THE DAILY HERALD. Glass for Paving, The glass pavement which is Headache, biliousness, heartburn, indi- \ Jesse O.^Wheeler, Ed. and Prop. gestion, and till Hver ills are cured by making its way in Paris is exciting the interest ot' the einions. Its in No woman can bavo a beautiful face without, health, and few wo- •ssuedEvery Day Except Sunday. "B Pills venlor is a Mr Hardier, who man- men poBsosa Bvich perfect health us those who regularly uso Sold by till druggists. 25 cents. ufactures his product from finely GERSTLE'S OFFICE: HERALD BUILIHXG, Kottlli Side crushed glass, which is subjected FEMALE PANACEA. Masl Elizabeth Street Of it Saliio P. Evans, of Columbia, S, C., BROWNSVILLE, : 'TEXAS. to great heat and heavy presure. says: ' It is undoubtedly the finest 10- : : V I'KUSONAl. nia o restorer on earth." Miss Carrie J. The result is a substance which Holmes, of Pjlanehard, La.: "May God Judge Wells ut present bless you; your G. F. I*. (Goi>stl«'n Female THE OFFICIAL COUNTY JOURNAL. said to be less affected by wear than I'annrea) on rod me and made me tho hap- Austin. piest girl in America." Harriet Martin, THE OFFICIAL CITY JOURNAL. the: best and hardest granite, avMl to ofSearcy, Ark., writes; "My health has been restored by G. F. r. T never expected Official Journal Hidalgo County. Mrs. R. Stillman went to the support a pressure of over 10,000 to be as well as I am to-day." JarettaP. Hunter, living in Laureus, S. 0 . writes: Point yesterday. pounds 'to the square inch. To 'I1 or six years I,suffered from femalecom- plaints. Doctors and medii/ines did me WEDNESDAY, AUUUBT 7, 1001. (ieo. Morn returned this morn- break a slab of the material a no good. I suHerod lorribly from whites, G. F. P. has cured .me." Mary A. Hunt, ing from Brazos island. weight of nearly live tons falling of Marion, Ark., says: "One, bottle of («« F. P. cured ine." And .so \ve. mijdit o «ote MissM. Duffy is visiting her from the height of three feet was frorn letters like those for an indclinits c ABOUT TOWN. period. It is sulhY.ieni. lo add that niece, Mrs. A. Colaya, at iho Point, necessary. The glass pavement is O (Gerstlo'i? Female F• • • Panacea) will perma- No piissuii^ors are reported as being laid down at the expense, of nently euro any manner of !<'. Ol«-!rhO« A '..'o., for fruo ttdvioe The Woodmen of the World hold Mrs. I lord and daughter, Miss it' at the end of live years the pave i-niuK your cas<'. Mioir regular meeting tomorrow Uord, were in town today, from ment has worn well,t he municipal- DRUGGISTS evening. : the Point. ity has undertaken to adopt it on SELL a large scale; if not, Mr. (Marcher, The regular meeting of the oonn- U. Aramhurn of Matamoros vis- ty commissioners' court takes place who evidently has confidence in ited Point Isabel hist night, return- his material., is under contract to next Monday. in K today. replace the old pavement at his Keep the Teeth Clean. . c. The steam lighter Lir/on tlis. . Mrs. (.',. A. Maetnamus and Mrs. own cost. The new pavement is Medical Record, Physician and Surgeon, charged ten cars of freight from R. M. Miller of Matamoros went said to be noisy. Special attention given to chronic dis- the schooner, and was again along Robert Ray burn states that a J to the Point last evening. mouth filled with decayed teeth is eases oL all classes. Will visit any side taking off more freight this It has been determined to lorm part; of the county to attend tho sick Judge U. Passement of Mata- always in ?i septic condition. Tho morning. a company for the purpose of day or ni^lit. Consultation confiden- moros arrived on yesterday's train septic fluids therefrom are being tial. Calls left at tho Botica del The schooner Beacham brought working the oil wells recently dis- from a trip to the interior of Mex- continually swallowed and parsed Leon, 240 tons of freight this trip. Her1 covered at Belmont, near Lausanne ico. into the stomach, which, together in Switzerland iwicic MJLLI:R HOTIOL. cargo is being promptly discharg- |{. B. Rentfro, sr., Prof, Har- with the intestinal sanal, they aid ed, and she will sail Friday for ., A. £ -A, IJrownsvillo, Texas. bour, K. i'turria, Ueo. Scanlan, in infecting. Thus result many New Orleans. E SURE that your blood is rich C'upt. Cooper Walker, Joe Wells, B and pure. The best blood purifier, cases of chronic dyspepsia and tlnstioe Oavito had one Jesus and Wm. Jjaroche were among enrifher and vilali/cr is Hood's iSarsn.- gastro intestinal catarrh. Such pa Abrigo, charged with horse theft, passengers to the count last even- parilla. Be sure to GET HOOD'S, tieuts should have the mouth put L. A. ROUSSKT, before him yesterday afternoon. -t-• t ing Smith Australia hr>lds the best into perfect condition by the den- The investigation did not develop Elizabeth Street. W. Will man and sisters have re- honey record of the colonies, near- tist. Mouth breathing is always a sufficient evidence to hold the man, turned to St. Louis from Buffalo, ly 1")0,000 pounds beiog produced symptom of disease. Chronic en- and he was dismissed. having visited the exposition. They in one year alone. > • largement of the tonsils being one A telegram was received yester- n ill spend some time with their of the most, frequent causes of this day by 1.1. Keyos of this city, an- relatives in St. Louis before re- $100 Reward, $!(>(>. condition, requires prompt and nouncing the death of his brother turning home. The readers of this paper will be thorough treatment, and in most Bebn Reyes, which occurred yes pleased to learn that that there is at cases 'these organs should be re Mrs. Louis Kowalski accompan- ist one dreaded disease that scjionco tcrday morning ut Victoria, Texas, ied by two of the younger children has been aide to cure hi all its stages muv.',d. Tim same treatment ap- where tho deceased resided. and Master Freddie retuined last and that is Catarah. Hall's Catarrh plies also to adenoid and polypoid - Master Freddie Kowalski, who evening from a visit to her daugh- (.hire is the only positive cure now growths ifi the posterior nasal Th place r,o get a first-class roturned yesterday from Monterey, ter, Mrs. J. Bloomberg at Mon- known to the medical i'ratci'iiity. Ca- spaces and pharynx. Patients Shave or Hair-Out. whore ho has spent over a year for tarrh being a constitutional disease, re- should be advised to use the tooth terey. Master Freddie lias been •ruircsu constitutional treatment. Hall's his health, returns very much ini with his sistsr nt Monterey for over Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act- brush and cleanse- the.teonlh with proved, which is a source of much a year past. ing directly upon the blood and mucous some mildly antiseptic solution r three times a day. A dilute solu- pleasure to his many friends. San Antonio Express:—Lion, surfaces of the sj'stem, herebj destroy- A seizure of fourteen cargas of ing the foundation of the disease, and tion containing glyceriol of carbolic Polite and Courteous Attention to All, W. [•[. Russell, Legislative Repre- giving the patient, st.tength by building acid, listor'ms or camphophenique smuggled corn, with two carts and sentative of the Brownsville dis- ii]) the constitution and assisting nature will do what-is required. For a four oxen, was made yesterday by trict', was in the city Saturday, on in doing its work. The proprietors tooth powder there is nothing so the custom house inspectors near his way from Brownsville to Aus- have so much faith in its curative pow- El Carmen about nine miles above ers, that they offer one Hundred Dol- good as precipitated chalk. Many tin, where he goes to attend the iai-s for any case that it- fails to cure authorities believe that the regular town. Tho carts and corn were session of the Legislature, Lo be ttend for list of testimonials. and systematic cleansing of chil- brought into town last evening. convened there Monday. Address. F. ,1. CIIKNKY & Co., dren's teeth would not only pro- Columbia Tho marriage of Uavino Rodri- "" " ' "" ™ ^ W * ' Toledo, Ohio. Sold by druggists, 7~)o. vent (\ecay of the teeth, but would guez and Rrtfaela Alvarado took A Sustaining IMot. Hall's Family Pills are. the befit, greatly diminish the number of place this morning, Justice of the There are the enervating days, when, as somebody has said, men drop by the. cases of scarlet fever, diptherin, Peace (javito officiating. The bridal ? RW'OUNIZKD. sunstroke as ii the Day of Fire had measles, tuberculosis,typhoid fever Standard ofthe Wbrld. pair reside at tho Rio Grande sugar dawned. They arc fraught with dan- St. Peter:" Well, sir, what have and all the other infective diseases plantation, and came in this morn- ger to people, whose systems are poorly you to say about yourself ?" which kill so many of our children ing to be married, returning homo sustained; and this leads us to say, in The newcomer: "1 regret to re- every year...... , . .$?.">, 00 after the ceremony. the interest of the less robust of our readers, that the full effect of Hood's port--" Chain ...... fiO, 00 • • • T' ^ T ' Hartford ...... sg.'JO.Ol) Fine Stock from the King Ranch. Sarsaparilla in such as to surest tin- St. Peter: "Why,iff. Kitchen- A clergyman, taking occasional Fay Juveniles ...... 20. IK) propriety oi: calling this medicine some- er! Uome right in duty for a friend in one of the Win. Anson, the fine stock thing besides a blood purifier and ton- moorland churches of a remote Columbia Sales I)(\J>L. breeder of Coleman, who is in the Cleveland Plain Dealer. ic,----say, a sustaining diet. It makes it >o+- part of bjiigland, was greatly scan- city, infonns Tho Express that he nmch easier to bear the heat, assures Tcxas Notes. dalized on observing the old verger has bought twelve thoroughbred refreshing sleep, and will without any The adjutant general has noti- who had been collecting the offer- Mrs/H.'Bollack, Hereford bull calves from tho King doubt averf much sickness at this time of year. fied Texas, volunteers who served tory, quietly abstract a half crown ranch which he will place on his during the Spanish war that their before presenting the plate at tho own ranch for breeding purposes. Food Adulteration, pay is now ready for then;. altar rails. After service he call- Uo got h'rst choice from the entire Dr. Wiley, chief chemist in tho The tax on peddlers imposed by ed the old man into the vestry and crop and is satisfied thai he has the city of has been declar- told him, with emotion, that his some of the best being turned out Dupnrtament of Agriculture, cails ed unconstitutional. crime had been discovered. The by Texas breeders, lie did not care attention lo the anomalous fact that while vaiions States have verger looked puzzled. Then ti to give the .price paid for them, Many foreign corporations are laws forbidding the adulteration sudden light, dawned on hi in. tic says that, while the rainfall notifying the secretary of state of foods, there is no national law "Whj, sir, you doant mean that, Brownsville, Texas. down there has been light and the that they have mailed their anil rcgnhuing the matter, so that food ould half crown of mine! Why, grass short, the cattle are fat. Ue trust aflidavits. A Boarding and Day School for which is adulterated in New York Oi've 'led oft' with lie this last attributes their condition largely An insane barber at UraSam, State can be taken to New Jersey fifteen years !" to the abundance of pure artesian Young county, shot and killed two and sold, the law prohibiting the Young Men water supplied by the 2f> How ing men whOm he happened to meet sale of it in she State of New York. Notice. well no A' on the ranch.—-San An- on the street. S >nit> adulterations are harmful, Andres Fierling has mnvjed his tonio Express. A bank cashier at Rockdale re while others are not; among the "tailor shop from its former loca- r.eived a letter demanding money, tion on 12th. street, to the building Gondurfted by tlio QbJato Por Over 1'Mt'ty Years . harmless list beintr the adultera and threatening to kill him and I near the iee factory on Levee street, Fatliors. MKS. WIXSLOW'S Soothing Syrup has tions of colife with peas, beans, wreck I he bank it' he refused. hetween IJJtli. and 14th. streets, -4**1g> ->«*«** been used for over fifty years by inil- chicory, elc svhere he will be pleased to serve lions of mothers for thoir children while The cotton crop is beginning to his patrons as usual. Next Sossions Begins Bopt- tout-lung, with perfect sueeess. it Election of Officers. move, fitty three bales having emboi-2-nd. 1U01. soothes the ehiUl, softens tho gun is, al- The (.-oneonlia society held reached Ualvus-ton so far, against lays all pain; enres wind eolie, and is foui-lf-en bales up to this time last the best remedy for Diarrhoea. It will annual 'election of officers last For GMtalogHie and Pai-ticu- relieve the poor little snttoror imme- night, ihe following being elected : Year For Iiiiants and Children. lars Address diately. Sold by Dnitf^isls in every President Han if! Buit.ureira, vice- The Kind You Have Always Bought pnrt of tho world. Twenty-five cents \\ president J usi.ino S L >|)r-y,, see.re Rev, 0, Valence, 0, M. I. bottle. Be sun- and ii'.k for "Mrs. Boars the tary K. Bnitureira, treasurer Jo.

HIDALGO HAPPENINGS. MRS. KING BUYS ! AND

i i Newsy BmU'ot of Local Items from The Entered at the Brownsville, Texas" s Hunch Sells Her .110- co as second class mail matter! Our Up-Uiver Neighbors. 000 Acres in.Nueces County.

THE OFFICIAL COUNTY JOURNAL* To THE HURALD. Mrs. Richard .King of Nneces THE OFFICIAL CITY JOURNAL.' Hidalgo, Texas.Aug. 26, —Work- nounty, Mio cattle queen of Texns, A sign 'that pould save a million times as Official Journal Hidalgo County. ! many dollars and hundreds of thousands of on the county court, house and jail, or ot the United States, for that lives as.;well, would be in tlie way of repairing and paint- matter, has just bought 'from the SUBSCRIPTION RATES: « '.'Cii | ing, which has been going on for Texas Land nnd Cattle Company, e[ - '.f*i ItII'A UI (U. S. Currency.) several weeks, under Contractor owner of the Laurr-les Ranch, 110,- eai ' ••• ...... $6.00 Martin Hanson, is now finished. 000 acres of land lying southwest IGirls, Maidens, Mothers, Women of Middle- «'x months . . .V; ...... 3>00 Age ; heed even the little warnings, never^ of Agua Dulce creek, in Nueces Tfirefe months ...... 1f50 A good job was done and great neglect one sign of weakness, one evidence One month ...... cn credit is duu Contractor Hanson. uouuty, and adjoining her pastures, 1of coming disease. One bottle of i]n pnpQ '<•••••>•...... o\j Home improvements are- being which were already considerably often cures, a few bottles always will. made on the school building, in over 1,000,000 acres in extent. The WHAT ORE WOMAN WK'STESs WEDNESDAY. AUGUtiT i>8, I wish to suy ;i f"\v words in rn«arrt lo your fis e If I the way i>f cleaning and fixing King ranch, known throughout the hayo only used one hotiio of this wonderful reinodv Jiml'Wl n,>nv,,. H,.,., T hnvo fult In tliroo years, suicl \vlllcow-1nno until preparatory for the opening of entire live stock world as the curort. I have, sei-n so many won.lerful euros ABOUT TOWN. thaMt !it o.lpeted, tli:it .1 JHMV Hool that I fi;imi«t AN NIK JlAJiiEiis. Knussy, Oft. ii, to Mr. nnd Mrs. .lesao S. Some improvements arc being doubt one of the best appointed than I00 000 «, ' women liav^ voluntarily testified to cures 'bv 'Ihornham, at noon today,a son. made on Sheriff Glosner's resi- and most successful ventures of la. t, (Gerstle's Female Panacea) of Ovarian troubles Prolap- Win. A. Neale has been appoint- dence by Contractor Hanson. the kind conducted in the world. sus, Whites, Tumors, Painful, Irregular, Profuse and Scrmty Menses and in fact, all manner of T'emnlc Diseases. ed inspector of eustoms at Browns- A fine rain fell here yesterday The price of tho land just purchas- ^'rjlr-to LASHKS' JTICAI/PTI CUT,, i'.j-.v< ville, viee J. if- dimming. afternoon. ed could not be ascertained, but is Druggists sell G, IF. P. 1-. iil::!iSTLi-j oi CO., Chattunootj-n, Tfrm A grand aeries of bailes is adver- generally believed to run close to for ircn lutvii't? al»o'ifc vouv o.usu." I NDIGESTiON, resulting fn>m I weakness of the .stomach, is' relieved tised Lo take place at the Uuadalupe $3.00 per acre. by Howl's SarsaparJlJa, (he j.-rea!. sh>;••- lanch, this county, from the 1st. - Mrs. King, besides being the On5,y,,a Musk, . Ca(.{S.J*rJi quietly yioJc'Is to iron:- aeh tonic and cure for DYSPEiPSIA. to '.be 7th. proximo. largest individual owner of land in Many arc not being benefited by the t )jy Ely's Cream .ihxlni, which is ugi\-( • summer vacation us they should be. rvhly avo.mrU-.ic. Jfc is rocoivcd throngli tl;',i Tliroo ensues of smallpox were A fine rain fell at Ueynosa, Texas, is the owner of the largest 3io-:ivilf{, clcanso« nnd honls tho whole Bin*. ton IK! tit the Dnnizno ranch, be- Now, uot\vithstatirli))|4 mne-h oaldooi ; face over v.iiicb. .if, diftus-o« iteolf. Druggist rf Mexico, yesterday. number of cattle most certainly of life, they are lit;;lo '•" M3iy strou^n- HIMJI. ):.-:ll ij.io50c.Bixi--.; Trinl ur/.e }>y jH.iil.1i> yond the Ja^'oii plantation, and Dame Rumor says a marriage in any woman in the. United States, they were. Tlie tnn on their faces is i Tiisl; it ami you ar<- t?.uro to continue taken ulmrgw of by County Physi- high life will take place in this and it is exceedingly doubtful if darker and makes Dunn look liea-ltlvier, ' j ninn Combe. Tin- rases, whicli'aro county shortly, when a certain any cattle baron brands so many but it is only a ina.sk. They nrc still To aeconnnutkilo (lio^a -who arc all well developed, have been iso nervous, easily lii-ed, upse: li.y tri'Ios, to tho iiso of ,'iloini/ers in up Jiqui- young merchant will lead to tlie calves as she. There has been about, into Iho nus-il p:\sssigc-K for <:t luted, and fifteen persons who were and tli(>y do not eat nor slee.n well. altar a fair senorila of a well-to-do 22,000 head of young steers and What they need is what lonus tlu- />'<•.-;, the proprietors prepare Cream ] itilm iu exposed Lo t,he disease are also un- limiul form, -which Vr'ill bo'3nd the number now on tite, and iimke.M sleep rel're.shhi^, and s-.prayinj;; t-abo is 75 oonts. .Di'ug^i.sls or )-y Tho ease of Ki-ardo Hnerla, that is Hood's .Sarsaparilla. PnpiJ.s and mail, 'rhe liquid form embodies tho moiU reopen in regular session on Mon- the ranch is by a most conservative r icineii properties ox the solid propnration. < charged with receiving smu^^led teaeluMS j.jeu orally will iind the ehiel day next, {Sept. 2. estimate placed at 100,000 head. , . rA .^ property, was examined before. U. puf^posB of: the vaoation best sn))served Very little corn and cotton are M rs. King takes no active part by this ^reat niedieiiu; which, as we |\|^RVOUS troubles nre cured by S. Commissioner Kowalski ye.sler- coming into t.ovvn now. Corn is in the management of her vast' es- know, "builds up the whole system." B ^1 Jiood's • 8,'irsapnrillu, whicli cji- riches and |>uri(i<'s the l)lood. .)i, is (he d»y ft veiling. Tin: defendant was still retailing hfe ai, 4f> to 00 cents tate, and it has been hrotrghr to its bound over in Die .sum of $1.00 to lK',-.t med.ieino i»r nervous PEOPLE. an almud. present stale by the wonderful ex- A Si itsiiniity I.)iot. await the action of the next federal The painteis (hat were employed ecutive ability and sound judgment There are tho enervating days, when, grand jury, and in default, of bond, on the court house, will leave to- of Robert J. Kleberg, who has had as somebody lias said, inon drop ]jy thu was reinrned to jail. ! morrow for their home in Browns- complete charge of every detail for sunstroke us i( the Day of 1'Mre had All. orders Money l)ack ville. the past, twelve or lourteen years. dawned. They are fraught with dan- (.'asli on for tlie In Honor of the Future Governor ger to people, whose systems are poorly delivery Asking. Only three boarders are now The action of the Laureles pen- sustained; ami this leads us to say, in An elegant, hall and m-opf-ion stopping at Hotel t'losner. pie in selling off such a large pro- the interest oi: tho less robust of our were tendered to lion. I>. Argiu-- readers, that tho full effect, of Hood's More machinery has been order- portion of their land holdings Sarsaparilla in. such as to fullest, the IJes in Matamoros last niuht, by ed for thn Ulosner sugar plantation would indicate an intention on propriety of calling this medicine, some- the Matamorense club, at the opera thing besides a blood. purifier and ton- to replace that, which was lost, on their part of eventually closing ie,— say, a sustaining diet,. It makes it house. It was largely alien '.led by the schooner Dickson. out their business, but there is no much easier to bear the heat, assures loading society people of ,\lain- refreshing sleep, and will without any Personals. one who seems to know" anything doub1 t avert much sickness at this time moros, mid a number from lirowns- about it now. — Sun Antonio. Kx- ol year. viile were also present. A sump- W. 1<\ Spragne arrived in town last night from his ranch, La press. tuous supper was served lo the Tlie State of Texas guests at midnight:. Coma, to meet Mrs. Spraguo who IHJRKl Y I'KKSONAI. To the. Hheriil: or any wmstabln of 0 + arrived on the train today from a Cameron county,—(.reeling: Late Horns. visit to friends and relatives at Mrs. II. M. Miller returned to The,,St-nt:<- of Texas Uouuty of Cam- A sensational story is published Brownsville. They left, for home the Point yesterday. eron. To Frederick J. Combo, uiid (o all in Paris, .snyinp: that the late Dovs- this afternoon. ijon ('. Hill returned hist even- .Miss N7ora Kiddei and brother persons owiiitf or Jinviiiff or clainiin^ ager Emptess Frederick of Uer- ing I'roin his trip to Hirlalgo.. any interest in i;he following de,s<.-ri]K'd returned home on Friday's train nifuiy was secretly married in 1890 ('apt. N. Carry of the H«lfooner land, rteliiiqnont, to i:lic Slate of Texas from Matamoros. to Count von tSeekendorf, and liv- Lake Austin was in town today. and Comity of Cimiurou, for ta:v(\s, to ed happily as man and wife, though Win. Schimior and wife return- wit: An undividi'd one Jiali.'oi'Lct 7 Missus Wells and Bar.es and Kmperor William never I'ee.ouni/ed ed home last night, after a short in Bloek "T", in ihe City of Browns- Master-Joe Wells ennui up -from ville, Cameron Counfy, Texas; i(L, i)aUcrn,s hi tho marriage. stay at I he" Havana ranch, this the Point t-hi.s morning. acres oi' land in Cameron county,Texas, colors. The kind county. r Miss Clara Maas, a nurse a}; Hu? beiuy a portion of a ^ranl; ori^i]iall\ sell elsewhere fo Sheriff Closner paid a Hying vis- liVuuk Champion left for his made to E. ami B.l^enumde/-, said jLjrant hns Aniimis hospital in Havana, pair. it to Brownsville- last week, relum- ranch near Santu Maria this after- lujin^- known as "C)oncepciori do Carri- who was bitten by n ye!low fever citos,'t' which said land and lor..are de- ing home on Friday's train. noon, in company with ,). D. A. linquent for taxes for the years ISiKiand infected mosquito in order to be- McCiellan. ' 18f)8 tor the following amoruits: jjiJS.o'S come immune, died oh1 the Fever Fred ]j. Johnston paid this town for Htiito taxes and !jv31).8t5 Tor count.y II. B. Ilcntt'ro, jr., J . tthei wood : last Saturday. This is the third a visit yesterday, returning home taxes, and you are hereby noi:i1ie< '. llia't, in the evening.• and the captain of the suhooner suit has been brought by the St!i.(;i! t'oy victim of the mosquito experiment. the collection of said tuxes, interest am! W. B. Barton and wife returned (.ieo. Lotdve were passengers to the costs and you are commanded' to appear Renewed effort* will be made to home last evening from Bantu Point last evening. and defend such suit at the September obtain a pardon for Mrs. Florence Term of tho District; Court of Cameron •eswfflia /s55». W»iaa B M. Anita ranch, after a short visit. Capt. Cooper Walker of the County, and. State oil Texas, beinj; the May brick after the coronation of next regular term thereof, to be, held at Mr. Barton .reports the country schooner Piercn JSimpson and I OR I A King Edward. She has now served the Court House hereof af; Brownsville, and Children, dry. but says stock is in good con- daughter Miss Walker cjaine up on the second day of Sept ember, A. D' twelve years of the lite sentence 190.1, and show cause, why judgment dition. from the coast (his morning. Kind You Have Always Bought given heron conviction of poison-1 shall not be rendered condemning said came up land and lot and ordering sale and fore- Bears tho ing her English husband, of which j L. W. H. Co won, Judge Wren, on today's train from Browns- closure thereof for naid taxes and oust •PiUsnaturo her friends contend .she is innocent", j A. Cloeltn, Miss Brongliton, Mi-s. of suit. ville. J. Simo and son were passengers Herein Vail Not, but have you before Turkey'has agreed to settle ihei said Court, on the first day of tlie, next Military Change In Tamaulipas. in from the const this morning. toriu thereof, this writ, with your ie- French claims, and t rouble is avert- turn thereon, showing liow you luwo ed. » News has been received here that Goo. Scianlan returned by the executed the same. schooner Pierce Simpson, after a Witness, Louis Kowalski, Clerk of orders have hecn issued hv the District Court of Cameron County. short, visit to Galveston. Became Given under my hand and the seal of up from the Point tins morning. « said Court, at of/ice in Brownsville, this Elizabeth Street ibitinjx the fourth Militury '/.one, the 10 day of August A. p. ]{)OJ. \\hie.h consistee ut' the stnln r/f Uon. Pedro Argnelles, after a LOUIS'KOWALSKI, **I Iiaro bot^jii Cronblod u grout tlonl Tum;uilip;is, with the Third Mili-j visit of several days in Matamoros, Cleric, District Court, Cameron Co. Tex :. witlt n torpid livor, wliich pvocluooH coiistipu- A true copy I certify , " tlOQ I found CASOAIU'VTS to bo nil you chilin iefr on the up-river train this morn- fortbora.ftiul socurocl euoh relief tlio tirsttrial, lary X/MSC, with headqu.ii'iers ;\t, \ CKJ,K'DONIO GrAK/,..\ that I purcliasocl another supply n»d was com- iny. Hi.^ himily, who ae.c'ompanied Sheriff, Cameron County, Texas. Dletely cured. I shall only bo too plad to rec- Monterey, Nuevo Leon. (-Jeneriil j omtnend Cftsoarots whonovor tho opportunity him to MaUunoros, will follow him IB presented." J. A. SMITH. iMiiiliatid Lojero, heretofore C«MII-j 2820 Susquouanna Avo., , Po. nininliiiu: the Konrlh zone, with • next b'ndav. h(M\d(]tuu'!ers in - Mntaninms, hfis j ., ' •' or Over Fifty Y oars . beeo ordered to proc.eed to the! ,.„ . Wfv..r, ,, a .,'. ., ! -Mils. WIN-SLOWS Soothing Kyrnp h,-iH stiite ot vlalise.o for duty. I bceu used for over fifty years' by iuil- The place to 'p'of This ehntiijre will ht- ;i serious' Ho";s -()t' lllot:h.ors i[' (-it-iifM-iil Lojero wiM also !ilys, ul1 paiui rai'es wind c-olic, and is tho. l)ost remedy for Diarrhoea. It will he iniKdi regretted, as he has been relievo the poor little snffcror iinnio-

T tour at M«hi- bottlo. J3o sure uiul a'k for "Mrs. ELY', S• OKTSA••*M• --.,» -*j •* j^i^ni i ^ v s'. i_]J41 v?, Apply into the .nostrils. It is quickly absorbed. 60 »I Polite and Courteous Atientidn MA Tft DIP BiiWttiWB«iirnnteoubr moro<1Jl , . Wuifdow's Soothing Syrup." and take ||Q*TU"D«y. gists to Tobacco iiabit.- " • no other kind. cen^ ut DrujrsiBtior by ihjiil ; sainules :oo. hy malt • ^ ' C-»Y Ee.OlTHIfi«3 • M ^.urreB,.KU, ]Sow Yctiz Oily;

; Newsy Budget of Local Items from The Luurdes Ranch Sells Her 110,- - Entered at the Brownsville, Up-Riv- Texas, Our er Neighbors. 000 Acres in Nueces County. 3 stof fice as second class mail matter! si Pickpockets! jk THE To The Mrs. Richard King of 'Nueces OFFICIAL COUNTY JOURNAL Herald. A sign that would save a million times as n county, the THE OFFICIAL CITY JOURNAL. Hidalgo, Texas.Aug. 26. Work-o- cattle queen of Texas, many dollars and hundreds of thousands of Official Journal Hidalgo County. the county court honse and jail, or of the TJuited States, for that lives as well, would be in the way of repairing and paint- matter, has just bought from the SUBSCRIPTION RATES: ing, which has been going on for Texas Land and Cattle Company, owner 110,-00- 0 (U. S. Currency.) several weeks, under Contractor of the Lanreles Ranch, Girls, Maidens, Mothers Women of Middle ,e year 5 $6.00 Martin Hanson, is now finished. acres of land lying southwest k-- Age ; heed even the little warnings, never Six months 3.00 A good job was done and great of Agua Dulce creek, in Nueces neglect one sign of weakness, one evidence Three months 1.50 coming credit is due Contractor Hanson. county, and adjoining her pastures, of disease. One bottle of O, Pa p, One month 50 often cures, a few bottles alwavs will. Some improvements are being which were already considerably on over 1,000,000 acres in extent. The WHAT tl!s"E WOMAN WRITES: made the school building, in T wish to sav a few wnrds in tn 12 IT D 7 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 2S. 1901. T rrvmri vimr King ranch, known throughout the havo only used one bottKrofthis wonderful remedy and feel . the way of cleaning and fixing up, better than I have felt in three years, ami will contmue until 1 entire live stock world as the I am entirely cured. I have seen so manv wonderful cures preparatory for the opening of that It has effected, that I now feel that I "cannot do withou; ABOUT TOWN. school next month. "Santa Gertrudes," is be-on- d It. Axxik IIamkks. Siiuasy, Ga. Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Jesse S. Some improvements are being donbt one of the best appointed j More than 106,000 women hav voluntarily testified to cures by (Gerstle's - 'Ihornham, made on resi- and most successful ventures of G. F P, Female Panacea) of Ovarian troubles, Prolap- at noun today, a son. Sheriff Closner's sus, Whites, Tumors, Painful, Irregular, the kind conducted in the world. Profuse and Scanty Menses Wm. A. Neale has been .appoint- dence by Contractor Hanson. and in fact, all manner of Female Diseases. A fine rain fell here The price of the land just purchas ed inspector of customs at Browns- yesterday r!tf t. 1 .ADITS' HEALTH Clt'::. i?t ed eonld not be ascertained, but is Druggists sell G. F. P. L. UERSTLc & CO., Cljattanoospi, T j ville, vice J. P. Cummins. afternoon. for iitj vivice &b.nt your case. A grand series of bailes is adver- trenerallv believed to run close to INDIGESTION, resulting. from I weakness tised to tajce place at the Guadalupe $3.00 per acre. of the stomach, is relieved Only a Mask. Kasal C;iiarrii quokly yields to trc- -. - ranch, from the 1st. Mrs King, besides being the pajjui ma. me great sioi::- - this county, are not being benefice! by the mt by Hjs CilahnTichSsagn-.--- ach - tonic and cure for DYSPEPSIA. to largest individual owner of land in . aromatic It is received through tf the 7th. proximo. oe. - smmner vacation as tliey should ntrife, cleanses an?l heals tfeo whole stu-- Three cases of smallpox were A fine rain fell at Reyuosa, Texas, is the owner of the largest Now, notwithstanding ranch onttfoor face over which it diffuses itself. Drugrib!' gi-- oOc. size by found at the Durazno ranch, be- Mexico, yestenhvy. number of cattle most certainly of life, they are little if any strougpr than ibs fclo: Trial mail. :j eeits. Test it snu you ar- sure to contiune were. The tan on their faces is . yond the Jaron plantation, and Dame Rumor says a marriage in any woman in the United States, they the treatm-.Tii- darker and makes them look healtliier, taken charge of by County Physi- high life will take place in this and it is exceedingly doubtful if but it is only a mask. They axe still To accon:ii! i.it9 Ujos; vho are parti .1 cian Combe. The any cattle baron brands so many . cases, which are county shortly, when a certain apse : Uy trifles, totho use cf atomizers in jIyhig lioni-- nervous, easily tired, :., , .. ..., all well developed, have young will calves as she. There has been about .,,..,.1 .!.7 been.iso merchant lead to the and the' do not eat nor sleep well. tho Cream Balm lated, and fifteen persons who were altar a fair senorita of a well-to-d- o 22,000 head of young steers and What they need is what tones Hie h(;i:id fori.i. wmeh wrill bo known a3 i.r. Cre-m- Liquid i Vr.cs including exposed to the disease aie also un- family. yearling heifers sold off the ranch nerves, perfects digestion, creates appe- lalni. tite, and makes sleep refreshing, and tube is 73 cents. Druggists or l.r der quarantine. The county public schools, will this ear, and the number now on mail. The liquid form embodies ihe nsci!-iein- that is Hood's Sarsaparilla. Pupils and The ease of th ranch is by a most conservative properties of the solid jjreparation. Khardo Lluertn, reopen in regularsessiou 011 Mon teachers trenerallv will tind the chief charged with receiving smuggled day next, Sept. 2. estimate placed at 100,000 head. purpose of the vacation ltest subserved property, was examined before U. Vet- - little corn and cotton Mrs. King take no active part by this great medicine which, as we troubles arc cured by aie NERVOUS which en- - in management es- laiow, up rhe system." S. Commissioner Kowalki yester- coming into town now.- Corn is the of her vast "builds whle riches ami purities the blood. It is the m day "evening. The defendant was still retailing here ar. 45 to 50 cents tate, and it has been brought, to its best medicine for nervous PEOPLE.

ex- Si"-taiiiiii- bound over iji the sum of $100 -- to an almud. present state by the wonderful A Jiet. await the action of the next federal The naintets that were emoloved ecutive ability and sound judgment There are the enervating' days, when, grantl jury, and in default of bon'd, 011 the court house will leave to- of Robert J. Kleberg, who has had as somebody has said, men drop by the Iff every sunstroke as if the Da- - of Fire had All rdei"s Money back was returned to jail. morrow for their home in Browns- complete charge of detail for Cash on dawned. They ?ue fraught with dan-- A for the ill ville. the past, twelve or lourteen years. delivery Asking. er to people whose systems ;ue poorly In Honor cf the Future Governor - O n ly- three boarders are now The action of the Laureles peo- sustained ; and this leads us to say, in Iff w An elegant ball and rerppuon ple in selling off such a large pro- the interest of the less robust of our slopping at Hotel Closner. readers, that the full effect of Hood's ill "were tendered th Hoik P Anmp- - More machinery has been order- portion of their land holdings Sarsaparilla in such as to suggest the lies in Matamoros last night, by ed for the would indicate, an intention on propriety of calling this medicine some- Closner sugar plantation thing besides a blood purifier and ton- m the Matamorense club, at the opera to replace that which was lost on their part of eventually closing ic, say, a sustaining diet. It makes it Ik ill honse. Jt was largely attended by the out theiribusiness, but there is no much easier to bear the heat, assures schooner Dickson. refreshing sleet), and will without anv leading society peopfe of .Mata- one who seems 0 know anything Personals. doubt avert much sickness at this tame J Tflj m moros, andannmber from Browns- about it now. San Antonio Bx- - or year. ; m Wis . W. P. Sprague arrived in town ville were also present. A sump- press. last night from his ranch, La The Texas m tuous supper was served to the State of Coma, to meet Mrs. Sprague who To the sheriff or any constable of fff guests at midnight. FUKI I Y arrived on the a I'KkSONAL Cameron county, Geeting: Hi nt 1 train today from Mm-cie- visit to friends and relatives at Mrs. K. M Miller returned to The State of Tex;is County of Cam- m Late Items. eron. Brownsville. They left for home the Point yesterday. 5!? fff A sensational stoiy is published To Frederick J. Combe, and to all ill in Paris, saying that the late Dow- Lon (.'. Hill returned last even- persons owing or having or claiming Miss Nora Kidder and to Hidalgo. ager Bmpi ess Frederick of Ger- brother ing from his trip any interest in the following described lyien'sSox-- 6 ? fff many was secretly married in 1S96 rem rued home on Friday's train Capt. N. Curry of the schooner land, delinquent to the State of Tex;is and Comity of Cameron, for taxes, to Pair for $1.00 to Count von Seekendorf, and liv- from Matamoros. Lake Atistiu was in town today. wit : An undivided one half of Let 7 m ed as man and wife, though Wm. Schunior and wife return- The new happil' Misses Wells and Bates and in Block 'T", in the City of Browns- w lace effect fff ed home -- Emperor William never recognized last night, after a short Master Joe Wells came up from ville, Cameron County, Texas; pattern? in black and stay at the Havana ill the marriage. ranch, this the Point this morning. acres of land in Cameron connty.Texas, colors. The kind that county. being a portion of a grant origirally sell elsewhere for J35c Miss Clara Maas, a unrse at the Frank Champion left for his made to E. and B.Fernandez, said grant Sheriff Closner paid a Hying vis- pair. Las Animas hospital in Havana, ranch near Santa Maria this after- being known as "Concepciou de Carri-citos- ,' it to Brownsville lasr week, return- which said land and lot are de- A. L. who was bitten by a yellow fever noon, in company with J. D. A. 189(5 KAHN ing home on Friday's train. linquent for taxes for the yesurs and infected mosquito in order to be- McClellau. 1S9S for the following amounts: 51S.38 Fred L. Johnston paid this town for State taxes and $59.86 for county t jjj Miller Hotel, iff come immune, died of the fever j a visit yesterday, returning home K. B. Kentfro, jr., J. Sherwood taxes, and you are hereby notified that ' ill has been bronght by the i last Saturday. Thjs is the third and the captain of the schooner suit State for in the evening. the collection of said taxes, interest and j of the mosquito experiment. victim W. B. Geo. Locke were passengers to the costs and yon are commanded to appear r. Barton and wife returned and defend such suit at the September be made to , Renewed efforts will home j f g Point last evening. Term of the District Court of Cameron . . . . . obtain a pardon for Mr. Florence . f Capt. Cooper Walker of the County, and State of Texas, being the coronation of next regular term thereof, to be held at Maybrick after the Mr. Barton reports the country schooner Pierce Simpson and the Court House hereof at Brownsville, Tor Liiants and Children. King Edward. She has now served daughter Miss Walker same up on the second day of September, A. D. TUn Vit U.. l...... n dry, but says.'Stoek is in good con- 1901, iuc Mtsu luU ndVd MIWdYb DUUgni lite sentence and show cause why judgment twelve 3'ears of the dition. from the coast this morning. shall .iiut be rendered condemning said Beai-- on conviction of poison- laud and lot and ordering sale and fore-clo?n- re the given her Lon C. Hill of Beeville came up L. W. R. Cowen, Judge Wren, husband, of which thereof f.r said taxes and' cost fctaiature of ing her English on today's train from Browns- A. Cloetta, Miss Broiighton, Mrs. of suit. her friends contend she is innoeenr. Herein Fail Not, but have yon before ville. J. Simo and son were passengers said Court, on the first day of the next agreed the m Turkey has to settle in from the coast this morning. term thereof, this writ, wish your le-tu- claims, and trouble is avert- Alilitary Change In Tamaulipas. thereon, showing how you have French Geo. Scanlau returned by the executed the same. i. 11 rn News has been received here that TTnn ed. schooner Pierce aimnson, after a' Witness, Louis Kowalski, Clerk of orders have been issued by the District Court of Cameron County. short visit to Galveston. He came Given my Mexican war department, consoli- under hand and the seal of Elizabeth Street. up from the Point this morning. said Court, at office in Brownsville, tins dating the Fourth Military zone, the 10 day of August A. D. 1901. I Lazw Liter which consisted of the stste of Hon. Pedro Argnelles, after a Louis Kowalski, Clerk, District Court, Cameron Co. visit of several days in Matamoros, Tex. liavo been troubled n great denl Tamaulipas, with the Third Mili- - A true copy I certify I n.nM ivpr. tvhich tiroduces constipa- - left up-riv- er morn- - Celedoxio Gakza, Hr.n ifoundCASCAKETStoboaiiyouciaim rarv z Mic, with lieadciuarters at oinhe train this : 1 ..,. Dimh rplirvflhn f rcrTrln - Sheriff, Cameron County, Texas. 8 - who accompanied t that I nurcbttsed another supply and was com- Monterey, uevo Leon General j t,,'ly whenever the opportunity ihim to Matamoros, will follow him onsoria ommend Cascarets ftiniiiauo. Loiero, lieretofore Com tep20SuiueUanna .Phfiaaeipiiia.Pa. next ',(,!,.v. ATe mawling the Fourth zone, with j I headquarters in Matamoros, has Jot $$fteMfa I For Over Fifty Years . r been ordered to proceed to the, Mi. Willow's Soothing Synip has Tin pmce 10 trt a tirst p State of Jalisco for duty. been used for over fifty years by mil-- t Hair-Cu- ; Hons of mothers for their children while ; Shave or t chanire will be a lhis serious teethiugj Avith perfect 5,. It Ios to MaUimoros. The depart- - soothes the child, softens the gums, al-- ,. (Teneral 'lays all pain; cures wind colic, and is ure hojero will the best remedy for Diarrhoea. It vill be much rejiretted, as he has been relieve the poor little sufferer imme-- 1 Intent Taste Good. Do diatelv. Sold by Druggists oSd Never sVckS. Weaken, i Gr.,.e.l0c. 25cc Uk.il by the people of this ' Kr.Hy ceuteS , CURE CONSTIPATION. ... p;irt 0f the world Twenty-fiv- e Yorl. 820 - - ELY'S CREAM isapopilivecnre. Pfllile and Gsorfeotis Attention gUriiB fn.f3r Cccpanr, CMs. XoalmU Frurtiei dm. at; lu- tour at .Mala- bottle. Be sure and ask for 'Mrs ? ?WL ' Winslow's Soothing Svrun." and take t? Tltia "7 Sold and cnaranteed by all drag- - jnori) - mli! f HOmO'DAC gists to CVUE Tobacco Habit no otner kuki. i m.v TipnTirpwik&s Krm vuj-c;.- . Bishop Verdaguer's Antonio Gutierrez Pefia, for many Fortieth Anniversary. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 9, .1902. years a popular representative-' of The 40th anniversary of the MISS IDA M. leading commercial houses of New sacerdotal ordination of Rt. Rev; Treasurer of the Brooklyn East £rid Art Club 1 Orleans, and who it at present In ! Bishop Peter Yerdnguer will be ABOUT TOWN'- -' 4 ENStRUAL;'- irregu- to their health we Brownsville, informs us .that this I celebrated on- December. 12 (next larities .-are geher- have more happy wives/ will be his last visit in that"capac- Friday) in St. Patrick's church in • ally the -'beginning mothers and daughters, and Most of the county schools have <3f a ^vonian^s trou- if they would use , more intel- ity^ as. he has -resigned- his position. Corpus Christi. A pontifical .mass bles. With the vitality at a- ligence in the matter of medi- low ebb, the blood ,weak- Sjeen opened. The arduous life on the road, with will take place at nine o'clock, the cines, observing, 'results, they enecl, tlie: digestipn/.dispr.-i. would find that the doctors' The Knights of Honor hold their its many vicissitudes, has wearied bishop to he the celebrant and the dered, she goes about pale- prescriptions do not perform regular meeting tonight, faced, hollow-eyed and nag- the many cures they are given him, and he has decided to engage sermon to be preached by the rector gard, a piteous contrast tp 1 •credit for* The schoones 0. H. Moore came in a business which will enable him of the church, Rev. C. JailJet.- the ;b.l doming.:. health : of ""• "In consenting with my her former self. But over inside the bar last evening. to remain with his family. He ex- Corpus Christi Caller. druggist he advised McEtree's 1, 000,000 women have found— —. _ _. Wine of €ardui and Thed- The Ladies' Euchre Club meets pects to make Monterey' his home. health again by taking Wine of Cardui. ford's Black-Draught* and so I took it Brownsville will miss Mr. Pefia's As a regulator of the menstrual periods and have every reason to thank him for tomorrow afternoon with the Misses Wine of Cardui has never been ^naown a new life opened up to me with restored pleasant visits and his many friends A farewell breakfast was given by to fail. It has seldom failed to restore health, /arid it only took three months to .Kelly. perfect health, even in the most persis- here hope he may still drop in oc- Antonio G. Pefia to some of his • ' '•' Preparations for the usual Christ- tent and aggravated case of weakness. * You may secure the same relief as casionally to see them. He has intimato friends todny at noon Miss Ida M. Snyder^ of No. 535 Ber- mas trees are .being made by the gen Street, Brooklyn, N. Y., has used MisEfShyder; if you take Wine of Gardui THE HERALD'S best wishes for suc- at a local restaurant... The Wine of Gardui and she says it helped as she ' took it. Thedford'a Black- various Sunday schools. Draught is the companion 'medicine of cess in his new ventures. menu included bacalado a la Vis- her into a new life. Health to Miss Up to the hour of going to press, Snyder is worth a great deal. She is Wine of Qardui and it is a liver and cay no, fried fish, mullet rolls, an attractive young woman with intel- bowel regulator which assists greatly the Mantco was still dancing on lectual attainments and she occupies in effecting a cure. If you take these FOURTH INFANTRY GOES champagne, coffee and cake. .The 1 the blue waves of the Gulf of-Mex- the position of Treasurer of the Brook- medicines according to directions, the participants drank various toasts lyn East End Art Club. This position relief and cure is simple, Some cases ico outside tho pass of Brazos San- TO THE PHILIPPINES. to thoir host, wishing him prosper- marks her as a person of intellect, cul- are cured quickly and others take longer tiago. The schooner Pierce Simpson According to an order issued from ture and refinement and it speaks highly because thV disease has run longer'. ity in his new home, and long life of the. respect and trust her lellow was also still .outside. Remember how Miss Sriyder took Wine the War Department at Washing- in which to enjoy it. women have in her. She writes: of Carclui and has health, The same ton, Friday, nearly all troops in "If women would pay more attention medicines are offered you to-day. The many Brownsville friends of A H month) n od e 1 s o who re : i n T r-i E the Department of Texas will Lieut. R. M. Beck, aide Lo General HERALD, Mr. Pefia expects to go to change station to the Philippines. A million suffering women Grant, who arrived this afternoon Monterey to reside. He will leave have found, relief in The entire Twelfth Cavalry, the Wine of Cardui. xvith tlie general, are more than shortly for Laredo, where his EofCARDVI whole of tlie Fourth Infantry and pleased to see him again. Lieut. family now resides, to move with the Seventeenth Battery of Field Beck was one of the most popular them to Monterey. FOR OVER SIXTY YEARS. Artillery are scheduled for the officers ever in command at Fort M-us. WJNSJ.OW'S Soothing syrup has Attention rica planters! Brown. Philippine service. Theso regi- been used for fiver sixty years l.y mil. •Hrmviisvillu ITondunis rice— !.<\st Buy and Try a Box Tonight j An order has been issued by U. ments will be replaced by the First lions of -mothers for th« ir children send to 1m found anywhere,. "Experts Cavalry and the Twenty-sixth In- . While "you think of it, go buy and 8. Marshal Hanson of this district, try a box of Cascarets Candy Ca- while teething, with perfect suc- class it.higher than best Mis^issi fantry and a battery of artillery thartic, ideal laxative, tonight. Youfl" _ . Ir. soothes the child, softens r.he rice,- For sale by transferring John M. Haynes, dep- gums, allays all pain; cures wind colic uty U. S. marshal at this place, to still to be named.—San Antonio never regret it. Genuine tablets, Express. stamped C. C. C. Never sold ia and it is.the best remedy for Diitvrhoea. Laredo. Mr. Haynes has held tho bulk. All druggists, ice. tt will relieve the noor liUlo. sutVerer DH AFNESS CANNOT BE CUBED •office of deputy at Brownsville for This order will include the re- immediately. Sold by dru.iwutR in ! by IOOH) <-ppli cations us they canno nearly twenty years. He will leave moval of tho present troops at Fort every part oi tho work). Twenty-five reach rhe (licensed portion .of' the ear. Brown. It is matter for general cents a bottle. Be sure and'ask^'i'or There is only one way to cure deafness, for his new station by January 1st. Mrs Winslow's soothing Syrup," and and that is by constitutional remedies. The good wishes of his many old regret in Brownsville that Major Deafness is caused l-y an inflamed con- Mason and his command cannot take no other kind, dition of the mucous lining of the J:!us- 'friends will go with him. FOR SALE. tachian Tube. . When- this tube is in- remain longer here. Tho exchange The Mexican supper given at St. Alcohol of superior quality at 30 flamed you have a rumbmi^ sound or will not be made before next imperfect hearing, and when it is en Joseph's College last evening, by cents a litre, or $1.03 a gallon. tircly closer!, beafness is the result, and February, however, and so there is Jthe Repair Fund Society of the Whiskey at~40 cents a litre unless the inflammation; can be taken time for a change of orders. The fiut and this tube restored to its normal Catholic Church was a decided suc- $1.50 a gallon. condition, hearing will be destroyed Fourth Infantry has already seen Distilled at the San Vicente plan "Iliavo used your valuable OAS€A- »ore ver. Nine oases out of ten aro caused -cess. A largo crowd was present to RETS and. find them perfect, Couldn't do by Catarrh, which is nothing but an its share of service in the Philip- tat ion. without them, I have used them Tor some time '.feast upon hot tnmales, enchiladas, for indigestion and biliousness and nm now com- inflamed condition of tho mucous sur- pines and is entitled to a longer For sale at the Northwest, corn e pletely cured. Recommend them, to every one. faces. . •chiles rellenos, the favorite Mexican tour in the "old country." uncurled, you will never bo without them In We will give One Honh-od Dollars -dishes, with claret and hot coffee. of 4th. and Movelos streets, one the fairly." EDW. A. MARX, Albany, N. V. for- any case of Deafness caused by block cast of custom house in. catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's A band of music enlivened the oc- natrm'h Hnr". Send for rmjiilarp -fvno casion, playing popular Mexican Water Connection With Corpus, F, J.CHENEY, &Co., Toledo, Ohio'. Sold by druggists 75c. airs throughout the evening. A neat The Caller of last week says:— John W Hoyt • .sum "was 'raised by the supper for Mr. W. E. Harlan, the garden truck - - At i ISN'T 01'' - - &he society. farmer, was in town yesterday talk- ing connection by water route CASTORIA •PUR&L'1**~~ Waters Pierce Oil Co, Tor Infants and Children. between Corpus Christi and Browns- l ftl atab oten Supplies the trade with GoodflrtN, Never Sickenm i , »8Weaken' P , otr" Gripe'Jasto, I0o,«flcGood., 60oDa. ville. ILLUMINATING AND LUBRICAT- ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... fhe Kind You Have Always Bought John Sneecl, a recruit for Fort ING OIL OF EVERY QUALITY attrHng n»»fdjr Company, Chltftge, , New York, 3?L the Brown, arrived on last nights stage. FIGHT WILL BE BITTER. Also Turpentine, Linseed Oils, Gaso- Signature of Mrs. Rosa Polhit went to the line, Caudles, Axle Grease, etc. Those who will persist in closing Sells Gasoline Engines 1 i-2 to 50 Horse Point yesterday -and returned in Power, with or without Centrifu- the afternoon. their ears against tho continual gal Irrigating Pumps. recommendation of Dr. King's New M. G. Mnyes-of Bay City, Tex- Discovery for Consumption, will SELLS SKWING MACHINES, NEW OR OLD. as, arrived by laat night's stngo, KEEPS NEEDLES, OIL AND EVERYTHING have a long and bitter fight with ELSE POll THEIR USE. REPAIRING SAT- and is registered at the Miller. ISFACTORILY DONE. RENTS SEWING llu-ir troubles, if not ended earlier MACHINES; RENTS AMBULANCES. President Celaya of tlie Rio by fatal termination. Read what LAYTOI^ AN°HALE Y'S. Grande is making almost daily T. R.-Beall, of Beall, Miss., has to AGK visits to tho Point, in -the interest say: "Last fall my wife had every FA'NCY 'AND STAPLE of shipping matters. Ho went down 7 symptom >f consumption. Sho 'yestorda} and again today. took Dr. King's New Discovery af- for ter everything else had failed. Im- 10 CENT ARRIVAL OF GEN. GRANT. TRIAL SIZE. GROCERIES..' General Frederick D. Grant, com- provement came at a once and four Prices and Quality are the Cheapest mander of the Army Department, bottles entirely cured her. Guar- Ely's Cream Balm - -and best-—- - accompanied by Col. Clom, and his anteed by J. L. Putegnat & Bro's Gives Relief at once. Druggists. Price 50e, and .$1.00. It cleanses, soothes and aide, Lieut. R. M. Beck, arrived at hcnta the diseased tnem- Free Delivery. Trial bottles free. brnnc. ItcureaCatarrh J^^v V mmm»i»mmmS. Fort Brown this afternoon, coming and drives nwny a Cold If A V W K IfKK

