El Paso International Daily Times (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 125, Ed. 1 Saturday, May 26, 1894 Page: 4 of 8
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Ei Jraao iiaily Times, Satur
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TIMES PUBLISHING COMPAJfY,
Publisher*,
JUAH & HABX, Manager. .
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Yr* '■•:■ Daily,
Pailtwd Id the City, per weak....... 26 cent*
Payable every Saturday to carrier
DAILY—BY MAIL.
Invariably In Advance.
On* year...............................*-*M
& *
All paper* discontinued at the expiration
af the time paid for.
T
OUR CIRCULATION.
Beside*covering I
iRSraewsfiff*
own* at ttnr hour named on
■JtS MSsrrxsSS
»Oak*....... ip m LaaCrnce*..-8.06 a m
‘ »n thi
fe reach also on the day of publication the
; placet:
In New Mexico.
Anthony........Dona Ana........FortSeldon
In Arisona. „
Bowie..............Wilcox...........Nogales
......Huaohuoa..........Duncan
i......Carlisle........... ..Clifton
In Texas.
Yaleta..............Camp Rice.... ...Socorro
Mi Blizarlo.......Port Hancock....Tan‘Horn
fort Dari*........Marfa ......Sierra Blanca
No Cbanre for Postage.
9/mon
Turnon
ADVERTISING RATES.
The custom among newspapers of printing
one rate and accepting another 1* faat dlsap-
**The*fxtt*» has been n oxa-nuca organ
since 1886. We find It pays.
Uniform rates are necessary for the satis-
faction of the advertiser and theauoees* of
*hNondHsrou^Vexcept those published onthl*
rate sheet are allowed to anybody.
The advertising agent ean pay our rate and
retail the spaoe to buyer* at our figures with
profit to himself. For Instance: he buys a
half column. 9 Inches, for one year, for *189;
If he retails each Inch at $42 a year his profit
is 100 per cent. We sell at the same figure to
everybody.
Mo.
5 00
BOO
12 00
15 00
17 60
18 00
*0 00
21 60
23 50
24 80*
25 75
29 00
81 00
83 OK
35 OOl
87 00
88 76
40 50l
SPACE
Inches.
3 Mo* 6 Mo* 9 Mos 17 e’r
Net.
13 50
24 30
32 40
40 60
47 29
48 60
54 00
58 05
60 75
66 15
72 25
78 30
83 70
89 10
94 50
99 90
104 60
Net.
24 00
43 20
57 60
72 00
84 00
88 40
96 00
139 20
148 00
158 40
168 00
177 60
186 00
109 35 194 40
Net.
33.75J
60 76
iir
118 10 147 00
121 50
1<)3 20 145 10
108 00 155 85
117 60 165 35
128 A* 180 55
75
109 25
222 75
236 25
249 75
261 55
273 35
42 00
76 60
100 80
126 00
151 20
135 00 168 00
180 60
189 00
feotly protect laborers, material men
and meohanlos against loss and in*
joittoi. *
8. Snob legislation as may be neoee-
sary to complete tbe work of snppres
sing trusts, pools and combinations in
restraint of trade; enabling tbe state by
Injunction or other legal process to re-
strain them.
9 Snob measures as will Insure the
maintenance of tbe pnbllo free sohoois,
a* required by tbe constitution, for the
fall period of eu months In eaob
year.
10. 8noh measures as will promote
the efflotenoy of the state university
d
205 80
224 70
248 00
280 40
377 20
294 00
310 80
325 50
340 20
Key to our Table of Rates.
The one month rate for space from the
Inoh to one column of 18 inches is fixed so
that the per inch rate decreases for incrsas
ad spaoe from $5 00 to *2.25, but for the same
length of time 9 Inches are sold at $22JC, and
18 inches are sold at *8.25 per inch, *40.60.
The one inch rate is tbe basis of the whole
table; a» the short time rate* fixed are a per
•outage bf it.
The 1 time rate 1.33M percent of the month
rate.
The 2 times rate is 40 pet oent of the month
The S times rate is 50 per cent of the month
The 1 week rate is 60 per oent of the month
This 2 weeks rate is 75 per cent of the month
rat*.
The 3 weeks rate is 90 pet cent of the month
rat*.
The 8 months rate is 3 times the month
rate, less 10 per cent discount.
The 6 months rate is 6 times the month rat*.
and It* branches, the agricultural an
ffituhanlosl college and the state nor-
mal institute. .
11. The necessary appropriations to
complete the improvements ot the
grqunds around the etate oapltol, make
proper repairs of the executive loan
sion and the necessary improvements
of the other public property and build-
ings, as demanded by state pride and
pnbllo necessity.
12 Snob measures as will protect
the Uve stock In this state from con-
tagious diseases and against unjnst
discrimination by Interstate quarantine
regulations and snob as will promote
agriculture, holtioalture and domestic
material industries.
13. The passage of lews for the re-
gulation of prim *ry elections, to punish
raise swearing and fraudnlent voting.
$fe siysalso:
I will favor and support: 1. The
notion of the attorney general’s depart
ment, oegan several years ago and stil|
faithfully pursued, of recovering
public lands unlawfully obtained by
railroad companies for sidings and
awttohes and by other methods and will
jealonsly guard the rights of actual
settlers in connection with them.
2. 1 favor the amendment of tbe
constitution so as to give tbe state tbe
power to endow, support and maintain
a home for disabled and dependent
confederate soldiers.
3. I also favor the amendment of
the const! n&ion so as to give the peo-
ple the right to eleot the railroad com-
miseloners, bo alternating the elec-
tions that bat one shall be eleoted at a
time, and thns retaining constantly
two experienced commissioners.
4. 1 approve and adhere to the
principles announced in the state De
mooratio platform of 1892 and to tbe
national Democratic platform of prin-
ciple. 1
Mr. Rsagan then enumerates eleven
federal issues and defines his position
on each, after wbioh he answers cer-
tain charges that have been made
against him! the principal one being
hie alleged opposition to the Dallas
harmony proceedings. Of this he dis-
poses by saying that ha favored har
raooy bat he deeSred the people and
not tbe committees to decide the qoea
tions of principle md of political pol-
icy. Ua enters the race in a most
friendly spirit with all the candidates,
and agrees to ohssrfully support tbe
euoeessful ooe.
MARRIAGE AND DlVOKDfc.
I*ss20per oent discount
The 9
months rate is 9 times the month
rate, less 25 per oent discount.
The year rate is 12 times the month rate,
lees 30 per cent discount.
Special position—Fifty per oent extra.
“B. O. D." advertisements charged at two-
thirds of daily rates.
Professional cards $5.00 per month.
Metal Base Cute only accepted.
Reading-Matter Rates.
Twenty-five cents per line first Insertion; 15
sente for each subsequent insertion. Con-
tracts for 1000 lines to oe taken in 3 months,
made at 5 cents per line each insertion. Un-
changed locals, by the month. 1 50 per Hue.
TIMES PUBLISHING COMPANY,
El Paso. Texas.
Yesterday’s Markets.
BAB SILVER..................................6» t-4
COPPER .......................................... 9 1-4
LB AD.................................................3 SO
WIN...............................10 55 to lO 60
I BON...........................11 OO to 13 50
SKBXIOAN PESOS (El Paso).....................50
MEXICAN PESOS (Jnarsa)..................51
CANDIDATE REAGAN’S VIEWS.
In an ablo document Judge Reagan
formally announces his candidacy for
governor. After expressing his ap-
proval of the anti corporation laws
passed daring Governor Hogg's two
terms, he proposes the following state
measures:
1. The economical administration
of the government In all its depart
manta, preserving the efflotenoy of the
pnbllo aervloe.
2 Tbe revision of the laws in rela-
tion to the foes and allowances to dis-
trict attorneys, sheriffs and dorks,
and a modification of the laws relating
to ths service of attachments on wit
nesses in distant conn ties.
3. A considerable redaction of tbe
expenditures of the state could bo
made without injury to tbe pnbllo ser
vice by a reorganization of tbe judicial
distrlots, a reduction of their number
and an equalization of tbe duties of
tbe judges.
4. Provisions for the transfer of
fees over and above a reasonable com-
pensation, to bo fixed by law, to the
several counties in which such officers
respectively reside.
5. The reduction of the force and
expense of the several departments
aud Institutions to aotaal pablio
neoesslty,consistent with the efficiency
of the servloe.
6. Booh laws as will render more
perfeot the policy of working the penal
convicts on the state aooounc and pra
; their competition with free labor.
. Such legislation as will more per
FOR LANHAM.
Decline of Illiteracy.
When Queen Victoria ascended the
throne, more than 41 per cent of the Eng-
lish people could not write their names.
The proportion in that condition has
been reduced to 7 per cent.
The greater portion of divorced people
iq Fronde ore between 40 and 50 years of
age.
Aristotle said that the proper age for
marriage was 37 for a man and 18 for a
Woman. /
Twenty-two states forbid by law the
marriage of stepchildren with their step-
parents. i
The minimum age fixed for marriage
in Sparta was 30 for a man aud 20 for a
woman.
The decrease in the price of food dur-
ing the last 60 years has pot resulted in
an increase in the proportion of mar*
riagee.
An Indiana applicant testified that “my
wife would not walk with me on Sun-
days and pulled a tuft of hair out of my
head.”
The laws of most of our states appear,
to show that the responsibility for tbs
marriage contract rests on the parties
themselves.
In 20 years prior to 1886 the United
.Kingdom had 6,587 divorces; Russia, 21,-
976; France, 57,116; Germany, 98,818; all
Europe, 258,332; the United States, 828,-
716.
Insurance statistics have shown that in
England if the wife dies first the hus-
band survives nine years, while if the
husband dies first the wife survives 11
years.
In California a defendant husband was
adjudged guilty of cruelty because he
did not provide water at his house; nei
ther would he repair the house to make
it comfortable.
By Roman law a married man having
three children was entitled to a better
seat in the theater than less fortunate
benedicts. A married man having 19
children was entitled to a robe of honor
and a pension.
The increase of divorce in this country
is without parallel. In Texas during the
10 yews from 1870 to 1880 the increase
was 310 per cent over the preceding 10
years; in Arkansas, 229 per cent; in Ala-
bama, 222; in Mississippi, 209; in Mis-
souri, 77.—St. Louis Globe-Democrat.
IN FURNITURE
HI
/ ;.i • j
Sidrjey Ullmapn’s,
£I;X.V '•■Y■'tc,■:
809 OPERA HOUSE BLOCK, EL PASO ST.
EBTEL8EN& DEGETAU,
El Paso, Texas, Ciudad Juarez, Chihuahua, Ouishuiriachio, Mexico.
-WHOLESALE DEALERS IN--
General Merchandise,
Forwarding and Commission Merchants.
Sole agents for Peter Schuttler Wagons,
Mica Roofing Paper,
New Home Sewing Machines,
Colonel Lanham has done nmob for
El Paso county and the oonnty has
now one more opportunity to show Mr.
Lanham Its appreciation of his ser-
vices by lnstrnotlDg its delegates to the
state convention to support him for
governor. His chances in tbe ra jo
are excellent. A dispatoh from Waco,
MoLennan county, says Mr. Lanham
will carry that Important county. The
Gazette says: “Colonel Lanham in
dlsoaasinfl[ his chances in MoLennan
oonnty and the oandidaoy of Judge
Rsagan, said to tbe Gazette corres-
pondent last night as be was leavlBg to
takethe train for Marlin: 'I think a
man who has held so many public post
tlona as Mr. Reagan has deserves a
Made Him Tired.
A Texas congressman is thinking of
resigning because he is kept so busy by
his friends in Texas urging upon the
administration the necessity of appoint-
ing them to foreign missions He re-
minds one of the 4-year-old child saying
her prayers at her mother’s knee. Hav-
ing concluded, as usual, with, “God
bless papa and mamma, grandpa and
grandmamma, uncles and aunts,” etc.,
she gave a great sigh and said:
“Oh, mamma, dear, 1 do wish those
people would pray for themselves, for
I’m tired of praying for them. ”—Texas
Siftings.
Without the Newspaper
Coupon it 'would never have been
possible for yon to have obtained
such a beautiful work as tbe
White City Artfolio for so small
an amount as 20 cents. Be grate
ful therefore to the coupon and
read our announcement on an-
other page of this newspaper.
California Powder Company,
Banco National de Mexico.
Exchange of money and drafts on all principal cities of Mexico
and Europe.
A Mile a Minute on the Sea. I
A Welsh engineer has prepared designs
for a vessel which he claims will attain a
speed of 60 miles an hour. His proposed
vessel is flat bottomed, 550 feet long, 50
feet in width, wedge shaped at each end
for 100 feet of her length, with a dis-
placement of some 14,600 tons. JJnch a
vessel fitted with 16 paddle wheels driv-
ing at 110 revolutions a minute, this san-
guine inventor believes, would be pro-
pelled through the water at the rate of 60
nnles an hour. This would be breaking
the record with a vengeance. The 16 pad-
dle wheels of the proposed express pas-
senger steamer would be placed eight on
each side, one behind the other, in a
water channel running fore and aft just
above the ship's bottom. They are of a
peculiar construction, the paddle always
maintaining a perpendicular position
and always entering and leaving the
water at exactly the same point.—Lon-
don Court Journal.
good deni of attention, and hts avowed
oandidaoy cannot be treated lightly. I
am confident where I have oanvaased
tbe state, however, that I will get a
larger number of votes than Mr. Rea-
gan. I think I will defeat him In Mo
Lsnnan oonnty, and so do my friends.
1 am gladthat he has ooms out and
this aarly. We all know where to
place him now. I am not afraid of the
result.’ ”
A Fortunate Selection.
Mother—Whatare all these senseless
trinkets f<»?
Pretty Daughter—They are for the
grabbag at the church fair.
“Mercy! There is not one thing that
any human being could want ”
“Yes; isn’t it fortunate? Everybody
who draws a prize will put it back in
the bag. ’’—New York Weekly.
Professor Schweninger, Prince Bis-
marck’s physician, recommends soda
water, fruit and lemon sirnp, white
wines, water and cider as drinks per-
missible in the treatment of his antifat
’cure” in connection with daily mas-
sage and bathing.
The Genius of the World
Made tbe Columbian Exposition.
Jackson's art preserved it in tbe
White City Artfolio*. Read our
announcement on another page
of this newspaper.
El Faso Coffin & Casket
Company
415 RL PASO STREET.
Undertakers and embalrrera. Hearses
end earrlages famished. Telephone 71
TERMS
City Readers--Bring 0 “White City Artfolio” coupons of
different dates, together with 20 cents, for each part as issued,
to the Daily Times office.
Out-of-town Headers—Mail 6 “White Oity Artfolio” coupons,
of different dates, with 20 cents in coin, to “White Oity Artfolio"
department, The Daily Timis, El Paso, Texas. Be particular to
give (1) your full name and address, and (2) inclose the necessary
coupons and 20 cents in coin.
No bound volumes of World’s Fair Art Folios will ever be
offered by The Times. This is positive. No Artfolios ean be
obtained in any other manner than indicated in our coupon.
PART FIVE BEADY MAY 28.
R. OAPLES.
CAPLES & HAMMER
Contractors and Builders,
EL PASO, TEXAS
A Pious Wish.
The emperer once stood before the
magnificent tomb of the Duke Rudolph
of Swabia. Some of his courtiers were
of the opinion that he ought not to al-
low his mortal enemy to have so splen-
did a monument, but that he should
have his body exhumed and bur ied else-
where.
“Oh, let him lie where he is,” said
the emperor. “I only wish all my en-
emies were as splendidly buried. ’ ’—Alle
Zeiten und Landen.
ARE YOU IN NEED
Printing,
Blank Books,
LithograpTiirjg;,
Pine Stationery,
Printers’ Supplies?
Is It Best SfijTOStf ESA
you? When you are sick and need a doctor do you send out
and secure prices of different physicians and employ the
cheapest?
ri/Mruei^ "MTrof For f our health is an im-
VJL UULLLDtJ llUl. portant matter When you
require a good lawyer do you get bids and accept the cheapest?1
Naturally No, -r this -is also lmportanl-
Then why not order your
printing on the same principle. Good stationery is essential
in your business. Our customers' interests are ours. The
next time you need printing send us your order and note the
result. You will find this method
THE CHEAPEST.
Times Publishing Co.
Cornel )f Oregon and Overland streets.
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El Paso International Daily Times (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 125, Ed. 1 Saturday, May 26, 1894, newspaper, May 26, 1894; El Paso, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth540003/m1/4/?q=Palestine: accessed March 30, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.