The Anvil (Castroville, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. [20], Ed. 1 Friday, December 23, 1892 Page: 2 of 4
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I
M ON E Y1.SH ARKS.
• Could the record ot the recorder
SY
boitom-
whence Mine IP From
SAN ANTONIO
BREWINJ ASSN
St Louis has
— men who prey upon the destitution
CIY BREWERY
ioarces and
•Im are at nothing to him.
LL ,
I
■
Has Now on the Market the
Celebrated
Pearl Beer;
have undergona it; the plague—I
the
STATES.
UNIT
--
■■
73
/
the eity of St Louis state o Mit i
onchundrod *t81O-J) dollars to him
'I
I
n
mT
1*
i
cd.
undertaken. with no other purpose
this
f
ah
TuERE it no need for
• "5
• turn.
I
Castroville
- and Lacoste
V
H.TMMN.Prenrdate.’
ing monopolistic civilizatlon doomed
KI
B
.he deceit of riches Flaming Sword.
€-
/
—OSUBSCRIBEo--
7on twa
bis bopes somewhere in the
CASTROVILLE
-"t
• . -ANVIL.-
never Torzret
!
and
22
-cos.
we wanted. and we got it, we bough
r> t he widened Infloeece to the next
j dirty after washin’, they think ths
* soapis nogood
t
6
-.a
HHD,
6
FXX<
■Mr
est sincere and earnest; and what-
ever ihay be the fate of their efforts
yite true that one with an education
fitting him. or her. for an intelligent
a man i taking up a
will know that ho i
aklng
luring
I
- _09
ity be
M in a
Mey have mercy for the poor!
Oh. r eenjura yoa have pity!.
F» rehsonabla poor man. yod were
made to be a alarm
Solentifie American
, Agency for
V. S MAI LINE
Daur HxcKa mwxzx
"HOma
hr 28202
is If any one <
mrnt properly
Pretty close
lx teat of terri
:-d ,
.
2
1
t it, indeed, a good deal too
antic in American daily life,
many men keep up the game
seen after enough has been
permit an old age of tranquil-
AVI at happiness to be again ridden 1
and beaten and starved! What hap-
pinera to work forever for bread and
’Trln-i Wi..- W.../.:2.L a — Lu e..12 1
Ki
b— v
LNBtfTMi,
Ftemdenk,
oV
1. IHILO,
. Managerj
} VMHHI,
Buperintendent
iu. h a volume of Itoney as the stupid
ulers the—" *
by the elevation of the car-tracks, the
whole railway roadbed being raised
No the word is weak, O master in
bllss! Poverty—I have grown up in
it; winter-1 have shivered in it;
famine—I have tasted it; scorn—I
• D
'C
do
TAK
K
Di
by a enrb, is a driveway and a side-
; walk. Most of the boulevards have
besides, a double row of trees planted
along the middle. Vehicles and foot.
and latent <ff
tha necessity
>f having do
with the pel
manship of u
and of haring
embody into
»nd administ
pnshensive vi
with our cape
% a living and will serve their em
Myjjimtfl th. better for their Intelli-
genes This is pre-eminently an edu-
rational age. an educational state'and
residences, churches and club-housen
The tracks of the street railway/
which have the right to run along the
boulevards pass along the center, and
on each side, guarded from the tracks
g
ow LOn
words .r vra
Tenyean
I
Sent by exm
of price,81.00
BRA DPI
Bold by all dr
depends upon organization. attacks at
its dendly foe non-union Inoor. .then
capital cnlls 10 its aid the military
powers of stte and nation. and labor
is coerced and rendered powerless
Peace, under such circumstances is
delisive; it is the peace of prostration
—of subjugation— itis peace en'orced
by the bayonet. a ”
if capital succeeds in breaking up
labor organization and enslaving the
■
r ■
3.;
your
did the act'
,k
I felt it requfsite that I should
come among you. Why? Because
of my yesterday's rag* it was in or-
der that my voice might be raised
among the satiated 'that God com-
mingled me with the hungered Oh!
have pity. Oh! you know not this
fatal world, whereto you think that
htainef any land lies to the north of it,
and to reach. If possible the geograph-
9
■kts of the age. w rit-
Hhow long are the
‘Leople of our Hreat
bar immense business
"unortioneThe Bawa A
As to PURITY and
STRENGTH It has no
" -.-i ■' .-,3 M02140 A, . ■ ,4 re-"""-
Equal, and is Guaranteed
t Excel anything of it ,
kind Manufactured in 4
country; and every man wants to see '
that his children are better educated the elect
then himself. i
9p
A Change Meet Come , c,
The New York Times of August
12, 1877. Mid:
‘There seems to be but one remedy
and that must oome a change of
ownership of the soil; that la tenant
farmers on the one hand and land-
upbuilding and uplirtingi of every
uinn; woman and child engaged in or
dependent upon that Vocation. Those
who have held back and hesitated
mat find fault andeven Oppose what
is ndertaken; hut if they had em-
hurked in thework at its inciplenc
i.nd studied it in all of its trials and
ticissitudes and labored as earnestly
nnd zealously as others whom they,
nondemn, they would have been in
different attitude toward the organlz-
ntion, and felt differently toward
those who have sacrificed their time
and labor in their behalf and for the
c
such a stale of things can arise as
mail require such Inter’crenco; what
A VOIDS FROM THS "ABT
W1»< viedor R«. MM on Um Qucatton
of Leber.
The poor ery rut to the wealthy.
The slaves implom their rulers and
m much now as in the days of Sparfan
I am ono of them, and I add my
roiM to that of.thomultlinde that it
may reach jhe ears of the rich. Who
am J? One of the people. From
Hu! 'o. you will not. I know yo
DsvU* bred in hell and dogs
physical obstacles would prevent any
larger lens ever being eonstrueteL
The new observatory presented to the
Chicago unirersity by Charles T
Yerkes is to have a telescope with a
forty-Are Inch lens. and the genius has
already been engaged to grin it.
Bight on the heels of this comes the
confideut aseertion of the French as
tronomee, M. Delnocle, that for the
world's fair in 1900 he will have ready
a telessope,equipped with a lens nine
feet ten inches in diameter, nineteen
inches thick,to weigh about nine tons,
whih will render risible surfass ob
jectsonthemson not less than five
‘ feet square. /nnu” '
ary bands of
nevere din-
dly ozeel in
or local or-
mt its horns
i will have no
sic, hearenly
G* ‘
e,
I
I1 prevent starvatton When they are
onco in the hands of the shark, they
are unable to extricate themselves
and remain there until all their ready
division in congresa
your vot i on the
Missouri has had them bn her statute
booka eversinseshehes been a slate.
They havebeen TPpatonty. dead
lerterg however, as the lender evades
the n by compelling the borrower to
pay the extortion in the form of ex-
iensfons." ’
# Keateunuon • Uraue,
! or a long time a sham angol. with
i to perish through its own weakness
1 nnd corruption, will be the next
1 stage in the growth of society. If,
however the people are sufficiently
about two feet from jthe level of the
street o .-■■r—......
VARIED FACTS/ ' . J
puxoreamicianew. slang ex-
A pair of traveling evangelists in
Virginia bear the names of Peter Horn
and Bill Fife. —
Amoy, in China, bears the doubtful
distinction of being the most dirty
and unhealthy city in the world.
It is said that the weeping willows
of America all sprung from a slip sent
over by Alexander Pope from Eng-
land.
Since the Belgian government has
absorbed the telephone .business life
has taken on a serious aspect to the
telephone girl. AU operators are re-
quired to pass an examination in Eng-
lish, French, German and Flemish,
and be able to draw a map of Europe.
Eight years ago, while a Philadel-
phia man was trying on a new suit pl
lothes in a clothing store, someone
stole his watch. The suit he bough t
was worn out years ago, but the sui t
he brought against the proprietors for
the value of his watch is still as good
M new.
The best lighted city in Europe is
Milan. American machinery only is
employed in its two central stations.
A curious feature of the system of dis-
tribution is that the wires instead of
being carried onspoles are suspended
from the brackets under the eaves of
Srenztan Tracy has changed his
mind and will let Lieutenant Peary
lead Mother polar expedition, after
. all, to determine definitely the
northern eoast of Greenland to ascer
Sow- 0
they have been heroes in the strife
The Aggressiveness of Capital.
Capital in the midst of ever-in-
creasing wealth, refuses to allow
labor to sliaro in the wealth produced.
It controls wages and keeps them
TNEW5KDM
LANE
"Allaruagsta
Eze.
CUR
..B
Heir in
.2
uS 43, • / M
I
The sky view
high order.
Scientific American
zoa
bm sIkmM he withcM it. Weekz,23,60,
UhLanasmsaws# sr
DR. OWEN’S
ELSHMJ
Patntetug.16,ina, Improved Jan. U. MR
-1
mind that the soriot of
why not? He can swear like a parrot
at Isul"
Mra Bunting 'reading from a fash-
ion paper—There is no change in
pocketbooks thia Mason. Bunting—
There hasn't been any in mine since I
married you. ’
A LAUOMINO CHORUS.
for mental training and acquired
knowtedge, Is naturally desirons of so-
(Curing a better position than that of
one who knows but little and has no
mental training, who is indeed but a
machine to do as directed and be fob
lowed every minute to see that he
■ does It correctly; but in a community
where there is a surplus of these ami
•Well, Mr. Duffy?" "Mornin’, Mr.
there w‛b still certain lepers driven
into tho woods who are fired at if
they come out of their dens? In
Peckr.ckze they have no bods in the
hove, and holes are dug in the
•■money sharks” who draw oq an
Wo want no second Ireland of
Amerioa, but it has been erit
rapid etrides in that direction d
the last quarter of a century__Chi-
224—2
r , c-.rk
("- - ; (2
, • goe, '
___________________J______________
divs
ile
the fer of misery, the groan of hun-
ger i ;i'i thu so'* of deipair and yo
hoe ! 1 not. What mercy thou hast
below gaps open. The shadow asks J
| to become light The damned discuss .
the elect it is the people who are workers the decline and fall of the
onco ni ng. I tell you it is a man who
of deeds office speak instead of be-
Ing a silent receptacle of written doc-
umonts what a startling tale of hu-
man misery would be unfolded, aud
E eheir panco and whnv narratives of inan's avarice and
L their lives to be I indiforenee would be told. It is
tf financial quaca- i there that misery and mni'ortune
ever rise to a full • tan du out as it does nowhere ele. II
100, mGsm2 is there that the executioner and
Ure now. and in the l mighibosnid ihe fena in human
landed of them by ‘ form, hidden from public gaze flour-
50 would mike the • ishes iv all his glory.
Lu subservient to i,u proportionate part oft esetellows
Stoatberry; have yes an impty bar'l o'
borrowed robes of virtue anda stolen Hour,.."or, to make • hincoop fer me
yr,ho of nuthority,ha tried to per- ( •The wire such
— I. the world that fortitude and ! ure as he cainng him Birdi? •Wel,
republie is certain. An overpower-
the shark walks in. takes possession,
and turhs their effect! over to a sec-
ond-handdealer, ' • . r
"The progress of' such transactions
from their incipienicy to their iending
is about as. follows: The unfortunate
individual want- money, and he goes
to Mr. Brown or some other individual
to borrow $100. Mr. Brown or his
been to Newcastle-on-Tyne? There
are men in the mines there who chew
coal to Illi the stomach and cheat
hunger.. Look you at Lancashire.
Want of work every where. Are you
aware that the Harlech fishermen cut
gruss when the fishery fats? Are
you rw.ro that at Horten Lazars,
Neither chance nor abuse is ondur
lag. They have both ol them, an
evil to,motrow.
I come to warn yoa I come to
denounco to you your own bliss. It
is made out of the ills of others
Your paradise is made out of hell and
of the poor.
I como to open be"ors you the
wealthy, tho grand assizes of the poor
—that sovereign, who is the slave
that convict who is the judge
I am bowed down under what I
have tsay- When to begin? I
know not I have picked up in the
vest I rough straggling pleas Now
what shall I do with them? They
overwhelm me and I throw them pell-
melt before me.
money borrowed. In fact a case was
tried before Judge Dillon not long
since, where it appeared that a well
( knbwn '.hark" had made $20,000 in
— transaction in connection with
ated for a small price But such is
promotion of thelr interests. They
growl for children to sleep, so that have done the best they knew. It may
in pAc' of beginning with the cradle , not have been wise, but it was hon-
they b'rin wilh the tomb.
wages; it is locked out and non-union
or competitive labor is employed in
its place This is the turn of the
thumb screw of torture for labor, it
is) work at the wages offered or
starve Mabor knowing that its life
L(,
sut
6
kiha Armod with sthe sword was
inte'rvpted byCromwellarmed with
tha rari
Tarible! Thei incorruptible' disso-
lul< az draw nenr; the clipped talons
put cut again the torn out tongue,
takt t fight: become tongues of fire
rcafeod to tho winds of darkness,
and IbB/howt in the Infinite. They
whe hi o hungry show their Idle teeth.
Parid’ses built over hells fotter.
Theu is suffering, nnd that which is
above leans over. naT that which is
One or kusertas tesezupuleme Veprera,.Row They
, . ieed heir Viettma
Th, following fFoud "tho Globe-
I nmn diver, and I bring up frOm
the depths a peart, the truth.. I
speak because l’know. I have ex-
per.ence, I have seen. Suffering?
mid-wIM fori
nccomplishe
stmeriing. til
in joyed by men who tyrunnizs over
ihe laborers and rob them of about
three-fourth 4 ot what ihey eUrn; ill'll,
by pocketing about twothirds whie
they put one-third into tho pockAh2'
.he employe second by comgg
them through protection." toy a
high price for article* they had cro- |
will avail you In heal,
side of th* grava ne et.‛ ” fo that
with I carts of stone. Upwtrd: to
had girls getting to > much eduatioh , your golden thrones for ages tins gone
be they country or city b ed. It is "
all
Worry abut.
in Kegs and in Bottles.
N“ouimtri. average 10 per cent per month from
meoi of "upoggdoe, vital the their victim* although the taw is
df...giVlng^Spiofall me rh.voryomphniisasnd oKplicit on the
iousofmaninsopotywih his rel.subfherinavnhoon numerous case.
„Uodernexistineletreumalanega u ' inattctnounondohenad conlqgtealdhom
"ausul§ to interfgre as he had done. borfower i a inioresenafono.more
because the government arbitrarily, than per cent in excess of the
limits the volume" of mpney. and of
ihs limited amoutfi keeps hundreds
brought up toll; he knows what it is ;l Philadelphia Times: < barks J.
It is his business. | Harrah, n large marnfacturer o
A guide is neceszary for us Being steel 'told the inside history of the
poor, we are ignorant; being igno- McKinley act when he wrote over hV
. । rant wo are blind; we need a guIda own signature for publication: •Fhi
-"7012.10. 1 But why are we ignorant? Because it tariff belongs to us; we bought H; wi
121201 0Zd6 must be 89 Ignorance is tho guar paid for it and it is aura Wedic
noans. for de.pite q|an of virtue. Ho who is ignorant not put up our money to increase th«
622” is no mors to innocnL It is our duty not to price of labor. lo increase wagea m<
MAN Lhe Europin think, complain or feason. , therefore wn have not done it; wn pu
man know no other These truths are incontestable up the money to buy the IcgUlaltor
meat ih»» hexam Society reposes on them. What is ' '
■MNlearned 165and society? Misery for you if you sup-
■tan they like II pori At Death if you daro touch IL
gemE5
799***:
skf
• Oorreapondence Im mngilah ,
„---e Meetrie neeles,61 vee
Bwiii fectric Belt and Appilanca co.,
108 North Broadway, ST. LOUIS, MO.
- hair-tr zger pistol a I will sayi "1 i;
it ahd paid for it and tha} i th' am to he H ue to justi > and lo inan- "
whole story." ptherwise 1am ads iduck"
Let me yen turn the prediction that
this is,but the firet of a long line of.
measures by the Cnited Sialo i treas-
ury looking to the same end—the ar-
resting of the final and inevitable so-
called financial crista really and only
S collapse of our bank and business
credit systems. Our sge rulers the
McCullochs tho Shermans and the
Giarfielda refused to let us have a
volume of money in! harmony with
af millions in the treasury as useless
is so many paving stones; but what ai
travesty on Government it is. that Ward FurnitureCompany, which
pine» a to work forever for bread and strong to resist the aggressiveness of
relee! Wunt heppinessto be free capital, interl eked and intertwined
ian the delmion that ctl-'il is good as it is with all the powers of church
-gvaxua, , mu - ’ * and 1 e other than misery! Was there Lind state; if, through political meth-
8 y^-*****0" O> thr pole There is a any tiling more crazy than those ideas? ods and the introduction of Industrial
afaudinatonin polar exploration that "Where should we be if every vaga- co-operation, an entire change of the ucuapuwor. .. IW-, wuu.......J
amounte to positive madneas Naw bond had his rights? Imagine every- industrial system is effected, and Ehemselves teltittheydont wanttheir
that Lieutenant Peary has been siezed body governing! Can you imagine wealth becomes equitably distributed.
Swith it he will continue to make ex- Hcity governed by those who built it? then the future prosperity of the
peditions uutil he either finds the pole They are, the team not the coach- nation is- assured. The turmoil of
-- man. What a God-send is a rich war will cease and peace and pros,
man to take care of everything, perlty will be the common heritage
Surely he is generous to take this of all the people. — Soclologic New*
trouble for us And then he was] ----------
used them. They have allowed the
monopolists of the country to control
the cauuses and conventlona nomi
nating their tool* to omce to legis-
late in their interest and against the
interest* of the farmers.
Th* farmer I* devoured by usury
because he ha* borne the chief burden
of taxation; because he give* the
transportation companies one-half his
crop to get the other half to market,
and the little thats left him after
paying interest and taxes pets him on
mighty short ratlons
He paid taxes to enable Uncle Sam
to give and to loan millions of treseure
to railroads and other corporations
Ho has been working early and late
to pay the public debt—and to day it
would take more wheat more corn
mure pork, or more beef to pay the
outstanding debt than it would to
have paid the entire debt at the close
of the war.
But what sort of a "remedy is that
proposed by the limes? The lot of
the furmer is certainly bad enough
now—and it is certainly just as true
that • a change of ownership of the soil;
that is, tenant farmers on the one hand
and landlordson the other," would not
better hi* conditinn. It would only
add to the number of tribute takers
Tho leeches must be shaken off;
able-bodied drones must be forced to
earn their living, instead of stealing
it from labor. A
Money and transportation at cost
would be a far better solution of the
problem than that proposed by the
Times
We want no farmers to farm the
farmers that farm the farms; on the'
contrary, the farmers who farm the
farms should have the product of
their own tabor and the other -farm-
ers" must be forced into somo useful
occupation nnd made to earn their
own living, netead of sponging it off
the labor of others- /
verted ^yramid^wlH gupp be tuy brunt! -- ____uuu<.^- -
wh‘oap7Mlct early -d'ssbl n- । transfer over to teZ said jSfr
Itou of the Greenback party must be Brown h‛s executors administrators
mtirety ignorant of the ground upon assigns L Here follows a desertion
which we stand financially, the real or the property, upon condition that
fact being that in spite of the enoc. 1 i ho Pa 10 the said Mr Erown or
mous sacritices by which resumption his snid oxecutors $ssgns or admin;
was brought about—certainly gauged itpators the sum1o *102 (and legal
itonnciail* oVerW.0Ja000'0b)-ite Interest) ' >« this convezarce shall
failure is As certain as Any avent in be void, othetwse.to remnin in ful
the future of the United State*. The Torea nod efTect . And 1,1 case
Greenback ideas art the ideas of the de ‛nulIt bo , mada iu the payment
future, for a people so intetiigent, .0 of he debt above mention od. or
practical, so enterprisng as the Alav. , paEt thorcof, o the interest due
leans who will refuse to foflow artheroenodungdaywhenthe.same
ruinous theory beyond a certain point , blteht t) bepnidzthen,the whole sun
far so that may appear to those who shul attlto electuousnid Brown
lo not believe in heltheory. and who hecopie immediately dueand payable,
cannot but lose patience with those 1 he property herebynBold and con:
who follow it even to their ruin, veyed 10 remain in Doe’s possession
When another collapse of the ered. ‘ uniildefau 1 bestiade in the paymen:
it system cornea It will find ln oNald deb arid l.ulere.L ffrsomopart
the United States a people who will thereoli butin case o[ dsle or dis;
be quite prepared to grspplo with the posal. or attewpt to sell or dirose of
Jlfficullv and put an eno to a condi Mud property, or n removal of, oral,
lion of' things-which perioa:cally tempt to remove the sume. or an un-
brings ruin misery and unhappiness -reusonab,o fie precation in the value
to almost the entre nation. The thereof, the said Brown or hs legal
mils of the gods grind slowly, but thJy representntive may take the, sa id
grind asceedingty line. "-only wait! •property. o'' any part thereof, into
5 -2 . ______ ’ his possession.
The "peelet Mteuef nt ..frutMti-m" j Upon taking possession of said
Russlan stove pipe is quoted at property or any par thereof, either
shout 13 cents per pound. Woods in caso of default, or ns above pro-
plunished lion pipa worth about one- vjded the said Brown or hi. legal
fourth as much, is. quoted at nearly representative may proceed to sell the
the same price. I ho Russian pipe s same, or amny part thereof, at public
dlurable. while the planished iron is nuction, to the highest bidder for cash,
comparatively wortiiless. We have Theu follows a description of the
recently been in’ormed by n stove methods of sale, with the proper cer-
dealer that one hour*.exposure to wet titications of the instrument.
weather will destroy the planished t The vietim signs the morignga
iron pipe, while at the same limo it but instead of receiving 8100 he is
would have been to Ills interest to sell given480 i« in’ormed that the
thesame The npplication o’ a prin- , #so is a pUrc of the expenses to re-
ciple that will *o protect the manu4 cord, etc. He then, a* per agree-
acturer of a poor or apurio i* nrllcle ment as is usually the case pays 10
ind increase the price of a good one per cart per month on $190 und pay.
may be correet, but we fail to reconcile in advanco. Mr. Brow a or whoever
it withthelawsofrighteo .economy, the leder may ball too sharp to
Free trade I. tho divine law of coin i crelit on the back of the note what
merce. Prof ection of the tyrant and the | orrower gives as interest, but he
aristocrat, and the slavery of the charges it up for exensions" to j
masses through, so catted American evnde the usury law. s+
protection, may be fiji th? la. !----Latva egele.t Mut^Kve extatad-;
borers of the country; it certainly is in almost nil agea and the slate of
■ T-
■
...... YoumayK.
ko'M Md 84 ,, -wamaorei 6b, torture. Resignation is ceinsh-
•I but on th I. n 3 under another fname to coward-
k • under a white veil of goodnesa
you belong. So high, you areoutslde
of it I will tell you whut it is.
Abandoned, an orphan alone in a
boundless crantion. Imade my entry
into this gloom that you call society.
The first thing Nhat I saw was law
under the form of a gibbet; the
second was wealth—it is your wealih,
— under the form of a woman dead
of cld" and hunger; the thir l was
■Lishs.i .aUsd*. -Xr— -----
fourth ww your palaces ’ beneth
which cowered the tramp:
The human race has been made by
you slave* and cog viets. You have
made this earth a duugeon. Light ts
wanting, air is wanting, virtue is
wanting
The workers of this world, whose
mnembered that the
cats paw to poll th*
Iha Are This to the
instaace where the
MM was not regarded
---
UI has relented, and
• at the world's fair
«Ot bethe end of odncation or cultnro.
The man in his life learns to under-
ietand and apply what came to his
mind bat dimly as a school boy The
sgbjects that bore the boy interest the
tnan. ft to therefore well that ho
shuuld ba intvoduced to as many lines
ot thought m poesible while a child,
that he may select the one that inter-
eata him when he comes to his mature
years. It has been remarked Hint a
man rarely entente* his field afici
gronna ne has gone over or choose
some patch of it to which to give his
special attention, bat he rarely adds
to IL It is thus well that the ground
should be as extensive as pot si ble
--rerr# •
A VEW year* ago when She Lick ob-
pervstory was being planned it wn*
confidently announced that the thirty:
•lx inch aperture planned for in the
Lick telescope would hnv reached the
maximum size, that insarmountalle
OUR T»,|>OUy LETTER-
Umlgu. Adverdlalag Deyhee-The Heule
vara Law Sustainedrsereet Hai"
raa Mall Cate
8g. Lcus, Dm. IS—Ths merehant
Aho have large holiday stocks of «ood!
to wll, pay handsomely for the IdeM
their udvertiming agents give them.
Th* streeta are crowded with people
ready to buy, end yet bewildered by
the Alluring shows i the big windows
of every shop, and the tradesman whe
bolds the throng for a few minnt 1
front of his place is sure to make
money by it. This week one merchant
got an idea that Mt hl* competitors nt
their wits epd to compete with him
Ue had an enormous show window, in
full view of th* street, flled with hi
moat attractive and expensive toy,
mechanical andotherwise, and put two
little boys in IL All daz long the
youngsters played with the figure*
winding them up nnd letting them run
out; shot at targets with guns and
bows and lay down and looked at
gorgeous picture-books. The street in
front was blockaded with people, and
inside the clerks were kept briny selling
the things with which th* lada were
playing. The idea has spread over th*
town, and boys who like to play with
toys can easily get places in every one
of th* shop* no W.
Postmaster Haow could have
chonen no batter time than this, when
the mail* are crowded with Christmas
presents, and the carrier* worn out
with overwork, for th* extension of
the street railway postal service he es
tablihed some time ago.
SL Louis is the only city in the coun-
try that has such a thing, and the
Postmaster has no models to help
/im. He started the system on a Une
of electric care, running twenty mile*
east and west, and found that it saved
k score of carrier* and several hours
in city delivtries. He has now decided
to improve th* system by adding a
cross-town line to it, so that the peo-
ple living in the north and south will
get their malls quickly as well as
those in the west and east. The other
electric lines will be added to the sys-
tem as fast m the government esn be
induced to make the necessary, appro-
priation*
The courts have just sustained the
boulevard law of the -city, and the
effectis already seen in a great in-
crease of the number of permits taken
out by builders for costly dwellings on
the broad avenues which the taw . was
designed to protect from the intsin
of business. No shop or structure in-
intended for apy commereial purpose
whatever can be built on the boule-
vards. They are reserved entirely for.
no responsive employment they must
take such positions as will gire them '
eash is extorted from them Thea
Your poor n
night after ngb
feing from thu
and horror to p.i
a bottle of Tay 1<
Sweet Gum ui
croup preveutiv
colds and consu
A stiteh la tiu
ofelothes.
eal Reonomainte: 4
, and most emirent of SL Lonis: ....
clerk makes an eamintion and finds
that the unfortunato has about $300
■ l mEWwAn then dra"ne Posenis:.................
" ' Xi John Dosgot
grown with the necessities of business"ln/ T ,1. .... ,
antil te superstructure of the in- . sour inconside allon o the sum of
. . T r J . dharhindpedeR16e) doarg tn him
Ss: HOW LONG?
less ph How am I named? I am
wretchedness My lorda I ba •
something to say to you
My lord* joa are placed high.
You havo power opulence pleasure
the sua immovable at your xenith
unlimited authority, enjoyment un-
divijed. a total forgetfulness of oth-
lr* So ba ll But there is something
below you, abort you. perhapa My
lord* I impart IC ytu a novelty. The
human race oxiata
I am be who comes from the
deptha My lord* you art tho gnat
ahd the Helu Tha is perilous. You
take advantage of tho night But
have a care there is greater power-
the morning. The dawn cannot be
vanquishe L it has within it the
Mt break of irresistible dev.
Yoa you are the dark cloud* of
privilege. Be a’rald The true mat-
ter of lb* house I* about to knock at
the door.
What is the father of privilege?
Cbance What is his son? Abuse.
ba can rend it: - W
" kes, e
-Pe /X: N
I
cago Exprees : ---
oijeets at the anfane
The Alliance has no furthw Object
orrurppsethanto further .and ad-
vande tho interest and prisperity of
every farmer. That, says the *AfU-
ance Herald. Is its highest aim. its
lotliesi purpose, and nobtest under-
taking. It has no other mission, ob-
,oet or purpose. It wasi born of ths
necessity and suffering of tho people
SPKNEfWorrHecoursethas
adopted to attain those ends may not
be tho wisest and best, but it is cer-
tuin that they have been .adopted af-
ter mature nnd earnest study and
consideration of.the problem* involr-
Footpad—I want your watch. Choi
.w ‛araabeduC0s,"r"Mewcht
— wltsgsoppatesane"
old. I once heard you say it was X ,000.
Dealer—Ham! that must bars been a
labor ouMton The patient endurance of wrong long.whjeo. , „ ..
dealing with a vas wrong froe to olsewhere spread Eriend Why do you dump all that
“emiK w » )f in !h I* generation and to trass- dirt into your noap ketttes? Soap Man-
-- ufheturwr—V folksdoa't find the water
Patents
nscerde: It is the end that is bagin- i
n ng. It is the red dawn of cutastro- l
phe.
----- ...------ _. ..... ob.qcl except the elevation of
fruits youenoylivein deathThere, the vocaton of agriculture und the
uro little girls whi> begin at eight by — -----
prostitution, and who end at twenty
by o!d ego. Who among you havo
conatderucuiX । ocwowkerememeort"h“poBtbere
aoschaqestlor tribe and almost •• indifferent. The
frvallonover a wl?.s usurer «• not:• man of setimert and
... And under var'ous is A unmoved by tales of wo. as he
ioverament ta K Bope ha* maro than is 10 the, forms ol law. , and
soavinced me Qi e"wonderi to- l interest is ali he lives and cares for.
-----X, * wor developed II I* his aim of existence; all things
• < rn country, undor nre “ nothine to him
ONE
Both the me
Syrup of Fig
and refreshix
Liver Ana”B
tem eflectual
aches and fe
constipatiou.
only remedy
duced, plcue
septabl/ to t
its action at
effects, Frj
healthy am)
ita many o:
mend it to
the meet po
Syrup of
nnd $1 bottl
gists. Any
may not ha'
cure Lt pro
wishes to ti
any substiti
CAUFORN
“Ge
Sy
. My niece,
taken with
became ven
that dreadec
She tried ut
, cine but not
Finally she
she told in
than anyth
stopped the
ana case, a
had it frot
Mary A. St
Honor to G
Wendell Phillip* says that it theegui mission combined ailTlovely ant
"ormnzpoworir Lytantmake ilt a suffering creature on hisi knees
: ex don’t want their wan teeth set tounmurmuringly bear
children l» wait lhg year* before nnd ndure 1* a spoctnole worthy
they bare th* bread Khey ought to bu h ol sympathy and reverence, lo
kava if they doul wAnt to wait this counterfeit nogel many men and
lhemseives they shpuid write oa women he ve .weiuten beautiful, sad
their banner* so that E very politicien, poem* and pathetic toriea andmany
uo matter how shortighted he may thousande.of peopla but cbiolly.al-
*- never forget’ mest whaliy. women have offered up
ifyou la tach te acow of sarcasm their complaining unprotesttng
at labor, w 3 never Jo te if there l« lives with a martyr* confident hop*
"and you throw
failed about three years ago, and was
I condemnation of the secretary him- ihen $ in Ktorecoyer 81500 addition-
.elf, seeing that he has’been Obliged al . Nealy "1 oftheseumortgagesare
to interrere, while congress refused * madeby pooplowhomwantnd.nec
to adopt his recommendation, made esaiky force 10 take such methods to
less than ten month* since, to-cease
lhe coinage of silver d llars ' and to
retire the silver cantifcutes of which
'attar there werevin circulation on
September 1, 1882 469, 440. 210.
| persons. The poet essayist granted
; her reqneat in the followln* TMhion:
, “Pray, do not say hereafter, 'I would
be obliged.’ If you would be obliged,
be obliged and be done with it Say,
T should be obliged,' and oblige, yours ‘
truly, James. Russell Lowell."
BRIGHT AND BREEZY.
the houses.
Perhaps no English proverbial
phrase is mor* frequently misquoted
than the one that speaks of hitting a
nail on the head. Unthinking people
almost always say the “right nail,”
which is absurd. The joiner who hit
Ube wrong nail would be a "duffer”
indeed; but an expert hand may now
and then hit his nail otherwise than
fairly on the head.
The reply of James Russell Lowell
to th* woman who wrote, saying: "I
would be much obliged for your auto-
graph,” has been often in print and
has undoubtedly been clipped for scrap
Md pocket book reference by many
t rAt,
re
. - , - 1 down to the more subsistence point
position, or rather a position calling &io thall be mete- out to you in Lubor resists strike* for higher
lords oa th* ther, Hk. that which j0mi on8°
bus long existed in Europe Md our . T . *
own state of California, Evry thing !WMB,„M TXX2
•Mm* ripo for th* chanze; half trio l I lh vi02I
farms of th* country are ready to be ' . wi .
•old if the buyers would only appear."’ | Tzatii 1 2
Too Vue; and bacause farming , ,h ,,
doesn't pay; and why don't H pay t "ttur
Bochum th* former* while tb*y euoiNDS.
have heads of thetr own haven’t ; nniPoWer
20M/rce NOl
3
Idel which we standi "Aecordiog to the record. of the
"i n". ana for nil ; recorder of deeds’ omce the number
1 A.Daupine I of chattel mortgages filed average
ph Stains ! about 12 000 peryear Some or these
Efss"sarstsmagpaanastcerm2"5a5;
401 broadianducomlorty. Or the 000, 14,000 are on
Xb- ely nur rmony 1 household effect* sch as furmiture,
liana la douzenis is the new de- carpeta cooking utensil* Of 1b.
partur. mor. mo than in Uie man- 11.000, 10,000 held by well known
igem.ot of Our mohey and our finan-
m involving ask/
nnd • that what is
I. a . : C
huit-.
' <•»*•«* »»* the merehant who
0d Smutlen • a tainload of silk tea
829 Aaeunedelicatethat adjudication
S 28548583602 RwLtoUs. tderav represenlatives in
Eamanzaazamasmimaz
E ^Kmatfi ton eltion of the mer-
9 . chand gnuc
M22 B3izrnsuut a Ponghkeepsie voman
MMMG 2"' toiwvw heavx damage* from a rail-
4866558 E 8828 rond gospany tor killlug * man to
yhom she was engaged to be married
I 8 . 8282 ' mny set aprecadentotgreat import
mm to baahA|grs. Ifherclaii prove
S05. musoeesful M unmarried man will have
2, N M much pecuniary value M • benediet
' T> —-after decease— and uninated mascu-
SSE- linity can *h«* shont with genuine ex-
ultancn: “Oh, Death, where is thy
E0e"g" -“ten —--=-===
PSshe A dotoanp philosopher once explain
Mdd“"Ba.fng why he wonld rather be in a rail-
20- road amash-p than a steamboat
EMMEeamhn’emash. "If yonsc In a railroad'
823 amashiup why dnh you is but if in a
22 .teamboat smash-up. whs’ is you?’
bgcTbosncondcondusion conld probably nare unaergons lt, ne piague_1
b. npplied with equal force to the have had it; sha ne—1 have drank of
B32MA 9 - emazhup at a train running 130 miles g
E22ean houn It would reqaire a iniero-
—,e meope to dotermine the difference be-
L gun , tween ire wrecked passengers and the
r 5 6,g ewrecked amperes, volts ahd ohms.
2 I -222 TAE *ad o?*ehool la not or should
WUl ear* all
#22253
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Haass, Herman E. The Anvil (Castroville, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. [20], Ed. 1 Friday, December 23, 1892, newspaper, December 23, 1892; Castroville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1584224/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Castroville Public Library.