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r Pi Hesald. HE ICEN PHCEXIX, MARICOPA COUXTY, A. T. WEDNESDAY, JULY 9, 1879. XEW SERIES XO. 28. VOL. 3. XO. 21. WHOLE XO. 101. The Herald. Pibllihad Teij Saturday and Wednesday. GOSPER &. McCLINTOCK, PROPRIETORS. Sciscsiftiox Rater One copj one year. - - -One copy mix months, - - -By carrier, in fuccuix. per month, AOTtBTiiiita Kirit: One inch, one insertion. Each uubsequeut insertion. Profesnlonal cards, per month. $5 00 2 AO 5Ucte $ nn 1 00 1 50 Cbari.e W. Crane is our Authorized Agent in San Francisco. PROFESSIONAL. II. II . PATRICK, Civil Engineer Peputy t'. S Mineral flurreyorfor Arizona. OrricK With W. A. Hancock Phoenix, A.T. II. M. HAYEK, Attorney and Counselor at law Phoenix, A. T. All kinds of Legal Business promptly attended to. BKJ. IIORGAV Attorney and Counselor at Iaw, Tucson, Arizona. All law bnsiness will receive prompt and ; carcim attention. 1. A. ZABR1SK.IE. B. HEREFORD. IIIiREI'OKD A. ZABRINKIK, Attorneys and Connneiora at Iiaw And Notary Public. Office on Myerw street, opposite Palace Hotel. Tucson. Arizona. II. L. BOSSOX, 91. I. Fhyaielan and Mnreeon. (Uradnate of the University of Va.) Offers his professional services to the people of Phoenix and vicinity. Office N. W Corner Washington and Center Streets, op posite the Post Office. I. H. COX. A. C. BAKER. COX Jk. BAKER. Attorneys at "Law, Phcsnix. A. T. Office. np-sta!rs. in Capital building, on Washington street. WHARTOK A SIIEF.TK. rhynirtana and rjeon. Will attend professionnl calls at any hour of the dav or night. Oflice east side of the plaza, o". H. P. Sheets. M. 1).. late of Reno. Nev.: J. E. Wharton, M. !., V. S. Medical Examiner. J. W. 8TEP1IEXBOX. Attorney at "Law. PnatNix Arizona J. It. ItJI-GLAH, Architect and Superintendent. Plans, specifications and estimates care fully prepared. Office with Drs. Sheets & Wharton, east side of the plaza. 5. I. COXYE1W, Fhyaielan and Surgeon. (Late of Visalia. Cal.) Office on Washington street, two doors from Montezuma. JIL11S W. VAX NLVCKi Attorney and Connsielor at Law, McMillenville, Maricopa Co., A. T. Will practice In all the courts of the Terri tory. JOHX T. ALNAP, Attorney and Counselor at J Law, Phojnix. Arizona. All business promptly attended to. Office with th District Attorney. raosiTi jcdoe. notaut rt'BUC. WM. A. HAXCOCK, Attorney at I a w , Phoenix, A. T. 3T-Land business in all departments a specialty. JOII.V I. UREUU. M. PhyMiclan,Mnreeon A Aceoucher. References withoat permission: F. M. CocWrill. U. S. Senator. Mo.; Col. John T. Crisp. Democratic nominee for Congress from Missouri. Office two miles south Hay den.s Ferry. Arizona. HL.AKK Sc. CO.. A!AVE1W. Gold dust, gold and silver bullion and -res of every description melted and assayed. All assays guaranteed. Prices of ore assays: Silver and gold. lead. copper, 5. Sample can be sent by mail or express, and returns will be promptly made. Office with Wells, Fargo Co., Prescolt. BUSINESS CARDS. FOR SALE. A complete set of , Surveyor's and Civil Engineer's - Instruments, for sale reasonably. They arc in first class condition and guaranteed. Apply at this office, or to the un dersigned. "0-tf WM. ISAAC. FIOXEER BAKERY! Washington Street. Nortlieatt Corner of the Plaza, Eight Loaves or Bread for Sl.OO Fruit Cakes and Pastry of all kinds, for wedding parties, etc.. prepared to order. OTTO GIESENUOFER, To Academies, High Schools and Private Families. AN EXPERIENCED EDUCATOR OF youths of both sexes; recently arrived in tins town, teaches LATIN, GREEK, FRENCII, SPANISn And nigh School course of the English branches. Address. PROF. P. G. JOYCE, Sl-tr Pucesii. P. O. FOR SALE, From 5 to 20 acres Of Land with Wator Privilege, within ONE-HALF MILE OF FIICENIX. ALSO It In the Town or Phornlx. -' wst. a. tia:cocs. MISCELLANEOUS. PICO HOUSE, Los Angeles. Cal. The Only First-Claws Hotel ii Southern California. JOHN WHITSEV Manager. Big Bug Station, YAVAPAI CO., A. T. 27 "Hilen from Frenrott and WO