El Paso Daily Times. (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 44, Ed. 1 Saturday, June 27, 1903 Page: 3 of 8
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"IP1'
EL PASO MORNING TIMES- SATURDAY, JUNE 27, 1903.
KB-C‘BEERS
INSANE ASYLUM REPORT
Guaranteed Pure
Order Croat
None So
Cenr.
Good.
RESULTS OP INVESTIGATION ARE
FILED WITH GOVERNOR.
NEWS OF RAILROADS
LITIGATION IN WEST TEXAS FOR
CATTLE DELAYS.
It Waa Hoped the Matter Was Settled
at El Paso Convention by the Rob-
ertson Resolution, but New Trou-
bles Are Arising—Other Railroad
Notes.
There l« soire romplalnt among ship-
pers of delay on the part of the various
railways of the state In furnishing cars
for cattle shipments as promptly as de-
Bircd, rays the West Texas Stockman,
and there Is something of a disposition
to litigate the situation, as has been
the prevailing custom in the past.
Conservative cattlemen had hoped that
the adoption of the Robertson arbitra-
tion resolution at tbe El Paso meet-
ing of the Cattle Raisers’ Association
of Texas would mark the dawning of
a new era in the relations existing
between the railways and the sliip-
P'rs. he unanimity with which the
resolution was passed and the favor
a'lli which it was received seamed to
li.diiait tnat all parties were ready to
■ all into line with its provisions, pml
welcomed it as just the proper u>ing.
It is eery cxaspe,atiug for a shipper
*o have to bold h's cattle on short
gw* lor several JayE waiting the ar-
rival of cars, but West Texas hai had
snni; Cuttle rushes which caught the
rni rcaiis almost unprepared an t there
" i.! nothing that could to done Inti
await '.no arrlv-l of the necessary
cars. It Is a fact that last fall caili'c
yen' held around this city lor a per-
iod of itcoral weeks before cars could
>■! oiitamcd, but last fall was an ex-
ceptional season, when ranchmen
generally were inmost running over
nr another in an tijoit to rush rhr-lr
fat stuff on a declining market. The
railways were simply overwhelmed
with the Immensity of the business
offered anil could no*, handle It with-
out considerable delay. As a result
they have reaped the largest crop of
damage suits known to Texas ra‘l-
roat ;ng. At San Angelo, which is
oi" of '.he leading chippini pont.-- of
the natc. damage suit aggregating
*'•« OOP were filed and are being press-
ed agair.Bt ttyc railways, and the pro-
portion of suits amounted to about
just Ihe same at the othat shipping
points. The roads tried to anticipate
the spring movement by providing the
iiaceisary cars, hut the movement has
bean so groat that some delay has
been necessary. a
came suddenly swollen after the storm
and did much damage in their course.
James C. Metcalfe Here.
President James C. Metcalfe of the
Mexican International railway, accom-
panied by his family, reached this eity
yesterday en route to California and
spent a few hours looking about town.
Mr. Metcalfe'a headquarters are in Du-
rango from which point his qpmpany
has under consideration an extension
westerly to Maxatlan. He says that
the difficulty which presents itself to
this project is the crossing of a moun-
tain 8,500 feet high, but he thinks
that the feat will be accomplished and
the road built to the coast.
The War Against Scalpers.
The Southwestern excursion bureau,
with headquarters at St. Louis, has
issued the following Item of news in
the form of a circular letter to the
passenger departments of the various
roads in the state:
“On Wednesday. June 3, the ticket
brokage office at 1813 Market street
was raided by the police department of
this city and a very large number of
expired limited and special contract
tickets were secured. The police de-
partment kindly retained these tickets
until the representatives of the va-
rious roads were able to get a list of
the same. The office undertook to get
a record of all the tickets which did
not read out of St. Louis by any par-
ticular line, and agreed to promulgate
for the information of ail concerned
such lists of tickets as would l>e filed
with us by Interested lines out of St.
Louis.”
The list of described tickets which
fceompanies the above covers about
twenty pages of typewritten copy, it
is estimated that no fewer than 5,000
tickets were confiscated by the St.
Louis department of police. Many of
the tickets bear the names of various
Texas lines. Any number of expired
parses also accompany the list.
