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THE AUIZONA JREPUBLiICA-NV TUESDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 12, 1899 3 ! Arizona 5 Live News TeKen From Miss Isoune, "B. Coombs left last to pass a civil service examination bc--ilonday for Phoenix to resume her po i fore receiving their appointment, it is -siticn as, teacher In one of the public j probable that Mr. raica would never schools there. Her Globe friends will ' have been appointed. The examiner mass her. Silver Belt. j on gun plays would have marked him -MfV U G.' Coombs has entirely re- , deficient A mu who will ever an covered from he"r recent illness and is opponent with a gun and th n look enjoying her visit in the- east. Mrs. j away could never pass in that impor teffi wm r hnm aht. Sen- tant branch of the service. Lordsburg tcmrr 15. Silver Belt. - r ; . .. t - -1 nTk:-. 1 rn t r ngeies weunesoay next, sajs Florence Tribune, to take the pesitien or professor cf Latin in Occidental college, vice Pirf. Wilber, resigns 1. Angeles Wednesday next, says the C 1 1 QALL cjiege ODens cn the 2C-h. Frank M. Morey and Miss Belle Rey- Hall wer? all a t the school building Holds were married on Wednesday and classified 136 pupils and made evening. August 30, at the residence other -arrangements'to commence work ni Mr. and. Mrs. Charles Nasbitt. Jus- iMondav without loss of time. Th3 tice Wil'.iam Whalley performed the school beard has expressed i'tss'.f a; cerem-cny. Glebe Silver Belt. j being pleased with the personnel cf C D. Reppy, editor cf the Florence the faculty, iand are confidant of a suc Tribune, leaves this week for Los An- ' cessful school year. The ladies are at geles. At Casa Grande he will meet tending the institute Jerome Re iia o;eie, Miss Helen Bay of St. Louis, porter. A5)4 together they will journey to the j Chief Engineer Burr Basssll, in 'cast, where they will join Mc3. Reppy , charge of the engineer corps of the and Miss Day's mother. School cpened yesterday in Florence gaged in tne preliminary survey for a with the following able corps of teach- proposed railroad line to the Continen ts; Mr. A. G. McAllister, principal; ! tal mines, last Saturday sant a partial AJi-s. S. H. Summers, assistant princi- ! report zt his work to President Wil al: Mrs. A. T. Colton, grammar; Mis, 'Ham Garland. He finds a feasible William Clark, nrimarv. The Tribune rnnfirlentlv nwfffs :,tt-.pntn1 school vear urrlp-r f h?ir nnnaEmnt Vh rw Monhnna lino nwnpd bv a new telephone the PrescoK Electric company was Completed to Crownsd Kjng last even ing. A-Courier employe talked over the new wire, and could hear the per son conversing at the other end as Ilstinotly a3 though the voice1 were iiiiljr a block away. Prescott Courier. A. prominent business man o Globe, "who had been subject to iabusa from i competitor for some time, finally lost his temper to such a 'degree; that he went after his tradueer with a quirt and gave the offender a good lamming. - The fact that the "P. B." had to pay a fine of $50 for the satisfaction, sug gests that the law needs revision. Silver Belt.. A' detachment of trccps from Jac hitan to'Caxaca has been stopped and nut in quarantina on a hacienda, it be ing suspected that there are incipient cases of yellow fever among tti2 e-i- The Hon. William Wortham is new !iers. A dispatch from the city of ' afcout ag weH kc3wn jn a ce:tain jew. Tehaurtepcc is to the effect that al- . . .-- most all foreigners arriving there have c st"e m New V-.rk as he is m An been taken dewn with the disease, the zona. It came aoout this way: Mr. mnriaiitv beinr great. Tombstone , Wortham was in the stores ens day fVospectcr. Judge C. M. Marshall this week re reived the sad news cf the death of his son-in-law, J. T. Faribault, which : occurred a few days ago in San An- ; tonio, Texas, says the Florence Trib- j line. He was maried in 'Miss BessL? I Marshall cn ithe 4th cf last January- , The death was the result of a railroad accident in which Mr. Faribault was) involved! several years ago. He was j Twpntlv rvnrarpd cn bv surgeons in I who gave him no hope ol . ige Marshall expects his ; -New Orleans. recovery. Jud: daurrhter here soon. I J. N Porter and Sheriff Armstrong of Gila county shipped nice hundred head cf cattle from Gilscn's station last Tuesday. The train load cf cattle reached Thomas at 8 o'clock p. m.. when it was overtaken by the big storm and the train lay there until Wednesday morning, when it proceed ed on to tBbwie, passing Solomonville at 12 o'clock. Both the trains on tho roau were aoacaonea v - quiet but intense enthusiasm as he re- causing much complaint among bus.- , 2f,?"" V!bo "ere deprived of their tha(. A Hiairtaolomonv.lle Bulletin. , wou,f, bc fa;in& df)wn on th,!rIknees Early this morning Mrs. E. W. Land begging to be- killed with at." Phila onveye(t to District Attorney Land a delphia Press. chcice piece of Land, says the Tomb- j ! 0 :s:one Prospector. It's a girl, and the j THAT VANISHED MADEIRA. little ray of sunshine is so sweet and j so coy. Ed was in great hopes that a The Melanchc-lv Recollection cf a Gas sort would. appear, yet we would that i tronomical Ccnnoisseu- ncthing cf great moment should strike j the district attorney's effice because as it was in Scotland, and at dinner :t is Ed is only hitting the eaith. in 'sherry and claret made their aooear high places. The proud papa is doing an-:e -co the table. I chess what 1 an tne proper thing and with a liberal ticipated would be the lesser cf the hand is setting 'em up in honor of the two evils and h-iped myelf to the event. We join in wishing him many ; ciaret, a dark colored, icy cold liquid happy returns. The paeans will be sung , for the introduction cf which to manv to the daughter later. a hitherto biame'.eos middle class Ths collector of customs of this dis- , household the nsticn h?s lately be tiict. the Hon. Moses Dilion, went in- j come indebted to Mr. Gladstone. My to the office of an El Paso business ! host hardiy touched any wine himself, m-an the ether day and made a gun 'but I ncticej that his taciturn fi lend play. This was not- exactly in tae course of business. After the collector had the business man covered with bis gun, and -at his mercy, he turned his head to look at a man on the ptreet. and when he looked back at the business man he found the tables bad been turned, and he was-covered, and at his opponent's mercy. He then rerirrd to the street and the incident was closed. If collectors cf customs, l:ke their subordinates, were required - - - J I EP T tt ' . & I continentally took a ta .T. ftellner s jtoreJs.flMrsM TIms week we will sell MASOM'S ' Uvarree lngnc. two cr three) botties i i i, wk t wui sell djof it left. It cam' to me lias my wife's FRUIT JARS,. fol'crws: Pints, per dozen Quarts, " Half Gal. " PORTABLE FRUIT LcrnonacTe .(large tottie)..- 25c ."For this week only, regular price, 35c. Fancy Mug Prepared Mustard, 5c ,,-- r- i Monarch Corn, 2 cans 25c ' Entire Retail Stock at Greatly Reduced Trices. E. F. Kellner's Store. Dav bv Oav ! Territorial Exchanges. Liberal. Because of the teachers' institute school h-ari i-(.mp i .? -et'?1 1 . Jle" A,nV ',7 "Z, h V' f 'T...", J next Monday, :ir creaking in cn i illv7 SlCllU! IVU tV Will r. T . ;hccl work will have passed. . Misses Johnson. Riley. Hauxhurst and G. V. G. & N. railway company en- route ior- a roaa Dea 10 me point 'named. The Black -Warrior w i reached by a spur from the ma t 1 i : r in 1 1 . t 1 ua V eumilldl y survey w ill UJ exic:.u- ed to the summit, from four to six miles from the Continental mines, and cn down Mineral creek to the different camps along that creek. It has al ready been ascertained that an easy grade can be found to the summit, the only question being as to whether cr not the drop-down into Mineral creek will be too steep for a railroad. The Globe Silver Belt is an'ormed by a gentleman high in authority that the road will be extended not only to- the Continental mine but over the divide . and ing creeiT if it is provea that a feasible route can bs found to this enormously rich district. o : A COSTLY PISTOL. It Would Make Him Too Popular at His Home, buying a present for a member of his family, when he noticed -a show case filled with splendid jeweled revolvers with silver and gold grips and chased bairels, having precious stones set in to the butts. "Ljmme see one c! those guns," said to the clerk. "Which one, sir?" "The gold cne with the big ruby the handle." The clerk took it from the case. he in It fas a beautiful piece of workmanship, ?c was marked $300, and it looked to took it. tenderly in both hands and held it admiringly up to the light. Then, drawing himself up to his full height, which was six feet and a half,' he rested the revolver barrel upon his elbow, crocked for the purpose. He looked ov-rr the sights down the long store and these persons who saw him involuntarily dodged and one weman screamed. "Say," said Mr. Wortham. with lost no chance at the sherry, , filling and emptying his glass with the ut most regular. ty, and at last imagining il nouiu ui an evunis contain a sum- citncy ci a.'conoi ta counteract the ill I effects of Bordeaux, already beginning to lie very chill :on my stomach, 1 de termined to try it myself. Imagine my astonishment when, in place cf the liquid fire made in Ham burg I had anticipated, there gilded ever my palate what I can truthfully affirm to be the very finest, silkiest Ma- deira I have ever tasted, and deter mined t'o make up for lost time. I in- ick-fcander, only lass remained ia 1 V L'Mlilllll i! Vt II l.iiH IIIV ; dpy. i v ai t.i Luis aiiu re ill a. ik r u : l .think yen's good sherry. I hae but undo, whae was captain z' an East Indiamani Ye like, the wine, do . ye 60jrx' Laidlaw?" he added, turning to i his silent friend, who, speaking for the ... .75 ! first time since the ladies had left the j ! room, replied: "Ay, it's guid wine, I but it's no Strang an-euch!" and again I relapsed into silence. I I have many melancholy gastronom- ical recollections, but few sadder than this when I think that I sat by and watched nearly a whole bcttle of the j finest Madeira I had ever tasced or shall probably ever taste again, disap- I pear down the gullet cf a man whose .only appreciation cf it was- that it failed to burn his whiskey hardened palate. Black wood. o BUT ONE OPINION. Funtton says he is in favor of hav ing the Philippines held by this gov ernment. That's what all the soldiers who have .done anything in the Phil ippines that is worth mentioning say. Chicago Times-Herald, THE EARTH IS FLAT Cbcnczer Breach Oives Reasons to Show If Is Not Round Mr. Ebenczer Breach cf this town has just written to the presidents of the leading American universities and colleges seeking to enlist them on his side in an argument tbat is just now exe:e:s:ng the greatest minds in Eng land, namely, the question cf the earth's shape, writes a Portsmouth etyrtspendent. Mr. Breach, in his let ter to the American men cf learning, has prepared what he is pleased to call a list cf Breach-loaded arguments, which go to show that, whatever may be said about the tb'ory he expounds, Mr. Ereach is without his equal ameTig tho first earthites of modem times. So ingenious are the arguments ad vanced by Mr. Breach that the man who calls cn him in a scoffing mood comes away ratlur pertuibed in mind to find that he is half persuaded to be lieve there is something in the flat earth theory after all. The talk I had with Mr. Breach, sup plemented by the information con tained, in the letters to; the American professors, gave me a comprehensive idea cf 'the subtle reasonings that un derlie the easy conversational argu ments of Mr. Breach. To give the gist of these arguments, Mr. 'Breach's idea is that the earth is the central and greatest object cf the universe; that its surface is the tcp cf a colossal pil lar, its mountains and hollows form ing excrescences and indentations as on the top cf a Madeira cake; that this ill I boltop EU!face cf 'tk- monstrous pillar is in Tn circular' in shape, and that above a in line. TTlprp mq-ttpr rf nnl" , flnfl miloo mere matter of only 5,000 miles or so distant Scats a crystal sea, circular and co-extensive wuh the earth's sur face, through which we bobjc'.d the celestial bodies revolving in one plane. One cf the illustrations I send givc3 an idea of this. The roughly and rapidly improvised circular disc on the table represents the top of the earth; the paper patches arc- the ccniinents. The piece cf mechanism held in che right had was constructed to shew the spiral course fnem the center to che circum ference, like a coiled watch spring, markiog the course lof the planets. The north is the center. The south is the circumference all the way round. Theieis perpetual ice at the north cen ter and at the south, the sun perform ing its course above the intermediate par ts. "And the pillar which constitutes the earth. Mr. Breach, upoa what does that rest?" "Ah!" he replied with a smile, "that I cannot say. Job was once. ' humili ated by that question, ,asked cf Gcd, 'Where wast titou when I laid the 'foundations of the earth?' Whereupon arc the foundations thereof fastened?' Thus showing conclusively that the earth had foundations and wasn't a revolving body." "Ships have sailed around the world? I queried. yuue so. l ou take a meant in mv disk. A ship by continued sailing, eitner east cr west, is bound to corns back to the point of starting. Shs would have sailed round the world. Nothing is clearer." Eut tho fact that you see a ship's masts at sea before the hull?" An optical illusion. Believe me, it proves ncihing. Cape Teneriffe can be seen a nundred and twenty miles. If the earth were: a globe that cape should be a mile and t,ree-quarters out 01 signt. 11 amps gu cut to sea sailing over ; a pretty fair day s work for his gov an orange shaped ocean," be continued, j ernment wages, and when ha gets "they should as often be seen moun- ! heme from work he likes to sit down tains nign aocve the range of vision as I mey are. conetanx v si?n hull r-wn owing to angular vision. We can only see distinctly for three miles. Bv tele scope ithe ship will appear .again as a sheet cf glass. I have proved this by lightships and other things." "But at sunrise you see the sun ris ing out of the water, if. you, are up early enough, and at sunset it dips be hind the horizon to the west." OJr. Breach smiled. "It is- the law cf perspective," he replied. "Two par allels will meet at a given point." "Hew do ycu account for day and night?" "Easily enough. When the sun is ia the arc cf the spiral course, which is shove our arc cf the flat earth, we have day; when it is in the opposite arc we get night. It is foolish to imagine that the sun gecs underneath the earth, as foolish, as the false teaching that the earth rotates .round the sun. "The earth is the greatest cf -all things created," he continued. "It v..a.3 created first, is immovable, and all other bodies were made for it. Thj sun was made first cf the subsidiarv bedies to give light to the world.' auz tne sun is cf greater propor- tio ac. ne said, laughing at my folly. "Modern astronomers say so, but they are wrong. God neated the sun to light the world. Whoever heard of a light being made bigger than the place to be lighted? We never carry a 10cm round the candle, but always the can dle round the room." The ingenuity and icriginality of the argument silenced me. "All plains are flat." continued Mr. Breach. "Takei che Sahara and the t I "rrTTl T -1 T- inctr,n nn . ciogy ycu will find all strata in flat layers, not in convex, as they would be in a curved body. Look at the case of rivers. The Nile drops ccly one foot in 1,000 miles. Rivers can-not flew up hill, as they would have to do in mounting the curvature of the world. ' iSut what excited Mr. Breach even more than the globular "fallacy" was chat the earth should be supposed to revolve. "Why." he exclaimed, "if the world wcot around the oeens wou!1. be whisked away in a moment. If ter is dropped cn a spinning t::p it i. 'at once thrown off. According to aie false theory, ships must be upside down at Australia. Ridiculous! All wells would be emptied cf their con tents, gnd Niagara would be upturned and tumble upwards. "If the earth is revolving at about 1.100 miles an hour as ia taught," ha continued, "why do net balloonist make an easy and swift passage to America by rising into the air and waiting till the new world comes rcund? Instead of that they go slowly with the wind, either in the direction cf the supposed revolution cf the earth or a.gain&t it. Aeronauts hav? informed me, too, that they see the surface cf the- earth as the shape of a . saucer, ccnoave, xot convex, as. it would be if bulged out round. You watch a lark rising.. V7hfa high up it poises itself in tho air, moving neither in one di rection nor another. Yet it Temains exactly over the field it rose from. If th-3 earth revolved 1.000 miles an h'our, that field ought to be 100 miles away in a few minutes. "Volcanic substances thrown a mile cr so irto the air f::Il near the edge cf the crater. They ought, at least, to ba left scree little way behind. All burn ing mountains, in fact," Mr. Breach, went cn, "deny the revolution of the earth, as they would be? extinguished by the tremendous velocity, just like a candla swiftly carried through a room. A burning mountain being merely a burnirg match hoa'd com pared with the size of th-3 world, ought to be snuffed out with a fraction 'of a revolution at 1.100 miles an hour. "The round earthites have to adept an imaginary axis foir their world to revolve upon, but no solid body could revolve upon an imaginary axis. The fact is, the round, revolving world is just as imaginary as their imaginary axis; imaginary cause, imaginary ef fect." Among the numerous converts claimed by Mr. Breaeh to his theory cf a flat ea:rth is no less august a person age than the prince cf Wales- His steadfast opponent is Sir Robert Bill, who is preparing to deliver a leetural broadside that he declares will shatter Mr. Breach's fi3t-earth fortifications to flinders. As Mr. Breach is so devout a believer m his theory that he is spreading the flat-earth arguments across the American continent it is likely that the wcrthy hostilities will become world-wide. Nothing would please Mr. Breach more. Galveston News o BROfiC UP AN "AT HOME" Unhujbandlv Act of a Man Who Was Driven to Desperation. "The meanest man on Capitol hill is a bosom chum of mine," said the man in the lunch rcom to the story teller. "Being cn Urcle Sam's wage list in the $l,40C-a-year class, he isn't exactly able to see where he and his'n break into the pink tea bunch-that is, he hasn't enough social aspirations to induce him to stop paying grocery bills, or to cause him to stay awake nights wondering how he's going to beg cr bribe a pin-headed legation at tache to lend him distinction by hon crir.g his rcof. or to incite him to in trigue for an invitation to a progres sive euchre party at a sassiety board ing house, where all the ladies who 'assist' teg themselves 'cue in their one pink china silk waist and throw the high handshake. He doesn't see where this kind of a lay is at all necessary to his happiness cr peace or mind. "Well, this mean man's wife, during the last six months since my friend, : thp mpnn mn-r " nov i-aioi fr.-m ; $1,200 to $1,400 has been four-flushing j around on the outskirts af the pink j waist bunch, trving to wriggle iu through the medium :z, 'samovar' tea served in a $1.39 set of Dresden. The i afternoon a couple of months ago j when she managed to rcpe in tha wife j of a wayback congressman to hit up one of these afternoon lavouts marked such an epoch in her career that she had to announce right off the especial day when she'd be found 'at home.' Now in V phun thp mpnn m-n nntc in to a proper meal of victuals, with his family around the board, and the cat washing herself before the basement latrobe. "When; his wife got her 'at homo' afternoon into commiesicn. however, he got his instructions to sneak into his home by the basement route and to keep himself stowed there until such time as she, upstairs in her 'reception room' 'they pay $32.50 a month rent got through talking about 'crushes' and 'the high and nobler thought.' and other hanky-panks like that with the bunch cf society peeresses who drove up on those afternoons in 50-cent-an-hour barouches that looked like they were suffering with the phylloxera or tuberculosis the barouches. I mean. It was up to my pal, the mean man, to sit down there in the basement, then, chewing on his nails and tight ening up his belt, and longing for grub, until the last cf the at-homers h-ad let up on the samovar tea and the macaroons and gone home to d:g up the cold pork chop in the refrigerator whereof to make a dinner--for at home.vs never sit clown to a square, hot meal, y see. "Well. Jim that's my chum, the mean man steed for this end cf it until last week, and then sedition and blood-red revolt took possession, cf him. He could not see where fell he cut in ort that proposition and the talkfest going on upstairs about 'the true, the good, and the beautiful' on his wife's afternoon at home, while he, hungry to the soul of him, had to hang around the basement, reading the "lest and found' ads until about 7 o'clock, when his wife 'ud release the $8-a-mocth 'maid' from upstairs duty and let her take off her ma'd's cap and slerpe below to prepare something to eatas I say, this is what got Jim going. He made up his mind that he was going to be it and he has made it stick and that's the reason he's the meanest man on Capitol hiil. "Jiin got heme on time 1:15 on Wednesday afternoon last his wife's-, 'at home' day. He had some bundles under his arm. In cne of the browo packages was a big tenderloin steak, and in another were about a dozen or so nice, juicy Bermuda onions. Jim raked the kitchen fire over as soon as be get in, took off his coat, set the cof fee pot on the stove and started in to cook his own dinner. Within ten minutes he had about as nice a look ing mess he tells me of beefsteak and cnions under way .in a pan as he SHAKE INTO YOUR SHOES, Allen's Foot Ease, h powder for llie feet. It l ures painful, swo!ln, smarting, nervous feet, nni instantly takes the stinff out of mnts und bunions. It's the greatest eomfort discovery of the ape. A Hen's Foot-Kay- makes t Ipht or now shoes feel easy. It is a certain cure for sweat ing, callous anil hot. tircl. aniline feet. Try it to-ilav. Sol'l ly all druggists anil shoe stores, By mail for Sm. in stamps. Trial package FKEE. Address, Allen S. Olmstead, be liov, X. Y ever saw. 'He didn't open the kitchen door, either, to let the onion smell sneak out that way. Jim was on the level he wasn't trying to have any bluffs, and he wanted the savory smell of those frying onions to make itself iS't home throughout the house, up stairs and downstairs. Then the mean man set the table not neglecting to fix places for his two little boys, who were kept huddled upstairs cut of sight on these 'at home' days. Wh?n the meal was on the table Jim, still in his shirt sleeves, made the best cf his way up the basement stairs through the powerful and appalling aroma of fried onions, and, standing at the head of the stairs at the second floor, yelled up to his boys: - 'Hey, there, Dick,; and you. Bob ccme cn "down to your dinner!' "Then he went to the door of the reception room and did a fine bit of acting pretending that he felt all kinds of dismay and embarrassment over showing up that way in his shirt sleeves. iK3 says the glare he got from his wife like to have wilted him, but he stayed with the game. ' 'Minnie.' said he to his wife, 'I'm just about due to make a hit with you. all right I've ccoked up a. big batch of beefsteaks and onions, that you're so fond 'cf. and what you'll (fS to it will be a plenty. But 3-ou're busy, ain't you? Well, I'll just put what's com ing to you on a plate in the oven." "Then he called the kids again from the bottom of the stairs and went down, to the basement with them, tho smell of onions coming through the open hatch, from the galley, as it were. ! getting in its penetrative" work. Of course, the at-aomers, with their mouths puised up in that Tm-giving- you-the-merry-htot' way they are on to, arose and took their,, departure right away, graciously remarking that they couldn't think of interfering with domestic arrangements, and all that, you know. "He stood his ground when his wife got below in he- $3.98 apple-green silk waist with- bleed in her eye. and he mads gdod his declaration ths-t from then on he was going to be it. She took ft cut for the rest of the evening in weeps up in her room, but she's al ready made the. announcement that she won't be 'at home' this Wednesday. Of course, all the women on the hill heard about it. and that is why Jim is count ed the meanest man up cn that bunch of land that the; geddess of liberty gazes at." Washington Post. o 'HELPING HIM ALONG. - Auth'or So you decline to produce my play? Manager Yes1, it would be useless. Author Isn't the plot a good one? Isn't the dialogue bright? IMaoiageir' Oh, yes, but it s decent. Why don't you take a lock around? See what plays area clawing the crowds. 1 hen wrree another ana I may be able to use it. Chicago Times- Herald. REMEMBER, "THERE 13 A SIvOW NESS IN AFFAIRS THAT RIP ENS THEM AND A SLOW NESS THAT ROTS "THEM." We address ourselves to the hun dreds of thinking men and women looking for homes ;.n 1'iiocntx.' as well as to those living in adjacent mining towns and. other places in he Terri tory, asking them this important question at this opportune time: WILL HISTORY REP3AT ITSELF IN YOUR CASE? "IE I had invested a hundred dollars, sir, in San Francisco real estate in the 'early deys' and hung on ill now, I'd been worth my millions to-day. Just h;nik of it!" Point out the man on the coast who has not heard a 'Friscan complaining of his Juck some what as above. In Chicago, Los An geles, Denver, Omaha, Kansas City, and almost every town and city in the west you meet with the same weeping and wailing and gnashing of teeth, and so. tndeed, in the vicinity of all our rapidly growing centers. Never have "coming events cast their shadows be fore" with the same marked outline coupled with intrinsic merit as in this infant city of Phoenix and Salt River Valley, yet will history repeat itself here. Many will be the lamentations in less han a short year to come, about the "golden opportunity lost." "Be wise today! 'Tis madness to de fer; next day the fatal precedent will plead thus on till wisdom is pushed out of life." .100 CITY LOTS, 50x132 FEET. FIVE MINUTES' WALK FROM COURT HOUSE. INo street car required. Firs class streets and avenues. Every lot elegantly situated and perfect; no ra vines or broken lands; now offered at prices that simply defy competition And can never be duplicated in Phoe nix, viz: AT $oj AND UP TO $200 EACH. ON INSTALLMENT 1'LAN, MONTHLY PAYMENTS OF $5.00 TO $10.00 EACH. NO INTEREST ON DEFERRED BALANCES. TITLE UNITED STATES PATENT. We address ourselves particularly to people paying rent exorbitant rent for poor accommodations, both in houses and rooms, every dollar of which is a practical waste when paid by the permanent settler. This offer cannot last long. Hence, to the renter olf houses and rooms we say COME AND SEE US! You are now wasting from $12 to $20 per mon-:h in rent. Buy a family tent and live on your own property until you decide later oa to build or sell your lot tt a big ad vance, thus saving noXonly money, but owning a lovely home for what, other wise, would go to a landlord. This in formation is an "angel's visit" to the saving wife and a pointer to the indus trious young man and woman work ing for a monthly wage. Ii's a good thing. The New Palestine tract is, without any exception, the finest iu or to Phoe nix. Its assessed valuation in 1S9S-!) was $25,500. It lies in the very heart of the manufacturing and resident district, viz: ON CENTER STREET, FIRST, SECOND, THIRD. FOURTH, FIFTH, SIXTH and SEVENTH AVE NUES, and IS THE ONLY SANITARY SEWERED TRACT IN OR TO THE CITY. The New Palestine tract alone adv-eiVcscs its terms and prices in the daily press, so that he who reads can know for himself without the aid of the Phoenix curbstone real estate or commiition man, to which our office pays no tribute. KILROYS' NEW PALESTINE Room 316, Fleming Bloclr. ' POPULAR Advertisements under this head one-half cent a word each insertion. No advertisement taken for less than twenty-five cenU. WANTED T;oi buy, tarantulas, horned toads, scorpions and centipedes. 228 West M'adision street. FOR SALE Lady's bicycle, $25 cash. Oai'.l at ence, 112 East Monroe street. FOR SALE Household furniture, al most new; iron bed. rockers, parlor table, etc. Mrs. Howe, 218 West Jefferson street. FOR SALE Salway canning peaches. DeliveirccJ any part city, 50 pound lots. Get prices and leave orders at fruit stand, Kellner's corner. FOR SALE Four horses, two wag ons, size V.M. Thimbleskein, and har ness. S. H. Jones, tent cn Dcnuis block. FURNISHED or unfurnished rooms to' let. Apply at 802 West Jefferson street, b-otween Eighth and Ninth avenues. FOR SALE A good upright piano and a young and gentle driving horse. Also single buggy in good condition. Will sell cheap because of leaving the city. Apply at residence of C. B. Ming, 1309 West Adams street. WANTED To rent, a small ranch cf from ten to forty acres, with house and water. Address B. Hafuer, P. O. Box 791. WANTED A girl for general house work. Appily 454 Noi'th FourOh av emwe'.. Mrs. C. S. Kecnd'aill. WANTED A man weJI acquainted in Phoenilx to eeill life 'imsuiianoe, new plan, good aelitr, To right moor sal ary will be paid. Address G. C. for interview. FOR RENT A nine-room, partially furnished, house by the year,. Terms very moderate. All modern con veniences. Inquire Evelyn M. Wharton, 527 North First avenue. MRS. CURRY, trance and test me dium. Advice on financial &nd do mestic affairs. Mining a specialty. S27 West Madison street. WANTED To rent at once, large brick house, good shade, close- in. furnished or unfurnished, or will buy same on installments. Address 112 East Monroe street. FOR SALE At 1 cent per pound, good Bartlett pears free from black specks and hard woody places, at the McClune ranch, one and a haif miles south of the Capitol station. FOR RENT Three atcre unrumisheA rooms, suitable for housekeeping, in private residence close to business center cf town, $15 per monch. Would prefer man. and wife; no children. Apply to C. F. Leonard, at Phoenix Stacionery and News Co. FOR SALE IGO-acre ranch, 80 acres in aLfalfa. Will sell on easy terms. J. W. Walker, P. O. Box 803. FOR RENT Brick cottage of five large rooms; screened room, desir able location. . Also a nicely fur- nisued room Tor rent. Inquire No. 332 North Fifth street. FOR SALE Horse power pumping plant. Just the thing for ranch or stock purposes. Cheap for cash. Call at Republican office. WANTED FOR CASH Two cople3 each of the Weekly Herald of June 8 and June 15. Apply this office. LOCATION SALE "My entire retail store will be sold out by Christmas. Counters and shelves and fixtures j are for sale, delivered December 25. ! E. F. KELLNER'S STORE. I WANTED Woman for ordinary housework and cooking. Address M, H. Maloney, Phoenix, Arizona. FOR SALE Cheapry. on account owner's absence, half section of land with abundant water supply all year. Partly in alfalfa and sor ghum. Necessary improvements, wHh open and unobstructed range tiuv stock. No better stock ranch in the territory. For particulars ap- ply to J. Elliot "Walker, Model Gro- I sale tickets to City of .Mexico and rc cery, 41 North Center street. turn September 6 to 11, inclusive. PHOENIX CITY PROPERTY. KILROY'S NEW PALESTINE. The largest individual owner of lots in Phoenix offers to the 50,000 READ ERS of The Arizona Republican and their friends throughout the United States and Canada, lovely homes at the following prices: 200 lovely lots. distant from Court House 5 TO 7 BLOCKS: each 50x13$ feet, lo- cated om CENTER ST., 1ST, 2ND, i 3RD. 4TH, 5TH, 6TH and 7TH AV- j ENUES. Perfect Storm and Sani- j 0 ..... ....... . -r , - . . , i-. "in (.cicuimuu ai no tary Sewerage (THE ONLY TRACT i i koo-;; o i i ti IV or Tn WnEVlv thits sup- 5?Ies .beSnnmg September 16. The IN OR TO PMOENIX THUS SUP PLIED); ranging "in price from $125 to $200 each, monthly install ments. No interest on deferred bal ances. Si Blocks. Twelve (50xl30-foot lots in eaoh) adjoining the above property on same avenues, with per fect sewerage. Price from $S00 and lip ward. NOTE: Curbstone brokers and com mission men not allowed to handle this property under any circum slances. KILROY'S NEW PALESTINE, Room 316 (3rd floor) Fleming Block. MANHOOD wEFORE rj AFT Tt.'O reason FuT-rrn r.re ret rtirp-l by Ifciors tTAvia! lf. 11 it 1 ! 1 j IS 'nf on! V Known rmwi 01.C0a hox.six ior $ .a ny mail. tMnu for rREK rircuiar aim testimonials. Address DiVOL I71i;iICI K C O., P. O. Box 2070, Pan Francisco, Cat For Sale 6jf TYD t ' III LTCE'L'Lrj I J Vf I I U li' I 1 17 WANTS'"!' WANTED Cocking and housework In Email private family by good wo man. Call at College Place. WE WANT AGENTS Have new plan. Big pay. Permanent business.- Beats 'em all. Rite and C. Cat-a-log free. Nonpareil Portrait Co., B-anver, Colo. A HOME Double-wall brick house. A. half acre of fruit and flower Fine lawn, cellar, bath room, barn, hen nery, city water, electric lights. For terms address Owner, Republican effice. WANTED--Ladies in need of a nurse for the month of September please address Mrs. C. A. Bernard, No. S East Monroe street. WANTED A man and woman" one or both, to do chores. 'Apply room 1, No. 18 West Washington street. ' FOR RENT Two or three rooms, fur- nished or unfurnished, with bath. 547 North Sixth avenue. FOR SALE 120 acres six miles west of town and one-half south cf Yuma road; 80 acres for raising grain, 40 in alfalfa, fenced in in two twenties. Easy terms. Apply Gerd Braue, Phoenix. APPRECIATIVE husband sought by attractive widow, (34) has positive income of $3,000 and $S0,000 cash. Mrs. Rochelle, 138 East Sixtieth St., N. Y. C. WANTED A girl to do general house work for a family of four. Apply at 226 East Van .Buren street. WANTED To rent, one-half share ' water right in Tempe canal, in cluding the western branch, and southern extension. John Junger mann, Tempe, Ariz. WANTED Immediately, a plumber, at D. H. Burtis", 31 East Washing ton street. GOOD board, pleasant rooms. 230 North Second Av., 2 blks from P.O. PKOFESJSIOIN Ali AGENTS FOR THIS PAPER. CURT1S-XEWHALL ADVERTISING COMPANY Kstablisbed 1895 San Francisco Office, 510 Montgomery Street. Los Angeles Ofhce. 223 West Second Street. PHYSICIANS. Owing to the Increase In Business in the last two years PR. CHII.DS has been compelled to seek, more commodious quar ters. His friends and patrons will now find him at NO, lii SCHT ril SECOND AVENT"E, All iiiseases Treated Srientiticallv to a curt.. Consultation Free DK. CH1LDS "is the best diagnostician in Arizona. VETERINARY. F. O. RICHMOND. M. D. C... Phrenix. Arizona- V 1 1 ! ' r i I J rrEiirsMiii und ilnnlitr iliu.a.a nl.11 domestic animals scientifically treated. Of fice and Residence, 5S7 Wtst Van Buren street. No charge for consultation. Alien t ior the iiorse ticvicw. DENTIST. j w. C. LENTZ, dkntis'i, specialist in Crown and Bridce Work. Gas administered. Ottlie. Fleming Block, rooms 201, 202. 203. 204, 205,206. H. J. JESSOP Dentist. Offlo Pvrter Dulldliifr, corner Washington, and ter Btreeta. rooms 14 and 1C . , . ATTORNETS-AT-liAW JOSEPH H. KIBBEY A ARTHUR J. EDWARDS. Lawyers. Steinger block. 21!' B. 1st. Ave. Phnanix. Ariaona. LAW OFFICES OF LOC.AN. PEMOXB HARBY, 27 WillrxmSt.ew York Wa'terS. Loeau, Charles M. Deinond, Marx E. Harby, Norton Chase, Fred c. Hanlord. Represented in Arizona by NORTON CAASE, Adams Hotel, I'hoeuix. STEAMSHIP AGENCY. ATLANTIC OCEAN STE AMSHIP COMPANIES. Kilroy's New Palestine (Room Sift. Fleming PI ck I. Agents lor hue Sur," "Cunard." "North German Llyood" a"d Anchor" Lines, to aud from ali parts of the world. Call or write. CITY OF MEXICO EXCURSION. The Phoenix Short Line will have on j with limit of thirty days, at the very law rate of $17.50. A grand celebra tion on account of the Mexican Inde pendence anniversary will be held in the city beginning September 15. Stop-over privileges -will be allowed in either direction at any point. For full particulars inquire of the M. & P. agents. M. O. BICKNELL. G. P. A. EXCURSION TO NOGALE3, MEXICO. The anniversary of Mexican Inde- flPn lcn.a u'tll ha nnlnkimlrtJ M f noenix snort Line will sell tickets on September 15. 16 and 17, with return limit September 21, at the rate of $16.90. Tickets from Nogales.to Mag dalena and return can be purchased for $2.10. At. Magdalena a gran cel ebration will be held in honor of Saint Francisco. For full particulars J apply to M. & P. agents. M. O. BICKNELL. G. P. A. Porter Co.'s first ciua elae make close connections with arriving: trains, as also with trains going to Bowie. Special accommodations provided far trips tm i aaf! ti-OD GSana. RESTORED- CUP1DENE' ip ereat VecetaM ' i t iliar.ttir p rtscri n- tioQ of a famous French pliyrichm. will quickly cure you of all n-r- vou cr ii"a.c9 of tV? punt-rutiv ortraiti. sucit nn Lst Mftnhrnd, Insormna. r;-,::".r.ia the P. icJc. ESemhtal Kiuissinne, Nrrvoiu lW'bilkv, Consiiti-n. 1 1 stops ail inrss hv day r nitrht. Prvmi qnl-k-rif 55 of tiisclinr.To. which if not chvVd "lea"N to KprrroaiorrhcPH und p.il the rrorsot Irrpotenrr- 1: E ol causes the liver, (lie Li'fipvw ami tnrionrT orcansof all impurities. ts hmw nfnrtr per cent n? tmnWM wttb v- m rnre wii iioui mm ojw-rarion. ocviwimofr I I ' I ' I V i' I l-J U "V I V : A k 1