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Show Pii bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbBEbk .riMflfllH. Lm dttan. 'STseBwBBbBbm bBH bbbbbbBkai J9r i V I lliBMffivfllBIHHHr bbS! fBBBBBBwHKKi! U 'iHwvvK J v tbT-bml nSbVbbbbbIb1bwZbbPv''!'' B&Y BBBBBBKi!3rJi 3 ' "V (irflBMBBHflBBnPMflnBBBBBBVwBVr la BH bHU-UMBI) V 'SaM'BMMMKBVBBBBBnRHH&BKK bB' Bwiniflvif M rilMMMMS lBBMBMHffiTrTPBMBmMB BBH lBVIwAH-ilV'L"'ft'..THBEv .jBBBBBBBHBUiraHKSfiflBBHBBBviVlk'JiBWRB tH; HbBSIvI JMBMraBBWpMWBBMBMiSl9(l tI J BWBBBBBBBbBmH '" '. J'BB9HBiuJnlaBHBHBH&BlBBBfl H Ijl. . .'afcff &-. v 4 -Ik J&MMmSmMlmmHMB. B ' THE NEW 1911 FORE-DOOR PACKARD TOURING CAR Hj Received this week by the Utah Motor Car Company. B Upon his arrival at Fairview, on the far K stretches of the desert beyond Fallon, he found B the Nevada Hills mine a glittering storehouse of H; gold and silver wealth. Bj To the genial prospector who had driven the Bl boundary stakes around Nevada Hills, Mr. Luce Bj made a proposal for the acquisition of the propyl prop-yl erty for $3,000. To secure an option the owner B called for a deposit of $1,000, a sum which Mr. B Luce did not have lingering around his mining B accoutrements. He was, however, prolific of B promises and departed for Reno, after leaving K his available cash with the prospector as evidence Bj of good faith, with the avowed intention of re-Bj re-Bj turning with a $1,000 bill. BB B Something happened to the Hon. Ben B. Luce B at Reno. Divers versions of the catastrophe have fl) been related around the camp fires, of the Nevada B wastes, but in any event, Mr. Luce loitered there B l for a considerable period. On his return, some- B thing like a week later, the eloquent exponent B of undefiled Democracy was horror-stricken to Bj discover that his option had lapsed and that one K W. H. Webber had purchased the property out- H right for $5,000. K All this was in the early days of 190G, when B siroccos gaily cavorted over the Nevada wilds. B' Three or four months later Nevada Hills was B the overshadowing sensation of western mining, B and within a few months had paid in dividends M a total of $375,000 and was selling at $7.10. B Many of Mr. Luce's intimate friends, who saw B him immediately preceding his invasion of Fair- Wm't view, scurcely recognized the wan and furrowed I visage which appeared over the horizon at Gold-field Gold-field some time later. The smile that had hitherto hither-to illumined his plastic features had been wiped Mb away; the oratory which had thrilled throngs of H thousands at Democratic foregatherings had lost B all its vibrant magic, and the tones that were i wont to issue in thunderous periods now scarcely i ij had more than the consistency of an adult whis- K pet. Ht fl Incidently, Mr. Luce survived a terrific fusi- Kf lade of linguistic chastisement from his principal, H Mr. D. H. Peery, who saw an enormous fortune Bt fade from his fingers as Mr. Luce yielded to the urban attractions of Reno. As the wealth of Nevada Ne-vada Hills grew, the lines in Mr. Luce's counte nance became more strongly delineated, and anyone any-one who wishes to hear a profusion of epithets, strongly at variance with the soa-ing eloquence so lavishly distributed in Democratic conventions, need only whisper "Nevada Hills" in Mr. Luce's dexter ear. No comet of unspeakable brilliancy could equal the dithyrumbic eloquence which inevitably in-evitably follows. |