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MONDAY, AUGUST 5, 1907. SAOTA FM S JEW MEXICAN, SANTA FE, jN. JUL PAQB VHREI Tlie New Mexican Printing Company has prepared civil and criminal dock ets especial 1 for the use of Justice of the peace. They are especially ruled, with printed headings, In elthe Spanish or English, made of good rec ord paper, strongly and durably bound with leather back and cofers and can vas, sides, have full Index In front and the fees of Justices of the peace and constables printed In full on the first page. The pages are 10x6 Inches. These books are made op 'n civil and criminal dockets, separate of II vages each, or with both civil and criminal "bound In one book, 80 pages civil and 320 pages criminal. To in troduce them they, rre offered at the following low prices; Civil or crlmlma. 12.75 Combined civil and criminal.... 14.10 For 45 nents additional for a single docket, or 65 cents Lddltlonal for a cmblnatloa docket, they will be sent by mall or prepaid express. Cash In full must accompany order. State plainly whether English or Spanlsfe printed heading is wanted. CRYING FOR HELP. Lots of it in Santa Fe But Daily Grow Ing Less. Herewith are some 'Dargams offered by the New Mexican Printing Com pany: Code of Civil Procedure of the Territory of New Mexico, 1897, sheep bound, $1; paper bound, 76c; Missouri Pleading forms, 61; Missouri Code Pleadings, $6; the two tor flO; Adapt ed to New Mexico Code, Laws of New Mexico, 1899, 1901, and 1903, English ' and Spanish pampb'et, $2.25; full leather, $3; flheri .'a Flexible-Cover Pocket Dock?,, single, $1.25; two or more books, $1 each; New Mexico Su preme Court Reports, Nos. 3 to 10, In clusive $3.30 each; Compilation Cor poration Laws 76c; Compilation Min ing Laws, 60c; Money's Digest of New Mexico Reports, full sheep, $150; full list school blanks. The kidneys cry for help. Not an organ in the whole body so delicately constructed. Not one so important to health. The kidneys are the filters of the blood. When thev fail the blood becomes foul and poisonous. There can be no health where there Is poisoned blood. Backache Is one of the first indi cations of kidney trouble. It Is the kidney's cry for help. Heed it. Doan's Kidney Pills are what is wanted. Are just what overworked kidneys need. They strengthen anc invigorate the kldenys; help them to do their work; never fall to cure any case of kidney disease. Read the 'proof from a Santa Fe cit lzen. Mrs. M. S. Zimmerman, living at 331 San Francisco street, Santa Fe, N. M., says: "I have an exceedingly good opinion of Doan's Kidney Pills, and my estimation of this remedy is based on personal knowledge of the great value it has proved to a number of my friends and acquaintances. Of this fact I am positive, that those who suffer from kidney complaint will con sult their own Interests by giving Doan's Kidney Pills a trial." For sale by all dealers. Price 60 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, Hew York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name Doan's and take no other. Try a New Mftcan want ad. $ NEW MEXICO MILITARY INSTITUTE $ BOSWBLL. HBW MKX1CO. THB MILITARY SCHOOL OF NSW MEXICO fttstabliehed and Supported by the Territory, EIGHT MEN INSTRUCTORS, all graduates of Standard Eastern Colleges. New buildings, all furnishings and equlpmentijmodern and com plete; iteam-heated, electric-lighted, baths, water-works, all conveniences. TUITION, BOARD and LAUNDRY, $350 per session. Session Is three terms of thirteen weeks each. R08WELL Is a noted health resort, 1,700 feet above ea-ievel well watered. Sunshine avery daylrom September to June. REGENTS-Nathan Jaffa, W If Reed, W, M. Atkinson, W. Flnlay and E. A. Oahoon For particulars addreu COL J. W. WILLS0R, Suit. ROTTFR 1 III SUA FE M. William Smith Here on Way to Far East LIKES NEW MEXICO CLIMATE Tells of His Observations While Traveling in the United States. J 0J0 CALIEfJTE 1(0T SPRljUGS. These Celebrated Hot Springs are located In the midst of the Ancient Cliff Dwellers, twenty-five miles west of Taos, and fifty miles north of Santa Fe, and about twelve miles from Bar anca Station, on the Denver & Rio Grande Railway, from which point a dally line of stages runs to the springs. The temperature of these waters is from 90 to 122 degrees. The