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PAGE TWO SANTA FE NEW MEXICAN. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1913. 1 i AAAA TRY THESE - THEY WILL PLEASE YOU FRESH OYSTERS, COVE OYSTERS, OYSTER COCKTAIL SAUCE, SWEET RED PIM1ENTOES, WALKER'S RED HAT TOMATOES, DYER'S BAKED BEANS, ORTEGA'S PEELED GREEN CHILI AND NEW COMB HONEY. REACTIONARY WAS miHffiffi!KM . ssiwirsnuis in CONGRESS MIMBRES VALLEY IT WAS CONTROLLED BY CORPORATION 'S MINORITY REPORT PRESENTED BY PINCHOT, STIMSON AND TEAL NO STOCKS OR BONDS WITHOUT PERMISSION. WINTER GROCERY GO. S ZPIKOTnTJE 40. (By Gilson Gardner.) Washington, Nov. 25. It is not nec essary to know more about the reac tionary character of the present ho called conservation congress which met in Washington last week, than the fact that the report ou water-pow er uie iiiutH important, guujeci ueiui e the congress was signed by, and in Denting, N. M., Nov. 25. M, L. Cadwalleder, the well known fruit grower of El Paso, has been visiting A. J,. Taylor and examining Into hor ticultural conditions in the Mimbres valley, which he pronounced of a very desirable character. He is a large raiser of Bartlett pears, and gave very valuable information con cerning the growth of trees. Among other things he said that trees set out in the fall should be cut back to with in IS to 24 inches of the ground and then entirely buried until the buds pre almost beginning to start in the spring. ThiH protects the trees from seasoning which does more harm to BABY'S HEAD ITCHED iNOBURNED Red Pimple Grew Larger and Larger, Scratched Until It Bled. Cured in a Week by Cuticura Soap and Ointment. yiiuug trees than any other one thing. ,... . . ..!!, P i-vt,..!.. 'l-'e prefers to have the trees set 20 CAPITAL COAL YARD PHONE 85 MAIN. oal a" mf Wood SWASTIKA LUMP FACTORY WOOD CERR1LLOS LUMP SAWED WOOD STEAM COAL CORD WOOD ANTHRACITE COAL, ALL SIZES. Montezuma Avenue, near A., T & S. F. Railroad Depot. THE DENVER & RIO GRANDE RAILROAD CO. MISSOURI-PACIFIC RAILWAY CO. S3 ST. LOUIS, IRON MOUNTAIN & SOUTHERN CO.21 WESTERN PACIFIC RAILWAY CO. SHORTEST LINE TO DliNVER, COLORADO SPRINGS and PUEBLO, Where Direct Connections are Made FOR ALL EASTERN AND SOUTHERN POINTS TRAVELERS TO THE EAST will find every want anticipated in the modern high-class service provided by the through sleeping: car routes to St. Louis over the Missouri-Pacific-Iron Mountain. THROUGH LINE To Salt Lake City and Pacific Coast Points Denver & Rio Grande- Western Pacific Rail wav-The Royal Gorge-Feather River Route, acknowledged to be the Scenic Line PAR EXCELLENCE of all America. FOR INFORMATION AS TO RATES, ETC., CALL ON WM. M. SCOTT, T. F. & P. A.. 244 San Francisco Street, Santa Fe,-N. M. L. A. HUGHES, President. C. L. POLLARD, Secretary. R. J. CRICHTON, Manager & Treasurer. Lumber and Transfer Co. (INCORPORATED) LUMBER OF EVERY DESCRIPTION. Shingles, Cement, Plaster, Roofing and Build ing Materials of Every Description. AGENTS THE FAMOUS DAWSON COAL GENERAL TRANSFER BUSINESS AND STORAGE yijf Your Business Solicited.' Phone 100 and 35 W. Foot of Montezuma Ave. UNITED STATES BANK & TRUST GO. Does a General Banking Business. Jltllll tttMHlillllllllinHMMIIIlllllllll"'l",,'"""t'"Ml,"'t f Your Patronage Solicited 3fc IHnilllMlllllllllilltlllllilllllllllllllltl(IHIIIItllllllllllllllllllllilMltlllllMIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlir N. B. LAUGHLIN, President. jW. E. GRIFFIN, Cashier. J. B. LAMY, Vice-President. HAND-PAINTED CHINA Showing: dscorations to delight the eye are now displayed at my tore.- There are articles to appeal to everyone Steins, Smoking Sets, Tobacco Jars, Card Cases, Vases, etc. The prices are reasonable. Please call to see the China Articles ' 'fore the best pieces have been sold. YONTZ, JEWELER, SAN FRANCISCO STREET. S. WebstM1 of Boston. Edwin S. Webster is a member of the corporation of Stone & Webster, which, next to the General Electric company, is the largest owner of wa ter power gite3, developed and unde veloped, in the United States. Be fore the opening of the Mississippi River Power Co. plant this fall, the Stone & Webster corporation had a total of 278,000 horsepower already developed, and owned and held unde veloped 372,000 horsepower addition al. The corporation is connected with the General Electric through inter locking; directorates. Charles S. Mel- len, former president of the New Ha ven, in his statement issued about two weeks ago, stated that the Stone & Webster corporation were going heav ily into transportation interests, in ad dition to the development of electrici ty for power and lighting purposes. Gifford Pincliot, supported by for mer Secretary of War Henry L. Stim- son and Jos. N. Teal of Oregon, were forced to bring in a minority report to combat the reactionary water-power policy proposed by the majority the Webster group. This report quoted figures compiled by the United States bureau of cor porations, and brought up to date by the national conservation association, to show that the central fact in the waterpower situation is concentration of control in private hands. "Ten groups of power interests," said the Finchot report, "control 65 per cent of all the developed water- power in the United States. Some o these groups are still further related through interlocking directors be tween the groups themselves. But the rapid growth of concentration and Control is even more striking than the amount of it. Two years ago the ten greatest groups of waterpower inter ests controlled in round numbers 3,270,000 horsepower developed and un developed. Today the ten greatest groups control 6,270,000 horsepower. Thus the amount of concentration has nearly doubled in two years. The waterpowers which are held undevel oped by the ten greatest groups are larger by about one-third than the developed waterpowers controlled by them. But still more striking is the increase in the last two years of con trolled powers held undeveloped com pared with developed waterpowers. The figures show that in the last two years the great power interests have increased their control of power held undeveloped more than twice as fast as they have increased their control of developed power. "The record of the power situation makes it very clear that the fight for the conservation of the public waterpowers is first of all a fight against monopoly. But the second prime necessity in the public interest is to forbid and prevent the specula tive holdings of powers unused, and to force the prompt and full develop. ment of the vast aggregate of power resources now held idle and unpro ductive under concentrated private control. If we Take the valuation of $45 per horsepower, the waterpowers now held undeveloped in the control of the ten great groups of interests represent a total annual loss to this country of one hundred and sixty mil lion dollars worth of power. It is per fectly clear that no right to use a pub lic waterpower should ever be grant ed unless the grantee can show either that he or it controls no waterpower not developed or not in actual process of development, or that there are reasons, sound from the point of view of the public, for leaving such con trolled power undeveloped and asking for a further grant." That no interstate railroad shall in future be permitted to issue stocks or bonds increase its capitalization without first obtaining permission from the Interstate commerce com mission, is the purpose of a bill now being drawn by Representative The tus W. Sims of Tennessee, member ol the committee on interstate and for eign commerce of the house. "If congress has the right to regu late railroad rates," said Mr. Sims, re ferring to his bill, "It has the right to regulate everything on which rates are based, including the issues of stocks and bonds." Mr. Sims stated it as his opinion that the Democratic Baltimore platform called on the par ty to regulate securities issued by in terstate carriers, and his bill aims at this result. The Sims bill would require that the commission should issue its au thority to a railroad, after due exam ination of the facts, before stocks and bonds could be issued, and that any such stocks and bonds so issued should be sold at public auction or in such other manner as the commis sion should designate, and that the proceeds from the sale of such securi ties, after providing for the expense of the sale itself, should be paid into the treasury of the roads. Not only that, but the commission would be empowered to see to it that funds so raised are devoted to the specific pur poses for which the issue was made. feet apart for the standard trees with dwarfs planted midway between the other trees. This not only saves land but will give plenty of room for ten or fifteen years growth. He prefers setting the trees in the square form rather than the diagonal on account of greater ease of cultivation. This method of Betting trees will make 216 trees to the acre. The first year the trees require more water than they ever require again, and the water , should be close enough to thoroughly i saturate all the ground. The trees I should be cultivated after each irri-1 gallon as soon as it is possible to get I on the ground. Water should not I come in direct contact with the tree j only as it soaks through the earth, j The laud should be well stirred with i the hoe as soon after each irrigation I as possible, and it is a very good plan ' to use a five-toothed cultivator as soon as conditions will warrant. Mr. ; Cadwalleder is firmly of the opinion j that Mimbres valley land and condi tions are thoroughly suited to the growth of fruit, and says that the land is extraordinarily good. He said that it would take standard pears from 6 to 8 years to come into produc tion, and dwarf fruit will produc;. fruit in three or four years. R. H. D. Thompson, who grew 100 acres of beans on the Mimbres valley alfalfa farms land this year, bas just furnished the chamber of commero? with a bale of bean straw which is one of the very nutritious foods for stock and is worth $8 per ton on the ground. As there was a large acre age of beans grown in the Mimbres valley this year, the value of the straw crop alone will go into many hundreds of dollars. J. B. Reynolds, Jr., manager of the Mountain States Telephone and Tele graph Co., of Albuquerque, is in the city today conferring with District Attorney Hugh Gunnison and the new Deming manager, Henry Hall. Dem ing has this year been made a No. 1 Telephonicy speaking, and it is the purpose of the company to improve the service at Silver City next year. T. V. Holbrook of t,akeHeld, Fla., is investigating conditions in the Mim bres valley this week. Clyde B. Barker of Santa Ke is in the city for a few days. 1 W W V Hums, Wye "Tho trouble began on my baby when sho was about four months olu A rod pimple was seen at first and it grew larger and laicer all the timo oH the back of her head. It looked scabby and it Itched and burned and she began to scratch it and scratched until it would bleed. Sometimes she could not sleep and felt pretty cross. " I tried different remedies, and other kinds but none of them would do any good. The trouDle lasted till she was a year old and I saw an advertisement of Cuticura Soap and Oint ment so I sent for some. First I washed the k ve part with the Cuticura Soap and then .-. nplied tho Cuticura Ointment and left it on :' r a while, then I washed it again with tho itlcura Soap. Cuticura Soap and Olnt l : 'i:t cured the sore in a week without a war." (Signed) Mrs. Otto F. Heckly, Nov. 22. 1912. When you huy a flno toilet soap think of t ho advantages C Cuticura Soap possesses over the most expensive toilet soap ever made. In addition to being absolutely pure and re fresliiugly fragrant, It Is delicately yet effec tively medicated, giving you two soaps in one, a toilet and a skin soap at one price. Culicura Soap (25c.) and Cuticura Oint ment (50c.) are Bold evorywhore. Sample of each mailed free with 32-p. Skin Book. Ad dress post-card "Cuticura. Dept. T, Boston.'T "Men who shave and shampoo with Cu- ticura Soap will Audit Pest tor skin and scalp, ll EGG PRODUCERS Green Cut Bone and Meat, $3.50 per cwt. Oyster Shells, .... $2.50 " " Meat Scraps, $ .05 " lb. Ground Charcoal, . . . $ .03 " " Poultry and Stock FoodComposed ) Q i nr ....1 of Corn, Bran, Oats and Alfalfa, pCI CWl. GORMLEY'S GENERAL STORE PHONE 19-W. i IIleghtII 1 N THESE DAYS OF MODERN METH ODS, Electricity plays a most Impor tant part. The grandfather would be amazed at the radiance of the mod ern home and why all this light ? To make the home more homelike to make the home the most pleasant spot on earth for father, mother and children. Good light that is easy on the eyes is very much to be desired. GOES TO JAIL RATHER j THAN PAY FINE. ; Birmingham, Eng., Nov. 24. Miss Forbes Robertson, sister of Sir jonnston homes icobertson, the ac- i tor-manager, was sentenced today at. i the sessions here to a fortnight's im prisonment for smashing a vttndow on the occasion of Premier Asquith's visit to Birmingham in July. The judge offered the defendant the alter native of a fine but she declined to pay. POWER For quick results, ittle "WANT." Every Woman Is interested and should know about the wonderful Whiffing Spray Douche N' LUMBER, LATH, CEMENT, WINDOWS, DOO AND MOULDING I, J. MWYFR Willi I tall 1 223 San Francisco St. Phone 206 W SANTA FE, N. M. lgMarvel Askyourdrugrelstfor n. It he cannot sup ply the MARVEL, accept no other, but sendstamp for book. Marvel Co.. 44 E. 23d St.. N.f. Majestic Cafe I iH THE SANITARY SHORTORDERRESTflURflNT I REGULAR MEALS. I Open Day and Night. I Best Equipped. Most Modem. 1 Special Dinner Parties, Z : I I ROMULO LOPEZ, PROP. f SANTA FE, - - - NEW MEXICO, if & rOTHINQ IS QUITE SO CONVEN- IENT as to touch the button and your stove is ready to cook your iron ready to use, your toasted ready for the hurried breakfast, your vacu um cleaner ready for the fray, 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' Estimates and full infor mation cheeerfully given. SANTA FE WATER & LIGHT CO. MULLIGAN & RISING, FUNERAl DIRECTORS License Numbers, 66-67. Day or Night Phone, 130 Main. 'Next Door to Postoffice. T N 1 IS COMING BE PREPARED to take care it in the Dest manner possioie. .Subscribe for ths Santa n Hew Mexican, me paper thai boosts ai the time and works for the upbuild I W Below you will find listed the good things we $1 m offer to make your Thanksgiving Dinner J a joyous one: & FRESH FRUIT Jj Strawberries, Blackberries, Persimmons, Peaches. Imported M Malagas, and California Red Grapes, Florida Grape Fruit, III Florida and Louisiana Oranges, Jonathan, Grimes, Golden, Wine Uji Sap, Black Ben and many other varieties of Apples. ?? FRESH VEGETABLES M Cauliflower, Green and Wax Beans, Spinach, Radishes, Califor nia Head Lettuce, Parsley, Soup Bunches, Cucumbers, Green Onions, Mangos, Celery. ROOT VEGETABLES Beets, Turnips, Carrots, Ruta-Baga, Parsnips, Sweet Spuds, Onions, Cabbage, Hubbard Squash, Fine White Spuds. NEW N UTS English Walnuts, Black Walnuts, Almonds, Pecans, Filberts, Brazil Nuts, Hickory Nuts, Chestnuts, Peanuts. ALSO Dates, bulk. Dromedary Dates, Imported Symrna Figs. Washed Figs, Cooking Figs, Cluster Raisins, New Seeded Raisins and Currants, Pop Corn. BLUE POINT OYSTERS IN THE SHELL SELECT AND STANDARD BULK OYSTERS. FRESH LIVE LOBSTERS. POULTRY Turkeys, Ducks, Geese, Hens and Springs. FRESH FISH Salmon, Halibut and Barracuda. SMOKED FISH White Fish, Salmon, Herring. MEATS Kosher Meats, Beef, Pork, Mutton, Veal, Spare-Ribs, Home-made Sausage, Wienerwurst, Pigs Feet, Brains, Smoked Tongues, etc. Swift Premium Hams and Bacon. J CHEESE lj Cream, Brick, Llmburger, Roquefort, Imported Swiss, Edam, s& Pineapple, Blue Hill, McClaren's, Imported Camembert, Neufch- Ij) atel, Pimento, Roman Crosse and Blaekwell's Parmasan. "Kf 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 QA5PER ST. Telephone 9 W ASK FOR TICKETS SHIP YOUR FREIGHT FROM SANTA FE To El Paso, Bisbee, Douglass and all points in New Mexico, Arizona, Mexico and to the Pacific Coast, via NEW MEXICO CENTRAL to Torrance thence. The Best Route gVEast For Rates and Full Information, Address EUGENE FOX, G. F. & P. Aft, El Paso, Texas. THE MODERN GROCERY CO. eOMINGl In a few days we will open A FIRST-CLASS STUDlO'jat 249 San Francisco Street' under the personal supervision of Mr.-Gray, Watch for the opening announcement. THE GRAY STUDIO NEW MEXICO'S LEADING PHOTOGRAPHER. I Santa Fe 1 Albuquerque J .11 A.) V tan of our saw State.