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Daily Arizona silver belt. (Globe, Gila County, Ariz.) 1906-1929, June 25, 1909, Image 2

Image and text provided by Arizona State Library, Archives and Public Records; Phoenix, AZ

Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn87082863/1909-06-25/ed-1/seq-2/

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THE DAIEILVER BELT
THE SILVER BELT PUBLISHING CO
H. H. HIENER H. 0. IIOLDSWOHTH
The Silver Belt has a larger paid cir
culation than any daily newspaper in the
world published in a city with 12,000 pr
less population.
OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE COUNTY OF GILA
OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER' OF THE CITY OF GLOBE
MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Daily, by mail, ono year .. , . .$7.50
Daily, by carrier, ono month .75
Weekly, one year 2X0
Weekly, six months 1.25
The average daily circulation of the
Silver Belt during the month of
May was 6ZZ3
EirrERED AT THE POSTOFFIOE IN GLOBE, ARIZ.,
AS SECOND-CLASS MAIL.
- I I a .., . , 1 1 . 1 I '-.-- ' li .. I .' 1.1 I II ' . I . II il ' II ' II.'
LET YOUR PAPER FOLLOW YOU
The Silver Belt will be mailed upon request
to subscribers leaving the city during the sum
mer months. Change of address tvill be made as
frequently as desired; notices of such change
should give both the old and new address. Gall
at the office or phone any change you wish before-
leaving the city. The subscription rate is
the same out of town as in the city.
DAILY ARIZONA SILVER BWLT
Friday, Juno 25, l9on
A Virginia court lias appraised the value of
six toes lost by a little girl in a trolley accident
as being $41G.G7 each. HencefQrtJi, we shall all
feel richer, but very few, we surmise, will care
to realize cash on their pedal possessions.
".It is just as right for a woman to lose her
temper as for a man to lose his," says a Mis
souri justice. Is it "just as right," we wonder,
or "just as 'wrong?"
A Connecticut paper calls attention to the
fact that the house chaplain used to be paid
more than the senate chaplain. It is generally
agreed nowadays, however, that the senate is
just as much in need of prayers as the house.
An attempt was made recently to kidnap Ab
dul ITamid. We cannot fathom the motive be
hind this, unless some one bet the would-be kid
napers they could not do it.
The public is grateful to the man that
sprinkles the streets. Those miniature dust
storms that used to drive everyone to refuge
in the nearest store or office are becoming more
and more infrequent.
A Dutch astrologer has cast the horoscope
of the baby Princess of Orange, and she is go
ing to be healthy, and wealthy, and wise; just
as she ought to be, and as she had to be
scheduled, or business would have been mighty
dull in the future for ono Dutch astrologer.
"The secret of long life, young ladies, is not
to get married," said an octogenarian spinster
to a bevy of New York maids recently. This
platform will be regarded by the average sum
mer girl as something in the nature of one of
those meaningless things Senator Bacon speaks
of so eloquently.
"Broiled 1909 spring chicken" is the way it
reads on a certain restaurant menu in Washing
ton. The government's efforts to get things
properly and accurately labeled are producing
results, all right.
To tell a woman that "much talking causes
wrinkles," is a little short of downright cruel.
Neither horn of the dilemma presents any at
tractive features at all.
A circus man declares the "honk honk" of
the automobile horn has become so familiar that
children are no longer interested in the. time
honored steam caliope. By and by, mayhap,
we shall love tho automobile for the enemies
it has made.
A New Haven man claims to be "the world's
champion ichthyologist." He may be, but he
is, plainly enough, not a real fisherman.
A Now York man claims to be able to talk
65,000 words per hour. The trouble, we sus
pect, however, is that ho does not say anything
while talking them.
It is not at all probable that Mr. Sisson will
imitate Mr. Hollingsworth, and ask that the
southern press opinion concerning himself be
printed in the Congressional Record. For one
reason, the Record is not printed on asbestos
paper.
ON ADAPTABILITY
In every city of rapid growth the process of
adjustment is at work. The kinds of adapta
bility that are necessary are, multiple. The
people, coming as they do, from different and
remote parts of the country, must, in the nature
of things, so remold their ways of .life that
some general degree of congeniality may 1)6
attained. Aside from this kind of adjustment,
there are others. Each newcomer has the task,
not always easy, of adapting himself to local
business methods, and to the needs prescribed
by tho climate and tradition of a new country.
To some people this mild ordeal of becoming
oriented in a new environment is in no way
difficult. These people may be said to hold
allegiance to no single 'ruce or group of in
dividuals. Their natures, by heritage, tran
scend the bounds of race prejudice and eccen
tricity. They belong properly to the great
commonwealth whicji is the dream of reform
ers, the brotherhood of man. Fate may set
them down in drawing room or eowcamp, but
their appreciation of the vastness of the uni
verse, the bond of natural sympathy that unites
all men, and the insignificance of the human
unit in the scheme of things causes'them, invol
untarily, to become a part of the environment
into which they are thrown. Tho word, "invol
untarily," is used advisedly, for all things that
thwart one's efforts toward adaptability, the
manifest and conscious desire to attain it is
most defeating. The unfortun'ate who adopts
this method is at once Haunted as resorting to
gallery-play, as assuming a pose, as playing a
part, or as currying favor, all of which are al
most synomous expressions used by different
people, to express their disdain and contempt.
Some people, to be sure, have the dramatic
instinct so strongly developed that they can as
sume any role imposed upon them and deceive
their audience for the time being. But, just as
the impression of reality induced by any drama
or pageant is rudely dispelled if someone in the
audience shouts, "Fire," so the kind of adapta
bility assumed by people who strive to play
their part cannot be depended upon to serve its
author in each stress of circumstance en
countered in everyday life. Many a crisis pre
senting imminent danger has proven superfi
cially dependable people to reveal themselves
arrant cowards, and how often have these same
occasions proven the moral and physical cour-1
age and inherent good breeding of men ex
ternally crude.
It is always to the advantage of an individual
to be naturally so constituted that he does not
render himself unpleasantly conspicuous among
his fellows. The callow youth, and not always
a youth in years either, that invades" a cattle
ranch arrayed in a Beau Brummel costume, and
with all the affectation of a manner, commonly
reputed to a French court, invites disaster sim
ply because his audience is so schooled in the
reading of human nature that it can detect
something radically wrong and lacking iu the
nature of the man who makes himself thus con
spicuous and bizarre in nature's schenie. And
yet, no one is more surprised than the individ
ual, himself, when calamity camps on his trail.
No degree of surprise and expostulation, how
over, has ever been known to rescue such a man
from the penalty of his lack of perception and
self-centredom. Neither inanimate or human
nature ever forgives -a man for disregarding
the mandate of adaptability. A non-scientific
college education is of no use .whatever to a
man in the practical work of tjie ranch or mine,
unless it is to teach him how little he knows.
And if he has the discernment to realize that
fact, he will have the good fortune to escape
many hard knocks and otherwise disagreeable
experiences. Just as the richest mineral de
posits are not generally found iiC surface out-1
crops, so any,. startling degree of kuowledge is
usually concealed beneath several strata of
modesty and self-abnegation.
enough pride not to desire a parade of his mis
fortunes before the public, and if not in positive
want of the necessary and sufficing things of
this life, one does not like to bo treated as if he
was beyond the pale of worldly worth and re
spectability, r
But my lady curious, and peVhaps disdainful,
wends her way through 'the alleys in blissful
ignorance of how she is regarded by the people
whom she chooses to call her objects of charity.
Charity is always offensive to a human being
that has left in him any germ of self-respect,
and although we are often tempted to think
that the hatred for the "predatory rich" exists
mostly in the columns of certain newspapers,
yet, that this resentment of the unfortunate for
those more favored in a material way, is unde
niably real, as anyone knows who has observed
human life, even in a cursory manner. So un
less my lady, on her slumming tours, is possess
ed of rare tact, she simply is feeding fuel to the
fires of class hatred, and not, as she often fond
ly imagines, bestowing priceless attentions on
needy people.
It often happens, too, that some girl with a
sincere desire to be of help to the people poor
in this world's goods and advantages, throws
herself, as did Elsie Sigel, into the work of seek
ing to benefit them. In the exceptional case,
this action may be justifiable. But surely, in
the average instance of this kind, both the giver
and receiver bf charity are losers. The person
on whom charity is bestowed loses in self-reliance,
and the girl who goes slumming has her
youthful mind poisoned with the misery that
is inevitable in life. The belief that this world
is almost wholly beautiful and happy with noth
ing but petty griefs to mar human existence
may be the mental idol of the deluded, but yet,
like tho fairy tales of childhood, it is w.orlh
clinging to as the only solace for the ills of life
that beset us Of a young woman, we may say,
this is especially true. , It is the duty of every
girl and woman, too, for that matter, to retain
her ideals in all their youthful freshness and
beauty. Do what we qan to protect and cherish
them, they will succumb, all too soon,- to the.
poison that is breathed from the market place
and ghetto. Although the horrible fate of Elsie
Sigel is an extreme and isolated case, it may,
nevertheless, be taken to point a moral.
The average young American is only mildly
interested in his prospect of becoming pres
ident some day But if he thinks he stands the
slightest chance to become a crack short stop
or a first-class twirler of the festive spheroid
why, that is entirely different, of cousre!
1:
MORNING SMILES
I
' Such Is Life
"Count your chickens before they, are hatched
if you want to." :
"Say. on." ;.;,.;
"It may be the only chance you'll get."
ilard Labor . . ,
1 ' Is poverty a crime ? "
"Well, it carries a penalty, anyhow;"
Anything to Please :
"Will that cook take the place?"
"She says she doesn't speak English."
"Tell her we'll learn her language."
But We Can't
"So you don't care for bathing?"
"Too much of a crush, don't you know."
"Well, it would be nice if we could have in
dividual oceans."
Bankers'
Garden
The finest Resort in Globe
Popular with all classes winter
and summer. Refreshments of
all kinds. Choice cigars, wines
and liquors.
ANHEUSER-BUSCH EEEB
ALWAYS ON DEAUQHT.
Cool dining room in connec
tion. Regular meals and cold
lunches at all hours. Order foi
provato dinners in advance.
A Caution
'In climbing the ladder of fame, it is well to
keep climbing, because you will never win out if
you linger on tho various rounds of applause.
About Advertising
A drop of" ink
: Makes many think,
As merchants all declare.
.. A little ad .
Whenibiz is bad
-'i.
Will bring a greater- share
3
Some people see
The rock or tree
With ads thereon, I guess,
But if you're wise
You'll utilize
The columns of the press.
.
WIGHTMAN'S
MUSIC STORE
Bound to Happen
"Why do the automobiles carry those extra
tires?"
"To be used in case of accident. In a few
generations, even tbe pedestrians will be
equipped with extra legs."
(
A Safe Guess
Of course a college education helps:"
I have a college graduate starting in as of
fice boy to learn the business."
"And I'll bet you're afraid of him. Bet you
haven't got the nerve to tell him to wash win
dows. ' '
II H IHIMillllllim
I ; Carl L. Addy
:: Manufacturing Jeweler
:: and Diamond Setter
; ; STONE CUTTING
! : AND ALLT.KINDS OF REPAIRING
: ; Room 6, Keegan Building, Upstlrc
! I Globe, Arizona
MiiiiinniiminiinM
S. Woodward
Contractor and Builder
ESTIMATES
PROMPTLY FURNISHED
P. 0. Box 14
Phone IIS!
Special Sale
We are selling a large line of Ladies' Combination Sum (Ham
took) at a 50 per cent sacrifice.
Corset Covers and Drawers combination suits, formerly S2.60 to
S5.00 per suit, now $2.00 to $4.00.
Corset Covers and Skirts combination suits, at tho same prica
These are -all lace trimmed, and are stylish up to date suit
Chemiso, long, haudsomo patterns;, regular price S2JH) to 18.00. now
yelling at from S2.00 to $5.00.
Embroidered and lace trimmed skirts from 60c to t2.6a
Enormous discount on aU ladies' underwear.
BROOKNER'S
THE BIG STORE
DOUBTFUL PHILANTHROPY
The recent revolting murder of a respected
American girl by a New York Oriental is only
ono of the pussing'cvils of the modern custom
of "slumming," as it is' popularly called. In
nearly cvory city having a population of 100,000
or more, there is a certain circle of society "wo
men who believe they are doing a noble and
philanthropical work in delving into all the by
ways of the city where are found the abodes of
what these women are pleased to call the lower
classes. Some of these "shimmers" go to the
extremes of making their rounds in a coach and
four, while others, to their credit be it said,
have sufficient sense of the fitness of things to,
at least, reach the scenes of their charity by
the plebian method of walking. But the re
sult of this custom, in either case, is, for the
most part, unprofitable and is often attended
by positive evils.
In the first place, the society shimmer goes
forth on her underworld pilgrimages in a
mental attitude of curiosity, which, if she but
knew it, betrays as little good taste as the peo
ple she visits are often supposed to possess. A
human being, if in absolute misery, has still
City. .joL Globe
Notice to
Merchants
All supplies sold to the City of Globe for the
water department must be presented in dupli
cate and separate from supplies ordered for
any other department of the City.
All bills against the City of Globe for the
month of June, 1909, must be presented at. the
office of the City Clerk before 2 o'clock p. vn
Thursday, July 1st, 1909, after which time n
bills can be paid until August on account of
the absence of members of the Council in at
tendance at thef'Elks' convention in Los An
geles. JAS. H. WELCH.
ga.gJK
OUR BUILDING
DEMOLISHED
But wo are still doing business in a new building' just completed,
two doors south of Cottonwood St., opposite freight depot.
Your orders wiU be appreciated and will receive the same prompt
attention as usual Fuel and Fead.
Arizona Feed & Fuel Company
PHONE 751
Citv Clerk.
Dated June 19, 1909.
TMESR
BARCLAY & COMPANY
Single and Double Teams
Saddle Horse Hay, Grain & Co&J
A Specialty made of Fine Livery Riga
TEUBPMONE 173
OLOBB. AJtlZONA
Surprising,
What Kodol Will Do
For you, when you need it But the longer you neg
lect Indigestion, the more you will suffer before Kodol
can restore Good Digestion.
We knew what Kodol would dt
befpro evef ,the first bottle, wa
sold. If we d!dnbt know Just what
it will do, wo would not guarante
it the way wo do.
It la easy for you to prove Kodol
the next (or the first) time 7j
have an attack of indigestion. Anfi
you will certainly be surprised "
the results. It is perfectly harm
lens. Ther can b no harm in tryini
something that may do you a great
deal of good- when It coiU yo
nothing If it doesn't
And, of course, indigestion if neg
lected long enough, brings on serj;
ous diseases' in which "Kodol cannot
benefit you. Some of these there
is no help for at all.
There ire, in fact, very few ail
ments which cannot be traced di
rectly to impure blood. And im
pure blood is always due to a dis
ordered dtotnnch.
Use Kodol and prevent Nervous
Dyspepsia.
Kodol will effectually assist Na
ture to secure a complete restora
tion of good digestion. It does
this by nt once digesting all food
In the stomach and keeping It di
tested, until tbe stomach is rested
and can resume its own work. Ko
dol removes the cause nrfd the
effect quickly removes ;ltelf.
When it Is recalled that Apo
plexy, Heart Disease, Cancer1 and
even. Consumption are due to
poor digestion and poisonsr thus
transmitted to tho blood, and
throughout the system the impor
tance of maintaining good diges
tion it at once realized.
Our Guarantee
Oo to your drotplnt today nd g
Ur bottle. Tiien after you hte uwd t
entire contents of tbe bottle If yon
honestly ay. that It boa not done ypn dj
erood, return the bottle to the druwUt
he will refund your money without ju";
tlon or delay. We will then pay th Cr
glat for the bottle. Don't benltateaj
drngglKta know that onr guarantee E
This offer applies unhelarpe bottle oniy
and to but one In a family. Tbe lari? "JJ
tie contains 1'tf time v much as the vv
cent bottle..
Kodol N prepared at the labora
tories of E. C. De Witt it Co..Cbicas.
Palace Pharmacy and United Drug Co
J
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