The Anvil. (Castroville, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 49, Ed. 1 Friday, July 19, 1895 Page: 2 of 4
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Bome ny Ob
pottery publication of Great Britain,
TURKISH OUTRAGES.
tn its iesue of May 1. 1896:
A
that
h
40.’
192,254
Miesionaries.
McKinley Tariff.
Tobacco-Weakened Resolutions.
of
age, while bathing in the nay off pier
481
/
of theW:
/
V
■t«. Miller
-
' I
lo without extra
eat
nois Federation, of Labor called upon
be had been wrongfully convicted, be-
1891, which in express term* prohib-
about half a mile south of
rgMelmnan oudty, re-
0
IZ
elater.
Aivord, W
recently exhib-
X
/T1,
lqgrenne pine that time will reach 20
7
was found
69
an ar-
beer garden at
Dallas:
augurated.—Tribune, Sat Lake.
( •
2e ofide
iolasto census
1
fession of H
j
A
• ।
of a doubl
at Bean Lake,
itt end Vunimment
wage
were
I
1886 .
1887 .
1888 .
1889 .
1890 .
stained
others
1891 .
1892 .
1893 .
1894 .
/ ■
pany. I
op the
Gaines mar-
Koch killed
in no
trace
For the frat quarter of thio year, and
ending with March 81. the total ex-
porta of crockery reached a value of
very
him-
out
second
la Iba neauvrui Lend Suppoed to Mav•
neem st one Time a Port of ene Gar-
den et Eden, Death ana woe Stalk
Abr—*
ie
it
c
l- '
». They are
On contract
from the roof on or near
on
ro-
"Po
in»:
f 1891. by which
ahibit prize fight-
sHemeOyC^New Yo*l» < 'lly or Ene
(though in many different forma) the
following prop *
1. Tht’te
in"s.a
MTmperponal
toecure a
, not exceeding
aring a heavy rain, a bolt
ng struck the residegce
AUSrIx, Tok.. July 15— The follow-
ing is the full text of Attorney General
Crane’s opinion anent the validity of
lied six ducumbers that weighed four-
teen pounds. o n »
In 1890 Texan had 228,126 farms,
with 61,406,967 acres. Doubtless the
At a cotton chopping at Mart, Me-
Lnnan county, a few days since, a
shooting scrape occurred, and Price
and Robert Elliott were wounded,
Robert fatally. Miguel Castado has
been arrested charged with the shoot-
ing-‘* 1i " ,•<
P. M.Hays, a farmer living five
miles east of Thornton. Limestone
county, was seriously shot one morn-
ing recently by his stepson, John
Favors, about 16 years old. Family
trouble was the cause.
Near Ringgold, Montague coun-
ty, Christ Peterson committed suicide
one morning recently about 7 o'clock
by hanging himself. He was tempo-
rarily insane. '
Attorneys for the pugilists have
been trying to edify the comptroller
oh his duty. Whether the comp-
troller will issue the coveted license
MADEFVNERALPYRESOF LIV-
ING HUMAN BEING$.
d
t
a Parisian monthly magazine of fash-
ion that there are tailors and fashion
plates for dogs. The list of garments'
includes mackintoshes, Jaeger vests.
years to be 8414, of which 6176 are
white and 2285 colored. Of the white
$127 tore males and 3052 females of
the polorgd 1119 pro males and, 1116
are females. ’ , ' ,.
rtyol
to be
so.
.Jit
ahe V'J ana W
-
■ J
at
Dug Dentists and Taylors. /h,
it is well known that there are
dentists in London and Paris whose
■peelaly it is to fit lap dogs with a set
of false teeth. It now appears from.
state farm 160. on share
, oprailroads 418. at Hunte-
Crane W. Cirhet
AUSTIX, Tok. J
• , 4
I has reprieved for
death sentence of
aw Whitehead, sen-
ed July 12 at Corsi-
a on the part of the
rmit Fbmmas' aged
a Alabetha. to have
reahher wayward
hjMUk The ap-
espiel signed by
»oux»y autorney
td
er two years ago on - ac-
S trouble. Gaines' wife
His body was recovered. Deceased
wed to ton p Mr*. ouisa Stribk-
hausen, a widow, who is prostrated
the governor Williams has confessed
that the revolutionary party which
sent him to begin the revolution has
3000 rifles in Trieste, Austria, which
will be buipped to Armenia for the
use of the patriots at the earliest op-
portunity. An interesting incident of
Williams' confession, as made public
by Hahrk to the feel that he G aot a
British subject at all, but is a native
of the Caucasian region of Russia.
the comptroller states that he
large forod at work on the lilts
but they will basest out as soon
Mible, and his advice to delin-
a is to pay up early.
» body of a man whose name is
teed to have been Blake was
I in the cornfield of John Hum-
A Douhte Tragedy-
Kansas Crry, Mo., July 15.—News
The sound money Democrats of
Tarrant ooanty met a few days ago
dudorganized with Ml members.
*C L McGill died from too much
and divided, one going
orly direction, leaving its
it was sought «
ing, is invalid 79
cause it denoum
felony and amix7
ment of a misden
the act was so'
and is of such dc
considered eithe
ly. Tie mianhad evidedtly been
I for three or four days, the body
g decomposed beyond rocogni-
him to be prsent and delirer an ad-
dress at the great Fourth of July,cele-
bration which Chicago organized labor
purposes to give this year. The dele-
gation was composed of Richard Pgw-
ers of the Sailors’ Union, W. 0 Poiy-
roy, representing the State Federation,
and W. M. Groves, secretary of th
tuMiee Near Grapeland. Houston county,
— ' irecentlycMeZack Harmon was go-
ing to * neighbor’s house in a rud
mmsmmMsmdheSkes"gtacared
and ran away, breaking Harmon's
collarbone and the horse was badly
cut up in a barbed wire fence.
They Coma meh.
Rhe (poutlagly)—Before we
oresons: 0) Be-
hhe offense ' as a
Chereon the punish-
anor, (2) Because
adelinitely framed
itfuk construction,
•y itself or in con-
swxan orr. No--Bad Is thie only suaraaM
tobacco babtt cure because 11 an airectiy
afectba nerve centers, cestroys irritatone
Goad (or the Tracts.
The promotion of Attorney-General
Olney to the office of Secretary of State
should be encouraging to' the trst
The failure of Mr. Olney to enforce the
anti-trust section of the Gorman tariff
is rewarded by promotion. This is in
full accord with the policy of the free
trade party under Mr. Cleveland's ad-
ministration.
Grover’a Wiadom.
It is reported that President Cleve-
land said the other day, “it takes idle-
ness to produce agitation.” For once
we commend the wisdom of the presi-
dent. Some 500,000 people have been
made idle because of the peculiar doc-
trines which he and his friends advo-
cate. When that idleness is enforced
until the idlers have nothing in their
stomachs, there is a tremendous agita-
tion, and it is a wonder to us that un-
der the pressure of the last two years
there has no armed revolution been In-
a county, the other
muchine at a plan-
FM Wi»Q OrCe
Oneplece passed
f and wamearried a
The Bouth la Eepectally Interested le
Iba Cause at reoteetien— Why nrictah
Fetters Ara riensed— What Leadig
Pagan Have to Bay.
. a /• Dress Goods. (
Women's and Children’s dress goods
should be plentiful' this season. In
March, 1894, we bought from abroad to
the extent of *579,657; last March we
bought to the extent of $1,851,647, an
increase of nearly $ 1,300,000. If all our
mills are as busy as the free-traders
tell us, there must be an enormous sur-
plus of dress goods in the market. Our
manufacturers will undoubtedly ap-
predate the blessing of free wool.
without saying a word. A
man will dq the same, except
e swears while he goes. An
Ten Years of Service
The 'American Economist celebrated
its tenth anniversary by issuing an edi-
tion containing expressions of opfh
from the leading editors and publigste
all over the country on the progress of
the country under protection during
the decade. It makes extremely inter-
esting reading. For instance, one writer
notes the America^ production of beet
sugar In 1890 was six million pounds,
in 1891 ten, in 1892, eightern, in 1893
forty-three and in 1894 sigty million
pounds. The factory at Norolk, Nep.,
alone expends among the farmers and
wage earners of its locality more thad
*400,000- a year. • ' \ rt
marked increase. A reference to
returns published monthly in the :
said, was recalled
wihgrie -,,,-2 48
5 "ie Other 4 veoing on the tram road
tory Gazette will at once prove how
considerable bad been this increase.
they have over 40 special machines,
with a eapac’ty of over 22 miles of
fence per day, and their fencing is Used
in every state in the Union. The fence
most used is their Cable Steel and Hog
Fence for field fencing. Cable Poultry
Fence, Steel Web Picket Fence, and
Park and Cemetery Fence, and to com-
plete same they also make gates of wood
or steel frames to match, and also fur-
nish Iron posts. All of their styles of
fencing are strong; neat, durable and
eoonomical in price.
And everyone needing fencing of any
kind will consult their own interests by
sending to the De Kalb Fence Co., 121
High Street, De Kalb, Ill., for thSIr 44
page catalogue and prices. The reader
is also directed to their advertisement
in this paper.
The best friend any man can have is his
"The Democratic party” dbnerves
the Dallas News, "has in it entipely too
many people who do not know what
Democracy means." If they knew they
would' get out. It is this ignorance
that has been the salvation of the
Democratie party.
lerry Williams, the leader
of the captured band. Aecording to
"SE-*225*dmpe,Eat/XTtf-5y.
DRAK Mir--1 received yours recent,
ly written in reference to the pro-
pveed Korbeu-Fitzeimmon fgbt it
i. ,
‛.,N
brahetamily-
to tollowhgshowe the amount of
dand couni taxes and penalties
in redemption of property sold
axes uedar the new law: Janu-
111, 104. M. February $11,085.23,
sh 19168.90. April M14LM. May
104.80, June 827,617.20. In an-
te numerous inquiries as to
i the time will expire as to when
"We believe that sueceeding parts of
the year will show an even greater in-
crease.”
Every American will agree with this
British pottery authority that the com-
parison is most "instructive," also that
from the British point of view it must
be very satisfactroy. It tells a story of
increasing sales of British pottery to
this oountry, an increase'of more than
100 per cent in 1895 as compared witf
1894. But here the figures do not tell
all. For seven months of 1894, in con-
sequence of a strike, scarcely any pot-
tery was made in this country and the
. From the clothing the body
ientiedne belng that op an old
i who went .there about July 1
) Waeq, where he had livea for
EarenLondrpdkomberoom who
zlleuimlomeawirbutdefs. In
- ’ — - ..... burning the houses the petroleum
THE AMERICAN POLICY IS AL-
WAYS THB BEST.
John Locitett, colored, 14 in jail at
Hempstead charged with having rav-
tohed a girl ol his oolor.
Hempstead has just passed through
40 epidemic of mad cows. One gored
aad ruined a fine horse.
So far only Texas grapes have ap-
peared in the Houston market They
AM-gMd Hough._________
Fifteen oars of fat beeves left
Weatherford for Chicago in one train
recently.
said to have been carefully, made out he had been wrongfully convicted, be-
nt Constantinople. , .Several weeks ' cause the act levying the occupation
after the Sassoun inaneuere, <11 is [ tax had been repealed by the act of
claimed, orders were sent from the 1891, which in express terms prohib-
। is to be eeen,-25 "0" -7"
a Clay burn Mack and-Jim Greene
and,, strangely enough, the
district in which Bahri
self was born. Leaving
of consideration entirely
Platt county. this state, was received
here last night Theodore Kirkman
was hot and killed by George Machel,
and later in the day Machel commit-
ted suicide, Machel's story was that
before getting out of bed that mora:
log Kirkman took down a gun and
they began fooling with IL Machel
finally wrestled the weapon from his
companion. Not knowing that it was
loaded, he pointed the gun at Kirk-
man's head and pulled the trigger.
Kirkman was almost instantly kiled.
m he lay in bed.
Gov. Altgeld charges that members
of the Illinois legislature have yielded
tO <*t>landisbmeuM'’
W Jr* 400 M0
, „i At amine near Mason, recently, a
Are 'Mr. Brack was putting in a blast
when it exploded, toartag bis head
- . 4^ W.
004 tb d h a. n A
Patomokfira, ig:
* 1 deltha 3a
; • • > ♦' . , - •
nois Federation , o4 Labor called upon that has never given satisfaction. This
Governor McKinley to-day and invited' is what has made their fence so popular
■■-<■>-'- .... and in such great demand and to-day
has captm
same body. The governor was unable
to make the delegation a definite an-
swer at this day, but will try to fake
arrangements to attend.— The Sunday
Inter-Ocean. •», '
At Benchley, Robertson county, re-
cently the store and contents owned
by J. T. Smith were consumed by fire.
Lots about 14000; insured for >2600.
i» The local option law, is bdipg en-
forced at Weatherford. Ten covic-
tions were secuted le one week, re-
cently of parties for selling Whisky.
Marion Calvert ip)charged with
having raped his 12-y ear-old eister-
in-law near Sunset, Montague county,
and is in jail.
Duval county again gives the first
bale of cotton. It ' weighed 626
pouyda, ginned from 1800 pounds of
seed cotton. Ab 1 1 v
M. Detnis, »a farmer living near
and Modtkan was not molested except
in the ordinary course of persecution
general in all parts of Armenia. In
the city of Van at this moment there
are 600 young men swurn to give
themselves as a satrifice t Turkish
butchery in the hope that the atten-
tion of England may be more strongly
called to the desperado situation of
their people. The Armenians can
not accept any scheme of reform
which does not have for its funda-
mental principles the absolute control
of European powers. Unless Europe
controls the reforms there will be a
massacre of 20,000 Christians in Van
within three months. The Armenians
themselves will bring this about
rather than be cast adrift by their
fellow-christians ol the west. There
is no langusge quite .adequate to a
description of the real condition of
Armenia at present. Men are beaten,
rubbed and murdered and women are
ravished by Kurds and Turkish sold-
iers. Woe and want, and despair,
and death etalkedabroad in this beau-
tiful land that was once a part ol the
garden of Eden.. The inhabitants of
Van are living on the brink of a mas-,
sacre from day to-day. By the trans-
fer from Van to Constantinople of the
advance guard of the Armenian revo-
lutionary movement, captured in the
village of Tehiboukla un May 19,
the Turkish government has taken a
step toward quieting public sentiment
in the eastern part of the empire.
The governor of Vue, Bahri Basha,
baa during the week added several
ihteresting facts to the lledged con-
1600,000, for the construction and
equfpmentofsald terminal railway'
aad union depot.
At Houston, the other evening
about 8 o’eloolk. a pistol shot fired in
a negro barber shop on Mala street
created considerable excitement. It
was learned tha Wm, Lewis, colored,
had shot Arehie Boll, colored. The
ball entered iust below the eye. He
was token to Abe inffrmat here the
ball was extracted. Lewis was ar-
rested and jailed.
. The appolpl4FB< 4hh ty^oao
metbers of the aW lemocratie
dou money bxecujigeicommiite
bas’bben complete by^MtJ «ufus
Hardy. The central and executive
committees are called to meet at Cor-
sicana Wednesday, July 24. When a
came by due course of mail. In it
you propounded in substance the fol-
lowing questions:
1. Is there nay valid law in Texas
prohibiting prize fighting?
2. If there la, can it he enforced so
as to prevent the/proposed light?
8. Have the courts any authority to
restrain such an exhibition by injunc-
tion.
I have not sought to quote your
language, but only what I conceive to
be its effect. From your letter of
course I gather the fact, which I
know you recognize, that the legis-
latere, by the aet of 1891, sought to
prohibit prize fighting, and that the
provisions of that act were, with
verbal modificatius, carried forward
into the penal code adopted by the
Twenty-fourth legislature, which will
be in effect October next. After 1
received your letter I was asked to
withhold my answer thereto until
such time as those who believed that
the provisions of the statute above
referred to were invalid could be
heard. I waited and have received
from the hands of the attorneys of the
gentleman who is seeking to have the
light take place at Dallas most elabo-
rate and ingenious arguments on the
subject. Briefly stated, they make
Four convicts escaped recently
from the poor farm in Cherokee
county.
Hubbard, Hill cotinty, is to have a
natlonal bunk, with 960,608 of Capi-
tol.
The dead body ot a colored babe
was fouad at San Antonio recently.
Joe Jonee, brother of Sam Jones,
is in a meeting at Groesbeeck.
Victoria county farmers are ship-
ping watermielone to Colorado.
The sheriffs of Texas recently held
tbely annual meeting at Waco. • I
B. F. Moss crossed 1000 head of
cattle from Mexico recently into Dim-
county.
•G. A. Wilson, merchant tailor at
Coralcada, has assigned. «
OeUia eounty produces tomatoes
that weigh two pounda. wan
!hemthe prise fighting state to:
was thrown upun the woodwork in
generous quantities and set on fire,'
with the result that everything that
could buru went up in smoke. In
cremating the dead the bodies in
many instances were placed between
layers of wood and built up in a pile.
The entire mass was then saturated
with petroleum and then set on
fire. It is charged that liviug men
were cremated in the same way.
But this was a merciful way of
putting the unfortunate creatures to
death in comparison with the tortures
inflicted upon many others. The
massing of troops near Sassoun re-
gion. and particularly at Mousb, was
carried'on for some time before the
beginning of the massacre in order
that everything might ba in readiness
in accordance with the programme
T. Dn Hobart and tel was seized with cramps and was
dodbto find the handing drowned before help cduM reach him.
dames were extinguish- — " "
HOLD GE
★ JOHN CARLE A SONS, Ne^jforfc.
Work 6r the tout Nhtsi
Writequick. New dephrfure plane .
Nurserlesorchard“®oduidana. It
Englishman spills the beer and or-
ders' another. A German carefully
£223,355. A’comparison with otherfshesoutthefyand.fnishesdrink-
years for the corresponding quarter to ing his beeras i nothing had
insarutiven March 31' ^.V^n^X
EnedingMarch the ny, swallows it and then throw.
1886 Tariff. away ‘the beer. An American, if it to
' 105200 on a Fourth of July, doe. not see tho
It all goes.
four or five years. From a letter
found la hto clothing his pame lasur-
' Pw. A Gaines of Van- Atty,
Grayson county, shot and killed
, Charlos Koah ol the same place the
other day. Koch was shot twice and
I ’ edied lh < few moments.
ried Koch’s -----
1
------
GRAND OLD PARTY
palace at Constantinople for a mabsa-
cre of The inhabitants of Modikan, a
district lying to the south and south-
west of Susson, but when it was
seen that an investigation of
the massacre waa inevitable the
morfMae near Grapeland, Houston
- ane a few days sinceu2
British product supplied the shortage.
The early result under the wison.--------- 0-2. ,
« "/z "i
crease be? At the cost of the labor bead. .
. 209.259 The missionaries in China are
conn sea greatly praised for the hospital work
’ 5:0125 they freely did during the late war.
’ sisi In ien Tsin they opened and con-
’ toi ms ’ ducted * hospital at their own ex-
. 103,272 . pense and saved many lives.
______________ If a fly drops into a beer glass, says
"It to very satistaetory to note that A German paper, one who has made a
our pottery aad giaas trade with the study of national characteristics can
United States has of late shown a easily toll the drinker's nationality by
- - • - - - — ‛*d---• A Spaniard pays for the
III on the table find goes
GOOD ;
aded igeveringeMiss Erdeen- percent, " Lrudtux
=-
dngacoe
compltely burned offaf
^ritotod: Nohf
BP ‘Amarillo to coming to the front a.
Hhgexooi market xani .
and the capital engaged in the industry
and of the country. Wheeling will
pay some of it in a way that she will
feel.
The pottery sohedule of the Wilson
tariff law might well have been en-
titled A Bill for the Relief of Foreign
Potters. It is humiliating to be con-
fronted with such, legislation by th.
Congress of the United States.—Intelli-
gencer, Wheeling, W. Va.
McKinley and Chiengo Wageworkers.
A significant item of news comes
from Columbus, Ohio, and one full of
encouragement, indicating as it does
that the organized labor of this coun-
try is beginning to realize that free
trade put in practice is the enemhy of
America industry. This item reads
thus:
A delegation representing the Illi-
murdered eight persons at a store in
ban Jose, near Guana Jay. The pur-
suit continues for the restof the band.
Two of the gang, armed with mach-
etes, made a pretext of watching wa-
tering their horses and killed a cor
poral of the civil guard, who was
pursuing. The guard" made three
prisoners, namely: Complot and one
nephew, and Chief Quintin. Chief
Toledo of a band of Bavoes has burn-
ed the barracks of the civU guard in
Yguanjo, Trinidad, cantainlog sup-
plies.
h 0 410 - '
tkruiihnhtmemaz"et#
Eugircepmszrgcnmskmsrossmak
• tract to par rallrong.ijarernd hetoybt I igana
aoebaraa.lt we fall towre.ifvonhavetngen mer-
wry. Toide pota,h, an. MIU bare dete ana*
enina.Muoguskateteinmouth, #orz.Throat
Em222i.*52m-i
eprzatpp2chempqnqexpienepkyy2e
edene •0o,oq9 eaple~ Sakino oar anroiuU-
ua completely sarmaa otmha
M momasliterulyromstea. Nohopes
enterigineg for her recovery. .
1 Prof. J. R. Conyers, county super-
8 intendent of school., of McLennan
2M. 1886. It shows the total number of tonal
schol children between 8 and 16
itoesed the partition wall were bruised up considerably,
surbelhhrceikg in an- ' "
by a large picture to the
over the bed occu-
revolutionary band across the
Persian border it is an undeniable
fact that the Armenian situation was
never in a more critical condition.
Your correspondent met the repre-
senttive of a fourth revolutionary
party, which ba. agents in Russia,
England and America, where a party
newspaper to published and revolu-
tionary funds collected. Thia agent
is a Russian-Armenian and he holds
etroug views oa the situation. The
fourth revolutionary party has no
guns in Armenia, nor does the ngent
sny that be has any arms hidden in
the mountains The party's prin-
cl plea however, are of the most radi-
cal and advanced sort.
nectlon with the thes provisions of
the written law, that it can pot be
understood. , , ) -
2. Because the Atwenty- fourth legis-
lature. In adopting the revised codes,
carried into the civil code the act of
1889, which licenses prize fighting,
and that the civil. code ' with the
provision in it wa finally passed
at a time subsequent- to A the
adoption of the penal code, to
which G incorporated the statute pro-
hibiting prize fighting, and that,
therefore, the statute licensing prize
fighting by implication repealed the
penal law on that Seme subject which
had been previously passed. I am un-
able to agree with those who insist
that the laws o Texas permit prize
fights. On the contrary I think they
are plainly prohibited by the statute.
That the law of 1891, by which the
legislature sought to prohibit such
contests, was and to operative is not
an open questin. The court of
criminal appeals has held it to be
valid (Sullivan's, ease, 32 App.,
60). Sullivan had been con-
victed .in Dallas , county ) for
giving an exhibition of the kind
in question without having paid the
occupation tax levied thereon by the
act of 1889. From the judgment ol
conviction he appealed, insisting that
The American Economist: The dis-
eussion in Congress on the first tariff
act—that of 1789—clearly shows that
the framers of that act, some of whom
eat in the convention which drafted
the Constitution, regarded no interest
of greater Importance than that of agri-
culture. The South is especially in-
terested in that feature of protection,
because her sugar, rice, tobacco and
cotton, her four great staples, stand in
greater peril to-day than at any epoch
in our history, and all ‘ because the
cordon of foreign cheap labor and com-
petition to being drawn around these
products closer and closer.
Old prejudices should give away to
concrete facts. The South, with a new
generation of men, looking anxiously
and hopefully forward to better days,
when there shall be more capital and
consequently more business and less
“politics" ther, is entitled to all the
light on the subject of protection that
it can get
The ecars Incident to.khe war be-
tween the states have healed, the last
vestige of reconstruction—exemplified
in the Federal Election or so-called
Force bill—has passed away, the feel-
ing engendered between, those who
were active participants in the greatest
struggle the world ever saw are being
cemented into tlee of fraternal flend-
ship, and new business relationships
are rapidly-forming based on the con-
fidence which capital requires and
slowly imbibes. A new blood and a
new life agitates the South, which sees
an example in the North of what the
protective policy can do as against for-
eign rivals and for those who have too
lang restated the march of progress and
proaperity.
But one thing remains for the South
to do. It must unhorse free-trade and
enter the fight for the regeneration of
that section under the old Whig banner
And the great principle of protection
for home industries—protection for
agriculture, for the raw materials
krown on our own'soil which enter into
bur manufactured products. That sen-
timent once dominated the South, and,
while slavery drove it Into seclusion in
1849 and 1850 and almost out of mind,
history has preserved the recod of the
fact. No section of the ebuntry has a
more glorious climate, none more im-
portant agricultural products—includ-
ing cotton, rice, sugar and tobacco—
none is richer In lumber and wood, in
mineral resources, water power and
energy than the South.
In adapting itself to new conditions,
in seeking to attain the full measure
of benefit to be derived from produc-
tion, old theories must be east aside
and practical views must be accepted
The Somth cannot hope for success by
shaping its legislation nor by sending
men to Congress to clog and hamper
the march of her productive develop-
ment and industrial progress with a
political theory that to sure to poison
the patient, paralyse its energies an4
seriously retard its prosperity. A
"Tariff for revenue only” takes no a-
ount Whatever of our business rela-
tions as they may be injuriously af-
fected by foreign rival! who seek to
control our home market. The future
of Southern agriculture, commerce and
manufacturing industry depends upon
that other policy which can most read-
ily be explained in these words: Stand
up for America! Protection for home
industries against the world.
• I . -Tts \
The Revival and Ita Converts.
It to undoubtedly true that business
is looking up all over the country. To
no one will this be such good news as
to the believers in a protective tariff.
The great object of the tariff to to keep
business humming and wages high,
and everything tending to such a con-
dition of affairs is welcomed with an
enthusiasm proportionate to the
strength of the movement
But the attitude of the free trade
and tariff reform newspapers at this
time to very funny. Every opening up
of a closed factory is greeted with an
enthusiasm not evoked by the hundreds
of factorlee which were built and
opened for the first time under the
beneficent effects of the McKinley bill.
Every increase of 10 per cent in wages
is heralded far and wide, in striking
contrast to the silence with which they
have greeted every cut of 25 per cent
in wages made during the last two
years. These tariff reform newspapers
affect to believe that protectionists will
be sorry to see any revival of business
while a tariff reform president sits in
the White House. We would assure
them that every protectionist rejoices
at any improvement of business con-
ditions. We would, however, like to
have these papers give us some speci-
fic reasons for this revival of business.
Ie it because there is a tariff reform
id two , uf the band—who president al Washington? Boxiness
“Row,” inquires a free trade con-
temporary, "will Republicans explain
away the fact that wages are higher
under the Democratic tariff than they
were under the McKinley tariff?" They
‘will not do it at all. There is no fact
there to explain away.—Kansas City
Journal. .
Ited prize tighting. That question
alone was considered by the. court of
criminal appeals in disposing of that
case. In determining the question
the court said: •fhis law (mneaning
the net of 1819 licensing prize lights),
however, lias been changed by the not
u( Marel 23, 18)Kaghiph practically
prohibits prize fights and pugilism,
and declares that a pugilistie encoun-
ter betweeh man and man or
a tight between man and bull or other
ahimal for money or other thing of
value, or upon which money is bet, or
to sco which admission fees are
charged, shall be deemed guilty of a
felony and punished by a line of not
less than f40<) nor more than >1000,
and by confinement in the county jail
for not less than sixty days nor more
than one year.’’ Mr. rane continues
at some length, but the above is the
substauce of his opinion.
Feni o- Jouen‛ K< pl* nation*
■ WasiIGroN, July 15,— Senator
Jones of Arkansas, who joined with
Senators Harris and Turple in'issuing
a call for a conference of silver Dem-
ocrats in Washington on the 18th of
August, says: “At Memphis, after
the adjournment of the meeting there,
a number of Democrats from different
states held a meeting at , the
Gay oso hotel, and after consid-
eration that meeting requested Sena-
tors Harris, f’urpie and I to take
steps to organize the silver Demo-
crats so that they should be fairly
represented in the next national con-
vention. We concluded that the best
way to do this ir ta first organ!,e a na-
tional central committee 'of silver
Democrats, consisting of one r more
members from each state, and let
these members look after the organi-
ration uf their owa states. To select
gentlemen for membership of this
committee by correspondence seemed
slow, hence it was concluded to in-
vite one or more gentlemen of char-
acter and experience from each state
to meetin Washington and select, if'
they thought well of it, this central
commitee. This is all there is of it,
as I understand."
/ Captured Two or tha Itand.
Havana, July 15__The civil guard
owleg 1* tha last issue uf pan-
to Texans: Reissue, John J.
I, Qrinlan, Huai county. Orig-
Adi Barak J. Webb, Rockwall,
vAlteount: Mexican war wid-
Elen D. Rotramel, Sherman,
mianianAeofuteproofment wenled on
paznmcr4jamf5*rHX.o
EwCut oo ena me this ndrertinement
H ' M *
■
NEw Yoxx, July 16— The follow-
tog special correspondence from Van,
Armenia, to the Associated press, un-
der data uf May 24, expluins itseif:
The Sassoun massacre, it would ap-
pear. was one of the must carefuMy
planned outrages in history. Evi-
dences ol thia la circumstantial only,
but it la alleged to be none the less
conclusive. During ‘the months of
June, July and August, preceding the
Baeeoun massacre, the Kurdisb
chiefs jn the country surrounding the
Sassoun region, aid practically the
districts in the southward and south*
westward, were apparently unusually
busy in gathering up the scattered
warriors of their tribes for an
invasion of tho 'Sassoun region.
In July and August enormous
quantities of petroleum were shipped
from Erzeroum to Moush. This pe-
troleum name originally from Russia
to Erzeroum, and ku great was tbs
quantity brought over the mountain
roads that it was a subject of remark
by a great many persons. Fur a time
it looked as though nothing went
over the tpudebetwepn Erzeroum and
Mouth but petroleumn. flow It is a
fact that Mouth does not use a great
quantity of petroleum herself, nor do.
her merchants sell much ol it to the
surrounding country. In the villages
candles of sheep fat are used for
lights. What Mouth wanted with those
couniless cans of .petroleum was a
mystery no longer after the 'Sassoun
mussacre, for that patroleum. was
used to burn the houses of the Sas-
was all right before thasitarif reform
president was elected. There was no
need of revival of business then, and a
revival has come only after tiro years
of stagndioh which followed tho elec-
tion of that president.
We are willing to assist these .tariff
retormers in their attempts to discover
the specific reason of the revival of
business and we would respectfully call
their attention to the fact that there
were some elections held last Novem-
ber. We would further remind them
that by those elections congress was
placed In control of the party pledged
to put an end to tariff reform. Not to
tariff reform, but to the hope of a re-
turn to protection, baaed on the re-
publican victory of last November, to
doe this revival of business. We
welcome our free-trade friends as con-
verta to .the cause sf protection -
Amelean BmmmM./ g S-•
way heah rottets AdFidSeds’
it is no secret that the Ktherican pet.
tory industry is not in a properons
conditioni it han suffered and to Buf-
fering stili from the general depres
slon, but there le an ndaitional and
specific reason for its. troubles. Ws
do not have to go for to seek this tea-
eon. It to ver well formulated by the
Pottery Gazette, the leading
I I
married you used to bring me candy, W
"Gmupmmancman,
root a good deal lene than,the meat 1
and potetood I bring yol naw," .
Is Your
Blood Pure
If not, It is important that you make it
pure at once with the great blood purifier,
Hood’s
Sarsaparilla
Because with impure blood you are in I
constant' danger of serious illness.
Hood’s Pills
★ HIGHEST AWARD*
WORLD’S FAIR.
★ THE BEST ★
PREPARED
have been arrested and jailed at El
Paso, charged with robbing and mur-
dering Louie Lotz, a Belgian baker, order, it was
"/AP“"
oumj.dhetheh Xt Gaheston thb other morning
Edward Strickhausen, 16 years ot
. R Collier 87. W. T.
J 1068. Harlem state
wrotarme-J. B. Jones
e 152, Burleson Johns
i 167. 8. M. Greene 90,
71. O W. Riddokes,
dirond gangs— Galves-
2 and Saa Antonio 186.
and West Texas 54
taa Central 60. Missourl,
ixas 112,Tyler South-
total 418. la prlaqas
wille 897. Rusk 994.
— Oa contract farms
Galvanised Steel Wire Fencing.
The most extensive and complete
plant for the manufaeture of wire fenc-
ing in the United States is the De Kalb
Fence Company, located at De Kalb.
Ill. For years prior to 1890 barbed
wire was extensively used for;
fencing, but those using it often lost in J .
fine stock, more than its cost and to
avoid danger to man or beast there wat
need of, and a demand for, a barbless
fence. -p.
The proprietors of this company
having spent more than 12 years in the
manufacture of wire fencing, recog-
nized this fact, and have produced the
best lines of smooth wire fencing for all
purposes now in use. The success of
this compahyyis title to the managers
adopting the true butlnes* principle of
making good what they make, putting
enough material in their lines to make
them both strong and serviceable, in-
stead of producing a Cheap flimsy ar-
ticle only to meet the price of a fence
, prit**Lwk n2+u$
inigjr--atm it id ~W;
At Dallas a few days ago Mrs. W. 8.
Weoowenttothe rssidencs of Mrs
J. H- Nichols and began shooting at
her..The bullets all went wide of the
mark. Miwm arrested and gave
bond. Both are living with their
husbands. Mrs. Wro befog ths
diyorced wife of J. H. Nichols.
Tobaeco Chewlag Doe.
Bupt. McAlvey bus a little English
mastiff pup, eight months old and weigh-
ing 185 pounds, that has deyeloped an ab-
normal appetite for tohacdo. He acquired
his taste for it by watching Amos chew,
no doubt, and he is never happier than
when he is given a "chaw." He chews and
epits like any other man and has never yet
been sick. His tobacco habit is a very ex- •
pensive one and he will be 'given a treat-
ment of ■ No-to-bae in the hope of curing
him.—Crawfordsville Argus News:
The chap who thinks he knows it all gen- '
•rally knows but little. 3,.
Wilson Tariff.
1895 ................... £223.355
eonsclenee. ’
in toWB'ak> after the shooting
A t drowe chersek hi a well, and
B whips boarding a train for homo
imptea to throw hprsell under the
mix, buluwae prevented by by-
avuderk . « *
. Atrightel aceident happened at
Ban Bartola. In Dimmit county, on
d thebtgifotthe 4 th. A sprituais-
tic meeting WB* in pogres when’ a
lamp exploded——«--*•<
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Hall, John G. The Anvil. (Castroville, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 49, Ed. 1 Friday, July 19, 1895, newspaper, July 19, 1895; Castroville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1584357/m1/2/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Castroville Public Library.