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WESTERN LIDERAL. . . i 'i.!-, i-T-.inen . lit.ORAMAW M"NK', Vice-president, Yv. L. TOOI.HV, V ie pi e!iont. Til F, First National Rank- t 4PITAI. as m nri.n mtn.oao ' l)KPOtlT! v ......... .rtOO.OO XTnlted. States Depository 4 percent, interest paid on Savings Accounts. Corresponrlnnoo i iimted f mm thn who ooiirniiiiete opening Initial or additional atuounts In K "hso. Assets - - - - - $6,000,000 Deposits made by mall are promptly acknowledged. cotts The Ford Agency Roadsters, Touring Cars A Full And Complete Line of Accessories At All Times Official Agents For "Pep" Daily Stage Line Between Lordsburg, Tyrone And Silver City. Save Time And Money xvwwvvwvwwwwwwv $ Make Your Headquarters at the LORDSBURG, NEW MEXICO Steam neat. Hot and Cold Water. Electric T lelits. PRIVATE BATHS. REASONABLE RATES Central Location, Restaurant Adjoining Homes on the Eas 'V ; . I Taicfe ZE3Cea-t!b.er I Contractor, Builder, Estimator I Plans and Estimating Free (i) , v ' Mining Timbers Framed. Mining Wedges made and Sold Milling Machine Work Assayer and Chemist GEORGE W. CAMERON Repreintnt.ve For Fhlpppr to tb L FASO 8MELTEH. 905 Saa FrtnHiA at. Kl Faso, Tx: P. U. HO 48 A. W. Morhingstar, ATTORNEY AT LAW LORDSBURG, NEW MEXICO. M. M. CROCKER, M.D. Dlitrfot fturfrfn Southern Paolflo and ArV lont fc New Mmloo Katlruad. Burrión to A nerl o a Consolidated Copper Co, LORMIDRO NlW MlKIOO. Snlpiuric Acifl Made from tho celebrated 01 If ton Ores. Free from Antimony and Ar eenlo. HIGH Kf, EOT RICA L IXIIflT. Gives more sattafactory resulta In Reduction Works than auy Chemicals ta trie market. A lnnfr freight haul saved to the consumers In both states, Arizona and New Mez. Prices In competition with the Eastern Markets. Arizona Copper Co. CMITTON. AHIZUNA. FAYW00D HOT SPRINGS. for Rheumatism, Stomach Trouble, Kidney Aliments, inflamatlons, Ar terial Hardening. Locomotor A tula, "Nervous Breaking etc. Perfect Treat ment, Perfect. Climate. Health, Plea sure, Large Modern Hotel. Booklet. T. (J. McDZBatOTT. WHITE and ANDREWS Attornaja at Law WASHINGTON LOAN A TRUST BUILDING WASHINGTON, D. C. Special attention to public Lnd and Minina cas es before the General Land Office and Interior Department. PATENTS FOR INVENTIONS Copras uno ah w. KAVírn. rtiir. sakla garag: vviiiiivvwwy,vwwwX Payment Plan i ARTHUR W: HOUCK Assayer and Chemist Agent for Ore Shippers at the Douglas Smelters. GOLD AND MI.VKK BULLION Box 392 355 10th St. DOUGLAS. ARIZONA. Terrell & Black LAWYEES SILVER CITT MEW MEXICO Will be at Lordsburg at tbe oflice of O. W. Marsalls, on the first and third SATURDAY of each mouth for the loovenience of clients MORNINGSTAR & AUGUSTINE Insurance Leading Companies Scottish Union, Firemen'j, Connecticut HOME, PALETINE ' Your Business Solicited Custom Assay Office Critchett & Ferguson Assayers-Chemists-Metallurgists REPRESENTATIVE FOR ORE SHIPPERS P. O. Bos 712 1 Pasa. Texas. asatasssaM ssssVassséU AkauaAu AaááaásBsAássaaáaAuáluást Feed & Livery Stable ! JONES & BURNS Hoantinir stock a-lren rood alianiion. i'i aiislemus" aud diarnua. PHONE 14-2 vwwwwwwvwwvwwwx I Dr. R. L BUVEÍÍS DKNTAli SURIiEON. O0.ce: Brown Block Ptamiil tot. Permanently Located. t LORDSBCHO. NEW MIXICO. t vwvwwvwvwvwwwi F.I'M w w . ri a y nrn, í Kinmr W1IUH M. HIDI.RH. Asst. t (i. T, MooHB Asst. tasuler HUGHES AND FAIRBANKS NAMED BY REPUBLICAN CONVEN TION FOR PRESIDENT AND VICE PRESIDENT. ROOSEVELT DECLINES REFUSES, CONDITIONALLY, NOMI NATION FOR PRESIDENT MADE BY THE PROGRESSIVES. Wrrtrrii í- ul( r t'nlnn Neva Service. Chicago. June 12. The republican Nntlonal Convention, which convened June 7, completed its labor' Saturday by nominating Associate Justice Charles Evans Hughes of tito U. S. Supreme Court, for President, and Charles Warren Fairbanks of Indiana for vice president. The count on the third and final ballot showed: Hughes, 9 !); KooBe velt, 1S: Lodge, 7; DuPont. 