1 y
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4
1 1 VOLUME II.
PROF K53IOW AL LAXUi.
TR. WM. T. DALBY,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON,
lit. dfokx, Arixtma. Territory.
COUNTY PHYSrCJAN,
x Rcsn. E. W, Wells. ScMNBSlIowArtD
RUSH, WELtS &. HOVARD,
ATTORNEYS & COUNSELORS AT LAW,
rescott, Yavapai County, Arlzoua-
Will at enl promptly to all business eu
rusted to them in the Courts of Kecord.cf the
Territory.
jg M. SANFORD.
ATTORNEY-AT-L AW ,
PRESCOTT. A.T.
TJARRIS BALDWIN,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW.
ST. JOHNS. A.T.
Lnd Wme a specialty. Office in Court House,
3R.D.J.BANNEN,
PHYSICIAN & SURGEON
- FLAGSTAFF, A. T.
W Office and Drug Store Opposite R. R. Depot.
Will tiv prompt attention to calls from any
(point eng th line f the A Jt P. R. R
LFREPRUIZ,
CLERK OF THE DISTRICT COURT ;
RECORDER APACHE COUNTY,
AND U. S. COMMISSIONER.
-Special attention Riven xo ihe examination
i transfer of titles to Real Eate in the connty.
'pfif e ia Court House,. St. Johus. Arizona.
rp S. BUNCH,
ATTORNEY-AT-L AW,
KOLBKOOK, A.T.
OSce in Court House.
l. qutter'son,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
ST. JOHNS. A.T.
Offlee.lu Court House. ' -
(4
-VTTELLS HENDERSHOTT.
ATTOKjN ltil-A v.
'ALBUQUERQUE. N. M.
jr BECKER,
V NOTARY PUBLIC,
SI'RINGERVILLE. A , T.
T7 M.ZUCK.
nV NOTARY2PUBCIC3
IKlI.BROOV. A.T.
rr G.NCfJRS,
. ATTORN.EY-AT-LAW,
FLAGSTAfE. A. T.
0ARK CHURCHILL,
Attorney Gomml oi' Arizona.
Attorney and Counselor at Law,
"-:Orcr. Over the Bank of Arizona,
35.1, Presoott, Arizona.
. R. EGGERS,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW.
(District Aaiey f Yavapai Coimty.)
PRESCOTT, - - ARIZONA.
J. C. BKXKOOSC. J- HAWKINS.
TZTE.RNDONit HAWKINS,
- ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW,
PRESCOTT, A. T.
Mp-Will practice in the District Court of
packt Cousty.
LEWIS LYNCH
DEALER IN
Groceries and Genera!
MERCHANDISE.
Navajo Station, A. & P, R. R.
Hay.grain apd stablmg for ac-(
commodation of travelers
Stage leaves the house
daily (exceptSundat) 0
p. m. for St. Johns.and
Springerville.
B. F. hi. BLAKE,
Cruggist and Apcthecary,
COMMERCIAL STREET,
ST. JOlIiK, AKIZC.A
Xeeps Constantly on Hand
OILS j PAINTS. BRUSHES. PUTTY
VARNISHES. ETC.
Stationery andPoclcet Cut'ery
NOTIONS, BOOKS, Etc.
ORANGES, LEMONS, Etc., Etc.
ny!3-tf
itORD fcTHOHASj Advertising 45 to
49 BsndoJph St, Chicago, keep this paper on file
lJa&k wtnetB v-tth. fill f Ji E lCfii
ST. JOHNS, APACHE COUNTY, ABIZONA
STANDARD WORKS
OF REFERENCE
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715 AND 717 MARKET ST., PHILADELPHIA
DIONICIO BACA
DEALER IN '
GENERAL
PI
if! L.I
ALSO
WINES, LIQUORS.
ASD-
CBS- !E& S S
' BUYS AND SELLS
WOOL, HIDES, PELTS, GRAIN
Look out for fraudulent voters
and repeaters on election day.
fc 0
"Equal Rights" means uMe too
Pete" a sort of Me and the Count'
arrangement.
You will find the same names
registered at Tule and Concho.
