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TAGE FOUR THE ARIZONA REPUBLICAN, SATURDAY MORXJNG, MAY S, 1915 Arizona Republican's Editorial Page Th Arizona Republican Published by ARIZONA PIIHUSHINO COMPANT. Ttie only Morning paper Published In Phoenix. I M. Heard Presidpnt and Munager I'l.i. n- A. Stauffer. . .. Business Munager aril. VV. Cale Assistant Business Manager i W. .'V-sr Editor fr-jo-iusivw Morning Associated Press Dispatches. iff ice. Corner SecotiU and Adams Streets. fc.kt-itd at the PiiMiuifice at Phoenix. Arizona as siall Matter of the Second Class. lo-Li. K. Ward, Representative, New York Office, Hi uiiswii )t HuilUiiiK- Chicago Office, AdverUninn Building. AiMiea all . omnium, ation-i to TUB ARIZONA HK PI'Bl.lCAN. Phoenix. Arizona. H.islii-sn Office .u y Kuitur.... TELEPHONES: .421 .421 SI H:st itl I'l l, in HATIfiS: it. one month. In advance............ lbli. three months, in advance .., I ::. mix months, in advance Iniiiy. one ear, in atlvaace. ........... ., lturiUua only. I.y mail .1 .75 . z.uo . 4.00 . 8.00 . Z.bU SATI'IMHV JIOK.MNli, MAY 8, llilS I do not care for people who al m do t hinirs; who almost love or almost hate; who almost succeed or almost (ail. .James Lane Allen. A State-wide Benefit Almost surely the house will think better of K tt.ic ll.e vciieral appropriation bill passes out of .is Land', ami it will icstol'e the full a H opriat loll .1 In. stale .-.hi Mil 1 u in I. Sectionalism should be .iii.ii, .it. d in. iii this luestiim, if it inav be elim ii.t.ii :n. in any q m .st i..n. Ther. js 1:0 -;iii iii this is.at ! pany politics 1. 1- factionalism. There .s . v!....i.. :..r an liouest uitference if opinion. If the state si-boi'l fund is a ;:ood thing for one toui.t. it is a g l tiling for all the counties. If it ;s ibutory to good citizenship, and that is the but i ml ami aim of education, the whole state will I tit,- Lencf iciary. Oo'.d citizenship cannot be lonTiT.ed Within county iiounil-irics, and, uulortuti- bad citizenship i n 1 1 in t be restricted w ithin .n.v .-in- location. We can have no patience with the argument I'mI ii is unfair lor a county of large wealth and i...H poj.iilalioii lo contril utc to the needs of a i..un! . I Mnaller wealth and larger school pop ;...iii..u. The same argument would be just as force ! il atamsi our public school system, and if it should 1 le.ail. it would take us back to the period when : ii.. iru the i i. h there Aius an aristocracy of educa ll'.li ..III refinement, while llle poor would be re :....l to uie same level of ignorance. There weie vcsterday two other urgumt nts a; :iin-t the restoration of the provision. One was tii.it the plan of apportionment was detective, hut in . hat pam.ultr, was not stilled. There could be but U" oti.er pi. ins ot apportiouiueiit. line would be ii the basis of county vn 1 'jat ions and the other uoi.M b.- on the average atteiK'ance of pupils rather than on the school population. As to an appor tionment on the basis of valuation, the fund would i.o loi ter be a state fund, but a county fund. As t" a . h.ince from a basis of school population to i average attendance, atuouiits of the funds t a.oe.l lo tbe counties would not be materially it..- third argument related to tin; waste of the !- ho.. i fim. is, and objection was made that while Imi.l was a piMirt loned on the basis of school . I il ti..ii. half the population did Hot attend school. That lould make no liiiterence ivgariling the need f the money tor the education of the pupils who do ; -Mend. inl, as to the waste, we may admit that 1'iere is a waste, but money, however raised and I.-ti i.Mit !. w ill be wasted until we have adopted a l.ii-ni-ss-like system of administering the school Ii i. ..s. stat- and comity. We are coming to that, and The Republican artiest I hopes rtiat an Arizona legislaUu e at the earliest opportunity will effect such a sweeping re-i-ioi, ot i he school code that there will be left no i pi'iimi for leak and waste. Oratory in the House i it. .is in the gallery of the house in this extra., as v. . 11 as in the lat tegular session. iave been r.iiiit.i and i-niei tamed by thi ri-mai ks of the sen tao.tii .at the tl...r. Sieclaloi'S havt' blinl.eil at the I .ii.:iiil' en rusciitions ot wit and have drunk deep t:..ni the nmiiil-up founts of wisdom. We havn n .1 ourselves and have felt Kindly toward the I a on n of :,..ih factious who have entfrtained u: ;...m .i.i to day. l:m we lnie often thought that ibe iurM,se of the orators has never been attained tlial ..f impressing their views uiwin another to be. iak.ii account of in the roll c:ill, the rising vote or the via iM-e expression. The gallery, it is true, has I een deeply affected. nil ariid emotions have len played uion. We have been moved to luughttr ami to tears, hut we have no vote. We are denied t pi ecsions of approval or disapproval. Even the M.tiop of approval which an enthusiastic citizen pla. ed upon the supplications of the chaplain wan li.ii.lv efiaceil by the seriker, who r".sented the in terception in the gallery of a prayer that was eli te ted higher. We have often doubted whether all the argu ti.eiit in tin co'.'rse ol the two sessions has ever i ivoral.ly alfected a single vote, hut we, call easily yee how votes may have been adversely affected. We hae often thought ihiit if we weie a member of the house and if a speaker should rise to a tpies li. .ii concerning wha-h we hail no decided convic tions, unit if he should weary us by repeating an argument which he and others of his side had v.orn tiieradbare, we should get even with him by votinn airainst him. It is one thing to sway the multitude, and the w i -oils are full of orators who can do thai. But it is another thing to produce results, and probably there aie not a half dozen orators in the country wl,.i can do that. If there is such a one n the house, he has not jet been heard. A Hint from Miami The Silver Belt ot .Miami issues a warning to the Oermans that this thing of torpedoing Amei ican vessels must cease, and adds that this goes to the allies as well; that a point is being ap proached when we will no longer tolerate interfer ence with our commerce. Is it Patt Sullivan who issues this truculent ultimatum, or has that Hot spur, Joe I'hisholm, resumed his desk and thus laid the train to blow us into the European war, not as an ally, but as il third party with a grievance of our own, separate and distinct from the assassi nation of Prince Ken", ina ml, the invasion of Bel gium, that bone of contention, Alsace-Lorraine, the commercial jealousy of Oreat Britain and tiermany, the imlitical jealousy of Mermany and Russia and all the other jealousies and fears and hopes of the nations in or near the war? W e are in the osition f a man u ho has been hit by a chance blow in this lionnybrook Kair melee, and we are about lo crack with our blackthorn the most convenient head. Power to the arm cl either Mr. Sullivan or Mr. t'hisliolm, or boih, each a worthy representa tive of the Irish race, whose members fight with or without provocation, for the mere love of fighting. The temper of these gci.th men has been tempered by residence in America, othet wis there would have been nowainiiig (o the European oifenl'ers thai tiii.4 thing must stop some time. But for tin tempering process one or both of tne.se gentlemen have undergone, there would havt been no warn ing, no ultimatum, but there would have been a Whoop, Wlllia' and then, the blow. This is the first definite information that Oer liiany and Ureal Britain have had. that they have been carrviiig too far the pastime of blowing up or capturing our ships. We like tin Hole of the ulti matum from Miami, while we comm ml its modera iion. Oilier protests froni thi country have im plied a doubt on our part whether or not the Brit isli and the v'ermans have not been within their lights all the time. THE TRUE CHAMPION EGG LAYER It is at this period of the year t::at the hea 1 of the family resurrects the window and door scieens Irom the basement and puts up barriers against the pernicious house f!v . But to many a i-'.ood house keeper the thoaght does not occur that screens keep flies within the house as well as without. It does not seem to her worth while to pursue a single lonely, buzzing insect liom room to room or win dow to window. V hat does one fly amount to? But if the one fly is not relentlessly slain, ten or twelve days litter the woman of the household iiegins to wonder where all the Hies come tiom. Perhaps a search is made for boles in the screens. Perhaps each sash is made to fit better, perhaps little Johnny is scolded for leaving the door open. But a more likely cause for their presence may he found ill the following figures compiled by a scientific publication : 1 One fly lays l:'n eggs. HI i;d flits lav il'OO eggs. L'n -::i'U flies lay 4:j.uuo eggs. :!'! 