The Waco Evening News. (Waco, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 296, Ed. 1, Wednesday, June 28, 1893 Page: 2 of 8
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THE EVENING NEWS WEDNESDAY JUNE 28 1893.
Waco Evening Sews
o 417 anil I I! I- rttlikltu St. Wtico.
j. k. HJt.v.vKrr
I'ubUthfr and I'rofrrieior.
All oomiuiiiiteailouH to Insure
prompt attention should foe addressed
to The News Waco TexaH
All IjIIIh aue The Nkws ofllce for
advertlilui; iuboriptlon or press
work aro payable alone to
J. R. BENNETT
or to hl authorized agent
l'UHIiISKKK'8 NOTIOK.
Bills which It Ih expected The Nowh
to pay must tie authorized by an
order signed by J. R. BENNETT.
The Only Democratic Dally In Con-
tra! Texas.
One cannot build up a democracy
upon si foundation c l financial aris-
tocracy. Joo Jones ha tackled Galveston
IHh meoting in the pirate isle in in
full blaHt.
Tins being an off year in state
politics every one should sand their
haudn take hold of the lope and
make a long strong pull for Waco.
Road the article by "lucle Sam"
headed "Anarchism in Finances."
According to his view capital may
become anarchicil as well as the
maiscB.
Subsciibo to that advertisement
fund. Help the committee make
known to the world the morits of
the hot w:itor Waco can furnish in
unlimited iiantitios.
Not till corporations are shorn of
special privileges and the power to
oppress can the principles of democ-
racy completely triumph "in thiB
land of the free and this homo of
the bravo."
Tho jury without dessent divisou
or hesitation pronounced Liz.ie
Borden innocont still some of our
exchanges aro publishing her pio-
turo and presenting it as tho picturo
of a murderess.
Capital aud labor are intordo.
pondont. A full recognition by
esiuh of this truth and a just divis-
ion of tho profits of thoir joint ef-
forts should bo freely accorded by
capital cheerfully accepted by labor
for such a division would bo right.
Hoger (i Mills will dolivor the
opening address at tho San Marcos
Chalauqua .July Ith. His thomo
will bo "Thomas Jefferson and tho
Philosophy of Froo Government."
It may bu Mr. Mills can got up a
now and attractive dress for this
old subjoot.
With tho news that tho govern-
ment of India had stopped the
coinage of silsor conies tho stato-
mont that government securi-
ties had advanced. Tho few who
hold the government securities will
be benefitted by the rise. The peo-
plo of India will not for they do
not own any of that class of paper.
Elsewhore in today's issuo ia
printed from tho Hoisington Bank
Reporter reviow of tho great panicB
which in the paat threo hundred
years ' have swept . over Europe and
Amerioa. Tho student of economio
subjeots will find in the articles in.
formation tersely stated as well as
much food for thought. Briefly
Btated each of these great panics
were produced by unscrupulous men
wielding in a dishonest way the
vast power which money gives and
for a while deceiving the people
until the magnitude of their frauds
come out to destroy confidence and
wreck all their associates.
A great thinker recently said:
"There must bo either honest so-
cialism or aristocratic reaction i e
the arurchism of financial privi-
leges freely tyrannyilng society.
There is no medium any more."
If he meant by "honest socialism"
to say the saiie social and moral
ethics should control capital as are
supposed to regulate the action of
the just citi.en he is not so far
wrong.
The enterprise shown by Dallas
in her efforts to make the Trinity
navigable is commendable and an
example Waco would do well to
imitate. The Brazos can be made
navigable at a smaller outlay of
money than the Trinity.
Anarchism in Finances
Yesterday The Nkn s showed
that "the real cause of the panic in
New York and along the Lake
Shore was a lack of confidence of
the bankB and the people in each
other" and that "this loss of con-
fidence was occasioned by the prev-
alence and tolerance of swindling
in the name of business." That
"the country is lloodod b- millions
of fraudulent stocks and bonds"
with tho complicity of "men who
Btand high in business social and
religious circles."
This state or rather this anarchy
of the financial interests of the peo-
ple so completely left at the mercy
of tho insatiable greed and rascality
of individualism; so completely
abandoned without repression to
the rapacity of tho robber birons
of finance shows that it is necessa-
ry tha' without any further delay
the social interest of the people be
restored to its democratic rights
and priveleges so scandalously in-
vaded by that thieving and finan-
cial anarchism of our financial
oligarchy.
It is general society to be pro-
tected against a few individuals.
It is collectivism to recover its
just preeminence over individual-
ism. It is honest linanoial and so-
cial to -roplaco dishonest financial
anarchy. The finances of the people
and country must be put by wise
natioal enactment out of danger
abovo tho reach schemes and tricks
of rascally financiers and specula-
tors. Tho first thing to bo done
without violating invidual light
and liberty would bo to
establish all over the land
a really "national" bank national
in fact as woll as in name as is the
posttllioo. That national bank be-
longing to Uncle Sam paying four
per cent or three per cent on depos-
its and lending at fivo por cent or
four por cent would be an impreg-
nable bult ark of crodit preventing
finanoial panics and making all tho
ruin and misory that follow in their
wake forever impossible. The
d'florence of one cent to the advan-
tage of I'uolo S3tn would be
st'fliciont to cover the expen-
ditures of the management of this
proposed national bank. Private
banks would not bo suppressed but
tho honest competition of Unole
Sam's national bank would oompol
privato financiers to abandon dis-
honest usury and speculation. The
peoplo would in fact be their o.vn
bankers and as a mutual help so-
ciety lend to and borrow one from
tho other. Lot socialism replace
ararohism; the interest of sooiety
bo above tho rascally greed of in-
dividuals. Unc le Sam.
SCIENTIFIC MISCELLANY.
A salt mine near Speurenberg
Germany is over 4101 feet deep.
It is 10 feet in diameter for l-.'OO
feet the boring below that having
been made with a 12-inch auger bit.
The claim of a Queensland me-
teorologiat that a rainfall 377
inches had beaten the world's
record for -24 hours proves to be
incorrect. At ChirapuDJi in In-
dia the fall was 40 S on June 14
1875 reaching 102 inohes in four
days the ISth to the loth inclu-
sive. Inoculation ro pbkvknt chol-
sua. Vacoination has conquered
small-pox. This fact alone tends to
give faith in the ultimate success of
inooulation as a preventative of
other paraBitio disease? although it
moat be confessed that the practical
application of the principle is ex-
tended very slowly. An opportu-
nity to experiment with cholera in
India is now being im roved by M.
Hafikine. His virus lias been used
upon ma. military men and rail-
way employes at Jhansi sso iuoou
lations having bsen performed be-
tween April .- aad May 1 and it is
hoped th3t his operations this sea-
son may be made extensive enough
a task by no means easy to dem-
onstrate the efficacy or ineflicaoy of
thiB method of avoiding a much
dreaded disease.
How Kle tkicity Kills.
After 3n investigation of a large
number of deaths from electric
shock Messrs. Birard and Laoas-
83ge of Lyons have concluded tha'
electricity causes death either by
producing mechanical lesions of the
blocd vessels and neivous system
or by stopping the respiration and
tho action of the heart. Deaths of
the former class result from light-
ning and static discharges from
powerful batteries; but those of the
second class are mot with in shocks
from the high tension currents used
industrially. The two classes of
death another French writer adds
are distinguished also in practice by
a most important fact. While dis-
ruptive discharges of the first class
produce death absolutely the elec-
tric action in the second case fre
quently puts the victim in a state of
apparent death from whioh he may
be restored by artificial respiration.
Rabbits have been revived after re-
ceiving a current of -'500 volts and
'0 amperes a shock more powerful
than is given in the electrocutions
of murderers.
BRIGHTAND BRIEF.
Look at mo ma'in" said tho man
who was asking for something to
eat. "An't I the picturo of de-
spair?" "I don't know anything
about yer boin' a picture" she an-
swered glancing at the ax "but
unless you're in the wood-cut line
you can't get anything to eat here."
Washington St?r.
Yet another yarn about Oscar
Wilde. A friend was visiting Mr.
Wilde one d3y recently and found
him hard at work "cutting" super-
fluous dialogue from his new play.
"Isn't it infamous" he asked look-
ing up after a moment or two.
"What right have I to do this
thing? Who am I that I should
tamper with a classic?" London
Figaro.
VIOLESCE.
Tlint is nlmt tho ordi-
nary pills nnd bowel
mt. menu depend upon.
.That explains by your
if. stem i- in a tioim
condition iifturnnrd
tlmii licfoi. And thnt
1-. tho rvoson why Dr.
i'lene'i Pli'iisunt Pel-
lets m u tho Lost thingi
m tho world for ery
stomach and bowel
tumble. TIh'Io'b ua
disturbance no reac
tion afterward nnd tlnir help last They
absolutory nnd pei niaiiontly aac Constipa-
tion Indigestion lliluuis Attacks Sick and
DUiouu Headaches. Onu tin v. hiiciu -coated
granulo is u gcntlo laxative or teyulator;'
threo aro cuthartic j
They're the smallest the easiest to take i
and the cheapest for they're (jttitmntred to
give satisfaction or our "money w returned.
Buy of reliable dealeis. "With any others.
Domettiing else that pavs them lietter will
probably bo tilled as "just as Rood." Per-
haps it is for them ; but it can't be for you.
For a perfect and permanent cure of Ca-
tarrh take Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy.
THE M. K. & T.
Lowest Prices. .J0S VT9 ! Ay IN
Prompt Delivery. The ToTb IWtVS
.c
o
Read This. It Will Interest Yoi
July 1st I will take dobjc-sioii of my handsome new craarterB corner of Knmvii
Streets. nd owing lo the (ontinued Demand utou ma and the ranldlv inr.. ln 4
DUplln I will opunto the publlcmj SCHOOL lit' I'll M'TIC l' sj i-J??j!n "UbI
tioth dy ami nl('ht. Only the SIIOHTLST MOST tlOOLICN am! 'S;' W
SI1S.SU MUTIIOIIS .M hYSTU.HS U.UIM.OVUO whereby mini!.. lM
accinire tho desired knowledge In tho i"horteit possible tlmo. ' "a emu
My mccess with pupils speaks for llnolf. Thlity-eeven lire now holdlns? r...
nd bank uoeltlona in Waco alone fl Y TUItrfs are i:Tlll.n Vr?!M?MMi
and to responsible per oaslmate terms ot paymnt o.ny. so young nwnof mni
can take a'lvantane of tlil opportunity o! loirnlng offered "gHttn
TAKi: A .SOTUOr THIN-CIAM:Vlno.u HlttM'll OI'VI'I n-
1IOSOAI..II LV.Ird. " lll
IMPliM'DIU HOOK Kl:i:iIM: r.
II. COOl'Ult whoso standing as a tii2J
Hailed to reiulronnv further en lor. nm... ""(
.Monr.u.s noi iilu uvritY
under the tutorage of 'III .IOIIS
d
01
IIOOKKUUI'Ult Is too w-11 established to reiulroiuiy further en lor-ement
ri link fa fiiiii'i.ivri' ffii ni- in iifiiiK.Kiii'iMti'
v.".-.v: .::..-.-" -- - ...... . .-. mciiiaiii .
io-vo i:.tiis
s'i'i:4i;i(Ai'iii ni mis oi-
OSC4II S WUIL. a young man. but
Mgli leseoDJ ev.HH. r II YOit
ri;.ii or stusoi.ii trm mo gr
1'ITim BVstems day course
oi i-i mi Bysieiiis uay course tanshi v
t u a stenographer hai no peer in Weu "1
I.CY-M IIII.IIT who will teach the liu..
reatest system of the age. Ilnndroii. nr i. ."'' '
... . .. ..." .. ...'.. .. . - -'.! imt.
wno nave usou iuhi sysiem ior years are mrowiug n-ouest-mo iorina isti.i Mir.."
and MICH SIIOHTUII svstem of .IIM'.S. Hit. VOItLU Y-VUH:iir l:K
veats of IMIIVTICtL I'Al'UIII U.SCU In I.OMtO and H llltir "' .'
holding an Important position with i ne of our leading law firms. ' a '
roil 1-11. II. nil 11 si. in sitnograpny uay or nigtit 4i)uii
A LONG-FELT WANT.
