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h PAGE SIX THE ARIZONA REPUBLICAN, THURSDAY MORNING, JULY 21, 1921 a : 1 r I t r rf !- 4? r . (i I t . Bettor Aitfiri, For Uis ...... PHONE J6 E. WASHINGTON ST ? - SPECIALISTS fa Examination of Eyaa and fitting f eorraot Z ' Glaaaaa ; ; NORTHRUP OPTICAL CO. - , E. Adama St. Phona 690 For Appointment. HANSON & KARLSON 737 GRAND AVE. '. Machinists Engineers Auto and Gae Englna Maehaniea ', Welding and Forging 235 tlal 223 sar'st Tucker Motor. Service Apperson "And Oldsmobile Service Expert Mechanic, Modern ' Equipment Satisfaction Guaranteed Phona . 6-9-9-5 22514 North Central Avenue PLUMBING HONEST WORK FAIR PRICES , - Sand me your work for Quick and efficient service O. E. BELLAS 10 North First St. Phone 2879 4 CONSTABLE ICE & r FUEL CO. Phone 1555 Pure Ice, Good Service Corrugated Iron Roofing, Galvan ized and Painted. H. H. Shoup Cor. Sixth Street "and Washington Phone 3002 4. irur-bearinar animals have de creased about 50 per cent during the last decade. t THE ARIZONA REPUBLICAN'S AUTO M O T IV ED I RECTO RY ROADS BULLETIN ' Phoenix to Coast: Take Parker road. High water at Ehrenburg preventa ferry service. " Phoenix to Prescott: Wickenburg road In good shape for moat part. Black Canyon fair. - ' - - ' , " , - Phoenix to- Globe: Apache Trail fair- Superior to Florence good. Phoenix to Tucson: Take Superior highway to Florence. Old Trails, Sprlngerville to Flagstaff good. Flagstaff west rough In apota particularly through Nelson Canyon. Take Oatman road out of 'Kingman. ', ' . , ' Roads north of Roosevelt Lake being widened. Roar to Carr'a Ranch in' Sierra Ancho Mountains completed. ' Roads in Graham and Cochise counties in good shape except for duet.. AUTOMOBILES AUTO ACCESSORIES GENUINE FORD PARTS HOME OF THE FORD AND FORDSON ED RUDOLPH Authorized Ford Dealer, 816-48 East Adama Street Buick-Cadillac--Mack Trucks TIRES ACCESSORIES PARTS PAINT SHOP BABBITT MOTOR West Waahinoton' at Fifth Ave. CHANDLER CL H. C TRUCKS V TRAILMOBILE . CALMESSNER Corner Fourth Avenue and Adams Street Chevrolet Little Four, Big Four BERT O. BROWN, Distributor 316-18 Eat Washington Street GARAGES AUTO TRUCK BODIES BUILT to order All sorts hardwood repairing for farm machinery. HOME BUILDERS PLANING MILL GENERAL AUTO REPAIRING Phone 4188 HANSON'S GARAGE FRED HANSON, Manager FIRST CLASS Corner Flret Avenue and Bennett ROGER HUNT GARAGE GENERAL REPAIR WORK ON ALL MAKES OF CARS Buren Street WATER REPORT Reservoir, elevation Reservoir, contents, acre feet Loss, 24 hours Elevation, year ago ......... .161.18 507,341 ..1,470 .215.65 Contents, year ago 1,214.062 Water used, north side ....... .39,063 Water used, south side 46,625 WEATHER FORECAST "Arizona: Thursday' and Friday partly cloudy, possibly showers north and east portions; not much change in temperature. New Mexico: Thursday and Friday local showers; not much change in temperature. - WEATHER REPORT a 2" x stations g : : e a ". a - : : ; Boston 76 88 Rain .44 Buffalo 70 76 Clear .00 Chicago .74 78 Clear .00 Denver .........82 86 Clear .00 Flagstaff 76 80 Pt-Cldy. .00 Fresno, ...94 54 Cloudy .00 Galveston 82 98 Pt.Cldy. .01 Kansas City ...;82 82 Clear .00 Los Angeles ....82 84 Clear .00 Minneapolis ....78 82 Clear .00' Needles ........110 110 Cloudy .00 New Orleans ....84 90 Pt.Cldy. .00 New York ......78 86 Clear .00 Oklahoma ......84 88 Clear .00 PHOENIX. 102 104 Clear . .00 Portland 72 72 .Clear .00 St. Louis ;.- 80 84 PtCldy. .00 Salt Lake City ..92 9s Cloudy .00 San Diego ......74 78 Pt.Cldy. .00 San Francisco ..62 . 64 . Clear .00 Seattle 62 62 Cloudy .00 Spokane ........78 82 Clear " .00 Tampa ..82 92 Clear: .00 Tucson 98 98 Cloudy .12 Washington .....80 88 Clear .00 Winnipeg ....".. 80 86 Clear .00 Tuma ....102 108 Clear .00 Local We.'hei Yesterday - 6 a.m. Noon 6 p.m. Temp., dry bulb. ....84 - 98 102 Temp., wet bulb 70 74 75 Humidity, per cent -.60 - . 82 Wind from ; E SW Wind, miles -i 6 Rainfall .1... 0 0 SE . .. 4 0 Weather . -r: . . .Cldy. P.Cldy. Cleai Highest yesterday . 104 Highest record this date ........108 Lowest yesterday.... 82 Lowest record this date 68 Total rainfall ' .... 00 Excess In temperature yesterday, "fi ripfirrees-- Excess In temperature since the first of the month. 