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University of New Mexico UNM Digital Repository Southwest Sentinel, 1892-1896 New Mexico Historical Newspapers 7-18-1893 Southwest-Sentinel, 07-18-1893 Allan H. MacDonald Follow this and additional works at: hps://digitalrepository.unm.edu/sws_news is Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the New Mexico Historical Newspapers at UNM Digital Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Southwest Sentinel, 1892-1896 by an authorized administrator of UNM Digital Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Recommended Citation MacDonald, Allan H.. "Southwest-Sentinel, 07-18-1893." (1893). hps://digitalrepository.unm.edu/sws_news/55

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Page 1: Southwest-Sentinel, 07-18-1893 · 2020. 7. 2. · Booklet telling how to successful with Garden and Houm I'lanta. THIS BOOKLET TELLS HOW TO RAISE BIQ ORY8ANTHEMUM8. OOMkSt AMO CATALOOUS

University of New MexicoUNM Digital Repository

Southwest Sentinel, 1892-1896 New Mexico Historical Newspapers

7-18-1893

Southwest-Sentinel, 07-18-1893Allan H. MacDonald

Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/sws_news

This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the New Mexico Historical Newspapers at UNM Digital Repository. It has been acceptedfor inclusion in Southwest Sentinel, 1892-1896 by an authorized administrator of UNM Digital Repository. For more information, please [email protected].

Recommended CitationMacDonald, Allan H.. "Southwest-Sentinel, 07-18-1893." (1893). https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/sws_news/55

Page 2: Southwest-Sentinel, 07-18-1893 · 2020. 7. 2. · Booklet telling how to successful with Garden and Houm I'lanta. THIS BOOKLET TELLS HOW TO RAISE BIQ ORY8ANTHEMUM8. OOMkSt AMO CATALOOUS

VOLUME XIX,

JJKI.L W RIGHT,

Attorneys.silver crrv new Mexico.

ilL L ANCIIKTA,

Attorneys and Counselorsat Law.

Office to Enterprise BulldlnK,SILVER UITY NEW MEXICO

Will nrftftlro In all th fonrts of ttif tmtorr.F. BAB.NKS,JICUUOND

Attorney at Law,

Oltoe corner Broadway and Main street.SILVER CITY NEW MEXICO

JJ L. PICKETT,

Attorney at Law,SILVER CITY NEW MEXICO

JAMES 8. FIELDER,

Attorney at Law,OITIee orer Bllvr City National BAnk,

Koomr andCITY, NEW MEXICO.

rjl F. CONWi I

Attorney at Law,SILVER CITY - - NEW MEXICO

H. HARLLEE,

Attorney at Law,Office Rooms 3 and 4, over Rosenberg's

Store, Sheridan Block. Entranceon Broadway.

SILVER CITY NEW MEXICO

Q.IDEON D. BA.NTZ,

Attorney at Law,Opposite White Home Saloon.

SILVER CITY NEW MEXICO

fJIHOS. 8. HEFLIN,

Attorney at Law,In Exchangt building,

SILVER CITY - - NEW MEXICO

s.B- - GILLETT,

Attorney at Law.Office on Main Street,

SILVER CITY, NEW MEXICO.

"yiLL. T. WILLIAMS, M. D.

Physician and Surgeon,Offlce In. Dr. Stephens' old Rooms.

BILVER CITY, - N. M.

Q.EO. T. KIMBALL, M.JD.,

Physician and Surgeon,Corner Main Street and Broadway.

Offlce Hours Irom 10 to 12 and 2 to 4.

8ILVER CITY

HUUHKS. V. D.IS.,

DElf

N. M.

Room 1, Sheridan Building. JEutrance fromBroadway

SILVER CITY N. M.

O. F.IO.Jumes L. Ridgely Encampment No. 1,meets the 2d and 4tn Wednesdays of eachmonth. Visiting patriarchs cordially Invited.

AMSUBW STAUDT, J.iJ. J. Kellt, Scribe.

T O. O. F.L . Isaac S. Tiffany Lodge, No. 13, meets at

Odd Fellows' nail, over even-HK- i.

Members of the order cordially Invited toattend. J. M. Fuinmi, N. U.

O. L. Dotsok, Beo.

O. O. F.. 8au Vicente T,odK, No. 6, meets every

Monday nlxlit at Odd Fellows Hull. VlHitlngbrothers invited. WlLUiM Owkhs, N. O.

.M. ii. MAHHit, Beo

A. M.Silver City Chapter, No. , at Masonic

Hall. ltfKular convocations on 3d WednesdayevenlnK of each mouth. All companions invitedto attend. M. V. Cox, II. r.

ii. W. Lucas, Bee.

F. & A. M... Silver City ludiré, Nit. 8, meets at Masonic

Hall, opposite TIihiihT House, the Thursdayveiling on or before the full moon each month.

All visiting brothers invited to attend.M. Ii. TWuMKV, W. M.

FlABKV W, Lucas, Sec.

KOF P.2d and 4th Tuesday nights In each

month, at Odd Fellows Hall. Visiting knlglitsInvited. 8. W. Fuuu, 0.0.ii. A. Ht'OHEB, K. R. 4 H.

A" O. D. W.Meets on the 1st and 8d Tuesday nights

n each month, at Masonic Hall, Fellow work.-me- n

cordially Invited. J. M. FuiTTaa, M. W.U. W. Lucas, Kec.

IT E. Chbbch

&hurthts.

TIST.

J.VL Services at the ehurrh, Broadway, nearthe Court House, every Hunday at 11 a. in. andT p. Ul. Sunday HIhk1 at :ft a. m,

ltav. W. S. Fitch. A. M., Pastor.

fpUiUKOII OF TUB OOOn H11EPHEUD.J Held In the Episcopal Mission room. Per-Tic- e,

every Sunday at II a. m. and dp. in. Sun-day school at 10 a. m. Come and Join us.

A. 1L LXWTD.

i$itlhntous.

JAMES COiUUN,

Real Estate, lünln&LoiH and Collection AgentOffice on Main Street,

SILVER CITY .....NEW MEXICO

Notary Public for Grant county. N. M.of Heeds for Arizona Territory. All

kinds of real estate ou hand and bought andS'j'.u ou commission. '

JAS. B. CA 111 Kit,

Notary PublicOfflce in Silver City National Bun.

Silvbb City, - . Nw Mixico.

JJAKRY W. LUCAS,

Notary Public.Offlice in ToBtoffloe Building-- ,

SILVER CITY. . . NEW MEXICO.

1

MAISER BROS'

Barber Shop&Eath RoomsThe Bret Flare la The tily Te Mt

a nice easy shave or a good bathBroadway, Below Bollard St.

Joseph Merk,Horticulturist and Landscape

GARDEN ERBest References Furnished.

SILVER CITY and DEMI NO, N. M.

J E. BURLINOAME,

Assay Office and Chemical Laboratory,440 Lawrence 8treet,

DENVER, .... COLORADO.

Samples bv mall or express will receive promptanil careful attention, (iold and Silver Bullionrellned. melted, assayed or purchased. &c.

Mrs. 0. E. Colby,

1 mSilver City, New Mex.

JOSE AZlXTOZiD,

Cleaning,Altering,

And RepairingBack of Dr. Bailey's drug store,

Market Street, - SILVER CITY

WM. STEVENS,TINOS ATLOS

feeáj livery talile?,

fW

Pino Altos, Hew Mexico.

A.i..4 .i A. i illmi mm mum ata at mm v a m mm iu .

DAVID ABRAHAM, Prop.,

FURNISHED ROOKS,

res

Clothes.

vM mm

BATHS FREE.

GEO. R.BROWN,P. 8. Deputy

Mineral and Land

SURVEYOR,RlLVKK CITY, N. M.

tifOlllceon I anaee Street.

G. W, VERA,

OILS, LAMPS,GLASSWARE.

Lubricating amd Coal Oil

a specialty.

SILVER CITY, - - NEW MEXICO

DENVER PUBLIC

C M. I'orultcr.

.) LAV

( r --y

SAMPLINGWORKS CO.GREATEtTORE MARK.ET IN THE WORLD.COLD, SILVER. COP.PER ANO LEAD ORESSAMPLED AND BOLDTO HIGHEST BIDDER.DENVER, COLO.

,

SILVER CITY, NEW MEXICO, TUESDAY, JULY 1893.

JONES'

MEAT MARKET-- The Finest- -

FRESH AND SALT MEATS

Always on Hand.

U JL. SFCIAXTT.

0.-- 1-

r'V

18,

BULLARD STREET,3rd Door Soulli of Tost-olTl- building.

FONG GEMf Prop,

excellent"cuisine.

Fvery dellcey In the market, at nil hours ofthe twenty-four- . Vitular lilniier (; eentt) ortoonler. (iaine, t ieh. Steaks, Ko,iti, c. hikedto suit OonrniPt or Kpirure. Careful And

fttteiiHon to every etiütoiiier. Sorupii-lousl- y

elemi. 1 try lo please everyone.FONU'UKM, Chef.

19ARL0R SALOONS

J. II. WEBSTER, Prop. .

Central, - - . New Mexico.

Choice nines,Liquors and Cigars.

Private Club Rocm.

The pleasantest place in Centralin which to spend an evening.Headquarters for the "13oys inBlue."

23I22G11TT

Open Day Night.Good Meals at all hours,

Fish, Meats, Vegetables iu season,always supplied.

Bullard Street, : : Silver City, N. M.

u

and

Jr. W. H. WHITEp

TD E ISPHas admlnUtered for the painless extrm tlonof toe to.

Broadway Hotel,SILVER CITY, N. M.

Refo'nished and renovatedthror.ghout. and comfort-able rooms by the day, week oriiionth. Terms very reasonable.Patronage solicited.

MRS. 0. B. DARLING. Proprietress.

pARLOR(1AL00N,

Corner Rrnadway and MainStreet.

WINES. LIQUORS AND CIGARS.

JOHN CARSON Proprietor.

J. XJ. AVliltc.

Elephant Corral,F0EAÍER 4 WHITE, ProM,

Ijtvery, .Weed and Sale Stables.Slnijle nd double bugules, InirkhoArds. sprlnir waifons, and enrts, ladiesand men s ihhng huiw, luiued out In koou form on Ilia shortest notice,Uorses ooardod. bpecul rule given by tile week or uioutb.

Horses Bought, Sold and Traded.Msia Strt. SU-re- t City, lTw Cxiee.

AROSE GARDEN F0R

IO FINE ROSE PLANTS. Your Mlectloo Iron loo ISUadard Varieties, peat-pai- d.

Our Catalogue of Plants and Floral Novcltlca tot ' Is sow ready, alsoBooklet telling how to successful with Garden and Houm I'lanta.

THIS BOOKLET TELLS HOW TO RAISE BIQ ORY8ANTHEMUM8.OOMkSt AMO CATALOOUS su is vou WHO. SSMO Urn VOUI Wfíumm

40,000 ft, omsa

IT

Neat

SOUTH DENVER FLORAL CO.HAauao M. Omit. kUMMxa

, a BOX Ml, COUTH Df NVM, OOtO.

s

fcj

b

Cattle otoi.

Tho livo stock exhibit at theWorld's fair is arranged as follows:Cattlo, horses, jacks and jennetsAugust 21 to September 21; sheepand swine, September 23 to Oct.11

In answer to an inquiry as towhich is tho best sheep dip of theseveral kinds advertised for thokilling of sheep ticks, C. D. Smeadin the National Stockman says:This is a question which is diffi-

cult to answer. In fact there sev-

eral dips put up by manufacturersand placed upon the market thatI believe one to be just as good astho other; several of them I havotried and found all effective in de-

stroying tho tick. I can best an-

swer by stating how tho variousdips kill tho ticks end leave it forreaders to chooso the one thatsuits them best. Of tho varioussheep dips placed upon the marketby different firms, sume preparedone way and some another, thereare but three agents used as thoingredient that does tho killing oftho ticks, viz., arsenic, carbolicacid and tobacco. The dips con-

taining tho arsenic are put up intho form of a powder, which ismixed with water, forming a solu-

tion in which the sheep are to bodipped. The dip containing thecarbolic acid is in a liquid form,generally of a black color with asmell like coal tar. AYheu mixedwith water makes a white, milkylike solution. Tho tobacco dipsaro sometimes in powder, some-

times a solid and sometimes athick liquid. The carbolic dipsare usually called n,

which is truo as far as tho sheepis concerned, but still will killsheep ticks and most other para-sites that inhabit the skin of thesheep. The tobacco dips are notpoisonous when used as directedor without the sheep swallowingconsiderable quantities of the so-

lution that they are dipped in. Thearsenical dips are both poisonousto tho sheep and the ticks pro-

viding tho sheep gets ouy greatquantity of the solution in itsmouth. It therefore becomes nec-

essary to use all the arsenical dipswith caution. Some flock ownersdo not understand how any agentcan be of a non-poisono- us natureand yet kill ticks, lice and scabmite. This I will endeavor to ex-

plain: The tick, the louse andmost other parasites do not havolungs and breathe through themouth and noso, but breathethrough capillaries or pores of thoskin. If any element is thereforeapplied to them that inflames their

I skin or causes it pucker up, it stopstheir breathing and they die. ethus see that when we dip 6heepwhose skins contain ticks or otherparasites in a carbolic or other dipmade strong enough to inflamethe skin of tho parasite that it willbo killed. The arsenical dip cov-

ers the skin of tho sheep with alight coating of arsenic which thetick or louse gets a quantity ofwhen ho bites tho sheep, and istherefore poisoned in the samomanner that the potato bug is kill-

ed by eating tho leaves of the po-

tato vino that has been sprayedwith pans green solution. Limeund sulphur wero once used in connection with the arsenical and tobacco dips, but it is not so largelyused at tho present time. As faras the danger lies to the humanfamily in using any of tho dipsmentioned thera is none whateverif used carefully and as directed;tobacco dip may sicken the etomach of somo who use it, and thecarbolic dip may make tho skin ofthe hands and arms smart for ashort time after tho dipping hasbeen done. The arsenicul dip ofcourse is an actual poison, andwhen used must be handled withcare. But unless those who dotho dipping get the solution intho month, the man need have nofear, as not enough will adhere tothe hands and arms to do anvharm if washed immediately aftertho dipping is liniHiieil, and noharm will como to the sheep ifewes suckling lambs are kept fromthe lambs for two hours after thedipping and tho flock kejrt in thoJard until no liquid will dropfrom them upon tho grasa.

