El Paso Morning Times (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. 29, Ed. 1 Friday, November 19, 1909 Page: 4 of 8
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EL PASO MORNING TIMES, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER IS. ISOS.
PASO MORNING TIMES
KVKRT DAT IN THE TEAS BT THE TIMES
PUBLISHING COMPANY.
At the postofflcc At El
matter.
Pa«o, Tau, u second-
PUBLICATION OFFICES :
BUILDING. 221-223 SOUTH OREGON STREET.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
(By Mall In Advance.)
and Sunday, one year ..........................17.00
and Bundey, six months.......................... * 5*)
. And Sunday, one month ..........................B!>
Bundey Times, one year ........................... 2.00
(By Carrier.)
Sunday, one month ..................,........•*
‘here who tall to receive their paper re«ularly ere
to notify the buelness office to that effect
postofflcc address In foil, Including county and itate.
Remit by money order, draft or regietered letter.
Address all communications to
THE MORNING TIMES, EL PASO, TEXAS
BRANCH OFFICES:
Business Office, 48-44-45-6647 48 40-50 The Tribune
iw Torb City.
Business Office. 810-11-12 Trlbnne Building.
C. Beckwith Special Agency, sole agents
I
Iron Ures. It won't melt like asphalt It is impervious,
to water. Automobiles can't skid on it. It grows belter
with age. On the whole, tin the best road known nowa- ;
days. It involves practically no expense of maintenance j
and lasts indefinitely.”
The “chemicals" are understood to be crude oil or a j
binding substance In w hich crude oil is the chief compo- |
nenf.
In this section where the crude oil can be so cheaply
obtained It is probable that a road of this kind can be
constructed at possibly a fourth of the cost of macadam.
mb §
RUTH CAMERON
B>v
Chicago.
foreign
TIMES TELEPHONES:
Time* endeavors always to transact Its business estlsfac-
ter tbs telephone. Note the following departments and
Auto Phone. Bell Phone.
lAtlon Department ..............1281 Ml
" s Office .....................1084—1 Ring 84—1 Ring
Rooms .....................1024—2 Hinge 26—2 Kings
Editor ........................ 8048
llton .....................1144
ng Department—308 North Oregon St. 1111
II in
“tv
It the carrier falls to deliver the paper promptly, notify ue
f of the above telephones. The Circulation Department
Week daye from 4 a. m. to 6 p. m.; Hundsye from 4 a.
I p. m.
Aliy erroneous reflection upon the standing, character or
llAtlon of any person, firm or corporation, which may
eolumna of The Time*. will be gladly corrected
brought to the attention of tin management
any erronr
MMtatioo of
•Mfhr In the
apeft Its being
Thh MORNING TIMES Is the OFFICIAL newspaper of
,b* The7 MORNING*TTME8 le the OFFICIAL newspaper of
he Oounty of Et Paso. _______
•RANCH CITY OFFICE, 803 NORTH OREGON ST.
The Court’s Delays.
Rpeakiug of the French legal practice* and court
Rlbthdds an exemplified in the Steluhell case, the Lhar-
lotte, North Carolina. Observer wlndB up Its criticism
Will Iho tertte statement of fact that we are not In a posi-
tion "to heave bricks" in view of our own shortcomings
•iitil respect to the administration of justice. It has
flat been n great while since one of London’s most promt
llfeni merchanta was murdered by a crank. In the Ameri-
can courts the murderer would even now be fighting for
hiA liberty. There would have been any number of eon-
titiURnces on one plea or another and each based upon
sOtRe informality or technicality that was in Its last
analysis inconsequential and therefore in no vital par-
tifcujar affecting the merits of the case, or he would
hi»B been declared a lunatic bv a morbid Jury uiul be
DOW lighting to get out of an asylum.
fortunately the English courts were created for the
business of dealing out justice—especially the criminal
cOUfta*—and the result is tin- murderer has long been
filling a grat'e. He was arraigned, found to be possessed
of pease enough to know that he had done Wrong, was
pfOven guilty of having taken human life and was
CtpCtitOd and that was all there was to It.
Since the slmplificatin of the English courts In 1887
as set foytu by Mr. George W. Alger tu.a widely quoted
article on ‘'Treadmill Just ice" in tin- current issue of .the
Atiattlle Monthly, justice has been rendered certain and
■l)r* and all cases go to trial upon their merits without
being delayed by adroit pleadings of astute lawyers
thAt have no real connection with the essential facts
establishing the real Issue.