Look out for reneaters.
Ten members of the Candelaria
family have registered at Concho
and more to be heard froi.
: o ma
Abram S. Hewitt has been nom
inated both by Tammany and the
County Democracy for Mayor of
New York City.
ta
Put a hair rope on Brother Mil
ner and stake him out in the pub
lic crib, and all will be Jovely and
uthc goose hang altitudelum."
Ghosts and departed spirits will
show up on election day. Wiggins
may fail on earthquake predictions
but we will go you one on this pro
phesy. Rev. John B. Milner paced out
of town last Sunday morning to
gather the sheep into the folds of
the wolves, who have declared the
next two vears as shearing season.
Harris Baldwin Esq. the ablest
and most prominent attorney of
Apache County is the nominee-for
District Attorney on the straight,
ticket adopted at Winslow. Vote
the ticket without a scratch.
'Equal Rights," a free ballot to
all not excepting sheep and burros.
The cradle and the grave are re
spectfully invited to attend. Re
spect for the dead and the necessi
ties of the living demand a vote
for all.
Chicago, Oct. 12. Paddy Ryan
has signed articles to fight John L.
Sullivan eight rounds with small
gloves, at San Francisco within
sixty days. The fight will be for
sixty-live and thirty-live per cent
of the gate receipts.
. g- a
A. V. Greer one of the best and
most popular citizens of the Coun
ty for Assesser. lie needs no help,
unless some one will kindly assist
in counting his majority. Every
report from along the line is '"Greer
ahead."
"Rack back Johnnie" B, matters
need your attention at this end of
your line. You had better stay at
home and attend to busineis. You
are snowed under so deep it will
require a warmer climate than this
to thaw you out. You, canvass is
in vain.
"Equal Rights" means give us an
even show, you tax-payers put up
the money and we will share your
burdens by taking care of it. Fair
play gentlemen, you put up and we
will take out. You hunt up the
money and we will hunt a place to
put it.
fe I. o q
Breed, Adamson and Hogue for
he legislature. Send in a straight
lelegation. We are in a muddy
turbid stream of politics and it is
no time for swapping horses. "He
who hositaics is lost." Stand by
the ticket solid and remember that
a vote lost is one given to the ene
my. A terrible storm occurred at Sa
bine Pass, Texas, last week. The
town of Sabine was inundated and
washed away by the waters of the
Gulf of Mexico, and fully 100 lives
lost. The neighboring towns and
county are rendering all assistance
possible.
The petrified forest in Apache
County, Arizona, is attracting gen
eral attention and a company will
soon begin to remove the deposit.
The petrified wood there found is
one'of the most remarkable geo
logical curiosities in the world.
Albuquerque Journnl.
E. W. Nelson; the nominee for
Recorder is a gentleman whose life
and education peculiarly fit him for
TERRITORY, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1886.
the position to which he aspires.
No more suitable or capable citizen
can be found in the County and we
cordially endorse him as a man
who will efficiently and, faithfully
discharge the duties of the office
to the perfect satisfaction of alL
' t
A contemplated innovation in
the manner of shinning cattle bv
weight instead of b the car is be
ing canvassed by railroad men.
The charges will prove quite likely.
satisfactory to the corporations
but will encounter considerable on-
position by cattle shippers. Hoof
and iiorn.
A scrambling horde of malcon
tents, a lot of howling politicial
dervishes held together by the "co
hesive power of public plunder."
Their only hope of salvation is to
keep on the inside and bar out in
vestigation. If honesty and truth
open the records of the past the
day of reckoning will be a sad one
for many a one who has staked
his all on the success of the "Equal
Rights Ticket;" shackles or sheck
wager of the game.
Morrison forour'ircxt County
Judge, and remember we do not
recognize pacing among the fancy
gaits in Arizona. Give him a
straightforward clear-footed walk
over into office. Brother Milner
you are a moderatel' fair single
footer but you will need both claws
and toenails to scramble to the dig
nity (r1he bench. Good-bye, we
we shall await your next" from an
other territory.
Over eleven thousand dollar?
taken from your County safe; ten
thousand dollars with a little thirty
five hundred dollar building to rep
resent the liberal appropriation;
twelve thousand dollars appropri
ated for your public roads.and one
small bridge to show for it. Thir
ty-two thousand dollars of the tax
payers money charged in the profit !
and loss column.
Tax-payers " and citizens of
Apache County are you going to
try the thing over or have you paid
enough for your experience?
a
There is a good time corning
when Commodore Owens is install
ed in the Sheriffs Office. The cat
tle and sheep will be able to browse
unmolested upon the plains, law
breakers must seek another climate,
cattle and horse thieves must adopt
a safer business even if it should
be less profitable, and when one
of them gets into jail he will learn
he is in "for keep's." Witnesses
will be both found and brought in
to convict those who depredate
upon the property of other people
and criminals willjj learn in sorrow
that Apache County has at last of
ficers, courts, and judges who will
bring them to grief.
b a ma
J. T. Lesueur of St. Johns is the
nominee of the Winslow Conven
tion for Treasurer. Mr. Lesueur is
too well known in Apache County
to need endorsement. He is on
the ticket for good and is billed
through to the last , station. His
modest worth, honorable record.
and Stirling business qualifications,
having fitting recognition in his
nomination for the responsible po
sition to whsch he will be elected.
No more robberies of the county
safe and no more nightly racings
of wheelbarrows loaded with
county records. "God reigns anil
the County will jet be saved."
One hundred and fifty three
names are claimed to be registered
at -Concho.- We have never heard
a disinterested person give this pre-cinct-moro
than a possible .forty
votes. How long are these meth
ods to continue in Apache County.
Reckless criminality and open con
tempt of all requirements of law.
should certainly fijid a limit at
some phice and time. We call at
tention of our prosecHvting Attor
ney to this matter, ltfiis general
ly acknowledged outrage be dealt
with in such a manner as witl
prove both a warning and an exam
ple to such practices in future.
fcj 0
The Critic very appropriately
christens the Court House ticket, a
monstrosity. Yes, a malformed, tri
formed, concave, convex, double
action monstrosity. A political
hybrid which has sprung into exis
tence like the mule," without pride
of ancestry or hope of posterity."
It has borrowed all its claims to
respectability, and like the jack
daw of old struts about with its
ugly carcass bedecked with stolen
peacock feathers. They have "bor
rowed the livery of heaven to serve
the devil in" and there is not one
of the Winslow candidates who will
not deny the authority or right to
use their names.
Can ihe 3Iormons Support HubbelR
Is it possible that the Mormons
are going to support the Hubbell
clique in the coming election?
Can they conscientiously vote
for a man who has always been
their most bitter enemy?
The man who was the ringleader
in the notorious Anti-Mormon raid
two years ago. The man who took
the most prominent part in putting
such men as Tenn-, Flake and
Christopherson and others in the
penitentiary, and gloated over the
sufferings of his victims. The man
who two years ago organized an
Anti-Mormon part, which defeated
the Reform Ticket nominated at
Hoi brook. No, it is impossible
for the Mormons to give him their
support.
It is unreasonable to suppose for
a moment that either Mormon.
Jew or Gentile, who possesses the
least spark of self-respect, honor
and integrity would vote for such a
man for Sheriff of this County.
Another good reason which makes
us feel confident that the Mormons
will support the People's Ticket
nominated at Winslow, is the fact
that nearly every Mormon precinct
sent good men there to represent
them in the Convention, which
should bind the precincts to stand
by the candidate nominated by
their delegates.
We believe they are going to do
this too.
We-believe that the voters and
tax-payer's of this unfortunate
County will unite at the coming
election in placing the right of
government in the hands of men
of principle and honor, men who
were nominated by representatives
from every part of the county.
There is a bright future yet in store
for Apache County, and it will be
gin to dawn on the 2d of Novem
ber. Mormon Tax-payer.
The outbreak of pleuro-pneu-mnnia
at Chicago comes like a
panic on the cattle world. No offi
cial report of its existence was
necessary, for the work showed tor
itself. That the range was in dan
ger can be readily seen from the
hasty manner in which the quaran
tine gates were lowered in the
western states and -territories. Thi'
decimating pestilence budded, o&
the St. Lawrence, and who knows
if energetic men were not at "the
wheel, but what it may bloom clean
through to the Paificc. Hoof and
Horn.
Winfie'ld Scott, a banker of Col
orado City, and Clabe Merchant of
Abilene. Texas, contracted to de
liver 2,000 head of cattle to Mr.
Bull winkle of the Arizona Cattle
Company, ol Flagstaff, Arizona, at
his ranch in New Mexico sometime
in the month of June, but the grass
being short, the. delivery has been
delayed. The cattle have been in
charge of one Adams, who, a few
days ago appeared at the1 range
with the cattle for delivery, when
it was discovered that he wjts short
a large number. While investigat
ing the matter the gentlemen also
discovered that Adams was short
in his money accQunt to the-
WHOLE NUMBER 93
amoUllt of 3fi0n AHnms finrUno-
, b
J that they had discovered the short
age in his account, saddled his
horse and skipped the country last
Saturday night, leaving Messrs
Scott and Merchant to bear the
loss. Albuquerque Citizen.
Captain W. H. Kingsberyj the '.. ,
southwestern agent of J. H. Camp- . -bell
& Co., has just returned' from 4 '
a trip through southern Arizona"
extending as far west as Tucson.
He sneaks in the most enthusiastic
terms of the condition' of the range
between Deming and Tucson and ,
down the line of the New Mexico r
and Arizona railroad to the Sonorav
line at Nogales. The Captain says 4"
that he never saw finer grnss
Stock also are in fine condition
and cattlemen are. feeing as well as .
the present low prices of will per-
rait. There will be a good many
beef steers put upon the market
late in the season. They will not -commence
their round up until4
about the 1st of November and
will be ready to ship about the 15. '
They propose to turn off all that
will bear shipment and get rid of
all their stags, which are to be
found in most of the ranges which
were stocked from Sonora. They
will then have their winter feed for
stock that can be improved and
have plenty of it. Hoof andHorn
"A correspondent of the Inter
Republics, writing of the drouth
stricken portion of Texas says:
The great trouble with that section -of
country is that when they first
commenced stocking the "range it
was in splendid fix. There were
water and grass in abundance, arid
they supposed from its appearance
that it could not well be exhausted.
The commenced crowding it until
they went far beyond its capacity
and can now see their mistake when
it is to late. Stockmen cannot be
too cautious in the stocking of their
ranges. They certainly have had
a terrible lesson and one that will
never be effaced from their meriio
ries." .
It has ever been thus. Arizona
stockmen, who have been and are .
now idolizing their bountiful range
may have an experience similar
to the above if they do not try to
prevent otherwise. In this range
game it is better to quit before you
get the worst of it, and since the
cattle business has developed iu .
the last few years into such popu
larity with every one, it seems that,
the old standbys in the business ,
ought to know better than submit .
to the cards being "stocked" right
before their eyes. Hoof and Horn.
Cattle Inspector George Frisk,
returned on Saturday last from the
San Carlos Indian Reservation,
where he had gone, at the request
of Captain Pierce, the agent, to in
vestigate the disease that has re
cently killed a number of the cattle
on the Reservation, as well as work
oxen between San Carlos and Fort
Thomas. It was Captain Pierces
intention to have the Reservation
quarantined, if Mr. Frisk thought '
it necessary in order to prevent the.
disease communicating itself to,
range cattle. After thoroughly im
vestigating the matter, Mr. Frisk
came to the conclusion that the.
deaths among the Reservation cat
tle and also the work oxen were
caused by their having to subsist
on old dry grass and also from lack
of sufficient feed, in other words
starvation. There were no rains at
San Carlos until quite recently, and
since the new grass has started up
there has been no further mortality
among the cattle there. This
seems to confirm Mr. Frisk's theory
of the malady. He does not think
the- disease at all contagious, and
apprehends no further loss of cattle
at San Carlos, now that there is
good feed there. It is sincerely to
be hoped that Mr. Frisk's conclu-,,
sions are correct in the premises
Hoof and Horn.
Tim
fa
9