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Tiu nsnw, Arniti as. ito. FACE six 'AtBUQTTEKOTJE CITIZEN. ATTACKS ON THE PRES DENT ARE wm Tart Is Doing His Work Well and Not Bacitslldlng cn Roosevelt Poli cies. Washington, April 21. The best and most devoted friends, the most loyal and faithful followers of Theo dora R osevelt In Washington, are of the i. pinion that those newspapers anil magazines that have commenced a campaign for the election of a dem" eratic House next year and the ro- nomtnution of Roosevelt for the pres idency in 1902. have missed their de sign by attacking the Taft adminis tration too soon. And too unjustifiably. No sooner was Mr Roosevelt be- : yon,i the seas than they began. Tart is denounced as a reactionary and a traitor to Roosevelt and the Roosevelt policies. And although he has not been in the white house much more than a month, has not yet had opportunity to send a single general message to Congress, and has scarcely had time to acquaint himself with the routine duties of his place. Judgement Is al ready passed and the people of the United States asked to condemn him. The acquisitions the public Is re-j fiueatcd to believe Involve the charge against Mr. Taft that he Is an "in grate, a hypocrite, a liar, a coward and a finished scoundrel." Of all these he Is unmistakably guilty it it be true that he has nut only ubandoned the Roosevelt poli cies, but that he conspired to aban don them ever since the day after the election. For he promised, n"t once out many times ami hi many different places, to carry out the pol icies of his predecessor. He did this in a speech at Colum bus. I)., as long ago as August 19. 1907. wher he said, at the conclusion of an exhaustive analysis and dis cussion of those policies. during which he approved them In detail: "I have reviewed at great length m-hat have properly come to be known as President Roosevelt's policies and have discussed them with what I hope you will think is entire candor. I have attempted to point out one or two Instances In which I would qual ify details of future policies which lie has sketched, but with these mln- or exceptions as to method, I am glad to express my complete, thor ough and sincere sympathy with, and CZ!s!iiMiiiIiii THE MIGHTY WORKERS OF AMERICA The true builders of our civilization and of our national industrial supremacy. No other country in the world can boast of such a masterful army of patriotic, intelligent, strong bodied and well paid artisans and craftsmen. No wonder they proudly toast one another in foaming glasses of health- giving The King of All Bottled Beers Evr-y drop of which is alive with the strength of the finest northern barley and the tonic po. is of the costliest Saazer hops. We employ 6, coo highly trained men at our model bre ory to keep pace with the ever increasing demand for Budweiser, the natural drink of America. The Most Bottled Only at lb Anheuser-Busch Brewery St. Louis, U. S. A. CORKED OR WITH CROWN CAPS. admiration for, and the great conser vative movement which has with wonderful success Initiated and car lied so far against bitter opposition t. remedy the evils of our prosperity and preserve to us the Institutions He have Inherited from our fathers." Again he made the same solemn promise. In words equally binding, explicit and forceful, when he stood upon tli.. porch of his brother's house in Cincinnati mid delivered the speech in which he accepted the nomination for president. More recently still, when he was Inaugurated and deliv ered his inaugural address before an assemblage composed of both houses of Congress and the supreme court of t..e t'nlted States, he repeatedly and in the Immediate presence of his pre decessor gave expression to the same views Mr. Roosevelt left the capltol, throwing praise of the Inaugural ad dress right and left to all with whom he came in contact, and at the de pot, while waiting for the train which was to take him away from the scene of his seven years of service, he again and again reverted to the man ly way in which the new president had delivered himself. Mr. Taft has been snaking speeches bearing upon tho Roosevelt policies almost ever since he returned from the Philippines to take a place in the Roosevelt cabinet. In all of them, whenever he has dwelt upon those policies, he has given them his un qualified support and endorsement. We are asked to believe that In one month after he has assumed the highest office In the world Mr. Taft has deliberately turned his buck up on the distinguished record of a life time, and has allied himself with thos,' whom he has so often in his speeches denounced as enemies of the American people. Another charge Is that Mr. Roose velt went away disappointed that Taft should have advised with him and taken his counsel. Mr. Roosevelt said, repeatedly, that his chief pur pose In going to the wilds of Africa was to keep his word with the Amer ican people, to whom he promised that If they would elect Taft president he should be their president In fact, and that the suspicion that he would be only the tool of the man who first esked them to place him In the white house would be proven groundless by the very fact that Roosevelt would lie entirely out of his reach. Which seems to dispose of that. The attitude of Mr. Roosevelt's best friends Is not hostile t.i Mr. Tat't. They have his word that he is go ing to carry out the Roosevelt poli cies ami they will believe he Is going to do t. and will continue to believe! It until they are shown that he is not. And the man who shows them has got to come out with more than words. It will require unmistakable proofs. In the meantime they are feeling pretty well over the way the case for the dissolution of the Standard Oil monopoly is being pushed, and over thv movements for the consolidation of overlapping bureaus and divisions in thfc government departments In the direct Interest of Ponomy. Popular Beer in BLAMESTHE MEN FOR COSTLY California Professor Says Husbands Want Their Wives Too Well Dressed San Francisho, April 22. "Men are responsible for the folly of the modern woman's attire." This is the conclusion reached by Miss Jessica Pelxotto, assistant pro fessor of economics In the University of California; six of the brightest women students of the University, and Isabura Shoda, Japanese male student, who are making searching Investigations of the cost of living and are seeking a solution of start ling modern changes In the standard of living. Astonishing facts have been uncov ered. I The college girl Is shown to have expensive tastes. She wants to live in a "palatial" residence. She wants line clothes. he loves sweets. It would cost $5,000 a year to support her, according to her tastes. The Japanese student displays very modest ideas of tho cost of maintain ing a household. It has been discovered that wom en spend fabulous sums for hats. While young man students at the University have been startled by tho estimate of $1,000 a year as the amount an "ordinarily etlicietit worn-; an" might well expend upon her clothes, there is food for thought for young women contemplating such a step as was taken by Henry Kmery, I who became the bride of a Japanese j In the fact that Shoda would allow her only $8 to $10 a year for her hats.' Mfow is the money spent?" Is one of the questions the class is trying to fcolve. ' "Whtvt do you spend n year on' clothing?" How much on shoes, how much on hats? How much for car fare? How much for amusements? How much for rent, false hair, sweets, laundry. Jewelry, servants?" Hun dreds of times these questions have been asked and the answers are to be tabulated when the course is completed. Also the students have been asked to make estimates of what an "effi cient woman" really needs for liv ing expenses. j The students were asked to draw plans tor the home of an "eiricient" family. One of the young women the World C. W. KUNZ, Distributor ALBUQUERQUE, N. M. CLOTHES students says that these plais called for palaces. Rut not so Shoda. He explained that one of these days after he left college he hoped to have a home and that he thought a building costing $4,000 or $5,iMH) would do very well. The women students figured tho cost of female attire at $l,0a0 a year. Shoda a estimate w as $110. The women allowed $73 a year for hats. Shoda said that in his estimate, he had placed this Item at $N to $10 a year, and that he thought it high enough. Shoda Is low again on his estimates of the cost of an "clllclcrit" man's at tire. With rigid equality he would allow the husband the same sum as the wife. Rut not so the college girls. For men they allow about $400 a year. Every estimate made by the young women has "been shockingly high," as they themselves admit. "My girl students handed me esti mates that would call for incomes of at least $5,000 a year." said Pro fessor Pelxotto. "Men are responsible for the frip I ery of female dress. The women get It because the men like to see them wear It. In Paris, for Instance, at one of the fashionable stores for women, one may see hundreds of men accompanying their wives on shop ping tours. They g. into ecstacy over the prettiest things In the place, and hold up their hands at the first of the month when the bills come in. Men like