Slllen from Phoenix, on the Itlaek Canyon Road. Having purchased the above station, the traveling pnblic will always find meals, grain aud hay at all times. A bar, with a good stock of 'liquors on band. 8XVDER. MAlXt EV A CO. T. Olson, Boot and Shoe Maker. Washington strrot.afljoininK the (Store of Caataneda. Fashionable Boots and Shoes of the best material made to order in elegant style. Perfect Fits Guaranteed. T give my entire attention to custom made work, and' I have every facility for giving entire satisfaction. Send in Tour orders. II, I;. GEIIMAX. Practical Boot & Shoe Maker. Boots and Shoes, MADE TO ORDER, AND REPAIRING NEATLY DONE, EShop at Waterman's Tin Shop. ICE! ICE!! LOU NT BROS., Will deliver ICE to any part of the city at the following rates; Ten Pounds and over per da". Six C'entn per Pound. Vnder. Ten Pounds per day, Ncvra Onts per Pound. Leave orders at the Factory, or with K. Ganz, Washington street. 95 tf Wine Rooms, Miss Katie Hayward - - Prop. Knvine lessed the Old Prewery Saloon, and refitted it entire, and added a' suderior quality of WINES LIQUORS & CIGARS. I would be pleased to entertain my old friends and the public generally. 95 tf MISS KATIE. Fast Freight Line BETWEEN Phoenix and Maricopa. Freight delivered in One Day. The Public are Informed that we have e tabliabed a Kant Freight Line between this city and the railroad. Addree all enm muni cat io us. 3I AKULKV e It LA k Fluent x. A. T. T. A. Waterman HiS OPENED A NEW Tin Shop. Opposite the Post-office. Prompt attention given to Repairing and Job Work. A krse assortment of Tin and Sheet IrOT3 oenprtfrtly or bac. MISCELLANEOUS. STAR " BAKBERSHOP. FELIX DEES, Formerlv with William Stnrcnbnrr ha fitted np a Bartwr Shop opposite the Herald Office, where he will he pleaid to o hi nnmeronrj friende and the public in jreueral. Khnvine. Shampooing and Hair C'nrriiig done in the Latet-t Siyle and sati fuctiou gnaraateed. PHOENIX ART GALTJERY Southwest Corner of Plaza. THE UNDERSIGNED. IIAVIXO COM pleted his new Gallery, is low pre pared to execute all work in his line in the best style and at reasonable rates. A complete assortment of ARIZONA SCENERY alwavs on hand. A fnll line of Picture Frames and Mould ings. Pictures framed to older. G. II. ROTIIROCK. White & Walters KEEP A FIRST-CLASS On Washington Street, Phoenix. Imported "Wines, Liquors and Cigars. Cheap Living! Board reduced to $ 7 00 per week. Single leals 50 cents. at the Cosmopolitan Restaurant. WM. HOLLAXD. The United States BREWERY, Wishes to inform the public and lovers of good Lager Beer!! That they have reduced the price of ! u.nticu uui:i y hi Three Dollars per Dozen, In order to allow the poor as well hs the riHi, to obtain a beverage hiclily beneficial to health. M. n'EHKFRETZ I.ats of Salt Lake City Brewerv. THE BALDWIN. The Lendinn HotH of Snn Frnncifco and the most elegantly appointed hotel in the world, over Sl.MHOM having been ex pended by Mr. Baldwin in itn construction and furnishing-. Headquarters nnv and navy. Special accommodation fin" families and larire parties. Price th6 name as at other firs-claH hotel to per day. Special contract" willJw made for perma nent boarder. The .-hotel coaches and car Haires in waiting at all bontH and railway depots. Jiot.ms ran he reserved before arrival by telegraphing the Baldwin. A. MACABEE, BUbinesa JJauaer. Young America HoUl and Restaurant, GILLETT, AKIZOXA. Board by the Da- or AVeek. Oniorr in tlio lnrntinn nf Iho Ttitll nf tt.o Tiptop Mining Company. Persons visiting America Hotel and Restaurant the cheapest and beet place to put np at. Terms reason able. SINGLE & ANDERSON, Piopr'a. Washington rihe public are respectfully Informed that X 1 have moved my barber Fhop to the building on Washington pfr;t lately occu pied by the druK Rtorc of Dr. Conyefs, and that I have also opened a firjt-class batliing estnblishment. By strict attention to bnpfnp I hope to warrant a fair share of your patronne. WM. S i L'KNBt RG. T atJ of San Francirco. MISCELLANEOUS. FURNITURE ! The undersigned has on hand a large assortment of Furniture and Upholstery. Also manufactures to order FINE CABINET WARE, DOORS. WAINSC'OATING. AND OFFICE FITTINGS. Eastern made chairs constantly on hand. On Washington street, adjoining the store of Nathan & Co. 67-tl A. COEKA. Livery Stable! Washington street adjoining the I'lieuix Hotel. Horses Boarded by the Week or Month. Day Keeps always on hflnd the best quality of wheat and grain hay, barley and oats. Good accommodation for teomters and travelers. Keeps constantly on hsnd fine turnouts. Horser boarded at my stable will receive the best attention. GEO. HAMLIN. CALIFORNIA BAKERY, ADAMS STREET, One bloric north of the Herald Office: also in the rear of Copeland's Sash aud Blind depot. Fresh It read Alvvay on Hand. RYE AND GRAHAM BREAD made to order; also PIF.S AXIS ('ARES. J3?Prices to suit the times. CARL SCHERRER. (Late of Pnn Bernardino.) 88 tf Notice to Farmers Persons desiring to purchase machiner of any kind will do well to order the same through J. A. S1IITH. Aeent, for Frank Tli'others. AVe arc ready at short notice to furnish Mowers, Reapers. Headers, Separators, Engines, etc., And to ive time on the same. .1. A.svmif h. Dudley House, Gurley St., Trescott, A. T. FIRST - CLASS HOUSE A On the European Plan. V" rw and Clean Bods for codgers, and Elegaxit Rooms for families. FRED WILLIAMS. Prop'r. T. J. MORGAN, Gurley street, one door east P. C, Prescott, Arizona Dealer in Diamond?, "Watches, Clocks. Jew elry and Silverware, Spectacles, Gold Pens and Pencils, etc. Watchmokrand Manufacturing Jewelert. All kinds of jewelry and silverware made from native gold and silver. Kn cravings of every description. Seal presseis and ribbon t-tanips. MATERIAL, The iindersisnd ha just received a large and complete asbortment of DOORS. SASH. BLIXRK. nnl WIXBOW! Which are of a better quality and will be Hold cheaper than at the Sash i'actiry In Prcscott. All order promptly attended to. Adnm Ftreet, one-half block north of the Herald pflice. r.. I. COI'I'.I.AM). BRICK FOR SALE. THE VN PER SIGN ED WISnES TO inform the public that be haa un hand Brick of a Superior Quality, And in a-y quantity desired Yard, Sent! eat Corner of Town. U. IJ. I.lSVItLE. E. IRVINE if- CO. A EJEW DEPARTURE. Cash Down Or No Sale. WE P WILL HATE THE A.Y OR KEEP OUR GOODS! We hereby notify our friends and the public generally that from this time forth we will cease to sell for credit on any terms whatever. We are aware that in order to do this Ave will have to sell cheaper than our neigh bors, and we are prepared to do so. As we are building we are very much pressed for cash, and therefore it will be better for us to sell for cost than to sell on ever so short a time, no matter, how good the birycr. The facts in the case are just these It is a necessity with us to have our goods or to have the wherewith to buy more. Of course we do not expect to do so much business, but we are de termined to do what we can. Our Lumber Yard is now full and nearly com plete. Provisions, Groceries, Dry Goods. Clothing, Boots and Shoes, Fruits, Honey, Summer Tlats, Ranch Buttei, Paints, Oils'. Glass, Putty, Crockery Ware, Iron and Steel, Lamps, Powder, Fuse, &c , &C, etc., &c, &c. rvine & Go. Keep on the West side of the Plaza. Remember the sign over the do r, E. IRVINE & GO. Variety Store Ticnda Barata. THE PHOEXIX HERALD. SUM l-WKKKLY KDITIOX. Wednesday. July 9. Water flights. The Supreme Court of California at the May term, 1S79, decided the following case relating to water rights, viz., Stine Canal Co. rs. Kern Island Irrigating Canal Co. In Aug., 1S74, the Kern Island Irrigating Ca nnl Co. appropriated a portion of the waters of Kern river, and conducted the same by means of a canaj to the Old South Fork, from which it was taken out lower down the stream, and so continued to do tip to about the spring of 1S78, when the waters were conveved through the canals of the defendant, without