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... SANTA FE NEW MEXICAN. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBF ' 'i if) ' i ! ! Hi ! i .' f First In New Cranberries! 0 GROCERY GO, 1 HOISTS 40. i 1 . CAPITAL COAL YARD PHONE 85 MAIN. a! AND ETAI L WOOCS SWASTIKA LUMP WOJD CERR1LLOS LUMP SAWE?, W,?D STEAM COAL ??Dc,p?D ANTHRACITE COAL, ALL SIZES. Montezuma Avenue, near A., T- & S. F. Railroad Depot. NEW MEXICO MILITARY INSTITUTE p. lenver&Rio ROUND TRIP EXCURSION FARE Santa Fe to Durango, Colorado, $13.15 ACCOUNT OF COLORADO-NEW MEXICO FAIR AND INDIAN CARNIVAL Date of Sale, Sept. 21 to 25, '13, inclusive. Return Limit, Sept. 29th. WM. M. SCOTT, T. F. & P. A., 244 San Francisco St., Santa Fe, N. M. ssssssssssllsWsssssWssssWMssslssssssssssssssssssssssssssM IT WILL BE A GREAT STATE FAIR THAT WILL BE HELD AT ALB 1)0 UP DUE OCTOBER 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, II, 1913 THE ONE BIG FAIR THAT ALWAYS MAKES GOOD ! GOOD purses nnnn PREMIUMS RACES UllUU EXHIBITS YOU WILL BE A WELCOME VISITOR ONE FARE FOR THE ROUND TRIP. Write for a Premium List to FRANK A. STORTZ, MANAGER, : : ALBUQUERQUE, NEW MEXICO. ROSWELL, NEW MEXICO. 'The West Point of the Southwest. Ranked as "Distinguished Institution " by the U S. War Department. Located In the beautiful Peoos Vlley,S,700 feetabove seslevel, sunshine every day. Open sir work throughout the entire ses sion. Conditions tor physical and mental development are IDEAL such as eannot be found elsewhere In America. Four teen offloers and Instructors, all graduates from standard East ern colleges. Ten buildings, modern in every respect. Begents : E. A. CAHOON, President. J. E. RHEA, Vice-President J. P. WHITE, Treasurer. JOHN W. PO, Secretary. W. A. F1NLAY. r For particulars and Illustrated cata ogne, address, COLJAS. W.WILLSON, Supt. Grands R.R. SPORTS CROWDS 3 GOOD DRAW A CLOTH MOIST THROUGH HAIR Try This! Hair gets thick, glossy, wavy and beautiful at once Stops falling out. Immediate? Yes! Certain? that's the. iov of it. Your hair becomes light, wavy. Huffy, abundant and ap j pears as soft, lustrous and beautiful as a young girl's after a Danderine ihair cleanse. Just, try this moisten ! a cloth with a little Danderine and j carefully draw it through your hair, i taking one small strand at a time. Tliia will cleanse the hair of dust, dirt 6r excessive oil, and in just a Tew mo Iments you have doubled the beauty of your hair. A delightful surprise awaits i those whose hair has been neglected lor is scraggy, faded, dry, brittle or thin. Besides beautifying the hair. Danderine dissolves every particle of j dandruff: cleanses, purines and invig orates the scalp, forever stopping ucu ing and falling hair, but what will please you most will be after a few weeks' use when you see new hair fine and downy at first yes but real ly new hair growing all over the Renin If vou care for pretty, soft hair, 'and lots of it. surely get a 23 cent bot- j ! tie of Knowlton's Danderine from any idrug store or toilet counter and just' I try it. FOREST OFFICER MOVES QUARTERS Cloudcroft, N. Sept. 23. It. - GIRLS! i ralthis, supervisor of the Alamo na- tol, ,njs ialKj appeared a clause specif-1 as possible. tional forest returned Thursday from , icaiy excluding in express terms "all Thompson's resolution directs the I Alnmogordo where he has been ar- j mineral lands" (except iron or coal attorney general to inform the house ! Hinging to move the office of the j lands. ) 'of representatives, "What action, if i Alamo national forest to Alamogordo (n gpite of thig fact tne Southern any, has been taken to stop the con I for the winter months. This is being pa(,jnc ami its subsidiary oil corapa- ; struction of oil wells, the extraction of j dene for the reason that during cer- i nies now (ienj. tnat the United States j petroleum, or to protect the interests tiiin periods of the year Alamogordo is more centrally locaiea iur uuuuuui I ing the work in the forest. Quarters i have been secured on 10th street in j Alamogordo Just west of the Alamo : fxrdo Improvement company office ,, , i - J i, 1 and they will be occupied October 1st cr very soon afterwards. Mr. Bnlthis has already moved his family to Ala mogordo and his clerk, Chalmers Mc t'nnnell, will move his family there as sr.on as the transfer of the office is r'ade. These new quarters will be maintained until spring when they will be transferred back to Cloudcroft. I Win. ,lno. Anderson, ranger in the ser j vice has been detailed on special work j in the office this winter and Geo. Mes i eer. ranger will be transferred to High j Polls where Mr. Anderson is on this j special work. I M. E. Morse, of Jennings, La., who has been spending a vacation in Cloud croft left Friday for Alamogordo where he will spend several days. From Alamogordo Mr. Morse will go to Kl Paso for a few days and then on to his home in Louisiana. BRIDE WAITED IN UAIN FOR GROOM Kansas City,, Sept. 2.1. For being made to stand before the assembled ! guests, in bridal array, and wait ex jpectantly for a groom who failed to : become one of the assemblage. Miss ;I?eva Scoop has brought suit for ' breach of promise in circuit court (against Sam Michael, nn employee of (the Kansas City Terminal Railway , Company. Two months ago. the petition says, j Michael made violent love to Miss ! Scoop and proposed to her. His suit was successful. The preparation for i the wedding went right on, up to the j wedding hour. When the wedding hour had passed and bride and guests i began to fear for the safety of the 'prospective groom an envoy from the j bride's family was sent in search of !him. He was found at work, unmind jful of the eventful occasion. lie as sured the envoy that he still loved jMiss Scoop, all right, but had changed ; his mind about getting married, that I was all. HELLO GIRL GETS 9 nftft Oftn RV Uflf f 9UUUUUU OJ W I bL .New Castle, Pa., Sept. 2",. Miss Jean Connel, for the past two years operator at the private telephone ex change of the Carnegie Steel com pany, here, leaves here to get a $2,- 1000,000 bequest. j She will join her mother, Mrs. iAgnes Connel, at Pittsburg, whence ithey will go to Philadelphia to secure their share in a $10,000,000 estate of j wi10 was charged with using his om her grandfather, the late John Ross. ioiai D0sition to further the interests !His property had been in litigation for some years, but this had recently been settled and Miss Connel and her mother go to get their share. lOVE LETTERS WORT 50C EACH. ! San Francisco, Oil., Sept. 2:1. How much is a love letter worth? W'm. S. j Schaeffer, a clerk of this city, apprais jes a pack of ten which were stolen jfrom him at $5. The letters were I stolen from Schaeffer by a rival at l the point of a gun. i $100 Reward, $10O The readers of this paper will be i pleased to learn that there is at least 'one dreaded disease that science has 'boon able to cure in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure la the only positive cure now known to i the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires n 'constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act ing directly upon the blood and mu cous surfaces of the system, there- j by destroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient j strength by building up the constku-, Hon and assisting nature in doing l ! rork. The proprietros have so muca faith In Its curative powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address F. J. CHENEY & CO., To ledo. Ohio. Sold by all druggists, 75c. Take Hall's Family Fills for constipation. IT LOOKS LIKE BIG LAND FRAUD THE DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE SEEMS TO BE MIXED UP IN A VERY BAD DEAL-CONGRESSMAN CHARLES THOMPSON SEEMS TO HAVE UN COVERED IT. (By tiilson Gardner.) Washington, Sept. 23. What may prove to be one of the biggest land frauds in the history of the United States has just been uncovered by Representative Charles M. Thompson of Illinois. That the department of justice has been mixed up in a bad looking con- spiracy, and has conducted a piece of litigation involving more than a bil- lion dollars wortli of mineral oil lands in California, in a manner so "as to be most advantageous to the Southern Pacific Kailroad company rather than to the government," is the bald charge contained in resolutions today intro duced into the hoise by the Illinois congressman. The case grows out of a land made to the Southern Pacific by act of con ersR aum-oved July 27, 1866, includ ing 125,000 acres, of an estimated value of more than a billion dollars, n the patents issued to the railroad ! )as any rjght or title in these lands and are drilling wells and extracting petroleum in large quantities. An obscure employe of the interior department, one T. J. Butler, dug up the facts from the musty and forgot ten files of the land office and after two years of effort finally forced tlr case up to the department of justice. which department on December o 1912, tiled a suit seeking to nave mn ,n a tree which latel, caught fire from title to approximately 46,000 acres ofl)Unling oru8hi wa8 the experience of these oil lands restored to the United j K T Ijanei a prosperous Engleston States. Three years before the filing of the government's suit certain private par ties brought suits against the South ern Pacific seeking to have the oil lands declared public lands and them selves confirmed in the title to some of these lands which they had filed upon. These suits known as Burke vs. Southern Pacific and Roberts vs. Southern Pacific. Both Burke and Roberts based their plea on the theory that the title to the lands had passed to the railroad company and merely sought to have the original grant au nuled. The government suit, however, is much stronger, since it rests its case on the fact that the Southern Pacific never had any title to these oil lands at all. In spite of the strength of the government's case, however, its bill is languishing in the courts wait ing for the decision of the U. S. su preme court in the case of Burke vs. Southern Pacific Railroad company. If the court decides the private cases ad versely it will to some extent preju iliit. tlio government's case, and in the meantime also the government i i wounds. He was later touna uncon losing thousands of dollars for every jBCt0Ug' on the street, month of delay. Physicians declare that if he recov- Thomson's resolution recites: ers ne wjn he marked for life. The "Whereas, it. became generally j authorities are investigating. known that the government proposed lo bring suit to establish its title to! Ngw Mexican Want Adg always said mineral lands, on or auuui Janu ary 1st, 1910, and at that time said railroad company had about forty pro ducing wells on said lands and imme rlintelv thereafter the operations of 'said company through the Kern Trad ling and Oil company (a subsidiary) were rapidly increased until it, now I has more than forty drilling outfits ! working night and day, seven days in the week, constructing new oil wens . . '. ' , :l 4c on said lanas ana saiu un now extracting petroleum from ap- proximately 150 wells in large quanti- ties and of a value of approximately .osnnnn mh month and is increasing this output as rapidly as it possibly can, and several other companies are doing the same thing under pretend ed leases from the Southern Pacific Railroad company for which all said oil companies are paying a royalty to said railroad company." It is an interesting fact that Frank Pierce, former assistant secretary oi ui,e interior under Secretary Ballinger i0f the Cunningham coal claimants, and Oscar W. Lawler, former assistant at- j torney general for the interior depart- ment under Ballniger tne man wno wrote the notorious Lawler memoran dum, which Taft used in exonerating Ballinger are both now in the employ of the Southern Pacific in the legal battle the railroad is putting up to keep the billion dollars worth of oil is,nds that are the property of the United States. Butler, the man who started the ; trouble for the Southern Pacific, was promoted from the land office to be a j special attorney for the department of j justice and was placed in charge of j the case. But then a curious thing i happened. On May 2, 1P13. Attorney, General McReynolds wrote him as follows: "Sir: Your appointment as a spe cial assistant to the attorney general dated November 25, 1910, is here by terminated, effective at the close of the 31st instant." McReynolds told Butler there were no charges against him, but that th reason for his dismissal was that one , his assjstant's had reported that there was "friction" between Assist- ant Attorney General Knaebel and Butler. Knaebel is the official of the department in charge of land matters and has had charge of the Washing ton end of the case. He is a protege of former Senator Guggenheim, and comes from Denver, McReynolds has refused Butler a hearing and refused to allow him to see the record upon which his dismissal was based. In Seauel To Love For Doll Maternal In.tinct Greatly Developed by Teaching Children to Love their Dolls. The little child's dull Is mother to tho m.Mt romantic fairy. And In tho yi-nrs that ih, the doll fades into the petal of a Juue roue, to evolve the most won drous of all transformations. And now comes a more serious period v iienthe joy of real motherhood should bo as tranquil as best effort can provide This is accomplished with a wonderful remedy known as .Mother's Friend, an ex ternal application so ponetratInK in Its r iture as to thoroughly lubricate every i rd nerve, muscle and tendon Involved. There will be no pain, none of that nausea or morning sickness, no Bensatlon r e .iicti-i.KR i,r Mtniin of expanding muscles:. j J?o will ' J , ;, uni a suim:e uf liappiou anticipation. rue young, expecium unum-i iuuoi. fully watchful lest site become absorbed in t:..ise mental distresses which Illy prepare litr for the most important event in her life. Mother's Friend enables her to avoid all privation of dread, worry or pain, and thua slie Is preserved in health and strength to take up the jovful task of motherhood. You will find Mother's Friend on sale at all drwr stores at ?1.00 a bottle. Do not fail to use It regularly os directed. Write to-day to Hrailfleld Regulator Co., Lamar Wdf?., Atlanta, t!a for their most valuable little guide book for ejpectant mothers, the meantime the case is held up and the Southern Pacific Is pumping oil out of the government lands as rapidly of the government in and to said land other than the filing of the bill of complaint on December 20, 1912." MAD BULL HOLDS MAN (N A BLAZE Muskegon. Mich., Sept. 2!!. Attack ed by a bull and forced to take refuge township farmer, living near here. Lane managed to beat out the fire in the tree but had his eyebrows burned off and his clothing was scorched. He climbed GO feet into the tree, before he was able to check the flames spreading through the branches. The bull remained in the neighbor hood of the tree, and Lane was unable to make his escape for several hours. Finally the flames spread to the ground and forced the bull away. SCHOOLBOYS ARE UNDER BAD CHARGE Ilowagiac, Mich., Sept. 23. Hervey Beach, a local high school boy, is in a serious condition as a result of an attack alleged to have been made upon bim during a visit to Benton Harbor. Beach charges that a crowd of Ben toil Harbor high school boys attacked him, cut the initials "B. H." into his hand and face with a knife, then pour ed nitrate of silver in the bleeding bring results. Try it. II CURES WHILE YOU WALK Use Allen's Foot-Ease, the antiseptic powder to be shaken into the shoes, l; instantly takes the sting out of corns, itching feet, ingrowing nails, and bunions. It's the greatest comfort discovery of the age. Allen's Foot- I Y7 .nbaa tifflif or T1PW ShOCS feel r. mana ..Bv - j easy. Ladies can wear shoes one size j smaller after using. It is a certain re- lief for sweating, callous ana swoueu, ttnder. aching feet. Try It today. Sold j everywhere, 25c. Trial package FREE. Address, Allen S. Olmstead, Le Hoy, N. Y. "Bringing Home The Bacon" That's a homely phrase some one originated to signify suc cess. Manufacturers of nationally advertised products are discov ering that the way to "Bring home the bacon" is to reacU consumers directly. Consumers demand is quickly felt by dealers and they are only too glad to help it along. Nothing succeeds like success and nothing is easier sold than something the public want to buy. Dealers put their energy and their advertising behind goods they believe will bring people to their stores. Business grows and manufac turer, merchant and consumer profit. Mr. Manufacturer, the short cut to the consumer lies through advertising in the da'ly newspapers. It is the medium your dealer uses and through which ho cun best co-operate with' you. Have you studied this plan of co operative advertising? Do you see how it can . be made to fit your goods? Write to the Bureau of Ad vertising, American Publishers' Association, World Building;, New York, and perhaps some light can be thrown on you." problem. EGG PRODUCER. Green Cut Bone and Meat, $3.50 per cwt. Oyster Shells, .... $2.50 " " Meat Scraps, f. . . . $.05 " lb Ground Charcoal, ... $ .03 " " Poultry and Stock Food Com posed ) ffj QC aar r of Corn, Bran, Oats and Alfalfa, j $v pCI GORMLEY'S GENERAL S7 L1GF IN THESE DAYS OF W ODS, Electricity pi' tant part. The ' be amazed at the ern home and why make the home mc the home the most for father, mother that Is easy on t' desired. PC fiO CONVEN i he button and Jy to cook your ise, your toasted ready for the ;akfast, your vacu- urn cleaner ready for . .efray, your washer ready to cleanse, fan ready to cool the heat ed rooms. Electricity will do every thing for you. We furnish It at reasonable rates, day and night v Estimates and full infor mation cheeerfully given. SANTA FE WATER & LIGHT CO. WSUMM TO EASTFRN New Mexico Central and SANTA FE TO CLOUDCROFT, The JM,EaSt Best lfflor Route gfpf For Rates and Full Information Call On or Address L. H GIBSON, T., F. & P. Agt., N. M. C. R. R., SANTA FE, 0r EUGENE FOX, G. Pass. Agt., E. P- '& S EL PASO, TEX. CORRICK LIVERY BARN NOBBIEST OUTFITS IN THE CITY Buggies and Saddlers a Specialty. Hacks and Baggage Transfer. Prompt Attention and the Best of Satisfaction Guaranteed. 104 DON GASPER ST. MULLIGAN & RISING, FUNERAL DIRECTORS License Numbers, 66-67. : Day or Night Phone, 130 Main. Next Door HEW MEXICAN PBINTING 00. ' .Local Agents tor "Elastic" Bookcase and Desk combined. A Desk Unit with few ot many Book Unite at dated. The only perfect combination desk and bookcaat evet made Roomy, convenient, attrac tive. Wewanttoshowyoji it advantages od poni bUtties. C JQ, write of pinoi' ne about It. K ST FARES POINTS VIA El Paso & Southwestern. N. M., AND RETURN, $12.10. ' West Telephone 9 W to Postoffice.