El Paso International Daily Times (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 3, Ed. 1 Friday, January 4, 1895 Page: 4 of 8
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Duly Tuuee, Friday, January 4,1895
Entered at the PoetofHoe at El Pooo. Texas, aa
Second-Class Mail Hatter.
TIMES PUBLISHING COMPANY,
Publishers.
Juan S. Hast, Manager.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES.
Dally.
Delivered In the city, per week ..........25 cents
Payable every Saturday to carrier.
DAILY—BY MAIL.
Invariably In Advance.
One year .................................................$10 00
Six months________.................................... 5 00
nne month............................................... 1 00
All papers discontinued at the expiration
of the time paid for.
OUR CIRCULATION.
Besides covering thoroughly the local field,
the Timis is delivered daily by carriers in
the following towns at the hour named on
the day of publication:
Lordsburg...........5pm Deming..............12m
Kingston ...........6p m Silver City. .2:90 v m
White Oaks.........4pm Las Cruces 8:05 am
We reach also on the day of publication
thefoLiowing places:
In New Mexico.
Anthony............Dona Ana............FortSeldon
Rincon..............Lake Valley.........San Marcia!
Engle..................Organ........................Socorro
In Arizona
Bowie.................... Wilcox.................Nogales
Benson................ Huaehnca...............Duncan
Tucson................. Carlisle............. Clifton
In Texas.
Ysleta
Ysleta.....................Camp Rice... ... Socorro
San Klizario..........Fort Hancock Van Horn
Fort Davis.............Marfa............Siorra Blanca
No charge for Pottage.
ADVERTISING RATES.
The custom among newspapers of printing
one rate and accepting another is fast disap-
pearing.
The Timkb has l»een a oxs-rRICB organ since
1888. We find it pays.
Uniform rates are necessary for the satis*
faction of the advertiser and the success of
the newspaper.
No discounts, except those published on this
rate sheet are allowed to anybody.
The advertising agent can pay our rate and
retail the space to buyers at our figures with
profit to himself. For instance: he buys a
halt column, 9 inches, for one year, for *189;
if heTetails each inch at Hi a year his profit
is 100 per cent. We sell at the same figure to
everybody.
Mo.
Sl-’ACJB.
tsoi
tfMut
iPMoe
1 ter
laches.
Net.
Net.
Not.
Net.
5 00
.... 1. .. .....
13 SO
21 90
33 73
42 OD
9 09
24*3
43 20
60 75
75 60
ia os
... 8.........
32, 40
57 80
81 00
100 80
1$ oo
.... 4..........
40 50
72 00
101 25
136 00
1? 50
... 5..........
47 25
84 00
U8 10
147 00
W 03
.... 6.........
48 60
86 40:121 50 151 20
18 03
54 00
96 aOiias oo
168 00
21 50
58 05
1<S 20,145 10 189 60
11 SO
... S—* Ool..
90 75
108 00 155 SSilfiS 90
14 50!
.........
88 15
117 60j165 35!2f>5 »
>i 7S
....11..........
72 25
128: 40:180 55 224 70
« 0J|
..,.12 .........
78 30
139 20 195 75
242 00
it 001
....12.*.*______
S3 701148 001209 25
mi 40
a ««
89 JO
158 *0J222 75
277 20
IS 00
... .15..........
94 50
168 00
236 25
234 00
»on
....16..........
99 90
177 80
243 75
310 80
IS w
...17.........
104 60
186 00
261 55
325 50
to 501
....18-1 Col..
109 35
194 40
273 35
Mi; 20
*gg^'Ss£z
ogpt In Ita minor datatls; bat tho treaty
mast stand. All of thla favors a quite
HOLIDAYS TN TTPATV lof tb0 Mi,anos® Christmas dainty—
uuJJil/A 1 to Ail A A All I. j panetone. I was passing along a narrow
street when, in glanciug into a dirty
- -----— pouutug ques-
tions. Ths only thing for Guatemala
to do Is to sas that ths engineers finish
tha work promptly and turn over toj
Mexico what rightly belongs to this!
country.
S OWkUCU HHCI4, 1U giauuiu^ IIUVJ « \UXVJ
HOW CHRISTMAS AND NEW YEAR’S oourtyurd, I saw hundreds of the largo
ARE OBSERVED THERE round loaves placed on tho ground to
rise, nothing botween them and tho
stono paving oxoopt a thin board. Poo-
MYAR OPERA ROVSK.
easy settlement of tha nandlno ... _ . _ stono paving except a thin board. Poo-
tione. The only thins for OnftamaU I Th °« ° t* *° *** To8Iethcr' pl« wore passing in and ont, hucksters
Th® Songs, the Festivals and the Flow- and servants and dirty ohildren, while
ers—A Milanese Christmas—The Holy several cats were amiably sunning them-
Chiid—Buont Auguri. J selves in a warm spot.
[Special Correspondence.] °?® of *h?se selfsalne loavea aftcr‘
Rome, Dec. 19—It is a great custom TiDt,00? ““V
in Italy to spend the Sunday and holi- » lM6 ^ dlv,ded
- . day afternoons at the cafes and osterie f.™1 ** Jrawhed happiness
sSSSS?S5S "t1 rradhaSss
q nog like stnok pigs beoause the I All go to the public cafes to bo glad and afterward learned that it is quite deli-
prios of those securities has fallen bs- merry toegther. The well to do shop- cio«s.
low tho figure paid for them, says the I keeper and his family, the workman in H *s tho custom in many houses to
Hanwaa Da»Lll____ aa ... I __.1 . il . I . . ...
“BEARED” THE MARKET.
m *v* euom» onyo tuoi yvrv* UiU w ULKlUHLl ill
Denver Rspoblioan, thus entail1 ng a I his holiday clothes, tho laborer with
slight apparent loss on the present I his suubrowned skin and bis toil hard-
holders. The American people will
shed no tears over the matter. The
syndloate so manipulated the terms of
sale that there could be no other sno-
oe&sfnl bidders for the bonds and so
obtained the entire issne at Its own
3rloe, 117.077, As soon as the award
was made and before ths bonds were
oven printed It worked the price up to
19 and it even made some sales at
19,^, thus harvesting an enormous
iroflt on the deal. The subsequent
blundering of the administration
in framing a onrrency bill which If
enacted as originally drawn would
lave compelled all the national
banks to withdraw their present oirou*
ation by the first of next July, thus
making It possible for them to throw
the bonds now held as security for olr-
erect presepo—scones representing the
nativity—the Holy Child, the ox ant
ass, whoso breath is supposed to warm
it; the Virgin, Joseph, the shepherds
bringing presents, all represented by
little clay figures. Those piresepe aro a
source of great pleasure to the children,
and for months before they begin to save
their pennies to buy tho little clay fig-
ures. Sometimes the presepe are very
elaborate affairs, but in tho homes of
the poor they more nearly resemble the
actual occurrence of 2,000 years ago.
All Expect a Present.
Every one in Italy asks for and ex-
pects a Christmas present. Every one
who has rendered the least and most in-
significant service through tho year ap-
pears on Christmas morning, doffs his
cap and—waits. The telegraph boy who
may have delivered one telegram, tho
postman, the registered letter man, tho
newsboy, the man who brings the coal,
the ono who empties tho dust bin and,
aye, even the debt collector who has
‘called so often to have that little bill
--------V*A* | ITALIAN TYPE
eolation, amounting to about $200,000, I ened bands, his clothes bespattered with , ______
000, on the market, caused a soarelnrad; tho peasant, the minenti, with J settled. ” Each servant, including the
among investors and made farther I their women laden with jewelry and I porteress in the lodge, expects from 25 to
L — A*, i I fl fill T1 f~,111 Cf nri! nrc nil /w*nw/1 4-l»n 4-n I KO 'pTUTinO Him wmol- Un«/V n 41.. 1 1 —
among investors ana made farther lueir women laden with jewelry and I porteress in tfie lodge, expects from 25 to
sales by the syndloate at a profit im I ®anDt*u8 colors, all crowd about the ta-1 SO francs. Ono must have a full purse,
possible. The New York bankers now b.les.of an ?8teria laughing, chatting, j giyejmd give freely at Christmas time,
s&y that when the administration tries I s!ngin8’ ipking, drinking. Perhaps a
Key to our Table of Rate*.
Th® one month rate for space from the
inch to one column of 18 inchei is fixed so
that the per inch rate decrease* for increas-
ed space from $5.00 to $2.25, but for l he same
length of time 9 inches are sold at $22 50, and
IS laches are sold at $3.25 per inch, $40 50.
The one inch rate is ihe basis of the whole
table; as the short time rates fixed are a per
i.antage of it.
The 1 time rate is 33M per cent of the month
rate.
The 2 timet rate is 40 per cent of the month
rate.
The 3 times rate is 50 per cent of the month
rate.
The 1 week rate is 60 per cent of the month
rate
* The 2 weeks rate is 75 per cent of the month
rate.
The 3 weeks rate is 90 per cent of the month
rate.
The 3 months rate is 3 times the m _,nth rate,
less 10 p er cent discount.
The 6 months rate is 6 times tie
less 20 per cent discount.
The 9 months rate is9 titce* the month rate,
less 25 per cent discount.
The year rate is 12 times the month rate,
___ . . ■ ... . • *® 11 ing to the music of a mandolin, danc-1 Once on a time thero was a goddess
. y j 1° tbree montb8> I ing with all the freedom and abandon I called Strena, who was the patroness of
tn»y will let it find customers as best of tho happy Italian nature. youth, health and strength. There was
t can, but that is an Jldls threat. I And while all are enjoying an hour a temple dedicated to this goddess in
They will buy if they oan make money I hilarions merriment, heightened by J Rome, and the gardens about the tem-
on the deal and they will not buy if I numerous drafts of the red lined Italian I pie were filled with hygienio plants,
there is no profit in sight for them I wiae or the rioh yellow Marsaha, a lit- more especially the verbena, which pos-
The administration oan avoid all neo! S ^ ey^ maid- holdillg the 8esses oxTtraordinary health gi™g pwp*
£*£ to.. bond to. S3. K Sto JCJfi SLSS
ng sliver in place of gold in exchange I a moan of anguish, piping out: Outside and inside, houses were decorat-
for legal tenders presented for rt damp j Sta chitareiia cca ed with it. On the first day of the year
tion and if it does that as the law real- j ]J?aie *a . . the priests of Strena’s temple were wont
lyreqaires.it need not worry aboat| SowfSrtU ^ aSLy?^84 here | to diBtribute shoots and slips of this
highly prized little plant to the people.
Mi-sx a- S
Literary Lights Who Feed a SHmulu. la I ^Ss “flower^uLToraST88 “d a“d M Wh° reCeived Rwere^ said& to
a—^ »reoeiV8d 8
■ with pre»nt» and tribotea o( affection | Aa Rome advanced in civilization the
oj;ly one night.
Saturday, Jan. 5th
Prices 25 and 50c.
Beats ou sale at MoKie’s Confection-
ery Store, Ban Antonio street.
Coming,
BLIND TOM,
January 8,1895.
W. L. Douglas
$3SHOEri?;oH££!K».
. CORDOVAN,
FRENCH & ENAMELLED CALF.
(4*3£? Fine Calf ^Kangaroo.
♦3.5? POLICE,3 SOLES,
*2.$i.7j? boys'SchoolShoesl
■ladies •
— BJtOCKTOKKMASSv^-
Over One Million People wear the
BV. L. Douglas $3 & $4 Shoes
All our shoes are equally satisfactory
Th*V wive 4ha knot 4a. dL. A
prices arc uniiurin,>N*Slflinpfi(l on 8(
Prom $i to $3 saved over other makes.
a If your dealer cannot supply you we can. Sold by
m o pbw,
105 San Antonio Street.
-er uwwu uuu wuuj auuub
the feelings of the bankers and brokers
and jobbers of New Yogk or any other
fluanoial canter.
Dr. B. Alexander’s
Native Wme.
CUB PURE JUICE OP THE GRAPE.
THEY LIKED NOISE.
Address R, P. JOHN80N AGO-, Bole
Agents, El Paso, Texas, for pricesln
’>nlk or moo
> month rate,
en who give distinction to their day is I ^ nf tL T? °f a,fection As Rome advanced in civilization the
of interest to those who admire, criti- I Th f . • ® °°“® fl°wers. modest little strennaof verbena became
cise and perhaps envy their achieve- ^ S transformed into flowers, fruit and cakes
ments. A special and legitimate curi- ^h ^es7s Site is a nifttul^ , covered with 8old leaf- ^ trinkets and
osityis felt in reference to the condi- d a prettily decorat- jewe]e. And thns originated the custom
tions under which success is won. ^^geDtJ® remind: of New Year’s gifts,
niimnaoa Qt-a ^___.1.,. I ®r that the offer of a lira or two would I ____..._______
Glimpses are o^on^^given into the I “ **“ offer of a^iraor two wonld
methods of eminent trviW * w™,. I ?ot 1,6 *akeD amiss bT the waiter who
lew 30 per centdiscount.
Special^position—Fifty per cent extra.
... . . advertisements charged st two-
thirds of dally rates.
Professional cards $5.00 per mouth.
Metai;ba«e cuts only accepted.
Resding-Matter Rates.
Twenty-five cents per line first insertion; 15
cents for each subsequent insertion. Con-
tracts for 1000 lines to be taken in 3 months,
made at 5cents per line each insertion. Un-
changed locals, by the month, $1.5 » per line.
TIMES PUBLISHING COMPANY,
El Paso, Texas.
methods of eminent toiler^ and a won- | JJJ patiently S’ved ^n^^ouch I 0ccasiolli*,lly iu Italy today one sees
derml variety is revealed. It is at least I year g 1 the I on 0]c] ca8ties or pa]ac8a large horns at
plain that no guidebook to great ner-1 3 F ‘ *h. -_____ . ... eacb side of the principal entrance.
formances—the anxious aathOT can n ra]n^j t|tus °P®*e inbls Bulls’horns were placed in tho halls
his choice of several—will determine ^nSation tf a and the doors of their houses for pass-
the point where exactly the best results Se haDm- thron J er«bJ to fill with gifts on New Year’s
aro to-be obtained. One man’s help is O'casionallv bands of day—cloves for young girls, cakes for
another’s hindrance Many to- eSSTESTtS S’." “aS ‘ T* !*£*$ “T"'8’
are only been „.IlfW. o ,___. ai“s< Schoolmasters in the olden timer.
Ell Paso Route.
TP
writers, for instance, have only been ^d„abonf2 ST Schoolmasters in the olden time re-
able to perfect their thoughts in silence ^ cdved 110 re«nlar ™ for their services,
and seclusion. But thero have also been “IS®8* b«t each pupil was expected ou the
year to present them
Texas ani Pacific.
and seclusion. But thero have also been I uprq nn(,n , g,51’ a street cor-1 but eacjj papji
—----- those who could work in the midst of J gweet strains of musin’ nn th ? Y we.1.rd’ I day of the „___
IfPStPTfl/lV Q [U orl/pfo babel and defy distraction. Jane Ans-1 mnesor tiiffcro Their r-r,«t e rAraadia,{ with a gold rod, in
sSsisislss ^ and Weat
wrote sitting in the family circle and Sfn b!t! 1 6f ^ °ngs- ' CJt*OU OllU W UDU,
under perpetual risk of interrnntion. It ?____f“* J, * * «crveas contribution
The great popular route
between the
BABSILTBR (Smelter Unotatlon)...C9 S-4
03PPKK................. 9 88
L*4D (Smelter Quotation)....................3 00
LBAD, New York........ 3 00
$Df ....13 *40
IBON, American............... 9 10 to 13 OO
kMHUAB PESOS (Jnarem)......... 50
aaxiOAN pesos (ki pMO)_____‘______si
Thx pope neglected
A. P. A.
to “Bair’ the
W. O. Bbann has resarreoted the
Ioonoolaet and it is being published at
Waoo.
The substantial good will of the citi
zens of El Paso will enable them to
make the great International dam an
actuality.
under perpetual risk of interruption. It WesTr the Cf°Utribati«n
™eU.ht\Sy UaT "h,>"reml i”t0 thOT’ For
SK wrote "T" “ff' I
her best known story on a plain nine P78 -1 cnr10a-s sweet melodies,
table by the aid of an evening lamp in
a tiny wooden bouso in Maina About I bVmn to the Virgin Ti i ^ ?,ban^®d
her were gathered ohildren of various ” g “ °a,,od tho'
ages, conning their lessons or at play ' Troubadour Music.
zltjssz ™ isrs «iss- *? r rmi? 11
''Sew. C°Lhbh, -Tl P',°"le. I !<™k lieu of tntodJL. I ".‘.“toll”
the “Roman History” of E ’ Araoki I™™hinv (Jhristm.-.s mom-
i|i§.
SHORT JLINE TO
New Orleans, Kansas City, St.
Louis, New York and
Washington.
Two oases of varioloid at Taylor,
Texas, has soared the authorities of
that burg and they have closed the
pnblio sohoole.
EtfMI
children playing in the room—his fre- L,i . „ , _ I or shouts, “Envinal” After that the host
The above is dipped from last night’s
Grapevine and as a sample illustrates,
first, the ability of that sheet to obtain
reliable news; second, its fairness and
third, how it gloats and revels in what
it hopes is the misfortune of a citizen.
children playing in the room-his fro- “fd °rf'^ “En™a‘” After that the host
quent guests, whether friends or former at last fron. y L f r and gnest8 8iIentlT coant any silver
pupils, cominff in or ont nt ...in » I frora Pnrfi Phy«>cal exhaustion. | money they have about them. v„
pupils, coming in or out at will.” Afto »tina awhK r£ fhanBtl0“- money they have about them. No gold
Thomas Lovell Beddoes, a poet of lux- fo find Sm L1 ^ ie vi8ible’ for that briu^ bad look,
uriant fancy and true genius, though !ho LJ?,!!* . i- tZ tho mU810’ “Buoni auguri” salute the Italians,
much neglected, also found stimulusto LemorvnovlrTo^f^ltt1108^ and “HaPPy New Year” salute we.
the creative faculty of his muse in never.tob«^forgotten. But they1
working in playful andeven noisy com- other , T *°™T? I
pany. Soch cases recall the story of the Christmases in Italy I never again • corrected.
learned man of Padua, who^assured “T 801088 the Plfferari- , Pater—I will never consent to your
1 I here are sweetmeat stalls on almost marrying young Harduppe, my dear.
Alice Marble.
favorite line to the North, Bast
and Southeast
Pullman buffet sleeping oars
and solid trains from El Paso to
Dallas, Ft. Worth, New Orleans,
Nemphis and St. Loots.
FAST TIME
-AND--
Sure Connection.
A dispatch from ths City of Mexico
•ays that on the very best authority It
to known that negotiations between
Mexico and Guatemala will not begin
thto weak and that Guatemala will
Montaigne that he actuallv needed to *bere ara sweetmeat stalls on almost marrying young Harduppe, my dear.
be hemmed in by uproar before he could ®V-!7 ^°Taf- The? ,C0US,-8t of a COTlutor Wijy* he does nothing—absolutely noth-
proce^d to study.—Chambers’ Journal. 8tfps •‘“ed with calico and fringed ing—but smoke cigarettes.
I in front and at the sides with bright red I The Heiress—But, papa, he has
cloth edged with a stripe of gold. On the I promised to stop that.—Brooklyn Life.
cnnntar and atona am all tha tana a,.,l I •_ . ,_
Ought to Sympathise.
---- pwucvu.io, jm-. Jinks—Why are you forever bother-
j low breads with raisins in, substitutes ing me about that bill I owe you?
Hettie—He had a seat iu a crowded I Plnm pudding, nougat and torroni I Minks—I need the money,
reet ear that I entered, and he looked I *11 tbe sweetmeats appropriate to I Jinks—Then you ought to be able to
FoUteneM. _____ ___ ^ UJO
Hettie—What a perfectly charming c°nnter and steps are all tho toys and
and original person Mr. Blather isl sweets necessary for a jolly Christmas.
Flossie—What has he said or done There are pangialli and panetone, yel-
recently? * j- —ul —,_j— —, ... .
v -------- a fJIUWUBU
waak and that Gnatemala will 8 , * 901 tbat 1 entered, and he looked | BUU **1* lua sweetmeats appropriate to I jmxs—men you ougni _____ _
tha Question nt Fln.t.n „i.„ ®p “om hls PaPer *nd bowed to me.- the season. sympathize with me. I need the money
q 89t,0n °f “P*1*0 »nd a,80i Chioago Inter Ocean. j Well do I remember mv first eiin,™ | too.-New York Weekly.
See that your tiekets read
via Texas and Pacific railway.
For maps, time tables, tickets,
rates and all required informa-
tion, call on or address any of
ths ticket agents, or
B. F. DARBY8HIRE,
Oan. A**nt, HI Paso, Tan
or
3A8TON ME8LIER, L> 8. THORNE,
0«LP. AT. Act. MY. P. AO. Sap*.
Dallas. Tessa.
t I 4
>—J.
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El Paso International Daily Times (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 3, Ed. 1 Friday, January 4, 1895, newspaper, January 4, 1895; El Paso, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth540456/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.