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University of New Mexico UNM Digital Repository Carlsbad Current, 1896-1918 New Mexico Historical Newspapers 7-9-1915 Carlsbad Current, 07-09-1915 Carlsbad Printing Co. Follow this and additional works at: hps://digitalrepository.unm.edu/cb_current_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 Carlsbad Current, 1896-1918 by an authorized administrator of UNM Digital Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Recommended Citation Carlsbad Printing Co.. "Carlsbad Current, 07-09-1915." (1915). hps://digitalrepository.unm.edu/cb_current_news/258

Carlsbad Current, 07-09-1915 - UNM Digital Repository

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University of New MexicoUNM Digital Repository

Carlsbad Current, 1896-1918 New Mexico Historical Newspapers

7-9-1915

Carlsbad Current, 07-09-1915Carlsbad Printing Co.

Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/cb_current_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 Carlsbad Current, 1896-1918 by an authorized administrator of UNM Digital Repository. For more information, please [email protected].

Recommended CitationCarlsbad Printing Co.. "Carlsbad Current, 07-09-1915." (1915). https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/cb_current_news/258

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i

"TWENTY-THIR- D TEAR. CARLSBAD. NEW MEXICO. FRIDAY, JULY 9. 11S. NUMBER 34.

ERRIBLESCORES KILLED BY TORNADOES

IN CENTRAL WESTERNSTATES.

Forty Estimated to Have Died at Cln.cinattl and Fifty Injured; Stoma

Take Heavy Toll of Ufe inMissouri, Illinois, Kentucky

Indiana and Tennessee,Property Loae

Millione.

' TRAINS DELAYED BY FURY OKSTORMS, CAUSING LOSS OF I

LIFE HOUSES LEVEL. I

ED AND CHOI'SDESTROYED I

Cincinnati, July 8. Tha great-est calamity that han ever hefallunCincinnati happened in ten minuto;last night when a fierce tornado1truck the city at about Oi.'iO. There:

were many boats on the river, includ-- !

ing the tug Dick Fulton and theateamer Convery. Thirteen of thecrews are missing and It la believedmany more were drowned. I

Along the river the damage dni.e'waa large, houses being wrecked anddeatroyed. Tha police and firemen,are digging in the ruin, assisted by,volunteer workers and a number!have been rescued alive. A numberof bodies have been taken out of theruins and it is believed many muroark buried beneath the falling build-ings. Some of the injured roseuedhad been buried for hours.

Hundreds of piule glaits win.lowioutside show cases and signs wvwdestroyed and it is believed the dun.age will run well over a million dotlara. Hundreds of automobiles wereovertcrned and even trees uprootcj.

Cincinnati, Ohio, July 8. A ter-rible storm struck this city last nightdoing a great amount of dumaga andtaking a heavy toll of Tife that iahourly mounting. The police o.iti-mat- e

that forty persons perished andtwenty uro already known to be doud.Fifty were injured. The ilamuuvamounts to at least a million dolL.iiThree persons are missing.

Along the river tin re waa a heuvvfatality and the police are at waikdragging the stream, rinding a num-ber of bodies.

In Tennessee eleven ara known tobo dead, among them members of theBaum and Cohen families, relatives.

Three were hurt and three killedwhen a heavy train was blown fromthe tracks of the Pennsylvania roaóin a suburb of this city. The traincontained many famous horses going,irom me l.uiumu track to Windsor,Canada, and a number of these wcikilled.

STRIKES MOHERLY .MO.Mubcrly, Mo., July 8. A fierce

tornado struck this city lute yesUrday and injured twenty-thre- e penons,including live women, when a Wab-ash truin wus derailed by the storm.Five roaches went Into the ditch.

FIVE AT CAROOLTON, KY.Louisville, Ky., July 8. It is

reported here that five were killed utCarrolton, Ky., whon a tornadostruck that pluce. Excepting alongthe Oliio river Kentucky did not suf-fer much elsewhere. There was t

at Louisville, outthere was no loss of lifo.

ONE DEAD IN INDIANA.Vincenncs. Ind., July 8. There

was one fatality here through thestorm sweeping this section. A younggirl wns killed here and several wereinjured at I.awrenceville, Illinois,where twenty houses were leveled tothe ground. Crops were destroyed inthis part of the state and a local dis-tillery was destroyed.

DEATH IN MISSOURI.St. Louis. Mo.. Julv 8. Several ner.

aona are reported to have been killed j

in St. Charles county and elsewherenearby. The storm did damage InMissouri that will reach to near. y amillion dollars. Three are reportedto hove been injured fatally and elgh--teen seriously. The hardest hit places

'were (If alien, Gllmore, DArdenne,Wcntzville and St. Charlns.

CRANK TRIES TO KILL MORGAN.A crank named Frank Holt last Sat-

urday shot and wounded J. P. Morgan, the great financier, in tha groinand thigh, at the lutu i's home in GlenCove Long Island, Ha was overpow-ered hy Morgan and his wife whileholding revolver In each hand andtha aervants bound and hog tied himafter nea.-l- killing him with bigchunk of coal. He a.iot and killedhimself Wednesday nii,l of this wetkIn the county jail f!r making sever-- 1

al other attempts to ope t an urtery'in hia arm. Ho wat a resident cfDalla, Texas, whert his wife resides.He seemed to thins if ho could Kill!Morgan the war in Ei'-o- would stop,for he alleged ilut Morgan furn:khidtha cash to England to finance thewar. Cecil Spring Rice, the Urltlshdiplomat, waa at thu Morgan homeat tha time of tha almost tragedy.

CLIMBED TO CEILIN0 AND FELLON HEAD.

Glen Cove, N. Y July 7. After anInvestigation of tha circumstancessurrounding Holt'a death, William1'ulse, warden of tha Nassau countyjail at Mineóla, Issued tha followingtaterasnt today)

mm"Holt met death by plunging from

the top of the bara of hia cell. Hafell eighteen feet.

FIXING GERMAN NOTE.

Washington Doesn't O. K. the FirstDralt, and Gerard is Given the

Dope by Wilson.

Washington, July 7. Further mes-sages from Ambassador Gerard weretoday transmitted to President Wil-

son at Corn'sn, N. )L, outlining thepoint of view of the Germnn eoveni-me- nt

on auhmaiine warfare as em-

bodied in a rough draft of the Germannote to the last American nolo.

The dispatches tended to show that)Germany ia anxious to bring ihout acompromise on the question of her!submarine campaign and there wereindications in ofllciul quarters thatthe proposals in their present formare not acceptable to the UnitedStates. Just what means would beadopted to inform ermany of the dis- -approval of the United States la notapparent. It is believed, however,that Ambassador Gerard wilt be in-- 1

structed within a day or two to makeclear in advance of the receipt of theformal and flnnl copy of the Germannote that he is unable to make anycomment.

Although from press dispatches andother sources it appeared that tileGerman proposals were unsatisfac-- !tory, the situation was not regardedIn well informed quarters aa hope-less, much encouragement beingdrawn from the fart that a tentativodraft of the note was submitted to theAmerican ambassador. This, it wasbelieved, indicated that If the prelim-inary draft waa not satisfactory theremight be changes mudo designed tomeet the American point of view on!submarine warfare.

It was believed that President Wil-

son would today direct Secretary tan-sin- g

to instruct Ambassador Gerardrespecting the proposals alreadymade.

Officials here generally declined toexpress any opinion on the sugges-tions made by Germany in the tenta-tive draft informally submitted toAmbasador Gerard. It was not un-- 1

derstood that Germany had requestedAmbasador Gerard to learn the viewsof this government, but merely hadtransmitted a rough memorandum ofthe proposals so the United Statescould, if it chose, make romnient.

It is considered most likely that theUnited States will decline to enterinto a disrussion while awaiting Ger-many's reply. Almost a month haselapsed since the American note wussent. i

GEORGE POWELL KILLED ATKENT.

Commissioner Fred G. Irhy Surren-ders to Sheriff at Van

Horn.El Paso lleruld.Van Horn, Texas, July fi- .- Ge:.i".

Powell, who lived near krt tisinner Fred (J. Irhy. of Ke"t, is t;"d"rcounty, is (h ad u ' ' I cii..iy rllimn- -

bond of $.1,0011 c e c u m l.f kill- -

ing him.Commissiei r !r' v tmv to Van,

Horn ut 7 o',-l- ,. , , t night und sur-- ,

rendered to shcrt' John A. Morine.Ho wuived an examining trial undguve bond in the sum of $1000 for hisuppeurance. Mr. Irhy told the sheriff,he hud shot Powell, who, he suld, hudthreatened his life. Powell, who wusa crack shot with a pistol, hud toldIrhy two days ugo that ho would killhim, the commissioner told the sheriff.It Is said Powell hud been drinkingisince June 2.1.

Commissioner Irhy told the sheriffhe wbs at the depot when the Texas& Pacific train came into Kent Sat-urday. He hud his rifle with him. Ashe got out of his auto he saw Powellhcoming, with his hund on his hip, andiinotit eight reel away. The threaten-in- g

look and action of Powll lendIrhy to think he meant to shoot lni.i,anil Irhy tired first.

It Is said Powell aaid aa he fell:"You got me first."

MANY ATTEND FUNERAL OF,GEORGE T. POWELL

AT KENT.Pecos, Texas, July 7. The funerul of

George Turner Powell who waa shotand killed by Fred G. Irhy at Kent onJuly 4th, took pluce at Kent yester-day. A lurge number of people werethere. Tha X ranch and several other,large ranchea were largely represent-ed- .

I

Mrs. J. W. Lytle and W. A. Collins,of Pecos, took charge of tho remains'and Rev. Mr. Duwing, of Barstow,

at tha grave.Young Powell was favorite with

the townspeople and the ranchmenalike. He waa on bis way to Califor-nia and It is cluimed he had not been'drinking that day bk ha waa talkingwun some young women and boys,when Mr. Irby drove ud in his cur.Eyo witneasea of tha killing, it is aaid,

Little Pitcher"Grandma, are you with the clrcnaf"Of course, not. child! What makea

you ask such a liiingr"I beard w aay that when you came

to visit na we'd have ao elephant onoar bauds."-Kultlm- ore American.

Christian A Co., INSURANCE.

searched tha body immediately ant:found he waa wholly unarmed.

Young Powell came out from DetroitMichigan, alout a year airo, and took

I II II ft I II II 1111

VVUUL

up aoma school land in ( ulliersoncounty, which he was living out.

RRAINARD-KNOKR- .

Mr. and Mrs. U. K. Hrainard haveissued invitations for the wtdding oftheir daughter, Ruth, U Mr. J. W.Knorr, July 15th. Tie wedding willtake piare at the Brrlnat I home inKosclawn and the young people willmuke their home in Carlsbad.- - Ar-tes-

News.

I I I II I ! I H I I 1 1 I II II Mill I I I

urimUVKWVlltLLibKtAIReport of the Two Games From Car I

Isbad'a Standpoint. The Car-lsbad Team a Hummer.

Playing their first game togetherthe Carlsbad team lost the first gameto Roswell on July 4th by a srore of6 to 2. A total disregard for teamwork and failure to hit with men onbanes was mainly responsible for thaloss of the game. No less than sev-enteen players were left stranded onthe buses during the game, the muchneeded hit never being forthcomingwith men in scoring position.

Stewart pitched a cool, heady gameand should have won. His controlwas perfect and his rhnnge of parewas nan ling to me opposing hitters.with proper support and riu

. 'l:. i i imis irom nis teammates he wouldhave won easily.

A morning lecture In the hotel hvMunagers Allen and Nichols and Cap-tain Hrainard to the team on insidebaseball, team work and "pep" andother things necessary to win bullgames had the desired effect. TheCarlsbad team took the field Mondayafternoon full of fight and ginger aniloutplayed the Roswell club in everydepartment of the game. The loss ofthe serond gumc by a srore of 4 to ."I

ran lie attributed entirely to a de-cision on a line drive which went fouldown t he right field line. So cer-tain was the Curldiad players thatthe bull was not fair that no pinywas made on the bull. Two Roswellmen on bane at that time scored andwhen the Roswell umpire declared theball a fuir hit it cost Carlsbad a vic-tory. ,

Roswell did not srore an earned runduring the game while Carlsbad scoreswere made by timely hitting and dur-ing base running. Two of Roswell'sruns were mude on the foul bull andthe other two were given to themwhen with men on thud and two outon two occasions the Carlsbad out-field dropped fly balls allowing theRoswell runnei to score.

The score was tied in ihe fifth inn-ing when I'V-l- e. d.i.-l.i- d home whilethe Roswell lirsl tm soman held the

n i;

s A -- A

IN i BRICK ofFOR SUNDAY

M K i:s Al id sk HOT

! g 'Phone

f AND IT WILL

iS! The Eddy! FINEST ICE

Drugs Sundries

N

BE

CREAM

ball. A nluy was mado for Fcsler atthe plato : ut ne slid around tliecatcher. Two acores were mude amoment later wbei. Owen and Seatmscored on an infield hit, Hunton wuson second and hia from thutbase on a hit to the infield wus adaring and brilliant piece of busebull

i ne score remained tied Irom thofifth to t' e ninth Innings, when withtwo men out and Roswell mun onthird, a fly to the Carlsbad outfieldwas dropped and the runner scored,winning ti e game for Roswell.

Stewart both games for thelocal dub and pitched great bull, notpassing a man in the entire eighteeninnings. The highly touted Jennings

walloped by the locals for atlea it ten safe hits and waa not aaeffective us White who thefirst game for Roswell.

cornea here Sunday, July10th, two games. If the team runarrange to over for a gameMnn.t. ik. i ina ui I,. l.iU.i

BIG RAIN ON FOOT HILLS,

Boyd Aker, who han the contract forthe mail to Queen at "present, statethnt he encountered much water atMoselcy about eighteen miles south- -

went of Carlsbad which flooded theroad on to the Snooks Gordon windmill. The rain fell Monday night andfrom others it is learned that all the.hill country north and .touth for sev-eral miles received a good rain. Mi.A uer stater, that the woia on the!Queen road has benefitted it verymurk

Christian INSURANCE

V LIm rt,750,000 POUNDS OF SOLD.

Two Dozen ( lips Are Sold to BuyersRepresenting the llig Houses

in Boston, Masa.

C. II. D'BREMOM) LEADS THELIST, RECEIVING 24 1

Prire Generally Paid la Co. Jnng-in- g

Upward From the H-- c of20 Cents Murh Ren.. .

to Be Sold.

Roswell News, July 2.This city is looming lurge in the

limelight as a market for wool, som.ithrec-quurter- s of a million poui.ds ofme suipie iing sold wilhi.i the pastlew nays, representingi ulou one- -lourin or the lotui amount ni ,

the remuinder"

of whichr will bo nold!

within the next month.The prices obtuined In' th( so sales

are regarded as very satisfactory, be-ing from 2 to 3 cents in advance ,fanything that bus been sill this yearby the locul growers. '1 1. y u'es havebeen negotiated by the Koswell Wool& Hide company, representing Ihegrowers.

The first effort of the selling .urencywus to conduct a public auction, atwhich many eastern buyers attended.The offerings und the price expectedby the growers did not effect anysales at the auction and the event wasdeclared off. The buyers remni.ied inthe city, however, und qi ick",lsome two dozen clips, u oximatelythree-quarter- s of a million mu-.d-

Those who have sold wit! .1. tha pntfew days und the prices ' .!ud uiigiven nerewnn j

Coffin Ilros. . 21C de Hi emolid 21cP. Cussnbone 21c.P. I.nuissenu 21.'.M. Chaves & Son 22.E. Etcheverry 20iJohn Cuuhope '.'If.J. W. Turknclt 22T. C. TillotsonT. J. i.2 i 2c!

C. T. Adams . ..

L. Pnrhero 21O. Cuilouette 21

3

fNICE -

v!CREAMI) I N I: R

PLEASING DESERTSUMMER DAYS.

No.TnERE

Drug StoreIN TOWN

Fountain Drinks

Ik

scoring

worked

was

pitched

Roswellfur

remain

WOui,

Will Johnson .21 lie.Harry Thorno ..!. ..20 c

J. Reynolds !""! .21Esguín St Abbey ...20.1. J. S. Smith ...!!! 20c.Paul Wilson ........! - 2le.Seth Alston ... 20c.II. II. Ilyrd 20c.

L. Gunn 20cM. und W. R. McKnight 21c.

o--Arrested at llagerman Upon Ugly

Charge.Hugerman, N. M.. Julv II. C. K.

Crawford and B. J. Blllington. bothwell known in this section, worn ar-rested few daya ago on a complaint!filed by J. N. lloren charging criminal!assault on one of Boren'a daughters.Crawford was bound ovor to awaitthe action of the grand Jury, bond be.Ing placed at $7.10, and pending thefurnishing of this bond he has beentaken to Jail at Roswell. Hi Hi mrtnn.after hia arrest by l.onstublo Porrv.

Sunday and Monduy afternoons. If ""lUMted to be allowed to attend tonot the team will play a doublehead-- ! om8 bulneis matteri here, and hiser Sunday afternoon. The manage-- : request was granted. He did not showment of the local club ia trying to "P tha '" wt for hia preliminaryavoid playing game on Sunday If nfríng, and ofllcera are now aearch-poaslbl- e,

but that day seems to be for him'the only one on which other eluba can ( ?come here. However aa many week, Oallelaa.day fame will be arranged ai poasl- - There are two Gállelas In Europe,ble. 4,tf n"B '"rln" l,urt ' Austria, while Ihe

Umpireii Rule and Engle. other la a pmvli In Hpulu.

LATE WAR EVENTSCANNING DEMONSTRATIONS IN

EDDY COUNTY.Miss Dora Ross and Mr. W. T.

Conway, both of the Extension de-partment of the New Mexico Agricul-tural college will be in Eddy countynext wi-c- anil win give a number ofcanning demonstrations throughoutthe county.

A demonstration will be given in,n lh Auditorium of the

High School on next Wednesday af- -

l"rnoon, July llfh, beginning prompt- -

ly at two o'clock.I hey will ran fruits and vegetables,

using the hot water bath and steampressure methods. This demonstrationis very timely and ought to be at-tended by every womun in this com-munity.

oCaed From George Frederick.

Marysvillc, Wn.,Dear Friend: We are Mill having n

fine time. The scenery is fine hereNew Mexico has the climate but 100years behind times on good roadsOregon and Washington huve hardpacked gravel roads just like pavedAn unto should lust l.'i years here.Ihe last three days have been veryhot. Will spend the It h ut Scuttle.Expert to leave here the 10th for Win-nipeg, Munitobu, and will be in Chicago the 1.1th. Hope Carlsbad penp.ure all well and enjoying the HOTweather.

Sincerely vours,GEO. J. FREDRICK.

oDEATH OF MRS. SETH FK.lt It

Ileuth of Mrs. Selh Ferrell occurredTuesday nt the Puliice hotel.

Mrs. Seth Ferrel wus brought toCurlslmd Sunday from the l arrellranch by .luck Furrell in their car.Mr. und Mrs. Seth Ferrel hud beenstaying nut nt the I'linell much withtheir son, Frank Ferrel, and family.Mrs. Seth hud been suffering wi'h in- -

diireation for some time und while oitfecdint' the chickens fell in llu ynrdin a fninting condition ami ufter shew curried into tin Ii iiim, sieiii-- d loget no reuei, so iney to townand secured u pliy ..cih'i and iiiimwired her d.iutrhlei ., in El Puso, Mrs.h. It. Ardoin came ut once.

1'iorel died suddenly, had beentalking of her children ki,d grandchildren, und died of acuic indigestionin a very few minutes.

Mr. and Mrs. Ferrel were marriedin Walla Walla. Washington, in IKi',2when Wushinirtnn whs a territory.They were married fifty three yearsTo this union live children, four girlsmil one boy, was horn. The four girlswere born in Walla Walla, Washing-ton, nuil the boy, Frank Ferrel, theyoungest ehilil. was born in California.The family moved to Texas in XN2

llr-- ut Abilene and from thereWent to Snyder, 'I'evus. They movedto Pecos, Texas, n few years Inter andlived in und around that place fortwenty years.

They eelel inte, I their -- olden wedd-ing in Pecos the five children many of

; imiii'iI eh'I'l ee ai d some of theercN 1'ianil child'' II t.eimr nie-e- ' t.

' .an 'it. va- - ni. ule at this lime.M-- s I ' ln 'eaves a husband, fourd in '' I" a' d one son Mrs. I!. .

Ardoin, E! I'a.u. Texas; Mis. MnrvPut ciMin. CI Paso. Texiri; Mrs. I If.

on. Kevder. Texas; Mrs. W. T.I'evi h, of ! n di k. lo';i; and l iank

Ferrel at the Fun ell ranch. Twentyeil'lit riand ciiildieii and eii'ht nlI'lui'd child' en.

Mrs. Ferrel was a cliri-tia- n womana inemher of the Methodist chinch lorlifly-on- yi ars.

They have many i I.I fi'ends andlieit'lihot s in und aioiiiid l'eeo Hullwill join their friends and family herein inoiirning her los

Funeral sel vices were held ut theMelhodot I'hureh at r.:llll o'clockThursday. The body lay in a beautifulcasket, surrounded by many floraltributes from friend, und relatives.

The burial services were coi'iiucteilby Kev. J. T. Keilliiiui, broiiifht com-fort to Ihe hearts of the sorrowingfamily. Some of her favorite songswere sung. One the children culled"mother's song" Is nil theWorld to Me." the others were: "As-leep in Jesus", and "Rock of Ages",tenderly sung by tho Methodist ladies.

Interment was mudo ut the Curls-bu- d

cemetery. The pull beurers wereMessrs. (cor i'c lleckelt. Howard Cra-ven, J. F. Flowers. D. G. Grunthum,Keuty Wilson, M. II. Butcher.

Blacksmith at ( lovis Dies aa Resultof Blow With Hummer.

Clovls, N. M., July fi. After lyingseventy-eigh- t hours in an unconscinus condition In th e Santa Fe llnsiiitnlof this rily, during which time an op.erution wus performed In an effortto suve his life. A. S. Combe, who was,heud blacksmith ut the Santa Feshops of this city, succumbed to In-

juries which he received at the hundsof T. M. Dickens, blacksmith help-er, with whom Combe whs workingwhen the former struck him on thoheud with a hummer, crushing hiskull. Dickens stated upon interview,thut he was provoked beyond endur-ance by the abusive language of tin)head blacksmith and resented sume Inthe manner stated.

Dickens has been bound over to thegrand Jury on a charge of murderBond has been fixed at $7,fi00,

NOTARY PUBLIC at the Currenoffice. Notary always In.

Paris A favorite pastime of soldierat the front is reported to be thecurving of rings nut of tie aluminumfuses of unexploded German shells.They are highly prized as souvenirs.

Dunkirk, F ranee III ilish ofllceraand soldiers fro mthe devastated coun-tryside which now consientes the bat-tered front between their army andthut of the (ier.nani, frcipicn'iy ex-press surprise thut si nie steps havenot leen tuken to remove t'ie civilianpopulation from the ifinediate area oflighting. The clearing out of civilians,they declare, would simplify militaryoperations, und reduce tin opportunityfor successful spying by the Germana.

London. The war is exercising a de-cidedly democrat influence on themanners, customs uit habits of Eng-lish folk who are commonly regardedas belonging to the big "S" section ofsociety. Before the war it wus con-sidered most undignified for anybodywith any pretensions to gentility t- -

be seen carrying a parcel in publicIlut now even dukes and duchesses tosay nothing of "honorul.le.s" ind un-titled respectabilities, muy be seenopenly and unshamediv rurrving pur-rel- s

in Piccadilly or Uey.-n- t Mrcetwith an air which inipliei the proudconsciousness thut they ure g tting agood example.

London A privnte dispatch fromParis states that the illness of KinirChristian of Greece, according ,o ru-- jmors current in the lobby of Ihechamber of deputies, wus in riulitvdue to a dagger wound. The ItritisttPress bureau, on being asked to pasathis dispatch for publication, s'utcd:"We see no sutlieieni n n in to stoppublication of this matter, but the re-sponsibility for the accuracy must restwith the publisher."

Paris- - War hus hud contrary ef-fects on the postal service of France.Obstruct ions to comnieice and indus-try resulted in u great decrease inbusiness correspondence, but this iamore than compénsale,! by the in-

crease in personal letters betweenmembers of dispersed families and thesoldiers and their relatives. In a sin-I'l- e

dav the postul department handledI 1,0110,11011 letters, "Minimi registeredletters und packages. .1.'.. mill news-papers, und .17,0111 postal orders. Thevolume of matter bus Miudily in-creased since December.

Loudon Lord Norlmry, former chiefjustice of the court of common pleas,hus taken employment us u fitter inun aeroplane factory in a Londonsuburb. He will put in thirteen liiiuradaily at his work. At the sume time.Lady Norhury hud begun work uswiut less in ii soldiers' coffee canteenat Fusion station.

FIGHTING .t"m EX ICO t i l V.

Pilifiillv Hungry. lis People Are SI illDodging Ihe Bullets of War-- .

ring actions.

Washington, July 7. Increasinganxiety was felt in olli. uil circles to-day over the situation in Mexico City,f mu which place no woul In,, I conicof Ihe of Ihe li i.tiug said tuhave again I n begun between (haCarrana and .upula foiees in the out.skills ol that eilv. M.aeer olliciuladvices received hero reported a ronewal of Ihe n,' uni ing, o, , .i.e ,,o i

al ions ef bow i w a . pi og ir. .ing.Willi lepnits ut li..m desci ibinir

eondiiions in the Mexican capital aa"pitiful." and lapiul., j.ioA,nt mus,.,on account of the shottage of food,ellicials loday auxiou.sly awaited theolilconie of Ihe latest lighllug l.eiail'oof Us pos.ible et,. ,lM t. safely offoieigners there. It was hoped thatl ulled Slates I iiiisid General Sluii

and Challes .t. il'l oiinor, in ehai-g-

of American relief ineasiiies in Mex-ico I lly, would soon be aide In ar-range fui the n ut foodMlpplii s to aid the I'aini'ie stnckeiipopulation of Ihe capital. Mr. 1' 'mi-nor, of ihe Ke, I'm-- , reports thatthe relief problem is an immense one.

Six Americans, captured 111 a lightbetween Carrana and Villa tumps atEl llefnglo, Coiihuilu, have been

fiom Mexico, iiccordiug to areceived today al the Cur-raii- .u

agency. The de patch also saidfive thousand head of cuttle beingdriven by Villa forces to the Ameri-can border for export were also cap-tured,

n-

HOPE CELEBRATES.

The big barbecue, bronco busting,goat roping ut Hope wus attended by2,000 people from all over tlie valley.

Fifteen beeves and many muttonsWere baibecued. Eight long tableswere arranged in a big walnut grovowhere every one hud plenty to eat.

A wus built upon whichtwentv.ll. or thin ...... ... ,,.ul,l.

-- i"- -lance at one time. Among those thut

weni irom t urlKhud In their carswere: C. N. Jones and family, andMisses Adit Gordon and Lucy Junes,Frank Jones and son, Elmore; HillJones and family; also Mr. and Mrs.Shafer; Carl Livingston, his mother,Mrs. Morgan Livingston, and MisMyrtle Ward; Mr. and Mrs. MarvinLivingston; Willurd Rates and familyand Mr. and Mrs. Less Batea; Mr. andMrs. Harry Christian and daughter.Misa I .ella; Will Purdy and familyand Mra. E. Purdy; Mrs. S. T. Bitt-ing; Mrs. Will Hicks and Mr. and Mra.Harry Braden; Miss Simons and RoyWaller; possibly others that we didnot get

I.1

pointsfor

Mothers

Uerel Tailing of Nerveue Children,tit faluiK I mil aa rominnit un

trill lifiiliicnn mil uaoally lakea Hi

Mild forui of the pilfering of Jelllcn oraweetn 'I Inn f r.Ui-till- we Ami Hi

fihynlrel hanks rUtlit there In th ilrmaml nf th ayatciii for mor aunarRome rhlldreri will ink from nthern

lint liny roiiiiT trlllea iniTrljr fromilcnlre tn ponaena ami would iml

think "f appropriating a n I IiIiik ofIII I'll I value SihIi n i IiIIiI im mil

rinirr ihla a form of theft ami Ifmili I) nwiikmied In I lie fiiit that It In

will nutter mnikcd nervous alto. k. Inhyaieii.nl tlealre to Hiem

altn with parrilla or leaiiicm enmeliillilrcn w ill Mtfiil nullify ami othervalualili-ii- . Inn always with a tlealre tnKl v It to others anil rrv mute forthllllIVa

Now, In tlpnllug wild any nf theeforma of lliefl Ilic i hllil (mint nut I

aeuai nf a thief; neither iniialbin aii It railed theft. It imint Im

clearly alniwn to him Hint Hi mi lalinl right; Hint In Ima no right In anyIhlim w lili h tH'loiiKa In mini her, amithen tin- - promlne inn y In cni ted HintIn will rcnpeci iIicih- - right In the -

I hi- - i hllil alioillil mil lie tillirencl wlili tin- - full gravity of the of

fen In- - nnr ln will i licit In- - In drendOf (III1 lllllllllielll whl-- I If HH (liftmI mil In onlliinrv Ihlevea Hut Hi

loircui inui not oterhmk even aiiarnull hiirmicn pilfering of aweeta. A

mntimininc of mi li tintilla limy lend10 lhi Inking of vnlnnliln. anil It tnunlb i Iiih ki'il ax amui hh mmhIIiI.

A Mother'e Sevan Cimmindminti.alike low lo every on. tmiudlng

your own t hlldi'cii If you any prettyllilin--a lo Hi khhllcn they will aaypretty IhlliKa lo oii

'lio' linger ii ii in I ht of ehlldren In afa in M v I ln nr Hi opp.inttiiltlefor n mil urn I ihIii. nti.ni. Vour youngeat rliliil U always. Hi lirli(lilt, I

ran on rhllil Irtirna from Niinthefquli kcr limn from mi iililr irwn.

Nvr any "iloiri" In n rhllil. If hIhihiiiih iiilsi try In Interest11 III! Ill HOllK'tlllllK (da.

.Nvr fon a rliliil. There la nudninii r of ovcrliiinli'iilnu hla drain withkuowlixlu un loiitf na h U liili-rete-

When ymi nee you ar tlrlini him litiini ril

Keep your i hlltlrcii rhrcrful nml linni l'i Ih'Iiih i IniTful nml liuiiy )uur

nelf, A mi In- - iiihiI In

nntliNm every mother In imIiiiII In inlu

rat Iiit own lilhlrrn, Iml all whu ranhiiulil I i It

All unillirr luioM IhIIi'V In Hi

fnil lr nml nIioiiiiI uuiltr tun lulu. a1InaHeie In llii'in An Ion.: ii l'ii'.i hiyum frlrml ou will nr t '

r .... : ...oiva añilaran rianiy oi oiaap.

MimIciii liiinioii lninm iihiii rlillérn who nr lniulrloua. lull ulowan In n n nu ini'iiliil Imln hihI im h

rlnliliiHi niiuli linn h tlm for alriI. ill lili' lliHlll'l of Mlri mil Ih ovi4 nr ii- - wll ii uuilriiliui "Marly to

ll U alwn a iirli lilp amiili .i nil i hllilrn ' Knrly tu rlw

la nlo a kimmI irlm ll ror niuai rhlldrrn. lull not for all Th rhllil whola ilroway ami Intik'ulil In Hi uoriilnii

lio U'iílii hl ilny lie Unit frrhnpml nhonlil In nllowtnl lo ulifp

lHH.'r III Hi luoliilliK until It haa liiillfli'iniliifil whnl Hi ilillnli taintmay !. ami liirH'i ll of th linnfill rff t of li of Iih'i uniii Hi

IiiniIiIi of th i hllil a 'iiill MiiRfiluicfrtiui m il low animl ln ant to it

liiMirin lor H'it with Hi aaiirnui'thai Ha lt uiriiiHl work rauiiot tw

ii iiiiiiIIkIihI

Diaturbad Blrap.Whi'll a rllllll WiikrllK f'Mllilltly till

la m iirialli tin lo urn mi. IrrltulililiyNo liifriui ntlt I lil tlrN-ml- uponjKjor or liiinoiri inuiri-liiio'i- il

I'nn-fu- l roiialilrrallon ahouiil I lvulo Hi iiirlloli of itlrl f"i It tuny !

luHiiltlrli nt In iiiiioiini or of muí li tinri Iri linn II H "i i'iiilt il líi -- ii!

I 'ii v hull Hi of l.ilaltri ii r ilur 1. ti. our i until

If tin- - iii I'lnti .i.. .run. 1.1 i m. rluiiltil or I" moi l i rut fiiit il to Hint thra lill l Is r.il.lnxl il'ii in! lit'i or '"!fif-- h an oi I lir i . I i ot rriiiu n rr In

lllti. I. ill or inn onitoriiil'lr ttil will rrilll lit tll-l- ui littl lrri Niitiinill.v with

lll t ilior I'lrvrlil Mill llllilll ri Ilrliiriil will Hi troulilr.

Mini Mtpanaibilily.Al rM'ii a i hllil ntioiiltl know rlrnrly

lb illfffrrm lirtwrrit rtwlil nml

wrt'im V ilo nut iiiruii li) llil tluilft inn thru lt hi llnrr iiirlloiialuí y nml iiioml. Iml h will It nlil Intllwrni whnl la rlilhl from whnl In iml;

ml. liKVluc Hull Htwr. h la ii ounthi for lila aria. If iionunily iltrloH-t-

If ILrr la a fallur nl IliU K In ill

rrrn Hih rlrnrly Hi rhllil ahuulil ra-k-

th of a ilioniuiih iii)lraiaililnnlloii to illaiovrr thr fit Hit

Halp Far Melhara.fur iir IhnullN U'lil thr Willi of

frh iu with half n iriiiifiil ofuk'nr '! ltu iiifri th )uli of luilf

Irni' ii Into thl lilt a lraiifniry hour

Kor H iirnlu I fu I Hi wlili of an(II with a laaMMinf ill of mill I'll'

riolb. into Hiia. Iliru I'lnl oil "frilnAm nuil aa I'luth drla aatural If

jam

WHAT 0000 ROA 01 MEAN. ?

Th final ri irt of Hi joint cobicrtwtlnmil I'oiiiiultu- - on ftlralnlil lo rl romla at forth Hi

U'ltuiiluMia of iJ maila Ibiia."Hyati'inutlr rltnrta am ro-o-

(ration of nation, alntra ami(iilintira Mill liiHk AURTlrauhUhwaya the ImhI lu Hi world,brliitf rriiuil aurli ulliirnl lamiawllhln irnrtli lile linullriic dlalame from rn II romla. malrrlnllyrula tlir vain of farm roiertj,fiiliiime Ih innrKlli of profit onfurni pHMlmtit. vatly linrifthr nvrriiK dally aticuiliinio atrural ai'hixila, riilao th atamlardof i ii ni I tilui atlon, iniike th moI on; ii. k un eroiioinlral vrhli If(or Aiiurli un fnrniir. Mulitfii thrInlM.rx of Amerlrnii liorM-a- , aav ,

wriii nml trnr nf hnruraa Mini ?wimon. nml add to Hi roiufortnml hiippliifaa of all rural rrnl V

drltta." .

U

ADVANTAGES OF WIDE TIRES.

Thay Pull Mora Caaily Than Narraw0n. and Maka Battar Tracka.

"Wld llrrd wairona pull more ennllyHum iinrmw Urol orn a IH r rent ofth timen whru thry nr uad," anyaK A. Wirt. Inntriirtor In farm mi linnIra In Hi K a linn a Ututo AiirlrullurulcolIrK. rniframir Wirt haa JiinI rumplrlril e iperlinriila with wide and withhiirniw llrrd waifoiia.

