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in.-- IWIlTl ' I Mill . r-, , f -r - -- M,M, U--T ;.. in iLrti - - .--t-.,- mmfTBfc,- ii ill ilBMtr-K - . THE ALBUQUERQUE MORNING JOURNAL, SATURDAY, APRIL 8, 191 1. Boy Scout's Hike No. 3 Starts on Monday Morning lakes Horaa Baking Easy TRACTION COMPANY MAY TEAR UP rj.m In Jin Vi'lii if fcWiV'w '"' j iii 'f,itrnfXmmSi"- "- ' - , ,n, m i rmmmmm j' '-j Tl Complete Schedule for En campment of Local Organi zation "With Daily Routine and Equipment Required of Each Boy Who Goes Into Camp; - Outing at Hubbell Ranch Will Give Boys Train ing in How to Take Care of Themselves. All the plans have been perfected by the Albuquerque Boy Scouts, under direction of Scoutmaster John Borra- j dalle and Adjutant M..J. McGulnness for the Scouts' Hike No. 3, to the en tampment at Hubbell's ranch Bouth of the city next .Monday morning. Seventy boys will participate In the encampment, which will afford the young men splendid training In dis cipline and in taking care of them-j solves, in the 'field. The camp will be' as near ft model one as Is possible,! and regular Orderly routine is provid ed for each day In camp. Colonel; Borradalle furnishes the following complete schedule of Route No. 3, April 10, 1911, to Camp Hubbell: Routine for .Monday. Meet at Putney's warehouse at 7 a. m. In uniform; form into platoons and march down Central avs and Second street 'across river; pitch camp, prepare dinner, follow routine. . Camp Routine. 6:80 Reveille; turn out and wash; roll call and exercise., " ' .',."! 7:00 Breakfast. ' 8:00 Air bedding In sun. 9:00 Prill and games. 11:45 First call for mess. 12:00 Dinner. " " 1:00 Talk by Scout adjutant. 2:00 Scouting, etc. 5:45 First call for mess. 6:00 Supper. . 6:30 Lowering colors. 7:30 Evening council around fire; opening council; roll cull; reports of Scouts; complaints; honors; new Scouts; new business; social doings;' dances, etc.; closing council. 9:00 Taps. . ampinjr Outfit for One Scout. 1 comfort or heavy quilt, 2 wool blankets, 1 old suit of clothes for camp use (to wear uniform on trip), no guns or firearms of any kind. Food for One Scwuti Five loaves of bread (marked for Identification), 1 dozen large potatoes, V-s pound ground coffee (best), 1 pound butter (marked for Identifica tion). 1 can condensed milk (marked for identification), 4 pound of ba con (best), Pint white b-iansi (same kind), 4 pound sugar, 2 pounds of beef (from same shop), package Quaker,, oats, no luxuries), . 1 dozen .pruneB.,' - i 'v ! " " ' . I tcnslls. One plate, 1 cup, 1 spoon, 1 knife, 1 fork, (either tin or enamelled.) (Note. Each Scout to fold his sleeping outfit and mark it for identi fication. He must put his food and utensils in a (lour sack and mark.) Camping Outfits Miscellaneous. Right ' 1 -gallon water bags, 1 10 gallon barrel, 1 10x12 tnt, 1 5-gal-lon coffee pot (riveted), 1 axe, 1 hatchet, 3 cover kettle" 2 big spoons, 1 butcher knif;, salt and pepper cas ters, 4 fiat steel rods to cook on, 1 spade, 2 wash basins, 1 6-pound can lurd, 1 bale of hay, 1 sack of oats, 3 feed bags, pound red pepper, 3 hitching ropes (30 feet In all.) Special duths are required of lieu tenants to observe and attend all mioses, to see that food Is properly cooked and served, that Scouts do not drink too much water or overload themselves! , Wngon and team to take the above as well as the Individual outfit of each Scout. Scouts must brlnvj their out fits Monday morning to Putney's warehouse. J, BORRADAILE, Scout Master. W. J. M'GCIXNESS, Adjutant. The agency for New Mexico for Cyphers Incubators and Brooders hat been placed with K. W. Fee. The Al buquerque price will bo the same as at the factory, Buffalo, New York. Hugh Trotter Meat Market WILL HAVE FRESH TODAY GOOD API'LICS, BANANAS, PINE APPLES, ORANGES, OUAPEFRIIT AND IXMJl'ATS. New Cucumbers are 20c apiece, and Fresh Tomatoes 13c per lb.; also Iwvp freli supply of Lettuce, Rail Ishcw, Pie Plant, Asparagus and Spinach. Will offer bargains In Case (ioods for the week: Gallon Apples ..... . . . $3.50 (itillon Pcactui, Tearn, Apricots .. ......... .$1.00 Gallon String Beans S.OO Good Peas 2.25 Gallon , Tomatoes. 