5 degrees. Accumulated excess i ntemperature Biripo Jan 1. 239 degrees. Normal precipitation Jan. 1 to date, R3 inches. - Actual Dreclpitation Jan. 1 to date, KO Inch f Deficiency since Jan. 1, 8.03 Inches. OBITUARIES Adin C. Kunselman Funeral services for -Adin C. Kun selman,' who died last Sunday at the home of his father, C. H. Kunselman, 338 North Third avenue, will be held this afternoon. The funeral party will leave the chapel of A. L. Moore and Son at 2:30 o'clock and go to Greenwood cemet- ry, where the aerv icea will bo conducted. ,-, a . . .. Born 0- MILLER To Mr. and Mrs. G. Guy Miller of 909 North Fifth street,- on Tuesday, July 19, an eight -pound boy who has been named G. Guy Miller, Jr. This is the first child In the Miller family. CARS DIVISION Phone 1450 SERVICE 350 South First Street AUTO REPAIRING Lane Phone 680 Phone 4022 T: , JccalBdeB . HOME FROM COAST Mies Al berta Simon of 1428 East Pierce street, who haa been spending some time on the coast, has returned home. "GOES TO LOS ANGELES Mrs. A. M. 'May-field -left on Wednesday night " for Los Angeles and the beaches to be absent three months. COUPLE TO MARRY A license to marry was issued yesterday to F. R. Oberlander. 36, of Salt Lake City, Utah, and Mary V. Hall. 25. of Rich. mond. Va. CHECKING DELINQUENT TAX- ES W. H. Keegan of Globe, secre tary of the taxpayers' association of Gila county, was In Phoenix yester day checking delinauent taxes due in all counties of the state. BACK TO DUTY Miss Marlon Jackson, stenographer with the state corporation commission, has returned to ner duties after a two weeks va cation. RETURNS AS BRIDE Mrs. L. L. Harlan of the insurance department of the corporation commission re turned yesterday from a two weeks' vacation. When she left on her va cation she was Miss Lucile Schnebly, her marriage being a recent event. DEATH BY HEART FAILURE A coroner's jury at the Inquest held by Coroner Nat T. McKee last night over the body of Francisco Ferreida, age'd 45 years, who dropped dead yesterday morning while trucking flour at the Southwest Flour and Feed 5 Mills, Sixth and Jackson streets,, found death due to heart failure. Ferreida lived at Seenteenth and Jackson streets. - GO TO SAN DIEGO Dr. and Mrs. J. W. Herbert of 621 East Monroe street left on. Wednesday evening ror. ban Diego where they will re main until the latter part of Septem ber. A wide circle of friends will be glad to know that he and his popular wife will return to Phoenix after the heated term : to make their future home in this city. WASHOUT IS SMALL The reDort received in Phoenix that 35 miles of the Tucson-Nogales aighway had been washed out was greatly exagger ated, according to word received by Thomas Maddock, state engineer. Mr. Maddock was advised that traffic was tld up only an hour and a half, the heavy rains filling small washes be tween mileposts 8 and 10 north of Nogales. ESTABLISH TWO ROADS Two roads were declared in a resolution passed yesterday by the board of supervisors to be public highways. One of the roads connects with the lower Buckeye road at Buckeye and extends one mile west from Buckeye on the line between sections six and seven, The other ' road begins at section 14 and runs south two and a half miles to the Buckeye canal. Both roads are to be 66 feet in width. APPEAL .TO HIGH COURT No tice -of appeal to the supreme court from the. decision of a jury in the superior court was filed yesterday by Attorneys Moore and Garcia for Con suelo R. Adair who with her hus band, Tomas Adair, recently sought to recover. 120,000 damages from cer tain city officials, alleging false im prisonment in the city jail. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the defendants in the case and held that detention of an individual in the jail for investigation ' did not constitute false imprisonment. CASE UNDER ADVISEMENT After a preliminary hearing yester day. Justice Nat T. McKee took the case of Charles " Sorenson, charged with' passing a bogus check, under advisement and will give his decision at 1:30 o'clock 'this afternoon. Sor. enson was arrested in Taft.- Califor nia, and brought back to Phoenix by Deputy Sheriff C. P. Anderson. He was committed to the county jail under a bond of 1600. .MORE COUNTY ASSESSMENTS Pima, luma and Mohava counties were, filed yesterday with the state lax commission,- wnicn nas now re ceived all but four copies of the as sessment rolls from the 14 counties in the state. , The valuation placed on Pima county's assessable property was given as $61,610,249, the largest single item being the New Cornelia Copper company, which was given a valuation of $22,751,410. This amount exceeds the entire valuation placed on Yuma county, which was given as $21,351,315. Mohave county figures totaled $28,505,783. -SUPPLIES TO ; BRANCH OF FICES With . the ' sending needed supplies to- the 30 branch offices of the Automobile Club of Arizona throughout the state the organiza tion began yesterday to make its activities tel. throughout the length and breadth of Arizona. The supplies. including office supplies, maps, book lets of road Information, leaflets, copies of the state motor vehicle act. receipt blanks, postal cards for roaa reports ana various other items will have been distributed within a few days, according to Sidney J. Ross, president - and general manager or the club, following which an active campaign for members will be In stituted. SUE FOR DAMAGES Suit to re cover damages of $15,232.08 alleged to have been sustained because ot delay to a shipment of wool was filed yesterday against the Arizona i.ast ern Railway company by the Arizona Traffic . association. They auexe George Scott delivered two carloads of wool to the railroad company in Mesa on April 8, 1920, for shipment to Boston, Mass. One of the cars, they allege, arrived at its destination 88 days later and the Other 114 aays later. Had the wool arrived in .Bos ton 20 davs after shipment which they , claim is a reasonable time for transportation, it would have sold ai 82 cents a pound, but due to the delay one car sold for 64 cents and the other 60 cents a pound, and they ask for the difference. Cuticura Soap Will Help You Clear Your Skin Washington Street GARAGE 8C8 West Washington St. Federal a Goodyear Tires Red Seal Dry Cells and Sparkera Open Evenings and Sunday GASOLINE & OIL Phone 4430 - Harry Cresswell COMPETITION III PING BIDS TO LOWER THE COST For First Time In Years More Than One Bid Is Received For City Pav ing Twohy Bros. In Field Competitivs bids - for city paving contracts were received by the city commission yesterday. It was the first time in years that more than one bid has been received by the city for a paving contract . Its effect, members of the Commission believe, will be to reduce paving costs here. Incidentally, it marked the advent of the Twohy Bros, contracting com pany as a bidder for city paving, one of the two bids "received yesterday being entered by that firm. The sec ond bid was entered by A. C. Peabody as attorney for Dan La Roe. Bids were for the paving of McDowell road, from Central to Eleventh avenue. Under the terms of the city char ter, the contract for paving work is awarded to the lowest bidder, provid ing said bid is for the kind of pav ing included in plans and specifica tions for the work as prepared by the city engineer. Both bids received yesterday were accompanied by the necessary bonds to show good faith. Company Had Monopoly For the past several years paving contracts in Phoenix have attracted little attention from road builders and contractors. The Southwestern Con tracting company was the only firm in the local field bidding on contracts for a period of years, with tne, resuu that all contracts were awarded to that firm, which has recently sus npnrlnl nnerations. Fight of city commission members for cheaper, paving rates seem to be hMu-incr fruit. It was mtimaiea yea terday. With competitive bids being received for city Daving contracts commission members are coniiaeni. that costs will be reduced. The bids of Twohy Bros, company vesterday for the 11 blocks from Cen tral avenue to Eleventh avenues was $24,683.59. The bid of tne Dan La not mmnsnv Was S2S.650.i.