Narrow tlrca pull Imnlrr Hmii wldtln-n- . anya 1'riifi'nnor Win. Imana thimrrow Ilr ruta drrH-- r lulo Hi topao. Th wld Ilr dora not rut nodi-r- nml inn km a lntiir Inn k un romUwhlrh ar Irnvrlinl whllr Hi KrnuiidIn aofl. Th wld Ilr pm kn Hi nurfar Into a linn roadU'd

Th t'rlini'iiln allow Hint In rornfirkin, plownl llrldn, llrld Ilium nml onIHinliir and nlfiilfn Inn. I tint dnifl onHi wld Ilr In roiiNlilrriitily Irnn. minintlrr w luti Hi romllllon of th noli

III pln. i'H whrr III lliuil In drrp nullrolla up un Hi w lni ln In ruin lund liytinrruw wlu-rla- . or lu n aiirfnr of mudwith a lund rouiiil th nurrow ilr will pull mor ennlly. Thinrrow win-e- l llin Hi rut. on Hi hunt

Inittoin of w lili h It niiin, nml roll. tlaa mud lliiin Hi whir tlr

Wlilih of tlr and lilk'hl of wheelliav a icral effin-- i upon th draftTh nl wldi h of Hi nurmw tlr lahi and llir.f fonnlin In. hr. whll

th wld Ilr In ununlly Hire or fouiInrhen wld Th tiren lined In HilMta wr nu and thr fourth nmlfour lln lien wld rr-r- . lively HUImli wtirrln nr tim-- d only on lowInn kn

A fnrinrr w ho i nn afford only nuw n'.'on tt III llml iiimiy fni torn enlrrlimluto hl "r'eitloii If he luí In nonu Hie rondn In nil UlmN of wnlhrIi IM liml Hi miii.iw llrmIh nu- - I lire will ro'let I lr mudwhen Hi rnl in Imd On Hi olhrrhnnd. If lir til lirn th rondnar vihnI ttr c the itn'.'uu In Hillrld ii tleni ilrtil lir will llml IIIwide Hir nlil preffitfil l. nun nf'' il'llf Hill lfn dlllllHU tiltil I'l liln

tin of Ih mullí poliitn lu fnvur nfIh wld llr i llml Hi r Une k'leiillylniuotn the roitdlnnl. nn thet willia' k Hi lop null Hint. Ii u Ih rouiHatl

firm, mid Hum emililltur It in drainwll lu tim of ram Th wld tlivwill not ml up th ini'iidow nr Held andora Hi iinrmw tlr TIN In nlno I inpoitiuil an a nimmth aurfiue In thrUiendow In muí Ii rnnlt! to uinw over

Oiling Straeta and ReadaTh nilt nnlntrn of nlllnu illy nt reel a

ar ntrlkluuly lllimtiatrd by a mrnlalnteliielit rrlntlv to Ih nnvlnn rff. inl In th roai of nprliiklluK. rrpalrlm; and i Iriinlini ntreetn lu th i llyof iiiiklitiul I 'a! iMirlmi Hi yntlulu th tont of nprlukllnif. arrurdIlia t Hi ntnlriliflil referred Inniunuiiltil In fstl.tlKl Th rnrrniuiiilIn kt eiiN'Uillliir iliirinu Hi rnoliHUI -' wan fsi.tikl. iliidiuf 111 IJ I.I Ii

wan U7ViM mid durlnu lUKt I I f.'iil.Ilr.'. whll Hie niimnird toat for Hien . ni IU1 4 Ih wan pla. nl at t I .".

In dim iiaalmt I dear llk'nrm II ntatnl thill Hi tUal tnr I'.MOII Inrlutlrd n net m inter In n Hi rnlnfiillwan piirilruliirlt hrnvy mi.l llml In

ndilltloii. ilurlnir Mnv mid .luii lullerliilu li'l i til' h ii it'll t liml to lie ium.Ii '

oil li.'. olllil of In. k nf fumta. nn tlllllI In' I l it rvprlnlltlirr for nprltiklllmttttn lra thllll llllullt rriiaoiullily hiltI. erii rpit Ird till tin other llillitlII. - i fin- - of I'D I I'J innl I'H- - CI i

rtlifliirlt dl. lllul liml k' It'i'liil'Uir tin' HIlllUlll ronl of apllnkilllLiiiiilil i'll luitr I'i'i'li iiriiilv HiiiiAltt'litl.iu ii ill- -. i i ii Ilr. I In Hir fin I

tluil tltr ii i rn iiliikiril In I 'in n

alluillrr lllilll III' prr-rl- .t ill ra aprllikltnl SI .1 III 1 I. I'M I till- - HtH't ill-

I 'It II ' lili olll'd HUT llllll'l.l unir'.if nun n'lilin rouil. nml lo lili I ill

irlliulrd Hie nil U' I ion lu lite roi oflirliikllnu ii well an very tiuiteilii1

nailiik'n lu I In t oan ttf re i mi I r I u ir anilt ti I ii it

o4vtMl.'.'.,tl't'''.v"?'"?l,., si o

pravi i ne nuKiii ny

When the nmlleti nf uui npMar.Itt.ta the loiola.

U'tirn (lie tui.mt.r luna la hela,In. in Hie tim.la: .

Wlieti II r ii'tti la lit lha eitr. r.

In tli wtiii-- nn. I iliear. itlett pM.ii. of II. e eiir' r

lUaa Itiv ton. In

Whrn tou t iii'ih na eiae lu !. V

I ii .in ll.e rtn.UIf Iml for at lit ,ii tir (o.

luna II e it'.i.ltt. vtt will kft n tl't'in ittitxl aa new, ;

tt lili a .li't.r ft i in mttl true V

Knll In in. t tl. la )uu- -

tuna ttie i'.U S1

K.tlitt.ta llt.lu.li latlaltl

ft it i li ii ii i 0 ii vim Otrú O ti 4Vrw

FARMER S PACKING

HOUSES

Important Karlora Which Can Not litlliarrxardrd Adrquate Supply

of Stork an Kaarnllal

Federal Meal In.

apertlon.

rurmrra' rouiH-rativ- meat-paikin- ir

rómpante recently have Inten orfran-ie- d

in a numlirr of rommuniliea inWinriiiinin, !owa, and Mmnenota andmor tliun a acore of olhern are re-ported to he rontemplated. Such mark-ed interent in the ponniliilitiea of

in th packing liuninpna iahciti)- - niunift'Htril in variou aectionaof the country that the Department ofAgriculture at makinir a atudy of themnvrmrnt to drlermine what condi-tion- n

are cnientiul to the aucreaa ofthin plnn of cooperation and to itiverntinnal counsel in the matter wher-ever help ia reiuentd. Sperinlintn ofth ili'pHrtment'n O (11 re of Marketaand Kurul Oriranir.ation, working inconjunct ion with the llureau of Ani-mal Induntry, call attention to num-lirr nf important factor which cannot lie iiarirardd without daner ofdiHHppointmvnt. if not dinanter.

In the ftrat place, it in nuid thatin which cooperative packing

hnusen ar proposed ahnuld umlcratandHint one of the reiuÍKÍtea for inter-Mat- e

shipment of meata from anyplant, whether nmprative or private-ly owned, in irnvernment innpection ofth plant and or the mutual audimi itln handled. He irulatinnn of the'1'niled StuteH Hepurtmpttt of Atrrirul-- icultiirr provid that an authnri;.edKrdrnil iimprlor or Inspector-- i he

ut every plant eniraiced in in- -'

temtiit huainena. Ilefore irrantiiiK in- - j

npectiun privilia to a plant, howver,the (Internment riuiiva the planaand spei tlliatiiina of the plant, iiirlud-- ti n If nunitary Brratik'rnirnts, to con- -'

form to olllciiil atandardn. Ily com-'- .niiinicntinir with the department re- -'

Ifanlinií thin matter and with oñVialn,of the State airricultural cnlleire andexperiment ntation or other who arein a position to Kive official aid, aeriouamintakea may lie avoided ly communi-ti- e

which are on the point ofaurh an enterprise. The im- -'

pnrlancc of thia point ia evident, inview of the fact that mont of the com-pan-

recently organized, it i naidwere promoted !y peraona from out-ni- d

of the rommunitiea concerned.The Department i f Agriculture la pre-- 1

pared to fur'ish relntive toprnponvd plu'ii and ttrlcomen lniuir-i- n

re lían I i in' then i'iittra whrvrit can Ii nf nervice to th fai-- rnf any locality nr to nlllciiifH nf citiescotitcmplntitiu' - estulilinhmrnt ofmunicipal ulinttotts.

The Ramon."I nee thry Inir.eil Hull new tii.trut

yealerdny liy rulililnx jam throuxli lilnliHlr "

"TliHt una Inánime tliey wnntitl hlallr-- t nweet liniinnun lo atlrk." lialtlluoi Auierlrnu.

The Chrl.t Life.I liellcfp. nfir my rlkhteeu yeara of

elIn rllilHiillnn. Iltnl It In Imlh ininalltland rlulil tu lit Ilk Hi llllea nf theflrld and Hi tiltil of th nlr; lo allall Hint on Ima nml Kit to the inmr.wltinliiK mi uiisreu liriiaur; lo lendwliln.nl rpri tlim ii return: to allowall Hint one lina In ;.i froill un Ullpnt-lealli-

I tilla In li Hnlhland rliilil lo do, hill I knn.t Hint I eranuiilly iiinuol tin It. purily In? aune I

am liny, arlllah uu.l lirn rl Iran, Put I

think finí more lirnimo I nm wenkmnl npprelU'iinlv and lirratln llMounhnlilln of tliiumlil and m llon now La-

conic luntlni'tlt prt iit my lit Inn bythe truth I rtoKtil Mtii'Ktirel HIMkbey Ken.lnll In Atliintk' Monthly.

( hrinllan A Co.. INSl'K Wt'K.

Oil resisted istire money saved!Get to know

PENNSYLVANIA

vacuum! CU WIRESKM 'KM Kl ATI S MX 10V IIAI.I AS TKX AS SI

W KAVKII S 0 H.I.Kf AUI Siail. . M.

U.I. V ( I I M ( I I' IIIIKS CI AR.

IMHIi SIX TIK11SAM MII.KSKIIKtlMK TdliAY.

I'KNSI.AM KI HIIKU ( O.I M:02 A M

WeaversGarage

SJ""

& Irol IPB.PHIUJP5 OPPENHEIM

kvr an rt i ttf.e ona r woodJov.llaad from th rhote Piar of the Rama Nam. Produced by the Uolvaraalrllm Manufacturing Company.

THIRD INSTALLMENT

YNOPSIt.

In her annriiTianl at tha Latanri e"lklaualiter of lird Anlileluh, la munleradind I li AalileUh dlntnonil nerklaee ato-en. Th Ni'W York leillre plnce the eaaen tha han.la of Hauford Uutat. knownind feared an Ilia ntaaler erltnlnolnaiat of .

he wnrld He taken lntirn. Klia'a maid,to hla nwn apnrtinenla and Itirounti hyno-- l

n and the uae of elerlro-telepnthl- e ap! nnra her eotina.-tl.i- wllh therima, re. nvfra in ntnntonna ann arrenta

the murderer. Maedouaal, lnnra'a hua-tan-

lhniia;h nanrly trnpried In hta deathia a touah lanemanl house whll ennaaedn tha work Ignora beeomea nna ofJuoat'a aaa'atanls The dalet-llv- la railedn (O Invenllffnle tha theft nf the aaaletnnjf an ape nf Lord Aahlelah Maednuanl i

eaenpea wnlle nn nla way In prlann. Atrtna of dlamnnda a mratertotialy aintan

Irom Mra. Hhalnln.l.ll durlna: a

THK POCKET WIRELESS.

CHAPTER VIII.

Mr. Ranford Queat aat In hla favorita ,

hair, hla cigar Inclined toward tha j

left hand corner of hla mouth, hi at- -

lentlon riveted upon a antn'l Inatrn-men- t

which ba aupportlna uponhla knee. H glanced aeroa the roomto where Lenora waa bending ovarher deak.

"We've dona tt thia tima, youngwoman." he der'nred triumphantly."If all O. K . working like littlepeach."

Lenora roa and cama toward him."I that tha pocket wlreleaarHe nodded."I've had Morrlnon out at Harlem

all tha morning to teat It." ha toldher. "I've lent him at leant balf adoten meaaaa.ee from thl eaay chair,and got ti e repllea How ara you getting on with tha coder

"Not ao badly for a atupld peraon,"Lenora replied.

I.aura, who had been buay withartma papar at tha farther end ofth room, cam over and joined them.

"Bay, It'a a dandy little affair, that.Mr. Queat." ah exclaimed. "I hadtry with It, day or ao ago. Jim tookto m from Fifth avenue."

"We've got It tuned lo a ahade now,"Quest declared. "Riulpped with thiaalmple little device, you ran apeakto me from any bur up to tea or adojen mile."

Queat roa lo hi feet and movedreatleaely about the room.

"Ray, girl," ha confed. "thl lathe flrat time In my life I h- -e beenl.i a lis Ilk thl. Two ciar on handand nothing doing with either of them.Crtmlnnloglit, Indeed! Who bogI thlr

Queat had paud nddnly In frontof aa oak aidebonrd whlrh stoodagain! tha wall. Orcni ring a poaltlon upon It of ome pro 'llnenca waaa small nlnck box, whine preaencethere seemed to him unfamlllnr.Ijittra came over tn h's aide andlooked at It alao In puttied faahlnn.

"Never aaw It before In my life,"ahe answered.

Queat gruntod."H'm! No onn elae ha bn In

tb room, and It hann't been emptyfor more lhn ten mlnntea," ha

"Well, let' seo v b it Inalda,anyway "

He lifted off th lid. There waanothing In the Interior hut a aheetof paper folded "I Qu- at amnothedIt out with hla band. Thry all leanedover and read th following worda.written In an ohvlnualy dlaguliedband:

Tru hav ainhnrke on a pew atndvanthro It ev What rhnrit'teria tc ntrl' envou niont fnrrlMy in rnnnefiton wllh I

Cunnlna" Toe na .. nii- -i hmha pkifinr la "A'hy nut ttraiu ( th be-

gin una''Th not waa unalgpnd. hut In the

not where a aliMin'i 't niluhl havebeen there Kan a ro'tt'h pen drawingif two hnnda. ai'h fnr xindd,talon faahlnn nn nuiiigly, aa tl.nughpolaed to strike at rorn unaen enemy Queat. after thrlr flrat momentof a'tinef rilnn. whlatlrd anfl'y.

"i hr linn. la!" he muttereit."Vhit hnnda"" l.enora akd'Th handa tluil gripped Mr Rheln-hnl.-

by the throat." h remindedhem "Pon't ou rememher? Hand

without arnis"There was ntiolhr brief, almnat d

aliene Then I.aura broke Intopirh"What I want to know la," h de- -

muniled. "who brought the thingut in?"

"A moat daring exploit, anyway,"Queil declared "If we could answrrvour queat Ion. Laura, w could aolvethe whole riddle. We are up agalnatsomething, and no nilatnt-e.- "

"The bind which placed that boxthere," Queat continued alowly. "I

'capable of even more wonderfulthing We must b cautlou. Hello!"

Tha door had opened. The profes-sor stood upon the threshold

"I truat that I have done right Incoming up?" he Inquired

"Quite right, profaaaor." Quest il

liim. "They know well choukqlowtintntrs that I am alwaya at humoia you fume In."

I - "Ions to train." th pro--

'

BEING SUOWN AT THE AIR IX) ME

there ta any now of my ssel.ton."

"Not yet, profeaaor, I am aorry tay," Quest replied. "Coma In and shut

the door."'There la a young lady here," hr

aid. "who caught ma up upon thelanding. Sha, too, I believe, wlshosto a you."

He threw open the door and stoodon ona aide. A young woman cama little hesitatingly Into the room. Herhair wa plainly brushed back, and

h wore tha severe dress of Ih Sal-

vation Army."Want to me, young ladyT

Quest asked.She held out a book."My nam la Mis Qulgg," she said

"I want to ask you for a subscrip-tion to our funds,"

Quest frowned a little."Very well, Miss Qulgg. you shall

hav a donation. I am buy today, butrail at th same hour tomorrow andmy aecretary ahall have a check readyfor you."

Tha girl imlled her gratitude.The profeaaor laid hi hand upon

her arm aa ahe paaaed."Young lady," ha observed, "you

eem very much In carnea', about yourwork."

"It la only the people In earnest,air," ahe aniwered, "who can do anygood In the world. My work I worthbeing In earnrit about"

"You compel my admiration. My

most reaped ful admiration. May I,

too. be permitted?"H drew out a nocketbonk and

paaaed over toward ber a little wad ofnote.

'It la o kind of you," h mur-mured. "Wa never hava any heiltatlon In accepting money. May I knowyour nam?"

"It la not neeesiary," th professoranswered. "You can enter me," beaddd, a b held open the door forher, "aa a friend or would you prefer

pseudonym?""A pseudonym. If you please," ahe

begged. "We hav so many who sendus sums of money as frlsnds. Anythingwill do."

The professor glanced around tharoom.

"What paeudonym ahall I adopt?"ba ruminated. "Shall I say that an ouksideboard gives you five hundred do-llars Or a Chippendale aofa? Or,"ba added, bla eyes reeling for a mo-

ment upon the little box, "a blackbox?"

Tha two girls from tha other aid ofthe table sturied Even Queat swunguddenty around. The profeaaor aa

though pleased with hi fancy, noddedaa hla fingí n played with the lid.

"Yea. that will do very nicely." bedecided. "Put m dowo 'Black Bog,'five hundred dollar. "

Th girl took out her book and be-

gan to write. The profeaaor, with alittle farewell bow. rrosned Ih roomtowsrd Quest. Lenora moved towardtha dcor.

"Let ma sea you out," she ssld totha girl pleanantly.

Lenora opened the door. Both girlsstarted Only a few leet awar Crulgwaa standing, his head a little thriulforward. For a moment the quirt

of his manner seemed to bsvadeserted blrn. II imcd at a lo forword.

"What do you want?" Lenora de-

manded."I wa walling for my mailer,"

Craig explained."Why not downstairs?" Lenora

asked sukplclously. "You did not comaup with hint."

"I inn Striving th profeaaor In hlaautomobile." Craig explained. "It oc-

curred to me lh:it If he were going tobe lung her I should hive lime to goand order another tire It Ii of noronae.unre, though. I will go downaud wait In th cur."

Lenora stood at the lop of the stairsand watched him dlnappear. Then shewent thoughtfully buck lo her workTh professor and Qui st were talkingat Hi farther end nf the room.

"I was In hopes, In grcgl hopes," theprofessor admitted, "that you mighthave heard aomething I promlat d tocall at Mrs. Kuc inholdl'a this after-noon."

(Jin nt shook his head"There Is nothing to report at (res-

ent. Mr Anhlrlgh," he announced"Dear me," th profeaaor niurmu'ed.

"this Is very disappointing. Is therno clue, Mr. Quest no clue at all?"

"Not a ghost of one," Quest acknowl-edged. "1 am as far off solving thamystery of the disappearance of yourSkeleton and Mra Hhelnholdt'a neck-lac- o

as 1 bsve ever been."Tha profeaaor took a courteous leave

of them all and departed Lenorarrosned tha room lo where Queat waaseated

"Mr Quest," she naked, "do you believe In Inspiration?

"I attribute a large amount of mysuccess," Quest replied, "to my pro-found belief In It."

"Then lot me tell you." Lenora con-tinued, "that I have ona, and a veryatrong or Do you know that hn

SEE IT at Al ROOMS WEDNESDAY

tn profeaaor" servant, Craig, waathere, listening r

"Inspector French ha had bla menwatching Craig ever since th night ofthe robbery," quiet i v remarked Quaat"What that? Answer tha telephone,Lonora."

Lenora obeyed."It'a Inspector French." aha an--

nounced. "Ha wants to apeak toyou."

Queat nodded and beld out bla bandfor the receiver.

"Hello, rrenchl" ba axclalmad."Anything freahr

"Nothing much," waa tha answer.''Ona of my men, though, who haaheso up Mayton avenua way, broughtIn aomathing I found rather Interest-ing thl morning. I want you to comaround and ae It."

"Go right ahrad and tell ma aboutit," Queat Invited.

"You know we'v been shadowingCraig." tha Inspector continued. "Notmuch tuck up till now. Fellow seemsnever to leave bla master's aide. Wahsve had a couple of men up there,though, and one of them brought In acurious-lookin- g object be picked upJust outside the back of the professor'sgrounds."

"What la th thing?" Quest asked."Well. I want you to eo whether

vou agree with me." French went on."If you can't coma round, 111 coma toyou."

"No neceaalty." Quest replied."We've got over titila dlfflcultle ofthat aort. Laura, Just tack on thpbototrlceme," ha added, holding thrtver awny for a momrnt. "Onmoiii.'iii, There tbat'a right,"ha ndded, aa Laura, with deft fingerarranged what seemed to ba asenaltltrd mirror to the Inatrn-men- t.

"Now, French, hold op tharticle Juat In front of tha re-

ceiver. There, that'a right. HoldIt atesdy. I've got tha forua of Itnow. Ray, French, where did you aaythat wa found V

"Just outside the professor' backgate," French grunted. "But you're notkidding me"

"It'a a finger from the professorskeleton you've got there," Quest In-

terrupted.Quest hung up the receiver. Then

ba turned toward hla two assistants"Another finger from the profes-

sor's skeleton." he announced, "haabeen found Just outside his grounda.What do you suppose that means?"

"Craig." Lenora declared confi-dently.

""ralg on your life," Laura echoed."Bay. Mr. Quest, I've got an Idea."

Quest nodded."Go right ahead with It.""Didn't the butler at Mra. Rhetor-nid-

i's say thai Craig belonged to aservant's club up town? I know thplace well. me go and If I

can't Join and pick up a I'ttl Informa-tion about th man. He must hav anight out sometimes. Let's And outwhat he do'-s- ? How's that?"

"Capital!" Queat agreed. "Get along,Laura And you. be added,"put on your hat. We ll take a ridtoward Muyton avenua."

CHAPTER IX.

Th exact snot where th bone ofth mlarlng skeleton was discovered,wai einlly located. It waa abouttwnty yards from a gate whlrh ledInto the bark part "f the professor'grounds. Qupst sated very llttltima before arriving at a decision.

'The discovery of the bonea aonear the professor's hume," ba decid-ed, "cannot be coincidence only. Wwill wast no lima out here, Lenora.W will search the grounds. Comon."

It was bard to know which way toturn. Every path waa choked withtangled weeds and bushes. They wan- -

WWT a.. ,i rvT.'i Vll

r.k' - 31

JU ti- r;i"V it .j -

In Front of Thm Crouched an Uarscognixabl Crsstur.

dared snout almost aimlessly for near-ly hslf an hour. Then Quest camto a sinldim standrtlll. l.enora grippedhis arm They had both hrd thsum sound a queer, rrooulng cry,half plaintive, half angry.

"What's that?" he exclaimed.Lenora atlll clung to hi arm."I bate thl. p;n." ah whlipered.

"It lrrlfle tn. What are we look-ing for, Mr. Queat?"

"Cnn'l aav thnt I know exactly," thlatter anewercd. "but I guess wellAnd out wti.re that cry came from.Bounded to ma uncommonly Ilk a hu-man effort."

I BEING 8U0WNaTteAIRD0MC

ft

i y .r8

1 n oagjlijtay.ljy "" Jl Ursa

"The Hut, Proftssorl

tar m Iba hedge, whim they evirteafor e few yards until they fnuud anopening Then Quest gave vent to aIHtla eiclamatlon. Immediately Infront of them was a small hut, builtapparently of sticks and bumbooa,With a stronger framework behind.Ths sloping roof waa grass-grow- and

ntwlned with rushes. Tbe only apol- -

0(ty for window waa a queer littlebola set quit clnaa to the roof,

k t There was a rude looking door, but' Queat, on trying It, found It locked.

i Tbey walked around the place, but' found no oilier opening. All the tima

from Inside they could henr queerscuffling aounda. l.enora's cheeks(raw paler. '

"Must wa stayT' she murmured. "Idon't think I want to h..t's

Mr. Quest? Mr. Quest"She clung to Ills iirm. They wera

opposlla tha III He aperture hlhserved as a window, nnd at that mo-

ment It suddenly fra - ed the fare ofa creature, human lu features, diaboli-cal In eipresslon.

"Bay. thut'a some face!" ha re-

marked. "I d hate to spoil It."v Even aa he spoke It disappeared.

"We've got to net Inside there.Lenora," ha announced, stepping for- - j

ward.She followed him silently. A few

turns of the wrist mid the door yield-

ed. Keeping Lenora a little behindhim, Quest giited around cnc rly.

In front of hlni, clad only In aloin cloth, with hunched up shoulders,a necklace around Us neck, with bias-

ing eyes and ugly, gleaming teeth,crouched aome unrncognlsuble crea-- .

ture, human, yet Inhuman, a monkey,and yet a man. Tuure were a coupleof monkeys swinging by their talisfrom a bar, and a leopard chained tca ataple In tuo ground, walkinground and round In tbe far corner,anapping and snarling every timebe glanced towarda tbe newcom-er- a.

The creature lu front of himstretched out a hairy band toward

club, and gripped It Quest drewlong breath, ilia eyea ware aet bard.

"Drop that club," be ordered.Tbe creature suddenly sprang up.

Tbe club waa waved around bla head."Drop It." Quest repeated firmly.

"To will alt down In your corner. YouwlU aleep."

It Tbe club allpped from tbe hairy Angara. The tense frame, which badbean already crouched for the spring,waa suddenly relaxed. Tbe kneeatrembled.

"Back to that corner," Quest or-

dered, pointing.Slowly and dejectedly, tbe ape-ma- n

crept to where be had been orderedand aat there with dull,

atara. It waa a new force,this, note of which be bad felt theanperman raising the voice of author-ity. Qaeet touched bla forehead andfound It damp. Tbe strain of thosefew seconds bad been intolerable.

"I don't think these other anímalawUI hurt," be said. "Ufa have alook around the place."

Tbe search took only a few mo-

menta. Tbe monkeys ran and Jumpedround them, gibbering aa though with

pleasure. The leopard watched themalways with a anarl aud an evil ll,;btIn his eye.

They found nothing unusual untilthey came to the distant corner, wherea huge piano bos lay on Ita aide withthe opening turned to the wall.

"Tola la where tbe brute sleeps, Isuppose. Quest remarked. Well

i turn It arouud, anyway."They dragged It a few feet away

from tbe wall, so that the openingfaced them. Then Lenora gave a littlecry aud Quest stood suddenly still.

"The skeleton I" Leuora shrieked."It's the skeleton!"

It waa a skeleton so old that the'' ' bonos had tamed a dull gray. Queat

glanced towards tbe bands., "Little Angers both missing." be

muttered."Remember the message?" abe

Where tbe skeleton la, tbenecklace may be also."

Quest nodded shortly."Well search."

A Tbey turned over everything In theplace fruitlessly. There waa no algnof tbe necklace.

"Ton get outalde, Lenora." Queat di-rected. "I'll Just bring this beaatfound again and then we'll tackle tbeprofessor."

Quest turned towarda tbe creature,which crouched still huddled up In Itssorner.

"Look at me," be ordered.Tbe creature obeyed. Once more Its

frame Beamed to grow more virile andnimrnl

BFINQ SHOWN AT THE AIRDOME

The hut la on rirel"

"tou need aleep no longer," QueatMid. "Wake up and be yourself."

Tbe effect of these words waa In-

stantaneous. Almost aa be spoke, thecreature crouched for aprlng. Therewaa wild hatred In Ita close-se- t eyes,the snarl of something Aendllke In Itscontorted mouth. Quest slipped quick-ly through the door.

"Anyone may have that for a pet!"he remnrked grimly. "Come. Ignora,there's a word or two to be said to theprofeseor. There's something lu re willneed a little eiplunatlon."

lie lit a cigar as they struggled bnrkalong the puth. I'reHcntly tbey reucliedthe untidy-lookin- avenue, end n fewminutes later arrived at the house.

Quest searched In vuin for a bell.They wnlked round the plana Therewere no signs of any human life. Theycame back to the front door. Questtried Hie handle and found It open.Tbey passed Into the ball.

"MoHpituble sort of place, anyway,"he remarked. "We'll go In and wait,Lenora."

They found their way to the atudy,which seemed to be the only habitableroom. Lenora glanced around at Itaatrange contenta with an expression al-

most of awe.A small motor car passed the win-

dow, driven by Craig. The professordescended. A moment or two later beentered the room. He gazed fromQuest to Lenora at Arst In blank sur-prise. Then he held out his hands.

"You have good news for me, myfriends!" he exclaimed. "1 am aure ofIt. How unfortunate that I waa not athome to receive you! Tell me don'tkeep me In íuapense. If you pleaseyou have discovered my skeleton T"

"We have 'ound the skeleton," Questannounced.

For a single moment tbe newcomerstood aa though turned to stone.

"My skeleton!" he murmured. "Mr.Quest, I knew It. You are the great-est man alive. Now tell me quicklyI want to know everything, but thisArst of all. Where did you And theskeleton? Who waa the thief?"

"We found tbe akeleton, professor,"Quest replied, "within a hundred yardsof thla bouse."

The professor'a mouth waa wideopen. He looked like a bewilderedchild. It was aeveral seconds beforebe spoke.

"Within a hundred yarda of thlabouae? Then It wasn't stolen by oneof my rivals?"

"I should say n.'t." Quest admitted."Where? exactly did you And UP

the professor Insisted."I found It In a hut," Queat said,

"bidden In a piano box. I found there,also, a creature a human being, Imuat call hlui In a state of cap-tivity."

"Hidden In a piano box?" the pro-feseor repeated wonderlngly. "Why,you mean In Hartoo's sleeping bos.then?"

"If Mr. Hartoo la the gentleman whotried to club me, you are right." Questadmitted. "Mr. Asblelgh. before wego any further I must ask you for anexplanation aa to tbe presence of thatperson In your grounds?"

The professor hesitated for mo-ment. Then he slowly crossed theMom, opened the drawer of a malíescritoire, and drew out a letter.

"You have beard of Sir WilliamRu.vHinore, the president of tbe HoyaJsoclely?" hn ahkud.

Queet nodded."Thla letter la from him," the pro-

fessor continued "You haj b.tterread It."

The criminologist read It aloud. Le-nora lookod over bla shoulder:Ta Prof Kctgnr Anhldsh, N-- York

My Hear lTul-u.- it: Yoi.r tui.ifni'ili--- .

tlon sraUllog snd sinains me. I can earno mure. II full lu your lot to dl..n. r(he skeleton at tm snthmiHiM, a marvel-ous thing, In Its way. and needing onlyUs corollary to form the T''uit ,. ,.uv.ery sine the dark agre Vow y,,u t,- -

me that In tha parnni, of llan.H., the laatvl the Inyamo rae ol South Am. rlc i. y.oiliava fi ui..l iht corollary You liuva sup.piled the mlaitng link. You ar In a isitien to give i.i ida wordt a ,lrilta aridluKlral rsplanatlnn ui tha avoluilnn ofmau. 11 me (Iva you ona word of warn-ing, profaaanr. brfore I wrue y.oi tit(reaiar length on tha matter. Anthro-- p

h'Kl"ts are aftlleiad mora. ven. tlmn anymhar ran ef aelnniin.- - man, Willi leiilnuayHoard your aecret wall, hat tha honor ofthis discovery should he l... n from you.

WIUUAM BAYBMOIUO.

The profersor nodded deliberatelyas Quest flnlshed the letter.

"Now, perhapa you can understand,"be said, "why It was neceas ry to keeyHartoo absolutely bidden. Inmonth's time my papers will be ready.Then I shall electrify the world. Ishall write not a new page but a newvolume across the history of science.I shall"

Tbe door waa suddenly thrown open.

SEE IT at AIRDOME WEDNESDAY

Craig sprsng In, no longer tbe selleoutalned, perfect n.an servant, batwith the face of some wild creatureHta shout waa one aliaos t ol agony.

"Tbe hut. profesaorl Tbe but is os-

are!" be cried.His appearance on tbe threshold

was like a Aaah. They heard his fly-

ing feet down the hall, and withouta moment's hesitation they all fol-

lowed. The professor led the waydown narrow and concealed path,but when they reached the little clear-ing In which the hut was situated,tbey were unable to approach anynearer. The place waa a whirlwindof flame. The amell of kerosene wasalmost overpowering. The wild ye,,ot the leopard rose above the atrnngehalf-huma- gibbering ol the monkeyand the boarsa, baa calling ol anotliar voice, at tbe sound ol which Ia

I nora and even Queat shuddered. The- -

aa they came, breathless, to a stamstill, they saw a atrange thing

of the hut fell In, and almost Inmediately the leopard with a mightaprlng, leaped from the placejuid rahowling Into the undergrowth. Tl.monkeys followed but tbey camstraight for the professor, wrlngli.their banda. They fawned at his fetaa though trying to show hi in tlieiscorched bodies. Then for a sing,moment tbey saw the form of the apman aa be atruggled to follow tinothers Ills strength failed him, however. He fell backwarda Into the bun.trg chasm.

The professor bade them farewellan hour later, on the steps of thhouse. He seemed suddenly to hataged.

"You have done your bent. 'Quest," he said, "but fate has b en tstrong. Iteinemlier tills, tbouiih. I

la quite true tliat the cunning of llaitoo muy have mudo It possible fi111 in to have stolen the skeleton anto have brought It back to Its hldlnplaco, but It was Jealousy cruel, bi-

ta!, foul Jealousy which smeared tl.walls of tliut hut with kerosene sist light to It. Tho work of a Intime, my dreams of scientific I mino,tu lit y, have vanished In these llames

He turned slowly away from tlieiand reentered the House, guest auIgnora minie (heir way down the avnue and entered the autom in iuwas waiting for them, aitnont In s

lence. The latter glanced toward bicompanion, us they drove off.

"Bay, this has been a bit tough toyou," he remarked. I'll nave to cutsomewhere and get you a gluss owine."

Bhe tried to smile but her strengt'waa almost gone. They drove to srestaurant and sat there for aome III ,

tin time. Lenora soon recovered heicolor. She even had courage to spea.of the events of the afternoon whetthey the automobile.

"Mr. Quest," Lenora murmured"who do you suppose burned tbe hutdown?"

"If I don't say Craig, I suppose youwill," be remarked. "I wonder whetuer Laura's bad any luck."

Tbey were greeted, aa they enteredQuest's room, by a familiar little ticklog. Queat smiled with pleasure.

"It's the pocket wireless," be dedared. "Let me take down the mes-

sage."He spelled It out to Lenora, who

atood by his side:

Have Joined servants' eluk dtosuts4your builvr. I'rals t vlalior heretan yaare sao, roni-- s now occasionally.Thurxlay atanlnsa most likely time. atiaJIwait hare on chants of seeing him.

"flood girl, that," Queat remarked."She's a rare sticker, too."

He turned away from tbe Instru-ment and waa crossing the room to-

ward bla elgar cabinet Suddenly beetopped. He looked Intently towardsthe sideboard.

"What la Itr Lenora asked.He did not answer. She followed

the direction of hla gate. Exactly In

tbe aame spot aa before reposed an

I I

Waa. Mrs. Nhelnholdt'e Necklace.

other but somewhat larger black boxof tbe same ebape and material aa theprevious one.

"8sv, who put that there?" be demandod.

Lenora shook ber bead."I locr.ed the door when we went

out," she assured blm.Queat took the bog Into hla handy

and removed tbe lid. It seemed halffull of cotton-woo- l. On the top werea few linea of writing and beneaththem tbe signature of the partedbands. He road the form out slowly:

Prep all Investlgstlon. The hands thstiwtura thasa Jewsls oommanS M.

Queet raised tbe cotton-wool- , lieneeta lay Mrs. Rbalaholdt's necklace

TO BB CONTIWEU.i

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HELLEBORE FOR FLIES

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the typhoid or houne fly has beenfound in powdered helloliro by scien-tists of the department Flies laytheir eirir' chiefly in stable manure.Powdered hnllcliore mixed with waterand sprinkled over the mnnurc willdestroy the larvae which are hatchedfrom the eirirs. Since powdered helle- -

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'

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It has long been knov ' ' "'breed in manure, but previou. inetliou i

of destroyiiif the larvae t ...use of strong chemicals have been!open to the objection that the treat-- 1

ment under some conditions lessened'the fertilizing value of the manure or1actually injured vegetation. This is'not true of powdered hellebro. Cov-- i'

eminent experiments have sbevn thnfthe hellebro is entirely dec, ,.. .i ',the course of the fermenta '

manure, and that even ii,(inutilities it does no hum tthe larvae it is intended ... .. y.Chickens in manure treatedwith it suffer no ill effects.

pound of powdered belle-- 'bore mixed with III pillions of wateris Kiilliricnl to kill the Inrvuu in H

liusliels, or 10 cubic feet of immure.'Hie i:ii.tuie should be spiinkled cure-- ,fully over the pile, esptviul attentionbeing paid to the outer edges. Inmost pimes hcllctiore is obtuiuulile in10(1 pound lots at u cost of 11 centsa pound, 'ibis makes the cost of thetieuliiient o little less than seven-tenth- s

ol a cent per bushel of manure.A liberal estimule ol the output ofmanure is two bushels a day perbuse. 'I lie money nvohvd is there-- !fore trilling in comparison with thebenefits to the individual ami thecommunity from the practical elimin-ation of the discase-sptvndlli- g rly.

Although fresh manure is the favor-- 1

iU-- breeding spot, liles lay their eggsin other places as well, such us out-- ,houses .refuse piles, etc. In Ibexotiluees. from which mi million is liiLeiito spread on t be fields, .

saving muy be effected .ough ti esubstitution of borax f tenv.ler dhellebore. Applied at tin . .c ofpounds for H bushels of tioruxis as effective us powdered helleborein killing the lurvue but costs lessthan half u cent for cuch bushel of1inunure treutvd. In lurger uantuies,however, or when the immure itselfis spreud at a greuter rute than 151tons to the acre, some tocrops muy result, (.urge i,. :J "fmanure arc often used b" mnrkcl'gardeners and other, am .

(lunger of carelessness in apply-ing the borax. The use i. ...reexpensive but safer hellebore is there-fore recommended for the treatmentof niunurc. Untax is recommendedfor all other refute in which fliesmuy luy eggs.

Scientists who have been working;for years to eliminate the fly are con-vinced thul the use of one or theother of these simple measure- - is apublic duty wl erever manure and re-

fuse exist. unitarians, however,strongly advise, the removal of refuseheaps or other unnecessary rubbishor breeding places for flies. In breed-ing pluces which cannot be thus dis-posed of, such as manure or stables,the daily use of powdered helleborewill keep the flies from breeding in1these favorite breeding grounds. Thebest results are obtainable in a com-- jmunity where everyone cleans up hispremises, traps or kills the flies, amisystematically treats the manure andother breeding pluces with powderedhellebore.

The fly is not only a nuisance tohuman beings ai d live slock, it spreadsdisease and tilth and is a menace topublic beulth which cun not be tol-

erated in tbe face of u demonstratedremedy, I letuils of the experimentswith oilier ir.foi niation on the subjectare contained in a professional paper,llulletin -- l"i of the department.

TIIK M VII. OKOKIt t lTIF.N.W il I in in Allen White in Kmporia

Caetle.The limn who buys his goods ill

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We are nil neighbors Industrially, Inour homo town, and the man whnisends away for his goods Is not oneof us. He is of another industrialsystem and deserves no local support.The fact that this is economicallywrong Is recognized by the mail or-

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TOTAL ANNUAL KXPLNSi: I'OR STl'DKNT, SlirWrite today for Illustrated book W. Ask for the University Newa; amonthly magaslne mailed free on request.

Address DAVID R. liOYD, President,University of New Meilro,

Albuquerque, N. M.

f

JL)t (telaba, (ínrrrtiiWm. H. MiIUm. Kdltar and ManMy

nrriCIAL PAI'KIt EDDY COUNTY.

CarUbad, N. M Friday, July 9, 19IS.

SUBSCRIPTION KATKS.Una year in advanca $l.f0Six months in advance 1.00Three month, In advance ... .0Sample copian, 6 cent.No aulmcriplion taken utile! paid

In advance.

ADVERTISING KATf.H.I'er inch of column, run of paper,

16c. per insertion.Time contract and regular ads,

12 I lie per insertion.Ixml notice plain fare type per

line, 6c. per insertion..IM-a- l notices black fare type per

tine, 10c per insertion.No local notice received by mail

or communication ordering advertisemcnt answered unless acrnm- -

fianied by cash, for thirty words orrenin and five cent fur every

ix word additional. All local noticesmini be paid for when ordered or theywill not be inserted.

Kubncrihers are notified that the.date after their ñamen it the onlynotice they will receive, an J the Current will not be sent after the date,no marked, a for instance, "JohnSmith I jan-I- hnwi that the n

of John Smith expire Janary I, l'.ilH, and will be discontinuedat that date unless paid f ir anothervear.

I OI' NT Y DIVISION SCHEME.

A reNolution wan offered in theWednesday meet in if of the Countyhoard by (niniiiissiiincr Wright toChange the commissioner district,,one to inc lude nil the ternti ry ast fthe I'eron ami another to take in theterritory one mile north of l.iikewood,and west of river, mid the other froma line ninth of l.nkewood to the coun-ty line on the Honlh mid west of theriver. Tins would put mure than twotbirdH the urea of the county in tl.iiliKtrict cast of the river nn oneeleventh in the northwest corner Willithe Imliiiirc south of l.akcw ml r It'sthan one fourth m I ) ( arlslcd iltstrnt. This would give the north westroí ni r urn thud of the mini fuml-liiil one thud of tin ntrnl nf thetiiaiiarcmoiit of the whole county whileMint Hiitioit east of the nver wnuMhave only one third of the mini fiimlto builil minis Willi iiml i i iisi'l"iah!vover two thirds of the 'ireii of

to builds mini, in and unuhlI led lint one commissioner who vunthlbiive but one third voice in t be miniuiemeiit of lhi coin.lv while rcp'e-sen- t

mi' two thuds of the men of thecounty.

This looks like an attempt to rewe the old cotintv ilivi.mii hcIi mewhich luis I n ilead mil buried for H

I iilnlier of veins ami - calculateii tostir iii xli-'- f and I imal Icilimr

r a matter in wlrch rim' tenth nfI i lile iff' nuil I v a ni II rlvat ied As i is I'e nlains cunt tc

I Hie hae ii 'i"i"i"i I'll' ii on th e boiuillis it fonre'lv 'ad I ' '"'tii'i' ii cmMl .lonei ii v in f ll v t'rti let w' li b 1 un el I i'lv

T'' show cleiilv :' l" t'eI on i' I vi n '' I ' e e il

t I e a ' i t i t mini a .1

yell :'l '''lit the nlnilis districtWould ci lit in n '' tnni slips, the fur.I I inl ill I .il on' I I' Ut'sllilis II

the Alte ill d' I' ! I'lit I ; t' i' .'II less I linn in. c i leventh tlie aiea'

It is II .' , Mil V t'.li t'lltI ' ll ' tcfu-i-'- I" c .ill' ll'V s

l"l III f II' III ll '.I '""I I I'll' ) ! ' V

nl'llne vbii'h l.l.l '"II 'v til I"t 'le t i. rl- of Ii. iliv.'l'i of (liecount' If nn v I'lii'l c i tu I." Illinlei wo' 'i' ' I'll - "s I I,, tu ii'.im' theI lit d lililí" d l l " I I.'.. I

M,ct h ill. n'll i mi' s wli-'- wini'ilt'iJ Ih tin Ii (lie 1'iiii-- ifCarlsbad the sunn' n is il me ini .ice ,i tv n't. It. "well lie conntv nut. This "o'lld nuike lilt a very"lielrii'lirii' irrrici ' in ll' an'ii

if the ili.iiicis h'lc i ".out'! e,iili l.. ""i.i, il ioi in tie di lints .inni.leral'ly.

TI.,.,-,- s ,'i,iis",, nl Ii- f ';ii 111 plcse.lttliHt the feiniail li'ply tn the lat .'o'cI'f the I nit d Stiili s iiiiiv liol be salis-- f

i ', ! hi .1 H iil nfiei all ilipliitnaiiirelatioiis with lii'iiiuiiiy nay bo s"v

e,i " ' K' "Ii h 'I ili muís, suchlis Cecil Spiini liiie can ii lliii i'ic tinI'll'Slilcnl tu Ineiik Ullh ficliinilV itvill I. il'i'ie and Hat is tin' da I.i.n

cms tu lime the cu of t' e .i. s". ,(I.I pii's.nt.

oTic tni ii l''. , ;n';, " i I V.

J 'iie ai I I .. K I !' ' . 'i.'. ;'.' in'i I

t le .'i I w ri in ! I In ci cI'M'-tc- I" be tiino'e.1 flolu ll" il,I milli'lil tn III. Inn us nil 'c listI is I" I'll pill'lcil ll U lll'.pii mMc InI lllo e I lie minies.

Th" 111111' clunk uhu liicil In KulJ I' M.ili'.ili o inc. I to ii,ifie en pit nl at W ll itincti'll illid s'l,1

eili.l in dung ...i .i.lcinl.lc dunlin'and ufli l be Iiml ilu te nil h, couldI i.allv I'lu'ini'K i oiiiiiiiIIc.I -- un i.lIf 1)11 I lie i mils won 1,1 be inIi ...Int lev tin y uuiilil unís,. Jess i

peiiM fui roii let inn.

ll 1111)11 seem front the innnyof the law that many me net

aaie that the taking of a ., y. leIniitur cy.'h in ttuto fur a shmt diek d letiirmng same lavs the utTei ilcrliuble tu a line nf f ulll ? " tn flilii,but such is the cane. Justice I'. II.IlichsiiU U'lieve all nhould be in.i.lc

ware of the law fur if any ate1'iuiiL'lit hefure him be will le cum-- I

died to assess the tine.

limita, ex dictator nf Mexico, wasplaced In jail in HI I'm 11, Tcvus, wnhlive nf his ('iimpaniiina. lie will betried in San Antonio fur breach nfJcOtmliiy lii.Mly.

1

During the past week or two theAlbuquerque Journal haa been pub-lishing In ita editorial column editor-ial from the editora of th leadingweekliea of the (late, the subject being"What New Mexico Mont Need .

The following editorial were pub.liahed thi week:

COOPERATION NEEDED IN NEWMEXICO.

If Vvery city, town and county inNew Mexico would unite in a move-ment to advanca the IntereiU of thestate at large there would ne adued

n Impetu to the growth and pro,perity of New Mexico that would bemarveloun.

In community build-ing, whenever practiced, han had ex-

cellent renultn. Theure I no reanonwhy the plan nhould not work wellwith counties, citien and townn. Withall nf New Mexico working toward acommon end nurrenn a a natural con-sequence would reward urh effort.

The o.. l.e-.n- oni Bli.f - engnt'cdin between iivl cnnimunilie.i benetitnneither, bul, it. th e other hand, re-

tard both. Wn.it one train. i by nuchmethodn, militante againnt the otherTherefore th argument for a

propaganda 1 the mote intent, no n.i h in that it assumes

the proportion of a deirand.. Mexico in a big state. It ha

more room to trrow than han perhapnany other tata in the union. AnideI rom niiirtn now and then, the statehan made no connintent and organisedeffort to get ahead, to build for thefuture.

If the newnpapern nf the ntate an awhole would neek to further the in-

terests of their own particular com-munities and those of the common-wealth at large, instead of exploitingthe misfortune and the mistaken ofcertain section, much good would beaccomplished and a friendly Rpirit en-gendered.

The AlbuueriUe Morning Journalhas always lived up to its name an aMale-wid- e newnpKier. It mixes in thetroubles of no section; takes up thefights nf no faction, but treats all com-munities alike. It is this spurt thatmakes the paper popular throughoutNew Mexico.

we repent, is whatNew Mexico I ds. It is the remedyto rejuvenate the state and its peo-ple. Let's try it.

HON W. I.I SK.Editor Silver City Independent.

Wll T NKW MI.XICO MOST VKKIISThe crying need of New Mexico is

the eradication of race prejudice. Thestate, ul pi. is 111 the throes ofhftcroi!f minis eili.eiiship, a peopleminie up . many and divers ideas ofright and wrong. To ninny the wryalen "I assoctalioiiH with the nativeelement nppcus to be obnoxious, ai dstill if the people who take this posiHon coiiid 'oi k into the future th ymight see that their progei y mustlive iiinoiig thi ili'scei'ilants of f'enative people who have first claimupon New MeMcn, iii'd ll'iit I' m

and mu. I sciimI,,. way is the cbaiit-al'l- e

ir il l.io.'il mcw I 1.1I hi, nl , 111,11. 1.for none If the so enl'eil Americaieleiiiciil would see to it that the tint;ie I'lciiie'-- i oiv il ""'si 'i'iatiiiii in ediicatioii they them-selves desire, and take every nppn,tunity to nid the education nf tieyouth of their native neighbors, allwould be mine piosperous. If the;.'

.i-- i itl .' it wll be f 11' dfat tlu'ie is no mute of bad urd usmuch of I'oo.l in them us in their nwnelement, that the little children of thenatives I, urn just ns fast und if taughthow lo 11". I vi wine will make thebest nf ci'i'cns. If nil could liebioui-h- l together, the American

of the young would lenrn Sunn-is-

while the unlive would become anAlucinan m fact. In this mvIiiii ,

the stati' it is elilmii we l l il thiiiatiM's taking any pail in public mil-itéis simo y tlic) aie as futidlis tulil tu herd '.I'i'ether and 111 I n

k'le Aith the In. lance nf lie people. Ifthe In o I de i f e V M"l,'o Han' Inproduce f 111 - thev have onlv locunt muí' to i, noie ami shun the tin .

tie Cilliliin, Hun 111 the coin's,, ofI inn' the -- lit wi" I mule noli . I

than al pie "Hi fur Its iaiue per cent..f liuiiili i.. ami utlier 11 lines. If theXiui'iii "! eli'iiiciii 'v u l In maketaxes hii'lier they can do so allow-ing 11 lingo per cent of the pool ofen her t.'ic iiaii" in- it"lu 1ne1 ,"u.sto giuw up 111 tgituiat an. I 11 Ii Id"v ' in n the t"d it'll reapthe wliiilwinil tf they su ilc-i- t

'" "M'i' fu rll'c edilcilt inn nf theUnlives in the sections where the

Ami'iicaiis predominate ami tn..1 r a '.-- " ii..

chinch, pctfeial'ly I lie church nf thepatents, v. hoi o thev cu, leant t'e

n o lap. Ini ut s al ii iml 'l e 11 keuwled.te nf Iiml and I be n'tt.ut ly nf lilt:l iiinii' fui tonir a. - , ominui, ,, .

hat i Mi mo t .Is.M M Ml I VK.

I'ditoi t "u lent, fail I. mi, M

Wll ti V I W Ml Alt O M'KIISMOST.

Th ii'l hal. e Hiulth of New Mi'

lei is I,'oiii hiiiiinn i'oif'1'i'licttsioii.It is He iiiain fa tot it Hie tu n.ltu I ofpen .hal'li. ciiiisuinal wcallh. Tin'other factor nf such 'rli-lui- l le wealthis 1. 11111,111 ettiui. I 'i t'ci islutl.le wealthCliniiul be met l'ls", 111 ill', 'I en si', I 'V

Inili'iin e'fiut ulllc ll-- iiualltiun ofpciishnlle wealth depends upon humat' cttoi ', huillali Inl.iu

The tin c-- inn nf human elfmt inthe pi oil. I. I inn of petlshiille Weiilt'depends iipuii the envi uniiiet.t s ui 'h'lwl l'h such lillinil'l llfntt Is xpeliilcilIf the siiciul 1 in liuiiiiients aie favoiHide, sinh hiiiunn elfurl applied I"the impel tshul'le weallh wi.l iio.lin,til.' t'leateat tnuilit I of ticilst'iil'weu'lh; if un f i' i" nl I.' tie proiltiw ill U' short of Hie u' nuil .nanlunIn trulh, pu.'h sorial I'tiviiunntcntmay reach sin It a degiee of ut f ivi.ibleni'ss us to re". lei 1111. I1 i f su, hhiiiunn I'lfuit void, nl uliite huiiutt.w

(ind. in his creative wisdom, hasgiven New Mexico the two great fac-tor in the liiudticliiin nf perishableWidth, namely, imperishable v culth,

uch a land with all It contents,water, atmosphere, mulliré, mois

1

ture, etc., and human labor, human!effort. The former factor munt beaccepted and ued wherever, andfound in natura and la aubject neitherto increase nor decreae by eitherwisely directed or misdirected humaneffort; therefore, ocial environment'cannot affect thi factor of perlnhahlewealth whether nuch environment befavorable or unfavorable, but may af-

fect th necond factor of nuch wealthby Interfering with It naturally freeand unhampered activity.

The nocial environment of humaneffort, human activity, are the lntl-- itutinn nf man, chief of which la theinstitution of civil government Ifcivil government be rooted andgrounded in truth, equality, Juntlceand righteousness it will establish,maintain and promote favorable en-

vironment under which human ef-

fort will bring forth it greatest pro- -'

ru,ls an the second factor of periih-l,bi- e

wealth.More than anything else, or all

thing else, doen New Mexico need acivil government tooted and groundedin truth, liberty, juntice and right-- ;enusnenn. Such civil government wouldsecure and perprtuulo the .ocial en-

vironment of pea-- o and plenty an lhanatural product of human tffnrtwisely directed to thn end of all hu-

man aspiration and hope namely, ife,love, liberty, freedcin, fruition, fruli-- :flcatinn and nappinen. Withoutpeace and plenty of perishable wealth,all human annociut.un must be moreor less miserable.

New Mexico h u not nuch a civilgovernment nor I lie alum; in thiundesirable Oitriit.un. In tins re- -'

npect, she in by no ue-m- a ntar ofthe first magnitu Id in th blue of thingreat nation. iler chiiilren am bundchildren, not of th- - free woman I) .tof the hond-woma- Space forbidenumeration and argument here, butthese are tenable truth. New Mex-

ico neids freedom fiom these bondand chains upon her human effort.Only a conception and full realizationof the truth can free her of theseclanking chains, and nuch a concep-tion and realization can and will cometo her only through her press; there-foil- '.

New Mexico's most urgent, immedi-ate need today in, a united daily undweekly press capable of sowing theunvarnished, untainted truth; a dailyand weekly press uninfluenced bygreed und tainted money; a dully andweekly press uncontrolled by M11111-nin- n

and his political miliums; a dailyand weekly piess thut will not lick thehunts of parasites in human associa-tion; a daily anil weekly presn thutwill not cringe under the scourge ofscotpion gold; u daily und weeklypress that will not be Kridiiy to for-

eign, unwholesome, unlicalthf ill insti-tutions iiml interests; a daily undweekly pies that will not eml.la.onupon her escutcheon false and lyingdoctrines us fact nf truth; u daily ai.tlweekly press i.nil hu.s the cnuiage nftruthful seiu c to humanity in tillthut factor in lie d "ii'icrney if hu-

man association, in nil I'tat tends tothe uplift und progress of the humanrace; a duily and weekly press thutHashes burning 1111's .iige of philo-sophic, civic, economic, social tiuthsund rigltleousi.e a ilaily and .vccl: I-mpress with clean hiinil', clear luaii.s,pure in heuit, feurless in soul, con-

stant in purpose und tireless in ef-

fort.I1 niter the benign influence of such

a nulled daily und weekly press. NewMexico, with her (iod given, nutuiul,iinpci ishalile wealth, must, mid soonwould, evolve nil the greatness ofrighteous possibilitie s in human iisso-- c

int 'on with environments nf peineand plenty. Under such inlUience, tuep. ni. nal peewit would pass away anthe misty dawn before the ilnz.linglii'ht of the king of day. 1'inler suchinfluence, the establishment of nneiilit'iils, righteous regime of civilgovernment aiiuM not only become 11

In ma n possii li.ty but would soon hen fai l nf iiml p. tent factor itl. humanassociation in eipiity and righteous-ness 111 this great state of liuiiiim

from i 'hie .us human eltort.With the piissin1.' nf the politicalpeewit, the evolution of righteous civilgovernment und .he cial environ-ments of peace and plenty wou'xmark a new on the scroll nlevents puncttiuiti g the ti.,fold:ncnt fmun to the wise iii'd genial piiii..'sof his Creator innli r ll.,- soft, u i ilgent blue of New Mixico's starry ll'tn-ain- c

ut.(I W. til YKIt.

Kllilnr t 111 Vt I'll I lllell.

II" l ll 111.

-- ' I f"..d

I CutGlass

11 w v. m ski: the new

ttlSMV" tlT (il.ASS l

Mil. LEY'S ttlMiii!COME IN SK 'HIE I'HIt E

- 4 nl Wll l. HE M 1(1 iu; I

H. H. DILLEY

JEWELER

EXHIBITS OF PRODUCTS.

(A. M. Hove.)

Every community in the Peco Valley need freshen up ita exhibit offarm, orchard, and garden productthia leason. Every variety of cropgrown her may be ihown to advan-tage in glan. Tha last aeaion'i dis-

play in losing color and form and I

ready to be dumped. Bright, aound

firoduct In clean Jar with neat, nawalway attract attention.

Every community need displayof product for home tine. It costlittle and I good advertising. Butbetter still, spend a little more money!and nend an exhibit to the various

rn thia fall. It la effective advertí- -'

Ing. I

10 secure good specimen of fruitand vegetable, attention to tha mat-ter I necennary all canon. Th PecoValley grow no great a variety ofgood thing to eat that with aystemat-i- c

nelectinn a most attractive assort-ment may b arranged.

Brush up the glass jara and bar-e-ai- n

with the druggist for plenty offormaldehyde, glycerin, and otherpreserving dope for the peach, plum,'cherry, prune, grape, nectarine, pear,apple, berries, cantaloupe, beet, onion,and no on down the long lint of pro-

duct thnt thrive in the Peco Val-- ,ley.

HOl'SEI, BU. I.EfiALI.i' PASSEDIS DECISION OK SI!.

PREME COl'KTThe decision of the New Mexico su-

preme court that House Hill No.2U4, the "traveling auditor bill,",wa legally panned by the ntate legis-lature, and that nntwithstanding thenotorious and flagrant actions of thenenate majority in connection withthe passage of that bill and in thechanging of the record, it validityrnnnnt be attacked, will come, we be-

lieve, an a profound and tremendouashock to the people of the atate ofNew Mexico, remarks the New Mexi-

can, which seems to take it hard.We assume thut the member of the

supreme rourt, men whom we proper-ly assume to be of unswerving im-

partiality and entirely unaffected bypolitical con i(l"iation or ufliliations,have correctly interpreted the law andthe constitution nf the ntate. Theyurc men leuined in the law who havedevoted weeks of deliberation andconscientious study to the question atissue one f the biggest questionwe believe, with which this augustbody hui ever corf ro'ited.

It is unneces utry to review herewhat the legislature ma'urity did inthe closing ilays of the I11.1t legislu-lui-

Tlie fact are known to everyvoter in the state. The people of NewMe" iio are latiniiiir with the absolute,ruthless unserupuluti.ini' whichmarked the nf the senate ma-

jority; the open insol. nee with whichthey th'!"" theii niggled reco'd in theface of the public; they know how"it record "us hsjwked around overthe ntate; they know that the final

... I 11. k.HVi'uiig auditor' ill" occurred ufter the constitutional

' 111 f t the session; theyknow the record wnn chunged to

1. 1 1.. 1.. p.i. legul; they knownieiiil'i" n.' t' e Semite "worked

over" the record after the session hadIn.ed to make it lit the fuels; they

know that these men, dify n'.i ev ryr'i'e of nn' ',:e nionrietv ant ofllcinldecency, said to the people of New

.!. :

"What are ycu going to do nboutif"

The tiii'-e- n-- t "f " M xicosnys thut the people nf 'vi w Mi lieucan do ituthiii'; t'hiiiit it.

The New Mex:cuii .leliivec that thedecent penpl nf tiii sta'e ci'tl ll"d II

way lo prevent a recurie'ice of tli'I ! p ibsi'i.i 'e We be", i 'v liuil nut tillthe de.'b i"ti ever Ivit 1! 1'

ever le 'iiliy oiird. ..in pievent a peopie f'oiii I 'ldiiu' .vitVH t e.' m'.uis ofenforcii.'? honest v in tin. making nftheir laws. We :i.e cnVd-n- t thntthere i 11 nieiiim of 'i in '.lying an out-

raged. ;.' '..ill M.li'l.l it ' l!lg. If 11 '.thi p'us "i frau.h. ' I i .'" '."'Iiv- -

est tu ".1.1 to l'ie 'vlfaie of New.Mexico. If hi. cti'inot get riil of ucon j .i J. i 'r i,i, kern 'onuike 11 ni'.c' ry of "i- - .r'oi 'it u

"I rid .1 e l iwpn.l ' : itciv ingt'.eni i'i i'l ''C life. I he peopleif tl.is s .ii.- - h:ic I'i." 1, .,ltc. and

'vi'i'.t i' f lac t publi-

can majority of the late senate. Theirrottenness lias b.ei I'. it. ! ourface; and the supreme court holds

"it lee.liliv I'i eutlllltr.What are we gnitrr to tin f'li'Ht it?i' '. 'ii ".iini which during the

cotnir.g ci.tiijiiiirii t u'll'l rei'oivi' tileinn-- direful an I ful cnitsid

if tt.e pi' pi" nf :' e sl.itc Thep'ui.i"n f i In '.i ve "is'iil.tv hii.sli en giuuiti wof.e in I'li state furyi'li' s ... .1 ' .11' lo 1.

il musí !. 'i.'', id. The sú-

pleme court, whose upiniun we re-

s'"' 't and in nl, declares tlie lawaffords no relief. And if not, weinn iiiisulut''iv und I cyot'df 'i! 'nv ef a iloiil't, that We liregoing to put men in the halls nl legis- -

.i in w, ni'iiiil the itt'wtittenlow f pul If' decency ns equally bind-ini- .'

Mth the 01 ilaiuctilal law nf thetan' losv.c! New.

illt. HI HUN) ON PLAINS.

l iolil report entiling in fi"m thel lallis tito noun eastern porli.ni ofthe county wu visited Xatunla an.!Mnliilay I y 11 hturin Inc extent Mod elf.e.'ls f wi'ich wete never before ki'iiwnin that country. The sloiin nf Satur-day night cante with wind and hail an I

is .i'. I to hnie killed about ll'll "hee,of Mr. Johnson, nortloast of

The hall and wu d continued nni', a sotit i uly iliienion and sev-en windmills were demolished in thopath. Near Na.lilic the hou u occu-pied by Mrs. Owen was blown downund .Mrs. Owen injured so as to beiiniil le to uttend u case thut was to,be tried in Carlsbad tomorrow. Tho,storm extended over so much terri-- jlory that it in impussihli: to learn aliithe particular.

Christian ft Co., INSURANCE.

NOTHINGWHEN YOU ARE HOT

COM) OFBLUE RIBBON

PABST EXPORTor 8CHLITZ

ORDER A CASE TODAY. Delivered lo your home from- -

'Phone

THE CARLSBAD REPORT.Th New hat been deeply interested

In the comment being made for andagainnt the report of the RevaluationBoard of th Carlsbad Project. WhenIt first appeared it cerned to u thatth facta in th can might have beenatated with equal force, with enoughemphania to impress the departmentofficial, without Infringing on therealm of the melodrama or ending upwhat ihould have been a statementof fact with the ntartlinir expression,"Cod pity the water user under theCarlsbad Project" A wa foreseenat the time by intelligent Catisbadpeople, the report waa widely copiedand special stresn laid on that lantstatement. The Irrigation Age, amagaxine which i frequently d

by hhomenecker who wish tolearn nomething of the irrigated nec-tio-

of the went, published the re-

port a legitimate news, which it in,and untold harm resulted therefrom.That a board appointed and authorizedby the Secretary of the Interior wouldirenent matter in nuch an unfavoru-il- e

light i enough to frighten awayany homeseeker unacquainted with thefact. It will be hard to convince theleast skeptical that the only objectof the board wan to make the reportstrong enough to force the govern-ment to make certain concessions tothe water user.

To anyone who compares the con-nection of the Carlsbad farming sec-tion today with what it was eight orten yearn ago after the break in thedam hnd brought ruin and desolationto a great country it would appearthnt the board was needlessly wroughtup over a matter of reduced paymentswnich will certainly be equitably ad-

justed by the department. The re-

port, in some of it saner paragraphs,states a fact that large sums ofmonev have been expended whichnhould never have been charged to theland owners, and given figure toprove the statement. Thnt set offigures alone nhould be sufficient tobring the mutter to the attention ofthe Department, anil the hurst fsympathy at he end of the rennrtwi'l add nothing to its efectiverc".

The facts boiled down amount tothis:

The Carlsbad water users have I onovercharged.

They wi h tn settle their account wi'hthe "e' lumntion Set vice on a fail e'dhonest basis.

7'l'y do rot wish 'n nav for the mis-tuk-

of the Heclaniatinn Service.As a strnightfnrw I usi""

position they do not want to pay twicef ' r water ll' V mo-- t'an lln--

would want to pnv double for theirgroceries or clothin t.

They are objecting lo overcharges:on wafer the same as von w '!

to an overcharge on a ton (.f .'Hut as for calling upon Divine Pro-

vidence or mankind for rity. thut is'i "o"muise. Instead of p'ty. ih?

Carlsbad water users want a bm 'ness.I'k" administration of (luir proj-- et .ifda fuir return for their mr-ne- ArtisuNew.

A

BETTERIIOTTLK

BARFIELD'S BUFFET

YOU'RE

AND TIRED THAN A

BEER

ISt.

ROOF GARDEN BAND ORCHES-TRA CONCERT.

The management of th Firemen'sband will, tonight, give those who arregular contributor to th support ofthe band free picture show withthe evening' municgt program asURual, to be given on t he AirdomeRoof Garden. This, no doubt, willmeet with popular approval for thgeneral public will have the benefitof the concert while the regular con-

tributor are entitled to nme recom- -

fiense occasionally for theirsustaining the band for no many

yearn. All contributor and theirfamilies will be admitted free to onof th best program ever given in apicture show. The picture will be"The Flash," and "Won With Dyne-mite- "

three reel of the most enter-taining moving picture for only tencent to the general public. Thiashow In connection with the band .'rhestra will he the best of ita kindever. The roof gat den I cool whenall other places in town ire almostsii", 'i. 'in;; nn will lie attested by allwho have attended the moving picturethe past week at the Airdome.

PERRY KEARNEY, PIONEER, I)?KS

Waa Founder of Town of l.a l.ut andFormer Owner of Kearney

Ranch.

Alamogordo, N. M., July 7. Funeralservice for Perry Kearney, one of thefiioneer settler of thi section, will

here tomorrow afternoon at3 o'clock and Interment will be madoin Mount Vista cemetery. Kearneydied at Dawson. N. M., Monday after-noon, of Hrlght'n disease. He wnnabout I'i'i yearn nf age. Rev. Jumen E.('under, pastor of the M. E. church,south, will preach the service at the(aren chapel nnd the Masonic bodieswill conduct the service ut the grave.He wun a member of the blue lodge,the Royal Arch and the KnightsTemplar, of Alamogordo.

Mr. Kearney came to New Mexicoin IH74, as a teamster with mi ele-- h

ruled I 'at Coghlun,

MAY SELL OCT DELINQUENTLIST.

Dona Ana County Han $2lMM00 InTaxen; t.ets 00

Cent Offer.Las Crucen, N.M.. July 7 The Donti

Ann counly commissioners met at the4cu-- t house for the purpose of ad-justing the delinquent tux list. DonaAru county bus nearly e'Jilll.OOO duefrom delinquent tux payers. Thocommissioner have a propositionfrom an eastern firm to sell all ofth. tux list for DO cents on theiloMnr. They are seriously consideringthe matter and in the event that theyaccept the offer, the rash will be paid'over lo the commissioners at once.Under the law, any tux payer whofuils to come in und redeem hiproperty within three yearn will losethe title and it in thought that de-

linquents will make a special effortto pay up nt once.

TELEPHONE

OPERATOR

THERE ARE THREE PARIS TO A

TELEPHONE CON N ECTI O N Ti I E

PARTY CAI.I.IN't;, THE PARTYCALLED AND HIE OI'LR ATllU,WHO SERVES BOTH.YOU, AND EVERY OTHER TFI

I Sl.lt. ARE ESSEVmiPARTNERS IN Tills COMI'iNVAK" MMMI ' K, K,'"ON KuuYOU SHOULD SPEAK THE NUM.HI K SLOWLY AND DLMIM TI YTHE CALLED SUBSCRIBERSHOULD ANSWER I'KoMi'TIVAND THE TELEPHONE (lili(OI RIEOUS AND PAINS, Ahll'iI IIKOI l.lllll I. W II. I. sEl l'llMM XhE A MISTAKE I F THE Oi III (

"0,'KI V'"",S ,M ,P VRT

HELP TOWARD l.noil SFRYICFiiv Foi i.owim; tiii: rules inTHE "INFORMATION" SECTIONIN THE FORE PART OF YOURTELEPHONE DIRECIOUY.

WE WANT YOUR TEI EPHoNE ToHE THE MOST COW EN IE NT ANDDEPEND HI.E IHINti A ROUNDyour house, am muni; ih tWE CAN DO TO M hE II neMORE USE TO YOU W . 1:1CHEERFULLY DONE.

THE PUBLIC UTILITIES GU.WATER LIGHTS - TELEPHONE

i

4

4

DELINQUENT TAX LIST TO THE YEAR 1114.Eddy Coanty.

The delinquent tax lilt of known and unknown owners of real estate and property of Eddy County, aa shown! Cochran, W. F., .

't ma tax rous or sata county, and ai levied and assess-ed against eaid property for the year 1914, now due andunpaid.State of New Mexico,! Office of Treasurer and

Cou.ity of Eddy ss. Tax Collector.To THE DELINQUENT TAX PAYERS OF EDDY

COUNTY WHOSE NAMES APPEAR IN THE FOLLOW- -1NG LIST!

Notice ii hereby riven that the following alphabeticalHat contains the names of the owners of property uponwhich taxes are delinquent, as shown by tha tax rolls ofr.ddy county for the year 1914. and opposite each namela act forth the amount of the tax deltaquent upon theproperty of the so named, as shown by said tax rolla Croxier, A. Cof Eddy County, together with tha Interest due thereonand the costs of publication,

NAME ORIO. INT. PUB. TOTALTAX C08T TAX

Carlsbad Sri ool Dlatrict.Ale wine, B. J 7.60 .08 .10 7.88Rartlett, B., 10.45 .10 .30 10.85Beckett, O A 30.40 1.82 .30 32.62Brice, C. R., .... 21.12 1.27 .30 22.60Brice A Hull 44.2 .44 .80 45.00nrown, W. G 115.08 8.90 .30 122.28Buchanan, Motile C R6.88 8.95 .80 70.13Campbell, Samuel 4.78 .28 .30 6.8AChamber, J. C 40.18 2.41 .30 42.8Chriatian, H. F., Spcl 822.10 19.33 .80 341.7:1Chriatian, Mary A., Spcl.,. 237.98 14.28 .30 252.54Church, C. D 87.45 .87 .30 88.12Clark, H. H., 87.78 2.28 .30 40.29Cloud. John C 10.22 .60 .30 11.12Collier, L. M 8.51 .01 .80 8.90Daugheritv, N. T 78.28 4.58 .80 81.1(1

Dean, W. W., Spcl 218.60 13.11 .80 231.61Doepp, Dr. F. F 133.61 1.33 .30 135.24Dominirl, F 4.08 .24 .30 4.62FalrchilH. O. M 12.24 .7.1 .30 13.27Finlay. W. A 88.35 .88 .30 89.63Force. W. C... 17.80 1.07 .80 19.17Fox, Mary Eddy 8.40 .20 .30 3.90Gcraugherity, E 1.87 .08 .80 1.75Herbert, C. C 88.82 2.83 .30 41.46Hardy, Mias Zuteika 27.24 1.68 .30 29.17Hill. S. W 33.64 2.02 .30 35.96Hnose. E. M 20.02 1.20 .30 21.62Huesser, J. II 10.01 .20 .30 10.62Hull, W. H 114.40 6.86 .30 121.56I.O.O.F. Lodge, Carlsbad 119.18 7.14 .80 126.32Jame II. K 7.11 .07 .30 7.48Jonea. C. N., 25.08 .25 .30 25.63Jordan. Eat. of C. A., 45.64 2.73 .80 48.68Kerr. Monroe T.. 24.52 1.47 .30 26.99Kerr. Eat. of Mary J., 13.62 .82 .30 14.73Kindell. T. J., 11.41 .11 .30 11.82Klrkpatrlck, E. S 14.80 .14 .30 14.74Kuykendall, J. D 22.47 1.85 ,80 24.12l.a Huerta Co 61.70 8.10 .30 65.10l,ewis, .1. W 26.78 1.61 .30 28.68Uwia, C. C 247.02 14.82 .30 22.14l.ichte. H. P., 6.82 .41 .80 7.63Marahull, F. B 84.92 B.10 .30 00.32Marahall. F. B., 4.09 .24 .30 4.63Maonicl.odge of Carlsbad 147.10 8.83 .30 156.23Mcl.enathen. C. H 128.44 7.71 .30 136.15McUnathen A Tracy 23.84 1.43 .30 25.67MeUnuthen, W. P., Spcl.,. 201.30 12.08 .30 213.3.Mitchell, S. P., 23.84 1.43 .30 25.67Mnnughan, A., 73.40 4.40 .30 78.10Morcan. D. W 20.44 1.20 .30 21.94Mudgett, W. P.. 48.72 .49 .30 49 51

Mullane. Wm. II 45.81 .46 .30 46.67Ohnemua, R 156.62 9.39 .30 166.3"VQuinn, A. R 17.30 1.04 .30 18.64Oslmrn, I. S., 791.42 67.49 .30 849 21Pendleton. C. M., 35.42 .35 .80 86.07Pecos Valley Trust Co.. 391 58 23.49 .80 415.37Pentowsky, Eat. of F. V., .. 44 94 2.70 .30 47.94Pope, W. J 64.24 3.15 .30 67.69Reed. Cuy A 29.76 1.70 .30 31.76Reed. W. T., 40.66 2.44 .30 43.40Reed. W. T.. Spcl., 210 16 12.61 .30 223.07ReifT, Mra. W. C. 8.90 .53 .30 9.73Rol.b, Mm. Mattie 8.90 .53 .30 9.73Robb, 11. E., 64.82 8.27 .30 68.39Robh, II. E.. Spcl., 25.88 1.35 .30 27.73Quinonea, Juan, 8.60 .09 .30 8.99 '

Sickles, C. H., 6.28 .05 .30 6.63Simpson. W. W 47.92 2.88 .30 51.10Simpson, A. L., 25.00 1.60 .30 26.80Slociim, Mary G 20.44 1.22 .30 21.96Smith. T. J 2.50 .15 .30 2.95Stamp. Mra. anna 17.02 1.02 .30 18.34Stewart. M. C 21.82 .22 .30 2.34Stone. Mra. Flora 138.44 8.30 .80 147.04 '

Sutherland, I). B 30.02 1.80 .30 82.1?Swigart. I.. A., 22.41 .22 .:,0 22.01Thnver, Mrs. J. O.. 42.56 .43 .30 41.29Trncy, Olive C, Spcl 225.18 13.51 .30 238.99Trncy, F. C, Spcl 178.28 10.58 .30 187.14Trncy. F. C, Spcl 171.26 10.27 .30 181.8PWalteracheid, W. M ... 66.62 8.89 .30 60.21Weaver. F. P 14.11 .84 .80 15.2fWeataway. R. H .... 93.02 5.58 .30 98.00Woerner. W. G 124.98 7.60 .80 132.7Wright. Claud F 20.79 1.25 .30 22.8PZimmerman, F. R. 19.68 1.18 .30 21. HSubsequent Asaeasmenla.Angelí. Lewi 61.14 8.07 .80 54.61Rlnrkmore, T. F., 12.94 .77 .80 14.11Emerson, M. A. A E. F 29.96 1.80 .80 32.0CHartes, H. H 86.70 2.20 .30 39.20HuM.urd, H. I)., .179.40 10.76 .30 190.4CWi.llare, J. E 59.16 8.65 .30 63.01Blocker, Mrs. Sophia, ....... 24.10 1.45 .30 25.55Bitting, Eat. of 8. T., 2.04 .02 .30 2..1C

Sc'iool Dlatrict No. 1.Arierine. J. W., 62 .04 .30 .90Balea. W. I)., 48.86 2.92 .30 61.90Balea, W. I)., Spcl 88.18 2.29 .30 40.75Blnnd. J. M . 8.60 .40 .30 7.20Calvan!. Torillo 28.25 .28 .80 28.8."Cunningham, M. N 110.22 8.61 .30 117.13Diofendorf, Dr. L. F, 71.48 4.29 .30 76.0fEllsworth, R. II . 60.44 8.63 .30 64.87Force, W. G., 87.62 2.26 .80 40.1Fullingln. G. W 88.10 2.17 .80 88.57Comes, Romelo 12.20 .12 JO 12.6?Geer, Mra. Elisabeth 86.72 2.25 .80 88.8)Ceer, A. f - 66.66 3.40 .30 60.8fHall. W. W., 62.78 .1.17 .80 66.24Hnrdy, Miaa Zulieka 18 28 1.10 .80 19.6Herrls. R. L., . ....39.79 2.39 .30 42.4Ki ykendall. J. D., 4.47 .27 .80 6.04lwis, J. W., 92.68 6.65 .80 98.43I.lltle, F. E 18.62 1.12 .30 20.04Murahall, Mrs. Lola L., 6.60 .89 .80 7.19Musters, A. A .. 88.72 6.02 .80 89.04M. llvain. W. F 41.88 2.61 .30 46.81Newcomer, C. B 167.06 10.02 .80 177.32Ohnemua, R 42.92 2.68 ,30 45.80Osburn, I. 8., 1.62 .10 .80 2.0:Pecos Valley Trust Co., .... 4.06 .24 .80 4.60Sands, 8. R 85.72 2.14 .80 38.16Santa Crux, Siato 8.82 .60 .80 9.12Smith. T. J . 8.60 .89 .80 7.19Sylvester, W. B., 88.68 .64 .80 64.47Tracy, F. G., Agent, 8.24 .19 .80 8.73Webb, T. 8 67.18 1.06 .80 68.44Freeman, L. F 118.84 7.09 .30 125.6DSchool Dlatrict No. S.

Hinchman.C. R., 2 64 .18 .80 2 99Keenuns. R. W.,. ., .. 8.60 .48 JO 8.83Raney. W. R 248J8 14.68 JO 258.81Washington. Mra. Maiy 28.84 1.70 JO 80.84School Dlatrict No. 4.Gray Lucas 28.81 .24 .80 28.37Washington, lira. Mary.267.e8 16.06 JO 284.04

NAME

School Din! rift No. 8.

De Moaa. J. C.School IHalrlrt No. 6.Smith, J. J. 8

School District No.A. II. AbbottAbernathy, D. M.,Beckham, J. H., Jr.,Brogdon, J. C,Buchly, W. C,Ruliach, A.,Campbell, C. HCook, N. VCoughlin, John

personCroxier A Humphreys .

Pe Arcey, J. E.,De Autremont, Mrs

Falrchlld. O. M

Falrchild, O. M

Fairchild, O. M.,Fanning, Mra. 8. E.,Fielda, E. L.,Fairchild, O. M, ...French, ChesterFreaby, F. T.,Gardinier, M. FGartner, Perry,Harlan. F. G.,Harshherger, L. B.Honning, August,Heater, R. E.,Holmes, Felix,Howell, W. MHowell, L. WHumphreys, E. Llenkina, J. R.,Jonea, Mra, E. G.,Jonea, A. E. A A. N.akewood Town Co

Lelizio, Dominico,Mchle, II. P.,I.innell, C. EMaride. F. EMatheson A LittleMcllenry, A. DMill. W. A.,Mnrrin, Mrc. ChasMorrison, O. DOhnemus, R .

Osburn, B. Prainier, W. IIPeltxcr, The. CPendleton, Walter,Robins, (1. C,Koaacr, LixxieKosser, Samuel,Schneider, J. I)St. John, P. F.,Monehouse, P. FStorehouse, Mary E.,I.. K. Tcmpletonruttle, W. PCilery, ClarenceValintini, Johntalintini, leucomaVallace, J. J.,Valler, Roy S

West, A. C.Wiles, Mra. EvaWilson, 11. I,Wiseman, U. A.,School District No. H.

Xhernathy A Howellult, J. G..

Blackmoie, T. F., AgonUBackus, J. K.,Beckett, DanBelle EatateBlakeny. J. ABoard, A. W.,Board, A. W. A J. WHoard, A. WHotta, C. M.,Hoyd, G. M., Srlirownlie, D. E.,

''oflin, T. V. A Bro.,

Davis, I). Drow. CamElms, II. I

Elms. R. J. T.Kairrhild, O. M.,Fanning, J. TFisher, Sterling'oxter, G. Jprench, W. SFuray, E. 8

age, J. C Spcltrwiller, P. C

Jilliam. T. VGore, W. AHall, A. MHallmark, Mrs. Lucy, ......Harria, A. SHighamith, J. S., Eat.,....,lolstein, C

Hope Drug Co. ....Hudle, Wmlohnaon Broa. CoKelley, Donna M

TomItnox, J. SIwla, T. A.,Ixiwe, T. G.,I.uthy, Jaa.,l.uthy, John KMalcom, M. C,MeClure, .1. P.,McCord. EMcCree, C. R

Miller, J. R .. .

Moore, II. W.,Velson, GeoVeNon. J. EOverhoM. W. B.,Owen, W. J. Ji'enaaco Valley Merc. Co"erry, E. C,"latt, A.,freusaer. Joe,'rude. C. G

rude, L. IRabbe EatateRiley, W. pRoaa, J. C,Roaa, J. T., SrScoggln, EdwSeoggln. C. ESeven Rivera Oil A Gas GNhelton, O. C, ..,Shelton, G. A ,

Shelton A MarxSmith. W. E.,Strong. Victoria,Swift. B.,Ward. E.,Wasann, J.wainen, j. h., .

wniuker, E. T, .Whiuker, W. U,

ORIO.TAX

,. 10.62. 6.88

. 42.45I.

f 2 02. 40.18. 2.02. 6.24. 6.06. .61. 80.64. 41.00. 2.02. 11.12. 23.7:1

. 81.98

. 10.64

. 8.56

. 8.82

. 24.80

. 1.62

. 1.0114.79

140.90.26

4.30.26

8.6889.0683.72

.2615.81

2.038.892.33

14.681.271.021.021.261.522.03

.519.88

.6178.8061.86

2.53.61

1.021.021.02

12.146.:.N2.53

.2:a.54

.26HI 03

3.302.0.1

.19.9360.224.052.53

.518.301.021.02

37.4111.12

.61

. 810.. 6.34.. 83.10.. 9.67.. 73.73.. 53.10... 1.75.. 5.22.. 2.7.. 47.54.. 26.68.. 10.64.. 89.7 1

.. 5.00

.. K.liO

.. Ill

.. 77.62

. 107.70

.. 18.22

.. 62.55

.. 8.23.. 11.68.. 4.84.. .8.1... 16.96... 8.Ü0.. 8.1(0

.. 63.43

.. 26.14

.. 32.30

.. 72.H2.. fi.33.. 40.10.. 17.93

10.C4.. 13.84.. 64.22.. 4.46.. 51.54

4.45... 16.18... 28.91

7.22"39ÚÓ... 3)1.14

... 4.06... 15.84... 13.60... 63.88... 8.90... 8.90... 67.28... 8.90... 23.80... 5.28... 47.8H... 25.69... 38.04... 2864... 44.48

72.82150.24

. 4.76.. 8.90.. 11.68.. 13.84.. 10.40.. 83.16.271.74

30.60.. 5.06.. 60.66.. 6.66

o. 24.28... 6.67... .46 64... 30 00... 4 00... 8 90

8.90- 67.2169.2675.9010.9224.67

INT. PUB. TOTALCOST TAX

.64 .30 11.66

.88 .30 7.06

.42 .30 43.17

.10 .30 8 2 422.01 .30 42.67

.10 .30 2.42

.81 .30 6.8ft

.25 .30 6.61

.03 .30 .8 1

4.03 .30 84.972.05 .30 4:i.:i;

.10 .30 2.42

.65 .30 11.1171.19 .30 25221.H0 .30 33.4N

.6.1 .80 11.47

.16 .80 4.01

.84 .30 7. Hi1.24 .30 2li.3i

.07 .30 1.892.05 .30 1.36

.15 .30 15.247.05 .80 148.25

.01 .30 .67

.21 .30 4.81

.01 .80 .67.27 .80 6.15

4.4.1 .30 93.811.68 .30 a.').7()

.01 .30 .67

.80 .80 16.01

.10 .30 2.43

.20 .30 4.3

.11 .30 2.74

.73 .30 15.71

.06 .80 I.IIM

.05 .30 1.37

.05 .30 1.37

.06 .30 1.62

.08 .30 1.911

.10 .30 2.43

.02 .3(1 .83

.60 .30 10.68

.02 .30 .818.94 .30 8:i III2.59 .30 M.7.--

.

.12 .30 2.9.V

.02 .311 .8.1

.06 .30 I.:!,M .30 .:8.06 .3(1 I.IIKj

'.61 ,:iii :.ii;,.07 .:to 6.9."..16 .::! 2.99.01 ,;io .67.17 .30 4.01.(I .30 .57

4..V1 .3(1 ll.'i.88.16 .3(1 3.76.10 .311 Ü.43

2.00 .3(1 42. 233.01 .30 63.i:.20 .30 i.:,:,.12 .30 J.!i',.01 .30 n.41 .:,( ;i.ii.60 .III ; ".7

.03 .30 1.3711.87 .3(1 4Ü.6I

.5(5 .3(1 ll.iis!

.03 .30 .84

.49 .30 8to!

.38 .30 7.0J6.00 .0 88.70

.68 .30 10.:.:.,4.42 .30 78.153.10 .30 66 59.

.11 .30 2 Hi'

.31 .30 6.83'

.16 .30 3,?r2.85 .30 50. 691 .60 .30 28.58

I .30 11.586.3H .30 9...1J.

.05 .30 6.35

.53 .30 9. I I

.07 .30 I IS4.66 .30 82.586.411 .30 111.161.011 .30 111.61

3.15 .30 66.00.49 .30 9.0?.88 .30 I.", 86.li .30 ft. 43.03 .30 1.16

1.05 .30 18.31.63 .30 9.73.63 .30 9.73

3.21 .30 60.941.57 .30 28.011 94 .30 11.3418.67 .30 78 6:1

.06 ,30 6.692.41 .30

.18 .30 19 11,

.62 .30 11.56

.83 .30 1 .'I78.25 .30 67.77

.28 .30 6(il

.51 .3(1 62.35

.26 .30 ft.oi

.97 .30 17.15

.29 .II) 29 50

.43 .30 7.!i.,23.60 .30 415.50!

2.17 .30 38.61.24 .30 4.59,.95 .30 17 09.14 .30 13.9 1

3.23 .3(1 67.nl.63 .30 9.73!.63 .30 9.73

4.01 .30 7 1. 2.63 .30 9.73

1.43 .30 .Y.V!

.05 .30 6.612 7 .3(1 61 O'.1 64 .30 27.632.28 .30 HI 6?1.71 .30 30 662.67 .30 47. Ci4.37 .30 77.190.01 .30 1 r,!l

.05 .30 5 11

.63 111 9.73

.70 .30 12 68

.80 .30 14 44

.62 .30 11.32

.83 .30 33.7916.20 .30 288 21

1.84 .30 32.74.30 .80 666

8.03 .30 6389.33 .30 6.1

1.46 .30 26.04.07 .30 7.01.47 .30 47 11.30 .30 10 60.71 .30 4 5 1

63 .30 73.61 .80 9.73

8.4.1 .30 60934.16 JO 73.724.68 JO 80.75

.68 JO 11.87M JO 25.12

NAME

Whltnker A LewlaWilliHms, Bryant,Wood, J. H.,School District No. 10.Amerine, J. W.,Illonm, LutherBowden, W. A.,Cook, F. T.,Cunningham, M. N.,Cunningham, E. K

Dauirherlty. N. TDavis, G. WDrwitx, P. E.,Dewitx, Mra. ElaieDotialdxon, J. W.,DomiliNnn, C, E. Spcl. .,

Donley, WmCeer, Mrs. Elixabeth(eer, A. C,Gerr, Mrs. A. C,Geer, D. IIHale. C. JHarris, .1. H

lloHL'laiiil, Wm. E.,Hughe. SamuelMiiuglilin, E. J.,Muiík'cndi'e, W. L.,Mullane Wm. IIXymeyer, John,Nvinever Mis. John,OsLorii, I. SParilue. C. I'.,Purdue. C. I". SpclPnriliie. C. P. SpclI'll rc I lie, C. 'Purdue ,v TracyRussell, A. M ,

Scott. W. IISmith. G. WSmith, CarlVlllll'llllM. J. )

WhIIíb. CWitt. G. V.Wood, H11 old P.,Wyinan, T. !.,Illinium l.amj Comiianylli'l. H. D

.liicU. I.. D..I ii. kev. W. KI ii. k. y. II. W.,School Dislrict No. II.Anierini', J. W.,Anderson, A

Arnold. Atnos,I In 11 in i'ii rl h. C ..

Ite.t. D I...lilii. k. MaudIllii.er, .Maltie I

Brown, Mr. M. ('Bruce. R. Ii.,Iliiet'liel, Mo. ElidaBurnett. II..i'nmpMI, D. M.,( fiddle, A. W..( 'iiiiiiini'lium, E.Davis. (. WDiiv. W. M..IfVili.iss. A. M., ...Ki'Lert. '. K.,E. i II. T. A..I'Kll.'il:. .1. WCuilM. S. K.Gen-- , D II ,

leer. Mrs. A. ('.,Gi-- i r. A. C,Ceer, Miss (hiit I..,(ella. li. K(elllii ll, i 'lias.,Clinch, Mrs. Mry,( iies-e- l, I .nlll,Mall. W.,Helm. C. I!..Heni V, .1. S .

ll.l.bard. G. A..Iliett. .1. AIIivnoiii,Ibuiu'liiiid. W. i:., ...llllI'MIIIII I iind Co.,Hin t slim 11. K. I !.,lliirroiin, W. IIIliirniiiii, Kvu K ,.Ii tikiiis. J. S.,Kerr. II. C,Kline. It. W

l.cidv, '. AI.eidV, Mrs. C.I.i.wry, W. II.,

A.,

K.

W.

W.

I D. W.,Mcl.i'iiiillieii, Marie R., ..Medley. .1. WMiller. II. ('.,Mi.llnyI'nirinitii, Primo,rainier. WinIlaiiney. W. It.,Knlii'soii, J. ,.,Sc.it, W. II..Seclitein, Henry,Smilli, Curl,Stamp, Mn. Annie,'I'liniiias, y .,Tilu ri'lieiii, W. M.,Til-on- , A. DTnl.le, .1. X..I'ttei 'luii-li- , Miss Appiu,Walker, llarrv.WashiniMnii, Mrs. Mary,Weld.. T. C.ScIiihiI District Xu. 12.Hunks, S. 'Hunks, S. P.,Itrilre. Ilntrillllll, lliggins

iV Coinpiiny1'iiiirlierity, W. K.,Duui'lierity. W. F. A Co.Diirriim. Á. SFaircbild, O. MI'aireliild. O. MFoster, Tlina'iiillei'ot, liafaelGartner, PerryGardner, Mrs. Maggln, ..,Gilbert, Ada NGillelt. J. T.,Hamilton, Harry W.,Heath, A. MHelming, Auirust,Henry, A. WHorsey, Mrs. S. IHit'hsmilh, Mra. MargieHunt, Misa L, JJenkins, J. R.,Johnson Bros. CoJuiilis, RuliclKaiser, G. W.,Kaiser, C. W , SpclMaride, K. EMcllride, J. )

Mnrrin, Mrs. ChasMorrison, G. I).,Noah, Lee,OI en, Fmma, ,

Oleson, Mrs. NelliePeak A BrownPeurcc, Mra Maggie, ...Pelter, T. CRhodea, WmRichardson, C. ARobins. O. C,Roberts. M. C., .Rogers, W. E.,

I

ORIO.TAX

... 64.22

..201.18

... 22.22

... .68

... .68

... 7.30

... 95.30

... 46.74

... 1.38

... 24.62

... .68

... 22 80

... 83.74

... 81.30

... 21.90

... 62.76

... 80.50

... 67.06

... .68,.. .68.123.10.. 37.40

.68.. 44.52.. 29.18.. 64 00.. 6.0... 43.76.. 16.18. 692.84.. 22.60.. 18.70.. 13.68.. 85.72. 141.36.. 61.02.. .68.. 119.32.. 8.66

.68.. 34.62

49.04.. 68.36.. 41.20

145.9241.94

. 69.32.. 61.92

112.18

. 8.911

. 147.83

. 147

. .8.1

. .83

. 146.83

. 35.84

. .83. 146. .8.1. .83

.21

I..21Id

. .2112(1826.8211.42

.83

.21

.?l1 67

.3.11 1.7128.72

. 21.01.83.83

88.56.83.83.21

. .83.21

069.64. 20 80. ..'ili. 250

1.16. 12.18. 146. 167. .81

27.72.83

28.70. .83

.83

.8344 44

. .83

. 1330

. .1.12.21

1.045.763.33

37.601.01.42.83

. .21

. 37.78

. 10 82

. 29.22

... 11.13

... 13.67

. 13.34

.104.86

. 60 68

. 7.78

. 441. 19 71. 6.66. .56. .83. 7.21.. .56. 35.01

.. .66

.. .66

.. 1.67,. 6.06

21.0414.726.39

.811.111.67

87 0413.856.81

26.741.67

.811184.Ill

119073 6014 IS24 4624.6020.1389.76

2.224 44

INT. PUBCOS!

.64 .3012.07 .80

1.23 .30

.04 .30

.04 .30

.44 .305.72 .302.80 .30

.08 .301.48 .30

.04 .301.37 .802.02 .801.88 .301.31 .903.16 .304.83 .304.02 .80

.04 .30

.04 .307.39 .802.04 .30

.04 .802.67 .3(1

1.75 .30.1.24 .30

.0(1 .302.62 .3(1

.97 .308.1.64 .30

1.36 .301.12 .30

.82 .806.14 .308.48 .303.06 .30

.04 .304 HI .30

.62 .30

.04 .302.08 ,.102 94 .803.50 .302.47 .308.76 .802.62 .304.16 .308.72 .306.73 .30

.24 .80

.08 .30

.0.1 .30

.08 .80

.05 .30

.05 .30

.08 .30

.05 .301.8(1 .30

.05 .30

.08 .30

.05 .30

.05 .30

.01 .30

.01 .30

.08 .30

.01 .3018 ,30

161 .302 7!l .30

.05 ..'10

.01 .30

.01 .30

.10 .30

.05 .,30III .30

172 .80.21 .3(1

.05 .30

.05 .306.31 .30

.05 .30

.05 .30"1 .30M ,30.01 .30

68. H .30125 ..'10

.10 .30

.01 .30

.08 .30

.75 .30

.08 .301 .00 .30

.05 .301.86 .30

.05 .3(11 .72 .3(1

.05 .30

.05 .30

.05 .30267 .80

.05 .30

.80 .30

.20 ..10

.01 .30

.06 .80

.34 .30

.20 .30

.38 .30

.06 .30

.02 .30

.05 .30

.02 ,302.27 .30

.65 .301.75 .30

.67 .30

.81 .30

.80 .306.2.1 .308.64 .30

.47 .30

.27 .301.1 .30

.31 .30

.03 .30

.05 .30

.42 .30

.01 .302 10 .30

.01 .30

.01 .30

.10 .30

.36 .301.44 .80

.88 .80

.06 .30

.05 .30

.07 .80

.10 .80

.87 .30

.11 .30

.35 .801.C.0 .30

.10 JO

.05 .30

.80 .30

.07 .308.1 ..10

4 41 .30.14 .30

1.47 .80.25 JO

1.20 JO239 JO.18 JOJ JO,

TOTAL' TAX

65.16213.61

23.76 Schwartx, W. F 4.44

1.021.028.04

101.6249.84

1.7426.40

1.0224.4736.0681.4823.5166.285.1371.38

1.021.02

130.7939.74

1.0247.49.11.2:67.64

6.4146.6817.45

628.1824.2620.1214.8091.16

160.1464.38

1.0273.88

9481.02

37.0062.2862.1643.97

164.6844.761

73.7

R.

4491.861.181.81.181.18184

1838.001 11.

t.8K.81

1.18Lis'

.62

.62

28.73

.62'1.18!

102822.35

9.962.83l.8

1.1829.68,

1.18 ,y

30.72 'j

1.18

!"!:

n,i"3.62

1.406.403.81

1.40.71

81.27

1214.0x1

14 64

4.628.65

l'i!ai

1.1879"

.8'37.4

.8'

.8'2n

IB6.7:MP

482.07

6.4828.64

NAME

Roaaer. Samuel. 84Kosser. I.ixxie.

Mmlth, I. N,Stephana, G. II.,Stephen. R. 1.11Stewart. W. P.. 4.1 urTerry, J. P.,Waldrop, A. 8., 6.00Walling, Mary F . I0.56Wellman. M. G 127Williams, C. W 40.04Yates. J. 25.5sYko, .fl7Atkeson, J. B., .noAtwood. J. B. 65.60Bailey, A. II H4.64Baumer, 66Ker.ele. 9Lamb, E. C.rhrelkeld. G. O 4.45SCnMEUITKNT AVQCSSurxiTiiMade hr Ihe Tr....r., vaa. r..cumuli, nan., .finCochran Montgomery 64Tomlinaon. W. I... in ttPackard, A. II., .' ,3Aetna Building Association .84

School IHalrlrt No. 12.Carlsbad Orchard A

Co..A. B. Dawson

I. M. Downs 8.09Esperanza CoPeco Irrigation Co

I. ). Woraell 60.92School Dislrict No. 14.'lurry GaitherEat. of M. E. Gaither 11.22W. G. Mac Arthur ... brimIt. B. Knowlea

Pendleton A inDistrict So. IS.

Acord A McClnv .

Aetna Bldg.Artesia Canning Co.

...

f rutera A A A U id1 19.21 J. Ii, Atkeson 44.19

J. Atterberrv 68 1 i

I

12.86

12

38.28

18

91

9'

Si

II

ns.74

nh

R

nn

A

Dr. P. M.W. Barrow nilFlorence M. Barrow 2o!l5

D. II. Hettisoníleon o7

.1. II. Beckham. Jr i.'.r.Will lltinsoiiA.

1 T.

8

ta

in

A.S.F.

S.It. W

M.

A. II.

SI..

'. Bishop K0. 00BishopBishopBlucknioie

. BruceBriinielaickBuckles .

Mm ns

346.10144.72

Farms 198.72188.22

Mbort Sands

School

Maker

BrownAgt.

A P. & Cattle Co.580.80Cbainlierluin

M. E. Charvos1.18 T. R. ciiiidiolm

62: .1. .1. Clark.VJjlir. .1. .1. lrk

2071.1,,,. Cluytou18 Joe Clayton

l5.l9i.loe Cluylon;'7llE. A. C. I'. Cluylon21 Kemielli Coates

M. CiuidellI.l.lne Cohen

. i. T rniii...I 18.1

.62i'i..'

13.53IV I

2.97

I H .

, 1.15

.62

I.53

403.--1

11.77

09

111.41

6.01

.89

6.7'25.7

1

87.7113.78

TAX

13.3460.60

Geo.,

OttoJoe.

147.88

f .- -v

Plan

Mrs.

10.12

19.68

96.14

Asa'n.

65.941

a5.L'8I.I.

1 1

( i

I8.ÜS

rBurg

Mrs.i

1 .....

'l.91.17

,

T. Colluin SplM. ConnX. CnrringtonA. Cotliiiglium .,II. Cox

AliiMlettu CrauiUIII. II. CravenHart CrouchC. B. CrnnkliiteA. W. DavisMrs. I'hiiI DeAutermont

DenningW. DentE. DoeserC. Do

B. EnlieldM. FairchildE. KerreeE. FarreoE.E.E.

FerrerFerreeFeriee

S. K. FérreaII. Fitr.rruMJ. A. FontulnC. A. Fieuch'Geo. FriskBlake Frilx.1. C. GagaE. GurciuIt. II. GuidncrI'erry (iuilnerMrs. E. Y. Gilberti. W. Gilbert

. D. (ileusen:. W. Giunl A M. YaU--

I0I111 (iieiinuiiium Hule

C. HullC. Hull

ilull A ItagadaleS. Hamilton

Hardwlcke A Hamilton .

K. A. HunnahlO. F. Ilurdwicke('. F. IlurdwickeK. K. IlurdwickeC. D. HurlingC. D. Hurling

M. Harperlas. Hurna

. M. HeathF. Ilclinig

. W. llendursunt.ora Ilesa

tation

ArtMMiii

Beach

44.211

1.18.1

Geo. W. Ilickoxliakox A Kagadale .....Wm. Hicks ..Est. of J. 8. HighamithElixabeth HodgesJohn Hook ...............J. II. lloloman ......A. J. CooperMrs. J. K. HowardHuduon A Goodale .........

2 07 John W. Hunt118 W. C. Hutchiaon

14 61''" Jarobann ..1 481 - K. Jaffray

15 0.1 D. J. Jonea78 21. E. D. Jonas ..,14.69 W. I. Jone .,

28.21. F. K Kemp25 IV A. M KentII 62 Cha. Ketner42.45 C L. King,

2 65 W. B. Klrkland6.00, r. A. Kiaeman, '

ORIO.

... 11.3610.18

A taIt tu

II

I.

12.7839.78

3.906.04

38.6066.091.1.3819.04

170.06Land

19.70241.62

26.08944

18.11887.3864.20

. 47.4846.1437.41168.50

. 19.8666.948.02

83.046.34

22.90. 16.1141.'12.3699 92

286.1860.60

. 17.868.02

16.6479.86

. 19.42an. 41

6.6846.7086.94

6.684.67

. 6.606.34

. 6.1027.90

. 15.851.67

. 39.48

. 7.78139.98

. 3.00

. 63.24

. 2.60

. 91.34

.178.64

. 16.60

. 13.34

. 26.42

. 26.84

. 21.94

. 4.67. 11.3(1

.. 26.70

.. 28.08

.. 82.58.800.90

30.68.. 19.14.. 60.66.. 6.68.. 7.18.. 96.12.. 21.88

8.1911.94

2.61.. 92.60... 26.8.1

6.10. 81.76... 11.68... 12.64

87.788.00

... 7.C080.94

... 89.8828.91

.... 40.64

.... 87.92

.... .10.0829.68

... 9.86

...274.88

.... 8 8680.24

... 41.7... 18.88

1384

INT.

.05

.05

.26JO

8.04.07

2.605.92

.30

.637.662.401.6.1.10.63

8.946.87

.0.1

.1610.87

.04

04 .30JO

1

OR JO.06 JO

20.767.38

.1611.9111.29

.603.63

1.20.66

2.106.76

.12

.66

.243.64

.884.481.60

.22

.40

.666.829.30

.303.60

.722.40

.243.962.281.11

.781.10

10.2044.80

1.2014.46

.63

.20

.366.223.842.622.70

1 'KIaiwéf3.48I 20I. 1(1

.1(1

II. 58.38.44.9(1

.1 'l .

17.163.001 (MS

.hi

.113

4.741.142.40

.372.752.22

.87

.28

.35

.36JO

1.66.85.08

2.42.47

9.34.18

3.18.16

6.4610.38

.32

.781.601.601.26

.28

.661.661.681.92

18.001.821.168.04

.37.42

6.881.27

.16

.66

.141.86

.62JO

1.89.67

.72

.60.44

1.812.37

.662.402.28MO1.7T

.6416.47

.644.802 46

.87

.71

TUB. TOTALCOST TAXJO.80JOJO.30JO.30.30.30.30.30.30.30.30.30.30.30.30.30.30..10

.0.1 .78

.60

.76

.30

.30

.30

.30

.30

.30

.30

.30

.30

.30

.30

JO.30.30.30.30.30.30.30.30.30.30.30.30.30.30.30.30.30.30.30.30.30.30.30.30.30.30.10.3(1

.30

.30

.30

.30

.;o

.30

.30

.30.30.10.30.30.30.30.:;n.30.30.II).30.10.30.30..'III

.30

.30

.30

.30

.30

.80JO.30.30.30.30.30.30.30.30JO.30.30.30.30JO.30.30.30.30.30.30.30.30.30.30.30.30.30.30.30.30.30.30.30.30.30JOJOJOJOJOJOJOJOJOJOJO.30JOJO.30JOJOJO.80JOJO

1.191.198.00

14.446.1.94

1.4846.61

104.966.60

11.49136.8442.7427.41

2.079.7.1

69.84121.71

.892.95

159.064.79

1.02

JO 11.031.181.20

JO367.16162.40

8.65210.93200.81

11.0264.85

21.0812.1888.32

102.206.91

12.3211.08

4.7263.0046.3762.9227.0811.6720.8512.32

103.42164.76

16.2363.901.1.8042.48444

70.3041.0866.6014 4620.44

180.66635.90

21.20256.28

26.919.94

19.6492.9068.3560 4048.1439.9262.282 1. 1667.31

8.48892

7.0226.3417.30

I 10.., A

303.6463.9(119.22

8.8216.7784.6020.8642 111

6.3549.7639.46

7.356.256.167.006.70

298517.00

2.0543.20

8.65149.62

.1.4866.72

2.9697.10

184.2216.2014.4228.2827.7023.60

6.2512.3228.0630.0684.80

819.2032.8020.6064.00

7.367.90

104.3023.45

8.6512.90

2.9694.7526.66

6.7083.9612.6613.703HJ0

8.808.40

83.0642.3529.774.184406082.18816610.70

291.669 80

88 J4416618.181641

3

C. I!.A K.A. Rr. rM. FW SK I.V A.I .a lira

lNAir. OHIO.TAX

Klerman. f0 RR

Knott ... 20.11Knott W.22Knnwlca 2172Knelling fl.llI .ani'amadp 1?C 70

l.nni'tnn 21 '.'2I .imp!) 1 1 T. 1 H

K lvers 77 UK

R. M LoveJ P l.owervW R l.urniiManche I MalnrJ 8. Major.1 W Midden MOOW. Malnr 40 0!

fltl Malcolm 1!):tV E Maride 3.34C. I. Maule 10II Y MrHrv.li 270 mo

Owtn Mrflnv 4r, 0(1

It F. McCorm 12 07Horace MrCnrmickMm M V. M. f nrmbk

Mcf'raryK. K. M- - S'HltK. K. MrHlt AiM.Midwest liiveatmeht f'oMm. I J MillhufTMra I. K Moore

Monli'nmpry .H

It. II Morrow 20 OK

Meek MH

I. . C. Mn I'.II.K'tI.. Minify

K. I. hurrayC. A. l

S. NcfTM Nelson

t'rnnk VewkirkII. I.. Ne'kirkW. A. NleimtaeO F. NIcVpvI M Vnrrl"ilov Vr.1 0 fKlmrnW. R Overhnlt.1 I'urP.

T ftr,.fcr A PM'Ithw n ri-t-- '-

M A I. PittII Porter("",TiH. V'p " . ...Unv. s kPe. '"mnfi." ! ton I M.,

i. r.l.iir.l 1 (), .. .

PH-- v V P.Reherí. ! ! ; I

T I Prt. tn O ip I,.,Pol, .r' i. ' rV.lic I..,To'ier:- - V V..Popi v. fl'ii,P i r. x .

Rn !! v; P.,fr! -- V. Murr-- v,

flchrnedcr. PT ,

Kchwartr. W I',i, I.I I ,

Mr W .,hew. John.vi4.t rt n .

Shorptt C I ,

Smith. F M .

nh. R N.Smith. C It .

Smith, r nS, uthworth, It r,Snnthwnrth Mii'l'l.md.Spamchnh (KunMRnrncer Mm i.i.o, .

Knerrv I'lUnitncrrv I ok in ..

Sperrv. I K.Klnllk.in. Mr M K .

Stnn.lef.r. W II.Stnrk. V. IIStrnimn, Ani'iitStrmmit. Aiii'ii-- t

Striink. Mnrv V

S'llnr. .Iiimp M..Tnlliot. (iivlii.Taylor. A t'Taylor II r

Thn-lki-M- . C II., .

TIihIit. .1 W .

Tnrkiiett .1 V .

I'llpry, ClarpiooWalirrrlii.Í4l. W M..Wathfn. I S..Wrllnn. Mr M V..Whltn. r,Whit. Kthi-- I P.. . .

Whlt.l IV,Whitii.li 1 V..Whlttd. T W .

32

W

ck

ft. V.

William., r V A M YalmWilliam f V it I',...Wln. W

lliiti'Linir l' FMaiil.lin. KkIi'IIh A..

rhiMil (iUiikI n. 7.Armtn.tiL' WAtMimoii, I.IiIm,HakiT C,

A P III.C'lnylnn. ,t T K SmitliCrolr lluiupliifyHurnn Iforr,.l,, O MCnrtnr Prry.fMLnt Cicvv

Mr1li..'!n. K ".,1'nr.Wf. JKi.li'ii, 1riKii!.

K It

It ',, JI r KMiri-V- . V yMltr;-- II I '."

r'hr.r,,. W M ,'".!!"'.!!!"Krhllil-r- . I

F'l'h. II I

ThliOi--n SV "...ZWplrS. .auraAn.li'rann. WFullrr A .1 Trt.Tmvtor oi-- v

r,

.... :! o

.... S7

.... ir.i

M.,t!io

K.,

Hl.ll fill.Irr

RMr A..

irkMr

P.

TTI

no 12

H4

Z'..0(t22 0424 74M.OH

in 40813 "0

fl.i'.flIS HH

.1 4'i 0

W W 20

II. MIMO

W.1

.1

I..

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I

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....

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.

l ,

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I

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....

m; 13! r.22H n ino 7ü

h ; x i7 7H

12 4210 .ri2

fi 1221 0413 4

217 M17 2r.o r.oHM ill11 3070 VI

rtr r.M

mi4 on32 ir,5Ti 00

1

r.r,.

If.2M'l

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f!

rtn

2'' 'm1 1 02

7 r.4'

1 1

(

' M2'! 00

:n: in01 10t,'i ( i17 7'I ', KH

71 flitM 0r. onn .i i

10 7

7i71 I

Ó

00h;. i;o

171 "Ir. no

3K 71mi7 I MlI I 'in

3 70HI

s onI in

4r. noVI 001 "OH? Mt

.i

'

no0

III 7r.i in

I r. I

'f. MM

7ll VM

M 00o on

1 1 . inI s r.v

:n " r.

n nr.

M 11no 71n.; 1

!'n r,i.'r. ns

inn oo.nr. 4 1

40 110

40 r.2no

20 inr. i

4 :

72r.n I

2 14S W R.N. II 42

I''-- .

.In

7i

27 7 1

f.'13" nil

7 r.2

!0 HI

no wl .M r.n

2 11r. no

?nr. no103 04

7240 12

H 10h r

31 AH

40 ORor.

TUIÍ CLOTMKS PltOIII KM koI.VKI)AT LAST.

Ifhj Buy The Shoddy Hand-Me- .

IKioaa?Ill furni'h jrou a atrirtlv made to

.iur Suit, all wool and made upin Style at the following pruea.

IIS 00 for Coal aad Pant.H.00 Nothinjr like them ever17.50 aeen In Carlabad.It.OO You mut aee them at

HAT AMI ( M)TIIKS HOSPI'I AU

OlU butter la ditlvend fic.h f.urotha churn artry waek.

INT. Pirn. TOTALCOST TAX

3.02 .30 r3.f01 21 .30 21.004.IR .30 73.7010 .30 2! 10

.14 .30 0..V)

7 r.r, no 1n.o1.3 .no "loo

02 .no I;':! io2 2.1 .30 HI in

2? "0 .no 3'' I in1 7r. no 3i2.23 .30 30 f

l!l .30 Son2 33 .30 41

00 .30 HÍ ;'1.01 .no r.o 401.11 .:o 20 fo

;1 "o 31'"1 io no i 3i

10?0 30 2m7.:M'2 'I .30 41

2t .no nr.c1 r. i no ?7 ofI n no 2'if"1 to no '.3.07 .no r.:. 3"

.00 .30 17 7'40 or, nr. I r

11 .no in1.12 .no 20 7'2.'. I .no 4r, 7'1 ''2 .no ,v1 77 .no nt r120 .no r.r, 4-

-

3 no .no r.iit2 17 .30 3H .0(ir,73 no loto:l.r.o .no 2s.r,1 hi .no ;t" ot1 "3 .no 23 c4 oí .no un

.no nr.c.23 .no wo'on no ii4'.3r .no o m

I 20 .30 "2 00.70 .30 1 1 0"

13 00 .no 231 n102 .no ion3 oo .no r.:i on3 10 .30 02 701 10 no 10701 41 no 7'" "M.

7.02 no i io i.

oto no inup2 01 no t,i on1 .03 .30 33 ou'1 r.r, no 27 7-

-OM no 101

3 .07 vo 00 r.

.23 'Kl oru.t

.mt no 1 040 .no s 10

013 .no 1 1111 k?nil 30 W7T

17 nr, no .nnnpo1 0 .30 o wt

00 no 1

n. 10 .no n r- .-

r, 17 no irn3 r.o io f op

IM .30 Hop3 nr, 30 70 1

1 aft 30 nn1 o; "n i r.n

no no r, n1 33 no n m

1 no 1 71 no in 1 n.1 37 no t', 711 to no "i r.n

.30 II 7',10 07 o VI

no .no 0 or'.' nn .no 11 nn

17 nv 3o not no1 17 30 70

00 .30 inir'3 30 4 3"

nr. .30 1 nr.n no 0 7-- '

'. nn 4 .

2 72 "O 4S3-- '

"I no vi r,7rn .no 1227

r, "t .30 117 30 no no 1 1 1 00170 .3(1 31.32

37 .30 37 4".10 .no 10 r.o

170 .no 10030 on no jon 1

4 r.H .no 1 ?rr.3 .30 0 7:1

'I 30 "I 1 1

71 30 1 1 1 701 12 .30 70 10"t no jn S3i no nr. 1

3 "7 .30 '.MOI1 .30 32 u

"io .no rtMon141 .no 7. 7fI r.2 no 77 70

3" 07 no r.iin v2.1! .30 38.0:'

? 13 .30 47 3n2 17 .30 4:1 or1 '17 "o 7 rrt1 "3 .30 21 00.ni .no r. s.'..711 .no 4 k

I no 1 or3. S .30 f.7.01.

vi no r.700 .30 PH.? .no "m no

3 73 .no r.o 1 r.

'on ..10 Hour4'i .no h.w

1 !7 70 21 ("! 30 77,!

9 0! 30 1 r.ii.i11 no or-no .30 r, r

1M0 30 s "i,(1T no 101r.1t

01 no 1 mt2 1) .30 42ft.1

40 30 K NO

M 30 0472 20 30 3 IN2 70 30 " osIM SO 77 03

Srhool lll.lriri Nn IS.ItlHikwoll I W., ..

Curtía K C .

HarH A I

Smith II M

'Vrrpp (, M

Srliiml ItlHtrlrt No. 20.Iliiflr-y-. A Iv. 'Ciiühc r. K-- t. M. K.,la.'r in, Wm.,s.nilh. .1. C. A.,ft ii.fl.aiiirli. T. (.,

Uton, K W ,

Kih.wIp. It II.,U. ionl. II. S..5rl.ii.il IH.irlrl No. 21.íluvi. R. R

NA.MK

";i Ifalf.t..i n on. Mix Willie,MrWilliiim. W. K

rhnnl itrrl No. 22.''nlkin, .lop.

lurk. II. M.,

'oVmiin. 1i. II. ,

('ol oiii.ti. Mil. I,.,llpwh'Tit, .lolin

op, .1. I

Intnl. A. .1..Mi-n- í I'ninklinKnowl Towniitp Cn.f ..Milli-r- . C. A..MiiMiipp. I II.,' tllPI'lIlM. P . .

' w. w.,!. W. W.. Spi-I.- .

I'pinllrtmi Onnil .....milli, A. A.,miili. .1. II..

Thiirmnn, JohnTool... .1. 1...Turtipr. H. II..'.Viirrioi. .1. r,Willhoit, M'IViiitiip. T. '..

rhmil IO-.- l Nn. 23.Itishop CrumhItliikp. (. W

iiti.lill. K. M..(iirn-tl- . .I T.,Irwin, .1. W.,lni'k"on. A.,lurkion. A.,l..liiion, W. N.,lolinm.n. It. (;.,I.ovp. R. II..I.ovp, S. I.,Rup. K. II.,Stokl-M- . .1. K.,Wliitpl. y. .1. II..'riioiupmip t l.oveXrhiMil lli.lriil No. 2.1.Ilnnlv, MÍ-.- Zuli'ikn,"liitt. R. :

i!ii-.- pi. i:. II.,Turnpr. II. II., .

Williiint. .1. ir..Wnoil, I low,Srhool IliHlrlrl Ni. 2fi.Üiiiilipr, I'M., M. K..lii'i'or.l. Ili'iirv,Kni.wli-- . R. II..Si limil No. 27.X.liim. It. T .

rn.tl.l. anna A.,nlt. Winli.n,

Illuylm-k- . Hynl.Ili.i'iiiii'hiit., A. V.,Itiown, M. S ,

Itrnwn, (',, M.,Ilrowo, C. S.,Hn.wn. t! M.. Sprl.,Kriitiinir. K. S.,lliiMi h. .1. C.Ciirl, liny .t Urnrp,''liiylno, .lor.,' 'l.'itiniiN. t '. I'.,I'ohlMI, .lop,t'ru.ipr Humphri'VMnry K. Unvillot'llliy, '. C,Kviin, I. K.,I iiiii hilil. (I. M..t'lpi'iiinii, K. I'.,1'ronini.'. .lolin,I iv. J. M..Ili iil.y. J. WKinuily, W.Ki'tiipr, Clin.,Kin,-- , C. I..,Miilrom. A. N.,M.'t'liiv, iiwpm,M.'Corniii'k. K. P.,Milli-r- , W.,MohOv, .1. II.,Mount. W A..IVar-ion- tl. A.,Pi'ttyjolm, Jim.,Privptt A lloolpyRi.'tinrilMin, C. A.,Shiirp, .1. S.,Siprry, I,. It., Sprl., ..Spi-rr- l.nkiiMMmncl. (I. ().,T.'iry, .1. T..SihiMij llialrirt No. 2H.Itnjlmm, T. S.,Srhool llixtrlrl No. 2!.liuliirt. Nut,SrhiM.I IliNlrii'l No. .10lulu. -- on, .;. jSli'phi'im, J. W

Q. M Vice Pre

. 10 70 1.00 SO 18.00

. n4 61 SO .Xft

. 74 If) 4 45 XO 7 B37 80 8.81

8 10 40 80 8 88j

.. 21 M8 1.4! .30 2.tV7. 8 10 .4! .30 8.89

00 04 4 00 .30 70.04110 ,X .30 15.18

.. 8 02 .r,0 .30 U.I28.-.- 5.15 .30

nr.O.M 21.03 .30 382.47.. 80.21 .80 .30 87.37

12.44 .12 .30 12.88OR 10. INT. PUB. TOTALTAX COST TAX

10.18 .07 .30 17.458 10 .40 .30 8.89

.. 10.20 .98 .30 17.48

.r.i .03 .30 .84... 304 .18 .30 3T.2... 40..'.0 2.70 .r,0 49.50. 8.10 .30 8.80

... 1300 .94 .30 14.93

... .55 .03 .30 .88

... 30.32 2.18 .30 38.80

... 900 .r,8 .30 10.48

... r.0.00 3.04 .30 63.94... 10.22 1.15 .30 20.07

20.50 1.23 .30 22.03.51 .03 .30 .84

. 17.30 1.01 .30 18.R4... 8.10 .40 .30 8.80

3.01 .18 .30 3.52... 8.10 .40 .30 8.89... 8.10 .10 .30 8.89.. 10.H3 .06 .30 11.78

31 10 1.80 .30 33.2A.. 15. 1 M .91 .30 1.39.. 2'0S 1.38 .30 24.00.. 28.8H 1.73 .30 .30.89... 9.02 .54 .30 9.80

f.. 0 10 .54 .30 9.9417.07 .18 .30 18.4625.25 1.62 .30 27.07

803 18 61.82 .30 915.30... 14.12 .14 .30 M.4(l.. 3.55 .19 .30 4.04

31.88 1.01 .30 34.09. 27.70 .28 .30 28.44

1.52 .10 .30 1.02.. 64.04 3.28 .30 58.22

... 07 ..Irt .30 6.73.20 .01 .30 .67

12.82 .13 .30 13.2510.22 1.15 .30 20.07

... 1I.3H .00 .30 12.44

.. 7.00 .45 .30 8.354.70 .20 .30 6.35

47.02 2.HII .30 60.7810.20 .08 .30 17.48

.. 10.20 ,IM .30 17.48.."H .07 .30 11.95

8.10 .19 .30 8.R0122.08 1.22 .30 123.00

.. 6.00 .30 .30 6.00

22 31 1 3 .30 23.9821.00 1.31 .30 23.51

20! 10 12.11 .30 214.840 12 .55 .30 9.07

31 10 1.80 .30 33.0521.00 1 31 .30 23.6123 71 1 30 .30 24.00

ll'.r.l 15.93 .30 122.773.05 .22 .30 4.177 .41 .30 8.1 1

3.r,,.',7 2.13 .30 3R.0025.51 1 53 .30 27.37

" 18 "I .30 fl.8o 4 oo .30 70.90'0 .10 .30 8.00'7 OH .30 1.75

... 01 1 Jo .:0 23.21

... .'13.08 2.02 .30 20.00110 .25 .70 4.05

l'l 12 1 00 .30 17.721 1 1.50 8.07 .30 153.47IOI.08 II 00 .30 108.91

.... 81.34 4.88 .30 80.52.. 38.02 2.32 .30 41.21

41.60 2 49 .30 41.205.02 .35 .30 .f,7

.... 90.72 6.44 .30 90.40

.... 25.08 1.50 .30 20.88

. 21.00 1.31 .30 23.51113.32 0.80 .30 120.13220.8(1 13.78 .30 213.89

... 30.02 2. Ill .30 38.48

.... 38.7(5 2.33 .30 41.3941.27 .41 .30 41.9831 01 2.08 .30 37.02

.... 1 37 .08 .30 1.7510.42 .90 .30 17.7031 10 1 87 .30 33.7241.30 2.48 .30 44.08

... 10.94 .00 .30 11 90. 21 90 1 32 .30 23 62'

.... 00.12 3.97 .30 70.00

10.15 .30 286.50

7.68 .30 134.22

. 8. Ml .49 .30 8.898.10 .4! .30 8.89

Nolirp in further irivon that Ihn uiulcriiiiriuilunit Hx otlli io Collp.tor of K.lily County, will on the

i.m tin y or AiH'iisl, 101.'., oltrr ror nulo at pulilic aurtiontlip front ilonr of ihp rourt Iiiiuhc lit CarUlmd, Kilily

t'ounty. Stair of N'rw in the inunnpr and formprnviili'il I. y uw, lirintiinir at the hour of 10 o'rlork inthe forvnoon, Hppuruti-l- anil in coiiMPiutive order each. . ...: . ...1'nrrpi in piopi-ri- upon wnirn iaxi-- are a-- down I, y the tax rolla of the rounty of Kddy for theyear 1014 or a much thereof an may he nerery to

the amoiintM due; and that aaid ale willhe rontimii'd from day to diiy, not later than 4 o'rlork inthe ufti-rnoo- of eai'h day. until all of mich property ahallhave Hold, or until the amount due ahall have been

or paid, aueh Kale ahall rontinue not exceedinifthirty (301 daya until all of aaid property haa l.ren cold.

In addition to the ahove anil forriioinir, will offerfor anle at thp name time and piare all the Tax SaleCertifl.-nte- aold to Kddy County which have not beeneither aaniiMied or . aaid tax ante certificate num-ber beinit from Number one (I), to Kiifhty twohundred twenty four (K'.'.M) both

W1TNKSS my hand thia 23rd dav of June, 1015.W. II. MFRCIIANT.

Treaaurer and r'xOflWio Tax Collector of Kddv County,Stale of New Mexico

JOHN M. JOYCE. PretidenlCOOKE, Cashier

A. C. HFARD.

01.27

.4

30

21

.200.10

.120.34

Tipam.r

nt

readied

number

J. F. JOVCE; Vlea PreW.A. CRAIQ, Aai't. Caamai

Tin- - First National HunkCANI.SIIAD. N. M.

UNITED STATES DEPOSITORY

DIRECTORSJOHN ft. JOVCi L 5. CrIAWFOsO

A.J.CRAWFORD A. 0. HEARD0. M. C00KI CLARINCt 8CI e.r.JOYCR

PRETTY LINGERIE.

Simple and Oainty NightRoba, Lao Trimmed.

11

a- - v A

til MITT AP lll HKIHTUO a.

Tbla la a year li. u many wotueu areuiaklUK their ou llnn.'ile mi tlipy re

iilre m.MU-l- a that are not tin. Intricateof I'X.'i'.ilii ii. Kliowu In thia llluntralion la of the very nllerna (or aluiple nlulit mIh. Theyoke ami aleevea are of Uve and thetown pun la of illinlij.

THE HOUSEWIVES' BATTLE.

The Suiting Fly One ot the Otadlieetof Inaeota.

Thia la the lime to bevlii your warfare Un the fly and prei'Miitlona takennow are worth all aorta ofUvea later oil Kvi-r- fly tluit you aeebintrltuc tlironah your ria.iiia and allowto live may breed million, em h one ofwhirh muy In tuni breed mlllloiia moreVery oileii a houa-wlf- e will not takethe iMithi-- r In rlmae a alnule fly, wherena If her r.a. ma were fllled elih anyuunil.er of tin-i- he oiilil atari aI'lenrani-- at on.' If alie eoiilil onlreall.e thiit the niiinbera woolil neverbe there If ahe killed the luirle one

Tlui,a mIii- - would eiert hemelf moreat the llrat Rllinwe of the ilrendi! peeL

The aH-ln- u of the year la the breedIlia time for fllea In another mm. Illfor every alimle fly that you allow tolive today you will Un. I huiiiln-- ofthoiiaiind. I ah that alnk Into yourinliiil lliorouclily TIiih tlr fly youJuki iiw tmr.xliiK iiIhmh In tin- - auiiahlue- liM.k tliroUKh and that eliiKlefly and aee lla tlinuaiiiida and llioiiaaiiilof proKeiiy Iri.u'i yuu think you willaave time and trouble later on by killInn Unit alnitle II.v now?

Hwat the fly! Let Mi la Im-- your aloKan If you w lalt to keep your hoiiae.holil free of alikneaa and illaenae thiaiiniin. r Tea. h your chlldri'ii to awat

theui I.ki They will ilo It Kindly If youwin Just arm them each with a weaponwhich l..k very much like a mlnlalure tpiiula racket made out of fleilblewire, and turn them hrnae In the rooina.They Mill make a name of It and willdear up all the tile lu alclit.

8 XV AT TIIK KI.Y.

To Remove Btaina.III.hhI Hliiltia.-- 1 mi a lephl anlutloii

nt a lableNM,nful of kenxene to aitallou of water lt atand a few mluotea, then waali In cold water

Van Htalua. - Table aalt and a wetcloth will relume 'KK alnlna frouiallier

Kr.ilt Minina - ful one hcapliiK tableh.ii(iiI of koiii catiiphor In a two

ounce l.oille of kihhI whiaky Shakewell iialmt au.lap.ly freely toatHlu IipIi inuntli.tf anlled rlolhea

lira Hliilua. -- Vah the ant In alco-hol, then In clear water

Ink Hliilua - I 'over the epot withall. iiiee'e lemon Juice over It and

eiMrae to I lit ami.linn ltut -- Cover thickly with pow-

dered alum and at.-ai- ten intoutee overa teakettle of Ih.IIIii water

I STARCHtD COLLARS USED.

8li.ii Iml linen and pique collara areattractive below round, youthful facet,hut they are nnpeleaaly Irving on thinfaced women and on women paat thefreahneaa of youth With ttwae child-la-

collara are worn knotted tlei ofanft allk In atrlped fine and while ordotted black, and while effecta. nr ofcrepe de chine In aomhre ahadlnnThe effect with one of the new man-nlahl-

tailored aulla la very amart. In-

deed, but women of matura yearn dobeat to confine tbemaehraa to a moreformal type of collar of handkerchiefawn or batíate touched with little

hand embroidery nr flnlahed withA rollar of eome anrt, how-ever- ,

mttat turn over on the dark ta-ilor) rt tit flT (be correct ajf.

CALL AT TIIK

CARLSBADAUTOMOBILE GO.

FOR A

DEMONSTRATIONor tiii:

SAXON SIXAND ROADSTER

CAR LOAD HAS .11 'ST ARRIVEDTllllSKARi: 1111ft MODKI.S AM)HAVi: NO KfJl'AI. AT Till; PRICK

Carlsbad AutomobileCompany

AGENTS

Alliaon la the place, '.hat ran hoyThe rheapeat (rood oet-tal- the ky.Many thinira of the hiititcat (trad".Through low prices are made to wade.Machine of the hi ifheat type are aoldAt pricea that atartlo weak and bold.Seize thia rhance both poor and rich;On to a irood thine one time to hitci).I'or be that finds Allison's Store,V ill I.Uss his stars forever more.

J. F. ALLISON,South of Springs llotl.

For the Children

Two Members of thWooHpeitr Family.

Slwi children have eu und admtredthe wiaiiliMi'ker. Ilolllitleaa. too, tbeyhave heard him ptvkluic away on trunkor limb of tree. What lot of knock-hu- e

he can do for aucb a email creature!Tln-r- are Uve or all aiieclea of wood-liei-ker- a

fu m II In r known In the east-ern atnlea Alane are ahown plctureaof I w o of ihein The bird at Uie lopla a hairy wnliH'ker, the other thedow ny woodHH'ker. They differ chieflyIn slice, their colora beliiK practicallythe Kiime. The liuilea. like tbiate ofin iiny other wiaaliieckera. are dlailn-KiilMbe- il

I.y a ai'arlet patch on the bead.An ciHinlnallnn of many aumiarba ofthese two aM le ahowa tlnit from two.third n three tonn ha of the food

of limpets, chiefly noxloua ktlKl.Wiaid iH.rlim lavtlea. both adulta andlarvae are couapk iinua. and with themate asMa'lalcd many raterplllara. tmwi-l-

sis--, lea that burrow Into treea. Neil

In ImiHirtance are the ants ibat live Inileca.vlua: wood, all or which are soughtby wiHidiwkera and eaten In greatquantities Many aula are particular-ly harmful to timber, fur If ibej noda small s,t of decay In the vacautburrow of a wood laa-e-r they eolargthe hole, and aa their iMiuiy la alwayson the Increase tbey cuuiluue to eataway tlie wood until the whole trimsla hnneycomlied. Moreover, ihey arenot aeeeaalhle to bint generally andcould pursue their career or deal rue-Ho-

iinmoleated were It not that thewoodpeckers, wlib Leaks and tongues

eeiNH-tall- fitted for sin b work, din outand devour tbeni It la ttni evidenttbat woode'kera are great coosenators of fore is.

A Boy (ceut Is Thrifty,The cashier or the savings hank la

accustomed to see the boy scout at biswindow lie knowa tbat when thekhaki rlad youth appeara betune blutwith a sum. nu waiter bow aman, heU UvUitf iii to avuul Uw No, "I

acoiit la thrifty "A scout la thrifty. He doea not wan-

tonly deatroy proierty. He workfaithfully, wastes notblug and makethe beat uae of bla opunrtunlUea. Heaavea his money so that be may paybla own way. be generous to those Inneed and helpful to worthy objectHe may work fur pay. but must notreceive tips for courtesies or goodturna.

To become a second class scoutboy must earn and deposit at least IIIn a bank. To become a flrat classecont a Imy niiiat earu and deposit atleaat 12 lu a bank.

Conundrums.What herb Is moat Injurious to a guTi

beauty T ThymeWhy are human eye like persona re-

mote from one another? Because, al-

though they may correspond, tbey nev-

er meet.Why la a school I. y being whipped

like your eye? lleca use he Is a pupilunder the laab

Why are rluuda like coachmen t Re-caí e ihey hold the rains Ireloai.

Why wua the dumb waiter returned T

Because It didn't anawerWhy I a IWhermun'a the moat prof-

itable bualupHs) It Is all net profit.

Why It's Catlrd Píenle.The term "picnic" originated In the

following uisutier: When what la nowknown aa a pb ulc was being arrangedfor the custom originally waa that tboaewho Intended to be present ahould aup-pl- y

the eatables and drinkables. A listuf these necpaxltlea having been drawnup. It waa paaaed round, and each per-son picked out the article of food ordrink that he or ahe .was willing tofurnlh and the mime of the articlewas "nicked." or th ked. off the Uat.The ohmi air entertainment tbua ba-ca he known aa "pick and nick " Tinnistnm la aaid to date from 112

The Rims ef Parous Prime.Thers livril s D'ggo fai and Ma

Thai hills lie enuM ant ellmk.Put UrH 10 nInaute his siv.

Hi name was t'orru Prtmsj

One summer dsyHe went swav

Quit nro.Ktlv in a ran;Poor Porrus. haHad son to tsa

Wllh Tnni, hs butehar's msnl-- Infants' Msasstaak

Christian & Co., INSURANCE.-"-f- r

FATTY'S

DF.ST OF COLD DRINKS

Barbershop

rnnnrous tkeatmknt To allEverything New and

R.M.TH0RNE

UNDERTAKER

LICENSED EMRALMEBTelephone 71

HmHmmtHMifj

C N. Jone am) fiin B, 8mlth leftjMaterdajr oriinU l'i.

JT

tha

sold

Bn and ehlldren, and Mr. andi

ME.Lat goat roping

day Tipton,early and and down

Mexican revolver twading I A

dayit four through hi lodging

goodi,Vl wa oiaae. wa nrougnt in lotnree gins, town

. even- - chicken and a variety baikets pie, and demon and ex- -i.- -iI I"'. t n.ning and camping trip .l.d. lemon pie, four, The Ublea and platform tracted by Dr. Uckey. threatArtesia, ia

Irvan Thermanpant last night

ti.,1

by 44wa

by the theVL ana wen me An.

of.r.i, rit.

ao,

He wa

down iV of Ice cold ened with havthem big and waa Those at--1 wood one

re-- tending were: l. G. and porta. they had a lovelyI '

to Iht family. Mrs. Tom and family. Quince won first. .T. i . ' d j i

JT.' early, Mrs. Ben Dickson and family, Mrs. goat roping, $15.00, accident occurred Sunday eveningoen jcrry " .. i wauuni Hm ana lamny, Anaer- - tying it In six!

Acrey ranch .yesterday.

Wheeler, wife,

BARBECUE ACCIDENTALLY

spending

dischargedeffect

spreadsandwichesEur dancing!

"n,n", under pneumonia,lemonade plentiful. every

í7..ui?V '"("'lapt caiwparraiBtdBndspent Iatherman

fried enjoyed family, Wm. and ,to camn. famtlv Ml .1.. T..III.

Scott, aUorney, came the water first thin, golnj F.dna Cox and son, Roy, Uncle y, $S.OO. tournament Warren M II.VAIN I'AVS FOK TIIK ASHES.irora Roswell Monday. with shoes and ao Kuykendall, Messrs. Brainard, Pullen, Crowder Quince latherman tied

. .. .I Tk; W0,1 hurt feeb Blythe McCollum, FaU Simpson, John ,d divided purse. The Mcllvain when In- -

Simpson wife They a very time. Galton, and t family Dick- - pleasure young and paid lonnes thator ... - . - sun alike. young dancen m m engag- -

Mr. Nutt ThalmaBorn, to Mr. Mr. Chas. Voice,! Alberts spent Monday at Hager--

of Malaga, Tuesday, uin, a son

fore

and

and

andV ears, which and their families Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. I.and I., had a day. Had been andfrom point moon- - Mina Jim. Mis.

Van Horn, Texan, were here lues, .plendid and returned day night. uln t. Dow John Wells Wed- -

j o I yond more fifty-fiv- e big nesday and at onspent on many w. , ,r... . ....... ..K i.ni..g irip. reineyl ti M..III. J A. I i ."' Pnt aavaral davs Durant, V. "V.C th fourth In vicinity, coming Carlnbad, from yueen a very Midi rtun KridnyLumbag f"r visit with in from n.,H f Rrkv . Th. from Carlsbad in A took them i;.,l... L

Chas. Beeman, commissioner fromMalaga, Is this week incounty swat.

of coast.

Buckner,

tha

AT

at of

At thatainner mi

looK or werethe treetht ay

theairs, bum and

a! son II. 8. wonnice, A. anl Maa iM-- d mnn.

K. K. the in Inhis on.

not his was See ofhad ha 11. C. on. He has all

wno uve near mere. od immu muco

tue

andth lal

miles take waanl for hu haa were

L D. ul He left th, ofof in. 0Ver ranch be- -

tne than carstha Ktn l..f. Ares were ine

some ana muifor pica sum unie and Mr.

th. last Kri- - car out L!.In

the

L.

. ' f"rm and Mr. and early- . spent cars his coat ...i.' ln uuues I. II...!! .n.l ll.. f.niilv for la.t I n . .L ...-- . rCharles old time

I I 1

Tournament,

afternoondelightfully

rumliihed anoulder

Skidmore

represented

M.rrh.nt hospital tockmen Istwick,Merchant pleasant growing daughter.Albritton'sevening Thursday McMillan

Valley'

Carlsbad.

ChalmenGrantham

spendingj- ami

"y from B. Hart

s i' went srn M.s-e- s tuck, rMf

for and a old tin., friend. unaay wiera ..ispenjr. and j. n. ann .am..,. " T" A""l r.'"MPacific

that his farm down

Carlsbad evening.

fhunday

eighteen

Ju"t,day.

Stewartleave' Uks S.turd.y.nd family yaughns Dow.and

exposition relatives .... anH Trmy. Uueenna oeen in farming in i n, i 1.1. ... ..,. I.ura. famine. hnd over Crow Hatyears. and

has away . fewMr

son Mr. ,h , (r, , Tuesday. They Judkins son. Dr Mrs. As they downthe valley. Jmta. leftha. Sunday were ,h xn,rt(0. h u ,,,.., .lay they Mr. Aker out with i

l whn r",k "'" th in Dean lat thicj mail. He a new . - Pr Bm)A aV.yu"LJt. r".hJb. rm'en s.n"m. "Ta" ra any out on motorcycle,. hud,

ana Wilis Ul nwn? w.mv,Julv th. doing well spent night with and Mrs.

ine uecue non. a day t-- w" '"anrn All auenilen re- - rains; ,.en lire the

apent yesterday in shopping dayand altttr nunnoas

few

.u

fish, Had

dam

sp.-n- t

mr,

andniirht

Ned

family

km.Ja.--

Themay lo.

avirnuvu report good......lne 01 ne 01 a 11 lavor uk

Iv ai..... -- T. PARTY.H. E. Fort ''-- ' -s- ited Mrs. fflle?f1l.ri "J"'Worth

i John llii.'i'in. 'mbv nre. tv.i t , snenilinir the week

John Mctollaum has womiu nis . W"".,Z nurents. up Monday.T1 ...... a M I ,lll -- lM1 t lllll ...

X p" vT íoad-P-"- hi. ..-la-

Wednesday who hud drove up fromboard. In rreif. cermi".

Joe Herw.g returned yesterday from'Mr ,, ,()((, vNjtJ Mu.

his visit in ine ing in

' day

good time, weather .rolhers,,,

Mitchell John Higginsof rain. j Friday, to the He'menwuy.

of herJohnson returned E. M. leaves t!ie , 0

Tuesday where she was mountains. He drive up and i

of Mrs. uike will VVednesdav ndurnedarrompamed by Mrs. andkirkl.v reniiilt.de.- - the summer

Born, to Mr. and X. ranches.Tuesday, July mh, a ninegi'l. and baby are; Mr Mrs. Ira the

doiiig nicely. children were down from rancha few

Joe was vi.i- - bud boys girlslast ur. I a had filled withwas He i. nil- - ers and to when

now. , it not scare

W. trot home Wilks wife theI it... rame in Sun- - ..,,..1. r"l,

to thetthe outin iuwo

husher mr anil a

shuuld attend.

Artesia

nd'luig

Craven.

Mary

second

left

ITBenson

tanltrht and

county seveial

puties

today

and

T..leVl11(,y

and,,.,,toduy

called came

the

Mrs. jous

The

.Monday, Carls.taken und returned. and

ufternoon pockets crack-.nhysici-

summoned. expected ccb'brulcright .gain

Woerrxr Glasscock, andlittl. ..i.l. ih..l. Mrs.Alewines

night ami T'.ie ulay, burned ground.spentmomuiK. '.un-i-nn- ;

icruiiy.Mrs. Valley (wen, who been

well

ftsh.

cam. ily.

spent days

their

''y home

reiurnvu

mother,a few is Artesia, going up, rams in front Mcyquitc. theTuesday morning . of week, where i

. I.....M i. . I...u.., .... k illolllh l.usk. n.,., '.t,.., ,,,1, ... "

wa I

ut:

I

,,

S- -in

.u in

Tl

en

.....a ao..,, nr.ut

........ m... i - . ...in'iiiu I I 11 11 , .L II '1 vrves tanksX T m ,B ,,., y me

wer,. on tl -out i

i en the

Miss ter Temí. ut,d Mrs. D.un f,om I'vnl le,a niece Dr. Durham, Curlsl u.l lustWednesday afternoon und will t'.e:r .i em out. fu: i" i

Carlsbad. they will vish with theidami fKniiiy. M s Lee M.dd!i- -

Miss Linn went to und the two .t.n, Cuss and Hilevriver celelnation and Dean.

nnd s aweek with "Billy" Hcgler. M.'? " f"w

. with her U'n t" i"ithe canning denionstrn- - .'. i etiended the

al nuil school iie necuv unu ui I n.U'.dnn.ilnv ufternoon. Indy Ne'tie .due

community1 Bertand go lo thisj,,,. ntlend the

f the O. F. tonight.

Preeding Monday the barbecue th.. ranch andI.ovington down the relurned t.e,, Wednesday. They

train the delighted tl.e muchKoine

Mi"S.

S,"'U

returned Tuesday.

board has been in sessionjtinee nnd tran-

suded considerable business,claims passing road

May Tutterson El.. u i,, fioiil Pi.eny.

daughterssUter Lovington,

CurNbadtomorrow moniing.

Mrs. John Harvey ami U.oyTexus,

tiiorning. sl.l so-i- -d ties..mint with purents.

summer the

Onburn, Sat-

urday from where he beenupending three with his grand-mother, Mrs. foiledall kinds of works his

and

lleeman, week

Klixlier. laaie

man

?.Hillv

f. K.

Mr.for

the

thut ine

Uta ih

in

of

the

much.

Josenhine

Middleton, his biw,from Mae,

ulldown Ijueen Monibty,

at Ttogoing on

W' reut

on

pleased nil. nil

Mr. nndCiilifornia ex

Elia Graham,r of her of il II

Mrs. Seth Ferrel. nnd herAidoin will return to duv in for the ex- -

f ir

r her onelist.

4 Jr.,has

fire

we'ksFruneisco, Angeles

Ki'ilvii'tnied Tues.

Ilovd fiomthey ig'i.1

hap-pily.

themreturn he did ccblnute the welcome.

Carl.

where

royal washe could wuit long. Mi.

A. A. tho

tha

the

lieleftfor

Ave bigIn

M. triad

the ne.--

sas,the

theKel

rreathis

the

and

Mrs. .de.

.1 down

...

oai

bur

K'iyVeni.'allfrom

r.

accompaniedwith li.d.ei' P"n- -

fumiluur...i..,.u.t.... i....i..A

iiimi

Lee

the sthe

She over

or linn the lopSun

I Weretelv d ... !.? v

tie Mr.Kit

the tt, i ii life

She andl In

if a

an

in itnot

o -

h ither Mis

the two' '" '"'" w"n ",rby his on a

his lice- -

. nni . . ll , iH . i xt:u ii i.

attendedmost

PICNIC ItlCSaturday a of

ia apant day tha fluma. Moat

J..."s

dañe- -all Henry

them going the; dancing waa kept up all night. mllea I'eco accidentallyday. spent the waa a he floor

tha band from which the bulltruck. beeves below left rib

water made much muttona, panned bodytwelve o a under below right

J areueo me carneaed cake, alad,! bullet

pickles, olive,varieties rakes, cotton-- : bullet

party Stokes

rierre

the

them. Mullan money.place Ida Rrni Mr.

district "Jud" the.down

dayspent for surance.peoplefamily

the Topcka,about from where will treatment

wjrse. Wedms- -picnic

ana grounn.

apun

i.:!

iiiieiva.

their morning tied behind th.T.....I... nn n.l.Rascoe. er barbecue.

A

or

w,. '" '

ThomeJohnle Jennie l.nn.

isha, Robt.

tha tour, and w Vernonnal-- , and Miss t country

u;..t....i and Dow

cause u,ed:ma.re the

riiiviii,r?m

Mrs.v.... wi'n

Texas. runrh

wi(hMrs.

west

fromfrotr

sick

theI....L

ghter

her,

rum

this

from

andw'iHi trip nnd

und

lust

two

and

and

will

and

thut thev

Mrs. Hollythev

Ran

Mrs.

land

and

'riini cont-li- l

day andMrs. del

have ponl

nut

cause

wilhMrs.

visit W1,h

lllnek return- -

Eliilu

I'LL

The noon;that went and

The bad tookand

clockcwiiy

goatand

tinnn.

and

Tom Kan- - time

very

were:them ruling

Miss

Missard óf'

Kern been'

Rerkett Mrs. C a claim for RossPaul Ares Calvin returned Mr. Mrs. regard range water his

valky Ceorira .Clay rolor.d horse,. Wedneandreturned ,onRcr than Fr,nU Rindel.il Jl hut untry Hines. being

, n.old thing named wen, the rock., hi.

All Mr.

baby

Wesley teturned t'arl.buH M..nJ between time.

looking

Tuerilny

engaged

Mnmliiv

thiit II.ia r. uiuhin'r 111 IOU IUL 1111,1 lltitr nlitl it...........nj. ...... H...I...... iriT - - ......X T barbecue another very welcome, which be

.1 t ll I..a.aa té ....... I I . . a"' Pleasures nay " """ii..." J witn down-pou-

Grime, leave, for

n boy. ...

up "'? her goingbrothe,

ill fire

the

fit.

unu

t...j bimo two or tnro. ,, ,nsvs 'n

Sniilh.

s,l,"t,rnillthl.r Mejtll.K- - Clitford

Phoneillness

,7,hisTecos wnch Thurs- -hislllncsa expects

spend day

l.utnerTerry pound

mother

Littlelently Friday

mules.

""V- -

spentAlonuuy

visitinir sus. nigciim, riowmunweeks, Texas,

tirst Mr. I'lnwmalid

Sharon,Texas,

spend

Jennie

Thomefritmd,

forgetuuiiuoriuin

Messrs.

timi.'M

Diego.

funeral

Judsnn

Dlcgo.

Texas,

t'M-iri-

banker

string

stockmen

Penny

Q"" Roswell

selling

helped

Taylor

speak

liittlie

j" sister. FrancisMm. .vnn

Kobemother.

time

girl, also Miss Ruthwent with themwher.

Mrs. Pearldren, also Mrs. Alewine anil chil-dren, Saturdnv morninghome of brothers, John and Roy

of l.akewood. continuedtheir journey and spent

returninir Carlslmd Wednes- -.,.Monday afternoon Mrs,

family Jewel Stan- -

oauTi'tiT rv ifn anSewelloí cnii'Ken nru lov

hi.tilunch

f.,.ll....ltiir.!"". .11,, iui.1Nellie and Georgia Wttt evening entonte to Panama ;' good

snent Tuesduv at iunrh-- go w.,.re ,1(1llining l.usk mer.

-- hibl.e.,campus loving eo'id

Loiie Mr.Mrs. arrived pushed wuotigli

FHihvsummer where

couple

Don'tton

Every in returned

Huyes, Minter, Leek,Flowers even- -

M.Knrp will meet-ing I.

countymorning has

uuilitin'mutters.

..i.iiiiiIiil'.mothei,

Pj."

girl

wil'

widower

returned

Judsnnawul'mg

the

the the

the

father-I- Mr,Dean, Uvalde, Vir-gi-

Audrey cameattemle.l

Kobcrta spent

visiting

Mr.

enroute

Arte-ii- l

spent

byArizmui

their married

extend

July style

meata,

aidfum.ly h'rCommis

ivi.r

number

Three lowerbeing;

dinner

Aiiwn,

would

nttnn.lodranch. would

'

rrva .........

Glover

Glover

theturn the

outwaa

for

.......IXT

her

for

by

(en

Gallonthe

she

Acrey anil chiltwo

left for theher

TheyMondav

rr..m

joi,n

andMrs.

Mr iiincn

for

s''e

ai'uniinnceed nicnic the nearthe flume.

.ml i...r..,,Euken

evening. bobos,the "hI ..,.,Lr

airIV

Blnc'tMr.

of

ue.iuy.ounce

early

Paso,

left

wheiu

weeks

iitul Mary

l.ns

where

where

famil

theCarlo- -'

bread

round

the

put

bit

baby

muí'-- . Howard .Null was with Un-

hand bnys.

VirL'iniu left hinight for her in Little Pock,Arkansas. Mrs. lias

strong and decidedchange.

Ross Middleton doing somebranding badly hrui-c- ami tinteirle! the the

Wed'H'silav is andmorning, having eninyeu' her stay "," orses.

Texas,nnd

Ed. Hend nnd have brenMrs. Julian left

in r toby ilr.m

und over in Puso uml oilierEdna the

will remain in Cuilsluid untilr"uch t'oiiie. Mie will '.'o on the

linme.

Benson leave Christina K Co.. IV-- i F

pert tour Pacltlc enlist nnd seo M nleerled ii theviio.itinn San Fiuncisco aril ball iinie lo Poswell o,.

Misses ll.Hended m

of stopped TEl

to

tilolie,

monthsfriends school

mnu'iions

1'ourth

Pluinview,visiting

olemau

brother.

il'i" were Mr,Me

to of Mr.in and

over in

i

titof

ll"of

has

of1

m.n

"",M"'and one otVaeis O.

of

anpickle

in vl-- ;nil- -

of

..f

of

of

at launiui

Mondayhe

toPuurvnit. and

Misses

who A.rt,

,,Murrah

.''pe,

Moore.

spring

in

In

in.

Ciuiirhnian

notm..n feelitiir lo

make

wasbroken of week.

he upu'r

familySmith,

are Elephant

daughn

to Pe !.i-- e

ut

A.

and Mrs. Church. I,sr.. Vieh'.N

M.uy llubl aiil nihi

He'l'tr who

.ii"'il tlnee leased near

Smith

Music

Kr.

er;i'.nler

has I'oi's hi, ewu. buthe lle'-le- r ran.'h, wus kicked by

Imrse at (he rtinch 'lltho arm which much im.Ho ri.M.,. in tiePick Thome nnd bus been in town eversince swul'i lu-is come l'"':iv.

Wuli. e'.'.'iv IV. ,.t,.:rin hjs right nun. wlnli

lilling the big bottle at b.'r' bolt'e

und cume near fall'rg and l!..bto save tied but has In

Ids urm ever since.

Mr. lied Mrs Sanderson mil lili'eCecil, left night f"."

un ir noine town Maim. They

thethe

us joins bis propei ty. Mr. undW III! I1UI1IV .lilla T niiiK-- noil r"i- - .,.,..mudo trip his new rus-o- n nf Loving and Miss N,Mi. 'M'cct

of "of of cf K.

in

the state. iet night thut hall. ft Insurance.

.mil

AT XT RANCH. SHOT.and nativa named Gregorio

Inr tha XT ranch Tuesday, the employtha

childrenbathing.

pleasantnear the and

anatorium

arranged

Carlsbad.

re- - left

money which pneumonia most likely.re'urn'"t catching tha

8.COOl

sUnkinmin

pleasantMir

spendimr

MMilL.,iii

furnished

and the old chatted ' buniness except one and dividedlliggins for pleasantly.

J.J.to and and

iuieplenty

Ixule nesday returned hilarm.

and

n anu ' :ui ineNirhrd and fnmily. Grace Cooke

Dick t'oad. Dick

to

nd inr.aorire family. H.

and and and in to andand Beckett and and came

to Horace

Smith.to

the

and

Mr.

the

I The visitors dinner, supper out and wason nn with the got on

Trank and wentWiilnmjlalf ...... a t t'linvimkui -

glowinp- - fur the the0 ... I

nil Mrs '" ").

in

a.

th

spent

niirht.

Mr,

tooi

to

in

.1.

gi

nd

Williams.

isurusperpus

on

-

Hiri

vin

'

n,n, mi

.

,

toa

j into

.u

la- -

m

i-

a

-

" r

'

I

theEl

r.

o

S

T.V. ' Al

-- s d

h.'i

s of t

i abl' Mondav,

p

a n arm.belter

I

' M"amenisI'.

e !

il 'l i

nursing

ilia III viiu, , , , i i r ,

in

InTjerduy at I Christian

Ramireiat In

I

neighbors "

aat

i '

unirat

0T

1 fewevet ing r.t his

four

INSURANCE.

fir.Wednesday

twenty-Mv- e

Marathon, S.iturd.iy

Campbell daughters,

anticipates spending

faughmati

However,

Wedne-ila- y

commission lukuv'proundt. chcmicul

nepurtincnt

Toffelmir

enlertait.fdSaturday

home, tables progress- -

ive bunco.. Punch whs erved While they worked the road on lhout the a luncheon of Queen and the roitdcmhim cake ice rr'nm at 1 1 :M0. in inuny ways they used

Those attending the hc in a bodv and work was called olf.lied n very dtdightful evening .Neltio i.iul

Kdnu Graves. Thelma aiulHnth llaiurhert v. lilliun

with , Null nn Hlytho. Mr. Mrs. IVrre' re he...l'o.irscool and was calledtown. Inst owing Sam

Mr.. J. Hull

andnor and

baby

The

witn

Hut'hey

thev

The

Mr.

hnm,

month..

and

the

a"d

Mie

Mrs. t

while

lookingvery "'

in

tin went

the Gr.i-- '

more

still

exited II

Son

evening

mimythat

that returned

beenColeman.

Olis

droppedand

autowere

mora

and

and

andliver

Wl

three

milts

home

first

whovisiting M.ui- -

goingstop

places. Graves,llievlii.in

those

ThevM

gaveI,iiiIi..iii.

with v.--

Wi:lerI'ruit lipp.

It. n

on

r.,.. eiii.:i7,

at1. (I.

deven

Tha

Jim

and

oint--

norse

and fam- -

andand

Dur--

had anilfast "ettit.g niui!. aulo hauling

hi- '-outing

the;

home

.andtheir

,,,,

Ed'ui

flvni'in.

I

that

home

evening anil dell- - way helpedand

enlovini'were:

Nor- -been

rwfrd. and Selh

this

iiiisilinn,

himf,,i with

the McCollum, Charley Walker. LutherNelson, and the host, ChHS. Itaicy.

Mr. and Moore to mother, Puso ""'I relatives ami friends in I

morrow for the Mr. been Monday. Hullas Mincrul Wei!Moore will select the full Hid winterstock of goods for Joycc-l'iui- t com-pun-

dry goods ilenart ineiil. Whiloaway they will visit inI. C.

While in Artesia lnM Saturday Wal-te- r

I'euilleton sold his lot undat that place. I 'art of !'

lot wus in un orchunl. He iJ-- n .o!ilun dverlund six to Mr. Williams ofArtehiii. Mr. and Mrs. Perdición milMrs. Pele Lowenbruck iittended theiiirtiivul theie ui.d ielnr:,iilhri'ie Sunday ufternoon.

Ir. T. E. Pr "'... the sirume down from Roswell Tu I:'He will in Curlsbud f,r a mu il

t'l duys. See his ml eUev here.

The sermon Sunday al t'.e li

t church on Putrioti in waspleasing und b.nelicial.

T! ri p t l.i cs emphusi '.ed; tliutif t'.e i.l'icer. the iMiii-- and the sol-

di r, I'lilimg atlcntion to the emir-fitic- y

of the soldi I, rpeeil'ying thaihe im..t l'n-- t be a gi citi en definel.e c mid le ll l'or.1 .oiilier. The

lided il

!'ais. all of Andersonweie in in

oII. Gee tonight "

l'u'i:i'' Circo i ?nr l,,1;(.lei

t all due 'Iof

iun

Ari'oiia, lie .

IV their car Arunnn. Th; v he uwny three months.

direct

in

company.

In

it

buving

bunu

.,'oies .mil I l.e ciiildir,si.-l- hióguie, and

Ma-d- i !' ' ll. id linedHklabomu Inst of the we. k, who e

lii'on pa t

- '1 i y wire a lepaiiied on1,1 .ll h bv lilll .unpl .11. Ir,

Hud .be, vv u w.ll tl til.r - l. Inl liie'Ñy.

Verne,.." i' Mi. and Mn. L. J, Postrer,

has typhoid past timeWeel,-- . He is le to le up !ill

i. It i, nt iii'ii'i' Mrs. ll, ine!' I .In Hie inmilitalns

il - i ell a.- - he le go.

I irisiian & Co., Iiisururieu.

W. A. Simmi.!'.-- I

a ilninnlii-- t night,

i .Ii. muWe-- 'i'iV'1.

mail i il inil wa j

te.After

i i. m. i.y

o

ii

r

efreof

I IT I

I I I " hi I I i,' I:finm ranch, Hales tin. , o nl

in the yestenluy al.o'itLioi.e in a uin

f. r llllles 1.' sid.. ofM.i-ie- y tu of Dull,

ami Mis. W H Cl.illon I '.'le ' I.l g I . I.llilh I,,.... vi, il

'lieir home to Wal'er I'en'.lle. m ''" weeks here with 'lil 'i'Mi

i'oiiiiMrs. Wisdom for their home

i !' line, Moiulay night.Wisdom a ti n vai

n u-- . sale lady i.ty -- . il

In l pun lilt wei here.

ing penetrated the lung rangingdiagonally aero effect of

at

two ofThe

Illn.k that. The Alewine waa lhahe the

PecosOoropany. Oklahoma, the

lll.k

iecs

two

,h(1

ton.Mr-- .

rrr-- .''"

tl!i

theA.

Christian ('..

mountains.

from

months,

duurhter,

Middleton

curof

the the

the

John MfCnlluiim com., froml"r IIIIW"'th work on the Out-e- route.

thru- -

toup the

1'iis

the

the

Ill

bad

ha.

Chrltian to.. INSURANCE.

I,'-- .. .,LY ."''slind v..

Wu.diington,

im-

provements

I.ewH, Thursday alli'iuliiiL' the funeralrts. Mrs. Ferrel. Frank Fry ciitne up from

me.tie

we-- t

I,el

i..U

Sliii'ktnn. Texas, ami

." ' " ' ' ' " 1 ' I c I. v m i a

I l

t

..

'

.

t

' ,

c

I i 0

f

. Sel'i Pry is lire n place, heylliiiuli's

Mrs, .luck Their f""'east, whetp

tlnee

fever

from

from

rMinn

Walter IVinllrtun presentedi

Ccoil'c I'enilleton, witli!live piise'.-e- r Peral this we,!..1

Pemllcl. Hi and Henry ,ri.-- 'out car coming lo limnWednesday.

M. L. Davis, who ha- - been siitTeiii.ghit .1 ii tu- - I'.lh. Irj.iic

to save the ball, bad leml vedyester lay at his i,un.' in oni. i tuthe oilier Mr. Davis i. u'.liin:easy since noon today.

"Hill" Junes is sii'T'ring w , I

from bl. in his bund.hiind while working on

wind

C. N. und wife went toII. L. Walker's ranch Siind.iV umlwill spend summer

Notary a I Curient olliie. i

P. I!. Gobel uf Aiiliniiie. Oi,lahom.i,tiavi ling mini wit. i taken suddenly ,

at Smugs hi. Id Sinnli.v u,ii,cl ir. h 'n well u"d decornti appendicitis, was moved 'o.vim und Company "If sunuturium Wi'dnesday.that being ullei. dance. o

Christian A INSURANCE.J. leaves for the

ciast. lie ..'I iimKi ot Tie vvas e.i- -

four s'i'p overs giiing and ci'ining back tuined by .s. Ilanly at llanlv- -

l!i iiiicll He will t.ti .it crafl 'I'hursday. Iim-- i la' 'sElida, ai.vl Port.ilc- - when his daugli- - players playing bridge. I unchenter, Mrs. Mnitii, iiviiic. another was reived al twelve oiii,,1,. T.daughter. Kite llumphrie at Indies enjoyed the duy vciy lii.i.n.Ulna. will vinited. lie - wexpects

Mi.her ni

iiinpl'i fromtie

have for thevv.il.He Onlien. Hi VI: 'II

on

tie litlle old

llieIII wil!

inliik.i to

a' to

Mtr-i-

Win

p.:

initial'at

tl.,.,;larliii'

Illsl iving illbin that

thut bungicon ilnwn pour of

Hiethe mouth ca.iv.m,

Mr andIII ul.o

here

Co.,

leftnee.

Mrs. enjoyed davsduties

the Penpb wliil.j

thattime.

limn

road

A

not

Fort will

In

a newMis.

new by

ivi-ame

,,iveeye.

thi- -mil

,(

out

ther.-- .

Hie

town

route.

Mrs.

Mrs.

dail

Mr. and M"-- . l."ii'.'bolham and twoihlhlien iiiiím-.- yestenlay from S'ivdel, Texas. Tin y related t,. SilhI em I.

Julian Smith left for Paciiu- -

coast Wednesday night. He !.nil all hi.s Cine, and sunl: "I. i n); f. r

ben you it ii e ci.mii.g".

Your application lo mal e linal pi ...fliiiulc out fne ut Ibis lill'ne.

t4A

44I44

LcL us fgure your bills

We

'Phone 66

The Sweet ShopIS THE PLACE TO GET

Cold DrinksFresh Nut

Pla'nVanillaCreamYOUR PLEASURE IS OURS

PHONE

The SweetShopYOUR ORDER POR SATURDAY

AND SUNDAY

Little Opal Midillvtnn is very illtilia W..jk auilK l.rt.,..t.i..l i ..'....Ml

.

Allwrt Monday Wehh

Mr71íolIy cZ.eof u'wTthhi íhVV.,; TV.mrr.ñge

HarVV.rf.ia.it.. liU7rf

,

arrival

Buick.

Glover

P.ulle

Creara

hauled water to Avalon so often. Patsat as struight in his saddle us he didt f ...... i l j . .

Ros.

ll. ne

of

pond

Illy.

goats for some time.has been with tne

o- -FIRE SATURDAY EVENING.

Aliout six p. m.. Sitturduy, Hie destroyed the house nf llert Ale'vinenn (iuudulupe street oppusiie umlubout a lilock north of the Catholicchurch. Mr. Alewine was in town iinii

'brear and lunch in theof Otis, Benuemen

G.

in

nr.

O.

of

of

playing

funds

pluntof

t.n

Li'MiT

lire. I he llrst report wits thut itwus the Kliomer resilience ucross thestreet from Alewine's. Mrs. Aluainewas also uwny having left fur llnpc1. ...... ..... Tl

I " " ill,,, 3 I'llilHU.. IIU' I UUtin "r? Nothing

was saveil, fur Hie lire hud obluinitimuch head way when diseuvered. Till'hou"- - was iiiM.it I in the AtlaW. I'. Mrllvain fot í . L' n I and

fur f iMI.no. As link wouldI. ne it the Mrllviiin itgeluy has paidfur all lnxM- - in Ciiilsbail since M'.M llvain lias eni'iigeil in luiim---- . iiipl ni.il Hint tt.i iliviilcil.

Mis. .1. e II. inch anil Sueelie .Macretiitned to ui'l-bi- id ye.teiilay alter-iioo- n

nun u lii tnontlis stnv ini "' io. with "iintis in lexus. 1 Msir

Mi'Comb lit the foot of the mniinlnii'. 'd Mrs. pureiils in Went -

bsive Mrs. Ardoin of I'mnight has here since mili. and

while

be

Mi

oil.

u"'

tli

tbeit

her

Mrs.

the

withthe

poisonthemill.

Walker

the

""eteii('d

Co..

are

the

r..u.

une

El

' Mrs. I lunch pleuscd to be homen gain.

oFrank Fertel, wife and two rhililici.

left for I lie I'm rell ranch this in..i ni."i'Mr. Haywood Palter-ot- i of Snvdcr,Texas, wiiil out with I hem.

I K SALE, in ai rein at mil. .Villi ess U.

beE. PLA IT.

'ANTED.- Giil to do light Iioumwo. I- anil li.nl, .n't. i baby. 'Pun!..!id. II.

rt ni sai y. u h, ii tii.i sleased. ''MI iici-'- s ilei'iled. ll) acies

1" m.ie- - of (.ice, gn.id itn-- n

io emenls, s miles miiiiIi of l ovingI' ll. Will sell f.T eight li.ou andI .''.i, iiu. nn I dollars. Will take some,cattle. E. W. ALSTON. IVaii. V M.

Do ymi want lo (pin I'ui in. rg andyour farm into lan.is City

rental propeily, aid have a m.intlilyiin'ome? If .o. seiul a complete tie.eripl ion uf your farm In Hi" haw

Really Company, Reserve lliiil'ling.Kansa. City. wlio have unumber of ent will, g I i'i.'iutigproietlies lo o.liani'i for 'r- '.'aleilfarms. .Inl lid 2

! .! PENT. A laii'e.fin hi ed room, wuli I. aili.

. I une 'Jt.I.

l'or the coolest rn i'n. al c hu'lithou-- e kei't'ing rooni". f I'ni-he- d omai il try the Mi l mpolii nn ho el. Everything new ami kepi in the le d oforder. I' If

FPD t.HHVE C MP W. O. W.Meels Thtirilav night eie h

Ii at W. II. W. Hall. isiunt;overeigns and niembers ur'ci In n.

lend. A. It. lli.l'INN. Cl'ik.pull IIAMIll.l'.N. C. C

I .4

'Phone 66

Just wordWhy Not, Keep Carlsbad

money in CarlsbadWE RUN A LUMBER YARD

And a Lumber Yard Onlyne . ..n,.. Ir j,, I .mnl .el. I ime. ..,i,. ( . inenl, I'l.i.Vi. ',

.Nllll.lel. .Sa.,, I J..,,,.. Sle.-l- ). , ., , ,,, t,u.VIiy

Carlsbad Lumber Co.OLD CROVF.S SI AND

I "t l'i'iniit ami C'niiitriMi. u mIiiu litNil til I imi I ,jyr ni, i I on.Sin ill

isenenlsbest lai.it. L

ll'iV lit.

."'il

TU:

jnn

first

a

Let us figure your bills

veilí

mint

I

4.ttt-t?tftfrtf-et is

A FINE BALL GAME1

MriiKiilr With Carlsbad fiave Jan

of (lie Very

Hik-ho- l ( lass.

Hniwcl; N'ewi.The Roswell fns were lrea.,,1 to

.ne of II,.. .,... ever m- -i. onthe local diamond m th,. lernml andI -t ifMim- - of t In- ones with ( .ii'-dun- l

Monday .

.li iiiiini's via in iHie fmni fur llm.'well ami iillowcil only futir hits. TheyM "H clean Unifies, l.'tt weie ho

.xciiiiereil Mint t hey ln M'it lit',lire in the

(arl-liiid- s lii-- l ir was ruiilowithout a hit in tie lir.it innini?. Thetu I (nan up walked, wan advanced tothird on ertnm and a . and

. I ui I ii.. ii i .

. . ,,,, . ' '".""V"- -

- -- ...r ui-,- r.nroiir lie 1'U'lornt 'I'l not tenner hiiir.elf in limi-

to rated the runner foil t' homeiln- -l

lio-w- ruine hack .mioii fin theList half of the f i 1 niid xeoreil threerum .1. Hall r.t man up, hit overleroiii on Ide Itrit hall pitchoi, .0 a. lean s,he-le-. and w. lit to eco,, ,.Audrii,., sacrificed. Me advanced toihir.i when 1 Hall look lirt mi an

rioi T. Hall promptly stole momI,and Imth oted when .lennimM hit

ver til I l.n-- e for three hnxci. Anio-tie- "

llml out lo tdiid and ,li ntn-iir-- .

I when Creer look (irsl on minot. I'l ,11, , wall,,,. se,,i,t' t :.,.,,

1.. e,o, J,,,,,., J) , fir ,,.Oil'. I out Kit'dt men hutted i'l thinInl.lla'

'Ideie was no mole i ím 110; i' Ihe'IX'li, When I , evi,l,.,.,

VIM' the Will, 1, .. , ,j

.mil thud a.. one out. l. le.llrr hit'" "ho a slow II, I.IHilliliy""' hal1 : ',:!, ,, , ,,,.(, Hsthe h'-ii- l' of a,, enon, ,, In,.,. ,,,,lal' ami low lieldintr, wilhoel anv-- Ihini' lit e a hit.

till, rilled .. MOlin.r ,1,1,1if I h.i.r i, the nii.i . I'ii, I'.,. jled otf will, a .11 ,1 Ii (

oil on a sai, ii, ,. I,., .loirsus teiy timely and wel, , ,. ,11 e,l.

look third on a liedler's ,101, andncoreil vl, en tail t,( ri.'dt Ii, I terpulled a SnoiU'rass hone ai dnK.Ted

1 nun, easy tlySlewnit for CaiMiad Vl,.H

credit foi pit. hire ,ti, ,r:i,... ,,,,,use, ,is ,ow hall veiy elTeelivi i.Ihe Call. had lean, i a wind, ,,'nv- -

I a very clean , d.it v e,, tin.'11I - to do 11 1, y 1,1 11 - u.il, .le:inu,u''s

present

EXCURSIONS ,111,11

o

i t

iwo roi. 0'NK ''AHr- -

Veil San Hugo an

I xpoHilioiia. Special hVu'on0 llrkrls on aale March

Jliiti. lo Krsncleco via ov

Angeles and Ilrg9 and relura I

tfiDUU.. Summer Tourist Tickets1

in June to September h j

Until Decembertare $tO'lil.

Kor fui t her inforniatirtn call Santa.tit-Ve- t Office.

T. t'. JOHNSON. AÍIKNT

NOTARY rUDUC at the Currentoffice. Notary always in.

.FARMERS ATTENTION!

Cane, Milo Frlerlla, Indianr.ir. U....A V...illa IManlwl.sum, niiiM

H ( leaned, graded arclimalcd Seed.! u

Standard Vaiitlea

Lowest I' rices

Send for Calaloif

Unitet! Seeti & Fruit Co.KtiSXM N. M,

K ll.-l- l Irlrkm.,1

M.s. an l.l.lrw.l.K..f. 4. rs IJV

bases .drove in two runa, scored orehimself. He wm master of the situation at all time. II ewis ally as-- lsited by hi catcher, Tom liull,iliiyel a jam-u- p líame and hundnd

.IcntiitiK 's in itreui mylí. A''olen will he a rare occurrencewith hum battery winking.

Koswi-l- l can well lie praui! of nor'team, an it in made up entirely ofhum boy, and they never trivo upuntil the lait man in out. The bi.m'

-- I ! - - - I - L I-- re p.ayin- - entirely lor inr love .;.Hie mine aim rnrnr nuiniin; i n ineir'woik. It in ceruinlv a cortre-- t lol

im of the paid teams of vhith R.s- -wolf han boasted. I

The team iroes to CartshaJ next Son- -'

dny for one tfiinie, leavmir cn themmn train and returning tlo Mimenirht. It ii hoped that Ui-- a"f fan will make the tup with theteam.

Captain llrninurd o ft lie local Huhand pitcher .lenninir of Koswi-l- l

team were hadly irjured in a collision at second base in the lust (rami!at Itoswell In a critical moment inHie seventh inninir Jcnnintrs, the fast-est man on Roswell cluli, uttempt.eil In s'eal second. Kraiiiard took theKnow for a put out hut in the rolli-so- n

at second .leuninir'a spikes openedtwo raider three inches lonir in thelie al short stop s left letf while Jen- -

r"u" "mK'' waK I'" located from the''"'". "' lhe ,""P",-t- So f"'"1ti,e interest in the fame that Imthmen run tinned to play nlthout'h the1hlood Mill freely from the deep cultin Itrninnrd' let' and Jcmiiut' wmkedfrom the hox with his ankle swollento twice the normal size. Two hours"ffr 'lie hoth men were on

'"".'I - '" 'hy-ica- who examine.: I

lliiiiimrd's let' say he will he out of;the fame at least a wei k.

o- -

STM K I AIII.

No expense U to l.e spared thisyiar the- amusement features of (heslate fair, nor on any feature of the.fair, as far that t'oes. However,the lit art inns are heim? contractedfor eaily sn that the fair manai'e- -

lor, it can five it x ntlenlion Ihioiii'l,tin' slimmer lo the t'litherint' of ex-- 1

hiliits and Ihe arousmt' of interest'throiif limit the state.

imiuseinent prot'nim as ont-- llined includes mamoiith lirewoiks atnielli, ehampiotiship hnschall, harnessami runnini; races, an immense wiliiwest spectacl,. and mdeo, some of Ihehe-- t s lacular act: in the country,'

I'm a plane with a woman driverknown as ll.e "1 lueen of thel

air nl least two luinds to he nh-- 1

tamed ami the lart'esl at't'iet'iition

will close contracts. At the latterinolul he eviiecls In riiist iitiinv- - hinsn..l

and prevail upon to stop;er in Alliu.pienp.e for the races !

this fall nn their way In llielall meet- -

IK lit the San ra"cis.li exposition." I

Vftr WW "V'.'"??'.' V WiSMlVf

COOD ROADS DAY.i

rTde holding of a .d riadsday In wliah rural and urliain 'lil.eos shall In itie con $

i.(sirm Hon or Unproseiu a of aplise of the pulilh- - Is auieiius of not only ,"Miliig apie. e of tint Ihe

r of au h a ilnrraii lsiM-- l lo slliiiulate Intereal Inron, I work aud alao to serure a

mm' aordlal uiMletutandhaiIhe Intialiltaula of I

and the eliy. It wnnld:i

ml In- - dltflrsult lo ulTer n,Jr-lloii- a

a to Hie ixmslhle efllelencyof a goal roods day as a iainaof ronsimciliig or Imnrmliigmails, lint am-- an oeeaat,a canlie fully jirovliled1 cou.slilerahle atteathsn Is toarousing nes--e li,UH-es-t la themads and to aa iBtetvhanga ofviews on highway pnolilrm

the Ulfferetal clnsM ofpeople nsv the roniW,

In eorae sorb t

templa has hero llml there was J

a surprising readlr.a le . J,

In such piihlle hiiprove-nieiit- s

In not a ftw Insiane,-,-l- t

, haiulHspa f tsniiiiu-- e ami'H mu, i Idle luis have Inndl- -

.Miirliill l.iery siiIsn,,iisIf,,r the lllll...elilelt .1 tie,.il, ..:s ! tile lfn

,i !n I, Hi, si- ,,l llll,,, ,1,,-i- Inndiumi lurw.-- Ir Ílinker f..

A.V:.'rTrrtVrftfrftrVrA Co. INSURANCE

M Hickanl

V-- M. H l.ii.lh.. R. 1. kumw.

iiiasiciim in nveiy 01 snows in tne worm, an ai'irret'iilionleiiiiiiii-- s in, 1, in, . eiv,-- , ,, ioihI' Ida! lux never conic- - west of the Miü-ir'--

for hi. woik in Ih.s in 1,1; 1,.! sissippi riverfi t three luis, on,, hein for linee 'rn lary Wiley of tde fair is nt

in tde east, visiting- Oí cairo,' - -i I 'iocinnali and l.exint'tiin where be

(

1'Aii.s

Ihe snriarii

dsy 1stTsiiv. San l

Sanrare

ssle IM 3111

inl reulrn 311

K

Matte,s ." ' - -

I.I.,

I

the

the

as

,

I

i

,

l

I IvinssWm. V,rJ N l.n,i,ln

NATIONAL BANKOFCARLSBADUnited State Depository ( Postal SavlnotJi

UlllKlTtlHSluee

who'

delivery

The

Join

linpnivrsl road,

Jnellaetlglveei

who-

erale

Christian

Mainn

KKr EUKM E Kl'KMSIIKU ESTIM VTLS t HELRFULLY GIVEN

AU kindi of repair work done proapt-ly- . I'eraonal auptrvlaiaa atall ward entrusted ta my cara.

U. S. HamiltonCONTRACTOR AND BUILDER

CARLSBAD, NEW MEXICO. These 125.

OUR PUBLIC FORUMllntroductory

Through the Press Bervir of A artculture and Commerce, the maulermlnda of thla nation will be Invitedto the public forum and aided to de-liver message,, to civilization. Men,ho ,,, uk

ho ,,lk lld"ni 'hlev Thera la1,0 urn mn " u'"r ,nlnl,Pr' naEerily la alway a elote companionl truth.

" III be a great privilege to alandhy Iho aide of men who can roll Inplace the cornerstone of Industry; toaitiorluie with men who can lookat the world and aee to the bottomof It; to commune with men who canhoar the roar f civilization fewcenturlei away.

Too often we Iluten to the rauhlnelement of our day that crlea out

KHlimt every man who achlevea,"Crucify him." Mankind never baaand probably never will produce aReiteration tin' appreciate! the iieniuaof Ita day. There never will be acrown without a rro. progrem with-out mirrl'lco or an achluvcinent with-out a challenae.

Thla I an at'e of ervlce, and thatman la areutert who servea the lar-es- t

number The present generationhan done more to Improve the con-

dition of nun, kind than any civiliza-tion Hinre human mol I ve began theirupward flUht. The (ireeka gave humanlife Inspiration, hut while her orntorawere npenkliiK with the tongtl" ofaiiKiils. her furiuent were plowingwith forked slirk; while her plillonopherH were einiinelpuilng humulihoutilit finiii hoiid.iKe. her traille

POLITICAL

POLITICIANS WHO CAPITAL!STRIFE A MENACE TO

COVERNMEMT.

Neglect of Agricultural tnd Industriad'

Opportunities a Natlonot Crime,

By Peter Radfod.

Thero never waa u time In the luw,,r 11, lu mill,,,, uti.m & u i,jlul

luteHincn more or atilintara less than.at ,,, u..H..t m.u ,1. The oppor- -

tunlll,.B w afforded us nu land aud ', Ul.mild y,. ,.,,, Ulur, (l in Mulo-- I

craft and the uossldllltles that are con- - I

fronting ua cull for national IssuesIhal llt.llu ll.u l.u,l.,lt l.llllll llwllIMtrV

aud expand trade. Tim agriculturaland IndiiMtrtal. developmeut of thisnailon has suffered sevarnly at thebanda of agitators whu have senttorpedoea cranhlug Into ttie port aideof business and whose of theInterests of the farmer makes tantolima lens inn poimcai anuiiuaia. vt

want no mora of these vil splrl toyredonilnutu In (uveriimanl. Too longth.lr hysterical cry haa sent a shiver'down the aulnal ooluusn of Indnstir.Too long luLVa tho political agllaliiracapital Ited atrlfe, pillaged pnigressand murdered opportunity. An Indus--

trial corMio la not a thing.crippled bualneas an, auhleveiuent or(a an accomplishment about

which any representative of ttktbaa a light to boast

Issuss that Bread AgHatora Srsould be- -

lllmlnaud.The political agitator muat. be elim-

inated from public Ilia befurn thoughtful consideration oaa be given toconstructive program lu govern men aThe Hir question Is the most prt-lltl-

breeding ground for ag alore audwhether pro or anil, the hatch laequally aa undesirable. This articleIs lu uo sen so a discusslim ot the

Question but deals solely amV hyway of Illustration with the polli.ir.alproi'iicls of that Issue. Other sub--

J.,-,- . will he Uo..t win, In tue erucro' i.h ir linpi r'jtue

lu I bo history of our govertimisjitI I' H'luor Issue has never ptxsluted' a constructiva worm men

t Killing noil it lieu r sin. it oua senimore Irenks to t'nngnsa, LIMIputimif the Soneto at Incoinpoteiita to

Ihuo any oiUcr pollUcul Issueumli-- (lis sun

The recent experience of tho Eoit11.1, ll.rll..,,,..,,." "V which la ihcd ItaolfInto a fury over the Itrnuir quet Honbus a lesion t'jat it la well lor theferment of thla nation to observe; forthe subject In some form or other Isconatautly before the public for solutlou and ofttluiea to tha exclusion ofmore tinortaiil problema to the Amoracaa plowmen.

THE LAYMAN'S DUTY

There never wat a tima wteapreachers and politicians formed anunholy alliance that civilisation didnot shriek out and Christianity cryaloud. Since tha benlnnlng of gov-

ernment, politicians bava sought todecoy tha ministry Into tha meshes ofpolitics and make them carry bannerIn political processions. They bavataken the ministry to th mountain- -

top of power and offered to make themmonarch of all they surveyed, and

hila moat ot them bav said. "Octthe behind ma Satan." a few bavfallen with a crash tbat ha ihakeavary pulpit ta Chrtatandom,

moved on two wheeled carta driven,and ortltmea drawn, by alavea; wh'ieh, r artivta were pulntltie divinedreama on canvaa, the atreeta ofproud Athena were llgbted by Orebranda dipped in tallow.

The gxtiiua of paat agea eought toarouse the Intellect and attr the aoulbut the mailer inlnda of today araaeeklng to aerve. Clvllltatton baa aa

igned to America the great-m- t tukof the greatest age, and the greatoatmen that ever trod the greatest planetare aolvlng It. Their achlevemenlahave aatoundi-- the whole world andwe challeiiKe etvry age and nationto name men or produe'i that canapprnnch In creative genius or mas-terful skill in organization, the mar-velous achievements of the tren, endnua men of the prevent dny. Editioncan press a button and turn a lighton multiplied miliums of homes; Vailcan take down the receiver and talkwith fifty millions of people:; Mc-

cormick reaper can harvest theworld's erop. and t'ulton's steam engin mo the commerce of landand aea.

The grrest thing a human bMngcan do Is n serve his fellow men:Christ did it; Kings decree It, andwise men tench II It la the glory ?

this practical age that Kdlson could,find no binder carlllng than to becomethe Junl'or to civilization; Vail themessenger to mnnkind: Mct'ormickthe hired hand to agriculture, andKullon the teamster to industry, anddlesaed Is the age that baa suchmusters for its srrvuata.

THEMISTCCLE4'When 1 lietnistocles waa asked by

his host at u dinner party to enlirlain the guests by playing Ibe lute, hereplied that he could not pluy the N.flddln, bul that he could make a smalltou a great city. We have In this Snation many politlrluns who are good"fiddlers." but they runno make asmall town a great city W it are over-ru-

with oralnra who ran liny Uoiithe paaalona of the people, but theycan't put brick and mortar togetherWe need bufldera

Ixt those who hunger and ifltrst forpower understand that the- highestglory of a atateaiuan Is to unstnirt.and that It r belter for a man Mint heshould bulls? a public hlghwisy thanthat he shouM re come (overnor of astate, and that be start a plow thanthat he becene the author ot a la,.The true tessi of statenniunshipi Ic the- oí

M"0 ni .,r bftmnier, so K: Dines)

,"""" 5Prn. nrsi Diuiu

Pride ot lh Japanese.The Japs ure a ty s,ple and. fond

of Juke, and they are genero, andtniscftil to ii uuirked They, alanhuvr-- elroatr sen- - rule, and. prnT-ele- r

a pis u.ai llisi.inee ofl Uii--s

trail. If a tiaveles U anuoyiHl ay he- -

lug- - follow tr hy u tnw'd - w hleli,. however.. Is ulways ,rsl' t andbe eau can It ni u.elt nwny IlkoiHiuw- -

flakiHi on a bid slufli-- 1 simply Unitingand holdlmt out is mUi. The Jups- - feel jn,m at oeing cafn-- nsr iiuaniui i

Fancy wll the sesuil would ba- - If atraveler ailopusl. a)il ev,K.,lle.,l Un likefee taking-cliJr- a if lam.., lie wuube almost turn .pieces l the-ur-

trying to gut uWsuua. Kt. UuuuVlMteDemuvraa

Thm Othe Way With Hsw"Hememlier. at tUat you soase-ttiln- g

t your couMltueuta." said aaw

nieuibea of a utstn. ruuncll to auotbaMi-- Iluinpbr' said, the other "If Je

owe aa'thlng w- - yuar coustltsieui allI've gut to say tbat youlnt low yWhy. tiler, asa u half a doaan verslu mj, wank Hum have not. boriesa-e-

money from. ata. - Htm y Hiuetea

NtmcE.Na. 291.

I.N THK PntlHATK COURT. E- -

PY COUNTY. NEW: MEXICO.IN THE MATTE K OF THE ES

TATE OF HOMER T. I'ARR.liKCEASEP.

Notice ift hereby giv m thai MaudeAdministratrix of the estate

of ilonu r 1'arr, deceused, huvingi... ,..., , flrst -- nH ñnH,r of ,H,f administration of said'e,te, and a pctiti.m for her día-

hnriie adininwtraii- - x of sulü es - ,

tute, the heuring of the same hasbeen fixed by the court tor me I'tinday of August, l'.n.i, at lu o ciockA. M.i at llie Colin room oi aiacourt in tho Court House at Curlsiud.!

Otmtv, New Mexico, nnd nilt ...I.I . spersona imeresiea in uiu eiw

hen-li- notified thjn and there to ap- -

ana snow cnusr, ,i noy 'o y irenr why the sail report should not!be and allowed and said

discharged.MAUDE H. PARR.

Administratrix of the Estate ofHomer E. Parr, Deceased.

Department of the Interior. United!i "a A. u''u v.-

Mex. Jun. 2d 1915:

Notice is hereby ifiven that thStat of New Mexico, under th pro-

vision of th Acta of Congress ap-

proved Juna 21, 1898 and Juna 20,1910, and the act supplementaryand amendatory thereto, ha filed Inthis office selection lista for th fol-

lowing described lands:List No. 24A. Serial No. 03228S.

NW 4 Sec. 27 NE 4 See. 28 T.26 S. R. 37 E., N. M. Mer. 320 acre.

List No. 147. Serial No. 032287.All of See. 35 T. 21 S. R. 39 E, N.M. Mer, 40 acres.

List No. 6148. Serial No. 032288.

IkPricesDAH1I(G POWDUl

Its superiority u unquestioned.Its fame world-wid- e.

Its use a protection end a guar-antee against alum food.

If you wish to avoid a danger to your food

READ THE LABEL

and decline to buy or use any baking pow-der that is not plainly designated as a creamof tartar powder.

F cntin- - th. bos.Ir trípili-,- - miles of great em-dul- l

tlnellls to picsciM- - the Nether-l-Ii, from Ib liiriirsli.o ,,f ilie sen

All of S.t. II T. 22 S. R. .Hi F..,M. Mer. II ii) acres.

l ist No. HI I'l. Serial No.Sec. 12 T. S It lift " v"f

Mer. .'lio arrestList No. üláií. Serial No. t):i22.ll.

All of Sic. 1.1 T. 22 S. . :l K., N.M. Mer. Ii III acres.

List X. fil'il. Serial N.. ir.'.'JltlAll or Sec. 14 T. 22 S. R. .ill E., N.

M. Mer. 10 acres.List Nit. f. Serial No. ii:l1".I'!.

Iota 9, 1(1. II. 12. :i. II. I",, !. S2 Sec. I T. 27 S. . :u E.". N.. JT.

Mer. (Mil ncrea.List tm H1SI. Serial N..-- n:rj2i7.

PK SW Sec. Ill T. 22 Si K.t:i f... N. M. Mer. 40 acres.

'rilteSljl lir ..Miln- -l ....or ull of such sHections n ay he tiled

inis oir uunng tne peiil or pud-- .ncauon nsin-n- r or ut any tune thureairer nnr ,ir,ti,..,

EJC.METT I ATTON.KifgjMi'r. ,

t" " '

Department of the Interior, latitud (

SutsatCuuil Office, R tsw ell. NewMcxiiss, Vay ?, IMti

Notice ta hereby given thak. HiesState of New Mexico, under the pro- -visions or tia- Acta of Congress anproved Juie 21. 1HÍIH imd Jura- 2f.1910, anf acta aupplernentarT- - andlamendatory thereto, hat-file- in thax0(jjra for the fc4lowi;j,. , . . ,

List Nai fi2Til Serial No. OílfmNw ,.4 w , NEM s R-- . ej. N M Mer W,.fr,'

Jltt fTiil. Seoul Nrs, 08115.NVY 4 K 1. NE 4 SW" üe.'

s.

E.,

Uapa-ntnan- t Interior,Aatoa Land Office, NaMnieo. Mv .s I

NtXica is heny given- - tint thaiStag New Mexico, under thevisión or or congress

June 21, and Juna 20.l'.'W, and acU uiinVmentarv andamendatory tlarreto, !as fi'd this

deMirribed lands':No. is47. S.riul 031970.

All Sec. '7 ES- - Mer ac-es-.

No. Serinl No. 0 ÜH77.f r ... o n ..

N. M. CIO n.rres.List N OMC Serial No.

MV 4 Sec. r. E.,1

I'rntosts or contests strainst nnv nrof such may tiled

in ttij, tiltlce durniir the neriml ..t-publication any time(srfoce rertiflcato.

EMMETTJune-- 5

NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION.1675.

Department the Interior, UnitedStates Land Office, Roswell,

Mexico, June 1915.NOTICE hereby Klven that JamJohnson, Carlsbad. M.. who.

'on March 18. Itiü9. made HI). E.!?"'' No. 016975, N NE

SW NE NE 14Section Township 2Í-S- , Rana;26-- N. M. Meridian, haa filed

intention mak FinalYear Proof, establish claim

described, beforeO'Quinn, Clerk Probata Court

r.ddy County, In his ulhc CarlaN. M., July 27, 1015.

Claimant name a witnesses!Henry Dickson, Dolph N. Vet,

William William Lck, alllansnaa,

EMMETT P ATTON,Jun 25 July 23 Register.

CREAM

Made from creamof tartar, derivedfrom grapes, themost delicious andwholesome of allfruit acids.

A Hurricsn..When wind irnvels a dnmlred miles

an hour er over It Is culled a hurrl-i.m-

NOTICK TO fONTK.UTOKS.Sealed bids will received

three o'clock Saturday July 24th, I15,et omce ot A. I'oore, I nuntySupei-ii-- t nil.-ii- t of Schools, ( nrUliaJ,

M., for the ruction of an ad-dition the srho'il dull iinir Otis,

M. Kuch hid accompan-ied by a check amounting'fiie pert-ca- t er cent) bid,Claris and specilii-auon- s will on fila

the County Superintendent's officeon nnd after Thursduy, July 16, 1915,and also the home Fullin-fri-

CaWxImd. N.M1 Contractorprepared to furnish a good and

auffieient bond securiry that therontrucc will completely

J"0''""'- -

A. POORE.County Superíntilident Schools.

W.oi tioarq.Zr7. ITT".

o une itiwnor, untiedStates Und Office. Rosweff,Slevico, Muy l'llU.

t Notice is htrchy given tftat the'State New Mexico, by virtue

Art Contrress gppruwd' Jan 21,Ju,,e -- n- 1!,,''-- and avt up.

plementary and ametrdktory thereto,tri' m''e electron lista

tor rn' following described lands:Ko r,," S'ál No. W082S.

fJ 171 S; 36 E- -

N. M. Mer. acres.Tist No. fi:i2. SrTiál No. M0829.

T Stfc, zn r. S. K. K.M. Mer. 10 irm;

Trnt No- - Serial To. (nORÜO.

M Sécv t It .

4. in, wur, acred.List No. 523T. Serial No. nnf84.

"M 2 8. S5 E,Mer. aerea.

LUtr No. B23H. Ral No. 0R0P35.All of See. E

M: Mer. fl40 aerea.Ijét No. 6235. Serial No. 030838..

All of 8ec. T. 20 8. 36 E,Mer.

22 37 E., N. M. S20- -

List No. r.2ll. Serial y0. 030838.f.otn 2. E NW ., NE

'"i. ' N" R'CS. 37 E.. M M..r. M.tíM

acres.l'roti-sr- , enHivM iMt nny r

all of such srleclions t.uv I,, f, inI hi i office durinif t)0 .r, ,,,,1,.ii . ion ncicni, or ut any limn there.,.f,r i . ,

"I nu vein-Ilcatien.

EMMETT PATTON,4 Jun-- 5 Roiris'.er

NOTICE FOR PUHLICATION.01181020521

Department the Interior, UnitedStates Land Offlc Roswell,New Mexico, June 22. 1915.

NOTICE t hereby ivtn thatRobrt W. Hardin, Queen, N. M,who, Nov. 2h, 1!I08 and Oct. 22,1909, made Oris;, and Add'!. II En-tri- e,

Serial No. 0I481 and 020Ó21for SW SE SW 4, See. 19;and NW M NE 4; NW 4,

f,c;.3ii T0Wn,iniP 21--

N. M. Meridian, haa filed notle ofIntention mak Final FW YaarProof, establish claim tha land

bov described, before A. O'Quinn,Clerk of tha Probata Court of EddyCounty, Now Mexico, at Carlibad, N.M., Aug. 1915.

Claimant names at witnesses!John Mean, Joseph Plowman,

Wa tr Shattuck, Je Magby, allQueen, N. M.

EMMETT PATTON,July 2- -30 Rgltr.

T. 24! Si EL S3 E. N. . Mor- - H0 x' Mer- - "40aerea. . fist No. 62.14. Serial lío. 030831;

l,rotaarntes(ajBa;aiimt,atiror í." Sic- - T SI R, E.;.all of such selections be died

X-.- Me,t "40In this, office during the period; of U1 K 52",s- - N- - 030832.puhlicnMim hereof. 0r at any tamal A" Sot T; K- - 35heforei dmal certiflratc. S- - Mí,r- - "re- -

EMMtTT Uni N'B- - r2!U5- - SerfaJ No. 030853.RegjsW1' ' 35' 2 S. R. 35 E

-

of Hie OtiteatItoswel

tan;-

of prome cts

1HH

in

list So.of 22 T. 21 Sv R.

M. 40Ijst AO IK.

iuMr.

. n:!l!l.;i.11 24 S. R. 24

M. Mer. lit)

nil be

hereof, or attinul

rATTON18

ofat

New Id,la

S. of N.

for 2

4 NW24,

P. no-ti- c

of to Fiveto to th

land abov A. R.of th

or atbad, on

C.Tunya. of

in. m.

he up to

the w.

N. constto at

.'í. must lieto

(' of thhe

lit

nt of & W.muat

heas

tmiidinir be

W.of

C.ncnoui

NewB,

of of,H;W- -

40

20 35N.

2T T. 20 35 E

tiuc.. T. R,

N. 40

ti T. 20 S. R. 35N.

18 RN. M. 40 aeres.

T--. S. Mor.ncres.

1, 12 4'

20 T.R. N.

orll

0f

ofnt

ofon

D.

N 2

P.to

to toR.

on 5,

R. T.R.

of

3.1 M M- -

29 20 35ma

20M- - f,,

of T.

COUNTY NEWS IfEwiS

ABSOLUTELY RELIABLE NEWSGATHERED BY THE LIVE

WIRES OF THE CUR-KEN-

KNOWLES GLEANLETS.

Bert Weir was one of the n.ilile hoyswho called In Knowles a f jw days ago,yes, always welcome.

W. II. Birdwell the Calr.es countycow man was a visitor In town a dayor two aa;o, speculating on the priceol rows.

Ranchero Robeson, from the cap--rork near Clark's Cap, moved toKnowles last week, for the benefit ofMrs. Kobeson's health.

Monroe Cloudt and Kerdinnnd Nem-eye- r,

cowmen from the Southern one,were arrivals in Knowles some dayago, and they did what they pleasedsaid what they thought, and boughtwhat they wanted, and returned tofrom whence they came.

Top Heard hud another bunch ofprospectors in Knowles last Friday,having a look, trying to rind seme-thin- g

that exactly suited their taste.Wagoner Hardin went to Seminole

last week and brought in a Kordrambler for ranch use last Thursday.

The Brerkon fruit wagon was intown again the other day, and, be-

lieve 'me, they started somethingwhen they began dishing out the finered peaches.

Jimmy Roberts cam in from hiscap-roc- k ranch last Kriduy, speculat-ing on futures, and doing business,ship-shap-

Doc L. C. Reinan, of Plains, Texas,was in town on important businessthe other 'day.

iiemy tun and Frank Mahin, re-

turned from their vacation viutjngtheir folks at Rotan, Texas, lastThursday.

Hen Smith the prosperous rancherofrom the north-we- st came in to seehow the Knowles delegation was gett-ing along last Kriduy, and returnedhome when he felt like it.

t'has. Miller, went to Tevas lastFriday to have a look at a hundredwhile face three year old heifers,

Mrs. John Royal of the Thornhillsection was right in the middle ofthe town shopping the other day.

It is reported that Karl Hustonsold Elbert Shipp a hundred huad offine cowa last week. Pr'sre not stat-ed.

A. J. Todd, the veteran tonnrialartist, took charge of that line ofbusiness In Knowles July 1st.

Dave Willhoit installed "hissef" atthe stock exchange a general mana-ger a few days ago and will no doubthustle up some business in that capac-ity.

Mr. and Mrs. Nny Stile came overfrom their ranrh forty westof us, to see if the Knowles peoplecan do any dancing.

Mr. L. Daugherty, mnther and sis-ter, eame to town last Saturday, visit-ing old time friends.

Mrs. Tom Ross of Seminole, Texas,was a welcome visitor in iiKowlc lastSaturday.

Mrs. J. E. Weir camp In from theranch west of Monument lust T'ridayand visited her friends und took inthe dance

Mrs. Fi d Nymyer rame in frmthe ranch in the big Hup. last Fiiday,bringing in a load of ladies, showingthem the scenery and a good dunce.

Mrs. Baxter Culp also came to townFriday afternoon. She says she Justcame in to take care of Baxter, forshe had some misgivings aliout hisgetting lost in the push.

Liberty Bell, of the lower district,made his appearance here last Fri-day, and rang out the chimes, untilthey faded away in the night air, wellon toward the rising sun.

Jim Love whs finally induced (forthe price) to bring over the collert'rvenative sons of Montezumn. last Sat-urday morn, and since thev wereabundantly supplied with Smoleon.Ne one was at all Inclined to shunthem, end of course their wants werepromptly attended to, according totheir instructions.

Colonel Frank Hardin our nelthhnrjust east of us, was constrained totake in t he Monument picnic with hisfamily last Snturday, and of coursesince the Colonel Is a whole showwithin himself, there was no doubtabout the whole bunch having "atime".

Mrs. A. A. Andrew was In townfrom the ranch a few miles north, theother day. trading and picking up afew of the topics of the dav.

Itnmnn Shin was In from the Lineranch last Friduv. to take purl tr thebig dance, returned home tickled todeath. His report is, can srricclywait for the next one to he pulledoff.eelebrnte every Fourth, that comeshis way, for he states he won't beable to celebrate over forty 01 fiftymore of them, therefore, don't wantto let nny of them get iiwhv.

Miit Roberts took a cur load of I'livcelcbratoM to the Monument picniclast Saturday. Said they were rningto start something lusl as soon asthey arrived there on the ha'h.vue

Captain Emerson made a trip overarms' the line lust Saturday morn-ing, presumably buying about 10 or15 sections of Texas laml -- poihnps.

Centnin Stringer of Midland, pass-e- d

through town a few days ago, re-

turning home with a fine slnl'ion,which he was Invited to bring out tothe country west of us. with the as-

surance of a trade which, however,was passed up, the trouble of thetrip being lost sight of. and t he mer-it of the hnrse unseen. Cap. :n

makes no difference, the price of thehore hits rniscd. lonsum nix.

Earnest Best the inspector accom-panied by the sheriff of Yoakum conn-ty- ,

Texas, made a night call to thisbur? last Thursday, looking for rumoone hard to find.

The shortage prevailing in S.hank notes in this vicinity enme to anabrupt halt last week hope the

strings won't tighten again for a longtime.

Jim William, who had such u hardtussle with the typhoid pneumonia,for several week, U out and up tohis usual stunts in the row lint.

The Kink randy nan was amongstthe hunch the other day, spreadingfragrance and sweetness as he vent.:

Klirht Inarinrf wairnna all hall,,.! iin'for ha'f day on the I) i if sand roed onaccount of a break-dow- where therewas no way of passing, even tho mailcar being delayed for several hour.

Judge Garrett wa tn town for sev-

eral days during the past week, attending to special official business.

That tremenduous bunch of thunderand lightning had the hull bunchbluffed here last week but the promts-- 1

Minn Jewel Houston visited herler, Mrs. Hardin of Monumant.several I

J. H. Hughes MaryWilliams to Carl.itad Thursday,Mra. Williams will attend lnsli- -

storm Saturday MrM did quitRood are at Nadine.'

Several adobe house! wen blown

ed showers were steered off to some Texas, Wednesday.other clime. Jim Fletcher and ftmily are

Cha. Loyd the dead game rport, visiting his pents and otner rela-fro- m

the west, was an appreciated tives.visitor in Know'c the other day.l Miss Samantha Bilhrry wilt atttiddoing the pleasing stunts. the Institute at Cambad.

Ir. M Millet nn is now installed In A. M. Ijirkin returned from Carls-hi- s

new quarters, on the and I, had Tuesday.awaiting for who may be The Nadine country had a fine rainIr.g for He ays he is always' Saturday night. of us on the

tn terve the people who Texas side they had a big hail whichd.sire his services. destroyed everything in its path.

An argument pulled off on the 0street, when the mercury run high, ARTESI .is never very satisfactory 10 euner

si- -Karl

went

tut,The

here

town

hill,thn-- e look-- !

him. East-- "'v

side, and beside after it's over, no the Newone can reekolect anything at all rlr. C. W. Williams has purchased

11' IV 'a new seven passengerW. (i. Woerner made a hurry-u- p overland carfin to Lovlnvton lift Friday, for tiod K K. Hubert and family were in

only knows what, but he returned In town Saturday and Sunday from Or-- acouple of hours, and wasn't skinned i,n. Mr. Hubert is manager of the

up a bit. National 1'laster Co. at that place.A real pier-i-- md barbe'iio was pull- - Rvv j c na, .old tn. ;.,,

ed off at the foleman C, rove Mjuth- - hote to Walter Pendleton, a retiredwet of town last Sunday, everybody cowm of c.rsbd. J. W. Ridgc-tnkin- g

part, a-- d relchiiiting to the t()e new ,,-,- ,., takingutmost oftheir ability. cs. a bunch chnTlt1s ot lhe pce th, nrHt of theof folk, frrm everywhere and all hav- - montnintr a pood time, by pulling off all will' Reed, Jr.. came up from Carls.kinds of stunts. ,)a Monday morning nd went, out to

Mrs Rodger, of Clabe Kyle. , VÍH, tmj c,lciir,,ion. j

was here visiting and enjoying the. Judge J. W. Ihiuron and Fcrlx Heathplains breeze. She I from Auslin.i w,,ir of thp VrKnMt were amoI1K,"?. the Lakewood visitor who came to

from the number of.lunging par Kri( flernon to ,ake lnpants, the big dunce lust r riday night the rnrnjVB(was certainly a pronounced ucees. Kd. Howell think that getting readyEverybody, even unto the c g was1!

for Fmmh of Ju, cel,rlltiunil athere and at least took a 'look in , ,trenou' )UMÍm..,. eif they were unable to trc in. 'furnished 1.0(10 loave of bread frrom one to two pirHe. eveiy day h , f iMr tarlaH-iie- .

from last r rldav until Tuesday, n h J , P, n(J flf f ,

the community, looks like prosperity ..... .i,j ,t a..íhas o"ertnken this part of eoun-- ltry folk that had nevei been heardof and had never been seen Likingpart and thoroughly enjoying them-selves getting together generally.

MALAGA ITEMS.

to

duys

days werk.

From

u,Ke

sister

down. No one was hurt except Mrs.W. R. Owen and two children.former been under medical

not able be about. Wehope for her speedy

Albert Cook, Chas. Auburg andHenry Haynes alt motor id over to

mountains this week on apecting tour.

I.um Daugherty went to Midland.,

' ' .EUNICE.

From the Democrat.Some men are already talking of,

running for county office next year.iThere is no doubt there being a

. ,k. :... n .1

let back lie Idllii's su kel. I nilyuu lieal thai?" New York Hun.

Ho Tooknot lake No lor answer. Miss

llilliki-- r I'risi he iledaroil braveus he .rihnl ln int.

'"I'lii'ii, ri'i'lii d iho oid ,n, .1 .111

liiti, l.ii-tn- ii girl, i,' i . I" tin011 "w III j on 11, in 11 1,1 ..ai 11. .o 1,

Inii knr J io.uiivi' t iui, ;tu, l"'1"1" ' ;" 1""1 ""cuirnn.y m 1I1, in o io.iu,ui IV"

ho 1I11I. .'U l.imis I 1'isj.ul, b

Hostler has gone 0 California "'n'ot'Vr.'cochn "here 'Xitlng at the' P lh

home of his niece Mrs. Clyde Egbert. r6V Mr Vermillion, who will as-- 1Miss (leve and f ( Irom hicago, ,Ht , ,nc ut me(.tin(f beginningitmg her father. Geot.rge Cleveland. t Monumpnt the lllth I the pastor

and her brother. Robert.on their borne- - ,)f the HaptÍHt cllUrch at La Cru-Hte-

southeast of Malaga. jA. A. Beemun and family are here Wm.'o. Mac Arthur sold hi

from Elida. N. M., visiting his bro- - ,Bnd ho(Un)in to Karl Hardin but thether. C. W. Beemun and family, and Commissioner's office is to remainother relatives in the valley. They at Monument.made the In their car. Thc pil.lic ut Tom Pendleton's ranch'

Mr. Black family and Mr. Sher- - waH tnut coui,i ,e expected. Themans family, were visited by their amusement was fine and there wascusoins lust week. They are taking pU ly ()f Kot things to eat.a ip through the country and camp- - T,e electrical storm Saturday nighting. having been to California, and destroyed fruit and crops near Know-ar- e

on their way home so we are told. ei) Hobbs. Nadine and Eclipse.The J. A. Harshorn family are rubbits by the dozen and a

ramping over to upper Hagerman calve.ranch and drove over to pend the Jlu Tuesday destroyed a'l the Car-Four-

here at the Mulaga picnic. ter garden, Crenshaw's crop and windBorn to Mr. and Mrs. Joel Frank- - ,,.w King's d over and wasted

Iin on July Fourth a fine ten pound quite a few peaches."y- - Lightning killed a mare for D. B.

The glorious Fourth was celebrated King and two steers for Speed theat Bluff this year. same day. ,

Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Burnett were athe host and hostess of a Fourth of BAD l.t'CK FOR I.INDI.EY.July gathering of a few of theirfriends and relatives - Eunice Democrat.

The table wa lied with everything when J. I.indley of Monument start-goo- d

to eat. They had a fry, ice t,, KOUth Friduy morning he leftpop and altogether too many ru dishonored checks in the hands of

things to mention. innocent parties around Monument;Those present were Mr. and Mrs. h bad been turned down, and

L. S. Fitdey and family, Griff Finley, the whole world looked dark to thisMrs. le Harnett and son and daugh- - grange family in a strange land,ter. It. Bruce and family, and when MucArthur returned hume fromGriffin. Mrs. A. R. Plowman. All had Uvington and heard that Lindley hada time and hope to meet with Mr. departed he immediately picked upand Mrs. Burnett again. constable Burk and his car "highed"

Miss Mollie Murray of Carlsbad to Kunice arriving just ahead of Lind-visite- d

at the home of John Reid and ley. Complaint made before J.family, to enjoy the picnic. c. Fstlack and Llndlev was luken back

A party wus held at the Gerlach t Monument night in the car inhome the evening of the a good charge of Burk and MacArthur. Arumlr were present, and enjoyed a message from the Abilene bankvery pleasant evening. morning slated that I.indley hud mon- -

Misses Jessie and Anna May Don- - ,.y there to cover the checks ami heiildson were up from Red Bluff to was given his liberty, Lindley mudespend a few at to uttend the the mistake of checking against openFourth of July picnic. account insteud of aguin-- i 11 letwi

C. R. Helm was a CarUhud visitor f credit given him by the bunk.Tiiexlny of thi week. Mr. Lindley und family are lopping

Mrs. Eugene lioniililson and son, H Ki.nicc where he is on 11 triide fort'lyde. were from Red Bluff to tu. pint list of town,en.iov the pirnic on 0

The Fourth of July was cclil, ruledon Monday with a basket dinner, Clovor Pickpocket

I nrbcctie iird lots of good things to Musi i,, Illustrate h,,v ,lei.r pli keat. The morning was cloudy, but poi t,,.n uro." Hali a poll, e .nidal, "letit conn cleared und couldn't huve hud 1110 lell f an lie lib 1,1 lib ha nicer day. A I ig crowd was there ril one iiIl-I- while was UMidnnd they kept coming all the afternoon ,,e ,l.sk A ymiiig follow . nine In

ad a foot buM game I'd ween the ,.,,, ,,,, hu ,,. kH ,,Hagerman ranch bovs and "Malaga, .. ,the score was in favor of the HageV '""l" ' k"' h"" ' """""man rand, bv,. T'.ey had race of ' "rt "; h"' " M" "' '""

kird. wich caused lot of w,ll,'h "' " '"fun and a i oil rime generally. Iillls. The ear was . r.iwilisl be ouldii t

Twenty gull'.'.s of ice and '!,', " ''" '"'"""'iially lie r liedthe aanie of lemonade was there for "I' and held on in a tin one ofbeef was the fltsl we have ever tnsted. Ilie-- e is casiuu a il k ket etir iciedwho ever wanted it. The barbecue the wallet from his Inside kd. lookWe hope to have more of these good the money nut. s'lppeil 11 folded news'i""""- - mn'r lulu the wallet nnd 1,111 the a.;

NADINE.

W. C. Crimes and Mr. Kimlmll aregone the Sacramento mounUins forfence posts.

Mrs. C. K. Auburg is enjoying avisit from her sister, Mrs. ( 00k. undfamily, of Austin, Texus.

Tom Houston is home firm l..im a,Texas, to spend ten wiln homefo'k.

Jim Baker ajd chiluun fromCarlsbud are spending a while withher father, Mr. Glascock. I

thinMesdames and

the

deal of dan.

may

Thehas treat-

ment and torecovery.

the pros- -

of

In I

It."I'll 1111

Ilia."ly isTslsldillj

sir,"I

,ii.,i'i'""

And

Mr.

vis.

has

trip

Hailfew

Red

fish

R. Will

line

was

thatfith,

next

day

upMonday.

here

I

creamsimp

Mrs.

GOOD ROADS

AND JITNEY BUS

Operation of Such Vehicles De-

mands Improved Highways.

INMilFNr.r' l. KrlMR rr I I.""- - --- " -- -

With Reads Provided There WillQuick and Reasonsbly Cheap Con-

nection far the Parmer and SteamRailroads Through keif PropelledVehicles.

Why la the Jitney bus? says theMntiiifiicturers' Itcvord. To what willIt lend? Klnrtliig a few months 11 no In

the far wmt In more or lists couitltlon with the senlce of traction lines,

the Jitney bus tin moved rnplilly acrossIIm country and. aienrliig In dltlereiitliK'iilltlen nlinoNl sIiiuiIIiioihiusIj, huebegun tn attract the serious attentionof the iiiHimtieineiit of street railways,Investors Hint iimul, lnl autliorttle

'siert to any Msllilllt.v of Irn reuslnnpnblle revenues llirnui.h the grunting of j

illoiie nvrt ie i run iukih iilie soiiiethitig Inore siilismnttnl tlinn sfsd. To buy and a single Jitlie) bus or tn ndapt some other iimt 11

vehicle to Its iure culls fur a l ertnlnnnnniiit of ailtnl to be Investid nlihUo tiTtiilnty of eoiilliiiieil 11 ml tm reuslug proMt

Wlmlever the ltisilralloii mny be. It

la unite evident flint In smue liMnlltliMat least there Iihs Imx-i- i a rtlstliicl ile

jlUf 'Ssw

4 ilTSlt klta.

omiid fur the Jitney bu. either becauseof the absence of other means of ipilcktniiisportutlon or Imsmiisc of lnnileUiicy of exlMilug menu. The greaterfreedom of art Ion of the self pniielliHlrehlrle ami Its ability to oeriiie eitsll)where It would be illlllcult for convenlloiiiil passenger service tn lie profllstile sre eertiilnly ihiIui In It favorand suggest that stn-e- l enr iiiiiivsn'csmight make no nilsinke In ailnptluuand siliipilug the jltner bu a auxllIsr.v to their own serviré, making It a

feeder tn their own Hues, esiwtally In

ii'liii'iiin e'tliins Even In si.ine largedtles fnn-slg- In acipilrliiK franrhls4Mi.in crlnir all possible nuiles or wisdomIn iiiin,iirhliitf the same end more dlredly by lhe sciiilltlon into one man.ugeiueut of ninny line has leftutreti'be of considerable territory In

whb h 'here I 110 such public servicehi the rose of suburban extension.where freiiiently the return mi thehi v..vf in. ni urn tll,t irniiirtotintely ns:re!it as In Hie elty. in siie of Hie rel

ntlvely higher rateof fares, there oughtto be abundant opportunities fur theiltlllxatloii of the Jitney as auxiliary

This bring the lliniifc-li- t to a widerrange of use for the self propclliM vehi' lr in both passrnger and freightmtvI e as a feeder to 1 tea 111 railroadsIn the south, for Instance, there an1KI..'Ji miles ut railroads, nn averageof something less than one mile for evcry tin siUiirr 111Ü1 s of Irrrllory TheavrraL'r In New Cnulainl Is one mile ofmil mu d for oirry -- ciin sipi.ire miliof lerrliory Slni c Hvi th,. south hasbuilt laüro.nl mllrugr í'illli lent to bringIts lotiii li a g:'iiier u'urcLMte lengththan the length of all lhe railroads Inlb, inn 1 in Hi,, I ). ih Tor the fulldi' l'iii',-n- of the south Its irauspurtin 'on fa ilitlrs i.iiui ,e made lit0 t 1. ".1 litóse if New Kiiglutnl11.' ' u d L'lr II ab.'iil i::i.hhi milesf I un with that . t 11

i .' . l... vts lr 1, Is In the mini h

.' (''I'm hi 1 1. I!i, li's. I n , ii,iil,!i'.1 ;,o.,'l nk. ' i . o ileus,. iiiil'i,ii

.' ' I in ! r. . ' , u' In milling. Inn:" .1 : ni. 'I iicr:- Hit un- enormous traf

!! f..r irain.pi b , iui,i 'lil. s ' h,.i rt .11 1. If n l liiii w iiiuy br

,r lisl ,i ii' ' il lie till- proper si'lllrno i t of itn. 11, ids in in. 11 I11 i,,eirl.l till' 1. I fu II II,. win ,, I l.ci.inl'irle ami I In- - .i,,iiiaii.iii will I,,

oblige I'. 1I1 p. ml up,,o 11. ni 1 i,. .,- -lli ihe past I. 'it jei.rs Iherr lias ls-- i n

notable in llvlty In the smith In 1

i.i-trii' lli n of luiproitd loirhivaK.both trunk lines 11 ml laterals, lint a1 asi tint of work of the kind Isstill lo be 1I0111. before there shall beHii r system of puldl,' highways iidworMng lhe smith Soihliu'probably roiild give a grnitir ImpetusIn the I'l'llipli-Uoi- i of the n thaniinsule nil Ion of the colivellletiies of

frriil l y the automobile Hie limb, rl,the niiitortru. k tn tariiilng com

iiiililtlis. for lhe prolllable operationif si,, h 1. hi I,'- - .I. iiiamls llrst class

.s.ads Wild Hi,, ro'ols proi I, b d. Hio

iii. k und lii ap isinn.-i'tlm- i

of Hie farmer's fi..it gate with thesi. 1111 railroad, the 'inking of farmwith IIk ii;el. nill I.,. ,iI1..mI,'. bvthe f pi"S'ii(il 1 cln w lib Ii aready Is ildirr , m.rk al maiijrHiiiiU where tt.v ilinli e for It exists.

Í11ED mis:By Pstsr Radford,

Tbli country is sufferlni more romtainted politics tb.ui from at.) otbuimalady at the present time. 1 here irscarcely a campalRO speech made, splatform demand written or a meauro enacted Into law that doe nol

carry the taint of personal gain olsoma politician or political tuctloothereof.

There la mor "blue sky'' In ram I

palfo promises of many politiciansrunning for olllre than was ever mntalned In the prospectuses of I lie boldest promoters of chiinertrul tiusinesischemes. There are morn secret com j

blnatlons formed by politicians to thename of "My Country" than were everformed under any and all otheraliases There are more political rebates hid Ion In the phrase "Be It enacted" than were ever concealed uuder any and all other disguises.

The Inordinate thirst for polltlraipower and unrestrained passion fotmastery has caused more distress inthis nation than the creed for aoldand It ought to be reaulntrd by Ihw '

No business combination ever pursuedtheir competitor an orvisited more heart.ei.s cruelty uiuitheir customer thsn a poll'Ual prrtythat seeks to make Junk of an tndustry, or cripple a business for partysuccess, through tariff measures, po

luteal supervision aud outlines de.structlve legislation. Many politicalplatforms are ss sllurlna to the voter'as the atory of tlm rainbow with Itspot of gold snd their consummationabout as far fetched. S If ituln Is thefirst law In politics. '1 .ere are iiiunymen In ofllre today who, If theycould not shake plums off the tree otAmerlrsn liberty or rut a melon takenfrom t'tirlo Sum's commissary, wouldhave less desire to serve the public

The country Is surfeiting with patri-ots, who will baro their breast to bul-

lets In defense of their country, butthere are few men In public life whowill bar their breast to voters or runthe gauntlet of party disfavor In de-

fense of agriculture or Industry. Norepresentative of the people, who willpermit personal prejudice to dethroneJustice, party success to disfranchisereason or the rancor of a polltlraicampaign to Influence Judgment canrender capable service.

The preservation of our prosperitydepends upon wisdom, courage andhonesty In government, snd the AmerIran voter should seek those altii-- ,

butes aa Implicitly as the Wise Menfollowed the Star of llethlehem andthey will often be found tn rent overIhe stnbln; the plow or the staff ofthe Shepherd The surest cure fortainted politics and machine rule lafresh air and uinrliltin and these Important elements are most abundantupon the farm, and when farmers,bankers and merchants are elected tomembership In legislative bodies, muchof the trouble in government will dis-appear.

WATERED SECURITIES

By Pater Radford.Much baa been said aud more writ-

ten about tho evlla of watered stuck labig business concerns and (be farm-er-

of this uatlou bdleve that everydollar written Into the Ufo of anybusiness organization, should be ableto say "I know that my Uedci no rllvuth," but farming Is the blagestbuslniss on earth, and there Is morowutcr lu lis tlniiiiciul transaction thanthat of any oilier Industry. I'Ihtc Isa much water In a farmers noteIruwlng clKbt or teu per cent Interestwhen olbor llt.r of Industry securemoney tor lour or live per cent perannum, as there Is In a business pay-ing a reasonable compensation uponthe face vulun of securities rrpretenting i,n Investment of ouly fiftyrem on I lie dollar. The only dlff, reic I, iho walor la in the Interestrato In 0110 Insiume and In tho secur-ities 111 tho other

Tho promoter ofttlmes tskes chanceand his siirrt'i-- s is contingent uponthe di vi'loiitueiil of tho property Involved Inn the usurer, us a rule, lakeslio ell. Hues anil bis MUccrhH cripplestho property involved There may beIndustrie ilmi cry louder but none

' thut suffer inoro severely Iriim Iliummil Immorality In IhiHi law and eil.-- ,

torn Ihan that of imili 11 urn.The fanners of Anielleu Imlav are

paving Í uu. per 111,1111111 inusury 011 real esiale mid ehaiielloans, and this Inn re. I cupnalu, ,1

1,1 live per ri'lll, represelilH $ I 000,111,11OH of Hi I Ii Inns al'les Inch ihe tat inT Is paying Interest nn 'I lux rum 1.

1111 in ) U alimisl count to the num.vuliie of crops producid In the I nit.States.

' The earning power of the fannernolo bused inti his Interest rale verynearly ilul b s li',. s the earth's surface- - thiei-fiiiiri- hs wuter and onefourth land The I truest body of :

ter that floats upon tho llnunclul hemisphere now rests upon the farmsami Us waves are dashing and Its

i billows are rolling against seven milHon homos threatening ruin and diaster to the prosperity of tho nationWill our public servunts who understand how in drain the liquid off In-

dustrial properties turn the faucet andlet the wuii r off the farms?

It Is an udantted ecoiiom'.c fact thaithere cun he llll perillUliellt 'Uihierilwithout a m rnj incst ugrli u)i uru

Full Moons,The .rl, si frmn one full uiis.ii ti

smaller is '.".i dais I.' hours ami tl Iminutes

ChrUtlan Co., INSURANCE.

i

Colds. . . .1 , A l M

bud", lor II allowed to ma rVlunchecked, serious. reMltfrfrlsun fallow. Numerous,- - - - -1catea of consumption, pneunoma, and other tatal du-

veas, can be traced back toa cold. Attha first sirnofacold, protect youraell bythoroughly cleansing yourijrttem with lew doses of

THEDFORD'S

BLACK-DRAUG- HT

the old reliable, regetabla'Iver powder.

Mr. Chaa. A. Rafand,HelghU. Va.. tayv

"I have been using Thed-lord- 's

Black-Uraug- hl lotstomach troubles, Indiges-

tion and colds and And It to

be the very best medicina I

ever used. It makes an old

nun leel like a young one."Insist on Thedford's, the

original and genuine.

Th Human Fsce.Itnsa 1. li the iiu-a- l palmer of

iiiilmals. hud a sysiem of miiciii. iiliwhlih was cv. sllui.'ly ipuiliii. SIinroiiiil race III I lie laces of I Pom peo-

ple who il-ll- her 11 reetnbla neesort of animal I ..r lusianee. If

some one reiiilu lcd her of 11 . ertsltilady she 11. ml I probahly hesliaie fora iiinmeiil and then say. lili. yes. thelull Mlili the camel face!" or "till. I

remember she had 11 eow facet" Thlamemory i 'cin was net flattering toher friends. 111 It showed lion .tun-rate- .

I she was with n knowleilue of nnImals nud ttielr harneterlsilcs (m everr human fin e she found a likeness tosome 11 11 mu I she bad studied snd

Being Old al Forty.Few men need to la- - old at forty un-

let they li.H.se In a large measureIt 1 an opiionnl matter If one keepstils nose to the gri'idsmue of business,cuts tisi muí h. indulges himself toofreely, gels 110 phi steal exercise ami'ake Ills business , hics home sin' totsit with hi in eieri night he is prettylikely to In- - Phi oIH when lie U eoiiusforty I'he Hint a inaii orwoiniiii Is old at forty iiiighl tu be alsunt That It Is not absurd Is s.uuething of retle. tlmi upon that N.rti..iiof us who. be ause we sre unwillingto take a little trouble are anuallyhrtulng on age at forty t'leielanilI'lulii IS'aier

No Chicken.I.ady ire. enily man led i - Im yoo

kiniw I tin. I It ipille bard to reiiiembermy new iiihoc'.'

Her I'rleo'l .Nnliiriilly, dear Voutindthe old one so long, you know.-- I te-

tro! t Kree Press

U44t4AJ.M. DILLARD I

ATTtlUNKY .ndCOI'NSKI

Notary 1'iiblic Tarlsbad, N. M.

Hand Klaxonets$4.00

Everything ofthe Best at

Weaver's Garage

The Club Livery

and Feed Strble

WAISON & SMITH,Props.

- FINE RIGS ANO

PROMPT SERVICE

OPPOSITE RI6HTWAV HOTEL

'Plione 78.

COMPANY "B" NEEDS 8UPPORT.With the first military encampment

ver held in Carlsbad at hand, theI icl company in now in need of notonly the moral support hut alio themc live support of every citixen of thecommunity.

Carlshud han been especially favoredby the authorities recently, first bythe appropriation of 117,000.00 for therrection of a splendid new armorytnjilding for Company and nowriy the selection of thin town for afiattalion encampment, bringing to- -

nearly two hundred citir.cn anl,bers. which will mean the spending.f hundied of dollar, w.th our l.ua -

T'ui . i i cly m--. essary for a mill- -

lary un .any o have not less thaniMr.y-c,..- , cnli.ted men at the en- -. ampim-n- t .. or.l.-- r tnnt ..irh companyi'ipjr mili, ii nan alwaysl.n a task to net loveth.-- r the

niuolier of Ten .'or the aummernrampmciits, and at I hi time, on

of many expiied enlistments.mil the removal from Cm Ishml of,.hers, Company .l' i exceedingly

i.hort or men. and Ire nu nnnm.t lie hail without the iictive sup

jv.rt of the business c..ino.u..ity.Every rili.en inlciest" I in kiiiiin.

a live mililnrv organization in Curls- -)ad is requested lo e !iin influencennd power in securing (he cili tine. itif hi least one reei-tii- i foi Company

' U" and those business nun who havemployes that ate oil,ers of the

l 'ompunv are reqm to lirnini'eto let Hiii'h employ, off for the week

r crii'ump.nciit. whii h vill he helil1 ere July .l lo III inclusive.

Wilii it fn.ur urniurv lunlili itir urn.mvn 'f ic he unaur-- ;commif

'ata

to do it termahow (lt'"1- - elec

inir appreciation.

NEW CEMENT PLANT.

NalioiiHl I'lnsler Ci.miianv WillTon Plant at

Ilae l ine

News.Vlaiuii'er F. E. Hubert, of the Nil- -

' l iter Conipiiny, at Oriental,a in town Salui.lnv that

rnmpany would innti commi nce the'.ertion of a '.!00 tun plant at Aviiluu,

; few miles south if the mill.TT. company own. a seetion of land

men is almost pure ye ow K.vpsurol.limit miles from the railroad.I hey luiilil . pi,,,,! ,lt ih,, r(ljroad, on hill overlookbike and haul law material toMial jMiint.

J'.fe Hubert has tak"ncharge of the mill ,,t f l a d- --

Kled the better has beentirade. While the force now at wink

i. m so larire as when he went thereI he quantity of material shipped each"mili ih m u, I v double, hih they liml.1 rra.lv maiket for it in all parta ofi.ii- - ri.iimiy. I .lie It I fit at K

isi-- s no averare uT ten enra a monthnun many cars are shipped to the I'u

coast. The i.iinlitv ,.f Ululi an exceot lonallv hieh vrade of plusler Ifnit eotuina.nls rood prices on al'markets.

, l.ltlV N il1KVr.' A wiish.'d flu roadallfllil 1 tlHlf'M HUlllll '(' Í llV.f'.V'XMl I

itrtH ti i ir ho luM of ii 1'iiritf MMitdi 111 I Mutnt.lV T!'f p!l(V

i'iiiisi. I ii nf MllMi'l I I. I'M -- I "M II Mil

wife ui IImv Wullcr Miw Sirxittis Mt.it. Ii:n l It.i' I'lllihvht'M t'oini' ( 1M in I fu hum hi i,rtiiil I llir io;n :iMiiit'l it I 1

if Mi- t.tfht tn f.i'lt.' It. tint lietlllCI- - Wlil'll- tit" tt! Ml'.ii'i )l i

lll'lit ilM'l tlif finitt W'li'l'l'' itltiitllf.(.tun tii tin' ir ! WMi-- iiiii,.. ijii'H'i t - v. A M u: vim van v ry

tM'flll lit lI'llM' llll V.ll. IHtt I'll- -

'i' nuil lluin lnili'4 :i?i Imur ltrn(is tu intii ti Ih V wiu-'t- hailmi tii'itiln u'm v T t ni n, '

tit si'ltli' llllil t!li' llitt to4 n " n"l wis in .l.ii'i t i if

vm AM it- tic iipiu'l ..! .tt ii n

11.4 t liln-lli- '.ii ltil.lv ltl. li:if of t 'llll I tvil'i"dl W lid WjiH H

r hurl iIiIhiu'i ImIhiiI. mmh u-- wilhiMUil rhmiiH tit pull t In ithrt r;ir iUl

liirli t iIimm. t in I .i;.!Hlll"f v ll IH IIOlthlT fl'il Mis!1 VI I v Vli I Hi V .lull" , lit

that tin n mi tin i'i:nlhh not irvti. ii'il In ,iu a ; ' rttt I i f n

MlM 1 lit

The Raaaan."Another eiiilHleuii nt. I ee Isn't

It Hull tlle-- e i.re lllwil.la commit'led b llllsli d . lerks1

".Vol ai 'ii, l lie urns nn notriisled in vi ni .i .liiiiee ni I lie iron

er " llosi.., ii i. i i ii

POKFIRO DIAZ IS DEAD.

Former Prealdent of Medro ('ailed toFather at the Ripe Arc I

of Eighty-Fou- r, I

July 2. General Porfirio(Max, former president of Mexico, diedat 7 o'clock thin morning. I

General l)ia.'s wife, .Señora Car- -men Homero Rubio Diaz, and their,aon, Porfirio Diaz, Jr., and the lat--

ter'a wife, were at the bedside whenthe end ,came.

(icfioral Dinx was horn in 18fli).

fat,.ly w,.r, of o( lianUh t,,ck wilh, Hn Mu,n f l.lood. Left' fBtherleaa at the of 3. hi waa

lwmtui Bl lhfl ,., f the bishopf wjth ,,', ,,ention ,lf ,,.

, jMt ,lUt rviJt,lu,y, , fJ , , h ouil.re.fcof the war with the United Statesturned to a military career, lie nervedthroughout that struggle in a militia1rnmpuny which he helped to orga-nize, nnd after peace waa declared

. . . .L ! I 3 Ui." T""L, Z " Zlof Santa dictatorahip.execution waa orilered, hut he es-

caped and Joined Herrera' revolt, Hespeedily made a reputation aa u r,

and aa a htigadier-gencik- l hewhs I tie chief thorn in the aide of theFrench forcea, when, taking advan-tage of the civil war in the United

, L i............ - ..!..- - i.nkV'"' ";"". "'I'""duke Miiximilian of Austria on thethrone of a Mexican empire. Diaahnr.iiH.Ked enemy constantly, andin June, Hi'i7, raptured Mexico Citywith h forcea. (In the

tion waa in July, r.ii'i.To Diux waa k'iven credit for tho

advance of Mexico to the status of astable, progressive and prosperousI'ovcrnmc nl, althoiiKh autocraticmet hods he employed were widelycriticised

ENCAMPMENT TWO WEEKS OFF.

Military Encampment Here l.aat Weekin July.

Tlu (lr-- t military rnrumpmnnt evorhrlil in ( arlsliiul will I

July ..f.ih, lasting one week. Four allAmerican rnnipiinies will attend thiaencampmeiit, which will be under command of Major E. P. Ilujac, while the1A ljittiint Oneral aiiil one or more1recular army ofllccra will also be In'attendance in advisory capacity.

Each of the companiea. which willI... .mm l.ln.i. m- - r...... II... i

lales, and "K" from Clovis In additionto the local compunv, will be providedwith regular camp kitchen outfit. .

'Imbuir a field ramre and all aerea- -soiies, and will be issued rcirular irar-- '

ison ratiotiM each day, same aa to

Mdwl for and an encainpn.nt thu repiih waaCarNhad. the ofiVialK Santa Fe ""'''I randidarf for president,

i.-e- l that we should make hif show- - in. ,H.77 he w;" lU'ried to fl" thooir, and we oui-h- l without ""expired of the fugitive presi-fai- l,

if for nothinif else than to , lrilo. Ills last and eiKhth

2IMI Avalan

Arlesiii

I'laand said

present

twowill

the ilii' Avalonthe

Phlinire fur

cillc

lMjif

.tinlml,-

fu'l-i-

.tlUVi

vi'iit

MMMH'lHTtltippiiM'

W.i

n.fin- -

till'HMll

wdtiilrr t'ti'i

odd

Hint

Ilia

Parla,

IIU

Indianage

Anna'a ilii

the

the

"('"

. ci'iilar snlillers. Thia Includea a One knows auioiiier la practically here.I'l'iilar issue of ire fur ilriiit iir water, Ami the i.f uusía are not only cbartn-rres-

l.iriil and buiier ami in fart , hiu when tlieii hIiowi IkvIs are amend:euouirn to sin isr y a nonirry iiiiin, pro-vided the rompany possessea n irnoilrook to serve the food properly,

the rush value is limited to ''teper day for each man.

It is probable that thla ramp willo pitched in or near the eilire of

town, and the people here will beopportunity to ee how soldiers

live under field romlr ions.If t'liins are carried out ns ron--

letMiiliited. the ciimi. "ill I n'liceilo tbut water lines will be laid along

Coi.uu.iiy si reel, with hydrants for'Ii kitchen, nod shower baths erect-- j

I fur use nf the soldiers. While,sitial military discipline wl'l be main-- ;

liiineil. lis til ii v I'liciiuioioent. the!men me allowed ample time otf forI reat ion, rest or iimuemeut in thenf ternoons. and it is likcW someteieitiiH' base ball games niavii'i'ii ibirioi' thi v k. as everv com- -

pnnx ntaiiis sonic erui-- iImiis.This will prove a bit' week for

Curl-ha- d muí iriaio'i-n'eet- l ould ben.iil.' lo eetertain the visitors I least

one nil-li- t iliin-- u' the . iiciiiepniei t.o

Llharly Ball.The l.llicrtv Im'II I leie fm l In rlr

riluiieri iue iiniuinl the Up and s,..ifoi l n un hea ii i u I Un. erou ti The

ell Is three fis- - folloMlng , Hue ofI lie Is'M from tlie lip to the iron u andtwo feet Itins- - linhea oler the crownI'lle leluMtl of the rl,lisT la three fis I

lo lie hea The lusi rltlni on thetell Is "lly oriler of the AsaiMnhly ofI lit- - I'liiiliire of I'elili-.vlMi- nl i. tor theSiiitelious). In the I lljr of l'hlli.i.l.ilu.IT.'.' 1'is.rlnlui l.lliir.i ilir..ui:li.iui HieI, uní unto nil Hie luli.ililiaiila thereof.1.1 ll. v. 10."

We Repeat That We AreMerchants

WE SELL ICETHAT MEANS WE ARE KEEN FOR ALL THE ÜI'SINFSS WECAN GET.That value you a. a customer, and there lan't a thing we ranreaaomihly do for you that e aid not do cheerfully.THE III. I Till OIR SERVICE THE MORE ICE WE SELL,

W are not rold blooded because w handle cold product. Wre human, through and through

Judge h. a. yoa Judge other merchants, knowing that cannotafford lo bo arbitrary or partialOUR ICE U good Ire. And It I. cheap enough for you lo use Itfreely. If not a customer already, oliclt you now,

CARLSBAD ICE FACTORYTII0NE StA.

SUMMER FROCK.

Hsndsem Free HandHandkerchief Linen.

I i. m

. 4 3m

1

t

rurrrr ai uvia caaAnon.Hand embroidery la uaed lavishly

thla aeaaon In the crea i Inn of handaome aummer rol.es The iHileru Jack-al lenda Itaelf to the acalluiwd edite,aa do also the yoke ami the bottomof the aklrt. To ulre the touch of col-or the iflnlle la mude of rose coloredan tin. A hat of white hemp la irltnmed with pink rosea, and the atia-kln-

are pink, woru with I. luck and whitl""P"

"

BEAUTIFUL DOGWOODS.

Whin THt Shrub Blossoms Svmmor UAb,,b H,r

,1 ""'" ent marnoPie apreait

their liiluriilil pétala ao early, while the,rw" "re .''' hare. Unit one fair It lan" "" K""l "e true but with thedelirium itnLMvusIa It la another atory

their roiii, m. u mill In I tic rail, aglorious crimson, ami the berries areeven more rh tily tinted t'ufoctuniite-l- y

the hungry lilnU often denc-em- l ma.iia tree ami devour etery UIiwmoiii IJkeluany other slii ulis, Ita buds for the fol-low Inn year will lie net thla ailtumn.Kvell prelller lluin thUilogwiHal Is thepink nourriuit variety, lull while thecoloi Is ninlrrf ul the form la not aaliarai rrl-tl- e.

I'lie i ui i id topsil, upward liranrhlngi oil niiipie Is superli i lust a veryblue sky Then I lie dark gray hurklooks tiliu'k mui the crimson hloaaoma.wlih h kiovv on almrt peUrela. ats-li- l

more thun i mt tu illliiiit In tieoru'lamui l'i.. ml i - liiii-aoi-ns are a an I

perh althi In M ir. h mi l a delight to j

the In ui Ii i' it Ins uiise they come soiiirly

One nee I li t he forever liM.kluu uloft.Iioweter lilulil ilmu In the grusa areflnrMl relies n plentv Tile llrsl faToiite. no ilmil.t. Is I In violet, the dear,inoilesi Huh' il'ilel wlil.h erervliislylines ami lil. li Mo-soi- ns rverx where

The llllle .:ue tiiMilteii Hila one ofthe Moral early lulls; likewise the

lnky and 1 o url.uliia. whichsome cull the niMjtl.iwer I it April and-- l,i y the l.l.io'lrisit la fiaiml. lis pure

hite iiolihii liemtisl IiIohmuiis la'lugas ni i ll as the Juice of lis root at.a k

la aur. rising '

Put Salt In Milk.Milk will not turn sour If a tenHMN.n

ful of fine salt lie aihlisl to every quartW'lic i, prepiirtiig unions, tutnlpa and

carrots for . ooklng. rill arn-a- a the lllier.us this makes tin in more tender vilu u

rooked.In warming a ateanusl pudding or lu

steiuuliiit a -- lute cuke neii-- r put the arthle on a plate or Hal dish. Place thepudding In a isilatiiter In the ateiimer,and you r. Ill lie surprised to fliul howmuch Itchier innl un.re dellcule the piiibding III be than If a plate had la-e-

used for the moisture to settle ou andmake the I'liiMing heavy.

O

I CREAM BLOUSES MODISH.

Cream s the modish (on for thespring blouse, not pink. Ilarely lovelyaa tli pink lilouae la lu dellcnte lleahor alu-l- l tones, lis day has paaaed, andlUcse Ilion-e- s an- - offered for snle onthe b'UKS'n tihlea, while cream andsun I .Ml. .red iii.kU'I have the plncvof fcnior auioiig exclusive new springwearable.. Hemstitched lik.uae. ofwin! eoloreil khaki tins for .port wearhave hutloneil down ami plaitsat front and hack. Cream are andnet Hiouc mei-- t the reqiilremetil. offur urn I aprlng sud there aregood liaiklng blouaes of Isn shantungcream tinted georgette crape and ecrupuaay willow allk. all with the longsleeve anil collar high al the backwhatever II. cut may be at the front

DEATH OF MRS. SORRELSAt iuat twelve o'clock laat Friday

night Mn. Sorreli paaaed away. Shahad been III for aix weeki, in factalnce the death of her boy that wiskilled in cava in April by a rockstriking him, and killing him almoatinatantly, he never ceaied to mournlor her boy.

About four week airo Mr, Sorrelbrought her up from Loving andplaced her In the Eddy county hoi-pital- .

She did not seem contente 1

there, and constantly aaked to bemoved home; Juat aa a typhoid pa-tient will. They alway have aometheme to talk on. Ho Mr. Sorrelsmoved her to a rented house near thehospital, at which place ahe died laatFriday night of typhoid fever.

Molíase Pearl liallard and Mr. Sor-rel were married at Dnllaa, Texaa,twenty-fiv- e yeara ago. To them aixchildren were horn, four boya and twogirla, four of them are living; twoboya and two girla. I

TV. . . : ,ne .Y.fuiiKrni pun uieu nrvrrii yeara

ago and the oldest one. Will Sorrels. 'ia buried here.1 i l t m . Iturn, rmrrein won mrmner or tne i

tjiS" hW".f i

...... ...m1? ...."r;! ll"J!.L m.ururi.!'!nil-- ? w. l...l Willi IIIV

llaptist church and reared her chil-dren in that faith. Frienda and neigh-bors were kind to her during her laatillneaa and many beautiful (oral tri-butes were evidence c.f their kindnca.

Mr. Sorrel ha been ill with feverfor three weeka but never left herbed aide, though at times he couldhardly stand.

THE FRUIT SEASON

runera aervicea were nei.i at the A'buouetoue Journalcemetery by the Baptiat minister. Rev. A letter signed "Mrs. Uuiaa Ker-M- r.Karl, at 3 no Saturday af ernoon 'MrdM haiI received Jour-Sh- ewas laid to rest in the Carlsbad ,lul, ,nd KÍVt, muvy u.rt's,illK taelncemetery by the side of her aon of; regarding the late Mil.y Kenands.whom ahe spoke until death called, whose sudden death in .tosía laat

I WPrK nnouneid in these eclumnsMr. Sorrels and family express their Th, mer is as follow:sincere thanks to those that helped; "Kd.tor Morning Journal. 1 wish

" '".VinT t0 corrert the notir0 ou lve in yourduring the illneaa of the pBper concernin, Mr Kiraunda' life.IIV I1U IIIVJillXTI , i

The ( urrent extend sympathy to,me ..ereaveq am y.

PICNICThe picnic at Mr. Hendéis homo

Monday for the children of St. Ed- -w.r.1. M.....IMV ..hoot n,l ., th.t, many years, arter which Hie company

'

8 . mXe,ulltV"t: ? ,CTu hap- -

i WUH "ol1' to J( k iviland. The com-A- tpRnv ,hor rtor w, ,,,,

py children, Kfown-u- p unch boxea f()r Rurope. where Mr. Kersandaice and decorated w.th bunting and peitre,, ,,rfor, hpr ma,eMy (Jll(ll.n v.l...iks .or ,.e pit n.cgrounds. When they arrived many,other conveyance, were there or came'lutur. There was not a dull momentfor any one. The men and boys hada ball game. Some of the young folk;donned their bathing suits and en oy-- ,

ed a swim, others fished, the children'had big swings and croquet game,went wading. Dinner waa spread ona long table made by placing longplunk, between. Thi table accommo-- ;dated eighty-tw- o people, and you hadonly to look over t and seo whul you

.wanted. Each lady took creum. milkor eggs, some took lemons, ire coldlemonade was plentiful and free to

'I- - The ladies prepared and the gen- -

tlemen and boys turned the freezerand gullon after gallon of deliciouscreum was mudo and served in the.afternoon with the cukes. Mr. Hitch-- ,'ockaiid his sister biought four crates1i une, ripe peacnes mui were uacei

where the children and anyone thatwished could help the madrea all dur-- jing me uay. riciures were matte or:the group which showed 82 peoplepresent: Mr. Walterschcid and family,'Joa Fesler and family, Hudiburgh andfamily, llindel and family, Hannah andfamily, and l.illie Mae Nelson, Hrocl;-- ;mun and family, Zeiglcr and fumily,Mullaue and family. Culvnni ami fum- -

ily, llogelin and fumily. Ed. lióos andfumily. Mury Kircher and fumily andSudie Margaret Wheeler, Mrs. Wertiand fumily. Miss Kulherine Wulteisi'heid. Ruth Duncan, Mr. ArchieHitchcock und sister, Hugo Kngbert'i,Pete Snyder. Fred and Wilford Roll- -mcr, lion Weldon. Mr. Uuyts, AlbertFisher, Futher tiilbert kud FatherIjiureme. The day was cool undil.'l flit fully spent.

n years

anndsin.u if '"" ''''Uti e leio

t'.. li a leu ten. riiiions ,i..yo,.o ii:eu. l ,Hau-4- - llu-.- s..wu

lu'i l.e douii llie hiuishlw ofji in i nt k ii In . Ttiey h.ul to lite In lie-- i.i.l'e und th,. held iiiuli-- r eie In!oriler lo la- - nli'e In illle--l he u.oie-- l

s Ni'HI, .II "'e in al Slav.,ni hi- - l.n-- e i er-- . when- - lie follow.uperitlon- - on a ui,i as iviri ihiih-In li le.ei.li'.lie mil le i ii. ih'i ii

si..ii.i;:, In in - ,i '.. fp.ni ml ni-- 1

I'lris of the "".en he gias on atmir of lii-.- ei ,e rolls along In itii. .. i r nt h s i -.. Meillralloiirn.

Ch Idran Nttd.in us . more iiiaiiv. mor tool

for I.i.iilIu.iI'.oh that la wlmtneed. Every day the I

more ii MMi:ar.lnea. ;

i.letiin s. ili uveriiKH ii.veiillo hook, thetalk of ull iiUiiit theiu-vv- er thinglend, to tether chlldr...'. thought, lothe ,ld Hecu ,ow and 1U... ....--..-

...ii. s Hut irtiull i hey. iherefore, losetheir fill Inheritance In that otherreaini ui loveliness worm or lea-- iterdu.v and Tuuiorrow, of Furnway,Miiyl.e realm Ls luteiub-.- l to beloaned theiu linletlultely. Inthe "glory mid the gbuin" of t.iu ittlu-bo-

prlsiu.-Atlan- tic.

Clr"llUlik1. wife ata-m- . to be quite a m

elctun.'"Vea. she Is a fine pianist""How doe. she keep lu practice

U .way from homer"She carries a large muff.'

forT""Just to keep btr bund Inr-Ptar- -on'

Weekly.

11 I

.

IS HER E

LET US SUPPLY NEEDSFOR PRESERVING AND PICK-LING.

We have everything thehousewife requireexcept the fruit andugar

BRASS KETTLES and ENAMELEDPOTS for cooking, STONE JARS,

II alea. MASON CLASSJARS, JELLY GLASSES

GLASS DIPPERS

Í ' 8: ,)on 1 rlouk our ilargaln"'ROBERTS OEARBORNE HOW. CO.

CARLSBAD, NEW MEXICO.

KERSANDS' WIFE TELLS FACTSOF HIS VARIED LIFE.

Widow of Late Minalrel CorrectaStatements in Regard lo Man

Who Made Millionsin Former Years.

1 . .:. .. .U....I.I i -

,und, w 1)orn , Nw Vork (.itvwa, 72 ol(J T)e firgl1C ver wor,ie,l ,jr w" in New York

'City when but a boy. in name was(hartes Callender

,le w"'"'"''! U'Í.U ht company

toria, through apecial request Mr.Kersands remained playing to therrown hfail, of the 0d mtrívl, íorfur yiarx

the managem-m- t of the luteCharles Froman. on his return toAmerica. Mr. Kersanda organized hi

wn rompHny with a pnrtneP namedCharles Hicks. The company waainown traveled under the0f nlCrllt 4 Keraand. They were to-- 1

other only a few dissolvedthoir partnership. Then Mr. Kersandsjjnw the Richard A. Pringle min-- lstrels. With this company remain-- 1

ed many years. After the death ofIlii-- r.l .ml l'rlnl. !- ,-

waa managed by Ruaco A HollandsWith thi company he remained until,they dissolved partnership. Then Mr.iKersanda ran his own minatrels.Hnownas 'Millie Kersands' Famous Minstrel.'His manager at that time was C. J.I

mith. nnd hi advance agent waqW. A. Thompson,

"The compunv had grent successArier closing his own company ha1joined the Hugo brothers' minstrelaa stnr of the company. They sailedfrom San Francisco Into the orientalcountries, making all of the islands'and going as fur into Australia as the)but inhabited town, which is West

going towurrt the south polenfter which the rnmnnnv urna mil. I

te Austrnliun mnnne-cment- . when1Mr. Mrs. Kersands sailed foriAmerica. This season Kersandscn his own minstrel show with the!Ni-- ro Stevenson Amusement Co.,iii'd-- r his own mnnn-t-rtent- .

"Mc. Kerar' died in Ártesin.M.. of failure .ii,nP .10. The tri-- i' -- 'c ia wns n f,-- if success. Mr

.iei4 has been bef.-.e,-. the furt-- i

Ri.wi. vntirs."MRS. f.OCISA KF.RSA.N'HS."

o

ODD FELLOWS ENTERTAIN.Eddy f.mle No. 2l . Tnileo.ndeni n- -.

,t.r 0f Odd Fellows, bad IIS itm (rilnal- -on Tuesday evening, July , themembers the local Rcfi.-I'ii- lodgeand the families of Odd Eellowa an. Itheir friends, the occasion being thepublic instullntinn ofJlcera for theterm from July 1 to December 31,

C. Pert Smith ,of Artesia Lodge.No. II, and Crond Master of th.Orand Lodge Odd Fellowa of.Mexico, and Mrs. Smith, came- - down,from Arie t end the inalulla- -

ceremony,R(v. j, T Rrtmoli who eM

transferred hia mebershlp to the locallodge, addressed the a..diiie i,ln,.tIne fraternity aplrit a. hi. .ubject.

'' l': '""m, the retiring

intereating manner. Mr. Ted Butlerrennerecl an enjoyable rocal solo.

Refreshment, were served at a latehour by the management of Hoteli.aiea,

The officers for the ensulm. term ara

lii's rorty-nv- We have bi-e-

Madarn War Mathoda. '" ''', twenty-tw- o yenrs. Mr. Ker- -..ilii.i(-..i- i would not have broken - in-iti-e of lioniibl-nnvill- e,

noun s ho hud leva iihle In'.'"-- . V K,,";""'ls' remiina will beuol.lle. l.le..o,,e ,.,.,1 "'r.'.? "l rh"tta- -

e:euiiili-- r

I

Iih.,

ir

Hi'i.lsli

V'hatMine

uecd Uvoiue- -j

irent. uiovliig

of

meof

This

guham.

whenbe

"Whet

YOUR

will

Laugh

"Under

and name

he

and

of

of

nf

a follows;Noble (irand, George V. Price.Vice Grand. Robert A. Hun.lck.Secretary, Victor L. Minter.Treasurer, Wm. A. Craig.Warden, Merle Shaw.Conductor, Frank W. Ros,R. 8. N, G., L. E. Hayes.L. S. N. G., Marvin Livingston.Inside Guardian, U. S. Hamilton.Outside Guardian, T. C. Horn.R. S. S., W. H. Woodwell.L. S. 8., J. T. Redmon.R. 8. V. G., E. S. Kirkpatrick.L. 8. V. G Jo.. U Andrews

oChristian A Co., Insurant.

AMONG UOCUB.Two Thousand Head of Yaarllnn. .!' Two and Three. Year Olda at

Oraneej Train I d LoareLordaburg.

Alamogordo, N. M; July 6 Th Jf.fers and the Jenes cattle interest ofthe Orange district of thia county, andW. II. Woods, alaoiof that district, havsold more than 2,000 head of yearlingand two and three-year-ol- for de-livery this month. Th cattle wjll

up near Orange, and will bedriven to the Van Horn section ofTexas for summer nnd fall pasturing.The prices reported are .'12.60, 137.60md IIH.

Trnlnln.d From LordsburgLordsburg, N. M July 6. Another

large cattle shipment was made fromthe local stock yards when McKeehanA Martin nf the (iile river, and thHighland Cattle company.sent a train,load of cattle to Texas. The stockwas in excellent condition, andbrought on an averare $.11 per head.

797 Head Shipped- -

Ukewood, N. M., July The Flour,de-ll- a Cattle rompany .hipped 19 car.

7!7 head to Mossman, S. D lustweek. Drown went with them.

8IMI Head at Springer.Sorinirer. N. M Jul. a T.n. a.

Cunningham, of this place, have Justrcceiveo ouu neau rf old Mexico- cat-tle. This firm rHe..i: . . i.i.shipment of cattle to lialantine, Mont.ii. ci. springer, superintendent of thCS Cattle company, ha made a ship.ment of f.O yearlinirs l ull in l.vnn .Campbell, of Silver City.

zimi Head .Sold al Koawell.Roswell. N. M.. Julv A C: H

strong has sold 200 hed of two andthrec-vear-nl- d cattl In Wi'L n.ni.ers. The price ha. ait been madepublic.

C. P. Shearman ha. shipped twocars of fat hogs to the markets at FtWorth. The hogs came from the Hopecountry and were some of the finestthat ever left the vnbey. The hog.brought six cent, per pound.

Cimarron Shipment.Cimarron, N. M., July 6. C. R. van

Houten has shipped 85 yearling steer,to market. Matt Heck has shippedfour cars, two from Maxwell and twofrom Ute Tark.

V. II. LU.SK SELLS RANCHES ANDC'ATTLK.

One of the lurgeal c..ttl jeals tobo pulled off in Eddy county thi. sea-so- n

was completed last Saturday whenVirgil Huag Lusk sold all hi. holding,to his son, John. The ranche, areamong the best in the county andthe cattle number 1,000 or more. Theronaiduration, which is private, ia, nodoubt, very low considering the pre,ent price of cattle. Mr. I.ujk camher in 1894 from the Sacramentomountains bringing; his family of flv.sons and hi wif who died at th'rthof th youngest, Sam, who wa.:the sixth and born here and of course

..ow a nrigne young man. Haalso brought a una stocK of cattl.and. luvated at ( r.yton Well, twentymiles northeuat where he hauled lum..i m the "f1 mi" nef Weed ovemiles to build hi. house. Here,he lived with hi smull bova andworked for years, flnully acquiring

liu-g- stock of rattle. About tenyear, ago he moved his headquarter,to four miles north nf the Fuo.s.ranch thirty.frve miles from Carlsbad,where he developed a fee watering ofgood water, and later purchased thcurtas ranch and other waturli.gs. Hewill now trawl and sc., the exposition.,and take a well eurirad rest, huvingreached the age wlum, if ilVvftman should comme s:e to enjoy the.fruit of a life of lubor uivl expo-sure, such as only the western cowmun knoitoi.

CAR OF KECISTEREU BULLS.1Cl'y cani in T"'-lu-

tni.ty t vu hend of. register.jd yearlinand tw register. d HerefordLulls nil of which are looking verysleek md line. TUse bulls are fromthe choicest herds of Missouri andKunsivs and sell from fliiO to $.25euch. Tho former car loud was allsold to a few stockmen, among them

eo. SI. William who purchasedthr.e and luw tuken the choicest of..& iouii ui ,iu.uu. a. Swigartpurchased line from the first load.I hebulls ran lie seen ut the Osbornefeed lots on the snuUiside of town.

ItlC. SHEEP DEAL.M. E. of Lovington Tuesoay

purrhused from A. N. Seaton and alsofrom W. P. llyrd all their sheep, titerbeing about 2,000 head. The we.sold ut $4.r0 ami lamb, at 12,75 whilethe muttons brought H.fiO. Mr. Sea- -,

ton, who reside near Pearl My. he-wi-

engage ia th cattle buuine...

Automobile InsuranceInd you ever stop to think that Inyour automobile you have

1 A TEN GALLON TANK OF GAS.ULINF.

2 A CARBURETOR THAT LEAKS.S OILY RAGS.

4 ELECTRIC WIRES WHICH IFCKOSSEU WILL START AFIRE

5 AN ENGINE STARTED BYELECTRIC SPARK.

A FAN FORCING GAS VAPORSHACK ON ENGINE ANDDASH.

And that every duy automobiler being burned from above

cause. T

PROTECT YOURSELF BY SECUR.ING A POLICY WITHOUT

DELAY FROM

W, F, Mcllvain