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El Paso Herald from El Paso, Texas • Page 4

Publication:
El Paso Heraldi
Location:
El Paso, Texas
Issue Date:
Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Tuesday, July 9, 1918. EL PASO and MAGAZINE PAGE TEXAS WOMEN MUST REGISTER 'The Only Way To Win TO SHOW THEY WANT SUFFRAGE By Hal Coffman A THE rate of 300 a day or more, El Paso county women are registering for the Democratic primary election of July 27. Opponents of suffrage and many who have been cool toward suffrage without downright opposing it, have declared not more than 1000 women would register in this county. About 3000 already have been registered and the number increases daily. Results so far have been most satisfactory.

They have been due partly to the interest of the women in preparing themselves to exercise the functions of the ballot and partly to the assistance given them by men and women supporters of the congressional candidacy of Zach Lamar Cobb. Perhaps it is no more than natural that Cobb workers should display marked interest in seeing to it that as large a registration of women as possible is secured, for Mr. Cobb has been a consistent advocate of votes for women and has advocated suffrage year in and year out. It follows that the women of this congressional district are generally supporting Mr. candidacy.

They can scarcely be expected to use their votes in behalf of a candidate whom they believe would not allow them to have a vote at all if he could have his way. Greatly as it is in the interest of Mr. Cobb that the women of this district should register, it is even more in the interest of the women themselves. Even those few who are friendly toward Mr. candidacy are urged to register, and at once, for, regardless of political leanings, it is important that every woman secure her right to vote and be prepared to exercise it in the primaries.

If a woman does not register, she does not vote in the primaries. If there is not a heavy showing of women in tne primary election, the cause of suffrage in the state is endangered. Registration and voting in the primaries is just a fair beginning. There must be a great showing, numerically and in point of intelligence, in the primaries; a response to this long delayed opportunity that will be so strong and fine as to answer the last question and resolve the last doubt on the score of granting full citizenship- suffrage to Texas women by amendment to the state constitution. As it now stands, women are offered the opportunity to vote in primary elections, not in general elections.

It may be that normally, the primary election decides; that as the primary goes, so goes the general election following it. But this is not to be taken for granted, for it is conceivable that now and again it may take a hotly contested general election to decide a close race. Therefore it is important that women receive the full franchise. It will require an amendment to the Texas constitution to bring that about. Securing that amendment is the farther goal before the eyes of the women of Texas and of the men who are championing their cause.

o-------------It would be interesting to know whether these public service companies which have large sums of their money, in $5 deposits for instance, have invested that money in Liberty bonds. Higher Copper, Higher Wages HE increase in the price of copper from 23 '2 to 26 cents a pound, as ordered by the war industries board and approved by president Wilson, is a step most helpful to the mining industry. It gives the small operators a chance to produce ore, unable as they are to produce it with the fine economies which the large operators have been able to in-; troduce by means of elaborate machinery and handling ore in very large quantities. It also gives the larger operators a chance to treat low grade as well as medium and high grade ores and to carry on development work which had to be suspended while the lower price was in effect. Here is something to be noted.

While the cent price was in effect, the large operators were paying a wage scale devised more than a year previously and based on the then price of 26 cents. Now that the price has been raised to 26 cents, one of the largest companies, the Copper Queen has announced that a wage increase is being worked out and will be announced as soon as its details have been figured. Doubtless the other large companies in the southwest will follow suit. Thus it is apparent that the mining companies are not intending to hold the old ratio between the wage scale and 26 cent copper, but to give to their employes a part of the advantage the companies gain by the increase from to 26 cents. This will be highly welcome news to employes of the companies.

A wage increase does more than anything else to convince employes that their employers want to give them a square deal. asked for bread and Germany sent an ill-bred reply. Honesty is hobby. And riding it; sticking right to it. It will be one of compensations to see one of these tango lizards heaving a 12-pound maul.

If the prohibition movement spreads much be no such thing as the spirits of 1919. further To reduce fat patients, doctors can get away with any prescription at all except an order to eat less. --------------o--------------German merchants, politicians and traffickers of various kinds are flocking in droves into Rumania, evidently believing they have found the room in Rumania. Also they are putting the mania in Rumania. o--------------Fourth of July was celebrated enthusiastically in London, Cork and Queenstown also in Paris, Versailles and Brest; likewise in Rome, La Paz, Rio de Janeiro and Havana; furthermore, to some slight extent, in El Paso, Texas, U.

