El Paso International Daily Times (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 269, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 25, 1893 Page: 4 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Texas Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Abilene Library Consortium.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
^ -------Y
■■I Mfcjktiff*****•*» —— 1,1 d»MMt>iMMinw»J.mUj»t -:-I
wS'd
IPv ”
l£ SP' :
rMi
H
jpg:
*<:•
ISA
ii-
9ft
fir
I;
f
F
i I
f.
I
. m
m,
f?
t
I
ft :'
■ ■
I
W ■
I
I;
I
if'
.</
ilk.
Vf»
EIPasoS^TlmeJ
Hgm AT THI HMIONIOI AT MI. PASO,
flUl, AS MOOHD-CLAM MAIL MATTS*.
TUIKS POBLISHINCi OOMPANT,
Publl.hfir*,
Juan 8. Hakt.
SUBSCRIPTION KATKS.
Daily.
MlTAnnl III the City, par weak......*» «“«nts
Fsyabla every Saturday to Carrier.
DAILY—BY MAIL
invariably lu Advance.
.110 00
SET m«uth»........................... J25
Om mouth ................. ;• . w
Allp*t*endl»eoutlnued at the expiration
p/ (lie time paid for.____
Person* dealrlnc copies of thla A R*P*rJ°*
■ssillip uurooiM will olea*© a*k ulthit oroca
ter "Mall Kdltlon" of the Tims*, aa our looal
xtttiou la not innllahle matter.
mm CIRCULATION.
(Me foliowin* toe III at the hour named ou
?!^Y,r{»ikr K »
Lordshuri; ... ft p. n>. Silver City f.-W p. in
Kins*ton .... ..Op in- U*Cr«ioe*..»softs.®
White Oak* 4 p. in.
W* reach al»o on the day of publlcatlot. the
follow lot: place*:
In New Mexico.
Do tin Ana...... Kort Seldon
Lake Valley San Marclal
(ircnii.......... Socorro
1 n Arizona.
Wilcox......N'lC'Hr*
Hilaehiica ........D'lncnn
.. .Carlisle........... Uilton
In Texn*
. C’nnip Klee.... Socorro
Fort Hancock Van Horn
...... Marta Sierra Blanca
And we circulate thron*hunt Mexico.
No C hartre for I’otlair*.
Anthony
Rincon..
■ar>s
Bowie
Hanson
Tucson
The Denver Republican la very
friendly to MaiiOO BE U ought to bf
and eays: "The friendship of Mexloo
In worth a groat deal to tha United
States Oor government should
cheerfully join with the Mexloan gov-
erumant In endeavoring to maintain
peaoe aloDg the international bound
ary. It shouldfxpend all the money
that may be needed to maintain a
foroe of men along the border from the
tiulf of Mexloo to the Colorado river.
There 1* more work In that oountry for
the United States Army than in all
the rest of the Union; and if a foroe of
thle sort were maintained there, It
would be au aseuranoe to Mexloo that
our government would neither direct-
ly nor indlreotly shelter the marauders
who infest the border."
Tsletn
Nan Hllaarlo..
Wort l)avin
The Arizona mud slinging tight that
has beeu going on between the Hughes
administration Demoorats and those
that tight that ring is getting ton nasty
for public print. When the Hughes
gang went so far as to jail honest and
fair editors, who were released by a
federal judge, then they merited all
the odium that h decent public oould
bestow upon them. If Governor Hughes
would ouly attend to his own business
the dark parts of his past, reoord would
not now bo haunting him and threat-
ening his removal from office.
advertising kails.
The cuitoin aiuonu new vuaper* of printing
one rate and accepting another I* fu»t disap-
pearing
The Ti
hlMRH hit I boon fit ONI’FHICB Or^ttD
*»ncel8Ni. We find it pay*.
Uniform rut*** are nece«*ary for the *ain_
faction of the ailvertUer and tlio miccc** of
*^No*dliw<iunt*, excent those pilhli*hed on
^1* rate Hhcct are allowed to anybody.
Tlie advertising agent can pay our rate
and retail the *pace to buyer* at our figure*
arlth profit to himself For Instance: he buy*
•half column. V inches, for one; ear. for *159.
fbe retails each inch at $12 a year his protit
*100 per cent. W e sell at the same tlgnreto
everybody. _
ft oo
I 00
n so
1ft on
17 SO
18 00
«0 (|0
SI SO
26 75
29 00
St OOi
88 (0,
» oo
tn oo;
88 75!
*e 50
Sl'Af'B
Incho*.
3 Mo* 6 Mo*i9 Mo* 1 Y’r
Net.
13 50
24 30
Net.
24 00
Net. I Net.