5; La Follette, 2; Weeks, 3; absent, 1. To tal, 97. The vote for vice president was: Fairbanks, 8tí:: Burkott of Nebraska, 108, with scattering votes for other men. Almost at the same timo the Repub licans named Justice Hughes In a stampede of the delegations, the Pro- CHARLES EVANS HUGHES. gresblve national convention assem bled in the Auditorium, nominated Theodore Roosevelt for President. The colonel Bent a message to the Progressives saying he could not ac cept nomination at this time. . This action followed the failure of the peace negotiations between the two parties to agree on a fusion nom inee arid the rejection b the Pro gressives of the Republican proposal to make Hughes the common candi date of the factions. Justice Hughes, advised by Chair man Harding by telegraph of his se lection, accepted the nomination, re signed from the bench and sent to the convention a statement of his position on the issues of. the hour, including the fostering of a true Americanism and tho provision of adequate' national defense. John M. Parker of Louisiana was nominated for vice president by iho Progressives and accepted the nomi nation. The men placed in nomination for President on Friday by the Republi cans were United States Supreme Court Justice Hughes, Theodore ItooBevelt, Kllhu Root, Senator J. W. Weeks of Massachusetts, Senator Theodore A. Burton of Ohio, Charles W. Fairbanks of Indiana, Senator Lawrence Y. Sherman of Illinois, Sen ator A. B. Cummins of Iowa, Senator Robert F. LaFollette of Wisconsin, Governor Martin Brumbaugh of Penn sylvania and T. Coleman DuPont of Maryland. First Ballot. Tho first ballot resulted: Hughes, 253V4; Hoosevelt, 65; Root, 103; Cum niliiH, 84; Fairbanks, 74; Sherman, C6; Burton, 7C4; Weeks, 105; Brum baugh, 29; La Follette, 23; Ford, 32; Taft, 14; Borah, 2. Knox, 36; Du Pont, 12; Mlllis. 4; McCall, 1; absent 2 V4 ; not voting, 1. Second Ballot. The result of the second ballot fol lows: Hughes, 3S8V4; Roosevelt, 81; Root, 98; Weeks, 79; Sherman, 65; Fairbanks, 88 Mi; Cummins, 85; LaFol lette, 5; Knox, 36; DuPont, 13; Bur ton, 7C4; Wunamaker, 5; Wood, 1; Harding, 1; Willis, 1: McCall, 1. Lincoln Elector, 86, at Chicago. Chicago. A picturesque character at the Republican national conven tion was William Pitt Kellogg, 80 ,years old, who lives In Washington He was a close personal friend ot President Lincoln, and is said to be the Sole surviving member of the electoral college that named Lincoln President. Kellogg was appointed b President Lincoln to be collector ol customs at New Orleans, and In ISO was elected United States senator and In 1S72 governor. Then be wai again elected senator ..... , ..J TIC KITCHEN Lfel CABINET Oood company, and irninl rnnvrrnK t!on nr tliu ninr-ws uf virtue. Sh-pli-n Alloiu T shall count notltlns; a fnllura but fatluro to du right. t'haa. IIiiKliea. LIGHT DESSERTS. After a heavy meal a dainly cus tard of souffle, something easy of di , gestión, should be served. Coffee Creams. Make a pint of very strong cof fee; cool and add to it a cupful of thin cream, Ufour eggs, slightly beat en, and four tablenpoon fuls of sugar. Strain Into small cups and place In several thicknesses of paper under tbe cups. Put boiling water Into the pan until it reaches half way up to the cups. Set Into a moderate oven and cook gently until the custard is Arm. Serve ice cold with small choco late cakes. Vanilla 8ouffle. Scald a cupful ot milk, seasoned with a fourth of a tea spoonful ot salt In a double boiler and mix in two tabiespoonfuls ot flour and two of butter, creamed together. Cook while stirring for ten minutes. Beat well the yolks of four eggs and three tabiespoonfuls of sugar; pour over the mixture in the double boil er. Flavor with orange rind and set away to cool. Cover closely and a half hour before serving time fold in the stiffly beaten whites of four eggs; bake in a moderate oven 30 minutes. Serve with chocolate sauce. Cream of Almond Pudding. Cook together two tabiespoonfuls of corn starch, three teaspoonfuls ot sugar, three cnpfuls of milk and a dash ot salt; cook ten minutes. Add a fourth ot a pound of almond paste, rubbed smooth with a little of the hot mix ture; add tbe whites of three eggs, beaten stiff and pour into a buttered mold; set In water to bake In a mod erate oven about 30 minutes. Sponfla Pudding. Take a pint of milk, a fourth of a cupful ot sugar, a cupful of flour, a tablespoontul ot butter and three eggs. Mix tbe sugar and flour together, then add a little of the milk while cold; stir It Into the remainder of the milk boiling hot, and let it cook Ave minutes. Cool and add the butter and egg yolks; told in tbe beaten whites and place in a buttered pudding dish set in water to bake half an hour. Serve with a creamy sauce. The aliorteat and suront way to llv with honor In the world, la to ba In reality what we would appear to be: all Miman vlrtuca In. reuse and atrenittheii theinaelvi-a by the practice and experience ot them. Socratea. FOOD FOR THE INVALID. A chafing dish, thermos bottle or a firoUss . cooker are all invaluable helps In caring for the sick. With an alcohol lamp one may heat a lit tle broth or milk, thus saving many times a long trip to the kitchen and back, when time and strength are both valua ble. A nurse to be at her best should never allow herself to get over-tired, for It is thus many serious mistakes have been made in caring for helpless people. When cooking chicken for broth, or In fact for any purpose, scrub it well 'with a small vegetable brush with soda and water, then rinse and wipe dry. Cut in small pieces and put on in cold water, if to be served as broth. Let simmer five hours, strain, cool and remove the fat. This broth, because of tho gelatin in the bones and tendons, will make a thick jolly when cold. . Reheat and add boiled rice or barley; serve with a dash of suit In a pretty cup, piping hot. i Mutton broth should rook five hours and strain, then when cold re move every bit of the fat. Triplex Soup. This is a soup that is such a favorite and so often recom mended by phyBiciaus that it should ho found in every home-nurBing cook book. Use equal quantities of beef, lamb or mutton, and veal; add a pint of water to each pound of meat. Cut the meat in small pieces, adding the bones; cover with cold water and sim mer for four hours. Strain and sea son with salt. Cool to remove the fat before using. A beaten egg may be added to either of the soups, but not allow it to cook at all. Just simply add to tbe hot soup and serve. A ta blespoonful of cream, with a sprin kling of celery salt is liked for variety when added to the chicken broth. In the Days of Superstition. The earliest record of a witch be ing burned to death Is dated 1275, the witch confessing that she fed her off spring the flesh ot babies. At Toulouse, In 1335, 63 persons were ac cused of being witches, eight of whom were burned and tbe others im prisoned for life. In 1324 Petronllla de Mldla was burned at Kilkenny, Ire land, by orders of the bishop of Os sory. Some 75 years later there were wholesale witch prosecutions at Bairna, Switzerland. Pi r 1 () plte,' ,-eialliiiioii and revenga are ao utterly Ignoble, and so sumll and fixil lh aa to be altogether unworthy of belna; noticed or harbored. No ona who foaters such conditions In hla heart can lift himself above the folly and suffering;, and guide hla Ufa aright. Janes Lane Allen. FEW WAYS WITH STEAK. i A lough steak may, by careful cook ing, become very palatable. Take a piece of steak that seems tough and pound ae much flour as Is pos sible to get into it. Sometimes with a small piece of meat a cupful and a half of flour may bo pounded In. Use the edge of a heavy saucer to pound it In then brown It In a little hot fat, add onions it desired, a little hot water and stew on the back part of the stove or in the oven until tendor. Spanish Steak. Take six ripe to matoes or one can, four onions, two chill peppers and one and a halt pounds of round steak. Peel and slice the onions, fry a light brown. Cut the steak In serving-sized pieces and put the onions on top, then over these place the peppers and tomatoes, cut fine; add hot water, cover and cook for half an hour, either In the oven or on the back part or the stove. Ranch Steak. Gash a thick round steak on both sides, rub In flour, brown, sprinkle with three chopped peppers, cover with hot ' water and stew until tender. Baked Round Steak. Take a two pound steak, cut in servlng-slied pieces, score well with a knife. Place In a roasting pan, season, dredge with flour; add a few bits of butter and a slice of onion over the meat. Cover with water, place in the oven and bake Blowly for an hour until tender. Deviled 8teak. Take one large flank steak, one-halt onion, two tabiespoon fuls of butter, two tabiespoonfuls of flour, one teaspoonful of salt, one-quarter of a teaspoonful of pepper, one teaspoonful of mustard, three table spoonfuls of vinegar, two cupfuls of hot water. Melt the butter in a frying pan, slice the onion and fry in the butter. Remove the onion when brown, cut tbe steak In pieces, dip In flour and fry in butter. Remove the meat, add the salt, mustard, vinegar and pepper, then add hot water. Replace the steak, cover closely and let simmer until tender. Dish on a platter with the gravy poured over It and garnish with brown potatoes. The man whs cannot forgive any mortal thing is a green hand In llfB. K. L. Htevanson. The last resort ot wisdom stamps It true; He only earns his freedom and exis tence Who dully conquers them nnew. Adelulde I'roctor. FEW NICE CAKES. When eggs are reasonable a sponge or angel cake Is not at all expensive. as no butter is needed, Kj yet such cakes are not I . "JI always liked. The folio w V'tJ ing is a light, delicious Delicate Yellow Cake. Put a half cupful of butter, a cupful of sugar and tho yolks of seven and the white of one egg into a warm bowl and beat until light; add two cupfuls of flour, sifted, with two teaspoonfuls of baking powder and a half cupful of water, beat two minutes; flavor with grated lenion rind or orange rind and bake in a sheet. Ribbon Cake. Put two tabiespoon fuls of butter, a cupful and a halt of sugar, an egg and two yolks of eggs Into a warm bowl and beat until light; then add two and a half cupfuls of Hour, a cupful of milk, and three tea spoonfuls o' baking powder; beat again hard for two minutes; flavor and divide, pour Into three tins, and re serve the amount for the last tin to add a tablespoontul of cocoa, a tea spoonful each of cloves, nutmeg and a half cupful of chopped raisins. Pour the layers' together with the dark one between; spread with boiled icing. Chocolate Gems. Take two table spoonfuls of butter, a cupful ot sugar, two teaspoonfuls of cocoa, a fourth of a teaspoonful ot cinnamon and two eggs, not beaten; one and a half cup fuls of flour, a teaspoonful of baking powder; beat well "and bake In gem pans; frost with powdered sugar and cream. Strong Soul Never Gives Up. Tbo tendency to porsevere, to per sist In spite of hindrances, discour urements and impossibilities It Is this that In all things distinguishes the strong soul from the weak. Car lyle. One Woman's Thought. "I bate and loathe the sight of the extravagantly 'dressed woman nowa days. She Infuriate me. She has no right to spend a great deal of money on her body." Queea. iff--.;' J No bother to get summer meals with these on hand Y-. V Vienna Style i Sausage and rotted Menu Just open end erve. Excellent for lanjiviches. JmlU n Libby' at ' y out groctr i. Ubby, McNeill & Libby, Chicago WWW. 1 DEFIANCE STARCH Is constantly growing in favor because it Does Not Stick to the Iron and it will not injure the finest fabric. For laundry purposes it has no equal. 16 ot. package 10c ' more starch for ssme money. DEFIANCE STARCH CO.. Omina, Nebruka THI HIOH QUALITY StWINfl MACHINE r TT- NOT SOLO UNDER ANT OTHER NAME Write for fre fcmk let "Point to be considered before purchasing s bewing MjUilne." Learn ttw tACt. THE NEW HOME SEWING MACHINE C0..0RANGE,USS. AUTOMOBILES A.d Parts No Tttlt too Stera. Nn Sand toe Pee Model M--KSS Model staai.las Mortal I 6S-4I,anst factory. AU parta eat rted In Deurer THE TIBBALS-ANDERSON MOTOR CO. lies Hmftdwcr. Ioner. Colorado. LIVK AI.BNTS WANTsU Motorcycle Bargains .t r r xjá sail rebullí motorriTlea. f - ,-Vr Jte mul sell. Ouarantewdl R M' ' ' jj stt'Peed suhjet-t to tnnpeet un. NtaS "MíV livdltlerenl oisrhlnea.iend l ltt and r-iuilo of trie His X. nMliDluMOTOMUo., 14lh 4 Bdwy., Penrojr Westers Dlstrtbatora of Kicelttor Aatocyctes He Had the Price. 1)111 McCabe's Poughkeepsie team was playing tbe Kingston team one day years ago, in tho Atlantic league, and a guy named Fogarty was umpire. In the ninth Inning, with the score tied, two of McCabe's men played out, and as Bill had only one man extra, he had to rush the bleacher scats to find a man to fill in. He drew a big hick, who said he couldn't play, but for the fun could fill in. There were two out at the time and the fans were ex cited. Our Hero, the hick, came to bat. Ha drew three balls and the next one across he pickled over the left field fence for a homer. Instead of running, the fathead stood there while the crowd bowled Itself mad. . McCabe ran out to him and yelled, "Run, you boob, runT The hick turned and faced Rill and In a slow voice drawled: "No, sir, 1 won't run. I'm no coward. I'll admit I lost your ball, but I got the money right here in my pocket to pay for It.". Similar Brand. The fair maid was toying with the new engagement ring. "Did I understand you to say that your first wife's name was Katharine same as mine?" she queried. "Yes, darling," replied the widower. "And," continued the fair one, "I suppose you loved her very dearly?" "Indeed I did," answered the party of the bereaved part. "That is why I am anxious to secure a dupli-Kate." A Man's Worth depends upon his power to produce what the world recognizes as of value. And when you skirmish around you'll find that this power; which is just power of mind and body depends to a remarkable degree on the food one eats. For highest accomplish ment one must have the best values in food food which builda well-balanced bodies and brains. Grape-Nuts . FOOD has that kind of value. It contains all the nutriment of whole wheat and barley, in cluding the important mineral ' elements ao often lacking in the usual dietary. Grape-Nuts comes ready to eat, is easy to digest, nourishing, economical, won-' derfully delicious a help in building men of worth. M There's a Reason n r- v I i