THE SPANISH-AMERICAN. IX I CUT'S liCIlTornwra, . TRT mmr. . . 11 T. when roa bay ExcellO 0 imnEfti.Eit SUSPENDERS No rubber to rot. Phoaphor ....w curing VIVO ttl treteh. UkYourD.-r for Nu-Way Sasimuleni uarteri and H SuDDorten. ii he hasn't them, eiid direct. ..giving dealer'! num. Ever f pftir aiiaranteed. Is , CO., Mtí4.. AdrUta. IA Mich. laV'vThi COCKROACHES WatarbuK ANTS Easily killed by using the genuine Stearns Electric Paste Also BUBS DEATH to raw not mío. Thaas 5 esta ara the greatest carrion oí disease. Thar ettroy both food and property. READY FOR USE BETTER THAN TRAPS Direction! In It language in ererj box. loa-alieKe. lloi. altelLCO. - MONEY BACK IE IT FAILS Inside Facts. Alice had been to Sunday school for the first time, and had come home filled with Information. She was over beard to say to her six-year-old sister, as she laid a wee hand over her heart. "When you hear something wlte here, you know It Is conscience whispering to you." : - . "No such thing," responded the six-year-old ; "It's Just wind in your turn my." Philadelphia Ledger. Our race Is growing sturdier. Few people now faint. - - . "i hereby solemnly promise to any man s pipe this promise is made in the letter that follows. We had sent Mr. Lewis pome free samples of Edgeworth (aa we do to all who ask for them). Wo didn't know that he was an Edgeworth emoker until we received thi3 letter. ; Niagara Falla, N, Y. Messrs. Larus & Brother Company, Richmond, Va, ' -J " ., , Gentlemen: , I am a smoker of good tobacco for over 40 years and have no hesitancy in saying that of all smoking tobacco Edgeworth in my estimation occupies the first place. Having smoked it for a number of years in many different parts of our ' own good U. S. A., and also Alaska and " Cuba it has always given me supreme moke-satisfaction, at till times, any where, everywhere, regardless of cli maticchanges orany other hocus-pocus. - " My object in sending for the "free samples (if yon will forgive me) was . todecerminewhetherornotEdgeworth wag being made any different that possibly the samples (like whiBkey ', - samples used to be) were the best and .. finest of the whole output. But on smoking the samples I find no difference whatever, and so I am con vinced beyond the shadow of a doubt that Edgeworth alwayt it of the same superior quality in all its forms, and further, that my little joke in asking for and receiving something for noth ing will be excused by you on the plea of curiosity. In thanking you kindly for your courtesy in sending free samples, I hereby solemnly promise to fill any -man's (reasonable-sized) pipe with Edgeworth tobacco of my own pur chase, to convert him to that really ' ' good imoki, "Edgeworth." Very sincerely, (Signed) Arthur John Lewis. Edgeworth samples are no different Irom the regular Edgeworth tobacco you can buy in a store. We wouldn't keep "special" samples any more than we would H have a special kind of tobacco in a dif ferent pouch in our , pocket to hand to a mend. We feel that Edgeworth is ' good enough, that its pleas ant fragrance and mellowness will appeal to fist most pipe-smokers. We do not think our effort is wasted if we send free samples of Edgeworth to a man who doesn't find it exactly suited to his taste. If you never tried Edgeworth, let us send you enough to fill your pipe a few times. Smoke it, and then decide whether or not Edgeworth was "made for you." . Edgeworth is sold in two forms Ready-Rubbed and Plug Slice. There are various sizes to suit all purchasers. When you send for samples, address Larus & Brother Company, 00 South 21st St., Richmond, Va. . To Retail Tobacco Merchants: It your jobber cannot supply you with Edgeworth, Larus & Brother Com pany will gladly send you prepaid by parcel post a one- or two-dozen carton of any size Edgeworth Plug Slice or Ready-Rubbed for the same price you would pay the jobber. YOU ;CAF1 111 stow. Safe tonseu watir. Make jou look young again. At all rood drngglats, 76 cauta, or direct Iron HKttólO-BLLla. Caamista, Memphis, Tena. DI - C O L - Q FOR BURNS CUTS ITCH 60RES 75c at stores; 85c by mail Address New Yprk Drug Concern, New York " U, tit1wiS7NOr20922r Southwest News From All Over New Mexico and Arizona '(Wtitwn Jrttirxper Union Nawi Strria.) The Eighty-five mine of the C. ft A. Company, near Lordsburg, N. M., Is shipping about 7,500 tons of ore to the smelter at Douglas each month. Actual work In the repairing by the State Highway Department of the Apache trail from Phoenix to Globe, via the Roosevelt dam, has started. Between fifty and seventy-five out-of-town delegates were in Nogales for the annual state convention of th Knights of Columbus lodge, held there recently. With the exception of peaches and apricots, the fruit crop In the vicinity of Albuquerque will be the heaviest In many years, according to a report of the county agent of Bernalillo county. Plans are being made for the locat ing of a Trl-State Masonic Sanatorium In Silver City by the Masonic lodges of Texas, Arizona and New Mexico. Elso Paso is also bidding for the big hospital. ..... , ',, The school bonds voted on at the recent special election held in Aztec, carried by a good majority, and as a result that city will soon have one of the best school buildings in the north ern part of the state. The famous old Deadwood mine, in the Mogollón district, will soon be put Into operation, according to news re ceived in Silver City this week. This was once one of the best stiver pro ducers hi the entire southwest. Governor Campbell of Arizona left recently for Washington, D. C, where he went in the interest of the Smlth McNary irrigation bill. He will also go to New York to bring back a mil lion and a half dollars from the sale of anticipation tax bond sales. A series of local campaigns, each conducted by a local organization, but with the Arizona Industrial Congress co-operating to make the, movement state-wide in scope that Is what the "Trade at Home Buy Arizona Pro ducts" week, to be observed May 22 27, will be. . . Necessity for the expenditure of a considerable sum of money on the Im provement of the road fromJRice to the White mountains, thereby giving access to what is generally regarded as among the best mountain scenery of America, was discussed at a meet ing held at the county seat recently.. The, Las Vegas Cowboys' Eeunlon, what pulls its show in Las Vegas July 3, 4, 5, is threatened to become plumb high-browed -and edieated. The reason is because its headquarters Is In the same building as the New Mexi co Normal University, where the two outfits are pullln' together like a pair of Siamese twin mules. The Santa Fé land office has han dled more business than any other in the country for the last four months, A. M. Bergere, register, stated recently. The territory under this of fice includes eight undivided counties, the bigger part of three more and large areas In three others and con tains 4,250,000 areas of vacant land. A million and a half dollars of east ern money will be placed in circula tion In Arizona during the next two months as the result of the action the State Funding and Loan Commission In negotiating the sale of tax antici pation bonds in this amount. The bonds were sold to the Bankers' Trust Co. of New York City at 4 per cent and $100 premium, the Issue to run for sixty days only. Because of the increased mileage oí highways constructed with federal aid, state and county bond funds, the su:. pervlsion of the maintenance of.roads lias become too big a task for one en gineer, State Engineer Thomas Mad dock said. He announced he has divided the work into three districts, with a supervisor for each district. Sisters of the Holy Cross at Dem Ing, NY M., -will convert Camp Cody, training center for the National Guard troops during the word war; In to a $250,000 tubercular hospital. This announcement was made by J. A. Ma honey, . Deming hardware merchant and banker. Trost & Trost, archi tects of El Paso; are drawing the plans for the hospital. A new farming community has been formed by forty-five families from Texas and Oklahoma at Tennja, about forty miles from the town of Grants, New Mexico. All the farmers have been furnished with seed by the coun ty agent and will try out different varieties to determine which Is best suited to the locality. An effort will be made during the summer to make this a postoffice. - William S. Estaver, accused of the murder of Mrs. Anna C. Johnson, wife of a Denver contractor, has been posi tively Identified as Paul V. Hadley, life-termer who escaped from the Oklahoma state penitentiary, it was asserted by Benjamin Stlllman, secre tary of the Arizona state penitentiary at Florence. He was recognized by Charles Fletcher, an Inmate of the Florence institution. . Fletcher, serví Ing a term for robbery, according to Stlllman, also was a prisoner with Estaver, ' alias Hadley, in the Okla homa pt''tentliry. "ON EASYSTREET" Women "Farmerettes" Make Money in Western Canada. Many Are Taking Advantage of the Opportunity Offered by the Fer tile Land and Fine Climate. In many parts of Western Canada are to be found women owning and running farms for themselves, and what is more, making them pay. May Hazlett, an English girl, who lived on a farm in the Touchwood hills, in Sas katchewan, for the past four years, looking after her stock and cultivating her land, is one of these. The farm was originally her brother's homestead, at which time Miss Hazlett was a stenographer. Her brother was killed while fighting with the Canadian forces at Vimy Ridge. Neighbors advised Miss Hazlett to sell the farm, but she decided that she was tired of the "eternal pounding" and became a farm erette. . . Mrs. Mary J; Blackburn, a pioneer woman farmer of Alberta, has Just added 160 cres to her farm near Hardisty. Coming from Eastern Can ada, Mrs. Blackburn homesteaded a quarter section . In 1902. She had two Holstein heifers, a bull,, and $17 In cash. She lived In a tent the first summer and In a sod shock In the winter. Her first crop put her, as she tells the story, "on Easy street." In ten years she had a herd of 60 pure-bred Holstein cattle and was op erating a prosperous dairy. A fine residence has supplanted the sod hut. "I milked my cows, raised my cattle, cut hay and stacked It all by myself," said Mrs. Blackburn. "I started on bare prairie with no money, and made good. I worked hard, but the experi ence was wonderful." ' It has generally been conceded that farming is a man's Job. It has long been considered that a woman's place on the farm was in the house, with a few attendant duties, looking after the chickens and the garden. But times are changing. Demonstrative of the present femi nine Initiative, there are two" young ladies farming extensively and with good profit too, In Western Canada. Some years ago a family located a 160 acre farm In the Oak Lake district, Manitoba Later the father died, leav ing his two daughters and aged wife a mortgaged qunrter section. Instead of selling the effects and moving to town to take employment, the girls decided to work the place. While the mother looked after the household duties the daughters did the farm work. They did the plowing, har rowing, seeding, haying, harvesting, stocking, feeding and other farm oper ations. Except at threshing time, the getting out of wood, the help of man was never sought. Instead of a 160 acre place, with seven horses and ten cattle, which they started with, they have a 1,120-acre farm, twenty-five head of heavy horses and nearly a hun dred head of cattle, mostly pure-breds. Their farm buildings, equipment and well-kept fields would be. objects ot pride to the ówners In any country. Their accomplishment has not only been profitable but pleasant; and they have enjoyed every home advantage. They are two entertaining and bright girls, and have all the feminine charm of womanhood. Their manlike occupa tion has not given them a masculine character or appearance, as some of the older generations might imagine. Their gallant struggle for success sig nifies the truth in tffe oft-repeated maxim of Western Canada, "A little assistance and the soil, with its natur al richness and God's sunshine will soon pay for the land Itself." If you wish to lenrn more of what Western Canada can do, write for a copy of "Canada West" which will be mailed to you free by your nearest Canadian government agent. Adver tisement. , A Bad Combination. i Trollope I know a combination which you may always take It for granted Is bent on mischief. r Needlmm What - combination " Is that? ' " , - ' ' Trollope A small boy and a pin. TAKE ASPIRIN ONLY - M' .... AS TOLD 3Y "BAYER" "Bayer" Introduced Aspirin to the Physicians Over 21 ' - Yttra Ago. " .J y. To get quick relief follow carefully the safe and proper directions in each unbroken package of "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin." This package Is plainly stamped with the safety "Bayer Cross." The "Bayer Cross" means the gen uine, world-famous Aspirin prescribed by physicians for over twenty-one years. Advertisement. The Principal Inducement. "What sends men Into the far cor ners of the world?" asks one of the magazines. Our guess Is that it is the hope of seeing their names in the newspaper headlines. Cuticura for Sore Hands. Soak hands on retiring in the hot suds of Cuticura Soap, dry and rub In Cu ticura Ointment. Remove surplus Ointment with tissue paper. This is only one of the things Cuticura will do If Soap, Ointment and Talcum are used for all toilet purposes. Advertisement. , Complimentary. Lady I want to see some grand pi anos. lo you carry them? 'Clerk Madam, you flutter uie.-Llfe. TO RECONVENE v. OHM. 15111 POWERS' DESIRE FOR UNITED STATES AID PROMPTS ACTION. CONFERENCE ADJOURNS ROBLEMS OF RUSSIA TO BE TAKEN. TO THE HAGUE FOR SETTLEMENT. (Western Newspjjw Union New, Serrlca. ) Genoa. The Genoa economic confer ence will be reconvened on June 15 at The Hague to disciiss Russian ques tions, if . the plan agreed to at a pri vate conference of the Inviting powers be accepted by the subcommission on Russian affairs, r - " This decision to postpone action rel ative to Russia is prompted largely by the desireof the European powers to Induce the United States to. partici pate, and apparently Is merely a means if dissolving -the . Genoa conference without admitting that the differences between France and Great Britain re tarding treatment of Russian problems tannot be reconciled In Genoa. Sir Edward Grlgg announced that this compromise plan suggested by Premier Lloyd George had been ac :epted by the inviting powers and will e passed on by the subcommission on Russian affairs. : .., Only vague details are given as to now the proposed commission or com missions to discuss the Russian ques tion will be formed at The Hague, and !he entire scheme seems to be still in he twilight zone, awaiting America's lecision whether she will help Europe :o straighten out the tangle. In his statement on the proposed mixed commission, Sir Edward Grlgg explained that It was practically Im possible for all the power.s In the con ference to have representatives ; con sequently they would designate a limited number to handle Russian af fairs, just as was done at Genoa, and that the Russians doubtless would be illowed more members in their panel thán any other single power would have In the mixed panel. In the meantime, a truce will oper ate and all the nations are to refrain from making separate agreements with Russia. ,, The economic conference seemingly will last only a few days longer. Sev eral delegates declared that this week would probably bring it to a close. Four months will be the maximum time-of the truce suggested In con aectlon with Russian affairs. The proposed plan of The Hague meeting provides that a decision must be ren dered within three months on June 20 to 26, and an additional month will be allowed within which . the powers may reject or ratify the decision. Consequently October 26 will be the xtreme limit of the truce. Millionaires Arrest Is Ordered. Memphis. immediate arrest of Miles C. Buckingham, wealthy Mem phis capitalist, sportsman and man about town, in connection with the death of his wife, Mrs. Lorraine Buck ingham, prominent social leader and member of a wealthy family, was de manded by T, J. Horton, chief of po lice at . rickens, : Miss., where Mrs. Buckingham was taken after she was shot. Morton made his demand In a telegram to Sheriff Smith at Canton, Madison county, Mississippi, request ing him to have the warrant issued charging Buckingham with murder. Explorers Find Peary's Canal. .Copenhagen Lauge Koch, the Dan ish arctic explorer, could easily have reached the North Pole, says an article published by the National Tidende, written by Aage Bistrup, a prominent Danish exnlOrer.. Bistrup writes, that Koch discovered thé existence of the much-disputed Peary canal, but says It was much further north than was -reported by Admiral Peary. "What Peary saw," he quotes Koch as saying, "was a mighty stretch of valleys, with an immense lalfe only 200 meters above sea level." a Three Dead in Lehigh Wreck. Batayia, N. Y. Three dead, twenty two' In hospitals in this city and a score or more with minor injuries were the casualties in the wreck of the Black Diamond express on the Le high Valley railroad at North Leroy. The wreck, according to Engineer Moser of the Black Diamond, was caused by the attempt of Thomas R. Brodie to get his automobile across the tracks at the Lake street crossing ahead of the train. The train was mov ing at sixty-five miles an hour, Engi neer Moser said. 75,000 Homelegs After Floods. Chicago. About 75,000 persons have been made homeless and 3,500 square . . i i i. . . n r ; ! miles inunuaieu, m urn ictoh oiuwio sippl valley floods, said Marquis Ea ton, chairman of the Chicago Associa tion of Commerce Commission on Floods, and also chairman of the Chi cago Chapter, American Red Cross. The disaster is said to be the most se rious since the Ohio river flood, of 1913., and the rising waters in, the Missis sippi are said to have reached the highest points recorded In history. ffiÉfo ífife íSP ü 10 tor 5c -X ife-. ' Sugar jacket just fíÍfai!& ; . "melts in your mouth," ÍMWA then you get the deleo 1, MlMMh' table gum center. M And with Wrteley three old , 8tandbys also affording friendly CS. Jjkff aid to teeth, throat, breath, sap- Vxf í J petite and digestion. mWtwt I Soothing, thirst-quenching. jX?&SA4?V Í V J Making the, next cigar yíSSV taste te 0-So-Easy to Use Colors Silk, Wool - - and Cotton All at the Same Time Putnam Fadeless Dyes I ' But everybody knows H 1 JflÉ2j I Hat since that box of Taultleu' came, i I My fortune's in my clothe." I 9S i J The Black Sheep. ' Kansas exchange Mr. Brown leaves nine children, eight of whom are hon ored and respected citizens of this state, and the other lives In Missouri. Boston Herald. More Quality for Less Money There never was a time when Goodyear Tires were r so good as now. . They are bigger, heavier and stronger today than ; any earlier Goodyears ever were. , ; Yet Goodyear prices are lower now than ever. Not even in those remembered days before the war did Goodyear Tires sell at such low prices as today. Look at the figures listed below. They represent an average decrease of more than 60 from Goodyear prices of 1910. When you can get these better Goodyears at such prices, there is no question of the tire value at your -command. Your Goodyear Service Station Dealer will tell you that never in his experience as a tire dealer has he known the equal of this value. See him today. 30 3J Cross-Rib Fabric . $10.95 30 1 3VÍ All-Weather A Tread Fabric $1475 30 z3K All-Weather Tread Cord $18.00 Manujachntr't lax extra "Wast era Made lOc Why Pay More Peckafs Dyef Poetry of love is transformed Into prose when matrimony reaches the paregoric stage. Modest merit may be recognized, but it takes longer. - 32 a 35Í All-Weather - rrt Tread Cord $25.50 32 x i All-Weather a , , . Tread Cord $32.40 334 All-Weather Tread Cord $33.40 TTTt for Western Trial'