The Austin Statesman. (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 33, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 11, 1903 Page: 4 of 8
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5994839*
I
THE NATIONAL PRESS
r
i It Is oper- lumbering has been nubstituted, pre-
e state's course.
/
—
1
Sells for Less.
That's Al
surrounding country which gives it
»
I
o
MATTERS PERSONAL
I
A
i.
ST
/
ON FOOLS.
McClellan for 1904.
/
Into the “clever fool” class come two
But the;
{p
pi. by reason of his
nomination by
We mean the learned fool ai
democratic
caucus for speaker,
er,
comes the leader in the house of the
Is claimed is so constructed as to be democratic minority.
of index to other
it what Scotci
IC' and he will begin to use his
ol
SEND
Ol
II
Kt <
DEFENSE OF MR. GORMAN.
11
EX-Senator Butler of South Caroll-
ol
Why can not other Texas towns do as I has been charged as being as much a
’ : protectionist as Ram Randall was in
weli?
Jefferson entered into no conspiracy.; his lifetime.
legal owners, France, the
loyalty to his party in advocating high
/
1-1
into no conspiracy, but bought Alaska and it becomes Mr. Butler to explain it.
"Four democratic senators
territory, before this decade of repub- had announced that if sugar and coal
Another Moses.
29
/
(
4 z;
vice of the Formosan governor
Ce
meth-
E
I
Moro Breakfast Food.
Oc
J
G
things in Porto Rico/’ (
try will not give out for forty or fifty
reason of the low price of
ibility to pay any
P
Miohlgari would be entirely denuded of issue in the presidential campaign?
If
Is hereby served upon
still him that nobody in the southern states
enough
to meet all demands and that wH) deny it.
i
late campaign was “Swing Low, Sweet
will
WAPLES • PLATTRN
Co.
P. Al
/
v
2
1
L_
noi
■A
P
ent they are a live people for its news- na has written a letter to the Courier
papers are full of alvertisemnts of journal in vindication of Mr. Gorman’s
boundary Mexico waged war upon us tariff, a majority of the democrats in
and paid the penalty of that rashness the senate were alike guilty.
rior kinds. One may
I not encounter more
the
be-
and ron were not restored to the du-
tiable list, they would defeat the bill.”
Is it not a little strange that as Mr,
Mines in All but Three Counties.
There are only three California coun-
fe ■
(
/
THE
FICI
TLE
OF
ugar and
luty upon
Ilcan power has been acquired honor-
ably.
fully as serviceable and more lasting
than the old wooden ties, combining its
good qualities with the durability of
metal.
Russian bear come down on this mat-
ter of leaving that door wide open.—
Galveston News.
i
returns to the even tenor of its beat.
The highest ideal a man can con-
cans.
When the Colombian
Porto Rican Cigrs. Be lure you
get the genulne L. Toro de la Selva
Porto Ricin Breva.
Women should cultivate a low dis-
tinct silver toned voice. It is the sign
of high breeding.
The art of listening to a dull talker
is the most winning of all.
had remained motionless
me.”
ME
g
A
Al
Ban Antonio is entitled to all the
protection, legal and moral, at the will
of the state government, but if she is
wise there will be a cessation of dia-
tribes against the state, for should the
state withdraw Its official restrictions
every town in Texas would inaugurate
their strenuous local quarantines only
to be more harassing to Ban Antonio
and her interests. Doctors don't agree,
of course, neither do lawyers or mer-
chants.
Mr. Roosevelt seems to have “told It
to the marines," for they were all ready
to complete the Panama business.
And the United States has had a
rupture with the authorities at San
Domingo. Does the president Intend to
consummate the deal begun by Presi-
dent Grant and take in more negroes to
further embarrass the settlement _ of
that question.
A steel company in New York has
bought all the patents for the manu-
facture of steel railroad ties, which It
%
I } I
3
,,, ’
Ran a Ten Penpy Nail Through F
While opening a box, J. C. Mount,
)
/
I
I .lesh ... - rie
men, but once let
h people call “above
1
fool of the French author is a pup
made of a mixture of saintliness. sil
very rare and supei
live a lifetime and
than one of each.
nus.. non. Ascomleivr.
a
Special
Dalia
son, w
nomina
las, la
in 1841
and ha
every c
The
his alv
compro
The :
ship ha
known
for mo
Part
fought
but he
publlca
Chairm
States
at Dall
ton for
socially
lieved
Robinse
It is
na Myr
win.
fe •
\ !
om the
on
done whatever it has started ott to do,
and has made it a good place for men
to live in and do business. It is appar-
We
X;
an
ret
fail
Growing Wise.
Borne New York financiers declare
that it is easier to sell a banker a
bundle of waste paper Securities than
it is to dispose of a satchel full of
sawdust to a countryman in search of
green goods.—Galveston Tribune.
7
,
1
I
him gel
himself
y do exist,
i nd the fool
representatives. It has been shrewdly
suspected that this claim of the house
wi.ty gdtnn..,.
8 ■ ‘
. WEDNESDAr.
A Discourse on the Usefulness of Some
Types.
trade.
It seems like the deepest foolishness
for any but one schooled in therapeutics
and the technique of diagnosis to waive
npinion to the public as to the presence
or non-presence of yellow . fever in Ban
Antonio. A farm hand has as much
right to tell a lawyer how to draw a
legal document as a lawyer or mer-
chant has to tell a doctor how to de-
An
wl
di
cai
IT
ml
pu
yo
the wasteful methods of twenty years
since of handling timber has come to
an end. The wasteful usage of timber
hinds have not been Confined to Mici-
igan, the same policy has been in vogue
ernl. and Is on his way to Cape >
and the Transvaal to study the
gen-
'olony
At
whth a provision that it shall also be
approved by the house, that the treaty '
with Cuba is loaded with more diffi-
culties and impediments to its ratifi-
cation than any other treaty ever made
with a foreign government and is now
in such a condition that it must be
approved by the president, enacted by
the senate in executive session and run
the gauntlet of the house before it be-
comes operative. It can not be con-
cealed from a reasonable presumption
that these complications have arisen
with a desire to postpone its confirma-
tion as long as possible in order it the
end to defeat the treaty altogether.
And although the president has call-
ed congress in a special session, os-
tensibly to ratify this treaty or enact
some law by which Cuba should have
theuivantage of reciprocal duties with
the United States there is very much
doubt as to whether such a treaty will
be confirmed or a law enacted ensuring
Cub reciprocal relations In tariff mat-
ters with this country. There has been
Ho much twisting in and twisting out
, that* it 1^ difficult to determine whether
the snake was "coming in or going
cut**
When these negotiations were inau-
gurated and seconded earnestly by Mr.
McKinley as an honorable obligation
on the part of our government, that by
c
lets made a strong fight, but lost. In
Maryland the contest was the most bit-
ter of the campaign, the parties being
more evenly matched than in any other
state, and Mr. Gorman making a hard
fight to restore his prestige as demo-
cratic leader.
employers and men who are presumed
to speak for the unions.—Kansas City
Times.
HAN
THEODOR LOW!
Outside of New York city, in which
the contest was not a party one, repub-
licans have reason to be satisfied with
the November elections of 1903-—Inter
Ocean.
Ing. When it finally fell every person
seemed to stiffen as if ready to leap
out of the way. Yet all probably
• any profta len- thet Cuba
suppliant asking mercy as
“We can fight Russia without any
other nation to help us,” said K. Wat-
anabo, special commissioner of the
possible bearing on the Panama canal
question. Revolutions in South Ameri-
ca are of such frequent occurrence and
are moulded so much after the same
has been made in order to delay action
on the Cuban reciprocity treaty.
The senate also not unwilling to de-
lay legislation on the subject, approved
the treaty with the provision that it
should receive the assent of congress.
Bo it will be seen, with these con-
flicting claims, first on the part of the
h0UM of representatives that the Cu- i by whleh we acquired the great west ler’s there is an incidental mention ’of
ban treaty embraced revenue matter, j to the Pacine coant. Reward entered a matter that looks quite suspiclous,
which must originate in the house, and
next the senate ratifying the treaty
10 come I Hoar la an up to date antiquarian pol-
Mr. Van Pelt. In speakin of the fatn j itielan. Does he mean to put that In
prophesles of twenty years ago, that | the republican platform and make It an
»p\rtcy, but In the defense of our
—-
Austin,
from Russia in the open market. All He says:
One of the songs in New York in the
that the action of the Panama insur-
gents in declaring the Independence of
the Isthmus will possibly have some
bearing on the future of the Panama
canal, however, the trouble at Panama
is of more than usual interest to Ameri-
) ’
\ 3
CLOTHING AND GENTS’ FURNISHING GOODS y
■
I
o
Itasea, Texas, is a model of enter-
prise and Improvement for other towns.
It has built a cotton mill. It has se- '
(3
•-T-EMr
I AUSTIN
. said the boy in blue.
3"Now there's about cigars; Porto Rican
W/Pcigars are right in it with the finest.. Why
5 L. Toro de la Selva
HSL.
1 . ;
purchase. Polk entered Into no con- I that I Mr. Gorman was guilty of dis-
in Texne, Arkansam, touainha, the
votes. A few were absent on each side,
7- — o-- - but that is the relative strength of each
cured two railroads, and It has always j political party.
Charlot." It swung Low so high that it
While ©11 Texas deplores the condition
; and sympathises with Fan Antonio, It
is feared the town is acting under a
i commercial inspiration rather than
and nothin, mnore,
ever<receives It,
tious fools are in French books. The
Talk vs. Facts,
Ten- thousand Russians guard the
Louisiana quite clear and complete and shows
Not Observed.
“Dove is blind, you know, papa,” sa d
the pretty girl.
"Guess you are right,” replied the
......— ----- -iey will uphold the
open door policy, but Russian promises
are worthless. Russia wlil fight to
hold the trade for her exclusive bene-
The returns at this writing indicate
that the republican party is as strong
as ever in states like Ohio, Iowa, and
Massachusetts. In Ohio there seems to
have been an uprising against John-
sonism. Cuyaboga, Johnson’s ■ own
county, gave last year a democratic
plurality of 2200. This year it gives a
larger republican plurality, increased
republican pluralities are reported from
strong as well as close counties. The
republican state ticket is elected by a
plurality of 125,000. and the republican
majority in the Jegislature is larger
than for many years.
The campaign in Iowa was less ac-
tive than that in Ohio, and there was a
lighter vote. - — * * .....
I learned a lot of 5
The vote for speaker of the house of
representatives on Monday shows how
the house stands on a division of party
lines. Cannon received 193 votes and
Williams of Mississippi received 169
stemn parent. "That is the reason peg-
pet pl in love can never see the lock."
iili- Chicago News. I I
ness and sin. Generally he does not
know right from wrong, and he seldom
has any sense of duty. All his good
works are works of supererogation. He
is capable of self sacrifice, and his er-
rors proceed from defect rather than
design. Not that he is deficient in the
ordinary sense of the word; indeed, he
who realizes that the highest wvisdon on:
Is not to be measured by the fot rule n
of prudence is perhaps the only foo j
whose folly may be enjoyed withou:
economy, and who all through the agies $"
has illustrated the old saying that d:/
fool may learn a wise man wit.”—Don-;
don Spectator. J t 1
Sincerity is one of the highest quali-
ties of human character. It gives a
man’s opinions the weight and Influ-
ence that nothing else will.
COUNTRYSfiMBER SUPPLY.
itreet from a desir to protect people ih the
The Disturbances at Panama.
f Nebraska the tuslo- arThacRystsntmpanamaos oralttrnt
to Americana chiefly on account of its
mills to anthet, not, however, be-
all the timber, including the young
th, has been usa up. I
rests have been worked on the
• plan as mines with te object of
1 out of them as soon as pos-
sible. But as economics have vastly
irt- improved in mining, so it has in the
ror plan of obtaining lumber, and scientifie
tie man with a heavy black beard and
piercing black eyes, and has all the
confidence and energy that have
counted for so much in the progress
of his race.
.4738, '■
~220023.
actual production. That is according
to expectation. But, considering the
area of this state, Its length And
breadth, there is probably no other
country on earth that can be shown to
be as uniformly mineralized through-
——— I any territory in Manchuria nor Korea.
The Power of Money, i fhe Japanese government k opposed
r p Nr..,.. «. ...6,... u । to territorial expansions. But Japan
enough Atorean.lspn new himseit. in wi Inalst upon An open door for wade
onouh train. stablithunewnrecore him 1,1 both Sfanchuria and Corea, fus-
"POS < m? ,hIs 1 ime.on «•»oK.hIm nlnn diplomats are always making
.bee. nJ end another, brousht A I promise that the; • * -
sheet of paper from Springfleld to meet --
him—the charter of a new street rail-
way trust.—Ki Paso Herald.
v( •'
h 8
The net resudts of the eleetions Tues-
day la that NewI York city elects it
democrat mayor by a plurality of 79,-
000, that Ohio, Iowa, Massachusetts,
Pennsylvania, and Rhode Island are
republican by increased or normal ma-
jorities. that in Maryland the vote is
close, and that in Kentucky the repub-
licans, although defeated, hold their
own.
New York city is nominally demo-
cratic. Once in eight or ten years the
citizens honestly ih favor of good gov-
ernment organize to defeat the doml-
mint parly, as they did in 1901, The
nonpartisan or fusion leaders attempt-
ed to organize the same sort of cam-
paign this year, bUt nt the very begin-
ning they were weakened by the defec-
tion of two of their own candidates,
who, breaking aWay from the nonpar-
titan movement, went, with their
friends to the support of the Tammany
ticket. Street railway and other cor-
porations became the active allies of
Tammany, and with its forces splen-
didly organised, and with its leaders
appealing to party spirit, Tammany
won.»
serving the forests for future use,
which means that there will be no
more waste in cutting and the destruc-
tion of young timber growth.
Moreover the necessity for the pre-
servation of proper climatic relations
has been recognized and great areas
of timber have been preserved and
plans adopted for the reforestation of
other areas. This is encouraging and
will be largely beneficial to lumbermen
and the consumers of timber, as well
as.lt will preserve the natural climatic
relations necessary for the health of
communities and cause seasonable
rains in agricultural districts.
Congressmen hereafter will have
Cannon in front of them. Cannon to the
right of them. Cannon to the left of
them. Cannon Volleying and thunder-
ins all about them.
Mr. Joseph G Cannon of Illinois,
who was elected speaker ot the house
I of representatives by the republicans
on Monday has served in the house
twenty-eight years, which entitles him
to rank with the veterans.
-----+-•--
Congressman Williams of Mississip-
Special
Dalla:
nomina
postma:
Wash in
When Morgan spoke of undigested
securities he probably had in mind the
stocks of that ship building trust he
was selling to suckers.-—Fort Worth
Record.
of the United States. He can propose
in New York city, and possibly he will
be able to do this in the national con-
vention of the party. The voters ot
um ountry, however, will dispose.
H 1, Shepard, Parker and the rest oi,
the New York democratic aspirants
the andidacy were silent, either
Virtuaily Or Absolutely in the canvass.'
But the thing which they feared has |
come topasa. Their rival is at the
front, and they will not be mentioned |
in connection with the nomination |
again. But the tendency of things'
i8Asainst his party, as it was 1,1 19001
and, 1896. u The George B. McClellan of ‛
1904. If there is one, will repeat the
historyo’the George B. McClellan of
1894. Bt. Loouis Globe Bemocrat.
Mr. King of Arkansas is quoted as acquitted by all democrats, but if he
"ayinK that the forests of Arkannan, I was one or the four, the whole defence
once thought to be Inexhustible, are, nuis to the ground.
threw a rope over an impaired wall
to pull it down and thus prevent its
“open door” at Mukden. Yet Mr. Wal-
ter Wellman is busy telling how Bec- thought they
ret ary Hay succeeded in making thet the whole tin
Butler was defending Mr. Gorman
from the charge of being a protection*
1st, and if Mr. Gorman was not one of
these four senators, that Mr. Butler did
not mention that fact? If Mr. Gorman
did not join in this threat, the fact
would have been a much stronger de-
fence than the one Mr. Butler makes
in behalf of his friend Gorman.
Was Mr. Gorman one of those, four
senators? It is not intimated that he
was, but the strangeness if he was not
of the fact not being mentioned natu-
rally arouses the suspicion that he
was. If Mr. Butler can answer this in-
terrogatory in the negative, then his
defense of Mr. Gorman is complete and
satisfactory, and Mr. Gorman would be
to patrol their premises on Bunday to
keep the festive small boy, and big _________________ ___________
ones, too, from entering thereon and; collapse at an unexpected moment,
appropriating to (heir own use the ma-; Pursuant of the usual method of top-
jor portion of the nuts. The penalty for' pling a wall the firemen alternately
trespassing in this manner is heavy-pulled and slackened on the rope and
and somebodly’s! boy may be caught* the several hundred spectators swayed
napping some day.—Brownwood Ban- k ‘ .....
ner.
ably St. Paul's daring and eloquent ex
pression, “We are fools for Christ'!
flake," threw this faciful and beautlfu
side meaning into the word. The mai
M
trmine between dengue and malaria.
1.--T~
_ day and Sun
back and forth, keeping time with the
motion of the rope. Their eyes were
riveted on the wall, which was rock-
He Learned a Great Truth.
It is said of John Wesley that he
once said to Mistress Wesley: “Why
do you tell that child the same thing
over and over again? “John Wesley,
because one telling is not enough.” It
is for this same reason that you are
told again and again that Chamber-
lain 8 Cough Remedy cures colds and
drip; that it counteracts the tendency
or these disenses to result in pnu-
moa, and that it la pleasant and safe
to take. For sale by Yates' Comer
Drug Store.
1. eottine an
’T
gave him the grand bounce. It
now be "sing low."
Carolinas, Virginia, and Washington.
. Lumbering operations have been car-
ve riel on in these states upon I he plan of
tk, exhausting one field and moving the
out practically its entire extent.
Among the surprises contained in the
statistics to be submitted by the state
mining bureau will be the figures of the
value of the total output of petroleum
in California for 1902. The production
was very large, but when the price nt
the wells ranges from 15 to 25 cents
per barrel for fuel oil it does not, om-
paratively speaking, require large
fgures to show what it sold fr In total
in the market. The total gold output
of two counties far surpasises the value
in the market of all the oil produced
in the state during the year 1902. While
the price of oil has continued to be
low, the value of silver, which is of
great interest in Pacific coast camps,
has continued to rse. The government
followed the market from 49 cents to
55 cents in its purchases for the Phli-
ippine coinage. Then it stopped. Mil-
lions of dollars worth of bullion will
be required by the government before
the Philippine coinage bill provisions
are fully carried out. At the present
price of silver many silver camps can
produce at profit—Bain Francisco Call.
facts as missiles and become a great
Intellectual danger. The cultivated
fool has lived in the hothouse atmos-
phere of a highly cultivated clique till
he literally smells of culture; but the
source of the aroma is not in his own
mind, and if put out to air among
Philistines for a sufficient period he
will loose all traces of his much-
prized artificiality. It is a great bore
to be obliged to observe for any length
of time the antics of this type of fool:
bit they are amusing sometimes to tell
about.
Very few “silly fools” afford any
pleasure to the spectator. Yet out of
two types of them some dangerous en-
tertainment may be derived. The first
of these two is a pretty woman—an In-
habitant, perhaps of the “fool fre-
quented fair of vanity.” But she may
thrive anywhere in any station. As a
rule she is not such a fool as she looks,
and her mind is capable of some ex-
pansion, at least in one direction, the
direction of self interest. The man
made to match het4 is generally aware
that folly is his most remarkable qual-
ity, and as he likes to be remarkable
for anything, he exaggerates all he can.
Did he omit to act in an Ineffably silly
manner no one would notice his ac,
tions at all. Those who enjoy the sight
of his folly are to a great extent re-
sponsible for him, and as he is an en-
tirely useless member of society the
responsibility is pretty heavy.
As to the fool of fiction, the only
fear about enjoying him is that we
should come to Imagine that he really
exists. The greater number of ficti-
George B. McClellan will be a very , .. _ . . .
