twelve international—the favorite copper

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Nogales International—The People's Favorite Newspaper-

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William Lowe, prominent Dem-ocratic leader of Tubac, was avisitor here Wednesday.

T. F. Friday of the Mexico-Arizona Trading Company hasreturned from a trip to El Paso.

J. M. Almada left Thursday tospend several days at Hermo-

s'.llo.

Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Barnharthave been nere for a few daysfrom St. Louis, Mo.

Talmadge Keener, Los An-geles mining engineer registeredat the Bowman last week en*route to Patagonia to do some

special work.

L. R. Mitchell, former ownerof the Shelby Service station inNogales, was here last week. MrMitchell is now in the wholesalefurniture business at Phoenix.

Charles Hill and family havebeen spending a few days on theborder from their home in Phoe-nix.

Captain Louis W. Maddox hasleft for Camp Penning, Georgia.,which is to be his future station.

Juan Fernandez, capitalist fromHavana, Cuba, and J. G. Alvarez,a garbanzo buyer, have returnedafter spending some time at Ca-jeme.

Floyd Thompson, mining man,

of Sonora, has returned from ashort visit with his family at

Tucson.

Adjutant - General Charles W.Harris was a visitor here Sundayfrom Fort Huachuca where theArizona National Guard is hold-ing its annual summer encamp-ment.

County Attorney K. Berry Pet-erson and wife and Dr. E. J. Got-thc-lf were visitors here Sundayfrom Tucson. Peterson is presi-ded of the Douglas For CongressCL.b in Pima County.

Attorney-General John W. Mur-phy and assistant, A. R. Lynch,were here Sunday from Phoenix.

Mrs. E. D. Farley of Tucson,formerly of Patagonia, was a vis-itor here Saturday.

A big rodeo will be held onLabor Day at the NorthcraftGrove near Patagonia. Follow-ing the rodeo there will be races,and at night a dance at the Pata-gonia opera house. Everybodyinvited.

TO THE PUBLIC

The school year is about to be-gin and the Associated Charitieshave a number of children whoare in need of clothing.

Last year while the secretarywas away most of the clothingwas disposed of otherwise withthe result that the Charities havehad very little with which to meetthe many calls which come forhelp in that line-

Will you not at thig early timemake an inventory of your sec-ond hand clothing and call theoffice, so that we can have it re-made within the next two weeks.Thanking you for what you maybe able to do in this way.

Associated Charities,Telephone 267 W.

Mr. and Mrs. T. C. Tripplettwere here Sunday from Tucsonwhere Triplett is a prominent

j builder.

Mr. and Mrs. George A- Dar-| nell of Tucson were visitors herei Tuesday.

M. M. Rodriguez was an ar-

ilival here Wednesday from Tepis.I

! Registration for the primary

1 election September 7 closed Fri-day. With registration at an end,

jcandidates will wage a warmi campaign for votes between nowland the date of the primary.I .

1 Election for adoption of theI new city charter will be heldi Tuesday September 14.

John George was an arrivalIhere Friday from Cajeme, Sonora,where he is engaged in ranching.

Mr. and Mrs. James H. Harrison! were arrivals here Friday from! Pitiquito, Sonora, where Harri-json is a cotton grower.

Tommy Hall hs returned from| a vacation trip to California.

I The Hoeffer brothers, Alfonso,i Bob and Lewis, sons of Dr. Hoes-! fer, who owns the Sonora Brew-

i ery at Hermosillo, were here Mon-day while waiting for the train to

I take them home to Los Angeles.They spent several days visitingtheir father at Hermosillo,

J. P. Powers and George Mc-Devitt were in the «ity last weekin the interest of the Idaho mineat Ruby, which they recentlypurchased-.

J. P. Scally and Mr. and Mrs.James W. Jordan of Los Mochiswere arrivals in Nogales, Wed-nesday.

Funeral services wtere heldTuesday afternoon for Mrs. FrankJolly, well known resident ofVaughn, who died in Nogales lastSaturday. Burial took place inthe Nogales Cemetery.

J. B. Schriever of Scranton,Pa., president and general man-ager of the Morning Glory andConquest mines in the Patagoniadistrict, was a visitor in Nogales,Monday, accompanied by C. A.Pierce of Patagonia.

Pete Munch, candidate for theDemocratic nomination for StateAuditor, arrived here Wednesdayfrom Phoenix. His opponent forthe nomination is Ana Frohmil-ler of Flagstaff.

A. Porchas, Jr., and son werevisitors here Monday from SanJavier, Sonora.

C. E. Beach and W. A. Robertswere here Sunday from Phoenix.

E. H. Butler of Tucson spentSunday in Nogales.

Mrs. Jnles Nahoun and sonwere arrivals here Monday fromNew York City.

A Ford roadster bearing Tuc-son license No. 3-4262, side-swiped a Nogales sedan near hereabout 9 o'clock Sunday evening.Both cars were badly damaged.The Nogales car was owned byM. Jackson, warrant officer ofthe 25th Infantry. The Ford isreported to have been travelingat a high rate of speed, and thesedan had stopped to allow it topass. The Tucson car was en-route to Tucson, and the otherenroute to Nogales.

Mr. and Mrs. Louis Hudgin,Walter Hudgin, Attorney Bon-sall Noon, Mrs. L. H. Watkinsand son, and Mrs. Carlton Towne,and Mrs. and Craig Pottinger,were among Nogales people at-tending the preliminary examina-tion of Alfred Hudgin at Pata-gonia. The charge of man-slaughter, brought against youngHudgin as a result of the fatalautomobile accident near Sonoitaa few weeks ago and in whichMiss Lillian Reed of Fairbankswas killed, was dismissed by Jus-tice of the Peace Howard Keen-er.

DR. W. r. CNENOWETH

County Baa Ith Officer

1 ' I,M 1 11 ¦¦¦ ¦ ¦ ¦|h rn-Minf-vtru»uV«»t*.

BPhotographer!

George Fisher, head of theFisher Music Company, was hereMonday from Tucson.

A- L. Peck, Sr., and Sam Leek-e-r returned Thursday from a tripto California.

J. M. Hiser of Culiacan, form-erly of Nogales, is spending afew days in the city.

Walter H. Rice of the Parker-Grimshaw Company made a busi-ness trip to Tucson, Tuesday.

E. A. Butler and F. W. Parkswere visitors here Tuesday fromTucson.

B. H. Worthington was a No-gales visitor Tuesday from Ruby.

Rodolfo Elias Calles, rancherin the Cajeme, Sonora, district,accompanied by his wife, arrivedhei’e Tuesday enroute to MexicoCity where they will visit hisfather, President Calles-

E. E. Ellinwood of Phooenix,candidate for the Democraticnomination for governor, address-ed Nogales voters Thursday nightat the Lyric Theater. Enroutehere he spoke at Patagonia, andwas met there by Victor Wagerand Leslie C. Hardy of Nogales.Mr. Ellinwood delivered an ex-cellent address and was warmlyapplauded-

Miss Gladys Walker, candidatefor the Democratic nominationfor state representative, and Mrs.Anna B. Ackley, candidate forthe Democratic nomination forCounty Treasurer, were amonglocal candidates attending thedance at Sonoita, last night.

F. A. KruppSANITARY ENGINEER

AJf» PLUMBER

Phene 4TU

IST Ssnoße Avenue

Nogales, Arisons

KINO COPPER CO. MAKINGShipping High Grade Copper Ore And Pushing

Development in Three Places

Expert Examination And Sampling Os Great OreBody In Red Mountain. Million of Tons of Copper

The Kino Copper Company ispushing work at several pointsin its extensive mineral holdingsin the Patagonia Mountains, be-yond the Santa Cruz River, with-in sight of Nogales. Dumps ofworkings on the Buena Vistagroup of mines are visible fromhigh points in the city. Highgrade ore is coming out from oneof the tunnels visible, and it isbrought into Nogales, A. L. Lewis,the well known ore buyer, pur-chasing- The ore now comingyields about S4O per ton, copperand silver.

No work had been done inany of these extensive propertiesthrough ten years or more, un-til undertaken recently by theKino Company. It has clearedout all tunnels in Red Mountain,which had caved very badly. Inmore than 3,000 feet of tunnels,winzes and crosscuts caves hadmade entrance practically impos-sible. Several months ago Col.Allen T. Bird, president of thecompany, .succeeded in explora-tion of all those workings. Buthe'had to squeeze himself throughnarrow openings above the greatheaps of rock and ore that hadcome down from above, and inthree places he waded in poolsof water knee deep, more than

I 100 feet long. A force was putto work clearing away those ob-structions, which has been all ac-complished, and the water drain-ed off. All the water flowingout it strongly impregnated withcopper.

Work has made access easy to,all parts of the workings, andcareful examination shows the

I great ore bodies developed by| former owners in the first dozencr fifteen years of the prezent

I century, much larger and more¦ valuable than ever anticipated.Recently careful examination and

i sampling was done by J. L..Sheperd, a mining engineers ofwide experience, who was assistedby Mark Wanless, the well known

| matallurgist. Mr. Sheperd avers[that present workings have ex-posed sixty million tons (60,-000,000) tons of coifeer oltowhich with adequate reductionfacilities will net $5 per ton-I’qir average samples assayedfrom 2% to 4.1% copper and 1.6to 4.1 oz. per ton in silver. Areport by Mr. Sheperd will hemade public shortly. He recom-

mends installation on the groundof a concentration unit with dailycapacity of 250 tons of ore, oth-er units of 250 tons each to fol-low until there are 1,000 tons ormore- of ore treated daily. Toaccomplish the recommendationis the problem of The Kino Com-pany. President Bird and asso-ciates express the utmost con-fidence that they will accomplishit.

During the paslc week work hasbeen commenced cleaning out ashaft sunk on the Prudentialgroup of mines, where in formeryears ore was extracted that net-ted $45 per ton on the ore floorof El Paso smelter. Severalminers who wTought there thenassert that there is four feet ofsuch ore in the bottom of thatshaft. The Kino Company willdetemine that proposition withina very few weeks.

An experienced mining manMisited the property Sunday last,

and he asked to undertake a con-

tract to run the lowest tunnel on

the Buena Vista ground in on theledtfe a distance of 1500 feetfarther, and he offered to do thework at a moderate price, takinghalf his pay in shares of thecompany. To accomplish 9uch acontract is another off the prob-lems undertaken by the KinoCompany. Without itwould develop a great and valuableore body-

The people doing this work

FINE SHOWINGmean business, and they assertthey will establish in Santa Cruzcounty, within a very few years,cne of the greatest Copper miningenterprises in all Arizona. Allthat will enhance greatly the im-portance and prosperity of No-gales.

LOCAL POST WINSTROPHY AT BISBEE

Gus Michaels and Fred Lodk-hart returned Friday morning

from Bisbee bringing back atrophy won by Ridge-Igo Post ofthe American Legion as secondprize in the stunt parade at the

[ Legion convention staged duringthe f’rst day of the conventionThursday. The local post placeda jazz band in the parade. Firstprize was won by the combinedposts of northern Arizona. Theyhad a Smoki Indian pageant inthe procession. The trophieswere awarded by L. A. EnglePost of Bisbee.

Howard Keener, editor of theSanta Cruz Patagonian, was intown Monday from Patagonia.

if JOIN THE jSUIT CLUB [

$2.00 A WEEK.? A suit given swsy tseh week |\ ' NOGALES CLEANING CO. \;• Condes and Murillo, Prou». \

l Merchant Tailors A Hatters \240 Grand Avs. j

> Nogalee, Arizona. \

AZTEC CLUB“YOU KNOW YOU’RE WELCOME”

Sunday Special, Chicken or TurkeyDinner, Served all day -75 c

aJUUtIkJLIMLKIPILf' DANCINGEVERY EVENING AND SUNDAY

AFTERNOON

Largest And Most Beautiful Cabaret onThe Border

PHONE 379NM

HjeWANT ABSFOR RENT Small cottage

and apartment, close in. Dothfurnished, Apply 317 Crawford;Phone 164-J. (8-29-lt)

FOR SALE—Master six, fourpassenger BUICK coupe. 1926Model. In excellent condition.Driven very little. See CaptainKinderVater, Camp Stephen D.Little.

%(8-8-lt)

84 TAXI*lO GRAND AVENUE

andBRICKWOOD HOTEL

Nogales, Arisons.

INVEST IN NOGALESReal Estate Before

Prices AdvanceE. K. CUMMING

REAL ESTATE DEALER

Sunday Morning, August 29, 1926

! - 9

Monday, Aug. 30WE WILL OPEN OUR

NEW STOREWhen the doors of Our New Store open Mondaymorning in the New Montezuma Hotel the people ofNogales will have entree to one of the SmartestWomen’s Apparell Shops in the State. Resides themany appointments of ultra refinement we will havethe most up-to-date modern store equipment.

YOU ARE INVITED TO IN-SPECT OUR NEW HOME

and also the attractive selections and irresistablevalues, in the fall fashions on display.

t THE MODERN yJoo Bork, Prop.

Page Twelve

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