Fort Worth Daily Gazette. (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 71, Ed. 1, Saturday, October 9, 1886 Page: 6 of 8
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SEYERELT CRITICISED
Wto Onptnln of the i Kl I > < iimuccd lur
Hid Treatment ol Miucotto
8t Looia Mo Oct8 Tbo following
Mentha occurred yesterday among those
Injured lu La Mascotto disaster making
the total number thlrlys
BUnsiuix Wajjr colored Walaut
IllUi Tcnn
Aliirht Kick colored CapoMlchMl
Jf B Kciikkkk Cincinnati
Lkvi Chatham colored ladncan Ky
Tbo coroner resumed Investigation Into
thocnuso of tho deaths resulting from
tho accident Capt Kbough of tho Eaglo
testified that ho was roworlessto render
any assistance to to Mascotto for his
own boat would have certainly caught
lire If ho had attempted to push tho
burning boat asboro Sworal of La
Mnecottos crow testified that Capt
Thompson master of tho boat was tho
last ono to leave Tho crow and passeu
gcrs alt agreed that tba iglo could have
pushed X Mascot to to tho shoro without
endangering tho boat Capt Thompson
testMed that after he had dono all ho
could ho jumped overboard and swam
ashore rau down to where tho Kaglo
had landed atid boarded her and repeat-
edly called upon her captain to lower his
lifeboat I told him contluucd
Capt Thompson that If ho did
not do so I Would report him
Jle replied that ho had no crow
I saw ten ort wclvo mon on her
deck and ho Anally lowered n boat Home
ono was In It but ban only ono
oar It camo ashoro and was aft
erwords taken back to the boat When
the Kaglo landed thero wcro passengers
from La Mascotto In tho river on tho
stage or clinging to It Ono or two were
clinging to tho line on tbo bow of the
boat Tbo Eaglo could havo gonu close
enough to have taken some of the paten
ters off but Capt Koough rcfnstd to do
this Ills conduct throughout was heart-
less to an extreme and ho seemed totally
Indifferent to tho condition of tho dying
and drowning
After tho evidence was all taken tbo
jury almost immediately returned a ver-
dict exonerating tho olllcors of La Mas
cotto from blamo but sovcrely criticising
Capt Kbough of tho lliglo for his treat-
ment of tbo survivors and for not at-
tempting to push tho boat ashoro and
recommending that his license bo re-
voked
m
JACKSON EN ROUTE HOME
The innernl atretH with nn Ovntlnn from
His Aiiiorlcnn Colony
City ov Mhxilo Oct 8 Gen Jack-
son presented his letter of recall to Pres-
ident Diaz yesterday and last night ho left
for tho United States In thu railway do
pot ho received from tho American col-
ony and other foreigners In Mexico tho
greatest ovation ovor witnessed In Mex-
ico with the single exception of that
given to Gen Grant Tbo Amorlcan col
ony presented him with a handsome oil
painting of too Valloy of Mexico Tho
genoral accepted it In u feeling speech full
of gratitude to his countrymen bore
EMORY
Thf > AlllMiOAn Dtinlntoii Mint lit u Dnnrn
UiilliCtliiK for Drought HuffBrerii
8icclal to Ilia Osteite
Emouv TiX Oct 8 Tho lfarmors
alliance of llalns county adjourned last
evening altera two dayssession Of-
ficers and committeemen woro elected for
tho onsolng year and It was determined
that the alliance will bulk their cotton at
their yard soulh of tho depot and sell In
bulk tho first day of sale to bu had ou
tho 15th lust second November 17 and
third December 1 Tho mooting wan liar
monlonsand thu best of feeling prevailed
0 S 1orbls a worthy citizen of our
town Is gotting up subscriptions for
drought sufferers In Jack county Italns
county will not bo found wanting In tho
hour of need
Last night Constable A L Armstrong
brought Joo M Oglo to town nnd iodgod
him lu Jallonachargo of shooting with
murderous intent ono Hunt Hi tit par
ties nro citizens of this county and woro
attending a dancing party lu their neigh
borhood when somo altercation camo up
Oglo drew his pistol nnd trod on Hunt
the ball taking cffct In Hunts mouth
It Is said that Hunt cannot recover
