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Vol. *2. 1894 SI Finds Os in til] M ! SPECIAL BARGAINS FOR CASH! ) I o A full line of General Merchandise constantly in Stock, and we will uot be undersold. B. F. Jolmm, y.).u & Oj* r- * •: - | C-aiio. Q .J. WILLIAMS, Eclectic Physician and Surgeon. WILL ATTEND A! <t ‘ALLS PROMPTLY diseases oi women ft Office : Kimball House. . _• Arizona WB« »■ # ~ rp B. SABIN, M. D. PHYSICIAN & SURGEON- Office —Two Door* Eastof Postoffiee , Street, 1 Door Snath of Main. Mesa .- , ' Lawrence woodruff, HOMCEOPATHIST, arndoete of ilahaa axa Medical C.u.eire. l'l>ila delphi>, Class 1S8*!. OSce and Residence Rooms 11,1? audio. Cotton Block, Phsnix. Office flours— i m<B» 8., 1 to t and 6 to 8 p. m. JJIV CHAS. H. JONES, PHYSICIAN & SURGEON, i Tes*pe, - Arizona 1 * i Office otHeinem.ftn ti O il Block. Office Hour? —8 to 9a. in., ito 4 ana 7to 8 p. in. P T. POMEROY, Notary Public & Conveyancer. Lffital papera Carefully Drawn. Opposite . Hakes House. • MESA CITY, - - - ARIZONA I j J J. JESSOt*, DENTIST. AH work warranted .and prices v ery easonable. Dffce—-Porfcer Block. Phoenix, Arizona. I QSTHUNE A McCABE ATTORNEYS-AT-L AW Special, attention given to laud, water and mining cases, Practice in all the courts, FEMPE :. :: ARIZ. 1 —— TRIPPEL & SON. Ilex, Trippkl, Mining* En«iueer and Met»lur;>4st. urtto L Thippel, Civil Deputy C 11-- ty Surveyor and Deputy U, S, Land Surveyor. Do all kinds of Architectural, Mining md Cizil Engineering. Contracts taken for buildings and es timates furnished for -a'l work. Uy lraulic and Canal work a specialty, urrtea, Power or Rloek ITT. Mesa Free Press. W. J. KING3F.URY Attorney-at- Laud Practices in all the C mrls. Specia a; tent ion to land ca*es.. TEM IE, - -ARIZ j JjR. u. W B ULY, •-D ALKK IN Drugs, Medi in S, Chemicals, I FANCY AllD T IL ! T UITICLES. Sonnes, shi* Per urn ry, Kte* l &L$ A.-- AKIZviNA, ..-^1 . THE giasm fyy^KET 6.1 AY & W SILER, Proprietors Fresh and Ctornel and Pickle 1 Moats, i Sausago, Etc, always on hani. |&4l*iM"Hts del.v red to any [.art <f 'h - ci'y siml viemiry. Pjnjrjy* Jlui, Slain Street, MESA, Ji BIZONA 7 1 W. A. BURTON, CONTRACTOR -and- • BUILDER. Estimates Furnished on Short Notice. MESA, - - - ’ Ariz DESERT L» A •D c ! V 1 /. PR ■O A N 0 TtCF F)R PJ3'J3\rm U'tTKn St st s Lanj, Office. lU B>lK. A JZOIf . M r. Htb, I Notic<* :a he eby g* ven thv Ftb’u< m Vernon. M*si, Marie'pa Ootnty, Ar z >usi, has fled no'iia f nte**tion ti mike i oof n hi* desert land el -i n Vo. 181-?, f rth Nnr h half of Sec tion i:> Tp IS 16 E. b>f p-i the f!,e**k of » hi* HIs riot ‘ r*u* t at I hoetih, \r zo a, on Satur di\,the2** h day t Anri', 1 '.'4. He in ne-i tho f tlo.v' witne *es to pr ve th* .* n *ht* ; rr rit , i rcclvnati >n of said land, S itu I al , The dre '. B uni, .lamas Pine, Jan.ee 11. Buoh, all >f it s». Ar zona. , FRANK W WALLS. .. r U ■ ,<•*-- . Rjtf.ator • -first pub Mar 2i MIS A, ARIZONA, THURSDAY, AllttlL 5, IpOI ZjlOj 80-lIJ. »*< -4- '■ The KWH L : m- Ev.-r Open* din M -xU cun l*t* S' en in Oor Dry Goods Dep’t, - I Which contains new, and I r , .\ hjoualilc di-css g'*orN, H inlifls, | „,|i» h’ Itrni gfius’ furnishing goods »nd e v» j rytiling usuilly found in a well furi'dshetl establishment. Our Hardware ana Grocery Den’t* ure stocked w> ‘ ’ - ...i the elide- Cf ' r goods, Wq are Agents for tlie! Celebrated Myers Pumps, fho Famous b\ a».ln l-none ])u.r.ry Wliips mid the Unexcelled Canton Clipper Plows. Our lines are of the best and our •rices as low jis the lowest.. Special "ders given prompt attention, C LL AVO SEE US. i FOR FI E INSURANCE CO TO B. F. Johnson, Sons & Co., AGKN I'B FOR HE OI D Ph lenix In». of '’rnkhn. N. A , l Am*f : can F r I is- o*'., of rßMade pliia Pe*i*isv!van"a " “ •* “ “ Niagara “ “ ‘ •* “ farm insurance \ si’Etialty.. •I 11. BARNETT. Dealer in . ine.s, Cliemicals, Paints, ()i’s, (jlass, etc.; Perfu npry, Fancy gonds, Stationery» Toilet Articles , md Tobacco. JVllsa, Arizona. ILvdlES^. Feed & Livery Stable. P. METS, Proprietor. R. WILSON * The only Second Tl-ind Store in j Southern Arizona. Ever) va iety •f goods sold at bed-rock prices. J Give us a call. St.* PIIOENIX. - - ARIZ. i r DESERT LAND, FINAL PROOF. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION.' Uni'ed States Land Office, j Tucson* Ariz. uni, Mar. 21, 1K94. | No.ice is hereby given that Wiiliam ' Barneit. ot Mesa, M ir c'» »a (70., Ari zona -has filed ii'»tice of inteatin i t » make |»r *ofnn his desert bind claim No 1821. t’»r the wh >li* of S.-cti *m 11. T|», 2 rs tiilh. 1.1 mge 5 Eist, befire the Clerk of the District. (Joint a» Phoenix Ar-Z mn, no Tiureliy, ibe 2i i div r lit A:»rii. IS9I. lie names tile follow i*i r wi:nesses t» prove tin* coniji'cV,, *rri«r ition an I re don ii »'i oL- said 1 bind: lame- Pi ie. O v\ r ■siinvud T Barnett and Wm N . w .|l. all of M si, \rzooa. fcV : iuk W Will's, ' | Fuat ,mj Ala 4 ZSi Register. How Arizona Dld.iT Get a Deep Sea Harbor. A gent 1 mill stopping ill Tomb stone, who is posted legardmg M-xican grants and tnaii s l eitei i.iiti iii y otner p»*.soli in the couo uy, || S gi'ei. this paper some val uable iiitoi iiiai ion, s<ys the Tomb stone Pio p ct**r. Tilt; 'wording of the treaty b». which Ar zona was ceded t*» tin U ill ed S> ut‘is by Mexico wa rn os*-1 y diawo, otl.erwise we w..nl have euj »yed the cl• s< inclioii o. hivmg a ueep wat r harbor. 11l i ,e, which leives Nogales and makes ail angle at Uiat point b} taking a ino e northerly r< ute u td i reaches the Colorado river.Mionld have 1 *" -- —pb on a continuous straig t course, which was the intent nf tin agreement with Mtxico. It w..s> •inaiged o give Arizona a rhen water harbor on the Gulf of Mexico bv mak.ng ihe treaty read tiiai tin boundary t-hould he drawn in a straigltr. line from No'gues to a p im twenty mil s below tin* mouth ot the- Odor .do ii\er. Af.er tin papers w* re drawn up and signed it, was “hs rved that ilie reading had lieen ch.nged to un.ke the Inn run ton point twenty miles be.ow the mouth of the Gi a river. | JI subs losing the harbor of ! Port Isabel and twenty mil. s of d* epw’a er coast Atizooa lost som* of the best, lalul 11l .So .ora. It was Coo l.leied in ihe days when tin treaiy wh- sigh' d (hut Ai'izoini soi w s not worth a c hi a qu ut*-r of a s ci o , a d 'hem tier was dropped w i bout e-Hi testing. N*,w that the di-covery is made til it the land which Die Un.ud Blutes gave up to MeX co hy this u. r.n is a-rth tuoie pe. act* f>r ie glowing of trop cal irui s ihm a y other part f Ameiica, it se ms as though our government soould take some steps to recover it, e\en though a few niidion della s were in ce-s.iry to move llie line t » wli* r* it properly b longs. It is worth aylta' ing Sentinel. luiqa Kcnervation. The Secretary of the luterioi tr lismitt'd to Congie-s last Tu s day the report of the coiiiminsi m appointed to n go late a neaty w ; i Ii the Yuuui li.di ns. This 'commis sion, sa\s the Yuma Tim* s, liek. iis ses-ioi)s in Yuma la t winter. Tin* r**port is \<*luminous a,d in addi tion io ihe term-* of the treaty con tains various i eoominei.d .lions--by the commis-ion. B\ tin* lirs sej ion the Ind ans r* liiuiuosti ad *liim over tiie tract of ta*.d in San D ego count> known is th * Yuma Indian ies nation. E cii Yuu a Indian sh ill be entitled (.* select hie acres of .land, to be all *ited to him in s veralty. When all of tin sea lote.ienfs are mme and appi o\ ed. the r* s due ot tin* reserv ,t oo w«,ica may be sub ject to rjii gat toil, txo | wi.-e prov.ded top,«nall be disposed I »>f r.B fodowrfTlie S c e .iry of the I itei ior 5h..1l cause tl em to be sur v y tl and subdivided into tiac 8 of t* ix acres each, and cause them to he appraised. They shall then l*/ e sold to the highest bidder, ae.d the mo uy re.ilizeit pi«c d to Vhe credit I of the Yuma Lull ms. All ihe land ib,at cannot be irri g;i ed IS to b-5 opened for s ttlemeut under tbe general laws The com estimate that 18,0J0 j acres cun * e pla* »<l under irriga tion, of whcli 3,600 wi 1 ii« it — ij.i r d for the Indians, leaving 14,400 acres. It is rei onmvmde l that the Guvvrmucut take steps to have the land pm under levee so as to prevent nve flow. The Com missiout r of Indian Affairs concurs hi tin* recommendat on relative to changing iln* r**ute the Southern P.*c tic through the reservation so 'hit in s»»me places it may act as a levee. ALL CAS GO IG TIIE FAIR. THE chance of a lifetime, don t MISS THE GREAT FAIR. The obstacle which prevents so nany tliou-and Pacific G"ft>t resi lentH from visiting the World’s Fair will no, interfere in the <|ase of the gieai Midwinter Fair in Sau . r - * ' . X- ranuihUO. Not Only is the din • slice iary .much le.-s, but the rail road rates have been reduced so > low that* the cost of making tlu trip will have comparatively little weight agiinst the inclination to 1 1, d h re is also the assurance of ii tel, lodg ng- house and restaurant proprietors that i o advantage will lie taken of theunusual demand for .ccommodatious l»y charging more rhan standard rates during the Fair season. Who, then, can afford to lose -.uch an invaluable oppori unity. Excepting always the World’s Fair nothing of equul magnitude aud importance has ever been s; en ii Atneri<a. Imbed, we may go • iuch further without transgressing lie truth. 'here are plenty of competent witnesses ready to testify that in many resp« ots chiefly hose of original feature which ap ical ni"«i warm y to the sentiments *f the western wo Id—the Califor nia Midwinter International Expo otion exceeds in splendid achieve— ii nt ami str king etfii't similar de partm-nts in the great Colurub.an enterprise It is essentially the fruits of Pacific Coast pnde an I enthusiasm. [t comprises, as no other scheme •vur ha;-, t ie united eflbrts of Pa •ifie Coast iudustres to show- the vorl l. what cau be done on this rreat western sl 'pe. It will be r,he grand* st awakening the C >ast has eV'-r known, and the world, so fir fmm 4> *ing alone interested spectators, will pa ticUate larg*-l> m it. There is probably no nook in civiliz ition which has not been . - lighted to some extent by the gVory and fame of the Golden West. Yet now for tiie first time will the vorldjie perm.tied to witness jt s ,r* anu s* i i its entir**ty—_’m a |l jt s oiimp.*ired strength and grandeur. If this Rcems ‘,iko a narrow and ,jr *\inciiil Vmw. let the lioriz >n of our observation b broade**ed. Thut it ’.s vastly more than a state or distiict fair, it need only bo known Mat upward of thirty foreign coun ries are represent! d, and that a few hours snent viewing their >lab irate exliibits will be almost esjual to a journ y around tho woil.l. It will giie exliibitors a glimpse of tiie peculiarities uiid in dustrial dimensions of foreign countries that could not otherwise be obtained short of extended travel and.ha/d study, i In the bn-f space peimitted for ■ this subj ci it will lie impossible to « name all ihe attractions, and give all the reasons «hy tiny should be ■ seen; but a few hard facts in the ; form of summary may serve as a • tonic to stimulate the desire to see. I The ground occupied is upward of ■ two hundred acres in Golden Gate ■ 1 Park, tin* most beautiful park*in ; Ameren. Cost of the buildings I over $700,000. An aof five main » palaces, 180,000 Square feet. The, * splendid spectacle of these inrpos- . ing siructuies is worth crossing the continent to see. More than one third of their space is occupied by oreign countries. Besides these are a number of unique and spacious state and county buildingjs. An electrical tower rises 272 feet high in the Grand Central Court. The Fifth Wheel will swing you 150 feet ill the air. There is a genuine mining cainp; a eyclorarna of the Hawaiian volcanoes; a Japanese tea garden; Chinese, Alaskan and Indian villages and numberless other attractions. When visitors have seen all they wish of the Fair, thev ***•*«» ♦ # I advfttltagS of the amazingly che°p railroad rates to broaden their knowledge of California. The state * is full of interesting cities, seaside resorts, mountain retreats and mineral springs that abundantly r pay the expense of a visit, and ample time is allowed for all reasonable trios. Readers who do not understand all that is here referred to will b* •heerfully furnished with full in formation if they will simply make their wants known to the nearest agent of the Southern Pacific Com pany, or to T. H. Goodman, Gen’l Passenger Agent at San Francisco. In a decision recently rendered j the 17. S. Supreme Court holds in plain and unmistakable terms that the owner of a mining claim where the apex of his vein crosses the side lines of the claim and not its end lines has no extra-lateral rights whatever in his lode. That is. h« is confined to that part of his vein which is within his claim, and ho eannot follow it outside of the lines of his own claim at all. ♦ * - Josh JBilling'M on Insurance. I kum to the conclusion lately th*t life A\as so unsarin that the only way for me to stand a fair chance with other folks was to get / my life insured, so I kalled on agent of the Garden surance Co., and the7nC«* """ lowing quesiions. w f, ich W(^e to me, over toe top ot a pair of * spectacles, by a sj^ k o ld f fc ,l ow with a round ky head on llim was ever o>Vned: “A’irt you a mail or femailt If state how long yu have been so. Had yu a father of mother 1 If so, which ? Are you subject to fits I und if so, du yu have more than one at a time ? What is your pre cise siting wate ? Hid you ever have kn ancestor? and if so how much ? Du yu have any nightmare) Are you mariied or single? or are you a bachelor? Have jou ever committed, suicide? If so, how did it affect you ?” After answering the above ques iions like a man, in the affirmative the slick, little, fat, old feller, with gold spectacles on, said “I was in sured for life, and probably would; remain so for years.” I thanked him, smiled and retired, Arizona has an abundance of rich soil and a tropical temperature in its valleys. With the completion of the great system of irrigating canals now being constructed, says the Denver News, the abundant waters of the Colorado and Gila rivers will furnish the one thing needful to convert Southwestern' Arizona into a vast- fertile With heat, mois'ure, health *andf cheap fertile soil, Arizona only re quires population to make it one of I the richest cl the Western ata.UA No. 30.