El Paso International Daily Times (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. SIXTEENTH YEAR, No. 208, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 26, 1896 Page: 3 of 4
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M
l
WANT8 BA88ETT8 MONEY.
roilUMl ctu •( Lmi Interest—Caught
M Handed.
Th# other day Mr. O. T. BmmH told
mm
5; m !P
K1 Paid) Daily Times, Wednesday, August 26,1896.
BICYCLE!
FOR THE SUM OF
Remember we in with yon Today and
Tomot row, this Year and Next Yaar.
W. G. Walz Co
MUSIG STORE.
Bleyel* and Sewing Haeblna Depot.
A Shrinkage in Values
RATHER THAR
A Cut in Prices.
First class new Northern Po-
tatoes, remarkably cheap, 20
pounds for 25 cents, and $1.10
per cwt.
DEVILED HAM, delicately prepared
ready for the table, 4 ounce can
key opener, only 5c. This is not
our best grade; we keep in stock
a better class of goods and can
recommend other brands more
highly.
ANDERSON’S JAM.—One lb. cans,
nearly every variety of fruit rep-
resented in these jams. Only
10 cts. per can.
ARBUCRLE’S COFFEE.— One pound
pkgs. 20 cts., but our best grade
of Java and Mocha (roasted) costs
40 cts. per lb. and we have no
hesitation in recommending
strongly. It is the best we can
buy.
BELLE SPRINGS BUTTER.—A brand
that can be relied on, only 20 cts.
per lb., and as we have first-class
cold storage facilities you may
always be sure of getting good
fresh butter.
RANCH EGGS received every day
from near-by farmers. Genuine
fresh eggs 25 cts. Eggs shipped
from Kansas (in refrigerator cars
all the way) and put in our ic©
box as soon as received, 15 cents
per doz. or 2 doz. for 25 cts.
PEACOCK BRAND OF FLOUR—A first
quality, highest patent, winter
wheat flour,sold on its well known
merits, 25-lb. sack for 75 cts.
LAUNDRY SOAP—8 bars first class
soap for 25 cents.
J. B WATSON’S
GROCERY STORE,
Corner Sen Antonio end Stanton Sta.
•PHONE 151.
It didn’t take long to find the river I °»» of tao Joiiy g.nu Telia How a.1
guard who found a baaket In the Ukaai’,
elected on the 3rd of next November. s#tu#a y«»torday. valid or the weary toller In thla world’a
And now Mr. Andrew Monroe at 407 Aooordlng to Madame Rumor there great work ahop. The ollmate here la
El Paao etreet announoea that he la will be a nnuibar of weddlnga In El delightful—neither too oold nor too
ready to take a little of Mr. Baeaett’a Paao the oomtng fall. hot, but a pleaaant refreablng medium
oaah at theae odda. Mr. Monroe has Albuqnerque’a bate ball team will Ith»t makes the vlalter feel that after
been watohlog oloaely the expression* ba here Saturday and Sunday and (he •*! >**• >• worth living, eapeolaliy at
of opinions ell over theoountry. Will Browns are ready for them. Qallentlne’a hotel at Santa Roaalla.
Mr.^aeaettcometoMmeT A bloyole track la being built tom »•»
Bib Ingeraoll aasaying that Mr Bryan, h#oonwnlancoof ^{j,toa°oyolUto ia h,lr t0 and *dd to th# °°onve“unoe
the Demooratto nominee for president, , 0 *D1*n,ce 01 ra,t oyouata. and o( gn#tU M(J to BgTe
Btanda on a platform cf principles the I It « whispered around aa a dead them the tiresome ollmb up a steep
aame as have baen championed by the eeoret that one of the most prominent bill after taking their baths, Mr. Gal-
ableet statesmen of this country for ““‘“here of the El Paeo bar will eoon lentlne sank a well adjoining his hotel
the past fifty years. This la sad news lead a ™*r bride to the altar. and tapped the subterranean etream of
for the Republicans who have always Baoauae M. F. McLean has paid a hot waters. Over thla well he haa
pioned their faith to Sir Robert’s pleasure trip to Mexloo does not mean erected his bath houses under the same
political jadgment. that Dan Stuart oontamplates playing roof with his hotel and the water is
The gold bugs of the eaat do not atop another flatlo carnival on the border. pumped, emoklog hot Into the baths
at anything In their efforts to mislead As the Pierson hotel la to be newly The water Is from ldentioally the aame
the people. The Ohloago Tribune haa furnished I am offering for sale all of «tream that poors Into the springs at
the contempt of all fair minded the furniture now in the house, In th* foot of the hill. I hare tried both
