El Paso Daily Times (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. 26, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 19, 1906 Page: 6 of 8
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EL PASO MORNING TIMES, THURSDAY, JULY 19, 1906.
Whet
Your Appetite!
Eminent |>hysiciati3 declare there must be a sharp
apfrtil? for, be* I in order that the nutrition it con-
tains lie digested and assimilated—therefore
the importance of "appdih." Palfet Beer taken
before or with your meals is a safe, sure means for
treating a healthy appetite.
PaB st
Blue Ribbon
lx.-cr is ni tre than an apjx-tizcr— it is an active aid
to digestion and a food of highest quality, strength-
cning, nutritious and rich in the vitalizing, pre-
digested food element., of I’abst exclusive eight-day
mall and the tonic properties of the choicest selected
hops. I’alrst Blue Ribltou Beer nourishes the whole
body, invigorates the nerves, enriches the blood and
rvfi' die . the brain. It i the sujwrior of all beers
in cleanness and delicious taste and flavor. Perfect
in age, purity and strength,
tieer, Call for Pabit Blue Ribbon
MILWAUKEE BEER COMPANY
Paso. Texas
in
When Ordering
MILWAUKE
territories in which forest reserves are
situated have been Informed by letter
rtmcenilag the amount which will
come to each state at the present time
from the forest reserve proceeds of
the last fiscal year. These letters say:
“The payment of the to per cent
centum thus provided will be made by
rite secretary of tbe treasury, who
will determine the exact distributive
share of (name of state.) Pending this
h termination the following reports
from the records of the forw« reserve
will show you the gross receipts from
the forest reserves in your state dur
ing the fiscal year Just closed and the
approximate (but perhaps not the ex-
act) amount which you will receive
under the terms of the ast just quot- j
ted.
“It Is with very great pleasure that I j
j am able to notify yon of this beginning
i of the direct contribution of the forest i
j reserve* to the coutvies In which they |
i lie. ... The proceeds from thej
• reserves are likely to increase rapidly,!
i iso that this contribution, although It
may uot yet have reached an Important j
figure, will ultimately pay a very con-)
- idcrable protiortion of the exi>enses of |
the counties which are fortunate j
enough to have forest reserves within i
heir boundaries. . . .”
The sum which each state and ter- j
ritory will receive this year is given
How to Exercise the
Bowels
Y
mmmmKmmm&mmmmsmmamm
.MINKS AND .MININIL
• Tf ivJvc»n them In M#mi of a freight.
l*i:l un Hovf'fnI hundred thousand »Iol-
| lar which was luntried In the early
i’ . I (In (Jr*' lie Copper company.
Fovm.iI of the Pheij»f*-Dodg«* work
QUALITY OF ASBESTOS. I lux I iff in tin- field had a romddora
’ j M* *v.vm i -.l'ip In Greene Consolidated
„ iia; . whirl) thave hJko town Hold.
FOUNT! B3 SHARK PROFITS
STATE
10 per ct.
rlzona ................
... $7,970.68
- California ..............
. . 8.192 12
Colorado................
...12.541.79
Kantics .................
... 102.09
Minima ................
Nevada .................
24 00
Nebraska ...............
... 790.35
New Mexico ............
. .. 4,094.65
Oklahoma ..............
... 120.95
Oregon .................
... 7,587.35
South Dakota...........
... .3,599 05
Utah ...................
Washington.............
... 1,930.43
W'ornlng ...............
... 6,78!.50
Alaska .................
... 283.00
Total .................
. .$76,721.92
Alaska, being neither a
state nor a
territory, is no! entitled by the wording
of the law to share in the distribution.
ARIZONA IS PRODUCING A GOOD:
The Phelos Dodge Reported to Have
Scld Their irterests in the Greene
Consolidated to W. C. Greene—Nev*
Mexico County SommuGtoncrti Place
Uniform AsBCfc&ment on Mmmg
Claims.
f >i \W.