- . The Twohy Bros, company nas about completed paving McDowell road from Eleventh avenue to Six Points and thence west, as the Chris tie road, for several miles. It is pro posed to construct the city highway of cement-concrete paving materiaL An ordinance directing City Man ager V. A. Thompson to draw a war rant for $3,000 in favor of the Game well Fire Alarm Telegraph company, in payment for 20 Peerless Succession fire alarm boxes, was adopted by a unanimous vote. Purchase of a 4-passenger motor car to cost $2,703 was also ordered by the city. - . A communication from 1. J. Cox, eiunrestinar that property owners us- lng excavations under the streets for commercial purposes snouia pay tne city a reasonable rent tor same, was silso- received. Considerable revenue "would ' be forthcoming through such a plan, he nointed out. and it will bring some relief to the overburdened taxpayers of the city. he. said. The matter was referred to the city manager and the city . building inspector tor , recom mendation. , ' Paving ot East Moreland street, from Twelfth to Fourteenth streets, was ordered postponed as a result of protests filed with the commission Dy property owners yesterday. o SOON TO RESUMi OIL WELL; WORK Work o.. the Tannehill oil well near Beardsley will soon be in progress ngain, it is stated, as the car of 10 inch, casing for want of which the drillers haa been com pelled temporarily to shut down Is ex pected to arrive in a day or two. Fuel for the boiler was being hauled to the well vesterday. MORE BOY BABIES Boys led the girls In the number of births report ed in Phoenix during the month of June to the state board of health. There were 23 male and 18 females born during the month, according to the records. ' ' HOME FROM VACATION Clay ton Bennett, secretary of the board of directors of state institutions, re turned yesterday from a two weeks' vacation on the Callfornian coast. MAY ISSUE SHARES The corpo ration commission yesterday issued a permit to the Brittania Gold Mines company permitting It to issue, to Didrick W'ggers 600,000 shares of stock In exchange for 30 claims irt the vicinity of Salome and to sell 100.000 shaee at 25 cents a share. ENTERTAIN CARTWRIGHT CLUB The Cartwright Community club will be entertained on Friday evening at the home of Mrs. John Williams on the Christy road. A so cial hour will be spent repairing the books belonging to the Cartwright school library. All members and la dies who are interested are Invited.' THE GRASSHOPPER PERIL Just as fast as America passes one' crisis something else come.s along to menace its peace of mind. Now" it's an army of grasshoppers! From Colorado Springs comes the war bulletin that an army of grass hoppers 15 miles wide and 20 miles long is advancing across the country, recruiting new members as it ad vances. They have the 'Jump" on all opponents and are said to be hop ping mad about something. Dealing with the ordinary grass hopper is a rather easy matter if one cares to deal with one. But when they become militant and mobilize it is a different matter. Tou can't keep a good grasshopper down, as the old saying goes; hence keeping an army of them down presents very real ob stacles. America, it is feared, Is to tally unprepared for defensive or ag gressive warfare against grasshop pers. You recall, of course, what Kipling said in that famous battle poem, Gunga Something or Other: "With his moosick on his back. He would skip to the attack." Skipping to an attack has ever been a great war tactic and nobody can do it like a grasshopper. They are great skippers. . Have you ever seen a grasshopper THE ONCE OVEP Ji By H. . PHILLIPS 11 U. Flying Too Slow . For This Bird M. Stirfev. 'Harris tjtckie LOS ANGELES They tried .to take "Dickie," a prize roller canary automobile riding in his cage. "Dick ie" objected and insisted on riding on the steering wheel. For months now he has ridden to town each morning perched on the wheel In front of his owner,' Mrs. Shirley Harris. . He is soon to be graduated into aviation and will be taken on a trip through cloudland perched on the wing of an airplane if it goes fast enough. x 0 ' WHEN MAN EATS TO LIVE One of the first things a young man who wants to see the world should learn is how to eat. Otis Warren Barrett says so. and If any one knows he. does. He has been wandering Into queer parts of the world for the government for years past and he Is never sick. - "Train the palate," says Mr. Bar rett. "I can live on palm oil chop In Liberia or raw fish in Japan and never, have a qualm.. I may not prefer monkey boiled In grease and eaten1 with the bare hand. But I can eat monkeys with the