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THE ARIZONA REPUBLICAN THURSDAY MORNING, SEFTEMRFR 10, 1908. 8 lllMliU MUlmlw ii . i If your doctor fully endorses your jj aV,rtn AiAre fhArm Perfrtrnl fnr B your bard cough, then buy it and use it. If be does not, then do not m ;n Jn rl nf it Hi Irr.nurs ... f .r ; r . we puotisn rne ompn; w a,j th0ut this splendid medicine medicines. We are proud of inem. ne nave d .-.ij,. j.c.lnrCi., m,Mmr M ncv,; no ,ecrl io hid!. for COUgu. ana C01CS. w,f j arc Coughs KNABENSHUE'S SUCCESS IN A RtCENI FLIGHT Exchanged Greetings With Pilot of Another Balloon in Mid-air. THE RtNAISSANti : OF THE IDEAL BEAN A Modern Commodity of Which One Family Now Has a, Monoply. ." Mrs. Kit Carson of this city has brought to The Republican office following season with fine success A rofont jsf!Ue f the Ohio State for they grew prolifically. The next i jnurI1nj gjVeg an account of the thrill season he planted the product again j mK trip )f Rov Knabenshue in his new and this season he harvested about , passt,nor rraft cllring which greet forty pounds or beans. inRS were exchanged with the So far as known there Is no other j of thp Qm,,,n 1llise balloon similar bean now grown. The plants , fl fi ni,t tlirt.iurli the air. The are the verv thick and stocky though stalks only rrew about fifteen ment of one hand direct the flight of the ship. All this work will be done before the flights at the state fair. o t Y ROOSEVELT.' Roosevelt, Sept. 3. (Special Cor respondence of The Republican.) The govern nient transport lighter and gasoline launch Is at last on the way between Mesa and Roosevelt In the meantime people wish to cross the lake for the Payson stage and ! trip took place at Columbus, Ohio (the mail and baggage transportation inches high and the bean pods were about ten inches long. It . would be interesting to know ree white beans behind which there I the origin of the beans, the former usefulness of them ceremonial rites or whether as an ar ticle of commerce; whether preserved for some future generation to secure just as has been done, or whether merely sealed up in the hole through forty pounds of these beans in the how there is much interest in k world, so far as known here and they in that they were secreted for a th is an interesting story. The beans are in the shape of an ordinary pink bean but they are as large as four or five pink beans which would be rolled into one, though they in no msinncr resemble a lima bean or but ter bean, being thicker and not so Idle purpose a.s a lot ot people in , f.rrQ There are onlv about these days put things away. Any-j in Know- i long will be placed on display in McKee's ; time and that germ of Hie rcmamei: cash store. The quantity is thus far I Whether they were sealed up for a so small that the quality of the beans hundred years of a thousand years or their desirability for market or I no one knows for the facts concern- I table purposes has not yet been ing the cliff duelling are ery largely experimented with but from ! meager. About all that anybody their apiH-arance and . what little is i knows is that they are there with all konwn of fhem one would think they 'the evidence of having been inhabited ought eventually to supplant both I a long time ago, though there are the pink bean and the navy bean or j scores of theories as to the identity, the popular Hoston product. ; origin and manner of extinction of And here is the story of their or- the cliff dwellers, and other theories igin; rather of their renaissance. forns to whether they are extinct, or thev have been the big bean of com-j whether the dwellings are but the mcree a thousand years ago. Miss j former abiding places of some race Sharlot Hall, who is too well known j which has changed its mode of liv in Arizona to need identification by! Ing. further reference, three years ago One might even ie permuteu to visited a cliff dwelling on the Verde i believe that the beans were placed river near the old Baker & Campbell ' there by some modern vistor, were ranch, sixteen miles from Jerome. She j it not for the fact that no modern .i;.:..,,v.r..,i in the nick- in the i has been apprehended with any of for same have all had to bo carried over in a small duck boat, that when loaded, has a small margin of about two inches above water line on the sides. The only reason there ls been no accident is owing to the extreme smoothness oj the water and lack of wind during the last two weeks that the government boat has been lying at Mesa awaiting means of trans portation to Roosevelt. Bud Armor of Payson. deputy sher iff, arrived here . last night with Charley Xoekey, an Apache Indian, arrested in the northern part of Gila eounty'on -he"oharge of killing two other Indians; and wounding others. some time 'Inst spring. It seems there was ouie kind of a fandango i nntdn? the lmli;ins nn there nml in I the course of the goo1 . time they were having some of them got drunk and a couple held. Charley Xoekey while another took a knife and slit open his nose. r They alsor added in- j suit to injury by calling him a white man. . When they : turned Charley j loose he got his grin and turned it loose on them, killing two and wounding others. He gave himself up at the time and has been held at Payson in the meantime awaiting ac tion of the sheriff of Yavapai coun ty, Mr. J. R. I,ovry, sheriff of the above named county met Bud and his Indian prisoner at Roosevelt and taking charge of his prisoner at this point proceeded on to Prescott via Mesa the next morning. Charley Xoekey, the Indian in charge, is past middle age and is favorably known among the pioneer white population as an Indian that has always worked for peace between the red brethren and the whites. He is an Indian of some education and has rendered good service to Uncle Sam as a scout under old Al Sieber and Is reputed to have always been true to his al legiance as a scout. All who know or know of him and the circum stances of the shooting are wholly Kin sympathy with him and hope he will get free. Mrs. O'Rourke and- two daughters left yesterday via Globe for the east. They expect to make Kansas City their future home. Mr. Brooks drove them over in o'Rourke's private rig. Miss May O'ourke and Miss Ruth Dorris were passengers on Tuesday's stage for Mesa en route to Phoenix. Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Drum, who have been here for the .past twenty months, left on Wednesday's Mesa tage en route to I,os Angeles, Cali fornia, where they expect to rest up r the next two months. In the meantime Roosevelters that can't shrive themselves will have to let their whiskers grow as Mr. Drum was our only locnl barber. Mrs. Wm. Kennedy and four chil- j. ,,, , , I , , 1 ,1 , r ; , t, till I , .,.h..w-w-h-4-!- dren "arrived from California via! ftH-H-H-H" n tonight's stage. They re port having an excellent two months' cliff house evidence of a hole having been drilled and sealed up air tight. Opening it she found in the hole five beans like the ones now in the pos session of The Republican. She took them to the home of her father at Dewey station. He planted them the this sort of beans in his possession. o FLORENCE WOMAN ILL. Mr. and Mrs. L. K. Drais came over from Flor ence yesterday, Mrs. Drais being taken to the Sisters' hospital. MAKES A LASTfflG'CURE There are certain mineral medicines which will remove the external symptoms of Contagious Blood Poison, .and shut the disease tip in the system for awhile, but when the treatment is. left off the disease will surely return. Then the loathsome symptoms of ulcerated mouth and throat, copper-colored spots, falling hair, sores and ulcers, etc., are usually worse because the disease has made rapid progress on the internal members, and weakened the constitution and general health of the sufferer. S. S. S. is the only remedy that can be used with perfect safety in the treatment of Contagious Blood Poison, and with the assurance that a lasting cure will result. This medicine, made entirely of roots and herbs of recognized curative and tonic value, antidotes and destroys the powerful virus of the disease, and by purifying the blood of every particle of the poison and enriching and strengthening the circulation, removes every sypmptom of the trouble. S. S. S. does not hide or cover up the disease in any way, but drives it entirely out from the blood, leaving not the slightest trace for future outbreaks. Home treatment book with valuable information and any medical advice desired sent free to all who write. , THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., AiLAUTA, GA. where he will exhibit during the state fair. Roy Knabenshue and his new ship is the big aerial attraction for the coining territorial fair. Tim ,ilit t.f Ilia uliin nrt it rnnnnt Irin .. ,.l I., ' l "' I and in the judgment ot aeronauts tl leader 'of the profession. The flight was started at 5:30 and lasted 14 min utes. The distance covered was from the state fair grounds to Second avenue and the Big Four railroad tracks, and then back over the fair grounds and north perhaps a quarter j oi a nine, i ne airsnip rose to an am- uioe 01 '"p ieei ami uescenueu as low as i:0 feet. Most of the flight was made at an altitude of 400 feet. Like a huge bird says the Journal the ship sailed along, turning now to the right, now to the left, at the will of Knaben shue, the operator preferring tu show his perfect control at all times. Thou sands witnessed the flight. During the flight the ship rame within hailing distance of the Queen Louise which sailed during the after noon from Columbus Driving park at the race with Velle de Dieppe and the Iriquois. Just as the Queen Louise rose sufficiently high to be seen at the fairgrounds, Knabenshue sailed sky ward in the direction of the balloon. When an elevation of 7n0 feet had been reached, and the huge airship pointed its nose directly at the balloon, the at tention of the latter's pilot was at tracted and after a signal to the air ship they anticipated the desire of Knabenshue, and throwing off several pounds of ballast sailed higher upward, evidently fearing Khabenshue's ma chin would reach them. To sail up and around the balloon was the inten tion of the Toledo aeronaut but when the balloonist.s sought to get away he settled his machine down and contin ued on p trip toward the city after exchanging hailing signs and "Hello" through the air. Knabenshue declared after the flight that It would have been dangerous but not impossible to have. pursued the balloon as the gas en velop was filled tight and the action of the upper atmosphere might have caused the gas to expand and burst the bag. The airship went at a 20 mile clip toward town returning at nn average of 25 miles an hour. The ship sailed with the wind and the return was a matter of a few minutes. After the flight Knabenshue said it was one of the prettiest he had made. It proved that with the aeroplanes he had at tached to the ship, he had solved the problem of maintaining equilibrium without being required to glide hack ward a-nd forward. Knabenshue is also constructing a twin rudder and when it is completed he will be able to sit in his basket and with just the move- 4 Guarantee of Quality We can safely talk of quality in speaking of the CONTRACT 5-cent straight cigar. It's entirely different from the ordinary nickel cigar many of which are made to sell 6, 7 or 8 for a quarter. It costs more to produce and costs the dealer more than any other 5-cent cigar. For this' unusual value the smoker pays NO more. The only 5-cent cigar with a genuine long leaf Havana filler rid scraps dust or tobacco sweepings. Try today the merits of a strictly hand-made nn liij ra fo) mi m ROTHENBERG & SCHLOSS CIGAR CO., Albuquerque, - New Mexico, peaches all that distance, not to get a prize, but just to show what he had; the best he had, whatever the quality might be judged. Mr. McOovern is of the right sort, but what shall be said of a hundred people living hereabout who have lots of things that would Interest the public, help the country anil incidentally themselves, but who do not seem to be aware of the tact that there is such a working organiza tion as the board of traiie? The least that can be said is that they are neg lecting an important matter. TROUBLE STARTED. The Arizo na Ostrich farm has laid the ground work for a lot of trouble- among the women at the fourth territorial fair, by 'offering as a premium, a $25 os trich plume or fan, to the one who makes the best jelly cake and places it on exhibition at the fair. M. Peloso, f.r years at Commercial barber shop, now at 120 Xo. 1st St., artistic shaving loc, hair cutting 25c. ' ATTEND Phoenjx City Hall Plaza, Thursday Evening, 7:30 Sharp "W"l,,i,4"I,,i"i""i"K"l"I"Il,i"I"I"i"H,i' Tempe, Friday Evening 7:30 Sharp Mesa, Saturday Evening 7:30 Sharp visit with the mother of Mrs. Ken nedy. Mrs. Louis Selly Is on the sick list this week with malaria, a good jdeal of which has been going the rounns. Joe Schell is also sick with typhoid and went to the hospital today. old Mr. Mocker died at Livingston Wednesday at 10 o'clock. He has iieen ailing for some time and died of old age. Mr. De Paw arrived in Roosevelt Thursday, Sept. 3. He will run the government launch. Tex McCoy, Roy Pemlierton, Fred Carr and a couple of other young fellows have been very busy lately building a row boat, but at last thev have completed It and have been en joying some very pleasant boat rides. The telephone line between Roose velt and Payson has now completed us nrst month of existence and tshows up very satisfactorily ns n laying proposition, communications can now be had with Phoenix and the outside world from all points be tween Payson and Roosevelt and ad ditional four miles is being added to the line to connect Gisela, four mile off the main line. The rates on the enw line between Roosevelt and Payson are fifty cents. tKoosevelt to St. John's forty-five cents. Roosevelt to Brodie and Rye, torty-five cents; Roosevelt to Pack erds, Clanton's and I towels, thirty five" cents; and Roosevelt to Ciine, twenty-five cents. This line was built altogether by local subscrip tions. 'Miss Pieper and Miss Goodfellow of l-ayson and. Natural Uridire urn guests In Roosevelt tonls-lir nn tli.i way to Tempe where they are going to resume tiieir studies in the state normal school. " - MEANS HALF RATE La and Return, Only on THE HONORABLE RALPH H. CAMERON Republican Nominee for Delegate to Congress Hon. E. S. Clark, Hon. Robert E. Morrison and other speakers will address these meetings on the above dates on topics of vital importance to every voter in Arizona t Good Music will be in Attendance E vbt yjb o d y 1 n v i ted "?' !!!!!!'' ! l l 1 l l"M 1111 i'4.1..t. 1 !..t. t..t..t?M-?t;.t-..t't,ltllii,l tin jLLHLH4J.J4.....rr..,,.,.,,l,,., 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 i i i i ; i i l i SOME MOUNTAIN PEAT.HPS T O. McOovern. a minintr man w. live. at Date Creek station, near Haynes poKtoiLu-e, seventy miles from a rail road, in northern Arizona, hmnrht fn the Phoenix board of trade the other day a sample lot of peaches raised at his mountain camp. The peaches are seeunngs, but arc of good size and fair flavor. While not noslnff fnr choice products, thev nrp mlirhftr rin eating for n man 73 or 100 miles from any place where he can buy fruit. The incident Is not mentioned SO much nn account of the peaches as by reason oi me spirit that prompted Mr. Mc Oovern to bring them in. to emphasize another point, that of the publicity being given by the newspap era to the activities of the Plmeniv board of trade, which publicity is an miiuence Tor good in manners almost inconceivable. It has resulted in one exhibit coming from Tomhstone 1 cently and in many ways keeping the world posted on what is iroinir nn hero People read about things being brought to the board of trade and set the place down as a live conimnnltv Tint for some reason only one farmer in a dozen, living right here In the valley, seems to appreciate it. Mr. McOovern living 70 miles away and having little interest in agricultural matters, es pecially in this valley, has taken the trouble to bring in " a quantity of. 12g Final Limit October 11th, 1908 SEASON END EXCURSION Enroute you see the Salton Ocean. One night out, here for dinner tonight, there for breakfast in the morning. Save money by leaving home for a few weeks, m Through Pullman Sleepers Fhoejiix to Los Angeles 1 . H. LANDIS, M. 6. BICKNELL, General Agent, Phoen fx General Pass. Agt., Tuscon