Whisky caused It
8e ii Dnji Utortlue
Nkw Yonit Oct 8 Tho nonnrrlval of
tho Anchor Lino steamship Anchorln Is
now beginning to causu considerable un
easiness Sho Is twentyouo days out and
seven days overdue It Is generally
believed lu shipping circles that an nccl
dent has happened to her machinery
which caused her to msko for tbo Azoro
lslnndsaud as thero Is no direct commun
ication with thoso Islands It will prob
nbly bo some tlmo before sho Is beard
from
Shot nt fort McKnxtt
Special to tho Unzotto
Four MoKavktt Tkx Oct 8 W J
Vadon well known throughout Western
Toxns was shot and Instantly killed hero
yesterday at 8a0 p m by Deputy Sheriff
U1 Daniels Vadon was partly lntoxl
catod at tho tlmo and It nppears tried to
trip Daniels with a hook attached to a
polo Daniels requested him to desist
Vadon again attempted to trip him
whoroupou Daniels drew his slxshootor
nnd shot at him llvo times only ono shot
taking effect
To bo Bold Octobor 22 1880 ono lot
situated In tho city of Fort Worth on
Houston street known as lot 2 In block
A Miw Annus Stokkb
Administratrix
THE STRIKE IN OUilA
Twenty Thoiunnd Olgnr Mitkors IdleHob
lirrn nml AmiumIiii Ilninpnut
Krv Wkst Vul Oct 8lUvana ad-
vices by steamer to luy statu that tho
cigarmakers strike there which has con
tinned seven weeks will probably as
sume n vory serious aspect beforu a set
tlomout Is ronched Tho strlko originated
in and was oonllned until Monday to
tho factories woiklng Inferior tobacco
but In cousjuutncy of no settlement bo
log reached an Immciifco Joint meotlng
oi manufacturers and operatives was held
last Sunday t tho Albla theater
Tho
manufacturers of Vuclta
tobacco Joined lasuo
ors and
Abujo
with tho otn
c os ° d their establish
menu la ordur to prevent thclroperatlves
contributing toward thu support o tho
8 lkr a J0 Btr 0 csud8 Saudltgo
lo Las Vegas Itojacal San Antonio
Gules and other interior towns It 3
est mated that 20000 operatives aro Idle
and considerable distress prevails
an omr
Ihem As usual the rough element it
I iM
THE GAZJETTE tfOftT WOIlTH TEXAS SATURDAY OCTOBER 9
taking ndvaVlago of tho oxcitomontanj
committing dopTOalions Highwayro j
berles and assassinations occur da ly
Hlots havo been apprehended for scv eral
days by tho authorities of Ha fnna
who havo taken precautions to keep
alt tbo available civil guards
underarms while mounted poll patrol
tho city prepared forany oniorgjucy Tho
following cablegram was rcccl ved at Key
West last night by tho prcsl dent of tho
Cigarmakers union Clga makors and
strippers of Saudlego do Jas Vegas out
of employment number about SOOO men
Threohundred women without bread fori
their families ask tholr brethren In Key
West for relief and transportation An
nounco by telegraph to Tampa and Now
York also notify tho Knights of Labor
A disordered liver Is tho bono of life
Take Morris CaBcarlne and restore Its
healthy condition
At Turner MoClmeii
1uro maple syrup
Wo havo 100 tons cholco bright pralrlo
hay for sale at 80 per ton f o b at
GrandIota Ross Co
LONUYIEW
Stubbed by HI HnokKeepiir Hurt tlnilfr
830O lionet
Special to tho CI niello
Lonovikw Tkx Oct 8 Longvlow
seems fair to keep up her unenviable
reputation At llevls S Huckcrs mill a
few miles north of hero on Wednesday
alter a short dispute owing to a misun-
derstanding In regard to salary tho book
keeper Klnsoy drow n jackknife
ami with a luncro at Rcvls succeeded In
cutting a deep and horriblelooking gash
from under tho car nearly to the front
part of tho neck A second stroke split
tho nose and on down through tho lips
and chin and still two other deep cuts
were mado on tho shoulder and back
llevls Is not necessarily fatally Injured
but Is badly hurt Klnsey wus arrested
and put under a 870 bond
Jo Hurd tho negro who unprovoketlly
shot at Night Watchman Harris at the
junction wni also put under a 8200 bond
Tho poor fellow Hurt who while In-
toxicated Is claimed to havo signed tho