S. A. Little Interviews Mrs. DeGroii Says Cobb Has For Years Been For Suffrage War Stamp Sellers Going After Limit Club Men This Week I When Baby Laughs In A Hot, Dusty Car Traveling Is Not Half So Disagreeable i IT WAS on the train. Roundabout The Country The Value Of Recreation To The People Of A City Some Very Striking Examples In Two American Centers HAVE been waiting: 30 years for 1 the opportunity to express myself in public said Mrs.

Charles DeGroff. that the opportunity has come, I am going to do my best to show all women the necessity of taking- a part in the political life of the community. And, as we have only a limited equal suffrage. I am going to do my best to put a man in congress work for the full light. I Cobb.

For many years, he has always sent telegrams, when I requested it, to Washington promoting the cause of equal frage.1' vr if am informed that between 5000 md 10.000 automobile licenses have been taken out in El Paso county and that there are about 1000 car owners delinquent in this said E. B. Kelso, of the state highway commission. "While this is not an extra good records, I want to say that similar conditions prevail in all the big cities of the state except Dallas, where heavy traffic conditions forced the community to enforce the laws vr this June is as good as it was last June, if anything it is a little said William McMath. are doing as much business as we did last year, but not making anything like as much profit.

This due to several conditions, principally the high operating costs. Labor is scarce and as a result demands a better wage, materials are all gone up. The price of paper is unprecedented; especially is this true of bonds, high grade bond paper is almost prohibitive. The ink situation, which was seriously hurt at the outbreak of the war because of this inability to make col- Ita ored inks, has cleared somewhat, and now eastern manufacturers announce they can make any kind of ink, and this will probably mean that the price of this one commodity will be a triple less. The price of finished printing has not increased with the cost of materials and labor, but we belong to the antibellyache want all $1000 pledges made during this to be in addition to whatever the subscriber may be spending for war stamps under present said Emmett Hines.

pledge cards will have this stipulation printed upon them, and members of the Limit club enroled this week will understand that. Furthermore, we want to get all the Limit club men possible now, so that they will have less difficulty in fulfilling their pladge by Jan. 1, 1919. They must pay a substantial sum down, within five days, and the balance in the nfxt six months. There are many men in this city who have pledged themselves to buy war stamps each week, but are not buying as many as they should.

These are the men that the Limit club is designed to get. We are going after them, and expect evefy man who is able to buy $1000 worth of stamps, to do of the successful methods by which the war savings stamps salesmen in Chicago helped to gather their said H. H. Frie. the setting of a Five Dollar day, when every one who could was asked to buy $5 worth of war stamps.

Solicitors were out on the streets, and man who bought $5 worth was tagged to protect him from further solicitation. The scheme proved a remarkable success, and the Chicago committee raised many thousands of dollars In this way. I believe that such a system would work well in El between here and Fort Worth are burned beyond recognition as a result of the long dry said W. C. McDaniel.

tops are so dry that a match would start a general conflagration in the fields. This con- dition provails all the way to Fort Worth with the exception that an occasional good looking cotton patch is seen. However, from Fort Worth to Dallas, the opposite conditions prevail, all crops showing excellent Married For 50 Years; No Deaths In Family Robert Lee, Texas, July remarkable family record is that of Mr. and Mrs. G.

W. Arledge, of the Slaughter headquarters ranch, near Stanton, who were married 50 years June 18, and had never had a death in the family. Joe W. Arledge, of Coke county, returned from Stanton last week, where he attended the golden wedding anniversary. Mr.

Arledge is 73 year of age, and Mrs. Arledge is 70 years. They are the parents of four children, all of whom were present, also their ten grandchildren. The children are Joe of Coke countv; W. Carlsbad, X.

T. E. Maryneai, and G. H. Blackwell.

Arledge, Arledge, of Arledge, of Arledge, of Over 1000 women have already enroled for work on government contracts at the five renters established by the advisory council of the corps. The women will earn from S18 to per week. Hog wo I low Loca Is By DINK BOTTS. Free Information Each reader of The El Paso Herald is offered the FREE and unlimited use of the largest Information Bureau in the world. It can answer practically any question you want to ask, but it cannot give advice, nor make exhaustive research.

