El Paso Times. (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. Seventh Year, No. 266, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 12, 1887 Page: 2 of 8
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El Paso Times, Saturday, November 12, 1887.
flu Ilailg jinxes.
SL PASO TEXAS, NOV. 18, 1887.
TIMES PUBLISHING COMPANY,
Publishers:
Jiun 8. Hakt President,
J. 0. Hamilton Treasurer.
sntkrsb at thk postofficb as second-class
matter.
•This paper is kept on Ale and advertising rates
may be ascertained at the office of the American
Newspaper Publishers' Association, ItM Temple
Court, New York City."
SUBSCRIPTION RATES.
DAILY.
delivered in the city, per week 0 85
payable every saturday to carrier.
DAILY—BY MAIL.
invariably in advance.
•bc year $10 00
Six months 5 00
One month 100
ASSOCIATED PRESS.
The Times is the only daily paper published in
El Paso with the Associated Press Dispatches.
OUR CIRCULATION,
Besides covering thoroughly the local field, THE
TIMES is delivered daily by carriers ill the
following towns at the hour named ON THE DAY
OP PUBLICATION:
Paso del Norte.
leming..
Silver City.
li a. m.
S! p. m.
7 p. in.
Clifton, A. T.
Lordsburg....
Kingston ....
. ,(i p. m.
. 3 p. m.
.10 p. 111.
Las Crnces, M a. m.
We reach also ON DAY OF PUBLICATION the
fallowing places:
in new mexico.
Anthony Dona Ana Fort Selden
Riaren Lake Valley San Martial
Kngle and Socorro.
fowie..
Benson.
in arizona.
Wilcox Nogales
Iluachuca Duncan
Tucson and Carlisle.
IN TEXAS*
Ysleta Camp Rice Socorro
San Elizario Fort Hancock Sierra Blanca
Fort Davis .and Marfa,
aid we circulate throughout Mexico.
NO CHARGE FOR POSTAGE.
'Die
Anarchie"
Rope.
Feels the
Four of Her Devotees Justly
Throttled.
THE LAW'S VENGEANCE
For Seven Policemen Murder-
ed and Sixty Wounded.
Eight Anarchists Pay the Pen-
alty.
Five Forfeit Their Lives and
Three Their Liberty.
One Forestalls His Own Dread
Doom.
A Tale of Fierce Incitement to
Crime
And a Sequel of Iron Re.
tribution.
HISTORY OF THE CASK.
(/HK'Ako, Nov. ll,—A more striking
procession of civic events may never
again be witnessed than the one having
its latest outcome tQ-day.
The supposed absurdity, theatrical dem-
onstrations with red banners and black
that took place in the streets of Chicago
not two winters ago, followed soon af-
terward by the picturesque, yet ominous,
Sunday gatherings of tatterdemalionB,
foreigners and demagogues on the broad
common at the lake front are now recall-
ed as the quick forerunners of the secret
cellar-drillings by hundreds of ignorant,
fanatical riflemen in the purleus through-
out the city. Then came the cool, delib-
erate dynamite experiments by carefully
selected masked representatives in the
wo«ds skirting the suburbs. Later on,
secluded in the quiet of down town back
rooms,
DARK t'ONCI.AYKs
•f wild-idead but brainy, unscrupulous
leadei s eagerly discussed as their long-
coveted opportunity the just beginning
development of the workingmen's con-
certed movement for a uniform eight-
hour day.
How "the gigantic, peaceful strikes
were turned into riots, how the entire
world was startled by the blood-chilling
bomb massacre in the Haymarket, then
the majestic state trial, the amazing
bravado of the one American defendant,
the horribly grotesque marriage of an-
other one of the prisoners—every detail
of these strange occurrences and the ex-
traordinary train succeeding, now pre-
sents itself again as if the whole bad
passed but yesterday.
The key note of it all is found in the
platform of
THE MYSTERIOUS I. A. A.
International Arbeiter (Workingmen's)
Association—of which organization An-
gus Spies and his seven co-defendants
were leading members and upholders. In
the International platform it is urged
that "the present system under which
property is owned by individuals should
be destroyed, and that all capital which
has been produced by labor should be
transformed into common property by
force. Eighty "groups" of this danger-
ous association existed in the United
States, chiefly at the great industrial cen-
tres, Chicago alone being the ill-starred
possessor of seven. Only a portion of
the members were armed, yet the num-
ber of this class in Chicago exceeded
:},000, every man of whom attended reg-
ular military drills, had his own rifle and
revolver, and could obtain
DYNAMITE AND ISOMISS
for the asking. It was this compact,
well disciplined I. A. A. that had for its
organs three now noted newspapers—the
Arbeiter Zeitung. the Alarm and the An-
archist. Excepting handsome, youthful
Louis Lingg, who, though taking a con
spicuous part, was a mere acting a,ront
each of
TIIE EIGHT HAYMARKET DEFENDANTS
was directly connected with one of these
papers.
August Spies, a keen, cynical Hessian
with the subtle intellectual vigor of an
lago, was editor-in-chief of the Arbeiter.
The jaunty, dare devil little Texan Al-
bert It. Parsons, brother of a confederate
general, presided over the Alarm. At
the head of the Anarchist, George Engel
another Hessian, but of a coarse, brutal
type, out-Heroded the most blood-thirsty
utterances of his compeers. While Sam
Fielden, the Englishman, sullen looking
shaggy and forbidding, but as an agita
tor simply volcanic, and Oscar Neebe,
the polished, attractive German-Ameri-
can organizer, were more especially con-
cerned iu other than journalistic branch-
es of the propaganda, they were, never-
theless, among the directors respectively
of the Alarm and the Arbeiter Zeitung.
The gaunt Bavarian Michael Schwab was
Spies'assistant editor, and his fellow
countryman, Adolph Fischer, lie of the
poisoned dagger, was the Arbeiter's head
foreman.
Not one of these men, however they
might split hairs, could candidly deny
that he was instrumental to a greater or
less degree in helping on the catastrophe
at the Haymarket, Of the legal guilt of
each nothing need be said further than
that its certainty was put to tests seldom
if ever paralleled.
Their speeches and arlieles fairly brist-
led with impassioned appeals for the
laboring people to provide themselves
with tire arms and dynamite. Specific
instructions were given how to handle
and use the explosive, and how to make
bombs and how to procure weapons. All
this was stated by the conspirators to be
making ready for the coming "social n
volution.'' The "revolution" was fit
quently defined in speech and writing as.
a sudden, bloody, forcible upheaval of
the right of private ownership of proper-
ty, then the bringing about of a state of
society in which ail property should lie
held in common.
Incredible as it may seem, the avowed
purpose was
TO DEM OK THE CITY IN IU,»)()!)
of the property owning classes, first de-
stroying the police and militia, who were
derided as their special champions. The
period of confusion developing from the
mammoth strikes of the first of May,188(i,
was definitely announced months before
as the time when the fearful holt should
fall. Pitiless as was this programme and
difficult as a belief that it ever was con-
templated by men, the facts as stated
were abundantly proven in court.
The diabolism was fully shared in by
women. Especially so was this the case
in the
FANTASTIC 1'l llUC DEMONSTRATION'S
like the red flag processions of regamuf-
fins with torches that attempted at night
to enter the magnificent new Board of
Trade when the dedication festivities of
the institution had for the time being
transformed the huge building into a
scene of social brilliance without a local
precedent.
The city authorities affected for some
reason to ignore all ebullitions of the mob.
As a result of this,
OFFICIAL INDIFFERENCE.
when the time came at last for the eight
hour labor disturbances and the simulta-
neous inauguration of the secretly cher-
ished "revolution," the anarchists were a
ixjwer indeed, and the police were igno-
rant of danger. It is true that the Chi-
cago papers contained timely intimations
otthe Plots, but owing to the peculiar at-
titude of the high municipal authorities,
the articles were treated as rank sensa-
tionalism.
Just one (lay before the time set for the
strike, Louis Lingg, the bomb maker,
(CONTINI'ED ON FIRST PAOE.)
UNPRECEDENTED ATTRACTION
OV*n HAI.P A MILLION DlftTRBlTTEDO
• W •
Louisiana State Lottery
GOOD TABLE.
COMPANY.
Incorporate! by tlio legislature in ltdis, for edu-
cational nml charitable purposes, and its franchise
" ,,iUL of llll! present state constitution in
18,9, by an overwhelming popular vote.
Its Grand Single Number drawings w
uinniuge »ill toke
place every mouth, and its Grand Sent i Animal
drawings takes place every six months, (Sune and
December)
We do hereby certify that we supervise the ar-
rangements for all the monthly and semi annual
drawings of the Louisiana State Lottery Company
and in person manage and control the drawings
themselves, and that the same are conducted with
honesty, fairness pud iu good faith towards all par-
t en and we authorize this company to use this cer-
tificate, with facsimiles of our signatures attached
iu its advertisements,
«. T. BEAUREGARD,
.... , . J. A. EARLY.
\\ e. the undersigned, hanks and bankerf will pay
all prizes drawn In the Louisiana State Lottery
which may be presented at our counters. i*~ 1
•T. H. Ogles by, Pres. La. Na. Hank.
P. Lanaux, Pres. Sta. Na. Bank.
A. Baldwin, Pres. N. O. Na. Bank
Carl Kohn, Pres. Union N. Bank.
GRAND SINGLE NUMBER DRAWING
At the Academy of Music,New Orleans.
Tuesday, Dec. 13, 1887.
Capital Prize SI50,000.
Notice—Tickets are 111)only. Halves $5, Fifths'#',',
.Tenths II. ' •
1.1ST OF l'RIZKS.
1 1'KIZE OF $800,0(10 is
1 PKIZK OF 100,000 is.
1 PRIZE OF 50.000 is.."
1 PRIZE OF Sft,ono Is
a PRIZES OF 10,000are....
5 PRIZES OF 5,000 are .J.".
3,130 Prizes amounting to
For c|uh rates or any further information apply
to the undersigned. Your hankwriting must be
distinct and vonr signature plain. More rapid re-
turn mail delivery will be assured by your enclos-
ing an envelope bearing your full address.
Send postal notes, express monry orders or New
Yoik exchange iu ordinary letter. Currency by
express at our expense, addressed to
M. A. DAUPIIIN,
... . ,, New Orleans, La.
Address registered letters to-'New Orleans Na
lional Bank, New Orleans, Louisiana."
, W. G. LANE, Agent.
.111 San Antonio St., El Paso. Texas.
. ..*300,000
... 100,000
.... .->0,000
.... OIK)
.... 40,000
— 35,000
..*1.055,000
E. KRAUSE,
r
im
-AMI-
SUPERINTENDENT,
EL PASO,
TEXAS.
ISTETVS,
Corner Texas and Utah Sts
a* V;
Ate
v,
NOW
OPPOSITE
MYAR
-OPERA-
HOUSE.
The Deimonico
NOW
French Restaurant
OPEN
PLATS DU JOUR:
v 1 UJL1*
Sunday : (Jotellettes Monton Mllanaise.
Monday : Escalopes a laTartare.
Tuesday : Bumf a la Mode.
Wednesday : Tripe a la Mode de Caen.
Thursday : Poulet a la Financiere
Friday : Bacaloa a la Visealna.
Saturday : Choucroute.
ELEGANT
BREAKFAST TO ORDER.
Lunch 12 to 2 ; Dinner 4 o'clock, 50 i ts.
Meals to order at all hours.
SERVICE.
DIETER & SAUER
IMPORTERS AM) DEALERS IN
Fine Groceries, Wines, Liquors,
Havana and Mexican Cigars,
Paso del Norte, Mexico.
PONTOKFII'E ADDRESS
EL PASO, TEXAS.
R. ('A PELS.
i. HAMMER.
•>< fm
INKS
ALL GRADES,
ALL COLORS,.
IN STOCK
SEMI) ORDERS TO
If f d on I j by the
ChemictlCo.
Cineinn
we rordially recommend
iourO as thel>e«<t remedy
nown to us for Onorrhcea
and ( rieet.
We hove told consider-
able, anriin every cm it
haii given satisfaction.
Aloott it Halt,
Hudson. S. Y,
Sold r>y Dmpgiatt.
Frka $1.0*
Capels & Hammer,
Contractors and Builders,
■
EL PASO, TEXAS.
M. L. BACON,
SUCCESSOR TO
i«4 ft"
4}
N, fcrsrs:1'"1'"' * ■■!—?* »»j ■»
MRS. HANNAH EARLY,
Late of the El Paso House, has opened a
Boarding House
NORTH OF THE SQUARE.
£0. (SperMontlL,CHti°n' Comfort"ble Rooms 1111(1 »<*t Meals in the; City. Board
#*•'>
and
made
Puebla,
ry, in Gold
if Examine
"■ n .KSuJT™,
W. G. WALZ,
FIRST NATtONAt. BANK BB1LDIN8. - - . KJ, ,.A80. TEXAS.
If
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El Paso Times. (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. Seventh Year, No. 266, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 12, 1887, newspaper, November 12, 1887; El Paso, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth502035/m1/2/: accessed July 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.