El Paso International Daily Times (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 134, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 6, 1897 Page: 3 of 4
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II Paso Daily Times, Sunday, Tune 6,1397.
A Bicycle for 25Cts?
t PASSING OF
’ SCHLATTER.
Ton can perhaps get it in a toy
shop, and it will be worth fell yon
pay for It.
Yon can get a full size, up to
date
Crescent Bicycle
for $50.
And it is worth all yon pay for
it. It is made throughout in a
Bicycle Factory—the largest in
the world—fully guaranteed by
people who can and do make their
guarantee good.
W. G. Walz Co.
MDStO STORK,
RICVCL* A 8KWIMG MllHIHB OBPO*.
Bleached Bones of the Great
Healer Found in
Mexico.
A WONDERFUL STORY.
Tl>* Pamoei Whit* B iti« la Pwieuloa ol
Indian*—Ml Pato.oa Taw tha Bkalttoa—
Til* Vied of a O*wboy—Wbirs Boblaltar
Wa* LHI Smb la Ibl* Cooni.y— Hi.
Bib:* and Giateeu.
We Want to
Ca'ch Your Custom.
OUR
Native valley straw berries.
Every berry ripens in ihe vine.
Contain fre^havery morning:,
FOR
▲ good cup of coffee try our
fresh roasted Mexican three
ponnds for one dollar.
FOR
A cooling summer drink why
not try our Wild Cherry Phot*
nhate? There is enough in »
25 cent bottle to make 16 quirt*.
WE'VE
Alto got Hlr s “ready to drink”
Koot Heer, carbonatef, at 10c.
per botde.
J. B. WATSON,
Groceries and Provisions.
San Autonio and St&uton Sts.
Phone 151.
+frr±fk:
I■' :
SL ; •
«». ,TOD N&-» CArC
1 Mpgff lein Beer Depot.
Gib v '.Tfir’ii?'.~T§ j?-~ ? id
, I ■HI.*** 1 ^ ““.fi ““.'5
Moerleln Cincinnati Beer Onpnt
Wholesale and Ifefall.
PUREST and BEST.
Oysteis AH Styles and on the
Half Shell.
BILLIARDS AND POOL
JBL PASO. TEXAS. _
How Did You Like It?
Pint Rata. That's what they fell
•ay of tha Grsat Second Hand Fur-
nishing Bazar at 116 S Oregon at. You
oan furnish frem the Kltohen to tb#
Parlor with less money than ever
knnwr. before In the Scmhwest
Prloes to salt i he times.
1 am hsre to sail.
C. C SHF.LTON.
Ban Francisco, March 5,>97.
The Znoker Mf’g Oo., San Fran-
oisoo, OaL
Gentlemen: using your
Medtcol the extermina-
ot Flees and Moths, we take
■ great pleasure In Baying that we
M found the remedy goo t 'n both
■ caves. After having need Moth
■ Wax, Tobacco, Camphor and
* many other things your Mediaol
I Eggs proved better than all el$e
id thoroughly cleaned them out
Tof the hou>*. We cheerfully re-
r vvitfnicnd the E~es 1 o the pnblic
Yours ir ily,
A. W. WRIGHT,
1053 Mission street.
Ghas. F. Slack & Do,
Poor Franols Sohlaltar, who nursed
o his soul the flittering dalaslon that
h* wa* dlvlna—tha uutator*d oobltr
of Colorado, whose wondsrfal oaras
oauBtd th» lama, th* halt and tha blind
from all over th* country to flack to
Denver, has gona tha w»y of all mor-
tality. HI* m**tl*B* and glistening
bones II* burled in th* monntaln* of
old Mtxloo. It Is a stracg* story, bnt
• true on*.
Th* *tory I* told by Contractor
Richard 0*pl*s, Qsorg* Look, P. G.
pollahed. Th* *k*l*ton wa* lying on
It* back with th* right hand reeling on
tha ehaat and tha left arm atratohad
•tralght out from the body. Th* right
foot wi* drawn np so a* to mak* tha
kna* stand np, whtl* th* laft itg we*
•tr«toh*d straight oat. Th* position
wa* *ooh a* eight man oat of ten will
tnk* when they II* down on th* grass.
Th*r* wa* no *vld*no* of a atraggla,
bat everything Indlotted that th* mao
of th* skalatou had paa**d away
p*ao*fnlly whlla rating. B**ld* th*
•kaUton l*y a oopp*r rod about thra
and a half f**t long.
th* driver of vthlolaa. Under th* law
of Pennsylvania, a* It itanda today, It
1* aufflolant If th* defendant wa* drlv
log *o o*r*l***ly, wantonly *od r*ok
lastly •• to *nd*og*r th* Uv*« of other
people, and white doing so -truok ihs
pro**oator by bringing hi* wh**l
•gainst th* btoyote, th* defendant m*y
b* found guilty of smalt. It 1* not
n*o****ry for th* commonwealth to
•how that th* defendant Intended to
ran down th* pro**ontor. Th* pri-
mary rate 1* to k**p to th* right, and
th* pbra*, ‘K**p to th* right, a* th*
tew dlr*ot*,' has long slno* passed In*
Lying against th* tra wu a pU* of to a proverb. Wb*n yon meat a v*hl
oloth** on top of whloh war* two
memoranda book* and a btbla. Oo
th* lnstd* oovar of th* bibl* wa* In
•orlbad th* nam* “Franols Bohlatter”
uod*r th* nam* war* two vara* of
prayer and nndsr th* v*ra* wa* th*
tddms, "Olaranoa J. Olark, D*nv*r,
Colo.’’ Th* oowboy than turned hi*
attention to th* artlote* hanging In th*
tra. Thar* wa* a saddle, mad* by a
Denver honat, a bridle, rop*, whit* felt
bat and a oantean oontelntng water.
Over all of tbm bong a slloksr, wblob
protected th* other artlol** from tn*
weather. Thera wu nothing In th*
•hap* of a oooklng utensil to b* found.
Tb* man of th* *k*l*ton had *vld*ntly
s tervtd todaath.Tba oowboy making th*
And reported tb* matter to tbajadga
at C »s*s Grand**, who took obarg* of
eh* *k*teton’a effect* and they w*r*
photographed by Saxton k Fain* and
through th* courtesy of F. G. Stanley
tb* Times artist **onr*d a *k*toh of
tb* photo,
THE WHITE HORSE.
Maseri. Oaplas, Stanley, Look and
r
WI W-rf.
f
3;' .
si
'0*
L4P^
E#
,?iur*
err
SCHLATTER'S SADDLE, WITH HIS HAT, SADDLE BAGS, BOOKS
AND BIBLE AND OTHER EFFECTS PILED THEREON.
Stanley and Frank Beroum, whooama
In y*st*rday from Oasas Granda on th*
Rio Grand*, Sterra Madr* and Paolflo
railroad. Th* reader will r*m*mb*r
that early last fall Franols Soblatter,
th* grsat heater, mysteriously dlsap
psarad. Th* la*t heard of him In thl*
oauotry was whan I ha Lordsbnrg
Liberal reported th*t th* huter, rld-
ii g * whit* hors*, bed stopped at *
ratch near Lordsbnrg and aetin an
Immense dinner; that after dlnnar
when he went to saddle hi* hots* to
r*sum* hie journey a oowboy oallsd
his attention to th* f*ot that th* hone
was suff.rlDg from a painful awalllog
on hi* baok; that Soblatter passed his
hand over t he awalllog and It disap-
peared. The heater than mounted
his gray horsa and rod* aw*y toward
th* Mexican line waving hi* heavy
heallog rod of ooppar In hie hand, th*
end of the rod ever pointing towards
Mexico. H* was asksd wh*r* b* w*s
going and replied that hi* rod pointed
th* way. Soblatter wu ***n no mor*
In tb* United Statu.
HIS GLISTENING BONES.
Oa th* 29 :h of last month a Mormon
oowboy rldlog his rang*, thirty-five
tutles west of Oasu Grande*, saw •
saddle, bridle, hat and *llok*r hanging
In a sorub o*k tra* end rod* np to th*
spot. Reclining In * perfectly natural
post under the tra on a blanket wa*
th* skelston of a man. Th* bonu and
skull war* perfectly bar* and glisten-
ed In the sunlight aa if they had bun
Btrnnm war* shown th* skeleton
lying wh*r* It wu fonnd and after
they looked at It, th* oowboy McGran
burled th* bonu and burned the
blanket.
Thar* oan b* no doubt as to the
Identity of th* skeleton. It wu th*
r.matna of Francis Soblatter, the
huter. Tb* El Paso people began
making enquiries ebout the white
horse and on* of tb* Mormon oowboys
told tb*m that test fall h* taw a
strange whit* man rldlog • whit*
bora* in the vtoinlty of Cues Grand*;
that some time afterward he saw the
eaddle In the aorab oak tr** and ■ man
lying and*rn**th th* tr**, white near
by,grazing wu • whit* hors*, Thinking
that th* reollnlcg man wu aluplng,
th* oowboy want on hi* way without
disturbing th* anknowo. Slnoe than,
however, h* again saw th* whit* hors*
In possession of Indiana. So th* sup
position I* that after th* death of his
muter the animal strayed off and was
fonnd by the Indian*.
White blueing tb*crowd* that Book-
ed to him to b* healed In Denver,
Bohlatter frequently announced that
ha wonld soon disappear from this
world, but would return again. Wall,
th* poor fallow has disappeared from
the great living world, bat h* did not
go as his qllnd worshiper* expected him
to go. did not disappear In a olond
nor wu fall* mortal body taken np to
haavan In a oharlot of flra. Soblatter
pusad through tha asm* narrow atslas
of death that era trod by mortality
•vary day.
HEARD ON THE 8TREET8.
Bole Agents.
Tha foliowtog latter la from tha own-
ers of Franklin Heights:
Colorado Springs, June 2—A. P.
Colas, El Puo Taxes; Wa hava been
very aorry to read of tha Buffering
caused by the flood and bag to anoloaa
our oheok tor 125, to ba contributed
toward a relief fond, whloh will un-
doubtedly ba started. That anoh a
catastrophe as thta would oocur aooner
or tetar seamed almoet oertatn and oar
paroheea on higher ground la now
amply jaatlfiad. W* trust that you
personally loat nothing. Yours faith-
fully,
Thublow, Hutton k Williams.
V
"1 understand," said a business man
yesterday, “that the darks of El Puo
•ra going to organ}.* a anion la th*
hop* of inducing (hair employers to
dou tbalt atom oa Sunday. I am
with tha olerka In teat movement.
Let la* merchant* clou their etore*
for thre* or fonr Saodtya and It will
teaoh the thoughtless, who look on a
oletk u a mere beasd harden, to
do all their shopping Muring tha six
work day* of tha week Sunday la a
d»y of rest and shoulAba eo obeerv
•d. Now I propoaa tbatYia marobants
get together and tlgn to agreement
oot to open th* door* of-heir stores
on Sandty, and If any o% or two of
them refuse to do eo let it* other* go
00 aud oloaa anyhow and .ha people
who work will attend to te» two or
three refasars. Pnb!io-9p.'nlon will sit
down on them hard.” j
V
“l didn’t know,” aahf/Ool. James
D. D. Fisher yesterdeM "what these
McGlnty boys meant Iben I heard
them going aronnd tinges, 'Mr. John-
slog tarn me loo**; I |ot no money,
bat a good exoase, Mr. Johnelng I’ll
be good.' ' Bat tod iy I «w a toll po-
1 Iceman wearing a forgai-ma-not aat of
whisker* marching a alnful *1*1 ar—ona
of tha fallen angele, yoo know—down
to tha polio* atatlon. Tta polloaman a
name la Johnson and tha aollad dove
wa* plaadlog with Mr. JohoaonTatorn
bar loose, at iha had no money. iu
sir, ontalda of Nogalaa El Puo la a
great dty. Now what other town
wonld have thought to name Us polio*
mao to fit tha popalar song* of tb*
day?”
V
Tha Times' correspondent at Toyab
writes tha Times u follows: "At 9:30
p. m., Jana 2, at tha home of tha
bride’s paranta, at Toyah, Mr. John
R. Shannon wu married to Mlaa May
Carpenter, Rev. O. P. Stark, of Peoos
City, officiating, and Mias Attla Shalby
playlog tha wedding march. The
happy groom la a fireman on tha Texas
and Paolflo road and ona of Toyah’a
popular society lads. Tha fair brlda
la ona of oar moat hlgnly aooompllahed
young ladles. After tha oaramooy
there was a Jolly danoe at tha T. k P.
hotel, followed by a oollatlon pra
pared by tha mothers of tha young
married ooupla.”
V
Braoa np, btoyote rldare! A Phils
dalphla judge hu deolded that yon
hava aqoal right* with other peopla
Chat. Doonay wu riding a whaal In
Phlladalphte and Jacob Hartman driv-
ing a light wagon, rafuaad to glvt
Doonay a part of tha atraat and puno-
tnrad Doonay and bta wheal. Jacob
wu tried for ueaull and mallotoos
mischief and In dallvartcg hie oharg*
to th* jary tha jadga says: "Thta
oaaa, both in Its extant and tta lm-
portanot, rleaa abov* tha dignity of
tha ordinary oaea of aasaalt end bat-
tery, because It Involve* right* and
duties whloh era Important to avary
oKIzen of tha oommoowealth—tbalr
rights and do te* upon tha highway*,
wotoh era tha property of tha people,
and upon whloh all olUaana have
equal righto. It Involvu aleo to a
oertatn extent tha rights of a large
olau for whom tha advanoa of aolanoe
and art hu provided both for
pleaaura and for bnelnau, a new
method of locomotion upon oar high-
way*, sod that olau of ottlzena, that
olaae of paeungara to and fro over oar
highway*, hava tbalr right* whloh oth-
er* are bound to rapaot. They hava
no grutor right, bat they have an
equal right upon tb* highway with tb*
padaatrlan, tha aqautrtao and with
ola oomlng In an opposite direction
yon go to tna right of It, In which ra
•paot wa differ from tba Eog.leb, *•
they pass to tba left.
"Thau are almpla rate*, whloh, If
obaarvad, save peopla from aooldant
I am of tba opinion that tbata rate*
wa equally anforolbla u to pedes-
trian*, horsemen, driver* or bloyol*
riders; that, though tha olronmatanoas
must determine aaoh oaaa, tha right*
of tha bloyola rtdar are tha asms *•
those of tha driver of a wagon, whether
U ba light or heavy; that thara la no
tew for a driver of a wagon whloh la
not squally applloabla to a rider of. a
bloyola, and tha tew, or tha rale, verted
of ocarse, by tha axlganolas of tha
partloalar oaea, Is that tha man to tba
right haa tha right of way. I regard
thta ai a ganaral rale of oommoa sense
and tba oastom of tha common law.
FOR THE INTERNATIONAL DAM.
GLA8£inED ADS.
Ml MLR
O'OR SALE-Typewriter*,
£ Remington, MO end $55.
fallgraph and
■ W.O. Well Co
f°l
et otet.
It SALB-Reage. oerpe *. betting *P v*».
dlnlrg room tab e end a few cbalrr, Ceil
ter. Mr* K. It. Kerr.
COB SALE—"Varnished room for rent’
r end "Rooms for not" oerds for eels at
TnsaaoMao,Mlaoa** each.
DOB HALE—Babbit
X offloe
metal at tba Tutu
F°?«2?
SALE—Blotting paper *5 tha Timm
AMERICAN KITCHEN.
FIS8T-0LA8S
BEST AUB ANT.
BOB CHIN WO, Pbopbietoe.
103 8an Antonio St., £1 P&fo
A Cell for tb* Orlnlntl Cmmlllit-Ju1g•
Iiltar Employed.
The following oall was leaned test
evening by th* chairman of tha original
International dam oommlttaa:
Tha members of tha Internationa)
dam oommlttaa era hereby requested
to mast at my offloa In tha ooanty ooar>
house on Monday, Jane 7 h, at 7:30
o’olook p. m. O. N. Buckler,
Chairman.
Tha members of th* oommlttaa are
O. N. Buoklar, chairman; Joan S
Hart, eaoratary; Z T. White, R F
Campbell, W. S MoOntobann, Joan
Armaodartz, Joseph M*gofflo, H. S.
Beattie, Max Webar, T. J. Baal1, R. F.
Johnson.
A number of citizens ware in oonsnl
tatlon yesterday and agraad to employ
Jadga T. A. Falvay to go to Silver
City on tha 14th to tender bis earv ose
to tha government as assistant ooun
sal to tba dam loj a notion ossa. Had
tha Rio Grand* Dim and Irrigation
Company agreed to th* proposition
submitted to them by th* citizens of
El Paso several weeks ago, viz: to sign
an agreement not to shat of the £Lw
of th* stream until the International
reservoir wu foil of water, it U doubt
fol If El Puo would have made any
fight against them. Bat they did no>
only refuse to outer into any snob
agreement, but El Paso’s represents
tivss war* given to nndaratand that
tha Elephant Butte people had a right
to bold all of tba water If they could
ose It.
Poal FUy Suspected.
J. S Rey, H. G. Johnson and F. B
Adams have bean pro-peoclDg down
th* Ho* of tke Oorralltos road. Sev-
eral weeks ago Messrs. Ray and Jobn<<
son cam* to El Paso to get money for
Adams to oey off some men working
for him. R»y got th* money (1175) acd
th* two started baok to eamp and got
mixed up In the wreck on th* Oorrall-
tos road on th* 15'h. Ray and John-
son than returned to El Paso. Co th*
16 h Ray was aaan In Juarez and then
mytterloasly disappeared. HU friends
fear that ha hae met with foal play.
A Blc Building Boon*.
We are headquarters for lime,cement,
plaster, hair, pitch, caper, etc,, hey,
grain and feed. O’Brien Coal Oo,
Oerrllos Cool Yard. Telephone No. 8
Z Wagon teams to do any kind of haul-
log oan be found ot W. K. Van Patten's
corral.__
PER80NAL.
Editor Papen of Las Oruoes Is In the
city.
Collector Obaa. Davis oame In from
tha east yesterday.
Misses Margarlt* Derbyshire and
Essie Oliver have gone to Dallas.
Mrs. B. B. Sublet, teaoher In tba
oolorad kindergarten, haa gone to San
Antonio.
Mrs. W. H Fox laavaa today for a
thraa months visit to relatives at Ann
Arbor, Mlohlgan.
Tbos. Beall, rod of Oapt. J. T. Beall,
has returned from Kentucky where he
has been attending soheoi.
Mrs. Jessie K. Ely, formerly of El
Puo, wae mwrled eo Mr*. Geo. S. San-
derson of Denver, In San Antonio last
month.
Hon John M. Dean left yesterday In
response to a telegram to deliver an
argament la avary Important oaee pen
dlogtn Sliver City.
Miss Altoe Davie, the charming lit-
tle daughter of Oolieotor Ohaa. Davis,
hae returned from Sherman where she
hu been attending eobool.
J. M. Leary and wife are In th* olty
after ac extensive trip through Mext-
oo, Inoludlug th* Olty. Mr. Leary in-
tends opening np a large aho* store at
Ohtbaahoa. He Is an old timer In this
country.
Of Klu’i Mew Dleoavery tor Coniemplloe.
This Is the best mediolo* la (he
world for all forms of ooughs and oilds
and for consumption. Every bottle
la guaranteed. It will our* and not
disappoint. It haa no equal for
whooping oougb, asthma, hay fever,
pneumonia, bronohttls, la grippe, oold
In tb* bead and for ooneamptlon. I>
1* safe for all ages, pleasant to take,
and, abov* all, a sure our*. It li al-
ways well to take Dr. King's New Life
Pills In oonneotlen with Dr. King’s
New DLoovery, as they regulate aDd
ton* th* stomaoh and bowels. W*
guarantee petfeot satisfaction or re-
turn money. Free trial bottles at W.
A. Irvin k Co.’s wholesale and ratal!
drug atora. Regular size 50 oants aud
11.00. _
Whit it Miibi.
When w* advertise that w* will
uuerante* Dr Kiog’e New Discovery,
Sleotrlo Bitters, Buokleo’s Aroloa
Salve, or Dr. King's New Life Pills, It
means that w* are authorized by th*
proprlatora to sell these remedies on e
positive gueraotee, that If purchaser
not eatMflid with results, w* will
refund the purchase prloe. These
medlolnes have been cold on this guer-
eotee for meoy years and there oould
be no mora oonolualva avldanoa of
tbalr great merit. Ask about them
and give them a trial. Sold at W. A
Itvln k Oo.’a wholesale and retail drag
•tore. _
Backlea's Arnica 3a It*.
Tha But Salve In the world for Cate,
Brule**, Sores, Ulcer*, Salt Rheum,
Fever Bora, Tetter, Chapped Hand*.
Obllbralns, Corns, and ail Skin Erup-
tion*, and positively cures Piles, or bo
pey required. It Is guaranteed to give
lerfooteatlefaction or money refunded.
»rlo* 25 oenta par box. For aala by.
W. A.. Irvin k Oo., El Paso, Texu.
NECKWEAR,
SHIRTS, ETC.,
FOR
MEN
AT
R. C. Lightbody’sl
212-214 El Paso St.,
EL PASO, TEE:. I
Low
Shoe
Assortment
for children was never
more complete with us tha^at
present, in dark tan and'blick
colors—all sizes and widths,
neat and new styles, excellent
wearers, perfect fitters, and a
pair of them ought to grace the
feet of every well dressed child
in town—if they do not alrea-
dy—selling at prices that con-
form to the most economical
shoe buyers’ ideas.
5 to 8 per pair $1.00
8H to 11 per pair 1.25
u'A to 2 per pair 1.50
Schutz
Bros.
OREGON STREET,
NEXT TO P. O.
MEXICAN
OPALS,
Direct from tha mlnaa.
Osrry anaxtonalva (took. Special ba>
gains to dealers.
40XOKA KBWS OOHPAXY
Maxloan Central Railway Depot,
Jon re a, Mexico.
Offio* houra D to 11 a.m. 3:S0 to fl:S0 pa
Washington Dining Hall
209 El Paso St., El Puo, Tax.
Finest Restaurant in the City.
All tha Dalloaolaa of tha season.
Regular Dinner 18 to 8 p. m.
Open Day and Night.
MktHingAOo , Prop*.
Woo Moo Sing. Manager
THOMAS A. DWYER, JR,
iiCimmlBBloi Merchant
_AMD_
RECEIVING AND FORWARDING
AGENT,
1I1B1EI,
STATE OT CHIHUAHUA. MRXIOO..
. Bays end Mile native end foratga pro-
* ’ duets on eoaemletlon, end raeelre* end
1 dlepatehas f retgfete by rail, exprate and
wagoae.
1 leteeeteetaauuaeaaa****
vaaraauaTs waaraaa u ml rxau
CBICTD STATU WBATHBB BCUAU.
Obisrrttlon at 5:51 p. m„ loeal time.
Barometer (*ee level).................... 28 73
Thermometer................. 81
Direction of wind _____ W
Wind voloclty (mile* per hour)_____ 14
Wenthar.....................—........... Clear
Rainfall laat 84 hour* (In. and hand.) 0
dig heat temperatur* today--------- 84
LoWaattemperatora today------ 86
ARRIVAL AMD DBFARTLBI OW HAILS
Arrtvea Lcavea
T.4P..........40:06 a.aa.-------_ ,1:40p. m.
O.H. A8. A.......4:45 p. m.---------4A0 p. m.
S. P. Wait------140 p.m.-------4:35 p.m.
A.T. A 8. r. ..U4fo. m-------------41te>a.m
Mexican Central- 4:30 a.m.— 4:»p. m.
All mall* will be distributed 30 minute* al-
tar the arrlva • of train! and all mall* will
clorn 30 minute* before tb* departure of train*.
HOURS WINDOWS OPR* AMD GLOOM.
General dalWmylaotSa^pmJ a. m -hi*.
eloaaa at 5 p. m.
open a* 3 a. m.;
WE OFFER
Great
msiiwm ;
WE QUOTE:
LADIES^ ROSE, ^ HermKlorfd,e, Ijood quality, our price only $0c. .
LADIES’ TAN OXFORDS, worth ts 50 *
hand turned, flexible lole, Hamilton * Brown make, well worth $3.50. .
for $1.35 a pair.
LADIES’ GAUZE VESTS, , ^ I
long *leeves well made, formerly told for 35«, goea for 25c
LADIES’ BILK VESTS, ,
sleeveless, in cream color, well worth 75c» goe* for 43o.
CHAMOIS KID 0L0 VES, „ „ I
in cream, black, cmhmidercd back*, all slxo*. for 85e a pr, well a jrth $1.00. .
DOTTED SWISS, . Z
for ourtal-s. 40 Inches wide, worth 15c, now lor 8o a yard. (
LADIES’ DUCK SUITS, f-
Id 8hephcrd Plaida, well made only $1.40*init.
FANCY GRASS LINEN BATISTE,
In silk and llnen.atrlped and plaid*, regular 60c good*, goe* for 30c yd
BICYCLE CLOTH,
in mixed color*, indestructible, only 12Vic a yard.
FIGURED LAWNS,
in beautiful nolor*. well werth 15c, for 8V<c a yard.
IMPORTED ORGANDIES,
choice colors, formerly sold for 25 cents, oor prioc now 16M»c n yard.
PERCALES,
36 inch wldc.a good line of color*, only 8c, worthU'/So.
COTTON CHALLIE8,
__ good color*. 3C yard* for $1.00.
WHITE DUCK,
the ve-y thin? for a Udv's summer suit, only 10c yd.
BLACK TAFFETA SILK,
Our price only 65c a yard.
13
213 a
SAN ANTONIO "*
STRBBT.
Sole agent for Her Majesty’s Corset, best in the world.
|||fc
PREPARE
FOR THE
HOT SUNI
WE HAVE ONLY A VERY
SMALL QUANTITY OF
THOSE FAMOTS......
LEFT, WHICH WE ARE
SELLING AT gi.oo.
AT BLUMENTHAL’S
SOLE AGENT FOR THE
THE BEST ON EARTH.
(09-111 SAN FRANCISCO ST.
HOUSE FURNISH
Dealers in Carpets, Furniture, Crockery, Glas^
and Iron Beds, Baby Carriages, Couches, Japan
Flower and Fancy Baskets, Easels, Carpet Sd
Curtains, Portieres, Drapery Goods, Down and^
lows, Art Squares, Rugs, Cocoa and Straw Mattl
line of Tin and Granite ware. Latest
Improved Refrigeral
Housekeepers are invited to inspect our exhibit
Furnishing Goods, embracing the largest andj ^
tion of High Grade Goods ever offered in th]j
Our stock comprises modern, reliab||
goods.
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El Paso International Daily Times (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 134, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 6, 1897, newspaper, June 6, 1897; El Paso, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth580979/m1/3/: accessed July 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.