gases are carbonic. Altitude, 6,000 feet. Climate wry dry and delightful the year round. There Is now a commodious hotel for the convenience of invalids, and tourists. People suffering with consumption, cancer, and other con tagious diseases, are not accepted. These waters contain 1,686.24 grains of alkaline salts to the gallon, being the richest alkaline Hot Springs In the world. The efficacy of these wat ers has been thoroughly tested by the miraculous cures attested to In the following diseases: Paralysis, Rheu matism, Neuralgia, Malaria, Bright' Disease of the Kidneys, 'Syphilitic and Mercurial Affections, Smfula, Catarrh, La Grippe, all Femal (' mplalnts, etc., etc. Board, lodging a.id bathing 2.50 per day; 315 per week; $50 per month. Stage meets Denver trains and waits for Santa Fe train upon re quest This resort is attractive at all seasons and Is open all winter. Pas sengers tor Oio Caliente can leave Santa Fe at 9 a. m., and reach Ojo Caliente at 4 p. m. the same day. Fare for round trip from Santa Fe to Ojo Caliente, $7.40. For further par ticulars, address ANTONIO JOSEPH, Proprietor. OJo Caliente. Taos County, W .Al DIAMONDS H C. VONTZ WATCHES RIGHT PRICES RIGHT GOODS RIGHT SERVICE 2a.3vuuta,et-u.xr of MEXICAN FILIGREE -JEWELRY--. Eyes Tested and Fitted by Up-to-Date Methods CUT GLASS, CHINA AND SILVERWARE 246 San Francisco St. Santa Fe, N. M. OUR FLAG OTTO RETSCH, Proprietor. PABST'S BLUE RIBBON The Beer of Quality. ANY QUANTITY FROM A PINT UP. Fine Vhies, Liquors and cigars. WEST SIDE OF PLAZA t i t SANTA Et N. M J. W. AlAYES & COMPANY FIRE, LIFE AND ACCIDENT INSURANCE AGENCY AMERICAN SURETY CO. Surety Bonds Judicial and Fidelity Bonds Laughlln Block SANTA FE, N. M. Among the tourists in Santa Fe last week was M. William Smith, of Exeter, England, who 'is en route to the new Far East. When he returns home a year hence he will have made a trip around the world. Mr. Williams dur ing the past five years has been travel ing most of the time and has develop ed into a full-fledged globe trotter. This Is his second tour of the United States although when he visited this country the first time he did not get beyond the Atlantic states. Mr. Williams has practically retired from business and is devoting himself to traveling now for health and pleaj- ure. He has acquired a competency which brins him an ample revenue each year and he believes in spending the remainder of his life in quit eu Joyment. Imbued with a desire to .see what lies beyond the tight little Isle he began making excursions into Ihe continent and since that time has traveled over nearly the entire civil iZ' ed world... The English tourist spent several days in Santa Fe and regretted that he could not remain longer. While here he visited the various points of scenic and historic interest in the around the city. Part of one day he spent at the United States Indian Industrial school here and he was much Interested with the Indian boys and girls. He carries a camera with him on his journeyings and he secured several snapshots of the pupils and buildings. Mr. Williams was delighted with the climate of New Mexico and especially of Santa Fe. He said that in all of his travels he never found a more congenial place with its blue skies, bright sunshine, ind magnificent scenery. What impressed him most about the climate was the small per centage of humidity, and the absence of oppressive heat. He said he began feeling an exhillratlng bouyancy. the minute he reached the mountainous region and this was particultrly pro nounced when he arrived in New Mex ico. New York City Mr. Williams thinks is a wonderful municipality, and he would not be surprised If in a few years more It will have a population larger than that of London. He found that a great change had come over the city during the twenty two years when he saw it first. Dis cussing his observations and Impress ions on his travels In this country he said: New York a City of Skyscrapers. "The numerous huge trust and of fice buildings soaring into the sky are the first most Impressive feature of New York City, making the streets look like canons traversed by cease less currents of humanity surging and 'hurrying like the rapids of Niag ara gorge. It Is the strenuous life indeed, from the boys who run shoe shine parlors on the sidewalks to the bankers who keep open day and night, and the restaurants that never close. Trinity spire, which towered aJbove the other buildings' when I visited New York City twenty-two years ago, is now dwarfed by the adjacent sky scrapers. . "The endless procession of electric cars, surface, subway and overhead, make another notch on one's memory. The big department stores are an other notable feature. They are stocked, equipped and organized on a scale so large that one wonders on which floor the bedrooms are located. Almost every human want Is catered for. Elevators, local and express, pas senger and freight, are always In mo tion ; and it Is not all buying and sell ing either. The stranger can walk around anywhere, look at the wares and refresh himself in the rest and comfort rooms with the daily news papers, of attend a morning concert in the theater on the premises with out being asked for a cent. "Fifth avenue is the Pickadilly of New York and Broadway the cheap side of Oxford street but our own London thoroughfares are so full of pleasant memories to make more than very general comparisons. During the week or so I stayed in New York City the spring weather was consid ered backward. Cold winds prevailed, but for my own part that .was con ducive to 'rapid transit.' "By the way, what a pity It is you Americans have not the nimble han som cab at a reasonable fare. That Is one of the conveniences a Lon doner misses In the American metrop olis. It is dollars in . the big cities of this country where it is but shill ings in England. The American capi talists, it seems to me, ought to take up this matter and add to their millions. Washington a Beautiful City. "Washington I visited on my way to the Jamestown Exposition. It is distinctly a political city. Its spa cious avenues and beautiful residen tial quarters are among my many pleasant recollections of the seat of the national government. The Capi tol and other governmental buildings are all fine architecturally, worthy of their great office, and are pictur esquely located. But what 1 remem ber about Washington with greatest pleasure after the White House, of course is the magnificent Congres sional Library. It Is a building that Is an honor to civilization a thing of beauty, a dream of art, and a bless ing to the book lover a place where he can repose and lift himself out of the beaten track. The charm of the White Mouse, to my humble mind, Is its simple dignity. Like American public institutions generally it is open to people without the wearisome officialism that characterizes red-tape Europe. "Art collections like those in the Corcoran art gallery in Washington, the Metropolitan Museum in New York City, and the public library at Boston are among the many evidences of the love of culture. In truth, it Is uot all mammon worship, as is some times alleged, to which the business American gives his heart. There Is a love of knowledge here outside of the market reports in spite of Euro pean conceptions to the contrary. "American colleges and universities are certainly amblqultous. The stu dents are drawn from the poor as well as the rich and class distinction Is almost unknown. I have met young men in my travels In this country serving as waiters and bellboys at hotels and on steamboats during va cation time to earn enough to pay their tuition and board whilst they attended college to win a training for the higher professions. There is nothing degrading about this, it is a manly endeavor and deserving of contempt for the snob who ridicules it. Carnegie Libraries Everywhere. "It has been a source of pleasure to note on my journey across this gteat continent the frequency with which I have met with a Carnegie public library. Rigbt here in New Mexico I paused to admire the wel come sight of that gracious institu tion. And how admirably arranged these libraries are, often with a lec ture room combined. In one or more I have had' the good fortune to lis ten to addresses on important ques tions and particularly one on Japan, in which the lecturer gave such a graphic description of the Japanese people, their institutions and aims that my intention to visit the "New Far East" was considerably emphasized, "Santa Fe is a very picturesque lit tie city, and I much regret that my short visit prevents me from seeing more of it. It impresses me as be ing a very sulubrious place. The ell mate here is almost perfect. It is so light and airy that It gives one a feeling of buoyancy. Here you have a maximum of sunshine without the accompanying sultriness that is pre vailing now in the East. South Eng land has a fine climate, but the air there does not feel so stimulating and invigorating during the hot months. However, In the spring and autumn I don't think there is a better cli mate anywhere." Vi Yilorlarty Sma Rosa JCJ si U i ( W I f' A li i Si A t A , STUDY THE MAP- The natural point on the new A., T. & S. F. Cut-off foT the dlstribu tlon of freight, having the advantage of the easy gra.les und short rfu' to the East and West, and direct com munlcatlon with all points in the Territory. Wholesale houses are coming to W illard as soon as the Cut-off Is open. Surrounded by a fine farming coun try. The purest waur In New Mexi co. The geographical center of Tor ranee County and of New Mexico. The water point on the great A., T. & S. F. short line through New Mexl Willard is a growing town. Willi ard will make f City. Study the Mar Your opportunity is there. For Information, call on or address FRANK L. WALRAT H, REAL, ESTATE, WILLARD, N. M. At this season we should eat spar ingly and properly. We should also help the stomach a much as possible bv the use of a little Kodol occasional ly. Kodol for indigestion and dyspep sia will rest the stomach by actually digesting the food itself. Sold by The Ireland Pharmacy. "The New Mexican Printing Com Danv is prepared to furnish cards de vlsite for ladies or gentlemen on short notice, in first class style at reasonable prices, either engraved or printed. Call on the New Mexican Printing Company. Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera, and Di arrhoea Remedy, Better Than Three Doctors. Three vears aeo we had three doc tors with our little bo;- and everything that they could do seemed in vain. At last when all hope seemed to be gone we began using Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy and in a few hours he began to Improve. To day he is as healthy a child as parents could wish for;" Mrs. B. J. Johnston, Linton, Miss. For sale by all druggists. For sale at all druggists. Santa Fe Livery Stable j THEODORE CORRICK Proprietor. $ i MUM 2 LIVERY. BOARDING AND FEED STABLE FIR8T-CLA88 CARRIAGE 8 EH VICE f s r GOOD 8ADDL8 HORSES FINE RIGS j ' ' I PHONE 132. 120 SAN FRANCISCO ST. S ADOLPH SELIGMAN Special Summer Sale of LADIES PUSLIU UPERWEAR White Goods, Laces and Embroideries. ADOLPH SELIGMAN $10 SINGERS SIO iron Sali TWO SINGER S " SEWING MACHINES (Sicohd Hasp) ft PRIOB SIO Call Brly At a M. W, flpiegelkerg- t$1 ftan FranelM ttrl iDHiaq and flleiiy wares ana Curios Blanket, Baskets, Rag, Wax,. Feather and Linen Drawn Work, Opals, Turquoise, Garnets and Other Gems. OUH MOTTO: .Te Havs the Be' of Everything In Our Llns. IT'S COLO HERE. Our beer sales have almost doubled since installing a inodeern sanitary system. You can always find a little cold bottle here of either Blue Rib bon, Scnlltz or Lemps. Phone 94. The Club. Blank certificates of births and deaths required to be furnished by physicians, mldwives, nurses and other attendants at surL occurrences, for sale at the New Mexican Printing Of fice. Low rates and in quantities to suit Either In the English or Span ish languages. All orders will re ceive prompt attention The New Mexican Printing Company la prepared to do the best of brlei work in short order and at very reas onable rates. Laws, who desire to hare their briefs pruited rapidly and correctly and to present them to the Supreme Court now In session hen on time, should call on tke New Mex ican Printing Company. HOT SPRINGS WATER. We make a specialty of handling during the shot summer months the celebrated Potash Sulphur Water from Hot Springs, Arkansas, A well known specific for stomach, and kid ney trouble. Phone 94, The Club. For anything and everything appertaining to Printing sc Bind Ing call on the New Mexican Printing Company. Cures Biliousness, Sick Headache, Sour Stom ach, Torpid Liver and Chronic Constipation, f 1iBat to tU OH mo bxatlye Fmit Syrop 1KB AN TVS PHARMACY. Cleanses ths Byttsa thoroughly and clears sallow complexions of pimples and blotches Is fttravaJ4