The eminently sensible ruling of the justice of the
OkilhOmo supreme court that cases before him will
be tried on their merits and no weight ho given to
technical informalities or any other ruse to postpone
trial,, points 4be way to the needed reform, lint In order
to make this the rule In all the courts everywhere it is
necessary that the legislative branch of the government
amend or enact statutes so as to make it obligatory or
mandatory.
The efforts of the critics of Texas; and the south in
the matter of lynching* to condone or excuse such hor-
rible crimes as that committed at Cairo, III., the other
day upon the plea of the "tardiness of the courts and the
Ineptitude of the Juries." is not without merit, notwith-
standing the failure of the critics in question to accord
ihe same excuse to the people of the south.
As a matter of fact, the secret of mob law and many
forms of violence every where Is to bo found in the
want of confidence by the people in the courts and Juries
as to their ability to measure out certain and swift
justice. There is no question from any respectable
source of the entire Integrity of the courts, but the sys-
tem and the practices which handicap the courts are
generally appreciated and have the same effect In incite
ment of mob administration of the law, as If the eourts
ware corrupt.
If the arguments of those versed in jurisprudence
are to be accepted, the cause of the law's delays and the
miscarriages of Justice are not far to seek and are due
to the weight allowed by the eourts to Immaterial
technicalities and errors that do not affect the real merits
of the cause.
The remedy is quite as easy and just, as plain:
Deprive the courts of this power by a statute prohibiting
It and establishing the rule (hat ail causes shall be tried
upon their merits. While effecting a reform in the
oourtft it will be found to automatically improve the'sys-
tem of trial by jury.
'"..ft Is patent that something must be done and done
dUihkJy, before the courts and Justice become the objects
oi Hdlcule and contempt
The Matter of Race Track Betting.
! The Times has been very free in extending the use
j of Its columns to people who want to air their views
j through its forum and therefore cannot be criticised If
it has become just a little weary of the captious criti-
cisms of some of its friends.
The purpose The Times had in View was to call atten-
tion to the ruling of the court Of appeals of New York
that race track betting was not malum prohibitum (our
erudite friend prefers to use the plural—-mala prohi-
blta). The Times was arguing the general proposition
and it is a very careless reader who would construe what
it had to say as applying to Texas, or to El Paso except
in a general way.
The principle is the same, however, In Texas as in
New York. One of the highest courts in thejand having
thus ruled, it is to be presumed that other courts of other
| states will note the precedent and that, attorneys in suits
Involving the principle will not be slow to cite it.
It is also safe to assume that when the Issue is
squarely drawn in our own courts they will give due
weight, to a decision from such a high legal source even
in construing an act of the aggregation known as the
Thirty-first legislature of Texas.
The point is this: That thing which is not malum In
se in New York Is not malum In sc anywhere else, and
if a New York legislature Is unable to make It malum
prohibitum In the eyes of the courts—the interpreters
of the law—it is reasonable to suppose that the courts
of other states when they get, around to It, will observe
the precedent set by New York’s two highest courts.
That, however, is by the way. The Times still con
tends that unless the people themselves believe a thing
to he malum In se it is a more or less difficult task to
enforce a law that makes ftiat thing wrong in face of a
public sentiment to the contrary.
YOU realize that every failure—if you know how to build aright—is
step toward success,
One of the very best qualification^ for success in life is learning
j tow to get the full value out of all your failures.
Maybe the story of a little girl who had a very hard time trying to break
Into the uewspapei business and finally got there only because she knew
how to make a failure a success may be suggestive.
For a whole week she had been bombarding the editors of New York
City asking for a position.
All of them refused her In one way or another.
The end of the week found her very much discourag-
ed. She had but one editor left on her list.
But she wouldn’t give up while there was a
ghost of chance so she went bravely to him. And
Instead of outright refusing her he said. "Write
something”—which unless you write something ex-
tremely clever is equivalent to a refusal.
But that young woman promptly gat down and
made her past failures into a very notable success
by writing a clever, witty little account of her ex-
periences with the other editors.
it was accepted and she was promptly installed
in a position.
That’s the right way, as the Ladies' Home Jour-
nal says.
Aud by way of contrast here Is the wrong way.
Another girl whom I know, recently sent a poem
to "Life." It was, accepted. J.ater she sent another. It was refused. In-
stead of saying toTurself, "What is the matter with that? Wherein wasn't
it as good as my first,' she was highly indignant and went around saying
that she didn’t think there was any system about the way things that were
sent in were read and that like as not nobody who knew anything saw that
second poem.