The El Paso Herald pays for this splendid service in order that every one of its readers may take free advantage of it. You are welcome td use it as often as you like. Write your request briefly, sign your name and address plainly, enclose a three-cent stamp for return postage, and address THE EL PASO HERALD INFORMATION BUREAU, Frederic J. Hnskln, Director, Wnnbington, D. C.

work or fight order be purty hard on feller that never fought anything but work. You git a purty fair line on who rues home by who carries baby. Copyright 1918, International Service PAN ome omet bo Vou Ht'S BECoKAt. Uncle Walt's Denatured Poem Understanding Us jDAZ BARLOW is having the time of his life in Tickville, this week, and says the report that there is no place like home is greatly exaggerated. vr The Hearsay club will meet with Mrs.

Columbus Allsop tomorrow afternoon to discuss ways and means of making Mrs. Jeff Potlocks mad without hurting her feelings. Washington Hocks has reelected himself trustee of the school for another year. If Wash had a deep bass voice and a long tail coat he would make a good congressman. LOUIS, July more we get about over the country the more most of us are convinced that El Paso is woefully lacking in the amusements necessary for its people.

Wherever you find a contented people, you find plenty of amusements. Los Angeles, particularly, and, in fact, most all of California is popular because it is a playground. You find other cities popular with their own people and visitors in proportion only to the amusements they afford during relaxation hours. The first thing a Kansas City resident begins talking; about is tho wonderful park and boulevard system of that city. St.

Louis people boast their parks and their river excursions. if it does grow hot said a St. Louis newspaper man to me, can always run down to the river (the Mississippi), hop in a boat and soon feel comfortable. Get hot as you please during the day. you can take a ride for ihree hours on the river for 50 cents and home refreshed.

By that time the breeze is blowing and you can sleep St. Louis also has many beautiful parks and one of the features of the system, like that of Kansas City, are the public bathing and wading pools for children. At any hour of the day, hundreds of mothers may be seen sitting on the grass watching their little ones disport themselves in the water, clear, cool, constantly running. In the smaller wading pools la Kansas City, fountains continually operate and not only may the children wade, but they can enjoy the luxury of a shower out in sunlight and air. Both these cities realize the necessity for affording their people places for relaxation and, while there are parks everywhere particularly in Kansas City, more so than St.

Louis is no such thing as a Off the sign. The parks are made for the people and the people utilize them to the fullest extent. In the larger parks, furthest out of the city, bake ovens and other places for cooking picnic and outdoor lunches, are provided. Boating is a feature on all the lakes large enough, and there are many of these, all of them artificially constructed, just as we might do in El Paso in the arroyos up at the base of Mount Franklin. The wonderful benuty of Kan- cliff drive could be duplicated In El Pnno'ft weenie drive nnd even improved, for Kaninas Ity has no sueh outlook from Its drive as we have at home.

Von can only look upon the muddy waters of the MisKTiuri or the smoky yards of the railroads from the Kansas City drive. It is true they have more rain up here for vegetation, but the park department has to water many of the trees along this drive and holes had to be blasted in the solid rock and fresh dirt poured in to make room for some of the trees. Now, each side of the drive is matted with trees and vines and you can imagine yourself a thousand miles from civilization as you spin along its bitulithic covered surface, except from spots where, through the vegetation you catch glimpses of the railroad yards or the sluggish old Missouri. Nobody ever saw a happier, ruddier lot of children than yon find playinsr in these Their shout is real music, their blowing faces an inspiration. Jack Sheehan and I could vision Little Bettie and Little Chris and hundreds of other little Chrises nnd little Hetties enjoyinsc Much childish sport at El Paso If we of El would make up oar minds that we must do our duty towards the cominK generations and go to work on our scenic driveway and parking system as we should do.

The people of Kansas City are so By A. MARTIN. enthusiastic over their parks and tree lined boulevards that act one of them object to the taxation necessary to maintain them and to continue their extension, in fact, everybody is glad to it, for the rich and the poor alike benefit. The rich may ride through the in their motor cars. The poor may loll beneath the trees on the grass and watch the motors whizz by.

This park system was constructed for the democracy of Kansas City and the democracy uses it. St. Louis ditto in a somewhat smaller way, but just as appreciative. 1 The great blessing to the St. Louis resident is the proximity of the Mississippi, great of With the old Mississippi at hand, they could get along without parks, for its cool breezes always beckon and they give satisfaction when you answer the call.

Where the people all come from, one might wonder at, but every day three large steamboats, as long as an El Paso block, put out from the wharves twice daily loaded to their utmost capacity. Leaving in the morning they make a i daylight run up the river to Alton. Leaving night, they make a night run down the river to Jefferson bar- racks. You can get anything you wish to eat or drink on board or you I onn take a fact, the management encourages the lunch idea, because otherwise there would be too many to you can even toss I your empty lunch boxes into the rear lifeboat and nobody cares. Often the boat returns with rear lifeboat swing full of empty boxes, testimonial to the true aim of the passengers.

As soon as the boat puts out Into the stream seven piece orchestra swings Into a step and you can dance until yon are too tired to dance more if you like. If you happen not to he acquainted, just stxnd around a little while at the rail or alonir the dancinK floor, which Is about SO by 100 feet, and he acquainted In a little while, for Iota of the St. Louis hoys have gone to war and St. Louis girls still on the excursions and they like to of them. Some society of some kind gives a picnic every night on one of the boats, sometimes there is a picnic party on each of them.

One night this week, the Western T'nion employes had a picnic on the Majestic and the Knights of Columbus had one on the Liberty, while an Episcopalian Sunday school had one on the St. Paul, the biggest of the three boats. Of course, the rest of the public can attend, too. These picnic parties Just help to swell the crowds. No matter how hot it may be in the city, it is always cool on the river and as you float down past the breweries, the smoking switch engines on the banks, the mud scows and the drift wood in the river and read the bill boards sticking out from among the trees, you can ruminate on the days when the Mississippi river packet was the most luxurious of all American methods of travel and wonder if Mark Twain really piloted a boat over the very spot that you are at the moment riding on the muddy bosom of the great stream.

In the moonlight, It Is just as silvery as our own Rio Grande, and Incidentally the odor Is very similar. As the old boat swings at her dock while the picnickers rush down the river bank to get aboard as the engineer frantically whittles his for the tenth time, you watch the trainload after trainload of people pulling Into the great middle western metropolis fram the Illinois side over the big? bridge Just ahead and shove you. wave from the train and the up about the street cars crossing on the deck high above the railroad, and the soot falls down on your panama and the plumber with the mashed thumb next to you sqnirts orange juice on his girl nnd she while he tries to cat, and the negro waller trtand.H in front of them nnd calls saveral times before he turns away in dlfcKust and darkness settles and the lights scintillate on the driftwood that floats by as some human wreckage In the tide of life you quit reflecting If you are a thousnnd miles away from home and turn to the deck below where Mtidweiser costs no more than In St. Louis, but where you have to buy a ticket from a big fat blonde before you can get for they evidently don't trust bartenders on pleasure boats. Living in a hotel in St.

Louis is not half bad these days of war and draft. Every elevator operator and all the room clerks, and cashiers and cigar clerks are girls. And they are a lot more polite than boys, for they say as you get in the elevator, and if you have a camera they want to know if you are going to take their picture and generally show the interest in their guests that the management of the hotel boasts all employes must show in the people in the house. Like Kansas City, St. Louis has a lot of girl conductors on the street cars, too, and, by the way, you pay six cents fare in St.

Louis to ride on a measure, you know? Writing of war measures reminds me of the cute notice In the rooms of one of these St. Louis hotels something like Harry appeal to El Pasoans to walk another block and save coal far Stone nnd Webster. This notice says: fuel by light. Turn out every light you do not need and It will save that much coal for somebody No reduction Is offered from your bill. The negroes had a parade here the other day and they had a black Uncle Sam in it.

Harry Norman, who used to work on the El Paso papers and is now rearranging The was on the copy desk that day and he captioned the picture as Harry had seen a lot of stuff in the papers about the French lately, too, and when he came to caption a group of United States marines for The Star he wrote: White and Blue It was after that he was assigned to the morgue. St. Louisians have erected a big eign down near the union station where all troop trains pass. It says: of Democracy, God The St. Refrigerator Car company has had the following painted on all its cars: the Glow in Old Glory; Buy War The lettering has been put on in the car shops and is as big as that announcing the ownership cf the tars.

St. Louis atlll uses nas liarhts on many of Its street but they have natural gas here nnd It Is cheap. On all the busy streets of St Louis a sign may be eeen on the lamp post, with red lettering reading. Automobile may not be parked in a district so marked. O.i some of the streets there is a big round sign th a red '-irow on it and above arrow the words Way Traffic may only pass through such streets the direction the arrow points.

Usually they are short, streets and no parking is -jllowed thorn. St. Louis traffic police all uniforms, olack leggings and helmets, such as ins British troops wear in India. Othor policemen wear blue uniforms and caps with black visors. HOT.

i AND IX our car. ALL OF the passengers. 1 WERE SITTING around. TRYING TO doze. 0 0 AND FEELING worse.

IF THEY did doze. AND NOT a bit better. IF THEY AND THERE one of them. LOOKED TO me. AS THOUGH he wanted to talk.

AND I did. AND I couldn't. EXCEPT TO the porter. AND THERE was a baby. NINE MONTHS old.

1 AND IT started to cry. AND THE mother hushed it. 0 BUT stop it I AND I borrowed it. AND WENT for a walk. IP AND down the aisle.

AND IT stopped crying. AND DISCOVERED my eyes. AND MADE an effort. TO PUT one of them out. AND NEARLY succeeded.

0 AMD LAUGHED. aii A.M> WHEN it laughed. THE MAN with whisker? HE SAW it. AN HIS whickers moved. AND I knew-jie was smiling.

A little girl. WHO LIVES in JTrooklyn. El Paso EAitor Tells Of Wartime Restrictions in U. 5. and Mexico.

In the St. Loutis Globe-Democrat of July 5, the following article telling of Mar time restrictions in communication between tbe United States and Mexico, told by G. A. Martin, 6t the El Taso Herald, appeared: A. Martin, managing editor of The Herald.

El Paeo, was in St. T.ouis yesterday his way home from Rotary club convention in Kansas City. says that cotnmunication with the Mexican side of Rio Grande has been practically suspended, and to visit Jaurez, across the necessitates getting a panssport from the State department in Washington. involves two time and a fee of $3. in additicti to the expense of furnishing photographs.

Consequently there is? not much running back and forth the international bridge. restrictions in communication extend to the telephone service. When ar. El Paso person calls a Juarez number the operator says: a and when the comes tne wire Jias been connected with the official- censor. long as the conversation contains nothing about government or military matters and is carried on in English, it may without interruption.

other than the English language is used or forbidden topics are mentioned the censor breaks in and the connection is SHE SMILEts. AND I stopped and talked. AND WE got acquainted. AND BY that time. THE TWO passengers IN THE next section.

WERE SITTING up. 41 AND I stopped there. 1XD THE dark woman. LIVED IN Chicago. 0 AND THE man.

WAS A newspaper maa. AND I found it all out. IN FIVE minutes. AND ANYWAY 0 0 INSIDE OF an hour. 0 0 0 i i KNEW all of the 0 0 0 IV THE car.

AND AN hour later. I THE WHOLE bunch. WAS TALKING to each other, AT dinner time, WE SENT the mother in to her dinner. ND THE newspaper man. 4ND THE Chicago girl.

0 0 0 and THE Brooklyn girl. 0 0 0 AND I- 0 0 0 TOOK CARE of the baby. 0 0 0 TILL MOTHER came back. 0 0 0 AND THEN the four of us 0 0 0 WENT IV to dinner. 0 0 0 AND DURING the night.

0 0 0 THE BABY cried. AND everybody up. 0 0 0 AND NOBODY got mad. OR ANYTHING. I THANK you.

iiuiniiiiiiiiWUiiiiwuishimsnmiHiuiiinniiHiBiiiHmMUitrMmMtiMiJg 1 Short Snatches From Everywhere Under the new control our railroads everything but Herald. If those U-boats have a base on side better stick to It and i not try to steal 1 Southern Lumberman. A small bit of German territory is now in the keeping of a small bit of the United States army. Both bits will Republican, i William the last has reigned 30 vears at an average cost to humanity of 3 000 000,000 a year. It is no joke to call him Eagle.

Lenine is reported as being on his way to Berlin, and the supposition is that there has been some hitch In the arrival of his North American. Foch says that the way to win is to i at lack. The kaiser tries Foch's egy and loses half a million meii. The real strategy seems to be in gif- ir.g the advice to an enemy foil enough to act upon JE 3. 10 Perhaps this, from F.

columns in the Stars and Stripes, will, help us visualize the war: difference between American and French automobile driving is this: In America when your tire blows up you say. Heavens: There goes our and in France you say, That was only the City Star. nmnnuirmnimiHiwuirtim Gathering Material For Article on The St. Louis Star of 5, said: Allie news edior of the Herald of El Paso, 1s at the Hotel Statler. He is vice president of the Rotary club of El and has been attending the national convention of the organization in Kansas City.

Martin came to St. Louis to gather material for a article on Garden. He was correspondent for the New Sun during the various Mexican revolutions, The Young Lady A cross The Way I ii POOL TABLES USED FOR GAMBLING, ARE BANISHED Phoenix, July 9 a war measure, pool tables have been banished from the Phoenix Y. M. C.

A. It has been found that, unless a caretaker is present constantly, the tables are used as a means of gambling. This action has been taken without ocher consideration of the morality of pool playing. When the tables were installed there was strong protest fnom some of the members and one contributor. who had signed for $1000 on the building fund, used the tables a defence in court when he refused to ray the subscription.

Names In The News 8 The Rathrnau -is one devised by Dr. Walter Rathenau, president of a great German electrii company, which provides for the mobilization and organization of the resources of the German empire. In conformity with this plan, the Germans have to a considerable stripped Belgium by seizing machinery of all descriptions. tools, chemical and mineral products, automobiles. locomotives and even horses and other animals.

young lady across the way says A she loves all nature except the i bailed wire fences. rFHEY held the theory theory gold is all for which we care, for which do our fighting. money grubbers, one and the nations cried, in anguish; have our backs against the wall, and still in sloth they languish. Still, they chase the buck and bone, to strains of Yankee Doodle; they hear the stricken peoples groan, and gather in more But now they see our legions rush across the rolling breakers, and! not io gather in some cash or annex foreign acres. They see our men go forth to I light where demolition rages, to plant the standard or the right where it may stand for ages.

Across the mined and ambushed sea, a thousand leagues of water, we go that nations may be free, that tyranny may totter. The wealth for which we planned and toiled in times of peace, is helping to see the war program spoiled, and set his cohorts yelping. And now they see us as we are; slow to wrath, but, thunder! When roused we rip things all ajar and tear the map asunder. They see us standing up for right without a thought of profit; see us carry on the fight until ice in Tophet, GoprrifhU Georga WALT MASON aktediluviam A ncestors FT PA GH AT JuJu JLiioU llijiiAJLJLI DEDICATED TO THE SERVICE OF THE PVOPLE, THAT NO GOOD CAUSE SHALL LACK A CHAMPION, A MW THAT EVIL SHALL THRIVE UNO! H. D.

Mater, editor and controlling owner. Bias directed Tha Herald far SO J. C. Ullnmrth Is and CV A. Martin la Edjtor.

MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS, AMERICA NEWSPAPER PI ASSOCIATION. AND AI DIT OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ts excluvively sntitled to ths ase for publication ef all dispatches credited to tt or not credited to this paper and also tlas local news published hereto. AN INDEPENDENT D.MLY El Paso Herald waSTaatab'- Uished In March. 1881. The El Paso Heralif includes also, by absorption and succession.

Dally News, The Teifefiraph, The Telegram. The Tribune, The Graphic, The Sun. The Advertiser. The Independent. The Journal.

Tbe Republican. The OF Herald, per "month, 60c: per year, $7.00. Wednesday and Week-End issues will be mailed for 12.50 per year. Week-End edition only per SI THIRTY.EIGHTH TEAR OF exclusive features and complete news report by Associated Pre Leased Wire and Speciai Correspondents covering Arizona. New West Texas.

Mexico, Washington, D. and New York. Entered ac the Postoffice In El Paeo. Texas, as Second Class Matter. WHATEVER YOU WANT TO The Paso Herald Information Bureau at Washlns'lon readers free sf charge, wttu accurate snd authoritative to on any and all subjects conce-nlng wmca information can be had from tbe unpa resources of tbs rlous government departments, tbe great t.tbrary of Congress snd tbs many experts and scientists tn the government service at Three cents tn postage tor reply must accompany each inquiry, stste cleaify the Information wanted and address Tbe El Paso Heraid Information Bureau, Firderie J.

Haskia. Director Washington, D. C..

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Years Available:
1896-1931