New Mexico State Record, 01-28-1921 - CORE

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University of New Mexico UNM Digital Repository New Mexico State Record, 1916-1921 New Mexico Historical Newspapers 1-28-1921 New Mexico State Record, 01-28-1921 State Publishing Company Follow this and additional works at: hps://digitalrepository.unm.edu/nm_state_record_news is Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the New Mexico Historical Newspapers at UNM Digital Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in New Mexico State Record, 1916-1921 by an authorized administrator of UNM Digital Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Recommended Citation State Publishing Company. "New Mexico State Record, 01-28-1921." (1921). hps://digitalrepository.unm.edu/ nm_state_record_news/238

Transcript of New Mexico State Record, 01-28-1921 - CORE

University of New MexicoUNM Digital Repository

New Mexico State Record, 1916-1921 New Mexico Historical Newspapers

1-28-1921

New Mexico State Record, 01-28-1921State Publishing Company

Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/nm_state_record_news

This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the New Mexico Historical Newspapers at UNM Digital Repository. It has been acceptedfor inclusion in New Mexico State Record, 1916-1921 by an authorized administrator of UNM Digital Repository. For more information, pleasecontact [email protected].

Recommended CitationState Publishing Company. "New Mexico State Record, 01-28-1921." (1921). https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/nm_state_record_news/238

NEW MEXICO STATE RECORDSUBSCRIPTION $1.50 SANTA FE, NEW MEXICO. FRIDAY. JANUARY 28. 1921 NUMBER 330

INNEW APPOINTMENTS TOSTATE BOARDS MADE

BY COVERNOR MECHEM

i STATE'S NEEDS NEARLYTWICE AS LARGE NOW

AS AVAILABLE INCOME

WITH 16S BILLS TOSTUDY, BOTH SENATE ANDHOUSE ADJOURN THURSDAY

By Guthrie Smith

heard to hit a caboose attached toa freight train near Raton. It wasreported and a crew going east fromlas Vegas was instructed to stop

the point where the jar was felt.They found a new Ford in the cat- -

tie guard, practically demolished,;

munition is doled out ouly when it isto be used.

A lull investigation is to be madeto fix responsibility for the loadedgrit.

EDDY

''OFFICIAL NEWS OFTHE PRESENT WEEK

Cooperation at MetrosThe Melrose Cooperation, with the

Iprimipal mine in Melrose, Currycounty, file its articles of incorpora- -

witb blood stains inside the car, but tion with the state corporation corn-n- o

one was found to claim it. j " : m.ssiou on Wednesday. .The auih- -.

I he had behavior of some voting oriz(.(! , stock is Wtm ofPlan, are now buns made whtie- -

..:n . i. ." 'punter .M.i soon nave a cnccsff.lt.trxt... ti.., t ,....;... xr:,; i

tiiLii'ij, v i.n I'jin j i;t .111,11111.v ... n .. i ... . .llJt uiuiiu lain. n.ivc tmstu uuw-'- i

on account of llie s10rtaKP of miik.T,,e mat1arcmet OI ,le factory jscollvi),ceJ that Spr.r.ger andcan furnish the necessary amount oi,,,,1 d.uly m order t keep the fac- -

lory running full tune,

COLFAX

,A K'w :rl? a,b,'c started on

P"l!j of I'aramount dan v.

a'"'."' miles southeastol town which soun spread to an ad- -

jotti-n- narn. i.ie two uais, one otwhich contained hay and the otherite, were totally consumed by thcflames and before the city fire de-

partment could get dime and mu-shed containing miscellaneous artic-les including an automobile was par-tially burned The auto was damagedto some extent also.

l he loss ot properly is f i'tv t olire. I by insurance.

Jose .Martinez and Vicente E. fio-iiu- .,

who pleaded Ruilty to theeh;. rge of holding up one Kakagura,

JapMie.se near the Santa Fe sta-- i

(fly Guthrie Smith)New Mexico's needs have be"t

crowing very much faster than itsincome. The disproportion has newreached an acute and distressingstage, it is. shown in the report ofthe budget committee, which Gov.llcc.hein transmitted, without recein-inendatio:i to the Fifth ligislature onThursday.

The report shows that the needsfor the tenth fiscal year will reach

total of $',87,iH while for thecleven'.h year, with no buildi'K pro- -

f.iani aiithoued, the needs will beonly I,W)J,I. ihc appropriationsfor tin- eighth year totaled $1,241,400,for lip mill vear f

Jiut the total oi $,oS7,iy4 for thetoutii vear is to he further increas- -ed by $4o5,655, to cover deficienciesfor the ninth year. This brings thetotal to $S,M2,bM. This figure makesthe demands of the ninth year lookmodest indeed by comparison

One encouraging naturethe total includes a building pio- -

pram that runs to $1,223,0110 Thereare many reasons for believing thatthw hnil-lllu- nn n r.i ill will li.lv, vntl- -

jshed almost entirely by the timethe general apiiropri.aion bill ispresented for Gov. Mechem's signa- -

tine. Some of the members of thislri;ialature have declared without re- -

servation that not a dollar is to be:.iiornor :iti-r- l fur tn'u linil.liiiirs forstate educational institutions.

Strike out all of the building pro- -

gtatn, to cost ?l,223.6uH and thetotal then remains $153,594, and theincrease is in round lig.ires, to,-

'3 rrcater than the appropriationfor the ninth

Included in 'the needed tocover deficiencies for the ninth year

etl e following items: Buildings,. ,1,. tfii;tr Tnstit,it ut

The House .made a fine start thisweek on nassine bills that will putinto clftct the program of retrench- -

went that has been pledged by botiiDemocratic and Republican conven -lions. In one afternoon there tr;passed the bills to aboli-.l- i the moil- -

nttd police iorce and the leal ad-

visor to the governor. The bill to a'u -

ohsh the countv road suierinten -

dents, with the emergency clauseattached, was carried over until theprinted copies were received, axdthen passed by a vote of 35 to 13,which preserves the emergency cl- -

ause. The bill to abolish the officeof insurance commissioner also was1

1,111 n,il innr.ance work under direction of thestate corporation commission.

The bill abolishing the office orlegal advisor to the governor hasbeen passed by the senate also, thatbodv concurring in the house inea- -

tire, with an amendment that reri- -

(Ued a delect in the tide, lhehouse immediately concurred in theamendment, and the 'bih' now needsonly the signature of Gov. MechemIn Knrnmp a tnw of tin .sunshinestate.

When both Senate and Mouse ad- -

journed on Thursday afternoon toTuesday afternoon, the former hadintroduced d7 bills and 10 joint res- -

olutions, the latter VJ bills and 15

iiio ri,ii ii t iniic A hinre iiuniher ofthese bills had not been translatedand printed, and the report of tinbudget committee, translated 1 bur- -

sday, was to be printed. It was be- -'

t.....A !... lU. nr... Ii.in wnn it 111.ICVCU Ulil lilt I'luilii'h nu"l

finished by Tuesday afternoon onthe bills, resolutions and budget report, so the adjournment was takenuntil thai time.

Poth Senate and House have in- -

ir,.J n..,v and bills

Hon a lew weeks ago, were senteuc-- , jep an(1 enthusiasm was the keyid by Judge 1. D. l.eib, yesterday no,,. sounjcj Wednesday night wl--- n

inornmg to serve I rum three to live l!lc ol :i) lost ()1 llle American is

each in the pemtentiary.-K- a- Kion ,m.t at ,le (jity ila a!ld ar.ton Range. ranged their lirotrram for 1921. Olli- -

to abolish the state corporation com-''- "! ..i.:. ti...ra(nr a

(he ,nsane irnlioii to datewe anJ Aj.lum( atr tmniuk. .1: i.u-

On Tuesday afternoon Governo'"Mechem sent to the senate tUe lol - ,

lowing nominations, which were con- -fii nied on Wednesday:

To be member of the state boarjof health, for a term of six yeiri :

Dr. A. G. Shortlc, of Albuquerque,n .ippointed.

To be trustees of the Reformschool, at Springer,- each for a termof lour years: Mrs. George D.Parrish, Springer; W. D. Brennan,Dawson; Harvey M. Chandler. Ci- - aniarron; L. C. White, Katon; Sefc- -

rine Martinez, Iilack Lakes. Tins isan entire new board.

To be members of the Quids' WW- -f.i rp hoar. at S:mt.l frr a tprmof six years: Mrs. George V.

ll'richaid and Mrs. Rome P. Dono- -

hue, of San Fe.On Wednesday afternoon the loi

lowing were sent in: To be memIters of the Girls' Welfare board, Al

hiiqucrijue : Mrs. A. 1$. Strottp, andMrs. Margaret Medler, of Alliutpicr-que, Mrs. M. Otero, l.o.iI.ttnas; Miss Isabel SilverCity; Mrs. II. 15. Summons, Farm- -

illL'tnn.The nominations of the new Slate

Board of Education, made la.,t l"n-- ,day, also have been confirmed.

Srcundino Romero, sheriff of SinMiguel county, has been appointeda member of the New Mexico moun,- -

cd nolire. lie is to serve without'pay.

NEW TRIAL CRANTED TOBASSETT. CONVICTED CF

SECOND DECREE MURDER

A new trial has been granted to DrWilliam G. Bassett, under an opinion

'by the supreme court, which revers- -

eel tne judgment oi itic msiiiei cuuri''"'on " remanded the

Cause. 1

Ur. Bassett was convicted of vio- -

la'.ion of section !4o4, code 1915,which classes the crime of abortion

second degree murder. He w is

sciitueiu iU - i...... in thepenitentiary.

The opm,on is by Justice larker,"' Jus,' Roberts and J its ice

Raynolds concurring. The .syllabussa.ys.: . . ... .,

Under section 1404, code wis, tite

Pt ot the ot ense is tne intent toM- M-

aiMirtinc me moincr. in a urwt.i- -, , ,f i 1

Hon under this section, proo ol otn- -

abortion upon women wnere tuc ;

"'"I " noi quicucueu, is ,01 relevant and should be excluded,

NEW VARIETY OF STILLCAPTURED AT GIBSON

A new device for the manufac- -

ture of home lirew, the aluminiiiupresst-r- steam cooker, was discov-- iered in the seizure of a still at (iibson by prohibition agents, which wastaken to Albuquerque, Saturday. A ,sealed wash boiler was used by ail- -

other alleged violator.Jicven persons were arrested amilarge amount ot liquor seized ly

the prohibition agents. .They wereheld on bonds running from ;5'J to$1,000.

.1411-111- l,cn iiclis, 'i uiinii.i,pleaded guilty to a charge of manufacttire and liossess o-- i of intovicatiug liquor and was hell in ja.l.

oting liquor and was hel l in jailfK ac.lt of $1,009 bond. Nin-te- en

gallons of corn mash were destroy- -

with a small still and two g :l

Ions nf whiskey seizedI orenzo Carvijinn. of Ca'lup.aded not guil'y to tiie charge of

sale and unlawful possession of 'ntoxicating liquor and his bond was

at 5.TO. Mine gallons of heerthewere seized.

uoys who are in the haDit ot gomcj!rt the iiirtnrp thuw and atifinvintrreveryone around them bv their ic- -- -

readied a culmination last, .. .

xviotiaay, tugnt. une. Doy puiiep auo- -

ther s hat off and in the tussle thatensued, Wesley Wheeler was badlycut with a knife in the hands otanother boy, lift, hand being slasho 1

between the thumb ind forefingei soat a physician had to take several

to close the wound.Patience has ceased to be a vir-

tue and other steps will now ; tak-en to keep order Caris'iad Lutreiit.

In order to interest outside peo-ple in Artesia to get them ariMi'int. v. i it business here a groiip oimerchants composed of the P::lr.ttjDrug Store, Fii,t National bank.tien s Matu Bank, Kay's Confection-ery, The lily Maikel, Pecos Riveri il ami das to, Aricsia Auto to..Braiuard torbin Hardware Co., andl erriman Son and Co., have contrac-ted wnh the m.iiKii'cnietit of theVCI-ros- e

'1 he. tire lo put on a special ina:-itie- e

on Saturday atteruooii. ilnsshow will be given for the benefitof people who live outside of thecorporate limits and tickets will befurnished free of charge by the mer-chants whose names appear above.

crs elected for the coming year andplans laid for the biggest and bestyear since the post was

The officers are:Commander O. W. Samclson.Post Finance Ofiicer William Li- -

1CH

Adjutant-- J. E. Burgett., ..i,...'. ,. ,!..lit UIIIIVI9 VI. .V IIIUIIIIBIIUII

and Post Historian will be filled atthe next meeting of the post February 7th. Artesia Advocate.

GRANT

Mrs Grace Griswold B.sby. countysllprr .,ltell(jent f srhools announces,,.lt arangements have been cornprte( w,ereby the children of theriiiini 1 inr i.iira M i mint-- oil :11c11..',,. ;n i.i Tt.,.,are al)out ,wenty children there withno school facilities but the companyhas loaned a building and the countywu supply ...c-- uecessai, ciiu., ...ei.cand 111 a few weeks a school wi:iopen. j

A. J. Slot kbridge, of Tyrone, whohas operating the mine at Rocky Trail north ot Separ, expects to

s ime work tin re in about a month,'lhe vein has been opened on thesitrf.n e for about 1:0 tect and ashall sunk to the depth of thirty-fee- t

with satisfactory .showings ofbe done be. ore serious mining

velopiiienl workat ' d. iesas men aiC inter

iu the prii'ioilii n.

P.. I Bai.dy, ilistiicl road super-- o

was in Silvtr Ci;y We.l-,- i

day. ales th d the -il ,er Ci.yII, i. ol i., being repaired and

s 'oid will hi in as i:oodli'tiuii :is pr o tieaily any load inst..te. lhe road will he Vvoiked

il-- lid: !;'- nimilv line.liid t.ii'i"jts will hi- lUst.ilicil on

(In- 1,ii. I:. i Ci:y andiTvrotic

,lloitllll. lt,ind a, Alanimror-- I- - - -

do, $!1,000; building at the SilverCity Normal collcge$7.000; the olddelicit that lias nei 11 accumulated atthe Agricultural allege, 9WH

It is estimated bv the budget com- -

miitee that the total of assessed va- -

,. -- vcrae on laxIII Ji in ren, tnej ( $1,275,010, which will

run far short o! mcctintr the needs. ,Ills IHltS Hill 1I1L.I11LIV.. 1 ,rse re- -

., income tax and the, j, ,a )oth o( wULn aws'

:ue yet to be passedThe estimate of need for the

tenth is as follows:l egislative, $2tiMH.State departments, $307,720.

Courts, $.S4,4O0.iiiktitiitiiiiK. SIiil.l7ti.

:lu lUi1P,, (,e building program.state institutions, created by the

consl jiution,State in dilutions, created by sta- -

utos. including tne museum oi NewM,-- co, lhe l.irls' Welfare work and,)e 1 t,j,s' Welfare, $100,800.

Indehtedress, interest and sinkingll!n,, ;:0i,55.

Miscellaneous, $17()3.'

SUPREME COURT UPHOLDSHEALTH DEPT.'S POWER

tliy Guthrie SmithThe law creating the stale d part-li-.ct- i:

ot health, and us .u-l:t- s

an.l powers, is valid w herein theis t,ivcn to approve or lisii;-prov-

the ajqioinluieiit of a cotti:-l- y

heuiib oiiictr by a l.oaiil of comi-

ty coinmisSKitici s ; and vvheuin ilnst.ite board may have :,tuces.-ai- rlont- - at lhe ciieii-.- ol

County, where the proper couu-- :

y oil ers iV.il 01 refu.-- e to do tnework.

1 i.i.i is the effect of an opinion bythe su;iriiue court, reversing liejudgment of the district court in S 01

JV!i;;-!c- county, in the case oi thestate department of health of New

M.:i. aipeliant, versus the comi-ty of San Miguel, appellee 'lheoi.idon is hy Just.te Kaynoids ..;..--

Jusit holu-rt- ami Justice I :'.rs.i--

BERNALILLO

T. Parker ppnrra! nannfrpr ui' .Jivurnme wtsiern ot the A. I. ana

S. b. railroad, was in Albuqueruuei r....- r .a mi ...sueiiion io, . . .

. 'ops under cons ruction anda conference with other ra.lroad

pav my the. .

,uau ii0 unu

'.. f ',,h 1 arktT wc,crn"f,,"- ' shii iiiuu- -

T',X'

lll:,"(t' .ci',c' .'Bnieer,-- ."

department of the railroad.The paving of the railroad cross- -

ing at tential avenue, the installmaof a watchman at the Tijeras avenueCl OssinLi UMfl lit her ni imnrnifi- -

:.. .1... i. a., .ioiiuii in iin- .ijniii ic vaius ineirwill be taken up.

The stockholders of the Union

fyrall Manufai tiring company atAlbuquerque, have elected the fol- -

'owing olticers and ijirectors: I.. L.Afttclicll, president, Siegfried Kalin.vice president and treasurer and K.A- - Clampett was lecrc- -

tary.be new directo.; of the company

"re, ll','' ,l We Marf,hll-s- ; Judge Modesto C. (Jrti, W.1 M L) '" ' J- k- McDonald a

was "f 'l,rsl a"al "'eetmgof fl e

,stockholders, the company

' llav"'K bee n organized during theI'ast '' The factory expects to'e runnmg at full capacity m a lew

l. in' ,i. msiau- -'.'! auoui natt nave neeu cjic I a -

Hotel affairs are thriving in Alhu- -

queiquc. in aUJinon 10 uie localcampaign for community investmentm a new hotel project Harvey,manager of the Fred 1 arvey sys- -

tern ol hotels and eating houses wasin the city Monday with $.J50, 100

today with B. F. Manger, of Newton, Kansas, general superintendentof the system and John K. Smithers,manager of the local hotel.

'

Although it was loimerly announc- -

cd that operations upon lhe Alva- -

rado would begin about January 1.

complete details have net yet beenworked out. The general plans are1for the doubling of the lunch roomcapacity, the enlarging of the lauti-- !

tri .T ai1nn:it, Hiirniilnti '

accommodations for the etiiiiloyeshere and inci easing ti.t guest captic-- l

ity of the hotel proper, lhe inonejfor the improvements has been ap- -

proiriated and wotk will begin assoon as plans an- completed.

Tie three Italian, of N'cw Y,nk''y who were arresleil 111 Ainiiqiu-- a

q e a tin 'J.i s a'.i on llu-o- n.lllSposses. in ;r and Iran .poriin:; liqllol

ititt- ill tli- i ; ; j.ol. beinii In I.I forthe idle. al dist t ourt at Santa a

Fe. Bondsmen who went on two oithe men's bonds foiWinj? their ar-li-

i.uud ti.'-m- l..i:ei.io M.uioiiand Kni-o- i Galiiii vt-i- i:d tniibrS.',.HJ bond each and (iiaiUHiip cik.i iiniier .!" o'ld. . (

A'bllqile que I M h: i.u-e.- l (.

cn er ?'. .I'm! id 'i.ti ?r,,M. 11 ofv Inch will be use J to construct thebij hotel in that city.

CHAVES

1 In ciiutr ae t lias Ii n Ii i an. I .!

work has mi a new wi II

which is to be known as the Kaits'i-.-- i t

N,vv well nrtul.i r two.'I corn, i " i , W. A. Siuil h iiii'l

I e b:t - tnoci .1 a S:ar ilrilhi:i' mach lieon the location and t I uuip! te the Wi II ii 00 da- s.

The well is located on a site s I

ii'ei! by A I). I.lovd who spentsix iTi.nitlis in in.il.in4 a :.

su-v- o of this coctttt) in 1017 andlocation was turtluT confirmed

Cady- - am! Rii'hI, consulting g i,logisls of Koswell, who have jn.t

a new cross section of H)(H,'Scvcn Kiv,.r, n(ril.,.

This well is two miles east of th- -Kansas-Ne- Mexico number onewell and on the mine structure and oithe showing already made in thenumber one well has demonstrated ed

, L 111 this vicinity e

tiroductivl". of oil at shallow depth-- , en.Roswell News.

The Daniel I'aint and Glass torn- -

pany exclusive paint house at Km- -well, has announctd a cut of i0 forcents a gallon in paints. This cutfollowed closely on the announce- -

ment by the local lumlier companies. j a i . i. ni 1 1.. - iei rriiuiiiuiis i.i me inui ui 'ii'iinoand an,10Unci.m.ni, ,y ,l,epJ an(J )ainU.r, lo ,!le ,l;.tl. ...:n... an..l. ..,l., I

Mo-i- s in latior riists II material v erecut. The whole movemett is resnlt of action on the part of va-

rious orpaniiations in that city, tost;n 'ale more building in ''o-.vc-

in 1921 Mi

COLFAX ;

The officers of the American Lc

pirn pt at nrtnEtr nave arrano-- d.WI ,, (he athon ie ol that city It r

,,.e orrpar,rv the entire rpnerfWr of t!ie Community H.,.e for a XjorJi;f rorirn an,j 0vj:ii cih. The ! irj ther. , n, t,,, ), wa, former1v the dis- - a

(rict CPort chamber, will be mid:n(0 hal rrirn. TJ,e I.rri'tn vi l iiia marif l,K,r, Herortte the room,

a piaro. bir'iard and p--

.. . bi a nal 1 ' rirv. and a servinq andVJichrn The club roon will be re?dyfT orrupancv in abont six weeks. ,1when it will be opened with a biiball. It is stated that the ha'l will :ftre one of the most a'tractive in theState when completed.

Several nights ago something wai ctly

I tie annual nieeimg ui tue siock-- iholders of the Spiinger Ditch Co.

!as held at the oific; of the Prcsi- -

dent, F.. K. Johnson of Springer,. On.,:,, ,,. ,,1,1 .,,,..r,. ,.. ,...:.I hey are K F

j,,!,,,,,, janiel T. floskins, V. A.slljrl E s CrooIiS iIld Lalli.tj,,,. k. F. Johnson was selected by

e lmari, u, jt ()rcsjjcllt. j

purpose of marketing the 300 or"'orc 'l,01 ." " ri,,le ' pruuuc,ta V""" ' "e I'"" prov.uesMoiing laeihties at the track sides'' 01 tiers tan ue mien iiiiiing ninesWlicn snow or outer uan wcaineiinteiiercs with batihng. Practicallyall ahali.i growers oi the Maxwelltract have joined the association.

DE BACA

The fan.;!) of J. K. Rather arriv-ed 111 I a. ban last veek from WalterHill. Teiin., ueediess to say Pa Johnwears a broad slime and on top olthat he was electid Cuustable of i.ion Village. The Wratherj came In

year and oiie-i.a- ago and estab- -'

lished themselves, tin u lett to ar-- j

range tiuir bu-i- alfaus in Tennessee Mr. Wi.ai.er only remained v

sln.ri tTiiie, letuined to Taiban, loivA.n: the ani-a- l o! the falilly. (i

T.iih. n News.

A in ting of the l oit Sumner il

ieils , is in in the- Fort uniiier:l 1 a e A nines. lay night lor

l""P o-- .'inimg a cia i

uili. lie in v iu: Was not only onelie l.iive-ii- 1. its nature ever fie-- I

llle I....H but was by ail odds thill:o-- l cllllili-- a .Hi and unanimous.

. I I, I,, who was mainly rc- -

.;.'.nsiii'i loi Ili'l.llI'lK tl lug t it i ii -

out i.iiie.l tl niiesit. t rder.11. I Vvi :i :. was lei led Pre-i-- ,

nt I. n e :rl;, IC- - ; J.i'.n.lire. ,.ri ml I. K Ow

'

ii s, '1 i t .i sun ril s lit s wi re

l t : c.ot down tobmiiie-llilier- s I.V r,iy mi -

I ca lei

OOMA A li A by

i

I ire of unknown origin caused be.ui Oaiuav. at the 1 einllc'.on Ful-

ler farm tins wick, the loss unliid- -

mil the barn, sheds, machinery ardtons of aiialta hay, ttie nay Pe-

ttylnK". par to Mr. 1' tiller and par-tly lo the renter The barn bad beenlocked lor two days and the origin

tne l;rc is tnvsury. lhe kiss itestimated at SoOtU i partly co.cr- -

by insurance. Mr. ruler wuLai vruces ihrn the alarm was gi.

Vilidl jm150 lias UC).n subscribed by.t. 'me i inc orpora t ors. me orgaaua- -.: T. i ... 7i jtJit win luiujiii I 1 'tl tl lllcr--mntiie business along cooperativelins

Increases Capital StockThe San M iteo Land company,

with pr.ncipal office in Albuquerque,filed an amendment to its articles of:,.,,r,.r.,.;.. .... if.i..r.i, i

ri,. cos.img capital sto. k Irom !0,.Jto ?it.H),MJ lhe president and sta-tutory agent is A. B. McMillen, theseer aiy is Atlila C. Holmquist.

Mining Compan7 QuitsTip- - Memphis Red Kiver Mining-ro-

it y , wi.h p;i.'Kipal office ill

Katon, has filed with the state cor-poration commission a notice o

of the corporation. Thestatutory agent of the company waiW. II. Ker4tner.

Water Useri Cliange ManThe Ruidojo Water Users' asso-

ciation, with principal office in (jlen-to- e,

I.incotn county, hits amendedits articles of incorporation so as tosurrender the right to issue capitalstock, and assuming the powers be-

longing to a mutual association. TinHtatntory aitt in oi the associationis J. V. Tuily, former state senator.

CoinmUsioner AppointedJ. If. LaRue, of Melrose, has been

appointed a member of the board ofcounty commissioners of Curry coun-ty, lie succeeds. J. B. Lynch, whorecently r'S'i'ned or account of removing to California to live. The

, Thursday morning,

DIPHTHERIA AND MEASLESINCREASING IN STATE

there was a slight increase indiphtheria and a considerable in- -crease 111 measles last week, as com--

. . .

pared with the week berore, it IS

shown in the weekly bulletin oncommunicable diseases issued by thestate department of health. The num-ber of cases of measles increasedfrom 133 to I7(i, diphtheria increas-

ing from lu to 2o. 'lhe total ofall communicable disease! moved upfrom 271 to 3.y, an increases of US.

The several diseases are reportedas nillows:

Cluckcnpox;.. .. P.ernalillo.. ..J, F.ddy i.Uraut i, anta fe 1, Socorro

10.

Diphtheria: Bernalillo 2, Colfax 1,

Dona Ana 8, (jrant 1, Quay 4, San-doval 2, San Miguel 1, Santa F'e 3,Torrancc 4, total 2b.

German measles: San Miguel 1.

Gonorrhea: Bernalillo I, Chaves S,

Colfax 2, Grant 2, Mora 4, Socorro1, Taos 1, total 14

Measles: Bernalillo 07, Coliax 18,

Grant 1, McKiulcy 11, Kio Arriba S,

Sandov.il 2, San Miguel I, SantaFe 2.i, boiorro 7, Torrance 10 andUnion 7.

ai nips: Cilf.ix 5, Dona Ana 1,

Grant 13, McKinley 5, Socorro I,'

. r, ,. , r .,i ii uiiiuiii;i : i.ci iiiimiii M uu &

4. lio Arril.i 1. S.m M il uol 1, Sant4I c i, .Sfc(nri) total IJ.

Minict iit: J.ima 1, Mora 1.

t (,n.i I Koose velt I, San'A I, .io-rr- i, i aos I, tolal

13.Small'iox Bern ilillo I. Coliax 1.

total 2Syphilis t haves 1, CY Itax 1, (J.i.i,

J. :,l 1.

Trachoma: Chaves 2.

T' bei eu osi : l.eriialillo 5, Chaves' i :. 2, total 41.

Typhoid fever: Jiay I, Santa Fe1. s..,..:to 1, total 3.

Whooping cough : Bernalillo 8,I I. (.i.illl iv, tj.elo 7. SoiOllsi

total 20.

NOTORIOUS AUTO B.NP1TN UBLD IN ALBUQUERQUE

r., i i. r.eatty. arrested by thep.'ne - of Albuquerquer. rr two weiks ago on a vagrancycharge, is v. int-- d in the state ofOhio to answer to serious ikiro

G A . lvn-- ic, head of thebun an of the Canton police

t'ciia -- ttnent, came to Santa Fe Mm-- d

iv v th a rcqusition upon Gavfor the extradition of Keatt".

Kic In- declared that l'.eatty has In "ihe head of a ganc, of automobile

s and bandits operating inOhio and east and that the dipart-m- :

r.t has heen chasing him for th e

montl s E i lencc i available toshow 'hat Bca'ty h.n stolen at lea t25 an ' otnohi Vs. Kirl.ie aTted.

An important letter, unsigned butcontait ing was interrepte-- bvthe pone in Albuquerque before i

reachec Beatty.

MINISTER WANTED FORlet'lVn rtVri vTHFvTICV

j - - -

r.ov Merht m en Thursday i.ed, .i-1- , ,11 ni, tl the

Cn!,.' .no fir the extradition of K nP.. II -- n irs. who ; r ported lbr 'iiJ'T -- ri-t n l' c city of Den-

ver. A comp'a-.- t las beenin a ii:i:i t of ti e ,( ce t in

Clayton, chrpinp Somers with ti'ti--

inu a cheik.

The Qual 0'0""ay.ThQ'ial it'Oriy In tlip nnPi "f that

portion of rt- l'f tir nt m InPsii tl at t tttt- - n. t(,e pu- - d- - laConcnr.i,. Frsritr tt. fuct 'h thct.'t-t't--t ft :1 HI

pnit,,-f.-

1s..t -

ja. I.I:- - -

Pathetic Apeeal.Mary's bnne htid sttmelt hf

Itehminc and p'tT hndljr 4nnag&.The nt-x- t exTin- - ahtTi Mr traapntyiiit at mott t r ttnrv tw i1Mesttng ovfl f n-- . ' ftp rnmljr

nd trw- - "i f;s plttvs'l Ii.:;i1 l t Hit ttllf-C.- " "ca- -

litir

mmissioner of oublic. utilities:. tocreate a ame commission; to supp- -

ress and prohibit gamblingThe senate has a new bill to cre- - as

ate a new cattle sanitary hoard, thestate to be divided into districtseach district to have a representa-- !live, and two members to be chos - .t-

en at large. The ux members arcto serve six years, under appoint- -

ment bv the governor. Members to;be eligible must be raisers and own- -'

. .

erj of mat catlie in sscw Ricxn.o-- ..j rACwlf.nt r.f th...1 LI lliusi liaiv uvvii i .i

state for three years. Removal ofan'y member from his district will era,.niaticallv create a vacancy inthat district. The house has alreadypassed a similar measure with res-- jpect to the sheep sanitary board.

Among the new house bills is onelto furnish free textbooks to all pu- -

riits of the public5 schools; mniherto limit the expenditures of schoolfunds by boards of education.

Reinburg's senate joint resolutionfo submit a constitutional amen -

ment to prohibit aliens ineligible tocitizenship from owning real esinlehas been passed by the senate bvunanimous vote. With one rcsnlu- -

lion on this subject already under -.

consideration in the house, still auo- -

thcr one, mm.c drastic has been in -irodttced It spe.itically defignatc--StllljeClS CI lie jajianesc r.niin

Baca, of Santa Fe, chairman ofthe capitol committee has introduc- -ed a house bill to construe: an c:.- -

tension to the capitol, at J Coil n

$200,000. m(JtCro. also of Santa Fe, his in- -

troduccd a house joint resolution to ed

increase the pay of legislators lioiii.) to $10 a day.The revenue measures had not ph

been introduced either in senate orhouse, at the time of adjournmenton Thursday afternoon, although sttthe Democratic members of t'--e sen-

'ate had begrn lo insist that th K:- -

publicBrs ought to introduce thehitls without further waiting.

cd

REQUISITION FOR '

JCHN BARRETT NOTHONORED BY GOVERNOR

The governor of Kane a made rr- - to.itiisitinn upon Gov. Mechem for the ofr tradition of John Barrett, of Clay- -

on. wanted to answer to the charge andf cnncbi111.ee. At a hrarimr

ducted by ticv, Mechem on lies-- ;

day afternoon, cvnlence was mtro-ir- r

duced to convince the governor thattin urMtM nnl hi tlntif iiH in honor- - tUm

inir the renuisition. This evidencetended to show that Barrett wis notguilty of the charge.

DECREES OF MURDERDEFINED FOR FIRST

TIME IN NEW MEXICO key

In reaffirming the judgment and1

sentence of the district court in So--

i. Cr.pt ('ir.iitv (ha tuber ofiiuu. u e '.v. is it r i un: "n!a I in seen-it- i

thi, i iipt...en.eiit. Silver City Ftit- -

I. come Louis pleaded guilty to thetransportation and possession of in-- 1

toxicatir.g liquor and his bond fix- -

c"'icii ring.l ;is' summer the slat- - department therefused to approve, the a;.po,iitiii.-i-- t

by

The firv.1 rr r,l imr.t iinl-tii- ri i.!i!if-li- and cave him a flee rinrenow being loaded out trojn the A-- o sleep over the St. Klmo CI d.ciatmn's curing house at Ijs ( ruces Tuesday morning at one lo V

an Arizona pomt lhe packoigMii- - star in-s- came dcwns-a-r- i uidand giading is done under the direc-- lifted $13100 in cash and :ib t :utvtion of the sales manager of the dollars in goods and started nr. the.Uoiia Ana t oaniy Marketing associ- - bai k di or. exprrting to m ik - a

. ,.a,.L:ti nlnt 1 ii.... fli,oini'ni..9ivi-- v lntifa.l h fniinil s:!.:.-.- !

at $:00. 1 nree gallons ot a'siiiwhiskey in a suitcase were seized.which l.e said be had bought inlhocnix.

flame Iorio was held under a fsOO

bond after he had pleaded not guiilythe manufacture and possessionintoxicatina liauor. A still was

seizcd with a quantity of whiskbeer. Frank Carr pleaded not

to the charge of possessi'i.;mtoxicatiuir liotior and was held und- -

a $500 bond. M-- H and KayDavis were : hel4 under $2S0 bond, on

.t,n.-- r of unlawful possession otmmxi. atintr linnor. i

SUNSHINE VALLEY PROJECTCOMMENDED BY PANKEY

- 4 . - r -rornicr ucuicnini vjuvcnior rau- -

of New Mexico is loud in his

n:a':ehf vL?;T..rin,bTJ.Great Divide in Sunshine Vajley,

vide are doing the preatest constructive development ever undertakenin New Mexico. Their work in Sun-

shine Valley is the biggest asset thestate has had."

At the present time 100 personsof them actual settlers

are fivin(r in Sunshine Valley, which. . . B,.nlTH K TH, P anJThe Great Divide. No oerson is tier- -

mitted to purchase more than eVh- -

nor less than forty acres. Specular- -ors are barred and every purchaser

....i- - A . t,:.As an instance of the sincerity of

the settlers and the rapidity withwhich thev are makine real homes ain their community, the whirlwindfashion in which they built and es- -

tabii?hed a school is cited Fifteenmintes after the need of a schoolh?4 been sucested checks to coverthe cost of the a Vome forthe learhrr and fot-- r months' salarv

corro county, in the case of (). . i New Mexico.Smith, convicted of murder in the Mr. Pankey is the biggest land-secon- d

degree, the New Mexico sn- - holder in New Mexico. In a con-pre-

court for the first time under-- versation with Volney Hoggatt, edit-too- k

to define firt and second dr- - or of The Great Divide, he declar-pre- e

murder. Smith was indicted in ed "The Post and The Great Di- -

erprise

'lhe sinti-ui- of d at!i nsstd onSylvester V. Il.i'l. y by tin- ilistticicourt of Grant county was affi'ined

tin- up: i rn court in an opinionJiistiic llcbert F". lievnolus.

IChiif Justice Roberts and JusticeI i r, rniicurring.

Bailey was convicted of tn t dc- -

ni irdrr for the killing of JaM. Bedroc and sentenced to be exccuted on April 25, 1''19 but lisieal to the sujuetue court acted as a

st.iv of execution.The supreme court has set Febru-

ary 11 as the date for the hangingSilver City.

HIDALGO

1. i I. Bhillins took nit v o-- i I

. . j - ,

An revolver pr.ssed as lirst hi,hmly. He she-if- f nil City Var-.al- '

I int .ts t ,1 !i ha.ITi'- - tl FII lirilli.l ill I

Tl-- i whole rtiz-o- may v. ell be- ond oi the -- ;' t vlii host it,,! t!;:it

b inn erected by he Lor M,iHospital Company

Ciu.trartor Jltathtr is tcU'-i-'

nc a s ru'iv No 1 job on th'pl r.d tl bui'din wliiih is the list

Word in modern co"sturt'on in bos-- imill is ly fire rmofj'r l ba- - t ery modern c,inir.i,Mc

' cr re ( the sickIt is expected that the beanti'i-- l

irl-r- will be rtady for occupan- - i

in t' t rof-- e i a very few weeks !

t a t nt meeting of cto t' " ' j- n-- w tlected t

follvwin; it'tntrs: D'. t'. P. Vi-':-

Pres'derl ; Pr M M. Cmcler. Vi.e- - ji 1' ri : M' M'-r.-r- c! Hon-nc-

Secret--- y : I' C. I!. Trva-- IDr. R F-- flmeti. St.Tiitofv

"I i Tiirrrrl

LUNA

7l i contcrrplatt d that w rk willb frn on the new Colambns

on page four)

ulr lMI"llT .V " i""1'm.ss.oners to s corye my1""I' "f"" (,f Mlpu1P'

' In the absenre of a health.officer, the state department employ4cd rhysician JJh h ""C', ' 'f'"!U I IHC tiiiiiii,

for the public health. The bill for- , . . lt u' -- ? V ' '"" " 'inc(1rred. reached a

cf $304.59. A b... ' '."';,hi, " un! wasorescnted to the board ot commis- -

p ',, f , , ,

fused. The state department appealed the case to the district court,which upheld the action of the boardof commissioners. I he case was thenappealed to the supreme court, whichreversed the judgment ot the districtcourt ?nd remanded the cause l,tnew trial.

I he syllabus says :

"1. The approval oi the state de-

partment of health is a prerequisiteto invest the nominee tor county

! "?r".'"1 "he h"ardof county commissioners of a coun- -

' " anthority, and without sa--

approval there can ne no sucn o:-- il"a Hied to act. j

The disapproval by the statedepartment of health of the nom.nee

.,or couniy neaun u nm n- - ufailure, neizlect, or refusal to noir. i -

one who approved by the s'a!cdepartment of health ronstiiutes afailure, ncplect and refusal of the

htth aoihorittej to do t: twork which Chapter 8.L U ! W,

designates shall be done by the s a:;department of health, and hnrtressaid Hate department of health to

of imnortance to the craft and to;"roast" each other at close range.

- s - -

were cured under the proper comli- -

tions and are of excetetit quality.Irv r . ii.rt, n,l minil nri, tiH a r i K

soul f. o. b. Las I ruces, inspectionand .acceptance at tne packiuy plant

About 2i.il Poinnls have thus farirhern sold by the M'Vcttrg Associa- - isHon i..ci Iv ai d to pours il New

sico in ies. than tirioad lots anFlout I50,0t pounds are still in stor-- 1 '

;.rc after loading this ca'. Alxi.it j

15,000 of this i seed for which theAssociation i now taking trd rs. thesrd to remain in until need-- !

Las Cruies Kcpubik. j'

i

V.-i-- T. 'I. l'i year u'.A sen of Geo. '

Fell of Mesilla Pa'k, is dead a jtjrenl! of the accidental firirii of'mac?:ine mn in the lands of Ham

t'onw ay. am-rtie- r s'i.!-r- at the Air- -r't-r- al Ct oe. , t jursdiy after-- !

ricon. i "'Mi ' cni h !p was tKe ! at ence

Mil ;i ii'arid n a ear n--rv-he- d t- an I J Pax. h.is,nM. H- - dt- -

h- - r! ' ' - ''v ve a h

t'tre. s't.t iw and one hall hours-r th, shit iiie.

This t f t anirlert of t'tisV'td that l as ever ocrnred at the

'Conere. The tnihianr practice is s:n- - !eupeT4ed at all times and am- -

Septemher, 1918, for the murder ofFred .Richards.

Hon. Jefferson Raynolds, a p'oneerbanker of Vegas, is reportedquite ill from pneumonia at his homein that city. Mr. Raynolds "'!long hst of public services to hiscredit. He was recently instrumental in having the Santa F? railwayrive to the community of Las Vcjsthe Montezuma hotel property andthe Hot Sprinrs, which was placedin the bands cf the Y. M. C A. asa organization. Theproperty recently berime the site of

college. Mr. Raynolds isa Grand Army man and a promin-ent republican.

Good wcrk has been done by theSanta Fe county health officers instnnpinjf diphtheria at the San

county lire southeast of t'd.-citr- .

At La 1oya. on the San Mi-

guel tide there were 38 cases Listwr'V The San'a Fe officers in-

oculated 68 pnpils of the school onthis side of the line and so far onlytwo cases have developed in thecommunity on this side of the tine.

m advance were Iving on the table perform snclt worn at tne expenseat headquarters. Twenty five min-.o- f tne county."ntes later lmber was being hauled i

'

for the building, which was opened; The New Mexico Fdi'orial As-o- -

January 17. Iciation will meet in this city Safr-r- -

It is expected there will be 300 day afternoon to consider ma'terssettlers in the ralley br Jcne 1,Denver Post.

BARBOUR PLAN KILLED Came From England iri Mail SackSDMETH NG EW JAP PACT WILL

BE FAVORABLE

ACTION TAKEN TO

ENFORCE PACT

auguration will he one of the most

simple and democratic in the historyof the I'liited States. The President-elect merely will tuke the oath of ofliceand deliver his address within the cap-ito- l

or on its east porch, und therewill be no extru preparation for theceremony at least none thut Involvesthe expenditure of government money."Example of Economy and Simplicity." X Sir i

1

2s

Contoined in one of the thousands of bags of mall which arrived in NewVork on the liner Aquitanlu, was one live parcel which has not been account-ed for. It was a blue kitten, which wus In the sack for eight days withoutwater or food.

MANY AMENDMENTS OFFEREDAND KILLED.

HOUSE ADOPTS REAPPORTION-MENT MEASURE AFTER TUR-

BULENT SESSION.

(ffnu-n- Nv "paper Union Srs Scmoe.)

Washington, Jan. SO. At the end ofihe most turbulent session of the prelit Congress, tin- - House adopted tin

reiipportiontrient bill with amendmentlimiting its membership for ten joursto the present total of 43.1.

The fight to irevent Increase to 4SII

was won several hours earlier, however, when the House in committee ofHie whole refused to postpone consideruteion of reilistricting and thenvoted, JUS to 77, to keep the presentmaximum. It wus after long purlinnientiii-.- wrangling that the bill wasbrought before the House Itself for a

final showdown. The iltfi anieniluienlfiliullv wus agreed to, -- !7 to 70, andIhe measure mude ready for the Senate.

After deciding In go ahead with t lie

measure, Kepreseiitative Jtarbour, lie- -

publicun, California, member of tincensus committee, made himself heardabove the din and proposed the 4X

maximum umendiiieut, around which

Ihe battle was waged. Other amend-

ments wen offered, one to cut themembership to :!07 and another to

raise it to 4li0. Until were voteddown.

After the reul fight had been set-

tled, Uepresentulive Tinkhum, b

llcan, Massachusetts, came up with a

isul to reduce House scuts In

states where negroes are denied tinrlsht of franchise, nnd the buttlestarted ufresh.

Another wrangle developed over mi

atnenilinent by Kepreseiitative Hur

hour to perfect the bill by providingthut the nun hiuery for redistricting int lie eleven Mutes which will lose scutsafter March 4. V.KXi. The Harbour

plan und many substitutes, finallywere defeuted.

As the bill stands the states whichwill lose representation ure: Mis

sour!, two seals, und Indiana, Inwu,Knnsas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine

Mississippi, Nebraskii, Khode Isluudand Vermont, one each. These twelveseats will lie shifted to eight states;California gets three, Michigan two,Ohio two und Connecticut, New- - Jer-

sey, North Curollnii, Texas and Wash-

ington, one each.

Plan New Union in U. S.

Chicago. Several hundred unionmen at u meeting here made plans fora nation-- ide organization to be knownas the American League of Union Men,with the announced object of eliminat-

ing what was termed the "malign In-

fluence which has been exerted on themlmls of American working men bythose official oligarchs who have foryears misled the union forces." Heso-lutlon- s

adopted wish to "convey toPresident-elec- t Harding thut the gen-

uine heart-thro- b of labor will be withhim in the grave responsibility whichhe w ill assume."

Use Wall for Buildings.Wushlngton. The Inner walls of

Paris, relics of the city's defenses inold baronial days, are going to makebuildings iu war devastated ureas ofKm nee. Where they stood. Purls willhuve Its first modern playground, laidout on American Hues hy the JuniorKed Cross. Announcement by Ihe liedCross suid twenty miles of good build-

ing stone hud been saved from levelingthe old fifty-foo- t defenses.

Bandits Get 12 Cents.Chicago. Enterprising safe blowers

who invaded the offices of the ChicagoPotato Company huve consult-ed Ihe oulju hoard before they startedill on the Job, to ascertain what wus inthe safe. As it was they expendedmany hours of highly professionalskill and used costly tools und explo-sives, wortli ut least $1". and all theygot out of the safe wus 11! cents twonickels und two pennies.

' Dead Bandits Worth $500.

Kansas City, Mo. A standing re-

ward of jO0 to any person for thedeath of each bandit killed while at-

tempting to rob a member bunk wasvoted by the Association of SuburbanHunkers. Matthew Clarklu, Jr-- a mo

torcycle patrolman who frustrated anattempt to rob the East Side Hankhere and killed one of the bandits,was awarded f.VM) hy the association.

Want Union With Germany.Iondon. A general strike Is begin

nlng in Austria, according to a dis-

patch from Paris. s are beingheld at which demands for union withGermany are being made. The dis-

patch adds that it is known the parlia-mentary opposition has refused to takethe responsibility of trying to governthe country under present clrcuni'stances.

Settlement on Child Denied.Chicago. Despite the marriage of

Peggy Marsh, Knglish actress, to Albert Johnson of Cleveland, JudgeDunne, counsel for Mrs. Marsh and herIllegitimate son by Henry Kield, proposes to continue his battle In thecourts to secure a larger portion ofthe Kield estate for the boy. "I do notcare to discuss the reports of a J.Xl.lWO

annuity settled upon the son," saidJudge Dunne. John P. Wilson, repre-senting the Kield estate, denied emphatically that such settlement hadbeen made.

Anti-Ja- p Measure in Utah.Salt Lake City, Ctah. A measure

designed to prevent Ihe ownership,requisition or leasing of land In I'tahby persons ineligible for citizenship,which Is said to be patterned almostIn its entirety after the recently-enac- ted California law, has been IntroducedIn the lower bouse of the Utah Legislature. So mention Is made In the billof Japanese or Chinese, tbe citizenshipclause covering that phase of the measure. The American Legion of Salt

I I FAR E

MYSTERIOUS DEVELOPMENT OR

INVENTION IS TALKED OFAMONG NATIONS.

SUBMARINE OR AIRPLANES?

Discoveries, It Is Rumored, Will Makethe Battleship Obsolete Our NavyDepartment Seemingly li GivingMatter Little Attention.

By EDWARD B. CLARK.WuHhiugtou. "Tin-r- ure mysteri-

ous hints tliul iiuportunt discoverieshave been mude in mtvul warfare.Whether these discoveries ore Inven-

tions or udvances In uuvul science re-

sulting from observation of operationsduring Hie lute war, Is not disclosed."

The quotation comprises the lirsttwo sentences of till editorlul whichtias Just appeared In the Washington1'ost.

Last summer In New York city ru-mor wus current in clrch-- s which limybe culled scientific that completechanges were coming In uuvul opera-tions, ami that thp nation which shouldcling to present day methods, andkeep its eyes closed to developments,would find Itself speedily out of unyconflict which might come.

There was something even moredefinite than rumor concerning thismutter. It wus said specifically thatthe Nuvy department of th" I'tiltedStates hail been given the details ofan Invention which would make thebattleship obsolete, und that whilethe department apparently was notpaying much attention to the Information which had been put before It, thenavy olllces of other countries hadbeen Investigating, Inventing and experlmentlng along lines parallel tothose which It was suggested the Unit-ex- )

Stall's should follow.No one knows, of course, definitely

just what form of thing it Is withwhich Investigation, Invention und ex-

periment uro concerning themselves.There ure two contrary stories. OneIs that a new submarine tins been In-

vented which, without uny (lunger toitself, can put battleships and cruis-ers out of commission at will, andthe other Is that airplane Improve-ment! have come about so rapidlythat battleships will be unable tomake any adequate resistance to at-

tacks from above.Great Britain Awaits Developments.Gn at Ilrltuiu today hus called u hult

In its navy building program. Somestudents of naval matters bold thatGreat Itrltaln Is waiting to determinedefinitely whether the new Inventionswill do all that Is claimed for them,and that If It is found thut they will,the whole nulure of naviil construc-tion In (ireal lirlluln will be changedto meet the new conditions. In otherwords. It is said that Great llrltaln isholding buck in order to avoid a greatexpenditure of money on types of shipswhich may prove soon to be obsolete,

as means of defense: or of of-

fense.An engineer of high standing In New

'ork city told the writer definitelynot long ugo thut the Nuvy depart-ment IihiI before it cert u In planswhich. If given the consideration theydeserved, would stop the building ofall great battleships. I made somesubsequent Inquiry concerning thismutter, ami while it did not leud Intothe Navy department, It led to someInformation which made it seem prob-able that the naval authorities of theworld are giving consideration to eT- -

tain newly proposed methods of seawarfare which. If proved worthy.would rhnuge the sea lighting of thefuture.

Something New In Torpedo Boats.Iu Washington there Is definite In'

formation concerning the developmentof "a small, almost submerged lorpedo bout, capable of In a

fairly rough sea, and possessing greatspeed," which Is one of the advancesto be credited to the Called States,The question Is. If this type of tinyfighter will render battleships obsolete. Of course It cannot tnuke themobsolete unless the Ingenuity of Diedefensive Is far behind In the racewith the Ingenuity of the offensive.

Most of the students of the situationseem to have came to the thatIf great battleships are to go by theboard, It will lie hemus aviation husadvanced to a degree that will ennbleairships to put battleships speedilyoat of commission absolutely sinktliem aa the result of a bombardmentfrom on high.

Presumably It Is commonly thoughtthat battleships with gunsran save-- themselves from air attacks.Ttey cannot do anything of the kind.As baa been written time and again,

viators are not In the least worriedhoot shrapnel or high explosives

avblch are fired at them from theground or from the decks of battle-skip- s.

TheM antl-alrrra- runs al-most never hit tbelr mark.

Inauguration to Be Simple.At the request of President-elec- t

Harding all plana for great dis-

play on the nccaslnc of Ms a

oa March 4 next bavebeen canceled. There will be sm pa-

rade down Pennsylvania avenue, andno Inaugural ball la tbe pension bund-

ing or elsewhere, and no popular car-nival for the entertainment of visitorswho could not gain entrance? to anysnore exclusive function.

Instead of all this, the Harding In

AUNTIE SHOULD HAVE KNOWN.

LJttle Marie was visiting at thetioroe of her grandmother, and whilethere ab went barefooted. One eve-

ning her aunt told ber to wash berfeet before going to bed. WhenMarie came Into tbe bedroom ber suntlooked at then and aald: "Why,pUrle, row did not wash tbe bottompt roar feet at all." The little girllooked p surprised and aald: "Why,aastie, I doat sleep standing up."Chicago America.

WAR GENERALS ACT TO DISARM

GERMANY AND ENFORCETREATY.

COUNCILWANTREPORTS

SUPREME COUNCIL TELLS CHIEFSTO DRAW UP PLANS FOR

EXECUTION.

(UfirrD Xewsluiier L'uicin Ntti Kmk. I

Paris, Jan. S!.1. TJie Supreme Couu-ri- l,

composed of representatives ofGreat Itritain, Italy, France, llolgluiiland Japan, have lieai'd the militaryexperts and later conferred togetherregarding the failure of Germany todisarm as provided for by the Treatyof Versailles.

The experts wen- - asked to uiiike u

delailed report on the subject, withreeiimiiieiiilatiiilis regarding measuresto Insure execution of the disarma-ment clauses of' the treaty.

The lirilisli prime minister, Davidl.loyd George, and the president of theFrench council. Aiistiile Itriaud, it isunderstood desire an opportunity totalk over I In- - ilin.-ren- t phases of the

comes up for discussion ul thefull council.

Thus the changes Iu the councilsprogram.

In this connection the premiers uresaid to be considering whether it isfeasible tiud advisable to have theGerman represenliit Ive sit with thecouncil before the final decision on

reparations Is taken.The ISritisli delegation Is believed

to favor inviting the Germans to tukepart iu the discussion after (he alliescome to an uuderstiiudiiig amongthemselves.

Pending a decision on this question,Ilerr llergiiiiiuii, the German delegate,It Is expected, will coiil'er with UnitsI.ouclieur, the French minister of lib-

erated regions.It Is reported he will make an offi-

cial offer to pay two billion marks in

gold within u year, one fourth of thutumoiinl In cash.

The eventuality of a German beingInvited to sit with the council dependspartly upon Ilerr Kerginnnn's reply toM. I.ouclieur, who will ask lilin if Ger-

many bus uny proposition to make be-

fore the allies decide on what courseliny shall pursue In enforce executionof the treaty.

The F.uslorn question, Greece andthe treaty of Severes will be taken upafter the council has finished consid-

ering the Austrian situation.of trade relations with

Kusslii by ullled governments whichwould entail a sort of conditional rec-

ognition of the soviet regime In Mos-

cow appeared to be a topic whichwould be discussed seriously duringthe next .

In connection with this subject, thenote sen I by President Wilson to PaulIlymans, president of the assembly ofthe League of Nations, in which Mr.Wilson demanded that the allies as-

sume ii "hands off" attitude towardthe Russian iinllon, appeared to lie ofprime Importance.

Electoral Votes Missing.Wushlngton. Klectorul voles frpm

six states, Indiana, Maryland, Nevada,North Carolina, Oregon and I'tuh, hadnot arrived us required hy law whenVice President Marshall closed his

Iteiiirns which have been mulled,however, from some of the states maybe used at the Joint session of Con-

gress Feb. It to count the votes forPresident and vice president.

Us Lincoln's Stand at Inauguration.Washington. The small stand first

used at the Inauguration of AbrahamLincoln and at every Inaugurationsince, except when William HowardTuft became President, will be usedMarch 4 when Warren G. Hardingtakes the outh of office. The excep-tion In the cuse of Mr. Tuft was because the' ceremony occurred In theSenate chamber on account of theweather. The stand Is in the possession of Watson S. Clark of this city,son of the architect of the capitolbuilding.

May Wear Tights in Canada.Ottawa. Woman may walk aloof

the streets of Ottawa In tights. ThereIs no law to prevent them." So rilledInss-cio- r .McLaughlin of the policemorality squad, after complaint that awoman who whs "old enough to knowbetter" bad been seen on the mainstreets with a daringly short skirt"The police cannot Interfere as long atthe Issly l the inss-cto- r de-

clared.

U. S. Protests Over Oil Holdings.Mexico City. The t'nited States

government, through George T. Summer! In, the charge d'affaires here, haspresented an emphatic note to Mexico regarding the alleged Invasion ofAmerican petroleum concessions, andrequesting an Immediate Investiga-tion with a proper adjustment, accord- -

big to semi-offici- Information. Theforeign office. In Its usual press state-ment, did not mention the reportednote, and confirmation of Its deliverywas lacking at the American embassy.

Vatea for Seed Distribution.Washington. The House voted to

appropriate x.hm,oi for the free dis-

tribution of seeds by members of Con-

gress. Tills is $120,(0 more than wasappropriated for tbe current fiscalyear.

Duke Ordered to Pay Loan.fxndoa. The dnke of Manchester,

who married Helena Zimmerman ofCincinnati, has been sued by Vers

a friend, for a f10,000 loanmade a rear ago.

PREMIER SAYS NEGOTIATIONSARE PROCEEDING SATISFAC-

TORILY AT WASHINGTON.

BACKS DISARMAMENT

ISSUES ARISING FROM ANTI-ALIE-

LAND LAWS WILLBE ADJUSTED.

(Westcra Seagals I'oioi New Bcffct I

Washington, Jun. 24. Negotiationsbetween Japan und the United Statesfor adjustment of issues arising fromuntl-ulie- ' land legislation by Cali-

fornia w ere viewed us satisfactory andhopeful by Premier llara and ForeignMinister Uilildu in uddresses at thereopening of the Japanese diet. Pre-mier llnru declared the exchange ofviews through ISnron Slildehurii, Jap-anese uuihussudor here, and ltohim! S.Morris, Americun uuihussudor to Ja-

pan, were proceeding "in a mostfriendly spirit for uu umlcuble adjust-ment."

Foreign Slinlster Uchida said "afrank und free exchange of views hasbeen proceeding on various points in-

volved." He expressed regret thut aayet it wus impossible to announce theresult of the discussions, hut he added"we confidently trust an adjustmentcompatible with the honor und inter-ests of both countries hud been finallyarrived at."

The addresses of the two officialswere made public-- by the Japaneseembassy.

lintli referred to the sending of Jap-anese troops to the Chienttao districtof China following the burning of theJapanese consulate and the killing ofseveral Japanese at Hunshuu and an-

nounced that the troops would bewithdrawn when the maintenance oforder was assured.

Viscount I'chldu also told of theLeague of Nations assembly and stat-ed that it was the intention of Japan"to make endeavors In lieurty

with other powers for the attain-ment of the lofty aim of the

"Disarmament Is to be welcomedfor the general welfare of the Iniinanrace, and the Japanese government Is

paying special attention to the ques-tion," the viscount suld.

The historic good relation betweenJupan nnd the United Stittes needs no

reiteration," said Foreign MinisterUchida in Inking up what his colleuguehud termed "the California question,"

"ltelatlons between the two nationssteadily huve grown in liiiHrlance.The present question hus been engag-ing the most careful attention of theJapanese government. It has ap-

proached the problem from the higherstandpoint of Japanese . Americanfriendship and with full regard to theclose mid important relations of com-

mon interests between the two nations,ami they have placed supreme Import-ance on a prompt and satisfactorysolution of the difficulty caused by theunfortunate movements In California."

Toklo, Jan. 24. The resolution bySenator Itoruh for a "naval holiday"and Its favorable reception in Japan-ese newspapers, served us the basis ofthe prlnclpul Interpellation in theHouse of Itepresentutlves. V. Huma-guch- i

of the opposition said he neitherwas a peace advocate nor an udvocateof war between Japan und America,hut that the naval expenditures ofboth nations should be of the sameproportions us fur as possible.

An agreement for naval curtailment,he said, would benefit Jnpun morethan the other powers.

"The situation In China," he said,"Is at the turning point, and. the awakening of Ihe people is, indeed, worthyof note. That the path of China Itbeset with difficulties should com-

mand the deep sympathy of the people and government of Japan, whileChina's development is a thing eagerly hoped for by Japan. Not only forChina's sake, but for the general wel-

fare and ieace of the world, it is ar-

dently to be desired China shouldsieedlly recover sace and unity."

Wife on Train That Kills Husband.Holdredge, Neb. While en route to

the railroad depot to meet his wife, J.II. Long, a farmer, living near here,was Instantly killed when the automobile he was driving was struck by thetrain on which she was returning homefrom a trip to Omaha. -

Hamon Trial March 10th.Ardmore, Okla. Judge T. W. Cham

pion announced the trial docket of theDistrict Court of Carter county wouldopen Feb. 28, and that the case of Mrs.Clara Smith Hamon, charged with theshooting of Jake L. Hamon, Is set fotMarch 10.

One Shot In Drug Raids.Kansas City, Mo. Federal narcotic

agents carried out a series of raid!pou a number of drug stores and phy-

sicians' offices. In which one man, aaalleged drug addict, was shot, twophysicians and one druggist arrested,snd more than 75,000 prescriptions be-

lieved lo have been exchanged for il-

legal narcotic seized. With the ob-

taining of warrants for the arrest oltwelve other druggists and nine phy-sicians, tbe authorities declared tbeyhad uncovered a drug conspiracy olmajor proportions.

Finda Way to Educate Children.

Washington. Army recruiting literature cast a little ray of sunshine la-

ta tbe life of aa Ozark farmer hi Mis-souri with eleven children to supportoa sixty acres of land. Noting educational features of army life, tbe Mls-souri-

wrote Adjutant General Harris for special permission to enlist tbosecond oldest of nine sons and a pairof twins, all Just under age. Tbo bay"are large for tbelr ages and willgrade wp to tbe average conulry boyta looks and latdUgeBre," be aald.

As has been said, it wus llr. Har-

ding himself who "busted up" ull theelaborute plans thut were being per-fected. In messages to Senutor Knox,chairman of the congressional commit-tee, and K. It. McLean, chairman ofthe Washington committee of arrange-ments, Mr. Hauling expressed hisdesire thut the program be us simple us

possible, though he was reluctant to In-

trude Ids views. To Senator Knox liesuld :

"This will require no expense, andwe shall be joint participants In un

example of economy us well as sim-

plicity which may be help! ill in theprocess of seeking our normal wuysonce more."

In his dispatch to Mr. McLean thePresident-elec- t expressed his grati-tude to the chairmen und his asso-ciates for the labor and time they hudgiven to preparition, and continued:

"If It Is becoming to express mypreference. I wish you and your com-

mittee to know thut the Impression ofextravagant expenditure und excessivecost would make me it very unhappyparticipant. I know full well thatthe government outlay Is relativelysmall, mill that the larger expenditurecomes from the generous contribu-tions of IHstrlet citizenship, but It Istfmi y and wholesome- - to practice the

where there Is no real necessity, nndIt will he a wholesome example ofeconomy and thrift If we save themany, many thousands which the in-

augural celebration will cull from theprivate purse of those nttendlng."

Mr. McLean Not Surprised.Chairman Md.iiin was not surprised

hy Mr. Harding's action, und prompt-ly canceled all plans for the publiccelebration.

"I realize, of course," he said, "how-kee-

will he the disappointment to thepeople of Washington, hut I have nilalong known how President-elec- t Har-ding felt with respect to the expendi-tures of large sums of money at thistime.

"Uicnuse of Mr. Harding's feelingI uluays was In doubt about the Inau-

gural program being curried out. Ifeel that Senator Harding's friendsnnd ndvlsers, no matter how- - muchthey regret the losses to Washington,will be with 111 in In this mutter."

Protests against expenditures ofmoney by the government for lavishceremony at the Harding inaugura-tion began several weeks ago. Atthut time Senator Knox, chairman oftlx senute inauguration committee, In-

troduced the usual bill appropriatingt.Vl.lNiO to defray expenses of erect-ing the Inaugural stand und providingfor extra police.

Harding Likes Tennis and Golf.There Is n story In Washington

that Theodore Kooscvclt when he wasPresident said to his secretary of war,William Howard Tuft, "Presidentsmust play to live." Itoosevelt had Justleft H session with his "tennis cabinet

Kverybisly knows how hard Theodore Itoosevelt played. He did notlike golf, and a peculiarity of his eye'sight hud prevented him all his lifefrom playing hnsebiill, but he pluyedat everything else except cards, andhe played hard at tennis, riding,diootlng, swimming, rowing, and at

other sports in which Americans delight.

William Howard Tnft was not builtfor tennis, but he wus built for golf.and he had his golf cabinet, just asItisisevelt hud his tennis cabinet. President Wilson played golf every daythat he hml a cham-- e np to the timethat lie was stricken with Illness. Mrs.Wilson Is fond of golf herself, nnd shefrequently was her husband's oppo-nent lit the game, although many timeshe played with Admiral dry (Irayson,or with some other close White Houseassociate.

Harding Likes Tennla and Golf.

Already the tenuis court of theWhite House Is put In conditionfor Warren 1. I larding. It Is easierto fix a tennis court In winter than ItIs In the spring, nnd knowing this.Senator Harding, through his privatesecretary, George It. Christian, recent-

ly told President Wilson that If con-

venient he would like It much If thedisused court on the Potomac side ofthe White House could be put Into

pnqier trim for the spring playing.President-elec- t Harding also likes

golf, and he pluyed on nenrly every oneof the Washington links while lie was asenator of the United States. Prior tothe time of his coming to WashingtonMr. Harding unquestionably will liemade an honorary member of virtuallyevery club In this town, provided hewill accept such honorary luemltershlp.It does not take a long memory to bringto mind what hapsned when Wood rowWilson became President and he wasoffered honorary membership In one ofthe prominent Washington Countryclubs. He declined the membership.which carried with It all the privilegesof the club without any payment ofdues, on the ground that If a man belonged to any club he should bear bisfull share of Its expenses and shouldpay as any other man would have topay for what was given htm. It re-

mains to be seen what the next I"rest- -dent will reply In case like proffers ofhonorary membership In the clubs artmade to him.

Cash Ran Out."How long did your honeymoon

lastr"Why. just like the other mnoa It

faded away with tbo last quarter."

ELEPHANTS IN DEMAND.

Twerty-tne- d elephants are held 1st

veneration throughout India, and arekeenly sought by all the rajas andmaharajas for tbe prosperity tbeyare supposed to bring, nays CharlesMayer, m Asia Magazine. Tbey areguarded boot carefully and quarteredereat more sumptuously thaa tbowhite elephants of and the pricethey swfll bring Is determined alasostentirely by the-- amount tbe rajas canOther together.

FIRE ON CROWN FORGES

SEVEN KILLED IN DISORDERSNEAR DUBLIN.

WRECK SINN FEINERS HOMES INCORK AS START ON NEW

TACTICS.

(Witters I'liios Nesi SotIm.)

Cork, Ireland, Jun. 21. The firstofficial destruction for attacks oilcrown forces iu Cork city since mur-tin-!

law- - was enforced in tills areawas curried out when two houses iuWusliington street, where two mem-

bers of the royal Irish constabularywere uttacked, were destroyed hy mil-

itary forces.'ihe military utilhoiltieg ussert

crown forces were fired on from sixhouses in Washington street and thut"Ihe two worst" were selected for de-

struction.A large force of militury arrived

and drew a cordon uround severalblocks, and no one wus permitted toenter or leave. Dwyer'a wholesaledrapery, the largest III southern Ire-lau-

wus searched. The work ofblowing up the designated houses wasgone about curefully to prevent duin

age to'udjolnlng property.The houses selected for reprisals

ure said to huve occupied bySinn 1'ein sympathizers,

who were given wuriiing to clear outThey were permitted to remove theirfurniture, and then militury engineersprepared for the demolition. Meuu-whll- e

officers with druwu revolversordered the large crowd thut hudgathered to disperse, saying thut otlierwise it would bu fired on.

Ten loud explosions followed at 111

tenuis of several minutes, cuuslngconsternation. However, no firesbroke out and no visible damn go hudbeen done to houses outside the none.

A proclamation was Issued hy theinllilary authorities announcing thutthe curfew- - on Saturiluy and Sumluywould begin hereafter ut 5 p. in.

A majority of the umbuslies und otlier disorders here huve occurred Hut'

urday nights.In tile first formal Interview given

to the press since be cuuie to lrelund,Major tienerul Strickland, in coinmaud of the troops, told the Associated Press that martial luw wus provinga success. lie discussed the reprlsulsami his letter to the uctlug lord mayorexplaining thut he expected aid fromthe citizens through a vlglluni-- committee to supply Information. He didnot allude to his reMrt on the burningof Cork.

"It might be taken as too optimisticto suy thut the present ofI lie llepiihllcun army are Its dyingkick, but I believe thut to he a fuct.How long they can keep going is amutter of conjecture, hut It Is only aquestion of time."

Yanks Must Pay Tan.

Washington. Uumarrled war veter-ans must return to the government asincome tux 4 per cent of any dlsabllIty payments they receive in excess of

1,(W0 a year. The Treasury Depart-ment ruled that It could not exemptsuch men although thosestill In the service are required to payonly on amounts In excess of $3,500 ayear. War risk insurance payments,hawever, are not taxable.

Train Hits Slide.Ixia Angeles, Calif. Scores of pas

sengers on train So. 19 of the Haltljtke line, bound for Los Angeles,were shaken up and many were hurledto the floor of the cars and bruisedwhen the train, known aa the Continental limited, crashed into a landslidew hich had burled the track. The mishap occurred at a point about tea mileswest of Stine, Nev.

Big Destruction by Fire.New Vork. Property worth 11,416,-.175,011- 0

was destroyed by fire In theUnited States from 1913 to 1919, asshown by tbe analysis of 3x10,01)0 ad-

justments made public by the nationalboard of fire underwriters. Electricityled with 14.00,471. Matches andsmoking stood second, with $70,474348.and defective chimneys caused $.")6,--

0.10,91 .Iu Other causes were: Stoves,furnaces, boilers and their pipes, spon-taneous combustion, lightning, sjwrkson roofs, petroleum products and unknown causes completed tbe totaL i

Man Secretary to Cengrca woman.Muskogee, Okla, Surprise and some

Indignation was expressed among suf-

fragettes here wbea It became knownthat a man instead of a woman wouldbe the private secretary to Miss AliceRobertson, who is the nation's onlywoman member of Congress. MissRobertson said she had tendered theappointment to Assistant PostmasterCook, who served under ber wbea shewas postmistress of Muskogee. He de-

clined and she appointed bis brother,Benjamin Cok--

TIME RIPE FOR

DISARMAMENT

AMERICAN PEACE COMMISSIONER

BELIEVES AMERICA SHOULDLEAD MOVEMENT.

WANTS NAVY REDUCED

WORLD IS "CRYING. FOR SOME

AGREEMENT" TO LIMIT ARM-

AMENT TO CUT TAXES. .

Washington, Jun. 22. Another ofthe Americun commissioners who

helped draft the treaty of VersaillesHenry White, amhussador to Franceunder President Itoosevelt told theHouse mtvul committee that the timewas ripe for world disarmament undthat the L'nlteil Slates should initiatethe movement.

General Pershing's views will be

sought shortly.The committee ulreudy has heard

Gen. Tusker II. Bliss, former Americun represents ive on the SupremeWar Council and a member of thepeace delegation; hecretury immcisami Acting Siicretury Davis of tieSlate Depart men t.

Mr. White gave us his opinion thatthe great burden of taxation result-

ing from the war made the peoples ofall nations anxious to cut down on

expenditures for armaments. He ex

pressed It that the world was "cryingfor some agreement" to limit arma-ments us a means of reducing tuxes.

Discussing the proposed "naval holi

day," the former coiiimisslouer suld hedid not think the I'nlted States should

stop the uuvul construction it now- - hasunder way. He suid he would like tosee the I'nlted Stales at the top whenIhe disarmament discussion begins,and and suggested thut the relativesizes of navies could be fixed byagreement ut Ihe proposed conference.He lidded thut questions raised lit theconference might show "the right ofsome nations Greut Hrltaln for In

stance to a larger navy than others."Because of the threatened spread of

Bolshevism, the witness suid, Francemight object to disarmament on land.In this connection, he said, thut "t In-

state of chaos" In w hlch Germany hudbeen kept over reparations whs doingmore to open the way to Bolshevismthan any other single factor.

As to the lime of culling a conference, .Mr. White said that should lieleft to President-elec- t Harding. Hedid not think President Wilson shouldcall It as the fact that he would e

March 4 might lead other nationsnot to take the Invitation seriously.

While the hearings were In progressbefore the House committee, SenutorFrance, ltepuhllcan, Maryland, presented to tiie Senate a proHisal Unitthe United States, Greut Britain und

Jupan agree to a reduction hy 1D.T ofh of their relutlve naval

strength on next July 1.

Senator France emlsHlled tils proposnl in an amendment to the lendingresolution of Senator Borah, ltepuhll-can, Idaho, directing the President tocall a conference of tbe three principalpowers for reduction of their navalbuilding program. The Maryland sen-

ator's resolution would rreSte a n

of naval experts of the threepowers to arrange gradual reductionsbetween now and 11)35.

King's Car Kills Child.Brussels. The automobile of King

Albert while returning to Brusselsfrom Louvain, knocked down two chil-

dren In Kesseldo. A girl of 5 was killedoutright and a boy 8 years old was se-

riously hurt.

Soldiers Cant Sua U. 8.Montgomery, Ala. A soldier cannot

prosecute a damage suit against tbegovernment, even for a bump sus-

tained on a troop train, the State Su-

preme Court beld In rejecting theof Jacob Moon. Tbe soldier bad

sought damages from Director Generalof Kailroads Walker D. Hines, alleg-ing that train employes had locked himout of his car when be stepped off forlunch at Alexander City, and be wasinjured while standing on tbe stepsof the train.

Suffrage Society Disband.New Haven, Conn. After fifty-on- e

years of effort, and with Its ambitionaccomplished, the Connecticut Woma a

Suffrage Association has dissolvedhere. Among those who ic 1RQ9 formedthis association were Snsan B. An

thony, Isabelle Beecner Hooker. Har-riet Beecher Stowe, Julia Ward Howe,the Rev. C E. Stowe and WilliamUoyd Garrison. The meeting was hiHartford, and Miss France EllenBurr, 89, alone la living of the pioneerband. She was secretary from 1909to 110.Lake I fostering tbe bilL

ELIMINATING DANGERMODERN DESIGN TheAilEIU LECIOt!VITAL STEERING

SYSTEM OF AUTOMARKETS

Furnished byU. 8. BUREAU OF MARKETS

Washington, D. C, WITH THEALDNETHE LINEDF MARCH

ground. On this half floor there Isplaced" plenty of bedding, so that theyoung pigs will be kept dry with em-

phasis on "dry" and warm.When the farm has such a hog

house, the sows farrow In early springand again In the fall, which Is as na-

ture intended. Late February pigs arekept In the warm; sunny bouse, andget the start that makes then healthyand strong when they are weaned audready for the pasture to spring. Therethey develop rapidly and are of mar-ketable size when there is small sup-

ply and better prices.One of the modern types of bog

houses Is shown In the accompanyingillustration. It Is of frame construc-tion, set on a concrete foundation andwill hold 14 sows and their litters. Thodimensions are 48 by 20 feet To getthe most of the early spring sunlightthis bouse is run east and west, andhas double sets of roof windows, oneset to permit sunshine to filter Into thepens on the south side of the buildingand the other into the pens on thenorth side.

Two suction ventilators in the roof

Copy for This Department Supplied by the Amarlcaji Legion News Service.)

ARIZONA CITIZENS ERECT LEGION HOSPITAL IN RECORD TIME

FROM EXHAUST GASES

Simple Method Illustrated for

Carrying Away Fumes.

Five Minutas In Small UnventilatedGarage With Doer Shut and En-

gine Working Means An-

other Job for Undertaker.

When Nat Willis, the noted actor,was found lying beneath his car, dead,and it was found that bis death badresulted from Inhaling the exhaustgases of an automobile, the motoringpublic began to take precautionsagainst this menace.

If one should remain for five mlnutes In a small unventilated garage,with the door shut and fumes pouring from the car's exhaust he wouldbe beyond the doctor's aid.

If you must work on the car withthe engine running attach a hose tothe exhaust and run the hose Intopipe that communicates wltll the outer

15

1 .V Jf..

I--

V

ps,qirgiJ, w I 1 1 J ew I as

wall- -

vf PlPC-- v

gjrH71

CxnuusT Pipe-

No. 1. Part of Army of Voluntesr Workman, 6,000 Strong. No. 2L Gov.emor Campbell at Whsol of Stat Highway Truck, Hauling Material andWorkmen. No. 3. Govomor Campbell Wearing Ovsralls That Later Brought$200 for Post Park Rod Cross Fund. No. 4Lsft to Right: 0. C. Parker,Mayor of Tucson; Bert H. Cllngan, Commander Department of Arizona, Amer-ican Legion; E. J. Winslett, National Vic Commander, American Legion.No. 5. Dr. I, E. Huffman, Commander Legion Post at Tucson.

Proper Lubrication at All TimesOne of Most - Important

Cares of Owner.

INSPECT GEARS FREQUENTLY

Faults That Lead te All Kinds efTroubles Explained and MeansOutlined for Preventing Them

Gears Always Working.

The vital steering system of theautomobile Is about as popular withthe motorist as the truffle cop. A sys-tem so Important as the steeringshould be well understood and wellcared for. The fundamentals areeasy to understand. In practically allcurs there Is the same fundamentaldesign, consisting of a steering wheel,which operates r post at the bottomof which are reduction gears. Oneof the gears Is turned directly by thewheel, the other, being In mesh withthe post gear, also funis. This secondgear operates a steering armto which the drag link Is fastened.

The drag link connects with onefront wheel through a knuckle armand to the other front wheel throughthe tie rod and another steering arm.

It Is clear to see that In this systemthere are numerous Joints and otherrubbing or moving surfaces, and everyone of them must be constantly lubrl-cate-

Gears Always In Action.To the driver the steering system

appears to be at rest except when thecar Is turned around, but actually theJoints and gears are always doing somework, always rubbing, even though ithe a little. The gears must alwaysbe covered with grease or graphite.

Usually there s a case whichhouses these gears, but sometimesthey are exposed. Once every threemonths these gears should be Inspected and the housing repluced.. The same applies to the ball Jointsat the drag link ends and to the tierod joints.

If this Is not done parts will getdry and rust and steering begins tobe difficult. Tou must turn the frontwheels by first overcoming the frictionof the rusty parts.

In time those rusty parts break.One of the commonest causes of hardsteering Is due to a stiff steeringknuckle. The steering knuckle Is partof the front axle that moves and per-mits the wheels to be turned.

There are two knuckles and theymust move very freely.

It Is necessary to lubricate theknuckle or kingpins everyday. Grease Is effective if sufficientpressure Is used to force It to therubbing surface, otherwise oil shouldbe employed. If you have ordinarygrease cups and wish to make sure thepins will get lubrication, substitutelarge oil cups.

All Show Play in System.Every car shows a certain amount

of play In the steering system, that Isthe steering wheel can be turned alittle before the front wheels move.There should be some play but not asmuch as the average car has.

Play develops naturally, due towear of all parts, but It also developsmore rapidly because owner have ahabit of turning the wheel when thecar Is standing. This puts an addedstrain on the rubbing parts of thesteering system, and wear Is morerapid.

When wear does occur It should becompensated for by adjustment at theright place. Sometimes the ball Jointsare badly worn, again It may be theknuckle pins or the tie-ro- d connections, or the gears In the post. Do notadjust the gears In the post when theball Joints or other part are at fault.

Find out where the play exists byfeeling the various parts separatelyand pulling and pushing them. A lit-tle play In all Is likely to developquite a bit of play at the wheel be-

cause of the gearing.

FOR HOG IS E

Proper Housing Is Essential toSuccess With Live Stock.

HOGS NEED LIGHT AND AIR

No Type of Farm Building I GivenMori Attention in the Agricultural

Colleges Than Hog Houses-G- ood

Plan Shown Hers.

By WILLIAM A. RADFORD.Mr. William A. Radford will aniwe.

questions and 1ve advice FREE OPCOST on all subjects pertaining to thesubject of building work on the farm, fortrie readers of this paper. On account ofhta wide experience, as Editor. Author andManufacturer, he la, without doubt, thehighest authority on all these subjects.Address all Inquiries to William A. Rad-ford, No. 1827 Prairie avenue, Chicago,III., and only Inclose two-ce- stamp forreply.

Success In raising hogs depends ontwo things well-bre- d stock, bothsows and sires, and proper housing.

Well-bre- d stock Is plentiful, and nofarmer In these days of better furralive stock can afford to breed or raise"scrubs." In every community, ese-clall-y

in the "corn belt"stales, hogs are one of the principalfarm products, and high-bre- If notregistered purebred sires, are availa-ble. With a start of one or two well-bre- d

sows and the service of a pure- -

bred hoar, careful management willInsure a good profit In hog raising.

The second essential good housesIs just as available as good breedingstock. During the lust ten or moreyears, architects who have made acareful study of the needs of farm anl-,ma- ls

have designed, and local con-

tractors have erected, thousands ofbuildings barns, ling houses audchicken houses that provide the live-stock with houses where they can be

E-3- J E3 C3 JOT

kept at the highest state of productivity and In the best of health,

The product that farmers turn Intocash with their hogs Is flesh. Bothcan be obtained with "scrub" stock,but the cost Is prohibitive. About thename amount of care will bring wellbred young pig to marketable size Inhalf the time required by a "scrub,'

nd the amount of feed both consumeper day Is practically the same.

Before the days of efHcT&nt hoghouses, a farmer considered himselflucky If half the litter was brought tomaturity. Toung pigs are subject tomany diseases and have little staminato withstand them. Pneumonia Is oneof them. The pigs that were litteredIn the early spring and were nothoused In weatherproof,

and warm quarters had and stillhave little chance of reaching ma-

turity.It was with these facts In mind that

the modern hog house was designed.And In passing It might bo said thatno type of farm building has beengiven more attention In the agricul-tural colleges than hog houses.

The modern hog house Is a wellconstructed building. It usually Is set

. on concrete foundation, with con-

crete floor. The side walls are weather-ti-

ght, and the roof Is designed sothat maximum of sunlight can reachthe pen on both sides of the building.Also some system of ventilation, eitherthrough the roof or by the suction ven-

tilator that are used on every moderndairy barn. Is provided. Half of thefloors, whether tbey be of concrete orcinders, are covered with heavyboards, raised slightly above the

NOT THE GIRL OF HIS HEART

For a Moment Lonely Youth Had

Hopes, but Alasl Joy WaaNot for Him.

It Is not good that man shouldlive without a woman In hi heartAnd on that particular spring da-y-one of blue and gold I bore a strange-ly sorrowful heart because of my ut-

ter loneliness. I sat at my window,.and stared oat without seeing any-

thing.There was do one in the house bat

the landlady, myself and the land-

lady' daughter a beautiful, briefthing, whom I called the "PongeePrincess" by res son of her blondehair, an acquisition precipitatedthrough a reckless use of peroxide.

She was calm, pretty and silentThe, more I thought of her, the moreshe intrigued my fancy. I remem-

bered she was downstairs at this veryminute rearranging the pillows on thedavenport that seemed to have spenta sleepless night I thought to tny-el- f:

"All! If abe were only here byi

p3 p-- T J irJ h

(WmUtb Noripipfr t'aios New Scnkr i

(For Week Ended Jan. 1. J 921.)

Hay and Feed.Rastern hay markets very weak be

cause of pour demand. Keceipta light.sugmiy lower. western mar-

kets down il to 12 on all kinds. Prairie receipts heavy and in excess of de-mand at all maiketa. Good srades ofuoiomy ana auaiia in rair local demand. Shipping orders limited. Quotedno. i rimoiny ftew lorn. iit.Zkl'hiladelphia, $27: Chicago, 124: Cincinnati, $25.50; Minneapolis, $20. No. 1 Alfalfa Memphis, fiv- Omaha. 2U: Kansaa t'ity, $24. No. 1 1'rairie Omaha,$u.u; Kansas City, 113; Minneapolis

10.Feed market ahows few changes.Wheat feeds dull. Hominy feed weak.

$2 lower than last week. Cottonseedmeal advanced about $4 from ita recentlow price. Gluten feed offerings moreliberal at slightly easier prices. Lan-aee- d

meal in light demand and Quotedunchanged. Demand generally is veryiigni: movement excellent, stocks inconsuming sections ample: receiptsooa. A better demand for alfalfa mealla noticeable as mixed feed manufacturera are booking more business,brewers' grains quoted about $8 perton lower than last week in Milwau-kee. Quoted bran. $26: middlings, $23flour middlings. $28, Minneapolis: linseed meal. $1U. liuffalo and Toledo. 3t.Minneapolis: gluten feed. Ill Chicagodried brewers' grains, a :i .& Milwaukee: rye middlings, $23.50 northeastern

per cent cottonseed meal.$2(1 Memphis. $38.50 northeastern markets: white hominy feed, $28 St. Louis$3li.50 New York: No. 1 alfalfa meal$24. SO St. Uiuis: beet pulp $41 IJoston.

I.lve Ktoek and Meats.With the exception of hogs, Chicago

livestock prices showed material doclines for the week. Heavy fat lambabroke $2.2.1 per loll lbs., handy weightlambs $1.10. rat ewes down 50c: ylings 75c to $1. Ileef steers declined40c to $1.15, better grades losing must,liutcher cattle down &0c. Feeder steersadvanced 25c; hogs advance an average of Sue to 75c per 100 lbs. Jan. lthChicago prices: Hogs, bulk of sales.$9. US to $10; medium and good beefsteers, $ft to $10.15: butcher cows andheifers. $4 tO to $9.50; feeder steers, $7to $9.25; light and medium weight vealcalves, $10 to $12: fat lambs. $8 50 to$11; feeding lamba. $8.25 to $10.25;yearlings, $7. 74 lo $s; lal ewes, J.ii!to 10.75.

Kastern wholesale fresh meat markets weak to lower. Veal and pork dedined $1 to $3 per 100 lbs. Ileef, lamband mutton weak to $1 lower. Jan.19th prices good grade meats: Ileef,$14.50 to $18: veal, $22 to $24: lambs,$24 to $27; mutton. $13 to $16; lightpork loins, $23 to $2C; heavy loins. $18to $22.

Hairy rVeducts.Weakness developed in butter mar-

kets early in week: markets now unsettled. Prices. 92 score: Chicago, 4tic:New York, bltyc: Philadelphia andlloston, &2c. Heavy imports whichhave arrived and others that are duelo arrive have been a factor contribut-ing to weakness. On New York marketDanish, Argentina and New Zealandbutter being offered as well as earlyarrivala of fresh from California whereseason is opening.Cheese markets in general maintalned firm tone during the week, butat present there is tendency towarddullness, especially at Wisconsin prim-ary marketa. A weak tone is noted onsonie atylea. I'rh-e- s are slightly higherthan s week ago un account highercosts at factories. Kxport orders segregating aeveral thousand hoxeiskims and Canadian rheddars recentlyhandled at New York for Knglish buy-ers. Wisconsin primary marketaprices; Twlna, 24V:: Daisies, ib,oDouble Daisies, 24 c Young Americas,Z7 V; i'onghorns, ilc; square 1'rints,

V.(2 rata.

On the opening day of the week'sgrain trading Chicago March wheat

Id at tl.lltt. the highest pricereached in some months: prices inbegan to fall and by the close on theltti Chicago March wheat had droppedlie. Sentiment generally bearish. Minneapolis reports dull flour demand, onbreak in prices nn the 19th export de-mand appeared and flwitserland reported to have purchased more than 1.000.- -mm busheia wheat. t:orn movement,heavy with slower export demand, andon the 19th raah corn sold at s newlow on the crop. Tn Chicago cash mar-ket. No. 1 Ked winter wheat 17c to 22c.over March: No. 1 Hard. 5o to 5 4over; new No. 1 mixed corn, so underMay; Yellow, THo to IVfec under. Forthe week Chicago March wheat tost

c at $1.72S : May corn V at tc.Minneapolis March wheat down He at$1.(5 4; Kanaaa City March e atItHtS: Winnipeg March H at$191. Chicago May wheat $14.

UF.NVKR troTTIONN.I.lve Sleek.

CATTLE Most traders on thismarket attended the auction saleof feeding cattle, which left theopen market with little Indica-tions of life. Ftipplles on the openmarket were extremely light and Included little desirable stock.

Few beef aad butcher cattle were offered. Most packers filled fhelr de.mand for thla class during the earlierpart of the week. Good beer steerswould rtrobahly bring up tn $9. whileomethlrrg choice would sell up to $9.25.

Fair to medium rat aleers were quotedat II tn 98.21: $7 to $8.25. dependingon weight and quality.

Tteef eowa were quoted up tn iff. RS

for the nest stock. Good fat rows andheifers would bring $5 to IS 7a. Cowshave been plentiful throughout theweek. A top price of $$.55 was reachedon one load of cows.

Feeders and eteckera showed littlechange. Price on this class of stockare slightly higher than a ween ago.ftest feeling steers are quoted up to$7.75. with good stock around $7.

HOG8 The opening; market on thisdivision showed price ruts rsnslagfrom 25c tn 40c. loiter buyers becamemere bearish and the late market wasfully eMe under quotations.

One load of choice light hershroueht top of II 75 on the earlymarket. These hogs went tn littlebutchers. Hulk of the offerings soldlamely from 11.90 la $9.25.

No sirs were offered. Inquiry forgood pigs waa strong and liberal sup-pli-

could undoubtedly be cleared atalmost ateadv prices. F4et stockwould pmhably bring ISIS to 19 75.with butcher stork at $9 to 9$Afor best kinds. Medium grades of pisswere quotable at $9 sad down.

KEEP A fair demand was report-ed here. Supplies were liberal, buttrading was somewhat slow to fret un-der way. Little change was skowa Innest quotations.

Two carloads of heavy fat lambsavermrlnsr about 1Af pounds, sold at$1 freight pJ4l on the early market.Choice hone weight fat lambs wouldpreKsbly bring up to $9.59 and possiblynn.

A fair sprinkling of rnnd feedingIsmbs waa tnelvided In the Affering.Beet feedlnr lambs were quoted up to$f 1. with gned stork at l 7 to 19 25.

One carload e--f good fat ewr-- soldat 14 10 freight paid. This kind ofstock was In ne4 demand.

ROGS Fresh ri'i took a slump nf tedosea en the local egg msrket when,quotattnae for first grade fresh ergswere given qt CI rents a dnsea. Sup-plies were liberal but the demand waasomewhat lighter than during the fore-part of tho week. Shippers' prices heldsteady.

BUTTER First grade creameryteck wae qwoted at (Sc a pound with

second arsde butter at 44c a pound.Perking butter met with a dragrytrade at 19e a pound. Khippers re-ceived 47e direct and 40c stations fortheir bntterfat products.

PObXTRT Fair supplies and astrong demand were reported on thepoultry market. Hess were quoted at17c; springs. ISe to 4ec: bmllers. tictn Sc: roosters. 2Sc: turkeys, ttc to

e- - docks 4e to 4c: geese, 4CTEGETABL.ES A similar conditio

was noted on the Ter stable market.Fair supplies and a sod demnnd ore- -

ailed. Potatoes were la heavy supplyand met with a slow sale at li t te $2per rwt. Cabbage was quoted at II 2Ste ti ts a hundredweight; carrots, a.jetfuce, 7Sct onions. $1; turnips, II;--srsaipa, J.1JSS,

SERVICE MEN

3bn6aaBMBV ,,aaaBBBBBaak,

Influx of "white plague" victims atthis scuson of the year. These 450men In dire need of the care and treat-ment they were not receiving, weredistributed through the communitywith such limited housing facilitiesand shelter from the extreme cold ofthe desert nights as their weary wan-

derings happened to bring them.Coiiimundia- - Galbralth sent E. J.

Winslett, national vice commander ofthe legion, und a representative of theAmerican Legion News Service to Tuc-son to see whut could be dona toremedy the situation. Their Instruc-tions were to do all possible to speedup construction work, thaefforts of all community Interest andvisualize the local altuation a an ob-

ject lesson to thrust "under the noseof congress" In the legion's nationalfight for Justice for the nation's he-roes of two years ago aud the legion'comrades then, now and always.

Governor Cumpbell wss In the Eastat the time and assisted Dr. MacAr-tan In Inducing Director ChomelyJones of the bureau of war risk In-

surance and other government officialto bring about the cutting of a vastamount of red tape. Dr. MacArtanfinally returned to Tucson with author-ization to spend approximately $300,-00- 0

for the erection of an emergencyhospital, and he brought with himGeorge E. Kirk, a federal engineer towhom with his assistant much of tbacredit for the record-breakin- g com-

pletion of the project Is due. Governor Campbell placed state workmen,materials, trucks and tools at the dis-

posal of the government and therewas from the beginning a hearty andenthusiastic on the partof the business and professional menof Tucson, as well as the citizens gen-erally.

Arriving at Tucson, Mr. Winslettsurveyed the situation and then calleda conference of legionnaires and stateand municipal public officials andbusluess men.

At the conference be told of thelegion's nation-wid- e fight, Just begin-ning, to obtain Justice for the derelictscoming back from the war and ap-pealed to all organizations and agen-cies to make a united stand for asquare deal for those who offeredtheir all to their country In time ofneed and have become victims of neg-lect, lueffli'leucy, red tape and dere-liction of duty as their reward.

The following evening a mass meet-ing was held In the Tucson armory,with Governor Campbell, NationalVice Commander Winslett, State Com-mander Cllngan and James It. Iuu-seat-

a prominent Tucson lawyer andbusiness man, as the principal speak-ers. An Informal dance under theauspices of the legion post followedthe meet ng and Governor and Mrs.Campbell led the grand march.

The following day was proclaimed aholiday by Mayor Parker and everystore, fsctory and business establish-ment of erery description closed Itsdoors.

Women and girls of the communitytook an active part In the demonstra-tion, and members of various women'sclubs and civic organizations enteredwhole-heartedl- y Into the spirit of thoevent and backed it one hundred percent

In ewery sense, it was a red letterday in the history of Tucson, Arizona,and America, and an exemplificationof the nnlty and unselfishwhich animated the whole nation dur-ing the war and which rarely. If erer.lias been so conspicuously displayedIn this country since the signing ofthe armistice.

to the American Legion headquarters,asking how they will be able to petwhat will be coming to them If theycannot produce their discharge pa-pers.

These men are receiving In place ofa discharge paper, a --certificate inIlea of lost, destroyed or dischargedpaper." Those who served IK thearmy are being answered by the ad-jutant general, navy men by the bu-reau of navigation and marine corpsmen by the personnel officer, marinacorps.

provide for a circulation of fresh air,without there being drafts uear thefloor, where the young pigs and theirmothers are penned. Surrounding thebuilding is a concrete feeding floorwhere the corn and dry feed is thrownfor the hogs.

Accompanying the illustration Is thefloor plan of the building showing thedimensions of the pons and the feed-

ing alley that extends through the cen-

ter.Too much emphasis cannot be laid

on the need of fresh air, dry beds andsunshine In a hog house. These three

essentials to healthy young pigs costnothing and can bo obtained in ahundunce by planning the house correctlyand constructing It according to themodern knowledge of whut Is best forthe animals.

By proper care In laying tho concrcte foundations and floor tills hoghouse can he built at any season ofthe year. Iiy healing the aggregatesof the concrete and covering the foundatlon and floor so as to prevent frees

Ing until the concreto has fully set,which. In cold weather, requires fitleast six days, tho work can he doneand the superstructure erected In timefor the early spring litters.

CITY OF GHASTLY LEGENDS

All Sorts of Blood-Curdlin- g StoriesCurrent In the Mexican Metrop.

ells, and Believed.

Mexico City Is a city of legends,ghostly horrors, most of them estab-lished at least upon a basis of truth.One of them Is about the deeds ofDon Junn Manuel who had tho merryhabit of stalking the streets In hiscloak at night and asking the firstman he met what time It was. Uponbeing answered, "It Is eleven by theclock." he would reply: "Tou arevery lucky, for you know the exacthour you die." Thereupon he wouldstab the chance-me-t stranger. lie had

dearly loved nephew, aud one nighthe met him In the dark, and not rec-

ognizing

i

him followed his usual cus-tom of homicide.

The next day, mad with grief, DonJuan went to the priest who orderedhim to say his beads at midnight be-fore a church and near the public gal-lows. He tried three times before hewas able to do so, and then, the legend says, angels took him and hangedhlro. The basis of the story lies Inthe fact that a man of the name ofJuan Manuel did stnb at least oneman, and his body was found bangingon the public callows without anyexplanation ever being made as to howIt got there.

my side that she might pass her cool,white hands over my eyes, my depres-sion would be lifted a If by magic."

f was Interrupted by a timid knockon the door. I wa startled for a moment It was foolish to think thatand yet

I called eagerly: "Come In."It was the landlady with my waste-pap- er

basket Iowa Frivol.

Largest AnlmaLMost boys have seen picture of the

huge lizard which roamed the earthmillion of year ago, and is supposedto be the largest anlsrnl which everlived. Searcher Id Ctah have dis-covered some bones of an animalwhich wa twice the size of this greatprehistoric animal. A bole 600 feetlong and 80 feet deep had been dngwhen some one claimed the land. Thegovernment thereupon created a na-tional dinosaur monument Dm prisingthe locality, which will be protecteduntil the investigation are finished.The work is being directed by theCarnegie Institute, which discoveredand assembled the skeleton of the fa-miliar dinosaur. Boy Life.

The Hose Carrie the Deadly Fumeito the Outside Air and Keeps theGarage Air Pur.

air. In this way you get rid of thosedeadly fumes und eliminate the dangerof being suffocated by them.

It Is very simple to arrange so thatthis can be done. A hole is madeIn the wall of the garage. In a con-

venient position to the rear of thecar, and piece of gas-pip- inserted.This pipe should be of sufiicient lengthto protrude about 6 or 8 Inches oneach side of the wall and, if the wallIs wood, duly Insulated. Connectionis made with a hose. E. T. OfeldtIn I'opular Science Monthly.

KEEP WINDSHIELD CLEAN

Many winter motorists havefound that a simple way to keepthe windshield clean when thafirst melting flakes of snow sreflying Is to apply a mixture ofglycerin, salt and water. Theglass should first be thoroughlywashed and dried, then the mix-

ture i applied with a clothrubbed In straight lines. Twiceas much glycerin as water anda liberal sprinkle of salt will befound efficacious.

VERDIGRIS FORMS ON BRASS

It May Be Removed by Uae ef GoodMetal Polish, Leaving a Clean

Smooth Surface.

The verdigris that form on brassmay be removed by the followingtreatment: Mix a good metal polishIn equal parts with wood alcohol. Ap-

ply wltll a brush and allow to dry.When dry rub with a clean cloth andthe verdigris will come off too, leavinga clean smooth surface. After thisthe bras may be polished In the usualwsy.

BE CAREFUL OF SPEEDOMETER

Spinning or Sliding of Rear Wheels IsLiable to Spring or Otherwise

Injur Shaft

When the ra' Jias a transmissiondriven speedometer the rear wheelsshould never be spun or permitted toslide. This hahlt Is likely to springor break the speedometer shaft, some-times causing sn error In speedometerreading of anywhere from 2 to 3 percent.

The automobile industry in Francis considered the greatest sufferer, doeto the presence of so many foreign-buil- t

cars obtained from old warstocks.

e e

In India aa automobile show winbe held In Delhi la February of tbtsyear under the auspices ef the localmotor trade association.

e eIt Is estimated that no less than

124.000 motor cars from other statestoured la California during 1930.

SPECTACLE iM llevecI to be al-

mostA unique In American historyand one that bus given tremendousImpetus to the nation-wid- e rltflit ofthe American Legion to olituln atleast simple Justice for sick and dis-

abled heroes of the World war, wasstaged In the thriving: little desertcity of Tucson, Ariz., recently.

Led by Gov. Tbonius K. Campbelland national, slate and local repre-sentatives of the Legion, the entirecitizenry of the community broughtevery business activity to a standstillfor a day while more than r,0t)0 menand women In overalls or other appro-priate working garb, drove their auto-mobiles to Pastime park, three milesnorth of the town, and labored withtheir hands to expedite constructionof an emergency public health serv-

ice hospital for tubercularmen.

