El Paso International Daily Times (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 256, Ed. 1 Saturday, October 21, 1899 Page: 4 of 8
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BL PASO DAILY T1MBS, SATURDAY, OCTOBER *1,1839.
HPaso^^Tlmes
■aland at tbe Postofflce at El Paso, Texas,
a* Beeond-Olas* Uall Hatter.
X1MB8 PUBLISHING COMPANY.
Publishers.
JUAN S. HAKT. Manager.
OOlce:
BAST OVERLAND STREET.
Telephone No. M.
80B8CRIFTION RATES.
DAILY.
rered In the elty. per week..........It e
Pajable^ew^Satord ajMoCarrl.r.
It cent*.
Invariably In Adranee.
no oo
S 00
1 00
5aa month......... ............................
ah paper* discontinued at the expiration of
^Fh*¥i*rM oan be found on tie In the news-
^•pa* department of the library of oongreas,
SOUTH WESTERN STAB—ELF AS O
Our Circulation.
Besides thoroughly ooverlng the loeal Held,
tbe Tin*8 r -aches,
ON DAY OF PUBLICATION,
the towns and stations named below, within
the radius of the South wehtsrm Star above
towns, wbleb distance Is 370 miles from El
Paso to eaeb point:
THAI.
Ufalft
fsleta
lien
Oblspa
ndell
•an EUsarlo
fats
Wend
Valentine
.abens
Bio Grande
1 ft Hancock
Madden
ESF
■alone
bases
holen
Quebec
Ryan
Aragon
Marfa
S?r
Bra j ton
Torbert
Dal berg
Oollado
Eo‘Jc
____fa
Nopal
Patsano
Toronto
Alpine
Strobe 1
Altuda
Vowne
Courchesne
Montoya
Oanutflo
Vinton
Anthony
Brunswick
■arlham
Mesquite
Has ilia Park
Las Oruoee
Dos
terra Blanea Lennox
Marathon
Warwick
Haymond
Taber
Mason
Roeenfeld
Volya
H*W_____
Albuquerque
Alameda
Bernalillo
A Igodones
Elota
Thornton
Rosario
Waldo
Los Cerlllos
Ortl*
GalllHte<
Twltchell
Lamy
CanondtO
Glorlcta
Fox
Rowe
Fulton
Sands
Ribera
Blanchard
Ohapelle
Silver Olty
Hawkins
White Water
Hudson
Crawford
Wh’tney
Coleman
Florida
Nutt
Easley
Hocket
Hatch
Royers
Strauss
Vevay
Lanark
AHISOHA.
Luiena
Emerson
Sanderson
Artspe
Hoyle Flat
Ai.amore
Van Horn
Wild Horse
Plateau
Boracho
Kent
Han Marline
Gomes
Toy ah
Hermoso
Pecos City
Barstow
Qulnto
Fyote
Aroya
Monahans
Longfellow
MIXIOO.
_onm Ana
Leo* burg
lelden
Tonuoo
Detroit
Bln con
Drama
Duhsm
Aleman
Gutter
Ingle
Orooker
Pope
San Marrlul
Arny
•an Antonio
Socorro
Llmltar
Alamlllo
La Joy a
■ablnal
talen
Lo* Lunas
HleU
•an
Abajo
Afton
Kenxln
Aden
Ohappel
Oambray
Myndus
Zunl
Demin*
Tunis
Gage
WUna
Separ
Lisbon
Lordsbur*
Pyramid
Conrad
Stein's Pass
Vanarman
San Simon
Olga. „
Santa Fe
Manxana
Sandla
Hlo Pueroc
Garcia
Shawnee
Armllo
II to
El Hit
Laguna
Laguri
Cube to
McCarty*
Ban Jose
Lake Valley
La Lui
Tulare wa
Alamogordo
Hillsboro
Ft Cummings
■owls
WUoo*
Railroad Pass
Cochise
MIXIOO
■uldad Juares Sablnal
■apello San Pedro
Aarreal Oorralltos --
las Bias Casas Grande* Gall-go
•uiman Samalayuea Laguna
Ssus Chihuahua
an Jose
Jjo Callente
Moctexuma
ADVERTISING RATES.
