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16 Ell 12 B I I $J$ II 1 iiIlsl-ly S ! L L 1 a & Ih ilil fell !! 1 1 !i nil k bt! ill s Ss sir y I If3!3 1 lr In line 5j fa s 1 O ililll i i Bri I I SiSii ii I S B III 1 ilfii 1 I is ii g Ufi!-J I lliSS Ite g 1 &$ 33 BsP Isal I Bar Jf I Gsn 1 M I I tsm I I W I 1 i . . I AGED MAN IN EL PASO SAYS HE KNEW DIAZ WHEN HE WAS CAPTAIN. Is Now Living in EI Paso in Poverty and Thinks President of Mexico Becognized Him When He Was on His Visit Here to Meet Mr. Taft Was One of the Four Who Fired the Shots That Killed Maximilian. "Men should be judged, not by their tint of skin, The gods they serve, the vintage that they drink; Nor by the way they love, or fight, or sin But by the quality of thought they think." "When the great Diaz came to El Paso, on that recent and brilliant oc casion wien two presidents met in the sister cities of the border, an incident occurred which was not recorded, per haps unnoticed except by two "very old men. An old Mexican, a very old man In shabby workman's garb, saluted the president from the curb stone of Santa Te istreet as the carriage sped past. z Now this very old and workworn Mexican raised his hand to a weather beaten hat in the military salute of a naif century sago, not as the soldiers of any country do today. And the great Diaz as he passed, seeing the man, raised his hat In answer to the antique salute. The great Mexican bowed verjr deeply, the carriage sped on, and the incident was ended. "Whether the great Diaz recognized In the very old man on the curb stone the person of Juan Henna, old soldier of the republic, Is not known except to Diaz himself and probably never will be. Perhaps the president merely acknowledged, with presidential de mocracy, the military salute of his country. But the man who raised his iand in the old salute of the Mexican army believes that he was recognized by Don Porfirio. whom he knew and r J FINANCIAL FSUST NATIONAL BAfM United States Depository assets" Loans and investments ......? $23456,9d4'.37 United States bonds : : . .- '. . 600,000.00 Cash in .vaults and exchange., ..,. . 1,422,658.91 $4,479,613.28 LIABILITIES Capital paid in . 500,000.00 Surplus and prefdts . . .' : 146.687.33 Circulating notes ., 500,000.00 Deposits : . ... 3,332,925.95 $4,479,613.28 C E- MOEEEEAD. President. i JOSEPH MAGOFFIK, V. Pi. STATE NATIONAL BANK J. ESTABLISHED APRIL, 1881. CAPITAL, SURPLUS AND PROFITS, $171,000; 1 A Lefrtbaxte BunJdsg Bus&esa Transacted In All Its Branches. HIGHEST PRICES PAID TOR MEXJCAS HONE?. Rio Grande Valley Bank & Trust W. VF. THraey, PrMfc. g. T. Tmraer, Vice Preat. W. Ooky, V. P. k Kgr- CAPITAL, SUBPLUS AND PROFITS $125,000 GENERAL BAJOOKG BUSIKESS TRANSACTED. SAVINGS DEPARTKSIfT OPEN SATURDAY EVENINGS. ESPECIAL ATTENTION TO OUT OF TOWJT ACCOUNTS. CITY NATIONAL BAN EL PASO, TESAS. UNITED STATES DEPOSITARY Capital, $150,000.00. Surplus and Profits, $25,000.00 7FICERS AND DIRECTORS: . Stns Frank Powers H. J. Simmons A. G. Aa&rmz & Kobiberg - B. Blumextkal J. F. Williams J. H. May TOUR BAIHOirO BUSINESS IS RESPECTFULLY INVITED. DIRECTORS: Crawford Earrie. W. E. Anderson. J. H. XtiZmu, ?ra. Jim T. McElroy, V. 'Pza. National Bank XL PASO, OAPrTAIr STOCK Pasmptaesa, Safsty as& Careful Attention te the Wanta of Our Customers is CM yniCy OX .fa gg bb aawaMBwiiwi ua w (gaiBB j KBHHHHKHSSjBjMSIBflRBHpMBHM I A PERTINENT CONSIDERATION If you are considering the establishment of a new barf ing connection, we invite your attention to the fact tnax the doors of this bank arp open every day from 10 a. m. iu 3 pm. except on Saturdays, when they are open from xu a. m. to 12 m. and 5 to 8 p. m. It is always our policy to ex. tend every courtesy and attention to depositors whether their balances are iaige or , ,,. l last saw as Capt. Diar, of Mexican cav- f airy, nearly a half century ago. The Old Soldier. Down in :i "M"virrn tonoVnont nt- CV South Kansas street, room 5, to be ' exact, lives Juan Menna. nn?:.fl hv nn. f-vfio i,ic fnn-n , r ,-,,., u4 .,. vears of mr anrt wnrtl v.t i, ! hmkpn nntto i,?c t 5fm I ity, Juan Menna never has broken the habit of work. But a few months ago he was working in the street, a laborer with a shovel. Now he is out of work, seeking employment at the age of 81 years. But Juan Menna as a workman bears less interest than Juan Menna '-as a sol dier although that was many years ago. .no un.es least to taiK or 'Himself as a i soldier, for Juan Menna is a man of j work. When he speaks of the davs of war his half-indian face, deeply lined and kindly, displays no pleasure, noth ing but horror at what he tells. Juan Menna is a natural humanitarian, humble and ignorant, true, but a hu manitarian because he is soft and gentle, not for logic or theory. Although it is not recorded in am- history, and known by few survivors of a cruel war. Juan Menna, who here J in El Paso lives in poverty and kinless ' want, was one of the executioners who j shot the emperor Maximilian, invader of Mexico. Fighting with the liberal I forces through that bloody war which 1 j preceaea ine anegea treacnery of Lo- ?w uu L"K tl" UL tne sreac European J3 - H i.1.. . -r-. 1 invader Juan Menna could tell if he behind We heard that the em would. of many things unwritten in his- lTi gone, and that made us FINA3FGIAL I GEO. D. FLORY, Cashier. C. H. BASSSXT, Vict Pr. W. E. Arnoia, Cashier. 7. M. Jtfnrchison, Aasr. Cash. H. E. Christie, Secy. J. M. Goggin, Vie Prts. W. L. Tooley, Cash. Of Commerce TEXAS. .....$200,000 I i.ou aui&. smau. tory and yet of interest to Mexico and givu me anuuier ririe, ana icxi ms i i . . t be a soldier. Por Dios. what could one ' do? It was not in my heart to f'.ght. but there rifle. over my shoulder was the The Story of MaximiUnin. But Juan Menna, after much priming, has told of the shooting of Maximilian,-! of his part in the slaughter of the man who, to many was both invader and friend of the American republic. Here is the story, fresh from the halting lips of Juan Menna, soidier. win me senor xorgive tne memory of a Xvery oId maxi- it is mauv vtars since it happened, tha story I will -cell you. It was a long time ago, and I do not read books to remember what I have forgotten, like some people do " "ie senor win iorgive, it was so: "They made me to be a soldier. I did not want to kill. Yes, there were many iii the army of Mexico like me. I They took me from nvy hearth in Parral, and made a soldier of me. They dressed me in uniform, and gave me a rifle. Then I was a soldier exceDt in my heart. I x i aUiu1Ci c-cpu m u.j uiu did not want to kill any man, and -et I was never afraid. Does the senor un- ! derstand? "Yes, I was in many battles, I do not know how many. Many times I was captured by the French soldiers. But they always let me go free. "Why? Well, senor. I do not know exactly. Perhaps they knew,that I was made to be a sol dier. I did not have to tell them that. They let me free, and no matter where I would go, they would find me, and give me another rifle, and tell me to be a soldier. Per dios. what could one do? It was not in my heart to fight, but there over my shoulder, was the rifle. iCnew Diaz. "It was unoer Gen. Blanco that I was a soldier. No, I had known Diaz long before, when he was a captain of cav jilw nt the canital. I always was of the Infantry and never served with him. ;" ""r" ;, tn ti,n battles until I TOTIlTilL itll UllUUfall UIVV . . - Wf Aris. snd left Max!- x luugui j.i uiiuuo" - very sorrv. .uany 01 me men -m fought with me liked the French and thought the emperor a good man. And fiiat grave me flie more pain when I had ro kill. It nlways save me pain to kill. "It vas not long: before the gen darmes of the enemy the enemy of good friends to me were all killed. And Maximilian was a prisoner, they told us. God had it that I was near Queretaro. They told me that I was to be one of murderers of the prisoners. I wanted to run awav. "But what could I do, senor? j I loved my life more than it hurt me to kill others. But surely you do not want to hear of how the emperor was . killed, murdered by me? Yes? , Execution of Maximilian. "Tt wn.s on the corro de la Campana that it happened, very near a little church. I have heard that a brother ofj Maximlliano built the little church, per haps that was why they killed him- there why they made me kxu mm. xuo j emperor stepped out of a carriage. He was smoking a cigar, ana was tm quiet With him were two men, Mojia and Miramon, both generals, I heard later. "They had chosen me and four other soldiers to kill these good men. Not one of us wanted to do it, may God hear me, this is true He was glad to die, was Maximilian." He died with much 'gusto,' thA la? he was to fall. I was afraid ' not to shoot straight, as the captain told i me. Someone else would have killed him had I not. and I wanted to live as much as the three men wanted to die, so they said. But was It equal for I, a ' common man, to kill Maximiliano an j emperor? ' 4,lt was very early in the morning ' when we .murderedHhe emperor and his ' two generals. It might have been that date; I do not even remember the year. ' Figures do not stay in my old head. But it was a very long time ago. Well, senor, let me end. We fired and killed ! the emperor and the two generals. The emperor was the last. I do not re- , member everything, but he was the last, that I know. And then we went away, and the war was over. I had helped ! kill a great man. It does not matter If ' he was no Mexican, have not we all the same good God, senor? Hard Iilfe for an Old Man. "It was 14 years that I fought with Gen. Blanco. And then they freed me from my uniform and my rifle. And then I was happy and went to work. I married and had two children. But DS YOU WM-iT I HOME? IF SO THE STAWOAHD HOME GOMAHY VIll lend you the money to buy, build or lift mortgages anywhere in the United States. Payments $.50 - per month on the ?1000 with 5 percent In terest fill out coupon and mall to us for full Information. Why not pay your rent money on a home of your own? How much rent do you pay? Name Car line " City ElililS X. JOSEPH District 33anajcer. 310-320 Herald Building. El Paso Texas. Bell Phone 2709. We can use a few good agents. 8te Crewley Co. EXPERT PRINTERS 33! Texas Si. E! Paso. Texas n Ws PLEASE ih People i $25 to $50 "WHEN YOU NEED A FEW DOLLARS come to us. We will loan you the amount needed on very snort notice. RATE and PAYMENTS to suit. JL.OANS on Pianos, Household Goods, Salary, etc. We buy notes of every descriptlon SECURITY LOAN COMPANY v Bell Phone 894. 20S Mesa when my wife died, and my children grew to be men and then died, too, I :ame away from Mexico. They told me that there was much work to do dn the country of the Americans. For more than 20 years I have lived in Texas. In San Antonio, senor, and now it has been I four years here in El Paso. "When I can not find work, some- ! times, I go out on the pampas, and live without a house. No, I can work still, oh yes, senor, I am not so old as that. No, never have I received money for what I did in the war. Perhaps they know that I did not want to do it. I do rrtf- iront tViA mnnov flnvrflV Tn TY1V ... nn,v - vo T . AT, .- f ' T..orlc that not Goodbye, 4 n r1A ?i.IIIll t IHtVH IH ! IK1IIU1 V JL. .111 V1U man; goodbye." Old Juan Menna, soldier, workman, bowed his shaggled head in farewell Indians Botcher Family Of Story of the Hard Luck of a Nogales, Ariz., Jan. 8. A. D, Peck, who is conducting mining and livery interests in Nogales, has achieved his success In the territory by experiences unusually discouraging. In early youth Mr. Peck came, west from the state of New York and, after a period of prospecting In different parts of the southwest and Sonora, Mexico, he settled on a ranch pear Calabasas a village ten miles north of the town of Nogales, Arlz.,n what Is now Santa Cruz county. Here he car ried on .extensive cattle and horse in terests. This settlement was made in 1884, and two years after this, early one morning in April, Mr. Peck and Charlie Owen, a friend and fellow cattleman, saddled their horses and went out on the range as usual. Owen had roped a cow and they were just about to make ready for brand ing her when a nearby report of a gim was heard. "Run for your life; it is Apaches," I said Peck in terrified tones. And both men mounted their horses and fled as fast as horse flesh could take them, In different directions, how ever, and right after them, riding" as only wild Indians can, dashed the Apaches. Owen was murdered and his body recovered some days later in the hills. Captured by Indians. Peck was quickly overtaken and surrounded in that magical, stealthy indian way of springing up on all sides in a flash. His horse was shot in the head and fell from under him dead. The indians approached him, removed his boots, his hat and his coat, leaving him barefoot and with little clothing on and, during these perilous moments, expect ing every breath to be his last, one of the Apaches, who could speak English, said to hijn: "You gave a pair of shoes once to an Apache child and because of that act, we are not going to kill you." It had been some months before this that Mr. Peck was returning from No gales with a pair of shoes tied tD his saddle for his own child and, seeing a little Apache tramping along with bleeding feet, had given the shoes to the child, which incident was not for gotten -by ther indians and saved his life. Released by Indians. After removing most of his clothing the indians took them and gave Mr. Peck a small piece of silver, about ten BENE BACHE'S BUDGET FREAKS OF FASHIONABLE UFE IN THE NEv WASHINGTON. Rapidly Becoming Ihe Most Luxurious City in World. Winter Home of the Multi-Millionaires Dwell ings That Are Like Hotels Business of Being "In the Swim.,, W ASHINGTON, D. C, Jan. 8. There isno question of the fact that Washington Is rapid ly becoming the fashionable center of the United States. Not only are multi-millionaires from all over the country coming here to live, but' the ,-ery rich New York people, such as the tf-onderbilts p-nr! Rpimnntc nr tMiMrltnc- Vanderbilts and Belmonts, are building palaces at the capital for winter occu pancy. The Perry Belmont mansion, at the junction of Eighteenth street and New Hampshire avenue, is almost fin ished, and it is understood that the George Vanderbilts will begin to putf up their palace, a couple of blocks fur ther up the same avenue, In the spring. In a social' sense, the Washington of 15 years ago was a village compared J v, ix.ii Huai ii is roaay. xne i-ieiLeio, leading the movement of the multi millionaires in this direction, had then but newly arrived from Chicago, and were erecting their huge white brick residence on Dupont Circle. It was the first of the great private palaces, which since, then have been rapidly multiply ing, so that today they are numbered by scores. Nineteen servants are em ployed In the Letter mansion; but the X,arz Andersons havens, and the Scott Townsends (nearly opposite the Ander sons on Massachusetts avenue) are un able to get along with fewer than 30. The expense of running one of these huge establishments merely to keep it in commission, that is to say. Is from $75,000 to 5150,000 a year. Homes Like llQtera. They are rather like hotels than like private houses. Indeed, the new palace of Thomas F. Walsh, on Massachusetts avenue, is larger than a good many city hotels. The lives the occupants are obliged to lead are necessarily somewhat artificial. It Is hardly pos sible to cultivate a home atmosphere under such conditions. Kathryn Elklns (daughter of the multi-millionaire sen- in Every Sense of the Word $50 to $100 Avenue Room 2, Stevens Bhlff. bent his head until the face was hidden in a matted plenty of hair, and a bush of beard. Only was the beard touched with gray. The head of Juan Menna is black, quite black, and unbleached with age. Wants Work Xo Beggar. "A little moment, senor with per mission. Could not you tell the people that old Juan Menna seeks work, that he has no children to work for him? I know very well how to grow grass, and work in gardens. Will the senor ask? Such is the story Juan Menna tells of the killing of the emperor invader of Mexico, long ago. It is not exactly in accordance with the historians. But perhaps the scribes may be at fault in the detail. , . .. At any rate that Is the story from the Lips of Juan Menna, who was there, who saw, who acted, a guiltless murder er of a great man. 1 1 Living At I s Citizen of the Border Town. cents in value, supposedly in con formance to some superstition of theirs, probably to free the act from that of robbery, aad then told him to go in the direction of Calabasas; that if he went to his house they would kill him. He wjjnt as "he was ordered until out of their sight, when he turned to ward his home and, coming In view of it, saw ho entile structure in a ma3a of flames and also his blacksmith shop nearby. Family Butchered. On reaching the scene a more appnl Ing sight still, met the eyes of the father. Lying dead In the yard were the wife and infant child the child in the mother's arms, and as was evidenced by the piercing of the bullet, the mother -was standing with the child in her arms when shot, for the bullet en tered her left arm, then the body of the child and finally ner body. The bodies were frightfully mutilat ed. The little golden head of the baby was beaten into a. perfect mass of jelly. And to add to the atrociousness of their crime, the indians had emptied the hot contents of the cooking vessels pota toes,, etc., which, were, being cooked at the time over the bodies and then covered all with jt cloth. The Bodies Rescued- Mr. Peck immediately -set out afoot for Calabasas, it being the nearest noint. and from there the story was j wired to Nogales. A posse was at once formed to go out and br"ng in the bodies for burial. Mr. Peck having been forced to walk miles over cactus and brush without" shoes, besides the intense mental suffering, was not al lowed to accompany the posse to the spot. The bodies were buried in No gales. Besides laying waste his home and murdering his family, the Apaches robbed Mr. Peck of a large number of cattlo and horses. Bad Luclc With Property. After this heartrending experience he came to Nogales and bought property valued at 10,000 on the international line, which was ordered removed by the United States government, together with all other buildings on the line, In 1S9S. Later his present business was established. Mr. Peck was 'appointed on the first board of supervisors of this county, having been active In securing its sep aration from Pima county. Fraternally he is a member of the Masons, the Knights of Pythias and No. 9 I. O. O. F.. all of Nogale3, ator fropa West Virginia) was heard to complain bitterly, on a recent occasion, that letters and even telegrams that came to the house were commonly un sealed and read by the servants, and that even the telephone calls had audi- tors in e iers department, wnere Pampereu menuu enjui eu me luxury or 'listening in. to acquire materdal for downstairs gossip. If one is to enjoy all the advantages or weaitn ana zasnion, nowever, one must make up one's mind to relinquish certain comforts among others, that of privacy. Inevitably, too, there is in the private palaces enormous extravagances and waste, especially where food sup plies are concerned. An intimate friend, permitted by a multi-millionaire's wi'e to glance over some cf her household accounts, chanced to notice that the mistress of the establishment was pay ing ?1 a pound for every beefsteak pur chased. But what Is one to do? A lady in Mrs. Leiter's position is fully occu pied with social affairs; she has no time to bother with the business of run ning the domestic hotel. Chaperons for Girls. The young girl who lives In the pri vate palace Is never allowed to o out alone, up to the time when she makes her debut in society. A governess, or a chaperon hired by the hour, always ac companies her. This is rather a new idea. After "coming out," of course, it is different- But that event merely marks the beginning of a period duri jg which the endurance of the physical feminine machine is tried to the ut most. Nothing short of scientific man agement will enable even the healthiest young woman to go through two or three seasons of "smart" uptodate so cial dissipation without losing the bloom of her youth and the better part of her beauty. This is why the fashionable debutante of the season of 1909-1910 is treated in all important respects as if she were a doll. She is put to bed like a doll, by her maid, and got up and dressed like a doll. Her bath Is drawn for her, when she wants it. She does not know how to "do" up her own hair. She never to "do" her own hair. She never anything useful from the time she gets up in the morning until the time she goes to bed. She never takes any care of anything. If a dress, or any other article is to be put away, the maid does it. If a handkerchief is needed, the maid gets it. Beinjc a Millionaire's Child. All of this is part of the business bi Lbcing the daughter of a modern multi- Not Only Chance That is Appreciated By Men Who Want :eed Tliere is lots of satisfaction when you sell a man a piece of property and then he thanks you for selling him and invites the "house" to cigars. But that very thing occurred in our office recently and the man was among those who purchased one of the small tracts in the upper Mesilla Valley. There is always; one thirtg that this firm has done "to see that the property is just as represented to prospect ive buyers. " That's one reason when we' get a cus tomer that he always comes to us when he desires to invest again. "When we tell a customer that five acres, ten acres or 20 acres, of the small tracts, which we are selling in the upper Mesilla Yalley will pay for the farm in one year we mean what we say and can convince anyone who will believe in facts. And we repeat that one crop of onions or cantaloupes wjll pay for one of the tracts whether a 5 or a 20 acre one. "We still give 6 years time on the remaining tracts and the man who wants to be his own boss, make better money than he ever made before and live an independent life should investigate this. "We would' be glad to tell you all about this proposi tion and you'll be glad to hear it. H atton Realty Co. 224 Mesa Avenue. millionaire. The young lady Is not taught the value of anything. She knows nothing that is really worth knowing though she Is well acquainted with many things she ought not to know. What education she has ac quired at a fashionable school, before "coming out," is a false fabric a mere pretense- But she does not need educa tion; her work in life Is to be orna mental, to amuse, and to be amused. She gets up at noon, usually, and is rubbed down by a professional mas seuse, just like a horse- This i to re move all traces of the fatigue arising from the dissipations of the day before. Her neck is rubbed to make it plump, and her face likewise, to discourage commencing wrinkles. As a rule, she is manicured in bed, and regularly once a week her pretty toe-nails receive similar attention. Three Hours o Get 3laCy. It takes her not less than rnree hours to be made ready for the day. The dressing of her hair Is in Itself a great affair there Is so much of it to b"g, put 6nr Indeed, the average society woman today wears much mqre hair than ever grew on one human head. Rats? Not one. The proper thing Is to wear a coiffure that is In the main artificial, but wholly composed of real hair of the most beautiful and expensive kind. The young lady's own hair Is combed straight back from her forehead, and upon it is superimposed a circular, or semi-circular, arrangement of real hair, soft and lovely. Puffs are then added, with here and. there a. coquettish curl. It is safe to say that no women that ever lived were so artificial, in a physi cal sehse, as the fashionable women of today. As for the hair, dyes have never been so .generally used. But they are much better dyes than were formerly obtainable, "and so the employment of them Is not likely to be suspected. Some of these dyes are bought In the shape of powders, which are brushed Into the hair. They produce a very beautiful ef fect. , Women's Figures. The fashionable woman of today has a much better figure than, her prototype of a generation ago, or of any bygone period. Her shape may not be better, but figure is an entirely different mat ter, being determined largely by tho corset-maker and the dressmaker. The woman of fashion 30 years ago thought $5 ahigh price for a pair of corsets; to day she thinks nothing of paying $75, and has them specially fitted. Often they are uncomfortable, it is true; and she finds it difficult to sit down, be cause the stays come nearly to her knees; but they give to her body the seeming contour which she "desires, and are well worth 'all the suffering en dured. The fresh-air treatment, which is do ing so much for consumptives, Is ap plied to the fashionable woman of to day for the preservation and improve ment of her beauty- especially for com plexion and color. A look of vigor is essential to the modern idea of beauty. The "weary" girl of the Dundreary play the "maid with the delicate air"" of the old ballad Is out of date. Hence It Is that the present-day woman of fash Ion spends much time out of doors. Exercise aad Beauty. Exercise- Is all-Important for beauty. Accordingly, she rides & great deal, and plays golf and tennis. But when It is a question of avoirdupois, my! how she works. In the privacy of her boudoir, she goes through all sorts of bother some "stunts," such as picking- up something 100 times in succession, or lyine- down on her back and kicking. -Anything to discourage an increase of the waist measure or over mucn xat :n the abdominal region. These are days when the fashionable woman of middle age expects still to retain at least some thing of her youthful appearance; but how is she going to do it If that fatal spread at the hips, with the consequent waddle, arrives? The latest fashionable fad for dis couraging adipose deposit is to stand 20 minutes after each meal. This is sup posed to prevent the above-mentioned tendency to accumulation of flesh about the hips. Less wine, too, is drunk at dinner. Physicians say that alcohol in any shape encourages fat. At some very "swell" dinners whiskey and soda Is served instead of wine, and a liquor instead of the after-dinner coffee. This latter is a recent Innovation. Dinner at 9 p. in. The' most fashionable Washington people are now dining at 9 jj. m. If tHeS" expect fo? go io the theater; the meal Is served at 7. Even so, they do l ! Both Phones not expect to arrive at the theater until 9, or half past 9 the really modish Idea being that the latter half of a play or an opera is always the best part of it. As a matter of detail, the fashionable woman should have 40 or 50 pairs of shoes. To change them frequently rests the feet. Of course she must have a different pair of shoes for every cos tume she wears. Calls are made after the theater- TMs Is another new idea. And yet another Is to be "at home" to one's friends on Sundays. An informal reception on Sunday makes the day much less- dul. , Where do the children come in? The answer Is that In fashionable life now adays they don't come in at all. At all events, their mothers do not bother much, with them. If little Charlie, or his sister Jane, sees mamma, once a. day, for a few minutes before dinner per haps, that ought to be sufficient. Nurse will do the rest. But the deputy mother nowadays, in the gay world, is required to be a professional trained nurse, who wears a uniform. She gets $25 a week, and is cheap at the price. Bene Bache. Dr.G.E. Cameron I DENTIST Beat Fall Set t Teeth $19.99 Good, reliable dentistry at a saost reasonable price. All -work guar anteed. Office over Guarantee Shoe Store, IIS S. El Paso St. Bell -Phme 2706, Biag 2 &Iff31 LMssYiiii & Hask viile R. R. Offers the merchant the beat service ' and. the quickest time to 3!few York aad other eastern markets., Ifew Orleans-Ifew York iiiaitedr an all Pnlhaan train, leaves 3feW Orleans daily 8.C0 P. 2L Excellent service to Birmingham, Louisville, Cincinaafr and. Ckicage through sleepers to above pdmta. J. F. SULLFTAX,' ' -Houston, Texas. BA&G-AGE TBAISFEB BAGGAGE VB8X2 BELL 1. AUTO 1Mi. : Wm. be v rfgStt wy. GaMfcl -BB.&. SeMQMblc pcicm. , LongweiFs Transfer, 11 SXJr FKASCISCO STL GDOM TRANSFEB GO. All Kinds ef Haahnj. PROMPT ATTElfTIOK Bell Phone 1054 Aut Phono 196 1M Wsw St DANDER IN E Produce tklcfc, luxuriant kalr vrfcea all ether remedies fall. We cnxrsatea Uastlerlnc All Drusrcrlst. 25c, S$c aad $1, or ead th.1 A.A vrttk 19e (stxatpc er liver) Jera larce free Nxatple. KSOWITOX DAXDBRIX2: CO, CMcsx. miaate. THE. DIUie.VD BltAXT lilies! Ask jour lmci&t for Cnl-che-tcr, Diamond JlrsacLi 1'llls in -Kca aaa bom metalUs boxes, seaietl inax mas Ri! bos. Take bo other. Jfaj- of your JJrnas&tf. AkfefrCin-ClfEiuTESS! ycais known asB;. Safest. Always RcBtbte SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE ! GH1GH s w 5 sSjs fji -F ! 2