name of tho editor of tho Cycle In an Ille-
gal manner for 820 isundor a 8500 bond
Tho following obituary notice has been
prepared by the friends ol the late G M
Tablen
IllcdAtMnriilinll September 21180 O M
Tnblor city marshal ot IoiuvIok
Wherein It liai pleased Hod In Ills Infinite
wisdom farncolrifc nnd foro knuwlng nil
thing loroinovo from our midst our much
lovoil frlond nnd brother wo auhinll to Ills dl
lno will though noro tho trial bo kntutnK
Ilodorth nil thlnx wall
MrTiiblor wns from Mlasourl hero thoughhu
bclongod to ono ot thoso Virginia families who
possess raro dignity high Intellectual culture
nnd n thorough sonso of good brooding Ho
was married In la8 to a matt estimable Chris
tlnn Indyof this place In 1881 wns converted
and Jolnod tho ltaptlet church nnd was always
liberal In bis contributions toward tho sumo
llu wan unbounded In Ills hospitality nr
dent In bis nlloctlons learlcs In his tin
turo having for his motto lie Hiiro sou aro
right then go ahciul Ono of tho most tiro
iiosscsslripr clinrnclcrlstlcs of bta nuttiro wns
hnmiy clmurful tompcrnmont nnd ns his wlfo
nlil nlwajB looking on tho bright sldo ot
everything thoroby cnstlng Bunshlne nlong
tho pathway of thoso loss fortunato than him-
self with wlmm ho associated proving n bono
factor to his raeo
In Ida death wo hao lost n truo frienda
noblo clllrenaiul a faithful ollloor who wont
fearlessly forward In tho illsrhargo of hit duty
making no discriminations nnd for whom no
can but grieve though freed from the trials
nnd troubles of this life nml whoso body now
rpata boneath tho groon sod till tho morning of
tho resurrection when Clods angel will sound
tlio uuinpot and call forlh thoso who dlod In
thn Ixird
to tho agod father nml motlior wo would ex
tend our heartfelt s mpnthlos In this soro nllllo
Hon nnd say to them roinombcr what tlcnrgo
rnlili Twill only bonllttlo whllo till wo mom
again Willi the gtlet stricken wife and chlf
dren wo will drop a tour of sympathy nnd for
comfort point thorn to thoproelous prom so of
tied who tinsvnld I will bo nhusbanu totho
willow nnd n fnthor to tho falhcrloss
Itnln lu llronu County
Special to tho Onrotto
lluowNWOOD Tisx Oct 8 Wo had a
lino rain last night and tho outlook for n
large acrongo of wheat is very promising
Notts from Ohlll
Valiahuso Oct 8 Sarah Burnhardt
loft hero today for Santa Sago whore
sho plays for tho llrst tlmoSaturday oven
lugThere
There aro llftcon casos of smallpox In
tho hospital pow
Carrots und lnrsnlps
Nice and fresh just In at tho lort Woith
Grocer Co s
A WATHK SUOUT
A Deliieo about Toll Mile West of Wtnth
nrfnrd
8pccal to tho Oaictto
WiUTiiKitFOiin Tkx Oct 8 Ilollablo
information was rocclcd horo lato this
ecnlng that a heavy wator spout had
fallen ton miles west of this place on tho
Texas lacllla railroad which report
was verlllcd later by a rlso In tho creek
In tho northwestern part of tho city ot six
feol
depth which continued for some
tlmo tho Btrcain ilslng raplaly until It
was a depth of twelvo foot higher than
over known beforo Tho wator with
heavy drifts camo down so fast that ono of
tho trcstlo benches was waBhcdfrom uudor
tho brldgo crossiug tho stream It Is re
ported that tho wator fell on tho dlvldo
of tho Trinity and Hrazos and that as
much ot tho water from tho spout wont
In tho direction of tho Hrazos as camo
this way Tho water Is reported as hav
lug fallon on what Is known to railroad
men as tho Manlng spur No report
of damago or disaster f urthor than In a
general way has been mado jot
Meets and turnips now and crisp at
tho Vort Worth Grocor Co s
Dentil lldloiups mm
Special to tho Uatetto
Bio Springs Tkx Oct 8 It W
Morrow oxsherlfl and tax collector of
Howard county who It will bo lomom
orcd suddenly left his family nnd oillclal
position with a shortage ot about 98000
in his accounts and then returned prom
Jslngtomako thu dcllclenoy good died
last night after a llngorlug illness of sov
oral weeks Ho leaves a wlfo and child
almost
ponnliess and his bondsraon will
probably bo called upon to pay tho short
ago to the stato and connty
To bo sold October 23 1880 ono lot
s tntcd In the city of iort Worth on
Houston Btreot known as lot C In block
u Mks Annik Stokks
Administratrix
r
Itnln on ths HUked llnlns
SneclaltothoOaiotte
Midland Tkx Oot 8A soaking
rnlnMslted tho Staked llalns last nKht
lasUng sovcral hours
INDUSTRIAL WAR
A UeTlewot the Lnbnr Question nnd nu At
lunpt to UnlftiiRle the Mtscoucpptlons
Uelatlng to It
W a Hammer In the Forum
Any ono who has attentively read tho
discussion of tho socalled labor question
during tho past fow months must hao
obiorvcd that n strict dcilnltlon of tetnu
nnd phrases Is tho first thing needed In
tho discussion and tbo ono thing that has
most been wanting Tho loose uso ol
terms tolerated by tho economists has
been extended by the newspapers adopted
erroneously by tho preachers abused by
tho professional labor reformers and
dually entirely misunderstood by the
employed until tho popular notion of the
muter has becomo little less than a tan-
gle of fallacies and misconceptions of
social facts relations and possibilities
Ho who says social nowadays takes
license to promulgate vague and whimsi-
cal notions or projects having for tholr
general aim to brldgo tho traditional gulf
between meum and tuum or to tako from
one of his neighbors and glvo to another
according to his good Juagrscnt of what
would bo mcro just As an illustration
ot misuse of terms I mention tho uso of
capital and labor to designate employer
and employe und as an Illustration of tho
ubuso of catJh phrases I refer to tho al-
most suicidal misbse of an injury to
ono Is an injury to all In tho Southwest
sttlku
Tho only attempt I havo mot with In
this discussion to dellno what the labor
question Is formulated 1 In this way
With thu growth of democracy tho po-
litical power has passed Into tho hands of
n numerical majority whllo property Is In
the hands of n minority Thero is there-
fore danger lest the former uso tho polit
ical power to pluudor tho latter unless
the latter conciliate tho former by timely
concessions If this wero tho question
It would no doubt bo serious enough
It would mean that political Institution
aro not the safeguard of liberty and prop-
erty under democracy any morothan they
wero such under older political forms
nnd that they aro still only convenient
means for thoso who can control tho In-
stitutions to lolato liberty und property
to their own advantage It would mean
that till our boasted political progress
was In questionj for Instancothat cannot
guarantee property cannot bo stable
Democracy would either havo to yield
at once to communism as tho only real-
ization of Its own principles or It would bo
overthrown by a monarchlal reaction to
secure property Furthermore if tho
question were us slated it would bo ono
that would arise amongst tho property
classes ana would bo suggested by alarm
lor tholr Interests It woulit not be a ques-
tion raised among tho employed and
bearing on their strugglo for their Inter-
ests Tho question would therefore bo-
a political question and u property ques-
tion It would not boa labor qustIon
If I attempt out of tho vague sent men
tal and declamatory expressions of tho
parties Interested nnd their friends to
foimulate tho question thoy try to raise
It seems to mo to bo this How can thoso
who havo neither land nor capital and
who must therefore enter thu organiza-
tion or of society as wage workers get
their living or get a better living or got
more than they now get out of the stock
of goods in society tor thu productive
cilort which thoy ran put Into thu work of
society The socialists answor this ques-
tion by saying tbat a cutnmltteo
should bo appointed to apportion tho
work of society and distribute the pro
duct according to somo standard which
each school ol socialists says can easily
bo dellncd but upon which no two
schools aro ugreed The professonial
socialists say that somo more just
distribution ought to bo found that sup
ply and demand will not do that the so-
cialistic schemes will not do and that
othlo must bo asked to decldo Tho
press tho pulpit tho politicians nil who
sollclLtho powor that tho wageclass by
virtue of numbers now possesses stand
eagerly lendy to Hatter aud cajolo it by
any proposal or proposition that will
please It
Is tho question aboo stated proporly
raised or properly forced upon public at-
tention 1 venture to maintain that It
Is not Tho question of how we shall got
our lh lug or bow we shall get tho best
possible living is common to all of us but
that Inslgulllcant minority which has In
herited laud or capital enough to support
a family without work Tho question Is
no more auvlous and porploxlng to arti-
sans or handicraftsmen than It Is to tho
mass of farmers lawyers doctors clorgy
men tenchers bookkeepers merchants
editors etc or to tho aged Invalids
women nnd others who depend upon
small investments It Is constantly
alleged in vague and declamatory terms
that artisans
and unskilled laborors aro lu
distress and misery or aro under oppros
slon No facts to bear out theso asser
tions nro offorod Tho wagecUss Is not
a pnupor class It la not a petitioner for
bounty nor a social burden Tho prob
lcm how that part of society U to oarn Its
living Is not a public question ft Is not
a class quosttou The question how to
earn onus living or tho best living possl
bon one a circumstance > tho most
s
distinctly individual question that can be
ralsod A gi eat deal might be dono by
nstiuctlon and exhortation to inform tho
individual mind and conscience especially
of pareuts so that this question might bo
moro wisely solved than It now is Such
wou d bu a legitimate field for discussion
and tho social consequences of foresight
and early selfdenial such as aro now om
p oyod by tho host parents and young poo
plo among us wonla bo Incalculable
Out no public question can properly bo
raised as to how somo shall make it easier
for others to got a Ihlng when tho llrst
aro already fully burdened v > lth tho task
of getting a living tor thomselvos Hero
as at oory other point in any unbiased
attempt to deal with this subjectlt Is found
that tbo real question Is whether wo shall
tblUt ° r 6bamlon lllerty wlll > respon
It Is sometimes said to be a shocking
doctrlno that tho employe entors Into u
contract to dlsposo of his energies because
this would put him on tho same piano
with commodities Thi9 objection hast
cL PlirronJ amos th0 Ootmaa pro
t
fessoulal socialists for years and It has
recently been mado much of here by thoso
l cath1uasety ftt tho BontimcnUl
aspects of this subject Kvery man who
earns his uses up his vital
onorgy
Ho may till his own laud and llvo on his
own product or ho may ralso a produot
and contract It away In exchange for what
no wants ho
or may contract away his
time or bis productive engines or him
self for tho commodities that ho needs
for his malntenanco In the llrst case
thero Is no social relation at all la tho
last two cases no distinction can bo mado
affecting iho dignity or tbo lutrests of tho
man which Is anything moro than a dla
Icctlcnl reilnemout Tte lawjer doctor
clergyman teacher tdltor etc each
wowm
T ncSr7
Tnvnluablo for JUtrm Suntnirn
Marrhaia ClioJIiiyi 8ll 08 of
meets Piles soro Eile Soro
Feci iflflummntlon of all JitiuU
CAtmoN So that tho words IONHfl
nXTKACT nro blown III cuch 1 > ottli > In
cloird lu n IiulTriiliirod wriippnr bonrltin
our litudscniio trndoumrlc nouo ullior Is
griinlno Hold treryichtrt iYfcfrG06SlS17
Cbnrot HESrOUUIIAOnS lLJLUll COM-
PLAINTS HLEEDINGNosoMauUi Btomach
Lilacs or from any ennso Bf piod as by a charm
It is called tho WONDLIlOVlf CAUNO Used
ixmuuixv A isrrritNAif v Wo bavo an aval
ancliooft08tlmouials Seniforour book Mailed
rco it io3 tell you all a tout it
rr 11 vnsakk to i sa a > t silpau itiok except rat
tlenuinoyntit ova mtusatiosii Prices COo tl17S
eaNfyXCXmCTCO 7G6thAY Netvrork
much as tho handicraftsman docs Each
toadors services that wear him out Kach
takes pay for his services Kach Is ox
pi died just as much by thoso who pay
as tbo handicraftsman Is Wo men havo a-
way of Inflating ourselves with big words
on tho osrth as If wo thus gained dignity
or wcro nny tho less bound down to toll
nnd suffering If wages wero abolished
or If thu socialistic stato wcrocstabllshcd
not a feature of tho caso would bo altered
Men would bo worn out In maintaining
their existence and tho only question
would bo just what It Is now Can each
ono got moro maintenance for a glcn ex-
penditure of himself by living In Isolation
or by joining other men In mutual ser-
vices
Tho wages system then Is part of tho
Industrial organization An Amorclan
farmer Is his own landlord tenant and la
borer It bu Unds It hard to get a living
ho has no employer against whom ho can
strike Ho may curse tho ground or
shako his list In thu faco ot Heaven but
that will not help him Ho must either
work harder or cut down his cnjoymentB
to tho measure ot his production If
however tho threo interostsnroHoparatod
In a higher organization ot society If
tho farmer makes a contract by which he
yields tho uso of his land to another nnd
himself becomes a landlord and if the
now tenant employs a laborer then tho
personal rights and Interests of tho three
mon como into play and lmplngo upon
each othor at evory chango which beforo
would havo affected dlffeient Interests of
tho same person Tho ilrnt farmer could
not as employe strlko against himself as
employer but tho threo now parties have
antagonistic interests which must bo ad-
justed and readjusted from tlmo to tlmo by
somo force or othor If thon wc regard
tho economic forces ot supply nnd do
maud ns tho only tho propoi and tho In
ovltable regulators of tho complex and
highly rellncd Interests that arise between
tho members of a highly organized society
then Justlco can mean nothing but the
unrestricted pliy of supply and demand
Nobody will bo bound to ceaso grumbling
nt tho result but each will accept It as
tho best that ho could get In a world of
toll and disappointment Ho will bo sat-
isfied that his neighbors havo not robbed
hlra If on tno othor hand wo do not
bollevo that thero aro any economic forces
at work in tho matter or that Iftheiearo
any thoy work under any necessary laws
then wo must regard the adjustment of
Interests as n product of arbitrary effort
Thore can bo no right and no justlco nt
all Tho
only thing to bo expected Is Avar
industrial vtar carried on by tho parties
in interest each for himself and totho
utmost Such Is tho only result to which
wo can como and tho socialists havo
gonorally reached It Thoro la no doubt
that It Is a clear lssuo between two
schools ot political economy which are
diametrically opposed to each other If
thero aro economic laws then It behooves
us to nnd them out and submit to them
for they must control all economic Inter-
ests and wo can establish peace order
and justlco only under thorn If thoioaro
no economic laws then war Is the normal
and only possible condition of society
unless wo taku refuge under tho pitiless
dospotlsm of thu socialistic stato with
Its hierarchy of voluptuaries t tho top
and tho stolid barbarism of its brutish
masses at tho bottom To reject tho eco-
nomical laws accept tho condition of
Industrial war and thon look to othlcs
to rulo tho social tempest is beneath dis-
cussion
An Industrial war Is not llko a military
combat It Is an extension of tho old
commercial war which consisted In In
flicting a posttlvo harm on onos self In
tho hope of causing a contingent harm to
ones enemy It is best llko the tcbool
boy game know us cutting jackets
Iho Industrial war simply alms to seo
who can stand it tho longest It Is cur
rently assorted that a man has a right
to strike That assertion Involves ono of
tho Incorrect uses ot tho word right
which aro so common In this discussion
When a man strikes he exercises bis
Will under liberty tbat Is to say ho exer
cises
a prerogative of a free man to make
or unmako contracts Ho is also at lib
erty undor our Institutions as nt present
oxlstlrg to combine with others with tho
samo Interest nnd tho same way of think
ing Ilowevor tho othor party to tho
contract has the samo liberty Henco
when both employers nnd employes
combine tho battlo is set for tho Indus
trial war
There Is a form of strlko that would
not
bo Irrational and would bo In accordance
with sound political economyj that Is If
should all stop work main
m LnS th1 th0 employer could not
nil their
places except on tho tonus do
raanded by them and should put their
contention to the test by waiting to seo
whe her ho could or not A lookout
would bo rational In the converse and
corresponding case It would then cost
loss of time to tho parties Interested but
nothing moro to them nnd
nothing to
SKJSlY 1S0 A 8trlke > n whlch em
ployes tako possession ol tho plant and
hinder others from taking tholr places Is
inconsistent with tho pcaco and order
of
a modern
civilized state Such a device hav
i l 0b od ecnim > ployoa mast inevitably bo
D0 t n tho effort to
mw
I U S1CCC0 could only produce
anger and retaliation It Is mto
lhfri ° 0fth0 ptlc t0 ft b aaln
Undoubtedly a man who has a bargain to
make will do wisely to strengthen
himself by all means In bis power for the
negotiation but
tho man who pays
narts with hi u i waccs
nrW t pm lZ
Ciufl SciiKUJiEn
Liquors and CigS
SolcJARonts In Norlh Texas tor tho Celebrated vJR
SILUltlAN SlIUNGS WAUltESHA WATE1
AND PH HESTS KEG AND llOTllf
404 Houston st Fort Worth Tei ciiclniitl ouce 95
jpmfJWyWii 111 1 mm 1 m in ii im i 1
77Dbic > lor3 etlo
CHAS 8CHEUBER 1
Wholosalo Doalora All
In Kindt of
200 Main St fort Woittffi
Importers and ManafnctuicrpL
Flno Gups Rlfloi riitoli rSfc
Cutlery Ammunition DnS
Fuse Caps Kto
TRICE LIST f
WM CAMERON
ho Is wronged Ho In his turn thon will
defend his Interests to tho utmost
Tho two chief extensions of the strlko
which hao been mado In tho way of per
Livery Feel
100 AND III EAST RUSK STREET FORT WORTH5
J V SMITH President
IIKNUY O SCOTT Secretary uff
TilOS I MILLKlt MJJ
Manager
Fort Worth Gaslight
Olfloo 511 Houston Street Fort Worth Texo M
Gas Fixtures Pipe Fittings Etc
COKE and COAL ll
m l ffi jSiffi tot Cok lch We recommendfctafll
I
< OOE8E XT < C3r TES3r3
t Jl2in
dbl
tho
n Bi 0Jlri tronnoonfr r tatopt Shcotlron WcathcrlmardtnB IroSCelffiS
H W HARRY BRO 707 Main Street
S a F7 ln ° k 27 It Iron Tin Ilato Solder and Galvanized Iron whlclnSff
trade at lowest market iulcc Wlioloealo agents for tho state 0 To Jos for f
KIECHLE HARRISONS CELEBRATED LEADER STOVES
If D JIATBMAN
Established 1805
w q wx
Nos 121416 and 18 West Second street cper TurocHortos
JTOIMP WORTn TEX
OO TO
cof
For all KliulK of XInr < l Wood Ioplar vu < l
Also lloaeo lalnte Itoof Brick and Ham Taints by tho barrel Flro Brlcki al
AH iumoer ant UtlMlnr Materia nndcr Shede ml
fecting tho methods of Industrial war are
tbo moro Intense organization and disci
pline of tho employes and tho boycott
Ilio former has produced n conillct ot or-
ganized with unorganlzodlaborand would
if It could be carried out outlaw any em
ploye who should choose to preserve his
Independence and liberty The employes
whllo denouncing monopoly havo hero
employed tho monopoly prlnciplo in its
most outrageous form nnd they sock to
ralso wages by crushlug any or < e who will
not como Into tho closo combination
which thoy regard as essential totho coer-
cion they hope to exorcise In reaching
about for means of thU coercion thoy
havo employed the strlko to compel tho
employer to becomo their ally and dis-
charge any ono who stays out ol tholr or
ganization
Tho boycott Is a further attempt to llnd
a point of reaction for tho coorclvo appar-
atus
The original caso of boycotting
from which tho devico got its name was
very generally approved or at least not
condemned bocanso It was sot In opera
tion against an Irish landlord It
was
however plain In tbat caso what tho do
vlco was and how monstrous an Innova
tion It was in a civilized society Tho
boycott consists In cutting a man out of
the organization of society If a man can
be so oxtruded from human society with
out process of law that ho cannot buy or
soil hire let beg borrow lend employ
or bo employed what becomes of the se
curity ot lite liberty or property Ot
cpurso no such result could be brought
about unless tho boycottors could brine
terrorism to bear on the wholo cominunl
i ncludDR at Ioa8t Jurors judges and
witnesses to force pooplo who aro not par
ties to the quarrel todopart frorathelegal
and peaceful enjoyment of their own will
ond pleasure to tako part in the boycott
It Is tho severest trial to which our Insti
tutions have yet been pnt to seo whothor
they can protect in his rights n man who
nas Incurred for any reasou unpopularity
among a considerable number of his
neighbors or whether democratic Instltu
tlons aro as powerless in this
caso as ar
lstocratlo Institutions wero when a man
Inclined the hostility of a great noblo
Tho doctrines that are preached about
tho relations of employer and employo
would go to make that relationship one of
status and not of contract with tho rights
and duties unevenly divided Tho rela
tlonshlp would then bo ono like marrlsco
entered by contract but when onco en
aBaanuvs MfcatTS HSS3SS
law It Is vcryiomsrkablothitffl
all feudal rclationsaB1
landlord and tenant aro treatedr
daln und eagerly assailed thMftjL
an attempt to establish feuds al
between employer ahd omploj
ployer has no obligation y iterKj
employe outside of thocontr ctn
than an editor has to his subscf
morchant to his customers of 3
owner to his tounnts or a hjstej
depositors In a free democw
employes aro not wards oll
They are not like Indians orlr
women or children If it cum
that any law or custom of oili
keeps down the man who Is J
for himself every falrmlndcd i
and would join tho agitation fofiL
ruoval but when wo are askrd m
privileges or tolorato oncrojclw
sistanco Is equally a social datj
Thoso extravagant nnd craelt
therefore produce war Inside
oty Industrial factions nriWi J
organized undor monarchlciloy
forms and which threaten to
thoir programmo at all cost tojj
munlty V
They nro doomed to fai
not be ovorromo by concUlatftiHii1
cession because thoy aro not rt
by the spirit from which any fJJ
will secure poaco bat only bjfsw
mands They will fall bccauMW
como Into collision with the W
ot tho community It IsJndewSg
experiment to grant tho f U H-
and tho greatest political eqnufljl
faith that the unsuccessful will J
regard without envy tbo prow
snecessful but also will belp Pim
nnd defend It but It is a MWJ 5
point ot vlow that because
havo not outnumber those Whc
therefore thoso who have noJF s
dor those Vho have Still morffi
tho measures that havo been Mfbh
sist tho employed class agW8
ployers will fall because tttpjj
tional and at war with econos
Thoro aro a great many c M Rf
where tho sum of tho parts E
whole but is zero The t Wl
ono of thorn A national tr Y
nn international tradesunlcOi
Ploycs instead of being Iwf Ha
be nil If by all going oat 5
could force an advanco In WW
IWlug back tomorrow all WOJgJ
tho old rale Tho human l H
In
Itself by tho b iotstraps
moro than In any othor m
V l fj
more wages tho only way Kf S
by working not by not worn J
Tho Flurst n or Jo
Audersons gnu store
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Fort Worth Daily Gazette. (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 71, Ed. 1, Saturday, October 9, 1886, newspaper, October 9, 1886; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth89484/m1/6/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .