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, I Page Four DAILY ARIZONA SILVER BELT Friday, February 14, 4 .. to rt - t tv j" . rh- k . f M.M..cM'MMwI'"4,H"I ivir. d .. usmess ivian Who Does Your Printing If you are sending your printing out of town with the idea that you are saving money by so doing, YOU ARE MISTAKEN. This may have been true at one time. Modern machinery and up-to-date equipment have made it possible for the Silver Belt Print Shop to compete on even terms with the large eastern housts. We Have Revised Prices ? 0TjTThe Silver Belt Publishing Company, succes- -usors to jos. xx. xiamui, nas revised irs prices on all clases of Commercial Printing, believing that a larger volume of business at competitive prices is better than the high prices of the old frontier days and a large percentage of business going elsewhere because of the price difference. Stock and Equipment The Silver Belt has the only Print Shop in Lrlobe thoroughly equipped to do every class of work and in the highest degree of excellence. We carry the only complete stock of, paper sup plies, and in every department of printing we are prepared to serve you in the most satisfactory manner. And above all is the price saving made possible by our splendidly equipped plant and the freight saving by buying s.tock in carfpots. Give Us a Chance to Figure The Country Mouse. By TEMPLE BAILEY. Copyright, 1C07, by N. E. Daley. t. .: :: X i t i i Tell us what you want and let us make fig ures for you. It will cost you nothing, and if we can't beat the other fellow on prices it is because he is committing business suicide. Ring us up and we will send a man. The Silver Belt Punishing Company t Quality Printers 'l!...Kv'44MKw4'44M.4wwH? CKOOOCOOCCXXTCOCKOCOOOCOro FAMOUS INDIAN HOT SPRINGS 8 A noted resort for health and pleasure Bates. 82.00 H to 13.00 per day. Twenty minutes rido from Hot Springs Station, Graham county, Arizona. These wonderful wa ters are recommended to cure rheumatism, gout, dropsy, liver, kidney and stomach troubles, blood disorders and women's ail ments. Beautiful lawns and shado trees; largo plunge and swimming pool; also fish lake and boating, lawn tennis and croquet and swings. Try our wonderful mua and mineral baths. If you are pick, get well. If well, get pleas ure and rest. Excursion tickets to Ft. Thomas and Indian Hot Springs, Saturday and Sunday, return Monday. Hound trip, S3.1G. Dr.. S. B. Claypool is tho permanent resident physician at tho Springs and is making a specialty of disoases of all kinds. ALEXANDER BKOTHEES. Postofflco Fort Thomas. Arizona. OOOOOOOOOOOCOOOCCCXOOOOOOCDCCOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOC BARCLAY, HIQDON & CO. Single and Double Teams Saddle Horses Hay, Grain & Coal A Specialty made of Fine Livery Rigs Telephone 171 Globe, Arizona F. L JONES & SON. Funeral Directors and Embalmers OFFICE: 174 S. Broad St. Telephone 432 RESIDENCE: 346 S. Hill St. Telephone 433 BANKER'S The Finest Resort in Globe Popular with all classes winter and summer. Refreshments of all kinds. Choice Ciffars, Wines and Liquors. ( HOLLOW Concrete Blocks and Sidewalk Reinforced Concrete Schlltz and Anhouser-Busch Boer al ways ono Draught. STORE AND OFFICE EMPLOYES UNION No. 247 Meets fust anil each month at A Miner's Union Hall third Mondays in A. n. HARGRAVE President E. G. GRIFFTIH Secretary Estimates on Buildings Promptly Furnished J. MAUREL Two-story Concroto Block IIouso, West oi! Globe Lumber Yard. P. 0. Box 221. "PEOPLE'S CASH STORE" Everything in Women's, Girls and Infants' Ready-to-wear Clothes, Ladies' Suits, Cloaks, Waists, Skirts. Millinorv. f Taney Goods, etc. DOLPH BAATZ & CO. C8G Broad St. Globe, Arizona Felicia packed Into a little trunk her one n'lilte party dress, ti pretty gray dinner gown, u half dozen shirt waists nud an extra lint, nnd away she went to town to visit her cousin, Mary Barnes. Mary's' brother Roger met lier nt tho station. "Mary is planning no end of things for you," he told Felicia when ho had settled her in the carriage, "She is go ing to give a luncheon nud ii tea and a theater party and n dance, and half ,of her friends are enlisted to make you have a good time. It will be lively existence for you, little girl." "Oh," Felicia leaned forward, "I shall love It! My greatest excltemeut for n year has been n church social or a filelgh ride, and I am longing for so ciety." "Mary spells society with n big 'S.' " Roger told her. "She is a slave to it, nud she needs n rent. She is as thin as a wafer and ns pale as paper." "But think what a lovely time she has!" Felicia said, all pink and white with enthusiasm. "Humph!" Roger said. "You don't know when you are well off, little Felicia." But Felicia fell on .Mary's neck when she reached the great stone mansion. "I enn stay two weeks," she said. "The school board gave me a vacation, and I am going to have tho time of my life." "Indeed you are," Mary said and car ried her away to n delectable bedroom, where rose leaves drifted across the wall paper. "I'll get into my kimono, and then wo can talk." Felicia said joyously as she opened her little black bag. But Mary shook her head dubiously. "The girls are coming for luncheon in just a half hour. There are 'ten of them, and tho table decorations are to be In pale pink,,, because that is your fa vorite color." "What shall I wear?" Felicia asked. "I have a gray gown and u white one, and the white one is for evening." "The gray will be all right with a ducky little knot of pink carnatIon3 and lilies of the valley. The florists are doing them that way now, and Roger can get you some." Roger got the flowers, but the gray gown was not gorgeous, and beside Mary's shimmering chiffon creation Felicia felt depresslngly shabby. But the luncheon was exquisite, and the girls were friendly, and Felicia did not have much time to think of herself, for there was a 'tea on Immediately after, and she was carried off by Mary and Roger, wearing n long and splen did wrap of Mary's, for her own sim ple tailor made jacket was out' of the question. "Noone will notice that it is mine," Mary assured her, '"In the crush," so Felicia, feeling very elegant, swept through the crowded rooms and talked as fast as she could to dozens of peo ple and came out breathless. "Wasn't It awful?" Roger asked, her. "I shouldn't have gone " a step if Jt hadn't been for you." "It wns delightful, Felicia gurgled "the pretty women, the lights, the mu sic, the ices and everything." "Humph!" Roger grumbled, and Fe licia made a little face at him and said, "You're an unsociable bear, Rog er," and Roger said, "Oh, it's such a waste of good material for you to spend youc tlinc. with such people when you might be talking to me, Fe licia." Felicia opeued her eyes wide at that. "Do you like to talk, to me, Roger?" she questioned, nnd Roger laughed and said, "Yes, but you don't deserve it" And Felicia, feeling very much flat tered, leaned back in tho carriage and. peeped at Roger now nnd then, while Mary mapped out the programme for the next day. "We will go to the hairdresser's eal ly. Roger, don't you think Felicia will look dear with her hair marccled?" "I think Felicia looks dear with her hair any way." "O-o-o-h," murmured Felicia from her corner. Mniy laughed and went on. "There are the Deering luncheon nnd three tens and the art exhibit and tne Colburns dinner and a box party aft er, and then the cotillon." "Oh, stop!" Felicia pleaded, looking at her cousin with startled eyes. "Do you expect me to do all that in one day, Mary?" "She does," Roger asserted, survey ing his country cousin with melancholy eyes, "nnd where, oh, where in all that programme will you have a min ute to spend with me?" "I am not worrying about that," Fo llcla told him, dimpling, "but what am I going to wear, Mary? What am I .going to wear?" ' "There's your wlito dresj," Mary said slowly. "But I can't wear that one dress to a luncheon nnd three tens and n thea ter party and a dance. What arc yon going to wear, Mary?" "My pale blue broadcloth will do for the luncheon nnd the tea and tho view. Then I shall wear wlilfc lace to tbo dinner and the rest of the evening." "When in nil that rush will you find lime to change?'' wns Roger's ques tion. Mary leaned back in the corner of the carriage. She was very pale, and there were dark circles around her jyes. "Oh, I don't know; I don't know." Jhe said. "Sometimes I feel as If I wero on n treadmill nnd no ono would let me stop." Felicia looked nt her with startled eyes. "Why, I thought you liked it," alio gasped. Mary straightened up at that. "Oh, when I get Into It," she snld, trying to speak lightly, "It's not so bad, but 1 hnve felt the strain this winter awfully." Between rushes that night Roger caught Felicia for n moment alone in the library. "Mary Is dreadfully blue," he told her. "Sho broke her engage ment with Bob Cnrruth in the sum mer, nnd she1 hasn't seen him since, nnd she misses him." "What did she break It for?' Felicia asked. "He wanted her to go south with him and eettlo in n little town where he could practice medicine, and she wouldn't give up society, and now I think she regrets it." "Oh," said llttlo Felicia, "If I loved a man I would go to the end of the world with him!" "Would you?" Roger nsked. "Yes." "Well, I am leaving for Japan next week," Ingratiatingly. Felicia gazed at him with Intense in dignation for a moment; then she turn ed her back on him. "Silly!" she said. When Felicln went to bed thnt night she wns so tired that she could not sleep. The next morning she was as pale as Mary. For u week tho two girls 'dragged their engagements, tin ishlng up on Saturday night with an other cotillon. "Felicln wore her white dress. It was mussed, and phe know thnt she was not looking her best, but sho wns so tired that she did not enre. Roger had sent her a bunch of violets, and hor dance card was filled with names, but the fart gave her no satisfaction. The fourth dance wns Roger's. "Enjoying it?" ho asked briefly as ho Bwung her out into the floor. "Oh, I am so tired 1 shall drop," she said. "Can't I go home, Roger?" Sho looked so like n little weary child thnt Roger htughed. "Baby," he teased and then tenderly, "I'll hunt Mary up, nnd we will cut tho rest of it." In the carriage Mury collapsed. "I didn't dream I was so tired," she sob bed, with her head on Felicia's shoul der, and Roger, surveying the pair with twinkling eyes, said, "Let me pre scribe." "Well?" came back lu muffled agree ment. "Yon pack your trunk, Mary," he planned, "and go home with Felicia. It's lovely In the country now, and I'll come up nnd bring Bob Cnrruth with me." Mary sat up, with her face ablaze. "Bob Carruth?" "Yes. I had a letter from him yes terday. He's coming up for a visit." Faint pink tinged Mary's cheeks. "Do you think ho will want to see me, Roger?" she nsked wistfully, and Roger snid gently, "I know he will, Mary." So Felicia packed her little trunk. and Mary packed a larger one, nnd away they went to the country, where the trees wero crimson nnd gold nnd brown and where the air was like wine. And there Bob Cnrruth and Roger followed them. "So she Is really going to marry him and live lu n country town," Roger commented, and he nnd Felicia fol lowed Mary and her lover along a path? that seemed to cud In n golden sunset. "Yes," Felicia snid. "And you are going to marry me and come nnd live In the city," Roger ven tured. "I haven't promised yet," said little Felicia. "I aui afraid that some day I should be saying, 'Give me again my hollow tree, my crust of brend nnd lib erty.' " "You aren't afraid of nnything of the kind," Roger told her. "You know we would live happy ever nfter." "Oh, well, 'if you arc so sure," said Felicia as she tucked n confiding hnnd through his arm nnd looked up at him with Jiappy eyes, "I guess I shall have to say yes, Roger." The Bellbird. The most remarkable thing In con nection with the bellbird is its power ful voice. It utters a clear metallic note that can be heard nt a distanco of three miles. Its noise Is liko thnt pro duced by a blacksmith striking his an vil. Sometimes it repents Its notes in quick succession, sometimes nt fairly long intervnls. There Is no mistnke about the voice of this, bird; It Is loud and piercing nnd would be henrd nbove the din produced by every in mnto of the zoo raising Its voice nt once. Except for n space of naked skin on the throat and nrouud the eyes, which during tiie brecdlug season is of green color, this bird Is pure white. The contrast between the sexes in tho holl blrds is extreme, for, while the male is pure white, the femalu Is brownish green. Darwin refers to tho bellbird when he points out that "white is n very rare color In terrestrial species of moderate size and inoffensive habits'." -Pall Mall Gazette. In a Bad Way. There Is u Pennsylvania divine who is not averse to telling u good story nt his own expense. Once In addressing a mission meet ing In Philadelphia which was attend rd mainly by sailors the good man hal Rought to. adapt his remarks to hip hearers by using nautical similes, and in so doing he ventured somewhat be yond his depth. , "And now what shall we do what Bhall wo do?" "Nothin" ' doln', cap'n!" sang out one of the sailors. "Ye'ro In bad! Ye'ro goln' In starnforcmost!" 