albuquerque morning journal, 08-27-1914
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Albuquerque Morning Journal 1908-1921 New Mexico Historical Newspapers
8-27-1914
Albuquerque Morning Journal, 08-27-1914Journal Publishing Company
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ALBUQUERQUE RMN(& J0U1NA J.VOl.THIRTY-SIXT-
t XXXXIII.YKAUN. ;.h. ALBUQUERQUE, NEW MEXICO, THURSDAY, AUGUST 27, 1914.. Dully ly Carrier or Mall Oo
Month. Single Copfcw, 5c.
TURKS RESENT ACTION
TAKEN BY ENGLANDEMBASSIES OF
POWEnSAT WAR
6EDI1Y Ill'JEEl! ALLIES'
AIL ID CMS HALIfJER,MOST
iMlsWITH OBREGON
'10 I1D ROW III
SOIJORfl STATE
EH GIVE
Washington, Aug. 'Jii. A. Kustuuillcy, Turkish ambassador, said todayti was without information a to thestand his government will take in theKuropcnn crisis, because of Interrupt-ed communication.
"Turk In h sentiment bis hcmi out-
raged," said th ambassador, "by thetaking over by the iSrltlsh fcovel nmenlof the two ureadititughtrf jum 'complet-ed In English ship ards for the Tur-kish government. The 'British navy
IS III OF 11 AS SEEI1IBS 10 SUIT
.1
CARDINALS PREPARE
TO ELECT A POPE
V MOMNlMa JOUftNAL aPBCIAL LIASIO ll
Rome, Auk. ml, 1'reparnllons forthe conclave which Is to choose asueccasur to the lato.PoPe Plus X.continued today. The sWth cotigtt-gu-- t
ion of the cardinals was held umlseveral newly urnvea members ofthe sacred college took Part in It.
Among them whs Cardinal Cavulo-am- i.
archbishop of Hlo Janeiro. Thecftnllnal said he had already sailedfor home from Europe when thenews of the pope's death reached himby wireless on his steamer.
Hy the Use of wireless, the cardinalsucceeded In summoning anothersteamer to which he was transferredat sea and brought to the continent.
The congregation today took theoath of secrecy concerning everythingrelating to the conclave.
Anna Surto, sister of Pope Plus,who was prostruted hy her brother'sdeath, has fully recovered and ex-
pects to leave soon with her sister tolive in Possugno.
4 did not need the warship,, and they HOUBH EU 'S EVESFrench Reports Say Invaders
meant everything to Turkey.) The ves.sels Just had been completed Slid wereready for their trials." '
NEGRO TeTuBUCIs"
. NOW FACING DISASTER
M MONNIN JOUNNAL PICIAL aillQ WiCLondon, Aug. 2 0 (1:17 p. In.)
Judge McCant' Stewart, of the su-
preme court of Liberia, called at the
Count Okuma Assures United
States His Government Is
Inspired Only by Highest andBest Motives,
NO INTERFERENCE IN' CHINA CONTEMPLATED
Heads Peace Society In M-
ikado's Empire and EntersUpon Var With GermanyBecause of Necessity,
High , Officers of Constitution-
alist Cause Pass Through,
United States by Federal
and State Permission,
MILITARY HONORS FOR
THEM AT FORT BUSS
Go to Arbitrate Differences Be-
tween Governor Maytorena
and Carranza's CommanderWho Are at War,
Are Meeting With SeriousReverses and DefendersAre Recovering Losses,
CZAR'S ARMIES MARCH
ON KAISER'S CAPITAL
Germans Claim ContinuousProgress in War Against
Allies, Reporting Defeat of
British Forces,
! American embassy in an effort to In
llirl Cartridge Seized.
New York, Aug. 28. United States
terest Amel leans In saving Liberiafrom distress through the destructionof the republic's trade with Germany.
."Two-third- s of the trade of LiberiaIs with the Herman emplte," JudgeStewart said. "Three hundred tler-ma- u
ships called at Liberian ports lastyear and took away rubber,, ivory,palm nuts nnd palm oil, filter anil cof-
fee. Wo hope tbnt America will putoil a line of steamers to relieve theCondition of trade stagnation that Isboun,i to result."
customs authorities seined 1 , 2 r. 0 rulecartridges in the crew's quarters nfthe' Ward line steamer Ollnda, be-
fore she sailed for Havana today.Four of the (Hindu's crew and thekeeper of u small water front am-
munition shop were arrested, accus-
ed of a conspiracy to export ammuni-tion to Cuba without properly label-ling and packing it.
MOHMIh JOURNAL IttCIAL LtAtCO Wlffll IS MOKHIM JOURNAL aPICIAL If atlD ilWashington, Aug. 28. The FrenchNw York, Au. 116. The lnlop-nl-
ent will print In Its forthcoming Issue j embassy today received the followingthe following cabled message from i dispatch from Its foreign office:Count Okuma, the premier of Japan; "The movement begun yesterday by
"I gladly seir. the opportunity to the commander-in-chie- f has been fol-se- n
l through the medium of the Hide- - j lwed itll day with the greatest en- -
TURKEY MAY ADDU. S. CAN STOP
El Pusn, A". 28. For the flrHtlime since the beginning of the consti-
tutionalist revolution, Alvnrn Obregonmill Francisco Vllln, rebel generals,crossed the international line herothin afternoon and were received withmilitary honors by ,J. J. Pershing,commander of the American troops.
A troop of cavalry with drawnswords formed a guard of honor forthe, two constitutionalist commandersas they were driven from the Interna
J0 WAR FLAME BYill BY HOLDINGj penitent, a message to tne people or , thuslasm and the enemy Is unable to'the United States, who have always wt,, it. The Prussian guard was
helpful and loyal friends of Jit-- j tacked terrifically by the AlgeriansIpun. i and suffered great loss. The Prussian
i "It is my desire to convince your! attack against Nancy was unsuccess-- ipeople of the sincerity of my govern- - j fui. The Ilelgluns coming from Km-ime- nt
and of my people in all their j berse have been able, by un energeticutterances and assurances connected offensive movement, to recapture Ma- -
ADO GERMANYWHEATATHOMEtional bridge at quick speed to Fort!lillss, where (ienernl Pershing and hi
CLOSER VEIL THAN EVER HAS
BEEN DRAWN OVER PROGRESS OF
BLOODY STRUGGLE IN EUROPE
More Hopeful Feeling Prevails in England Over the Power ofFrance to Resist Attack and Reports Are Current ThatKaiser's Soldiers Are Meeting Strong Resistance Along
French Frontier; Russians Are Believed to Be Advancing
Toward Berlin and May Capture That City Before Teu-
tonic Invaders Are Able to Take Possession of Paris, Is Be-
lief Now Prevalent Among English Observers..
So far as can In- - Rloanctl frmn official announcement, the greatL'tttle line along the French frontier ami in continues to bethe scene of engagements Ix'twecn the opposing armies.
The nature of these engagements ami their results have notheeii maile public, beyoml the admission by the French war officethat in the north the French and Uritish lines have been moved backa short distance, as well as the French right in the region of St. Die.The French troops, on the offensive between Nancy and Vosges,are said to he making headway.
From Antwerp conies the announcement that the Belgian troopshave compelled the. Fourth German division, advancing southward,to retrace its stes. It is added in the official statement that theFourth llelgian division at Naimir has fulfilled its task of arrestingthe German column and allowing the Belgians to retire on theFrench line.
The French ministers under Premier Vivian! presented theirresignations collectively to President Poincare because they believedthat in the present circumstances the ministry should have a widerscope and comprise the best of all the republican groups.
Premier Viviani, at the request of President Poincare, immedi-ately formed a new cabinet in which Alexandre Millerand took theplace of Adolphe Messiniv as minister of war, and Thcophile Del-cas- se
assumed the portfolio of foreign affairs which previously washeld by M. Viviani Liniself. The new cabinet includes evPrcmiersUiiand. Douinergue and Rilxit.
London reports that" Togoland, the German possession on thewest coast of Africa, has surrendered unconditionally. ' ' Yt
A Bucharest report says that Tarnopol, an important town inGalicin, has k-e- occupied by the Russians, while the Russians them-selves claim that they have driven the Austrians back to the riverZlota Lipa, thirty miles west of Tarnopol and about fifty milescast of Iinhcrg, the Gatician capital.
Direct dispatches from Tsing-Ta- u, capital of the German pro--tectorate of Kiao-Cho- say that there is no evidence as yet of Jap-anese warships or field troops in that neighborhood.
lines an 1 to push back the Hermans toVllverve. ,
"The Russians are following with T ,, . .
great energy their move in Oallcla and j enSC OltUatlOll tXIStS 3t 101V
Iwith the present regrettable situation. j in Europe and the Fur East.
Jiiimn Reluctant for War.UnleSS FOOdStUffS Are Sent "Every sense uf loyalty und honor
r a r. - obliges Japan to with routed a cavalry division. The HerbsUreut Jiriluin to clear from these wa-jha- routed the AuHtrlunn from ha I
stantinople and Mobilization
of Sultan's Army May Be
Ordered Soon,
staff had prepared a reception forthem. A dozen staff officers accom-panied
"
the generals. ' .
Go to Settle How.Obregon and Villa will leave enrly
Thursday morning for Nogales, a,
to settle Internal disputes In thatstate. They will Journey throughAmerican territory.
The visit to Fort Rliss, as well asthe expedition through the UnitedStates to .Sonora had been arrangedby the constitutionalist agents here
Armies Must btarver ue-- r ,n.e enrnJ7 wno v. 'lri "present and future menace lnter- -
clare Milling Experts, RUSSIANS SAY TIIKV ARK J
MARCHING INTO GFRMANVjests, her trade, her shipping and herI people's lives.. "This Far Eastern situation is not
X v i . . . am mi . in. ISV MOHNIM9 JOURNAL SriOIAL LIAtID WlRI)
Washington, Aug. id. Tension Is soof our seeking. i t w rs., sug. iiie miuiHryh" 'he Russiani0u' embassy,i, u. v.n mv ,iuir n,ininln
ISV MOHNINfl JOURNAL SPICIAt. LIAtIO WICNew York. Aug. 29. The I'nited ,
In Constantinople that dlplo- -n..r,., ,.fflr.l..lu Thlo In. Sl.lu. rr,vor,,man, iit,l alnn h u.lll ... o..,,.U. ...i.l uu " UHTIOI It COIIHUIUte IUIIIK O I " u
aether with the Joint entertainment of hn Kurone by placing an embargo on Lenient f the neace society of Ja- - i iBKU,'d ,ho """In statement: Jmals there fear Turkey may at any
the Carranza men with Villa, was tak- - wheat, flour and other products, It pan I have consistently so endeavored. In eastern Prussia, on August 24. " "-- " " "''"'"Je offlelnllv nx indicating an accord i was asserted today at District Attor Jmlration ' tne line of tne river Angerap, ui- - ," ,
"X have read with loftybetween the two factions. General !ney Whitman's John Doe investiga- - j the fty niesHUge of President Wil- - though fortified for defense
A strict censorship lias been placedObregon. who at the Sonora confer- - tlnn Into the Increased tost of living. ; to , ,u.0,,iB n the subject of abandoned by the enemy without an
tti , . u f.n i ruu i..A,:i..t. r i,iJlrt ra a t... uti ii at lit nffr rpMiutfini'n. InKtr on the newspapers In Turkey wnlcnrut c?q win rt"M rn 111 v. ti i ion v u-- - viiirt, jiuHirtiiuf mi'iuuu, uc j m 111 ra j 11 y ...... - - - - - - -
ttr now controlled by the luiimirylion. PUlU itiuny imu n nmuriB winmi iiie jiniuiiy in in nri)Kn-- B, iu--
- llnti 1 ifrtr Mitllvt. .n.iM, vII, owoulU, be taken up other than those tinned wltnej to what trte effect j .'WP( Japan, are appreeiutivo ufi
itnsslnh hnittmi u,a '"'lri according to dlp- -troops The enemy
oispatches here, to create aiflsordef, "."t,",t"ln greut partly to-- ! feeling.retreatedpertu.ninK W "(Jl1 uuuiion inerwjwouiu u? ir Ainmia exijuruiift (he pirt ftntj tnutlveH that )ir(inited in ifwards Koeiilgsbiirir and mirtlv to-- !created by Governor Mnytorena'a up-it- o the belligerent nations. J'1"161' j , he head of your great nation and we The Turk lull eablnel Im V.-- i ilili bewards liostenbtirg. From tho frontrising against the newly establlsneu waru varner, presioeni or me r.ew willfe(., confident that its messageI Vi.i-I- . riw 1 in. a AVf'hiinvii an.f f!flnt.pft tween a declaration of war and thethe IliiB- -(if DrtelHburg and Soldaueentrnt irnvprn ment. i v. n ,..UUv. .n....,.n., 'n wlh toitiiinuLm,.n h i .......... ii... m.- -. air.
IktllfVO Peace ItCStoml. zauu'insm, preBiueni aim inunaKer wr j "As premier of Japan, I have stated;" ,""" and leaving lomntlc representatives ot the variousemy retiring to CatenateTh einedltlon of the Mexican lead- - Minneapolis manufacturers of flour, and I now again state to the people"l - ! of America and the world that Japan
powers are In constant conferencewith the government officials. GreatIlrituln nnd Itussla are endeavoring1. ' has no ulterior motive; no desire to
There was a big demand for flour in I ,,... h h, , ,,,.rlv. jto keep Turkey neutral. The Germanforeign countries, according to these I, z, : "Ing China or other peoples of ary amoassnnor, it is unuersiooit, nas m- -
several machine guns, ammunitionwagons and provisions.
"On the left bank, of the river Vis-
tula the enemy retired from the line,Ptock-Ientchiu- a, but further to thesouth his detachments yet undisturbedby th Jtusslun advance, retuined intheir hands, Lads, Pelrokoff, Konsk,Hundom and Pntoff.
Itlmated that while Germany wlsm.wltneaseg, with a heavy demand, too,in domestic markets. Mr. Zahrtnsklsaid there is a shortage of 400,000,000
thing which they now possess."My government and my people
their Word and theirTurkey to remain neutral, he believedthe Ottoman empire should mobiliseto prevent an invasion by Kussia,
lniuhola In Mi.. Tliiuulur, u;hBiit crnn , have givenP"'1k which would be as honorablyand that prudent housewives, fearing
Feeling is most acute over the enkept as Japan always keeps promises.a shortage at home, have been laying.
era will be made through three Ameri-can states. The governor of NewMexico late today gave his consent.Texas and Arizona previously hadagreed, following the permit given bythe war and state departments atWashington. The granted permissionwas believed to show that the Ameri-can government considered Mexicovirtually In a state of peace since thereexists a war department order pro-viti-
Mexican officers from enter-ing American territory.
General Villa wore his rough cam-
paign clothes, while General Obre-gon appeared in immaculate uniformwith smartly dressed aides. The mil-
itary band at the fort played the Mex
'OKUMA. "In Gallcla the enemy, on August try Into the Dardanelles of the German23, advanced his left to the line of (cruisers Goeben and Hresluu, tlreat
while rsritaln, Kussia and France not onlyon their right, tho Austrlans are fall- - 'requested ten days ago that if these
lair mosnin journal arieiAL liaiid wiatiIxiiiitiiii, Aug. 27 (1:30 u. in.)
"The allies In their present entrench-ed positions are as the anvil to theMuscovite hammer," declares theDally Graphic's military
War Bulletins. ing back before our advance. On thejnhlps were purchased by Turkey, the
In barrels of the product Instead ofbuying hy the bags, with a result thatthe price of flour has gone up.
Mr. Zahrlnskl declared the UnitedStates could dispose of Its entire flouroutput to France, England. Greeceand Turkey at any reasonable pricesand receive payment In gold beforethe staple was put aboard sleamshlpa.
.evening of August 23, the Husslans crews be sent to either Germany orI took Tamopol and strengthened their
mlmrff (via London, Aug. positions on the river 'Sered, affluent
great force, but, If It was, the Frenchsuccess shows that they are now Inn stronger position along this fron-tier, from which they will be drivenonly tiy great sacrifices on the partof the Germans.
A more hopeful feeling prevails InFngland as to the strength of theFrench defensive position. The re-
pulse the French suffered at Char-ler- ol
has been partly due to the de-
sire of the French army to achleVs
St. IVtc20, 10:241 p. in.) 'I lie tieininns in, of the river Dnelster.
Austria, but promised safe conduct.Today many of the German sailors arestill on hoard and 150 or mote aresaid to have been distributed aimingTurkish torpedo bouts.
The British government is observ-ing these incidents with much disfa
ican and American national anthems Not only would war in Europe end
'It Is good news," he continues,"that the concentration of tho nllieson entrenched lines within theFrench frontier Is complete and thntthe positions thus held are little less
which' were saluted by both American jf an embargo was placed on Americanand Mexican officers. The crossing of products, Mr. Zahrlnskl and Mr. Wnr- -
"On August 24, the commander-in-chie- f
reportej to his majesty an ac-
count of a brilliant encounter of asquadron of the Nljegorodakl dragoonregiment, which attacked a detach- -
Hi Killing district of West Prnsslunear (he Vistula river, ore fleeingwestward before the HuhhIiiii ad-
vance.I
Purls, Auk. 20 (II ;."( p. in.)- - Thethe fighting general, Villa, and Obre-in- cr agreed, but normal markets would
vor and the situation has been nggra than Impregnable. The Germans willfind that their nest move agulnst the...... Ivated hy the Inability of Heverul KnK- -be established at home and the prices
here go down. Mr. AVarner volun- -gon, the first leader whose troops en-
tered Mexico City, passed without dis ! ment of German scoutsofficial Matonie.it Ihh..,-- I by the ar "TV 1 Ush mer. hant hit.a to mm throughteered the ouinlnn also that such anl., ,,order or accident
allies will be much more difficultthan thnt which confronted them aweek ago,
(the Dardanelles even after the Orandv ' ,. - ., iifniftiii. ,1Mlv r.frni!inK wei'A tiiknn nrlM-- 1ifflcer. had given tho requisite per- -
Tho "'"'I'' lemhargo would bring tne w ram or me ,., tll no.,h (he iVaiH'o-IIrlllH- li
r.U'I, M1XKK StiATKI) FOR farmers upon the heads of the na-!li(- .s
haxe w) nM)m, )u(.k B "General J off re s troops will nowoners. The rest were killed.Russian dragoons had four
i mission. Bubordlnute officials-- dls- -'
obeyed the instructions In a way asAMBASSADOR TO MEXICO I Honal administration tr tney were ,MtiM-- . menbill- -''- - -- t .. i . iiney could not export gram io i',iuo)e, In n uuv our orreiisive
brilliant Incursion into Alsace andLorraine, which led them to weakentheir forces on the Belgian frontier.Having recognized the danger of thiscourse, they have now reverted towhat appears to experts to be a morelegitimate strategy, abandoning theirInvasion of the lost provinces andconcentrating their strength in thodefense of the northern frontier.
Much Is hoped from the unexpect-edly victorious progress of the Rus-
sian armies in I'russlu and the factthat the Austrlans have been com-pelled to abandon their campaign
but none of our men was evenPaul Fuller i Mr, V'fiur..a inn L iMtt l- -iwarner sain me i- - )(.,(M.n Sa,wv amiWaHhlnton, Augr. 26.-yet explained.'
cjreat Itrltaln has let It la knownthat If tho floeliPti nnd llreslau enter
lie devoting all their energies to astubborn defensive. They are the an-
vil. The Muscovite hammer Is gath-ering Its Immense force for a crush-ing blow in 1'osen. Hence It is mostimportant Hint the allies forces
of'New York, who probably will beiers' Assoeiation of North America. ,,l(wuyi ,. Ight, however, liaj 'il'hed by the enemy's sabres.... . .. (. ..... I. .1.. I.. "n'ttA U..m.t.... Iint, m.til ......a 1.. l.h... ...k- - .,,. m m. rv. w in neauauarters in riinaiiviionu, um
y I iF.,fiv- ii ..... n r..,."1? ... " - ... iniu .11 1'UI M:'l I u lirtl II w II JIt I HHUI ripw,i.rt. . rraui.innt witann todav that not attempt to fix prices. Kalph l . l. i.i..,t . I . 1 t ti 1. 1., Binii'nuut ill K't. km ,hu it.,- -' i .. ... .. i i. .. . . .... .....
lira region in ni. ! ....... .... . ...... .... .anoiini iney win lie iuei upon uy innCurl, assistant New York manager or ginning of the war the Hervtuns have
ni.) The: captured forty-thre- e guns, six howit1'lirlK, Auir. 2(1 (S:.'iO p,
wheat crop liai bet-i- i liarvexteil
English Meet..Neither Great Britain nor Russia,
however, has ussuined a threateningattitude, diplomatically hoping to per-suade Turkey to remain neutral, A
there waH little danger of a conflictbetween Villa and Carranza and thatprospects for continued peace in Mex-
ico were bright.Mr. Fuller probably will leave for
Mexico again shortly as un unofficialrepresentative of the American
should stand firm."The hummer Is doing excellently,
although the preliminary work Is ne-
cessarily slow on account of the Rus-
sians lack of facilities for mobilisa-tion.
"Neverthelis the progress thus
against flervlu. The belief la held hertlirouKliout I'rnnco according to In-
formal Ion collcctiHl by tho govern-ment. The cutting of the oat crop Is
zers, sixty-si- x ammunition wagons,four field hospitals, n field bakery aniln large quantity of clothing, shoes andhorses,
"There Is no definite news from thewestern frontier of the Germans.'1
that even should the Germans sue-- -few days ago the Jtusslun ambassador
ceed In reaching Paris, the Russians
another Minneapolis milling company,declared there was no combine to fixprices. He believed there was n possi-
bility of wheat going higher, he said,adding that European demand was a
factor in price quoting.
RALPHOFwell adtanosl. ilects ar In splendid
will almost as certainly reach Bercondition. fur made by Russia has exceeded thewas requested to censo using the wire-less on Russian vessels In the harbor.He acquiesced ruther than bring onan issue with his government.
lin.most optimistic expectations and thGermans are likely to pay dearly forRome, Aug. 20 (2 '.?.' p. ni, via
7:23 i. in.) How li'iiu' FredeGF.R.MAXV CLAIMS TO BE
V1M ALL BATTLESI'RI.XCH OKFI'.NSIVIO IS
fOXTINUttll IX IX) II RAIN KASKS CARBANZA TO AM-O-
HEH GVH I'KIESTS TO RETURN their under valuation of the Russianefforts.
"The outstanding fact Is that thehammer Is well poised for action. IfHE JED LOSSI London, Aug. 27 (2:20 a. m.) Th
French offensive continues In Lor-raine, according to a Paris dispatch
rick of Llp)e died In tim lighting be-fo- ro
Liege is described tersely In udlsmti'li riMflvcd licre today fromthe headquarters of Uie Germanarmy.. ,
The prince's infantry regiment was
Washington, Aug. 26. The Onr-mi- m
pmtmssy to.lay received the fol-
lowing wireless message from the Ber-
lin foreign office by way of Hayville,L. I.:
the anvil only stands firm the enemy
must bo speedily crushed betweenthem.
MADE CHAIRMAN
OF GDHMITTEE
to the Renter Telegram company, theGermans have suffered heavy losses.OF CASH BRINGS "Here Is the situation of the three The battle continues In the north,surrounded by the Belgians tinder the
walls of Mcge and lie was struck by sides Russian advance. At present
Vera Cruz, Aug. 26. ProvisionalPresident Carranza's local agent haspetitioned his chief to permit the re-
turn to their postB of 400 priests nnd200 nuns who are now refugees withinthe American lines here.;
The action of the agent was In re-
sponse to a request by Father FrancisII. Joyce; chaplain of tne Fourth ar-
tillery, U. S. A., who has been activeIn assisting the fugitive clergymen.Some of the priests are virtually des-
titute. Several of them have foundwork, a few as waiters in cafes.
two bullet while standing among his Fast Prussia Is In process ot no ng
"An English cavalry brigade hasbeen repulsed at Maubeage. An Eng-
lish division has been beaten off withcomplete rout of the division. ; Manyprisoners were taken.
"A French official communication
lll'.ltl.IN 1'rXM'I.F. I'LFK FROMABVAXCK OF RUSSHN8men. He died instiuitly. clenred of German troops, while in
I'osen another Russiun army is movParis, An. 26 (5:50 n. in.) dis- - irJCOrjGRESStVIEN
Ing almost unopposed and will soon
of tho twenty-fourt- h proves that the be within KiO miles of Berlin. Mean-
while In Ciillela, the Austrian troopslutU'h to the I lavas agency from Ant-we- pt
says It Is officially announcedthat a Zcpielln dirigible balloon are not making an effective resist
a nee." 'made another uttcniiit lust night to
Tendon, Aug. 27 (3:40 a. m.) De-
spite the German efforts to minimisethe extent and Importance of theRussian victories, says the Standard'sCopenhagen correspondent, "the Ger-mans apparently are by no meansatisfied of their security. A panloseems apparent In Berlin. Wealthyresidents are already leaving the city
V MOSNINa JOUIVNftL SPECIAL LIASES WIMC)
i. Washington, Aug. 26.- - Prospsctsof losing a day's pay for each day's
drop ImmiiIis on the city but that itfailed on account of the precaution-ary measures taken hy the Belgians. CIXtSKH VK1L THAV I VF.lt
absence, brought congressmen troop
eeil. BHPATCH TO mofMIM JOIILSanta Fc, Aug. 26. The republican
state central committee met hero thismorning and perfected organization by
electing Ralph C. Ely, of Demlng,
chairman; Lorenzo Delgado, of LasVegas, secretary, and Jose V. Sena,
of Santa- - Fe, assistant secretary.
The election Mr. Ely was madeafter Herbert W. Clark, the formerchairman, had positively declined re-
election. Headquarters for the com-
ing campaign will be established in
Santa Fe.
Ing back to the house today and the
French offensive on the Belgian lineand the Lorraine frontier has beenruined.
"The terrible effect of thehowitzers on the forts at Na-m-
Is not known here yet. The Ger-man (cavalry near Louvaln is movingin the direction of Calais.
"An Austrian corps attacked twoRussian corps south of Krasnlk hndcarried off S,000 prisoners, three col-
ors, twenty-on- e guns and seven mi-
trailleuses. The situation In eastPrussia Is not yet decided."
and hastening toward Scandinavia by
To Favor State Banks.Washington, Aug. 2. As a result
of a conference today between meni-her- g
of the federal reserve board andSenators Owen, Hoke Smith andVardaman, a bill will be IntroducedIn congress to reduce the amount ofeap:ta necessary to qualify a state
t for membership in the federalve rygtem from 125,000 to $15,- -
way of Copenhagen. A number ofthese already have passed throughtho city."
BRAWV OVKH WAR BOX K
Ismdoii, Aug.'"27 (2'20 a. in.) A
closer veil than ever seems to be
druwn over tho progress of the wue.
Little news has come to hand con-
cerning the operations on eitherfront. The Russia ns, however, ap-
pear to be continuing their advanceIn East Prussia towards Fosen, withthe Germans In retreat.
The only news Irom the Frenchside is that the French troops wereattacked along the Alsace-Lorrain- e
line, but repulsed all the attacks
FRENCH CABIXF.TIS IlEOUGAMZEna proviso that the capital
Geneva, Switzerland, Tuesday, Aug.25 (via Paris, Aug. 20, 11:43 a. ill.)
IetU'r to' Americans here from Ger-many Indicate that many womenAmerican tourists are stranded Inhotels tliere. They are deserllK-- asoccasionally mt on the streets without their baggage. In some cases theyliavc feold their plotlie for food.