2 1 ;,tii fln-s lay r,:i-i.m eggs. 10 1 2,!i;i).ooi flies lay l..".."ir.,"0ii,oin) egRK. 20 77T.C0ii.iiim flies lay i:;,::12.0iiii ioo eggs. :;o 4i;,irii,,iii"i.ui)ii flics lay ."..ris.Tc.iino.iMiu .lil.nf.ii.iMiii.Ouo flies lay 20, i: 72....V.I,- June J une June June Julv July July eggs. August 9- noo.oiiO eggs. August 1!' li;7,0i;i.i;iie,otiii,iii:ii lli'-s lay .r;li,iiijii,oiio,iMiii eggs. August 2! ln.077, C!r,,iMiO,0(Mi, 001, flies lay 4 1 1.200, lino, O'hi. mil) eggs. September S (;i4.iji;i,7i;o,non,000,Ooo flies lay 72, .".r.Vt.4 1 1. ".'00. Odii, (mil. Olio eggs. iHiubtless the figuits are merely illustrative. It frequently happens that a hoiiie-ovvner closes hi.s residence June 1 without eradicating every fly and returns not before October 1. Yet we never heard of an incident where one ha1' to shovel the Hies away front the front door to get in- Yet the ques tion. "Where do all the flies come from .'" which confronts the painstaking housekeeper so often, gen erally has but one answer: It is "eggs fly eggs" If you would have a clean house, a healthy house, spare not a single fly. Portland Oregoniai. DID YOU EVER KNOW IT TO FAIL7 I would like to make a few useless remarks about martied life. I- not only would like to, but I arn going to. If you are a tall. Hallow, nerveless, easy-going man with a liliputiau income, enormous feet ami hands, and have an Adam's apple that looks like somebody trying to iMike his fist through your neck, yon will marry a tiny black -ha ire. I woman wlio has all-seeing, lashless eyes, a mouth like a kn'fe cut in a dish of cornstarch pudding, and a love of jew elry and ancient black-and-tan dogs with rotten dispositions and hairpin legs. You may say you won't, but you will. If you are a red-headed gentlemin, you will mairy a beautiful girl. I don't know why this Is -hut you think over the led-headed men you know and see if they haven't copped peaches! If you are a little runt addicted to morning coats and gardenias, a large, viial, auburn-haired huly will get you yet! She will want all there is in life. And don't sit down calmly after you're mar ried, with a panetola in the corner of your mouth, and imagine you are that all! If you are a home-loving man, a man who likes to loll about in an old suit, a man who gits slightly seasick by merely glancing over a passenger list of the Lusitania, then, by the gods, you will wed a female Burton Holmes! If vou are a jealous person, it is written that you shall marry a girl who will give you every ex cuse to harbor that ridiculous passion. And. by the same token, it wouldn't matter whether sue did or not it would seem so to you. If .Vou put your stomach before everything else in life, physically as well as metaphorically, your wife will be the kind who made a pan of bum fudge once when she was at school, but knows and cares not that mint sauce ha. nothing to do with veal cutlets, and tha! sea bass get.i nurvoi's and fidgety when yon pour maple syrup on it! I. Montgomery Flagg, in American Magazine. SMALL CALIBER MARTINETS All public institutions. I here assert, should have .is their employes only people who are courteous, pleasant and kind. One of tho greatest hardships of poverty is to be obliged to face the autocratic martinets who seem to guard the doorways of all such organizations. There is something detestable and offensive in the frozen, impatient and often in sulting manner of the women anil men who occupy little jHisitions of authority like this, and before whom poor working girls and, 1 suppose, men must always go. From "Me, a Book of Remem brance," in Century Magazine. ' BAD WEATHER STILL HfiS FIGHTING associatkd press dispatch I.OXDON. May 7. Fighting of n sanguinary character continues be tween the Russians and the Teutonic allies in Uaiicia anil in the western and eastern Carpathians. Bad vvea- asmuch as Japan and Oermnny are at war the latter country will not be consulted at this time but later may be included in the American govern ment's correspondence on the question. -o- VANDERBILT IS LOST (Continued from Page One) turns mm LOAM TO COCHISE CO. ther prevailed along the western front, and but little fighting has tak- t en place there. Vienna and Berlin still claim that the Russians are re treating. Petrograd says the fighting has " assumed the character of a great battle." Vienna asserts that the Austro Oermans are now in the district of Pilano, Jaslo and East Wisloka. In the eastern