3.r0 Corn .., 2.25 ToiiuttocM 2.23 New Mexico Kggs, cne. . 5.25 ft gal loos Jacket Maple Syrup 1.50 KF.MF.MHER, we carry the lamest line of fancy Rmeerles ami l !ce meats In the clly. IXm't forget cur Baiavla Line of Fancy Canned GimhK Teas and Coffee. ' IN THE MARKET, will have nice Hnnus, Outsell liens Tin-keys and Bucks besides K. C. Beef, Fat .Million, llsti, Oysters Mack erel anil S:t Meals, , SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO OCT OF TOWN ORDERS. . IMMU North Kei-oiid Street. PHONICS: Market. 44 , . Grocery, 821 Tl FORESTS GOVERNMENT ANNOUNCES IMPORTANT EXPERIMENT Flattering Results Obtained From Samples Taken From Pine Woods May Mean New Industry for Southland, A further series of tests are about to be conducted by the forest service on the yield of turpentine obtained from the national forests In this sec tion. These will be begun as soon as weather conditions are satisfactory. The report of the expert chemists who analyzed specimens obtained from pine trees In the national for ests of New Mexico and Arizona last year are of go flattering a nature as to lead to further and more exhaustive experimentation in the product of this valuable adjunct to the timber In dustry. According to a report received by Forester Ringland the quality of the dip obtained last year Is superior to much of that found In the most pro ductive fields of the country, and Bhould the yield be of sufficient qual ity In New Mexico and Arisona it will bring to this section millions of dol lars annually. The present market price of turpentine is $1.10 per gal lon, and the demand is ever exceeding the' supply, so that a continual mar ket is assured. The Immense value of naval stores can be realized by the ordinary layman when he reads of the wealth of this particular product of the Bouthern forests. With this industry as with many others the hand of the scientific grower and producer hac been at work devising means for a more per fect handling and securing of the product, so -that turpentine can now be gathered from the pine trees with not one-quarter th Aamage to the tree that used to result from the old fashioned slash and run system. The additional value of the system used, known as the Gllman McKay system, Is to lengthen the producing age of the. tree, jwlthout . curtailing, the amoiinf of the immediate supply. It is estimated that a goodly por tion of the 175,000,000 acres of tim ber In the national forests of New Mexico and Arizona, and north to the Canadian line, ean be utilized in the turpentine producing Industry, with the corresponding enrichment of the, section from which the oil is produc ed. Ladles' souvenirs today. Gem. CLASSY STUNTS AT ELKS' SMOKER THIS EVENING Tonight the Elks will pull off their classy doings at the club rooms on Gold avenue and Fifth. It is announc ed that nothing like it has ever been attempted before In the history of Elkdom In this section. Visiting Elks will be extended the happy mlt up on their arrival at the scene of the happenings, and all will be merry as the proverbial marriage bell. If you haven't a guesi card coun tersigned by either Big Elks Stortz, Helta or Benjamin you can't get In. The peep hole on the guard door will not even be opened to you, but If you have the needful and do get In, yours is the happy time from then till morn ing. Las Cruces lots given away at that boosting Gem. Grocery and Good Spuds, per loo-lb. 2. 1 3 Two Joe. Foiir-I-cur Clover Butter . . , Fancy Shelled Walnuts, iht lb CO Shelled Almonds, M-r ll. 50c and .75 Shelled Pecans HT lb.... 50 lbs. Old Homestead Flour for .73 J.50 TURPENTINE FROM NEW MEXICO mm ... PRJIEG Absolutely Pure Tho only baking powder ntado from Royal Grapo Cream of Tartar NO AUIM Nil I IMF PHOSPHITE LOCAL MAN TIKES Banana " Boats End 200-Mile ,; Chase Neck and Neck; Pan ama Canal Work Stupend ous, Says Stamm. Roy Stamm of this city, who hns JuBt returned with his bride, tiee Miss Eessie BoldrUlge, from a honeymoon trip to the tropicst, had the pleu&ure of being In on a remarkable and somewhat exciting ocean race north from Colon, 'Panama, while on his trip. Mr. and Mrs. Stamm were passen gers on one of the big banana bouts of the Fruit Dispatch company, a branch of the United Fruit company, the big thirty million dollar corpora tion which controls the Central Am or I run fruit trnde. The bout on which Mr. Stamm voyaged was re garded hitherto as the "hoodoo" of the line but on the trip was In charge of a red-hended Irish captain, who got rid of the hoodoo for good. The other boat wag one of the crack vessels of the line. The boats are equipped with five boilers each, one fnr emereencv work. The competi tor got his -extra boiler , into .service quite a while before the irishman fnnnil nut what wna dolne. the latter, however, breaking all records with his battery of four, and firing up the fifth In time to overhaul his rival. The two shins, followed each by a boiling wake and with a Chinaman sitting on the safety valve, reached port. 200 miles north, a quarter of a mile apart. The Irish captain over came a handicap of forty-five miles, and the record, it is paid, has creat ed a sensation In the service. The Stamms had the pleasure of visiting some of the biggest banana plantations In the Isthmian country na guests of the United Fruit com pany, and also had an opportunity to fully Inspect the work on the Pan ama ennal, which Mr. Stamm says Is entirely too stupendous to describe or photograph. TO HELP TRADE Autonomous Government to Boost, Belief of Millionaire St. Louis Brewer Busch. Adolphus Rusch, better known the country ovor as "Anheurer Hush," In his mngnlflcent private car "Adol phus," passed through this city yes terday afternoon, returning to his a 3-m.inths' visit and rest in his pala tial villa at Pasadena, Cul. Accompany Mr. llusch were his wife, Mr. and Mrs. Conrad, Carl Con-l-ad and Miss Schumann, all of St. Louis, together with his secretary, personal retalnes and others, making home and business in St. Louis after nineteen In all. When seen by a representative of the Morning Journal at the Santa Fe depot yesterday afternon, Mr. Roach said: "I am going back to St. Louis after a 3-months' rest In California. I hnve been playing for go long that I must get back to work now right away. "liusines In California Is looking up. The country out there has been blessed this winter with an abund ance of rain and in consequence the crops are looking splendid. Especial ly is this true with regard to the vineyards and hop fields. "I always remember Albuquerque with nleasure and would bo glad If I could stop . over and stay awhile here, but business is now pressing. I am vr-ry glnd to see that New Mexico Is about to have her hope of state hood realized, as I bellexe that busi ness In this territory will expand un der an autonomous government. "Olve my repards to my friends In this city," he concluded, as the (rain pulled out. It after transpired that Mr. Bunch's pleasant memory of Al buquerriuo doubtlets went back- to the time when a committee of six Duke City boosters headed P. F. Mc- Cnnmi, on which he was traveling to California some years back and after a 15-minutn conversation with the generous brewer obtained a , $500 subscription to the Albuquerque fair and purse for the Anheuser Iiuseh sweepstakes. - PART III LIVELY OCEAN RACE STATEHOOD BOUND T HE TRACK i uoun uibiuibitJi ouu( imu uuii- irati viuiauuii Dcutg oiiuwii, . Pnmnnnv Will Rnilrl Snnr tn ! Elk's Theater Later, After hearine the evidence In the Injunction proceeding brought by thej Citizens' Power and Traction com pany against the Albuquerque Trac tion company yesterday. Judge Ira A. Abbott dissolved the injunction nnd dismissed the suit. It is held the; plaintiffs failed to make out a suit,1 and hence must stand for the costs of' the suit. ! The evidence In the case took up; the time of the court for the greater; part of yesterday, the plaintiffs at. j tempting to establish that a contract w-na entered Into between them and the Albuquerque Trartion company, being a verbal agreement, In which tne jMitunuii in,..,.. .-...,-,....., nt the time they took over the ,'ligh lands line of the plaintiff company, agreed to do certain things ami to nc bound by certain promises which had been made to divers property owner by the Citizens' Power and Traction company. . At about 2:31 yesterday afternoon Judge Abbott dissolved the temporary Injunction whtcn hud lain upon me defendants since the previous Tues day, and dismissed the suit at the cost of plaintiffs.' No existence of j any contract between the two corpor ations was proven, according to the ruling of the court Manager Chadbourne of the Trac tion company said last night that he would have the Gold avenue track taken up when he got around to It. -Our object In taking up the track at this time," said Manager Chad bourne, "la to avoid getting hung up on a street paving proposition for a piece of track for which at present we have no use. Later we shall like ly arrange to relay a loop or spur to take care of the Elks' theater busi ness, but we have set no definite date for such a loop. Our application to the city council to be allowed to take up the track was to be released from that portion of the franchise. The offer and acceptance In the negotia tions for the purchase of the Citi zens' Traction company property con tained no stipulation regarding the operation of any portion of the line, the only stipulation In the whole transfer proceeding being regarding the operation of a line in that por. tion of the city known as the High lands.' This we were to have In op eration by April 1. and In reality had It In operation by 'th'e middle of March! At this time we ca'nnot undertake operate two parallel lines of tiai k a block apart; but, as I say, our future plans contemplate taking care of the theater traffic satisfactorily." . . Manager of Wisconsin Co-operative Union Arrives to In spect and Report to Wool Growers on Plant Here. That the co-operntlon plan has saved a big percentage on their pro ducts for the farmers of Wisconsin Is the statement made by A. Slaughter of Menominee, WlR., manager of the Wisconsin Co-operative union and secretary of the board of directors of the Wisconsin branch of the American Society of Equity, including In Its members some 11,000 Wisconsin farmers. Mr. Slaughter arrived here yesterday to Inspect and report to the Wisconsin wool growers on the pro ject of the company headed by Mag nus Brown, which has leased and put In running order the big plant of the ,old Rio Grande Woollen Mills com pany to manufacture western fabrics out of western wool. Mr. Slaugh ter will spend several days here look ing over the plant and going Into the detuila of the enterprise. A favora ble report means support for the pro ject from the Wisconsin wool grow ers. On binding twine, for Instance, Mr. Slaughter says, the co-operative plan has saved the members 15 per cent, 1,000,000 pounds of thlB product be ,tng handled by the Wisconsin union. Seven Days More Madame Chulda Clarivoyant Superior 308 V. I.SCAD AVI'.M'K. All readings taereilly confidential. Hours 10 u. ni. to 8:30 p. tn. Special for three diijii, toe,. Dully und Surif dys. , , , COOPERATIOiy WINS WISCONSIN W Mil 1:4 ft A., T. 29 Lois Sold to Dale In the Kelly Addition to the Business Center of Willard $15 to $35 Per Lot Only $ I - Down - - - Balance $ I . Per Week Y No Interest - - No Taxes I'KIU'MT TITIi:. AHSTIt ACT WITH lAI.HY li:ri. Tf you are earning $1(1 to $12 each week, try buying two, of these $20 lota by paying $1 per week; no Interest. In four years Willard will lie a little el'y of from 2500 to 3MH) people, and these lots now adjoining the buslnos renter will naturally be worth from $:0l) to $M)0 each, which means 2,500 per cent prulit, and a nice little start to go Into some kind of business for yourself. If you get sick or lose your position before you tlnlnh paying tor your lots, we will wait until you get well or another position. More people have gotten a start in life through re:t estate than any other way, and the new, grow ing western towns are the ones to malte the money. Next year wo will have Statehood, then, watch- all the Now Mexico towns grow. roit 1'L.vrs axi) riticKs kick anv of tiiic ioi.i.oyi; tUCAl. KSTATK WCALICUS: IIUNSAKF.R & TIIAXTON J. M. MOOIIK HISALTY CO. J. HOHIIAPAILIO E. II. DITNI3AK FRANK O. OATES R. I FUIELOW S. J. B. UNDERWOOD 111HJ1I 8W1SI11CR ! The union handler some 1500 car loads of hay last year In the state, and Mr. Slaughter says that on all products the organization has effected a tremendous saving for Its mem bers. Tl TO BE COMPLETE SAYS OGLE River Carrying Good Volume : of Water but Not Danger ously High; Everything in Good Shape Above. J In a week's time all preparations will have been made to take rare of a possible' hli;h stage of water In the Rio fl ramie this spring, according to County Surveyor A. I). Ogle, who has been supervising the dyke work north and south of the city. "Repairs at Alameda have been completed and everything Is now ,ln good shape for high water above the city," said Mr. Ogle yesterday. We shall be through with the wing dams along the river In a week and with tb Unreins dyke put In proper shape the river banks will be well protected by that time." The Rio Orande Is carrying a good, stiff volume or water, as It has for nm time past, but the stage Is no thing to excite apprehension, Slid it Is believed .Unit everything Is In sat isfactory siiape to lild a big rlv thin spring. The funny big company. , Ueni. - - - 1 1 AiiWMtPa'w WS-ii' j,fw - iJu sent TtMt&d i- k FLOOD PROTECTION til r-:f & S. V. (( TT-Oli ) 11 lsT AT WII.I.AUU. ALlllOTICRO P, N1AV MKXICO. . . 1MCXTEU MeCUKlllAN I-OUTERK1EL1) CO. W. II. McMII.LlON H. 1. HNYOICR (JfJL!) AVE. REALTY CO. WILLARD, MCW MICXICO. 11. L. 11ITT & CO. ' FlticniilCO CHAVEZ SANl'A lie, XKW MICXICO. F. ABSTRACT REALTY & INS. AGENCY v PROPOSED ANNEX TO NEW AIRD0ME (From Description Furnished by J. Sam Huston,) Cli REAL GOES STRAIGHT NORTR SAYS BOARD Commissioners Send Tran script of Minutes to Good Roads Commission at Santa -Fe, . ' It Is expected that by today or lo mcrrow the hoard of county com missioners and the territorial good roads commission will get together on the route of the Cnmlno real north out of this. city. $10,000 for the con struction ff which lh now available and work on which Is to be started at once. As previously stated, the good roads commission gave Instruc tions tn Assistant Engineer Neal that the road should he laid straight north fi r four miles, and thence along the east side of the valley. The purpose of the road and the purpose for which the commission ers made the appropriation Is to give the farming country north of here to Sandoval county a main highway, and the commissioners will stand pat on this proposition. A copy of the resolution to tills effect passed at tin recent board meeting has been sent to the good roads bureau at Sntita Fl orid there Is no doubt that the en gineers "III be so instructed. County Superintendent of Sellouts A. II. Stroup, who Is n member of the good roads committee of the Albu querque Commercial' club, left this morning for Santa Fe to confer o" niaUiTa In connection with the terri ' u W. P. METCAI.F A. FLEISCHER FELIPE (1IJRCLK D. K. 11. SELLERS I'. F. McCANNA U D. ELLETT torial good roads propaganda wllh the members of the territorial asso ciation In that city. It Is understood that questions In regard to the Cumlno real, which Is to !)n built from Albuquerque north to the Sandowil county Hue, will bo discussed. HIT HELD NOT DEFECTIVE District Court Overrules De murrer in .Case of Forstall, Charged With Embezzle ment of $400. Sitting In chambers, Judie Ira A. Abbott yesterday afternoon over ruled the demurrer of the attorneys of E. E. Forstall, In a criminal case pending against him In which he I charg-d In an Indictment with having imbe..l d $4 011 In form of a note and $100 In tin- form of a cheek left In his posM'Si'lon by C E. Newcomer. The defense claimed that the in Iletnient wna defective, In that It failed to set forth that any crime had been committed. The Indictment has been standing for some time, and the argument In the case was made soiue time ago, but the opinion was nut batided down until yesterday. The liel nalllli. Mercantile company was yesterday allotted Judgment with col Is against Iguacln Uuterrex I" :l suit brought on an account of $ll. Lame shoulder Is nearly always duo to rheumatism of the muscles, nnd quickly yields to the freo application of Chamberlain's Liniment. For sale by all dealers.