El Paso International Daily Times. (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. ELEVENTH YEAR, No. 76, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 31, 1891 Page: 4 of 8
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El Faao Times Tuesday, March 3-
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1 HAT fUNERAL PAR Y-
.
CHATS ABOUT
ntiud at ni rowoRioi at ex taao, tee is,
ktf »«C01«T> OLAM UAH. HATTBB,_
Ti*R9 FUBU8H1NG COMPANY,
Publisher!.
joa* 8- Bast. Manager.
SUBSCRIPTION RATB8
DAH.T,
Daltverwi la the city, per week............* ce*u
PAT ABLE STBBT SATURDAY TO OABB1BB.
DAILY—BY MAIL,
nrrAaiABLT m adtasos.
Six months..............••**••••• 1 ntt
(Wa innth.................................. j* *"
All papers discontinued *t the ezptrstloo of the
Mm paid for. ___
OUB CIRCULATION,
SSSSSSSs&S
fOlUOiTIOl e
Paso -w> Norte... .6 a. m. 9?lntoS;," S' S'
Bfcrr.«£ fiEBEStS:
^RMCsna wut#(Mk!|........4 p.m.
We reach also oa dat op .jtjaucatio* the foi
lowing places:
'» aaw aauoo
..... ..........Dons Ana..........Fort Selden
SSm . . .. . Lake VAlley.......8sn JlarcUl
........ .Socorro
......................................
n 4BIS0HA
Wilcox..............Nogales
Doncan
Clifton
f...................Carlisle.....
IX TEXAS
f.uu ............Camp Rice...........Socorro
« vsTlisarlo........Port Hancock... Siena Blancs
i2i““s ...”..Marfa ..............Van Hon
And ae circulate throoghout Mexico.
eo O BA AOS *OB POBTAOB.
aOVBRTISING ratba
ta&S&ESSSr
since
188A We Bud it pays.
j^rs,ssss‘Jisss£ $h?ss
^iSo^Dmoouets, except those published on this
rote sheet, are Allowed to anybody.
Tbs Advsbtisiho Aobbt can pay our rates and
retail the space he buys at our figure* with prom
to himself. For Instance: he buys a half column
9 Inches, for one rear for 1189; If he retails each
inch at M2 a year hie profit 1* 100 l>er cent. We eel)
t the same figure to everybody.
•The B! Paso Times Is an enterprising
Journal and without doubt the leading
newspaper of the Southwest.”
—Socorro [N. M.] Chieftain.
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Ker to Our Table of Kales:
on aoarn batb for space from one Inch to
. -ami of 18 Inches 1* fixed so that the per Inch
rate'deertasee tor Increased space from S5.no to
W SB That la one Inch for one month la sold at
BW83WSKSSfari! £2Z s
■old at H.95 per Inch or HO.SO.
Tee oEEEorra a ate Is the baeto of the whole
table, as the abort time ratae an a fixed percentage
*fThe I time rite to ISM per cunt of the mo. rate.
M 2 •• « 40 « •< M M .. ..
M | .4— M »(0 « «“•*•* “
h 1 week •• “ 90 •<««••»«
m a Weeks “ ** 75 »««*•««
I weeks *• ** 90 «»«««»•
The tS month’s rau to 1 time* the month rate, leas
***Kw fcSont?*rate to times the month rate, less
10 per cent discount.
The 9 month's rau to SUems the month rate,!
M per cent discount.
*be year rate to U time* the month rate, lee*
90 par cent discount.
Special position:—Fifty per cent extra,
“Tf. o. D.” advertisement* charged at two-tierd*
•f daily rate.
Professional Canto &uu per month
Metal Base Cuts only ar<*s»ed
KeadMut Matter Kates
nty-five cents p« r line tir»t imxrtleu; 15 seat*
^subsequent in*erri«u For ifco** Having *4
Raising contract* locale will h* taaenad at w
aents per line, each tnaenton. Contracts for M*
tine* to be taken In 8 month* mao* at 5 cent* pe*
line each Insertion. Unchanged locals, by the
month, «t I *>’ w lice.
TIM Kb PUBLISHING COMPANY,
R1 >'w. Ter as
Of the Ucsrat funerBl party, the mem
ber# ofjwhich ecj ije l the hoepltalityol
£1 Paso, theUt. Louis GlobfUemocrat's
Washington correepondent l si this to
ssy:
The Hesret funeral party, of what re
maioedofit after the trip to California
and Dae*, arrived hern to day Bergeant
at arms Valentine of the Senate was in
chaege and the congressmen who return
ed to Washington with h m were Senators
Barbour of Virginia. Sawyer of Wiscon-
sin and Carlisle of E romcky and Hepre
sentatrves Millikeu of Maine and Gibson
ut Maryland. The other congressional
mt mbers of (be party, as originally form
<d, dropped off at various points oa the
return route Senator Berry of Arkansas
took his departure at Paris, Texas, and
Senators Pugh of Alabama and Bale of
Tennessee, and B present alive Blount of
Georgia, left the party at St. Louis. R**
prtsentsiives Geary and Uunie of Cali-
fornia remained at home. There were
several other m scellaneous excur*ionis s
and they all came back. Thewea'ber
was dtmp and gloomy when the train ar-
rived.to-day, and the excursionists looked
as if they had just gone ‘‘around the
world in eighty days,” more or less. They
were very much distressed over the re-
ports which have been published alleg-
ing that their rnp had be> n "one grand
demonstration of hilarity ’’ and they were
particularly indignant over the S‘ory put
in emulation by Mrfi Helen M Gougar
Tbe latter aj pears to have been ns
Grafton excursion train wbicb followed
the Beam funeral train pretty closely
from K1 Paeo on the return trip
According to a dispatch sent out from
St Louis M>e Gougar says the conduct
of tne “funeral excursionists” was ex-
trtmily disgraceful, and that the bag
eaee car of their train wai fu.l of 1 quor,
ven the ice c lolers in the parlor oars
being fl led with orange wine inst-ad of
water Mrs Gougar is an Indiana tern
perance oia or and female suffragist,
who will be rememoered as the woman
wh) went to Leavenworth, Kansas, in
the spring 18S7 to ruu the first election
under the new law which conferred
municipal suffrage urnm the women of
Ktnsas. While h r pert in the Leaven-
worth electiou and subsequent contro-
troversies in court indicatul that she i*
rathe: given to sem-ational sayings as
wel! as doings, it is quite probable that
her statement eftneernmg the indiscrete
dUpl*y nude by the Hearst funeral ex-
cu somsts are not g-eatly exaggerated.
The mt mbers of the party who returued
today with one accord dedare that Mrs
G mgar wilfully fend maliciously falsifies
One of the memb rs of tbe party ex-
plans that Mrs Gougar is in lignant be-
catt-e of an incident which occurred at
B1 Paso According to the explanation,
the Grafton excursions s, including Mrs
Gougar, expressed a d*s>re to have their
car attached to the congressional train.
Their rrquest was denied, whereupon
Mrs Gougar and her trends expressed
great indignation. U wever, Mrs.
Gougar bottled her wrath unttlshe got
to St, Louis. When she reached that
citv she unbosomed herself to the public,
tnd told fearful stories abont the con-
gressional junketers.
A member of tbe party says that H is
true that the porter had saved up two
barrd’s full of bottles on the trip, but
claims with a few exception* the bottles
contained mireral water
Society will now have an inning. The
party days loaned to the Lord have
passed.
In Favor with the Kaiser.
When an emperor who is very nearly
an autocrat slaps a subject on the shoul-
ders, greets him as "old friend." and be-
gins a pleasantly confidential chat, the
rest of the cour-
lfi#r iMit
The Times has pul in a steam power
cutler to meet tbe demands of an incre**-
ing business aud therefore offers for saje
a30 inch "Climax" hand lever paper cut
ter in perfect order. Cheap for cash
If a bitter partisan fight is to be msde
let tbe business mun of El Pas > keep out
of it and devote themselves to the gre«i
Work of building up the ci'v L t the
polit’ci >n* and office seekers to their
heart’s content, while the taxpayers gc
quietly along and elect an honest acd cap
able ticket _
When a n-ttimit demtcrntic adminis
tra’ion takeschargeof the government in
1^93 be m-»n who have been true to then
forty should and will receive tne offices,
and the < ffi ?e seekers who are skipping
fit m one Bide of the fence to tbe other
should, and will be left out in the cold
When thedimocrats passtd the Mills
bill, wbi< his today tbe embodiment o'
their tar II policy, they left a duty of
nearly 100 per cent on sueur. Then pub
Ucans practica ly abol'sbed Ibat du'r,
and as a coos* qneoce. event famby in
tbe country will Siva from #3 o >5 per
y<sron its grocery bill.-Olobe*L>ima-
tters who are
dancing attend-
ance naturally
conclude that the
aforesaid ** o 1 d
friend” is in high
favor aud that iie
t« Ut be iiiarie tile
cl j -ct < r honors
an.1 etnoiutnents.
i a.U is the o t tt
with Dr. Johan-
nes for-
tre-riy a br.rgo-
master ot frank- Pit. johannus MIQCEL
f«rt-oa-the Main, rio luut been a nteta-
her of the reichstag aim* 1337 Abont
a year ago Emperor V* iiii.uu gave him
tne sl ip on the shoulder that allowed ex-
cess of royal favor. Soon afterward Dr
iiiiptel entered tho Prussian cabinet,
and be now Uoi.li the place of minister
of finance, it is sai i tuat ho is slated to
succeed Caprivi in the chancellorship,
and next to the kai-i r he will be the
chief authority in the political manage-
ment of the German empire.
An Furrntire t«» Matrimony.
A Davenport (l'a.) dry goods dealer who
is u believer in matrimony recently told
hits female clerks that, he would give bed-
room set* to those who married before
May 1. Within two days. his prettiest
employe claimed the prize. She had lost
no line in bringing one of her favored
admirers to terms.
The German universities have a wide-
spread tame that attracts many wealthy
and ambitious young men to their classic
nails. There are at present on the lists
tbe names of nearly a.000 foreign stu-
dents. over *03 of whom are Americans.
■v ays
MEN.
ATTENTION LADIES
t
In Jay Gould’s drawing room is a Ja;
anese crystal, a mere bagatelle, save
cost, which was $7,000.
Ex-Senator Warner Miller is said to
receive $23,000 a year as president of the
Nicaragua Canal company.
Wilfred Laurier, the Canadian Liberal,
is magnetic, accessible, and would leave
a banquet at any time in order to help a
newspaper man to a bit of news.
Congressman John L. Mitchell, of Mil-
waukee, is said to be the wealthiest
member of the incoming house. His
fortune is estimated at $40,000,000.
Dr. Da Costa has a weakness for old
■ind rare clocks. It is not an infrequent
occurrence for the doctor to take to
pieces a delicate piece of Swiss mechan-
ism and replace or repair deficient parts.
, Peter Bacigalup is the leading citizen
of Lima, Peru, and is a New York man.
He has provided Lima with an opera
house, a newspaper, and has introduced
the telephone, phonograph, bicycle and
other features of American civilization.
Cftarles Tebo, of Barre, Vt., who is of
French descent and 85 years of age, has
twenty-nine children, twenty-seven of
whom aregirl8and all living. Mr. Tebo
is a frisky man for all this, and one ot
the best fiddlers and clog dancers in the
state.
General Lew Wallace and Secretary
Foster are altnpst doubles in personal
appearance, their resemblance being so
striking that they are frequently mis-
taken for each other. Each is a man of
medium height, weighing about 170
pounds.
Elijah Kellogg, the man who wrote
“Spartacus to the Gladiators” and * -1G*
ulus to the Carthagenians,” once so fa
miliar to every schoolboy, is still living
in Harpswell, Me. He is a clergyman.
81 years old, and even now preaches oc-
casionally.
Deibler, the French executioner, says
that once or twice lately his knife has
been badly set, but he Inis reason to be-
lieve that this is the work of his ene-
mies, who are trying to make the world
believe that he is too old to manipulate
the guillotine. Deibler is C3.
Dr. William L. Abbot, of Philadel-
phia, who has returned home after ex-
ploring east Africa with Dr. Meyer, the
German savant, has presented to the
Academy of Sciences in that city a fine
collection of heads and skins of animal?
shot near Mount Kilima-Njaro.
I ,ja
y
ii
ssiism
We ha\e the largest stick and greatest variety pi
Low Shoes and Shop rs
For Ladies and Chiidr* n ever ii. this country. !• c udi g the
“Goncolier,” “Duche s,” “Nadjy,” “Harvard," Etc.
and at price*
30 4W 83 OO
ind see them,
It will pay you to can and
Shelton Bros. & Co.
113 San Antonio Street
GASOLINE
SS Cents Per Gallon
Waters Pierce Oil Company.
-:4
Campbell Real Estate Company
Vr*-
Lots in All Parts of tbe City
LOWEST PRICKS & EASIEST TERMS.
t.o-.iix the Eighteenth amt Talleyrand.
The duties of iny position kept mo in
Paris and made it impossible for me tc
go and meet Louis XVI11. I saw him
(or the first time at Compiegne. H*
was in his study—M. de Duras brought
me to it. The king on seeing me held
out his hand and said to me in the most
amiable—nay, the most affectionate-
manner: “I am ver3' glad to see you;
both our houses date from the same
epoch. My ancestors were more clever
than yours; had it been the reverse, you
would say to me today, ‘Take a chair,
come here near me, let us speak of our
affairs’; whereas today it is I who say to
you, ‘Sit down and let us talk.’ ”
I very soon did my uncle, the arch-
bishop of Rheims. the pleasure of re-
peating to bvn the compliments paid by
the king tc uar family. I repeated them
the same evening to the emperor of
Russia, who was at Compiegue, and who
with much kindness asked me if 1 was
satisfied with the king. These were his
own words. I have not been weak
enough to relate the opening of this in-
terview to any other person.—Talley-
rand's Memoirs in Genturv.
Newman Russell & Coles Aats,
Corner Ssn Antonio and Orrgon Streets
Strictly First Class
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Central
LE1DDC' HOTEL OF EL PASO
PASSENGER ELEVATOR.
SAM ECKRR. PronrietOT
Ci'HtLi,
B. W‘ POMERUJ,
President.
' ADOLPH SOLOMON,
Bee. and Treaa.
Telephone Noe. 15 end 18.
Pomeroy’s El Paso Transfer Co .
U. S. MAIL CONTRACTORS,
11YEBY, SALE AID MM STABLES
HACKS, BUS AND BAGGAGE.
-REICHT AND MACHINERY TRANSFER.
109. til & 118, Ban Francisco Pt.
2(0 202 204 & 2ftfi. South t >revon St.
FL PISO.TKXAS.
SAMUEL SCHUTZ CARPET STORE
Garget tain Ansm Eitraerd nary.
T
MORE CLUBBING OF CARUETS, Tearing, Rubbing or
REM EMBER
We have the ageticj for the OH
Stat< n 1-land Dyeing and Bleaching
E.Uhltehment. Send for catalogue
and price Hat.
NO
Wearing.
In connection with my carpet business I hive eq tipoed myself with a Pteam
carpet cleaning mi :hine, and am now reidy to receive orders for cleaning carpet*
from the finest to the coarsest fabric.
Carpets called for and de.ivered free.
Carpets cu‘, tilted, sewed and laid. First-cla^s work at reasonable nrioes,
©
SOME REASON8 WHY Y’OU 8HOLLD GIVE US A TRIAL.
We give satisfaction to all our customers.
We do first-class work
We clean all the year, rain cr shine,
We are prompt and obliging.
Our prices are modera’te.
Our he’p is ejperiei ced.
Our machinery is of the finest and latest improvement.
It you come once y< u will come > g on
We will not do poor wors at any p ice. Your carpets wear twice a* long
those cleaned bv band.
Don’t iorget the place and send your orders to
A-
Why th*i Doctor W>,s Fined.
It doesn't pay for a Oh *adi&n doctor
to poach on the territory of his profes-
sional brethren. Tbe ot;»er day a well
fcnoVm physician of (^uelec went to On-
tario by requeat and pieacribed for a
Samuel Scliutz Carpet Store,
V
121, 123, 125, San Pranoisoo1 St.
mm
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El Paso International Daily Times. (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. ELEVENTH YEAR, No. 76, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 31, 1891, newspaper, March 31, 1891; El Paso, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth540010/m1/4/?q=%22Places+-+United+States+-+Texas+-+El+Paso+County+-+El+Paso%22: accessed June 20, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.