Governor Campbell, E. J. Winslett,national vice commander of the Legion; State Commander Bert H. Clln-

gan, Mayor O. C, Parker and hundredsof other prominent business and pro-fessional men of the city and stateapiteared In real working clothes andmanipulated shovels, picks, hammers.saws and wheelbarrows In the great-est frenzy nf activity the communityhad ever known. The Immediate re-

sult wa that the emergency Institu-tion which government engineersoriginally had estimated It would takethree months to build, was brought tovirtual completion within one week,and more than 000 tubercular dere-licts of the war who had been uuhns-pltallze- d

and partly shelterless, sud-

denly found themselves with a roofover their heads

The whole demonstration wasplanned and carried out within a lit-

tle more than 48 hours, while GovernorCampbell and Rtate Legion Comman-der Cllngan made flying trips fromPhoenix to address a mass meetingunder legion auspices at the armoryon the evening preceding the parkevent, and to participate In the "heavywork" there next day. The chiefexecutive of the commonwealthpushed a wheelbarrow full of rocks,drove an y truck and wound

up bis strenuous afternoon with snImpassioned pies to Tucsnnisns and allgood Americans to get together andstand squarely behind the legion Inthe most Important movement now

starting here for the benefit of dis-

abled ex-se- n Ice men that lias yet be-

gun In the Cnlted States."At the conclusion of his address.

he overalls the governor bsd wornduring the afternoon, and mhlch fig-

ured conspicuously In several hundredfeet of "movie" film unwound by aPathe News camera man, were auctioned off to the highest bidder, theMorgan McDermott post of the legionat Tucson. Approximately $200 forthe benefit of a welfare) fund for pa-

tients at the hospital was realizedfrom the auction, each bidder beingobliged to hand over the sum offered.

Irrespective of whether It nss hlglienough to get the clothes. The bidof the lgion Post was 10.

The attention of F. W. Gslbraith,Jr, the legion's national commander,was first attracted to the Tucson n

after H. D. MacArtan. the publichealth service physician in charge ofthe hospital, had gone to Washingtonand reported that more than half ofthe 128 patients then la the Institu-tion were sleeping In condemnedarmy tents, and that there were ap-

proximately 450 other tubercularmen entirely Mnhnspltallzed

In the community as a res9 of thecongestion which followed the usual

WORRY ABOUT LOSING PAPERS

Members ef American Legion Are

teokirtf Advice In Anticipationf Beneficial Legislation.

Far-sighte-d members of tba Ameri-ra- a

Legion as well as other formerterrlcc mes, who have lost their dis-

charge paper and who anticipatetome kind of beneficial legislation forparticipants In the World war, harewritten many letters to the War andWary rt meets. Marine corps and

POLICE GET AFTER TAX DODGERS

, .

,, f' 3tem

The photograph shows a Chicago policeman stopping an unlucky motor-ist who had neglected to obtain his city vehicle tax. The 'police of Chicagoare stationed at all streets leading Into the loop and Inspecting all cars toIf the owner has a license.

AUTOMOBILEGOSSIPS

Denmark is reported to be an Idealland for automobiles, the roads beinggood, the land quite flat and the coun-

try Interesting and attractive for tour-ists. see

Movable spring seats which are asedIn some cars should receive attention.Tbey should be oiled.

OTERO right to reject aa? tad all bids offered ataid (ale.

Posacaaioa nailer contracts of gala lorNEW MEXICO STATE RECORD

se on the old Garfield mine is tak- -

ing out ore that goei better than '

$li5.(0 in guld, silver and lead. j

STATE OF NEW MEXICO

NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION

NEW MEXICO

NEWS REVIEWChas. E. Mitchell, president of the the above described tracts will be givea aa

Alamo State Bank, has had plans Very rich silver assays have been OIL ANt CAS LEASE OF PUBLIC LANDS or belore October 1st, W2LFRANK STAPLIN. EDITOR

Witness my band and the official seal at'th Rtat I iBil nff;s. f . - c.. t

ui.. u, aiiiuiciu iui a iau.ai from extracted:g,Ven quartz ore quay COUNTYrearrangement of the interior of the w,iie doing the annual assessmentbank building. The floor Of the work nn Ihe Tmiurr Vjnlf mine OH""- - "I the Commissioner of Iubic Mexico, this twenty-eight- h day of Noma- -

Laads,main hanking room will be placed(Continued from page one.) oer, two.N. A. FIELD, CommissaooerSanta Fe, New Mexico.on a level or near a level with the

Published Every Friday at Santa Fe, the State Capital by the

STATE PUBLISHING COMPANYFrank Staplia, Receiver

ot rabiK uau stats alNotice is hereby given that pursuant toter Works in a very short time. It is sidewalk and also thp lartre alrnvt New Meslea.the provisions of an Act of Congress, ap- -

proved June 20th, 1910, the laws of the First Publics t ion Dec ft, Wat,estimated that the work, which will entrance to the bank will be putbe done by local men, will apgre- - down to street level. Mr. Mitchell At the regular meeting of the stoc- - State of New Mexico, and the rules and Last Publicatioe Feb. 1L nu:gate in the neighborhood of $40,000 can be very justly called cruel in the kholders of the First National Bank Commissioner

renuiations ot ,lhcI,sll?'e iUn(i olt'ff- - ,',hemi,!., frnm th.. marhin.rv and nthr . c .u: i i ..r .u r n..j.i -- t. . :

ROAD IMPROVEMENTSEntered at second-clas- s matter at the post office at Santa Fe.New Mexico, under the Act of March 3, 1879.

"- - A'i J " feci, unc ui mc ui niaKudicna mc following uucciois or til for-th- c exploration, development,supplies purcnased. inis will stimu- - niost oomilar conerecatner nlaces for were elected for the ensuing vear:and uroduction of oil and eas. at ou'.ilic STATE OF NEW MEXICOlite business considerable during the street lizzards ever since the build- - Jose Y. Aragon, Fred Nicholas, Wm.

' auction to the highest bidder, at 9 o'clock!

readjustment period. iug was erected. No more can the li. Moreley. W. J. AndrusW. J. .."stau BID FEBHUAW 21. 11-- u Kv n i . 7 L. 7 7, , r .u. Sealed proposal! will be received at the

Subscriptia $150 per year aiui caoiu oj)t.v.. an. v- - i. uuiiiv iuh, j uatiuidiiu udia, jjuwdi u j tsiuc., oi new a i tuc irum uwi ui hc office of the New Mexico State Hi hThe Columbus Telephone company sltPs a!ld. see wh can squirt the to- - and Jerry Gonzales, and in a direct- - JJjJ thc iollow,n dcs"

Commission, Capitol Building, Sanu T?New Mexico, until 10:00 A. M.. Februaraic nuiii tiiL;aucu in Jinuruvum i:icir ' --- o

R p c- - 21, Wl, (or the construction ol New Mezlowing officers were elected: Wm .K. SJe No. L t T. 13 N,SANTA FE, NEW MEXICO, FRIDAY, JANUARY 28, 1921 service by resmnging ail the lines rt.throughout the cay. Mr. Burion, me lauies who nave 10 go jviorrey, rresment ; jose r. Aragon, ' . ,,V ,7"N E' u Co,,nl. l"ch .' known as the Itpa- -

spanning the Kio Grande anaui iiic iidiih, ejn l i.i ii v in im- -m'-jy- vnc liiealiiein aiiu I. IV. 1 UM, caMl- - t o t i;:y. i,. ih all. nun imkikc

old summer time will not ohjert to ier. 1?. W'i: Sec. Jo. all: T. U N.. K. 35 " vFIX DEATH PENALTYMcADOO OVERRULED Sic. i, T. U K., K. 34 ., Sec. " "CX'C

ii.an.igcr of the company states tliatthis it only one of the improvementsthat is contemplated hy the companyf'.r their pat ions during the comingie.tr. Coliiiiilnts Mirror.

Or innovation tor this reason if noother. Neither will Mr. Mitchell lie The Magdalma auto supply com l, V!l; J. 14 ix , . is 1., Src.

'r t, ht i, t i." cAn ia wt. CI.'.

sorry when the change is made Al- - pany, a branch oifice of the Jake wNK-,- MiNtj; i. h '. K. 'n kl;.i:vgirdo News. Koiher and company of Albuquer- - ju, all. juI Al. 1'. Si., containing,

hit.1 lind l li.Nriftc anil ic unur ill ' 3 acri'S. t

nil thct V, c II

crimetate.

Thc Ui.i'.fd States .Supreme Court The New Mexicans wluhas recently refused to renew i'i. Fi th stite leti.-iatu- c mij;ilcci.siun ef the suprtine imirt of t:tl:r c.Ii'icial iuit.ee th: t tiCalifornia in which it was held that vwa;c has slruiK the sin s'.,the United States Railroad Aduiiu- - sJiastie leyislatiim wiilistralion w.s not iniimine from a em jaehnieiHs ty handits.

A terrific txplo.iion of the air tank .charge of Herman Kaabe, who has v., nt ii- - arnnn,!. t.r lesa thmi

Apjiroximate Main Quantities as "follows:Cu. Yds. Class 1 i tcavation.

&W Cu. Yds. I lass 1 Burrow.(.36 Cu. Y'llie One C'.urse (iravel Surfaciua1(1 I u. Yds. K.p Kapit Lin. Kt. 24' Oiam. 14 Ga. Corr. Metal

ulvcrt24 Lin. I t. 30" Diam. 14 Ga. Corr. Metal

Culvert511 Cu. YJa. Class "A" Concrete

7 In Vus. Class U" Concrete Head,walls)

56 Cu. Yds. Class "B" Concrete (Abut

QUAY ' heen manaying the concern for thc lifu.n c.nis per aire, which shall be drem- -irevciil at the lJeiniiig f illing station rcaiilt-Iha- tis td in the serious injury oi George

Another A. Chester. Sr. and the wrecking i f;pa-,- t two years. Mr. Raabe will run el i include and cover the drst year's

r. l..r t.ul l.ni!uit for damans ari.siny from the 'he forward looking plan San Jon had a destructive fire re- - the business as he has heretofore to ."t'"., "h Kk?";"ently, entailing a ioss of $10,000 con- - on a strictly cash basis. Magdalcna.iu Ls, not Ks than five days prior io4ieration of a road under con t rid I'lan, less effective and not nearly so tne tank room oi thc station,'! hurs- -

ol the Administration. 1 he decisou uesirauic would lie to wait two day morning. J he tank was being turning the 'li. Lee Robinson store1 News I''1' d"c iherei.r, deiinsitu with tlicrnmi'i: inn In h. nf effect in Years, and then trv to sloti tile ori'V. lilt. it witU i.imr...EcpH .."- - .nl t. i...:..i: i ..?::.. i i' U..niiiiikioner oi PuLlic Lands, or i'hmurine- - nioir, W il,m,,i. rln!,,,. A Statute defint.H- - anv .,r....,r.. ra... mi... hue. eT, . V 7 8

.7 ,v lA... '"IT'. ... . . .. ' "' 5 ''orcigB.,a, . e -- , r. i...o. . ..- -. ,., . udkii Kiase. iiic: MID IC.anuer. SIOCKUian OI ine nr cerulifd cxiliinere to the amount i.l HI I.in. 1" t. Concrete Jfi inriints, but it will serve to remind the roguery or sitny otner rojoery or ,.r. Cnesur states that it only regis- - tintld in tr was occupied bv C. G. Crain K.hitvp ilietrirt rtirn vcrv liuhi the nb.ne niininiuin hid. Deposits oi 270 Lin. Ft. Tet Files (Wooden)

u''VSiui hinder, will ue re urnc . ,e sj t .. t A.piiait jointwilh a stock of uroceries. dry gcods rain and snow fall in his oart ofrnment operation. weapon, as a capttal crime ami Hx- - explosion occured. . al..j drllcs al! of which are a total the county, with both stock and ran- - K' . The ..mm.i. n r oi T'ul.lic Laii.lT "'T. ' ' ?.'. - ...One of the first arts of Mr Me- - "g the death penalty, would mine- - ihe nuise of the explosion could bjloss. Mr. Crain carried about f5(XJ0 ges in good condition. and him applied in payment of su, der.'Tl.n. and .pilieat"on. mai be":

Adoo on taking possession of the oiatcly and forever put an end to be heard all over town and the big jn insurance on his stock but his loss '"J b"' successful bidder shall fail aminej , ,hc ollce of ',he District E- -

lailroads as the representative of the uiH crimes. steel air lank, whose sides are a i rttitnnterf at ?7I0. K. 4V. Baker's ' ' Jwnta ew bTr'"" T... '"'. e, Mexico, or mayihcrc w.'li any due-- under pratUred at the 'office of the State High- -TORRANCEThe state now has a law prcs nh- - quarter inch thick and which was garage was iiiMirc'd foi $200J and his' iuieli:ibe nn lu.itiijjr the c.ist ot aiivertisini: u...u i. ,;n. c..nt. r. Ki... u..;.Aland the expenses ii.cichnt thereto, thin J,p()llt o( (.10.110. which deposit will' teing t!.e death penalty ior tr.,m iu- - tirmly bolted to a concrete bed was fS $2M5. I'.oth luosers by thc fire

It transpires that Lee Davenport, and in such such deposit shall Le-- ,.,.und.a when the plans and apeeificationsthe young man now in the Torrance iSddaLe1"! ." will beX"v" '"WcnZnVi

Highway Cumnussion reser- -

ueiy. ns a conseijuepte, wui.e torn Irom its moorings and Hurled rxpeit to resume business,loiilierus have heen committed in a several hundred feet in the air. fin- -

lovtrnment was to a rulmgthat thc adnnrn l ration could not i fsued and could not be made thehjeft of garnishment proeeednj-'s- .

J In tetolore, under private operation,i,r a man Was iuinted, nr sufieredinjory to his property, through theiiej'.liK.i nee ol the u nratois of a

ith form of ves the ritJis tu reject any and all progreat mauy states, there have n .' a v landing into the adjacent yard T J. l'car-n- of Oklahoma City county jail charged with stealing substantial toi'ifumiiiybee:i any offenses in New M m. .. f the Coca Cola Bottling company has' arrived in Glenrio with thc first H" l'l' t","t Ois.ino Chavez, jjave f'" ..V",

l.r ..,-..- - .1 ...I ...I . ...I.. .1 i:.e: 1' I .1. . ... , hit ,itii cnrr..lti Hie l.ni r ''Uiee ul 11. e I

file in theposals.I'uolic l.an ls, L. A. GH.I.ETT,'""'"' re...a ami ..iiu ueiiiiMisiiiiig a ruiu iiuen (1au ot oarts ol t he eouipment ot a "V - V"V.""-.- ' .,n i !..,, wdl L nnnialiid on up- -

f.jil,., .,., ..... i"B"w cnimeer.has enforced a law leiihmg the on which it alighted. flour mill to be erected at House1,The tank room oi the filling sta in this county Glenrio Tribune. him Monday having heard of his pre-- 1

wiln, ss ,,..,, ,.., ,(. ofrici;,' ft Pal'.Heu," n'lIuI.y'TR'f'

dicamcllt. 1 be poor old mail iym- - r,f il- e;t;lU. ( ,in, oin.-- of the S: il- - nl Last l'uLhcati..u IVI.iuary 18, ly.'l.suit a'1.. I leeoileet ti.td l :il;i.o eeultl Mil' and

tion is a mute testimonial ot theforce of the explosion, the big pktt- - pathi.ed with his erring son but said v.exico tins tnii huh u.iy el ji

i aiuoatl. lie rou r ngcovet d;.in.igts, arid

judoic'it. If ;t railro;:oweil hllll niolie, he ee

y up n the w u f,es ):

i ornpany.

Two cars oi heavy machinery ar-rived at l.o.Ljan this week to handle lie had li t tie means and thought it l,'y 1 -- '

N. A. ROAD IMPROVEMENTSSTATE OP NEW MEXICO

lorni tnoheis .splintered hke inaichwood, the loof torn off, all ihe win us'icss to .spend what he had trying:n t;; t!ie large steel stringers for the bri Con.ir.issKiner of I'ulilic Lumts,

sale oi Ni w .Mexicj.Canadian river. A l Krt ,lle bt,y out ol nis lroble..denv s deir.ohshi 'l and tne ktav ste l t'lLii' u,-- the

tie at ti penally lor any hig'.u .o, n

j. durii g li e mo.iii.." thath.u.J-ed- s of valued lives La . e !i en

Ot ifi'll mil by hi.... iV.l o.e.i, liienous ua;1. itches h.ue been roo.ariv-;.!o-

f:ee Irotn stove:- of stie'i io,;h-w-

robheiies in .Maba'oa.i.very hamiit wh eot-not- i !.!'-ber- y

at the iioint of a pistol i.-- pilenlial iioir'ieier. The Jcw Mc.v.o!.iMti.t kers ooe'l-- to trial lie ht ;hwas man as a innrijerei - Gil t.i

i titiilcrI'.iir.i-liri- u

the s li's

lort Put.lic.iti'.n CS,

Cleofas Komero is here this week Last PuWicatiun Apid s, l'j.l.avi'inging l.is lumber business, and

bottom ol the air lank being driv-'.- n

aganot the brick wal! oi the LocaColt' plant .'U feet away.

All this v.:o set4McA.ioo ruin', an

Coi'hl, id ronr-

li. e grading ami lotiertte work Hasbeen fini ;h d ready for the s'cc!work.

and leev upon v..i;:es toot Mt h .'.ilii- - wi'l close it up for the winter. lis-- 'laneia Herald.nig the rr.lito'. nianv wire ili .tiad- She iii Jack hinjer and Deputy I. The Tmnnnari Concert Hand is

practicing e.ery week. This band is.. iJavi- - have returned with the jh A movement initiated by Kcv. Fa-ther Molinie is now on foot to raisericovcrcd near Mesilla composed o tne Itttious lioy

I'.md presumably by the ,wlth t!'e other bading band menranis car,1'ark, aba

IHhS. KKHWUARV 21, 1921.

Salt .1 pr'ii-i!- u ill lie rrreived at tbtillu:r of the New Mrxicn .State Highway( miniksiMii, Capitol Huil'lin', Santa Kt,Nt Mexico, unul 2:W P. M., February. 1, 1'. I, l r tt n t t lit n of a $mjfi n m o( New Mtxiro fVtleral Aid ProjfMNo. 61- - A, Heritalillo County, which

thf rtctinsi ruction o( the HarelavItrnJe oer tlie Kio Grande and nece&aariippniftcht lucaicj ii ar Albuquerque, N.Alt XI CO,

Appruxim m:iin gunntitiea at fallow:110 Cu. Vtls. CI.imi 1 Kxcavatiun

2hM Cu. YN Class 1 liurrowCm V.fs. i las A Concrete (Pier

Iltatls)31.2 Cu. Yds. Cl;is II Concrttc (Abut-

ments)1H I lis. Kcittrnrrinp B;ir14 .span i'.n'ilini; Sit-e- Supcrnt ructurt

"fl ' ui. Kt. W'wxlfn PilniK

STATE OF NEW MEXICO

NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION

CYfSlTE LEASE OF PUBLIC LANDS

EDDY COUNTY

Ohici' nf the C..ii.tiii-.sini'- r of PublicLands,iNitl'a 1'r, New R!esico.

Kutici is heretiy j:ivin th.t pursuant tothe i.rnvisiol.s of all Alt of Congress, :ip-

robbed ihe Clark Go- - '" 'own. It r; liackeil liy tlie lnam- - nuiio.. n.eRANCH AND PROPERTY :u tv f itAS OFFERED FOR SALE tlit.it- ...itipain. Ix-put- Davis has al- - lH'r 01 t oiuuicrce aim public unrip - ' . 'V "

i " r t 7111s' I" ' Willaril and vicinity have res- -b"' Andre' Rodriguez Ponded to the call willliberal do-- 1

Kami, rontanis l.,0 acn s of pat- - iron, I rone accused ol havmg rob- - ' ' .'f iniU rousnations and the drive will continue

v..1'' .'al'lJ'V',.;":ri;.Mlb)-t- t t": I" "KMn 11,, LI : L , e a carload l,a. been secured A

i.il iioni iloiiig so, thus s i o t

witliont renic iy :n I n'i. vithe Railroad Aiim:! i' !r;i t i. n of inn ii

tr I'thh- ami evpe-ts- to whiih a nfwt operator uiii.ld h.ue been sii')jrrtcd

Kvtry man wi n h:i ever h.nl aid.iitn against tlie tio e'titm nt orany Di pprtnient ol the (iovi rnn.i ntItniUi vsh.it a slow, uniir'ai'i androstly proceeding is an at:em) t lorecover. An nolo, ion.'! or pri.ateconcern must respond to its obliga-tions promptly or be snbitct to ad- -

V.1 (II . . d(T'S i i Pi hl Wl't'h. - . i i

141 has been cultivated. '1 his r..mh At the preliminarv heating before many :i t e concerts wm ne given (inr- - '""" fcMan- of' N.w Mexie,,. and the rules and

ii.i v.lioilv in ;i v:.1icv ami is !,.. finite Kourr, K;iv l.Iovd and llrtrrv K tt,e aiM blliniUHr. l ilium-- , - - of the .Stale l and dince, liei 'oniniibhinncf ( 1'ulihc l.aiitls will nfdr

The attendance in the nuhlie n I100I t r li.ise, ( .r the expl iratn.ii, iU vt'Knvn. ni,c ifj n (hrffs nK's by a Kutiot..iJ iifiun, wwt lu-l-- to the tr.'ind jury catl

In uiiditiou lo the ranch ui Williams utnltr OtJ IjhikI all for al-- 1

11J0 I.m. iiincrctc tilingat Motintainair is reduced one half tnudm-inm- una r.inuvui ni Bypsue iIut.-- .V)W5 l.l.s. Steel Sulmirui-tur- (Strinrr

acres 1 liavt an at'rituhnral h'u'cd it;irttcipatiin in the Clark (Jo- - SAW IMAM , . ' r "n ' fieri lri.ni, una ne nuiii in 11 .1 p,ms sinviny hi.nns.mi ai.i.uui.1 wi an piuiiiiins ui .va- -

..yf.silc so l.reducl rl, SI IHIUilc auenf.ll. Ki.'J.'S MU.finicnion m court o. ton- a jury ol h.afie jol, !lic (;OVtrtinittiit ior ihin to. nihi.trv on IkcuihUi sirs. ' 111 the hiKiitst biilder, al 9 o'rlurk A. M.,'in 1 liurs.lay, April St. in the lonrnurt.v. I his is one .more arn-- : a, r( S am jn aiitliti. n thereto, have Sheriff Smvcr is working en the

mcnt aamst rovrrnmcnt ownership :i (dstnrt. Ko acres, (tlrs pasiuic iin robhtry of the Kainbo prtmises at 11. M. Seilinjer of llloomfieldUNION71 ll'lldll"" I'll ft! VI I M III II I l. fbe made l.irK.er) this inakis a total iola last week and an arrest in the l' en.y acre orcnarn tinil.i, It Liny tl li.o, Male i

New Mtxito, at the front il.ior of tie

tuurt li.iusc thtri-in- ilie fi'llowiim iVs-

, ril.t il to wit:

Wiiislra SupcrslrurtureiVcw l

.V0 .in Ft. Wri'i kinir Triy.tl Approsckl.t.UM M. II M. Htlaying S.ilvsnr.l Lum

her lVck)fur rop.Kils. instructions tn bill- '

Hits, titans mi'l tnny be rnamint-.- t at tin- nfln-- of thr District

bos l.unat, N'rwr Mexico, or maslc ruetir .1 at tlir effiri1 ol thr !tTlrllishaiav Kn,nr,r S...... P.. N, Mrs

.ition means delayed justice. ol AH acres the bolder of this place case is expected at a marly date. !) j...."."Mine, iasi ivioniiav. ah. renaniKer

.1, .1,., The new C. & S. station at Grenlias acrrss to which in case of sale'Diminy lliadiifbtis transferable. The rent on liii'MTHE FREE SEED FRAUD Sale No. U--It All ..f See. i, T. .'! S ,

R. 11 E., comprising Mi.td acres.vill. is ni.arin(r completion. Thrpaint- -

will arrive this week asIt is understood that the board ni .rrii.in ni,.l . u. a rnmnii.rr!J "i crewb ases it very small but yet of nrratbenefit. There in also a stock ra'.ve;n runt privilege to this bold'i'K w hich

the cariienters have completed their Sale No. L si All of Sic. sc. T. 11 ji, n ,irp,ft f tinou, hieh jiitl in announced by ti e lioi:'.(irunrialti.ns conunittie has tbmt nf the viriiltnr.il anni in: ui- - K'ves preference to irramnp .v.l head

work. The entire platform will be K- enaiirisin(j ic niun.if.i h,n the plans ami specifies

paved with brick and a suitable Eo,., cf ,ie ahovr tracts wiU e "sTat'n "h'la'y (omm?s-hn- resrrvrs

place will be arrallKt'U to park the be llrr,.( ..r base stpstatcly. the rihl to r..i,ci any and all proposalscarS N l"u be arctptcd f'ir Iris than

j A nit I KTTian aiinual rental of (J.N K IIUNDKH) IMtl.- - . "Siaie Highway' EnKinerr

county tonuniss'.oiurs is considering apple orchard will pay a satisfactorylilt abaiiu. nnieiit of the county bos- - duidend whin readjiutineiit has

on tlie north side and making ken place,uliitr arrangement to take care of;the charity ca;ts that may dniiai.d' V. D. Steele reports that practica-attetitioi- i.

Last year there were few ly all the hay on the La I'lata liasapplications from paupers for medi- - been sold to feeders, the farmeii

n( hill Ihe JJ39,K intended 10 in- - cattle under permit W" and toraWe tongressmen to supply free 11 li-'r-r herd under jiennit H

setds lo their constituents llos year1 h" ' mentioned in case the buyer

If (his hoary old fraud is final'y rli- should wish to run a herd of c;;t- - Santa Fe New Mistt-o- Janu.irv 27, I'tflSome needed improvements are be- - i,ily of two cents per ton of finished pro.iiry at. I'i'l.aiimaled from the nppropriatons bill ' have a hnK permit to ranee

ruary Id, 1921.cai attention anil it 15 thought that decidii M it were belter,, Ms( firM slre(;t When duct ... ypsit. taken from the land. Kent- - First

to Sell at , . . als will lie required to be psid annually ' lullicalii.iltli.oi worK " conipictiii !!. can

jn a(lvan(.,t an no p.,,,,,, will le ).m--of net1

thcr sire many who will brea'l e 'u ' t'"'e counly can be saed a consider- - what is cmisidred low prkeanlcntv ol mast such as acorns and t , ... . . , boast of haviuu the best streets .,.,. .1 i t such sale who hasvgh t reliel. (inuinally iniuukj atenable Kerne. ,0 the hog need, hut little . ' J" " " 1 '. mean, to aKrici,lturi.-t- to ,,. insti,u,jol, in Tllc ,,. L...

by teenini;. ine aDove lanu ami will board'sany town in tnion county. rn.r to the hour set lor the sl-- . le- IN THE .PROBATE COURT FOR

A pile of ties near the residence of fi'l or" . ,'hc..t."l,7;:;'ion'Br eh.,J Z ?ANTA FE COL'NTV. NEW MEX- -

Vicente Bneto cauutit1 fire on Tues- - .,.k .,1. . ..1. nr een.iied eschane- - m ILU.payers appreciate the ef-- i.

.1.1. .1 .,!.... It : ,expediment with seeds sec iredthe Department of Agricnlti'-- r 'ibisseed business has grown to be ai.ufse to conRreiiien and an aijKra- -

i' is "ii ll.l Ullll.lUl . i.Liiu.it: tjl.l- -l,.firert I haif a iftjitiT riirhl :iiil.r..v- -

Estate.' 'lay nife'ht and during thc high wind the amount equal tn h above st itel .,of our arniers ate having ths.ni tan- - , minimum .nnual rental. Deposits ..f !.;" ' Matter of theana 0 'or 'e I'rompt ac.ion o(ned and using the leather to repair mu.r(t d by the State Knt;ineer for nn( '"'"'cubit foot per second for irrigation.' ss(u bl,,,tr, will he r,,rel. T.ie.of Cannel Salas, aeceaseu.

wation to most of lur gaiibnei . their harness and shoesmove men! ulntiir these li NOTICE'i hi. ulUim.ni r4 inrL:iit hi l i " project has not been cotnpkt- - MCKINLEY - si si-.- .- . ,1 l. -- .. i,H h.m i,ii...i in iisvmeni ill so. ti . ... . ....to tach senator and reprf int ative "1 h aardinR was only rran!- -

has varied from i.'K) to 10iKI an- - lo lnV sllorl "inc aP 1 w011.. 1 1.. .........;... ,..1.. iMieers have t.sltd the oi'.i'Htie id

make Ihe combines set up and take " J' V' V j" UnV. due sh.ll be payable1 Aotice is nereby given, tnat inailJl:d conflagration. It was ,5..,.",. bidder w,ll unders.ied has been appointed d- -

The siho.,1 ht.ilcli.iB for uoiice. han juan Review. ,"e Th. .c...ulll.irillllg 'a nierrv while It lasted and -- i I,. ,rlrsd 10 nss n addition to the , ,, ,r.lnr of l w estate nf firmfhas been completedsunny, i - nit .liiw('i ijuuiis iiiiiv Jl" '"is project and it n (Whitewater)fr their .li.i nl.nt ii.n I.i.t a -- "JSAN MIGUELsaid there is ample to initiate at and the people of that district are.in the bucket when it to the

'kept all hands busy keeping things annual rental offered the rost of advc.-- .;aat deceased. All persons havinn

ilntact.-D- es Moines Swastika. j''c 'T.de'"5o,'"rm ".r cHim against the said estate nhou.Jyears and as loan thereafter as irypsne file the same within the time pro- -

tlic' On Saturday night a party of po- - shall be produced from the lands in pay..vjjc(J jjy jawleal 40 acres, 'ihe toil oil this very will pleased. 1 here are twenty

:i- - .. . ii.. 1 i 1. .. . . -ranih is a pood sandy loam. pu; ., I.,, s, .pi.a V..O...I. as IC..-- ,C,ar ,.d W1(h teui,., irt to

ker players were treated to 1 gen'' quantities, n. mvi P VTRiriO V'ir.IIhome of his brother in law, Santi . . . . :. . i. i.rn mi inc e . . r u, . . .... - --.me istrator of the Estate ofgo Aragon at San Geronimo, Av

A flowing well i f water has. been aristo Mcnloya has been bound over '.! men ntered their place of opera- - M,,ko, or obtained from the Commission-ol salt.

expenditure involvnl in sinmnsfbein out. This year the iirrndt.lnlbittnent reached the lo it.lt ol10.0DO paclaites per couKresstu v,and this is somtt'iii.K like t!e t

fxuditure which would have be 11

iii'oI'-d- Oriitii.il apptopri.it'ontJ.WiVift. Ten '.h ant i.:i k.tpes to

Vflrli of ! sen'o and 4.i5 tm -

. c ... ... the linn to lip er. or Ilia agent.Carmet Salas, deceased.

A M. EDWARDS.Attorney.

mi uc k 011 lie catiic r.incli .0 I. it. grand pury under fJ.UW bond. a"d proceeded break their a the date

A well was being drib The house and contents were valued "'.'le game by taking a clean up rake ot.,Zt, "( & Land. o".

k water when the flow at f.ii i(l. ft i allercd that Montova '"f, using two ugly looking Matc'r K,.w uKrKa this twentyMet auiant.led for stoi

iiirsuaibr 1 he game came -- ,.,!, aay of January. l'l.w.is e nciHintered A flowing well of sit lire to the building because ofirrel he had bad with his bro- -lb. a ii

llur; 1:1 liie ranch 111 thisvaluable as a flowing

to a hasty conclusion leaving a . A. I I I.l I),bunch of excited gain'.ileis to guesi i'h.ii,i,mi r f Public l ands,who the bolilnns were. Clavloll t - Malt- ol X'-- Mtxiee.

in law....:cr on a hi;

couiif y i; asviil of oil.

Stock: bead oi work horsesa d mares, one blooded colt, a hull!Kl head of hos. 20 head of cattlei riiicif ally holstein (youny and all I.aliinit 7S white Ittiborii cl.iiktin,-- oine t.ukevs. peacocks, piL'euns, rab-bii- s

and a few anjoria jroats.In. ii- ct. ' hi'ce roi in

o n. i b.,if H.v.M' sl'i I " .beds011 ;.!! si ' too! Miojt wi'h shelteron two siilcs with a ?m.d s...olyof tools incluibnt; forte and i.iu.i-?ii- ;

it'i'ei s, a eow.J Mi4 c!u- ti

house, two Cher si'a.l it t -

'IIV'S l)- fl.'1, e, .1 . ho. W

nifinc ami pump-ja- ( k 110 I .. 'led. .1

L'kKI K"l !aiv.il 11 i.oll I..I.K i

i!i. tji st j.- w.'t.r jiiiruovcs, a oiit 5

InilrS of fim Mic, a MK11H, tw.i f

tiiien. ,rt I' lt.lii all m January 2. IVl.Last I'lihlicati.-- Ala. I 1, l.

IS THE risOllTK COL'KT f)KT1IK COl'XTV lF SANTA FKSTATK OF NEW MLXICO.

In tlie Matter of the F.staW ofW. M. Taber, deceased.

NOTICENotice !s hereby given that Feb-n- i:

ry 27. I'lil, at the hour of two

l.atir Mr. M CiiiTiant slates thatit is an aiti-i.i- l tiois. ' libernun in that -- iciiin will put 1I11.11

wens w.ib l.opes of a bkellow of water, -- tiuih p l.cra.d.

STATE or NLW MLXICO

NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION

PL'Et.lC LNO SALE

LUNA COUNTYMORA

A ie ,v t'viinii.js an, in the mainil room 01 I i.e 1 astetnula Hotel,,I.e e old:i r boys who bad tvi.h-- o

'1 iiic ligors of wart-tar- cn thebatik fields of Europe, surroundedby ihcir niotheis, isttrs, b.culnrs,i.,,lieis, wiics, s ivecl l.eat is ai.d

made a sudden aitack uponone of the must s.ii.pti.'.. a tinnuis1 . r spread.

Ihe aiiair was thc annual bun- -'

.:uit cinn by the Leonard lioskii.s10 1 ,.i. 4. American Legion, '1 hom-- .

'1 inb r post tonin.ii.dcr; W .

.v h nici.itison, i e post commander;.1. I.i riff lirown, .icluilaut and John

'. Il.'iriis tdiauie ouicer.i: e hm: d e l ai d lo.irurn rovers

1,1 .! :.o.,i,: luMi.illlvnr. ' the IVirnniisi.-ne- ol

Jspnere tiport With Fireflies.p,.si.,. iicit.it i.;i i... ttirtly

ei.nliiiiii in a s,ort it, t I.i'Hkl'o-I- pursue it cli t) ot faun, 'mikW 'tll u ,, ,, ,, .,. .,( ,11111

'S fllM.'l.cil Vnt 1o MlilelS lls't OH

'I. lull .)c .( I. t It. Nisi' ..' .:.!!;.fl'sllllll ;,;., II, I s eclllfl. J'OlSlor tl How HMi (j, im.lllV'itt.os- - lis?

't i:u' s,.., :H1i,. nf the til t.flM I.l "t.fl Hi IfH'tlS tr

II- tls:'i..u ,,1 I'so.ils; lire rut' t'll'MiS111. s,..,.,,, , . , Iionii.-I- ,

! I., t tlic ll.iVir... I.iis., 11 ,.i Kiltrtit t'llMlt!

s. ntativts 5..1M". ' f.. rHnd of ddrreini; st..ii frank vur In nt 'in b.tm.iil'm;, for they to lr '

OH 'I b!l ini.l.i' .1 r vini I

nothing of ll"1 est of ni.i'n!.a force in the ileparirn. nt "(culture to att'itd to i'r

the Uo of (.t;..Mi. f.il-- y litit K's t .11 i ' e 111'

I ' ' ' ' '1 ( cr' y l'

w.iild be re.pnre.l (

If e s. r ,K, t'i.- , t , .t

li.it in . re tb.-- :'i ' ..:oi-- t x fti r t ' In ' e 'urn

rd. Many a car V-- K... '

Sjard" n ' for t' i .

he d. f i t. i;i .1 on -i ' s N

S in . a'liot'lit of 'o. .( 00' v c t .' I i f in- - ' . ! li- i

fen ceils Now 1. n ' .1

nd .f fl is n.i. r 'ill i -

nl (or all. on the j o!-- if'lea of ra'ion.d if.r'.fi M

I t hoped thM t' r i 111 v''t the bill

o'clock I. M. has been fixed as thetime for the hearing of objection

' to the Final Account and the set-- Itlement tberiof, filed by the admi-

nistrators in the estate of W. M

Tuber, deceased.C. C. CLOSSOV,

MRS. MAKTHA It. TABF.R

Office olLsnds.Insli.1 ll u n ;.

p'.ni'.c I at ( ipV en three ii

e of beat1110 this

p. r poi

?

in...nd f

.Van is Fe, New Mesico.' Noma is herel.r i.n that pursuantdI''

..1 I n. the ot Ast nf Congress, a..i

ptutiJ lune .11. th, I'M, th- - las ol lh,S'n- - "I .w Mm.". i'l i'"i and lerfy Adniinistratorv

mat can lie olna idis bat t:ot'.i.ii ihe

.lioi... .i.iiini K o c. a '...o-i-

?cer will plan' '...h as a gardenerpiowin.; uifiir li .;.- - a a cover

iali. n. ol the .Mat. I..I..I .'.:.'.. '- - Firs. Tobli. ntinn tan. 7.4o

ret,l,c sale to the hiehest bidder at M Last Piib.ication January 2, I9JI.n'rlmli. A. M.. ob Wedt.rs.tay, Fetirusrj

!.i r .... li is l... all s.

f 1 Mi.' e, ( i v ii'ie i a: ii.v.:i a p.,'. 110--

t cci.siis, h ;.'. er t ty ttot iw 1K v t'' lo o r .

s.. '. lie is mar; in Ike ..,.st l...,l-;.i.- l

n 11. lo .if d i'l'.i-- i thet ra:n'. t. the report s.

2Jrd, VM, ia the Iowa ol llrnuag, touatyof l.uns. Siste ol New Mesico, Hi troal -oi the court bouse therein, the totlowiai (J M U K t.described tracts ol Uad, ia:

A Rat Breeds to 1 Times a YesI,terrginf Ten Young to a Litter.

Remember this, act as soon as von

cop prcv.ous to stirimff tin: winter tt...rt laid on forty tables, and I'almstrips. ., s r.i lurio-iu- d the ins, rutin nt:

.v las ben started nu; ,.c whtie several vocal numberscon ell. lale the school disiiii's of io,- rendered.lair.ii-,,'- , Arkansas Valley, Noiati ll-- p i;ici a! speakers of the v- -

Leiy A lu'tttion w is circulated triii 2 were in the order given : Tho- -in i fie tour distib t wrh the resuit in;.s V. '1 ruder, ii t commander: F.

Ratspo Ve the first rat. Get a rkg of RAT Sal No. irtl All ol See. 2J; WHI .ii' I.. I. . i U".. .'l. 'Lite io .10 v. If. R. II W , so.AI. It a sure rat and micr ite- - Wl.ts . 1There art ao ". ' I '.' .t ow. f .. " d c n .t

f i re wi hi.ut open'.. on a'rd It's convenient, comes in "...';.JAP TMF.RMOS BOTTLES or mica, after fan use RAT-SNA-

It' a aure rodent killer. TryU.e prevailing sentiment tie- - . fleflh r, iucbl representative for r..t, tthis could - -

smell No bid the aboee d.sctihesi " Pkj. and prose it. Rata killed witfcAn Ann pi. r.t

h:cc 1 an jr. Three l"1 'IJ'Tl'." "JOZ . .V. RAT-SNA- P leaee no smell. Cats orJ. an for !.I Riiar- -

- ce ii. on a c.,('.v in ta-- r.t rots .M .'i'ii. in the fciler.il board ol vocational td- - i.al.:.i!!e place for tniets.

e... !.,..mi': ,ii ,. u,,, 1 ait vii w aM Arkansas .uaii.n; K. R. O.ltson of Albuqt.er- -' rSTAn'Si, ;?

.iixl is t'MM. ii. a n.is.v ..o,,' i. i. alley ,T)!y one inyn lo sign que, trjtc rire.cnta.i c of the bn-- , i yc cn1 !lr'kTnH.' u'li' the 1, Roe. wiih-.u- , say.n, :i,s..,:om M. Cutting of Santa. 'coVn Drui; &or tic al Jbe chiirman for thewon en pa- - 1 e, state organiza-- , ( r ,j v,,,-- . Co.in fait this place bus many ajv.-.ft- -

,tl! ,c bent scnl to the t.t.nitr tion manned by Herbert Hoover to " trocery

Stipra'sea eaiue tnrrroi, m . -Stationery thereto the successful biilder mast s. i 3 sjM j J,,) enough for Paa

! improvemeets tliat eaisl oa ta-- Kitehea or Cellar.IL ('i'-nn- , ,.f

r' nrescn'.i! The

thi boitlft.testinior.y of lo!Vindand, N. ) .

Flint Class Worktry.

I nor. le: ,n apes. My well is IV i et deep. dr. i raise it. nds for tiie millions ofstarvingcoo.n.issioneri.id ?nd has an t ravt.it with athc Wats and Mcins d.-- mr in Europe; Dr. Walter E.

and he showed a samo'c bofle frern pt tup line insije. tne x rial's I ble "t(,- -

UBa- - I C5c ait (2 cakes) for ChickeaThe above tale ol laail witt he sat)cit l House, coopa. or email buildings,

'the tollowiog terms aat coodititms vis: j ) 25 ,;M (j eakea) oaougk for alt

The sucre..fl ti pt storagethe Comm.ssiooer ot Putille I surfs, xt kit ' bti.ldinga, or factory bwildiags.arfit hoMme mrk ssle. mtetwetitvit. o-- j Sold a its! Gnaraoteed by

ply of water '2 ttttic. An irrigaThc Turners' Esihatige of Levy Ka-- er of Las eras, exammginfr

a carload of wheat to Ari- - ysician for tl e board. Las Vegaszona this week; also a carload of Optic.

Janan ss. hit h sills for SII". Vctloinotc bot'V r.ifs S.T5. Th tion project co'tld be int.-ini- i lr-

the price of fere by aim m mas; ....Beaeham-Mianard- ot Hdw. Co

SIERRAlieans to Leaumont. Texas. Severalfarn.trs have shelled and corn is be-in- tf

hauled to the warehouse. Wa-

gon Mound I'antagraph.

cent interest ansauce tor "'.per .atiee A such purchase price, lees ln a Collins Drug Staty. Ce, andvertisme sad amtraisemeel aat! all ettt Kihi Creest Cm.tnrutental to tne ssle netvtu. eaeu anasS . I mttmmt be rfetwinted M. east

American bottle is Ixtttr lienor it rupiri? at this ell A!o have .:fan be replaced, but on the surface of the Skinner irrigation fi'ltm in- -

Ihe Japanese bottle looks a eoo.) stil'td for pardeninR.to tbe purchaser, said Me. OTriiTi. The owner const lers thi placeTTie fillers ire du'iab!e at 5 rtr cent, bargain (or the priie askid.ad lalortm as Klas. bnt the com- - Address all enquiri-- . s to Snteplcted article is adrot'td tir.der the Record which will forward tittif t t

metals tchedule at 25 per cent. He owner.?nts the bettle made dji?a1!r m

under both schedules. The order i i.,,,.. o,,-.,- i

or certified exchange at the time of eel.aa4 srhieh aat4 isnstl and all ot theeare sntsiert le foHeitere t the State o

Two incipient fires, one Tuesdayrife-fi- t and one Wednesday nightwere discovered in time to preventany property loss. The first fire oc-

curred between the Miller and Sulli

IF YOU HiUST TAKE .sLHICINETRV

The epidemic of diphtheria whichhas been rastinin several seho , inIhe west end of Mora is abating inplaces and breaking out in others van res dences and was discovered by

which be cited reoresfrt onr-ixl- h The result has been dep'orable, and uan Mifr and Guy Mcl'herson whoabout fifty voune lives have been the ti,. ..r.nl Kl. wo r,nTti. iitmnl '.f 'tis. sroHd 10

fbe annual consumption tf the lo t- -

cd States.

New Mexico, il the successful biMeT one.am execute a contract vithia thtrtvafter rt has hee inaih--il to hita by tatState l.aad Office, asie cmtrset to peevide that the purchaser eta? at his eettteeaiake pavmcata of otit lees thae ooe-th-

tteth of ataety fire tier cent ot the purchase price at ary time after the sale aopnor to the expieetioo ot thirty yearstmta the date ol the enetreet an4 ta provide fee the Tetwnt 4 aay apat4 Wal

at.ee at the exptrattoa et thirty year Sfmthe date of the coerract with inrerr-s- t eetttttind aevtaewta et the rate ot Sewi

per cist per eawoai payable ta ailvaoevoa the astaiveraary fA thc date el tWcontract, partial paymewts to be tJtdiltoo the awoisetssry of 'he date of ttfe.

rem tract, oext Sultou lag the date of oca

e.t.tt..l l. I s.t rmtn toI, ciaimc(i hy ,hc drcd pcstiience. ,he fcncr at the corner of the Cbi- -frul trrr at !'.'7 -n--r n.lW--a, f . j eie bkrTy Ind mas discovered bv

. iit.w mli.-- s rtt-n-s Into th 0n, of tllf mo!lt hoj-HM-,. accidents Gny McPherson and D E. Heaton

" Farti mt.ie nine ..f tt, rtT water t),aj j,lf happened in Roy for sever- - sad was immediately extinguished,roadie ahut 2r, torta. abd al years occured recently at the Me- - Investigation showed that coal oil

rrf aliin 4'JV"t Kane of forelfa sa elevator, when Ro-- had been thrown on tbe fence andBMitrf that immh tn the oesft. nald Hnbon. the t year old son of then set on fire, and its timely dis- -

C E. Hobson the Roy jeweler was covery no doubt prevented a dit- -crosued -- nd pounded fo death after astrout conflagration. The first blaze

OcuDie Quantity. takmst hoU of a shaft which con- - unboubtedly was caused br criminal

if ii i if

Worry No Mer.A tatstimar fnwt mnrneWI from tt

fMlaa Knnre fhne V-- n'- - nttflaitSToml trt .rr"tie - " Alrtvmrt1hT rs rwtMpstHs nmit-twr- s rbrfyin wsfttee nr not aMt srlH

nrry tusly m fe " Rirtit tw re M

line f ttIt mm 1 iwe otmst 'tt1 fvtmrr T (irtthgarlMS. Anttist H Ftafl. In tiPei- -o

SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTSTl Htrlf hs ate the- etiw4 erst nects the engine room and tbe ele-- . carelessness and the second was per-- Its toastedt uiuHl pinM wtct thr arrive! sT xitnr machinery. pretated by a criminal mind.

Thc little bd died at 2 o'clock theesrta saany smtneni. s , m eiisinithat aw of lit time plarmaTea ka4 a tollowmg morning tram his injuries. tquipment tor tbe school house

The above sale of hod wig be aobHU Steod exist rue rirhta, ess, mi ata, rigaea away aad fsetrsataf a.

Afl anoeeal rigbta ta tbe above dVoertboS

SAMPLE COPY OF MAC DONALD'SFABMEJtS ALMANAC

SENT FBEC

ATLAS PRIVTING CO.(tie at fc PorVty meSted Out ot respect to little Konald ev--1 consisting ot thirty desks and two

- as --- . irwMi itta ery business house in Roy including recitation benches arrived this week.lead are rtatrxta So tbe atoae.

i ta ivll ZZ l-Tr-tl

-r- tatmr. --ot, la year both bank, and the postoff.ee were More equipment will follow.closed tbe funeral Mondayi ZTw. Ia. nct ones to Ttror I during

etMnfeetaal " lRoy Spanish-Amerka- a. Pat Valencia who has taken a lea.The CoarariasioBer of Pebfc taala. ,Z ' ATLAS BLOCm BCtCMAMTON, M.V.boat t vorm ageat

OKLAHOMA FARM BARGAINMO Acre All in On Saction.UncleValfe ! UncfeValfe GOV'T OPERATION

. One of the best agricultural andstock farms in Harper County, OkWmA OUT OF POLITICS

wr P

Main Idea With Youngster.A youngxter has caused bla dad

much worry hy crossing streets with-out I Htklnz tirsi for passing vehicles.To Impress upon the youngster's mindthe necessity of being more careful, bewas telling bis wife tn the boy's pres-ence a story of another little hoy who.while crossing ihe street with an Icecream cone, had been run dowa by aheavy motor truck. For a brief mo-ment the child sat lo deep thought;then asked: "Did be spill the cone,pop?"

Party Leaders Convinced ABigDropResults of National Can-

vass of Editors.

lahoma, in the midst of the greatwheat belt. Fourteen miles ,'romrailroad but new road now. buildingbeaded that way. This splendid farmconsists of 640 acres, all in one

500 acres in cultivation; 140acres in pasture, hog lots, and build-

ing grounds. All good strong groundI n;t..ble for growing wheat, corn,kafiir,. cane, broom corn, alf.-.if- i,

barley and oats. Beside being afirst class agricultural farm thisplace is an ideal one for a hog and

'general stock ranch.IMPROVEMENTS: There Is on

this . farm a new four room housewiih two porches, finished in an up- -

VINDICATES FORMER POLLGAY OLD MENI

XXX

iiOAM JAGWAT was trying to be 0arwhelmina Veto Like That of YearBefore From Both Sides ofIJ funny, thla morning," related

CLEANING THE DOG

i4""ni8 Is the most wonderful ioapX ever offered the public," ex-

plained the voluble agent, as he openedhis grip. "It will clan anything un-der the sun. It wl!l remove greasespots, polish tinware "

Wizards of the Wires.Pntll ghoul

-n th Morse !nglfntessnge svsieins wore itie otily oneswhich bail prnveil (iriicl ii ul. Theduplex method 'hi -- ending of two

the horse doctor. "He saw some boysturning handsprings, and undertookto show them how the trick used to bedone In the halcyon days, and the doc- -

cJELL--0

f packages

s In opposite ilirectlons si runtnnoniisty was pcrocM-i- t hy J. R".

manner inside ana ou', tarn,chicken house, two granarlcs --oic

Steam. In 1ST'.' TV PrpVx. 'lie enil-tn- s

or t'-- tn 'In- - "'np iPrpctkm st thenm iin,e n lioinicil ny Thomas

Ivli-.'- t, in ist;; .lb., ,,:i, mci,:d 'hefptadrtyilej. vccm Ip tH7t.

.'ccl and one frame cave, wcl! andw ind mill, one mile of 36 im.ii hot?

h te wiili double steel gutc and'larjic hedge posts. Entire K'Ctiunfenced and cross-fence- d.

GOOD WATER: There is an,abundant supply of good well water '

A RARE BARGAIN: This farm-- 1

ranch is a rare bargain at $4? .00 per

M-mti-Jor 'lb- -

tor says bowrenched hisbuck so he'll beIn bed for severaldays."

"Disasters ofthat sort usuallyhappen to thegray beard whotries to demon-strate that heisn't any olderthan he was fortyyears ago," d

the villagepntriurch. "I'malways being

"Oh, I have nodoubt It will re-

store hair to Iraldheads and makec h I e k en b laye?SS," said Mrs.Curfew, sarcas-

tically. "I foolC'lite satisfied it'smode of barks andbuds and healingherhs, but I don'twant any of yourmarvelous soap,having had expe-rience with othermarvels of the

At the Butcher's.My little ncphcu a;,. to the

hatcher shop for s'ne O'tat. writes a

Political Fence.

Washington. Inner circles of bothpolitical parties here are greatly In-

terested in the results of a nationalpoll on Ihe quest ion of governmentoperation" amtiiig oer 5,)"0 newspa-per editors thrnughont the country.With 80 per cent of these editors, rolimitless of political Tailh. giving it atheir iuipartiHl opinion that the publicis more tlian eier opposed In the gov-ernment going into business In

with Its citizens, observershere see little chance that either po-

litical party will Hnd It a prodtuhlecampaign issue.

In the opinion of party leaders thissort of a cuiivnss among newspapereditors Is the best possible index ofpublic opinion. They recall a similarqi.tistlonmiire sem out a year ago Inconnection with the proposition thutthe government take oyer the rail-roads permanently. Iteptieg at thntlime from appmiiinatuly lie samenumber of editors l ow ed fe't per centattains! the principle ut governmentoperation They recall also that within teu days from piihlhiitlnn of I tie)

acre, as it is located in the Cimarbest section i correspondent, but as the butcher didron River valley the

of Haroer Countv. Oklahoma. $JK-- 1 not have Ihe meal he went for he re--

The Genesee Pure Food Company;Wm ;ue xvoy, in. x.

8H00O will buy the entire 640 ar turned, home wiiliom any., whereupon.nd inin nvrments. 1 want $15,000.00 his mother asked why be d'd not bringcash; $!0,0llU.U0 in five years; bai-- j the meiiL In reply he said: "Well,ante to suit purchaser. mother, they didn't hnve Just what yoO

COMMISSION: In order to s.-- wanted, hut they have the cutest littlethis farm soon I will e,i.e any hrown doggie hanging up."agency, Real Estate Dealer or Indi

6'SI

vidual $1,5011.00 commission who willcither buy or sell this farm withinmx months from Jan. I, 1921, onabove terms. I guarantee all state-ments made above to be exactly isn presented

Photographers Bar Powder.I'holo-rnphe- rs ndvise ctrls not to

powder their faces before hftvliin theirphotographs fiiki-n- . Powder tlnttensthe leiiuires ntn rods the face of

A shiny nose "tulies" hot-ter han a dull one. ami the eirl who

VOL'R OPPORTUNITY : This - One-ha- lfOnly Two anlesiin oi me loiiner questionnaire) ma your opportunity to own a line lari i

beiilinient for return of ihe railroads nominalat a price or to make a ciin resist the mitm-n- l lemiiiiition togood piece of money by brinyi.ig or gne her nose n liitle dab will have the

inii a far better Cents a Daysending a tmyer. tins place rinie.i faiisfn. onout pays 10 per cent on J.i'J.OW) .'. pi,,,!,,., , ,,T)o not pass it by.

I.. I EE ADAMS,ror cover

)vnrr.Ultimo, Okln., Why Worry About Coal?The sun erd tnrs do not rh'iicnrt for

tliclr heat on rotiirin'tion hut on somevast reservoir of siihaiomlc energy.The sun can still maintain Its outputof beat for HVKKViii'i.'"" of years, andit mii"i dale hack in time 0 remotethat Ihcre Is no prae'l" at limit to esti-

mates of ihe nu'c of the ei.r'li. LondonTimes.

tempted to do some Idiotic thing, audhave to suppress such impulses witha mailed fist .It's all the outcome ofvanity. A man hates to admit thathe's a htick number. He wants toassure the plain people that, notwith-standing his gray whiskers and string-halte- d

legs, he's a four-hors- e teumwith a dog under the wagon, whenit conies to athletic skill,

"I was In the livery barn the otherevening, when .young I'retsinger be-

gan explaining that he bad been tak-ing boxing lessons from one of theel, I masters. He had learned all thetricks of Hie game, and was Just suf-fering, ugonles because there was no-

body present who would stand up andexchange scientific swats with him.

"In my younger days. If I do say It

myself. I was a star performer inthe ordinary knockform of combat, but I never was worthshucks at boxing. Nobody knows thatbetter than I do. Why, then, did Iinform Kretsingcr that I would be gladto spar a few rounds with him? Itsurely was vanity and nothing else.I had an Idea that, while he mighthnve plenty of the fancy stuff onhand. I might land one of my old-tim-

haymakers; In which case I felt surethe town would soon be ringing wltbthe story of an old man's prowess.

"So I took, off my long jiraswlngercost, nnd my vest, and stood up forbaltle. If anybody tells you, myfriends, that Fretslnger doesn't knowhow to wield his hands, you may re-

gard the story as a roorback. I nevetsaw Csts so numerous as on that occa

K't S o pkins in Hard Lock.Mr Sln.nl I'is uiis oilip!liM!l,K lo his

ho-n- ut flhli'l .h.l.l.ins llholll the fi -

toei.aiv ;in hi uitt- had brought upontun. m 'he ..nurse ot their association,"When iii t I met h. r " he said "I wassu n, .)i: u,l. wnh admiration. When I

uiiirncd hei I i' as blind with love,and mi 'i ' he lidded. "I'm deuf fromhei evt rla- - tiai." lall.nig."

lo their owners li.nl ileilnlialy crys-tallised

t'ouiparison of present results la de-

tail with those of h year mho 'con-vinces tie iiolltic.il student not onlythnt these e liiors have I ecuIn then ii(l:;iiicnt, hut that pmly con-

siderations pin ed no pin I in funn-ing It. r'rmu Democratic Hnd suppnsedly radical Texas, for example,the ptei-en- i questionnaire brought re-

plies from editors of -- II papers, onlythree of which nro llepiihllcan. Yetthe percentage against goVHrntnentojeratlon was 1)2, which is exactly Ihesume as ii t given hy 2iSi editorfrom ItepuhlicHii Michlgnti, amongwhom were reprcfcetitutlves of onlythree Democratic papers Othetstales that pair percentages signitiCHtiily are Massachusetts and Nevadawith 1(H)- Connecticut and tSouih CamUna. wttli UT ; Maine und West Vlr

giula, with '!; Kentucky aud NewYork, with Ul ; Missouri and I'ennsylvanla, with hi); Ohio und Oklahoma

Javanese Pn0r Oftee Makers.Travelers sny that nowhere In the

j world Is coTow ns i drink, worse tluuiIn Jiivh. whore the eotYoe h' an Is

tc. !;e at Its cerj t.esl. 'Hie .lava-ne-- e

distdl cidTee essence of eTfremestrength, buttle II ami oetir a fewdrop lino n ciii of hot water wnenthe) d'" in eni' , III

Most Br Gind. 'J h HibtnryThe sure;! utiv lo rein it ihe

Is hy mu'ttpln-ntiot- i of theKnown. Just as there t(re no simrr-en'- s

hi science, so there Is no vaywhereby we can hriion- the tried for-mulas of a political hU!oi In deteh.p.Inc a truli representative ;m eminent.

Exchange.

ing the World s NewsThe cheapest service you can Imy is the service ren-

dered you hy a modern metropolitan daily. Compare theservice rendered yourself and family by El Paso MorningTimes with that of other public services.

A nickel is the telephone company's charp;e for puttinga brass ping into a hole 5 cents is the price of a street carride: a quarter is the minimum rate for a ten-wor- d telegram.

Twenty-fou- r hours a day, seven days a week, ElPaso Morning Times hunts the world for news. It lias thisnews wired into ElPaso Sometimes at a cost of two dollarsa word. It prints tins news in a lively, readable, interestingform and will put it product in any Southwest mail boxfor two and one-ha- lf cents a day: $875 per year for thedaily and Sunday by mail.

Can you thinlc of any better investment of two andone-hal- f cents a day? Subscrme right now.

Mail subscriptions accepted only in localities whrrewe have no home delivery agents.

El Paso Morning TimesFirst Newspaper of the Southwest

Willi 87.

The result of the present poll as t

gnveririieiil operation In each stateare graphically slioi.u by the following chart :

What He Wanted.Hilly mhiiireil I'harlie's rocldng horse

er omih mid hegi-t- l his mother toInn lilui one. Ills mm her could notmiller. no .1 h:ii lie iiunted ko bes i'it "i Hi, I wiih h horse that keepson golin; Hint never gets anywhere."

fame kind. Last fall an agent camelong, selling a soap that would do

everything you can think of, frombeautifying the female complexion tophasing the cows out of the corn. Theagent talked as though he had eight-da- y

works In hlin, like our old grand- -

father's clock, and he didn't make anyImpression until ho said the soapwould heal all skin diseases of manor beast. It happened at that periodthat Mr. Cnrfcw had an Imitation birddog that he traded a gf 'i watch for,and gave a dollar to boot, said dollarhaving been extracted from v p.I-fat- e

savings, and never returned.'This dug had the mange or some

ilsagreenble disease that caused himto Itch In the most reprehensible man-ner. He was always scratchli.g andrunning against everything he couldAnd, first and last. One day he up-set my parlor table and broke all. mybest china, which I had placed on thetable a few minutes before. He alsoupset the sewing mach'ne and thechurn, and I don't know what else.

"So when Mr. Curfew heard thatIhe agent's soap would cure skin dis-

eases, h Insisted upon buying n cuke,and after he hud gone he began towash the dog with , that marvelousjoap. I don't know what Ingredientsaid soap contained, but after It was

rubbed Into the dog's skin that un- -

fortunate animal became frantic andacted as though Its reason tottered onIts throne. Mr. Curfew tried to holdthe beast, anil It readied around nndbit his ear almost olT, nnd of coursehe released It then, and the uproarhe made, as he danced around thebouse, holding his ear with one bund,and summoning the police with theother was simply scandalous.

"Meanwhile the dog ran off, en-

tirely demented. Mrs. Turpentinewas crossing the road pushing herbaby buggy, when the animal collidedwith said vehicle, and spilled her off--

spring Into the mud. I am willingto admit that such an experience wasaggravating, but I don't think It wasladylike In Mrs. Turpentine to comeover to my house with her muddy

under her arm, and ahuke her listunder my nose, and tell me Hint forfive cents she'd pull nil my hair nut.

"Old Mr. Poppih.hiy was standing.mi the corner, leaning on his carm,

waiting for a afreet enr, when thecrary dog run against his cane andhe took a header Into the gutter, andI really felt sorry for him when I sawhim going home ten minutes later, j

dripping slush and mud like abut I couldn't s aiiiiithi.e

with him mi very much when hepicked up a brick ns he was passingour place and smashed a panel in ourfront diMir.

"Kor two days people were comingnere claiming that we ought to reim-burse thi'in fur damages dene by thatdog. It stained that tl.e. unfortunateanimal made a circuit of the town,and left a trail of desolation belli. idhim. lie upset six puns of milk forMrs. Trt.mpoter, and scared Smith'sfamily horse so It ran away and in-

jured several members of the family,and killed eight prize chickens for Mr.

RemarKnhle family.At VVnlthain t'ross Ciu'luinl Mr

Ulltl ty' Ii (' lleillleole Hie heiols ofa lillliil of live soli, font tin illllei M.

HM Kratiilchllilreti not the i cut t'riinil-- '

clnhlii ii A iw ihein II. i'V I'hiy V

liistriiineiiiM. sevi-- ft nint.liiiighierfthe orirnn ohmotorte not violtn nnd

OPPOSED 10 0OVERNtNr OWNERSHIP

lJ IN FAVOR Of GOVERN If NT OWNERSHIP

CD DOUBTFUL Oft FAILED TO REPLY.

DEC. in 100MASS lun jren L,rniiih'hl,,lre the orgiin.

NESMOA

Your Monty Back If Rat-Sna- p

Doesn't Com Up lo These Claims I

RAT-SNA- P is absolutely guaran-teed to kill rats and mice. Creamateitbrm. Kodents killed with RAT-SNA- P

loave no imell. Rats pass npall food to get at RAT-SNA- Their

N M AMRAbyssinian Belief.

Ill the 'Jeniirii miry of Abyssiniathe liiliahrmii" are pagans, who be-

lieve In a v i l . : Inlnihif Ihg tho sky,VERMONT

first mtal is their laM. RAT-SNA- P

nnd also in e.oi,ihny iei.ll dwelllnS comes in cakes. No mixing. Cats oron earth. Shivery Is not niliciiilly reo dogs won't touch it. Three sizes

CONN.

S CAS.

UTAH

MAIMS

ogineii. nut ex. sis in niei, inougn witn o.ic, ioc, ji.o. Sold and guarnine cyieiiniilion in I..1111 jantced by Collins Drug A Stationery

( o, and Kaune Grocery Co.

llO

too

i

HMMMaaMB&o 4

ii

MHaHSBBaSMMHaSBSBTZTI

BHV. VA Where Sound Trevele Far.Across lee nnd particularly tn hurd

frosi, sound travels iiiiiiiringly. Lieut.Koster, 011 an arctic cMM'dltion, foundthat he could converse ivlth anotherman quite ensl! :n io-- s Ihe uiouih ofa hay which un n mile h id a quarterwide.

MO

H. CAR.

TENN.

MICH.

sion. I couldn't see anything else fora while, nnd they landed on me In

many unexpected places, and I don'tremember a time when I was so

"Fretsluger explained afterwnrdthat be merely tapped me gently be-

cause I was a venerable man, oldenough to be his grandfather. In thatcase I never want to become Involvedin an argument with him when he IsIn earnest. I hnd a black eye for aweek after this recital,, and my nosehas never satisfied me since. Everytime I came downtown, I had to ex-

plain toathousund people that I black-ened my eye while splitting kindling,or thut I dropped a sad-Iro- on ItThere Is nothing more humiliatingthan a black eye, and I made np mymind that I'd try to realize my

age thereafter, and behave my-

self like a grave und reverend man."Rut no sooner had my eye recov-

ered than I whs In trouble again. Isaw some young men wrestling, andpaused to point out that they didn'tknow the rudiments of the game. 1

assured them Hint in my younger daysI was a lioiv terror, and I didn't thinkthat my hand had lost Ps cunning.It would afford me genuine happiness,I said, to show them how wrestlingwas done In the palmy il.t-- of Mul-doo- n

and Whistler."So I removed my coat und vest and

went Into executive session wlih ahusky young man who had no respectfur gray li'al.-s- . I am not sure aboutwhat followed, but 1 think he musthave thrown tae over his land. Any-

how, I made a treat dent in the earthw ith my person, and I was so sore fortwo weeks that I had to take myselfn round in a wheelbarrow. Of course.I am determined to make no more badbreaks of the kind, but I haven't muchconfidence in inyserf, and tomorrowyou nii'y see me climbing a tree halfa mile high, to show some boys howto rob birds' nests."

N EK.

TEXAS

IOWAIn Using Long DistanceLesson in Ca"-tllne- f

School children In 1'i'tshi rgh sat a

rtY

H.Y.

Ft. f .

Trrot where manyvi h., conn di.i.ucr by

n; ihe sm el, urc.Mill Iti fruil

e el school Is'iiiiiM rhilitren vet

chnolho'l- -eutotii.ih!:.rnrclesMreiii!rett hof Ihe i lolei 0111 111 '

errors tin

a call to a distant point, thought should be taken of thethe person railed, and of others who wish to use theFlCRlPA

In j ilacingro;)vc;ii ncc oflino.

WKrvrntam iimi mumraia iiiaiaBi ii imse.

ii eTommmuemsmmimumm tut a

ai y

Smmwejm ai m5o to

msj.-mj- t ininangwia- - 4MBk.XXatatT7MeTiTr.I7hi 7-- 4

as T--5

LA.

MO.

PENNJ.Important

"T i l I. 'l. "I. ''I '.

Ill) Illl'It ' We il.efornintioi. Ie it"- -

sillily e ill. -- I

ore lot oer-- t iv -

1. e' s'lllg." ! f'T'l1." i.o IV- iint of:i '01 this In-

l"'i Wf ni c hetlig. Ml.! lo 1'iens- -

C'l h I., lei' fl.

AF.HAN.

IMS.OHIO

onA.

a-- 7iJippy, Hnd 1 don't know wliat else.In view of which, I think we canstruggle along without any of yourmarvelous soap."

ft Ii- - J

wiraaumOREGON

O ' irntOt M I 'I

':i vjitr..I'. mi .

t ri.'i. -

tv v--

li isn t a kind act to place a long-distan- call and tlion leave yourtelephone before connection is made wiih the distant person. For instance,

u place a call fr a busy man in l!uviilc. Then von leave your office.Meanwhile, the 1 Insy i !e man is called. In :mswers. the opcr-ito- riusyii.ir t.hjilioi.c and there is no rc-- p "ii-- c. or she is told you have stepped out.It i.-- not only annoying to the pcru called, but others who 'arc waitinghave Ken delayed in securing the circuit.

If yon MUST leave the telephone lieforc the call has been completed,piciK 11. tit'y "Long Distance" at what telephone you orm le called. Thisw ill pre. cut inconvenience to the pers n called and will (nn-rn- x the use oflong-di-tanc- c facilities.

I.ali si.bscril.cr is an essential factT in c:ood t.lepltr nc service, and we

piTt in the use of your telephone, and your fmndly nt'itnde towards ourwill greatly apjireciate during this year, as :;i the pa-t- , vour doing yourefforts to make the service the best possiM:.

Ourfliir sen.i

that of thefin ilil v Is H

ti nt o( lovrlrnriK on a

the eiitri'ii.

IYr nr." (1 r to,0 en h's seetif

fire'l nidio H r( get

- -- .. h

VA.of 1 r.

WASH.,1n' lO 3

An Intellectual."You often hear It snld that Mrs.

Gllthery bus all tho brains in theGlitb-er- y

family."Put Mr. Gllthery Is a successful,

business nan.""Oil. yes. However, he merely makes

money. While sipping tea and sinok- -

IBtffjriTiiWgaKMKaTggalILL.

IND.L 'fe

MONT II.Economy.

"Here is a fine tonic which will

quickly bring buck-yo-ur husband's

"Dear me, doctor. I've been gettingalong so tine with my market money

e (n C

.Mil-- -" so,-

eon Ills int'eidull del in ((

niot'iM con t r l

r.olc!' Tctn

oi.olir.Ing a perfumed cigarette, Mrs. Gllth-

ery can discuss more abstruse ques-tions that have noibing to do with

WIS.

WO.ARi.

CAL.

housework, or the uphring'ng of theC.litberr twins than any oilier woman ' since he lost his appetite." Uostoutn her set." r.irmini;hum i Transcript.

MINN.

ummmtieKntH Ji. 41 I "BWVj..r

III mi IIMVIM

74

By the Way -I OA HO

St If in.Thick h'hi h y..ii' . tve" : cl out hal

you want, what , ri, "wlit reliedpiHitile otith; to pay to von. hht (

pie tliiel of yon : and then m yoo noifc.1" nill Iw pure. - I arhn KlnKley.

N MEX.

NEB.

The Compromise."Does your wife object to youi

playing golfT""No, we've made a compromise.""That sor"Yep. She's perfectly willing to havt

me play the game, hut she insists onmy not talking about It after I gethome."

COLO.

ALA.

Blocks tasi'y Removed.A prominent tradesman In south-

west londiffi expostulated with a gangof road repairers regarding a smallmountain of wood Mocks dumped infront of his premises.

The protect lielng Ignored, hestuck a card, bearing the

Inscription : Tlease take one." on theoffending heap.

The philanthropic suggestion was

quickly acted on by passers-by- . andmore than half the blocks had disap-peared before a vigilant policeman re-

moved the' card. London Express.

Are von taking advantage of our reduced Evening and Night Rates?Bitween 8:30 p. tn. and midnight, station-to-statio- n calls that is, callsfor numlicrs only and not for a particular peron are OXE-IIAL- F theday rate. IVtwecn midnight and 4:30 a tn. stnh calls are OXE-FOURT- II

the day rate.

Adversity SweetenedWhen a fat erToi! m.vn imo'lfr

otimli oho tn fatt.t 'hei. h i n.fbegins to notice the nn is tiiiiinj;and that it t e .ivii .hit. Ark auviaTbotiia"

OA

OAK.

. OAK.British After Trade.

British merchants are planning ex-

hibitions In large cities of China tsrecover their commercial position lostduring the war. j

TOTAL

Softie tetrious teiIdle.- -'

Hair Used hi Building ChurchesAt one time the Japanese made

Favor Independent inquiry.When a new family mmo Into a

Beiglilorhnd Its head ooiiht to give abiocraphleal sketHi of each meiulier te

TRY THESE RATES ON YOUR TELEPHONE.

The Mountain States Telephone and

Telegraph Company

0t human balr in building churches. It J

A Musical Dieovrry.A laree quamii) of rusty plfiii

wire, rays a new Item has heen foundin a valuable milk at Ihrnton

There Is hiqie that the Timethe Cow Pled of" may now be posi-

tively Identified. Pnneh I guidon.

tbe neighbors, hi tlie latter iton'l haveto worry about miuorn. ToleocBlade.

How Bif New York Grocery FnKeeps Dewa Rats

Vroome A Co Batter ft CfceettMerchants, New York Gty. saya"We keep RAT-SNA- P fa owr cetlaisit the time. It keeps down ratsWe bay it by the cross, woald sjosbe without it." Farmers RAT-SNA- P

because rats pass p alt toedfor RAT-SNA- Three sites35c. 65c, $125. Sold and gxutt-antee- d

by Collins Dnt ft StatioaeryCo, and Kaune Grocery Co.

First Battle Armor.

was tbe caston for church going peo-

ple te give some of their hair as afree-wil-l offering when a temple wasbelnf built. Such a structure at Toklobad tbe beams and rafters held in

place by one of these human haircables. Placed end on end this humanbalr rope measured 42S feet long andstem Inch la dianMXer do fewerthan SRO.000 pernus contributing be-fa-re

nftViect e;uanUty , was obtained.

Gambeaoa was the armor ed bthe anrlent, RsTpttana. It was coea-notw-

of layers of rlotb and tern, at

Orria Fevnd Only Twe Zone.Orrla root, which la ows a ba4(

af many perfume In nhrnined onlyI round fTontn-- e and In tie neighboraood of Verona

a similar material quilted so ran rat atlee ther.

I DAIRY I

I POINTSCOFFIN OF ATTILA

Burial Place of the Great Hun

Leader Reported Found.

When Lovely Woman Gave Up Faintingand Took Up Smoking Instead.

BULL ASSOCIATIONS GAININGBy G. BERNARD SHAW, English Man of Letters.

narkness. It became Increasingly like-

ly Hint Wliisperfoot world have to re-

tire to bis lair without any uiealwhatever.

1'. ut still he remained, hopingagainst hope. After a futile fifteenminutes of watching a trull, ha hearda doe feeding on u hillside. Its foot-

fall was not so heavy us the sturdytramp of a buck, and besides, thebucks would be higher on the ridgesthis time of morning. lie began u cau-

tious advance toward It.For the lirst fifty yards the hunt

was In his favor. He came up wind,and the brush made a perfect cover.Hut the doe unfortunately was stand-lu- g

a full twenty yurds farther, In auopen glade. I'mler ordinary circum

Ill MM

IL ofthe mlIf JR-CCI-

K. M

I .

Tradition as to Final Resting Place of"Scourge of God" Seems to

have Been True.

A correspondent of the LondonTimes reports the discovery in south-ern Hungary of what urcheologistadeclare is the coffin of Attlla theHun. known to the Christian nationsof the Fifth century us "'the Scourgeof Cod." The find was made In thebed of the Aranka river, u small tribu-tary of the Tlieiss hetweeu the towusof S.egedin and Teiuesvar.

Tills discovery seems to support

Masculine affectations were always a mistake.

During tha movement for the liberal education ofwomen and their admission to the professions, thefollowers of John Stuart Mill and Henry Fawcett cuttheir hair short, put on men stilf collars and cravats,wore waistcoats and shirtfroiita and watchchains, andmade themselves mannish above the waist while re-

maining quakerish below it.The counter-moveme- nt has not balanced itself yet

It culminated in the campaign of the suffragets, which

In Count-U- p for Last Fiscal Year anIncrease of 57 Par Cent Is Noted

More In South.

In the count-u- p of bull associationsfor the last fiscal year made by thedairy division of the United States De-

partment of Agriculture, associationsare found all over the country. Thereare now 123, where there were only78 the year before. This is an In-

crease of 57 per cent. Thirty of the48 states In the union are on the list.

Associations are not equally numer-ous In all states, however, for fourAlabama. Pennsylvania. Mississippi

b aura X wlmwsl lua

stances, Wliisperfoot would not havemade an attack. A cougar can runswiftly, but a deer Is light Itself. Thebig cut would have preferred to linger,n motionless thing in the thickets,hoping some other member of the deerherd to which the doe must have be--

longed would come Into his ambush.Hut the hunt was lute, and Whisper- -

was conducted with extraordinary violence and resisted with frantic sav-

agery. But before it broke into volcanic eruption it had obliterated thetlifc persistent tradition regarding thegreat Hun leader's burial which haslived for almost l.ntKl yeurs. His deathoccurred soon after bis Invasion ofItaly mid on the night of Ills marriage.His body was carried ncross southernAustria nt the head of his unity andIn Hungary, at a spot which waski.ovvn only to a few of his chief off-

icers, the ellipse was inclosed in threecoIllns, the first of gold, the secotjd ofsilver, nnii the third or iron, ana

Umg shriek of pain. Of course theydidn't lltfht often. They had entirelyapposite interests. The heur was a

berry enter and u honey-jiruhtie- andthe concur cared too much for his wnlife nnd beauty to tackle Woof in ahunting way.

A fawn leaped from the thicket Idfront of Iilin, si ii rt led hy Ills sound Inthe thicket. The truth wits, Whisper-foo- t

hail ntaile a wholly unjilslilieilmisstep on a dry twig. Just at thecrucial moment. Perhaps It wan thefault of Woof, whose presence huddriven Wliisperfoot from the trail,ami perhaps because old life and stiff-

ness was I'uiiiini; upon him. Itutneither of these facts appeased hismifi r. lie could scarcely suppress u

siinrl of fury and disappointment.lie continued nliitif the rlilfc, still

KtenlliiK. still alert, hut his linger In

buried. The captives who were asA Bull Should Be Selected to Improvetha Dairy Qualities of the Herd He signed to the task of burying t Ik body

were strangled In order Hint theIs to Head.

foot was very, very ungry. Tiki manytimes this night he hud missed hiskill. In desperation, he leuped fromthe thicket and charged the deor.

In spite of the preponderant oddsagainst him, the charge was almost usuccess. He went fully half the ins-

tance between them before the deerperceived blm. Then she leaped.There seemed to be no Interlude oftime betMi-e- the instant that she be-

held the dim, tawny figure in the i

that In which her long legs pushedout In n spring. Itut she didn't leapstraight ahead. She knew enough ofthe cougars to know that the greatcat would certainly nlm for her headnnd neck In the same way that a duck-hunt-

leads a fast-flyin- g duck hop-

ing to Intercept her leap. Even as herfeet left the ground she seemed towhirl in the air, and the deadly talonswhipped down In vain. Then, cutting

place of the interment might lie keptand South Carolina furnish nearly u secret from Attlla's foes.half of the total. The number of associations found In each of these four

I'or centuries there has been agreat fascination In the search forrelics of the Huns, for it was thought

WHISPEFlFOOT.

Synopsis WurneJ by I'1 phyi-du- n

tliut he l.iia nut inure ttimi l

months to livf, lutn Fulling Hitson h purK bt'neh, won-ilerl-

where lie bhuillj upend lliiwehi inoiillis. Mt'iimrU-- s of Ills Kraiul-I'hiI-

ttnd u uVt'U love for ulltl:mm of tha wild ln-l- him Inre.n IiIiik a division. n a luruhouilti'in on-wo- city hu mtietspeopln who hud known and lovedhlu unjndtiithiT, a fiimouH

IIh ni.ikes hit home withSil.ia Lennox, a typlrul westerner.The ohlv older meniheia of theliousrhoM are I.i'Iiihik'h Mill, "lllll,"an. I ii.i mjhlir, "Simwhircl." Theiruli.nl.. Ih In the L'lnpiiua divide, andthere J'allir. plans to live out theshort siian ot life whk-l- he hash. old Is his. Krorn the firstI' .tiling's hi'sltli shows a markedIniprovt'ttii-nt- , and III the loiniian-lonshi- p

of Li'tinox and his son andil.tiiKhler he tits into the woods lifeas If he I. .i.l heeii horn to It. Kyipilrk thlnklne, and remarkahleihsplay of "nerve" lis saves 's

life and his n when theyare altu'ked hy enad coyote.Lennox fle.'Iares M Is a

of his grandfather, lianI, whose Lint as a woodsman

Is a household wf'd. I 'an learnsth.it an organized btnd of oiillaws,of which Kelt I'mnston is theleader, is settlnij foist llres. Lan-dry JIIMieth. a f'lriier niemher ofttie vanK. has heell Ihdlieed to turnst.ite's eviileiM'e. Cranston shootsHildreth and leave him for dead.

states Is as follows: Alabama, 7;Pennsylvania, 21; Mississippi, 11; and that they might throw- - some light uponSouth Carolina, 17. Three of these

would-b- e manly women. Tha suffragets insisted on their womanlinessmuch more consciously and strenuously than the Victorian women.

The manly phase, however, had established toleration for practiceswhich, though formerly confined to men, were really as proper or im-

proper to women as to men. For instance, women gave up crying andfainting, and took to swearing and smoking.

When my mother formed her habits, smoking by women, or even intheir presence, was unheard of. There was not even a smoking room inthe house. Men went down to the kitchen late at night and smoked upthe cliimnej. When women discovered that the toleration and even thepractice of smoking was the price of male company, they first tolerated andthen practiced. The habit is one of the most extraordinary aberrationsof our civilization, imposed on us as it was by the redskin at the climaxof the Renascence. Men were always a little ashamed of it, and were ac-

tually heading for its renunciation when women gave it an enormous im-

pulse and made it quite shameless. . In the nineteenth century wo could

hope smoking might disapjiear in the twentieth. Now people who donot smoke have to choose between stale tobacco and social ostracism.

As refinement was supposed to be proper to women and roughnessproper to men fifty years ago, the great increase in companionship be-

tween men and women during that jieriod was bound either to refine themen or roughen the women. It has done both. The feminine refinement,which was only silliness disguised by affection, has gone, and women arehardier and healthier, and the stock sizes of their clothes ara larger incousequence.

The masculine vigor that was only boorishness, slovenliness and neg-lect of person and clothes has fled before feminine criticism. But thegeneralization that women arc refined and men rough by nature is a super-ficial one, holding good only when, as often happens, the man's occupationis rougher than the woman's.

these strange, utmost unknown AsiaticInvaders of Europe. The countryleading states are in the cotton belt.

Dairying Is comparatively new in thatpart of the country, and the men go-

ing into the business are building on

along the Aranka river and aroundSxcgcdln has been Industriously

creasing with every moment. The factthat he had to leave the trail iifitlti to

permit still another animal to pass,and u particularly insignlllcunt onetoo, didn't make him feel tiny better.

the right foundations from the start.searched for evidence of their successes in Europe.

Some rare and beautiful gold vesOne of the Important foundations ofeffective and lucrative dairying Is co-

operation, and the extension workcarried on by the dairy division nnd

sels have been unearthed In this re-

gion. These relics are preserved amongtlte Hnpsliurg treasures. While thesehave been Identified as belonging toby the various state agricultural colsome of the peoples of the eurly ml

buck in front, she raced down wind.

It Is usually the most unmitigatedfolly for n cougar to chase a de.ragainst which he has missed hisstroke; and It Is also quite fatal to hisdignity. And whoever doubts for aminute that the larger creatures haveno dignity, and that It Is not very deorto them, simply knows nothing aboutthe ways of animals. They cling toit to the death. Hut tonight one dis-

appointment after another had crum

leges has been the means of Introduc-

ing efficient methods nt the outsetwherever dairying Is tuken up In theSouth.

griitioii from the East they havenot been proved definitely to have be-

longed to the Huns. The latest find Isthus especially noteworthy ; not onlyIs It the most valuable, but at thesnme time It Is the most sought after

Pennsylvania Is andairy state, but has taken to the bull'association Idea In a remarkahle man'ner, and has In fuct the largest num-ber of all.

of all the Hun treasures.bled, us the rains crumble leaves, the

This animal had a number of curiousstripes along his hack, and usually did

nothing more desperate than stealeggs and cat bird Ileilgllngs. Whisper-foo- t

could have crushed him with onebile, but this was one thing that thegreat cat, as long as he lived, wouldnever try to do. lie got out of theway politely when Strlpe-bnc- k wasMill a quarter of a mile away; whichwas quite a compliment to the littleitiiiiiinl's ability to introduce himself.Slrlpc hiick was familiarly known asu skunk.

Shortly after ten, the mountain Honluiil a remarkably fine chance at ubuck. The direction of the wind, thetrees, the thickets mid the light wereall In his favor. It was old Iilticktall,wallowing in the salt lick; and

heart hounded when he de-

tected him. No Ii u i n ii ii hunter couldhave laid his plans with greater care.He had to cut up the side of the ridge.

last vestige of Whlsperfoot's self-co-

trol. Snarling In fury, lie boundedafter the doe. MOLASSES FOR DAIRY STOCK

The memory of Attlln nnd hisbitmls of savage barbarians was re-vived dining the World war, Thedevastation they wrought In the hindsover which they swept seemed to fur-nish the only apt comparison for the

She was lost to sight nt once Inthe darkness, hut for fully thirty yards Especially Valuable Whers Cows Arthe raced in her pursuit. If he hadstopped to think, It would have been "The Great Puritan Emigration Was

Not the Foundation of America."desolation left by the modern Invader,The people of central and southeastone of the really great surprises of

his life to hear the sudden, unmis ern Europe would question today Ifthe ravages of their country by thetakable stir and movement of a large,

living creature not fifteen feet distant Fifth century Huns left In their trull By GILBERT K. CHESTERTON, British Essayist.us much suffering nnd sorrow as wereIn the thicket.left by the World war.He didn't stop to think t.t all. He

didn't puzzle on the extreme unllkellWhatever the great Puritan emigration was it was emphatically notImportant Medical Discovery.

Croat possibilities have been sughood of a doe halting in her flight froma cougar. It Is doubtful whether. In

CHAPTER I Continued.

lor when til things lire Mi hi milllone, there were frw bigger cowards

tn' llii' whole wilderness world tlutnWhNpcrf out. A good iiiiniy peoplellilnl; Hint Cmvcoitt t lie coyote

iilil t:ilo lessons from Iilin In litisrespect. Knt others, knowing how atinnier In brought In occiislonnlly withutmost nil Iiiiiiuiii reseinliliiiice goneinMii Iilin licriiiisc ii coiigur charged inM ili'iitli Hgmi.v, think this Is unfairto llif larger iiniiiinl. Ami it is truetint ii full frown cougar will smite-- t

lines attack horned cattle, somethingHull mi American ntiiiiiiil cares tc (Inunless In- - wim I a pom I fight on Ills

paws ii it I of which the very though;would throw (irayeont Into u spasm;mid there have been even strangerHlorli'S. if line I'otllil iiiltt believeiIiimii. A certain measure of respectmust he extended to any iinliual t lift

uill limit the front hull elk, for tomiss the stroke mill got I'll 11 flit be-

neath the churning, lushing, slashing,mnor-edgc- front hoofM Is simplylentil, painful anil without ilelny. Hut

i lie dlHIctilty lies In the fact that the?t hint's n r-- not ilmie In the onllnary,rational IiIimmI of hunting. What tiniitiluinl lines In its ilenth agony, or toprotect Its young, what front game It

follows in the starving tlnn's of win

the thickets, he bad nny perceptions gested by tlie method of making newblood discovered by Dr. W. J. lVnfuldof the creature other than Its moveof the Australian Commonwealth Se

the foundation of America. The Puritan emigration was not even thefoundation of English America, as distinct from Spanish America. Atleast a whole generation before the Calvinist quarrels, one of the adven-

turous antagonists of Spanish America had established the first defiant

frontiers of English America. Italeigh and the Elizabethans gave to their

ments. He was running down wind,rum Institute, London. In preparingso It Is certain that be didn't smell It.

Not Permitted to ExerciseReplaces Green Feed,

One of the helps of the livestockfeeder which Is being used more gen-

erally every day Is the crude, or lowgrade, molasses from a sugar mill.The value of the feed has been foundto be not only In the actual nutritioncontent, as Indicated hy the analysis,but because of Its quality not exact-ly succulency, but akin to that whichmakes It an appetizer. Especially IsIt valuable where the cows are notpermitted to run on pasture or wherethey are not permitted to exercise.The molasses acts both as a digesterand tonic nnd takes the place of greenfeed which tends to keep the cowshealthy and Increases all their normalfunctions, such as the milk producingpowers. Then, too, dniry cows whichare confined In small areas often losetheir appetites, and w hen they do milkproduction naturally drops off. Hyadding a little molasses to the rationthey will regain their appetites and be.sides ent more than they did withoutthe molasses, which of course In-

creases their milk production.

llphthcrlu and other serums, theplasma or fluid of the blood drawn

colony a magnificent Elizabethan name, however little it may have been

merited by Elizabeth. But whether or no its origin was worthy of it, itsfrom horses has been separated lifterthe red corpuscles have settled, andthe bitter have been thrown awuv.

If be snw It at ull, it was just as n

shadow, sulllclently largo to be thatof a deer. It was moving, crawling asWisif the bear sometimes crawled,seemingly to get out of his path. And

Wliisperfoot leaped straight at It.It was a perfect shot. He landed

Conceiving that this practice might history was wholly worthy of it. Nothing in the American story has been

more truly heroic or humane, more truly fitted to last among men as alegend, than the story of what we may still be tempted to call the great

be Improved, Doctor Penfleld returnedthe red corpuscles Into the veins of ahorse that bad been bled. The resultof this Injection was an astonishingipiickenlng of the formation of newblood, and, while the normal average

nation cf Virginia.It is s commonplace to say that Virginia was the very throne of the

authority of the Revolution. From Virginia came Washington, its hero,and Jefferson, its prophet. The state was known as the Mother of Presi

of blood In a horse Is .'IS quarts. Itwas found that M quarts In a weekcould ls drawn from the animal with-out lessening vitality more than theusual smaller bleeding. The compo

dents. It was felt as a sort of council chamber of the Fathers of the Re-

public. Not to follow its pivotal political history through a thousandother things, it is enough to say tliat, in the Civil war, the adherence of,

Virginia to the side of local patriotism, which happened to be the losing

high on Its shoulders. Ills head lasheddown, and the white teeth closed. Allthe long life of his rme he had knownthnt pungent essence that flowed forth.His senses perceived It, a messageshot along Ids nerves to his lira In. Andthen be opened his mouth In a high,

g squeal of utter, uhjectterror.

He sprang a full fifteen fwt backInto the thickets; then crouched. Thehair stood still at bis shoulders, hisclaws were bared ; he was preparedto fight to the death. He didn't under-stand. He only knew the worst singleterror of his life. It was not a dissthat be had attacked In the darkness.It was not I'rson the porcupine, oreven Woof. It was that ltnerliil mas-

ter of all things, man himself. I'tv.

knowlng, he had attacked l.nndy Hil-

dreth, lying wounded from Cranston'sbullet beside the trull. Word of thearson ring would never reach the set-

tlements, after all.

side, was certainly the fact which almost turned it into the winning side.

sition of the blisid was not materiallyaffected. Following the first eier.niei.t, the red corpuscles have beenreturned to the entire or 40 horsesbled In the institute, and the effect Isthe sunn- - In ull.

In Virginia, in the dark hour, arose the greatest of American generals,who was, perhaps, the noblest of Americans. I really can not imagine why

ter, ran lie put to neither It ileliltnor Its rroillt. A coyote will chargeylien mini. A rinvooii will put up a

wicked llflit when contereil. A henwill peck at the luiml Hi it mlm hernest. When hmitlnir was fairly rimmI,VVhlsKrfoot avoliled the elk ami steernl'tiost as punctiliously as lip nvnhlcilmen, which Is miylni; very inticli in- -

ami liny kltul of terrier couhltisutilly drive hltn Ktmlclit up a tree.

Hut he iliil like to pretend to heTery ureal and terrlhlu ntnotii; thevinaller forest And he wn

fear Itself to the i1iht. A litlliltinliunter who would kill two deer aweek for fifty-tw- weeks would heciilied n lunch tiL'ller name tlitin poach- -

a history which begins with Raleigh and ends with Lee, and incidentallyDeludes Washington, should be utterly swept aside and forgotten in favor

of a few sincere, but limited, who happened to quarrelwith Charles I.

LIBERAL FEEDING URGED

Dairy extenslonlsts and au-thorities at University farm, St.Paul, Minn., are agreed that apolicy of liberal feeding withdairy cattle Is profitable andshould he pursued wherever cir-cumstances make It possible.The Importance of adequatefeeding has been shown timeand time again. In one in-

stance which may now be cited,feeding costs were Increased Ina year from $o3 per cow to $S3,but the Income from each cowIncreased from $129 to J218 Inthe same interim, so that foran extra expenditure of $.'!

profits were Increased $89 percow.

Full Twenty Yards Farther.

mindful of the wind. Then there wpsa long dense thicket in which Vc

tr; toit yet mis nun Peon M tip pertool's ns'ord. on mid off, ever uliice "Conservation Phase of St Lawrence

Improvement Is Most Important"

Lightship's Perilous Voyage.Ships were linM-iilei- l when Nantuck-

et SIiihiIcs beacon, the leading markfor transatlantic shipping making portat New York, was torn from its lone-

ly and Important station by a hurri-cane. After inquiry from severalships that missed the floating beaconand almost anxious search hy a wire-less combing of the sens, the mysteryof the lightship's dlsapNarance wassolved when she put In ot New Hert-ford. The lightship bad been thirty-si- x

hours making xrt on a run of HMJ

mile. The liurrlcnne. which blew l.eraway and snapped the moorings,reached a velocity of ninety mile anhour. Mate L. O. Johnson, her keep-er, said that It was much as lie andtils fifteen men could do to hold theirown. Light vessel are not built forspeed, and their emergency equlpnieutIs not often called on.

j Sstting a forest fir.

TI HK I'U.NTINl KI.)By H. C GARDNER, Great Lakes-S- t Lawrenca Tidewater Au'n.

CULTURELAND OFPERSIAWINTER ATTENTION TO MILK

Has Been a Favored Region From theVery Earliest Age Capital

Beautiful in Ruin.inUnusual Care Should Be Exercised

Washing All Tin UtensilsUsed in Dairy.

might approach within fifty foot ofthe tick, still with the wind In h'--iface. .lust beside the lick was anotherihs'p thicket, from which be couldmake hi leap.

Ills body lowered. The tall lashedback and forth, and now It bad begunto have a slight vertical motion thatfrontiersmen have learned to watchfor. He placed every paw with con-

summate grace, and few sets of hu-

man nerves have sulllcleiit controlover leg muscles to move with suchastonishing patience. He scarcelyseemed to move Ht all.

lint when HCRi-ccl- y ten fis't re-

mained to stalk, a udd-- soundpricked through the darkness. It camefrom afar, but It was no less terrible.It was really two sounds, so close to-

gether that they sounded as one.NeitlM-- r Klacktafl nor Whlsorfoothad any delusions alsiut them. Theyrecognized them at once, in strangeways muter the skin that no man maydescrlls". i the far-of- f report of a

Persia rank among the foremost ofancient nation that have exercised the

tils year. Many a preat Imckwore the enr of the full stroke aft-er wlthh WhlsisTfisit had lost Msheld Many fawn had crouchedpnntltij with terror in the thickets ntJust a ttiwtty llcht on the ciinrled lltntiif h jiitie. Mativ ii doe would prow

eed nnd terrified at Just hi

fctnuiEc. putii'eiit micll on the wind.

Me yawned nfttiti. and III f tinesI.h.I, oil white and nhfiormally Inrce In

the iiusitillflit. Ills crciit, ereen eyin,(,.ro still clouded nndfrotti shsp. Then he Isncnii to steal

tip the rldfe toward his liiintliicrriopids. It was a curious thine thatlie wtilked -- tralcht In the face of thesoft wind that ':i!ne down from themiow fields, and yet there wasn'tweathercock In lie sis-- anywhere. Andticlf.ier had the cliipuiiitik wen himwet paw id hold It tip. after thenpproved fashion of holdine up fin-ce- r.

lie had a way of knowingn chill at the nd of his whisker.The little, breathless: nieht sounds

In the brush around liiin aoctiicd to

Bird Student's ParadiM.greatest Influence on the fates of ElThe winter care of milk calls for un-

usual care in washing all tin thingsused. In summer It is easier to keepclean ; we have the sunshine to help

The farmers and industries of the whole region that if nearer to theGreat Lake than to our salt water port will reap the advantage of lower

transjKtrtation costs from the improvement of the St. Lawrence. Her-

bert Hoover estimated thii at a saving' of certainly 6 cents per bushel onwheat, and it will be correspondingly as much on other grains. More

than 90 per rent of the many thousand of ton of meat products, lardand animal oils exported from this country annually are produced in theCentral West, and on every pound a large saving could be made by load-

ing into ships at our lake porta.The people of northern New York and New England will be bene-

fited even more than their western brethren, for they will not only have

the improved transportation by water, but will have elcctnic power fordistribution to every city, town and farmstead. Their trunk line rail-

way can be electrified, and they can banish the coal famine specter.

rojie. It has been a region of culturefrom the earliest age, where traces of

the world s greatest purifier. So muchthe more reason why we should placeextra stress on using hot water andsoap, with good pure cold water for

the pure religion of Zerdusht whichhe brought among the nations fromMount AllKinll, may still be recog-nized.

The people who Inhabit the southernside of the great ridge of hills havealways displayed greater inventivepower and greater constancy in pre

rinsing.

HAVE GOOD PUREBREDS ONLY

In Andean Colombia, according toa report recently made by an expedi-tion sent out by the American Museumof Natural History, there are to befound no less than 1.1.10 specie ofland birds. This 1 a larger numberthan ha been checked up In thelolled States, Canada and Greenland.The Inhabitants of this Colombianblrdland are largely non migratory, forIn this part of the Andes may he foundthe tropical, temperateand alpine cones. The bird studentmay observe Kpecitncn that would or-

dinarily lie scattered over a very largeterritory, with varying climatic condi-

tions, by simply emulating to some ex-tent the youth In the poem "Excelsior."

rifle. Just tiay l.iackt.ni had seenIds doe fall bleeding when this same Pedigree Don't Amount te Much Un

turxl. only louder. sske from a let Daughter Are Better ThanTheir Dam.covert from which I(ert Cranston hadmadilen him. They made a one to

Mm. a strance. wild melnly that venmhIi frontlersmi'n as IHid and Len-

nox could not eierlcnce. A thousandnie'.ls bruslie.1 down to hltn on tn;

wind, more potent than any wine orlnt. He lieean to tremble all overwith rapture and eiHtement nut un-

like Crntoo" trembline. no wilder-n- e

ear w as keen enonrh to bear theleaves rustling lieneath him.

No stock-raise- r should be satisfiedtin til he has the service of purebredaires for his farm ; not merely a pore-bre-

but a productive purebred. Ped-

igrees don't amount to anything nnlessa sire can produce daughter better

But fundamentally the conservation phase of the St Liwrence im-

provement is most important of alL Where on our own continent i therea region that ii not vitally interested in a development that will everyyear for all future time save ns from tha need to bum millions of tonsof our "black diamonds" and use instead the "white coal" that a bened-ce- nt

Providence has laid at onr doorstep?Some good judges estimate that within a decade or two, after the

power demand shall have grown to meet the (apply, this annual coal

saving will amount to 100,000,000 tons.

Leu Small, Governor-Ele- ct of IUinois Cheaper materials or boroad construction. It will be the immediate purpose of the new adminis-tration to beat down the present price of materials an that the broadest

policy of construction of the road system, under the $60,000,000 bond .

issue program ran be carried into early effect.

serving their Institutions than thetrilM-- s who dwell to the northward.The former they owe to the ease andleisure afforded them by a most pro-

pitious climate and by their settledhabits, not being prompted by a rest-

less pirlt to a migratory life.The remains of the ancient Persian

capital. Percpolls, as well as theEgyptian, The. and the ruins on thehigher peninsula of India, bear the ex-

pression of majestic grandeur and nfa desire to hand down to futurityeternal feelings of certain great truthsor remarkable events. These elevatedfeelings are not doe to climate, his-

torians claim, pointing te the samecountries today where, instead of sim-

plicity and grandeur, a fondness forsingularity and false refinement Is nowdisplayed. Detroit News.

than their danta.

Plan Farm Work Ahead.Most of the things put off until to-

morrow should have been done yester-day. A careful planning of work thiswinter will enable yon next spring todo today's Job today.

poached her and he left the lick Inone bound.

Terrified though he was by the rifleshot, still WhlsperfiKit sprang. Itutthe distance was too far. His out-

stretched paw hummed down fourfeet behind Blacktall's flank. Thenforgetting everything hot Lis angerand disappointment, the great cougaroned his mouth and howled.

