El Paso Daily Herald. (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 85, Ed. 1 Friday, April 7, 1899 Page: 3 of 8
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EL PASO DAILY HERALD FRIDAY APRIL 7 1899.
3
A TRUE HOME
All the stock owned bv San Antonio citizens
Largest Brewery in the South
Last year's output 250000 kegs more than any other brewery south of
tSt. Louis. The cause of this is the excellent quality o! the beer produced.
Telephone 122.
H. C. MURRAY
..J K McGIBBON
Jt. Paso Street Opera ou Block.
ISTew and Second-lifLTicl ZFiirnitrrre
STOVES ST. CL- I STEEL RANGES CROCKERY LAMPS.
GLASSWARE SIT.
Ref rigeratoi s Cheap in Order to Close Out.
S3HE3LTOM
Gives the
FOR HOUSEHOLD GOODS AND SELLS
AT THE LOWEST.
Try Him - - - 116 Oregon Street.
The Star Livery Feed & Sale Stables
vomer West Ovrland ana Santa We Sreta.
-THE ONL.i MORGUE IN THE CITY.-
Emerson
TJUIDEE.
26 EI Paso St.
Hearse and Carrlajr' Furnished.
Link Restaurant
215 E31 Paso Street.
A First-Class Short Order House.
4
Ototi Dav and. !Nig:b.t.
WHITE HOUSE RESTAURANT.
BEST OF SHORT ORDER AT ALL HOURS.
For Ladles and Gentlemen. - Family Patronage Solicited.
Turkey or Chicken Dinner Every Sunday H cc
REGULAR MEALS J IOC.
Board by the week S3. Commutation Tickets $5.25 for $5.00.
Corner of San Antonio and Utah sts. OLIVER PE.COrr Prop
'V.To Lovers Of
FINEJIHINA
You will enjoy yourself by looking
at the beautiful line of Fine China
we just had in.
Come and see them.-aa
CHINA PALACE
A. ST0LAR0FF Prop.
211-
San Antonio
Street.
Santa Fe House.
MRS. AXXIE WILLIAMS Prop.
Fine Table Board. Booms Neatly
Furnished. Conveniently Located.
Prices Reasonable.
Corner Chlbuabua & Sonora Streets
EL PASO. TEXAS.
INDUSTRY.
J. W. MAGOFFIN Agent.
THE REMINGTON
Standard Typewriter.
MERCHANT & MANNING
State Sealers Dallas Texas.
Local Dealer
Herald Office
7ti-
Highest Price
Phone 92. J. CALDWELL Prop
Caldwell Undertating Co.
305 S. El Paso Street
The Leading undertakers
Phones 197 ana 82.
CALL8 ANSWERED DAY OR NIQH7
J. E.5NAQLEY. Manager.
& Berrien
Phones 71 68Z& 196.
Wagon and Carriage Maker.
Horseshoeing & Blacksmith-
ing of all kinds.
Builder of the three wheel carriage
my own patent which received Diplo-
ma and Medal at World's Fair.
G. ROUY
111 West Overland Street.
The best Mexican and Havana cigars
are made by the El Paso Clear Mfg
Co.
Take Your Choice
from bur delicious assortment of fine confec-
tionery they will be found dainty and
tempting. Our chocolates and caramels
nut candles bon-bons mrsh-mallows and
taffys will be found especially toothsome.
Our confections are all made from the purest
Ingredients ana are roncoctea oy artists in
their trade.
At ROGER'S
NEXT TO POST-OFFICE.
OUR PRICES ARE RIGHT.
Doctors Disagree
Sometimes over points in professional
practice but they will agree that we
put up and compound their prescrip-
tions with more care and with the best
and freshest drugs that can be dis-
pensed anywhere. Vou will always
find us reliable and accurate in this
department of our business. Our stock
ol drugs proprietary medicines and
toilet articles are of the best.
FRED. SCHAEFER
The Druggist.
-WEBB'S I
You will always find
the latest books.
"CYRANO DE BERGERAC
"THE GADFLY" CD
"CASTLE IXN"
"ADVENTURES OF FRANCOIS"
"THE DAYS WORK"
"RED ROCK"
"PAN MICHAEL"-
"A DESERT DRAMA"? '
"GHOSTS 1 HAVE MET"
' "PEEPS AT PEOPLE"
-AT-
M. H. WEBB'S
fa C
220 San Antonio St.
OFFICE:
.NO. 3 TAYS BLOCK....
SELAJVEOJST
Assay and Chemical
Laboratories
Corner of Stanton and St. Louis streets
P. O. Box 97 El Paao Texas
Umpire and control assays .a speci
Agents for ore shippers.
City Upholstering House....
AND
Carpet Cleaning Establishment.
Curtain Shades and Mattresses made. All
lnda of Furniture repaired. Satisfactory
worlc guaranteed.
ERNST BESSELMANN. Prop.
305 E. Overland St.. near new Fire Dept.
Pacific Coast Limited.
Beginning- on Wednesday March
23th. the Pacific Coast Limited will
run but once per week passing El Pa-
so east bound March 28 April 5 12
19 acd 26 and May 3 when it will be
discontinued.
Westbound: Once per week pass-
ing El Paso on Thursdays March 30th
April C. 13 20 and 28 when it will be
discontinued
B. F. Darbyshire
S. W. F. & P. A. T. & P. Ry.
We stamp your name in gold letters
on pocketbooks card and letter cases
bill-books memorandums diaries lap
tablets traveling sets -valises and
chatelaine bags. Herald Job Print-ingJDepartment.
COM R i fiM'l. '"Wi
Neighbor-
hood Notes.
Texas.
Mrs. L. Wllkey suicided at Austin.
A mad doe: ws killed at Waxahachie
a few days ago.
A portion of the jaw of a mastodon
was dug up at Fort Worth.
Henry Haynes had his left foot badly
crushed by a train at Clarksville.
Mrs. H. U. Canfield a well known
temperance worker died at Dallas.
The Brown gin and contents at
Brownwood were destroyed by fire.
The 8900 residence of William
Vaugban at Gainesville was destroyed
by fire.
An old colored man named J. Vinson
was struck by a train at Greenville and
instantly killed.
The store of Kinsella & Wilson at
Forney was burglarized and thirty
pairs of shoe3 taken.
Fort Worth has been sprinkling
some streets with petroleum and it is
pronounced a success.
The barn of Wm Toliver burned at
Foney together with a large quantity
of feed and four horses.
A. A Spangler has been indicted at
Henrietta charged with tne Killing oi
Mrs. S. E. Whitesides.
Temple is to have a mill with a ca-
pacity of 200 barrels of flour per day
and 100 barrels of meal.
Collin county school teacher have or
ganized a literary association with
headquarters at McKinney.
Little Addle Maddex wbo had an
eye injured at Waxahachie by a knife
CARTER H. HARRISON.
Who has been elected for second term as mayor of Chicago.
had the injured optic removed.
John L.ovett a farmer near Midlo-
thian lost his barn three horses and a
large quantity of wheat corn and oats
by tire.
The state intercollegiate oratorical
contest will take place at the
agricultural and mechanical college
April 21.
Rsv. C. P. Bridewell of Fort Worth
has accepted the call tendered him by
the First Presbyterian church of At-
lanta Ga.
The farmers are well up with their
work in the Skidmore section and
most of them have watermelons up and
corn several inches high.
Yoakum gardeners have already be-
gun to supply the local market with
strawberries and a few early vegeta-
bles such as radishes lettuce etc.
Two farmers arrived at Waxahachie
a few days ago with eight bales of cot-
ton which they said had been picked
since the first snow of the past winter.
New Mexico.
The Tularosa Democrat has made its
appearance.
Socorro elected the entire republican
ticket Tuesday last.
Raton elected the entire republican
ticket on Tuesday last.
East Las Vegas elected the citizen "s
union ticket headed by Henry Coora
for mayor.
Lately there was pilgrimage to Cha-
mita from Santa Fe attended by twenty
priests from that part of the territo-
ry. H. O. Eureum of Socorro has been
appointed warden of the penitentiary
of New Mexico and will take charge
shortly.
Frank Otis will open a butcher shop
at Tularosa. He will have an ice house
built and will soon be prepared to
handle ice.
A number of burglaries have lately
taken place at Gallup and they are
laid to a lot of hobDS that are laying
around there.
Assistant Superintendent J. W.
Prough of construction at ths new
copitol Santa Fe was struck by paral-
ysis a few days ago on the capitol
grounds.
Eight wagons loaded with merchan-
dise came In from Santa Fe yesterday.
Part of the goods were delivered to
Arthur. L Finch and part to the Cochi-
ti Store company. Bland llcral.
Testimony was heard in the divorce
suit of Isaac vs. Isaac and u divorce
granted. A decree of dlvorco was
granted In the case of 1'ortigllatl vs.
Portighati. Albuquerque Citizen.
At a meeting of Albuquerque Typo-
graphical Union No. 304 the following
members were elected for the ensuing
six months: President G. W. Stubbs;
vice president. H. B. Wynkoop; secre
tary-treasurer I. N. Williamson; exe-
cutive committee Richard Powers
James Blaok and Gerhardt Reul; ser-
ge ant-at-arms Arthur Webster.
Township No. 16 south range 9 east
Mew Mexican meridian will be filed in
the Las Cruces land office on the 30th
day of April. This township lies north
west of the town ot Aiamogorno uiero
county.
The ODtlc savs: The McNew mur
der case is set for trial in Grant coun
ty on the third Monday in April. The
cases against Lee and Gililland will
come up latter probably not before the
fall term.
The democrats elected the city
ticket in Santa Fe Tuesday headed by
J. H. Sloan for mayor. Only 890 votes
were cast. There was a split in the
republican party which accounts for
their defeat.
It is reported that the Sisters of Lo-
retto may leave Mora owing to lack of
means for their support. Father Pi-
card made a special plea from the pul-
pit for aiding them as their removal
means the closing of the school.
One whohas visited Tularosa during
the fruit season and gone into the
peach and apple orchard and grape
vineyards is at once convinced that no
where does fruit grow and mature bet-
ter than here. Tularosa Democrat.
At Albuquerque on Tuesday the
democratic city ticket was elected as
follows: O. N Marron mayor; C. W.
Medler clerk; R. E. Putney treasur
er. The democrats also elected one
alderman and one school trustee in the
city.
Word has been received in this city
from Chama to tha effect that the first
clean-up has been made on the Nettle-
ton dredge which is working on the
Chama river placers with results
which exceeded the most sanguine ex
pectations of the proprietors. Santa
Fe New Mexican.
The Tularosa Democrat says: 'A
railroad to carry our resources of
mineral stock and fruit will Boon be
completed to Tularosa and owners of
orchards -and gardens this year can
j find a ready market in El Paso loa all
I surplus fruits and products. The
situation and location of Tularosa with
reference to the lay of the country
building material mineral fanit and
stock raising is all that eould be ask-
ed to make a good substantial town.
Near the town is a natural reservoir
; site and water sufficient to irrigate
several thousand acres of land could be
obtained. The soil is fertile and
' productive and will grow alfalfa
vegetables and cereals."
Arizona.
A well is being dug baok of the new
Hough dairy to supply the Doner witn
water.
Geo. Schornick's orange grove south
of Mesa is blossoming out in full and
the air for half a mile around is filled
with fragrance.
Roy Lamb bought 6000 pounds of
steel from the stamping mill of IrOlQ
ffeld at Mesa from where he shipped it
to the Phoenix iron works.
A shoemaker by the name of Jezyk
suicided at Prescott a few days ago by
climbing a tree fastening a rope to the
same and around his neck and jumping
out.
Charles H. Rubling a -grocer who
disappeared from Phoenix about a
month aorn h an returned. He States
that he was crazy over his business
affairs.
The little three-year-old child of Mr.
and Mrs. E. W. Morgan of Mesa
probed its eye with a pen-knife but ; it
Is believed that loss of eyesight win
not result.
Jack Ford the foreman on H. C
Yaeger's sheep camp about seven
miles north of the Phoenix mine was
murdered on Monday last by a herder
named Jim Daniels.
Mrs. J. H. Vincent wife of Bishop
Vincent of the M. E. church has lately
returned east alter spending a delight
ful winter in the Salt River valley as a
guest of her sister Mrs. Dusenburg.
A 6tring of ten wagons rolled into
Corsicana recently from the north part
of Navarro county containing the fol
lowing products: Thlrty-hve bales of
cotton 100 dozen eggs 10 dozen chick
ens 25 bushels of black-eyed peas and
30 bushels of onions.
The reclamation of lands to agricul
ture has this in its favor above that of
mining. Mines must sooner or later
be worked out. The farm if properly
cultivated ani cared for increases in
value as the years came and go hence
a farming community is the most
stable and permanent of any other of
the industrial class. Tucson btar.
The president has signed an exclusive
ni-ilpr BRtt.incr aside a pouare mile nf
land in Truxton Canyon live miles east
of Hackberry as a permanent reserva
tion. This reserve is to De used as a
site for an Indian industrial school for
the HualaDai Indians for which pur
pose an appropriation of $60000 was
made at the last session oi congress.
Indian Agent Ewing will soon be call-
ing for bids for the construction of
these buildings. Mineral Wealth.
Clifton is at present over run with
mining men who are here examining
copper properties says the Clifton cor
respondent of the Soiomonvuie bulle-
tin. Among them are Senator Baker
Geo. Elliott Capt. Tlbbey Messrs.
Merrill Landridge and. Palmer. These
men represent the Copper King com-
pany. Also Mr. Wisher and three
experts are here examining J. F'
Smart's copper mine with a view of
purchasing.
The Globe correspondent of the
Phoenix Herald says: You had aa
well try to whistle Schubert's serenade
properly with a bull dog hanging to
your coat tail as to be a Christian in
Globe with its 175 jackasses that toil
not; its 1500 tomcats that sleep not and
its 4000 chickens that lay not. but only
seem to be created to fill the locg days
with discord and the nights with pan-
demonium. These things may seem
unimportant but they do not operate
like fluid extract of celery on the
nerves of well regulated strangers who
are seeking a somber asylum from the
cares of a larger city."
No man need go unemployed in
Globe as the present time. But the
specific microbe of common oussednesa
has such a hold on part of the popula-
slon that the beer keg brigade forma
about as big a crowd as the little army
with their dinner buckets and the for-
mer crowd seems to be gaining recruits
every day. Nibsey Ben brook has ham-
mered away on them in vain and the
Salvation Army gave them up in des-
pair. Without money without credit
without manners without the recollec-
tion that they were all born and -raised
by ladies they line the side walk or
cluster in the middle thereof unmind-
ful of the fact that women and chil-
dren are supposed to have a few rights
left. Correspondence Phoenix Her-
ald. The Tucson Citizen is in receipt of a
dispatch to the effect that there waa
trouble with the Yuma Indians. It
says: "lne dispatch was somewnat
obscure. It simply stated that there
was trouble. Tne facts are that the
Yuma Iudians were dissatisfied some
what during the epidemic of measles
which broke out and spread among
the pupils of the Indian school. They
withdrew their children- from the
school and sometime ago a portion of
the school building was burned. The
origin of the fire was never discovered
and it is supposed to have been tne
work of the Indians who thought the
only way to stop the disease was to
burn down the institution where it was
confined. Mulford Windsor who was
until recently editor of the Yuma Sun
is in Tucson today and he says that
there waa no trouble with the Yumaa
as far as he knew.
Mexico.
Repeated shocks of earthquake have
recently been felt at Zibuatanejo Gue
rrero.
The Chihuahua and Pacific R. R. in
a few days will be running trains to Pe-
dernales.
The scorpions have come out of their
winter quarters at Durango and sever-
al persons have been bitten by them
particularly children.
Near the United States border of
Lower California Sr. Raile of the Ru
rales was killed by the savage Indiana.
A person who was with him succeded
in escaping.
The Two Republics says that on and
after the first of April postal carda
will be sold at one cent for the federal
district and two cents for the interior
of the republic instead of two or three
cents as heretofore. Postage on letters
in the city of Mexico -will be two cent a
Instead of four. There is also a reduct-
ion in registered letters.
American hardware is securing a
foothold in Mexico of no slight im-
portance. During the past month
orders have been placed for the first
time for at. Louis cutlery. This in a
country where the hardware business
la controlled by Germans is a distinct
recognition of better prices and better
goods obtainable in the states. Ex-
change. A well known English resident of
the city of Mexico states that the Mrs.
Martin Black who ia supposed to have
committed suicide owing to her rela-
tions with F. Girard Mitchell is a
niece of the duke of Portland. He
further states that she traced her des-
cent direct from the royal house of
Stewarts. The Los Angeles papera
stated that she had heirlooms of Mary
Queen of Scots.
A party telegraphed to Mr Agustln
rchulze at his hacienda at Santa Ma-
Sia. for 4000 hectoliters of corn C. O.
D. The corn was shipped as per order
and the consignee received it and in-
mediately proceeded to -sell a portion
to a man named Diaz Conti who at
once paid for his purchase. Schulze
appeared two days later at the house of
his debtor and not being able to effect
a settlement accused him of fraud be-
fore the judgeo of the Second juz-
gado and also suspended the .shipping
of more corn and refused to deliver the
amount already in the city which re-
mains on deposit in the Santiago cus-
tom house.
The Vidrio-Galindo affair at Jalisco
continues to attract attention. The
names of the other accomplices in the
killing of Gallndo are Manuel Juan
Susano Enrique and Genaro all broth-
ers of the chief assassin. According to
Aceves Gallndo a nephew of the mur-
dered man he (Aceves) on hearing the
challenge to come out hastened to the
nearest corner where he was received
with a shower of bullets one of which
struck him. He turned about just in
time to see his uncle fall at the hands
of Genaro and Enrique Vidrio. Manuel
Juan and Susnno are prisoners but
deny participation in the affair but
there are ' witnesses wbo affirm that
they saw them take a part in the shoot-
ing. Pure Hygienic Ice.
Made from distilled water. Ask
your family-physician or druggist as to
purity and healthfulness of our ice.
Telephone No. 14.
El. Paso Ice & Refrigerator Co.
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Slater, H. D. El Paso Daily Herald. (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 85, Ed. 1 Friday, April 7, 1899, newspaper, April 7, 1899; El Paso, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth297080/m1/3/?q=alien+smuggler: accessed June 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .