El Paso International Daily Times. (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. Tenth Year, No. 134, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 5, 1890 Page: 6 of 8
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El Paso Times, Thursday June 5 1890
*V)t
Campbell Real
Estate
Co.
' ljut* everywhere, in all parts et the city, at prices to unit th<- tim**.
j' * ■
Newman, Russell and Coles. Agents.
Blip
#
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Tla Short Li e to
ChcHvfo
•uis,
\K York
and
K Mab
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v nd
lit
M. H AMPS' 'N
) ?rh r*t r4-ih\
l»«DV«r. C»il"fafio
FBI A
Double Breech-loader
Breech-loaders from $4 to $50.
Breech-loading Rifles, $2.65 to $13.
feff-Cocking Revolvers, nickel-plated, '52.
Wegua'lnteeyou will save 25 per cent, by seeing
nr 60-page Illustrated Cataligue before buying.
Send fccent stamp for catalogue.
GRIFFITH & SEMPLE,
«»SW.Maln8u, LOUISVILLE. KV,
CAUTION
Take
W. t>. Dont
price are «i
ftottom. If the dealq
1 direct to factory
shoes nnlesa
glM' name and
I tamped on the
If the dealer cannot supply yon,
" * ' " " , eaclMtlag adTirUted
W. L. DOUGLAS
$3 SHOE GENTLEMEN.
Fine Calf, Heavy Laced drain and Creed*
moor Waterproof.
Best In the world. Examine his
Bff.00 GENUINE HAND-SEWED HHOl
•4.00 HAND-SEWED WELT SHOE.
>3.50 POLICE ANI) FARMERS' SHOE.
12.50 EXTRA VALUE CALF SHOE.
i» WORK I NO MEN'S SHOES.
~ 75 BOYS' SCHOOL SHOES,
Congress, Button and Lace.
•3 & $2 SHOES uGSIa.
SI.75 SHOE FOR MISSES.
Beet Material. Beat Style. Best Fitting.
W. L. Douclas, Brockton, Blaaa. Sold by
|a.2B & ,..
8.00 and SI.
All nnde In <
Of. Ai«<ao«ie.r L
IVATIVf WINE
% Jdreet I'
Wh-.ir
<aUne»
©v»
JKA/i
ft
■* I ui
Pw I'Kt*
"1H> ft * fr
IF YOV HAVB ANY
To Mil remember
We Pay tin Highest Price
If yoo want to bay we can furnish yon
%T PRICJEH THAT WILL 8URPRI8B
yoc
liOTTB BOUBB FUBNI8HIN© STORE
76 South Oregon
Charged with Pa'-if J is;; a Man Red.'
r . ,:i Gratton, a iter, was charged
if.'' «Jr.:;tiee Kava.: :li at L. .'g I.l'ind
Or. , L. i.. with th:- - - 13 a ]>: ' of > 1 it
over the h?a<l and 1.. t.l N'. .Los Iiad-
line, completely spoking the hitter's j)er-
sonil appearance for the time being:.
Gr.itton was employed painting a houso
in Dutch Kills. He had placed a twen-
ty-five foot ladder against Cedline'a
house, which stood within tliree feet of
the building which he was wording on
Redline ordered him dbwn. and tc
hasten the painter's movements he pulled
at the foot of the ladder with at hoe.
Gratton is nearsighted, and, fearing thai
Redline would upset the ladder, he up-
set his bucket of red paint. The paint
struck Redline on the head and made
him look like an Indian. He ran shout-
ting down the street, followed by a
crowd which quickly gathered. He ran
into a barber shop, where his appearance
caused a panic among the patrons of the
place. Some took the paint for blood
and shouted for the police. Redline's
hair had ti> be shaved off to the scalp.—
Philadelphia Ledger.
Germans Leaving Russia.
According'to our Odessa correspond-
ent upwards of ten thousand German
families of the colonial agriculturist
class have, during the last two years,
emigrated from southern Russia to
America. The facility •with which these
emigrants obtain foreign passports from
the provincial authorities appears in it-
self to manifest a desire on the part of
the government to be rid of the German
colonists. The comparatively few Ger-
mans who of late years have sought
Russian naturalization have been re-
fuse;! legitimation. The power and in-
fluence of the landed nobility, which
have revived under the Tolstoi reforms,
promise anything but an
future for (tie Gorman agricultural
onies of
eral i-uri;.
is at ]>,•<•.•
ruinous...
their hoi
col-
southern Russia. A more gen-
eration of the German colonists
"lit only retarded by the utterly
;/Vices just now obtainable for
lings.—London News.
Novel Application of the Camera.
A graphic history of the new library
building at Washington is being pre-
pared. At regular intervals, from the
top of the building, occupied by the
superintending architect and his force of
draftsmen, a camera is turned upon the
work, which at present consists only of
a great hole dug out in the square east of
the Capitol grounds.
•The resulting picture shows every de-
tail of the condition of the work, the
height of the foundation wall, (he piles
of material 011 hand, etc. , It is proposed
to file tiiese photographs away, properly
labeled in such form that they can be
produced il any question tlrisesau to what
was done or was not done at any stage of
the work.—Carpentry and Building.
Mausoleums.
An innovation which will doubtless
give rise to a considerable amount of dis-.
cussion is that of heating mausoleums.
1'iii; e of the late Emperor Frederick of
Germany at I'otsdaia, and of his father-
in-law, the late prince consort, at Wind-
sor, are both being fitted with an elab-
orate t ":'le:u of radiators and steampipes.
This. -iVi-ver, is a fashion which is not
iikuly to ','ccome jiopular. For the num-
ber of j.;; sons who can afford to main-
tain steam engines and boilers for the
purpose of keeping their family tomb
warm is necessarily limitefl.—New York
Telegram.
June.
All May there baa been whispering in the trees]
Of changes that would make this old world new;
Sweet rumors—brought by birds who flutter
through
The year ahead of summer—that tho breeze
Would kiss the buds to odorous mysteries
Of mazy petals and undreamed of hue.
Lo! as June comes (the gossip birds spoke fame!)
At every step great roses brush her icneea.
June is a maid whose virgin eyes shine clear
With truth and innocence: who sees her knows
She is nor child nor woman, yet so near
To both that each might claim the grace she
shows.
Most like her dearest flower she doth appear,
A half unfolded, thirty petaled rose.
—Ladies' Home Journal.
Death in the Desert.
It has just come to light that a party
of Chinese, who attempted to Bmuggle
themselves into the United Statos from
lower California, got lost on the desert
and had a terrible experience, one of the
party dying of thir-fc and exposure. They
found the frontier so closely guarded
that they stole a march toward the east-
ward and got into the desert. Here they
got lost and wandered aimlessly around
for several days, suffering unutterable
agonies.
One of the Mongolians was a youth of
some 14 years. He gave out under the
terrible suffering and became crazy. In
his ravings he imagined the blistering
sands were limpid water and eagerly
filled his parched mouth with the burn-
ing particles. This only added to his
horrors, and pretty soon he lay down to
die, his* companions being in too pitiful
a condition to render him any assistance.
Here they heaped a pile of sand upon
him and left him alone to sleep his last
long slumber, while they, with swollen
tongue i, aching limbs and heavy hearts,
continued their aimless wanderings-
lost in a trackless desert. It is asserted
that they at last reached the railroad and
soon reached Los Angeles, minus e\ ery-
tliing they had attempted to bring mto
the country except the clothes upon
their backs. They had thrown away the
bundles containing the many things the
Chinese hold dear, all of which mark
their track upon the waste of sands.
As the almond eyed ones liavo a sys-
tem of spreading information among
them : Ives, it is quite likely this terrible
experience will prevent any more of
them attempting to invade tho United
States via the desert route.—San Diego
Union.
A Valuable Collection of Coins.
Loring G. Parmalee, of Boston and a
former resident of Wilmington, Vt., has
sold his valuable and unique collection
of American coins to New York persons,
who arc to sell them at public auction.
The collection comprises -alx'rat tlUOO
pieces, many of which are uncirculated,
and is thought thy most valuable single
collection of United States coinage in
the world,' aijd is valued at $75,000. !Mr.
Parma-lee lias been about twenty yienra
acquiring, this collection, which includes
the rare )WJ4 dollar, for which he paid
$75(1, though it has since nearly doubled
in value, and a specimen of every gold
coin from 1795 down to the present date,
the best, assortment known. Some of the
rare pieces of colonial coinage in the
cabinet are valued as high as $1,000 each.
An unsuccessful effort was made to get
these coins for the government, it being
a more nearly complete collection than
the one in the Philadelphia Mint.—Cor.
Springfield Republican.
The money spent for fetes, carriage
hire, printing and •'indemnities," at the
Hotel de Villa in Paris is said to be just
Ave times that of the days of the em-
pire. The number of sinecures has been
nearly trebled to find places for friends
of the higher officers. The last I Kill of
the Hotel de Villa was to cost 140,000
francs, and the expenditures being really
19,000 f nines less the surplus was divided
up among the employes. An investiga-
tion may soon be expected.
The oddest proposition made for a
long time is that of a man at Big Sandy
Gap, in the widest part of Kentucky. A
rUlroad is building in that country and
one Peter Kidd offers $500 cash for the
,-pnvilegp of covering thp.first engitu
cars that get into tnat plafcewrth a
Vas for twenty-four hours and of charg
ing twenty-five cents admission to the
mountaineers and their families for en-
tering the tent
A Oreat I'rairle Fire.
A tremendous prairie fire was raging
for several days in the Willow creek
district. It started about Eighteen Mile
lake and hurried north and south to the
Old Man's river, and to the McLeod
trail west and the Blaekfoot trail east.
The New Oxley ranch people were fight-
ing the fire with desperation, but the
wind was so strong they could do noth-
ing. The fire caught the Oxley ranch
outfit while they were crossing Willow
creek with some 8,000 head of cattle to
summer grazing, scattering the cattle
all over the country. A district fifty to
sixty miles north and south and twenty
to thirty miles east and west lias been
burned over. Experienced cattlemen
say it was as bad a prairie fire as they
have ever seen.—Calvary Herald.
* " |>
In a blacksmith's shop at Andlem,
h ayrugrin has built a nest otf a
ledge close to where the horses are slio&, '
and is now sitting upon its eggs. Neither
the din of the hammer noi the flying
sparks from the anvil appear to disturb
the bird.
SMOKERS.
I.ooh at These Prices on Vera Cruz an*
Havana Cigars.
"LA NACIONAL," F. RENDON & Co
"Wells Fargo," tin foil and rings, 25 in a box $ 2.50 per 100
"Principes,' large size, 50 in a box 2.75 per 100
"Obsequios," tin foil and rings, 50 in a box
"Emperadores." tinfoil and rings, 25 in a box
<<
3.75 per 100
10.00 per loo
LA PRUEBA," R. Balsa Hnos.
"Victorias de Colon," with rings, 50 in a box $5.00 per •«*
"LA UNION," Jose Fuentes..
"Wells Fargo," tinfoil and rings, 25 in a box $2.50 per iw
"Victorias de Colon," with rings, 50 in a box 4.50 per 10c
"Regalia Espartero," large size, 50 in a box 3.50 per 100
"Regaliade Mexico," tinfoil and rings 25 in box 6.00 per 100
"Regalia Imperial," latge size, 50 in a box 3 25 per 10c
"Alfonsinos," tinfoil and rings 25 in a box 6,50 per io«
"El Valle Nacional," E. Gabarrot & Co.
»
"Victorias de Colon," with rings, 50in a box $4.50 per 10c
"Porfiristas." tinfoil and rings, 50 in a box 4.00 per 10c
"Boquets," goldfoil and rings, 25 in a box 5.00 per 10©
"Regalia Mexico," goldfoil and rings, 25 in a box 6.25 per 10c
"La Incognita," Imported Direct From'
Havana.
"Boquets," Flor Extra, with rings, 50 in a box #5.00 per lot
"Imperiales," Flor extra fina, rings' 50 in a box 7.50 per toc
^ Fresh goods, fall size, full weight, quick sales and smaj
profits. V" i;,
HCst* We are in the Cigar Business. Terms spot cash U,
S. currency. No book accounts at above prices.
mh
A fall Hne of the above cigars also in stock at'El Paso and
San Diego stores, at proportionate low prices;' U. s. dutv
added.y
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First < las
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Central
L OF EL PASO THIS
PASSENGER ELEVATOR,
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SAM ECKER. Propriety.
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the leading
only aaie
orWhi^L
prescribe it and ieel
la recommending It
nr« «oij *7 sue in rccommt
THt£w*<C»tmnnOo. to all traiferere.
A. J. STONEB, If. D,
Decatur. IIjU
OTOIPWIDBN*
assay office;,
BBCKHAKT * nCKBLMAXK,
Agents forJOre BWppera.
Gold and 81lTer Bullies reflaed and aasayed
TUaphraeM. resMUe Box m,
XL PASO,
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El Paso International Daily Times. (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. Tenth Year, No. 134, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 5, 1890, newspaper, June 5, 1890; El Paso, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth460292/m1/6/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.