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r 7 THE ARIZONA REPUBLICAN: TUESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 19, 1897. eral planks in their platform which are popular with .the people through out the state, and the prohibitionists annually poll a large number of votea. This combination!, aided by the re publicans and the farmers' alliance, will be able to put up the stiffest kind of a fight, the result of which no mam can safely predict. The gold democrats of .the state, led by fo.mer Secretary of the Interior Hoke Smith, cut no figure whatever, because there is scarcely a handful of them left. The regular democracy will likely nominate either Capt. Evan P. Howell or former Congressmani Candler, who is now secretary of state. no!5onsoijidation. K K i PHOENIX SHORfliNEl lime Table No. 42. in etleci July 1, XV ' jgf - to. w rami ra 6 If you have a mine to sell, or to bond, or if you know of a desirable mining property that is for sale, please write to or call upon the min ing editor of the Arizona Republican. THE METAL MARKET. New York, Oct. 18 Silver erii3 cates, 58; silver bars, 58; Mexi can dollars, 44; copper, nominal, brokers', $11J.2; exchange, $11; lead, steady; brokers,' $3.75; exchange, $3.90. NOT A POOR MAN'S COUNTRY. Reports (are going out about the. Yaqui gold region which are deceptive1 in itheir nature and which, if not cor rected, will cause much disappoint ment In: faot a number have already gone into Sonera on the faith that all they had to do was to find the Yaqui river and go to washing out gold at once with pans, rockers and long Toms, as was done in early days in California. That rich gold diggings have al ready been found In ;the Yaqui region there is no doubt; and development and intelligent effort will demonstrate that the field is of no mean extent. But it is a field in which capital and experience are required to work. The mining ground has first to be secured from the government which is of it self no small item of expense. In Mexico one cannot go out, take up one or more claims and hold them indefi nitely by filing a record of the claims taken, paying a small fee and doing a little mythical work. Instead the claim has to bo "denounced" ait the mining office of the district wihich re quires quite a fee, surveyed by an. en gineer who charges likewise a heavy fee, and when his survey is accepted and title granted the claimant has to play ten dollars for every "pertenc'a" of ground. (A pertencia is an area measuring 100 meters on each sile) And this payment of ten dollars per pertenencia has to be .made anmual'y thereafter or the claim is forfeited. Then the placers so far as discovered are not to be worked with pan cr rocker, as were ithe tarly California mines. Rather are they hydraulic iog or sluicing propositions in which large bodies of gold tearing earth have to be moved by the force of hea vy volumes of water to develop, con duct and (handle which need the co operation or associated- capita.! It takes money and lots of it to eluice or hydraulic away a bank cf earth twenty to forty feet in depth to gat at the gold on the bed rock. Such ex penses go far to make it practically impossible tor a poor man to embark in placer mining in Mexico; and those who think that with their prt?peo:iing pan or rocker, with a few weeks' sup ply of provisions, tJhey can wash out fortunes are doomed to biKer disap pointment and had better stay away. Men with means who can embark in large projects can find splendid op portunities for investment in the Ya . qui gold fields; but all others will find them a disappointment. THE WINNIFRED MINE. Mrs. Anna White brought to town yesterday some very fine specimens of gold bearing ore from her Winni fred mine northeast of Bbcenix. The Winnifred is near the Unlfon mine and .mill and is less than a mile from the proposed roure of the Rio Verde ca nal. A. C. Shmall, who has just fin ished the assessment work on this mine, is a miner of twenty-five years' experience in Arizona. In conversa tion with a Republican reporter yes terday he said ithat .the Winnifred ledge was the most promising and easiest worked of any in the entire district. The ledge is now two feet wide and grows wider as depth is reached. The ore is partly free mill ing but as it carries considerable iroa it is pfrobahle that much better rei sults could be secured by roasting. Mrs. White placed the specimens on exhibiitfion at Hoadley, Turnibull & Co.'s office in the Adams hotefl. NUGGETS FROM THE HILLS. SuiperiaitendeiD.t Thompson at Rose mlon't, on the Chicago mine, at 'a depth of 250 feet has a twenty foot body of sulphide ore. J. R. Hateey of Kingman received a return from a shipment of ore to the Pueblo smelter. It 'gave 3,056 ounces silver and 7.7 ounces gold to the ton. The Gopher Mining company Is working three shifts on its Gopher mine in Chaparral. The shaft is down 200 feet and at this depth ev erything indicates permanency. Development work on FJ Tiro mine in the Altar district, is being vigor ously prosecuted. The shaft, which is now down 140 feet, is Ito be sunk another 100 feet, and the work of sinking will be pushed as Tapidly as possible. The Anglo-Mexican Mining com pany limited, operating mines at San Jose de Graicia, in the sta'e of Slna loa, has recently completed a sixty ton cyanide plant, which has bean working very satisfactorily since the first of July. t Last month ithe Kingman sampler sold to the Pueblo smelter over $28, 000 worth of ore. And yet the peopla say nothing is being done in our mines. All ore shipments are the .product of chloriders, no company i3 now shipping ore. Mohave Miner. The rich strike made at a dsp h. of 150 feet on the Schuylkill mine at Chloride still continues. The ore is worth $25 in godd and 1,000 ounces in silver per ton, and the ore body is about five tteet thick. BiE&icies the precious metals in the Schuylkill ore, it carries a Mgh per cent of lead. While working on the gravel claim of Frank M. Barnes, five miles below Bonelli ferry, wtorkinen uncovered a mammoth bone at a depth of Whirty five feet The bone measured forty three inches in length amd eight inches in diameter. The bone is supposed to be from a mammal of prehistoric time. Mohave Miner. The steam hoist, boiler, rock cru h er and other machinery for the Kasser Gold Mining company has arrived and been .taken out to the mime. The hoist is capable of sinking 1,000 to 1,200 feet, and all the machinery is of Ithe most approved pattern. It was ordered by General Manager Mi es Gibbons in 'Denver last summer. Sil ver Belt. The Gold Cliff Gpld and Silver Min ing company, Win. Johnson, superirA tendent, operates a mile east of the i OommoiLwealth. The company has put down a shaft of 175 feet and soims sttoping has been, done, which shows ore ten feet wide, similar in charac ter to that of tbi3 Commonwealth. A hoist is being operated and a cyanide plant is to be constructed. In Aravaipa canyon, Graham coun ty, the Grand Reef Mining company, J. "W. Paine superintendent, is work ing thirty men, (p repairing for the erection of a large amount ef new machinery. About 150 men are now at work building a road from the main road to Aravairpa canyon to the Burgess mine, eight miles., iWhen the road is completed active work will aommenoa on the miine. J. W. Gerritt, owner of the Orr Plata mine, has leased to H. B. Hamp ton and William OTay one hundred and fifty feet of ground in that prop erty, on the main fcunnel level. Al Jarfs has been also given a leare on. one hundred feet of g.'cfund cm the same level. Owen Mc-Neely has be ta granted one hundred feet on the level and all the boys will begin active work the first of the coming week. The Oro Plata is now working more men and producing more pay ore ihn any other mine in the country. Mo have Miner. i A PHYSICIAN'S SUICIDE. He Wanted His Friend, a Fellow Practitioner, to Note His Death. Atlanta, Ga., Oct. 18. Dr. Jerome G. Going is still feeding the effects of the shock which cams to him in the early hours of yesterday morning, when a fellow practitioner, his room mate in the Hotel Alvin:, bled to death before his eyes, and despite the best efforts of his practical hand. The dead man is Dr. Theodore Mon roe. He was the victim of morphine and a suicidal impulse. Both he and Dr. Going came from South Carolina, the self murderer from Union and his friend from Aiken. Their errand to Atlanta was to consult a specialist regarding the morphine habit, which had fixed itself upon Dr. Monroe. Dr. Monroe spoke of tho aid that a willing physician might give to science even In the manner of his death. "If he contemplated suicide, for instance," he said, "he might so arrange that his last moments would be passed in. the presence of a fellow practitloneri, who would thus have the opportunity to study every manifesta tion of the approach, of death." Dr. Monroe spoke smilingly, and Dr. Go ing laughed off his talk. Later he had reason to regret that he had miss ed the hint comveyed in his friend's words. After their conversation both physicians retired. Dr. Going was faffing into a light dose when ne was startled by Dr. Monroe's voice calling to him, "Come quick and take notes." Hurriedly turning up the light, Dr. Going sprang to his .friend's bedside. There was, blood dripping to the floor, and w hen the clothes ware turned down the horrified physician saw that his com panion had, with quick, deft thrusts of a sharp knife, severed a number of large veins in his limbs and body. Dr. Monroe turned a last faint smile upon his friend and then sank into a state of unconsciousness, from which he passed to that of death. Dr. Going's best efforts were of no avail. The hand that wilded the knife had been too skillful to leave a hope of rescue from the fats to which morphine had driven its pos sessor. So Dr. Monroe followed out his own words. He died in the aresence cf a fellow practitioner. But Dr. Going took no notes. WILL KNOW WHERE HE IS AT. Three Parties in Georgia Will En dorse Tom Watson for Governor. Atlanta, Ga., Oct. 18. Arrange ments were completed today which will unquestionably make Thomas E. Watson, late candidate for the vice presidency, a fusion nominee for gov ernor of Georgia. With or without his consent, his friends have entered into a deal whereby the nomination of Watson by the populists of the state will be endorsed by the repub licans, the prohibitionists and the farmers' alliance. The active factor in making ha i last year caused a political upheaval in (the state by bringing charges of 1 corruption against the superior court judges. These charges were tried by the legislature and dismissed, but some very sensational testimony was presented. The populists have sev The Volunteers and Salva ionists Will Remain Apart New York, Oct, 18. Mrs. Ba'ling ton Booth fired the first gun of dihe fall campaign of the Volunteers at Cooper Union tonight. Many promi nent officers weire present and the audience was a large one. One purpose of the meeting was to contradict rumoTs that the Volun teers and the Salvation Army, from Which it seceded, are to amalgamate. Mrs. Booth said there is no truth in the story, which she had traced to Detroit. Some of the (members think Brigadier Miles originated it. They regard him as a traitor, because he came to the Volunteers from South Africa, where he had been working in the Salvation Army, and returned to the army after having been with the Volunteers only six weeks. The Booths, however, say tihey do not be lieve Brigadier Miles was a spy. Mrs. Booth spoke tonight on "No Amalgamation." While she did not mention the Salvation Army by name, she denied napeaitedly and in strong terms that the leaders of the Volun teers had any thought of amalgama tion with any body. ' NOT A THIEF. Yet Thousands of "Dollars Worth of Goods Were Found. New York, Oct. 18. John H. Steals, ex-superintendent of he Waldorf ho tel, who was arrested three weeks ago on a charge of having stolen a large quantity oS goods from the ho tel, was today set free by Justice Cowing in (the court of general ses sions. Staats "had been the superin tendent of the hotel for some time. He had also been, in the service of the Hotel Norimandlie and had been own er of a hotel in the south. He was a very eccentric man and took the goods not for the purpose of theft. When arrested thousands . of dollars worth of goods stolen from various hotels were found in his rooms. He had not sold or pawned a dollar's worth. Today ithe manager of the Waldorf appeared in court and pleaded to Judge Cowing for the man's dismissal. The. judge suspend ed sentence, as it was evident that Mr. Staats was not a thief nd had no idea of realizing any money from the sale of the goods he had taken. A w .1 . . i . . . ... . . Wm. Griffiths. Albert Ieke Telephone 57. P. O. Box 458. I STANDARD IRON WORKS X Machinists and Foundrymen, southeast X 6 of Capitol grounds. Wriieforestimates. J LOCAL D'CZASE sudden cimijo c i-nncs. it oau be nred. bva pleasant remedy which ir. a;:slied di rectly into the nnrr:Is. Bo ingqaickly a:aurbedit glvca relief at once. Ely's Cress. C:!:i is acknowledged to be the moet thorough enre fop Nasal Catarrh, Cold in Head and Hay t ever c . remedies. It opens and cleanses tiien -sal pass os allays pain and inflammation, heals the enrcs, -r-tects the membrane from colds, restores the s udee of tastcandamell. Price 50c. atDrnjrtrisraorhyi-isiL SLY BliOTIIERS. 63 Warren Street, Hew Xo& ZEIGER'S HOTEL Congress Junction. (Martinez P. O.) Strictly First-Class. Connection. FirBt-Class R;gs. Careful Drivers. ZEIGER & CO., Prop'rs. I N Wm The Hotel Anguis, Bisbee, Arizona. Best equipped house in the terri tory. Opened October 11, 1S97. Twenty rooms, all newly furnished. Running water and basins in every apartment. Not a dark room on the floor. 'Europeani plan. J. B. ANGUIS Prop. Good Have made many changes in our stock. The old stock has about passed away and many new and original K articles are being added daily 5 More Attract'v V More Elaborate Will alTcaira fr coll trio price: B. HE YMAN Made by the Indiana Bicycle Company. Prices that talk. Call at our office and we will W. H. Robinson Agent H. L. RUSSELLL, Pres. National Steam V Latest Improved Machinery Our Work Speaks for Itself. Call up 'phone 159 and our wagon will call. Laundry 215 West Jefferson Street. fnllmOTl ftPn THE PIONEERS. We carry a UOIUMII & bO. ?ul1 Hne-f everything in Grocer w w w ies. Hardware, Farming Imple ments, Miners' Supplies, Dry Goods, Boots and Shoes, Furnishing Goods, Hats, Etc., Etc. All of which we offer at Bed Rock Prices. Hay and Grarn in Car Lots, or Less. CAPITAL HARNESS SHOP, Gr. T. SWITZEK, Manager Successor to J. L Gant in the Gant Harness Shop, North Center 8t. Carries a special line of ... . Metal Rimmed Collars, Harness, Saddles, Horse Blankets, Lap Robes It Builds You Ui ST. HUBERT NATURAL RESTORATIVE Can recommend it highly as a re storative. C. GUSHING, M. D.. 636 Sutter St., S. F. " The result has been very satisfactory indeed. O. O. BURGESS, M. D., 329 Geary, S. F. Highly recommend it to the medical profession. E. WINDELE, M. D., 30 Post. S. F. HEBE'S TRIBUTE Ita action is prompt and continuous. It stimulates the appetite and diges tion. It promotes assimilation and ahealthy circulation, and it enters di rectly into the production of red blood. Try it for loss of vitality. Gold medals Columbian and Atlanta Expositions. For Sale by Principal Druggists. SAN FRAHCISCO. PHILADELPHIA. HEREFORD BULLS. Thoroughbred Bull Calves. High Grade Bull Calves. High Grade Yearling Calves. The grades are from three-quarter bred and better and sired by thoroughbreds of the best families; all well marked, good individuals, fine condition. The yearlings ready for service. For sale in car lots at reasonable prices. Address G. H. ADA MS, Crestone, Colorado. Times Koaf of. Vi lATPoof nncciVklD T furniture co i Wholesale and Retail. I0YCLES. $50 an tell you the rest about it. No. 18 North Center Street. A. G. WILLIAMS, Sec'y. Laundry Co. TONIC PORT OF WOKDERFUL POWER. . I have found it very useful. A. S. LARKET, M. D., Oakland. Find it useful in many debilitated conditions. GEO. H. PALMER, M. D., 606 Sutter, S. F. Use it in my family and commend it as a fine wine. E. W. HILGARD, Dep't of Agriculture of Cal., Stat . University. TO CUPID. LONDON. BREMEN d $75. 8TAT10K8. p x 8:00 8:30 8:40 8:55 9:20 9:4(1 Lv. . . Phcenlx . . At 7.40; 7:10 Tempe.. Petersen Kyrene 8acaton At.. Maricopa . Ly 7.00 6.45 6.20 i .oo PHOENIX AND MKSA BITT. STATIONS. a rs Ea fa a. m. p. at 10.30 QeGO 10.00 66 9.30 5.0 fx uu A. K. P. M. 7.80 8.00 1.30 Lt Mesa. Ar 2.0(1 2.30 iempt Ar. .