Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

Arizona Silver Belt from Globe, Arizona • Page 1

Location:
Globe, Arizona
Issue Date:
Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

UiCGs4jimm The rizona Silver VOJu. YH. GLOBE, ARIZONA, SATURDAY, APRIL 12, 1884. Sis Belt NO. 1.

jffi jil THE ARIZONA SILVER BELT. Published ererr SturJv tnoruliyat Globe, Gila County, Arizona, IJY ItaTux ivd I'konubtma. suBHCBirnox k.vtkm: no.Yoar 00 Mx Months 2 00 Three Months I GO ii A.4yrtiftlc Kates ma.le known on ffttUdUdn. OFICUUDIRECTOr "y7 Territorial. ViXraW, PrcscottJ'' J.

uVtltr, Piecott: Ilv' Un, Tucson. Ailltor-E. P. tft4aia Court C. 0.

Preach, Clllct Justitc, Frtsictt; Dialel II. Pl.ney, ACWi tli; Associate Tovson. Ci Blttolet AUornoy-J. A. Tuwort.

V. SHnik1-Le 3. Tidba.rrvto.V. Surrejror Johnon, Tuiip O. B.

Ictertll Eerctus CjUtctor TuMon. Ddejtto to Conirtj d. It 0rj, FJormcc. Judfe of Hrst Jndldtl IMstrfet ot Soooad JuJIcUl DljtrK-liUt It. Ilii.

ey, Third JuJU-Ul Dlstrlct'-C. a. CrticeiL- Z- OMa, Cocntr. Jirfr ot District Court-Danltl It, Plftncy. arl of DUtrla Court-11.

1. Suii'p Jdj PitlutaU. L. Lonjt V. Pmjjc.

XS DnlrSknC-Tonia A. I'ujoo. r-: i E. C.Thatcksr, Hovell. DUttlct Altorney-J.

D. MCal(-BecorJer P. IJ. Miter. fllirTlMr-r.

VT. ITettuie.vjr, Chirln Mk. C. ItoherUon. Clerk of Board of SupervUora Ocorje W.

Sterrtt, Countjr TriMrcrD. B. Lacey. PubII3Admlnltrltor-HoIllerM. Fbk.

POST OFFICE TIME TABLE. omce ofp on week days, froui 7.50 a. until 7.J9 p. u. Bundayi From a.

m. until a. and I p. m. till p.

in. 4S" All mall closet at 1 p. m. SPEXCE, rostmatcr. B'nUnee from Globe to the railroad at MTlIleox, orcr Wood- and Norton Ftewirt'a tiaM (route for Eastern pastenjers.) 123 mile.

rFton Olobe ta CaaOnmlc, crojalnj the Dell Can. tou.Wn; et Pinal riljrt From Olobe to Orando la Pioneer 0 "miles. Elevation above tea lerel at CJoke 3W0 feet. Latitude 3) tnlnattt, 110 de- grtes, 4 minutes. Highest mtmnn temperature, Julj dej.

Lowest minimum temperature, Jan. 10th IS de. Mean, (Bdi-j. Italnfill for 18S2 ,13 G2-1W0 rrerallln direction of wind South et. Aa okttrratlon extcndlnjr over several years, dls.

rtotat the remarkable fait, that there hat not beeu a da wlthaut more or less sumhine. JOKNTISTKY. Dp. T. S.

HENDRIX, tteNltlent PeutUt. OrriCi: roscoc House, GLODK, A. T. GEO. V.

JOHNSTON, pilYSlfiAX Offlec rioneer Drug Stove, (iloho. City and County rails will ictelvo lmmc-dlate atU'iitloiL W. U. COOK, M. D.

PuysicuyANDhiiHaEox office Ilitclicoek' Uruj; Store, Wlobe, Arizona. OOice hours: 10 to 12 a. und to p. in. Doctor Win.

IIAKVJUY. Physiciamand SuuaiON, dec 13, 0, KENNEDY, Assnycr, Globe, Arizona. war. GKAVKS, ATTOttNKY AT LAW and Notary Public, llro.id Street, (llobe. Arizonu.

08CAK M.JBltOWN, ATTORNBrAThAWof Gila County. OfflcaoppiNltu tlio Hblt ofllce. ii. ouuy, At to -it oy at Law, Floiencc. Arizona.

A. V. BAKKK. ATTORNEY AT LAW. PlKKNIX, Af7.0NA.

Will pracllcoin all Courts of tlm Territory anS United SUtes Supreme Court. CALVIN S. FARQUAR, Atiornuy-at-Law, ULOBE. J. 1.

HAHKLEIl, tCor.tr 2C tor and Builder, GLone, A. T. PENDLETON, Civil Engineer SUUVEYOllaud U. S. Deputy Mineral Surveyor.

0 flier, a jLTiiQUa. txtsi'lciicciu L'mc direct, iloho' mjij UliOUK "ARIZONA. iTTAS bNJlAND and ft constantly recctv- Ins a full wipply of tlioTcst ami latest atylo ot furniture aud lutilr.et ware; also REAlTY MAUD COFFINS of decant deslcu and tMtlWnlccn' eood ol every description wnli.twri: fur sala nt low i June My SOMERVILLE'S BAKERY JKWAD Globe. Opposlto Photograph Gallery. Bread, Pies, Cakes, Butter, Sggs and Fresh Candies, ALWA7S 0NT lf-lND Bread Atijvorcd to all yarti of the twn.

BEDS, 25 and 50 cents. New Chop House, RESTAURANTand BAKERY, Opposite west nd of Depot, Open all Night. JSTMEAIiS AT ALL HOURS. Fresh Bread, Cakes and Pies. i JL.17IVCJIES Phi.

it l'or Ti'sivcllet's. febHtf C. UAXCKOFT, 1'ropiietor. Tlx 3Pion.eer SAW MILL Is prepared tb enter Into CONTRACTS, To Furnish Clear Pine, -Ami- MILL TIMBERS, At ratci that Defy Competition. Orders left at Eaton Ii.illej's Store, (llobe, A.

T. J. II. r.ATON. jtmo 18-tf DR.

SPINNEY, no. a. Treats Special Chronic Diseases VOWXG Who may bo suffering from the effects of oiithftil follies or indiscretion, will do well to avail theuiseh es of tills the greatest boon ever laid at thu altar of suffering humanity. Dr. Spinney will guarantee to forfeit 500 for every easo of seminal weakness which ho undertakes ami falls to cute.

9Ien. Tlietc are many at tho ages of thlrtv to sixty years who are troubled with too frequent evacuations of (he bladder, often accompanied by a slight smarting or burning sensation, mid a weakening of tho sjstem in a manner the patient cannot aecountfor. On examining tlie urinary deposits a lopy sediment will often bo found, and sometimes small particles of nlhumen will appear, or tho color will bo of a thin, mllkish line. uL'aln to a daik anil tornld appearance. Theiu aio many men who die of tills dlmVuIty, ignorant of tho cause, which Is th) second htage of seminal weakness.

Dr. S. ill guarantee a perfect cure In all such eases, and a healthy jestoration of the geneto-urinary organs. Ofllrit hours 10 to -1 and 0 to 8. Sundays from 10 to 11 n.

m. Consultation free. Thorough examination and advice 85. Call on or address, Dii. Kearny San Francisco, Cal.

deel5-ly for Male. I tVllirt Hull BtMierallv known Holme's Well. For paillriilitr- apply nl thi-llKM Jj-tl Wsn-zZiminerman, Upholsterer ''fc Cabinet-maker. BANKERS, GLOBE ARIZONA. COnitESPONDEXTS: Nr.

York National Shoe and Leather Bank San FlUNCjseo Bunk ot California Ti'cscv Saflonl, Hudson A. Co. In connection with Its hanking business, tho firm J8 prepared to oxnmliitj and report wH.li care and reliability upon mining jiropunius. leu 11-u PASCOEHQTJSEr i Main Street, Globe, Arizona. LODGING DEPARTMENT, UMDEIl TnE MANAOEMENT OF MnS.

J. II. HYNDMAN and MISS MAGGIE CAMPBELL. Hot and Cold Baths. Iioriflng, BO Cents Pascoe's Restaurant, door to CllOv'O Mercantile Company, Arizona.

Tho long felt want of a first-clans restaurant has at last bosn supplied. MeMs llrst-ilasi ai all nd servcu hv uronfot and attentive waiters. dic.23tf -T. 11. PsTSCOB, rroiirictor.

THE POST OrEJCI? STOBE, Ciu-ricM HiiiieK 3XERCIIAlSr)ISE, ol' Staple and' Fancy Groceries, XL'TS, IHc, HOOKS, WINDOW KASIIKH und HARDWARE All at lteasonablo Prices. L. ROBINSON, Prop. mch 1-tf George A. Newton SHOP At Hitchcock Drug Store, Globe, A.

T. WATCHES, CLOCKS JEWELRY. Sewing Machine Fixtures and Needles. Pistols. OUNH AND PISTOLS RKIMIKF.O IKE IVXining Stock Register Journal of Finance Olvos the value and coirect ratings of over H.000 i i cojir a xirs Asn Tim Latest Mining Information, Including Dividends, Assessments, Low- kst and Hioiikst Stock Sales for each week, up to within 24 hours of publication, c.

For Sale by all Xcivsdcalcrs. SUBSCRIPTION, -SINGLE COPY, 15 SO PEU YEAH. CENTS. detailed repoits upon any Ml no furnished. See paper for terms.

Annnrsf The Financial and Mining Publishing Company. 2T Itmarlwav. Now YorkCit. j.m 27 0 Box 1 152, Tl'OWX HEARTH. TVlmt though thu years are flying fast, And silver sprinkles through the hair, And crow's-feet come, and Wrinkles last, In spite of pride's most Jealous care; That with leluctance wo confess, And growing old escape the tohg'ueV So plain a truth should not distress; 'TIs nothing if the heart is young.

That we have errors to regret Is but tho common lot of all; There's something to be lived for yet, So struggle on, whate'er befall, 'Tis useless that above the past The dirges of rcmorso are rung; We'll light old Time unto tho last; Aud triumph while the heart is young. Wliilc life exists the light of hopo' Should never b'coliscured by gloom, Hut brighten all our horocopo i -Until OHlnotitfeirtifaKt IhtCtumb. Tho oldest st i 1 1 1 ve truths to kai nr So faith should never be unstrung; Our little lamps'wlllcheeiily burn i As long as e'er tho'heart Is young. And how shall hearts bo kept in green When checks are sunk and eyes ai dim, When age brings on the Jays of spleen, Aud memory crowns a funeral liymn By finding means of doing good; Hy soothing souls with sorrow stung. Thus age and death aio long withstood, And thus our hearts kept cer young.

THE MOST LEARNED OF ALL SCIENCE. Slark Twain on thi jjnraon I'oshII-FootprlntH The Tonus Man Wat There. It may bo all very well for Professor Marsh and Professor Harkness to talk their scientific talk about the Carson footprints, and try to saddle them onto, the primoval man, tho' Irish elk and otli'ers who are -gone and cannot now defend themselves; it may be all very well, I say. and entertaining, and within the just limits of scientific slander and research, but it is not moral. For I know the cold facts about tho footprints, and I know they were not made by the primeval man, or the Irish elk, or any of that sect; they were mado by tho Uovada legislature, aud I was there when it was done.

It was done at the time of the sino die adjournment. It had rained rain all the evening outside, and it had rained whiskey all the evening inside inside the fence, I mean, for thtro were no buildings in that early day -and neither you nor a much older could hlu-o told 'oh. side of tho fence the weather was most inclement. was on both side3 of it, and sometimes it, for a brief, uu-ceitaiu scjsoii, I couldn't tell. Tho footprint quarry, whero that legislature pat stood they could, I mean -was a dry with a fence around it when tho rain, began; just a dry n1ku.li flat, containing a fence full of a4y honorable alimlied flats from all over the territory; aud in three hou'-s that first mentioned flat was absolutely soaked to the depth of three inches; and the others all the way through.

I mako no exceptions; I say all. I was there, and I know. So the place was becomo a regular marsh, full of irregular Marshes, so to speak meaning the legislature, but intending no disrespect. And when the weather moderated so that no ono could venture outside outsido the fenco these latter adjourned. They adjourned in the usual form form used by territorial legislatures of that day the Speaker bringing down his gavel on the head of the member mistaken by these scientists for tho Irish elk which he, the Speaker, mistook for the fence-post and thus, as you see, is the gloom and sorrow of a double error spread over this moldering historic incidentand said common time, four heats to tho measure, that is to say four hiccoughs to the sentence: "The niodder having weatheratcd." and so on, in a similar strain, till ho got through.

I remember it as if itT irtre but yesterday. Thus dissolvod, they departed thence. It was then tllat they made the They couldn't help making them; for tho place was a marsh, as I was telling you. I saw it done; for I was there. I was there, and 1 shall now cast upon this pale dim void of scientific conjecture the lurid glare ol I was there, and I saw them march.

The primeval man was absent, tho Irish elk did not arrive; tho cave bear responded not to the summons; tho old Silurian ass got left. The menagerie was wholly local. Part of it I saw, and the rest of it I was. This is history; this is cold history; and history cannot lie. The Speaker went first.

He made the largo tracks the ones eight inches broad and eighteen inches long, and resemble tho footprint of a champagiie basket. He wds a.prime man in two or three ways, and evilvin forty, but he was not tho primeval man, just tho same; reflect upon this. I was' there, I was there all the time, and I knew him well. He made tho large tracks. And he did it without an e'Ubrt.

He could have done it with one hand tied behind him. He said so himself he didn't tell me so, but he told rtiher so, though 1 knew him wMl Hi- n.mvtinil Iff in one end of it tu the othoi was Welsh; either Welsh or Sanders, I don't remember which; but it was a narao that sounded like those. He" was a rancher, kept a ranch; cattle ranch, and did not wear shoes, such not being his custom, though a praying man from his mother's knee. And always when he went forth ranching with all his might into tho pasture among the'tattle, there was much hay aud straw lying scattered about, and with it much other material material of a plastic nature; mud, to wit; acrea of it; and this material and tho straw did of a truth qnd by custom combine and form unto him uncreated sandels, as you may say uncreated, because Got projected by. volition nor wrought vcrbut the occuv mutative achievement of.tiiT-; thlit to say, time and patient neglcl.

And as tho prosperous years rolled on his sandals waxed, and trathertd "race and style, and also "magnitude and majesty; insomuch that tho 'footprint of him was like to the footprint of a hogshead which is up-ended in the snow. And ho became a legislator and also Speaker. But there was jealousy because of the splendor of his attainments in the field; there was rancor because of the sublimity of his sandals. And besides there Iwas not room, for tho alkali flat was circum- area, ana no unjustly occupied space proper and sufficient for the representation of also, he trod upon tho feet of distant members. Those near at hand could see the danger and avoid it, bvt those who were further removed, liai'hjpho warning, his step being noiseless, liko to that of the stealthy and cushioned cat, suffered.

Yet his.intention3 wire pure; ho did thesS 'things inadvertBy usually while absorbed in tUfoght concerning tho national debt. So charges wero against him, and h'e was incticted, tried ana condemned as an obstructionist. The verdict was confirmed by tho appellate courts in succession, by Congress, also, and finally bythe United States Court sitting in bank or chambers, tonuL- whero, and this latter condemned him to cut his sandals down to eight inches broad and eighteen inches lolijj. with costs; it was vrilh'Uc rfuced ffiminisiipdV: duced powers," these tfiminislied capa-cities, that he made tho now world-renowned footprints for the primeval man. But suppose he had a chance to do some fossil tracks for the benefit of science before they trimmed his golden slippers? Which one of the late lamented would they havo laid them on? But that is not vital to my theme they'd have found a fossil to fit them, I judge.

Sucli is history; and thus is the primeval man vindicated, struck from tho roster and dismissed from further service in this conflict. I now proceed to dispose of the rest of those myths. If I were jrone, and tho treasury of history with me, they yet could not stand; for evetf tho scientific theory that gave them being would be also their destruction. Because it locates theta back in tho old red sandstone period. There were ho Irish in the old red sandstone period.

The Irish arc a comparatively recent formation. They belong to tho old bluegiindstone tertiary, and aro there confined to the stratified roclu of tho alluvium and uppr pentamerpus limestone. Tho asscifion of Hugh Milles and other early observers, that traces ot them are discoverable in uie Jurassic deposits of the carboniferous chalks, between the median Jayer of old basaltic gneiss and the marsupial crinoids of the paleozoic conglomerate, was regarded with suspicion at the time, and is now known to have been woolly bituminous. Now then, wc come to the point. footprints belong to the old red standstono period, what becomes of your Irish elk? What was ho doing there when there weren't any Irish yet? Answer mo that? Crack me that nut, Messieurs Marsh and Harkness and pray let us havo a squaie deal just this once.

The case is simple; I sec your geological blunder, and go you a geological fact better now you call me, if you can. Then we'll draw three apiece and double tho pot. I think nobody can offer fairer than that. And so I have disposed of tho Irish elk as I Icok at it. Now wo como to the cave bear.

"What is his period? Ho belongs among the talcose horn, blendes of tho post-tertiary Devonian, along with the thecodont batraehians, andothev gold-bearing rocks of-the Azoic' agert and there isn't a trace of-hiln to' bo" found anywhere else for money. Then what is he doing out there among the old red sandstone schist? Why, honored sirs, when ho died out of the world for good and all, there wasn't enough old red sandstone in it to make a whetstone out of, It hadn't begun to deposit jet. And another thing; tho cavo War qouldu't havo ltYil in Xevmla, run way, for thore isn't a cave except the comparatively recent ones in the mines, and perhaps -here and there in tho mining stocks. Too recent to do him nnygood, or hardly anybody else. This disposes of tho cave bear as-1 look at it.

JSow the same arguments' that dispose of tho Irish elk and tho cave bear dispose also of the old Silurian ass, for they trained together. They were of the same general breed of mammalsand were tho only mol-lusks that were able to hold their own against the megatherium, the ichthyosaurus, and other flesh-eating birds of tho birdo-rep'tilian period, and did it then only through that vigilance which is tbenrico of liberty, and that which is strength. All iiou or to the brave I "v' Now then enough of that. Ltl conjecture stand aside and histom go to tho bat. For I was there nivself and I know.

The tracks which have been attributed to tho Irish elk were not made by an Irish elk at all, they were made by an Irish bricklayer named Stephen McGinniss, Member of tho Legislature. I knew bira perfectly well. He had a hoof, a hoof like a cow's. It was a birthmark. He was a high-tempered man, and very handy with his birthmark.

And now at this minute after tho scientists aud they will see. Even tho may not call Stephen McGinniss an Irish elk with impunity, nor misrepresent his hoof-prints in a spirit of scientific wantonness. These arc truths, these arc facts; in a word, history. For I was there. Little, remains, to bo said.

Only thisjisThc cave bjar tracks were made byMr. R. Mvjpaggett, now grown honorablyamfn's in other walks in life, deporting thc.same iden tical'taick to this day, lefcus freely believe, when he' ujifflhotL-as vSs the sternly simple custoni of the pioneer legislator of the Territory of Nevada in a day when virtuous endeavor was held above tho comfort of the body, and Godlincs3 above meretricious gauds of fashion. in jnc tracks auiioutea to the old Silurian ass were not mado by the old silurian ass. I made them myself.

I jjiade them myself, mvl I am not an old silurian ass. I may be some kind of an ass, and some observers have held tho theory that I was and am; but I am not an old silurian ass. I mado thoso tracks, and I make the same track now, and it appears that even an expert cannot tell it from an old, silurian ass's track, and neither can for that matter; but it is not an old silurian ass's track, just the same, any more than I am an old silurian ass; yet the person who calls the track out yonder an old silurian ass's track, does in effect call me an old silurian ass, by reason that I made that track. And it must not be repeated. For I have my feelings as well as another, and the man that calls mo an old silurian ass and proves it shall not go out of this world alive.

I have said it. The language may be intemperate, but the provocation is great. These scientists aro in an ill-concealed sweat because they cannot tell why there aro so many tracks, and all going pno way all going nor.th. It was a largo legislature, dear sirs; and the saloon was north. This ishistofy, not conjecture.

For I was there in person. And they cannot divine whv the primeval man took such short Step3, yet with so little lateral spread. Think of the feet he carried; also remember his condition; of course a person cpuld not spread laterally in his condition as he could formerly when sober; necessarily ho would spread laterally formerly, but not latterly, tho conuitions being reverseu, you see. This seems simple. Also unanswerable.

And they aro perturbed because they cannot tell why the tracks are so confused, and movo in such subtly sinuous curves. Listen, then; I will explain this also. It is a law of na-fuic that whiskey cannpt be Conveyed in straight lines by a Legislature, except in buckets. A Legislature never uses buckets, man. I am" 'done.

Such is history. Such are the Car son footprints. They aro not fossili-ferous, they arc legislative; the'' are 'uniform, they aro identical with the tracks deposited by all adjourning legislatures. In" the west, I mean. Let U3 have peace.

Mark Twain in Sin Franciscan. Liverpool is the greatest shipping pojt of the world, its annual tonnage bcijg tons. London is the neNt port, with 2,330,688 tons. Glasgow ranks third, with a tonnage of 1.4:12,35-1.. New York conies forth on ist.of shipping.ports of.thc world, will, a tonnago of rill A rlti iia Tr limit, ho i-t tfc-nA 1 uf vuuyir mi tMiftlt, owiit to the prevalence flhe "itch" he chol.irs THE VOOT-ASD MOUTn DIHEAHE IV El'ROPK.

An American consul, Mr.G.'C. "fan- ner, writing from to tho Department of State in regard to. cattle disease among tho English herds says it has caused losses that I woUlo-shrink from mentioning forfear of not being credited in my estimates. I have no statistics covering such losses. and any estimate I might mako would oe might therefore be far wrong; but I think no one can find fault with me in placing the loss of the English farmer since the year 1880 at $5,000,000 per annum in their cal- milk and cheese, not takiW into account veterinary, attendance.

r' "Tho British farmer, taking jtdjri-jtage of his distfeS, has cried out that tho disease was imported, some saV from the United States, others frouV Franco in the year 1880. Tho truth1 is that this assertion is entirely wrong, I will take upon myself to assert, arirf I can prove the assertion, that tho' foot-and-mouth disease which n6w' rages to such an extent in England existed there prior to tho year 187tr." This disease originated near London, and has spread to a greater or less-extent, in thirty-two English and fivo Welsh counties, as well as into certian portions of Scotland and Ire--land, so that in one week the number' of farms infected with fresh outbreaks' has more than doubled. Largo and small farincr3sufrerliktr by this fearful pest, some being brought to absolute ruiti by it. Nino per cent, of the failures in England luring the past year have been failures of farmers. American craze for English cattle has ameliorated to some extent this' losl, by Americans paying to the 'English enough money for one bull -to buy a herd of American cattle that would be as fine as the English if tho same-jcare were given them.

Tho principal cause of this disease in England and other parts of Europe, is believed to be the climate acting upon a soil that has been under cultivation or so long a time as to be of certain generating forces, and hence the forces required must bo made artifiVi.ll mpnr, hnrthsl in I cattle and promotive, of disease! Tho American demand for "blooded cattle" has caused the English to force their cattle too much, aud this unnatural forcing has contributed towards promoting disease. A table is submitted by Consul Tanner showing the progress of tho disease in Great Britain during 1883. In that time 199,612 cattle were attacked, wbilo in thepreceding year there wcro only 37,950. WAITER'S OX ROLLER SKATES. Unquestionably tho most difficult thing to manage satisfactorily in a hotel is tho The Americans, who do everthing- with a rush, find it hard to wait patiently Xpr the serving of their orders, be the waiters ever so expeditious.

A novel' and original idea is being experimented on by the pioprielors oflbp Paxlon Hotel at Omaha. Having the rapidity and ease with which persons move about on roller skates it occurred to the Kitchen Brothers, proprietors of tho l'jxton, that possibly dining-room with the requisite amount of practice, could therewith facilitate tabjc service. With this end in view tho hpadwaiter drilled his crew, aud a Jew days, ago the first experiment was made. A patron of the house writes us that with the exception of two of the boy who came down wth tho trays, passed propriatoij declare their jutonion of giving Uio scheme a thorough trial, and thehcad- waiter says he can and will mako, a success of this new style of service. JW the skates can bo made noiseless, and the waiters become expert skaters, wo do not seo why, at Leat in large dinr ing-rooins, the roller skaU'3 cannot made very useful.

The jproject is at least woi th a fair ti ial, and the pro prietors in question, are to be com mended taking the initial stop towards a possibjo improvement of dining-room ervice. Chicago Hotel Keporter. A correspondent of an Atlanta paper states as a solid fapt that fashionable tailors in Philadelphia inake a gre.i'h many suits Tor ladies after the pattern of men's suils. Thcso aro mostly woi by tHem'when out on larks by gaslight, yet not a few, oven among those of the highest respectability, venture on tho street with' them in broad daylight. A wig.

mustache mid bronze powder so changes their appearance that their most intimato friends' will not recognize them. They have to wear tho trousers a good while before they daro venture out in them. Some wear" them about the house in connection with their other clothes until they tome tifod to I hem..

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About Arizona Silver Belt Archive

Pages Available:
10,601
Years Available:
1878-1975