Carpathians Vienna de clares the Austro-Oermans are re pulsing desperate Russian attacks, causing heavy losses. From Corland to the Carpathians hoth p.erlin and Petrograd claim successes at various points. PASS A LAW I Are your neighbors very bad? Pass a law! I)o they sn.oke? Do they chew? Piiss a law! Are they bothering you? Hi n t they do as you would do? Pass a law! Aie your wages awful low? Pass a law! Are the prices much too high? Do the wife ami babitn cry 'Cause the turkeys nil roost high? Piiss u law! When M. P. finds new diseases. Pass a law! Cot Uie mumps or enfertnesis. Measles, croup or "experit is"? Best we aU fly to pieces, Piiss a law! Are the lights a burning red.' Pass a law! Paint 'em reeti, or pai.it 'em white! Close no all them places tight! My! Our town it-: such a sight! pass a law! Xo matter what the trouble is, Pass a law! Coi.dness :iker, but ain't it awful! My! What are we goinrT to do? Almost anything ain't lawful. And the ju Ige is human, too! Piiss a law ! Public. GOLF AT HOME An ingenious little device has been perticted that will permit the practice at home of long drives of a golf ball, without smashing any windows or iiiad.;, show the golfer how far hi.s drive would go, and whether it Went high or low. The golf ball is attached to a short cord, which, in turn, is attached to a heavy meter. When the hall is driven it operates two gauges on the meter, one showing whether the shot was high or 'ov, .'.nil the other indicating how far ii hall would travel ordinarily on the force of that drive. Saturday Evening Post. CHINA AGREES TO MORE (Continued from Tage One) offered to bestow land without com pensation upon the Japanese and proposed to withdraw China's three requirements regarding the Shan Tung province, namely to return to its status quo before the war, Cht na's participation in the peace con ference and compensation for dam ages in the Kaio Chan campaign. The final Chinese proposals were therefore refused only to authorize Japan to supply half the arms used by China: to participate in the con duct of Chinese arsenals; to appoint Japanese advisers lo China and to preach Buddhism in the republic. The Chinese dislike the require ment insisted upon by the Japanese that China, recognize' Tokio's right to reopen these questions at a fu ture date, but they will accept those features unless a few irreeoncilables in the councils of President Yuan succeed before next Monday in alter ing the president's decision. The ultimatum complains of the Chinese attitude advancing the argu ment that the Japanese position is designed in part for presentation to the foreign countries. It is consid ered curious that the ultimatum was written only in Japanese, while all formal documents have been written in hoth Japanese and Chinese. The Chinese public is quite aware of the trend that events have taken. Bong lines of Chinese carts all day long slowly dragged through the rain into the legation' quarter to the rail road stilt ion. taking bullion and other articles of value to he placed under foreign protection. Crisis Is Averted WASHIN'OTON, May 7 Official advices were received late tonight to the effect that the crisis in the Far East hail been averted, that Japan had modified her demands and that China would accept them Before the terms of the agreement are finally concluded, however, an expression of opinionis . expected by the United States from Great Britain, France and Russia, as allies of Japan as to whether the interests which the leading powers had in the mainten ance of the territorial integrity of China or the "open door" policy are in any way affected. American ambassadors at Lnndon, Paris and Petrograd have been in structed to learn the attitude of the powers, which, like the United States, are pledged to maintain, the terri torial status quo of China and free dom of commercial opportunity. In- this being his first connection with any theater. In 1K7T he took charge I ltl(. of tnT company that was sent west to play "Our Bias." In 1SS8 he or ganized a company at Boston, and from that time his success as a manager dated. In 1S!I0 he organized , the Charles proliman Stock company,! and is at present proprietor of the . Empire, Criterion Byceum, Garrick, Savoy and Knickerbocker theaters in New York, and the Duke of York's, j Adclphi, Globe and Comedy theaters in London, and joint manager of the Vaudeville theater in that city. Alfred Givynnp Vanderbilt Because it appeared that the mon ey was to be spent for bridges on county roads, the board of control yesterday denied the application of the hoard of supervisors of Cochise conntv for the loan of $20,000 from general fund. Tlie board's action was taken after a consideration of the amount now in the general fund, and on the ad vice of the state engineer, who re fused to approve the loan. given unnecessary if all passengers on alarm to the Lusi- perha ps friends tania. "The vessel can do twenty-five knots easilv und " pressure, and there is not a submarine on the ocean, or under it, I that can catch her at that speed. Be- capital- 1 sides the admiralty is taking mighty ist, was a son of Cornelius and Alice good tare of the Lusitania. There is Vandei hilt, and a grandson of William , absolutely nothing to fear for her Henry Vanderbilt. He was born in New Whenever fur family or syndicate reasons it is de sired to have title to a piece of real estate in the name of an impersonal, non-individual bolder, se cure the services of the trust department of the PJTOTCXJX TITLE AND TRUST CO. This is a safe and certain method, this company heim? ex perienced in all leal phases of transfer and title work. "Jt is the Safe Wav" ORDINANCE NO. 42 York Oct. 20, 1S77. He wa a brother of Cornelius, Vanderbilt HI and Regi nald C. Vanderbilt anil a director in many railroads iind corporations, as well us president of the National Horse Show association and a director in many clubs at home and abroad. MOOSE HIKERS GET AWAY (Continued from Page One) rir.okei's with their little sparring ex- i hibitions. ! The hike is but one of the methods hi ing Ui;ed by the phoenix lodge in older to g":n publicity for its designs in the sanitarium committee. Every j possible means will he used to gain ; favorable attention to the claims of the Salt River Valley as the best possible j loi'rtion for the tubercular home. An- ( other very prominent stunt is the 200 , mile motorcycle race to be staged here on May Si. The committee announces ' that the sale of tickets in the diamond ring contest has started like a flash, anil that tile race of the young women for ticket-votes will be well settled for I interv iew v tlie month's grind by Monday, when it j "! ,IKf'(1 ' is tho'iiiht the first announcement of ' Ole kaiser,' the definite line up of candidates can be made. -n- FIRST NEWS OF (Continued from Page One) British isles; that, in accordance with a formal notice given by the im perial government, vessels flying the safety, for she will go up to Liverpool as regularly and as surely as nhc 1ms I been doing." I The Lusitania did not get away on Cue scheduled hour of 10 a. m., the de lay being caused by the personal iden ' tification of all baggage by tlie passen , gers themselves. Long before the trav l elets began to arrive on the pier a I sci re of detectiveti were on hand watching baggage to see that nothing , menacing was taken aboard, j No piece of baggage was taken aboard the vess'-l unless it was identi fied by tli" owner, and then only after I the owner had shown his ticket and j pi overt he was the actual owner of the j ticket. This process wan slow and j tedious, and held the liner at her pier : intil 12:30 p. m., when she finally i hacked out into the stream. Alfred G. Vanderbilt was among the saloon passengers. He said he was going abroad on business and pleasure and would reniain abroad about three weeks. j Klhert Hubbard, writer, editor and . shepherd of his flock of Roycrofters at 1 Fiist Aurora, accompanied by his wife, (went over on the Lusitania in the hope ; i getting into Germany anil having an th the German emperor, he on friendly terms w?ih said the Fra. "but I don't know how I stand with him now, for you know I have written some things he may not have liked." Mr. Hubbard knew about the German embassy's warning, but he thought it about as imnortant .is the direction of yesterday':- wind. He said he would make no effort to get into the life boats if tile German threat was put into practice unless there was some to destruction in that travelers sail zone on ships of her allies do so at lilies are liable those Witters and ing in the war Great Britain or their own risk." This afternoon and tonight anxious friends and relatives of the Lusi tania's passengers besieged the of fices of the Cunard line and the scene recalled those at the office of the White Star line when the Titanic sank thr.-e years ago. Among the widely known passen gers on the Lusitania were Alfred Gwynne Vanderbilt. Charles Bow ring, of New Y'ork; Alexander Campbell, general manager for John Dewar and Sons, Iuidon; Klbert Hubbard, pub lisher of the Philistine; D. A. Tho mas, a wealthy Welsh coal operator, and his daughter. Lady Mack Worth, an Knglish suffragette, and Rev. Basil Maturin, of Oxford, Kngland. Officers of the Cunard line an nounced tonight they had received more than "00 telep'aone and tele graph inquiries relative to the safety of passengers. Telegrams were re ceived from as far north as Mon treal, as far south as Atlanta and as far west as St. Louis. Mr. Vandei hilt was among those credited with receiving anonymous letters of warning. All deprecated the possibility of danger to the ship. Charles Sumner, general agent of th.a line, announced at the time that the f 2a knots an hour from a submarin.1 cargo was valued and contained a war supplies. Her 2S0.0OO pounds of brass and copper wire, $f.fi.(ioo worth of military goods and n.471 cflses of ammunition, valued at $200,000, all which was contraband of war. Lusitania's speed made her immune attack. The Lusitania's at about $7r,0,000 large quantity of manifest included of THREAT TO SINK (Continued from Page One) thirty-four second cabin passengers were elated over the provision made for them on the fast Cnnarder, although they had the alternative of a return of their passage money. There were about 300 third class passengers on the Scotch vessel anxious to get away on the C'u narder, but as their transfer would cause a delay of some five hours in the Lusitania's departure they were pro vided for cn the Transylvania. Rumors were current on the pier about the hour of sailing that several of the Lusitania's prominent saloon passengers had received telegrams, some anonymous and others bearing fictitious names, advising them not to sail, as the vessel was sure to be tor pedoed. These reports were branded as fa!e by the Cunard officials. A rep resentative of the line said at that time: ' "There is not one word of truth in the receipt of these alleged telegrams by our patrons. If such messages had been received the recipients would un doubtedly have called it to our atten tion. There was not a single cancel lation, and that in itself epeaks for the absurdity of the reports, which have spare room for him. He said he knew (c) Wooden the value of advertising, and that if feet high, he was torpedoed by the kaiser's navy j Corrugated iron men while on his way to see the kaiser feet high, the publicity would be a fine boost for! fd) Screened the Roycrofters left behind up at East Aurora, "if I get through safely,' he added, "and the German emperor won't see me in Berlin, I'll be patient a while and see him later at St. Helena." Among others on the Lusitania were Charles Frohman, Sir Hugh Lane, Lady Maekvvorth, Miss Jessie Taft Smith. Mr. and Mrs. Montagu T. Grant, Lady Allan, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Crompton, Mr. and .'rs. William S. Hodges, Dr. J. o. orr. Major and Mrs. F. Warren Pearl and Commander J. Foster Stack house. o AN ORDINANCE! PERMITTING CERTAIN FRAME STRUCTURES I WITHIN THE FIRE LIMITS OF ,THE CITY OF PHOENIX. BE IT ORDAINED BY THE CITY COMMISSION OF THE CITY OF PHOENIX, AS FOLLOWS: Sec. 1. Xo frame or wooden structure shall hereafter be built within the fire limits as established. or as may hereafter be established, except the following, and all such I structures shall conform to any ad- ditional requirements deemed neces sary by the City Inspector of Build ings; (a) Temporary one story buildings ! f or use of builders. b) One story sheds, confined to the rear half of the property, not iabutting on a street and not nearer jthan twenty feet to any other frame 'structure. Such sheds must not be ver ten feet in height. If sides are ; covered, such covering must be of incombustible material. A Wooden : fence shall not be used to form the j back or sides of such sheds. If such itsheds are entirely enclosed they may I be built with a floor area not to ex i ceed two hundred and fifty square it'eet in the special fire limits, and not ! to exceed five hundred square feet in ! the general fire limits. If such sheds are open on one or more sides in j eluding the long side, they may be j built with a floor area not to exceed five hundred square feet in the spe cial fire limits. In the general fire .limits such