El Paso International Daily Times (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 63, Ed. 1 Saturday, March 10, 1900 Page: 4 of 8
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ML PASO DAILY T1MJDB, BATUBDAY, MABtiH 10, 1900.
OUbso^^Tlmes
*4 M the Panto (He* it El Paao, Tiiu.
M Baaoad-Olaa* Hall Matter.
~y?i. i lrmrvi
in PUBLISHING COMP ANT
Publisher*.
JUAN S. HABT. Manasrer.
OIm:
■i KM OTIBUMD 8TBBMT.
Telephone No. M.
B0B8CK1PTI0N BATES.
DAILY.
Wtnnl »■ *ba city. per wee oenU.
Invariably In Advance.
...... ..........................HO 00
jbiMin*li«" "____________________________ s oo
^MLpapir* iiedat the expiration of
^fu Tnill oan be found on file In the newl-
mn department of the library of eongres*.
OSStwrton. D. O. __
•ooth western STAB-EL PASO
Our Circulation.
B^ldee tuoroughly oovering the local field,
h, Timm r 'nehes,
ON D Y OF PUBLICATION,
he iovdi and elation* named below, within
Se radlu* of the 8outrw*bt*h» Star above
hawm whloh dUtanee la *76 mllea from El
• eau to each point:
THAI.
iltelh Ohlapa Emerson
Ifiaia Wendell Sanderson
g-T Valentin* Artope .
CfiDtaarlo Quebee Eagle Flat
fatten* Ryan Aj.amora
K Brand* Aragoa Van Horn
fTalTSoek Mar?a Wild Horan
lad den Nopal P,lRtei.u
Palaano Boraoho
Toront* Kent
Alpine San Martin*
_ Strobel Gome*
tholea Altuda Toy ah
•rra Blanaa Lennox' Hermoeo
ray ton Marathon PtooeOlty
oronrt Warwick Bars tow
albera Bayinond Qulnto
SS3o Taber Pyote
u Max on Amy a
X, Uoeenfeld Monahan*
Vnlg* Longfellow
■ aw uaxioo
mm Albuguertjne Afton
gnrohean* Alameda Kenxln
ontoya r»< rnallllo Aden ,
anntuo A.godones Ohappel
i. m. b ota Oampray
nthony 11 ornton Myndua
rwnawlek boearlo Xunl
ulluun Vt aldo Demin*
anuntte i os Cerlllos Tunis
•nOla Park f rtli Gaye
M Grace* Gallletet Wllna
oan Ana Twitched Separ
•anburc Lamy Lisbon
liden CanonoltO Lordsburg
onneo Glorleta Pyramid
Mrott Fox Conrad
let~i Howe Stein's Pas*
runa Fulton Vanarman
Bbam Sands San Simon
Cnae Blbera Olga.
Utter Blanchard Santa Fe
aale Ohapello Maneana
rocker Silver Olty Sandla
atra Hawkins Rio Puerec
OUa Whip Water Garcia
an Marctal Hudson Shawnee
ray Crawford Armijo
an Antonio Whitney El Rlto
oeorro Coleman Laguna
Amitar Florida Oubero
Jamlllo Nutt McCarty*
mJoya Easley San Jose
abtnnl Hocket Lake Valley
IhlhB Hatch La Lui
iO, Luaaa Boxers Tularosa
Beta Strauss Alamogordo
larr Vevay Hillsboro
ttalo Lanark Ft Gumming*
ARIZONA.
in«■!* Lutcna Ballrofcu Pass
WUoox Cochise
uaxioo.
dldad Juarei Sabtnal an Jose
lapnllo San l'edro Jjo (taltente
iMtnal Oorralltos Moctesuma
*'«n Casas Grandee Gall-go
Maaaan Samalayuoa Laguna
Saue Chihuahua
advertising bates.
The enntom among newspapere of printing
m, rate and aooeptlng another le fait dleap-
lWhatiase has been a on* frigs oraan
. IAA4 III,. t» n.D.
OTID rt\W« HIT upuewarj tur tur navio-
__j of the advertiser and the success of
I newspaper. Set
rhe advertising agent can pay our rate and
ball the space to buyers ut our figures with
alt to himself For Instance: He buys nine
she. for one year, for 11 Mi; If he ret alls each
eh at $42 a year, bis profit is 100 per cent.
I sell at same figure rn every I ort v
METAL MARKET.
SILVAS.
CUPPER
LEAD (Smelter Qts«
LKaU (Maw .York)
a* 7-«
IE t*
__« 70
4 78
tim —i -------------** 7®
IHUM (Awsitaan) ...................17 ##
MEXICAN PESOS (.Inaras)------ 47
MEXICAN PESOS 1*1 Pane)......... 47
lasTSMUAra wkatukh in at pasu
Observation at l:i» p. m., loeal Base
Barometer, sea level______________*15
thermometer___________________________—------ 7*
Direction of wind_____________—---NE
'”"'1 velocity, milee per hour.---- «
Weather...............-...................... Cloudy
u.»uiaii laetM hours in. and nun____ o
Highest temperature today„._............ 75
Lowest temperature today ........ 46
Our Puerto Rican and Filipino anb
jeots might oome over ard learn the art
of self government .at Frankfort, Ken-
tucky.
Hr,ALTH-eeekers who have tried El
Pasos winter climate will find our sum-
mer climate as beneficial as onr dry
winter atmosphere. Try it and it will
do y n good El Paso does not have op-
pressive summer weather.
According to the Waco papers ar-
riving in E Paso yesterday Fergnson
was at no time in the race with Mc-
Donald for chairmanship of the State
Republican convention. This is aflat
contradiction of the reports sent out by
special correspondents and the Associ-
ated Press.
Paderi wsKI chatged San Antonio
$4 per seat to bear bim play tbe piano.
Han Antonio paid the price once in or-
der to be able to say it bad seen and
beard Paderewtki. Bnt now be has
ceased to lie a cnrio and very few peo-
ple in Tamaleville turned ont to hear
bim the other night.
McDonald, who the “lily whites”
tried to make chairman of the sthte
Republican convention at Waco, is not
a white limn, bnt is tbe tool of Mr.
Green' The TIMES fell iuto the error
of classing him among the whites be-
came be wns being used by them to de-
feat his own people
Folitics in New Mexioo appear to
be v ry lunch i f a personal affair. Gov-
ernor Otero's representative has agreed
to send Jo E Sheridan and W, B Jack
to the Philadelphia convention if Grant
county Repnblicans will not fight the
governor. The masses can sit down and
snck their thumbs, while these little
personal arrengnnenfs sre being made.
Olga Nethersolk believes in ad
vertising. She paid two New York pa-
pers $50,000 each to prove that “Sspho”
is an indecent play and then Olga began
to coin money. The rush to see her was
so great that a police magistrate deoid
ed the play was too bad for New York
It will be reformed by dropping a few
words and then New Yprk will pay
hundreds of thousands of dollars to
see it.
Gen Joe Wheeler arrived in Han
Francisco the other day from tbe Phil-
ippines and in so interview sajs: “I
was much pleased wiih tbe Filipino
people They are intelligent, courteous
and kind. They are not disposed tore
volution and violence, but the false re
presentation made to them regarding
fi uiericans very naturally aroused them
and led tli-in to believe that resistance
to onr rule was tbe only possible es-
cape from impending evil.” If they
ere intelligent, com terms and kind,
theu they should be capable of self gov-
ernment.
TUB KUUNIIIX TRIAL.
An Able New York oorrespondsnl In
reviewing the Molinenx trial, present*
soma it teresting facta. He any* that
no verdict ever rendered in n criminal
trial has attracted so winch attention,
especially among lawyers, as that by
which Roland B. Molinenx waa found
gnilty oi the mnrder of Mrs. Katherine
J Adams. Lawyers and judges alike
are astounded not only at the verilot,
bnt at tbe methods by which it was ob-
taiued. It is the general opinion among
these legal experts that Molinenx ia
gnlity, bnt it is also their opinion that
no satisfactory evidenoe of hisgnllt was
brought ont, and that he was really
convicted of a crime for which he was
not on trial, and bad not beeu iudiotsd.
“Molinenx was convicted on evidence
that would have been excluded by al-
most any other judge in the oonutry,"
said a lawyer of long experience m cri-
minal procedure, and bis assertion wae
generally indorsed. “On the sixtieth
day of the trial every scrap of evidenoe
tending to connection Molinenx with the
mnrder for which the prosecution wae
really trying him was swept aside as ir
relevant by Recorder G> ff, and the jury
was instructed to not to consider it.
Bnt when District Attorney Osborne
reached tbe end of his oaae, and said:
‘The people rest,’he had succeeded in
doing what no other prosecutor in the
world had done where the principles of
law laid down by Blackstone are fol-
lowed, and that is in trying one man
for two mnrders at one aud tbe same
time, ai d dovetailing and interweav-
ing the evidenoe in each. Bnt his
greatest triumph was in trying Moli-
nenx for the mnrder of Barnet, of
which he whs not aocnsed, and offering
stronger proof of motive than in the
Adams murder, of which be was ac-
cused And the cap sheaf of this as-
tonishing stack of legal paradoxes is the
unoontradh ted official record that Bar-
net wae not innrdered at all.
This remarkable record in a remark-
able case may be summarized as fol-
lows:
Molinenx was indicted for tbe mnr-
der by poison of a Mrs Katherine J.
Adams, a woman against whom be
oonld have had no enmity, because be
did not know her and was not aware of
her existence.
Moliueux was really oonvioted of
the mnrder of Hetry C. Barnet and ev-
idence was introduced to show that the
defendant had a motive for wanting to
kill this man, whose death is alleged
to have been caused by the same rare
poison which caused the death of Mrs.
Adams. And this evidence was intro-
duced despite the fact that Molinenx
had not been indicted ft r the Barnet
mnrder (if it was mnrder) and was not
legally or formally charged with it
The c fficial record of the board of
health is that Barnet died of diphther
ia and not from lbet Sects of poison
No corner’s intinest was ever held on
his body; no accusation made, and no
iudictmeut was found against any per
sou charging murder.
Baruet did not know Mrs. Adams any
more than Molinenx did. There was
not the silghest connection between tbe
two deaths. Expeiienced lawyers were
perplexed and then astounded as the
plan of the prosecution upfolded.
Toward the latter days of the prot-een-
tion s < ase the death of Mrs. Adams
seemed lost eichf. of entirely.
: t
\ 11
V
A
f **
El Paso has a population of 22,500 and has put over a million dollars in building improve
ments during the past year. The mining industry is flourishing. The Sierra Madre Line
now taps the Sierra Madre Range at Casas Grandes, a virgin region for the American
prospector. Many rich mines have already been discovered and are now big producers.
The El Paso & Northeastern Railway, now building from El Paso, has reached to within
few miles of the great coal fields near White Oaks, N. M. El Paso is a cosmopolitan city
and destined to be in a few years the Greatest City in the Great Southwest.
SERVING THE COAL TRUST
IS
!i
5*
»«
n to
n «
II
STAGE
Inches.
::::Tv
.... a...
.... «...
.. . 7...
.... «...
.......
....10...
....11...
....12.
,...ia...
....14...
. .15...
.. lit. .
...17...
....IF...
a ,\U»b b JtU'h V Mobl
Net i Net. Net. |
13 5t) 24 00 3 7s| 42 oO
24 30 43 30 t*. 75 75 $0
32 40 57 60 00 100 b0
40 50 72 00 101 25
47 25 84 00 118 10
48 fll 86 40 121 50
54 00 96 M 185 00
58 06 10 20 145 n
60 75-! (♦ 00{ 151 85 ISP so
66 15! 1)7 «<> ins
72 261 '36 401180 5.V224 SO
78 se ;tv 80*196 75 *48 70
63 70; 4s 00; 209 a 260 60
HV t() 40 ’
126 uO
147 (0
151 Of
m go
iso oo
- . :5 40
94 50 168 oe • ;>5 S.4 j„
99 90 177 60 219 75 310 on
104 60 166 IS 26 1 55 325 10
109 36 194 4Q 273 35 340 25
Key to tier 1 utile o> In,,
Th* one month rate for space Is fixed go that
Mm pax inch rate deoresses for tnoreaged space
jW® 16.00 to 12.26, but for the same ienxtti of
Moa 9 Inches are sold at $32.50, and IS Tnchea
ttaaold ntta.26 per Inch.$40.60.
•he one inch rate Is the basts of the whole
ahl*. as the short time rates fixed are a uer-
taaugre of it.
’ wfca 1 time rate is aa 1-2 per cent of the
ADath rate.
I times rate Is 40 per cent of the month
Mm $ time* rate la 50 per cent of the month
Ik* 1 week rate Is 60 per cent of the month
Thai weeks rate Is 71 per cent of e month
JFX# I week* rate Iperoentof ne month
iS* $ month rate la 1 times the month rate
t«Ml 10per cent discount.
*ha # months rate Is 6 time* the month
■Ma, lea* 80 per cent discount.
* months rate Is 9 times the month rate
$$■$$ per cent discount
■tea year rate to 12 times the month rate.
OH *0 per cent discount,
fc^lal poenions- Ftfty per cent extra
«AVLirS"menu oh‘r,red “ **<>-
Kending Matter Betas,
•wwjky-fiva tent* per line first Insertion :1$
tex each subsequent insertion. Oon-
itor 1000line# lobe taken In 1 months.
a» » cento uer line eaob Inaertlou. ulT
kFUBL&HlN&tOOMPART.
BFmo. Texas.
?«»■
In Colorado a pool of miners owning
coal deposits are getting a taste of the
tyrany of trusts. The railroads are aid-
ing the Colorado coal trust in an effort
to starve the miners into surrendering
their property to the trust. The Den-
ver Post, in discussing the high handed
outrage, says:
“Home people have been simple
enough to believe that railroads are
o mmou earners and as such are bonnd
to receive, forward and deliver Leight
whenever and wherever effered. That
supposition is altogether wrong Ao
c *rdiog to tbe ttatement of Representa-
tive Raw It of Gnnnison the railroad-
r.-fnre to banl the coal from the Black
Diamond mine, which is operated by a
home pc oi of coal miners Ihe daily
ontiut of 40 tons has to be transported
by w agon from tbe mice to market Tbe
railroads will not provide cars for the
mine nor transport ihe coal. This is
tbe statement of Mr Rawait, and it no
doubt cun tie substantiated.
“As Colorado has no railroad com
mission, the atUrney general should
tfike np the caee, and, after a thorough
investigation, apply the necessary legal
remedy. This state of affiirs, however,
goes to demonstrate the nrgent neces-
sity for an active, energetic and oon-
cientions railroad commiesion, such as,
| for instance, Texas has, or Florida,
I where tbe railroads were brought to
| terms after rears of hard fighting in tbe
j courts In the Gnnnison esse a small
body of miners organized as a home
pool for the development of a coal
mine. These men wonld be able to
make a living thereby, bnt the oorpo
rations declare that they shall not do
so, •and, peenmsbly at the instance of
the coal trnet, the railroads deny them
all facilities for the shipment of their
product Oan oppression and tyranny
be carried fnttberT Will tbe state an
tborities tolerate such conduct without
making every lawful effort to protect
the miner* in their righto T”
tatoes to Mineral Welle, which brought
him $104,
The John Owens case has been with
drawn from the jury in the Federal
oonrt at Galveston.
On March 1 there was $8,604 684 cash
in tbe treasury of the state of Texas,ac
oredited to the varions fnnds.and bonds
to the amount of $8 292,879.
A Mexioan by the name of Nicholas
Sanchez, an employe on the Dnnn
ranch a few miles from Alioe, came to
Alice. He slept on the gronnd near one
of the jaoals in Monterey, a snbnrb of
Alice. In the night a rattier bit him
on the head He is in a critical oondi
tion. Dr. Bering, who is treating the
case, says the ohances are slim for his
recovery. __________
MEXICO MATTERS.
MAY MEXICO.
Acting Governor Wallace has ap-
pointed Andrew J Hndspeth, of Gray,
Lincoln county, a notary pnbiio.
Home one eet the grass in the ceme-
tery three miles south of R is we II on
fire, aud in oonseqaence the fences were
burned.
Territorial Treasurer Vangbn re-
ceived from A A K-en. commissioner
of pnbiio lauds, $2,447 27 for the pnbiio
school fund
AH tbe pnbiio schools of Santa Fe
need dictionaries and books of refer-
ence The schools are preparing ent-r-
tain ments to procure mouev with which
to buy the much needed books and pay
for organs.
Acting Governor Wallace appointed
Peter F MeCanna, of Albnqneiqne,
Bernalillo oonnty; Robert M. McOaru-y,
of Golden, Santa Fe oonnty, and J A
Lnoero, of E-pauoia, Santa Fe county,
notaries public.
The territorial treasurer has received
tr im F W Clancy, Esq , of Alboquer
qne, $59-‘t 55, ibe proceeds of a suit won
ov the territory, which will be credi'ed
to the legal expense fnnd. Ale*-, from
Hon Solomon Luna, collector of Valeu
eta com,ty $>.228 92. of which $565 50is
f r territorial purposes aud $292 24 for
territorial ius'ttntlons.
The strong tl >w of water obtained in
the artesian well at tbe Gantlier block
st Rnswel’ bfiseuabl-d the owner to i nt
in a system of waterworks for the bnild
tug A hydraulic ram that throws 160
g-llons per minute was pot in. 1 he raut
keeps toll a 3600 gallon tank at tbe
height of 35 feet, which snpplies the
block wi h water The system is self-
operating and inexpensive.
TEX t“ MFTINGS.
Alamo D»y was observed only at a
few points.
The vegetable crop in southwest
Texas has been damaged.
The citizens of West have subscribed
$50,000 for a cotton mill
Waoostenographers havs organized
to prepare for tbe state meeting.
Tbe B-lton cotton milt baa been ohar
tered with a capital of $100,000
The Exatman Business College waa
d-stroted bv fire at Sulphur Springs.
Brakeman Thomas Beasley was shot
bv a tramp, near San Antonio, and will
die. ",
J. C. Spain aold a load of iweet po-
It is expected that Mexico will see
Paderewrbi in the National theater on
10th and 11th of March.
H Westiughonse, the inventor of the
car improvements that bear his name,
is oinking a tonr of Mexico.
The Mexican Type Foundry is the ti-
tle of a new industry that has been
started in the City of Mexioo.
A syndicate of capitali-ts has bought
the cotton factory at Urnpani, in the
state of Moreli i, and will largely in-
crease its cipr oity.
Cindad Juarez firms engaged in light
manufacturing clmm that nnless the
free zone liberties are removed they
will have to leave ihe border.
Tbe government has on its hands 272
women and 852 children of the families
of the Yaqni prisoners captured in the
Msz ooba battle a few weeks since.
The gemral snperintendent of the
Yera Crttz & Pacific says that work is
in progress on the first section of the
Moiz iron go road from that point to the
Papaloapatn river, 65 miles, and that
teii miles h*ve been completed An ex-
tm-ion of the main line from the Pa-
paloapam to Santa Lnoreoia, 128 miles,
i-t proposed, and there will be two
branobes, one 71 miles to Ver-crnz and
the other, 62 miles long, to Otxaoa.
Sntveys have been completed for both
branches and construction is to begin
soon.
ARIZONA NEWS.
Nogal is on a building boom.
Phoenix streets are to be graded.
Measels etill prevail at Pboenix.
Nogales ie one of the most progress-
ive towns in Arizona.
There were $240,700 worth of im-
provements made in Flagstbff during
1899
. 1 he Phoenix Elks have decided to ir
corporate for the purpose of erecting u
building.
The gold product of the King of Ari
zona mine, in Yuma' oonnty, is mor>
ihau $1,1)00 a day.
There are some 240 priso> esas in tht
territorial penitentiary at Yuma and h
grater number of life tenners that
ever before.
Citizens of Phoenix have incorporat-
ed the Iron Springs Onting ooinparn
and a summer resort will be establish
?d at the above place during the sum-
mer.
IHE LATfrST AND BES!
IN FINE
—ART CHINA—
And Beautiful
Mantel Vases.
Just received, a large assortment.
CHINA PALACE-
A. STOLAKOFF, Proprietor.
811 San Antonio Street Phone 816
ei Pn s Nonoeisiem- iim do.
AND
mooii: o 8 Miiiio iquhuiir 8.
White Oaks Route.
TIME TABLE NO. 4.
(Mountain Time.)
Train No. 1 leaves El Paso.. .10:80 a. m
Train No. 2 arrives El Paso.. 6:50 p. m
(Dally Except Sunday.)
Trains leaving El Paso on Mon
days, Wednesdays and Fridays,
make though connection to Capitan.
Trains arriving at El Paso Tues
days, Thursdays and Saturdays
have a through connection from
Capitan, leaving Cartizosa at 10:5c
a. m
Trains Nos. 1 and 2 run via Jar
ilia, *he Gr at Gold and Coppet
Camp, on Tuesdays and Fridays.
1 rains leave Alamogordo for To
boggan, on the summit of the Sacra-
mentos, twice a dav.
STAGE CONNECTIONS:
At Tularo-a: For Mescalero In-
dian Agency, and San Andrea.4
mm ng region.
At Carr z sa: For White Oaks,
JicarilUs, Gallirias and surrounding
count'y.
At Walnut: For Nogal,
At Captsn: For Fort Stanton
Sanita ium, Gray, Lincoln, Rich
ardson, Ruido>a and Bonito country.
At Toboggan: For Pine Spr ngs,
Elk, Weed, Upper Penasco, Pe ias-
co and the entire Sacrament# Moun-
tain Region.
For Intermatlon of any kind r^ga-dtn*
the railroad* or tbe country adjacent tin retr
call on ox write to
A. 8. GKEIG.
Gen. Supt. A Traffic Manager.
H. Alexandeh.
Asfit. U. F. A P. Agt.
Alamogordo, N. M .
or F Morris. Arent KIPrho Texas
EASTERN GRILL
First olaaa restaurant in every respect
First olaee cooking. Short orders day
and night.
Dinner Dally at 3 p. m.
138 El Pa»o St... next, to Coopers.
Railroad Time Tables.
LOCAL OR BL FASO TIM*.
, Railroad* whloh contribute nothing to
the Times in our work of building up
this city and her surronndlngs, are not
mentioned In this oolumn. Tnoee whloh
work against El Paao'a interests are like-
wise omitted.
RIO GRAN OB. 81KURA
MADRE A PACIFIC.
(Sierra Madre Line.)
Leaves dally exoept Sunday
at 8:25 a. m for Oaaea Gran-
des.
Arrive* dally exoept Sunday
at 3:55 p. m.
TEXAS A PACIFIC.
(El Paso Route.)
Leaves at 6:50 a. m. dally for
the East via Fort Woi-th. Dal-
las, Little Rook or Kansas
Olty, and direct to New Or-
leans.
Arrives at 7:20 p m dally
with full malls from tbe East
and from Central, East and
North Texas points.
MEXICAN CENTRAL
Trains leave El Paso 11:40 a.
m. Arrive In El Paso 5:10 p.m,
EL PASO A NOK1HIJ81KKK,
Trains leave El Paso dally,
except Sunday, at 10:8f a. m.;
arrive at Alamogordi at2:80
p. m. Leave Alazmgordo
at 3:05 p. m., and arrive In El
Paso at 6:60 p. m.
PECOS VALLE1 A NORTHEASTERN.
Leaves Peco* dally at 3.30 p
m. Arrives at ( arlsbad at 7.46
p. m. and at Roswell at 11:46
u. m.
Leaves Roswell dally at 4:05
u. ra„ arrives at Carlsbad at
7:30 p.m.,and at Pecosat 11.06
a. m
THE WABASH LINE
connects with Texas A Pa-
cific at St. Lout*. Through
line to Buffalo, Canadian
points and New York.
All tlokets, limited or unlim-
ited, entitle holder to 10 days
atop over at Niagara Falla.
ILLINOIS CENTRAL
oonneoto withTexas A Pacific
at N jw Orleans and St Louis.
The New Orleans and Chisa-
go limited train la only on*
night on the road.
IBON MOUNTAIN LINE
connects at Texarkana with
all Texas A Pacific trains,
whloh are taken dlreot to 8t
Louts, making clone oonnec
tlons for Memphis and all
points east of tbe Mississippi.
OH1CABO A NORTH WESTERN.
This line runs to the neat
summer resorts of tbe North,
to clear water lakes and
stream* where fish abound.
For parti ular* and descrip-
tive pamphlets, write to the
General Passenger Agent at
Ohioago.
WARD BRICK CO.
Brick, Wood and Coal.
PHONE 384.
ttAAVJU HA LOU A.
Always Fresh Boer on tap.
BUT FIFTEEN GENT LUNCH IK
THE CITY.
Clift!) illT J me MARK
When he tips his arrows with onr dell-
cions confectionery. Tbe poisoned ar-
row of the Indian was never more i
rfflcacions in its desired mission than a
box of onr ohoioe ohoo dates, French
creams, marshmallows, crystallized
gnm drops, etc, all made from pare
sugar and fine fruit flavors.
CAH'iwt
Phone 347. Next to Postoffke.
Branch at Chihuahua, Mexioo
It Takes |
a rich man to draw a
check, a horse to draw a
ca>t, a pretty girl to draw
attention,a toper to draw
a cork, a free lunch to
draw a crowd and an ad-
vertiseme it In the TIMES
to draw trade.
The Times
excels In the amount of
advertLing carried,a cer-
tain proof that it does
draw trade. Telephone
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El Paso International Daily Times (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 63, Ed. 1 Saturday, March 10, 1900, newspaper, March 10, 1900; El Paso, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth581964/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.