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5 Yai & 3 B? fiks3 m f rk la w 13 ol B ti J?m xjL LP S & ill M &Jr BJ I &S55 QUE BOOKS Skin, Eidney, Rectal and Bladde: Diseases, Chronic Diseases, Dis Bases of Men, Diseases of Women. Will be sent to any address in a plain sealed envelope FREE of charge provided you mention this paper and inclose four cents, the actual cost of postage. They will prove interesting reading to all, no matter whether sick or not, as they discuss not only the causes, changes and treatment of the above class of afflictions, but, they also tell how to prevent many dis- CONSULTATION", EXAMINATION AND AD" Office Hours: 9 a. in., Rooms 9-12 KftM FRANK G. CARPENTER'S LETTER. M ML A JLdtf y QUEER FEATURES OF CALCUTTA, THE CITY OF PALACES AND' HOVELS. '"The Black Hole" of 1910- and Other Hotel Features. Gay Scenes on the Maidan Government Buildings. Pilots Who Make $700 a Month Fortunes in Jute. How the Country Grows Fifty Millions in Thirty Years Some Reasons for the Unrest. Copyright. 1910. by CALODTTA, India, :May 24. I am in Calcutta, the eastern gateway of tie empire of India, and the front doorstep of the home of one-fifth, of mankind. It is a turbulent fifth and is likely to stir up the world. The British have kept this country dead ouiet for the last 50 years. They have inclosed it in a network of railroads, nvatered its deserts wutih lrrajratins: -inals, lowered its taxes and "made two bTades of prass grow where one .grew before. They have brought order out of chaos and peace out ot discord. They "have begun to make men of those who, when they took liold of the country a few generations ago, were but little Abetter than beasts. Thev have given lean srhools and stirred them up to think and plan for themselves, and now the Indians are readr to bite the hands Slight Red Eruption Grew to be Terrible Sleepless Nights and Restless Days Made Life a Burden Was Completely Discouraged. s- CUTICURA CURED AFTER 16 YEARS OF SUFFERING "For sixteen long years I have been. Buffering with a bad case cf skin dis ease. While a child there broke out a red sore on the legs just in back of my knees, caused by a tight, col ored garter. At first it seemed to bo a slight affair but grad ually it wased from bad to worse, and at last I saw I had a bad skin disease. I tried many house remedies and also many widely known doctors in dif ferent cities but to no satisfactory result. The plague bothered me more in warm weather than in winter and being on my leg joints it made it impossible for me to walk, and I was forced to stay indoors in the warmest weather. j "Mr hones of recovery were by" this time spent. Sleepless nights and rest- less days made life an unbearable bur- ' cten. At Jast x was aansea to try tne Cuticura Remedies and I did not need more than a trial to convince me that I was on the road of success this time. I bought two sets cf the Cuticura Rem edies (Quticura Soap, Ointment and Pills) and after these were gone I was a different man entirely. The Cuticura Remedies certainly did a great deal for I me, as it changed my whole career from bad to good. I am now the happiest j man that there is at least one true cure i for skin diseases. Leonard A. Hawtof, s 11 Nostrand Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y., July 30 and Aug. S, 1909." OF SKIN TORTURE Rest and peace fall upon distracted self and Ins family. The rohgions are households when Cuticura enters. All so strange tliat a book as big as a four that the fondest of mothers desires for i dollar Bible might be written about the alleviation of her skin-tortured and disfigured children is to be found in warm baths with Cuticura Soap and gentle anointings with Cuticura Ointment. Guaranteed absolutely pure and may be used from the hour of birth. Cutlcara Soap (25c). Ointment (50c ). Resolvent (50" ) and ChocotatP Coaled Pills (2jc.). are sold tiiroucnout the world Potter Drus & Cnem Corp . Solo Props 137 Cotumbus Ave, Boston ss-ilalled Free. Cuticura Book on the Cure of Sfcla Diseases. 32 paces ol lnvfiluaDle advice. $I5.C0 Our Charge in Uncomplicated Cases. WE CURE THE FOLLOWIXG DISEASES IIS FOlrtt DAYS AXI5 OFTE OXE TltEATMET IS ALL THAT IS XECESSARY: VARICOCELE, HY DROCELE, PILES, RUPTURE AND STRICTURE. In view of the fiict that manj people have treated with various specialists for years and did not even receive lelief, the above statement may make them skeptical, to all such we will state that if you will call at our office we will with their permission give you the names of reliable business men of El Paso, New Mexico, and Arizona, whom we have cured and have remained so for varying periods of from one to three years. XO SEVERS OPERATION IS DOXS, THE TREATMENTS ARE PRACTIC ALLY PAINLESS AND BX.OODLESS, AND NO DETENTION FROM BUSI NESS IS NECESSARY EITHER DURING OR AFTER TREATMENT. CURES ARE NOT ONLY RAPID BUT2 RADICAL AAD PERMANENT. We also treat with the same guarantee of success CATARRH, NERVOUS DEBILITY, LOST FUNCTIONS, BLOOD POISON IN ALL ITS STAGES, SCROFULA, RHEL MAT1SM AND ALL PRIVATE DISEASES AND WEAKNESSES AND THEIR COMPLICATIONS. A CERTAINTY OF CI. RE IS WHAT EVERYONE IV ANTS, and while we treat each case on its individual merits, taking into consideration the peculiarities and susceptibilities, we sometimes meet with cases that have been neglected so long or worse, improperly treated, that they have reached an incurable stage, these cases we never knowingly accept. NOTICE The above "four day cures" require at least one visit to our office, otherwise it is not necessary. I to 7 p. m. Wednesdays and Saturdas to 2W. & L.. Bldg., 106 North Oregon Street, El mm Frank G. Oarpentr-) that liave helped them. This is one iphase of the great unrest wihich I have eome to describe. The World of India. Do you know what India is? The country appals me, it is so big, so varied, and, withal, so strange. If you coukl lift Hindustan up and lav it upon Xorth America, with one end at Seattle, it would reach as far east as Montreal and its lower apex would be wedged dto the Panaua canal. From north to south India is as long, as from the mid dle of Hudson bay to"t&e gulf of Mexico, and from east to west it measures 2500 miles. The land is one of extremes. The Hihnaiiayfls on the north are covered with perpetual snows, and the iey wastes about Mount Everest are closer than the frozen chambers of the Budd hist hell. The plains below lie in the tropics, and thev are sometimes as hot as the burning deserts of Australia, j iVio Tot-It TNiioit cove -!- -rem A -fiV i hcr.s Ice to keep them frcm laying boiled egs. India is the wettest land upon earth and the driest. It has province5, suqh as Blkaner, where it does not rain for 13 mouths in succession and other iptlaces where it pours a-11 the ,time. ! beyond it, at the opposite end, is the ivg There are localities in the Hi ma laws j hou"e of the lieutenant general of Ben where six feet of water have l)een j gal. Both are surrounded by beautiful known to fall in the "iace of 12 months. I grounds, and the latter has a hamran Thecountry is one of great deserts and mightv rivers, of soils which have been cultivated since the dawn of his- j tory and of wastes which the plow of j man has never turned. Phjically 1 speaking, it is a world. The People Swarm. It is also a world from the standpoint of humanity. It is one of tie most crowded parts of the globe. It has three times as many people as the United States and farming localities where there are more than one man to evening and the people come forth and the acre. drive about in handsome turnouts. The Altogether India has more towns and viceroy and ladv Minto may sometimes villages than there are people in Boston, be seen in their carriages with their Baltimore or St. Louis, and it has cities i retinue and with native soldiers as out of large size the names of which we j riders. There are other officials and liardlv know- The greater Calcutta in- j also rajahs with coachmen and footmen cludinsr the suSburbs and nearby town is as large as greater Chicago. Bom bay is bigger than Boston, and Madras equals Cleveland in size. The popula tion is rapidiy growing. It has increased 50.000,000 within the past 30 years, and is nowv300.000,000 all told. India is not like China, in that it is made1 up of one race of the same color and features, with the same language, religion and customs. It is composed of a score of nationalities and of so many religiojifj and castes that they can hardly Ibe numbered. There are tribes here which lo-k like our American Indians. others which resemble Chinese, scatter- ing places where the people have blue eyes and brown haar. and man3r localities where their skins are as black as a negro's. There are more races in Hind iitsten t'fluin on .the continent cf Eurone. aaid as to tongues t,her are something like 700 different dialects, and Ian- piases r? spoken by millions wtncii are not understood bx4ne others, A Land of Many Gods, As to religions. India has more strancre nods ttian any continent upon earth. There is no placi where the faith of the people so varies and none ' where man's belief means more to him- sthem and not tell it all. India has 200,000.000 Hindoos divided up into castes, manv of which number millions- It has more Mohammedans than the sultan of Turkey has subjects, aaid about 9,000.000 Buddhists. In addition to ijhh there are several million Sikhsf more than a million Jains, and in the neighborhood of 100,000 Par sees, who believe in the faith of Zoro- aMJLtMEWJPEriiLftJH s "SS'tlP IX niirino- t)ia anfira TnmtVi rtf Tiino wo nrp frninir tn rpdiioft our fees less D IE FREE OF CHARGE. S. Sundavs 9-1 only. Paso, Texas. mm& M$WSfMMR5 aster worshiping Sre. There are among the aborigines of the back woods nature worshipers known as Animists, to the number of 8,000,000 and more; they be lieve in spirits and witchcraft and offer bloodv sacrifices to their devil-like gods. There are also 18,000 Jews and 3,000,000 Christians of various sects. It surprises one to find so manv Christians in India. They are mostly Roman Catholics and Xestorians, although there are Method ists, Baptists, Presbyterians and other branches of the Protestant faith. I see that bishop Thoburn says that there are now about a million of native Protes tant Christians and that the Christian population has increased 640,000 in the space of 10 vears. Our missionaries 'are aiiive and thej' are doing great good. A City of Palaces. Calcutta is one of the chief seats of l the ITnrcat. 1 do not wonder at is. There is no place where the difference of conditions is more pronounced. These Hindoos are among the poorest peoples on earth. Asong them are millions "who always go to hed hungry, and irf the slums here are people who count their bites to see whether they wiU hae enough for the morning. At the same time Calcutta has its. fashionable resi dence quarters, the homes of the Brit ish, where moiiey flows like the Ganges and fortunes are spent in one season. I wish I could show you the better .parts of Calcutta. It is a city of pal aces, with immense parks and wide open spaces. It covers alxout as much ground as Chicago in proportion to its size, running along the Hooghly with the great suburb on the opposite bank. The city has lakes and lawns, botanical and zoological -wardens, and a public park known as the Maiden, which runs through iae fashionable quarter. At the beginning of this is the palace of the viceroy, a mansion as snowy as newlv slacked lime, and several miles tree surpassed only by that in the zc logical park of which, perhaps, y zoo- ou have heard. The Maiden is bordered with club houses and -mansions. The most fash- ionable homes of Calcutta look out upon it and it forms the social heart of the citv. It has a race track with a two mile course 15 n which new and then polo matches are played, aaid o3so tennis courts and grounds for cricket and golf. The band alwawa plavs there of an in livery. There are Europeans. Par sees and many Eurasians. Every one rides in his carriage xnd every carriage hacj its liveried coachmen and footmen. The coachman is usual!' a bearded man with turban and rown; he is always barefooted. The footman either stands on the step behind the carriage or squats down there and holds on. The latter position is precarious, and I often wonder wln the man is not jostled out in going over a gutter or rut in the road. In addition to such turnouts there are manv automobiles. There are 800 in the city and the most I have seen are touring' cans which at home would cost several thousand dollars aipiece and which go like the wind. Do you wondr that ithe hungry Hindoo whose lean shanks have to tty to get out of the way is mad when he con trasts his condition with that of the man in tihe ear? The Palaces and the Black Hole. He feels the same when he compares his hovel to the mansions on the Mniden and the bier government (buildings of the British officials. The mansion where lord Minto holds forth is of about the same age as the white house at "Wash ington. It is far more magnificent and its surrmmdings have 10 times the style. West of it is the town hall, a Doric building which was finished under fihe instructions of this viceroy's grand father in 1813. and near that the mag nificent buildings of the high courts, which compare in size with those of our government departments at AVashincrton. Another fine structure is the postoffice. .which faces the lake in Dalhousie square. I went through it today, and as I came out I 6txpped jit the corner During the entire month of June we are going to reduce our fees less than ONE-HALF the usual charges, and although they have never been exhorbitant still, many pedple in need of special treatment have neglected consulting us for fear that they would be excessive. Many do not con sider the fact that we furnish all modicines for the cure, that we spare neither pains nor money in securing the best of everything for our patients and that we have expendecPlLhousands of dollars In equipping our offices and are giving them as gosfd treatment as they can get in Chicago or New York. With all this, our cnarges for curing many uncomplicated Chronic Diseases do not exceed FIFTEEN DOLLARS. , A consultation, a carefui examination and our opinion and advice will cost you nothing nor obligate iyou to take treatment, and when necessary we will use the X-RAYS, Cyfoscope and Microscope, or make a chemical analysis FREE. J Some people who jjggmr ads the past two weeks in which we stated that we would cunftWiarioocele, Stricture and Piles for the small sum of fifteen doilarjavere very skeptical. The following letters taken from ff -"0 .UV lV, AAAVVIbU. W- -. 0 0 SH many we Eafve received, tell what we are City. May 23, 1910. Dear Doctors: It is with pleasure that I write you that the little oper ation -was a perfect success. When I read your advertisement stating that you would cure varicocele for fifteen dollars, I said to myself, well I will go up and see where the catch in this ad. is. as I had some experience with advertising doctor's and the other kind too for that mat ter. You did all you promised and I am truly grateful. "Would prefer that you- not use ny name in the papers, but will talk with anyone. Your Grateful Patient. El Paso, May 25th. Dear Doctors: I believe that my stricture is well. I feel fine, in fact better than for years. Your charges were less than one-fourth I paid an other specialist who treated me for months without giving me relief. Yours gratfully, R. Gramlich. FRANK G, CARPENTER'S LETTER. and read on a tablet the following: The marble pavement below this spot was placed here by Lord Ourzon, Viceroy and Governor General of India, in 1901, To mark the site of the prison in Old Fort William, known as the Black Hole, In which 146 British inhabitants of Cal cutta were confined on the night of the 20th June. 1756. and from -which only 23 came out alive. The pavement marks the exact di mensions of the prison and near it is an obelisk erected by one of the sur vivors. The Black Hole is a monument of one of tie most terrible tragedies of the Unrest of India loO-years- ago. The nabob, or native i$ilerx ordered the in carceration of these victims and then drank Jiirnself off to sleep. The 146 British who were thrown in were large ly offieiais. They were driven at the point of the sword into a dungeon 20 feet souare. It was in the heat of the tropical summer, and the airholes were small. In a short time they gasped for breath. Tiey cried for mercv and tried to break down the door. Then they of fered bribes to their jailers, but the only answer was that the nabob was asleep, and he would be angry if awakened. The dym then fought for places at the windows, and raved and prayed and swore, while their iailers held lights at the bars and laughed. When the day broke thes nabob, having slept off his spell, ordered the door .to be opened. Ot the 146 all but 23 were dead, and the living were -o far gone that they were barely able to stagger from the charnel house. T'xlay that tragedy is remem bered with horror. And still how closely the subHme tramples upon the heels of the ridicul ous! Only last week a traveler was talking with the viceroy about the sights of Calcutta, when his excellency nsked him if he had seen the famous Black Hole. "Indeed. I have," replied the vis itor. "I am living in it. It was room 105 at the Grand hotel " At the Hotels. I can sympathize with that visitor, for I live in the same hotel. It is said to he the best in town, but it has nu merous black holes. Just now it is crowded, and it is almost impossible to get rooms. An American admiral who came here last week failed to do so, and 'had to go to a cheap boarding house, where he is now living. I got in only by cabling in advance from urnia. There are several bir hotels in Calcutta. They are rambling three-story buildings which cover acres, and have all sorts of inconveniences. My room, for instance, is locked with a padlock which snaps with a spring. There is only one key to the padlock, and when I left tins after noon the key remained inside the room. I could not get it until I reported to the manager; and the servants then had to climb up the walls and through the window to open the door. I have an electric boll, supposedly to call the hotel servants. I have rung it again and again, and one day I propped my ran ibrella against the button and left it there for an hour. I could hear the bell ringinxr, but there was no response. So in self defence I have had to hire a personal servant of my own to lie on the floor outside the door at niarht. and to wait upon me duripo- the daytime. I am paying him hist 33 cents a day, and he feeds himself. Hirinpc a Servant. I hired this servant two days after I Qanded in Calcutta. Indeed, I was forced t do so, not only on account of my need of him. but rather of his need for .me. The moment our ship came to an chor in the harbor a score of would-be servants rushed aboard and attached themselves to the passengers. Of these two settled upon me as their prey, and each determined to outdo the other. I supposed them servants of the Grand hotel, and handed over my bap. As soon as I -was settled each claimed that he had brought my baggage, and that this was an implied agreement to take him as my boy. Both had sheaves of let ters of introduction, and each seemed equally good. One -was a straight, dark faced Hindoo of 30, and the other a turbanned Mohnnrmedan of 40 or so. The Hindoo's name was Hund "Lai, and the follower of the prophet called him self Wall Mohammed. I took a day 'to decide, during which time each dogged my footsteps. I could not ask for any thing, but both Jumped to get it, and when I attempted to slip out to inquire about them I found both on guard, ready to follow me. If I asked the doing: tdn-i fi$M$&&'' IHT j& ?"'-',r Kg lip&3lw3KBMW hours of meals the two answered in correct and if I wanted hot water they started on the dead run to get it. In deed, I have been much in the same po sition as the man who was adopted by a dog, except that I was adopted by two dogs, and both stuck to me. I have settled the matter by paying Nund Lai i a dollar; and by appointing Wall Mo hammed my valet. From Bnrnia to India. I came here from Rangoon on a Brit ish India steamer. The ship -was one of 2000 tons, with English officers and Hindoo sailors and waiters. The cabin stewards were dark faced, heavy beard ed men of 40, who wore black velvet caps, white gowns which reached to their knees and tight white crton drawers below which their' black bare feet showed. The dinner -waiters wore Mhite Bengalese hats with bands of blue ribbon, and their gown; -were belt ed In at the waist ivlth blue ropes a thick j as my waist. .It was hot all the way up j the bay of Bengal, and the air of the j salon was kept cool by a punkah, a long screen so hung from the ceiling that it could be drawn back and forth. A black Malay did the work jerking the rope 3 2 pulls -with one hand and then changing and making 12 pulls with the other. The dishes were washed in a bucket on deck, the plates being swab bed off Tvith a brush on the end of a stick, and wiped by a Malay as dirty j as the Indian, who did the cooking, j We were several days on the bav of I Bengal. The water -rcas indigo until we j reached the mouths of the Gange-. ,' These extend for a hundred miles up j and down the coast and they vomit so j much silt that it turns the ocean to 1 gruel. I took a bath when we reached I the pilot brig, about a hundred miles j from Calcutta, and upon draining the aup oi louipniKs Tvere as piam in tne mud as those which frightened Robin son Crusoe on his dsert island. The silt of the Ganges Is as grear as that of the Nile. It is said to be five times as much as that of the Mississippi-Missouri, amounting to hundreds of millions of tons every year. It builds up great bars along the shore, and makes the work of piloting the ships dangerous to an extreme. A IIIrIi Paid Monopoly. The pilots of Calcutta are a close corporation. There are onlj- 52 of them, and they monopolize the Ganges, or. rather, the Hooghly. for it ls on the Hooghly branch of the delta that the ships go U to the city. The trade of the river amounts to more than a hun dred million dollars a year, and there is a procession of boats always going up and coming down. The men receive various wages, the best getting as much as $700 per month. To belong to this association one must have a first mate's certificate and must have passed ! through his apprenticeship. He spends j five years at low wages learning the j river, and then graduates in the full rank of pilot. The Hooghly cannot be navigated at night and the ships go in with the tides. As the latter rise there is often a bore which reaches as much as seven feet, so that the risks are great. Milliou.H m Jute. As we coasted the shores of the Hooghly we passed jungles Infested -with tigers. The land is low and malarious and wild bests roam in it at will. A little farther up the houses begin, and palm trees are frequent. The population grows more and more dense, and then comes a region of mighty jute mills. On each side of the stream tall smoke stacks vomit black volumes into the sky and near them are enormous hrlfkr structures where the rough bagging 1 lor an manKind is made. Calcutta ships vast quantities of jute to the United States, and much of our cotton crop Is baled in cloth made here on the banks of the Hooghly. A few years ago we were taking more than 60 percent of the Sulphur-The Best Skin Remedy There Is no drug or medicine that has been used for skin diseases as long as Sulphur. The trouble has been that sulphur in crude or powder form can not be readily applied to the germ that causes Eczema, Tetter, Acne, Hives, Barber's Itch and the many other skin diseases. l-ilttelrs Liquid Sulphur j compound overcomes this difficulty, being liquid, and if applied with soft brush reaohes the seat of the trouble at once killing the germs and. giving instamt relief to Intense itching caused by skin disorders. A few applications according to directions will cure any skin disease, no matter of what char acter. Send 10c for sample bottle. Rhuma-Sulphur Co., St. Louis. Mo. 5 product and today the thousands of Hindoos working this fiber are depend ent upon us for their wages. There are now two score jute mills in India and the jute annually produced is worth about $90,000,000.. There are cotton fac tories here and there between the jute weaving establishments and mills of this kind line the Hoocjhly all the way to Calcutta. The stream is filled with shipping. Ocean steamers heavily loaded are go ing in and out with the tide. The trade of Calcutta is worth, hundreds of Tinl 'ions, and a large part of the com nierce of the empire passes this way. Its total foreign trade is the greatest of any country of Asia, the imports and exports now amounting to more than ? 1.200,000,000 and growing more every j car. Frank G. Carpenter. I Between Galveston, Key West and 2Tew York Superior Passenger Accommodations Fast Freight Service STEAMERS SAIL EVERY WED NESDAY AND SATURDAY AT NOON Wednesday Steamers Call at Key West, Fla making connection for points n Moxida and Cuba. Saturday Steamers Carry Freight Only For particulars as to reservations, rates, etc., eee your ticket agent or write S. T. DeMILT, Gen. Agent, Galveston, Texas. i Tickets to and from Etrropa ODOM TEANSFSE CO. BAGGAGE AND MOVING ALL KINDS OF HAULING PROMPT ATTENTION Bell Phone 1054 Ato Phone 1968 109 MAIN ST. BAGGAGE PHONF, BELL 1 AUTO 1001 Will be vf right away. Careful mea- Reasonable prices. LongwelTs Transfer 116 SAN FRANCISCO ST. ASSAYERS & CHEMISTS Independent Assay Offie ESTABLISHED 1883. D. W. Reczhabt. EAL. Proprietor. Agent far Ore Shippers Assays asrf Chemical Analysis. Mines Examined and Reported Upon. Bullion Work c Specialty. p Q Bqx B3 Office aid Laboratory: Cr. S& Frsadsse & CkXuakcsSfe. "L PA?0. TEXAS- y V I C2UTCMCTT FKIGUSBX, 1 Successors te Hugkes 3s Crltckstt. I AcMyers. Chexiletz. Metallurgist. Areata fr Ore Skippers. 1 S223& Sac Flanclse St. Pneae 334. I L i, Suffcm Osmpany i STATIONERY SPECIALISTS gj Embossing, Engraving, Printing fj 328 Texas St. Bell Phone 680 MalloryLme &ND FEESH FIELD, GABDEK AND FLOWEK SEEDS 0ALL ON SHSSLV AND CHIHUAHUA STEESTS DEALERS IN - HAY, GRAIN, FLOUE AND FEED -". !' ' . 1 BASE BALL Southwestern Distributors for A. G. SPALDING & BROS. Athletic Goods. SHOES CAPS GLOVE SOFTENER TOE PLATES HEEL PLATES SLIDING PADS BALLS BATS MASKS GLOVES MITTS UNIFORMS Send for Illustrated Catalog. Mail Orders Given Prompt Attention. W. G. WALZ COMPANY r 101-103 El Paso Street. J etaS keep out sand, dirt and wind j at THE doors AND TOXDOWS. SURGICAL AND DENTAL BIG LINE TO INS 7 R PRICES RIGHT. Anything Yon Want The neat dressed man not only wears spotless linen, but his clothes are well pressed and shapely. Do you look after your clothes like you do your laundry? Holmes' Cleaning irks will take care of your clothes properly at nominal :harges. ASK YOUB GROCER FOR Arctic or Matador Brand Lard Compound, the Pure jB Manufactured by El Paso Refining Co., El Paso, Tesas. The B Paso Bottle and Junk Bompany 1505-9 San Antonio St. Dealers in old iron, copper, brass, lead, zinc, rnbeers, sacks and bottles. BOTH PHONES CONCERTS EVERY DAY MeCullough's Confectionery Shop on the shady side of .Oregon St., opposite Post office. - Ckas. McCullough DRINK MILK-DRINK PLENTY OF IT-DRINK EL PASO PURE-MILK There is more food value in one quart of El Paso Pure Milk than there is in one pound of the choicest porterhouse steak. El Paso Pure Milk is pure milk. It comes from inspected, contented cotvs, and is treated by the most scien tific methods. Delivered to you in sterilized airtight bottles. El Paso Dairy Co. Phones: 'Bell 340; Auto. 1150. Office 313 X. OregoH. ! Psss iPasisur Insf iiuis For Prevemtlve Treafaaeal OF HYDROPHOBIA. 323 SAX ANTONIO STREET. Phone 2340 R. 1. Res 345T VED to Ellis Bldg. 110 S. Oregon Ellis Bros. Printing Co. OR W3S5E T9 1 I ill ETON SO SCORE BOOKS SUPPORTERS PROTECTORS BASES GUIDES ETC ' El Paso. Texas. Weather Strips Graig, O'SonnsiJ & Co., 6n, Agis. Phcne Bell 43. Chamber of Commerce Bids. SELECT FROM. UMENTS CARR DRUG CO., MAIL ORDERS WANTED in the Druz Line. . 202 TEXAS t