El Paso Daily Herald. (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 11, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 14, 1897 Page: 2 of 4
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1
HIE DAILY HERALD
THURSDAY JANUARY 14 ISO-
PUBLISHED EVERY KVENIXO Kicept Sunday
Entered at the postoflice at El Paso Texas
as mall matter of the second class.
TERM8 OF SUBSCRIPTION.
dally one year - " 0
xaily. six months !
Dally three Mooths - 1
Dally one month ..... - 9JJ
Weekly one year - S 00
Weekly six months 1 00
Veekly three months - - 0
BY CARRIER.
The 1aiit Hihald Is delivered by carrier
In f"l Paso Texas and Juarez Mexico at la
cents per week or 00 cents per month.
Subscribers falling to Ret This 11ehai.i reg-
ularly or promptly should notify The Her-
ald business oBice (not the carrier) In order
to recoive Immediate attention. Telephone
No. 115.
ADVERTISING RATES.
Kates of advertising In the Dally or Weekly
dltlon made known on application at the
publication office. Or ring up telephone num-
ber 115 and a representative of the business
department will call and quote prices and
Qon.rac for space.
Locals 10 cents per line In every Instance
for first Insertion and 6 cents per line for each
additional Insertion.
Legal notices of every description II per
neb each insertion.
BOOK AND JOB PRINTING.
"Th HihalI) Is fully prepared to do all
lnds or plain ana lancy joo prmi iuK
the latest styles-
w oric
perfectly and
promptly done.
THE WEEKLY HERALD.
A large eight page paper giving the
local events of the week published
every Saturday. Just the paper to
send friends for information regard-
ing El Pso. Price S2.00 per year--ix
months $1.00.
OUR creed embraces an untarnished
national credit adequate revenues for
the use of the government protection
to labor and enterprise preservation
of the home market and a reciprocity
that will stand our foreign markets.
Wm. McKinley.
Reciprocity is not a contradiction
of the protective policy. It is a losri -cal
expansion of protection because it
is free-trade of dissimilar .products
only. The protective-reciprocity plan
not only protects what we produce but
secures in return for the free admis-
sion into this country of articles which
we do not produce markets in foreign
lands at favorable rates that are not
accorded to our customers there. The
protective features of reciprocity are
easily discerned when it is remembered
that while our own custom houses exact
protective taxes on European imports
that are similar to our own products
the custom houses of countries with
which we make reciprocity treaties
prevent equal competition from Europe
in those countries with our exports.
Chicago Times-Herald.
A BUSINESS MORALITY.
It is not to be doubted that in a vast
business system like that of the United
States there is some dishonesty; but as
a general proposition it is safe to as-
sert that business men of all classes are
guided by the rules of integrity and
morality. The present conditions of
trade are such that there is little or no
chance for success to be achieved by
crooked and disreputable methods.
A man may thrive for a time in that
way but he is sure to fail at last.
Things are somehow so arranged that
in the long run his sins find him out.
and his ill-gotten gains are taken from
him. as if through the operation or a
natural law. This has been so often il
lustrated that there is no room for con
troversy about it. There is no fact
better settled by practical experience
and commercial history than the one
represented by the familiar proverb
"Honesty is the best policy." It pay
to do business according to the
fundamental doctrines of morality; it
is more profitable to be upright and
straightforward than to be otherwise
The testimony of all truly successful
business men is to this effect. They
will tell you that no man is sufficiently
resourceful in slippery expedients to
meet the competition of those who
conduct their affairs with strict
adherence to the highest standards of
truth fairness and propriety. The
value of a good name a reputation for
morality is well understood by these
men and they guard it with the great
est care. Globe-Democrat.
BRIGHT OUTi.OOK FOR '97.
Looking over the nation as a whole
outside of the gold producing regions
the year closed with a record of apathy
and shrinkage. But there are much
better reasons than anything in the
political situation for the hope that
189" will mark the fulfillment of im-
proved business conditions. The bal-
ance of trade which implies that the
country is paying its debts decreasing
its obligations abroad and thus
strengthening its credit has been
heavily in our favor during 1S9G. The
net result is stated in round numbers
at (30000000 a vast sum on the right
side of our commercial ledger. It
indicates that a spirit of economy
very largely enforced has been abroad
for some months that .travel in for-
eign parts is decreasing and that the
outside market for our great agricul-
tural products.is in better condition than
since 1882. In San Francisco where the
daily papers are engaged with the pen
and pencil in promoting charity funds
for the dependent poor the board of
trade points to wheat exports this fall of
838000000 a figure which more than
doubles the output of the mines. This
money belongs to the farmer primarily
part of it will remain with the
middlemen in the city but all of it will
fructify trade enabling the small coun-
try dealer at a thousand points to pay off
his bills and start over with a reinforc-
ed credit.
