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PAGE SIX SANTA FE NEW MEXICAN. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1913. THE SWITZERLAND OF AMERICA. EaUred Secoad Class Matter at the Santa Pa Poatafflee The Santa Pa New Mexican Published Dally The New Mexican Review English Weekly El Nuevo Mexlcano Spanish Weekly The Now Mexican Printing Co., Publishers Santa Fe New Mexican Bronson M. Cutting; President Charles M. Stauffer General Manager J. Wight Glddlngs Editor SUBSCRIPTION RATES illy, per year, In mill IS.OQ Oilly, Mr qmrHi, ky mH Dally, ill month, ky mail 12.61 Daily, par quarts, by tafrtw UM Wwkly. par yaar Still Waakly, tlx Manrht I M "All of Today's Newo Today w The most beautiful time of the entire year on the Upper Pecos, conditions are ideal for Horseback Riding, Hunting, Tennis Playing and all outdoor sports. The to Booklet Free on Request - THE VALLEY RANCH, VALLEY RANCH, NEW MEXICO. WHAT HE WANTED. THE DIFFERENT ERAS , II is an inlcrvstiiig thing to recall the condition and the demands made at the present time touching the question of war with Mexico and those nf the period just preceding the Spanish war in 1898. Now, President Wilson is having an easy time in carrying out the policy h-. has decided upon and the people are willing to give him the chance, making no demand upon aim. for immediate declaration of war. The general senti ment iR fnr neace if it can lie had. and almost the unanimous wish is that var may lie avoided. How strong is the contrast between this spirit and that of McKiuley's ! time, when the clamor was almost too great to be denied, and the strong, patriotic and patient president sat siJent, knowing what the people did not know, that we were not prepared for war and that if we attempted it then ihe result would be disaster. President Wilson and his cabinet can take their time and study the situa tion as it should be studied anu there will bo no bitter criticism on the part of the citizenship of the country. The policy regarding the Mexican situation ran be worked out without, the bitter denunciation that was heard on all sides when the nuestion of action was before the people fifteen years ago, This mav be a part of the new spirit of the present day which is not toward war. but seeks peace. It is not the spirit of the coward and not niereiv a listless condition, but it is one of more regard for life and the better condition of our people. We are in an age when the thought that is foremost fs that of heilp fulness and the desire to uplift and to bring to the mass of pur people better things ami to inspire more hope and bring more encouragement. From this attitude and this method of thought, it is but natural that we now hear the average man say, "1 hope wo will not have war with Mexico, instead of listening to t he cry of fifteen years ago,' "We want war. Down with Spain." - - It looks as if the dav were coining when the peace palace at the Hague would really be occupied with the meetings attended by the delegates of the different nations of the world, and that the policy of all nations would be that of peace. This is not the idea of peace at any price, but peace with honor. It can be brought about if the spirit of the present day grows In the next few years as it has in the past. . 1? NEEDED ON BOTH SIDES In sentencing a man who had wrecked a bank in Michigan, through the most barefaced methods and with the spirit or recklessness that was unusual, Judge Smith, of the district court, made use of this rather unusual state ment: ' There is no prison in Michigan that will hold an embezzling banker who has wealthy and influential friends." He then advised the banker whom he had just sentenced to go Into the prison to serve a portion of his sentence without fear and with hope, as there was no doubt he would be free in a short time. it is unusual to hear such sarcastic and pointed language from the bench to a prisoner about to begin a long sentence, and doubtless the judge who made use of the language knew what he was saying, as the pardoning power of late years has been worked to a remarkable limit and in other states be sides Michigan. One is led to wonder, though, if this power is invoked any more by those who have it than it is oftentimes by the judges themselves who are in the position of men bound to certain individual or to private parties, and feel that the obligation which has been incurred must be met. The placing of the selection of judges of our courts in the realm of politics is one of the errors of the present day and conditions will not be what they should be until the whole matter of the selection and the election of the judges of our courts is taken out of the field of politics and made on the basis of fitness and courage and ability, only. There is no more danger in the power of those who are given the authority to issue pardons under the present system than there is in the present method of choosing the judges of our courts. The judiciary should be absolutely outside of the Influence of politics and the pale of favors demanded in return for favors given, which is too much the custom of the present day. This is one of the reforms that muBt come with the new order of things and it is already taking root in the minds of the voters of this country. The judge should have no other owner than his own conscience, and when we get that, many oj today's court evils will have vanished and more justice will result. 0 THE BRAVEST MAN The Carnegie medal people would do well to keep their eye on Miner t'hipman, for we aren't sure he isn't the bravest biped on the beach. Miner's an efficiency expert down in Boston, who makes speeches at din ners and often jolts the highbrows, because one of his notions about effi ciency is that if it doesn't reach into the pay envelope of the men and into the betterment of surroundings where they live as well as where they work it isn't efficiency at all, but only a hifalutin alibi for plain stealing. Sometimes Miner says tilings not so well taken in point of view, but you cau always get the drift of what's in his mind. The other night was one of those times the other night when he hired ixrimer hall and told a roomful of women that they are hopelessly ineffi cient in industry; that their ideals are largely matrimonial, which sends them into business under inevitable disadvantages; and that, instead of striving with might and main to achieve the impossible, a parity of wages and conditions with men. they ought rather to use the resources of their intelligence to boost the men up the ladder so that they themselves could the sooner confine their energies to that function for which they were peculiarly and indispensably fitted, namely, the rearing of families. There, now; doesn't that prove it isn't he quite as brave as many rf the Carnegie medal wearers? Of course, if we wanted to argue with Miner, things might be sub miHed in reply. But why argue? This isn't a case for argument, but ra'her for handing it to a man with sheer grit. No wonder MiT.er lives in Boston. Where else could freedom of prejudice get so generous a hospitality? 0 woman in Philadelphia is said to have worked for the same family fnr u nerind nf sixtv-three years. That is a fine recommendation for the family and the woman, both. They must have given her what days off Bhe wanted. 0 Some Maryland deer hunters fired at a passing trolley the ether day. When a man goes into the woods to hunt deer he seems to lose all idea of shape and color and method of perambulation an.1 shoots at anything that moves. knew that the hats go off and the fight but the terrier refused and tried danger is over. ' I to set away. This terrier is like peo- nf nil rh funnv rirlralures I ever ! Dle wno llave con""011 se,lse' Tney Of all the funuj cat icaiures I evei -there is some- ... inn lifrt tna iinru or TIIS I1HV " L ..... ... ,' thing to scrap about and refuse are the richest, and the end is reach-, .Ao . ,i,0 pmsn i ed when we see the willow plumes to iiaul a comrade to make a Roman hoi- ,: iday for the crowd or to gain some- TVJ'?JULV Z !l,i,,g worthless. When something real I.'...' .,", r ,;,; turn up they are there in the mid- Bi'IlUC liifl I ID nun v muiniv- ' ' - the alleged feather or whatever it is die of tilings with bells on and have YOUR MONEY, YOUR SECURITIES AND OTHER VALUABLES When you deposit your funds with this bank, either in a checking account or Invest them according to the TIME DEPOSIT plan, you are assured of their complete protection. This bank is under the strict supervision of the United States Government and its Capital, surplus, net profits and stockholders' liability amounts to over $400,000.00. Furthermore, this institution has conducted a successful business for a period of forty-three years, being the oldest bank In New Mexico. Our SAFETY DEPOSIT boxes In a first class vault equipment, furnish a secure place for your securities at a low yearly rental. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF SANTA FE CAPITAL, SURPLUS MO PROFITS, RAMP- "What is your ambition?" "To see a moving picture of still life." AS THE BYSTANDER SEES IT. ai their command every mental as iirt.il n a h v c i - n 1 roonnrio iinii tllP hat, or is it a bonnet, now? Lt.i fl.i,'to, u H,,mi,fm,.,rtBH nnrt It is a good thing that the feather .. . before a blow is Btruck, The style is going out as the things are so j terrier collld uave killed tne mongrel utterly grotesque and lacking injin a few mim,tes but that mongrel is beauty. I telling around in the dog language how many bull dogs he has for break- More Publicity. Santa B'e is in the way of another nice bit of publicity which ought to bring to the beautiful old city a wide acquaintance with the outside world 1 Something New. We say there is nothing new under the sun, but there is. Something new occurred in an Illinois court the other day which may have the effect of changing the view of the liability of the men who run saloons in the matter of the sale of liquor to certain people. A man had six children. His wife was in the insane asylum as the re sult of his drunkenness. He did prac tically nothing toward the support of his children and they were destitute. Stjlt was brought against the saloon keepers who had been selling the man the liquor all this time, and the jury rendered a verdict of $50,000 against them. The charge, was selling liquor to the man and making him incapable of supporting his children. This looks like justice. Of course the man him self should be punished, too. He should have nothing to say regarding fast every can. morning. Gallup Republi- WOMEN WANT EQUALITY AND WILL GET IT The Montezuma Hotel SANTA FE, NRW MEXICO. THE TRAVELING MAN'S HOME Cuisint and Table Service Unexcelled. Rooms en suit with private baths. Electric light, Steam Heat, Central Location. "MEN WILL ALWAYS PREFER THE WOMAN WHO CRAWFISHES-THE WOMAN WHO BAChSTEPS-THAT SHE MAY BE PURSUED!" Large Sample Rooms. THOS. DORAN, Prorpfetor. a (By Nixola Greeley-Smith.) (Copyright, 1913, by the Newspaper Enterprise Association.) "Political equality is all very well. Women want it and they will get it. Hut we have cone much farther than the money which was awarded to the j jl)gt tQ the roa(J t,mt eads ,0 .yotes children, if they ever get It, after the courts have finally determined the af fair when all the appeals have been for Women.' In the last few years a great 'Woman's Revolution' has blown up out of nowhere and is convulciug acMumiiiauut? wuu lue uuioiuc t'unu , i.. Bawflws - " and get us before hundreds of thou- takf But he is d eserv I. g of as evere tbe WQrld An(J t)e n(?art an(J sands of readers. During the May Day fete that was pulled off here last spring and which was one of the prettiest things that has ever taken place in this city, T. H. Parkhurst took some very beauti ful pictures of the different scenes that were presented, including the parade and the various games as they were being played and the contests as they took place. Now, the Ladies' Home Journal has asked for some of these photographs to be published in that widely read magazine, with a sketch of the pro ceedings of the day. This Is one of the best things that has come this way for a long time. It will make the name of Santa Fe known from one end of the land to the other, and it ought not to be asked after that ar ticle is published, where the city is, or if New Mexico Is a part of Old Mex ico, as has been asked several times in the last few months that we know of. If we were to select a publication In which to have the city exploited I do punishment, just as were those who aided him in making of himself what ! he became and took from the children j in the case all the support they had. j It appears as if the times were ! changing In many ways for the better and-as if the conscience of the people was becoming awakened more and more. There is more of charity to ward the afflicted and the ones who are in want and who need protection. There is more regard for the eternal justice of things and a tendency to up lift and help where it can be done in a practical way. As time goes on I apprehend we will see more legislation In the direc tion of an attempt to bring a little more equality into the things of life, and an evening up of the scales. There is more of the idea of charity and an effort to aid those who are struggling against too heavy odds. soul and mind of it is not merely the demand for suffrage. It is the demand for emotional equality; it is woman's recognition of her need and her right AMONG THE EDITORS. Too Late. Those Navajo Indians who are try- not know of any that would be pre-1 in n revive the old davs in New ferable to the one in which we are to bt. made known as far as our schools are concerned, and there is nothing better to advertise than our schools. No one looking at the pictures that will be printed, can be other than de lighted as they give a very fine im pression of the way things are done and the appearance of the city. There has never been a time when the old Mexico are just a quarter of a century too late. Roswell Record. Not In Bill. The persimmon crop in Missouri is said to have been heavy this year, and the persimmon is not mentioned any where in the tariff bill. Springer Stockman. They Can Tell. The famous Mr. Weston says walk- town has had the publicity that has . . becoming a lost art, but some ccme to it in different ways within , aut0 owners can tell him dif- the last few months and we ought to i ferently with much fluency. Raton reap from tuts a good narvest in tne future. This is what we all want and what we can all have if we pull to- ANNOUNCEMENT MR. HARVEY 0ATMAN, Proprietor of the MONTEZUMA BILLIARD PARLORS, Has Engaged at a Great Expense, MARCUS CATT0N, Son of the Famous Ex-Champion, "BILLY" CATTON, who will manage his billiard par lors and instruct those desiring to learn the game. All new tables, new cues, and a quiet, gentlemanly lounging room lor those who cater to the pastime. EVERYONE WELCOME I mmmmmmmmmimmmm La Salle Hotel I 1 CHARLEY GANN, Prop'r am' Range. Has Some Reason. The man who believes in thirteen gether with the one aim in view, and iDeing an unlucky number certainly has that aim, the prosperity and the prog ress of Santa Fe. Those Feathers. If the birds really wore the feath ers that women have been wearing the last few years with the bright colors and the wonderful shapes into which they are twisted there would be some reason for his belief when this year is considered, at least from a corn production standpoint. Raton Re porter. They Have, Though. It is often claimed that women have no head for finance. It seems to NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. to express the mating instinct with the same honesty as a man in other words, her right to propose marriage!" Miss Maria Thompson Daviess, who made the remarks I have Just quoted, i a plump and pleasing blue-eyed young woman from Tennessee. She is widely known as the author of "The Melting of Molly" and "Andrew the Glad," both charming love stories which give no hint of the fiery femin ism which rings from every page of "The Tinder-Box," her latest novel just published in New York. Of course, "The Tinder-Box" is a love story, too, but its central theme is a us that they have a peculiar knack of more wonderful displays for theieel-"'5 uui m men v..c.c vr.. crugade Wh,cn s beautiful and charm- nicn.roHoa tn tho liirH lino Hnw the law sometimes fails. would you like to see an ostrich with Chieftain. oocorro jng gouthern woman undertakes in the The invitations to the white house wedding are said to be very simple and democratic. This Is only hearsay, as we have not received ours yet. That would be in keeping with the methods of the Wilsons, however. . o A man in New York says he drinks highballs because his wife seasons his foid too highly. There is nothing easier than to find an excuse for anything we want to do. o ' Going down"' seems to be the way Murphy is doing it now. That Sul zer thing has the appearance of having been loaded. . 0 I am still Rovernor of New York, says Mr. Sulser. The ex-governor must be having some tarcbit dreams. colors of blue and pink and green on his tail and a heron with one great feather like a projection sticking up into the air for six feet or more, or n ! Ilka a nalm trao np a ffrmiRe with A feather duster hitched on behind or a I 1,18 "f'ocrais nave oeen in power ..oilman rnrrvino- n ten fnnt nolo mir- for nearly one year, and we cannot mounted with a broom? f,ee where the decrease in the cost of uving comes rrom. snoes ana ciotntng moss-grown town of her nativity to assert woman's right to propose mar riage! And as the last page finds her heroine in the arms of her chosen j hero Miss Daviess regards the case for Keep It Before Them. Keep it before the people that ex cessive salaries for public officials are not to be allowed in New Mexico. The duck with two long prongs going itreasurer's fflce in thls cunt' has j the feminine proposal as proved. straight up and then looping over, or " "ul , "Ilu a wild goose with a bushy tail like a jWsonahle salaries there will not be squirrel, folding over its back, or a B niuch Tee toT office. Las Vegas peacock with an appendage that looks j Democrat. ngui io express ineir emotions as frankly as men do. The barbaric and senseless old convention that denies women the right of selection for Then all these things must have ,. mnro h h the most gaudy colors and be of theithfi - ... ( most variegated tints At that I dojwas gome bynk yo not believe they would look any more nnM,v ot . . . grotesque than the hats of the present jnum wag CQrrect when he uay are luumug, lur wvy nio tei ituiuj iuc uuiiK tlmo " T"., v- imaiiuii liens, The Fighting Animal. Some boys were busy Sunday morn ing on one of our main streets trying to make two dogs flght. One was a little black and white mongrel and the other was a Boston terrier that might have been a blue-blood of high One never knows when he goes to the theatre or the movies now, and sees one of these hats in front of him, whether he Is going to be able to dodge fast enough to escape being tickled on the nose or not, and it Is always a relief when the curtain goes one can "fool the people some of the "All love is a gas," said Miss Da- viess to me, "and it makes no differ ence whether the man or the woman ladles it out. I claim for women the which God has given her the superior Instinct must be broken down. Wom an must stop her idiotic crawfish pol icy of courtship. She must not re treat from the supreme emotion which calls to her. When she feels the mat ing Instinct move her towards a man she should consider it a sacred obli gation to express her preference to him with the same honesty he would show towards her in a similar case. "But don't you know that lots of women could never bring themselves I European Plan. f Meals At All Hours. Elegant Rooms In Connec tion. Steam Heat, Electric Lights and Baths. 11 PER DAY. up or the lights go down, as then we pedigree. The mongrel was willing to t (Continued On Page Seven.) RATES: 75c and $IJ MUSIC for DINNER and SUPPER 1 241 San Francisco Street. j Near S. W. Corner Plaza, j ::ii;iii'iwi;!::M!-Mi:;iamHl'iiw Mr. Manufacturer Can We Help You ? This newspaper in connection with the other leading newspa pers of the country is devoting much time and money to study ing how to make advertising pay even in greater degree. ; It realizes that the possibili ties of newspaper advertising are almost ulimited. The sur face has hardly been skimmed. We believe that the great chan nel of commerce lies in direct newspaper advertising in which manufacturer and dealer co operate. More manufacturers and more dealers are beginning to see this. The public appreciates this co-operation for it means bet ter service. If any manufacturer who is interested in co-operative adver tising will address the Bureau of Adverising, American News paper Publishers' Association, World Building, New York, It will be glad to answer questions. INSURANCE FIRE, LIFE, PLATE GLASS The Best That Can be Bought 1 AT ANY PRICE Take no chances on either when a small amount will give you the protection that you need, and when you do use in surance get the best, as it is the cheapest, and ALWAYS SEE FRANK M. JONES, Office United States Bank Building (FIRST FLOOK) who has purchased the Insur ance Business of the L. A. Harvey Agency. Strong lines, goodcompanie5,goed protection WOODY'S STAGE Li From BARRANCA TO TAOS Meet Both North South Bounds Trains. Leaves Barranca on the arrival i the north bound train and arrlvaa at Taoa at 7 p. m. Ten miles shorter than any other way. Good covered haoK and fooa teama. Fare $5.00 round trip. Team furnished commercial man o take In the surrounding towns. Wlra Emaudi station. uiWMES PRIVATE AMBULANCE SERVICE A new and Up-to-date Ambulance for the Transfer of Invalids Day or Night at Rea sonable Prices. C. A. RISING, Phone 130 Main. INSURANCE Pire, Life, Accident1 Plate Olass, Etc. Etc1 REAL ESTATE City Property, Farms Ranches, Orchards Land Qrants, Etc Surety Bonds Of A II Kinds. Telephone 191 W., Room U LAUGHLIN BUILDING, SANTA FE : NEW MEXICO? Espanola Livery Barn LEESE & LOFTUS, PROPS. Good Teams, Rigs and Drivers at all times at live and let live prices. Closest Route-to Cliff Dwelliofs. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED. Phone Livery. : : : Espanola,