sheds with at least three sides open may exceed five hundred square feet in area and shall not be f confined lo the rear half of the lot. 1A11 roofs placed upon such buildings i or structures shall have an incom bustible covering. fences not over six fence.3 not over ten Sleeping Rooms: I Subject to the approval of the City I Inspector of Buildings, screened en closures may be erected within the 'fire limits provided such structures ;do not exceed six hundred NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of Teodora Valenzuela, deceased. Notice is hereby given hv square feet in area and twelve feet in height. !f the roof is covered with canvas the entire framework of the structure must be of metal. If covered with corrugated iron or other incombusti ble material, such structures may be built with substantial wood framing. (e) Roof Gardens: Roof Gardens consisting of a pavillion or series of pavillions may be erected on the roofs of buildings of Classes A. B. & C, construction of four stories or more in height, subject to the special the undersigned Administrator, of the ! permission and approval of the City Estate of Teodora Valenzuela. deceased, to the creditors of and all persons having claims against the said deceased, to exhibit them, with the necessary vouchers, within four months after the first publication of this notice to the said administrator at his office No. It North First Ave nue, Phoenix, Arizona, tlie same being the place for the transaction of the business of said estate, in the said County of Maricopa, Arizona. J. F. W'estherg. Administrator of estate of Teodora j Valenzuela. deceased. Dated Phoenix, I An., this Ifith day of April, PH."). FINANCES AND MARKETS Metals NEW Y'ORK, May 7. Elect rolytic, Slii; silver, 50; copper, firm. Stocks Amalgamated, (S; Smelting, fill; Santa Fe, 9:iA: St. Paul, 92; New Y ork Central, St'-'i; Penns.v Ivania, lo7? Reading, 144; Southern Pacific, SS; Union Pacific, 1234; Steel, 54 -; Steel, preferred. I0GV&. BOSTON COPPER MARKET Bid Adventure 2lj Arizona fomml 6 Allouez 53 Calumet and Ariz i4 Calumet and Hecia .....rt;5 Copper Range 54 Daly West 3',i Ray Consolidated 22 30 20 7 2 '4 . . Ill . . 31! Greene Cananea . Hanccck Isle Royale' Lake Copper Miami Mohawk Mass Coper North Butte Nevada Cons 13 Osceola 80 Old Dominion 53 Quincy 85 Shannon : 8 Superior Copper 32 Vi Tamarack 35 Utah Cons 12 Victoria 3 Winona 3V4 Wolverine 59 North Lake 2 South Lake 64 Ask 3 7 54 5 570 5 5 3 V, 3 31 22 28 Vz 12 26 73 12 32 14 83 53 3 2 Mi 37 12 i 3 V 4 CI 3 7 Inspector of Buildings, providing that such structure shall not constitute an undue fire hazard. Such structure must be of substantial construction with metal frame work. Wherever Much roof gardens shall he built the roof must be capable of sustaining a live load of not less than sixty pounds to the square foot, and shall he subject to an actual test of one and one-half times said live loud, ?f no required by the City Inspector of Buildings. ' f) Interior Frame Partitions. Non bearing board partitions extending riot to exceed two-thirds of the I height from floor to ceiling. The , space above such partitions may be i closed with wile netting, metal grills. or glass set in wood sash or frames. Such partitions shall not be used to separate occupancies. (c) Pavillions: Pavillions of sub stantial construction intended for recreation purposes, open on at least three sides may be built within the fire limits of the city unless in the judgment of the City Inspector of Buildings such structure will consti tute an undue fire hazard or menace. The floor of such pavillion shall not be more than four feet above the grade of the adjoining street. (h) Reviewing Stands, Band Stands and Speakers' Platforms of substan tial construction may be erected by special permission from the City manager. Sec. 2. WHEREAS, The immediate operation of this ordinance is neces sary for the preservation of the pub lic peace, health and safety, an emer gency is hereby declared to exist, and this ordinance shall he in full force from and after its passage hv the commission and approval by the Mayor, and is hereby exempt from the referendum provision of the City Charter. PASSED by the Commission of the City of Phoenix this 2fih day of April. 1915. Approved this 2fith day of April, 1915. GEO. u. ynuNo, Mayor. FRANK THOMAS, City Clerk. Copper (!4 Chino Utah Inspiration . . Shattuck United Verde 4fi 4, 29 Ext 3i 3fc