a beehive oven because they up and fusing rather persisted la than In behaving like the sane and conservative coals mined In Onnnellsvtlle re- In West Virginia' and f ion pnd where the gas contents are lower They became known as and ware available only for ordicoal, commercial purposes. nary ovens of th The new Belgian, the Koppers and the Solvay process types, suceasful though they were with low volatile (low gas content) coal failed, as had the beehive ovens, to get metallurgical coke from Illinois coal. The of Illinois coal were richer, but the primary product was worthies. , .The employees of the Central Trust Company will Baals of the Robert coke oven is even distribution of heat to the coal .charge. In the Bolvay process, the Hoppers and Belgian type ovens, heat la applied through flues carrying burning gases which enter tor a time from one end of theoven and then are reversed to enter from the other end In order to equalize and average the temperature over the entire space of Jhe oven. In the Roberts oven the burning gaseS travel always In one direction, but the fuel is fed in at distributed points so that combustion is always over the entire surface of both sides of ths coal chamber. In the older ovens one end is Intensely hot while the other Is comparatively cool, the alternation In direction being relied on to bring up a general average of beat during tha period required to coke a charge. Many factors, some extremely technical. operate to produce the quality of temperature that enibles the Roberts oven successfully to coke highly volatile coals. One baaic but simple factor is the presence of an air chamber in the center of the fuel chamber. In the older ovens there is a fuel chamber, then a coal chamber, then another fuel chamber, then a second coal chamber, and so on. in the Roberts oven there ts first an air chamber, then a fuel chamber, a coal chamber, a fuel chamber, an air chamber. a fuel chamber a coal chamber, and ao on. Kaiq JlKDbO bill-nln- tft At'cnfiir vestment reference library. New Oven Explained, Coking process Is a distillation of coal which drives out gases and leaves carbon. It is essential that the orlgtnal coal be not consumed but merely degassed. In the first coke process, operated In a beehive" oven, Ignition was started In the centre of a heap of coal and was then smothered by a covering of play so that complete combustion could not take plsce. Ths gases Inherent In the coal were let out into the atmosphere through hols In the top . olth, Whatever might be left of the original coal with which the 'beehive" was loaded became "coke" of more or less uncertain character as to Its availability in a blast furnace to produce pig iron. Meanwhile all the gases distilled from the coal went to waste. Frick's-- fortune would have been many times the nirK lions that It eventually achieved had he conserved and utilized the gases. Eventually somebody realized that the gases contained more values than the coke Itself. Thus arose coking furnaces which caught'the gases. SAB FRA3CISC0 KIKIMO STOCKS. Here Is where the Gerihans came in (AA Kportal bt J A Hofle Co.) with their exact methods. They captured the gases resulting from smothBid jAcke. ered, combustion, and proceeded to make I Goldfield IHilrlct dyes, medicine, explosives and even Bine Bell IS .03 .01 I foods. What had gone 'to waste for Comb Erect 03 .08 hundred of years was in fact most valu.34 .13 Florence able and remarkable for Its many usee. Goldfield Cod. .OS .06 It was an Englishman, Perkins, who originally worked out the chemical possibilities of coal distillation, but It was ths Germans who put Perkins discoveries to practical use. When the great war broke loose, Germany had a virtual monopoly of the manufacture of dye stuffs, medicines, high explosives and the thousand and more coal tar products on which industries and llfe itself had HATI HDAY'S BALES Aita T'inn!. loop at Qc. HQ I o'l foul., l.VMJ at OQ. H.ntfhnm lt00 at H4e. lrtM 10 t 81c. H., e Coal Must Be Degassed, Byproducts Valuable. r e L HENEVER you desire infor mation on any investment or security, we cordially invite you to use our fully, equipped in- Through which is operated Investments Savings Trusts ......... C B02TDS, ) Bid. Asked. TS 79 74 n 49 37 84 91 H 60 76 Si AS 90 94(4 44 th 01 es 64 H 63 77 SO S7 64 94 70 46 B - 64 370 sr. 794 8S 54 90 TSTi WHOLESALE DAIRY FR0DUCZ. (Quota t Iona by Mutual Creamery Company fmli extra creamery butter la 64- pound fnbes .8SH Fresh firsts creamery butter la cartons abb to Freak first creamery butter, parchment prints ' .ITto Freeh ftrsm creamery butter ia cert os a 49to Freeh firsts creamery butter, parchment prints Cooking batter Is enbes JM acted all wblta fresh efga .30 Bench eggs .37 rnU cresm cheese, triplets .21 Full cream chceae. Young Americas. .22 Full cream cheese, 6 pound squares.. .23 Block 8w!sg cheese .33 rr.11.. Cream bitch ebaiee ; .t; .1- 7- ........ ;.t CKICAG0 FAODTJCY. 19. Btitten rerhenged. CHICAGO, Aug. Fjrg Poultry Lethanged-receipt- , 096A ck. Alice, tower; fowls. 15tfx21c; 37C; roosters, lie- - Ed'D-SmithSon- s at First South Wasatch 455 Main Mortgages Insurance Beat Estate biiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiniiiiiiiimniiiiiiiiiiiiiuniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiinniNiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiii SOMETHING GOOD: AND MIGHTY GOOD f Coal Prices Soar. WEEKLY CREDIT REPORT. Tha Credit Clearing House wesklv report of merehandixlng aemuie by manufacturers and wholesalers shows increased purchasing bv im-- Un, in onlv two sections, the Fa' Ift roast wbere all three states are actively hmiti ul the middle sericulture! (bcr so alv notably the seal, show the etfr, is of strike renditions In decreased purchasf th rnuntrv ing, while the purchasing aa A whole Is even with the same we.-last year and slightly more setne than the same week two year o Three sections, the Pacific coast !V Amith agricultural gnd th eat, s'nw lesg indebtedness than a iwck ago whue tha north agricultural Is even with Ust week. Payments wl.ll lag. though the mnunta'n section shows Improvement, wh ie there ia also a slight Improvement li. th couth agricultural section The Pacific coast section show the most active purchasing of the week, with A marked Advance over the game week a year ago. lit the mountain section payment shoe A considerable increase, largely due to activities in Colorado, though "indeoted-acs- s is still high-Thnorth agricultural section has a alight decrease in purchasing, but Is still well ahead of the same week a year ago And two veers ago." The middle agricultural section has active purchasing by merchants and is keeping well ahead of the last two years, but indebtedness ia still too high. The qouth agricultural section (shows a decrease of Indebtedness and an increase of payments, though both are tlighL while purchasing by merchants is lex active. eart section, as noted, shows the 4 The tffeet conditions,, especially In Pennsylvania, in decreased purchasing bv Bterenants. but there la a slight decrease th Indebtedness. , Coke A Chemical sped to the St. company, of Granite City. III., which like the parent company ts controlled by interests equally identified with the Na tional Enameling A Stamping company. The plant of the St. Eouls Co ke & Chemical company, constructed at an expense of (12.0o0.000 has since January, 1921, been successfully producing coke from Illinois coal, and using that coke to produce pig Iron which it delivers In moulten form to the open hearth furnaces Of tha National Enameling A Stamping company, less than a mile distant from the Illinois coal end Missouri ore plies of the coking plant. A coking oven consists of a narrow chamber, about fourteen inches feet wide, twelve feet high and forty-tw- o long. It holds a charge of about fourteen tons of pulverized coal. The walls are generally of alUCa brick, and tha heat la applied from the aides through these walls. . After the heat la originally started, part of the gases driven off through vents In the top of the oven is used for the fuel that produces the heat. In order to conserve heat, the ovens are arranged in batteries, side by aide as that there is alternately a coal retort and a heat retort. Thus on each side of a coal chamber is the burning fuel and on each side of a fuel chamber Is a coal charge. Development of a new coke oven .process by Interests long connected with the steel trade In kind.' If not promlees in degree, for steel and Iron manufacture, what the oil flotation process has ac- pervaded the Salt Lake Stock and evihange yesterday during Its one session. Volume of trading was limited. The most active stocks were Wood-law- n and Prince Con., with 4000 and I5C0 shares sold, respectively. None of the six other active Issues, representing the several camps of the state, registered sales totaling mors than 1500 shares Woodlawn, because pf encouraging reports received of the condition of the mine, was stronger and advanced to a close of 12c, although on the sale of an odd let a high of 14c was reached. Prince Consolidated was firm at 71te and 7)tc. Iron Blossom continue! to stand at lie. Lehl Tintlc. with 1000 snares sold at was the only other Eureka stock to trade. All of the other sales we-- e confined to routine transactions in Alta and Park stocks. City Alta Tunnel sold at 9t4c, Big Cotton- Gases Deaden Heat. wood Coalition at lic, Bingham Galena Tha answer Is that both wood and coa! at lic. New Quincy at 314c and Tar When burned give off gasea that blanket t luby at IVc. Quotations follow: . deaden the heat needed for metallurgior MHTKIl STOCK. cal purposes. When these gasea have Bid lAakod. been driven off from either wood or coal without combustion of tha original substance, the residuum Is comparatively pure carbon which then bums intensely and. cleanly with only a small ash deposit. At the beginning of metal manufacture In the modern world dating say from 1600 coal was virtually unknown. Primeval forests provided what were tneti unlimited supplies of wood. Workers in a. cho,. woed-w- as 1 first partially burned by smothered combustion, without complete volatilization, the char that remained, later known as charcoal, could be used to create an Intense flame that would boll Iron ore Into what Is now known as pig Iron. In both charcoal and Iron ore are certain quantities of dirt and foreign substances. It was found that by putting lime Into the blast furnace with charcoal and ore, the Impurities would rise to the top like scum on any ordinary boiling as In the case of maple sap reduced to maple sugar. Wfren the scum was skimmed off the resultant was pig iron. Then It was discovered that coal like wood could be distilled by the smothered so that coke Instead of burning process charcoal could be used In a blast furnace. Thus it happened that the first patent probably ever issued in the English language with reference to the use of coal .oa Glil Chain for the production of pig iron was dated Grand tent ml .40 April 23. 