big personage in the democratic na- . When the Colombian government a
tknal convention of 1904. He has few months ago rejected the treaty
youth, ability and personal popularity giving the United States the right to
on his side. The democrats are look- complete the canal across the Isthmus
Ing for a candidate in 1904 who has ©J / anama there were evidences at
at some time or another won something Folon and Panama of popular dissatis-
or another. They have him in the 'action with the action of the Bogota
mayor elect of New York. Of course, government. The terms offered to Co-
lt is a strongly democratic community lombia by Uncle Bam had been most
that McClellan has carried. Coler, the liberal. There war- no reasonable
candidate for governor, had a lead of ground for objection to the treaty on
122,000 in New York last November, the ground of insufficient remuneration
which is far ahead of McClellan’s mar- to Colombia for the surrender of her
gin. But McClellan has won the Office canal rights. It was felt that the com-
which he sought, while Coler failed, pletion of the canal under American
and the prestige of success in some auspices would mean much for the fu-
shape is what the democrats are look- ture prosperity of the isthmus. Con-
ing for in a presidential nomineee, sequently it is not impossible that,
Another advantage which McClellan pushed on by a sense of Injured self-
will have Is that he is new. His name interest, a suspicion crossed the isthmi-
until this morning has never been an mind that the government at Bo-
coupled with'the presidential candi- gota was planning a hold-up, financial-
dacy. He has been several terms in ly, with tht big northern republic as a
Congress without attracting any es- victim, but with the isthmus in the role
peclal attention. Nobody thought of of incidental sufferer. Whether the
him for any higher post, but yesterday’^ revolution really owes its existence to
stroke of fortune has transferred him some such cause as this or whether it
into a man of destiny. He had the is the result of careful reasoning by
good luck to become a favorite of Cro. the unsuccessful revolutionists of a
ker. Who has been bossing Tammany year ago, who count on the support of
from his estate in England, but who Uncle Bam to aid them tn their latest’
will now take the next steamer for effort, remains to be proven. South
New York and resume charge of his old American revolutions are strange and
, mainCroker named him for.mayor devious things at the best—wherefore
in 1903, the Wigwam registered Croker’s It wquld possibly be just as well for
decree and the apathy of one element Americans to go a little slow before
oI.theyoters and,the perversity of an'- ( giving their sympathy to either side in
other, did the rest. the present Colombian difficulty.— Cin-
But Croker does not run the politics cinnati Star.
pattern that the usual type of outbreak
of this sort excites very little interest
in this country. In view of the fact
! ' ■ X
of culture. The learned fool is a “fact
glutton," if we may be allowed the ex-
pression. He has more appetite for
knowledge than power to assimilate it.
Kept in his place, he is useful as a kind
k a Porto Rican Breva, made in an old factory
9 at San Juan, is the best cigar I ever smoked. j
, Since the war you can buy them here for a •
/ nickel, but loot out for substitutes. There’s
M only one genuine L. Toro de la Selva, and
N lots of counterfeits,"
K ) When the duty was rempved from L. Toro de la Selva Cigan, the demand
Bg over-taxed the capacity of the factory, kiting room for a flood ofinferior, to-called >
if a habit of making allowances for
the opinions and acts of others is culti-
vated, you fail to snag yourselt
against many rough edges. You do
not feel called upon to sit in judgment
on so many eross purposes that annoy
you. g
—=
psp * y
X P‛s,)
ved tn .
loud of doubt too thick for the k
qent eye to penetrate.
, -----
Mayor White turned the n.at >1
full of dirt on the stomm dewet «
and there was mppinuse
assembied to See II da,
any doubt d. to IM |
&W«s
{ding, Chicago, ill. ____________
finest types which human nature pro !
duces. The early Franciscans calle
themselves "the fools of the world, L
and an epitaph on a priest of the Four 515
teenth century (quoted by Doran iar
his "Court Fools”) Invokes heaven fpes
"this thy fool." We find the expres ns
Rlon “a fool in the court of God" use J
In 1609 in a laudatory sense. Prob es
_________ Japanese government, at the Houston
A curfew law properly enforced In and Texas Central depot this morning.
Corsicana would send many a wander- Everybody in Japan believes it,” he
Ing boy home early at night. Instead of continued. “Although I am not close-
permitting him to straggle in duringily in touch with the situation, itseems
the morning’s early hours.—Corsicana to me that wer 19 bound to come
Bun. sooner or later. Japan does not want
road company on Twenty-third, near
Race street in our city,” said W. C.
Gray of Phuiladelphia, “Firemen
being so rapidly depleted of timber i .... J , —..———--
that the supply in many part, of th. I '' hen, trouble meete you, keep stin.
auto wi last but few years km,,,. When slander nosalls you, be patient
On the other hand, an optimist o When you feelines are hurt, keep .till.
Beattie. Mr. Van Pelt. .. n wet off to I you xet mad keep stin unti your
Mr. KW, pesaiminue views declaren excitement 1. over and until ‛ur pula,
that the bupply of timber in this coun-
ssEe-se
mntporatnoatherwPurposet. than , t A L, Jarofeman of Tonkawa, received and askea for the article. The edltX
compeultor.tbormmoxrmentiaaxainstla registered package from the United blushed deeply, .but stepped to the wal
thing, that were not true aldmzome \ States treasury department last week took. 11 from the nal where he he
hl. S?fen»e WatrStnot isU&. uomakin । containing duplicate bills for some that hunK.it .and handed it to her. siB
Soni believeutthe rh.“wno.xoodxenzl were burned. The roll that was sent thanked him, slipped the web over 138
falsely j,, this instance wasnzpeakin in Was » charred mass, but the system Eibis and proceeded on her way UH
Thany’eonrobratiistaneenenthezhaarelncle sam has in deciphering burned Sunday school with a look of sweh
cumstances to show the prevalence of, money makes it possible to tell exactly n
venal combinatnw s.provalenen.o I what was destroyed. Mr. Scott of the „ . • • « • U
enal combinations between certain aame place, also received the duplicate .Beforesleavinig for Washington Delen
amount of money burned in his store. ’ Hate, Bird McGuire of Kansas gave Qu
4 the following interesting interview: {E
• • • ♦ 5 I shall introduce a bill aldhg tw
A “walking Indian” appeared in lines of the territorial republican pla
Chandler lately from Mexico, where, he form. I believe in the doctrines as aA
said, many "walking Indians” live. He yocated therein. The outlook for .th
could talk the Ozaukee language and bill’s passage is better than at any pre*
said: “We are called ’walking In-tvious time. I have had expresslor
dans" for the reason that our old folks of aid from men in congress, who, a
left the main camp of the Sacs and had supposed, where not with me ips
Foxes on the Mississippi many years this fight. The trip of the Hears,
agb. They walked and walked; they party through Oklahoma will be bene
walked to the Missouri, they walked cial, for the reason. if no other, tha 1
to the Rocky mountains, and they, all of these men will make speeches fo
walked to near Mexico, where some of us and will be consulted by their col
them Are wealthy and none of them are leagues here. I feel satisfied regardin
poor-” , ‘the statehood situation at present.”; '
say to a Bunday school toucher wno
offered presents of cigarettes as an in-
ducement for boys to attend his class.
According to a London paper I picked
up recently I see this pmctlce has ac-
tually been established at All Saints"
church, Wellington. It was reported
that this distribution of cigarettes In-
creased the attendance of the class
100 per cent. The experiment, has
stirred up a great deal of criticism,
however, and the vicar of the parish
denies that he had any knowledge of
the matter, it having been an expri-
ment made by Mr. Wilmot, the teacher
of the Bible class. While the boys in
the class as a rule wire over 16 years
of age, there were n number of them
who were not prmitted tovsmoke, and
their parents naturally objected
strongly to this novel method of se-
curing attendance at K Sunday school.
Not Moving.
“Well,” said Mr. Polk, for the fourth
or fifth time, “I must be going.”
"What a queer delusion,” replied
Miss Bord, "you're really quite station-
’ ary.”—Philadelphia Press.
Mr. Hanna assured the voters of
Ohio that it he was not elected every
industry would tumble and every ex-
change see stocks dumped in the waste
basket, or words to that effect. Mr.
Hanna was elected and stocks are still
falling. How does he account for that?
According to his ante election talks,
their downward tendency should have
been arrested by hs election, but it is
not so.
ators Platt, Depew and Stewart can
claim exemption from military service
not only on account of age, but be-
cause of the scriptural, grant to bride-
grooms of a year at home to comfort
their young wives.—Houston Chronicle.
Ths Hour of Troubls.
Owners of pecan orchards are forced
“An example of how persons are
unconsciously influenced by what they
see was demonstrated the other day
just after the firemen had extinguished
the fire that destroyed the grain ele-
vator of the Baltimore and Ohio Rail-
well as Justice from the United Statea,
by the condition of affairs is very
nugar hair gone up
fub comes asking the treaty, not as a Umber by this time, gives the interent- ; he does, notice
suppliant begging for mercy, but now Ing information that there le stm him that nobod
mamea
either from a republican executive and
n republican --- ■ ‘ •
fit." Count Watanabo Is in the ser-
T5"spwsegmoumENT8 HEARD IN HOTEL corridors
if we go to war with Colombia Sen- -----
omil
RECIPROCITY WITH CUBA.
The treaty making powers have had
some modifications in recent years.
The different departments of the goy-
ernment, the executive and the legisla-
tive, have to some extent had concur-
rent or joint authority on the subject
of treaties. The senate, heretofore the
only branch of congress authorized in
what is called executive aesslon to
co-operate with the president in mak-
ing treaties with foreign nations, and
the executive participates in the legis-
lative department in its co-operation
with the senate.
The powers of these distinctive de-
partments have thus, contrary to the
construction of the government, into
the three departments xcutive, judi-
cial and legislative, mingled the au-
thority of the executive and legisla-
tive, and while the president partici-
pates in legislation by the exercise of
the veto power the senate participates
in executive authority in confirming
the president’s appointments and rati-
fying his treaties.
When treaties have heretofore been
made with foreign countries, the sanc-
tion of the president and the approval
of the senate have been considered as
giving them the strongest onfmation.
But recently the house of representa-
tives have complicated matters of this
nature by urging the constitutional
provision that all legislation involving
8am Parks,
Before, his departure for Sing Bing
prison, sam Park*, th. New York
walking delegate who was convicted of
extortion, declared that the greatest
danger of trades unionism was in L _
Ing loopholes for pesonal graft among
ttsrepresentatives. He declared tht he
Three Mile Bay, N. Y., ran a ten penns.
nail through the fleshy part of hi¥
hand. “I thought at once of all the
pain and soreness this would cause
me,” he says, “and immediately ap-
plied Chamberlain’s Pain Balm and oc-
casionally afterwards. To :ny surprise
It removed all pain and soreness and
the injured parts were soon healed.”
For sale by Yates’ Corner Drug Store.
An Unfailing Proof.
Calvert, Jr.—I am positive that Jinks
is absolutely honest and trustworthy. -
Baity More—What is your proof?
Calvert, Jr.—I accused him of ste]- J
Ing my umbrella once and found out I
afterward that it was some one ekse |
who had stolen it.—Baltimore Ameri* y
can. \ I
In the treaty of Guadaloupe Hidalgo, i But in this letter of Ex-Senator But-
ties out of the entire array of fifty-
Seven that will not make a showing in
the statistics of mineral output for the
qnThere havegbeen. numerous nt-
are not representea by iarge iguresor JkX" "he menjegotonreteegalatann
■ J. W. Wood of Boston, who was sit
the Driskill yesterday. “In fact it is
Illegal in my state to sell them to boy*
under 16 years of age. Now, what
would these anti-cigarette agitators
ods of administration In the British
colonies. In Formosa, he says, Japan
has a very difficult people to govern
and wishes to profit by the experience
of the British government In handling
similar problems. The distinguished
visitor left for Galveston yesterday,
from which point he will sail on a
cattle steamer to the South African
republic. This is his first visit to thia
country, nnd he is much pleased with
America and Americans. He is a ltt-
is usually represented as having som
kind of genius. { <
As to the fool who never knowsh,
own interest, he may be the mas)
charming or the most irritating of pe l
pie, but it Is impossible in either cas
to dislike him. In the least estimabl
form he is "no one’s enemy but hl
own.” In his highest he is one of th
He bought in the open market from its j The vindication, as far as it goes, is
the appropriation or expenditure ot local business men and nil thia has course in the senate upon the Wilson
money must originate in the house of been done solely by st own people. I bi, for which action Mr. Gorman
For Over dirty Years %
Mra. Winslow's Soothing Svrup han
been used for children teething. 11
soothes the child, soften* the gums, al-1
lays all pain, cures colic, and is the
best remedy for diarrhoea. Twenty-
live cents a bottle.
F.
tana M
and ha
by the
as the ।
cent d
i has oft
' ‘arovide
years, and he furthermore expresses oeive •• within his reach, else he could
the opinion that the timber nelda otrot have conceived IL
North America will produce enough to' Senator Hoar charges the democrats
meet all demands for a hundred yean! with causing the civil war. Senator
ment about the t
the conditions und
ated seem to justir
The A
Choi
i publ
i Cecil
zmpu"e-=sg
Semi.weekly 8tateem«r»—1 year.. 100
------3------—
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The Austin Statesman. (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 33, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 11, 1903, newspaper, November 11, 1903; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1454753/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .