El Paso International Daily Times (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 178, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 3, 1892 Page: 4 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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El Paso Daily Times, Wednesday, August 3,1892.
a Pasoan
mes
iybkbd at th» whtoiuci at ml tamo
mul, AM Mmtmo-CLABB UAtL MATTXK,
TIMES PUBLISHING COUPANT,
Publishes*.
117ah S. Hakt. Mauarer,
WHAT SOME EDITORS THINK.
sgSI
TURF TOPICS.
SUBSCBIPTION RATES.
> daily
D«lWere<l in the city, per week........» cant*
PATABLD *T*BT 8ATUBDAY TO OABMBB,
DAILY—BY MAIL.
IDYABIABLY ID ADYAMCB.
One year..................................®®9£
Six month*........... ................
One month,.., .....i...* w
Ail paper* discontinued at tba expiration
of the time paid for. _■
OUR CIRCULATION. .
DAY OY PUBLICATION:
“■^“•-wiAaSi^'Ssr.......
We reach al*o on thd day or pcbucation
the following place*:
IS NDW MBXICO,
Anthony...........Dona Ana......Fort Selden
Kinoon............Lake Valley....San Marcial
Knglo...............Organ..............Socorro
IN ABIZONA,
Bowie..............Wilcox.............Nogale*
Benton............Iluaehuca..........Duncan
Tncaon.......... .Carlisle......... ..Clifton
IN TEXAS,
Yileta............Camp Rice.........Socorro
San BlUario.......Fort Hancock.. Van Horn
Fort Davis ........Marfa....... -Sierra Blanca
And we circulate throughout Mexico.
NO CHABQB NOB POSTAGE,
ADVERTISING RATES.
Tne cu*tom among newspaper* of printing
one rate and accepting another 1* fart disap-
PThe?ftMBS ha*been aonb-pbicborgan*ince
1886. We find It pay*.
Uniform bates are nece**ary for the satls-
f action of the advertiser and the success of
the newspaper, , , ,
No Discounts, except those published on
this rate sheet are allowed to anybody.
Thb Advertising Agknt can pay our rate-
and retail the space to buyers at our figures
with profit to himself. For instance: he buys
vith prontto nimseii. rur miuiucu.
Tft retareaeh inch rnffi
100 per cent, We sell at the same figure to
everybody.
Persons desiring copies of this paper for
mailing purposes will please ask at this office
for “Mail Edition” of the Times, as our local
edition is not mailable matter.
I Mo.
I 5 00
9 00
12 00
• 15 00
17 50
18 00
20 00
21 50
22 50
24 50
26 75
29 00
81 00
83 00
85 00
87 00
88 75
40 501
SPACE
Inches,
3 ii.js 6 Mos 9 Mos 1 Y’r
.... 2.......
4 .7.’...
... 5.......
.... 8.......
.... 7.......
.... 8.......
.... flHCol.
... 10.......
...11.......
...12.......
...18
Net.
Net.
13 50 24 00
24 30! 43 20
Net.! Net,
33 751 42 00
60 75j 75 60
32 40i 57 60 81 U0 100 80
40 501 72 00 101 25|126 00
47 25 84 00
48 601 86 40
54 001 96 00
118 10 147 00
121 50*151 20
135 00! 168 00
58 05,103 20 145 10;180 60
60 75:108 001151 85:189 00
66 15117 60165 35,205 80
72 251128 401180 55 224 70
78 30:139 20 195 75
83 70
. * • • Id ,v
....14............ 89 10
....15........... 04 50
.,..16 ............ 99 90
148 00 209 25
158 401222
168 00*236 25
177 60;249 75
.17............ 104 60 186 00 261 55
l^i’col...! 109 351194 401273 35 340 20
243 00
260 40
277 20
294 00
310 80
323 50
Key to Our Table of Rates.
Thb one month rate for space from the
inch to one column of 18 Inches Is fixed so that
the per inch rate decreases for insreased
space from 16.00 to $2.25, but for the same
lenffth’of time 9 inches are pold at $22.50, and 18
inches are sold at $2.25 per inch, $40.50,
The one inch bate is the basis of the whole
table, a* the short time rate* fixed are a per
°*Th^t£n«rrate i* 33 % per cent of the mouth
rate.
