NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
Shredded Whole Wheat 
Cream of Wheat 
Royal Breakfast Cereal 
Maz-all (Toasted Corn Flakes) 
5 pounds Rolled Oats for 
10 pounds Granulated Meal for 
PHONE 1300 
Private Branch Exchange 
‘as EXREZEESELAAEX REBRBT BME 
Later Coronado made it his head- 
quarters and tollowing were many 
notable men. 
Three or four hundred years ago 
the house had two stories, so a leg- 
end has it. The Spaniards came up 
from Mexico searching for three 
priests. They. came to this house 
and found the Indian chief’s daugh- 
ter alone. They demanded to know 
where the missionaries were or to 
be shown their graves. The girl re- 
fused to give them any information 
when they cut off her hands and her 
brown arms. . Later the Ind:ans ear- 
ried away the dirt of the upper story 
of this house in sacks and some- 
where back in the mountains made 
of it a sepulcher for the chief’s 
daughter. It is out here, somewhere, 
now, but none have ever found it— 
neither has anyone ever found the 
graves of the Fancisean Fathers, nor 
does anyone know when, where or 
how they met death. 
There is a monument in the cen- 
ter of the plaza at Santa Fe that has 
attracted .almost national attention 
and a lot of criticism, because the 
inscription says it is erected to the 
memory of the soldiers of 1862, who 
‘‘fought the rebels.’’ It was erected 
by the territory legislature, and 1+ is 
the only monument in the couniry 
whose lettering refers to the ¢on- - 
federates as ‘‘rebels.’’? Southerners 
don’t think any too much of this 
stone shaft. 
It bothers me to tell where a Mex- 
ican, Indian or Spaniard commeies 
in this territory or where a white 
man leaves off. Only the black, 
glossy hair will give one a clew. You 
will see a light-complexioned, fash- 
ionably-dressed youngster pushing 
out 1910 drinks over a Mission bar, 
or assigning you a room on a Plaza 
hotel, where General Lew Wallace 
used to spend his money in the early 
While Neacak and Ries ice Committees are investigating ae 
COST OF LIVING 
Package 10c 
a 
payed Pe 
eae. 12 
sett 8c 
eee SC Cans 
COBB, BATES & YERXA COMPANY, 
a EEE LLL KELL LTE RTA AAAAERAAERRRMRRERR RRR RRERREEERRES Mane 
days. He looks like a New Yerk 
tourist and I wonder if he has a job 
in the office during the season where 
he can see the sights [| am seeing 
without having to grow poor every 
time he turns around. Then | lear 
the soft Spanish roll of his tongue, 
and I look at him with a new in- 
terest. J wonder if he is a descend- 
ent of Chief Tiquex; one of Cor- 
onado’s hand-me-downs; whether he 
has not Laquna or Astufa Indiana 
lore back in his blood—or where or 
when he ever came from. He knows 
less about his ancestors than | do, 
and cares a heap less. 
But the Spanish girls, one can tell 
them at sight. They seem to be 
more true to old ways. Few speak 
English, so you ean understand, and 
each has a something about her that 
dates her back. You will find her 
in the restaurants and stores. She 
may be dressed in full fashion, but 
she will have some old bracelet, ring 
or ornament that tells you she 1s a 
daughter of the south and has the 
blood of Cortez in her veins. 
As to the Indian girls, you don’t 
find them in the restaurants. They 
preserve every custom and manner 
of the days before the Spaniard el- 
bowed them to the hills—stately, 
dignified, dressed as their Aztee 
mothers dressed, and looking at you 
through eyes that seem to have in 
them pictures of a long past. But 
more of these later. 
It was in this town, Santa Fe, thet 
Warren Wilcox, a printer of Cherry 
Creek, N. Y., had to make a very 
hasty leave, something like a year 
ago, and which incident became of 
enough importance to be discussed 
on the floor of the senate at Wash- 
ington, in connection with the state- 
hood matter. 
Wilcox wrote a letter to the 
Jamestown Journal. He wanted to 
Be 
Why not investigate a little for yourself? 
GANNED VEGETABLES 
COMBINATION NO. 4. 
Good Goods at Right Prices. 
3 cans Knoxboro Corn $i OS 
3 cans Minetts String Beans 
3 cans Chop Tank Tomatoes 
3 Cans Three Pine Peas 
Peter Sts. 
MAS sf 
Essex and St. 
SALEM, 
show his knowledge of Spanish, so 
he dragged in some expressions that 
had a different meaning than what 
he supposed the words spelled. In 
some way a copy of the paper came 
back here and was reprinted in the 
New Mexican. A friend gave him 
a timely tip, and he was able to get 
out on a train to El Paso. 
Have you had enough of 1287 and 
1910 for this week? Enough of the 
days before Columbus or Joseph 
Cannon, A. D., 1910? 
Got to give you some Indian 
stories yet, some stuff that comes 
down here from the hills, but which 
there is no history. And I have got 
to tell you of a people and a time - 
so many thousands of years before - 
the first Spaniard came up the Santa 
Fe trail that Coronado’s exploits 
seem like a news dispatch about 
wireless electric lights. 
Santa Fe, N. M., Feb. 10, 1910. 
AUCTION SALE 
M. EH. Gorman - Auctioneer 
Harness, Whips, Robes, Blankets, - 
- Stable Supplies. 
Entire stock of R. Culbert will be 
sold at Public Auction, Tuesday and 
Wednesday, March 29 and 23, 1 p. 
m., each day. 
Bridge Street - 
Between Ashland Avenue and Pine Street 
These goods will be sold regard- 
less of cost. 
The Stock includes Two Extra Heavy 
Double Team Harness, Ten Express Har- 
ness (heavy and light), Several Buggy 
Harness, Four Coupe Harness, Whips, 
Blankets, Robes and Stable Supplies, too 
numerous to mention, all in first class! 
condition. 
_The stock is being disposed of because 
of the illness of the owner, who has been 
in business in Manchester for the last 
30 years, 
‘Manchester pee 
