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ALBUQUERQUE EVENING HERALD IBITOJUAL SIOXION. AL1UQUIXQUI, HEW MEXICO, 7USAT, DECEMBER 15, 19U. PART TWO. CLASSIFIED, INSURANCE HEADS MEET 10 DISCUSS CONSERVATION OF LIFE Representatives of About Twenty Million Policy Holders Awemblc in Hew York City Today. STATE IMSURAKOE IS VIGOROUSLY OPPOSED What Is Heeded, It Is Said, Is Not to Deetrey Frsnt Sys tem But to Conduct Its Af fairs Differently. New York, Dec. IS. With the treat tc ot nearly at! the twenty million Wo insurance policy holder of the United Htate and Canada In attend ance, tho association or Ufa Insuranco Presidents began It flfth annual con ventlon hero thla mo?nlng. Problem iteallg with tho prolonging of human life In this country ana witn tne gen eral conservation of the life Insurance business lira to bo discussed during the two day session. The speakers tn. elude lion. William II. Hotchklss, New York superintendent of Insurance; President Oscar Dowllng of tho lu Ulatia state health board; Or. J. A. Mncdonald of tho Toronto. Qnt., Glo'.ic; Ir. Luther 11. Oullck, director of the department of Child lfyiiluno of thu Itussell Ha Bo foundation. Now York; Hon. r. W I'otter of Kprlngtlnld, 1111 nol. president of the National Con ventlon of Insurance Commissioners; P D. Oold. Jr.. of Katelih. N. C, prc. Idem of the American convention-, u Uoldman of Toronto, Ont . president of th Canadian Life Iniuranee Olfl- ccra' association, Print'dml Alexander O. Humphrey of Mevens institute or Technology, Hoboken. N. J. Hon Illchard V. Llndabdry of Newark. N. J.s John It. Hegoman and W. A. Day of New York and Charts-. Jeromo Ed wards of Brooklyn. Mate Insurance wai vigorously op posed by Insuranco Superintendent Hotchkle or Now York, who li chair man of the executive committee of th National Convention (it Insurance CommWudeners. "Are, we Americans read will wo j5ver.beTdy---tor U7" he said. ''rhtrsHy. no. WIco. !n, next month, Inaugurate a system whereby the statu Itself will grant life 1, surnnce and nnnUltU to resident. ye, even to strangers within hvr K'.tt e without, however, n ydt tno "ob ligation assumed to ten that tht In ilemnlty la paid. Commission nro at work In other date wt I., duubtlt-, ftlmllar stntulos In view. The growth of political socialism sugger intiro ex. pitlmonta of the ame kind. The present drift la unmUtakabl". "What la needed by our peoph In no' the submergence of thla great In stitution In sovereignty, but the proper co-ordination of Insurance and gov ernment. Each idiould do for the other only what each can do hotter than the other, tn soma thingsun derwriting and adjustment, for In stance Insurance by private corpor ation ha been eminently successful. Tho very nature of these thing rnnkc Impossible tliolr econemlo accnmpllsn n.ent through the ordinary processes or government. The, the Mate should, nave for helpful upnrMn, let alone, Hut whero corporate Initiative haa failed, the state sfcettitf co-opcrato with It creatures. In some Holds In your now tea than In any other competitive practice prevent rate making that la level wK economic cost. The temptation tfl withhold too much for salary or overhead charge, or to pay too much fln far toa mtii'ii for auslnein, hi ever present, Hence, home offlee iMebursonunts, generally, and commkon payment arc In omo quarter, Wgjher than can be Justified by the sevke performed A results, so-cark-d, gcntlomcn'tf agreement to maintain rate thus swollen are branded M trust, ami, despite their exigence, rato wara aro wnged which proSt the few out post tino that adjustment of premium charge to economic eot which I w fjntlal to publlo satisfaction. Save, perhaps, In tho life field, and hero tho state haa already aoa Insurance by private corporations has not In these particular flood in titt. Here, therefore, government has n duty. It must 'end a hand. Indeed, wl Ik leaving to Its insurnnco corpor ations all technical and specialised functions and making no effort, savo through proper watchfulness, to Inter. fere with theso factors In the rate charged, will not the state in the not distant future co-itrUfnatc with cor porate Insurance, and regulate or limit expenso or alt kinds? If It does not, tho present drift toward, state Insur ance serins likely to continue, r or. whatever b tho IHW. tne pcopio win not long pay far the Insuranco of tho futuro more thin such service I right ly worth. "How many insurnnco men even know that, while ntnte life Insurance ha been In force In Now Steals nil mnro than forty year, Its early auc cesa ha not been maintained, ita pres ent sltuntlon I unsatisfactory, it al leged reduced cxpenso ratio in dun more to II Inertia than Iti elllclency, and- that, whllo It haw tho presllgo of n governmental Institution, the proportion or atato In eurance to total insurance In forco In that dominion I ten and leas each year? "Hfls lnuranco done anything to make It plain that tlio boasted statu Insurance system In Germany la de tenting Its object by obliterating the line between compensation arid char ity, or sought to cntphaftlxa the dan gers that lurk In an Ituturonca proposal where, a In Germany, either the em ployers' ' contribution to the fund or the cmidweV claims for nicknes, ac- okHnr'itr'H age nro iixcd by a. board of non-experts subject to local or po litical olamer. "Has Imturanco yet pointed out that a flat rate statu Inaurancu law would remov the IneentiVe to we-rk or pre vmtlen, and ieavo tkle kind or con servation to pure philanthropy and ftthMc ff4fit, ilHlim(4ilNl y st4f , Interest? "Has Insurnnco done aught ta re veal the many faUHrew of government, where Ik aU4 has taken over or aought to compete with Individual In itiative in oven a ttuasl-publlo busi ness? "Htta Insufanra tHrvcKsd attention to the probacy ttei ipnn tho money ur trran ui KoverntRnni, u, ai nrai fuw, then more, and finally, all tho insurance haaurrt of Mtt th people In nil th- atte ate awumed by government? "Ha Insurnnco direct public at tention to the quite unbearable strain which wuJ4 be nut upon existing governmental function and depart mentsMy, in u tt Uk New York should there be added thereto even one of the Important Inawance lane? "Above all, what haa Insurance done to blazon the absurdity of a soelal acr vlco whoso work must bo In motttod aclentlric, whoso rate must rccognlxe conditions Infinitely diverse nnd an ex perience fairly encyclopaedic, and who adjustment with tho peoplu mmt ho wltnout fear or favor or such n system being taken away rrom pres ent agencies or great skill, tho tnaur ntico operation of today, and remit tal to our American system or politic, partisanship and pull? "If Insurance companies of all kind would, for tho common good, but mako a sorloiw and effective ef fort to economlzo on present Items or expense, so thut, without Increasing burdens, u considerable sum could an nunllj during tho next ten year bo apportioned for and spent In n com prehensive campaign nf education; 11 Just a llttlo of tho energy now exerted In compctlttvu practice could be put. Into such a cnmpnlgni and, most or nil, lr tho grrnl nrmy or ugenta their company allegiance, for n time, nut asidecould bo mobilized Into it mighty force of trained Insurnnco teachers present prejudice against; Insurnnco companies would consider ably vanish, and, with their selfish In. terest quickened by knowledge, tho pcoplii at this nation would put ctato Insurance in alt It forms forever aside" PREDICTS A GREAT CIVIL WAR Job Harriman, Defeated Can didate far Mayor of Los An gelea, Sees Only Gloom in Future of Country. 4tM t-HH i Now is the Time to Buy it as : Your Christmas Clothes ! We make clethw to meet tke requirements of all sorts ef men, and we satisfy tkem all, mmum of our leng txperienee in making Xen's Cloth. Wherticr yon find our Clothes you ahe find Stylt, Quality i Stroke the three necessities for clothes sttisfocthn Wky ekeuld yen pay more money wken we will give yen all tkat geee te make a first elaee suit. Vak rioe ef any weavee yen ekeew, fabrics tkat kave k4y and wiil kU tkeir kafi; fakriee made ef pure lf- : ; fibre wm! tkat will wear m leng ae yen will expeet : : tkem U, and laet but net leaet, Werkmanskip tkat will ; tend tke ket and Fit tkat k a Pit. Any suit in enr keuse wHk all tkeee requirement! fer $15.00 NATIONAL WOOLEN MILLS MAKKRS OF CLOTHES WE SELL sr44-H KamHy haa nerd of a ge4 lttlaSdKU HUuM. War mm Ml. MNM T 1 m. ijis et Ike muscle ni rhn I mkta Mm there U none hotter tfcH 4444 4 )4-e-- OiwwaisrlaW. Hold hy all IIS WEST CENTRAL AVENUE m Angeles, Calif., Dec. IB. Civil war, with nil Ita horrifying dotntla ot blood and slaughter, iircdlctt'd In n atuteinunt which Job Ilnrrliuan, do Icatod Socialist candidate lor mayor of I.0 AnKi'lca has Issued, llorrlruan says the McNanmra Incident mark tbo nbandotimcnt of peaceable meth ods to aecuro a readjustment of con dition, and n Rticirllla warfare m tho capitalist clnss by the worker. "Whenovor the maneea ot mankind abandon all hopo ot a peaceable solu tion ot our social probloma we will have present with ua all Urn oleisenta that cauio civil war acd open war late will then commence," he write. "Theae defendanta had abandoned all hopo of a peflceable solution and thus misguided, began n guerrilla war-faro. "How much ot tin i you want? However much we bemoan. J say to you it will increase directly In pro portion as the hope ot tho oppressed Is crashed. "For years I have seen tho hopeless ness nf such a course and at tke same Hnl saw why that eewse M seate- time taken and the warning It should bo to our great movement, I have shown you an astounding Jnct. a grist, If you please, bolng ground from our economic and social mill. "Now, listen u-hllo 1 tell you tho remedy: Tho great American labor movement, including tho socialist ar ty, must merge their political acttv. Ills. Their united power will Inspire an abiding hope, whllo the philoso phy or socialism win rurnisfl tno rea son (or tho Hope and at the samo time a solution of the problem. "After tho election I had a long con ference with Mr. Harrow and the other attorneys. Thuy then showed me, lor the first tlmo .all tho evidence recent, ly developed In the case. Tho web had been aiade complete, Tliero wus no escape. It w&a so conclusive that even J, ! MoNamara could not have been placed on tho stand to deny It. Tho cases would hare required years tn complete. The honest working jicople of this country would havo lmd to nay one uuuion uouars more inr the defense, only to have had tho story of the plea ot guilty written out at length. "Was that, and tho educational ef fect of It and all that would follow In Its trail, tho best? Darrow, Davis. MeNutt and Beott answered 'No, euld they withhold their answer because or our ioeal campaign? Again they answered 'No.' And did not con sult tne. Wtas It wise and proper to give their answer at that time or never? "This attest on cannot bo answored hy me, My word could go no further than theirs with tno public. .My vision mkfht he clouded becauje I was a tnmilKee In tho movement nnd was dt lectlv affected uv t'lls ilJCUIon. "The movement must answor this nuestiea nnd I know It will be k 1 1 Iter nto i. ml fair In Its final answer," "MIM AMD MLIGION" W1KS 0FFX1ED I00ZE New York. Dec. IB, That the New York, campaign or the man and relkj- (ofl forvs-ard movement was not opened with tho aid of a corkscrew Is no faH of tbo Hotel Astor taanagow When the 200 diners took their nteco at the tablet at the opening (Mftfter wt cvealnc they round win a hi atace. wine Ihsta ptae4 where they cowls' noi 1h overlooked, aeti trays In amHMasvce ami match besea fer every am. Some one h4 Miinilersil, some en IMHl expected a hum time, to nil aw'anrawcee, and net a few ot the "wyMm" of tne ekHreneii, not to say mmwiefe of mtermMlemu retnttatlon were niartiM when thev saw the "lay ent." When w4e seoere were not re e4v4 tke waiters oetetttatlously laid the wine earae hiXwn the diners a Heii ami asked, "Do you wish samesnlsur 9 drink?" Net a single or dec we reedvwl. After the sneaking Mwa a rw esgant were lighted, twt they were allowed to die ont when It -wai Been that emeklng was net to OIL IS SUBSTITUTED FOR HL ON THE COAST Many Types ef Burners De vised to Ha4k Crntle Oil or Some ef Ita. Component Hydrotmrtens I.o Angele. CaHf.t Vec. 15. Tho cnmparntlvo .enrol ty tor coal, which has to bo hauled by freight from n long distance nnd consequent!) is expensive, has forced the puofde. or Us Angeles to look to their nelfrtborlng oil Dclda for their fuel supply, 'JMore homes, In dustrlat Institutions ed puollo build ings In Ixts Angolcs arc heated by alt fire than by nny oth?r form or fuel. Nest to oil comes wood, und coal takos third place. The average price of coal In south" orn California I tie a ton, slight fluctuations in price holiiR occasioned by season, the stnlo of tho niurkvt and, other factor, ttxperienct' has nhowti thnt with coal selling tt 110 one can afford to pay seven eight cents a gallon for oil and sttH save money, Hut there 1 another feature that count with householder nnd Is worth bvlnn taken Into coneederallon. That 11, that tho burning ef ,oll Is attended with less trouble, Is elenner, gives a more dependable ami a more easily i regulated heat and eliminate the problem of disposing ot ashes. I'rv rer (MI N Coal. If u largo deposit of coal wero to bo found In southern CaMfurnlu nnd tho coat reduced to 11 point "ual with that of oil, it probably would be many years brfore coal would dlsplaco oil if It evir did. OH burning hits licrti tried out until it I no Inngnr an cx pcrlmont. and It apparently has glvon the greatest satisfaction. Oil Is burned In two forms crudo oil nnd distillate. The use of crudo oil practically Is confined to factories nnd other larse Industrie, because It re quires rather expensive and cumber some apparatus to eetaln tho highest ciilclency from tho fl. One or two device have uppeareit on the market designed to nmke possible the use of crudo oil In home, but their success Is till u matter or controversy. The use or distillate I involved lit 110 such uncertainty. ThU 1 tho form or f'lul ntnst generally used In Ion ngeies residence. When tho easterner, nowly arrived In southern California, deetdo to fol tow examples' of his neighbor who burn oil and begin ta look out for n burner, ho gnds tht.U consumer nro invineu into laciiufra. t.cb n special kind of burner which he be- Htvea Is best, although tho fact I that any ot them will do the work. Several Kindt of Httrncr. There Is a nelf-gencratlng atennt burner, in thnt, ono plpo conveys ill- ctlllutu to the burner nnd another car rlrs water; but tho water plpo pussea over tho burner to that before tho water reaches thf burner It la convert id Into steam, tho force of which, om It escapes, blows the oil Into n spray. In (ill oil burnors, tt may be explain. cd, thn chief purpose sought I to Ml- vtdu the oil Into such rtno particles that they will Ignite readily. There aro other warn to nocomplUh that besides blowing It te bit with ni Jet of steam. Thero Is u rotary burner In which the oil drip upen tlio blades or a ran revolving at high spued; nnd them la tho uruft burner in which tho oil drips on tho edge of a tiny orifice. tnrough which tho hutted air Is runn ing upwards. A fourth typo of burner I called u retort burner,, That work somewhat on the- principle of a ftftso. lino stove, The distillate Is converted Into vapor by being heated In a chum. ber nbovo tho burner. Thl. like tho self-generating steam burner has to be heated beforohunil. The burning or crudo oil has brought forth several other types, t burners, but most of them call fer k)ra tank capacity, high pressure and heavy von. sumption. Ct or the OH, Tho detail of cost w Important. In I4Q Angele. two grndcaef distillate are In us. Ono Is No.' S' stovo dis tillate which In used principally In burnors of the draft type. ' That for about five cents a gHon. vat steam, rotary and retort hnrner, thu all used is No. Si fuel distillate, What Do You Want for Xmas? Whatever It Ii We Have It Good Goods. Reasonable Prices. Furniture -Crockery - Glassware STRONG BROS. complete ;: house :: furnishers strong Slock, second & copper WWVVVVVW'WV,'affss NEW MEXICO HAS A WALDBQN SKIPPED URGE INDIAN POP U MURDER A Preliminary Statement from tke Census Bureau Shows That Over 30,000 Red Men Live in New Stat?. Washington, D. C. Dec. 1C.A pro- llmlnitry statement giving for contin ental United mate the distribution of thu Indian population by stales and territories, a shown hy the J'cturns 1 the Thirteenth Dcci-unlnl re iisttVrlsKett as of Anrlt IS. 1910. wu Issued to day by Director Ourand of the bureau of the census, depurtmcnt of com merce nnd labor. Tho stutlstlc wero tironared under tho MUpertlaton o Wllllum C. Hunt, chief statistician for population In tho ceusu burenu, anil ur subject to later revision. In 1V1U tho Indian population ot continental United Htutca was 305,883, us compared with 237.190 In 1000, nn.t 2tS,:'S3 tn 1890. According to these figures there wu an Increase. In tint Indian population from 1U0O to 1IU of 28,487, or 12 per cent, as compared with it decreasu rrom IS IM) to luuu of II. 057, or t.5 pur cent. The derreusv In tho d caul u 1880-1900 suggests th poKBlbllily that the enumeration in 11)00 wan not so accurate or cmplt'to n In 18V0 or In lliin. For tho 20 year period from 18!)0 to IMfi thnro viun un Increase ot 17. 430 or sown per cunt. Tlio Indian population .n into 1 dl. trlbutod among tho aevcr il steles und territories, urrungud nccordlng to geo. graphical divisions, an follow. New Kngland division- -Maine. 892; New Humpshlro, 3. Vermont, 28 j Mamwcliuselts, 088; ilhode Islaud, 281; Connecticut, 151. " Mlddto Atlantic dlvlslon.Vaw York, 0,0t0; New Jersey, 108. Pennsylvania, 1,503. Gust North Contral division Ohio, 127; Indiana, 279; Illinois, 188; Mich, igan, 7,519; WIconsln, 10,112. Wrst North Centrnl division Minn. cota, 0,053; Iowa. 471; Missouri, 313. I North Dukota, 6,186, Hmith Dakota, 19,137; Nebritsku, 3.502; Kansas, 2,114. Kouth Atlantic division Detawnre, which sells for three nnd arhair cents! ;l .:;' !.!. ' 1 """f a gallon In such i.uant.t.es the aver- 1 irZ' age householder bu)8 It. The amount V,T V!'1mV.m ,i .... . " ... : :l 1 ; ,k-i- Hast Houth t'tntral division Ken ki. .....niiii wii, ik J,wi' leniitssep. .iu, lnvltabl cansciiucnca or carelossnes and Ignorance A little experimenting Jolntd with Intalllgent observation ot tho apparatus soon reveals the secret i of success. I mi jniiiiiiiuiii ou Hw.nm i , At. . .... it. .... .,. .i ...n.nllnn ,.f ,n nnnnriiu. n. Ncw Mi'slco 20,1,73; Arl avenig,; homo coi.tam; maybo ot at f 29 201 ; 3'ISJ; TRIAL TBO Ilnswcll Morning News Tells How Juror in Hyde Case Got Away Under Similar Conditions in 1898. ltowell Morning News.) L.OCUI ciiinniitf was nmm iu .nu ui Hyde trial In Knn.-as City yesterday when it was learned thut Harry Wat "drn'nV h Jlirnr wfin find n?ud6" hi ecapa front tho hotel in which ho wus being cared for, had formerly lived In thl locality nnd thut h had executed n simitar cscupv from Jury service in thl city u number u. yours ngn. queries irom u. Katmfls City paper to UHei-rtiiiu tt such iillegntloii could ho prnvtu ugulnst !!! pcrlmllcal Jury breaker sinned an Investigation of court record to dctcrmlno tho facts iu tiio case and Wuldron was round to havn been Involved In tho trlul of I.o (lrunde I'rutt held In thl city in 1498 Resident or thl community at thut iliito will recall tho circumstance ut- tendnnt upon tho trial. 1'r.ttt wns be ing tried for the murder ot Itud John son, a deputy sheriff of Kddy county whom he was accused of kilting nt Hope. A chnngo or venue wa taken to Clinvcs county, nnd Waldron wnn sworn In a ono or the Juror. Detail ns ta how ho executed hi cscapo flro lucking, but nccordlng to tho best advice obtainable he made hi escnpn In a manner very similar to that omployed at Kansas City- disappearing rrom hU roont whero ha wits under the guard of deputtr, nun 1)1 fscnpo wa not noted until momo little time had claiwil, nnd hu wnw not retaken. I'ratt wa round guilty but at n rehearing or tho enso was neuiiywd. ' Tim Is ftttablished n trlklng- slm llarUrbetwsfl thu two cams, a co IncldOtiiV !i?rf." ti,f, nnVcitlKil tiun so rar, failed to dUoiose Wnl. dron'a full Identity, but thero are In timations that members of his family reside now further down th valley, rltlinr neur Dexter or Itngerman, though exuctl what kin th"" aro tu him Is not estnbllsh' d. Far the best MiSUIa hurmct a tho cllay eall pheae No. 3, V. L. Trimble, 113 North s0a Street. r CUT GLASS An Ideal CKristman Gift Wc have just received a selected line of the famous HAWKE'S OUT GLASS recognized the world over as tho most brilliant and artistic We have it in small, moderate-priced effeots and also in the more elaborate designs. Any woman would take pride in such a gift. I'Sin t'I KOUVMNIIl MIVUX TO KVKKY liADV V1SITOH AT orit sTom:. tiin' N this witnic. Mabamu, DOB: MIssUslppI, 1,233. I West South Central division Ar kansas, 4t0: Ixiulslunu. 780; Okla homa, 74.823: Tcxiifl, 702. Mountain division Montana, 10,745; -.nhu, 3.488; Wyoming. 1.488; Colo three quarts and six gallons art hour. respectively. The six-aeMon flguru stands for a cold day und'an Inexper ienced operator Iru l'ntts, city amokn Inspector ot Lo Angele, give tho cost ot heating an average room In at hotel or apartment house at from one and a hair to two cents for tut eight hour day. tt or thn Ituraeni. The cost of u burner toenailed, In cluding a so, gallon rteeago tank, range from $30 to (0, ieHMltag un type. le, and olher c4iwltowi. It can be Installed In ay furace; In fact, moet r the turnace Used n Ii An gele were manufactured hi the east U are of conventional 4e4n. The stersffe tank used in homes rae in caH4ty from SO lo BOO gallons. All the 41 companies mike ;tlvrrl of I Tn teol at: l uet as coal dealers deliver coal. It aHl dfglhMi,r W tewtly poureit irom,wi wagon joy htH( ihw iNftH a nose into inn mnrage anx. ihi great sy Utah, 3,133; NoVMdu. C.240. I'Ailflc division Washington, 10, 097; Oregon. 5,090: California, 10 371 KvrrimwH hi"i::i.1i hmm. II lbt, gmnulali'il Mtgnr Wl.tHl I CteMfombt niilcrrli', kii . . , , , . I.V tm. ot riiv . . . Stto X nf Ktrlug tM-iiuri Mr Amu JetHltwu'it iMtmiikc flour. ... tin II thw, r iMitntot . ., ....... a.n 91 pmmm iff o)hlcn S.v it Itt-WH i-atiH of milk 'iM- Cleaiie1,wyHtHts, mt Uk . ....Ho fmwf tmtle of pumpkin . . . ihV Wn mr hm1iK u cplctidid nw-ort. Htent nf h44ty good, don't rail to THK MAM. WAI, KIClii:, I'rop. illl kH44i llrM M. kave gnod appetite soundly nnd en- H ooi Hitter, itiNSMe nml liullilfi-. MAYNARD JEWELER SOUTH S1C0ND ST. All the world's a stage We operate the wires Reasonable Rates Good Service The Mountain States Tel. & Tel. Co.