best of monkey eaters. - The man who is particular, about his chop had best stay at home." Mr. Barrett has made a success of wandering. He is one of the greatest of ' our agricultural experts. His latest exploit is to teach the natives of the palm countries how to make white sugar out of palm sap which they never knew before by which process four hundred and fifty thou sand tons of the finest sugar imagin able has been added to the sugar total of the world. In all his years of wandering In swamp and Jungle he has never been seriously ill., and he attributes this In part to the fact that he can live at the . local table M-ithout repining. . "Cassava paste isn't very good. said Mr. Barrett, remlnlscently. "It doesn't taste like anything., and it Is so sticky that if a man were to at tempt to chew it his jaws might be clamped together or perhaps his teeth might be pulled out. . One Just makes a little ball of it, rolls it in gravy as a lubricant, and lets it Blip down." . O -5 CUSTARD8 Watch the custard that it does not bake too long and become dry and stringy. If you are not quite sure that your milk -is of the best quality, put a heaping teaspoon of cornstarch into the custard mixture and it will not be watery. . -o UNDELIVEREDTELEG R A M S The following undelivered telegrams are at the .local office of the West ern Union: Ben Gallsworthy, D. M. Anderson. C. H. Bamer. FUNERAL OF MURRAY BRYANT The body of Murray Bryant, 20 year old employee on the Clan ton and I.yall ranch.' 28 miles north of Agua aliente. who was found dead on the desert Sunday morning by a fellow employe.-w as buried on Tuesday by Sheriff 3.KI. Polhamus of Tuma coun ty near the spot where he died, ac cording to word brought back to Phoenix yesterday by Deputy Sheriff Fred L. . Meeks. Deputy Meeks and Earl Lyall left for the ranch Tues day after receiving word of the young man's death, which was thought to have been caused by sunstroke. o , HOWDY NOBLE! ' ' Open House Fri day night in the Shrine Auditor ium. Cards, mu sic and punch. Special musical program pre pared by Xobles Kisselburg and Carpenter. as sisted by the Chanters. Drop in any time af ter 8 o'clock. H. B. St. Claire, It Recorder. when he was real angry and in a fighting mood? In such a state ot mind he is very savage. He loses all control and there Is no' use trying to sit down and reason with him. He will fairly leap at you at the very suggestion of a parley. -And the worst thing about a grassohpper is that he will not "stay put," as the saying goes. Even though you pin him down to something, he will fly off to some thing else the moment your back is turned. Of course, you may pursue a grass hopper, if so disposed, and overtake him . . . but a man looks so darned foolish trying to out-hop one! And neighbors do talk so! Personally, we let grasshoppers go their way. but if it is true that they have taken to mobilizing their forces and attempting mob violence they will find they have gone a step too far. That's the trouble with certain elements of our population: you give them an inch, and they take a mile.: presently they try jumping all ovor you! At last reports the First Army of the Grasshoppers of Southwestern America were nearlng El Paso Coun ty. Colorado. If the commanding grasshopper knows anything he will disband his forces before the thing goes too far. Or presently he may find he hasn't a leg to stand on. COREY SAYS GARPENTIER DEKEY FIGHT WAS ONE SIDED MURDER; FOREIGNER JUST ORDINARY FIGHTER By Herbert Corey ' NEW YORK. July 20. i his is cold, gray dawn stuff. - It is written days after the fight between Dempsey and tjarpentier. Or, more accurately, days after Mr. Carpentler hit ' Mr. Dempsey once, ineffectively, and then pugilistically died with, his boots on. It isn't a story of the fight or the fighters, though they appear in it It is rather a few coupled-up reflec tions upon our national liking- for temporary neurosis. - : ' The truth, as the truth appears to me, is that almost 100,000 people at a total cost to themselves of more than a million and a half dollars, kidded themselves at Boyle's Thirty.- .Acres into the belief that they had seen a great fight. Whereas, ; bless their hearts,-in the conviction of the under signed they had been the willing wit nesses of a one-sided murder. In my story immediately after the fight I said that Carpentler had never had a chance. That he had but one blow, and that 'Viad crumpled against Dempsey's steel defenses. That be knew nothing whatever about in fighting, and that while he was mag nificently game gameness is a thing expected of a pugilist Iron Joe Grim's Record Iron Joe Grim, by that standard, is more heroic than Carpentier, because it Ubed to take the best of them ten or twelve rounds to put him out. Sometimes he never was put out, but, chopped beaten, pulped, bleeding, swollen, hung on to the end of the route. Tet no one ever thought, of Iron Joe as a hero. He was a bit of raw meat hrown to the carnivorous lions of fight fandom. Whenever he fought they knew they would see gore. I have seen no occasion to change my opinion since then. But to It has been added a sort of a wonder at the extent to which the American people can succumb to hysterics. Every one who cared to know knew precisely what Carpentier is and might be. He had one good hand and great speed. By the combination he had been able to whip many men who lacked shock -absorbing qualities. He had become light heavyweight champion of the world by licking poor old Battled Levinsky (and that "Battled," Mr. Proof-reader. Is intentional). He wasn't "Battling" any more - when Carpentier took his faded wreath away. Nothing that Carpentler had ever shown made him appear a fit antagonist for Dempsey, though tech nically he was about the only chal lenger in eight. Was Sentimental Favorite What I mean is that no one who had watched the two men should have been able to persuade himself that Carpentier had a ghost of a chance to whip this solid, steel ai mahogany, rawhide and wire fighting man. though by virtue of victories over other men ho had become Demp sey's logical antagonist. .1 do not be lieve that Carpentier himself thought he could.-. The Carpentier- money. I am told, was ail placed on his ability to stay a definite number of rounds.., He is a fit ring companion. I think, for Tommie Gibbons or Bill Brennan to which I add my aiaeere belief that either of them can whip him. No one suspects that either Brennan , lv STARTING THIS MORNING : Exceptional Reductions on FINEST QUALM. M'S Rogers Peet Society Brand Adler-Rochester - - , . - ' i - . . : .- - ', ' . - - $40, $45, $50 Suits at.;.:....... ...$27.50 ' $60, $65,, $70 Suits at. .......... ..... ........ .. ....$37.50 $75, $80, $85 SuiU at........... I..:;......:...... 1$470 " EVERYTHING INCLUDED Semi-Annual Sale "MAM ATT AN" SHIRTS $3.50 Shirts .$2.65 $6.00, $6.50 Shirts ...... . .$4.55 $4.00 Shirts .............. $3.15 $7.00, $7.50, $8.00 Shirts . . . $5.65 $5.00 Shirts ........'......$3.85 $8.50, $10.00 Shirts ....... .$6.85 $12.00 Shirts .$7.85 USE OF THE FINEST MATERIALS, COUPLED WITH TAIL ORING OF AN EXCEPTIONALLY HIGH STANDARD, HAS BROUGHT THE "MANHATTAN" SHIRT TO A PRE-EMINENCE IN ITS FIELD. Dark Colored Palm Beach Trousers Reduced to $4.85 All "Knox" Straw Hat Half Price All Striped and Polo Flannel Trousers Reduced or Gibbons is at this moment a fit match for Dempsey. but the Ameri can public went wild about Carpen tier. There lsn t a doubt that he was the sentimental favorite throughout the fight. The truth Is that we had - been ureeK-goaaed ana benowerea to a (point at which we the public were about ready to twine roses In our hair. Carpentier is a nice looking man. His nose is rather prominent, his eyes are good, his hair Is blond. his legs straight, and he hag a pleas ant expression.. - You can match ini to the last item in any haberdashery, but if you dropped into the necktie mart and hinted to the salesman that he waa a Greek god he. would either put you out, or else, rightfully de ciding that you were coocoo, he would call for the wired wagon. " How the Lady Writere Raved Lady writers raved about Carpen tier s legs, which seems to me. an old fashioned person, as a severe thing for a lady writer to do. They were good- legs. ' Dempsey has a better pair, more shapely, stronger, ' and about as fast. Eminent authors told of Carpentier'r luminous eyes. His bathrobe came in for kisses. He was called fragile and slender and wraith like. Whereas I submit that 172 pounds of muscular flesh, trained to the last