.,.»._,..- A M ^ , in the Head quickly. It flfl 1 • t» W bit by the Matamoros train. A gov- Is nbsorbcd. Heale and Protects the Membrane. Restores the Sensefl of Taste and Smell. FuH size ernment ambulance drawn by eight BRIGHT'3 DISEASE. V)c.: Trial Size 10c.; at Druggists or by mall. Try ELY BROTHERS, 66 Warren Street, New York- mules was sent.across the river, by Tlie largest sum ever paid for a pro Chilian, with a detail of ofh'cers scription, changed hands in San Fran- tfrom the post, to meet the dis- cisco, Aug. 29, 1902. The transfer in- tinguished commander and escort volved, in coin and stock $112,500, and was paidJPy a party of business men for Aurora Restaurant. liim across to Fort Brown. A gen- a specifWfor Bright's disease. eral's salute was fired by the gar- Thowommcnced the serious iiivesti- At this restaurant, the public Get Gluick Action. rison gun on tho arrival of General gationw the specific Nov. 15, 1901. Grant at the post. Thoy in^hyfewed scores of the secured will be served fine meals, in- cluding game when in season, 'Thegeneral will be the guest of and tried re^uit on its merits by putting ; Will ship '.'you,express charges prepaid, over tho thre^|^||0ncases ou the treat- Major Mason, commanding officer ftsh, oysters, etc.,with excellent coffee. at Fort Brown, while here., An in- got physicians to name cnr^Suc, incur Four Full Giiiarts formal reception will be given in able cases, arid administered it with the .P r •/ c e s It, e a s o n a b I e. his honor at the major's quarters physicians for judges. Up to Aug. 25, Pedro Viilareal, Proprietor 8-YAR OLD ROSDALERYE djo nn this evening. eighty-seven per cent of tho test cases WHISKY FOR- — v v :„:. Spp.VJV wore either well or progressing favor- Cor. Adams and 13th. Streets Tho general will inspect the gar- ably . Packed in plain boxes--Ko marks to indicate contents. xisqn tomorrow. There being but thirteen per cent of This ispure old mellow whiskey. Upon receiptof same taste it, and failures, the parties wore satisfied and if not perfectly satisfied, return at our expense and^your money Cattle Dipping Vat. closed the transaction. The;proceed- will be refunded, Can ship whisky any where in Texas by railroad, A large cattle dipping vat, forty ings of tho investigating committee and in two days. Address all orders to '. feet long, is being built in this city tho clinical reports of the test cases were published and will be mailed free by Reid &• Sutherland for use on SOUTHERN LIQOUB CO., on application. ' Address John J. FuU sUmped C. C. C Never $o!d In buft tho King ranch in the lower coun- ton Company, 430 Montgomery St. San Stwar* of the dealer who tries to s«U 378 Main St., [Patronize a Texas institution] Dallas, Tex, try.—Corpus Christi Caller. Francisco, Gal. • ' !*#iriii»in|iifliiiw^ The Honor Roll In • -'--.-

TH^t ^* J»JkiF4 J—**B* *J /h* Jb« I*T A*J | Y*• . *"^ ^»^«,^™ ^m ^*^^ «*ii^*H^H^ « ' —- — _- f*y • ft • ' • m^ " "* " * | ..— -.-.-- :.--:^.-:~~ • ; Confer With Brownsvil Incarnate Word Academy. 25 cents a Bottle/ SUBSCRIPTION RATES: ! Messrs W. W, Shelv, frofrom &io Th« following pupils having dis- a \ • (U. S. Currency.) Grande City, and John Closrfer,'! languished tliQiiiselves- by a very One month 60 cfedi lllle from Hidalgo, came clown .,,h'***'. : " -'oxiiinimiliori held, in tin, GENUIN Three .months 1.50 _,.,— — ---..-. Tnc-irn-iteWord-•" Acidemv on QIx months 3.00 terday'n Mn la moms train to confer. ^"rn'l 7. U ^a,^cftcltm)> Q .ulto., we'fuel weaned •One year * 6.0nr0t «.JfwitKh *Ktheo authoritieonmrYrihi«cs aort ' BrownsvillR r'nvv na few Miss Agnes Vol/M lessons and The Frontier Ice Works are j'or •clays ago that thu total enrollment Corpus Christi Callings, mathematics. sale, ami to the right party this is •of.Brownsville's public school was Miss Stella Sherwood, lessons and the chance of a life time to secure •560 pupils, was erroneous. It mathematics. . '* an established and paying business From the Caller: should havo been GGO. Another fresh water gusher has Miss* Lucile Champion, lessons with the best of prospects in the and mathematics. nonr future, Three cans of tomatoes for 25 just been secured on La Parra * \ Miss Eloisa Reyes, lessons and For price and other information cents at Leo Wiso's. ranch, eighteen mjiles southeast of nathematics. call on or address the undersigned. Arbncklo coffee two pound pack the ranch headquarters, depth of Miss Fidela Garza, lessons and Come and examine tho works. .ages for 25 cents at Loo Wise's. well 1160 feet; flow, 400 gallons a .mathematics. G. \V. KENDALL. A. W, Amthor went out this minute of fine f res hi waterwe , The well LOW 7'n-r. GRADE: Brownsville, Tex. •morning to take charge of the sur- is five miles from Lagnna Mad re, Miss Folicitas-Lopez,deportment, veying corps of the Lott railroad, Indeed, great is the country between lessons and mathematics. who will at onco proceed to locate Corpus Christi and BrownsviMe, Miss A,ddio Celaya, deportment tho permanent route for the Hidal- Mr. John G. Kenedy, who has arid lessons. go branch, secured over forty fine artesian Miss.Gundalupe Morales, deport- wells on Ln Parra, has five well For rubber slices, coats, caps, etc,, ment and lessons, boring outfits now at work, which in fact, all kinds of rubber goods Miss Laura Celayn, lessons, The Thomas School. means - more gushers—plenty of sco H. Grtinowakl. Miss Irene Alonzo, mathematics. A SELECT SCHOOL FOR- GIRLS- WEST END, SAN ANTONIO, TEXA them, Tho screw steamer Man too, hav- LOW GTH. GRADE: D. McNeill Turner, Esq., return- Superior advantages. Thoroughly competent literary teachers. ing fully repaired the slight damage Miss Virginia Campbell, deport- ed homo from attending district Pupil of Madame Marches!, Paris, France. Leading Piano teacher f rom the recently sustained by getting ment and lessons. .Academy of Music, Londou, England. Stringed inslvriunents teacher fn court at Brownsville last Saturday tieipsic Conservatory. Art toucher from the National Academy of Desij aground, sails for Point Isabel this Miss Amelia Campbell, deport- night via Rio Grande City, San York ..Elocution and Physical Culture teacher Pupil of C. H, Clark, Nev evening. The vessel takes out a fair ment and lessons, Business neportmcmt teacher, Graduate of a leading Commercial Coll Diogo and Siddmore, being four Large .Njopl, and comfortable rooms. Excellent health conditions. number of passengers and a full Miss Zottn Jones, deportment and days on the road. He says the peo- was culled in" only twice during tho past schoo year.J cargo of miscellaneous freight. It is lessons, Board, Tuitmrt.Siind Laundering for the school year, $200. ple of the lower country are going Write for catalogue. anticipated thnt she will return full Miss Gertrude Scrivnor, deport- to make an immense rice crop and V A. A. THO *with cotton, rico and other products ment and lessons. everybody is happy, of tho lower Rio Grande valley.— Miss Joset'a Lope/,, deportment. A grand sight was -that noticed Gnlvoston Tribune. MISK Hilda Thorsell, lessons. in Corpus Christi yesterday, when Dried poaches and apricots, in Miss Elena Cortex, lessons. a train of ten eix-mule-teams was ono pound cartons; apples in bulk 8 P ANISH DEPARTMENT: noticed coming down the main and in fivu pound cans at Leo Miss Maria Fernandez, deport- treet from Mr. E, H, Caldwell's Wiso's. ment, BOTIC0DEL store, every wagon loaded with well Miss Carolina MacAllen, deport- Postmaster Sharpo has received casing, going out to the Santa •the following letter, which, however, ment. Gertrudes ranch, They were Mrs. H, 0 DEPARTMENT OK MUSIC: •wo aro inclined to believe was M, King's teams-and, of course, •Solicits yon to buy ynr Drui/?* Toilor nvr 4th. grade. 111: written before tho lifting of the looked fine with the big wagons, all Drug Sundries, Combs, Too>h, Hair and Nul quarantine JIM mentioned in Major iMiss Ettu Kowulski and Miss wide-tired wheels. Tho wagons brushes aiid tiling in this lifj»j mo numerous tn Armstrong's li'ltor to Colonel Lott, Lucile Champion. altogether carried away 3,800 feet mention. A full linn of' shui-iut-Tv niH L »\v!n-»y's ^JWKIS ma do. nf casing, which is to be used on cnndifs. Our £o-i Buii.DEH.—Contracts , Arrive Niagara Falls 8:08p m taken for both iramo aud brick build-! within ;\ short time, 7:00 pin 7:r,0vin 4:0-") am We ^ 0:00 p.m Book ."Binders Arriving .in St. Paul ,. 8:30 a nr 7:20 p m j Shears it Putcgnat, Proprietors, ; American ami Spanish makes of Can- ra Falls. Wviss Foived in Wabnib au Cnkos Etc "•',. DALLAS, TEXAS. Stop over allowed;.on all tinketa via \Viil deliver Frosh Milk on and\if-' ^ . « - ^eilclia^- and Ban- Palace Dining Cars. 'T T mno j. IA i '• L '-quot i a sewed in latest styles, Prices tor Juno 1, 1903, at 10 cents a quart,1 . .. Honrs o^ valoablo time aro saved .by purchasing tic'rc route . ' . ' ' reasonable, Onnsnlh.Jtickfet agents of comiccting lines or address. Mexican coin. Twelfth Street, facing G, & G. Steam- JESSE 0, WHEELER, Local Agent \-T>_^VXN W. P. A..'35? Wa.-.Strce- Dallas, Texas Leave ardors at Boticn del Leon shiM oflico. irv^X/-N.X THE G A l. VESTON TBIBDNIJ t SATURDAY. APRIL 22, 19Ö5.

Following are members of the choir*. EASTER SUNDAY - ■Boj>ranoa—Mrs. Wm. Murphy. .Mrs. Oser. Mrs. Ad. Dolson. Miss V. Lacorne. Mis» OMEN NOT TRÜTHFÜI B. Mardfeldt, Miss G. Foster, Miss N. Rear-Admiral tìichòorn IN GALVESTON McDonnough, Misses Louise and Ada \V11-

Mltoa—Miss Q. Reybaud, Miss I.. Dallla. Statement Hàs Been Unjustly Made, use » e n p ts —Mr. J. tyjLnlor, Mr. S. Hlerlng. How the Day Will Be Observe ‘•Josses— Messrs. Frank Quin. Bacon, I.. B y Praises Pe-ru na. Modest Women Evade7 Questions Aski Miller, Sykes, TV. Herrle. in the Churched Sololsts^-Mts* Foster, Miss Dalll.in, Mr. Male Physicians. Lalor. Mr. Quin. Evthilng servlce( Junior choir): O Saluturla, by E. H. Bailey. ELABORATE PROGRAMS Tnntum Ergo, by J. Wlegand. Gregorian Vespers—Mixed chorus. OF MUSIC AND SONG Keglnu Coell, by Hamma. Following are members: Misses Jose­ phine Emmett. Irene Morgan. Jennie Mc- Caulley, Angle Arnold' Beesle Daley. Mrs. The Mustoal Talent of the C ity Has H. Tsehuray, flOprano; Miss Reybaud, Been Freely Drawn (7pon to alto: Mr. S. Bloring, tenor; Mr. W, Herrle, i ummemirale th© Uaj. - bass. Trinity Episcopal church. Mr. Chas. S. Aves. rector: Prof. J. J. Blood, organist; Mrs. A. J. F. Parker, musical director. Easter Sunday will be .observed ;mor« The Easter music« as arranged for the It generally In the Galvo*ton churches to­ a. m. service Is: morrow than has tn»en done for years. The Processional. Signature Brand, whole, Tribune gives here the. program* ji\ the Hymn 10;*, “Welcome Happjy Morning“ ca n ...... »••• various places of worship that tltfVo nude (A. S Sullivan). formal preparation for the occasion: ° l î £ ^ ...... 6 5 c "Christ Our Passover" (Crotch). ai»*» Jar*. QAr Fourth Presbyterian chdrch. avenue Gloria Patrl (Crotch). whole...... S v i* G. Service at 8 p. m. Te Deum Laudaniua (Clough Lei lor). The Hullelujah Chorus Olandel)—illM Jubilate (Tours).’ P ark. Hymn 123, "Alleluia! Sounds of Glad­ Jams, Preserves, App, Hymn—Congregation. ness’,' (A. Sullivan). Prayer—The pastor. Kyrle,Elelson (Tours). and all Seasonable OoinKiuu,, Frankford, lad. .write« *The Light of the World (Sullivan)—Ml*s Gloria Tlbl (Tours). W lttlg. H vm n 118. "At the Lamb's High Feast BUY.. . . Y O U £ l K S i t o $ S ^ . t o ^ a >M, M di. We Sing" (Elvey). doe has done for me. Address—The pastor. d bo qualified; women do tell the “Christ Is Risen" (Blerly >—Mrs. E. B. Anthem. "God Hath Appointed a Day" i, but not the whole troth, to ft “ Three year» ago I had Inflammation of the ADMIRAL'S WORDS CARRY WEIGHT. ovaries ana aloers on my womb. I was under Holman, Mrs. L. E. Sparrow. Cavt. A. (B ertho’.d Tours). ( RECOMMENDS PE-RU-NA. ] ptmridM, bat this is. only la r*- Presentation of Alms (Whitney). to those painful and troublesome the doctor's care tor about three months, and McDonald Brooks. **“ only time I was not in pain was whan Hymn—Congregation. Surstim Corda (Tours). J^EAR-ADMIRAL HICHBORN Is one of the best “1 am convinced of Peruna’s curative qualities and I to their mx. ander tthe lufluence of morphine. The doctor “Dream of Paradise" (Gray)—Mrs. M. EL Gloria in Excelsls (Zumer). known admirals of our navy. unhesitatingly recommend it to to all persons suffering from mid I never would be better, and Nunc Dlmittis (Tours). There can be no more terrible ordeal would bo an Invalid the net of my life. I bad Blystone. His statement concerning Peruna will have much catarrh."—Commodore 8omervlUe Nicholson. »delicate, sensitive, refined woman given op in dsspair, bat one «rentng I How Sweet the Name of Jesus Sounds’* Recessional, Hymn 113, “Christ is Risen" Weight as it goes out into the world. (Sullivan). | te> be obliged to answer certain aerosa one of vour advertisements and dsdded (Brown)—Mrs. E. B. Holnjan, Capt. A. What he says is echoed by many other naval offloers of The Sunday schtiil will have Easter pro­ FROM HIS OWN EXPERIENCE;. | * as when those questions are to write jwi for advtoe. *I did so and com» McDonald Brooks. * v '’V high standing. oven hjr her family physician. I. Pinkham's Vege- ‘The Enajiter Morn" (TaylorJ-+Capt. A. cessional and ofCwlng-at 4.30 p.' m. Mr. tabWCompound I began to improve at once, ;in> K especially the ease With un- McDomild Brooks. . W. Catteri^ll^jmpAntendent. “ The use of your Peruna as a remedy and cure tor catarrh W anted women. and to-day 1 am a well woman, and I know WHAT THE ADMIRAL SAYS. it b all due to your advioe and medicine. Hymn—Congregation. Because of the absence from the city of by many of my friends who have been benefited, by the same, "The Resurrection Morn" (Sohnecker)— ’ Xa lt any wander, than, th at women lira. J. H. Farmer o f 2809 Elliot* Mr. Hudson, u is^ f ofthe Central Presby­ Philip Hichborn, Rear-Admiral United States Navy, as well as my awn experience as to its efficacy and gGod tonic eoatinns to anffer and that doctor« Mr*. E. B. Holman. - x terian ehurch.niorApeclal Easter music has properties, causes me to recommend it to all persons.”— jteO to ewe female diseases wh*n they Avenue, St. Louis, Mo., writes: Benediction. r* . writes from Washington, D. C-, as follows: Dear Mrs. Plnkhsm:- been arrangef^^fegular Sunday service Ex-Lieut. U. S. Navy, James M. Morgan. eunot ge\ the proper Information to _____ will be held. «After the use of Peruna for a short period, I WWlMNtf .... “ I cannot thank yt _ Groce Episcopal church, R»V. J- K. advice and msdlinnes have done for me. Black, pastor. The Oluslc tor the U a. m. can now, cheerfully recommend your valuable ; ’fhta ta the resson^vhy thousands and They have done me more good than all the Sacred Heart church. 748 Broadway. The PE-RU-NA CURES THROAT CATARRH. doctor* 1 ever had. service Is arranged as follows: muasee on Eastar day will be at 5.30, 6, ? remedy to any one who Is In need ot an Invigor­ J « t b m a n d i o f women are now eorre* Organ Prelude. . «ponding w ith Mr*. Hnkham . To her “ For the last eight yean I have suffer'd and 8. Solemn high mass and 9ermon at ating tonic. Philip Hichborn. “ I can cheerfully recommend your remedy, Peruna, to m; toerean and do give every symptom, with female troubhe; * » very weak; bad Sonnta in F (Hayden), 10. Celebrant, Rev. D. Murphy. S. J.; dea­ friends and other sufferers as one of the best remedies 1 have nervousous prostration, and could inot ' do my Processional Hymn. ao that she really knows more abont work;i; but I am happy to my Lydia R. Pink* con. Rev. M. Grace, S. J.; sub-deacon, Rev. AN EVERPRESENT FOE. ever tried for catarrhal troubles of the throat and kindred Use true condition of her patients, Christ Our Passover. A. Remy, S. J. Father Grace will preach diseases. I also consider Peruna a grand tonic.”—Admiral ham's's Vegetable Compound bas. made a Te Deurn (Uloyd). T** ,S » ‘ ; through her oomspondenee with them different woman of me. I am in perfect "The Risen Christ." The choir, un The soldier and the sailor are especially subject to James A. Greer. ÎÎ* Î health and have gained in weight (rum 98 Jubllante (Belcher). der the ¿>ftlcl*«t kU reel Ion of Mrs. Marlon than the physiolan who personally Hymn—Offertory—“Eastern Mej-n-1—Capt; catarrh in some form or phase. U * '-i questions them. pounds to 138 pounds.” Douglas, wtir^m esjf lie following music: Exposed as they are to constant changes, subject as they A. McD. Brooks. FOR COUGHS AND COLDS. Ifyott goffer from any form of trouble No' other medioine in the world has Festival Mads In E Flat, by Wlogand. are to various vicissitudes, and all kinds of climate, wet r v * Sanctus: Agnus Del. Offertory, ‘ Regina Coell,*’ Cour-part 1 " pooullar to women, write a t once, to received suoh widespread and unquali­ UlorUi In Excolsus lllunt). and dry, night and day, they find catarrh to be their most Mia. Pinkham, Lyan, Mass., and she fied endorsement. No other medicine chorus, by Warner. “ I have used your Peruna with satisfaction and can cheer* Nunc Dlmittis. Ave Veruin,” bass solo—Mr. Ph. Bar- Insidious and everpresent foe. fully recommend the remedy as an effective remedy tor w ill advise you m e of charge. has suoh a record for actual cures of Recessional. , , In the barracks and on the field, Peruna is equally The fact thatthia great boon, which female ills as has Lydia S. Ptnkham’s bot. coughs and colds.”—Rear-Admiral J. A. Howell. Organ—March des Hugeupfe—Mrs. J. J. Tiuilum Ergo,| soprano solo and efficacious. la extended freely to women by Mrs. Vegetable Compound. Hunnu. organist. Pinkham, la appreciated, the thou? Mrs. Pinkham Invites all sick women chorus (Wlogand). Taken in time, it will absolutely prevent catching cold. pW SED PE-RU-NA IN > HIS FAMILY. The Sunday school will hold their Easter Sopranos: Mrs, C. Relcherzer, Mrs. E. 1^1 sands o f letters reoelved' by her prove. to write her for advice. She has Curol service a t 1.30 p\ m. Mr. Wm. T, Shea. Mrs. W. Guyton, Miss I. Bodd^ker. PE-RU-NA AN ABSOLUTE SPECIFIC. Many suoh grateful letters as the fol* aided thousands to health. Address, ArmHtrong. superintendent. “I have used Peruna in my family with the moat flattering -y^towtoyte constantly pouring In. Viynn, Mass. Ml»s A. Devin«, Miss K-. Joyce. Mias M. results. MmX liter, Miss Th. Elbert. Miss K. Elbert, After a cold has become established, Peruna will break '. . S lk .S f l* ■PfaUun> A ifkt-A vlfMiB IM tntaafe A Wonka’s Ola. West End M. E. church, 39th and 1» Miss M. Burke. Miss M. Doherty. Altos: it up quicker than any other remedy known to man. “ I can recommend your valuable remedy as a most efficient 8 p. m. Mrs. Th. Horn. Mrs. M. Douglas. Tenors: Even after a cold has become settled in some organ of remedy for coughs, colds and catarrh.”—Col. U. 8. Marins “Hallejujah! Hallelujah!'' — Song by not yet 39 years old. Domestic unhappl Mr. J. Ganter, Mr. M. Douglas. Basses; the body Peruna can be relied upon to promptly dispel it, Corps, C. J. Porter. school and choir. . _ L ' Mr. Ph. Barbot. Mr. W. Kolley. No remedy ever yet devised has received such unstfitted ■f nc.i* (allotting separation from lipr Ivus Invocation. - Peruna will cure catarrh, whether acute or chronic, but band Is supposed 10 lmve been the cause Solemn Benediction of the Most Blessed a few doses taken in the Srst stages of'the disease will be eulogy from so many renowned statesmen and military iqen V* m W •: Song by choir (selected). Sacrament Immediately after high mass. If-M A i k ' i of her sulcldi*. "Easter VJuestlons '—Four girls and four more effective than when tho disease has become chronic. as Peruna. 15,000 PEOPLE The Good Friday services In the Duoroo boys. Easter, the day of Resurrection , Is ob­ If you suffer from catarrh in any form, do not negleot We have on file thousands of teatl monlals IIke those given are renowned throughout the. world und "My Easter Violets"—Mattie May Free served by the Spiritualists as their annual It. Take Peruna at once. .Delays in such matters are aboVe. We can give our readers only a glimpse of the vast are second only to those of Rome. The man. memorial servloe. At the Splrltualst Tem. dangerous. array of endorsements Dr. Hartman is receiving. church was Hllcd and (treat crowds were Trio by Otis Schwab. Roy Garrett. Ed corner 14th and Postofftce streets. Che § Sensation«! Suicida of an Italian gathered In front of the building und even die Cuenod. with chorus by twelve boys lyeeum will hold their memorial service» standing upon the pedestal of tnu statue "What the Lilies Tell''—Christine Tad wWh decorated chairs and special program. Russia regarding the Kamranh bay in- ^ tlon must not be classed with tho various Gpunteas in Milam Cathedral. of Victor Emmamml In the pi.via before lock. In the morning at 9.30 o’clock. At night, TEXAS NEWS NOTES. cldent. cheap shows that have appeared here In the cathedral Song by choir. 7.45 o’clock, the lecrure by Mr. John W. Orders given for disarmament of the the past. At , Mr. Rich has had The Interior of the (treat edifice was “Little Children of the King"—Eme Tad' Ring. ‘'Easter Observance, Ancient and Diana at Saigon. his company playing at the Empire fo» draped throughout in black. The altar lock. Reno Cuenod. Lola MurfT. Murgaret K^odern." Special music by the quartet B. F. Yoakum and party are at Browns­ Nan Patterson is permitted to occupy 12 weeks and it is a relief to Ree such Vfi SHE SHOT HERSELF was stripped and the church wa* almost Tad lock. •• • choir. Not only members, but friends ot ville. cell with her sister. players as he has gathered at papular \h' In darkness. "A Haw Easter Time"—Irma Ileookert the society who wish to commemmorate No quorum was obtained in either Text of Japan’*» “note to France trans­ prices. “California” ‘ Is a pretty play, v v THROUGH THE HEAD The procession of the stations of the Trio by Gertrude Schwab. Genev the spiritual memory of arisen friends, house. mitted to Roosevelt. ^H-ll played. Miss Effle Hext, the lending cross had ended and thousands In the Brown. Bessie Elzy. with chorus by girls. v should come to the temple at 7 o’clock with There are valuable kaolin deposits near Great Britain awaits France’s reply to lady, does fine work and Miss Wynne is \, < cathedral knelt In silence about the CrWl "Her Falrost Lily"—Della' Howard. flowers and decorate a chair. This cus­ Goliad. Japan before taking action. one of the sweetest actresses ever seen 4 Ox. There was no sound throughout the Song by choir. tom was Instituted here some years ago Palestine—Interesting good roads meet­ High Masons from* everywhere were here. Then, too, the comedy of Miss Vrtsi S d llei Had tobeReeonsrcrated great church except the parcuilly dls A ddress by pastor. by Mr. R thg. ing held h£re. banqueted in Chicago. Fallen is excellent. Of the gentlemen we è ' y Again Before It Could b ■ ; * tlngiilshed breathing of the congregation. Song by congregation. < <*ol. E. C. Greene of El Paso has organ­ Colombian president will negotiate a can only say that each part was playea . Uaed fòr ttervte««. At this moment of most intense concen St. Augustine Episcopal church, corner ized a big bear hunt. £5.000.000 foreign loan. with the same excellence as those of the tratlon the shot was heard near the tomb The First Presbyterian church. Rev. Broadway and 22d street. Rev. W. H. Twenty thousand cattle are being Samuel Eisenberg, Chicago, says he saw ladies. Mr. Joe Bernard's specialty was of St. Charles Bonromeo In front of the Robt. M. Hall, pastor, and Prof. Fred Marshall rector. 7.80 a, m.. Holy Cora* moved from th^ King ranch. “Caesar" Young kill himself. thoroughly enjoyed. altar. Hermann, organist, wll have the following munlon; 10 «. m., Sunday school and San Jacinto day was quite generally ob­ Russiun socialists plan May day demon “The illustrated songs of Mrs. Hilda Easter morning service at U o'clock: matins; U a* m., celebration ot the Holy i Wtr Assedated Prese. The tense silence was shattered like served throughout the state. stratlons on a large scale. Levy and the moving pictures are them­ broken glass. Thousands of women rose Processional March (Vernl). Eucharist; 7.90 p. m., children's festal ser* Alabama Medlcsl association closed Its selves worth a visit to the theater and • New Tork, April tt.—In the mldit of a Doxology—Congregation. vice. An organ iftcital on Tuesday night Arguments begun in the Klrby-Vander- to their .feet panic stricken by the scream convention In Montgomery. none seen here have ever pleased more.’* jpreat throne attending Good .Friday wrv- Hymn No. 178—Congregation. ¿1 8 o'clock. Admission free. Order ot voort bribery conspiracy case. which followed the shot. Only those Toklo piarty leaded counsel the Jap­ The company will open a week's engage, teea' In the famous cathedral the March- Scripture and Prayer. music at the Holy Eucharist tomorrow: El Paso—Walter Drysdale, employe of clustered near the tomb could realise anese press to use moderation. tcmees Maria PaUavldnl. Vlscouattn of Offertory, A Major (Munroe). Preluds. “I Know That My Redeemer Dun's agency, suicided with poison. meht at the ^Grand on Monday night« Trent. Austrti; has committed aulclde by what had happened. On the beautiful A cold norther spread over Texas, and Shanghai rumor has It thatc~Russlans April 24. at popular prices. Ladles will ba prie-dleu on which she had been kneeling Violin solos: (a) Arle for Q string (Bach)' Uveth” (Handel). Sfcooilna. Bas is' the Milan comupaodent (b) Trummerei (Schumann)—Miss Rebecca Pro. Hymn 111, “Jesus Christ Is Risen there were fears of frost In some locali­ havfl passed the Formosan strait. admitted free. This will be the last at* «* Uw AslWean. at prayer tar the marchioness, blood ties. Officers and crew of the cruiser Co­ traction of the season. streaming from the wound In her forehead Trueheurt. Today" (Morgan). . ^tlw ‘ eircnmstsnces were so Inltnsely Introlt anthem, “Seak the Lord** (H. El« The sulphur well at Corpus Christl Is to lumbia will visit Mexico City. while the women near her screamed and Hymn No. 21*. ^ dkamatie and extraordinary as' to to be Sermon. lit fiutton). be used In connection with a new natato- Prayer service held in Admiralty church tnpreeedented. frantically sought to get away from the Vocal solo. "•Resurrection Morn" (P. A. “Communion Service" (J. H. Maunder). rlum. for safety of Russian fleet. • Tb» suletde of the marchlencsa occurred spot. Schneider)—Mrs. E. B. llolman. Anthem (during offertory). “Christ Our Meritt, a negro, made a confession at Cruiser Tacoma «t Pensacola receives TO-DAYl'" From the altar a priest forced his way • t the moment ot tho most intense re- Prayer. , Passover” (Chappie). Houston of attempting criminal assault rush orders to go to Santo Domingo. Uatous concentration In the gr»at cath*> to her side and remained kneeling, admin­ Hymn No. 29. Anthem (on presentation), “Thou Art on a Uttle white girl. East St. Louis saloonlsts may keep open dral where were gather U.M0 Cnthotto istering the last rites of the church. Benediction. Worthy O Lord” (Gilbert), Postofflce officials made arrests at Sundays If they preserve order. STorfhlps«ri." The cengregatlon was kneel- Other church officials hurried sbout Triumphal March (Costa). , “Lord’s Prayer,“ “Sevenfold Amen*' and Houston, San Antonio and other places of Four trans-Atlantic steamers arrived at - '.tag when a shot rang out. $ ...... through the cathedral urging the throng Nunc Dlmittis" (Stainer), alleged vendors of lottery tickets. New York, bringing 9675 immigrants. ' • *-» Austrian priest hurried.to tlie «Ida to leave until the building had been Eastertide at Central Methodist church, "Te Deum Laudamus In F“ (JaeksorO. Mr. J. B. Bagley of North Carolina will Foreign Minister Delcasse wants to re­ )ie countess and tound her dying, with cleared, so that It could be consecrated avenue I and 19th street, will be appro­ Recessional Hymp 121. T h e Strif. la probably be appointed instructor In tex­ sign, but Is urged to remain In office. i|ound , in : her forehead. Her death anew. priately observed. At 6.S0 a. m. there will O’er” (from * Palestrina“). tile engineering at the A. and M. college. American consul general In Mexico Is moments later, while she An ambulance-was called an dihc march­ be held a sunrise prayer meeting under Postlude, “Op Mighty Pens** (lladyn). Bonham—West Wethersby 'and Pink investigating a land shark scheme. r to a hospital. . ioness was hurried to a hospital, but died the auspice« of the young people ot the Mrs. A delina^ Cost, organist. Bailey run over in Texas and Paclflo Secretary Taft agrees to arbitrate J «ss was renown sd throuth- on the way. church which will lie led by Mrs. Sex­ ‘Mil»—. * yards. Wethersby killed and Bailey badly Philippine friars’ lands controversy. The cathedral was solemnly reconse­ beauty. She was ton. At 9.30 a. m. there will be a special MRSTODOM ILL. mangled. Reported in St. Petersburg that Rus­ crated before the commencement ot the Easter program by the Sunday school, at Texas Veterans and Daughters of the sian fleet has left Kamranh bay for Vlad­ evening services the conclusion of which an offering win Mrs. Mbty Hpnt Odom, for many years Republic visited Monument hill at La­ ivostok. be rattfed which will be used to spread the a resident of Qalyeston^ is critically 111 at grange, where services were held at the France Instructs governor general of NOT FORCING FORCE. Gospel among those who now have It not. Ballinger, T e^ , h^r condition being so Indo-Chlna to report location of Rojest- At 11 a. m. there will be preached a special vault where lie the bodies of Dawson's Serious that tif?, family has been sum- men. vensky's ships. Mr, Frank B. Lane of Buffalo, N. Y.. Raster sermon by Rev. Geo. 8. 8exton in —And to think that ten months ago 1 looked Ilka oned to her bedside. Cot. Hunt McCaleb, Packers tried to stop secret service thlsl I owe it to German Byrup.'* who Is here looking after the trans-ship* the main auditorium: the music for the who was In Galveston temporarily, left work In the Federal inquiry and Chief occasion will be .appropriate and will be meats ot a large cargo ot Force through for Ballinger last night. Col. McCaleb, Wilkie answered objections. fl'fht time-worn injnnction, ‘‘Never put Galveston, a reference to which has pre­ furnished by a male choir. The church who Is now ujp$n the staff of the Fort THE NEWS BRIEFED. off ‘til to-morrow what you can do to* viously been mentioned la The Tribune, will be handsomely decorated tor the occa­ Worth Record, ,' la himself in very bad day,“ is now generally presented in thU has been here long enough to become sion. The services at night will carry out health and was on a ledve of absence from form : “ Do it to-day I” That is the ten* the Easter thought, both sermon and mu- advice we want to give you sbout that thoroughly enthusiastic over Galveston. his paper when he received the message Earl of Chester died In London. AMUSEMENTS "1 like Galveston better than any town eio wll be In harmony with the spiritual telling him of h&ii mother's condition. Mrs. backing cough or demoralising cold with significance of the day. Senator Platt of Connecticut dead. which you have been struggling for sev­ I was ever In,** stated Mr. Lane, and he Odom is the mother of Col. Hunt Mc­ Brooklyn tenement Are causes $100,00k) "My Pard. the Colonel.” w as presented Caleb and D. C. McCaleb of Fort Worth eral days, perhaps weeks. ({Take Soma said it In s war that showed that It came 'St. Mary's Cathedral. Mass at 10 o'clock damage. to the satisfaction of a large audience at and Claud McC<fc. , reliable remedy for it To-day—and let from his heart and with a smile as broad a. m. French senate passed budget and ad­ the Grand -Opera- house etast evening by that remedy be Dr. Boschee’s German as that ot Sunny Jim of Force tame. "For Opening Easter song, “Regina Coell," by journed. Carter’s comedians. The performance Syrup, which bas been in use tot over a^t>lace of residence ! know of no dty In GROVK*8 TASTELESS c h i l l t o n ic Lablllotte. Has stood the test twenty-live years. The An Arkansas ranchman In trouble near was the second of their four nights' en­ thirty-five years. A few doses of |t will which I would rather live.- It Is already Solo, duet and chorus, accompanied by first and original tasteless chill tonic. 50c. Acapulco. gagement. undoubtedly relieve your cough or cold, a greet port and Is destined to be a still organ and orchestra______— ______■ i im ...... i -i mi i i i ______.-5______-President Roosevelt will have six new ~ Tonight , the company produces "A and its continued use for a few days will Cteater’OBek' end "this, together with tts Mtsse Tollemtlle—Op. IS No. 7 In O. k9 Men and women spend their little lives bear rugs. Quaker Tragedy.” cure you completely. flNo matter how climate and its people, make It, In my Marao, accompanied with organ and or* straggling for wreaths. A man would have Equitable agents visit Oov. Higgins of deep-seated your cough, even if dread opinion, an Ideal place to live.” chestra. bis woven ot laurel leaves; a woman New Tork. FRANK RICH STOCK COMPANY. consumption has attacked your lungi, Mr. Lane Is with the Ustllc end of his Organist sad director, Frank B. Herrle. dreams only of orange blossoms in hers. Commissioner., Oarfleld leaves Kansas An exchange says: “Quite a surprise German Syrup will surely effect a cure—^ ccncera. i • ,;t i,,-m ...... Olfertorjr—Violin solo by Mr. Conway R. for California*. was given to local tfieater-goers last as it has done before in thousands of sp* ■" ■" '•» patently hopeless cases uf lung trouble.1 ., Shaw. ;~ V H EN IN NSW TORK STOP AT Four tfaiips killed In freight wreck near night at the opera house, where the “After and. before the ratal,".tike cjnle Postlude March, by Wagner, organ and Shreveport, La. qNew trial bottles, g jc; regular suc^' orchestra. . .. * Gregorian Hotel, 36th jt . near Stlt ave. Re- Frank Rich stock company appeared for 756. At *11 druggist* awaked. *tiie rheumaUsm!MtM -i 0ned patronage aollclted. Send tor booklet ^ France has not made representations to DM first time hi this olty. This organisa THE NEWS MAGAZINE SUPPLEMENT, SUNDAY. FEBRUARY 2&. 1905.

