El Paso Daily Times (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. 26, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 24, 1906 Page: 4 of 8
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Our sworn statement of con-
dition published this week In
the local papers shows a very
healthy growth. The reasons
for this growth arc worth look-
ing into. It means that our
service is found satisfactory by
our patrons and that they are
recommending us to their
friends.
We would appreciate your
account.
American National Bank
of El Paso
CAPITAL AND SURPLUS,
$210,000.
EL PASO MORNING TIMES
EL r’ASO MORNING TIMES, TUESDAY, APRIL 24, 1906.
Cards have brt.-n Issued from Santa
Ft* announcing the commencement ex-
ercises of t'.ie Santa Ft- Indian school
to lake place Mj*y 2 at the
schools. The rgaduating class from
the Indus'rial department will
Ik- addressed by Superintendent S. M
MbCowan of the Chllocco Indian
school of Oklahoma.
about the marble quarries in that im-
mediate vicinity.
James Mair, the carpenter employed
by M P. Cousins, nay about recov-
ered from the painful Injuries he sus-
tained by a fall some weeks ago. His
life was saved by a hammer in his
pocket, the handle of which was split
open by ihe Jolt it received.~-JLas Ve-
gas Optic.
in pursuance to % a telegram re-
ceived from the society headquarters
at Cincinnati, President H. A. Canter
of ihe locul branch of be Independ-
ent Order of B'nall Brlth, has appoint
<d n committee to soilcli money from
rmong the member* In I .as Vega* for
the relief of the sufferers In San Fran-
cisco.
ITtll.lCATION OKI P t
UMCb in ilium; at a south obepomst
SUBSCRIPTION RAILS
BV MAIL IV AO VANCE.
Ubilvkiv! SuwUy on* Teat
nn«t Sund*?. *•!» toonfh#
!»r*i' v Mini fttxtidiiy. oit« raonlh
Ti w tiu.Ujr TJ»t»*». mu >»ar
BY CAIWEI*
»tn1 StimU>.’irtt«'iiitonHi.
#7.P0
:l5o
ft*?
*.M*u
Champ Clark.
BEPRCSENTATIVE FROM MISSOUI.
- *» ho fn.il ttf* wwivE th#lr n»|T'>
nrly are rawjuoMod «*• notify th« bi-nine** o(Ac« T9
l).nt cff*ct .
,,|v« pofitofflu* «4ftr***s«* ip full, t'tnwtf
hfwt Kthip Remit l»y money ont^r, «lrnft or r*Ei*
•protj i*tt*r
Adder** all comntiinkatkMiB to
THE TIMES. El FASO. TEXAS,
Entered Kt t)»* Poeifrffb
Mtcsutl el* ■
At iCI Pmo,
■ mill! mattor.
HKANCH OFFICES,
EaMwrn rttfoiflo** CMIW 1- 11 T* ML47-4* W* -4».
lit* Trllmiio ItaibMuif N**r \ ork t tty
Wtrrsfitn! Hu*im • ufti-o. MD 11 1- Tribune
HniltJim; < ''I lira iff
l j,,- s » IWk wit}) sptw'ial Atferwy Sf>!* Agent*
Foreign Atl'artlnlttf
IFXHIUtOM S
Buaineaa Offie ...........
26 1 Ring
Editorial Room*........
26-2 Rings
rt KSDAX APRIL 21
. r.«Mi
GOVERNOR FOLK'S PROMISE
Tie Httrilord Coiiiaii' "links i It-icTii
flow-root Folk' r-'iitAtlo. lor -"-it’? ; rh-'ti1
lug whai he mini- Is -?ifttc-1«*n to
ROOSEVELT NOT RADICAL.
Henry WaltyiMW say* iu his pa-
per. -the Loclayfilt- Courier-Journal
that the utterance?, of President
Kosi.ti, vali on the menace of money
to ih? tun Itutlons of this country ar-
no move radical Ilian ill? declaration
, Abraham Lincoln in 1x5k that this
government could not permanently
enduin' hall free and half slave He
ivoatUT“thai l.lncoln’s utterance w»
r-garded at ihe time ii was made a*
not only radical, Inn positively revo-
lutionary Mr VVatlersou says
As Mater;. wit the menace of tin*
I ii ion in is.1*. is money it* menace
now. As Slavery built up an oligar-
chy in the Smith, is money building
op a plutocracy in ihe K.v-t
The Iteiuinlican party, mainly
tlt'ruibfh I'.s,.tariff policy, but In many
other legislative ways, creat* >1 the
I plutocracy. It has consistently fits
men can'i stick to facts, However,
ou try coming in some morning aft-
er I o'clock and you'll see your wife
hang on like grim death to the fact,
no matter how insinuating your ex-
planations,—Pit rahurg Press,
no doubt as to he evil -if
ttie inequality of taxation, which op#
J"-'' ■' ko hope "ML nn example wtiija(,,„ |<;) Jh(. !illvan!Bae ot (1„, ricli and
m ol.- Of .c least s mu o in- t"?di-advamou oi the pom. and
who pameipa.e! n the .Spriugfl-bl, j (h( #pW|. mj, i?(, t;re.t lomutes
Mu Jjk tfchi»K Ht says .tbit '»v«*l y
uf Ilk * mob liiftt took pftn
in thto Jhjfrnc* *ul pr-i>c«*tfdtaK '^vl
vtivofi t« b<k hu.u*^. ftiul that hf*j
}mo ?i» ' u yc i Tot y nuain th0;
l« iWi i of tiiv* hi® i* to L./JiiK 'Im'X/ bi» j
m; muiit^rem r» ‘ AhtiL’, ht*j
«ity* ■ "A f« m uV a liwi
lyucbiTs i» an obj*‘< t U ssur. ai is \
\ory muolt n»' ib i At: .tri wiH j
rtibabh
If"AMOll j
Many
as Uircib! y a ml tlion
1‘ Gov i
i to t in* (jUadvantiiKi
i i. Ih- gri‘«' m i H 'o eld
\ t hca {»♦■ alruoM rtillr^ly. ‘vhilc the bur-
jiieug on fin at“ ist-UTa; cuns aii?-
i 1;- Imreuatnl. Tht tfathnrius of tht-
1 mom y in > t hv - o* a (v# ai<*n
\ it imbH’ii a ^ruaT fianjrnr. Ttn' pow#*
jot ?s»t plotiK’raey grows aiwcn It i-4
high limn ?aK» nn isum> 'br^'Ts
U Tin pr* silica?am Omniy
Wi.n num Till *1 )if*m an ! w »ar
age legistaUon wfeicli will maU** fur
greattr miuallty among the1 jM<>pk‘.
| T.iis nation slnml^l havn a gra*.)nait^1
mconn tux imi a ^railuAtmt inhtr-
itance Tft\
nivn havt* spokv
taU^ii to act «*
I'iiWr- y\AV. ’s r^pii aiinii a man of
a rfloti ihsV Ruvr* hujiy iha! Ult* f x j
nan'iw pfactir. wt \ Jiifastir*- up wMti J
tin1 ^xneptivn prnac hi i
Uovunn ■ Folk ha- an inviting In ht
Tbvrn 1s at iirt’^ehi auit * h*!tu.*r for a
man wha ha« wcj tin* UsUfK'llun of
lH>lag a man who itotn things and
who winh-M- <» jH'fpotrai.o Ui&4 nariu'
Thvn* is a popular WUo! that (>»*cu
liar d!f!h »in«*% wm nx;< tlio.-h* who un
dt riako to punish lyncher* Prt>lvB?d> ! j^(v^”*C(*^ 'r
tin* chi of difh' ulty j.h in ilp* publh ; 'f* jJ4. $>** .>p|^» .u« goi'iig to h4<v to U ihat
M>uUiinnii hack of thiy lyncher> \V|Lh ■ th< compk xior »>t flhc majority in
tn|l a IBrih-spirit '.h;>Tt* t |H» mob. '-OUiji*ss is ch.4n;4C»l j^jsl as 900X1 ft*
ACTER THE TARIFF.
in thy Kist ;hr> tarllf qit uMlou holds
j ihe front of the stap* The fight t »r
[a rovUion 1 on in cariu's . T*Ui*
| llnffa!,* rim* > says'
In a spirit of prophecy a few days
Pfso, Speaker i'annun of tit bousi* <»(
J foprcaemariVi s said the tariff was
j sure to lip* revised *<»nio day. Ho inti*
j mated his belief that th rvvtelofi
i wmild not hv tin- work of a Ropub-
Thi^ belief is general
This spirit js li 'ti foo;: i to in* rmu
! tdecUous will p? i'in it.
, , , , . , i “The wife of ihe mechanic and la*
ger than law and ,.,ler s.r.-tethv Hlu■;borlll„ matl ,„.u„
to admit The recent experience of,t,Mr<j supply ihe household needs
SpriagH'-lil. O. whete an a lefupt from her hushund', earnings and 1*
was ma lu to pu.,isn p op!,- for the dls 'obliged to curtail the purcltaai or
giaceful work of mob sugg. Ms ,h<1 i «'Ujc* tw herself an 1 children. The
. „ ,, wifu of tae tarmor fimis tin* cost of
dlfftc'ilty ma (tovernur folk may -n ,rl„s al„, „mu
( . •utcr. one dollar rill.- an l the line keeping up with the advance in tit.-
n-prc'-cnts tlu» maj. .d> ot t pricf of the products of the tarm. The
n ii. ted
thv lavs
mob May Governor Folk Gave, be; J
in dealing with the t)lilo|wlfe "f 1,11 bitainexs man has dlscov-
I "i cd that her weekly allowance will
, . . not provide as s»ood a table as hoie
ter luck In dealing with a much morej ami s;„. (ll..likt.s
sertotia e.itn« than ihtrt committed husband to increase the allowance,
in Ohio. i which has sufficed for years Indore,
A- ;<• me wav to prevent ivaciil.tg i a,“l she lm" fliX l,own !"-‘r °*'n
... f . ,, ; pleasures and adonimoni
..ovemm- I Li. - i man of V* Mextcoj •Th,.e„„ntry i- 'c njoying' the high-
s(-t>nis to think that they do kings ,.; tariff that it has over known, and
better In Ills territory lb cavs: jtongres*- a KepttbUran congress,
"Such a lynching as took place in i tivinrl y ou - has refuse I to relieve the
Spriugtield under a Statue if Liberty, .'cople by* revising exorbitant ached-.
with the police hell lev-. Ctinld no j "1®-
’i ave ocettrre I in New Mexico. Out | "Every man, woman and child who J
mounted police are men who would I feels the efftc, of the enormous in
ake no aeotKtH of the ol.i.i agai.is jCrt-ase In the cost of living ought to
them In enforcing the law, It would g?' into politics for the time being or
be a lasting disgrace to a sheriff In -until there is such revision of the
the let .'it ary to nave a prisoner taken I burdensome tariff as to destroy the
Horn him by a mob, as it is to have a, rust-, and monopolies which have
priBoner to escape " ! grown up under it
Why -in yottce void dat bulldog?'
asked Tire! Tiffins. saeerlngly.
"Traid?"
“Not personalty." answered Precise
Perkins, "Inu my garments are nuffi-
i ,-ientlv so.”—ixmitvliW Courier-Jour
nat.
When girts go "visiting,'' we wonder
if it ever occurs to them that they
make u lot of extra work for the
A party of New Mexico young men
have left for the purpose of explor-
ing the cave recently found by Rob-
The high cost ofie.: Hopkins in the south of the Man-
The conception of official disgrace I ,!v>08 l« due in a measure to the fact j am m monataias. in which be repor-s
which Coventor llagcrtMn sa\s j* j ll»*t H'uMs atv sending their prodnets finding many apec.imens uf antique
, . ., , ' . i abroad and selling them to foreigners
,-uterUlaed by the sheriffs o, New ; that, they do to peopi# here
Mexico Is sound aa I admirable j» home. A revised tariff means .....^__________ ________
Mout- od police who ",akc no account cheaper food, clothing, boots and store of "he Homeni Mercantile com-
of the odds against them In enforc-: tomes and every neceMity of. pany up in GaUioa* eanytin. dropped
trig iwc law " are just the right kind, * hom,> ! dead of apotdexy. He was *ei*ed
of moiiiup 1 I* ivritiiii' l-,»il i • ' ■ I ftill' nlW)kt‘ bt1 fP"
,1 < arnesle wants f« maN© hi®- jfor ihe nin^kit anti fell Hfeleaa
in dealing with j n,W,c in e e/KVtt eans,. <stt S-ss.i.
pottfry and other ancient relics.
F. Delgado, manager of the agency
on the right track in dealing with
tv-ccber* who have ly ached. The
sheriffs and police destvlb.Hi by Gov-
self poor in a good eaase San Fran-
cisco effers him the opisiflUBlty.
emor Hagerman ait- the men t.i han-i A’astro pruroise* to visit this conn
die lynchers in whose heads Hn; lynch j fry. He has nu». been invited, silll
lug bee has just begun to liu*/.. ! the visit might par him a, be would
____ -- j »#e the biggest Lung on ear h.
Give the people a voice!" shouts j --— ,
an eastern editor. \V« thought they I «- Mwdw, Who w«* s*»wb«#« M» gflea,
five years in the penitentiary for;
wrecking a bank as Atdiene. waa, two* **'
as the side of the lietl
Anangenu-nts aavt bep completed
and closed for the special S.irlners'
train out of Albuquerque- on May .1 for
tje annual convocation of the Shri-
ne rs ot the na Ion in lai* Angeles The
train wfi ran. as a solid Shriners' spe-
from Vibuquerque to Lo* An-
were all pretty well supplied. The
people who attend baseball game* in
Kasteru cities seem to be all voice.
They have voice to I row at the um-
pire and all of the players.
Le-vU, r: present tag the
®UUrrlMt Granite company. Baltl-
year, ago the Rcpuidtcaa norniac- for „M(Pr hwtUt,n o, bigh-gradc Otae-
governor of T,.xa» j »hlu- granite for monuments, man sic
—------ »-i«t and marker*, writes to La« Ve-
A -New York lawyer ray* tht. wo-jga* to ascertain everything possible
The great mission at Our Church
of the Lady of Sorrows has cbreed at.
I.aa Vegas The services were dosed
with an address appropriate to the
occasion by Rev Fr. Paul Gllberton.
The missionary priests, who bad beeu
present during the fortnight, havo
gone to Taos, In which field they will
labor /.ealously, as ..hey did in Las
Vegas.
Six hundred irees have lieen re-
ceived by the Mesa Park Driving as
sooiation, which will be planted at
once In the park on the mesa. The
speedway lias been completed and
with the pumping plant in condition
for work the park Is In a fair way
io be completed. The park will be-
fpre long be one of the popular re
sorts for Albuquerque people.—Albu
querque Journal.
Lie. Augusto Petriciolo, a promi-
nent luwyer residing in the city 6f
Puebla, has been appointed chief of
the finance department of Matamoros,
Tamaullpas. and he will shortly leave
Puebla for that city to take charge of
his new office.
An agitation is now progressing In
Mexico CUy for shorter hours for the
employes of shops and stores. It is
said that at present the hours which
these people have to work are terri-
bly long—unnecessary so from every
point of view.
According to A. Martin, who Is con-
nected with the banana plantation of
the Mutual Planters' association of
Tamos. Tamaullpas, the plantation will
ship an unusually large number of ba-
nanas this year to Chicago. The plan-
tation is largely owned by Chicago
capitalists. •
The papers have been signed by
which E. M. Rowley becomes the
owner of 5,500 acres of Improved
stock pasture on the Panuco river, fifty
miles above Tampico, the property
having been purchased for a valuable
consideration. It is said, from Ralph
W. Hutchinson, Both parties are busi-
ness men of that port.
Great preparations are being made
in Puebla for the battle of flowers
that wit) be held there next month.
The committee charged with the or-
ganisation of the festival has already
oiderod the const motion of the gold,
sliver and bronxe medals that will be
awarded to the persons taking part
In the flower exhibit.
The big broom factory of Juan A.
Creel ami E Avlia. located at Ilia* of
Chihuahua, ts now in operation. It coat
ti*»Juki and Is a modern and up to date
factory in every way. The owuers raise
tbtdr own broom corn and last year
year, although the first trial, they had
Tucson is to have an additional
hospital. it is hoi.IF built by Nowi
York parties In trie northern part "<>')
the city between First stree-. and Eu-i
Citd avenue and one block north of I
the? Speedway. The stonework for!
the hospital has already been com-!
pleted. Tht* bulldiag is being coo-1
stmeted of brick. The plans show|
that there will be thirty rooms for
■patients In the hospital, in addition
there will be the operating room,
dining room, general offices and oth- -
er rooms fousti in the hospital.
Kev. Father Maurer has left for
Nogales wriere he will pass several
days os business of a private na.ure.
He stated that as J'ht the plans of
the convent to be ereoteJ here had
not beea chosen, iwu that it was prob-
able they woulJ be in a short time.
Almost money enough has been rais-
ed to carry ; he building to comple-
tion. and as soon as the necessary
amount has been raised, ground will
be broken 'for the building.—Bisbee
Miner.
We are exclusively interested
in the examination of ihe, eye
in the fitting, grinding and
manufacture of spectacles.
ll U hut nMurai. ai>piri*Wf *11 t*«r !«M*rliy
In f»tUjr that we are in a
pnaiflon t<» reiwiwr jtm t-be N»*t NerviHe
«4>t*inaM«. *
-3; EL PASO
HOICK & DIETER CO.,
WHOLESALE AGENTS.
City Office 220 El Paso Street
Optical Company
OPTICIANS EXCLUSIVELY.
5 Plaza Block.
a splendid crop. This Is a new in-
dustry In the state of Chihuahua.
Consul Canada of Vercruz, Mexico,
sends a statement relating to the
market for cement in that country. A
great deal of cement is used In Mexico,
but the United States does not supply
much of It. Mexico has been making
extraordinary efforts to provide safe
harbors, to Improve her light-houses,
to construct new and improve old rail-
roads. and lo do many other things
which require a great deal of cement.
Ing • to secure damage's ft#' injury to
a cow; worth about, $30.
The Southwesiers Telephone aind
Telegraph company will reconstruct
its lines at Temple and will expend
about $50,000 la betterments.
The United Confederate veterans of
Burleson and Ihe surrounding coun-
iles are celebrating San Jacinto day
with a picnic.
If. as the city attorney bolds, there
i no paving contract, then there ts
nothing for the mayor to veto. Be
.-ides the mayor could not veto some
thing the city council has not acted
on, and according to The Times' tn-
Lirmalton toe council has not even
approved lie minutes embodying the
paving contract proposition.
El Paso is still wrestling with the
strut (laving problem, and It Is
doubtful If any si\ men in the city
ire agreed on a plan for solving It.
A committee composed of Frank Pow-
er. . Nick Carson and A. Courchesne,
having had prac teal experience In
ueb work, should be able to agree
with tin contractor ou specifications.
Attention Pioneer#.
The regular quarterly meeting of the
Pioneer * Association will be held next
Krific} evening. April 37, at 8 o'clock
in the city ball A full attendance Is
reqties . o as at this meeiins arrange-
menw must be made for the aunlver
war. celebration on May 10th.
S H NEWMAN.
Secretary.
NO TIIOl'HLK IS FEARED
Ludrones Who Have Been Creating
Trouble in Philippine* Indicate
No General Upritl-ng.
Washington. D. C-, April 23—The
nthi rltb s of ihe war department are
not unduly exercised over Ihe incident
repotted from Malolos, where the con-
slal.mii it is'reported as having been
attacked.
It is presumed iliai those who were
Implicated in the assault belong to a
band of rob tens iu the neighborhood,
but that there Is no occasion for ap-
prehension in regard to an uprising
of lU.satlsfieii natives. There is noth-
ing in the reports from General Wood
io justify such a sensational theory.
The taci that the scene of the recent
attack Is comparatively near Manila
is not considered of any special sig-
nificance either. Malolos Is near the
heart of a mountainous district where
dense forests afford an admirable op-
portunity for the biding of just such
a Isttiil as must have attacked the con-
stabulary at that place, which, by the
way. was the headquarter# of Again-
aldo, and from which he Incontinently
tied toward the north rtntil he was cap
tuied toy Funston.
The first annual hop ot the FlrBt
regiment Infantry. New .Mexico na-
tional guard. In Elks' hall at Albu-
qilerqtie. was a great success from u
social as will a# a financial stand-
point. Some two hundred dancers
were on the floor and ihe evening
proved a remarkably pleasant one.
Captain *B. Ruppe and Mils# Ruppe led
the grand march, in which one hun-
dred couples • joined. Colonel John
Borrodalle ami all officers of the regi-
ment were present.
R. A. Baldwin, who is at the head
of the movement lo organize a Young
Men's Christian association in Albu-
querque. is receiving much encourage-
mem from the business men of the
city whom lie has approached on thfi
subject and the plan of starting the
institution on a small scale and
growing, as money and resources per-
mit. is admltte! to bt the practical
method of organizing. Mr. Baldwin
is quite oytomistic of success.
Copper ................,.$18@18.50
Lead ...................$5.35@5.46
Silver ......................G51-4C
The tobacco crop of the republic of
Mexico in the year t9f)0 Is expected
to reach 11.500,00n kilograms.
The foreign club of Parral, Chi-
huahua. ha# just bought the residence
of Angel Garcia for its new head-
quarters and will move in this month.
The building cost $40,000.
A -.v&gou road seventy-five kike
metis long has jrtst been opened to
traffic between the town# of Aeatlan
and Piaxtla, in the stale of Puebla,
Mexico.
Ganibo Sanchez, a laborer living
near ihe Tejerla station of the Mexi-
can railway, was run over and torn
to pieces by a freight train of that
railroad Saturday.
Lie. Salvador Diaz de Bonilla, the
former judge of first Instance al the
Zitnapan district, state of Hidalgo,
has beeu removed to take charge of
the court of first instance of Acto-
pan. Iu the same state.
There will be civil service exanil-
nation# held at Flagstaff. Prescott.
Bennett ami Globe on May 10. fir the
kurpo-ie of securing eligible# for the
grade c, assistant forest ranger is
the forest service.
Constable Shropshire of Douglas ar-
rived in the city to take charge of
H, Grant, reported to be badly want-
ed In Douglas for beating Fred Haras,
a well knows restaurant man. out of
a board bill amounting to $65.—Bis-
bea Miner. ,
A Douglaf officer, in the course of
his rounds the other night, met a
young woman riding a bicycle with-
out a light, and when he accosted her
he was L'ormed that if he did not
get oui of her way he'd get his face
slapped.
Samuel Cox. a farmer, comraitied
suicide at. Calvert by hanging himself
in a barn.
'John Goble Hurre.Gered io the offi-
cers at Dayton stating that he hail
killed Neal Brown, a negro.
Robert Jordan, a white man. was
sentenced lo two years in the peni-
j tretlary »t Greensville, for burglary.
j Judge W. B. Powell has appointed
\Y. W. Wilson of Houston, receiver
of the Sandy Craek Lumber company
of Jaeper.
At a mass meeting held at Pales-
tine the ca. lidacy of Col. Tom Camp-
bell for governor was enthusiastically
indorsed.
Walter Earles was sentenced to fif-
teen years in the penitentiary at Cor-
sicana oa the charge of killing Po-
liceman Charles Maddox.
A case for damages was decided
again ‘ lie plaintiff at .Temple in
which $400 had been experaijed is try-
That the mattor of changing the
laws of the territory regarding the)
incorporation of towns may be go
bofora the territorial legislature Int
a regular manner. Judge O'Connell of
Bisbae. suggests the organization of j
a league of the cities and towns to:
work to that end.
For the purpose of Improving anil
cleaning up that ":a t of Lowell known j
as Upper Lowell, a committee of kv-I
habf ant.H of the neighborhood was I
nreSent at a meeti-g of the Johnson
Improvement club for the purpose of)
securing co-oparatlos In Important
projects.
Dave A lilacs, formerly I# (charge
rtf the D. 0. M. Co., sawmill, left
Inst week fir parts itnkcown. It
seems that Ihe owed quite a sum o'
money arounJ town asd instead of do
ing the sque e ,hing ami working his
way out. he took the commoner meth-
od of paying and skipped out.—Moren-
ci Loader.
W. Pope Jordan of the Copper
Queen store has left Btsbee for San
Francisco, where he will pass sev-
eral days looking up his wife if pos-
sible. Jordan carried with him let-
ters from the mayor and other prom-
inent people. Introducing him to he,
mayor an 1 General Funston. Willi
these letters Jordan hopes to he able
to penetrate the tire line In search
of Ids wife. *
The musical coterie of Morenci .ire
preparing o give an entertainment
the Hi st of the week for s he benefit
of (he tenement sufferers of the San
Frarclsco disaster, when a muslt'ai
program o' much Interest Is expected
to be rendered. The dale has not. yet
been definitely settled, but. notice will
be given in time for he large attend-
ance of those who would care to as-
sist In this worthy object.
There is very little doubt 'that,
work will be commenced on the con-
struction of the Arlzosa cement di-
version dam in the near future. A
new road Is to e tibutlt toy trie gov-
ernment from Desert Wells, eight
miles out of Mesa, to Grank • Reefs,
the site of the proposed diversion
dam. and over this supplies will lie-
freighted frqpi Mesa and cement from |
Roosevelt will also be brought down)
and earrled on the Roosevelt road to
the dam site over this route.
On Furniture,
Refrigerators,
Carpets,
Crockery, Glass-
ware and
Kitchen Ranges.
T. H. SPRINGER
216-218 San Antonio St.
*’®M * Soft I# »t Chamberlain't
Cough Remedy havo you f "
“Yea. I've tried everythin* eUe
and (till have thla miserable cold."
** “ Well, you'll got rid of it now. I
toad on awful cold and wa* threatened
with pneumonia eoiy laat w<* k
•elf, and a bottle of it fixed me l
right."
my-
up all
$ee
Springer
$ave
$everal
. 4* ^
y y
Galveston will raise $10,000 for tile
San Francisco sufferers.
A new sc limit building will shortly
be erected at Omaha which will cost
$7,500.
TEXAS TOPICS
W. G. WALZ COMPANY, Distributors and Jobbers
VICTOR S Edison Phonographs
I. C. S. Phonograph Language Outfits
”#*!• MASTER'* VOICE"
Records, Horns and Other
Talking Machine Supplies
All tli* new Records from both companies
received each month. We are the only
Wholesale Dealers for the above companies
within a radius of over 600 mile# from K1
Vaao, our wholesale and retail prices r\ O.
B. El Paao are just th-i same as at the fac-
tories or in Chicago or New York.
We Carry in Stock Over 30,000 Records, and All Ihe Different Styles of
Machines Made by Both Factories.
Freights saved to all dealer# in this territory. Catalogues and price list furnished on application. You are cordially
invited to call, see and hear demonstrations from 7:30 a. m. to 8 o'clock p. m.
u“,“"',c *"■ * Corner f I Paso and San Erancisco Streets. El Paso. Texas
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Mexican Matters
New Mexico News
_ i
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El Paso Daily Times (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. 26, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 24, 1906, newspaper, April 24, 1906; El Paso, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth579314/m1/4/: accessed July 3, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.