33 75, 42 00
43 20 SO 75; 75 SO
__0 4 Col..
...to ......
1) . ...
12 .....
_ 13 ...
__14......
.. 15_______
....10
32 40 57 6'1 81 00,130 8u
4u SOl 72 iX/.lOi 25 120 O')
47 25 M 00,110 10|147 00
4-* 601 *0 40.121 610151 20
34 On1 u0 00)135 0C;168 00
58 05,103 2:'U4fi 1011 S’) 60
60 75 100 on 151 05’IN) 00
:<e> 80
2)4 70
>43 00
At the City of Mexloo an urchin has
been jailed for annoying a Chinaman
who was going along the streets Tills
lesson for the boy was eminently pro-
per and should be imitated by the El
Paso authorities. Hut here llie "kids"
are allowed to molest Chinamen prob-
ably because the professional and
business men of the city, as a rule,
make up for this rudeness by board
ing at Chinese restaurants and giving
the celestials all their washing much
to the detriment of first class hotels
and of willing poor women who want
to earn a livelihood.
66 15)117 60 165 35
72 ‘251120 40’lsO 55
70 30.139 2'1 1»5 75
h3 70.14* 00,209 2.51260 40
09 1 0 158 40 '222 75 277 20
94 501138 00,238 25 294 00
99 «0|177 00|249 75 310 80
17 ' “. 104 80 105 00,281 55 325 50
18-l’Col". 109 35 191 JIG73 33 340 20
Key to' mr luble of Kate*.
The one month rate for snare from the
teoh to one column of Is Inch** i* fixed *o
that the per Inch rote decrea«es for iucreag-
•4 space from $5.00 to 12.25. but for the *ame
earth of time 9 inches are sold at $22.50, and
18 inches are sold at $3.25 per inch. $40..V .
The one iuch rate in the bams of the wholo
table; as the*hort time rate* fixed are a per
TtwU*time rate 1* 33* per ceat of the mouth
Mte.
The 2 times rate 1* 40 per cent of the mouth
TriF. People's Saving Bank in Denver
will shortly resume business, after
paying in full all depositors of twenty-
live dollars and under. This speaks
well for the queeu city of the Rockies,
where twelve banks closed daring the
pauie, and already a majority of them
have resumed business.
A Washington dispp.leh says Assis-
tant Secretary of the Interior Sims ha6
rendered a decision holdiug the sur-
plus laad9 in the Shoshone reservation
in Wyoming can be leased for grazing
purposes, and that the leases should
be made for five or three years at the
minimum, and that all informal bid6
already received will be rejected.
The 3 time* rate I* SO per ceut of the mouth
The 1 week rate 60 per cent of the month
Iftte.
The 2 week* rat* ia 75 per ceut of the month
rate.
The 3 week* rate 1* 90 per cent of the month
rate.
The 3 month* rate 1* S time* the mouth rate,
#ee 10 per eent discount.
The 6 months rate is 6 times the mouth
fata, less 20 per cent discount.
The9 month* rate is 9 tunes the month
rate, les* 2ft per cent discount.
The year rate is 12 times the mouth rate,
per cent discount.
m 30 per cent disoount.
Special position—Fifty per cent extra.
“g. (>. D." advertisements charged at two-
thirds of dniiy rates.
Professional Cat ds *5.00 per month.
Metal Base Cuts only accepted.
Heading-Matter Rate*.
Twenty-live cents per line first insertion: 15
•rot* for each subsequent insertion. Con-
tract* for 1'«jC lines to be taken in 3 mouth*,
mode at 5 cents per line each insertion L n-
•hauced locals, by the mon’h. #1.50 per line.
TIMLN PUBLISHING COMPANY.
HI Paso, Texas
Governor Pennoyer's thanksgiving
was observed only by his 6tate officials
who will take another holiday next
Thursday. This thing of startling
originiality like that indulged in by the
governors of Oregon and Colorado is
never popalar.
Yesterday’s Markets.
BAR SILVER ............................. 70
NPFER............................... 9 86
HAD................................. 3 37 1-3
tU .......................... ........... 20 6.5
IRON............ ............... 13 to 14 50
RKMXIOAN PESOS (Kl Paso)..............65
Senator Voorhees knows that he is
from the doubtful state of Indiana and
in order to be prepared for any pres-
idential lightning he has announced
officially that on the matter of pen
sions he stands where he had always
stood—ou the side of the soldiers.
The coal output, of Colorado Is very
large—but New Mexloo is fast rising in
the record. The estimated coal crop
for 1803 gives Colorado an output
valued at $10,000,000, Wyoming $5,-
000,000 and New Mexico $4,000,000.
Tucson has her new postmaster.
Paso will have a change soon.
The editor of the postoffice imagines
that the readers of his "grapevines"
are worr> ing over the Times.
The Russian imperial cap bearer
Ckrant Potocki, is now a little angel
expecting promotion in the celestial
circles to which St. Peter has admitted
him.
The name bank la derived from banco,
a bench.
Forgery was first made punishable by
death in 1034.
The first Italian bank was established
by the Jews of Lombardy.
Co-operative banks have proved a
marked success in Germany.
In 1828 the "safety fund system" was
tried in New York, but was soon aban-
doned for the free banking system.
Between 1828 and 1830 tho Bank of
England established branch banka in al-
most every large city in the kingdom.
The eetablishment of joint stock banks,
for some time in vogue, was formally
permitted by act of parliament in 1826.
In 1788 Lord Chanoellor Thnrlow re-
fused a bankrupt a certificate liecauae ho
had lost £0 a^ gambling after he became
involved in financial difficulty.
The first fidelity bank, guaranteeing
employers agaimit lone from tho defalca-
tions of dishonest clerks, was established
by English bauk clerks ih 1850.
The Bank of England manages the en-
tire public, debt of Great Britain, audits
compensation for doing ho lias in some
years almost equaled $1,000,000.
The Bank of England was once com-
pelled to suspend specie payments. It
was on Fob. 27, 1702. It resumed in
1823 after the financial disaster follow-
ing the French wars hud passed away.
In 1708 tho Bank of England acquired
a practical monopoly of the English
hanking business by tho passage of an
act prohibiting any company of moro
than six persons engaging in banking.
Germany has 5,000,000 depositors in
savings banks; Franco, 4,150,000; Great
Britain, 3,750,000; Italy, 1,070,000; Aus-
tria, 1,850,000; Switzerland, 1,000,000;
Sweden and Norway, 1,570,000. — SL
Louis Globo-Domocrat.
LONG LIVED THOROUGHBRED SIRES.
Lord Palmerston’s only Derby horse,
Mainstone, lived to bo 27.
The average lifo of the English thor-
oughbred stallion is only 10 years.
Famous old Gunboat, by Sir Hercules,
was shot when ho was 20 years of age.
The great sire Galopin is now 21 years
of age and seems good for years to come.
Tiie noted sire Surplice, whose get
were very fast, lived to be 26 years of
age.
VoHigcnr, the sire of Vedette, was 27
when ho broke bis leg and had to bo
shot.
Ono famous thoroughbred sire who
lived to ho 27 years of ago was the great
King Tom.
Stock well, who was one of the most
famous stallions of this century, was 21
when he died.
Vedette, the sire of Galopin, lived to a
good old age before death ended his serv-
ice in tho stud.
Twenty-six years was the time alloted
Orlando to live, Hermit was 27, and
Marsyas was 25.
The great Newininstor, rival of King
Tom as a sire of swift thoroughbreds,
lived a full score of useful years.
The Methuselah of sires was rare old
Touchstone, who kept on until he was
30. and several of his descendants have
been long lived.
FASHION’S FANCIES.
Xlatabelo Marriages.
Mr. Lionel Decle, in an account of the
marriage customs of the Matabele. men-
tions one feature which is, wo belie, e,
quite singular. The husband does not
buy his wife and, although thero is a
suggestion of a memory of marriage by
capture in the details of courting and in
the avoidance of the parents-in-law. she
would appear to remain her father’s
property. When children are born, the
father has to buy them of his father-in-
law, or, failing this, they revert to the
mother's family.-—Knowledge.
Why is Smith like his "grapevines?"
Because both oliag to a post. But
Smith’s "post" has an "office" behind
it or he would let go voluntarily before
being removed.
After the World’s fair orowd it is
earprising that Chicago has only nine
teen oases of 6mall pox to report. Yet
this warrants the health offioers of
that olty in declaring the disease an
epidemic._
P
The recent gale on the British ooast
has resulted up to date in 237 lost
lives. The noble part of the reoord
HMide is the fact that 506 lives were
saved by the ooast guardsmen and the
life saving crews.
Colonial Dames Celebrate.
The Colonial Dames of Maryland this
year gave a tea on Oct. 19 to commemo-
rate the burning of the Peggy Stewart in
the harbor of Annajwlis in 1774. Many
people still think that Peggy was a
Colonial Dame herself, instead of a brig
of that name carrying a cargo of tea.
Tea, in that eventful year, had several
more "drawings” in hot water than were
represented by the Boston tea party.—
Philadelphia Ledger.
Beautifully shaded crepons and gauzes
are shown for evening toilets.
Sleeves are enormous, but continue to
droop from the shoulders in a fingo bell
puff at theelbow.
Ladies’ cloth in every weight and shade
is shown as a “leader” in all tho fashion-
able dry goods houses.
Vert sperenza is the new name of a
fashionable emerald green that appears
among brocades, shot taffetas and fancy
evening silks.
Green, black and wine colored velvet
plateau hats for the theater are trimmed
with costly cream laces and erect airy
egrets, held by glittering tricolored, mock
jeweled buckles.
New fancy trimming braids are adorn-
ed with jet beads. Opaque and pearl
beads are also made up with jet and are
used with fine effect laid over black vel-
vet ribbon on gowns of gray and black,
or black and white, striped or brocaded
satin and silk.
New mink capes of extra length have
flat shoulders and are finished with yokes
of sealskin. Theater coats of black or
dark green velvet have yokes, borders and
shoulder points of ermine. Somo are in
semiloose sack shape from the yoke down,
front and back.—New York Post.
Emperors and empresses, kings and
queens, write to eafch other as brother
and sister. Reigning grand dukes also
enjoy this privilege when addressing
kings, but sovereigns not possessing roy-
al honors are designated as cousin.
Wood, like wool, reqnires to lie shrunk
before used for manufacturing purposes.
Pitch pine beams will shrink in thick-
ness from 18} inches to 18}, spruce from
8} inches to 8|, white pine from 12 Inches
j to 11}, yellow pine a trifle less.
B
lank books, all sizes and shapes
ruled and printed to order al
the Times office. Telephone 26
b©r 25) 1898.
HOUCK & DIETER
22Q El Paso street.
WHOLESALE DEALERS IN WINES & LIQUORS
Sole Agent* for
vy.J. Letup Brewing’ Company, Th® Appolinarl* Co.
Palmt Brewing Company
Joa. Boiilltc Brewing Company,
George Omilei, ltelma,
Krlealrloh Kroete, Coblentz,
ORMtUllon & Go., itelniB,
Evariste, Dupont A Co.. Bordeaux.
Limited,
fiondou
Nassau Heltier Co, Ober Belter,
Germany.
White Kook Mineral Waterj Go
Waukeih*, Win.
These Are 8ome ef Our Special Brands of Fine,
Whiskies, the Purity of Which We Guarantee.
Belle of Nelson Bo nr bon.
T. J. Monarch Bourbon.
Wquador Bourbon,
Honey Dew Bourbon,
Kioh Hill Bourbon.
Mount Vernon ltye,
Guokanheimer Uye,
Plnchee* Golden Wedding Uye,
Monogram Hye,
Taylor's Uye.
R. CAPLES.
L. HAMMER.
CAPLES & HAMMER,
Contractors and Builders,
EL PASO, TEXAS.
L. B, Freudenthal & Co
G
JOBBERS OP
and dry goodC-^
ASO. TEXAS_ VO
rocenes
_EL PASO, TEXAS,
J.S. RAYNOLDS, Prest.
JEFFERSON RAYNOLDS Vioe Prest.
H. S. BEATTIE, OushiM
U. S. STEWART, Asst, tkab
First National Baijk
A General Banking Business Transacted.
MEXICAN SILVER BOUGHT & SOLD
M. A. DOLAN’S
Star Stables
FINE LIVERY
Undertaking,
BLACKSMITHING
Woodwork aod Carriage Painting Neatly
done
Wagons, Bngglev. etc., Bought and Sold
R. W. SYMONS,
Suookseor to BERLA & CO.
Plumber and Gat Fitter, Gas Fixtures and
Pumps
fiL PASO,
3iil-Wirt Han Antonio Street,
TEXAN.
BEST BARGAINS
AX
UllmaimFurmtare Co.
309 OPERA HOUSE BLOCK EL PASO, ST
HOTEL PIERSON,
THE BEST FAMILY HOTEL IN EL PASO.
Oysters, one dozen raw, 25o
Oysters, one dozen fried or
stewed, 30o.
: Best r5C Hot Lunch
in the city,
From 11 to 2 o’olook.
ALL ROOMS OUTSIDE
--AND
WELL VENTILATED.
.....
The drinking water need in this
hotel is all from the Lanoria
Mesa Wells.
Breakfast from G:30to 9:30.
Lnnob from 12:30 to 2:30.
Dinner from 6:00 to 8:00.
Rates: $2-50 to $4.50 per Day.
Special rates made to families by the week or month, and commercial
traveling men. L. M. BELL, Owner and Proprietor.
r
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
El Paso International Daily Times (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 269, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 25, 1893, newspaper, November 25, 1893; El Paso, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth539858/m1/4/: accessed April 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.