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Stockton Independent from Stockton, California • 9

Location:
Stockton, California
Issue Date:
Page:
9
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

About Things in General 64TH YEAR VOL. 128 NO. 155. STOCKTON, CALIFORNIA, SUNDAY MORNING, JULY 5, 1925. DAILY (By Carrier), 75c A MONTH DAILY (By SS.00 A YKAB and especially War Literature the Moon and Kemal Pasha By A.

R. B.s WESTERN MONDA PA CIFIC TO NEW RAIL WA MO VES STOCKTON YARDS PROJECT STARTED IN 23 MARTIAL AIRS STIR PATRIOTISM Imitation of Christ, but as a uni versal book it has tho limitation of being based on experiences which are not and cannot bo the common lot of men. The new writers that sprang up in Italy after the war, and the old ones who jumped into larger fame and larger sales, were indeed legion. But they produced mainly a kind of low-cut literature catering to the passing mood of the nation. Fiction literature, in the mnfn, and almost all trash; superficial, licentious trash whose circulation reached astonishing A1 i figures, as after the war many night of horrors the world decid- niore peope seemed t0 have the ed to have a good time and at jejsurc f0r readjng or more monleast in the first years after the ey t(J spend Jn that Kind of war we had a rathe noticcub.e lIre Yet there are gIffns indlcat.

drop in the curve of spiritual ox- ing that ths dCpressin hoUr is haltation. The war itself did not aj)0Ut t0 end A conception of inspire any of the expected mus- tjle geriousness of life and a splr-terpieces. English literature pro- jtual interpretation of it seem des-duced a few fragments of near- tjned supersede the moral col-great poetry, but that was all. In lapse f0n0Wjnff the War. Xhe Italy poems and novels about the sreatest men and the most ad- At a lecture the other night, and for once I agreed completely with the speaker.

His observations had in part to do with the effect of the War on Literature and while he confined himself mainly to Italian Literature, what is said of Italy is very much true for the rest of the world. Some people expected a great moral upheaval as a consequence of the war: to mal the world safe for democracy was the least of tho things expected, there was to be some kind of a spiritual regeneration. That simply did not happen. On the contrary, emerging from that COMPLETED THIS SEASON Tile AYcstri'n Parifie Railway (oinpany will occupy the pew yards in the southern part of the city Monday morning, it was an. nounccd yesterday.

The big new terminal and switching yards which have been under process of roiistruetion for more than two years ar now ready for occupancy. There is Mill some work to be done but the buildings are advanced sufficiently to permit their use. Painting will proceed and oilier small details will lie completed in the coming months. The new yards will be occupied' Condys Boys Band of 1900, a feature of Fourth of July celebrations in the past. completely by oclock Monday morning, it was slated Ly J.

P. Harkins, agent. Even the new machine shops will be in operation with machinery having been carried there piecemeal for installation during the past week. Beginning yesterday, the work of moving the offices of the trainmaster, the yard master and the despatch-er and their clerks was begun. The new yards were designed to move switching and handling of cars from the present yards located near the main business section.

The move was designed to lacililate the road own work as well as remove the hazard of accident to automobile and other downtown traffic. Work Begun jit 192:1 In 1923, the Western Pacific company took an area of bare land parallelling their tracks south of Charter Way and began the building of a metropolitan railroad yards. Only pioneering work was accomplished the first year. A large protection canal to guard the yards from flood waters of the east were dug and banked and storage tracks were laid. The big Valley Ice plant was commenced.

It provides for the icing of refrigerators, Growth in Savings Shown By Reports of Citys Financial Bodies GLIMPSES OF THE PAST FOURTHS OF OTHER DAYS By Minnie Rutherford Fitzgerald OF SAFEST PLACES ENTIRE CONTINENT Seven Stockton banks and four building and loan associations paid interest amounting to $722,324 on July 1 to savings depositors. This amount does not include dividends paid to stockholders. As the second half of the year is usually heavier than the first half, the thrifty people of Stockton will probably receive $1,509,900 in interest this year. Figures were not available necessary facility for the ship- lent of Central Caiilornia fruits, lie exact increase in the round house, turn- amount of deposits but this sum is ment In 19 24. tl Perhaps no Fourth of in Stocktons history wurf ever fraught with a deeper significance of the real meaning and spirit of the great National Birthday than that which took place shortly after the close of the Civil War.

After the bitter hostilities of those years when brother opposed brother on the field of battle and when it seemed as, if the Union might forever be disrupted, the, hearts and minds of. the people, were attuned to a new patriotism and a reawakened love of country. And so on July Fourth, 18G5 present time Croce and idealists. To be added another the growing purely scientific solid and finally one deep reaching by the planned by Gentile, which individualism and to greater individual While only a authors have boundaiies the has many attention of the of the profound radical stock STAR soft azure manes of the hill immersed faint taper altar. star, first mine- of a rhyme mine for all by a solitary in darkness? strange Beauties like a banana you and overlit mediocrity I say.

first quarter like bananas: pretentiosity, flea-bitten planet. the earth, car of newlyweds. kick it out. carcass of a backstairs of the uf the the Speakers stand. Mr.

Header called on Rev. J. W. Ross to pray, after which the young ladies representing the States sang Hail, Columbia, Happy Land. accompanied by the band.

The Declaration of Independence was read by the Hon. Samuel Meyers ami Rev. J. G. Gasman read Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation.

The oration was eloquently delivered by Hon. William lligby and Rev. Dr. Happersett pronounced the benediction. Real Hospitality of Guards and Firemen Sanitary Grove never presented a a shiver.

The valley fill is less firmly consolidated, the vibrations are longer and though slower are more dangerous. This was one principal reason for the concentration of destruction along State street. The other prime reason was poor design arid bad construction. Good buildings stood, poor ones revealed their weakness. "The California a frame structure with brick walls, was table, machine shops amt other 1 the largest ever paid, according to buildings were constructed.

brink officials. This last year, 1925, has seen the The building and loan associa-addition uf repair tracks, the fill-j tions paid their customers $302,781. ing in of the yards with 1 according to the stat omenta given yards of earth and gravel, raising Independent, while the banks their level more than lour feet credited their depositors with $419-above the original soil, the con- 343. sUuction ul office. buildings, bunk; The individual reports were as ows: unk of Italy $132,834 of inter- san Joaquin Valiev Bldg.

change trackage with the Southern and Loan Assn 130,000 Pacific near -)rtoga lower. 'Stockton Savings anil Loan house, sand house, 500,090 gallon foR oli storage tank, and lubricating jjar oil house and the buildin war were plentiful enough but hardly any of a character assuring immortality or even protracted fame. Sem Benelli, of Jest fame, contrived a lengthy poem entitled The Altar of the Country' which was meant as a glorification of the Italian exploits on the Car-sic It did not take and was indeed subjected to a ferocious criticism by the terrible Papini, after which the Altar of the Country collapsed into unhonored debris. A much higher worth is claimed for the Feast of Holy Corizia, a poem by Vittorio Loc-chi, an officer who died toward the end of the war, that has a certain impressive simplicity and thrills with something like the childlike reverence of one who relates the witnessing of a miracle. D'Annunzio, during and after the war, has not found an expression above the level he had reached before.

That is not to be wondered at when we consider that in all this period he has been occupied with theatrical, though indeed heroical gestures as a warrior and as a leader, tfyin with literary elaborations. The war has not created a new DAnnunzio, much less a better DAnnunzio, as a literary man. He has affected kind of religiosity but that was in the main merely a literary device in order to exploit new sources of emotion and of rethori-cai effects. Thus his frequent quotations from the Scriptures and from church liturgy have appeared to many rather in bad taste. A modern war is not poetical.

The individual is submerged; and there is no genius so vast as to be able to conceive as a whole the immense struggle. Besides, modern war is repulsive not only to esthetic sensibilities, but also to quite often to the pride of ones manhood. The war emailed a contempt for human flesh and for human dignity: one cannot sing of that. With all due regard to the heroism of the soldiers, this I ijelieve can be accepted by everybody, that a modern v. is r.ot suitable materia poetica.

Even the elation of victory is not -without sobering thoughts. In one way, it may be said that at the cessation of the war we actually realized one of President Wilsons great sayings: it was a peace without victors'. Everybody had lost so much especially speaking of Europe that victory could produce little joy, outside of the inexpressible relief from further sufferings. And then we can say at least this much about Christianity and war. that while wc may grant that during hostilities very little Christian spirit was in sight, when peace came, though f.tatesmen may have been in a revengeful mood and disposed to extract all they could from the nations who had lost or had submitted, the ordinary man found his heart emptying itself of hatred as if the container had burst, i regard for old Selene, and there was no gloating over the prostrate enemy.

On the whole. we may even feel gratified that the modern mind does not feel war sufficiently to produce a masterpiece about it. mired in Italy at the are two philosopners: Gentile, both of them this symptom may significant one: importance of a literature representing devout study. And must not forget the school reform achieved Mussolini government, the philosopher aims to develop to force the student efforts. few names of Italian passed the national literature of that nation claims to the world and is an index vitality of the from which it springs.

ODE TO A Greetings. Star, Peering from the the sky Amidst the tousled oaks On the edge of the in dark meditation. Greetings to you, first of the nights Are you indeed my Or anybodys star? Perhaps 1 saw you And I claim you for I slip unto you the ring And I claim you time. Well, where are you? Your timid twinkle Has faded already. Are you so world shy That even beholden eye You should veil yourself Well, thats rather In these days of Bathing pageants.

I see; twas the moon; That miserable moon. Yellow and curved That came up near you, Proving that bold Crowds outshy greatness. Down with the moon, I would gladly sell moons At two bits a bunch That silly incomplete That scrawny, Dogging the steps of Rattling after the earth Like an old can Tied to the shining Why dont somebody That ill-smelling worldlet. Kick it down the heavens Into the garbage can I want my star Amidst the tousled oaks Up on the edge of the X. R.

The above is joke. I really have An editorial in a paper mentions the fact Kenial Pasha have a statue of himself a celebrated sculptor, STANFORD UNIVERSITY, July 4. Santa Barbara will not experience another shock like the recent one for many years to come as the earthquake strain is off and it is just now one of the safest places in the United States so far as earthquakes are concerned, Dr. Bailey Willis, professor emeritus of geology, Stanford University, and president of the Seismologieal Society of America declared today. Dr.

Willis, an outstanding authority on earthquakes, predicted the Santa Barbara disturbance aud was in a suburb of the city during the temblors. Instead of the heavy losses that resulted from the shock there would have been little damage and the earthquake would have passed simply as an experience if public opinion had supported the officials in the rigid rules of good construction, we read in the columns of the In stripped of Us walls because they were not properly fastened to the frame and aJI the interior was re- more lively appearance or enter-1 mined so large a crowd. The Fire I Companies had tables spread with' dependent of a wonderful celebration in which there flowed that ealed to view as if for some scene KPUit of thankfulness and rejoicing that fills a nation's heart when peace descends upon it after some terrible conflict. Those of us today can understand something of the feeling- then by that over- the movies. The San Marcos building, the most conspicuous of all the failures.

was of heavy concrete. lightly reinforced and not 90.000 in 'rather braced diagonally to an adequate powering joy that swept our be-degree considering the weight ofjns "hen -the walls and arched concrete the armistice World war Was declared. 80.000 Gracl IH Bny Bank Although more impressive at one Security Building ami Loan stage of proceedings than another, Assn, the work has always been inspir- ing because of its magnitude and Bank intense activity from start to end. Stockton Land, Loan Building Assn The contractors have been 71.000 plenty for their friends to eat and drink at the Grovo. as did also the City Guard.

The Union Guard entertained their friends at the grounds of Dr. Holden and the JJght Artillery had their collation spread In the grounds of Genera! Cobb, their commander. The comforts of our fellow citizens from the country were assiduously attended to by George H. Sanderson, in fact, every tabic was free to them. Dinner over at the grounds of Dr.

Holden, Captain Cobb present 53.7SI maintaining their own gravel pits at Carbona with a total output of 2500 cubic yards a day, half the Dr. Willis said in describing the fl An older scction the shock and outlining the caiiBes for and serious damages suffered at Santa Barbara. it was knocked down by the United Bank and Trust Co City Bank Brilliant Uniforms Prancing Iior.sos in Parade Brilliant uniforms. prancing horses, glittering fire engines and hose carts and beautiful young women representing the Goddess of Liberty and the 3 6 states, 52.000 50.0 u'o daily product being shipped here state Building and Loan and the other 1 all being used by 39 500 the railroad company for repair flllon 'safe Deposit Bank work along the line. First National Bank The contractors have had more.

swaying of the entire building, just as the end brick of a pile will be knocked over. The floors and roof fell in and the walls collapsed on top of them, showing the weakness of the concrete and the which The" earthquake lack ot rigidity in the structure. Dr. Willis said, I make! The damage to the Arlington been in Miramar, a of Santa Barbara, during recent earthquake, having inspected the damage done city, and being familiar local geological conditions "Having suburb the twice in the with from sprang Total marked the most beautiful parade in Stocktons history. Headed by the Stockton Cornet Band, the First Division was commanded by Major G.

R. Choate and was composed of. the Stockton Union i hotel appears to have been due to architectural ambition, which ed the beautiful sword, gift of the citizens of Stockton, to General Conner and it was received by Hon. Williams Rigby for General Conner, who could not return to Stockton for the Fourth as he heavyluar' Captain L. E.

Lyon, Stock- i had been ordered to quell Indian a In rge Cit ua i d. Captain Co- pris: ii; at the close of there Stockton Light Artillery, war. The H. G. Cobb, Mokelumno in the afternoon the Stockton also fell laKoniis, Captain tl.

C. l.isht Artillery Have a splendid tied to 1 Holman, Castoria Guard. Captain fiejd drill and the eventful and happy day closed with beautiful fireworks kt Fremont Park. There I r- Perry. A boat, The Con- stitution.V represented the navy jnnian the Civil than 1 OO.uOO worth of equipment on the job and since February 25 have had a force of approximately 175 men at work on the Stockton yards besides 25 men at work on lhe KraveI pits at Carbona.

The has been around a month. All of the men working in the yards have been living in the city, most of them residents of Stockton. The company 1ms been maintaining bunk houses at Car-bona und a small camp equipment. Huge Fill Made (Mic locomotive supplied by the co an.j another supplied by the Western 1aclfic company are included in the equipment. A huge crane mounted on tars pulled the following statement of facts: Shock Was Local The Santa Barbara earthquake was a local shock of moderate se- i verity.

The area within which it I was startling was about 60 miles long by 10 miles wide, or half of one per cent of the area of Cali-1 fornia. The area of destructive! intensity was limited to a few acres. As compared with the earthquake of February 28 in the eastern states the area of startling the general causes of loss shock was about one fourth of one led to the construction of brick towers adjacent to open rotunda across which was no adequate bracking. brick wails at the back out because thev were no the frame. Lack of Precautions This review of the damage in conspicuous cases shows Unfortunately they are not manes of the hill.

done I and was manned by Robert Dyke- were a number of pieces bearing whatmar1, Edward Sanderson, Lcwibithe names of such national heroes were. er Calvin Baldwin, John Dick-j as Grant. Sherman, Sheridan and con-unson George Sanderson. The Hooker and one beautiful Tribute fined to Santa Barbara nor even I Guards, the Light Artillery, thejtu Lincoln. Dragoons all splendidly trained,) The salutes of the day were were superb in their flashing uni-fired as fallows: At sunrise by tic to California.

The fundamental cause of earthquake damage is the To further forward plans for the by ermines has aided in the dispos- un proposed Golden Gate First Detachment of the Light Ar. general neglect of the precautions orm8- Yoseniite highway between Oakland and Stockton, a joint meeting of the road committees of the ing of the earth for the tills. Locomotive earth spreaders, p.uvs that scooped earth running end to end Dr. Grattan was in command of tillery under command of Chief the Hecond Division. which in-1 of Peace, James lattl hale; niton.

eluded the President of the Day. Second Detachment of Light Artil- through a line of gun-bdas to the Ftorkton and Oakland chambers of necessary to insure ourselves against it. Where the grounds are of such a character, vibrations are bound to be dangerous. We may protect ourselves by sinking foundations ten feet or more, construc- ing the foundation walls with wide; footings or putting the structure an lovely little girls representing Peace t. on a reinforced slab, so that it Reader and Orator.

Chaplain, City I lory Officials, distinguished guests, thojpeaee Goddess of Liberty, beautifully Third by Miss Belle Tnvlor'lery 36 states of the Union, some of Politics meant as accent and the maximum intensity the utmost 'was probably very similar, but much more narrowly localized. The earthquake lault, on which metropolitan the center was located runs along that Mus- the base of the Santa Ynez moun-tapha is about to tains parallel with the sea. There made by was no visible displacement on against Mo- the fault and the center of the hammedan traditions. The editor movement was probably situated opines that it is a striking sign at a depth of some miles beneath of the times that the Turkish die-j the surface. The fault passes tator, Mustapha statue made.

through the site of the Sheffield That's a kind of a joke that I reservoir, which failed through did not expect from a chief edi-j the floating cut of the dam with-tor who deals with the graver out any displacement of the align problems of life. Is there to be mont of the top as sighted along no distinction between editorial the remaining remnants, columns and just columns? Hu- Ibrations Short comnierue is planned for the near future, John H. Kagal, chairman of the Stockton body, stated yesterday. Representatives from other cities oh the route of the road a grcai pioject of be asked to attend the been in use. foj-ence.

and wagons, trunk, ndtools. sur eyinv. blueprinting other implement com-cived of being ground, horse graders, ha drafting and instruments and every that can be necessary this charaet under command of Chief of H. B. Underhill; sunset.

Detachment uf Light Artil-ropresented under command ot Chief of F. M'lwle. Siisjxuiilrtl During mottoes in this division were; Vlcbratbui of flic I ourlli in 73 Arc Marching On, a Union Jn those days reg.irdJess uf The United Sisterhood, the interesting projeeis on hand. a Welcome for All. alj aetiviiy was practically suh- X.

M. Orr had charge of; pended while everybody prepared Third Division, W'hich was to get ready to celebrate the Na-most attractive with the Firemen tional Holiday. Aceomtng to the their engines. Weber No. 1 Independent, as early as June 26th engine was beautifully dec- the townspeople were busily en-orated, drawn by twd magnificent I gaged in preparing to shine on the ominittee of the Oak-r.

at a meeting re-d the Curry canyon south base of Mount Unique in the method of run- The road struction, the roundhouse was built ehamlx-on steel lramewmk of huge con-lrfnY, favor Crete slabs, moulded separately, roUe will move as a unit. The responsibility really comes back to technical men and public opinion. If the engineers and architects had insisted in adequate building laws embodied in a proper code of regulations, and If public opinion had supported the officials in a rigid enforcement of the rules of good construction, this the We We've Major the and steam A young Italian poet of great promise had seen clearly the situation before going to the front, where his life was soon snuffed out. His name, which the eagle of glory dropped soon after leaving the ground, was Renato Ser-ra: Literature does not change suddenly: it is useless to expect any great renovation from the war, which is a fact apart. Men of letters will come back from it and will start out again from the point where they had left off.

So they came back those who came and started doing business at the same old stand, like dry-goods clerks, with the same old kind of wares. It will not do to quote Papini and Giosue Borsi as instances of a mentality changed by war. Both of them were already on their new road before the war. though it might be said that the then carried by crane into place in Diablo in preference to the route niches in the steel. The structure around the north base and through I has been carried to almost the Greek.

Th Furry canyon height of a five story oflice building route would also pass through has an abundance of steel sash, Danville and Marsh Greek and intt huge doors, an eerie viica from Stockton over the Borden highway I floor to ceumg. great pits under-j (running the stalls lengthwise. I There are ten stalls pi oUdeu in the LfllCl 01 lOliCC I OttCT roundhouse. One end wall has I been constructed of od so that the structure may be expanded to hoirse an imb finite number of en- Barbara is surrounded by rock or of them by their earthquake. The rock or fr masses of grave I interesting In con earthquake vi-j tion material are very Mutely true that we harmless moderately wevere earthqu; would have passed simply as with earthquakes it is as ke horses, while the members of the Fourth, as Vf lead in that issue, an Company drew the hose cart.

Ku- lhe r'nnwrmd lnvincibles are nPC. reka No. 2, gayly decorated, glit- burnishing up their armor, the abso- tered like a mirror in the sun and tr.idesm are preparing, the lne-live we it hose carriage was gorgeously im-ti are washing, oiling and pol-rich. San Joaquin No. 3 was a while the Doilies, Demo-veritable bower of bunting and rats and Republicans, without dis- mor is of course allowed to editors, but it ought to be of the more refined kind; something dignified and upper class, not consisting of puns and other vulgar appeals to the risibility of the public.

That is an invasion of a special field. Almost every trade has its province mrell defined: I believe that a tile-setter would not rapid but short and do the work of a bricklayer and a plumber would never overstep i into the specialty of the steam-fitter. There ought to be some The city of Santa built in a valley hills consist of solid if we distinguish reaction to an hills consist of solid well consolidated and boulders. The in this Caballeros Aztecas tin' To I Large Ore Deposit Opens Picnic Somewhere Today On Cherokee Mine Claim hief of I nil. I stopped u- in i on June 30, r.n -and eventual! W.

1ottei go for a da ijtc to New York Indianapolis to rule enjoining editors from using var hastened their spiritual pro-1 material of other departments. Of Papini enough is cesses. of race, color or previ- ous condition of servitude nr want of money, are pr paring to join in the jinging of beds, the roai ihc rannon, the music nf the iiie- cracker, and in short to be glad i ength the height sturdiness of hat they are alive on the ninety-j ninth birthday of lh IP-public Fannie and lditarf I eainre of elcbraiion The spbndid paind was bv General KMrhum. Grand Marshal and his staff, the First Divii aiJ with A. Rugeb Ur-h and hi aids.

John J.m gullivan ful owit g. This i i its neighbor. In front of th round house is a turntable of bearing andl turning the longest engine. 1 1 Mil of Tnwiiire The buildings constructed this yeor are of railroad tv pe rtn ture. The office provide room for ail the freuht offubit intluding the I trainmaster, the trj flowers and atop it was seated tie Miss Caroline Rush representing Liberty.

Young Americas gloried in drawing their ow'n engine and a group of still younger bovs followed them in line of man CoggeshaMs Brass Band furnbhed inspiring music for this division. H. F. Thornhlow, Esq. and G.

Fharp. commanded th Fourth and Fifh Divisions, whuh consisted citizens in private cat riaees and on horset.a'k ami carriage of bus-nss firm The bugler, dressed in Hie uniform of the old Ualifotr.iu Guard, the first to be mgatuzed in the Jtate, gave the order and the procession moved promptly at Js Sanitary Grove provided the st i I i master and known. Giosue Bor.si. who died in the first year of the war. gave us indeed a great book.

A Soldiers Confidences With God. which has had quite a public, even in its English translation. It may be taken as an exception to the et-neral statement that the war has not produced a striking masterpiece. Borni book is deeply mystical: in trenches and A truck driving at moderat speed: a passenger car follows it1 at a distance of about 25 feet. Pedestrian attempts to cross between the two vehicles: it can easily be done, even without agility of a Ihmgl is Fairbanks.

But hanging from and trailing after the tru there is a loose rope, pedestrian is in a hurry tbH-s not A inystcM-y pi nb with the pU-r nf revels secret, will be held the UabalJeros Aztecas society for its tnemJtf'rs. friends and wie t-da y. M.i'hities r'irryirg the party will le-ive Miner avenue and El Dorado street this morning at 8 k. The commute in barge consists of Ton. Adair.

Juan H.irmej-and E. TUOLUMNE. July 4 The Uher-oke Mine f'onsoiidatcd, has opened large ore deposit at the Lime Light and Ford Warren mines on Mount Louis, northeast of Uonfidence. Samples taken across the ledge which is 6 feet in width, assay better than a ton. A small amount of development work ha exposed many tons of nrh ore.

This ore i also estimated to run the police hjf IV internal ional convention. arrordine to a postal received by Gjpnin A. Norris, acting chief. Iotter wr-te that the weath: in Chicago i very jj intends to spend a or in New Y'oik and go to j-hirgt before going to the convention. He will be gone a month.

I than m. of spur into the ards whkh wl.l be located below Gtega tower ai the way I rem -st t. W. A tel. Ji representing A Bechtel rOr r.tny has Pen the- Muitvr tr charge 4rf he mu.

7 rm a iio id b-n i-d by M. nggi -id pee? in ihrje indude.i The Bund, Stxkton GuaU 3' Order -f nij G. Frnt M-irAui! Second ant? ha guns 4 ii the 1 1 ug be per rent lead on the surface making it ajTh wnr foan to build a td pii to dragirUrt road r-wn the Norm I (rg tor the Lberart them. unJe-w Pm of the Tuolumne r.ver and Breeden of the I-j of i tattle be rnm there Mount Lorn. f-r, Grnr Lr T.

9 Hnl- the Wpather arid their darks, There is rm than II mile of trackage euffuierd to huild a rii-' road to Lodi, in the ircit.d-i if. it nf triik the ta 7he stto-kyard nr the net i project f.i the Men 'he vm rectors Tv-ev hive 1 tr.e se Die rope. You may imagine the author pur-iung the fr- the rest You may imagine the fectlon frf his soul, the utter con-I rest because it really did not hap-forroity wPh Gods will, and found pen. but it easy for the pedes- amidst his officers duties truin to step on that rope to be ioid me.im.r in a simple language th'rbiown off hi balance, to en Feme rope hs a private diary not intended t'ie paeror.t nd to run over b-il some for publication) the fend hisfgs I w-rnee-ed the potemial cf, uj h'-d leditatbms. The book h-e be I suggest that we rope or compared Thomas a k'empi ro'hr tn etn anoth-i rei -g knd T.

V. Miilon Tin section onta.ntng the Goon' il nlrnr end nf mi I 1 fl Pol tl of -hr IHjre tb ftvan Bro'hem fjc -Ofi 7 i )or orkme the I jrr Pne Raton mirv John K'-dt and a i tloae Jetd. cj i en the Tueiorrrie fleer Ir t-mrr in he pa fa de Ic I track..

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About Stockton Independent Archive

Pages Available:
33,680
Years Available:
1925-1937