-...Phoenix. ...Lv 8.301 ' buh win vwp at any point on signal. ' Tram So.l connects with Southern Pacific 19, passiDfcMarleopa at 10:08 p. m. Train No, J connects with Southern Pacific 20, paadnt Maricopa at 5:32 a. m. Connection made at Mesa with stages for Goldoeld. Connecttos made at Phoenix for Congress, Preseot t and -E points in northern Arizona via the 8. F.,P. A Aa,; E- Trainsstopon signal Pullman Palace Sleeping Car on trains Ko 1 and 2 between Phoanix and Maricopa. N K.MA8TEN, C. C. McNEIL, President. Hen. Saoi F. B. SANFORD. Gen. Pass. Agt. Santa Fe, Prescott & Pknix Ry, WITH THE" Santa Fe System. Is the Shortest and. " Quickest Route to r?nver, Kansas City, St. Louis and Chicago and all points EAST. S. F. P. & p. TIME TABLE. " In Effect Aug. 12 1397. Mountain time Is standard used THROUGH TIMB CARD. HATS. Mou Tues 5:00pj 10 :50a I iy..San Francisco.. i,r lv Mojave ar 6:15pi Toes n 3-45aTea ' Tues Tues Tues Ti Wed Wed 7:00a 9:4na 4:f5f U.Oop 2:15a 7:15a tv ottn uiego ar l:i;p; 8 30a Tees : Toes Taes Men ; Moo Mob ' v.. .Los Angeles. ..ar lv Barttuw nr 1:10a lv...The lveedies...ar 6:40p .v Kingman ar ar.... Ash Fork.... lv, d:wi l:35p Men Mon Tues Turs Wed Thur Thur Thur Thur 10:25p 11 30 r., 2:25p 8:50p 10:4 p 6 '55a 8:10a 10:-0tti lv Chicago ar 9:32p fi:15p 7:05a 5;00tj Wed Wed ; Wed Toes Mosi Mon Man Mon KansaB City. lienver .....Albuquerque Holbrook Winslow Flaustsff 10:25p; l:to.. 12:02p 10:15a 1:10' ar....Ash Fork....lv 7:4Ca Mon SouUibouna. I Morthtxran, Passenger. I IPaaPTieet No 3 1 No. 1. STATIONS. No. 2. INo. 4 7.4m 1.45 p 2.40 3.35 3.50 4 45 5.f.6 5.41 6.53 7.13 8.16 8.53 9 42 11.27 Vr:..AIi Fork... ai . .Rock Butte.. Dei hlo Jerome Jnrsetlon Ar. . . Hreacott.. .Lv 6 50 a 5 50 4.50 4.28 3 85 3.15 a 2.42 i 132 8.45 9.50 10 15 6Mp 5.1 4.50 S 50 2.10 12.30P Lv... Prescott.. Ar -..summit :8kull Valley. ....Kirkland. . ...Date Creek 12.25 10.48 9 42 7.F2 7 29 7.16 700 Congress Junction . . . Wickentuig . . Peoria .. Glendale Albambra 11.39 11.54 p 12. 15 a Ar... Phoenix ..Lv lhesctnie'lno of Arizona The best tvutt to 'lallfornia. The only North and South Use in ATkzo?S: t0 the Grand Canon ol the Colorado. Petrified Forest, Great Pine Forest, Clifl IftveJ. liaaa, Grea i.-alt Siver Valley and other potots at interest. Through tlcsetB to all points ;n the Orrfted states, Canada and Mexico. No. 2 connect, at Jerome Junction with trains of U. V. & P. By . for Jerome. Connectingat Prescott with stage lines rat al principal mining camps; at Congress Junction with Congress Gold Co., R. R. for Congress und stage lines for Harqua Hala, Stanton and 7ar nell; at Phoenix with the M. 4 P ,4 8. R V Kv- for points on the S. P. Ry. Train for California leaves Ash Fork at 1:35 p. in., arriving in Los Angelas next morning at 8:30 and 8an Krsncisco the same evening at 6:16 Train for the east leaves A-sh. fork at 7:40 a. m. F. M. MURPHTf , GHO M. 8ARGHNT. Pres. & Gen. M gr. Gen'l Fi't& PaBs'r Ag'ir Prescott. A ri Prescott, Aiir. R. K. WELT.8, E W. GILLETT, Asst. Gen'l Mg'r, Htn'l Ap , Prescott Ariz. Phoenix. Aria. Southern Paeifio Co. (PACIFIC BISTZH. Commencing April 5, 18:7, trains will, leiw Maricopa as follows: K.1K A.M. DAILY PACIFIC EXfKEP O.lO for points in California, ISew,6i., Oregon end Washington. D.OK A.M. DAILY MIXED TP.ilJf iOK O.OtJ' Tucson, Benson, Lordsburg, Dealing, Bl Paso and intermediate stations. S.nn P. M. DAILY MIXED THAIS JFOB 0 .Uvi Gila Bend and intermediate staSoiia 7,1 A P M. DAILY MIXED TRAIN FOR XVl El Paso and all way stations. 1 fWflft P-M. DAILY NEW ORLEANi.r3C. I TjF.VJO press for Tucson, Benson, Desnajt, El Paso.San Antonio, Houston and New Or.. T. H. GOODMAK, Gen. Pass. AfO Gila' Valley, Globe & Northern IMk Between Bowie and Plnva. STATIONS. Mo 1 No 2 P. M. 2:00 2:21 3:00 3:13 3:27 3:37 3:80 4:11 4:44 4-59 5:02 5:10 5:35 f :0o P. M. (Mountain Time.) Lv Bowie Ar m. Thomas r. x. 30 . 504 UiJ a-Oi JQ.-5 W:M 100 9& :U n0l 8:6e SS52 J 6:00 . .Al. Matthewsvillel Pimn Central .Thatcher 8afford Solomonville Rail N . Ranch .... Big Wind Mill 20-Mile Tank..... Bailpy's Wells Snmmit Ar Bowie Lv Trglns Nos . 1 and 2 run daily except 8mHy. Tiaius Nos. 1 and 2 connect at Geronimo With stage from and to a&u Carlos and Globe, Trains Nos 1 and 2 make connections at Itowie with Southern Pacific trains 19 and 20 for ail points east ana west. Wj Garland, President. B. JfMir