1(26. and gave exclusive right Great Writtii .01 .03 to the patentees for twenty-on- e years to . .... Gallon .03 tha use of coal and coke for the productlawel! .os .2 metals. or tion steel and other lUoianm mi iron, .30 .0! 11111 n Qmta ,. Iron lltn-jn- ' TiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiRnHiiiiirirmirnrmimTTTTmiTiTirflinTinTrTrinriTTTTTiiniiiimTTllinill.'iZ Coals Previously Worthless for Manufacture of - -Pig Iron Now Can BerTreated " Successfully. Many . Mines Inactive, but ; Prediction Is That Supply Will Be Available Soon. Trading in Prince Con. and Woddlawn Copper Lead Now to $erious Question ing Feature of Market Be Adjusted Relates to v Quiet, unbroken save by fair i activity Operation of Railroads. In Prince Consolidated and WoodlaWn, 1 20, 1922. New Coket3veiTProcess Has Vital Significance METxIsr Cap par, spot THE SALT. LAKE TRIBUNE, SUNDAY MORNING, AUGUST I have been looking for Something Good for 35 years. And I have been diligently looking for a good mining property for 20 years, one within reach of a poor man a real property on terms, and. conditions that would allow a' hustler and a inahef initiative to pay for it out of the proceeds from sales of ore and concentrates from the mine. Last March I advertised for such a property in the Engineering & Mining Journal Rpd also in the Mining 4; Scientific Press. I received about 480 replies to these ads, among which was one describing the very property I had looked for and dreamed of so long. I got one of the best engineers in the country to go down and check up the engineers ' report on the property. The engineer who wrote tn me, calling my attention ta ihe property He has no interest in the property is one of the best on the North American Continent. whatever. The engineer whom I sent down to check up on the property reported that it was even better than represented. The engineer and I made arrangements to take over the property at once, he to' take 10 jer cent and I 90 per cent. As so many other people and exploration companies were after the property, the owners head became turned, and at the last minute he refused to sign the papers which he had himself prepared for our signatures. He decided it was good enough to keep. Later he became involved in some outside financial difficulties, and having promised ua chance at the property, should he later decide to sell it, he has just offered us the first the property on what I consider more advantageous terms than at first pitoposed in May. 1 could have handled this property in May easily, hut failing to41 get it, and failing to find a property to suit me, and being heavily interested in oil, I have since put $35,000 in oil. . This has about cleaned me out, and I need $12,000.00 to help finance this property. It will require $30,000.00 to safely handle this: property for twelve months to repair the mill, start development work properly, make a small payment down and allow some $5000.00 to' $8000.00 for working capital Ind emergencies. t e silAt the end of twelve months here should be at least $250,000 worth of ver ore (300 ounces to 600 ounces) net smelter returns in sight, and the same amount of mill dirt (30 ounces to 60 ounces silver) net smelter returns in sight. If such is not the . case, we need not make1 the second payment on the mine. Nothing unlooked-fo- r some but calamity can prevent our getting our $30,000.00 hack with a nice profit ' months. twelve during the first f - This is a clean-cutstraight out business proposition for some clean-custraight out gentleman (and no other sort of a man will be considered for a minute), who has $12,000 to ' put into the best mining proposition I ever heard of. If you are interested, come tcTPark City7'where I have lived 21 years. Every man, child and dog in town, knows me. Investigate me thoroughly, and if you fjnd me a 'basis. better, come with me on this, ' I "will consider no one, no matter how muchf money he has, unless he is ' a gentleman h from the to of his head to the sole of his feet a I intend to take over the property, ANYWAY, if I do not get a good partner, and 'with the $18,000 Ive got trust the Lord and my banker for the other $12,000.00. ' This is no promotion stunt, but a brief presentation of he best thing I have ever heard of. , . . high-grad- t, !, , "' wo-roa- n, square-shoote- 40-6- 0 r, , sure-enoug- !T Investigate.at jmcancL ictjquickly I sqnare-shoote- r. CIIAS, MOORE, Mining Engineer, Hark City, Utah. |