El Paso Times. (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. NINTH YEAR, No. 102, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 24, 1889 Page: 4 of 8
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hook3-ox-ahs MAIL *att*b.
T11UW PUBLISH UNO COMPANY.
Publishers. *'
i. ■ ). bamh.to» .
ltj 4.x S. Habi
. .Pmtttet
. .Treasurer
Tht# paper 1b kept on file and advertising rates
Biay be ascertained at the office of the American
Niwep&pcr Pnblieherg' Association, 104 TtimpH)
'ourt. New York City.
«V»i40KlPT10*> HA'I K>S.
OAlL*.
JouvuMid tn.tne city, per week— • ceute
ipayablb ivskt satubi3at to CARHlSn.j
DAILY—BY MAIL.
INVARIABLY IS. ADYANCi.
Ji.e year..... 0u
sw months................. 50t>
Oue month 1 011
All papers discontinued at the expiration of the
time paid for.
OCH CUKCdUATlON.
dtaiaiB covering thoroughly Uie local Held, the
tin as is dilxvebed daily sby cabbibbs in the
fallowing towns at the hour named ON THE DA\
OPi PUBLICATION:
'Paso del Norte. ...6am
Ocmlrg.... . P m LordBbnrg 6pm
Silver City ........7pm Kingston 10 p m
L««(.races.. Warn Whiteoans...... 4pai
We reach also ON DAY OF PUBLICATION the
allowing places:
IX NSW KKXHiO
Anthony....... ... .Dona Ana....... fort Seidell
giacor. Lake Valley,.... San Marclal
gngle Socorro.
IK ARIZONA
aowie Wilcox Nogales
Benson ..Uuachuca ...Duncan
Tucson. Carlisle. Clifton
in TSXAS.
Yeieta. ........ ...Camp Bice Socorro
San Ella. *io .Fort Hancock... Sierra Blanca
£ort LaYit ..Marfa,.......... ..Van Horn
>td we circulate throughout Mexico.3
NO charge FOB POSTAGE.
J. 8. L«eds,Traffic Manager of the
Missouri Pacific Railway, says: 'i have
no statistics or data at baud which would
enable me to write much of an article on
the question at ishue. I know, of course,
it would be a serious blow to many inter-
ests in this country if the prevailing idea
as regards tbe admission of silver lead
ores into the United States from Mexico
is carried into effect; in fact, the benefit
would be to a very mall district in the
Sttite of Colorado, ami very materially
injure the balance of the country. In
fact, it is my judgement that such amove
would not only cripple the interchange
of business between the United States
and Mexico,but also the industry in min
iug in the United States to the extent that
lead ores from Mexico enable us to deve-
lop the mining of dry ores in our own
country. I can not tell to what extent
this is true; but .from a general observa
tion which I have been able to give the
matter there is no doubt but that a large
amount of dry ores is taken out of this
country by reason of admission of silver
lead ores from Mexico. This is particu
larly true of the mining industriesof New
Mexico and Arizona."
Maj. Jules A. Randle, General Mana-
ger Monterey and Santa Catalina Kail
way, Monterey, Mexico says: "In order
to protect a few ltadsproducing mints
in Colorado and Missouri, the Secretary
of the Treasury, with one stroke of the
pen, destorys millions of dollars' worth
of trade with Mexico, and forces this
country to go to Europe for all she wauts.
All of the railroads in Mexico are owned
and operated by Amercians except one,
and niue tenths of the mines are controll-
ed by Americans. With millions of dol-
lars invested in these enterprises they are
forced to abandon their own country and
carry with them the great and growing
trade of Mexico to England, for what
reason? Protection to a 15c industry in
the United States. Personally this ac-
tion does not injure me, as I see forMon«-
etrey, on the completion of the railroad
toTampico, the greatest smelting and
manufacturing city on the globe. As an
American, I prefer this great trade of
Mexico to go to the United States. If
the t usiness people of the American Gov-
ernment don't wish to have commcrcialre*.
lations with Mexico, we can stand it as
Americans interested here, and will help
this country to make the best business con
nections possible with England. 'Viva
Mexico/ Organize a grand smelting
company, and come to Monterey. We
will soon havs connection with Liver*
fool and the coal mines at Benedito, W e
will have white lead and pipe factories,
etc., etc."
REPUBLICAN OPINION.
ISt. LouIb Globe Democrat, republican May 31 VSBJ
Nobody has had to leave texas be-
cause of social osthacism oh political
oppression; and Texas has heaped the
JUST reward OF her good sense in that
RESPECT.
* # *
Her chosen mission is one of peace and
progress, of Happiness and honor.
VALUE OF IRRIGATION.
■POHK
MM
[Prof. Powell, Director U. S. Geological Survey.]
All of the ealry civilization be^an in
arid lands and the best agriculture of
the world today i* carried on by means
of artificial irrigation.
SOME WEIGHTY PROTESTS.
El Paso has done well in earnestly-
protesting against Secretary Windom's
threatened reversal of the long establish-
ed ruling in regard to the importation of
Mexican silver-lead ores. There have
been meetings and protests by the El
Paso and Southwestern Mining Associa-
tion, by the city council of El Paso, by
the El Paso Board of Trade, and by a
large and representative mass meeting of
citizens. All of these bodies went about
the matter in a spirit of dignity and earn-
est argument, in striking contrast to the
false and dishonest methods adopted by
the Colorado lead ring. If every city
and town along the Mexican border will
do as well as El Paso has done and is
doing, Secretary Windom and congress
will be greatly influenced. El Paso is
preparing a pamphlet on the subject,
wbieh is to be sent to every member of
congress and to every influential news
paper in the country.
THE
RAILROADS AND
ORES.
MEXICAN LEAD
The railroads in the United States,
running in the direction of Mexico, and
hauling goodB to Mexico, are beginning
to Bee what damage to trade would re-
sult from the reversal of the long estab-
lished U. 8. Treasury ruling on Mexican
ores. In reply to a cirular, asking their
▼lews, the following promiment railroad
men have responded:
Col. B. P. McDonald, Treasurer of the
Missouri, Kansas and Texas Railway,
& says: "Am heartily in favor of the move,
and think it wise. Something should be
> retain and develop the Mexican
It is a trade knocking at our
for admission and is certainly
[our most generous considera
Maj. J. Waldo. Traffic Manager of the
Kansas and Texas Railway,
r- " X- "I can not believe
States will take kny
importation of
THE BROWN-SEQUARD ELIXIR.
Dr. Brown-Sequard is a physician and
chemist of eminence. Therefore his own
statement is to preferred to the evidence
of a lot of impulsive doctors, quacks and
crmks, who have been experimenting in
a "cLeap John" way with his elixir. In
the London Lancet, one of the first medi-
cal journals in the world, Dr. Brown*
Sequard says;
' I am 72 years ""old. My general
strength, which has been considerable,
hae notably and gradually diminished
during the last ien or twelve years. Be-
fore May 15 last I was so weak that
I was always compelled to sit
down after half an hour's work in the
laboratory. Even when I remained seat-
ed all the time, or almost all the time, in
the laboratory, I used to come out of it
exhausted after three or four hours exper-
imental labor, and sometimes after only
two hours. For many years < n r< turning
home in a carriage by 6 o'^lot k after
several hours passed in the laboratory, I
was so extremely tired that I invariably
had to go to bed after having hastily
taken a very small amount of food. Very
frequently the exhaustion was so great
that, although extremely sleepy, I could
not for hours go to sleep, and I only slept
very little, wakirg up exceedingly
tired.
The day after the first subcutaneous
injection, and still more after the two
succeeding ones, a radical change took
place in me, and I had ample reson to say
and to write that I had regained at least
all the strength I possessed a good many
years ago. Considerable laboratory work
hardly tired me. To the great astonish-
ment of my two principal assistants, Drs.
d'Areonval and Henocque,and other per>
tons, I was able to make experiments
for several hours while standing up, feel-
ing no need whatever to sit down. Still
more: One day (the 28d of May), after
three hours and a quarter of hard experi-
mental labor In the standing attitude, I
went home so little tired that after dinner
I was able to work and
to write for an hour and a half a part
of a paper on a difficult subject. For
more than twenty years 1 had never been
able to do as mnch. (My friends know
that, owing to certain circumstances snd
certain habits, I have for thirty or forty
years gone to bed very early and done
years il had lost all
ny serious mental work
after dinner. Sinee my first subcutaneous
injections I have very frequently been
able to do such work for two, three, and
one evening for nearly fonr hours.) From
a natural impetuosity,and also to avoid
losing time, I had till I was 60 years old,
the habit of ascending and descending
stairs so rapidly that my movements were
rather those of running than of walking
This had gradulty changed, and I had
come to move slowly up and down stairs,
having to hold the banister in difficult
staircases. After the second injection I
found that I had fully regained my olci
powers and returned to my previous habits
in that respect.
I have at present no fact to mention
which might serve to solve the question
whether it would be possible or not to
change structurally muscles, nerves and
the nervous centers by making during
good many months frequent injections of
the fluid I have used. As 1 stated at the
Paris Biological Society, I have always
feared, and I still fear, that the special
nutritive actions which bring on certain
changes in a man and animals, from the
primitive embryonal state till death by
old age.sre absolutely fatal and irreversi-
ble. But in the sume way that we see
muscles which have from disease under
gone considerable structural alterations
regain sometimes their normal organiza
tion. we mny I believe, see also some
structural changes not t seentially allied
with old age, although accompanying it,
disappear to such a degree as to allow
tissues to recover the power they possess-
ed at a much less advanced age."
The tenor of this state mint is vtry dif-
ferent from many assertions imputed to
Dr. Brown-Sequard. The general public
would do well to be as cartful and go as
slow as i>r. Brown-Sequard himself.
PILES! PILES!
Dr. William's Indian pile Ointment is
the only sure cure for Blind, Bleeding or
Itching Piles ever discovered. It never
fails to cure old chronic cases of long
standing
Judge Coons Maysville. Ky., says:
'Dr. William's Indian Pile Ointment
cured me after years of suffering."
Judge Coffinbury, Cleveland 0., says:
I have found by experience that Dr.
VYUiam's Indian Pile ointment gives ims
mediate and permanent relief."
We have uurtdeds of such testiu./Di*
als. Do not suffer m instant longer,
bei.1 by druggists at oOc.and $1. per box.
Sold by Kio Grande Pharmacy, El
Pass Texas.
fffl
Our $70.00 Diamond
Kbg.
Our $30.00 Diamond
Ring.
IF YOU With to Purchase A GOOD PIECE OF
PIAMOHO JEWELRY or A FINE WATCH"-'
Call on ut or send for our Illustrated Catalogue
with information how to order.
■arWe can offer you the be»t of reference* in your
immediate neighborhood.
IRION & CIRARDET,
8. W. Oor. Fifth and Market Streets,
LOUISVILLE, KV*
If &
Our $25.00 DiMwmi
Ring.
R .F. JOHNSON
(Established in If ft?,)
JOHN JULIAN
JULIAN & JOHNSON,
Wholesale Lipor Dealers
Sole Agents for Jostj h'Schlitz Milwaukee Beer.
;i
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i
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First Class f
Central
LEADING1 HOTEL OF EL PASO, TEXAS,
SAM ECKER, Proprietor.
Aid Association
OF CHICAGO. ILLS.
Our association is not a stranger to the
people of the United States. We have
stood the test ot over live years, and have
not a single claim unpaid, nor have we
ever been sued or havf we ever litigated
a claim in any way, shape, manner or
form. We havealHree and increasing
membership among the very best families
WHO KNOW
The value of protection.
WE HAVE PAID THOUSANDS OF
DOLLARS
To widows and orphans throughout the
United States and elsewhere.
WE WRITE EITHER LIFE OR ACCIJ
DENT POLICIES- OUR EX*
PENSE TABLE
k>hows a lower rate than «ny other re*,
liable company known. We want good
honest men and women everywhere as
agents and to such we pay liberally.
REMEMBER DEATH WILL COME
And that you may he prepared protec-
tively for the ones you leave behind you.
it is best you write us at once for blanks.
We refer as Our reference to you the
editor of this paper who knows us. Ad-
dress
D W. MOODY,
General Superintendent
Suits 28 and 29, 99 East Madison street,
Chicago, Ills.
THE TIMES
PAPER & STATIONERY DEPARTMENT
Offers «pec,*l<lindocements to_ Printers and the Trade
iPP
Print Papers,
Poster Papers.
?iat Papers,
*arti Boards.
Cut Cards,
Straw Board,
Wrapping Papers
Printing Inks,
Roller Composition,
Envelope*,
Bill Heads,
Letter Headi,,
Statements,
Wedding Invitation*,
Wedding Cards,
Ball Programme
Visitirg Cards,
Bills"of Fare.
a
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W. L. DOUGLAS
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S3 SHOE FOR
Best in th
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Examine W. A. Douglas 12.00 Shoe* for
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108 SAN ANTONIO ST.
J. P. CASEY, Jr.
G. F, CASSIANO
Casey & Cassiano.
DEALERS IN
Hay, Grain and Feed
*'•
We carry the Largect'stoek in this section and can undersell small
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dealers. Otvt
Office:—San Francisco Street, nepr corner Santa
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El Paso Times. (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. NINTH YEAR, No. 102, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 24, 1889, newspaper, August 24, 1889; El Paso, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth460841/m1/4/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.