El Paso International Daily Times (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 229, Ed. 1 Friday, October 9, 1891 Page: 3 of 8
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_*1
1y Times, FrUlay, O. tober f), 1891
. ... ........i—<....
..................
El Paso
MENTIONS.
OUUS AND ENDS.
Great Britain I ms .11.1)00 women trade
iiiofiistF
I >jS- :»<$:
' See dbr new 10 rent sheet ifnisie. \V.
G. W4I* Co. '
The T. Ts. mid Reds will play ugumo
of ball Sunday afternoon at 1 •’clock.
Mr. J. Christie wears a proud smile.
A handsome young lady has arrived at
his house.
Walter C. Hadley. jr.. a well known
mining man of Lake Valjdy, Nf M.. is
in the city.
Arthur Kau.worth l'ruin®ji^Jiave !
returned from the ' easF affct#Tw|" ah-1
Hence of six months.
-■sMisq uRrOHel
1 d'lidw dsr'rt / IrriHiJav" a i
to fniO .tuam'Kjj Of. '9ft'a
• i *>.' t(yftnit- ’<(,
Where to Send Tour JOB WORE
r* *
r +»
There will bo ipi important | by 18.000. and Mansion House street by
meeting of the Browns ball chib hfekl j about 23.000 vehicles daily.
Harvard college is 225 years old (mul
lias graduated 17.000 students. A little
more than half of them are living.
■ *f
The temple of Honi-mon-ji, at Ikega-
1T .... ,, ... '""Yt j ,uj begun in 1282 and finished in 1807, is
He says polities there are exciting ai*l j Qne of‘lhe IBOSt 1;unous reUyions 8truc.
at the office of the Water Co., this
evening at. 8 o'clock.
8. J. Gatlin has returned from an
extended visit, to liis old home in Ohio.
both parties claiming the st ate.
Captain J.'H. White has at his office
some fine specimens of winter apples
from three-year old trees in his or-
chard. They pleasure over 11 inches
in circumference.
'[’lie companies at Fort Bliss will
shortly go on practice march, one com-
pany B t he latter part of this month
and (lie other company 1) next
month, each company to be gone about
fifteen days.
tares in Japan.
The right to vote at the age of eight-
een is one of the especial privileges of
the young men in Venezuela, Another
is the fact that t\e girls are allowed to
vVvt’oiidd.
eri cans
marry at fifteen.
It is estimated
visit Europe every yCfiV ahd ledve there
$100,000,000. No other country on the
face of the globe conkl ftand such a
fit vain nnrl tint fWd if >
strain and not feel it.
The Dominion senate lias passed a bill
abolishing the dual language system in
At the G. H. & S. A. shops yesterday 1 the northwest territorilk though French
a car wheel fell on a boy working in the I »* allowed to be used officially, if neces-
shops. painfully bruising one} of his
legs. Dr. Vilas was summoned and
ascertained on examinat ion
injury was not serious.
sary, m territorial courts
The lowest body of water on the globe
that the i's the Caspian sea. The level has been
j gradually lowering , for centuries and
I now it is oighty-fi wr feet below the level
One of tlio greatest aids you can give your Newspaper is voiir Job Work.
If you do not feel able to run an Advertisement you surely ran afford to <*iyo
t he Newspaper your Cards, Dodgers, Billheads, letterheads and Envelopes to
print. The Newspaper man needs it, and it helps pav his printers for settimr
up the 1001 tree notices he jrives you and your town: but don't i>'o and irive it
to any office that ran i» ive you no such return—in expending neither money,
time or brain* in trying to help you build up your city. The time mav ronie
"lien a Newspaper ean live simply upon the revenue from Advertisiiuy and
Subscription, but no ordinary Newspaper in any ordinary eitv ean exist
without an auxiliary support/derived from Job Printing. ’Therefore if Von
want a good Newspaper—one that ran still further help You and tin* Pitv.
give it Your Job Printing.—Las Yogas Optic.
Contractor W. IL Tuttle has 1(! men i of its neighbor, tty?' Black sea.
at work repainting the court house in-
side and out and remodeling the
interior. Mr. AJ Lamour is superin-
tending the work for the county and
lie says it will be the finest job ever
done in the city, and it looks now as it'
it won hi be.
In person and attire the scrupulous
cleanliness of the Malay women is pro-
verbial throughout the orient. Twice
daily she bathes, changes her garments
and washes and rinses her luxuriant
black hair.
Thirteen years ago a student in Berlin
was mobbed in the streets for appearing
You may not have heard it. but its j on a bicycle. Now the German Union
common talk around town that, Mer-
rick (sogic call him Charley I has re-
|of Bicyclists, which has just held its
eighth animal conference at Breslau, has
Rulii)£>' I )('pali'nt
Ground bone ir. an excellent fertil-
izer. It is insoluble 'in water, but be-
coived bis fall selection for the male j 1'ieill^eIS'
sex. andajW are told by those who have I
seen them, that they surpass anything; ^ ^ ,, _ .......
iieretohjdfeceii in LI Paso in the way | comes decomposed* hi'the ground. The
of elothwlTor men and boys. Suppose | finer it isgypnnd tiie. jjtpre readily it de-
you drop in there and see if these re-! compost s ,
port s are true. Fire w
(’has. Weber. Sam Bridges and Jos. IB.tkoit, Oct. 8, Walsh ,v
(DBiicn were elected members of the
Pass/City base ball club at their last
meeting. The Pass Citys now have a
Is First Class In
tine battery and promise to make it
warm f^M^ettyseonuietitors in the fu-
ture. 'IpS^ will play the Franklin
dull Sunday aftenioon at Sportsman
Park, flwth teams have good material'
1-lSk________
Co's, packing hmisev' BetNiue
teolith and Twentieth Streets,yity.
i was damaged to the extent of sflbOopp
by tiro this morning. One man wm.
burned to death and about a dozen
men were burned, or more or less in-
jured. jTl V5
Blaijl
V
of
Every
HI
l ies pert.
K i l ] c 17
ill'LED TO ODDER
__.._;a.....
AUCTION SALK,
tin* entire stock of
and a pretty contest may be expected. Clothing, ete., etc.,; of’the late
r ... ... ti_____ 1 !„d,th(wK X
(inn of Light body & .James
advertised for sale Octo-
ber tin* lHtli, lHfil,
Bet ween the-, Hours
of lO a. in. and
4 p. in.
Will In* sold in Two Lots as fol-
lows:
Lot One Consisting of tlieen-
Miwle Cloth-
.. .. . . . ... , ing, Hats, Shoes, Furnishings,
available space lias been covered with j Trunks,Hubber Godd*, Blankets,
the elegant pictorial printing of the i Comforts, Ete. Kte.
show, announcing its adVerit here on I Lot Two- Consists of the entire
sjjitnrdav October 10 stock of Woolens, Tmmmngs,
batnrday, tlctober Kt«*., in Merchant Tailoring !>♦*-
The circus is a great humumzer. Its jKU.tment.
Both clubs will appeal* in their new
uniforms. iLadies will be admitted
free, and they are asked to dime out in
full force. The batting order will ap-
pear later.
Th«* I’Tuscinations of the C ircus.
Forepaugh’s bill posters have made j
a picture gallery of the city, every tir<‘ stock ot lte<ut\-
popularity is chiefly due to the fact,
t hat everyone can can understand it.
and it. arouses in every one a sym-
pathy of sentiments which levels the
{►owers, fortune and station set up.
The millionaire gets no more for his
money than t he man who sweeps the
crossing for him. at the circus. He
c;ui
these prerogatives
tnue confers oh the man.
Forepaugh’s advance courier, says:
“I was once at a circus in San Frau
cisco, where the late King Kalakaula
of the Sandwich islands, occupied a
seat of honor. His Majesty was a sight
to behold; there wasn't a boy in the j made w ith Trustee as to tin
audience who enjoyed himself more, moval of goods
He fairly rolled in his arm chair, and ,
for the cof {Sle of hours the show lasted j
he was' as' happy as if he was not u!
king.
“Not ion feet from him was a tattered i
little bootblack, whom. I had watched i
crawling uiulor tlie tent just before I
entered the canvas. He was dirty,;
ragged, whitefaced and illfed. and he ] carg on night trains and the most
chuckled and screamed us lustily in his sumptuous drawing room cars on day
small way as anyone, for in his delight j trains, of any line between Colorado
lie forgot ttyit he was losing an after ! „m] Xew York.
noon's work, which meant a dinner! The Wabash makes direct cunnee'
apd a be^. turns at all points taimprising its west-
“Who can say that the circus, as an j eru termini for till joints east, south,
entertainment, is not a great one. that | southeast and northwest,
can thus place king and beggar on a j The Wabash is the only line having
common level aud arouse in each those i its own track from the Missouri River
identical sentiments, which exist in j to Detroit and Toledo,
mankind, whether in a hovel or on a] Tho Wabash is the only line having
throne?" its own Steamer pj$fing on Lake Erie.
1 The Wabash owns and operates the '
ciu'up Rau^* to Atlanta.Ok. (Niagara Falls Short lane, the only
The Southern Pacific company will i route giving® satisfactory view of the
sell on Oct. 15th. and periodically i Falls by daylight, and the train leaves
thereafter until Nov. Jd. tickets to At-1 tf a convenient lmnr for business men
laiitii. Go., for the Piedinout Kxposi- atld tourists.
t ion, at 811.80 for the round trijE good j Ask any hotel clerk or ticket agent
to return till Nov. 12th. See that your j for time cards or maps* of the Wabash,
tickets read via the Southern Pacific, j or address. 11. M. Hampson,
Apply at either the depot or city ticket j Coni’1 Agent, 1227 8th St.
CONDITIONS OF SALK,
First- That tile foregoing lots
be sold for cash onkv, tojlic high-
oliock must he with i
the Trustee for thtoh[«»u»t of!
purchase liefore th^aiMtverj of
goods, and between tlic hewrs of,
, , „ , . , lO a. in. and 4 p. m. ou thf day
only sec, hear and enjoy, lirH* 0p sale, otherwise the purchase |
e prerogatives, nature and not for- AVju |,c. void and forfeited.,
Third The higlujst bifck*r to
he purchaser. jp j ’
Fourth In ease any ' dispnti*
should arise between oue, two or
more bidders, the lot ill dispute
to bo put up and resold.
Fifth All arrangemeats to In*
re-
K> oilier, F/ltitiKB,^
; V1 I T-pU^tCi*. \
Tin* Walnuh l
It. is the short line to St. Louis.
Runs free reclining''chair o'ars.
Runs the most elegant state room
BLANK BOOK DEFT
Books Alack’ to ( )rclor < >11
Short X<>1 k*o ai|cl Satis-
faot i< >i i ( g larai) I oo< |. \\V
Moko I )|('
PATENT FLAT < iRRNINC
BLANK }]()( )K.
I >ii )t Iino 1 )< '| >; trl t
Magazines. Mpdit al Journals^ Law Reports. Music, Xovols,
Drawings, etc., hound to order. Old and valuable Rooks
Rebound and Decorated like Original.
Soul 11
■euro i i
office.
Denver Colo.
mm
■
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El Paso International Daily Times (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 229, Ed. 1 Friday, October 9, 1891, newspaper, October 9, 1891; El Paso, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth540858/m1/3/: accessed July 8, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.