It is felt that the statistical position
of silver is so strong with deceased
out-put in the United States that an
honest effort at international bimetal-
ism which Cleveland did not give us
must result in some good. At any
event it can do no harm and may spur
Ccol. n A c. .
the market at once to procure the nil-
ver needed for the gradual replacing of
their paper currencies. In Russia the
estimated requirement is $200000000
equal to eight times the present yearly
output of this country. Should bar sil-
ver advance to seventy-five cents per
ounce by the first of May as some Lon-
don authorities predict a resumption
of silver exploration would mark the
summer of 18!iT causing increased ac-
tivity in this and the neighboring stat-
es with a wider demand for labor for
idle money in the bank. for machin-
ery and supplies. Denver News.
(iootl (iraiul .Jury Cliargj.
Judge Harris of Fort Worth in his
charge to the srrand jury said much
that is usual. That must of necessity
be so for he said ''he was required by
law to give the errand jury in charge of
all of the laws of the s ate" particular-
ly hesaid in referring to certain kinds
of law violation. "I recognize in
business three classes. One observes
the laws acd cares to do nothing than
that permitted by law. Of this class I
may say their business is strictly legal.
There is another class who do a leual
business but do it in part beyond what
the law permits and thus do illegal
things: that is. they do a legal business
in part in an illegal way. From the
sake of gain from force of habit of
from the love of transgressing a little
on the law they press their business
bevond the confines of the legal sphere.
There is another class (I reckon tbey
call their occupations their business)
whose business is whollv illegal. luis
business is detrimental to public in-
terests and they are a class of people
who e-o into a business illegal wrong
and against the genius and letter of the
law. It is the right of every man who
respects the law and conducts his busi
ness legally to have this same respect
for law exacted of all other classes if
they do not have it to the degree that
makes them conform to the laws of the
land. It is their right to have all
business people engage only in business
that is legal for we do not want any
special or privileged classes.
"It is the duty of the grand jury to
stop the second class from doing their
busine-s in an illegal way. It is our
duty t) see that the business of the
third ehissjis stopped entirely for it is
entirely without warrant of law. The
moral effect of this permitted or con-
nived at violation of law that is doing
an illegal business is very bad for it
leads to so general a disregard for law
that all thr: laws are violated. There is
only one safe rule. Permit no violation
of law."
He cautioned the grand jury against
finding bills unless beyond a reasonable
doubt there was the evidence to con
vict. This led the judge to a brief dis
sertation on the oft-made corap:aints
of the failure or miscarriage of justice
in criminal cases for which the mach-
inery of courts was much blamed. He
argued and this opinion was based on
years of experience in Tarrant county
that there was one part of the machin
ery of the courts much at fault aad
that u as the petit vines tie had oue
say to him a man in whose judgment
acd observatiou ne hail much conli
dence that ne tad known of cases
where from hearing the evidence in
the court or from reading it in the pub
lic prints a citizen wouid sav the ac
cused is guilty and should be punished
but as soon as this same citizen gut in
to the jury-box he became as badly aff-
ected with ''reasonable doubts" as so
many petit jurymen have been in the
past. Continuing on this subject
Judge Harris said:
"I am led to this conclusion that
where the higher grade of felonies are
concerned the presumption of inno
cence and reasonable doubts of guilty
of the average petit juryman are strong
and much above par. The fact that
the average petit juryman has such
strong "reasonable doubts" is no rea-
son why vou should fail to do your duty
and indict if you think the evidence
warrants it."
Auli-Trust Law Cases.
The hearings of Wm. Grice F. A
Austin W. E. Hawkins and Arthur M
Finlay agents of the Waters-Pierce
Oil company who are charged with
violating the anti-trust law of Texas.
were begun before Judge Swayne of
the federal court at Dallas on Tuesday.
The court room was well filled w ith
spectators and several pt omint nt law
yers were in attendance. Judge Geo
Clark of Waco and J. D Johnson of
St. Louis appeared as counsel of the re
lators and Attorney General Crane and
Hon. Cullen F. Thomas
of Waco represented the state.
The defendants were indicted in Mc-
Lennan oountv over two years ago Ou
Dec. 9 last they sued out writs of
habeas corpus before Judge Swayne
who set Jan. 1 1 for the hearings to be-
gin. The case was opened by Judge
Clark at 3 o'clock this afternoon. He
presented a long petition for the rela-
tors making the allegation that the
state had never seemed willing to bring
the cases to trial and the relators were
unjustly deprived of their liberties.
The petition atlackedthe constitution-
ality of the anti-trust law and alleged
that it conllicted with the Fourteenth
amendment to the federal constitution
which gives to every man equal rights
before the law. Mr. Thomas read the
state's answer. It was a strong paper
and took opposite grounds to that held
by Judge Clark. The state essayed to
prove that it was not the state's fault
that the defendants had never been
tried and that the relators had several
times had their trials postponed. The
petition closed with the prayer that re
lators be remanded back to the custody
of the sheriff of McLennan countv.
After some slight skirmishing Judge
Clark began his argument. He
arraigned the state administration for
passage of such an act as the anti-trust
law and claimed that it discriminated
against citizens in favor of others.
Much of this part of his speech was
construed as being of a political nature.
Clark spoke about an hour and a half
and will resume his argument at 10
o'clock tomorrow. Attorney General
Crane it is said is primed for the effort
of his life. He will likely answer
Clarke's political utterances in his
reply. Judge Swayne is called upon to
decide whether the law in question
conflicts with the federal constitution.
lie is expected to write a lengthy
opinion at the conclusion of the bearing
which will last a day or two longer.
The hearing is the talk of th town
and is looked upon as an event of
interest throughout the country. Dal-
las News.
Many disagreeab'e incidents are oc-
curing daily at the. City of Mexico by
reason or the partisanship shown by
the Mexican masses for Cubans and
theiropenly displayed antagonism for
resident Spaniards.
Joe McCullagh's definition of news
paper instinct was "to have the in-
tuitive faculty of knowing where he'l
was liable to break loose next and
having a correspondent on the spot at
the time."
Galveston has 4000 cases of la grippe.
A FORECAST.
What May be Done at the Coming Ses-
sion of New Mexican Legislature-
Santa Fe. Jan. 10. The New Mexi-
co legislature will .neet next week aud
from what can bo gleaned in advance
there will ba no more bills introduced
the first week than have ever been
introduced in the first week of any
previous session of the legislature of
this territory. There will be no county
division bill except it be a bill pro-
viding for the division of counties in
general can be passed. One of the
first bills to be introduced will bo a
bill providing for a radical reduction
in the fees and salaries of otiicials aid
this will have such a strong backing
that it will be w holly useless for offi-
cials to attempt to defeat it. The
Commercial club of Albuquerque is
taking a very active interest in this
matter and ils members will be heard
from. An old resident of Grant county
has a bill already for introduction
which will go through practically
without opposition. The bill is J. K.
Curren's bill in relation to publ:c
printing. The bill provides that no
newspaper in the territory which
shall not have been published for at
least a year shall receive
... ... j -1 .
any puDllc printing anu uiai
such publications in papers
which have not been established at
least a year shall be void and of no
effect. Mr. Curren was a resident ot
Grant county for four or five years in
the early eighties. He established the
Deming Headlight in Jjssi ana ran it.
uatil 1885 when he sold out to A. C.
Lowry. Since he left Deming be has
b en engaged in the newspaper bus
iness in Hillsboro and at Clayton in
Union countv. There will be bills for
the improvement of the public school
system for reform in elections for a
reduction in the number of county 01-
ficials.and it Is not improbable that a
bill for the compilation of the laws of
the territory. The laws have not been
compiled since 1884.
There is a great deal of speculation
concerning the organization of the
legislature and up to this time there
is nothing to indicate that there will
not be a tie in both houses. Very few be
certificates have been filed with the
secretary of the territory and when
the remainder of these certificates are
filed there may be a surprise in store
for both parties. The members will
sworn in by the secretary of the ter-
ritory unless Delegate Catron's bill
which provides that the members may
swear in each other becomes a law this
week of which there appears to be ab-
solutely no prospect. Correspondence
of Silver City Eagle.
JI. M. S. Terrible.
H. M. S. Terrible the first-class
cruiser had her trials over a 23 mile
course off the Cornish coast recently.
The speed developed showed an aver-
age 22A knots an hour beating it is
claimed the record of every war vessel
ailoat. The Terrible was launched at
Glasgow in 1895 and she is equipped
with forty-eight boilers of the Belle-
ville water tube type.
This great ship was sheathed with
steel and is of 14200 tons displace-
m . 1QV 4. ".Oil f.iot orl l-ifr-
v -i f m.vimm ift
anH i nrnvirlpd with an indicated
norsepower oi .uuu. one is raieu as
a protected cruiser the armored deks
extending over the whole length of the
ship. In its thickest part it is four in-
ches and tapers to three inches at the
end. The coal capacity is :5000 tops
the armored deck being associated with
minutely sub-divided coal bunkers.
The complement of officers and men
provided is 840. The twin screws are
eachfthree blades nineteen ftet six in-
ches in diameter. Both screws rotate
inwardly which is the reverse of the
ordinary practice. The ship's arma-
ment consist of sixteen twelve pounders
twelve three pounders nine machine
guns two light guns for boats acd five
torpedo tubes. The speed of the United
States cruiser Columbia on her trip
was 22 2-10 knots an hour.
His Youth Restored.
A remarkable case exists in the
village of Tuck-yfi in Kankakee
county Mo. in the person of John
Adams. This man is 8.") years old.
Until recently he was ball toothless
and almost blind. He can now pee as
well as ever has cut several teeth and
his hair has grown out again. The
new hair is dark brown his eyes are
brightand clear and at first glance be
looks like a man of 40. The brown
hair and bright eyes seem to emphasize
the wrinkles and his cuticle looks like
parchment.
Mr. Adams now has an idea that new
skin will come and the wriukles disap-
pear. He is enjoying excellent health
and believes he has many years yet to
live. Mr. Adams weighs 198 pounds
is .3 feet 0 inches tail and his shoulders
are but little stooped. He drinks no
coffee nor alcoholic stimulants and
for the past ten years he has been ris
ing regularly at 5:;i0 r. m. summer and
winter and walking a distance of two
miles to his son's for breakfast.
Mr. Adams' mustache and beard are
just beginning to turn gray and do not
appear to have been affected by the re-
juvenating influences.
The land court at Santa Fa has ad-
journed to sit again at the sams place
on the fourth day of May. No term
was set for Arizona but the chief jus-
tice was authorized to call the court to-
gether in Tucson at any time before
the date mentioned. The court is
waiting to see what will be the decis-
ion of the United States supreme court
in the Arizona cases tried heretofore.
Sam Maas ono of the landmarks
Galveston is dead at the age of 87.
of
Just full of improvements Dr. Pier-
ce's Pleasant Pellets. To begin with
they're the smallest and the easiest to
take. They're tiny sugar coated
anti-bilious granules scarcely larger
than mustard seeds. Every child is
ready for them. Then after they're
taken instead of disturbing and shock-
ing the system they act in a mild easy
and natural way. There's no chance
for any reaction afterward. Their
help lasts. Constipation indigestion
bilious attacks sick or bilious head-
aches and all derangements of the
liver stomach and bowels are
promptly relieved and permanently
cured.
Ill
13 especially true of Hood's Pills for no medi-
cine ever contained so great curative power ill
so small space. They are a whole medicine
chest always ready al-
ways efficient always sat-
isfactory; prevent a cold
or fever cure all liver ills
side headache jaundice constipation etc. 2Bc.
Jue only Pills to take with Hood's Sarsaparilla
i5
rerer
"Every season from the time I
was two years old I sufl'eml dread-
fully fiom erysipelas which kept
growing -worse until my hands wero
almost useless. The bones .softened
so that they would bend and several
of my lingers are now crooked from
sSL'r'N. this pausp. On mv
M&X. hand I carry largo
scars which but for
A i LSI o
Sarsaparilla would
be sores provided I
'was alive and able
to carry anything.
Eight bottles of
Ayer's Sarsaparilla cured me so
that I have had no return of the
disease for more than twenty years.
The first bottle seemed to reach the
spot and a persistent use of it lias
periectetl the cure.
Wautoma Wis.
-O. C. Davis
THE ONLY WORLD'S FAIR
Sarsaparilla
AYER'S PILLS Promote Good Digestion.
The Sing Sing plan of putting con
victs in military training in order to
relieve enforced idleness might ulti
mately redound to the public welfare
is generally developed. There are
many thousands of idle convicts in th
various state penitentiaries who are
neither required nor. permited to work
and if Uncle Sam is to eater upon the
Don Quijote business of going to the
relief of all the distressed or oppressed
people of the earth an army of convicts
trained to the use of arms would make
a handy lot of Sanch Pauzas.
The seamstresses employed in the
manufacture of uniforms for the Mexi-
can army have addressed a letter to
the president of the republic beseech-
ing the chief magistrate not to permit
the work to be executed abroad as is
feared will be the case in the future
The reason advanced is that it would
deprive upwards of 4000 women of
employment. The petition ia the out
come of a contract that was recently
awarded to an American house.
Ardmore I. T. has a uniaue fire
alarm. The inhabitants are great be
Havers m the rousing dualities ot a
Colt's 4"i six-shooter and on tne first
intimation of a fire every man pul
his gun. Of course it sounds like
pitched battle for a while but it is said
to have the desired effect of getting out
the boys which no eud of church bell-
ringing has hitherto been a'rle to do.
The Chicago city council has passed
an ordinance which prohibits wearing
oi- neaa gear in
the theatres
during a performance. This will corn-
i Pei ail tDe to !ai'
aside their
. t bonnets at the theatre or any other
i -- -
i Place of amusement
The managers or
proprietors of amu-eineut places who
violate this ordinance are subjected to
fines for each offense.
The German are very much worked
up over the increase and change ic the
French artillery and promise to keep
up with the procession. The Cologne
Gazette says that it regrets that the
French army increases like an endless
screw but it cannot be helped although
Germany with 52.000.000 popula-
tion the task is lighter than it is for
France with 40000000.
The Dodge City Glohe Hepuhlican
publishes an interview with Engineer
Jerry Shaw in which be says lie has
made the run from Garden City to
Dodge City fifty miles in forty-three
minutes and he cocsiders that the pro-
posed fast run from La Junta to Dodge
City. 202 miles at a rate of seventy-two
miles an hour a feat easily accom-
plished. "
The weekly operations of the EJdy
sugar factory an account which is
secured from the Argus now finds
space in the Weekly Statistical Sugar
Trade Journal published by Willet &
Gray !)1 Wall street Neur York
recogn'zed as an authority on market
quotations of sugar in this and foreign
countries.
An appeal has been tiiken to the
supreme court of the territory of New
Mexico in the Daniels murder case
which will come up for hearing before
that tribunal at its next regular session
in July. Daniels was sentenced to be
hung on the 4lh of January at the last
term of district court by judge Dantz.
S iys the lUton Importer: "County
division schemes are assuming shape
acd wiU be vigorously pushed with
every hope of success at the coming
session of the legislature. Bryan county
is down on the program and will be
erected out of the northern half of Col-
fax county.
The legislature of Sonora has passed
a law compelling owners of town lots to
build on them and there never was
such a building boom as has now struck
that progressive state. Texas town
boomers will now crawl into their dens
and admit that they cumber the earth.
Owing to the vast distance between
Kingman and Phoenix the editor of the
Mineral Wealth calls the editor of the
Republican a "mica colored Hessian"
because the latter is not in favor of the
Cuban insurgents.
(.'tire for Headache.
As a remedy for ali forms of head
ache Electric Hitters has proved to b
.cne iMecinc Hitters has prove:l to he ;
josf rarii
ick headaches yield to its inlluenco.
Vis ll rirn i 11 i.-li .-n lllift...l ti -...!
tn
c
u urtro an w no are a i ir tcu to pro
cure a bottle und give this remedy a
fair trial. Incise of habitm.l consti-
patiou Lieutric Bitters cures by
i v m g
the needed tone to the b
cases long resist the use
cine iryitouce. 1' invcmls and
at W. A. Irvin. .S; Co's. "wholesale nvd
retail drug store I'd I'aso.
Not a few who
id what Mr. Koburt
Bowls of Holland Ya. has to tay i T1 H J i
below will remember their o-.vu ex per- ' M A VH A 0 T S ! K i I II
ience under likcc'rcum-tances: '-LastirUi Jittj ill liMlilljU
w inter 1 had la grippe which left me in
a it Mate oi health. 1 tried r.umcruus
remedies none of which did me any
good until 1 was induced to try a buttle
of Chumberlain'sCough KcmeViy. The
lirst bottle of it so far f lieved me that
1 was enabled to attend to my work.
ami toe second bottle elltcted a
Pot- sale at 2." aud iX cents per
by all druggists.
cure.'
bottle
Mining location notices
'he Herald job oilice.
for sale at
Fine linen typevriter paper for
at the Hekalu oilice.
Religious R-nicor.
A dispatch to the X. Y. Herold from
Constantinople says: Official advices re-
ceived here from Jerusalem show that
there has been further trouble among
the worshippers at the church of the
Holy S?pnl'-nre. It appears that the
'man Catholics were opposed to
members of the orthodox Greek church
iteiitig the chun-h by a certai loor
on the eve oi Jan. i. uie. uay oo- rveu
by the orthodox chun-h as Christmas.
'H e latter moisted upon their rights
to enter and the result was that the
two factions became involved in a
serious fight which did not end until
the Turkish authorities intervened to
restore order. Some of the combat
ants were badly injured but it is not
kuown if any were killed.
Co-Operative Iron Works.
Mill workers at the Garni fie plan's
at Hradduck I'a . and i t ! o uesteui
Duquesue and Pittsburg and employ 8
)f the W esi.i ngnouse works at lult.e
Creek and Wilmcrdiug are forming a
joint stock company 1o build a 32 000010
iron and steel plant at Port Angt-le.-'
on Puget sound. 1 tie company n&s
been incorporated under the Washing
ton laws.
Twelve hundred prominent mill
workers have in the past fortnight
subscribed for about $1000000 worth
f stock. The plant will employ 2000
men and win cover thirty serfs oi
round. The work on the mill buildings
will be startr u in April aba tne sub
scription books will remain opeu until
that time.
Thf estimate of the cost of govern-
ing New York City for 1S07 shows what
a decided tendency municipal expenses
have to increase. Iast year the bud-
get aggregated S4G.4!l!r71 and this
year it sums up $404S.207 or an in-
crease of very nearly 83000000 in one
year. At that rate of increase and
with the addition cf Brooklyn and its
suburbs it will not be many years be
fore the annual expense account of
greater New York will reach $100000
000. The most expensive department
is the police which a-sks for S-OJb.i.il-.O
and the next is the. bureau of education
which wants $ )ii."!I2'l!). These two de
partments absorb more than one-fourth
of the total revenue of fttvf 1 ork City
That Chicago professor who gave it
as his opinion that we are fast lapsing
nack into the norm.il condi' ion of the
Indians does not know much of Chica-
go people nor of Americans in general
or he would not talk as he does. The
noble red man never gambled in wheat
or pork; he did not go to the theater
nor come out at midnight calling for
"a hot bird and a cold bottle." He
took his equestrian exercise on the
back of his white-eyed cayuse pony and
didnotdrive in a sulky drawn by a
horse with a 2:18 record. Oh no; you
are away o!T dear professor. The
Chieago man is not going hack to the
red man's life. His own suits too well
for that.
The English cruiser Powerful is soon
to go on her speed trial. This vessel
is the first of the "cruiser catchers"
added to the British navy. Oa its
power trials when no attention was
paid to spocd the Powerful made over
twenty one knots easily. . It is expected
to make two or three more without
trouble in the run against time.
The Chicago Tribune makes it a
habit every New Year's day to compile
and publish a statement of the suicides
and murders m the United States lhe
report oi suicides for the yearlV.lt was
i'i.'iIO au average of tweu ty a day against
in 1'.!2 and 2040 in "lS!0 white the
number of murders in lsut was lO.hJi
against 4270 iu 10.
Americim
WW"
:ewni2:
Company
PHIL YOUNG'S.
Y. jVI- C A..
Gymnasium Class Hours
5 p. m. every day Dumb Bell Drill
for
Business and Professional Mem
4 p. m. Wednesdays ( Juniors 11 to 16
10 a. m. Saturdays years old.
4 p m. Tuesdays and Fridavs. Ladies
Class. Work suited to all.
":.'10 p. m. Mondays Thursdays aud Sa'
turdays Young Men's Class.
Yearly Membership llegular $7; Jun
ior S5: Ladies tuition made known on
application.
iisfer.
I am now prepared to do all kinds of
Transferring o' Freight Light
s.r& Heavy Hauling.
Safe Moving n
Sp-c'aty.
H?dquart?rg at SI Paso Stabiea.
A.U ordera promptly attended to.
Vhosi No. 1.
rp. -.j . n 1
oo kraery mw lloom
1 " V 1UllO v 1 J
CENTER BLOCK
TliiirilijH. L. HAYES Prop
Reasonable Rates
REGULAR HOURS.
JOB OFFICE:
Typewriter Paper
Mining Location Notices
Blank Leases
Vendor's Lein Notices
House Rent Books.
! DENTIST
DR. A. H WHITMER.
Over Saaoa Fe City
Ticket Gice.
AUTOGRAPH
Made Right Here.
Designs Conceived
and Engraved for
Letterheads
Billheads
Business Cards
Menus
Color Plates
Labels
Advertisements
Etc.
FRANK M. EICKEUSON.
EL PASO PLANING MILL
Contractor and Builder
Sash Blinds Doors Turning aad Scroll Work io Order. Mill Work a Spseialtj
First ar.d V'rcir.la Streets. ODnoalte T .P. dtot.
SOCIETY DIRECTORY
Masonic.
El Paso Lodge No. 130 A. F. & A. M.
Meets every first and third Wednesday ai
M;isonic hall. $au Actonio street. Visiting
brotuers cordially Invited.
C. F. Slack. W. M.
A. KAPLAN Secretary
El Paso Chapter No. 157 Ft. A. M.
Meets the second Wednesday of each mouth
at Masouic hall. Visiting cDtuuanioas cor-
dially invited. GEO. F. XILXOii li. P.
A. KAPLAN Secretary.
til Paso Commandery No. 18 K. T.
Meets fourth Wednesday of each month at
Masonic hail. Visiting sir Knights cordially
Invited. lito F. XiLTON K. vj.
W. K. KACE Eocoruer.
Alpha Chapter No. 178
OKDEH EASTEHS STAR.
CKegular meeting second Saturday of each
month. tSojourumi members of the order
cordially invited.
Mas. Julia Mast
J. C. llaujih. Worthy ilatron.
Wortuy Patron.
I. O. O. F.
El Paso Lodge. No. 284 I. O. O. F.
Meeting Every Monday Night.
1. Blcm N. G.
P. M. MiLLSPiCon Secretary.
Border Lodge 374 I. O. O. F
Meets every Tuesday night.
Flournoy Carter Horace B. Stevens N. Ci.
Secretary. .
Canton del Paso No. 4
Patriarchs' Militant.
Night of meeting socond and fourth Thurs-
days in Odd Fellows' hall.
J. K. MONXFOKT. Captain.
W. E. SUAKP Clerk.
Mt. Frnnklin Encampment I. O. O. F.
Night of meeting first aud third Thursdays
P. M. MlLLSPAUOli C. P.
Hznry L. Capell Scribe.
IvlLsoellaiieoLUs
National Urnon.
Meets fourth Thursday In each month at
Odd Fellows' Hall. J. Y. Brown Prest.
J. W. Wilkinson Secretary.
Knight of Honor.
Meets second and fourth Thursdays f each
month at Odd Fello its' hall. Visiting brothers
cordially invited.
Z. B. CLAKDY Dictator.
K. A. SUKLTON. F-uporter.
United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Join-
era of El Paao.
Meets evory Sunday at 10 a. in. at Labor
hall. Visiting members welcome.
I KED W'KlDUNti&CK Kec. and Sec
Woodmen of the World
Tornlllo Camp No. 4a.
Meets evory socoud and fourth Tuesday
each month at their forest t. A. K. hall i p.
m. sharp. Sovereigns and strangers cordially
Invited. C H. HELM Commander.
TitKKY PEAIicK Clerk.
Knights of Lcbor.
Gate OI y Assembly (L. A. 3C11.
Meets every Friday eventrg at 'he hull
corner San Antonio tut N. Stanton streel xi
SiOt'o'cloik. Ji.:HN ;Cltt;h.bUIS M. W.
li. J. M K KH. U. t.
B P. O. E.
El Paso Lodge No. 1S7.
Meet first and third Tuesdays tn OJ'l Vs
lows hall. ii. U. WOOD iZ. is..
J. F. L'cnohce Sacrctary.
A. O. U. W.
Meets In O. A. U. hall on the first ace
third Tuesday in each liii nin. Vlsitlnfc
brothers cordially invited.
FiilD VflDMAN. M. W
C. O. Ksirrs Recorder.
Foresters of America.
COURT KOKIN noon so. 1
each mouth iu Odd l-Vi low's ball.
ui. i.ueiiiuyiuier L:. K.
H. Coliiauder Secretary.
Firo Department.
Board of Fire D!re '.ors meets every secon
Wednesday. General deuai -merit meeting
second Wednesday in IV' arch June Sentem-
rpf and hecembur. J T -Irrr.iAN. Pi Mdent.
J B Payne J J Connors Chief
secretary. p M MiUspaUfeh Ass't Chief.
FAC-KIMILE Foil OOc.
-ok EVERY
PURPOSE
BREVITY Is the toul of Adver-
tisliR as well as "Wit A sim-
ple illustration will say what a
column of words often fall to
express. Kvery merchant knows the
value of an original Illustration made
expressly for his own business a
design of his own suggestion. But
there has always been one uninviting
hurdle to jump in obtaining It: the
cost. If j-ou desire an illustration of
any kind call and see us and you will
find that the greater part of the hurdle
of cost ha-s been torn away Suggest
your cwn idea and it will be designed
and submitted to you for approval
before being eDgraved.
IDEAS FUKNISHED GRATIS.
K. ofP.
El Paso Lodge No. 82.
Regular meeting everv Friday nlgkt at
Castle hall over Beroke's hardware store
Polourniag Knights will receive a cordla
welcome. Geo. R.Harvkt C O.
H. Colli an oer K. K. S.
Bliss Lodge No. 221. K. Of P.
Eegnlar meetinst every Monday evening at
O. B. C. hall. Visiting knigcta welcome.
J J. O. Armstrong B. F. Corns
K. of K. &. S. o. O
Oolored Knights of Pythiac.
Myrtle Lodge No. 10
vited to attend
pectiuiiy n-
A. O. M
RFHY. K. of K. and 6.
W. E. SCOTT. O. O
Em matt Crawford Post. No. 18 Q. A. R.
Meets 1st Sund ay of each month at 3:30 p ra
Hal. on San Antonio street. All comrades '-a
good stanalng Invited to visit the Dost
F. E. ABH' Commander
ARRIVAL AND DEPARTURE OF TRAIN8.
Eastern G. LT. & S. A
Southern Mexican Central...
Eastern Texas & Pp rifle
VYestern Southern Paclnc...
'acta Fe (through tram
Rincon Accommodation
Riucon Accommodation
ianta Fe (thrmttiti train;
Western Southern Paclflc.
Easieri; C H. s. A.. ..
Eastern Texas & Pacific..".
9 xithfcrn Moxlcnn Central.
ARRIVE.
S:45 p.m
8:20 a.m
10:t6 a.m.
2:3ft t. -t.
... 2
a.m"
. 7:b0p.m
LIAVS'
6:30 a.m'
.11:30 a.m'
3:-0 p.m-
2:60 p.m"
4:16 pnr .
3:S6tm
Southern Pacific Time Card
El Paso Local Time.
Da?S Thains. Departs.
INo. 19 Easlbound 2-60 P M
No. 20 Westbound 3:35 'P' M
Arrives
2:31 P. 21.
3:45 P. M.
Every 6ffort !s made for the -omfortof Da
eeugers. tor further Information regarains
tickets rates connections etc. call oa or ad-
dress. M. U. B.-CKwar.L. T. K. Hirer.
PC8TOFFIC& HOURS.
Malls arrive and close as follows:
G. H. & S. A
Mexican Central
Texas & Pacific
Southern Paclnc
at J v
ARRIVE.
. 2:45 p.m.
. 8:30 a.m.
.10:05 a.m.
. 2:30 p.m.
.11:45 a.m.
CLOSB
2:20 p. m
3:10 p.m
3:45 p. ci
3:Go a. in
Silver City Local.'
9:30 a. m
9:00 p. m
6:30 p.m.
The ffeneral (IfillvflM vindA. .. .
.:1a i a.m. to 5:.ki p.m. except while eastern
mall Is being distributed.
Money order and registry windows are open
from s a.m. to 5 p.m.
i?ur.cays the general delivery and carriers
windows will be open from 11:00 a. m to 12 00
m.. except when malls are heavy or lata
tn either case the window will open on com.
pletlon of distribution.
JOHN JULIAN. P. M.
MISSOURI DAIRY
Fine Milk Cream But-
termilk Clabber and
Cottage Cheese
TilEWONE 15C - - P. 0. BOX 205
Order of the Driver of the Deliv-
ery Wag-on Smith's Creamery
Telephone 156 or by mail P. 0. Box
205.
J. A. SMITH Prop. f
- V
r
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
El Paso Daily Herald. (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 11, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 14, 1897, newspaper, January 14, 1897; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth295859/m1/2/: accessed July 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .