El Paso Sunday Times. (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. 24, Ed. 1 Sunday, February 21, 1904 Page: 8 of 12
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I
HOUCK & DIETER CO.
I
[1 NCOTtPORATED)
PHONE 65
220 El Paso Street
We Represent the following Firms:
(i. [J. Mumni & Co. “Extrn l)ry.M
Mot't & Cbaiidoti, “While.
Wm. *). J**nip Brg. <'»»., "KaLUfT
Pniwt Brtr. (t)., ’“Hint' Ribhoii/’
,1»>1» M tX'war & Hohn, “Scotch Wi i^koy. ”
Uali iii 8wl*» Colony, “Cilifornia WIimm.’
Kvati*l»* l>ti|M»nt Ac Co., “Hfcwh \Vh»»
Di inhnn! Ac Co., “(forttiftn Wiow.
And the Following Whiskies Bottled in Bond:
Cedar-Brook, In^lepidt*, OU Crow , Hertnil*^, w,»m Clay ar.d othe rs.
A\no Hunter Bye. Wiltoit Rye. and Hefiilt! Kjr-
CLRANLINESS
run! HEAT
AOK COM81NKD IV
Geronimo Coal
Santa Fc Fuel Co.
Solv* Agents.
Tltimt S«a. ,*
W. G. WALZ CO
COITKII
i ready rank high sad are destined to
’ tank tiuirii higher among the big and
• profitable clipper mines of the country.
Michigan nil I show a substantial in-
crease i» 1904. though not so large a
gain a* In 190S, and will Increase pro-
i-ductfon rather more slowly for several
years to come
California Is not coming to the front
as a copper producer as rapidly as was
' anticipated , would be the case a few
| years ago The Mountain remains the
only brg mine In the state, with the
Bully Hill a good small mine. Several
__other smaller producers an- scattered
■■■BW throughout tin state The principal
" -—■ " .......................... production continues to come from
»i..... i Shasta county, though a little copper is
i )r> I PiLUt M r..\ I M-cured from a score or more of differ-
i«tit ciwntle*. and copper ore* are
- ; found in nearly every county in the
KHTA Iti.lHKKJi Wt
101 EL PASO STBEiT.
The
Oldest Music Store.
THE
LARGEST
STOCK
-OF-
The Best Pianos
to Select From at
■ Most Reasonable
I Prices in *
I EL (PASO, TEXAS,
ana
SHORT SKETCH OF IMPORTANT^ ^ m,de , inb-taBtta, Raln in
SOUTHWESTERN INDUSTRY. production during 1903. and thexfuture
______ of the Industry in that state In no long-
er subject to doubt. Tlie gold and all-
Col. Otto Wahrmund of San Antonio Vl'r '*b<*» carried with the Copper aid
w,o n.,w n,.h M..;.. , greatly In making profitable mines. In
W," Buy Rich Mexico Mmr.-A r v- tht. Majestic .a promts-
Novel Mining Exhibit at World > jn). mine, has become ensnared In litI-
Fair—General Mining Note* of the Ration and financial difficulties. The
Southwest. * Beaver county district is. upon its face.
i one of the most promising of the nil-
-- ; developed fields of'the country, and
will probably become Important In
(Written for Ores and Metals by Hot- ,|mc Nearly every county In Utah
an .1. Stevens I has copper ores, and mining develop-
Copper or. In place occurs in more ment la under way on a small scale
than forty of Hu- fifty stales and ter-!
ritorles of the rod ted Slates In many;
| of I he states t hese ores are of g.-olag ,
M Interest rather
side of Salt Imkt- and lU-aver counties.
Texan Buys Mexican Mines.
.>,.„ n.inmerelal Colonel Otto Wahrmund of San An-
. .. . ", ‘ totrio, Texas, with Mrs. Wahrmund
i important - Al-atid-m >t c i-i-r mine* aa(, ^ chPi,tw w*hrm..nd, and
are found In Maine and (VnnecHcUt,! former State Senator Then. Koehler,
and a little development work - no* Nf,w York, are at the Reforma ho-
'“-tug don. in Mie-- i.'lm- " ,v mine .,,| ,or , „my of several days. Col.
i is lining operated in V, . i. -on tlie | Wahrmund Is here as the president of
!'’' stern extern- on of the K. w.--nawan the jlmulco Mining company for the
tiellnal. which carries ’f. e'.j.rili-r pnrisise of completing the legal for-
"||“ “I' d i oi the Michigan district.; malitles confirming a large concession
Tin extrem-' W’ - tern end of this belt ; „f additional territory granted to the
>: noted in ri-.riln i o rn .Minnesota, j great copper company by the original
|('upper ..n- iiav. been found in Okia ,jwn,.r of the properties, Amador Car-
b una and n-nral a't.-mpt* at copper denas. The final papers for the addl-
| mining have In.-eii made in I. xa», at .ional grant have been completed. Re-
' least .me enterprise of this nature j |y great Improvements have been
, being In process oi development at ma,i„ the company's properties,
the eprsent time. ,
Alaska lias furnished some marvel-
ous, and It Is to la? feared, not overly
NEWMAN-AIISTIN INVESTMENT CO.
W. II. AUSTIN/Manager
I . S NEW M W
G. T MW MAN
<i. M. NEWMAN
Real Estate, Fire Insurance, Cattle
We an- agent* for tin- Highland Park Addition. lads from
$•">0,011 to rjfi.ou—-Jlu down ami f.j per mouth. No Interest.
No Tuxes.
•Phone 550
Office 219 San Antonio Street
which are luc licit within eight miles
of .llinnko station on the Mexican
Central railway.
A railroad line leading from the
camps to the Mexican Central's tracks
at Jlmulco Is being constructed. The
scarcity of water, which lias been a
difficulty In the development of that
region, is being removed by the lay-
UR. NG CHE IIOK
/
CURES
’•ti n and Women’*
All fe-
rn u I* «*om |» 1 st i nio
skillfully relieved
and i n h t u n 11 y
ciirod* Cou glitt, H
chronic Rtomacb
trouble, TN’eiikueHH
und general debility
at once. Heart din*
« i*e*. liver, kidney
wild hladdf^r trouble
iimtHiitly cured.
; veraeioua tale«. of inimfDKe copper de-
j iKwUn. during the last fe*y veern That
; ib*‘ clftiins of clipper in Alaska have a
did basis of fact in some iriHtaucos
II | i ' being i»nm*n by the develtipnient of
All rheunmtiMin and blood poison
eradicated immediately. Cancer cured
without a knife. Hours 9 to 8; Sundays
to to 4. 317 Teian Htrt*et.
RANCH SALOON
AND
CAFE
212 213 El Paso Street
lAitnp’s Spccinl Brew of
Boer a Specialty
Pale
First-Class Cafe
Private Dining Rooms tip stairs.
Merchants hot lunch daily from
11 to 2 o’clock.
Short orders at all hours, day
anil night.
J. A. HALSTEAD, Proprietor
promising mines it long the const, gov-
cral hi Hu-.sc will become producer*
hortly. mid will start production un-
11■ i" favorable circumstance*. There
are also copper measures In the Inte-
rior of Alaska that will doubtless make
jgood mines In time, though as yet so
1 difficult of acre#- that they can hardly
I u regardcil a* more than poasllillltles
for some years to come.
A brief summary of precent condl-
11*uis and future prosiu-cl* in the prim
| I pal copper ficiil* of the country is ap-
propriate. The vast size of the subject
•iiid the limited space at command
compel close compression of statement,
and mention of only the features of
greatest importance.
Montanu remains the heaviest pro-
ducer of any copper field of the Puitod
Hl.ates, or of tlie world, l.ltlgation
hamp-'i development with no prog-
peel of an earl y wri t lenient. The An-
jr.cotida |* no longer the rieli mine of
yore, but the Boston olid Montana Is
a worthy siiecessor. -The principal
now development under way is the
mine null smelter of the Pittsburg
and Montana, the latter planned oh a
new system, soon to lie given trial.
(Various copper fields outside of the
Butte district report renewed activity.
Michigan has mad.- a notable In-
crease In production of upwards of 28.-
(KiO.OOO pounds in a single year—much
the greatest ever secured. The old
mines show little or no increase, with
the exception of the Wolverine, the
added copper coming mainly from the
Baltic, Trlmountain, Champion and
Mohawk mines — four properties
born In the boom of 1390, that al
lug of a pipe line from the perpetual
| springs bicated at the foot of the
j mountains directly to the mines. A
j deposit of silver and gold, sufficient
to pay tiie running expenses of the
entire company, lias been found on the
company's premises and la being util-
ized.
The last year and a half has seen a
remarkable development of this dis-
trict, under the management of Pres-
ident Wahrmund, the dividend paid to
stockholders for 190.I being 35 tier cent
on a capital stock (of $500,(MfO. Senator
Koehler, who Is a stockholder in the
Jiimileo company/ is the proprietor ot
tlie New York School of Accounts,
where Chester Wahrmund Is now a
student preparing to take charge ol
the financial ami accountant affairs of
hs father's largo enterprises, includ-
ing the San Antonio Brewing associa-
tion, several mining companies other
than the Jlmulco company, and the
great Sulphur Spring* sanitarium in
Texas. The New York school is the
uuly technical school for accountants
in tlie states, and confers upon grad-
uates the degree of certifled public ac-
countant. through the University or
New York. Mr. Koehler will Install
ills special system of accounting in the
offices of the Jlmulco company before
Ids return to New York. The past
week has been spent by the party in
an inspection of the mines at Jlmulco.
—Mexican Herald.
A Novel Exhibit.
A Hwri t manner of blending colors
in copper that has been carefully
guarded ever since Plzarro conquered
Peru and Cortex triumphed over the
Aztecs in Mexico, will be Illustrated
but not revealed in an unique exhibit
in the Mining Gulch at the world’s
fair The exhibit is made under the
auspices of the Mexican government
and is designed lo show the ancient
alongside tin- modem methods of min-
ing and smelting.
•r
Santa Rosalia HotM *£4,.
The Hoi Springs of
the Southwest.
Tb« most desirable Winter
continent. High, dry, and
shine. All outside rooms sa-
bring in the oountiv.
f
d
this
itenor! on
lenty of
rates ehea^ as
Address NORMAN E. CA^ENTINE, Proprietor,
Grand Hotel de la Cueva, SantafRosalla, Chihuahua, Mexico.
DU. G. B. CALNAN,
Besident Physician.
Sulphur Water Cures-
Best on Earth.
••••••••••••$••••••$
• MYSELF CURED •
Jl will gladly Jnform an: one (uktii’UiT to J
2 COCAINE, MORPHINE J
• OPIUM or LAUDANUM Z
m of » rwjvt'r-fiiilinjf Ifttrmloss Home Cure Z
MRS. M. &: BALDWIN.
• P. O. Box 1212. T Chicago, MllnoH. •
••••••••••••••••••••
THE WIGWAM
Finest oi Wines, Liquor* tad Cigar* Alwtyt on Hand.
Conveniently Located and Up-to-Dwte In Every Respect.
rite mine that 1* to be created on
the world's fair grounds is the Carrlzo
mine, situated on t.he west coast of
Mexico in the state of Jalisco. While
It has been operated by the natives for
centuries, It wa* not discovered by
Americans until 1845; when an explor-
er named Blake acquired a proprie-
tary interest in It. Such was the rich-
ness of the mine that It yielded him
a fortune even wrfen operated by the
native* in their primitive way.
A year or two ago Kent E, Keller, a
young and hustling newspaper man
from southern Illinois, toured Mexico
and saw this mine, lie determined to
possess it. He organized a company
and has worked it to the present time.
Now the stock has been increased anil
the output of the mine will be In-
creased a hundred fold.
Tlie Mexican afivernment would not
permit the reproduction of the mine at
8t. Louis unless Mr. Keller would
agree -to show his working model il-
lustrating how the mine Is to be man-
ned In the future. He readily con-
sented to this so that visitors may see
the modern method alongside the man-
ner tn vogue since the earliest ages.
Another Fakir Discovered.
A dispatch from Indianapolis, Ind.,
says;
W. E. Mosher, who Is said to have
a confederate in Toledo, Ohio. Is held
it the police Htation here to answer to
iho charge of obtaining money under
false preteusos and using the mails
for fraudulent purpose*.
Mosher's scheme Is said by the de-
tectives to be to offer employment a*
motormen and conductors lo men
who take stock In the proposed Clove-
jland,, Columbus and Cincinnati Trac-
tion company of mioenlx, Ariz. He
explains that the word “Phoenix” is
used because the company is incor-
porated under the laws of Arizona for
»15,000,000.
Mosher came here recently and es-
tablished an office He advertised the
proposed road extensively. All appli-
cant* who called were asked to take a
share of stock on the condition that
they were to be given employment
when the road was in operation which
would be in about a month. Shares
were held at $10 each and stubs found
in Mosher’s office showed ttiat he liad
collected money from several Hundred
men.
A man named Musgravc thought so
well of the schem-- that he considered
selling a forty-acre farm in Illinois
and Investing the proceeds in Mosher’s
company. Before the deal was con-
cluded he consulted the police. The
investigation which followed resulted
in the arrest of Mosher.
Value of Copper,
glance at th-- figures will show
the value of The copper mines of the
Sir output exceeding that
country. The!
ff in
Output exceeding
of golff in value by nearly $15,000,000.
As dividend payers It has long been
recognized that some of the big cop-
per properties arc without equals, it
lakes more capital and time to put, a
big copper producer in the dividend
list in many casus marvelous returns.
A* to the future of copper, the lead-
ing authorities declare that there is
little ground for anything but good
expectations if the metal can be pro-
duced at a reasonable cost. Demand
keeps pace with this supply and new
discoveries not more than outweigh
new uses for the red metal. The
growth In the uses of copper In the
last few years has scarcely found
parallel In any industry, due largely
to the fact that it Is an age of elec-
tricity.—North American Miner.
Perfect Confidence In Chamberlain's
Cough Remedy.
Where there used to be a feeling
of uneasiness ami worry in the house-
hold when a child showed symptoms
of croup, there is now perfect confi-
dence. This is owing to the uniform
success of Chamberlain's Cough Rem-
edy in the treatment of that dispute.
Mrs. M. 1. Sanford of Poolesvllle. yi-.i
In.speaking of her experience in Inc
use of that remedy says; “I have a
world of confidence In Chamberlain's
Cough Itomqdy for l have used It with
perfect success. My child Garland is
subject to severo attacks of croup and
it always gives him prompt relief.''
For rale by All druggists.
For satisfactory watch repairing and
reasonable prices try Snyder,-Jeweler
and Optician, lied Cross Pharmacy.
Duck Shooting as fine Jlrt in Sport
WVNAMWMWWWWVWN*
(San Antonio Express.)
It lias been n tong time since the
sportsmen of Ban Antonio have had
such an excel leu1 season at duck
shooting near at home as they enjoy-
ed this winter.
The Inkes and the pasture tanks in
Bexar caunty hax • abounded in fowl
and the splendid mason in all lines of
game this past winter has awakened a
new interest In the exciting realm of
tills class of outqi or sport.
Among the thousands who regard
the shotgun as tb- ir chief instrument
of recreative anntr- ment may be found
many who count i in; jacksnlpe as the
most difficult of all game birds to
strike down upon Hie wing; equally
large is the numb't who fancy lor all
around difficult}, the ruffled grouse.
Some gunners declare the quail an in-
soluble puzzle to them, and others
yield tiie palm ly tho erratic, dodging
woodcock, but the mass of tlie scat-
tergun public, tin rank and file of the
“por1 small army, with one voice ac-
claim duck shooting tin- moat difficult
am) the most fascinating of all small
game hunting.
With the jacksnlpe, the problem is
solved as Siam as the bird is struck;
men experience.! in shooting these
corkscrew gentry experience no diffi-
culty in scoring kills witli consider-
able regularity. The ruffed grouse
is usually shot in thick cover at close
range; a cylinder-bored and a quick
hand ou the trigger arc his nemesis.
Quail are generally in range when
llushed, and present no great difficul-
ties except in heavy cover, river bot-
toms or the like.. The woodcock is
0 easy to till and kill that he does
not siand half a chance before a snap-
shot ami bni.-h gun. for lie is gener-
ally killed im;idq 100 feet. But duck
shooting no man can declare easy,
no matti : how proficient years of prac-
tice have mad- him.
Densely leathered, wild, and seldom
foolish, tin- various kinds of waterfowl,
especially tin- larger ducks, afford to
the pastnuu ter of gunnery a chance to
exercise his skill that is not afforded
by any ot the inland birds. Ducks
usually keep farther away than other
game; IIy faster, and are possessed of
1 great dial more vitality. They test
the value of a (owllng piece to tlie ut-
most; it must not only shoot close
enough to lilt them at considerable
distance, lint Vest also deliver Jin' pel-
lets with tho great force essential to
clean killing.
Ducks ari shot at greater distances
than any other fowl, so, given a good
gut) and proper ammunition, the kill-
ing of them -comes a very pretty
field for the exhibition of judgment.
A good gunner must know at a glance
how far he can hit a bird hard enough
to kll/it with any chance of regularity.
It is the Inexperienced man, who alter
making a sera:oh long kill, continues
banging awav at bird* out of range in
;u
I
hope of ibiplieitlng It. Tho expert*
know fifty yard* is a good long shot,
and that luck ,-nters largely into re-
sults over that distance.
Successful dock shooting i* mtich
more a matter of accurately Judging
distance than most men suppose. Ob-
viously the mu' calculation that
would plaster a bird with shot at
thirty-live yards would fail by many
feet to reach it at nlxty. Shot falls
slightly ami !e,p* greatly in m j petty
after the tom yard, mark is passed.
It Is an unde -undine of these facts;
an appreciation of the difference wind
makes in the course of shot, and a
realization of tho relative speeds of
load ami birds that makes one man
a better duck hot than another. The
crack deck shot knows when birds are
in range, takes long chancer, only when
he hss to amt then allows for drop
of shot, give the ten or twelve-foot
lead tferesaary—in fact, makes his
calculation as does the rtllcnmn. in-
stead of letting chance play the game
for him.
The Hri;t thing a beginner does is to
shoot squarely at duck*—and miss
them Event illy he learns that he
must lead the -irds far. and somebody
tells him two et la about the average
allowance m-eessaty. That figure Is
stamped. In h)s memory, and he be-
gins killing fairly Well at forty yard*.
The close bird* he shoots ahead of and
the long stie?* he does not lead
enough. Nothing but experience will
ever tench the trick. Not until a man
gets past hat itg “duck fever” every
time white wings whizz through hl>
decoys can he expect to become a cool-
headed good duck shot. Excitement
and calculation do not run in tho same
race, and no man can make long shots
consistently without doing a great deal
of mechanical figuring over them.
The infinite variety of duck shoot-
ing; the rarity with which two shots
identical witli each other, occur con-
secutively: tho differences in dis-
tance, speed of birds, weight of wind,
and a thouonnd and one other con
ditions Influencing marksmanship have
placed the sport open it", present high
plane.
Tho higher art of d ick shooting,
which enables the expert to break a
sprig's wing seventy yards overhead
with liis best barrel, and then kill the
bird with the other lu niid-air as It
falls fluttering to the water, is not a
tiling that can be taught except by
practice. Many a man does not know
as his birds (all whether they are
dead or crippled; some of those who
do cannot solve the difficulties of the
swlltly descending mark.
In close shooting at ducks, which
is a rarity, Indeed, men sometimes
overlead: but at average or extreme
distances the tendency Is the other
way. A poorly-fitting gun, if too
straight sometimes causes overshoot-
ing; if the stock is bent too much Iho
shot often passes beneath tho birds.
As duck shooting is done at consid-
erable range, many have advised using
a straightor stock than at upland
game. This la nonsense. A gun should
fit like a dress suit; it is the marks-
man’s business to make all necessary
allowances in pointing it.
One of the most essential aids to
successful duck killing in tho ability
to fire while, tlie gun is on the swing.
All the best shots follow their bird just
long enough to get his line of (light,
smartly bring tho gun up from be-
hind ntid draw trigger us It passed the
hill, pulling quickly fer a close shot,
and lingering on the pull In proportion
to the distance. Some always draw
trigger alike, but get tliqir allowance
by swinging ahead in proportion to
Hie speed of flight before starting
the death message.
There Is much Individuality In the
methods of successful shooters; so
much tlial it is hard to lay down a
general rule, but tho best always shoot
with the gun on Hie swing.
Incomers are birds that puzzle many
good marksmen. The reason is simple;
Hie birds are likely to he shot over, es-
pecially when coming In to decoys. It
is a good rule to always see the bird
above the gun barrels if coming in on
a line, and to pull as soon as the muz-
zle covers his breast on the incoming
overhead shot. High Incomers are, to
use a HlberniclMu, best shot going
away, as the charge enters their leath-
ers with more certainty. Tho swlftly-
doKcendtng duck, whistling down on
set wings, always offers a hard shot,
and must be fired at well under In
order to score a kill, either going or
coming.
High cross shots require extreme
lead, and sometimes holding ovor if
tlie distance he groat. Birds flying
thus are usually traveling at great
speed. A long, low cross shot, over the
water is extremely difficult for some
gunner*) the shot usually passing
underneath tho bird. A well known
local expert whose regularity in scor-
ing on this chance has caused much
comment in tho chib with which lie
shoots, recommends swinging the gun
rapidly, and with an upward incllnn
tiou as It passes the bird's 1*111; tho
xvatcr plainly shows Iho reason of th-.
miss if there is one. Blitebllls, canvas-
backs and other doop-wator fowl con-
stantiv present this shot.
In shooting teal and Urge ducks in-
dihcrimluatcily. the slower .fowl nre
often missed most ridiculously by gun-
ners after maybe stringing along three
or four consecutive doubles on the art-
ful little dodgers. Springs and widg-
eons, particularly, in sailing over a
pood preparatory to lighting often
_ a.. 1_ Iu.).nltnn fnoi Did n !hDV
seem to be traveling faster than they
really are, though considerable allow-
ance is necessary to hit them in the
middle. ............ •
One great advantage In liberally
leading birds Is the tendency to hit
them in the head and neck, causing
Immediately fatal wounds. Most of
the birds which sail off and settle dead
W*)WWWWWWVWWWVWVVWVWWVWWVVW^VWVI)VVW
Head Lettuce
Large, tender and crisp.
EVERY DAY
ALL DAY.
5 cents a head.
I
WATSON’S GROCERY
a
4
Corner Stanton and San Antonio Sts.
PHONE 151
W*M*^W^^WIWAIWWVWW*AMIWWWI*****WMWWWX
maylie half a mile away are tho vic-
tims of a poorly-directed Bhot which
crashed Into their bodies too far back,
cutting some small blood vessel.
In general it may safely bo said
three ducks are missed by underload-
ing, even in these days of lightning-
quick powders, to one which is over
led. Men changing from a slower to
a quicker load sometimes overdo the
leading for awhile, but a good shot
usually knows why he has missed and
corrects the fault another time.
Few sights attract more attention
oven to non-sportsmen than the casual
glimpse of a duck marsh upon which
one or two good shots are “hitting ’em
in the middle" and doubling tip their
birds stone dead at fifty or even sixty-
yard range,with fair regularity. The
hand which has once closed around
a breech-loader's stock always aches
to try just one more whack at the fast
fliers as its owner sits awhile on tlie
nearest observing poirtt, and rekindles
enthusiasm of old times.
WARION HIGH CHURCH.
sm of
(Riot
'orl\ 1
thelfl;
, ha?
New Yorll Feb. 20.—Rev. R. C. Fill-
ingham, thelflglitiiig vicar” of Hexton,
England, haT returned to make life a
burden for Bishop Potter. He caused
something of a sensation in this city
a few months ago by attacking ritual-
ism in tho Protestant Episcopal
church. At that time Mr, Filllnghani
threatened to denounce the service
in one of the ritualistic churches in
this city, and wrote a letter to Bishop
Potter demanding that he stop such
services. He said today:
MYAR OPERA HOUSE
FIVE NIGHTS, COMMENCING
Tuesday, Feb. 23
SPECIAL ENGAGEMENT OF
ANNA EVA FAY
...IN..
“Somnolency”
A positive sensation, upfolding the
mysteries of the miiidf supported by
a Clever Company.
POPULAR PRI0ES25c/35c, 50c
Matinee ThursdajfZandlSaturdajf,
Exclusively for Ladies. All Seats
25 cents.
FREE—On Tuesday evening one
lady will be admitted free ou every
paid fiUe ticket.
Scats on Sale at Tatter & White's Saturday, fell 20
> i
A more drawing-room bishop—a social
Sadducee, who only has tlie ritual in
his church because it Is fashionable.
I shall write an open letter to Bishop
Potter, telling him just what I think
of liira and his idolatrous practices.
Yes. sir. idolatrous is tlie very word
for it. and my war cry will be 'idol-
atry.' ”
Homes on Easy Terms
r;
145 LOTS
IN EAST
EL PASO
Fronting on Alameda Avenue and Frutns
Avenue, within one block of electric cars and
5 cents fare to any part of the city.
All of these lots will be sold for SMALL
CASH PAYMENT and EASY TERMS.
$10 Cash, $10 Per Month, Will
make liberal discounts for cash.
APPLY TO
B. E. HAMMETT REALTY CO.
i
“1 am here again to take up the
fight against .priestcraft, which is sap-
ping the manhood of our Anglo-Saxon
race. The Church of England service,
aB practiced in tlie so-called high
church by Bishop Potter and ills
underlings, is an abomination' In the
sight of the Ixirii. It has got to he
nothing more nor less than a slavish
Imitation of the Roman Catholic serv-
ice. That, at least, has tHe merit of
being sincere; but this imitation of
it, which Is served up in so-called
Protestant churches, reeks of cant
and hypocrisy. They are making
for themselves Idols of brass and
stone, and are following after strange
gods. All ‘ true Protestants should
unite against this evil. Let them be-
come Protestants in very truth and
cry out against this insidious priest-
craft which is ruining our people.”
“But Bishop P»tter—" ventured tt
listener.
I
"Don’t talk of Bishop Potter to me,”
cried Dr. FtlHngham excitedly, “don't
quote any of his views. What Is he?
IF YOU DEINK
WHISKY
TRY TIIE
ACME SALOON.
“Only the Very Best.”
225 San Antnaia St. JOHN KRICE, Prop.
GEORGE ROLLER
Dealer in Fruit, Shade and Orna-
mental Trees of all kinds; also
Onion Setts. Especially low fig-
ures on large lots. Rambler Rose
2 years old, 33 cents each.
Write lor Prices or C«II.
Corner Leon and Sonora Streets.
NAPOLEON J. ROY
Our Woolens are the finest, n full line of fancy vestings and
novelty suitings. Everything used in • fashionable tailoring
can be fountain our2st«re.
WE TAKE PLEASURE l\ SHOWING GOODS
NAPOLEON J. ROY,
-MERCHANT TAILOR-
102 El Paso Street El Paso, Texas
mM
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El Paso Sunday Times. (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. 24, Ed. 1 Sunday, February 21, 1904, newspaper, February 21, 1904; El Paso, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth595791/m1/8/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.