El Paso Sunday Times. (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. 24, Ed. 1 Sunday, February 7, 1904 Page: 4 of 12
twelve pages : ill. ; page 22 x 17 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
4
EL PASO MORNING TIMES. SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1904
EL PASO TIMES
Printed B'vry Day In the Yenr
BV THE TIMES PUBLISHING COMPANY.
lent on the street to the effect that
the chief hart said bunco men were
a "good thing for a town.” A re-
porter of the paper referred to called
on him for his version of the affair
ami this is what he is reported as
saying:
“I'll tell yon just what I said, and.
if you will quote me just as I said
it, I don't think there is any one who
will make any objection.
"There was a crowd standing in
Judge Spencer’s cigar store and we
were discussing the bunco question.
I said, financially speaking: ‘I do
not. think that the bunco man is a
bad thing for the town. He never
tries to work anybody who lives In
the city, for he knows that that
would never do, for there would be
i too much of a row, but he catches
i a man who Is transient and who prob-
i ably would not spend bis money here.
I if iie did not fail in with a bunco
! man.’
j "What i meant to say was that the
bunco men got the money in circula-
lion which would perhaps be taken
out ot the town if the Bunco man did
■not get it Of course I did not say
'that I sanctioned gambling, I do not.
j l never gamble or touch a card nor
! do I approve of it. i was merely di«-
_ - - —— — j cussing the bunco man from a sort !
I'l’nt/K'ATION' 0KKHK of a philosophical standpoint."
TUIt:s UtTLlilxo.Ki:: SOUTH OKBOO.v ST. There Is nothing subtle or uneer-
______ ___________________tain about this. It is a plain, straight-
OFFICIAL PA PUR OF THE COUNTY. ! f,,r'var'1 argument In favor of the
, bunco man as an agency through
OFFICIAL PAPl R OF THE CITY, j which to secure money which would
___ 'fdherwise lie taken away from the
I town In which lie flourishes. It. is
! commercialism of a type so daring
j and so startling and withal at such
| variance with correct views as to
) give one cause to wonder what tho
An Indiana inventor will send Presi-
dent Roosevelt a bulletproof vest to
wear. The president would rather
have a vest to protect his presidential
bom.
The Chicago saloons must close al
12 o'clock every night, and It is a very
good law, as it forces the man who
is on a spree to go home.
It is not. at all likely that the people
and press of the country will condemn
the state of Texas because a police-
officer in one town gave a very foolish
Interview to a newspaper 'reporter.
placed with the manufacturer for a
fertilizer containing just the amount
of each required.
To supply these wants the company
draws from every quarter of the globe.
Nitre is brought from Peru, tankage
_. , .. ...... from Swift & Co. of Kansas City, and
The large audience that is already aiso from Alaska IK)tagh /rom 8(rasfi.
assured for the Andrews Opera com-, forth, Germany, gypsum from Acton,
pany Sunday and Monday nights will
is; treated to one <5f the most delight-
ful entertainments ever held in this
city. Mr. Andrews is supported by
artists and singers of international
reputation. The new comedy, “Birds
of a Feather,” is said to be excruciat-
lime from Soledad Canon, bones from
wherever they can get them and guano
from Arizona, New Mexico, Texas,
Northern Mexico and the islands off
the Mexican coast, principal of which
is Cedros.
, , , .... _ , , . . It is the collection of this guano that
ingly funny while the musical features u of unusuai interest. In the tend-
are the best ever rendered by this well j tories named there are along the
known organization Seats on sale streams hundreds of caves of greater
Japan -should bear In mind that the
fellow Who gets in the first good blow
and follows It. up with enthusiasm
generally wins the fight. Dewey's
first blow at Manila put Spain out of
the scrap.
at Potter & White's,
and $1.00.
Prices 50c, 7oc
SUBSCRIPTION rates.
By Mail In Advance.
** j'frtr ...
i iftfiiif hfe.
i next, step will bo.
'**' ! There may he other peace officers
one you’ •
By Carrier.
I'fliU i
rnouth................ GT>
m futo n^tiivH tlioii paper ro^u
. hut to rjifUty tlm IjusiauKH offlf u to
fi'ii who entertain the same opinions as
2 ou 11h«- K! Paso chief, hut they appar-
ently do not care to court, publicity,
since, so far as the observations of
Hie Record have extended, he is tin-
only man who tins given voice to
such advanced—to say the least of
them—views.
151 Paso is a city of the west rather
t!i;ui of the 'south, and the conditions
which exist there exist in no other
city in this slate. Yet the whole
state must hear the stigma which
will Inevitably, be cast on ns as a
remit of an expression of this kind.
Papers in New York and other north-
THE times, ei. paso, Texas. !0|,,j eastern cities will seek to
—................t— make It appear that the state of af-
faire reflected by the remarkable
statement quoted above are general In
Texas. The effect of fake stories . . . ,. , ..
like that of the celebrated Philip for the hem on » tablecloth un-
iivp -tortp'tt *t-.iv!* ttsh iu fall in< rbanty
uni sintt! HuntiJ Ly money draft or rntiK-
Atldrntk 0II commitment tonh to
j’oNloflipo M K1 IV‘0. Tex ha,
titid in nil iiifilior
7i:t.EW10NfiS
Business Gfliet .............2(1—2 ring
lotitoriu; Rooms.............20 11 ring:
“In Convict Stripes.
Frank B. Harris, the advance man
for B. C. Whitney’s scenic production,
"In Convict Stripes," is in town, at
. the Orondorff. -preparing for the ad-
Slgnor Ferrlani has constructed a J Vent of his attraction at Myar opera
scale showing the varying degrees In i house next Sunday, February 14th.
which professional Jealdusy exists in! /‘{» Collet Stripes" gives promise
1 ' ' iof being one of Major Rogers chief
different professions. The lowest: melodramatic offerings of the season,
place in this scale is assigned to nrehi- ; Hal Reid, who wrote "Knobs
loots; next above them come clergy- OTennossee.” is the author, ahd B. C.
men. advocates and military officer * ■ i r„.trolt opera house, and controls a
then follow. In order from below up- dozen road companies, is the exploit-
ward, professors of science and litera-
ture, journalists, authors, doctors and
actors.
If the weather bureau were in the
hands of a private corporation,
wouldn’t It furnish better weather?
Public ownership of the weather is a
rank failure.—St. Louis Globe-Demo-
oral.
And all on account of republican
nmadmlnistration. There has been
a stringency of good weather since
Mr. Roosevelt took charge, Thanks
to theG.-D. for reminding us that this
over-production of strenuous weather
is another thing the country must
"view with alarm."
Of Interest To Women.
Brass on bedsteads should lie rubbed
every day with a soft cloth and when
discolored a little sweet oil rubbed in
thoroughly with a finishing polish by
chamois. Ordinary brass polish will
destroy the lacquer finish pul on to
prevent the brass from tarnishing.
One fourth of an Inch is the correct
SI s’ DA V, FEBRUARY 7. 31101
Hunts will pale Into insignificance
I when compared with the howl of de-
! light which will go up from that por-
jtion of the northern press whose
! geographical knowledge of Texas Is
ins limited as Its desire to do us jus-
tice and which is always on the look-
|out for opportunities to slander this
|state and make the world believe its
: people are barbarians. It would lie
viewing pmi enough could the knowledge of
the “philosophical" ideas of El Paso’s
chief of police lie confined to that
city. But It will not. be, and more’s
the pity.
Eventually we shall doubtless be
entertained with eulogies on the train
robber who places In circulation
money which might otherwise lie idle
in bunks and of the hold-up artist
who forces the olbsefisted citizen to
disgorge cast) he would otherwise
hoard. And from lHat on to the
wholesale robbery of banks and oth-
er concerns handling largs sums of
money would be but a step.—Fort
Worth Record.
The only conditions existing In El
Paso that do not exist iu no other
city of this state is the rapid and
wonderfully substantial growth of our
town The same class of lawlessness
exists iu Houston to the same extent
.that it exists In El Paso. The senli-
uieiits expressed by Chief Wool ton
though distorted and misconstrued
are. condemned by every official of
ARE FIGHTING PENNYPACKER.
In Pi iie vivania the republicans art
not Hu only ouch who tin
with alarm Governor Pemivpackcr's
well-laid plain In place himself ill the
head o) e supreme court of that
.- tap Democratic lawyers of Pennsyl-
vania . so abij protesting 'against Pen-
ny par her adiam-lng himself to ifie
supreme court bench.
The Philadelphia Ledger suys an
effort I being made to interest all
tho promiin at lawyers in the state in
,i movement to petition Gov Penny-
paeki r not In ye, |, the nomination for
supreme emut judge at the hands of
the ta public in convention in April,
and in the event of his persisting in
ills candidacy, to oppose him a I the
j III I If:.
Those Philadelphia members of the
liar who Mlttcd In a friendly letter to
the governor, urging him to hold his
u tn Inf it in to become a judge unlit his
term in the executive <hair e lull I have
expired, believe that ho will accept the
advice, if in- dm not it is the inijires- i. .... .
ling subject to misconstruction.
ion e| i'ii lawyers opposed to hi- .. . .
But the new kind ot commercial-
nominal ion that Senator Quay, as re
pui-’o an state loader, will Interfere, I
less the cloth is woven with a border
on four sides, when the hem should
then be turned to make tho distance
between the border and edge the same
as on the selvage edges
A rug that will save the cook a deal
of work Is made of several thicknesses
of newspaper covered with brown
paper and stitched near the edge, to
lay in front of sink or range on the
hardwood floor. When soiled, it Is
useful to kindle a tire with.
"The choice of hooks, like that of
friends, Is a serious duly," said Sir
John Lubbock. We are ns responsible
for what we read as for what we do.
Tho best books elevate us Into a re-
gion of disinterested thought, where
personal objects fade into insignifi-
cance, and the, troubles and the anxi-
eties of the world are almost forgot-
ten.
Cut glass or any crystal should he
washed In warm soapsuds, Vinsed in
warm water, then covered with clean,
coarse sawdust for ten minutes, after
which it should he lightly brushed
with a clean soft camel’s hair brush.
Avoid extremes of temperature in
handling glass, and under no circum-
stances allow cut glass to be put in
the refrigerator.
er. The organization closed a notable
week's engagement at the Grand op-
era house, Ia>s Angeles, last night.
Talking with a representative of
The Times last evening, Manager
Harris said:
“Instead of noise and bombast, Im-
probable situations and highly florid
language, as in the old days, we have
a play that Is quiet In tone with a
tender bit of heart interest, yet with-
al powerful and logical. The author
went to a quiet village in the south
for ills subject and around the doings
of a certain band of folks in that lo-
cality he has woven a drama of in-
tense strength. The hero is every
Inch a man among men. Ihe heroine
!h sweetly sympathetic, while the vil-
lian’s cowardly acts mark a limit of
dastardly criminality. The play
abounds in quaint Character sketches,
every line has literary merit and the
moral if pofhts is a strong one. The
great scene wherein a southern con-
vict. camp is shown is a vivid repro-
duction of such an institution and is
highly realistic. The players appear-
ing In thin production are all artists
of ability and the entire presentation
will show careful and generous treat-
ment. The climaxes disclose several
new and effective stage groupings and
no detail that contributes toward a
or less extent, but only a few were
the ancient, prehistoric home of the
bat family. Some of them, however,
contain a practically inexhaustible
supply of this most useful fertilizer.
At Lava station and San Marcial,
in New Mexico, on the Chicago Cattle
company's grant, there are caves
which furnish a steady supply of
guano of superior quality. Each car-
load is analyzed at the mill and aver-
age value of it, laid down, is about
$25 per ton. As the finished article is
worth from $25 to $50 a ton the rela-
tive value of the guano is readily seen.
These New Mexico caves are on the
border of the lava desert, to cross
which the Mexicans called El Jornado
del Mtierte, and a journey of death it
proved to many a traveler caught In
its wind storms with their blinding ac-
companiment of ashes and lava dust..
Near Uvalde, on the Frio river, in
Texas, are hundreds of caves, some
over a mile long, and In some of these
are great deposits of guano.
During the Civil war, nitre for the
manufacture of powder was extracted
from this guano, and remains of the
leaching tanks may yet be seen In the
neighborhood.
Later the right was bought, by nn
English company, which soon sank
$120,000 In the enterprise, due to the
mismarytgement or non-management
of My Lord, who drove out occasion-
ally in a carriage from his luxurious
office and Inspected the work in patent
leathers and kid gloves.
creek, a name chiefly noted as a
rendezvous for outlaws and cattle
thieves, 'is a cave possessing some pe-
culiar points of interest, its dimen-
sions are some two hundred feet
square and one hundred feet high.
The entrance is almost as regular as
masonry.
This deposit has been mined for two
years, yielding about one hundred
:'. , , ...... i tons a month. It is sacked and packed
smooth and finished performance is (o Morenc) thp shipping poi'nt. on
burros, thirty-six of which are regular-
lacking."
A WONDERFUL GUANO CAVE IN ;
WESTERN NEW MEXICO.
(1-os Angeles Herald.)
At the littlo station of Aurant. New
■ Mexico, just outside the eity_limits
on "the"Sourhem Pacific, is the center
ot' n" homely Industry, which yet em-
braces in its details a world of inter-
est. Its history Is wrapped up with
modern progress on the one hand, on
the other with the primitive condi-
tions of Ihe past.
Tills is the manufacture of fertil-
izer. to which in ever increasing ratio
the success of California's great
orange industry depends. For Its ef-
fect upon tho citrus crop, in size, color
and quality, is marvelous.
The older growers know this and
many of them arctlargel.v interested
in the enterprise itself. A new mill
was erected last season, having a
greatly Increased capacity over the
former one, which had been located
In the city proper. For four months
Typhoid Epidemic Decreasing.
Columbus, t)., Fell. I!.—Typhoid
fever here is decreasing steadily. The
total number of cases reported since
January I is 1.025, and the total
deaths 52.
I the present city administration as bo-
und in: , I on tin* governor withdraw-
ing to de-pel Hie antagonism tlpit
threaten:', to break ou't against the re
puiilb .ii : lute ticket IT his name
Should lie uu it
II i: }ji nl in lilt that the stale bur ns-
soriatlou will take a hand In the up
ism which the Fort Worth paper
would impute to .Chief Wootton is in
line with the Record’s idea of secur-
ing the Panama canal. It endorses
He employment of the thief and bun-
co artist to advance our commercial
ink rests across the Panama Isthmus.
by Indians who promised to take him
to vast deposit* of gold, he came up
from Mexii o, through what is now
known as the southwest and penetrat-
ed as far east as Fort Dodge. Kansas.
There la no doubt that the Indians
were taking him to I-ake Superior
but seeing before him yet an endless
expanse of waving grass, he engraved
a tablet to mark his journey's end and
turned back. This tablet of stone was
found in excavating for the fort at
Dodge City.
The Rio Grande river he described
as heavily wooded and the whole coun-
try of the iavi beds at that time was
a fertile plain.
There are everywhere evidences of
prehistoric peoples In this section also,
who mined anil carried on a high state
of agriculture, so that the country has
changed within comparatively recent
geologic time by great natural up-
heavals.
The cupply of guano from the is-
lands Is irregular, as It Is brought
oniy by Portuguese traders, who take
a cargo into Mexican ports and. fail-
ing to got. a return cacgo, run out to j
the inlands end load with guano.
Thus do sea and desert contribute |
from their poverty to the wealth and
fertility of our already fertile valleys, I
lVllfilling the saying that to those I
tl.at have shall he given and to those
that have not, shall be taken away.
DENIES CONSTITUTIONALITY.
Hcnt.
:rc uld
court heroT&day Judge Clancy denied j
the motion for a change or' venue j
under the law that was passed by the j
last legislature on the ground that, |
in the opinion of the court, the law |
is unconstitutional.
Mandamus proceedings will begin
immediately in the supreme court to
compel Judge Clancy to grant the
cluing ' of venue under the new law
that was passed by the last legisla-
ture.
TO FIX RESPONSIBILITY.
Special Grand Jury to Be Called to
Investigate Criminal Responsi-
bility for Iroquois Fire.
in Graham county, Ariz., on Eagle j- Chicago, Feb. 0.— Formal applica-
tion was made today by State Attor-
ney Dineen for a special grand jury
to investigate the Iroquois theater fire.
It t: planned by Dineen to make the
inquiry exhaustive and every effort
will lie made to fix the criminal re-
sponsibility for tho fire, if any exists.
Home industry—Geronimo Cigars.
All dealers.
ly employed. They make the trip
every day. carrying two sacks, each
weighing about a hundred pounds.
The trail up Devil’s gulch from
Eagle creek is an exceedingly steep
and difficult one and involves a hard
struggle for the patient little burros.
The guano of this cave at some re-
mote time has been burned and. shut
out from the air, has smoldered and
coked for years. The roof and walls
are coated heavily with soot and but
little of the disagreeable odor remains
that characterizes deposits of fresh
guano.
There are various ways of account-
ing for this burning, long before the
advent of man, one being spontaneous | case over to the district attorney,
combustion; hut by far the most likely I ,V]U) has promised to take whatever
theory is that it was ignited tn some action the facts warrant.
PADDED REGISTRATION.
Denver Investigation Shows that
There Are 4,000 Fraudulent
Names on Lists.
Denver, Feb. 5.—The council inves-
tigating committee which has been
probing the padding of the registra-
tion lists with over 4.000 names, is
meeting with much success in secur-
ing evidences of crooked work. The
committee is preparing its report, and
will have one more meeting before
submitting the result of its labors to
the council.
In tiie opinion of several commit-
teemen sufficient evidence nas already
been obtained to warrant turning the j hinder the prosecution of the respon-
sible parties, it is assured that tho
Purity in
Medicine
is necessary to get best
results in lighting dis-
ease.
There should be no
doubts .as to whether it
is right or not.
This drug store lias
the perfect confidence
< >f t h e p 1 i v sici an s ai ul t, 11 e
public who know our
methods.
They know that ev-
ery drug or medicine
from this store is cor-
rect in everyway, abso-
lutely fresh and the best
that money can purchase
and that they may feel
sure of the greatest
benefits from its use.
Prompt Free Delivery.
EL PASO DRUG CO.
‘Safest Place to Trade.’
113 EL PASO ST.
\nlcanie eruption, evidences of which
exist throughout the whole of the
southwest.
That mighty changes in the general
contour of the country have taken
place is evidenced by the description
of this same country by the Spanish
adventurer. Coronado, about three
of last season the sales averaged one i hundred years ago.
thousand dollars a day. j Coronado's narrative ha.s been prov-
The manufacture of this fertilizer is ; authentic in many points. Guided
a science. The grower analyzes bis |
soil and determines the constituents
necessary to he added to make it yield
the best results, and the order is
Chairman Lowry states that a plain
and direct report of the findings pf
the committee will he made to the
council, and that matters will not. he
minced in stating names and facts,
it is, hard to believe that even the
gang leaders in the council possess
sufficient nerve to shelve tho report
without recommending reference qf
tho matter to the district attorney,
but should the majority attempt to
League for Honest Elections, whose
attorney, L. W. Hoyt, has been aid-
ing in securing evidence, will push the
prosecution to a decisive end.
Attorney Hoyt has been busy for
the past week in prosecuting the cases
of ballot box stuffing before Judge
Johnson, but will be on hand at, tho
last meeting to propound questions
to important witnesses whom the com-
mittee desires to hear before complet-
ing the report.
When eastern editors get busy .vdli
poiition lo the tpiveriior’s candidacy, j Russia's lints of casualties Urine:
It Is lid ii- >:al for this organization I Kulnnlanaole will Ik* sidetracked,
to inject it self into political discus
skins, hut it is urged iliat the action |
It is coin to pebbles that every time
, ,i | Russia and Japan mix on Hie sea
ol the gio> ' nor in using his office to! . ‘
force hlffiM if upon Hie te nch Is uti
usual, and that it warrants the mem-
bers id the ii.- social ion, not to suggest
a candidate, but to oppose one whose
selection, they sa; will lower the dig
ii it y of the : npreme court, With the
bar oi the stale against his candidacy,
it is; believed that Gov l’ennypiiekei-
will weaken and eonsect to serve out
Ids term as chief magistrate of the
state.
Japan will got the decision.
Judge Hoggin lias taken judicial cog-
nizance of tiie fact that wlmt Presi-
dent Roosevelt does is not necessarily
fur the public good.
The indications arc that ail tiie
artifices of diplomacy have failed and
Japan and Russia Have appealed Hee.r
cause to the god of battle
if Mrs. Maybrick is to rush on to
(lie American stage or lecture plat-
form as soon as she gets out of Jail,
ONE KIND OF COMERCIALISM.
The r >od peopii of Texas have in
Die past tiad reason to believe that tho | we hope she will be kept In jail.
spirit, of commercialism so rampant i — ■ .........................-
elsewhere is not. sufficiently preval : The Information that J. Uio-pont
out hero to (to any ma'eriai amount ot Morgan will make Ids home in Europe
barm. It k«- boon more or less In , ,ettvo Wa„ 8lm.t *„„*.*.* ,h0
cvklijnee. necessarily, but not to the ' ,, ... ,,
extent which makes it so noticeable ! lf " a" ifl “*«•*»> ,lov 11
in states and municipalities farther ! ,
to the north and oust, and on that j I),'nv(r Port: Frost E. Weather is
account Texan* have assumed some ! the suggestive name of a prominent
"hat of a holier than thou attitude 1 rltizen of Nebraska, but in this In-
ami have intimated that the Hum ,, . , . , .
would never come when we would be !s, ,n<'“ ,he nam0 lfi 8 horrl11 ",ls,i
afflicted like our brethren. i* the warmest number upon
But tho time for ail this seems to ! town’s dally social program,
be past. The indications are that
we are getting into the procession
and that ere long we wii! be march-
ing directly behind the leading hand
wagon. The representative citizeu-
ship of the state will not approve,
but the outside world will impartial-
ly tar ns all with the sam'* stick
and in the end the result will be much
the same.
Tic matter which Induces these re- Icily treasury,
flections is a statement said to have
been made by Chief of Police Woot-
ton of El Paso, There appears to
be no doubt of the authenticity of
the reports concerning the matter,
since one said to lie authorized by
him is printed in the paper which
supports him politically and which is
supposed to be his personal organ.
it seems that a report was preva*
Those people who know Chief
Wootton know that he considers the
bunco the most despicable thief pn
earth. When he jokingly said th
bunco was a good business maker for
Ei Paso he mean that it is frequent
arrest and fining put money in the
The trouble with democratic poll
tieians Is that they make issues among
themselves iustead of uniting on some
sound party Issues to maiutaln be
fore tbe country.—Nashville Banner.
A very correct diagnosis of the Ban-
net’s democrats who supported their
ticket iu 1S3C and 1900.
You Never Ifcad Ads.
You Better Read This One.
It will pay you and save lots of
trouble. Don’t go to the Opera House
block to find Hoyt, the furniture man,
but go’ to 109-111-113 San Francisco
street, formerly occupied by Samuel
Schutz & Son, the largest, best lighted
and most convenient store in Texas,
where you will find a veritable “bee
hive” of busy people.
DON’T FORGET
We Have Moved!
. .
G. L. HOYT a CO.
Lucky Purchase! ^
V /NUR Mr. J. Stolaroff is in the East purchasing goods and
% the other day he ran across a lot of Lace Curtains and
\
i
the other day he ran across a lot of Lace Curtains and
Lace Curtain Goods that were offered to him so low that he
could not help purchasing. So he purchased them, had them
sent by express to El Paso, and they will go on sale
Monday Morning.
The Greatest Lace Curtain Bargains Ever Offered in El Paso.
1 Lacc Curtain Goods.
1 *-nA Yll amwm Ot. T r> m n.. 1. I nit A O.. ntn In f
i Lacc Curtains.
1,500 Pieces Short Length Lace Curtain Goods,
suitable for sash and door panels: IflP
worth tip tb 75c each. Piece......... lull
LOT ONE—Lacc Curtains worth $2.50.
At this sale.......................
LOT TWO Lace Curtains worth $2.00,
At this sale .......................
$1.29
98c
LOT THREE—I,ace Curtains worth $1.50.
At this sale ..........................
79c
With the Above We Will Place on Sale Two Lots of
Ladies’ Dress
and Walking Skirts.
$4.95
$2.98
LOT ONE
this sale
1.0T TWO
this sale
-Worth up to $10. At
-Worth up to $0.00, At
THE
i BOSTON STORE
jj “HOME, OF LOW PRICES.”
Y Stolaroff. I L paso.s Tl TT STORE. Cor Overland
A Proprietor. es JH and Oregon Sts.
onavery
box. 25c
Cor. Overland NP
and Oregon Sts. M
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
El Paso Sunday Times. (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. 24, Ed. 1 Sunday, February 7, 1904, newspaper, February 7, 1904; El Paso, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth596037/m1/4/: accessed June 28, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.