The custom among newspapers of printing
Oss rate and accepting another is fast dlsap-
**Then? iM*s has been a onb phios organ
■see 1286. We And It pays.
~ ptthc
Ho discounts, except those published on this
rats sheet are allowed to anybody.
Uniform rates are necessary for the satis-
faction of tbe advertiser and tbe sucoese of
th* newspaper.
The advertising agent oan pay our rate and
■Stall tbe space to buyers at our figures with
syofit to himself. For Instance: He buys nine
lichee for one year, for|188; If he retallseach
iaeh at M2 a year, his profit, Is 10U per oent.
Ws sell at the same figure to everybody.
TOO
0 00
U 00
118
u w
■ 10
M »
■ m1
■ »
!S
*S:
n!
oo
BP ACE.
Inches.
8 Mosle Mos'9 Mos’l Y'r
Net. Net. I Net. | Net.
=i
..... j.._
li
~.W
M
13 60
24 HO
H2 40
40 SO
47 26
48 no
64 00
68 06
60 76
66 18
K 26
78 30
SI 70
8.1 10
94 60
99 lO
104 6:
33 76 1 42 00
I 75 00
METAL MARKET.
SILVER—..............................
COFFEE...............................
LEAD (Baseltar Quotations)..
LEAD (Mow York)..............
moN(A^w^i:r.
MEXICAN PEBOB (Jaftre*i)“_„
MEXICAN PEBOB (El Faso)....
... SB 7-B
... lit OO
... 4 OO
... 4 6#
... 32 OO
... 18 OO
= 1?
YESTERDAY'S WEATHER IN EL FASO
Observation at 6:45 p. m., loeal time
Barometer, sea level.
Thermometer___________________________________
Direction of wind_____________________
Wind velocity, miles per hour----
Rainfall last 24 hours Inr'and bun.
Highest temperature tod ay__________
Lowest temperature today________
30.06
73
- NE
.. 3
Clear
.09
83
39
There is hope for the Boers, if it is
true, as reported, that John Ball is ne-
gotiating with American army contrac-
tors for embalmed beef to feed the
British troops.
A few days ago the citizens of Me
rida, Mexico, made a big demonstra-
tion to boom President Diaz for re-elec-
tion. President Diaz does not need
booming; bis reoord has boomed him
and he can be president as long as he
lives, if he so desires.
There is a precedent for Schley’s ac-
ceptance of a home, as a gift from tbe
people. President Grant accepted
everthing that came his way and Pres
ident Cleveland was never known to re-
fuse a "sample case” or an invitation to
go duck hnnting.
In Kansas City the other night a
meeting of ICO representative single
line merchants, members of the Retail
Grocers Association, the Retail Batch-
ers Association and tbe Single Line
merchants’ Association, was held and
steps were taken to form an organiza-
tion inclnding the single line merchant's
in the city to support the department
store commissioner in his effort to com-
pel the department stores to pay the
tax provided by the law passed by the
last legislature. There are 3,000 single
line merchants in Kansas City, and as-
surances were received that the new or-
ganization would receive the support of
nine-tenths of them. Twenty-nine or-
ganizations have endorsed the organ-
ization and its proposed warfare on the
department stores.
from the cradle to the grave they are a
tax upon their countrymen. Not one
that they object to, any more than to
the expense of maintaining tbe machin-
ery of courts and constabulary, but a
tax nevertheless, and one that they do
not care to have increased beyond the
necessities of the honr.
But the objectionable pbaae of the
Schley project is that it is, in a sense,
prompted'by a desire to stand the hero
of Santiago alongside of the hero of Ma
nila in every manifestation of popular
favor. Tbe impulse is discreditable to
the American people and eeeentially
coarse. It should be discouraged every-
where. If not, then let’s play the dis-
gusting farce to ite shameful finale.
With ‘ ‘endless chains” to express the
emotional insanity of the period,provide
homes and manors for every- man who
commanded the fire of his vessel upon
the foredoomed ships of the Spanish ar
mada at Manila or Santiago. Mean
time, in the frenzy of hero worship and
rivalry in the reward of the heroes, for-
get the gallant fellows who, stripped to
the skin, fed the raging furnaces and
drove the powerful engines, under
whose tremendous impulse the mighty
dogs of the sea sprang to their missions
of destruction and glory. Forget, like-
wise, the intrepid hero of the turret
who swung and trained his gnn amid
the tempest of action to crawl out
upon the hot decks, when respite was
ordered, limp and tremulons from the
thunderous crash and recoil of his
piece, like a "panting, blackened vic-
tim thrown up by a colliery explosion.”
These do not need homes. It’s only the
heroes they made.—Houston Post.
24 oo
43 20
57 60
72 00
84 00
86 40
96 0(1
103 20
108 00
117 60
128 40
139 20
148 00
168 40j222 751277 20
168 00 236 26 294 00
7*
00 75 ____
81 00 100 80
101 26 126 00
118 10 147 00
121 60 :161 20
136 00,168 00
146 10 180 60
181 86
166 85
180 55 ..
195 76 243 60
189 00
306 80
224 70
209 25,260 46
751
177 60 249 75 310 80
186 00 261 65 >325 50
1UA AiV>>7'i « tain ‘>31
100 35 104 40!273 35 *340 20
Key to Our Table o» Rat**.
Tbe one month rate for apaot* In fixed so that
lbs per inch rate decreases ror Increased space
farom 16.00 to 12.26, but forj-he same lencrtn of
and 18 inches
rime 0 Inches are sold at £2.50,
ire sold at$3.26 per Inch, 140.50.
f IU1U BtfO-MI pci iuwii,*vo.w.
Tbe one Inch rate l» the basis of the whole
able, u the short, time rates fixed are a per-
•otage of It.
The 1 time rate Is 331-2 |>er cent of the
sonth rate.
The 2 times rate Is 40 her cent of the month
at*.
Th* I times rate is 50 her sent of the month
at*.
The 1 week rate Is SO per sent of the month
*fte | weeks rate Is 75 per eentlof
||9,
Th* I weeks rate Is 20 per oent of ne month
^b# | month rat* Is I times the month rate,
e month
Since Bonrke Cockrau flopped over
to the Republ’can party he is having
trouble to please his new friends, be-
cause he is not onto all the curves of
Hanna’s foreign polioy. One day he
says something in favor of trusts and
the Republican press calls him a brainy
patriot; the next day he steps on Han-
na’s foreign policy and the same press
oalls Bonrke a damphool. The St
Louis Globe-Democrat says: “Bonrke
Cockrau’s assertion at a reoent meeting
in New York held to express sympathy
with the Boers, that ’United States in-
tervention of an effective kind will
come,’ was silly and misohievions. The
United States will remain strictly neu-
tral in the conflict. Whether the war
lasts twelve months or ends in a quar-
ter of that time this country will keep
its hands off. There is not likely to be
‘intervention’ by any nation. Certainly
there will be none by the United States.
SMASH THE ENDLESS CHAIN.
,s*s uper oent dlsoount.
The 6 months rate Is 6 times
less 20 per cent discount.
2 months rate Is 9 times tbe month rate,
dlseo>
the month
Mfcl
IMS ■ per oent discount.
The pear rate Is 12 times the month rata,
SO* 20 per cent discount.
•pedal positions—Fifty per oent extra
«J. O. D.” advertlaemente obarged at two-
Etrii of dally rates!
Reading Matter Bates.
Twenty-Ire oesu per line first Insertion; II
Mats for each subsequent Insertion, nnn-
Sasts for 1000 line* to be
Saetsfor 1000line* tobe taken in I month_,
A KrnilnDa“-
—*onal card* fa per month.
MIUDiu qn.ru* *o
The magio of the "endless chain” has
teen invoked to provide money with
which to buy Admiral Schley a home
It is to be hoped that, if the admiral
does not protest against this abomina-
tion, the American people will have the
good sense to clip it to pieoes.
This craze to build homes for "our ad-
mirals is nu-Amerioan, undignified and
absurdly belittling.
If Admiral Dewey has committed one
single act to disappoint his countrymen,
sinoe his name leapt to glory at Manila,
it was in the acceptance of a home from
the generous hands of his grateful coun-
trymen. This incident is referred to with
more relnotanoe than criticism. It is
reflected more upon the Amerioan
sense of propriety than upon the mod-
esty and good sense of Ad-
miral Dewey, to whom it most have
brought all the greater embrarass-
rnent, sinoe he oonld not decline the
gift without the appearance of having
undervalued a free will offering. Never-
theless, there is an element of vulgarity
in this transaction shocking alike to
honor aud decency. Moreover it has
established a precedent that is contrary
to the genius of republican iustitutions.
The distasteful fruits of this precedent
are seen in the "endless chain” to raise
funds with w hich to present Admiral
Scblcy a palatial home.
The men of the American public ser-
vice, whether in army, navy, of
civil employ, are well paid. The
duties they perform and the skill
aud competency they display are but
adequate or inadequate returns to the
government for the money of the tax-
payer which it invests in their services
There is no need to supplement the gen-
erous compensation of the government
with popular subscriptions for elegant
homes that oan have no other effect
than that of lifting men, who have
merely done their duty by the govern-
ment and the people—their maker—to
positions of aristotratio exclusiveness.
Least of all men, who are entitled to
pecuniary reward from their oonntry-
men for acts of distinction in times of
peril, are the officers of the army and
navy. They are edneated under the
care and expense of the government.
Many of them never see anything bnt
routine service, and when they retain
the age of retirement they beoome pen-
sioner! upon federal bounty. Almost
TEXAS SIFTINUS.
A man named Baldwin was fatally
hurt east of Denton yesterday in a run-
away acoident. His skull was frao
tured by being thrown from the wagon.
The residence of J. H. Sterling at
Dodds, six miles east of Bonham, was
destroyed by fire. The residence was a
new one, having just been completed,
costing $1)00; no insurance.
I. Dresben, doing a dry goods busi-
ness in McKinney, filed a petition in
bankruptcy in the Federal court at
Dallas last night. Liabilities, $18,000;
assets estimated at $10,000.
An Incendiary fired the home of
Lawrenoe Doolin, of Austin, aud the
house and contents were a total loss
Mrs. Doolin was severely burned on the
head and body in attempting to save
some of the household effects,
The governor has offered a reward of
$200 for the arrest and conviction of
Sotero Valdez, the Mexican who is
obarged with the mnrder of his wife on
the night of September 25, at their home
in Caldwell county.
The Missouri, Kansas and Texas Rail-
way company of Texas today paid into
the comptroller’s ofHoe the sum of $1,939,
being the passenger taxes of 1 per oeut
on $109,889, the gross passenger earn-
ings for.the year ending September 80,
1899
The oharter of the Powell Oil Mill
company of Bastrop, Bastrop oounty,
was filed today with the secretary of
state, with a capital stock of $27,000.
The inoorporators are W. E. Goodman,
W. A. McCord and Chester Erhard.
J. W. Farnsworth of Ennis, a brake-
man on the Honston and Texas Central
No. 6, was killed at McKinney. He
was switching and fell, one car passing
over the entire portion of his body. He
lived 30 minutes. He was a single man
and 28 years old.