Now wasn't that absurd?
Do you do that ? Do you blame your failures on other people and on
circumstances, or do you sit down humbly before your failures and learn
what they have to teach you? .
If you are a shop girl and you just failed to sell the piece of goods or
the hat do you say to yourself, "Did I say too much or too little, or what,"
and apply your decision?
If you are a teacher and your class makes a most miserable flunk the
day the fussiest member of the school board comes a visiting, do you say,
"How did I fail to arouse enough Interest to make them study that lesson ”
or do you say, “Isn't that just the luck?"
To fail in -anything is very uupieasant of course. But never to fail is
dangerous. i
It la the successes built on failures that are the most safe and secure
Have you failed recently in anything, and have you allowed vourself
to get discouraged over It?
Then remember that in every failure is a germ of success and get so
busy germ hunting that you won’t have time to 'bf discouraged.
It is a pretty hard thing to get things straight, when
they get as badly tangled as the telegraph merger seems
to be. One report has it that the American Telegraph
and Telephone company has absorbed the Western Union;
then it Is given out that the Bell Telephone company has
swallowed everything iy sight. Now it is declared that
the Postal has swallowed the Western Union, the Hell
and the steeple, all the good people and everything lying
around loose. Whichever way it may turn out to be, you
cun bet that the sponge thut is doing all the absorbing
will be prepared to take the people in.
It Is passing si range how fast some things travel with-
out making any fuss about It. Silas Morgan a fisherman
on Hu* North Carolina coast found 30 cans of opium
•worth Jff.ono cast up by the sea and painted his house
with it, then had 405 different kind# of fits when he found
out what It Whs. Now comeB a Mississippi paper that
locates Mr. Morgan and his find, together with his ills,
away , 11#.,ou tlqr, oo.wt, of Washington qta^e, pearly 1000
milep away from Currituck sound! ’ 111
Peary Is getting left as badly by Dr. Cook In the race
for ducats as lie was left in the hunt for the pole. Prof.
Matt Henson, who blossomed out into a lecturer and
authority on boreal matters, Is also in the dust, out for
the dust and getting none In IiIh pockets. Forty people
turned out to hear him the other night,
In the report of the committee investigating prison
conditions it is understood will be included a demand
that the prisons be taken out of politics, which is very
well, but how are you going to get politics out of the
prisons?
^ _ $
4 This Date in History t
* ♦
November 19.
17-73—Cleneral George Rogers Clarke,
soldier and pioneer, born in
Alberroarle County, Va. Died
near Louisville Ky„ February
18, 1818.
1764 —The "OonneCtient Courant” was
issued at Hartford.
1807—Nearly 300 Jives lost in a col-
lisioii between the packet
"Prince! of Wales" and the
transport "Rochedale,”. near
Dublin.
183!-—James A. Garfield, twentieth
president of the United States,
horn in Cuyahoga county, Ohio,
died at Long Branch, N. J.,
Sept. 19, 1881.
1832 —Nullification in South Carolina.
lSfifi—John Barry, second Roman
Catholic bishop of Savannah,
■“■“•—died hi Paris, France. Horn in
Ireland about 1799.
1863—President -Lincoln spoke at the
dedication of the National Sol-
diers' cemetery at Gettysburg.
1871—Grand Duke Alexis son of the
czar of Russia, arrives in New
York.
1873—John P. Hale, the first anti
shivery senator of the United
States, died at Dover, N. H.
Horn in 1806.
1904—Statue of Frederick the Great
unveiled in Washington, D. C.
THIS IS MY 74TH BIRTHDAY.
After the regulation irrigation of their throats in
El Paso-with mesa water of course—the senatorial com-
mittee went up to Elephant Butte yesterday to see how
the arrangements to satisfy the thirst of the land here-
abouts were getting along.
The man with a turkey In his backyard is the enviable
individual who can look without dismay upon‘the near
approach of Thanksgiving.
The United States senators saw a dam site yesterday
on theli trip to Elephant Butte.
TEXA8 COMMENT,
Bank robbers are harvesting their fall and winter
crop in Texas. Never mind yeggmen. Down with nickel
crap shooters and the fellow who smuggles a bottle of
"’Bud" across the border. These are the desperadoes
who must be put away.—Dallas Times-Herald.
Thank the Lord we do not have to dream in order
to contemplate Texas as a Democratic proposition. Still,
we should be delighted to take on a trance now and then
If that would show us Pennsylvania manned from cala-
boose to state house with Democratic offleiuls.—Houston
Post.
