Ira fi u AU a if r rTfir1 i V JOHH BURT CHAPTER XII Continued Ive been past It a hundred times Ive struck a pick all around there and never found ore said Blake reflective ly but that proves nothing A thou sand people walked over the Little Calaveras before I found the gilt Wall John he concluded relapsing to the familiar Yankee drawl dont this beat time as Uncle Toby Ilaynes used to say It certainly is remarkable said John Burt folding the map How did you happen to select this particij lai spot Jim Just happened to thats all was the laconic reply I laid out claims all along here but this one seemed the most likely I suppose your claims cover the ground indicated on this map dont they asked John It dont make a bit of difference whether they do or not asserted Blake with much vigor If you find ore the claim is yours John and dont you forget it Supposj wo go partners in the Sailor mine suggested John I have a tidy sum of money and Ill offset that and the map against your claim and experience What do you say Jim Its not fair to you John but Ill gladly accept and heres my hand on it After breakfast they set about lo cating the sailors vein In less than an hour Jim Blake sunk his pick inco v quartz rock which showed free gold While Jim was gloating over his find John appeared from behind a ledge He handed Blake a nugget which weighed fully ten pounds and a lance to say nothing of the weight showed it to be almost solid gold Blake grasped it devoured its dull gloss with sparkling eyes and hurled his hat high in the air We are rich We are rich he shouted until the rocks resounded 13 ii ncv By FREDERICK UPHAM ADAMS Author of Tho Kit nppcd Millionaires Colonel Monroo5 Doctrine Etc COITIUGHT 1003 BT FUEDEnICK UiXIAM ADAMS AH rljjhts rcsorvod COPYIUOUT 1603 DT A J D hex el Diddle We can try John- said Blake hopefully Two hundred and fifty thousand dollars is a lot of money I would take it In a minute if I could get it They discussed the matter for hours but Blake would not recede from his position Dangling before his eyes was a purse containing two hundred and fifty thousand dollars to be obtained without further work or worry It meant pleasure affluence ease liberty it was enough Not so with John Burt When the rock crumbled beneath the first blow of his 1 pick and the ten pound nugget gleamed in the shale he recalled the parting words of Peter Burt quoting the lan guage of Isaiah I will give thee the treasures of darkness and the hidden riches of secret places Well talk no more about this mat ter to night Jim he said when Blake had finished telling of the great things which could be accomplished with a quarter of a million dollars Ill think it over for two or three days and then well take the question up and de cide it Blake curbed his impatience and worked and waited He knew John Burt well enough not to mention the topic during the days which followed One evening after supper John spent an hour or more figuring in an old note book I suppose you are still determined to sell your share in these mines Jim said John I am if I can get an offer of a quar ter of a million replied Jim Youre making a mistake old man said John Burt laying his hand on his friends shoulder but you have as much right to your opinion as I have to mine So we will call that settled I told you I would make you a proposition and here it is There are two mines and they look equally promising I propose that you take one and I take the other We will UjagnMBP1l1V7TlKZHEZSB vfil I iJi 5HEtZ5BBifcB lttMMJW fl JHBfe ST4Mrai tyF4 JZCTf 1 V J UrS 5HDU7ZD W7ZL TZrOOSS ymrm mmi Monte Cristo was a beggar compared with Burton Blake Hurrah for the Sailor mine and John Burt You cant keep a good man down Hur rah CHAPTER XIII The Quest for Geld rhe two young giants performed wonders in the three weeks which fol lowed their discovery of gold Glow ing with health and strength and in spired by ambition they gnawed ragged holes into the side of the mountains with their picks and drills Several nuggets were found but these were of small value compared with the broad stratum of ore which opened out from the spot selected by John Burt The claim chosen by Blake soon exhausted itself and he turned his attention to the third expressing a fear that he was a hoodoo But theres luck in odd numbers says Rory OMoore sang Blake as he poised on a shelving ledge and vig orously drove a crowbar into a crev ice Ere the sun dropped below the range he had uncovered another wide deep vein of gold bearing quartz The spring rains set in and the brook became a foaming thundering torrent Avalanches tore down the mountain sides plowed their way over the cliff and with a roar which shook the cabin hurlea themselves into the valley The pine trees lost their plumes of snow and sang in a higher key the refrain which told of relief from burdens carried complain ingly for months Piled in gray heaps near the tunnel was ore worth not less than forty thousand dollars With the flight of the snow and the birth of spring Blake wearied of his task and longed for its rewards Tell you what lets do John he said one night after supper Lets go to Auburn and negotiate the sale of these mines We ought to get big money for the Sailor John How much asked John after a moments pause Half a million replied Blake posi tively with a loving accent on the million Half a million is dead cheap Dont you think so John I shall not sell my interest at least not at present said John Burt and I advise you not to We can handle this property without trouble and make more in developing it than by selling it Besides I doubt if we can get an offer of half a million PZOUTVnsTD fYsrQsrjrtfrjs call the south one Sailor A and the north Sailor B You can have your choice Thats not fair said Jim Ill play you a game of seven up for the first choice three games of ten points each best two out of three to take first choice All right responded John as Blake produced a well worn pack of cards and shuffled them But before we play let me finish my proposition You wish to sell your claims for two hundred and fifty thousand if you can find a purchaser Will you give me an option on your claim Ill give you five thousand in cash for the follow ing option on your claim you to deed me all your rights in consideration of one hundred thousand dollars payable in sixty days from this date one hun dred thousand payable in six months from date and one hundred thousand payable in one year from date And You bet your life I will interrupt ed Blake extending his hand Make it two thousand in cash John That will be enough Make it two thousand and Ill go you We will call it twenty five hundred and you can have the other twenty five hundred if you need it said John smiling But I had not finished You shall have one half of the pro ceeds from the sale of the ore already mined That should net you 25000 You need not shake your head In any arrangement I may make with outsiders you shall have ten per cent of all profits payabl co me I wish to feel that you will always have an in terest in the Sailor mine All right John said Jim finally Now well play that game of seven up Blake won the first game and John the second In the third game John had two to go and Blake lacked six points It was his deal He turned two jacks before the trump was se lected and then made high low jack and the game and won the rubber and the first choice Lucky in cards unlucky in love laughed Blake as he arose from the ta ble Sailor A is mine subject to your option John John drew up an agreement and an option which both signed and the firm of Burton Blake -was dissolved Blake accepted twenty five hundred dollars in cash and three days later both arrived in the little mining town of Auburn from which they sent a trustworthy man back to the cabin to remain on guard until John Burt re turned Bidding Blake adieu for a week or more Burt proceeded to San Fran cisco He engaged rooms in t e Palace ho tel registering under tae name of John Burton and made inquiries con cerning the leading mining experts of the city He decided to present his case to David Parker He wrote the famous expert a brief letter and was duly accorded an Interview During the brief preliminary con versation John Burt studied David Parker and decided to trust him Then he related the story of the discovery of the Sailor mine I have always believed that those hills that those hills contained gold said David Parker hesitatingly Why do you come to me Mr Bur ton he asked I am not an an in vestor Im an expert at least an an alleged expert I wish you to refer me to an in vestor replied John Burt You are an expert in metals and should be in capitalists You know them I dont Go and see John Hawkins said David Parker as a faint smile froze on his face He is honest but hard hard as granite I hope you may suc ceed with him Mr Burton If you and Mr Hawkins cannot come to terms I I might refer you to others Good day good day sir and good luck - As David Parker predicted John Burt had little trouble in securing an interview with John Hawkins million aire mine owner and investor He wrote the name Jolin Burton on a card and gave it to an attendant Two burly men stood in the doorway pausing to make some parting re mark which was followed by roars of merriment The attendant brushed past them as they closed the door Tell him to come in was the or der given in a voice sonorous through the heavy rartition John Burts education in the eti quette of servility and in adulation of material things was singularly defec tive This may have been due to his country training It never occurred to John Burt that he should stand in awe of the Hawkins millions He was im pressed by the leonine head and gi gantic proportions of the magnate as an artist is when he contemplates for the first time some stupendous work of nature He returned the great mans gaze before which most Strang ers quailed and faltered with an an swering look which talmly asserted an equality yielding deference only to a seniority of years How do you do What can I do for you sir Take a chair Mr Hawkins glanced again at the card tossed it on his desk and wheeled and confronted John Burt who had ac cepted this gruff invitation I own or control some recently dis covered gold mines and am in San Francisco for the purpose of interest ing capital in their development said John Burt I am informed that you are an investor in mining proper ty I am in a position to submit prop ositions which may result to our mutual advantage Where are they growled Mr John Hawkins For an answer John stepped behind the capitalist and placed his fingers on a point indicated on a large map of California which hung on the wall They are located on the west slope of the Sierra Nevadas at an altitude of about two thousand feet above the river five miles south of the Wormley trail said John Here is a rough detailed map of the surroundings He handed the chart to Mr Hawkins There is no gold there not an ounce declared the magnate You have found a mares nest young man I looked that country over ten years ago Theres no gold there My partner and I have extracted forty thousand dollars worth of high grade ore there in three weeks said John Burt quietly Here is a speci men of it Here is something else He placed a sample of ore and the ten pound nugget in Hawkins out stretched hand To be continued DESERVED ANSWER HE GOT RaProad Head Was Wrong in Calling Down Machinist When A A Robinson of the Mexi can Central railroad was the inspiring genius of the Santa Fe he often vis ited the big shops in Topeka One day while on a tour of inspection he watch ed a machinist execute a piece of work Now Mr Robinson prides him self upon his knowledge of every branch of the railroad service Upon this occasion it struck him that the machinist was not doing his work correctly My friend he said that is wrong The machinist who did not recog nize the railway magnate replied Suppose it is what business is it of yours I am A A Robinson the railroad manager answered sternly The machinist turned white I beg a thousand pardons he said I hope my impertinence will not cost me my job I have a- wife and five children and to lose my place would mean poverty to them I am sorry I said it but you see we have so many visitors here who give us advice about our work that we cant tell one damn fool from another Mr Robinson who is full of humor laughed heartily and assured the ma chinist that his job would not be in terfered -with Investigation revealed that the ma chinist was -executing the work cor rectly and that Mr Robinson was wrong Topeka Capital Desperate Remedy Singleton Im getting awfully gray doctor Is there no remedy for it Dr Gruff Yes Get married PKQ0F AGAINST PANIC SENATOR GALLINGER SOUNDS KEY NOTE OF CAMPAIGN Events Have Shown That In TImo of Financial Disturbance and Spec ulative Demoralization Protection Operates as a Preventive of Panic and Paralysis Protection Is Panic Proof Under this impressive title Senator Gallin ger of New Hampshire has contrib uted a speech which promises to be come as useful in the campaign of 1901 as was his great speech Pro tection is the Issue in the campaign of 1902 Prosperity is once more the issue which overshadows all others It is even more true to day than it was two years ago In the well chos en language of the New York state Republican platform The greatest national issue is the maintenance of prosperity Prosperity we now have and have had in marvelous measure beginning with 1S97 when the Republican party regained control of national affairs and reinstated the national policy of protection to American labor and in dustry How shall we maintain pros perity That is the leading question to be considered in the great civic struggle of 1904 Senator Gallingers speech deals with this question It has for Its text the following senate resolution offered on April 22 1904 Resolved That our continued pros perity as a nation is the best possible assurance that our fiscal policy is sound and stable and that its dis turbance by legislation is not war ranted by the best interests of the people Speaking to this resolution Sena tor Gallinger drew attention to the fact that as proclaimed by one of the house leaders of that organiza tion the Democratic party will go forth to the conflict of this year with Tariff Reduction and Genuine Recip rocity inscribed on its banners There is the issue It is plain and unequiv ocal There is no mistaking the Dem ocratic purpose The tariff law of 1897 productive though it has been of the most extraordinary results ever known in the history of the world productive of the highest de gree of prosperity and the greatest sum of human happiness ever known in connection with fiscal legislation productive of abundance of work at an average wage rate three times that of continental Europe produc tive of trade of commerce of indus try far exceeding in volume the trade commerce and industry of any other nation on earth productive of a vast increase in the total and in the per capital wealth of our country as shown by the mighty increase alike in the bank deposits of the rich and in the savings deposits of the wage earn ers this tariff law of 1S97 with all its splendid results is to be attacked and repealed and tinkered and butch ered by the double process of direct reduction and wide open reciprocity In competitive products That is the Democratic program for L904 What is to take the place of the Dingley law in the event of Dem ocratic success in this years presi dential election Who can tell may be as Senator Gallinger says A Wilson bill or a Mills bill or a Morrison bill or a tariff like that of 184G and of 1857 both of which tariffs proved disastrous to the best inter ests of the country Vigorously and ably Senator Gallinger challenges this destructive propaganda With an im pressive array of facts and figures to support his contention he avers that the country should stick to the grand old ship protection and not lower her colors to free trade pirates The speech bristles with strong argument and fact It deals fairly and effect ively with the trust question showing conclusively that trusts owe neither their origin nor their continued ex istence to a protective tariff This showing is made the more ef fective by the plain business facts of the past year It has been a bad year for the overinfiated trusts Some of them have gone down while oth ers have had a hard time to weather the storm of their own creation Shocks and strains have occurred which would surely have wrecked prosperity but for the presence of a protective tariff as a safeguard What with trust stocks tumbling in values by the billion and other stocks shar ing in the general depression while great labor strikes were keeping some hundreds of thousands of men in vol untary idleness the conditions were favorable for a general panic of the worst description But there was no general panic The business of the country went on as usual and there was no damage and no disaster out side the ranks of those who had brought on and participated in the reat speculative debauch Such pan ic as there was was a rich mans panic The poor man escaped What was the reason of this exemption of the general mass Production did not stop employment did not cease Protection took care of that The country continued to do its own work It did not as in 1893 1897 turn over its great market to foreigners be cause of Democratic tariff making This time we had a Republican tar iff Protection proved panic proof Giving a Dollar for a Dime The pith of the whole free trade business is the assumption that If we throw down tne bars in this country and let all sorts of foreign goods in free to compete with American indus try and American labor othir coun tries will make similar laws and per- mit our goods to enter free Of course this Is a preposterous assumption but it is not difficult to account for when we recall that it was fastened upon the Democratic party by the South at a time when the South imagined It could do anything but grow cotton which it supposed it would have to send out of that region to bo manu factured This section of course was considering not the interests of the whole country but merely its own in terests Then too it was jealous of the Northern industries and preferred to patronize the foreigner Once this was fastened upon the party thi3 party was true to the tradition as Mr Cleveland says it ought to be and consequently fell a good many years behind the times in this as in other things Hence the party became com mitted to this dogma or a tariff for revenue which is the nearest ap proach to free trade that any civilized country has ever had Of course the schoolboy knows that others nations will not make such a law because we do it but assume that they would Al ready we have at homo the greatest market in the world and this would mean to throw all of it away for the silly delusion of thus capturing in ferior markets In the first place we dont get the markets in this way and even if we should get these mar kets we should be giving away a gold dollar for a dime in the transac tion Marion Ind Chronicle Where Is He The Democratic leaders are no near er agreement as to a candidate than they were three months ago The Parker movement launched in New York has not developed as promised Hill stock is going down and Gorman stock is not coming up There is talk of compromise but neither the Parker nor the Bryan contingent is yielding an inch Parker it is reported from New York and Washington is losing ground Hearst has lost prestige and Hills enemies are coming to the front The reorganizes who have followed the lead of Cleveland and Olney are divided into envious groups The Kansas City platform faction is not standing together The tendency is downward every where Even those who talk of a com promise candidate dispiritedly men tion Mr Towne as a man who would accept defeat in good spirit Others talk dejectedly of President Francis of the St Louis Exposition as a har monizer With the strong men of the party in the background or on the retired list witli the rank and file of the party clamoring for leadership there is no activity except in intrigue and no en thusiasm not bounded by state lines Basing all their hopes for success in November on carrying New York the eastern Democrats are haggling over conditions on which they will accept the New York candidate