Spanish American, 05-04-1912 - UNM Digital Repository

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University of New Mexico UNM Digital Repository Spanish-American, 1905-1922 (Roy, Mora County, New Mexico) New Mexico Historical Newspapers 5-4-1912 Spanish American, 05-04-1912 Roy Pub. Co. Follow this and additional works at: hps://digitalrepository.unm.edu/sp_am_roy_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 Spanish-American, 1905-1922 (Roy, Mora County, New Mexico) by an authorized administrator of UNM Digital Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Recommended Citation Roy Pub. Co.. "Spanish American, 05-04-1912." (1912). hps://digitalrepository.unm.edu/sp_am_roy_news/13

Transcript of Spanish American, 05-04-1912 - UNM Digital Repository

University of New MexicoUNM Digital RepositorySpanish-American, 1905-1922 (Roy, Mora County,New Mexico) New Mexico Historical Newspapers

5-4-1912

Spanish American, 05-04-1912Roy Pub. Co.

Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/sp_am_roy_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 Spanish-American, 1905-1922 (Roy, Mora County, New Mexico) by an authorized administrator of UNM Digital Repository. For moreinformation, please contact [email protected].

Recommended CitationRoy Pub. Co.. "Spanish American, 05-04-1912." (1912). https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/sp_am_roy_news/13

H AMERICANü ü iliLjVol. IX ROY, MOKA COUNTY, NEW MEXICO. SATURDAY, MAY 4. 1$12. No. 15

Drummed Up. Charges, Roy

is Indicted

The present terrn of Court was

noticeable from the point of view

that E. J. II. Roy, Editor of the

Spanish American was indicted

on two charges. The first on

charges preferred by B. G. Tylerthe MANAGKR-IN-CHIE- of

the Tyler Estate, and the second

Criminal Libel, account of an art-

icle published some three months

ago, in mutters affecting the

death and. finding of the body of

Lucks Vigil, who was presumablymurdered by Abel Flores.

The first indictment is signill-.cant- ,

owing to the. fact it has

been Impossible to get mi ac-

counting from 15. G. Tyler of

large sums of the funds of the

Estate that came into his hands

E. J. H. Roy was 11 nuble to fur-

nish a complete report and upon

those grounus, Tyler, Hughesand Ward procured an indict-uient- .

At the present stage of thematter there were absolutely no

grounds for an indictment on

an embezzlement charge, and if

there were, the Manoger-inChie-

Horse Trader and Good for Noth-

ing Specimen that done as he

nleaseil with the affairs of theEstate, should have been shoul-

dered with the Ignominy. The

former administrator Is ready to

show the world where he is atand the public may know it

Tne Criminal Libel matter was

insisted upon by one O. A.Who is Larrozoio?

. . If the fre speech- of the Ncyv

Mexico Press is to be curtaiieu,what are we progressives going

to do under the present dominant

power the SUnd-Pattcrs- . Thiswill be a test case and probably

think than Larrazolo has select-

ed his victim.

The Spanish American is in no

wiy cowed down by all of thedoings, and feels that '.t will enterthe fray more iluterinincd than

ever. Keep a Coming.

Pleasant View

Farmers of this vicinity arc

busy plowing nml getting theirground in condition ior crops.

C'aud lloskins and HerbertMitchell called on Carlylo and

Elmer Boulware Sunday evening

Neis Wetlerhus and Wm. Kiug

have their well almost completed

Jim Hopper called on

Mitchell Sunday evening.Joe

Mrs. Wm. King and Lela Mit-

chell were visitors at Roy Tues

day.

Emma and Aliene Boulware

were the guests of Jessie HoskinsSunday evening.

R. W. Mitchell was a businessvisitor to Roy Monday.-

Literary was well attended Saturday night. A Hue program

was rendered.

The Farmers Club No. 1. was

well attended Monday night.

A. F. Chavez, popular salesman

of the Floersheim Mercantilo Co.

, spent several days on his ranch

near Albert, this week.

Mills Items

Qlaud Morris came home fromCalifornia last week.

Ben Christan is also back to bisranch.

Mrs. Rierdon drove to MillsMonday morning to get a load ofcoal.

W. L. Cobb, the Repesenativeof Remington Fire Arms madeus a very pleasant call this week.

Mr. and Mrs. Carleson of twomiles south of Mills were in town hethe first of the week to do sometrading.

We again welconied our genialand capable salesman ForrestRemesberg to Mills, Monday.

Mr. Lumbard got a cinder in

his eye on Monday he went toRoy to have it removed by Dr.Gibbs.

We received a short call fromEugene Roy and the editor of theSpanish American early in theweek. Air. Koy renewed insurancefor Mr. Cress and Mr. Florsheimtook an order for stationery.

Mrs. Borentz came home Sun"day from her trip to Oklahomawhere she had been to attend thefuneral of her daughter Effie.

Solano News " Nótes

Considerable excitement wascaused Wed. morning by someunknown parties trying to steala team from Mrs. Hepburn,northof town. They were seen to takethe horses from the pasture, butwere frightened away and leftthem. Later they were tractedto tho Uptan Ranch in La CintaPnnvnn. whern thpT bud abandon.

four evidentlybrands showed

belong to parties living Endeeánd De Haven.

I). S. H. R. Johnsonand L. P. Upton have been elected

the new committee in chargeof putting down a well onthe public square.

E. Mitchell was in town thisweek, buying cattle. It is understood that he purchased cattlefrom Henry Stone, Pete Lauin-bac- h

and the Uptons. '

The Ladies Aid Society of theUnion Church has ordered a bellfor the new building, and it isexpected to have it in place in afew weeks.

Rev. Mr. Beck of Mosquero isvisiting B. F. Keist.

A - Good Show in Town

Cole Brothers Variety Circuswas here Thursday, Friday, Sat-

urday, and played to a good sizedaudience. One of the main feat-

ures of the show is the brassband which can certainly deliverthe goods. The show is a goodone and should bo patronized byall towns where they stop.

The Railroad Co. distributedseveral hundrod pounds of seedbeans to the farmers of Ruy andvicinity this week.

WM. C. ROY PASSES

TO THE GREAT BEYOND

Father of Roy, and one of the most Prominent Business

Men of Northeastern New Mexico, Away Sudden-

ly at Hot Springs, Arkansas, Wednesday Morning.

Relatives and friends of Win. remaining to mourn hisC. Roy, one of the most proud-- departure aro his two daughters,nent citizens tins community,who has been taking treatmentat Hut Springs, Aril, since Feb-

ruary, and who had only fewdays previous written his relatives

tlmt he was leaving forwere shocked' to learn by telegram of his sudden death Wed

horses,

Durrin,

v.

Passes

in

a

e

nesday morning, 1st. Owing! (no. 'V: Roy,the seriousness of the malady M

from which he was sufferingsuch a result was not entirely un-

expected, but reports of his con-

dition had been recently so en-

couraging that the news came asa severe blow to those who heldhim in love and high esteem.

The first indication of thetrouble which resulted in 1; -

ed stolen '.

01 llis l1'"''as the them In

at

astown

T.

Those

death became evident me family

Folio

f I

'.--

:)..r ? ?

WILLIAM C. ROY

iivi the ail'.',' l"ri in Oi l'

r

were so heneticiui hat hope ailield out for his ultimate recovery.

He returned to Hoy much im-

proved, but the high altitude was

unfavorable and onco in

February he found it necessary

to return to Arkansas. Since

that time he has apparently beenslowly recovering, and this g

knowledge has

his sudden demise doubly sad andshocking. s,"

The remains will arrive heretomorrow from Hot Springs,Arlc. Burial services and High

Requiem Mass will bo held from

the Church on Monday,

and interment will be in

the Catholic Cemetery of Roy.

Deceased was preceeded to the

grave by his beloved wife (form

erly Nellie St. Vrain, of Mora,)

who has since the the year of

1893, been peacefullying in the beautiful Mora. Valley.

A daughter, Hortense, who fol

lowed her mother to the land of

reAt in the year of 1904, also lies

amo.ig the peaceful hills of the

valley,Deceased at the time of his

death was 51 of age and

the oldest of a family of twelve'children.

Words cannot exjiress, nor

kindness display the bereav-

ed daughters and other relativesthe deep sympathy felt by the

entire community over the loss of

a father and brother whose lite

has been so closely interwoventheirs for and

changing years.

ve'

who have grown to womanhoodin this city, Mrs. Irwin C. Floer-

sheim, of Miss Eugenia M.

of Tiicumcari; Frank A.and Eugene J. H. brothers,

lioy. aKo of this'' city; C. C. Roy,

father, L. P. and Alfred Roy,

brothers, of Sabrovois, Canada;!May

to Manitoba;Irother, ot Eli,s. A. Neville, of

Hartfonl, Conn.; Mrs. Frank(iagne, of Chicago, Illinois,Mrs. P. ). St. Vrain, of Eli,Manitoba; and Missof St. Albitas Ray, Vermont;sisters.

lie also leaves a wife by secondmarriage (formerly Matilda Es- -

i u i f who is now residing atin Septcm- ranch home in Roy

.riat'.s

'f-

again,

made

Catholicmade

slumber

years

to

with these long

Roy,Roy,

Uov,

Mary Roy,

He burn in Sabrevois,1, ' .!!! t" .VW ll'MCO ID

--, I ais r I'ij'lif yeais ill the

ai;!. .y .i l'i e.vie ami Matizan-ire- s

al, !.;; Y't iy, went to Mora,ut cnaeyd n ilie niccantile

business. After four .years he

sold out, his business in the coun-

ty seal and came to lioy, wherelie went into the sheep businessand together with llis brother, F.A. Roy, of this city, establishedthe towusite which still bears hisname.

He was a men whose real depthof character was appreciated tothe fullest extent only by a fewintimate friends but his moraland physical courage, his absolute honesty and seventy of busi-

ness principle, his untiring zealin the interest of the town heoriginated was known to all withwhom he came in contact.

He was secretary-treasur- er ofthe Roy Land & Live Stock Co.,Manager of the Ideal GroceryCo.; and, until a short time beforehis illness was cashier of theRoy Trust & Savings Bank.

His life has been an example ofthe opportunities and possibilitiesin this country for young menwith like energy and perserverence. hile he had, during hisb'isy life, many reverses andovercame obstiHes which to anordinary man would have seem-

ed Insurmountable, yet to thevery last his spirit and couragowas unconquerable.

The Loud will not look you

Local News

J. W. Johnson of east of townwas here Wednesday.

C. II. Hand of northeast of thoi"'1 tlle l)ubUc moneys bill, thecity was here Wednesday and leftus an order for job work.

Col, Sam Bland, of the KansasValley was a business visitor inthe city Monday.

The Editor made a businesstrip to Solano and Mosquero thisweek- -

Chas. Wetheivl of near Mills,was in the city the first ot theweek.

W. Cliadderdon of near Mills,was a business visitor in the cityTuesday.

T. J. Cress, the merchant ofMills, has given us a nice orderfor Stationery.

For efficient work, legal docu-

ments and notorial work, see E.

J. H. Roy.

Ilolmer and Bob Holmes camein from Cimarron Tuesday,wherethey have been at work.

P.P.Branch and family re-

turned Tuesday from a weeksvisit with relatives in Mora.

E. V. Neil came in from Tu-

cumcari, Tuesday to . remain onhis farm west of town, ior a fewdays.

Wm. Noffke arrived in the citythe first of the week from Cimarron to reside on his claim east oftown.

Leandro Archuletta returnedMonday from a ten day's busi-

ness trip In the western end ofthe county. '

Miss Eugenia M. Roy, of Tucumcari, arrived in the city yesterday to attend the funeral ofher father. She will remain hereall summer at the hoihe of her

sister, Mrs. I. C. Floersheim.

Lopez IntroducesBill

County

Hon. Remegio Lopez, Representative of Mora County intro-

duced the following Bills in theHouse on Wednesday.

House Bill No. 158, by Lopez,

to create tho county of Coronado

with the county seat at Roy.

House Bill No. 159, by Lopez,

an act to create Coronado Day.

April 15th a legal holiday.

Doroteo M. Martinez, a young

and prosperous stockraiser jof

Carizo, has been appointed ohe

of the regents of the State Re

form School at Sprlnger.by Gov,

Wm. C. McDonald.

the scars of a well spent, courageous, honest life.

"Lord support us all the day

long of the trouhless life, until

tho shadows lengthen and the

evening come, and the busyworld is hushed, and tho fever

of lite Is over and then in ThyMercy, grant us a safe lodging,

over for medals, but for scars."jand a Holy rest, and peace at the

Surely he has passed to the last, tnrougn our uoru jesuslong, peaceful rest marked with Christ--Amen.-

Lopez to Retain.Seat

Santa Fe, N. M., April 30.

The final passage by the senate

adoption by the house of the rt

of the commit- -tee on privileges and elections,declaring Remegio Lopez, demo-

crat, entitled to the seat which hehas held since the session began,nml the discussion in committeeof ihe whole in the house of thei'iiirg child labor bill wero theprincipal feat ores of today's leg-

islative session.As i'mv aslml by the Morning

Journal , Kriucgio Lopezwill retain his seat in the houseuntil the end of the session

Late Tuesday nigiit, it lookedas it there would be two reportsof the committee on privilegesmid elections, but another meet-

ing of the committee was heldthis morning, nod those whothreatened to lile a minority report were brought into line.

The report recited the factthat, after hearing evidence incontest and eliminating all illegalVotes known to have been castonboth sides, it developed that in-

stead of the contestant, Marce-

lino C. Martinez, having a major-

ity, the majority of Mr. Lopez ap-

peared to be H8 instead of 20, aswas shown on the faee of tho re-

turns. The motion to adopt thereport of tho committee wasmade by Mr. Toombs, an organi-

zation republican, and was car-

ried without a dissenting vote. C

Albuquerque Journal.

NOTICE -

All "parties' the TylerEstatewill please advise the undersigned as to the correctness ofindebtedness. Any parties hold-

ing receipts from B. O. Tyler willplease present same. I understandsome accounts have been paid, al- -

tho appearing on the books as un-

paid, and no accounting madebyB. G. Tyler.

E, J. II. Roy.

The school kids and their teachers to the number of a 100 strongenjoyed a picnic In the canyonsyesterday. A fine dinner anda great time was reported by thepupils.

Forrest Remesberg, the popular traveling salesman for theRemesberg Mercantile Companyof Raton was calling on local tradeTuesday.

Tho Executive Committe of theRoy District Fair Assocation willmeet Saturday at Roy for thepurpose of attending to importantmatter pertaining to the fair forU12.

B. F. Keist was herefrom his home at Solano.

U. S. Commissioner L. P.Upton of Solano, was a businessvisitor in the city Wednesday.

John Gallagher and sister. MissMaggie were in the city Thurs-day from their home at Qellaveu,on a shopping expedition.

P. L. Woodson represeting the"Karo Syrups" was calling on thelocal trade this week.

Full blooded white Pekín duclccags for sale $1.00 per setting foreleven eggs. Mrs. C. E. Anderson2 miles east Roy. .

0" " fA ,jjÍ ' Í (CopyrtsM. 19, by tha New York Herald Company..

Ht ' 'Copyrlsht. 1810. by tha McMillan Company.ÍÍ WTliirtfir '

B &s --S W T i ll&BWBK I NH1

BYNOPSIa.

El urn Harnlsh, known at through A1m-It- a

as "Hurnlnn Daylight," celebrates tilsth birthday with a crowd of miners at

the Circle City Tlvoll. Tha dance leadsto heavy gambllnfr. in which over lOO.fti)If staked Harnlih loies his money andhis mine but wins the mail contract. He Itarts on his mall trip with doss and

sledge, telling his friends that he will beIn the big Yukon gold strike at the start.Burning Daylight makes a 'nnnlloimllyrapid run across country with the mall,appears at the Tlvoll and Is now readyto join his friends In a dash to the new offold fields. Deriding that Rold will be

In the district Ha.rn.nhbuvs two tons of flour, which he declareswill be worth Its weight In geld, hutwhen he arrives with his flour he findsthe big flat dfsoUte. A comrade dtncov-r- s

gold and Daylight Traps a rich har-vest. He rrw to Dawson, becomes themost proml'nt figure In the Klondikeand dcferi a combination of capitalistsIn a ast mining deal. He returns tocivilisation, and, amid the bewilderingcomplications of high finance,' Daylightfinds that he has been led to Invest hiseleven millions In a manipulated scheme.He goes to New York, nnd confrontingMs disloyal partners with a revolver, hethreatens to kill them if his money is notreturned. They are cowed, return theirstealings and Harnlsh goes bnr-- to SnnFrancisco where he meets his fate InDefle Mason, a pretty stenographer. Hpmakes large Investments and gels Into thepolitical ring. For a rest he goes to thecountry. Dnvllght gets deeper Into hlehfinance In San Francisco, but often thelonjdng for the simple life nenrly over-comes him. Pede Mason buys a horse andpsyllght meets her In her saddle trips.One duy he asks Dedc to go with himon one more ride, his purpose being toask her to marry him and they ennteraway, she trying to analyze her feelings.Dede tells Daylight that her happinesscould not lie with a money manipulator.Daylight undertakes to hulld up a greatIndustrial community. He Is Insistentthat she marry htm and yet hopes to winher. Daylight falls back Into his olddrinking ways. There Is a flurry in themoney market.

CHAPTER XIX. Continued.

"Dede, If I tell you, flat and straight,that I'm going up to ttve on that ranchat Glen Ellen, that I ain't taking acent with me, that I'm going toscratch for every bite I eat, and thatI ain't going to play ary a card at thebusiness game again, will you come

long with me?"She gave a glad little cry, and he

nestled her In closely. But the nextmoment she had thrust herself outfrom him to the old position at arm'slength.

"How Is this possible? How canyou leave your business? Has any-

thing happened?""No, nothing's happened yet, but it's

going to, blame quick, I've takenyour preaching to heart, and I'vecome to the penitent form. I've takenmy last drink. You're marryingwhisky-soak- , but your huBband won'the that. He's going to grow Into another man so quick you won't knowhim. A couple of months from now,up there in Glen Ellen, you'll wake upsome morning and And you've gotperfect stranger In the house with you,

nd you'll have to get introduced toRim all over again. You'll say, 'I'm Mrs.

Harnlsh, who are you?' And I'll say,I'm Elani HarnlBh'B younger brother.I've just arrived from Alaska to attend the funeral.' 'What funeral?'you'll say. And I'll say, 'Why the fu-

neral of that gam-

bling, Burning Day

lightthe man that died of fatty degeneration of the heart from sittingIn night and day at the business game.'Yes, ma'am,' I'll Bay, 'he's sure a gone'coon, but I've come to take his placeand make you happy. And nowma'am, If you'll allow me, I'll Just meander down to the pasture and milkthe cow while you're getting breakfast' "

"But you haven't answered my questions," she reproached him, as sheemerged, rosy and radiant, from theembrace that had accompanied theculmination of his narrative.

"Now JuBt what do you want toknow?" he asked.

"I want to know how all this is pos

sible? How you are able to leave

Otar Elam," 8h, Whlspersd,Elam."

four buBinaas at a ttme Hke this?What you meant by Baying that something wn going to happen qulcklyr

"Let'a go and Kt married, he urgedail the whimsicality of hli uttaraoot

i

duplicated In bis eyea. "I've been working like forty horseB ever since thisblamed panto Bet in, and all the timesome of those Ideas you'd given mewere getting ready to sprout. Well,they sprouted this morning, that's all.

knew I wanted to ride In the hillswith you Just about thirty milliontimes more than I wanted to go to theoffice. And I knew all the time Itwaa impossible. And why! Mecause

the office. The office wouldn't letme. And then I made up my mindthat I was to the dividing of the ways.One way led to the office. The otherway led to Berkeley. And I took theBerkeley road. I'm never going toset foot In the office again. That's allgone, finished, over and done with,and I'm letting it slide clean to smashand then some. I'm wiping the slateclean. I'm letting It all go smash.When them thirty million dollarsstood up to my face and said I couldn'tgo out with you In the hills today.knew the time had come for me to putmy foot down. And I'm putting Itdown. I've got you, and my strengthto work for you. and that little ranchin Sonoma. That's all I want, andthat's all I'm going to save out, alongwith Bob and Wolf, a suit case and ahundred and forty hair bridles. Allthe rest goes, and good riddance. It'sthat much Junk."

A knock at the door Interruptedhim, and he waa left to stare delight-edly at the Crouched Venus and onaround the room at Dede'a dainty pos-

sessions, while she answered the tele-phone.

"It 1b she Bald, on returning. "He is holding the line. Hesays It Is Important."

Daylight shook his head and smiled."Please tell Mr. llegan to hang up.

m done with the office and I don'twant to hear anything about anything."

A minute later she was back again."He refuseB to hang up. He told

me to tell you that Unwin is In theoffice now, waiting to see you, andHarrison, too. Mr. Hegan said thatOrlmshaw and Hodgklns are In trouble.That It looks as If they are going tobreak. And he Bald something aboutprotection."

It waa startling Information. BothUnwin and Harrison represented bigbanking corporations, and Daylightknew that If the nouBe of Grimshawand Hodgklns went It would precipi-

tate a number of failures and start aflurry of serious dimensions. But Day-

light smiled, and shook his bead.He caught her by the band and drew

her to blm.You let Hegan hang on to that line

till he's tired. We can't be wastinga second on blm on a day like this."

But I know something of the fightyou have been making," Dede contended. "If you stop now, all the workyou have done, everything, will be de-

stroyed. You have no right to do ItYou can't do It"

Daylight waa obdurate. He shookhis head and smiled tantallilngly.

"Nothing will be destroyed, Dede,nothing. You dont understand thisbusiness game. U'b done on paper.All 1 stand for Is paper. I've got thepaper for thousands of acres of land.All right Bum up the paper, andburn me along with It. The land remains, don't It? Nothing Is going tobe lost not one pile out of the docks,not one railroad spike, not one ounceof steam out of the gauge of a ferryboat. The cars will go on running,whether 1 hold the paper or somebodyelse holds it.

By this time Hegan had arrived Inan automobile. The honk of It camein through the open window, and theysaw it stop alongside the big red machine. In the car were Unwin andHarrison, while Jones aat with thechauffeur.

"I'll see Hegan," Daylight told Dede.There's no need for the rest. They

can wait In the machine.""Is he drunk?" Hegan whispered to

Dede at the door.She shook her head and showed him

In.Good morning, Larry," waa Day

light's greeting. "Sit down and restyour feet You sure seem to be In anutter."

'I am," the little Irishman snappedback. "Orlmshaw and HodgklnB aregoing to smash If something Isn'tdone quick. Why didn't you come tothe office? What are you going to doabout It?"

"Nothing." Daylight drawled lazily.Except let them smash, I gueBB. I've

had no dealings with Orlmshaw andHodgklnB. 1 don't owe them anything.Besides, I'm going to smash myBelf.Look here, Larry, you know me. Youknow when I make up my mind Imean It Well, I've sure made up mymind. I'm tired of the wbole game.I'm letting go of It aa fast aa I can,and a smaBb Is tiie quickest way to letgo. All you're got to do Is to protectyourself and all our friends. Now youllBten to me while I tell you what todo. Everytblng Is In good shape todo It Nobody must get hurt Every-body that stood by me must comathrough without damage. All the back

If iPlf

Use a Different Tone of Voice, or

wages and salaries musthfepald pron-

to. All the money I've wTched awayfrom the water company, the streetcars, and the ferries must be switchedback. And you won't get hurt your-Bel-f

none. Every company you gotBtock In will come through "

"What have you done to him?" Hegan snarled at Dede.

"Hold on there, Larry." For thefirst ttme Daylight's voice was sharp,while all the old lines of cruelty in bisface stood forth. "Miss Mason Is go-

ing to be my wife, and while I don'tmind your talking to her all you want,you've got to ubb a different tone of

voice or you'll be beading for a hos-

pital, which will sure be an unex-

pected sort of smash. And let me tellyou one other thing. Thls-al- l Is my

doing. She says I'm crazy, too."Dede stepped forward where she

confronted tbe two men."Walt," she said. "I want to say

something. Elam, If you do this In-

sane thing, I won't marry you. I refuseto marry you."

Hegan, in spite of his misery, gaveher a quick, grateful look.

"I'll take my chance on that," Daylight said. "And now, Larry, you'dbetter be going. I'll be at the hotel In

little while, and since I'm not go

ing to step Into the office again, bringall papers to sign and the rest overto my rooms. And you can get me on

the 'phone there any time. This8mash Is going through. Savvee? I'mquit and done."

He turned to Dede as soon aa Hegan was gone, and took her by thehand.

"And now, little woman, you needn'tcome to the office any more. Consideryourself discharged."

"I'd cry, If I thought tt would do anygood," she threatened.

"In which case I reckon I'd have tohold you In my arms some more andsort of soothe you down," he threaten-ed back.

As he stood at the top of the ateps,leaving, she said:

"You needn't send those men. Therewill be no packing, because I am notgoing to marry you."

"I'm not a bit scared," he answered,and went down the steps.

.CHAPTER XX.

Three days later, Daylight rode toBerkeley tn his red car. It was for thelast time, for on tbe morrow the big

machine passed into another's pos

session. It had been a strenuous threedays, for hi smash had been the big-

gest tbe panic had precipitated in Cal-

ifornia. The papers had been filled

with it, and a great cry of indignationhad gone up from the very men wbo

later found that Daylight had fully'protected their interests. It was thesefacts, coming slowly to light, thatgave rise to the widely repeatedcharge that Daylight had gone In

sane. It was the unanimous convictionamong business men that no saneman could posBlbly behave In suchfashion. On the other hand, neitherhis prolonged steady drinking nor hisaffair with Dede became public, so

You'll Be Heading for a Hospital."

the only- conclusion attainable wasthat the wild financier from Alaskabad gone lunatic. And Daylight hadgrinned and confirmed the suspicionby refusing to see the reporter. Hebaited the automobile before Dede'sdoor, and met her with his same rushing tactics, enclosing her in his armsbefore a word could be uttered.

"I've done It," he announced,"You've seen the newspapers, ofcourse. I'm plumb cleaned out, andI've Just called around to find outwhat day you feel like starting forGlen Ellen. It'll have to be soon, torit's real expensive living in Oaklandthese days. My board at the hotel Isonly paid to the end of the week, andI can't afford to stay on after thatAnd beginning with tomorrow I've gotto use the street cars, and they sureeat up the nickels."

He pan Bed, and waited, and lookedat her. Indecision and trouble showedon her face. Then tbe smile he knewso well began to grow on ber Hps andIn her eyes, until she threw back herhead and laughed in the old forthrightboyish way.

"When are those men coming topack for me"' she asked.

And again she laughed and simulated a vain attempt to eBcape bisbear-lik- arms.

"Dear Elam," she whispered; "dearElam." And of herself, for the firsttime, she kissed him.

"Now, I've got an Idea," Daylightsaid. We re running away from cities, and you have no kith nor kin, soIt don't seem exactly right that weshould start off by getting married tna city. So here's the Idea: I'll runup to the ranch and get things inshape around the house and give thecaretaker his walking-papers- . Youfollow me In a couple of days, comingon the morning train. I'll have thepreacher fixed and waiting. And here')another Idea. You bring your ridingtogs In a suit caBe. And as soon asthe ceremony's over, you can go totbe hotel and change. Then out youcome, and you find me waiting with acouple of horses, and we'll ride overthe landscape so as you can see tbeprettiest parts of the ranch the firstthine And she's sure pretty, thatranch. And now that it's settled, I'llbe waiting for you at the morningtrain day after tomorrow.

Dede blushed as she spoke."You are Buch a hurricane.""Well, ma'am," he drawled, "I sure

hate to burn daylight. And you andhave burned a heap of daylight. We'vebeen scandalously extravagant Wemight have been married years ago."

(TO BB CONTINUED.)

Race Between Man and Horse.At Dublin yesterday a large crowd

witnessed a race on a grasstrack between Michael Horan's trot-ting mare Kathleen and P. Fagan, toepedestrian.

Fagan received 18 minutes' allow-ance and covered three miles one fur-long In that time. He was caught 700yards from the tape and beaten by300 yards In 63 minutes 68 seconda.London Dally Malt

LIKE THE WOLF AND LAMB

Inoffensive Creatures Most UnjustlyCharged With Sudden Attaok

of Bloodthirstlness,

A man wbo was caught In the actof Bklnning a nelghbor'a abeep, cov-

ered his embarrassment by declaringthat no sheep could bite him andlive. The logic of this Ib equaled bythat of the Yankee Boldler who oncebad a narrow escape from an enragedgander. The men of a certain Maineregiment, which waa in the enemy'scountry in 1862, considered the order'no foraging" an additional and un

called-fo-r hardship. One afternoonbout dusk, a soldier was seen beat

ing a rapid retreat from tbe rear of afurmhouse near by, closely pursuedby a gander with wings outspread,wboBe feet seemed scarcely to touchthe ground, and from whose beak 1s- -

curd a succession of angry Bcroaius.The fugitive was not reassured by thecries of the gander'a owner: "Holdon, man, hold on! He won't hurtyou!" "Call off your gander! Callhim off!" Bbouted the fleeing soldier.Neither man nor gander stopped un-

til inside the campltnes, when the soldier's friends relieved him of hiBfierce pursuer Kith the aid of the buttof a musket. "Did that gander thinkhe could chase me like that andUve!" the soldier exclaimed, as hesurveyed tbe outstretched bird; buthe said nothing of the baited book,with codllne attached, which mighthave thrown light on the unfortunateBander's strange actions.

Mlsalng the Point.Kepresentatlve Kucker of Colorado,

npropos of a tariff argument abouttunar, said to a Washington corre-spondent: "Oh, well, tboee men don'tsee my point. They misa It as badlyas the old lady missed ber son's.

'Mother,' a young man aald, looking up from the Bulletin, 'would youbelieve that it takes 6,(100 elephants

year to make our piano keys andbilliard balls?'

'Make our piano keys and billiardballs!' cried the old lady. 'Well, 1

alwnys understood elepnantB were In-

telligent creatures, but 1 never knewbefore that they'd .been trained tomake piano keys and billiard balls.' "

A Sad Handicap."Sad case of the fellow the

fourth floor!"What's that?""He plays the cornet for his own

amusement, but be got so hard up lately that he had to pawn the Instru-ment."

"Well?""Ntjw he can't borrow a dollar In

the entire building because everybodyla afraid he'll get the blamed footerout of pawn." t

Cause of the Row,Mrs. Brown had a dreadful quar

rel with her husband last night?""That so?"Yes. She bid eight on a hand that

was good for ten, not thinking Mr.Brown would overbid her, but he did.It almost broke up tbe party."

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GftSItttmb NTftuti teisMf, stmr vom utt.

LIXE ENOCH ARDEN

HE WOULD NOT

STAY DEAD

How P. JJhomson, Wanderer

Returned to Savannah After Forty-seve- n

Years to Find His Wife With

New Husband and New Ch-

ildrenWants Only to Die

Where He Was Born.

from the arms of his young

TORN and baby daughter by theunes of war, eilled from

Savannah by the order ofGeneral Sherman, whose army

had Juet completed In famoui marchthrough Georgia to the Sea, P. J.Thompson, recently of Kentucky, wan-

derer extraordinary, has returned tohit native state for the first time in47 years, only to find his wife hap-

pily married to another man and themother of many children; bis daugh-ter, whom he left an Infant, grownto womanhood and nursing babies ofher own, and bis sister scarcely ableto recognise nlra.

With the lines of the years scarreddeeply into bis weather-beate- face,and his back bent with the burdenof many days, the heart of the oldman cried for the red old hills tha hehad wandered over aa a barefoot boy,and for news of the little family fromwhom be had parted In his youth. Hewished to rest bis bones In the groundthat nourished him, and to feel forthe last time the breezes that the"Gulf Stream, that wandering summerof the tea," brings to Georgia's shoes.And so he turned bis footsteps backtoward the land of hit nativity, and aaa consequence involves his wife in amatrimonial tangle not yet unrav-eled.

For after having spent the betterTears of a long life at the wife of an-

other man and the mother of hit chil-

dren, the old woman It Inclined tolook askance at this husband ot herearly youth, whom she can now re-

member only dimly, and whom thehas to long believed to be lying In anunknown soldier's grave upon one ofthe many battlefields with which thebosom of the south was reddened. SheIt at thy aa a girl In the presence ofher former husband, but she continuesto Uve with her tecond husband.v

A Man Without a Home.Berty Jones, kindly eyed, white

whiskered, who wooed and won thefount Mrs. Thompson, after the hadgiven up her husband for dead, la notInclined to part at thlt late date withhit life companion. He looks uponthe advent of Thompson as a ratherhumorous Incident that will break themonotony of exlttence for his womenfolks a little while, and then be for-gotten. He cannot conceive that theremay be a real interruption in the es-

tablished order of things, and as tohis wife's leaving blm he accepts thesuggestion with a laugh. These twotogether have been the architects oftoo many human lives to allow a deadman come to life to break the placid-ity yof their conugal relatione. EnochArdent are supposed to look throughwindows upon happy firesides andthen to disappear again.

The ttory of the adventure! ofThompson it of Intense InterestThrough all the years he hat been aman without a home, a wanderer, seek-ing alwayt after the offt fortune that forever eluded him.The one discordant note In the harmony Is that he never made an at-

tempt to return to his wife and homeafter having been tent nortb by thefederal soldiers.

Thompson's Early Life.When the war broke out Thompson,

not yet of age, enlisted for six months.On the expiration ot that period hewent Into t cavalry troop and tawmuch service In Virginia and Tennes-see. The beginning of the last year ofthe war found him In ft hospital InSavannah. Becoming convalescent,he obtained leave to visit his familyin Pembroke, where be learned for thefirst time that he waa a father, andfor a brief and only period of bis lifeheld his baby In bis arms. While he

iu ttlll at Pembroke Sherman andma legions awupt across the state.Bidding his wife ft hasty goodby. theConfederate soldier took refuge In theswamps. That wat the last that Mra.Thompson now alto Mrs. Jonet andthe wife of two men, ever taw of herhusband.

Driven from his hiding place by hunger, Thompson made his way acrossthe Ogeechee river bridge and fell intothe hands of a federal outpost, bywhom he was promptly dispatched intoSavannah, a prisoner of war. He waadetained' there and furnished with ra-

tions for ft time, but an order finallyoame that no more provisions wereto be served, and this, together withan offer of transportation nortb, leftThompson and others In similar pre-dicament no alternative but to go Intothe land of the enemy as hostages ofwar. He was sent by a boat to NewYork, where he remained until thewar closed.

Escaped Dssth In Cyclone.After the war Thompson wandered

Into the welt. Why ht chote the westInstead of the south and home hatnever been satisfactorily explained.He lived for a time In Cincinnati, butdriven by the unrest that was In blm.he continued hit wanderings over thegreat oart ot the western country,

stopping for a time like any bird ofpassage wherever chance placed blm. InHe peddled goods for a livelihood,worked on farms, cut timber in theforests did anything that came bisway that offered bread for hit hungrymouth. He never wrote to find outwhat had become of his wife andchild.

After a brief time he found himselfthe proprietor of a cross-road- s storenear Mound City, Kan. Here, be says,he cherished the hope of some dayachieving a competency and of return-ing to Qeorga with means to searcnfor his people. But at night a cycloneswept over the land while he coweredIn a cellar and In the mornlug hefound his store distributed over a num-ber ot counties and blmself againhomeless and penniless. Nothing re-

mained of hit possessions but an oldtub, which alone had withstood thestorm and remalnded to mock him Inhit loss. He again became a wanderer, setting his back steadily upon wifeand home and child.

He moved Into Kentucky and againbegan to build up hit shattered fortunes. He became tbe proprietor of ageneral atore and again began todream dreams of a competence. But

disastrous fire visited him, and hewatched all his earthly goods go up insmoke. After the fire be peddledfruit trees In the mountains, andwatched the distillation of the yellowcorn that had waved He golden bannereta over Kentucky abills. He walked with tbe feudists Inthe Kentucky hills for a number ofyean, braving flood and storm In thepursuit of hit several peddling occu-pations.

Worked His Way Home.Recently he decided to carry out his

long cherished Intention of returningto Georgia. Old age was now comingupon him fast, and with the comingof age his mind turned upon the pastHe worked his way across the Intervenlng states and came at last againto Pembroke. But all the friends ofhis youth had disappeared. Many oftbe old families were broken up. Thelittle slabs In the churchyard told himwhere moat of the people he knewhad gone. The gravea of hla fatherand mother he found there. No traceot hla wife and child could he find. A

chance acquaintance told him that hlaalater had married and waa living In

Savannah.He found hit sister, Mrs. Jessie

Davis, after some search, and convinced her, with some trouble, of hisIdentity. From her he learned thathis wife, after giving blm up for dead,had married again, and with theirdaughter, who was alao now married.lived in BUtchton. He offered no

for having abandoned hit familyto long, and hit titter did not pretshim upon the point

Msy Woe His Wife Agsln.Thompson went on to BUtchton to

see the wife of bis early manhood andhis middle aged daughter, whom heremembered as a littler child. He spenta day at the home of L. A. Schuman.the husband of his daughter, whom hesaw mothering sturdy men and worn-

hora she had brought into tbeworld In the years that had trans-formed her father from a veteran oftwenty-on- to a bent and broken wan-

derer of sixty-eigh- t With the as-

sistance of ft picture taken before hewent away, and by recalling intimateInstances of her baby days, he suc-

ceeded in convincing his daughterthat he wat her father.

Meane to 8tay In Savannah.Thompson has announced that be

will epend the rest of his days In

Savannah. Precisely what are his In-

tentions regarding his wife are notknown. He hat given no Indicationof what procedure be will adopt In

this respect It Is generally believedthat he will not make any endeavorto Interfere with present arrange-ment-

Jonea will certainly fight forhit wife, although he bat exhibitedevery Indication of being friendly toThompson unless the latter putt upa fight Mra. Thompson Jones will un-

doubtedly prefer to remain with thelatter. She mourned Thompson lordead many years ago, and she cannotrecognise he father ot her daughterIn the sued visitor.

But ber politlón la delicate aa wellaa humiliating. She hat two living

hutbanda, which la ft little beyond the

oal of the law. However Innocent

she may have been, she Is now livinga state of polygamy. To desert ber

last husband after all these yeara andgo to a perfect Btranger la a littlemore than could be expected of her,and yet her position as the wife of

Jones Is a trying one. Nobody blamesher, but those who know the ctrcum-stance-

are wondering what tbe outcome of the tangle will be. Her numerous offspring by her last husbandwould not consent to her leaving theroot of their father even If she wlBhed

to do so.

Not Sure He le Her Brother.It Mrs. Thompson had gone Into

court and had her husband pronounced legally dead before she marrled the second time all would havebeen well. But so certain was shethat he was dead that she did nottake this precaution. Possibly sometechnicality of the law will come toher rescue. The matter haa not beenInquired Into. With her the matterIs simply that here are two men. bothliving, whom she has recognized as husband, and both of whom are the fathers ot her children.

Thompson it back in Savannah, atthe home of hit titter. She declaresthat while the has accepted him, sheIs not at all sure that he la really herbrother. She does not believe that

real flesh and blood brother coulddrop suddenly from nowhere In partlcular after an absence ot 47 yeara.Everybody la afraid to take the matter Into court for fear of further complicating the situation and bringingout trying points heretofore overlooked. The consensus of opinionseems to he that Thompson ought todisappear again and remain dead. Or,

better still, he ought to have remained In the west, and not come backto trouble bis wife at all.

Jones Is apparently waiting for theother man to make the first move In

the case. ' He holds the trump cardsIn that he Is In possession ot the disputed wife. "And possession is ninepoints of the law, you know," hesays with a laugh. Ha Is not lettingthe situation worrit him much, either.It la probable that aa long as Thomp-

son does not move be will allow thematter to drop. And Thompson ap-

pears Inclined to be quiescent Hewill remsln with his sister tor tbepresent There Is plenty of time tomake his plana for the future.

Has Fund of Strange Tales,This Is the basis upon which the

mattér stands at present Thomp-

son's ambition seems solely to beamong hla own people to make a little niche aomewhere where he canapend the remainder ot hla daya andearn five feet of ground In tbe endIn which his bones may rest alongside those of his father and mother.

Why Thompson did not tramp toward Georgia Instead of continuallyaway from It Is a secret that remainslocked In his own bosom. On thispoint he has been consistently silent.He talka of hla adventurea pleasant'ly and of the affairs of bis family humorously, but any questions leadingup to his reasons for remaining awayso long Invsrlably silences blm.

Thompson shows bis age more thanhis wife. His face Is finely lined andwrinkled. His shoulders are a littlebent, but they are of great breadth, andwould Indicate that he was a man of

great physical strength In his younger days. Hla teeth are white and fine,

and his smile Is pleaaant and Infectious. He haa at his tongue's end the"blarney" that comes to all who puttheir feet upon the road. He hasfund of strange tales always ready totell, and he apparently takes delight In

relating them. He it a pleaaant comoanlon, and there is much crude wisdom burled beneath his experiences.

All Georgia and the south Is Interested In the strange case. Everybodyhas a solution ot the difficulty; to offer. The theories advanced arethick at dust In vacant houses. ButIt is not theories that are troublingthese old people. It is hard facts-f- acts

that drive thought home aa withthe Impact of a hammer. What It tobe done! Suppose Thompson de-

mands his wife at the hands of Jones?What will the consequence be? Mrs.

Jones cannot deny that she Is the wifeof Thompson under the law. Thenwhat will the consequences be to tbechildren who have been born to herin the Intervening yeara since Thompton disappeared?

STATE TAKES HAND IN FIGHT

New Jersey Leads In Advanced Legis-

lation Designed to Cheok Speedof Tuberculosis.

What it designed by the NationalAssociation for the Study and Preven-tion ot Tuberculosis as the moat advanced legislation In the campaignagainst tuberculosis that baa beenenacted by any state In the UnitedStates, If not by any country In theworld, la found In a bill recentlypassed by the New Jersey legislatureand signed by Governor Wilson. Thenew law provldea that tuberculosispatients who refuse to obey the regu-

lation! laid down by tbe state boardof health concerning the prevention oftheir dlBease, and thus become a men-

ace to the health of those with whomthey associate, shall be compulsorllysegregated by order of the courts, In

Institutions provided for this purpose.If tuch a patient retimes to obey therules and regulations of the institu-tion In which he is placed, he may "beIsolated or separated from other persons and restrained from leaving theinstitution." The law further pro-

vides that all counties In tbe stateof New Jersey shall within six monthsfrom April 1st make provision In spe-

cial Institutions for the care of allpersons having tuberculosis In thesecounties. The state treasury will subsidize each county to the extent of$3 a week for each person maintainedIn these institutions, except thosewho are able to pay for the coBt ofmaintenance.

BABY'S TERRIBLE SUFFERING

"When my baby waa six months old,his body was completely covered withlarge sores that seemed to Itch andburn, and cause terrible suffering.The eruption began In pimples whichwould open and run, making largesores. His hair came out and fingernails fell off, and the sores were overthe entire body, causing little or nosleep for baby or myself. Great scabswould come oft when I removed hisshirt.

"We tried ft great many remedies,but nothing would help him, till afriend Induced me to try the CutlcuraSoap and Ointment I used tbe Cutl-cura Soap and Ointment but ft ahorttime before I could tee that he waaImproving, and In tlx weeks' time hewaa entirely cured. He had Bufferedabout six weeks before we tried theCutlcura Soap and Ointment, althoughwe had tried several other things, anddoctors, too. I think the Cutlcura a

will do all that Is claimed forthem, and ft great deal more."(Signed) Mrs. Noble Tubman, Dodaon,Mont, Jan. 8, 1911. Although Cutl-cura Soap and Ointment are sold bydruggists and dealers everywhere, a(ample of each, with book,will be mailed free on application to'Cutlcura," Dept L, Boston.

The Ruling Passion.Little Willie was an embryo elec

trician. Anything relating to hisfavorite study possessed absorbing interest for him. One day his motherappeared In a new gray gown, thejacket of which was trimmed In flatblack buttons showing an outer circleof the light dress material. Williestudied the gown critically for a mo-

ment, then the light of strong ap-

proval dawned In his eyes.'Oh, mamma," he cried, "what a

pretty new dreBs! It's all trimmed Inpush buttons." Judge.

in the Dark.Has that boy of yours who gradu

ated from college last year found aJob that suits him yet?"

"Nope. He's still looking for one.""Where's he looking?""Well, I don't Just know. He seems

tú do moBt of his looking nights."

Garfield Toa. the Incomparable laxative.Pleaaant to take, pure, mild Id action andwonderfully .

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Be hannv. Uae Red fro Rar Blue:much better than liquid blue. E flightsthe laundresa. All rocen.

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coa nuts really on trees?""Of course! Where did you think

they Brew?""Why, pa, I always thought the

monkeys laid 'era." BoBton Tran-

script

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Di. Pierce gave to the thie remedy, whioh be called Dr. Pierce'sMedical He found help the blood in the proper

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L.$2.50 $3.00 $3.50 $4.00

. MEN, BOYS

W. DOUGLAS $4.50 $5.00BHOtS BENCHWOBKOOoTINQ (7.00 $8.00

Wear W. L. Douglas Yousave because they

economical in style,and makes. W L.Douglas and price stamped on

bottom guarantees andprotects wearer against high

shoes.genuine W. L Douglas aJm".

It Toar mmt L. Itonilu (ho, w. I.ponHlM, Hrnrkton. lent

THE SECRET LONG LIFE.the life the human try

accumulation the ayatem. An methodia

an alcohol)I Cherrybark. Orerarto publio Golden

Discovery. it would taking" up ele-

mentsthe the syatem as as soothing

unices constipated, or having wecall malnutntion,wnioh attended impovenahed

" Diaoovery" is aa allwhioh restores to

tiiaue, theblood.

MI aarare W, Nam to

Í had ooiiunptloo, saidbedridden, to alt for

edrlsed me toend

1 up anhad could

the 1 uHr Is

an

a andand to

CALUMET

1mlBAKING POWDER

purity.in

It than high-pric- e

it is

worthin

Grocers.

QUARTER CENTURY

otALLEN'S FOOT-EAS- E.

Shake

Hwder Are you a;Ulfle alie ofjour

Ifawollen,

e

TRY ITgs

mil br mall.

-- inbr tretj-

mei

COLT DISTEMPERtable, mat for friimliloir ü

Show to rati.

Ufthe of

eU? .Ontottleusirtiut(dUiciironaMM.

remedy snauutaaee twelve y tain.

Vaselinefor

bo u for ta.

W. DOUGLASSHOES

For

EQUALTO

aresatisfactory

than

Intiatuponhavingthe

iuddI w.

sap

ia

8.

bat

of1

and

you

t

imntf. Lfietl ifrHU UH4 lAIgSrt sWllttf

OfkfcsrtSiuaHiimhii, Coartan, lna,U.t.A.

eold. tad oouglu. LAE&iI5af B

CompanyN.w York

..trrwhT.Myit ,i.d.

THE BEST STOCKSADDLES:;able prices, write for (resIllustrated catalomie.

2V A. H. HE5S 4V CO.

THINlWFRIHCHeiMEDV.rlo.l.Br.t.rloJ.

THERAPION S!SilSQKKaT HITCKStl, IXkKB KlltNKV, HLAllUKS DIHUAHHi,riLK8,CIIHtlHIC DU!KHfl,8TN IHCrTloNB tlTHKR SK

DEFIANCE STARCH" oflDcetPac kan

t

other iiarrhM only 11 ounce ama price andDIFIANOC" IS tUPKRIOR QUALITY.

KOH IJKNKRAL STOKE; D.f.. intci., hsrriw , lióte, mm, rtc. Thrivingtows, so ra. (rom Denver; wHl paring; doing

annnsllr: ei. ell. l.lnn. But Mit.rblceio.

W. N. U., DENVER, NO.

FADELESS DYES'Otherdye. One 10c package colore all fibers. Thsy dye In cold water bnttr than any other dye. Youcaag tree booklet How to Dye, Bleach and Mix Colora. MONBOf PRCIO COMPANY. Qalacv, lit

THESPANISH AMERICAN

E. J. H. ROY, Editor

PnbliiM Emy Stlereij ty

Mora County Publishing Co.I incorporated

ROY. NEW MEXICO

SubK'nplioi $1.50 Ptt Y.rEnterei as second-clas- s matter at

the postoflice in Hoy, N. M. '

Swat the tly.

If all dreams came true .nine

people would quit work.

There are no joy rulers on a

"water wagon.

Why don't the busin men

of Roy get somo kind of a l!,mlc-- i

er?

One our business imfl is so

small that he can liido undi-- theleft leg of n flea.

to loser in .Chicago.

when he begins to bargain with

the devil. ' '

w e are not very goou unlesswe are a good deal betlir than

most folki think we are.

Can it be that tan shi'' andpurple socks are to be worn bymen this summer.

"Convicts are not tin worst

men", says a Chicago preacher.Still there are a lot of good

out of prison.

If Boy continues to reuse in

population, we think it. Vmuld bedone legally. (?) Ro.iuomllyhas always had a good reputation.

That little stunt that w pulledoff in Roy about three we'ls agomight not have been a fiiM-

show, but look at the money itput into circulation.

One woman, unmarried, is of

the opinion that if woman were

allowed to do the courting and

proposing there would In- - more

happy marriages. It might, beworth the while to try it anyway.

Mora GangHas Editorial

This weeks issue of the Mensa-

jero has an editoria1 touching up-

on character of E. .1, II. Royof Spanish American.

The Savant rellects upon Royin regard to his adininist ration ofthe Tyler Estate affairs. AnyCur may cast reUections, hut. canthey be substantiated? K. .1. H.ltoy was in Mora, regard hs.s of

the warrant that was isMird ac-

count of contempt of Court. Butin Mora County.

The administrator of the TylerEstato would have complied with

the Courts former orders Inn it

not been impossible hi n to

secure an accounting from U. G.Tyler. The Spanish Ainetican

has nothing but praise to offerJudge Leahy, upon the manner

under which he disposed of thecontempt proceedings. l!y wasnot in jail, and if anyone goes to

jail or the Penitentiary, H. G.Tyler be the dog.

Messrs. Guys of the Mensajero

will remember that Roy. while in"Mora was among a hostile hunchof (call it what you please),

but regardless of his predica--

went furnished bond, alilio hewas against it on odds, and thatof his imploring the cleniem y of

the court was not done thru1

cowardice, but simply, ui'iountjof giving a MAN a show. The

fipanlsh American doe? nut care,

to occupy all of its space to thissmall matter, but rest assuredthat the indictments returned

twill not make this publicationthe arican of a scandalous set ofpoliticians for and within theconfina of Mora County. AU ofthe Spanish publications haveseen tit to wash other's linen, buttheir own, and if it suits them tostart a race issue wo are ready,This applies to a certain set onlyand those not implicated are ourfriends, altho of Spanish Araer-- I

ican descent.H. J. H. Roy is ready to. vin

dicate himself and will do so be-- j

fore many moons pass by. Henas iiuu to deal with thieves,renegades, (politicians and others)attorneys and HEIRS.

Exercise In the Opij Air.Aur system ot physical culture

which does not Include at least fromtwo to four hours' gentle exercise aday In the open air, three squaremeals and nine hours or sleep is ofthe Evil One. So far as It pcsses Itselfoff as a substitute for real exerciseand fresh eir, or encourages you toneglect these, It Is a fraud and afailure. Pracllcally s ot allthe advertised systems must be putdown In this class. Woods Hutchin-son In "Exercise and Health."

A Good Pole Hone.Prospective Purchaser I want a

horse to use In my work.Dealer Well, what kind of work do

you doT '

Prospective Purchaser Wire repair-ing.

Dealer Here she Is. Just the horseyou want, youns man. All you haveto do Is to shotf Maude a picture of

an automobile and she'll climb a telograph pole. Judge.

Belgian Stallion SelimSired hy JULIAN, 524, "2700" Registered in both

Belgian and American Stud Books. JULIAN was darkbay, weight 1650, won second prize as yearling, Belgian

Exposition. First prize 2 year old, American Horse Show,'

No man be the end : : : : ; : :

men

irir

thethe

not

for

will

SELIM is a dark brown, weight 1500, has greatpower and action. Is the sire of more good colts than any

tin.. r M M- - . .

... r i

Belgian Stallion, SelimThe first need of a homesteader, and the most profitable crop,

is1 a good work team. It is cheaper to raise them than to buy them.Pew of us have good teams, but most of us have one or more mares.By raising colts from a good horse, we will soon have good teams

at cost so small that we won't notice it, and have good colts thatwill bring good prices to sell. There is no better horse in New.

Mexico than SKLIM, and it will he to your advantage to make use

of him. His colts may he seen at Mosquero and vicinity.

TERMS: S3.0U to ensure living colt, payable thirty days aftercolt is dropped. Not responsible for accidents Mares from adis! a ice pastured free.

SKLIM may be seen at the Ilerendecn Place, one mile from Solano.

B. F. KEIST, Owner.

. J o fa n

h ílA

'

y

Famous T. L Mitchell Jack. Standi over 15 hands high,

Black with White PointsWill multe the seivson nt the "Sunny Slope Stock Knrin." (I milesnortbi'iist of Roy. Season $10.00. Mure and colt stnnd good forseiison. If traded Or sold senson becoinps due nt once, A urooinfee of $1. lit tune of service will becbniged.

I will also aivo a colt show ot Roy, giving S10.00 prize for bestcolt, $5.00 for second, and Vive dinner to every man who oneof my Jack's umles into town.

t Cl H. HAND.; r

ata

Spring Spring Spring

We are now receiving daily, a Well' Selected Stock of Merchandise, Consisting

of--Ladi-es' and Children's Hats, Ginghams,

Calicos, Ladies' Waists. Ladies' ReadyMade Tailored Suits and Everything per-

taining to a First Class Dry Goods Store.

Groceries, Lumber, Wire, Feed and Implements

Our Specialites

Call and make our store your

Headquarters

GOODMAN MERC. CO.Roy, New Mexico

Notice For Publication.

Department ot the Interior,U. S. Land Olllce at C'la.vton, N. M

April II, 11112

Clayton, IH90H. Not Goal' lana. "

',. Notice it hereby given that Noe It.lluro, ot Hoy, N. M., oho, onApril 27. UK)", made Homestead K.No. 1744:1, serial No. (UIKHI for SW1nee. 22 Twp. 21 N, It. 2 K. N. M. P.Meridian, Una Hied notice of intentionto make Final five yeur Proof, to. establish claim to the land above described, before U. S. Com., V. H. Foster, at his olllce, at Roy, N. M. , onthe 20th day of Muy, 11112.

Claimant names as witnesses:Mart Trobauifh. F. A. Uoy, Jose R.Viifil, Tomas Vigil, all or Hoy, N. M.

Kdtvard W. Fox,12:18 Hi'jfister,

Physicians Failed To !c!p Hrs.

Green, Cut S:z Finally Found

ta Cardul.

McetM, Va. Jfra. J. C. Orreri of tht3place, says. "I sufioreti with womanlytroubles so that I could hardly sit up.Two of the best doctora in our towntreated me, and I tried different medl- -

cines, until I gavo up all hopo of evergetting well.

One day, I decided to try some Car- -

dui. It did bo much for r.io that Iordered some mora, and it cured me!Today, I feel aa well aa I over did lamy life.

The paina ar.d the trouble are allgone. I feel like .another peixon inevery way. 1 wluh every sufferer couldknow what Cardul will do for Bidewomen."

A few doses of Cardul at the rltrTittime, will save many a big doctor bill,by preventing serious sickness.

It tones up the nervous system, andhelps make pale cheeks fresh and rosy.

Thousands of weak women have beenrostored to health and happiness tryusing Cardul. Suppose you try It.

It may be Just the medicine you need,

N. B Write to: Lidln Advisory DW.. Chut- -tour Mdfctt.A Co., Chatunooe, Tt nn., for $i?rialImtrnelioni, t br. "Homt Truunintfr wwmo." wnt la plain wrapptf , oa rtquttu

Variety Machine

yorks

C. E. ANDF.IISON SON, Prop

All Classes of Machine Work,Automobile Work, GeneralBliicksinithiiig, Heavy Forgi-

ng,- Horse-- ' Hhoe'mi;. s

Given on Piics andPumps for Wells

Wagon and CarriageWork our Spucjalty

All work Guaranteed

Variety " Machine Works

ItOY, - SEW MEX.

OU

BANKING BUSINESS- -

have more or less of it Possibly it is with us.

Such being the casé you know something of our ser-

vice, But if nota patron woufd'ntit be well for

you to become one? : : : :

We offer your account strengthand confidential and courteoustreatment. : : : : :

Roy Trust & Savings BankH.B. JONES, President

A. S. BUSHKEVITZPRES. AND CEN. MAN ACE

C. L JUSTICE,

E. J. H.

TRFAS.

Roy Telephone Company(INCORPORATED)

Now connected with Solano and Mosquero, on the South.Mills, Abbott, Jarifas, Chico, Taylor and Springer,

on the North

Connected with all Bell Long DistanceTelephone Lines

Do your business by phone and get your answer at sametime and save tqlegraphic delays.

EXCHANGES AT

ROY, N. M. and SPRINGER, N. M.Local Reiidtic$1.50 per mo.

Private Lin.$3.00 par me.

Ciikiir

ROY

SEC'Y AND

Local Bullae..per mo.

Southwestern Hotel .

GOOD MEALS

QUICK SERVICESpecial Attention Paid to the Traveling Public' West Side of Depot, Roy, N. M.

fa te 1 I r--r

LOCAL AGENTAm in position to represent clients in

U.S. land matters. Call and see me- and get advice. '

i ,'" j ': . : ' ' '

H K. J. H. K()Y. , Fv.I I Si

$2.50

"Merit System" Suits

íí 1

Mosl men want to make their money go as far as possible. When you buy suit of

clothes you want style, you want correct fabrics and colors. Then you look for wear, the kind

that does not "shine."" "You look for material that "holds" not for few days, but until

change in style. You want suit tliat is "built" by master workman of established reputationwho cannot afford to jenpiirdise their business with indilferenco work and values.

We solicit your careful inspection of our recent arrivals in Spring and Summer two andthree-piec- suits. The showing included diagonals and mild stripes, bluo and black Frenchserges, and novelty weaves. We are offering these at figures ranging from

$8.00 to $18.00And Don't Worry About the Fit

We handle the "American Gentlemen" Pants and "Pony Boy" Suits also made underthe "Merit System." Every one of these garments sold has made friends for us in our

Wejiave-buil- t up generous patronage in this section, by offering to ourpatrons only such merchandise as we can personally recommend and guarantee.

We have all confidence in the value of "Merit System" Clothes. They will clinch ourclaims on every fi'tu-rtr- y 'em and see. '.,

i Sí i'r

They Draw i

Chances on the Piano

Floersheim MROY, NEW MEXICO.

5

I rrvUmW 'Vhi Jh.l I ARMOUR

This Dancing Savage 1$ Ko VeaklingHe haa strength, vigor and endúranos because hehaeatrong atomach, atrong heart, etrong kidneys and strongnerves. Strong vital organa create strength, but don'tbe dlsoouraged If you are weak, n or alokly for

ELECTRIC B3M BITTERSwill tone your etomaoh, regulate your liver and kidneys,strengthen your nerves, and fill you with new health,strength and vigor, Thla matohlesa tonlo

WILL GIVE YOUa fine appetite, atrong digestion, sound sleep and makayou feel like new person. Try It.

PRICE 500 AND $1.00 PER BOTTLE'gg'jg'jj;,1 ISOLD AND GUARANTEED BYCSZ552

FAIRVIEW PHARMACY Roy, N. M.

Not for Hsr.The vorger of a Urge church, see.

lrjg in old woman In one of the leatireserved. for some Important persone,beckoned her to come out But Justat that moment the organ started play-

ing. The old woman, never havingbeen In a church containing an organ,startled him and the congregation by

calling: ,'.'.'Ha, man, get somebodyyounger; ;tny dancing deys-ar- e PsVl'U

i a - 1

a

a a aa

)

i

a

' .. ,

i

'

a

a .

. t Faahlona Little Changed.From the fresco paintings of women

In Cretan palaces of the period about1000 B. C, It Is learned, that the orn-

en of that time pinched In their waists,hsd flounced .or accord eon . plaited

klrte, were an elaborate coiffure,shoes with high heels and hats whichmight have come from a Parisian hatshop, while one woman' might be

' 'at wearing a 'Jupa cutntle.

.J:..m. eir araii'.--J-Ki.trtBeKaTO'"-"-"-'--

S

Co.

Jet Black Missouri JackWill make the Season at W.

W Day's Ranch, 10 miles Northand 4 miles east of Roy. Season$10.00. Mare and colt standgood for season. If traded orsold season becomes due at once.

W. W. DAY,Owner.

: F. H. FOSTER

United States

.CommissionerF1UNGS CONTESTS PROÓFS

j AND ETC.

Office in Great Western Com-

'. mercial Building.

RoyJ : : - r New Mex;

Tr; a, Spanish American Ad.

Roy Public Schools CloseSuccessful Term Yesterday

The Roy Public Schools afterbeing in session for eight monthsclosed yesterday evening.

The term just closed is con-

sidered one of the best that hasbeen taught in lioy, and Profes-sor Johnson and his corps ofteachers are to be congratulatedon the excellent manner in whichthey have conducted the school.

The progress of the pupils dur-ing the term has been very notedand but few, probably less titan

of the 240 enrolled failed ofpromotion, and of those whofailed nearly all did not attendoyer three or four months. be

In looking over the registers of 7

the teachers, it is deplorablefact to note tho poor attendanceof some of the pupils, especiallythe low attendance of so many ofthe Spanish speaking children:this should not be for it behooves ofevery patron to give his children

well rounded education, for

r

twaJjwBafciali. 14WM. G.

Principal of the Roy Public SchoolsT and one of tins Leading

New

education is not only privi-

lege but duty, and every citi-

zen owes to their community to

equip their children for the bestcitizenship possible.

The School Board has donecveyything possible during thepast term to make the school

success and the great success is

due great deal to their untiringefforts in bettering the conditionsof the school in every way pos-

sible, and tho earnest supportthey have given the teachers,

Following is brief outline of

the schools of the Roy' Districtduring the past year.

Total en rollment including

transfers '20.r

Actual EnrollmentNumber of days school was in

session.Roy 152

Liberty ..100

Pleasant View JoAverage daily attendance 185

Percent of attendance 78

Number enrolled in differentrooms.Primary 0

1st Intermediate 54

2nd Intermediate 40

Grammar Room 12

High School.. ó

Pleasant View .33Liberty 21

Number of graduates in HighSchool.--- - 5

Number of graduates in Eighth

$2,000,00 DEATH

BENEFIT.

$15.00 Weekly for Accident orSickness; $1,000 for loss of limbor eyesight; $100,00 for Emergoncy Relief Benefit. Cost Is$0.00 per year. No other Dues

nor Assessments. MEN andWOMEN between ages 10 to 65

are accepted. Reliable Companywith $100,000.00 State Deposit

for the protection of Policy-hol-

era, and to guarantee the paymentof claims. Write for further information giving your age, sexand occupation. Address Dept.441 American Regjstry.ijoropatojr,Brie, Pa.

grade 7

Total Graduates 12

Enrollment by grades are asfollows.1st grade flS

2nd 35

3rd 25

4th .....20atli 15

uth .o7th 12

8th 10

High School ...5Teachers employed

Tho Roy Schools are growingvery rapidly and next year it will

necessary to employ at leastteachers instead of as this

year

The selection of the corps oftmichers for the coming-yea- willprobably take place during thepresent month, nnd it is the wish

the greater number of thepatrons that the present corpsbe reemployed, Of course this

JOHNSON :

During'the Past Two Years,

'

--

S

a

a

aa

a

a

a

,

.'

,

5

a

.

Educators of NortheasternMoxico

can not bo done as Mrs. Scott,one of the best intermediate,teachers that ever taught in Royhas decided to retire from thes3ho:)l worlc, which will bedeeply regretted by her pupils in

the schoool. We understandthat the balance of the teacherswill be applicants for

to the positions for thecoming term, and we trust thatthey will be chosen to succeedthemselves.

Professor Johnson especially,deserves commendation for hisuntiring work as Principal of theschool and for the marncr --inwhich he has pushed our schoolto the front and mad. them the!

best in Northeastern New Mex-- f

ico. He will undoubtly be re- -. -

elected us principal tor the com

ing school year.

Extends Thanks

Tliniiradllat.'mif IXiw nf 1019

....me columns ottnonanisn. Amen- -

..., , ,

itiu, m inn iu uiiiim but; piibLwnnand friends of the district, for thehelp nnd favors shown them dur-

ing Commencement. They alsowish to thank the Orchestra fortheir excellcr.t music, and theIndies of tho Primrose Progressi-ve Circle, for their floral offer-

ings, and Mrs. W. H. Willcox forwriting the class song and to Mrs.Komine for setting the class songto music.

Public Forum

"(All communications must bear

the signature of the writer, butthe name will not be publishedwhere such request is made.Publication of communicationdoes not mean indorsement of thesame, but the columns of thispaiier are open to all who wish toexpress themselves on publicmatters of local interest, provid-ing their expression does notviolate good taste tnd the ethicsof publicity.)

PROFESSIONAL

W.R. HOLLYAitornev-at-La-

Practices in Territorial andredera! Courts. :: :: ::

Springer, N. Mex

Tucumcari HospitalDr's Thomson and Noble

Surgeons in Charge,

TUCUMCARI, : : N. M.

T. F. SELFPhysician and Surgeon

Office Inllushkivitz filnck

ROY, NEW MEXICO

M. H. KOCH

Funeral Director Licenced Embalmer

PHONE 116 : : TUCUMCARI, N. H.

I). S. DURRINATTORNEY-AT-LA- W

Practices In All CourtsLand Cases a Specialty

SOLANO, i : N. M

A. S. HANSONNOTAUY PUBUO

Legal documents and papersacknowledged.

ROY, NEW MEXICO

M. D. GIBBS

Physician and Surgeon

Bushkevitz Building

ROY, NEW MEXICO

Phone 552

THE ROYBARBER SHOP

C A. ARMOUR, Prop.

Agency fob

White SwanSteam Laundry

Basket Goes Out Every Monday

R0Y' " " NEW MEXICO

Ml Ull III III, IMII. M m MM

I Alex. S. BushhsvitzATTORNEY AT LAW

Practices in the Justice,Probate and Land Courtsand County Commiss- -

1 loners.

B Real Estate And'I Investments

L P. UPTON

Solnno, i i i New Mexico

United States

Commissioner. Everything in land matters

Filings, Contests, Proofs and

etc.

Land Business of all Kinds

No Excltsmtnt."A man doesn't seam to take any

pleasure In writing letters to a womanalter ha haa married her," said Mrs.Qloomar.

"No," replied Hiss Cavenner "heseems to lose all Interest when therela no possibility at hji Istisra betaNad to a urj."

THE SPANISH AMERICAN

ROY

E. J. H. Roy, Editor.

. . . NEW MEXICO.

TORNADO KILLS

41 PEOPLE

TERRIFIC CYCLONE VISITS TEXAS

PANHANDLE AND SOUTHERN

OKLAHOMA.

15 KILLED AT LUGERT

DOZEN TOWNS MORE THAN HAl F

RAZED; PATH SWEPT ;

CLEAN.

Vt'e.t.rn Newspaper Union News Service.

Oklahoma City, Okla. Forty onepersons are reported to have beenkilled by a tornado that swept south-

western Oklahoma and the Bouthw!stcorner of the Texas Panhandle April28tb. A dozen towns were Btruck and(arming communities suffered.

Communication facilities arc para-

lyzed and It Is Impossible to confirmthe reportB of Iohs of life or to accurately estimate the property damag?.

The greatest loss of life reported isat Lugert, where It Is said fifteen per-

sons were killed. A special train, sentfrom Altus with physicians and nurses,when it was reported a passengertrain had been blown from the rails;picked up ten injured persona andtarted back for Altus. Two of these

died on the train.It waB reported a Kansas City, Mex-

ico & Orient train had been blownfrom the track and twenty personskilled, but It developed that but two

sari had been derailed and no one washurt.

The tornado started just across theTexas border and first killed sevenpersons at Kirkland, Tex., demolishingthirty buildings, and blew a Kock Isl-

and work train off the track.Tearing on northward the storm

Btruck Eldorado, killing four; Calumet,killing three, and Lugert, Rooky, wherehalf the town is In ruins; Yukon, War-

ren, Martha, Blair and Lone Wolf. At

each of these places many personswere hurt.

Several of these townB are cut offfrom communication. What Ib belie fedto be the tall of the storm destroyedseveral buildings at Mulhall, fiftymiles north of Oklahoma City, but ofar as known there were no casualtiesthere.

P. B. Thompson and his wife werecaught under the falling timbers oftheir home at Calumet and criiBhed 10

death. Several other buildings at Calumet were demolished and two perBonswere injured.

Aledo, a village In Dewey county, Is

reported to be In rulnB.Those killed In Texas were Roy

Camp, wife and two children; Mrs. 0.E. Kennedy and Hugh Singleton andwife.

Looks Like Intervention.

Washington. It 1b generally be-

lieved that the United States Is onthe eve of Intervening In Mexico.ThlB Is based upon the latest warlikemovement of the army and navy, allof which hint at aggressiveness to-

ward the Republic on the south. SanDiego is looked upon as the mostprobable point of mobilization for anadvance upon Mexico.

.Two torpedo boat destroyers, thePreble and the Perry, the largest ves-

sels of the flotilla, suddenly left SanDiego April 27, under sealed orders,proceeding at high speed and withoutlights, Magdalena bay Is believed tobe their destination.

The United States transport Butordsteamed from San Francisco recently,bearing relief to distressed Americanson the weBt coast of Mexico.

Vessels arriving at San Franciscoand Los Angeles from the westerncoast of Mexico brought many refu-

gees, who told many taleB of cruelty,outrage, robbery and murder.

Paris Auto Bandits Slain.Paris. Bonnot, the leader of an or

ganized gang of automobile banditswho have been terrorizing Paris andthe surrounding district for monthsand Du Bols, a notorilusarchist, were shot to weath inthe most thrilling encounter in theannals of French crime. A garage atChoisy-le-Ro- six miles south of Paris,In which the bandits had taken refugo,was blown up by dynamite, after thesetwo men bad kept at bay for hours alarge part of the police force of Paris.

Pops Is Very III.

Rome. The Pope's physicians, Dre.

Pellacl and Marchlafava, are In closeattendance on his holiness, whovery 111.

Cheyenne Season Opens.

Cheyenne, Wyo. The 1912 baseballseason opened here April 28 withgame between the Cheyenne Indiansand the Eleventh Infantry team.

phoenix, Arii. Eugenia Mata, oneof Governor Hunt's "honor convlctB,'walked up to the gates of the Arlsonapenitentiary at Florence, was admittedand donned penal garb after havingbeen on a month's leave of absence tovisit his aged parents at Alameda,N. M.

NEWS TO DATE

IN PARAGRAPHS

CAUGHT FROM THE NETWORK OF

WIRES ROUND ABOUT

THE WORLD.

DURING THE PAST WEEK

RECORD OF IMPORTANT EVENTS

CONDENSED FOR BUSY

PEOPLE.

fftattrn NewiDtoer Union N.wi B.r.lce.

WESTERN.

Preliminary planB have been per-

fected for the erection of a laborIn Fresno, Calif.

Three persons are dead at PoncaCity, Okla., as the result of one of

four tornadoes near theline.

Forty-seve- passengers, all but onecltizeUB of the United States, who ar-

rived in Galveston from Vera Cruz,Mexico, on the steamer Texas, tell of

alleged torture and assassination of

Americans in Mexico.

A cyclone which swept the country

near Broken Uow, Neb., picked up

little country Brhool house, In whichwere twelve children- and the teacher,carried it a mile and set It on theground without Injuring a child.

Estimates of flood losses in elevenparishes of northeast Louisiana set thedamage at 116,0110,000. Fertile acresare Inundated and will be unfit forcrop planting this year. Sufferingamong the thousands of homeless ib

great.

Unless an immediate settlement of

the strike of the Union Pacific shop-

men is effected, a Btrike of the 300,

000 shop employes of the Denver ftRio Grande, Burlington, Colorado tSouthern and other lines is

Western horBemen and racing fol

lowers are interested in the -

day running meeting which hasopened at Alan Idaho, under the auspices of the Coeur d'Alene Fair andRacing Association.' Over (125,000 Is

offered in stakes and purses.

Because the Western Union Telegraph Company refused to pay Its taxassessment In the state Of Idaho, theattorney general, O. M. Van Duyan,has authorized the seizure of the company's property. The telegraph company claims that the rate of taxes wistoo high.

Twenty-nin- persons were Injured,on of them, James Davis, perhapsfatally, when a cyclonic wind struck a

Union Pacific passenger train one milewest of North Loup, Neb. The entiretrain, the engine excepted, was blownfrom the track and all the care wereoverturned.

Henry M. Doarlng, aged 72, and son,Palmer M. Doarlng, 40, were brougntto the federal prison nt Leavenworth,Kan., to begin sentences of five yearsach for embezzlement. Henry M.

Hearing was cashier of the AlbionNational bank of Albion, Mich., uadhis son an employe.

Because the foot of his horse exactlymatched a plaster of parls cast of thefootprint of the horBe driven to thespot near Nowata, Okla., where Mrs.

Irene Gohen was murdered recently,H. O. Jeffries, editor of the NowataAdvertiser, has been arrested chargedwith killing the woman.

Word that the fugitive loaders of theAllen gang from Carroll county, Vir-

ginia, were headed for southern Cal

ifornia, If not already there,, has tieated much activity In the sheriffs' of-

fices of the Los Angeles section of

the state. Lob Angeles police boll'.vetney'have arrived.

Declaring that unless the trouble of

the railway carmen, who have been ona strike on a western railroad for sev-

eral monthB was mediated, a strike ofmore than 300,000 shopmen and ma-

chinists employed on all western railroads would he called, the officers of

the Federation of Federations sent atelegram to President Tart advisinghim of their Intentions. The message

waB signed by the presidents of twelveunions.

A movement has been started In theBaptist churches of Denver to est;

llsh free tuberculosis sanatorlums In

various parts of the United Stateswith headquarters In Denver. Fundsfor establishing the Institutions are tobe raised by the unique plan of assessing the 6,000,000 Baptists of the United States 10 cents each annually. Articles of Incorporation have been filedin the office of the secretary of stateof Colorado for the American BaptistTuberculosis Association. A campaignfor funds will be launched Immediately. It Is planned to have a researchstation connected with each lnstttuth-for the study of the causes and pre

vention of the dlBease.

Three trainmen were Instantly killedwhen the boiler of a locomotive onthe Western Pacific railroad blew upnear Elko, Nev.

FOREIGN.

easy.

In future women not be engagedin the Canadian civil service save asstenographers sad typewriters,, accord-

ing to a recent ruling.

The relief funds being raised In

London for the assistance of the suf-

ferers by the Titanio disaster nowto upwards of 1700,000

WESTERNriuhn -

SPORT,

LEAGl'B STANDING.

91. Jnnenh .T- IDenver ft

Tout'ka 5WichliaDm Moines áOmaha 4Sioux city 2Lincoln 0

Won. Pet..114.71.71

í!!.571.S3.000

Johnny Kllbane. feather-weleh- tchampion, has accepted an offer of amatch with Johnny Dundee, In NowYork, May IS.

Luther McCarthy of Springfield,Mo., knocked out Joe Hagen of Den-ver, in the third round of a scheduled

bout at Bartlesvllle, Okla.Pat Mclntlre of Cleveland has ot-

tered Kllbane (15,000 for a twelve- -

round battle with White. KllbaneBays he will take the money providingsome other opponent Is picked. Mc-

lntlre says White is the man. Kllbanesays nix.

will

Packey MrFarlnnd, who was Intro-

duced at Madison Square Garden InNew York, as Chicago's FightingIrishman, administered a drubbing toEngland's lightweight champion, MassWells. The men went ten rounds, andwhile McFarland was a 10 to 7 favor-ite, nobody thought his task would beso

WASHINGTON.

Harry A. Wheeler of Chicago waselected president of the NationalChamber of Commerce of tte UnitedStates.

amount

A hill to provide medals of honorfor Captain A. H. Rostron and officersof' the Carpathla has been Introducedin the House. ,

S

Partial home rule for Alaska, withauthority vented In the Legislature togrant to women the right to vote, wasapproved in the Hoimo when it passedthe bill for a local Alaskan government.

Resolutions authorizing $10,000 appropriations Tor the families of each oftho three I' n i ted Status poBtal clerkswho lost their lives on the Titanic,were Introduced in the House by Representative Rellly of Connecticut.

Several hundred thousand copies of

the speech delivered in the Houbo by

Congressman Taylor on woman's suf-

frage are to be scattered broadcast infive states where the women are wag-

ing determined campaigns, for theright to vote.' The Senate passed bills previously

passed by the House, extending thetime within which to make proof ondesert land entries for three yeara incases where through unavoidable y

In the construction of irrigationworks, the en try man, without fault of

his own, is unable to get water on hisland within five years; extending theprovisions of the surface entry law tocoal lands within state selection, andproviding that an en try man under agovernment reclamation project shallnot forfeit his entry on account of ab-

sence prior to the date the government furnishes water for Its irrigation.The Senate also passed Senator Guggenheim's bill appropriating $25,000

for establishment of a fish cultural station In Colorado, the site to be select-

ed by the Department of Commerceand Labor.

Representatives Mondell, Taylorand Pray had a conference with Com

missioner Dennett 'of the Generaland Office regarding the bills which

have been Introduced In the Senate by

Sonator Warren, and In the House of

Representatives by RepresentativeMondell, to provide for reducing thearea required for cultivation in en-

larged homeHteads from eighty to for-

ty acres. Representative Mondell's billprovides that but twenty acres be cul-

tivated the second year, and fortyacres the third year of the entry. Com

missioner Dennett is Inclined to favorlegislation which will reduce the areato be cultivated from eighty to fortyacres in the third year of the entry,with a provision that when proof Is

submitted at the end of the r

term to complete the entry, It shallbe shown that of the entire entry, or eighty acres, is undercultivation.

GENERAL.

Warned by a telephone operatorthat the Minevllle dam had broken,Uve hundred persons residing In thevalley of Mllbrook, Essex county, N. Y,

Mi d to the hills and then watched thetorrent wash their homes away.

Insurance men estimate that the to

tal losses to be paid by the variouslife, accident and marine companiesas a result of the sinking of the Tl-

tanlc will reach approximately $15,

000,000. Some companies have beenhard hit.

The "king of beggars" Is In NewYork and under lock and key. In pos-

session of a fortune as some fortunesgo he was picked up on charges of

intoxication and disorderly conduct.He calls himself tbe "king of beggars'and had no objection to telling the po

lice of his career. In Cleveland recently he gathered up (17,000 fromsympathetic auditors and the ProbateCourt of that city appointed a guardian to look after hla money.

Dr. D. K. Pearson, the aged philanthropist, died In a sanitarium at Hins-

dale, III., at the age of ninety-two- . Hehad been at the point of death sev

eral days, and physicians had givenup all hope for his recovery. He was

kept alive by the use of oxygen forBeveral days. Dr. Pearson's fortune

of 10,000,000 was given away to needyschools and colleges.

Loit.

Robert Cameron Rogers, poet, loverof nature, Journalist, true friend,dead. He died at his beautiful homein MlsBlon canon, Santa Barbancal.

SENATOR THOMAS B. CATRON

:-:.- -.I ' I f s , ' S

Thomas Benton Catron, one of tht new United States senators from New

Mexico, was born In Warreusburg, Mo., In 1840. He served through the warIn the confederate army, and soon after peace was declared he moved toNew Mexico and began the practice of law. He held several offices underthe territorial government and took an active part In constructing the con

stitution of the new state

HAPPENINGSI N

NEW MEXICO

Western Newspaper Unlnn New. B.rvlc.COMINO KVICNTS IN NEW KRX1CO.

May 14 Democrat State Conventionto select dnlt'Kates lo the national con-

vention Clovls.

County Treasurer Reported Shot.Santa Fe. A shortage of $19,000 In

the accounts of a former treasurer itDoña Ana county has been reportedto Governor McDonald by AssistantTraveling Auditor Guilfoll, and a de-

mand was made upon the bondsmenfor the sum.

Johnson and Flynn Will Fight.Chicago. Jock Johnson and Jim

i'lynn will fight forty-fiv- rounds torthe world's heavyweight championshipat Las Vegas, N. M on the afternoonof July 4th, according to an officialannouncement made by Jack Curlcy,promoter of the contest. Final plaasfor staging the match have boen madehere.

To Protect Mexican Border.Santa Fe. That New Mexico will

not be unprepared to protect toelives and property of her citizens In

the event of serious trouble on tneMexican frontier was made evidentwhen, at a Joint meeting of the Ho:ii.e

committee on ways and means and tbeBenate committee on finance, whiihwas addressed by Governor wcuonaiuand Adjutant General Brookes, bothcommittees agreed to report favorably

hill which Is to be drawn by At'nr--

ney General Frank W. Clancy, pro.td- -

lng an appropriation to be used by thegovernor in his discretion for the han-

dling of troopB and the mounted po-

lice, If they should be needed alongtbe border.

Preparing for Big Fight.

Ids Vegas. Preliminary prepara

tions for the boxing contest of July

are rw under way. E. W. HartIs drawing plans for the giant arenafii which JaclTJohnson and Jim riynnwill contest for the heavyweight chara- -

plonshtp of the world. PromoterCharles O'Malley has engaged the en

tire lower floor of La PenBlon hotel.This room will be used as headquarters for Promoter and Manager JackCurley, and a small army of sportingwriters from the big newspapers ofthe country.

O'Mallev has received a meBsagefrom Curley Btating that he would ar-

rive In Las Vegas on May 1 to remain until after the bout Is staged.Flynn has gone to Hot SprlngB, Ark.,for a brief Bojourn. He will arrivehere May 10 and begin training In

quarters now being prepared for him.Johnson is expected to arrive shortlyafter Flynn' advent. He will estab-lish headquarters either at Romero-vlll- e

or on the Gallinas river,' northof the city.

ing.

District Attorney for McKlnley.

Santa Fé. Senator Gregory Page ofMcKlnley oounty Introduced In theSenate a very remarkable bill. It pro-

vides In effect for the creation of aseparate Judicial district so far as theoffice cf district attorney Ib concernedto be formed solely of McKlnleyoounty, and for the appointment bythe governor of a district attorney tofill the office until the next generalelection, after which McKlnley oountyIs to elect Its own district attorney toserve only In that county.

LITTLE NEW MEXICO ITEMS.

Minor Occurrences of More Than Ordl-

nary InterestWestern Newspaper Union New! Ssrvlce.

Two baseball teams have been organized at Dexter.

There are five women county schoolsuperintendents In New Mexico.

A large number of cattle are beingshipped from the Demlng district.

A postal savings bank Is to be established at Dexter, Chaves county, on

May let.A Texas corporation is sinking a

well for oil In the Bad Lands In southern Quay county.

The big Ice plant at Belen Is nowIn operation and everything Ib progressing nicely.

The Demlng Automobile Club hashad 100 metal BlguB made and palntodfor sign posting all the roadB Into Dom

District Court at Taos will conveneon the first Monday in May. The iow

state of the court funds may preventJury trials.

The Rocky Mountain Synod of theLutheran Church convened at Albuquerque on April 25th for a four dnyssession.

Itoswell people use a millionof water a day for domestic pur

poses and 200,000 gullons for Hushingthe sewers.

A movement is on foot to developthe tire clay mines In the vicinity ol

Gallup. There Is an unlimited areaof thiB mineral.

The enlarged power dam four milessouth of Carlsbad, owned by the Public will be flnUhcdabout May 1st.

Alamogordo will vote on May 7th,

whether to reincorporate. The townhad been Incorporated but In recentyears disincorporated.

A large force of men are at workon the double tracking near Gallup,

Judge William H. Pope expects todeliver the commencement address forthe New Mexico College of Agricultureand Mechanic Arts on May 23. .

The Demlng Chamber of CommerceIs having printed a large quantity of

booklets and folders to be used In advertising Demlng and New Mexico.

GraBS Is coming on In the Melrosr.

country In fine shape. The farmersare all busy and report that thereIs practically no limit to the moisture.

The Senate unseated Abelino Romero, Progressive Republican fromSocorro county, giving his seat to thecontestant, A. C. Abeytla, Republican.

Following a quarrel at a dance atStanley, southern Santa Fé county,Apolonlo Barela was shot and probably fatally wounded. John Cantwell,who Is charged with tbe shooting, hassurrendered.

Three new school districts havebeen created In Taos county, one ntCañón, the second at Prado and Uuthird at Virginia, a new settlement.The three districts have 105 childrenof school age.

William Barnes, sixty years old andfor many years a resident of Magdalena, fell dead In the store of theRanch Supply Company at that plav.e.

Congressman H. B. FurgUBson hasIntroduced in 'Congress a bill to pro-

vide tor the surveying of the unsur--

veyed lands In the state of New Mex

ico.

Alfred Hunter, a pioneer of Alamo-

gordo and southern New Mexico, andfor years one of the 'most prominentresidents of Otero oounty, was founddead In bed by members ot hia family

IN CRITICAL CONDITION.

Spokans, Wish, Woman Endures Tap.

rlbl Suffering.Mrs. J. A. Schoonmaker, 127 8. Pino

8t, Spokane, Wash., says: "I grewso weak I could scarcely do my house-

work and was often confined to bed.was a bearlng-dow- n

throughmy and

as If ItI by thesecretions that

my kidneys were In abut

I doctored, 1

graduallyIn critical condition. It was then

I began Doan's Kidney Pills andwas entirely I have not had a

of trouble since.""When Is Lame, Remem

ber the DOAN'S." 60c allCo., Buffalo, N. Y.

The more promises a man makesthe more he

Tern tbe ltrerbefore retiring.

painhips head

knewkidney

terriblethough

grewuntil

sign kidneyYour Back

doesn't

keeps Drink

- .And many a married woman thinks

It's up to her to assert her Indepen-

dence by hér husband.

Ten nilpii for a Always buy RedCro. Hag Illuc; have beautiful clear wlnteclothes, i1

In theKink Your son Is pursuing

studies at college, Isn't he?his

Dink I guees bo. He's always behind. Judge.

Knicker A ago I told a He

on the water.

Knicker I cut the fish I

and he had swal-

lowed It

Draw Interest.'A he said after having

had one, "Is the mostand yet give them away."

You are mistaken, she said. "Wenever give them away, we merely

them." Fun.

A Correction.We are drifting a paternal

form of government," said the

me If I correct responded the suffragette, gently: "tobe accurate, you say a mater-

nal of government." Washing

ton Star.

Fish

open

Just

form

Tims Flies.the blind woman who plays

tho accordion saw a lookingman stop to read her placard shequickened her tune in the expectation that he was to give nersome hut he gave In-

stead.Said he: you read that sign

of youra lately?"

There

ached wouldspilt.

condition

worse,

usingcured.

Name stores

keep.

Oarfleld normal.

abusing

nickel.

Chase.

Story.month

Bocker Well?

caught today found

Theykiss,"

precious thing,women

In-

vest

toward

Pardon you,'

should

Whengenial

goingmoney, advice

"Have

She Bald she had not."Well," Bald he, "you'd better, and

then have It edited. It Is dated sixyears ago and says you have six small

htldren dependent upon your etlortswith this Instrument for support.yearp works wonders in children, andthey must be pretty lusty youngstersby thlB time. Change that date to1912."

He

my

Six

THE OLD PLEA"Didn't Know It Was Loaded."

The coffee drinker Beldom realizesthat coffee contains the drug, caffeine,a aevere poison to the heart andnerves, causing many formB of dis-

ease, noticeably dyspepsia.I was a lover of coffee and UBed It

for many years, and did not realize the)

bad effects I was suffering from Itsuse. (Tea is Just as Injurious as cof-

fee because It, too, contains caffeine,the same drug found in coffee.)

At first I was troubled with Indigestion. I did not attribute the troubleto the use of coffee, but thought Itarose from other causes. With theseattacks I had sick headache, nauseaand vomiting. Finally my stomachwas in such a condition I could scarcely retain any food.

"I consulted a physician; was toldall my troubles came from Indiges-

tion, but was not Informed whatcaused the indgestton. I kept on withthe coffee, and kept on with the troubles, too, and my case continued togrow worBe from year to year until Itdeveloped Into chronic diarrhea, nau-

sea and severe attacks of vomiting. I 'could keep nothing on my stomach andbecame a mere shadow, reduced from159 to 128 pounds.

"A specialist Informed tne I had aVery severe case of catarrh of thestomach, which had got so bad hecould do nothing for me, and I becameconvinced my days were numbered.

'Then I chanced to see an article setting forth the good qualities of Postumand explaining how coffee Injured people so I concluded to give Postum atrial. I soon saw the good effects my

headaches were less frequent, nauseaand vomiting only came on at long In-

tervals and I was soon a changed man,feeling much better.

"Then I thought I could stand coffee

again, but as soon as I tried It my old

troubles returned and I again turnedto Postum. Would you believe it,did this three times before I had senseenough to quit coffee for- good andkeep on with the Postum. I am now a

well man with no more headaches, sickstomach or vomiting, and have al-

ready gained back to 147 pounds.1

Name given by Postum Co., BattleBattle Creek, Mich.

Look In pkgs. for the famous littlebook, "The Road to Wellvllle."

Krmr rsS the above Utter! A aewe appears from time ta time. Ttaer

re aeaalae, true, asá fall ( kaowalatereet.

IMICÜLIIE

THINNING OF FOREST TREES

Thay Mutt Hav Abundance of tun-lig-

and Air to Producá BeatReaulta How to Cut.

If we want itrong, healthy treea In

the woodlot It la Just aa Importantthat we thin out the treea aa It la tothin out the young (rult The plctureaabow what may be accomplished by

I11PStrong and Straight,

thinning. They are from photographstaken by A. F. Hawea, Btate foresterof Connecticut

In Fig. 1 the trees In the center ofthe group are strong and straight, hutthe smaller ones form a mass of foli-

age, the removal of which helped theothers. This li shown by the trees InFig. 2. The trees left standing arenow exposed to the light and free fromthe sapping by the maBs of foliage andsmall trees which have been removedand will grow Into strong, tall trees.

In cutting mature timber the chiefconcern Is to secure satisfactory repro-

duction as soon as possible. The"group method" Is generally the bestadopted for farm wood lot b. Select aspot, or several spots, If one will notBupply what Is wanted, where the for-est crop Is ripest possibly overripeand clear, with due care for younggrowth, a hole In the forest, takingcare that the diameter of this hole Isnot more than two or three timos theheight of the surrounding trees.

Gradually widen these holes by cutting in concentric rlngB about themuntil the whole area has been cutover.

It should be borne In mind, however,that if In any one year more wood Is

A Mass of Foliage.

cut than grows on the whole woodlotin that year the necessary wood capi-

tal Is diminished.Where the whole area la cut over

before the part cut first had time togrow to maturity a period will have tofollow during which th'e woodlot willstop paying dividends.

MULCHING FOR FRUIT VINES

Practice Prevente Growth of Weeda,Retain. Molature and Adda

Needed Humus to Soil.

' A successful West Virginia raspber-ry grower gives the following reaaonafor mulching:

It prevente the growth of weeds.Itretalna moisture In the soil.'It adds humua, one of the necessary

elements.It keeps the fruit clean and pre-

vents mud at picking timetIt saves labor, the cost of mulching

an acre with forest leaves or strawsot exceeding $16.

It prevente deep freezing.It makes the fruit more solid for

cultivation and better for shippingpurposea.

It prevents the baking of the soileauBed by tramping at picking time.

It baa the disadvantage of encourag-ing mice and establishing a surfaceroot system. However, we have notnoticed any serious damage from ei

ther of these effects.The cost of growing raspberries by

nature's method, as I like to call It,Is not very great. Picking Is a niceJob where there Is no mud, no weedsand where the canea have been properly pruned.

Don't leave any old canes standingIn the Held.

TIPS FOR LOVER OF FLOWERS

Plant Sweet Pea In Trenohea SixInchca Deep Chrysanthemum

Grow From 8etd or Cuttings.

Plant the sweet peas early litrenches fully six Inches deep, coverlng but lightly at first, drawing thetoll around the plants as they reachup

This will give better roots by whichto withstanding the dry heat by andby. Plant as toon as possible.

Root room in fair bo 11 1b all thebeautiful white Day Lily aaks. It 1b

perfectly hardy, likes moist situations,but will do with little water. A plantfor the busy housewife.

Chrysanthemums may be raisedfrom seeds or from cuttings andsprouts from old roots. If the seedsare sown early In boxes and trans-planted the plants will bloom the firstyear. There may be many poor onesfrom seed.

Do not forget the hardy everbloom-ln-

roses when ordering Includesome hardy flowering vines forscreens for the porches, back fencesand summer arbors. Prairie roses,evergreen honeysuckles, woodbines,clematis In variety, wUtarlas, bitter-swee-

trumpet vine and the harmlesswood ivies are all fine.

ATTENTION FOR YOUNG TREES

Ground Should B. Forked Up and WellMellowed and Then Covered Two

Inches with Manure.

Spring-plante- fruit and ornamentaltrees and bushes should have theground forked up and well mellowedand then covered two Inches deepwith long manure, straw, corn stalks,rotted leaves, wecdB or freshly cutgrass. This mulch will keep the soilcool and moist. If the summer le hotand dry give to each tree one or twobucket of water. Apply the waterlate In the evening, apread It slowlyaround the trunk of tree so It canreach the roots. If the water ladashed against the stem most of Itwill run off the hard ground and Itwill be of HtUe benefit to the tree.

Garden Cart and Wheelbarrow.

On an average fully f of thetrees that die the first summer couldhave been Baved had they been properly mulched and given a little waterwhen needed.

Young trees planted In exposed positions, where they are liable to heavywind and rainstorms, should be stakedand the trees tied to the stakes wllaa rye straw or canvaa band. An oldsail cut Into strips makes excellentbands. To keep the roots from beingloosened, where ground Is soft, placefour or five large stones on top of themulch close up to the stem of tree.

Two of the most handy Implementson the farm for general,work, are the wheelbarrow and cart

Ready for Young Trees,While the stock la coming, prepare

the ground. It will not be necessaryto add new soli as the treea have beenselected with reference to the kindfound where they are to be planted.Dig very large holes and fill them In,The trees always do better In filledground than they do In that which hasnot been broken up. If the land lasod, It would be well to plow the entire strip, as grass la a great enemy tonewly planted things. When the treesarrive, take them at once to somefriable land near where they are tobe planted and heel them in. Nurserystock Is often Injured by being kepttoo long In boxes. After the plantsare heeled In It will be safe to trans-plant them to permanent places anytime within a week or ten days fromthe ume of their arrival.

HORTICULTURAL

Evergreens ought to be planted asearly as possible.

When buds begin to swell the timela right to

Prune sparingly and a little everyyear, is the best plan.

Just as soon now aa frost Is out theground will be ready for tree planting.

In that order for fruit trees, youcan't go wrong by putting in a fewJonathan apples.

The era of the haphazard and care-lee- s

horticulturist and agriculturisthas passed away.

For orchard spraying a s

or half-inc- hose la best and Inlengths of 50 feet

Soil for strawberrlea should he adeep, rich loam, capable of holding agood deal of moisture.

It Is not a good plan to plant treeswhile the ground is wet and soggy.Let It dry out a little.

Don't get the Idea that you cannotobtain satisfactory results from spraying Just because your neighbor failed,

Be sure that all of your hose coup-lings are of the same size so that anytwo lengths may be coupled together.

Any tendency to fancy. shaped flowerbeds and fancy flower stands and suchgrlmcracka should be firmly suppressed.

Do not expect satisfaction frombordeaux mixture that has stood foraa much as 24 hours. It deterioratesquickly.

When dona spraying each day, runsome clean water through the pump,to wash out the spray mixture andavoid corrosion of the working parta.

LookingBy COLIN

My dear friend, let the dead pastbury Its dead," urged the dictator gen-

tly. "Why should we give so great con-

cern to the rifle of the wicked admin-

istration of that dog of a MollnaT"

"Because tbey are not paid for andI'm here to get the coin,' said HartleyMarvin with emphasla. "You can letthe dead revolution bury its dead ifyour trumpery revolutions ever dohave any dead but those guns arestill a live Issue."

Director Baiamo sighed gently. Theday was warm, as was the argumenLHe disliked warmth of any sort elsehe would have risen in bis wrath, andcast this Importunate collector fromthe palace door.

But to do that might Involve someunpleasantness with the diplomats andBaiamo well knew that the presence or

a hostile gunboat In the harbor wouldbe made the excuse for a revolutionthat would be personally unpleasant tohimself.

You yourself agree that you soldthese rifles to that Molina." he re-

minded. "If this Is so, would It not beas well to ask of him the payment?Shall I give out of the treasure of thecountry to pay the private debta ofa traitorous revolutionary?"

You've got the guns, naveo't you?"demanded Marvin brusquely.

"I have some guns." admitted Ba

iamo diplomatically. "That they areyour guns I do not know. When thecountry rose In Its might against theextravagance of the presidente andmade me dictator It was found thatthere were many fine rifles. With thosewe armed our troopa. The gnns arethe spoils of war. If Molina did notpay for them, is It then my fault? Itis to Molina that you should look foryour money."

"And your friend Molina! Where Ishe?"

"Friend!" Baiamo spal viciously atthe word. "He is no friend, senor, asyou well know. Where he Is I knownot but ther6 Is Justice In Ban Cristo-bal for all who como to the tribunal.I will give you a warrant for this M-olina Bring him to the bar of Justiceand there bring suit Yeu shall haveample Justice." '

In spite of his anger Marvin smiled.Molina, the departed ruler, waa a fu-

gitive In the forests."I think I'll accept that suggestion,"

agreed Marvin rising. 'H suppose thatyou look on the guna as spoils of war.but It would be better to pay for themhoneBlly Instead of reforrlng me toMolina

"That Is a threat?" asked Baiamo."Merely advice," waa the lazy re-

sponse. "1 bid you good day. senor."Marvin strode from the courtyard,

where the Interview had been held, andheaded for the Plaza Cristobal, wherethe Inhabitants of La Rosarlo werewont to congregate In a cafe.

To his surprise the cafe waa crowd-ed with strangers and they all wereunmistakably from the States.

"Is there a steamer In?" demandedMarvin as be sank into a seat In acorner where be could have a tableto himself.

"It Is a circus," explained the wait-er. "It Is tut Just arrived and thepeople, they are hungry and verythirsty, so they come to the best placeto eat and drink."

"It seems to be mostly drink." de-

clared Marvin with a laugh. 'That Imay be In the fashion, bring me ahighball with lota of Ice."

The waiter hurried away to give theorder and Marvin was still wonderingat the site of the party when a bandfell upon hla sboulder and be turnedto look Into the face of a gigantic fel-low. For a moment be stared

Into the twinkling eyes, thenwith a shout he was on his feet andpounding the newcomer on theback.

"Joe Bardeen, by all that's great."he cried. "What good fortune bringsyou down here?"

"It looks more like bad fortune,"said Bardeen seriously as he sankinto a chair and pounded on the tableto attract the attention of the waiter."I'm the chaperon of this hunch ofartistic talent."

"Your show?" asked Marvin. "Howdid you come to get In the show busi-ness? I thought that you were con-tent to stick to In Ar-izona"

"8o I was," admitted Bardeen, "buta chap talked me into outfitting hisWild West Show, and then when theshow did bad business I had to ad-vance some more mooey to get achance to be paid for what I had fur-nished. Well, tblnga ran on until theflrat tblng you know I owned theabow and had to run It In the hopeof getting out clear."

"Too much for the country," de-clared Marvin, and Bardeen noddedhla approval or the opinion.

"He's brought bis wares to a badmarket here." said Marvin. "I'mdown here trying to get some monavfor the guns that the last administra-tion bought before It became theadministration.''

Bardeen smiled. There had been atime when his adventurous naturehad sought the excitement of Centraland South America, and he knew thepeople.

"The old man Is pretty good at col.lections," he declared. "Let's callhim ovar and have a talk. He's re-

tired from business, and be travelswith the show for the fun of It That'swhy wa are staying out If he stayed

to MolinoS. COLLINS

home and Just looked over the balanee' sheet, he'd send for us mightyquick, but he's rather enjoyed thecruise, and so he stlcka"

He rose from his chair and strodeacross the room to where an elderlyman was entertaining two of the cir-cus riders. There waa a whisperedconsultation, and presently the twomen came to Marvin's table.

After a whispered consultation thethree men went Inside of the exhibi-tion tent and Marvin nodded approv-ingly at the huge space.

"You can stow the entire town ofLa Rosarlo In this tent." he declared,laughingly. "To get a full house,even the barracka will have to be de-

serted.""They ought to come as a matter of

education," declared Blooügood."Dardeeo's reproduction of the battleor Port Arthur that winds up theshow Is a lesson In warfare by moderumethods."

"Advertise It as a war school Inthese revolutionary republics and thewhole country will come," advisedMarvin. '

Tm going to have an audience herethat will Include the whole town," de-

clared Blooilgood. "1 think I'll goand see the Dictator. Even he willnot be able to resist a free box."

Uloodgood was right. The Dictatorhad the universal appreciation of thetree pass, Nand when Bloodgood ex-

plained his plans! he found a ready adviser in the Dictator.

The following day the seats werepacked to excess when . the ' parade,

hlcb Had halted outside, made entryupon the hippodrome tracks.

It was a splendid performance, andas act succeeded act, the natives' eyesgrew wider and wider with amazementThis was vastly different from any-thing ever aeen before In La Rosarlo,and when at last the cowboyi dashedInto the arena and took possession ofthe' rings, the excitement was un-

bounded. The natives appreciatedgood rtding. and they were seeing thebest.

Before the finale, Bloodgood took bisstand In (be central ring and explainedthat the entire force of the circuswould give an accurate reproduction ofthe battle of Port Arthur.

At one side of the arena an inclinedplatform had been built to serve aa 101Meter Hill, and on this the Russianstook their stand, while the Japsmarched in and paraded around thehippodrome track before they gavebattle. '

They marched in open order and ata trumpet call they halted and facedforward. Bardeen stood beside thestate box and now he leaned overBalamo's shoulder,

"Those guns are loaded with ballcartridges," be advised. "The two gat--linga are fully manned. Tbey cansweep the teut and In ten minuteswipe out the population of La Rosario.Fire mile, from town Molina la Incamp ready to move on the city. Hedoes not know that the place Is ungusrded, but one Jf our riders canmake the trip in half an hour. Youowe Mr. Marvin $18.000 gold, for somsrules and big guns. You have advisedhim to see Molina about It Is thatstill your advice?"

"This Is trap?" whispered Baiamo."It you will," assented Bardeen.

"Marvin Is a friend of mine, and I

want to see him treated fairly. Yourtreasurer Is here. Let him take someof our men to the treasury and conveythe money to our ateamer. After thatwe shall take our departure, and voushall be our hostage until we leave. Ifyou refuse well, Marvin will have tolook to Molina, and Molina will be willing to pay when he la restored to thepresidency. Marvin had seen to thatThere Is a collection fee of $11,000 to beadded to the other. Will you pay?'

with trembling hand, Baiamo signedthe order, and motioned the treasurerto accompany Marvin. They rumbledoff with several eight-hors- trucks.

The half hour that passed seemedlike days, then Marvin and the treas-urer returned. A file of men and oneof the gatllngs were sent off to protect me noat, and while the soldierswere masBed under guard, the rest ofthe circus force hurriedly took downthe tents and rushed them to thesteamer. In four hours the loading waaaccomplished and tbe steamer, fol-

lowed by the tug which constitutedtbe San Cristobal navy, pulled out.They were some five miles from shorewhen Bardeen approached the dictator and hla cabinet.

"We will put you aboard the tugnow," he announced with a smile. "Wehave had a very eventful little' birth-day party, and we arc very muchobliged to you or your share In thefestivities. You may return with theassurance that Molina haa not usurpedyour seat As a matter of fact, wecould not locate him, else we shouldhave put blm In your place as a lessonto other dictators."

"it waa all a lie?" asked Baiamo,stammering In his rage

"It was a birthday party," correctedBardeen, "and s most successful oneat that. Good day, senor."

Bardeen watched the tug as toeturned and steamed toward the ahore.then with a laugh he turned, to Blood-good.

"There's one town that paid a nrofllon this tour," he declared with alaugh, "to say nothing of giving you abirthday party without ac equr'"

205 TITANIC

VICTIMS FOUND

BODIES OF COL. ASTOR, ISIDORE

STRAUS AND C. M. HAYS

RECOVERED.

MANY ARE IDENTIFIED

NAMES OP NINETY-ON- PERSON8

REPORTED BY CABLE SHIP

WwUrn NVwtpaper L'nlon Newi Service.

New ork. The bodies of Colonel

John Jacob Astor and Isidore Straus,the millionaire merchant of thin cliy,who lost their lives in the Titanic disaster, have been recovered and are on

board the cable shipNews of the recovery of the bodieswas contained in a dispatch to theWhite Star Line Company.

The body of C. M. Hays, president of

the Graud Trunk Hallway, has alsobeen recovered according to a wire-

less message from the cable shipMinia.

The wirelesB dispatch which cameto the company from tbe

gives-th- additional identificationof forty-nin- e of the heretofore uu

known recovered dead on the cableship. Of the 205 dead on board theMackay-iienne- the names of ninety-

one have been" sent ashore by wire-

less.

Washington. Ablaze with light fnmher Balon and cabins, the Titanicdashed full speed to her destruction,according to Ernest Gill, a donkey en-

gine man on the steamship Califoni-an-

who testified before the Senatecommittee Investigating the disaster.

He said Captain Stanley Lord of theCallfornlan refused later to go to .heaid of the Titanic, the rockets fromwhich could be plainly seen.

This, Captain Lord denied; but bothhe and bis wireless operator acknowledged having seen rockets. Their Bhip,tbey said, was fast In the tee.

GUI submitted an affidavit to thecommittee, and when sworn and put onthe stand Btuck to his charges againstthe captain of the Callfornian.

He said he was Btandlng on thedeck late Sunday night when he sight-ed a great ship, sweeping along at topspeed, about ten miles off. He did notknow It was the Titanic, but made outreadily that It was not a freighter ox

a small vessel because of the mannerIn which It was Illuminated.

Some time later he saw distress rockets on the horizon. He says the

was apprised of these signals,but made no effort to get up steam mdgo to the rescue. The Callfornlan wasdrifting with the floe. So indignantdid he become, said Gill, that he en-

deavored to recruit a committee of pro-

test from among the crew, but the tnnfailed him.

Captain Lord entered a sweeping de-

nial of Gill's accusntlons and read fromtbe Callfornlan'a log to support Mbcontention.

Cyral EvanB, the Callfornlan'a wire-less operator, however, told of havingheard much talk among the crew, whocriticised tbe captain's course. GUI,he said, told him he expected to get$500 for his story when the shipreached Boston.

Evans told of having warned theonly a brief time before the

great vessel crashed Into the bergthat the sea was crowded with Ice.

The Tltantc's operators, he Baid,

at the time were working with thewireless Biatlon at Cape Race, andthey told him to "Bhut up and keepout." Within a half hour the prideof the sea wag crumpled up and sink-ing.

It developed that one reform whichIs certain to spring from tbe investi-

gation will be enforced in the wirelessrooms of ships entering or leavingAmerican ports. This concerns lack of

authority over the operators' pay,hours and freedom from responsibili-ty as brought out by the testimony todate. Senator Smith, Its chairman,announced that such legislation wübInevitable.

A sworn statement that the captainof the liner Callfornian refused to goto the aid of the Titanic, althoughonly a few miles away, was tiled withthe committee by Ernst GUI, donkeyenglneman on the Callfornian. Gill

said that the distress rockets wereplainly visible from the deck of theCallfornian, and must have been visi-

ble to both the bridge and the look-

out.

8eamen Desert Olympic

Southampton. The Whfto Star lin-

er Olympic, which had been held offRyde, Isle of Wight, for Beveral daysby a strike of her firemen, haa aban-

doned her trip to New York and re-

turned to port. ThU waa made neces-

sary by the desertion of ber seamen,when tbe liner attempted to replacethe striking firemen withmen. One hundred and twenty-on- e

passengers who were awaiting theOlympic at Queenstown, have beentransferred to the Baltic.

Almost."Avoid ,kiBStng If you would have a

beautiful mouth," says Dr. Lillian Rua-se!., We are almost inclined to

the report that I. tillan Isn't asyoung as she used to be.

Doing the Square Thing."Young man, how do you expect to

marry my daughter If you are. Indebt?"

"Why, sir, in my opinion, it's iheonly square thing to do. The longos Iam engaged to her tbe worse off Iwill be."

A Large Hairpin Holder.Mrs. Nagget I watched your sister

fixing her hair the other day, and Imust say she's not the most refinedperson in tha world.

Mr. Nagget You don't approve ofher, eh?

Mrs. Nagget Well, you never sawme with my mouth full of hairpins.

Mr. Nagget or course not. Whatwould you want with so many bait,pins?

Hit Abusive Eyes.Aunt Caroline and the partner of

her woeo evidently round connubialbl i bh a misnomer, for the sounds ofwar were often heard down In the lit-

tle cabin in the hollow. Finally thepair were hailed Into court and medusky lady entered a charge or abusivelanguage against her spouse. Ihejudge, who had known them both nilhis life, endeavored to pour oil on thetroubled waters.

"What did he say to you, Caroline?"he asked, according to Llpplncott's.

"Why, .ledk'e, I jes' can't tell you alldnt man do say to me."

"Does he ever use hard language?""DoeB you mean cussin'? Yassuh, not

wlf his mouf, but he's always givin'madem cussory glances."

Not 80 Strange."It's strange; that you never met the

Count Spaghetti before," remarkedthe heiress.

"Oh, not at all," replied the disap-pointed suitor.

"But he tells me he has been inNtw York for quite a number ofyears."

"Yes, but I always shave myself,vou know."

An Occullit Cook,When a certain Mobile man stopped

for luncheon at a small railway sta-tion eating hoiiBe in a Mississippitown, an old darkey BhufMed up andand announced in a gruff voice thebill of fare consisted of ham, eggs,cornbread and coffee.

After due deliberation the travelerstated that he would like some ham,eggB, cornbread and coffee.

Such a pretentions order for oneperson only appeared to stagger theaged Burvitor. Hut he soon recoveredbis equanimity and started towardthe kitchen. Then he turned andcame hack with the Inquiry:

"Hoss, how will yo' hah dem eggabllud or looking at yer?"

Medill McCormick, president of theIllinois Progressive Republican league,was talking at a dinner 'in Chicagoabout certain campaign- -

met hod a."Those methods," Bald Mr. McCor

mick, "seem as cumbersome to ub atthe methods of the moover seemed tothe undertaker.

"As an inebriate rested against alamppoBt a mover passed him. Thomover, an economical chap, was doingthe moving by hand, and he had onhis back a huge grandfather's clock.

"The inebriate starred vacantly atthe sweating figure bent under thoweight of the great clock and thenhiccoughed and hailed him.

" 'Hey he said, 'hey, hie there!'"The mover, stopped, turned slowly"Well, what Is It?' he asked."'Take my advice, young fel,' oald

the Inebriate, 'an' buy 'shelf hlc awatch.' '

Pnlnrorlr tnn nt tho wnrM Irnin--

everywhere as the greatest miningstate in the Union, Is making amazingstrides in Its agricultural development.The Btory of Its wonderful progrtBsduring recent years and Mb exceptionalfarming possibilities is tersely told Inan attractively illustrated pamphlet,

nt) renue ianus 01 i oiorano, jusipublished and now being distributedby the .Passenger Department of theDenver & Rio Grande Railroad. Thetart is hv that Wpll.ltnnwn authnnlvon all things agricultural, Mr. Clarencea, layman, 01 uuiiia, (.oioraao.

HOWARD E. BURTON, ASSAYER 4, CHEMISTLKAOWIXK, Ldl.OltAIH),

Specimen i) rice; Ui.lil. iiver, lead, fold,ilvir. 76c; KuM. ÍiUc; . ilnc or cnuDor IIMallín envelope! nd full price mm ?nt oñ

plii mind font rol and umittre workheferem-e- : rartnate National panic

BEE SUPPLIESof be (inft)lly nt rlnht prlree. Heni for free II- -iuhi i mujo, mm "mriK'uuM 10 wifi miera.

lmrlli luat tu it iimHONEYS tho ÍHrdo (if our msmlwraby mml, Kke,

The Colorado Honey Producers' Assn.144 Market Mreei, líente r, ('oloriirio

COI.OHADO COM. RGB1NTEHM IIOI.AVI'H Tit l K AND

hli;i ll MKKT.COU)KAlH) Sl'lilNOS

4, una.3.00 FOR TMK hoi is trip

WKM KH TO rol.OKAUO SPRINGSby wav of

the dknveh & mo orandr r. r,"The Meenle l.liif of the World"

Tickets on sale May 3rd.KhiRl return limit Mnv fith "

Ticket., on ante mi City Ticket Office,'1 17th anil Mout Htm or t'nlon Depot.

Low TiMirlat Fare to ( nlirornlaCflFHO AI.Ij HIN l,lK POINTS

O V U IN 4'OI.OHAUO on theUUNVKH ItlU (IIANPK llATl,ROAD

"The Heroic l,lue of the World"tCCONK W AY VIA l')lt n.ANH,

Ticket h on Rale April 27 to May S.1IH1!. InchiKtve.

Final rftnru limit Jtine Í7. 1ÍM2.ThroiiKh Pullman St umlurd and Tour-li- tt Hlei'iiliiK "nrn dally lu Ban Francis-

co anil li A mielen,IIIO t.HAMIIQ HKMTKKN PtCIHTf)

The Hol limr Kent her Hirer CaAoaHoute"

Offers the transcontinental travelermore varied ceñir attrnt'tln that canbe seen from the car windows withoutextra expenso fur side trips, than anyother line.

HKKVH'B "PF9T IN THE WESTFor Taren and further detailed in-

formation applv toI.OCAI, ItlO ORANPR AOENT

Kri.uk A. W sdlelirh. (Jen. rnMnrairer ActDraver, Colorado.

ROY REAL ESTÁTE I ABSTRACT CO.

forClayton, 02201!. Not coal land.

of the Interior.U. S. Land Office, Clayton, N. M.

April 9th, 11)12.

Notice is hereby given thatClarence Hoy, N. M., who,on Dec If, 1!K)1, made H. E. No. 3402,

Serial No. 02206, for SKI, Section 2.1,

18 North Range 25 Kast,N. M. I'. has filed notice ofintention to make final Ave yearproof, to establish claim to. the landabove before U.

F. H. Foster, at hisoffice at Roy, N. M., on the 23d dayof May, 1012.

Claialant names as witnesses:Henry Farr, Thos, W. H.

Farmer, W. A. all of Roy,N. M.

Edward W. Fox,

Forof the Interior,

U. S. Land Office at Clayton, N. M

April 9th, 1912.

Cloy ton, 04186. Not coal land.Notice is hereby given that Douglas

Meeker, of Albert, New Mex. who onMar. 28, 1907, made entryNo. 10745, serial No. 04786, for theSEJ NWJ, and lots 3, 4, and 5 offSection 6, Range 30 East,N. M. P. Meridian, has .filed

notice of intention to make Finalfive year Proof, to establish claim to

the land above before U. S.

F. H.at his office, at Roy, N. M., on the 20thday of May., 1912.

Claimant names as witnesses:J. S. Ballard, V. I. N.Graham, Jacob Daniels, all of Al-

bert, N. M.

8

Edward W. Fox,

Get Information NowCountry Neighboring

as a

FARM LANDS

Lands

forof the Interior,

U. S. Land Office at Cluyton, N. M.,April 9, M2.

03044 Not coal land.

Notice is hereby given that JosephS. Ballard, of Allwrt, N. M., who, on

18, 1H05, made H. E. No.serial No. 03044, for the

SI SE J, NE i SE J, S E J N EJ,Section 10, 20N. Range 2UK.

N. M. P. has filed notice ofintention to mitke Final five year Proof

the land above do- -

scribed, before U. S.F. H. Foster, at his office, at Roy, N.M., on the 21st day of May, 1012.

Claimant names as witnesses:D. Meeker, Albert N. M. D. C. Tralst- -

or, De Haven, N, M., V.Albert, N. M., Henry Stone, of Roy,N. M.

Edward W. Fox.

forof the Interior,

IT, S. Land Office at Clayton, N. M

Apr. 9th, 1912.

03803. Not coal land.

Notice is hereby given that GeorgeA. Bough, of Abbott, New Mexico,who, on June 11th 1906, made home-

stead entry, No. 8IÍÍ1 seriaNo. 03863

for the S J 8 EJ, and S J 8 W 1,

Section 10, 23 North. Rge.25 East, N. M. P. has filednotice of intention to make Finalfive year froof, to establish claimto the land above beforeF. H. U. 8. Commissioner, at Roy, N. M., on the 21st dayof May, 1912.

Claimant names as witnesses:Robert Silas Fuller, Geo.Higglns, Florence Fuller, all of Abbott, N. M.

Edward W. Fox,

.

forof the Interior,

U. S. Land Office at Clayton, N. M.

Apr 9th, 1912.

04735. Not coal land.Notice is hereby given that Clarence

E. Brown, of Roy, New Mexico, whoon March 21, 11X17, made H. ENo. 10458, serial 04735, for SWJof Section Number 4, Twp. 20 N.N., Range 26 E., N. M. P.has filed notlce of intention to makefinal five year proof, to establishclaim to the land above before U. S. F. H.Foster, at his office, at Roy, N.M., on the 22d day of May, 11)12.

Claimant names as witnesses:John W. P. Tindall, Mart

Gust. all ofRoy, N. M.

Edward W. Fox,

Forof the Interior,

U. S. Land Office at Clayton, N. M

April 9th. 1912.

Clayton. 03409. Not coal land.Notice Is hereby given that

C. Farmer, of Roy, New Mexico,who on April '3rd, 1905, made H. K

No. 5896, Serial Number 03469, forthe WJ NWJ, NWJ SWJ, sec. 27 andNEJ SEJ, Section 28. Twp.20 East, N. M. P. has filednotice of intention to make FinalProof, to establish claim to the landabove before U. 8.

F. H. Foster, at hisoffice, at Roy, N. M., on the 22d day ofMay, 1912.

Claimant names as witnesses:Henry Stone, P. J. Wm.Puckett, Clarence Wright, all of Solano, N. M.

'Edward W. Fox1318 -

ANCH PROPERTIES

oughtM SoldGovernment Homesteads. Relinquishments

Charges Reasonable. TransactionGuaranteed.

Free BookletAbout G Wheat Country Surrounding

Notice

Wright.of

TownshipMeridian,

described,

McGrath,Brumage,

Register.

Notice

homestead

Twp.KIN.

described,

Foster,

Urquhart,

Register.

tois an

Notice

Clayton,

September

TownshipMeridian,

Urqubart,

Register.

Notice

Clayton,

TownshipMeridian,

desoribed,

Foster,

Keppler,

Register,

ROYCome ROY, New Mexico, And Make Your Home.

Water, Schools, Congenial People.

Roy Real Estate Abstract Co. Roy, M.

Publication

Department

Commissioner

Publication.Department

Commissioner,

About the Roy, N. M.

New County with Roy County Seat

assured fact.

Publication.Department

toestablishclaimtoCommissioner

Department

BR

FreeHandled. Every

The reat

To Fine

& N.IWM'MIHBira

Publication.

Notice Publication.Department

Clayton,

Meridian,

described,Commissioner,

Schneider,Trobaugh, Schneider,

Register,

Notice Publication.Department

ISN.rangeMeridian,

described,Commissioner

Laumbach,

Register.

Notice for Publication.Department of the Interior,

U, 3. Land Office at Clayton, N. M.I Apr. 9th, 1912.

Clayton, 03933. Not coal land.Notice is hereby given that Concep

ción A. Bargas, of Roy, New Méx.,who on Aug. 1, 1908, made H. E. No.9273, serial No. 03933, for SW J SEsec. 27, and NJ NEJ, NEJ NWJ, sec.

34, Twp. 20 N., Range 25 E., X.M. P. Meridian, has filed notice of in-

tention to make final five yearproot,to establish claim to the landabove described, before U. S. Com.F. H. Foster, at his office, at Roy, N.M., on the 2.1rd day of May, 1912.

Claimant names as witnesses:Aurelio Aldriis, Manuel B. Gallegos,Adolfo Montoya, Luis Manzanares,all of Roy, N. M.

Edward W. Fox,8 Register.

NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION.

Department of the Interior,D. S. Land Offloe at Clayton, N. M

Apr. 9th, 1912.

Clayton, 04507. Not coal land.

Notice is hereby given that Mary R.Mfller, formerly Humphrey, o f

Solano, N. M., who, on Feb. 13, 1907,

made H. E. No. 15012, serial No.04507, for the SEJ Section 4, Twp. 18

North, Range 27 East, N. M. P. Meri-

dian, has filed notice of Intention tomake Final five year Proof, to estab-lish claim to the land above described,before U. S. Commissioner LloydP. Upton, at his office, at Solano,N. M., on the 20th day of May,1912.

Claimant names as witnesses:F. M. Hughes, John Beckman, JohnGillard, D. M. Talbot, all of Solano,N. M.

Edward W. Fox,8 Register.

Notice For Publication.Department of the Interior,

U. S. Land Office at Clayton, N. M.,Apr. 9th 1912.

Clayton, 04405. Not coal landNotice is hereby given that Carolina

Martinez formerly Martinez of Roy,New Mexico, who on Jan. 18, 1907,

made H. E. No. 14374, serial No. 04405

for NWJ SEJ, SEJ SWJ Nj SWJ, Sec-

tion 17, Township 21N., Range 28E.,N. M, P. Meridian, has filed notice ofintention to make Final five year Proof,to establish claim to the land abovedescribed, before U. S. Com. F.H, Foster at his office, at Roy, N. M.on the 21st day of May, 1912.

Claimant names' as witnesses:Encamación Lucero, and DcaederioGallegos, of Albert N. M. Emilio Gon-

zales, of De Haven, N. M., EnriqueMartinez, of Roy, N. M.

Edward W. Fox,8 Register

Notice For Publication.Department of the Interior,

U. S. Land Office at Clayton, N. M.April 9, 1912.

Clayton, 04257. Not coal land.

Notice is liareby given that QuirinoGallegos, of Sanchez, N. M., who, onDec. 1st 1906, made H. E. No 13355,

serial No. 04257, for N J SW J, Sec-

tion 32 and E J SE J, Section 31,

Township 17 N., Range 25 E., N. M.P. Meridian, has filed notice of Intention to make final five year proof, toestablish claim to the land above described, before U. S. Commis-sioner, F. H. Foster, at his office,at Roy, N. M., on the 22d day ofMay 1912. '

Claimant names as witnesses:Miguel Estrada, Valentin Baca, Antonio Arguello, and Andres Gallegos,all of Sanchez, N. M.

Edward W. Fox,.8 Register.

NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION

Department of the Interior,U. S. Land Office at Clayton. N. M.,

Apr. 9, 1812.

Clayton, 04392. Not coal land.

Notice Is hereby given that CarmelLujando Mestas for the heirs of Fran-cisco Mestas deceased, of DeHaven NM. who on Jan. 12th, 1907, made H.E. No. 14254, serial No. 04392 tor theE SWJ and W SEJ of Section 9,Township 21North Range 28E, ,N.M. P. Meridian, has filed notlos ofintention to make Final five yearproof, to establish claim to the landabove described, before F. H. Foster,U. 8. Com., at his office at Roy,

N. M., on the 21st day of Mav1912.

Claimant names as witnesses:

George Ulibarrl, Francisco UllbarrlEmello Gonzales, Pedro Velasquez,all of DeHaven, N. M.

Edward W. Fox,8 , Register.

NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION.

Department of the Interior,U. S. Land Office at Clayton, N. M.,

Apr. 9, 1912.

Clayton, 03540. Not Coal land.t

Notice la hereby given that Josede Jesus Medina of Roy.N. M.,who, on Julv 13, 1905, made H. E.No. 0042, Serial No. 03540, for NE. J,Section 17, Township 19 North,Range 26 East, N. M, P. Meridian,has filed notice of intention to makeFinal five year Proof, to establishclaim to the land above described,

U. S. Commissioner F. H.Foster at his office, at Roy, N. M.,on the 20th day of May, 1912.

Claimant names as witnesses:Pablo Slsneros, Antonio R. Lucero, Al-

earlo Griego, Ant Lucero all ofRoy, N. M.

Edward W. Fox,Register.