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THE CASA GRANDE VALLEY. information tor I ncse oseKing nones ( In tho Gordon Spot of tho West. Pinal count v was organized In 1875 from portions of Pima. Maricopa and Yavapai counties, and contains au area of S.Jtodsnmire miles, or S,4So,fv20 acres, one-third of whivti eouldbe made productive by a systematic storage -f the surplus water now running to waste. Next to Maricopa it is t lie most im portant agricultural county inthelerritorv. It it traversed from east to west by the Southern Pacific railroad, and a branch of the great Santa Fe svstenl is now upproach Inr from the north. The objective point of this road is a connection with the boiiora Toad, of the same system. The Southern Pacific is also building in this direction from . Terape.and it is confidently believed that work will not cease until the Deer Creek eoal Belds are reached and connection is made with another branch of that road run ning from Bowie to Globe and now complet ed to Fort Thomas. , , Thus it will be seen that. Final county is the theater of roilroad buildiii': "t the pres ent time, and inside of o year loreuce. the oounty seat, will be ABAILBOADCKSTBK. At present it contains a population of wbout 1500, hut with the completion of these tw o railroads and the liutte reservoir no city iu Arizona can approach it for natural advantages, and a large increase in popula tion will follow. Florence is at an elevation of 155 feet above sea level, situated near the Gila river, twenty-six miles northwest of the railroad station of Casa Grande, with which it is connected by au elegantly equipid daily stage Hue. Going and coining stas-es run by the old Casa Grande ruins, and passengers are allowed a short time to in spect t hem. There are many handsome pri vate residences in Florence, several brick tores, good hotel, an excellent graded school employing tour teachers, churches, secret societies, a Commercial Club, a news- gaper (the only one in the comity), and the audsomest court house in the Territory. Here is held the United States Court for the district composed of Gila. Graham and Pinal counties. The streets are lined with shade trees, which impart an air of comfort on the wurmest days. PRODUCTS OF THK VALLIY. Unlike the Salt river, the waters of the ilia are fresh and pure; the soil contains no Alkali, is a deei), rich gray ash, especially adapted to the growth of the prune, olive, almond, iiearli, fig, pear, apricot and fruits of all kinds, w hich pay largely on the invest ment. It is also the natural home of alfalfa. 'which grows in the most prolific manner. The grape does exceptionally well in this valley, and wine and raisin culture is destin ed to become a prominent industry. Citrus fruits have been cultivated to a limited extent ; there are a number of orange trees in the neiirhhorhnod of Florence which hear tieir golden fruit each year without pro tection, and a few date palm trees are also in full bearing. The season is from six weeks to two mouths earlier than outnernaiiror, nia, which gives fruit growers an appreciat ed advantage in THB EABLT UAKEETS. Th nhunM nf fofirfl And Tliirhtlv dews is a formidable obstacle to the destructive and unsightly scale-bug, and the fruits of the valley are all bright and clean. All the agri cultural products of temperate and semi tropic aones are easily grow n here, the long seasons giving a succession of crops that double or treble the productive value of the land. FKICES Or LAND. Improved lands, with government title and water right, can be bought for from f A) to $50 per acre, according to. location and im- Iirovements. In the immediate neighbor lood aud to the south of the Casa Grande ruins there are thousands of acres covered with a heavy growth of mesquite timber yet .open to settlement. These are among the choicest in the valley. Water iu inexhausti ble quantity is found at a depth of from twenty to thirty feet; in fact, a river seems to be flowing underneath. Here is a splen did opportunity to take up and improve land with a pumping system of irrigation, which is said to be successful on small tracts. However, with the completion of the Butte reservoir, pumping will be a thing of the past, and it is only mentioned here for the