Written Specially for g deeds. All unconscious of the great dan- dians or had been where they might bo number of extra guns tyid the great amoun Western Texas or Western Kansas, tho gers so close upon them, the men on herd expected to harass me at any time I would 1 first being tho Fight for tho Water Hole, a» of ammunition, each man went into th guard were singing their Mexican songs to not have been so taken unawares nor found trench with from three to eight' loaded gun It is now known, which took place near thfl •the peaceful cattle, while the men in camp so poorly prepared, and so far as we knew and several extra rounds _ of ammunition town of Van, Horn, between Fort Davlg wore singing, dancing and playing a guitar, they might then bo Clipping upon us. The yet there were nearly two; hundred of 'thi and Bl Paso, in 1868, in which eig-ht men the one musical instrument nearly always howl of every wolf and the screech of Indians well, armed and well mounted, am under the leadership of Big Foot Wallace, 'present where there are any considerable every owl chilled my blood, for I Knew tho I really had no hopes of making a success the famous scout and Indian fighter, for number of-Mexicans. The men were espe- deceptive mimic signals of the Indians, and ful defense. Ten of my men had never been thirty-six hours withstood tine repeated as- cially cheerful, anticipating that within n mlstrusrbd every sound I heard. It was In an Indian fight, -wore excited and scare1 iaults of mor« than 100 Comanche Indians, few days the cattle would be delivered at such a sudden, unexpected transition from —in fact, almost panic-stricken, Had they and with tho loss o' only one man, finally Dodge,-after, which they would havo a few the" cheerful to the extremely glottmy. all been experienced Indian fighters : making their escape. He waa afterward in Uioiira' high carnival and then start back Would we reach our destination before the should not have been at all apprehensive tha famous Adcbp Walls fight, where thirty to thejr homes in Texas. I had made my Indians should make an attack, and "if we us to the outcome. I told the men tha1 men withstood nn attack by over 600 Ki- be'd some distance from where the men succeeded In this would those men p'rove their lives depended upon their coolness and owa, Comanche and Arapaho Indiana, and were Indulging In their jollifications and true. keep.cool,._obey orders and..fight? Tha courage and the 'amount of execution they two years later, in 1878, had his' third and with the ligh't of a lantern was reading a moments dragged into a long night of did; that they '-must obey my orders anc most remarkable Indian fight and escape. copy of The Oalveston News, which had brain-racking, nerve-straining suspense, muat not shoot until I gave tho order to .Thip was what Is known as the Lone Tree been brought to the camp by some of the which was partially alleviated by thought do so and then shoot to kill. SIGNS OF INDIANS. flgnt, and occurred at a crossing on the extra wagons coming out from Dodge. Th_ that possibly the Indian? had Home fixed paper was about six months old, but-its ' "After the Indians tired of killing cattle Arkansas River about twenty miles from. purpose other than disturbing us, .perhaps they rode to a point where they could be J>odgo City. Clinton Is a quiet, r/'served contents were all 'new and fresh to me. some objective point that would not lead get In a shot, but for the most part,we boxes. It was now getting late in the rounded up the. stock, and the rivor having Just then the horpe hunter galloped into easily seen from our Intrenchment, and e more than content to lay low in the man, averse to publicity ana notoriety, and them along our way. ' i about fifty of them left the main body, rid- evening, the men, who had not slept for fallen sufficlently-^crossed the herd and, - this is the first time ho has ever been pre- camp, and, without speaking to the other "Daylight found us only a short distance ditch. As a- result of this assault, the thirty-six hours were becoming exhausted, reached Fort Bodge late In the evening. men, came direct to me and related what ing slowly aii'l shooting occasionally. Then, wagon sheets were riddlqd and torn to vailed upon to give the particulars of the from our destination, and on the edge of a breaking into a fast run, whooping, yelling discouraged and demoralized, the ammuni- "The Indians had killed.*about two hun- he had discovered, enumerating in detail ons slope that descended to the river. I pieces, the bedding and boxes under tho tion in the ditch was getting scarce, and .dred head of our cattle ana several horses, Lone Tree 'fight, which Is among the most the investigations he had made and that he and firing an almoat\continuous volley, they wagons were filled with holes, while thou- as the Indians soon approached again aild remarkable Indian fights on record, remark- :ook my field glasses and carefully scanned came dashing toward us. I glanced along and these, added to thiHr own dead stock, was positive there were more than 200'of the country in every direction, but saw no sands of. bullets whistled over us, but not began firing rapidly, It was impossible to made a field of carnage that ought to have able because ono white man and twelve the Indians. the line of men on either side of me and one of our party way scratched'. send a man to the wagons for a fresh sup- Mexicans got the best of a fight with about signs of Indians. I felt greatly relieved felt considerably relieved, for their fear at least partially satisfied a savage's thirst "More unexpected or unwelcome news and virtually out of danger, so I had the 'After some time the flanking parties ply, so we simply lay quiet, awaited deve£ for slaughter. JOO Comanche Indians. never fell on my ears, for I had never Been nnd excitement 'had given way to grim de- ceased firing and occasionally displayed opments and trusted to chance. \ Under herd turned off of the trail, the wagons termination. Every gun was in readiness, "While on/the Fort Sill reservation eomo "In 387S six herds of beef cattle were less prepared for an emergency of the kind stopped and breakfast prepared, Cor had hcmselves in' a manner calculated to cover of their heavy fire a' few of> the In- time after the Lone .Tree flght I became ac- driven from the King ranch, hi Southern that now threatened me. Besides myself, every eye was glancing down a gun 'barrel draw our fire, but I understood their dians would dash up, tie a rope around the he Indians Intended attacking: us they pointed at the approaching demons and not quainted with Sun Boy, a sub.chief, and Texas, to. Dodge City, Kan., where they two .of the men in the crowd had been In would certainly have done so during the cheme and did not fall intu their plans. foot of a dead Indian and drag him away. participant "In tho Lone Tree fight, and were delivered to buyers from the differ- a nerve seemed to quiver. The .Indians' fire The main body of the Indians was still In the Adobe Wails fight, but not one of the night or been upon us, or at least in sight, was not returned until they approached I then understood that they had enough of sot some Information from him that-I had ent Northern markets," said Mr. Clinton. others had ever been In a fight with the by daylight. After breakfast the "wagons ur front and their Idea was to have us the fight for the present at least, and -that longed to obtain. I asked him why they close enough for us to do proper execution. mpty our guns, waste our ammunition what they now wanted was to carry away "I was personally ID charge of one of the Indians and were poor marksmen, and I moved along:, the herd was thrown on the 'I tliun gave tho command to fire and every had not molested us during the night or at herds and nominally In charge" "o'f'all'-'of had no knowledge as to how far they could rail again and, being thirsty and smelling nd concentrate our attention on thy flank- their dead. It was certainly a temptation least kept us In siege for some time, and gun boomed at once, and the men continued ng parties, imd at a time when we were to shoot these adventurous redskins, but.-I. them, all of the cattle belonging to one be relied upon -in the event the Indians •water, traveled in a swift walk. My feel- to shoot as fast and accurately as possible. 3is_.Bald It was'-to-cause -they had-escaped man. The cattle were not all delivered at attacked us, as I was sure, from the re- ngs of security were now almost as great nprepared and off our guard tUft^ would held the Mexicans down by telling them from the reservation, knew the soldiers port, that they would. It would not do This checked, but did not stop the Indians, ash upon us. The wary old chief, real- that if they killed any more of them it Dodge at one time, but were delivered one is my uneasiness had been during the who made a desperate effort to pass the would follow them and consequently tihcy.^.^- herd at -a time, and because of this fact, to advise them of what had been discov- light; £fc bright, cheerful morning had dis- zing that his ruse had failed, decided to would only make matters worse, for the had no time to tarry long in one place. Ha ered, as they might become panic-stricken, i6livu-tho gloomy forebodings oC -the men wagons, but the steep banks of the river iake a desperate, .overpowering effort, so Indians would have their dead or harass several days elapsed between the delivery and tflie high water stopped them, after 1 1 would scarcely believe ine when I told him of the first and the last herd.Vrhe unde- mount thefr horses and run away, leaving nd they again began singing their lively e signaled the flankinc parties to keep up us all Anight, and a daylight fight was all which they resorted to their circling tactics, continuous fire while he with the main wo could attend to properly. that after their first charge I had only livered herds Were Tield.as near Dodge as the wagons and herd without attendants, panltth songs.whlch commingled with the eleven men left, and that when' they 1 but we killed BO many of their number and ody. came charging- toward us. It was a go'ort-grass ' and water would-'permit, the while.they rushed .into the worst possible- batterings and whistling of the flocks of "When night came the dead had all been, dashed so-near to the wagons tho second complications; but time was precious and owblrds and field larks which always hov- nurses that they soon beat a hasty retreat.' lagnlllcent and awe-inspiring spectacle, taken away and not an Indian-was to be Jierd of which I had Individual charge be- They left sixteen dead horses just In front time I was sure we were gone. He said the ing hold about forty miles from Dodge, nnd I must think fast -and determine quickly. i-ed about. ^But notwithstanding tills feei- tiose hundred or" more Indians in war seen, but knowjjyjjrhat to expect, wu stood of .our wagons, but succeeded in carrying alnt and plumes, mounted, on beautiful, guard all night, and'a solemn,'gloomy vigil number of wagons and the rapidity with as fast'as the other'herds were delivered, 1 knew that In such an open, exposed posi- ng I did not cease to ho vigilant. When tion the chances would be against an equal- bout six miles from the river I saw, with away all dead and wounded Indians. They eet-footed horses, five or six feet apart, in It was: Behind the trench lay the dead which ^ we fired caused the Indians to think the (horses, chuck wagons, guns, ammuni- ly small number of experienced .Indian had Inflicted severe punishment upon us. ngle file, yelling, brandishing their guns man wrapped In -a blanket, the wounded there were^at least forty in our crowd, and . tion and surplus supplies of various kinds is aid of my glasses, what seemed to be a Juan Gonzales, ^ne of the men -who had fighters, and that with a. 'bunch of "tender loud of. smoko or dust a considerable 'dis- nd riding at full speed toward us, -while man moaned in agony, i while Ills —com- consequently they were not anxiou* to pass were brought to my camp and left, as my feet" resistance would be useless. I knew been with me in th« Adobe Walls fight, and bullets of tho flanking- parties whistled panions ministered to his sufferings In the wagons and engage in a hand to hand herd was to be~the last one delivered. Five ance back the trail we had traveled dur- upon whom I placed my greatest rellaffce 'encounter. He then asked me'now eleven of only one. place where we could find any ing the night, and after watching it very bove and rained about us. We gave no every way imaginable, and my -v.'OUr.Oi wa5- iTisn could load their guns BO quickly and of the 'herds had been delivered and a like In this trouble, was* killed; another one of eed to the flanking parties, but as soon paining me considerably. The bullet rid- fire- so rapidly, and when I told him that kind of shelter under which to resist an closely for several minutes, discerned a the men was mor tails- wounded, and I was disposition' was to be made of the remain- attack, and that was the Lone Tree cross- large body of horsemen, apparently In- the main body got reasonably close,' dled wagon sheets flipped about the broken each man had from three to eight guns ho ing one within a. few days. slightly crippled in the arm.. Aa It after- urned loose on them. At our fii-st volley a bows, and every breath of wind whispered looked like the victim of & lost opportunity Ing on tho Arkansas River, fully twenty dians, rapidly approaching. AH my fears ward developed, Dull Knife, chief of the grunted a few tlvncs and then said: "Huh "I was theii camped on Sand Creek, a miles from where we were camped, but I and apprehensions returned, for I was sure urr.ber of Indians and horses went down, a mournful dirge. Save tho lashing waters, you fool Injun. Heap gun. shoot all timfi. pmall tributary of the Arkansas River, and resolved to make for that place. I took Comanches and one of the worst products ie others lilted and seemed confused, but the moans of the dying man, the occasional Injun think him heap cowboys; get scared, we were being followed and.that a fight that tribe ever produced, was In charge of go way! Huh, d—n!' had under my charge 2,200 beef steers, six the horse hunter Into my confidence and was certain, and that the only sensible hile our bullets spatted and whistled whisper, an oppressive silence reigned and "And when I further told him that nina chuck wagons, about 150 saddle hors"es and, this band, and the failure of .the flrut at- mong them they closed their ranks, began the very air seemed charged with impend- fully confided to him my fears and plans, thing to do was to make arrangements ac- tempt not only enraged him, but made him of tho men left after the first charge wero fortunately, an abundance of guns and am- cautioning him not to intimate to any of cordingly. All the men with the cattle •ing and came dashing on. It looked as ine disaster. tenderfeet and had never bee1n in an In- munition, much of which belonged with the more cunning: and. cautloub. He eent one ough they would succeed In passing the dian fight, the 'noble red man seemed hu- the other men what he had discovered. were -warned, t?je herd thrown from the body of Indians to the loft and another to "Daylight came o.t last, but not an Indian miliated beyond endurance, but presently wagons that had been with the oilier Ilo readily approved of my plans and as- trail and we rushed to the wagons, which agons, but our fire was so rapid, constant was in sight, only our own horses and his face lighted, up as though a revelation h'erds. These guns and ammunition had the right, both bunches prelecting: them- sured me that he would follow my in- had already reached the bank of the river, suJvos as much as possible ' by creeping id destructive -that when only a few feet cattlo scattered .throughout the valley, had come to IKS rescue and after a few; been brought, along to defend ourselves r om inn wagons they wheeled and once grunts and chuckles he said: '* structions In every respect. There is one and began making all possible preparations from ono sandhill or small rj»una"ib an- along the hillside and 'the river banks. '"Maybe so you talk heap lie to me all against Indians In Texas and not In view thing about Mexicans when on the trail. to resist an attack. Where the fight oc- more heat a hasty retreat, leaving nine About sunrise the wounded man died and time. Him no tenderfoots. Tenderfoots no of any troubles that might arise In Kansas, other untii they got within range of the dead Indians and several dead horses In They will obey orders at any hour, and, curred the river makes a small but almost wagons find then began mercilessly shelling we buried both tho dead men on the right shoot like that. Tenderfoot ahnot all time for wo anticipated none. Tho Indians wore though they, may suspect, they never ques- perfect horseshoe bend, and fortunately for sight. We had sustained no damage other bank of the river near the spot they had no hit much. Cowboy heap shoot hit all supposed to l>o friendly In that section of tion. 1 told him to so and -tell the horso our position, and continued to do for a than a few other additional bullet holes in time. -Him cowboys. You no fool me.' and I us, there was a heavy rise, the red, muddy considerable time. Once In awhile wo could sacrificed their lives defending. We then never convinced "him. to the contrary." tiie wagon beds, wagon sheets, bedding- and prepared" breakfast, after which we (To be -continued.) ' HE other day a willful 16-year-old girl In a neighboring city disobeyed T her parents, and when she returned For years the Spanish bell did its duty ^ome her wrwthful lather emphasized 'his WOMEN WHO NEED SHAKING loyally, but finally It became cracked and s'Gbuke by giving her a good shaking. its tone was broken and harsh. When the themselves and others out o£ life, and let inees, buys actors' pictures, and recites new church was built,'close by where the Whereupon she Went promptly forth and us, brethren and sisters, heave a sigh over about what she did at tho VJall last night, had her stern parent arrested for assault Kipling with fits and starts, and In a antedates the sclioolhouse by more than old Nathan Hale 3choolhouf*e now stands, tho fact that custom and law nut a time hollow voice, at evening' entertainments. and who answers customers over her shoul- 900 yoars. It Is now near the little stone the bell was taken from the steeple of the • and battery, in which she wan upheld by limit to the age at which people can bo der that "we haven't go; It," without ever the magistrate before whom the case was Whatever her special turn, she is never church, and from its appearance none old church, and has not since been used, forcibly reminded ot their blessinss, if they any account at home. Mother has to taking the trouble to look. There is the would suppose that It had known the heat but rests quietly in the church yard, viewed tried, who contended that 15 -was past the can't be appealed to in any'other way. stenographer who never learns how to shaking ago limit, and fined the man for make all of. her clothes, because she Is of summer and the cold of winter for al- reverently by hundreds every year. There's the domestic woman, for instance, too "literary" to learn how to sew. She spell, or write a decent letter, and the most eleven centuries. 3t is not very large H was cast in the year 815. The marks inculcating obedience by physical force. who has a good husband and a comfort- woman who thinks that because she be- Perhapy the magistrate- was right. 1C the can't wash tha dishes, because that would and tho greenness of old age common to of the tongue, where for years it struck able home, and little children, yet who Is, ruin her hands for piano playins, ao longs to the once rich and blue-blooded , copper has maae but slight inroads upon it. against the side, are deep and broad. The plrl had been spanked sufficiently when always bemoaning the slavery of her lot, Do Smythc family, Instead of tho plain she--was little, she wouldn't have needed a mother or the other girls have to do that, When Nathan Hale died for his coun- Arabic numerals which ^orm the date show and exaltlngr and envying tho freedom of Smiths, that everybody ought 'to 'bo glad try this^old bell was '^' the ago of Methu- that It was cast not long after Spain was Shaking so badly "when she was older, and tob. You couldn't trust her tc clean up- to pay her any price for any sort ot work. it ought to be a solemn warning ti> all par- tho bachelor woman. She complains that a room, because she is too artistically solah, the oldest patrlt.. ch of Bible record. conquered by the Moors. The inscription she is forever ordering meals and darning Yet, these women wonder that they get At _the tlnie. Christopher Columbus discov- ents to begin in time on their children, but attached to dust to sweep under tho bed, starvation wages and loudly prate about on the ancient bell is in Spanish, and can (the incident calls attention once more to stockings, and cleaning up tho house, and and you couldn't think of calling up" a ered America It had '.>cen ringing out the be read very plainly. It is as follows: washing little faces, and tying up hurt fln- the injustice of women's pay not equaling days of more than half a thousand years. tho hardships of having to treat as reason- Rers. "Is this an adequate way for an in- future I.ady Macbeth to get breakfast, men's. My dear winters, you need a good "The Prior Being the Most Rev. Father able and sensible human beings those who ff/r while her eyes were rolling in a line It lolled tho deaths of thousands of Span- Miguel Villa Murva. The Procurator, tho tellect like mine to expend Itself?" she de- shaking up that will teach you that busi- lards who were lost in tho destruction of Most Rev. Father Josef E'Stivan. Corrales nro nothing but spoilt children—who never mands) traglcallj-. ^'\Vhat do I got for my frenzy, she would ho sure to overlook th ness is business, anil that If a man did his mnde me. Made in year A. D. S15." outgrow the shaking age In mind and char- labor beyond my food and clothes, and—er fact that the potatoes were burning, and work as poorly as you are doing yours he tho srcnt Armada; witnessed the incursions The people of St. Stephen's Church valuo acter—and who ought to be dealt with on tho steak was still In the Ice box. of the Moors and Arabs across tile stralte tha old bell very lilKhiy, and It will doubt- - -er-perhaps a trip to the seaside or would be fired tho next day. Men don't less always remain in possession of the that basis. We all know so many people mountains in tho summer, and things like So far as my experience of the'family ge- ey.pect as good work from women as from of Gibraltar as they despoiled the fair •who are running their own and other pco- that?" The idea of such a woman mahlnB nius goes, sho does nothing but roll around nien, and our petticoats are al once a vlnej'ards ot Castile, and for more than a bid for public sympa'thy, on tho grounds the hc'jso In an untidy wrapper and Jet shame and, a protection to us. 400 years knew none but Moorish rule. nnd made agreeable members of society, if He3i»leH» Bnelielor. of her misfortunes In life Is a public out- everybody else wait oti her—and when, Nor Is this childish conduct -confined by Europe wae but a wild, unsettled, savage As the proud young mother was showing only there- was somebody who had the rage, yet there Isn't a'week wo don't hear finally, as only too frequently happens, any means to women. There are just as country when this old hell \vas cast, and Bright to give them a good shaking overy some misguided man marries her, .she tho British Tsle« were but so much terri- the baby to a .bachelor friend the young- r.ow and then, and make them behave one do it, and the queer thine about it all many men who need to be pulled up In ster suddenly began to bawl. is that alie is dead earnest and considers merely shifts the sceno of her Incom- their career of folly and made to act sensi- •tory ruled by clannish barons with might . rtfi em selves-. petency and laziness and general the only law. "He's crying," ventured tho bachelor. And, oh, wouldn't you like to be the lord herself a poor, put-upon. downtrodden bly, and behave themselves, as there aro "Well," retorted the proud mother, sharp- m?mb«r ofxho community. Tor-nothingness to another home, to make women. There is the man who lets his When Ferdinand nnd Isabella ascended ly, "all babies cry." high executioner? that uncomfortable. Wouldn't you Just "Of course! Of Course! I don't mind Think of all onr discontented, disgruntled Doesn't she need somebody to give her a temper r-,:!n all tho happiness of hie home. the throne of Spnln the little oiil bell in i " Mm h.')lfi\v. -^,- good shaking and make her remember her enjoy seeing somebody give her colossal He may bo otherwise a model of all tho the East Hnddam church yard helped to friends who, with all tho materials for hap- vanity a Jar. and make her see that ono "Bellow? Why my baby Is no bullock-'" • piness in their hunds, deliberately throw mercies? She talks about the liberty of tho virtues, a good provider; in reality, a lov- ring out the tidings to all the country Ana iiu'ii thu naonelor lied.—Detroit Jour- bachelor woman, and never stops to think good loaf of bread Is better than a bar- ing husband and father, and when his wife round. It was then In tho tower of one of nal. %hom away, and ftiit nothing but misery 'or rel of slushy poetic yearnings; that Wag- that liberty's' other name for a woman is LOLLS AROUND IN AN UNTIDY and children can forget his Irritability Uio churches of Arnnon, iho home loneliness. The woman who can come and ner Is all right as a side Issue, bill that It they do justice to his good quality. This Vrovlr.cc of Ferdinand. For more than COO BO as she pleases is the most forlorn crea- Is n poor substltno for a clean hearth and isn't generally until he is dead, and liijn years it had been there culling the people— ture on earth, because It means that .no- a well-cooked dinner for a hungry man. they put him up il bc"Ulllul monument, rich and poor-- in ^service; ringing out the body cares when «lie goes, or whether sho and that the domestic stage affords am- Bilve h!s IIIV, and the only thing Unit would and people speak of how bravely they bear Joy of their marrWge celebrations and ever comes back or not. The housekeeping ple room for nil tho histrionic ability any rca!ly thrill him would be ;; ralae In ills up under their affliction. There arlenty tolling tho death requiem. woman complains of her drudgery. Doesn't woman is likely to have. She'll need to Bnliiry. This type of women lives mostly of men like that, who say things to their itnow how to cajole and conx and weep Early In this century, when Xnpoleon she have time cver,y day of her life to llo In hotels and l>u.lrdlng houses, where Bho wives, so sneering and so Insulting they started on. his sacking tour of Spain, and down if she feels badly? Doesn't ulin have when H Is effective, and take high tragedy has nothing to do' but feed her Ill-regulated would nnt dare to say them to a man ot attitudes when it is necessary, if she wants was finally overthrown by Wellington, this leisure lo Ross!p with a neighbor? noes mind on problem nut-els and erotic.poetry, their own size. Their children fear them. bell, together with many othcn-i, was taken to got along peaceably and comfortably iim) that she doesn't ot'Hiner come to grief Their coming Is a wet blanket over tho have even tho slightest conception of with the average man. x from its place ip tin- belfry of the stone tlnld seem (o nientnl creatures who carry on mild flir- Intentionally criminal who do the most hn lhat liuiKinuch IIH we all, men and n-ciis; for bullH for American churches. Ihu style you do, and tell me if you don't tations with any man they meet, and who The old Kast Imdihim bell was in the lot. think you Imvu got a pretty. Rood-payltiK. harm In this world. It In the .silly folks, women, aro Knt children of o. larger growth, 1 nrc, always tr.lkhiR about affinities. They Everybody who has hoarded about much we should ho treated as children, and when William Willys 1'i.ut, a Now York ship soft Job? Any woman who linn got a good wear a far-away pulhcllo look, anil thnlr clinndlor, wan In business at that time. His husband-mid a uood homo has drawn tho knows dozens of anch women, and no .Hon- wo won't behave ourselves, we should bo utronf; suits In being "mlnilntlermood." slblo person ever neej? omi without: wishing made to. wlfo was a daughter of the Into Cant. Oli- capital prllo In tho lottery of life, and sho Their husbands nnvcr underntand them by ver Attwood ot Kant Hnddam, Mft mat has no rlKht to bo anyilrinir but happy her- they could take her by tho shoulders and Now wl!l you he Rood?—Dorothy Dlx, In nny elmnco, and they vaguely hint that given her a good Blinking, and set hor foet Washington Foat. nnd hln wife wore Interested In St. Ste- self and mako other people liappy.' they r.ro pining away under the withering phen's KplmiopiU Church at Kri.nl llnrldnm,. Then there Is tho wnll-cyod nonius |!), onco more on the straight path of honest W blifht. Vour, dear, John Is good, of courao. living. and ns tho church wnw without 'a hi^'.J, Mr. which no many faniillex are afflicted. Some- Thny don't erltlclno him (hero titoy hoa'vo ft llrll Tolled Ulftvm Centnrle>. 1'rntt piirchAned tho old Spanish nn;'l from times nhii playa on tho piano, sometime* Thwo nro plenty or other women who mrlford, Conn.-Al Ka*t Iliuldam, only «lgh), but he JB no natural. Ho i»n't xotiltul need n. KOOI! milling up, and being ^i-i« to atif the hundreds of nthnrn In tho nhlp (iho mean™ up ihiiinn with pnhit; nomo- llkf. they, nro. Ha'couldn't nlmply llvo on * short dtatniico from the Nathan Halo load. .11 wnn sent to lOnnt Hnddam ana DNLT A RAISE IN SALARY WOULD tlmea «ho -writes vor.io/i, and ilaomi't comb . look things squarely In iho facu. Among Schoolhoiwo, which

A MILLION TO FIOHT TUBERCULOSIS. They contribute liberally to the expenses MISSnilBI KMUHTS t e m p l a r s PLAYGROUND IN THE OZARK WILD. and through their aid and that of the county court the teacberü' association tbls year was able to offer prl/.es that *Kre*»ted |620. These were for every I kind of bandlwork; sewing, bread, fan( y ! work, raising of corn, stock and other ‘ things. Practically every school in tlu- ; county takes part and to every girl whn | exhibits was given this year a sUvei i thimble and to every boy who tried for a prize there was ft ^ckkuife. | Piled high on the exhibition tables j thi« year were forty-six loave.s of bremi, seventy cakes, forty-five fancy aproua, i forty work aprons, twenty-two shirt-, j waists, twelve dolls, dolls' clothinK, buHh | els of corn and grain and many other | thlnga, all the work of the pupils done¡ 1 as a part of their si’hool work along S(’i-1 entlflc lines. All of the bulletins of the | United States Department of AKrieul-1 ture and college of agriculture of the ■ University of Missouri are supplied to the teachers that they may be a!il*> to | better give instruction In aKrii-uUurei and domestic science and' this teaching j is a regular part of the publir school! curriculum. .411 over the covinty, says! the superintendent, the boys ami girls, are Interested. A complete course, fori Instance. Is given to the girls In the! making of the i)uttonhole stitch, darn- i Ing, making of all kinds of food, \^hllej the boys W’lll be learning how to prepare j TÜBEnCüI-OBIS SAXITABItJM BEING P,ni,T NEAR C0IX)nAT)0 SPRINGS BT THE MODERN WOODMBN OF AMERTrA IWBt the soil for a particular kind of| MILLION dollara la the sum the i sanatorium^Is maintained wholly ai the of 180 patient*. These are housed In- corn and the eiteots of moisture on the growing of the corn. Modern WoodmSan Francisco Hall wav, active Knights Templars will he located on the The commanderles were overwhelm­ ? S i i g f g i v J ' t h i s ' <'on.mittee i tV : ' ingly In faror of both propositions, and on permanent encampment to get the | bluff overlooking the river. From the a report to that effect was made to the had kept on with her school work. She cake had won. She had seen Maryville instruction and the benefits to the pupils grounds In condition fr-r locnfing the va-‘ vorlnii.ci tmililtnr“ vilptnra will have a conclnvn held nt Cnrthacje In May of was particularlv interested in her conk­ and ridden on a train for the flist time, arc great." year. At that conclave the committee A ing lésions and among her tea<'hers she rioue buildings that are to be erected i ^ “S. onade for mile« too, Many other counties In the state are either way. It Is In one of the wildest on permanent encampment grounds wai: had won a distinction - she was ronsld- doing the same sort of work h>it none there. appointed, ITiey have prepared a report iTecl an fciperi al iKiiiing cakes. Alice was proud and happy that day, parts of the Ozark .Mountains, with rug­ MISSOUW has carried this form of instruction The committee is compoaed of S. K, ged scenery on all Sides. The woods which sets forth much Information In Early this fall there came to the but there was a Nodaway ('ounty boy along so far and created such an inter­ I Waggoner of St, l^uls, Van F. Poor of abound with all kinds of small, game, reference to the ground selected, Tho school, which .-Mice attended whenever who was Just as happy. He Is Dale est among the pupils as Nodaway Kansas City and B, 11, Uiicker of Holla, while big bass in the clear waters of the advantages of having a permanent as- COUNTY she could find time, a circular from the Thompson, 11 years old, the son of a County, farmer, who took home with him |42,50 ÌThls committee, in company with Ilert GaBconade furnish nil the sjiort that the ,sembly grounds and incidentally furnish­ ------‘------1------ing to members and their families an in prize money because he had proved C O B t r a a t . j S, Ivee of Springfield, grand commander disclples of Isaac Walton could wish for. annual outing In the Ozarks, with fresh that he was the best boy corn grower In From Rjk'W»». I of the Missouri Knights Templars, has: T>>'* Rrand commandery contemplates THAT air, high altitude, good fishing and hunt­ the county. All by himself he had spending $.'i0,000 within the next year It 1b easy enough to be pleasant ijust completed an inspection of the cn i , . , ,, ing, boating and bathing are mentioned. grown corn that won the sweepstakes of When the man comes around and kpH« i ran nment'ground« with a view to mak-'"'" buHdinKa that w II form The committee has taken wtlve charge TEACHE5 $20, $10 prize for being the best in his i you a handsome set of books on the In-¡ inc recommendations with reitard fo thel'u V'hiv for holding all dasa. a |5 for thte best single ear and stallment plan. I '• « o m m e n d . i ions "Hh regard o the I « ,^ ,0 conclaves of the order of the work of having the grounds pre­ $7,r>0 for being the best boy corn Judge I n„t the mat. wo.th while ' l<><’atlon of buildings and the making of The Frisco offered the land to the pared for the erection of buildings. In tiie county. Before the school exhibl- ' an I lmproveni>'nts that will convert th<* plneo Kniglus Templars about two years ago. There is already a considerable sum at FARMING the dlspoial of the grand commandery KAR.N'I.N;! to iiakc l.iread, ¡uake tion Dale had exhibited corn that had when the collector conies around m onth'info one of the most beautiful encamp thè oniy Teserviiilon being thatimprove- from the collection of the special per cakes and do all otiier «ookingj won prizes over the exhibits of his after month for the next decade, and inent grounds in the country. ments reprc,‘:entlng an expendlture of and housew ork was a neces.slty | father. during the whole time you have been 'i'lie land donated to th Knights $10,0(10 or more he made. Kach com aplta tax the first year, and contracts L for Alice liaker, a ir.-year-old ■ In Xodaway the county superintend­ too busy to read a single paragraph. 'reiuplarr. bv Ihe l''ris< o coinprises 1 SU i nianderv ln Ihe state was asked to vote j will be awarded ln tho near future. It acres, and is situated in Pulaski County, Oll thc proposition iif nccepting the gUi, Is posslble that everythlng will be ln liaiiphter of a \(^aw ay County farmer. | ent and the teachers are trying to inter­ Obatlnaor, ninety miles northeast of Springfield and also on a proposition that each com-. readiness for holding the 1914 conclave Srveral years ago her n'other died and est the pupils in agricultural work and (■'tom ihc W»shtiiRloii EvfiiSiii: Sn^. in domestic science. The, rally and the I T h e tract has an elevation of l,l,'iO feet inandery pledge itseir to pay a sum ; there. •Mire, then a Biiiall clyld, became her - I "Why in the world did you make that exhibition was only incidental to the in -' ^^rmal application to have your salarv father's helpmeet. She prepared his Kt ruction they are giving fjach year unfenced and vinbvoUen wllderneuB of that one Rnddle maker In kept constant­ meals, took care of their small, «npre- W, M, Oakerson, the superintendent, 30 MILKS FROM THK FRONT “Because," replied the meek yet obsti­ was a combined resid<‘nce and fortreas. ly employed In the manufacture of thU tcntioHS home in a rural community with the aid of-the public school teach­ nate man, "I wanted to be sure of hav­ (lATK TO THK FRONT DOOR.; „ „ i ; constructed of stone and In eiicb ¡part of the cowboy equipment. Saddle« ers and the normal school instructors, cie;lit miles from Maryville, Mo. So ing my own way about something." corner of its battlements wan a cannon. | of elaborate design and handsome traj)- arranges In connection with the teach­ liard did she work and so limited were Tb.se cannon were used to defend the pingh are turned out In this ranch es- ers' institute this rally and display of i Hard Job. oiiiTH CllHis'ii, T kx.. Do«'. 1,— the means of her father after ¡¡aylng boaie Ironi nttaclis of .Mexican outlaws, j lubllHbment. work done by the pujllls during t i e ' F r o m the nnltlrnore Am(rlc»n. It is no longer thirty nilles f:oni ¡or the Illness of his wifij, who had ! year. Three weeks ago when the meet- "So Uibhs is trying to break his the front gat(' on tlie public high­ Tbe ancient guns now ornament the | Mr, Kleberg has conducted some ex- bciutlfiil lawn that surrounds the ' tensive experiments In agriculture upon many debts to pay, that she had none j ing was held, pupils and parents gath-i wife’s will." c way to the rinch house of Mrs. modern ranch r.-sbience and tbo original the ranch during the last two yearn and of the pleasures of the ordinary child. I ered from every part of the county In "Yes. Hope he'll have more success Henrietta M. King. 'I'be size of ber building has b' cn converted into houses, ' they have proved highly succesaful. She had never ridden on a railroad | Maryville and the merchants consider It at the job, now^she’s dead, than he had front yard has been cut down by tin.- one part of which is occupied by U. .1. This season he grew several hundred the biggest day for them of the year, ^ while she was living, " train. She never had had a Kllmpsej construction of a railroad through hei Kleberg, son-lnlaw of Mrs. King and acres of cotton, and other crops wore even of the city of Maryville, (he coun-; vast landed i)roperty, and it is now a manager of the ranch, lu^ his office. also grown on a conniderable scale. rivi« intiiti: i\ i,i!«roi.\, k a s . drive of only three miles from the near­ The neadqiiarters building. Including Most of the one and a quarter million the residence, are of attractive atyle of acres Is sunceptlblo of Irrigation by est statkin to the well kept country home architecture, ar.d designed on a scaio means of artesian wells. Many of theae where she has lived for more than half a century. .Mrs. King Is not only the largest ran.'h woman in the world, but DAt.E TnOMPSOK. 31 TEARP OLD, WHO IN she iiinka well up with such women aa PPITE OK m s YOUTH. PROVED TUAT HB WAS TIIF, BE.ST CORN GROWER l.N NODA­ .Mrs, Hetty Green and .Mrs. Russell Sago WAY Col NTY. In the matter of wealth. The King ranch Includes api>roxinuiti'ly l,2.‘,fi.0o0 acres, cotinty superintendent telling of a big i and the valu<* of t b<‘ land, live stock and rally of school children, teachers' meet-[ other holdlniis embraced in the property inps and exhibitions of cooking and! is said to l)‘‘ more than .^0 miilion dol­ other things by the public school chil­ lars. With !!ii- d- velopineiit of t lie Kur- dren of the county. In the list was the! j rounding ranch region and the incoming offer of a $10 poll! piece for the best I of new settlers, the value of the land cake, Alice heard alA>ut it and made [of this great I'aiich is consiantly incriias- up her mind that she would have that I ing, .Not very many yeiir.-^ ago it waa $r0 prize. A month ago, just a few ; 'considered worih less than per acre, days before the exhibition, with the but with tlie discovery that practir,'illy aiii of neighbors she was able to get to-1 all of it is suitable for anricultiiral pur- gether all of the needed Ingredients for i i poses, and by reason of tlie benefits that that sort of cake which she liked best - ; l i Hliì ® SPr- jba>e come to the whole lower Gulf Coa.sl Ill I II I, lU ll.nlNO ON THE KINO RANi'lt. iiWNEI) HY A WOMAN______a butter cake. One whole day she spent i ¡region of the state by the construction in the mixing, baking and frosting of -of a railroad down it, the land value has T, full k'i|)ing with the magnificent welLs have already Iwen bored and are that cake. When it was done she was ; niount<-d up to about per aero. proporiiiJiis of the landed estate. In the giving forth an ample supply of wati r sallsfled. It was the best caUe that she I The nucleus tor the great King ranch main nKiiience are many guest rooms, for ttie iivnstock. It Is claimed tha:, had ever baked. S T A N iv \r .W ■ was acquired in IS.-jS by Capt, Ulchard and the old and delightful hosjiitality i nough water may be oblaineil from one Then came her first ride on a rail-; towards visitors is sfill maintained by or tliesii wells to Irrigate more than one mad train With that cake carried care­ ; King. In those days the lower Ulo Cirande border was the scene of many .Mrs. KIiik und ihe Klebergs, The homes iiundred acres of land. fully on her lap she went fo .Maryville acts of brl^;andage and other kinds of Ilf tlie servants are sltuat(!d‘adjaceiit to .Mrs, King has always displayed a alone, found the Maryville State Normal THE PRESENT CITY HAI I. AT MN i 'h i .n , KAS, lawlessness. Captain King bad .i most ibe main residence and a few hundred splendid ,splrlt of enterprise in the mai- At ITE KAKEK of NODAWAY COfVTY, MIS- Serfected In that municipality, Is absolutely fireproof, there not through the ranch for more than one ty seat of Nodaway County, the mys­ a cement sidewalk, to connect the town i I'omelesa waif on lae streets of .\ewistabl whom were many years older than Alice. Lincoln has been getting a good deal of a single piece of wood In U s; >i“>idred miles was const.rueted. Her spe teries of which she had heard of all But when Alice went home that night and the Union Pacific depot, a quarter 1 ^ a position as cabin , l.eing unwelcome notoriety recently because boy upon a steamship and for many ; whol,‘ construction. clal pride is the new town of Kingsville, her life. But hi all of these years she she took with her $10 in gold. Her mile away. There now Is only a dirt the site of which was formerly a jiart of o t the "tar party" cases brought to trial road between the two. The Commercial the property. She erB00r 8TÁBLB. h « !' looner. HERALD- THURSDAY; JAOTJARY the other vast concerns that are In- KING RANCH CATTLE FOR BRA- BROWNSVILLE DAILY HERALD cluded in the socialistic program of ZIL. • government ownership. FRONTIER LUMBER CO. Brown&vil'e Herald Publishing Co. Contract to Furnish 600 Head in the Have you paid your poll tax-, Mr Spring. Mrs. Jesse 0. Wheeler - Editor Voter?«; Corpus -Christi, Jan. ) ".—Arran£CT Martin J. Slattery - - Manager Only twelve more days in which to morns have been made by one pi the Devoe •pay the poll, tax and retain your. vote. foremen from tbo 9,000,000-acre Offucul Organ of Cameron County tanch in Brazil of which Murdo.Mac- cTWcans saving and saving means accumulating. - kenzie, a .former. Texan, is manager, Only twelve more days in which to with the King ranch near here to Consolidated in 1S93 with the Daily pay your property tax a-r.d nvoid the help stock t'.ic big ranch in Brazil! ten per cent penal.ty. 'Better see the Cosmopolitan, which wag publlsh- with Texas cattle . Eight hundred tax collector, if you haven't already head of cattle have been contracted Systematic accumulating will put you on «+«•*»«»»«»»»**+»»»»•»•••» ed in Brownsville for If. years. settled. for and die shipment will go forward the road to prosperity. Then you get the Terms of Subscription sometime early i ' the spring through habit.and" the rest comes easy. Start the Xc-v that Brownsville has p\iro,|.|)C Galveston port, Daily — Published every morning drinking water and clean baths, s-lio New Year with a bank account—we don't except Sunday, by mail postpaid to is not ashamed to invite guests to MADE OF HARD WOOD care how small—Si will start you here .for . any point, jn the United -States, Mcx. visit lie)-. And when she completes FROM RIO GEANDE VALLEY we cater to small depositers and welcome ico or Cuba, or delivered by carrier the paving in the business district, '' Pedestal Displayed at Midwinter Fair their accounts io any part of the city, W.est and builds -that $300,000 tourist ho- : •Brownsville, Texas, or Mai-arooros, " Show'*' Eig'ht Kinds of Native THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK tel, she will be •clamorinp; for the Woods- M ox i en. next national democratic nominating convention. One of the exhibits displayed in of Brownsville, Texas On<> copy, one year $(! 00 the- Art department at the Midwinter One copy, six months. ... ü 00 CARNIVAL WILL CONTINUE- Pair which deserves special mciir Brownsville Bank & Trust Co. iton is a pedestal made from a col- 4 Per Cent Interest cm Sayings, Anteved at the 'Postoffice at Rrowiis- Arrangement to Extend It Sat- lection o.f the Lower Saturday. This piece of work was executed The night. This was arranged .last, night (by Richard Miller, he having collcc- ''"¿IE HERALD'S COMPLEMENTS TO at a meeting iC-f tíie fair directors and Led and prepared all -the woods him. ITS PA'PRONS. Mr. Rciss. .The association will still; iller Hotel self,' Mr. Miller:» object was to uscjj; Surplus and Undivided •have the .gat-e receipts, charging ten The Mcfald luis had printed on a this'pedestal to. .illustrate the diffe- M cents admission each.night as former- number of large desk 'blotters tlie rent woods of this section and how ly. There will bo no charge for ad- they might be utilized for fine cabin-';;; The Largest and Most Modern Hotel Profits $115,000.00 out anil description ot t'he new Cam- mission during'the day. Mr. lleiss ex. ot work, whereas most of ¡hem are £ poets -to go from here .to. San Bonito eron County Court Mouse which rip. used daily as -fuel throughout the with bis shows, in South-West Texas ])carecl In the issue of Saturday, J.in. X-ow alt-actions aro. promised, by Valley. Lo, and is distributing them, with the carnival daiily durin.g tho remain- W. 0. W. BID ON ON TO THE GULF »M«M*««**«»»t********** Us compIimciHi, to Herald pain*us. der of i ho engagement here, and three COURT HOUSE BONDS. more night c£ fun are anticipated by The report of the award of the Hcadquarlers Any subscriber wishing one of those' the devotees of -the Pleasure Pa-th, souvenirs may ob'ain it by calling county court, house bond issue cf wliic.h has been such a popular fea- ^200,000, publisher! in yesterday's at The 'llórale! office. The pictures ture Of the. Midwinter Fair. Brownsville, Texas MERCHANTS NATIONAL BANK Tlerald, erred i-n stating che amount >:Jiow np imite hanrtsomoly on ttio E of the premium offered by live Wood- -soft surface of the white blotter, and Lay Water Mains. Monday.—•*• - men of the World, which was $1.000, BROWNSVILLE. TEXAS Jlcnclall, tin' contractor, has informed Instead ot $."00 as reported. The cor- ' some" who have received >t,ln-m have ,)leml)OI.s of .hc water and liplvt com- rectliHi is made at the rcriuest of B. j Capital and Surplus, $209,000.00 lacked them <,"ti -the wall instead of mittee that ho will be ready to be- E. -Hinkley, state organizer of the or-i gin laying tbo new water mains Mon. using them as desk blotters. tier;, wlio ¡naip the bid ou the ..bond |' WHEN YOU VISIT ~ day. Mr. ilendn!l oxpccts to complete issue' for the" Ml' 0. W. . l.h.e layin.g of the 'new maius "through : KOOM. KOK IJirKOVIJ.MIi.NlT. •."!! ^il<\-'.r • . ' ,. -.¡ii '•••#••' •i.liose streets which are to be paved BROWNSVILLE While on the subject of building by Feb. 1.". The work i-f paving: pro- TAYLOK'3 BEST PLAY .Speaking of "Our-Attorney," one STOP C/4T -,, : •-:. houses— H would not be a had babiy will begin about that date. of. the plays which the Albert Taylor • ^ S idea for Uncle Sam .to enlarge the company will put On at Brownsville THE HOTEL HOYT federal court accommodations at Laid at Rest, next week, ¿he Dallas Morning News Th-o funeral and liitcrnient-of -little- On Adams Siieet near 12th Street. European Plan l'trowíisvíllo. ' Not" only ÍK the court of'Scpt. -7. last, sr..ys: Virginia MeDaviU occurred yester- ."In 'Our Attorney' Albert Taylor FIFTY OUTSIDE ROOMS room small and lacking in the ilig- day afternoon at four o'clock from has. one of tho best comedies of hisj nily and irppresslveness tliiit ¡i- feder- 'the family iresidence on St. (.'fiarlos (.'.-¡reer, and in .the character of 'Pat-, All Thoroughly Renovated and Absolutely Clean. As Near 1 THERE ARE TWO al court should possess, but the cns- street. A* announced, it was private,, i-ick, Taylors-is, ¡doing very superior j Modern as Any Hotel, in the City. Rates Per Day tcmi-housc acconiniod;i.tir>ns in gener- only the family and a few very Intí- work, which is snying much, as Ta-y-j' Things that hsvertf^iieaiied ¡n price ¡n al. and particularly 'the .postoffico male friends -being present. Rev. Dr. lor. has long ¿luce been rated as one; of the most artistic and inteiligenti 50c, 75c and $1.00 also might well be enlarged and Im- L R. Kurress and Rev. G. M. McDou- Brownsville during the last seven years- jrall randucted tho funeral services actors on tho^American staiüc."- I proved. There is ample room on tho jointly. Interment was aiailc ¡n the , Free Hack From Depot to Postage Stamps and Ice, The UniUd -' sito of tho federal building for a con- city cemetery. Many -beautiful flow- WEATHER- States Government makes the former. , " siderable nduitton. and It may bo ers wcr-c sent by sympathizing fri- M.ttcrologit:al data -for 21 hours end. : advisable for Brownsville to seek to ends io adorn the tiny white casket ing at 7 a. m. today: secure ¡m appropriation for the on- and tho grave in which Ihe beloved Barometer .a: 7 p. m. yesterday. .30.-I .Harorneter ait 7 a ai. today. . .2!)..''-. The People's Ice Company InrgemenJ. of the building. The rap- little one was-laid at rest. Temp. at. 7. a. m. today -GI.S. Id growing of the town anil corres- the latter. Both arc reliable Firms. FOE A' THAT AND A' THAT Maximum Temp, yesterday 7-1.." SAN CARLOS HOTEL pondingly incrvnsed -tax upon '.¡u- fac- •Mimimuin Temp..this morning. .58.-1 ilities of Uncle Sam's various depart- Is there for honest poverty . West Texas, -dourly in the south, 1 Qne. Block from St. L., B. C& M. Depot ment acconi modal ions here win .soon Wh;i. hangs his head, and a' that? I'M" probably snow in the north por- necessitate an expansion, and ill The cowan! slave, we pass him by; tion Thursday. Colder with coirl wave # :r would lie well to secure the improve-! We dare be poor for a' that. in the Panhnndl'O. -Friday probably_ RATES $2,00 PER. DAY fair. East Texas, rain Thursday, Much '•K I l-'or a' that and a' that. rti inciU In time. colder by night Cold wave in north Brownsville, , ....-- ...... - „. - Texas Our toils obscure, and a' that; TK - and central '.oi-ior.s. Friday fair and A PKAC'nCAL COMMENTARY Tln> rank is but the guinea's stamp, &.. -: The man's the gowd for a' that. colder 'n the south The president's message, n synopsis s of which aiM'cars in The Herald (his iVhat though on ham-ply fare w<; dine Rea' E tate .Transfers, S¿ ;!: :ü ?H ~K :!í £ * * -r. !tí ¡H & £ ;ul : ble The -followiiiR warranty deeds were *•. morning, is > P¡'Per, ¡ndii'atini; \\~ear hoddin' gray -and a' that? LIBER, SHINGLES NATIONAL LUMBER earernl. almost, prayerful study of the Gie fools their silks .and Knaves their filed for record ot the County Clerk's PHONE of fice, .yesterday: prlm-i'ples of economy on the part of wine— * AND E. G. Alexander antl wife, to A. m CEMENI, LIME our rhief executive. Tho enliRhtoiied A man's a man for a that. For a' that, and u' that. •J. Ernest et. al, south half .-f Sur- The Phárr 190 democra-i. howrvor, will soe it • r. a» Their '-tinsel show, and a' that: vey. Xo. •!!, Consideration S3.100_|:g DIRS ANO WINDOWS i-'seeeiliiiplv practical commentary on The honest man, thourlh e'i'c sac . E. H. Smkh. and W. H. Mor-lson j^ Mr, Hitchcock's plan for government :pOOTi (p -Mrs. Fra F. Clark, Ir-t No. 12 in :g ownership oí -telcwraph lines. Thej Is king o' men for a' that, block 10 of Rio -Hondo Park town- Host-Mr. Linesetter J president ca-lls attention to tbo vou-l site fo'r S.'iOU. E. F.Johnson LumberGo' ful waste in llie ¡ulniiuist'nuion of the! Yn> soq yon birkie ca'd a lord, Walter J. J.acobson ct al, to John St. Oiarlw and Belt Una RfcJlro»d Ftont •_ Coán«ctlont, T Holland, tho west half of block qcvencl departments -'f the exccutivej WJin sirufs and stares and a' that? THE BEST OF SERVICE * his No. -IS E. &.. B. Forn.indcz Kr ^10 Of our affairs. Due to various! Tl.ouKh hundreds worship TK If your home, 'fence, or outbuildings need a few. pieces of 4 word. but chiefly to inefficiency ¡n tlMBER for repairsJeJ.eohpne ust, you,w,il| fin(J> that how f ' causes He's but a coof for a' tha; T. W. Uoodcll, to J. T. Vineyard, ever small your order may be you"'will get "prompt" delivery j ' tho office work of the sovt>rnnienl. For a.' that and a' that; ;i portion of block Xo. Í17 of the San : tho people whose business it is to do His ribbon star and a' that; .Benito Lamí aud Water compauy.s and {owest market price for good material. We wish to Now, in tho one. lumdroi! ami !>>ir- The man of independent mind. siirvej-, ?7G. PHÁRR, TEXAS .impression the^ public ,tóa| »- ty-sixth year of our national exis- He looks and laughs at a.' that, tence, it appears thai the business of No Order is to Small for Our Best Attention the nation is so lamely conducted that A prince can nink a bolted knight, BEÍOTIFTÍ YOUR HOMES ono small commission is able «¡effect A marquis, duke anc a' that: i Help Make the city beautiful economic rciorms in the mere man- But an honest man's aboon his niip.ht— Hani your, vacant loti with Ever- nr> T/^TC agement of the clerical force of the Guid faith, he maunnaTa' thai: green-Shade Tree»- ~Ornamental,.Ealm» Ulxl to A.- departments tha-t will amount to ?-,- and. Holering, Shrub»,. Hedgev and ¡•For a' that and a' that, a- yaijety,of liuit»; Now ii. the. .time When" contempdlating to build your .Residence, B.uslneBa or. Bank 000,000 a year. I Their dignities, -and aThat. Building, specify our brick. .to., book your orders for fall• wniter. We .manufacture -n. high, olas» tace brick o£ a 'beautiful ll^ht grey Wo are informed that It cost one|T|1;i |)j(h p. SCI1SO ana pride o' worth. and iprin^ planting. - Con*ult an Ex- department Í3.M per thousand to Are hjpher ranks than a' tb-aL ••olor, cnual. to tlie best. ... perienced .Horticulturist- Succe»s Our plant IB up to-date.. Daily capacity twenty • thousand, located ; handle incoming mall, while another piaran teed tmder my direction- thxee,.miles.north..pr. Brownsville. on the. main line ot the Saint Loul», " Joyce R. Wood , JForestry. Tree Surgery. Plant-Dii- 1 liep'irtmrat l'i'ld SS-1.ÍU for the same! Then let us pray thartbmc. it may— Brownsvijifl & Mexico railroad. , Our facilities .forvlaoding from our Phone 100 Combé Building,Dveir Howse Furniture Company (,,vlcc One department expended! As come it will for a' that— private «purs .Insiires prompt ^hlpm eats. . . . . •• " ' ~ " '• ' -« »* - ' , _ , ,,„ „„, (That souse and worth o'er a' the J5.ÍM per .thousand to handle out- W. M. WHÍTE, City. SampIeB.ot h'rick will ti« 6ent"ipre-pald upon., request...... ' •earth, OiBce Snlte-J.;! New Combe BÍdg. Telephone 100, Hrowmjvllle, Taia* goinK mail, and another paid J60.89 May bear the grec and a' that. " .-. I^- JOHN SON- LUMBER COMÍAN.?. .-, ,:-;>• -' BOTICA &£, MATAMORO3 5 S for tho same service. For n,' that, and a' that. Sanitary Plumlbing '.' . rssiuib..'lyrpya'. --Prop:.•.';;. 'jt J.'''";- .''';/': , .-f W.iivliiR t.-ereforc all nuesuen of It's coming yet, for a' thai — Everything ia£lectrical and Gulf Coast Brick and Tile Meicmn Cifi". POS'T CARDS. J0p»l». Sfr*y.H»W. Dr»wa. Fcithcr. Oaj;»^ tho abstract wisdom or unwisdom of •When man to man, t-he wor'3 o'er, "Hifrcc Work- Smndili ind jll'Kindi of Mcxicincurioiititi Ü Fréncli PcrfüiuíKí 1 MANUFACTURERS X>F BRICK government ownership of public util- Shall brothers be for a that. Plumbing floods^ Whcnin Mitimoro don't f«i 1 to c»Il on m«. Souch-w« .'. '•';•'•• "•;-•: '-^ P. JOHJrS01Í..Manajrét '.;-. .;.,:,.. ' ' V fn ities, the average' democrat is dis- EL ."^EXft- ..PLSASED,' r pbsed to ask how far * Rovernment so „ «^«,^¿1 eenu6. r6ader. fihuipped and «o conducted Is in a| we doVot think Mjr_ RooseYclt-^ould YALLET PLTÜCBDÍG AOT SUPPLY position to handle-efficiently either; ratherWlte than be president.—Pñil- " ' '"' the great telegroiph .lines or any of j adelphik- Inquirer. 14 Holiday, July 15, 1912 EX PASO HEUALD 1 ..Hi KrEagggJajnti '" express companies and shippers as o Merchants are prosperous. why the prescribed by the c0m Hi I prosperous. rates into eiieci. r Jxnmm ! ( Wholesalers are IN mission should not ?o except that oi DmenpmiK awn are prosperous. SWEEPING IEUK1MS EXPRESS On every question I Real Estate rates, a substantial aBrec"'"",.,.,on IVVIVUV Manufacturers are prosperous. been reached between express prosperous. and the companies. The latter TEJIS CATTLE TO FEBEIIIIS PHI Ranchmen are their willingness to inform their bus Cattlemen are prosperous. RATES CUT HIGH COST OF operations to any requirements prosperous. 10 LUG Iness might make, .but they ilining.men are. the commission concerning an expressed anxiety It COST ft our paint reduction of their rates lest COT 11 TH prosperitv makes our paint stock more ami keeps Com-- and ot i reparing new rules for the seriously affect their revenues. All tins Commerce ! gove-nme- express CJP Interstate carriers of StCommissioner Lane makes a vigor- Lli factory busy if ed traffic ous attack, in his report, upon the mission Orders Drastic INtaMIsh Through Routes. scale of graduated charges bj Sonora Ranches Greatly Ex- 3Iut re- -. now de- On Brazilian Eanch They Of foremost importance is the which the express companies ie a Reforms in Express Busi- uulrement that all cf the express com- termine the rate which shall apply to Un- ercised Over New Order Pssiit package of given weight. This scale Will Be Eaised in Phone 1206 panies shall ioiii in the establishment a un- 1 2 1 0-- 2 1 2 N. Stanton Auto of through routes by the quickest is held bv the commission to he Numbers. Being Enforced Rell Phone 206 ness. lines of communication between all ex- reasonable, discriminatory and arbi- limited press pffices and publish through trary. The report says: shall years shrewd Douglas, Ariz.. July 15. Washington, D. C, July 15. Sweep- rates to appl between those points. "It is the product of of San Antonio. Texas, July 15. Texas The state no justification in ed already beginning reductions in express rates aver- The same i rovisior gives the shipper manipulation, has cattle are to be pitted against the of Sonora is to feel ing 15 by wnlcn minds of the express men them- high cost the effects of the continued revolu- aging, in general, approximately per th' right to i.tme the route w the example yet "meat trust." and the Additional taxes are now cent, drastic reforms in regulations his property shall be carried. It selves, and is the richest ot living In general or accepted term. tion. being NeW of a tariff ,. ,-- un levied to help cover the deficiency eeivin m and practices, and comprehensive believed by commissioner Lane that brought to our attention rnrrtn McKenzie. of operation, these precisions will effect an based exclusively upon the theory that recently manager of the farfamed caused by the loss of tax returns. changes in the methods til .i de- The last of these taxes Is one levy- Goods, Croquet Sets, Hammocks, Tesnii a report made pub- n the service and a Sfeat the charge should be what the traffic Matador ranch in the Panhandle, to l?A 1 Baseball are prescribed in which now involving the ex- ing a duty of $3.G0 on every head of and also hare a goott supply of today by the Interstate Commerce economy to the carrier" vise a gigantic plan .V SlGCKu OI Backers and Balls, lic by circuit- "With respect to the Standard of millions of dollars in cat- cattle exported from the state. vig- commission of its investigation into haul shipments oftentimes over says: penditure of scene of orous protest is being made by the firearms and ammunition. the business of the 13 great express ous rentes to aveid turning them rates, the commissioner tle and packing houses, the throughout the to a conecling line. The CommiMHloner'H Conclusion. operation being south Brazil. .There cattlemen state. A companies of the United States departure from may be said to be the company ranch consisting subscription list was started in Doug- Dealing with the identity of interest The most radical "What then express the has a long half a las for the purpose of sending a rep- companies, existing methods Iks m tlat adopted standard of a reasonable rate? 9,000,000 acres, and before to Hermosillo 'Qn-Jr&js- tte between the various the new rates. In tnc no one consideration. of cattle will roam the resentative to protest & report finds that while these com- of applying the express Our answer is, million head green against the continuation of this tax. separate legal entities, "it United States there are 35,000 These conclusions, however, we have broad expanse of prairies, with fund had reached $180 by noon. panies are from each - of pure and every The OVERLAND and EL PASO STREETS. Is of interest to regard this fact that stations To nan e rates reached- grass, streams .water The owners of cattle in this nart nf they of these every other one requires the "1 That express rates should be other condition that is ideal for the claim new by stock ownership and otherwise dif- of Sonora that this law will -- in- statement of more than 600,000,000 primarily to meet the need cattle Industry. are so interlaced, intertwined, and now oc- made people of the finest breed of is with difficulty wo ferent rates. These schedules the great body of our and One thousand from the tlemen themselves bntvilso on Sonora terlocked that it com- cupy hundred volumes of m therefore, be stated in terms shorthorns and Herefords as American buyer con- can trace any one of the greater several de- should, KlngsUlle. Tex., were as well the and wholly independent 200 to 300 pages each In the tariff that represent the small packages King ranch at tramp sumer. Cattle can be imported Into panies as either The rates express company is intended loaded today aboard the British Mexi- management or the agency of a partment of the commission. which the "Willesden, Galveston, with tue states from other sections of TeSi People You in its system. while themselves are intricate and involved, to carry rather tnan Dy tne juu yuunus steamer at co not subjected to these laws, at a These What single railroad So that authority to de- a full complement of ranch horses and figure these companies operate separately and and it requires expert any as freight rates are stated. cowboys, headed for South America. less than the Sonora owners can jiflikpijA compete each other for traffic, termine the lawful rate between "2. That in the fixing of its rates and Cattle company deliver them. with to twn Tioints. express coiupau? dhuu.u . The Brazil Land expects Four hundred head of cattle brought the express business may be said enor- an nui is making the importation and Cogglns & a family affair. An interest- The problem of reducing this allowed to charge more than a rail- thousands of head of Texas form the Scott ranch near be almost might mous volume of rate schedules to a company if the latter undertook to secure thoroughbreds, to be El Tigre were the first to cross the Wi ing genealogical tree, in fact, compass is one road same service. cattle, mainly line and be dipped according to the Want, They be drawn showing a common ancestry genuinely practicable to and did, give the used in building up the breed on the government companies. And to which commissioner Lane devoted "3. That it is proper for the gov- ranch. is found that the formula since the order in all of the larger most attention. He hab express company Brazilian It mix became effective on July 1. While while many names may be used to serious ernment to treat the Texas and native cattle of Brazil other cattle are en route to the companies, it is witnin evolved a method whereby the rates as a freight forwarder by passenger well and a fine beef animal Is the re-- line designate these ope- any point in the United States to supplemental service at this herd was the first to arrive and 'Respond Promptly the fact to say that aside from the from on a train, giving go through the process. wwaitSKia and distinctively all other points may be printed each terminal and intermediate care. "Scarcity of ranges In Texas is the being rations of the minor express single sheet or card about one fourth an express rate may not be cause for this proposition of After officially allowed to railroad express companies, the newspaper "4. That primarj cross the line by Dr. Harry M. Hart, 5 Is main-age- d of the size of a single upon the monopoly right of the building up one of the largest cattle bulsness of the United States page. based government veterinarian, the cattle by more than three groups express company to be the exclusive growing and meat packing industries were driven to dipping plant re- not over one or more on globe," said 'E. L. .Roberts, of the of Interests " Country Divided Into Block. freight forwarder the manager for the Bra- cently completed by Benton & Co., near Auto 1088. Three Ycorx. The first step in the consummation lines of railroad. . Colo., the E. P. & S. VT. stockpens. The ani- Bell 608 & 629. Inquiry in 1'roRret.s of the plan was the division of the "5. That the rate should not include zilian company in the United States. mals were forced to swim through the The inquiry was the most extensive, ap- compensation "Wo propose to put millions into pack- ANTONIO ST, detail, prob- United States into blocks, each more than a reasonable In dipping vats under supervision o.f Dr. .RYAN & CO. OPEN ALL NIGHT. 212 SAN and, in wealth of infinite proximately 50 miles square. Rates the service given, even though ing houses and refrigerating plants Hart. A. E ably the most thorough, ever prose- for compensation below that to stocking the Immense ranch was con- are proposed between each of these such falls addition To ac- On account of this being the first cuted by the commission. It blocks, treating all cities and towns which the railroad exacts as a mini- with the best grade of cattle. lot put through, a large and interest- ducted the report was prepared by 100 pounds of complish the best possible results it PASO TRUNK FACTORY and K. Lane. within each block as common points. mum for the carriage of Import ed crowd of cattlemen and townspeople EL commissioner Franklin It of blocks is one degree of freight. was determined to the finest was on hand to witness it. Bell Trunks, Bags and Leather Goods Auto has been in progress for nearly three Each these to Texas bulls and the first shipment of report makes 600 longitude in length and one degree '6 That it is unreasonable fix King Is going on 1054 Made, Repaired and Exchanged. 1966 years. The itself of latitude in width. To every express so rapid a decline in express rates these from the ranch CORONA PERSONALS. printed pages. It involved an examin- blocks as is made by the the,, steamer Willesden. Others will We Store Goods. Opp. Postoffice, across Plaza. of practically station within each of these for long distances -- t.. ,!.. . n. ,,... sxf tlmn Tt nf ation and comparison same from any other in their freight rates, ex- M- more than 600,600,000 express rates in the rate is the railroads being mnrss rMiuires great Datience and a Corona, X. - July 15. John Swan to given block. Thus the rate Is statea press service in this respect of expense to, prepare for these son, who has been spending some few effect in this country, in addition as ea to passenger to lot 1271 way- as between blocks rather than more analogous than shipments." , days Tularosa, has Z522S5 Anto an examination of millions of cities. Supplementing this block freight service. purpose me in returned io Tmn retail GROCERIES an investigation, through the ex- It is the ultimate oi coroI1 - bills and system of making rates which consti- "7. That in compounding the company to ow n reftis- - ' . Special books of the companies of their finan- zone origin or should be al- establish its T, f fe the Mail Orders Given Prompt and Attentioa. methods. tutes each block a of press rates the railroad j 307-30- cial operations and business freight I United of the season, the thermometer 3 E. Oreilaca St Lane Is of the opinion of destination the rates are stated for lowed compensation for bulked countrj. TncluTnT the StaJel hottest CLIFFORD BROS Commissioner package weighing from 1 to 100 upon a passenger train as to ! being considered registering from 80 to 90 degrees every hot Hib fonf-liiHin- reached consti each moved The Panama canal is solution pounds. The express companies will which it is relieved by contract for all in the plans. dav. liatii is needed. tute a long step towards the required to publish a directory of liability loss or damage and is Mississippi, of gravest prooiem oi me Amer- be for Dr. Ellard. of who has WELL'S THAKSFEU that liv- express stations which will show the without expense for the furnishing of weeks on the L0N6 ican householder, the high cost of which each sta- billing, bookkeeping REBELS ARE OFFERING been snendin? several Warehoaie; light and Hex.Ty ing- block number within a receipt, the the I Johnson ranch, left for El Paso, Deming, Hacks, Baggage, Livery and Boarding; Storage, tion is located, and at each station and a great number of other general Blacksmithing, Orriaga & Painting Shop. et Elephant Itatea Reduced on Small package. there will be filed a slnjle-she- tariff expenses. CATTLE AT LOW PRICE Engle and Butte, where he Hauling; Horse Shoeing, General The greatest reduction of rates pro- which will gke the rate from that sta- "8. That the rate should include a will consider a location. posed is on small packages that is on tion to all other blocks in the United return to the express company which Cat- The largest crowd that ever wit- parcels which weigh less than 12 States. will compensate it with profit for the Local Cattlemen Say nessed a moving picture show in Corona pounds. on packages of more Block. gives, 7S TiiMiSFEft Rates Many Towns In Same expense of the service which it Ter-raz- as Chatauqua moving picture more lo- witnessed the than 12 pounds were found to be To illustrate: New York city is being added" thereto in the for- tle Are From the O. XV. will be re- m. i t .. nnva T?nn sinracp and Daclrinsr bv careful men. per-cel- s. there " at the W. hall. It v., reasonable than those on smaller in block 952. Some 20 other of the total rate the pooper fol- AUT0 1965 cate mation Ranches. peated again tonight, with a dance BELL 1054. towns and villages are included in that charge which it may reasonably make lowing. Briefly stated the new rates may be same block. Chicago is locaieu in service which the railroad gives S10 my be had sjiiri based, unon minimum for the Cattle at ner head and Will Sulteniicr have re- to lie a block 838, which also contains a score as stated in the preceding paragraph." 1 from the rebels in Juarez, local cattle Frank ISJ E3 S&SB&iB S rhar-r- o one pouno. . days' El E5tH&CS. of 21 cents for a or more of cities and towns. A shipper hearing next October a ,nen S4J- - anyone wishes to a. turned from a few visit in 1 After the it tane fifes tfi?n EcSUfit package. This charge increases in Jn jjew York wishing to send a pack supplementary order will be entered by j cnance with the state authoritl es ana Paso. ratio to the Increase of weight ana age to Chicago will learn from tne h fnmmlssioTv nuttine1 Into effect the I associations, which Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Brown, HEN FOOD, CHICK FOOD AND POULTRY MASH. hs the cattle hae Born, to distance, at rates varying from three-tent- the block in which Chicago proposed as soon as it may be representatives here to watch for just AND STOCK SUPPLIES. pound to about 12 dlrecorv .rates a g'rl. POULTRY of a cent a is situated. Then turning to the single considered practicable to make them such violations of the state law as the San Bernardino. 849-18- a pound, num- Dr. S. B. Richard', of 2HONES: cents a pound. Twelve cents tariff sheet he will ascertain the effective- - bringing of stolen property into the been visiting Dr. Pinkler for HAY AND GRAIN according to the conclusions of the ber of the scale of rates, which applies state. The cattle which the rebels Cal.. has approximately high- 952 a few davs. commission, is the upon all packages between block claim to have In Juarez and northern Willingham est rate per pound for the greatest and block 838. CLIFTON MOOSE Chihuahua are said to be from the Joe and Jessie were in distance possible for a parcel to be This method of stating rates, the Terrazas and other big ranches in from their ranch east of here Saturday carried wholly within the United i report claims, will avoid the great GROWING RAPIDLY Chihuahua taken by the rebels during and report grass burning up. States, exclusive of Alaska. ooay oj. cumpiiiim.3 awiu ww vi. un- their raids of these ranches. As the J. L. Jones spent a dav or so at Car-rizo- ro Packages weighing two pounds, for overcharges, pres- Clifton, Ariz., July 15. Jack Holamn, funds of the revolution are low at com- dercharges and the - s: before the board of eountT Instance, may be shipped 1000 miles ent method of stating rates being so tiie vork valley rancher, has been- suend-in- this time and miny of the men are New York city to Chicago for 24 even express some tinft; in Clifton; sellintr his re- unpaid, these cattle are being offered missioner'. confusing that not the $10. which is S5 lower than the Mis Theo Richardson is spending a ients. and 2000 miles New York city agents are able to discover the law- cent cutting of alfalfa. at Gladys Bond, of to Denver for 31 cents, the present two points. The di- Moose will this market price. No shipments of these few davs visiting Miss 35 ful rate between The local lodsc of stolen cattle have yet been made to place- B ffi being respectively, for eaeh express Is also to this - . rates rectory of stations week initiate some 30 new members, the American side, the custom offi- a position at cents. A three pound package wilt state the delivery limits in each city membership up al- G. C. Brown has .taken St 1000 and 37 company thus brinsinj: the to cials say. although they would be 8 miles T. Davidson. cost 27 cents for which express e bartender for J. within the 200. Hie lod-r- has absorbed the Clif- lowed to enter the port providing a cents for 2000 miles, the existing rates gives service upon its tariff rates. bill of lading is presented and the du- P. M. Melton has been sick for a few being respectively, each 45 cents. A Collecting Double CJiarges, ton band. improving some. may transported Holwav, an oldtime miner ties paid, as there is no federal stat- davs. but is 10 pound package be It is found that the large number ot Commodore ute against the importation of cattle T. M. DuBoise made a trip to the 1000 miles for 42 cents and 2000 miles double collections of express charges and prospector of the Clifion-Moren- ci supposed to have been stolen. Ancho. N. M.. r existing Warden brothers' ranch at 77 cents, as against the arises out of the fact that a package district, is returning from a. prospectins Saturday. rates of 75 cents and $1.25. respect- which has been prepaid does not bear trip in the northern part of California. ively. The cost of transporting a 25 fact. Ac- AWAIT SHIPMENT OF Marshal Atkinson is spending a few 7G sufficient evidence of this Tom Simpson, now livmz on his pound package 1000 miles will be cordingly the report presents a set of York, visiting his family in dav in the citv. cents, against the present rate of $1.16, labels and waybills In different col- ranch at is CATTLE AT TEXLINE Finis Atkinson drove Max Xorthouse and 2000 miles, $1.64, against the are required to Clifton. Wells Sunday. for ors which the carriers Kline has been visiting rer to Peno present rate of $2.25. use, and In the event that the package Mrs. Max Al- Commissioner Lane believes that the does not bear any label the shipment is sister in Morcnci for acouple of, days. Shipments This Year When vou feel laay. out of sorts and method adopted for the computation to be delivered to the consignee with- Bert McBride. of Duncan, is pendins yawn a good deal in the dav time, you and construction of express rates Is out collection of any charges, the car- the week in Clifton with friends. ready' Amount to can charge it to a torpid liver which scientific and will result in the ex- bearing burden of discover- deputy county record- svstem to get fmi oi charges. rier the Miss Jov Gray, 30,000 has allow'ed the disor- action of entirely reasonable ing where the mistake lies. er, is spending two weeks' vacation in Head. impurities. HERBINE cures all Through the decision announced today The present system requires the a produced by an Inactive liver, it ex- and the beaches. Texline, Texas, July 15. A number ders express rates are made that are statement of about 200 times as many cowboys from J. J. ranch are strengthens that organ, cleanses the pected to open an avenue of trade be- system proposed by the Forty new members have been taken of the puts system In good rates as the lodge here awaiting the arrival of several bowels and the bv Book tween the producer of food commodi- commission. However, as each agent, into the Morenci K. of P. in the thousand head of cattle, which they healthv condition. Price 50c Sold How to Get This ties and the consumer by distributing under the new system, will be obliged past two weeks. will unload here and drive across the Scott White & Co.. Stores. equitably to the weight and distance to know only the rates that apply be- E. H. Jones was a Morcnei visitor the country to ranch, which lo- above coupon from sis consecutive issues of The Herald cost of transporta- the is Cut out tie the burden of the tween his station and each of the first of the week. cated over 100 miles noi tbwest of ana present them with 50 ceats to cover the bare cost of manufacture, tion. At present that burden Is borne blocks, he will have to consult XV. Colorado. weight. other Deputy sheriff R. ChanAcrlain. of Texline in handling, and a cony will be presented to you without ad- chiefly by the parcels of light only 830 rates to find the proper Morenci, was a recent Clifton business The total shipment of cattle to Tex- freight and By commissioner Lane's decision, the charge from his station to every other line this year by the J. J. outfit will CaBidy Specia ditional cost. A $2.00 VALUE FOR 50c Act quickly if you want s package will bear no greater visitor. to 30,000 head. small station within the .United States. Eldredge has been spending a amount about copy. share, per pound, of the cost of trans- Through this system the common-rat- e Dud Herald portation than the heavy package, and area on short hauls is reduced couple of days in Clifton receiving medi- on our 40c Save "six consecutive coupons aad present them at Tht every package weighing less than 100 from an area of about 3500 square cal attention for a slight case of RANCH LEASE AND office. pounds will bear the same amount of is average area of pleurisy. csrpense. miles, which the CATTLE ARE SOLD PLANTATION CUTS EACH BOOK BY MAIL 15 CENTS. terminal each main block to an area of about Charles Chesterfield, a Morenci mer- EXTRA FOR POSTAGE. Will Reduce Living Cost. 180 square miles. The present express chant, has been visiting in Clifton on Big Spring. Texas, July 15. TJodway Soft Filling The charges the express com- rate methods embrace much larger Keen has sold to P. K. Abney his ed business. Mun-g- er panies, iiow in many instances, are the common rate areas. The following officers and noncom- one-ha- lf Interest in the same for 5C pounds as for 100 pounds, Reduces Rate to Went. Morenci cav- ranch lease, the ranch lying north between the same points; and in some For instance, the rate, per 100 missioned officers of the of this city, also 1.200 head of cattle, instances they are as much for 30 pounds from Boston, New York, Phil- alry troop are attending the school of saddle horses, farming implements and pounds as for 100 pounds. Under such adelphia. , "Washington and instruction for officers and noncom- all other property belonging to the a system the householder is compelled Richmond to , Tacoma, Port- missioned officers in Wyoming: Capt. partnership ot Keen & Abney. The to pay as much for a 10 pound package land, San Francisco, San Diego, Reno, Jav, second Lieut. Hearst. Sergt. Raseoc lease covers 24 sections and was made Saturday Only. 9 25 many points em- for five years. as a dealer would pay for a pound Sacramento and other and. corporals Randall anl Westerman. if. A. Harwell purchased of J. C package, and three or four times as braced in the region west of the Sierra Anderson and children are SO 10 Mrs. r. Sparkman, of Glasscock countj. The Store Beautiful. Railway much, as the dealer would pay for and Cascade mountains is now the spending the summer with relatives and head of cows and calves. Mexico North pound's 100 pound ship- same, $13.50. Under the commission's SO included in a vary friends in Denver. "W. K. Trammell has purchased ment. system the rates will with the head of cows C. Sparkman. expresses be- any two points, XV. L. DeMolin, superintendent of the from J. Commissioner Lane the distance between pan L. S. McDowell has purchased a car- lief that the system proposed will from $9.85 to $11 for 100 pounds. Morenci Water com v, has returned load of purebred Durham cattle, to be make practicable the opening of direct While there has been an almost uni- from El Paso and Tucson. placed on his ranch south of here. BETWEEN EL PASO, NUEVA CASAS GRANDES, MADERA, MINACA avenues of trade between the farm and form reduction In charges upon par- H. S. Van Gordcr, of the Phelps-Dodg- e the city household. He, likewise, is cels weighing 50 pounds or less, the Mercantile company at Morenci, AND CHIHUAHUA. C opinion that while the reduction of rates on packages weighing more than has returned home from the coast. COCHISE RANGES the rates on the lighter weight parcels 50 pounds have not been materially re- Jeff Dunagan was a recent Morenci will average between 20 ana 30 per duced. In some instances, the com- NEED RAIN BADLY Train leaves El Paso Union Depot 7:05 A. M proposed rate basis shows a. business visitor. cent the express companies themselves mission's s. 13. Unless arrives Paso Union Depot 7:05 P.M. heavy-package- Todd, cattleman of Colorado, Tombstone, Ariz., July Train El will be the beneficiaries of a largely slight increase of the charges on Mr. a come pretty soon the feed on handling of This indicates the belief of has been spending some time in and rains increased business in the the ranges will be short and the cat- PARLOR-OBSERVATIO- N CAR, BUFFET SERVICE, BETWEEN MA- smal: parcels. the commission that the rates of the around Clifton inspecting, some of the tle, which are now in fine condition, in The report shows that more than express companies per 100 pounds are ranches in Greenlee countr with a view-t- o fact, the best in years. willbegin to DERA AND EL 'PASO. 300,000,000 parcels are handled an- not. on the whole, seriously excessive. buying. He has not vet decided to suffer. . ot only Is the feed begin- nually by the express companies in This is particularly manifest from an purchase, but is favorably impressed ning to burn up. but the water holes the United States. The average house- analysis of the rates for distances of with showing made in both land and are drying or already dried up and For further particulars, rates ete phone 9SS or communicate with hold of five persons in this- - country 200 --miles or less, which are scarcely some of the springs are falling oft express. In on heavy weight cattle. supply. either sends or receives by ditributed the traffic William Grant, a former resident of rapidly In their T. R. RYAN, F. L. WEMPLE, the course of a year, from eight to 10 Effective In 'Autumn. The dry ranch farmers are all ready Manager. Asst. Goi. Frt. & Pass. Agt-- packages. .The average weight of By the terms of the commission's Metcalf. but now traveling on the raid to put in a crop and are waiting on Traffic these packages is 34 pounds; the aver- prder the chanjrrs in the regulations, for a Chicago concern, is in Clifton for the rains to start. The ranchers who age express charge Is 50 cents; and methods and practices of the express a few days stay. hae fruit trees are bothered consid- ex- year the average haul Is 200 miles. It ap- compai.ies; the of J. R. Hampton, who has been spend- erably by rabbits this and there gpMiW8 i pears that a very small proportion of press matter; the changes In the bill- ing some time in California, has returned has been an unusually large crop of $2.50, $3.00 gmst express country re- lackages; and other adminis- young rabbits. The quail crop is large the traffic of the ing of put nomc. asd the say the nimrods will sult- fron direc shipments from the trative reforms are required to be Dcputv sheriff Jim Cash, of Morenc ranchers farm to the city home. into effect practically Immediately. have plenty of quail shooting this The investigators have devoted a The rates proposed, however, will not is a Clifton visitor. fall. j car to the onMructive work of re- become effective before some time next and $3.50 forming the bases of express rates of autumn. The commission has fixed RUIDOSO PEOPLE ATTEND THOUSAND CATTLE St. Louis and Return $49.65 un- Ortnbpr 9 beginning RACE MEET AT ALTO, N. M. devlsinir simpler and more easily .as the date for the - derstood means of stating those rates, t of a hearing of the representatives of RuidosO, X. M.. July 15. yA- number CROSSED NEAR 3VLARFA Hot Springs and Return $39.35 people went to wit- of Ruidoso toAlto Marfa, Texas. July 5. John Degnan. ness the races between W. W. Slack'3 of Pueblo, Colo., has imported from race horse and the noted grav racing Mexico over 1.000 head of cattle. Ed E. & W. horse of J. Crawford of tha place, the Myers and v Wiley Franklin brought VIA former winning by a length. them from ranches from the river near Mr. and Mrs. Frank Maxwell and sis- Presidio. Robert Breeding, who has been In ters are camping on the Ruidoso. Mexico bujing cattle, has returned. Humors get into the blood usually because of an inactive condition of J. J. Alderson, hi Angus, N. M.. was SHIRTS DINING CAR SERVICE system. Those members rfiose duty is to expel all refuse matter a visitor here. OIL.V SIIIUS 1S.000 the it J. V. Tullv and son, Fred, of Glencoc, CATTLE IX SE1SOX City Office Sheldon Block. do not properly perform their work, and an unhealthy accumulation is ab- are here on business. Globe. Ariz.. July 15. Gila county sorbed into the blood. Then instead of performing its natural function of Miss D. Elizabeth Cooper, of Tularosa, lias completed the largest shipment of visiting Gilmore. cattle in Its history, at the highest "We Appreciate Your Patronage." nourishing the skm the circulation irritates and in- is here the Misses prices. This spring shipments were flames it because of its impure condition. A thorough Earl Converse, of San Andres moun- 18,000 head The shipments contracted tains, is here on business. for fall approximate 4,000 head. cleansing of the blood is the only certain cure for any Oliver Jackson, of Tularosa, is a vis- skin disease; external applications ran only give tem- itor on the upper Ruidoso. porary relief. S. S. S. goes into the circulation and Dan McGuire. of Tularosa, passed drives all humors from the blood, and in this "way through here en route to Roswell. where he is taking his brother. Joe McGuire, makss a permanent and complete cure in every form who has been visiting him for the past BR. H. A, mQMUBER of skin trouble. S. S. S. supplies the blood with the month. DENTIST nutritive qualities necessary to sustain the skin and James A. Carroll made a busiuesa trip preserve perfect appearance. to the Ruidoso in his car. its natural texture and very OPEN DAY AKD X1GHT lilHHBJMIIil Don't Work for Negroes. S. S. S. cures Eczema, Acne, and all other skin erup- R. Bracken, who has been ill, is I Tetter, Salt Eheum, now convalescing. DovrnBtniro References: ASK ANYONE. COLES BLDG. 10th Year El Paso. tions or diseases. Book on Skin Diseases and any medical advice free. N X. llightower, of Alto, was a vis- Roberta-Bann- er Bids. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CQ GA. itor here I Edited >Slo«vne ISS OLEDITSCc M NORWEGIAN EXPERT, EXPERIMENTS AT

1SS ELLEX GLEDITSCH, who JIHS established an inter- national reputation in experi- menting with radium jn associa- tion with Madame Curie in Paris, has gone to Yale to carry, ont her investigations into some of the' scientific problouis in which she is inter-; cstedl She is nt the university not us an, unliiiniy student, but for tlic purpose of & carrying out in n general v,-ay work n the line of determining disintegration jmi'lu.ets of radio-act: ve- elements. Miss Glcditsch will have tlie use of the labor- atories in the new Sloan Laboratory and •will Tvork in conjunction with Professor Bertram B. Boltwood, professor of radio- cbcmi«lrr :.t I'ule and a member of the .International Committee on Radio-Ac- tivity. Vt'bcn it became known in academic circles in this eonntry that Miss G!e- GLEDITSCH ditseh was coming to America to study i many invitations were extended to her'there consisted oi lectures to tli'e students isity 1ms the large portion of ]0 to the from universities in various parts of thfi oil the general subject of radio-activity, minus 31 power uf u gram, which, 1'ru- larly interested in the radio-activity of I The secretary of the Foundation, writ- country. Ila-vard, which frowns upoti|This year, having been awarded a fellow-1 fessor ISultwood says, is fully as big metals and in perfecting the processes - ing of "America in Scandinavia," says:— "women sttidents in its scientific depart-lship o.,*f tli...ve ~...... — tl;e millionth p;irt of the head o„f. a.. nnd making it! To help toward a true appreciation in ruent, offered Miss Gleditsch inducements, l''oi:adation, I came to America with the- pin. Tlie writer wasn't surprised tbr.i! I Scandinavia of American methods and to carry on her experiments and do her I intention of devoting my time to the fur-hie couldn't see it when he was sho Xot that she e.rpccls it ever to be really!idea's, the trustees of the Foundation es-- •tvork thore. Johns Hopkins, also a con- ther investigation of some of the scientific! enpsule containing Ibc quantity, because she knows that there is Itablished fellowships with stipends of $"50; servative institution, was eager that she problems in which I have been inter- Vale has on hand the radium salts m comparatively little in the earth's surface. each to enable six advanced Scandinavian should go there, and Yale made a bid | ested. After considering a number of 1 by .Madame Curie ns far hack us 100-. If there were much, she said, there would students to worknt the same time inAmer- for her presence, while the State Uni- differentt institutions in the United States: some of the first brought lo tins conn- bc dancer of so high a temporaturp that! lean universities, it being expected that versity of Minnesota, besides, eitcndiug I decided to conic to Yule to carry on my j try. we should burn our feet in walking on ir.'the.se students would return nfter their a cordial invitation made an offer of work with Profussor Uoltwood, since; Professor ftoltwood She thinks, however, tlmt there is much 'sojourn in America effective interpreters $500 in addition to the income she en- the general field o[ his scientific work that nK'suthuriu— ii- so more radium in this country than is sen-;of the best in our life and thought. The joys from the American-Scandinavian has been very similar to my own iinJ as| occupies a place "between" ("meso") orally believed. She has had consider- better to secure, the right persons for thiij Foundation. She would have liked to his laboratory offers some facilities for] .horimn nnd ether radio-active elements! able correspondence will! the owner of] end, .he choice of the fellows was left accept this offer, especially as there mly work that 1 could not find elsewhere, [discovered earlier. "I'l-ofcssor Ilnhn mines in Colorado that contain a promis-, entirely in the hands of advisory oom- is such- a iar.se Norwegian settlement "From what T have seen of this country jfaid I'mfcf-sor Boltwood, "discovered mz amount of radium and from which mi t tecs, which have been officially api' in that State, but she decided that it I think I shall like it very much. The elicit and renamed it, and its use in the! some has been sent to Paris. I pointed by tlie tiovcrnmeiits of Denmark,. mate is certainly different from that ofjmedical work] has brmiglit it to the nt The largest amount of rndium that Miss. Norway and Sweden, would be better for her to take her e u ! T- course in oae ot the older universities ray own country and the weather you are I U'ntinn ~if ti"'n ' ~ Fo -r - '••-long- "-tim-e I i Gieditsch ever saw at one time was .il w;ls to confer w th these . bavins now is much warmer than that j after records came of benofici 1 «""'"""<* the trustees of the I-oun- and to remain in the older part of the grim nnd a half, owned by Mine. Curio.I 1 tlo...u . L'nited States. She would there be in which we usually get in Norway in tlic'effects nf radium in certain types of dis i t- I H I,, „!' M>L herself ]>;,* crystallized and purified,< " '»strueted the• secretary to Dro- touch with many phases of American life early fall. I undemauil thac much is. 'case, fciontisis anl physicians here wci i XTU12-- ! I tlmtv centigrams of it, While it is soiCO(M '" M"-v.'" hcnnd.nav.n. Ihc spoil.: 1 "hat she wished'to study, and she alreadyldone in the United States for the edue.-i- sceptical tihou: tlu-ju, bin since they him , f nh 1 it ire and so co'sti: v Miss Gieditsch did notita"col:s ™rdlal't7 w'tb ^"'<* I)c ™* ™~ ; cciv Hl 1 1 l ; wliilo torcon t eri ' everywhere «s tl.elr reprcWiXwttve had an acquaintance" with Professor Ition of women, but 1 havt. not been here sui-n mor- of the results accomplish!- 1 I'jrt-.-hip.f established M at sonv« -i- had •tfcu..'sent to Not -' '' ' ' S D long enough to form any definite opinion I they nre uou- .e.ut.liu'sinslie oviir, it. Mes lls so n tnc but another evidence of the growing Bertram Boltwood and considered the 1 s scan,! iua via n l-'oumliiHiiyi u utc. di fur i is nt u us ' ' transmutation of metals. 'equipment at Yale particularly favorable on those mutters. You certainly have some! thorium ' now beini'useil by 'IVttcrlcin. I friendship for America of, the countries .».,., •-••'• . . [jusc oUfL onal.'liii'<.-i;ui.'ii u;:' SixV'nilviMX "i,u vn: ,;i-c;ii o^i"-' d. as she knows ir.ore about I'sdmmj The American-Sc!inrd tlmt sliu u'.nild be ihcre when; to conic to this country, is a very interest-* ceived in private audience by His Slaj- versity of Christianin, where she is a-, in- r l U n ! ; arrived to give counsel aud information.] in? institution, Kndowed by Xicls Poul s^ woul(M,aTfSo-netHn"° 'o ^ve' o u' N™rh ^^^ ^ ^t'^^\ uV-.-tfleJi^l, '.is. Mso 'lie most distill "(osty King Christian X., also by the Min- structor, but she hopes at the close ot As might be expected from a disciplnjsoii for the purpose of niaintnininK un in ister of Foreign Affairs, Count X'hle- the college year to go \Vest and see. a rojatiTto bei-experiment n'tYnfe? ^ C^ m^uZ^,^^^^. £^0 f^ ^^ ^^.^ ,-t MadamMiidaniec CurieCurie' MiMis*s tileditseCileditsi.'lh i li.lksliioks] ]terdlal.ge'o terohange of f '^u^is/tc'achol^istnden.s, teachera andd 'lee- ™" «' 'T'an ^[v^o ^L^'t lU Lrnlrvl an^ AT^O T Y [V. also graciously received the secretary "I first -went to Paris," said Miss Gie- MILLION*'-* •* *~*M^m- •*^r A » AAL>Rh M. -\^< A a. A—4 Ji.tt.jK/1/VC/i A. A. T v> M. M./ in private audience. He was present at ditsch, "to work in radio-activity with a dinner given by the Minister of for- Madame Curie in the fall of 1007. Pre- eign Affairs, Count Khrcnsvilrd, nt his vious to that time I had studied organic official residence, for nil members of the and analytical chemistry, having graduat- Swedish Advisory Committee, the Amer- ed from the University of Christiania. in ican diplomatic corps, the Minister of Ed- Norway. My first work in Paris was on ucation, mid several officials hi the l\>r- the crystallization aud purification of the • ei^n Office. The secretary wag also on- salts of radiu-.n nnd ives carried out in 1 tertaiucd by I'rofcssor Montelius, chair- Madame Curie's laboratory under her su- Imau of the Swedish Advisory Committee, pervision. Later, in association with her, 'and by Mr. Stabler, Secretary of the I undertook the investigation of the prob- JAmerican Legation. In his journey lem of the production of the element I through Sweden he was tbe recipient of lithium from copper, a scientific possi- [special hospitality from the state rail- bility of the transmutation of matterj !roads, die Koyal Waterfalls, Commission, under the influence of radium rays, which. 'and the Kirnnavaura-Luossavaara Cotu- had been asserted to ta!;e place by Fro-^ jlinny in Lapland. fessor Sir-: William Itamsey, of England. | In Norway His Majesty King Haako.l In carrying 'out tbese experiments Ma-l VII. also granted the secretary an audi- New Ranch Hous6~to Cost About $300,000; Built on Site of House Destroyed by Fire. Mrs. Henrietta.!!/!. King, Owner of the dame Curie and I found no indication of 'Great King Ranch. Original Ranch House Built in 1852. ;ence. He was the guest of.the Minister the transmutation of one chemical element! Pifturfii from Stfltt Tbplcj. of Foreign Affairs, Mr. Ihlen, at a din- from ,ai\o'her, and our results, published! \/J RS^.. HENRIETTI A M. KING, own-jshared all the hardships nnd dnnsers of one of Mrs. King's pleasures,, is to kecpjpublic use nt her own expense handsome Branch, taking with her her friend, Lady'nor at which various officials were prcs- in the French scientific journals, made [ j er of the enormous King ranch,' it;! frontier life with her husband, and after a watchful care over these.simple micdod his fle uil sllc sti church (ditices nnd school buildings. OneUVinton, of England. Mrs. Klciiorg tele- cut. including the Minister of State, tha' public our failure to substantiate the; Texas, containing more than n mil!-i -' " carried on the business]people. She visits and administers to the of her latest projects of this character graphed to Mrs. King that Mrs. Adair .Ministers ot Denmark and Sweden, the ,of the ranch and added to the .more than claims of , the English savant. Following 'ion and a <,uartcr acreSi is a sick and lends her sympathy to any who was the gift of 000 acres of choice land'and Lady \Vinton were coming nnd that American Minister, the Governor of.. these experiments I undertook others on. .800,000 acres that he left more than 400,- may be bereaved woman whose interest in life is now QQQ acres ' ' ' and u. liberal sum of money for the ex-! they should be met at the railroad station. Chrislinnia and the chairman of th«'- the scneral relation existing bctweenj When the vast ranch domain was pene- tablishmcnt of an industrial' school forjThe superintendent, whose mind was on Norwegian 1 chiefly bound up in the children, grand- Advisory Committee. Tha ' mdio-active elements as they occur in the W'ith the corah'.; of the railroad, u few|trated by a railroad Mrs. King found -Mexican boys and girls near here. AtIhorsc-s, took it for grained that "Lady members of the committee, find the sec-'", natural minerals. children and great-grandohil'Jres with years ago, the aspect of the great Kingja-J enlarged field for hcr philanthropic this institution the'sons and daughters ofKvinton" was .•, fine imported horse am!'rotary was entertained at luncheon by :\ "•Jn all my relations with Madame whom she is surrounded. ranch from a .business point of view activities. The new town, of .Kiagsvillc| poor Mexicans of the ranch territory of himself went to meet ihc".r.iin on which'the rector of Ihe University of Chriatia-.1. Curie," Miss Gieditsch continued, "I Always she has been a home woman, wiis materially changed. Up to that was laid out on land which alia donated South Texas are trained In scientific j this welcome addition to the ranch stables', liii, Professor Morgensticrne, nnd by the ' ' found her a great inspiration, and but her home has been an almost bound- ,, farming nnd the various trades. j was expected. He told onr of the men to'Amcriain Minister, Mr. Swenson. Tba he„.r ______constant and unfailin_g, interes.„...... t in. _: ( ,vuh t,,e r:ii,roa(] runrlinS;a few years it has grown to a populador. o.f less area anti fofc cr This remarkable woman comes of a.'°ok -after Mrs. Adair ana ho would see pecrctary was also ihu guest of Mr. En- "le work in progress in her labora-j ' ' ^ T™* the peene of, through it for more than 100 miles the -more thnn two thousand people. Xotwit-h- Ncw England family. Her father wns j to Lady YVInton. idicott, Secretary of tlic American Legn- tory was a great encouragement to all;activities, adventures and perils, in which land became available for agricultural islanding Mrs. King was raised in this sent to Brownsville, near the mouth of When tlie train cnrae ho inquired,tion, and of Consul F. Herman Gade, ri.0se who had tbe privilege of work- she actively participated. Her husb.in.l. purposes. Already approximately 10,000 i border region nnd has made it her life- the I'io Grande, as a Presbyterian mis-!"1"'"' tnc horse. brother of the president of the American-, ing with her. She is woman with Captain Richard King, bought land in the acres bave been converted into a fnrm.;long home, she adopted certain i-estricJ-'|sioi'.!in- in the early days. It was there1 "What horse?" he wns asked. Scandinavian Society, memory While this is a pretty good sized farm.jtions governing the establishment of th1:e a remarkable and a highly,; early Texas days when Jt was worth al- !that she met the brave and dashing Cap- "Why, Lndy Winton." Tho following six fellows of tho Foon- developed critical sense. She usually it h nn ajmost infinitesimal part of the new town which from the very King,, who hud come to the plac.e When he learned that Lndy Winton an'ilatiou have been appointed for the ana-' „ |m 8t Dothin and he JIrs .pends much time working in the labora- ° K> bought widely andil.200,000 acres. Several steam plough outout- - placed it: on a higher plane than most,'afl cort)mandcr of n steamship duriiiK the - Adair's friend and hml gone with her tleiuic year ']01l!-l-l:-l-'or Denmark—C-V,' tpry, nnd is generally regarded by all frequently. He had enormous herds of'fits are at work year in and' year out municipalities of- the ranch regions of j jf^j,,^ wnr_ ' in the carriage he wns vastly disappointed.'M. Pcdersen, student of technology, nnd; U those familiar with her methods of work- cattle at a time when an owner could I turning over the virgin soil and addilini g the country. While not a. sentimentalist. Corpus Christ! was formerly the near- • 'IVilhelm Slom.-inn, student of librarj-mcth-'": graze his cattle all over the State, provided ito tne cultivated acreage, ing as an experimenter of unusual ex- in the matter of prohibiting tbe sale ofjc3t place to the rnr!ch headquarters, and In Fashionland. iodn; for Xorwny—Arnt Jacohscn, student)»'! actness and precision." he did not come into contact with other] Mrs. King is erecting a country intoxicating liquors, she believed it wouldj 1 King usually spent a part of the! Velvet waistcoats complete 'of bridge construction, and Bllon Glc-;- Misa Gieditsch speaks warmly not only brands. [ mansion, which will be the "finest ranch be to the best .interests of tl,e new com- ar there. She has never heeu a great L 'dllsch, investigator in physical chemistry;; • • Thieves and smugglers infested the land,'house in the world, upon a beautiful site munity to forbid the saloon 'from ever I J^,,^ , of Madame Curie's scientific achieve- in tllc Kam o£ gcttins fnt awil The new hats arc trimmed with rich rlb-i ments, but of her personal qualities. She and there were many times when not only i three miles west of here. The'new resi- benig esrablisned withiii its.^coufines. from th(, KJDS ran(;h, and now that she neer, and Einnr Corvin, investigator in",'J thc property but also the lives of those on dence will cost $300,000. While she is bans in tall loops, like wings. refers to her as n strangely silent woman, Inaugurating this plan .10 the .beginning,-; hag Rrown old she is less disposed than experimental psychology. Furthci do-'.-i5 the King ranch were in danger. In the deeply interested in this improvement, A charming toilet is of pale mauve < silent even with her children, but intense its accomplishment has been easy.. She!ev(,r to !cavc hcr home, which she shares veiled with lace, and tho lac« veiled with' tniis of their work will be published in?;° early sillies the noted brigand Cortina wns j there are other things around her which required in her transfer of the- land for tho in her devotion to them. She had unusual ividl K]cbergs, her daughter's family, nlnon. Tho obi sajh Is of mauve ribbon i November ixnuc of the review, devastating the country with a band of receive most of. -lier attention. It bus town site purposes that in every deed for opportunities for observation, as she not 1 Mr, R. J. Klcberg.'her son-in-law, now- and the hat of black velvet. I they have begun their studies in A'aicrl- only spent the most of her time in the bout five hundred men, and he announced been Mrs.. 'King's lifelong maxim to the sale of any part of it there, be con- having the practical.charge o£ the ranch cn tained a. provision that no saloon'or'-place In Paris low suede shoes, laced to tnej laboratory .with the distinguished that he intended to invade the King ranch I "do -what her hands Ontl to do." She affairs. jlcgr with broad colored ribbons, arc worn Ma:.iy friends of the American-Seandi- and drive off the cattle. Mrs, King was:is not a member o'i*any women's clubs for the sale of intoxicants shall-ever be A story is told of.^nnother woma:n, the ion the'sheerest of ail lc stockings In any'navtan movement in the Xcrth have, fell chemist, but she was frequently a guest never frightened at the perils with which 'a her home. and the suffragist movement' does not •-located upon the property. The same owner of a larg' ranch in Terns, Mrs. color but b'lack. Of course, they must har-;thc need of a large, free wotkiug boily of she was surrounded, and she helped her interest her. ...For years she has JaborcH,, - -...--.-.-. wa—s required .o-f- —the pur,._.- A. Adair, whose million acres were in the monlze with the costume, (members to co-operate with the I-'ounda--- > "I left Paris about a year ago and 1361 8 Ian(3 husband and the M-Micans on the place to uplift the.condition of :!>he poor Mexfi.'iS" ' "°£ from hcr for farming Tulle'and velvet neckbands will bo popu-'tion. The need of greater resources 1s;- accepted a position on the teaching staff •Panhandle. She was accustomed to visit- to get ready to .protect themselves. It cnn element of South Texas. Severn; rs. King at intervals, and once when lar for autumn ov.-lns to the large use of appivont when one realizes that in Nor-- - - of the University of Christiania," said ; was so well known that they would do hundred Mexicans are constantly CII1: King is the leading spirit in re-'Mr. Klcberg was in that part of the State>urpllclice n«clm;cl< bodices. The low necks on wny v':one, -."here two arplicnnta for fcl-{' >Iiss Gieditsch, in speaking of her work this effectively that the brigand decided ployed upon her rancii and farm. A 0 Iowsl if !! wcrc 'jfBej-ifigious- and edncational work of this lookin„.g fo. r some fine horses she told.^^\^irijt 1^^mr^o^v^tVery becoming to ' ' chosen, seventy-eight ;had;'>: lincc leaving Madame Curie. "The work not to make the' attack, Mrs. King are provided with comfortable; homerand[region. She has erected and donated for that she was going down to the King' . to be rejected- SUNDAY, .THE SAN ANTONIO LIGHT •JULY 6, 1918.

American delegate mentioned in re- gard to states in his own country. Orie.must always have an elite and IS CIVILIZATION PROGRESSING? masses. The masses without the elite MODES OF THE MOMENT OLD-WORLD CASTLE SET UPON By Hciirl Joly, Member of .the French Academy; would first stagnate and then go back. This Is why every power which under the pretext of equality' Is fool- One may say that the civilization bound to go on developing and we PLAINS OF SOUTHWEST TEXAS ishly jealous of an elite counteracts?1 cf a society (3 measured by Its civiliz- cannot help discovering strong ihe interests, of civilization and of all, humanity. An elite M-ho would re-j ing influence, or, the ether way, that linking together of causes and ef- main isolated'-simply to be permitted; Mrs. Henrietta M. King, the Wealthiest Woman in its civilizing Influence tends to show fects. to live Its own life as the American Texas, Is Building a $300,000 Ranch House on the state of its own civilization. The Which Is the cause which is to de- miss wanted to would soon fall a vic- only thtag that might be said againl! terming our future and Imprint its tim to its own egotism and disdain, the Famous Kintf Ranch, Modeling Its Archi- this double proposition Is that it IB stamp upon it? Even on the very it i\ould cecse to be an elite but ' tectureUpon the Styles of Three European Nations too apparent, too self-evident. eve of events It is very seldom that simply a, minority, for those two but Overlooking Nothing in the Way of Modem There fs in the- world no lack of any man Is able to prophesy cor- words do not mean quite the same societies which are behind or which. rectly. tuing. It would disappear as dis- American Conveniences. worse still, have stagnated, gone • "We must not do as certain statisti- appeared the Ronieii patricians be- backward or decayed, strangers to cians do who take hold of some dis- fore the Christians and Barbarians^ civilization. How then does the part couraging social , phenomenon, and, But did those patricians really still: By this fall, Southwest Texas will and the presence of the dreaded can- of tho world which Hatters Itself making this their starting point, ,i-e>iibLn,m.'onstitute« a«n" elit*m.ve mi»"^d did they still [ have & ranch house that will be non mado him withdraw in disorder. wltli being civilized behave toward prophesy evUs which must inevitably represent civilization? without an etjual in the world. The Married Chaplain's Daughter, these? In three different manners. Th people wilt tell when from- the seats of the Coll- In many places it exploits them, in seum thls a house Is being built by Texas' rich- Captain Kins was a steamboat vision when - i» storpieec of archltec-j captain on the Mississippi, and when others, still quite numerous, it col- the time ;en we shall all ^ t e one hundred thousand est woman, Mrs. Henrietta M. King, onizes them, while those which it ure> nes he came to Texas he ran his own be insane, or the time when there Roman citizens, already decimated and it will be located on the famous boat on the Rio Grande. U was then civilizes are unfortunately in the mi* shall be no more children born, fol- tiy divorce and voluntary sterility, nority. To exploit—the word Is really King ranch, three miles from Kings- that he met Mrs. King, the daughter lowed naturally by the time when l€t Christians lie, torn to pieces by. viHo. More than $300,000 will be of a Presbyterian minister, who was sufficiently clear in Itself—means humanity, shall cease to exisi. Thus wild beasts, where was civilization! spent in the consiruction. chaplain of Fort Brown. Her maiden simply to look "for a new source of an English scientist has recently giv- then? Whore was the elite? And The styles of architecture that will name was Henrietta Chamberlain. wealth among' the people to whom en his country three hundred years, where would the masses soon be? appear in the home are Spanish, Edmond Chamberlain ot this city la you sell and from whom you buy on not one year less nor one year more, The elite must. In time, become the Venetian and Henry VIII. From a descended also from the chaplain of profitable terms. To colonize also before all Englishmen are to be masses and the masses must always distance the building1 appears to be an Fort Brown, incans to try to increase your wealth mad. Happily, however, human so- e have a rejuvenated elite. old world castle transplanted to the After they were married the young and extend your influence, but at cieties, are not li^ strata of coal plains of Texas. Hut it Isn't exactly the same {ime to endeavor little by which "do not increase and of which! -. Salvation lies In the families, the couple went to make their home in cities, the churches and the nations. u castle.1 It has too much of the the wilderness in 1852. Captain King little to make the natives take part it is possible to calculate when they rambling grandeur of the 1 talian bought a larffe tract of grazing land in the economic and even the social shall be exhausted. We have many When facts show that we have real- ized the truth of this we may say villa for that. Nor is It altogether an from the state. He stocked it with life of the colonists who are" sent times before seen reforms and resur- Italian lla, either, for has a cattle from the surrounding ranches. out to live) among them, but it is rections, so there IE nothing to pre- that our civilization is progressing. touch ot* old Spain In it to1 make it In spite of the unsettled conditions clear that for a long time.it will be vent us from hoping .the best from native to the land first settled by the of the times. Captain King slowly be- the colonists who get nearly all the the future. WHAT'STHE ANSWER? old Spanish padres. gan to add to the area of the ranch. profits from the colonized goil. To Civilization IE, first of all, selection. Modeled as it Is after the styles of Year by year the acreage of his land civilize means to prompt a coun- 11 do not mean that It should reserve three nations, the new King ranch was Increased, until the whole ranch try, whether you colonize It or not at „ benefits for a fe Xrittle Rock, Ark,—A momentous house w; on question has ben asked by the de- surpass the castles of Sn f.'ueces and Cameron counties the same tune, to strive toward the trary, it should wish them to be- England, the villas of Italy and the consisted of 1,250,000 acres. highest conception of life, social; re- partment of education. It is a sor1t palaces of Spain. For It will be,pre- come the property of all and en- hiffh-bro- w "how old • is Ann All of the land was stocked with ligious and family life, which the deavor to make all accept them. But| eminently a home, and a home with Texas -cattle. They were the old- older nations possessed in their bet- uion that nua thom aU gue&s all the modern conveniences. fashioned long-iiorned atock, the ter days. before offering them to tho masses, f * Superintendent Cook threaten: It Is not that people may stand in last herd cf which long ago drifted it should have them tested and con- to submit it to the Supreme Court Now, where does France stand? U poltdaled by ari elite, ThI elite awe ot Its magnificence that nearly up the trail. Tn those days there were has been said that she has not always 3 for final adjudication, as the legis- half a million dollars Is being ex- no thoroughbred cattle in the coun- wouid . fiii'd itself faced by a solid lature does not happen to be in ses- understood to -exploit the countries opposition, the open enemies, and pended way out on Santa Gertrudis try, and conditions were so bad that she has taken possession of. But this sion. [Branch. Mrs. JClng has planned a they could not have rustled for their besides these, the people who are It is a question of grammatical 5 is perhaps a praise as much as it is already disgusted with and ttred of place to live In. Hot water pipe. ;, grub and fought for their lives as a criticism. Our country is not as construction, and Involves the line electric lights, an elevator anQ .all the native stock did. With his vast . . nu^. vji«.. ~ —&.-, "and all the air a other modern Improvements are in- herds of Ions-horns, Captain King gr$sniiiK as some others, and It Is lukewarm to strike "a blow or mKe more merciful to the conquered I solemn stillness holds." cluded in the plans for the new was the largest cattle owner in Texas, countries. It is also said tbat France dwelling. Each detail was planned Short-horns Displace Long-horns. cannot colonize, and this is undoubt- iljl dent in the state is expected to get [for ease and quiet. The interior After the death of her husband, , *•_._ 1"toJ d««o for vdithias unitelite: , which«inv;u ' tn ut iiii - busy on it. The question is what is decoration was done by Tiffany with Mrs. Kins made Robert J. Kleberg-, cdly true in as far that, our fam-l m)ned to serve civilization bv defend- the- subject of the sentence? Some this end in view, rather-than empty lier son-in-law, the manager of the ilies not being very prolific, wo «"ijing. its faith, doctrines sml'cusloms, persons say it is "air," and others gorgcousness. ranch. He has- remained in that ppsi- not send out the true colonists |s ,o increase and add to thc nuTOl,er But in those places where we ha\el ^^ ^pat^e . say it is "stillness." Was a Landmark. tion ever since. When he started his ot who wlth lt It has been submitted to 76 col- The building;wtiL replace the old duties, the long-horned cattle that enough colonists, as in Algiers and. M the E |c congress In ton. Tunis,. France performnerforms a etvilialnetviljamg ,,„., ,„„ .^ „- A«,X^i ^« ,Toi™-,t. lege professors and students oC the: King ranch house that was burned!were being rntced were not paying a, don we Unnheard an American n delegate Bast, of whom 39 say It is "still-' .more than a year ago. The old house j profit. Mr, Kleberg sold off the old work which it may proudly show to complain thnt In more than one state its friends and enemies, though it ness," 26 say it Is "air" and 11 are in .was Itseif of great interest and a Block and began to improve the of the Union, and particularly in doubt. $( Uandinark known from one end of grade.' Today the finest herd of has its weak points. It cannot be Rhode Island, the new Malthusian Itho country to the other. Wuill like phort-horns in tho world.is kept at denied by anyone that France has propaganda was "ft danger to the fort .and with cannon protecting! the ranch. done and is still doinff more civil- predominance of Anglo-Saxon ideas TAR BABY NO MYTH 'the approach, it represented an age j Still another change is under way. izing 9work than any other country. and institutions." The number of 'in Texas history that has passed, i For years cattle have been raised oii Whv Nn one ou^ht to be surprised 1\ ll> . IMJ UllC Ullo',1. LW "~ •,!,„,,« SlatL-staleOs IIIn! kVIlU:lchl II1C1thereC tilaree AUU»moret New York.- Mrs. Ray Heller of ,but which Is still remembered by! the ranch, but they were sold thin" when I say it clearly and without. Projestantg than catholics was do- ^flny of the old-tlmors. fnnd off the ran^c. The buyer took hesitation, because Prance has bee| ^a, because 'at the No. 1653 Prospect place, Brooklyn, crcaslngi he took her two-year-old child Harriet r It was bark in the fifties that Cap- j them to Oklahoma and oiher states the first to send out ami is still'at b,nh rate amoni, the Cath- .tain Richard King built the fortress i to the north, fattened them, and eending out, at great sacrifice^ men Mcs , qno|e lhesc rcmarks wUnout with her yesterday when she went to which stood for \ oars lU'fying- In-1 made "the bis? money." The Texas who do their work In the most dis- making .my comments.. In the same the grocery at ^o. 417 Ralph ave- dirvns, cattle thieves and bntuls oftrcuser \v,is paid for bones and hide interested manner and whose whole \vay 1 quote a remark by a Miss nue. Harriet was left outside. In .Mexican outlaws alike. Heeause life jaml sinew, while the fattener got heart and soul is in their work. R : "The right of living one's neat white cloths, her pink and white IWRS FO uncertain in those times, he i money for Ihe beefsteaks and roasts, We must not forget that civiliza- life is Incompatible with the burden face smiling. mounted the cannon In front of the j But now, with the aid of the silo the tion Is complex; it implicates ma- of a large family," to which remark i When "Mrs. Heller came out she house, more for tho moral effect than cattle are to be fattened on the terial and temporal as well as spirit- Dr. Plortz. president of. the Inter- -found a black baby instead of her lor UER. Btit they scrvorl their turn, j ranch. ual arid moral benefits. But the national Society of the Hygienics of own child, and she screamed. A Time and .again during the first i About ten years ago. the "most first—no more in our colonies than the Race, added this: ."It is .to be crowd collected. David Margolls, ears on the ranch, nnd clurins the] pressing need at the ranch was a - at home and perhaps even less—do feared that the white race be i roofer, "solved the puzzle. civil war. Captain King and his j railroad. The Brownsville road was not necessarily carry with them the greatfy handicapped by "lts low birth ' "I'm tarring the roof over the gro- \mnig wife hnd causer to be thankful i the result, for Mr. Kleberg, as man- others. We do not see signs that the rate in the struggle which must come I eery," said he, "and'I upset a pot of tlisl their home was a fortress andjager of the ranch, did more than administrations which are so indit- with the yellow race." tar. It poured down, and I guess it tli;>t the two cannon ffiinrdctl the j any otbcr person or combination ferenf to everything which does not Let Us drop these too distant per-1 coated the baby." door. Frequently there WHS trouble | of persons to got the. road through concern revenues, custom duties, pro- aUe ambl n c e is cut with a raVlKT with outlaws. One band in particular i his country by giving land and money motion ot officials, improvement ot spectivesand simply look at the pres-| Somebody ^ ^^^ ^ ( r, c; tried to drive the new ranchers from 1 to help in the construction, ent. The complaint made In regard o\it ? i Eiste train. The central figure il- means of communications, are do- Harriet home, sayin" g she needed lustrates a useful walking gown In their homo. j The present. King: ranch is about a- \r>g very much to teach, our colonial to Rhode Island does not stand Tbis"bf\«d was headed by a chief | million acres. This includes Santa alone, for similar complaints are scrubbing, not medical attendance. ,nk voile de blue serge with a slightly-draped subjects respect of women, ove of n single' pearls. The fiklrt; the small rolled collar and nained Cortinas. Several times Cor- Gertmdls ranch, on which the new work and abstinence from intoxicat- periodically irtade in Holland, Bel- 1 nas proclaimed that he Intended to dwelling Is to be located. It Is forty glum ami Switzerland. If the Can- The record for tongevltr of ships rorsago ned •ich nbrold- the ntwinefl bands of trimming are. kill or drive out of the country the miles from Corpus Christi and three ing liquor. On the other side _the until a. fiw years ago he'11 hl' the Tt__ =ry finished off with a }< missionaries .cannot boast .^{..adding ton of Geneva seeg "its character pt ve=B«t Anita- Built In Genoa In 15*8, she owners of the ranch, and several miles from Kingsville. When the' to. the material-Hvealth of- tne yel- being- the Protestant Rome .disap- made her !a*t voyage Jin 1002 frotn Tenc liar Is ot embroidered linen. A simple morning frock Is shown on the right-hand aide, of; the picture, times with hit: lawless men he mode dwelling Is completed this fall, it. low and black races by their Bible pearing from day to day It is simply w&» thus more tbwi which is carried out in leaf-green cachemire. The long sleeves are cut large armholcs and a soft lawn fichu tht> attempt. But each tlmo the cour- will be one of the show places- ot~ lectures. Nevertheless, they, do the same phenomenon which the 3EO years old, and frills finish the neck and sleeves. .The deep waist, band is a new feature. nge of the dwellers within the fort'Texas. teach them to curb their desires and passions, inspire them with love of family and bv their oivn devotion sh?w\hem an example of charity, for they lake care of their orphans, nurse their sick and place at their THE IDEA F?E THIS N5VEL * PRACTICAL PESIGfl WAS SRW3N4TED BY "WINIFREP W9RTH" disposal all that they have learned themsel v es for this v ery pur pose, N I _ they show them how to cultivate «tnbro!dery is flower I Ike and fragile l« because In the land of its crea- their soil and improve the construc- I tion about (he only bfflutlftil objects to delight the eyea of the women tion of their houses, all without any tr» flowers which grow tn lovely profusion. These the »'omen Imitate in hidden thought of exploiting them in! embroidery, often working by'a single light or by tne Bide of a humble open their own interest. Far from Im- crate fire. peding the work of the-admlnlstrat- ors, 'of the honest merchant or of If you wish to make a good Imitation of their kr ely work, I would -the officers and engineers, H fs quite suggest that you transfer this pattern to a very aheer white material. Work evident that they pave the way. the leaves, and bowknqta In solfd embroidery, using a single, thread. Make Thus If colonization does not al- the long items first, tben the leaves. Tn making the loaves run the thread ways civilize, civilization thus propa- from tbe. base to the Up, then begin whipping leaf over and over gated occupies the front rank among slanting tn« studies slightly. our" means of colonizing. AVnoever The fioral portions-are made In eyelet * Use one hundred thread and n docs hot civilize colonizes badly, just very fine needle to outline every petal and center A aewlns stitch IB as whoever does not colonize !s never used. y«( fine enough to hold tbe edge* firm With a pair ot embroidery sure of being able to exploit Ions or scissors silt tbe middle of each petal, turn the eltt edges under and back unopposed. To sum up, every nation with tha needle. Whip the edges over and over (he line made with the that does not observe the hierarchy sewing Ihread. Stitches should be of one ilte. clotely placed and deep of the three ways of action and in- enough to hold the edge Sincerely yours. fluence, or still more every nation who attacks it introduces within it- eelf a germ of "decadence which in time will breed others. The time has passed when we be- TO TRANSFEB THIS DESIGN. lieved that we sained anything by Put tome soap in 4 pint ol hot water, stir and remove eoap Saturat* Impoverishing the people who were Design with mixture, ihen remove excess moisture by partially drying De- our rivals. Whoever impoverished sign. Place material on a hard, flat surface and lay the Design face down, his subjects, his vassals, his colon- upon the material Cover with two folds ot newspaper, and with a table- ists or even his neighbors, impov- spoon rub,«fre&slng bard, until the Design Is entirely transferred. erishes himself at the same time. PATENT rENDIKH. What is true of economic changes World Color Printlcf Co, St. La'jit, M» which benefit both sides is equally true of what is properly called civi- lization. Exploitation which de- bases the one party corrupts ihe o(h er and both suffer. The great an- cient empires found this out, as did also Spain and Portugal later. Today we understand, of course, to promote the exchange of products. We love nothing better than to see the negroes gather plenty of rubber and make money to buy our cotton goods, or our machinery. "We ask nothing belter than to see the banks of the Tigris and Euphrates pro- duce enough to enable the inhabi- tants to order great quantities of our rails and locomotives, but will these people ever find means enough to build a capital like Babylon, which was as large as Paris. Versailles, St. Denis and St. Germain together? And if they were able to bufld It would tliey.be able to keep it from uegenera I ing any more than their ancestors were? The task which our colonists should set themselves is not only to rebuild the material ruins, no mat- ter how beautiful or Imposing they V may have been—they must first of ^ all build up the institution, the fam- ily, and through the family, what the family alone is able to give, the conciliation between the spirit of liberty and individual property and tho feeling of duty toward society tho love of material work and the love of the eternal Ideal. But how are we to inspire tn others what we have destroyed among ourselves? if civilization of today shows more signs of degeneration ^nd decadence than promises of progress, is is then possible to abolish tho first and at; Ihe same time realize the others? Here we must remember that losses increase and accumulate as do gains, but in regard to the losses, as well ns to the gains, there are intervals and breathing spells, which everyone cannot help seeing. The historic determinism is no chimera. It Is al- ways possible to find It again, for no matter what germ we develop it is -THE NEWS MAGAZINE SUPPLEMENT. Murdo Mackenzie and His South American Cattle !$• Hindu Bull Worth Many Thousands:::Features of Business

BY FRANK G. CARPENTER. cattle here as they can in the Argen- entirely on where the land is located miums to co-operative dairies. That Sao Paulo. tine?" I asked. and its accessibility to the market. In Stale has now more than a hundred URING my stay in Sao Paulo "I believe they can niake more," said the well-settled States of Sao Paulo, butter and cheese factories, which pro- I met Murdo Mackenzie, the Mr. Mackenzie. "In Argentina the Santa Catharina, Rio Grande do Su! and duce almost'$J,ooo,ooo worth of dairy manager of tlie Brazil Cat- prices have so risen that the best graz- Parana the prices range from $2 to $50 products per annum. They also export tle, Land and Packing Com- ing country brings as much as $150 an per acre. In Matto Grosso, Goyaz and milk and cream to Rio de Janciio. The D pany, who had just come in acre. Of such land it takes three acres Minas Gcracs equally good land can latter are delivered to the people from from his great ranch in Southern Brazil. to keep an animal for a year, and that be gotten from 30 cents to $1 per acre. house to house, and they are alao sold Mr. Mackenzie is well known to the means an investment of $450 for the All depends on the locality and the in dairies, where one may sit as in a cattlemen of the United States. Born land alone. The expenses of caring for means of getting the cattle to the con- cafe and drink his hot or cold milk at in Scotland, he came to Texas as a the stock there are greater than here, sumers. about 3 cents a glass.—(Copyright, 1915, young man and grew up with our cat- and, therefore, the cattle sold are higher The Government is doing all it can by Frank G. Carpenter.) tle interests. He has had to do with priced. They get on an average about to better the cattle and to improve the every branch of the business, and that $65 in gold for a steer, and out of that native breeds. Premiums are given for on a large scale. He has seen the evo- must come the interest on their invest- the importation of all kinds of stock, lution of American beef from the Texas ment and their running expenses. Land and these vary in amount according to enough to raise a steer at the present grass-fed fleer to the fine corn-fed the locality from where the stock WHEN valuation of Brazil* can be bought for Shorthorn of today. He was at one comes and its character. Full-blooded from $15 to $30 at the outside, and the time the owner of » rasch in the United bulls of high grade, brought from steer can be sold for $45. So you s.ee States which had 70,000 fine Herefords Europe, get prizes as high as $150; from A GIRL the difference in the investment. upon it, and he is now introducing the United States, $100, and from the "Besides, there is a local demand for Rio de la Plata Basin, from $80 to f 120. Herefords and Shorthorns into this meat in Brazil. This country has more country, forming the beginning of a Stallions receive higher premiums, while SAYS "NO" than 21,000,000 people, and it has, all hogs bring from $25 to $50 per animal, cattle industry which, in its fine stock, told, only 22,000,000 cattle. It buys may some day compete with that of the depending upon the source or origin. meat from the Argentine and Uruguay, In IQIO the lumber of cattle imported OW, there !s a right and a wrong Argentine. ' way of saying "no" to a man. Mr. Mackenzie's operations in this N There must be no half-hearted- part of the world are upon a large ness about the refusal, for that is al- «cale. He is connected with the Far- most tantamount to giving a degree of quhar lyndicate, which own millions of encouragement. acres of land, which is building thou- Having made up her mind that, thong!: sands of miles of railway and which, I he is a nice companion, he could never might almost say, is opening up a con- be her husband, a girl must he most de- tinent and an empire. Here in Brazil cided; she must not use a term sug- the cattle company of which Mr. Mac- gesting or giving the slightest hint thai kenzie is head owns nine or ten million his proposal might be favorably con- acres of pastures and it has over four sidered later on. million acres in one block. The latter In defense of this method of refusal, tract is just across the border from it might be said that some girls don't Bolivia and north of Paraguay. It is in like to be harsh; they try to pat a man the great State of Matto Grosso, which' off: they don't want to apr^car unkind, is more than twice the size of Texas, especially if he is a soldier who is "go- and which, Mr. Mackenzie tells me, ing out to fight; yet in reality they are promises to become one of the greatest very unkind indeed; it is far better to meat baskets on earth. settle the matter for good and all. Open Pastures. The Highest Possible Compliment The Bra?!' Railway Company is now It goes without saying that it is dif- extending its lines, which already cover ficult for a girl to behave in just the a large part of Southern Sao Paulo, Pa- right -way when refusing a man's offer, rana, Santa Catharina and Rio Grande for he is paying her the very highest do Snl, the white man's country of compliment possible; but when a girl in Southern Brazil, into Matto Grosso. her heart knows that she can not give It has projected a line which will run him her love, she must be candid, even from Sao Paulo and the Bay of San although it causes pain. Francisco, clear across Matto Grosso to On the other hand, no girl should re- within forty miles of this great ranch fuse an offer in a disgusted or semi- of four million acres. This will open insulted style. Yet girjs do this at up an enormous area of pastures and times, and no doubt regret it afterward, will carry the cattle direct to the sea. even if the man never mat's a second VVlien the road is completed these attempt to capture their hands and lands will be within 600 miles of Sao hearts. Paulo and the cattle can be shipped by Always let a girl beware of one rail to meat-packing houses which will thing, namely, saying "no" when she soon be erected here. Mr. Mackenzie really means "yes." This is one of the tells me that he has driven cattle much most criminal things possible, and farther than this in the United States doubtless many old maids today have and that it would be an easy matter to* this to thank for their condition of sin- drive the stock across country to the gle blessedness. market. From Sao Paulo to Santos To say "no." however, in a graceful the beef will be shipped to the United and at the same time final manner is States. not easy, and, perhap's, when a man Raise for Dried Beef. and it pays high prices for its local sup- proposes, a girl can not do better than I asked Mr. Mackenzie as to the char- plies. There are a number of large cities MURDO Mdck put him off for the moment by saying acter of the lands in Matto Grosso and and towns that furnish a steady de- Or Melyin. she will think the matter over and write as to whether they were yet doing any- mand, and it will be a long time before telling him her decision. Naturally, she thing upon the big ranch. He replied: we can furnish all that is required; in- will be better able to tell him distinctly in a letter than ever she could by won "We have now 150,000 head of cattle deed, I should like to see from fifty to and they can be bought all the way feeding upon our pastures on the Bra- a hundred good cattlemen come down of mouth. from 15 cents an acre upward. They An Exceedingly Delicate Position. zilian highlands. We are raising them here from the States. There is plenty are sure to increase in value. On the Some may think that by 9o acting for dried beef, but we will eventually of land which .they can buy at such a other hand, this is a country where the she shows cowardice, but that is en- ship them across country to the mar- price that they can afford to do busi- people have their own language, and tirely a matter of opinion, and even i: kets. The land there is excellent. The ness upon it. We have bought some, the American would likely feel lone- she does, small blame to her, for the country is well watered. The Paraguay but there is plenty more quite as good. some, and his family might not appre- position is exceedingly delicate. River runs through it and a part of it is The lands are sure to rise in value, and ciate the advantages. I do not want to Moreover, in the privacy of her own inundated during much of the year. it seems to me that it is a live business give advice of that kind." was about 75,ooo, and their value was they run so largely to lean meat that passage as freight animals. Much of room she is able to compose a sensible The water is not deep and the grass proposition, with excellent prospects of almost a million dollars. Great Hog Country. they are not good as a cross for ex- the way is through the woods, where letter, and in it can tell him most plainly rises above the surface, so that the a big profit. That is what we are bank- A great deal of this stock came from In speaking further concerning the porting. The Brazilians like lean meat, the cry of a panther may stampede the that she never can become his wife, stock feed and grow fat upon it." ing on, and we expect to succeed." Argentina and Uruguay, but about one- meat possibilities of Brazil, Mr.- Mac- and for this reason the zebus have be- whole drove. Sometimes it is through therefore he need not try again. "What kind of cattle have you there?" Plenty of Disadvantages. fifth, or $200,000 worth, came from East kenzie said: come quite popular in many parts of the swamps, which become quagmires The man reads this when thoroughly "The most of our stock is still of the "But what are the disadvantages?" I "I believe that this part of the world the country. in the rainy season, so that the animals India. Some of the Indian bulls bring very high prices. . On the fazenda cool; the ardor, the passion, which a native breeds, but we are bringing in asked. has a great future as a hog country. Mr. Mackenzie showed me some pho- wade breast-deep through the mud. The personal interview is almost bound to Cassu, the zebu bull Lontra sold for fine blooded breeding animals from the "We have plenty," replied Mr. Mac- This seems to be the natural home of tographs of the cowboys of the big average number in a drove of cattle is produce are absent; he can grasp ex- $14,000, and he was a 3-year-old at the United States and ars improving it. We kenzie, "but they arc not insurmount- the pig. We have many that breed and ranch not far from Sao Paulo. The from 1,000 to 2,000, and the owners actly what she means, and if he be wise time. On the fazenda Cascata is the expect to cross the native cattle with able. We have ticks of various kinds run wild in the woods. They live on most of them were barefooted Bra- sometimes lose a 'whole drove on its he will not ask her again. bull Cacique. That bull cost over $2,000 the Herefords, as we think that makes and the Texas fever. The fever is not grass all the year round, and when they zilians, and their bronchos were mules. way to the market. When the animals Let no girl when a man proposes and was the winner of the gold medal the best animal for this country. As it exactly the same as in the States, but are taken up it takes less grain to fat- The methods of taking care of the cat- arrive they are often living skeletons, treat the matter in a flippant way; she at the cattle show of Uberaba. is, our cattle are better than the old it is quite as bad. It can easily be con- ten them than is required for our hogs tle on that ranch are the same as ours. and have-to be fattened before they can must not behave as if the whole affair Texas stock and fully equal to the trolled, however, by dipping, and the at home. The animals breed well. The It is different in the more remote parts be sold. \ Dairying Question. T were a huge joke. If she does, she cer- grass-fed animals of some parts of the man who takes care of his stock need average sow will produce one-third of the country, There the cowboys n some parts of Brazil there are cat- The East Indian cattle are valuable tainly K-ill not o!iske the man off; rather United States. Take the cattle which not fear it. In other respects the prop- more than her North American sister. limit themselves to visiting the ranches He fairs, to which animals from all parts because the cross between them and will she add to his eagerness, though are now being shipped from North Da- osition is a better one than that of the She will give five litters of*pig5 every only now and then. They watch the of the country are driven. There are the native stock makes the lean animal sometimes it may have the effect of kota to Chicago and if they can dress United States. The cattle here feed out two years. Our average is less than cattle carefully at breeding time, and two of these in the State of Minas so much prized for the jerked beef driving him away. up to 58 per cent of their live weight, of doors all the year round, and they six pigs to the litter. Here the average the calves are immediately separated Geraes, ajid others in other provinces. market. Brazil is said to use about So There is another thing a girl should M'ter having- been brought from that have good grass from one year's end to is eight or nine. This means that one from ths cows. The calves are shut up Buyers go from Rio Janeiro to these per cent of all the meat of this kind not do when her answer takes the form distance, it is considered fairly good. the other. The climate is mild, and you sow will have forty pigs in two years, in corrals and the cows brought in to fairs to buy animals for the municipal made, and there arc many large fac- of a negative, she must not try to gloss The other day I brought in a steer from do not have to feed to keep out the and not only that, but the first litter feed them morning and evening. In the slaughter houses. They have to keep tories devoted to the industry. Rio her refusal over by making any silly our ranch and had him killed and cold." will he producing pigs before the end far north the cattle are lassooed. In a large number of animals on hand for Grande do Sul has thirty-one, and there promises, such as that she will always weighed. He dressed up to 26K per "How long does it takes to mature a of that time; indeed, the breeding Rio Grande the cowboys use the bolo. the reason that coid storage is lacking. are large numbers in Matto Grosso. In remember his great kindness; that she cent of his live weight, and that is bet- steer for the market?" I asked. proposition is something like that of In some places the animals are branded. In Rio about 400 animals are killed making this meat the animals arc las- will endeavor to remain a great friend ter t'.ian some cf the Texas cattle have 'Just about as long as in the States; the Australian rabbit. We are trying In others they are marked by cutting daily to supply the demand. The ani- soed, drawn to a post and killed by of his, and so on. done in the ]iast." Here Mr. Mackenzie but we do it on the native grasses. We to improve the pigs of Brazil. We are their ears in such a way that they can mals bring different prices, according driving a knife into the back of the Girl? too often act in this manner, showed IMC a photograph of the steer. are planting other grasses and expect introducing new stock. We want a be known. Each fazenda has its owr. to the season and the locality. In some head. They are then skinned and cleaned. and it is cruel; the whole affair should "Tell me what you are doing on your to improve the feed. As to alfalfa, it stock that will keep growing from its cut or mark. The cowboys of the gre, \ parts of Matto Grosso a 2-year-old steer The bones and fat arc taken out and be ended with the refusal. ranch south of Sao Paulo. 1 mean the has not succeeded well in the places birth until it weighs 200 or 300 pounds." plains of Goyaz and other central States is worth from $5 to $10, while a saddle the meat is cut into thin layers. Tt is one that President Roosevelt visited." where it ha.i been planted. I am told Zebu Bull. are dressed in leather from head to ox will bring from $15 to $25. In the then put into a strong brine and fur- A small girl entered a dairy in the '"•That ranch is much smaller than the it does better in other localities. I do During our conversation Mr. Macken- foot. In some places they are paid by State of Goyar a 5-year-old steer or ox ther salted and hung over wooden rails East End of London siid^aid: " 'Arf a one in Matto Grosso. The number of not know. There is no limit to the pos- zie showed me & number of photo- being given a share of the production. is valued at $10 to $30, and in the little to dry in the sun. It becomes as hard pound of butter, please, au' a penn'orth cattle upon it is only about 6,000. We sibilities of corn. There are millions of graphs of cattle taken upon his ranches Ctttle Driven Overland. State of Piauhy an ox may sell for $8 as stone, when it is sewn up into pack- of cheese, an' miivver'll send a shillin' urc using them for breeding purposes acres here that will grow as good corn in Parana, Sao Paulo and Matto Grosso, The completion of the railroad to the to $10. ages of about 600 pounds each and in when father comes 'ome." to supply stock for other ranches. We as Illinois, and we will eventually fat- The native stock of Matto Grosso con- highlands of Matto Grosso will make a During the last two years cattle have shipped to the markets. The fat is "Very well," replied the shopkeeper, have there hundreds of Herefords which ten our pigs upon corn; indeed, we can sists of fine big long-horned animals— great difference in the handling of the greatly risen in value, and they arc foiled down and refine;!. The tongues who was used to such orders. ive have imported from Texas, and also grow almost anything here that can be far better, I should say, than the native cattle. The stock will be fattened on now advancing at the rate of about $3 are canned, and the bones, horns anil "But," went on the girl, "ycr must a large number of Shorthorr.s. I have grown in the corn belt of the United Texas breed. He showed me also sorrc the ranches and carried on the cars to per head per annum. Not long ago fat (lircd blnod are shipped off to Europe. let me 'avc the change now, cos muvver no doubt that we can raise the standard States, or in any part of our South." of the Herefords they arc now raising the packing houses. Now there arc steers weighing 1,000 pounds brought Within the last few years Brazil has wants a penny fnr the gas meter." of our stock so that it .will be equal to "Would you advise Americans to on the Parana ranch. They Icok as practically no packing houses, and the as much as $40 at the municipal slaugh- been paying a great deal of attention any bred in North America. The na- come to Brazil?" well as any young stock I have seen in cattle are driven overland to the mar- ter houses, and it iii now estimated that to dairying, although there arc States Japwell—What makes tliat hen tive cattle of Brazil are better than the "1 should hesitate to do that," re- the States. Among other pictures was ket The distance ranges from 600 to to stock ft large ranch in the interior in which milk is a luxury and butter, your back yard cackle so loud? native cattle of the Argentine, and in plied Mr. Mackenzie. "I can only say one of a zebu bull. These have been 1,000 miiea, and it requires many weeks with cows would cost something like or.tsidc zt tins, is prac'.ical'y unknown. Wigway—Oh, they've just laid a cor- time we shall have a better breed of the climate is excellent, the soil good imported from India, and they are used to make It. The most of the animals $33 per hetd. The Government keeps dairy bulls on ncr-stonc across the street, and she's stock thsn they ?re now raising. and the country i* tint unlike that which largely here as a cross with the native are wild, and some of them »re loaded I have been asked something a* to some of its experimental farms, and the trying to make the ncighl><>r« thinV. she "Can men make as much money on we have (it home. Lands are cheap. stock. Thcv are vicious, however, and with products and made to pay their pricei of cattle lands. That depends State of Minas Geraes is offering pre- did itl ""TTsTAK ANO lCl"t VUNOMILL & 'e A. MACHINE "Safety First' ViipplY CO. CORPUS ChH.tl. Taa.a. cr,, CHRIS W. T. WATN AN& DAILY HERALD 111 CaafaMT) I rfcMM Til CORPUS CHKISTI. ..,. - - IT:.! mn NUMBER 107. AEROPLANES FPWORTH LEW. T M T 1 . 11 iw a Trt 1 I'luun 1 AliN ARTILLERY HUTU I 1 ' IN till 10 PICK jfTOD" MEXICAN DESERT WORK UN L V LLA FINALLY RUN I T- -

ASSFMBLY SITE TO EARTH AMERICAN TROOPS

PLACtS NOW El.' AU, N- - MATlOfc m WILL RE IN MEXICO run i vi; .RETAINED . t s .S PHESI.

HOT! t STATE AND WAR DEPARTMENTS DENY THAT COMMITTEE MEET MONDAY , CI.MIIM Tl I ERE IS ANY INTENTION OK CALLING OFF THE EXPEDITION UNTIL ITS PURPOSES HAVE BEEN FULLY ACCOMPLISHED .1 ".ft. - on r mff .Me.' KINIiSVILII FOR ., , H.igy and M. r to M.tke tht ' D sm.irt'i li:-l!Si',N- UISTKIfTT MEETP !i :fflT mo villa's outhheak hut ' ' . I.in .IM' i l 'In- - f.pwnrth (,mirif ' Is imiuuham ran tm opinin DAvlSUttt Dtipnr linaitt Content Into Pocilon of Cormpotulenca N M ir.iw't' I al tor the an liniIO Ht Pi. DIE WIT Lands to I I niul Cnpl. IN TO TN Which lidicf lint uitomc Spy Von l the- - I ttVBRAl ''' pur nt rx Mv NUHKO DtLlOATM Of TM( Pnpon Hnil Hnnd In Mcxicnti DUordnrs No New Ify I ' ef 1 '14 llitTHICT YnnlcirclfiV ...In .ii!i. ordintf ' rtOtMATlON ctllwd I'rtiui Clmi Pnrcliimt .. Sts-ao- n . I), ol Roe " 1I1 nt ot the I it.' !'"' rxan GUESTS AT KING RANCH1 chair- - pysnttil ii' and ihf Htair liiiMiitr nail f War llkr . lht uHlfUl rptr n aiing Commit rttrii Ajwrtii troop nUgH lw lMryi from viin .Imi I h rownnlltwit nf (Hp iirritiiinrtiU m l!i ii hunt. Old. . i!. fun. il i.i . iimmi itt iTim-liin- i im I.. II I uu ia. Cr. ustin. 'or' . t Jowptl 0fcl" J t I HRlt i f ,i i.'il llmru nt Kl I'nan Id! tlx- . Iiln.ii hmi . . m4hl- - .mil I. H ".! it- - Ml clHIMl Km kport 'um kt.4 P'tw ..I - In lisp, th iiiillnHs nt., I Ii. uiMll.l tir if U.I .1. Mi nt.i.- rlll I t Alli.1.n tit ill 11 KoHC. ...ni Hi. i. i ,. 111.f lO.t M..i lini't mm ilhilrnw it flli i.Mf a. i. t at e WFAItt . . 1 .itH-iii- i a hmi l..iw-- ' ' .iv. 11 a. ( 1. I I r ., . ll'i.l ,i li.nii !mi.l nf tin. liijnwit In pnviilM I'C P ' ' ntlii-- pla cs thai kiiiln iini I. .tin In. in I'mi.t lnr I it i.it.l.-- . i. tul 1'fMtrw.ui, Hiti- - llwy ltrl.i II mi nit ar 111 Mill l. iiMlltlll.l.' tin lull IVltKllltf iillllllHII'l .'AtllM.! Ktltl'.fHU(HI l itti-- 't :i Miiunng atcord III Mlli. mull tn tin,! Mtk mil tlii ii'iiuil Kiiiti.tr it i Il4a ili-ii- ins '' ' .ii ini'iit by Dt II i tin i.i hi tii ill. I. i. ".nit Mill Imt- - Ihr miitif Tin nil ti i li tni I .Hl.t . iilH-.- l if -- mi. iiiikI.hi li.'.l thi' r'r'Ht rrrmiU v P'-ut a part ol ilr!liui iiii.n.ir tin' lNir.lt i i,itiiU III irvl.n ' y leaving tit - II ' .. ii I rum AMk-tii- 'i n I 1.1't, l.i I In HfNtr ilrinl tllli'lll from Sw" ial Atfi'lit .lullH I. - lmsii on tli- 11 I ' i .1 I Urn- .ilf' n rise o train Uihlif, ii, I it l I'll.) nt 1 ill (filtlMlli.Hi Willi l'i t1 it Mi ui n mi. (ir.ivi.iic in. . I i. k' iurra thi' rimluium'-!- lh I ( tor i.irlun 11 1 . i1 . . ' i It' ..Uh '! lS.!ll..imi.iMI (. tt. i in. .ar.iii... ..ii In. mtlMMi iimnititMi p A.WitfalM t (.nnirt.. i th .11: it li t. i. ii, thi .iiIHUaI nitiiBliuw nffrHttiH Msiin rcnAml 'I' 'IU 'I.M1H m M W jlK.. Mtltl' . i 1..''l. tlll i.i. . i I. ii.t.ini - 'i . - ' - i. I" Hi till' tltMtr (liipUft mrHl ti! .HrrrrHMMlilirir W- it uf In l'. . 'mini It. ..i"H II Mi I K 'I. Old I. rtll'1 a.. tuiit ll ' i i ' IKt titrlu. aIIpkiiI Jnniui Ami t Apl mi I'jmf, i t hrs-t-r i I in iii.av (.ttHrhr at ihr tVrmsn mhumy It iiiidrr i. .. in .1 . f lh. la. ifi. ' I rirrr-tnirtiTt- -- ' ,s,,ll lit .t,.,..l ii a ,.ii,. f iht i lwM wHi i ho m tlMtu nf Vuu '.'ii. i ii 'i STRIKE - li-- ' n ' Volunteer lli'i i.4tA Hi W' II Provision Is illAIS . MIW Mr I. f Ifi 'I., hi Hull rltM 4 tfuim ifftr-iH- l 111.. am tjiv ta nrfM&ttfl rwvmitil of ,iu . ... I lMf Hrttfhttt lft' f inlii ' it I . -- I Ii Hiiia hi i.nlh Mi n Ittfiirmalrim of thi iici'nrtniftil of ill By In I. rti i" 'ill Retained Seriate rl-in- . ...l.t'l, ,! inKii.-- i ... I iii M htt hrrn lir'.ir thi1 lnti' t' Hi' I'IPBt tt BRITISH LINES fiimt.' in7 ln' llil I, I. II. i 'hvrl-- ft. ni 'lh. I. at. i iUii him mi no. 'iiit'irmi'il ritumr t'ml Ihnc urinf I I i IiiiiIh hi.liltimr , Army Increase Bill li.. h ,,i .il'i'!'.. .'III lint. t ' HtrW I I ' I IM', SOUTH OF YPRES TO POHOB IHaUB WITH OAltltANZA - ' ' hf . , . , . . ' . ' ' t.v. ' I ' S 'If I I I i i ! v .... I. UtiiihI i!.i h ' 'nl tl.a tint.it 'Mil.. ,tf ' J I II h' IM I. it til" " Ml.Vl.l, I I III. . I I l tin nf IMIUItlM Vji' lltll.ll ft'illl f'St'II i ,i i, .1 ' i . I ( l.l s liifil. fl . l ' llli.ltnl 1 ' . !... II 11 I ' ' ' ... I,,., ifll.-- Huh mil' tiillntt tl .,,. i'l Tin-- tf Ii HO At ttilh ..'li.,l Illt.l.t. ' Mi i. n i ' r ltNl I I ii I., ftl ( r . .ii fc m i I I.I, n tl it lh itll r. ftnl i., i.Htr I Al f n r r i 1(1 lit! V ,l in.mi. thai iii.ii' nriiin.i i Mil i KHATd ' ' ' - l ,.i .'. ,r tlx std'tial t I Hi Ii I f.i S If t l.y Hi- ti In. h i ri.lil. in ill If fiifi i i. inr m irlrniii 'l hiTi' th ' . till fli I H.is . .. i I. i i .i in,, i. ii. i.. 'tiii.l ih nwn i' TEN DAVS .iimnit iUii I, ii. tlx- - tnrklii0 tn(i. tuffr whirli will roi- - I I II III). I ' ' It'll i iirt. .1 i in milfm-"- ' '' ,'iin 'iin "'f 1. l i In- - ' - l ti in tin ii, m nf tin riii .a Mtru '.. ii i. l. . i" 'f ihr " .1 iii. 'ti.iii' hr .1 t J.- - I . II. . . aiil m i ii f rttwit 'i i vnlraU . .1. Hi. n tin "ii it ii'ttii nut MiitiK nU .. , S. r ... ,i'.r i',' t nf th rot' " LITTLE CHANGE AT VERDUN tin ,' ' M "i,il Midi ii I liilnwhua t I I .. t II. il. li I iton-Hft- ,i .il.ii. .ifinniiw tM .,!'.. v. i i, I'ihiIk .,f fMnl unit fiitwnnl t.i.lity fniiu Juarrji i r ill.- v . . vtl-ihi- l ' in. in r..;.. iil ' a ''" il i.i . Ii nt l aa I Irnit.lrn. nl' i ,i,.,i'. mti iiili whilr hi'mliiinrlrn t . ncr-i-l it. ata" T...- i t, ' ' in ,,fii..t. I,, i, .,,,f..H. i, iniiinlfiifi' ..f id. .lnpini'iit. it U tvwiwiimWy w i " " .ii. n int.. i.ill . ft II ti t. Ml Ml thiil tin Hill fllltl til (It'll. 'm ImHHI I wMrh Ow k . I'ltHlll atllillr tll.'ll Mil) l'rFiillK h. irr.. HiMfKin im sntirtuf A'1 ' t it I'M Minim inn H i . ' ' t ..t.l l: mm H'tAHi"! '' , r - at '.iliriiiu liiitiliui. inn..' i.i. Ii..n t it. i, .it-- Mi it ... t.. i ' H B Iw 1 Hi i f i, ,, . .li.iiMf.'f if rnl-- '' . t w Kt-- t I.- mi i inlt-lit ' i ... i .) tr 9 (1 APA0IIH8 TOTRAIt, VII.IwV h 'lj( i, 1' k 1 H (ft- - nic t Dl.l MIU H. M. A.nl h.itiMiiii.Hl in lililf tinmit nrmy t . tt , m mm tif dtn "slow UNITED STATFS ANO -Ji ta iNvh' Ititliati wtruu iri'Htriiiir tan t to Htnrt corporations i) )m ir jr or fain wtlh Lnu wr illt tin- - tuoiiiiUtlxK. "' ... T nnoi v In tkf nit trail nf KnuirtJKHi Villa in th Ctdrrmru nTiinn iv ni'miiuw nrnii - l Ifcr-- - Ml I alt'tf KWfl Ihr Im. Milt Tli' bIi'iI mi thi- iiri.-uiu- liHiiKhl i ilnl imt ttkr ttia Iiprllm (if tin- Thitrwlio IN l AYIrib oIAlt lAA rnUI.UUOLl mtiirtlf UWM i i ii(.rf' imi'.fi "f ll'i1 N I'tilliHRii i hi Tliirt.i M ar fnur of tliftv iiMrt mailf a Hiinilfir irl(i II II 111 I I n.i .1.. Ml fill1 1 I' PI i, f.., u,n tin i.fli ,11. I J - i nfti'i tirri.iiimii, Biiiitiiii iiiillaw. I'juh i carill K , . -- l.l i nlall Imliau h nil wulu OF OtLIN j iif.itkti"t ft," Mat , THE JAV - AFTER FIT .11. .'I f "f iti- tin ij'hi iitKitdilH "f war, liulitlv Hutati llmir lullf lllui'k WILL MAY ''. wit a. XL., ,1.x OUENT , ,,. i. mi.i, , I.r d.atll. liaa Tin i i iilmfi .) n. , ih' aficTiil tnidiintott .,., .., WWHTY ai.i hit niin nHir rtiBiT W CINT . . li- x f ti" a touihiooing r sir ami" it i.ii. I. lalt tin llnnlii ll Imliaii lliatlliil.', whli Will fur thf Ktifiuy in till) 1. I..r.i1 'mmIi MX IN VIOLATION ' f tftliri, ll' BKliii i riuatHi' iiillHi. r hi ill. I lltrir forrfMllirri. "'"i'l If"' ., .,. ,,.,i, r ,,.,1, tM owl lit . , -- V ,., ,i t ' , it,, . 'ft n'aul".' "f u..-'i- I'm.!" ,1,, ijbiiii i ,,n...'" '"" t""4" I..I. tin. ti - KLBEIHC1 BOUTirWAUl). "' "" " ...... i.r i.,n.l tvir fmn - ,,. . ii.- i'.i"f, hallflaM'..l VILLA .,' II. . (jl."t s ASTolu T. mi; Arll li A rfoft rrin t'l HlOWli ( ; t- ..I ! I" I -l :::y:''i";:.i;.;;,;.";:,'':,,::-',- I,.. .Ji. t.(h " Ti t.tlt r. f. i vr-- l at lliiilMrtrr Intiiyhl in!ifli'il (lint lit) ,. finfii'-.- .l A . !, It lit, f 'ir I' '. Ill' li. '- - V frniti Iim t;ol. I.. M I. I Mf that ilia tin. fl.'il ...iilhiranl ytnTriTo iliatriflt. r"l ' , - . - I.i.,.-.- .. (. th- aVimiialt Hftllfrtlay lilltltlrial " t?"!rU',4,ww" wn.--.- . a --.L'I I.- .a liul. iff Maii"!'" M ".rt r. r I.i nf Hilli a , ,,. .m , . imlM ... ' " ' ,li,,i, v, i. twnrli art... la Infl iti-- l fif ViIIimh in whn h ihr-- x .na w.Tr killi'tl lliore wt'tM , Mi ' .1.-- I. a a vKt tf"ni tin . llavi-.- .i t . ' " K...I i... iin ti. an aMialtii'M It ia hi l that thia wa ihr aHUto flfjllt ill ' i' aj.it ' . MWtuffnn T'. w,i . I. frii iiillv Minuaii that thirty Mfiriuw lliitt t'tittll i rMrt"l l. ' ' " I'ut 4 anul kill., I CALLER-HERAL- D Jlt ml' . ,' ' It' F.ASTER EDITION OF THE ' 1 ("hi ,f m lili'..'. ' " ' nl Uriiwn f'.rwanlr.l hia iiwrt frMii 'ualritilrawk, rtMt TO APPEAR SUNDAY, APRIL 16. ' ' Hl,l,.-- ' l.,, , lnNihita, Itro itaya agin ami aani Uiat kc wraa fnllawtng a "het trail" aufffi . i TODAY'S CALENDAR. Uciiuai i I ,i, .. . la iki " l,f f th fiiKiliM' i hi. f Thf raiMTt waa arul Ihrtuitrti ('wjimiI IMehvr nt I ,. f ' I'l Irfiotft'lt t14 . fiirwartia.1 H Kl ia thij lli I . . I'hihiiHhiia whn to Orn. at lnao. Till f I I H, Itll i ..... ' " , IMNI ' nllt ioiacH( lor twlny: Umf. iiaanl tmtwmiH- - I " ' itnti jKr.wt, trlrgmpii r.r Iwti for tho MSTK KIMTIOH OF THS CALLER1WHAII) WM tlK ' UK' !. f IrlI 11 , ,. , Kowor; lignt of TMi U tr.t.-til- i ur ' Ln ct led with aiofi intlKorv rKWl waa wilt wu J'uitntiiii from .ll - th m- IW' rr.,rt, -l It . ''' ,, , ,,t mi i KH'aao. ( ol lirown rW thr Sntttnlity l0 cliuwd ' ' to inodrralc cnatcrly to outh nMHil tht fkht ..MUifl.t i' ' wlt''t. lb- - Matt llitt tin-.- - - vt... Villa ftiriv throtiirtt Anl'Milo tow no! Mailt:. t. futtiir.- . Ml ' .i ?TTLi J1 ... rrly witid. - . I . I, i br - n , Mr. i, It fill . . . . . Th a ilrU hmifiil nf thtt TwtUi wivnlrv- nt Ciuilmt ,.f rat I wall Mil 'I'll iirwu.-- tf ti,. Int nt tanlikmi.. I . . 1.111 1,, I . i'l'!1-,- A.i I thi- - Il ' " ' 'il.ll. ' il. an,, tht jfa. lui' mi Annl arrved l" auifarirt aaauKititloit nf otlK'om ni mm . .. ts.. l Man " THt...... I . I . v. ..,.11. ,. . y F W N"T- ',T-ra- ' hid l ti if Sm-i.- MlaaiM tti.a.rfarMT ra tulvaiii-M- l airr-iut- rpurueu OF THE FEATURES: imi v. ma -- luarl. that ronvta iwvc iwieru, miiiiihi tr . ii. i. I -- ' Tl.ti. Jam MII l it.rtNM t ( I .'rir hihtinhua SPRi v, AND EOK MEN '"' U",",, .(.. if-- i, , a fiva Cll. SUMMER STYLE ." triH, la tin. .i '' tnfii a.l fi..'ut' ,'irxj! r4 , . , ,.... klaraarrt UWiM d'l-t.'- l- ' '1 ....I i.,f Uuiu.i i.i. sr! MSHIONS FOR THE LADIES. ... ,t. r tf ,af' !" , t Ivrii I. , . i ..,i ,i a,-- -.. o.. " .wiw TlUtKI'. AMEUIOANB MUKDSRKD. Mini" ,,,, a,. rl . ., Tlf H ff' , , a ,,...... - AriMaxav, nun OF SPRING I . Ml0 TiT'Mt AjiHI - Tlirwi Ameiitimi ultirtto nnJ ts . , ,i. . inaf ii. is. li ' ' ' H-- ANI IUMMKR- - Ti -- r.i w ytNtlrtlny by iWxlimn lmtiJJt CH1LDRHCS FOR EPRINO , . iirii' " ".'' . L.-I iT'Sr' killwl ufar lUmx, APPAREL .fl.WK. . m m t . I f ZZ " tVai Witadoa, to rellrHi(l "''v rewhwl NOW PLAYS AN IMPORTANT PART IN iWRWW otrn at al.Aari.i-lr- r Th. ' l tut t MfwlisE hmtJwJay. Kr in KjI l" -- IX y maa'nlia l1oal l vain w m., mmw , mKl l --f "i i . m AUTO, OijIltjtB. sfclc? In tha tt- t . i ' - ii it "f ..,.i r. itit.-r- Ilal if4a.iJ. CMILO 6THUOK BY faraitr - fi..r ilaititt linferV Khli-i- tf " .In RiMlty f, ' A alao i wtwi H.i(IIT'iN. Afnrtt rtMitlulMrr'a offlca, w fuun.l SXKOHR CAUSE fATH Il " "" .n. Th. If 'Taw' HMftaywal' '"IPI'ERIES A ' III. unewn- - or pubH - .l...itl ' tHjtfl' . f 'Ul ,M i. I'M Niutia A4HM waa halfrttaa lanlKlit of lh toUU()lfalltii l tl. ... -- - - - Wmtmntimy NbafNta whan nt futttla. HI iHin(ahmnt wa flxnJ tarlttt.ft . . .j !" aitvna II '. n lv Mtvrn In th TfUciillnr),i I'AINTY FOOTWEAR W. ' lHl Cam.ng Attraliant. Itaaa aru uUmOUt turi IS THE FEMININE ..' - TrWh I at a v wava frwtn u Our al ' 1 awl ,.. i rti. fajra.n atlaMia lUn'ir : 'tv l,.t UmU.irrl.1. ii li', ) l . T OmW iHHtiimtni. , !. ' I. I ,i .... iirii-ca- WaaHMi"0 tltS' "ii mi . H..',ir-- i aitnai m.'ttn '.it la ; - U - WaVar anil la Maa waa V- r i i " ' rtok- amt PMa rwaawl a IC'- 'i,f f - b - UialMkM ,mil THE WEATHER t'KMsHINGS SUMMER HOME iaa i . r u i r aa'lar- Maat'W KawmtiML" II waa aha aiiffrrt.l ft FOR THE 11 i Tta-- laaOaa VftiT.' liaa "Ttv. that WJZX art nrh 'i " .mf .Mar arllnJbn4 hikI br. aah. f t.. t r lartUK fataratHMi anlif' iiU brulan WAHUltfOTHK. l'pr ., Tod CtUnitt, lata". la lmm lualr. Arlt "" i " ol u- . . . . . - . . .., .. . I Must Ttuaaj FthUr ruin.' HU ..... a. aitkit ACCIDENT T , . " t i.k " ridiaall -. - - ,t ur .tin- ' - aair- I , - -t ' AWTO JlFAJi;k.ll inwi.na, j " ' ' t . .i ' tittlay, liflr'J- tlumlif, PIS COIFFURBS th.m tin li.irtr.i- t Mum T-- UNK a,.. .rt.it,i. ai i ..rtw4. wk'i A4ama but wtra mltz ' t II,. f tvxrtfc a TRAIiSOUT tl.F Wtut FKday nit.r I,. .mhii v I ' M li'iiw-- will with t t,,,r, TeM0t MX A f ' II turn Mr Hatwntaj' KWMnlly fnUr. ai THERK OF INTEREST. I ...... t t.' - ' r ' 111' M'tHi-tl- 'TlUftl WILL BE MANY FEATURES " I,.' fl... ft ., t 4 It I t, QUILLAN 15 CONVICTED. THERE WILL BE THE USUAL , ',.t AffttlK, AHli .- -'- . 1. 1. A"- Mauat Irwf. To. It. ici thr aail.i ii.-..- rti !. FJJnV atriark fort""" '''.' SUNDAY, MAY A, 1919 PAGE TWO CORPUS CHRISTI CALLER

MAKES M. KLEBERG f"7'fre,sjr , i GOOD RECORD M iMEqZU

- ,,- I iVtiiipffliiy linn . l,,, turn urtill'iii- in.i ACTIVITIES1, Hi., i ...Illn. tninllur" "ton in niiisi r. t.,M WAR it,, i' M MIn iftaiKEr ut tli" en ..f itni ! i ...... I faMHUrii In ftmi inn. ; W1 If). I HI"' Of l I'ml'IK "'"I '' Ih" Mill il in i. ii" I Miiilllf In (n ' . ii 'wi'mii' .1 fiinii r r1 .! r i 1 mHliiM Hi.' rhrimi ' llt-- i . . f I Mi. mi in.l m iimiiil miu 'in' Thr oiHli rin ' firm, ! lIllltK- - I" i!,0b a ii 'il i. Uk i uiU'ini''' t ' in.'! ninny prfdi'l. m imp. I i I ihli.-k- . i ' "f 'I" Ji.l.i in .ini'ltfml . 1'inH'i Itirnllurn ulitri m i rt ii th. ! , gt Mm n l'nHIIi im i ,i I'- - 1,n'1 i (' ' Klnir'lll'' w"' i'" l" i4l" in Ii Hi nil "" t ' . ' 1. .1 in. I., c.tnipillwl vomr up Him O Ii I.H' (Mini iMIlllii' - litnl II.- t l.'IKI'li-- lllfl "' IIH'1 "''I ,il It i'i- - liaitilli-'- i I ' .1 III ""If l"l nWkii i ,. I. lull Ii I II ' .niitnlli . I, Will Ml 'li'. ! I., piii.ln iiri.'(t'(l Hilnriti" I i mi v Ii M I. I ' ' 'M i an, i tin- tut i l unlay In ii"S ih kniirlll l I ' ' , M .Id i.i ii J'nlt ,' it. tint: l)iu Ml . . I MUlll! t itl IUI' ,al n. l . ninpiiitj Willi . M H la if ! i Ii ii tn ' f.n n.l i.M!... I a I.i ii tla w ctmitiwl i" nin - irn . .. i. : ; th i'u inn inK i'"' t ... ii .irntturi- fomparii l.i . ' "'.-I- i ' pi i 'i Ii I '. II ' ' ' i Suggestion ' '' ,i. i. , tiinim t I', III! It. .1 '.'" ' City DeiH l. .'III i, ,,,, i .,i.o maintain'uiriltlv urn' '.' . i , , i i ' .''Hi m 1 lift i ,i i. ii. 'I ii" i, !,,i tiw IaihU. - ltroiir h- - ., . nl ui.l tu i '. , i In im. il ,m i l vim itnimy ' . . if .'lit .r ,1. urn it r i ii.ifli illlvn'i hlix ilnllil mn-- mil . i - : i Mii I'll iii hi.- .t. i t i.i i.i .li i i in uhlrh nrf m'hl Vlrtr' I I i . i. r utl t.i. I"'' i, ,,,,, ,,.,-i,- piainini. jimv-r- in.-u- ' I! Mil ' h ll l , ii n 11 rMf'lt '. . t . l... i ...n , I a i . II ' ' I'1 'I ...in ifi'talll'i! i l .1 III 111 Il' I'l' .1' nut llnon "f I nnti nil . .llll IKK lit I'll I P, niititiiiii t" rnmTlt ' ' uffli ' In mil.' .11 i li ' '"" mi,,.. tiniiKK ami In. ' , t . .. I. . i I.' '! ' ". it. i of a '11.1 l: .it in '.' in. hJ-- , . . li Vn W ' li nl I1IH lit thr ll I".. i"l IV. ' ,r.. ili firm iuh!! i' ill ' ' r or r, ,l.tc I!. .11 TI .' ' i .. "Hi Tbf '!' .lie. ' i 1,1. l. l hrM I'l I'"' pnl'. IT. i.i "'iiiitti T. i" iii.il '"''' h HiiK II I" known tin SO I .'I il' 'I nigh 11 I'l' U 'laUxftl whli ,.' ! lH)Wfd H-- M K - - M Villi. '( (Ittltr tblni la in 'In urniturf rfeirll ' It, i..uthwrilt ! Btn ir 4"itn'i" "f Tr4i - tinnniilri' wr' fi' l' Alli--n m h- ' 11 iim IIKlllHtl ITH, llllpllllni' f.lillnil nffll i I iiinninr I, fnitrU-r- ilurh.i; - i i. nit inonlhn Mi .mil 'tbi tun! iall"ii nl ihr -i. - Bliili: .. I in ! i ( irmi-r-- . MmliifW alt. tf KiniMlf nvi sn'l tni l i - H ! ., Hurlng al.Ki'nr- H 111. "it . ITI I' ItltllH il" I rji.pill.'tlt I' Casa IRicardo a most magnificent hotel lit in .hargi-- "f ih i " ' i f ii i Ipi'ilnn (nan i i 'tnrm wMir'. nn.H tti' t, ttnin w m.l MlM-nl.i- ii.-l- nt m in HfirulB F'n In ..1l in ' ,m ar il iii ivnti Ii" Mlrn - I ,w ... I i ... i ..i, ill' hi- rf'l'-- I t . i'I.iiI. llmiii' slim Mcrklln lip, .ihllnn li in iiiltlt in. i.l'i. UK-i- t i - wan in inltlt.ni Hi.' uf hittiiwini- .im 'in i ' COMMERCIAL CLUB M t V HIitintiH, .It VII i h i II. '' Ivlti; all'l ''' . ilrpBrlmi'n' 'i i 'i.i. ken .ui.l T tii nml tiii.i 'li' lit in ii.Mn.itiii.i n pi ri'lMitr K' ik '' - ui'l jiinti ".n ." iiiitnN i i i ' i htith-''l'- Memopijil the i illt nml i iii an h.n i .IK I'll .' l.i tin .in t ' ' Committto ii. ' iKWr-li'i- 'HirntCii.. h'i' p,,,i'0 villi "'li''' i l .. i.'.m-i- i .' :if .n' I h'i i ,.l--- !( Bint in l liln in t Is it Mi fhlM't mil fin ThU m nl I; "' t Work mr pm ami nlhrn atnuwiii' iiln "I inur ilinrirr .pl K i m H I, i HI W thMii ainilntrtl im i I'M LI lr. 'I " IMlltlVttlKin ,a,pii!.ir I't Ihf r'pl" ','' '"' ax I'llf. to LEADS IN PLANNING Inl V.mi.itt tin ii - al nyillfl, (fi'lt'K pilhll'iiv tn .niinti . i '! n Uriif- I. 1 - - ti .1 St .1. ii III S. .mi'l" lull) " III.- S H.'llfWt I i Mi-- l! I' Mm ii. it s ilr'i i(lMni-u- l mrinil a nl i u nllftfT nrrltiiri "i, .!,. KuK.i'xhl l - i l iiinl ' . m i i h Li I.e. i. Thn '."tuinl '.'il , I. t l.iT im I .1 J . Inv it tin pill i miti-rla- l - !ln lli M'i. llniumi Kiitll . li'ii- in iinnin l.tMl- - l III a .ln i in up ii ii I 'i. - u.ii.iiiM.ii h tVnnftt. Mlu'i f ii Thirl illli i llllll tin M.tnkjm ml 'ii' Handquairtr In !' M - vui' r ' i I. - n'l jm;.'- - ii role- i"i.iiiii'iiiii ri'm rniT' i. M imlf li.irliHiii Mm. II rl WtiiiHiiii niiil il lloifi' dir IhiMiii'Hii i " in Mmonic Buik-in- MERCHANTS' ' ' . C.,1 H"l In K l:' in Mi a M ilivwii'imr'f RETAIL Kl'i(' uif in ti WML Tra I'll ' i .1 i; it In . .1 M I, M V i i i n ' ' ii im Ii. illn ihiim'I Hi '! I' l:.. n l' Mifi ii ii TI '..ii '. i n hllli w I'll . Wt ' 'I iril.. rl on MiiMtntr i 111 W II K M.L l i i li ' ' Ho .Il .III i.ll lOlt 'II. II. Millll.i 'i M V, int. ' hi i ii. in. . 1' ,, it ... . .ii- -i p. mini l I ' ii. "i HELP mi.; "ITkI II'. i l t Hi-- . .1 'A ' . I. M - ASSOCIATION ih Vl'li lll.l lin "'I .'.II ,tn Ki.'i. III. ii I'l in. .in 'I I' ii III l ' ' 'I' 'Hi.- i ' Ul '"I ' Kli'li '"I"' ,.f V I Mi I .illif. ii. i inmt V' III. Ill llf Hi. i . ' li .1 l.nin. l I II". nt i In il i i inn' ili 1" ll.ll.l .1.. it ' Itrl hIk , r I r . r I. ! II. i ii i ISti .. up. I t II it Ii In i t ,'. I'lll'V I.. ,1 II 9'r inn it ii ,i" niiiii' ii riniit'ii .luiit it in in lull mill " 't, .iinti . ' M' ' t ' Mtl-rri- N t h ilrm in i ti Y H S.n iiijih St:inj W'llwiii H M.-- kllti I II mil . i "ii- -. ..ii .hilsl.m ii' .in. I l ". i I'.tl 'Il . FIRMS V llmm ti i'i.i .l.i'. TO BUSINESS In I' ' " I. In Mill'. unit Hi hi i i' l.l'inl unit ThimliSr. I Korh I 'iiili'iri : 1 linlll I - tu . III J.I" . . .! " h. . it 'i.i t hi -' I - ' l'lt-- i Hi t'lul-- l I . - 11 i t ' irjfr- VI1 tl. I'riiHs mi ii i hiptnriit t lii'iin. tt fell tin 'i li I. i i.titiK nil mi. tn ii 'lllll t M I'f I M I itr.--i I miirr-'tHhsK- 1'ili i'1' tiii'iii Imlrumn, .liiditr Hen K. Wllwm. N M Thr i liih I' foKti'tins il'ilri ptuiliii tinn ' ' .11 pi l .ilrnnr t "i ' i.i i i I,, K l.i t it It I .'im III ' M. h ' ..I 'i" mil llnirell nml Triiii!. Ilcnm. thr iitiini i. In limine '' " i tin In llfttir I' .i ''' I ' ' ; it' IT1IS1 I i'i-- J. H. Wrluht. rtwil.-mn- IIT' t, ' i 'HI In.. 111. 1' ' .tin! lair im nf in.l '' ' "i"11" ' ' turn in. 114 ' l I i - i i ,. i It 1' .. . ' I"1 ol'J i Tn. tiiriM'Ttiri lr IV. J. V 'hamHir. W II lip thfi InilllMl mi i.,, ii. Hint Kmti ill' l.tii"' . .1 itu'i-ouxl- i 11 , 'li-itl- t I'" rViutprn'rit I hi Inn W r. KhIh- - Mnyor K H. hi1 V luin hrnl ilrrM'tK in..i ., 'I ... ui.lI, 'I Mil, ,' p..,.. l.hta'i. ruling follr , th lolnl rrut Mm II It 'I .lilm I i l Inn II Iii Thin rmrimlltrr woi-K- In m cliih h.iK i n iipi'rMtPil In iirRliiK 11. if, I 1' ii , r t tw ''I'Hlii i . I ',ip!m ' an t I.. .it. I thf 'lllif llif" I'rir'l All' prnfi-tMiimi- Accommodation 'c Hiul Iti II A II won Th. nrrnllim with iiiinmltt.OM fnnu ihr iiftal'llnluil. lit ill hlKh tlltulr hinlx 'iiMii- - ir. tl " iii.'ii' ' ptltit'il mil a tit , thr uiul if lnrnt' - Forty iwurK I: tl'i'iiu).! W.itniin'H mil MiUhi'i'w' iMtlKKilllr hut- I'lPli ".iiH'.l i.n Hi. ,ii all p ,1 .1 th, t llltf l ' .1. W. SCHLINKE ONE ,r 'rwirilfm I thflr nli " Pdirnti - I ill tin rhili i.iitir.f i'ti .lull thr ilrli ...it '. in nl Th.' hnlWltu " 'iii ni rm.i '.nmmttt' ini'tTllMTi' liriTlfc Iril llllllistl till lll'lk'i' Hi II Wlll'tl Int n niirmii! i liiinl li.t Snutl ptlMI 'i . ill p it H'I III ' ' i . j hi.. tn th" pinj-m- nf work - ' lltlllll it 'HI!'. 'HI M M I i I fttruftur .rirf ' M III' Il . 'I' -- III II' .' ii . h'llrtn.iti Mmin K llr.inl ii.i.t 1'rxiiM m.iiI I'ltihllni; "h'liiit 'irftiirh Ih arlHillf" nf 'hi II .'I lain ' liut't mi iiii n'.'. lii.ini n'.'Ii. n't" T !.itl't M ( i I. .l Ii T'-ll- 111 1', -- I"' .l.ou' l patient mi run I'll "lit Tin "lltlc'i " Il t.il1 Mi lln i'ImIi Mini .mil I' Minim tl'.",(K(l ulll lr ii'i I'liin inn In 11.. pi i'l ll fnl p'l p' OF RKAL PIONEERS ,.i' mi. lki" rtrtlr l..if Iti"' il)' f ir ( . . - iiniirovicotffnt Vim ..tM. !. II. kl'nrrk I'liiiiiti i lr 'niiinillli'i li It'll i if linil ulll lr Hint .1 II. 'll' ' It ,tll, 1,1 11' ' II II II 1' II itnatfMl n'i i' ""', ,ri' ,''r', huHjn'. i' I I tia-i- ileal irmtrnr' Tlii I'lll.lli ,' S .hi. I. II Ii .tiulilil.il' U ih'i" I'll ii nt iniiiii li.i Hiii Good Sv-it- of of iiinfii" " I - t'liuli" llrlilllilf ii .int. "'!' ""! ''111- .1 kin VS I M I 1. ' t i n'iimll wlf lu l 'I. it . Kllhhli'li ' nil. H IIRht pi t Mil' II' 'I pill I I.', f llfctl I'"'' '' 'I' f ofi"-nt- Mimbri'i ii'imnifK IrttiK - tu I'llf . Ii-an- , t . . ' . . , .., f it. inrmlli nMr- i. i'u IIpii I. Kmili-i'- Ileum-- wiirfc II iiifilH ltil ill it it" ' i i' ii i' i vv Miilink" it' iiii iff i, nl '. " - 'u. '' ii.- I l M . i H V l I' i r trontnm! liiif Merkltn Pi II Jnff nf tif;i Irtiltiirc ulll itai ,m Inipm' iii.ii 'liiitimi; i i.i jltc iti- ; iff rl il n rui'lTli " I i'if I'lainlii" tirr-inrr- ' I' .1 .1 llm-I- I - h.f ,, . ' hmginllli' tf I" mil I'llh.M ilium in liiU ill. limns :in i'.ill'. Itri uiil p.'iii in fiiliin iiiirni it m In... ii ' I'llrtlt Hint' I I'll !.' .itllllllt lf- Mfll'k l ). l iw '04 M if- - llt 't. ia.-i.ii- T I il-'- Liiipk- nrtvmiiiK'.l.i! 'mi" i i in-- ' t M J ll- -' r ' i ' hiu t" r tin, il.itlv n Kit. " ininti W Tlir-- Kimii tun nil! thai illlpli ' ir. Nlnns Imiil'l II il"i liln.l I" 'll- lll'.ll ll 'It tl 111"' KJ'C- it i' .Mittll .ittu !if ,.',,. ,nl aui ' t Iiimlm i tli. .H..I til in W i J N l II J IIIIMlr I.T "I I II Ip- I .11 l.iM ' li! ' III.-- ll. i . a ha in. 'nrn - ii'i'lf. i.v ..l II" hin '! illiliuill nml thr lilantlllt. il.iil il I""l (tit " it 'Ul mil.. o I ! .f i. .inn llna-J- Uif li'.iillni- ll'.t. ,1 "I If. I .'HI III til. linn ' i Alri'K Club Inititute ' ' 'Ml' ll flj (I Ur u U.tf J it lunm1 "1 If Onnpj 'l. '.lip. .' tt IHIV 'li'" ilnaiuiB - - . P"i' l e thr- Im. 1 I . "V I thf- U HUMid bv Vnnno. Itlli- .! III. Tltr llllti'l ' 'InHni'" " IViiu.ii. . lo Kinasville ' ' i in t ' ii 1" Mn in. ml., ii'p i i n if it i 'i iijt mi' t )u Us- lit f'i i .1 f lin nilfift fstl'li i .tu' ilt. - ! nmm hfili - :.n ivhl-'l- i V ' i "H' ("omprn Kvrri ha- imiini u!! ..' nii'il II KtiriiV.il .liihn C.hir Tin rlnh iviin a liirliir In mtl "u- ''' " i.i h.'ir ..i.i. ' (t.i .. ,i iuttiit' nl ipa ln H'I smh irrin i" ill- - . - wIp.-IimI- . ttinv - ' 'l In Ml onui-- imr It. i'"n i I'.'iintil "I i.i 1. m iront iii' tin hiii.-- l i'l.iitiiiit nml otliWN In In- Trmn Iniluxt rlnl mvIih"! iii.i.i ' i' 'I ti I.- ivrrr t.lank-- i tn r "X H h.iK iillfj. Hi' hit " i. 'i.!-- ikI' I'tnln ."t il.- - l . I in- m ltd' to milk" .mm ill In nil'litiiiti th.-r- 'Kiiii,'i in liilim tun In ruiiin-- i i.mi t.'llilli.lli il ll KmtM Ulr lliil of Im ' I M (i.trt u M' I.o'll4 inoni- Tin ' f rork ii"m in' liurriniK H.'i.' Iril nllni iiik' i"ns divi 'In "I"' ' ' 'i i I . I I . U ' Mtctton. Kvt'i' niii ,Jl'l' lii.ti'' mill til" Slilltlli'Mi hull with tin ivi.iini'i .i.i! I'lul Mi I'hll Unit Inn. ia lii'i'ti iluniiii il Sl Itim In l. ,.'iii" '. 111.11 IM-I- tt iv iinv il 1. f i.tilii'titt m H'i..iili '""i l"'"""-- i. Some Things We HaveAccomplished

Kingaville fifteen years ngo wns ranch property. ,' ... Kleberg County has an area of 1012 square miles agricultural land. Klebtsrg County Kinssville's growth has ranched a population of 5,500. fc has only about two per cent, of its land in cultivation. Kingsville has many important fireproof buildings, such as County Hospital, II. M. King Kleberg County contains bluclc hog wallow land and sandy loam land. High School, County Court House, Hotel Caaa Ricardo, General R. R. Offices, and Kleberg County has land on the market at. low prices and on easy terms. , Business. Blocks. Kleberg County borders the Gulf and has an evenlike climate.

Kingsville has a modern up-to-da- te opera house, Flato Hall. Kleberg is the "Baby County" of the State of Texas. Organized 1913. Kingsville owns its water system and maintains the cheap rate of $1,00 minimum. Kleberg County is well drained, free from malaria and othorwisc healthful. Kingsville has a well equipped and paid Fire Department. Kloberg County has wells emitting gas, and prospects favorable for oil. Kingsville's good fire rtcord is reflected in the lowest possible insurance rate. Kleberg County has about SO underground concrete silos. Kingsville is the best lighted City in the country. Kloberg County has many artesian wells of pure drinking water. Kingsville has one of the best Creameries in the State. Kloberg County has diversified crops such as cotton, corn, sorghum, grains, cane, Sudan, Kingoville has a first-clas- s cotton oil mill. 9 and Rhodes Grass, sweet potates, melons, beans, and a complete variety of winter h Kingsville leads in its beautiful parks and magnificont palms. vegetables. Kingsville has splendid churches of all loading denominations. Kloberg County farmers as n rule have made sustaining crops during ths two generally

well-equippe- well-patroniz- Kingsville has a d, well-ke- pt and Library. drouthy years for Texae. Kingsville ha an extensive and very efficient Sewage System. Kleberg County has a fund of $425,000 for the building of permanent roads. Kingsville has the Round House and Machine Shopa of the St. L, B. and M. Ry. Kleborg County maintains an Agricultural jVcnt with Government Kingsville has many pretty cottages occupied chiofly by home owners. Kloberg County's record in canning and poultry raising is unsurpassed. Kingtville has an abundance of pure and healthful artasinn water. Kleberg County's people have unmeasurably proven their patriotism in the war. Kingsville is the location for the South Toxae State Normal College. AS TO THE PRESENT CONDITIONS Kingnvillt has near it the Texas-Mexica- n Industrial Institute. Kloberg County has fine crop prospects for this year (May 1, linotype machine. 1919. Kingsville has a publishing company with modorn Kloberg County is arranging for a Fair on 7th and 8th of November. Kleberg County has just oversubscribed her quota of th Victory Loan. Kleberg County lands will bo eagorly sought for by homcseckcrs. WE VENTURE TO PREDICT THAT - Kleberg County will, when a similar acreage is utilised, produco mora cotton than Ellis Kingsville will be a town of 10,000 poople in five years from date. County, the leading county of Texas. Kloberg County lands will Kingsville will have paved streets. increase in valuo from 300 lo 400 per cent. loon Kloborg County is the home of the famous King Ranch. Kingsville will oon have a Federal Building. Kleberg County has one of the most modem dairy barns and one of the finest Jersey Dairy Kingsville will have additional important industrious. Herds in the State of Texas. Kingsville boat today of not having any vacant houses. Kloborg County maintains the live and progressive organization known as the Kleberg Kingsville is visited daily by representatives of oil interests. County Commercial Club.

The above ad prepared upon request by the Kleberg County Commercial Club but paid for by

Un-Incorporat- RobL J. Kleberg & Co., ed, Bankers KINGSVILLE, TEXAS

. WT TUESDAY, JULY 15,1919 CORPUS CHRISTI CALLER PAGE THREE

JUST

1 i a

KINGSVILLE, TEXAS THE TRUSTEES AND OFFICERS OUR GUARANTEE We cannot guarantee of course, that oil will be found. We do guarantee, how- The Trustees and Officers of this Company arc all prominent business men 'of ever, that your money vill be honestly and judiciously spent in an earnest Kingsville, men who have been successful in the management of their respec- and diligent effort to develop this field and produce oil. No contracts arc to tive enterprises. be entered into or indebtedness incurred, until a sufficient amount is In the

Com-misssi- treasury and available to complete the first well. Just as soon as this amount is vice-preside- nt manager of the Kingsville H. C. Dennett, president, and is available drilling operations will commence. Company.

J. C. Nolan, vice-preside- ia superintendent of the Gulf Coast Lines Railroad. is secretary of the Kingsville Land and In- E. L. Clark, secretary and treasurer, We have placed $50,000 slock on the market at par and will guarantee to drill vestment Company. a well at luast 3500 feet, if necessary to secure oil and this we propose to do Chas. H. Flato, trustee, is manager of the Kingsville Land and Investment without delay. We propose to develop this four thousand acre lease by mak- Company. ing deep test wells. J. F. Ivey, trustee, is of the Ivcy-Madol- ey Grocery Company. ATTRACTIVE FEATURES vice-preide- nt Company, Chas. H. Flato, trustee, is of Robert J. Kleberg and Our proposition will appeal to you and Company because Bankers; vice president of the Kingsville Lumber Hardware We have 1,000 acres of land well distributed which we hove leased with- of B. Ragland Mercantile Company. Mr. Flato is also president and the John out cost to the company, except the usual one-eight- h royalty to owner. Association. of the State Lumberman's The Capital Stock is only $100,000, divided into shares of $10 each 'non- Ban F. Wilson, trustee, is County Judge of Kleberg County and is in the Cot- - assessable and transferable. ,J,on. Brpkerjjge. business. Absolutely no proinojtioji stock and. no salaried of fjcers ,. gach sbireh3tl!jr,...... 'stands to share the profits and losses alike. Jordt-Alle- n Company of Cor- C. M. Allen, trustee, is manager of the Furniture Each shareholder has a pro rata option on all unsold stock when drilling pus Christi and Kingsville. begins. Marcus Phillips, trustee, is secretary of the Commercial Club. Sam Sellers, trustee, is manager and largest stockholder of the W. T. Sellers INDICATIONS Grocery Company. By referring to a i n our prospectus, you will find that our holdings are lo- These men guarantee you a square deal in the company. They have bought cated between the .rachinal and Santa Grrtrudis and San Fernando and slock and have paid dollar for dollar for it. They have not and will not receive Cayo del Grullo, which is an inlet from Baffin's Bay ami the Cult 't Mexico. any promotion stock. A well-know- n geologist has stated that a third group of sdt domi is indicat- ed for San Patricio, Duval, Brooks and Kleberg counties. Large deposits of gypsum are found along the Santa Gertrudis, San rernando and Jarachinal creeks. Limestone oul-croppin- on very pronounced domes and elevations, as well as gas wells, sulphur water, fossils, and several distinct gas blow outs, with pieces of asphalt are found in this immediate section of Kleberg county. Baffin's Bay, southeast of our tract, is said to be the thir l saltiest bay in the United States. A representative of one of the largest companies while mak- THINK OF IT' Think what an investment of $100.00 in this company, if oil ing survey of our field recently declared that it was his theory that this bay is found means! We believe we have the oil on our land. We want to put was so briny because under the waters of the bay there might be some salt this proposition over in record time. Everybody in the Gull Coast section domes exposed. It is not an inland buy, as it has an outlet into the Laguna from Corpus Christi to Brownsville, and to McAlIen and Mission, is interested Madre ant! thence into the Gulf of Mexico. We have 100 acres located next to in the development of South Texas oil fields. The sooner a sulficient amount the welbknown Rosso tract, where a well was sunk 1300 feet and twisted off of stock is sold to insure the drilling of the first well the sooner the well will in blue gumbo, after going through blue, ureen and grey formations, sulphur be started. Don't delay. If you have any questions to ask, before investing water, gas, domomilic rock and traces of lignite. Large cracks or fissures in write us. We shall be glad to mail you our prospectus with maps showing our the earth, and other favorable signs, are noticeable in places about one mile acreage in detail and the genera) contour of the country. . Subscribo for yours north of tile Texas-Ke- n lucky derrick and two miles south and southwest. Oil now. Let's put it over in a hurry. Wo will sol! a part of this stock on partial men advise that these cracks are either caused from escaping gas or from hot payments. JLtt.i sulphur bods under the earth. These cracks are only noticeable in curtain areas and invariably run northwest and southeast It is well known that the large companies are seeking a large pool of oil between White Point, north of Corpus Christi, and Brownsville, FOR STOCK on the Gulf SUBSCRIPTION Coast. One of the largest gas fields in the world was discovered at White Point several years ago. The Empire Oil and Gas Co., have leased thousands KLEBERG COUNTY OIL & GAS C of acres in Kleberg county, in fact, they have the whole county clieckerboarded, Kingsville, Texao. and some of the other large companies are negotiating for leases hem Several operators who have boon in the Tampico field, who have studied the coast Gentlemen : line, say that our holdings resemble the Tampico fields more than anything Enclosed find check for $ tor which enter in- i jWiipuon they have seen. Surface or shallow production is found in Duval county only 30 miles northwest of us. By looking at the map you will find all value $10.00 eueh) in the Kleberg that creeks for shares (par in this section run from northwest to southeast, end the dip in the coast coun- " ' Oil Ac Gaii Comoanv. try runs from northwest to southeast. Professor Udden, head of the Bureau of fniintvw j r Name Technology and Geology of the University of Texas, reports large gypsum de- posits in Brooks tounty, we them Kleberg Malj.c all check payable and have in county, because we show them you. A to the Company Addm can to decided fault in the structure and several apparent upheavals are found on our holdings. WE WILL TAKE YOUR LIBERTY BONDS AT PAR OIL KINGSVILLE, TEXAS Kingsville Kingsville Section Section Eight Pfijjca Vtdkr Eijfht Pagcn . s ' ' W:f'f UHTI. ! - -- f'NIC1) WAV J !'!' KINGSVILL PULATION " KLEBERG MAKES KSeberg Avenue in Kingsvfiie Z BUILDING OF RAILROAD GOOD RECORD IN CAUSES RAPID GROWTH WAR ACTIVITIES WITHIN Every Drive for Patriotic FIFTEEN YEARS Purposes Goes Over Top With Ease .

J Itl.ert '',', nt , hum ioJ n i, mi ri' wil in ntr !W h- Hi ii li, .ili ii - Th- - nr , ' . I , . i '.i'if.lStun-ii- j,iitimt mi l,(iri, ' ,!,(, l(...n hi. af trll,.i!'l li.r-- h to tf. In U.t iirionlwtmn .ur;i .1 ' ' " (I,- !- J V.H-- . I in. - !n t Wjltoor .n t"rs", f "' til th l.lhart) loan mmiiaisrni' fv - ' i 'm lining "''! Tli' U(U In tit firaf rtri'.c via I I '"i and the tihrrlittnn warn ( ' '.'iSft"'''''' - i .1 I 'I ' nl (wn oa. J?h oi .,t,., r.. OJII "I fil.'t .1 t ion. llH.(K TWrd inftii vi - , ! subacrtption. IM4iti vo un. 1, i. i" '.n 'lUOta. tH!.I"l- mim''lii'i., ' !!..! !' w' '. rH VM'fy loan hi. nvi-- - r 1.n i, r. ',( im-t- - j"rtbal. ;,. orJIif n iniiiun i !!!. !m;.'ii .! Kh'K'mIIi l'tf,, h'ti t.,t ii ttniri th ffii'tillc i.f ; l vi. " "i 'f ' U -- i i,v -- l t if t 1 1 "' " i.mtir '!! 31! (i'f . 1, ,. iH h.t.j ,.,,( ., H .. . iv r. tulfillcf'!' ; j ', ....t,') ,l(.w ori ' . m.l IJi.'i" Thf i..i, 1' t.' ' 1.' i Km r . "i 1 liiwi1l'-- v ntirly th li W-- f S,Hi-- 5 !;. iTle' lb Uri'ln "f Ii. 1 . Mr,-)- .' 1918i?rWir 3tmp Dnw. Top. ' lb .1! ! ' n . I Over - " I ' ... ' j no 91 M.l! a" llll M.tlf. "'it-, Bar f .1 v.i unii". .. ' fl f'. ' y th (i - . , ' 1. ' ; ir.. ' I'lullil. inmUr) k . ' - I turn ('irnmin'inl "i 11. nrnl r Lf!f ' IIU.47l.tl '.D a .moi. i!J. . . Him high ver-lw- f ripti-.- iui I. - lCi.' ' IfTg "ei.nl)r rink tumtti in ,. . . . !,. 1, . on r iiiM( Milvo. . . - '1' ' 'lht fund ruteMt t'.j .r iurty. . j:- - . . t ' ' t t ' ' , . II n- - Ht ' .1 - ,'l. .... V 'rM f1'1" riv JT HI..I..1 'If.' iiw. nt. JUrtO ! i'k.iui n. or., . , ' i ' ll' " r (and quota, ti.WM: mitKorlpli'.-- . ' ' fl . It ! 1.1 t,r(2. y. M c a firm inv Organization Grows With Town and Country . . ,, ' ("' ' ' .11 Wt I 'fH iiui. tM: vutMrriptlon. tin.?.'. , ' '' Army. ftr( 1flv iuoia Mi K .M'- - ' '. . ' rt ' $..',! I tf.r . ' MlNMrtptUMt, ' I c . .1 I T( Ti Kriicht 'if k" ' '(. ' w . f.r ,.'.-- 'A... II, l r Ililfll -- hisfcu, HMt 4hv- - '4U'a IMi. Viii ' '. '! . Z , r.'. il"-.- ! 'f Jtftlunina wrii Anwri-- rnry i , t ' ' ration, (fit, Ul As '! t.i .....1 vi "' (w otttttlW- MtMwiptlflfi 110 ' r,. v . - i'i - 510.84. with Vlopm'.' ' it .'.1 It r ...I , l.') I''"mIMU l'.tt '. Mt'li l - . J !.' iTlM4 iTffni-,ir"- ' 4tl!M. t'niuxl W'nr Wrk t'Wfi v."- w - i,; ri i.f 'I fl i.i - ' t mp(rB - . . r- t . I . . ft !' ' fU!. U.'- MMKTltilin 'ng "f in vl. T in it - 1" .,' i.n 1' !" . . . . .'i'"' eff'''3tw ji it- v, itri itJ.; fv. ri (.lift I4f, , .'.. t141 " I ('! 1 Mil ' ,!" berltlim. IMI Arm. r KlnJ iHf 'in ...... I' (tl ll Jl tilan."'. 1 1 140 : nubwription r . . rclkf UW. Dr i.Unn Hartlct! ! ,r ..i- -n .i.i 0 u'HMVt w. in i!-.- .' wi"i fnitir 1 J27 it I' K'wt tiOl AUN II !' r '"Jf K V M'rU ! I iA v '114 IlltilOUffh til w Th liad ikm umr pin'll'l i't .,rl If !!'11. t.) It .. n f rtM miiwiiff.'i.t M' Msia M v 1 11 Mn i.f j 'irk. he worn untttlng dunitred nt Mtr . lw-'t- f Ho luw n .1 tH" In lt i.!.r-- t V Mttt Thorough Stud dlj' , '. v Htr' K ar n' . . ( ir "iiihi aiaa JHi H.t. i ! . (Af.! ef Club Work int mul tu tKMOl um i .'i (C'MtMa on Two) . - mi" Jaaa of (niir th. h'-- ir H'" .1 ....-I- .!. V.- ' W'l I"

The King Ranch Herd can't afford to waste your time and money with scrubs They cost more in the long run Let us show you how and why pure bred cattle are the solution to your stock question

WE BREED 3 fi Sun GfSTERED CATTLE ONLY it jTY itNTA 5U Re J. R. GALLIMORE, Supt. KINGSVILLE, TEXAS . J. KLEBERG, Prop, PAGE EIGHT CORPUS CHRISTI CALLER TUESDAY, JULY IS, 1919'

I WASHINGTON INVOKES . COMPLETE PROGRAM FOR H. P. Griffin All) OF GOD IN MASONIC Noble SHRINERS' ENCAMPMENT IS LODGE 'MID BATTLE DIN ANNOUNCED BY COMMITTEE

Tim '0lii)Uitii lniil.Tinn Tor Itm Hlirln-it- CIuhIiik with fin "lliillim NlKlit." I'liiKimiiiiii'til Mint (iliirtH Unlay til entertainment Commitlee. nt Mim in i' I Ciinili AlMifiir, Ninth lloiicli, Mini lunt-Ini- ; duo T. Ilotafiiiil. otifilrnliiii, Han 4 v i pi.' W I'mU'ii, Corlum ju .. tar wciIih, (utlovva: Tmsr w t: ln Mtli, I'liriatl, .'. Han t Moml.Ty, July TMa; It Vl6iit, Omfi ti.i lo Antonio. Timia; Joh. HtiaOli, UorliUH . HlirliiciV iiiiilal tnilti tiftvi'H 8tin on th. i I. Hijli Ai) itl x i n. in. Hluiii nt towns eiirUU Tinaa; VIcKir ralMwl 'In W. (HIiNim. CorlAia VJi iniilii lo itlvi imtml ilrllln iilld Imnil lonlo. Tphhh; Ma M T-i- . Han lo I'lilirnrlH I'oriHi I'hrlNtl (llinut CIiHatl Itoht. JUeba.fl. ir111 !( l.i' AtrliK 4 . in. T thi H w.tut.i Tuciilay, July 15th. I v ' of the Hplaali. ALZAFAR. Hid.t. " Jlilimli !). Qui'i'ti hi' Nol.li. A P. Norton Duncti HI tilKht. mUlltll ICth. (Tunat "Llltl Jane.") I I WoilncMlnv, July Lla tux Day- - itofll You've tifiinl of Stirltlcn HiHiiU Corpm Chritll Kiuirlon mil 4 anil U'r.'t ' i in . i furuuil iiainilu till tnJuli lloth Aim i I" ' in, I.' rlK-i't- (MirlNtl, llOhtllty In Of Ini .ii of I'oriiua ami iini full . Hut our wiiy lilt 1U l i tlti.l of ptRtmijln -- Ir yon want tin' 1'hL. In ' Aililniait wnli'oUtD anil M.lflt t."ll- t kvya llliyor lloailuV With A tlutii'N of l - luii of thi' lo city, Aililrt'H of wuli-oiii- i' Ooimlj" JiiilRn i.ji itiui a i i (At ritQiUJS: WoUtil ' - II It. iitlirliii). city iwrh ilii I' il In' op- DillK'l' nt ' nil. AI r. p iid mm I t hi nliilit. Thuridiy. July 17th. Horn' r. i Oi nt L. M. Al .JODLt HULtliriT. L.MIIUJ. oh, Al'M-te- r. H- x v HiiHfllMlll tflllllO fBU va. I, M Mlilinn It Al-s- f- lu"i "" lliillili' win iiiiulf I I I A run Ml ami UIK a -r. h1 rn ' - IllWt inrumlun lo 'or ii I1' ytarn okii I'i i'IvIiiiiiii- Tftiis. Mr.J Itm Hi n-i- l klllf tJti'hiumt nf Itlllblii linn luiiiHfi lil MiifnnU Wo'Vi- - ieot a Hlitiiio I .11 ' 1 Damn at iiIkIU. fll .ill, f I' Inn ii to n!' no JflK". - l . Friday, July IBlh. What ain't f,.,-.- i n.t i ni i H i immiu nrinm I'tiimu ii ii A ii I run obi I llirouKli lite dlty of u i i.' (O'lii'.i- - In I'.ml1 trip Alionjr ii iMhn tool Alxafui II If von km ii In nlKht, i -- ' V I Curium Chrlntl. rt tfiMltti Ii ii Ktit f li rlttHt ii f 1'iihiini i Imiilni ami Hindkfl. ," E r M G An 1 I mill i.tlit-- r Vou'vf uni to i It i NODi AFIl.F" p. i i . ' i loot mitimloii mnunoini'tit Inn .i'i "iiiiiiiinilrr nf th imr hi lit A Ii.ivc m I' ': ' Hill. ..II i filura. '' ' n.itief nt nltilit rlmi.K i. t. lin. . 19th. I'HOIll'H: u i .'11 nf III Saturday, Jut ANCCSTOIIS. Vtltli'tli- Hpnrta Mai k raw l.oya tin-tlt- ' !nnii ii . s. . I If von niuld w your itnrratorn 10 Our Potriitate iinnK ' IS. Htirw ,1 , '' . I . AH III n Harri'l rm'n. Iioya utuli'r KO" tn Rail I.I Hi. 'lit. Ill I' Ii !! . , , I HiiimllnK row. . i.iilil you Ik- - iirotlt! nf Un til nr not. Kkk "ml hikmjii riii-n- for a II HKfa. Kor H..'a imp of mnny ' hi iloo'l oi) iiiiiy know Iiiiiri. ni night. ". , wftCl, m" ua Win, H l.i.in nl ... Sunn t i ii iiri. illdcovfrli'ii nri niA'ln Sunday July ?J0th. That makfa l;rt tv'i ', oCCC . iuiii. ' ''-- i nfrvlcng. htlth ... militate la Inn toimniuK.I im II. "" '" "' ' til L SV) I In MiiiIiIiik fnmlly li "i'n. ItHRUlnr iiruai'liliiif Ami H'Hii. of Ilium, you knot, tin nt mornltiH nu rvmlnis I '11 I 111 I 6 p . (illy ti It I V I'tOtt!'. Srril Imnil m nt tiark plnzn. ' A'.- - any out niuai 1. M,.h-il- l ... ' Ly If .iii miilil hhi your Monday, July 21.1. navir &&sr&2.J. f Pi an' s Y.U Hy. All hIi. I I :i I'arnue ttrii. f mime low, um Imat ' ' ' -S--gfcg a Coi-- I'hrtstl town or nl.'.lti.K m,m to i " .'. "' VbDTP'---- - Tlirre mlHlit '" Monir of thi'in iifrliitn llont ciiuralon It isWe.. - "'.'J" fJt l (Hi.- - l a rar. t- i t M.i'i- i ion wiiiililn lo know n.inri- in nlitlit. j. n,,ii,i( iniiMti in nnntlu-t- ' 72nd. . . nitii'' Hut lu'ti'V iurtli)ti, wlilrh Tuaidav. Jur M i , , It.' II. in. I,.,.. ,,! ,lln, 1S ,,.,. ii ii .'fft't-ii- t I'llyrlinoKr jtolMUov.ii Dlnlmp and fllOHllH: (Hit t. - - Ki'.iuii. vlnw tn Mi nol i.x N- . m. Wi..n.i- ,,r ,, ,,(.llK, m h. ,rF5' If Mm iniilil iiimit your itncKHIorn KlniravllU.. wllh Aliafar Patrol and friMii - , , tvinln" - hit Mnmir.U' ..ml u , .1 m 1. 1:. M Si.ll Italtbl MniH. auauMMagBHMMaauMMHMBB They'll ne'er force! ,,, In him .Hum Nutiillly W'.iil.i Hi... t iiroml of yon- biuiil riini tin Pawn nt nlKlit Tlmt we've there GRAND TOTAL OF J90.000.000 Wadnoday. July 23rd. Kor A lfi l ,,..l K MllHIII, .,r, wnn . ,,h IIKXlK ' BE HplaHh. Until 'I'mi" ami MuMr will Par ' H TO AVAILABLE FOR ROADS Itofit niriirnlon Ukii.iI ii l. .in,i i ,.,,,l ,v m hi. N" ' " '" '"' "' - A I IK .... -- - B"1 ,i uli On thla Ua tin- Wirlm'rx will ner Willi - '"' i BlHHBPVCH ' fa- I July A UiiwonH ratnlllHB. !3niTa . .1 II Brain) tain all anil their 1n.lv. .."IniiK ii.-- in. ml., ,u.,i ,,,,,,, , f . ,,.M, Wli.i. yim kuIIh'i J'. mill 0110 mil lie nvullllllIP Dame a I til if lit . j ' IHF' - in.- I'. i ii n 'ir.iini itnnnnHRt:. IIKI T ml ii nr.- iiiun Toxnn IiIicmwiij h i (Uiirr oitemli'il notlr of thin will iiou.r -"i v '"' iM- ' vi , .t, ' m. i i mi ii ii int i. i' hi t motillm, ai'conl-- i Kl. -- it aptiar lutnrl "What la an i'.! imiiu .fi.rwir.i I.. ,1 K.i'l.imlv lhn. IfB . . vrBI M .I ilKiiri-- of tlii Iilj;litvny Thursday. July 24th. Sohl llull.li' links .. , f .. ii i I, ,, , ...... i, i i i 0HF' i.r.., .I. .i ii,. i, IHBS- Auto pllKrlmaK to Oratory, Taft. M.umv.i i, .,,. i,.,, .,, , , jTWHI 'i'..!',i ",Ati"1oiiln"'' frland." annwurwl ,i, N,. ,, vSHSv 'H t"i l 111 fdll.nvn- IMhh ami llorkpurt. "iv 'llvldrll Slntnn. Aranaua In mnn visrr.. ii M- i- , i , ii i.umi.i- - . I a known. a iini.. mc!l.ri ,,i, n.r.,,,,, n,,t ,,i! l.if. ih mft ilnu tin .t on.lH ill'ITliXltnut.-l- i $71111111),- - rniii'r-rt- In 1'ntrol Nobh' Mri:oiiri. who ' ,,,, WJTF 'With hanil Alrafar ,r'' iti'l il"Vl"iim. nt i.f ,i Kcviiiiiion lnanl of BBK lsst' '.W n.m I ,, lliili.-.- l 0 Kf,5.- - who .loiHiil inr.' wliol hanltalia """'" ni IWHBl i.il funiN II and lnitiil t" him ic fiuiiN f ' '.'n 707 iiii'iiiiiilili Dam .it nlirht IniiK 'l"t't hI'lr r.no ini 'i h I'.nntlPH yi orio Friday, July 25th. rSver lay ''" IIIkIiuh)' lijmrtinoiit iy I'artnlf. Hplaali. Whin vou iKillif I" In thi' Imttoiii of the Httunin If I'lilllioii lo linllilltiir Ha nrc tit nlijlit rtowi on iu "'ir.iliiM nr iii'rfiTtlni? mnl. ' Saturday, July 26th. la it)nv iIhi;i'M oooler tlmn ' tr.i tilrjitloiiR SjiIiimIi In mornltiK Hiirfiicc Rhodes Grass "ALL WORK AND NO PLAY MAKES JACK A DULL BOY

Tin' citizen of Corpus Christi are fflacl Hint the Nobles of Alssnfar N. I) E i AM MAYC R de- VHl SEED Shrine, accompanied hy their wives and children, are going to i'i. vote a fortnight to recreation on the shores of Corpus Christi Hay. ..I, i Mi l i . i. ii II. t i nii'i i.--- you do this, for Corpus Christi is your u ml t pi ' i ' i t .1 .is iln It entirely fitting that ' no ! ii in K .lllll 'll "play-groun- , M'-- natural play-groun- d. We call it the d of Texas." loi il .H'lill i till. I mh ': .It , Mm rh THE WONDERFUL HAY AND PASTURE GRASS in . "t I'ih. a .oi .tin i w.iiiIh will it a fine place in which to play. We have a it... nif He I'lti MM. ill lllll III We think you tind i lln .Mhiii Shi ill" Do mmmer temperature is i 'I' iiipl. iIm si hi Mai h you know that our i delightful climate. i ii Mi M.n i i" I'hiiit'-- Direc- I It has a high protein content. Dr. Harrington, Agricultural rarely in excess of S degrees and the cool Gulf breezes blow from ml ..I th. i'..iilM Iwlsli Mhrin. ii ii. - it w.-i- "lil "i vmni. tor of Gulf Coast Lines says, "I believe it to be superior to Sudan ... I.. . i r f i i i i i i about !):() a. m. until midnight. Grass for Hay, and to Bermuda Grass for Pasture: and this is word can be said in an endorsement of any is finest about the last that We think you will agree that our balhine beach one of the grass." It means to the Gulf Coast Farmer what alfalfa does to in America. the Kansas farmer. Rhodes grass is of value only in warm cli- mates. It requires plenty of moisture to germinate. The seeds Our city is clean and healthful. Our city water is'puro our sow-ag- e are very fine and are enclosed in a chaffy hull or shell, are very Plowing dinposal syctem is modern -- our etroots are woll paved and light and require about seven pounds to the acre. One to it will well kept. The city is peculiarly free from. vice and disease and its will kill the grass, therefore there is no reason fear that ever become a pest. As a drouth resistor it has no equal, requires moral atmosphere is clean. It is a good recreation place for wo- and is sve arc gjail to welcoi but one sowing, will furnish pasturage winter and summer men and children. the highest in protein of any grass known. Cattle and hogs will to graze on Rhodes Grass. ii will fo walk through alfalfa We do not want to enmmerciaiiae your visit, but perhaps some of sunt that you you maj think about making Corpus Christi your permanent home. One farmer in Rio Grande Valley says, "Last year I had one steer days, Many people u ho eanie here to visit, have remained to make their to gain THREE POUNDS PER DAY for about SIXTY and SdU until the first of the year. Two permanent residence in oin midst. So it is not inappropriate for made an average of pounds iou will call on us f put in the 5th day of April have nearly doubled their us to tell you something of our eity. of it's cleanliness and attrac- steers woight. Will pasture three head of stock per annum per acre, or tiveness ( hit- schools are good. Our health is good. Our people jnvintenrr.s ii can ollc cut oight tons of hay. Hogs thrive on it at the rato of 25 nor acre." are good. R. J. Kleberg, manager of the King Ranch, has sevoral hundred acres planted to Rhodds Grass. We have othor endorsements, The Business Manager of this paper asked us to take a apucittl which we show in our booklet. advertisement in the Shriners' Kdition of The Caller. The above a shipment of 3,000 pounds of this seed di- our advertisement. 11 you ever come here lu live, it may not be We have just received k and have imported large quantities of this seed to say that in addition to the above mentioned rect from Australia inappropriate is oing to very scarce and much higher in price this year. We is one of them. It be things, we have three excellent banks and ours have 4,000 pounds "en route. We would advise you to buy now, as we have large orders booked. Come in, while you are here and meet our people. A Shrine badge k good identification if vou want a check cashed. Wo sell this seed wholesale to dealers and also RETAIL. Write --1 for booklet. . . - THE CORPUS CHRISTI NATIONAL BANK CAPITAL and SURPLUS $350,000.00 Deposits, June 30th $2,232,541.91 R. J. KLEBERG, Chairman of Board JOS. HIRSCI I, President KINGSVILLE PHILIP HOWERTON, Cashier E. J. MILLER Cashier COMMISSION CO.

KINGSVILLE, TEXAS. NOBLE WILLIAM TOUGIAS. U u.i mi ToMKiae iw im Maa.in ..lu...i r... vuir. Hi- rttlMil IIIKIU' I.. -- .1 ,1... ,1. i I'l.k-tMt- l ItlUU ' I .. II. Stl'lU.ll Hill' . llllMlHlnl III 1J Sin Vl.ii'llli. mil W. if. II ti.. . l. 4lll i ii till i i. Mil "K"

II' * FRIDAY, JANUARY 30, GOLD BOND AND INDUSTRIAL PART Vl-l»AGE5iio^(l EDITION EVENING NEWS

* :

ySS&?

3 -V,?

!-'» )V<^S;"*^^ 4 7? rteWEO-:'

perhaps a fair percentage will lie bold ability-.. Ail Ifuteresting -aecount.-of • tbe,zebu* fov re-stockins. ' : on the .SoutDcrn--rang? appears In. a re- It is no reflection upon other breeds of cent issue of 3-'Ue Pro'ducer, the National beef cuttle tu say that tire Hereford ilomi-' Live Stock Monthly, pulihshea in P«nTef, nates in Southwest ,1'esn's with the short- rolo., i» -wliich 'sucb well-known' T«xa» llorn iff- second :pln«: The Marfa sec- cattlemen 08 A M. Jfernadeu and Col.-.Ike tion recently Tarried ,«fc so "many, Hereford T. JJrj-or -.are quoted *.on-thlir snecles., or honors in Kansas City .chat 'Northern •cattle. The article riysilrpart; • -..i' lu-ec«lers accustomed' to carefully pamner- ., ThroURh the gardens''and cultivated Ins their purebred ' stock'were" amazed at fields of-India .taowse. .b'ands of^ white luil s, leedlyg^oji- tho-Jiiirit^dlHthe' Iiirin'er'» the range-bred cattle's condition ana 1 orf cuttle breeding has. whose, perio,d of gestation ii^fETp days, the Ivpn the wort ot A. P. Eortlen in de- female carries her.calf 500 djy*.' The fore- \clopliiK the Brahma cattle or Mbus. head , of the zebu is"-bulging; the horn* i-'rom fur off India and oven from .the short, and concave : along, tbe.'upper border, west eonst o( Africa the-zebus lias .bee'n the ««rs large and drooping, and. the dew- •f Muppo.l to Southern ranges and '.-rossed lap abnorma.ly developed. 1 to most clur- with tlie native cattle, and from this.breed- actertstic mark is the'flump surmounttnif ing cattlemen claim they have evolved a its withers: • This jjroturbance in tho

GUTTLE. 3f(J AKE.

1 1^ ION COJ>4TV.

Famous for Half Century as Source of Best Meat in Nation, Southwest Texas Has Kept Abreast of Demand by Improving Quality of Herds. Greatest Range in America Remains in South- west HILE it. sometimes is the fashion to draw an invidious .comparison be-' W tween 'the old-time Southwest Texas Longhorn and the present fancy beeves now being produced by the trainload .on the same nutritious grasses wliich Nature has used for a carpet'quite as fruitful in yielding wealth as the mythical rug of the Arab;;in N;"Hts tales, let it not be forgotten that the Southwest Te^as Longfi~orn, for many vcurs was the surest supply of meat u'hich the Middle Western States had. Ant?, further, the meal of this same

,«f

GQNHSTV Iarp"st species' !S said to reach a webrbt of CO pounds, and Is considered a great m.'litacv by tic English' In India. VaHe- tl.'S with two aunipn are also found, at v.ell afc hornless types. In sizo the zebu ranges from animal* ]:>r^'er than our ordinary oxen to other! not much tailor than mastiffs. Its moat .tjiiinjou color is ashy gray or .creamy buff, but rud, brown, hlnck and' white are like- wise met. •with". Its voice resembles tout CITV i>£ tbe yak—rather a grunting than a low- • i. z. By vatare It is gentle, docile and very Uu'fly. Llki; the caciel it 'can go for a Longhorn was of a quality not to be long tl.To-Trident water, -Llke-'the camel, despised, as any veteran butcher will too, it ;s capable of walking- long dis- t..in-.?a • on the ineugerest -rations. These . testify. To this day the expert judges qualities make'the profane-brother of the 'w.-reij boll cT-remcly useful-as a beast of of meat employed by the famous pack- Or.-it and burden In bis native lan-1. In ers will admit that the corn belt never adiiuii.n to India, tbe zebu i$ distributed over Cilna, Use Asiatic Islands, Mada£axcitr has "produced cattle more economical ai:d t;.e cast coast or Afrita. Many Biodifl. cati.ud of t!ie type are found. from the. killer's point of view, nor •JL'!I,> !vtr-:luctlon Into, this eo'jntry of meat of more uniformly high quality "T;:-:'l;:!'a" cattle, as they were called here, . than "Southwest Texas grassers." .':!'?s bia'i about 70 years. In the early 1'iflles 'of t!;e past century .a few indl- The richness of Southwest Texas' vM-.uus it t!:ij species were1 imported from range peed not be enlarged upon. With lu,'.i.i us un experiment by men who nid bountiful rains through all of 1919 Lccnuie acijoalntcd with their admirable many old-time stockmen say the grass '-.day the descendants of these ploneeca. . in Southwest Texas has not been better r- distributed throughout the Gulf HMtoaj,..;, 'in half a century. litln-r us purclireda-or crossed wjta ."lo-iJ, U'.t-jt!-.' tyjies. From time to tlme,.lreali5^*V Always Southwest Texas, because of 1 i :.'/. rtutioiJS, especiaUy'.of bulTH,-haTO-b««nj-/.1^- its open winters, will send the first fat i:.-.:!» fvo:a Asia and occasionally prtw_'Y> cattle to the spring markets. Alwafs, «l't.vliueuTi huvo be;n secured . froi» ' '•; i...-.ni}<. r!e? i:ud collc<-tlons brouyht^.-^JVftif'. . because of the same mild temperatures, fur cxlilbitlou purposes. ;'. '/. . .^ - will the winter losses in -this section >-ore.-:i,.st ain:«jt • the nod the high-grade steer, the only differ- \v'j*> JT.VI; plven years ot 'stady to tke-ralK ence in respect to Southwest Texan leader- .le-t t!:i!t the Krahma is easier to f»tt«n. ship in "the NaUonls meat supply is that Kail retain^ its fnt longer, than, any «Unr IndiTidonl animals weigh more, mature lirpoil. V'.lere it. takai .ordlnarjr -cattle earlier and there" are four or five times five or ei* months to put' on •». rlren a* many choice cuts per uniuiol as Iti the iniiBbsr- of pounds, the Erahram will r»- olden days ON ouire from^ one to two~ monthi nea»."" IB At present the supply of cattle in Soath- IK t):e feed lot as-on tbc,.ranice;'It IS-clA" weat TeMS is not-so iarge as in -former it leads the rest-of-the-herfl, and.j.h'^the MMuhi. An extended period of dry weather . j... ._N;.-fortunate sections. Perhaps 100,- west Texas this winter from as far' away 'uili quickly'fatten onl"!"'; winter Tasses most hardy range nnimal with r\mcli flesh- final test at the market; It herds in many sections, bnt re- have come many trainloads of range cattle OW catile,4iave \>&z .shipped into Soath- as Utah, Wyoming and Colorado. They aud be ready \f.6r the ear1^ markets, though enfng qualities and general good adapt- jaf^er percentage o( dnMed •5*3

PAOB THREfc THE MEX1A EVENING NEWS Thursday, May 26. 1922. ————————•== ^!^ . BVI

Berim g County Coming Oil Centei:otWliTexas O -ji. ^^ rr7TT^:OG OF KLEBERn,G COUNTrmTNTYY OILLrtmi nn r eTATr>c DECT ifNnWN & GAS COMPANY'S ROSSE NO. 2; ONE OF STATE'S BEST KNOWN OT 4, IN BLOCK NUMBER 41 1-10 Joint Clay and Sand. GEOLOGISTS PASSES FAVORABLY 40-130 gumbo and sand. 130-205 gumbo, uhalo and sand. 265-300 shale and gumbo. - ON KLEBERG CO. STRUCTURE 300-375 shale, rock and gumbo. Sour Lake, Gooso Creek, and at.other 375-435 gumbo. After a'hasty survey of Kleberg , Professor W. F. Cummins, places in the Miocene. The oil and 435-500 gumbo. county;y, gas that has been found in commercial 509-500 gumbo. on„.„e of the best, ideologists of the quantities in the Gulf Coast region, 560-583 shale and boulders (gas). southwest gives it as his opinion that occurs Invariably In connection with 583-012 gumbo. oil and gas In paying quantities will domes. The domes are structural 012-016 rock. be found In the confines of th s features consisting of bosses of salt, 615^-018 gumbo. county. On the whole his report is 618-085 gumbo. gypsum and anhydrite or of combi- 686-712 pink gumbo. considered aB being entirely favor- nations of these. Some of these 712-770 shale and boulders. able to the aspirations of citizens of omes show on the surface as mounds 770-804 gumbo. this county for a highly productive C greater or less elevations, whik1 804-815 shale and boulders. oil field. The fact that one gas well 815-818 rock. has already been Completed UKivlng thcrs are only known from drilling Q 10.0*^2 rock much added impetus to deilnng ami ccords. The Costal domes found , 822-843 hard sand, shale and boul- now that some of the larger com- ear the Gulf and are known to exist ders. "anies are becoming interested in the rom the Sabine to the Rio Grande, 813-814 sand rock. 'iold' , it seems that this 'hey are quite numerous and appar- 841-847 rock. • tion will come in for a ntly are arrange^ along several linen 817-867 shale and boulders (gas) testing. The report of Professor laving u general -northeast-south- 807-878 gumbo. Cummina follows: • west direction. 873-885 rock. Houston, Texas, October - The conditions connected with thcso 885-8U1 shale and boulders. Kleberg County Oil Co., domes clearly show that they are In- 8'J 1-802 rock. Kingsville, Texas, rusives coming up from below thru 892-895 rock. Gentlemen: he- other beds. 895-90 J gumbo, yellow and brown After having made a hasty exam Sometimes oil is found on top o. shale. ution of your property southeast o the dome as at Humble, where gush- Gcrtrudis. Headquarters King Ranch. Klebery Count>, Texas 904-907 rock, heavy gas. Kingsville, Texas, for the purpose o ng oil was found at a depth of 1,000 Santa 007-911 gumbo. getting ii; exact locality and to se to 1200 feet. Oil in commercial 911-915 rock. the topography, more than onythin quanltics is also found on different 916-960 shale and bouldeis. - seis, ns I had previously examined sides of these domes, at somewhat 950-970 gumbo. geology of the region quite thor grater depths. The beds in which the 970-977 shale and boulders. he oil is found dip away from the mounds 977-1030 gumbo, sand breaks and "fn'making this report I shall draw To appy these general facts to in* FACTS ABOUT KINGSVILLE AND L lands held by this company will say- bales. In addition, corn, iced and y • . , . .u „:»., Of Kimrs- oulders. cry largely on my previous know and a been piped into the city' of Kings- 1030-1013 gumbo. edge of the region as well as from that it willl be n little difficult to de- ciops produce abundantly, ville, where it is being used for both termine whether or not the lands ttro gregreaat advantage—one that has 1045-1019 rock. ther facts that have come to m KLEBERG COUNTY, NEW OIL source of considerable profit to. the industiial and domestic purposes. 1049-1065 gumbo. nowledgc during my last visit t situated on one of these lines ol South Texas farmer—is that cotton Kleberg county offers more to the 1065-1072 hard sand. domes, because of the uncertainty here is several weeks earlier than In farmer than a mere living. It ex- 1072-1084 gumbo. of just where one of these linns tends to him the opportunity of woulWUU1dU pasJ»I»UMs throug•«.» — — h— thi- s---- - regionA!_ i. 1084-1090 gumbo and boulders. This region is generally quite levi n CENTER OF SOUTH TEXAS the central and northern portions of beautifying his home and living in . the state, which enables it to be plac- 1090-1115 gumbo and boulders. ust where your property is locnto If, however, one takes the line that i several thousand high- j -jhe murKot ut a i.-.ine when a country where life Is made pleas- 1115-1120 rock. here Is a ridge which seems to ex- s known to pass through Damon - Kleberg county, Texas, holders on here beingK c on ant by climate, good roads, citrus 1120-1125 gumbo. lound and Markham oil field and ired Jersey and other breeds of dai- higher prices prevail than when the fruits, the growth of semi-tropical end from north to south. This ridge roject the line to the southw.jstward. the Gulf of Mexico, between the 1330-1335 gumbo. . . northwestward, he would start on tno he result of erosion rather than thut terial advancement ut these people. ranches, no impioved cattle, no ville and Old. Mexico. Texas As a rule men change their plates Very promising oil indications pre- 1335-1316 rock with shale breaks newest bed and continuously cross of an uplift. _ towns, no houses other than those, 1316-1352 gumbo. There is a strong indication that of residence for the purpose of bet- the next oldest ns he went along. „ dome exists on the north half ot tering their condition financially, lot few belonging to the great King. 1352-1359 gumbo. If one should drill a hole on your Ranch. The development, has been re- 1359-1369 blue gumbo. section No. 41, known as the Rosso an opportunity for a gi eater devel- property he would start m the new- and. It is a well established fact opment of their it-sources, or on ac- markably rapid and substantial dur- 1369-1380 tough blue gumbo. est of the geological beds and peno- ing these few yeais, however, and] 1380-1390 gumbo, strong sulphu trntc each successive older bed as he that this region is underlaid by an count of their health. The climate is now there aie over 25,000 acres of artesian water sand that flow-ing the most important single influence odor. went down. The beds that it would wells arc on all sides of the Kosic affecting the economical welfare ot ns fine farm land as there are in the 1J90-1393 rock. .... be possible to reach by the drill on state under the plow, producing reg- 1393-1394 gumbo with lime nn property, but none have been found tho farmer, so when \vo invite tht this property belongs to the Tertiary on that property, notwithstanding farmer to Kleberg county, we natur- ularly wonderful yields of cotton, sand, sulphur. the sixth of the geologic Ages. vegetables and feed stuffs. 1391-1397 Rock. This age has been divided into six hales have been drilled to a depth ally expect hi* first inquiiy to bo in Soil is quite important us climate 1397-1450 gumbo, high sulphor odo that would have reached the water legard to the climate. three periods by the Geologists: the in the selection of n place to live and 1140-1454 shale and bouldcts (gas Eocene, Miocene and Pliocene, ins sand if it had been there. Now there Quoting from an article by Di make money by one's efforts. Ihe is some reason for such a condition Jos. L. Cline of the United btates 1151-1462 shale and gumbo. Eocene being the oldest. These peri fol United States Department of Agn- 1462-1465 rock. ods have been divided in to epochs: and one such reason is that the lower Weather Bureau, we make the cultuic in 1910 issued a booklet en- 1465-1508 shale and gumbo. beds have been shoved up by a dome lowing excerpts: Above the Tertiary comes the which cut off the water bed. While "No other state in the Unitei titled "Reconnaissance Soil Survey ot 1508-1510 rock. Quaternary which in like manner has South Texas." which classifies the 1510-1540 hard shale with gyp- been divided into periods and epochs there are other reasons why the ar- - — - • follows: tesian sand bed was not found on the 8n < ) In drilling a hole on your property Rossc property, the one already stat- sr;rr^^»Hity of climatic characteristiciracttristics wiu|i ss-i-a^.-a^ ^^ ^^ ^ s arswollovsv iB40- l'o02 shale with gyp spots, the following beds would be pcncrtat ed- 1. Coast clays; 2, Equus beds ed seems to be the most probable. reference to wind, temperature, land; "Victoria Loam", which has a and gyp spots, The fact that in the wells on tho cloudiness, humidity, and precipita- boulders, 3, Reynosa, artesian water; 4, Lagar Rosse property is the only place In tion than does Texas." (bpeakmg little more sand than the first nam- 15!)9-1611 bumbo with to; 5, Lauaro; 0, Oakville; 7, Frio; 8 ed, and "Victoria Fine Sandy Loam, sand with lime spots. ' that whole region where a noticnble particularly of the Gulf Coast Coun- Fayctte; 9, Yogua; 10, Marine; 11 amount of gas has been found, would try Dr. Cline continues) "The north- a soil having considerably more sand. 1C 11-1601 gumbo, boulders, gyp. Liirnltic; 12, Willis Point.- The black waxy soil is unexcelled for ltiGl-1085 gumbo and gyp. Nos. one and two are Plicstocene indicate that there were different ers of northvv cut Texas never amount geological conditions existing there to more than a cool spell along the cotton corn amandi ,other feed stuff. 1685-1738 gumbo with sand and gyp. Nos. three to six arc Pliocene ana land is without than in the surrounding area. const Many tropical fruits thrive in This character of 1738-1741 gumbo. ilinoccne Nos. seven to twelve are Considering all the facts above en- rh Unction, and with the exception timber, except alalone g the streams, 1741-1753 shale and sand boulders 3occne. this section, and . which are of minor importance. Ihe 1753-1787 gumbo. umerated, I suggest that the first of an occasional winter of moderate- ThillBe whol„..*,._e thickness of these lolc drilled by your company be put ly low temperature, flowers bloom mixed and sandy lands are easier to 1787-1808 blue gumbo. bedueds combineccombined. would b-e- bou---- t. 4,000 cultivate, hold moisture somewhat 1808-1822 brown shale, red gumbo cot provided they are all in place down 150 feet south of the Rosso outdoors in every month. Owing to better, are admirably adapted for GAS AND OIL south line and not far from his south- the equitable climate, outdoor exer- 1822-1874 brown shale, red and blue west corner cises and amusements can be engag- grain and forage crops, and are in Oil and gas is not peculiar to any A correct loir of the well should bo oil In without inconvenience through- the main quite as fertile as the black gumbo. geological formations nor to any waxy. These landji are covered with 1874-1926 red and blue gumbo, Particular kind of rocks or beds. It kept and samples taken and. preserved out the year. a heavy growth of mcsquitc, for tht brown shale. . occurs in sands, sandstones, limes- of the several beds passed through, * * * The summers over the ex- ....— ., 1926-1956 red gumbo, very tough. as the hole goes down and n dolly re- treme south portion ^xas^aro cleivring • ' ' Mexican labor '• stones, shales, and the igneous rocks. up 1956-1969 red bumbo. In the Gulf Coast region oil and gas port of the work made as it progres- 1969-1972 black sand (gus.) are generally found in sand and 1972-2026 red and blue gumbo. sandstones, but at Thrall, Texas, It The depth at which the top of a 2026-2030 brown shale, red """•'• found in a volcanic rock. dome would be reached if one exists •>30-2050 brown shale, red marl vvitn on this property, cannot be determin- Oil occurs in tho Llgnitic at _ Oil ,cd as there Is no uniformity as to the • can hiudly breaks of fine grained sand, blui- sand stone with pyrites, heavy gas in depth nt which they have been reach- ns an agricultural district, is no Cro'wthcr in McMullefl --- .. ed at othtfr fields along the Gulf coast. SI1 Yegau yields at Gonzalcs, Aguilarica. 2050-2057 blue and red marl, brow n and in Zapato County. Some smhll The driller should take all necessary , •:? r;":r, '!"3H""- •"•!=? s^rcrn^a."? seepages of oil has been found in the precautions to prevent a blowout such h 20*57-2085 blue and red marls as occurred at White Point. Jackson in southeastern Gulf Costnl Yours very truly, in Novemoer1 , JX-IPK "»£;••__ , , nnv n j)()te] Between these two cities 2085-2109 Hard blue shale. &^^J?i^ttF,„ '™™'""J •0 ~t"V" They are cool,'nor a hotel between these plain. W. F. CUMMINS. seat of Kle 2109-2120 blue shale. Oil at Botson, Saratoga, population o 2120-2125 blue marl. ^^^^^^SSSfcX-p^Tfa 2125-2126 blue sand rock. 2126-2129 hard sand, (gas) (blow fort witIfh thethemm at _tluthe. _vcrvery out) (20 feet over 112 feet derr ck 2537-2546 marl. Short Sketch of Cap s-S srs s-s/iss'sount ansd growth -ASS.. It is *Trt4Uonly 39 miles sout£h 25-40-2550 blue marl. Chnsti, is within easy Mudiled off and drilling continued.) Houton and San Antonio, 2129-2133 blue marl. 2650-2556 hard sand. Lock Oil Association, direct rail connections' with 2133-2150 red marl. , 2556-2571 blue marl. 2150-2175 red marl and brown shale 2571-2575 sand, sandy- shale, blue. )rilling Near Kingsville „., ,..- ...... s of the United States and 2175-2222 red and blue marl. iimfall ranges Mexico. The farms are well improved 2675-2592 sandy shale with breaks, ' mmlprii and attractive cottages and 2222-2248 blue marl,, shale and Financed by local citizens and a fr 0 hard sand. salt water sand. K?«b^ counririn the center of gZl"bar™ have been erected, the blue marl with brown 2592-2602 blue marl with whit* arty of Ohio capitalists, the Cap th^territ;,ry"re erred to in Dr. Clines farms fenced and cross-fenced, and lately derricks rise 2248-2267 iock Oil Association of Kinsville the territory renn u j many silos constructed.. razing purposes. • marl spots. and hard pudded in their first test in Aug- " miles west of Kingsvitle is | As n dairy territory, kleberg coun- | 2267-2307 Marl, shale 2602-2611 pack sand with boulders, st of 1921. Owing to changing the sand. , H the magnificent ty is only second to any other in I 2307-2320 blue marl. blue marl with white lime sand spots. orm of organization from an as- the King Hunch, the .Texas. A modern creamery at Kings- blue sand, 2611-2036 blue sand, shale with lime ociation to a corporation drilling h - • 'ville has a daily capacity of 1000 I 2320-2340 blue marl, was suspended for several months, largest most 'iron pyrites, boulders. and breaks blue marl. States, containing more pounds of butter and 500 gallons of KLEBERG OIL AND GAS COMPANY 2340-2366 blue marl, lime. lowcver, good progress has been the United ice cream, and it consumes all the 2630-2640 hard blue, shale, limo, made and the test is now drilling than 1,300,000 acres, and grazing 2366-237SOOU-iSOl3o rel vdu an(*..d» blu—• —e - mar" l_ , , cream that can be produced on the 2373-2390 red and blue shale, blue blue, marl, sand rock. round 3600 feet. more than 100,000 cattle. Ihe old many dairies and farms, over the 2646-2066 hard sand, lime. It is stated by the management longhorn hoa been displaced by the county. This cream is collected dally BRINGS IN FIRST PRODUCER IN gumbo. 2666-2674 "hard sand, lime. hat this well will be drilled to a Hereford. Shorthorn and Jersey on 2390-2401 blue marl. th,U portion of the ranch ying wh- by motor trucks. Dairying and live 2401-2421 red and blue marls, for- 2674-2680 blue marl. depth of at least 4500 feet unless oil stock interests form a very impor- mation changing frequently in colors. 2686-2692 sand with pyrites. n paying quantities is found at a y Sample from bit at 2418 .hows,choco- 2680 2688 blue marl, lime. csscr depth. THIS SECTION OF THE STATE 2692-2696 very hard sand stone. The test is located about 0 miles ™lS fe=5Kr"H: SrSSsS^H late marl, very elastic, heavy gas 2696-2705 hard blue sand stone. most important and profitable in Kle-jly true t at many•armtrs e e _i_ tt _ _L_ *.»(•*» ^MtS» southeast .of Kinsville. The location berg county at its present status, entirely upon agriculture The Kleberg County Oil and Gas Bloving" the rig over 600 feet the and blue marls and 2705-2718 rock. was selected by Prof. S. F. R. Sur Company was organized June 19., No 2 well was spudded and drilled 2718-2730 blue marl. of San Antonio. 1919 by Chas. H. Plate, Chas. H. to a depth of 2126 feet, where aBh 2464-2473 red and blue shale, hard 2730-2758 blue marl, blue shale. o flow was encountered, 2473-2477 sand, sand stone, pyrltos 2768-2782 hard sand, pyrites. Plate Jr., Sam Sellers, Ben F. Wil- heavy gas 2762-2707 blue marl. son, Robert Kleberg, C. M. Allen, J. throwing mud and. water over, the 2477-2489 blue marl, lime. 2767-2772 red marl, white limo Francis Oil Trustees Is C. Nolan and Marcus Phillips. derrick. The drillers finally succeed- 2489-2491 blue marl. ed in shutting off. the gas and the 2491-2508 thin stratum limestone, 8P Composed Principally of Financed entirely by local capital to a deptn ci limo, sand, sandstone, granular gyp, 2772-2780 blue shale, sand, pyrites bearing form- pyrites in cuttings. 2780-2810 blue marl. 2508-2520 blue marl. 2816-2827 blue marl with sand ana California Parties 2620-2523 hard sand, pyrites. on pyrites in breaks. 2523-2526 blue gumbo, red.marl. 2827-2833 blue marie with pyrites The Francis Oil Trustees Is com- 2525-2434 hard sand, pyrites, soft 2833-2840 blue marl. posed principally of California citi- 2840 2847sand with pyrites. zens and although not in the fteld 8B2534-2537 sand rock. 2847-2879 blue marl. very \ortg have already shown com- 287D-2906 marl, chocolate, and mix mendable activity. ;ure red and blue. Their No. 1 well was spudded In Klebery County Court Houne. Klnpfsvllle, Texas State Railroad Commission the hole 2906-2991 marl. March 20, of the present year, and- 2991-3008 marl, red and blue. Is now drilling; around 1800 feet. At WThTSSber 3 well was spudded In 3C06-300D sand with pyrites. a depth of 1410 feet a very rood during December 1921, and carried 3009-3013 sand with shale. showing of oil and gas was'encoun- a depth of 2150 feet, where cas- Oil came In at 3013 with heavyteredt ' g was set, and the well temporar- water flow, making 300 barrels or Scouts for many of the big com- For Full Information regarding KingsviUe and Klebiirg ily held up to permit the drilling of more against heavypressure of water. panies have visited i the Klmjavllle the Francis .Oil Trustees well Later Through,fear of flooding field hole field, and a great number, of them on, the well is to be completed, and was plugged with heavy mud-under have already acquired protection ac- it i« felt by those Interested that direction of State Commission and reage in Kleberg county. County Address Chamber of Commerce, Kingsville Tex. the test will come in for a producer well abandonded. .

NEWSPAPER! WSPAPfcRI Sunday, June 25, 1922 THE SAN ANTONIO LIGH Classified and Real Estate GTITT.TT .. xJJJJJbi

VIEW OF KINGSVILLE BUSINESS

ffJK >'f*- nj^" V* 1 r^

, ,. WA'G. . HOOUSE--

Fifteen Years Ago, Site of Kingsville Was Wilderness—Founding of Town Fol- lowed Coming of Railroad—Growth /•//CAf SCHOOL /3u/L O//VG- - G/rr OP // Phenbmenal—Many Important In- dustries—Center of Great Agricul- tural and Dairy Section—Fine Resort se at Hand—Kleberg County, Formed in 1913—King Ranch Largest in Country.

I'roliflbly Micro arn fc.w other townw !u >ps of (l\c Gulf (.'oust' Tjities which Texas, or in the entire country, for '<•« employment, fo fiOO mm. Here th&t matter, «'lter« (lie citizens nre ..,-.lled mcclmnirn ninke iilmost auythini; Mich firm helicvors in themselves and needed by the roilrotid company in (In Iheir c«j mm in illy as in Kinn.svJlle, liie opmiimn of its various; HIICR, In ad 1 ait ion to the whops Ivingsvilln is thi> county uenL of Klclierg county. I 'very hcndqinirlers niifl division point for the CATTLE one in Kfngsvrllc is a hearl-nn-1 smil llnlf (.'onst Jinep. TJin Kenerjil offii.'ca ImoMler, from thfi youngest to the old lire housed jn n mngnificent two-story fst, nml it is thin progressive spirit that concrete am] steel linildnig in the in putting Klohcrg county on (he limp 1 1 heart of the city. In tliiy building COTTON MH.LS Kinfcsvillc in truly a city tlmt is "so -! more than 100 people nre employed. to Itself. With (he morn [linn l;~0 trainmen infik- imtienf3. Bnilrflngp, wiin'pmert and Dairy COTVS, lieof cattle, hogs and sheep Vttr sheer cncrpy nml tfctei-minnlion, in^ tluiir/lLOiueR in Kingwvillc, the, lo«ru the inhaltitnnifl of KinjTKvilta and Klc- grounds reprcsoot a tot(il investment on the King ranch wore judged the luiH npproximnlely SOO who nre eou- uf nearly ?50,(100. first day. lerg county undoubtedly li.avr few "ictcd with the rjiilromL ccinals. .lust 3H years apo the. nrfsent KinKWlanch Famous. The second day, itio county agents site of Xinfttirllle wns n uiJdorne.-iss lOslabllsh Co-ni>erniivo Da^ry. Xo r3c-scrjp{irm of Kleberg ronnty anil their hoy.i were carried to Iliviern. - \\ itli no ttlfin of liuninn limitation. Another forward titep Inken by would hn complete without mention of a prosperous Hi tic community about "With tlic romiiiK of the nulroad unnie .-InHMVille ivas the cstnblislimeat of a the fiunous King ranch, which pi-obnbly fifteen miles south of Kiiifisville, where the first unttlcrH who founded n (own cn-npcralive creamery for ninkiug dairy is the largest individually-owned ranch tliev indeed stock of Thco, V. Koch, Wx'»' '.^ f* and rmmrd it in honor of 1he f unions product n from cream in-oflucod by in the putted S^itea nnd one. of the owner of large rnneh interests and de- 1*3 * *3 « •- ) taltlomiin, Opt. Kichnnl King, owner Kfctierpr county dairymen. Tdis ea(er- Jurgest in the world. Tlie ranch ccn- veloper of Uiviera bench. is' <^%^v^v^ 1^4 of Santa (Jcrlrudis ram:li. Tlie new pi'iso \irovcd n success from tlie Marl, KiwtN of more tlinn 1,000,0(10 ncren in After inspection of the Koeji filoek, '[$ * «llk¥, "jA*rf-*/ (own experienced a iiheiminaiml firowtli mid in now, lilie tlie cotton mill, find- the center of which is'one of the most the boya were ttiken lo Riviern lieach ami by ]D10. liml a impulntinn of more iiiff .it impo<;.4ili!e 1o supply ail Ilie nnlatinl rnneh houses in the world. demands for its products. wliern they enjoyed a dinner as guests *" .•*'« Hum .'ilOO. Tt is CHtnuntcd Hint KmBS- The ranch lumje, the home of Mrs. Tf. of Mr. nnd Mrs. Koch »«d Inter, a villo now has n population of more dinn T.ho eromnery (urnw out on the av- Xf. King, willow of the late Captain HliflO, nil of whom nre industriona nnd crnjre of ^f»,0()0 ponntlH of butter n King nnd of Tt. .7. Kleberg, the gnifl- swim in Baffin buy. \v-nbidinj;. montli, in addition to n largo qufinUly ins genii us of the Kinp i\slate, inoi-e Tn the vicinity of Rivicrn nml in * ,J(Ktcljorj; county is (he home of liiR of ice cream. It hns the distinction of CiONoly resenihlea n New York mansion other scctionn of the c.cmnty, Komn of DRILLING- men «)><) coiisnjnenUy, thing? are done tmying the highest price for crenin of f h an n T. ex as rnnch house. \ t was the finest grrtpe, frn'M, orftugcs, pine- FOR O?L in n biff wjiy. I'rnJec'lM nre under hi teen any creinnery in Month/west Texas, cunNtrnrlci] at cost of nearly ^riOO.OtXl. rtpplos nnd other citniH fruits w IK* in a mnunei- tlmt would do «-rctlit to Duller pi-oduecd. by the crcatacry has There arc 21 liedroonm, each equipped found on the market arc grown. much JiifH'e tliiHily-iionulalcd ncetionp. Teceived high awards on scrftrnl tie- wi(U private hath. The Kinp rnneh J( there is no more rain for the nest Build Ciidnii Mill. ('fusions, in I'ontpclitlon with some of lins henn I lie -scene of many brilliant three, ov four weeks. Klchrrg eonuly riot many month* as«, fnrmcra nml tJie Jnrprst bultor tnanntnf.lurcrs in social nfftiirs in years gone by nmi farmers say they will luirvtut one of STOCK Juo CMG ON SA NT A Im^AncJJs men of KlebepR county de- the country. famous men have enjoyed Ihc hospi- the largest cotton crops in (he history c''ded tliey were tired of senrling their Or her important industries include tality of the Kiuga and KlebarffK, Tlie .of the county. An excellent pram nml cotton to the1 Kast to he converted Into nn ice plant of forty tons cnpncity, iianin Jvlclici'e, it is inlere-stinR lo note. til run yield already is assured. mil n u f nc t n red prod net s nnd sh inncii liRht and power rdnnt of 1200 hormv Is pronounced "Klahurg," ns in ''ehiy." "Klplicrg count v cattlemen Eire wiving Imcli lo Iliem at n RI-PJII cost; so (hey power capacity, municipally-owned wa- Ann! her fainouw rnnch near Kinj-s- tlio drought problem in two \vay«. Jn 5ft about to liuilfl n cotton mijl and if r nysreni with more than twenty ville is llint owned liy the Kennedy the firHt place, they arc plnntniB utitlxe 1lie Kront ml Ion production of miles of innins supplying pure arlefnnn rotate. This ranch is noted for UK Uhoilca RrusH which is an excellent nU- water, cotton oil mill nnil liotllliiR \\ondoi'fn] itmnlinpH colleeleil liy the ycar- around fornee crop; (hen they nre Now, in innnv towns of the size of works. _ There arc n. number of iminller owner in bis (ruvels, croNNJHff Uifl Hriilima ivitJi Ihoir beef />V^ KiiiRHvtlh-, the finanriiif; of unch nn iiuhiwIi'ieH, including two Ijnkcry Hhops, Of the million ncres fttmpriHinpf the i-atllo. The type ficcurei] from tiie I'litcTprlhO ivould hnve been considered M'inting nnd puhliFhing lionse. lent her King rnncb, ninny tlinusaiuJH »re in a Itnihina, it is claimed, cnn utnnd drouth ^ in-xt lo iinnoHsiule. But » Kronp of the and harness ftjjop, tin wliop and puolt- high state of cultivation. 1C is esti- nnd heat nincdi better limn the ordinary town's* most prfi^rei'Hive huHincss men ing plnnt. • mated (hat more. Hum 100.000 >icarl of 1 sleer and rcachc-s market in a far bel- got tO!j;<-[]i<-r, n»bscrilici] (lie jjere.ssiiry, Kin^svinp him fine Jiolel^, nebooJs cnlfJr Ijrnr (ho Kinj,* );nn)i!, ,1 finniinR ter condition. amount of money and \vi1hin a nhorl "lid chnrcheH. Thci <'n»n Ittcnrdo IIo- *• W." time, the mill wns built nnd plueed in (ol 3« one of the finest of its nixe in 11 in (lie intention of the inannKfi'-s Kxpoct OiJ Field. Klnberp county has nn area of more operntion. the state. KiiiRfiville hns a modern of Hie Kins estate to subdivide niti.'h 1 ..lust three inonthn old, the new en- hfgh Hcliool Imildlng, the gift of MPK. of the much eventually mid sell it in tlinii 301) square miles or 047.000 neve*. ferp/l^e i,n runninp nlfiltl ntnl dny and 11. M. King. Tncre are churelieft of [rnets for farim'ni; aud dnlry inirpoaes. K \vdM tfikcti from (1m so»t)ier« porlJon unable fo supply the demand for it-s l)i'nc'ticnlly every ilcnominnUon. Ttie They run Hi at the time of Hie denlh of of Nuecost county, An^nst 27, 3013. product^, OrdcVK nre received fmni an county »leiiarinieni« arc honied in a Cnplain Kins;, consisted of not more A factor tlmt tuulniibtcdly vnU cun- fnr distant couitlricH n* llrnxil nnd fine^ court liousc built nt n cost of than 30,0(11) neros. Under Ilio maniiRC- li ilnite much toward the development JVru nnd n Ini-tc part of (he output of merit of Jt. .T, Klehprc, it lias hern cn- of Kinfisville and Klclierg county t* the, mlllH if marketed in lh_e North Just an inhabilflii1« of Kh'berc .'nrped to J(H prc.scuL Kr/.f. At one iiatnvnl ga^. Nntnral gns was discov- ^^m nnd TCast. Tlic new enterprise given county believe.' in doing things thor- time, there were nearly l.fiOO.OtlO ncres ered near KinK^viltc two yoara ayo and & n employment to more than TOO men mid oughly, they Ijdic'vc in being IcaderH in in Uio much but Home 200,000 net-en recently wns piped inlo (he cHy wliero >vo[iien, which muuber will 1m enlarged any movement for the good of cHy and linvo lieen sold in (be last few years. il is being used for domestic nnd in- ivilfi Ihn o,Tj>nnj;Jon of the plant. county, Jt, is therefore in(eres(in;r to Kingsville was host ln.st \vrefc I" dustrial purposes. For a town which doen not pnrtieu- note that Klobrrtf county wa.s (lie first county a sent!) and members of hoy**1 KiiiRSville iH confidently expcctliiK COWS Inrly Fiscrilie it« r^nmUablft ^fowth to in til* Htatc to efltaldi«h n county IIOH^ cluha from (en Southwest Texas coun- n large oil field oil field to lie. opened tlie, developmrnt of innnnfnclnrinjT, iiitnl under the McCjreRor-Colouilt law. ties on the occnwion of (he flrat annual ;it its doors; {n the near future. Se>v KilKHville !m« nn timtnunlly lorfjo TlispiMl wa« opened at Kitifisville diKiriet aloe]; judniiifc contwt. A nnm- pinl test \yells1_ nre being drilled, any iffa yea iv alter I lie Inw lifetime cffec- In'.f of fitock yicteiny experts frotn A. nne <»f wtitVIt tt is rfflitiled, may top JarKrit plimlfi imhintty la the 'live, with nccomniOflftttonB for forty nnd M. CoHc^o. were alno prcaent. gusher vroduclLoti nt any moment.

/ SAN ANTONIO THURSDAY MORNING. MARCH 5. 1925. DERRICK MATERIAL POLICE CAR HITS TRUCK; Rehearing Asked IS BEING ASSEMBLED MAN THROWN ON STREET Rudolph Xovo, 310 Speed Street, Family Wins Baby Beef Laurels FOR CUERO WILDCAT was.Jbruiscd slightly about the 'body 5761 In Ranger Case shortly before dawn Wednesday morn- / *^4*tai&?'4.& Special Correspondence to The Express. ins when, lie was thrown off a truck ClffiKO, Tes., March -4,—Geologist,- driven by Gc-varro Soldano. 710 South The first step-- toward appeal ot 20' years ago located a drilling site Pecos Street, when it collided with '[ESS OIL IN 1924 the ranger injunction case to the Su- less than 30 yards from the spot where (lie police emergency oar driven by preme Court of Texas was .taken on the test well of the Yoro Development Lonnie Crow. Tho accident occurred Wednesday when D. B. Chapin, at- Company will be sunk near Edgar, at the corner oi Navarre'and Houston torney for J. E. Elgin, filed nn ap- nine miles northeast o£ Cuero, it be- Streets at r>:30 o'clock as the police World's Production Slips, plication for rehearing in the Fourth catne known today. car wa« on .in emergency run. The Coi'r't of Civil Appeals. Mr. Chapm Itiimorfe that the location selected injured boy was carried to his home U. S. and Mexico 84.3 hy- G. A. McGce, company scologist, by the police. aid if his motion is overruled h_ o_ will is practically the same as that chosen Per Cent of Total. take an appeal. by. geologists who made a complete The suit resulted from an injunc- survey of Cuero territory a decade i>fro liou issued by Judge R..B. Minor of have been current among the older set- P.y A-nociatccl Pro-is. the 57th District Court on'the appK- 1 tlers for sonic time. The property ;it large sale oC NJTir YOrtfC, M(i*v*h (.-TJi," Ameri- cation, of Elgin restraining State of thnt time belonged to John M. King, can Petroleum Institute Vi'oihu.mlny <•«• iicials from paying salaries and ex- JL Edgeworth is due ] now dead, Joseph Sheridan, about lij timaterl the world's petroleum produc- pcnscs o£ rangers on tlie grounds davs ago addressed a letter t'o Mrs. chiefly to two thing*— tion In 1021 «t 1,013,139.000 hurrclf. thnthat the law creating (htlie forctorce wa""^'KJ,,,s , nat j.Toplinopiin, , Mo,'askinMo.,' askingg fofor ththe compared with l.OlS.OOO.nOO bnrreln re- unconstitutional. The State appealed (,ocntipn of tilc geologists who made Edgeworth smoker* ported by tho Unltoil Rtntes Ccolcicrlc.il and the court of appeals reversed tlie thfi fim Kl!r,.Cy_ ^'jie location dc- Survey for 1023, a il<>crcriKo oJ! .^.T^l.COci i-uling of Judge Minor. ' scribed by Mrs.'King is low than 30 stick to Edgeworth; bnro-ln, or* 0.0 per cent. * ~' yardt-nt./ise frofvfimm tlithe ospo soot whort whe.re oth eth presene ureseut t Edgeworth smokers "The United Sin'.-* proc]u..-ei! 711,000.- well is to be sunk, and along the,I (100 barrels In 1021. or 70.5 per cent of Brother and Sister AUTO STRIKES WOMAN same divide, Mr. Sheridan report-s. boost Edgeworth. i ho total world's production." cnld the STEPPING OFF TROLLEY The property at present belongs to fusUtuto'K announcement-, "fn !!>??• tli" Race for Champion- Tom Burns. United States produced '732,407,000 bir- Mr. Sheridan, who 5s president of red, or 71.0 per cent oC tlie world pro- ship Honors at Show Seven-Year-Old Girl Struck by tho Buchcl National Bank of this city, duction In Unit yonr. Tin- United States Car Driven by and custodian of the funds of the Yoro production In 1021 hnnvlK. or 14.7 per <.-ejir of hooves and members 01 the clubs who seriously injured Wednesday after- tin- |r,l.iil iiroiluotlon In Unit year. Tlio. fed tho.ru nt the Hnby Beef Show held noon at 5:80 o'clock when she was to be set up within a short while. The 'h-rronHo for M^Tlfo h) i'£\ fiinonnto'J hit by a truck as she alighted from promoters of the wild cat well have tft °,W-\o(Ki nrrri-lK or (1.7 ln-r ci-nt, by members of tlie clubs of Bexnr, leased fi.OOO acres of land in that sec- i:. S. nnil Mi-xli-o T,i-nd. a street car in front o£ her home. "In \\tel tin- I'nKi'il (!Mfi'« nnil Mc::- Medina. Frio and Gillespie Counties, Miss Thomas had just stepped oft tion'. Jro combln"*! producer! Kt.2 per cent of nt. tho Union Stock Yards Tuesday. the car end vras waiting for the cor tin: worlil proiluetlc.il, ami In 102" Sfi.C V.'r n-rit. Left to right they are Bill Con- to pass, when a Ford delivery truck BABY CITY OF STATE way, Bcxar County, winner ot til- driven by E. Dclmns, 203 Belvin fljriir,..i nri- ofta-lnl 'filial t'ic'ife.x or Street, srrni'Ic her. <,rrli'Inl otifiiiuiloH. In ,'onvrllni: l!i»fi--. grand f.-Immpiouship and first vrize GROWING, MAYOR SAYS uros nf o"rt:iin <>niintr|i<>i from lor.:; to She was taken to tho Santa Rosa Your Vision li:irrcN, i-fii::v:ili-n-i l.i'f .-itul.'il In fur • senior calves nut mi nurse cov* Infirmary in the police ambulance lifter October 1 ; his MMOr, May (.'nil- where it is thought that «hc is likely Settlers Buying Small Tracts and j Governs your mental stabil- way, whnsc auiinal won first: !'o to bo injured internally. Her leg was Plantinff Citrus Fruits Near ity, peace of mind—efficiency ii.l- tin- oil of i-in-'i country. All tiic fie- .vt-.:i,ir calves never mi nuf.se cov.- lacerated and she was bruised severely Alamo. l.y ih- l"i .('•'! sfir,:- nvo!o':ii-:.l Sur- crowded Jtill for I'hiiiiii'ioushin h"n- about, tin) upper jiart of the body. SET; v. \'." 1 DHnui'i was arrested and booked A cnmn:iri.~o!i ',( T.fs; nml 1f>-t p'-o- f,rs; Clemi "". Wurxbacli. Mediu.i Fran!; J. Denzer, luayc-r "f Alii mo, iliidioji In I'oiintrii"! mis net foMh in Cotiiit.v, winner ainonjr senior at the stalioii on 'lie charge of speed- which, except for Weslaso. is the CAPUKRO'S I!;.- fulli-i'vlii'.; ta'ilv: on itmviC cows I'm- jit Ic-iist yd . . ins. nnd Harvey Kay Wriu'hl, Vrio County, Cecil Melzger, age 7. of 127 Pnso newest city iti the State, was a guest hoi'lin? his p:-lt.p winner in tlie junior Hondo Street, was run over by a at the Lonier Hotel IVcdnescla.v. Optometrist oiiir clnss. truck iu North Hackbcrry Street at Mayor Ltcnzer declared himself de- for a thorough examination. In flu- center iiirturc fire Bill Coil- •1 o'clock Wednesday afternoon. The lighted with the Krowth and progress j BIO K. I1OCSTON ST. rvrxi.i :tt,Kin,oon way and May runway, holding their ear wan driven by Mclvin Wilburn, n of the baby city. linti-h K. Indies,. oij prize-winners. Tiioro lire 11 children negro. "Orfv prowth is steady nnd solid; in the Comv.-iy family, living JM miles The little girl was picked up by a we are »ot n boon) town," declared out on the CiiH-ln-n Koad. During tho parsing c;ir and taken to her home. the mayor. "\Ve are right in the cen- few day.-; the (Vimvoy calves were tit Her injuries arc .slight. ter of the largest citrus rnisiiiK belt STOP THAT the Unioa Stock Yards f»r the Baby Wilburn was arrested on the charge W, o.ooo in the State. There arc two coloni- ri.o.-ii ,(«K) Hi-ef Show, they j:i)t up at <1:' of driving nn automobile without zation companies operating in Alamo, P.. -1(10.01)0 o'clock I'.'ifh nifiniiiig in nrrter to do license. bringing in prospective- Bottlers from ITCHING their chores :IMI{ tniiko it to San An the North every two weeks. Two . Do not bo embarrassed and hurnil- •r_'4.»oo tonio in time to water, feed and curry weeks a?;o one of those companies their animals. May, who has bobbed intcd by a sliin disease tbat can be re- SOLDIERS TRY TO SELL sold .$170,000 worth of land. lieved by the use of Blue Mar Reme- . halt: and who I'M as pretty ns any mod- "The best of it is thnt the new 170,000 ern clay flauper who does not know STOLEN AUTO TO COPS dy This clo:in, ontiscptic skin reme- 74,O(Xi people are buying small 10 to 20-acre dy Lna relieved sufferers from Ec*zc- SI/NX1 the first principle* of cjirinj: for bub.i ] tracts, and are planting them to cit- ran I'cti, Tottci'. Ringworaj, Poison . n.ono beeves, milks 10 unw.s c;ac;h morning Two nllngcd automobile thieves rus fruit at once, Most of them arc On I: OW Sorrs nnd otbcr skin dic- Culm •1.0(10 and she did not get a respite from her nicked tlie wronjr suspect'* Wednesday moving right on the laud, and that's c-iscs. Jt is different from tbe ordi- Others 100,000 work in order lo get off to S.'m Au- afteriiopii wiied tbey apiiroiielied De- nitry >kin treatment, ax it ncnetnups tectives Sclioeustciu and Harris on .1 thin^ that njakes for permanency. tbe s!;in :mil iminodiately relieves i at tonio and her baby bc.-ef during the | It also tends to knock out the specu- terrible itching. Will not stain cloth- show- period. 'Bill Conwny has many the «:i«:ilc o t nnn nutomobilnutomoo tbata t haa d "• -----""-•'.• : who ins and has a pleasant odor. Sold on rarch-Iiome chore-:, too, rim'-ng them reponeil stolen nt the comer of In-'™ procl.nlic.s of .some folks * ~. . ~ ..—.I- #™ UrtT^ InT in n n tlie charge wife desertion in Blue Earth, Minn. at around nonn Monday run another LINE TO REAGAN FIELD The man had been in San Antonio ,-OTK at :j,0t>^ fMt after passing RutledgeWell ty pool, ot theft over ?•")() and were remanded Shows Rainbows to jail in default of bond. nbout three months. He was arrested HOW TO HAVE through six fr-ot of sand. The core is Spedul Corresrmmlcmce to The Eiprcsa. ^ William N1. Pahio, representing the in n Jooa! tinderrnkins establishment. lieing tested nnd should setting liner ""COLmiA'NViV'xTMardi 4.—A spe- The warrant charges that the man preparatory to builing be. wnrrnntod, On Kaufman Land crude oil purchasing department of In Reagan Field cial train bearing n crew of nbout 10S the Beacon Oil Company of Boston, GENERAL HERNANDEZ left big wife and three bnby -children Hie well will be bailed. men. tents, hcddinir and other equip- Mass., is in the city and has been six months ago in the -Minnesota A CLEAR HEAD The Humphrpys-Boyd on the \\ ai- ment of the Humble Oil Pipeline Cor.i- town nnd cnme lo San Antonio._ The •W. K. liutledge, drillmg on the looting over the market situation and REPORTED CAPTURED thall tract SOU feet from the Penn, Special Telegram to The Express. liany arrived in Coleman last week supply of oil froin this part of Texas. man was arrested on telegraphic in- si-t casing and eementcil Sunday night BIG- LAKE, Tex., March 4.—The nnd after breakfast at tho several [ Kaufman lease in. Somerset is down Antonio Uei-nnmk'i!, a rebel general structions from the chief of police of Here Is What You Hare So Long at midnight. Tliirty-six boars ternii- University Oil Company, five miles cafes wore conveyed to the J. W. dates i around 2,000 feet and debating Clark & Humphreys arc nbout to who has been operating in the- State Blue Earth, Been Seeking. jintin.e on Tuesday will be allowed for properly, 21/;; miles south oC Coloman. north of Bis T>aki>, after being shut start n test in Wilson County, n few of Guerrero, Mexico, and 31 of his lhr> C'-nivnt t«i SIT. nnd then the voll where a tented city bus been erected hole is above the Austin Chalk ami miles southwest from Kloresvilli*. The followers, have been captured by fly- clown fov several days waiting for the DOG BEING EXAMINED Do you tret op In the moraine wltli • • Ml l,i- drill''!l i:i :»''' tested. 01 headquarters. ! has bcc'u having mo:-i" or less showing derrick has been rontrijfted for it is ing Federal columns at Kl Narnnjo, s stoppccj-up nose? Are your breatbins •fho J'iiri-::'t "f Mines jtavi.* i;ili*r- mjor companies to send representatives iictu.'i! constL-.-K-Iinn ivoi!,- on !hr |oC g:is ami oil from 1.500 feet down. understood with Fred Dcn'tler nnd •">0 miles from Chilaps, snys an official AFTER BOY IS BITTEN pipeline of the company that will ex- passages clogged with a cold? DOCS (••ting figure, ronocrnins the Wno.l- here today for an examination of t'ue Il WHS started originally with the in- the teat will be spudded in within a bulletin from the offices of President yonr bead feel choked up and do!l? l.iue depth nt Pi.welT and Itioliland. tend from the Bis Lake oil fields in „:,„.,„.ntio'n! vcf. drillin„g to the Edwards short time. Mutarco Calles. published in the news- A large Airedale dog is being held •I'hcrc the Woodbine is e,.r>S(l below holdings and tc; roe.-.siirf the clejitb of Reagan County to C« coo- order to build up nn entrapment nt C nt around 1000 but it was reported T.cou Hernandez and Andti-a Kocl- fiiseil witb tbe "cubcb" or other «Im- eticotiragine well drilling outs Work is soon to he resumed on the rigue?.. Abnun Sariohez to Death. the Perm's location. proven territory. ^ fid<1 .Tolm Reed Sirkol and Nonine Wig- The trial of Rafael Garcia, charged il.ir clgarettea. The next few days will tell the talc Hoicourt oil well, about 14 miles from It Is HO simple to Inhale thl» pleas- This well should get tho pay from Eagle 1'ass on the Del Rio Koud, The s with murder of Abram Sanchez, is as to whether Bazette >.« going to pre- — u^«. —- ^ nboul jUfred Edward Taylor anil 1511.1 the Texon sand about 2,823 to i-'.S-lO well is down nbout flOO feet and was 300 barrels daily. expected to end in tbe 04th District ant nnd soothing smoke. Much more vent a further increase in Mid-Con- feet. The well will be shut clown to four miles south and a little east of convenient than uslnz eprayi. washes. abando-ncd about a year ngo on ac- where M. E. Glasscock spudded in a Bennett's No. 1 Fichelt is flowing ".Tesns Sandoval ami Mrs. Jlarla Cas- Court Thursday. Garcia is charged tinent crude prices. make arrangements for pipe line con- count of n fishing job. At that time 000 barrels, Oxford Oil Company's telluno. with stabbing Snnche:* to death at douche*, etc. nections with the Big Lake Oil Com- test Wednesday morning on the Bins No. 1 Harrison SOO barrels nnd Vac- OhiirJIc TowntcncJ and Mre. Alice If you suffer from catarrh, caUrrhal the ?as pressure was terrific. The gas tract for Lefevre & Storey. Thompson. Brazos and Chihuahua Street March pany nnd to erect storage expecting to pressure has increased and when the uum's Barrett No. 1 dropped to 2,800, :>5, 1924. Garcia has pleaded self- ticufncsa or arcs subject to treqntnt bo completed in about one week. The cup is opened oil nnd muddy wntcr is giving the field nt this time a total of KKl'OHTEB. defense. The case is bciuft tried with cold), get from any.drog «tore * co»- oil fraternity expect this to be the March 3— To Mr. uiiU Mrs. .lose Her- forced out. 4,700 barrels, all pipeline oil csccpt rcrn. 1111 Monterrey Street; girl. the regular jury, the State having vonleat pocket Bl«« package of D*f- long looted for extension from the It is estimated that oil is stanuding HERE AND THEREIN OIL Bennett's Picket Xo. 2. ' February SS— '.Co Mr. nnil Mrs. An- waived the death penalty. Blosscr'B Cigarette! and prove tor yoor- present Big Lake field. 000 feet deep in tho hole and that the tonio Macl.ie, T04Vi SoutU recos Street; dcir tfielr pleasant, 6cneflcl«J efftet. well will make considerable oil if March 3 — To Mr. and Mm. Escci'liel The amatl sire packs «e. eont«lnln* Insist on cleaned out. Mr. Boicourt is soon to Walter G. Clark of Dallas has had (Advertisement) Sallnus. 210 South ConcJio Street; boy. 20 dearcttce. Is' sold bj «H BASSETTE GASSER haul out more pipe, clean out the hole a derrick erected on the Scott farm March 1 —T o Mr. ami Mrs. Benno at 55 cents.—(Adv.) Schecl, 125 Catolpa Street; boy. (Advertisement^ MAKING 20.000..000 and go deeper and mnny predict he- in Bee County about five miles north March 3— To Mr. :imJ Mrs. John Hen- will bring in a good producer. Better Than Calomel ry Wilson, 22," Winnipeg Avenue; boy. of Beevillo and is getting ready to February U5— To Jlr. an,i Mrs. Cor- Special Telegram «o TSc Express. drill n wildcat test. Fred Dcutler, ncllui Cox, 303 West Texas Avenue; DON'T EXPERIMENT CORSICANA, Tei., March 4.—The rig builder, completed the derrick a widely heralded Bassctte development Thousands Have Discovered Dr. "February £8— To Mr. and Mrs, Wil- took a decided turn at 11 a. m. Tues- few days ago and ,1. C. Hughes, drill- liam CarU'.r, HOB Avenue B ( boy. WITH' 'PIMPLE CURES" day when the Pcnn Abslicr well blew ing contractor, is moving in a rig to Edwards' Olive Tablets Are February 27— To Mr. iiiul Mrs.. T/eun S!n" 108 ''SouUi Alnnu> Street: girl, A Cougb Medicine 'PHILLIPS" MILK in when bailing nt 3.0SO feet, making drill the well. The tract is' under- £>o you think so little of your deli- March 2 — TIJ Xly.. anil Mrs. :m estimated $20,000,000 cubic feet stood to comprise nbout 0,000 acres a Harmless Substitute. R." Mor"Cir. 10(! Cimipeclic: street; hoy. cate skin and face aa to allow yourself oC gas-and COO barrels of salt water. o£ Jnml and ntljoins n tract blocked Jf:irch S—To Mr. .-m up for the No. 2 well of ,. _„ coughs, bronchial asthtnn, blotches, bumps, "breaking out," - Unless you ask for ".-...-,.•..»-- the Tonn is drilling out tbe plug at '• uKed cu'-h year colored1 tablets arc the result oC Dr. Ed- the Son Bait Petroleum Company on •arclB determination not to treat liver coW or flu cnugli*. . ' eczema, cte. Black and White Oint- may not set the orininnl Milk ol 3,014 feet and has n. 50-50 chance for th.m nny othei- the Shiner ranch in McMullen Coun- inl bowel complaints with calomel. ment, and Soap, have not only Btoo4 Magnesia prescribed by physicians for production. The Colonel in construct- ' February IB—To and 'Mrs. .Tosc Creosote Ktops germ growth anil BO years as an antacid, laxative, ty. It is about 900 feet northwest The pleasant little tablet* do the good , _- .„, N In (I hpalinir Brent—combined with thiss test, but: you are sure of it;— ing storage tank nnd the cotton belt ot the No. 1. The Xo, 1 found shal- that onloimM docs, but Have no "=»< "f.'" ( r3ir'n«7y 1°>- n'ni! Mrs. Kil- the other ingredients gives_ you « when you know that they tire scllfnn has gangs and teams laying approxi- , Itopttuse at the tremendous Kate of more thnu 25-cent'bottles, also 50-cent bottles, low production in wildcat territory ,__octs. TheJR ™ 'ciilii'mel S'iicy take! ward ItlpMlm-'S cnueh m*«lrine for hroncliitis, bron- mately a mile of sidetrack-age, while yon can rely two million pucktifes a yenr. contain directions—nny drujf "•"" — at n .depth of 1,500 feet but drilled fiold nt the trouble nnd quickly correct j boy. cJilnl asthma. coW. fl'-' and chronic Thi- way they are economical!-? (Adv.) the telephone company has its district on ft to stop down to below 1,900 feet in search of It Why cure the liver at the expense oouglu. Oon't tske chances of • superintendent watching the wells of tho tooth? Calomel sometime* Dluys cnnjrh devolopint: into (.erious luns priced, in 'liberal • packascfi, has helped the cough n deeper sand and- bigger production. William x:ilrlch, '82 years old. Con- 1 to make them so popular nlonc witn havoc'with tho ItnniH. Wo 'lo Ktvons VOI'.*i\ f rouble. Emnlsio * antiseptic proper- with his staff preparntorr to makms The No. 1 fs shut down now wafting liquids. It is best not to take ™lomei. nTf n (heir dciieiidubility. The We tin suitable instnlation nt Kerens. and check I,ct Dr. Edward*;' Olivo Tablets lake its \d'n Lvons, -.10 yearn old, Robert 15. ties «t at .the cause. TfTon . y Ointment contains three times M the* drilling of the No. 2 to the shal- Green Memorial Hnnpltal. V catisfied your mnne.v will be* refund- much «s the 25c size. All deilcri A decision respecting whether Bas- the cold low sund where it is proposed to brlnj PlilCG Florence K»toll SmMl, 20 years old, ed. Iiook for copyrighted traoe-i sette is going to prove nn immediate HvaclaelicR. "dtiTljiCsi" arid that lazy OTfi Santa Clara Street. have both Blnck «nd White Ointaawl NO NARCOTICS. in a well nnd test tho possibilities in *.,«llnx come» from constipation ami a Gimdalupe Acosta, 23 year* old, 230 on every bottle. Eagle Remedy iind Black and White Sottp, *• menace to further Mid-Continent production of the new field. disordered liver. Take. Dr. Edward* San ABtonto. T«as. erode price increases, will bo forth- Olive Tablets when you feel "logy and Soutu Frio Street. .•,•», f (Advertisement) •re called. "••'• ' Estimated production of tho Mi- "heavy" They "cleur1' olomlen nrnm Loomirdn. Brooks. 1 ynr o!0. Robert fAtlverbsement) . coming before the end of the present raiido field for the seven days ending And "uork uu" thu soirits. l^c and We. E. Green Memorial Hospital. •week- >