From all indications the war on the
ticket scalper has begun in earnest
ail over the country. Several months
ago the conviction of a ticket scalper
was well nigh an impossibility. But
things have changed. Some weeks ago
a New Orleans judge issued an injunc-
tion restraining scalpers from the
practice. A few days ago two men
were convicted and assessed a heavy
fine in a northern city for the same
offense. And yet it is evident that the
war has just begun.
Bean Succeeds Barnes.
S. L. Bean has been appointed to
succeed F. I*. Barnes as master me-
chanic at the Albuquerque railroad
shops. The appointment was announced
by Mechanical Superintendent G. R.
Joughins of tbe coast lines. Mr. Barnes
resigned several weeks ago to take the
position of mechanical superintendent
of the El Paso ft Northeastern system
with headquarters at Alamogordo.
Since he left Albuquerque the shops
have been in charge of General Fore-
man William Essex who has been act-
ing master mechanic. Mr. Bean lias
served for several years with the
Northern Pacific and adds another to
the already long list of mechanical
men who have come from that system
to tbe coast lines of the Santa Fe with-
in the-last year. Mr. Barnes, his pre-
decessor, was a Northern Pacific man,
having held the position af master
mechanic at Missoula, Mont., before
coming to Albuquerque.
Minor Mention.
G. O. Perkins, superintendent of tel
egraph on the Mexican Central, is in
the city.
General Passengers Agent Joe Myers
of the C.. R. I. ft B, with headquarters
in Dalhart, is in the city.
.George E. Roc, division freight, and
pafsenger agent of the Santa Fc lines,,
has gone to New Mexico.
Mrs. L. G. l/!onard, wife of City Pas-
senger Agent George laonanl of Ihe
Texas ft Pacific, leaves this morning
for Fort Worth on n visit.
. Tapers are being prepared in Den-
ver to be filed in Wyoming for the in-
corporation of the Sonora, Chihuahua
& Monterey railroad. The capital
stock is to lie *20,000.000. The pro-
moters are mostly residents of Den-
ver.
The number of railways In the
hands of receivers on June 30, 1002, it
appears, was twenty-seven, showing a
net decrease of eighteen, as compared
with the fiscal year 1001. The num-
ber of railways placed In the charge
of receivers during 1002 was four, and
the number of railways taken from tbe
management of receivers was twenty-
two.
WHITELAW REID FORESEES A
CHANGE OF MONROE'S POLICY.
Says Modification Will Como Gradu-
ally, However, After Nation* Have
Learned That It Will Be Enforced
by America.
H. N. Miller’s Wife Dead.
City Passenger Agent H. N. Miller
of the E. P. ft S. W. who left this city
on the 14th of this month to attend
the bedside of his wife in York, Pa.,
writes home that his wife died on the
16th, two days before he reached there.
Mr. Miller has only a few weeks before
taken his wife to York. A very short
time after his return to this city he
was notified of her dangerous illness
and left in the hope of reaching her
before she died.
Mr. Miller is left with a small chilli
He will return to this city about July
1st.
Bad Storm at Pastura.
Thad Van Horn, traveling freight
and passenger agent of the E. P. ft
N. E., returned yesterday afternoon
from Pastura, N. M. He says that
out of the worst rain and hail storms
in years visited that section yester-
day morning. The rain fell la tor-
rents and the hail stones were so large
that some fifty sheep were killed in
the storm. The mountain streams be-
8COURING YOUR SCALP.
Will Remove the Loose Dandruff
* Scales, but It Won’t Cure Dandruff.
If your lialr Is brittle and thinning,
you have dandruff. The mere scour-
ing of the scalp of the loose scales,
won’t euro dandruff, because dandruff
Is nothing but the stales of scalp
thrown up by a pestiferous little germ
In burrowing Its way to the root of
the hair where ft saps tho vitality,
causing falling hair and, in time, bald-
ness. Now you can't stop dandruff,
nor falling hair, nor prevent baldness
unless you destroy that germ; and
the only preparation that can do it
is the new scientific discovery, New-
bro’s Hcrpictde. In fact no other
hair preparation claims to kill the
dandruff germ—all of them will clean
the scalp; soap and water will do
that, but only Newbro's Herpleide
gets at the root of the trouble and
kills the dandruff germ.
Send 10c in Btamps for sample to
Heipicide Co., Detroit, Mich. Red
Cross Pharmacy, special agent I
An kinds of Qood Things rora
PICNIC OR PARTY
Can be Found at
THE FINEST
Moat Complete Line in Southwest.
