El Paso International Daily Times (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. SIXTEENTH YEAR, No. 12, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 14, 1896 Page: 1 of 4
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El Paso
Times
Sixteenth Yeir. No. 12.
fil Paso, Texas, Tuesday Morning, January 14. 1896.
Pi ice Five Cents.
THE SENATE.
R. F. JOHNSON & CO..
Wholesale Liquor Dealers,
Finest Kentucky Bourbon and
Pennsylvania Bye Whiskies.
Sole Agent for the Product of
THE ANHEUSER-BUSCH BREWING ASSOCIATION
THE JOS. SCHLITZiB«lwiNa%OMPANY OP MILWAUKEE THE SILVER BOND BILL*
Wholesale Dialer iu Pare Rocky Mountain Lake Ice.
Families Supplied With Soda, Sarsaparilla, Vichy, Seltzer and all Form* of Mineral Water
BRANCH IN CIUDAD JUAREZ, MEXICO-
Senator Morgan Addressed
Himself Personally to
Hi ?r man.
O H. MOKEEEAD, President.
JOSEPH MAGOFFIN, VloePreat.
J. 0. LACKLAND, O sh . t
J. H. RUSSEL.1Asst. Cash.
State National Bank.
ESTABLISHED APRIL, 1881.
k Ugltifliate Banking Business Transacted In all Its Branches.
Highest pries paid for Mexican dollars.
M
v. .......
©iii
Few & Son, Dealers in Fine Shoes, El Paso, Texas.
SPECIAL OPPORTUNITY
Having just received in addition to our already large stock,
ONE CAR FURNITURE. ONE CAR GLA8SWARE.
And a large assortment of FANCY ROCKERS, in Rattan, Birch
and Fine Oak. We must se1! these goods and are going to sell them
cheap. Call and be convinced. Don’t miss seeing our Holiday
Goods before making your purchases.
T. H. SPRINGER
Furniture, Crockery and Carpets,
North Stanton and St, Louis Streets El Paso, Texas.
L. B FREUDRNTHAL & CO..
- JOBBERS IN-
Groceries & Dry Goods.
-DEPOT FOR-
Goodwin’s Mining Candles, Fairbanks Soaps and Washing Soda,
Swift & Co.'s Meats and Lard, Friend’s Rolled Oats, Church & Oo.’s
Arm and Hammer Soda, Scbepp’s Shredded Oocoanut, Roualt's
Las Graces Tomatoes, Mexican Beans, Peloncillo, &c.
All goods sold by cs we guarantee strictly first class We
solicit the trade of dealers only.
-THE
First National Bank.
EL PASO, TEXAS.
Capital and Surplus, $125,000.
.(OHHUA RATNOT.D8, Praaldent
ULYSSES S. STEWJlKT, Ouhler.
M. W. FLOURNOY, Vice Praildsnl.
JOS. F. WILLIAMS, AMt. Ouhler.
mASSET! ^ , ,
Hardware, stoves and tinware,
AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS,
Cutlery, Guns, Pistols, Mining Supplies anr
AMMUNITION OP ALL KINDS.
Sole agents for Buckeye Mowers and Reapers. Fairbanks’ Soalea,
Buffalo Boales, Charter Oak Stoves, Star Wind Mills, Giant Powder,
and Aermotor Wind Mills.
HOUCK & DIETER,
220 EL PASO STREET.
GERMAN WINES, FRENCH LIQUORS
and Kentucky Whiskies
BOLE AOBNTB FOR
Wm. J. Letup Brewing Co., bt, Loui*. Mo.
Pabst Brewing Co., Mtlw nkee, Wls.
The White Rock Mineral Springs Co., Waukesha, Wls.
The Appolinarls Company. Limited, London, England.
Telephone No. 6fl. Warehouse and Bottling Works, 93.
“WHAT WB WANT, IS TOUR ORDERS.”
Hill's Political Oontlstanoy Dltcnsaad.
Morgan Was Bltttrly Parsonal to Sher-
man at Tlmte—Turkey Will Not Permit
Ontalda Relief— gaya Oollcotlons Were
Mad. on tha Strength of Spatohea Made
In Pnbllo Met tinge by Irreconcilable
Enemies,
Washington, Jan 13—Senator Mor
gan’s speeoh on the allvar bond bill was
the event In the senate today .although
a sharp personal oolloqny between Util,
Prltohard and Bntler enlivened the
early hoars.
Morgan finally addressed himself
personally to SbermaD, who sat aoross
the aisle, and for two hoars arraigned
the Ohio senator for the series of flnan
olal aots with which he Is identified.
At times Morgan was bitterly personal.
In the main, however, the speeoh was
a soholarly presentation of the stiver
question.
Hill’s oollcqiy with the two North
Carolina senators brought oat onsld
erable dlsoasslon of the New York sen
ator’s political consistency and was
amusing to the crowded galleries for
the sharp sallies aod witty rejoinders
daring the singular debate. ,
Mr. Morgan 6afd; "The senator
from Ohio is the author of five new
measures of finance that has given the
people and government more trouble
in handling the little remnant of $310, '
000,OCO In greenbacks than to pay bil-
lions of expenditures for the support
of the government. These measures
are the demonetization of silver In
1873, the stques'ration of the gold re-
serve in the treasury in 1878, the
power given the seoretary of the trees
nry In 1800 to preserve the parity be
tween the metals, the power to sell
bonds at private sale and the power to
enable private persons by oontraot to
dispense with the legal tender laws of
their transactions.”
necessary to secure proper treatment
of John Hays Hammond, Amerloan
mining engineer, reported to have been
arrested by Boer officials at Johannes-
burg, on the charge of treason in oou-
neotlon with ths rsoent rising of the
Ultlandere.
Seoretary Olney Informed his callers
he bad oabled Mr Manyoc, United
States consul resident at Johannes-
burg, to do everything proper for the
proteo'ion of all Amerloan citizens in
Transvaal. Ambassador Bayard was
cabled by Seoretary Olney to seonre
from ths foreign affairs office In Lon-
don direotlcn to British represents
tlves in South Africa to use their good
offices to protect Amerloan citizens.
The secretary assured the Californians
Amerloan citizens lu Transvaal cannot
be tried for treason, so Hammond’s
life la not in danger.
INTERNATIONAL AMERICAN BANK-
A RACE WAR.
White People Intensely Ex-
cited Over i lie Public
School Question.
A VIGOROUS PROTEST.
Negro Children Keoorted to 8ohool by
Police Officer* — Rumored the Entire
School Board Will be Arretted for Con-
tempt of Court—White Olltzane Threaten
to Tenr Down the Jail if Arre.te are
Made—Brltalna Iterated en Arylum by
the Cepe Colony Government,
by |5 and those from Denver to St.
Louis and th» Missouri river by 12 50.
Tomrrrow it will receive notice (rom
all eastern connections that they will
refute to stand any part of the reduc-
tion and they will do no basinets with
It except on the basts of fall tariff
rstas. The haul of the Union Pacific,
Denver & Gulf Is so short It will hard-
ly be able to stand all of the reduc-
tions ont of Its income. All othtr
Colorado lines are keeping cut of the
fight and will do so unless the Union
Paoiflo joins the Gulf.
WORTHLESS DRAFTS.
Turkey Will Not Fremtt Ontitde Keller.
Washington, Jan. 13—Ths Turkish
legation gave cut this afternoon the
following official communication:
The Imperial government will not
permit any distribution among his
subjuots in his own territory by any
foreign society or individuals however
respectable the same may be (ns for
instance, the Red Cross society),
money collected abroad. Snob inter-
ference no independent government
aver allowed, especially oolleotlons
made on the strength of speeohes de
ltvered in pnblio meetings by irreoon
olllable enemies of the Tnrklsh raoe
and religion and on the basis of false
aoousatlons that Turkey repudiates.
Besides the sublime porte Is mindful
of the trne interests of Its subjects and
distinguishing between the real state
of things and oalnmnles and wild ex
aggerations of interested or fanatical
parties, will, as it has done heretofore
under its own legitlment control, alle-
viate the wan’s of Turkish subjects
living in certain provinces irrespective
of creed or raoe.
Comptroller Btklta Favor* It? Establish*
uieut.
Washington, Jan. 13-The house
oommittee on banking and ourrenoy
oocsidered the projeot for an interna
tlonal American bank wbloh, cn re-
commendation of the Pan American
coBgrers and largely the Idea of the
late J. G. Blaine. Among the would be
lnoorporators are Cornelius Bliss and
Charles R. Flint of New York; T. Jef
ferson Ooolldge, Andrew Carnegie, J
S. Clarkson. P. D Armour and M. M.
Estes of California.
The bill puts the oapital stood at
15,000,000 and authorizes the bauk to
act as financial agent of any govern-
ment, state or municipality or oorpora
tlon, to handle bonds, etc , but bars it
from issuing notes to circulate as
money in the United States.
OomDtroiler Eikles addressed the
oommittee, slating he favored the es-
tablishment of snoh a bank nnderpro
per restrictions. Itwonldgive to the
Uolted States, he said, proper axohange
with South Amerloan repnbilos and
enable them to oompete successfully
with European merobants and manu-
facturers. South American exohange
Is new handled through London and
other European oenters and the small
savlog In exchange has often deter
mined who should do business In the
country. International banks, be
thought, should not be permitted to
i6sne circulation in the United States
and it should be nrder restrictions
that It would not be given an advantage
over other banks under government
oontrol, in case it should decide to do
all its business in the United States.
GOLD COMING.
Indian Depredation Ultima
Washington, Jan. 13-The supreme
oonrt today rendered Its first decision
in the Indian dspreda'ion claims,
which are before It In the shape of
appeals from the oonrt of claims. The
case pa sed upon today was that of J
K. Johnson, who olalms to have lo6t
property through depredations of the
Utes in Colorado and Utah, and the
opinion was handed dowa by Justice
Brewer. The opinion did not enter
Into alstraot questions involved In the
oase, but the decision was rendered
against Johnson on the grunud that be
was not a citizen of the United States
at the time the propeity was lost, which
was held to be a sntfiolent bar, not
withstanding he afterwards took ou‘
bis papers.
Presidential Nomination?.
Washington, Jan. 13—The president
today sent the following nominations
to the senate:
Jastloe John A. Marshall, to be
United Statesdlstriot j' ’eof Utah;
John W Jndd, United L #s attorney.
Utah; Nat M. Brigham, marshal of
United States, dlstriot of Utah.
The senate oommittee on judiciary
today deolded to report favorably the
nomination of Charles B. Bimonton. to
be district attorney of the western dis-
trict of TenneEsee. This appointment
was opposed by Senator Harris.
Charges were filed, bat were not re
garded sntfiolent by the judlolary com
mlttee.__
American Arrested for Treason.
Washington, Jan. 13—Senators Per-
kins and While, of Caitfornla, called
at the state department today to urge
Seoretary Olney to take each steps as
Dieter Sc Sauer.
C. JUAREZ, MEXICO.
v —Importers and Jobbers in Fine—
Groceries, Wines. Liquors, Havana
And Mexican Cigars.
DENTIST,
Dr.W.S.PYLE,
1H end 10, Mandjr Building.
First class work at reduced
prices. Can save you 25 per
cent on all Dental Work.
Gradnata of Dentistry; ten yeart'
experience.
Over Two Million Dollars Dipua ted in tbe
Holt-Treasury Yesterday,
New York, Jan. 13—The total depos-
its of gold at the sab treasury today
amounted to $1,700,000 in American
gold coin, and in addition there was
deposited at the assay office $700,000 In
gold bers at d foreign coin, a total of
$2,400,000. All the gold had been im-
ported and in no single Instance were
greenbacks taken In exchange.
Tbe presumption is various amounts
will be Qsed to pay for subscriptions
to tbe new government loan. The gold
was deposited for examination. Only
United States ooln was received at the
sab treasury and no charge made for
examination. The foreign gold ooio
and bars were reoelved at tbe assay
office subject to the usual oharge for
treatment at mintage.
Withdrawal was made today from the
nob-treasury of $500,000 lu gold ooln
Them was some contention as tc
whether the amom t taken out figured
against the treasury reserve, as It * as
claimed the gold was part of a sum de-
posited last week f r examination by a
firm of bullion brokers. It Is under-
stood the gold was finally deposited in
the bauk of Net* York
Modern oooks do not suiotlon the
n6e of any agent lint Royal Baking
Powder for quick raising purposes.
Tb« I)»wib Indian OommUslon.
Washington, Jan. 13 — Secretary
Smith todpy ordered the members of
the Dawes Indian commission, ap-
pointed to treat with the five civilized
tribes to report Immediately at Wash-
ington. They are to oonfer with the
senate and house oommlttees on In
dlan afiairs regarding their report on
their work In the Indian Territory and
recommendations far ohaogs of form
of government and allotment of lands
in severalty. Delegates from the
tribes, as well as from Intruders on
tribal lands are now In tb» city and
will present their views to congress.
Unban RioognlUan,
Washington, Jan. 13—Senator Kyle
today introduced a resolntlon asking
the president to recognize representa-
tives of the Unban insurgents whenever
they appear to have a seat of govern
ment in the Island aod tbe following
of a majority of the natlViS of that
pl sos. ______'__
Iufrlogem.nt of Fittol.
Trenton, N J ,Jan. 13—The United
States oonrt of appeals rendered a de-
cision snstrinlng the deotsion of J edge
Green, of the New Jersey olroutt oonrt,
against Walter Soott in the salt of
Robert Hoe and Go. for infringement
of patent for priotlng press attach
ment. _
l»t inn.ratio Convention Food.,
St. Louis, Jan. 13—James Oox, seo
retary of the Business Men’s League,
of St. Louie, reported reoeipts of
$47,055 this afternoon toward the Dem-
ooratlo convention fund. Tbe total
will probably exoeed sixty thousand
dollars by tomorrow evenlDg.
F.jr# For FmlSesi I’ro Tom.
Washington, Jan. 13—Republican
senators held a brief oeaons after tbe
adj mrnment of tbe senate today and
deolded that In oaee tha emergency
arise they will support Senator Frye
for president pro tern of the senate.
Perry, O. T,, Jan. 13—Since early
morning tha whole towo has been In-
tensely excited over the pnbllo sohool
question. When the schools were
opened this morning Prof. J. W.
Augustine denied admittance to col
ored children In the high sohool, or
other public sohool buildings, except
those designated months ago for the
exclusive use of oolored children. The
exception was George Washington
Alexander Webster, a boy of ten years,
in whose name mandamus proceedings
were brought three months ago, and
deolded in his favor. Prof. Angastlue
bolds the deoree of the oonrt appllel
only to this boy.
lathe high school building 500 white
children and abont fifty oolored child-
ren, two-thirds of the total Dumber lu
the town assembled. A orowd of white
men and negro men were there. White
sohool boys bad large stones In their
pookets with the Intention of nslng
them on tbe negroes as they entered
tbe building.
It is said every negro ohlld in the
olty asked for admtttanoe. Officers
esoorted four oolored children Into the
high sohool. The teaoher made a
vigorous protest against receiving
them, but the ohtldren were made to
sit down.
It is rumored that the entire sohool
board Is to be arrestel for contempt of
oonrt Tbe white citizens threaten to
tear down tha jatl If the arrests are
made.
Hilioog Ktloaed An Aaylnm,
London, Jan. 13—South African poli-
ticians bold that the banishment and
Interdiction plaoed upon the property
of the chief men of Johannesburg oan
not be tolerated. This feeling grows
oat of a Johannesburg dispatch report
lug warrants are oat for the arrest of
at least 200 pirsons, all leading men
In the mines and the principal com
panles of the stook exohange and of
the professional element. It was add-
ed among those arrested were several
Americans and Germans, including J.
S. Ourtls, an Amerloan engineer.
Considerable feeling has also been
oansed among South Africans here by
a dispatch from Cape Towu announc-
ing the arrest, at Sea Point, a suburb
of Cape Towd, of Charles Leonard,
chairman of the Transvaal National
Union, under extradition proceedings.
This is especially criticised severely
and the Globe asks why the Cape gov-
ernment ts doing President Krnger’s
work for him and refusing Britons an
asylum, which has not been denied to
political offenders of other nations.
Why tha Emperor Remained Quiet.
Paris, Jan. 13—The Figaro Bays the
only reason tha emperor of Germany,
who Is generally to sensitive to orlti-
olsm. remained apparently calm in the
faoe of the attacks of the English
press, Is that he evidently had knowl
edge of the fact that he was incapable
of doing more than sanding a telegram
expressing his sentiments on Ihe
Transvaal question, showing that In a
war with Great Britain Its ohanoes
would by no means bs in bis fa7or.
The Figaro adds, “France will not
depart from tbe position wbloh has
mede her alone the arbitrator of tbe
peace of the world. She will Dot In-
terfere between England and Ger-
many."
A pointer: The best oooks and
teachers of cookery, with whom suo
oess is Imperative, nse Royal BaklDg
Powder. _
Truavul A D'etre.
Paris, Jan 13—The Temps publish-
ed an Interview with a Transvaal repre
seutatlve, Herr Blookland,ln wbloh he
said the situation of efFalrs oonoernlng
the Transvaal is now satisfactory and
everything will end well. Transvaal,
he said, had fnlly exempted the conven-
tion of 1885 and had not dreamed of
denouncing it. The term “British
suzerainty" In connection with Trans
vaal, be thought, is misapplied, as
Great Britian only had the right to
veto, within six months, the conven-
tions oonoluled by Transvaal with
other powers wbloh might be regarded
as dangerous to British Interests,
la the Q :e«n Alive.
Washington, Jan. 13—The Japanese
legation has reoelved no advices con-
cerning the report that the Queen of
Corea, said to have been murdered at
tha recent nprlslt g, is In fact alive and
well. This entire transaction,however,
has been shrouded In so much mystery
that officials here would not be ear
prised at any developments. In 1882
the same queen was reported killed
and all details of the atroolty were
given to the world, but after a year of
mourning her majesty returned to the
capital amid greet rejoicing.
Uniting Pwaiaiir llt'ia.
Chicago, Jan. 13—There Is tronble
ahead for tbe Union Paoiflo, Den-
ver & Golf railroad in Its fight agalnat
the Atohison road. It today oarrled
the war deeper in passenger rates, re-
dnolng those from Denver to Gbtoago
An Operator Arrn'id at TdnldkO Who he*
Been Operating In tbe West.
Denver, Jan. 13—Sheriff W. W.
Painter, of Guthrie, Oklahoma, arrived
In the olty this morning with a requisi-
tion from the governor of Oklahoma
for the extradition of Frank Olive, a
well known resident of Triutdsd, on
the oharge of pacslng worthless paper,
Olive la now held at Trlnldsd where he
was arrested Saturday night. The re
qnlsltlon papers were referred to the
attorney general’s office for approve!
and Assistant At’orney Gareral Reed
refused to approve the papers on the
ground of several Informalities. It is
probable the papers will be oorreoted
by telegraph and that the extradition
will be granted.
Olive Is eupp:s9d to be one of a gang
which has been operating in fraudu-
lent banks and disposing of worthless
drafts In Iowa, Kansas and Colorado
and Ok'ahoma The g«ng ts said to
consist of William Royoe, George El-
wood, Oilve and a woman now held In
Dodgi City, Kansas. Royce Is now
strvlcg a term of th ee years In the
penitentiary on on» of rive oennts
against him, and as soon ss tho term
expires ths authorities will pnsh tbe
other four. The biggest work of the
gang is said to have bean done in Kan-
sas and over $100,000 worth of drafts is
said to have been floated.
TO THE NORTH POLE.
Prof. Andres to Start in a Halloou Daring
the Coming Hammer,
Stockholm, Jan, 13—The foreign
ministry of Sweden has sent notloe to
KosbIb, Denmark, Great Britain and
the United States with reference to the
projected balloon voyage to the north
pole of Prof. S. A. Andree, asking the
oo operation of countries whose terri-
tories have coasts on the polar seas
and have also asked these countries to
distribute thousands of leaflets asking
for information from anyone who may
ohance to seoure it, of the time tbe
balloon is seen, and the direction of
tbe wind at the time.
Prof. Andree has given many years of
study and experiment to the subject,
and has become an expert balloonist
himself. He read a paper on tbe plan
to roach the north pole by balloon be-
fore tbe gjograpbioal oongress lest
summer, but received little enoourage
meat. The Sweedish academy of
science and the Sweedlsh society of
anthropology and geology have reoom-
mended Prof. Andree and promised to
bear a share of the expense. KlDg
Osoar, of SweedeD, has also subscribed
a sum of money for tbe expedition
which Prof. Andree hopes to have
itarted sometime In the summer of
st a
18'1
XL
tThe mors certain way to have your
cake and blsontt of the best Is to use
the Royal Baking Powder.
Agatiut th» Pnllm&u Compauy.
Philadelphia,Jan. 13-Judge Butler,
In the United States olroult court to-
day, rendered a decision in the case cf
tbe Central Transportation company
against the Pallman Palace Car com-
pany, dismissing the exceptions of the
latter and awarding $2,552,000 to tbe
Central oompany. The Central Trans
portatlon oempany was absorbed by
the Pullman oompany in 1885 and the
suit was instituted to recover payments
to the amount of over $2,000,000, al-
leged to be due.
It «u Only ft Torpedo.
Havana, Jan. 13 —Quite a commotion
was caused here last night by-a report
that tbe Insurgents were approaching
Havana. The news spread with great
rapidity and there was oonstderable
relief among Spanish anthorltles when
It was discovered the alarming report
grew oat of the explosion of an Im-
mense torpedo in the village of Vedado,
near this olty,
l’awtn Sent«no,il to Eight Ytin,
Leadville, Colo , Jan. 13—Thomas
Powers, found guilty of voluntary man-
slaughter for killing Patrlok T. Ken
nedy last October, was eenteuoed to-
day to eight years in tbe penitentiary.
This was tbe full extent of the law, and
Judge Owers in pronouncing sentence,
told Powers he had been delt with
very leniently by the jury.
Awarded
Highest Honors—World’s Fair,
DK
vWtfi
w CREAM
BAKING
POWDffi
MOST PERFECT MADE.
A pure Grape Cream of Tartar Powder. Free
from Ammonia, Alum or any other adulterant
40 YEARS THE STANDARD.
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El Paso International Daily Times (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. SIXTEENTH YEAR, No. 12, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 14, 1896, newspaper, January 14, 1896; El Paso, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth540771/m1/1/: accessed May 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.