uniting the same with the Old South Fork. All of the water companies which are joined as plaintiffs, except the Goose Lake Ca nal Co., appropriated portions of the waters of Kern river prior to the ap propriation by the Kern Island Canal Co., and consequently their right to the portions of the water by them re spectively appropriated is superior to that of the defendant. The right of the defendant is subordinate to that of the plaintiffs, and it is not entitled to divert the waters of the river to such an extent that a sufficient amount thereof will net flow down the river to supply the plaintiffs with their usual quantity. The injunction granted by the District Court ordered modified in accordance with above ruling. A question of subterranean water rights was decided in the case of Hale ts. ilcLea. The defendant had diverted the whole body of a subter ranean stream used by plaintiff. The point decided in this cate was that the defendant could not exercise any greater rights in respect to the diver sion or use of the waters of the sub terranean stream flowing "across his land to the spring of the plaintiff, than if he had been an upper and the plaintiff a lower riparian owner on a surface stream flowing across their respective lands. The defendant can only claim ns much water as he needs for his cattle and for domestic pur poses, leaving the surplus to flow to the spring of the plaintiff in its nat- ural channel But the defendant here exceececi ins rinis ov (livening tne whole body of the ural channel- water from its nat- Itepttblicaiis in California. All the conventions have now been held, and the candidates are before the people. It is apparent that the Republican ticket is by far the strongest and most acceptable of the whole number, and it is equally evi dent that Ihe Republican party enters the campaign under the most encour aging auspices. The II. B's have lit erally fallen to pieces, after vainly endeavoring to strengthen themselves by effecting fusions, first with the Workingmen, and then with the Democracy. There is nothing left of the party, and it has been so badly and dishonestly managed that it can never retrieve its blunders. The Democrats themselves have frankly confessed that they have no hope of electing their ticket, and the W. I. C. has an equally forlorn prospect be fore it. The Republicans alone are justified in anticipating a briliant future, but they must not imagine that victory is to be had without ex ertion. An energetic and aggressive campaign should bc:rin at once, and be carried on with unabated vigor until the eve of the election. The opposition is totally demoralized and broken up, and all that is required to give assurance of success is a reso- lute advance. Si(crtiiwnU Jiccvrdl Union. California Polities. Xew York, July 5th. The Jlcrald says: The final upshot of the stormy Stale Convention at Sacramento City indicates that the Democratic party of California will maintain ils seper ate organization, but makes it im probable that it will carry the State. California is more nearly in a con dition of politeal chaos than any other State in the Union. It is so bedeviled with Kearneyism, and so split up into factions, founded on wild crotchets, that outsiders can take little interest in the contusing sqi'abbles. The election of Membeis of Congress in California is the only thing in the cTiniug contest which is of any particular concern to the country at large. But the politics of the Slate are in so distracted a con dition the two Democratic members of last Congress arc likely enough to be replaced by Nationals, or men of some odd political stripe. A mail route will r,t Piit-.tronia scon. be e tab'u-died Agricultural Depression in Ens-laud. London, July, 5tb. Id the House of Commons last night the Govern inent agreed to the motion of Henry Caplin (Conservative) for tht ap pointment of a royal commission tu inquire into the causes of agricultu ral depression and how far they were created