minute, cannot rightfully be termed a wraith. Some one draped the lilies of France about his brow. One cartoonist drew a picture in which Foch and Joan of Arc and Hehro of Navarre and Napoleon, and every other great character of Fran i waa standing in Carpentier's corner. Carpentier was d'-Artagnan. Where as Carpentler.. in brutal fact, is a ) pugilist who haa made his living out or pugilism for 14 years. He is a cold, cruel,' merciless pugilist. A young English amateur named Mit chell, desirous of testing his own quality, paid Carpentier 100 pounds to meet him in private. Carpentier cut him to pieces as a boy might pull the wings off a fly. instead of outing' him quickly and ending his suffering. Carpentier'a War Record. . I do not know what Carpentier's war record was. I do -know that he spent a great part of the war about the cafes of Paris. The fact that he was decorated means absolutely nothing, a sany one will testify who knows of conditions in France. He was the national pugilistic hero of his country. The French not only felt that he should be saved from pos sible danger by a German bomb, but that he should he decorated on gen eral principles. . All this is nothing against Carpen tier. He merely runs true to pugilistic form. One does not expect too much of a pugilist. But the American pub lic, aided and abetted and driven thereto by American writers, forgot that the contest was essentially that of two bruisers in a squared ring, and began to yammer.' about the moral. Intellectual and sentimental Items In volved, r Because be threw himself away against Dempsey's iron arms, he was -praised for gallantry. k An American manager would have rated nun for stupidity. Because he stag gered Dempsey with one blow into which, he pjit all he had. even to the extent of breaking a bone In his hand McDougall 32 W. Washington Street Phoenix one would think that he almost won the championship. - Dempsey' Took All He Had. - ! To take is as essentia a part 'of fighting as to give. Dempsey took al. he could give, and at the end of the round was outf.'ghting him. Aty one can hit Dempsey. But. so cess pletely twisted were our ideas that to hit the r-hamnion became a moral victory. Instead oi a fight hetwe'ea two husky, well-conditioned- well paid gladiators, it has become an Homeric contest between Brute Force and Soul. - Which, I maintain, is pure drivel - - - - Nowadays they say that Carpentler may fight Gibbons or Brennan. I hope that. If such a contest is arv ranged, the lady ' writers, male aodr female, will lar off. .Let us assess Carpentier for precisely what hf Is a mighty good fighting map nd foiget about his Soul and His' Beau tiful Legs and his Luminous Eyes. In unskilled hands this tashajjeut Greek gods sounds as thougtfTne'boy were -a burlesaue . queen ' Furthe,r--v more; it starts a lot of us listening to. pretty birdies. - o; THE BROTHERHOOD ; OF American Yeomen have. very- interesting- meeting planned - for - tonight.1 Tte- freshments . will be served ' and all members are urged to be Present. Visitors always w elcome. ' . MRS. J. E. GILLEN. It Thone 3351; Correspondent. ; Arizona Lodge No. 2. F. and. A. M., will meet In Masonic hall. Thursday morning at 9:30, for the purpose f conducting the funeral of the - late brother. T. S. Malev of Corenade Lodge No. 8.- All brethren requested to attend. . , V ': ' , 2t G. I. HAMMOVS.XV. M. . PER HOUR Auto Repaircj 50c Work Guaranteed Phone 6J4 Will Call for and Deliver Your Car" Fortnightly by "O" Steamer -NEW YORK, CHERBOURG, SOUTHAMPTON.HAMBUR&S. 1st, 2nd and 3rd class passengers, THE ROYAL MAIL . 8TEAM PACKET CO. K S3t Post t, San Francieee . Or Local Agente ' ' - " mm PA8SENGER AND FREIQHTV4)CR." , VICE BETWEEN . New Tork. Boston. Philadelphia. Baltimore, Montreal. Portland U - . AND ' .. f,.- t ' Liverpool. ' Southampton, Londeaw derry. Cherbourg. Antwerp, Lonen. Glasgow. Havre. Rotterdam. Medlter.. raceao, Plymouth, Bristol. Daaxi, Levant. Hamburg. . , . . , For rates of passenger sailings general Information, apply tet- . - W. WARD OAVIES - - T General Ticket Agent for Arize 441 West Washington Street 4" -Phoenix. Arizona, SUITS Hand Tailored Palm Beach Suits Reduced to . $14.75 'Hartmann" Wardrobe Trunks Suit Cases, Hand Bags Reduced & Cassou 14 West Van if t