purpose of showing what can be done, and to magnify the further fact tha what was once considered AX USIJtHABITABLE DSSEBT Is in truth the most productive land on the globe, and that there is water in abundance only waiting for the magic wand of capital to develop it. There is no water-storuge scheme on the Pacific coast that has one-hulf the natural advantages and so few engineer ing difficulties as the Butte reservoir. Here nature has built the abutments in ever-living rock, and all that is left for man to do is to put in the hendgate. the blulfs which form the gorge being only separated by a paltry t 220 feet. A country is drained through this narrow canyon "-10 miles square, representing . 40,000 square miles, or larger than Maine and liassocbusettsoombined. Theraiufall is suf ficient to fill the reservoir twice a year, and - the land to be brought under cultivation is practically linrttless. This may read like a ' fairy tale, but it is every word true, and hat '. been verified time and again. CASA GBA3TDB BE8EKVOIK. The reservoir of the Casa Grande Talley Canal company is the largest in the territory. It covers a surface of loOO acres, with an aver age depth of 12 feet, and coutainsabout eight thousand million gallons of water. Itis.it- . nated fifteen miles southwest of Florence, A levee of earth has been thrown tip across a depression in the plain 14.WU ieet in length. 125 feet in width at the bottom antl 25 feet in : width at toD. 2 to 1 slope on each side, and an average height of 25 feet. The waste is regu lated by 1 cast Iron pipes 3 leet in diameter, set in solid masonry, regulated by gates and tower. This reservoir cost $150,U00, and sup plies water for 6,000 acres. Meteorological Statistics. The signal service of the general govern- ment maintained a station at Florence from 1R, tn lnri2. The reoorts covering the Doriod f rom Jmy. 10, to April, 1S82, gives the follow ing statistics, which may be taken as a safe 5 tilde to the prevailing temperature given uring the series of six yeas: lttbO. Mean. Max. Min. July m.6 111 61 August September M.O October 68.0 Koveinber 52.1 December 50.9 lb8L January 45.7 February 54.7 March 54.7 April 09.1 May 74.7 June 83.7 July..-. B7.9 August 84.5 September 77.5 Vctober 87.4 November 52.4 December , 52.2 12. January 48.4 February 40.5 March 57.S - Anril Kit 112 107 W HO 77 78 85 W 100 104 113 112 110 103 m 80 81 79 72 92 60 48 82 25 27 21 21 29 48 45 44 64 82 50 36 28 23 27 25 92 100 The heat as represented In the above table luring the months of June, July and August Is nothing like as unbearable as in the Eastern States, and death from SC58TH0KB 18 CWK50WS In fact, in a residence of sixteen years in Arizona the writer has only known two persons to be overcome by the heat, and they recovered. Their condition, however, was more the result of w hisky than heat, liie air is so dry here that a- registered temperature of 110 degrees is not as oppres sive as 80 degrees in St. Louis or New York. Tho Signal Service bureau has recognized this fact, and reports the difference between the apparent and sensible temperature to be f nils 30 degrees. At nearly all times there is a pleasant breeze; the nights are invariably cool in the summer, and out-door labor is lierformed without serious discomfort to either man or beast on the warmest days. Very seldom does the thermometer got be low the freezing rioint in winter, andin the gardens of Florence to-day are castor bean plants two years or more old, UHXOUCHID BY FBOST. Orange and lemon trees require slight pro tection during the winter for a year or two, jjntil the wood is sufficiently hardened. While it is a popular thing for one to say that he is "not here for Ids health,11 it is an undisputed fact that for all pulmonary ail ments no climate on earth isenualto South ern Arizona, and there are numbers of active, inuiipu ions cujzeiis, wiiu uut one lung, w no came here years ago, expecting to live but a few weeks. Hut for all that, the wonderful Cava Grande valley is something better than a health resort. '4 hat portion of the .great Casa Grande ,-i.llp l,tiiic nlonglhaliuu - the Southern Pacific railway in the vicinity of Casa Grande and Arizola is nt present, and with good reason considered one of the most desirable portions of this magnificent Southern Arl soua. Great changes have been made in the appcuritnce of this part of the valley during the last four vears. It was about tiuit long ago that tho Florence canal was completed mid the work of actual improvement begun. It is useless to deny that under our present water system there is not h lug like a suffi cient water to irrigate this vast body of laud THE CASA GRANDS. tiU.II CANAL is forty-three miles in length and covers 60,000 acres of land, about 7,000 of which are under cultivation. It is so constructea inal it can be easily enlarged and its capacity in creased. A reservoir covering 1.IW0 acres, having storage capacity of eight billion gal lons, iu the sout heast corner of township 8, range 8, gives ample supply of water the year rouud to all farmers located below it, but those above suffer by a shortage of water miring a few weeks in summer. It is proposed to remedy this by the con struction cf a huge reservoir at the Buttos, fifteen miles northeast of Florence. Com petent engineers have examined and reported upon the scheme and pronounce it feasible. Notice of Sale of Unclaimed Merchandise. I. the undersigned C. W. Wardwell, keep er of the freight depot of the Southern Pacific company, at Maricopa Station, in the County of Pinal, Territory of Arizona, hereby give public notice that the following described property, boxes, bundles and merchandise, has come into my possession as the keeper of said freight depot and lias re maiued unclaimed in said freight depot for a period of more then six months next pre ceding the date of this notice, to-wit: Four esses of machinery, weight 1237 pounds, covered by New York to Maricopa W. B. N. M. ft A., 18.1, February 12, 1893, con signed and mark cd D. B. Horton, Maricopa. A. T.; consignor, Steele ft Co.; consignee1 D. B, Horton, aud cannot be found. Name of owner unknown. One bundle of bedding, weight 43 pounds covered by Gila City to Maricopa W. B. M. 21 December 25th, 1897 .consigned and marked M. Shaffner, Maricopa, A. T.; consignor and, consignee the same and address unknown, Name of owner is unknown. Public notice is hereby given that in pur suance of the provisions of Act No 47 of the Twentieth Legislative Assembly of the Territory of Arizona, approved March 18 1899, the undersigned, C. W. Wardwell' keeper of the said freight depot of the Southern Pacific company at the station of Maricopa, in the County of Pinal, Terr itory of Arizona, will sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash. lawful money of the United States, on the 11th day of November, 1899, at the hour of 10 o'clock a. m. on said day, at the said freight depot of the South ern Pacific company at the station of Mari copa, in the County of Final, Territory of Arizona, all of the above described prop erty to pay the storage charges against the same and the expenses of advertising and sale thereof. Dated this 2nd day of Oct, 1839, at Mari copa. Arizona. C W. WAHDWELL, Keeper of the freight depot S. P. Co., Mari copa, Arizona. Oct. ll-4t -TO- TAXPAYERS THE DUPLICATE ASSESSMENT ROLL OF Pinal County, Arizona, for the year 199, lias this day been placed in my possession, and I am commanded to collect from each person named therein the several sums mentioned and carried out in the last column opposite their respective names. Said taxes will become delinquent on the third Monday (the 18th day) of December, next, and unless paid on that day or prior thereto five per cent penalty and conts of advertising, which is fifty centy for each de scription, will be added to the amount thereof. The taxes are payable at the office of the County Tax Collector, in the court house at Florence, Arizona, during office hours, from 1 a, m. to 12 m. and from 1 to t p. ra., Sundays and legal holidsys excepted. September 22, 1899. W. T. PRICE, Tax Collector, Pinal County, Arizona. For Sale. The Brady ranch on the Gila river one mile and a quarter below Florence, consist ing of one pre-emption claim of one hun dred and sixty acres, end an additional homestead claim adjoining of eighty acres with a frontage on the river of one mile. Divided into five different fields of I and 4 barbed wire fences with mesquit posts. The land with proper cultivation will yield 