El Paso International Daily Times (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 87, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 13, 1892 Page: 6 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 20 x 13 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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TEXAS.
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Wr THE LARGEST AND NOBBIEST
STOCIt.OF BABY CARRIAGES
•iV .•*» '? A Ever seen in the City call at
ORIGIN OF A
35S IS walz
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PRICES REmJCEn.
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THE NEW
Hotel Vendome.
PASSENGER ELEVATOR, ELECTRIC LIGHT.
Imn. elegantly furnished rooms, single wad ensdte, ^ibatL Semite
to location of room, Spootal nf.W
the month. Day board 810 a week.
' CT ATT BE DUNNING. Proprietor.
JEWEL GAS STOVES, JEWEL GASOLINE STOVES,
/ Steel Ranges, at
BEI^LA & CO.’S,
gimben and Gas Fitters, 301 and 303 San Antonio street.
A new variety of Gas Fixtures and Globes of the latest patterns. ,
way Fred P. Oleott Preferred’ BostnOM
to Politics.
Nk.tv York. April ?.—Thomon of New
Yorlf state who have gained repfite by
reason of their achievementsusually de-
vote themselves either to politics or to
literary pursuits. Yet it is probably
true, as Was once said by Commodore
Vanderbilt, that the men who shape the
business of the nation, at least so far as
.finance is concerned, are more irdiueh-
tial and yet less heard of outside the
circle of financiers than are the politi-
cians or the literary mon. Just now
Mr. Fred P. Oleott is attracting atten-
tidn to himself by 1x308011 of certain
achievements which he has consum-
mated in the financial world, and while
his name may not appear in the news-
papers as frequently as does that of
some of the' tnen who are prominent in
New York state politics, yet Mr. Oleott
is a man of-greater influence perhaps
than any politician, because through his
management he controls millions and
millions of dollars.
Mr. Oleott has recently attracted to
himself the attention of financiers, not
only in this country, but in Europe, be-,
cause he seems to have been able to ar-
range for the reorganization of railroad
properties which practically gridiron the
entire south. The securities of the vari-
ous companies involved in tins reorgani-
zation amount to moro than .$400,000,000,
a much larger sum than at the beginning
of the civil war it was thought that tha
national government would have to pro-
vide in order to pay the expenses of that
contest. The arrangement also involved
the management of nearly 9,000 miles of
railway, or practically almost all of the
railroad communication between the
states east of the Mississippi river and
south of the Ohio and Potomac,
London, April 12:4# i|\auumii$^i
there whs no'ulore important iWation’ jthat prince Georgeof Wales,only son of
.between polities an#business than tfakt iV~ 1
'which toe bankers of*Wtt» streot con-
trolled. ,, Francis KtfmSP. who was a
senator fromNcw Yfrk,also,..waa much
man, end used
thePrince pf W ales, wj(l mako a Visit
interested in
sometimes tojsay.tl
.w, opportunities
offered for u 'careenp a financier were
far more tempting %’ari any Of tho al-
lureme'rits of politics. 'Mr. Oicott spent
some twelve years on Wall street, learn-
ing the methods of that greatfinancial
whirlpool. ,„i, . ■ ■ . :
To his surprise he, wgo offered the r.pr
T r ,T r r ''*** »ioiutu5 v^jutr
bee, Montreal and other places in the
Dominion, ho will visit Ch)cagp .and
attend the World’s Fair. fiqwil^keh
return to England.
be comptroller of mkYork is/piacti-
cally to be the bank^ol the State.
When Mr. Oleott-hte&me comptroller
he realized the very^gteat political ad-
.vantage which he held in that position,
and when the politicians of his . party
said to him “We \yfyl pow nominate you
....... .
The Government Lot Suit-, ,
Hot Springs,,‘April 12.—Tihe aiiotion
sale of government lots opened today
and was conducted by United States
Land Receiver F. R. Arkins: The
sales amounted to 8,890. The sale will
continue from day to day until, tbs ff'H
lots are sold. . '. i
for governor,” the Temptation was very
great to listen to proposition: But
Great Popular Route
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M'
..... BETWEEN TH& ^
EAST AND
SHORT LINE TO
New-:- Or]
4.- ANP ALL POINTS IN
14At
Z'Sfl
Louisiana. If Mexico
Mr. Oleott some years ago was doubt-
ful about his career. He hh<
...______ __........ d been brec
in Albany as a banker in tho office of
his father. The senior Oleott Was presi-
dent of a bank in that city at a time
when Albany was almost as jmportan;
a monetary center as New York city.
The politicians of the |>prth made Al-
bafiy their center and some of uiern es-
tablished the closest relations with the
senior 01pott,c; P • .. -t?
Oleott, was a mere lad whpn these men
used to meet in his father’s back par-
lors, but as he heard their conversation
hb became impressed vdth the idea that
the basis of political parties is, after all,
a financial one, and the great issues
which divide the parties are also finan-
cial. 3
Young Oleott, impressed with this
idea, came to New York just after tho
close of the war, He bad maiiy friends
Mr. Oleott h*fl already received pro-
posals froriPsaen Who controlled vast
amotants of money? to return to Wall
street as the head of ra banking institn- i
tion, and after a good deal of deiiberar
tion he decided that toe rewards of a
financial career were far more tempting
than those of pottn&s, He therefore
went to Wall stixsef ^ahftut ten years ago,
and hfe became ktiown as the man who did
not desire td destroy properties, but to
preserve them, ia thatcapacity he took
rank unlh Mr- Piex-pont Morgan, who is
generally regardtwl up too greatest finan-
cial and constructive genius that Wall
street has known in,toe;prefl«3nt genera-
tion: Oleott is cateeihed a tnqro auda-
cious and riftkymari fchari Mhr^an, arid
' someof those • who have found fault
with his methods have insisted that
some day he might go too far and entail
ruin upon hin^Jff and toe properties
which he uudprt^es.topmwve.
Like most of, the iuen on Wall street
who'-accOinplish griat things, Mr. Oleott
is a good liver. He lik4 tho good 4;hihgs
oflife.1- Hd^isfdril «T h fafet horse, he
enjoy^toe to«at4*,‘ and bh thinks that
perhaps the highest art is that-af perfect
cooking. He looks; like a man who
lives well
Within the past year Mr. Oleott has
half a
moi-e than ------ — —
course toe man who is' able to1 do what
he has done in the morky world is rocog-
nized by the men,who control millions
as a person of greatLfinaucial genius.
E. J. Edwards.
■: ■
ARIZONA
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CALIFORNIA.
‘ Favorite Line to the North, East and Southwest.
Pullman Palace Sleeping Caffs
**•
A rt*m for Fourteen Uollani.
Land otnoe fees for entering lfiOecres
in Cheyenne ntul Arapahoe reserva-
tions (soon to bo opened) are $1. You
paff 81.50 per acre additional; cmodmlf
m two years and remainder in five
years. This is under homestead act
The Santa Fe route is the only rail-
road reaching all parts of the new
tickets to Kiowa, Woodward" Higgins
or Canadian via A.* T. & S. F. Good
Texas line, has been designated by thp
TTnitarl Ctt Ilf/te lnn/I . anliani nn/Lt
United States land commisston^r as
the land office for the southerli bhIf
wmw wM4vw «vi ouu ouuvuFi u ,unu
of Cheyenne and Arapahoe reserva
tions. Two daily trains over the A. T
& S. F. to Oklahoma City and thence
by rail to eastern border,,.. .
Don’t be deceived by -tlie claims of
inferior lines that only reach one side
of the now lands. ’ Local agent oUTtite
Santa Fe route will be glad to give yoti
copy of Oklahoma folder, and furnish
full information relative tp cost of
tickets, route to take, etc. '. v.
HEADQUARTERS DEPARTMENT
term^MrriLd?[ A^eU* ’
IvA UlUOtW y . 'JJUB . J vtll^ Jfi-Jjl Ii
9th, 1892. Sealed proposals, in tripli-
cate, will be received here until 11
o’clock a. m . May 9th, 1892, and then
opened, for transportation, of Military
plies on Routes NoR: 8, JJ, TO an<i
Jnring fiscal year ootmnencing July
1,1892. TheU. S. resetVeB the right
,0 reject any or all proposals. All in
formation will be furnished on a]
—Wi_______--------^ appli-
cation here. Envelopes containing
proposals should be markbdh “Pro
josals for Transportation?; Oh Roub-
'fo-,” and addressed to the under-
signed here. J. G. C. Lpe. Major .pod
Chief Quartermaster. ^
. •“' 1 i f
DAILY BETWEEN
SI 1* ail Mb, Ft Worth, B Faso
*• . - •
4 And. San Francisco CaL,
^ OLCOTT.
who were of great influence in toe bank-
ing and flTmtiftial world. Roscoe Conk-
ling, who at that time was juBt begin-
ning hjs career as United States senator
The Xun Cued * Six Shooter.
There was great excitement at . the
Catlio.jc convent about 3 o’clock this
morning, when torogf pistol..shots, fired
to quick succession within its walls
brought tiie'ppjfco, to tbe sc«ne- , toves
tigatioh disclosed t)iat one of the nnns
had discovered'P'&an scaling the high
wall surrounding'\he convent, and by
the tiihe lhe intritder had reached the
Bacred imilding the 1 sister ojiened fire
upon him with a big,sit ^hooter at ckist*
range. The intruder beat a hasty r*>
treat.-r-liqredo Cor. Antonio Ea
m-oos; ^A ' ; ,,
'■•■V TiusSuaar trust.
pLiLADULruiA, 12. ~r Several
agents of the sugar trust were in , the
city today .and it; was reported the ob
ject of their visit was to confer with
the wholesale grooeus telative to mak-
ing arran gesaents byii „Wh ich the trust
will allow a rebate of 40 cents a barrel
to grocers who ibnintain retail prices.
Cole’s Grocery, 207 'tftsn Aatonto
street, for fresh oreamery .gutter.
Fashionable dressmaker late from
New 1 ork City. i •,
311, St. Louis Strict:
To save money is to mak6tn«mey,' 1 '
To save and to trade buy>yonr M.u:' ?
Goods while you can get jheto ; . t c ‘
At less than cost. , f w.
vr:mA
11 ‘ i:: -
BRAIN
A«TWSSre-^^‘-
S&SsS..
tary Lomm. Spermatorrhoea caused hy over
A UIUIIUI ■ VliVkMWMM w <• -j-’ »
male We guarantee nix bottle* to cure. .Bach
ordr for Ohottles. with »3, wlU nend written!
guarantee to refund if not cured. Ouaran-
axiaruntee to refund if not cured. Guaran-
Marshall and New Orleans
Without Change I
BoUd Trains Frorn El Paso to St. Louis
FAST ’TTMia, FTBST-CLA8S EQUIPMENT AND SURE
CONNECTIONS.
via Tsana A
JOHN A. GRANT,
E. L. SARGENT,
General Agent, El Paso, Texas
GASTON M ISSUER,
THE
The Finest and the Cheapest, is
■ .. . tl - - 'mmi • • tl‘ m ■"'■n —wn /***&
G(')LDKN KAGLK WUITKSHIKTS
*1.25 Each; 6 lor $7. Try Them
a\»:>
M '
a *%
respectfully,
QOLDEN
VlhS b-
-Id .i
EAGLE]
■ ,I.S 1
,■ .''I'
I*.«
Onc-pricc Clothii^ House.
B. BLUMENTHAL.
MtTNDY BLOCK, EL PASO STREET,
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El Paso International Daily Times (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 87, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 13, 1892, newspaper, April 13, 1892; El Paso, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth540056/m1/6/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.