'HHMH-MMmMHMmM-MHHMMBHM-l R0 TYPEWRITER The 1908 Model Illustrates the Modern Writing-Machine Carried Nearer to the Point of Absolute Perfection than any Other Typewriter in Existence Qardnor Ball-Boaring Typebar Joint. You know tho superiority of a ball bearing over tliB common friction hearing. Our typebar bearings nro made of steel and arc as hard aud as smooth as glass. Run perfectly free without play and without friction. SOME NEW FEATURES Tho Now Lightning Escapement for caso and speed and tho new Silent Shift, with many other val uable new features, combine to pro duce the first example of a modern writing machine, complete in every Instantaneous Automatic Eibbcj Ecvorso Works in the fraction of a second without an ounc of rib bon strain or any added key ten sion. The first satufactory ribbos reversing device. Ilustrated catalogue of New Mod free. dotal L. & M. ALEXANDER & CO. Exclusivo Pacific Coast Dealers 528 South Spring Street S. 11. GD0DS?ED, Lo:al AJcnt Los Angeles, California mmmmmmmmmammmsmmmBHrnrnHmmummammmmmmammmmmmmmn i 7 H To G FOR INDIGESTION AND DVSSEPSIA. tvo Itatlaf notion o? Tfo-ay Mangy nct Xr after uMnr 1 wo-thlrli of a 11.30 bottl of Kerf al. von mit I.AHti- ... boneilted yon, wejilll rtfnort jour mow;. IrrKnAoX to.lir.en iJiI.ot.S!!1 If It Xll to nilifr Tm. rtturn th bottle eonttlntngooo-thlnf of t!i mS?1 to tl dealer from hom you boegbt It. and wa will rtf jnd jour raonr Town -SUttL. fljn hm eCTTIUSOUX. RELIEVKS SOUR STOMACH, D2SX-CHING. J?TC. E. C. DoWITT G3, COMPANY, CHXCAGoTfTr Cniri Uw uamma'c noun emptr u OU1U U y llrilvlirt j utiuvi o 1 imil In Now Quarters. Mrs. Barker has removed from tho Fort millinery parlors to JJoom 4, Globo oflico building, whero sho will be 'ilcasud to see all her old patrons and many new ones. NOTICE Or STOCKHOLDERS' NUAL MEETING. AN- Valuablo P.omedy for Colcta and Croup. W. W. Cray, an attorney at Weu itchoc, Wash., says: "I have used Chamberlain's Cough Remedy in my family for colds and croup with good results. I aim to always keep this rem edy in the house." Sold by All Druggists. Notice is hereby given thnt the An nual Meeting of Stockholders xof the AMERICAN COPPER COMPANY, will be held at the Office of the Gibson Cop per Company, in the Trust Building, Globe, Arizona, on March 5th, 1008, for the purposo of electing Directors for the coming year, and the transaction of any other business that may be neces sary JOHN L. ALEXANDER, x Secretary. G'lobe, Arizona, Feb. 5th, 1908. Rfnn flint fii-lflinir irnfrr?i! Tip CL.. . Cough Cure will surely stop it, nd ij porioct safety, it is to thorosrV, harmless, that Dr. Shoop tells aotke to use nothing else even with re- young babies. The wholesome n(. leaves and tender stems of a lnng l; ing mountainous shrub furnish the tive properties to Dr. Shoop 's Co:- iurc. it cairns tne eougn, and it& sensitive bronchial membranes. 2Tb ium, no chloroform, nothing harta t to injure or suppress. DercAod ! Shoop 's. Take no other. Palate n, Globe Pharmacies. 20CCCCKDOOCOOQOOOOOOO00QOOOOOOCK3CXX iiia Valley, Globe & Northern R. R. Co. INDIAN HOT SPRINGS ROUTE Ri sites .C?v&UiVw' Account Shriners Meeting to be Held at Phoenix, Ariz., February 20 Tickets on sale February 11th to 20th, inclusive. One and one-fourth first class fare for the round trip from all stations. Return limit February 20 to 22, inclusive. No stopovers will be allowed. xcursions Week-End E TO Ft. Thomas and Indian Hot Springs, $3.15 Tickets sold each Saturday and Sunday, Limit Monday Tickets now on sale to and from all points in EUROPE VIA LL IMPORTANT TRANS-ATLANTIC LINES Full information regarding rates and sailing dates furnished upon application Latest Innovations in Reduced Fares Are 3c Our 1000-mile Coupon Books Our 2000-mile Coupon Books Gpod on all Randolph Lines in Arizona, including GILA VALLEY ROUTE ARIZONA & COLORADO MARICOPA & PHOENIX PHOENIX & EASTERN G. A. MAUK Agent, Globe M. O. BICKNELL Gen. Pass. Agt., Tucson K it '' " " OOOOOOOCO 00000000O0CH30O000OOOOOOOO0O0OOO000O0O0O0O0C wl&w -, -,. j.x.u-ja,. j jK-. ww'- v.. A..aag ?,',S.