The bsng olcht was almost donewhen he rot sight of further game.Once a flock of grouse exploded witha roar of wings from a thicket; butthey had beea wakened by the firstwhisper of dawa In the wind, and hereally bad no chance at them. a Soonafter this, the moon set.

The larger creatures of the forestare almost as helpless in alnwlntedarkness as human brings. It is verywell to talk of seeing la the dark, hotfrom the natare of things, even vertl-c- l

pnplls may only respond to lightKa ow l r hat can see in absolute

Falling Manna.Nobody bad ever seen the laziest

man in the Texas oil fields do a strokenf work, yet he already had a fewdeep holes bored In his land and wasconfidently predicting that some dayhe wonld strike nil.

"How d'ye do It, Itilir asked anelch1or. "Te sit around rersll day and next mniin' ye got a newhole as deep as any of nsT"

"It's by the grace of iod and theWrit-li-t brothers." the laziest man con-flile-

"The air passenger route toMexico insnes right over my place andpretty tiear every day they threw abum off the aerial express." Ameri-can Icgtoo Weekly. ,

CHAPTER II.

Shortly after nine Vlork. Whisper-foo- tencountered his first herd of deer.

Rut the ranrbt Id acent and acat-ter- ei

before he could (ret tip to them,lie met Woof, fronting through theimiV-rtwns- and he ptmctllbrnsly. butwith wretched spirit, left the trail. Aflc.t with Woof the hear wa one ofthe most ofpleasant eiperienoea that

be imagined, lie bad a pair ofstroc f arms of which one endwacr f

BiOEsr's 1y meant nVth in one

Birds Cheek Insect Life.Birds have a definite place to fin in

the economy of nature. They are theprlnokpal check on Insect life.More people would avoid getting In-

to the fire If they had sense enought keep out of the frying pan.

D. B. Waldo, President Michigan State Normal College There are1,638 teachers in Illinois who have not graduated from high school.There are 1,514 more who only. graduated, from the elementary schools.The cause of this is poor salaries, which hart driven good teachers oatof the schools.

Sign of Prosperity. '

Well painted buildings art a ti ofprosperity.

Cmbrellss are great Malfers; it'scase of pot ap or shot up with theia.

iMraovtD umrouf wteimtioiihTWO YEARS TfceKitrhen INVITING SPRING

SUITS ARRIVEi

to be who In the higher ranks of thediplomatic corps after March 4 nextI'resldent-elec- t Harding will appointnew ambassadors to Great Britain,France, Italy and Japan, and to sev-

eral other countries of not quite sohigh a rank, as rank goes among thenations of the world.

Under the scale of salaries paid toambassadors and ministers represent-ing this country In foreign lands, noone but a rich man can be consideredfor apM)lntiuent to any one of theplaces. The ambassador to Great Brlt-ul- n

sis-nd- It Is said, and necessarilysisMids, $100.0)10 a year over and abovethe salary of $17,000 which I'ncle Sam

pays him. Ambassadors and minis-ters to other countries "s)iend lu pro-

portion."It Is remarked on as curious today

that a man. Frank U. Lowden of Illi-

nois, who hus been mentioned as apossible ambassadorial appointee, wasthe man who, when a representativeIn congress some years ago, tried hisbest to get a bill through, providingfunds for the building of residencesfor our ambassadors and ministersabroad. The bill failed of passage,although It was admitted then, as ItIs admitted today, thut If I'ncle Samwants to send men abroad who haveevery ijiiuliticHtion for ambassadorialoffice except thnt of wealth, It oughtto he possible fur him to do so.

It is said that the house lu whichone of our ambassadors lived in Lou-

don cost $.'0,000 a year for Its mererental. It takes a lot of door men,maids and general factotums to runa house like this, and the wages of thewhole stuff must be paid, like the rent,out of the pocket of the bead of thehouse. Thu ambassador who balancesup at the end of tho year und finds

1 h '!

THEKITCHENCABINET

lfurn Nfwmir rnfoii t

Let me laugh for the pure Joy of liv-

ing.Let me laugh like a child at his play.And the heart of the race will reserve

me a place. Aud be gliid that 1 traveled this way.

-- Liddell.

FEEDING THE FAMILY.

The children of the family, beingthe most IrniMirtant members as to

proH-- r reeding,may follow theriii Kngllsli custom,which Is Ideal.

VcMrl of "ivhig a. ta- -

wTHL'ift ,lle ,,f ,,1,r mvn- -

any compromisebetween what they ought to have audwhat they want. The result is ofcourse sturdy, healthy youngsters. A

few American fumilies are now fol-

lowing this system, but the most asyet from necessity; others from Indif-

ference allow the children to eat withthe family, where they usually havewhat they cry for, for the sake ofpeace at the sacrifice of manners, mor-

als und physique.The average housemother cannot

run two sets of meals und serve litthe same time the needs of the youngand the desires of the old.

One muy restrict the diet of theelders to conform to the food whichshould be given the young for thetwo meals of the day, having dinnerat noon, or let the little people havesupper by themselves curlier than theevening dinner hour.

Children under five should never he

given food not suited lo their ageand condition. The problem then Isto serve meals which will he suitablefor the whole family for breakfastami luncheon, and neither unbalancednor Inadequate for either child orudult.

In the feeding of children considera-tion must be made In the difference

a child aud an adult. In com-

parison of size the child Is doing a

great ileal more work than the adult,but bis mi I urn) appetite win take careof I he amount of food needed to buildtho body and keep up energy. Thecblhi's food, because he hns to usemore, must be easily digested, morewholesome and be better balanced, ortiouble will follow.

Children should have fats, such ascream, butter and olive oil, all easilydigested. Plenty of fat. two minceof butter to u pound nf bread Is con-

sidered a normal amount a great fac-

tor in growth.When the child refuses to en' slop

feeding or give liquid diet, and consulta physician.

The child, fortunately, who has notbeen paniMrci, ibs's nut need u vari-

ety of fo I to stimulate the upieille,neither sanit's nor condiments; "hun-ger Is the Is-s- t sauce."

misused, n Idle hour wntt-In- s

to lie employed, bile baliiU wait-ing with no occupation. Ml and emptyminds with nothing; to think of these

re the mnln temptations lu evil, rillui that empty void, employ those va-

cant hours, occupy those Itstlevshands the world Is desperately Inneed tit earnest workers then evil willdfMtrt because II hus no place to en-

ter, because It Is conquered by giKd.I lean etunley.

GOOD THINGS FOR THE TABLE.

When the ordinary foods lose t beltI.tiTest try these:

Italian Round Steak.Put two pounds ofround steak and twoounces of liecf suetthroiaii a meat chop-

per; add of acupful of lirci.ilcriil.ihs,w a lcasHHitifiil of suit.

of a tassMui-fil- l

of one ta- -

of giuted onion, two well-be-

ten eggs; mix well anil formtogether Into balls the size of anegg. Simmer together one can of tientntocs, cue cupful of water, one onion,one clove of garlic, one green pep-- r

sliced tine, two chives, two tuhlcsMHnfills of butter, one tcr.spnonful of salt,a small pinch of bay leaf; after nu-

lla If hour press I brunch a sieve. He-

len! In s shallow dish; when boilinglay In the bulls, cover mid simmer onehour. Have ready two-third- s of a

package of elbow macaroni cooltdtender In salted wster, drained andrinsed In water. Lift the meat ballsfrom the dish to the center of the serv-

ing dish, surround the meat with themacaroni, xitir the wunf over themacaroni, then sprinkle with half acupful of grated cheese. Garnish withrings of green pep,ier.

Jellied Fruit Salad. Soften oneounce, or two and one-hal- f tahlcjHHn-fills- ,

of gelatin In half a cupful ofwater, and dissolve In one cupful ofboiling water; add two-third- s of a cupful of sugar, the Juice if half a lemon, one capful of pineapple Juice, andstir nntll the sugnr Is dissolved; setthe liquid Into a dissi of Ice wster. andwhen It begins to thicken stir In sixslice of canned plnenpple cut In smallWedge-shi- p bits and two-thlr- dj nf acupful of tokay grics cat In halvesand seeded. When the mixture Isthick enough to hold op tle fruit turnInto a mold or mallow pan. Whenready to serve nnmold and cut intoeight piece. Serve In crisp heartleaves of lettuce with dressing pouredover It. Sprinkle with nuts and

Species af Nuts Highly Valued,line nuts, which are tbe seeds of

several species of pines, are now fair-

ly common In tbe markets of our b!gcities. Pistachio are produced In Cali-

fornia on a considers hie scale. Tlieyhave long been pnred by confectionersfor their delicate flavor and st tractivegreea color. Tliey are small and notnnlike a bean m shape. The "lidiPnot ts really a dried fruit frnrmatedby a otrtllke shell. It somewhat re-

sembles a rslsj In flavor, lntrorimt-- 4

Into this count rr by tbe 1 bmene. It

baa already become quits well known.

SUNMTSOIOOL

LessoniBy REV. P. B. FITZWATER, D. D.

Teacher of English Bible In the MoodyBible Inatltute of Chicago.)

((e). 1S20. Western Newspaper Union.)

LESSON FOR JANUARY 30.

JESUS' OFFICIAL PRESENTATIONAS KING.

LESSON TEXT Matt. 21:1-4- '

GOLDEN TEXT-Bies- sed la he thateometh to the name of the Lord. Matt.

REFERENCE MATERIAL-Ma- tt. S:-- 34; Luke 18:29-4- John J2:12-- l; I Pt:u.PRIMARY TOPIC-T- he Story of a Won.

derful Procession.JUNIOR TOPIC A Wonderful Proces- -

lon.INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOPICHonoring Christ In Our Lives.YOUNO PEOPLE AND ADULT TOPICThe Lordship of Jesus: Its Meaning for

tilI. Th Preparation (vv.1. The sending of the disciples for

the ass (vv. Ho told them Justwhere to go to find It and told themhgw to answer the inquiry of the onewho owned It. This shows how perfectly our Lord knows our ways. Goduses unlikely and apparently lnslgnlfvrant things In the accomplishment ofbis purposes.

2. The fulfillment of prophecy (w.4, B). Some five hundred years beforethis Zeoharlah had mitdo this predietion. If the predictions of His firstcoming were thus literally fulfilledthere Is no alternative but to believethat those of His second coming willbe literally fulfilled. The predictionof Zecharluh 14:3-1- 1 will be Just asliteral as thnt of Zecharlah 9:9.

3. The obedience of the disciples(v. 6). The request may have seemed

strange and unreasonable, hut theyfully obeyed. True disciples will render full and glad obedience no matterhow strange the command may seem.

II. The Entrance of the King (vr.

1. The disciples put their garmentsupon the ass and set the Lord uponthem (v. 7). This art showed thnt (heyrecognized Him as their King (II Kings9:13).

2. The multitude. Some spread theirgarments In the way; others who hadno garments to spare cut downbranches and did the same with them,which was Just as acceptable to Illra.To give what we have and to do whatwe can Is all that He demands of us.

3. The city shaken (vv. 10, 11). Thiswas a stirring time, but one morestirring Is coming. That will he whenthe Lord comes In power and glory.

III. The King Rejected (vv.The Immedlnte occasion of this re-

jection was the cleansing of the tem-

ple. A like cleansing hnd been madesome two years before (John 2but the worldlings had gone back totheir old trode.

IV. The Nation Rejected by theKing (vv.

Having In this official presentationshown their unwillingness to receiveChrist, He turns from them tind byparables makes known their awful con-

dition.1. The bnrren fig tree cursed (vv.

It was on the morrow afterHis offlclnl presentation as Jesus wasreturning from Jerusalem thnt He ob-

served the unfruitful fig tree. Be-

cause of hunger He sought for figs,and finding none He caused to fullupon It a withering curse. This figtree full of leaves but barren of fruitIs a type of Israel. With Its leavesIt gave a show of life, but being desti-

tute of fruit It hnd no 'right to en-

cumber the ground. The nntlon thusstood like a mountain In the way ofthe gospel. He encouraged the dis-

ciples by showing them that If theybsd fnlth even this grent mountainshould not stnnd In their way.

2. The parable of the two sons (vv.Itoth sons were told by the

father to work In the vineyard. Theone, like the profligate publican, re-

fused outright to obey, but afterwardrepented and went. The other pre-tended willingness to obey, but In real-

ity did not. The first one representsthe publicans and harlots; the second,the proud Pharisees,priests and elders. The Lord declaredthat the publicans and harlots wouldgo Into the kingdom before them.

3. The parable of the householder(vv. ).

(1) The householder. This was Godhimself. (2) The vineyard. Thismeans Israel (see Isa. 5:1-7- ; Jer. 2:21 ;Is. 80 :8). The Lord went to particu-lar pains to gather out this nationand make It separate, bestowing pe-culiar favors upon It This vineyardso well kept and provided for did notbear fruit. (3) The husbandmen.These were the spiritual guides, theruler and teachers of Israel, the mem-bers of the sanhedrln. (4) The serv-

ants sent for the fruits of the vineyard. These were the various prophets whom God sent to the nation. Themaltreatment and rejection of theprophets Is fully aet forth In theScripture. They were beaten andkilled. (S) The Ron. He Is the LordJesus Christ God's only and belovedHon. He came Into their midst Theyknew Him to be the Son. but they did

'not receive His message nor bow toTils authority. They cast Him out ofthe vineyard and slew ITIm. They knewthis was Intended for them, no nowasked them for their own verdict uponrack villainous Ingratitude. He tookthe place of Judge and pronouncedJudgment upon them on the basis oftheir en verdict

Our Lord's Attitude,Think of our Lord' attitude toward

those who did Htm an Injury. Howtouchy most of as are, easily hart andquick to reseat the least encroachmentupon which we consider our lights.Paul wrote to the Christians In Ephe-ru- s

and mid: "Let all bitterness,wrath, and anger, and clamor, andevil speaking be put away from you,with an malice." He well knew thatthere were a lot of Christians mholacked the grace of good- - ill.

FOR LAWMAKERS

CONGRESSMEN ARE LIKELY TOBE KEPT IN WASHINGTON FOR

THAT LENGTH OF TIME.

EXTRA SESSION IN MARCH

Some of the Legislation Planned forPresent Session Probably Will Be

Postponed Tariff Revision Will Oc-

cupy Many Months.

By EDWARD B. CLARK.Washington. Congress probably

will sit almost uninterruptedly fortwo yeurs. This will be uppalling orpleasing to the Americuu public ac-

cording to the varying views of theIndividuuU making up Unit public.

Wheu one spcuks of continuous ses-

sions of congress the word "continu-ous" Is not to be taken literuily. Thepresent congress dies on March 4,and therefore there will be a breukuntil the new congretis is culled to-

gether, liut the breuk is not likelyto be a wide one. The chances lirethat the Sixty-sevent- h cougresg will beculled lu extraordinary sossiou notluter thun the third week in March.It will sit ultnost unquestionably untillate in the full. The second sessionof the Slxty-seveut- h congress, whichlu the first regular session, will beginnext December and Inasmuch us thesession beginning that mouth geuerullyla known us the long session becauseMarch 4 does not bring It to an end,the chances are thut it will runthrough until lute in tho full of 1022.

Why Is it considered probuble thatcongress will sit virtually uninterrupt-edly for such a length of time? Theanswer is easy. The program of leglslutlon which bus been laid down bythe leaders of the purty which Is aboutto come into power takes puges to con-

tain It. Thu Itcpuhllcuii leaders saythey Intend to undo much thut theDemocrats have done and to do manythings on their party's owu account.So It seeing thut the legislation, or attempted legiNlution, us war's after,inuth Is to take up as much time andas much debute as the war legislationItself.

Some Things May Be Postponed.At this short session of congress it

was proponed In addition to the pus-sag- e

of the appropriation bills to takeup partial tariff revision, the plans fordisarmament, measures to limit Immigration, legislation affecting the sol-

diers of the lute wur and several otherbills, but it seems probuble today thutsome of the things upon which Imme-diate action Is asked will be post-poned for consideration until the nextI'resldetit culls congress together in ex-

traordinary session In March,The Republicans will have com

manding majorities In both house andsenate utter March 4, und the WhiteHouse will be occupied by a Itopuldl- -

can president. With all governmentalpowers ill its bands, however, the

party will not be utile to enactII the legislation thut it desires with

out a fight. It can win in any tightprobably which It undertukes unless Itshull split into factious, one of whichIt Is conceivable might Join the Democrats In an attempt to defeat certainbills.

Of course even to Intimate thatthere will be factious in the Itepulillcun puny is to take something forgrunted, because It is known thut oneof the chief desires und efforts of thePresident-elec- t Is to keep the ranksharmonious. Factions, however, havecome into being lu the past, and hu-man nature remains about the sameyear In and year out, and so it luuy liethut factions will spring into being

gain, although the ltepubllcun lead- -

ears will make every attempt to keepall the members of the party in line.

At the present session of congressthe farmers la riff bill Iihsbeen given consideration. The housepassed It easily, but It is having trouble In the senate. It may be, however,thut it will become a law prior toMarch unless I'resldeiit Wilson shallIntervene with bis veto.

Tariff Will Consume Much Time.The comprehensive tariff Icglslatlou

which the majority In congress Intendsto undertake will occupy the attentionof the members for many months ofthe extraordinary session. It takes along while to put comprehensive tarifflegislation on the statute books. Thebearings in both house and senate arelong drawn out. They lust sometimesfor months and after they are endedand the bill Is formulated, there al-

ways come long, drawn-ou- t debates.In the house of representatives, of

course, by the adoption of a rule limit-ing debate, a tariff measure ran be putthrough In comparatively short time.but the "rock of deliberation' Is to bemet with In the senate where unlessthe new rule allowing cloture Is In-

voked the debate will run on almostcertainly for some months.

Notwithstanding the fact that thesenate now has a rule which, if putInto operation, will limit debate, theregulation Is so worded that it Is diff-icult to put It Into effect and more-over the senators do not like to Invokethe rule.

Ambassadors Must Be Wealthy.In the Intervals between the peri-

ods of sharp interest in prospecttlve cabinet appointments, Wash-

ington shows almost equally sharpInterest In the question of who's

'Macaroni Vers."This Is a kind of humorous verse

fn which, with Latin as a base, wordsof other languages are Introduced,using Latin inflections and construc-tions. The term was selected since Itimplies a mixture of languages com-

parable with the mixture of ingredi-ents found in a dish of macaroni. Thename Is sometimes applied to verseswhich are merely a mixture of Latinand the unadulterated vernacular ofthe writer. This type of verse halong been known in Italy.

Cabinet((& 121. Westers Newspaper Union.)

In these days of IndiKestloat Is oftentimes a question.As to what to eat and what to let

alone;For each microbe and bacillusHas a different way to kill us

And In time they always claim ustor their own.

Wona lancet Way.

EVERYDAY FOODS.

A good breakfast dish which is sus-

taining may be prepared from an in-

expensive cut ofbeef from theshank, the mar-row adding muchto its food value.Take two poundsof beef cookedwith the choppedmarrow, covermeat and bone

with boiling water and cook until ten-

der. Let the incut stand after cook-

ing until the next day, then chop fine.There should be three or four cupfulsof broth In which there should berooked three cupfuls of outmeal. toin uke a luush much like the ordinaryhteakfast fmsl not at all soft be-

cause It must mold. When the il

Is cooked, stir III the choppedmeat, celery salt, onion Juice and linydesired seasoning. When well cookedturn Into well greased puns to cool.Cut In slices and fry. To serve fora main dish nt luncheon or dinnerservo with boiled onions, turnips orparsnips and a green salad.

Scalloped Potatoes. Cut a peeledonion In very thin slices and cut In

quarters. Melt three tablespoonfulsof fat, add tbe onion and cook veryslowly on the buck part of the rangeuntil sofiened, stirring occasionally.Slice n layer of potatoes Into a but-

tered baking dish holding a quart.Sprinkle with the onion, with salt, pep-

per and chopped parsley; continue thelayers until the dish Is full; add milkor broth from leftover roasts until It

can be seen through the potatoes. Letbake one-hal- f hour. If uncooked po-

tatoes ure lo be used, parboil themfor five minutes and Increase the timeof baking to one hour or longer,

A New Salad. Cisik threeof rice In boiling salted wa-

ter lo cover; ufter boiling ten minutes,drain and add one cupful of orangeJuice and cook In n double boiler untilthe rice Is tender; cool, add one-hal- f

cupful of finely-choppe- d Munched al-

monds, sprinkle with salt. Arrangewith balls of creutn rhecstt on lettuceand serve with French dressing.

Societies, soverninents. nations fnilwhen the secret chambers of Individ-ual hearts srow weak. Hut tho

cbsmlHTs cannot he filled fromthe world outside. They rsn only betried from within at the cisterns ofliilllilte Hlltiice.-- H. J. Harrow's.

SEASONABLE FOODS.

During the winter when cannedfruit Is ti be used In various ways.

the following willbe a snlinl that Isunusual, and verygissl ;

Plum and CreamCheese Salad.Take cannedgrii'ii gage plums,

.drained from theirsirup and dry on soft paT. Cuti en and remove the stones, allow-plum- s

lug three with the cheesefor each km In l. Chop flue u dozen

pecan meats and half a plnu'titu. rinsedlu cold water and dried In it cloth.I lout those Into cream cheese, addingcream If the cheese lacks moisture.Sbnie Into halls. Make a nest of heartleaves of Icttuiv. on these dispose theplums wlih a ball of cheese In thecenter to take tbe place of the stone.Serve with French dressing using lem-

on Juice, one part to three or four ofoil.

Baked D;an, New York Style. Letn pint of Inn ns soak over night inwncr t cover. In the morning drain,mid fresh water and ruh the bennsthrough the hands to hwn the skins.Wsh In a colander with cold water.Cover with cold water nnd return tofire to ci.ik. Dip of apound of salt pork Into ladling water.stu- - the rind nnd score It, then putto ctsik with the In a us. When theskin conniieiiiT to curl, remove themfrom the fire and put them to bake In

a shallow b;firing dish. Press the IHirk

Into the center of the dish and coverwith a cratilte pan. Pake six hourslu a moderate oven, adding water asmilled. I si not add water during thelast hour of baking. Itemove the cov-

er and brown during the lust hour.Serve with mustard pickles, tomatocatsup or any desired relish.

Peanut 6traws.ttoU rich pastry toh of an Inch In thickness;

spread one half with softened peanutbutter; wet the edges of the crust;fold the remaining half over It. Roll

lightly: prick here and there to pre-vent puffing; rut In strl half an Inchwide and four Inches long; brush withmilk and hake In a quick oven. Whendone, sprinkle with paprika.

Cream of Almond Sauce. Planch,chop and brown In the oven two ouncesof almonds and one ounce nf hitterstmnnds. Put through the meat grin-der end ndx with one cupful of pow-dered sugar, then beat the mixtureInto one cupful of heavy cream. Servewith cold pudding or as a garnishfor plain lee cream.

Wadding Daya In Holland.In orderly Holland, where every-

thing happens by rule, the differentclashes of society choose different dayof the week on which to be married.For some unknown reason Monday Is

society) day and marriage fees forthat day amount to a sum approxi-mate to K4. On Saturdays thecharge Is $2. or nothing at all if thew;iph do not wish a separate cere-mony, and are willing to Join a groupof 11 couples. At these group marriages, the clerk reads the service once,rouph-- s making responses la choros.

CI i)

i xSi

that he hasn't spent more than $1."J,-00-

la accounted to be In greut luck.It lakes a new ambassador and a

new minister a long time to know howto run things. While he is learning,his real work Is done by some attachewho hus been with the embassy foryeurs und who could fill the ambas-sadorial Job without the leust troubleexcept for tho fact that his salaryprohuhly does not exceed $.1,500 a year.

Some of the greut nations of theworld train all tho members of theirdiplomatic con1 with a view to pro-

moting them when the time shall come.This means that when a Frenchmanor an Englishman, or a man of someoilier tuition Is appointed us ambassa-dor or minister, he knows his business.Liberal allowances ure made by mostcountries for the expenses of theirembassies und legations.

Mr. Wilson Refuses Big Offer.President Wilson has declined all

offer of $150,000 for the first news-pas- -r

article, long or short, whichhe honld write after leaving theWhite House. The I'resldent saidIn his letter of deiilnutlon that no ar-

ticle written by unybody could beworth the huge sum named.

Successful authors who get 10 rentsa word, or perhaps more, for magu-lin- e

u nicies, probably were somewhatstaggered when they read of the offermade to Mr, Wilson, Vlrtuully he wustold thut whether his article was longor short the $150,000 would be forth-coming. If the President hud agreedlo the terms offered and hud writtenwhat ordinarily Is considered a "fat"new spa per article, one 1,500 wordslong, his pay would have been at therate of $100 a word, fulrly good com-

pensation, and csK-ciull- so If Mr. Wil-son in writing made up Ills mind toconfine hlniMcIf to words of one syl-

lable. In this case the article wouldrepresent maximum pay with n min-imum of handwriting or tyiewrllingeffort.

It Is pretty well known thut theI'resldent Intends to write ufter heleaves the White I louse. Already, asthe world knows, he has written wide-

ly. Nearly all our havebeen writers to a moro or less prolificextent, and also to u more or less ex-

cellent degree.Mr. Wilson already has written

'Congressional Government ;" "TheSlate;" "Division and Iteimloii ;" "AnOld Muster und oilier Political F.s- -

kr.vs;" "Mere Literature und Other Ks- -

says;" "George Washington;" "TheHistory of the Amerii-u- People;""Constitutional Government lu theCnlted Stutes;" "The Statu Klementsof Historical and Practical Politics;""Free Life;" "The New Freedom;""When a Mun Comes to Ilimsvlf ;" "OnBeing Human," and a gisul many otherthings. It can be seen thut alreadyMr. Wilson hns been an Industriouswriter, and the licllcf Is thut If hishealth shall admit he Intends to keepup the puce.

Tumulty May Collaborate.It Is understood that Secrctary-to-the-Presldet- it

Joseph l. Tumulty, willwrite a book when he ha left theWhite House. If Mr. Wilson shallwrite a book on his administration,Mr. Tumulty necessarily w ill, in a way,collaborate with his chief, for the sec-

retary Is familiar with what may becalled the details of the administra-tion's work, and probably has all therecords where he can lay his handon them, and probably also store upmany unwritten records In his mind.

The World war period was so fullof administrative action, and also, asperhaps some critics will say. Inaction,and so full of controversy that thefield Iff one which can be tilled withtremendous Interest to the tiHer andto the persons who visually benefit bythe tilling when the fruits of It areon the printed page.

Hia Comeback.Wife (during quarrel) If It weren't

for me you'd be the most foolish person on earth.

Hub Very well ! Go ahead and bogthe first place if yon want to.

Starting Slips.More bouse plants are grown from

slips than from seeds. To do thistake a branch half ripe and cut a slitthree Inches long. Take off all theleaves except the apper two and rootIt well In wet sand several inchesthick, putting one and one-ha- lf Inchesof the slip under the sand. Kwp thisthoroughly moist When the roots be-

gin ta grow put roar plant, with In?

sand, into a pot provided with othersoiL Some slip such as oleanderand ivy, will root in water.

suits tor spring have madeNV.Wentry In a bevy of models

thut Includes familiar styles, and oth-

ers Ingeniously designed and less fa-

miliar. A few of these new thingswill prove short-live- experiments, butthere are several good novel styleswith n promising future. There uremore short coats than long one

utnong the new arrivals shortcoats being springlike nnd youth-ful anil there are short capesand coats to be worn with one-piec- e

frocks or skirls and blouses that ure

unusually good looking. These coatsare much like the Chinese model, hutwith more Hare to the body, suggest-ive of a cape, and there Is every rea-son to predict thut they will becomea fashion.

Tbe dignified long coat and the sen-

sible three-quarte- r length are alwaysserenely sure of a follow ing, and there-fore they ure well represented 111 thenew displays, the shorter of these out-

numbering oilier styles. A handsome

Blouses Offer

r r$id '

CUOOHIM2 new blouses one isIXapt lo waver between those thatpromise lo lie iMTpotually fresli look-

ing since they may be laundered eas-

ily and those that enllce with love-

ly color. In the end it turns out thatiM'th kinds find their way Into theuurdrols-- . To wear with suits nndseparate skirts, the daintiness of sheercotton fabrics, made up with exquis-ite nii dle work and good laces, neverappeals in vain to women of refine-ment. There are iniitiy of these blousesIn tbe shops now and they are nmongthe things thnt a good seamstress cunmake for herself successfully. Poll-rat- e

hand work is exis-nslv- for thosewho must buy It, but costs the needle-woman little but lier time.

Tbe new lingerie blouses are nearlyall and have collars thatreach the nuie of the m-c- In tbe backbut ere 0111 at the throat. Drawnwork, hemstitching, pin tucks, nurrowfrills, line laces in edgings and Insc-ribes tell the story of emliellishinentson them. Not all nf them are white,for batiste Is shown In some colors;porcelain blue makes a lovely blouse.

The blouses shown In the picture arelent h made of georgette, which appearsIn a lovely mute of soft colors forsprifg. A pcpluin blouse appears atthe left of the two. made with shoul-de- l

yoke ami finished with satin pip-

ings. Scattered motifs In ls?ad em-

broidery settle the question of decora-tion, and the round neck survives Inthis model ; but the sleeves are long.A narrow licit of gewgctte falls short

Hats and Turbans.The d hat that Is nsually

difficult for the adult to wear goes wellwuh the brilliant and unllned youthfulface. It has a slight brim and a massof flues swirling out from the side.The yonng wear it In black velvet with-out a touch of color. The Persian tur-ban brought into strong relief thiswinter by the success of "Mecca' and"Afghar." the latter costumed by PaulPot ret. Is the delight of the girl whohas a dash of tbe adventuresome In

her carriage. It should not lie worn

model In the first of these two classoIs shown at the left of the two springstills pictured and It cun lie recom-mended to the older women more par-ticularly, Just us it is. Its skirt Isbordered ut the bottom with a nurrowbund braided or embroidered in telfand another color. The coat Is

straight with simulated belt at the;long waistline, slightly flaring amilong sleeves, and u loosely adjustedand interest lug collar, In us much usit Is a typo greutly fuvored In col-

lars for this spring. The sleeves makeplace for II deep bund of braiding orembroidery that gives an Invaluable)finish to a rich looking suit.

If one Is looking for somethingnovel the suit at the right claims at-

tention on this score. It has a ttinleskirt and n very odd und Ingeniouslycut Jacket that Is extended ut the bot-

tom into shaped sash ends. Narrowbraid in two w idths outlines the edges,nnd the sleeves add their approval tothe long hcll-shne- style.

Wide Choice

of encircling the waist, stopping ateach side of tbe, front where two smallbullous punctuate Its finish.

Among so many colors In georgetteone may choose a dark blouse, likothat at the right. It has a short pep-lu-

at the buck and has fallen in withthe vogue, but chisises thoflaring style. The neck reveals a pret-ty eccentricity In short slashes at enchside, and for trimming there are bundof bugles and beads.

coemoMT rr votim Mvmn unioh

Freak Designs In Women's Clothing.Never were the fantasy of London

fashion ex.ierts and the during of de-

signers more severely taxed than theyare today. Keccnlrlc etceteras are forthe moment woman's whim. Koine ofthe latest freak designs which havebcen produced to gratify that whim In-

clude luces and net stockings, dragon-fly buckles and garters, jeweled ank-lets fur slippers and "Pussyfoot"S4Kks.

Pretty Window Draperies.Pretty window draperies are made

by dyeing white marquisette Ihitrbcurtains old rose and some blue. Thesecurtains look very pretty over whitecurtains, nnd do not keep out the lightlike other heavy goons, such as milin and cretonnes.

by the timid type. It is built In orien-tal blue velvet nnd covered with alatticework of small pearls aud whitecrystals.

Full Skirt on Stage.Fashions as presented on the New

Tork stage this season stress the fullskirt, which often has a distended hipline.

Rivals of Chantilly.Margot and Bohemian laces

rivaling Chantilly.

eccooeooocooooaoooooooooooooooocoocoooocQcoooo

SOCIETY, CLUBS, LODGES, CHURCHES

Hon. B. F. Paukey returned froma business trip to Texas the earlypart of the week.

A baby daughter was born to Irand Mrs. Eugene W. Fiske, of San-

ta Fe, in Chicago on Monday.

otHMinnnmni i ir rmnnnrrnnrmr inn nn'nnrrr"CAPITAL CITY NEWS IN BRIEF

(jeneral and Personal

Anana P. T. A. Matting A very pretty bridge luncheon wuThe Missouri Avenue P. T. A. of by Mrs. Jamei A. Rolls at her

Roswell met Friday afternoon at the tue on Palace avenue, Tuesdayschool building for its annual meet- - nn honor of Mrs. Le Due,ing. Mrs. Albert Fruit, the piesi- - visitor in the city. The table atdent, was in the chair. The sand which twelve guests were seated,pile drive was announced as success- - was lovely with a large center piecetully over and appreciation of help ol pink carnations and ferns. Indi-w- as

acknowledged. A delightful vidual corsage bouquets of carna-inusic- al

program was followed oy a tions, and ferns add

Here and There Over the StateMrs. John O. Miller will leave for

Las Crutes Monday on a weeks ju Think This Over Baptist Annual BanquetThe annual banouet riven bv the very fine annual report bv Mrs. E. ed a most attractive effect. Follow- -visit witn relatives and lrienas i'i

thai ci'.y and at the State College.William Bcl em lef the 'Vterirt of last week for Flertra Texas,

to iuuk aiL'i In oii leases.

Mrs. Frank Andrews left for Den-ver. Colorado, Sunday night in rev

liicCs of Jut an-- J mother.pon.se to a telc-Tai- umiouncnty the

That it is a great blessing in lifeto be associated with workers. Theyare the happiest, most sensible, moatenthusiastic, most dependable class ofpe pie on earth, whether they be

meii of the Baptist church was an W. Mitchell. The officers elected were 'ff he luncheon bridge was playedoccasion Wednesday night that drew as follows: Mrs Albert Fruit, piesi- - dti'-iiu- the afternoon hours. Mrs.a laiee crowd, mostly members but dent; Mrs. kheinboldt, vice presid- - Le Due was presented with the guesta number of invited guests It was nt; Mrs. Schram, secretary; Mrs. prize, while Mrs. Thomas Wilson wasesiimaud that nearly 250 took al- - I Ir.Tiny, rorrc pondiiiff secretary : Mrs. awarded the prize for high score.

forMiss Henrietta Chavez left Tues-

day afternoon for her home at LosAngeles, California. Miss Olivewhile her1 v. :is tht ipiest of hT mint

Urn. I. P, Unnna left MondayI 0-- , Ai'vetes, Ca'itorni-i- . wl'trcv. i spend several wt'i Vs. the class that labors with its hands

Pi of. J. A. Wood is r roverin:;from a severe atlack of pl.uris).Hunts of friends will be pleated when or its head, or with both as most vantage of the opportunity to get Coats, treasurer

Miss Clara Olsen.lie will be able to resume u.c vvoikers have to do today to deliver a square meal served by men who

the Idleness and discontent evidently understand the cullinary de- -I Very enjoyable and largely attend-- jed was the public reception given ati.. !.. i. ;,i,,... v.).,.!, .r,. 'i, iiics of bis daily life. Delijhtful Candy Partyrt c A. Byus, publisher of the partment duties of the ladies so that

when necessary they can cook theirour; meals. Anyhow the men claim- -

are destructive factors in the world.Workers, and content, or at leastanililfion "o liani itl lianit ztttii urf

(ia'hip Hi, aid is in t:K- cily for theFd.i-jri.-.- Association meeting wh'i IiMrs. Cai! ot Carrio,

Last Friday night Mrs. Christmas eveni8 from 8:30 to 0.dock DTcnieru .iuu the young people with the .Woman's Museum Board. Thisa delightful candy party. Many cm- -

fvelU was jn honor of Governor and:io has liecn deputy clerk ot tli

ihe bllililers of lln worlil To rriti. ed they cooked and prepared the

fudge Richard II. H.inna and At-

torney T. J Mahry, of Albini'ier-4-ur-- ,.

were visitors in S.inta Fe a

di. the week on li gal! iiiiness

Mii. Nathrn Salmon, wife of thepopular merchant Nath.-n- S:i Inu.ii.eft Stmdav evening to spend the re-

mainder of the witer in souiiiei i

California.

.e rem Kiuas oi canaies were niane.Lantpaet. ihey served it like veterlaKe, place tomorrow, ivoiii rami

., strict court at Albuquerque for the wm , ,.(; ,f is on the w.lv.

MX months lias accepted a posi-- ,, i" the law office of l.ai.f-hii- w A .,, who rc.,,rcsent n

k; ljrk('r (,f lms cl,v- St. l.orii shoe firm has been in the

ans in courses and got by without And judging rom the way the candy Governor and Mrs. VV. li.the. boys and girls seem- -

WQrth ,he state of ficials aild th.j i v.r j.Le tei.am ( ookof the Montcf.ima ed to enjoy it very much Cards ,IU:nibcrs of tllc legislature. Daintyvarious forms of amuseKa0,.t I iiUr.li.. i I ric VfOT-.- mi, 1a si.i. refreshments were served.city this wet k calling on his rccpiiar

ci's'i ini rs. Mr Diml'ivy is a brotherC. Koch will ler.ve shortly for

the Texas oil lields to look after hisi.ili" in nit invf.tmii: anit i ,a

ment were enjoyed. This was a greatsuccess, and all who were there hadOt this

to bund, to strengthen is a missiongiven Ihe human race, and to de-

sire to lullill that mission is a lia-na ul, inborn desire.

It is a privilege and an inspirationi'or a worker to he associated withoi. .it woikcrs w' o aie giving thei."best at all times. Their best inspirit, is an uplift that cannot he...k .i, nor turned iroin uiihecdingly.

To work by the side of a man v.. o:s hai oy at his woi k, because he

of Attorney Melv imlavy; n iiiteies ing talk and E. S. Pad-chu- k

told what baptists believe andteach. His talk was instructive and a line time. Lovingtou Leader.

as, ertain what develops, ut.i haw c'1It. Key not,),

dislrict ifMfiapcrStates Telephonei J hern in the

, of Alhinittrripte,of the Mountain

and Teh graoh to.i 1' y i h s vi ci. on

Mrs. E. R. Wright was hostess ata bridge party given at her homeon Don Gasper avenue, Wednesdayafternoon, in honor of Mrs. M. C.Mechern. The fascinating game wasenjoyed by a large party of guets.

lain n:'.i!e alnn:; that hue. inn tion (;f the cc'.iiitry.

will received by all.I atn.-- s Orchestra was engaged to CAPITAL CITY NOTES

play durinir the e'l'i'e evening ndeven the ''laz" music was encored ficai'ifi'l in ai: its a)pointmenttime and ap.-.i-

n. It was a pleasure 2,1(1 ORe ot 'he very pretty winterI.IlO il s it well, Di'hcious refreshments were servediniijuthe called infection !iie man whoi,f"e llllkv f"""-- " e Present on ..P..U. ";e sue.a. u. , ,h hostess, who was assisted itdoes not cich t!.o snirit of such '' is roiiiuai oiiasion nuti 11 neic iicai ... , - - ....

y i , i I o i ii. ,i serving by several lady friends.mis. diamine? j. ivooeris, iiis. cj.

liiijuess comec!ed with the ysteui.As a temii'der that sprin-.- : is at p

torching the weather man Siimliy.'aped a hard hail sUo-n- i nrci;ip;;tii-e- d

by lightening ard tli H'.hr In iVei ours-- of a fe hou's '' i : f

ty a hcaty fail of snow. tmitiy inorii'iig Saiija Fe wrc ;

;eous v.l'ite t' y an !if-e- l:1",!,, 'more ( hrist rn asy.

corker is lacing J hat is one rea-- ' ';ar many will enjoy l.eing Uamists

Mia. I. H. l ackey of Albuquerque,h i accepted the position of inli nc-.- r

or niu.jic; in the city school i. f.'owing the resignation of Mrs. Scli-i,,i't- .

who Uaaves the frsl of la.slmonth for California. Mrs Lackey or

Known as ''Mary Mi Fie" has! a i.f friends in S'uita Fe, who'. ill gladly welcome her and her faiu-i'-

hack to her old home town.

aim eiin.lo . e. take pride in men who '"r a 'tw no" raain. Tucumcari .iu ana Mrs. Jonathan M.Waiter at the Uoherls home onnews,in ti.tir woi'k, whethei ,l e ,i i.

Mi i. A. I.. Morrison who has been'ill for several weeks suffering from

a severe attack of rheum;. tism isimpreved Mrs. Morrison expects tohave shortly to spend a few week"at Fay wood Springs.

P. oil A. HiM, assistant travelingauditor, is at Detnincr auditing theI. 'ilia county books. It is expectedtin' it wi'l lake a considerable len-

gth ot time to complete the work asan ati lit has no' V'.en made for sometime.

Tin en lertaiiirnent committee of theI'.'ks have announced t'-a- t a fiancewill he );isen lit the Flks Home onl.i'K iln Lvinue tomorrow evening.Splendid r, tsit. will be provided for

An Fr.joyabbOne of the

Occasionmost enjovable occas-

In of a jiiuely ni;.nuala hit hly mental caliber.

v!ij" the man who takesin I is work, climbs ihe

cted.

tl.a.t work'or of

'! Ir t tco i

such a ni.hiaJac- - Se!c

On Monday evening at their homeon Lincoln avenue, Mr. andMrs,Charles Marker entertained at a de-- 1

ghtful Ir'.lfie party The guestswere: Mes,rs. and Mcsdames S. G.Mardorf, K. L. Ormsbce, Hugh Wil-

liams, Leslie Gillett, Mayor and Mrs.T. Winter, Mrs. Harry Mitchetand Mr., Karl T. Wiley.

i uiulc .iicniie, yesierday aflernoon,in compliment to Mrs M. C. Me-chern. lu the receiving line were:iirs. Fseii iiolloman, Mrs. Koherts,Mis. M. C. Mecheni, Mrs. Askren,Mis. W. H. Duckworth and Mrs.Wagner. A'istng ill entertaiui'i-- j

vveie: Mrs. Frank W. Parker, .l rsWyly Larsons, Mrs. George Meal,Mis. Kaili Miller. Mrs. John Vin- -

The W. M. U. Study ClanThe ineiiiliers of tiic V. M. La

the First ihiptist church held tiregular montniy Alissiou Indy

nil-- , thus tar indulged in ly theen organiza' ion occore 1 last

i. ,,.il when the club, something overtwenty strong, invaded the VV. F.Witt home in a surprise meeting.

The lady of the house had, ofcourse, been appraised of. the factt'r.ar the club was coining, but Mr.Wilt was totally unprepared to meetthe flood of h onanity that pouredinto his pl.asant home when In

4a. s atMrs. A. J. Fischer and daughter

Miss Claribel Fischer are entertain-ing this afternoon at their homeon Washington avenue, in honor ofMrs. M. C. Mecheni and Mrs. W. UDuckworth.

;ihe o.ca-ii- iiid refres'imeats will!he served.

Conway and Mrs. E. li. Wri;;ht.The rooms were lovely, decoratedwith quantities of pink and whitecarnations, terns and siuilax. In thelolling i iioiii tile labie was exquisite

(he Home oi Mrs. C I. dealt,Intel e.siing piqiers on dillereut

phases of l oreign Mission woi k wereread by Mcsdaiius Talbot, Foe, Vil- -

coxon, tiai'hiei, lienrv, Ferguson, "pened the door in response to theknoik of President Williams.

M, ".. F. I'.ankey rel'irned ho- -(hiring the ncik from a three or

r weeks visit to her mother inKa;u v;. She was home

i. hi t ki nil I .arhoiiC.A substantial of was made' The discussion by Messrs. F.D.hie cuilie Moon Mission fund, wn-te- . t'.. I'. rainier and u.d.nia'-tc- Mrs. Flora Miller lo

w.th a center piece of these gorgeousflowers, intermingled with ferns and Mr- - Bowen Tells How Rats Almostsimlax. Jl.e pink and white color! Burned Her House Down.scheme was out in the deli-- 1 "For two months I never went incions efre.hments Among the ladies our cellar, fearing a rat. One nightstaving were: Mrs. Frank Cian.y, in bed I smelted fire. Sure enoughMis. i. . Winter, Mrs. John Mnr- - the rat had been nibbling at the

iphy, Mrs. F. K. Andrews, Mrs. H. matches. If I hadn't acted promptly

A, in ''tie, Ka ,he a"le u' petuating Goodsell on "Ihe Home's Fart iis.as who will spend pei

pircn,s .the work which was instituted years Making .letter Men," was piod'io-- i

auo bv Miss Louie Moon in China. Ine "t many good and instructiveweeks here with her

ideaslifornia --Arizona Texar The Woman's Hoard of Trade has: Leaii'-iui- l eiiveloies especiallynnal plans for its Charit-- ; for the purpose, were used n. At the close of the business ses C. ontz and Mrs. Henry Woolrulf. my house would have Decn Dtirncil.

sion, delicious refreshments were , , - Mrs. Paul Later we found the dead rat. RAT-) served by the hostess who was very . ,, Walter Mm. k I Ornish,,. SNAP killed it. It's creat stuff"i.o rary Fall which will be given eollctmg tue olleniig.

at tic Scottish Pile Cathedral Feb- iv"-- s jN1:"--' and Mrs. K.

rnaiy 7th Tickets will he $3.iKI a VV rendered effectively ap- - t Itici.-ntl- y assisted by Miss Aditie 1r. i:tfrj u.-ll-, M. Il. l,ree ie. .15c. dV. $1 25. Sold and

.and Miss Annie Witt. ) . A . Witt Jocrns anj ,h Misjes guaranteed by Collins Drug & StaMiss tionery Co., and Kaune Grecory Co.

'coup'- - and will be charged for propnati instrumental duets,jei. h additional lady. As the n.cm-- l Following the rendition ol the pro-lixin are serving refreshments these- 'gram the hostess dispensed rare bus- -

was a Kucs, o , ,nr ciuo on w.. cc- -j K;1UM(. a)d Eve,yn McBrjde.Standard oiTourisl SlTeiT7

Shortened SVrbednler (

CISHent Servicepri--

e. are considered very reasoraide. m mc lu.m m A ueitiousi Uver ZWI ladies called during the rent e luncheon Covers were Legionaire Have Good Time reiving hours from 4 to 6 o'clock. AT-SNA- PR"Canary Cot-;'"- 1 twenty and all were loud in The mtnibers of the American Le-- 1Conditions at the

are again being aired tins week he ir praises oi me nospiiaiuy oi ineijri,,,, i,KU ,)ost combined businessInterertiug roenei es:ccte A very pretty wedding and one vi KILLS RATShostess.U)n account of two of the inmates and pleasure Monday night when.1.. i i t . . . interest to Santa Feans and a largev Uom.' Fail to sc? til Ciran.i v.Zu.::Z K.. ..;T-7- ..ii VT.tiiL ". J i "em tneir regular nieetins, oy tj , ()( f, , throughout the Also mice, Absolutely preventreported to be afflicted with a

diteast lh notnrion re- - "W'J insiJtu-- tin in, u .t i iiu- - ii iiwinu (hi'ir liitmiwcc me-tii.- u'lth .. ... .. t rc Canyon ofAriona .-- Peti iIed Tore (live to (int. slaIe W4i that Ot MISS Kosilia Jicr-oa- o rom crc. jnm pmim.mmMirt w.is nlaeed under nnji-.-m- ine priille reading entitled

Vcrtfmite Valley, and the Indianr oi Wednesdav. It is reported that a Your Cc,t."-l.-as Cruces Republic. l-g- cre. ctaugnter ot Mr. A. M. er- - P'es urn. aaiiiar "mV

. , gcre. of this city, and Frank Leo-- , ke no mixing with other fooli ne mis lies, meeting was cai eu ... Smi. of rienvei. Colorado ' Guaranteed.hot'se on Agua Fria street was alsoi

quarantined for a similar reason. Two Hundred Present at Mo clock and all matters coining w,(l(.h s0tllmjzt.a Thursdav; 3Se siae (1 cake) enough for Pan- -The masiiuerade m'ven bv the1 "i for consideration by the Post

St end H:e mtsertutdt morning at St. Francis Cathedral. try kitchen or Cellar.Lev iorihio Christiiian, assistant! 65c size (t cakes) for ChickenThe Colleens, members of the I.y-- ! members of the Mountainvie w farm were speedily attended to, after

etmi course presented a very cn- - bureau at Ihe Moniitainview school w hich the evening was given overtertaiuiiig program, consisting of house near AlbiKiucruuc was one of to dancing and the box supper at

Tirite.ancl Ia iHtell yoax rector, oiiicuted at the nine o clock Mouse, coops or small buildings.nuptial mass. During the service! S1.2S size (S cakes) enough for all

vocal and instrunient.il selections the merriest entertainments as well 'l:.i A number of Lcm'onaires wereand monologues at the Museum ai (lllr 0f 10 most unique given in attendance from out of town, and

riccntly in the valley schools. Tlic a couple of veterans of the Spanish-aii.:i- r

was gi.cn for the purpose of American war, were among the larmraising ntoiicv for the bureau, and crowd at the dance.

beautiful hymns including the Ave farm and storage)Maria, by Koswiad, were rendered by buildings, or factory buildings,the young ladies of the Loretto Con- - Beacham-Mignard- Hdw. Co,vent, and the beautiful wedding Collins Drug it Slaty. Co., andmar, h w as played by Sister Mary Kaune Grocery Co,Ilernard. The interior of the church' M"was appropriately decorated for the! a b

building Monday evening. A largeand appreciative audience was pres-je-

regardless of the inclementweather.

furnish rattf it?jvrvaHoar

you pbn thf ir?p iTor Details, Rates, etc.

Write or CallH. S. LUTZ, Aent

. Phone . Santa Fe, N. M. P

he results wiie entirely satisfactory.! 1 l,e 1 ,)OVS contemplatePreceding the dance, prizes for the 'stag, ing a play in the near future.lByi Ji

The Normal Ua.ketl-.al- l team of ',! c isli.lites were offered. .Hill ihe detaiN ot which will He annoitnl.as Vegas played the Santa Fe girls occasion, only the immediate reli-- :

tii of the bride and groom wer.present. At the licrgerc home 0:1lira ut awiiue, v.lvere the rooms were!

co inittecMrs. Kev

rri- on

t guests named as judges. ; tf l later l laylon rsews.Ilogan won the first1

"Sis Hopkins" costume; Uninne Party at CarrioroMet h Andrews, (he. Me.ilames l ieiuh and tiumill en a Imwtr ol flowers an elaborate'a Spa i s '

i dancer's cs-- . tertaine a number of friends last wedding breakfast was served a n.l

L L A 5 I f 1 t Uve s

FOR SALE LANDa ,

PFRSONAI

liFNTLF.MAN, retired, with Mfnwants wile, (i Box .'5, League, To-

ledo, Ohio.

third Saturday at the I'rench homelloli ow leu, theoy cirt.nne nrnle

re!andI'nwact;..

Invitations in Stiauish were sent out

'and hoys at the Armory Fridayinuht. The Normal girls carried oil'

Ihe honors by scoring 1.1 to Santahe's H. That it was a furious iramcis evinced by the fact tliat two ofthe girls from the Normal were

,kn ;!.d i""-i!- sii i"s for shoi I periiodi, at ililferent Lines durini; tin-

' no The Norma! hoys reg.irdllii e a, leain vsrk and l

jllivi g scored only 11 to Santalal Both games weie hotly coine-l-

imtnherHere were .l i ii bio t lorth relies ill astunny different languages as w-r-

li'-.i'- at the Tower of Hahehan interest 'i'; rubber a lunch"v d - ypi.n-.i ll style tatuales,

i in hi!, rias and chili rntiraiTe whichant c.'i t'n gi'i-st- home greatlybraced tin. It was a very pleasantaffair and a lar.'e of guc-il-

i.. i i.i,: d -I '.".r: ioxo News.

later tlie nappy couple accomp-uii--id by their motored oI.amy wheie Mr, and Mrs. Smithiook the east bound train for NewNil, 'liny expect lo he gone atioiila i'i,.i. i'i I e wedding pre.cnti.;' neon handsome pieces ofli.i.vAa i ai'il int i;las. Mrs. .s;ni:h

is a vny atir.-ciiv- and accomplish-e- i

at n: la ly, and the bride.eroouiis a no inber of a vscalihy and pro-- i

iec.ii .i mi He came to Saniae e. : rue ;,i( mid holds a res-

ponsible po.ltion at the I'irsi Na

nl.HAOJF.I OH, .1.. worth $30,010, will

in.ury. K Hot Ai2, League, Colum-bus, Ohio.

i i, e, ns ami traiiip among the'; "e i ii (,; j io in i';v up ii

:i coll c'ii.n oi ilre. Theii"; pro-e- uio'-- p'easu ahle to

e ?'' presen'., Mi l n freshmt li, s

bed the evening.It I, a, been staud ll at this willa l a ari.'i of hi weekly entei

' tl.,t ihe Fnri'i Inn an will givei.i. I' c n ntrv ' o tin schi-o-

,:r, at the school hoe,c.

H.r

Parsiatis ciilore-l- ,

SundayJ,

Thomasit her Ik

age of .V

- d alh siin t he

UTUUW, .W, worth ?16.(Kl(l, warnshnshand. F. F.ox 1134, League,

4 )hio.

M- -,

r?!e.l i

nt 'heofi- d- t

.at I'!.--

year.,. At the '.i'i'---

v ,as t'ic ol h's'i rir te. She was hoi n

is oari. a ' t an it t"ll oil s ae ne h

"csr-nn- t to M, Tanners Certimle Tanner of Toledo,

v.- o lor two veeks has beenguest of I'rof. and Mrs. K. II.

lis t.itytional ltank and both arr exc d

inly popular in ihe social circlein I i'i Capital til.

I M)V, 1S, worth $! ai.OOti will marry.I. -- I'.ox .15, League, 'i'oledo, ( lino.I'e. i'iSi ita (he

!athotel ;i

tofipii.I.i.in.

a s a r.3o. with $s(i,'J(tI'.or 4.", League,

Ii

Ki;i'lNKI) LADS',vv ills husband. S- -(

olunhus, Ohio.

A Chop Suey Dinneri 'hop Sia-- dinmr was given el

Ihe hon e oi Mi. and Mrs C. A.keckU- - Wedutsdiy night It was'ii, y a ".stag" affair, and the

Were present: 11. Vv . Yll-i- ,

i'e in I liunons, M I.,.r--

in, H. Wvhe, .lenn, W.II. li. Wih-on- . I., tl. I'ohl.

The concert given in the auditoriumof lie Meseaui h nld'iig Sunday afte-iioo- n

t.nder Ihe auspices of the San- -

Fon i i

r shee

and,,. t

and

I !., !li :..- - II. 1luarrawere m- parent- -I m

til Ol ' PH

iv of lor ii. 'o or-o- n--e arlias been t! e reripi, nt of much social:!t nli"i- Among the affa'rsin her honor was a three ta a'-- 1

re!;.-- I.y M s I'hi'cli L'ee I. at t'ici ll- hit lining of her visit: a deIi.-- i en last Saturday afttrnoon

Mr Mice Stewart ; and a i'n-

;,.r: Mo" lay night by Mr-- .Recce.

la re Woman club, by Miss I!eu-ri IP iT'FL I'KOPRlI'.Tt K. worth Soil..in ii, io ir o: v ho ai i s.ei1 he.i t Angeles, talil , u wants wife. U lion .!:5. Club.o,.; .ik.o c glit i,i:.:;d c'itd-i- n

t''n

il. '

one ,, K; !0 f,trs- I :lr iina :or 'lie ir ,t time in the e!ec- ! Novee her ser.ice

he' i on Tuesday niori'.ng at J t

Francis catt-edra- l and i:it 'rn- - n t u

Fair . ir w . eiuct'-- y. C. A. Ris'i'g .

i !mi c

1.. I". I'.viis and I'. A. Ke bPAlter enjo;,ini' iiie In-,- ( hop sue,-lila- t

evei mtereil the palalc of a

n an. mu-i- c was lied. Mr. i'oiilai the piano and the rit of theeaiig sing.ng. Soncs that ranged

as far hack as "longer thanI can remetnher" up to the latest

1) l. . ,.K

I! K I 'arsons, of Mimner. vayn,. ,,J. i, i,! of Incato, Mrs. L. C.

Mi ,' and Mrs. Charles Duel, of CALIFORNIA 1,.C!I 4.5 v... ,. i.--

. v.. one ol the iiiusnal f.il)f(fi) would marry F. H... ll.U,oi th- - season. Miss Chavez league, Detroit, Mich,

,g h'-- s lections in fine form and'in '! voice. Mr Larson., the DKTFCTTVFS EARN BIO MONEY.

""" "f "' sc. Unit b. riiotu- 'x., i;,nt ot.portutiity . Experiencev i e. dvh'.htid the large assembly. ',,,. ; arv Faiticolaii free. Writevi .il.er pieasing feat ire on the t ro- - American Detective System, V8tr m v.-- .s a goup of piano numbers ;, t.a d vv a y. Kew York. N. Vbv Mr Schmitt. Mrs. thnrles Doll .

KEEP IT IN THE KOUSL .2

The Gyni-- s CrclrtrThe Ovpsies, an organization for

the produition of sjncopal d in-- 'o

i s e ii lly sui nbk for dances, is

proving popular over the distrn".'The (iyp-ies- " have beadijn irters .

T"i r, I id ail being em--- They pbv for most of tinilama. at the Post.

The members are: Irvin Minis.

Lr.S.''gent who run In

'. "i' d moir- Intelli-

Tlroadway hit were indulged in, withmoe or less success rntil a late hour.

Opinion was unanimous when it

ll in nii'l il

ponvlni !ia i

' '"gp-ri.- as usual was the perfect accompanist Ma(. ,,,., Dr.am Eook- ine ci me to the "good night" that Mr,.

Keebtc is some cook, and too that for the singers. What Dreams May CornelTk F. rmer Worst Katl. ' rvceuie niinseii,. isnows h iiung ir r.nd manaocr; l""nk Miller.

Th Farmer's Best Friend itwo, when it comes to keeping theCapital Coal YardWholesale And Ret&i! Coal and Wood

PHONE 85

harjoist: Arthur Lcnr, violinist, andDan Sullivan, drummer.Rat-Snap- spirits of guests at its highest pom

The most comprehenive andScientific book on this subject ever

written.New edition now ready. Price 20c

A'.las Printing Co. Dept. 6, Bingham-to- n,

N. Y.

One of the most notable and at-

tractive social events next week w-t- l

be the reception and dance gt'nby the Scottish Kite Masons at their

Th- -- are ;he words of Jamr, Bax- - !'.""' )y n"naf, V-"- '- '

er. X J : "Ever since I tried RAT- - ' 1,,s home OallupSNAP ! have always kept it in the'house Ntvr fails. Fsed about $.V00. PI -- asant Bridge Tea

Annual Masquerade BallThe E. Romero Hose and I t .v.iiTMl Cathedral, Wednesday uti,- -

tcompany will stive its fortv-thir- d ing. in honor of Governor Me.c.rth of RAT-SNA- P a year and fig-- l Mrs. J F. Joyce was hostess ll.iUASUVI Vr.m rlir-n- r arilkannual masquarade ball on Wash- - Mecheni, Lieut. Ciovernor Verr it saves me $.0 in chicks, eess bridRr tea Wednesday afternom jngton', birthday, February 22. This "Duck worth, all state officials, and enrtions and photos. Bonafide Co,tia leer is.'s i o.v.ir is convenient, lononn mc unuc, mi- -. joiu t,rt. ronm-oi- n ihe oicleit in !!ie nictnoeis ol lie leeislalurr w no arc fc; vfi!.a I it- - Ma

Ccrrillo LumpCrrrilIo EgruO'Mera LumpSmithing CoalAnthracittl, all iizSteftm Co&l

Sugarite LumpSugarite GrateSuyarite NutRaton LumpYankee LumpCoke

aist break up eal.e, no mixinu with Lee Moore, and the visiting ladies 5tatl. t s ro snppor:'

i'coiti-- h File Masons and their ladies.the community and buys its nwn jTiie ihainnen of the different com- - MARRY IF for resultsother ford. Three si7es, o.sc, ofc. who arc in the city at this tune:

fl. Sold and Kuaranfed bv Collins Mesdarres Priekctt of IVcos, WhiteS.- Stationery Co.. and Kaine of Nashville, Tenn., Rnrns of San

'"roTrv C i Marco-- , Texas, ar 1 Misses Howell

cqu pment ts annual masqueraa i"i"r who have charge ot the ardances are amors: the bis wintet rangements arr: R. 11. Ilanna,

events of Greater Las Vegas, ception; E. K. Paul, floor; K L.lOiinshcr, music; V. E. Griffin, in- -

irv me: nest ana mot successtul'Home Maker": hundreds rich wishmarriare tonti; striri'y confidential,most reliable, years of experiencelecrinfions free. "The SuccessfulOfh- - Mrs. B. Ball. Bon 556 Oakland

am Jose, of Ocilla, Oeoriria, andArizona, respectively. ar.d Lucius Dills, ri frc.-l- !v nations

mentstables of players m- -Cord Vood, Said Woo.?, Native Kinfllinj;

OFFICE Montezuma AvenueNear A. T. & S. F. Depot.

jjRATS DIEllgJ A - .

il afterRATS DIE !?;,.

in that game, and aboutnty-fiv- e other ladies came in

A Dainty LuncheonMrs J. C. Watson of DeminR. en-

tertained at a diin'y luncheon inhonor ol Mrs. F. M. McMahan cfFan-view- .- Has, at the Watson borne;on South Gold avenue. Thnrd.iy.

the eaines and remained toICalifomia.

One i the most nrcesful and en- -.,-:.- !. church af,,i-- , riven ,n thi, MARRY--FO- R SPEEDY MARRIACEiitv recently the t,ocl Fellow- - '"olutely the best, larfest m theMrs. I. H. llndi-in- s nnd-- -

oe mice, once they eat Kat- - l irrhcst score at the c, mis and was Covers "here laid for eight. Mrs. ccnnttry, esraDiisnea io years, rnous- -ship rpier for men, which wasSNAP. And they leave no odor be-- rewarded bv a brauti'ul towel ns members, both sex.

fcir.d. Don't take our word for it '

ni izc. Guest prizes w?re also ena 'cM.'han the mo'her of Mrs. ardsis , , '

. , . . wealthy- Clyde r.arl Ely and i, being made 'wi-h- earlyy'.the recip'cnt of .m-n- y rona" .alien- -

. ,i,.ii-ir,- VWIr F.ri M, fjdcmial. o"criTitnarriaee. strictly, con- -

. : i t i rM'try packafe. Cat and dors he horor piests. Mrs. MarIUSE THE BETTER KINDmn lire. inc i i

won't touch it. Rata pass up ail ! ivin!s!rn presided a' t''e tea tabl v"c K,.j;.-,b'-c n-ib- . Mrs. Wrubel, Box 26.tic ns d oing her visit to Deminp. w i. 9 oi t i'rtTj oi mr rveiii. .11 inr Calif.eonch'sion of sumptuous repast.Cel-bret- ea 7fth Birthdiv 'kd ; nd servel bv to men.

food to get RAT-SNA- Three ii the dining room vvhire dcliht-siaee- .

j lul refreshments of cake and tea35c size (I cake) enough for Pan- - wre ervcd tie puc.,:.- - Car! bad

try. Kitchen or Cellar. j f .irrent.65c aiie (2 cakes) for Chicken

House, coops, or small buildings. 'St- -' C E. Conventionfarm and g s, storage' Conferences were, held Saturdav

Tv. cl e mc-ib.T- s of the Country r' T i WANTED Man of woman to takeCI b o' Norih A er, net at thr hrK( '' w11r'I!ma.e. "''Vv. orie" tmo" frn,S, tni .

hop, of Mr. V.i mi.- - Howe on h- -r c,!,z"ns , fof thf gt.vint hosiery,.cc n:v ,.Kh. l.Vthd,v. last c,":'r, hVa!,,h rtmeiit ,in frr meil, women' .n thild- -, v .akin? vif. them a T'ri Mf. dealt Eliminates darning We pay

!v of al! i! i uood thinir. for ' i""'."". ,.--c an nonr spare time, orI1-Z- sixe ($ cakes) enough for all afternoon bv local business men andjviry int. resiini and instrurtise. week full fm. Experience linnet- -.officials of tve New Mesico Chiis'i.-i- n iv' i 1 n Jiinii f e-- rti 1; f irmi". rsarv. Wri'e Tntemational Stotk- -

h F. Trit.he'1 en 'ertain- - inc Mills Morristown, Ta. 315--

buddings, or factory buildings,Sold and Guaranteed by

Collin Drug & Suty. Co,ICanao Crocery Co.

Endeavor Union, when it was derid-,Th- e :.iiair was a complete ir- -i ed to hold the state Chris-ia- F.nd-i- tr M-- . I 'owe f ! 1 en-- e-l a

It pays to supply your table vit!i qualityfood products, such a

Chase & Sanborn. Coffee.

Hunt Canned Fruiti.Richelieu Canned Vegetal-lfs- .

KAUNE GROCERY CO.

eavor convention in Albuquerque r,l ;:snii . ticinoon - i- -cincjepena--'- o several irir-:- s mti-oin- s; tne visit .

M.rrh 4 S and 6. It is the plan ent. r,.cFIE & EDWARDS'."17 lartt. s "I ti.e members oi the lez-- ;stat.-r- e at her attractive rom- - on 'of the leaders to bring: delegatesft;t I r W f. e''-- In the isrjrrfrom all parts of the state for thislTb J?Vj CJnb Ert-rtr- ns

Eathcrine and it is expected that The loilr Orb dince and tif so reception room, .th its hnsfe an-- .if 'J I 2 . C Si

K J ' h I i ", ; r Governor Oliver H. Shoitp, of Colo-- '. ill. he'd Saturday eseine at Lew ti-- . p e. Powers ?ti'.4 l

rado, who is much interested in the Mora County, netted $.'7, wh'ch will to the cheerfulness of the atmos-moveme-

will give the principal ad- - be used to help defray the cost of phere. At the close of a pleaant

ATTORNETS-AT-LA-

OFFICEOver Santa Fa Poet Offwa

Santa Fa, N-- w MeaieS t-- 7 s- -t inoim-in- - jdresn at the meeting. This will be : Gra'ono'a recently par- - a'tr'noon spent over the eard tabks,,

the first convention of its kind held chased by the eltib. The lowest price delirio-n- s refreshments were served!in the state. Raton Reporter. pie brought $2J0. by the gracious hostess.