the cimarron news and press, 03-14-1907
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University of New MexicoUNM Digital Repository
Cimarron News and Press, 1907 New Mexico Historical Newspapers
3-14-1907
The Cimarron News and Press, 03-14-1907Cimarron Publishing Company
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( Hr-- ra n ri ñ n n n n r1 ti f i (I II ii
II J L LL
rí i r riicjijNOTE :The type used in this heading is from the old plant of the Cimarron News and Press and was used for a heading for the paper in the seventies.
Estab. 1872 New Vol. I. CIMARRON, NEW MEXICO, THURSDAY, MARCH 14, 1907 NO. 10
HOW WILL CIMARRON MEN REPRESENTATIVE ANDMRS. ABBOTT ENTERTAIN CATTLE MEENQINEERAND
mmmBLAMED
With Accidental Care-lessness in Trini-
dad Affair
All Important MachineLegislation Tacked on to
Appropriation Bill as RidersThe only really extraordinary event of the present session oí the
New Mexico Legislature occurred Tuesday afternoon, when the housepassed the general appropriation bill for the running expenses of theterritory and all its institutions for the "ensuing two years, and tackedon ail the machine legislation which has been discussed this term.This is the last and supreme effort of the machine to get through theDistrict Attorney's bill and the numerous public printing measureswhich have had no show to pass the Council. The attorney's bill,a printing bill, an immigration agent bill, $6,500 for Spanish printinga new Coal Oil Inspection bill, a bill to provide for the revision of the
Á
laws, and spending fourteen thousand dollars in salaries ai.d eleventhousand dollars in expenses for the commission of six men who arenamed by the bill. Clarence T. Stockton is named as coal oil in-
spector for this district without his sanction. The Miners' Hospitalgets an appropriation of $13,000.
In order to railroad through the legislation which is directly aimed atGovernor Hagerman, the House is willing to jeopardize all prospects ot ap-propriations for territorial expenses for the next two years. It is almostcertain that the council will not pass the appropriation bill with all theriders, which are characterized as high-hande- d attempts at coercion.
Baits of all kinds are thrown out in the bill as passed by the hiuMembers of the families of influential members of the Council are slated forappointments, and other men are named on commissions at good salariesbecause of service already rendered. The appropriation provisions are soliberal to all interests concerned, that its pupose is flagrantly apparent.Every effort has been made to bribe and influence all interests possible, inorder to get the bill through with the riders, Especial baits ars laid for theBernalillo and Colfax Councilmen who have been opposing the District Attor-ney's bill. -
BRUTAL TREATMENT
Of CIMARRON WOMAN
LOOK IN THIS CARB?
London, March 7. The "Princess"style, so long popular among women
for their gowns, is advocated by re-
form tailors, who say men shouldhave more attractive and comfortablegarments. While they give the name
"Princess" to the new style, it is in
reality but a development of the un-
ion suit idea.Sample suits have been made show-
ing the coat, trousers and vest allmade in one piece. The ordinarylines of division between the three aresimulated by heavy seams. , Coat tailsare cleverly arranged to hang loosely,giving the idea of a separate coat.
The tailors claim the advantage ofincreased comfort and a big saving in
time for their new suits, and they saythe unity of the three garments givesthe tout ensemble effect ' impossiblewith separate garments.
AUTO RECORDS
WERE BROKEN
The record for automobile drivingacross country was broken on Satur-day, when E. C. Sperry drove hisReo machine from Raton to Dawsonin one hour and thirty-fiv- e minutes,and from Cimarron to Raton in twohours and fifteen minutes. This wasdone with three men in the car E. C.
Crampton, Charles Colgrove and Mr.Sperry.
The Trinidad Advertiser has coineda new one when it calls a party sup-
per "a tasty round of refreshments."
CIMARRON YOUNG MEN
ORGANIZE ATHLETIC CLUB
Last Jmuay evening the youngmea called a meeting in Aztec hallfor the purpose of organizing an ath;letic club in Cimarron. Jack Recordsmaster mechanic of the St. Louis,Rocky Mountain & Pacific, called themeeting to order, and nominationscalled for temporary chairman andsecretary.
Nominations were then called for apresident of the association . FredericWhitney was nominated and unanimously elected. The following officers
were elected by acclamation: J. W.Records, vice president; H, Griebel,secretary; Norman Wilkins, treasurer.
A committee of seven was then ap-
pointed as a baseball committee, thiscommittee to include the captain ofthe base ball nine, he to be appointedby the other six. At the suggestionof E. J. Belton the following wereappointed: Ira Duckworth, Jas. Lail,Fred Whitney, Alex Livginston, Wm.
Rupert and Norman Wilkins. .A committee of three was then ap-
pointed to draw up the by-law- s andconstitution for the association. On
this committee were Messrs. J. A.Haimbaugh, Jas. Lail and Wm.Rupert.
Another committee of three was appointed to negotiate for a building.S. E. Pelphrey, Frederic Whitneyand Chas. Scott were appointed.
Next in order came the ways andmeans committee. J. W. Records,John Littrell, Ira Duckworth and H.Griebel were appointed. '
- And last but not least the enter-
tainment committee to arrange for abig dance and other entertainment on
the night of March Ifith. Prior tothe dance there will be wrestling andboxing matches. So bear in mindthe date, March 16, for . that is thegala day. Get out your new buggies,boys, and your fast horses, get hereearly and don't miss a minute of thegood time. On the entertainmentcommittee are J. W. Records, NealConley, and Chas. Lowman.
A prize fight will also be arrangedfor in the near future, the proceeds tohelp build a modern club house.
The following were enrolled asmembers: Fred Whitney, Ira Duck-worth. Eugene Keep; J. W. Records,Norman Wilkins, Robert Barr, captaiuof base bull team, E. J. Belton, JohnPeden. Egbert Boyd, Ralph Mann.W. L. Rupert, Jesse Littrell, J. R,Littrell, Thos. Vest, Joe Dally, CM.Lowman, Geo. McCIellan,Al Davis,D. B. Cole, J. P. Daley, M. N.Winters, E.G. Winters, H. Griebel,Alex Livingston, F. 0. Haimbaughand S. W. Pelphrey.
Representative and Mrs. H. C. Ab-
bott, of Springer, entertained at thePalace hotel on Thursday evening ata delightful card party, followed byan elaborate banquet. The event wasone of the most successful socialfunctions during the present sessionof the Legislative Assembly. Thefore part of the evening was taken upwith cards, five hundred being thegame. This was played at nine tablesin the parlors of the hotel, the hon-ors of the evening going to Mrs. S.G. Cartwright and Judge John R. Mc-Fi- e.
At 11 o'clock cards were laidaside and the guests repaired to thebanquet room, where an elegantluncheon was served. Pink and whitecarnations were used profusely on thetabic and platos were laid for fifty.At one end of the festive board satPresident Charles A. Spiess, of theCouncil, while at the other SpeakerBaca held forth. New Mexican.
NEBRASKANS
REDUCE FARES
Lincoln, Neb., March 7. The twocent per mile railroad law, which wentinto effect in Nebraska today, wassigned by Governor Sheldon only afew minutes before midnight, whenit would have become a law withoutthe governor's signature. While Gov-
ernor Sheldon stands for certain rail-
road reforms, he expressed himselfduring his campaign and since his in-
auguration as believing that a twocent fare would mean confiscation in
many cases.lie said today:"No one will say that I am a rail-
road tool because I oppose a reduc-
tion to two cents per mile by the leg-
islature. The railroads fought me atevery turn during this campaign andthcir opposition to me is well known
I "I do not now and I did not in mycampaign believe in the passage of a
two cent fare law. I do not believethat such a law is likely to stand thetest of the courts in all cases. Itmight do so on the big lines, but therearc smaller roads in the state onwhich the earnings are so small thatthe law would be declared inopera-tive because not compensatory.
"A former legislature of Nebraskapassed a minimum freight rate law in
a general attack upon the freightrates and the law was declared in-
operative because its enforcementfailed to yield to the railroads a fairreturn upon the investment of theowners. In like manner an arbitraryreduction of passenger rates by thelegislature is likely to lead to thesame mistake of attempting to get thewhole loaf and failing to get any atall.
"In freight rates it is the same aswith passenger rates. A direct at-
tempt to arbitrarily reduce themwould result in the same failure toobtain a reduction which is fair andpossible to obtain."
At the last moment the governorsigned the bill, not because he be-
lieved in its justness, but, as heit: "I am a firm believer in
the principles of representative legis-
lation. For that reason I signed thebill, not wishing to take any standwhich would invalidate the desire ofthe majority."
New Mexico Pharmacists.The New Mexico Board of Phar-
macy convened in Santa Fe last weekand the following druggists appearedbefore the board: C. C. Pcgg, Ama-
rillo, Texas; Dr. G. A. V. Hackney,San Marcial; Columbus Talbott, Por-
tales; F. L. Stanton, Alamagordo; L.D. Stowc, Raton; S. O. Brown, SantaFe; E. C. Ottwell, Albuquerque; S.
W. Keller and F. W. Sipf, of LasVegas.
ALABAMA QUAILFOR NEW MEXICO
A shipment of Alabama quail, which
will be liberated on the game pre-
serves of C. G. Hudson and Roderic
Stover, rvar Padilla, were received by
these gentlemen last week. Messrs.
Hudson and Stover hope in this way
to give the birds a chance to multiply
and replenish the country adjacent totheir preserves with game for shooting a few years later.
KILLING OFF
SHEEP
War Between Wyom-ing Livestock Men
Range Rivalry
Sheridan, Wyo., March 9. North-ern Wyoming is again threatenedwith a range war between the cattleand sheep men. Closely following theattack on the Wisner camp last week,when 400 head of sheep were killedand the camp burned, comes the re-
port of a similar outrage in the OwlCreek country. The Sugh Dickeycamp was attacked by twelve maskedmen.
The raiders drove off the herders,fired the camp and began shootingsheep. Out of a total of 8,000 sheep,1,000 have disappeared and are sup-posed to have been killed.
The cattlemen had marked out a"dead line" and the Dickey sheepwere a mile over it.
The war will probably spread toother camps and further trouble islikely to occur.
When the sheen men first enterednorthern Wyoming, one of the fierc-
est wars in the history of the west-
ern range was precipitated. The cat-
tlemen were up in arms for severalmonths and dozens of men on bothsides were killed, either from ambushor in open fights. The sheep menwere driven below the cattlemen'sdead line" for a time, but under pro
tection of the officers of the law soonspread towards the north. The cattlemen lost considerable of the rangewhich they claimed by right of occu-
pancy. The sheep men. it is said,have gradually encroached upon therange until the cattlemen are in dan-
ger of being driven therefrom.Following the first 'slaughter of
sheep by cattlemen, the sheep ownersarmed their herders, and these menshowed equal bravery and coolnessin the defense of their flocks. Theresult of the present trouble is prob-
lematical, but the bloodshed of for-
mer days is not expected, as each sidehas too much fear of retaliation uponthe part of the other.
In Memory of John Heck.Born December 11, 1890; died
March 9, 1907; aged 1(5 years and 3months.
After a sickness of eight days thispromising young life succumbed topneumonia. All that was possible wasdone by loving hauds, but deathclaimed his own.
The pride anJ hope of his aged,
grandparents, Mr, and Mrs. MathiasHeck, with whom he had lived formany years, he provecí himself worthyof their confidence by constant faith-fulness and integrity. This was arare union of all those qualities thatmake a fine manly character. He wasloved and respected by his friends forhis honor end uprightness. It is sad(hat he should be taken just at thebeginning of so much usefulness. Hisbravery and endurance were evidenceto the last in the way in which hefought against the ravages of the in-
sidious , but at lust, overcomeby the cruel ma'ady, he gave up thestruggle and sank peacefully to restabout 2:30 o'clock Saturday morning.
He was buried in the cemetery atCimarron on Sunday afternoon. Alarge proeession of sympathizingfriends followed the bereaved familyto his last resting place.
The funeral services were conductedby Father Cellier at the little churchnear the cemetery.
The sorrowing family has the heart-
felt sy mpstby of the entire communityin their affliction.
PRESIDENT WONT BE THERE.
Phoenix, Ariz., March 8. In a let-
ter received by Gov. Kibbey, Presi-dent Roosevelt stated he would notbe able to attend the Rough Riders'reunion in Prescott in June and thededication of Borghlum's statue ofCapt. "Buckie" O'Neill.
" The death of William G. Taylor,the brakeman who was killed while
trying to cut out the airbetween a
locomotive and box car in the localSanta Fe yards several days ago, wasdue to the joint carelessness of theengineer and head brakeman on therolling stock instrumentaj in the incurrence of his fatal injuries. This
, is the sum and substance of the ver-di- et
returned late yesterday afternoon by a coroner's jury impaneled
by J. H. Guilfoil to investigate thecause of death.
While the verdict returned fixescarelessness as the cause f death,this does not mean that it was crim-
inal carelessness; merely accidentalcarelessness, but carelessness, never-
theless, sufficient to briqg about afatal termination. For the reason,mainly, that neither the engineer norbrakeman will be held directly re-
sponsible for the death of Taylor,their names will not be made publicby this paper.
It was held by the coroner's jurythat the locomotive should not havebeen backed up without a signal fromthe head brakeman; and, further, thatthe head brakeman, after seeing theengine backing, and the position ofthe man killed between the cars,should have signalled the engineer tostop or run more slowly. TrinidadAdvertiser.
Mr. Taylor made his home here andiad many friends who regret his ter-
rible death.
HARD TRIP FOR
AUTOMOBILE
A trip that will long stand as re-
markable in automobile lore was thatmade yesterday from Raton, N. M.,by William Shaw, proprietor of theCoronado billiard rooms, in hisFranklin automobile. He was accom-
panied on the trip by Judge E. S.
Bright.The roads are almost impassable
owing to the melting snow, and in
places a mile at a time the mud ishub deep.- - Farmers along the linesaid that the trip could not be made,and one with heavy horses followedthe machine much of the way, ex-
pecting a call to "hitch on and pullus to Trinidad." '
The machine stood up nobly, how-
ever, and plowed through the sea ofmud like a duck takes to water.' Thisin spite of the fact that the wheelswere not chain wrapped to preventskidding.' The run was made in two hours andfifteen minutes and is a wonderfulachievement considering the obstaclesin the way of highways that the ma-
chine had to buck against. Chronicle--
News.
MEN IN TRAIN SERVICEOPPOSE TWO CENT FARE BILL
The legislative committee, repre-
senting the order of locomotive en-
gineers, railroad firemen, conductorsand trainmen, has decided to throwthe influence of these unions againstthe adoption of the bill, pending inthe state legislature that will requirethe railroads in Michigan to carrypassengers for two cents per mile,says a telegraphic dispatch fromGrand Rapids. At the last session ofthe committee it was held that instates where such a law has beenpassed the opportunities to work havebeen reduced through the curtailmentof train service, an instance being theabolishing of Sunday excursions, and
that in some states where such a lawhas been passed the railroads werebetter able to stand the reduction offares than in Michigan.
EDITOR-JUDG- E AS
SAULTED AT SPRINGER
Special Dispatch to the Morning Journal,Springer, N. M., March 7. Editor
J. F. Hutchinson, of the SpringerStockman, who is also justice of thepeace, was assaulted and badly beatenup here by Bob Winburn, as the resuit of the arrest of Winburn'syounger brother, who was fined $25and costs by the justice for sendingobscene letters to school girls inSpringer. After the trial Bob Win-bur- n
went to Hutchinson's office andwithout warning struck him a terrificblow in the face, knocking the editordown. As Hutchinson fell his headhit a projection of the woodwork, in-
flicting injuries so serious that he hasbeen in bed ever since,
A warrant was at once sworn out,charging Bob V inburn with assaultwith intent, to murder, and after ahearing in Raton, Judge Bay ne boundWinburn over to appear for trial un-
der $1,000 bond, which was furnished.It is said this is not the first time
the younger Winburn has been introuble on the same charge.
Editor of The Albuquerque MorningJournal, Albuquerque, New Mexico:Dear Sir In regard to an article in
your paper of March 8, 1907, anderthe heading "Editor-Judg- e Is Assaulted at Springer," will say thatyour correspondent has been bndlymisstating facts. In the first placeyoung Winburn was not arrested forsending obscene letters, but had writ-
ten a note to other boys that by sec-
ond party was passed to a girl inschool, and it was proven at the pre-
liminary hearing that there was notan obscene word in the note.
However, Mr. Hutchinson saw fit toimpose a fine of twenty-fiv- e dollars($25) and costs; young Winburn beinga minor his brother, Bob Winburn,appealsd the case and offered bond of$2,000 for his release signed by goodresponsible parties. It was refused bythe officers and the assault followedlater, not in Mr. Hutchinson's office
as stated, but in the Floersheim Mer-
cantile company's store where theparties met by accident.
Bob Winburn waived preliminaryexamination before Judge Bayne atRaton and was released on five hun-dred dollars ($500) bond to appearfor trial.
Young Winburn has not been introuble on similar charges before, andthe whole affair appears to be spitework from the very start. H. C.
Card of ThanksWe desire to thank our sympathetic
friends and neighbors for their kindlyministrations during the illness anddeath of John Ureen.
Mrs. Eugene Keep, who came herea short time ago with her husbandand her brother, Ira Duckworth, wasbrutally assaulted on last Fridaynight by a man named Pbelps, and isstulS tiering from the nervous shocko.l isi. i.,n;...,i w u. -assailant.
Mrs. Keep, who lives with her hus-
band in a tent, awaiting the erectionof a home, was alone when the manentered. He struck her several times,choked her and otherwise roughlyhandled her, but was frightened by herscreams and left her unconscious.
Mrs. Keep was found a few momentsafter the man left, and given carefulattention. A numbei of men imme-
diately began searching for Phelps,but were unable to find him. Anothersuspect left for Maxwell City aboutthe time the assault was committed.Phelps was arrested in Raton by Sher-
iff Littrellvacd is being held thereuntil Mrs. Keep is able to appearagainst him. He is a peddler whohas been here for some days, and isunderstood to be a married man.
Death of John Green.John Green aged 16 died at the
Heck ranch at 2:30 a. m., Saturday,March 9th, after a short illness of twoweeks. The cause of death was pneu-
monia. John Green was the son ofJ int ice and Kathrinelleck Green anda grandson of Mr. and Mrs. MatbiasHeck.- The funeral took place from the
Catholic church at 3:30 p. m. SundayThere was many beautiful floral piecesreceived, and although a young boy,he was very popular and very muchresisted, twenty-tw- o carriages fol-
lowed the bearse in from the ranchand many more waiting at the church.The pall bearers were Messrs. Fredand Jean Lambert, Ed. and HenryScherrer, Ralph Vance and TomBaugb, all young men friends of thedeceased.
CHICO SPRINGS TOHAVE SANATORIUM
The Chico Springs Sanatorium com-
pany are among the new incorporat-
ors of the territory. Incorporators,S. Strong, Silver City; William Von
Bruggcn, Chico; Arthur L. Mix, Max-
well City. Object, conducting healthresorts and ranches. Capital stock,$150,000, divided into 15,000 shares at10 cents a share; $2,000 capital stockalready subscribed. Duration, 49years. Territorial agent, WilliamVon Bruggen, Chico, N. M.
THE CIMARRON NEWS AND PRESS care of engines . . . IMew 'Mexico is
Published every Thursday at Cimarron, New Mexico
By the CIMARRON PUBLISHING COMPANY
Entered Secoud-cUn- matter January JO. 1907, at the post office at Cimarron, New Mexico,
nuder the act of Coutfrea of March 3, 1879. G SECTIONSUBSCRIPTION TWO DOLLARS PER YEAR
DISPLAY ADVERTISING 15 CENTS PER INCH
v EDITORIAL v of the United States. ColfaxCounty is the Most PromisingSection of New Mexico. Cim-
arron is in the best part ofColfax County.
Do you Want Land?Do you Want Town Lots?
Do you Want Mining Propetty?IF YOU DPI CAN SERVE YOUI rr?Lmar- ::,zzaIf you Have Property For SaleI can find you a Buyer if you
will list it with me.
If you Own a Home, or otherInsurable Property I can In-
sure it
F. A. HaimbaughCimarron, New Mexico.
the ;
& PACIFIC RAILWAY COMPANY
Schedule
Wells Fargo Express
STATION Train No. I
Tí ITÍltf AciHvm 12.30 p.m.12 01p.m.11.40 a.m.11.30 .ro.11.10.m.11.30 a.m.10.25 a.m.
1 10.15 a.m.CERRO8O80 Arrives 9.45 a.m.C1M tKRON Lvei tt.2Sa.m.
East Bound
No. 8 6:40 a. m
No. 4 8:10 a m
.17 No. 10 6 p. in
No. 2 6:15 p. m
FRUIT TREEÓ
Will have a car load of FruitTrees from Star NurseryCo., Quincy, 111. :.-- ::
The above will be on sale oaand after March 1st. :: ::
C. E. HARTLEYtf. SPRINOEK. N. M.
grinding out these coins for the Mex-ican republic will commence as soon
s the Mexican government deliverthe bullion. The Unltid St::tis wiillo this minliny: for our- - Mexicnl.leighbor at waciic.-ill- what it will:oit for labor, 'c::r ::r.d tear en
y, etc. ... , ...... -
RAILROADS HAVE MOST THOR-
OUGH SYSTEM.
Locomotive Must Make So much Mile-
age Between "Shoppings" Coatof Repairs Noted Through
Records Carefully Kept,
When a locomotive Is built It Isexpected to make a certain mileagebefore It receives a general overhaul-ing. When that overhauling is dona,
it is again required to make a defi-
nite mileage.A modern passenger locomotive is
expected, says the Ohio Magazine, tocover 100,000 miles between general''shoppings," intermediate repairs be-
ing made at the various roundhouses,. Responsibility for. failure of a loco-
motive to perform the work cut outfor it Is eas..y fixed by means of a sys-
tem of records. The superintendentof shops is responsible for all powetcut out of service on the road andplaced inside the shop grounds, andthis reponsiblllty does not end untUthe locomotive is ready for servlcsagain. From the time that it Is readjfor service until it is once more cutout for repairs is the shop the mas-
ter mechanic shoulders the reponsiblllty.
When the locomotive is ready tleave the shops it Is Inspected jointly by the shop inspector, under thesuperintendent of shops, and an in-
spector worliing under the master me-
chanic. Every workman who has anypart whatever in the handling of thelocomotive is responsible to nis immediate foreman, iust as the foremanis responsible to his superiors.
In spite of the many intricate partsof a locomotive the company recordsshow less than one engine failure forevery 16,000 miles. An "engine fallure" Is a delay of one minute or moreto any train, provided it is caused bya failure of the machinery of the locomotive.
Each of the many locomotives of abig system 790 In one case has a
decided individuality in the eyes otthe railroad. At headquarters isknown not only the cost of originalconstruction but the cost of labwr andmaterials used In repairs and the entire expense of maintenance down todate.
The labor of every man who worksfor even an hour upon a certain engine la charged to that engine, eachmechanic recording his labor upon aslip of paper known as a dally time3ertiflcate, which in turn Is certifiedlo by his immediate foreman and for-
warded to the general timekeeper.The records" of the road enable the offtclals to show the exact cost of laborand material for each mile that a lo-
comotive travels, or each ton hauled.In the case of collisions or wrecks,
where the fault Is not one of defectiveworkmanship or material, the locomotive may enter the general shops forrebuilding, even though it may nothave completed the mileage assignedto It, and no responsibility attachesitself to those on whom It would otherwise fall. The locomotive is simplyrepaired and Is allowed to completethe mileage originally assigned It.
When a locomotive Is brought Intothe shops for work It is first strippedby the men who comprise what Isknown as the stripping gang. Thisgang Immediately takes off such partsof tbe engine as are necessary for therespective Job.
The parts to be repaired are cleanedIn a vat and the work is then distributed among the various employes ofthe machia and blacksmith departtnents, each part when repaired to bereturned to the erecting side of thshop, to be mounted again on the locomotive by the date oa which it Isscheduled to go on tbe road. Tbedates are coste la a conspicuousplace convenient to each repair gang,
BEAR RACED EXPRESS TRAM.
Passengers en Pennsylvania Lin Witness Novel Sight.
Passenger la the observation caron the rear of a New Tork and SiLouis limited, over the Pennsylvaniarailroad, were treated to an excitingrace between the train and a big blackbear Tuesday, says the Altoona (Pa.)correspondent of the PhiladelphiaNorth American.
As, the train came round th horse-shoe curve bruin ambled down off themountain and stopped In th roadwhich lead to Altoona, paralleling thePennsylvania main line for soma dis-tance. Seeing tbe train coming to-
ward It, the bear turned and fled city-
ward a fast as Its legs could carryIts great bulk. Passengers crowdedto the rail for a better vlw. Thbear bad a good start and mad fasttime, but the limited left It in the rear.
For a mile the passenger watchedth unequal speed contest, applaud-ing bruin' effort. Flagman W. C.
Wynkoop saw th last of th bearabout two mile outside of th citylimits, and It wa still running. Wyn-koo-p
and CapL John Tressler, aneld bear hunter, started for th moun-
tains In search of the bear after thetrain arrived her, but failed to find it.
Polite Irish Trainmen.Speed and punctuality are, said Mrs
Amy O'.irn. a County ("Is- - lady, he-
lóte thi- - I ish railway re nun i an i on at. m.t the ilrunj of the
I rait s I'--i the Klii te district of thecounty.
She l.ad beard that oa one occasiona lady pasvenser bad a canary, whichesti-.x- Inu Its cage, and th train(topped wb'le she tried to capture lbbird. London Dally iiail
ST. LOUS, ROCKY MOUNTAIN
Passenger
Daily
their cautious relatives in the nearestasylums for the weak minded.
Yet most women, in these days ofhurry and hurly-burl- treat in thisway more precious and more delicatepossessions than plants. It is verytrite to compare friendship to a plant;it is very trite to liken love to a seed.But the reason that these figures arewell worn is because they representan actual truth. That twice two is fouris a very trite statement because ithappens to be an absolute truth. Sowith the metaphors that liken the hu-
man affections to the prolucts of thegarden.
All women acknowledge that thisis likely enough, but their actions donot confirm their belief. If the af-
fections, delicate, changing, alwaysgrowing in one way or another, were,instead, finished monuments, com-
pleted achievements, they couldscarcely seem les concerned abouttheir loss.' Love?. Friendship? Theyhave these things. They found themby accident, or perhaps, they think,through merit, and having foundthem, they regard them as imperish-able and changeless as the Egyptianpyramids things which because theywere yesterday must be today and to-
morrow.Experience, though it will compel
a verbal agreement with the theorythat the human affections haVe theirlaws of growth and change, like theplants, seldom induces a woman totreat them with care, to nurturethem, and to bring them to their fullflower, so to speak. Yet one imaginesthat if they were cultivated carefully,thought about with intelligent tenderness, fed with the food that theycrave kindness, companionship,thoughtfulness kept from the thingswhich are harmful to them criticism,forgetfulness, an indifferent manner
they would bloom with more glorythan the most wonderful night-bloomin- g
cereus or century-plan- t thatever engaged the whole attention ofan under-gardnc- r. Woman's Magazine.
THE HEART OF WOMANIS EVER THE SAME
Now and then the columns of thedaily papers contain a bit of newsthat shows a real throb of the humanheart, untainted by the spirit whichscoffs at sentiment as at a sham. Romance and tragedy joined hands theother day, with Bellevue hospital fora meeting-groun- and the old storyof woman's sacrificing love was toldagain.
Sweethearts since their childhoodin Scotland, "James Drysdale andChristine Johnstone were engaged tobe married, and were living near eachother in Brooklyn, when he was car-
ried to Bellevue hospital, his backbroken by a terrible fall. When itbecame evident that only an opera-tion would save his life and eventhat was doubtful their marriagewas arranged. With the knowledgethat the most to eb hoped for wasthat he would be a cripple for life,he demurred at the sacrifice she wasmaking. She insisted on the, cere-mony, and they were made man andwife in the hospital ward. A weeklater he died.
Women will understand perfectlyonly a man could wonder at her act.What is there that the loving heartof a woman will not suffer, will notsacrifice, for the sake of her love?Every woman who has ever knownlove in its full truth will know thatthere could be no hesitation at theprospect the man wished to save herfrom.
The crowning glory of a woman'slove is its capacity for forgetting allthe world and all the worldly considerations that ordinarily govern thethat shrdlu shrdlu shrdlu shrdlurdllive of people. In a woman, love thatis less than this is not worthy of thename. Woman s Magazine;
COAL IS THE STUFF NOW.Mrs. Young of Fruitland, San Juan
county, this week leased her coal minelo C. If. Irvin of Colorado, who hastwo other capitalists interested withliiin. The lease was made for tenvv. v.:'i it i tlii- - intent'o'i i. i tin- -
;i rt : t oil n t:u-ti-"- t pti-'n-
!! h.--H t'.c Iktc f r jit:imiw f - Colo . T!-- .' r;n-- t
i n th-'- t they m::-- t t '.ke out ::le.ist Atoo tors yeir'.y. ni("Vti.bf . The pi Ii" to the rrni'm"ry they will t ike oi-- t li.rno t'-- e f t
yea- - anj will in: e:.se each succeed- -'
ing one.
The new Secretary of the Interior,
James A. Garfield, assumed the du-
ties of his office this week. In an
interview with a prominent citizen of
this territory a short time ago he
set at rest the numerous rumorswhich had been persistently circulat-
ed by enemies of Governor Hager-
man, to the effect that the governorwould be removed as soon as the new
Secretary of the interior came intothe office vacated by Mr. Hitchcock.The statements of Mr. Garfield werebrief and to the point. They settledeffectively the rumors as to the gov-
ernor's alleged forthcoming removal,which the enemies of the governorliad been using to unsettle the con-
ditions in the New Mexico legisla-
ture and in their effort to block legis-
lation. This is certainly good news
for the people of New Mexico whohave stood unflinchingly by Gover-
nor Hagerman since the beginning of
his term in office. The blocking of
legislation by the enemies of Gover-
nor Hagerman (men wkhin his own
party) is very much deplored by thepeople of the entire territory, and thefact that the new secretary of the in-
terior approves his course and will
stand by him is pleasing news tothem. Springer Stockman.
When the prospectors first arrivedin Red River, gold seemed to be theobject of search, but now many of
them re locking for copper. Thegreat raise in the price of copper in
the past few years has made it pos-
sible to mine lower grade ore at a
big profit. Red River has many such
properties, anil with a leaching plantlike the one that has lately been builtat Tusus, Rio Arriba county, which
is reported a success. It will not be
many years, frmi present indications,before northern Taos county will takeher place among the great copper pro-
ducing sections of the country. Red
River Prospector.
Since the publication of the Barnesinterview with Secretary Garfield, thering newspapers have made a greatchange in the topics discussed in
their editorial columns. You remem-
ber about the trend of their editorialsa couple of weeks ago. Well, since
the Barnes interview has been pu-blishedand that, too, without any at-
tempt at reputable denial the lead-
ing paper has con-
tained such interesting and timely ed-
itorial captions as these: "TeachersMay Instruct Parents in Child Con-
trol," "How Trimmings on the SpringHat Have Shifted," "Savings andSuccess," "Dr. Edward EverettHale." "Why Should Zinc Be Placedon the Free List?" etc., etc. In fact,the old ship seems badly on therocks, and all the sailors who can getaway at all are manning the lifeboatsfor the nearest safe port.
Some adrerfWs do not read tbepapers their advertisements appear in
and many think that just the firm
name in enough in print to bring bus-
iness. To both of thee the suggest-
ion Is made that business success byadvertising is only gained by thosewho are able to attract by theirprinted inducements and who tudrwith care the effect of their bid (orbuniness upon the public.
The politicians are most all wondering who Governor Hagerman isgoing to name as district attorney forColfax and Union counties. Fromwhat can be learned there doesn'tseem to be a shortage in applicants.Springer Stockman.
Seems that a couple of wheels areoff the band wagon now, and thereappears to be a number who wouldat soon walk as to stand the delay offixing up the old rattle-tra- p.
ON THE NURTUREOF FRIENDSHIP
Dots any woman alive who finds,lit us ;iy. :i clump if vioMs andlr II tin-- Imnie In ).""vv in her own
i h I I i !.!; t tin ii ae.i ii
mi- u'lli a ."ivi rye? I lb-.- r anyv.' "'11.11. ii, m it I; ) ,r ; n l:nl'ii;!ti'r':. !., u Ii (ii In-- - lnilli-t- -
!!,. fit mho h.ll, ,f Í agr:;ee ami.liraniy ii -- hi f .ii- - to five them lieSoil, thr e, the d.i-U- ti mrl! the itijiii':, i'.n t ll'.ey need forlliei- - lf t lop-i- nt ? If ih.- - t 3c anyti:.!i, tl probably confined by
Im.
UisUuceTrain No. 1 from
Huton
3.30 p.m.4.K)p.m. 74!5p.m. "4. p.m.5. U0 p.m. 20(.20 p.m. U
f 5.45 pm. 385.55 p.m.
.211 ikm. 4145 p.m. 47
Leave CLIFTON BOUSK Letvea
i'eTi . PRESTON e.LMVM ....KOKHLER JUNCTION ArrivalArrives ,. KOEHLEB ,..Arrive
íiírl VERMEJO..LoveArriv
t Connect with El Puo & KoutweKtero Rv. train 124, arriving In Dawaon, N.H.. at 1 10 p.m.j Cennectt with El Faso A Soutbweatern Ry, Train No. 128, leavirg Dawaon, K. M at 10:06 a.m.
Btage for van Houlen meela traini. at Preaton, N. f.W. A. GORMAN, Gen. Paa. Agt,
Raton, New Mexico
A. T. (EL S. F. TIME TABLE.RATON, NEW MEXICOEffective Nov. 4th. 1906
Trains West Bound
No. 3.. 2:40 a. m
No.l 10:00 a. m
No. 7 1:25 p. m
No. 9 3:00 p. m
Littrell Bros.
Harness.and
Saddlery
13
Bits, Spurs, Quirts, NavajoSaddle Blankets, an assortmentof Flynn Saddles always on
hand ranging in price from $35
to $6o.on. Also a new and up-to-d-
line of Hand-mad- e andSilver mounted Bits and Spurs
Repairing
Neatly Done
SPRINGER HOTELSpringer, N. M.A. L. HARMON, .Prop.
Bar ir Gorrectior
Tablet furnished Hack meetswi h the be-- t all trains
Special atlention piid to the I ravelingpublic
. .: t v. .11 O.IVUI'2 here Mil rli a;ltn!';i- Mil.-- . S- innliiiu Ii mcr-- i a'i
.'. I". .n in-.- will l.s Vi'i;;i!
;.i !:.: of i'nis w irk to :.ttuiil ourt l;;t-"i- . ( nil ii ;.t 1
n'H i pi il court .l(C. ' "
R. C. Larimore, Agent
LeonardAND
HaywardGeneral MerchandiseFine Wines. Liquors
and Cigars.
First St E'town
DENVER MINT TO GRINDwbT COIN FOR MEXICO
V s'iii:,'t n. 'Ma-c- h ft. The Den
vc--r mint will coin f.-- the Mocica'
government ,000,000 ounces of silver.
These 2,000,000 ottnet-- v. ill he coinedint.t" piects The. w.:rt; of
FAMILY Of THOMAS HONEY
SERIOUSLY AffLICTED
Two Daughters Have Died of Scarlet Fever, and SixOther Members of the Family are 111 at
Their Home Near Folsom.
Should Set AsidePersonal Matters
The yellow and gang sheets in theterritory are endeavoring to spreadimpressions that the Thirty-sevent- h
Legislative Assembly has not donemuch work and that a deadlock existsbetween the Council and the Houseand much strife between alleged Re-
publican factions in those bodies.There is just about 95 per cent of hotair and moonshine in these allega-
tions and probably five per cent ofgrounds whereupon to base them tosome extent. The truth is that theAssembly has done much good workalready,' and while the number of billsintroduced have not been as large asin the last three Assemblies for thelength of the session, the number ofbills passed is fully up to the usual
I tonsilitis, and unable to care for the CIMARRONCONSTRUCTION
COMPANYGeneral Contractors
Operates in'all the Towns in theTerritory
S. E. PELPHREYGen'l Manager Cimarron. N. M.
Three Generations Practicing Law.To the Editor of Law Notes.
Sib: I saw something unusual inthe Madison Circuit Court, at Rich-
mond, Ky., recently. During the mo-tion hour of the court I saw a father,
CIMARRON MERCANTILE CO.
The Big General Merchandise Store
Dry GoodsClothing
HardwareFurniture
Groceries
We Solicit Your Trade
Queensware fHay and Grain 2
f. W. BROOKS, Mgr.
son, and grandson, all practicinglawyers at the same bar, make mo-tions.
The father was was Hon. C P.Btirnam, who represented Madisoncouniy in the General Assembly ofKentucky ov?r sixty years ago. andhas held a number of State and federal offices since since that time, andis now state senator from the Madisondistrict.
The son was Hon. Rollins Burnam.Justice of Keutuckv. and
who is prominently spoken of as thenext Republican nominee for governor.
The grandson is Anthony Burnam.a young man of between tweutv-fiv- e
1 . .anu inirty years ot age.Is there another bar in America
that has three generations aetivelv engaged in the practice of law?Louisville, Ky. II, H. H.
The gentlemen referred to in theibove clipping are near relatives ofHon. Allen Burnam, well known here,but who resides at Colorado Springs.
GARFIELD TAKES OATH.Washington, Tuesday. Janus R.
Garfield took oath of office as secre-tary of the interior today. The oathwas administered in the office of thesecretary by Warren R. Choate, chiefclerk of the bureau of corporations.
The family of Thomas Honey, nowJiving four miles west of Folsom, aredangerously ill witb Hcariet iever,End in a pitiable condition Two ofthe young ladies of the family, MissIda, aged eighteen and Miss Iva, aged16, died on Thursday of the dreadfever, and were buried in the frmilycemetery on Friday. Six other mem-
bers of the family are suffering fromthe disease, two of them very sen- -
ously. Mrs. Honey is very ill, also,
SIMPLIFIED SPELLING BOARD
PLANS AN ACTIVE CAMPAIGN
With an army of 15,000 supporterswho have signified their belief in thesimplified spelling idea, with 100magazines and newspapers alreadyusing the shorter forms, and with 130other publications ready to begin tospell in the space-savin- g way, theSimplified Spelling board is planningfor this year a very active campaign tosecure the adoption of its idea. Inthe first two months of this year 850important business men have joinedthe movement. A campaign amongcollege and university professors intwo months has added 600 names tothis class of supporters. As a result,simplified spelling is now endorsed by2,500 educators in the institutions ofhigher education in this country. Thenext campaign will be to interest thefaculties and pupils of the great normal schools. Already there are 3,000teachers who have signed the adhesion card, while simplified spelling isbeing taught or authorized in thestate normal schools of Colorado, Illi-
nois, Iowa, Minnesota, Pennsylvania,Wisconsin and other states, and in thepublic schools of Washington, D. C;Dajton, O.; Columbus, O.; Culuth,Minn.; Passaic, N. J., and many othercities and towns.
A simplified spelling conventionwill be held in April in New YorkCity, at which plans for a sustainedand activa campaign will be formu-lated. The simplified spelling ideacontinues to make friends, and its sup-porters are more sanguine than everof its ultimate success,
LivestockAND
Real EstateBOUGHT"0 SOLD
On CommissionParties wishing to buy or sell either
Live Stock or Real Estate, willdo well to call on or list their
property or stock with me
Proprietor of the Hartlev Meat MarketMeats for sule by the quarter
at all' times
C. E. HARTLEYSpringer, N. M.
J. S. WILSON
General Black-smithin- g.
Wag-on and CarriageRepairing Neat-ly Executed NewRigs Built to Or-
der. Horseshoe-ing. Plow Work
Cimarron, N. M.
S. MEYER a
Attorney-at-La- w
Rooms 6 and 7, Roth Block. Raton
J. C. MARSHCivil Engineer
Raton. New Mexico
! sick ones. The grandfather of theyoung ladies is with them, and ishelping to care for them, and thegrandmother is in a near-b- y house,doing the cooking.
The Honey family are well knownin Raton, having lived here for sometime. The condition of the family isvery pitable, and Raton friends willsympathize with them in tbir afflic--
o'tion.
HOUSE BILL NO. 148.
If the present House gets anythingdone at all this session, it would seemthat it is determined to get throughsome saloon legislation. In additionto House bill No. 83, introduced byMr. Studley, there has been intro-duced by Mr. Sanchez, of Taos, Housebill No. 148, the purpose of which isto repeal Section 1, Chap. 115 of the1905 laws. The section which the billwould repeal, is as follows: .
Section 1. That Sectioo 4124 of theCompiled Laws of the Territory ofNew Mexico of 1897, is hereby amend-ed by adding thereto the following:
"Provided, That no license shall begranted for the sale of malt, vinous orspirituous liquor at any place in anycounty of this territory, except withinthe limits of a city, town or villagecontaining at least one hundred inhab-itants; and any officer authorizing "orissuing a license contrary to this pro-vision shall be punished by a fine ofnot less than one hundred dollars normore than five hundred dollars."
This section was inserted in the liq-
uor laws of the Territory for the ex-
press purpose of protecting outlyingdistricts where no adequate policeprotection could be maintained. Theestablishment of a saloon in a railroadgrading crmp, or a lumber camp, forintance, in Colfax county would be amost undesirnble event. With abso'lately no police regulation, and isolated as these camps are from theprotection of the sheriff's forces, theestablishment of a saloon of the character which would of necessity belocated in these places, would be thedirect cause of more lawlessness andcrime than the county has ever experíencea. A saloon located in such adistrict as these would necessarily be,would be the rendezvous of the lowestclass of thugs, tin-hor- n gamblers andblacklegs, from whom the laborers ofthe camp would have absolutely nopolice protection. Section 1, as quotedabove is a wise provision of the law,and should not be repealed. We donot believe the members of the legis-lature, unless directly interested inthe business will be in favor of passingany of the saloon measures up beforethe present session.
LAS VEGAS FUTURE ZION.It will not be so long a trip to Zion
as we have long believed it would befor those who live to earn the honor.Zion is to be moved to Las Vegasand vicinity, where a 100,000 acretract is being engaged for them. Pur-
ple, the '"Elijah" color, is expected tobe the "go" in Vegas now.
A hundred thousand additionalacres of land on the grant east ofGallinas river is to be thrown opento settlement as rapidly as possible.This will insure the colony of ZionCity farmers who have already plan-
ned to locate in San Miguel county.The board of trustees of the Las Ve-
gas grant yesterday agreed to a con-
tract with Fred V. Browne, leasingto him 100,000 acres.
Mr. Browne states that a large colony of Dowieitcs is assured. A fa-
vorable report has been made of theland, and the Zica City farmers areanxious to locate and begin activefarming operations. The churchwanted 100,000 acres of land beforethey located here, but Mr. Brownemade arrangements with them to startwith 50,000 acres, and if within oneyear one hundred families located onthe land to make their permanenthome they will be given as muchmore territory as they need.
It is estimated that there are 30,000heads of families, followers of Dowie,who are scattered over the UnitedStates who would like to gather into
community for the purposes of wor-
ship, but who cannot go to Zion Citybecause there is no available farmland owned by the church.
POSTOFFICE ESTABLISHED.A postoffice has been established
at Solano, Mora county, to be servedfrom Roy, ten miles to the northwest,and Tucumcari, fifty-eig- ht miles tothe south. George H. Marris has
THE ANTLERS SALOONJohn Livingston, Proprietor
I X F.AK iUX K Y;.M0UN TAIN 1 )K PUT
Fine Liquors and Cigars
amount. That there is a differenceof opinion between the Republicanmajorities in both Houses and thviews or governor Hagerman uponcertain measures is true, but thatall there is to it. This is natural andis very, very often the case in thegreatest states of the Union. Differences of opinion and of policieswill happen, do exist and will alwaysbe more or less the case in everyform of government under the constitution of the United States. Thatharmony and mutual consideration inlegislative bodies and between executives are always best for the peopland for the Republican party in NewMexico is too well established to needdiscussion. The respectable newspapers of the territory, and especiallythose having the best interests of thepeople and of the Republican partyin mind and at heart, are discussingthis phase 01 affairs- - Santa Fe NewMexican.
These are the words of an editorialwhich appeared in the New Mexicanof March 4. and the evident determination is shown throughout the article to show that only "yellow and
gang sheets" have discovered that this
Legislative Assembly has not done
much work. The last issue of theRange contained a statement to theeffect that it was time to get clown
to business 111 legislative lines and
that very little has been done thissession. Uespite the fair argumentsof the editorial mentioned, the Range
is not willing to change the above
statement, for there has been littledone, and there is no doubt in the
minds of persons that tin
deadlock referred to in the above ar
tide is largely the cause. Withoutfurther discussion as to who is wrongor who is right, the papers of the territory, whether "gang or yellow" or"respectable," should join in a d
maud, and a most decided one, with
all needed publicity given it, that the
personal matters which are obstructing the progress of our LegislativeAssembly be set aside and privatelysettled if need be, that the work for
which these representatives of the
people of this territory were sent to
Santa Fe to do, and for which they
are paid, should be done speedily.
There is no use in word-war- s and
abuse between papers or persons on
this subject, for no word-wa- r can fill
the atmosphere at this late day suf
ficiently to blind the sight or understanding of those lookiifg toward San
ta Fe. We all know the issues and
tne men Deiimu tiiem, and tliey arenot of as much importance to thehome people as is the much neededegislation, which is being thwarted
and neglected. Let our elected offi-
cers git to work and redeem electionpromises to their constituents.
LAWS PROHIBIT USE Of HAG
Washington, March 4. That thestates may pass laws prohibiting theuse of the United States flag for ad-
vertising purposes was declared bythe United States Supreme Court indeciding the case of Nicholas V. Hal-
ter and Henry V. Hayward, whichwas appealed from the Supreme Courtof Nebraska.
Halter and Hayward are liquordealers in Omaha and were prosecut-ed under the law of that state upona charge of selling beer in bottlesdecorated with the national colors.The decision of the Nebraska courtis upheld. Nebraska has a state lawprohibiting the use of Old Glory foradvertising purposes.
Santa Fe, March 6. Prof. J. E.
Clark was today appointed to the po-
sition of superintendent of public in-
struction, to succeed Prof. HiramHadley, resigned.
SCORE ONE FOR DES MOINES.George Hearn, formerly of Kansas
City, but who has lived in Trinidadfor some time, left yesterday for DesMoines, N. M., with a crew of carpenters to erect a business block.Trinidad Advertiser.
5
New Mexico
LUMB CO.
5 5
Cimarron.
CimarronER
Wholesale and RetailLumber and BuildingMaterial of Every De-
scription and Build-ers Hardware
CIMARRONLUMBER Co.CIMARRON. N. M.
been appointed postmaster.
r7 r7 rr rr Y"7
r? nn ,l o J o) r l Ml nil 4lE,nJ
lb Ü ill Til JVJn 9 lh li LiÜ)
A PROSPEROUS TOWN, THE GATEWAY TO THE LAND OF OPPORTUNITYr ...li hi i m.ii.i. in. '' ni i y" " TnTT"
. A J fWÉm mill e vI'i Aj-fci- j Sjtfejl EÍeÍF NMfc ViS if
Supply of Cimarron and vicinity is unlimited and' THjTTnTTTrrfrfJL '
the quality for all uses is unsurpassed by any locali- - UTTTT 7 1 j , j P, .
I J,...Í ... ! 1 11..tll.,1l'ty in the world. Following is an analysis of water j j üLkü-- j J glg&U UgMW kggkfthU Sfi J j j
fflff iffrom Cimarron by R. W. Hunt & Company: j L1TjlT TITÍT T j , j
E i I ! j f jI J I
f jjjjj ! flllllJlllllj. .HOL1D3 U H. uau, 4 y - j i I ;
asas sssss- - sa 't hmmá mmm, mmm HIT SlMi PUS WMM IMMB WMM
Calcium Chloride - - Há J bU : LMlj-- t4 1I? ULdíL'lJ ! i FsSwSa 'Magnesium carbonate - - ! nwirff-tilWrf-i i mTffl'fltl'lfl f PñTrTff illflf Itlt'tl ÍT tIWBM BTTTTTTfT!!
.
L1TITnT"TlWFFJ,, fFlTTíf TI I1TITJ tí Tmf T i i i jl!Magnesium Selpbnte - - ; it i5 t S P i 3 f F
Magnesium Chloride - - i; , JJJ; U ' ' ,.IU ', ' !', J, ! Ji lU-- lI H ! IJ Ui LI1U-:- ! I ! Aj UU 4Utt-M4U-- ? M4I-I4I- ; Ut I MM IMMiUiLLLliilJ ) HtHHHtifH ;
Iron and Alumina - - trace T , . . ll i ..t.... 4-- - 14
' Silica ' 6833 r, H H.H.m.H.mHt4 HttHtittrtl-ittl- I rTtt Itlltttrntr 11 Mlffl"! Itltllf HtfItltUtltím tlllítttttllíltti i
Suspended Matter - - -; 0 11111 ! Í) i ' l
! I I !' ' ' ! f. i.p 1 i Í
Total .... 5.89oi jjjjj j iyyyydjM! . &w;ph
Sodium Sulphate - - - ---- iranpw ' i. t ' 1 "H 1 3
Sodium Chloride ,- - - --J j --f T 1 i... i--
Sodium Carbonate . - - - trace f-- T7""" """" ""17" N-- , " ? . S . 1 K...1H,HH.Ht-sodium Nitrate - - - L, v L.
K R 11 1 í t H H II í-.-.-
"
; iHSHR WB HSiLM--J BS.HiU !Carbonic Acid - j 4'.-- -
REMARKS : Should make a Very Good water for f"l h"h"wiTwT ' m ttttHtillfl r II lilt';!:'! i'i l1 I'Tlttfttillltttll I Tl H i t i I !í i! iWO Rl ! ill I i i íl i i "3:
Boiler use. Kindly note the unua- - ! f L H J : j i i j ! J.,...ually emally small amount of total j iljJJ:J:;JJ.;l,lj I wMiUUUiÁhú mMUÜpMMsM WMMMMM i tiM
mffniiTiTíT i mTirrn'Tfrfrm f mrirfiriTiWra PfnrrtífÉí Hril íf:fn i i ll iililllMay 31st, 1906. j fj j j j j ülJllJJjlIlljüll 0 ! !'
!. 3 j U 1 I U U
'
. i'fiss 'ríttíiiiifiiii'tti ' ríiíiSiiifl ffllll lililí IF...) 1 !...:.--Jm- í i iJJJ llilL, i UJJJ,JJ:,,J yjyi-ll- l
BM-iJJJ-J üiié j 4feH i Bis
j
'PLT OF CIMNTNEtV MEXICO.
, lll
"'C"'""' X
V - - (Í
boasts of a climate unequaled elsewhere inCIMARRONThe summers are never too hot and the win-
ters while crisp and cold at times are full of sunshine. Thestreets of Cimarron slope gently to the East and there is a slightlymore pronounced fall to the South on the avenues so thatlent drainage is assured.
While it is only recently that regular trains be-
gan running into Cimarron, business is such that the railroadhas proven very profitable, and already the town has been re-platt-
work has been commenced on the grading of the streets, anewspaper has been started, a temporary water system supplyingvery excellent water both for drinking purposes and for use inboilers, as shown by the accompanying analysis by R. W. Hunt &
Co., has been installed. The capacity of this system is sufficient tosupply the needs of the town for a year by which time a new andpermanent system, conveying water, through wooden stave pipes,from reservoirs in the mountains, will be in operation. Commo-dious and convenient stock yards have been completed and are inuse. A freight depot has been erected, and a passenger depot willbe built at once.
The Railroad shops are almost completed. A lumber yardhas been started and is supplying the daily increasing demand forbuilding material. A construction company capable of putting uphouses, store buildings and other structures on short notice hasbeen organized for the accomodation of parties who want build-ings quick.
An Improvement Company will build houses for those whowith to purchase on deferred payments.
A number of houses have beeen erected and more areunder way but these are snapped up as fast as they can be fin-
ished; the demand for houses, already far in excess of the sup-
ply is increasing daily and there is an excellent opportunityfor investment in building houses to rent or sell.
Daily trains carry passengers, freight and express andwill carry the mail in a short time. The railroad runs throughthe middle of the town and saloons are restricted to the southside of the track.
The St. Louis, Rocky Mountain if Pacific intersectsthree important railway systems which are ten, thirty andseventy miles from Cimarron, thus affords ample and com-
prehensive transportation facilities.A new railroad, the Cimarron & Northwestern, will be built
at once to tap the timber and mining districts of the upper Poniland the Southern part of Colorado.
Building material and fuel are abundant and cheap.There is clay for brick, and limestone for lime. An unlimitedsupply of building stone is easily quarried along the line of therail road within a few miles of the town. There are tracts ofpine timber as yet untouched which excell any others in theSouthwest. Hundreds of thousands of cattle range on everyside. Hunting and fishing in the hills and streams nearby isgood. The scenery in the mountains is magnificent and thecountry offers every attraction to the lover of outdoor, life.
Colfax County, New Mexico, is an old townCIMARRON,
taken a new lease on life since the coming of the
St. Louis, Rocky Mountain & Pacific Railroad. It lies at
the edge of the timbered foothills on the southern slope of the
Rocky Mountains and is protected from storms and blizzards by a
spur of that Range. It is most ideally and strategically located at
the entrance to the last great pass through the Rocky Moun-
tains and as if in confirmation of the old saying that "the last is
always best',' the St. Louis, Rocky Mountain and Pacific Railway
Company in acquiring this pass have secured the best and shortest
line of all to the Pacific coast. And the Railroad has shown its
appreciation of the advantages and possibilities of Cimarron and
its confidence in the future of the place by selecting it for its
General Headquarters and for the location of its shops, and they
have been wise, for Cimarron is the center of a region which has
every resource one could ask. To the west are extensive deposits
of gold, copper and iron ore, which with the facilities for shipping
now afforded by the railroad will bring good returns even when
shipped to distant smelters and rich returns when smelters are
built at Cimarron
To the North and West, from five to fifty miles, are pine
forests with producing mills.
And the largest and finest coal fields in the southwest. The
latter have been developed to the extent that mines and coke ovens
are producing coal and coke by the train load.
Cimarron lies midway between the mineral and thevcoke,
with a down hill haul of twenty-fiv- e miles or less for each.
To the East and South of Cimarron are hundreds of thous-
ands of acres of rich alluvial lands that only need the application
of the water or the skill of the dry farmer to make of them one
vast garden spot. The soil is a deep sandy loam, with a clay sub-
soil, and needs no fertilizing other than that furnished by the
water from the mountain stream. Pomacious fruits grown on these
same lands took the First Prize at the World's Columbian Exposi--
tion at Chicago.
In the Taos Valley, forty miles west, on similar land so ir-
rigated, the Pueblo Indians have raised good crops of wheat year
and without the use ofrotation ofin and year out without crops
any fertilizer other than the water, for over 300 years, and this
same wheat was pronounced the best in quality, of any exhibited
at the World's Fair in St. Louis.
To the west of Cimarron the mountains rise to an altitude
of from 9,000 to 14,000 feet and from these mountains flow never
failing streams of pure water, at once sugestive of cheap power
and of irrigation.
Cimarron lies midway between the sources of these streams
and these rich lands so well adapted to the culture of the sugar
beet, fruit, alfalfa and grain. It is a beautiful and healthful coun-
try to live in and the outlook is doubly attractive to both capital
and labor because development has only just begun.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION ADDRESSnrzn rzzi
T3 1WUVJ uMilCIMARRON, . MEW RflOtIC
3C
Hilario Fisher, guard at quarantine sta
CIMARRON BRIDGE CONTRACT
COMLS UP, AT-NEX- MEETING
Bids of Both Competitors Were too Elaborate
and Will lie red at a
Later SessionBUILD
and specifications, all ready for travel
including fill to back end of abutA residence or businesshouse in Cimarron to rentor sell, and make 20 percent on an investment of
from $1.000 to $5,000.There are twenty appli-
cants to rent every build-
ing that is erected. Forparticulars, address
MARRONCI
Improvement Co.,N. M.
tion -C. R. Bass, medical attendance to pau
per, precinct 1 1Í.0O
L. C, II feld, services Id commitment In10.00sane person -
H. W. Goeliti, services in commitmentInMnA nirtnil ....... 1U.00
Samuel T. Hearne, guard at quarantineÍ.75camp
C. E. Bars, M. D., services to panpeT, pre- -
mln 1 6.50
T. B. Hart. M. D., professional servicesand medicines to county prisoners anasmall pox patientu - - 159.75
Midland Bridge Co., board of guard atquarantine camp -
Raton Range, county printing for Janu-ary and February......
Delfino Cordova, labor ou roads, pre-
cinct 1....; J: - , ,45 50
National Bank New Mexico, on accounteonut payment 8pri ger bridge 677.59
E, G. Twitty, on account certitted copies ,
ditch locations to Territorial Ingineer 50.00
The Board then adjourned to meet
Tuesday, March 5.
TUESDAY, MARCH 5.
The Board met as per adjournmentpresent as on yesterday.;
Id the matter of taxesagiinst J. A. Knowland in Precinct
No. 1 it was found that be had been
assessed with property he had as
sessed with property he had sold theyear before, so the treasurer was in-
structed to strike such from his as-
sessment of 1906 an 1 to receive the
amount of $30 in full settlement of
his taxes for the year 1906.
The following justices of the peace
and constables were appointed in the
various precincts as follows, and the
clerk instructed to issue certificatesUDon their proper qualification:
Precinct No. S Unas. innea,Tnstice of the Peace.
Precinct No. 23 E. P. McGuire,
Constable.Precinct No. 5 Ed Maulsby, Jus-
tice of the Peace.
Precinct No. 5 J- - C. Masden, Con-
stable.Precinct No- - 11 F. C Baker, Jus-
tice of the Peace.Precinct No. 24 James Buck-holde- r,
Justice of the Peace.Precinct No. 24 Theo. Gardner,
Constable.Commissioner E. N. Burch, is au
thorized by the Board to meet with
the City Council for the purpose of
adjusting matters concerning the
county s proportion tor the runningexpenses of the pest house which has
been built jointly by the City of Raton
and the county for the taking care of
small pox patients.The treasurer is hereby instructed
to refund to J. K- - Gillespie theamount paid into the county for theredeeming of certain tax sale certifi-
cates and tax deed issued to him by
the county for the N. J, NE J. SE.,Ntt . Section 1, in p. o, i. .
east, and also to cancel "11 record of
such transfers from the County of
Colfax tOBiiid J- - R. Gillespie, the landherein mentioned having been- re-
deemed by the proper owner thereof.No other business appearing the
Board then adjourned to meet in reg-
ular session on Monday, April the 2d,1907, at 10 o'clock a. m.
J. C. TAYLOR. Chairman.E. G. TWITTY, Clerk.
A. S. Rogers, of Maxwell City, sold
I20 head of steers, twos and threes,to Humphrey, of Raton, a few days
ago. Las Vegas Optic'
Cimarron,
Schroeder's
The Honorable Board of Count;
Commissioners of Colfax county met
in special sesBion at the Court House
in the City of Raton, New Mexico,
Monday. March the 4th, 1907, at 10
o'clock a. m.v Present J. C. Taylor, Chairman;
E. N. Burch and David Crow, Com-
missioners; E. G . Twitty. Clerk.
Meeting called to order by the clerk,
Minutes of the last meetini were read
and approved as read.
The following Justice of the Peace
and Constable Bonds were examined,
approved, ordered filed and the clerk
Instructed to issue certificates of elec-
tion as follows:
Precinct No. 1 Herman A. Funke,
O. W. Spinner.
Precinct No. 3 J. S. Wilson. M.
Winters.
Precinct No. 9 G. T. George, Dan-
iel Cortez.Precinct No. 10 Norman Bartlett,
Wm. Copher.Precinct No 15 Emil Ashe, Wal-
lace West.Precinct No, 17 Pablo E. Trujillo.Precinct No. 18-- W. S. McCloud.Precinct No. 19 J. F. Fernandez,
J. B. MartinezPrecinct No. 25 C. L.Rinker, Wm.
Smith.In the matter of the appointments
of Roivd Supervisors for the variousprecincts it was decided to lay thematter over till the next regular meet-
ing of the Board in April.In the matter of the taxes amsessed
against J. E. Temple for the S. .J, NE, Section 17, Twp 26, N. R. 26 east,
and sold to the eouutv under tax salecertificates Nob. 1108 j.'RIfi, 1514, 2127,
1852, 28:, 3133, 3417, 3613 and 386,it was found to be a double assfss-men- t
on the tax rolls of the county,the property belonging to the ChicoSanitarium company who have paid thetaxes on the above deacribed property;the treasurer is hereby instructed tocancel the Tax Sale Certificates abovereferred to, thereby clearing the countyrecords of that incumbrance agaiustthe said property.
Sealed bids opened and read for theconstruction of a concrete bridgeacross the Cimarron river at the townof Cimarron as per advertisement to
e opened at 10 o'clock, March 4.
1907.The bids were as follows:
WALTER SHARP CONSTUCTIONCOMPANY.
To furnish all material and later
Raton, New Mexico
$ For anything you need in Drugs, Medicines or Toilet Arti
cles, etc. Our Stock is complete and our Prices are right
: Special attention given to Optical WorK, and SatifsactionS Always Given.
Dr. Geo. C. Roberts
ments at each end of bridge for$5,8Ua
CIMARRON CONSTRUCTION COM
PANY.To furnish all material, labor, trans
portation and hauling necessary to
perform the whole of the wor, ana
submit to all the conditions as repre
sented jn the plans and specifications
for a concrete aren Driage
for $5,176.
The board discussed the matter atleneth and concluded the cost of this
style and plan of bridge to be too ex
pensive to the county.The subiect will ajrairj be taken up
at the next regular meeting of the
Board in April, and representatives oithe town of Cimarron are requested to
be present at the meeting that the
matter might be fully aiscussea. inthe matter of taxes assessed against
Francisco Abeyta, the Treasurer is
hereby instructed to adjust same on
the tax rolls, after allowing exemp-
tion, said Abeyta to pay on a valua-
tion of f 100.
Bills of P. V. Santistevan Juan Isi-
dro, carrying ballot boxes in Justice
of the Peace election, rejected.
The following bills were allowed:
W. B. Howard, interpreting Justice ofK,n0Peace court
Natioi al Bank of New Mexico, account
Spriwser bridge 2000,00
Colorado Telephone Co., rental tele-
phone instrument!! to April 1, 1807
J. vnn Houtn. repair of laos Mill, 400.1X1
p.hIav .lull Ruiliinff Co., on accountnew Jail 850.00
Tho. Goin. labor on roads 40,00
City of Raton, part payment on Quarantine station 700.00
Fidel Valdex, repair roads precinct 13 10.00
Funate-Fr- Furniture Oo., burying pau-
pers, and office supplies 4(1.60
J. R. tüllepeie, refund an taxes paid 155.70
W. U. Johnson, buryina old soldier 60.00
M. I.. Phebbs. guarding small pox pa-
tient ' 4.00
Miners' Hospital, care of county patientfmm nrncinctl 43.00
Huicli McKee, livery for health officer l"i.50
Hol.ha Hardware Co.. supplies for court11,50house
Hilton Fuel Co , coal bill from November,19oS, to March, 07 - 1'0,no
K. O. Twitty. office expenfo bill ' 20.16
Katon K. L. & P. Co., December, Janu-ary and February W.OU
Benbcrg Mer. Co., supplies for courthouse
J. C. (Jale, deputy sheriff fees
Marion l.ittrell, Jailor and guards' salary two months: mileage lu making;
:im.17arrests,Marion Littrell. commitments 14.00
MBrion Littroll, feeding prisoners Janu-
ary 1 to March 1s- - oo
Batou Water Works Co., water rent toMarch 1,1907 11000
Jacob Michael, deputy sheriff fees 12.00
Thos. Harberer, interpreting Justice ofPeace court, precinct 1 2.00
Herbert P. Green, map, plans and speci-eatlo-
for bridge 50 00
The Optic Co., township plats 100
Heo. D. Barnard Co., record books 17.75
W. L. Kldins. burial of pauper, pre- -
mm
GRAND
MillineryCommencing:
The Leading Milliner
BANK of SPRINGER ISPRINGER. NEW MEXICO
GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS DONE.
Capital Paid Up - - $30.000OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS:
C. N. Blackwell, President S. Floebsheim, Vice-Preside-
D.J. Devine, CashierG. W Gillespie M. M. Salazab R. E. Alluredgb
NEAREST BANKING TOWN TO CIMARRON
Remsberg MercantileCompany
Wholesale Grocersand complete the bridge as per paDy.c.a"''ñi'!i'irbgt 1,30
We are prepared to shipor mixed cars of anything in Groceries, Flour,
Drug Store
Spanish Spoken
Manager
t
t
immediately straight
New Mexico
Connection
Open Day and flight
Maxwell CityDr. Hopkins, of Springer, was a
professional visitor here last Monday.
Miss Nellie Rogers is somewhat
better, though still quite ill.
- Rease Stubblefield was a business
visitor to Springer last Tuesday.
John Van Wyk and Peter Zwier
went to Raton Wednesday on a mat-
ter of business,
James 0. Ropers, of Raton, is here
today representing the Remsberg Mer-- ,
cantile company.
E. R. Manning, wife and daughter,Atlioe, left Friday for a three weeks
visit in Lincoln, Neb.
Mr. OamDbell. a dry farming ex
pert from the East, was here the first
os the week examining soils.
S. H. Rogéis, of Raton, is down here
breaking some young horses he had
on pasture near here.
Mr. and Mrs, Ed Sproull enter-
tained Mr. Sproull's brother and wife
of Raton Saturday and Sunday.
Mrs. J. N. Brackett went to Raton
Wednesday. She is not well and
went to consult her physician.
Nick Krannawitter has resigned his
position as agent for the Santa Fe at
French and was here this week shak-ino- p
barilla W ith friends. Says be Is
going to loaf around for a wek or
two before settling down to worn
again.Miss Blanche Howard, of this place,
and Alexander Livingston, of Cimar
roD, were niarried in Trinidad, Colo.,
and returned to Cimarron, where they
were charivaried Sunday night.
Mr. E. Christie, who formerly lived
here, died of consumption on February17 at ihe home of bis parents in In-
diana where be went knowing that he
must die soon. He had many friends
here. Mrs. Christie will probably re-
turn to New Mexico.
Mrs. P. van Bruggen and littledaughter, Rena, leave here tomorrow
for a three months' visit to her par-
ents in Holland. She sails from NewYork on the 13th hist. Pete expects
' to join her in Holland the 1st of May
I and spend a month.I A. M. Hollenbeck. who has spentthe past year at La Cueva, Moracounty, has resigued his position thereand is taking a few days' vacation,
after which he goes to Pasamonte,Union county, to take charge of themerchandising business of Wm. vanBruggen at that place. Dixik.
BOLTON GRANTED BAIL
L. D. Hulton has been granted and
approved bail in the sum of $10,000.
The sureties are R. T. Mansker, Jack
Putter and Saturnino I'inard.Bolton is chat-Re- with murder, hav-
ing shot and killed Carl Gilg on the13th day of last July in this town. A
chantre of venue to Colfax county wasgranted the defendant during the lastterm of court.
On the approval of bond by Dis-
trict Attorney J. Leahy, the prisonerwas released from the custody of thesheriff. Ill Plicnix.
Hay, Grain, Salt, Potatoes, Salt Meats, Lard.
Prompt and Special AttentionAlways Given to our Orders
OpeningSpringRaton,
MARCtt 15, 1907and continuing the following week at
MRS. G. R. ENGLEDOW'S Frank A. HaimbaughCivil and Consulting Engineer
Cimarron, N. M.
Plans, Specifications, Surveys, Estimates, In-
spection, Superintendence, lor
Sewerage systems, Water works, Dams, Res-
ervoirs, Canals
Landscape Work for Parks Municipal Work-Examinatio-n
and Reports made of Coal, Min-
eral and Timber Properties
HO has lust returned from Chicago and otherv n 11 II f eastern points, wnere sne nas Deen poiB
herself on the latest Millinery and DressCreations and has bought the most com-plete and up-to-da- te stock of Millinery and
a full line of Ladies Tailor-mad- e Jmits. auiris.Waists and Petticoats, which you are invited to calland examine. We employ an experienced trim-mer and degigner from the East, also there is anexperienced hair dresser in connection.AAKemem-be- r
the time and place, The Lobby Saloon & CafeCHARETTE & BRACKETT, Props.
Fine Wines, Liquors and Citfars. BilliardNo. 136 -
The only place in
158 North Second Street
town where Gage & fiske hats can be had
Room In
Short Order Cafe
ties are running it I'm, not headlinedin the bills, but I'm the mustard in the ,The
phonographthe GraJft
By O. HENRY
Maxwell Land brant U .
(0 MINERAL LA
have Is that the populace may notwake up when you play. There's twoways,' says the consul, 'they may takeit they may become ineoriated withattention, like an Atlanta colonel listen-ing to "Marching Through Georgia," orthey will get excited and transpose thekey of the music with au ax and your-selves Into a dungeon. In the lattercase," says the consul, 'I'll do my dutyby cabling to the state department,and I'll wrap the stars aud stripesaround you when you come to bo shot,and threaten them' with the vengeanceof the greatest gold export and finan- -
clal reserve nation on earth. The flagIs, full of bullet holes now, says theconsul, 'made In that way. Twice be-
fore,' says the consul, '1 have cabledour government for a couple of gun-
boats to protect American citizens.The first time the department sent mea pah-- of gum boots. The other timewas when a man named Pease was go-
ing to be executed here. They referredthat appeal to the secretary of agri-
culture. Let us now disturb the senorbehind the bar for a subsequence ofthe red wine."
"Thus soliloquized the consul ofto me and Henry Horse-colla- r.
"
"But, notwithstanding, we hired aroom tbat afternoon In the Calle de losAngeles, the main street tbat runsalong the shore, and put our trunksthere. 'Twas a good sized room, darkand cheerful, but small. 'Twas on a
jjExtensive Areas of High and low grade
Ore awaiting Development
Cold Silver CopperIron
'
U3
Our Mining Regulations are very fav-
orable to the Prospector. These Reg-
ulations apply to all Mineral Landscontained within the Boundaries of theGrant in New Mexico except reserva-tions indicated on the mineral maps
published by the Company
Within this reservation Special Ar-
rangements will be made with partiesdesiring a large acreage and who are
prepared to develop the same
All Conditionsare favorable to the success of the
District
For further information write
lie laxwell Land IraniCIMARRON. NEW MEXICO
salad dressing. There isn't a law goesbefore congress, there isn't a conces-
sion granted, there Isn't on importduty levied, but what II. P. Mellinger,he cooks and seasons it. Iu the frontoffice I fill the president's Inkstand andsearch visiting statesmen for dyna-
mite; In the back1 room I dictate theLpolicy of the government. You'd never
guess how I got the pull. It's the onlygraft of Its kind In the world. I'll putyou wise. You remember the toplineriu the old copy books, "Honesty U thebest policy." That's it. I'm the onlyhonest man iu this republic. The gov-
ernment knows It; the people know it;the bQodlern know it; the foreign in-
vestors know it I make the govern-
ment keep Its faith. If a man is prom-
ised a Job he gets it; if outside capita!buys a concession they get the goods.I run a monopoly of square dealinghere. There's no competition. If Colo-
nel Diogenes were to flash his lanternIn this precinct he'd have my addressInside of two minutes. There isn't bigmoney In it, but it's a sure tiling andlets a man sleep of nights.'
"Thus Homer P. Mellinger made ora-
tion to me and Henry Horsecollar inAnd later he di-
vested himself of this remark:" 'Boys, I'm to hold a soiree this
evening with a gang of leading citi-zens, aud I want your assistance. Youbring the musical corn shelter and givethe affair the outside appearance of afunction. There's Important businesson band, but it mustn't show. I cautalk to you people. I've been painedfor years ou account of not havinganybody to blow off and brug to. Iget homesick sometimes, aud I'd swapthe entire perquisites of ollice for justone hour to have a stein and a caviaresandwich somewhere ou Thirty-fourt-
street and stand and watch the streetcars go by and smell the peanut roast-er at old Giuseppe's fruit stand.'
" 'Yes,' said 1, 'there' fine caviare atBilly Iteufrow's cafe, comer of Thirty-fourt- h
aud'" 'God knows It,' Interrupts Mellin-
ger, 'aud If you'd told me you knewBilly lieufrow I'd have Invented tonsof ways of making you happy. Billywas my side kicker lu New York. Thatis a runu who never knew what crook-ed was. Here I am working honestyfor a graft, but that man loses moneyon It. Curraiubos! I get sick at timesof this country. Everything's rotten.From the executive down to the coffeepickers they're plotting to down eachother aud skin their friends. If a imiludriver takes oft' his hut to au official,
that man figures it out that he's u
popular Idol and sets his pegs to stirup a revolution ami upset t lie adminis-
tration. It's one of my little chores asprivate secre'.ary to smell out theserevolutions arid alilx the kibosh beforethey break out and scratch the paintoft the government property. That'swhy I'm down here now lu this mil-
dewed coast town. The governor ofthe district mid his crew ure plottingto uprise. I've got every one of theirnames, and they're invited to listeu tothe phonograph tonight, complimentsOf II. P. M. That's the way I'll getthem In a bunch, aud things are ou theprogramme to happen to them.'
"We three were sitting at table Inthe cantina of the Purified Saints. Mel-
linger poured out wine and was look-lu- g
some worried. I was thinking." 'They're n sharp crowd,' he says,
kind of fretful. They're capitalizedby a foreign syudicate after rubber,and they're loaded to the muzzle forbribing. I'm sick,' goes on Mellinger,'of comic opera. I want to smell Eastriver and wear suspenders again. Attimes I feel like throwing up my Job,but I'm fool enough to be sort of proudof It. "There's Mellinger," they sayhere; "por Dios, you can't touch himwith a million:" I'd like to take that
i record back and show it to Hilly Ren- -
fp,,. ,, 1iaVi flmj ttiHt tightens mygrif whenever I see a fat thing thatj POuW ,.orrtl w by winking one eye
and losing my graft. By George,they can't monkey with me; they knowIt! What money I get I make honestaud spend it. Some day I'll make n
pile and go back aud eat caviare withBilly. Tonight I'll show yon bow tohandle a bunch of corriiptloulsts. I'llshow them what Mellinger. privatesecretary, means when you spell itwith the cotton mid tissue paper off.'
"Mellinger appears shaky and breaksbis glass against the ueck of the bottle.
"I says to myself, 'White man, If I'mnot mistaken, there's been a bait laidout. where the tail of your eye couldsee It.'
"That night, according to urrauge-meuts- ,
mo aud lleury took the phono-
graph to a room Iu a 'dobe bouse in adirty ski street, where the grass wasknee high. 'Twas a long room, lit withsmoky II lamps. There was pleuty ofchairs and a table at the back end.
"By aud by the Invitations to theluuslcule came sliding lu by pairs andthrees and spade flushes. Their colorvas of a diversity, running from athree days' smoked meerschaum to a
patent leather polish. They were aspolite as wax, being devastated withenjoyments to give Senor Mellinger thegood evenings. I understood theirSpanish talk- - I rsu a pumping enginetwo years In a Mexican silver mineand had It pat but I never let on.
"Maybe fifty of 'em had come audwas seated, wheu lu slid the kig bee,
the governor of the district Mellingermet hi m at Uie door aud escorted blmto the grand stand. Wheu 1 saw tbatIjiUii man I knew that Mellinger, prl- -
vate secretary, had all the dances onbis card takeu. That was a big.squashy man, the color of a rubberovershoe, aud be had an eye like abead waiter's.
"Mellluger explained, fluent, la theCastillau idioms, that tbe soul was dis-
concerted with Joy at Introducing tohis renrxHte--l f--'i'l America's ereaf.
Copvriffiit bl S. 8. MeOmt Co.
I LOOKED In at the enginem room of the Bloouifield-Ca- -
limited, tor uie engineer wasKirksy, and there was a golden halftour between the time he shut downteam and washed up that I coveted.I found Kirksy resting, with bis pipa
lit, smut faced and blue overalled."Tla a fair afternoon," I said, "but
bids to be .colder.""Did I ever tell you," began Kirksy
honorably, "about the time HenryHorsecollar and me took a phonographto South America?" And I felt asham-
ed of my subterfuge and dropped Intothe wooden chair he kicked toward me.
"Henry was a quarter breed, quar-
terback Cherokee, educated east in theIdioms ot football and west In contra-
band whisky, and a gentleman, samea you or me. He was easy and romp-
ing In his ways; a man about six foot.With a kind of rubber tire movement.
"Henry and me met at Texarkanaand figured out this phonographscheme. He had $360 which came toblm out of a land allotment in thereservation. I had run down from Lit-
tle Rock on account of a distressfulscene I had witnessed on the streetthere. A man stood on a bos and pass-
ed around some gold watcheB, screwcase, stem winders, Elgin movement,very elegant Twenty bucks they costyou over the counter. At $3 the crowdfought for the tickers. The man hap-
pened to find a valise full of thembandy, and be passed them out likeputting hot biscuits on a plate. Thebacks were bard to unscrew, but thecrowd put lta ear to the case and theyticked mollifying and agreeable. Threeof those watches were genuine tickers,but the rest, they were only kickers.
"Hey? Why, empty cases, with oneof them horny .black bugs that fly
around electric lights In 'em. Thembugs kick off minutes and seconds in-
dustrious and beautiful. The man I
was speaking of cleaned up ?288 andwent away, because he knew tht whenit came to wind watches iu Little Rock
an entomologist would be needed, andhe wasn't one.
"So, as I sny, Henry had $300 and Ibad $288. The phonograph idea wasHenry's, but I took to it freely, beingfond of machinery of all kinds.
"We bought a fine phonograph in
Texarkana one of the best makeand half a trunkful of records. Wepacked up and took the T. uuil P. forNew Orleans. From that celebratedcenter of molasses aud disfranchisedcoon songs we took a steamer for yes,I think it was South America or Mexico
I am full of inability to divulge the lo-
cation of It 'tis on the rural deliverymap, 'tis colored yellow ou the mapand branded with the literature ofcigar boxes.- "We landed on a smiling coast at a
town they denounced by the name, asnear as I can recollect, of
Twas a palatable enough
lilace to look at. The bouses wereclean and white, sticking about among
the scenery like hard boiled eggs serv-
ed with lettuce. There was a block ofskyscraper mountains in the suburbs,and they kept pretty quiet, like theywere laying one finger on their' lipsand watching the tpwn. And the sea
wat remarking 'Sh-sh-s- on the beach,and now and then a ripe cocoauutwould fail kerflip lu the sand, and thatwas all there was doing.
"The captain went ashore with viand offered to conduct what be seemedto like to call the obsequies. He Intro-
duced Henry and uie to the UnitedStates consul and a roan man, the beadof the department of mercenary andlicentious disposition, the way It readupon bis sign.
'I touch here again a week fromtoday,' aays the captain.
" 'By that time,' we told him, 'we'llbe amassing wealth In the Interiortowns with our galvanized primadonna and correct Imitations of Sousa'sband excavating a march from a tinmine.'
" 'Ye'H not,' aays the captain. 'Ye'Ube hypnotized. Any gentleman lu the
audience who kindly steps upon theatage and look this country lu the eye
will be converted to the hypothesis
tbat he's but a fly in the Elgin cream-
ery. Tell be standing kuee deep In
the surf waiting for me, and your ma-
chine for making hamburger steak outof the hitherto respected art of musicwill be playing "There's no place likeborne."
"Henry skinned a twenty off bis rolland received from the bureau of mer-
cenary dispositions a paper bearing ared seal and a dialect story, aud nochange.
"Then we got the consul full of redwine and struck blm for a horoscope.He was a thin, youngish kind of man,I should say past fifty, sort of French-Iris- h
In bis affections aud puffed upwith dlsconsolatlun. Yes, he was aflattened kind of a uiau In whom drinklay stagnant, inclined to corpulenceand misery. Yes, I think he was akind of Dutchman, being very sad andgenial In his ways.
" The marvelous Invention,' he says,'entitled the phonograph has uever be-
fore Invaded these shores. The peoplehave never beard It. They would notbelieve It if they should. Himple
bearted children of nature, progressbaa never condemned them to acceptthe work of a can opener as an over-
ture, mid rnctime mljrht Incite them toa bloody revolution. Hut you can tryChe experiment. The 'best chance you
Oompany
struot the 'egjilatlon of Mellinger. Youniay say there was three of us, for moaud Henry, simultaneous, declaredNew York city and the Cherokee Na-
tion In sympathy wlUi the weaker party."Then It was that Henry Horsecollar
rose to a point of disorder and Inter-vened, showing admirable the advan-tages of education as applied to theAmerican Indian's uatural Intellectaud native refinement. He stood upand smoothed back his balr on eachfide with his bauds as you bave seenlittle girls do wheu they play.
" 'Get behind me, both of you,' sayHenry.
" 'What Is it to lie?' I asked."'I'm going to buck ceuter,' say
Henry, In bis football Idioms. 'ThereIsn't a tackle In the lot of them. Keepclose behind me aud rush the game.'
"That cultured red man exhaled auarrangement of sounds with his mouththat caused the Latin aggregation topause with tho'.igbtfulness aud hesita-
tions. The matter of bis proclamationseemed to be a of theCherokee college yell with tbe Carlislewar whoop. He went at the chocolateteam like the flip of a little boy's nig-
ger shooter. His right elbow laid outthe governor man on the gridiron, audbe made a lane tbe length of tho crowdthat a woman could have carriedstepludder through without strikinganything. All mo and Mellluger hadto do was to follow.
"In five minutes we were out of thatstreet and at the military headquar-ters, where Mellinger had things bisown way.
"The next day Mellluger takes meand Henry to one side and begins toshed tens and twenties.
"'I want to buy that phonograph,'he an vs. 'I liked that last tune It Dlay- -
I ed. Now, you boys better go back '
! home, for they'll give you trouble herbefore I can get the screws put on 'em.If you happen to ever see Billy Ren-
frew again, tell him I'm coming bockto New York as soon as I can makestake honest!'
" This Is more money,' say I, thantbe machine is worth.'
"'T1 government expense money,'says Mellinger, 'snd the government'getting the tune grimier cheap.'
"Henry and I knew thst pretty well,but we never let Homer 1. Mellingerknow that we had seeu how near became to losing his graft.
"We laid low until the day thesteamer came back. When we saw thecaptain's bout on tbe beach me andHenry went down aud stood In theedge of the water. The captain grlu-ne- d
when he saw us.'"I told you yon'd be waltln', be
ays. 'Where's tbe Hamburger T
'"It stays behlud,' I ssys, 'to play"Ilome, Sweet Home."
"I told yea so.' say tbe captainCiln. Tllmb In tbe boat'"And that," said Klrtsy, "I tbe way
a and Henry Horaecollar Introducedthe pboaogrsph In tbat Lathi
A blg,tinclookliig whttc mn looked in."various street, diversified by housesand conservatory plants. The peas-- j
antry of the city passed to and fro ou' the flue pasturage between the side-
walks. 'Twas, for the world, like anopera chorus when the Royal Kafooz-lu-
is about to enter."We were rubbing the dust off the
machine aud getting fixed to startbusiness the next day wheu a big, fine
' looking white man lu white clothesstopped at the door and looked In. Weextended the invitations, aud be walk-- I
ed inside aud sized us up. He was, chewing a long cigar aud wrlukliugbis eyes, meditative, like a girl tryingto decide which dress to wear to theparty. f" 'New York?' he says to me finally.
" Orlgiually, and from time to time,'I says. 'Hasn't It rubbed off yet?'
" 'It's simple,' says he, 'wheu youknow bow. It's the fit of the vest.They don't cut vests right auywbereelsev Coats, maybe, but not vests.'
I "The white uiau looks at lleuryHorsecollar and hesitates.
Tnln. uva Hsiiri". .. , 't flint Inlllll.AujMUf r j kj - j" 'Mellinger,' says the man 'Homer
P. Mellinger. Boys, you re confiscated.you're babes lu the wood wituout achaperon or referee, aud It's my dutyto start you golug. I'll knock out theprops aud launch you proper lu thepellucid waters of
j you'll have to be christened, aud Ifyou'll come with me I'll break a bot-
tle of wlue across your bows, Record-
ing to Hoyle.'"Well, for two days Homer P. Mel-linge- r
did the honors. That man cutj Ice In He was It.lie was the ltoyal Kafoozlum. If meand Henry was babes lo the wood, bewas a Robin Redbreast from the top-
most bough. Him and me and HenryHorsecollar locked arms aud toted thatphonograph around aud bad wassailand diversion. There was vino tintoand vino bianco to drink with every
' tune. The aborigines bad acquirements'of a pleasant thing In the way ofdrinks tbat gums Itself to the reeollec- -
. tion. They chop off the end of a greencocoanut and pour lu on the liquor ofIt French brandy aud gin. We badthem and other things.
"Mine and Henry's mouey was coun-
terfeit Everything was on Homer P.I Mellinger. That man could, find rollsof bills In his clothes where Herrmann
j tbe Wizard couldn't have conjured outan omelet. He could bave founded uul--
j vendues and bad enough left to buyj the colored rote of his country. Henryaud me wondered what his graft was.
i One evening he told us.j " 'Boys,' says he, 'I've deceived you.
I Instead of a painted butterfly, I'm thehardest worked man In tills country.Ten years ago I landed on Its shoreand two years ago on the point of Itslaw. Yes: I reckon 1 can get tDe ae- -
clslon over this ginger cake common- -
wealth at the eud of any round I
cboose. I'll confide In you because you
ire my countrymen and guests, evenIf yon bave committed an assault upon
niy adopted shores with the worst systern of noises ever set to music.
- My Job private secretary to 1bepresident --, "'. V .
from the basketful weT brought, suait in the phonograph and started heroff. It was a cornet solo, very neatand beautiful, and the name of it was'Home, Sweet Home.' Not one of themfifty odd men iu the room moved whileIt was playing, and the governor mankept his eyes steady on Mellluger. I
saw Melllnger's head go up little by
little, and his hand came creepingaway from the package. Not untiltbe last note sounded did anybody stir,and then Homer 1. Mellinger takes upthe bundle of boodle and slams It In
the governor man's face." 'That's my answer,' says Mellinger,
private secretary, 'and there'll be an- -
other In the morning. I have proofsof conspiracy against every man ofyou. The show Is over, gentlemen. '
" 'There's one more act, puts iu thegovernor man. 'You are a servaut, I
believe, employed by tho president to
,u ll
"AU me and MrlUnucr had to do too tofolluw."
copy letters and answer raps at thedoor. 1 aiu goveruor here. Senors, I
call upon you In the name of Uie causeto scire this man!'
"That brindled gang of conspiratorsshoved back their chairs and advancedin force. I could see where Mellingerbad made a mistake iu masslug bis en-
emy so as to make a grand stand play.I think be made another one, too, butwe can pass tbat, Mellinger' Idea ofgraft and mine being different accord-
ing to estimations and point of view."There was only ou window and
door In that room, and they were In, tbe front end. Her was fifty odd
Latin men coming in a dudcd iv wu- -
est Invention, the wonder of the age,Henry got the cue and ruu ou au ele-gant brass band record, aud the fes-
tivities becume lultluted. The govern-or man has a bit of English under hishat, and when the music was chokedoff he says:
"'Ver-r-re-e flue. theAmerican gentleemen, the so espíen-dee- d
mooslc as to playee."The table was a long one, aud Henry
and me sat at the end of It next thewall. The governor sat at the othereud. Homer P. Mellluger stood at theside of It. I was Just wondering howMellinger was going to handle hiscrowd, when the home talent suddenlyopened the services.
"Tbat governor man was suitablefor uprisings and policies. I Judge hewas a ready kind of man, who tookhis own time.
" 'Do the American senors understandSpanish? be asked In his native ac-
cents." 'They do not,' says Mellinger." 'Then listen,' goes ou the I,atln man
prompt. 'The musics are of sufficientprtttlness, but not of necessity. Letus speak of business. I well kuow whywe are here, since I observe my com-
patriots. You bud a whisper yesterday,Senor Mellinger, of our proposals. To-
night we will speak out. We kuowthat you stand In the president s favor,and we know your Influence. The gov-
ernment will be changed. We knowthe worth of your services. Wc esteemyour friendship and aid so much that'
Mellinger raises bis baud, but thegovernor man bottles him up. 'Do uotspeuk until I bave done.'
"The governor mau then drawspackage wrapped lu paper from hispjeket aud lays It on the table by 's
hand.'"In that you will flud $100,000 In
money of your country. You can donothing against us, but you cau beworth that for us. Go back to thocapital and obey our instructions.Take that money now. We trust you.You will find with it a paper giving Indetail the work you will be expected
to do for us. Do not bave the unwise-ues- s
to refuse.'"The governor man paused, with his
eyes fixed on Mellinger, full of ex-
pressions and olMservauces. I looked
at Mellinger and whs glad Billy Reu-fro-
couldn't see him then. The sweatwas popping out ou bis forehead, andhe stood dumb, tapping the little pack-
age with the ends of his Angers. TheColorado maduro gang was after- - hisgraft. He had only to change his s
and stuff six figures in his Insidepocket. t
"Henry whispers to me and wantstbe pause In tbe programme Interpret-ed. I whisper back, 'H. P. Is upagainst a brllie, senator's site, and thecoons bare got blm going.' I saw Mel-linge-
band moving closer to tbepackage. 'Ue's weakeulng,' I whl-per-
to Henry. 'We'll reualud blm,'says Henry, 'of tbe peanut roaster onThirty-fourt- h street. New York.
"Henry tooped. audgot record
Farrell Dance.News Notes Taken From Locals andPersonal ChareiteJ. ro.the Springer Stockman
General MerchandiseOur Motto: "Live and Let Live
SEASONABLE GOODSMen's fine ribbe1 uuderwear, zood warm goo Is, the kindusually sold for $1.25 a suit, will go the rest of the season at
85cMEN'S BOOTS
$6 00 grades in cowboys' aud miners' boots, the best wearersand good styles, we re selling for
$4.50MEN'S OVERALLS
Best, heavy drill, without bins, Heavy drill bib overalls, worththe 75c grade , we want $1.25, we are selling peryou to wear 'em per pr. 5UC pair at... ... ..; 75c
FINE GROCERIES & CANNED GOODSOur line of groceries is well selected, and the prices are lower thanmau towns farther east. In canned goods and fancy groceriesour line is unexcelled. Fresh ranch eggs, at low prices. TopekaCreHmery Butter at 35c per pound Our warehouse is full offeed, hy Bnd grain, and the prices are very low.
J, R. Charette & Bro.Cimarron, New Mexico
THE BIG STORE
Always the Leaders inGOOD GOODS andLOW PRI C ES
Pre-Invento- ry Reduc-tion Sale Now On
CohnMERCANTILE
Last Saturday evening the railroadboya gave a dance to Mr, and MrsWm. Farrell. Mr. Farrell is traindispatcher on the Rocky MountainHe left Cimarron ten days ago forKansas City where he married MiHelen Freise, returaiog last Thursdaywith his bride. Mrs. J. W Recordsloaned her house for the eveningAbout 12 o'clock, just previous to supper, the darning was (topped and a
small table brought in with a cutglass decanter and a half dozen goblets of the same pattern as a presentfrom Mr. Farrell'a brother employesMr. Records presented the gift for
the boys, saying that they all hopedthe taken would be esteemed, that itwas givea with their best wishes andhopes of every happiness for themboth. Mr. Farrell responded whencalled upon for a speech that thebeauty and unexpectedness of the gifthad struck him speechless and hecould only thank them' all for theirtboughtfulness. Mrs. Farrell thencame to his rescue, and thanked themall. A few of those present were Mr,
and Mrs. . J. Belton, Mr. and Mrs.Wm. Hickman, Mr. aud Mr. H. RGreibel, Mr. and Mrs. John Living-
ston, Mr. tod Mrs. Alex LivingstonMiss Margaret Christie, Miss MargaretCavanaiigh, Misses Laura WhitenianBelle and May Livingston, Emma anoLottie Larseu, Lucy Edwards and theMisses Stubblefield, and the followingRocky Mountain boys; Claud Crowe,
L O. Williams, J. V. Records, JKelly, Dick Sims, Joe Brick, ChirlesGutterman, Bob Thompson.
THE FATAL WORK OFILL-TIME- D HUMOR.
What use do you make of the intimacies ot tne nousenoiar uo youhold your mother up for the amusement of your guests by recountingher little foibles of economy, her littie vagaries of extravagance? Do you,because you have frequently heardyour husband's stories, interrupt himwhen he is about er throughwith the announcement that yourguests will not care to hear that tale?Do you, in short, acquire a reputationas a wit at the expense of your ownpeople? If you do not, then you area rare thing in women, and your fami-
ly should rise up and call you blessed.It is especially true among young
married people, that domestic revelations are made almost without principie. It begins when they are still inthat stage when a quarrel is only oneform of love-makin- g; and they areapt to sit at opposite ends of theirdinner table pitting their wits againsteach other, interrupting, teasing, gibing quite indifferent to the lamentable lack of interest on the part of theirguests.
It requires a very fine order of wit,a very delicate touch, to keep this sortof thing from degenerating into posi-
tive nagging. There is no form ofsocial torment more irritating thanthat which compels a harmless visitorto listen to conjuga.1 badgering andrecrimination very thinly disguisedas persiflage. And sooner or latercomes the mournful day when the sor-ry jesters learn what their friendshave long perceived that the sugar-coatin- g
of humor has worn off, thegilding of affection has grown tarnished, and the ugly frame of household discourtesy lies bare before theeyes of all. Woman.
BRING IN YOUR SAMPLES.A. T. Mclntyre, president of the
Deep Tunnel Mining and Millingcompany of Elizabethtown, is collecting ore to place in cabinets to beplaced in the depots at Raton. Thefollowing letter to the Prospector explains the matter quite fully:
Elizabethtown, N. M.,February 14, 1907.
Red River Prospector,Red River, N. M.
Dear Sir: I am collecting mineralspecimens trom Elizabethtown andRed River, to be placed in cabinets,one at Santa Fe depot and one at theSt. Louis, Rocky Mountain & Pacificdepot in Raton, to advertise the RedRiver and Elizabethtown mining districts. If the miners of Red Riverwill donate specimens, labeled, showing what property they are from, theywill be placed in the cabinet just asthey are labeled. Tlease bring orsend them to A. T. Mclntvre. andeave at the postoffice in Elizabeth- -
town. Hoping the people will seethe good of this and respond quickly,
I am yours truly,A. T. M'INTYRE.
Any ore left at the News and Pressoffice in Cimarron, or handed toArthur O'Sulh'vnn, will be forwardedto Mr. Mclntyre.
DRY FARMING CONGRESS.
The coming dry farming congress,to be held in Roswell on April 18, thelast day of the Panhandle cattlemen'sconvention, is attracting general andfavorable comment, and it is verylikely that the attendance will includefarmers from all portions of the
Miss Emma and Lottie Li sen werein town over Sunday.
W. A. Hopewell of Raton has beenin Cimarron for the past week.
Col. Dick SitHH, engini-e- r at theround bouse, has lost his whistle.
J. R. van Houten has been in Ratonfor several days on a business trip
John Kellenberger of Durango,Colorado, passed throug on his wayto
Alfred Brown, superintendent ofbridges on the Rocky Mountain, camein Monday morning.
Mason Chase and his sister Mrs.Chas. Spriuger returned from SanAntonio, Texas last Thursday.
Dr, Shuler of Raton was in town theearly part of this week, leturuing from
n via thw Rocky Mountain.The offices of tho Cimarron Town- -
site Co. will r main open Saturdayevenings from seven to nine p. m.
R. A. Fullenwhiter, express messenger on the Hocky Mountain passen-ger has been la:d off for sixty days.
The Towusite Co. are grading Seveuth strest to Washington Avenue preparatory to laying the water mains
The Ryolite Mining Co. at HenRiver just drifted in to a body 01 rid.ore thirty feet wide, being at the junction of two leads.
Joe Brick, storekeeper at P estou,loaded a g:od pait of the stoves on auork train Monday and brought themover to Cimarron.
Martin Bokovc, proprietor of thePort Arthur restaurant in Raton.passed through town on his way up tohis claims near
E H. Fisher, assistant consultingengineer on the Rocky Mountain arrived in Ci&iarion Monday evening onan inspection trip of the line.
Neal Conley is another cow puncherto join the railroad shops. Neal isnow helper to the machiuist in theRocky Mountain round house.
Mr. H. R. Leatherman, of the Park,was in towd the latter part of last weekMr. Leatherman runs the stage houseat the creek on the Cimarron-E-tow- n
route.
Tho Loilcra in the round house arenow complet3, and as coon as iherestof the parts, valves, etc., are receivedthe machine shop will be in fullswing.
The Cimarron Towusite ompanyis pushing tho work on Seventh street.As soon as the grading is finished thewater mains will be laid to Washing-ton avenue.
Attorney E. C. Crampton of Ratonanived in Cimarron last Saturdayand was the guest of Mr. Chas. Col- -
grove. Mr. Crampton made the tripwith Mr. Colgrove in one of the Sperry automobiles.
Littrell Bros, have just received aLandis harness machine. So resurrectall your old harness, and Bend it in.A day's work of sewing by hand canbe done in a few minutes, and the costis in proportion.
Tim Curran and Jack Keefe, ofKeefe & Curran the well known contractors drove over the line of theCimarron & Northwestrn Monday,prepratory to accepting a gradingcontract on the new railroad.
Mr. aud Mrs. Wm. Hickman arrivedin Cimarron Saturday. Mr. Hickman,who has been the Rocky Mountainagent at Preston for the past year,resigned that position to accept animportant post with the CimarronLumber Co., aud started in ou hisnew duties last Mouday.
The ducks are very plentiful onSpringer lake, twenty miles east ofhere. Last Friday Jas. Livingston andand John Quinliven were driving toSpringer, while passing the lake, they .
managed to bring down three birds infour shots. The ducks are very wildand stay about the middle of the lakeand can only be shot on the wing,
John Eilbridge, who was formerlybookkeeper at the McCormack ranch,returned Saturday.- - He filled thisposition at McCormacks about fouryears and during that time mademany friends here. We are sure theywill all be pleased to hear of his return.Mr. Kilbridge says, once a resident ofCimarron, no other city or town cantake its place.
Last Sunday evening the youngpeople had an tally ho
party, leaving Cimarron at 5 o'clockthey drove to the Upper W. S. ranch,where they were entertained by Mr.
and Mrs. Wm. Fanning. The returndrive was made by moonlight. In theparty were .Mr; Bnd Mrs. George er
Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Haynes,Misses Hay and Edith faley, Lucy
Ratont
rFirst
E. Ruth, banker of Raton, was inSpringer Monday a while.
A. S. Brown was in the city lastSunday rom Dawson a few hours.
J. M. Higgins was in WagonMound last Saturday, going down atnoon on Santa Fe No. I and return-ing in the afternoon on No. 10.
Mr. and Mrs. Ramon Abren, ofRayado, came t Saturday andstayed over Sunday at the home ofMrs. Abren's parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Darl Brown.Don't forget to call at the Springer
hotel March 18, 19 and 20, and see thegrand millinery display by
Mrs. F. A. Kent, of Raton, N. M.
Charles Harrison was in townTuesday, leaving Wednesday morningfor Abbott, his home, with a wagonloaded with hay, grain and other pro-
visions.Just as long as the editor isn"t dead
he will be found boosting for the mor-
al, spiritual, commercial,, population:ind financial growth of Springer andevery section of Colfax county.
Dr. W. I'.. P. Nelibel, formerly of
this city, but now a resident of LasCruces, N. M., in a letter to a friendin this city, says he is doing very well
as far as his profession is concerned,but the climate there didn't seem toa roe with Mr. Nihbcl. He also.Males that he hn bien having troubleuiili hi eye.
John Jilt's. George Lyon andThomas McBride, appraisers appoint- -
(1 by Judge V. J. Mills to assessdamages in the case of the JaritasHitch Co. vs. George W. Gillespie and1. the-:- ., wherein the Ditch company is
t'i !:y i!am:i'rcs frr running the pri-:t- e
lam'- - of George W. Gillespie,l'lnreneio A. Triijnlo and Mrs. E. J.T'.ppy. i;:.-- these lands Thursday
the purp of making their
As to Mr. Gillespiv, the appraisersawarded him $0-- 5 I t the groundtaken and damages; $10 an acre forprairie and $40 an acre for hay land.They also allowed him $100 for gen-- t
ral damages and inconveniences.In the case of Florencio A.,Trujil-1')- .
the appraisers allowed $,50 for landtaken and damages.
Mrs. E. J. Toppy was awarded $18
t land and damages.It lias 11 t been learned whether the
r.ctioii of the appraisers is satisfactoryto all parties or not.
George W. Gillespie was transact-ing budines in the city yesterday.
A. Lange was in town this weektransacting business from Halls Peak.
County commissioners have been in
special session this week at Raton.J. P. McDonald and wife, of Mora,
the latter having been visiting in
Springer for some time at the home
News NotesRed River
K. I". Kelly is working six men inthe Rhyolitc Mining & Milling com-pany's property. They arc sinking a
on the big lead.1!. T. Ergcnbright is having twenty
tons of ice put up in the little officebuilding east of his saloon. The ice isis over a foot thick. a
The Union Sabbath school meetsin the school building every Sundayat i p, m. Every one is invited to bepresent and take part in the exer-cises.
A dance was given at P.ianchi halllast Saturday evening in honor of theyoung people of Elizabethtown who
ere visiting in town. A pleasanttime is reported by those present.
Robert Roller, Sr.. who returnedbonie lat week from Denver, wherehe underwent a serious operation, is
gaining in strength nicely and no 1
iloiibt will soon be himself again.Raton Report r
The Misses Niiiie Hurland Stella Young and JU-.-.- t s. Jesse
FolsomNews Notes
Mis Florence Morgan returnedfrom Iowa Saturday, where sun hasbeen visiting for the past month.
Schcol dosed Thursday noon onaccount of scarlet fever.
Mr Ryan has htarted tho foundation for a new building, .'K)x.'J2 feet,which will be used for a land oilice. the
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Summers wereover from Raton to attend the funeral put
of Lucy May Tabor. for
Mrs. Gregory and children are withher mother, Mrs. Gleason, for thepresent.
Lucy May, the little daughter ofMr. and Mrs. Levi Tabor, died Tues-day- ,
March ft, of cholera infantumaged ten months. The little child bad
of her sister, Mrs. D. J. Devine, spentth: past week visiting with friends inDawson. With the mother of the la-
dies, Mrs. St. Vrain, they will leavehere for Mora today, traveling over-
land.' Mrs. F. E. Finley, wife of Rev. Fin-le- y,
has been Bomewhat ill this week."Doc" Harmon was here the first
of the week from his home ranch atCol mor.
E. W. Calley has been among thesick list for some time past, but isnow recovering.
Mr. Harris, of Gladstone, northeastof this city, was transacting businessin Springer this week.
Life insurance agents and most allkinds of agents have visited Springerthis week.
Douglas Wright and wife visited inRaton Thursday, returning home inthe afternoon.
David Padilla and family are nowcomfortably domiciled at the South-
ern hotel in this city.Miss Decker, principal of our
schools, took sick Thursday morningand was not able to be at the schoolroom. -
Mrs. A. L. Harmon and Mrs. Rob-
ert Dunaway visited Trinidad thisweek, returning home on No. I Thurs-day.
Deputy Sheriff Wright was in Ra-
ton this week on business of an of-
ficial character.Owing to "unavoidable circum-
stances The Stockman is a little shortin home reading matter this week.
J. D. McGrath, of Roy, was inSpringer Tuesday, coming down fromRaton, where he had been ;ii busi-
ness.Last Saturday and Sunday M. W.
Mills visited Wagon Mound and LasVegas on business of a personal nature.
Frank Coe, of Las Vegas, was inSpringer Monday, leaving for St. Jo-seph Mo., on business in the afternoon.
A Las Vegas- lawyer by the nameof Lucas was in Springer the forepart of the week on psofessional business.,
Jimmic Rodgers, representative ofthe Remsberg Mercantile Co., of Raton, was in town Thursday in theinterest of his house.
Miss Deluvina Arellano returnedhome last week from Roy, where shehad been for several months with hersis.ter, Mrs. Clarence Wright.
Dr. Hopkins went up to Maxwell.City Monday to attend a daughter ofMr. Rodgers there. He returnedhome Tuesday afternoon.
Mounted Policeman Collier was inthe city the first of the week on business.
FromProspector
'and Earl Young came over last Sat-
urday evening from Elizabethtown tovisit friends. They returned homeSunday.
L. S. Davis, now located at ElPaso, Texas, writes us that "El Paso
booming and is destined to makelarge city, on account of its loca-
tion, many railroads, etc. It will nodoubt have 100,000 population in lessthan ten years."
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Zwergel andMr. and Mrs. Merlin Hudson, ofElizabethtown, passed through townthis week on their way to the SanLuis valley, where they are going tolook for a location.
J. E. Kirk, who was formerly su-
perintendent of the Cashier miningproperty at Anchor, but riow man-
ager of the Lucky Bard mine at Goldill, Ore., has undoubtedly struck it
rich. He lately got a $500 gold brickfrom 15 tons of ore from the LuckyBard. The mine is operated by Kirk,Mill .I Hagcnbaugh.
on'y lieen sick three days. Mr. andMir . Tabor have the sympathy of theentire community.
FOR SALE.A brand new rooming house and
restaurant property in Cimarron, ispaying $900 per year rent now andcan be bought for $4.500 cash. Invest your savings and make- 20 percent interest on your money from thestart besides getting the benefit of
increase in the price of real estate.The company's object in selling is to
the money into other buildingsthe accommodation of litw comers
who are arriving in town every day.For further particulars address Cim-arron Lumber company.
Subscribe for the Cimarron News-Pres- s.
It will cost you just two dol-
lars a year. Address the CimarronPublishing Co., Cimarron, N. M.
National BankRaton, New Mexico
Capital Paid Up $100.000
Surplus and Profits (Earned) $60.000
Deposits .....$800.000 -
ry
BrothersCOMPANYNew Mexico '
"
H. T. LANDS
40 miles east of Springer,2500 acres for sale. Theselands are part of an estate,and must be sold. Alsomany other small tracts
c. E. HARTLEYSPRINGER, N. M.
even go out and borrow rqore to sendto the heathen. But the ministerpreached too long, and my enthusi-asm began to drop about $25 a droptill there was .nothing left for the poorheathen, and by the time he wasthrough and the collection was takenup I stole ten cents off the plate."--Southwestcrn's Book.
Oldest and Largest Bank in Northern New Mexico.Safety Dhposis Boxs in Connection.
Depositary for the A, T. & S. F. Ry., St. Louis, RockyMountain & Pacific Ry., and Coal Companies, Territoryof New Mexico, and Couaty of Colfax.
Accounts from Merchants, Corperations, Individuals, andRanchmen received on favorable terms. Interest paidon time peposits. If any change is contemplated inpresent banking arrangements please correspond with us.
C. N. BLACKWELL, Cashier
Edwards, Buelah Vance, Mrs. GeorgeCampbell, and the Messrs. Billy andRalph Vance, Jud Bishop, Edwardand Henry Scherrer, Ray Whittman,Fred Lambert, Orman Paddock, JoeDaley, Tom Vest- -
Miss Belle Livingston, oldestdaughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Liv-
ingston, was married to Alex. McEl-roy- ,
at the Palace Hotel, Raton, Sun.day evening at eight p. m. Mr. McEl-ro- y
is the Cimarron representative of
the Continental Timber Co. Throughsome unknown channel the news
leaked out and their friends were
waiting for them armed with old shoes,rice and good wishes.
LONG SERMONS.
Mark Twain tells this story, the
moral of which you may supply your
self: "I went to church one time andwas so impressed by what the preach
told ine about the poor heathenthat I was ready to give up a hundred dollars of my own money and