In the east there is distrust instead of loyalty and an absence of anything resem bling constructive leadership In the west conditions are no better in some particulars they are worse because of resentment against any candidate likely to be named by the reorgan izes or Cleveland Democrats The spectacle of a great party mark ing time aimlessly on the even of a great contest is a pitiable one If there is to be the momentum of battle in the loose organization some compe tent organizer must come to the front in the next two weeks Has the Dem ocratic party such a man If so where is he Misstating History Congressman Warner said to the members of the Hamilton club last Saturday The first purpose of Lin coln and those who elected him was to abolish African slave pauper labor That was a misstatement calculated to mislead members of the club who are not familiar with the political his tory of 1SC0 Col Warner who was not old enough to vote in that year but who was old enough and patriotic enough to volunteer in 1861 and to fight through the war may have en listed to root out slavery as well as to save the union but the abolition of slave labor was not the avowed pur pose of the Republican party in 1860 If it had been Mr Lincoln would not have been elected Nor did any con siderable number of those who voted for him have in mind the freeing of the slaves as the result of his election The great purpose of the Republican party was to prevent the extension of slavery to the territories It said in its platform that their normal condi tion was that of freedom and it de nied the authority of congress or of a territorial legislature to give legal ex istence to slavery in any territory The fourth plank of the platform de clared That the maintenance inviolate of the rights of the states and especially the right of each state to order and control its own domestic institutions according to its own judgment exclu sively is essential to that balance of powers on which the perfection and endurance of our political fabric de pends The domestic institutions includ ed African slavery The slaveholders would not accept the pledges of non interference with slavery in the states made by Repub licans in and out of congress They seceded and the Republican party finally did what in 1860 it did not dream of doing Chicago Tribune It May Be a Mistake Very likely scientists are mistaken in supposing there is vegetation on the moons surface All that is known U that Democratic majorities are found there and that is the only place where they are found these days Philadelphia Press WVrM m3 ND Convinced at Last Tommy Smokin cigarottes Is dead sure to hurt yer Jimmy Gon Where did yer git dat notion Tommy From pop Jimmy Aw he wuz jist strlngln yer Tommy No he wasnt strlngln me he wuz strappin me Dnfs how I knows it hurts Catholic Standard and Times A Long Felt Want This said the dealer is a won derful thing the very latest Its an alarm clock with a phonograph at tached Ah the phonograph yells Get up I suppose Oh no you only turn on the phonograph when you go too bed It sings lullabies to you and puts you to sleep Swept the Deck Guyemoff I bought a tray of dia monds for 50 cents yesterday Japalak Say you take my advico and stop hitting the pipe before its everlastingly too late Guyemoff Its straight goods I not only got the tray of diamonds but tho other 51 cards in the deck also Preparing for the Worst Miss Prim O I just know you aro going to take this dime and get ter ibly intoxicated Rummy Robinson Yer do mum Den yer might hand over a dollar so I can take a Turkish bath an straight- en up afterward Pittsburg Chronicle-Telegraph Doesnt Like to Guess Pretty Daughter Id rather marry the worst man on earth than the best one Horrified mother Good gracious Are you crazy Pretty Daughter Not necessarily You see Id know then right from the Start what I was up against and wouldnt be kept guessing High Finance Hes a splendid financier they say Yes indeed Why lie can manipu late the assets of a corporation In which you are interested so cleverly that you continue to feel grateful toward him when you wake up and find you have lost everything Possible Explanation Ignorance remarked young Sap head they say is bliss That replied Miss Caustique accounts for it I imagine Accounts for what queried tho youth Your apparent blissfulness she replied A Boomerang Stringem What kind of a cigar do you prefer Witicus A dark cigar with a light end See Stringem Thats all right too but when youre smoking it is light at both ends Disturbing Peace - Did your daughters musical train jig cost you much money Sure Why the next door neigh Dors have sued me for damages Juvenile Theory Nellie said a mother to her daughter whats the reason fou and your little brother cant get llong without quarreling I dont know mamma replied the mall miss unless its cause I take lfter you and he takes after papa Russia and Japan It is a sort of a war snt it Fur rugs and you night say Indianapolis Journal Partial Eclipse Ernie And did you hide your face when he kissed you Belle Well I had on automobile goggle-