Santa Fe New Mexican, 09-03-1913

9
University of New Mexico UNM Digital Repository Santa Fe New Mexican, 1883-1913 New Mexico Historical Newspapers 9-3-1913 Santa Fe New Mexican, 09-03-1913 New Mexican Printing company Follow this and additional works at: hps://digitalrepository.unm.edu/sfnm_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 Santa Fe New Mexican, 1883-1913 by an authorized administrator of UNM Digital Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Recommended Citation New Mexican Printing company. "Santa Fe New Mexican, 09-03-1913." (1913). hps://digitalrepository.unm.edu/sfnm_news/3892

Transcript of Santa Fe New Mexican, 09-03-1913

University of New MexicoUNM Digital Repository

Santa Fe New Mexican, 1883-1913 New Mexico Historical Newspapers

9-3-1913

Santa Fe New Mexican, 09-03-1913New Mexican Printing company

Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/sfnm_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 Santa Fe New Mexican, 1883-1913 by an authorized administrator of UNM Digital Repository. For more information, please [email protected].

Recommended CitationNew Mexican Printing company. "Santa Fe New Mexican, 09-03-1913." (1913). https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/sfnm_news/3892

v

Aw rKOI. JO FE, JVIVK MEXICO. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1913.

PULLMAN C0.T0 MEXICANS TRISing system. Wexler said, were "thelack of a flexible circulating mediumand the fact that banks have no placeto go for when we have ex- -

liiiiisti'd our own credit facilities.""We believe the reserves of the

country should be in one big reser-voir,- "

said he, "where they are read!-l-

accessible, rather than scatiered in20,000 or more little piles where theycan be of little benefit to the country

DEATH LIST

NOW SET

AT 21

north of New Haven.This opened the signal in the pre- -

jvioiiB block, a mile away and down a'stretch of track, straight as an arrow,!plunging through the thick fog, camelthe White Mountain express with the:impetus of seven cars, baggare car,day coach and five sleepers behind j

the, engine. Meantime. Flagman C. H.

Murray of the Bar Harbor train hadLone back with the torpedoes, a dis-- j

itence. it was said, of 400 feet. The

BE CALLED ON A BOYCOTT

TESTIMONY ON

TRAIN IS

READ

THAW IS FREED

AND AGAIN

ARRESTED

HE IS RELEASED BY JUDGE HUTCH-

INSON AS A FUGITIVE FROM

MATTEAWAN AND IS ARRESTED

CARPET NOWin general."

An increased issue of governmentbonds and an increase in the bond se-

cured national bank currency wouldnot meet the present needs of cur

torpedoes went off, according to ofll- -

cials of the road and some of the traincrew. Then came the crash.

According to Vice President Whaleyof the New Haven, it would not have?

THE STATEMENT BY

AND LOLA NORMS

CAMINETTI

ON TRAIN

rency relorin. Wexler thougnt.

THE NEW HAVEN WRECK. KILLS

MORE THAN WAS AT FIRST

ARE ALSO

IN THE HOSPITAL-INVESTIGA- TION

HAS STARTED.

INTERSTATE COMMERCE COMMISSION

WANTS TO KNOW ALL ABOUT

WOODEN PULLMANS. MASSA-

CHUSETTS MAY ALSO DELVE

INTO THE SUBJECT.

EVERYTHING AMERICAN IS NOW ON

THE BLACKLIST AT CHIHUAHUA.

-R- EBEL MINT HAS STARTED.-FE- LIX

DIAZ GOES TO BERLIN.-MISSION- ARIES

LEAVE.

The bankers association suggestedBACK FROM RENO IS READ BY

THE PROSECUTION AT TRIAL OF

FORMER TO DAY.

liaen possible at the speed he wasmaking for Engineer Miller to ba"e'ttopped with'n 1,5110 feet after he saw;he signal. The engineer did not seo

it, he said, until he was almost upon!t, or scarcelv more than 1110 feet

BY IMMIGRATION OFFICERS AS AN

UNDESIRABLE ALIEN.

the advantages of a single centralbank, especially as to the fixing of arate of discount for all parts of thecountry. Mr. Wexler, said however,that he did not believe the federalreserve bank, under the administrationbill would arbitrarily try to fix differ

ifrom the rear of the Bar Harbor ex

press and at the same moment h!heard the torpedoes.

WM. BAYARD HALEWRECKAGE BURNED AFTEROCCURRED ON THE FIRST

DAY OF NEW PRESIDENT

HIS DEPORTATION NOW

ONLY QUESTION OF HOURS

CAMINETTI IS WILLING

TO MARRY MISS NORRISHAS RETURNED TO U. S.WARNING HAD BEEN GIVEN ent discount tates for different partsof the country.

"I do not wish to place any blameon the engineer," said Mr. Whaley,"but in view of the foggy conditions,a question to be determined is whether Coaticook. Quebec, Sept. 3. Harry

"The rate of discount would reallybe fixed by conditions in the region ofthe reserve bank," he said, "and thefederal reserve board simply wouldpromulgate that rate."

K, Thaw arrived here at. 4:13 p. in.Washington, O. C, Sept. 3. The

Pullman company Is to be made a

party to the interstate commerce com-

mission's investigation into the Wall- -

rEl Paso, Texas, Sept. 3. Americans

arriving here from Chihuahua reportthat a boycott is being worked by na-

tives there against all things Ameri-can and that no money Is being spent

4

(he was running too fast under thecircumstances."

Chief Engineer Elwell said tonightthat the New Haven had been advisedtwice by the public utilities commis-sion to abolish the "banjo" system,once last December and once again in

March, following minor wrecks in bothof which the blame was la-i- ut thedoor of the "banjo."

San Francisco, Calif., Sejt. 3. With,the strongest testimony held in reserveti1 the last, the government closed to-

day its prosecution of F. Drew Cami-nett- i

under the Mann white slave traf-fic act, and the defense took up itstask. In rebutal of testimony givenby W. E. Doan, a Sacramento courtreporter, who read from his notes thestatements made by Caminetti to As-

sistant District Attorney Atkinson on

Sherbrooke, Que., Sept. 3. HarryThaw today lost his fight to defy de-

portation by remaining in the Sher-brooke jail.

Judge Hutchinson this afternoonsustained a wEit of habeas corpus call-

ing for his release.Thaw remained dazed for possibly

three minutes. The crowd began to

PEGOUD HAS MANY MOREEXPERIMENTS TO MAKE.

Paris, Sejt. 3. M. Pegoud, writing

with American stores and shopkeep-ers where the natives can buy fromGermans, French or other foreigners.

William Bunsow, proprietor of "TheAmerican Stationery Company" was

ingford wreck. The commission will

inquire why the Pullman company con-

tinued to operate wooden sleeping carsct through fast passenger trains.Commisisoner McChord today tele-

graphed Richmond Dean, general man-

ager of the Pullman company at Chi- -EARTHQUAKE CAUSES

ALARM AT MESSINA.

New Haven, Conn., Sept. 3. The in-

terstate commerce commission will be-

gin a public inquiry here Friday intothe cause of the wreck of the Bar Har-

bor express, telescoped yesterday bythe White Mountain express sevenmiles north of here with a loss of

twenty-on- e lives. Probably five ofthose injured will die. The hearingwill be conducted by CommissionerMcChord, who haB invited the publicutilities commission of the state to sitwith him.

H. W. Belknap, inspector for thecommission, arrived here and servednotice on President Elliott of the NewHaven road that he would expect theattendance at the hearing of all wit-

nesses who could throw light on thecauses of the wreck.

Mr. Belnap denied that the NewHaven had been guilty of disobeyingthe orders of the commission when itburned the wreckage last night. He

tc the Matin, says:"My experiments are not finished.

I want soon to show that, it is pos-sible for an aeroplane to turn overbead first, then tail first, and thensideways without disaster. If my ex-

periments demonstrate, as I am con-

vinced they will, that security maybe attained In an aeroplane, I will besatisfied."

leave the judge's chamber in silence.Thaw followed aimlessly.

As he crossed the threshold, E.Dlako Robertson, assistant superin-tendent of immigration, tapped him on

the shoulder and placed him officiallyunder arrest as an undesirable alien.

The crowd then surged from thebuilding and it was announced that

the way back from Reno to Sacra-mento. Caminetti was prepared thisafternoon to take the stand in his owndefense and swear that everything hesaid on that trip, though correct!reported, by Doan, was part of a pre-concerted plan to shield the girls, con-

cocted by Diggs and himself, imme-

diately after their arrest in Reno.

Messina, Sicily, Sept. 3. A strong icago as follows:underlatory perpendicular earthquake ,, , , , .

caused a panic among the population ? company

of this city early-today-. It lasted only to furnish statement at the earliest

six seconds. The people, already possible date showing number of carsalarmed by previous shocks, abandon- -

UEed , pagsenger traln 8ervlc;, num.ed their houses and fled to the open .

streets such cars of wooden construc- -

tion, of all steel construction and of

made to take down his sign and toldif he did not take American papers outof the windows, the glass would bebroken, the Americans arriving heredeclare.

Mrs. Edward Sanders arrived heretoday from Parral, bringing one of thefirst coins turned out of the rebelmint, presented by the constitutional-ists at Parral. It bears the words Hi-

dalgo and Parral Riul a portrait. o(Hidalgo, the priest who started therevolution that threw the Spanish In-

fluence off Mexico. The coin is a cop-

per penny, but silver money of the

CABIN CREEK OPERATOR

TAFT HEADS AMERICANsteel under frame construction. Also

plumber of cars now under construc TELLS HIS SIDE

Thaw would be taken immediately toCoaticook for a hearing.

Thaw's lawyers seemed stunned.Special officers of the immigration de-

partment jostled them in the corridors."I'll see you In Coaticook, boys,"

said Thaw, waiving his hand to thereporters.

Lawyers working for and againstthe deportation and return to Mattea- -

San Francisco, Calif., Sept. 3. Inclosing its case under the Mann whiteslave traffic act against F. DrewCaminetti, the government played atrump card today. Testimony givenby Caminetti to assist District Attor-ney Atkinson, of Sacramento county,on the way back from Reno, after the

BAR ASSOCIATIONsame type is being turned out also.

Mrs. Sanders, who came overland to

Marfa, Texas, with friends, says Kierebels are levying forced loans in Par-

ral and that there Is little to eat. Sugar

explained that F. A. Howard, an in-

spector for the commission, was onthe scene of the wreck early yeBterdayand after having made an investiga-tion, released the wreckage to therailroad company.

Coroner Mix will hold a' secret In-

quest.Five of the injured are now being

cared for in the New" Haven hospital,

arersts, were read as taken down by

SPECIAL SENATE COMMITTEE RESUMES

INVESTIGATION INTO LABOR TROUBLES

IN WEST VIRGINIA COALFIELDS-TRY- ING

TO UNIONIZE FIELD CAUSED

STRIKE.

W. E. Doan, a court reporter. Thiswas an excerpt from the transcript in

ELECTED PRESIDENT AT CLOSE OF AN-

NUAL MEETING TODAY AT MONTREAL

THE SIMPLIFYING OFLEGALPROCEEDURE

DISCUSSED TO DAY.

the possesion of the government whichthe defense vainly sought to have

tion ana proportion of same wood,steel and with steel under frame. Thisinformation imperatively is needed

for use in New Haven wreck investi-

gation now in progress."Soon afterwards a telegram was re-

ceived by Commissioner McCord fromJohn F. FitzGerald. mayor of Boston,inquiring if there were some way inwhich the Pullman company could be

compelled to build steel cars."Certainly," reads Mayor 's

telegram, "this company can-

not plead poverty of resources. Mil-

lions of its present capital was a giftto stockholders during the last twentyyears. Am sending same telegram toMassachusetts public service commis-sioner, but inasmuch as Pulltna'i bus

in- - '

an--

ud

troduced in the Diggs trial.Doan read the questions and

swers from his notes.

wan of Harry K. Thaw, were on thealert today, mindful of the fact thatSuperior Judge Hutchinson might atany time hand down his decision on

the habeas corpus writ, arguments on

which he heard yesterday.All hough the court did nol say def-

initely when he would render judgmentthere were those who believed that hewould announce his findings today.Others thought it might be Thursdayor Friday.

The courts ruling will be renderedin writing and he agreed to summoncounsel to chambers in ample timefor Its deliver-- . If the writ 1s sus

"Did you tell Lola Norris that yoi

was selling for $2.50 a kilo when sheleft.

Diaz Goes to Berlin.

London(. Sept. 3. General FelixDiaz started today for Berlin wherehe intends to remain some time.

Missionaries Leave.Nashville, Tenn, Sept. 3. The

Southern Methodist board of missionstoday received news of the safe ar-

rival at Vera Cruz of a party of mis-

sionaries, largely from Mexico City.They sail for the United States tomor-row.

The women stationed at San LuisPotosi have reached Tampico and maywait there under the protection olAmerican warships.

marry her?" Mr. Atkinson had asked

Montreal, Quebec, Sept. IS

Taft was elected presidentof the American par Association thisafternoon at the close of the annualmeeting.

This, the last day of the AmericanBar Association's meeting, was devot-ed to a discussion of means to sim-

plify 'legal procedure-an- election of

Washington, D. C, Sept. 3. Thecoal operators' story of labor troublesin the Cabin Creek and Paint Creekdistricts of West Virginia was told tothe special senate committee today byM. T. Davis, president of the CabinCreek Consolidated Coal company.The hearing was a resumption Of theinvestigation began early in the sum-

mer when the miners' side was heard

are expected to die. They are Jeanand Edna Anneite of Bayonne, N. J.,Rose Zimmerman, New York, WilliamO. Rowland of Philadelphia, and L. E.Colomy, supposed to be from Buck-spcr-

Maine.New Haven, Conn., Sept. 3. The

formal inquiry by the Interstate com-

merce commission into the Walling-for- d

wreck will begin here Friday.The death list' in the wreck still

stood at 21 this morning and the hos-

pital list at seventeen. The railroademployes . ho played the leading partsin the New Haven line's latest tragedywere under detention by the coroner'sorder.

"1 believe 1 did," Caminetti an-

swered."I don't want to make any state-

ment I'd be .roiitnadictari. in later, butI believe I did."

"Did you make the promise in goodfaith?"

"Yes, I did.""Did you intend to leave your wife

officers. Taft was the j iness is largely Interstate, think yourchief speaker this morning at a joint board be proper authority to suggest

tained, Thaw will be ejected from theSherbrooke jail and arrested by im-

migration officers for deportation.N. K. LaFIamme, of Montreal, one

in West Virginia."The desire of the United Minesession of the section of legal educa-- ; legislation

Commissioner McChord wired Mayortion and the Association of AmericanLaw schools.

The missionaries at Monterey hav-

ing asked permission to remain, havebeen sent new orders allowing themto use discretion.

Workers to organize our field was thecause of the strike," said Davis.

"The trouble came from the outsiderather than from the inside. Therehnil hom n n trmihlc until Afflinr

Papers were read at the Bar Asso

and children and marry her?""Yes, I did."Doan testified that a clipping from

a Sacramento newspaper in which,was printed an interview with Caini-- i

of the most eminent criminal lawyersin the dominion, came here today toreinforce the Thaw lawyers. He wasretained in the case some time agobut up till now has taken no active

ciation symposium by William C. HookMeanwhile the machinery for theusual county, state and federal inves- - jr Kansas, juage oi me reaerai circuittigation was in motion. Coroner Mix !court of appeals: Judge X. Charles Jones made her speech last August.and Chief Engineer Elwell of the state BurKe, or ine Maryland court: or ap-

FitzGerald that he already had calledon the Pullman company for data asto its cars, and that the informationreceived would be used in the NewHaven investigation.

Commissioner McChord read news

dispatches telling of New Haven man-

agement burning wreckage at Wall-ingfor-

despite the commission's re-

quest not to do so, without further re-

mark than to say the railroad had as- -

The board has heard nothing fromthe missioHaries at Guadalajara, Tor-reo-

and Mazatlan. Uneasiness isfelt for those at Torreon.

The Southern Fmsbyterian commit-tee has instructed its representativesin Mexico City to sew! (lie women andchildren across the border and use

There had been no complaint fromthe men, although all knew they wereat liberty to present any complaints."

Resistance of arrest and the de-

struction of property during the strikeof 10114 caused the "guard system."Some of the miners would not stay on

netti telegraphed from Reno, wadshown to him on the train. In tho In-

terview he was quoted as having saidthat he intended to marry Miss Nor-

ris."Did you say that, or substantially

that," the district attorney askel"I believe I did," Caminetti an-

swered, "although I didn't Intend to

peals, and William A. Blount, ofFlorida.

Judge' Hook urged brevity and sim-

plicity, and said: "It is a common re-

mark that the ablest lawyers draftthe most concise pleadings, submitthe briefest briefs and make the short-est arguments."

Judge Burke's subject was: "Legal

public utilities commission resumedthis morning the secret investigationwhich they began yesterday, jointlywith the railroad company.

The revised list of dead as compiledby the coroner today was as follows:

Altschul, Wm., Norfolk, Va.

Armstrong, Margaret, Washington,D. C.

part in the fight.Roger Thompson's case was called

at 10:30 and with the consent of bothsides was put over for a week. Hisbail was continued.

Thaw was sent for shortly after 2

o'clock. This indicated the decisionwould soon be apnounced.

Judge Hutchinson's voice trembledas he read the decision, which in ef-

fect started Stanford White's slayeron the road back to Matteawan. The

discretion as to remaining.Hale Has Returned.

Washington, T). C, Sept. 3. With the creek if guards were not kept,sured the commission the wreck wouldbe preserved for inspection.

"We wired the railroad not to burnthe wreckage and received a reply

Davis said, and added that the peace qU0tedthe return of President Wilson fromthe summer white house and the ar-rival of William Bayard Hale, who

of the community had been much betProcedure and Social ."Unrest."has been making observations in Mex

judge's hands shook bo that he couldthat the telegram would, receive at-

tention. But it seems they have burn-

ed the wreckage any way. 1 don'tico for the administration, interest inthe Mexican situation was revived. hardly hold the parchment.

' Thaw did not take his eyes off the

ter since the inauguration of the guardsystem. Objection of the miners seem-

ed not to be directed against theguards or watchmen who had station-ed tlie guards, but was directedagainst men working in the mines.

know what we can do about it."GAYNOR WILL RUN

FOR MAYOR ASAN INDEPENDENT

Secretary Bryan announced that noIn his right hand Thaw heldJohn reauer.Information reached Commissioner word had been received from

only made Doan'stestimony fuller and more positive.

Mr. Atkinson had turned to LolaNorris, Doan testified. "Do you think,"repeated Doan, reading the questionfrom his notes, "that he (Caminetti)would marry you now?"

"1 know he would," was the con-

fident answer.Atkinson had turned to Caminetti.

"Would you?" he asked."Yes."Caminetti had been allowed to ask

limply two little pennants of the fair,which a little girl had thrust uponhim. There were forty persons in thejudge's chamber. The court's reading

Lind, who still remains at VeraCruz. Mr. Hale, who accompaniedMr. Lind from Mexico City, was saidto be the bearer of personal mes- -

Biddle, Harriet, Torresdale, Pa.Bullitt, Marie L., Philadelphia.Davis, Emilie Kennedy, PhiladelphiaFox, Samuel Crozier, Philadelphia.Green, Albert, New York.Hotchkiss, Royal A., New Haven.

i Hotchkiss, Philo, his brother.Izani, Harry K., New York.Koga, Geo. T., New York.Marvin, Dr. Joseph B.,- Louisville,

Ky.Marvin, Mrs. Joseph B., Louisville,

Ky.Marlin, Howard F., Bryn $lawr, Pa.McQuillan, Daniel Neal, Jr., Over

brook, N. Y.Rutter, Frank P., Scranton, Pa.

New York, Sept. 3. Voters from allsections of New York city crowdedcity hall park this afternoon and ask-

ed Mayor Gaynor to become an inde

BELIEUES HOUSEAND SENATE CAN

AGREE ON BILL

McChord today that efforts were be-

ing made by New Haven officials toconduct the investigation of the wreckin secret. He Immediately telegraph-ed Chief Inspector W. H. Belnap:

"Have man at all meetings of cor-

oner or railroads regarding wreck toget what is said and done. Our re-

ports indicate secret investigations be-

ing held."

sages to the president. Before leav- - was slow, and while there were indica-m- g

late today for a lecture engage-- 1 (ions that he would sustain the writ,ment, Secretary Bryan planned to gojj. waH 110t until the last few para-ove- r

Mexican developments of the last J graphs that this became positive,few days with President Wilson and. Th(! court heli briefly, that Thaw

pendent candidate for Themayor gave his consent.

The gathering was more like a NewEngland town meeting than a formal discuss inquiries by Americans re- -

waH bping connne(1 illegally and thatgarding means of protection to their ,., . nhir nf ,,- - nf rwi- -'rri, - ...ill l. ... i ij political assemblage and was prob-

ably the first event of its kind in the juC.o ,,. uC uu BKV,., auuu. !,)ropertv. jf they leave Mexico.

Washington, D. C Sept. 3. Repre-sentative Underwood, leader of thehouse, was at the White House to talktariff with President Wilson.

"We hope to dispose of the differ-ence between house and senate in con-

ference in less than two weeks," saidMr. Underwood. "I am not disposed to

ccck, the petitioner, had a right to de-

mand the prisoner's release.mis uiuLier, ueciareu commissionerMcChord. "The public is entitled toknow the facts end it will get then "

history of the city. The voters parad-ed from their homes in the variousboroughs, armed with banners, flagsand thousands of shovels the latter

his own questions of Lola Norris,Doan said, and these were the an-

swers taken down."Did you ever hear me mention

cruelty or getting a divorce ongrounds of cruelty?" Caminetti ask-

ed."Yes," said the girl, and then turn-

ing to Atkinson, added: 'Mr. Cami-netti told me he'd be much happier iteruditions were different at his homeand he said that physical crueltywould be the ground for his

"

Yahn, Robert M., Philadelphia.Mary Jane, 65 years old, family

name not yet ascertained.It was the third serious wreck

which the New Haven has sufferedwithin a year, and Inaugurated theElliott, the newly elected head of theroad. Mr. Elliott, returning from his

Conferences between the president!and Mr. Hale were arranged for late j

today Mr. Bryan said that he would!confer with Mr. Hale tomorrow.

Mr. Hale arrived today. He disclaim-ed that he carried file original of anyof the Gamboa notes or any personalmessages from Mr. Lind to the presi- -

dent, or to Secretary Bryan. j

SEAMEN ARE DROWNEDBANKERS SUGGEST NEW

MONETARY IDEAS

signifying their approval of MayorGaynor's work in subway construc-tion. The shovel had been chosen asthe official party emblem for the Gaynor campaign.

fight the senate for the purpose ofmaintaining all the house provisions.There are no differences of principleinvolved. I believe the senate hascut too much revenue from the billand if 1 can convince the conferees

summer home in New Hampshire to AT NEWPORT NEWS

"What did Mr. Caminetti say aboutJacob H. Schiff, the banker; Her-- 1

man Ridder, and R. Ross Appleton, j

head of the "Gaynor league" escortedthat my estimate are correct, I think

T don't see why so much import- -j

ance has been attached to my move- -

ments." he said. "I simply am a priv- - j

ate traveler who has found Mexico aninteresting field during the last few j

HURRICANE AND WATERSPOUT BRING the senate will be willing to put some hit' family relationship about hisof the revenue back."DEVASTATION TO LOWER CHESAPEAKE.

SENATE BANKING COMMITTEE HEARS

SPOKESMAN FROM RECENT BANKERS

CONFERENCE GIVE HIS IDEAS ON THE

PRESENT BILL AND THE REAL NEEDS

OF THE SITUATION.

Mayor Gaynor to the front steps ofthe city hall, where they stood for fiveminutes, bowing to the cheeringcrowds. The mayor, who recently suf-- !

fered an attack of his old throat trou- -

ble, looked pale and drawn.

STEAMER MOBJACK REPORTED SUNK

WITH SEVERAL LIVES LOST.

assume nis duties, passed over tnescene of the wreck in an earliertrain, less than an hour before.

The New Haven officials were frankto admit that- the d "banjo"signal, which on this part of the linehad not yet been replaced by thesemaphore system, recommended bythe public utilities , commission last

t , December, in a measure was respo-nsible for the wreck, although the ques-

tion as to whether the engineer of theWhite Mountain train, Augustus B.Miller, was making too much speed,under the weather conditions, is un

INTERVENTION MIGHT LEADTO GENERAL MASSACRE.

elder daughter?" Atkinson asked."He said that was the only regret

h. had at leaving his family, that heloved her and grieved at. leaving her.He said if he got a divorce he mightbring the child with him later."

With this reply, n

weeks. Any information 1 havegathered is, of course, at the dis--

posa.l of the president and the state j

department, if they care for it."The Warlike Yaquis. j

Douglas, Ariz., Sept. 3. Threateneduprisings of the Yaqui Indians, as re-- 1

ported yesterday by American refu--1

gees arriving here, which menace the

San Francisco, Sept. 3. More thanhalf of the 120 passengers who arrived today on the Pacific Mail liner j closed and the government announcedPOTATO CROP SHORT

PRICES GO UP TEN CENTS. (hat it had no other witnesses to call.

Washington, D. C, Sept. 3. Thekind of national paper currency theAmerican Bankers association wouldlike established in place of the UnitedStates treasury notes proposed by theadministration currency bill was out-

lined to the senate banking committee

NV'vport News, Sept. 3. Threepf-il- officers and five men of the

Nebraska, were drowned to-

day when one of the ship's launcheswas wrecked In the hurricane sweep-

ing the coast here.The Old Dominion liner Mobjack is

reported sunk in the bay with a crew

City of Para, from south coast ports,were refugees from Mexico, vho

brought new stories of murder andpillage in that troubled country.

J. C. Ingram, who was UnitedStales vice consul at La Vat, arrived

der Investigation. j

Under the '"banjo" system, as soonas a train passes n signal it shows

supremacy of the Sonora insurgentstate government, are but a repetitionof outbreaks that dot the history ofMexico. Since the Spanish invasion

Chicago, III., Sept. 3. Epicureswhose ideals of a repast Includes bigbaked potatoes, French fried or anyother variety, suffered a serious shocktoday, a leading crop expert here an

the defense made ready to present itacase.

Except for a few minutes of minortestimony to be introduced, the gov-

ernment completed yesieiday its caoe

against F. Drew Caminetti, whom itseeks on four counts to prove guilty

today by bankers who declared theyHe said that whileof eight and some passengers. The re- - this most warlike tribe of Mexican In- - did not favor asset currency or notes with his family.

nouncing that the potato crop this nnrt iH llnnnnfirmBJ, nri tho n,,., h dians frequently lias been In arms secured by the general credit of indi Lari r iiou liu iif,iiiiug a ua i cel.

against the existing government. The j vidual banks because of the danger of conditions were altogether unsettled

Yaquis have been less troublesome to "wild cat banking." jand Americans should heed Presidentsettlers since the present revolt "We believe the notes should be is- - Wilson's warning and get out as quick- -

red and automatically opens the sig-nal into the previous block allowinga train to erier.

Both trains were more than an hourlate. The two trains passed Willing-ford- ,

three miles north of the sceneof the accident, eight minutes apartshortly before 7 o'clock. Right aheadof them was the first section of the

year would be 100,000,000 bushelsshort of last year.

Prices for Minnesota and Ohio pota-toes in the Chicago market 'advancedtoday 8 to 10 cents a bushel.

iido information.

The Nebraska is at anchor off FortMonroe, but the shore , wireless hasbeen put out of commission by thestorm and communication by small

against the Huerta government, hav-isue- d by the federal reserve board to

ing taken upon themselves the strug-jth- e banks and by them to the public,

gle of the constitutionalists. Their re- - and that all the federal reserve banksboats is impossible.The men were attempting to make cent demand for a return of their should be responsible for the wholeWOMEN ATTACK

MINERS AT CALUMET.

of violating the Mann white slave traf-fic act by transporting Lola Norris forImmoral purposes from her home inSacramento to Reno, New

Lola Norris repeated more fullyn in the Diggs trial the story of

her relations with Caminetti. Neces-

sarily, the government bore more per-

sonally and more particularly on thepart she and Caminetti played in tbedeterminations and acts of the fourof them, and thedwelt more heavily on her share inthe responsibility for her own down-

fall. The wife and mother of the

shore, when men on the wharves who lands, taken from them during the j issue of notes". Baid Sol. Wexler ofhad watched their perilous passage, regime of Porfirio Diaz, or perhaps pre-- 1 New Orleans, one of the spokesmen

Bar Harbor express, and a .local train,due to stop at New Haven, threemiles south of the wreck, led themall.

According to the officials, an engl- -vious to his time, offers a perplex-- ; of the recent bankers' conference atsay a water spout struck the launch,

overturned it and men and boat dis

Iy as they could obtain transporta-tion.

A majority of the refugees who wereinterviewed here, expressed the beliefthat intervention by this countrywould mean massacres of Americanswho are forced to remain in Mexico.

They contradicted reports that a waveof patriotism and adherence to Huer-ta was sweeping over the country.

When the City of Para sailed fromMazatlan a week ago it had to leavebehind more than a hundred Ameri-cans for whom there was no room ontbe vessel.

ing problem to Governor Maytorena Chicago.A t neer may pass a "banjo" signal set at appeared In the waves and spume. The Senator Reed, declared he was"wedded to no particular plan," and i

throughout the hearing witnesses were ', rred after he has brought his train to hurricane, which, has been blowing

Calumet, Mich., Sept. 3. Womenstrike picketB attacked non-unio- n

miners today in the streets of RedJacket and turned on cavalrymen,throwing stones and cans. Two wom-en were arrested and are held fortrial. The mounted patrol used forceIn driving back the woman and strik-ers.

and General Obregon, in command of

the state troops. Originally the Ya-

quis owned a large portion of therichest lands of tbe state, and theyhave been joined in their demands for

ta. stop. This, according to the rail-road officials, tho. engineer of the' Bar Harbor express did, and then

' came to another stop about 100 feet on. the other side of the signal, a mile

since early morning, is accompaniedby almost blinding downpours of rain,but the battleship seemed to be rid-

ing It well, despite tugging on the an-

chors.

questioned with freedom, indicatingthat the committee would take up theadministration bill with open minds.

The chief evils of the present bank- - (Continued on Page Four.)(Continued on Page Four.)

Mti. 1, ,,,, innimii, I, i.iTnTTT

A 'I

't" aqb

fPAGE TWO SANTA FE NEW MEXICAN. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1913.

JUSTICE DONE THOUGH

IT WAS LATE

Obstinate Acne

Quickly Yields

Fine Remedy that ClearsSkin of Pimples on Cheeks,

Temples, Sides of Noseand Chin.

IT IS A PICNIC TO5HOP AT OUR.STOHE-LOT- S OPGOOD THINGS ATTEMPTING PfclCCS- -

COUNCIL SEEKS TO

TAX SOCIETIES

AND CLUBS

CITY FATHERS TELL "CITY MOTHERS"

THEY WILL NOT LOWER SALOON

LICENSE, BUT WILL GO AFTER

SOCIAL ANO FRATERNAL ORGANI

THE SEATING OF M'DONALD WAS BELATED

ACTION, BUT THE RIGHT FINALLY PRE-

VAILED LEADERS ON BOTH SIDES IN

OPPOSITION.

True Rocky Ford

CantaloupesCrystal Butter, 2 lbs. 65c Washington, D. C, Sept. 3. By

fi.rmal action, taken on August 2Gtli,

the house of representatives has atlength done justice lo William J. Mac-- i

Donald, the Progressive who waselected to congress from the 12th

ZATIONS, HGTELS & DRUG STORES, j

WINTER GROCERY C NICE LEGAL POINT

IS HEREBY RAISED

Michigan district last November, butwhose seat the Republican board ofcanvassers atttempted to steal fromhim by counting 4,"8 pf his votes for amythical person for whom they werenot cast.

The committee on elections, which

Arne atfocka the glandular structureiff the skin, more particularly thoset.ny glands that secrete fat.

PHONE 40. ' And it is here that S. S. S., the famousj hi nod purifier ib most active in its

Can a club, lodge, faternal organiza-- 1 influence,tion or society be made to pay a liquor j , MKi '."..mSa!. tj had made an exhaustive investigationicence wuen tne "(lnnKs are sola tor , is In the tissues that they select

the blood the nutriment thatno Individual's profit? Can a social orof the case, had previously reportedunanimously in favor of seating

The resolution carrying that THE GOOD DIE YOUNG, NO MATTER HOW LONG THEY LIVE. GOODfraternal organization, which sellsliquor only to members aud theirguests, be classed as a saloon whichsells to any man who comes alongwith a thirst and the price of a quench

NEW MEXICO MILITARY INSTITUTEreport into effect was debated forabout two hours in the house, and wasfinally udopted by a vote of 175 to (i.

The voting opposition was confined en-- 1

n::ikes new skin and thus eliminatesall irritants, acids and parasites thutinfliime the glands. There is a natural

of the fine network of bloodvi.sels in the skin to throw off Impurl-tle-

but where a persistent Inflamma-tion process has invaded the skin, thenatural repair work of the blood is in-

terfered with. It requires th3 stimu-lating- activity of 8. S. S. to overcomeHtich morbid conditions. Tf you havelieen troubled with acne, do not despulrof a cure.

You can get S. S. S. In any drusstore, hut insist upon having it. Takeno chance with a substitute. And if

HARDWARE IS THE BEST; IT LAwTS FOR A LIFETIME. WHEN YOUNEED HARDWARE COME TO US AND BUY. YOU WILL GET THEGOOD KIND, THAT'S THE KIND WE ARE SELLING. IT IS A PICNICFOR YOU TO BUY HERE; WE KNOW OUR STOCK AND CAN WAITON YOU PROMPTLY, AND YOU CAN DEPEND ON ONE THINGTHE PRICE WILL BE RIGHT.

WOOD -- DAVIS HARDWARE COMPANY.

er !

These questions have arisen inview of the action of the city councillast night imposing a licence of fivehundred dollars ($500) on clubs andsocial or fraternal organizations sell-

ing Intoxicants in quantities of less

tirely to Democrats, but Representa-- ;tive .Mann, of Illinois, the Republicanstandpat leader, joined in the opposi-- I

tion of Mr. MacDonald that was dis--i

played in the debate. No quertion wasraised as to the validity of Mr. Mao-- !

Donald's election. The only pointPHONE 14."IF IT'S HARDWARE WE HAVE IT.'PHONE 14.

ithan five tallons or less than a dozen your blond condition is such that youbottles and a license of one hundred would line to consult a specialist

freelv, address the Medical Dept., Thedollars additional for selling in larger Swlft Kpe(.,flc company, 181 Swift fildg..

tlant.-i- C,nquantities,

ROSWELL, NEW MEXICO.

'The West Point of the Southwest.

Ranked a "DistinguishedInstitution " by the U S.War Department.

Located in the beautiful PecoiValley, J.700 feelabove sea level,sunshine every day. Open airwork throughout the entire ses-

sion, Conditions for physicalaod mental development areIDEAL such as cannot be found

elsewhere in America. Four-

teen officers and instructors, all' graduates from standard East-

ern colleges. Ten buildings,modern in every respect.

Resents :

E. A. CAHOOM. President.J. E. RHEA,J. P. WHITE. Treasurer.JOHN W. PO, Secretary.W. A. P1NLAY.

e For particulars and illustrated catal-

ogue, address,

COL. JAS. W. WILLSON, Supt.

(lightbrought up against him was that hehad failed to file a supplemental state-- I

meat of his campaign contributionsi'nd expenses, required under the cam-- j

paign publicity law, within the thirtydays allowed by the statute for thatpurpose. It appeared that Mr. Mac-- j

Donald had complied substantiallywith the law by filing on October 26th,just prior to the election, a statement

j which in fact covered practically thewhole of his campaign fund. It alsoappeared that he was the district at--

tomey of his own county, and imme- -

diately after the election had devotedhimself to court work for a long time,having been engaged in the trial ofsome fifty separate cases. His finalstatement was filed on April Kith of

The ordinance passed its first read-

ing and will be advertised.Another ordinance submitted was

making drug stores pay an annual li-

cense of one thousand dollars ($1,000)for selling liquor which is not pre-

scribed by a regular physician. Thistook the form of an amendment to thepresent ordinance on the subject of

liquor licenses.The action of the council was th"

subject of conversation throughout thecity today in view of the presencehere of the lodge of the Elks and ofthe Santa Fe club.

If the ordinance should be passed.

Graham County.Observing the officers, the girl,

known as Singing Bessie to thenountaineers, crept along ithe wind-:n- g

mountain trail until she reachedthe laurel and other underbrush. Theofficers saw her, 'but discounted herkeen intellect so far as her devotionto friends was concerned. iShe wassoon lost sight of and forgotten forthe time being.

Then the officers two miles distantsaw the girl running. They gavechase, but the fleet-foote- ginl knewthe ins and out of the rocky moun- -

M X

I J

N THESE DAYS OF MODERN METHr ODS, Electricity plays a most impor-

tant part. The grandfather would

rntnft hotter thn n Iipp nn ran ore ntirtj this year, and it appeared that there can it be made to stick? When asked ,ghe ,e(J them a chage fQp fiye mjleg

about the matter today the attorney Buch a8 they ha, neyep hftd heforegeneral of New Mexico, rrank she scaled bowlders and fallen logsadmitted that there is roomClancy, smartand wa(jed ov(?r Htreamg t0for a great deal of argument on tn" reach her friends.

had been no material additions to theitems set forth in the October state-ment.

The effort of a very small number

be amazed at the radiance of the mod-

ern home and why all this light? To

make the home more homelike to make

the home the most pleasant spot on earthfor father, mother and children. Good lightthat is easy on the eyes is very much to be

desired.

of Democrats and of Republican subject. The attorney general noesnot believe, however, that, a city matter of this kind is likely to come upbefore him for an opinion.

She got there four hours ahead ofthe Government officers, and when thelatter arrived their prey fled. Themen took to the mountains and thagirl disappeared. The girl is said toProminent clubmpn said that social

Leader Mann to make capital out ofthis Incident recalls the vigor withwhich both the Democrats and Repub-licans have fought tUe efforts of Rep-resentative Murdock, the Progressivefloor leader of the house, to haveprinted as a public document all the

CAPITAL COAL YARDPHONE 85 MAIN.

oal .swvffirVit WoodSWASTIKA LUMP FACTORY WOODCERRILLOS LUMP SAWED WOODSTEAM COAL CORD WOOD

ANTHRACITE COAL, ALL SIZES.Montezuma Avenue, near A., T- - & S. F. Railroad Depot.

have sustained a broken arm in hermad race, but lier friends carried heroff to be attended to. Revenue officers

Henry, Shelton and Brown reportedthe case to their chief, R. S. Sams, ofAsheville.

ow:ERPstatements of campaign contributionsand expenditures filed with the clerknF 1 rt- :ui Liitj uuuse. i uw mw requires mat

organizations have but to insist on the"individual bottle" arrangement tomake such an ordinance "futile folly."

Other clubmen said nervously: "Theindividual bottle system makes themixed drink impossible and what is

more desirable as a beverage than amixed drink?"

Saloon Men Amused.The saloon men seemed amused at

the consternation caused by their lit-

tle coup last night. "Five hundreddollars license from a club too much?"asked one. "Why, they ought to haveput it $1,000. The clubs are doing bigbusiness in the thirst quenching line."

NEIGHBORLY ADVICE

IS QUITE SO CONVENFreely Given by a Santa Fe Citizen.

such statements Bhall be filed by allcandidates for congress, whether suc-

cessful or unsuccessful. The law alsoprovides a penalty of fine or imprison-ment, or both, for failure to complywith its provisions. It is a notoriousfact, however, that a considerablenumber of candidates at the last ses-sion have not yet filed such state- -

N IENT as to touch the button and

your stove is ready to cook yourWhen one lias suffered tortures

fiom a bad back and found relief fromthe aches and pains, that person's ad-

vice is of untold value to friends andneighbors. The following neighborlyTo the surprise and delight of a

number of "city mothers" prominent

ments. Yet no attempt has been madejto do anything in any of these cases.On the contrary, when Mr. Murdockproposed that the statements whichhad been tiled should he printed as a

udvice comes from a Santa Fe resi-dent.

Mrs. Agripina D. de Gonzales, 102

Iron ready to use, your toasted

ready for the hurried breakfast, your vacu-

um cleaner ready for the fray, your washerready to cleanse, fan ready to cool the heat-

ed rooms. Electricity will do every thingfor you. We furnish it at reasonable rates,day and night Estimates and full . infor-

mation cheeerfully given.

Denver & Rio Grande R.R.

ROUND TRIP EXCURSION FARE

Santa Fe to Durango, Colorado,

$13.15document, so that they might be

preserved, he encounteredthe vigorous opposition of the leaders

' and the rank and file of both the Tory

SANTA FE WATER & LIGHT CO.

ladies of Santa Fe who appeared be-

fore the council last night to protestagainst the lowering of the saloons'license from $1,000 to $600, the coun-ciime-

stated that this idea had beenabandoned. Then it was explainedthat clubs, fraternal organizations anddrug stores were to be made "toe theline." The ladies expressed their sat-

isfaction and withdrew.In the early part of the session, sev-

eral ladies appealed to the council towipe out the saloon evil. CouncilmanLopez, who' keeps a saloon replied:"How about the drug store whichsells ten cents worth of alcohol to aman who dilutes it with water andthen gets violently drunk?"

This sally aroused much laughter.The statement made by one of thefeminine orators that it is currently

ACCOUNT OF

parties.The avowed purpose of the cam-

paign publicity law was to secure gen-uine publicity of these contributionsand expenditures. In point of fact ithas secured no practical publicity, be-

cause th.e statements are filed withthe clerk of the house, and are notonly difficult of access in Washingtonbut practically wholly inaccessiblo sofar as the people of the different con-

gressional districts are concerned. Ifpublished as a document in accord-ance with Mr. Murdock's proposal theywould be made readily available all

Garcia St., Santa Fe, New Mex., says:"One of my relatives was in a verycritical) condition with dropsy andkidney trouble. She. was attended bytwo or three doctors and they said shecouldn't be cured. Furthermore, theysaid she would not live more than amonth or so. Doan's Kidney Pills werebrought to her notice and she begantaking them. Four boxes cured her. l

have used Doan's Kidney Pills forbackache that clung to me for quiteawhile. One box rid me of the trouble.Since then, when a cold has settled on

my kidneys and caused a slight attackof backache, Doan's Kidney Pillshave never failed to bring me aroundin good shape. I have given a publicstatement before, telling how goodDoan's Pills are and I am pleased t

recommend them again."For sale by all dealers. Price 50

cents. Foster-Milbur- n Co., Buffalo,New York, sole agents for the UnitedStates.

Jtemember the name Doan's andtake no other.

5W SHECOLORADO-NE- W MEXICO

FAIR AND INDIAN CARNIVAL

Date of Sale, Sept. 21 to 25, '13, inclusive.

Return Limit, Sept. 29th.

TO EASTFRN POINTS VIA INew Mexico Central and El Paso & Southwestern. I

CMITl PF TO ftl flIIDCROFT. N. M AND RETURN. 412 10. Iover the country, and the people inany district, who are the ones natural-ly most familiar with the campaignwork of their candidate for congress,would have some means of detenum-in- g

whether or not the statementswere complete and trustworthy. Butthus far Mr. Murdock has beei un- -WM. M. SCOTT, T. F. & P. A.,

244 San Francisco St, Santa Fe, N. M.East

orable, in the face of the bipartisanDemocratic-Republica- opposition, to

rumored that $30,000 a month passesover the Santa Fe saloon bars wasmet by Councilman Lopez with thisremark: "I haven't seen much of thismoney. I've been trying to sell out

my saloon for three years. I W'lsh

somebody would take a poor payingbusiness off my hands." There wasmore laughter in which the ladies

joined.Hotel License.

An amendment to Sec. 92, Chap. 9 of

the city ordinances was offered to

change the wording, thus after theword "used."

"Provided further, that persons,firms, corporations conducting hotelsthat are more than two hundred and

fifty yards distant from the center of

the plaza be required to pay a licenseof five hundred dollars ($500.)"

It was first worded "only $500" butCouncilman Renehan's suggestion tostrike out the word "only" on the

Not a Best pjiilMitMSsecure action on his proposal.tJnder the usual practic? such doc-

uments filed with the clerk of thehouse are kept for only a few monthsand then destroyed. Unless, there-fore, these statements are printed aspermanent documents they will cease

'WestFor Rates and Full Information Call On or Address

THIRTY-THIR- D ANNUAL

HEW MEXICO STATE FAIR (Ito have any potential value in a fewninths, and thus the law will be ren-- j

dered purely a farce,j Mr. MacDonald was. sworn In as a

member of the house immediately

L. H GIBSON, T., F. & P. Agt., N. M. C. R. R., SANTA FE,0r EUGENE FOX, G. Pass. Agt., E. P. & S., EL PASO, TEX.

ground that it was unnecessary, was

accepted. The amendment passed itsfirBt reading.

after the passage of the resolution.He will be assigned to places on com

mittees, and is already entering Intothe work of representing his district.

Albuquerque, N. M.tSUGGESTIVE GOWNS

DEGRADE YOUNG WOMEN,

It was explained that this amend-

ment will affect the De Vargas hotelbut not hotels close to the plaza; thelatter must pay the regular saloonlicense of $1,000.

The amendment to lower the licensefrom $1,000 to $600 was then read, butthe first section was stricken out. Thesecond section allowing a saloon keep-er to liold on to his license privilegeseven If he Is required to change thelocation of his saloon, was passed bythe council.

CORRICK LIVER Y BARNNOBBIEST OUTFITS IN THE CITY

Buggies and Saddlers a Specialty.Hacks and Baggage Transfer. Prompt Attention and the Best

of Satisfaction Guaranteed.

Asbury Park, Nte. J., Sept 3. "Wo

Fairy StoryOnce upon a time there was

a shrewd person who wantedhis business proposition toreach a very Influential man.

He could not get to see himIn person but he learned thathe was a constant reader of acertain newspaper.

So the man who wanted some-

thing wrote an advertisementstating his proposition andworded in the way he believedwould appeal to the ONE MANhe wanted to reach.

He put It in a prominent placeIn the newspaper read by theONE MAN.

He kept It there and beforemany days rolled around it did

just what he hoped it would,brought him to the attention ofthe customer.

Both profited for this is atrue advertising story.

Now the point to YOU lies inthe fact that there is probablySOME MESSAGE in the adver-tising of today's SANTA FENEW MEXICAN that is WRIT-TEN EXPRESSLY TO YOU.

Are you a reader of the adver-

tising so you can catch the mes-

sage?It may be Important.

men who wear the dresses of todayand indorse the new styles are not re-

presentatives of true American wo

OCTOBER 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, II, 1913.

tlllllltlllllMIIMI

Each Department Overflowing With

Splendid Attractions.MIIMItMMMfMM

manhood," Bishop Luther Wilson toldthe thousands of persons who attended the concluding session of the an-

nual camp meeting at Ocean GroveTelephone 9 W104 DON OASPER ST.yesterday.

"The wearers of the latest dressestend to degrade the small girls who

GIRL GIVES WILDCHASE TO SQUAD

Norfolk, Va., Sept. 2. Betrayed by

ADDRESS ALL COMMUNICATIONS TO6 are soon to become women. Women

an apparently unobserving, singing,barefooted mountain girl three Inter-nal revenue officers, working out of

in this congregation will leave hereand go to the big cities and towns allover the United States. It Is theirduty to do all they can against thesefashions."

iMULLIGAN & RISING,FUNERAL DIRECTORS

License Nomhers, f M7. Day or Night Phone, 130 Mail.Next Door to Postoff ice.

FRANK A. STORTZ, MANAGER,1 IAsheville, N. C, after walking. 51 milesin three days through the mountainHishop Wilson's protest was aimed

at the split and "X-Ra- skirts."Pure American Womanhood," washis subject

ALBUQUERQUE, NEW MEXICO. fastness of Western North Carolina,lost their would-b- e prisoners, but man-

aged to seize four illicit distilleries in

i J -- V i' ' '

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1913. SANTA FE NEW MEXICAN. PAGE TH.

SNAPSHOT SHOWS PRESIDENT WILSON READING HIS SIDE LIGHTS ONINTERESTING

PERSONALITIES.

TRUNK SEWER SCHEME

STRIKES A SNAG

red to the Dank saloon's fine cut glass.One of the councilmen understood herto comment on the cut glass at tho"back" of the saloon and asked how

many barrels of broken bottles werait- the lot, any way.'

THE COUNCILMEXICAN MESSAGE TO CONGRESS.NO BONO ELECTION CAN BE HELD BY THE

CITY UNTIL GENERAL ELECTION WHICH

WILL BE HELD IN APRIL OF NEXT

YEAR.

jSCHOOL LEVY QUESTION WILL NOT DOWN;

FINANCES TO BE PUBLISHED; WAS

THE CUT GLASS IN FRONT OR BACK

OF THE SALOON.

HAILSTONES RUINTOBACCO CROP X

Lancaster, Pa., S"pt. 3. Belated re-

ports of tho heavy rain and hail.storm .show that Lancaster countyfanners suffered a loss of upwards of.

The school levy was the subject o:; tilt between former .Mayor .1. 1).

Sena, president of the school board,jiuid former .Mayor Arthur Seligman,! $loii.iMiii. It was the most destructivewho intended t lie meeting of the coun hail storm that has swept Lancaster

milTltV fill vaitr ,Tll rnminn ocil. .Mr. Sena told tile council that thev "'attkfl ..

Is the "trunk sewer" merely a"pipe dream?"

This was the question asked severalj councilmen by citizens last night fol- -

j lowing the session at the c ourt house(when the sewer problem had been (lis- -

cussed and seemed to be a greaterproblem than ever.

For some time it seemed that therewould be clear sailing to carry out theprogram of State Engineer French to j

j increase the size of the capitol sewerj from eight to eighteen inches, thussafeguarding the sewer facilities ofSanta Fe for all time or until this cityshould grow to over four times its '

present size.

h.w requires the school board to fix tlnie wlln'

t()LaM.0 ,gtins levy and submit it to the council nearing harvest, lime, the loss is keen-lan- d

he added that, the council has no y f,qtjurisdiction to raisa or lower it but ',j the northern and eastern parts ofmerely to cer U y , to the county com-- ! the (:oull(v ,lunm,8 of aomi of toba(..missumers. Mr. Seligman wanted to ,. rFa,,v (:,t0 wf.re ri(,(I(,(, fcy haj,.know how the school board could fix clones largej as as walnuts. The.a. u.uii uie lax run gtaikg were completely denuded ofis in. The subject was discussed with leaves, the loss being a total one. Insome warmth. j('iay township entire fields were ruin

ed, not a stalk being left, while In anumber .of places the leaves were sobadly riddled that the plants will be

I The state had appropriated $9,000 toj build the sewer under the capitol andexecutive mansion. All that wasneeded was $3,000 more from the city

iOf Santa Fe to make the pipe a"trunk line."Seattle, Wash., Sept. 3. Robert T.

Kodge, who, as Progressive candidatefor governor of Washington last fall,

j The sum of $3,000 could be easily

The council passed the ordinancerequiring the telephone and telegraphpoles in the city to be painted greeninstead of white. "This will pleasethe Irish," said Mr. Renehau with evi-dent delight.

Mayor Ixipez suggested to the coun-cil that the finances of the city fromApril 1 to July l be published. Mr.Kenehan made a motion to that effectand it was carried.

ploughed down. In the vicinity ofNew Holland, Bareville, Akron, TerreHill, Warwick and Ephrata the dam-

age is particularly heavy. Karlier inthe season the tobacco farmers suf-fered from the destruction of plants bypests, and now the hail has wiped outmost of what remained.

In many places entire fields of cornwere ruined. At Lititz Springs Parbhuge trees were shattered by lightning

received over 80,000 votes, promisedthe voters that if defeated he wouldreturn to work in the coal mines, fromwhence he made his advent into poli-tics, lie was defeated. Hodge didn'tgo back to the coal mines, but got a

raised by a bond issue: in fact, doublethat amount might as well be raisedright away.

So it was thought.But it cropped out last night that

there is no authority for holding abond election except when there is ageneral election, say of city council- - HOTEL ARRIVALS.WOULDN'T THIS JUST ABOUT MAKE YOUR

HAIR TURN PURPLE ?

Does the city want that cess poolcleaner a Las Vegan has for sale.The city fathers were asked this ques-tion shortly before adjourning. "No,we don't want to buy it," was the an-

swer.

There was much amusement over a

while in the vicinity of Witmer astack, seventy feet high, was wrecked.

Telephone communication was notestablished with some parts of thecounty until late today.

A carriage in the funeral processionof Mrs. Sarah S. Bunn was overturnedrier South Hermitage by the highwind, and the occupants, David Rose- -

Job running a steam drill for the e

railroad tunnel in the Cas-cades.

Hodge's career in politics wasmeteoric. He was an ordinary coalminer at Black Diamond, Newcastle,u nd other mining towns in Washing-ton for many years. Then he was ap-

pointed a deputy sheriff. Five yearsago he announced his candidacy forsheriff of King county, the largest

men. That will not occur until Aprilof next year.

The council referred the whole mat-ter of sewer and pavements back to itsoriginal committees for suggestions asto the next step.

This much was agreed upon: SantaFe can ill afford to miss the opportuni-ty of getting a trunk sewer.

Hotel De Vargas.George P. Davidson, lyouisville, Ky.N. C. Frenger, Las Cruces.F. C. Shelhart, Albuquerque.It. C. Dillon and wife, Encino.Kva Cecil, Encino.George Brewer, Encino.12. B, Cornel!, Alamosa. Colo.

DEAD RINGER FOR BUFFALO BILL CREATES RIOT IN BIG CITY BYWEARING THE LATEST IN MEN 'S TROUSERS.

ii,isunuersiauuing oi me siaiemem Don, ot Coatesville: John Gause ofmade by one of the ladies who ad- - Honev Brook, and two women, waredressed the council. She pointed out The undertaker cared for the injured,the luxury seen in saloons, and refer-- j badly hurt. The horses ran away.WALL STREET.

county in the state. The politicianslaughed at him. But "Bob" Hodges, abig, healthy, robust, man with a big,winning smile, and a wonderful lot ofnative eloquence, went into office byan. overwhelming majority. He had

Speculative conditions favored bearselling again today. The effect offurther poor crop reports and unfavor- -been a sailor, a pugilist, and a com

mon day laborer before and he was able statements of railroad

"I AM NOT THROUGH FIGHTING YET," SAYS

DIGGS, CONVICTED WHITE SLAVER.

'If I Thought I Was What They Call Me, I Would Hang My Head and GoWillingly to the Penitentiary," He Declares.

earnings

H. ,f. Mendenhall, City.O. L. Zeiger, Denver.A. W. Pulleu, Denver.Mrs. M. R. Williams, 10. Las Vegas.Mrs. .lames H. Illack, Lebanon, Ind.Mrs. F. M. Council, Chicago.E. C. Wade, Jr., Las 'Cruces.F. R. Lord and wife, Las Vegas.J. M. C. Chaves. Abiquiu.Osgood Hardy, New Haven, Ct.C. W. Pape, Jr., St. Umis.Frank If. Roberts. Las Vegas.Miss Thomas, Denver.F. Units. City.

Montezuma.Dr. Lloyd, City.

H. Hunker. Ijis Vegas.H. B. Boeder, Albuquerque.

keen student of life. He made a won-derful race for governor, but the oddsv ere against him. Hodge has now re-

turned to manual labor.

W'ere reinforced by other adverse con-ditions. Call money, which touched 3

per cent late yesterday, renewed to-

day at 2 Foreign interests wereactive sellers. Weakness of invest-ment shares and indications thatstocks were being distributed quietlyon rallies restrained speculative buy-ing.

Copper issues were affected by pres-sure abroad against them, despite the

( wrv

KANSAS CITY WOOL AND HIDES.Kansas City, Mo., Sept. 3. The fol-

lowing quotations are furnished by F,L. Cofteld, wool commission company,1739 to 1743 Genesee St., Kansas Citv,Mo.Wool Qoutations for Colorado, New

Mexico, Utah and Texas.Light medium 16 to 20 cents per

pound. Light fine 14 to 17 cents;heavy fine 11 to 14 cents; angora mo-

hair, 12 months. 25 to 30 cents.Hides.

Green sr It natives, No. 1, 15 centsper pound : green salt natives No. 214c; side brands, over 401b. flat, 13c;part cured hides, less than cured;uncured hides lc less than cured; glue

fact that London's price for the Amal-

gamated was materially higher.Declines reached two points in

Union Pacific and Reading and one-hal- f

for Steel, Amalgamated, St. Paul,Can, Great Northern and others. NewHaven was bought by the shorts aftertne price DroKe to mi out Its recoverywas small.

Bonds were irregular.

T. .1. Giiroil, Oklahoma City.Tony Chisni, AQbUquerquu.F. K. Hottal, Albuquerque..1. Savolwick, Pasadena.F. R. Schauk, Pasadena.H. F. Robinson, Albuquerque.W. B. Hill, Washington.R. B. Saner, Albuquerque.K. M. Baca. Socorro.A. C. Castello, Socorro.L. . Baca, Socorro.V.. A. Scheuick, Clovis.(". L. Converse, Taos.R. M. Anderson, San Antonio.B. Lascke, Chicago.A. S. Feiss, New York.O. H. Nakahma, Los Angeles.A. C. de Baca, Cienega.C. H. Hittson, Tucumciiri.D. H. Belmore, Tucumcari.Lee Parker. Denver.F. Olson, Las Vegas.Ignacio Moya, City.R. Lopez, City.

Declines stopped as delivery hourapproached. Shorts went into the

hides, flat. Sc.: green horse MHpr n arKer, ior siocks, winch pulled up$2.25 to $3.75 each; dry flint hides, 22c 'Reading a point and other favoritiesto 24e per pound; dry salt hides 16c to "alf a Point.17c. j The market closed steady. Busi- -

Pelts. iness shrank measurably toward the1 n 9 mmend of the day, but the list showed

more stability. Fractional recoverieswere general and New York Central

Dry full wool sheep pelts 10 to 12cents per pound; green salt sheeppelts 50c to $1.25 each; angora goatskins 15c to 75c each.

Tallow: No. 1, 6 4 cents; No. 2,

and New Haven succeded in wipingout their declines. California Detro- -

vr""" V . sJ b Jleum ,lost. several points on the pas-sing of the dividend. Illinois Centralrefunding 4's weakened in sympathywith the stock, breaking from t3 to30 on one transaction.

DURBIN AND HIS SLIT TROUSERS.THE PRESIDENT RETURNS

FROM BRIEF OUTING.Washington, D. C, Sept. 3. Presi-

dent Wilson returned from the sum-mer white house at Cornish, N. H., to- -

Los Angeles, Cal., Sept. 3. "Hi! hi!look at the guy with the split

One pretty little miss, according toDurbin, was so overcome by the effect

5 2 cents per pound.Grease: White 61-- cents; yellow

5 cents.Beeswax: Bright, 25 to 30 cents per

pound.Scrap Iron.

Country junk mixed iron $6 to $10.50

per ton.Bones.

Country junk bleached bones $16 to$21.50 per ton.

that she just could not forbear telling day on a train that was two hours late.My. ain t he just the progressive He was driven immediately to the

White House and reached there short-ly before noon.

It will not pay you to waste yourtime writing out your legal formswhen you can get thorn already print-ed at the New Mexican PrintingCompany,

thing!""Ho, for the harem skirt pants." and

the pioneer in fashions what shethought of him.

"Why. you're really quite the mostprogressive man in this progressivestate," she gushed. "How did you everhave the nerve to break away from

traditions? You are in

similar cries echoing down Broadway,recently attracted a crowd around oneP. J. Durbin, a resident, who Is one of

DIRECTUM ATTEMPTS TOLOWER PACIFIC RECORD

Hartford. Ct.. Sept. .1. An exhibi- -

m!....

1

to the'tion of pacing by Directum I featureddeed a hero and will prove

the trustees of Vernon and also con-ducts a business of reeding severalthousand hogs with the garbage or thecity.

P. J. bears a close resemblance toCol. Cody, of Wild West show fame,

world that women are not going to ex- - the card for today's grand circuittremes in dress," etc., etc., until Dur- - races at Charter Oak Park.uin mane nis escape. Directum s attempt was to break

"Why, they're the coolest things I; the record of two minutes flat madeand the combination of slit trousersand the cowboy hat was startling.

cei wuic, oam uuiuiu, pieniy 01 oy star pointer, some years ago onventilation for the ankles, you know." this track.j

MAURY I. D1CIGS His latest Picture.

San Francisco, Cal., Sept. :i. Maury isays Diggs. "If I was what they. Diggs, convicted of white slavery brand me a monster and ruiner of

because he eloped with j young girls I would hang my headMarsha Warrington from Sacramento and go willingly behind the bars. IHOPE Ito Reno, deserting his wife and baby, lam not a white slaver. I am not aisn't through fighting yet; he isn't monster and that's why I'm going to

keep on fighting. I have not beengiven a square deal either by the pub-

lic, the press or the courts. They maysentence me to the penitentiary, but

going to the penitentiary until everymeans have been exhausted to beatUncle Sam, who is trying to put himbehind the bars

"I am not through fighting yet," 1 will still keep up the fight.'

7 would rather$20,000 (N PRIZES

AT STATE FAIR

fertile soli of the Sunshine State. TheState Fair board this year is layingspecial stress on the developmentfeatures of the state exposition 4n. V)endeavor to make it thorough,., -- ,

A

Twenty thou-purse- s

andj Albuquerque, Sept. 3.

sand dollars in prizes,sentatlve of the progress and possi- -

bilities or New Mexico.

$100 Reward, $100.The readers of this paper will be

pleased to learn that there is at leastone dreaded disease that science hasbeen able to cure in all its stages, and

premiums; two thousand dollars in'prizes to the baseball tournament; au-

tomobile and motorcycle and horseraces: big popular carnival, the bestin the country, with twenty-tw-

'shows; a poultry show twice as bigjas any of its predecessors; a displayof farm products and livestock of ev-er-

description; irrigation and farming

that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure Uthe only positive cure now known to

sell you a Studebaker"When your dealer tells you that you know

he's honest.fte may have cheaper wagons in stock, but he

knows the Studebaker is the best.And so do you.He wants to give such good wagon value

that you will come back and demand a buggymade by the same people.

Studebaker have been building wagons for sixtyyears and they have won the confidence of dealer andfarmer by building- - not the cheapest but the best

wagons.Whether you live in city, town or country, there's

a Studebaker to fit your needs. Farm wagons, trucks,business and delivery wagons, surreys, buggies andrunabouts, with harness for each of the same highquality as Studebaker vehicles.

'Set out Dealer or mile at,

STUDEBAKER South Bend, Ind.

and industrial machinery, and themost important good roads meeting

the medical fraternity. Catarrh beinga constitutional disease, requires H

constitutional treatment. Hall's

T,iey ve turned th 7 jflfeS'COne vltght 'voonct i J Jy

towa fd tK SCH OOt. . llSisF1

L j

ever held in the state of New Mexico,... iPntnrrh Ctirfl la tnkon tnforna.llvare a few of the things which it is - --

"B directly "Pon the 1)100,1 and e

expected will draw to Albuquerquelargest crowd in her history when coua surfaces of the system, there-th- e

Fair destroying the foundation of theNew Mexico State opens Oc- -

tober 6 for six davs of fun and profit. di8ease- - and giving the patientii

While the sports, amusements ands,rensm dy Dunning up me consul-- -lion ana assisting nature in uoing usentertainment features will be better

than ever before, the fair this yearwill be more than ever an agricultural

work. The proprietros have so mucafaith in Ite niiraUi'. ti c thatofter One Hundred Dollars for any J

(development fair; more than ever e

has the Interest in the displays case that it falls to cure. Send for list ;

oi leRitmoninis. 'jMTSW YORKMINNEAPOLIS Address F. J. CHENEY & CO.CHICAGO ' DALLAS KANSAS CITY DENVER

SALT LAKE CITY SAN FRANCISCO PORTLAND, OKK. 'Iledo Ohio.Sold by all druggists, 75c.

been increased in the various coun-

ties and districts: and the prizes inthe agricultural and livestock sectionare sufficiently substantial thiB year tobring many more farmers and manymore exhibits of the products of the

0Take Hall's Family Pills tor cons!

pation.

r J

r.V

1

4i FOUR SANTA FE NEW MEXICAN. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER .3, 1913.

! holders. The subscribers will re- -

PORTING NEW OSGOOD HARDY HERE

TO SEE INDIANS

YALE SCIENTIST WHO ACCOMPANIES

DR. BINGHAM ON HIS FAMOUS

PERUVIAN EXPEDITION IS GATH-

ERING DATA FOR A REPORT.

--HERE'S PENNANT WINNERS INDIANAPOLIS "FED." TEAM.

SOMETHING OFINTEREST NEAR

THE BIG CAGES

"Let's slip over near those cages.Perhaps 1 tan show you somethingof unusual interest," said AI G. Barnes,the famous animal trainer.

It was just feeding time for theanimals in the large menagerie of HieBarnes Wild Animal Circus, which isto exhibit in Santa Fe, Thursday, Sep-tember 11.

"Can you see through that smallopening? Then look at the cage justto the ileft and watch the mother lionand her cubs. She's giving them alesson." i

stock Itself only when transferred to

persons who are not owners of UnionPacific stock.

BASEBALL.Standing of the Clubs.

National League.Club Won lxst Pet.

New York 85 40 .6S0

Philadelphia 73 46 .614

Chicago 70 56 , .556!

Pittsburg 66 57 .537Boston 53 68 .438

Brooklyn 52 69 .430'Cincinnati 53 78 .405

St, Louis 45 83 .352

Club Won Lost Pet.' hlladelphla S3 42 .664Cleveland 77 51 .601

Washington ...70 54 .565

'hicago 67 fi3 .515:c ton 62 61 .504

Detroit ' 56 71 .441

St. Louis 48 S3 .367New York '. 42 80 .344

And. so she was. The great mothers arrival her9yiew of th(J of 0Bg00(1

American Association.

4

C1.U b Won Lost Pet.AHwaukee . . ;'. .'.82 56 .594

Minneapolis 7S "60 '

.565,Columbus SI 60 :574

ouisville ..75 63 .543'"it. Paul !....'. V.: 62 7.) .440Toledo ' 60 7 .432

Kansas City 60 79 .432

Indianapolis 54 82 .397

Indianapolis is the pennant winner

in the Federal league.Manager Phillips, remembered

by old-tim- e fans as one of the great

puns of former days, has gatheredsome fast youngsters and has tooled

his team to the front rapidly in the

last few weeks.The team now has a comfortable

lead over Cy Young's Cleveland team

and ought to win the flag withouttrouble.

Phillips hasn't any players who

figure as great "stars" but he has dril-

led team play into his kids until they

plav a game that is a winner all the

time.The ifearn fields tightly, and, with

good pitching and hard hitting, is

easily 'the class of the tight little

league! which has been a thorn in the

hide of organized baseball all Season.Unnoticed by papers in some of the

cities, ithe standing not published and

only meager accounts of the game

jfciven; annoyed continually by the

hirlings of the baseball tmst, the Fed-

eral league has gone along minding

its own business and has shown

quality of baseball at popular pricesthat meets with the approval of theIons in every city.

Encouraged by the success it has

met, the league plans to strengthenthis winter and by next season theofficers expect to be able to competefor patronage with the bigger leaguesof organised baseball. ,

FIGHTING GAMEGETS A BLACK

EYE AT ROSWELL

Roswell, N. M., Sept. 3. Much indig-nation was expressed in many quar-ters here over the disgraceful incidentwhich occurred during the labor dayalleged boxing contest between JohnPatrick, a New Orleans middleweight,and Al Higgins, the "Pride of Ros-

well," in which Higgins won by aknockout in the fourth round of ascheduled ten-roun- d bout. That theIncident in question has done more tohurt the boxing game in the state thananything tiat has yet occurred notexcepting the Flynn-Johnso- n fiasco atLas Vegas a year ago is generally ad-

mitted.Now as to the incident referred to.

"THAW'S DEAREST GIRL

THE MEN WHO ARB WINNING

THE FEDERAL LEAGUE PENNANTFOR INDIANAPOLIS. FROM LEFTTO RIGHT, DOLAN, IB.; VANDER-GRIFT- ,

2B.; MANAGER BILL PH1L-1JPS- ;

TEXTER, C; KAISERLING,P. "

tworking over him, while Patrick wasipire Brennan awarded the contest to

staggering about the ring. Jthe Giants by a score of 9 to 0, when

Will the Yale scientists turn theirgaze and efforts to the prehistoricruins and relics of the great south-i'pKt- ?

This is a Question asked today

Hardy, who haB come out from NewHaven to look at the cliff dwellings,and attend the Indian dances andgather data for a report.

The report will be submitted to Dr.

Hiram Bingham, of Yale, who hasachieved fame by his unearthing ofthe city of Manchupicchu, in Peru.This wonderful discovery was illus-trated with 244 views in the Aprilnumber of the ' National GeologicalMagazine.

Dr. Bingham is head of thehistorical ' department of

Yale University. Mr. Hardy"' accom:panied him to Peru as assistant to thechief topographer.' With the fire and energy or youth,Mr. Hardy is now looking over thetieasure house of the southwest, buthe is not telling much of his plans be-

yond his itinerary. This includes atrip to the rito tomororw, a visit toSan- lldefonso on September 6 then ajourney to Espaiiola and the Puyeclilts.- On August 8 he will be in Taosand returns here August lu.

Mr. kardy is registered at the DeVargas hotel and by some strangelaw of the fitness of things, otherscientists were gathered at his table.To his left sat Ur. F. W. Rodge, chiefo; the bureau of American Ethnologyand aot lai away was Dr. JosephSpinden of the American Museum, andSylvanus Griswold Morley, the distin-

guished young Harvard scientist whoires'IUes lit Santa Fe.

Mr: Hardy discussed the Peruvianexpedition of 1912 and said that polit-ical changes down in Peru haA made itnecessary to delay further excava-tion work for some time.

TESTIMONY ON TRAIN IS READ

(Continued from page one).

defendant listened closely while Cami-rett- i

coached his lawyers in ensnaring,questions. Diggs was in attendance,as has been his wife, since the trialof his companion began.

So far as the wife's face went, thetestimony left her unstirred. Therewas no play of emotion as she heardthe slip of a girl ao stole her hus-

band tell how he had pressed loveon her, promising to marry her whenhe should have obtained a divorce.

"Was there anything said about,

mariage before March 1," she wasaeked. The elopement did not takeplace until the early morning of March10 and-in- . the meanwhile there hadbeen trips to 'San Francisco, Stockton,San Jose and Jackson.

"No," was the answer.Marriage came up for discussion on

Sunday, March 9. "The day before weit ft," she testified. "Mr. Caminettisaid his wife would start action fordivorce at once and then we could bemarled."

The morality and propriety of theirrelationship came up elsewhere in

"I introduced Mr. Caminetti to my

people," Bhe testified, "under a false .

name, because I didn't want them toknow I didn't think it the proper

yJiiSKjS-SO-P- iit with' a married man.'Then why did you go with Cami

netti.".."Well, I knew it was not proper,

and if they had been living properlyit might have made a difference. Idid not feel that I was doing her (Mrs.Caminetti) so much of an injustice, nsHe" told me"they were going to beseparated."

, Robert Devlin, for the defense, inof the witness,

dwelt upon the return trip from Reno."Didn't you tell District Attorney

Atkinson that you and Miss Warring-te-had occupied the same berth on

the way to Reno?' --

"Yes.""Why. did you try to protect Drew

Caminetti then "

"I would not believe what they toldme about Drew's deceiving me notuntil later.";

"You were still in love with himthen?"

"Yes.""What are your feelings toward him

now?"The girl hung her head and did not

answer. -"Do you feel the same affection for

him?".There was another moment of si-

lence, before the answer came withhead averted, "No."

In this and other thorny passagesof the the essen-tials of her story were not distortedor even, deeply called in question. Itsessence was that Caminetti had terrif-

ied her into leaving home by threatsof scandal; that Diggs had presentedthe argument, and Caminetti had fol-

lowed them with personal persua-sion.

HOUSE PASSES SANFRANCISCO WATER BILL,

Washington, D. C, Sept. 3. TheHetch-Hetch- y bill, to enable the cityof San Francisco to utilize the HetchHetchy basin in the Sierra Nevadamountains, 132 miles away, as a watersupply, was passed by the house, 183to 43. The bill now goes to the sen-ate.

New Mexican Want Ads alwaysbring results. Try it,

cat was teaching her three furry in-

fonts the lore of the jungle.How to leap from tne grass upon a

horse at the right angle to break itsback at a single blow. How to followa blood trail to where the quarry lay.The "grass" was a pile of straw, the"trail," through sawdust, the prize apiece of raw beef.

Such a happy family it seemed, too.The cubs as intent in their efforts totrail and leap as though in the. forestswith a buck as their stalking prey.Equally interested seemed the lioness all unmindful or tne tact that theymight never know the tierce' joy'of thehunt and the kill.

"We hear much about, animal lifebehind the bars," said Mr. Barnes. "Ofthe lion, tiger and leopard, trained anduntrained. Of how they are caughtand caged the cruelty of it all. Someof it is true more is untrue, for when

mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm qmmq

y f'sy- Al G. Barnes famous as a capturer

and trainer of wild animals.

one knows the characteristics of thedumb brute, they learn that their con-

tentment lepends largely upon whatthey get to eat."

"Wild animals, when given propercare, live much longer in captivitythan in their native haunts, which is

largely due to good treatment, regularfeeding of proper foodB and freshwater. They might not be happy, butI think they are. We give every ani-

mal of the 350 in our managerie verycareful feeding and attention. Theyare also turned ,loose every day in thebig arena for exercise and allowed to

mingle with their kind. Happy? I'msure they are."

"Look at Trilby and her babies overthere." Trilby was a huge Asiaticlioness and her babies would easilyweigh a hundred pounds each. Thefamily was engaged in a l,

rough and tumble, care-fre- e frolic.Further along, 'Sampson, the show's

Asiatic lion, was doing a hippety-ho- p

around his cage in an endeavor tocatch the tip of his bushy tail. Samp-son is full grown, too, and supposed.to be Very sedate. King and Queen,a pair of immense Bengal tigers, wereMintentfiillv washine their faces Justlike any house tabby cat. A dozggleopards sleek, fat fellows, . werestretched about, the seeming acme of

content, one being busy in a playfu.Iendeavor to pull a sliver from thedoor on his cage.

Big Bill, the Frank Gotch of the griz- -

zlv bear tribe, was having a tusslewith two smaller companions. Evethe hyenas, more restless than anyother animals, were looking out uponthe-- scene with perfect content. Sealsand- sea; lions were sporting about Jnthe tanks of salty ice water. Unhap- -

piness; not a trace of it.

"Things change," said Mr. Barnes,When a day's feeding is missed. One

day each week all food is kept fromthe flesh eating animals; they getnothing but water. We find it keepsthem in better health. The followingday, finds them restless, unroarious in

their activities. Quest for food isshown in every action, and great caution must be exercised by the train-- 'era to avoid an attack. They are particularly dangerous at this time. Afterfeeding, they resume their normalnoise. That's how the trainer haslearned to know upon what their hap :

piness depends full stomachs.

MEXICANS TRY A BOYCOTT NOW

(Continued from page oncl.

immediate reparation by the Pima andMayo tribes, which also have been

fighting with the Mexican insurgents.The Indians have formed probably

the most effective fighting force of therevolutionary government in its strug-gle to oust the federalists from thestate. They excelled in the borderfighting of the last few months.

By taking the wpr path they notonly would demoralize the stateforces but would ifavite invasion bythe federals who apparently have mostfeared the markmanship and daring ofthe Indian braves.

Fears are held for the safety ofAmericans residing at Corral, Tonichi,Cumurllia, Esperanza, Alamos, Navajoand other points in the Yaqui rivercountry.

, Washouts will prevent their escap-ing north. The American Btate depart-ment had been asked for a Bhip tomeet them at the mouth of the Yaquiand Mayo rivers, which point they '.

may reach by an overland Journey.

When the second ro.'.nd was re- -

stinted. Patrick, despite his apparentweakened condition, managed to dropHiggins again, and was badly beatingthe. Roswell boy.

However, in the third round Pat-

rick weakened perceptibly doubtlessdue to the beating he had receivedwhen the lights were out, and Higginswho had by this time regained hisstrength, punished him badly.

The fourth round was brief for Hig- - ;annual inter.colleglate. championshipwent right after Patrick, whogins j,awn tenllis tollrnament opened todayat the of thewas groggy beginning on tn ground8 of U)e Merlo Crcketround, and a series of right and leftcin

Western League,Club Won Lost Pet.

Oenver 85 50 .630

jDes Moines 77 59 .566

jUncoln 73 64 .533St. Joseph 71 65 .522Omaha 67 70 .489

jTopeka 61 73 . 455

City 79' .428Wichita 52 85 .380

Where They Play Today- National League.' Chicago at St. Louis. '

Cincinnati at Pittsburgh.Boston at New York.

Philadelphia at Brooklyn (2).

American League.New York at Boston.

Washington at Philadelphia.

American Association.Indianapolis at Columbus.Toledo at Louisville.St. Paul at Milwaukee.Kansas City at Minneapolis (2).

Today's Games.

, National League.

At Bro'klyn First Game

Philadelphia 4 9

Brooklyn 3 7

Camnitz, Brennan and KilliferPfeiffer and W. Fisher.

At PittsburgCincinnati 3 10 0

Pittsburg 1 9 0

Brown and Clark; Adams and Sinion.

At Nf ,v YorkBoston 2 8 1

New York 1 1 0

Tyler and Rariden; Wiltse andMeyers.

At St. LouisChicago 7 9 1

St. Louis 2 8 2

Watson and Bresnahan; Trekell andWingo.

American League.

At BostonNew York .11 16

Boston 4

Caldwell and Sweeney; Andersonand Thomas.

At Philadelphia-Washin- gton

3 8

Philadelphia 4 9 6

Groom, Johnson and Henry, j Ain;smith; Brown, Bender and Schang.

American Association.

At MilwaukeeSt. Paul 1 2 2

Milwaukee 0 5 0

Gardner and Miller; Powell andMarshall, Hughes.

At Minneapolis Both Minneapolis-Kansa- s

City games postponed; rain;two games tomorrow.

YESTERDAY'S GAMES.

Reports of games received too latefor publication in yesterday's NewMexican;

National League.At St. Louis Second game)

Chicago 6 10 2

St Louis 13 0

Vaughn and Bresnahan ;Griner andHilderbrand.

American League.At Cleveland Second Game

Chicago .9 14 2

Cleveland 3 ft 3Benz and Schalk; Blanding, Culjop,

Kahler and Carisch.(Game called end of eighth inning.

account darkness). .,''American Association.

At Louisville .

Toledo .1 72jLouisvuie s 12 (r

Basketjte, Benn and DaVoght,Young; Woodburn, R, demons andSeveroid.

Subscribe for the Santa rv; nanMexican, the paper that boosts allthe time and works for the upbuildins of our new Stat.

For auick results, alittle "WANT."

swings floored him and he wascounted out by the referee and Hig-gins declared the winner.

While the club management dis-

claims any responsibility for lastnight's disgraceful exhibition, therein a well defined rumor going therounds that the fight was "fixed" forHiggins to win in any event, and thatthe bout was a "frame-up- " to furnisheasy pickings for a coterie of sure -

THAT IS HOW HARRY, IN A CANACIAN JAIL, SPEAKS- NISBET THAW.

thing bettors. !at New York, is well up in the run- -

It is problematical ..what effect the lning. as are also Princeton andbout will have on the j sylvania.

future of the boxing game in this city. The individual revolver match atfifty yards finds the United States in

GOLF FIELD OF ASPIRANTS IS j the Ieai-

Patrick according to spectators who

witnessed the bout, clearly had thefight won in the opening round, whenbe put Higgins down for the count.The local boy fell heavily and to allappearances was out. However, hischief second, Kid Tuggles, also a mid-

dleweight, jumped into the ring andbegan pouring water on Higgins' faceto revive him. This infraction ofring rules forfeited the bout to Pat-rick, without further question, but thereferee did not stop the bout. In themeantime Patrick resented Tugglesinterference and the two mixed it.Tuggles using his bare fists and Pat-rick hammering away with his gloves.During the melee the lights weresw itched off and in the darkness Pat-rick is alleged to have been slugged.When the lights came on a few mom-

ents later, Higgins by some strangesleight-of-han- d performance was rest-

ing in his corner with his seconds

IN ALL THE WORLD."

OF EVELYN

eo Photograph of the Girl.

tne ' niiaaeipma management was unhi'ile to clear a section of the bleach- -

jeis back of center field, claiming thatthe moving spectators were a handi-cap to the New York batters. Theumpire's decision nearly precipitateda riot.

INTERCOLLEGIATETENIS TOURNEY STARTS

Shaerfnrd. Ph.. Sent 3 The :!1ot

The new cup, donated by WilliamJ. Clothier, of Philadelphia, formernational champion, is in competitionfor the first time this year and rivalryfor the first leg on it is keen amongthe colleges.

Harvard, with R. Norris Williamsthe Davis enp crack, and G. S. Caner,

iboth Philadelphia boys, is favorite forthe year's honors, but Yale with R.Evans, Jr., who made a strong showing

ARIZONA HAS .

WINNERS ATRIFLE MATCH

Camp Perry, Ohio. Sept. 3. Thestanding at the end of the seconddays' work on the firing line in theinternational matches, as officially an-nounced today, sivo the Swiss shoot-ers the lead in three stages of the

international match.The United States leads in the "bes:three score" prone shooting whiteSweden is showing higher scores thanFrance. Three men are tied for h;ghplace in the running deer match.

Dillon, Pennsylvania, Bjorkman,Sweden, and La Tourette. Arizona,w)th 43 a piece. Next come Olson,Sweden, with 42; Cobb, navy, 41; Sey-ala- ,

Arizona, 40; Yorkman, Sweden,40; Lane, New York, 40.

UNION PACIFIC STOCKHOLDERS GET S. P. STOCK.

New York, Sept. 3. Stockholders ofthe Union Pacific have subscribed ac- -

cording to the underwriters' announcement today, for about eighty per centof the $88,357,000 Southern Pacificstock held by Union Pacific. The timelimit for subscribing to the stock ex-

pired yesterday. The stock represent-ed the balance of Union Pacific's hold-

ings following the exchange with theproposition of Southern Pacific stockfor Baltimore' and Ohio. Under decreeof the supreme court in the Harrimanmerger case. Union Pacific was com

pelled to divest itself of the stock, andit was offered to Union Pacific stock- -

- 'T"" r1 ':yjf?$&

rvcj Ar:

REDUCED TO SIXTEEN.

Garden City, N. Y., Sept. 3. The bigfield of aspirants for national amateurgolfing honors was reduced to 16 players today representing clubs in thesouth, middle west. New England,Maryland and New York. The firstof the match play rounds at 36 holesbegan early at the Garden City club'slinks.

The nuUch most talked of was thatbetween Jerome B. Travers, the titleholder and Francis Ouimet, the youngamateur champion of Massachusetts.

Jerome D.. Travers was one up onFrancis Ouimet at the end of the firstIS holes. Charles Evans was five upon E. M. Byers; Frederick Herreshoftthree up on Paul Hunter; A. M. Reidfive up on F. A. Martin; B. P. Merri-- 1

man, two up on T. M. Sherman; FraserHale two up on W. J. Travis; J. G.

Anderson three up on B. W. Corkran.Travers beat Ouimet three up and

two to go.Anderson beat Cockran four and

three.Herreshoff beat Hunter seven and

six. I

Reid beat Webb six and four.

DECISION GIVES FORFEITEDGAME TO PHILADELPHIA

New York, Sept. 3. Reversing thedecision of Umpire Brennan, President Thomas J. Lynch of the Nation-al league, announced yesterday after-noon that the game of 'Saturday, Aug-ust 30, between the New York andPhiladelphia clubs, will count as a i

victory for the Philadelphia team. Um- - j

iV.

f

11

6 Th Latest and Heretofore Unpublfah

XM

v: h

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1913 SANTA FE NEW MEXICAN. PAGE

PERSONALS .W MILLINERY nDGLTlEL f GOODS CO.MAN

REAL THING, SAYS

pjS CAS

UNITED STATES BANK & TRUST GO.

Does a General Banking Business.JlltlllllHIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIHJIHIIIIIIIIIIIHUIIIIIMIIfllllllllHIIIIIMIIIIIMIIIIIIUMMIIMIItlMlltllllllMltl;

Your Patronage Solicited j5lltlflillllllltMMIIItllllHH IIIIIIIIMlMllliMttltlMIIIHIIIIIirMIIMMIIllllllHlltlllHIIinttlllMUIIIIMHr

N. B. LAUGHLIN, President. JW. E. GRIFFIN, Cashier.

J. B. LAMY, t.

DISPLAYWednesday, Sept. 3d.

MRS. W. LINDHARDT

125 Palace Ave.

Mr. and Mrs. H. ('. Dillon, of Enc-ino- ,

are at the De Vargas hotel.J. M. 0. Chaves, of Abieiuiu, is in the

city en route home from a trip east.Mrs. M. H. Williams, of East Las

Vegas, Is visiting friends in the city.Assistant Attorney General Harry

S Clancy has gone to Taos for a fort-

night's vacation.Xuma C. Frenger. a Las Cruces at-

torney, is in the city today on businessbefore the supreme court.

LOVELL

GENERAL SUPERINTENDENT OF THE

PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD SYSTEM

WAXES ENTHUSIASTIC OVER AIR,

SUNSHINE, WATER, SCENERY AND

HISTORY OF SANTA FE.

Cut Prices in All Departments.WE CAN SAVE YOU MONEY. CALL AND SEE US.Charles A. Scheurich, of Clovis, ar- -

i vivpd i? the rtv tact ovontnv unrl willPHONE 180.g&0)S8i8& S)ien( 8(iveral ayS here. 210 SAN FRANCISCO ST.LGeorge II. Hunker, of Las Vegas,M I I i I I 1 1 1 1 1 I I I I I I I I I I I 1 1 1 I I I I IH I

portation in America are two diflerentproblems."

Mr. Lovell strikes one as a good fel-

low. He has read much of the south-west and he says he is going back to

Philadelphia witli the firm resolve tovisit, this part of the world, not only"again," but "soon again."

"Will you come out for a horseback

INSURE WITH HAYWARD AND REST CONTENT.

FOR SALE ILAUGHED WHEN ASKED

ABOUT RAG DANCES

chairman of the San Miguel countyload board, is in the city today.

Harold Allen Herrick, of New York,,ho has been visiting E. H. Oakley,

is spending a few days at Moriarty.A. H. Hudspeth, V, S. marshal, re-

turned to the city yesterday after atrip to the southern part of the state.

'ride up the canyon? Perhaps we will

twenty isee bear tracks, with adventure? HowI FOR SALE

BUSINESS PROPERTY on San FrancUcoStreet. Rents for $185.00 per month.Cheap, if taken at once.

RESIDENCE (Brick) eight rooms bestof location. Cost owner about $8,000.Will sell for $6,500 if taken within next 10 days

Eight-roo- Bungalow. Completely furnished.Best of location. $60.00 per month.

Two nicely furnished rooms, Palace Ave.

"You have asked me soim

VVe Have a Purchaser for a

THREE TO FIVE-ACR- E TRACT OF LANDOn South Side of City. Have you such a tract, im-

proved or unimproved, at a Reasonable Price?If so, and you will give us price, without discounting" the

future, we can make a sale.

questions; I have tried to answer alljubout it?"Miss Florence Kremis, of Albuquer- -

Inf fliaiii oVtant oliitnt ,1... rw,.,, fit ,r r.f But lie could not be tempted.que, who has been visiting .Mr. and

FOR RENT the rag dances Ha! really I don'tjmust go back to work. I am leavingknow anything about the rag dances i this afternoon and I fear a trip a- -

and now wish you to make tho horse might upset my muscles., I

feature of your story, the 'lead' as you haven't ridden for years."

Mrs. Frank Sturges, left for home thisafternoon. ...

j .Mrs. II. SI. Cordes, who has beenvismng ner sister, airs. u. r,. scnu- writel.s call lti something about Santa JOSEPH B. HAYWARD, MANAGER,

Rooms 8 and 9, Capital City Bank Building, Santa Fe, N. M.

:x; IF IT'sTeAlTsTaTE

"Do you have to .work hard, evenwhen you are the general superintend- -

ent?" ,

' "My dear man," replied Mr. Lovoll

jiieiu, lett tins aiternoon tor ner noine ,Fe. . i do not kmnv of any greater asin Jacksonville, 111. get than your bracing air, sunshine,

General II. P. Robinson, superintend- - jan(j pure water. This is also a treas-1o work hard."

O. C. WATSON & CO.(C. A. BISHOP, PROP.)

INSURANCE, REAL ESTATE, LOANS, SURETY BONDS.

Phone, 189 J.1 19 San Francisco St., : : Santa Fe, New Mexico- -

ent of irrigation for the Pueblo e house of history and romance and "all railroad men havedians, is at the Montezuma. His home u anl mightly pleased with it ALL!" j

is in the Duke t.ity. Thus spoke D. H. Lovell, general su-

Prank Butt, formerly of this city, iperintendent of the Pennsylvania rail-bu-

now in charge of the Albuquer-!roa- system, with offices in PhUadel-qu-

drug store of the Butt brothers, is jphia.here for a day or two. An unassuming man. dressed in gray

Assistant U. S. District Attorney Ed- - jand wearing a felt hat is Mr. Ixivell.ward C. Wade, Jr. ,of Las Cruces, isIHe was seen at the De Vargas hotel,

AMERICAN EXODUS FROMMEXICO PRACTICALLY ENDED.

.Mexico City, Sept. 3. The Americanexodus from Mexico City practicallyhas ceased. A score or more Ameri-

cans, who arrived here today from in-

terior points, called at the consulate,but have made no arrangements so

hnWll M I I I 1 I I 1 1 I I I I I 1 1Ml I M I Ml I I MM II I

WHY BE BAKED OVER A HOT STOVE?When you can buy PERCOLATORS and CHAFINGDISH liS run by electricity or alcohol ? I have a fineassortment of the Sterneau " Inferno," all high-gra- de

chafing dishes, on which you can cook ameal, and the percolators which will make a cupof most delicious coffee in a few minutes.

H. C. YONTZ, JEWELER, SAN FRANCISCO STREET.

at the De Vargas. Air. Wade will swinging gently in a chair and look-- j

make this city his headquarters. ling at the mountains in the distance.C. L. Dr. P. R. Lord, of Las Vegas, presi-- "You are holding down a pretty big.L. A. HUGHES,

President.

R. J. CRICHTON,

Manager Treasurer.POLLARD,

Secretary.tar- for proceedings. Those of the bet--

job. aren't yon?" asked the reporterter classes decline to accept steer- -

with a tone of admiration in his voice.Mr. Lovell chuckled. "Well, our Be pasage, but say that they are

railroad is one of the prominent roads willing to take accommodations on anof the country, I do believe," he said Amercvan transport, where they couldmodestly. "We employ 17r,,(:fill people frel assured of sanitary quarters andand there are Tfl.uflO stockholders, 40ipioper treatment. Consul General

dent of the state board of dental ex-- i

aminers, accompanied by Mrs. Lord,is spending the day in Santa Fe.

Roger and Wallace Fiske left todayfor Boulder, Colo., where they will en-- i

ter school. Thornton Victory willleave tomorrow for the same place.

Mrs. A. T. Owen, who is visiting herson, Frank Owen, is from El Paso.Texas, and not from El Rito as wasstated erroneously in the New Mexi-pa-

yesterday.,General A. S. Brookes, adjutant

cral of the state, left this afternoon

per cent of them being women.' Shanklin, however, has not.' receivedany intimation that Biich aj transportwill be sent to Mexican waters.

Mr. Lind, President Wilson's per- -

"Your road makes big money?""The gross earnings were nearly

five hundred millions last year, but

THE STAR BARNW. A. WILLIAMS, - - PROPRIETOR.

GENERAL LIVERYHack and Baggage Lines. Entire Stable Re-

stocked. Best Rigs you can get.SADDLE POMES. TWO AND FOUR HORSE OUTFITS. PROMPT SERVICE.

Phone 139. 3 1 0 San Francisco St.

sonal envoy, has indicated that he hasno intention of returning to Mexico

City unless assured that he could beof service in reopening the negotia

of course, you know, we have a greatmany expense. Three quarters of amillion people depend on the salariespaid out alone."

"Is it easy to become a general su-

perintendent of a great railroad?" wasasked.

i for Albuquerque and Las Cruces,tions. The Mexican foreign office hasmade 110 move to give such assurance.

Lumber and Transfer Co.(INCORPORATED)

HIEA-IDQXJILTEI- IFOR

LUMBER OF EVERY DESCRIPTION.

Shingles, Cement, Plaster, Roofing and Build-

ing Materials of Every Description.

AGENTS ThE FAMOUS DAWSON COAL

GENERAL TRANSFER BUSINESS AND STORAGE

There he will inspect the local militiacompanies".

T. J. Guilfoil, who for severalmonths was assistant, traveling audt- -

Again Mr. Lovell chuckled. He n some quarters, 11 is mougiu matpossibly unexpected developments

tor, and who is now registrar at the anRwer the question or to let it go!'ay follow the arrival of WilliamAgricultural college, spent yesterdav witn a iaugh. Finally he replied: Bayard Hale in Washington, wherein the city. 'y0 niatter who enters the employ he is understood to have gone to lay

Dr. Frank H. H. Roberts .president iOf the Pennsylvania, be he right off seme new phase of Hie situation be-o- f

the New Mexico Normal University, Uhe farm or from the great universi- - fere the administration,and professor of history at the Uni- - ties, he has to be TRALVED. Do youversity of Denver, is In the city on lunderstand? Trained In the work ofbusiness. He is at the De Vargas. jthe road. To get the higher posts, ai

Mrs. G. F. McNitt, court stenograph-- man has to go through the lower

NEW MEXICO

SCHOOL OF MINESSOCORRO, N. M.

our Business Soliciteder for the First judicial district, is act- - jones. '

ing as court stenographer in the Sev- - j "Do you think the foreign comment'e.nth district at the term of court In " the railroad accidents of this coun-- !

Valencia county, held in the new court jtrv jst? I mean that the number ofFoot of Montezuma Ave.Phone 100 and J5 .W.

llouse' killed and injured is due to gross

A Physician's Faith inTuberculosis Medicine

"lliivc lined Alterntlve Insev'i-n- eases of t.uln'rculfii- gltinU of the

wit li excellent results every time.In one c;ise it eost me ."fno. for the girlw;m put 011 ft mily until she could nr- -

riiniie to 1m, operuted. nutl In n shurttime nn oporntlon was not needed. J

suppose your n rds ui-- just ;ts line (isof old. Vou know niy fulth in it."MlrlL'hlill of this physician's leller u file.)

Kckiniin's Artcnulve is effective in olh- -

er forms. Ileiid what Mrs. (Inrvin says:Fulls, Idaho.

"Gentlemen : I h.ive Kuiucd twenty-tw-

pounds since liisr nnd niy hilhyIs jn perfect hcullh. huve lieen waitingsince she was horn to see how I woulil

carelessness? asKea tne reporter.R. C, Dillon, of Encino, chairman ofThey Don't Know. ifthe Torrance county road board motor- - j "1 ho tionnla uhn run railT-nuri- a in

cu uji lu me vupiuu jcnirmny, mmEurope have different, conditions to

Hespent the day here on business. contend with. In this country therewas accompanied by Mrs. Dillon, hisBuy For Cash ! is a tremendous amount of freight car- -

wite, miss u.va uecil and i.eorge iiaK- -

jrIeda Kreat deaJ Inore than in Ku-er- -

rope. Of course, abroad there is a

And we will show you how much you can save. Espe Miss Minerva Wagner and Miss Jo-- ! great population: we will not deny, ; ov!.r Ri,. .she was foui- weeksthat. But conditions are totally dif-- old. and I n in steadily I do notferenf and the man who runs a rail- - 2vKi!,h inZ.inXtl!" ""' ' lM!"',Te

road in this country knows Hie ditli-- (Sworn Aiiidnvin mks. m. n. (lAiu iN.

sephine Herseh leave this afternoonfor Cincinnati, Ohio, where they willenter the convent Mt. Joseph's acade- -

COURSES OFFERED: Mine Engineering, Mining

Geology, Metallurgical Engineering, Civil Engineer-

ing, Electrica Engineering and Mechanica' Engi-

neering,

ADVANTAGES: Requirements fully up to thoseof standard schools of mines everywhere; close

proximity to a great variety of mines and smelters,where the various metallurgical processes are I-

llustrated; salubrious climate; water famed for Its

"purity; good dormitory accommodations at low cos:etc.

For full Information, or catalogue, address

THE kEQISTRARNEW MEXICO SCHOOL OF MINES,

SOCORRO, NEW MEXICO.

Aoie .urs. i.nrvin lias seven c lieu.culties tn the clearKeep Kekuian's Alterative Is en'ective In Hronmy conducted by the Sisters of Char-- j

ity. They will stop In Chicago for aj few days. Mr. and Mrs. Leo Herschwill accompany them to Lamy.

Why, in Philadelphia alone, tnePennsylvania has one thousand trainsa day running info its depots; fiOO

cially should you do this with your

Hay, Grain FlourGive us a trial and let us show you. Guaranteed

Pure, Clean and Wholesome.

THE SANTA FE HAY AND GRAIN CO.M. O'CONNELL, Mgr., - - Galisteo and Water Sts.

Phone, Main 250.

I'liilK A Ht hum, liny Fever; Tliront midI. nil?? Troubles, uml in iiplnilMiiig thusystem. Iioos not ''onl.-iii- i poisons, opijitcsor drills. Ask for booklettelling of roeoverit's, niul write to MeknninliUlionilory, I'lillnrielnliiu. I :i for more

For hv Mil lending druggiststod by Zook's Pharmacy in Santa Fe

A. L. Morrison, past exalted ruler of ;traills n,n int0 tl,e Broad street fta'tion and 400 into the Camden station.the Elks and for years in the traveling

auditor's office at the capital is back inSanta Fe. He has been in Gallup but

The freight business is immense."Particular Business.

Asked why the Pennsylvania rail-

road did not discard the dining carla going to stay in this city. Mr. Mor- -

nj uiuvrLruxnnnvruxnjxnJiruuuuuarLprisen was back at the piano last night '

fi H eatj ,I0UM sys.at the Elks threatre and he he tern, Mr. Lovell smiled. "I do notsayshopes to help discourse music atmany a dance.i

aFor quick results,little "WANT."

HENRY KRICK- e-DISTRIBUTOR OF

LEMP'S KEG and BOTTLE BEERBUDWEISER IN BOTTLES

Manufacturer of all kinds of Soda Waters made from Pure Distilledwater. Agent for Manitou Spring Mineral Water.

TELEPHONE 35 J ' ' Santa Fe, New Men.

yassih .I THE AMERICAN

fll

think it Is the particular business of arailroad to run hotelB. I must add,however, that I am most favorablyimpressed with the meals of the Har-vey house along the Santa Fe. You

get good food and 25 minutes is

enough. I think, to eat it."Praises Santa Fe Road?

"Don't you think the Santa Feought to run a main line through thecity which christened it?" was asked.

"I am not sufficiently familiar withSanta Fe city to Bay yes or no," replied the prominent official. "I willsay that I think the Santa Fe a good

H. S. KAUNE 5 GC.

HELLOYES, THIS IS

THEPURE FOOD

GROCERYPhone 262.

PriceWhere Quality Governs the

and Price the Quality railroad. It is affiliated with the PennHONSESUMMER sylvania, as you doubtless know."

CALIFORNIAAND THE EAST17 IF ,YOU BUSINESS MEN

DicklingReason

Is Now Here

"Why doesn't the Santa Fe roadmake it its particular business tobring more tourists to Santa Fe?" wasthe next question. "What do you sug-gest as the best plan to 'cop' the tour-ist trade?"

Mr. Lovell looked perplexed. He saidthat he did not know just how tobring people out here. "I have oftenpassed through Lamy myself withoutcoming up here, but finally I made upmy mind to come to Santa Fe and I

am glad 1 did. I hope to return hereagain to see many things I have beenunable to look at this trip."

"You do not know how to hriug out

NO MADAM We do not give

premiums with our Coffee. You

can't make good Coffee out ofonly realized the business-buildin- g power of first-cla- ss

The Summer Tourist Rates will soon be over,

TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THE LOW RATES NOWstationery, you would choose your own Bond Paper andnot intrust its selection to a subordinate

And, if you wanted to make your business stationery100 efficient, you would specify

SanFrancisco

Los Angeles orSan Diego, The Secret

of Good$55.55 $45.55tourists? Aren't you the general su-

perintendent and do you not have tohandle the transportation problemfrom A to Z?" asked the Interviewer.

"Yes," he answered quickly, "butour transportation problem is notvniirn. We have to deal with large

poor Beans. You can't expect tomake good coffee out of thekinds that are half Premium, forremember, you can't put thePremium in the Cup Have aCup of our Coffee.

Gold Band Line 40c 35c 30cBonnet te 40cOld Fort Mocha & Java.. ..40cWhite House 40cBarrington Hall ...,40cLiptons Yellow Label 40cGood value the best of the

cheaper coffees 25cOur bulk coffees the same

grade you pay 40c for incans 35c

Modern Grocery Co.

"TheQualityShop"" "PHONIT

SUM HER TOURIST RATES-EA- ST

ON SALE DAILY UNTIL SEPTEMBER 30TH. ;

numbers of people. It is not 'getting'them, but taking care of them whenthey come to us. You see the

Pickles isin theVinegar

HAVE PURE APPLE CIDER VINEGAR

WHITE PICKLING VINEGAR

MALT AND HEINZ SPICED

(Fac-Simi- Water-Mark- )

The De Luxe Business PaperSt. Louis . . $47.35Minneapolis $51.85 How About Pullmans.

Will the alert minds of the Penn

Chicago .

St. Paul .

Denver. .

New York

$51.85$51.85$21.10$78.85

Pueblo ... $16.35 sylvania's great railroad system ever

Col. Springs $18.15 devise something superior to the pres-ent Pullmans?" was then asked, "Willthere be a sleeping car in which oneSALAD VINEGAR.

because by comparison you would find that COUPON

BOND is far beyond the average Bond Paper in qualitycharacter impressiveness, and all that makes stationeryreally productive.

can get into an upper birth without astep ladder?"

"I haven't heard much, criticism ofthe Pullman." said the great railroadman, laughing. "I meant criticism by-

-

Return Limit, October 31st, I9IJ.

For particular regarding above rates, and rates to

many other points, call on or address anyagent of the Santa Fe.

H. S. LUTZ Agt, .f SANTA FE, N. M.

Just specify COUPON BOND today. And see theH. S. KAUNE 8 CO.

Where Prices ar BtAmericans. Of course, some of theseforeigners coming over here talk difference. Let us show you samples.about the Pullmans. Here again is adifferent condition. Railroad transpor NEW MEXICAN PRINTING COMPANY. AGEN".

8Mitt Ft, N. M.i', Par' Sf Oualitv. tation In Europe and railroad trans-- , nnnix ruvwxnnnnnnnfinnn uirb

'i-- 'PAGE SIX SANTA FE NEW MEXICAN. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1913.

THE SWITZERLAND OF AMERICA.RANCH, INT. 1VI.Santa Fe New Mexican

Entered as Second Class Matter at the Santa Fe Postoffice

The Santa Fe New Mexican Published DallyThe New Mexican Review English WeeklyEl Nuevo Mexicano Spanish Weekly

The New Mexican Printing Co., Publishers "POCKET MONEY"IS THE P I

MONEY of nearlyevery man-mo- ney lo spend 011 trifles which bring

no return.President

.General ManagerEditor

Bronson M. Cutting.Charles M. StaufferJ. Wight Glddings. ..

Fishing in its prime. The Pecos River the best troutstream in the Southwest. The Valley Ranch offers thebest accommodations and best location for fishing.

r Booklet Free on Request :

SUBSCRIPTION RATES

Dally, per year, by mall 15.00 Dally, per quarter, by mill 11.25

Dally, tlx months, by mall 2.50 Dally, per quarter, by carrier 11.60

Weekly, per year f1.00 Weekly, tlx montht I .60

The man who makes a practice of putting his money in the bank savesthe money he would otherwise fritter away.

The old custom of keeping on hand cash to pay bills and expenses is

largely displaced by .drawing checks for the necessary sums. Money de-

posited with a strong financial institution, such as THE FIRST NATIONAL

BANK, and checked against, in addition to affording safety, saves time,as you can write out the exact amount required and mail the check, thuseliminating a personal call.

We invite your account,

THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF SANTA FE

CAPITAL, SURPLUS AND PROFITS, $242,000.00.

VALLEY RANCH, NEW MEXICO.THE VALLEY RANCH,

"All of Today's News Today" SATISFIED. fighter in the afterward. It is enoug'o proper, comes out of his hole andto make anyone wail to have the makes music after the rain, but thestomach ache and the lesson of over-- d fellow croaks loudest in

feeding is given to the youngster just dry weather. Pecos Valley News.

PHONES:BUSINESS OFFICE 286 EDITORIAL ROOMS 31

as much as to the person who hasgrown up, as the mechanism of themachine is all the same only built ona smaller frame.

That loud, lusty yell is because thebaby is mad. He is letting you knowthat the manner in which he Is being

1

IT f OOKS BRIGHT. handled is not the proper one and itThe past summer has been, in many respects, the most important one that

Hunts Fe 1ms known for many years and the results of the labor and theinterest shown in the future of the city by its citizens will be seen in the

ILL

Did Not Know It.

Before today we did not know therewas a national association of hay fev-

er sufferers, but the association met inannual convention this week withmany delegates present to report theprogress of their sneezing affliction.These sneezers should run over to thehigh altitude section of New Mexico,where hay fever sneezers are un-

known, and where this mutual associa-tion of sneezing sufferers has no mem-

bership whatever. Clayton News.

Do It Alone.A look at the map will disclose that

New Mexico borders on Old Mexico aswell as Texas, but the governor ofthe former has yet to tell the publichow bloodthirsty he is. If Texas hasbeen hurt more than the rest of thestates, and the governor is pining forsomeone's gore, none should interferewere he to wade in and secure his fill,but he should not expect others to aid

The Montezuma HotelSANTA FE, NEW MEXICO.

THE TRAVELING MAN'S HOME

. Cuisine and Table Service Unexcelled. Rooms en suit withprivate baths. Electric light, Steam Heat,

central Location.

is not to show that he is going to bea big noise when he grows to man-

hood at all.These theories of the theorists

sound great but they have no signif-icance at all.'. The baby crieB because he's hun-

gry or has the stomach ache or ismad.

Not Needed Here.Over in Sweden, so report sa; s,

there is a movement on foot topass a law permitting women to pro-

pose marriage.I do not know much about Sweden

or why there is need to pass a law

'Fancy Vera marrying an aeroplanedriver."

years to come.Never before has the attention of the outside world been brought to this

section of the country as it has in the last few months and never before has

this city in particular, had as much publicity as it has today.The chamber of commerce has had much to do with this and the earnest

and intelligent effort lias been directed in efficient channels.

Many of the traveling public have made their first visit to Santa Ke

during the past few months and each one of those who came. left, with a

different opinion than that which has been generally prevalent, based on

the crude ideas of those who did not know us and had gained an entirelyerroneous impression as to the climate, the conveniences and the beauties

of this section of .t he west.We have never had as large acquaintance as we have at the present tune

and never have those acquaintances felt for us so cordial a regard.summer we will show more of the people of the United State-an-d

of the world what we have and what we are and with the better roads

which we have come lo realize are among our biggest assets, we will offer

them further opportunities for enjoyment and recreation than have ever been

set before them in the prior years.The future looks bright for Simla Fe, and with a continuance of this

spirit of unity and of enthusiasm for our city and its surroundings, we cannot

tail to bring results that will add to the prosperity of our citizens and to the

Large Sample Rooms. THOS. DORAN, Prorpietor."Yes, she always said she'd haveto have a man she could look up to."

nnnoriKir n miaotimi nf iVla L'trwl flllt it" - - :inlm for they are hot that way inmay ne uiai me ymiuie over uiiu Rock Island Tribune.Iclined.- -

have the notion that a thing is not soAS

THE BYSTANDER

SEES IT.Opals Again.until it is on the statute books, i am

ANNOUNCEMENTnot going to say anything about the" women of the land of the far away.

either, but I do know a little of the

thp women of our dear land, and I want toj More New Ones.! "Hair stvles less trying."j fashion notes. I do not know whether j sv right here, that we do not need a

upbuilding of this section.eat encouragement to witness that union this means less trying to one who law or any other thing that we naveIt has been a matter of very gn

of action which all must have seen in the last few months, especially on the wears the style or the one who looks not got to help our lovely women in

part of the citizens of Santa Fe, both on the part of the members of the jar it. I do think that some of the the matter of catching the man theylive chamber of commerce, and on the part, of the good roads advocates as hair styles that we have been com-- 1 want, and they do not need to proposewell. pelled to witness of late, are trying to him, either.

It all adds a tinge of brightness lo the future of this city and Ave can t0 everybody. j All our American woman bus to dolook Corward to better days ahead. 11 always seemed funny to me that j.; just to twist the fellow she thinks

n there must be a certaiu style to do B, e w ntg arollnd ner pretty finger and

MR. HARVEY OATMAN,Proprietor of the

MONTEZUMA BILLIARD PARLORS,

Has at a Great Expense,

MARCUS CATTON,Son of the Famous

"BILLY" CATTON,who will manage his billiard par-lors and Instruct tnose desiring tolearn the game. All new tables,new cues, and a quiet, gentlemanlylounging room for those who caterto the pastime.

Opals are now coming into favoramong, those people fortunate enoughto own precious stones. For some rea-son or other there has always been agood deal of superstition attached tothe opal, the idea being that it bringsbad luck to the wearer. But if fashiondecrees that this stone shall be thefavorite the superstition will have togo, for fashion is all powerful in gemsas in dress. Anyway It Ms alwaysgood to knock silly superstitions onthe head, and especially one connect-ed with so beautiful a gem as the opal.Grant county has several good opalmines nine miles east of Silver Cityand they can be made paying proposi-tions with proper development. Sil-

ver City Enterprise.He Was Watched.

For four years we have been a resi-dent of Questa and have many watch-ers who have their optic cast in ourdirection; in fact we have been the

INSURANCEFIRE, LIFE,

PLATE GLASSThe Best That Can be Bought t

AT ANV PRICE

Take no chances on eitherwhen a small amount will giveyou the protection that youneed, and when you do use in-surance get the best, as it isthe cheapest, and

ALWAYS SEE

FRANK M. JONES,Office United States Bank Building

(FIRST FLOOK)

who has purchased the Insur-ance Business of the L. A.Harvey Agency. Strong lines,goodcompanies.good protection

Iho hair women, ana it musiamong h ,,. . .,,. on , tne Drouerbe done that way no matter whether intended that hetme( jHst a8 t wagll makes the woman look a beauty or

THE CONSTANT FEAR.And now comes the Oklahoma Times and it wants to know. This newspa-

per, like so many others, is greatly worried over the absence of Col. Rooseveltfrom the Progressive anniversary held a few days ago and sees in that ab-

sence the beginning of the end.The Times goes a little further than some of the journals have done and

prophecies that the Colonel is planning to have the Progressives and the

regular Republicans get together and then nominate him as the candidate

should do when the twisting processbegun. He cannot wait to tell herabout it when she gets ready to havehim and the beauty of it all is that hedoes not know that he has had any- -

a fright. It seems as if' there oughtto be a little leeway in the style asthe contour of our heads is of a verydifferent character and the tight EVERYONE WELCOME!drawing of the hair on certain ones is

j thing done to him it has all been donevery fetching and on others it looUs

so artistically and in such a sweetlyf the reorganized combination. HHMIHIHe thinks that he diddainty manner.Now thev are uninir to have littlen )q a nrettv d renin and it might have been given some credence by Ihad 'Roosevelt to reach the of the neck if they " n.u 5n ut uuu u. me luwh. uwtiose who are not students of the times not happened curls at nape , iIi La Salle HotelChicago at the psychological moment and tip the theory all over in a very dress their hair low and they are go-- j right stage he is in a desperate ie.ii we give notice tnat the vigilance can

characteristic interview where he said that the amalgamation of the two mg to have all kinds of ornaments lest someone else will get her before cease as we have a watch of our own;

parties could never be brought about except by the acceptance on the part iflxed around through the hair and he does, and as a matter of fact, he is a full jeweled .leffersonian, open face,.i. t. ,.iv r ti.u nf the Progressives. not nart of thev nre enine tn bide their ears. This! not in the least danger of suffering i gold case and stem winding, and war- -

Ul llic: HClluin.dii lie.,.. - - - , ...... ... n - ........them, "but all." might be a good thing in some ways, the loss he fears.

The Times says that the Democrats are shivering wilh dread over the as for instance when you come in late A whole lot of that stuff we read ofCHARLEY GANN, Prop'r

ranted to keep up with any pace wemay set. The modus operandi of se-

curing a watch of our own is no one'sprospect of such an outcome as the choice ot Roosevelt ny tne sue coum inn near juu u mo tne helplessness of woman Is interest-

European Plan. ncovered but the worst 01 tills ts tn nrniw and nice to believe huti:were business. Please ask us what time itis when you meet us. This watch reg-- 111it. isn't so. And the beauty ot this- - allthat she won't be covered at the

nsvrhnlnG-ira- moment as that is the

party.Of course. The Times admits that the story of this far fetched scheme is

only rumor as yet, but that it is evident that Colonel Roosevelt is "losinginterest in the movement started by him some months ago."

Thin ia o nn whore thp wihIi Is father to the thought and there is not

is that it does not detract from her,,m ;h her hair is Win on the we regulate the watch to suit our con- -

a"""" or ner mooesty or ner veence-- at a glance the time of daybureau and not on her pretty head womanliness in the least degree. the Iinnaret nt ni-- i,t w., thnnir

i Meals At AH Hours. P1 Elegant Rooms in Connec- - 1

tion. Steam Heat, m

g Electric Lights and Baths.1 RATES: 50c and 75c PER DAY. I

241 San Francisco Street. fNear S. W. Corner Plaza, j

WmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmSi

a spark of evidence anywhere to show that there is a lack of interest ai a,w-li- s " most charming woman in the the heretofore watchers for their kind- -

on the part of any citizens who joined the party organized tor tne pin pose ' '7' ",,,. ,, world, is our American, and the world ness in our behalf. We have a chainof bringing about a better condition in this country, uom socially and In :' F. '

.." ', H. . admits it. They may need this law in on the watch, also a fob. Questa Ga

dustriaJIv and to give ua a more honest government. to propose zette.The fight is on and nowhere is it more intense than in th

Sweden to permit womene strongholds heads. They can wear a pointed knot

at the top of the head or across the not in our own I nited States.

PromBARRANCA TO TAOS

Meets Both North SouthBounds Trains.

Leaves Barranca on the arrival 'the north beund train and arrives atTaos at 7 p.m.

Ten miles shorter than any otherway. Good covered hacks and goodteams. Fare $5.00 round trip. Teamsfurnished commercial men to take Inthe surrounding town. Wlr Embudt,station.

of Republicanism in the stales of the east.back and when she does this we are iauit uu nui uc mo mu i THE WEATHERthe law in little matter oimice more to our old a simpleme ieut;m utiuy..,,, -- r. .... . it,l.o,lmental in making the necessity for a change more and more apparent ana; .i,, u,.,t i;ii.i i j. TI'IMIIM lHt ItiAl Willi M imi"

the breaking nf the lines of the Democratic party, wmcn are ueginning to - -

aoallainttd back inalarm the leaders, is further evidence that the voice of the people is going j ' V" " h n

the election next year and that the old political metnoaa ""-- 3 I Mil HUI I UKd.to be heard 111

and the former style of legislation have gone by.

Vp to 7ti hut no higher yesterday!What glorious weather for Septemberor any other mouth! The silver bulbbegan work yesterday at the 50 markand rose a few degrees each hour, un-

til the maximum was reached at 3:1"

i need worry the men folks are thosethose Neither One.andornaments for the hair

HOW HISTORY REPEATS. feathers, as you know how far the or- - A great many of our citizens wouldi. l tn tUa u'j v nf ha anrni'iuoH irk loam tlmf tlia MrtiirrianuiuHUL uusiiieoo vnu ftu ... v.. j ... , .... ... .

v, fi,u,. orQ nr. ,miii rinntrino lu noithor a vuiip-in.i- nnr u P - 1 ne average relativft numiuuyeApeiiec auu turz utqlui id ..... .... .......... ... ..v........ H ...B.vuu ..... '

was 55 per cent. The temperature atS a. m. today was 58 degrees. In other NW MAYES

If in an old manuscript in a dead language you should decipher that on a

certain day a comely and healthy young woman, penniless and alone, afterweeks of famishing on scraps and cast-awa- picnic lunches and of sleepingon pari; benches and in places, being unable to find work

and unwilling to earn ease at the price of shame, had sought escape by

item when you consider that, they patent medicine. Springer Stockmay want a different one for every go- - man.

cities it was as follows:ing out. Of course they do not wain Being wastedm r the same feather everywhere, If the government doctors are i Amarillo, 62; Bismarck, 54; Boise,!

poison, what would you think of the civilization of her time?THE VISI GRAPH TYPEWRITERhe likelv to swell with pride

'

for they are not like hens, you know, right, there are a lot of turtles be-- w. 52; uouge city, bS; uu- -

.. i. i . Un...l .U..m trine nluaoin I, u'..,dH n anmm tViot tno-ll- .lrnirn 52; flagstaff, 50; Grand JuncReading her pathetic story, wouldn't you .....if such things used to be, they couldn't happen inougn i nave ,,.u w.u ..

and exclaim: "Thank heaven,'Bt times, Specially WIlu uicj huhui j iiiw auuy, opi uiftci oiunuiaii.in this Christian land in this era of peace and plenty!"

tion, 5; Helena, 58; Kansas City, 70;Lander, 50 ; Los Angeles, 58; Modena.64; Phoenix, 70; Portland, 56; Pueblo,

ed about to get nolo ot some on oi From That.of A.idea .... no,,,in .o mnn..rint. further, vou came to a story aouhho " T ' ' ... Well anvhnw there Annrr from the ncrnainnal hnnKtinirrnnmfnl nf nrderlv nersons eating ouietly in a tavern until suaaeni tnere

is going to be a new style in hairdressing this fall.

iof the Bull Moose Illusion, the Santa 56; RaPid cit'' Reburg, 66; Ros-P- p

New Mevican is one of the best we". 2; Salt Lake, 66; San Francis--was a commotion at the door and a band of men wearing the uniforms of off-

icers rushed in, seized a number of these quiet citizens, men and women alike,

beat down their resistance and threw them bodily into the street. Wouldn't

you be inclined to look upon it as a picture of the dark ages, as an example of

feudal outrage in the rule of might over right? Wouldn't your impulse be to

INSURANCE

Pire, Life, lAccidentPlate Qlass, Etc. Etc '

REAL ESTATE

City Property, FarmsRanches, OrchardsLand (Jrants, Etc

Surety Bonds

O, Piffle. dailies in the state. Lake vood l'ro-lco- . 58: Spokane, 5(i; Tonopah,. 54;Some of the stuff that Is being put j gresg. Winnemucca, 52.

out s is such silly twaddle j Four tQ Qne 'j Local Data.

that it is only to laugh. The effort to Highest temperature this date last

The Visigraph is the result of 28

years experience. Contains all thedevelopments of the Typewriter art

Best m the world. It has84 characters with a Bingleshift, light action and un-

limited speed; Interchange-able carriage and platens,rapidly set marginal and col-

umn stops. Absolute visi-

bility and handlness of ma-

nipulation, with drop forgedtype bars. It is a durable

. and dependable machine.ABk for Catalogue or Agtnta Terms

THE SANTA FE TYPEWRITER EXCHANGE

Distributors for New Mexico,SANTA FE, N. M.

that such scenes had passed away. . j .j nl,nt th.a cuinp timp nnd. anmathlnv now rr winp and tn see. year, 74Tnen suppose you turneu a page auu i ...... .... , ... .. ... - - mcr.eof tion inthe nast ten

in the same country, a d young man. d with murder, after jtbing8 that no one else has been able pjpuU

years of trifling with the laws of God and man, had bought his way through to discover and to advance some unex "

j J"n"vn "th tarm8 Thisthe walls of a restraining institution anu was uraevmnis an eum, i.uuhmcu. pecteu uieurj is juot !.

nipurtH thp inprpuap nf nrinnlntion nftWouidn t you tninK it, also, a nigmmaie ui which cries . . . . .Here is one: "The baby m oo , Q ,hioin his impudent efforts to escape,

with a wnme or a snari noie win inane

lowest temperature this date lastyear, 52.

Extreme this date, 41 years record,highest, 85 in 1879.

Extreme this date, 41 years record,lowest, 40 in 1SS0.

Forecast.For Santa Fe and vicinity: Partly

cloudy but generally fair tonight andThursday.

the hunea past.- - - l. . mamtainei

These are not tales from ancient history. They are taken from the-dtocont(?nt,di fretful adult. The In- - lllel18 here to

rhronioles of our day. All reflect the civilization of our richest city and ant wnose cry is a sprles of wails j,g

s'ate. And still we wonder why there are reformers. wilI alwayB have a chip on its shoul- -j Hjm 50Q Punka- -

' der, while a strong, lusty cry with a; , , . f ..pi.m.,nts-- A gospel stick'' is what someone has cal.eeI President Wdson So far he M m fl smi)e the , ke8 , J Vut to

has wielded nunseit wuu a guuu u u. n.... .. -- ..,, the world leaders, neiermmeu to buc- -

our figures, that rain the other night j For; New Mexico: Generally cloudy

Of All Kinds.Telephone 194 W., Room 24

LALGHLIN BUILDING,

SANTA PE - NEW MEXICO

ia poine now. the "gospel stick" will be as powerful as a certain Jceed.'GRAND ARMY OF

THE REPUBLICcost Secretary Bryan not less than with local thunder showers tonight or

Thursday.Conditions.

Some one is trying to make us De-- j j5q0 However as it saved that muchlieve that he or she has discovered j for ti10se who didn't hear the lecturesomething entirely new and now a lle didn't deliver the situation is aboutparent can tell all about what a child j a 8tandoff. Rorwell News,is going to be by the way it cries when j Wasted Effort.

I me center or lowest Darometer isjover Montana and Washington this

used to be.w

If Mulhall is really what the different members of congress say he is. he

certainly has Ananias and then some. He ought to make the

other members of the club look like first grade kindergartners.o

Friends of Mayor Oanyor say they see victory in the air. Yes, but whose

victory is it? Victory can always be seen after a fight, but there is not much

satisfaction in it when it belongs to the other fellow.

morning, with a through of low prea-

ANNUAL ENCAMPMENT,

CHATTANOOGA, TENN.,

Sept. 15-2- 0, 1913.To Chatanooga and Return

at rate of

a baby. - Now poor old Germany will notj 8Ure extending southward to New

O. piffle. The chances are that make an exhibit at the world's fair in Mexico and Arizona. Relatively highwhen a kid whines or is fretful it is California. .Oh, well, that will leave Darometer continues over the upperbecause it nas grown nungry auu mo more room to uipmj mc cuuiu.uuo--o-

Blease of South Carolina, Has expressed his only way it has of telling about it is home resources of the country. Per- -

Poor Sulzer! Governor

harsch's coyote springs

Mineral Water

TRY A DOZEN AND YOUWILL ORDER MORE !

It is Right,Huff Said,Handled by

:Vr. h m n the relief of the New York executive with the question-- to whine. I have heard grown-u- p peo- - haps there is a feeling abroad tnai itrjuiviwj ...... -

pie put on a sort of whining tone lis wasted effort to try and compete

Mississippi valley, and a second areaappears on the California coast Show-ers have occurred in parts of NewMexico, Colorado, Utah, Wyoming,South Dakota, Washington and Ore-

gon. It is warmer quite generallyover the northwest and the North Pa- -

able title. As if Sulzer was not naving a naru eiiuiiKn iuur u. .i ur..c.when thev came home with the gnaw-- 1 with the industries 6f the United

States. Rock Island Tribune.ings of hunger in their system and putLoud in Dry Weather.

Summer is past and the fall Is at

Dates of Sale, Sept. I Oth to 18thReturn Limit, by extension,October I7th, 113.

H. S. LUTZ, Agent,Santa Fe, . . New Mexico!

Kifl- - and high temperatures continuehand and, strange to say, Artesia is

The news notes say that Nat Goodwin is "wedded to literature." Litera-

ture better look out if she really wants to keep him or N'at will be getting in

the divorce courts before she knows it.o

Ohio statistic!' Bay that clergymen live longer than any other people.

If the old saying about the good dying yAttng has any truth in it then must

the clerygmen ot Ohio be a bad lot.

HENRY KRICK,

up a discontented moan, or when themissus is still at the bridge club andit's dinner time.

Probably when the infant indulgesin a wail it has the stomachache andit is not at all an indication of being a

in the central valleys. ConditionsSanta Fe, N. M. Phone )5 J.

still on the map. The last good raincooled off the croakers and they areapparently enjoying life. The frog

favor partly cloudy weather in thissection.

J:

SANTA FE NEW MEXICAN. PAGE SEVENWEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1913.

! FRATERNAL SOCIETIESFacts in Nature WANfiWOULD HAVE GOVERN-

MENT MANUFACTURETOIl centuries t has been known th'it Nature's most valuable health KivVV

Amprirnn foiesK. Syto the Invalids'1

1 inir amenta for the cure of disease are found in ourMASCMC.

Montezuma LodgeNo. 1, A. F. & A. M.

Over forty years aeo Dr. R. V. Pierce, ehief consulting nhvsician A furnishedAve.

KENT:1 (Irani

forApply :

loU', and Surgical Institute at Buffalo, N.Y'vuaed the powdered extracts aa well asthe liquid extracts of native medicinal plants, such as Blood root and Queen's root,Golden Seal and Stone root, Cherry hark and Mandrake, for the cure of blooddiseases. This prescription as put up in liquid form was called

DR. PIERCE'S

Regular communl- -

cation firit Mondayof each month atMasonic Hail at

REPRESENTATIVE TAVENNER CANNOT SEE

WHY TRIBUTE SHOULD BE PAID TO

PDlUUrr rflUTDiPTdDc cnur orn '1 !t)J W llalYY M? e "a 7:30.

E. H. PAH., W. M.ICHAS.His Choice Golden Medical Discovery

and has enjoyed a large sale for all these years in every drug store in the Q

imnik vtmiiwui una "uuitil r luPLE REGARD M'REYNOLD'S OPINION AS

NARROW.

E. LINNEY. Secretary.

Wanted, a good cook. Mrs. A. S.

I'.rookes, 122 (Jrant Ave.

For Rent Six room house, furnish-ed or unfurnished. Apply to David S.Lowitzki.

FOR SALI- C- Two young ponies formiller riding or driving. Phone Prank.Mcllride. Main 50.

lano. iou cau now UDLain me oowuereu extract n BUtrar-coate- d tablet form ofand

'The T Familv Friend" your medicine dealer, or Bend fOc in one-ce- Doptaire stamna tor trial box taI I 7 r

FoieySHoneyAiH.v Uilson Carduer.)

j Washington, D. ('., Sept. :;." can-not imagine:' any good reason why the.

nr. fierce a Invalids Hotel, Hullalo, W.Y., and tablets will be mailed, pontage prepaidThe "Golden Medical Discovery" makes rich, red blood, invigorates thestomach, liver and bowels and through them the whole system. Skinaffections. blotehes, boils, pimples and eruptions result of bad bluod

are eradicated by this alterative extract as thousands have testihed.

Santa Fe Chapter No1, R. A. M. Regularconvocation secondMonday of each monthat Masonic Hali at7:30 p. m.iCONTAINS NO OPIATES

nt Dr.FOR SALE Two horses and

wagon. An Oliver Tj pewriter cheap.A ti. Woodford, City.

For All I clotbboundSend 31 one-ce- stamps to pay cost of mailing onlyon a free copyPictce's Common Sense Medical Adviser, 1008 pages,

ADDRESS DS. R. V. PIERCE, BUFFALO, N. Y.

1. A. MASSIE,ARTHUR SELIGMAN, H. P.

Secretary.

government of Hie United Statesshould nay to private contractorstwice as much for a manufactured ar--j

jtilce as tile same article can be pro-- 1

duced for in government shops,' saidRepresentative Clyde H. Tavenner, of

COUGHSJAND

GOLDSFor Children

Santa Pe ConimanfleryNo. 1, K. T. Regularconclave fourth Mon-

day in each month atMasonic Hall at 7:30p. m.

HOMER, GA., Mrs. J. N. Hilthe merits of Foley's Honey andsays: "I cheerfully testify toTar Compound, having used itin my family for years andrecommended it to my neigh-bors. I find it always cures ourcoughs and colds and preventscroup. I have five children andIt is all they ever take for colds.We would not be withoutFoley's Honey and Tar Com-

pound in the house and can notsay too much for it." '

OFFICERS TO USETRAINED DOGS AS

MAN HUNTERS

BABES CHANGEDBy NURSE. THE

RICH FOR POOR

Illinois today. Tavenner lias introduo-- !

eu into the house a series of six billsto provide for govern ment niiimifac-- itore of field artillery and small armsammunition at the Rock Islandarsenal, Illinois.

"The government is now paying toprivate manufactures $2 for 4.7 inch

N

andlV AE. C.WESLEY O. CONNER, JH;&Gro wn Persons

For Rent nici-l- furnished frontroom. Board in private family if de-

sired. 242 Lower Paiaos A veil IK.'.

'

POSITION WANTED-l- iy youngdoctor, company or sur-- i

geon, in mining camp. Jlcst reference,ceven years' experience, hospital train-- i

iiig. Address C. S. Skaggs, M. I)., No.

!ft Fast Poplar St., larrisburg. 111.

. Six per cent loans on farms, or-

chard lands, city resident or businessproperty, to buy. build, improve, ex-

tend or refund mortages or other se-

curities; terms reasonable; specialprivileges; correspondence invited.

Aftc four W. E. GRIFFIN, Recorder.Hrldgeton, X. L, SeptDetroit, Sept. 3. Rloudhoiiiuls, aswell as Airedale terriers, will be usedbp the police department as soon as

years' mourning for he.-- lastlahe, whom she belie ied sne lui!shrapnel, the ammunition ued for

heavy artillery,'' continued Tavenner, Commissioner (Jillespie inaugurates I .11 fed in infancyCAPITAL PHARMACY. Mrs. tteiti-i-- e

young widowwhile at the same time it is niannfac-- ! ih' canine patrol force, in the city. (lis. of this city.

Santa Fe Lodge of Per-fection No. 1, 141 h de-

gree. Ancient and Ac-

cepted Scottish Rite ofFree Masonry meets on

learned that, her child is living andwell cared for in a family of wealth

hiring the same article, in its Frank-- lleBe simmus win ne en men on ineford arsenal, at Philadelphia, for squadron Patrols and will beS12.fi! his is rmlv a Hamnle nf the.iusl ' ""llling down murderers, bur- - in Philadelphia.

In 1000 Mrs. (liddis was livinjthe third Monday of each month at

n 7:30 o'clock in the evening in the New-t ommonweallh Kldg.,

glars and other criminals whose trailis struck ut the scene of the crime.The Commissioner staled Friday he

way private interests are mulcting thegovernment," he continued. "The gov-ernment records show that the war

Cathedral. Visiting Scottish Ritel1'"- - " Ms

Maspns are cordially invited to attend.

NEWS OF THE STATESome Bullion. j ten on the very night the accident oc- -

Shipments of bullion from the Mogo-- 1 curred makes some interestinglion district the last week aggregated thoughts for those believing in dreams.$17,000. Pour bars weighing 250 Clayton News.

Mauchehunk when her husband waskilled in a coal mine explosion. Shott-- j

ly after that she became a mother,Abount the same time there was

department lias been paying private h ' 'south as soon as possible and have

E. C. ABBOTT, 32,Venerable Master.

CHAS. A. WHEELON, Secy.manufacturers from 25 to 33 per cent them trained here. Mr. (lillespie bemore for small arms cartridges and another mother in the hospital and a

few hours after the birth of this wo-lieves that the bloodhounds will be airoiu . . to an ut--i i:eiit nioiw lut iiriu t m- - i .ik it ti in eases use lilt si uoi lit;- u.i.. ,s...iman's I,.i.:u.11 tin IIIHII. lit'

LEGAL NOTICE.In the Probate Court for and In thfi

County of Santa Fe, State of NeMexico.

In the matter of the Estate of RichardWilson Barry, Deceased.

Notice of Appointment Presentaticiof Claims.

ammunition and equipmentartillery ( Schoo, wner tlle ,)0,lice hospital nurse in charge of the two P. O. E.Santa Fe LodgeNo460, B. P. O. B..hold its regular

pounds, value $."IHI0 passed throughthe city Saturday from the Deadwoodniijl, and eight bars, weighing 750pounds, value approximately $12,000,from another operating company inthe district, passed through the city

etsion on the sec-ond and fourth

TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:Notice is hereby given that the un- -

Big Land Deal.The most important sale under the

Carlsbad project has lately been con-

summated by the Hartshorn broth-ers, who sold their holdings to W. H.

Harroun, of St. .loseph. Mo. Thecelebrated farm Is known us the'llagerman Farm," thirteen milessouth of Carlsbad on the east side ofthe Pecos river. This farm consistsof ij,00t acres of very fertile land un-

der an independent water right

Monday. Silver City Enterprise.

its own arsenals. Hall cartridges, , . . committed and the:" lm- was:: a pool. widow wi h our other e n d- -ca iber JO. lor the regular ser ce H.P1), hot.,ag whi,e the olher mother was weal- -

ntles, were made at the rranKford j have ,JPOn givenllhy,AirP(ialliKigh, pp of excellent family, and that herarsenal in 1012 for $20.95 per lOim, ln-t- 0 , I)))lrot department by the New chd was bvr flr8t borneluding all overhead charges. For the Y(),.k poc and wln be shipped to The nurse exchanged babies, givingsame cartridge private parties are re-- ; tlH, ,,j,v s()(jn The commissioner in-- j Mrs (jjddis the body of the otherceiving $38.04. Pr'ate manulactur-- !

vestigated the work of the animals mother's child and giving the liveers got $1708 for a three-inc- caisson, jduring his trip to New York and is baby of Mrs. (liddis to the wealthy

Wednesday of each idersigned was duly appointed execumonth. VJ i 1 1 Inn itrix of the estate of Richard Wilson)

uen me lueiiucui taiBocn m iuuii,.,v. (juuvoieeu uiai. mey win ue a uig npiMiwoniail,

Costs Money To See.Porflrio Gutierrez has returned from

the Templar mine, where he had beenprospecting for a new ore body forsome weeks. Before leaving he killeda five-fo- rattlesnake which he skin-ned and stuffed and then presented to

brothers are invit-'- , Harry, deceased, on the 30th day ofed and welcome. I.Iul.v, A. D., 1913, and duly qualified us

EDWARD P. DAVIES, jsnch on the 7th day of August, A. D.

Exalted Ruler, !l!'13. All persons having claims againstC. H. WILSON. !'he estate of the said Richard Wilsoh

Secretary, j Barry, deceased, should present them

tured at Rock Island arsenal forgranted years ago hy the territory of to the patrolmen. He has already A fow d Mrs Gid,,)g reoeivf,d

written to Iielgmm for two trained d from ,h(, mlI.s0 s(in ju Mauch.mals to be used in breaking the pup-- ' hmk , e hlstKntlv. she

in and will detail to trainpies a man ,,.., lu1 ,nmu, ,h ,,. nn,, )lpr

New Mexico. The purchase consisted overneau cnarges me.uu

of all lands and water rights, build- - These illustrations may be multipliedmanu-tpd wtth almost indefinitely. Privatethe editor. The snake will be on free :to the undersigned at Suite No. t.

Capital City Bank Building, withinthree inch the young dogs as soon as they ar- -it. T .T TTnenrmim imnroved this facturers get $320S for aexhibition to all water wagon passen deathbed. There also was the othergers. Others desirous of establishing piace (n the early settlement of this gun carriage proper, when it Is pro-- 1 rive here. j woman. The nurse told thetheir sobriety will be charged fifteen j part 0f the Pecos Valley and had it duced by the government at a cost of "New, York's police wouldn't partjaml fol. tne fir8t tillu, tnt, two motn.

the time prescribed by law.ELIZABETH BARRY,

Executrix.cents a look. Hillsboro Free Press, lunder a high state of cultivation. In $2341 with their dogs tor anything, said Mr. erH knew the truth.

Santa Fe Gamp13514. M. W. A

meets iecond Tues-day each month, so-cial meeting thirdTuesday at Fire-man's Hall. Visit- -

his trade with the Pecos Irrigation why thlH condition existed.' jGillespie Friday. "The few they have The nurse begged forgiveness beforeIn which he took the .that are well trained are pricelesscompany. ttQpw .Representative Tavenner was asked, butj8,)e, died , this wafl Kranted hy th(.

pan oi me company s iiuiuiiiro, hud; .,( haye trie(J ,Q flnd a reaaon," ne women. Then the mother who hadpossession of the Giddis child appeal-- ! ln neighbors welcome.

the majority of the dogs in that de-

partment aren't trained as they shouldbe and this makes unfavorable com-mi, nf nlwtnt Hip imp it' 11m nnlm:i!

place went imo oiner nuirns aim wareplied. i confess that I cannot un

sold to the Hartshorn brothers by the A. G. WHITTIER, Consul.A. E. P. ROBINSON, Clerk.

ed to Mrs. Giddis for the custody ofthe little girl that bad been broughtup in her home as her own. Mrs.Giddis yielded to the entreaties and

Irrigation company. The presentsale involves several hundred thou-

sand dollars and John Hartshorn isgive me a reason. Hut the question is,v!From what I saw of the dogs, I amwill the government continue to pay

manufacturers these ex--

Narrow Escape.Miss Florence Bonlware, daughter

of Jack Boulware, proprietor of theTenderfoot Corral, had a very narrowescape from serious injury on Mon-

day last when the horse she was rid-

ing became frightened and bolted.It headed for the corral and thoughunable to control the animal the younglady pluckily held her seat. Turninginto the corral, the horse fell, andMiss Boulware was thrown violentlyto the roadway. In some unaccount-able way she luckily escaped fatal oreven serious injury, though badly

retained to assist In the management prnaie ,and j , t n bpst breeds g wp,i. ., . . , . . nphlinnt nr c.es when it has the means , r took legal Mil ps hi permit ner enuuor me vasi lmprovemenis uuiuem- - as ine oesc iraining...... i . t i 1, nrnrhiee the art c es itself at a less ..... ... to be adopted into the home in which

LEGAL NOTICE.State of New Mexico,

t'ounty of Santa Fe.In the District Court of the First

Judicial District of New Mexico forlie County or Santa Fe.

Lillian M. Perry vs. Herbert M. Per-

ry. No. 80K1.

The said defendant Herbert M. Per-

ry is hereby notified that, a complainthas ben tiled against him iii the Tist-ric- t

Court for the County of SantaFe, State aforesaid, that being the

jiCourt. in which said case is pending.by said plaintiff, Lillian M. Perry; thegeneral object, of said action being

Idivorce, as will more fully appear by

preference to the complaint filed insaid case. And that, unless you enter

piaieu. ne is uuu pitpaiiiiB mr ouu i niipi. iiowney irieti io get muj j , i.. , i. ,,nto plant 500 acres in alfalfa and 500 cost? I have introduced in congress fmm one of them while he was in New

e l.illu nPrtArirlitiii' for fl . . .

F. W. FARMERHomestead No.2879, Brother-hoo- d

of Ameri-can Yoemen.Meets secondand fourth Mon-day- s

of the

acres in wneat, Daney ana oats. u series ui h v York and he couldn't do . Even af- REPRESENTATIVE BURGTbroo rara nf fprtilizer are enroute totjil annronriation of $1,030,000 to en--

and will be sown with the alfalfa, large the plant at the Rock Islandp(,tted tnf) animal, the dog tripped

IS NOW JUDGE BURG

Albuquerque, Sept. 3. Judge JohnWhile this project is not directly con- - Arsenal, Rock island, Illinois, so ,i,jm wi,n ile started to walk away Baron Burg, of the probate court, ap- - month at the!snaiten up. ne is now entirely with the I nited states recia-- ; the government may manufacture f,m the. officer. They are invaluable, pointed to succeed the late Judge Julcovered. The horse ran over a miip. mation project, Mr. Foster, assisted own fleid artillery equipment and am-lt- ui,rsl !lnri thmnrhSilver City Independent. ius Staab, held his first session of

court yesterday. This, incidentally.by Vernon L. Sullivan, former New munition and small arms cartridges, d,ir hf)le8 am, g(jt men

Fireman's Hall.H. Foreman. R. L. Baca,Cor. Sec. David Gonzales.

'

-Santa Fe Lodge

Mexico state engineer, ana an emi- -Tne federal government is In a pecu-Ine-

engineer from San Antonio, H , fHV(lrabie situation at Rock Is- -Vigorous Road Work.your appearance in said cause on orbefore the 23rd day of October. 1913,

"New York hasn't any good scent jwas the first term for four months.dogs. I shall go south for them. In Tll(J September term opened Mon-!""-

last couple of murders ill the city day, but Judge. liurg simply opened!a hat. or knife has been dropped by ; court, and continued cases set foritl,,. nl If ..... 1,1, ,J1, n...,A i . ...

A large delegation of business meniTexas, are doing all, they can to Plj.,nd to undertake this work. There isand hired workmen left this morning this place in the very best shape for . . , Mississippi river

judgment will be rendered against youby automobile for various points along an plantation. Mr. Foster

tlbun(jant water power to furnish the in said case by default.the main highway between Raton audits the resident, government engineer; . maci,iery "m'- - ". . . .... " . L" ;""' ' mteroay and aujonrnea

The plaintiff's attorney is H. S. Boiy

No. 2, Knights ofPythias meetsevery Second andFourth Friday ofthe month at 8o'clock p. m.

T)es Moines where the day is being of the Carlsbad project. Mr. Harroun I ,a Zihw hp needed The " uyer' " " "i""111 V'erday morning. Judge Burgman and his post office addressSanta. Fe, New Mexico.

capitalists, ana is a man mat oes There are V.. . M.. ." . : Ti ... 'J ,' ... " .ul """'umo ,"tT u""""1 "in prime condition. In witness whereof, I have lure- -

pmiiL ui we; i iroiu uie scene oi ine crime ueioie low iapproved 11.i c u..M.i;n.a ntictinnt. ..Although several local automoDil-- 1 things. Meeting In K. unto set my hand and Seal of said

of P. Hall over rnnrf ut s.intn FV New Mexico, thisIsts who have recently been over the The Harroun Land company is ad-- !

road report fair conditions existing vertising for all the men and teams!aiso a nuuiuer ui uuums, pnnce are on tne 300.eii originally for manufacturing: Work for tne Npw Mex!can. It la

piants now on the Rock Island reser-- 1 ye,v Mexican Want Ads always Working- for you, for Santa Fe andration, which are being used simply Drins results. Try it. the new state.

Kaune's store. !2nd ,iav 0f September. A. D. 1913.All visiting M. A. OiRTIZ,

Knights are most County Clerk.

it can get, intending to begin thebreaking of 1,000 acres of land at once,

cordially invited. eVT) L. SAFFORO, Peputy.H. F. STEPHENS, C. C. i(FRL)

A. REINGARDT, K. of R. and S.

for storehouses. Tims, at a compara-

tively moderate cost, Uncle Sam can

go into the business of supplying him-

self with this ammunition and equip-

ment, and save an enormous amount

INDIANS SENT TOWEST FROM EAST

over the entire route, the finishingtouch given by a squad of 40 or 50

men on the highway today will givethe road as good a stretch of road asis to be found in the state. The accu-

mulating enthusiasm manifested todayin good roads matters gives greatpromise for getting out a bannersquad for the holiday on Sept. 6 whichwill be spent in work between Ratonand the rim rock on Johnson mesa.Des Moines Swastika.

"" " ' " j it will not pay you to waste yourFRATERNAL UNION OF AMERICA, time wrting out your legal forms

Lodge No. 259, holds Its regular j v hen you can get them already print-meetin-g

on the first Thursday of each e(J at the New Mexican Printing h

at Fireman's hall at 7:30 p. m.panT.

Visiting brothers are invited and wel

HOW ( FELT AS ( WASDROWNING TO DEATH.

GIRL, JUST RESCUED IN NICK OF TIME, TELLS HOW SHE HEARDMUSIC, SAW ANGELS, SMELLED PERFUMES AND WANTED TODIE.

down three times in the surf before

iof money. The program of the warT

Petoskey, Mich., Sept. ; department calls for $20,000,000 worthdian children of northern Michigan eeW artn,ery ammunition, for

datlv the arriva-- of Ine

ejecting U)eagent to take B,nllL

government ot.ld save $o,0 0 0or.tl, west, where they will be yi.ced

how much the nitrfin educational institutions.

IIt isand

come.BENITO A LA RID, President

DAVID GONZALES, Secretary.

Work for the New Mexican,working for you, for Santa Fethe new state.she was rescued by

Vividly, Miss iiennett tells of how itfeels to drown. Such strange fasclna- - Ads alwaysNew Mexican Want

bring results. Try it.

ODD FELLOWS,No. 2, I. O. O. F.

Santa Fe Lodge

Unbecoming Conduct.Late yesterday afternoon two Mexi-

cans, Bassilio Rodriguez and Guada-

lupe Ruiz, went to the home of AngelHernandez in the south part of townand behaved in an unbecoming man-ner, using profane language and at-

tempting to force an entrance where

The trip is necessitated by the lack government: nas pa.u m

of facilit. shere. It Is with no to. private manufactures for

that the children await the deputing army and navy materials in the pastdav. All bummer they have been free twenty years, 1 would hesitate to guessto r pip ir the woods and hi'.ls, and at. But I have not the slightest doubt

satisfy their characteristic cravings in the world that the sum would equalfor the open. There are more than the cost of an entire fleet of modern300 of school age, and the greater battleships. I believe it is time to

0 I

T"' f 1

meets regularlyevery Thursday evening at 8 o'clockin Odd Fellows Hull. Visiting broth-ers always welcome.

t:on did the marvelous visions she sawhave on her that when she was reviv-ed her first words were: " want togo back. It seemed to me I was be-

ing wafted through space on a greatpile of narcissus, with a slim band of

golden haired girls dancing languidlyabout, 'me, singing.

I "For the first few seconds it was

terrible," she said. "It seemed that

percentage of the little nature-lover- s stop this waste. That is why I havemust leave the semi-wild- s for the first introduced these bills."

the family were at supper. They wererequested by Hernandez to desist,but they persisted and finally pickeda row with John Olivas, Hernandez's time in their lives. PROFESSIONAL CARDS

They have heard the story of theI coining of the federal agent and theyIliBten with almost the same fears that

brother-in-law- , still striving to enterthe house. Hernandez secured a pickhandle and sailed in, and a running

ATTORNEYS AT LAW..1 wseme huge cruel hand was gripping

my throat and choking me slowly oh,'! their forefathers once felt at the In- -

N.nnlnn n fn. DnlnllnA iflfight out Into- - the street followed. A. T, & S. F. R'YIII. i so slow! v. but relentlessly. It seem- -

Because the states of Minnesota,South Carolina, Georgia, Iowa and Vir-

ginia objected to the enforcement of

an eigh-hou- r day in roadwork between these states and thefederal government, Attorney GeneralMcRaynolds has rendered an opinionnullifying the eight-hou- r provision ofthe "federal aid" section of the post-offic- e

appropriation act. The act pro- -

,vuu u to them, and this they have been toldriguez and Ruiz both had badly bat--

M of th(J federa, agent ,tered and bloody heads, Rodriguez

EDWARD P. DAVIES,City Attorney.

Capital City Bank Building,Rooms 17-1- 8

Santa Fe, New Mexico

TIME TABLE

Effective January 1st, 1913.oeing pariiy insensioie. tuej wcic

eu to me that I was dying to tear hisfingers away from my throat, butsomehow I seemed to have lost all mystrength.

"Then, all of a sudden, everything

Michigan is able to look after aof the Indians through its schools

ll.t Ulm. .Dohliatntirn anil tliachanged. The pain all disappearedand there came a feeling of absolutedrowsy peace. Some wonderful ner- -

Leave Santa Fe 8:10 a. m. to con-

nect with No. 3 westbound andNo. 10 eastbound.

Returning, arrive Santa Fe 12:10 p.

G. W. PRICHARD,Attorney and Counsellor-at-Law- .

Practices in all the District Courtiand gives special attention to casebefore the State Supreme Court.Office: Laughlin Bldg., Santa Fe, N. M

li:mo In mo ri,l tY,,- - eovoi-ii- l ac.

to be expended byforvideo $500,000Catholic school at Cross village, on

Sturgeon bav. the secretary of agriculture in co- -

operation with the postmaster generalNINETY TEAMS SIGNED

' !and the several states in road im- -

The states namedFOR GOOD ROADS DAY.' piovement.N. M., Sept. 2.-- The ed to the enforcement of an eight-hou- r

committee appointed to get teams to day on this work. The matter was put

hauled to the calaboose by ConstableWilder, where Dr. Furay examinedand dressed their wounds.

The next morning Hernandez plead-ed guilty before Judge Oauron to as-

sault and battery and was fined $5

and costs. Lkewood Progress.Dream Came True.

R. W. Isaacs had an accident Mon-

day night that almost cost that gentle-man his life as well as the loss of hisautomobile. He remained in town un-

til rather late and as his lamps on thecar were not working he started witha kerosene light. Just as he thought

7work on the Albuquerque-Islet- a road up to ine attorney general, uu uw

rendered the following opinion:

ends I tried to figure out what it wif'Finally I recognized it as the su scdor of the narcissus blossom. '

"For a long time 1 lay and baskedin that perfume. Then sound of sing-

ing came to me a gentle lullaby setto a tune that could never have beenwritten by mortals.. It was too seduc-- ;

September 11, yesterday reported that"Taking this provision as a whole,

No. 3 carries passengers tolfclbu-querqu-

locally, and to aclfto

Coast points. 1

Leave Santa Fe 3:30 p. m. to con-

nect with No. 1 westbound, andNo. 2, eastbound, connecting atAlbuquerque with "Cut-off- "

train for Clovls and v'ec.oe Val-

ley points.

Chas, F. Eatley, . Chas. ft. EaaleyEASLEY 4 EA'iLEY,

Attorneys-i- t aw.Practice In the Courts and Defer

Land DepartmentLand grants and titles examined.

Santa Fe, N. M branch Office, Estaacia, N. M.

they had signed ninety teams already.The committeemen are A. B. Stroup,E. W. Fee and T. J. Passmore.

The committeemen signed most of

I think it may be said to authorize theactual work of road Improvementscontemplated to be done by the stateor local municipality in which the road

he had passed over the dangerous partof the road leading down the hill just tn(, teams Sunday, when they made an

tive. And then a group of slendergirls came walking lightly along, sing-

ing as they came. They were clad Inlies and to which it belongs, the fed- -west of town he noticed his car tip- - automobile trip over the road to beReturning, arrive Santa Fe 6:05 p.

improved. They conducted mass meet-ler- government merely selecting the m.road to be improved, and, through the

great swathing veils of all the colorsof the rainbow although a tint of paleviolet seemed to predominate. One oftbem carried a tiny gilt harp, and now

Leave Santa Fe 6:20 p. m. to conings at Pajarito and Las Padillas. ThePajarito meeting was held In theschool house there in the morning,and when they reached Las Padillas,unexpectedly in the afternoon, Mr.

secretary of agriculture, supervisingthe performance of the work, the costof the same to be defrayed as provid-ed in the act. If this course be fol- -

nect with No. 7 westbound car-

rying El Paso sleeper, also No.

4 eastbound.

DR. W. HUME BROWN,Dentist

Ove? Spitz Jewelry 8 tor.Rooms X, 2 and I.

Phone Red 6.

Office Hours 8 a. nt. te I .

And by Appointment

rnd again she would touch the strings

Passmore rang the school bell until lowed, the federal statutes regulatinga crowd gathered. The building was hours of labor will not apply. Labor- -

Returning, arrive Santa Fa 1:35 p.

m.

Leave Santa Fe 8:50 p. m. to coners and mechanics who engage in such

ping to one side and stopped It asquickly as possible the investigationshowed he had run within six inchesof the embankment. Bob says theculvert there is only twenty feet deepin day time, but on a dark night, andparticularly that one, it was at leastone thousand.

A rather peculiar feature of the af-

fair is the fact that Wednesday Mr.Isaacs received a letter from a friendof his, J. F. Semple, vice president ofthe Simmons Hardware Co., St. Louis,informing him of a dream he had onthe night of the above incident. Mr.Semple dreamed he had seen Bobcrawling out from under his machinecovered in mud and barely escapingwith his life. This letter being writ- -

nect with No. 8 eastbound, andNo. 9 westbound.

It will not pay you to waste yourtime writing out your legal formswhen you can get them already print-ed at tbe New Mexican Printing compan.

in some soft chord, to go with the.

singing."Then came the most remarkable

thing of all. One of the singing girls,a dainty little thing with great massesof red gold hair, came up to me,

Stretching out a cool, slim hand andtouched my forehead.

"Then, one of by one, grew more andmore dim, and finally dematerialized.

"And then finally I heard a humanvoice say, "Thank God she's allright. She's coming round,"

Returning, arrive Santa Fa 11:30a. m.

filled.The members of the committee ad-

dressed the Las Padillas people, tell-

ing them about the plans for Good

Roads day. The people expressedthemselves as willing to help, withthe provision that Albuquerque do itsshare. Los Padillas people offeredtwenty-si- x teams and the Pajarito peo-

ple offered twenty-three- .

work will not be enfployed by the gov-ernment of the United States, nor is aroad so improved a public work of theUnited States within the meaning ofthe act of August 1, 1892."

There are a lot of people in Wash-

ington and elsewhere who are dispos-ed to look upon such an interpretationas rather narrow.

MISS LAURA BENNETT.

Atlantic City, SepL 3. Entrancingdreams, enchanting visions, sounds of

languid, celestial music, the subtleodor of rare perfumes all these cametn a young girl as she was drowning.The girl. Miss Laura Bennett, had gone

Call "Central" for TrainWork for the New Mexican. It isworking for you, for Santa Fe andthe new state.

Reports.

PAGE EIGHT SANTA FE NEW MEXICAN. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1913.

MINISTER DENOUNCES

DJR niWPPQ

NEW STYLISH HATS

IN SATIN AND WHITE FELT.OFFICIAL NEWS.'

financier, is back in the city after an'

interesting trip to Acoma where hewitnessed an American Indian dance, j

He also took in a dance at "Zuni. "Do

you think the Indians will' ever learn;to rag dance?" was asked. Mr. Biddle

replied: "I hardly think so unlessiVona Ana county assessment roll has

F. ANDREWSGrocery, Bakery and Market.

Auto Delivery Every ilourl Auto Deliverv Every Hour!

Another car of that famou EMPRESS FLOUR. The best moneywill ouy, try it, A coupon packed in every sack good for valuablepremiums, and besides this we are going to give to the boy or girl un-

der 15 years of age, who collects the most of these coupons up toSeptember 15th a $30.00 bicycle and to the next highest a watch.

Boys and girls get busy, get your mother and your neighbors touse EMPRESS FLOUR.

j tney learn to quit moving their rightlatilBI Ulan UJC Irii.. i namuui

only well impressed with the Indiandances but I also had a most delight- -

ful time witnessing what you call outhere a 'baile.' " Mr. Biddle expects to j

remain in the city a few days and isa frequent caller at the chamber of

,. ol unri fni- that msntlthe board cannot enter upon the statewide equalization work which it had

planned, hut it was decided to take upi'.nd decide any appeals wholly withincue county, in cases where reference

til,-- nl,.,.ortWn fl 0"I1 nil tllP,u iviii" "l,M'v"v.liole state are not absolutely neces -

sary. In this connection it might. b

rrentioned that the Rio Grandelican quotes D. V. Peacock, assessorVl LHMIH. Allii uuiiij no Diauue mat.had sent the assessment roll and says

the has the traveling auditors receipt

commerce.Hgme grown tomatoe8j cauliflower n.aterial

and aU otiler vegetables the marketonlya( Andrews, "IJNSURE WITH HAYWARD AND

Phone No.4 ANDREWS PhoneNo-'- t

To represent his department in thetrial of P. V. ..!,, .,,! f A llnranarrested at Albuquerque for shootingquail out of season. Game Warden T.C. de Baca left for the Puke City yes-

terday. It is alleged that these two

linen while motoring to Roswell did a

little quail shooting on the way. Thecase is being heard at Albuquerquetoday.

Resigned From Mounted Police.M . .... 1, t r niTolnca lrcotfirffai; tilfiri

rDoiirnntinn JIB a mpnihpr of thP

mounted police and will go into the.. . .. T)tt a,lorehu seivice on cue

I!.,iii fnf iinnnrHinir tn an an- -

L.nnnnomunt mafie this innriiinc. Mr. i

. ivlaV.. h.. heen.. tntinned at Chimin.

Land Sales.At Roswell today. Fritz Miller, rep-- ,

resenting the state land department,!is conducting the sale of 7960 acres j

of state land, which is located in south- - j

western Chaves county on the head-waters of the Felix river. September5th, he will sell to the highest bidderMO acres of land in Roosevelt county,the sale being made on the steps ofthe Portales court house.

, . . ,. ..." .... .,.!,,. ... u u,jTor same, mil II sucil is uie case, uictraveling auditor doeB not know any-- j

thine about it and cannot find thebook around his office.

LOCAL ITEMS.- r

A Nobby Line of Fall and Wintf-- r

1 1 rTiur1 rr lli in em ...i..,' i

suitings and overcoats at Muralter's not signified their intention to joinAt Andrews tomorrow, grapes, can-- ! Vrill be at the meeting tomorrow

peaches, grape fruit, etc. jng. Every merchant that will attend

PICTURE SHOWS AND SUNDAY NEWS

PAPERS, AS WELL AS WRITERS ON

DANCE FANTASTIQUE, ARE GIVEN A

"DIG" BY REV. B. Z. M'COLLOUGH.

"I am surprised that our local pa-

per should fill its columns with such

(dance discussions) that is

stuff." Rev. B. Z. McCollough,am delighted with the dance ar-

ticles in the New Mexican.. They are

".repealing ana mrormm- a- , ...great stuff." Prominent Clubman 0.

'I Santa PeThe above express two views of the

' rag dance" which is the topic of thehcur, from the Atlantic to the Pacific.

The Rev. B. Z. McCollough, pastorof the First Presbyterian church tooka fling at the rag dances, the ragdance writers, the "movies" and theSunday papers. The meager reportsof this sermon talked around the clubslead to other views, and a prominentclub man whose name is not heregiven, voiced the opinion of a numberot Santa Feans that the. well conduct-ed rag dance is all right and that itspopularity merits discussion in theSanta Fe papers as in the great NewYork papers.

When asked for his views on the ragdance, the "movies," etc., Rev. Mr, Mc-

Collough said today:"If you want to find God, where will

you-go- ? Certainly you will not And

him in the modern dance with its fifty-seve- n

or so varieties. That is not theatmosphere in which God speaks tothe soul I am glad to know thatwhile Borne of us differ on the subjectof the dance and there are membersof this church that see no wrong in ita- it has been carried on in the past,yet, there are some of you who havechampioned it in the past who have nouse for it as it is now being carriedon. I am glad to know that there aremembers of this church who say thatit has gone to such a length that now

they can have absolutely nothing to dowith it. And I am surprised that ourlocal paper should fill its columns with8nch material that is only 'stuff' andbe thus advertising the wares of thosev,ho are 'blind leaders of the blind.'If you are seeking God, you will not goto the modern 'rag' in order to findHim.

"Nor will you find flod, if you are

State Educational Board. a e school year are considered very

A scheduled meeting of the state. S00(i-boar-

of education did not begin until jGood home cooking, quick service

this afternoon because of the non-;a- t the Plaza Cafe.

Opens Today The Allison Missionschools reopened today. The attendance was large and the prospects for

Picnic and Good Things to be had

when dealing with the Wood-Davi- s

hardware people. They have theprices that suit; the goods that pleaseand the stock to back it up. See new

ad today.will find ma.-.- good smokes m

our cigar case. No trouble to selectthe particular size, shape and shadeyou like. Zook's.

100 Doz. Pairs of Ladies Black LisleHose, floral embroidered, regular price75 cts., during our Cash Sale,4 cts. a pair. N. Salmon.

Delegates Named The Santa Fe

aunCi.Merchants Meet Tomorrow The

nir llr,otur maotinv nf ttie Santa Peaiercuaius associaiiuu win uc upiu wmorrow evening at eight o'clock inthe chamber of commerce rooms. Thesoliciting committee has about com-

pleted its work and plans for the fu-

ture welfare of the association will bediscussed and the different commit-tees appointed. It is most necessarythat every member who lias signed therou an(j au those merchants who have

this meeting will be made to realizethat this reorganization means business and its success means dollars andcents in the pocket of every person do-

ing business in Santa Fe.

Don't Fail to take advantage of theCash Sale. N. Salmon.

FOR RENT Five room modernj,ouse one an(i one-ha- lf blocks fromplaza. Joseph B. Hayward.

Patronize the only bakery in town.Andrews

New Light on that Rag Dance Theftllowing communication, 'sent to theNew Mexican, may explain certain in-

cidents that occurred at the dancegiven by the White Sox at the armorySaturday night: "The White Soxbenefit dance given last Monday nightat the Armory Hall was the most en-

joyable ever given at the armory. A

large crowd attended and everybody

"hits." Manager Dan Ortiz, of theWhite Sox, was the floor manager andeverybody congratulated him for thenice, clean way he conducted thedance. It had been advertised that"ragging" would be allowed after11:30, but a little before the "ragging"

to start, the police notified Man- -

dance if he allowed "ragging." Manager Ortiz saw Mayor Celso Lopez be-

fore the dance and told him that hewas going to allow "ragging" in his

We have the Nobbiest DecorativeIron Fences, Gates and Railings.

LET US FIGURE

on your wants. Our prices are right.

YSVrVrYYYYYYYVWiWr

Santa Fe Hardware & Supply Co.

Everything In Hardware.chamber of commerce has appointed seemed to he having the time of theirL. A. Hughes, M. A. Otero, Arthur Sel-- lives. Ramirez' orchestra furnishedIgman, J. Levy and J. H. Crist dele-- j the music and they certainly made

to the sixteenth annual conven-- erybody happy with their latestMr . H. WICKHAMLUDWKJ Wll. ILFELD. tion of the American mining congress

which meets in Philadelphia October20 to 24.

Nice new seedless grape fruit, 10c

each at. Andrews.You never go wrong in placing your

fish order with the Modern market,phone 262, Frank Mourer, proprietor

One On Us In yesterday s issue ofiager Ortiz that they would stop theWHOLESALE AND RETAIL

Flour Hay, Grain, Potatoes and Salt.. Solt Aggnts For INTERNATIONAL STOCK FOOD.

ALFALFA SEED. All kinds of flowers, garden 4 field seeds in bulk and packages

The only exclusive grain house in Santa Fe

jiigldance that night, and Mayor Lopez

the Xew Mexican the personal columncontained an item to the effect thatMr. J. Stein, of Abiquiu, was in SantaFe visiting with Mr. and Mrs. J, W,

Norment. Mr. Stein is visitingwife and two children who are at preB--

ent living here,Have that old iron made new,

Gnagey & Krvien.60 Doz. Pair Men's Silk Hose, regu-

lar prize 75 cts., at Sale price, 35 cts.a pair. The Hub. N. Salmon.

Dr. Casner Sells,) Practice Dr. W.K. Graff, a dentist of. New York City,has purchased the practice and equip,went of Dr. A. J. Carner. Dr. Groff isa graduate or the Chicago College of

Dental Surgery and has been practic-ing his profession for six years andwas a class mate of Dr. Casner. He

comes here highly recommended. Dr.

Casner will devote his time to ranch- i

ing and his business interests, remain-- j

ing in Santa FeHn,n'in witrh Hazel and

Umond Cream are fine for sunburnand windburn. Tak-e.- bottle with yCl,

They are Swell, at

"The Milliner"MISS A. MUGLER

OUTBEAST CORNER PLAZA.

seeking for Him, in the desecrationsot the Sabbath day. I speak of threethings in particular in this connec-

tion: The laziness of people, theSunday newspaper, and the film shopthat is run contrary to the law. Thereare many people who give all kinds of

excuses for not attending divine wor-

ship. They want to lie abed and restso they tell you. And yet when theywant to get up and go Np the canyonon Sabbath day, there is no hardshipabout that. Most of the excuses thatare given for failure to attend ser-

vices are nothing but lies and bymeans of them, people hope to hidetheir own laziness and indifference to

God's call. But you won't find Godthere?

"The Sunday newspaper takes awaythe appetite for God's house. The film

shop is filled with people who wantamusement and not a sight of God.And when these same people come to

cash in, 1 suppose that they will wantto rag into the kingdom of heavenwiUt a Sunday newspaper under theirarm, with the Sunday show picture intheir mind, and with the remembranceOl wasted hours that belong to God

himself upon their souls! If you arej' anxious to find God, you will have to

go to other places ana conaitions manthese. For you can find Him. Butyou will find him in His house, thechurch; you will find Him in Hisword, the Bible; you will find Him inthe Word made flesh, His Son ourSaviour; you will find Him in Hischildren, God's people." k

ARMY-NAV- GAME WILLBE PLAYED AT NEW YORK.

Washington, D. C, Sept. 3. Theai my navy football game will be play-ed at the New York polo grounds onNovember 29. This was arranged to-

day at a conference between SecretaryDainels, Assistant Secretary Brecken-ridg- e

and the athletic directors ofWest Point and Annapolis.

zxes

Apples andCrab Apples

Phone 12.

Ancient City's Pride,

MODERN AND

ALWAYS

LARGE LOBBY

AND VERANDAS

COMFORTABLE PORCH

SWINGS and ROCKERS

Service and Cuisinethe Best in the City

Ample facilities for largeand small banquets.

SPECIAL RATESBY THE WEEK

WATSON & CO.

LEO HERSCHPhone Black45

arrival of some of the members. C.

IC Hill of Roswell, motored over,while lohn R. Enloe of Silver City

'and Bonafacio Montoya, of Bernalillo,were expected on the noon train. Dr.Roberts of Las Vegas, and ,1. U. G.

iSwinney, of San Juan county, were inthe city this morning, and reportedearly at the office of the superintend-jen- t

of public instruction.

In the Supreme Court.In the supreme court yesterday

Case No. 1556, William Praser!vs. The State Savings Bank, was

and submitted and today ,No.

jlf.86, Peter Roth vs. Tranquilino Yara,from San Miguel county, and No. 1566,

jNuma Raymond ys. H. B. Holt, fromDona Ana county, were argued and

'submitted.

LARGE ATTENDANCE ATNEW MEXICO NORMAL.

One of the busiest opening daysever seen at the New Mexico NormalUniversity took place this morningv.hen the registration for the fall term

started, says yesterday's Las VegasOptic. The corridors and halls of theNormal were crowded to capacity,while all the rooms were filled withstudents.

The enrollment is the largest knownir the history of the institution. lathe grades, students were turned awayon account of lack of room, while theacademic course was greatly in de- -

mand. The enrollment of studentshving outside of the city was' unusual-

ly large this morning. The flow ofstudents into the city yesterday washeavy and this morning numerousstrangers were seen making applica-tion for courses at the school.

Working On Eddy County Books.

Walter L. Kegel, of the traveling au-- j

ditor's office, left this afternoon forCarlsbad, where he will take up thework of examining he books of theEddy county officia's replacing L. B.

Wocters, who had started the workjbut who has been summoned to Clay-- i

ton as a witness in the trial of thoseinterested in the Des Moines bank fail- -r'..:irs win lane up nans examinationsexclusively. E. A. Mossmann recent-

jly added to the traveling auditorsforce is now examining the Montezu- -

ma Trust company at Albuquerque.

New Corporation.The New Mexico Lead company

filed incorporation papers with the

corporation commission today. The

capital stock is $35,000 divided into ?1

shares. The company starts businesswith $2100 subscribed. The incorpora-tors are D. P. Fuller, of Denver; Dr.

C. G. Dimcan, of Socorro, and John A.

Hunter, of Denver. They each hold700 shares, and Dr. Duncan is the stat-

utory agent for the concern.

Six Beaver in New Home.There are now six beaver on the

upper Santa Fe river, the last con-

signment of four coming through in

(good shape and being turned looseabove monument rock in the neighbor-- i

hood of the rangers cabin. Still otherswill be planted up there, arrange-- I

nients having been made to have sev-- !

eral more sent down from Chama and

vicinity.

Equalization Board Meets.The state board of equalization met

for a few minutes this morning and

NOW!inert; was great amutfeaieuL w uenour vacation. the crowd noticed that after the

iXZIlftZuZZcernen had not succeeded in stop- -

1the n iDcwnnw r.ADncw

$ MIL, VL,rlIUlVUn UrtlULn

told Floor Manager Ortiz it was all

right if they started after 11:30, butit seems after Floor Manager Ortizsaw Mayor Lopez, the mayor had a

conference with some of his council-men- ,

and by their advice he instructedthe policemen to stop the dance if

they ha.d any "ragging" at all. At 12:30the large sign at the armory "NORAGGING" was changed to "RAG-

GING" the word "NO" having beentucked under, and Floor ManagerOrtiz instructed the orchestra to play"When the Midnight Choo ChooTrain," etc., and all the dancers start- -

.ed to "rag," and two policemen camein, trying to stop the "ragging," butit was useless as everybody refused to

saying that the policemen had'norigIlt to conle int0 tne dance nal1'as nobody was breaking any law or

" "T ,aBB'"Bearned on until the dance, was over.

ping the 'ragging,' one of them wasseen with a. fair senorita eniovlna: the

, . t, Xlagging Willi me iei ui me imiiueiis.

Any kind of nursing bottle you wantnipples of all styles, brushes, babyfoods, talcum powders and the mostcareful prescription department to

help baby when ill. Zook's.We have a beautiful pattern in

Navajo Blankets and we are going tosell them during our CashSale at. a very low price. N. Sal-

mon.

THE DflV IN CONGRESS

Senate.Resumed consideration, of tariff bill.American Bankers' association com-

mittee outlined before banking com-

mittee views on currency legislation.1Foreign relations committee report-

ed favorably nomination of HenryMorgenthau as ambassador to Turkey.

Lobby committee temporarily closedits hearings.

West Virginia coal strike committeeresumed its investigation, with coaloperators testifying.

House.Passed 'Hetch-Hetch- y reservoir bill

granting San Francisco use of Heteh-Hetch-

basin.M. M. Mulhall continued bis testi-

mony before lobby committee.

Always Stop at the

- - .. ' .' , .r .... .

noon on tne tennis court at me santaFe club today. His opponent wasHarry Moulton. Both racket wieldersare endeavoring to lower tneir nanai- -

cap of 30 given them by the athleticcommittee. The games this morningwere characterized by Gov. Otero's ac-

curacy in placing the ball and Mr.Moulton's smashes at the net lefthanded smashes.

The very best of meats, poultry, fish,sausages, ham, bacon, etc. Andrews.

Just Received our Fall line ofladies' suits, coats and skirts. Pricesmoderate. Fit guaranteed. Call an!inspect samples. Muralter, the tailor.

Elks Enjoy Themselves The Elksgave a dance last evening, one oftheir non-ra- dances, and a merrycrowd, numbering about twenty cou-

ples, spent a most pleasant evening.Prof. Morrison presided at the piano,and those who used, to attend when hehad charge of the music, will knowthat there was no fault to find on thatscore last' evening. These dances aregrowing in popularity and a numberwill probably be given during the falland winter.

Wanted fifty men for board androom. Six dollars per week. PlazaCafe.

Rich Man Studies Dances WilliamC. Biddle, a prominent Philadelphia

The Hardware Man Says :

Be it for "Choring," "Fishing," "Camping or Prowling" the RE-

LIABLE HARDWARE STORE have made it one of their duties .1Life to supply the tarly risers of this community with the very bestand most ihing ir. the Lantern line. They handle the kind

that gives steady, bright light, Is easy to light, clean, rewick anddoes not blow out rn the gale, smoke nor leak.

All the way from 60c to $2.50.By the way do you need anything for the Stable? Salt Bricks for

your Horses and Cows.Remember it pays to get It at

The Reliable Hardware Store, My Home.

Phone B,ack

45;

$10 A MONTH WILL START C

HOTEL DE VARGASAMERICAN PLANRoom With Bath, $3.00 Dp.Room Without Bath. $2.25 Up. 41

invetniciit?atp vmi interested in a (fiuarapteerizUM W 11 U 111Such an opportunity to secure a fine lot close in and at a price

that we can ail afford will not be had again for many a day. Onlya few of the lots closest in and on the new water main remain tobe sold. Special prices, special terms, selected patrons, time pay-ments, no interest, no taxes, beautiful, well-plann- ed avenue, al-

leys, magnificent vista, street straight, houses straight, sidewalksand shade trees straight. Still, we will have In its truest sense,

THE NEW OLD SANTA FE PLAN.

5 OffFor Cash

A few years ago any residence lot in this city could have been

bought for two hundred dollars. Recently these same lots sold forfrom $600 to $1,250. A few days ago, a certain business man whohas been here for thirty years, and has paid for the property he oc-

cupied several times over in rentals, bought the place, but paidabout four times more than he could have got it for at the outset.

Many of our far-seei- ng citizens have READ THE CARDS andpurchased beautiful residence lots on Don Diego Heights and arenow planning to build themselves homes on this splendid, well-plann- ed

avenue, all of which will be on the NEW OLD SANTA FE PLAN.

A HI A RICrlAf) aMI lM TAUNCFNn OFFICE OF Q. C.i cum PlYMFNT nOWN AND

YOU IN AS YOUR OWN LANDLORD. SEE AT ONCE Vlit;L 1. UI JllVr VI WW . 11. I J HI 1WL-11-1 Telephone 189 J.