Mrs. Robert Nicholson, of Houston,
while on her way home last night from
market, was attacked by an unknown
white man. She was brutally beaten
into insensibility, robbed and thrown
into the bayou. She fortunately fell
where the water was shallow. Upon
reviving she soreamed for help. It is
feared she received severe internal in-
juries from kicks reoeived.
NEW MEXICO.
court yesterday, District Attorney Fin*
leal prosecuting. The defense succeed-
ed in pretty thoroughly laying the
blame on a man, Bamon Lucero. The
pefendant was found not guilty.
Dan Johnson, one of the horse thieves
captured by Sheriff Stewart, and taken
to Roswell on a charge of venne and
released on a $500 bond, has jumped
the latter, and the place that once knew
him will not know him again for some
time. It was decided during the court
term to raise the bond to $1,000 and a
search was made for Johnson, but he
had reoeived wind of the court’s evil
intention and waited not the hour ap
pointed, but grabbed a gun. saddled a
horse and Mr. Johnson is loose.
rmaminuimmmtmimimmmtinmri
ite, files, Fill
MEXICAN MATTERS.
The henneqnen fibre exported from
Yucatan through ite port, Progresso,
daring September, amounted in value
to $1,500,000.
The bank of Jalisco, established in the
city of Gnadajara, has decided to in-
crease its working oapital and to start a
branch in the city of Tepio.
A head-end collision occurred on the
Mexican Central sonth of Picandlas
Sunday night, which resulted in slight
damage to two locomotives and a mail
car, but fortunately caused no fatal-
ties.
The governor of the state of Mlohoa
oan, Mr. Aristoe Mercado, has purchas
ed ten large and modern filters for the
various public offices, hospitals, eto., in
Morelia, the capital of his state.
Don Carlos Ortiz, a prominent mer-
chant of Mexico city, has commenced
suit against the Tlahualilo Cotton com
pany, for the snmof $200,000 for failure
to deliver a certain quantity of cotton
as per contract.
A big crowd of pilgrims will start
frdTn San Lnis Potosi on November 8 to
visit the echrine of the Virgin of Gua-
dalupe; there will be over eight hun-
dred person in the party, and they will'
come over the National railway.
The officials of the Mexican Central
expect to put into force shortly a new
time table. Superintendent Cox and
Trainmaster Casey have been occupied
with its arrangement, but the work is
not yet completed.
At the present time there is not a
British commercial house in tbe City
of Mexico. There are, it is perfectly
true, several firms who act as agents for
British mercantile houses but they can-
not be oalled large wholesale houses of
business.
Ground is-being broken upon the Mex-
ican Central grounds in Buena Vista,
for the ereotion of an office to be ocoa-
pied by the Wells-Fargo Express oom-
pany. The building will be near the
ticket office and will face Calle de Las
Estaoiones.
Iu Mexico city a well known young
man, named Bueno, committed suicide
Tuesday evening at about 7 o’olock in
his residence in Bucareli. He leave a
wife and two little children, and hie
brother is one of the most prominent
mining experts in Mexico.
Mexican Herald: Two girls sixteen
and thirteen years of age respectively,
were recently abdnoted from the home
of their father a man oalled Fernando
Vega. A young lieutenant was accused
of the abduction. The father of the
girls oomplained to the authorities and
the police, having moved wctively in
tbe matter, discovered the where
abonts of the girls One of them was
found in a barrack and the other in an
assignation house where they had been
respectively placed by the lieutenant
§
LL COMBINED IN OUR NEW FALL
CLOTHING. Why do so many men stick
to us season in and season out? The answer is
easy. They get proper fit, proper wearing quali-
ties and proper price treatment, consequently they
are satisfied. We can take similar care of you.
In selecting your fall clothing many things
should be taken into consideration; first, the re-
liability of the dealer. Our reputation makes you
safe and the articles always prove just as represent-
ed. No matter how hard to fit you may be we
can suit you and at a reasonable price.
Don’t put off purchasing your Overcoat, but see
them now while the stock is complete.
Not how Cheap, But how Good.
R. C. LIGHTB0DY.
The Leading Clothier and Fnrnisher,
212—214 El Paso Street.
ARIZONA NEWS.
Silver City hae a new musical organ-
ization known as tbe "Amphion Club.”
Sheriff Montana, of San Miguel coun-
ty, has arrested Teodoro Baca upon a
belief that be is one of the outlaws who
have committed various crimes at Cha-
perito.
Monday afternoon Jaoobo Flores, ao-
oused of the mnrder of A. J. DeMueles,
the "Torquoise King,” pleaded guilty to
murder in the second degree before
.Judge Parker, at district court at Las
Cruces. He was sentenced to twenty-
one years in the penitentiary.
The safe of the Greenbnrger clothing
store at Las Vegas was opaued Monday
uight And $45 was taken. The same
night $60 was taken- from the store of
the Dunn Bnllding Supply company, the
thieves finding the safe open. Several
articles were stolen from otner stores
during the previous day.
Last week on the Boston stock ex-
change, 5,479 shares of the Cochitl Gold
Mining company’s stock, of the Cochitl
district, of the par value of $10 were
sold at from $17 to $18 per ehare. Of
the Santa Fe Gold and Copper Mining
company, of San Pedro, Santa Fe ooun-
ty, 1,875 shares of $10 par value were
sold at from $18.50 to $12.75.
Tbe oase of the territory vs Josefa
Apodaoa, oharged with having murder-
ed a woman at Alameda last spring,
ooonpied the attention of the district
Stock interests in sonthern Arizona
are at par.
Phoenix papers speak of a meat com-
bine in that city.
Two new additions have just been
annexed to Phoenix.
■ W. B. Foster has cut 200 tons of wild
hay near Duncan and iB disposing of it
at a good prioe.
The Pima Investment and Trading
oompany of Tuoeon will soon ship a
train load of cattle from Benson to
Yuma.
Stock interests in southern Arizona is
in prime condition, range pastnrage is
above the average, price of beef is much
above the usual price, and stockmen are
in good spirits,
Indian tracks have been seen near
Duncan recently supposed to have come
from the San Carlos reservation, and
some fears are entertained as to their
intentions. They are considered to be
on the war path when seen this far from
the reservation.
George H. Vandewalker yesterday
shipped to oars of fat sheep to Tnoson,
one going to Schumacher and the other
to Pusch & Zelleweger. Mr. Vande-
walker has been breeding np his sheep
for years and his flocks show fine qua-
lity.—Range News.
Articles of incorporation of the An-
glo-American Zino oompany were filed
with Reoorder Sheridan yesterday the
capital stook being $1,250,000. The
principal place of business named is
Phoenix and other plaoes in the terri-
tory. The objeot of the corporation Is
to acquire possession by purchase, lease
or otherwise mining and agricultural
lands, to engage in mining and milling,
eto. The inoorporators named are T.
B. Munroe, M. C. Meager and D. G
Pope, all of Boeton, Maas.
IMllBM
For quality and price, no need to look furthe
W. O. WALZ OOMPANY, Sols Agents.
SEWING MACHINES.
OMESTIC and ST the best loth e
World. 240 and 250. W. G. Walt Oo., Bole Ag
Mrs. J. B. Wilcox’s
DINING ROOM.
Best private boarding in tbe city;
III UTAH STREET.
Furniture Repairing
Mattress Overhauling
Carpet Work
-AT-
City Upholstering House,
305 E. Overland 8t.
Ernst Besselmann.
THE CITY KITCHEN
Serves the Best 25c Meal to Be Had
In the City.
Short Orders First-Class Throughout.
M1ER BEEN LEE, Proprietor.
223 San Antonio Street.
Edward A. Lowery,
OPTICA1N.
Eight years experience in the grind-
ing and filling of prescription lenses
for the correction of errors of refrac-
tion.
Examination Free.
Formerly with H. C. Boden & Co.,
Philadelphia.
Office, - - - No. 3, Tay's Block
PHYSICIAN V
MERCANTILE NATIONAL BANK, j
Dallas, Tsxas, June4, 1896,
Kitchen Queen Baking Powder Oo.
DBAS 8ix* —AM.r I etT.rnl eont.«riMn of 70a, b*Y4M
».4«. (KILbes Q.kd) with oth.r trading brand. 1
M w«U s)«m4 with u th»t I now in It .xctu.it.17.
Tour, truly, .
■ run
“SIMMER AND WINTER.”
Hot Mineral Springs,
SANTA ROSALIA,
STATE Of CHIHUAHUA, MEXICO.
These hot springs, so well and favorab
known, now offer many more Inducements
health and rest seekers than eves befo:
Hotel accommodations are bome-llke at
unsurpassed, the kitchen now being und
my direct supervision.
For Information, address
Norman E, Galsntinx, Proprietor,
Grand Hotel de la Cueva.
R. D. Robinson, M. 1)., physician In 0haKf
“SUMMER AND WINTER ”
-—---
EL PASO & NO
ANO
RTHEASTERN
MINTO MOUNTAIN RYJ}
ftAMQGCRDO & SACRAMENTO MOUNTAIN RY&
TIME TABLE NO. 2
(Mountain Time.)
Train No. 1 leaves El Paso.. .10:30 a. mV
Train No. 2 arrives El Paso.. 6:50 p. m.
(Dally Except Sunday.)
Train No. 1 ar. Alamogordo..2:30 p. m.
Train No. 2 lv. Alamogordo. .3:05 p. m„
(Dally Except Sunday.)
These trains run via JarlllaThe Great Gold
and Copper Camp, Tuesdays and Fridays, i
Trains leave Alamogordo on the Cloud
Climbing Route twice a day for Toboggan (
and connect there with stages for
CLOUDCROFT -
The Breathing Spot of the Southwest*!
1 his ride from Alamogordo to Oloudcroft Is
the most unique Imaginable, and not equaled
anywhere on the continent. ^
Don't forget that you can make the round
trip from El Paso to Toboggan for 15 00, leav-
ing hi Paso Saturdays at 10:30 a. m.. arriving
at Oloudcroft In time for dinner, and return-
ng any Monday.
White Oaks. Nogal and Fort Stanton
Trains leave Alamogordo on arrival of tral
]No. 1, for the end of the line, which by Octc
ber 1st, will be atSalado, the new coal minio
Ountn u-11,,eo 4)ia __— X__ l,---.i .
uer i.-u. win iK- atnaiaao, me new coal mlnlt
camp, where the largest town In Soutbei
New Mexico will be found.
cw mciiw wm ue iouna.
Track Is hut twelve miles from White Oal
and comfortable st ages makes trip In one ho
and thirty minutes.
Stages to Nogal. Halado and Fort Stem
connect with all trains.
rid^^ito Oa^tsountry is pa.L“tL'
of the mule Is supplanted by the snort of
locomotive.
for information of any Kind regarding
The railroads or me country adjacent thfr?h
•all on or write to'
*r N. AJotaoder,”
^G./sFAft)
M.svrr. * stu. *.» a
Alamogordo, N. M,. at
F. MORRIS, Agent. El Paso, Texas. A
and Whiskey Hahtti
cured st horns with-
out pain Book of n
. tioulnr* sent FRCI
_IDE. B.■. WOOLLEY Cl
OAss, UH Norik rtysr J
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El Paso International Daily Times (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 256, Ed. 1 Saturday, October 21, 1899, newspaper, October 21, 1899; El Paso, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth579446/m1/4/: accessed April 23, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.