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A THE RECORD, KENNA, NEW MEXICO. I HO PRESIDENT LEAVES WASHINGTON FOR FEW DAYS' REST IN . ' NEW HAMPSHIRE. .S . RELIEVED ABOUT MEXICO Will Allow Time for Huert to "Think Things Over" Secretary Bry. . an Also Leaves the CarJltal. Washington, D. C President Wll-1 son has left Washington for the sum mer capital at Cornish, N. H., still hopeful of favorable culmination, ot the negotiations undertaken by this country to bring at-out peace In 'Mex ico. - . . Although no affirmative action onJ either side had been reported up to the time- of the President's departure, encouraging dispatches were received from Nelson O'Shauglmessy,. in charge of the American embassy in the t'?ty of Mexico, bearing on the general sit uation. These readied the President a few hours before train time and led him to determine upon a'sliort rest over Labor da. Nothing In tne advices from the City of Mexico gave the' administra tion officlels .cause for particular an xiety and It was the general convic tion that a lull in the diplomatic ex changes would be beneficial to all con cerned. The President, it is known, feels that good may come from an opportunity for the position of this government, us announced in his mes sage of Wednesday, to "sink in." Excitement FUbsidins over the ex change of proptsals and replies would, it was believed, lead to further nego . tlatlons between the officials of Mexico and John Lind, tho personal repre- . sentattve of this government. ' Mr. Lind, it was asserted here, had been instructed fiom Washington to continue to act at his own discre tion as to wlfether he should await developments at Vera "Cruz, or return "to the City of Mexico. Up to a late hour no dispatches had been received at the State Depart ment from 'Mr. L,ind. Secretary Bryan said before leaving for an overnight trip In Pennsylvania, that lie believed the envoy would remain In Vera Cruz. Mr. Llnd, it was reported, probably v fcould fnake the next move In the negotiations, which the President em phatically asserted in his message hud not been. closed." The fact that the City of Mexico officials In their sec ond note of reply had receded from the demand for an exchange of ac credited ambassadors. It was pointed out, left an opening for future moves. The view was expressed that the Camboa reply to the second American note might actuate Mr. Lind to ad dress a' third note to the officials of the Huerta government. Before deciding to go to Cornish. President Wilson discussed the sit uation at length with Cabinet officers, and arrangements were made where by he could be notified at once of any developments. - HODGES EXPLAINS HIS IDEA' Kansas Executive Addresses the Go' ernor's Meeting at Colorado i Springs, Colo. Colorado Springs, Colo. ABsalllns the two house system of legislative government as at present constituted as unrepresentative ana Inefficient, Governor George II. Hodges of kan sas, in an address at the governors' conference, Bitld If the people were to gain control of the lawmaking bodltis of the states they must abolish un wieldy legislatures and elect in their stead a legislative body of not more than sixteen members, who would de vote their entire time to the state's business. , The governor charged that mem bers of one house of the legislature now frequently "traded" with the members of the other house for the passage of certain bills they were per sonally Interested in and neglected giving attention to other Important legislation in which the entire state was concerned. A BLAZING OIL SHIP SINKS The Burghomelster Hachmann, With 600,000 Gallons of Crude Oil Qoes Down at New York. . New York. The steamer Burgno malster Hachmann, with 600,000 gal lons oi crude oil ablaze In its hold, sank to the bottom of Butermllfc Channel with a hiss that sounded f - C p: ti blocks away. Clouds of Bteam rose above it' and hovered a moment over the jtct -ftisre it went-down. The channel Is shallow there and the superstructure remained above the water when the ship settled, but did Cot burn. YOfMN If! TERRIBLE STATE Finds Help in Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound. Bellevue, Ohio.-" I was In a terrible tate before I took Lydia E. Plnkbam'a Vegetable Com pound. My bacld acheduntil I thought it would break, I had pains all over me, nervous feelings and Periodic troubles. II NvJ was very weak and run aown ana was losing hope of ever being well and strong. ' After tak ing Lydia E. Pink- fcam's Vegetable Compound I improved rapidly and today am a well woman. I cannot tell you how happy I feel and I cannot say too much for your Compound. 'Would not be without it in the house if it cost three times the amountl" Mrs. -Cha8. Chapman, R. F. D. No. 7, Belle vue, Ohio. Because your case is a difficult one, doctors having done you no good, do not continue to suffer without giving Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound a, trial. It surely has remedied many cases of female ills, such as inflamma tion, ulceration, displacements, tumors. Irregularities, periodic pains, backache, and it may be exactly what you need. a. The Pinkham record is a proud and peerless one. It is a record of constant victory over the obstinate ills of woman, ills that deal ont despair. It is an es tablished fact that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has restored health to thousands of such suffering women. Why don't you try it if you need such a medicine? Trie dyspeptic, the debilitated, whether from excess of work of mind or body, drink or oosure In MALARIAL telONS, will find Tut ft Pills the most cental rotors tlve over offered the uttering Invalid. Oh Tboeune (1001) While rawllle wi ted to settle In Harrison Uo., Texas, s'lnela dBcneap. PleDl. rain fall. tiuihf.r,rallro ds, oral roules.chnrche .schools. Cor inf. write Ioaaf lea's Haiiaeaa Club, maaU, Ina, His Bust 1 Daniel C. French, the sculpto who was commissioned to make the bust of Ralph Waldo Emerson which Is now in Memorial hall, Harvard unl versitj, tells this story; "At one of the sittings Mr. Emer son rose suddenly and walked over to where the sculptor was working. He looked long and earnestly at the bust, and then, with an inimitably droll expression, cald: "The trouble is the more it resem bles me the worse it looks."- ERUPTION ON ANKLE BURNED Klngsville, Mo. "My trouble began eighteen years ago. Nearly half "of the time there were running sores around my ankle; sometimes it would be two years at a time before they were healed. There were many nights I 'did not sleep because of the great suffering. Tfje sores were deep run ning ones and s6 sore that I could not bear for anything to touch them. They would burn all the time and sting like a' lot of bees were confined around my ankle. I could not bear to scratch it, it was always so sensitive to the touch. I could not let my clothes touch it. r The skin was very red. I made what I called-a cap out of white felt, blotting paper and soft white cloth to hold It in shape. This I wore night and day. - "I tried many remedies for most of the eighteen yearsywlth no effect. Last summer I sent for some Cutlcura Soap and Ointment. The very first time I used Cutlcura Soap and Oint ment I gained relief; they relieved the pain right then. It was three months from (he time I commenced using Cutlcura Soap and Ointment until the sores were entirely healed. I have not been, troubled since and my ankle seems perfectly well." (Signed) Mrs. Charles E. Brooke, Oct. 22, 1912. Cutlcura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sample of each free, with 3 2-p. Skin Book. Address post card "Cutlcura, Dept. L, Boston." Adv. Had to Have It. "I must have a wig." "Why mutt you?" "Because it is a bald necessity." One i satisfactory thing about mar riage is the prelude. BMIUlO of i!!ij!ipjris!!!!!l;!j T IT ff Ifii WAS PRETTY MUCH DIVIDED Really, When You Come to Think of It, Boy Had Not Kept Much of the Original String. "Want more string?" said Mrs. Hop per, as she drew her arms out of the washtub. "Anybody might think I was made of string, the way you go on. Why, I gave you a great long piece only yesterday. Can't think what you do with all the string." "Well, mother," said Dick, "I know what I did with that piece. FirSt you took half of it back again." "I don't want no impertinence. If parcels have to be done .up, whose fault Is that?" "Then Tom took half of what was left to go "shlng for stickly backs in the canal vhere there ain't none." "Tom's your elder brother, and it's your place to give way to him." "Yes, I dare say; but it didn't leave much, and father took .half of that to mend his suspenders what he broke through laughing at the motor acci dent, and sister had three-fifths of what was left after to tie her hair back." - - "Ah, but what did you do with all the rest of it?" "All the rest of it! ,Why, there wasn't but nine Inches Jeft for myself, and aow was I going to make a tele phone. of that?" TIME A MATTER OF MOMENT Something Poultry Dealer Had For gotten to Explain to His Very Much Disappointed Patron. Mr.' Timkins of East Orange had bought six new hens, from a poultry dealer in Flainfield. "Didn't you tell me that you got bb many- as ten and twelve eggs a day from them?" aBked Mr. Timkins a few weeks later. "That's what 1 told you, said the Plalnfield man. "I've had those chickens several weeks cow and I never got more than four eggs on any one day. How do you account for. that?" "Well, I don't know," said the guile ful dealer, "unless It's because you look too often. If you would look only once every three days, you would probably get as many as ten or twelve eggs In a single day, Just as I did." ,ew York Evening Post. Should. Carry a Tin Whistle. Capt. Thomas E. Halls of the Unit ed States secret service, never learn ed to whistle. He simply can't puck er up his lips and make the whist ling sound, and never could. One day when he' was . walking down a Philadelphia street, a well dressed young woman came running in his direction and said to him: "Kind Bir, will. you please whistle at the conductor of that car, bo he will Btop the car for me?" Captain Halls doffed his hat and said: "Madam, I am very unrry, but nature has made it iriiussible for me to comply with your request". The captain says the young woman stopped, looked him over with an air of complete ' misunderstanding, and withered him on the spot with a pair of eyes that flashed all the scorn that a superior being can give for a "mere man." Who Am I? Last year 1 did not want to em barrass my best girl to make her pro pose to me, so asked her to be my wife, and she said: "I would rather be excused," and I like an idiot ex cused her. But I got even with the girl. I married her mother. Then my father married the girl. Now, I don't know who I am. When I married the girl's mother, the 'girl became my daughter, and when my father married my daughter he Is my son. When my father mar ried my daughter she was my moth er. If my father is my son, and my daughter is my mother, who in thun der am I? My mother's mother (which 1b my wife) must be my grand mother, and I being my grandmother's husband, I am my own grandfather. National Monthly. J. Pluvlus' Veracity In Question. Saturday afternoon there' were black clouds and flashes of lightning and the rumble of thunder, but no general rain. "Sounds like It might rain," suggested someone. "Nix," re plied Mr. Pozozzle. "It has reached a point where I wouldn't believe J. Fluvius under oath!" Utmost Devotion. Margaret Would (he leave her happy home for him? Katherine My dear! She'd even leave a bridge game. There may be fun In doing the things you can afford. Uglv. grtoly, lira h.trtv U "LA ii v-rts--r Circumlocution. He was new to a certain railway run in Wales this guard. Came to a sta tion whioh rejoice In the appalling name Llanfalrfecbanpwllgyngyllgoge rych. For a few moments he stood looking at the signboard In mute helplessness. Then, pointing to the board, and wav ing his other arm toward the car riages, he bellowed: "If there's anybody there for here, this Is It." Summer Annoyances such as prickly heat, Ivy poisoning, insect bites and offensive perspiration are quickly relieved by applying Tyree's Antiseptic Powder. 25c. at druggists or write J. S. Tyree, Wash ington, D. C. for free sample. Adv. Should Have Known That. "Whv are vou romnhilnine? My head never rings." "Nothing does ring when it's' cracked." " i Dark 3ecret. "Did Clara really have light hair? And did she dye It dark brown?" "That's not a- fair question." Be Kind to the Animals. This is the time of the year whei domestic animals need mopt consider ate treatment from human beings. The hot weather takes the life out of many a horse that could go on work ing comfortably for years In a mod erate temperature. To the dogs ex treme heat Is as exhausting as It is to their masters. The cats are not so much affected by the heaf!, but this is the time of year when the majority of cat cwners seem to feel free to go out of town and leave their house hold pets to the tender mercies of their neighbors. So every city church yard and school yard and every spot which can occur coolness and safety in the heart of a city has its popula tion of neglected cats to whom it Is a mercy to minister in July and Au gust. Hartford Times. Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTOKIA, a safe and sure remedy for Infants and children, and see that it Bears Signature In Use For Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria Any girl will cheerfully give up a dollar to a fortune teller in exchange for the Information that she is going to be married within a year. I Excuse will not hold friends that promises bring. iackache Rheumatism Kidneys and Bladder 20 HAMMERLESS i' The Model 1912 Winchester the lightest, strongest and handsomest repeating weighs only about 5 H pounds, yet it has great strength, because its metal parts throughout are made of nickel steel. It is a two-part Take down, without loose parts, is simple to operate and the action works with an ease and smoothness unknown in gun3 of other makes. See one at your dealer's or St net to Wlxchttttr Rtpiating Armt Co., Nw Havta, Com., tor circular. THE LIGIIT WEIGIIT, MCKJSl STEEL REPEATER. !h!)r flat Qf- t NOMH FOR THE FMOUN 71' JrVX STARCH DOLISSJ; Li ;'':!'Voojo?'5i Rend tone from ton cent wrkim of Faoltleaa A 1'iCXi"V',ii, ilf Buirch and tea cei.ts la ktnuipa do cover poBltwoTy . " V1,! -vHUflrJlTfff3iTf and parking) and geV Mi-a Kliiubetb Ann, 22 incurs llu. V IJft: ttt '"Tl aish. tMina throe tops from ten cent pHci.aei and llt- VT lIpfccfttT - JfJ four oenu In stamps nd t Miks Pboelte Primm or IJ L ftt ill Mlas Lily White, twilve lDcheahiiU. Bond tops from 11 " J! A lit Ji fie cent parkac If jou wish, hut twlca as many are Ifj'i ,U, I A JLUt2MZf require dOut this sd. out. It will be aoeepu-d a Slj . , j ', li'l uT" 7. plaoe of one tea cent or two are cent tops. Ooij PV . l!.Jl:' Kv " ilfejJri'J.Lii'rtv-iyTkV on accepted with each application. gL"ijkilf lffaJ17 V'rit toaT ad address plainly. p rmJr-rxJi ri!iifii:i!f--rl-4':M liiiliiS FAULTLESS STARCH CO. - Uli 1UCL11J CREOLS" HAIR DRiSSINO. 1RICK, SI.OO, rU(l. "You're Safe" so long as you keep the Stomach, Liverand Bowels working regu larly and when the first siga of weakness ap pears be sure to take H OSTEITE ITS STOMACH BITTERS promptly. It will help you keep the ar-pet te normal, digest on per fect and liver and bowels active. Try it. Catarrhal Fever I to 0 (Jnsoa often cnr One &u-c'!H IxiHltt sl'OIIN'S guaranteed to core a casa Bafo for hut man. liorM1 nr colt. IhiM'n bottles tb. del it of UruKtrlsu, parnesB dealers or direct fro 19 Mann fit t n wrs, mrn-ess mi.1. ttl'OUX'S 1b tli" bffci ircventlTe of all form of distemper. Sl'OlIN M EPICAL TO., Clienitnta ami llnrtr rlolulsts, (jus ben, I nd.. U. 8 A ijTiliilffi'i'fjjiiliiiro ih mm 11,; : H; ,m:"!:: ,11 i f Tl:i ;.-'. Uncle Sam's last big land opening 1,345,000 acrcsof rich prairie land thuran open to white settlers. 8.4C6 ht'mt-stea'ls of 160 acres each ure wait'ntf. Lmnted in NortheoHt ern Montana, just uorth of the Missouri Uiver, on the main line of the Great Northern Railway. Rich, sandy, loam soil caDable of raisin? 20 to 30 bushels of wheat and40 to 60 bushels of oats per acre. Register at Glatgew, Havre or Great Falls, Montana Daily Sept. 1 te 20 inclusive . , Drawing at Gtatgow, Smpt. 23 This land has bcrn appraised at I2.ro to 97.00 ptr pere. Cn be lafcun. up under United States Houtestnad Ikws. rot1 IT Illustratedman-folderand full Inform T iC ation about Ibifl biu land opening will he sent free if you write at once. Seud a postal or letter to E.C. LEEDY, General Immigration Asent Dept. 0000 Great Northern Ry. ST. PAUL. MINN. YOU CAN MAKE BIG MONEY nt home with my Mull Ordor Plnn. Ot ers hare mad UimiKHnrtt.. Yon run do the same, Complete plan 1 cvnih. KL'UKiS fc; H I L.L, llulte, Moutau PATENTS Wataos E.CM-mnn.Waflh. InifUtn. Ii.C. llouHlre. Hlttb est reiet-eoces. Uett resuita, N. U., WICHITA, GAUGE REPEATING SHOTGU27 shotgun on the market. It v4 1 t is NO. 36-1913. 'ifa'7ti;iT''T"tsa.