Hie Passing of Macadam Roads.
Hot the least gratifying fact in connection with the
progress of the Improvement of the highways and the
dissemination of information as to the necessity of good
roads, their value and profitableness, Is that the methods
of road building are keeping step with the work of con-
struction and the demand for them.
Until now, the macadam road was considered the
finest and most durable highway that could be con-
structed. but the growing use of the automobile and the
progress of the science of roadbullJing show that it Is
not. The Iron tires of wagons grind the road and the
rubber tires of the automobiles whisk away is a fact
that is being only now appreciated.
Strange to say the new road which is meeting the
approval of experts everywhere as the best road that can
be constructed is the simplest and much more cheaply
and rapidly constructed than the macadam. It.is known
as the "rtnperlal " . . —
It is thus described by au aiitomohilist who has
traveled over the entire country in his machine. He
says: ‘The imperial road Is first plowed; then the loose
dirt is soaked with a chemical mixture adapted to the
soil; then the whole is kneaded to a paste; then it is
leveled and rolled. It gets hard as traffic packs It. It
is self-healing from the wounds of horseshoe caulks and
"If one-half of the press reports of flie penitentiary
atrocities are the truth. It would be better for the oon-
viets to he taken out Into the fields and shot down like
dogs. The people or Texas do not yet realize the condi-
tions that exist in the penitentiaries, but they are waking
up."—Mayor Callaghan in San Antonio Express.
Colonel Bryan announees that he is going to Brazil
b) way of Texas. Wherefore the near-grouch observes
that if the colonel Indulges a hit more of his free raw
material talk Texas will see to it that his start for
Brazil is a flying one.—Fort Wtoi-th Star-Telegram.
The Democratic party In Texas includes Ballev pro-
hibitionists. anti-Bailey prohibitionists. Bailey anti-pro-
hibitionists, anti-Baile.v anti-prohibitionists, prohibition-
Isis-Halley men, prohibltonsts anti-Bailey men, anti-pro-
hibitionist Bailey men, anti-prohlbitionist anti-Bailey men
and some who are simply Democrats—Bryan Eagle!
SOME SMILE8,
"Your husband seems dreadfully ill at ease this even-
ing. Isn't he well?"
Oh, yes. he’s quite well. but. confidentially, be is
breaking in his heavy underwear, and your house is ter-
ribly warm."—Detroit Free Press.
Annie Yeamans.
Mrs. Annie Yeamans, the oldest
actress on the American stage, was
born on the lsie of Man, November
19, 1835. Her girlhood was spent, in
Australia, where as a child she went
on the stage. At th© age of 18 she
married Edward Yeamans. a circus
clown, and in the next few years she made,
accompanied the circus on a tour of;
Australia India and other parts of
the world. When the circus stranded
in Shanghai, Mrs. Yoamans got to-
gether a few of the performers and
pardons over a year and a half ago,
Governor Campbell did not issue the
pardon until a few days ago. He was
repeatedly urged to do so, however,
by persons Interested in the matter.
Padilla is now in San Antonio, hut
will probably come to El Paso before
long.
MUCH TROUBLE OVER BILLS
Secretary Kinne’s Assistant Is Having
Just a Terrible Time in Ab-
sence of the Boss.
Miss Nita Ransbeger. the capablo
and gracious assistant secretary ot
the chamber of commerce, Is in com
maud during the absence in Chicago
of Secretary Klnne.
Just now Miss Ransberger Is hav
ing all kinds of trouble attending to
the bills contracted by the commit-
tees in charge of the Tart-DIaz meet-
ing. Everybody wants his hill paid
pnd. blames the secretary of tie
chamber of commerce because it Is
not paid.
It seems that the failure of somo
of those interested to get th^ir bills
Imfore the auditing committee in
proper shape has been responsible for
the delay In having them paid. The
committee must have all the hills In
correct shape before the money is
appropriated. But everything now
seems to be in shape for a pay day
at once.
COLD-KILLS STRIKE.
Spokane, Nov. 18.—Cold weather
quickly put an end to the "freezing
strike" of the Industrial Workers of
the World imprisoned here for viola-
tion of the city ordinance against
street oratory. All of the men under
guard at the old Franklin school be-
gan carrying and sawing wood for
their prison today. No further at-
tempts at street speaking are being
PLAGUE IN CARACAS.
Caracas, Nov. 18.—The bubonic
plague has reappeared in this city.
Five new eases have been reported
they toured through all the possible j three of which terminated latally.
parts of China, in 1868 she came to----
Ihe United States and for several 1 Dr. Pearce, Osteopathic, Physician,
years played in a stock company in
San Francisco. Then came a tour
of the country with her husband, the
two appearing In (ketches In music
halls and variety theaters. In Leav-
enworth, Kansas, Mr. Yeamans fell a
victim to the cholera and his widow-
traveled almost penniless to New
York, where she found employment
In a stock company playing in a
Brooklyn theater, falter she appeared
in company with John Brougham.
Maggie Mitchell, John E. Owens and
other famous players of that city.
Mrs. Yeamans made her greatest rep-
utation, however, while appearing in
the famous Harrigan and Hart farces
at (he Union Square theater.
PADILLA SECURES PARDON
Man Sent Up From El Paso for Life
Is Freed From the
Penitentiary.
Justice 'E. H Watson has just re-
ceived word that Lucas D. Padilla has
been pardoned from the penitentiary
at Austin. Padilla was sent up from
El Paso 14 years ago and was serving
a life sentence.
The crime for which Padilla was
sentenced was the murder of his wife,
which oecured at their home In Ysleta
The case was tried in the district court
at this pigee before Judge C. N. Buck-
ler, now .deceased, and was bitterly
! fought on both sides.
It was shown that Padilla's wife was
a woman of bad repute and that her
husband was insanely jealous ot her.
Also that for quite a time previous to
the murder Padilla had been in a de-
mented condition.
Due £0 Justice Watson.
Padilla's pardon is in a large meas-
ure due to Justice Watson. He ob-
! tained a petition asking for the pris-
has moved to 615 N. Oregon.
the weather.
Forecast* (III <1 p. to. Friday.
El Paso and vicinity: Friday fair.
New Mexico: Fair Friday.
West Texas: Friday fair.
Weather Oonditlone.
The pressure is diminishing over the
northwestern border states and the tem-
perature has risen decidedlv in the
northern Hocky mountain region The
pressure Is highest over the 'south cen-
tral portion of the country and over
southern Utah. In the Atlantic states
temperature falls of 18 to 30 degrees are
noted. Precipitation has been confined
to areas west of the Mississippi and to
Oregon and Washington. oVer the south-
ern half of the country oleylr skies arc
general.
Observations
tain time.
Stations—
Abilene .. ..
Amarillo.....
Asheville ..
Bismarck ....
Buffalo .....
t’hlcago ., .
Cincinnati ..
Del R|g ......
Denver ... ..
Detroit .....
N. D. LANE,
Observer, P. S. W. B.
taken at 6 a. in. mouri-
"Charlle, dear." queried the fair maid at the ball
park, "why does that man behind the hitter wear such a
big bib?"
That, explained Charlie, "is to keep his shirt from I oner's pardon signed by all the living
getting mussed when the hall knocks his teeth out."—! members of the jury which convicted
Chicago News. him, also by all his old neighbors in
- I Ysleta who were familiar with the cir-
"bhe belongs to one of our best families,” j eumstaiiisefc attending th? crime, 4
"Did her ancestors come oyer In the .Mayflower?" iw»s also/shown that Padilla was a
'Oh. no. She's much more exclusive than that. She's 1 model prisoner, not having a mark
a Daughter of Dlacoverers of the North Pole.'"—Life, i against him during his entire term.
Young Lone Wolf, a Kiowa Indian chief, is a Baptist I A rather curious phase of the case
minister. He is a Carlisle graduate and reads his Greek 1 Is that 'though *' .....
testament every morning. reoomni ' *-----
Flagstaff.. .
Oa1v*«ton ..
Huvr<* ......
Helena ... .
.Jacksonville
Kansas City
Lander ., .
IaO*- Angele*
Marquette ..
Memphis ...
Montgomery
j Modena . . .
' New Orleans
New York .........34
North Platte
Oklahoma ...
Phoenix
Rapid GU'V .
lied Bluff ,.
POOR COFFEE
IS DEA£ AT ANY PRICE
As a rule, poor grade coffees are extremely
acid—altogether too acid for stomach com-
fort. In fact, it’s the long-continued con-
sumption of poor grade coffee that gives the
health drink man his chance. Good coffee
is wholesome and it’s economical as far as
the pocketbook is’concerned, because it will
return many more cups of the beverage to
the pound. For a really good and whole-
some coffee, at a really reasonable price, try
•Chase & Sanborn's Coffee.
Jackson Grocery Co.
353—Telephones—507
; ,r
EL PASO DAIRY COMPANY
PRODUCERS OF AND DEALER8 IN
PURE MILK AND CREAM
Telephone*: Bell 340; Auto 1156. Office 313 North Oregon 8treet.
SW® *b'k h:k a.aXK;g.'«TIO(3< *
Ihe NEW PORTER’S HOTEL
THE LEADING AMERICAN HOTEL Off MEXICO CITY.
Thi* Hotel le Conducted on That High Standard of Excellence That
Always Pleases the Public.
Our hotel li entirely new end modern, every room belrtir etipplled with
hot nod cold running water, a telephone In each room; private bathe, elec-
tric elevator service day and night an4 electric heat. We have a epadoua,
elegant lobby lor laillea sod gentlemen, "TUB MEETING PLACE FOB
AMERICANS IN MEXICO,” where they have that genuine comfortable feeling
of being "at home." The public are Invited to visit our hotel, and to pat
xj rouIre our restaurant and cefe, the best American meals and service Is
k Mexico. Roscrvatlone for rooms receive prompt and courteoas attention.
(IHRBIIWIBrKWexlx'klii^xLKIBKSmTj^
..''-f,.,'. .'sc ;.)'■■
\
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
United States Depository.
Capital and Surplus $600,000
DEPOSITS $3,000,000
Like the Others »» Offer Every Inducement and Solicit Everything in
Sight—Trade. Deposits, and Kind Words, and Everything Else That s Good.
CITY NATIONAL BANK.
OR H Paso, Texas.
U. 8. DEPOSITORY.
Capital, Surplus aod Profits $170,000
OFFICERS*>140 DIRECTORS:
U. B. Btewart, President.
A. G Andreas, Ylce-PreeMent
Frank Powers. <
E. Kohl berg.
J. F. Williams, ceahler.
B. Blumenthsl.
U. J. Blmmone.
J. M. May.
BSgttBSS&IBXKSg&SggB^^
DIRECTORS:
J. H. Nations, Pres. Crawford Harvle. J. M. Goggln, Vice Pres.
John T. McElroy, V. Pree. W. fc. Anderson. W. L. Tooley, Cash.
NATIONAL BANK OF COMMERCE
EL PASO, TEXAS. CAPITAL STOCK *200,000
Promptness, Safety and Careful Attention to the Want* ot Onr Cus-
tomers Is the Policy of This Bank.
SassaaMRiaaeaaBssaaagaaaaggaaigsaaaaa^^
Unswell.
St. Isouis ...
St. Paul .. ..
.Salt Luke
San FranciRuo
Santa Fp ...
ShrevepMvt
Spokane......
Vonppah ... .
Washington. ,.
WilWtoiT..!. ..
Vhlmlnfcton ..
Winnemucoa ,
YnmftYunui ...
Min.
.. .r*
Max.
51
Wind.
4
Preo.
.60
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6
C. R. MOREHEAD, President C. N. BASSETT, Vice President *
JOSEPH MAGOFFIN. V. Praa GEO. D. FLORY, Cashier. »
L. J. GILCHRIST, Ass't Cashier. 8
STATE NATIONAL BANK I
ESTABLISHED APRIL, 1881. J
CAPITAL, SURPLUS AND PROFITS. *175,000.
A Legitimate Banking Buelness Transacted in All Its Branches.
HIGHEST PRICE PAID FOR MEXICAN MONEY.
For Health and Recreation
as well as an unsurpassed climate, there la no health resort on the
continent equal to the fa me us
SANTA ROSALIA HOT SPRINGS
First-class accommodations In every department of the Hotel service.
Ratee to suit all visitors.
The waters are recommended by the moat renowned Physicians ot
many different countries as being the best mineral water on the
globe for both bathing and drinking purposes for the cure of all
chronic diseases. First-class American physician In the Hotel.
Address,
Norman E. Galentine, Prop.
Santa Rosalia, State of Chihuahua, Mexico.
<*>
I
NUKOTE AND JAP-A LAC.
The modern finish for home use. The easiest and cheapest helps
to home efforts at keeping furniture, floors ami woodwork In the
best order.
Gallons, halves, quarts aud smaller sizes.
I
vCMKtKmMHAMk
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El Paso Morning Times (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. 29, Ed. 1 Friday, November 19, 1909, newspaper, November 19, 1909; El Paso, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth583107/m1/4/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.