men In the oourae of mlsrepresenta-1 ■ ■ . _ _ 1 -----•*---------- " -*
tton It la pursuing. It baa been oalled
down fraquently, and now the Ohiosgo I
i* -
“In an editorial published last Sun-
day the Chicago Tribune makes an- if’ „ . „ . ,
bwer to a correspondent who questions . Thursday afternoon th* pnbllo school
the accuracy of Its estimate of the size I teaohers will meet with Prof. Putnam
of the orotrd that gathered In Madison I ®° receive their asslgoments and
Hot Wave Luxuries
A. P. Coles.
ball team will
when It trlea
rowns next
The looala are eager for the
Square garden to hear Mr. Bryao. Io
support of his criticism of the Tri-
bune’s figures, which were 12,000, the
correspondent cited the figures given
In the Reoord’s account, whloh were
22,000, Io reply to this correspondent
the Tribune said: 'Madison Square
garden seats exactly 9,275 people.’ As
the plaoe was orowded the Tribune al-
lowed for a larger attendanoe, but con-
tended that 'an estimate that 12,000
people attended the ratification was
csrtslnly liberal.’
ft'Tu'sday evening Mr. Oookran
made a epeeoh In Madison Square gar-
den, the same plaoe In which Mr.
Bryan bad appeared the wetk before.
In the Tribune’s Introductory account
of this meeting yesterday mornlog ap
peered the foliowijg: “Twenty thous
and people rose to their feat, waving
smell United States fl<gs in their
hands to cheer and cheer again W.
Bourke Oookrau ”
“How oould 20,000 people rise to
their feet In a hall the seating oapaolty
of which the week before, when Mr.
Bryan was speaklrg, was exeo:ly
9,275?’*
But a better j)ke still oomes from
Fort S nltb, Arkansas, where a gold
bug oonoelved the brilliant Idea of
polling the 176 prisoners In the federal
prison there. The poll showed that
172 of the prisoners were McKinley
men while four of them wanted to vote
for Bryan. A mej irlty of the MoKln
ley men, It was ascertained, were la for
murdering United States c Ulcers, for
rape, train robbery, eto., and will he
burg before November.
Buy your milk of Missouri Dairy.
HEARD ON THE STREETS-
arrange for their fall eduoatlonal
oampalgn.
Yesterday United States Deputy Mar
shall Mej ire and oustoms Inspectors
raided the Chinese jilnt on Oregon
si rest and oaptured one oelesttal who
had no oertlfloate.
A large oonoourse of the friends of
Slater Stella attended the memorial
services at tho hospital chapel yester-
day morning. A regulem mass was
sung for the repose of the lamented
sister’s soul.
Anastaolo da la Rosa, a youthful
Aztec, exchanged uncomplimentary re
marks with an irate senorlta In Obl-
huahulta the other night and pranoed
on the carpet before Justice Gatlin and
was assessed 823.50 per pranoe.
The young ladles Dove Club gave a
“mattress’’ soolable at the restdenoa
of Judge T. A. Falvey lest evening
Those present were: Miss Pansy
Loomis, Annie Loomis. Mary Edwards,
Stella Jones, Joels Nations, Emms
Ullman and Mabel Falvey.
A few days ago Ilia looal ooriespon
dent of the San Fracolsoo Examiner
wired that paper an Interview with
Santa Teresa and tha Socorro, New
Mexloo, Advertiser repreduoes a large
portion of the Interview verbatem, as
coming from County Clerk Baca. The
Herald of this olty ooples the artlole
crediting It to the Advertiser Instead
of the Examiner.
Missouri Dairy milk Is the best.
“It Is Impossible for me to tell you,’’ vl®*t 8‘lv,r 01ty>
PERSONAL-
George Fitzgerald came In yesterday
| from Arizona.
Dr. Van Clave baa returned from
I ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦+»♦»♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦?
;j THOMAS A. DWYER, JR.,
i: Commission Merchant i:
__AND___
RECEIVING AND FORWARDING
AGENT,
JI1ENE1,
8TATB OF CHIHUAHUA, MEXICO.
Buys and sells nativs and foreign pro-' ’
II duets on commission, nnd receives and 11
’1 dlspatohes freights by mil, express and
\ [wagon*. ;;
< i >♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦' •
said a well known Rtpnblloan yester
day, "what tha looal Rapublloaos will
do tha oomlng fall. We have not yat
agraed on a elate farther thaa that we
will nomtua’e George Parker for oouu
ty dark. 1 have heerd soma talk
about endorsing Judga Baokler for dis
trlot judge;bsites I said we have not
agreed upon any programme yet.
Mayor Campbell’s posse have the
county convention grabbed and will do
what th»y consider best for ths party.
Tba little ollqua always fighting Mayor
Campbell will not get anything. The
Repabllonn masses would not vote for
one of them shuuld we give one a nomi-
nation. Every time Mr. Campbell
downs them they say be does It with
the Mexloan vote, but that le not true.
At tha last primary held In the first
ward there were forty white Repub-
licans present and the highest vote
reoelved by any one of the ollque can-
didates was 15 voIeB end ten of those
15 votes were oast by Mexloau Amer-
icans. Yes sir the rank and file of the
looal Rtpnblloan party Is with Mayor
Campbell.”
V
O. O. Blodgett and Mr. Tansy have
returned from White Oaks.
Judge and Mrs. T. A. Falvey return-
ed home yesterday from tho east.
Mr. H. Boeroherdlog, wife and
o'llldren, have returned from Galves
ton.
District Clerk Esos.jada Is In Gua-
dalupe, but will probably return home
today.
Collector Ohas. Davis- and M. F.
McLean will probably return from tba
south this morning
President Robinson of the Mexloan
Central oama up from tho south yes-
terday en route to Boston.
Miss E. B. Mesklns, principal of tha
high sohool, returned yesterday from
Mexico, where aha spent her vacation
Peaoh cobbler at Smith’s Creamery.
and tha results era the asms. Bat for
oomfort’s sake I taka my batha at tha
hotel.
This Is tha best season of tho yaar to
visit Santa Roaalla, both on aooouut of
tho ollmate at thla eeesou of tha ysar
and on aooouut of tha largo variety of
fruit and vegetable* to bo found on tho
tables of Grand Hotel de la Outva.
Tha two excellent Ohlceae oooks who
have oharg* of th* oulloary and of the
hotel believe io famishing their
patrons with plenty of luolous fruit,
such as otntaloupee, watermelons
peaohss and grapes. Mr Grilentlne
said tha othar day that ht oould not
understood why El Pasoans did uot
visit tha springs at this season of the
ysar Instead of la the early epilog
whan ths weather was not so pleasant
and whan it la a difficult matter to set
a good table.
We have a pleasant party her* at th*
hotel now and wa are all slivsrltos ax
ospt Gallentine and he finds It entirely
too tiresome to talk us all to a stand
still so h* Is devotiog his spare mo-
meats to an invention for the exterml
oatton of a hard of knots left in this
neighborhood by a oonple of oltiztns
from El Paso. Wa are to have a big
ball at tha ho'el tomorrow night and
Gallauttna, Phil Fall and MoNulty are
new In ths billiard rooms praotlolng
few new stops that Ben Moore brought
here from Jimenez, and whloh
picked np at tha flssta. Colonel
Melville of the Santa Fe Is still stealing
watermelons.
Tell all yonr friends who fall like
they would enjjy a rest and baths that
will renew their youth to purohaae a
ticket for Sinta Rosalia and tha hotel
wagon will meat them at tho dapot.
Sunday night wa were all sitting Id
front of the sally port smoking and
tolling yarns, whan an El Pasoan oast
a gloom over tha orowd with tho re-
mark: “I wish I was sitting In the
Golden Engle gtrden at El Paeo to
olght qnsfflog loe oold beer and listen
Ing to Carl Pltzer’s orchestra dlsoonrs
log sweet mnslo. Oh that wonld be
life.’’ The beer they have in tho town
of Santa Raealla Is not as oold as El
Paso’s aocqala water and yon oan
Imagine how we felt when that dock
referred to the Golden Eagle and oold
bear. _ Mac.
Milk for sals at Smith’s Creamery.
Suburban Kota*.
Monday evening at Rlnoon, N. M.,,
the popular youog editor of tbs Rlocon
Weekly, F. A. Anderson, and Miss
Rena Howard, one of the leading
society belles of the olty, were joined
together In the bonds of matrlmooy
by Dr. C. L. Edmondson, J. P. After
ths oeremony the young folks of the
town tamed oat en masse and gave the
fair bride and bridegroom a surprise
congratulation party, whloh no donbt
Mr. and Mrs. Anderson will In years
to corns look book upon with pleasant
raoolleotlone. The yonng oonple will
take a tour through Mexloo toepend
tbelr honeymoon, and will be at boms
to their nnmerons friends abont Sept
15th.
J. A. Deemer and his family have
left_Cooke, N. M., to reside hereafter
FOR GENTLEMEN
•
Linen Crash Suits,
White Duck Pants,
White Duck Vests,
Thin Coats and Vests,
(ell colon)
Straw Hats,
Transparent Underwear,
Lawn Neckwear.
SEE:
Our line of
Balbriggan Underwear
at $i.oo per suit.
R. C. Lightbody,
The Clothier,
212 AND 214 EL PASO STREET.
SANCHEZ’ BlUhfiTIN.
REAL ESTATE, EMPLOYMENT AMD
COMMISSION.
Oattla Broker.
ro* SALE.
twins, hacienda. In Mexico,
*ood
Two haciendas of 1.S00 acres of land e sh.
j P1.8 of Canal cost ova*
125,000. Adapted for cnltlvatlon,
$3,000—Six room brick boose on North Ore g
st. Corner lot. Modern conveniences.
$808—Three room honse on South Ore*
•“••t. A bargain. Corner lot.
Buildlug lots, on Mcbs avenue. Very c
■ a Kuildlnff lots op corner ol Campbell a„
13rd and corner of Florence and 1st streets.
COFFEE PLANTATIONS AND LAND
adapted to general cultivation of wheel, tom
|coffee, sugar oane, cotton, tobaeeo, ramie
rloe, rubber bananas, tropical fruits and .at-
FARMS--Down the valley. Very Ot..p
POM RENT,
fnnliliid or unfurnished rooms, host
| and business blookt.
Bargains lneity lots.
MONET TO LOAN.
General Information about Mexloo given.
V. L. SANCHEZ.
Oregon St., near PostoSee.
Money Saved
Is Money Made.
Don’t buy cheap shoes; it
isTalse economyT^Cheiip
shoes are the most expen-
sive in the end. The
price does not make the
quality—it’s the quality
that makes the price.
There’s not a mean pair
of Ladies’, Men’s or Chil-
dren’s Shoes in our stock
—they all wear well.
You can’t buy them at as
low figure as you can get
paper shoes for—which
do you want ?
Good reliable shoes, or
the cheap kind ?
TRUTHFUL
ADVERTISERS
Oregon St., next to Postoffice.
IliRIRilllllllRlIlljj
CLASSIFIED ADR.
VOR HAI.R.
pGK S*LK-“Purnighed room for rout”
■nMEs offlcc°2™c\»nte"each.C&rd'
I?OK SALE—babbit
k office
F°r
metal at the Timm
SALE—Blotting paper at the Tims*
office
WANTRD.
YU ANTED-A re.pectable woman todo cook-
/* ,, >ng uud general housework for a .mall
family. Apply 913 Mesa avenue.
1X7 ANTED—One good team for thirty daya.
*» Inquire at Buchanan & Powers.
^ ANTED—A woman ol abont forty to act aa
co. Call on Dellqnc.t and Andrews, dealers In
School books, 308 San Antonio street.
FOR KENT.
L OK ItENT—Five room brick house, furnish
X ed.in good loeat.on. Address 718 North Kan-
sas street.
pOR KENT-Nic.ly furnished front room,
JL cheap, with private family in aurburba.
Qu et neighborhood aud gran and trees in
yurd Address M. L.. caro Times.
KODNO.
COUND—A pair of eye glasses. Owner can
get them by paying for this notice.
PROgXiBSIOMAL.
Physiol «n and Surgeon.
DR. O. H. CONRRLV.
EVE, EAK, NOSE AND THROAT. CATABRH
TREATED.
GLASSES ACCURATELY FITTED.
Room TH, Sheldon Block.
Dentist.,
He Talk! for Juar.z
The Mexican Herald says: "Han
Manuel Banoba, the Mexloan collector
of onstoms at Paso del Norte, le In tbls I In Dernlog, N. M.
olty, havlDg arrived here the day ba- After the base ball season L over Id
fore yesterday. H* la stopptog at the the eaat, Oapt. Anson haa made
Yesterday afternoon a Tires reporter I house of hta mother, Celle Oerrada de arrangements for himself and seven
CHARLES ROKAHR,
PRACTICAL
BOOT MAKER.
No. 210 Sau Antonio St:,
EL PASO, TPJP2LAS.
O. 0. BBOWB.
Established 18trl
GOLD CBOWN f
BRIDGE WOhf
18 A 10 Sheldon Bl. .
El Paao, Tex. '
DR. KING,
THE SPECIALIST,
Couenltatlon and Kxamlnatlon
Free.
IS DURING, AND BY A NEW METHOD
Positively
PILES
any of them
dropped In at the olty hall and listened
to a party of friends talk about war
times. “I want Into tba late war si a.
bngler and I remember dlstiootly how |B 0DS °f tk* popular officials In the
. >♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦,♦♦♦♦♦♦< *j
:: EL PASO KITCHEN,
218 El Paeo Street.
A first class Restaurant.
The tables contain the best
the market affords. X
Good service to all patrons. 4
Open from 5 a. m. to 10 p. m.
< ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦»»♦•*«♦*••♦•♦»<e
lUl
Some few artloles yon may need, end
do not know we keep for sale; Wax
gee lighters, lamp burners end ohtm
neye, Paraflne and Oordova fancy
oolored wax oandles, ostrich, turkey,
and plotnro feather daster, stove, shoe,
eorab, sink and osanter brashes
Whisk, osrpet, end oslllog brooms
Moase-traps. Lnnob boxes end bask-
et*, olotbea baskets end clothes
hampers. Chopping bowls. Self
wringing mops. Galvanized Iron end
fiber wash tabs, wash boards. Cotton
and wire clothes linos. Soonrtng
brlok, potato mashtrs, rolling pins
and egg bsaters, oan openers, lemon
joloeextraotors. Hnntors flour lifters,
oil oane, root bear bottles, and Masons
fralt Jars. Toilet paper, tablets or
rolls, Oolgates toilet water, bay ram
endoologn*. .Also a fine line of Col
gates and Fels toilet soaps in fifty
varieties and many other things neoet
•ary to good honse keeplog.
old Joe Shelby frsqnently made onr
bine jiokete hard to oat oh In Missouri
We kept a sharp lookout for Joe Shelby
and his male. He was not afraid of
anything and possessed the audaoity
of a whole regiment. With only
twenty troopers be wonld surprise and
make snob a noise ae to oanse onr boys
to imagine that Stnart’s oavalry had
ns. Bat at last tho federal boys
oanght on to Sbelby’a methods and
mad* him pay dearly for trying to bloff
ns with a bandfnll of man. Onr boys
sang a little verse like this:
’Lookout boys, make no noise,
Bat do not be afraid,
Somatblngs Up and h—l’s to pay,
Joe Bhslby Is on a raid.’
’ We would often ring these lines
aronnd tbe oamp fire when we were
expecting a call from Shelby.”
V
“The teaohers In tbe pnbllo schools,
said a bright yonng pupil yesterday,
’are to have a testa of discipline them
selves this fall. They will be allowed
raoeiva oompany only on Saturday
and Sunday avanlogs and
Santa Teresa No. 4, and will ba hers I teen others to go to Hudson Hot
two wstks. Mr. Banohe has been on Springs, N. M ., and will become the
the frontier for ten years or more, and guests of Mr. Graham, tha proprietor
i.— ------•*-- of the new hotel whloh has just l>»en
oomplated.
Mexloan olvll seivloo. His errand to
Mexico Is toomsntt tbe government
on business oonneoted with theoustom
bouse. Speaking of bis work be said
that Paso del Norte le now the first
oastom honse Ic Mexloo la amount of
eiports of bnsiness. Tbe duties on
Imports from tbe United States daring
the year will not fell short of $1,100,000
In vein*; while tbe value of exports
through Paso del Norte from Mexico
Elegant ooffee at Smith’s Creamery.
Look Relay Keoe.
San Francisco, Aug. 25—At noon to-
day a start was mads In tha Examiner
Journal trans oontlnental relay raoe,
A leather packet containing a massage
to Major General Miles, U. 8. A., New
York, will be passed along three hnn-
he oalonlates at 811,800,000, or $660,000 dred relays by six hundred riders,
more than through ths Vera Ornz ons roaoblng New York In from twelve to
tom house daring the year. Among | fourteen days,
other matters that bring Mr. Banohe
to oonault with tha government Is to I Hioh Gold stnk*.
an arrangement for tha dispatching of Night Hawk, Colo., Aug. 25—This
oastom honse work nnd transfer of oamp Is slotted over the dleoovery of
goods at tha oastom boas* Itself rather gold ora oarrylng 880,000 par ton. Ths
than at tha warehouse. Tbls he olalms | prospector who shows the rloh samples
will save twenty four hoars and ba a
goed thing for the Mexloan Csntral
end the pnbllo.’’
parties only on Friday avanlogs. It Is
said, too, that they will not be allowed
to eat pie for lnnob. Forthslr benefit
e onrfew ordlnanoe Is to b» passed by
the olty ooanoll and the teachers will
be rtqolred to go to nsd at 8 o’olook ’’
Badger and Thompson Nominated.
The Dsmooratlo legislative conven-
tion at Marfa yesterday nominated J.
B. Badger, of Bl Paso, and S. B
attend I Thompson, of Jtff Davis ooonty, by
aoolamation for the legislator*. Jndge
Baokler, J. M. Dean and W. W. Tarney
of this olty attended the oonventlon.
It was thonght that Robert Hloks
woo'd be on* of the nominees, bat
another deal was evidently made and
Tba pupil appeared to orjiy th* j <k» just what It means oannot ba dlaoerntd
Immensely. One olty oouootl pa-sod j at this dtstaoo*.
rjssnuassuas:? o,,v,Jrr,r ■sr, N.„„
tear, aod anothtr ordloaoca flxlog ft Olevilahd, Ohio, Aog, Nearly
diet for nublto sohool teaohers and ih®
pupils would baa happy companion 19°Pr*m« ,od*» K?‘«hts of Pythias was
refuses to reveal the exaot looatlon
till he oan make his title to tho olalm
saoure. _____
Chtongo Varkitt.
Chicago, Ang. 25—Thera seems to be
no limit to the slnmp of oorn end
poik. Both of these commodities made
new low reoords, oorn declining J8o
end pork 25o. Wheat suffered con-
siderably from liquidation and deolln-
ed %o. OAts were heavy and deollned
%@ko.
Baseball.
Washington 4 3 Cincinnati 3 1.
Philadelphia 9 7, St. Louis 4 8.
Baltimore 2 4, Cleveland 12 4.
New York 4 8, Louisville, 6 6.
Brooklyn 1, Oblcsgo 4.
Boston 11, Pittsburg 7.
Fine Repeiring end Cowboy Ridinglppjy^j^ QiSEASES
Boots a Specialty.
Only first-class work made to or-
der. Special care taken in fitting
tender and deformed feet. '
Half soles put on in 20 minutes
MEXICAN
OPALS,
Direct from the mine*.
Carry an extensive stock. Special bar
gains to daalara.
40N0UA HEWS COMPANY,
Mexloan Central Railway Depot,
Jnarei, Mexloo.
CtRa* hoars B to 12 a.m. 8:30 to 6:80
Dr. E. Alexander’s |
Native Wine.
THE PURE JUICE OF THE GRAPE
ITCHING,
protruding Guarantee
aud EXTERNAL To Cute
without auy detention from
budncH aud doei not u«e the Knife or Lig-
ature aud la a perfectly patnleia treatmout.
Fistula and Ulcerated bowels positive-
Nervous Detail-
• •<■mu.invbnvi.vlty, LOSt MUU-
liood, lu young aud middle aged men, re
■tored. Unnatural Dlacbarirea, Son-
orrhuea, Gleet, Stricture.
CYU I IC Talnt(’d Blood, Pimples, sore
O I niLIO Month, Ulcer*, etc., permairatlf
cured without the use ol mercury, and Hydro-
cele cured by a new and palnlevv treatment.
rmVFY Akin I’aluful or difficult miatu-
MUItLl AleU ration, milky or brlokduat
URINARY DISEASES SJteV&'fi
attended to before It goes Into Borne horri-
ble malady, inch aa Hrlghta Disease, etc.
UTERINE DISEASES KSKiRSys
the Womb, Excess Menses. Uleeratlon, Un-
natural DlttciiarKee, and many otoer
I troubles peculiar to woman.
RAtADDU Throat aud Bronchtl
UMIMnnn Trouble treated by the Iu-
I lialatlou Method,lu which themadiolne
oomes In aotual contact with diseased parts.
WRITE- *or symptom blanks. Satisfactory
nnilL results Guaranteed through my per-
j feet system o(correspondence.
Frenlctthal Hbck (Up stairs). GornerSan
Francisco and hi Paso Sts, Opposite Grand
Central Hotel,
EL PASO. TBXiS.
Address R. F. JOHNSON A CO.,Sol* I
Agents, El Paeo, Texas, for prices In [
balk or nos*.
piece to the blfnrosted dress ordl- *"jP
nonce. Th* new ordlnanoe will also I ?.’t0.hie °‘1L*d th# *??.«• to °r<l»r today,
provids that Sspstiatondsnt Patnam
resent when Snprsms Ohanoellor Flnedonghnats at Smith’s Oresmsry.
Tbs Leading Grocers.
and boy pnplls will not b* allowed to
ohewgnmlf they wear gallnsee with
their belts or do not part tbelr hair In
tho middle^_
Fresh eggs at Smith’s Oreomery.
Teams Wasted
To heal ooke end oopper bullion bt
tween the tormina* of the Gills Valley,
Glob* and Northern railway and th*
, town of Glob*, Arizona.
I For part Ionian address W. W. Rloh-
arda at Geronlmo, Arizona.
Chairman Dnnn, of th* oommltt** on
arrangements Introduced Mayor Mo-
Klsson, who spoke bristly. Ohanoellor |
Rttoble responded. He deolered th*
olty might well feel honored by th*
preeeno* of snob a representative body
of men from evsry part of the continent
and from ovary vocation In Ufa.
Th* lodge to eeoret session oonferred
! the supreme lodge rank on 48 new |
member*.___
Ask for the EL PASO TRANSFER
the boat five oent OIOAR in ths mar
kat.
\ EHRENBERQ,
Carriage and Wagon
PAINTER,
320 111 Paao Street.
El Paso Coffin & Casket
Cornpany.
418 BL PASO STREET.
Undertakers and Embalmers.
Hearses and carriages furnished.
Telephone 7L
SSED Cerrillos Coal,
WOOD! AND KINDLING.
CHARCOAL
in any quantity at car-load price..
DEALERS IN
Hay, Crain and Feed
Lime, Cement and Plaster.
Roofing Materials.
I Ht. Loula St., near Pierson Hotel. Phone 8.
_____THE____
Pioneer Marble Work*,
M. ROTUNNO, Prop.
All klnde of Monument Work to
order. Qrenlte and Marble Tomb-
stone! and all kind* of Cemvtvry
Work. Stone Coping for cemeter-
ies. Iron Fences.
Statuary,
S,n Antonio ’tree,,
Opposite Court Hones.
■L PASO,
HIM
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El Paso International Daily Times (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. SIXTEENTH YEAR, No. 208, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 26, 1896, newspaper, August 26, 1896; El Paso, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth540560/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.