IVIminim TO ftl AND DRINK.
ilowanl-Hcrtiefiidge Co.,
raONE 377.1 204 ST. LOWS STREET.
MOUNT VERNON RYE.
YOUNG WIFEHOOD
It Is Thought It Will Completely Ex-
onerate the Present Management of
the Inetitution—Perjury Proceed-
ings May Bt Begun.
..._____ _ „ porros, Mu*., 1SJ Shurmst Are„Oct.», 1901
dr*CTtrtVb!l‘U*s>TSu1'*r^r<* ,0"r my bN^rb <mrlinc. muni to lore the light »u,p and
p*»>» through my toll »n32uinach while bearing down paint ami constant headache* added to my misery. The menurual
Wwtoeame asore and more nrofnae and I was unfit So attend to my daily duties. My husband nailed in three dim-rent
KyMciancend 1 look medicine enough to kill or euro n doien woman, but Itmll had no effect on uio whatever, until 1 took
"me of Oardoi. In a few daya 1 felt a ohangc for the better, my general health Improved and at the next time of my periods
joy now waa more natural and 1 waa in leas pain. Gradually f recovered my health and strength nmt am now in perfect
wenlth. I tab# an occasional dose of Win* of OSrdui which keeps me well. 1 am happy to give you this endorsement.
Wine at Cardin brought Mrs. Ricker good health. That is why
she has so much faith in it that she never is without Wine of Cartlui
in her house.
The first months following marriage arc full of peril for the young
wife and a dose of AVine of Cartlui everv day is a great rein/ercouicut to
her strength. Why don’t you try for the same health Mrs. liicker has?
It is easy to secure if you take Wine of Cardui according to directions.
Wine of Cartlui strengthens weak and worn-out women of any age and
assists the mother and housewife to bear her exacting duties, ft is a
great strain ttt give birth to children and to perform housework, hut
Wine of Cardtii makes women fit for ail tho duties of womanhood.
It will relieve the pains of irregularity,cures falling of tbe womb,
inles, and has been known to remove what
A-^ispatch from Albuquerque says;
Tbe commission appointed by Govern-
or Otero to investigate the charges
preferred against the management of
the territorial Insane asylum at Las
Vegas has completed Its work and the
report Is now on file with the govern-
or. Governor Otero is at present away
from Santa Fe, and tn Ms absence the
report wilt not be made public. It is
understood that it makes tea pages
of typewritten matter. It is reported
in Lots Vegas that two reports will be
made, a majority and minority report.
The majority report ia the one which
is said to bo In the governor’s hands
at the present time, and it is signed
by six members of the commission, the
report says. The seventh member
could not agree on all the conclusions
arrived at by the majority, and on
these points will make a separate re-
port. It is said this has not yet been
prepared and Is not In the possession
of the governor.
The commission did its work thor-
oughly and well. The first day it was
in session It inspected the building
and grounds thoroughly and the re-
maining days, including Saturday last,
heard testimony from 9 a. m. to 6 p.
m. Tills will make about 500 pages
of typewritten matter, and will not be
ready for a limit ten days.
The thief interest Saturday centered
in the testimony of Dr. W. R. Tipton,
who. for about three hours, was on
the stand, and was searching!}’ ques-
tioned. He showed by books and rec-
ords from the asylum that witnesses
who had testified to certain matters
were not at the institution when the
things alleged to have occurred took
place.
Virginia Maestas, who testified to
having seen a woman dragged by her
hair and declared that the woman
died the next day from the effects of
her injuries, was shown by the rec-
ords to have not been at the institu-
tion at that time. It was also showed
that the patient had received the last
sacrament administered by a Catholic
priest Dr. Tipton did not deny there
had been Instances where patients
were abused hy attendants, but he
showed that his orders and instruc-
tions were strongly against such prac-
tices.
There is strong talk of beginning
proceedings for perjury against some
of the witnesses, now that the tnves-
tigation Is over. The commission de-
voted the remaining time on Saturday
and a part of Sunday to formulating
its report.
MRS. BERTHA RICKER,
Prtildent Back-Bay Woman’i Club,
- Beiton. Man.,
lencorrhcea, ovarian troubles, and has been known to remove what phy-
sicians considered dangerous tumors. Women who use Wine of i’ftrdui
do not suffer at tho monthly periods, No shock or strain lays them tip
in lied for days or weeks with nervous prostration. They do not suffer
hysterical attacks, because Wine of (Jardui gives them strong nerves freed from tho irritation of female sufferintr.
A $1.00 bottle of Wjne — - -
of Cardui purchased from your
druggist will keep you tree
from pain.
ic m v mom gives uieiu strung nerves irniu irom me irriunion oi lemaie snncring,
WINECARDUI
SMITH ANSWERS.
THE EX-POSTMASTER GENERAL
MAKES A STATEMENT.
He Explains at Length His Position
as Regards the Gossip Against Him
Arising Out of the So-Called "Tub
loch Charges."
TO MODIFY DOCTRINE
New Haven, Conn., Juno 26.—-A
statement that tho Monroe doctrine
will one day be outgrown and the na-
tion will have to modify it was the
feature of an address delivered by
Whltelaw Reid to the graduatea of
the law achool of Yale the other day.
While there may be no formal an-
nouncement of a change in policy by
the nation, Mr. Reid said, the modifi-
cation will come gradually when the
nations of the world have learned that
It will bo enforced at any cost and
they have ceased to oppose It.
in his speech, Mr. Reid said. In part:
"The things that made the Monroe
doctrine have disappeared—the dan-
ger that the Infant republics should
be strangled by their cruel step-
mother and her allies; that the holy
alliance should check the spread of re-
publican institutions or overturn them
in any place where they deserve to
exist; or that Europeans should at-
tempt now, under the shadow of the
United States of the twentieth cen-
tury, to colonize alleged unoccupied
lands in America.
“Under such circumstances It may
be easy, afer a while, for us to look
over the Monroe doctrine again in
the, light of the present situation of
the American continents and of our
present necessities. We will certainly
not abandon It; but we may find, If
nobody is opposing us, that perhaps
Us extension quite so far beyond the
original purpose of Mr. Monroe ami
Mr. Adams, as the fervor of our pa-
triots has carried it, may prove to la?
attended with wholly unnecessary In-
conveniences to ourselves.
"No one denies that the Gulf of
Mexico, the Caribbean sea, and Ihe
waters of both ocean* about tbe isth-
mus are within that sphere. They
must be forever dominated by the
great republic. It cannot tolerate a
nuisance at its doers and the races
that people those shores must keep
the peaee and preserve order as to u»,
and conform to ordinary international
obligations toward the world. To this
the moral duty of our strength points
and our material interest binds us. It
was on this ground our action toward
Cuba was Justified; and reasons of
equal strength would no doubt be
found to conduct us again to similar
action in any similar emergency
throughout that whole region, on the
continent, in the Islands, or on tbe
other ocean, at least from I-os An-
geles to Lima.
“Towards tbe rest of the American
continents, it msy some day prove
more convenient for us to assume less
responsibility. We shall certainly
never cease to manifest our friendly I
interest in those countries.”
El Paso Lodge No. 75, F. V. of A..
held its regular meeting Thursday,
June 25, and presented Mrs. C. Bolke
and MrR. Belie Reynolds wRh a set
of fine framed resolutions for making
tbe last entertainment a success.
Philadelphia, l’a„ June 26.—Charles
Emory Smith, who waa succeeded as
pcstmaster general by Mr. Payne,
made public today his reply lo the
charges made hy Mr. Tulloeh In con-
nection with the poatqfflce investiga-
tion. It says:
“In view of partial publication of
the letter of Fourth Assistant Post
master General Bristow on the to
called Tulloeh charges mid of accom-
panying reports of inspectors made
to him in 1899 and 1900, I deem it In-
cumbent on me for a right public mi-
uerstanding to make a further state
ment, supplementary to my letter of
May 27, and to present the papers In
their proper relation.
“Appended U) this letter and to lie
treated as a part of It, will be found,
first, a complete copy, marked ‘Ex-
hibit A2’ of the Itemized statement
of the Tulloeh rhargeti, us" submitted
10 me bf Ihe time TlYcy were made;
zecond, in parallel column, a com
plete copy (except as Indicated in the
text) marked 'Exhibit H' of the ,,gi-
fidential report of Inspector in Charge
Smith, uhlrh Is the main docum -nt
accompanying General Bristow's let-
ter; third, a complete copy, marked
‘Exhibit of the report which came
at, a result of examination made when
the Tulloeh chhrges were submitted
and which embodies the answer and
the explanation of transactions refer-
red to.
"It will be seen that the Tulloeh
statement and the Inspector’s report
tire practically identical At many
points the language Is exactly the
same. It Is as If they were written
by. the same hand. The Tulloeh state-
ment was submitted to me. The in-
spector's report was submitted to the
fourth assistant postmaster general.
It was the business of the Inspector to
film whatever seemed to call for ex-
planation; It was left to the postmas-
ter general to find the explanation and
the truth.
“Tills was done by prolong the Tul
11 eh statement when il was present-
ed. Ail of Ihe transactions described
as Irregular were examined and a re-
port was made to me whb b took th m
up item by Item and groups of Items
and gave the facts anti the explana-
tions in each case. .To this report,
which appears below a Exhibit
I direct particular attention, if Us
statements are correct, tie u on most
points its explanations are satisfac
lory, Its accuracy in all Its specific
averments lias never been impeached
In any quarter. On the main points
it Is believed to be beyond sueceasful
i hallenge These main points may tie
thus summed up. each In a sentence:
First, names of military postal clerks
were put on the general roll until the
military appropriation became avalla
hie, then they were transferred to the
military roll; second, the bond pre-
miums of military postal , lerks were
paid for good reasons which are plain-
ly set forth and which had th • ap-
proval of the comptroller: third, the
purchases of Porto Rico supplies were
made from the regular department
contractors named under competition
and at regular contract prices; fourth,
the vouchers for expenses of depart-
ment officials traveling on official bus-
iness were made as required by the
auditor, fifth, the lease of the Wash-
ington postoffice was shown to he en-
lirely justified; sixth, the apparently
double payment of those employed In
< xarqinlng letter carriers' claim* I*
♦uliy explained.
”Tbc*r points embrace all that an*
specified in the charges, except the
items relating to appointments, in-
cluding the Individual caaea of iarrne."
rud O. H. Smith, and thus the matters
open to question are reduced to the
rppolntmoiits. which ail told involve
thlrtr-cn clerks and seven Hcam-ris.
“Even thl* is not an irreduceable
maximum for several of these ap-
pointments a* shown by the explana-
tory statement, ware perfectly right
and beyond any questions
“More than one-half of tbe inspect-
or s report is taken up with a minute
and detailed statement of the cases
of Ltruer and O H. Smith. Of the
latter i had no knowledge, and say
nothing. Of the former. I have some
recoilectlon, a* It ws* the only one
rf tilt eases that was appealed to ipe.
!aimer had been appointed a military
postal clerk for Porto Rico by the
first assistant's bureau. He went un-
der a promise from that bureau of
compensation at the rate of *1,400 a
year. About that time 1 fixed tbe
general compensation of cb rks in
Porto Rico, as 1 was empowered to
do by luw, al $1,200 a year. When
Lamer returned he refused to settle
l;is unsettled account on that basis
and appealed to me. He Insisted that
ho had been promised $1,400. and I
found on Inquiry that this was true.
I ordered that ho should be paid what
he had been promised, ad 1 had a right
to do. Out of that question of rat
and out of tho question of actual
length of his service, grew the whole
slory of alleged Irregularities."
CORNELL
WIN
BOTH RACES
(Continued from First Page.)
II o’clock tills morning. The morn-
ing trains and boats from New York
brought thousands of visitors and ola
Karate arrangements for their con-
venience wore made. Tho observa-
tion train of fifty ears was waiting
below Highland station, llie (lags hud
been fixed on the bride; ferry boats
were busy between the city and the
west side of the river, and big yachts
were gelling Into place about tile fin-
ish lino.
As usual the chief interest centered
in the university eightoared rare. In
the large amount of betting done IIiIh
forenoon Come*,I ruled the prime fa
voilte. The critics lamed their juilg
ment on the fact that tho Ithlean crew
won'the race last year and that several
of last year's crew have been displaced
for seemingly lielicr men. The Cor-
nel' crew had also made an excellent
showing In Its practice work here ami
lii endurance showed very superior
to the other contestants.
John 15. Eustis of Wesleyan acted
ae referee and the time keepers were
15. .1 Wendell of Harvard and limes
Forties of the Pennsylvania Barge
club.
IF YOU APPRECIATE A DRINK
OF GOOD 8TRAIGHT KENTUCKY
WHIilKY, THE ACME SALOON IS
THE PLACE. NONE BETTER. 225
8AN ANTONIO STREET.
KING EDWARD'S BIRTHDAY.
Born in November, bet British Prefer
Celebrating in June.
London. June 26 The birthday of
King Edward (who was born Novem
Ik r 9, 18411 was officially celebrated
today, it having le i n decided, as an-
nounced In the London Gazette some
time sine?, that his majesty's natal
day was to he observed In London and
on the home stations on Jufie 26, Ibis
being the anniversary of his corona-
lion and altogether a more suitable
lime for a military display than in
November. On the other hand, at;
was the -ase last year, foreign sta-
tions will celebrate it on November
9, th" actual anniversary of his
majesty's birth
The chief feature of today's cele-
bration was the trooping of the colors
on the Horse Guards’ parade here.
This picturesque custom, oik e so com-
mon, has of lute years been reserved
for particular occasions and it never
fails to attract a great crowd of spec
tutors Today II was attended hy his
majesty in person, accompanied by a
brilliant escort, which Included many
notabilities.
If Hungry and Thirsty
Go to Phil Young's Cafe. 217 El Paso
street. Tbe only place in tbe city
where you can get fresh, cool Cin-
cinnati bee'. Lunches served at ail
hours, day \nd night.
THE INTERNATIONAL EXCHANGE BANK.
ESTABLISH!!!) U>0I.
Individual Responsibility......$2,000,000.00
Commercial Corporations and Individual Accounts Invited.
Mexican Money Bought and Sold.
GUARANTY TRUST BUILDING, SAN ANTONIO STREET.
DIETER & SAUER
EL PASO, TEXAS AND CIUDAD JUAREZ, MEXICO,
IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS.
Groceries, Wines, Liquors and Cigars. Lending Brands of Bonded Whis-
kies In Bulk and Bottled offered at Any Station In the Interior of Mexico.
MAIL ORDERS PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO.
« HOIIL BRUNSWICK
10S ANGtLES, CAL.
r.fNHR Op CUT. MIMMIR IMtfS BY IlH IIAY OK WffK.
Street Cars from either Depot wit hunt Transfer.
$6.25
ROCK ISLAND ECONOMY.
Some Projected Extensions Will
Therefore Be Abandoned.
New York, June 26. —Conferences
between the officers of the Chicago,
Itnek Island ft Pacific, St. laiuls ft: j
Fan Francisco. Chicago ft Eastern II j
linolp and other lines comprised in |
the great Rock Islam! system will be
held In this eRy within the next few
cays. Developments of Importance
are expected therefrom. Concent ra-
tion in operating, management, uni-
formity of methods and the working
out of a system of economies are some
of the objects sought to tie attained
tnrough th*y, conferences.
Tin avowed policy of the syndicate
"f ('t.pltallsla in control of the Rock
Islam, Is to develop and strengthen
ttx system by the additional construc-
tion of connections by establishing
frbnnly truth, relations with other
lines op< rating In the wejtern and
south," ui, re territory. There is good
authority fot the statement that rnucb
now eofulru: tion heretofore planned
by the flock Island management will
lie abandoned in cons: ipience of lb,
friendly agreement* with the Illinois
Genital end the Gould lines in Ui-
southwest
TO CHIHUAHUA
AND RETURN
VIA
Mexican Central Ry.
Triiin will lefn’o Simla I'V Depot ai 10 u. m. July ,‘iixl, arriving at,
('liiliimfum nt 7 p. in. mum- dub-. Tmk< i valid tor return until
.1IIlx lOtll, Nee how I lie Al/fei'i-'llIIS reli'limte the Fourth of
.Tit]A iii Mexico.
W. S. MEAD. W. D. MURDOCK.
Commercial Agent. General Pass. Agent.
------- ' ......—---------------------'“b
‘ 1224 MILES
TO
; Mexico City
VIA THE
Mexican Central Railway.
Tho Paris of Latin America! The ideal summer
resort! Without i’oiitrndi<’tion the most delightful
summer climate in the world! Thermometer never
over Bt) degrees.
7349 feet Elevation!
SPECIAL SUMMER RATES NOW ON.
CALL ON OR ADDRESS
W. S. MtAI), Com. Agent. W. D. MIRDOGK, G. P. A.
C, R. HUDSON, T. M.
TRY A
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El Paso Daily Times. (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 44, Ed. 1 Saturday, June 27, 1903, newspaper, June 27, 1903; El Paso, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth582606/m1/3/: accessed April 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.