A I.O.Mi-l'Ul.T WAST IMtUPAIt VlOltV ItUPAH Till r .
II ITIIClltTKS (ill 11IU lt. (iKOUHIPIIV SI'ULLIXi I'llM".
lii iiJri(iKii-ip.i'i.'i.ifi.iiBB&-i.ii i.i ana i'ivii. ..':
1II1.M' are taught during the day by that erudite scholar Piof. .1. N. (iambrcll. wkniiJl
JVBIFilH IH'Ul. 'IllllliUl III .11' U ll nwnmim - HI.U Bliu Ub IIIK'H UUI BI1 RIlOWll tmriil
Mr'A..T. CiiU on. will ImVH rharfffl. Ilolh nfthftnp cpntTprrifln aro llinrrirmi.t un
eipeclaby adapted to teain. "Petei
All woiic unuer my boio uireciiun.
Kor further ptiticulnrs adi'rem me at Va"o or call on ine at the Provident Kn!
anydayalfr I iiip.m Yours truly nauW11
tUWAHU rOBYJR
Expert Accountant and Teller Provident NationilBB
Read and Reflect!
It will be Ten Years in all probability
fore another such stock as this is throl
upon the Waco market at Oost!
Examine
Carefully your stock on hand and col
at once and replenish. We still have
hand SSO.OOO worth of Hot!
Furnishing Goods at prices thaf forcm
sale when the article suits
JOHN
F.
MARSRML
Trustee for C. N. Curtis
In mil hit and Carpet;
Cost
To Chicago and Return
$40.85.
Tickets on salo daily good until
November 15th for roturn Take
No. 0 tho "KATY" VESTI-
BULE FLYER. Leaves Waco 6 a
ra. daily arrives in Chioago 1:20 p.
m. next day 11 Hours Ahead of any
Other Line. A Solid Vestibulo Train
of Day Coaches Elegant Reolining
Chair Cars free and Wagner Palaoe
Buffet Sloopers without change.
Train No; 1 leaves Waco 4:15 p. m.
daily arrives in Chioogo 0 15 a. m.
seoond morning has Reclining Chair
Cars kree Wagner Palaoe Vestibule
Sleeper Waco to Chicago without
change. Also Wagner Vestibulo
Sleeper to St. Louis without change.
For further information sleeping oar
reservation and tickets oall on or
address J. E SMITH
Tioket Agt. M. K. . T. R'y 119
S. 4th st or M. K & T Pas-
senger Depot Waco Texas.
H. P. Huohes
G. P. and T. A. Denison.
James Barker
G P. and T. A. St. Louis Mo.
D. Miller
Traffic Manager St. Louis Mo.
AiM 15 BAY COST SALE OF
R.T. DENNIS &C
Our Entire Stock of Furniture and CarpeW
Actual COST for 15 Days Only
-: Beginning Holiday July 3rd
Ending Saturday July 15. Not a Day
Earlier nor a Day Later
FOR - SPOT - CASH - ONLYI
As we positively will not charge anything at Cost prices.
Come Eirly and bring Csh with you and get pick of tho Ltfgel
Best stock in the world. ZW WE NEED MONEY!
IR.. T. Dennis & &
W. D. MAYFIKLD PreeldenJ. J. D.'BELL Vice President. JOHN'D. MAYflE'l
The City Savipgs Bap(
CHARTERED FEB.I12. 1892
AUTHORIZED CAPITAL $1000
Now offers 6 per cent interest on deposits. teres Pi
irom date.
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Christopher, R. The Waco Evening News. (Waco, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 296, Ed. 1, Wednesday, June 28, 1893, newspaper, June 28, 1893; Waco, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth114917/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .