Newspaper Page Text
8 THE ARIZONA REPUBLICAN : FRIDAY MORNING, AUGUST 14, 18. Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report li ABSOLUTELY PURE EL PASO JSHILARIODS The Boundary Commis sion Reports. An International Result. Dam Will The Boundary Disputes Between Texas and Mexico Are Now Ended-All Satisfied. El Paso Times: Yesterday marks a great event in the history of El Paso .and .Cludad Juarez. The international boundary commission, -which has been working lor many months to finish the boundary disputes which have arisen concerning the strip of land lying ..south-of the El Paso irrigation canal and the island near San JSlizario, has concluded its labors. The El Paso, or what is better known as the Chamizal case, has been disposed of by non agreement on the part Of the eommis sion, leaving the two governments to make final decision upon the testt mony and arguments as submitted by the commission. As o the island case' the commission has agreed, in view of the testimony presented, that the river abandoned its old bed and formed a new one, and therefore the island will continue to remain United States territory. The commission, as concerns 'joun dary matters, has adjourned until the beginning of February, 1897, but has set a meeting shortly to formulate' a programme for finishing the work en trusted to them under the convention signed in Washington on the 6th of March lest, as to restoring the water of the Rio Grande to the citizens of both sides of the river and the con struction of the great international dam. Commissioners Otorno and Mills , who are both thoroughly fa miliar with the conditions of our sec- i ne i . j i- , nuu vi luc utruuLi j' auu wail nave seen with their. own eyes the great suffer ing of our people on account of the lack of water, will now devote their entire attention to finishing the inves tigations entrusted to them by the above mentioned treaty. Colonel Mills thas already secured the services of Engineer W. W. Folleti, .who made the preliminary survey for . the dam and who is one of the best posted engineers on work of this char acter to be found anywhere. He has located for the United States geologi cal survey a number of dam sites in Colorado and New Mexico and is fuiiy 'posted as to the dams and reservoirs existing in that portion of the country. Captain Derby and Mr. Ybavrola are expected here next week. The engineering work as to the loca tion of the dam, plans and specifica tions, changes of the railroads and in vestigations as to the amount of water which has been taken out in Colorado and New Mexica will b i entrusted to the engineers, while the commission ers will correspond with the govern ments as to the enacting of proper laws by which the water of the inter national storage reservoir will be properly protected and distributed. They will also enter into negotiations with private owners of land to be sub merged by the water and confer with the United States government with a view to placing such lands under uuncu oLatjs junsuicuui, ana will further consider the matter of trans ferring the 'railroads. The star of El Paso and Ciudad Juarez is in the ascendency and when the great work of this dam shall have been completed, the twin cities here on the frontier will show to the world their progress and thrift that will soon place them in the rank of the princi pal points of the southwest. Both commissioners are anxious to. . have the investigation fully completed and placed before the two govern ments within the time provided for in the treaty so that the matter can be acted upon and appropriations secured ' before the term of the present ad ministration expires. fCash Prices.! '96 RAMBLERS - $80 I '95 RAMBLERS - $59 '96 IDEALS - - $55 i '95 IDEALS - - $50 t '96 TANDEMS - $125 GREENE, THE HATTER, Fleming Block. THE SPIRIT OF THE PRESS. Tucson Star: Some of Wiley E. Jones' friends would like to see him nominated for congress. This is a recognition of the Graham county Democracy. Tempe News: It is shrewdly ob served that Bryan does not so much represent either the Populists or the Democrats as he does a popular up rising. The whole fabric of American society appears to have a gigantic yeast cake at work in it. Tucson Star: It is declared that W. A, Rowe will have Yavapai and Mo have and probably two southern coun ties tn the territorial convention. Rowe is now conceded to be the strongest man in tfhe field. Albuquerque Citizen: Phoenix