The Texas Miner, Volume 1, Number 25, July 7, 1894 Page: 4
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THE TEXAS MINER.
THE TEXAS MINER
WALTER B. McADAMS, EDtTOR.
SUBSCRtPTtON RATES:
One Year
Single Copies
.00.
5^-
Advertising Rates made known on application to the Business Office.
BVEBiV SA rURDAV
Entered at the Post-Office in Thurber, Texas, as Second-Ctass Mai) Matter.
THURHER, TEXAS, SATURDAY, JULY 7, 1894.
perhaps than ever before. Let him ask himselt whether his
fancy for his Grover wiH smooth his throat for the Income Tax.
If he can swallow that he is still a Mugwump of the champion
class, and the American spark is dead in him.—New York Sun.
THE assassination of President Carnot of Prance by an an-
archist shows that a muzzle of iron should be placed on al) ot
that ilk. It is high time they should be made to understand in
this country that the outrages that have been committed by la-
bor organizations should be brought to an end. We lavor de-
porting all foreigners that try to take the law into their own
hands, except those we electrocute, and those we might
give 6x2 feet of American free soil.
HAS anvone heard of Adlai recentyly ? Maybe he's lost.
1 HE most heated term in United States history is Grover s
second.
-'A BULLY boat, a bully crew- a bully mate and captain tco" -
that's us, in this town.
THE Coxevites are moving toward New \ork. Won c Wail
street welcome them?
THE Democratic party in Pennsylvania has adopted planks in
it's platform lauding the Administration of the Consecrated One
from Buzzard's Bay. charging the ruin of the country to McKin-
leyism, and stating that but for Grover we would have gone to
the bow-wows. It is needless to say that Mr. Singely, the head
of the ticket running on this platform, officially announces that
he experts to he defeated "by an overwhelming majority" in
sptte of the fart that the present incumbent of the office to
which he aspires is a Democrat.
THE duty of M. Caseimir-Perier is very plain. )'ranee must
he purged of anarchy.
CoRNwillbe king this year. !t looks as though we would
raise two billion, five hundred million bushels.
SENATOR HtLL of New York made many friends by his brave
light against the iniquous Income Tax feature of the W ilson
bill.
THE Republican League of Denver has passed resolutions in
favor of free coinage of silver. So the good work goes on.
The people will have no use for the Democratic party, and
Grover. who is wedded to goidbug isms and Tree-Trade. !f
ever the stgns of the times showed anything, it is that one four
vearsof Democratic rule ruins all business interests, oppresses
the peopte, makes banks fail, depresses the prices of all farm
products, and raises Gam generally. Our people ran "learn
through their stomachs what they cannot through their brains."
AxAKCHY should be declared treason in every civilized coun-
trv on earth, and any person convicted of being an anarchist
should be punished by death.
W HY is it that the most enlightened, the most advanced, the
most liberty-giving and loving nations of the world are the ones
to which anarchy and socialism direct their attacks ?
THE Texas & Pacific Coal company believes that every man
has the right to work when and where he chooses, and acts on it,
and protects any man that wants to work for them.
OUR motto is the protection of American industries, protect
the farmer, the miner, the wage earner, and free coinage oi sil-
ver at the rate of 16 to 1 will protect the debtor classes against
usurers.
WHAT safeguard is there in this world for society or its mem-
bers when the President of a great Republic can be openly as-
sassinated in the presence of a vast multitude of people m a
public street while riding in his private carriage ?
NEXT to an anarchist, the most dangerous criminal in this
country is the man who, whde pretending to be a tjiend to the
jlaboringman. commits such acts as rob that laboring man of
employment money and the respect of the better elements ot
societv. W e wish to refer to the man who inaugurated the
I Pullman s+rike. It is an undisputed, undeniable fact that the
Pullman shops have been run for over a year past at a daily loss
' simplv to keep the men at work and not turn them out to starve
! as others have done: and now, after having been the recipients
! of absolute charity for twelve months, to strike and tie up the
, railroads of the country because the hand that donates the
charitv does not "bleed" more profusely upon the demand ot a
S "walking delegate." is a crime and should be punished severely.
W e sympathize widi labor in any meritorious demand, hnt when
labor organizations stoop to blackmail and even highway rob-
berv we do not hesitate to < ondemn the art as unworthy ot
honest labor.
1 HE convention of Republican League Clubs at Denver was
not long in determining that the true monetary doctrine of this
nation is bimetalism. Good for the Republican clubs. Mav
their sentiments spread o'er the land and their shadow s never be
less- - ——————
Ivxcmxo and mob violence are always abhorrent to civihzed
eommunities. but when we repeat the names of Lincoln. Gar-
field and Carnot " e m\ oluntarilly wish we had hold of a rope
at the other end ot which was the neck ot a Booth, a (<mtau or
a Sat.to. —
THE Mugwump can now measure himself more ac< urateb
THE rapiditv. quietness and calm firmness with which the
French people elected their ftfth President in the very face of
death itself is highly commendable. One of the most harass-
ing conditions that surround the people ot this nation is the un-
settled feeling that attends every Presidential election. l*or five
months before election every four years the country is wild with
political excitement, is continually in a ferment, all to no pur-
pose. Then for four months after such elertion there is a pause
in national affairs until the newly-elected President is inr.ugaia-
ted and bv his address and first message to Congress dis( loses
his intention with respect to natioal polities. This is ail wrong.
Either the term of office should be lengthened so as to put
further apart surh depressing renditions or the elertion should
bemadeasquirkly and quietly as that ot \t. Casemir-l'erier.
and the inauguration of the new President oorur within ten days
, of his eleetion. Nine months of unrest and disquietude in busi-
ness affairs every four years is n )t o:\ly unnj(cs.sir\ but. sick.en.ing.
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McAdams, Walter B. The Texas Miner, Volume 1, Number 25, July 7, 1894, newspaper, July 7, 1894; Thurber, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth200472/m1/4/: accessed April 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Tarleton State University.