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le-Xews ,AI B“ FEARLESS ' MD WEEKLY iffice of Triindad, Colorado President Manager Editor City Editor * ♦ •UK for itrt principal must agree to spend onip leeway Ih pre »hat the basic Idea >d in its broadest bo homo*’ move rroctiiiK some of , >■ by students of ; was once count little more than bore a majority tier part of the • servants. If It ea neressliy to •• when the re mother usual iii school; ull . 1 through one a I re, the club favorite gang, j a show; the or Ini.vs; the tomo merely ns anted arc los growliig care egard for those* rough homo In •ol no loiiKer city holds too lioyie was lonic ht principles, of hold upon the narrlage bond i■* . k to the homes! heir walls He saf his life by wrap-.j ibout his neck. He i time by Jailer i newspaper report i breathliiß heavily i cell. At the couii ii second attempt t / beating bis head Is and also attempted cap by the men ns of at was discovered In EMBEZZLEMENT RENDERS TO POLICE dice force Is Invcstignt »rd of one \V. 11. Sneed, lered himself Inst night Cunningham, claiming wanted for embezzlement )hlo town. Feed claims to ■nph operator and to have with funds belonging to a ifflre about four years ago. • wanted to be taken back • the music”. Sneed was Hie county Jail and the nu hnvo written tin authori ic Ohio town to ascertain If •ments of the prisoner are tile human refrigerator may inble man in many respects, d keep out of politics. 1 ' DIAMONDS lering a diamond for (Y WAIT? The e absolutely protects harge ordepreciation . HALL, Jeweler OUR R. R. FARE J MONDAY SUPREME COURT FORB DS MERGER (Continued from l’uge One.) crating force of the combination, ■ sin h disposition khould lie made sub ject to the approval and decree of tin* court and any plan for the dispo sition of this Kto* k mu»t he such as to effectually dissolve the unlawful combination tints crented. The court -hull proceed, upon the presentation of any plan to hear the government and defendants and may bring in any additional parties whoso presence may lie necessary to a final divis ion of tin* stock in conformity to the vlcws herein expressed. • As to tlie suggestion tnndelnt tin* oral argument by the Attorney Gen et al I to the nature or the decree, tlint one must be entered which, while destroying the unlawful com bination Insofar as the Union Pacific secured control of the competing line (of road extending from New Orleans and Galves.on to Am Francisco nnd Portland would permit the Union Pa cific to retain the Central Pacific connection from Ogden to San Fran cisco and thereby to control that line to the coast, thus effecting such a continuity of the Union Pacific and Central Pacific from the Missouri river to San Francisco ns was con templated by the acts of congress un der which they were constructed. It should he said that nothing herein shall In* considered a? preventing the government or any pnily Interest, it so dc.-lriu,'. from presenting to the court a plan for accomplishing this result or preventing the court from adopting and giving effect of any such | lan so presented. "Any plan or plans shall be pre sented to the court wlthtnthn months from the receipt of the man date of this court, failing which, or upon the rejection by the court of plan submitted within surh time, the court shall proceed by receivership and sale If necessary to dispose of micli stock in such wise ns to dls :o|\v such unlawful combination. "The government has appealed Ironi the decree which is u genet a I one dismissing the hill. So tar as concerns the attempt to acquire' the Northern Pacific stock and the stock ot the Atchison. Topeka and Santa Kc Hallway company nftcrwariis abandoned, and a certain interest in the San Pedro, lx>* Angeles and Salt Lake railroad company and other lentures of the case dealt with am! disposed of by the decree nnd opin ion of the court hclow. It is suffi cient, without going into these mat ters in detail, to say ns to them we Mud no reason to disturb the action of the court below, hut for the rcn-l sons stated, the decree shall lie re versed and one entered in couform- . Ity to the views herein expressed so ' fat as concernh the acquisition of the Southern Pacific stock. ‘•The court instructed the circuit court to retain its Jurisdiction to see that the decree above outlined is jinde effectual.” Omaha. Neb., Dec. 2.—lntense in terest was shown in railroad circle* relative to the Union Pacific merger decision. Tills was especially true at Union Pacific headquarters where officials in many instances forgot their luncheons in discussion of the decision. President A. L. Mobler was eager for the details of the decision hut declined to comment on it. There was. however, a general atmosphere of relief when the result was known. One prominent official declared it would have the effect ot clearing up .many matters which hnd been much speculated upon. lie also asserted it would put the Union Pacific rall- I road in a position to go aitead with I tunny projects which have been held j up awaiting the outcome of the mer ger suit. BILL TO PENSION EX-PRESIDENTS UP Washington Dec. 2.—The first public hill introduced In the house today was to pension former presi dents of the United States and their widows. It was by Representative Deforest of New York and would pro vide for a former president $2,000 u month. A widow of a former presi dent would receive SI,OOO during her widowhood. A minor child or chil dren of a former president under 21 years,of ago with parents both dead, would get. S2OO a month. Representative Deforest also Intro duced a resolution for a constitu tional amendment to limit the ten ure of tlie presidential office to one term of six year and another repeal ing the news palter publicity section or the Inst postoffice appropriation bill. HICKEY PLEADS NOT GUILTY Buffalo, N. Y., Doc. 2.—J. Frank Hickey, confessed boy murderer, per sonally entered a plea of not guilty to tlie indictment charging him with the murder of Joseph Josephs, the seven-year-old boy at Lackawanna, October 12, 1911, when arraigned in speelnl term of tlie supreme court todny. His trial was set for Deccm- Tin CHRONICLE-NEWS. TRINIDAD, COLORADO. THE SUTTONS’ HOUSE By I. M’DONALD. "I still Insist." said the woman who was doing the talking, "that i was quite within my righta. My busbaud, however. Is firm in the conviction that I fatally ruined my reputation for good breeding. I secretly tblnk that he believes me now beyond the pal<>: Ho la still at the point where he sputters whenever I allude to tho subject! "Of course, I would not go around looking Into people's windows in town. When n person builds a bouse in town you know ifa hia castle and you haven't any right ou the premises without an invitation, but when ho builds one In the country It la a posi tive bid for inspection! "Why, a new red barn Is a subject for dinner tublo conversation for miles nronnd In the country and a house Is a positive godsend, because every body can explutn at length why be doesn’t like It. "The Buttons began building their house out near tho golf links early lu the spring and as Jt was merely across tho road from the eighth hole it was quite tho thlrg from the star) to take a recess at that point and cut across the road and survoy the hole in the ground that was going to In* the But tons’ cellar eventually. All of us de clared every time wo looked ut It that tbo holo was either too big. tuo small, too shallow or too deep and nothing could induce ua to havo a cellar like it. When tho workmen began putting in the foundations It was even more exciting, because there are so many kinds of foundations. Nobody who looked at the Buttons’ foundations approved of them. "We all gurgled with Joy when tho uprights marking off the partitions worn up and wc could see where the rooms were to be. According to va rious golf players who drop;** d over . there la one morning tho living room j was a farce, the dining room u crime, the hall a Joke and tho bedrooms a fright. Most people said tin* house should have faced east instead of west, though there were a few in fa vor of a southern view and some voted for the north, which gave one a view of the railway line and let one keep track of tho trains that went past. "The walla started In cobblestones and that revived flagging interest II sotno one wusn't telling about a cab blcstone house he knew of that fell l down at tho first puff of wind some one cite was explaining how banal nnd Inart latte cobblestones were now that they had grown so common. That the second story was half timbered only fanned tbo flame. Everybody who oat around on the terrace to cool off after a game got all heated up again expostulating against the halt timbered style. "Tho Suttons* house, in abort, was not u building; It was an Institution without which tho golf club would have fallen flat. It made It all the moro comfortable that the Buttons were In Europe and the bonse was helpless. "When tho Fielding girl* came out to spend the day at the club with me what was moro natural than that 1 should take them over to see tho But* ton’s house? I thought they would enjoy gloating over Its deficiencies. Wo tried the front door, but It was fnstened and so was that at the back. Evidently tho carpenters had finished their work nnd left. "‘Anyhow.’ I told tho Fielding girls. ’I want you to get a glimpse of the inside. You never saw the like!’ "So we strolled around to the side and I got a box and stood on tiptoe and flatuned my face against the liv ing room window. “I found myself looking straight into the Interested eyes of a perfectly etrango nfun who seemed very much at home In a wicker chair beside a big table heaped with magazines and books and flowers and surrounded by furniture! If you havo uover peeked into a room In n house that did not belong to you and found tho ownet regarding you meditatively you cannot understand my sensations. "My face remained glued to the pane, because I was too limp to take it away. The strange man aroso and came out at the front door and around to whero we trembled and shrank and regarded us politely. In a voice strangely not my own I stammered foolishly that I was showing my friends the Sutton house. The strange man then announced thnt ho was Mrs. Sutton's brother and living there till the arrival of tho family and he would be charmod— "Were you ever hypnotized? Did you ever dream of doing things that curdled your soul with shame? Well, I curdled as wo trailed after that re lentless man, who took ua from attic to cellar and had tho cruelty to serve tea Into the bargain and act aa though wo hnd called politely instead of peek ing in at windows! "He hadn’t any right to revenge himself so! The inside of the house? My dear, tho house is a perfect dream, a beauty! That's the moat exasperat ing part of It!" Truth and Progress. Whoever hesitates to utter that which he thinks tlie highest truth, lest it should be too much in advanco of the time, may reassure himself by looking at his acta from an Imperson al point of view. . . . Not aa ad ventitious will the wise man regard the faith which is in him. The high est truth he seos he will fearlessly utter. Knowing that, let what may come of It. he la thus playing hia right part In the world —knowing that if be can effect the change he alma at •—well, If not—well alao; though not ■i i—— Apples .a • « . . What the Big Just received: as long _ . ° as they last Store Carnes 9"%** Per = ■ n Dry Good!, Groceries, Meats. Mjg DO* Home-made Bakery Goods, Ready-to-wear for Ladiss and Children, Clothing, A rare bargain at this price b£ Olau and Tinware, Crook eryware. etc., eto. ‘The Emporium smsaas—im D. B. HINDMAN Manager. Tel- Trin. 44-45 216-818 Weft Main. FUNERAL SERVICES FOR H. L RHODES Simple hut Itnprcaalro wore the funeral »i««-h over the remains of liie Into Harry 1.. Rhodes, at tho First M. E. church at Walsc-nhurg yester day afternoon. A host of friends mourned with the widow nnd chil dren, the !«»►» of one held high lu the iMtoem of all with whom the doceased associated In Ills life. Doubly sad was the bereavement bora use of the sudden end of the us* fill life when | the deceased was in the full Idnoiu of i healthy and robust man hood. Rhodes a stable boss at I lie Cedar Hill Coal A: Coke company mine, at Tollerburg was killed last Wednesday afternoon when he fell upon a live wire. Harry L. Rhodes was born In Ot tervllle. Cooper County. Missouri, on June is*. lR7t». He came to Trinidad with bis parents in 1879 and was rnlscd and educated here and lu New Mexico. On April 22. I9iH, lie watt married to Miss Mary Muir at Wal tM-nhurg. lie is survived by Ills wife and two children by his parents. My. and Mrs. Jack Rhodes of Conjillon. N M.. by two brothers. Perry Rhodes and Charles Scott, and a sister Mrs. Hearn. A number of Intimate I friends of the family nnd relatives I from Trinidad and New Mexico points |attended the funeral yesterday, re | turning her last evening, among 'them John Griffin and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Scott of Cimarron. N. M., Mr. and Mrs. Wiley Hutler or tltis city. HOW COWPUNCHER BECAME DIST. JUDGE Fiont the Springfield Herald. Hon. A. Watson Mcllomlrio, re cently elected District Judge, was uniung the pioneers of this county. Il!.s parents located northeast of tills town in the SO’a hih! Watson attend ed the Springfield school, worked for Miser and Whitaker, became an adept cowboy and freighter. An ex perience with a load of egg* and hut-' ter on a trip to La Junta in tlie dreary month of November, was tlie turning point In his career. The trlp was fraught with much hardship on account of a series of blizzards, deep snow nnd intense cold. Return ing to Springfield, Watson bade Ills Irlends adieu ami went to Trinidnd. There lie finished his education, studied law, became a partner of Judge Northcutt, was elected District Attorney, nnd at the last election. District Judge. BIG SURPRISE TO MANY IN TRINIDAD Locnl people are surprised at the QUICK results received from simple buckthorn hark, glycerine, etc., as mixed in Adlcr-l-kn, the German ap pendicitis remedy. The Hausman Drug Co. states thnt this simple rem edy niitiseptieizes the digestive sys tem ond draws off tho Impurities so thoroughly Mint. A SINGLE DOSE re lieves sour stomach, gas on the stom ach and constipation INSTANTLY* A lies Moines man had an attack of muscular rheumatism in his shoulder. A friend advised him to go to I lot Springs. That menus r»n expense of $160.00 or more. Tic sought for a quicker nnd cheaper way to euro it and found it In Chamber lain's liniment. Three days after the first application of this liniment he was well. For sale by all dealers. DEATH AT STONEWALL Juan Sandoval, four year old son of Mr. nnd Mrs. J. Sandoval, of Stone wnll died yesterday morning. The funeral will be held tomorrow morn ing nnd Interment will take place In tho Stonewall cemetery. DECEMBER 2. 1912. Smoke Commercial Two for 250 I * Boquet Cigar rrinidod. | - - ■■ - * =£= JUST ARRIVED Six new styles in Ladies’ Shoes A. H. BUTLER SHOE GO. < ioS North Commercial St. l STOP! I £ You've Paid Kent Long ♦ £ Enough! ? ; Hero la your charier to buy a f V home at a low prlc® and on $ T easy terms: + $2,300.00 —A new, five-room £ ♦ modern cottage. $3OO cash A nnd $26 per month. . 1 $2,760.00 —A new six-room ♦ ♦ modern cottage. $360 cash Z. and $3O per month. £ ♦ Money to Loau——— • ♦ Insurance —Abstract* Bonds ♦ McGlashan 6 Gow • t Suite -I Elks Hlk. Ph. Trin. 247 £ • a Manhattan Cafe C. F. KIRKPATRICK. Prop. OPEN NIGHT AND DAY EVERYTHING IN SEASON And up-to-date. Drop in and gel ac quainted. ; Steinway Tone Often Imitated Never Equalled vY mi ™ /KNa > ... . ■ • * it-vt 11 A. B. Chase; the pin no for the millionairs home. Kohler & Camp bell, Hobart M. Cabel and other pianos for the musicians who know just the "tone nnd touch” they arc looking for but "Seldom find." Victor Vlctrolas, the "Steinway” of all "tone reproducing" machin es. Just now a few especially good values in used pianos. Let us show these at Knight-Camphclls. 138 East Main Street. J. H. COOLEY. In Charge HOTEL CORINADO Announces t" Its friends and palrona that It has Installed a first class A’ In Carte service, with exceedingly moderate prices and a culslue sec* ond to none. In ndditlon to our A’ In Carte bill wo serve from 0 a. m. to 10:30 a. m. special Club breukfnsta. Prices rang lug from 16 cents to 60 cents. A feature Is our noonday luncheon lor 36 rents. An especially attractive Table D’ Note dinner will be served on Bun day from 12:30 to 2 p. m. for 60 ceuta Your putronago resist fully so llclted. ■ * i Call JORDAN FOR QUICK Parcel Delivery and Messenger Service i 216 East Main St or Phone Trin. 423 J. G. GATES Scientific Optician All work done satisfactory Trinidad 89 Red 1812 ROOM S—OPERA HOUSE BLOCK