The2 time* rate is 40 per cent of the month
ikaiie
The 3 time* rate I* 50 per cent of the month
The 1 week rate 60 per cent of the month
The 2 weeks rate 1* 75 per cent of the month
r°The 3 week* rat* is 90 per cent of the month
The 3 months rate is 3 times the mouth rate,
less 10 per cent discount.
The 6 months rate Is 6 times the month rate
lest 20 per cent discount.
The 9 months rate is 9 times the month rate
lets 25 per cent discount.
The
_ he year rate is 12 times the month rate,
less 30 per cent discount.
Special position—Fifty per cent extra.
“E. O. D.” advertisements charged at two-
thirds of daily rate.
Professional Cards $3.00 per month.
Metal Base Cuts only accepted,
Reading-Matter Rates,
Twenty-five cents per line first Insertion; 15
eents for each subsequent insertion. Con-
tract* for 1000 lines, to be taken in 3 months,
made at 5 cents per line each insertion. Un-
changed locals, by the month, $1.50 per line.
TIMES PUBLISHING COMPANY,
El Paso, Texas.
Globe-Democrat: The Homestead
strikers have lost a large sum of money
by their folly, but they have gained
a good deal of valuable experience.
Victoria Review: The Dallas state
fair is going to be a bir thing thi9 fall
and many of Victoria's citizens will be
in attendance.
Dallas News: Society has just as
much right to take the life of a desper-
ate criminal in self-defense a) any in-
dividual would have to do this. As a
matter of public interest and protec-
tion society has even a higher right
than the simple right of self-defense.
Crosby County News: No man wants
his boy’s life ruir ed by whiskey, nor
the wifehood of his daughter embitter-
ed by the rudeness of a drunken hus-
band. Then all are interested in set-
ting temperate examples. No war need
be made on saloons, or any right invad-
ed—jast quit—absolutely—and don’t
lend your influence that way any
more.
Denver News:—The People’s Party of
Colorado missed its opportunity. By
nominating D. R. Waite, of Aspen, it
placed at the head of tbe ticket a man
of but little strength, and whose nomi-
nation will be repudiated by all but the
original People’s Party men.
Boston Herald:—Tbe Chicago Trib-
une speaks of the dead force bill, too.
Mr. Cleveland seems to have them on
the run.
Pueblo Chieftain:—There is now a
great big pile of trouble in store for
Major Powell. The senate yesterday/
consented to a congressional investiga-
tion of the geological survey, and ap-
pointed Senator Wolcott as chairman
of the committee to make the inquiry.
Colorado Spriugs Republic:—Forty-
eight retail grocers in Colorado
Springs, Colorado City and Manitou
have signed a document undertaking
to favor Colorade manufactured goods.
This is right. Patronize home labor
and build up home industries. Col-
orado is an empire in itself and by
proper co-operation and development
can furnish a 11 the natural and man-
ufactured products that are necessary
to the maintenance of a population of
ten million people.
Re-Elect, by Elect, is the latest grand
son of Electioneer to enter the 2:30 list.
-rfr
mim
ness, Fits. Neurai
Prostration caUi
WAkefulness,
of Brain, oai
death, Premu
if Power in el
heao and all
guarantee to ref
issued out
Sole Aireut. liol
l
lv Governor Hogg would follow the
example set by Governor Buchanan of
Tennessee, and withdraw from tbe
race, it would go far toward allaying
factional feeling among the Democrats
of Texas. But he will not do it. He
will ins st upon being nominated over
the protest of many of the wisest Dem-
ocrats of Texas. What will the har-
vest be?
Mr. Holman has attained no small
amount of notoriety as an “objector,”
whenever congressional appropriations
are up for discussion. But about the
only appropriation the public knows
of his preventing is that for the World’s
Fair—one thatcongress is honor bound
to make.
The Houston Post philosophically
remarks that Americans do not mix
their religion with their politics. Ed-
itor Johnston has evidently been ob-
serving the methods adopted by Texas
Democrats in the present campaign.
New York, Aug., 2—Money on call
easy @ closed offered (fc 2.
Pig Iron-
Lead—Quiet 400.
Copper—Steady Lake 1105 (a, 1175.
Tin—Easier straits 2100 U 2110.
Silver—85 Vx.
Mexican Silver Dollars—El Paso
quotations 67 cents.
Too good to be true—the rumored
linding of artesian water.
Thf. New Orleans Times-Democrat
speaks of New York city as “The center
of Gehenna.”
Thk World’s Fair is a national insti-
tution and should be treated as such.
And those congressmen who are fight-
ing it are making a great mistake.
Mbs. Julia Truitt Bishop, for some
time with the editorial staff of the Aus-
tin Statesman ha9 retired from that
paper to establish “ Texas Home Corn
er,” a weekly family paper.
CHATS ABOUT MEN.
to mak^a double gaited record. ne“*' pit*- Neu
Green B. "Morris paid $10,000 in 1890
for the brother to Troubadour, and tht
colt has proved almost worthless.
Athadon, 2:27, champion yearling
stallion, stands sixteen bands and
weighs 1,050 pounds in his 2-year-old
form.
Sir Sidney, brother to Frou-Fron,
2:25j^, owned by J. Woollier & Son,
Beaconsiield, Ills., broke his leg while
jogging on the track and died.
A prominent horseman, in speaking of
the faults of jockeys ami drivers, said,
“I never want a persou who will turn
around to see where the rest of the con-
testants are in a race just as he is near-
ing the wire.”
Henry Williamson, one of the most
successful horse breeders in the west,
who recently died at Phoenix, A. T., was
the breeder and trainer of the famous
Thad Stevens, the long distance runner
that won the purse of $30,000, the race
being open to the world.
It is said that the value of the car
horses in London is probably greater per
head than it is in any city in the United
States. They are bought at $300 each
and sold at fifty to sixty dollars each
after five years of work. There are
about 25,000 horses employed in the city,
and their food costs $4,000,000 per year.
"jtjum
Bused by alcohol or tobacco.
_____Mental Depression, Softening
of Brain, causing Insanity, misery, decay,
' " FUNMMMN
W. B. MERCHANT,
WORLD’S FAIR NOTES.
A Buffalo man proposes to furnish
the World’s fair with an attraction in
the shape of a collection of snakes. He
claims to lie able to show as many as
2,000 different varieties.
The Kentucky building at the World’s
fair will be a typical representation of a
southern colonial mansion, one of the
distinctive features of which is great
pillared porches or verandas.
It is reported that King Alexander of
Servia has decided to visit the World’s
fair next year. He is sixteen years old
and son of the much talked of ex-King
Milan and ex-fQueen Natalie.
The Jelly palace, which the women of
California will prepare for the World's
fair exhibit, will be 16 by 20 feet and 25
feet high, with two open doors ap-
proached by three marble steps.
An exact fac simile, of the San Lonis
Key mission, perhaps the finest and
most celebrated of all the famed old
mission ruins in southern California,
will be seen at the World’s fair.
General J. H. Brinker, one of the al-
ternate national commissioners from
Mississippi, has in his possession and will
exhibit at the exposition five bales of
Attorney & Counsellor at Law
Well*. Fargo A Co.’* Bank Building,
EL PASO, TEXAS
Will practice in the United State* and State
courts. Reliable law and bank correspond* J
snts at every county seat in the United States, I
Canada ana Mexico.
El Paso Marble Works
M. KOTO NO, Pro*.
8. EL PASO STREET, El Paso. Tax
All kind* of
MONUMENT
AND
CEMETERY WORK
Also Mantle*. Stone Cc
Cut to order.
„ :le*. Stone Cooping and
Iron Fence* at reasonable rate*.
COUNTRY OBDBRS
will receive prompt attention.
r CURE^
'OURSELF f
Jor any unnatural discharge **ka
Fyour druggUt lor a bottle a<
I doctor. Non-pottonou* end
MANHOOD RESTORED.
" SANATIVO,” the
Wonderful Spanish
Remedy, Is sold With a
WrlttenGuarantee
to cure all Nervous-Dis-
ease*, auch os Weak
Memory, Loss of Brain
Power,Headache,
Wakefulness. Lost Man-
hood, Nenmusness, Las-
ie, all drain* and
loss of power of the
Generative Organa, In
either sex, caused by
over-exertion, youthful ln<le*creUon»ror the excessive
use of tobacco, opium, or stimulants, which ultimately
a written guarantee to ________
money. Sent by mail to auy address. Circular free.
Mention this paper. Address,
MADRID CHEMICAL CO., Branch Office for V.B.A.
W. A.Irwin & Co.. Druggists, 113 El Paso St.
I guaranteed not to stricture.
Ilto Vntwrva m ‘
American Curt.
Manufactured by
,Th« Smi Chemical 0o.L
CINCINNATI, O. j
9.1,4.
+•
Dr. B. Alexander’s
Native Wine.
(The Pure Juice or the Gbapi.)
Address R. F. JOHNSON & OO., Sole
Agents, El Paso, Texas, for prloes in
bulk or case.
E. A. STUART & CO..
Corner San Francisco and El Paso Streets,
EL PASO, TEXAS.
J. S. RAYNOLDB, Prest. ,
JEFFERSON RAYNOLDS, Vice Prest.
B. & STEWART,
cotton that was raised by slave labor in
1862-3
SUNSET ROUTE.
The People’s Favorite Line from
El Paso.
TO ALL POINTS
North, East and West.
Miss Kate Douglas Wiggin ’is right
when she says, in an article on "Chil-
dren’s Rights,” in the August Scrib-
ner, that “there is no substitute for a
genuine, free, serene, healthy, bread-
and-butter childhood. A fine manhood
or womanhood can be built on no other
fonndation.”
President Harrison and David Swing,
the great Chicago preacher, were class-
mates at Miami university.
Miles Darden, who was living in the
Btate of Tennessee in 1857, was the
largest man known to history. Clad in
thin summer clothes ho weighed 1,037
pounds.
The fortune of the late Jules Leban
dy, the great sugar refiner and specu-
lator of Paris, is estimated at 360,000,001.
francs, probably the largest fortune in i
France.
Frank D. Ring, of Denver, has been
given a gold medal hv the government
for saving five lives. His acts of heroism
were performed while he wras a citizen
of Jersey City.
Dr. Buckley introduced two new
words to the attention of his Methodist
brethren at the recent Omaha confer-
ence. They were “episcomania’’ and
“episcophobia.”
It is said of the late Samuel McDon-
ald Richardson, of Baltimore, that he
was personally acquainted with nearly
47,000 depositors in the savings hank ol
which he was president, all of them
working people of small means.
M. Triconpis, the Grecian statesman,
is a man of wonderful industry. Though
reserved in manner, he has a kindly
way that foreigners like after they come
to know him. His personal character
has never been attacked. He is unmar-
ried.
Captain Nicholas Murphy, of Boston,
is one of the most noted life savers in
America. During the period of thirty-
five years he has saved upward of 100
persons from drowning, his first res-
cue being made when he was fourteen
Years old.
Beat passenger service
West.
Pullman Palace Buffet Sleeping Cars
of the latest designs are attached to all
trains of this line for
San Antonio, Houston, Gal-
veston, Texas,
AND
New Orleans, La.
Passengers for all points north and
.....,doh
east make direct and close connection
at New Orleans with only one change
of oars (in day light) saving from four
to ten hours in time between El Paso
and New York.
Secure your tickets and travel by
this popnlar route.
City Ticket Offioe, Sheldon block.
Or Depot Ticket Office, Southern Pa-
cific Depot, east of the “Plaza.”
W. C. WATSON,
General Passenger and Ticket Agent.
New Orleans, Louisiana.
H. D. PLATT,
Commercial Agent, El Paso, Texas.
FIRST NATL BANK.
A GENERAL BANKING BU8INE88 TRANSACTED.
Mexican Silver Bought and Sold.
M. A.
Star
DOLAN’S
Stables.
FINE LIVERY.
Undertaking.
BLACKSM1THING.
Weedwerk an* Carriage Painting neatly dent.
and sold.
X
R. CAPLES.
L. HAMMER.
\
CAPLES & HAMMER,
Contractors & Builders,
EL PASO, TEXAS.
W. O. WALZ CO.
(INCORPORATED.)
Lapdisits and Manufacturers
Hold and Silver 4
Filigree
. Jewelry
•tar"
And Spoons.
Wholesale and Retail Dealers i n
Mexican and Indian Curiosities and Souvenir Goods of
all Kinds.
EL PASO, TEXAS, SAN DIEGO, CA L.,
103 El Paso Street. Fifth and F. Streets.
CIUDAD JUAREZ, MEX., CITY OFJMEXIOO, MEX.,
Formerly Paso del Norte.
A cordial invitation extended to all to visit us.
obligations to bur.
45 Avenida t Orient,e
You need not feel under
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El Paso International Daily Times (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 178, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 3, 1892, newspaper, August 3, 1892; El Paso, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth541545/m1/4/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.