Ixindnn, Aug. 20 (1:45 p. m.) The.second Issue of CIS.tXNI.OOO ($73,000,-OIM)- ),
In treasury Mils, has lieen an-oiI-
siiwss. The total applications,which Here priitH pally from banks,
Tlibllliie Exwod Assets $3,000,000.
roll call showed 27 of the 435 In
thelrseats the greatest number Inweeks. ,
"This Is the second line of reservearriving." announced the leader ofque returning party, "the third lineIs on the way." "Whose that mnn?"demanded Speaker Clark, pointing hisgavel at a strange face. A clerk ex-
plained It was a returned member.A deluge of applications for leave
"on account of Illness," came downon the clerk. Majority Leuder Under-wood announced that the sergeant-at-arm- s
Would have to be satisfiedof tins validity of such application.
t be Increased to $25,000months. Paris, Aug. 2 (midnight.) The.
French ministry headed by PremierRene Viviani. resigned tonight. An
Belief Bureau for Americans.The Hague, Aug. 2d (via London,
8:05 p, m.) A bureau for the relief
New York Aug. 26. Liabilities of
3 H P Pell & Co., stock and cotton
brokera whose suspension was caused
by demoralisation in the cotton mar-
ket incidenul to the war situation, ex-
ceed the firm's assets by more than$3,000,000, according to a schedulemade public today.
other cabinet was immediatelyformed,
'Premier Viviani visited Elysea pal- -of Americans has been established atthe legation here. Captain Richard
FORECAST,n. Aug. 26 New Mex-sout- h,
local showers;layr Friday generally
successfully. There, is no indicationH. Williams nf the coast artillery. Is inthat the German attack was In anyjuc at 10:15 o'clock this evening andamonutetl to over t IO,00,K0. , charge.
alduquehcue Mor.;.i::3 jc,j:.:;;.l. Thursday, august 27, 1914.
LEAVING PATJ3 ITJ "X CATTLE CA?--Jwnipifil thi !' of Xordenburg. J
jH nhurn nj r!' hofshurg and the!jri'ac rtat n at and addi(hat fit. l:ti,!n advania contifcuea.! fy V ff
II t
3
J1
Personal ContactW ITH ITS CTSTOMnnS A XII CAItF.rVL C(lNSUI;llATIOX
4IF TIIFIU It FQl'I HF.M KXTS KXAItl.K THIS IIAXK TO HEOF THK ;i:fati-- t lOSSIHI: kFKVK'F.. IA FKV AC.Ct)MMol)'iTIX FOXSISTEXT WITH KOI XII HAXKIXtirmxci ii.i :s is kxtf.xdfu.
THE LW;K CAI'ITAI KlltPI.VS AXD I XIHVIDFDFIIOFITS. TOtiFTHFH WITH ITS H OXSFltVATIVE MAX.AI.FMF.XT AMI THE ITXAXflAIj STAMIIXCi AXII
OF ITS OFFICERS AXII llOAKII OF IHKECTORS REXIlEU THIS 1XSTITFTIOV A MOST SATISFACTORY M Fill CM THROF'.!! WHICH TO THA XS ACT YOtRHAXKIXti 15 I'M X ESS,
, NEW HTOCK JUST KIXKIVKD IKOMTHIS J'ACTOR V.
zah.o Cz Mauser115-11- 7 North First Street.
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Li ,A ,; '111--
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i -s-rswrrt::-
V:y ') Ill
atvl ni'M up to-d;it-e Mylei.
Tl y are made by the oldest
inriijti fact'ir-- f stove and
ranj.'f in America. Ivn't
Mie (4 guarantee! by the
mal'-c- atid by m. If yon
want tbe tiK.tt range for
onr money, $'c the Sttw- -
nrt Jinc.
mar hed to Iwjy and Pnmaf; theretny bunul th? town hull, tore up aconsiderable length of the railway andfired on passing loeornothes. About
(Mlo,k In ih ir.orninic th.yihu iilnlna sronti'I noiii'lutln, Iirviiik
iwl. il tnty ill a runt Fn-n.-
lerrliory. H-- te they r tnnnf'iKretK h artillery rRlmni, which,
wfier four houra firlnx, annihilnifilihm." .
lt;M;lt Mllll I H IJI'.l'OHTIlMI.M O fHltlNt. I ItillT
Ixmitmi, Ana. 27 (: a. in.) An
Arna'critiirn Oimli h to lh t'" m:fha HelKian i'tlnt at The Hmku
niu,f,unr that rrlncn Oeorge I
t.lttna, whrt Joined ih IktlKinti roloraU volunteer, haa he-- ktlh.id, ftlxo
Ihdt f'oiint Vandarhua h, a lleittenunttha Third rKlnifiit, Helglan Inn-cer- a,
wua killed In the fighting neor
MNY ItlltMliV U'OMKKJtFltlim l IS lllSTItFKN
Iiotulon, Ang.a7 "ti:7 a. ni.) Ho
runny aiplienllon for relief from for-eign woitieit In dlnlteaa Imva heen
at tha relief quarter of therraldatit Aiiierhitn wotnen'a rommlt-t- e
thiit an upimh will ha mda lo- -
morrow to tha New Ilrltlnh Uellef no- - I
elety. whlrh tha Pitchcaa of Murlhor- -
otiKh, iiaatrloa Jlarriilin and othernolila wotnen are forming to arrange
linndla ciim M of thla i Iiihk.
m:w I'Ai'i it dimti m vI Imt'FI IV FHAN'CK
I'aria. Au. 21 (6:40 p. m.) l'np'rnolpn of fifty cenllmea, ont franc andtwo franca nra being printed underHit nitihnrlxniion of th governmentby lh f'arla chnnilwr of commerce toUpplf rhiiliKe. Tha flrnt laaua amotliita
10.000.000 frtia ( 12,000,000).
AMtKitCANt, EN ROUTE TO HAVRE FROM PAferS. HCATTLE CAa TO GO ON DOAJ5P THE FRANCE ,
Aliova are nhown oiue of the first American tuuriata to come out Of
.France, who reached New York on board the FranCe, of the French line. Ttia
Franco carried 1,302 American refugee, and there was not one among all thesepereonn to whom the Statue of Lllicrty waa not a cludsomo alKhf, Moat otthoae on board the From-- nnived In Havre from Paris n a cattle train thatleft the capital at half paiit three l.i the morning and waa ten noun in reach-fci- g
th Bcnport
j In can-ter- (talk-I- the li'iianc hv j
'driven i,r k the Auorla rar trmrd'lb.' rlvr (Iota Ijpw, wiix-h-
rnoa north 'and rout It about thirty!!inllK - f Tarnopol, I
(.IRVMN AMI Itfmixl! I
TORPEDO ItOVfti I M.IITl
Peking, Anx. 2.lp to noon today;only f) ri at ment report-,- to have,
o curled ,r Ti'ig-Tai- j cipital ofjith German pr - torata of KIo-- lChow im sn nutifi r between a j
German torpedo boat and a ISnf!hjtorpedo boat, on PuncUy or Monday"last. The liriHi'h torpedo boat
lo e with elevennn-- killed end wound-d- . Th Ger-rnu- n
rKu:ilik- are not known.
XAMtll IDHTH MID TOHE HTML HOLDING OtT
lmlon, Aug. 27 l:2 a. m.) Thefollowing announn-rneo- t h been is-
sued nt Antwerp, according lo theRenter Tt'l(.ffirn comiiiny cjrrt-np'in- -
drif."TliO r;-l- l.i n fj)i:ratkn hv ur.
(cii'J In th djull object t,( dlmln-jNhlii- K
th ( rmun nilrt n' hinf-n- amidrsliif th tji-rm- trunm on th llnl;( lw n Mallnoii ari'l Jlru?xi ami thua.ri-d- Inic prmfiire on the Kfttrh pt- -
tlori. W hav cimiirlloil ihi--
fi.rin dlvlalon. hk h advanc- -
Ina aouthward, to rtrae Hi !epa.th fourth Uelaian divinlon atmur Ima fulflilcd lla lnk, nrrexllnn thfSermun column and allowing tha Hel-Klii-
to retlr on tha Frem h lina,"Tha N'timur fort arc Mill holding!
out."
KI KMW AltMV AUVANt l H
isro Ai.'KTitiAV rnovixci:rtom, Aug. 2B (via London, mid-
night.) A dliiiit-- from Huthareaty that tha ItMMxIun columna Invud-In- g
fin!J(la hava oerupled Turnopol,an Irniiortiinl tltjr tlghty nillca cuni,miiitheimt of Iniherg, eiiiit!i of t)a-llcl- a.
Thrf Austrian army corpn areuald to h opponlng them.
MOXTKAWJlfl C'AITI'ItK,0(M) AFhTHIAM 'JIKKifS
Imdon, Aug. 26 (:35 p. rn.) Withthe reoeMipatlon of Hhiiliaio hy the
MH a ioimtf h lo th Kx- -
!chunK' Tehgrntn company from Cet- -'
tinjo. MontMiiegro, th 4.000 Aiiftrlnnl.u lnonet hiiva heen duuhh d, 4,000
men hnvtrig heen d'niitured h- -'iweett t..,fil.i un,t Ktiut,,,,,, tiiriritfilhu Hervitin march to occupy the largertown. The tVrvlun cimuultlcm In re- -
jtiiklng Hhalitico ore admitted to haveliecn heavy.
ntm ;fiim4 ufa i ivi nii: i,it.rio.v or vvai:
Jiiilon, Aug. 29 (11:25 p. in.) AnIniereMtlrig HkIiI la thrown on ticniinnfeeling hy 11. V. Vah'ntina of NewYork, who hiia Juat arrive,! In Londonfrom Cciiiiiiny und rclutea exprlenecaIn vurlouM Kreoden tfm on the niKhtlrent liriialn'a declitruilon of war wu
u tele;ruf atinotinring I'ngliind'a dtoluratlon of wur. A audden lnixh fellwhern prcVlmiMly till hud been n.
Mont of thoKii prelum t iutetlyleft. Among them 1 noticed tho di-
rector of n big aleiiiiiHhlji line."All obvloiiHly were Kreutly aur-prlfc-
und wolii ic 1 by tho tlillngn forwhich the newp!ipciH hud not pre-pore- d
Ihcm, the belief that k'ngltintlwould rcnililn neulriil being unlver- -
aal. - ,
"I next went to iipopuuir beer hullmuch frequented by biikImii. Munyaobllera were jireHcnt mid here thenewa urouaed ll greut ntlthurat of
The bund phtyed martiitlniiN; putrlollit aotiax were aitug nndwnrllke upeechea were imule by tiicitmounted on tublca. Never have I td
a gfeiiter tllaplay of pntriullefervor. i
"At other popular rnfim almllaracenea wera enncied, Later a mob
iKnlhered nri.1 timrcheil on the l'.rltiMhlegation which wua boiTibarded withalonea."
ltltlTIill Tit Kit's HFI'I'.liMX ATTAt KM HY tiFI'.MAXS
I iimloi,. Anir. 27 Ct .1 a. m UTIm
It la ratliuale.l thut two billion ' ti'iido known. The upper cl.instIn allvnr la now lumrded inclvl tho-new- svriounly; tho lower
Frame. U'hmaca Joyotmly.I "I wna In a cafu froitietited hy well- -
IXV AMFHIFAVH A HI j to-d- o people," .;!" Jlr, Valentine,l;.M-lH'J'l't- r JI FX4iI,AM "when (i nmn ciilered and reuil ulnud
fifty per cent of the urmy to gain avictory.
The Clerinnrn nmde ai aucceaaiveattackn on the l!rltlh troop In nneffort to cut their Jinm of communi-cation, hut were uilBUcreawful,
;i:i!Mv ixmci: AiiVAxnxoI 'tOH IIIU SI I S 7.MI,(I00
lmilori, Aiftr. 27 (:l:l(t a. oi.) "Al!eh;bm officer who returned hereyeMcrday from Hazehriiuch, France,"aaya th Iinlly 'ExprcAa and Oalcndcorrenpondent, "gave me tho detailsof the Hlluullim. It wua decided Mon-day not to di fi nd I.IIIh nnd Tuesdaythe mnyor'a proclamntlon wan pub-llnhe- d
announcing the evuciiation bythe Fr ni b troop ami the trnnafor-matlo- n
of thu town Into un unde-fended place. i
"All the liendarmeti wire diHarm-e- d
and elepa were '.Jiiken to deliverthe city, with till Itf: rleh factoriestip to the tlermnna. Tuesday eveningtill the available jreaaiire w,ii re-moved. Apparently' there were neverany great allied forced to bur the mudto t.llle.
'The mom the let inn n a rmyhowever, the more perilous
become ita elluutinn. It now baa Itffl.inli.i and line of communicationmenaced by Helej.irm hased on Ant-werp with advance Kuunla at Muliticnhy the northern French army anil
the allied masses near Maubeage,"All Hint is now needed i a strong
holding fofen tour Arras, which thet'reiich have had ample tlmo to pre-pare,
"It Is estimnted that the Germanstriking force from UrtiNsel num-bered 750,000 men."
HESSIAN TROOPS REVOLTAHAIXST THEIR OIIICFRS
.4.:Eomloii, A uar. 27 (tilSfl a. in.) In-
formation from southern ,. Dalmatla,suya tlie I'osl's Tin coiTcsioiuli'iit,la to the effect that ;lii aovernl townsihe l.'iv troopa hnve; revolted againsttheir officer.
ARE, t.V OI'FX REVOLT
ImiimIoii, Auk. 27 j 1:113 a. in.) A
dispatch the Morning I'ost fromRome say that u telegram receivedthere from Nish, contains slatementsurn do by prisoners Hint there had
been numerous dcecrtlotia from theAiiHirtHii army.
In. mime of the regimenta. It wasntuted, 40 per cent of the reacrvistafailed to respond to the call to thecolor. The aged Kmperor Francl.Joseph was kept in !"rm'e of thereal Hlnfe of affair.
The telegram added that thebulletin contain only satisfac-
tory new and report of great Aus-trian victories.
IH'KSIAX SOI .IHEH ISMATCH FOR GF.ItMAXS
I bunion, A iiff. 27 (1:15 a, m.) A
dlHiiiti'h to the I'ost from Kt.comments on the cxcellene
of the Russliin army nnd the Inex-haustible supply of men to draw up-
on. H says further:"Russia will have no difficulty In
jftndlniT 20.000,000 men to completethe work begun by Its trained lighting
J force. Moreover, this n the firsttlum In the memory of men that the!!t!Hinfi nrtny linn taken the fieldwith adequate equipment and n suf-ficiency of supplies, under office) 5
trained In the hard lesson so thor-oughly learned In the Japanesecainpnigna.'
"Thn history of that campaignshows what Russian soldiers accom-plished when badly fed und equipped,
Mint tinder the condition of today thelighting in a country they understandthere Is little wonder that the Rus-sian Juoldler hiv proved himself umatch for the tierrnans. ,
"The Oerman opposition to theRussian advance is broken and
Koenlgsberg,' where threeGerman army corps have taken ref-uge, Is so situated It can easily beobtnlned hy an adequate force whilethe rest of the. Russian army passeson Inlo the Interior of Germany andit Is doubtful whether Germany hasufficiently (yrganleed forres to op-pose, the Russia na."
RI '.NSIANH CLAIM TO WINIMPORTANT VICTORIES
Ht. Pctcrshuig, Aug. 2( (la 1 ti,
A lis. 27, 2:13 a. in.) The No-vo- n
Vremya anya today that althoughthe general has made public onlythe bnrpst detulla regarding the strik-ing suoctns to tha RuoUn aioim ineast Prussia, it Is nppnrent that thegreater part of that province is now
ti:::. Li.XiL:::i1 4
dpp,ir
u.::tfcrw Mcak. liy
H'.liriel I'rl(lrit I'olinara that U"tiiftil t !Dtf (shlnet m I ili-lili- j
lo rin ciir lively, lis ail(J thai hg
and hla ritlloauttea hud rgina to Hi'.'!
Hint Ifi th lrromine J
lhriKh Wbbh tin toiiritry w aaa j
Ina tti rnliilKiry ahnuM have a Wer '
a. otf aa J otnprle' all tha hent menIn all th retmi.liiwn aroup. aa
I'raaNiant J'oltmara fharged M.
Vlvlahl wllh the t,mk t ofauninitig a In
lirw tahltief, whln'h thn prfrrtler'eiird, Jle fMurneil to i:ly ahout
an hour latM" und timdp known ts thvreiern h fonijionltion of tha nwinliilntry, wh(-- la sa follow:
I'rmtldint of th t'oum ll WithoutI'ortfollii liana Vlvlaol,
MinUirr or fwreign Aff4lra-Tbo-!- hil
lieluaaa.Mlhlaler of War Alxandra Wlllw
raixl.atiiilaler f Juatlca AtlalUln Hrl-an-
Mitiialer of Jintl' O Ittila J, Miilvl.Minlatar of Marjna Victor Angu-Bsur- (
MllilHlef of Flunnru Alelnndnr Ill-ho- t, lo
MlnlHlor "f Pitlillu Iaatructlon Al-i- rt
HturutMlnlaifr of PuUfr Worka Miirctl
Heiri'-ul- .
Mlnltef of Coinmma (luatonThKtnaon,
Minister of ColoDh a Onstnn Unit-tiier- ii
Mlnlater of Aarli ulluraP'rrlliin4 toiold.
MlniNter of thor Hlefiven Martin.Milliliter Without I'ortfulliv Julea
OihimIi.t'lider Keeratary of Flno Aria Al
t.rt Dullfiitjr.Among iJla. ltieliihera of tha he
rablnet ur iveinl t premier andrnuny inemliera of former inliltieta.Mar-- fl f iiintmt t niillt'l amlullHlrlcfiut y, HiiJ M. (lundile, u nm litlut dp-ti'-
M, fjelinwit.' waa fiirmetly u tfilpimxa
dor to iiuimIk. M, Mill, rtiiul I u for-
mer tnlnisier of war.I'remler Vlvlutil ri'imilneil at KlyartJ
i;hi m to preavnt thn iiiemliera of thafahlnet to lh prfMUU-iit-,
I
(.I KMIf inillt.llll I s D1IOI'ivmm into ANTUilU'
Antwerp, Aug. 18 (vlii 1'arla, 1
p. ni )Tlu HititlHinra tif Vh'- -' fralgnipoweia at Aniwer hvj luoiexndaMHlimt tha homhardmenl of Anlwvrpby Zi'i.pelm dtriullilu tuilloona. AmoiiK
other itiitiiiiMw dona waa tha totnlof a hulklitig liehiiiitliiK '
an Aini'tli'iin I'ltUer),All llalit tit Atilwitu urc out at t
ci'clocH at nlKlit. Tha peopU' of thflty ar bKhavliig with reioitrkablecouraica and patrlotlam, nlthoiigh It f m
I bacuiiilng hlahly iii'Vvracklii, ow-
ing I') th um;i nullity. Antwerp l
cut off from the entire countryMullm, (llicrtt, llrtiKCa titid the
wi'.i cmtat. '. Th only conimunlciiilotiwith the oytnlitii wvi'hi In through 'id-ten-
OHIO III t"Fnij'AM ItHt sk of i.i :kh i.i t,t imi
("olunibii, tt., Aug, I. Th repuh-llcn- ti
atnln rotivcnilon ailjntii nei) herotoditv, after ml i )( in K a plat fol io.The liquor plahk ile Iu'vk thepull Itl favor of eotitiliiied raatrlcllotiof the Huur trnffle under preaentand future Ihwi.
Other plsiiii tall for a that willprotect A met lean industries, a mer-chant murine ami liberal upprupria-t.lolt- s
for agricullural put poses,
4W.E H I E A KiTiiiT; I 'E ATI ' 1 1
Itllt EXITED KfATE SENATOR
Cuiuml la. s C Attg. 66, lClltsmII. rlmllh waa rcnoitilmiteii for thet'tiiteU IMutes a,nnte over GovernorCM l l!laa In demoerat.fc primary ty ft titujortty of between18, 000 and, Su.noo,
Richard' I, Manning. Robert A.I
Cooper and John tl. Richards lireleading in the cuntst for the guber-natorial nonamuion,
CEH!MX CV l ltV HMDMMaK WITH DISASTER
As- -. 57 2:53 a, tu.J A
I'arta diMiu-h- . to the thiily Mail de- -
aerthea an adventurous ral,l neruaar ranch territory by a division of tierman cavalry. Coming from ,lu,direction of Alowt, they t)ufrontier nearJd mdy evening.
"Entering the town, they roundedlip the women and children andfoi"pt them to (oar. h all nightthrough French town and villages,trtkinx tt,r into the hesrts of Ihe
praannta they eaciuritered on theway," rm th rorresHudcnt.
Through LvurcUea, irt Nord, they
occupied by Russian and thut tha(ierman arc In a condition of demor-aliatin- n.
' Althnnirh no fiiturea of the cna-ualli-
have been given." the newpa- -
per adds, "the fight a most obntl-- j
rate and aangulnao. Tile cerman re-- jtreat finally degenerated Into a rout.!Thdr evauitition of the weatern part I
of UiiKPian I'oland la niw virtuallycomplete. uermaoa n wiemijrwere dappninted end d bythe failure of the" Itussian I'olea toriae against Huin.
"The Oerm.-i- prioner lire report-ed to he Indifferent as to their captlv-l- i
y. '
"Xenr Vloslaff, a Rusaian peasantwaa hailed by two German scouts,both of them armed heavily. 'Comehere, w are your prisoner,' theycalled out. The peasant, however.distrusted the summons and took to)hi heel, whereupon tho horsemencaught up with him and lnisted onsurrendering. "Arrest ua nuickly andlake us somewhere and obtain foodand sleep,' they begged.
"Many tales are told of the heroismof the Cossacks, fine detactimentdashed across a burning railwaybridge and fell upon the enemy withsuch fury V'at several Germans werecut !n two by their swords. Theleader of the Cnsaacka received sixteenwound, but he boasted that he putout eleven oT the enemy before hefell."
IISATTI.E AT MAMXFHi;i.(..Utli:i) AS IMI'OHTAXT
London. Aug. 27 (1:23 a. m.) Tel- -
egrnphing from Terneusen, Holland,
(Ciinliiiurd no I'naa I uur.)
GRflTlTiWARNED HOT TO
BE TQQ RIGID
Should United States Ships
Carrying Goods Be Subject-
ed to Inconvenience, It Will
Be Resented by Americans,
or aoNiHa journal e(eii. liid1 ooilori. Auir. 27 (2:50 a. m.) The
Chronicle In a long article today warnsjthe Rritish government of the dangerof England's becoming embroiled withthe United Ktutes over questions ofcontraouna oi war anu isu- n"".estrangement between the two coun-
tries would be the extreme of budmanagement.
"It must be the guiding principle ofthe British government," the articlesays, "to direct its navnl policy so thatwe may not become embroiled withany neutral power. In nearly everywar of the past tw0 centuries we in-
curred this danger.Wise SUtesnianslilp Required.
"The only really powerful neutralof the present time is tho United j
States. It there Is a wise statesman-shi- n
we shall remain In perfect amitywith that power, as well as with theNetherlands, which possesses the groatgateway leading to the heart of Ger-
many."The t'nlted States possesses the
right to send cargoes to Rotterdamand will exercise that right. Ve mustbe prepared to see neutral Americantoeuotj ilisehnro-iri- cargo and In Hol- -
hand ports. Many questions are likelyto arise regarding the exclusion oi te
or conditional contraband thatIs, things that may he used by theGerman naval and military forceB.
' Must Give No Ofretise.
"It has been the Rrltish practice toregard ns liable fo capture any con-
traband cargoes which it could beproved they had an ulterior hostiledestination. It is evident that thisorovtalon nres?nts a Very real dangeras the character of a cargo can onlybe ascertained by exercising the rightof search, which the United States hasstrongly resisted and which was thecause of the war of 1812.
"Picture, then, an American shipapproaching the port of Rotterdamand a Rrltish naval officer exercising
the right of search and detaining theship on the presumption that hertrr.iln rnrirn la COn trabnnd. The coolest judgment will be needed In sucha case to avoid a dispute and a misun-derstanding.
Intrtiriioii Must Re Clear."It has been suggested that we al-
low food ships to enter Dutch portson the mere declaration that theircargoes are not In trnnstt to theenemy. Whether such a declarationwould he sufficient It is difficult to
i.nt tr la evident that the officersof the fleet should have very definiteInstructions on these points to avoidany estrangement, .
FOUR MISSING
AS A RESULT OF
CRASH AT SEA
Steamship Admiral Sampson,Is Rammed by Canadian Pacific Liner Princess Victoria
' "" 'During Fog,
'OFFICERS OF SHIP GO
DOWN WITH VESSEL
Heroic and Cool-head- ed Ef-
forts' Prevent Far More Se-
rious Catastrophe Off NorthPacific Coast, . j
tar MoRNiNa journal spccial uoid wikijSeattle, Wash., Aug. 26. The offi-
cial list of dead furnished by the Pu-rlf- ie
Alaska Navigation company,whoso steel steamship Admiral Samp-son was rammed and aonk bv fhCanadian Pacific liner Princes Vic-toria enrly today, twenty miles northof Seattle, contains eleven names,eight name of crew, twj passengerand an alleged stowaway, but tourother passengers are missing and arebelieved to have perished-- .
The meVnbera of the . crew lostwere:
3IMROI3 M. MOORE, captain.ALLEN J.'NOON, chief engineer.W. K. RECKER, wireless operator.MISS M. CAMPBELL, stewardess.A. HATER, watchman.L. CABANAS, third cook.C. M. MARQCTST, quartermaster.J. C. WILLIAMS, mess boy.The passengers lost were:MRS. RUBY BANBURY, wife or
George Banbury. Pacific-Alask- a Na-vigation agent at Skugway.
GEORGE W. BRYANT, of Seattle.EZItA BYRNE, of Seattle, a wait-
er who was burned so badly that hedied soon after being taken to a hos-pital here, is alleged to have been astowaway.
The four missing passengers were:JOHN McLAUGHLIN, of San B'ran-clse- o.
W. HOFFEM.J. H. CLINE,WILLIAM KLOVITCH. . ,
Row At-Ide- Occurred,the Admiral Sampson, bound for
Alaska, was just creeping alonff inthe smoke and fog, blowing herhorns. The Princess' Victoria, alsowhistling and traveling nrudentlv.struck the Alaska boat at a quarterangle lust abaft of the beam, andsliced almost three-fourt- of thway across the Sampson, The tankoi mo nampson was cut in two tiythe PrlnVcss and the oil wag set onfire.
Immediately the middle of thePampson and the interlocking bow ofthe Princess were enveloped Inflames. The officers of both boatshad good control of their crews. Thelife boats of the Victoria and someof those on the Sampson were lower-ed Immediately, the latter containingpassengers. The people on the Samp-son began to leap into the water andwere speedily picked up by the Vic-toria's bouts and taken to the Cana-dian ship. The captain of the Prin-cess held his boat in the gap oif the.Sampson until the latter began tosettle in the water and then With-drew. The Sampson sank a few sec-onds latcri
fio Down With Ship.Captain Moore, quartermaster
Marqulst nnd Wireless OperatorReeker stayed n the Sampson untilthey h.id seen all the nth iu-- ,
Then they tried to lower, a life boat.ooi lnPy were too late nnd they werengulfed with the ship.
As a result of the collision thePacific- - Mnska Navigation companyfiled today a libel nf $670,000 asalnstthe Princess Victoria.
Favorite Remedy for Diarrhoea.A hi) ill., thrpti... vo.i , , v. ,- Jv. l IKIU M Wf
rious attack of summer comulaint.The doctor's iredicine failed to bene- -i.i on--, o i nenc ior a bottle of Cham-berlnln-- B
Colic, Cholera and DiarrhoeaHemenv nnnn Hw, , , . . , ....v t- uiiuiiriiuuiion inene. of my neighbors. One dose of It, mure goon man all the othermedicine I hn.t nuj t .j- iitiriuvrii rap-idly and In a short time I waa well,"
mrs. may lliggins, Peru. Ind.(or aalo by all dealnra.
s. A. l'nhrniau. i lltf 1.1a mi ii iuw It
Dully Mnll'a larla correniondctit imyajWASiV AFHtltlAX fiOLDIKH.Sthe tlermnna, It Is now believed, oreattacking the allies on the southern1 U1', In ri frontier. Cavalry raid arefrequent around Lille.
Wounded Germans sny their offi-
cers' orders are to advance nt anycost, even to forfeit, U necpssurv,
London. Aug. it (; p. m.)--M- uny
Arrinrli'Aria hava crillnted In
London In lha fonlKfi legion, orgu-nlre- d
by Captain ttici'i, who foughtith Ourlhithll. .The arrvlcea )f the
IcKlon hflvn not yet been acceplcd.The ! Mint) ciintiiliiH 3.000 inert and200 officer, One-thir- d of Ha tuem-brrtthl- n
apeaka KitMllxh, onu-thlr-
lluioilriit, und one-thir- d Italian.
l i t Ml'IS TO FHI VEXTKTEAMSIUF I IIAIDS
Ilotteriliim (via Iotidon, Aug. 21,
:45 p. m.) The American conattlgeneral at lhltt purl, Hnren Matne, hasbeen ciuleiiVorlng to prevent the
by Htnull atenhiahlp con-'erti-
h"e of alleged dtcumnhlpfor atranded Atnerl-cHtt-
Theu colicertiN plun tft put hhtunny oa 2f'0 pMnaehgera on a 4,000- -
ton veaat'l not built for punsengertruffle. ; 1
tiFICtlAXS (ilVE WAV TOAiiv vxt i: tip m ssiAxs
The Hague, Auir. 2 (via London,R.So p, m,)The military rorreapond-- 1
eitt of the Nleuw Cmirattt det-lare- hnIk utile, to tHti on titiMt worthy author-ity that lh tlermnna plan to abandonternpontrlly caul and wrat I'ruaalrtand I'uiiiranlft to the Ituaalnna andwithitruw alowly to the river Oder,where thn tniiln defenaea of Tterlln lie.
"tb itiintiy," aecording to the enrra-xliiittde-
"npetira to hnve undertakenlli'.mneiiMiue to give time to her armyoperation naulnt Franca to try anddeal the ifrltlah end French ormlesitheir death' blow and then inarch m
lo IMt'la, the tilft-Mnc- between Mmjand I'aria being four nines les thanthe d lata nee between Ht. lVteraburgand lterlln."
ltoviis i nn iti n with lioiuEsOF DEAD AND WOl'NRED
Amstcrdnm, Aug. 20 (via London,ll:S& p. in,) --The Tclegraf'a Antwerpcm respondent wires that fighting wasrcMimc.l this titurnlnu In thn vicinityof Mallnca, trttcre the HflRlans h"v"been timigeil ilullv with Gorman ad- -
vanre trotqia.' The roitd from Mallnea toward
Vllvorden, v'x mile northeast of ltrua.I the cot reapoiident ad da, "la Ul- -
'let-n- l lth boilles ot men and horses,while In ihe fields pasturing cattlehave been killed hy ehiHpiiel, Thellelglaus eaiuiiteil otto Held gun.
j "Lv.-tylhlii- In Rrusacla is going ani'''1 hi for the German occu- -
pation,The correspondent suys It Is report
ed that it ts the THike of Rrnnswlckwho has oicupled the royal palaca ntt.Sekeu. The 1UHJ Ot tirlttlMWIcK mar-fle- d
I'tlnees Vb'torlti Lulse of Hohen- -
nollern, daughter of Emperor Wil-
liam of Germany.
RVssiAN UtOOI'S MttVEItlRW'ARD IX l'RCSKlA
Iindon. Aug. H (tl;6S p. rn.) A
St. Petersburg dispatch to the RenterTelegram company says thai the Kus-sls- n
tri'ops In vuatera Ftusal.httv
A FHENCU QUICK 'WING GUN READY FOR 'ACTION.
I , fc,Vtiti.i.',t'i-- i V"-- '' I -- ""I " , v I ' VI 1 .'!.:, .4
' "I .. . ..' t K taawef i
- - x:-- iV i
.vv r ' yx,,4..
r 'V
In town, 301, '
ALBUQUERQUE KORKir.'G JOURNAL, THURSDAY, AUGUST 27, 1914.
nrLQSIiiG 110New Sffi Nm M3;dcomiEfiiii;j illllTW IPIII ELECTION llIElll!!!L
headquarters of the new union wasIdentified tonight aH Felix McAIava-nlo- .
Miners say he ens accidentallykllU'd while he and another limn were"swapping guns."
'Che police have been unable tofind the tther man, whoso numo Issaid lo bo Webb. ' ,
lloyd-georgT"scor- es
unpatriotic banks
170r.1fll VERY ILL
Finally Restored To Htzl-- h
By Lydia E. Pinkhaci'Vegetable Compound.
v ' ' .1 i ii r" w w w u w nilRTrnnTPMiinrn mil iLULlini u I
110 OIQ.IS SUBJECT OF
FlfJE LECTURE
IETIU NO TO ii ru auniNLnLondon, Aug. 28.-- H nglrnh bunk a
m ESS5S9EE IS
GOQDFOnGnOUGliwhich have fulled absolutely to ussim
Bellevue, Ohio. "I was la a tcrribsjtat before I took Lydia E. Pinkham'i
More Than Ono Thousand In- -Rlirfpnfc Mnirll tn Mnnlini
the trade of ihn country In the prr.eni crisis rwy rappud sharply byT0BEC01STEDED SCHOOL "I1 ' i in j.
ill J WM'ov" itihivi, iu miiiumU I'.ivld l.loy.t George, chancellor ofthe exchequer today.Mines and Serve Notice on
Union Miners,
Vegetable Com-
pound. My backached until I thoughtit would break, I hadpain all over me,nervous feelings andperiodic troubles. I
"At all cost we ttiust keep themachine of commerce and Indus' ryBig Boost for Barber Shops Audicncci Regaled With Spoony going," he din lared, 'and It Is for this
Handed Out by Lecturer at Stuff Coming Down From
Denver Woman Makes Splen-
did Address for Special Ben-
efit of Santa Fe Club Wom-
en at Summer .School, . .
was very weak andN i
Office of Attorney General
Hands ' Down " Important
Opinion Bearing on Rights
to Grant Liquor Licenses,
1ST MOKNIH JOURNAL ,PICIAl UU, WlI)Hutte. Mont., Aug. IIH. Moro than
f.noo Insurgent miners have march- -
purpose that the government cmr.o tothe help of the batiks. Many Lankahave behaved well, but some ' havenul. It may be necessary to mtfne theletter. tint I bop before this has to
Summer School; Jones-lecture- s
on "Geology,
Days of Moses; Same Old
Line of Talk,bed to the mines with ,the announced 'W1
run own ana waslosing hope of tverbeing well andstrong. After tuk-i-
Lvdia E. Pink- -be done tbut they will adopt a more
purpose or preventing any WesternFederation of Miners men returninglo work.
A mysterious killing occurred lut
liberal policy."Tim chancellor added that he, waxHU BKMTCH tS MONINS MUMtU
liriCIU DKPATCH TO MOSNIN JOUAKALIeoiiNhrVrlng whether or Hot he could
If.toil KMrcH to MSMXNS JOIIANAL)Santa Fe. Aug. 28. A love letter
from the days of Moses a written bvthis afternoon In the headquarters of arrange a limited iiioratorlum wll.h
Santa Fe, Aug. 2. The Modernprams." and lt drift wore broughtbefore tr summer school this aftern-
oon in authoritative find elquentout Interfering with tho Interests ofa Pabyloninn to his sweetheart, was
tlC1U OI,ATCM TO MOftNINft JOUBMAMi
Santa Fe, Aug. St. The quickestcure for the grouch Is a face massage,deMared Dean Frank Carroon to thesummer school today. It was a lec-
ture of inimitable charm that thespeaker gave as he bared the inner-most workings of t ho emotions In men.
tho insurgent miners. Seiious troubleI, feared. I
Arriving at the Anaconda mine,the insurgents, who are now known!
those who wished to abolish It. Hemanner 1.v Mrs. Ida. Kruse McFar said !' had consulted Uinkers and
traders In this connection, Out of
roan ry Dr. a. T. Clay to the sum-mer school this morning. It was adocument that demonstrated howmodern In feeling the ancients were,
lnd of Denver, In a lecture which w Ilia Itotfa Ttltttn W.L ....I......... .. i antic lilinill.fu,,..., jfA.. . ... '. , , h.im replies, !,uii were in invor or...,.-- . , H.oono ,ne cm- - lhft n,orullrrm. .rhn lvnmnHo differentiated beast by j for theman from lovo letter might serve as awa especially attended by the San-
ta Fe Woman's club, Mrs, Laughlinpresided and In her preliminary re-
marks, lucidly outlined the historyin ..i me mum mill lloille(l llle .,- - .. i,. .,.,-,- ..declaring that man look before and model lo this very dav,
Santa Fe, August 26. That tho re-
sult of the local option ' election atFort Sumner, Guadalupe county. Isto be contested 'Is apparent rrom aletter received by Attorney GeneralFrank V. Clancy this forenoon. Froman opinion delivered In reply thisforenoon, General Clancy points outthat the granting of liquor licensesis not under tho control of tho boardof county commissioners as Is gen-
erally supposed, but that tho provi-
sions of Section 4125 have, been su-
perseded by Section of Chapter 18of tho laws of 11)01.
k The Opinion.The opinion says:
niiiiiii kiiiiik on woi'K inai unless meyJoined the new union before thev
A letter from the days of Abrahamwas by a son to his father asking himand the purpose of the School of JAIL SENTENCES FOR
TRUST LAW BREAKERSwent on shift again tomorrow morn-ing and were wearing I he new union'sbuttons they would be prevented from
for a remittance, because of the urg-ent need of money to buy himselffood. From letters and documents onclay In cuneiform inscriuttomi. T)r.
going to work by a force of the mem
hnm'a Vegetable Omiwund I Improvedrapidly and Unlay mn a well woman. Icannot tell you how happy I feel and Icannot Bay too much foryourCompound.Would not be without it In the house Ifit cost three times the amount" Mrs,Chah. Chapman, U. Y. D. No. 7, Belle-vu- o,
Ohio.
Woman's Precious Gift.The ono which nho should most r.eal-otis- ly
guard, is her health, but it isthe one most often neglected, untileome nllnvnt peculiar to her sex hasfastened itswlf upon her. Whvf-focte-d
such v. .mcn may rely upon LydiaE. Pinkhiun's Vegetable Compound, aremedy that hwi been wonderfully suc-
cessful in restoring health to sufferingwomen.
If you hare the slightest doubtthat Lyill.'i II. l'in k ham's Vegeta-ble ('oiniMiiiiHl will help you.writotol.yilln K.IMiikliRiii Medk lneCo.(ctMiiUletitliil) Lynn.MnsJt.,foriul-vle- c.
Your let tor will 1 opened,read nmt miNwered ly a woman,end li Id tn strlet confidence.
after, engages in the psychologicalprocess of Introspection, while ani-mals do not. Ho demonstrated howgetting into tight places develops theintelligence and declares that thebest thing we can wish our friendsIs not ease and peace of mind, but lotsof trouble, for It Is trouble that de-
velops the best In character.Ho warned against the fatalism of
the east, which If It becomes general In
bers of the new union. Tomorrow V"'"'!T MOHMIHa ioUNHAt. PCCIAL LVAMD Willi)Washington, Aug. 2i. Advocates of
Jail nentcnca for truit luw breakerswon n victory In the donate today and
morning, the Insurgents say, a forcewill meet the shift that quits Work
Clay most Interestingly told the storyof "Murashii Sons, Hankers andBrokers." Some of the bankers in Messrs. Parsons ft Edwards, Fort at thnt time and those miners will be
notified they must Join the new unionthe audience sighed for (be good old Sumner, New Mexico.
American Archaeology and of theHummer School of the New MexicoInstitute of Science and K'ducation.
Mrs. McFarland analyzed especiall-y John Galsworthy's "The Fugitive."although dwelling also at somelength on "The Servant In theHouse." :"n.i maged Goods,", "TheEldest Son," and "As a ManThinks." Jt was on arraignment ofwine modern Ideas of education, nsto women In seeking to emphasizethat some women are too fine to dothe necessary things of life hut notrtrong enough to do the extraordin-ary things, t V
before they can resume work tomordays when creditors paid 40 per centInterest as they did in Babylonia.Most of the debtors to Murashu Hons,
"Gentlemen: I have Just receivedyour letter of the 2!th Instant rel-ative to proposed-litigatio- n as to a
row night.the west will destroy whatever Is goodThe miners marched through theIn American civilization. Dean Car- -
streets of the city four abreast, gnth- -roon's npt quotations from the greatlerlng recruits as they advanced on
apparently were Jews, which seemed j local option election which was heldto be turning the tables. nt Fort Sumner on tho 10lh of this
"The more I see of Santa Fe and month under tho provisions of Chap-th- e
longer I stuy here, the more Itlter 78 of the laws of 1913. I haveseems to me that I am tin an ancient made It a uniform practice up to the
writers, bis elucidation of the cannyinsight of poets who often In a fewwords tell what it takes scientists centuries to. prove, were especially fine.An I.ducjUlon.il l'orui liabylonlan city," decbicd l)r. Clay. present time as to any proceedings
Insisted that Is free agent.man a.The Inability of the heroine toi
by a vote of 29 to it incorporated Inthe pending' Clayton bill, a provisionto make violations of the "tying" con-tract section punlshujilo by Imprison-ment.
Senutors Reed and Borah led thefight for the amendment. SenatorsCulberson, Walsh and Cummins of thojudiciary committee, and SenatorNewlands, chairman of the Interstatecommerce committee, contended theproposed federal trade commissionshould be authorised! to deul by in-
junction with these practices notreached by criminal prosecutions un-
der the Sherman untl-tru- st law.The "lying" section as finally
agreed to wonlj make it unlawful forany person to sell or lease a patentedarticle on condition that supplies orother articles bo bought of the paten-tee, v
the mines.Following their ultimatum to the
members of the 'Western Federationof Miners the insurgents again pa-
raded the vtrcctH, winding up at theauditorium, where a meet lug washeld. No one win admitted exceptthoso wearing the buttons of tho newunion.
Mining officials refused to bequoted tonight, but It Is Intimatedthat the company purposes to remainneutral and ' that If the miners areprevented from going to work a sus-pension of operations may follow.
The miner slain In the rear of the
thnt the will (s free and than man, byfixing his attention, may do what hedesires, that he can say successfullyto every temptation '.'Oct thee behindme, Satan." He speaks tomorrow on"The Control of Kmotlon."
The Sanln 1'V Range.
earn a living leaving her the choice(if but two things, death or sin, wasvividly brought to mind. The dramahas ceased to be merely a work ofart and has become, an educationalforce, a vehicle of merciless truthtelling. It Illustrates the unwillingness
BALDRIDGELUMBER COMPANY ,
PAROID ROOFING with 15-ye- ar
guarantee
"The charm of your dry Is indescrib-able and I find ancient customs herewhich existed In Babylon four andsix thousand years ago." lr. Clay reada number of leases for adobe houses.These leases were on baked clay ta-
bles In cunefirm writing and provid-ed that the tenant must keep thewalls clean nnd plastered, must re-
pair the roof three times each year,must pay one-ha- lf of the rent at thebeginning and the balance at the end
of the modern spirit to perpetuate Professor Fayette A. Jones, presl- -
In court which appeared to requirethe use of the name of tho attorneygeneral or of I he state to authorisesuch usc as I feel thnt In the pres-
ent day an attorney general of a stateought not to Interpose any obstacleto persons getting Into court i wherethey believe they have a cause ofaction. There might possibly arisesome case of such a nature that I
could not so consent, but 1 do notbelieve that I could find any proper,serious objection to giving yon theneoesiry authority, and I will In-
close herewith a distinct authorisa-tion, which, If you find It. necessary,you can exhibit to the court or file"
with your complaint."I have not time to make Investi-
gation Just at present us to the form
miatukes and the tendency that no jent of the School of Mines at er
what the wreck may be, to Lorro, described Interestingly the ge-p- ut
It together again. It Is no longer jolngy f tho Santa Fe Range. . He. il- - Gentry' ICgirs. Uie d iwmlabl" kind.t t Infra'. Viiluv'i. H ivtKlna
lustrated wllh a chart the geologicalpopular to end it all with a pistoljhot or a fatal leap, but to leavesomething still to be lived for or tobe done when the curtain drops.
She puld a high tribute to George
column for New Mexico. While SantaFe is ancient historically it is built ona very recent deposit geologicajlyspeaking. Prof. Jones fixed the age
of each month and gave an insightinto life in the days of Babylon thntwas inimitable In its charm.
The remaining three lectures byDr. Clay will bo the most Interest-ing of the entire series, being as theyare on Art nnd Hellgion in Babyloniaand Assyria and "Modern Light on
I of man on earth at 125,000 years atleast anil very probably much older.
Brewer fLfe:Ancient Palestine
'Bernard Shaw and to Ibsen and drewthe distinction between immoral andmoral plays by saying that immoralplays make for death and destruct-ion, but moral plays for health anillite. Anything that obscures right orwrong, or that makes wrong seem
He showed howl the mineralizationIn the Santa Ke range is much, mucholder, Ihnn that In Grant county, animportant fact to the prospector. He
of action which you should adopt,.but will Hssume, as your letter Indi-
cates, that you have satisfied yourselfas to that. I note, however, that youspeak of enjoining tho board of coun-ty commissioners from Issuing li
described the origin of coal beds in
FIGURES DEMONSTRATEADSURblTY OF ANCIENT --
POLITICAL CANARD
jWtralil) la liuil uhpfrinr It ho IndramnltniB vicinity and gave many other in-- 1
hook or drama. The modern(ociological and educational and 'cresting points on local geology that
th ',n""1 forward withthe speaker enumerated ten great "-
Kreat interest to his lecture tomorrowshouldmodern plays whioh every one j
wart "llnw to live on twentv-fou- r n tlie momentous question: "Has(PICIAL PltPATCH TO MORNIN4 JOUPNALl
Santa Fe, Aug. 26. To dispel the
censes. I know that within the lastyear or two the Idea seems to haverevived that the county commissionershave some control over the isminnceof liquor licenses under Section 4225
of the compiled lawn of 1897, but I
am of the opinion that Section 6 of
ma xthours a dav." Is the ' lesson taught "" production reached the assertion that It Is thePecos valley or English-speakin- g
counties that defeat Spanish-America- n
candidates, figures were prepared to-
day from election returns.CLAIMThe Vote given Attorney General
Frank W, Clancy, who polled the
Chapter 10R of the laws of 1901,
which prescribed the procedure forobtaining such a license without, any
action by the county commissioners,supersedes the provisions of Section4125, which provides for tho Issu-
ance of the license upon order ofthe board of county comminsloners.As there Is possible some room fordispute about this, I suggest thatyou should make the assessor, countyclerk and board of county commis
highest vote at tho first state election,wns enmpured with that of George W.Armljo and It was found that It wasnot In Chaves and Eddy counties or
SANTA FE TAXES
NEED ENIIZIeven ltoosrve.lt. or Quay or Currycounties thnt Armijo fell behind Clan
and the voluntary sacrifice o'f thodesin of the Individual for the goodot the community is the spirit thatrum through the plays. IJt was aninspiring, a scholarly and wlthul In-
tensely interesting dissertation.The Indian's Greatest Foe.
Dr. H, A. Larson, in charge of thesuppression of the liquor . trafficamong the Indians, addressed thesummer school on the baneful effectof firewater on the Indian and ly
also on the white man. Hepresented a mass of statistics In anInteresting manner. The lecture wasIllumined with anecdotes, pathetic,humorus. witty and the speaker heldhis audience spellbound.
A fine musical program nnd a reci-tation by two Indian girls broughtforth great applause. Mrs. Hammltsang two new Indian songs, and Mr.Andrews and Miss Abraluimson, avery pleasing duet.'
cy but in Bernalillo nnd Santa Fecounties. In Bernalillo, he was 244votes behind Clancy; in Santa Fe, 62votes, while in ("haves be was only56; Ed ly G7, Curry 51 votes behindthe leader on tho republican ticket.
sioners all defendants, because If youmade the board alone the defendant,the objection might be made thatthe board had nothing to do with tlissuance ot licenses.
"Yours very truly,"FRANK V. CLANCY,
"Attorney General.
On the republican' aide, Armijo ranonly 154 votes behind Williams InEddy, Chaves, Roosevelt and Martinezfell 544 votes behind O. L, Owen.
PCCIAL DISPATCH TO WOPNINM JOUPNAL1
Santa Fe, Aug. 26. liefore the stateboard of equalization this forenoon,J. W. Norment, Nathan Salmon,George Kissell, the first named presi-
dent of the Chamber of Commerce,the second president of the Mer-chants' association and the last oftho board of county entrimlssioners,
TULAROSA DITCH CASE
pi
vtl
REVERSED BY COURT
nvPtCIAL OlftPATCH TO MOPNIN4 JoOPNAUSanta Fe, Aug. 26. The state su
discussed what they considered an in-
justice to Santa Fe county. Theypointed out that property in the cityof Santa Fe was assessed at a higher
RECEIVERS FOR
PUMP COflllll
H APPOINTED
preme court today in a lengthy opinrale than the same class of propertyin other cities. if :
' '
illIt was also shown that the rural
UNKNOWN BENEFACTORPRESENTS RARE TABLETS.
TO NEW MEXICO MUSEUM
MMCIAl DISPATCH TO HOKUIM JOUMLISanta Fe, Aug. 26. Nineteen cunei-
form clay tablets from Ancient Ba-bylonia and Assyria, collected by Dr.A. T. Clay of Yale university andauthenticated by him, were todayPresented to the New Mexico Museum
y a citizen who wishes his namewithhold. The Museum authorities'or years have desired such a col-
lection, both for comparative purp-
oses and also for general exhibit,M financial restrictions had prevent-p- !
them from acquiring it. Some ofthe tablets antedate tho davs of Ab
I!T MOHNIHO JOUNAL MCIAL UHIO WIS!)
New York, Aug. 2fi. Receiverswere appointed tonight for the Inter
ion by Chief Justice Koberts reversedthe celebrated Tularosa ditch case,appealed from Otero county, Involvingthe water rights of two different com-munity ditches in Tularosa. The titleof the case is State of New Mexico onrelation of community ditches or noc-qui-
of Tularosa townsite, Bnlph S.Connell, Thomas M. Shields, and lo
Duran, commissioners of saidcorporation, and Noah Bullard, mayordomo, vb. The Tularosa CommunityDitch, Ell Knight, J. J.. Sanders, J. ill.Jackson and It. Fields, uppallants.
Ralph S. Connell, one of the appel-lees, was recently murdered by hcinijshot from ambush, near Tularosa.
districts did not bear their Just pro-porli-
of assessment and taxation.Mr. Normen cited figures to show theenormous and Inexplicable decline In
one year of livestock and agriculturalproperty and tho big increase in cityvaluations. He told of land ownerswho although they owned forty to onehundred and sixty and more acres, re-
turned for assessment only the threeor four acres under cultivation andapparently mado It stick.
national Steam Pump company, acorporation, by Culled Stntes
Judge Mayer, The receivership wasgranted in an equity suit brought by
bondholders and stockholders and acreditor.
Tho International Steam Pump com.pany was incorporated In New JerseyIn i8'.9, and has since acquired con- -
How to increaso the taxable assess- -
raham while others are as recent as1 merit $13,000,000 so that taxes nextlh reign of Cyrus, One letter with year might meet expenditures was thetivoliqie dates from the Ur dynasty. I problem thut faced ' the members of
He knows that when he puts his beerin light glass bottles and placards thecase "Keep thisxover on to protectthe beer from light" that he is deliber-ately throwing on you-t-he responsi-bility of keeping it pure.
Why should you take the risk?
Beer is saccharine.
The slightest taint of impurity ruinsits healthfulness. -
Schlitz is made pure and the BrownBottle keeps it; pure from the breweryto your glass.
the board at their session this after''W to 2281 R C. A temnle recordtrol of the following corporations:
lMalse tk Knowles Steam PumpWorks, Kas't Cambridge, Mam.; DeanSteam Pump Works, llolyokn, Mass.:Henry It. Worthirigtoii, Harrison, N
J.; Laldlaw Dunn Gordon company,Cincinnati; Snow Steam Pump Wwrks,and the Holly Manufacturing com
To 0en Hiidge Hlds., Santa Fe, Aug. 26. J. W, Johnsonof the state engineer's department willbo present on Saturday afternoon atthe opening of bids for the bridge tobe built across the Rio Grande atArrey on the Rio Grande river. It tsto be a four-spa- n structure, each span
noon, at which they took up appeals.Hearings havfr-bee- n practically com-
pleted although the Mountain StatesTelephone and Telegraph companyand others still want to be beard In
'rom the reign of Dungl la datedK. c. and another from Jokha,
J4(,0 B. C, Is tho record of paymentsfr drink, oil, cereals, etc., to ines-enger- g
of southern IJabylonla.Probably the most interesting is a protests and appeals and will be given
of steel sixty-fiv- e feet long, andulla from 2400 B. C, being a sealitno opportunity.placed on pile piers and abutments.iut upon the knot of a cord or ropo
Md afterward baked as a record.There is also a temple record fromth reign of Ibc-Si- n 2306 B. C, and
Cattle Company Granted Intension.Santa Fe, Aug. 26.. State Engineer
pany, liuffalo; Clayton Air Compres-sor works, New York; Jeanesvllle ironWorks company, llaxelton, Pa.; TheFred M. Present! St ain Pump 'com-pany, Milwaukee, W'-- .
Benjamin Guggenheim, who wasloot on the Titanic, wan chief organi-zer and'promoler of the company;
The board of directors, of whichWilliam Guggenheim Is chairman, Is-
sued a statement saying th receiver
James A. French today granted an extension of time td the Red River Cattle company to completes Ha irrigationproject near Springer, Colfax county,
Groves Leaves Xor Denver.SautaFe, Aug. 26. Corporation
Commissioner M. S. Groves and KateClerk B. F. Seggcrsoiv leave tomorrowfor a conference of western corpora-
tion commissioners at Denver to dis-
cuss the effect of the inter-mounta- in
rate decision and what leg-
islation Is needed to counteract some
of the effects of this de-
cision which seems to circumscribe to
a large extent the power of the statesin fixing rates.
See Jhat Crown isbranded "Schlitz."
""e from the reign of Gimil-Si- 2315B. C.
royal Inscription from Erech,J10" B. C is inscribed by '"Shanga-nid- ,
the mighty hero, king of Freeh;K of Amnanum: patron of the
Ifmple of Ana etc m
A bulla from the temple archivesof Larsa, 2100 B. C, Is a record of
Telephone No. 1029Montezuma Grocery &
'
fLiquor Co.
Albuquerque, N M.ship Is a friendly one.UNPLEASANT TRAVEL,
, BY AMERICAN..
WOMENv
Paris, Aug. 26 (6:45 p. m.) While
"The receivership," tavs the state-ment, "was rendered necessary by thefact that although th compaiij hawbeen doing a fairly prosperous busi- -
fneep given to various temples. On
nuu mi.) hua K....H Considerate hardships of the Americans who ))y Irll)rw tlmn ilH interest charges. Itwere caught in the war stone are ml- - h ,,, , ...k the interestnor in comparison with the terrors' avmnt ,,f .sss.ooo and the sinkingand sufferings of the people In the fund payrr,et of 2r,o,00, due Sp-regln-
to the north now being swept ;tpm,,er on first lien twenty-ye- ar
"0th Bides and the four edges arene seal impressions of temple
There are three other tabletsom this temple, two of them from
n days of Abraham. Six additionalwdeu from Srech, are dated in therisn of Nebudchadneawr, Belshaa-- .
Neriglissar Nabonidus and Cyrua,mK the most recent of the docu
to,nt, 529 B. C.The collection is one that 'has beenTefuiiy made to Illustrate the his-u,r- y
of Babylonia and Assyria.
by battle, yet they are enduring;
Hurt Trouble Wtli Her Stomach."About four years ago I began tc
have trouble with .my stomach anilfound it necessary to eat sparingly,writes Mrs. Bernleo Wyandt, Lima,
Ohio. "There was a dull nd heavyfeeling in my stomach after eating
uncomfortable. I 'that was mostalso annoyed by frequent headachesAfter taking; a number of 'cf'c'"ofwithout benefit I got aChamberlain' Tablets and found they
h hin- - Two bottles
much personal Inconvenience.A parly of American women who
5 per cent bonds.' It also lacks ade-quate .working capital."
The statement adds that the receiv-ership is not expected to Involve anyof its associated or subsidiary com-panies.
kesslta frost Journal waat ass,
arrived -- from Switzerland today wasthree days In making the trip fromGeneva to Paris, which ordinarily
ten hours. They were in third- -tVem 'rW ; of this comptalnt- - ForJP cars which were crowded.Wlti from journal waat
ALBUQUERQUE MORJX'G JOURNAL, THURSDAY, AUGUST 27, 1914.
IN THE WORLD OF SPORTWHEAT PIICES
i
SOAR AB0VES1.21
ON WAR SCARE
OFFICIALS FEAR
TJEiV OEVOLUTIOfJ
:
l!J OLD MEXICOPITTFEDS TRIMMED SPEAKER'S TRIPLE
H5FI1D T CERSTAGE FIST FI6HTIBY TERRflPfH TEAM Statement by Lord KitchenerThat England Is Prepared
jfor Three Years' Struggle
i Cause of Advance.
Chance That Villa Will StartSomething in Near FutureIs Being Carefully Weighed
by Administration,'.Csmnlli Yield only Three Mimic In
cakj:hi, vikci;ht" ViJTjrxjax'Cardinal Vincent V:uiiiuU'!!i n huviiImt of tin; Sacred ColloKe nf CardlnaK
H'lilclt HKH-t- s lu tlic Vitii.-tt- to clot t a Ktiei II" is one of the lromlrientmemlaTs ond tuay be licded 11m new rontiff tu Ilea the Ilotnan Cutbollciburcl).
Nine, Inning Hut Can't ,i l lijr WilliII; lfiHnder Wallop Packer aniltrotM)it i Howl of Buffalo.
IriirHtl, IKV.IK rCMMlltlJ.w I.. pit
. . 41 ,17(hi. . , . ,. ...t (I ,tr.(
ItaHimnn ., ... it .n:Ouil.u. . . . '. r.i totrflriM'ktyn . . . . . .r.anKMriKM CM? . . 11 ilM l.ill , . ...hi n
...47 I
IIiimi TiMir.IndjgiiHiMiMN Hi Khiihnn flty,Mtaari nl Ml. un
l'Hii.iith at lialiirnnra.llufliiln ui llrMiifcltn,
tav MNtiia jmiMNAi. ecillaltlmore, Aug. 2.
Pe'ira: nrialtlmora 110 000 OOx tIMttahuiRti .,..000 000 0101
Iluttcrlea: Qulnn and It unwell; i
Camnlti, Lccleir ami Uerry,
lmllatuiMila 7) Knna City 3.Kanaaa City, Aug. 20.WHIM It II II
Indlanapolla ..'.Oil 000 0407 14 il
Kanaaa City ..100 100 1003 10 3
llatterlea; Kalkenhern and Ttarlilen;Cullnp and Kiiaterly, Kzenroth.
CliiK 'i; Kl. liiula I.Ht, lunula, AUK. 20.ai.rt R II
Chicago ....000 100 000 1 II y
Ht. Loula 001 000 000 01lliitlerlea; JnhtiKon and Wllaoh;
Keupper and Hlmnn.
HriMiklyn llnrfiilo 3.Brooklyn, Aug. 21.
He.tr : R
lluffHl.t ,100 100 0002llrooklyn . ,..,U0 101 0I
Batterlea: Hchultx, Anderaon andHliilri Klnncran and Land.
OTHER BASEBALL RESULTS
AMI.HKAN AtOKHMTION.
IIhw They aiHnit.
the slaughtering of millions of peo-
ple, forcing countries into bankruptcyIn (ho end The uppeal sent out by
FrcHldrnt Wilson has greatly affect-ed the people of War-ridd- Kuropeanil will eventually help bring uhoutpence." ,
Hislmp Henilrix hud personnl In-
terviews with Kmperor William... .. ii. ..
I IrM Hough llimx- - MarIMttwi llrc mid Cult,
Which I irrmcr turn li One-ru- n
Margin; Olanl lMvldo trouble till).
l Prl. I
, 4 ,5,'.1
i. n ,, .. . l. J.4 r.
HI l.'ul ., .01 (4 ,m!! ,. . . HI ..'.:
I'MljHielj'tii . H r. .miItaclnnatl .1.1 n .infinal. .11 art . . 1 m c.V
. M t
(him Tmur...w Vm at I tin a.
It ,c.n i m. i,.mi!l'tillaHrlihla at riiiilrilial I,
iir.an i I'itiabumii,
ts-- min iuaiAi ineiik LUMkChicago, Auk, 2. In a gam In
which Cheney allowed Huston tinton hit and no ruin, anil Ha I it scoredChicugo'a only ruii with a four-turn- e
drive, I ho tension (if tha rlo leaguere today grew mi great that playerof both cliilin engaged In a flat light.Km cm I player mere banished fr"intha game.
In I lm seventh Inning, af!r Palerili'ivr lh- - Imll over l ho right Addaereen fur hi hum rim, Zimmer-man followed wllh a hit to lift fieldand attempted to stretch It Into adouble. Ever was waiting with thehall and when Zimmerman slid Intosecond base, lagged hliu. Homethlngunaeen happened, for Ever hit Zim-
merman on the hml with tha hullaa thn player slid paat th Iiumi. Zlni-merm-
aro immediately and In amoment a free-for-a- fight follow- -
ed.Maranvillft tump to Ever' asslst-ane- n
and a swarm of thn home play-er- a
rushed to tha aid of Zimmerman,When order km restored, Zimmer-man, Ever. Maranvlllo andMchmldtwere sent to tha club house. It wasnxrcaaary for Manager Ktalllniyi toaend Pitcher He lo,flrnt base forHoaton.a! HUMHtwlon ...... 000 0011 0000 ! I
Chicago .... 01 000 lflxv- -1 0 1
Hatterles: Tyler and dowdy; Cha-ncy and Archer.
(iaiita 0-- li CardHI, f.oul. Aug, 2. HI. 1 ,00 In and
New York hrnkn even In , todiiy'adiiiilde-hoadc- r and tonight tha loud-In- g
teHin'a position la unchanged.Hur ririt im: II M B
New Yolk .. 0 000 0000 8 1
HI. l..iul .... 100 0110 II0K- -1 4 4
Hatterles; Miirquiii'd, liemarea andMeywra; Huk nd Hnydur.
aw HmmhiiI gimi W it Ic
New toik .. uuo 001 oat 4 7 0
t. liula .... 000 000 0000 i 2
Hattrlea: Mathcwann and Meyer;KIIn, t hirer and Wlnno. u
IhalKKra 2-- I'lralinriituhuiKh. Auk, 119. Iiroiiltlyn won
hot h Riimca of a double-heade- r to-
day, tho wore Im Idk 2 Ui 1 mil 4 to
Monrao-flra- l gania; Il II Illrooklyn . . 110 000 000 2 4 1
I'ltlaliurgh . 010 000 000 I 0
Itatlorlea: 1'feffer and McCmty;Cuoper and C ilmiin.
ir Beiinno lamai II II Il"iUtiurgh ., OHO 110 0002 7 1
liriKtklyn ... ooa ool (too 4 11 1
Iluttcrlea; KrtNllchiiiier, Ailiiin millColoinan, (illmuii; HnMiin uml MiCur-ty- .
I'hlliitlelphia-Cltii'litiiiii- i, t'"t ached,nleil. ;
LINCOLN SHUT OUT
BY OMAHA; SOOS PUT
KIBOSH ON DENVER
MIHltHN I.KAUIK atAMUMI,
j wniie in i icrin.niy. no was u itctenioto tne Intel natl'iniil pence ooniorcneewhich met In Constance, which wasforced to adjourn to lmtlon wherethe last session was held.
i m:cnMi: K.f.u; toJOIN IN MII.ITAItY SMIIVICI
London. Aug. 27 (1:11 n. ni.) A
tliMntti h to llotiter's Telegram com-pany from Paris slates thut PrinceI.ouis Anionlno of Orleans and Hru-gan.-
who resigned his commissionin the AtiHtrfi-Hungarla- n unity at theoutbreak of the war, has been au-
thorized by King George to servo in
the rith h army.Ho has left fur the front tn Join the
staff. The keenness of Frenchmen ofall classes and the world toJoin tin; coirs is instanced by thepriests in Palestine. A number ofthose in Jerusalem, hearing of theiniitiiliziit ii,u order, left on the firstlout for France. Among them Is the,liomiiiican Father. Vincent, who wus.engaged at the lime in writing an
work on ancient Jerusa-lem.
IIVTTl.t op Miittt aim;(;iu:ati',st or HISTORY
Ivonilou, Aug. 27 (l:l." ti. in.) A
dispatch to the Daily Mail from Co-
penhagen, says that the (lerman so- -
(Ciaitiatteit un Puss rie.i
LUMBER
V MOMNIN JOUSNAl aCCIAt. LlAr.O Wl1,Chlc igo, Aug. 28. Mav wheat leap-.e- d
to 11.21 today an a result of thawildest, (lay ever experienced by theboard of trado in the way of pricechanges. At the siimu time the top
Iniark for September was 11.10'i andfor liecenilier, $1.13.
Tha advance was attributed to state.Imenlg by Lord Kitchener, saylnK thatKnglimd wat prepared for three years
!1if war which caused holders of cereal'to wait for higher prices while nospeculator had the tcrmerlty to sell'short.
The upward leap of grain began tit.the opening of the market with fran-ti- c
traders in the pits bidding 1 to 2
cents higher than the previous closejan,i filling their orders piecemeal.
One order for 60,000 bushels ofwheat, which ordinarily Is a mere tri-
fle uml might change hands without.affecting prices, at all, was split Into
10,000 and 20,000 biishl lots and sent(the price up two cents,j I respite the record figures reached,'actual transaction were few, owing to;the optimism of holders that the warwill send prices still higher.
! - - -
j oooooooooooooooooooooooooa
BUY YOUR
Lumber, Glass, Paintsand Cement
AT THE
SUPERIOR LUMBER
& MILL CO.
00000000000000000000000000
Hudson for Signs!
Wall Paper
: HUDSON for Picture
Frames .
:. it 5 j HIroarth St. ami Copper A.
Drummer ' Bowling Alley205 W. GOLD
Ducbplne, the Iilenl Summer SportFOCK ALLEYS
Glass-Pai- nt
Cement-Plaste- r
,
,
,
ALBUQUERQUE, N. M.
, w. K p,tMllaaiikr , 711 !.'. . i . 7
l.".iit in.. , 7r, r,; ,r.r,I iHllHim i..lla .. , ,.71 tit .117
.1 til II h lit .Mi
ClfvelHnil Hit 4 .4HAKmii.ni, I'll , , , , ,n,i i.;.Mlmii-Hill- l ...til 71 .4iHI, i'atil HI .341
alerrff' Rrattlla,I'lavttlHIlit G; Mllwmilve 4.
Kdtiatta City 4. I'liliiniliila 2.t.iMitMvlttti '', M lrtn t iMh 2. 'ImtluhKP'.tH , Ht. I'Hltl
rAIIIIC tdAHT I.KAfll'K.
llitat lltay Ntttntl.w. 1 , rm.
Pi.rllattd ,. 7 I." .t.7mhii t' ttlllrlai'ii , al B7 . . 4 a
t,. AtiKflfa ,. .......,..7ii 7 .MVnnlra ., .... , 1 .!'
M l4 .I'SUaklailtl ItB ,j 7 .37
Oulfh'Mf'r KMlnsa lllii.lKeoii anil ThreeItiinncr Canter Oicr the Hatter;Atlil'lhia Uln Again, Which la ,otNi l'nuniial; la oka Heat llnmiw,
w. 1.t'hjU'Mtlnhlt .7 37 .lll. l..n , . , .1;:, :.o .sur,Wimhiimion bi a ;.'ltriill ., . itI'tlll'UNA ., .: j .(71
. ;.i li!r.j .C,7
rievlmul , . ,i III an
(hl.njc, t flill.li!ililn.rivlnf!il at Wiahliiaton.HI. I.i.uii at New ym.
lV MOANIM iOUMMAi. IHCIIl tlM0 WIHC)
Hoaton, An. 26. With three Una- -
t"n runnerH i.n the hae In the thirdInnlnif, loduy, Kjn'Hker tripled, muringthree runa and hlmaelf later on Iloh- -
Iiu I a (loulilc. lloaton won, i to 2.
hi Mm i R II Klloaton ....... .004 000 lOx 5 7 1
I Hit roll .001 001 000- -2 4 0
Hutii-riex- : Ori'KK and Only; CaVetand Klanagc.
Alhlcllin A; White Ktit n.rhlliidelphlu, An. 21 ChlcaKO
oiened a aerlea hero toiluy 11 ml waa(iefeiited hy fhlhideliihla hy 5 to 0,
Thla waa tho thirty-fift- h vlitory forI'lilliidelphlH out of tha hint fortyKamea played,
uri.r. n 11 a'jl'hlcaifu . . , . , .000 000 000 0 7 1
Philadelphia ,.000 302 OOx G 10 1
llatterlea: Clrottn, Woiriiiuift antlMayer; Hhawkey and Hchiinir,
Yanka 2; llrowna I.New York, Auit. 28. New York de-
feated IXt. Utula In a twelve-lnnln- s
pltchera' Imttlo hete today hy a acoreof 2 to 1.
cr: tl II RHt. l.oola .,100 000 000 0001 8 iNew York .010 000 00 Olil 2 7 1
Iluttcrlea: W'ellmfin and Akiicw;lirown and Sweeney,
Cleveliind-WuHhltiKtor- i, pnal potted.
LASSIE M'GREGOR IS
WINNER OF BIG STAKE
RACE AT BUFFALO
if MnNta jouaaaL aaaciAi. t,Aaao wiaaiIttiffiilo, N. Y Aug. 28. duly four
horat a atiirted In tho King fleorge Vtr.,0u() Mlnke for 2:14 trotleiN, tho fea-ture of the aecoml dny'a grand circuitrucea nt tha Kort Krlo truck thla af-
ternoon. The big race waa won bylinnle McOreRor. After oukliind hudwon the flrat heat of the Queen CityHlnke for 2:UH trottora, the judxea d
all beta off on tho heat. Thegray gelding envoi im! the mile In 2:12,( t inn r won thn next three hoata andthe race, Omiir'a heat timo for thetulle waa 2:06 4.
It. II. Ureal won the 2:07 puce Inatrulght hoata, Napoleon Direct, thofavorite In the poola, flnlxhed luat Intho first two heata.
Maudiit to Mii'l WolgiiHt.Milwaukee, Wis., Aug. 2.- -Ad
W'olgimt and Joe Mantlot will box tenitiiuiilM In tr the National A. C,here on Friday, September 1S. Thewinner of the bout will meet CharlieWhltti or Freddie Weliih, If he canbe brought over here. '
BUSINESS COLLEGE
GRADUATES HOLD
FINE POSITIONS
Efficiency Training Opens Way
to Business Success; Field
of Opportunity PracticallyUnlimited, jn
The real test of education l thedegree of aiiccoaa it brltiKH to lis poa-aoaa-
Hence, tho aucceaa of a aehoolla ilependvnt ou the aucceas of ItsKl'udilmtca.
Tho record of the AlhuiiierUeIhtalnoaa College In placing Ita gl'ad-uiiIc- h
readily iimhi liraduution InpoHltlona, and their success
In hohllnu the moat difficult poaitionala convincing proof of the thorough-nea-
of the training Imparted. Inevery office In Albuiuiritie. and
In notirly every town In tho south-west. A. II. C. graduates may befound, mid everywhere they ara muk-iit- g
name and fortune for themselves,over- llt'iy different kimta of bual-nea- a
and various ttaea for liusinemttraining are followed by A.graduates.. They are locatod In hanks,wholesale hciiiMcH, Inaurance officeji.with lumber and mining concerns, tnhitrdwatB firma. law flrma, as com
i K.,p sm a employ In WashingtonI C, In r.iii.uou and In the distant
htlipplnc.Tha oupnim, ( ?, f.,il irni Sep- -
temtior (( promises to eclipse all form-er recorda and deaka will he at- apremium. Arrange today to Join thenew elasa, '
AUKl'QVKRQl'E HCSINKSS COU-t.KO-
'The Special School l)y Specialist."
Vaaterilay' Haaiitta.Oakland B; Haeranienin I.Hail Kialirla.il Ji Pnrllaiiil i.i'H Anatlea d; Vfltlta t 4. (Htuiilld
iaaiiti' raili. I. rtHtKlieaa )
Nlll Tllr.llN I KAtM K.
uncut emnmiHKi to wuanauWaahltiKton, Autf, 2. The Ameri
can govertiment Is carefully weiRhlngthe chance f0r an! hKainat a counterrevolution (n Mexho, to be lej byVilla, the kuc essful general of therevolution now drawing to a close. Itla doing all thut it can lo prevent aucha revolution, hut thus far without he- -Ing certain of aucceaa. Everything de-
pend upon the whim ofVI Ilia, who announce that ha la great-ly disappointed at Carranr.a'a failureto live up lo plcdx'a contained In theTorreon agreement and who halairk of him a force of troops auffi- -
rlontly largo to plunge the countryInto another civil war.
lt la conceded In this city that thereprobably will be further trouble iin- -
lesa tho Cnlled States can In mmiway pacify Villa and consequently thoa l m I Mint rut Ion la Riving even more at-
tention In the affairs In Mexico thanIl la to th war situation in Kuropc.The former situation. It la admittedfrankly In official "circles, is of farmore Importance to the United Htntcathan the aituntlon In Europe, for thehitler la now in a fair wny speedily toresume a normal con litlon, so far asthe ability of the country to export Itasurplus products la concerned, whilethe latter, unless American Influenceat this HI leal moment can he madeeffective, will continue a slate of affairs, south of the P.lo tlrnnde, whichmay nil I mutely make Intervention bythla government necessary. ,
Through Consular Agent (leorgn C.Carothera, at Torreon, and Paul Fuller, sent Into Mexico to aid In tha workof securing a permanent peace, theAmerican government has beenbringing to bear upon Villa nil possi-ble presHtirn and It hits been warnlnRhim that If he should liiHlitutc anotherravolullon he can expect no favorsfrom the (.'tilted States, whose borderwill he (dosed to him so far as sup-plies of nil klnda arc concerned, andthat this country probably will do(venythlng that It can, short of actualIntervention, to uid tho Currttnzu government. . ,
KiipMiii to ( arraoa (ovcritmciit., Villa has been told that thla support
will go to tho recognition of the Car-ranz- u.
government provide I It shouldproceed In art orderly way to n. reason-ably prompt J'iittg hl of affulra upona poi iniUtniii lljiiaii. To all these rep-
resentations Villu has listened withinterest, but it In significant thatnothing lm boon said hy him to In-
dicate h iiurpittte to permit the Car-rnnst- rt
government' to proceed to Itawork of restoring peace and prosper-ity to Mexico.
I'rcHident Wilson and SecretaryfJrynn of tho state department do notkruiw what the' outcome Is to be.They frankly admit that If Villa Is de-
termined upon war, there is no way ofstopping him, and thut he probablyha enough troops at his command tobring about a serious state of affairs.He has not yet, however, Indefinitelyrefuse, 1 to accede to the request ofthis country for peace, in which factlies the only hope there is In the pres-
ent situation. Th Wilson adminis-tration Is exerting Itself to the utmostand Is putting Into Ita representationsall the eniphasls that It can command.As long as Villa continues to llatcnI here is hope of averting a renewal of(he wur; (lunger ia 1ht at any eventhe may announce his unwillingness toto listen further,
Agreement City's rail.That Torreon agreement, the failure
to live u)i to which la the excuse Rivenhy Villa for hl present iinrrlcndlyattitude, was made, according to re-
ports which have reached the Wash-ington government, before tho fall ofthat iity. It Ik understood to haveboon signed hy all the constitutional-ist generals, and was to the effect, asreported hero, that the provisionalpresident of the republic, following
I IIia r.ill ,.C II.. ..fin ullntilil tint tio IL
military man and that the permanentprosl lent should be nominated by avote of all tho officers and men of theconstitutionalist forces.
Cairanii, according to Villa, as thegeneral anil first chief of the consti-tutionalists, is not entitled, under thoTin toon agreement, to serve an provi-sional pnsl.lottt; nor would he beentitled. Villa further assert, to serveas permanent president, unless nomi-
nated to that office hy the vote of hisofficers ati.t enlisted men,
Safely Installed as .'resident.It is not known here what reply
Car ran .a ninkea to thla charge of hadfaith, brought hy Villa. .CarranssH lcnow, ttf course, safely , Installed apresident from which position he mayperhaps have an outlook very differ-ent from that which he had when histroops Here Investing Torreon, agd thesuccess of the eiSistltutlonullHt armlawas still in the far future and uncortain.
In a now revolution, northern Mexi-co would be attacking the government,as was the case In the uprisingagiiihi,!, Matlcro and Huerta. Villa, lapractically supreme in Chihuahua andif he slioulil make an alliance with)Governor Muylorena of Honora, he,would he supreme In that state also.Maytorena is not on good terms withCarraiifta, and it ia assorted that hewould be glad to make a union withVilla fur the purpose of starling anew revolution.
sulfk-icn- t for Trouble.Villa ha under his Immediate con-
trol between S&.0(0 And 40,000 . men.according to popular report. Even Ifnot that large, his force would hesufficient to cause serious trouble, ifhe were ti effect onion with Gov-ernor Mayterenn. At Hallna Cru
Iltiw They Hltinil,W. I f.t.71 t.2 .1777
. .5777(1 f.H .1147
, , 115 M ,5.1t,,,, k l .t;
, , , , 1 7 .477, , !,1 H .421
4) tis ,s;.
Albuquerque Lumber Company423 North First Street
there Is another force - of troopsftien lly to Villu and numbering some-where between ID, 000 and 25,11110 men.If Villa and Muylorena were to unitewith the fonts at Sal ina .Crux andthen hcgln a war against Cgrranxa,the latter would be In the same po-
sition pecupied by lluortii at 'the be- -
ginning of the Carran.a uprising.Notwithstanding the serious nature
nt the case, the administration is notwithout hope. It does not believeVilla, In a revolt against Currunzu, canbe as successful us were Carranm andVilla in the revolt against Huerta,and that, ultimately, the regular
will win. For one thing.ltla pointed out, Villa, In a new revolu-tion, would l.tt k the moritl Issue whichwas so prominent in the revolutionwhich is now ending. Without thatmora) issue, It is believed here, thesuccess of the revolutionists wouldhave been out of the iiuostlon. Cer-tainly, it explains tho refusal of tho
j Wilson inlministrutlon to recognizeHiiorta, and Ita open policy pf goodwill .toward the constltutionalistM.
d'oiiunilc IsiH' Lucking.It Is further pointed out, that Vllln
In a new revolution will also lack thestrong economic Issue on which the
lCiirianxa forces planted themselvesearly in their career the Issue of Inn 1
fiocdom In Mexico and t tie breakingup of the system of large holdings,
'under which the small agriculturalistshnd boon reduced to a atate closely
jakln to middle age serfdom.(in tho land Issue the Cnrrunza gov-
ernment Is sound, and only waits foran oppoi tunty to make Its pledgesgood.
GERMANY IS
B ETWEEN
HAMMER
(('iiiitiniieil lns Two.)
tho correspondent of tho MorningPost suys:
"Tho details of the :ombat atMallnea show concjtislniy that Ilii-glu-
has un army with an undimin-ished morale and capable of u strongoffensive. H Was a mere skirmishas the number of wounded shows. TheGermans were driven buck withhorse, foot and artillery. In the ar-tillery work tho Height ng showed su-periority,". ,
PARIS WAIN SlWVICttRAIMA' l)ISORGAM;
London, Aug. 27 (3:."l a. m.) TheI'aily Mull's Itoulogno cnrrcspontlentsays that the events of tho, past fewday have ugaln (llsorganlxed theParis train service and that everythingmust give way to the necessities forthe transportation of troops, the re-
moval of wounded and the, clearing 'ofthe civilian popoulation from tho fir-ing lines.
The train trmn Piitla' 'nlni,.,invtook twelve hours, being comiicllcd to!wall seven hours ut Amiens by a floodof 5,(i(io lielglan refugees anivlrtgfrom Hie Charlorol (lift riot and airninhiMd of Hrltish wounded whowere guarded from InniiiHltlVo viritorsby an armed sentry. '
Among those who crossed to Kng-lan- d
were many Amerii.iin Womenfront Switzerland.
ItlsllOP III.MHUV TIII.I.SWHAT II K SAW IN WAR 7.0XK
Triniiiail, Colo..'-Au- c. "f notconfident lhat wiien the Kuropeauwar la brotiuht tn a cli,u ih .i n...sword will be broken and war will hoa thing of the past," Mated Bishopl'.. it. lientlnx of Kansas, lily U- -
night, who recently returned f mmHernia ny.
"Should (leriniiny be defeated. f!us-sl- a
will be nearer to tho front amithe war Mestlon will be a grave one.The duration of the war will beshortened hy a lack of foodstuffs.The country will not be able to fur-nish the army with food after I DO
days. ' . , 3t
'The declaration of war was likeH thunder holt, from a clear sky. Itwa unwelcome by a majority of theforeign V'ountries. Kngla,nd. Prance.Austria, Russia and the people ofGermany did not wan war but theemperor was ready. This war means
BABIES' HEALTH CONTEST ENTRY CARD AT NEW MEXICO
STATE FAIR AND EXPOSITION, OCTOBER 5 TO 1 0.
The entry card, printed below, must be mailed to cither Mrs. John W.Wilson, superintendent of I hat department of tho fair, or to Mrs. (Jeorge.S. Kloek, both of this city. Notice of tlmo of Judging appointment will bomailed to all making their, entries early. Entries In . this departmentclose at 12 o'clock, noon, Ha'turday, October ;i. Examinations will he madoon October S. fi ami 7, from 1 to 3 p. tn. No entrance loo reirulrcd.Hero Is the entry card:W ,1, ',t
ai..ti i'iiv , M 4 ,.'Heaver ' , ; , r. .. .;.17at, Ji.t-i- it f.a ..,
ti. M'tlave , . .i m .miMnroln .i a .inntiittali. iii ?t .444Tlwka . . '. . 14 t .11 jWli'lilta .. .. M 7 ,jn
.1 IJntry No......Name of Ch'ilil
Age. . . Months(ITgiiie Age to Oclohcr fttli, 1011.)
Hex ,
Parent's Name i..,.
Nf.w Otli'atialltrinlDahuitiMuliIKi . . , .AtlantaSnalivlll .,i 'Imtiiiii'.i.auMftnlilila . ,
MiintauiiiM'y
Yeateriliiy'a Keaulta.AllanlH, Mobile 'nitmlliKliam Hi lllMtlllll"" 3,
Niihvllle-M.iilliiiiie- i y anil NewMrmi.hla aniitna f"ll'''l.THREE TENNIS MATCHES,
EACH THREE HOURS LONG,
' FEATURE TOURNAMENT
T MOHNma jOUBNAI. FCIt no wialNewport. It, I., Aug. i. Throe
iiiiitihoa, nidi three hotira long, li nt
uniiaital Intnreal to the ftnti'th roundof the totii liiiihent for thenittlniiul HltiRlea lawn tonnia ennm-ploiiHh-
today.C. K. Tom-har- of the Went Hide
club, New York, fought Oiplnln K. it.Whitney r.f the JlltirviU'd team andl.onawond, tJ.roUKh five long acta he-fo-
victory ierchei on his nidi oftin. net. Tmichiird won thirty-thro- e
mtmia uml Whitney thirty.V. C. Iiiiuhh, of thu aatna Wet Hldo
cluh,' waa compelled to play five setactmiprlalng alxty-tw- o gamea heforc hoeliminated H. O. Johnmin, also of theLtinRH'iiod Crlt ket chih. The third ex-to- n
led match waa tmlwocn Chnrlca A.M.i tp nr Tumua. F a., and tsldneyTiiylor; Jr., of 1'hlladelphla. the fur- -
tnvt winning afler playing firty-flv- o
' f"atiniea.tin the other hand, the grand court
mutch between tho champion, M. Me- -
l.otiKhlin and Irving C. Wilnht, ofHimt.in. who Hold, tlitj mnithem chum-ploiiKhl-
WHa ertth'd In thirty-thre- e
mlmitea for Wright won only throeKntnea. ,; , t
WAGON MOUND A. C.
WILL PROMOTE BOUT;
CHAVEZ TO REFEREE
Address
Street hihI Nil. .
ST. VINCENT ACADEMY,
(lumea Ttitlay.Wi. hin t OniaiiaT'ii'a at Klniii t'lty.IH'inm' at Hi, Jiai.ih:l.lmiilti nl Hn M .Ihin
if MoNta jew., apacut laaaao maAt Onirthii
aciirt n H H
liiit.thii ,3 7 1
Mm olit . , 0 2 !l
Matti-rtca- : Tlppla ami MoAtllater,Kreti;cii Khmau and llhickbui n,l'.ohr.
At tt Multlrahi .ira- it f
1 ' M 'tlien . . , , 4 i :;
Wichita f. lHutteilea; Moprltlito end Haley
ker and Cruhnm.
At KIouk Citylm City 1 0
IVnver ., 1 t allatti'llea. Clink and Wltht'nw;
HarrtnRion, Slelter and Hpuhr.
At Kt, JtmfphHnoea; ft It K
Tupika ....,1 5 :Ht. Joarph .. , ...5 l
Halterica' (iinver, funfnrd andHappa, Merr and KchunR.
.lnhnxnn amia Iteil ( mna la).hiaati. Aug. 2t, I'resl tent John-e- n
today appointed rptemoT 1 a"Ked Ct'oca ty" In the Americanleague. Twenty-fiv- e tier rent of theIcngiiB g.ime recelpta wil he given tothe !'d Croaa for ha Kuropran warfund
llarm-- n Wins !' frtdf CtiamplimolilpMiline(Kilia, Mian., AuR. 2, J. M.
Uana, of the Whitrmarah dub, I'hll-dt-hli- i.
today won the western opensn:f rhamptoRahip with total of !Mn.kea (or 72 hole. WilUmm Kidd.trf ifesr AlStr.'ain i lub, Kt. tjul, w
tb beat with Jl.
n i j
' : :"' . ''''., .".'.,.: '.
'
',' ' mercliil tcachcia and aecre- -i , f t . f private
taaafiai. itcm -- o noan jouaaan tarlea. In statu employ, countyMound, N. M., Aug. u,,,, nmv j ,.jv givlce, and In
Th Walton Mytilid A. C. r"atur. ,,. tnor cupaoltlea. Nor doday nlatit will "taae ita flrat hoxllig j ,h ,.((,., tnp w,uthweHt limitbout. Kid Jutbwi of Trinidad. Colo.,ith()r tll,,(, t(f ,.lui(.vilr; ttu,v Brp xcnt-an- d
Young Hame, a local ymingater, tl,roj f,.lu vnntti ( voast, several Inwill be the pi lni iiwla. They m niaae ,
114 pounds at Willi' travel ton roonda. Two napiy pre-- 1
hmiruille have been scheduled to!precede the wlmlirp- - '
Kenny Chavea, the featherweight,will relerre the main event.
Want a high grada employ T Ortha hotter Rind nt aervanial Makuse of th want column of th
BOARDING AND DAY SCHOOL. FOR GIRLS.Music, prammio Arts, Domestic Science, Painting, S laJ AiicnUim.
CIYSSIS REOPEN. SliPTEJIBEU 1st, I9H.Complete !oursc, Preparatory and Academic
For particular, address SISTEK SUPERIOR, St. Vincent Academy.Alhiiiltierque, N. M.
ALBUQUERQUE MORNING JOURNAL, THURSDAY, AUGUST 27. 1914. :
THE BaGIflN OUEEN AND HISTUHIC FLIIIJES 111 GUONIHY .BOH' III M LEI
FIVE
fodh m tho Jim' Crow bills 1n con-
gressecuMie
amiilrpal'tnu
Hie segregationnil Is coIkIi
InHilled.the cx-- j E FFORT MADE TO
Tho piuty Is pledged to Womanruff age In the next IcKlwlaturo whenSELLERS IS BACKconn(ho amendment
s h life t;,t,i the t oiistiiutlon
i
CONTROL POLICY,()MUUI MMIV TI l Hlt '
j tt. ritMitt tir sin ii Hi vnmem IIICDRDCPCnc iin
IdUl IILltfU! HI LIDetroit. Mull.,' Aug. rii.Cb.il les S. i
Osborne, former gpvei unr, 1
mi to-- j
rlglil i inn i ilcd the victory In yisler-- jjL 9 "'. A 5r . i. itay a n Mni liciiu nuiiet-nnliiin- l i niilisti
' t v;-- j in ii i"Air. tbtrne will have ft.r his"ii , ' ' ; J .1 1 111 ;','vl Advertiser s Try to Influenceli,inenH in the f ill i.aiiip:il(ii
'1 i 'V
After Notable Trip to Californiaand Return With Mrs, Sel-
lers, Good Roads Booster Is
at Home Again,7- 1-. ..... t' - ,
tditotinls in Stockton Dailies
During Controversy With
Labor Unions., " ' '. iiit .'ST -- -
itfiMimitti ft ifi'llior Woi.ill'l lle N'. l'Viris, ileltio-jcrn- t,
mid I tarty U. I'liliengill, pio- -
i u - I ve. - '
j In the oenmcissioli.il H'tili;its, theIncomplete n turns Indl, ul-- that all
;of tlu pi'.sciit iiigrHsin-- with thejrxieptii n of fainuel V. Smith of l'"n-lilti-
ulil le candidiitt forIn the fall. Mr. Smith withdrew sev-- ;era I ec,s uko. ,
c ilia
i
liej KOitfiti journav- PtriAil I avo willS'ni Fimo isto, Aug. jii. A fiory of
a futile effort of I he Merchants,x Employe's' association
of Stockton to control the cditoi la J andl i Wh loluiunx cf the three flally liews-pape- is
of that city In the present la-t-
trouble there, was related to th.Jfedeial Industrial lelattons rommis-slo- n
today t y liviim Martin, owner of
HEAR CANNONS
After in automobile trip of 3,400miles, former Mayor I). K. H. Sellersand Aire. Kolljrs returned yesterdayHfternoon. They went from here toCalifornia, and back, spending twomonths and ten days on the road, Hidetrips aecoiint for the high mileage.
Prom Socorro they traveled overthe new road by way of the ISscon-dld- o
bridge Hnd flecker. This roadnow In pussnble. Colonel Sellers wildh would advise tourists to go thatway now, although II was closed untilrecently on Recount of heavy ruins.The colonel said It wag as good as theLa Hajada hill road. Ho praised thestate engineer's department enthusl-astieall- y
for the construction of this
111.. Slo. Ll,, !.,, ...aROAR OFF COAST
OF BAY SHORE
-
Iff hWBW ' V I
rjf QUEEN tU2AfIH J
. , III" ...
MnnwiNd JOimMAt. fpriAL Llatn liliisv Ore., Aon. J. Wlmthey (leelnr In h'IV been eaiinon idiim
at m'ii unit reported today by personsat various po'nti uloiiir the Coos bayhlion-- . Hhlpplnirrtrflcs, however mdio Klionleibie of the plvwncii of war-- i
ships It, ttie vbinily, and tht rumorsof a probabln sea flKht were' received
j hero with skepticism, In view i f themany wild reports of the rhaructertint hav ii 'bo! ri 'e:r nlal 'd Vif late.
I What wm apparently heavy caimojt.jaiiiR was hilifd ni Intervals by
jiersons from ! :to a, m. t
alout 2 p. m. today. JuwsUKiitioii ap.Jpiaiij lu hvv established that thvniund was t.ot i hum by blai'tlnn litany point oil shore.
I opwrutoii at tlin Cult d States wlrv
stretch.Saw I AO Tourist Autos.
The colonel gathered some statisticson the road. He used eighty-tw- o gal-
lons of gasoline at prices rangingfrom thirteen and a half to fifty centsa gallon, the cost depending upon thelocation, on tho way to San lXlogo. Heused or set of tires. .
Travel over . tho Occan-to-oceii- n
highway In both directions Is unusu-ally heavy. The colonel counted ISOautomobiles on the road.
Colonel Kdlcrg saw considerableroad work under way In Arizona andCalifornlo, but not any more than Isbeing dono In New Mexico, he said.The roads of Nw Mexico compare fa-
vorably with those of the other two"'itte i ' r '; -
One of the most pleasant stretchesof-- , the trip was, through the MoJavedesert, between Needles and llarstow.He drove the tar only ut night when
While no open threat ever wasmu.ln to, withdraw' nUvci tlwing, Mr.Martin Said, in the Mmrt ronl'ilenctibetween publishers and nuuilis ofthe iissiH'lat lou, that soure of thonewspapu's prla. Ipn! financial sup-port always was u leading topicbroached by the business men.
The principal objection voiced, tes-
tified Mr. Martin, was Unit too muchpublbity was given the union side ofthe controversy. Fuion luideis, hocontinued, brought their news In thovarious offices while reporters foundIt difficult to obtain statement fiom(he association heaibtuarter. Whenboth sides evervtually established prcsa( onUiilllees, Mr. Martin w ent on, prac-lltiill- y
tiothinar fXreptslot nients were fori hcomlni;.
Eventually Mr. Martin refiiM-- topublish further stulcmenls of Ibis. Iial.o 11 1', he Said, ami published anVftltorla'l odvlaliig '
at blt,nillo'i. Forthis, he tiKtllied, he Was termed "ob-
noxious" by certain employers nodtold that )'. If editorial was a bad thingto publish for the community.
When a rumor bci ann' current thatall the hummus men would withdrawtheir advertising as n mailt of thopewspaper's stand, Mr. Martin saidmembers of the typographical unionoffered their service free In such" miexigency. Advertising, he continued,hud fallen off, bill he (lid not believeIt was due to any concerted action.
the temperature hud dropped, Nliave;! hy MiVonllghl.
The moon shone so brightly thath shaved ut 1 ('eJock one morning. I
K.i ulatloii.nt I'lipo Ulani-- eonl'lrmedthis iemrt, iyiii(f lliNt firinti washeard I hero distinctly. They staledthat there vveie two slnsle shots andalter :i short Internal two' broadsideswere distinctly heard and later morecannonadlnMi. They estimated that theririnir was nbniit elubt tulles off shoreand apparently northwest of Capo1 Ian eo.
Vessels, arriving here today fromSan Francisco saw no warahlps. I'oiiMt-wb- e
veKcels have not reported any,althoiiKh one 1'rem Ii and two t'.ermanvessels have been reported, withoutconfirmation, to be somewhere offthis const.
The mean temperature In August onth MoJave Is 123 "In the shade, andthere in no shade," according to thecolonel. Ho drove at fifteen miles an
. hour through tho desert.An automobile run from Sut Diego
to El Centro was held for the presi-dent of the Ooean-to-oeca- n Highway
; association. Five automobiles wereIn the procession. Mayor O'Neal, of
.San Diego, was In the party.
On tlie (op Is slion;n tho Uoyttl Cltatcnti ntf
Also nlctnrci Is tiin Bi.'Ulans' (Juoctl, uUoShown above are some of tho historic pieces of Belgium, now lu the war sonc, whlHi nr threatened.
Lacked, in tba centre the King's residence at Ostein nrd at tlin WHtoin u ti Tulscn do liol of ttnixwln.fffsHg la tlia work of carina for tbo HuIcUu wounde4
! .
The WM. FARK COMPANYWliulesala and ltetall Dealer In
FUI-S- H ANIi SALT SIKATSSausago Siiednltr
For Cat lie and Hogs the HIM"Market Price Ar PaidSWISS STEAMER PR 1
GERMANY IS
Hoys, Look Out for Greer. Apples.Lester Wolroth had a very severj
attack of cholera morbus brought onby eating green apples. Ills mother,Mrs. Pearl Wolroth, Herkimer, N. Y.,says, "I was advised to give himdiatribe rluln's .Folic,, Cholora andDiarrhoea Kemedy, which I did,' andth relief' from the first was very
aXI'lrmlnw belief in a p.rolective tariff.The advance in !h cos! of livingand the European war Is deplored,while "as part of the protective sys-l- i
in the Immediate upbijildlnv of amerchant murine bv proper legisla-tion" Is urged. The policy of the pres-ent administration In chrinection with
IS DETAINED BYDUKE CITY
Gleaners-Hatte- rs
CALIFORNIA ARE
rifles mounted at her stern nod Itwas these guns which 'caused her to
(lie detained. They were In positionwhen the ship arrived here frorr
'Hull Annus-- ! 12.The Francisco left her dock at Ho
jboken soon nftcr 8 o'clock this morn- -
lug and headed s(owly dowif thharbor. '
When off the Statue of Liberty thFrancisco dropped anchor and tincaptain came ashore tor his cloar-anc- e
papers, lie obtained them amireturned early In the afternoon to hli
.Hhili which lirocficrlcd ilitu-- flo
BETWEEN ANVIL great. After taking three doses hethe affairs In Mexico is deplored and I was all rlgh." For sale by nil dealers 220 W. Gold. Phone 4 HI
UNITED STATES ALL HASHED UP
M HAMMER! in " it... ,
AS hhlD P.aVfiS tnr H I 111. Fn.rr- - harbor. As she passed the Florida Progressive Candidate? Nom- -:
inated oi Republican and:Democratic Tickets and No- -i
'however, she was signalled to stopl
land, With Cargo orr
Grain, At the navy yard. was s,ii, to.
Amnr!rnn Aorcli! night ttiat the commanded of tillMllienCall VVUrSnip UailS a .Florida, had decided that the Fran-Hal- t
fin Vnvncro :cisco should be detained until cer- -
(Cnnliniird From I'sks Four.)
cialist papers are publishing extreme-ly patriotic a t tides.
body Knows Where He Is At
THIRTY-FOURT- H ANNUAL
New MesdeoThe Vorwaertg says it must be every v" '""fci"' tui facts concerning her clearance
0
papers hud been determined.ST MOMNINO JOURNAL fPfCIAU I.P.AVCO WIRII g
New York, Aua. 2C The Kwlasj.. 'Must J'usli Trust Hills.'
liner Francisco, n Itrltish" si earner, Washington, Aug. 26. Adioiiilstra-boun-
for Hull with a cargo of Kiain, tn letters in eoiiKicys Were sum-wa- s
stopped today as she was leiv- - M1oned to the While House today an.!Ing port by the United States liftt-jt,,!- ,) th.a tho ,eldent expected netleshlp Florida which has been sta-- j !iy.)l)Wn , tm. program of keeplnntioned in the lower hrnrbor Hince lhe;,he lnl!t t,m moving. Senator Kerrnut hemic ..f t,ol,l(ll.. In Knrope loit(llli ,h(. ,,n,H.,ient be cxP'i'tod H Votfsee that, neutrality regulations were;,,,, ,,H cy(n ,m Saturday,observed by shipping. - . .
IT1
1SV MOftNINS JUUPNAL ptchi- - LEAIIO WIHK)
Sun Francisco, Aug. 26. The out-- jstanding feature of yesterday's pri-- j
mary election in California, returns,from which continued to struggle inif day, was the havoc played In partylilies. While the registration of voterswas overwhelmingly republican, It ap-- ipears on the face of the, returns thati 'majority of the republican fundi-- ;lu tea for more Important office ul
socialist's duty to fight to the lastdrop of blood for Germany's existence.
Many socialist leaders have Joinedthe army as. volunteer. Among otherOerman volunteers is Baron VonSchoen, unMI recently ambassador toParis. He Is 63 years old and has beenmade a colonel.
The kaiser's third son, Prince Adal-bert, who became enRHKed .a fewweeks ago to Princess Adelaide ofFaxemeininKcn, was married on Mon-day.
The Cologne Gauette states that atthe battle of Lorraine 300,000 menwere engaged on each side, tho great-est number yet engaged hi tho historyof the world. A German casualty listIs published but It is stated that thoplace and time of the casualties willnot be published until later.
The Francisco, has two 4.i caliber IEcsiiIIn from Journal Want Ads.the November election will be progrcs- -
ive. ;
TAKING DOWN TflE SIGN" AFTEl DECLARING WAR ' 'i .
ALBUQUERQUEI'AHT OF GKKMAef .IIMY
PASSES THROt'GH Oct. 0-6-7--0-9 10, 1914
In addition lo sockliig tho lioiolna-- iJons of their own party, u numlui of.:irogres;ive asplninls cuntesled also;tor places oil the republican ticket, j
ind tluy seem to have won ull such'ontests except that for seerelary (.1 i
slate in w hich tho republican Ineum- -'
bent, Frank ('. Jordan, overw In lining-- 1
ly defeated his piOgresslve 'opponent.,J. F. O'lirleu.
John M. Ksi hcdmiin, running unop-- 1
posed for the iirogresslVe nominal ionfor lieutenant governor, capturedhands down the republican nominationalso, leading his nearest opponent by!nearly two to one. Mrs. Helen K.WIlllMtns, one of the two woman as-- !
plrants for statu offices, la second toEschclmun.
lioiuhm, Aiiir. 27. The Daily Ex-
press' Ostend correspondent says:"Louvaln town on Sunday was full
of troaps. This place has apparentlybeen reserved as an army base. Thestation has been transformed Into a BIG DAYShuge repair shop with a horse shoeing
ii $20,000 in Purses, Prizesand Premiums to Be
Contested For
Kent's Wlnlios OlM'fgonled. '
Progressix'e candldaleH for contioll-- :r, treasurer, utlorucy general and
olrveyor general appear to have wonnot. only the republican nomination.-.- ,
jut the democratic also,' In the first toimrimwional district,.William Kent, who preferred to be re-- 1
limed to the house of represc iilatlvesus nn Independent an 1 therefore!wfisht fi ? r'"?.5.v5..?,vcn:!!sr;)allot by petition, had hla wlslu s ve-- i
.oed by the voters of the district, whoArole' his name in on the progressiveballot so extensively that ho appearso have 'been nomlriuteii by un ovf r-- !
helmlng majority.Today's returns charjgid Inst night's
indicated result lu but one importantparticular, Joseph It, Knowland as-- 1
forge."The railway has been tut at sev-
eral, places. A remarkable thing aboutthe 'German advance is that thorn areno troops along the lines of commu-nication. The railway services havebeen opened by the Belgians In thotowns through which masses of troopshave just passed.
"At Audenarde, flft"on miles south-west of Ghent, where thj greatestarmy passed' through today, ihtie. areno troops. All the- food stuffs in thetown were taken and the railway wasbroken. When the army passedthrough the rear ginird remained tfitown over Sunday and Monday. Thetroops were Bavarians and nil werewell oehaved. The officers and tol-dio- rs
had been on short rations! andale, out tho town. A
"The wireless plant on tha i'hateaunear the town was disabled and thetelephone lines were cut. Moiw'u" "nebjft of the troops left th. town. !tundoubtedly was part of th Germanmain army that passed through.",- -
i" j ip , il3rt 'i ill 1 3 imm s" v I I ' ' ' g
- iu s i tit
- Tim",mm!
I wo Aeroplane Flights Daily by Aviators ofNational Reputation-Exciti- ng, Thrilling, Inspiring
ROPING AND RIDING CONTESTS-- - FRONTIER SPORTS
sumlng a commanding lead over Sam-- 1
uel M. Khortrldge for the repulilicnnnomination for I'nlted States senator,! SANTA FE l(. R. SPECIAL EXCURSION RATES
James I. Phelan, for the democrat!3CIc nomination and Kranels J. Ilcney,
for the progressive; increased their;leads over their opponents.
John D. Fredericks' plurality for)
Cuns at I'ananm Aro Tested.Panama, Aug. 26. Exhaustive tests
ero jnade todaV of the huge gunsat the pacific end of the Panama canalIn order to ascertain their fitness. Thetests were entirely satisfactory. Therewas an all-da- y firing of the guns withboth normal and over-charge- s.
For Premium List and Other Information, Write
THOS. F. BINKERT, Secretary to CommissionAlbuquerque, N. M.
the republican nomination for lleutcn.!ant governor seemed today likely tomeet the figures claimed by bis adherents, 40, 0.
ULPMILH ANX AHOPT i
KUMfAL
Pittsburgh, Aug. 28. The repiih- -
Montana Contests Close.Helen. Mont., Aug. 2. Definite
results on Montana's first primaryelection yesterday probably will not beknown In ome contests until the offi-ei- aj
canvass la made September 9.
ttliean slate rommlttee. met in this city;tonight and adopted a platform re- -
VrORICVlAN REMOVING THfc BKAX klat k n TMBfNTRANCE To TVB GERMAM EMDAWy, LOeiDOM.
alcuquerque Kon.:i..G Thursday, august 27, 1914.
Kfi fitiltfln In Yt . tI rum .rum nf unstineii 10 rcpnwDi mem ,LA I nsPKNIIKNT NEWSPAPERr- -, , ..
'' ''-r- -r--'- "' "WATERLOO" AEar.'-fc- r
All the PeopleEverybody Included
Ono of lhe chM and " Important ambitions of the nwa.agemeut of thin Jik sinew Ita catabllnliinciit Iwa brwo tomake It, first of ail, hank FOIt ALL THE I'EOI'U!. Forthl reason, the Btalc National Bank of Allmqiiprqile endea
era to Mtcnil w'J po1"!" rourU-a- anil ai"oni"iodatlou tnt
all custonuTn, wIicUht they are largo or small
LET US HAVE VOUH D EPOSIT9 FA ClIilTI ES CNSCKPASSED.
STATE NATIONAL BANK. Albuquerque, N. M.
Comer Second Street and Central Avenue
United State. Depository Santa Fe Railway Depository
(From Hymn' "Chlldo Ilarold'n I'ilKrlmiiKe.")
"TTllHICK waa a noiind of revelry by nlKht,And ItelKlum'a capital had Kather'd then
Iler Heauty und her Chivalry,' and brlic'ilThe lampH nhone o'er fair women nnd brave men;A IhoUHitnd heart beat happily; and When
Moult: a rone with It volopttioii nwell, '
Hoft rye bink'd love to eye which npnke again,And all went merry n a marrlnKo bell;Hut hunh! hark! a deep nound nlrike like a rlnlitfr Knell!
JUd ye not henr It? No; 'twit but the windOr the car rattllnK o'er the atony street;
On with the dance! let Joy bo unconlluetl;Nti nleep till morn, when Youth and I'leanure meetTo chitHo the RloW'liiK Hour With (lying feet
Hut, hark! that heavy noutid breuka In once moreA if the cloud It echo would repeat;
And nearer, dearer, deadlier than before!Arm! Arm! It I It I tips cannon' opening roar!
Ah! then and thcrn win hurrying to and fro,Anil gathering tears, und IrnmbhnKx of 'fliatren,
And cheek all pale, which but an hour nkoKlunh'tl at thn ptalne-o- f their own lovcllnean;Aud there wer tiddcn partinK. mich. a pren
The life from out young heart, and choking alghaWhich ne'er might, ho repented; who could guen
If ever morn ahould meet thono mutual eye,Kline upon night no sweet tnich awful morn could rlaet
And 'there wa mounting In hot hnte; the rteed.The muntering wiuailron, and the clattering car,
Went pouring forward with lmpetuou npeed,And swiftly forming In tho rank of war;Anil the deep thunder peal on peal ufar;
And near, thn beat of tho alarming drumItouMcd up the noltller ero tho4 morning' star;
Willis thronir'd the clltxen wllh terror dumb,Or whlnperlng, with white llp
"Tho foe! They cotno! They come!"
GEOGRAPHYGeographic Society, Washington.
good man probably for lh posi-
tion of probate clerk unl of sheriffof Hid Arriba county which havebeen held ly him, lint one who wouldb a misfit u a congressman- -
If thn republican lender ho regard(heir nominee nnd Ihns forecast theJudgment of the people, we know f
no reason why the- - Journal shouldnut regard their nominee In the wtnivwuy, and, In tho interval of the ntutc,mty no.
For tlio nomlniilliin of a candidatew hoH'lfHHly ununited for tho otd-llo- n,
thi-r- e m nn iindcrlylnK reiiaonof Miurw. It wjh reroKtilxcd y theIradi-- thai it native muni t' noml-nt'- (l
fur one i?thu piwiilon In ordi-- r
tu nllay rare ffcllnit Ihiit In lircomlimmora and more nianlfrnt ruth nr.Kemitor I'utron wiin fMvnriihle ti anative Iipchuhw he wished no natlvoiniKUIon to his cmidldiicy for thiartialc two )ini from now. Uv wanoppuiii'd (i) W. H. Andrews hfcmiiiohi) wn Mfruhl th litttrr mlKht l
flertrrt ti) thu lower hounc mid th--
unplic tu dili" from I'm trim thu IokuAndrrwn khvp tu him In tl HlHt ntHt
iKlwliitiir when AniifWi threw hlntwenty-oni- i reputillrnn vole to Cut-ron'- n
three voten ruther thun ee adi'moi-rii- l rhoMcn.
,'t n Cut roil who ullrred up, to aKrciit extent, the iiiiidldiiy of KTfeRo
i:iiit In Ditiiiillllo t'ounty. It wui hewho mine here a ml reinnlncil fursomthI dy trying to Induce theiuitl- -I iiK-- men to yield the fruit of theirvictory lit tins' iirlmurleti. Ho hud tohe told In thu moHt iiniiilHluknIileternii by tho huHineiw urul prtifeiwlon- -
men of Albuquerque, where tohead in. He continued hi nppoHl-tio- ii
to A oil tew lifter tho dclcKutenwere on the ground In Ranta Fe andone uf the two Hanta, F county
cant hi Vote ugitlliHt eutin; tho Andrew dcleBitto.
Tha npeech liy Senator C'ulron antemporary chairman wit one thatmljsht have been nntlnfylnn to theparty twenty year hk, but It wanot wilted to condition In thl Roodyear of our Lord 1914. It wit of theultra ntandpat order and In harmonywllh hi vote one of nix for the re-
tention nf Lorlmer In hi eat In theI'lilted Htule nenitte.
For the nomination of llernandesithe utter elflnhneH of Thoma Hen-to- n
Catron la chiefly rcnponitlble, andthe defeat of Hernnnde nieitn thodefeat of Catron for United Slates
'senator in IBIS. The republican par- -
ty never can hope to win until It
rids Itself of such barnacle on theship of state.
THE KTOH.M OF WAIt,
Houses Suitable for HeallhseekersOne Great Need of Albuquerque Now
fl':lisi:::;3 co.. A, MSl'I'HKHHlIN ITMlil.-n- l
W. T, Mi'IIKI'IHT Itullla MnBrft. I II MpAI.I.ISTEII N, K.IK.irA. N. MolKlAK Otf K.lit'tfM. U Ki'X , Bailor
MMlfra KpmnlnllrV. i, AMIKMMIN,
Marajawtl Hnllrflna, Oilman, lit,
fnatrm ttrprewntallra.11 Al I'll li. Ml I.I.HI AN,M I'nrfc Maw, Now lurk.
Kni'rr4 a mvail rluM matter at tha..lMffH- f A .uti- ri no. H U , unil.r net
of Conarran t.f March 1. IK9-
THK MllllMMI JOI'IINAI. IK TUBf.KAPINU lll'ITIII.HAN I'AI'KII I'K N KWMKXUHI. HI I'I'ilUTINil TIIW I'lSIMI- -
VI. KH 1'K TUB IU-:- MI.H'AN I'AltTr AM,THIC TIMN ANI IIIK MKTIItil' oKI'HKHI I'AUTIT WIIKN TIIET A HI!lililllT.
ljrr circulation Ilia atgr nllo-- r paperIn I,w Mfili-n- Tha iTil)f pup,f In N,.
Mnlru lanm- -l nvorr lr In Ilia ynr.
TMIM or KI'IIWIIIITHIN.Patty, lir nr mall, on montli. ..Ilk
MlTIl K TO nrllSl'IIIIIKIt.Sur.a.'riiwra la Ilia Journal, nrhrn writing
! hat Ihnr Plr clianio-- In nrar a
mul t aula la nlvs tha eld a.l.ln-M- .
"Tha M"irilna Journal hits a hmiu-- r circu-lation rails lima la aceonlrU to any othpriHp,'f In NfW Mexico." Tha Amrili-a-
Maupaiwr lir'lorr.THUt."lAV ACGISl' S J, 1BH
MH AIJI.I.O ltl.I' lll.K AXS,
The republican leaders of Bernu-IHI- o
county have" liurli'ii the hatchetand r unltt'it for thu flint time In
many year. Jnui Romero I nutlidd inun. Me fulhd to uiiiJerntili ithe Rititlineiit of the people, lllnedhliiiwelf with hod Influence und
tu he 11 hoitn of tt tild-tiiii-
ort. HiH tlefeiit wti liievltitliln.The iinloit of the wiming tli inenti
prohudly awwci thu election of thel.pulillcim IckIhIuIIvo ticket, providedno change, from tho noiulimUonn ofthu convention preniiied over by M.
I'., lllckey In nttempted.AIho, It 1m probable that tho coun-
ty will rtimiiln republican for quit!a while provided men who are lend-
ers do not uttempt to become bonne
urul folHt upon the Miter candidateunfit, mentally or, morally or iioth,for thn poiilllon aoiiMht.
Thonlate bonne may dictate can-
didate, but . they can't elect them.Tho same I true of thl countywhere scratching ballot ha becomea linn art. One or two good men ona ticket cannot Insure the electionof unworthy ones. Iloih lhe republi-can and the democratic voter havelearned that It Is better to elect aRood in, m rather than nn unfit one,icK.'iidless of tho ticket upon whichbe may run. t
It li bt lleved that the In I
Ucrnallllo county has been wellb urntd, biilli by the leaders and theVoters.
oi ii kkii. t i l. riuuu;NT.A month after month of hi ad-
ministration pasae by, Mr, Wilson I
leave more and more thy Impressionof being perhaps lhe most skilful ne-
gotiator that ha sat Jn the presi-
dential chair In our generation.Every president ironies to be In the
public mind the embodiment of thechief t Intrude rlslles of bis tempera-ment. And II not Infrequently hap-pens that this concent rated essenceof his menial ami moral ciiilpiiient,which tin) public extract from hisdally ucts und saying, becomestamped upon him in history ,
Jackson's honest rapacity to flyoff thu handle; Lincoln's intuitu putt-
er of being broadly human; Cleve-
land's direct ability to nay "yes" or"no" with a finality thai Was author!- -
,.,. .... !..l.M.t., ...... 1.. Iniiinv n ni imtutu, i" -
milling htfrfTo be, naturally and honestly, all thing to all men; itoose-Vei- l'
well-mea- but often rash Im-
pulsiveness; Tiifl'au IiIh Kretilctit strength and hisgreat cat weaknesn all lliese com-posite picture of their big und llt-ll- o
doings are the result of countlessimpn Kiilnn upon the public mind,which is a fairly accurate photo-graphi- c
plate.
THE HST I I,' CONVENTION,
Probably never before ha therebeen held a slate convention of apatty numerically dominant ut theclow! of which It was admitted byi very person of Judgment that theload of the ticket lioiuluated wadoomi-- to defeat by a big majority.
H. C. Hfi nandcx. the republican j
nominee, for congress, Is u man ofgood reputation, so far as We haveever heard, but absolutely withoutexperience or other iitialiricutton for
The grapple of the (lermans with,,n(, ,i, arranging to assist In suchho French and English armies along (.,. )lllt that lhe plans have not pro- -
hit frontier from Holland to theAlps recall the dramatic event of1 870, when lhe Prussian overwhelm-ed the French anil Hlnmarck dictatedhard term of peace In Paris. Hutnotwithstanding the success of theHerman arm in the lirst areat strua- -
edy, "The Hendlng of the Hough,"' hedefine hi Interent In the movementtor the revival of the Celtic, tongueand literature a arlnlng solely from"ularm over the present courne ofKngliah fiction." He regarded mod-ern English literature a wholly givenup to tha mere portrayal of "manners,fact and social cuntomn," and advocat-ed the return to the novel of "hu- -
lan passion and moral Ideas." Francealone, he said, had follower the truth
'In literature, and ho threw In hi lotwith the Fren'-- school. Some of hinovel have orouaed vigorous protestan being unduly realistic, but his powerof ken olmi'rvatlon and delicacy ofappreciation, have won admiration. Hela tha author of the following works,bodde those already mentioned: "I'a.gin roemn." 1881; "A Modern Lover,'1883; "A Mummer's Wife," 1884; "Lit.erature at Nurse," 1883:; "A Dramain Munlln,'' lHHtl; "Parnell and HiInland," 1887; "A Mere Accident,"1887; "Confesnlons of a Young Man,"1888; "fprlng Hays," 1888; "AlikeFletcher," 1889; "impressions andOpinions," 1890; "Vain Fortune."1880; "Modern I'alnting," 1893; "TheStrike at Arllngford," 189; "KntherWaters," 1894; "Celibates," 1896!"Evelyn Innes," 1898; "Sister Tereaa,"
11901; "The Untitled Field," 1903; "TheLake," 190S; "Memoirs of My DeadLife," 1906; "Hall and Farewell,"1911-1- 2. Ill address Is 4 Upper ElyPlace. Dublin.
AX AI'l'KAL.(W. H. Dickson, In Chicago Tost.)
Tho dog of war Hell-houn- ofdeath,
Are straining ut the lcanh the whileTheir subre-tunk- s drip red with blood,With bated breath they scent the
trailOf murder, woe and crime the whileTheir baleful eyes inflame with hate,Ueneath the mask of patriot loveOf country, home and fatherlundTheir keeper, man, with whip in handGoads into frenzy with his lanhThe frantic beauts of shame, anddeath.
How long, oh, stupid mnn, how long,Shall paltry, potty, foolish kingrttrut to and fro"ln spangled garb,Klitspheme our God, usurp Hi throne,Reverse HI low of brotherhood,Ills Christ-taug- ht law of "Pence on
earth,Good will to men," and lead Thy sonaTo ntril'e and death?
How long, oh, stupid man, how long,Khali thl God-wor- ld of your and
mine,From which spring forth in glad ar-
rayThe lilie of the field, the rose,And all the wonders Infinite,He drenched with sacrificial bloodOf brother strife?
'How long, oh, stupid man, how long,Will thou play puppet to the whimsOf Idle kings, man-mad- e and weak,And devastate the gift of God,Your homes and flocks and bounteous
fields?Oh blind, purblind and foolish man!Hlse in God-give- n might and claimThy rightful heritage of Pence.
The StorytellersTlw ami lips.
Francis Qultnet, the golf champion,was praising In Boston tho Scotchcaddie. ,
"He 1 the best caddie In theworld," said Qultnet. "Only, like f
all his race, he' a little near. A littletight across the chest. 'Bang goo six-
pence,' don't you know.; "A friend of mine spent hi vaca-tion golfing on the famous An-
drews links In Scotland. My friendhad a very fine Hootch caddie, a no-
toriously line Scotch caddie, and hesaid to the man tho lirst duy on thecourse:
" 'Duguld, my man, I expect to getsome good tips from you during mystay here.'
"'An'' I expect,' said Dugald dry-
ly, "tho like frae you.' "
GirlH of Today.Harold Vanderbiit said nt a tea on
his yacht, Vagrant In tho Newportharbor:
"How girls have changed in thelast ten years or so! I said to a middle-
-aged woman tho othif duy:"'Your duughter has put In nn
active morning. In white breechesand brown boots she played polofrom 9 to 11. Then she put on aman's two-ounc- e swimming suit, andswam a mile out to sen, using theturgeon stroke going nd coining.Afterwards she dressed In a slitskirt and decollete mosquito netblouse, and, on the wind-swe- Ca-
sino terrace, she drank four liqueursund smoked eleven cigarettes In along amber tube.'
"My air, as I spoke, was perhapscensorious, The girl's mother, at anyrate, smiled Indulgently.
"'oh, well,' she said, 'bills will beboys.' "
A Local Knock."What a knock! What a knock ut
Pittsburgh!"The apeakrr wus Hilary K. Adair,
the Han Francisco detective. Ho con-tinued:
"Pittsburgh got this knock at afashionable Atlantic City hotel where
was shadowing a Pittsburgh mil-lionaire divorce scandal, you know.
j "I guess my millionaire didn't Hphis waiter any too well, for, on hislast dinner I'd got my evidence allright by that time the waiter, as hegurgled and burhled over his soup,bent flown and said: r
" "Why didn't you tell me youwas from Pittsburgh, sli? I'd haveserved a sponge, then, with your con-somme.' " '
! Lobbies.:"The lobby the lobby for this and
the lobby for that ha vanishedfrom Washington," sold Senator Smithat a picnic at cool Snow Hill, "andwith the lobby has vanished the leg-
islator of Blanc's type,"Blanc one of those frock coat,
sombrero and white lawn necktie le-gislatorscame home on a June even-ing and said:
" The lobbyist of that infamous P,XX. Q. ring approaehed me at theluncheon hour today, and
"'Oh, sood!' cried Mrs, Blanc, clap-ping h'r hands, 'Then I can havethat V to Europe, after all, can'tI, dear?" I
gle of the war, it la apparent that !ha"7!,, !"7". . ,. . . i ...... ... in. . to be glad
15,0On men, while the allies, with theDutch bearing the brunt of the fight-ing, lost scarcely one-thir- d of that,number, Itamlllies is ! twenty-seve- n
miles west of Liege, and the same dis-
tance southeast of ItrusnclH. It is thehalf-wa- y point between Nninur andTirletnont.
EGHEZEE A Hclglan town tenmiles north of'Namlir, tin the railroadrunning from tiest southward to Ka-mu- r,
viai IJirUinont, J Is tibouv" fivomiles south of Raniillies.
' LAN DEN A small town In Bel-glu-
on the railroad between IJegeand Louvain, about twenty-fou- r milesnorthwest of Liege. It was the birth-- ,place of the first Pippin, distinguishedan Pippin of Herstal. The French de-
feated tho Anglo-Dutc- h army here In1693, and the Austrian defeated theFrench in 1793.
PODOIGNE The half-wa- y pointon the railroad from Dlest to Namur,seven miles up the Gheete river fromTlrlemont.
WAVRE (Vav'r) A town in liel-gium, fourteen miles southwest ofBrussels, with a population of about10,000, Here Grouchy advanced onthe day of Waterloo, gaining a uselesasuccess over a Prussian corps. Thfate of tho campaign was decidedelsewhere,
DYLT RIVER (Dile) A streamwhose upper course flows southward ,
from Louvain, Belgium, passing four-teen miles east of Brussels, with Wv-r- e
on Us bunks, und with Its head-waters ending only about' ten milesfrom tho Samore river, which leadsinto France from Xaniur,
NANCY (Nong-sce- ) The capital ofMuertha-et-Mosell- s, France, onv themain lino of railroad between Parisand Ktrassburg. Its population Is giv-
en as 100,000. It Is about ten milesfrom tho German frontier, thirteenmileSj cust of tho stronghold of Toul,and thirty-fiv- e miles west of north ofEpl-na- l. Charles the Bold perishedat Its gates. The city became FrenchIn 17fi6, was occupied by the allies In1815, nnd put to ransom by the Prus-sians in 1870, which was paid byFrance.
(Pong-tay--
)- A lily of some 15,000Inhabitants in northeastern Franco,the half-wa- y station between Mctz andNancy. It is equally distant fromToul and Nancy, mi l a sort pf out-post of both. It Is an Important man-ufacturing town.
STRASKRClta Capital of Alsace-Lorrain- e,
Germany, two miles west oT"tho Rhine, on the river' II!, which di-vides here Into five ranches. It istwenty-eig- ht miles from the Frenchfrontier, and Is ono of Iho strongestfll!'trCKM0 tt tho ( n or,i(,li-- Hav,lng a cir(.Iet fuurtCPn fuPt8,
'Th, i
liiiversity of Strassburg was refound-e- d
as tho Emperor William's univer-sity in 1S72, and its library has 800,-00- 0
volumes. Its population is up-
ward of IfvO.OOO., Ktrassburg held outagainst tho Germans for six weeksduring the Franco-Prussia- n war, fin-ally surrendering September 27,ISiO,
LAKE NYASA The third In size ofthe great lakes of Central Africa. Itslength is 3!0 miles, while Its greatestbreadth is forty-fiv- e miles. Tho lakelies at an altitude of about 1,650 feetabove the sea. Its shores are dividedbetween Great Britain, Portugal andGerman'. Great Britain holding lhewest coast, the south coast and thelower east coast through its protec-torate of Xyasal; Germany the north-ern half of the east coast nnd all ofthe north coast, and Portugal the mid ,file section nf fh puf r,mt ;'. m,o i.vi.'separates southern German East Af-rica from British Central Africa.' inr 1
eluding Nyaual, and northern Portu-"- 'guese East Africa from British Cen-- 'ttal Africa. - .... i ..
WAR ZONEData Issued by the National
THE A itDKNNKS A plateau regionextending over the Hclglan provinceof Luxembourg, the grand Juchy ofLuxembourg and the French depart-ment of Ardennes. The Hclglan Ar-
dennes; may bo said to extend fromtho Meune above Dinant on the westto the grand duchy of Luxembourgand Rhenish Trusnla on the east, withtheir northern boundary representedby a line drawn from Dinant, throughVI arch ii to tli. tierman frontier, wherelhe Mart.no rivPr ,.r..sse the Belgianboundary. On the south of tho boun-
dary is tha French frontier and theSemols river valley. Some of the fin-
est forests In all Europe are to' befound Jn this territory. The countryIs rolling and offer Itself to militarystrutcgy. Hie French Ardennes atsome points reach an elevation of 1,600feet. '
TUItNliOUT APelgia.1 town nearthe Dutch frontier, twenty-fiv- e milenortheast of Antwerp and the samedlstanca west and north of Diest. Ithas a population of about 1,200 andcarries on an important textile indus-try. It also has a breeding establish-ment for leeches which aro used forblood-lettin- g In moderate quantities.Two miles from tho town is the refor-matory colony of Merxolus, with apopulation of about 3,000. The pris-oners have complete liberty of move-
ment except that they must bo underthe supervision of a guardian andmust not leave the boundaries of thesettlement.
GHEEL A Hclglan town nearlymidway between Turnhout and Diest,where lielgium maintains one of thoworld's most noted asylums for theInsane, giving the Inmates every opportunity to lead normal lives and tokeep Interested in normal things aslong us possible. '
FLO REN VILLE A small Belgiantown immediately across the boundaryfrom France tind about fifteen milesairline distance east of the famousFrench battlefield; of Hedun. It is Justoff the main highway leading fromDinant to Mentmedy und Longwy,France.
METZ A City of some 70,000 popu-lation, the capital of fha Germanprovince of Lorraine, on the Moselle,less than ten miles from the Frenchfrontier at a point nearly oppositeVerdun. It Is eighty miles airline dis-
tance, or ninety-nin- e miles by railfrom Ktrassburg. Tho Sollle Joins theMosello here. There are fourteenbridges spanning the Moselle.Throughout Its entire history, down to1H70, Metii never surrendered to anenemy, thus winning for Itself thenamo "La Pucelle." It now rankswith Strassburg as one of the twogrout fortresses of western Germany.After the French lost It In the Franco-Prussia- n
war the Germans strength-ened its fortifications so as to mukeIt the principal pivot of operationsagainst France. It is literally Burrounded by strong outlying forts.
ZABERN A towR In lower GermanAlsace situated on the Rhine-Marn- e
canal, twenty-eig- ht miles from Ktrassburg. It Is situated at the foot of epass through the Vosgos mountains,commanding the road from theFrench frontier to Strassburg on theFrench sides of the Vosge Is Pfalz- -
burg. The road between-thes- twoplaces is fumous for Its scenery, whichwas Immortalized by Goethe in "Dich-tun- g
und Wahrheit"
GCMBINNEN A town In tho ex-
treme northeast of Germany, twenty-tw- o
miles Inland from the Russianfrontier and about sixty-fiv- e mileseast of KonlgHberg. It ha a popula-tion of some 15,000 utid Is located ina rich farming section. It has a num-ber of iron foundries, machine shopsand textile and tanning plants.
ARKIRCH (FrenchA town In upper Alsace,
Germany, with a population of about15,000, where desperate fighting Is re-
ported to have taken place betweenthe French and the Germans. Itcommands ,nne of tho passes of theVosges mountains und is situated intho valley of Leber. It is famous forits textile and dye works.
RA MILLIES e) A vil-lage of Belgium between the sourcesof the Little Gheete and the Mehalgne.It was here that tho allies under taoDuke of Marlborough gained a nota-ble victory over the French underMarshal Villeroy in May, 170S. Theposition of the French on the highground around the town was markedsv the villages of Andcklrch on theleft and Taviers on the right, withOffua and Ramlllles forming the cen-ter. The town stand almost on thewatershed of the two rivers, and Itwas here that Marlborough decided todeliver hi main attack. The Frencharmy lost, In killed and Injured, aome
- Alhu'iucrque came in for a severearrulunnicnt at lhe Imii.i nt a health-seek- er
yesterday who, upon his ar-rival here, found that he could fintlno accommodations to his liking. Illsremarks are significant because of thefact that the health department ofthe Commercial club has undertakento annlnt new arrivals In securinghome by keeping a list of the availa-ble place. Tho department Is alsoreceiving ninny letters dully askingthat such place either be found orources for such accommodations rec-
ommended.The heullhseeker had spent a long
day In looking for a furnished collagewithout success. "Where ran I find aplneo to live?" he queried of Mr, Wi-
ley, who has ehargn of the Commercial club work. It was explained that
grense.l far enough to bring results.Itnlhtiih ami Hcils.
"Why do you Invite people here byyour advertising unless you can ac,commodiilo them?" the heullhseekerwanted to know, Mr. Wiley explainedthat they are invited because Albn- -
nnd that theyinvitation. Jlc
admitted, however, that suitable, mod-em, furnished cottages are at a pro-i- ii
I ti nt and offered to assist."When I nay that I am a health-sicke- r,
everyone seems to think that I
ought to be willing to bathe in a tintub with water carried from a well.Also, It nover seems to occur to any-one wllh furnished houses to rent thatrenter might want more than onebed, All I want Is three rooms, decently furnished, modern, clean and in agood neighborhood. I
With Scissors and PasteI.OMilNGS I'OH Till: WOODS.
(Richard llovey.)U aui mv heart "I ant nick of four
walls and a ceiling.I Tiiiva need, of thu sky.1 have buslfess wllh the grass,I will up and get away where tho
, huwk is wheeling,Loiiii und high.And tho. snow clouds go by,1 will up and gt;t mo away to the wa-
ters that glassThe cloud as they pass,To tho waters that M
Like lhe heart of a maiden aware ofa doom drawing nigh
And dunilK for sorcery of Impendingjy. Jt will get me away to the woods.
Kpting like a hmilr'inau's boy,Halloo along tho hillside and
Tho falcon In my will.Tho dogwood calls me und tho sud-
den thrillThat breaks in upplo bluuum down
country roadPluck mo by the sleeve tiiul nudges
me away.The sup In in the bides today,Mid in my vein, a pulse that yearns '
and gouds."
A PltK-AR- AXGEH WAIL(New York Evening Post.)
A gl.tnco tit tho last butch of Ger-man newspapers tu come to hand,printed on the eve of the war, lx suf- -
ficleiit to show how swiftly the sig- -
Silt '(tCenyrlcht. ky McClar ayBteata.)
An all-da- y search by two peoplecould not locate something to fill theneeds of this healthseeker, althoughhe wn willing to pay a much as 1 35per month for a three-roo- cottage.After looking ut fifteen houses onoday recently, Mr. Wiley reportedthat only one out of that number wasIn fll condition to offer to health-Keeke- r.
Most of the places were dir-ty and musty, and many badly venti-lated. Few hud beds upon which anInvalid could be comfortable, andnone could be considered first class Inany respect.
.Hiiimeiit Houses Needed.At the present moment the health
committee of the club could fill a fltsl-cia- ss
apartment house with health-seeke- rs
who are either here or ontheir way here und who desire to havemembers of their families with them.For the most part, they desire threeor four rooms, clean, well furnishedand with u sleeping porch. It Is thebelief of members of the committeethat Investment capita could securebig returns by building a number ofapartment houses in suitable localitiesto meet this demand which Is growingstronger every day, and which musthe met If Albuojuerqun- - is to continueher reputation as a desirable place forhealthseeker.
Heal estate office are Invited toSubmit to the club health departmentthe addresses of suitable and availablehouses, furnished and unfurnished. ItIs needless, however, to give addressesutiles the house aro clean,, modernand desirable as tho advertising campaign Ih bringing Inquiries from onlytho better class of people who demandfirst class iirconiinoilutions.
nlflciAico of the Austrian ultimatumto HervUi penetrated tho Germanmind. It was everywhere token forgranted that this move hud been madewith the knowledge and consent oftho German foreign office. Indeed, theGerman ambassador In Paris prompt-ly announced that GermnrnjuKaa. awareof the Austrian note and would sup-port her ally, though he added thatthere was mi Intention of forcing awar, Hut the German press was In-
stantly alive to tho (lunger of a gen-
eral European war. Tho Hamburgh'remdenbliitt foreshadowed it, and sodid the Berlin Tageblatt. These twopapers distrusted the matter in phrasesho nearly that It almost seemsa if they were obeying an order ofthe day. .Iioth spuko of the Intentionof Germany to "localize" the war, ifpossible a If you could ltwralixe aneartmiuaue nut also ueciareo inofirm purpose to go to war with Franceand It t a la It necessary. It Is, how-ove- r.
;n the Frankfurter Zeitung thatwo find the gravity of the situationbest appreciated and most weightilydiscussed. This liberal organ did notconceal Its belief that the whole sys-
tem of European alliance was on thepoint of being broken down. - Nor didit share the opinion of those optimistwh,i i,ri if.tod thiii ittiuuiA ivoiittl hack
Wj dM ,n
NO RETAIL .SLAl'CiHTEK.(Nebriska Statu Journal.)
A portable incinerator, capable ofburning twenty-liv- e bodies nn hour, isto be used by the German army. Thisis ple.isuntr than shallow graves orbonfires. Hut it will take more thanone such cremation plant to do the
(btiBinoss. licfore this war Is over weare llkcjy to see 25,000 corpses pre-
pared for the fire In a single .hour,This la to bo no retail slaughter.
bTOUV OF (ilXi;;E MOOItlC.. (Now York Times.)
George Moore, novelist and drama-tist, was born In licland In lt8, andIs tho son of the lute George II. Moore,member of parliament,' of Moore hall,RaUygluss, County Mayo, He studiedart under Ilytin in London, nd com-pleted his education In France. HIfirst efforts in literature were confinedto th mag.ixines, and under the title"Notva and Sensations'' he contributedto The London Hawk. Ilia first PuMention was a volume of verse, "Flow-er of Parnassus," 1877. which wasseverely criticized, For u long time hiscritical work wa regaraed aa of morepermanent value than hi novels. Heslllej blma.if with Martin and Yeatin founding the Irish Literary theater
tlllli et la) IU ue IIU IHVI V a rjmunv'uof 1870.
The German llde of army corpsrolls in on tho French shore, beatingIt with 'Ire of cannon, fire of rifleand strewing It with costly argosiesof German dead, meanwhile Inflict-
ing terrible Iohsch upon tho allies,littt France seems really preparedthis time. There la no gay
to be turned Into panic attho revelation of uupreparedtiess.;on to Hcrliu," howled the, madmobs of Palis in the month of Au-
gust forty-fou- r year ago. "Wo willlake Purls," is tho gtitit declarationof the Gentians now.
And the German may do whatthey have set out to do. Hut It will
, .L ..iq no exultant proeonsion as mihithe iTtTssVmn crown prince and Field"Marshal Von Moltke In 1870 throughthe vale of Chanipaigno and downtho valley of the Marne. If lhe Ger-
mans get to Pari thl time-- It willbo a way of blood paved withcorpse.
Hut tho Germans aro willing topay the price, They begun to payIt nt I.lcgi), They paid It on the roadto UruusclM, to Naniur and Chaiierol.Hut between the Hclglan border andtho capital of France, they will en-
counter tunny Lieges and Namursand Clmrlcrid'a. And when the armiesat last come to Paris what will theyfind? A fortress sevenly-flv- rt . milearound, the bugest and bent defend-ed fortress In all the world a fort-
ress that will shelter a million men,and one the mere investment of whichrequire a million men,
The defenders of Prusscl have retired to the great fortress that
Antwerp, which experts saywill take a half million men six
allie most have for defense, H re- -
quired the Prussian only nix weeksin 1870 to march across France andinvest Turin. Hut nearly four weekshave elapsed since the declaration ofwar and the Germans are not yet ontrench soil,
Then, there arc the millions of Rus-
sia to be thought of. They are In-
vading Germany. Corps after corpsis pouring In from the east, and H
i not Improbable that by the timethn Germans have Hails Invested, theRussian horiles will , be menacinglierlin, 11 is not Impossible that wemay yet have the spectacle of Francein the hands of the Germans andGermany In the. grasp of Russia,
Handing the state chairmanship toRalph Ely was much like the oldstunt of leaving the undesirablebaby on some respectable citizen'sdoorstep.
it presenlativ e of the slate of New j month to reduce. While the GermanMexico t Washington. He would army great, it Is riot without limit,
have preferred the nomination fur The campaign, in Franco is ant mnnnSHioner, und many Nlon, un aggressive, action wiiich re- -
people pointed out that, so hum un!qulrcs many mote soldier than tho;Hugh William wn to be nominated '
for some! long. It would have beenbeltof to have nominated him foreongro and Mr. HitnutubE fur
commissioner. Mr, Williamsin licit. r qualified for a member of!emigre than Is Mr. Hirnandex. buthe preferred to lake his chance onn Job ubuul the Wutk of which heliicw something.
Tin; t.u t that the republican lead-ers, without exception to far un weknow, concede ttiat the voter ofNew a majority of whom
, are republicans, will defeat Mr. c
and Harvey H.
to congress, Is reason enough,If none other existed, for the Journalto support the landiduiy of Mr.
The opinion of the republicanbvdera mink Mr. llertiandea ,aa nn-fitt-
for the position for which hbus belli humid. They know thatthe people of the' state will resard
$100 Reward, jpiGOtJ?'.!"?dC" '"' V1t will h plpasr-,-
?i S' i1 l"t"rr'- "' I'Mnn-- furl.,'''' !"',lf ""' ""W known t the mi-
,n?i.5l ""r""r- rot-- conation torn lit .a icVr."" T. ccwstlmtloimi tnvrWiit.d UwtlT I',1 VIUm '""J"1 '"'""ills', acting
tem. tlawhjr tu fonn,ntt,,t,'"""K'' .rB(1 lr,n "10 I'lOlent "IreiiRthby l.u lillnK up jt,e wtltutlon mill ashling nn- -
Jlb '""l tt ".rtln A? that tn"t?Z Humlrwl Dollar fr nr.. ,.,. ,hBt ItHi ruif. s,.nd tor t f toatltn.ail.ia.
Mltvm y, . CHENEY ft CO., TuHr-il- . Q.Rolil by all Drainrlstn, TV. ;
Tana Hall'. m, fuf j,,,,,, '; ,
Sour Stomach.Jf you are troubled with this com-Pln.- nt
you should take Chamberlain sL.. ,."' bclns careful t observe theVJT " wilh each b"e- - You arecertain to be benefited by them Ifdealt" a tm1, 8old bjr aU
ALEUQUEP3UE KOSKISQ .OCTAL, THURSDAY, AUGUST 27, 1914.
- Copyright U14JittrnaMtfA- -l ., Newt Servlc.. - ;.Cringing UP Father By George McMzn
c., e oNXTHINt; IN TUP rTHERE'S
HE HAi RCAO I
VEVOUTthe vafjo UtUCMi'r -That handsome "TI .o.r
I NEVEf
HEAFJD OFHUM -- WHAT
V I W I t L J a 1"THE PAPf ,.- -.
HE WA. SUCH
( M .. tf '- 1 1 v ' n f i 1 f 1 iir x- 1 1
'
'-- 1 L T
nm Mi.n-ii- mi.
l I. --I
TT '.
; IF01 SMMrnnch, 3 miles from Post
Office, modern house, vehicleshed, fruit trees, alfalfa, lino homePluce.
t?
hotme, good location, citywater. Price $1200; $100 rush, $20per month.
IPirflirSfl(eIldl' CaHeal Estate, Eire Insurance, Loans
FOK KEN T 1 looms With Hoard.
North.
rOH HUNT Koul-- rooiri aud alaeptngporch. Weal Murquette.
KOU ltF.XTKxi'ltelit 'Vleepln porch,ronm and hoard In jirtvuLe fuinlty. I'hone
now.Folt It'inlll uod lileeoiOK poixh
with hoard, fine niettln, home conking; nolnk. '.'24 North Klulit h. I'hone l:!W,
Folt ItKNT llourd and room with aleep-Inf- f
porch or tent ottiie for convales-cents. Lota of shade, fruit, freah egxa andmilk. Kre conveyance. i(lione KuW.HUH IlK.N'l Itooina or' cittuSes with hoard
at Mrs. Heed's sariltusium for corvvalee-centa- .
Home milk, cream, eiou. frulta andflowers. Lorkhart Ftani;h. Phime lost,
IHuhlnndH.
Full HKNT Jood rooms anil bourd, aleep-Kont- h
In porches, 301 tMlth.Foil lllON'T Honrd and room, ltnle 1.M
per day. Ml South tiroadwny.bXCKl.l.KNT TAHI.fi BOA KU with nlc.iy
furnished rooms and nice location. Undernew nisnseement. VIm Hoioh Wsltee
WAN TE1 M IscwMhihhiub.
W'II.Ij buy second-han- Ford auto. AddressHlghy, tlolilen, N. M.
CARI'KT CI.KA.M.Vi, furniture nml stoverepairing. W. A. Cofr, phone liflK.
WANTKH We buy old gold nod silverJewelry. Dennett's, 115 Koulh Second.
tVANTKIJ Fine pa 111! log, hi Ht quality paintused; moderate prices. M. Wald, phone
4IH.
WANTFD To buy a wagon scale. Statecondition, price nml where may bo seen.
Address Hon 7f, care Journal,
VANTIl Positions.
Wanthu Position by gin, light Sousework, no wnslilnir. Phone 7'in.
WANTKH Laundry '".., to do si homeor will go out by day. CulT" -- II SnuFfi'Fourth.
t HELP WANTED.
Female. ...WANTEIi Competent cook. Apply rnorn-Ing-
10 to 12. 701 West Copper.
Copyright 1914International News Bervlo V
AtOUT CAPTAINKITUNDUtbTltK'l?
1 ' Ol'POHTIMTVFOR 8A1.K Seventeen lots adjoin-ing I.unii piirk$2,2iio Payments.
F. F. nKOTTERMoBe)r t Loan, i
rhrinV lit Home I'hnna 125UV
A UTTTLE FIPFHNliaised on the hill wlu rn tlu air andView ar superb, 4 rooms, bath, frontporch, sleeping porch, kitchen iioivli,arranged for heatlnt; plant und oneof the best built new bungalows Inthe city. Has to be seen to be ap-
preciated. Owner must sell. $2,2.rifl,one-ha- lf cash, takes It.
MONRV TO LOAN'.
0)
S3
IliW. Gold.
Ft)lt KAl.EMtsllaneiii.FOKBALI! djirpoata. Phonefull S.U.K-Ho- me, Iiiirkv him) hu'rrieaaT e
L. Htlirae. 42.1 North MeforvlFl.PIt SAI.K-I'll- ce IJnolt pmiuOlv hrlke oven.
tiO. A IhllflOerque Willi A ofhlm:FOH SA I. K Underwood typewriter, good
order, :u. 121 West floliL i'hone 144.FOH SA1.K A large "stTld" oak dToliig
fonm lablo. chesp, I'all 41S West t'ofil.Foil sAl.K Cider vim aiirroiira--eiii--oTi- i
elder, very strong. 40 cents per gallon,IBM South Second. I V, Albers.FOIt SALK Three Model I linotype mug-aaln-
In flrst-claa- a eondltton. On orall at a bargain. Morning JuurntL Alliu- -querqne. NiM. -
Three liorsi'iiower gisoiineengine and cupuclty Centrifimal
pump In good condition. If taken quick,p. o. 1. 87, 'li y.
Full HALK Very Ansorglium' mill, used only part of one sea- -
.ion. For Information, call tit Hhtiffleliai'Ker'sfrannfer l.lne, Fl Weal Copper,FoK A1.K Hpeclal barKaln, one
Fox hainnierless shotgun villh two setsof hnrrels and leather covered steel, hand-made cuss. See at Imperial laundry.
oven, flivU'HS cooker, kitchen lablo, beat-ing stoves, sewing machine, new oak drces-cr- .
chiffonier, MlUon piano.- - chickens,chicken wire and posis, fire wood. Housefor rent, 'lir, Sotoh Arno.
Folt HAl.hl My fine driving team, minerone will work double or single, or under
saddle; 4 wagons, surrey, mountain buggy,small farm wagon, 1 springwsgon, I single buggies, double aid singleharness. Ueorga K. Neher, 401 Norlh JSco-n- d
lret.fe'OK HAI.K Hue bills for loom accomiuo-datlon- a
at the Hates hotel, l.os Angidea,Cal. The (late hotel ll one ofthe newest and best tn l.os Angeles, andlocated corner of Slsth and FlKUeronstreets. Address fitoriilug .louniul.
. FOR KEXT-iHrlmri-
FOR HKNT a and flats for. Mglitholisekeenlnr. 404 North Second
Foil ,KENT--Mcel- y furnished, iiio.biu 3
or apartment; no lick. Apply 103....a.otlh ll'iiltee
Itcsults from Journnl Want Ails.
INDOOR
wmr
$1,600.00Will buy n nice homo In ten hun-dred block on Highlands. lilockfrom car; 3 rooms, hhth, elet-trl-
Imbtn, sleeplntt porch. All newlypainted and In gouil coiitlllloii,I. ot r.dvH-- . Hhadt) and fruit.Terms.
Minn M. Mmm U&Mf
Phono 10, 211 V. (lold.
IIKUIO'S A liKAL IIAROA1N-EO- lt
RALK AT
AND ON EASY PAYMENTS
Four-roo- modern cottage inHighlands, almost new. 00-fo-
lot, a dozen shade and fruit trees.Ootid, close in location. Call orphono HO.MK P.OND AND LOANCO., 104 N. Third St.
EOK HICNT Dwellln.'?.North.
FOR HKNT Fin t in modern brickHiMire. ImiullS tl North r'ourlli.
'olt' H KNT Two-roo- bouse, partly furnished, no.! North Twelfth street.
F(.iR HKNT modorn flat, NorthFifth street. s, prr month; water
paid. First Havlnys IJsnk Trust Co.FOR HKNT fair, North FouVili sueX
modern four-rmi- brick coitsge, sleep,log porch, porches, range, linoleum, shades,lots of shads trees, gnrage, water paid.Rent 00 per month; with garage, 122.00.Apply Mrs, Till. hi llogh, 414 South Third orKruno IMerkmann,
Mouth.
Foil KKNT-l-'ou- i-i in brick, moili-rii- , gasratiKO; eloso In, new furnlshlnKs; corner
houart, Inquire SOS Houlh Seventh.Highlands.
Full HUNT Nitty l n forulslHol bun.galow. to'w and modern. 1224 M, Icititn.
Foil HKNT To-r n Imnislied cottagewith sleeping pon-h- tto ler Inonlll, wa-
ter paid. AiilyJ In West Hold.Full HKNT New furnislied
largo sen ened front iorch( glassedsteeping room, and Ue-a- 12()t South KilHh,
Itlll KENT MlHf'i'llniiiHiins,
FOR HUNT The most desirable offh--
ri.'oms in the city. Apply to Oeorg F.Albright. I'll. me 440.
FOR HKNT Horses aud rigs, bougnt, soldand eschknged. Call at inr alur. 12. li
Worth Arno. Simon HarMe
FOR HKNT- Hie boarding house, best lo-
cation In city. 114 West ilratid. Fifteenrooms, I'll 00 per month. Inquire any realestate agent.
SPORTS
Do oubC THINKknow every &allplaner, in the
APO0T AHX OF eVtH THE 151,5 LEAGUEAN' JL BET TOOE
WN wE YOU DEfcF
,fv
WANTIC- l)-Piano, houaehohl mda, eto..atoreil aafely at reaaonalile Tatea. Phune
44. The Security Warehouse Iniprote-trae- nt
Co. Hpriour Transfer Co., succes-sors. 11 Oold As.
PROFE55SIONAL CARDS
ATTORNKY
HHIN W. WI1SNA ttorary-at- - mw.
Hooma Cromwell Bid.Bes. Ikon. UIIWs Offline I'hone 1111
lKNTIHTS
UK. t. at KKAFT1'ental Sargsem.
i Rooms t-- Barnatt Uit. rknas 141Appointment Mad TIT Mall.
j I'll YHICIANH AMI 4JUKOBONS
.. U. HIKIHTI.K. M. I).' t'raotlna Limited to Tubarenloala,
Hours 1 to II Faun till!244 W. Central At.
Albuquerque Sanitarium. Fhon 141.
UHS. TI I.I. HAHKHI'raeUra Umlieel ) Kya, tar, HM m4
Ttaroa.Stst National Bank Blrtg.
TIIK Ml Itl'llhV SANAI'tHtlt l'
't'utiereuliiais of the Throat and I.unss.Ii'lte Office. SIS14 West Central Avenuaj,Office Hour: to 11 a., m.i I to 4 p. m.I'hone 2lt Sanatorium I'hone 441
Yi . 1. Aiorpopy, m, meiiteui iiireeiur.
W. M, SHERIDAN, M. D.Practice Mmltsd
Genito Urinary Diseases tsJDiseases of the Skin.
Th Waaermann and Noguehl Teatli Mtarts n "(or Administered,
l.'lllsen Baak Uldg.Albuquerque Saw Mail
V ETEIl I NAItV aU.LEUES.S, F. VBTKltlNAHY COHLKtia begin Sept.
14. No profession offer equal opportunity,Catalog free. C. Kesne, Pre., 1411 Marktlat ftlsn SVnelseo
Ml (SIXNUHHh) would like ears of one or two tu-
bercular cases. Address N la. Journal,
11)11 HIM OHIii' Itoonm.
FOIt HKNT -- Ot'lh e. Apply li. A, Man.plicrsoii, .Toiiriiiit ofri',--
TIME CAKDS.
Pally passenger aorvloe leaving HnswtUnd Currlsoso at 1:40 a. m,
West bound, Ar. Ar. Saatbonni..ltotwell 4:46 p.m.
11:00 a. m.. . , ... ,1'lcacho 1:40 p. m.11:90a.m.. Tlnnle 1:15 p. m.ll r.f, a m... Hondo 11:60 p.m.
1 :110 p. tn. , , Lincoln 11 :10 a. m,1:00 p. m Ft. Stanton . . . . 1 0 :3II a, m.1:3.1 p.' in I'milua 10:0 a, m,:tip in Nogal :00 a.m.
j 4:45 p. In CarrlaoioThrough far, on way .....114.14Intermediate points, per mile.., II
10 lb, hagirag-- free Kiceas carried.IIHNUH 1. ALTO CO.,
Owner and Operator. . Phon lit
Iiy TAD
fNrs off -
v --we
it- - :m7 ,('
V''''A
Yi: m
WAR AVruL?
RD OF TflnDE
MARKETS IKE
HEN RECORDS
Lord Kitchener's Remark That
the Allies Are Prepared for
Three' Years' of War Puts Up
Price of Wheat,
Jf MOSNIN9 SPI-IA- L UAStO WISS
Chicago, Auk. 26. Board of trademnrkels, affected by the war, soaredto n"w high levels today; led hy wheatwhich closed to e,.c over yester-day. Corn advanced 1 to 2c; oats,1 to 2 (4c, While provisions were'iic down to 57c higher.
While fluctuations In wheat werespectacular the story behind them wassimple, namely, that belief wit'' wnrmean still higher prices. Lord Kltch.ener was quoted as saying the alliedwere prepared for three years of thestruggle, and millers were buyingwheat said to be for the purpose ofsatisfying the foreign demand forflour. The fact that Liverpool washlsther was followed and other routinenews was practically disregarded. A
three-c- nt bulge early brought . outconsiderable profit-takin- g but priceswere not materially affected und stoploss orders were uncovered within fivecents of the top and the price wasbid up on a market practically bareof off rings. "
Advances In corn, oats and provi-sions were due mainly to the war anreflected In wheat, and tone strong.Country offerings of corn and oatswere small and the eastern shippingdemand strong. - There was some liqui-dation of September hog products.There was a good demand for Janu-ary deliveries, and a fair one for spot.
Closing prices: x 'l
Wheat Kept., $1.08 Dec., $1.-1- 3
54: May. $1.18.Corn Kept., $82c; Pec, $72'4cOats Sept., 48 c; Dec, 504cPork Sept., $21.25; Jan., $22.12.Lard Sept., $10.10; Oct., $10.25;
Jan., $10.70.rtlbs Sept., $12.50; Jan., $11.37.
ST. LEAD AXD 8PELTKU.
fit. Louis, Aug. 28. Lead firm,$3.75; Bpe4ter...blgher, $6.87
EXGMSH SUA 4;rOTATIOX.
London, Aug. 26. Bar silver steadyat 25d per ounce.
LIVESTOCK MAKKETS.
Chicago Livestock.Chicago, Aug. 26. Cattle Hcclpts
15,500. Market slow and steady.Ueeves, $6.60 10.50; Steers,' $6.259.30; Blockers and feeders, $5.35fn8.00; cows and heifers; $3.709.10;calves, $7.55 10.60.
flheep Receipts, 35,000. Market dulland weak. Sheep, $4.80-6.75- yeur-ling- s,
$5.706.70; lambs, $6.25 8.10.Hogs Receipts 25,000. Market slow,
6 to 10 cents higher. Bulk of sales,$8.85 l 9.16; light, $8.90 i 9.32 ; mix-ed, $8.659.324; heavy, $8.45p9.25;rough, $8.453.65;- pigs, $6.5O8.50.
Kansas City Livestock.Kansas City,' Aug,; 26.--Cf- lttle Ke- -
31WANTED: ABright YoungIfnn A long olablithed and
il4Ull reputable - house - 40.... Halyem jii buiinru
an openinf in tfm cJjr lot a resident
tepresentative. His time Will be laigely
hit owni the work i plean( and
agreeable; hit profit avetaget mote than
'the buuaest done, and
previous experience i not ewential.
Thii it aa ideal opportunity (or young
man ol good appearance, wide circle of
acquaintance and a genuine desire to
make good in profitable field of work.
The earliest teply will leceive first
consideration.
FOSTER GILROYKl Lafayette Street
New York
TfRR-lBLE- -
. LAST SllMMcr;.
:
,
I
Knit n 1.10 Kmir-roti- motWrn brick. HiWeit Santa V. .
FOR PAI.K Klshl-rMi- mnjirii h"W,two lot, or will taka mall lunim tn n- -
Aililri'M Mr. II. J. Kehtler, 411
Somh Itr'Wilwav. .
FOHlA'l'.Eimr-ri'i- h'.uno Uh l
pnreh;- M-t- Miu r Int, frninl:iil iiiulmilillnK. frull tree; 4'i0. I "0
North Thlnl trei-t- .
FCUl SAI.H on ItKXt Partly furnlli.-.- l
rvslilf-nnt- with talh nml cello r.t S14 Frniili Seventh aireot. Fine ennill-tlnn- .
Iav term', so rninmlalmia to iay.Aildraaa P. O. H"X .". ''Hy.
,,11 tilll.' . I(h,h: I 'i. I) till. (HI ImiirnVe.meiit". M 00 iwrea free rnn ilj"lntn.
Prli--e l. &; f ,'iUO eaali. Owner. Juuniol.
1 1.1. kinds built new und oona-hMii-
Iiouslit. anlil. renteil and repaired. e
Typewriter . l'huse 14.l.'l Wtat (lold.
FOK SA1.K Aliout 4 aerea improved landailtolnln t.orkt:art ranch, at a bargain.
Henry I.orkrmrt. Phone 1039.
CATTLE AND POULTRY RANCHFnr mle cheap. Meal place to atart up In
th cattle timlnew. and have plenty of
room to expand Into hi ranch. Close toAlbuqueriie. Addrea A. B., care Journal.
celpUt, 6,000. Market steady. 'Primefed steers, $9.6510.50; dressed beefsteers, $8.10 S.'CO; western steers, $6..75 fi 9.36; cows, $4. 25 Ci 7,25; heifers,$6.25(99.50; stockers and feeders, $5.-7- 5
It 8.25 ; calves, $6.6010.60.Khora rieceluts. 5.000. Market
'steady. Lambs, $7.40 7.65; yearlings$5.75 & 6.60; wethers, $:,40 (tl S.8&,
ewes, $4.80 & 5.00.Hogs Itecelpts, 7,000. Market
isteady. Hulk of sales, $9.O0ffD9.S0;heavy. $9.16fl)9.35; packers ahd butchers, $9.10(119.27; light, $9.20
9.25; pigs, $8.259.00.
MPRQVEMENT IN
T1E0UWIS NOTED AGAIN
While Some Productions Have
to Be Curtailed in This Coun-
try, Foreign Demand Is Sure
to Be Felt at Early Date,
isr MosNiNa jounl asaeiAL liasid wishNew York, Aug. 26. Additional
steps looking to the relief of the for-
eign exchange situation were taken by
international bankers today. It is un-
derstood that the $3,000,000 of New
York City obligations will full due
the first week In September will be
met hv th 'ourchuse of exchange in
this m'urket. Arrangements are under j
way also to lacniiaie inii.ir."grain and other commodities to Eu-
rope in' larger volume. It Is notewor-
thy In thl connection that some
banks have decided to issue long billsngalnst future grain shipments. Most
of the grain now going abroad, is con-
signed to France, while England is
tuking small amounts of cotton. Apro-
pos of the cotton situation southernbunks were again active borrowers to
day and aside from numerous renew-
als of loans which mature between
this and the ehd of the month nulny
new loans were reported. In order
it meet these fresh demands It Is like-
ly local banks will have to Increase
their supplies of emergency cur-
rency, ';''"', A review of the stcc' and iron in-
dustry indicates tnat the leading mills
ore no less active than a month ago;
some even more so, but the buying
t,ower is steadily running behind pro- -
Iduction. , There has been some in
quiry from abroad, including Aus-
tralia, without much actual buying.
Nevertheless, It is the prevailing opin-
ion ftinr exnorts must eventually asbecause of thesume- large proportions
...!.. e ,.t ih Wiiroriean supply.
Announcement by the Pennsylvania
railroad of its intention to furthercurtail its passenger service along themain system was attribute,! to foreign
conditions. Other roads are said to
lie contemplating similar action. In
various lines of Industry and utility
there are Indications of reduced activ-
ity, Including the Montana copper re-
gion.. Money shows a tendency to harden,
some loans being made at aa high asexchange has
9 per rent. Foreignbeen visibly strengthened hy the re-
ported success of the German army.
l'lM4
,.
M Yea Um a lsid.
Tel 1 Tlkrffii &
FOE SALE'$3,800 frame, modern, hoi
water heat, lawn, shade, good loca-tion In HighlundH, close In.
$2,7RO brick, modern, largebasement, corner lot, Highlands,close In; easy terms.
$2,000-5-roo- m modern frame; twolarge purcnes, goon ouiuuiiuins.Fourth ward. liasy terms.
11900. frame, bath, flnhade, rod outbuildings, no lo-
cation; N. 11th BL
13,000 brick, modern, wellbuilt, sleeping porch, goodoutbuildings; W. tillver Avenue,close In.
$3,200 bungalow, modern,mgnianaa, cioae in.
A. raG2EELoans Fire Iiuturanc
111 Sooth Fourth St.
FOB KENT Room.North.
I'OH KKNT Furnished room. K13 NorthSecond.
FOH H KNT NlceT tunoTheil room, mud-er-
rent reaannulile. 917 North Hecond.
FOK MKS'T lood, modern turnlaheil romnaat $2 25 per week. 3MV& Weal Central.
Foil HUNT One modern furnlnhed frontroom; no alck need apply. 4(11 North
FourthFOR RENT Two roome (urnlahed for
houaekueplng, with aureen porch. 41SKorth Hlith.Foil HUNT Fin nlKhed flot, mod-
ern. L'SS Wft Marquette. Inquire 31.1
South Firm.FOH KKNT Two modern rooms, furnlahed
for housekeeping; alao one eleepln room.S? North Fourth.ti Llit HKNT LurKe cool, nlculy furnlahed
room In good location and private fam-ily: bnfh, Hunts, shade. Hi 4 West NewVoetr ....FuK KENT Three rooms furnlahed for
housekeeping, modern, iliira-- aleeptnirporch. Kood location, no children. Inquiream North Second.
South.
FOR HUNT Hooma. 14 Weal silver.FOH KKNT Two furnished rooms,
modfirn. 404 West Irfnd.Full HKNT' Furnlahed roome; modern; uo
sick. Apply B(s 14 Weet (VntrnlFOH HKNT Two furnished room for
lleht housekeeping, 72t South Fourth.FOK KENT Two nicely rurnlnhid modern
rooms for housekeeping; no sick. G21
West silver.Foil HIS NT Housekeeping rooms and fur-
nished cottages, sleeping porche. (14West ci,Folt HKNT Fal l of house to couple on co-
operative houackcepUig plan. 1110 WestCentral. Phone rr,l.FOR KK.NT Furnished roome, wlth or
without light houaekeeplng. all iiTTprnre--menu, summer rates. 414 Wst OolLFoil HUNT Twu nicely furnished room
for light housekeeping, modern. gas.Phone H.'Kl.r. r,0 South Fifth street.
Highlands.
FOH KKNT House, also furniture for sale.115 South Arno.
FOR HKNT Furnished rooms. ZH SouthWalter. Phone 202.
for "-M- rn furnished bedroom
FOR JIENT Modern furnished rooma withsleeping porches. Ill (Sty K. Central. P. ITal.
FOH HKNT 2 nicely fuinlehed front roomswith or without board, 21 S B. Hrondwny.
FOH HKNT Two large modern rooms, ensuite or single, MS South Ilroadway.
Phone 1274 W.
JBCsmEILNCESFOR BALE Kesiaurant anil hotel) cheap
B. Nlerl. ft IS South First street.FOR HAI.U Tlie furniture of a flrst-clau- s
four-cha- barber shop or will rent thesame. Also will rent the store room emptyat 111 West Central avenue. Apply tot'nlon Itar. 107 North First.A YOI1NH MAHKIKl) MAN with a small
amount of money Invested in a poultryplant, desires a partner who will Invest alike .amount and lake on active Interest Anthe bUKlncss. Address: Opportunity, cAreJournal.
FOR KMsK Idvestocic nmt ronltry.THKY I. AY. they win, they pay. Won
four first, one second, ..at stale fair, lllll;six first, two seconds. 1812; five firsts, fourseconds and Our. McDonald cup. ion. R. C.
11. I. Reds, Molded Anconas, 8. C. WhiteOrplngtims. Huff Orpington and I. H.Ducks. Stock eggs and chicks for sale. I,.B. Thomas, I'. O. Box 111. 717 East llasel-dlti-
,
w'MH A tire. .14x4, In oaiivas cover. Re- -
iiiro lo I'olem'in-Htfln- Karoire Reward.LOST A gold bar pin. Finder please re-
turn to Morning Journal and receivesuitable reward.LOST On Boat Central avenue Hundny
evening, while and ptnk sash. Kindly re-
turn to 410 Kast Central avenue or phonelOM.f. .
Silver CB.yi.f1Ilffik DAItT AUTOMOBILE) ITAOI
Passenger Service.Ieve Silver city 1:1 p. m .
Luti Mogollon 0 a. at.Tar meet all tram. Irget and --ee
quipped auto livery In the soothwsat,JJKNNISTT AUTO CO.,
ailvtr City, N. at.
1 v - xa jk8 T,-ew
i nil k i i t " I I e ;
1
mm rtMTkm mmm. mmmmmm mmI- -e V . .
I U 1
51inl!itiiiioiiuiiiHiMii.iii,.,i uiiiinimiiiii""m""1"" ' SUn,.ilii..u. u ,..,ie.,euOi-"",e'"'"",""l"- "n
ALBUQUERQUE MORNING J0Ur,::AL. THURSDAY, AUGUST 27,1914.e;::itInjc
Crescent Hardvare Co. CRYSTAL TCEATffiTools, Iroa Pip.Copprt Work.TELEPHONE Sit.
Cottm. IUnc, Afiowe Fnrntahlnff Goods, Cotlery,Yattr and Filling, Plumbing, HtMtnf. Jls) and
tlS W. CENTRAL AVE.
SO TEUEDSf
MISSB WILL
MEETHERETQDAVioT7i
Co' mayor with that P"v.ii'. Mr,Wllkeraun did not luimv whether the
then under oniilderationrepealed any former act the coun-"l- l.
but h opined it wiiuhl Htainl forwhat It hal. I. ,. thought that thectiurtw would rtnd no eonf hi t.
An i:.rcii!leFollowing thin tin' council went
Into an evcrutiV,, minion andbehind closed iloniN for up-
ward if nn hour. C.HH ilmen saidafterward that t:uy had attemptedto nettle Dip mutter appolntmentmwith Mayor ItoattiKlil. but had failed,Tliey offered to mahu foine coitceN-uliin-
Tiny malii the mioor admittedthat prcnetit nffleeholdem were effi-cient, but wanted to ctmiiKo them.A deiiiiM ratle member hinted at arepublican i lly nuiclilne.
Mayor boulrlKlil mild he had notheard that IiIh iippolnteen were tot ku up noted iiNHiiuH'd by patrioticreiubicatiH In the IumI illy emiipuU'.nto the extent of JI.'iO In payment ofilm reiiibilcan ciiy eenirnl conunlt-tee'- a
elinxew when a eotincllinani efel red to tbn report.
ni KfiiFirr nv uim i.tJX M IT Vt.AINST CITY
THE FAVORITE
REFRESHMENTWilli ninny IiiMcnm In our brick Ufileum. lit combination of flavormakes It uuriiiiblo Id Mil Instes, ilM
iihuimiIi'im'o In nerving mill lit Imi'ilkeeping iiiiilljr wake II km i,iiy In
HH It In good to rill, Order somefor )"iir new function. It Mill kii jiluinl uu boor,
MATTHEW'SPIIONK 4i0,
- -- A
.rue vol it w kippers from
State ftetintnr Ih.uic linrth nppetiredbefore the council in behalf of Mrs.John W. WIlHon, Mm Franeea Wll-ho- ii
and (1. A. M. WIIhihi, km.vIuk thatthe latter Woman wan wverely In-
jured when their biiKKy ran lulu nhole on North Hixih atreet laxt Hun-ila- y
nlKht. Mrn. John V Unfit! andMr. WilHon'g moii were only fllKhtlyInjured, however, he said.
It wan the desire of the WIImihih tumie for 12,00(1, Mr. Ilarlh maid, butkiiowliiK the financial condition of thecity "throuejh rumor, ut leant," hepreferred that the council first namea coinmlttei to confer with him In
to a Mcttlenu nt. Cuinu ilmenKcheer. Jlauimoml and Dr. HiihI wereappointed.
A petition from renlilentu of "NorthSixth atreet wa read later by th cityclerk, ankllln that the street be re-
paired. Councilman Otlbert, chairmanof the Hlleet coiiimltlee, an id the workhad already been commenced.
City TrcjiMiirer Al doodilch report-ed that Intercut on boiidx amountingto tH,225.2 would be due SeptemberI. The clerk wax authorized to drawa warrant for that amount.
MOV KM KAMtON UITIIOITI'FII.M IT: II S TO C,OSi:
I.eo , Zaioni uked ths council tu
Hior n tncr.ane In freight rateeaatern claaalficatloii lerrnuubenefit the Itock Inland greall.
Sir. Mudge accoinpanled by hi,here In hi private car,family arrived
, L. . , VAat 7 o clock, luat niKm. ontrain No. 1 from 1'ecos. He lert oa
Santa Vo train Nu. " t 7:50 o'clock
for Vaughn, where n
It nek Island train cant. He win meet ;
hla Htutt nt Tucumcnrl and cxpecta to
aciiulre detailed inrornuiiioii u)
financial matter then.
Henry's Delivery and Mes-
sengers. Phone 939.
B, M. WIMilAMSpentlHt
Rooma 1 . Whiting Hulldlug.
Corner Second and tlold.Hhona No.
Wait Ii Tlil" Kint Mill'Health Talk.
No. 2RHEUMATISM
la the result of faulty elimina-
tion, Ihereby causing nn exceaof Impurities In the blood, with
Its attendant misery.
OSTEOPATHY
Stimulate tho functions of tho
kidney, bowela . and pores,
causing thein to throw off tiepoison, giving relief,
DR. SCHWENTKER
OSTLOPATH
Sulla .1. N, T. A milJo lliiildlngl'liiMM-H.11- or 1035
PEACHES
Champion Pcaclic, absolutely freefrom worms. Mountain grown.Kine flavor. Ask your, grocer forUil variety.
LAND
BARGAIN
Xlnety-tlirc- o (:I3) acresshallow pumping land fourmile north of the city.ItKST OIUIIAIU) I,.NIIN VALI.Ky. Will Wllciii:ap.
SIMON STERNII
"TELMO"BUY THIS IlKAND of CANNEDG(X)DS AND YOU HAVE THE
IHiST
Sag
LET US SEND A MANTo Replace tbat Broken Window
GinsAIiBUQ DEHQ I' K LCMBEB
COMPANYPhone 421 42S N. First
WALLACE HESSELDENGeneral Contractors,
Figures nnd workmannhin count. We!guarantee more for your money thanany other contracting firm In Albu-querque. Oi l Ice nt
Sl'PF.KIOK PKW'ING MILLl'liono 377.
CatrtliosSail p Lamp
Lam HAH TJ
traiiffer hlx miloon llceiiHe from 100HHuiilh Second ntreei to 91 9 South See-- Ioml. Chief Me.Millin auld he had al- -
For All GradesAND
High School
STRONG'SBOOK STORE
DU GUT' 1STCLOSE OCTOBER
SAY CQUNC LMEN
Pass OidinancG Quickly Under
Suspension of Rules and
Then Take Step to InsureEnforcement,
The council luxt nlitht relievedMayor D. II. Itoalrliiht of hp re-
HporiHlblllty of caiT.vliiK Into effecttho 'TiMlllKht" platform upon whichh WiU elected laid April.
The council lliHt paMMcd a brlc-- f
and comprchenxlvii ordlnaneo :ibol-iHhln- g
the" district and then to Insun;agalnxt executive laxity In the en-
forcement of the mea.Muro adopted nreiiolutlun Itmtluctliig Chief McMll-ll- n
to clone the rexortR. The or-
dinance will becoiim operative October 1.
Councilman Jamex A. Skinner,chairman of tin ordinance commit-- 1
tee, placed the ordinance on City'Clerk llughctt' di xit. Tho ordinancecame from tho council, aldermenxtutcd afterward. When It waxadopted ax read the Hint time, nil
(cngn(ilmen voting a flirma lively, uponCouncilman Ivan (IrunnfebrN motion,Couinilinan Skinner offered n motionnunpendlnK the mica tor enable thepanning of the ordinance nt thatxennion,
Itcptilailon Siil'flclcnl.The orillnanco In diUHllc. It prn- -
videx that the general reputation ofa houne In nuflieient evidence to con- -
vlct. The penalty In a fine of from$10 to i0 nnd lmptinonment fornot more than nlxty days, or both' filmand iuiprlnoniiienl,
Hv' the reMohttion the couniilpledged Itnelf to give the chiefenough police to enforce the ordin-ance, pelbapn indicating that thecouncil, expectn difficulty In thiswith the former lomalen of theNorth Third atreet houaea " scat-
tered.Couiuilmnn Skinner before tho
ri'Holullon wan put to n vole, nukedCity Attorney T. N, Wllkeraon whether ttiia would repeal the mayorauthority over tho dlali'lct. Ho Bald
tho council had prevlounly Invented
ricturca bangc J'.vcry Dujr
hk;h class hovsk1IK.I1 CLASS I'lCTTltKS
i Ilit.ll CLASS Ml SIC
SKCOXD SKillT"Vltagrapli Comedy
Tii it i :r. mi:x and aWOMAN''
I.iibln real lire DriimaTwo I did
ltlt( DO HILLY WINSOCT"
N. a A. Witaerii
Alff P. WANT some Albu-Jrf- hl
uuerquc lady litTpjl inline hur I'liiatilate.It llolhiug tomakii a NiiggcHtion. A
nice jircM'iit for I lie lady wlumcHiiKetlon we adopt.
i.rxdi atGRIMSHAW'S
. Kecond and Central"Sanitation Our Special Delight"
TENT THEATRESIXTH AM) CT'.NTKAIi
Saturday, Aug. 29th
c. n i:mcKsovrreacnta the Famous Colored
ALABAMA MINSTRELSIn n CTn.sa by Ourselves
iu;(;r.u and hi.ttkh thanOTIIIOHS
40-PEOPLE-- 40
Including WAITS AM) HOWARDSTho1 l'unnlest I'cIIohs on tarth
I1KJ NOON-DA- Y STRKET PARADE
Another Big Reduction in
Kodak Work
We develop any size roll film for10c; film packs, 20c. Also rod notionon printing.
All films received by noon fin-ished by six o'clock, Including mallorders.
'THE GRAY STUDIO
219 W. Central Albuquerque, N. M.
Position and SuccessAwait you after completing an A.B. C. training. Courses, Business,Stenography, Court Reporting, Ac-
countancy, Civil Service and Bank-in- g.
The only National AccreditedCommercial School in tho South-west. Catalogue on request.The, Albuquerque Business College
ALIIl'Ql'KKOrK, N. M.
At llt QlKKQt K UOt HESpponrt flour of Korlier Tu Id iik. Beenn4
"f"" Tljera Hoait. farnliitieilrenin, utrKn mm airy, It modern cunvt-nt-lieu-
nncea Incluillii alvam hot anil eotdwalor. An Ideal ulaie to room; cloae In.Hpnt musonabis. Trmisli nt or permunontrooniPM,
MRS. iAM COX NE Its, l'roprltlor.
Gallop 8to7CerrlltiNj Btov
H0E
to 5 4
to $2.50 $1.50 to $3.00
") " 1, to 6
West Central, Ave.
Interdenominational Confer-
ence of New Mexico, Which
Will Open This Morning, to
Close Monday,
More than alxty teacher areto attend thu meeting of the
International Mi'atoti Teacher' asso-
ciation, which will open toduy at thellioN(irand Induntrla! nhool. Theconvention will laat until Monday af-
ternoon.The conference 1 made up of tnla-nlo- n
teacher of the Congregational,Methodint and Trenbyterlnn churcheengaged In New Mexico.
The program for the conference follow:
Today. -
Morning Seaaion.K:45 Devotion. Uev. J. H. lleald,
I). I.:1S Welcome addrea, 8upt. A. C.
Heynian.Itcnponne, I'renldent of the Insti-
tute.!):4" Organisation and bunlnenn.
10: 15 The (iury School Hyatem,Mln H. It. Sutherland.
10: 4 5 ltural Coiumuulty Itulldlng,Minn Anna I!, Tuft.
11: 15 Hlhle Talk, Itev. 8. Alonxo. Hrlght, D. I).
Afternoon Hennlon.2:00 Whut Standard of Admla-alo- n
of I'npll to the MlaalnnSchools, Iiiynlcully and Men- -
tally. Day achool, Mln Olivefl. Ollmon. Ilonrdlng achool,Olindg K. Meeker.
2:40 1'hyHciii Culture, Mr. J, 8.Knaterdny.
3:00 II iw tn Awaken a HealthfulSelf-renpe- in Pupil of theteen-ag- e of Mexican Train-ing, Rev. A, C. Jteynian.
X:10 Ilible Study In the School,Itev. II. A. Hannett, D. D.
ICvenlng.8:00 New Mexico Archaeology,
atereoptlcon lecture by JudgeMcKle. j
Physical Culture Dtlll, Mr. Ka-- :terday'a clan.
Tomorrow. i
Morning Sesnlon.8:45 Devotion, Supt. J, C. Rons.H:1K How Could Gardening and
other Induntrie lie Intro- - j
duced Into the IMnxn School? j
Key. S. V. Hernandei,9:45 The Value of Athletic, '
Prln. It. E. MiConnoll.10:00 How to Teach a Cla of,
lieglnners. Mln Nlchol.10:16 How to Hench Our People
Iteliglounly, Mln Anita Hell.10:45 A Siitii'factory Life for
Country Women, Mln AnnaIt. Taft.
11: 15 Illble Talk, Itev. 8. AlonioHrlght.Afternoon Session.
00 Hible Talk, Itev. 8. AlonsmHrlght.
30 How Much nnd WhatWork Can We Do
Among the Cuthollc People?Ml Tripp.
3:00-- The Influence of SabbathObaervance
(a) The Teacher, Miss Alice Hy-ao- n.
(b) In the Boarding School, MlnMlllcent Wood.
(c) In the Community, Ming B.W. Craig,
3:30 Emergencies, Dlninfectunt.etc., Dr., A. 0. Shortle,
Saturday.Morning Senslon.
8:45 Devotions, Uev. II. A. Baa-aet- t.
9:15 Tulk, Itev. Hoffman.9:4." Iteport of Committee on Be-
ginner' Work, Mln Tripp,Mlsn Webster, Ml Front. '
10:10 Iteport of Committee onTeacher' Training School,Mr. Hons, Dr. lleald, MisPnvla, Min Wood.
10:30 The Country Ciirl and HerProblem, Mln Annn n. Taft.
11:00 How to Increase PersonalCleanliness Among the Peo-ple, Mlna Bunker.
11:30 School Music, Mr. J. C.Itoaa.
Afternoon.P.ecrentlon.
Sunday.11:00 a.m. Wornhip in Churches of
Albuquerque,4:00 p. m. Sacrament of the Lord'
Supper..Monday.
8:45 Devotions, Mrs. J. H. lleald.9:15 Use of the English and Spun.
Inh In the School, Miss Ma helSmith.
10:30 DincuHSion of Teachers'Bending Course.
11:00 Outline Course of ManualTraining, D. It. Jennings.
BUSINESS SUFFERSFROM WAR, MUDGE OF
ROCK ISLAND SAYS
Just what effect the F.uropean warwill have on business conditionHenry IT. Mudge, of Chicago, presi-dent of the Rock Iglund system, wouldnot haaurd a guesa here last night.He left Chicago before war wa de-clared and practically ever lncethenhas been with hi family at his sum-mer home on the I'pper Peco river.Although he has been in communica-tion with hi office in Chicago hewould not attempt to give a state-ment upon this Information, not be-lieving It to (be comprehensive.
The war had hurt business, how-ever, he snid. The Rock Islutid suf-fered through the war, he aald,pointing out the wheat embargo. RockIsland cars loaded with wheat hadbeen forced to remain standing still.Although the embargo wa liftedseveral day ago the time that It tiedup the railroad is a iosa that will notbe quick ty recovered, Mr. Mudge didnot believe that the Interstate Com-merce commission's decision permit- -
PEARL WHITE SOAPrcrfiilli.il of Willie) Laundry
Koh."
he limited hint niRht for Detroit,Mich., where they will itttend the
ti nit I ii encampment of thetiriind Army of the Republic, John
Murphy, iiIhu a tnemher uiul officer(he local ImikI, will leavH for L)v
toilny.('utility Clerk Walker yesterday a- -
ailed u license to iiinrry to HarrisonOliver ii ml Ellicl Hehymer, holh ofAI!ni(UeniH'.
Mm. K. M. Lowe of Hullnn, Kan.,ha heeti vhdttng her min, J'"ru n It
Lowe, herti for the ImhI Mix Week, de-
parted limt night fur li liver on herhoniis ' -
W. A. Il.iller, of New Vork, thiefengineer of the Federal I.IkIiI I'liW- -
Co., controlling Ihe AlbUqUerqUCElectric Light Power I'll., I
hero Inspecting the company' prop- -
Sister Alexandrine, MupcintemlcntHI. Mury'ii hoHiitul in I'llelilo,
Colo,, will have 1 h 1m evening for homelifter a hrh f visit here, winter Alex-andrine, wax for ninny yearn super-intendent of Kt. Joseph's llnapitul III
Alhuileri(lie,I'rof. denote A. Horsey, curator of
anthropology of the Klehl MuMeiiniNatural History, wit n passengerSanta Kit train No. 3 yesterday
morning on the way from Chicago toChliui. He Inspected the Kreil HarveyIndian curio department,
Mix Hannah V. Moore, beauty ctil-llirl-
hiiH left for two WeeliN' HtnyDenver nnd Pm lilo. While In Don-ve- r,
Mln Moore will study the latesthair dressing ntylea for the benefit
her patroiiH who plan to attendMontessumu hall here In fietuher.
There will lie a reheatMiil of theoperetta "Ooldcn Hair unit the Threeliearn" In the Flrnt wnrd nehool thinafternoon at 3 o'rlock: MrH. ti. I.,Ilradford, under whiwe maniiKement
play 1h to bu Riven, ha returneefrom her vacation and will havecharge of the rebearHiil.
ASK FORECLOSURE
OF MORTGAGE ON N. M. j
CAFE FURNITURE
The foreclimura of nn alleged chat-tel mortKuKK on the furniture of theNew Mexico cafe, 122 Went Centralavenue, U linked In a xult llled yexter-da- y
In the dlatrlct court by SamuelSahtingy limilliHt lleorge Flock, Hel-m- a
Ktock nnd K. Hakeiu.The proprietor of the ' rnfe gave
him a note for $i!l3 nnd the WesternMeat company another for $400 andholh were aecured by chattel uiort-kukc-
accordlnif to (the complaint,virtue of tho payment of the ace-mi- d
note the meat company hadIt to him, Kuhitngy ulli'Mex. He
aaka JudKuient for l,2ori.83.JoHit Antonio I'ndilln risk fop a
decree of divorce, chalgliiK hla wifewith abandonment. They were mar-fle- d
'November 0, lilt I, nt Chlllll,liernalillo county, nnd lived on bin!ranch near Kxcobona, for n year, I'u-- 1
illlia fayn.
ALABAMA MINSTRELS
WILL APPEAR HERE THE
COMING SATURDAY
The Alabama Mlnatrela wi)l nppearthin city on Satnldny, Augunt Sll,
uinjer lent at the corner of Sixth atreetand Central avenue, and will give twoperformance, ufternoon and evening.The)' are recognised un the very bent
nimnrela on the road andare leal urtlMl.1 The prt'KH of thecountry apeak highly of the mlimlreln,
the following will ahow:The Colorado Spring Oaxette nayn;
"The fatnoun Alabama, Mlnalrels havecome and gone public aentiment, bentcoluied nhow ever In our city,"
Tho lieauinont Knterprine: "Thela bn ma Mlnatrcta waa the first gen-
uine colored mlnatret nhow of the oldachnnl (n ever visit Iteitumout, andsuch a decided ouecea wan acored thatthe management cancelled the l'ortArthur date in order to give anotherperfoi'intincn In lieauinont."
ALBUQUERQUE FOLKS
ASTONISH DRUGGISTWe ell many good medicine but
we are told the mixture of buckthornbark, glycerine, etc., known a Adler-t-k- a,
1 the bent wo ever auld. Albn-(ucriu- fl
folk untoninh u dally bytelling how UUiCKIA" Adlcr-l-k- a
aour atomaeb, gaa on the atom-Inc- h
and constipation. Many reportllhat A .SINUl.i; lOSK relieve thesetrouble aluiont 1M M KD1 ATl'.l.Y". Weare glad we nre Albuquer'iuo agentfor Adler-l-k- llutf. Incorporated.
lUddla hnraea. Trimble' Ket Kara.
lilnit tip Toncy Mlcliclbacli'a atitifHue, liioncn: Stand, 1711; tiounc, 1302.1.
CAKll KIUNS I OK AI.F..Ti Ji.urnnl h full .irimnt
"f lar.t nmi on liumt. you run eertalnlyf'tid wiuil ..u vi'unt in Ih fiillwitia :
"KurnuiiiJ lOtnms For llPtit." "IUfurntti-'- lli.t'.niil For Kiit," '"Ktir ttpnl." "Ki'P
si!p," "Hr.mi F..f linl, "Kurnlwhl rtu.mtPur l.lKhl lltinH.kriln." iOK.m nitH'writ," "TaliW H.mnl " "lliw K.ir al.""Il"w Kor Itfin." "I'tnln Hrwina." "lre- -utakll,." Tim tll li (Uilil Ml Ihp lewline, uf ra. lu Call at Ih builiM
"The
it I:
When It Comes to ('.uf
VINEGAR liult
one ilUnli'N Hie claim
llwtl llicti-Ili- a In no Ulter miiili'
n ' whoj
IIIIV. I I III. (JIH Itway
UVOAIt
er(till,
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WARD'S STORESIS Marble An-- . Phone 2IIH.2
of1IOMIII II. WAItl), Mgr. on
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CHAMPION GROCERYin
A. Mutinied, Prop.622.821 Vit TIJcraa Ave.
Frch Men l, Poultry, l'ish, Gro-ceries
ofninl imported good. Excel-
lentthe
service, riiotii) 61
TO KUIISCniUKUR theIf you full to get your Morning
Journal, railWESTERN I'NloN THI.1'
tj K A I'll COMPANY.Phone 1411-14- .
Strong BrothersUndertakers
I'ltOMIT BFHVICR. rilONRIS. hlltONd Itl-K.- , COI'I'ltHAND Ki;C()M,
IA1CAL ITEMSOF IJVTETtEST lly
UFJMIll It HKIDKT.
For thn twenty-fou- r hours enillnf at6 o'cloi h ycHtcr.tay evenlmt:
MaXimuiA temperature, XI decree;i ii i in lemperal in e, 5 r, deKieeM;
rami', '2(1 rietireeg. Temperature at 8
P, m., 73, SiiiitliweHt wlitd; partlycloudy, I'rirlpHatloil, .04 Inch.
Herbuth, puintlnif, puperlnK, 1486 J.Mitttuuei & Co. l'hune 15,
That nood aim wherry Ice cream alFee'a candy Ktore.
Mil. V.. 15, C'imtia hiiN returned toAlbuiiieriue from htm AnxeleH andother point In California,
A regular meeting of AlblUlieriUeInTemple No, 3, I'ythtan SiHteiN, will lie
hebl at o'clock tonight nt theKnlKhta of rylhlaa hail.
Mrs. JcknIo Kcleher and daiiKbterMImk Kngcnlii, have returned fromtwo week' vacation apetit at CampWhlteomb,
Tile clerk of the school board, Mix. aH, v. Tcnnant, has returned tu thecity after Npi'tidintt her Vacation InCalifornia with relative and frletwlH.
Tin Woiiiun's Mlshionary ,t'nton ofthe HuptlM church will meet tliin
ut 3 o'clock at the chnrcli. A
Mis. i. A. Hammond will be lender.Them will he a meeting of the
Hector Aid of St. John's church attlie home of Mi-h- . An hUmld HuciUcr.'Hi Went Silver, thin afternoon itt 3
i'( lock.Stilled conclave of I'llmlm y
No, ,1, KntntHw Templar, ntN o'cliM'k thin i wniim. Work In Hiemder i.f the K. C, All vlHitlng SirK u ilttss Welcome,
IJIIentin lto M'Velt, koii of formerI'KHllient ItlllinAcl), w:ir here l.itn!j,ht in route from (lalltip to NewYnlk. He h.is In imi in muthenHierriArlKnnn, for the last two lllolltllB. I
'., H. Win, eommitnder of the Jo- -
cral 1, K. VVnt K ii post, O, A, 1!,, anddaughter, Mi Myrtle; and J. tl.C.ildiVell, a pant comiiinnder, left on
W IHMHj ill' MOIll HN D (iToiilgbl III Olid I cIIohV Hall.
Diai't lorget our ituiicc timiulit willIh- - held in Odd I cHowm' Hall.
II, l IM ;. Dancing ItisirtictiHr.riiotie 1S.M.
SPRINGERTRANSFER
Careful Furniture Movers
P THE DAILY HINT FROM PAmSiw- - ) COAL COPHONE II. -
ready ntovru ar.a that ne had clonedI'm place yenlerday becaUHe he hadnot applied for the trannfor firnt. Thematter wan referred to the pourscommittee.
City K'nglnecr (iladding preventeda lit of peiponn who failed to complywith the aldewalk ordinance, The lttwiih turned over to the city attorney.
Tho appointment by the mayor ofH. C. liuller. It. I,. Dolmon, ChaiiegChadwiek, Harry Johnnon and C. Ii,
an tin automobile board wanannounced. 'J'hey are to examine
for licenae to drive earn.' The t'oumil took nu action on a resolution authorising tho city engineerto prepare apecif IcatioiiH for pavingthe alley bet ween Second and Thirdstrcctn and t.' ntral and Gold avenues.
KTOI.F I.AKDI K TO ITVI MM It TtlWI H; CAV'T WIXI) IT
Arthur Kveiitt, In a letter to thecouncil, reported that aome one hudtampered with the clock In the towerof the library building and alno hadstolen the laibb r Hiat the dockman could not wind It, That wan at11:30 o'clock hint Sunday morning.The hnnda have remained nt thin timeever ulnee, Mr. Kveiitt warned thatthere would lie no city time until thebidder waa r. placed.
"I anlern" Haoco Snt. live., new W.O. VV. Hull, Central Ave, Cavauaiigh
th-c- l ititrii.
,0. II. CON MICH, M. I., I, O.Onteopalblu Sncclallxt.
I treat all curable dlaeanva. OfficeStern Building, l'hona 65 and 126.
CHIItOl'KACTOItS.Mr. and Mm. M. V. Itattemlorf, I). C
IxK'ated at V. (odd. IMioiic t I2IW.
'
liat t ;nthu. widtuln It at the aide.
Thu ahap ta aucu aLou la eriy autumn
VH't OlddtMh
ANTHRACITE, AI L SIZES, 6T!AM OOAUCoke, Mill Wood, Factory Wood, Cord Wood, Native Kindling, Liana- -
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SCHOOLt'.t " ' ' " 7 h
, "V ,J JJ , ,A ) ' ? .
ii J Our Fall School Shoes show every feature that is essentialto comfortable, durable, good Inking, satisfying shoes. '
J Bring your children here and every attention will be givento supplying them with school shoes that are just right inevery way. Gun Metal, Box Calf, Vici Kid, Kangaroo andPatent Colt. Lace or button styles. The limit of good shoe-niaki-
and, every pair exceptionally close priced.
SCHOOL SHOES FOR BOYS13 to 2 zy.
i
8 to 12.
$1.25 to $2.00 $1.35"
SCHOOL SHOES FOR GIRLSX tn I I , 1 1 T
1 . f
f "'Vvi :
if 'I v "
1
'
Whit '1a fUB4attOB die with tunic
of whlla tulle aduriisil with tlounrr, Thej
aaiit he IB iacvuriuui A hLU mUu.
$1.25 to $1.85 $1.50 to $2.25 $1.75 to $2.75Every Shoe represents the Wst in 'its grade and is guaran-
teed by us to do its full duty.