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PX PASO HERALD Saturday, August 9, 1913 BBQKEN-IN CBOGES 4 .. r-ii c.... iWZ 01 ,1 . "7 1 1 ziacunct; xcm tJiyuss 1 iou .soouia mow inax 11 Mil hi 0 Fridav Is First Day Without Rain in Week; Ditches. Give Way. T as Cruces. N. M., Af, 9- So f '1 here voterdav, it being the first v this -meek that rain has not fallen. ' 1 ore -was water m tl e B Grande in morning but the Dona Ana and Las i u es ditches had been broken by floods m .in anwa above Dona Ana and not - zreat benefit was derived as other- a -V would fc-ue been, as the amount of t ter is said to have been sufficient to ' 1 1 the numerous ditches. The flow ,1 nnpcd from 1800 cubic feet per seeond t . too cubic feet per seeond in a few The recent rains Ire greatly benefit t s ffi-owmcr crops in this section, and t "fact that there has been a scarcity r water in the Rk Grande has not been i. red as it otherwise would Aave been. Five Cars of Melons Daily. Tli. cantaloupes are turning out fine, a- about five carloads of eanteloupes , r cav are being shipped from 1 i uces and Dona Ana. The ones shipped from Dona Ana go to Isew ork city, w . le the ones shipped from Las Cruces go to Chicago and various northern PC1E " Literary Society Meets. The meeting of the High School Lit ..;. -was ImiM in the Central school building last night. A large num- J fcer of the scholars were pumno j- era! visitors. The program was as fol lows: Music by the orchestra. A review of a book entitled "Book of To Thousand," by Alda O'Hara. Humorous reading bv Frances Burke from 'Pecks Bad Boy." ong bv the society, Iso. 47. Tie minutes' speech by Roy Bean. -oeal solo bv Marion Wade, aeeom Tvmed bv Winifred Crater, pianist, and TVnf TWininir. T-ifllinist. AI.-I ., ...... ,, i M., I Debate, question, "Kesoivea, ui. "- tr life is more pleasurable than city i life " Affirmative, Kenneth McClearnon, tm t. mnW stirJ Charles Ollara: : restive, Isabel Brown, Lyman Hoagland and Miss Heinreieb- The decision of the judges, who were Pro r vloan, Henry Stoes and Sam Bean, Tm fnr the ffirmative. When the de li-te was open for general discussion re- TLC 01a.m TT-rTr marks were maoe oy .rro. om", if"J -toes. Dr. O. Bron and X. C. O'Hara who all commended the speakers and the societv on its general conduct. The" next meeting will be on August 22 and during the teachers' institute, which is to be held here. The question fnr debate that time will be: "Re solved, that the schools of the country J Should ue unaer luuenu buiuuivu eterday there were nine refrigerator cars on the siding" at Las Cruces await ing shipment- Three cars of cantaloupes were shipped to Chicago yesterday. Entertains at Bridge. Mrs. Clem DeWigeins entertained sev eral friends at bridge at her pleasant country home near here. The invitations were unique and were written in verse. The invited guests were: Mrs. R. G Faulkner, Mrs Nigel Flint. Mrs. Petin, Airs Frank M. Hayner. Mrs. Oscar B. J olimsn, Mrs. Winters, Mrs C. M. Poole, Ar. Frank Ielas. Mrs. John McCInre, Mrs -Seale. Mrs. Dvne. Mrs. Ed. Ehle, 'Mrs V. B. Hinton, Mrs. Fred Hes. Mrs. j Cordon H. McCbv, Mrs. Evans, Mrs. Joe i W Lowe, Mrs. Edward C. Wade, jr., Mrs. . Cornell. Mrs. Vincent B. May. Mrs. E. Dav. Mrs. Paul Ruhle. Miss Henrietta j Pet in Las Cruces, and Mrs. John Lemon an" Miss tsraaiev. or fit raso. TJie house was decorated with sun fi'.u. -s and ferns. The hiehest score in bridge was won by Mrs. Nigel Flint and the lowest by Mrs. Frank M., Hayner. The score cards were hand painted in sunflower design. The eolor scheme, yel low and green, was carted out in the re treshments, consisting of a three course luncheon. After refreshments, each guesr, low ?nd gr-eea, was earried out in the re cipe m a book which was presented to Mrs. Paul Ruhle, the guest of honor rnd a bride, being formerly Miss Bertha Brown. ''land painted boxes filled with salted nuts were given to the guests as favors. The Ladies of the Maccabees of the World held a meeting in Elks' hall yes terdav afternoon. The next meeting will be held on August 22, at the same place. Mrs. P. B. Hinton entertained the Bridge club of which she is a member, at her home on Hinton avenue, in Cox's ti 5"-d addition. Health Seeker Dies. John F. Eeogh died at the home of Mrs Brewen, near town, aftr a resi dence of five months here. His remains were sent by express last night to hi3 f"-mer home in Jersey City, X. J. He was about 30 years of age. He was a li"-Uh seeker. Henry C. McCowen, a graduate of State college, and now located at Amar illo Tex, arrived here yesterday to -visit his parents. Mr. and Mrs. Duncan McCowen. Mr. McCowen is assistant ag ricultural demonstrator for the Santa Fe system. Paul Ruhle will soon move from apart ments in the Don Bernardo hotel to the north half of the Hosmer cottage, on Miranda avenue. Bnino. the great mastiff watch' dog of the Peterson ranch, was shot while awav from the ranch yesterday morn ing Mr. and Mrs. M. Peterson left town Kst evening for the Las Cruces colony at Soledad canyon. They were going From the Royal Tailors - I T'S your move to select a Fall S uit, or Overcoat pattern And I have it ready for you in the Royal Tailors' Fall Styles and woolens direct from the throbbing heart of the Fashion World in New York and Chicago Now awaits your keenest inspection. There never was a more beautiful variety of color blendings in Fabrics ever shown before. Utterly new and yet in excellent taste and harmony. There are hundrds of selections, exquisite in richness and yet quietly refined for those who want dignity with distinctiveness. I invite all to the style show from August 24th to 31st. LOCAL HOME OF ROYAL TAILORS 110 TEXAS STREET PEARSON HI HIGH 30.1 U. S. Department of Agriculture. ,o.o WEATHER BUREAU 30.1 NfeaA Pv L. L,ow o-W A T? JS&StfSZp vn NUu v VV III VSV ; rt&AytXK. WpW j. - vklfrk r EXPLANATORY KQTE& Obseiratkms tat en at 8 a.tru. sarestr-flfia me rktlan time. Air pressure reduced to sea If Tel. Hobass (conttaiioaa llnei) pass through points of eqa&I air pressure. Isotherms (dotted lines) pass through points of equal temperature; drawn onlr fbr zero, freiinc. S0, and 100. O clear; Q partly clondv: cloudy; rain; () snow; report missing. Arrows fly with the wind. First figures, temper ature; second, precipitation of .01 Inch or more for past 2i hours; third. maTimnm wind veloo-lty. to camp on the way, when darkness overtook them. A. B. Carter, of DeBidder, La., wa3 in town yesterday. E. L. Wadsworth and B. A. Kuth, of San Marcial, were here on business Fri day. Mrs. J. K. Candler and daughter, Hiss Gertrude, went to Tularosa this morning to visit her mother, Mrs. C. B. Holden. Later they will go to Cloudcroft and Alamogordo. Patricio Lopez went to Anthony this morning, where he is organizing a lodge of the Fraternal Union of America. Miss Maria Padillo went to El Paso this morning to visit her aunt, Mrs. Salome Gonzales, on Florence street, ex pecting to he gone about one week. C. H. H. Smith went to El Paso thi morning to spend the day looking after business interests. W .Bl Paso. Saturday, Au. 3, 1913. Forecasts. El Paso a8 vicinity Cloudy tonight and Sunday. New Mexico Generally fair south. portion, local thundershowers north J Y. portion tonight or Sunday; cooler Sun- I 'iff West Texas Generally cloudy to ?OUCTKttft ii t-i ri CRAVEt IS HAULED FOR IMPROVING PARK ROAD Mesilla Park, N. 1L, Aug 9. Loads of gravel are being hauled daily from the pits southeast of the college to be used on the road from Mesilla Park to Las Cruces. Mrs. John M. Iewis, of Dallas,Texas, is visiting Mrs. C. & Taylor. Oscar Wilson add bride passed through the Park en route to his for mer home at Lake Valley, from Globe, Ariz where he is in the employe of a railroad company. The young couple will return to Globe after a month's visit. Rev. E. E. Mathes. of the Presby terian church, has returned from a sir weeks' visit with friends at Roswell. A reception was held at the home of J. G. Stewart, at which Misses Mar garet Mathes and Esther Stewart re ceived. Sunday night an auto party of eight will go from here to La Mesa for the last service to be siven at the St. John's church by Rev. Hunter Lewis. Mrs. A. H. Badenoch will sins. Mrs. G. It Coats and son. Junior, are spending a part of the summer at the Pacific coast The Presbyterian church held an Ice cream social last night. E. E. Talber, the druggist, has moved into his new property. Mrs. A. Strode is expecting to moTe soon from Dona Ana to Mesilla Park. Misses Maggie and Onis Longbol tom have returned from a few -weeks" Tisit with friends at Capltan, N. M. Mrs. Allen Ricketson, formerly of Lake Valley, has moved into the large Hager house. The Hager family now occupy one of the nearby houses. Mrs. J. C. Robins held a reception in honor of Mrs. R H. Hatton. She was assisted by Mrs. A. Strode. Rev. Leonidas Smith, who has re ceived an appointment from the pre siding bishop. D. S. Tuttle, will spend Monday and Tuesday of next week with Rev. Hunter Lewis, of the Saint James Episcopal church. Friday night Mrs. A. Ricketson left for a visit at her old home in Lake Valley. night and Sunday: showers in north portion tonight or Sunday; cooler in north portion Sunday. Local Data. El Paso Readings. Today Yest'dy G a. m. B n m. Barometer (sea level) 29.76 29.61 .ury thermometer 72 Wet thermometer 61 Dew point 55 Relative humidity 55 Direction of wind W Velocity of wind S tatate of weather Clean Pt. cld'y Rainfall last 24 hrs 0 .... Highest temp, last 24 hrs 92 '.'... Lowest temp, last 12 hrs.. 72 .... ItlTer. No water running. SO 64 4S 24 W 9 ' -.- - 1 Saturday il j I Specials mM I High Grade Meats Hw .feTiiiS, 1 I I Kightly Priced m if in W ffT hw ' 1 if Yiiin k j j. b.c xviu uuui, -a - r an w T17" per lb JL I 'J4K. Sm Rj S H Rami) Rrtftst -ana .. ' -1 9 , Ml per lb IOC Railroad News Of the Southvest The Herald will welcome contri butions or corrections of any errors in this column. Sign name to all communications, and It ,will not be published. engineer of the El i-aso board, is back on the board, after having made a through freight trip on engine 2712 in regular engineer W. O. Olsen's turn, who is running In passenger ser vice for a month. F. W. Hoffman, Southern Pacific ex tra fireman, is back on the El Paso extra board, after havlnsr made a I through freight trip on engine 2712, i with engineer Ed Laymen. J Bob Stinson, Southern Pacific ex , tra fireman, who was used about two I weeks ago on one of the new engines mat were messengered to Los Ange les, dead-headed into El Paso last night, and will be assigned to the El Paso extra board. Nine cars of stock arrived over the Southern Pacific last night and were transferred to the Southwestern at Kl Paso. They were consigned to Rock Island points. Side Heights Without first being shown all sides of a question you are in no position to make a wise decision. Without first being shown mm; you are in no position, to make a wise Investment or Home site selection. After all is said regarding El Paso's progress after all the' demonstrations of the desirability of home owning have been made after all the very desirable El Paso prop erties have been shown and their claims heard you are all the more convinced that Morning Side Heights Is The- reemioeot uooortimitv -for the Home Builder or Investor today. We use facts for our selling talk and leave the truth of this to your good sense and observation. SOLE AGENTS man Investment a I I i in mi i ii i i iiir Phone 550 104 San Arifdnto Spending Husband's Money Girls Are ot Glcn the Rlcht Sort of Education In Money Mat ters Theiie Days. Br Dorothy DIs w1 Shoulder Boast, per Mi Leg of Mutton, per )b 12'2C ..15c Mutton Chops, per lb ilamimrjjer Steak, IK r ib Home made Snusafrp per Ib IOC Spring Chickens, 35c to 60c EaJi. 17'2C 12'2C HEHS ALIVE AND DRESSED TO ORDER. OPITZ MARKET 213 N. Sinton St. ' Bell Phone 255 I. N. Griffin, general freight asent of the Texas & Pacific railroad com pany, with headquarters at Dallas, Tex., passed through El Paso yester day, en route to the Pacific coast, where he will spend a short vacation at the California beaches. C. P. engine 3016 is out of the El Paco back shops, after a general over dauling and painting. It went out in double-head service last night in charge of extra engineer R. M. Luse and fireman J. Stickler. It is con signed to Sacramento, where It will be assigned to regular passpnger service. C. P. engine 3022 is out of the El Paso back shops, after a general over hauling and painting and is being broken today by extra engineer J. Horton, and extra fireman W. ilc Creery. After it is properly broken in, it will be assigned to passenger service, between El Paso and Lords burg, on the Tucson division. H. L. Spence. regular G. H. & S. A. yard engineer, is laying off for a few days, and extra fireman W. R. Calen der is being .used as engineer on the day house engine, in his place. The G. H. & S. A. is usinir an .a switch engine today, O. T. Ward is running it and extra fireman W. Barksdale is firing for him. L. J. Yager. G. H. & S. A. f! reman was used in the yards last nihf n I the 5 o'clock house engine, with reg ular eiiiueer xa. vjarroil. Johnnie Howard. G. H. & a a in. I surance writer, with headquarters at can Aniunio, xexas, is in the city for several, dajs, on company business J Fehily, extra engineer for the Southern Pacific at El Paso, is mak ing a through freight trip on engine 2786 Extra fireman W. C. Henrich is firing for him. HT?rT I,e,1?lan' extl-a fireman for the u. ii. & fa. A..t El Paso, worked In the yards last night, on the 8 o'clock lead engine, with regular engineer J l xvltZ. M. D. Gandy. extra engineer for the Southern Pacific at El PBr i. r. I l-?ca t,hroueh freight trip on engine -.-u, in icB"t engineer Frank Karll's turn t- ,o , ran. , J leave of absenc u -uuo-maij, ouuinem l'acific extra 1 iwwBTwaiUMiJLMajafcuafiai-j-.. -"jumj-m TELEPHONE COMPLAINTS EARLY Subscribers failing to get The Herald promptly should call ai the office or telephone No. 2030 before 6:30 p. m. All complaints will receive prompt attention- HEN a young man asks a girl's hand in marriage the first question that her father puts to him is, "Can you support my daugh ter In comfort?" No kind of thoughtful parent, how ever, takes the trouble to ask a pros pective bride, "Can you spend wisely and judiciously my son's hard earned money?" Yet the one thing is just as im portant aa the other. "When you see the young wife of a man on a moderate salary always dressed up in the very latest cut in fashion, when you meet her at mat inees every week and watch her hav ing tea at a smart hotel afterward, when you encounter her in the butcher shop negligently ordering sweetbreads and squabs, you don't have to go to any fortune teller to forecast the fu ture of her husband and herself. Von Can' Forecast. On the other hand, when you see the wife of a poor young man who does her own housework and makes her own frocks and who buys the cheap cuts of meat at the butcher shop and is particular about having the bones and the trimmings sent home, jou are equally able to forecast the future for her and her husband. And you see diamonds and motor cars festooning her horizon along about the time she is 50. There Is nothinc: new In these state ments. Everybody has seen hundreds nt Knrrh res. Evervhoilv Mn recite to you dozens of instances in their personal knowledge or men who nave been ruined by their wives" extrava gance or made by their wives' thrift. Every mother and father pray that their own son will get a 'wife who has the saving bank habit instead of the bargain counter mania, yet no body raises a, finger to prevent a ca tastrophe that threatens every man who gets married and every family that is started. "When a woman is wasteful and ex travagant, and throws her husband's good money away, we blame her, and say all the hard things about her that we can think of. It's a cruel in justice. It Isn't her fault. It's the fault of the idiotic way in which we bring girls up. We don't teach them the value of money We don't teach them how to spend it. and to expect them to make a wise use of it is as unreasonable as to exoect a land lubber to know how to pilot a ship. o Experience. It Isn't the girl's fault that she doesn't know how to spend her hus band s money wisely. Its the fault or her parents who have not taught her one of the most important lessons in life. That this is true is abundantly proved by the fact that women who have earned their own living before they were married, and who have thus learned how to handle money, are almost invariably economical and thrifty managers and helps to their husbands. There is no greater injustice in the world than the way women are treated about money. A woman without money is the most forlorn and piteous creature on earth. Boys a'e given money of their own when they are little fellows in order that they may learn to handle It, but the little girl is left to find out this important piece of knowledge the best way she can. A boy is fitted for some occupation whereby he may support himself In comfort. A girl's living ia left to chance. She Isn't taught any way by which she can keep herself out of the poor house if she doesn't marry, or if her husband should die and leave her penniless. A rich man leaves hia daughter a fortune, but he has not taught her one thing about how to take care of it. and she is left to the mercy of ex ecutors and lawyers and she doesn't even know enough to keep herself from being swindled. Perhaps some day men will realize that the onlv way to protect them selves is to teach women how to handle monei bv giving them a defin ite sum for their own, instead of mak ing tem do the mendicant act for oor r-erit the-k sret Th n we shall h ir i. c ihout cxTnaean! jups Tt's f ignorance, pot vicionsness. that makes P- :-;-: :iri m m en - &?&' & Yex&ihzmg, Points1 - r A J JE?5 KJ1 HKJISSf I BSE l&Good Ventilation PaysJ The need of providing good ventilatioji for your j, office, factory, store or home may not be af new thought to you but have you yet crystal-1 lized that thought into Action? G-E Ventilating Outfits are a profitable Investment they are efficient," compact, inexpensive, reliable and silent. yj We are prepared to install G-E Ventilating outfits aniwherCyOi any capacity, ior any service, El Paso Electric Railvay Co. Electric Building Phone 2323 M-lA TEMPLAR TRAIN IN A COLLISION So Templars Vrt Injured When Light Hngine strikes Passenger Train, Bat Engineer I Hurt. Monument, Colo., Aug. 9 Denver & Rio Grande passenger train So. 12, northbound, collided head-on with a light engine three miles south nt here at Id:30 oclock this morning. The train I carnea K-mgnts Templar delegations en route to Denver for the conclave. Aside from a severe jolting none of the passengers were hurt. Engineer White, of the passenger train, was cut about the head. The light engine had been ordered to meet the passenger train at Monu ment to help pull the train un the grade to Palmer lake. The collision occurred on a sha- curve. ,,The engines and mail cars we'j slightly damaged. F. E. Blssers, G. H. 4 S. A., regx. fireman, has taken a M day's leavc absence. I Womanhood OK MOTHEBfiOOD Assist Nature now and then, with a gentle cathartic Dr. Pierce's Pleas and Pellets itme up and invigor ate liver and bowels. Be sure ycu get what ,:- ;', for. The women who have used ? Dr. Pierce's Favorite i evunution Will tft vmi that it freed them from pain Helped them over nainfiil narimfe in their hf e and saved them many a day of anguish and misery. This tonic, in liquid form, was devised over 40 years ago for the womanly system, by R.V. nerce, M. D., and has been sold ever since by dealers in medicine to the benefit of many thousand women. -iPrefer-jfou can obtain Dr. Pierces Favorite Prescription tablets at our druggist at $2 per box, sfeo in 50c 9toeoreftd50one cent stamps to Dr. R. V. Pierce, BuSalo, N. Y. for trial box. y omen waste munsy. srwraa 'wffiE5i.'i1S?53