to see the women beau tifully gowned. They feel a great sense of pride in them, and, of course, the women buy the clothes. That Is why we see higher and higher prices on women's clothes." All of the Information Is to he tab ulated. Future classes will add to the facts until the university shall be in possession of valuable Informa tion as to tho actual cost of main taining families and future students may be presented with valuable hints as to what their prospective house holds will require, what incomes are necessary for happy homes and where to save and where to spend. PRIEST IS DYING OF SLEEPING SICKNESS Strang1 Ma lady Attacks Missionary Several -Moo I lis AI'Hr He Re turned lYoni Africa. Paris, April 22. The malady of sleeping sickness has made Its ap pearance In Paris In rather a sensa tional manner, on Friday afternoon Father Iieauchen of the Order of the Holy Ghost was taken unwell and decided to go unj. consult his- physi cian, Dr. Martin, lie set out, but when near the Luxembourg Gardens his eyes closed and he sank to the ground, as though asleep. He was carried into a chemist's shop and given a cordial, but without effect. Police Commissary Itajaud was summoned and suspecting the case to be one of sleeping sickness, ordered the sufferer to be conveyed t once to the Pasteur Institute, where he now lies In a critical condition. The priest had contracted the dis- lase some time ago while traveling on the I'pper I'banghi, but it wa. n"t apparently until two years ago on his return to Paris, that it declared Itself. The arsenic and toxin treatment proved unavailing, in Kpit(. of con stant Injections of serum. All at tempts to combat the deadly sickness, are said to be without effect. and Father ilea lichen Is reported to be dying. A In hi mouse Is a frail and harmless looking little "beastie," about which I u i ns' wrote one of his most beauti ful poems. l!y himself he would not In' regarded as especially dangerous, but when lv becomes mice, as he does with great rapidity and In geometrical progression, the case i somewhat dif ferent. In a certain valley in Nevada last year Held inieo entirely destroyed three-fourths of 2n.00il acres of alfal fa. Their depredations brought down upon them the American eagle in the shape of representatives at the bio logical nurvey. Experiments in poisoning disclosed a method of lining sulphate of stry chnine on chopped green alfalfa and il falfa hay so successfully that even or. ranches where the mice reached a total of 12.0110 to the acre, relief was obtained at thu cost of only "0 cents an ai re. tXuw conies the most interesting part of the experience. When the pest of mice rlrst became -a serious menace to the crop an army was sent direct by nature, to war upon them. It con sisted of thousands of hawks, owls, gulls, herons, ravens, skunke, badgers, weasels, foxes and coyotes nhtur.il enemies of the mice called together by the news of good hunting. Uut all of them were also, be it notrfi, of the class tmually designated as "vermin," and the farmers were in clined to regard thorn as fair game and to shoot them. The representative of the depart ment of agriculture, on the other hand. Insisted upon protecting these birds and beasts as friendti rather than enemies of tho ranchmen. The result was immediate and remark l ie. Within the 20,000 acres w.i.'re the mice were most numerous, the vermin which preyed upon them de stroyed at least 4 5,000 mice a day, and, with the assistance of poisoner.'", were able to take care of the rest of the mice and prevent them from do ing serious damage. It might be difficult to match this case In magnitude, but It is easy to catch it in kind. Not In Nevada alone but all over the country tnere aro birds and beasts popularly regarded as noxious which a larger knowledge, shows to be enormously beneficent. Youth's Companion. Any part or all or the first fleor ef as Luna and Strlckler building ! ow ready tor occupancy and will be iwd to responsible parties. Any .iterations desired will be made to alt tenants. Total floor space, II,. 00 square feet. Basement umi di mensions, steam heat and all other modern lmpreTemsnts. Apply W. 8. trickier. ivwy.y,' AN UNDERGROUND AUTOMOBILE FOR UNITED STATES SENATORS AND A VICE PRESIDENT OF THE U. S. TII1-: HATLKSS The automobile is in Washington. It was built to carry 1'nited States tenators. .lust senators; and once in w hile a vice president of the I nit- ul States. Tin' balil-hea.led man in the automobile, without any hat. Is vice president of the I'nited States. It Is none other than Jann s School- craft .Sherman, now the vice president of the I'nited States. This automobile runs in ,i suh- LEOPOLD ARRANGES i nntirtn r mimiT A rnNRll rYHlRIT H UUilUU LAIIIUII lUiiuiu's Killer lc oles Handsome New lluildlng to t'-olli i'tlon of African Iridiicis. Brussels, April 22. Muxeunis as h rule are given a wide berth by people seeking entertainment, but King leo- pold has just completed at Tervuere,i ar. institution which will excite no end o' public curiosity. A principal si ction of it is to be devoted to the exhibition of specimens from the Con go. H is certainly a bold etroke f ir the king of the llclgiums. in view of the world-wide criticism to which he has been subjected owing to his al leged Congo misrule, to advertise his former connection with the land of rubber in this fashion. Agents are scouring the Congo in every direction for Bultable collec tions with which to fill the enormous huilding which the king has dedicated ti his unique object. This splendid structure will serv the double pur pose of supplying the world with a permanent museum containing repre sentative specimen from the African dlst icts over which he rub s, and of for; ling a school and university for Hi in colonial students. Many sk d professors have already been i i chair in this school; and a v. number of experts have been en d to (lystematize the exhibitions. ' uerous lit'tunw on the Congo will I iven, and these will be practically nonstrated to visitors by specially ; ranged toura through the museum i stated periods. TO SELL AnythingQuickly You can learn who will pay good prices for the things you have to sell, at no ex pense, except for the cost of a Citizen. It's easy profitable and more dignified than the "for sale" sign way only a few peo ple will notice the si?n, and they may not be interested in what you have to sell. Not only can you find a ready buyer for single articles, but stores, houses and real estate can be sold if you patronize the Cit izen Want Ad Columns Read Citizen Want Ads Every 1 A I.I - II KA I Kl MAN IS VICK PltKS , terrain an passage u tunnel an un-i oeryround road connecting the cap-! itol building with the new $3,000,000: otlice building built for the enliven-1 ienee of senators. It Is a whole block from the Ben site ohamber to the otllces "of some nt the senators. To walk a block is very hard f r many senators. Besides, is undignified. Senators git used to r -d ins. And the get used to un- 1 King Ixopold hopes, hy estublish j ing this magnificent institution, to dis- 1 amin i"1""1' m'n'' aH to many ""pleasant charges which have been ! brought against him in connection with the Free State. The building itself is a splendid af fair and is estimated to have cost nearly $2,500,000. With its exhibits. it will, of course, be one of the cost- EvSexvwa ctvWxc )owcs ; dcawscs XSSSS cWCVCTCQTt$ To $e's bcwcJvco cjfccs.awaysu c CALIFORNIA Fig Syrup Co. 5010 BY LEADING DRUGGISTS WABOTTU FOR SAlt Day 1DKNT SlIKRMAN. del-ground ways, so it is singularly appro riiite that they oe furnished with vehicles for riding in their un derground way. No fare charged by this traction i ompany. It is ull paid for out of the same fund that furnM.ea rators with shaves, nahs, hair oil. tonic, mineral water and subscr'r lions to the Ladies Home Journal. hist structures in the world. It stands in a be-autiful park, laid out with the utmost skill of tho landscape garden er. It faces an extensive artificial lake, the upper portion of which forms a pond surrounded by beds of flowers. Haised on a commanding terrace, it occupies an exceptional site end from Its front portico you may see literally miles of the riurrounding country. The building Is In the semi Greek style, one of its prominent fea tures being rows and rows of Doric columns. A compliment has (been paid to American architects by mod eling it on the lines of one of the state buildings at the St. Louis ex position. NOTICE FOK PVRL1CATION. (Not Coal Land.) Department of the Interior, U. S. Land Office at Santa Fe. N. M. April 1, 109. Notice Is hereby given that Juan F. Romero, of Albuquerque. N. M who. on 190... made Home stead Entry No. 5947. forSWtt, Sec tion 4, Township 8 ti.. Range 6 E.. N. M. P.. Meridian, has filed notice of intention to make final five year proofs, to establish claim to the land above described, before H. W. S. Otero, U. S. Court Commissioner at Albuquerque, N. M., on the 7th day of June, 1909. Claimant names as witnesses: Fllomeno Mora, of Chilill, N. M.; Juan Antonio Alderete, of Albuquer que. N. M.; Perfirlo Sandoval, of Chilill. N. M ; Prudenclo Maldonado, of Chilill, N. M. MANUEL R. OTERO, Register. For the bej work en ttijlrt waidtt patroulro Ilubbs I-auadry Co.