2,000 pounds of wheat and 2.500 pounds of barley per acre. A good dwelling house with kitchen, bath room and store room at tached, with large graneiles 16x82 each. One grist mill with machinery for a burr mill. 2 pair of burrs. A frame house adjoin ing 16x30 feet and one of the best wells of water in the valley, 15 yards from the house. The land will yield 400,000 pounds of wheat or 500,000 pounds of barley or 1,200 tons of alfalfa allowing for I crops of alfalfa a year. An abundance of mesquite and Cottonwood on the claim. Title VS. S. Patent. For further particulars address the Tsi- bunx Office or the undersigned. Sept. 23-tf PETER R. BRADY, Sb. WANTED! A position by a young man, ns in structor either in a private family or in a public school. State salary. Ad dress P. O. box 84 Jeanerette, La, IP. FISHER, NEWSPAPER ADVERTIS .'a lug Agent, 21 Mechanic's ExchangejSan Franaisco, is our authorized agent. This paper is kept 6u tile at his office. Articles of Incorporat'on OF THE Mammoth-Collins Supply Com pany. We, John A Blaurock, Cole Saunders and ! A. L. Carpenter, desiring to incorporate ' ourselves under the provisions of the'laws of the Territory of Arizona, and especially an Act of the Legislative Assembly thereof, entitled "An Act Concerning Corporations," ' approved March 8th, 1887, for the purpose i of engaging in the lawful enterprises, busi j ness pursuits and occupation hereinafter spciUed, do make, subscribe and acknow ledge according to law, these articles of incorporation and declare: The name assumed by this Corporation and by which it shall be known is "The Mammoth-Collins Supply Company," and I. . : . k . .(,,! j u iiuio ui ma vuiuiiKJinxiiiDui ui lunvorpo- ration shall be the day of the filing of these articles in the office of the County Recorder of the County of Pinal, Territory of Ari zona, and the termination thereof shall be twenty-five (25) years thereafter. II. The enterprise, pursuits, business and occupation in which this Company proposes to engage, is to acquire by-purchase, and in anv other lawful manner, real estate, lands and all kinds of property, real, personal or mixed ; to lay out, construct and acquire by purchase or In any other lawful manner, and accept, hold, possess, enjoy, operate and use franchises from any Slate or Territory of the United States, or in ony county or : municipal or privato corporations, wagon : roads, canals, mills, factories, houses capital stock and bonds of corporations, chattels : goods, wares and merchandise, choses in ) action, to transact any and all kinds of busi ' ness which may be transacted by a natural person ; to hold, use and enjoy the same and - to alienate, sell, lease, demise and dispose o' same or any part thereof, as well as of any j other property this corporation possesses, be , seized of or be entitled to ; to borrow money : and contract to repay the same at such time ' or times as its Board of Directors deem pro , per and see fit; and to hypothecate, mort- gage or pledge, all or any part of the prop erty which this corporation may hereafter acquire; to secure the payment of such money with interest, or to secure the pay ment of any debt of this corporation, with such interest thereon as it may be legally obligated to pay and to conduct a general merchandise and trading business; to buy and sell gold, silver, copper, lead and other mines to form subsidiary companies to work them, and to erect quarts mills, smelt ing furnaces or other reduction works for the treatment of all kinds of mineral ores. III. The place were this Corporation proposes to have It principal office and place of busi ness i the town of ..lam moth. County of Pinal. Territory of Arizona. ( ! IV. The amount of the capital stock of thi . corporation fchall be Thirty Thousand Pol ' lars, divHetl into three thousand shares of the par vahif ot Ten 1 ollarh each and the time hen. am. the cundiiioiiM upon which it is to be paid are as follows, viz: JLe whole thereof immediately upon making the subscription there r or, and the said stock : shall be fully paid befure being burned und ' non-assessable thereafter. I V. The amount ot the :av vulue of each share of the Cupitai Mjck ot this corpora tion shall be ten dollars. ! ! The highest aniuunt of indebtedness or i liability direct or contingent to which this j corporation is at any time to be subjected j or to subject itself, is the sum of Twenty Thousand Dollars. VII. The stockholders in this corporation and their private property, shall be exempt from the corporate debts of this corpora tion. Vfll. The affairs of this corporation are to be and shall be conducted by a Board of Directors consisting nf three persons who shall be elected annually by the stockhold ers at such time and in such manner as shall be prescribed by the by-laws of this corporation, and all of whom shall be stock holders or subscribers to the capital stock of this corporation. The following named persons who are subscribers to the capital stock of this cor poration, shall constitute the Board of Directors of this corporation until the first day of September, 1899, and until their suc cessors duly qualified shall be elected or appointed, to-wit: i. A. Blaurock, Cole Saunders and A. L. Carpenter. If any dir ector shall cease to be stockholders, he shall cease to be a director. Vacancies in the Board of Directors shall be filled by the re-, maining members of tho Board. Immediately or as soon as practicable after the filing of these articles in the of fice of the County Recorder of the County of Pinal, the persons herein before named as Directors to serve until the 1st day of September, 1899, shall meet and organize a Board of Directors, adopt by-laws and pre scribe in said by-laws the method of calling the" meeting of the Board of Directors and stockholders, A majority of the Board of Directors shall constitute a quorum of said Board for the transaction of business, and any meeting of said Board at which aquorum is present, shall be deemed a regular meet ing and have the same authority as a full Board, whether notice of the meeting to the absent members of the Board shall have been given or not. IX. The Board of Hirectorsottliis Corporal shall have power to establish liy -law,. au make all rules and regtilutiotia !eeme" -pedlent for the management of the aii'uirs or this corporation and the officers thereoi. Is Witness Whekeof, we have hereunto set our hands and seals this 6th day of Septemlier, A. D., 1893. JOHN A. BLAUROCK, seal COLE SAUNDERS, IsealI A. L. CARPENTER, . seal STATE OF NEW YORK County, oi New York On this 6th duy of September, A. D., 1898, before me, W. L. Murray, a Notary Public in and for said County and State, personally appeared J, A. Blaurock, Cole Saunders and A. L. Carpenter, known to me to be the per sons described in, aud who executed the foregoing instrument, who acknowledged to me that they executed the same for the purposes and considerations therein ex pressed. In Witness Whebeof, I have hereunto set my hand and affixed my official seal this 6th day of September, A. 15.. 1898. seal W. L. MURRAY. Notary Public, N. Y. Co, My commission expires March 80th, 18S9. TERRITORY OP ARIZONA, County of Pinal. I, F. A. Chombei lin. Recorder, in and for the County of Pinal, Territory aforesaid, do hereby certify that the annexed instrument was filed and recorded nt request of J. II. Carpenter, on the 14th day of Sept., A, D. 1898, at 1 o cloch, p. va in book No. 1, of Article of Incorporation, Page 157. Witness my hand and official seal, this 14th day of Sept., 1898. seal F. A. CHAMKERLIN, Recorder. Thos.G. Pevton, Sept.2S-10t Deputy. ...THE HIGH-GRADE... NEWROYAL 'j3 1 n. NO. 8 DROP-HEJtD CABINET FAMILY SEWING a MACHINE Posesses al! ths modern improvements to bs found in any first-class machine. Sold al popular prices. Warranted ten.yec.rs ..MANUFACTURED BY.. ILLINOIS SEWING MACHINE CO. ttOCTSOSD, ILLINOIS SOLD BY SHIELDS & PRICE, Agents. March 25-6 m "LIVE QUESTIONS" EX-GOV. JOHN P. ALTGELD. A Book for the People eon-rams an. thi famous SPltexcs, irrrins, Mcssaais xo (ssars or thc authob. CVtSY ISSUC OT NATIONAL IMPORTANCE AND) POPULAR INTCP.CST CARNCSTLV CONSIDtRCB. Trot, MoNOfouea, Govchnmcnt Ownen8mi, Civil Service, Taxation, Money Question, Tariff, Education, Election Frauds, Strikes, Labor Organizations, Imperialism and Hundred Other Topics Discussed. hanosomc liirarv edition, 1,000 pases, substantial cloth, postpaid, s2.60 Geo. S. Bow ei & Soi, Unity Bldg., Chiciis. Agents wanted ewrywhera. Write lor terms. j NOTICE. ! On and after December 1st, 1896, all j meat b-mght in my shop ramt be paid I for t time of delivery. I am compelled j to make this order for self-protection, d5-tf C E. Akgclo. LarcestanoMostCompleteBuccyictory on Earth Write for Our Goods Ape The Best ' .SL Our Price the Lowest Parry MFc.&lnd,anaPo,is'l DR.TALCOTT&Co Strictly Reliable - Eatalilittital Tea Year. THE ONLY SPECIALISTS Oa flas Pastft Ceast Treatise Diseases el We BosMvely tousatos to cure Vsrfcocels, Fttes and ?!2 c Westasiss si six vaafcs. Blood Taints, Stricture ana Acute sua Chronic Umhuga s speci-ity. To show our ged firth We will not ask for a dollar until we cure you. We. Kit H tastisrJcsgy atai Is tor evtrabseW. We occupy ttw entire Wefts Frr birfUtar with the moat completely aouia4 offcea an4 hosaltal vast ot New York for too aceosHBodanoa el oat ot tears oassnts an -atkari BWila Is Beaaa la thectty doriag trtMsoat Cor aa aoo rk ilea chaorfulty Miwotos, (Mac furl Cor.3d&UainSts.,LosAnget8S,Cat. QYS WELLS fa ' I 1 1 W MESA, FLORENCE AND - GLOBE STAGE LINE. C. C. HOCKETT, Proprietor. Three Trips a week. Daylight Travel Leaves Mesa Sa.ni, Mondays, Wednesdays and Friduys. Arrives at Florence at ll:i0 a. m. Leaves Florence at 1 p. m., arriving at Globe at 8 p. m., the following dav. Leaves Globe 8 a. m. Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. Arrives at Florence at 11a. m. the following, day. Leaves Florence for Mesa at 1 p. m. Arrives at Mesa at 6 p. m. Stages stop over night at Riverside. Good accommodations given the traveling public. Stages connect with stages for Dudley ville, Benson, Mammoth, Oracle and Tucson. Johnson Bkos, Agents at Mesa. Thos. Abmob, AgtntatGlobe. Shields ft Phicb. Agent at Florence mm Made To Order GO 00 Man's Suit, for 10.30 BY OUYINO OIRIOT PROM '. ROSEN BURGER & CO., 202-204 E. 102d St., NEW YORK CITY. The Largest Clothing Manufacturers In America. OUR GREAT BARGAIN OFFERI BOYS' ASCITIS SUITS FOB- with Extra Pants and we Pay fcxprssssge Theu SslU arc mmtt op f All WmI Catalan1 irlmr.cd witii fast black Sattea, tfatbeat af workaafl' hip, cut Double Breasted, Sieu, tl Tears, wits Silk Embroidered Sailor Collar, 10 to 15 Teare, wita sat Sailor Collar. All Paotibare Potent Waist Bande. We nead pierce of the cloth aed extra battoao, with each suit, kiadl ateatios If large ar anall far age. Whea erdcrlag tend Poet Office, lieree Uoaey Order ar Becteteres Letters, alaa afe at last alrtsday, aed If tares ar enall far ala aae. Meaey caeeffally reloaded If sot aatlefactary. Sead sc. etampa far aaialea, tape auaaara, Seaasr1a hi-.ni. etc. If you suffer from any of the m urn oi men, come to tne oiaesc Specialist oa the Pacific Coast. OR. JORDAN k CO.. h 1051 Market St Est I8S2. ' Tennr men ud middle 3 UMi s-nttan avhfi siras (urTprino- T I from the effects of youthful tndiicretioni or x- m d-M ; ...,. v... ..wi tn.eMi T ' IlMlit7,ImplDey,IatMnh(Hl in all iu complications; fepermatorrhcra, ' Proitalorrhia, fionorrbcea, Czleet, Frequency f tTrlnaiititr. eie. Bvif I Combination of remedies, of grtat curative pow- m er, the Doctor has so aiTanged his treatment T I that it will not only afford immediate relief but permanent cure. The Doctor does not claim to T perform miracles, but is well-known to be a fair a and square Physician and Surgeon, preeminent T in his specialty IHscasS Of ln ff My phi If tborongbly emdirctedlrointbe ystem wltoontusing 31errurj m EVRY MAN atJDtvinK to t wm r r Ceire our honest opinion of b.sromplnltit. a We -will Guarantee a POSITIVE CURB in f evry ease we undertake, or jorfeii One) T hon Ma nd Dollars. tonsiiitatton rK.ti", ar3 strictly private, a CHARGES VERY REASONABLE. Treat- ment personally or by letter. Send for book. A "TUe Fhiloftophy of Itt&rriager ne. ia vaiuaoie dock iot men.; TWIT DR. JOBDAH1 Great Museum of Anatomy 0 . . I I . if... - i j : l. T UIC MUCH MM aUOt M USCUIU - - UTW IU 09 world. Come and learn how wonderfully you mrv uauci now k kvoio sicKiiesB boo aiseasc. We are continually adding new specimens. CATALOGUE FREE. Call or write. 1051 Market Street. San Fnncisrti. CaL $250 Reward By authority vested in me by the Board of Supervisors of Pinal county I hereby offer a reward of $250 for the arrest and convic tion of the person or persons who murdered one James Lee at Shultz. Pinal county, Ari zona, on or about September 14th, 1898. W. C. TRUMAN, Oct.22-tf Sheriff. Prices and Catalogue Ind. xftl WW ' j f5M Thl.St,k lffhr2" id wU tlt" ( 4M 8. V- T P'f P'" I -af ii :raM UK -1 n 53 D- 'OHIu t nn H fe 11U (M U IB MARCUS A. SMITil, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Tucson, - - - Arizona. Will attend to cases in Final, Gra ham and Gila counties. Notice for lnIlicaMou. (Homestead Application No. 1814.) DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR. J Lamd Office at Tucson, Ariz..Sept.20,18. ) NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT THE foHowins-named settler has filed notice of his Intention to make final proof in sup port of his claim, and that said proof will be made before the Register and Receiver at Tucson. Arizona, on Monday, Novem ber 6. 1199, viz: William T. Branaman, of Riverside. Arizona, for the SWJi Soe. 28, T. 4 S.. R. 14 E G. A S. R. B. M. He names the following witnesses to prove his continuous residence upon and cultiva tion of said land, viz: William W. Swingle, of Dudieyville, Arizona, Robert L. Brana man, Thomas Desmond and Frederick W. Lattin, of Riverside Arizona. MILTON B. MOORE, Register. First publication September 23. 1899. TWO FOR ONE. Send for free sample and jndge thereby, THE FLORENCE TRIBUNE AND THE CINCINNATI WEEKLY ENQUIRER. Both one year for only $3.00. : The Enquirer is a 9-column, 8-page paper, issued each Thursday, i Largest in size, cheapest in price, ' most reliable in news, all large type, plain print, good white paper. If our readers want another live paper, the Enquirer is that Daper. Call or send orders to THE TRIBUNE, Florence, Abjbona. TVir Enouir'r is thfl rrrftftt f re Rilvpr ! paper of the east, RED HOT NEWS, News That is News to arizonans in THE Los Angeles Times. Fuix Wibe Service. Vekt FRIESPJ.T TO AjaiONA. Clear asd Vigorous. Largest Paper on the Coast, The Times is the only paper with a specia Arizona News Bureau, and publishes com plete Territorial Correspondence. The Times reaches Arizona points 24 hou rs, ahead of the San Francisco dailies, and Is 48 to 60 hours earlier than all papers from the Eastward. 12 TO 36 PAGES. B mai!, $9 per year. By carrier, 75 cents per month, iSsfSubscrib) witb Local Aeent. rtiii; FLORENCE r HI BUNIS, The only newspaper pub lUhed in Pinal County, the richest of all the Ari zona counties in mines and agricultural lands, In general circulation among farmers and min ers. The most desirable advertising medium in Arizona. A newspaper that you need not ba ashamed to send away to. your friends. Subscrip-r tion $3.00 a year, or $5.0Q for two copies (in adt vance). Address TRIBUNE. Florence, Ariz, Florence, Arizona. The New York World. Thrice-a-Week Edition, ALMOST A DAILY AT THE PEICE OF A WEEKLY. The most widely circulated "weekly" newspaper in America is the Thrice-a-Week edition of The New York World, and with the Presidential campaign now at hand you cnmiot do without it. Here are some of the reasons why it is easily the leader in dollar it year ionrnali-m. It is i.'ie.l every other dav. and is to all purposes a 'lailv. tvery week each subxeribpr receives 18 paes utul oftFn during-the "busy" season !'g'e. nrii v eek. The price is nl.v $!,00 iei year. It is virtually a daily at. the price of a v c-ei.iy. Its news covers every known part of the wuHa. No weekly itewApnvir'r could stand ati'ii1 i!iid furnish such nerviee. The Thrti'e-a-World has at its disposal all ! of the resnurees the of greatest cewspapei 1 111 existeuro the wonder oi modern Journal i ism' Anenrn's Gieatn ewsvaper, it hits been justly termed The New York V end. - ts ro!itira! rews is rtBr,leeiv i,...ii This far-t will be of espeeial value in the Presidential campaign comine; on The best oi current fiction is found in its columns. These are only some of the reasons; there are others. Read it and see them all. We offer this unequaled. newspaper and Th Florence Thibumb together one year for $8.00. The reeular subscription price of the two papers is $4.00. OST ViGC COO y, Si g;5i t Icraissicns antj ts, aii electa of slt or excess and indin A 'irrrgtpEicand ': Brings the s cheeks and of youth. : 6 boxes ,-naran. " saoaey. CO. 5J, ISA. !'!tr.:ij.cj ck. . r 1 1 I