Ilf ${J*f
P
m'
are
nf A,sh< sitis In the Culted !
vis ,'ijOO Khofl lUDR, 1
Gi<< Minim' ID- j
I* i ho pro,! net Ion /»f j
both in lonnajce and t
ioiis an inert*;iKe of
than Inn pot resit In quantity
of a!in; i fit jmt
GHH oulput. Ge
T'e >■ iv ?h» v did nof Kell their ahares
however. !»*"'.uir-e ,,f an> laek of faith
in ! tj*■ Greene properly.
!? in a not L'en<*rally known that
lie Piieii, l>odi'e people have large
fiii: d in ' r',e in Cananua. They
*vn a larye property right in the ren-
ter of Gif am j i which they purehaaed
from Jainea Lindsay of I/m Anaeles,
who w.t one of ’in* early pioneers in
■ ae i ThU property they have
bf on tievf*loj)in;< for Home time, ami it
• iiw it! that they have a very good
): *wing of copper.
Ten Per-Cent of Gross Receipts
Allotted by Law to Offset Loss in
Taxes—Nearly* $77,000 This
Year.
Within the next two years the area
sot aside for forest reserve purposes
ha* increased from ; s than 50,000,*
000 to more than 100,000.000 acrt*rf.
.Suet, a change caused great cons ci-l p<*7pie”n"ot'only liveif ofl "th\»Tywidl)Ut
natlrrn aromtg wane who were L(m„.m|P,) that
NEW CROPPS FOR THE FARMER
A few’ years ago American wheat
growers did not know that there was
in another part of the world an entire-
ty different species of wheat from the
kinds they grow, that a different bread
was made from it, and that millions of
Hint rep:
i d at
The hoard of county commissioners
of dr,nit county held a session early
in June, at which an important ac-
:,i iu value over j Oon was tni en relating to tin1 asaess-
i. Virginia and I mem of mining claims. It lias been
• it- cent r) bitted 2995 tons.j ordered that all patented claims shall
t '.g,.bar, to this total, and the I f>*”-
familiar with the objects to he at-
tained by forest reserve All the
enemies of the .National forest policy
made ammunition f', and many of
its more timid frien.te beg an to fear
titat the movemen' was going
Most of the arguments of doubters
however, could easily he refuted.
The ■ were two objections that,
could not t«- disposed of so readily—
first, that this vast area, at <arge as
all the, New Eogvuid and Middle
States with Mary and unit Virginia
thrown in, took away from opiportun-
tty for agricultural settlement and
• at *ju per acre Instead of | il0llu, hultdinR many tracts of land
ere. Hie price heretofore , jMyf iored here an I there along creeks
o{ < 'mi" ln)jn Califprtiia, Mlr!) ' *' :,r^' '!. A number of the mining Uu.,| valievw ip riie forest reserves*.
i'Mii VVyomiujLf iui.i Arlz *im. .Tliese \c' r»*f l>a ve■protectee! to f hi board Tj„. Forester fell the propriety of
liv ir«' ui ep from the vr*p<nf J Goti \o Dii* ad,on. II 1h urpetf j Lhix erlflcinm keenly and studied
w' <•!, Mi fjeutgr Oils Smith of tie'
i nited Slater, geologlcnl survey has
Wi it!".I I'Ollei-riling tile pi'll luCliOtl of
asiii st.ii In I Wifi.
objection to tills action,
j that. Hi'- hoard lots no authority un-
' ler (lie law to place a valuation on
mining property, hud that, furthermore,
In mo a unlfo'iii tistumsment of |Z0
Tiii in I, I:,■ Is floe ill part to new ace „n each patented mine would,
p;o-tuci vg Inn more -Iare a to tlie M’ ' tome of them tit much more
greater output of (icorgla amt Vlr- '*'«« tin dr value and others at much
gitil-t operators, flu ndiestos from ,l'"- l» It1 »*•*» thought hy some llv.it
tin two 1.1 • s eousliiuies two tilirds ,hl'’ "-'ion will have a tendency to
Hu ., ,1 von He product ton an ! delay application for pinent. and there-
is wholly of the amphllsdii variety
and much
will t
value
htdlH'
1!»»* I
inert
ehry
d U , of a tow grade. This
t v, to explain the disus aae In
per ton. (lie 1W)5 average value
irtt>2 I- "iipo.rej to $17 )u in
’fhe e w:• , however, a slight
o i.i the production of the
II" variety which eontuiandw
hotter pries k.
Mines In Itnr.yi county, Michigan,
and I'lac-r county . (hillforida, are new
1>t "i hut of Hie nattil'e of this
protect lift i * * i known. The asbestos
mine in h fir;, ,] Canyon. Arlzmia,
iyf b i . flm e uiljiv ot fibre, pro
tine' ! a smalt quantity of the chryso-
lite.
N'f-w • come' from I to-.ton to the of-
!• ' 'fat i tie Phelps-! lodge people liave
c t l !o w <■ t.'reen ttieir stock or
since O' Hie (Ireotie Consotldated Cop
1' ' 'c • t Tile ItoMoll News |III
r* • a ■ Hv, (tic l*htdpa-Uotlg(> peo-
ple on. mally held I I,non tihares which
In keep down tlio aiATsmith' property
of the oounty.
a.
Watermelons
Tel 800.
on Ice. Artlidn Bros.
“We wi t have to r oft to dcs-
IH-rate measures,’* aid I.v'satrder John
Anpleifvn lf> his wife yeaterdtiy when
Hie liiesrxihger hoy le t them a te'o-
carefully the lioundarics of each re-
serve to eliminate as much agricul-
tun* land as possible. Finding I hat
many small tracts remained, he sub-
mitted to the Secretary of Agricul-
ture the “Agricultural Settlement
Bill," which the latter recommended
to cmigresf and which finally receiv-
ed the pred ion 's g.'tature June 11.
we;
Although under the law aT land
actually usable f ir home building wf l
he brought within the reach of the
poop'o, there was another strohg ob-
ject hm to the reserves namely, that
many cmmHeM In which reserves lie
have much, In some Instances more
than half, ef their area withdrawn
from the possibility of private own-
ership and taxation. The kNtrost 8or-
nr:int. Acordltiglv they put tti eir vice was not unmindful: of the unfair-
heads together and consulted for aev | nose of Hits condition and KUbmittod
oral hour.-, and as a result of thejn hill :<> grant; I" per <snt or the
confer, nee their house burned down: total rocolpts fnwi forest reserves to
1 ti 1 'tight: they had set it on fire,: the ocunftes In whiclt the
Hie telegram having aivnuunci l
about to visit them.
ill at
Mr; iiighmuR "You never have any
trinilile with .your cook? How do you
manage it?
Mrs I pmore 'Whenever we get
one Unit doesn't suit I go out of town
for a d:ty and leave instruct ions with
my lei,' hand to discharge her while
I'm away." Ghicago Tribune.
To Colorado
-VIA THE-
Coolest and vShortevSt Way
To All Colorado Points.
Special Summer Roundtrip Rates
to Colorado and All Points in
tho NORTH AND EAST, the
The
SHORTEST
WAY
TO
COLORADO
Santa Fe
% V
HARVEY
SERVES
THE
MEALS
Direct Sleeping Car Connections
to Denver and intermediate points.
We will be glad to furnish detailed information
relative to Colorado resorts. It is the best state in
this section in which to take a summer outing.
Write or call on
J. S. MORRISON. W. R. BROWN,
City Pit‘8. A Rent. I), p, A.
Mill* Building, £1 Paso, Texas.
The Atchison, Topeka nntl Sfuita Fe Railway.
they arc altuat-
ed. Tdie prop ped I iw was finally
Incorporated In the forcst-re-ervo pro'
vlMlonn of the agrleitl urh] uppmpria-
tlan act of June JO. lftOti. The
clause toads a.^ follows:
"That ten |mt rentiiri of af money
rd’Civml from each forest reserve
during any fiscal year, including tin:
year ending June thirtieth, nineteen
iuinJiWd and six. shill lie paid at the
end thereof by the (Secretary of Hit)
Treasury to the ..fate or \ ritory in
which said rfiRerv" is situated, to tie
expended as the tale or (territorial
Ttiglslsture max pn scriiie for the
benefit of the ipubde scIkkiIs
nntl puB'lc roads of the counties tn
which the forest reserve Is situated:
Provided, That when any tores ri“-
serve Is In more th in one state or
! territory or county the distributive
j share to each from the proceeds of
I raid reserve shall in- proportional to
jits area therein: And . ovided fur-
• ther, That there shall not lie pah! to
j any state or territory for any county
an amount equal to more than forty
| per centum of the total income of
j itch county from all other sources."
I The proceeds from forest reserves
| In the fiscal year ended June 30. 1901,
| to $58,436.19. During the next tts-
1 cat year the receipts were $7.1,27<MS.
j The transfer of the forest reserves
: to tile Forest Service was made Fob-
1 ruary 1 of t'lmt year, and during the
; five months remaining the Forest
j Service was Imsy reorganlr.lxig the
plans for forest-reserve ad min 1st ra-
I tion. The result is not cable. lour-
ing the year mded June 3(1 last the
j receipt* were $767.219.96. whicW was
more than a tenfold increase over
the previous year.
The full measure of the Importance
if this to cer cent provision can not.
it was the best bread
in the world. And It was Mr. M. A.
Carleton, an agricultural explorer of
tho government, and not the great
grain magnates, who demonstrated to
f r ,*K' America® public that this foreign
..i1. . i wheat will earn for the farmers of the
country miliins of dollars a year. The
Wheat was brought In by the govern-
ment .scientists and distributed
throughout the northwest, it yielded
last year alone a net Income to the
farmers who grow it of, more than
$1,500,000. It will grow on semi-arid
land where ordinary wheat Is a failure,
if will yield four bushels more to the
acre, and It Is not affected hy the di-
seases which attack the ordinary
wheats. With an expenditure of $30,-
000 by the department of agriculture,
this new wheal—-the Durum wheat—
lias i-irned $330,000 for American farm-
ers since 1899.
The nnm engaged In the great rice
Industry of the south, the first irri-
gated erop to lie grown In this country,
..!<■ grain upon which more people In
the world live than on any other,
had made no study of the Immense
varieties of rice being grown In the Im-
mense rice areas of the Orient, in
Ismlsiana and Texas it is estimated
that rice planters were losing every
year more tha.ri $3,000,000 because they
grew the long kerndled rice Instead of
importing from Japan n short kernell-
ed sort that would not break In milling
The planters complain, moreover, that
the American people are not rice con-
sumers. and yet they allow the rlee
miller- to so polish and otherwise pre-
pare the product, that ,no Oriental rice
connoisseur will rat It. and they won-
der why the public do not like It or use
It as a vegetable Instead of as a des-
sert.
Tho department of agriculture,
through Its office of plant introduction
has Introduced the short kornelled rice
and saved the rice planters many mil-
lions already, and it has called the at-
tention of the public to the superiority
of the unpolished product which is
less expensive to prepare.—The
World's Work.
OUR intestines are lined inside
with millions of suckers, that
draw the Nutrition from iood as
it passes them. But, if the food
passes too slowly, it decays before It gets
through. Then the little suckers draw Poison
from it Instead of Nutrition. - This Poison
makes a Cas that injures your system more
than the food should have nourished it.
The usual remedy for this delayed pass-
age (called Constipation) ia to take a big
dose of Castor Oil.
• * •
This merely make slippery the passage
for unloading the current cargo.
It does not help the Cause of delay a
trifle, it does slacken the Bowel-Muscles,
and weakens them for their next task.
Another remedy is to take a strong
“Physic,'1 like Saits, Calomel, Jalap, Phos-
phate of Sodium, Aperient Water, or any of
these mixed.
What does the “Physic" do?
It merely flushes-out the Bowels with
a waste of Digestive Juice, set flowing Into
the Intestines through the tiny suckers.
• ♦ *
Cascarets are- the only safe medicine for
the bowels.
They do not waste any precious fluid of
the Bowels, as “Physics" do.
They do not relax the Intestines by greas-
ing them Inside like Castor Oil or Clycerine.
They simply stimulate the Bowel-
Muscles to do their work naturally, com-
fortably, and nutritiously.
» » •
They are put up in thin, flat, round-corn-
ered Enamel boxes, so they can be carried
in a man’s vest pocket, or in a woman's
purse, a£ the time, without bulk or trouble.
The time to take a Cascaret is not
only when you are Sick, but when you j
first suspect you need one. Price, lOcabox. !
Be very careful to get the genuine, j
made only by the Sterling Remedy Company |
and never sold in bulk. Every tablet
stamped "CCC." All druggists. TV
ISM -______.......——-BSRfc-g
lion of a plan which is to irrigate al-1
most a million acres of desert. This j
moans, within a few years, fifty acre
farms for twenty thousand families, on ;
which they are certain of large ana ■
profitable crops. It means also new j
towns and cities to supply this great l
fanning community with the product*
of the mills and mines and factories
of the 'ountry, east and west.
More than that, it jneans a new pop-
ulation of perhaps two hundred thou-
sand souls and a prosperous princi-
pality added to the greatness of the
Union, it is all purely creative, for
wealth is made where there was none
before, and magnificent opportunity
offered for independent and self-re-
liant livelihood to those who hunger
for It.—Ralph D. Paine in “The Build-
ers," in the Outing Magazine for
July.
He Blamed the Frog.
James Wilson, the secretary of agri-
culture, was discussing a rather anti-
quated kind of farming.
“It is about as profitable and logi-
gal," he said, “as the weather reading
of a Connecticut farm hand I used to
know. This farm hand claimed that, he
could read the weather infallibly. On a
walk with me ono afternoon a frog
croaked and he said:
“We will have clear weather for
twenty-four hours. When a frog croaks
In the afternoon you may be sure of
twenty-four hours of sunshine. We
walked on and In twenty minutes or so
a heavy shower came up and wo were
both drenched to the skin.
"You are a fine weather prophet,
said I, as we hurried homeward
through the downpour. You ought to
lie ashamed of yourself.
"Oh, well, said the farm hand, the
frog lied. It's to blame, not me. Am I
responsible for the morals of that par-!
ticular frog?"
Of Little Consequence.
"Well, well," exclaimed tho flrsi j
summer girl, "where did the engage-
ment ring come from?”
“From Biffany's of course," replied
the other.
“Ob, 1 don't mean that. Who is the j
man who gave it to you?”
“Oh, Why—or— really, I've forgot- j
ten his last name. I Just call him
Shorty."—Catholic Standard and
Times,.
The Man With the Information.
Even In journalism the Spanish pro- Mrs. Farmer.—“Wouldn't you like to
verb holds that knowing something l hoe the cabnago patch? Why not take
doesn’t take up any room—el saber no
oertpn lugar. Sp<*-lnl information is. a.<
1 often have occasion to say to appli-
cants for work the one thing that Igves
a stranger a chance In a newspaper
office. The most out of the way knowl-
edge has a trick of falling pat to the
dav's need.
Not long since, a young American
turned up In New York with appar-
ently the most hopeless outfit for Jour- j
nails!Ic work. He had spent eight
years In Italy studying tnedaeval
church history—and that was his basis
for thinking he could write for a dally
naner of the palpitating present. But
It happened just then that the aged
Isson Xllt drew to his end ami here
was a man who knew all the papabiU.
“wdina's anil nrehbtshopg; who un
dersteol thoroughly the ceremony and
procedure of electing a pope: who was
drenched in all the actualities of the
situation, and who could, therefore,
write about it with an intelligence and
sympathy which made bis work com-
pel acceptance, and gave him en-
trance into Journalism by the unlikely
Porta- It-imsra. It Is hut an instance
of the way in which a profession grow-
ing more serious is liound to take
example from the little busy bee,
and—”
Weary WliUe—'“I’m willing to, mum.
Jest as soon as I see a bee grab a hoe
an' ...e it In to de cabbage patch i'll
do de same t’lag."—Judge.
Mexican Central Railway Company
SIMMER EXCURSION RATES TO
ALL POINTS IN MEXICO
At
RATE OF ONE AND ONE-FIFTH FARES
For
Round Trip
’ ’ EL PASO TO MEXICO CITY AND RETURN VIA
Eagle Pass, or Laredo, at rate of $50.25 U. S. Cy.
Tickets on sale at City Ticket Office in the Postal Cable Bldg.,
from Juno 1st to Sept. 30th, Inclusive, with final return limit Oct.
31st, 1900.
For information cal! on C. F. Bema, Com’l Agent.
W. D. MURDOCK,
Pass. Tralfic Mgr.,
Mexico City
J. C. MCDONALD,
Asst Gen. Pass. Agt.
—-
“Tlie first Consideration”
In selecting route for pleasure or
business trip through Mexico for
Safely, Speed and Comfort
THE MEXICAN CENTRAL RAILWAY
Operating the most modern equipment over
a smooth, well ballasted track, offers a supe-
rior passenger service to all points in Mexico.
CUERNAVACA, GUADALAJARA
AND LAKE CHAPALA
the most renowned pleasure and health resorts in
Mexico are reached only via.
The Mexican Central
The Service is Excellent on the Mexican Central
C. F. BERNA,
Commercial Agent.
J. C. M’DONALD,
A. G. P. A.
W. D. MURDOCK,
P. T. M.
California Excursions
“THE GARDEN SPOT OF THE EARTH”
ALL SUMMER EXCURSIONS TO
LOS ANGELES and Return... .$45
SAN FRANCISCO and Return.$50
On June 26th July 8th, inclusive, wo will have
SPECIAL EXCURSIONS TO
Los Angeles andiReturn........$37
San FranciscoAnd Return.....$42
-0- VIA -O-
HARVEY
SERVES
THE
MEALS
M fit
ISanta Fe
[The Only Line
to the
GRAND
CANYON
OF ARIZONA
WHY XOT unauRe your trip to .nelude Los Angeles, Situ
Francisco, Portland, Salt Lake City, Denver and other im-
portant Colorado ltesorts. This can tie done for $o9.fi0, by
buying on June 2Gth to July 8th or September 4th to 14th.
See its about your trip
J. S. MORRISON: W. R. BROWN,
City Pass. Afjent. I). P. A.
Mills Building, Cl Paso, Texas.
The Atchison, Topeki and Santa Fe Railway.
however, be taken from the figures o| | knowledge more seriomdy.—Rot to Og-
this year. The receipts from die re-
serves will probably irx'roasp with
great strides for years to come, and
the coutributton tq the counties is des-
tined to make up richly for the loss
of taxation.
The 10 per cent contributed to the
counties is safeguarded in the act by
a provision that it must be sport en-
tirely for the maintenance of schools
and public rood*. The state legisla-
tures are allowed to direct the expen-
diture. Another safeguard is that the
contributions from forest reserve re-
ceipts must not in any case be greater
than 10 per rent of the taxes received
from other sources.
The governors of all the states and
den. In the July Atlantic.
Irrigation In Nevada.
The Irrigation work of the national
government has made It* first groat
conquest 1n this same Nevada. Into
this parched san l and sagebrush the
water wa5 turned last rear from the
works of the Carson and Trucker Pro-
b'd. I' was the most Important event
in the history of the state, of more
lasting value even than the discovery
of the Comstock lode. From the mass-
ive masonry dam constructed to hold
the wafers of the Trockee river, the
Mes«ed flow was turned over the fifty
thousand acre*.
This was the first completed sec-
Y0U CAM BE THERE
Tomorrow Night
Our new time card now in effect
Leave
Arrive
EL PASO
DENVER
6:;sj p. m. Tonight
11:30 p. m. Tomorrow
wt oferau THROUGH SLEEPERS
Mo Layovers, Mo Waits in Connection
with C. 8u S. Ry.
Compare this with the Schedule and
Service of other Denver Lines
NO CHANGES
$35.00
FOR THE ROUND TRIP.
- UNTIL —
GOOD
Oct. 31st
GARNETT KING, Ganeral Agent.
City Ticket Office, Hotel Sheldon Block.
H. D. M'GREGOR, City Tick* Agent
Telephone 594.
k
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El Paso Daily Times (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. 26, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 19, 1906, newspaper, July 19, 1906; El Paso, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth580399/m1/6/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.