El Paso International Daily Times (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 139, Ed. 1 Saturday, June 12, 1897 Page: 2 of 4
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JE1 Paso Daily Times, Paturlay, Jane 12 1897.
El Paso!^pTlines
a nt.r.J >1 the PoitoBM »t II Puo, Iuu,H
Heeond-ClnM Mall Matter.
T1MBS PUBLISHING COMPANY.
Publisher*.
Jvam 8. Ram. I
8URSCBIPT10M RATE*.
Dally.
Delivered In ths city, par wert--“ *
P»T*ble every Saturday to aarvtwt.
r wart__U aantt
Payable every
DAILT-BY MAIL.
Invariably la Advaaaa.
iai ____________-
Sir month* ____.— —— —
Una month
_no 00
__000
1 00
hart btaa batlt abort hit boost to
pazsl# a soofflag posterity.
Sohlstter fulfilled all tha oandltlon*
of tha btrmltt of tba middle agat.
Hit ooda wat tha oodo of tht prlaat-
hood, though ho bad no ordar. Ha
llrad op to tha rows of poverty, hu-
mility and oallbaoy Ilka tba atarnaat
old raolato that arar Bad from tha
world's temptations and dlad at last a
martyr to tha faith that wat in him.
A fraud? Uodonbtadly, thongh ha
was ohlaf among hit dopat. An Im-
postor? Of ooarta, though ha wat
moat Impotad upon. Bathe maantno
SSi rt^dESSaSSKa m. *«pi~»io.
of tb* »lm« paid for.
OUB CIRCCLATIOB.
jamptd abanohof mala dear In tba
footblllt of tha Mogilloot, and that
there waa a bnok with thorn whtoh oar
rlad lmmantt antiart and waa striped
Ilka a atbra.
A Hobs special says: What prom-
taaa to bt tha most Important ooppar
strike made In Arizona for many yesrt
hat jnit bttn made on tha watt tide of
Plato creak, In Qtla county, by D. K.
Williamson, W. T. and H H. McNally,
A1 S tabor and Oon Grow lay. Thtyhars
taken np fire locations and tha ont-
oropptnga of all of thtm Indicate an
anoimont deposit of ora. Orowlay and
Blabar are driving a tunnel to oat tht
profanation and did no harm. Ha
wat honaat and nnaolfith, and tbonght I (edge at a depth of ninety fast. Oj
ha waa helping hit fallows, and bon- Monday, whan abont 100 feat In, tht
____ •*t|r. nntalBthnaaa and altruism art ledge wat enooanterad, and since than
B»»i<iot«oTtriii« iborouahiy »ht loaailtia. I not common enough to be laughed at. eighteen feat of the ora hat bean
tb* SuowbSaJowutrt "tba hour o» SohUtter ought to hare a monument pUroed, and the hanging wall has not
ib*d»yofpabilaaston: ^ _ „_|endb* remembered—lostead of whlob yet been teaobad. Tba ora le ooppar
lemlnW JJn I * | WwwU IWWUUVVIi AUO U»W ID
.6p m p m | tht ttltgrtph brings tht ntwt that a|gitoot, rtd oxldt andsllloatt of oopptr,
4pm
wordaburff..
#KiiZr.'ipS Lu bro***L8 *» » ■
Wa r*ufa also on the day of pukUeaSloe
he followln* tlaw«;
Id Mew Mixleo.
Anthony___Dona Ane---VottEaMya
Atowmlll—-Lnke Talley--Baa Barela!
*n,T. _Or.an-------Soeorro
lu Arlaooa
Howl*___Wlleoa----Mote1”
sSJaoDzr— --DaD“n
■p— Carllale
dim# musanm manager la planning to I and an aeeay of the drillings, whlob
get hie bones for his show.—NawTork laths most aocarate that oan be made,
Journal.
GETTING DOWN TO HARD PAN.
The Mexican Herald says: It It
0UfloB I elgnlBoant that some of the high tariff
Boeorvo paptre in the north are beginning to I jjBV# returned to Phoenix from a trip
gave a ratnrn of 13 65 par oant ooppar.
Thera la no olatm In this district—tbs
richest copper dletrlot of Arizona—
which mskts any snob showing for tba
amount of development.
J. M. Barnett and W. H. Bonsall
Id Texas.
ban Bilasrio — Fort H*noo*k^M Horn #dmlt prohibitory onttom* taxes j iQt0 the Superstition mountains. They
,oftD,Tt, Keh.r«VfoVpo'rti*#e. are not an altogsthar sure remedy for L,8,ud the ..K|d’s Gave" while on
■---- I the depressed slate of business. Ws J tbalr journey. It Is one of the most
adtbbtibiho katbb. have reoently cited that admirable and remarkable fastnesses In Arizona and
oJaVaw'aud aeeepstn* another is f ass Bleep-1 impartial paper, the New \ ork Jour- oonoernltig whloh even less Is known
^Vhii^msehas been a oxa-raiox organ .lnea of Oommeros, whloh points out that than of Oaohls.’s stronghold In the
use. w« And it pays. mannfsotnrlng plants in the United D,-»goon«. it was In this cave that the
f msi!!d oT»b<aad»art?s<air^andJsba suaaassof States have outgrown the home I Apaobw Kid to bellwvwcl to have hidden
SheoewepepOT. shedonihls m,nd for their product* end th*t 8l!t or seven years ego or about the
me# sheet ar# allowed so anybody. foreign trad* Is whet ths Lotted Statss L|me of the murder of Jjhnny Doble,
I reqnlr89 10 b'oom# Pro'P»roa5 Lli year-old boy, at Frazier's ranch,
profit to 6ims#i». /or U.»«u«:fh. buy. mor,. Nothing truer was ever **ld. th* last mQrder the K;d Is certainly
u h* TetaiiVsasb tneh at us a year his profit Instead of choking off trade with Max- gQ0WD to have committed His body
L\»dr‘‘ w*Mll*,*he,“m,a,ur*to loo, the Uolted States should foster was foand by hu aa0;et 81m Nabors,
--—————and encourage It: the freest possible wbo w*g foreman of the ranob then,
Hu.' ».“| Ert HeV' | with this country Is for Its In- gnd l8 8tm Uv|og jQ that vlolnlty. The
terest; It should admit free our ores, t[ftagb?er of his nephew Interested him
oattle, fruit, fibres, eto. Then Ln Apaches and he has since been
Mexico will prosper and will bay more I tnggged jn tbe accumulation of a
heavily avery yaar of American warts lBrlst mad§ of Indian hair. By what
Tha oontrary polloy means what? It persuasion h# lndaoas the Apaohas to
means the investment of Amerloan u;)ntrlbate their hair Is not dtfloltely
capital here under the protection of LnowD) tut it Is feared that he has
our tariff and the heavy gold premium, | gometlmes resorted to violence,
aud this Is oimpstltlon with the Am
erloan people! Why shonld not thei army nnuri,
law-makers at Washington see this? The following two orders Issued
Amerloan capital Is oomtng In hare | from the Jieadqaarters of the depart
6 00
a oo
U 00;
is oo:
11 60,
IS 00
go o«'
il 50
II 50
U 50
■» is;
29 00
J1 00
II 00
05 00
n oo
88 76
/r> 50
1_____
z
„*
E
...10____
_u.._
...11_____
_1»___
...H........
...15.......
....18....
II K>
gg so
n 4o
40 10
47 II
46 DO
54 00
41 00
76 60
100 60
U 00; 8i 76
41 SOI SO 76
17 60 81 00
n 00 101 261186 00
84 001118 101147 00
86 40 121 60:151 80
86 00!1S6 00 168 00
68 05 108 80:i45 10 180 80
60 76 108 00!166 861189 00
SENOR MUNDY'8 ADVICE
68 15:117 64.
: n 26 186 401
78 30 18S 20
88 701148 00
68 10 168 40
94 60
___, 90 90
_____1104 60
168 00
177 90
186 OH
109 36 194 40
166 16
ISO 66
196 75,
206 80
224 70
241 00
209 26 260 40
282 75|»77 20
288 25 294 00
249 76 810 80
861 55*825 60
ra 861340 in
the
depart-
Bay lo oar Table of BtM*. I afaaHllv II l« an atlrantlvo nnnntrv to I of Texas yesterday tell of
The on. month ret# for apace 1. fixed to 8t**<,Ur'1M®,nBUra0tlV# ooantry t0 change of oommand Of this del
thut the pir Inob r»l« dtoruiM for iucr«ta»* oome to, ftOd OftpuaUBtS OV«r the bor- m#nt;
raugt“ofVim“?iM^W»« eoiVa^M’and 'lerareflndlngltont. Put np a stiff "In accordance with the orders of
18 Inch**ara told etw.26per.inoh.640 so. tariff 4 gelnit Mexloo and more money Ilia president, published In general
w:: 1 5; .“'"'mi:
The 1 lime ra»*i.8IH percenlof the month
re**
| tlve Interests. I the onderslgoed hereby relinquishes
—. ■ . . , „ . ... ... Times are ohanglng In tha Unltad I command of this dapartment.
Than ttmeireUU 40 par **n» of tha month ... . „ .u n- Wxnv
jata. States; there Is now available abnn- . .. „ J * ■ W*DK' „
Thai timet retell 10 per cent of the month »h. .... .* in*.,Bsr "Brigadier General U. S A.
r*M . „ .... dant capital, the rate of interest Is t.Io BOOcrdaDOe with the orders of
Vhel week rale it 60 per eeel of Iht month falling; railway booda to
Vh*2 weeki rata 1*75 par east of the month I tary at 3)4 par oant ara popular; | ord«rs, No. 35, current
In general
series, war
Tht I waek»ra*e It 80 par tent of the month | wagei are tending downward; the
contraction of tha world's onrrenoy by
tha demonetization of silver la making
meathe month rat*. | itself felt In the United States, and
the farmer and the meobsnlo, the
operative and the professional man,
Tha 8 month*rat* la Itlmea the m^nth rate,
late 10p*r cent dleeoont.
Tha 6 month! rat* la 8 tl
laa* 20 par cant dlaaonnt.
Tha 9 month! rate la9 tlmaa tha month rtta,
1 Ml 25 par aant dlaaonnt.
Tha yaar rate la U timet the month . rale,
I at* 10 par aantdlaeount.
Specialpoaltlon-fifty per aant extra.
"l.O. D" advartltemaat* aharged at Iwo-
Ihlrda of dally rataa.
Prolaaalonal card* 92.00 par moath.
Uatal baaa eota only aoaapted.
Baadlng-Matter Ratal. .
Twanty-fivaeanta par llna flrtt lnacrtlon; 161 Fnormoua profits, mad*
small savings la ell
■a**,*.,*nunyar imw *—uu huu. wd- [by Influanolog tariff
hanged looala. by the month. 91.80 par line,
T1M1B POBL1BHI1Q OOHPAMT,
■l Paao.Taxtt.
department, adjutant general’s office,
tba undersigned hereby assumes com
mand of this department.
"Samuel Ovenshine,
"Golonel 23d infantry."
Ool. Ovenshine arrived from Fort
| Clark yesterday end assumed tempo
rary oommacd of the department
eanta for each aabaaqaant Inaartlon. Con-
rtat* for 1000 llnaa to ba takan In 2 month!,
medial 6aanta per llna oaob Inaartlon. Un-
I, by - - -.....
will have to be content with leas In- until the arrival of Brig. Gen. Graham,
ooma. The hnga trusts are monopo- Gen. Wade, who has saooeeded to
llztng great bcalneates and arel^® oommand of the department of
■a-** »• ■w^jafaM,arts-s
np oat of his family. The cavalry and artillery
directions, ware ordered oat at the time of Gen.
schedules Wade’s departure from tha post
' headquarters and tired a brigadier
flow Into the coffers of
THE PASSING OF SCHLATTER-
tha vary rich who foand oolleges and prase,
libraries, and give In many dlreotloni,
of their anrplns, a sort of sop to the
popular Gerbarns,
general's salute —Bin Antonio Ex-
To th« Public.
All parsons desiring men to work
to stop people’s for them, and all persons desiring em-
talklng too mnoh and Inquiring too | ployment, art asked to make their
Schlatter, the Divine Healer, la dead
His skeleton, with the Bible, his only I {gr, The trust magueies fear the qoes- J P®nts known to the Chief of Polloe
eld In producing the mlreoles that t|0D( "Where did you get if
thousands of people In the west ara
willing to awear to, was foand In tha
mountains of nortbarn Maxtoo. His
death was nndoabtadly due to stsrva
tlon. When the quaar, tamest shoe-
maker with tha Chrlatltka face paased
out of tha ken of man, ha had aononno
ed bis purpose of fasting forty days in
the wilderness In emulation of hla
Mae ter.
It Is easy to ssy that Schlatter was a
More than ever Is Mexico becoming
a country of Irresistible attraction to
men with small capitals, who In the
United Btates are being pressed to the
wall.
Mexloo Is the Land of Promise, the
Gonntry of the Future!
who will promptly respond to
request made of him
every
NEW MEXICO NEWS.
Fresh butteimllk, Smith’s Ureamery
Chicago Market*.
Ohicaqo, Jane 11—The monetary
show of streogtd at the opening of the
wheat market today osused by the
government orop report was followed
by a gradual but most decided decline
which continued with but slight inter-
ruption to the dose. An early rise of
lo per bushel wee converted lu the end
Into a ,Vj diolin*. Giro aud oats
innatlo who should h»v* been confined I 8Bioon8 wm ba thrown open to ‘helby^heat, dec) I dug ;Bf?a!dtfv''rPels^#o
to prevent tils self murder. His ways | publlo at Albuquerque during thlsltlvely. Provisions aione elmer maln-
month. | talned their valne or improved, pork
I remaining unchanged, while ribs ad-
The Bank of Dtmlng will move into Uanoed 2)41 and lard 10). July wheat
Its new quarters on tha oorner of Pine | closed gi s8)4), corn 21)4, oats 18.
street and Silver avenae abont the 15:h I cunpmsu Tr«7~
of the present month. I Washington, June 11—Sugar Broker
R. M. Oarley and P*blo Aranda, Chapman left the jail this morning s
'freeman. Uls ssntenoe expired at
midnight. He breakfasted at the jail
It Is understood that several new
were not the ways of other men. He
'ltd not want money, and though mu-
eeums yawned for him and people
who had dreamed themselves well
under his healtog touoh offered him
large sums, the shoemaker took noth-
ing. Ptrhep* that Is additional erl-
denos of bis Insanity.
owners of the "Gold Standard” mine
It le Impossible to understand her* I Bt 0old#n’ w,r* ,n Aibaquwrqaw. bev-|and th,n spent an hour looking over
In matter-of-fact brlok-aud-mortar ln« "Uh th#m " b“r °f PUM «°>d mftU whtl* >*»t«ng (clende.
New York the sensation prodnoed by w»*ihlng ounces and worth 11200, Drowned u » N .i.torinm.
this man In the west There have whloh th*y 8011 ** th* tlr,t N*t oaal Denveb, June 11—Charles Eoglleh,
been f.lth healer, time oat of mind, b#nk• nilhfauV. naUtorlaT’ Broadband
bnt almost Invariably In modern days B Harronn, of Santa be, spent a Ljh avenue, while bathing with several
they have turned their mlraolee to I <1*7 1° Han Merotal measnrlng the How loompenlons. Ushasa brother living
their own Interest. Only this wander of water In the Rio Grande at that | in Dnrango.
ing, meanly dressed foreigner, begging place- Ileaeysthe water passing at
hla braad from town to town, stand*!®1111 Marolal Is 9,100 feet par saoond a*
Cool.
-- -----. ------- . It la related of a certain French general,
out. There la no question that ht ba-1 oompared with 1,100 oublo feet during I Wh0 (iind recently, that ho had a very do-
lleved In hlmeelf, and what h# did was * corresponding period last year,
moat rsmarkabla. I "Bronoho Bill," who waa arqulttad
Wa ara nsarlog tha twantiath can of laying to kill OtBoera John Phillips
tary, end we know, or think we know, | and Frank Petars In Darning In Marob,
that Schlatter's art was at beat a mlod 1896, and afterwards arrested upon a
cure. There 1s nothing naw In that, ohargeof perjnry, has been discharged
bnt there are several thoneand Amerl-1 from onetody upon tha understanding
oan citizens, probably almost as ad | that he quit the territory of Naw Mex-
vanoed as ourselvae, to whom this | loo. From all aoomots h» has follow-
answer to the suggested question | ed Inetruotioos—Stiver City Eagle,
would item ae absurd as the miracle . _ _
idea seems to us. I ARIZONA DOINGS*
Schlatter lived too late. Not so
many oenturtae ago one euoh ae he I The town of Stafford propose# to
wonld have etarted a crusade or oon-1 have a publlo park, one of the fea-
Tuteed tha world with a religious re- turea of whloh will baa pavllllon to
rival, and If after performing his | aooommodate 350 danoers.
marvels he had gone Into tha wilder I Oooontno oounty cowboys, aooording
naaa and died there, a cathedral might [ to the Window Moll, daolart that they 1 Fresh aggs at Smith’s Creamery.
voted servant to whom, though really
kind, he was somewhat rough In hit
speech. In the Crimean war the general
was wounded so badly that, one of his legs
had to be amputated, and during tbo oper-
ation, which bad to bo performed without
ether, the man, Jean Baptlsto, stood by
and howled while the general submitted
qulotly.
"What are you howling forf" the gen-
eral presently cant'd out.
"Oli, my master, I cannot endure that
you should lose your leg I”
"Who wants you to endure ltf Can’t
you soo that you will benefit by ltf"
"What does monsieur moan?"
"Why, you blockhead, you’ll only have
to black one boot after thill’’—Youth’s
Companion.
A til for tnsT BiL. PAtMJ TRANSFER
• ha beat five cent OIGAR In the mar
k*t
Ard Be Premises B.at More ef It On
AnoUier Lias.
Tba following oommanioation was
presented to olty oounotl Thursday
night:
GiTior Mexico, Jana 1st., 1897.
To tho Honorable Mayor and Olty
Gout oil of El Paao, Teiaa.
Gentlemen;—As a taxpayer and reel
dent of your olty, I bag to writ# yon
frankly on yourpraaent disaster Al-
though I regret tha loas of proparty
end suffering oauaed by the present
flood, It wilt prove a groat bleating to
fatnre residents of tbta olty and to
maoy of tha preeent ones, if yon will
bssd tha warning that this fl jod gives
yon.
It is useless to Ignore tbo foot that
tbs Rio Granda is a very great stream,
even If II le not great only at distant
lotervala. It la absolutely neoessary
to leave ample room for tha water to
escape at Its htgheat, and 35 par oant.
or more additional, to provide against
emergencies of reservoirs breaking on
« fall river, whloh will be the oase, ae
reset voire unit be ballt In many places
lo the river and Its tributaries for the
proper development of the ooantry.
Ei Paso and tha olty of Jnarez have
the natural advantages of making vary
Important oltlee, whose Interests are
largely mutuei, as they ara located at
the most Important gata-way of tbaee
two great countries, and tha people of
these two oltles are more reeponesble
for the pesos and good fellowship
between them than any other people In
these Republics, and tha reeponsablli-
ttei of yonr honorable body In this re-
aped Is only seoond to that of the U
8. Senate, as no other official body has
so mnoh to do with Mexloo as yon.
Over one third of the vitality and sup-
port of yonr olty oomas from Mexloo
«td a large portion of yonr citizens are
largely Interested In Mexican Indus
tries, and to stive yonr own people
justly and ably, a muoh bioadar polloy
must be adopted and followed in the
fatnre.
At present there Is not one fifth the
room given for the river that Is sbsoln
:sly nsoasssry, and for yon to raise
yoor present levee high enough to pro-
teotthe olty, wonld throw the onrrent
Into tha olty of Jnarez and wash It
literally out of exlstenoe. At the same
time the people of El Peso are the ones
who are enoroaohlng on the natural
grounds over whloh the exoess water
escapes la time of oveiflow, and there
Is not the slightest need of It, as thare
Is an abundance of good safe land on
to whloh to bnlld your olty wlthont
eLoroaohlog upon the river, Imposing
on yoor8lstsr olty or sndangsrlng tht
lives and property of yonr citizens.
It would have bean far more credit-
able for you to have called upon the
State Government for an appropriation
of ona hundred thousand dollars or
more for a grand State University and
Industrial eohool (of whlob I will write
you later), than to have asked them
for ten thonsand dollars for releaf,—
the result of tha oversight of former
olty administrations In allowing tbs
people to populate the should ba river-
bed.
The advertisement given does the
olty great harm aod brands It as a
dtngerons looatlon, when In fact there
l* no danger, whatever, If the right
polloy le Inaugurated and whloh mast
be done In order to oompiy with both
looal and international demands. I
wonld suggest that yon petition tbs
Federal Government of the U. S, to
denonooe all the land as water-way
lying between the Mexloan levee and a
line oommenolng at tbs month of the
canyon and running easterly abont
fifty feet south of tbs Santa Fs Rail-
way Go’s main traok to El Paso street
and extending abont dne east from
there through the olty, and to seonre
title to the same In the name of the
Government and have a good levee
thrown np on that line and oompel^U
the street end railway grades that now
oroas It, to be removed to prevent hold
log the water back and throwing It
Into both ottlas as la now the oats.
Pat all railways and thoroughfares on
one large bridge and tha epproaoh made
by open trtBtlework as is dons by most
large cities located .on tha banks of
large rivers.
Tba olty shonld get permission from
tbeGovsrnment to smooth this low land
and plant it In an open forsat under
the supervision of a U. S. olvtl an.
glnesr and seed It to a suitable graae,
thus making for the olty a large and
beautiful park, and on tha only plaoa
where oos oan be made near tha olty.
This park would for all time ba tha
meeting piaoe for tbs ptopla of both
oltles on soolal ooosslons, and the
Identical ground that le now a bona of
detention would ba tranaformad into
a oradle of harmony.
The olty shonld permit very free ass
to the railway oompanlaa of the lacd
lying between the proposed levs# and
ths preeent olty Irrigating dltob, and
all new permits requiring tha railways
to assist to a oenaln extant in oon-
Urnotlng and supporting the lava# on
the above described line of river and as
soon as possibla oampel all railway* to
oooopy that traot of ground. Ia the
fatnre there wonld be a vladnot pare
lng over tha railway* to tha bridge from
the olty, and tha railways in Jnarez
wonld all naoassarly pass through th*
olty together, eo that they could be
crossed by a bridge on their main
street* Instead of havlog th* olty oat
promlsooaaly by railways.
In my many year* of oonatant travel In
both oonotrlea, I have watched olosely
tb* mod* of Improvement* In th* larg-
est oltles in th* U S., and studied tb*
resouroaa of thee* two oltlee, and am
oertaln that tha above la th* only feas-
ible way of treating th* snbjeo*, and
tba plans are not In sxoess of fatnre
dtmtnde end tvtry move should b*
mad* with th* Idea of aooompllehtng
th* seme, regardless of th* protests of
Individuals or corporation* in contend-
ing tor their tndlvldnal Interests.
Wonld alto reoommend that yon pro-
hibit th* reoonstrootton of villages In
a manner entirely oentrary to all
sanitary laws, as has been don* In the
pas', and whtoh bat been th* hot bed
of diseases sndfrem wbloh th* beet
families of th* olty have mostly seonre
ed their nurses and eervao'e, and who
have been dally and oaoatantiy spread
thg dlseatas that shonld not axis*
throughout tbe olty.
To Ignore th* latter ob -erva’too and
allow th* above dtflnid prescribed
water-way to be reooonpled and ob •
s’rnotlons to tb* free flow of water to
axlet on eald land, will b* nothing las*
i h»n criminal neglaot of yonr dnty.
There will never as good an opportun-
ity comr again. Now aa on* wagon
bridge la washed away and another
1CCIPCO* Freudenthal Block (up stairs) Cor.
irribCvi El Paso and Ban Franolaco Sts.
PRIVATE OISEASES B8
young and middle aged men CURED and
lerfeot MANUOOI) reatored UNNATURAL
DlhCHARGas, GONORRHOEA, GLKBT,
STRICTURE positively CURED.
UTERINE DISEASES tkation, fSg
of the Womb. Excesiive Menatrnation, Ulcera-
tion, UNNATURAL DISCHARGES, and many
other troubles peculiar to woman.
BLOOD POISON
CURED without the use of merenry; all com-
plications, inch as Sore Throat. Ulcers, Sore
donth, Pimples. Pain in the Joints readily dis-
appear nnder my treatment and a permanent
CURE is Guaranteed in each caae.
DR. KING, Expert Specialist
On Nervous, Chronic and Special Diseases.
CONSULTATION FREE.
- - EL PASO, TEXAS.
RECTAL DISEASES-PILES tTtdl??'
Bleeding, Internal, External and Itohlng posi-
tively CURED without the use of the knife ox
other dangeious remedies and CURED without
any detention from busineas. Fistula ulcer-
ation of tha Bowels positively CURED.
RATiRQU Treated by tha INHALATION
UHlHIinn PBOCBS8. The latest methods
for the CURE of THROAT, BRONCHIAL and
LUNG TROUBLES.
FinilCV Alin Painful or difficult ralctu-
KIUHCI fWU ration, milky or brick dust
URINARY DISEASES «,?.
attended to before It goes Into some horrible
malady, such aa Bright* Disease, etc.
WRITE for Symptom Blanks. Satisfactory results guar-
anteed through my perfect system of correspondence.
railway abont to bnlld soross the river,
thee* two ahonld b« j fined [to th#
Mexloan Central bridge and yon have
three of the four lines at ooo« oonoen-
tra'ed. Another reason that the pres-
ent opportunity Is good, Is beosnse the
publlo sentiment certainly ought to
assist yon aftsr this soars aud mos'
detrimental advertisement. In lnan
gnratlog a system that will prevent
appalling disasters lu the future sud
systematise th* development of tht
rssouioss of tbs olty, so that same oan
b* real I z id to tha fullest extant without
continual clashing of interests and at
a minimum oost.
Vary respsotfolly yours,
H M. Mundy
Good eating at Smith’s Creamery.
His Suspicion.
At last the day camo when he under
stood. It was n day when ho returned un-
expectedly to find her absont from their
home. Idly he turnod Into her room, and
there, upon tho table, a letter lay with un-
covered face. With Idle curiosity he took
It up, turned It In his flngors, then laid It
down. But curiosity gained the upper
hand. He took It again in his hand. Me-
chanically almost his fingers played about
the seal. Then swiftly he tore it open, and
as tho envelope fell to the floor she entered.
A gleam of foar shot across her face, and
she gilded to his side. “What have you
there?” ahe cried sharply. “Give It to me."
He drew bock and raised the missive aloft.
Suspicion, sharp and plorclng as a glisten
ing hlado, flashed from his eyes. Again
she tried to take It from him, laughing
uneasily. But, with brutal force, he push-
ed her from him, then tore the letter open
and read. And as he scanned the lines
fear shone in his eyes.
He drew his hand across his forehead.
“It cannot be true,” he groaned aloud.
Then he struck the paper open in his hand.
It appeared simply as print, a subterfuge
to hide its dreadful purpose. “Do you de-
ny it?” he cried. "Tell me, are you so
brazen that you can say It la not true?
Woman, do not dony It. You are a victim
of the auction habit I’?—New York World.
A Higher Bid.
The anotlon room was crowded, and the
collection of furniture, art and brio-a-brao
being unusually choice the bidding had
been very spirited. During an Interval of
tho sale a man with a pale and agitated
countenance pushed his way to the auc-
tioneer's sldo and engaged him in a whis-
pered conversation. Presently he stood
aside, and the auctioneer rapped attention
With his hammer.
"Ladles and gentlemen,” he said in a
loud voice, "I have to inform you that a
gentleman present has lost his pocketbook
containing £300. Ho offers £40 for Its re-
turn.”
Instantly a snull man In the back-
ground sprang upon a chair and orled ex-
ottedly:
"I'll give £50 for HI’’—Tit-Bits.
Of Undoubted Gentility.
Mrs. Newrlche (patronizingly)—Were
any of your ancestors men of note, Mr.
Cynic?
Mr. C.—Yea, madam, I should say so.
On* of them was the most famous admiral
of his day and commanded the allied
forces of the world.
Mrs. N. (with altered tone of deep re-
spect)—I* It possible, Mr. C. I And what
eras his name?
"Noah, madam.”—Life.
Eaxland BSUtrsis of tbeBi*.
London, Jane 11—Constantinople
advices say that the British embassa-
dor has served notlos on tbo saltan
iha* England will never ooneent to th*
oeeslon of Thessaly. Easels and Gar-
many express a willingness that Tur-
key keep ths oor.qnor*d provinces.
The Turkish prime minister waa strnok
dumb by England's ultimatum. This
makes the eastern queitlon again
ftoute. If Turkey defies England,
Daoked by Qermaoy and Easels,
trouble Is expeoted. England has an
Immanss Hast In ths Mediterranean,
and Is undisputed mistress of lbs tea.
She also has a heavy force of troops at
Malta, Gibraltar acd other oonvenient
ports. _
Milk for sale at Smith’s Ora emery.
Oo« Hi! Htari In T»o.
Chicago, June 11—James S. Eath-
gaber, a llneoiype operator employed
to ths later Ojean office, was stabbed
and Instantly killed In a saloon oppo»
site the Oeoirel polloe station at mid
night by Albert Bark*, a fellow ltneo-
yplsr, Burke etoaptd bat give him-
self np this morning. Bark* formerly
worked at Kansas Gity, and on several
other weBiern papers. Eathgabsr’s
jugular veto was fevered, end hie heart
was almost out out.
AnilClpBllDI m« T Mr Iff.
New York, June 11—Ths Amerloan
Sugar R.lining company has advanced
the prloe on all grades of 6ngar )» of a
oent. This was tb* lnoress* except In
numbers 5, 9, 13, 14, 15 and 16, on
wbloh figures It was raised one six-
teenth of a oent.
Lawn mowers and Garden Hose at
Momssn A Thorne’s.
Dsllolons ooffee at Smith’s Creamery
AtUmptad Afstsalnaftloa.
Leavenworth June 11—An attempt
was made to BBsatslnats Gov. Smith, of
the soldiers’ home, this morning by
thsnseof dynamite. An Inmate has
been arrested.
ff i*oi n OommcaocmlBt.
West Point, N Y , Jan# 11—Balmy
weather favored the ceremonies oon-
neoted with the graduation olaee of '97,
from th# m Utary aoidemy today.
There were about 5,000 people In at-
tendant)*.
Th* Shrink Wonld Do the Rest.
"What’* that?" exclaimed the keeper.
"Are we out of strait jackets?”
"Yes," replied the attendant.
"Weil, put a close fitting flannel shirt aa
the patient and stand him nnder the show-
er bath.”—Washington Star.
Guarding the Trees.
In Norway a law provides that no
person shall be permitted to cut down a
tree unless he plants three saplings in
its plaoa
mriF.RE IS HATP1NE8S IN STRENGTH.
L Joy «»nd gUdncwfl *hine forth from tht* of
the manly and strong. Confidfncr, m*f~«*t*em
and low of wxMrty come with thr return erf m-
ttirr'i Tliror. Rlrctricity. the force *f vitality,
rank**# men great. It bring* back the fire of
yonth. It hcljm manhood.
I»r. R»ndrn’* Electric Belt I* tb* ebo«*n *pring
from whloh i* drawn th* vital energy which in-
fni»e« the ▼* of men and develop* th* nerve am]
phy*!c*l power*. The vlgwoo* §i*nd*rd of our
race le Improved by It.
Do you wlab to read the «tory of bow vltel f*re*
1* renewed by eleetrlclty? If *o. get Dr, Sanden'*
hook. “Three CliutFe* of Men.*' which will be sent,
cloeely sealed, free from oboerratkra, upon rw-
DR. A T. SANDEN,
Box B, 204 8. Broadway,
Los Angeles, Cal.
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El Paso International Daily Times (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 139, Ed. 1 Saturday, June 12, 1897, newspaper, June 12, 1897; El Paso, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth582361/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.