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El Paso Herald from El Paso, Texas • Page 2

Publication:
El Paso Heraldi
Location:
El Paso, Texas
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

SKIRTS WORTH UP TO $10.00, 3.95 30 DIFFERENT STYLES TO SELECT FROM. SEE WINDOW DISPLAY. Lapowski Mercantile Go. 308-310 San Antonio St Opp. Masonic Temple.

ii STATE'S INSANE ARE BRUTALLY NEGLECTED, MISTREATED AND ALLOWED TO DIE" County Official Says it is Lack of Provision on the Part of the State That Results in Many Deaths of These I nfortunates in the County Jails, Along With the Thieves and Murderers. JVetvj 'Bre'Vities Suspicious Man Released. The case against Hermeijildo Ar- quella, charged with being a suspicious character, was dismissed in the court Monday evening. The defendant told the recorder Monday morning that he works in the smelter, that he came to El Paso the evening before to attend a dance and that function did not come to an end until nearly daylight. Then he sat down on the stairway of a business block to wait for a car.

Officer Herd, who made the arrest, was not present and the case was continued until Monday evening in order that (testimony might be secured. Hord stated then that he had nothing against Arquella except that he seemed to be loafing around town at a time when honest men ought to be abed, and the dismissal followed. Bankruptcy Sales. Endorsement by the chamber of commerce has been asked for a bill which is now before the state legisla- I ture, requiring that in the case of sales of stocks of goods in bulk, in the case of bankrupt individuals or firms, the creditors shall be notified of the sale at least five days in advance. It is possible that a special meeting of the directors of the chamber of commerce will be called to consider the bill.

Life Insurance Is an investment better than government bonds. The annual dividend paying Mutual Benefit Life is as safe as the Bank of England. H. W. Allen, Agent, Mills Building.

Wants El Paso Statistics. Leonard S. Tyler, a member of Yale university, has written the secretary of the chamber of commerce asking for a compilation of figures regarding El industries, its railroad connections, its principal shipments, and similar data. It is supposed that the facts are to be used for a thesis of similar treatise to be issued by the department of economics of the university. Pure Maple Sap Syrup.

Buy one to try something good for a cents. Watson, phone 151. Charged With Embezzlement. San Antonio, Feb. C.

Lester has been arrested here on a telegram from Engle Pass and placed in the Bexar county jail awaiting the arrival of officers from Maverick county. He is wanted there on a charge of embezzlement, growing out of a transaction involving a life insurance policy which he issued in the border city. Returns of Corbett-Nelson fight will be received by rounds with direct wire tonight at the Sheldon bar. Maple Syrup. Vermont produces the best.

We get it from the trees, pure sap boiled to a syrup. Not the factory kind, but cents a quart. Watson, phone 151. Had a Gun. An American who refused to give his name, and who therefore was booked as John Doe, was arrested for carrying a revolver by officers Greet and Word, Sunday.

He was not arraigned in the court Monday, the officers having a few thinks in their heads with reference to his identity and not wishing to give him a chance to pay a fine and get out of town before they investigate a matter or two. Returns of Corbett-Nelson fight will be received by rounds with direct wire tonight at the Sheldon bar. Bond Is Forfeited. Horatio Stevenson, who was arrested at the American end of the Stanton street bridge by officer Waibridge Sunday night for carrying a revolver, and wrho was released from custody as soon as taken to the station upon depositing a cash bond of $25, failed to appear when his case was called in the court Monday evening and his bend was declared forfeited. He appeared today, the forfeiture was set aside and a new trial ordered.

Fine dresseds hens, springs, ducks, and geese at Market, phone 138. These at Market: Spring lamb, choice beef, pork, mutton, hens, springs, ducks and geese. Phone 138. Changing Location. The cafe at Hotel Angelus is being changed from the Main street side the Mesa avenue side of the hotel, the old cafe location having been rented to a mining concern for an office.

Spring Lamb. Real spring lamb today at Market, phone 138. Buckwheat Cakes. To have good buckwheat cakes, you must have pure buckwheat flour. We have some buckwheat flour that is cents a sack.

Watson, phone 151. Plenty of nice Gallup coal, $7.00 per ton. El Paso Fuel phone 110. Dr. Townsend, Dentist, has removed his office to rooms 211-212 Guaranty Club Meeting.

Miss M. Eleanor Ford will speak before the club Thursday afternoon. A good musical program will also be given. Choice Beef. The kind that is tender, juicy and dem 0 a i IV i ii u.

limi io Ltuiutn juxi dim (ie Trust building, 2nd floor. Phone 98,. at Market, phone 138 Touring the Country. W. H.

De Arme, a prominent business man of Butler, a leading Elk and Mason of his city, has been in the city, a guest of the Angelus for several days, accompanied by his wife, on a sight seeing visit. They left last evening over the G. H. for San Antonio to spend a week, after which they will visit New Orleans and other points in the south. They have been into California for several weeks past.

Praise it Too Much. That, pure maple sap syrup directly from the trees, be praised too highly. absolutely the best maple sap syrup ever sold in this cents a quart. Watson, phone 151. Chinamen Have Hearing.

Moy Sam and Low Dock, the two Chinamen arrested Sunday night by immigration inspectors Tony Sierra and u. L. Creswell, had their cases called for hearing Monday afternoon and Sam was ordered deported by commissioner Howe, while the case of Dock was continued. Get your Piano Contest Tickets for coal and wood at phone 8. Returns of Corbett-Nelson fight will be received by rounds with direct wire tonight at the Sheldon bar.

Purity Butter 2 Pounds For 65c Best IKat ever came from Kansas, FRANKLIN BROS Sole Agents. Cor. Stanton and Franklin PHONE 367 Joe Rogers On Duty. Joe Rogers has returned to his duties as city detective. His cheek is badly scarred by the bullet fired by Lou Vidal in the court room some weeks ago and his face is freckled with blue spots, the marks left, by the powder burns.

His eyes have recovered their normal strength and his general health is first class. Fine young, tender pork at Market, phone 138. Major Fewel, Grain, Hay, Coal and Wood; Prompt Service. Phone 1479. Ordering Uniforms.

Today is pay day for the customs inspectors and the employes of the federal building in Capt. department. The customs force are giving their orders for new uniforms, which must be donned by first of May. Get your Piano Contest Tickets for coal and wood at phone 8. Real mutton today at Mar ket, phone 138.

For Over Sixty years Mrs. Soothing Syrup has boon used for teething. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays all pain, euros wind colic, and is the best remedy for Diarrhoea. Tickets for the presidential inauguration were placed on sale today. At 3 oclock this afternoon no tickets had been sold.

is no question which it is more necessary that the state legislators should solve before adjourning than this question of what to do our said office deputy James H. Com stock, of the force, morning. the jails tin Texas are full of insane he continued. are six in the local county jail now and that is probably not as great as the usual number. have no conveniences for taking care of these poor unfortunates.

We are compelled to herd them in cells along with the thieves and the vags and -the murderers. They have no attendants, no nurses, none of the care and the treatment that the dictates of the lowest form of civilization would say that they ought to have. you realize that such a condition as this exists, and that the people who among all of the distressed have the strongest possible claim upon us are subjected to the most brutal and degraded ftreatment. that we have at our disposal, and do you realize that all this is due to the fact that the rich state of Texas has not the humanity, has not the decency, to provide asylums for its insane wards? the past year two insane people have died in the local county jail. I say they died in the jail.

It amounted to that, though we managed to have them removed to the horpita.1 just before they drew their last breaths. I believe that both of those deaths were caused by the lack of proper treatment, which can not possibly be given them in jails. only this, but I have seen people taken to our county jail who had recently become afflicted with lunacy and who I am sure could have been cured and restored to sound mind if they had had the treatment which is necessary in such cases. But we had no chance to give them such treatment. We could only treat them as prisoners, and they became confirmed lunatics.

treatment which Texas accords to its insane is a shame and a disgrace to the state and it is high time that the legislature put a stop to it by providing for suitable asylums in which these poor unfortunates may be given the care and the treatment which they WEAPONS DECLINED. Odd Proposition When ChnllenRed by Kimiuarok, Dr. Virchow, the eminent man of science, had been sharply criticising Prince Bismarck, who was then chancellor. At the end of a particularly severe attack Bismarck felt himself personally affronted and sent seconds to Virchow with a challenge to fight a duel. The man of science was found in his laboratory, hard at work at experiments which had for their object the discovery of a means of destroying trichinae, which were making great ravages in Germany.

said the doctor, challenge from Prince Bismarck, eh! Well, well! As I am the challenged party, I suppose I have the choice of weapons. Here they He held up two large sausages, which seemed to be exactly alike. of these he said, filled with trichinae; it is deadly. The other is perfectly wholesome. Externally they can't be told apart.

Let his excellency do me the honor to choose whichever of these he wishes and eat it, and I will eat the Though the proposition as reasonable as any dueling proposition could be. Prince representatives refused it. No duel was fought, and no one accused Virchow of cowardice. SPECIAL NOTICES Local Metal Market. El Paso Smelter.

Feb. 28, 1005. Silver 60 Copper 14 1-2 Lead $3.50 Mexican pesos (First National bank 1-2. New York Exchange (Mexican government 1-8. Train Bulletin.

Golden State Limited from the east, due at 3:45 this afternoon, is reported 3 hours and 30 minutes late. S. P. No. 10, due at oclock.

is 1 hour and 50 minutes late. S. P. No. 8, from the west, due at 6:15, is 3 hours and 15 minutes late.

NDEXING BOOKS. The Cnotom Is an Old One That Developed Rather The custom of indexing books developed gradually. Cicero used the word but in the sense of a table of contents. Seneca provided some works which he sent to a friend with notes of particular passages, that he who only aimed at the useful might be spared the trouble of examining them This was at least a partial in the modern sense. Annotated, or at least explanatory, tables of contents seem to have preceded the index proper.

Such tables followed the order of appearance of the subjects in the book itself. Alphabetical arrangement, which was the beginning of the real index, appears not to have been thought of until the invention of printing, and even then it spread but slowly. Erasmus was one of the first to provide his works with alphabetical indexes. The custom did not become universal until well into the sixteenth century. The first index to an English book is said to be that printed in Polydore Vergil's in An edition of this work published ten years later has an index of thirty-seven pages.

The Hungarian Crown. The Hungarian crown worn at their accession by the emperors of Austria as kings of Hungary is the identical one made for Stephen and used at his coronation over 800 years ago. The whole is of pure gold, except the settings, and weighs nine marks six ounces, almost exactly fourteen pounds. The settings above alluded to consist of 53 sapphires, 50 rubies, 1 emerald and 3.38 pearls. It will be noticed that there are no diamonds among these precious adornments.

This is accounted for by the oft quoted story of aversion to such gems be cause he considered them New Advertisements Today. Robertson Gro. $400 Piano Jafrell, Ballard Muslin Underwear Pioneer Grocery Porterhouse Steak Krakauer. Zork Moye, loia Cement Tuttle Paint Glass Wall Paper Ticket Agency, Cut Newman-Austin Highland Park. W.

C. Draper, Undertaking Wm. Moeller, Real Estate W. O. Millican, Real Estate El Paso Gas Electric Gas .1 Santa Fe Fuel Building Material ...............................................1 Subdivision, New Addition.

1 Frank A. Spence, Real A BRAVE Eyed and Hydra The term means watchful. According to the Grecian fable Argus had 100 eyes, and Juno set him to watch all of whom she was jealous. When Argus was slain she transplanted his eyes into the tnil of the peacock. is a term derived from the fable of Hercules and the hydra.

The hydra had nine heads, and Hercules was sent to kill it. As soon ns he struck off one of its heads two shot up in its place. One of the Most Tlirilline Incidents of the Bnll Kine. The famous Spanish toreador verte figured in one of the most thrilling incidents ever witnessed in the arena. It was at Bayonne.

After disposing of two bulls Reverte had twice plunged his sword into a third of great strength and ferocity, and as the beast continued careering wildly the spectators began to hiss Reverte for bungling. Wounded to the very quick of his pride, the Spaniard shouted, bull is and, throwing aside his sword, sank on one knee with folded arms in the middle of the ring. He was right, but he had not allowed for the margin of accident. The wounded beast charged full upon him, but the matadore, splendid to the last, knelt motionless as a statue, while the spectators held their breath in horrified suspense. Reaching his victim, the bull literally bounded at him.

and as he sprang he sank in death, with his lant effort giving one fearful lunge of the head that drove a horn into the thigh of the kneeling man and laid bare the bone from the knee to the joint. Still Reverte never flinched, but remained kneeling, exultant in victory, but calmly contemptuous of applause, till he was carried away to heal him of his grievous wound. TO THE PEOPLE OF EL PASO The Interest In It. wonder what there was in the paper today about Masters? Grimes know there was anything, there must have been. He was saying to me that issue was usually interesting.

Frank Root, of Santa Rosa, is at the Orndorff. Happiness and misery are two extremes, the utmost bounds whereof we fr.no Open Letter From Kind Hearted Ohioan. The following letter will be of great interest to our readers. It breathes the true spirit of charity, of helping others. May it do the good that Mr.

Carpenter hopes for: the People ot El Paso: I may be unknown to you, yet I hope my experience will carry the weight that earnestness always should. I believe in doing good to my fellow men, and in no way can I tell them better than in pointing out the road to health. the treatment that cures catarrh without stomach dosing, has done me so much good that 1 want everybody to know of its merits. 1 had a very bad case of catarrh, and Hyomei completely cured me. I have recommended it to my neighbors, anil they, too, have been cured.

Now. I want everybody in all parts of the country to know what Hyomei has done for me. YV. Carpenter, Hyomei contains the healing balsams that are found in the air upon the mountains, where catarrh is tin- known. It destroys all catarrhal germs in the air passages of the head, throat and lungs, and makes complete cures.

A complete on fit costs but $1.00, while extra bottles can be obtained for 50 cents. Ask the El Paso Drug Company to show you the strong guarantee under which they sell the treatment. FR05TS AND THE GROWING OFFRUITS New Mexico College of Agriculture Issues a Bulletin of Importance to This Section. The New Mexico College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts and Agri: cultural Experiment Station, Mesilla Park, has issued a bulletin on Relation of Frosts and Air Drainage to Fruit It says: The subject of the late spring frosts is one of great importance to the fruit grower, and one that deserves more consideration than it generally gets. The light spring frosts frequently cause great losses to the fruit grower, and this danger seems to increase with certain varieties in the south and southwest.

This fact has been quite well demonstrated in New Mexico. Many fruits which succeed in the north and east are practically worthless on account of their liability to frost injury during the spring. The orchard fruits that suffer the most are die Japanese plums, late ripening peaches and apricots. The damaging effects of these light frosts come when the trees are either in bloom or just as the tender fruit is forming. As this of the growth, a very light frost will be enough to destroy the crop.

While there are a number of ways by means of which this danger may be mitigated, that of air drainage is as practical and as important as any. Frequently, a plantation with good air drainage escapes frost injury when the adjacent orchards in the lower lands are killed. The air is rarely perfectly still, and yet there are nights when it appears to be so. The danger increases during still and cloudless nigHts. particularly in the spring while the trees are in bloom and when radiation is most rapid.

Cold air is heavier and denser and, accordingly, it will settle in the low places and valleys. At night the cold air will desccnd from the hills and elevated regions into the valleys and displace the warmer air. which will rise. A person, in going across a valley in the spring, in the evening, will notice the cooler air in the depressions and old river beds. If the night is clear and there is no wind to keep the air in motion, this heavier and cold air will lie in the low places and frequently cause enough frost to injure tender vegetation or newly forming fruit, when similar growth may escape injury just a few feet higher.

This drainage of the cold air to the depressions is the secret of much of the success of fruit growing on high and sloping lands. And, for this reason, it becomes very important to give much attention to the selection of the site for tender fruits. a rule the ideal site for a fruit plantation is one which is somewhat elevated above the adjoining The elevation need not be very great. A comparatively sligh: elevation usually gives good air drainage, particularly so if the land has a slope so that the air may gradually drain away. Farms in the large valleys may be sufficiently elevated above the general level of the valley or the local river beds and other depressions to answer the purpose for fruit sites.

Of course, more pronounced elevations, up to a certain limit, give better results. Frequently, the valleys are lower along the edges, next to the foothills, than toward the middle, and the air draining from the foothills will settle in the lowest places and there cause the most serious damage to fruits. The sloping foothills make ideal sites, especially for the more tender fruits. The planting of tender fruits in the valleys next to the foothills. when the valley has a gradual elevation to middle, is not always a safe practice.

Under such tions, better fruit sites can be found to tfie middle of the valley. The present orchard at the experiment station is located aboiK one- fourth of a mile from the foothills and the valley at this place is lower than toward the middle. On several occasions it has been observed that varieties of peaches and other tender fruits have been destroyed by the light spring frosts, while the same varieties in orchards into the middle of the valley produced good crops. Last spring the freeze of April 11 practically destroyed all the fruit at the station orchard and the new growth of eight or ten inches on the grapes, while the orchards and vineyards located from one to three miles to the middle of the valley, were not so seriously damaged. Fabian Garcia.

ROBBERS LYNCHED BY A NEVADA MOB Reno. Nevada, Feb. mob at Hazen lynched Wood last night for robbery. Wood and a con. pan ion robbed two men at.

the railroad station and a mob quickly collected and ran the two men into the sage brush, where Wood was captured and hanged. The other escaped. NELSON FAVORITE IN COMING SCRAP San Francisco, Feb. I second meeting in the prize ring of I Nelson and Young Corbett, which occurs tonight, promises to attract thousands of spectators. Both men are confident and in the pink oi? i condition.

The betting is 10 to with I Nelson the favorite. W. E. Bush, of Texarkana, is in the eit yon a business mission. He is i ping at the Orndorff.

Try a Herald Want Ad. They work you IWajor Fewel, Coal and Wood. Phone 1479. FOOLED THE SEARCHERS. How a Qnlelc Wlttod Saved a Fugitive.

John Maxwell, a stout Protestant, who had taken part in the battle of Bullion Green, Nov. 28, Ifittfi, successfully deitod the many attempts that were made to capture him. Once he had a very narrow shave. The soldiers traced him to Edinburgh and there gave him a chase. Bolting down a close, he dashed into a tavern and explained his desperate case to the landlady, who locked him into the chest that held the oatmeal.

The soldiers then entered and searched the house from top to bottom, but could not find their man. Vowing they knew he was on the premises, they called for drink and sat down to think over the matter. One of them, seated on the box that contained the fugitive, remarked: wouldn't say but the Whig is in this very kist (chest). Guidwife, the key and we'll In no wray put about, the landlady went to the door and cried to her girl upstairs: rin to the guidman for the key the kist till we see if a Whig can lie in the meal and no be boasting (coughing) At this the soldiers burst out laughing, felt there wras truth in the guid- taunt, drained their cups and departed. Maxwell at last managed to escape to Ireland, where he died.

MACARONI. One Story of the Origin of the Name and the Dinh. A great many stories are in existence about the origin of the word and the invention of the dish so designated. According to one authority, a drunken chef employed by one of the popes was responsible both for the name and the dish. He was preparing a souffle for the papal soup, and, having taken considerably more than a drop too much, he went on stirring the flour until the souffle was of the consistency ofvhard tack.

The assistant chef, knowing that his holiness was not overpatient about things pertaining to the table, ventured to call the attention of his chef to this fact, and the latter, being a resourceful man, decided to make a paste instead of a souffle. He waited the result with some anxiety and responded to a call to appear before his holiness wMth considerable perturbation. Visions of a stay in the papal dungeon rose before him, and when the pontiff asked, with a smiling face, for the name of the wonderful paste served in the soup he was too nervous to think of a name. (my he replied at last, and the pontiff, not catching the words exactly. said: Well, in future never serve me a meal without a dish of Sentinel.

i i go Some advertisers gleaning roadside cliance- blades, while full-sheaved corn fields arc at And that is why even the poorest advertising medium will always have some advertising. FOR SALE Prospecting outfit, one team good mules, wagon, harness and saddles, 12x14 new tent, 4 water barrels, cooking outfit, all necessary tools. L. O. Judson, P.

O. Box 418, G05 Myrtle xAve. WANTED and fancy cooking for parties or dinners, by first class cook, either at home or will go out. Miss Christensen, 130G E. Nevada St.

FOR SALE and phaeton, $35. Will sell separate. 1218 Missouri St. FOUND pocket book belonging to Stephen P. Talbot.

Has been left at Herald office. FOR RENT furnished rooms for light, housekeeping. 309 Wyoming St. FOR RENT nicely furnished rooms for light, housekeeping, bath, telephone, $12 per month. 1403 N.

St. Vrain St. FOR SALE of 11 room rooming house, with lease, reasonable for cash. 311 Missouri St. FOR SALE and ponies broke to harness and saddle.

321 Texas St. caterer who thoroughly understand plain and fancy cooking, would like to rent dining room in furnished house centrally located. Address, Caterer, care Herald. WANTED for a small tamily; one who can do housework: state salary wanted. care Herald.

WANTED and board in private family where there are no children nor sick people, by man and child. care Herald. WANTED a woman, situation at light, housework. Address, Housework, care Herald. Mrs.

Harris Walthall has returned tom a pleasure trip to Guadalajara. FOR RENT room flat with bath, steam iieat, hot and cold water, at Hotel Angelus. FOR RENT newly furnished rooms. 012 San Antonio St. FOR SALE grocery with strictly cash trade.

Address, care Herald. WANTED man (22) office and store experience, New York City, desires position; references. R. care Herald. WANTED osition by a young man; good health; good habits; has worked as shipping and billing clerk, also assistant bookkeeper for large firms; highest references.

Address, care Herald. Weak Kidneys To any Kidney sufferer who has not tried my remedy I offer a full worth free. Not a more a regular dollar size and staple. There is nothing to pay, either now or later. I ask no promise.

You take no risk. The dollar bottle is beeuase mine is no ordinary remedy, and I feel so sure of its results that I can afford to make this offer. In the first place, my remedy does not treat the kidneys themselves. Such treatment is wrong. For the kidneys are not to blame for their weaknesses or irregularities.

They have no self- control. They are operated and actuated by a tiny shred of a nerve which alone is responsible for their condition. If the Kidney nerve is strong and healthy the kidneys are stron gand healthy. If tho Kidney uerve goes wrong you know it by the inevitable trouble. This tender nerve is only one of a great system of nerves; this system controls not only the kidneys, but the heart and the liver and the stomach.

For sake I have called this great nerve system the They are not the nerves of the nerves that enable you to walkJYo talk, act, to think. They are master nerves and every vital organ is their slave. The common name for these nerves is the each set is in such close sympathy with the others, that weakness anywhere results in weakness everywhere. This is why I treat not the kidney that is weak but the ailing nerve that MAKES it weak. This is the secret of my success.

This is why I can afford to do this unusual give away FREE the first dollar bottle, that ANY STRANGER may know how my remedy The offer is open to every one, everywhere, who has not tried my remedy. Those who have tried it do not need the evidence. So you must write ME for the free dollar bottle order. I will then send you an order on your druggist for a full dollar bottle, standard size and staple. He will pass it down to you from his stock as freely as though your dollar lay before him and will send the bill me.

Write for the order today. For a free order for Book 1 on Dyspepsia, a full dollar bottle Book 2 on the Heart, vou must address Book 3 on Kidneys. Dr, Shoop. Box Book 4 for Women. 405, Racine, Wis.

Book 5 for Men. State which book Book 6 on you want. tism. Mild cases are often cured by a single beetle. For sale at 40,000 drug stores.

Dr. Restorative THE DAILY RECORD Building Permits. To Ramon Gomez, to build a brick residence on lot 12, block 57, addition, on Stanton street, to cost $1000. To Mark Miller by J. K.

Turbeville, to build a brick residence on lots 1 and 2, block 1, Franklin Heights addition, on Texas street, to cost $1300. To Turbeville Rogers, by K. Turbeville. to build a brick residence on lots 8 and 9, block 5G, Franklin Heights addition, on Boulevard, to cost $1800. Licensed to Wed.

Jose Nome, Trinidad Ruis. Estanesla Fonseca, Rosa Costalles. Births Reported. Boy, born February 22, to Lazaro Leal and wife, 110 Utah street. Girl, born January 30, to Jose Conception Alvirez and wife, El Paso.

Girl, born February 25, to Maximilian Melas and wife. Octavia alley. A SCHOONER LOST WITH TWELVE MEN San Francisco, Feb. 28. schooner reported lost off Tomales bay yesterday has been identified as the Jesse Matsen.

Twelve men were aboard and all were lost according to the report received from Point Reyes weather station. orget That we give votes with every 25c purchase on the $400 Price Piano which is to be given away. ROBERTSON GROCERY CO. Phone 709. cm RAIES Our Rate.

CHICAGO ST. 18.00 KANSAS CITY 15.00 DENVER 16.00 NEW 37.00 NEW 15.00 All first class via all routes. Highest Prices Paid op Tickets. Cheap Rates to All Points SILBERBERG BROTHERS COURSE" 102 SAN ANTONIO STREET..

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About El Paso Herald Archive

Pages Available:
176,279
Years Available:
1896-1931