Santa Fe New Mexican, 08-15-1907 New Mexican Printing Company

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Santa Fe New Mexican, 08-15-1907 New Mexican Printing Company University of New Mexico UNM Digital Repository Santa Fe New Mexican, 1883-1913 New Mexico Historical Newspapers 8-15-1907 Santa Fe New Mexican, 08-15-1907 New Mexican Printing Company Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/sfnm_news Recommended Citation New Mexican Printing Company. "Santa Fe New Mexican, 08-15-1907." (1907). https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/sfnm_news/6703 This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the New Mexico Historical Newspapers at UNM Digital Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Santa Fe New Mexican, 1883-1913 by an authorized administrator of UNM Digital Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. m mnm-fvfMtl--- "Kltltilw''"''"' .(njir'"V1 SANTA FflR NEW StWBCAN VOL. 44. SANTA NEW MEXICO, THURSDAY AUGUST 1907. NO. 156. a FE, 15, REGULAR MEETING ! WORK OF BUREAU 10 PROSECUTE m mm. BOARD OF TRADE bqulder fiends HIGHLY PRAISED FACTORY FAILS Will Be Held Tomorrow Evening and Texas Land Company Says Book "To Attendance Is Pres- Land of is With- GRANT IS SOLD Large Urged L CROOKS the Sunshine" FOR ident Names Committees. out a Peer. S51IU1 The monthly meeting of the hum The Andrews Land Com- regular County s Santa Fe Board of Trade will be held pany, of Hollebecke, Texas, a few-day- B. E. Pankey, Cap- tomorrow evening. This Is practically Pennsylvania to Get Four Men Confess ago made application to the edi- Pope Co. Goes In- the commencement of a new year and tor of the New Mexican for a copy of much can be if all italist, is very accomplished Even For Gigan- to Rail-roa- d the book, "To the Land of Sunshine," to Hands of Re citizens will take an interest and unite Burning published by the Bureau of Immigra- in the work. For the past few years tic Steal tion, while the editor of the New Mex- the labor of the board has fallen upon Depot ican was secretary; the general mana- ceiver a comparatively few people and many ger of the company, James T. Crum- of those who are the most directly in- ley, desiring information concerning LAND DEAL E IMPORTANT terested in the results have been con- ESTI IS T A LYNCHI the Territory. The following letter PLENTY OF ASSETS to tented receive the benefits without was received from Mr. Crumley assisting in the work or even attend- Consideration Said to Be ing the meetings. This year begins Legislative Commission Will Prisoners Rushed to Denver !"To the Editor of the New Mexican: Head of Firm Claims Its under excellent auspices and with a "It was our pleasure this week to Over$140,000-Gra- nt Con-tain- s to Gover- determination push Santa Fe to Make Report to to Escape Fury of Indig-an- t receive a copy of "To the Land of Sun- Will Pay Dollar For the front About 80,000 Acres. in every way. The subject nor Tomorrow. Citizens. shine, for which we should be glad to Dollar. of the introduction of new industries have you accept our most sincere and of patronizing home institutions thanks. One of the most Important, real es- instead of 15. With the for- sending money abroad, will Philadelphia, Aug. Denver, Colo., Aag. 15. Frank "We want to congratulate you on New York, Aug. 15. The Pope Man- tate deals transacted in New Mexico receive mal of its to Gov- special attention. An active presentation report KIser and J. V. Reeves, two railroad this work. Within the last ten or fif- ufacturing Company of Hartford, within recent was consummat- committee on - ernor Stuart the years membership will en- tomorrow, legislative men of Boulder, are in the county jail teen years we have reviewed a great Conn,, failed today, and an application ed In this city last evening by which deavor to see that nil of those who commission which has been investigat- In this city to escape the fury of the many copies of this particular kind of was made to the courts for the ap- Pueblo de San Cristoval tract or benefit most the of in connection the by the work, like hotel ing charges fraud Indignant citizens of Boulder. They work, and have assisted, at times, in pointment of a receiver. The court as it is more commonly known as the curio With the of keepers, dealers, liverymen, furnishing Pennsylvania's art said to have confessed to the the compilation and arranging of much selected Albert L. Pope, the vice presi- Eaton land hands. B. builders and new thirteen million dollar grant changed large landholders, take Capitol crime of setting the Colorado and matter of this kind, but in our entire dent of the company, to settle up the E. a of an active Interest. will have its labors after Pankey, capitalist Topeka, completed Southern depot on fire last week experience this is the handsomest and affairs of the concern. The labilities was the and the President Prince has more than six months' work. The In- Kansas, purchaser just appointed causing an explosion which resulted most elaborate piece of work of its it is said, will approximate $",000,. consideration in round numbers is the committees for will meet in standing the year, vestigators Harrisburg in the death of four people and a kind that we have ever known. We OiiO. given as $141,000. The grant is one a list of which is published, and It Is next Friday to hand the result of their have a in our office in which we monetary loss of $250,000. Two others place Receiver Pope, after his appoint- of the largest private tracts of land particularly desired that every com- work to the Governor. stack literature from the a,o also said to have confessed. descriptive ment, stated that the assignment was in the Territory and contains some- mitteeman and member be to- The attorney general of Pennsyl- entire country, but we have taken "To present The confessions were made In the due to the Inability of the company over 81,032 acres. morrow night. vania will Institute both criminal and thing presence of witnesses, voluntarily and the Laud of Sunshine" Into our home, The committees are civil suits those who have to secure accommodations from the An effort was made to keep the fact appointed as against are backed up by evidence which and have placed It upon our bookshelf, follows: been shown to have shared in the il- banks on account of the tightness of of the sale a secret but it leaked out leaves no doubt of their guilt. The and we think that it is worthy of one Committees. The general the money market. According to Mr. in spite of the precautions of Standing legal profits. attorney confession of Reeves states that he of the most prominent places in our today Finance Messrs. has been Informed of the contents of Pope, the company has un abundant the parties interested. Negotiations Palen, Ingraham, started the fire for the purpose of get- library. Staab, the but he will make no public supply of assets and is doing a steady have been pending for some time look- Schumann, Adolph Seligman. report, ting rid of two Colorado and Southern "We thank you for this courtesy, Laws and Ordinances announcement of his intended action business. The receivership came so ing to the sale of the grant which Messrs. strike breakers. and for this rare piece of literature, Fiske, Kaune. until after the matter Is turned over suddenly that Mr. Pope stated that he was owned heretofore by Saron N. Gortner, Read, The sheriff at Boulder and the Colo- and also the copies of the to him the Governor. appreciate was unable to say anything about the ;B. but Streets and Bridges Messrs. by New Mexican and Laughlin and Thomas Catron, con- rado and Southern officials say that Daily weekly papers Ger-de- The it is understood, financial conditions at present. It is ev- Sparks, Hersch, Arthur Selignian, report, fit to the deal was not closed until last they could not have been kept alive which you have seen send us. will Boyle. tains no specific recommendations, but thought that the company be able ening when the deeds were finally until 10 o'clock tonight and that "In conclusion we desire to say that Shade Trees evidence of criminal intent is so plain- only to pay dollar for dollar. signed and delivered. Parts of this and Sidewalks the bringing of them to Denver saved we have placed you upon our exchange Messrs. ly out by the commission that An Ancient Concern. immense tract are under fence. It is Brodhead, Rivenberg, Muller, pointed their lives. The will take list, and will send you our weekly it leaves the State authorities no other inquest The concern was Fe Walker, White. In Boulder the Shatter Lake Herald, and If Pope organized situated in southern Santa County, than to place tomorrow, but the, paper, Antiquities; Their Preservation and alternative proceed against at time we can in manner ren- just after the close of the Civil war a short distance south of Lamy. named. prisoners will nut be taken back to any any Exhibition Messrs. G. Cart-wrigh- t, the persona with that Colonel Albert A. Read, S. It is not would der you any material assistance it will money May Become Big Cattle Ranch. testify. thought that it saved from his Sena, Spiegelberg, Wood. be safe to be our Pope had soldier's pay. asso- take them within reach of pleasure. What Mr. Pankey and those Scenic and Cliff I sin- The Pope Manufacturing Company Highway Dwellings GROUND TO PIECES the indignant people.
Recommended publications
  • To the William Howard Taft Papers. Volume 1
    THE L I 13 R A R Y 0 F CO 0.: G R 1 ~ ~ ~ • P R I ~ ~ I I) I ~ \J T ~' PAP E R ~ J N 1) E X ~ E R IE S INDEX TO THE William Howard Taft Papers LIBRARY OF CONGRESS • PRESIDENTS' PAPERS INDEX SERIES INDEX TO THE William Ho-ward Taft Papers VOLUME 1 INTRODUCTION AND PRESIDENTIAL PERIOD SUBJECT TITLES MANUSCRIPT DIVISION • REFERENCE DEPARTMENT LIBRARY OF CONGRESS WASHINGTON : 1972 Library of Congress 'Cataloging in Publication Data United States. Library of Congress. Manuscript Division. Index to the William Howard Taft papers. (Its Presidents' papers index series) 1. Taft, William Howard, Pres. U.S., 1857-1930.­ Manuscripts-Indexes. I. Title. II. Series. Z6616.T18U6 016.97391'2'0924 70-608096 ISBN 0-8444-0028-9 For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office Washington, D.C. 20402 - Price $24 per set. Sold in'sets only. Stock Number 3003-0010 Preface THIS INDEX to the William Howard Taft Papers is a direct result of the wish of the Congress and the President, as expressed by Public Law 85-147 approved August 16, 1957, and amended by Public Laws 87-263 approved September 21, 1961, and 88-299 approved April 27, 1964, to arrange, index, and microfilm the papers of the Presidents in the Library of Congress in order "to preserve their contents against destruction by war or other calamity," to make the Presidential Papers more "readily available for study and research," and to inspire informed patriotism. Presidents whose papers are in the Library are: George Washington James K.
    [Show full text]
  • From a Grain of Mustard Seed by Cynthia Davis
    FROM A GRAIN OF MUSTARD SEED BY CYNTHIA DAVIS ISBN 978-0-557-02763-7 THE MUSTARD SEED IS PLANTED 1872-1882 The seed that became St. John’s Episcopal Cathedral was found in the hearts of the small group of faithful Episcopalians who settled in Albuquerque. As a minority of the population, the Anglos found comfort in the familiarity of reading the 1789 Book of Common Prayer, the King James Bible, and the Calvary Cathechism. Very likely they followed the mandate in the Prayer Book stating, “The Psalter shall be read through once every month, as it is there appointed, both for Morning and for Evening Prayer.”i Under the strong spiritual direction of the Rev. Henry Forrester, both St. John’s and missions around the District would be planted, land purchased, and churches built. Other seeds were being planted in Albuquerque. Various denominations built churches in the midst of the homes where the new arrivals lived. Members could easily walk to the church of their choice. Many corner lots were taken up with small places of worship. Some Anglos attended the Methodist church built of adobe in 1880 at Third and Lead. Dr. Sheldon Jackson, established First Presbyterian Church in 1880. A one-room church was built at Fifth and Silver two years later under Rev. James Menaul. It was enlarged in 1905, and after a fire in 1938, the building was rebuilt and improved. (In 1954 it moved to 215 Locust.)ii St. Paul’s Lutheran Church was not built until 1891 at Sixth and Silver. The Rev.
    [Show full text]
  • New Mexico Lobo, Volume 059, No 26, 10/28/1955." 59, 26 (1955)
    University of New Mexico UNM Digital Repository 1955 The aiD ly Lobo 1951 - 1960 10-28-1955 New Mexico Lobo, Volume 059, No 26, 10/28/ 1955 University of New Mexico Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/daily_lobo_1955 Recommended Citation University of New Mexico. "New Mexico Lobo, Volume 059, No 26, 10/28/1955." 59, 26 (1955). https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/ daily_lobo_1955/76 This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the The aiD ly Lobo 1951 - 1960 at UNM Digital Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in 1955 by an authorized administrator of UNM Digital Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. ,,.,_, ·- ·- l \ \ Violinist Rabin Will Perform NEW MEXICO LOBO . f,.P~Ck'. THE VOICE OF THE UNIVERSITY OF NEW MEXICO ,..., Welcome Alumni Nov. 2 in Community Concert ,1' Vol. 59 PARTY. PEREZ Friday, October 28, 1955 No. 26 '' NUTS ~ 1 p 'X:I j Mixed 'J:l· Nuts ~·. .'• Ph. 3-2446 2312 Central E. Snacks ----------'-~----- Jane Day Homeco HOMECOMING ueen i DANCE '• ·.-' Carlisle Gym QUICK ,. Everything for the Bridal Party DELIVERY Phone Date Dresses-Party Dresses Bulk Orders $1.50 9-1 and his Only Chip 3-4495 Saturday, Oct. 29 ORCH TRA · 0 RCA-Victor Recordings &1~ s~ ,. < Mode -:My W Al~oq-u 3424 CENTRAL SE . ' PHONE 5-1328 ~ ~............................... j Ahead of the game ... Conni11 Giomi Maryln Thomas < • ·Unlimited sales opportunities are Giom·i, Thomas Are Chosen available for graduating seniors-. Arrow fi_elds a smart squad of sweaters, with man-for-man superiority down the line, They're warm and soft, styled Attend.ants In Royal Court: Fidelity Union Life representatives with exceptional taste-in Orlan or Jane Day, Town club junior from Albuquerque, was lambswool, or a blend of Orion and crowned as UNM's 22nd homecoming queen tonight in Zim­ merman stadium.
    [Show full text]
  • Santa Fe New Mexican, 05-01-1906 New Mexican Printing Company
    University of New Mexico UNM Digital Repository Santa Fe New Mexican, 1883-1913 New Mexico Historical Newspapers 5-1-1906 Santa Fe New Mexican, 05-01-1906 New Mexican Printing Company Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/sfnm_news Recommended Citation New Mexican Printing Company. "Santa Fe New Mexican, 05-01-1906." (1906). https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/sfnm_news/6326 This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the New Mexico Historical Newspapers at UNM Digital Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Santa Fe New Mexican, 1883-1913 by an authorized administrator of UNM Digital Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. SAN A NEW VOL. 43. SANTA FE, N. M., TUESDAY, MAY 1. 1906. NO. 61. AMERICANS IN THE LEAD INDIAN APPROPRIATION NEED MORE MONEY ( LABOR UPRISING SHOOTS HER BABE In Historical Olympic Games United SHE BILL CONSIDERED States Standi First' In Most IK Events. Senate Discusses Smoot Cass but EXPENSES HEAVY 1 RAFFIC THREATENS PARIS Reaches No Conclusion Pike's SUICIDES Athens, May 1. Americans have al- Memorial. TiH ready won the greatest . number ' of i l a 1. - l I ml... Washington, eveniu in me uiyuiyic games. , inoj, f May l.Representa-tiv- Greeks come next, with tne swedes Sherman Immediately after the Fund Appropriated third and English 'fourth. The super- May Day Labor Fear Riotous Mobs approval of the House Journal asked Las Vegas Woman iority of the individual American is immediate consent to take the Indian Near- acknowledged, but the defeated athe-lete- s Troubles Will appropriation bill from the speaker's Performs Fear- Relief non-concu- for Along r are endeavoring to find some sol- Attempt table, in the Senate amend- Gone.
    [Show full text]
  • Santa Fe New Mexican, 02-02-1906 New Mexican Printing Company
    University of New Mexico UNM Digital Repository Santa Fe New Mexican, 1883-1913 New Mexico Historical Newspapers 2-2-1906 Santa Fe New Mexican, 02-02-1906 New Mexican Printing Company Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/sfnm_news Recommended Citation New Mexican Printing Company. "Santa Fe New Mexican, 02-02-1906." (1906). https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/sfnm_news/6251 This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the New Mexico Historical Newspapers at UNM Digital Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Santa Fe New Mexican, 1883-1913 by an authorized administrator of UNM Digital Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. ANTA FE NEW MEXICAN VOL. 42. SANTA FE, N. M., FRIDAY. JEBRUARY 2. 1906. NO. 297. MRS. VERKES MARRIED. GOVERNOR PUZZLED. T ROUBLES GLASSIFIGATION EIIIS PROW SUE Fornoff Has Made No Report Doubts of Union Set Aside By Deputy But Will Arrive Tomor- Filing of Certificate in New 1H row. York. OF ALL COUNTIES AGREED ECTED OF COAL MINERS to New York, Feb. 2. Doubt as to the STILLf Governor Herbert J. Hagerman of Mrs. Charles T. Yerkes. day received a telegram from United marriage at to Wilson Mizner, was, set. at rest to- States Marshal Frederick Fornoff, that he day by the filing of the certificate of Prescolt, Arizona, saying Auditor Committee Russians Who Are Joint Conference At would return to Santa Fe tomorrow. Traveling Senate marriage. an In addition one newspaper quotes Deputy Fornoff has been making maae Gives Mrs. Yerkes as "All I can say in Touch With Has investigation of the confesslou Safford the Will Vote on saying: Indianapolis lu is that I am happily married." by Frank Bell, In Jail at Prescott, which he asserts that he killed Colonel Sums Credited.
    [Show full text]
  • The Swinging Door”: U.S
    ABSTRACT Title of Document: “THE SWINGING DOOR”: U.S. NATIONAL IDENTITY AND THE MAKING OF THE MEXICAN GUESTWORKER, 1900 - 1935 Linda Carol Noel, Ph.D., History, 2006 Directed By: Professor Gary Gerstle Department of History This study examines U.S. national identity in the first third of the twentieth century. During this period, heated discussions ensued throughout the country regarding the extent to which the door of American society should be open to people of Mexican descent. Several major events brought this issue to the foreground: the proposed statehood of Arizona and New Mexico in the early twentieth century, the increase in Mexican immigration after World War I, and the repatriation of Mexican immigrants in the 1930s. The “Swinging Door” explores the competing perspectives regarding the inclusion or exclusion of people of Mexican descent embedded within each of these disputes. This dissertation argues that four strategies evolved for dealing with newcomers of Mexican descent: assimilation, pluralism, exclusion, and marginalization. Two strategies, assimilation and pluralism, permitted people of Mexican descent to belong to the nation so long as they either conformed to an Anglo American identity or proclaimed a Spanish American one rooted in a European heritage, whiteness, and a certain class standing. Exclusion denied entry into the U.S., or in the case of those already there, no role in society. Marginalization, which became the predominant strategy by the 1930s, allowed people of Mexican descent to remain physically within the country so long as they stayed only temporarily or agreed to accept a subordinate status as second-class Americans. The prevailing view changed depending on the economic and political power of people of Mexican descent, their desire to incorporate as Americans, and the demand for their labor or land by other Americans.
    [Show full text]
  • Bernard Shandon Rodey
    BERNARD SHANDON RODEY In the Albuquerque boardroom of Rodey, Dickason, Sloan, Akin & Robb, P.A., hangs an arresting photographic portrait – apparently from the 1880s or 1890s – that hovers over deponents and arbitration witnesses like an admonition to tell the truth. The subject’s forehead, like his starched white collar, is high; his bearing erect; his moustache trim and to the point. But it is his eyes that bore through the mists of time and transfix the modern-day viewer. To meet that gaze is to get some sense of its owner’s fierce determination, his single-minded devotion to causes great and small, and the long day at the office that awaited each of his adversaries. The subject of the portrait is Bernard Shandon Rodey, founder of the Rodey Firm and father of the University of New Mexico. In the style of his day, the New Mexico Reports often identified him as “B.S. Rodey,” but there was no B.S. about him; he was all action, all the time. To the contemporary observer, he seems larger than life – and indeed, he must have been a remarkable figure. Yet he also reminds us that in territorial times, in many ways, life itself was larger than it is today. He was born in 1856 in County Mayo, on the west coast of Ireland, in the aftermath of the great potato famine that claimed a million Irish lives (more than 100,000 of them in County Mayo) and that launched a million more Irish citizens into exile.1 His parents joined the exodus in 1862, emigrating with six-year-old Bernard to Sherbrooke, Quebec, where they sought a fresh start as farmers.2
    [Show full text]
  • Historic Markers, Page 1 NM HIGHWAY/ MARKER TITLE TEXT of MARKER COUNTY NAME MILEMARKER Apache Battleground in This Immediate Vicinity, Captain Henry W
    NM HIGHWAY/ MARKER TITLE TEXT OF MARKER COUNTY NAME MILEMARKER A.M. Curley Trainer Memorial N.M. State Road 78 appeared on maps before 1927, but remained a gravel highway in several sections in Arizona and New Mexico through the 1960s. By Grant NM 78 mm .5 EB Highway 1971, all but one stretch near the border had been paved. Area rancher Curley Traynor was instrumental in having a paved road connect Arizona and New Mexico, and in 1974 it was dedicated as the A.M. Curley Traynor Memorial Highway. Abiquiú Established on the site on an abandoned Indian pueblo, Abiquiú in the mid-18th century became a settlement of Spaniards and genízaros (Hispanicized Rio Arriba US 084 North of Espanola at MM 211.9 Indians). In 1776, explorers Fran Francisco Atanacio Domínguez and Fray Silvestre Vélez de Escalante visited here. In 1830, the settlement became one of the stops on the Spanish Trail which linked Santa Fe with Los Angeles, California. Abó Pass Trail Cutting through the southern edge of the Manzano Mountains, this area has always been an important trade route. The trail linked Abó and the Salinas Torrance US 60 between mm's 189-190 pueblos to the Rio Grande pueblos, fostering trade of beans, cotton, buffalo meat and salt with the Plains Indians. It gave access to El Camino Real, and U.S. 60—originally a coast-to-coast highway—follows the trail’s route through the pass. One of the world’s busiest intermodal transport routes, the Burlington Northern and Santa Fe Railway, runs through Abo Canyon, just north of Abó Pass.
    [Show full text]
  • Santa Fe New Mexican, 04-21-1906 New Mexican Printing Company
    University of New Mexico UNM Digital Repository Santa Fe New Mexican, 1883-1913 New Mexico Historical Newspapers 4-21-1906 Santa Fe New Mexican, 04-21-1906 New Mexican Printing Company Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/sfnm_news Recommended Citation New Mexican Printing Company. "Santa Fe New Mexican, 04-21-1906." (1906). https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/sfnm_news/6318 This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the New Mexico Historical Newspapers at UNM Digital Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Santa Fe New Mexican, 1883-1913 by an authorized administrator of UNM Digital Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. ANTA FE NEW MEXICAN VOL. 43. SANTA FE, N. M., SATURDAY, APRIL 21, 1906. NO. 53. STATEHOOD BILL. Treasurer Jacobs Safe. Washington, April 21. Assistant ENERGETIC Treasurer of the United States Jacobs DESK'S IRK Again Subjected to Delays Sever FI FUE SWEEPING at San Francisco for whose safety idge to Prevent Report if Possible. fears wore entertained is safe. FORIMMIGRATION One Million Dollars for Sufferers. MANY IN Washington, April 21. If it Is with Washington, April 21. The House HOIS in the power of Senator Beverldge, ENTIRE FRISCO today passed a resolution appropriat- there will be no final action taken on ing one million dollars in addition to the statehood bill in the Senate this the amount heretofore appropriated RESULTS for i The suf- PHILIPPINES BIGS session of Congress, Is the general be he aid of San Francisco lief of those posted on conditions as WATER ferers.
    [Show full text]
  • Santa Fe New Mexican, 05-15-1906 New Mexican Printing Company
    University of New Mexico UNM Digital Repository Santa Fe New Mexican, 1883-1913 New Mexico Historical Newspapers 5-15-1906 Santa Fe New Mexican, 05-15-1906 New Mexican Printing Company Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/sfnm_news Recommended Citation New Mexican Printing Company. "Santa Fe New Mexican, 05-15-1906." (1906). https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/sfnm_news/6338 This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the New Mexico Historical Newspapers at UNM Digital Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Santa Fe New Mexican, 1883-1913 by an authorized administrator of UNM Digital Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. V7" lib of c-- ANTA FE NEW MEXICAK VOL. 4ft. SANTA FE, N. M., TUESDAY, MAY 15, 1906. NO. 73. LEADER MET SANDOVAL COUNTY SENATOR LODGE VIOLENT DEATH BIS KILL SETTLERS GOING JURY DISCHARGED W Father Gapon Heard to Betray His By Judge Abbott Upon Statement of HAS HEW SCHEME Followers Killed By Blow on ENTIRE FAMILY COUNTY District Attorney Clancy That it the Head. III Was Controlled. MURDERMYSTERY St. Petersburg, May 15. At the in Upon a statement by District Attor- quest on the body of Father Gapon ney Frank W. Clancy, that the San Offers Amendment which was found May 13, in an upper Mother and Over 1,200 Home- doval County juries were controlled Desiderio chamber in a lonely villa, in the sum- Father, by outside influence and that It was Aguilar to Railroad Rate mer suburb of Ozerki, Finland, M. Seven Children stead Entries absolutely impossible to secure the Have Margolin, the former priest's lawyer conviction of men known to be in Thought Bill.
    [Show full text]
  • Bernard Rodey and the Jointure Movement in The
    BERNARD RODEY AND THE JOINTURE MOVEMENT IN THE U.S. CONGRESS by Mark Thompson eal Property lawyers are probably was elected as the Republican candidate for wondering why the Congress of the congressional delegate and then re-elected RUnited States would be interested in in 1902. As a non-voting territorial delegate, the ancient, common law, and marital property his main job was to lobby for statehood for doctrine of “jointure.” Ah yes, but they forget New Mexico. that in politics words may often be used to hide or soften the real intent. In this case, “jointure” Jointure may not have risen to the level was the term describing the proposed admis- of a “litmus test” by 1904, but the relative sion of two or more territories as one state, the newcomer who defeated Rodey at the Sep- political goal being a limitation on the number tember GOP convention believed it necessary of U.S. senators representing the wide open to immediately announce his opposition.1 spaces of the American West. Rodey’s other problem was his close ties with sometimes Bernalillo County sheriff and By the time of the 58th Congress (1903-05) the full time political boss Frank A. Hubbell. If focus was on the jointure of Arizona and New you just count newspaper stories, you could Mexico territories as well as jointure of the conclude that it was the effort to get Hub- Oklahoma and Indian territories. The Indian bell that propelled William Andrews to the Territory had only been divided since May 2, nomination over Rodey.
    [Show full text]
  • Tradición Revista Volume 54
    Regis University ePublications at Regis University Tradición Revista 7-1-2011 Tradición Revista volume 54 Follow this and additional works at: https://epublications.regis.edu/tradicionrevista Recommended Citation "Tradición Revista volume 54" (2011). Tradición Revista. 8. https://epublications.regis.edu/tradicionrevista/8 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by ePublications at Regis University. It has been accepted for inclusion in Tradición Revista by an authorized administrator of ePublications at Regis University. For more information, please contact [email protected]. TRADICIÓN JULY 2011 REVIS T A Hi s pa n i c Tr a d i T i o n a l ar T cr a f T i n am e r i c a cH a r l e s lu m m i s CHARLIE CAR RILLO SA NTO BY CH A RLIE CA RRILLO A ND POTTERY BY DEBBIE CA RRILLO STUDIO BY APPOINTMENT 2712 Pas EO DE TUL A RO sa , SA NT A FE, NM 87505 505/473-7941 E-MA IL : CCA RR 1810@A OL .C OM TRADICIÓN FEATURING SOUTHWE S T TRADITION S , ART & CULTURE JULY 2011 VOLUME XVI, NO. 2 ISSN 1093-0973 PUBLI S HER S /MANAGING EDITOR S Barbe Awalt Paul Rhetts CONTRIBUTOR S Andrés Armijo Andrew Connors Richard Melzer Sherry Robinson Tradición Revista is published electronically four times a year by LPD Enterprises, 925 Salamanca NW Los Ranchos de Albuquerque, NM 87107-5647 505/344-9382 t FAX 505/345-5129 Website: www.nmsantos.com Email: [email protected] The nmsantos.com website contains information on both the current issue of TRADICIÓN REVIS T A as well as all back issues, a comprehensive index of articles, and information on the book list from LPD Press.
    [Show full text]