by, or are remediable by legis lation. The matter caused a debate. All sides were agreed that mie great cause of the depression ?;as Ameri can competion. Cnplin in his open ing speech, said he regarded free trade as a questiod definiteley settled, but lie could not shut his eyes to the failure of many, of the predictions of the advocates of free trade. He did not propose a remedy now, but only asked for inquiry. He pointer" out that the future fate of British agriculture was dependent upon the cost of production in Amer. ica. If the cost of importation fell below the cost of production at horoo the ruin of Eritish agriculture was not far distant. Liberals such as Brassy, 3IacDuff and Duff blamed the British land system and game laws for the depres sion. Their arguments were sum, med np in a speech by John Bright, who warned land-owners thai the competition of the United States would go on increasing, and the only way of meetirg it was to get rid of the stnpid and mischievious logislat iou of regulating the tenure and transfer of land. . AlacEwer and Benterick advocated protective measures, but the Marquis of Hartington and the Government as represented by Viscount Sandou (Conservative) and Stafford Xorth cote, Chancellor of the Exchequer declared that no cause had been shown for such measures, which cer tainly would never be sanctioned. The Marquis of Hartington Attribut ed the depression primarily to the bad season. King S. M'oolsej-- Our Phcenix dispatch is a surprise in that it announces the death of King S. Woolscv, a man widclv known in Arizona and one snpposed to have been in the enjoyment of sound health. He has emphatically a pioneer, and a man of energy and ambition both financially and politi cally How his estate will foot tip will not likely be known till after an official appraisement, but he always conducted business on a pretty large scale in stock raising and farming, and latterly in grinding grain and dealing in flour. His political aspir ations made him the subject of some severe public comment, but however much of it may have been based cn facts it must be said that King S. Voolsey led an industrious and enter prising life, and was always popular in his own county when a test of popularity was tried with another at the polls. Our knowledge of him was not of an intimate character, but we feel justified in saying that few men in Arizona were truer to her welfare, more zealous in building up the Territory on her natural resour ces, more attached to it. Our Pine nix dispatch truly says his death is ''a great loss to the community-" mistaken Mercy. The law and order classes of lexas are bitterly denouncing their Govern or for commuting the death sentence of the murderer, Coward, to impris onment for life. Public meetings have been held at Galveston and other points, demanding that tho Governor shall resign. In the case of this des perado, Coward, there is not a single extenuating circumstance. Ife shot and killed a man named Schachtrut t simply because Schachtrupt tcstilied against his brother in a horse-stealing trial. He also shot at, b"t missed Sehachtrupt's wife for giving similar evidence. If ciiminals like this are to be shown indulgence, what is the use of the gallows t-Cnll. The Estate of Itrisrham l oan;. A Siilt Lake telegram snvs: Two weeks have been consumed by the executors of the estate of Brigham Young to effect a compromise with his daughter Emeline Young, their efforts have been fruilless, and tiey have jointly filed an answer with John Taylor admits to taking prop, city, claiming that it belonged to the Church, and his defense is a quali fied admission that Brigham Young had used it during his life for the benefit of his own family. The exe cutors seem to be in doubt as to their transactions, and submit their action in the premises to the Court. The answer is regarded as flimsy utterly devoid of law. It is stated that Stevens & Hughes received $50,000 from the sale vt tho ! Her haw wines