has the (best electric car service of any city of its size in the United States. Tucson Star: It appears that Co chise county may have a candidate for delegate In W. C Land, the cattleman of the Babacomari. Mr. Land is one of the solid free silver Democrats who has never swerved from the tenets of the party and he represents one of the most (important interests of the terri tory. Land would not masquerade as a statesman, but as a plain, practical representative of the people. flagstaff Democrat: The next leg islature of Arizona should amend sev eral of the laws now on its statutes We believe in all officers receiving a salary Instead of fees. It. is cheaper ana Detcer lor the taxpayers, and jast as good results can be accomDlished. and we 'believe an amendment in this particular would prove beneficial. We also favor the abolishing of the regis tration system, as it is an expense without any profits. . Mohave Miner: The young men of Mohave county will have a ticket in the field this fall for county officers. It is time to turn down fossils and give the bright young fellows a chance. Tucson Star: One of the sad things sometimes noticed in politics is for a lame duck to aot as though he were still in the ring, when in fact he has been, counted out, never more to ap pear among "the thoroughbreds." You can get along without Schil ling's Best tea; but why should you? COLOR Or- WOMEN'S EYES. The Mere Question of Pigment Has Set tled Many a Man's Fate. Did you ever notice that men always instinctively put confidence in a girl with blue eyes, and have their sus picions of the girl with brilliant black ones, and will you kindly tell me why? asks a writer in the Ladies' Home Jour nal. Is it that the limpid blue eye; transparent and gentle, suggests all the soft, womanly virtues, and because he thinks he can see through it, clear down into that blue-eyed girl's soul, that she is the kind of a girl he fancies she is? I think it is, but some of the greatest little frauds I know are the puTry, kittcny girls with the big inno cent blue eyes. Blazing black eyes, and the rich, warm colors, which dark skinned women hate to wear suggest energy and brilliance and no end of intellect. Men look into such eyes and seem not to be. able to see below the surface. They have not the pleasure of a long, deep gaze into immeasurable depths. And so they think her design ing and clever, and, perhaps (God save the mark!), even intellectual, when, perhaps, she has a wealth of love and de votion and heroism stored up behind that impulsive disposition and those dazzling black eyes, which would do and dare more in a minute for some man she had set that great heart of hers upon, than your cold-blooded, tranquil blond would do in 40 years.. A mere question of pigment in the eye has set tled many a man's fate in life, and es tablished him with a wife who turned out to be very different from the girl he fondly thought he was getting. Success in Plant Growing. - There is a wonderful amount 0f truth in the following statement: "Wn,rSnnShil(nal.ofmJiin? all kinds of plants grow in "the most unfavorable circumstances. I think this is partly owing to a magnetic at- traction existing between such persons and their plants. The plants seem to know they are loved, that they are household treasures, that every new leaf and flower is as welcome as the new words and expanding thoughts of a baby to its mother. Apparently un eonscious of this, they do their utmost, and in places least adapted for success ful house culture of plants, we often find stands or individuals equal to the best greenhouse specimens." MM TO IMPROVE YOUR LOOKS. Devices for Making the Complexion Bet ter and Adding to Physical Beauty. Vanity furnishes the inspiration for many of the inventions of the patent office. One of these is a mask of verv thin rubber, designed to be worn on j the face at night. It causes-profuse perspiration, which washes impurities J out-of the skin and makes the complex- ) ion. clearer. ' Sun tan is quickly re moved, so it is claimed. 1 Another device for producing' dim pies, according to the Cincinnati Com mercial Gazette, is a woman's idea. It is a wire mask, likewise to put on when going to bed. By an arrangement of screws, pencils of wood, very blunt, are made to press upon the cheeks and chin at the points where dimples are desired. Uncomfortable? Why, of course. But, as the French say, it is worth while to suffer for beauty's sake. False busts, hips and calves are made of rubber, to be blown out like bal loons, and in many other styles, while the young- lady of build hopelessly skeletonesque may procure a complete stuffed jacket which fills out her form at every point to the extent requisite for counterfeiting' desirable embon point. If one is so unfortunate as to lack a nose he can obtain a false one of papier maehe, artfully enameled to imitate the skin. One kind of imitation pro boscis is attached to a spectacle frame, so that the owner puts on his counter feit nasal organ in adjusting his glasses. Masculine vanity is concerned in the genesis of about eighty patents for various kinds of mustache guards.. One such is a gold plate with a spring1, which may be fastened to any drink ing vessel at a moment's notive. - Another is especially designed for beer glasses. A tube connecting with it goes down deep into the beer, so that the mustached drinker is able to avoid the foam. Other guards are destined to be worn like spectacles somewhat, with wires to pass to the back of the ears of the wearer, and hold them on. The shield for the mustache is of gold or silver, or of fine gold wire net. THE ITALIAN PEOPLE. A TieW of Their Present Condition and Prospects for the Future. What are the prospects of the people? That depends in the present case large ly upon the people themselves. A peo ple that are not united will never bear taxation patiently, because a disunited people cannot be commercially pros perous, and, therefore, cannot afford to pay the tn xei. The difference between north and south Italy, or between Pied mont and Sicily, are hot, indeed, like those between Ireland and England, largely religious, but they are certain ly radical, and the gulf between the easygoing, but passionate, children of the two Sicilies and the hardy moun taineer and stalwart cultivator of the Piedmont plains is almost as wide as the chasm between the Teuton and the Celt. Victor Emanuel's favorite unifier of Italy was the army, but, says the Fortnightly Review, it has turned in the hands of his successor into a disin tegrator. It was all very well to move the army up and down Italy when the army was a symbol of common libera tion from which so much was expected; but now the tyrants are gone there is no longer halo of romance about the army, nothing but army bills. The tyrant now is the tax collector. Undoubtedly the people have a griev ance. The taxes have been not only cruelly but unjustly exacted. The col lector has entered Sicilian cottages, backed' by the police, and, seeing the pot-a-feu smoking, argued that those who could afford to eat could, afford to pay a "supplement" or excess tax, and if it turned out there was no money. !. the officers of the law have been known to seize the dinner and throw it out the window, under the noses of the poor peasant and his hungry family. There was no redress for the subjects of Hum bert any more than for 1' Bomba, The Prince Took OH His Hat. . According to the Philadelphia Rec ord, the captain of the clipper Louisi ana, which lately arrived at that port, tells a good story of the way an Amer ican boy, without making himself of fensive, extorted a tribute from royalty. While the Louisiana was ly ing at Dublin, the prince of Wales, who was then the. guest of the lord mayor of the Irish capital, sent word to the captain that he would like to came on board and see what an old-time American clipper-ship was like. The captain's son heard what was going on, and declared that he would make the prince tip his hat to him. He knew, it seems, that the prince was not in the habit of uncovering in this way. When 4-1.. miT.l nonTr V.Y, i .""" J "J S .""J I PP """wamgineM. rW flaf ha prince seemg the national ! colors, lifted his hat, and the rest of the party followed suit, to the great delight of the captain's son, who thus , uua!"'- , i. .1 1 .-. .1 i. : .. i x Few Children In France. Of all the peoples of Europe the French have the fewest children ani the Irish the most. The average French family numbers 3.03 persons and the average Irish family 5.2. In England the average is 1.S and in Germany it is 4.1. The Spanish and Russians closely approach the Irish in prolificness. Con trasted with the French in Europe, the French in Canada are the most prolific race in Christendom. IN AUSTRIA X. They Must Serve in All Cases Turee- Years Apprenticenhip. The Austrians take no rhanc s with their barbers, says t he New York World. They must Jje-"otl.ana jtijS"I&irfers) ' and yipnaker?.tiiypn fjl ienjia sjees tji it "that, they 'arej- "Pro isioji its hlso Wide in their code for women barbers vsjho desire to carry ,on the business of pi their husbands in case ol the latter s (k-ath or illness. But in order to do this the wife must have been enrolled in the union as an ap prentice for three years. Apprentices, by the. rules, of the union, must appear in Vienna in the presence of judges of the union and show their skill before they are allowed to open shops of their own. " A properly certified barber must have a knowledge of and pass an examination in shaving, hair-cutting, hair-curling and wig-making, and during the period before the issuance of a certificate the poor and others who are frugal serve as subjects for experiment. At the examination the young men have their razors dulled by four strokes in a pine plank, and they must then sharpen them. A subject is assigned to each, who must be tonsorially perfect, iu the opinion of the judges, when the apprentice has released him. After this a certificate is issued and the apprentice serves two years as a journeyman before he may open a shop as an employer. The average age of ap prentices when they begin to learn their trade is 13 years. . Pure Food and. Drln K. We are friendly with grocers ; they are in business to make mon ey so are we so are you. ' But we are all in business for something else too for good living and good-doing. We are going to make a lot of 'money selling you good tea, pure tea, clean tea, whole some tea Schilling's Best. So is your grocer. You are going to make money buying it not wasting your money any more on col ored and adulterated and dirty tea, that is bad for you you can make most money by being strong. Good tea will help you be strong. Let's all make money to gether. Schilling's Best at your grocer's, and your money back if you want it Schilling's Best coffee, baking pow der, soda, spices, and flavoring-extracts, are also money-backed. A Schilling & Company San Francisco 3 $ BARBERS PHCENIX PARK Swimming Baths Monday and "Wednesday mornings, 9 to 12, ladies cnly. Tuesday and Friday evenings, ladies and their escorts. General Admission, BEFORE NOON, fifteen cents. CAPITAL HARNESS SHOP, Gr. T. SWITZKK. Manager Snneessor to J. L Oant In the Gant Harness Shot). North Center St. C a mesa special line of .... Ketal Rimmed Collars, Harness, IMIMMHIIMMI WHERE IS THE COOLEST Meat, Fish, Berries, At Zoeckler's, of course. The? have the coolest and cleanest meat and fruit market iu town. Ac the .... ZOECKLER MARKET . Is the only place in town where you can set . . Cold Roast EVERYTHING OFF COLD STORAGE. . . SPECIFIC For Scrofula. , " Since 'cluldhood.l I have been afflicted with .scrofulous bcils and "sores, which caused : me : terrible suffering. .Physicians were unable to help ffie, and I only grew worse under their care. At length, I begar to take AYER'S Sarsaparilla, and very soon grew bet ter. After using half- a dozen bottles I was completely cured, so that I have not had a boil or pimple on any part of jny bodj for the last twelve years. I can cordially recommend Ayer's Sarsa parilla as tiie very best blood-purifier in existence." G. T. Keinhart, Myersville, Texas. I I THE ONLY WOBLD'S TAIB Sarsaparilla Ajeri Cherry Pectoral cores Coughs ui Colds Blacksmith and Wagon Shop T.. UBir, Proprietor. H' . TITl- . 1 .. J .1. Ua..V Center St., opposite the school bonee tor the nurpose of carrying on . the BLACK BM1TH1KO BUSINESS In all its various branches, I can b found there at all -times. Fine carriage making a specialti es HOEING done in the very best manner. A larve assortment of iron, eteel and wagon material coriBiantly on hend. Experienced irorkmen. Repairing Done 'With Dispatch. II 1 3rd Ave. and Washington St. Second Hand Goods - Bought and Sold. We will sell your goods for a small Commission. Our prices are the lowest in town. - Honrs school for boys. Accredited at the State and Stanford Universities. A first class Home School, pre paring oojb tor any university or for business. Careful supervision, thorough moral, mental and physical training. Sixth j ear beeins Aug ust 4'h. Bend for catalogue. IRA. G. HOlTTi Ph. D.. Master. Burlingame. San Mateo Co., California. . Saddles, Horse Blankets, Lap Robes- PLACE IN TOWN TO BUY Eggs and Butter ? Beef. IX Cooked Coned Beef in town c eeaog fnmmkiftii