Territorial Itrms.

New Mexico can produce thirty-eig- ht

tons of sugar beets to the acre,worth $1 per ton, or $152 in thomarket

In spito of tho drop in silver,matters at Kelly are moving onwith great lifo and activity. This is

because 00 to 75 per cent, lead isin the oro of tho camp aud smel-

ters must have it as long as theyrun at all.

The Soccorro Fire Clay companyhas been pla'ced in tho hands of areceiver. Tho president and vicepresident waived process of serviceand consented to tho appointmentof a receiver on $15,000 bonds.

C. F. Eusley says though J udgoFall has approved his bond, it willhavo to bo accepted by tho depart-ment and thereupon his commis-

sion will be forwarded an that hewill not be ablo to assume tho dutiesof surveyor general till about thefirst of August.

Santa Fo is threatened with a wat-

er famine. All irrigation of gardenshas been ordered discontinued, andtho streets have not been sprinkledfor several weeks as no wator couldbo spared for that purpose. Thereis only sufficient water in tho reser-voirs now for drinking purposes tolast for five or six days unless agood rain comes down within thattime.

The good effects of a stonni Hourmill in Socorro are already begin-ning to show. Yesterday morning anumber of farmers came all tho wayfrom San Marcial to bring in theirwheat. It will not be long untilthey will bo coming in from alldirections. Socorro Advertiser.

The great drop in tho prico ofsilver has caused a feeling of goneness to enter tho heart of the miner. This district, like every otherraining district, keenly feels thetho stroke of injustice that threat-ens to demoralize every branch ofbusiness in tho country. BlackRange.

Deputy U. S. Marshals, EarhaitWilliams and Tucker arrived fromthe south with Marshal Hall onFriday. They havearrestodaChina-ma- n

who did not correspond iu anyparticular with the certificate heheld, which had been mado out forsome othor Chinaman or else was afraudulent certificate. MarshalHall will have his deputies watchcarefully that only those Chinamanentitled to enjoy the privileges ofNew Mexico's soil shall be allowedhere. Santa Fe Sun.

Work on tho Atlanta, St Cloudand Mayflower shut down laBt Sat-urday night Tho last work- - donoin tho bottom of tho shaft on theSt. Cloud showed an increased orebody and of better quality; theshowing of ore in the Allanta- andMayflower was steadily improvingat the time of tho shut down. Whenwork on these mines will be re-

sumed has not been learnedBlack Range.

In view of tho continued and rap-

id declino in tho prico of silver,tho Rio Grande Smelting company,of Socorro, last week sent out tele-

grams to stop all purchase of ore,and to stop shipping auy moro thanis already agreed ujon under timocontracts. This will bo a severoblow to miners and mino ownersthroughout tho southwest, as thiscompany was taking all tho ore ofTombstouo, about 1,(XX) tons permonth, large quantities fromCook's Teak, Lake Valley, Mag-dalena and other points in New-Mexic-

aud Arizona, as well asheavy importations from the stateof Sonora. Tho smelter itself willnot bo shut down, as it has about40,000 tons of ore on hand andconsiderable quantities in transitand to n shipped under time eon.tracts; but tho blow will bo felt iuevery community and in everybranch of business, as it willnecenbitato tho bhutting down cfmost of the mines and cause thous-ands of men to le thrown out ofemployment.

The public debt stotoment forthe month of Juno shows a de-

crease of $1,250.000.

)

Tho problem of manufacturinga noncorrosivo paint for tho bot-

toms of steel and iron warships,which has been vexing tho Navyofficials for a long time, has justbeen satisfactorily settled. Apaiut was invented in Germanyseveral years ago which had thedesired properties, but as tho gov-

ernment requires American made"paint on American, warships, itcould not bo used. Now, however,the German paint plant has beenremoved to this country r.nd Unit-ed States cruisers will now havenoncorroeive bottoms. The question of Biiitablo paint for use in6alt wafer has troubled all coun-

tries, tho Jopanoso alone havinghad a noncorrosivo urticle. Thisis a lacquer whoso compositionthey keep secret.

A new vogetablo is about to beintroduced to tho people of theUnited Slates through the depart-ment of agriculture. It is theroot of tho calla lily, which resem-bles somewhat in appearance theordinary Irish tuber, with the ad-

dition of a few fibrous roofs, thathave nothing to do with the qual-ities of the article a3 an esculent.So prolific and palatable is theroot of that plant that their prop-agation in many parts of theUnited States, where conditionsare favorable, may reasonably belooked forward to as an agricult-ural industry of tho future.

An ingenious general informa-tion machine has been set up in arailway station at Melbourne, Aus-

tralia. By pressing different elec-

tric buttons the following, amongother things, will appear: A listof tho best hotels in the city, alist of tho plays at tho theatres,with their play bills, a list of theomnibus routes and the cab faresto tho various points of interestThe principle of tho machine iscapable of indefinite expansion;and doubtless it will soon bo in-

troduced in this country.

One of tho most uniquo duelsever known is that of two French-men who decided to fight in theair. Two balloons wero made, andupon tho appointed day each soar-ed aloft, accompanied by his sec-

ond. They were each armed witha blunderbuss, tho agreement be-

ing that they should not fire ateach other, but nt tho balloons.They arose half a mile, and thentho preconcerted signal was given.One fired and missed. The otherhit his opponent's balloon, whichinstantly collapsed. Tho occu-

pants were dashed to tho earthand instantly killed.

Whether Pasteur and Koch'speculiar modes of treatment willultimately prevail or not, theirtheory of blood contamination isthe correct one, though not origi-nal. It was on this theory thatDr. J. C. Ayer, of Lowell, Mass.,nearly fifty years ago, formulatedAyer's Sarsajmrilla.

A rumor was current in thotreasury department at Washing-ton that Mexico contemplated slop-ping tho freo coingo ti silver.

NO. 'JO.

Purs --CriA cream of tartar baking powder.

Highest of all in leavening st rengthIsttrst I'intrif. Stiita (lortrif

mntt Fond Rcjiort,Royal Caking Powder Co.,

lOU Wnll wt v.

When, by reason of cold or oth-

er cause, tho stomach, live r andkidneys become disordered, notime should bo lost in stimulatingthem to action. Ayer's Tills actquickly, safely nnd surely. Soldby druggists and dealers in medi-

cines.

The French are amazed that thoEnglish should havo built thoRoyal Sovereign, their biggestironclad, in three and a half years.The Neptuno and Magenta, twoFrench ships, hove been twelveyears building.

When tho hair has fallen out,leaving the head bald, if tho scalpis not shiny, there is a chanco ofregaining the hair by tiding Hall'sHair Renewer.

A portion of the bones of a mas-

todon were recently unearthed ona ranch on Snake river, in Idaho.The fromo of tho mastodon is saidto cover a surface of 100 feet, andsomo. of tho bones mensuro tincofeet s i pi a re.

Experiments havo been madoby M. M. Goutes and Sibillot withtho view of adopting alumnium astho material for tho gas holdersof dirigible baloons instead ofsilk or other stuff, and the resultsof their experiments havo beensatisfactory.

Wo have sixty divisions on thodials of our clocks and watchesbecause the old Greek astronomer,Hipparchus, who lived in the sec-

ond century before Christ, usedtho Babylonian system of dividingtime, that system being sexagesi-mal.

A. W. Glover of Windsor Locks,Wis., claims to have discovered intho foundations of an old foundrya stono covered with highero-glyphic- s

supposed to bo of Indianorigin, though no one versed intho Indian loro can decipherthem.

A report from tho Illinois stateprison, at Joliet, says that thereare 1,400 convicts within the wallaand fully one-thir- d of them havoconsumption in a light or budform. Nearly all deaths of per-

sons in tho penitentiary hnve beencaused by consumption.

Tim earl of Meath ei ts thatin London some thousands of wo-

men and girls be long to what arocalled drink clubs, a small sum be-

ing paid each week by members iuorder that several times yearly allmay meet at some public houseand drink what has been

Dr. Price'sCream Baking Powder

Is the only. Baking Powder free fromAmmonia, Alum, or any other adultera-

tion. Ilcnco the only Wholcsomo One.

Baking Towders branded "Absolutely Pure"Contain either Alum or Ammonia.

When high, flaky white biscuit, pastry of surpassingfineness, delicacy and flavor

orCake that is light, 6wcet and retains its moisture is desired,

Dr. Price's Cream BakingPowderis Indispensable and incomparable.

Its higher leavening power makes it more economical

thaa any other, and it never disappoints.

Page 3: Southwest-Sentinel, 07-18-1893 · 2020. 7. 2. · Booklet telling how to successful with Garden and Houm I'lanta. THIS BOOKLET TELLS HOW TO RAISE BIQ ORY8ANTHEMUM8. OOMkSt AMO CATALOOUS

fpmthvcrJ ?:í::cl.AI..LAM II. KACPONLl).

n.l i i'ii .mi I in I in r ll.

'

crriauL cc.trr x'x.?.

fn!"rrlpion 1'rlcrn.Tlir mi'it U. 1

fn rii''i'l hn Vr.

On jc.ir 3Iavwi ;.U!v lnAdvnoco.

ivn:TisiMi nrr.(ni'h l.nr M':n í I l111. Il I'?!! Ilt'.'l'il ' fl1

lii. ll (" f i'itmml M (ili

iU. M nuil ni" fTluii' im li Itivrliiin.rilnTile i.h : tl-4- I'i r lili.

KntrrtM ut lii pii.i!irp in S 'm r M y. N. M..Mroliil i'l:'-- rtt.'vl'rr.

Coin, tlic now jiilvor tulilicatioi),pnys: "Enlnnil bujH our mIvi r fitb'2 cvnt nn oinicv, reins it into ru-rx'- H

fit tlio rnU vt í 1.1'J to Jl. l.j

Ior ounce nrul with tho minted pro-ilu- ct

Mipri 3 Int m ills with liulifvlicnl nii'l cotton, Ami yet wo

claim lo bo intelligent."

Catüon minio n Blron.i; íilit furtho office of BlieriíT of Síinin l'ocounty for liiá frieiel Cniikliii imtit wnsof no nvnil. lío wns uniiMo

to ImlMiv.o Jmle l'nll nivl t'onlv-li- n

lml to elep down nml'ont andlet Cumiinglinin linvo tlio office.

Coi.t.ittokh will l.nvo to turnover 1 lio furnia in their linndu tin

the law directa whilo Thornton isGovernor of New Mexico or theywill lio r'ilnf'd liy men who willcomply with the laws. Thiswill nave tho tnximyers of tho Ter-ritory ft good ninny dollars ami ifMich a coutho had been adoptedyears n;o tho Territory and alltho counties iu it would have beenbetter olT.

Goykknoi! Tnoiisrox commenc-ed tho task of removing officialswho imagined that tho laws wereinado to be disobeyed in a countywhich has been idmost bankruptedby just officials as were re-

moved. . Tho friends of good gov-

ernment all over tho Territory ap-

prove of his coim;e anil tho onlyones who disapprove) of it arethose who ore directly injured findtheir Fvmpathizers. Law break-ers are generally deserving of verylittle Hympathy but in New Mexi-co they usually get more thanthey deserve.

Ursmr.NTs of the towns on theline of tho A., T. fc S. F. railroadin tho northern part of this Terri-tory had tho opportunity of seeingtho vice-Preside-

nt last week, lieis making a tour of the west priorto tho assembling of congress nextmonth and incidentally feeling thetemper of tho people of the terri-tories on tho statehood question.Tho Senate committee which wasappointed to investigate the claimsof the territorio to fctakhood didnot get btarted on its mission andko tho vico-Pi- e sident came to seefor himself how the people felt ontho question. Froiu, what h saidnt Albuquerque it may bo inferredthat ho is in favor of tho admis-sion of New Mexico and that with-

out nny unnecessary delay. Itmay also 1 inferred that ho hastho l'r sulential bee iu his

It s to look as though pub-lic office would noon become apublic trust in Now Mexico in-

stead of a privato snap as it hasbeen for nianv vcars. It is ft notorious fact that the collector of Valencm county nas not turned overto the Territorial treasurer morethan half of tho amount of taxeslevied for Territorial funds lor agood many years. Tho office ofcollector ot mat county was enough to keep a man in good circumstances as long as ho was notcompelled to turn over tho moneyfid provided by law. Thero wereoiner counties in ti.o .territory inmo mine nx inn po.ri.np3 not hgreat a proportion of tho taxeswere held by tho collector. Nowthings have cLanged. Tho Gov- -

rnor nas taKen tne stand mat thelaw must bo obeyed find that collectora must turn over trio moneycollected by them, in nccordnncowith tho law, or bo removed fromoffifo. Ho has commenced thowork of removal of tho delinquent

iils and tho good is fdlti itready to ih seen, ilis course ismeeting with some oppositionamong tho office holders and theirfriends but tho tax payers of theTerritory ire delighted at tho turnin i) Tail's. The burden of taxationon property owners in .ew .uesucoi heavy enough if hll the' money

collected is promptly paid overbut win n ft lario part of tho taxescollected go into the jmokt trf o

Collectors who ( nrieh thenc'lVC:l.t the c xix lir.o of tho t. n payers tinburden becomes I! lib l.n.ble.

Tin: nr.Nvrn sii.vnt rosvrs- -TIOX.

TIkto was a big mass silver con-

vention of tho frit. nds of silver inDenver last week and tho dele-gates who comiHjsed that convention ppoko in no uncertain, toneson tho bilvcr question.

Tho nddreps which they issuedto tho people of this country putstho question in ft clear light findthoso who take tho trouble to rendit will got n pretty good idea oftho situation in tho west. It wanwritten by T. M. Pattcrnon, editorof tho Denver News, and has al-

ready been widely published.Uno of tho points which will

command nt tent ion in tho east isas follows: "Vo of Coloradopride ourselves upon our commer-cial and financial integrity. Nocalamity can induce ns to repudi-at- o

one dollar of nn honest debt.All of our assets nre at tho will ofour creditors for their reimburse-ment. Dut if by bad congression-al legislation, if through congressyou Khali w ipe out tho great in-

dustry of tho section around whichall others duster for vigor andprofit, tho values of our propertieswill shrink, our business will bodestroyed, our towns and citieswill bo largely depopulated, andthe railroads traversing the wept-er- n

half of tho continent w ill bosent into bankruptcy. Certainlyin the face of such nnmeritod

you cannot blamo ua if woare thus deprived of ability tomeet our obligations. You may,it is true, take the country in pay-

ment, but after you get it whfttwill you do with it?"

Tho eastern papers have com-

mented on it quilo freely and thosilver question is being talkedabout in tho east as it has neverbeen talked about before. Theair of supremo indiflVrenco to thewelfare of tho people of tho westis beginning to give way to alarmfor the safety of eastern invest-ments and money lenders therearo beginning to look up the silversido of tho question.

Although tho time is short bo-fo- re

tho meeting of congress inextra fiession, tho silver questionwill bo much better understoodwhen congress mods than it isnow. Tho President may bo ableto inlluenco some of tho membersot congress oy tlio bestowal otpatronago and tho opponents ofsilver may bo able to got ft bill forthe repeal of tho Sherman lawthrough tho house of representatives w ithout tho enactment of anysilver legislation in its place buttho senate will hold out for thofree coinago of silver and thePresident will not bo able to bringpressure enough on the senatorsto make them chango their views.The men nre undoubtedlystronger in congress now than theywere throo weeks ago and tho onlyíopo of getting any converts to

tlio other Bido ot tho cause isthrough liberal promises of

The people of the east haveicon fighting silver for years but

tho reaction is beginning to come.It is beginning to dawn on someof them that to fight against f ilveris to fight against their own interests and when this gets to bo genially understood thero will be as

many friends of silver in the eastas there are in tho west. ThoDenver convention has done somegoinl at least in getting tho (piestion lie fore tho people.

to

In tho absence of n creditablefruit exhibit at tho "World's fairfrom this Territory, (several finephotographs of fruit have beensent to Chicago. "While the pho- -

raphs may not bhow tho ilavorf the fruit raised in New Mexico

as well ns the original specimensand may not bo so satisfactory tothe visitors at tho fair, they willnot ti'cay, ana besides soino enterprising photographer gotgood job which was paid for bytho Territory. Fruit growers areasked to ship fruit to tho fair freoof co.st to tho commissioners. Theyhavo sjH-n- nearly all tho moneyavailable and now want to get ex-

hibits free.

It in perfectly clear thatdov-erno- rThornton intends to seo that

tho laws of tho Territory are en-

forced. Ho has already removedtwo officials for failure to complyw ith tho laws arid if these objecth onour aro not enough to teachother officials to do as the laws di-re-

d

, it is ruoro than probable thatother examples will Ikj made. Theg.Kl ( ifi-f-t of tho action taken bytho (overnor is already apparentand it muy bo that ho will notfuel it heers-jur- y to remove other

.officials.

wooL (;ito writs wast ri:oTLCTIO.t.

The wool growers of this coun-try have asked for more protectionwith every successive- drop in thoprice of wool for moro than twen-ty years nnd now that thero in ft

higher protective tariff on woolthan there hns ever been beforeand the price of wool ia lower thanhas been known w ithin the pres-ent generation, they aro still ask-

ing for protection. They aro ask-

ing for ft remedy which has beenprescribed so often nnd which liasalways failed to pnxlnco the de-bir-

result that it would seemthat they would want a chango oftreatment, but the Stock GrowerBooms to think that more of theRamo medicino will save the pa-

tient w hich now appears to tho or-

dinary observer to bo past thohelp of tariff medicine:

Wool growers nro a unit on pro-tection. It is the general opinionand strengthening every day, thatputting wool on tho free list willbo ruinous to tho industry in thiscountry. Thero is no time tobolost in organizing the sheep raisers and petitioning congress tolet things pertaining to wools andwoolens alone. There need be nodoubts about congressmen consid-ering the wishes of their constitu-ents. They will listón, and theywill do what their people wantdone, if they aro convinced thatit is tho wish of the people. Letthere bo one more big, long, strongIiull taken; let every man who

sheep or believes that woolought to be protected, become per-sonally interested in circulating afvetition. Congress mebls August7, in extra session.

"Wool is now selling at a figurewhich would not admit of the im-

portation of tho article even ifthere wero no tariff on it. Austra-lian wool cannot bo laid down intho wool markets of th8 countryns cheap as wool can be boughthere. What, then, would bo theadvantage to tho American woolgrower of an additional tariff onwool or the advantage of any tariffat all? The present tariff ia prac-tically prohibitory and yet, underits operation tho price of wool hasgone down to a point wnero thewool grower can seo no profit ingrowing wool.

The wool grower is in tho samecategory with the w heat raiser andtho cotton grower, but the lowprice of wheat and cottoa cannotbo attributed to the operations oftho tariff. It is just as absurd to tryto euro tho ills of tho wool marketwith tariff medicine as it would beto attempt to raise the prico ofcotton by putting a tariff on rowcotton.

The diagnosis of the wool casohas been entirely incorrect. Tariffmedicine is not required. Theprico of wool, like that of wheat,cotton, and dozens of other pro- -lucts, has kept pace with tho priceof silver and will continue to keeppace with it A lower prico forsilver means a still lower prico forwool and tho sooner tho woolgrowers of tho country got thisidea into their heads and getrid of the notion thathigh tariff on an article thatis already selling for n less pricethan it could bo brought herewould help them, tho better. Thotrouble with the wool market, likethat or wheat, cotton, corn, ironand all of the staple products ofthis country, is that values havedepreciated on account of adversosilver legislation which enables afew men to control the wealth oftho nation and consequently tocontrol prices. Give us free coinago and wool will ad vaneo in pricewhether there is any change iutho tariff or not

RuiiAitD Mansfield White,tho World's Fair commissionerfrom this Territory who was re-

moved by tho President a shorttimo since, refuses to recognizetho jower of tho President to re-

move him and is hanging to thooffico with a tenacity which is sur-prising. If notoriety is what ho isseeking, ho is getting just what hois looking for. Ho is undoubtedlytho most energetic and persistentkicker on tho entire board and hasbeen sat down ujiou so hiany timosby tho other members that itwould seem that his protests mustnecessarily be feeble now, but suchis not tho enso. As soon as hoheard that ho had been removednnd J. M. Webster had been ap.jxin'.ed in his place, ho announcedthat ho would mako a fight and hohas dono so. IIo still retains hisposition and tlio case bids fair tobecome a celebrated one beforeit ic ended. Whito says thatho was making it uncomfortable for tho memlers oftho New Mexico board who havo.evidently not been doing their

duty and it was for this that theymade tho attempt to have him re-

moved. It is generally knownthat the New Mexico exhibit isnot worthy of Iho name, although? 10,000 liavo boon furnished to thoboard for the purposo of makingtho exhibit If "Whito is makingan earnest ( Tort to aoccrtain whorothe money hns gone and why thoNevr Mexico exhibit is no betterthan it is, he ought to bo allowedto remain in tho place to whichho was appointed, but if his re-

moval was on account of his per-

sistent and continued kickingagainst everything, as has beenreported, he ought to bo sncceod-e- d

by ft man of milder mien whowould not keep the board in aconstant state of irritation. Thequestion as to whether the Presi-dent has or has not the power toremove a member of tho board isono of considerable interest and itmay not bo finally decided beforetho end of tho fair.

The action of Judge Fall hasbeen sharply criticisod by Bomeof the republican naners xt thoTerritory. It is claimed that hisdecision in the Santa Fe sheriffcaso was influenced by politicalmotives but such is far from beingthe caso. .Judge Seeds had approved the bond of Cunninghamthus virtually acknowledging thathis appointment as sheriff by thoGovernor was a valid appointmentbut at the Bamo time he grantedan injunction restraining himfrom interfering with the officeuntil the time set for the hearingof the injunction. Although hisbond had boon accepted he wasprevented from exercising thofanctions of tho office by the in-

junction. , After this action hadbeen taken, Judge Seeds left theTerritory. Judge Fall was sum-moned to Santa Fe and tho casewas arguod before him. He dis-

solved the injunction and issuedwrit of mandamus requiring

Conklin to turn over the recordsof the sheriffs office to Cunning-ham w ho was recoguized as sheriff. If the action of Fall in dissolving the injunction and issuingft writ of mandamus was governedby political motives, the action ofJudge Seeds in approving thebond of Cunningham is liableto the same imputation andSeeds is a republican. If Seedshad had any doubts as to tho legality of tho appointment he wouldhardly have approved the bondoffered by Cunningham. Thebond was offered as tho bond ofthe sheriff of Santa Fe county andif the Judge had doubts as to histitle to tho office ho would nothave approved tho bond.

The gold bugs in Wall streetare beginning to get alarmed at thesituation. If they succeed in repealing tho Sherman law withouta substitute in the shapo of a freecoinago law they will havo stillmore cause for alarm.

The Rio Grande Republican isfurnishing more amusement fortho people . of New Mexico thanany other paper published withinthe borders of the Territory. Ithas ben a persistent advocate ofmonometallism and when some ofthe papers called it to task for opposing the best interests of theTerritory, it said that irrigationwas the thing for the people ofNew Mexico to depend on. Thesilver interest did not amount tomuch in its opinion, but now ithas suddenly discovered that, afterall, silver is of some importanceIn the first issue after the bigslump in silver it sagely observedthat tho maiket for the fruitsraised iu tin valley this summerwould not bo as good as usual onaccount of tho closing down of somany silver mines and the consequent throwing out of employmentof so mauy men. It might haveadded that the market for the ulf-al- fa

grown in the valley will belimited on account of there beingfewer teams to feed ou account ofthe closing down of the mills anddriving tho teamsters to seek employment elsewhere or turn theirteams out on tho ranges in orderto cut down expenses. The RioOraudo Republican will finl outsometime, twrhaps, that irrigationwill do the people of New Mexicolittle good u there is no marketfor tho products of the field amgarden. Tho mining interests ofNew Mexico are what have sustained tho Territory so far andtlio mines are forced tocloso downtho residents of tho Territoryiiii'dit as well shako the dust ofNew Mexico from their feet andgive tho land up to the Indians,Such impera as the Rio (IrandoRepublican are doing the Territory no good, but its fossil ideasfire amusing.

i

The Santa Fo ring backed itsservant, Sheriff Conklin, in hisfight for tho offico of sheriff ofSanta Fe county, but its backingwas of no avail. The ring is pretty badly twisted ami is likely togot some moro pretty hard knocks)oforo tho end of tho present ad

ministration.

-P. L.

Hair andNext door to P. O. on Dro.vl wv. Silver Clt-T.- . M

and Itotall Dealers

f:

and

Silver City,

RED FRONT

BARBER SHOPBUQUOR, Proprietor.

Cutting Sharing.

IKE IIQLZIIAIT,Wholesale

Tobacco, Cigars,

omoKers' Articles. viv

Corner Broadway, forcer! Wells- -

Fargo Office.

Dealer

New Mexico.

CHAS. MERGER,

ROCERTES AND PROVISIONS.

Two doors from roitofflee, Hroadway.

Live Poultry, Ranch Ejgs, Butter and Home Produce

of all kinds.

Table Delicacies Always on Hand.

NEWBUSINESSFIRM.

JUST OPENEDAT THE .

In

Post-Offic- e Store.will kflpp on hand a Flrst-Clas- s

Assortment of

Standard- Books,

(!)

Main

Stationery,Blank Books,

Confectionery,ami Notions.

Frosh Fmlts ropnlved ilnllv. The Intent luih- -llratlnns in lllnitni km noon as inllishcl. AHtu'WHimiHT and KrlMll(aW kept on Hale or or- -(lcri'd flimiany lor ukimb who wish to suuamuelor iiiKiu.

In

on

B. T. LINK,

I

rKoritiETon

Old Han Corral,

ISTEEL& MICHAELProprietors.

Livery, FeedbSale Stables

Good Buggies and Teams, with orw ithout drivers, always ready

for traveling men,miners, &c.

Cor. Texas and Yunkle Streets,

Silver City, : : New Mexico,

BUY KOXE BUT THE GENUINE.

3,000 Merchants soil Haw ka'Spectacle

2,000 them handle otherSpectacles w ithout success,

Showing the great popularity of HawkeClasses over till others.

Ilia optical plant anJ factory is one ofthe most complete in the United States,

Established Twentj-tlire- a Years A&o.

They cannot bo honnlit at your reuldenra, s

ttu y arc not siipidled to peddk rs ut any price.

Every Pair Warranted.

These famous glasses are fitted to theeye ut

J. A. KEHIIIS'Watchmaker & Jeweler,

r.ullaid Street, Silver City, N. M.

A. K. HAWKES,Wanltkaotlking Optician,

21 Whitehall St., Atlanta, OA

HASTINGS

Lumber Mg. CoDEA I. I'll IN

LUMBER. SASH, DOORS, BLINDS

FOUNDRY CASTINGSMade to Order.

bILVEK CITY, MiW MEXICO

Jrenrvorxt House(AMEKICAN ri.AN.)

JOHN BHCKNHK, Prop.

SILVER

C rntr

andfit.

FLOUR.

k. w jjgn.ll- -

J'or Commercial Mcn- -

Jh'Rt Su m filcHwm& in .Vnc JiexJrad'idirtcrs for Jlimng

Stockmen.

SILVER CITY,MEX.

RATES, $2.00 to $2.50 Per Day. Supper, Lodging and Dreakfast. $2.00.

Bullan)

Yankli

Flour, Hay and Grain by Wholesale and Retail

CITY M7

JLND

A

all

M PÍ U Pi E

rifa MíWñv)im Us

Only Ecluiive Flour, Hay and Grain Store in the City.

luí. KZ. WHITE, Prop'tr.

J. II. MATUEWS. . R. L. I) LACK.

MATHEWS & BLACK,SILVER CITY. N. M., BOX 270.

MINES EXAMINED,Advieo Given on Treatment of Ores.

Crucible Asuays mtulo by tho Most Reliable Method.

Office Main Street, Adjoining Tremont House.

W. C. PORTERFIELDtho Largeet Stock of

Paints Oils1IDriags - -Patent Medicines, Toilet Articles, Books, Stationery

and Druggists' Sundries in New Mexico.

BOTTOM PRICES.f1 I 3 1 ...

400 El Paso Street, Paso, Texas.

SADDLES, HARNESS, CUNS, PISTOLS, AMMUNITION AND

All Kinds of Baddlury Hardware and Ranch Euppllos.

jjAitaiwr i)i;ALi:itH in theOur Leather Goods are made expressly (or tha Frontier and are unsurpassed, aud we cannot te

beaten In Low X'rlocs. SPECIAL ATTENTION.GIVEN MAIL ORDERS.

Cosgrovo d ZBro-sTZxel- l,

--(Successors to S. Swift.)--

V7HOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS IN

1n

& HARDWARE, HAY AND GRAIN.

SilTror City,

a

BROCKMAN.

XNEW

HotJTirwjeeiT.

Silver City and uoollon Stage LineHakes Three Hound Triws Week.

SILVER CITY EVERY TUES- -

ARRIVING IN 4 13 THURSDAY AND

5

LEAVING SILVER CITY ONMONDAYS, WEDNESDAYS .

AND ERIDAYS AT 1 P. M.

J. D. LEE, Proprietor.

BROCKIHIAN, Presiaent, THOS. F. CONWAT, J. W. CARTER, CashierJOU

SILVEE CITY HATIOHALof SILVER CITY, M

CAPITAL PAIS T2.T, S330.000.00.TRANSACTS A GE1TEHAL BANKING BUSINESS

JOHN

and

Carries

El

John

AY- -

JOHN

N.

IHIlKCTOHHlMAX SCHUTZ, T F. CONWAY,

J. Vt. CARTER.HARRY BOOTH,

Gold dtiBt purohnuoJ nnd ndvnnces made on shipments of cuttlo. cold nndsilver bullion, ores, eto. Kujtoiior facilities fur waking collections on Bcwisuiblapoints at ur (or customers. lxclntriKo on the principal cities for bm. o

II. S. GIL LETT & SON,WHOLESALE AND RETAIL

STAPLE AND FANCY GROCERIES0. G. K1DD & GO'S OLD STAND

SILVER CITY, - - - NEW MEXICO- -

GURDON BRADLEY,-- DEALEH IN- -

General rJ3erchandise9SILVER CITY, - - - NEW 2IEXIC0.

Special Attention Given to out of town Orders.

Page 4: Southwest-Sentinel, 07-18-1893 · 2020. 7. 2. · Booklet telling how to successful with Garden and Houm I'lanta. THIS BOOKLET TELLS HOW TO RAISE BIQ ORY8ANTHEMUM8. OOMkSt AMO CATALOOUS

atülnvcsí ííincLTUESDAY, JULY 19, 1303.

1ST RmT JULY 8, IIJ.Un. :l.Arrive.

4 ) p. m.1 :) "

) wi "11 :W1 v m.o: ;nH Si

í:"í "l.l'IWP.

R :4S . m.12 p.m.10 ;U0 "

DKWTIXATIOJf.

. .Rllver City...DsniltiR...Nnf t

. . Hincón

. .Lm Cruces. .

... Fl Pmo....

. Kiinns ( Ity .

... .Chicago. ...John II. Mi'üo

s

Nil l.

Departa.

Z W . niII IU "

"12:31 D. m.

1 45 "S D 'S:4(lArrives,

p ni .

7:iie 1, ni.8:01 "

It, AfcPIlt.

(Jeneral Superintendent II. U. Jludgei,fcf the Santa Fe, wu here in his specialcar last week.

' The flood of Inst Saturday did consid-erable damage to the repairs which havebeen made on the streets this fear.

Ike Ilolzman has Bold out his stock ofcigars and tobacco and retired frombusiness here.

A train load of cattle was shipped fromthe stock yards here last Saturday, Thecattle shipments for the season aro aboutover.

The board of County commissionerswill meet again today. There is somebusiness which left over from lostweek to be attended to.

The reward which ofTed for thecapturo of Analla, the murderer of Con-

stable Schutz, has been withdraw bySheriff Lcird.

The comptroller of the currency hascalled for a statement of the condition ofthe notional banks at the close of busi-ness on the 12th i net.

Severel earthquake shocks were feltlost week at Albquerque and in theneighboring towns. That part of NewMexico is getting quite a reputation forearthquarkes.

Bids for furnishing fuel, forage andstraw will be received at Fort Bayarduntil noon today and then will be open-ed. It is probable that a number ofbids will be submitted.

The people of Doming are makingpreparations for the irrigation

convention to be held there next fall.There is little doubt but that the con-vention will be a grand succees in everyparticular.

The average rainfall for the month ofJuly in this Territory is between two andthree inches. There will have to be somepretty heavy rains before the end of themonth or the rainfall for tb is year willbe considerably below the average.

Peaches from the Mimbres appearedin market here last week. The crop inthis county this year is larger than usualbut the price is about the same as it hasbeen for two or three years past. A fewapples have been brought in but theyare not of very good quality.

The walk which recently laid fromSixth street to the railroad station isgetting hard and the people who haveoccasion to go to and from trains will notindulge in such a choice solection of pro-fanity when the streets are muddy asthey did before the walk was laid.

It expected that there would bemoney enough in the general Countyfund this month to pay off all the claimsagainst the County which have been al-

lowed and no warrants issued, but theamount of taxes collected was muchsmaller than was expectod and a goodmany of the claims will have to go unpaid.

There were heavy rains in differentparts of the County last week and wherethose rains fell grass is coming alongnicely. The rains did not extend overany considerable part of the County anda great deal of rain is needed on theranges to make a sufficient growth ofgrnea to provide winter feed for the stockon the ranges.

J. J. Kelly received a message lastThursday morning from Terry B. Lady,at Potter Valley, California, stating thatDee Lady, the two year old son of Mr.and Mrs. P. B. Lady, had died there onWednesday. The little fellow had beenill only five days. Mrs. Lady, who wasvisiting friends there, telegraphed Mr.Lady on the 7th that their son was veryill and Mr. Lady left on the followingmorning arriving about thirty-si- x hoursbefore his son death.

11:WV

was

was

was

was

There were three floods down thestreets of this place last week, but onlyone of them amounted to anythingThere was a very heavy rain in themountains around Pinos Altos last Saturday forenoon and about one o'clock inthe afternoon a flood came down fromthe direction of Boar Mountain whichwaa the lurgeat of the season. It wasconsiderably smaller than the big floodof last summer but was sufficient to stopall traillo on the streets.

Receiver Foster of the Dune banks hasgone to Chicago and will be absent sev-eral weeks. Depositors who have boonlooking for another dividend will prob-ably have to wait until after the receivergets back from the World's fair. All ofthe property bolenging to the banks isfor sale but on account of the presentfinancial depression it can hardly be ex-

pected that the property will bring avery large amount.

The water supply here is'a little shortbutiis sufficient for all domestic pur-poses and considerable is used for irri-gation and that is more than can be saidof the water supply of severa, othertowns in Now Mexico. Iu Loa Vegasthe people have had to resort to wellsto got a supply of water sufficient fordomestic use and in Santa Fe the useof water for irrigation is positively for-bidden by the wuter company. The sea-son hoH boon unusually dry and if therainy season ooinoa on ns early as usualIt will be several weeks yet bofore therewill be a geuerul roliuf from the presentCondition.

Persona!.C. II. Myers was in from Gold Hill

Inst week.

Jamos Colqiihoun, of Clifton, was intown hint week.

Win. Motmfiold was over from Lords-bur- g

hint week.

Mi?s Emma Iloberls baa gone to Illi-nois.

C. A. Lnrraway was i a the city loutSuturday.

M. II. Twomey was in from BlackHawk Inst week.

Herbert Martyr is in the the city for afewdnys."

Ilov. Fitch held Bonicos at Centrallat Sunday afternoon.

Thomas S. Iloflin was down to LnsCruces last week.

Joe Williams was dovn from PinosAltos last week.

King Wade cauio down from the Mog-ollona last week.

Miss Mary Ott visited Brockman'sranch on the Mimbres last week.

William Woodburn came up fromDeming last Sunday afternoon.

Frank Andrews and wife, of Kingston,went out to Boar Creek Inst week. '

Judge Qinn who hns been ill for sometime is again on the streets.

Judyo Bail wns at Las Cruces Instweek on legal business.

Mrs. A. O. Hood who has been ill forsome time will go to Denver this week.

Rev. Bovnrd, of Albuquerque, heldservices in the Methodist church herelust Sunday.

Thomas Foster went over to Gold Hilllast week to Btart the Standard mill oncustom ore.

narry Lucas went to Hillsborough lastweek on business connected with theKnightsof Pythias.

Thos. B. Pheby, of the Mimbres Con-

solidated Mining Company, went to GoldHill last week.

Mrs. W. C. Portorfleld went east on avisit lust week. She will visit theWorld's fair before she returns.

Felix Leavick arrived from DenverInst Wednesday and will go out to theMogollona this week.

Mrs. A. M. Little was hero severaldays last week. She had business beforethe commissioners.

Mrs. W. T. Thornton who has beenvisiting Miss Conway returned to SantaFe lost Sunday morning.

Prof, and Mrs. Decker have gone tothe Gila hot springs to be absent aboutten days.

Mrs. IL Rosenberg who has been visit-ing in California is expected home in afew days.

.Miss M. R. Koehler has gone east tosee the World's Fair. She will be absentseveral weeks.

Mrs. O. S. Warren was over to George-town last Wednesday looking at theruins made by the fire there last week.

CoL Burdick was here last week tryingto explain why the raise on his stockmade by the County commissionersshould not besuBtuined.

Col. Bennett, of the Colonial MiningCompany, at Silver Creek, was downlast week. He thinks there is a greatfuture for the Mogollón country.

A. II. Harllee end J. A. Ancheta weredown to Las Cruces last week lookingafter the interests of the County in thecose against Lockhart.

Misses Mny and Jettie Gaddis havegone to the World's Fair but they willbe buck in time to resume thoir dutiesas teachers at the beginning of tho nextterm of school.

John Duncan, of the San Simon Cat-

tle Company, was in the city last week.He came to see the County commission-ers about the raise in the assessment ofthe 3an Simon Company's stock.

Rev. Llwyd, pastor, of the Episcopalchurch here, expects to leave about thefirst of next month. Services will beheld once in two weeks by the pastor ofthe Doming church.

W. H. Donaldson, of the Jim stockcompany, was in attendance at the meeting of the board of County commissioners lost week. He thinks the raise madeby the commissioners was unjust.

John S. Swift and family have gone toSt. Louis where they will reside In thefuture. Mr. Swift hus purchased an in-

terest in a big hardware business in

Charles M. Shannon who was recentlyappointed collecter of internal revenuefor New Mexico and Arizona is expectedhere this week. Mrs. Shannon has beenvisiting here for two weeks.

William Marble and W. IL Smallwere over from Lordsburg last week onschool business. At the recent electionfor school directors Mr. Marble waselected one of the direotors in the Lords-bur- g

district, but it seems that he failedto file his oath of office in the office ofthe County superintendent as requiredby law and one of the members of theboard has protested against Mr, Marbleserving on the board. The case will bedecided Boon.

For a week past George D. Jones hasbeen supplying beef to the soldiers atFort Bayard. The contract for the yearcommeucing on the first of this monthwas let to H. P. Carpenter and S. Lin-duuo- r

at f 1.10 a hundred while Jone bida few cents higher. His bid was 11.11 ahundred. The beef which wua offeredby tho contractors last week wus con-demned the by quurteuiustor and tho re-

quired amount of meat was purchasedhere. Tho contractors will have to paythe diirerenoe between the urico tmidhere for the uirat and the price forwhich they agreed to deliver it to thequurtoriiiuatur.

The Illegal Tax Levy.The case of Grant County against ex- -

Sheriff Lockhnrt for the recovery of acertain amount of taxes collected by himunder an alleged illegal levy, came upbefore J'ulgo Full at Lou Crucen lastweek. Tho board of County commissioners was represented by A. 11. ILirlloeand J. A. Ancheta, Lockhnrt was repre-sento! by Bail ana Ashonfolter and someof the taxpayers, among them beingJoseph E. Sheridan, wore repre-sented by R. P. Barnes who intervenedand asked that the taxes which hadbeen paid by them over and alwve theamount of the legal levy should be re-

paid to them. Two demurrers were nr- -

guod, both of which were Bustainod bythe Judge. Ono was the demurrer ofLockhart to the declaration of the Terri-tory in tho suit and the other was thedomurrer of the Territory to the intervention of the taxpayers. During thehearing the point as to the legality ofthe levy was brought up and the judgedecided that the County could levy nomore than two and a half mills on thedollar for general purposes. This decision disposed of a point which has boonin controversy for some time but whichnobody expected to be decided any otherway, in fact Sheriff Laird has been collecting taxes for weeks on the basis of thetwo and a half mill levy, or a total inthis county of 1. 715.

This decision will prevent the futurelevy of more than two and a half millsfor gonoral County purposes and willbring in a revenuo of about tl0,000annually to bo expendod by the Countycommissioners. As the jail expenseshave averaged $10,000 a year for the postsix years, there will either have to be areduction in these expenses or there willnot be more than half money enough topay the current expeuses of the Countyin the future. The expense cf maintain-ing the Grant County jail is more thanthe cost of maintains any other jail inNew Mexice, and this is partly onaccount of the amount paid to the jailorand guards which is much larger thanthe average paid in other counties.Heretofore the County has raised ann-ually about $30,000 forcurrent expensesand this Bum has not been sufficient topay the bills allowed by some of theboards of County commissioners, and aspecial levy has been made to provide forthe deficiency. The special levy is limit-ed to halt a mill and would amount toonly about 82,000.

The retrenchment in County expenseswhich has been talked about for so longa time must nów be brought about. Thedebt cannot be increased and the taxlovy is limited so that there must be alimit to the expenditures.

The money which baa been collectedover and above the two and a half millswill have to be returned to the taxpayersby the commissioners as the law provides.

The board of County commissionersdeserve a great deal of credit for bringing the suit to determine the questionwhich had arisen, so that there might beno trouble in the future on account ofillegal tax levies or excuses for futurecollectors to hold indefinitely any part ofthe funds collected by them.

The decision of Judge Fall in the matter is too long for publication in this is-

sue but tho following extracts will suf-fice to show what the holdings of thecourt were on the different points at issue?

'This is an action in the name of theTerritory against James A. Lockhart,

of the County of Grant, andthe sureties on his.bond, to recover theamount ot twenty-tw- o thousand, fourhundred and thirty-seve- n dollars, whiohit is alleged is due the Territory and theCounty of Grant for taxes collected andwithheld.

As to the question of payment underprotest, the court holds thut under thestatute law ot this Territory, no protestwould be necessary to enable a taxpayerto recover the amount illegally paid, pro-vided he pursues the statutory methodof recovery, and whether a nrotest wouldbe necessary before a recovery could behad in another way it is unnecessary forme to decide now.

The duties ot a collecting officer areplain. Ihe statute law of this Territoryprescribing those duties cannot be misunderstood by any one. The law as set-tled, by a practically unbroken line ofdecisions from almost every supremecourt of the different states, admits of nocontradiction, leaves no ground for argu-ment. The collector luust turn over tothe officer authorized to receive thesame, all taxes collected by him.

Under ttie statute, if this money is notturned over as prescribed, the officerana ms sureties become liable and innearly every instance failure is punishedbv a severe nennltv. mich na ramnvulfrom office andeven disqualification fromDerving.

The laws of this Territory are often severely criticised, but in the matter oftax collections, if in no other, the differ-ent legislatures have done their duties.They have recognized the fact that taxa-tion at its least is a burden, and theyhave provided absolute, speedy, summaryand not costly moans by which the tux- -

payer should be protected. Failure toprotect him is not nor has been the fuultof the laws but of the officers and courtswhose duty it is to enforce them.

The principle must be settled in this.territory once for all.

No officer having collected a tax canarrogate to himself judicial powers whichno law written or unwritten ever con-ferred or was intended to confer uaonhim. He must, under penalty of theluw, perform his pluin duty and turn themoney over as prescribed by statute. Nouun can rise to the luw in arepublic. - When failure is made to sur-render the moneys the penalty should beapplied, and in this court no man canavoid this by the plea that the tax so col-lected was an illegal tax. Shall we saywhen the people elect a sheriff and thelaw constitutes him collector,that tho people or the laws constitutethis man judge and jury of finance mat-ters for two years as well as collector ofrevenues? The proposition is absurd.

The collector may refuse to collect atax believed to be illegal or unconstitu-tional, until compelled to do so bv orderof court, but once collected. th tin mnunder no imaginable circumstances behehl or its legality passed upon by thecollector; bis duty is pluin, it must beturned over.

Then if this court woul''. not consideras a defense urion suit against the col-lector, the pleu of illegality of the tux,certainly it would be a reduclio ad

to admit thut a third party, nomatter what his interest, could by inter-vention, collaterully, as it were, attackthe validity or sot up the illegality fthe tax in bar to recovery by tho couu- -

ty or Territory or injured party suingupon the bond for bretteii.

Now us the legality of tho tax:7. he court him examined this matter

thoroughly, going into it with the hopothat tho legality of the tax levy for ordi-nary county excuso, of inoro than one-fourt- h

of one per rent. roiiKI be sustain-ed by nonio authority-- 2' í milis levy Isnoi Biiiiicieni to meet me ordinary ex-penses of Grant County nor of Dunn Ahacounty, in fact of few counties in theTerritory. The authority to lovy taxesis a sovereign power, an attribute of the

power, which throughconsideration of public policy, and fromnecessity, can in certain cases be dole-gate-

but when so delegate.!, the powermust oe exercised in strict accordancewith the terms of the Bet or statute, anda Btrict construction will be made by thecourts.

It is our duty to construe the law aswo find it and enforce its provisions.The enforcement of an obnoxious lawrosulta in nrouning publio sentimentagainst it and means its repeal or amendment, more is no authority in theboard of county commissioners to levymore than 2 mills in anr one vonr forordinary county expenses and the levyin excess oi mis amount is illegal.

Mr. Lockhart might have refused tocollect these illegal taxes aud this courtwould have. sustained such refusal. Hehas howevor collected the same and neg-lected and refused to turn the amountsoyer; this is an entirely different quetion. The amount should be turnedover to the proper officers, and thon thotax payers can, under the law, securethe refunding of the amount tmid bveach respectively. The collector thusprotects inmseii and ma bondsmen, andthe law clearly protects the tax payers,the courts standing roady to enforceobedience to the law.

Hanging In tho Balance.The future of this part of the Territo

ry is now hanging in the balance. Theaction of congress or the failure of thatbody to act within the next few monthson tho silver question will determinewhat the future of this section is to be.

If a free coinage bill should be passedthere would no longer be any doubtabout the future prosperity of southwestern New Mexico. Neither minersnor business men need to be told whatthe effect would be with such a law inoperation. Without such a law the silver mines must remain closed down andthe demand for such product as areraised in New Mexico now will be muchless than it is now and prices will fallcorrespondingly as the demand falls off.

To continue to raise products whichcannot be shipped to points outside ofthe Territory where there is a demandfor them would Bimply be wasting timeand money.

Fruit growing has been very prolitable in the Territory up to the presentbut with a constantly increasing supplyand a decreasing demand there can hebut one outcome and it is plain thatsome other industry will have to be engaged in. If our borne market becomeslimited we must look for other marketsand raise products which will bear transportation and still be profitable Ofsuch products, for the raising of whichtho soil and climate of New Mexico appears to be suited, the sugar beet andcanaigre seem to be the best adapted tothis section. Canaigre will grow anywhere that soil can bo found deepenough to covor the roots and where theland can be irrigated the sugar beetthrives. To be sure it cannot be expoct-e- d

that as good wages can be made inthe cultivation of either the sugar beetor canaigre here as aro paid to minersto work in the mines, but if there is tobe no work in the mines, tho miners willhave to seek employment elsewhere. Ifthey are unable to find employment inthe mines at three dollars a day or less,they will be obliged to find some otheroccupation, even if they get no more fortheir work than enough to keep thorn inexistence. The thousands of minorswho have been thrown out of employ-ment within the past three weeks in thesilver, mining regionj of the west will notbe able to get employment in the minesunless there shall be some fuvorable sil-

ver legislation and they will either beobliged to leave the country or engage insome other occupation if the mines re-

main closed down. Perhaps they mightnot take kindly to ruising sugar beets orcanaigre at the wages which could bepaid but unless thore shall be somechange in the situation the question willnot be what wages shall be paid butwhether there shall be any wages paid

The seriousness of the situation hasnot dawned upon many of the residentsof this section of country yet but thetimo is not far distant when the masseswill be struck forcibly with the situation of affairs. Communities which arebut slightly dependent on the mining iudustry will not be affected to such a degree as the mining towns and miningcamps, but tho entire southwest will beaffected to a greuter or less degree andnew occupations will have to be foundfor those thrown out of employment otthere will have to be a reduction in thepopulution.

The Deming Headlight has been engaged in building a railroad into Mexicofor about six years. The Headlight besbeen shining all this tune but the tootof the locomotive has not yet boon heardon the new road.

The board of directors of the Territo-rial Fair Association has deuided to holdthe fair on the 19th, 20th, 21st and 22udof September and the next session of theSouthwest Silver Convention will be heldon some of the above dates. It was sug-gested that the Territorial fair oughtnot to be held so near New Mexico dayat the World's fuir, which is the 10th ofSeptember, on account cf the probablelarge attendance of residents of NewMexico at the Chicago exposition aboutthat time, but as the time fixed will givethe owners of horses exhibited at theRocky Ford and Trinidud fuirs an op-

portunity to exhibit at Albuquerque, itwas thought best to have the fair at thetime mentioned. If tho time hud beenfixed about two weeks luter the attend-ance from this Territory might havebeen greater. An extra effort will bemoda to have a bettor fair this year thanhas ever been held in the Territory be-

fore. Grant County ought to liova enexhibit there of minerals which wouldbe a credit to the County.

i

Mining1 and Milling.

The railronds are not doing a vory bigbusines in New Mexico hauling ore juntnow and tho business is not likely to in- -

eroiiHo much this year.A few men are at work in the mines

at Georgotowu under leases but if thereis not an improvement in thf, price ofsilver it is not probable thut they willcontinue work much longer. The out-look for Georgetown is not very promis-ing jubt now.

Cnpt. Cooney will put up his five stampmill in the Mogollona regardless of theprice of silver. He expects to run it asa custom mill and will probably bo abloto got ore enough to keep it runningfrom minars who take out small quanti-ties of very rich oré.

Minors who have been thrown out ofemploymont by the closing down of thesilver mines will now have an opportunity to look for gold mines. The production of gold will bo very lnrgely re-

duced by the closing down of silvermines and proeiioctors who find goldmines which will pay to work w ill be inluck.

There is a small force of minors atwork at Pyramid but tho work beingdone in other camps in this County southof the Southern Pacific railroad is inconsiderable. With silvor even at a dollaran ounce tho number of miners employed in that part of the County would bemany times as more than are now atwork.

There is no immediate prospect thatoperations will be resumed on a largescale in Cook's Poak district. Thero hasbeen considerublo development workdone there within the pnst few monthsand large bodies of ore are exposed readyto be taken out The mines are in sucha shape that an outputof over ahundrodtons a day could be kept up for sometimo. The micos in the comp were noverin bettor condition than they are now.

The Standard mill at Gold Hill is running on ore from William Werney'smine. He has out considerable ore whichwill run from Í73 to $100 a ton. Hethought of putting up a mill a shorttime ago but has abandoned the plan forthe present. His ore is free milling andis rich enough to pay well for working.There is a littlo silver In the ore but notenough to make any cor.siderablo differ-ence in handling it. The ore could lieworked profitably without taking thesilver into account.

There is a prospect that work willsoon be commenced at Ivonhoe. TheIvanhoe mine was leased some time ngoto the Kingston Ore Reduction Company and the members of the company oresatisfied that the mine can bo workodprofitably. The property has been idlefor a number of years but the ore can betreated now much cheaper than it wasbeing treated at the time work was suspended. The ore which the mino produces is richer than that found iu mostcopper mines iu this section and thecopper is of a superior quality.

It was expected that there would beconsiderable work dono at Dlack Hawkthis summer in the mines in the way ofdevelopment and extracting ore butthe situntion has suddenly changed. Allthe mines thore are silver producers andthe developments of the past three weekshove caused the mining operators thereto coll a halt. This camp is among themost noted in Now Mexico but nothingcon be done in the mines there with sil-

ver at its present price. Ore which ranover 70 per cent, silver has been takenout of the mines there and it is quiteprobable that thore are othor depositsequully as rich in the camp.

The scarcity of water at rinos Altosthis summer has been a very seriousdrawback to mining operations there.There is a large amount of ore out onthe dumps and in the mills which connot be treated until there is a supply ofwoter to keep the mills going. Withplenty of water at Tinos Altos thorewould be no trouble about keeping themines there in continuous operation.Various plans hove been proposed tosupply the camp with wotor but none ofthera have been deemed feasible enoughto put into operation. If artesian watercould be obtained, there the problemwould be solved. An artoeian well couldbe put down for a small fraction of whatit would cost to pipe water into thecamp. The experiment is worth trying.If artesian water could be found at PinosAltos the cump would be rostored to itsplace at the head of the mining camps ofthe Territory.

The stamps which have been put inthe Maud tí. mill at Silvor Creek haveincreased the capacity of the aiill considerably and the property id in excellent condition. Jiew hoisting machineryhas been put in and if it had not boonfor the sudden and unexpected drop inthe price ot silver there would be nodoubt but that the company would continue operations. As it is, there will belittle, if any, profit in the ojierotion ofthe property, and it will be decided thisweek whether work is to continue ornot. Felix Leavick was here lust weekand suid that even if the company couldcontinue operations without loss it wouldnot be policy to do so because the orewould be tuken out ot the mine withoutsufficient returns to the owners if theprice of silver continúen as low as It isnow. He thinks that the mine can beoperated without loss with silvor at 70cents an ounce but there will be nothingto be gained by tuking out the ore andmilling it.

What dot the Silver City Sknti.m.l,think of the action of the County com-missioners in bringing suit agaiuat Col.Lockhart by this lunof Has the enitorread Judge Seeds decision in the manda-mus suitlf Houdlight July I.

The Skntinix thiuks that they didjubt right anil it prints a decision in thisibsue which is to thepoiiitandwhic.hthe editor of the Houd'ight uiifht readwith prolit,

A fire at Georgetown lwt Tuesdaymorning destroyed five building:!. Itwas discovered about 2 o'clock in ti e

morning in tlm rour of Phoby's More.Whether it originated in tho lvni;.ntof the toro or on ll;3 oi:te.lo is not

but Mrs. Warren, who was overthere last week, is of thocpionion that itoriginated in tho basement of tho store.In addition to this building there wereburned n building occupied as n restaurant and owned by Joseph Hitchins, abutcher shop owned by Mrs. Tongue, avacant building owned by P. O. Towerand a dwelling owned bv l'rmr.nvand Potter. Tho insurance on theburned buildings and stm-- in tl.- - sloiois about ÍW,000. The loss is eon..;. lora- -

bly more.

The Episcopal church was well filledon Sunday morning, notwithstandingthe thre itening rain; many of the con-gregation having. mado a special elT.irtto lie there to enjoy what is prohahlythe InHt service in which Mrs. Davenport will lead the choir here. Thischarming lady's delicious voice and per-fect musical training were never heardto bolter nd vim tut o than on lust Sinn.day. Her own enchanting musio wasably supported by tho tine voices ofLieut. Jenks. of Fort Bayard, and Mrs,Laird and Misses linymond and I'uileyof Silver City. This town w ill probablynever again hoar such music us wasgiven last Sunday morning; nnd it iswith tho sineerent regret that "San Vi-cente" says farewell to ono of tho moiitrlmrminf, ln.li u .in. I n..pln!..l.. t V.......... ...a..H 1, .i nun vintiiiui.est singer thut ever mudo tliid her temporary tiomo.

The Governor's Stuff.Governor Thornton, the commondur

of the Territorial militia, hasappointed and commissioned tho follow-ing staff:

Chief of stoff with the roLk of ColonelGeorge W. Knoebol, of Santa Fe.Inspector general William B. Hen- -

dershects, Albuquerquo.Surgoon t'onerul-Jo- hn Symington,

Santa Fe.Inspector ot riflo practice George H.

Pratt' Lnguna, Bernalillo county. Thesethree with the rank of colonel.

Aides de camp, with rank of majorC. F. Eosley, Santa Fe county; PhilipS. Full, Dona Ana county; John W.Fleming, Grant County; Ernest Gruns-feld- ,

rnaliIlo county; E. V. Chaves,Socorro county; Roiuulo Martinez, San-ta Fe county; Goorge Curry, Lincolncounty, and Alex Gusdorf, Taos county;John C. Len, Roswoll; Frank A. Munzu-nares- ,

Las Vegas.

Stockholders Meeting:.To the ttocUhiMcrt vf the Ijmc Minmttitn Min-

ino CumiHinji:Take tlint en Momlnv, tlie :Mt dav

of .Inly, Ihii.i, hi in eVIm k, a in., ilieie will lie HmeelliiKof tlie ef Hie alinve reni-IHiii- y

lit Hie olllce of the .silver City NiitninalHunk. In Silver City, C.rant Cninitv. S'rw .

fur the miriume nf 1.1.. rim. .ni....t..ru ..1cnni:iny for tlie ensulnij e.n, 11ml for the trans-act tun ut ullit-- r liiiioit;nil liMsmex.

John Hkockman,Tiios. 8. HiKi.iv, President.? -t Kecit'tary.

July 17,

Poll Tax Une.Poll taxes aro now due and must bo

paid to the undesigned at once.H. If. II KITS,

29w2. Clerk of School Board.I liavo tho ngency for oil the

stumlnrd and'high grado bicycles.

2Gtf W. C. rorteifield.Oront reduction ou all goods

sold in tho next 30 days atHtf. r. D. Lady'h.

When The Heart I AffectedBy Rheumatism, or any of tho musclesnear that organ, it is like Ininin.ini,..with an oloctrio wire, for death maycomo ot any moment. It life is worth85, go to the druggist and get Dr. Drum-mond- 's

Lightning Remedy, or cend totho Drummond Medicino Co. 48 ."K)

Maiden Lane. New York, nml H inu it í

send you a largo bottle by prepaid ex-press. It is not os quick as electricity,but it will save your hfo if you take it intimo. Agents wautod.

We Speak What We Know.(lit CtnkvMc, Testis Banner

My wife and four children were takenvery suddenly w ith severe cuses of choleramorbus I bought a bottle of Chamber-lain's Coito, Cholera and Diarrhoea Reme-dy, and from ono to two dimes gnvo reliefin each cuse. I heartily recommend it;boheving it the best remedy known forbowel complaint. 25 and 00 cent bottlesfor sale by VV. C. Portorfleld, Druggist.

The Sun Juan Gold FieldsAre a fake but thore is no fake aboutFred Sholton's ploce being the favoriteresort iu Silver City. The finest wines,liquors and cigars aro to be found thereand the club room in connection is oneof the tileusantest resorts in the Territory. Frod knows exactly how to pleaseins customers ana uoes it to perpection.

I furnish any bicyclo youmay want as cheap or cheaperman any one.2Ü-- tf . W. C. TorterGeld

Steve LThlo, at tlie Cave si.loon, keepsuiu mo ucubgooos in ins line.

1 tf.

Kates totlio World's Fuir.Tho A., T. .t S. F. railroad will sell re

duced rate round trip tickets to Chieugifor Í V.10, limited to continuous passngteach direction nnd final limit NoveiiiU-- i

15th; samo rate of reduction to StLouis, which is fl7.li); Kansas CityAtchinon, St. Joseph and Leaven worth

15.10, :0 days limit.lHtf. J. IL Mcnon, Agent.

Ifnn llrnuFurniahed in any quantity, write for

l'iiuua mi i . ii. Agent.P. O. Box KJ2. Silvor City, X. M

Stovo Ulilu'a new aidnou the Cave1 if.

6tf

can

Go to tho Cave Saloon for a glims ofiroun AiniouHor licor. i.iu.

Frenh fruit received daily tit thoSilver City Fruit Store.2(-- tf (J M. Nolan, Manager.

A Mood Tiling for Summer loiii-plalut- s.

Mr. J. W. linger, a well known inor-chun- tof Clio, Iredell Co.'.N'oilh Carolina,

cured four eases of 11 u x with one fundibottle of Chamberlain's Colic, Choleaand Diarrhu'u liemedy. This is the ino.--tprompt and inoet sueceh:,f ul remedy inUso for dysentery, dnu-rlm-a- colic; andcholera morbus. Xn oilier medicin willtake its place or do lis works in tinsof diseases. It is cjiuillv vnliinhle forchildren and a iul's. ;' an, I ,r,d cent

for fcuio by V. C. 1'ui tei "field, Drug-

The rohonoii .trhliIn tl.rt blood shonld be t.iL- - n up n,..removed by tlm Liver and KMihms. It!tlic-- o orguna irt out of order f.lill útheir work, nnd the results i rheu-matism. There are n t 'mi:i iimU- rem. .

for tho Liver and Kir. lev I Mt tinro itonly onn cure fur l:hMimut;i:i;i, tin 1 tlmtis Dr. Drummond'H Lightning Keinnlv.A large lxtt!o may he tin-- at the drug-gists, or will be t by evpr n nnvli'MrcfSon receipt of '(:. '1 I t.t W theprice of n cure, ami any one uh v. I, iv.msf mi argument witli'tl.owill feel fully repaid by the t'r I i'.v'.Druuiniond Medicina (')., (S.Vi M u.'oilIiuo, New York. Agent w anted.

Notice for Publication.t'.vi t rn Sni" l.ivn on r i

'i iiiieH, n ,ii , .lm,,. rn,. iOTICl: In !(!. t. 1 ven tint t'-- f .Hew!,...l'il:iH (l ! tf el- lee. tl'i .1 lie; ..i I...

ell ! UMiKe IMnl l.,.,.l in .1,),) ,,.! el ,l ,mel that u.l 1'ieef win lie re ,.. I r.,i,. ,, .

leik or l'KM-:,(- ,li.l:v i, f!H. (Illy I 'I, lv. 1. Vl, v - ,,,,, j.,)',,,,.Il. N M . wi n ln;.le l. S N,,. . I f.,, ( ,.

1!. l S. i: I i Si-- i;, t. N , 1. , Vv

lie llinilt't U,e felt, iu liit; nil in si,... (., y,,,.rIK I'eilllllll-MI- lusiilellir III in .eel fill II' ileiivú I Lot,), vi : 'eliert St mi, 1

ol hi KiilLiiel, ( A l! "fI'enev.ill, , Kiln r ( ,M--

, Nliiuuel II. K. kle",

V -M ltt!..l-..- ti I t ., tl rHell ..li.-- i Í Mil li irn.tf, ,,- ui, , ku.,v, ', f.ll'M.llill:il relsiin. Illlil.-- ti e an i i ,,

"li ef tlie Interior I ii ji Ml.'-n- uit' si, i

Hint st,,e,, ,,,, ,,. ,, ', I;H"'l lllliitv lit Hie utieif lie Mieiieil i ,. .,,..(I. lee tn 1'i'KsH examine tlie i ;lii. s,e e( s.ieiiiiinnt, an, I tu i. tier len-- ,, In i, Let..: ,.;.at buhimttril r'.ni iant

fiA.m K!. V. M.Vii;- ,,(,b

Notice for F.ibr.e;if.ion.I'MI I H Snns I. l. tlKH'T, I

Last ri, e, i, N M , .tu.ie .1 lVTOTKTis tietel.y riven ti,,- f,,i,.m ,.,,,

l. tinnie.l xettler l;a tile.l ii..i; ,. ef H ,,,.Un to ii.;,ke ili,-- , ve-.- tn ., ,,,

i

aim nun it,l pr.ml will lie ni.-- ,

Jlliltf." nr lirel.ale Ciei k II s, o-- ( ,,.Inly :il, ivei, v,, ; vIV, S V,N. M., wl.o ma le 11,1. . t,ll N.',N. K. . nuil N. 1 S. j:. I,13 IV.

He ñames tlie fnllnwnn; wilnesJ,CelllhllieiM rc.slilelli-- IILmiii an. I

SIVt'l hunt, Vt;Samuel . K. Ilckli'-i- , 1

lVri-- II. I.aily, (

Jul. n K i.l. man, f A- ,,f Smt lark It, Klei n. i

M . e,T I ,..

.';V,.!e e hi i

alma et

y. N. M.

Any persuii whrt ilesires te pT,!i-.- ' iinst ti eallow anee n sneli n ..,,(. or w kinmx a un!,,ilaiiti.-i-l reason, nielei iin law i,i ihenvn -tlnlis ef the llllennr leallllieu! liy s,,--

slmill.l lint lie lllleweil. v.lil - ixrli ailnnimittiiilly nl the alinve niei:'l,.iie,l I amipiare 1,1 eri.ss.exanilne Hie v.tliienes ef einand to oiler euilenee m lelitnuil e eiatMiliinilleU liy

it .SAMI KI, McCiika. ;,- Ister.

Qunliry Yourself to rronjipft fer t!ie.Metal.IiOSPKCTOIJS should

Iril biko ad V lint a i;o ofh ti'f every cii)orlui:ity to

quality tlioin.'iolve.s! lor1 1... ,..- -. f..i

T""Wf7V " prosecution of their'i i i O . business. They will l

lietter iii:ililiid if theyhave n knovledí f lniroralfo-y-

and economic peoloov which theycan obtain in tho Corrcnpondenc-- Schoolof Mines, Serunton, 1 i the l.iroe.t edu-cational inntitutioii devoted exclusivelyto the instruction of coal and r.ic al Minera, p ron pec to ra, etc.. in the world, in ithas upon its rolla student, it n;wrecently CBlablialied H coime for iiron-pector- s.

To outer, Mudent need oi !vto know how to rend and write. Tuili, "!

chnrneB aro reasonable. Students etudyat home nnd lone no time from worU.Send for free circular i;iviue; full

WORLD Hew to ereniiirii7. time1111,1 Muliey SO as til seer I n tlie Mel Ills r.il- - Ml muírMIM, iiiivant.u'e is a

Hint may have pii7leil y.ni. Av.1,1 mi I dies lvItftlliiK pesleil In alliance, leilinps tlie illus-trated miller Jllst lssill-,- li)- S.Pll le lelilewlial yen nreil. It i'niiUin.s views Well, sFair liiillilimrs, map of Ottea :. tci.l(itlier liitoiimilimi el value tn sud.l seers.

ii 1 A.. A.Nicholson,

T. S.11I tí AN TA f-- I.

fc.It 1! , Topi'ka, has., ami - , , r--ask f.n free copy. li JU I t..

Aro You Well Eauipp!with ClothinK? If you nro not, wo nif.The diti'orenco betv een uh is this: Youhavon't enough, nnd we hnvo too much.It's B condition of Lh xi'fci w hich nhouMn'toxnt; it'c a tritio one-side- und theroought to lio n distribution to equalizemutters. See if wo can t come to ternin.All thut can possibly stand in tho way iitho mutter of price. That i n't nn in-

surmountable obstacle. I In-.- , .on lour-ed out what you cnnniíord t , nyi liaveyou figured up what yon l i ink youought to pay? If you have, ro matterflow low your estimates niv, tliii:U weenn go below them.

C. C. BHOEUAKEE,Tho Leading C!cÜ;ier.

T V V T ' t T

DAVI1 A1ii:aU VM, I'nip.,

FINISHED imi L.'ii'j Li,:.1:.

DEMING II0USÜ.Rooms neatly and comfortably furni- li-

ed. Tonus roauji.llo 1 y tho day i rweek.

Silver A venue, one Mori; souihi.ftlodepot. Ml:. Mu:v K. Coi.m:. .,

1'ropni .i i, I '.muí--r- , X. M.

Ladies Only! .

DR. DU MONT'S nVMT PCGIM AT'Y.i P. US M'Jt',VVitH Hill' üll'l l I. !'..!

.ill nir let- Vx't r,f ,s,,i,. cf u. j..,.."iiilUt iti'H Mul It' ll :l- 'lis I i' ' (i p. i t. -

s, ,.t i, j,,,. X,,. ,u, iv "i ft i 'in oA.ih.-- It It l.t.-- tn',

U rt. II.iNlr.ui rn In. .,.., II. ., I S, A.

rnEEi:r;:.;,.,,( ""!KAN CAT,,

ARIZONA, OKLAHOMA,ncv; Mexico,

CALIrO;.l; ,

mnv ,.i i. .s.i.io . t , ,

i 'i a , i V r j;. ; . ií' l,li"H HllS , tí,

Page 5: Southwest-Sentinel, 07-18-1893 · 2020. 7. 2. · Booklet telling how to successful with Garden and Houm I'lanta. THIS BOOKLET TELLS HOW TO RAISE BIQ ORY8ANTHEMUM8. OOMkSt AMO CATALOOUS

tor. ro.ss o." rr.rE oi.A(;r.

Iitrect froai Ills Spereh at the Sil-tc- r

1hicbUoh.

Gov. Hops upoke bo foro tlio Sil-

ver Convention on tho morning ofthe 4th of July. He paid, in pnrt:Mr. Chairman and Follow Citi-zeu- s:

It was not ny expectationto mljrops tho convention at thintime. I expected to bo precededby a gentleman much better qnnli-fio- d

to addresa you than I am, butho ia not here and I will attemptto fill tho Rap.

It ought to bo a sufficient an-

swer to this demonetization schemethat there is not nenv that therenever has been, and never will be,gold enough in existence at anyone time for tho transaction oftho business of the world.

There never wrap, nor has theroever been, at any timo or place cm

tho surface of tho globe, enoughof either, or both of tho moneymetala, gold or silver, to supplythe monetary demands of thattime or place, for the convenientand satisfactory conduct of busi-

ness affairs, and thero never willbe.

What folly, tlir-n- , to talk of a6ngle standard in either of thomoney metals, especially thescarcest and cfarest of tho two,and more especially in a countrythat far surpasses all others intho abundance of its preciousmetals and the consequent abilityto supply the world with tliebebasic constituents of money.

The power to supply tho moneyof the world of necessity carrieswith it the power to control in avery largo degree tho business oftho world. And that ower isimmensely magnified in tho caseof America, in her ability to pro-

duce not only the money metals,but also food 6tutFs nnd minerals,and all the vast range of agricul-

tural and mechanical products, toan extent that has not been devel-epe- d

anywhere elso on earth.Yet, with this grand combina-

tion of forces in our hands, point-

ing to an imperialism for the bet-

terment of the woild's affairs it isnow proposed to banish from therealm of trado that which consti-

tutes with five-sixt- of tho peo-

ple of the world tho principal andmost convenient legal tender andmedium of exchango and success-

ful commerce that tho earth produces.

Yet this scheme of demonetization is in keeping with tho historyof our financial legislation and administration of tho last twentyfive years, strewn as it is withbroken pledges and violations ofcompact, unvaryingly and by seccessive statres in tho interest ofincorj)orated capital and the ng

erandisenient of money, the aimand end of which lias been the establishment of gold as tho standard of values and the sole lawfumoney of the country, and at thedemand solely of tho creditor audnon-produci- classes

It ia significant that this domain'comes primarily from F.ngland,nation that has been for centuriestho monev lender tho creditornation of tho world. She producca neither silver nor Lrold. Herenormous wealth has been gnthered from every part of the globethrough tho thrift and shrewdnesa of her shop keepers, till shehas lecomo a loaning nation, auiher peoplo distinctively a loauraco.

They invested largely in tho se

curities of tho United Stulca in tholater and immediately followingyears of the war. They boughextensively nnd were able to driva hard bargain because tho ñecossities of our condition wero greatliut even lliat coma ix eonuonealiad tho transaction been freo fromapparently well grounded suspi-cion of treasonable corruption.

The Ernest Seyd scandal of18S, whereby a largo part of thatindebtedness was changed from aa paper debt to coin bonds by anact of congress largely at tho de-ma-

of the FngUbh creditors,lias never been and never will bo

forgotten or explained.That legislation was the first

step in this gold standard crusade,instigated by English creditor!:and backed by American

who exceeded Nhylook intheir demand for tho pound offleeh though not nominated in the1k)iiL

This conspiracy of 1WS, where-by twelve hundred millions of le-

gal tender paper was convertí! in-

to coin bonds, thus practically ad-

ding, as it wero by tho scratc h ofa pen, six hundred millions to thepublic debt and a corresponding

on the people, was equalled onlyby tho other conspiracy now be-

ing manipulated by and in tho in-

terest of and practically throughthe same influences, for tho conver-sion of that coin debt into a golddebt by the demonetization of sil-

ver, and reducing again by one-thir- d,

tho facilities for its pay-

ment destroying at a singlo blowmore than half of tho coin circu-

lation of tho country, and with itcorresKiudingly reducing the debt-payin- g

power of tho eople.It is not only a contraction of

tho coin money of tho country,and at a timo when tho enormouselaboration of business demandseven more money, but it is a cur-

tailment of a constitutional rightnever be foro openly suggested,much less attempted.

And as a potent instrumentalityto thid conspiracy for tho finalelimination of silver from tho currency, a great national party condition resolves that the tax on

tato banks shall bo removed, totho end that irreprensible local

auks shall be permitted by stateauthority to again invado tho realmof trado aud competo.with tho im-

perial power of tho federal government in the issuance of money.

For tho power to create moneyimperial in its nature. That

power is especially or oy metrongest inference reserved byho constitution to tho federal

government by denying it to thostates. It is thus, in ollect, putbeyond tho power of congress to11 i .l . il íi-- - , .delegate uiai auinoruy. iu imj- -

er to declare money, or to saywhat shall bo money, is the high-

est element of sovereignty, andthat is of necessity lodged solelyn congress, and cannot bo dele

gated to a state or to an ímliviü- -

al.

This stato bank movement shedsflood of light upon the silver de

monetizing conspiracy, buver isto bo driven from tho domain ofcommerce. Gold will in that oveutbecome so valuable that it will bewithdrawn utterly from circulation.With silver already destroyed bydemonetization and denial of coinage, the business of the countrymust of necessity bo transactedmainly if not altogether on blankpaper and the silver coins be replaced by the shinplasters of fortyyears ago.

With Ixith gold and silver with.drawn from circulation, tho country would go back to tho dayswhen coin of any and every do

nomination and metal was a rarityami tho people and all public atfairs became a prey to an írrespouiblo currency bottomed on credit

that would again, sooner or later.require every traveler to fortifyhimself with a bank noto do

tector to avoid begging Ins wayback home.

That is what the demonitazation of silver means the ultimateand inevitable end of the conspiracy. lliat is the secret, the end

aud aim of the fight against silveras money inaugurated twentyfive vears atro. and that has beengoing on moie or less activelyfor now more than twenty years.

It illustrates tho purpose of thisentiro demonetizing scheme toforce upon the peoplo the generauuo of private bank paper, with allits liabilities to destruction and of

consequent loss to the holder andgain to tho maker, and thus stillfarther extend and magnify theopportunities for corporate specu-

lation at tho expenso of tho greatmass of tho peoplo and all our na-

tional industries.Tho inevitable if not intended

effect of all this is to lower theprice of everything but moneylalor as well as product of everycharacter except interest ratesto aggrandize money and cheapenmanhood.

Tho most unwelcome aud unac-

countable spectacle ever witnessedin tho manipulation of publicfinances to this mischievous end, is

that of tho first officer of tho Ke-publ-ic,

for years openly and bold-

ly using his great office for the de-

basement of tho "coin of therealm," by refusing to dischargepublic obligation in the moneyauthorized by the explicit termsof those obligations gold and sil-

ver when tho fact is that thoseobligations constitute neither agold debt nor a silver debt. Theyaro equally ami jointly gold andsilver obligations. I'oth metalsaro in effect expressed in tho termsof tho contract as tho combinedmedium of payment, and under astrictly technical and honest con-

struction of the term "coin" in

w hich they are made payable thatnavuicnt must mcludo both (.'11

weight to the burden of taxation 'and silver in equal values. That

is what tha debtor agrees to pny,and that is what the creditoragrees to take, and the official whodeviates from the plain and unmis-takable terms of that coutrni-t-, orassumes to se t up a ne. and differ-ent standard or method of pay-

ment at the dictation of eitherparty thereto, transcends histrust

To insist that parity of tho mon-

ey metals can bo Becured only bytho methods in voguo is a subter-fug- o

dishonoring to tho man thatmakes it, and too ridiculous forrerions contention.

A hat would gold be worth asa currency if denied tho legal ten-

der quality, refused coinage, andonly silver was paid out in thedischarge of public obligations?

Of w hat val uo would bo any article of commerce 'f its use fortho purpose to which it is adaptedwero interdicted by public law rcustom?

Both gold and silver would becompartively valueless if not permitted circulation aa money andtheir uses consequently confinedto the arts.

It is only tho discriminationagainst silver as money that hasnhanced the comparative value

of gold by enlarging its uses andt the same time diminishing the

comparative value of silver by curtailing its uses. To'niako themequal before the law in debt pay- -

power is to give them equalillm ill iscope, lo pay out tno two metáisequal amounts in tho redemp- -

íon or purchase of coin bonda willbe to give them parity as money,aud that alone can do it The in- -

rinsic value of gold and silver asmetals has littlo to do with their

aluo as money. They are themselves the essence of money andthe standards of value, and thosestandards are prescribed and fixed,not by tho existing volume of themetals or their temporary com-

mercial value in tho markets asmetals, but by tho supreme law oftho land, by common consent ofthose having most at stake in theiruse, nnd by tho necessities of commerce. This is fully illustratedin the fact that nowhere in theUnited Stales w ill a given amountin either of these coined metalspurchase on the market moregoods than tho other in the dailytransactions of trade. It is onlyin the marts of speculation in money and evidences of debt, that thereverse is true.

The irieuds of 6ilver aro metwith tho ridiculous plea that silveris dishonest money because itsmarket value has been thus hammered down. Yet but a quarterof a century ago these samo selfconstituted guardians of tho currency were equally iusistent thatthe paper of the government, bondsand currency alike, were dishonestbecause they wero not payable incoin, silver as well as cold. Singular, that this same silver dollar,that was 60 good and honest in18C8 that tho purchasers of thepublic bonds wero content thattheir bonda should be made payable therein, has since then becometransformed iuto an instrumentality of deception and fraud,

Nor should it bo forgotten thatwhatever appearance of dishonestytho silver dollar may now seemto bear, granting for tho sake othe argument that it hns that appearance, the goldites have themselves given it thorough gross vio.I at ion ot compact, in their insanegreed of accumulation, by seekingto banish it from the realm ofmoney, and thus to enhance thevalue of their bonds by makingthem payable only in tho scarcestand consequently the dearest ofmoney metals. .

Yet these uro the peoplo who uc-cu- ho

tho peoplo of tho west, theproducers of silver, of an ignobleselfishness in demanding tho

of that metal.Why do they not accuso the

peoplo of the south of selfishnessin demanding fair treatment forand rebuking legislative discrim-

ination against their great staplecroj) of cotton?

Why do they not rebuko thegrain growers of the middle statesfor denouncing discriminationagainst their great staple crops ofcorn and wheat? Or the north-east for demanding legislative in-

tervention in behalf of their man-

ufactures?Tho production of silver is a

great national industry peculiar tothe weet. So is gold. Tho suc-

cessful production of both is es-

sential to national prosperity.They are as essential to public

prosperity and to national great-

ness as is the production of 'corn,wheut and cotton, or as

tures and machinery. They alljcombino to add to tho greatnessand grandeur o our political andindustrial fabric. Nono of themcan bo spared. To repress onewould be like breaking a cog in agreat propelling wheel, marringtho harmony of tho entire nationalstructure, and bringing confusionand failure whero nature has de-

signed harmoniousand success.

Mining is to the west what cot-

ton is to tho south, what wheatand corn aro to tho middle statesand manufacturing to to east Astheso sections rightfully protestBgainst hostile legislation affectingtheir industries, so tho west pro-

tests, and with equal right, to thosame character of legislation con-

cerning its great industry of min-

ing.There is a persistent effort to

create tho impression that thiscontroversy in behalf of silver issolely by and in behalf of tho sil-

ver miner. That is the farthestpossible from the fact, except asmining has become one of tho basicindustrial iutorests of the countryand the sole resource for the re-

coupment of its Btore of coin mon-

ey against abrasion and loss, andthe vast demands of the arts, andalso aa ono of tho iustumentalitiea

f American growth and expansion.

The miner of course wanta freecoinage because he has a directpersonal interest in the issue, justaa the merchant and sailor wantree trado that their opportunities

for active and profitable businessmay not bo hampered by tariff restriction.

The farmer, the mechanic, theaborer and the wage earner of

every vocation aud in every department of tho industries, is alsointerested in free coinairo quiteaa actively and directly as theminer, becauso their opportunitiesfor regular and profitable employment depend largely upon a reasonable abundance of money forthe traueactieu of all the branchesof trado aud business and tho payment of wages, and that will in-

sure uniformity in values.The fundamental law of the land

recognizes silver as absolute money, equally with . gold, and tillwithin the last two decades thelaws of congress have been in aecord with the Constitution. Themining of silver was sanctionedand encouraged by being accorded the samo treatment in all re-

spects as gold. Tho mints wereopen to tho coinago of silver onthe samo terms as gold.

liut suddenly, without notice,without discussion, with no intimation whatever that it was to bedone, silver was dropped from thecoinage, ureat surprise was expressed at tho proceeding on thepart of tho manipulator of financial legislation. It was plead that itwas unintentional and an accidentIf it had been accidental it woulbo reasonable to suppose that thewrong would have been ritimmediately upon tho nrst opportunity to do so. But that theomission was intentional and studied, and for a purpose, is provenby the fact that it required astruggle of five years to restoresilver' aud then by only a smalmajority oí congress; and eventhen again, the restoration wasbut partial and limited by law.while tho coinage of gold remain.ed and continues free and unlimited as before, as it ought to be.and as 6lver ought to have been

Accompanied by tho action ofdemonetization and apparently inintended íustihcation ot it, wasand is a continuing onslaught upon the silver miner, with tho accusation of unworthy selfishnessin his opposition to and criticismof that action.

Yes we hear nothingsort about the gold digger,it is as a rulo impossibleduce either of tho metalsproducing both.

of thathoughto pro.without

The product of one is contemned as dishonorable that of tloiner is Honored ana magnnieuthough both are brought to thlight by tho same pick and botare essential to public prosperity,

Why this discrimination? Isnot tho one as honest and honorable as the other?' Does not tllabor of the one contribute quitas much to tho country's resources,to its dignity and its commerco astho other?

The development and encourage-ment of all tho industrial interestsand capabilities of tho country by

projHT legislation is among thohighest objects of government.It is the most exalted phase ofpractical politics. It is states- -

mansl ip of tho highest order. Itis thai kind of politics that hasmadofreest,sen so

America the richest, thoand in every legitimatothe greatest nation on

earth.Silver is essentially a staple crop

of tho west, as well os gold. Thogeneral prosperity of tho entirecountry, not merely the west, isdependaut largely upon the vol-

ume of tho output of both. Theproduction of silver has no morothan kept paco with tho expansionof tho commerce and industries oftho world, whilo it ia well knownthat tho production of gold formoro than thirty yeara has fallenshort of tho development that haataken placo in the world's otherindustries.

Many have been the expedientssuggested for the cure of tho finan-cial ilia that have grown out of thomonetary situation during the pastquarter of a century. There id atleast ono speedy, effective and per-

manent cure that seema to havebeen overlooked at least it hasnot yet been tried. Ilopeal notonly tho Sherman silver storagelaw, but all the laws that havebeen erected during the last twen-ty years, including that of 1873,which impose restrictions upon thecoinngs .f silver that do not applyalso to tho coinage of gold. Putthe whole matter of the relationsbetween silver and gold whero theywere np to íoí ó, and then let tho

undreds of tons of silver bullionnow stored in the the treasury re-

main thero as security for the redemption of the outstanding silvernotes according to the pledgeprinted in the face of those notes,aud let silver money take its chan-ces uuimpedod by partial and hostile legislation.

Ono of tho fundamental axiomsof safety has been disregardedthat a progressive, expanding nation needs a constantly expandingcurrency,' as well aa an expandingbasis for that currency, and alsothat the stability' of a declaredstandard of values is of the utmostimportance.

Tho undoubted causo of tho existing condition of unrest in financial affairs lies in the fact that wemve departed from these basicprinciples. The constitution ineffect makes gold and silver aloneegal tender. We supplemented

that by adding paper to the volume of legal tendor money. Wethen undertook to discriminatebetween gold and silver by issu-

ing treasury notes payable in sil-

ver and not in gold, and again, is-

suing notes payable in gold andnot in silver, thus violating another cardinal principal of finance,and now, beiug the greatest silverproducing nation on earth, we areattempting by an act of supremeststupidity arid perfidy to tho economic interest of the entire world,and especially to those of our owncountry, by seeking the destruction of our principal money pro-

duct and the most essential anduseful element of money that thecivilization of the agea haa produced.

What wonder is it, then, thattho land is strewn with businessfailures and fiuancial wrecks, andthat from practically every locality, from tho Atlantic to the Pacific, comes a wail of financial distress, as the direct result, in verylarge part, of the effort to banishthe most abundant and the mostuseful of our money metals andput tho business of the countryupon tho basis of tho scarcer anddearer metal.

There is ground for hopo thatthis conspiracy against tho business interests of the country andin behalf of speculation has aboutrun its courso. The industrial interests affected by it are too tremendous to longer permit thebond holding and speculating co-

teries of Wall street to make useof these great wealth-producin- g,

power-evolvin- g and nation build- -

ing industries as uattledor anshuttle coc k in their bond gambling speculations.

VP TO A CERTAI.V POIXTIn the progresa of Consumptiuia, JJr.I'uiroea Uoldea Wodicoi Duooreryb a positive remedy. Eren in themost edvaured oaaee. It gives oorafort and relief; and whore othermedicines only relieve, this willcurs.

But delay is djingeroui, with Coa.sumption. Ia ail the conditionsmat leaa lo It, tue Discovery " laitie remedy. t Ru severe, UngennsCouuhs or Weak Lungs, uuihlnaarts so promptly. ILvery rtlsnwthat can be iwhal through theblood y lull U to this medicine. TheHtiolulotia affection ot the lungthat's called Couauuiptkjn la oil ofthem. Kor this, and for every otherform of R.Tufuui, for all blood-taint- s

ml disiu dura, and all chronto bron-chial, Turoat, and Lung artetlions.the " Discovery " Is the only remedyo certain that it oao be ffuaruntrtJ.

It it ever falls to beueltt or cure,you have your money buck.

Can anything ehut be "Just aifood " for you te buy I

lion't beliove ib

Dr, SagVf IWiueUy pouiUvcly cures C'eUrih.

For tho first time sinco tho es-

tablishment of free coinago head-

quarters in Washington ifa

aro on tho defensive.

AYER1kl 0 GarsaparillaY-o- ur best remedy for

Catarrhand

Salt-Rheu- Sore EyesTumors

SoresHumorSf ItchIndigestionBlotches

A-n- d CarbunclesRashe3

BloodDropsy

L-Iv- er ComplaintA-- ll cured by

AVER'SSarsaparillaPrepared hTPr. J.O.Ay.t k Co.,T.ewsll,lfae..Sold bjr tl lr Agists, irle 01 ; tli boliles,

Cures others, will ouroyou

EYE AND EAR.DR. WILLIAM A. LEVIN,jr. W. Cor. lOib. and Btoul St. DENVER,

wnnsTFM'SINWRNATIONAL7

B.r,tr av.. DICTIONA R YA GrUbduciler.

by

A C.

notui

(or rrae

1

rtucce9or rif"Vaabridged."

cpntIn twining, l'"

eniploynljinflmore UUU,000exendud.

Hveryboilythntiiil own t:ii

Ttall qumtinn

the Ills-tor-

iclllntr. iro- -

cunclation, anil

A Library in it aluothe oiten dwfred Information concerningeminent persona facta concernine tliocountries, cities, towns, and natural fea-tures of the globe; parucuuirs conoernlnfrnnlod fictitious persons and places: traus-latio- d

of foraifrn quotations, words, andproverbs; etc., etc., etc.

if Work ia Invaluable in thehousehold, and to the teacher, scholar, pro-fessional man, and

Bold Ml H'xikteUcn.

G. Co.Pvbltsl.er,

SpHngflelil, Main.

ryPn bnr chsp photo.grniunc rcynnisCU1UUI1B.

iid prosDsctas.

Tmi yearicl-ito- r

limn

llctionry.concerning

Itself, pivoa

Ais

MerriamWEBSTER'S

DiTEKMTnONAL I

I" III in TIIIAIj .UC A If MCM Sufferers from youthful errors,flCAiX In Cm loss of manly vlnor, Varicocele,etc. Dr. liuMnnt's Nerve Tills will ailcrt aspeedy cure by its use, thousands of cases of thevery worst Klliu muí i long stmnnng nave nevurestored to t health. r,il testimonialsfrom all over tli9 world. Price per packaire

.'to, six for 5. (to, trial package sent securelyeulvd for It) cents postage.

Address, nr. it. ntiMonc,8 8. UulleadSt..Clacago,Uls,U. S. A.

JACK MCGEE,

OB (0 3 IL. E ES

MAKER AND REPAIRER,

Silver City, N. M.

tSyAU work warrantod. Orders bymail promptly attended to.

O. O IIINMAN,

Filllll and UNDERTAKING,

SILVEH CITY. NEW MEXICO.

O P P E RBUIfcHi OF ALL CLASSES OF

COPPER ORES and MATTES

1752 CURTIS ST., DENVER, CCLO.

a

Writs for Prices.

Sclentiflo AmericanAgency for

r j- -

in

CAVEATS,TRADE MARKS,

ff B I rfl &J V eta Y A

CnUVRIOUTl. n.

4

Fur Information nd fre Handbook writ tMI NN ft CO., 1 liliOAUWir, iskw YoitK.

OKI tint bureau for ecuririn pnteuta tn AnifrioA.r.vcfy j Kit ent tukfn out by tin i brmiM hv !.rjtli public br ft uuuo givtm freo oí tiiiu-g- lu tii

iinttific lUnmnwlnrvft drrulation of any sAtontlfta paiw In thaWoild. tiluiiltdir tlhutntUHi. Nn in' fUu'ftul

mu ihuuld l Willi.. iu It. Weekly. MI.UO ftuinutht. A.i.1reo MI NN & (X

'eJttlUbUiUU, eibl ettrOeWWeV, .NttW KtM Uljf.

SKGLLYSPhotographic

5TÜDI0.SILVER CITY, N. M.

Southwest Cattlcmon :

W. S. ItANCII.P.O. Ahnn, Socorro Coni'ty, N.M. Ksngs, 8

Franilsi'O lilvor, SocorroCounly.

claim niland

hniuiled W 8 onun y of thBtilniHl, nine

snd catbranded

All Incrca'c of branded T S en left hlnslue and CO ou both Underslopeeacb

ear .We oVslretociill to oir brands as

dcirrtbcd. We will pny l, reward ththe ami conviction of any or per.sons unlawfully handling any iWk Inbiunds.

i

es-- t

V

Brand(tight TblKh

J--A Utf

IT

cuttle horsesprt

nil horsestie C

both

enttloor jaws.

Jl,ltabove

arret! personthese

Horse

Jaws

c C on

on let

lilnee;ti y Milk lunch.

)'. O. Ad droite. FI.KUKY.S lver City, N.M.

Ran?

Mountain (oar mils

north of

P. O. Address,

FKA.NK SIITBAR,

81IverClt T K'.M

Ranr: Lowor, Mid-

dle (ills and waitside vt Bnrro Mts.

Additional brandscircle loft side, crosson left hip, ! connectod, n.KT. Old"mnrs or 24 oonnectea

connected,cat up

. When Tntd. on shoulder.j

P. 0. Address, HART BROS.,Lords bars, NcMexlco

(Rometiei oa tide"X on night Hip.

Range i Upper Ulnj

P. 0. Address,

a JAB. M. 11 ii aa,

,Eaoi;e: Vicinity of

ITot aud WarnSprings,

P O. Address,

GEO. WILLIAMS'.

Hudson, N. H.

ELLEN GIIXETT,

i., . .in ' 1 1 Postofflce,? I Bllver '" M.

i: . r- , Maniré,. "w Whlakty Creek,

ar

NECilUTA CATTLECooney,

Ilorse brand

claim

1

Sllrer

CO.If . V.

Ranee East sideMogollón in o u n --

tullís, oa Negritacreek.

Additional brandtriangle rail left

side.4

left hip.

lefl- -aide.

tap.

SllT

sold,

bres.

EYE AND EAR.Dr. Chas. E. Walker,

JAC0B80N BUIADIXa, DENVER.

DAILY

STAGE : LINEFrom

Silver City-- VIA-

FORT BAYARD, CENTRAL ANDSAXiA RITA TO

GEORGETOWN.Btaces arrive dull v In Rllver Cltv on the

dena ture of train, carrying passeiiKers, mailand express, ami leave Hllyer City dally on arriv-al oí ti inn, currying im.siengors.tuail and express.

(I

OF

City

OFFICES :

At Silver City In the Express Offio.At Georgetown In the Poet-Offlo-

W. M. MUKPHEY, Manager,bllver City, N. M.

THE QME,"Corner of Yankee Street and Broadway, former

ly occupied by Theo. Uergnian, the tailor.

6TEVE VnLB, rxoprlat.

All the Finest kinds of

LIQUORS and CIGARS

Cold Anhcusvr Beer always om draught- -

REV. SAM P. JONES.

... )

Iter. Bum Jones, the great evangelist, writes?" My wife, v.lio was an Invalid from Nmvore

Ru k llKAHAi iik, has bei-- entirely ruled bysix m k s use nl Ml. K1NOH IHiVaI, (1KK-M- l-

ll l it. llcr liealth Is period. In tlneeweeks two ol my clilldieii were contletcly curjdol Nh.-i-.l ( AiAiuiii. Ir ta lutxi oarABKt.r.DV."

kor sole by W, C. PoiteiHelil.