Fort Worth Gazette. (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 27, Ed. 1, Thursday, June 11, 1891 Page: 2 of 12
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FORT WORTH WEESLY GAZETTE
PUBLISHED ETITRT THURSDAY
BY THE
PEMOCRAT PUBLISHING COMPAJfT
Peblishers and Proprietors
Even with a per capita circulation of
V0 same of us wouldnt have the 50
While others would have millions
Thf Peoples party that is the
Democracy is all right As for the
re let tin in join and they will he all
riyht too
Talking about boom prices and the
corn rs operated in 3oards of Trade
v hat is the matter with ST oQ a bushel
for oorn at Ttio Grande City Tex
WHEN the men who are amusing
themselves with Barney GnW bank-
ing scheme can suggest something bet-
ter they will bo heard with respect
TnCKErviLLn I T May 38 1S9L
Editor Gazette
What is the height of Washingtons
monument and where is it situated
F C Gkeex
Height i70 feet from ground to top
Situated in Washington City D C
It U proposed to extend the time of
552000000 or maturing bonds at an in
ii harge of per cvnt When the
war closed there were no government
bonds bearing a rate of Interest below
i at and some of them drew 7 JO
Hos Baksett Gibbs substitute net
i if anj indorsement at the
too Texas Democracy Sulphur
- -
3
Has Democracy of Texas passed
i e Gibbs Ian if so when and
ere
A sale of Texas cattle in St Louis
r 5JG5 is a r minder ol 1883 About
the i - ben were made at 7
we believe which is considerably above
but nol as much above it as 8565
best prices for Texas
- i ar ago
TnE election figures show that last
era were 5042140 Demo
crats at the polls and of all other par
can rohibition Alliance
Land Taxers Siciaii t all only
That is pretty good backing for
the assertion that the real peoples
partj is thi nocratio party
Give us reciprocity with Mexico
says an able Republican organ and
we will be in grand shape fur making a
successful canvass next year When
- had reciprocity in argentiferous
ores the Republican party destroyed
it in order to out itself in grand shape
for making a successful campaign two
ear- ago
A NEW country is usually scant in its
money supply because the people who
go to a n i intrj are not often rich
congregate in the old and
e tablished centers of fashion and
iry where th ir wealth can make a
large show People who are striving
to better their condition financially
are pioneers That is why the West
so gri atly in need of money
Senator Colqi itt of Georgia ha
pressed the opinion thai Cleveland
i not popular in the South The
Texas d
hardly an i
I so
iand i
own state i
lie Soul h or
di - n and vi
man r
v eland man
cause
j I i m in congress with
eption will agree with
ator As Mr
nol popular iu his
iork why should
any other section fall
hip him as the coming
til of Alabama is not a
He is against Grover
t lis of the Alabamians
for free coinage of silver and
not lie is against him for
loring the infamous force bill as an
ssue This latter circumstance coupled
ith an expression in his Buffalospeech
-cine little time ago in which he spoke
n the governm t was
assailed by rebellious hands proves
nol an ardent admirer
Dixie anno the latter Gad a lover
rill - getting to be perilous
days foi o I lodoxy The faithful in
Missouri were thrown the other day
almost into spasms by the annual ad-
dressoft R - Dr Cane of St Louis
to the students of the state university
in his address the doctor virtual it
deni Inspiration of the
rlptures and the divinity of Christ
What is to become of us if ministers go
on as Briggs Heber Newton Phillip
Brooks McQucary lane and others are
doing Sam Jones should turn himself
se among the big preachers
THERE Is more money in the United
States to day than there was a year or
i wo years ago We have lost about
5 0 000 000 in nold exported to Europe
evo have gained since the lirst of
January IS90 over 100000000 by the
age of silver and gold There was
jo stringency in the money markets a
year ago With more money in use
now than then why is it so hard to
get The answer is simple Lack of
confidence People got wared at the
Bariugs failure and a panic seized
them They looked up their money
and hoarded it They have notyotgot
over their scare When they do the
money will come in circulation acain
Fifteen thousand cars will be
reeded to carry the wheat grown along
the line of the Fort Worth and Denver
railroad That is about six million
bushels Three years ago most of the
country where this wheat is grown was
considered to be a part of the great
American desert unfit for anything
save the grazing of cattle and sheep
There are millions of acres of lard still
uncultivated which the settler can get
for a trifle and on it grow twenty five
bushels of wheat to the acre Is it
straining credulity to believe that there
wilfbe a half a million people in the
Panhandle within five years all con-
tributing to the upbuilding cf Fort
Worth
About six or seven years ago The
Gazette started out armed only with
virtue and a Faber on a crusade
against the big pastures and in favor
of the man with the hoe The man
with the noe is now hoeing his own
row and he is hoeing It clean The
big pastures are gone in some counties
and they are going even in the most
remote parte of the state The sale of
a 15 000 acre pasture in Brown county
is one of the results of The Gazettes
preaching It was a good thing for
the owner of the land for it brought a
good price even in the season of low
prices and scant money It was a
good thing for the purchasers for they
haegot some good farms on which
to sind their industry and energy
instead of renting And it was a good
thing for the state for these farms
will now raise babies instead of calves
The Gazette is satisfied with its
work and virtue is its own reward
CHEAPNESS AND GLADNESS
From the San Antonio Light a Re-
publican journal we take this strong
indorsement of a low tariff
Applications for sugar bounty are coming
into the department very freely Thirty
six plantations have already filed estimates
of 51735000 pounds nearly one and a half
million Himds for each plantation If thi1
estimate holds it will beat the phenomenal
yield of last year The planters are not
kicking over the bounty and the consumer
t ikes liia twenty one pounds forjl and is
glad
The consumer takes his twenty one
pounds for 1 and is glad is he Well
if he is glad it must be because he gets
cheap sugar Free trade in sugar has
gladdened his heart As nearly if not
quite all our people are sugar eon
sumers nearly all of us are glad on
his account
Now why should wa not have a
chance to be made glad with cheap
clothes cheap machinery cheap salt
heap gla s cheap tin cheap every-
thing indeed that is now so dear
Tins cheapness that maketh the heart
glad is kept from us only by tariff laws
that the Republican party has made
The siid bounty of 2 cents a pound
does not Vibe from the gladness of the
consumer for he doesnt think of it
as it comes out of his pocket when he
buys a suit of clothes or some Ingr
protected article
N 1
There are a lot of mossbaeks in the
Democratic party of Texas to whom an
original idea is as great a stranger as
is a glass of water The grand Demo-
cratic partee as it was thirty years ago
is their ideal of political perfection
But ancient friends 1S91 is not 186L
We have passed through a good deal
since then and learned a good deal
nost ofus have but some have not
Since ISfil a number of young men
have come on the stage of action in
Texas young men who knew not
Joseph to whom the wah and ante-
bellum polities live only in the dim
pages of history They are men of to-
day who live in the present and think
of the future They are sympathetic
with the people alive to the needs of
the hour and active in relief of the
oppressed They are too busy to think
even of the dead past
Between the young nieu who breathe
he air of to day and the relies of an
ancient regime who inhale the musty
atmosphere of the Bepulcher thero is
antagonism of action of thought of
principle and of interest The moss
backs hate what is new and original
The progressists despise what is de-
cayed and worn out A noellist in
political economics is to the graveyard
politician what a parvenue in society is
to the old families
People live and hunger and suffer in
Texas and they look to their leaders
to think and act in their behalf They
ask for bread Will they be contented
when they are offered stones or will
they stiil insist upon having bread
This bread must be fresh from the
kery not stale and moldy with
years
The leaders who deride the offerings
of such as have ideas but give nothing
themselves are going to awake pretty
soon to a sense of the fact that the
great hungry public would rather take
half a loaf than to hive no bread at all
money ano cuors
Not all the gold In the country has
Cone or is likely to go to Europe
What has gone this spring is but a
trifle to the stock on hand May 1 Ac-
cording to the director of the mint the
supply of gold in the country at that
date was 090000000 Of this amount
S2SJ000000 of coin and gold bullion
were in the treasury
Besides the gold on hand there was
in the treasury at the same date 337
000000 in silver coin and bullion mak-
ing a total of the precious metals in the
treasury vaults of 60 000 000 as a basis
for the business fabric of the country
With such a large stock on hand of
gold and silver but little uneasiness is
felt on account of the millions of gold
sent to help the Europeans out of a
tight place Confidence is quite strong
In the return of the gold this fall when
Europe buys our wheat corn and cat-
tle She will need an unusually large
amount of agricultural products because
of her own poor crops and the crop
prospects here were never better than
they are now throughout the entire
Mississippi valley and the West
The acreage of wheat sown this year
is far ahead of any previous year This
is especially true of Dekota and the
THE GAZETTE FT WORTH TEXAS THURSDAY JUNE 11
Northwest where the spring seeding
lias been unprecedented In nearly
every part of the country the weather
has been seasonable and crops are in
prime condition France has lowered
her tariff on wheat and flour although
she still keeps it on the hog Her
wheat crop is poor and she will want
millions of bushels of American wheat
Ditto England Germany Belgium and
others Germany seems disposed to
admit the American hog and will
probably do away with her hog tariff
That will open a first class market for
American pork which will of course be
very gratifying to the farmer though
perhaps a trifle distasteful to the agri
culturist7 All things considered the
outlook for a fair return for the years
work is as good as could be expected
Neither is there anything in prospect
to cause apprehension not even the
capture of the Itata wheh if it should
by any possibility occur might breed
international embarrassments that were
better avoded
COMBINE THE TWO DEMANDS
What is to be the leading issue in
the ensuing presidential contest
finance or the tariff Senator Carlisle
Mr Morrison and Mr McKinley say it
will be tbi tariff Congressman Cul
berson intimates that the financial
question will fill the greater part of the
thoughts of men in that contest The
Alliance and third party leaders take
the same view of it
It will be observed that the opinions
of each of these leaders and authorities
are colored by the atmosphere sur-
rounding them Carlisle Morrison and
McKinley are experts and specialists in
tariff figures and their long studv of
that subject has made them think less
of the importance of other reforms that
the people are clamoring for The
Third party while demanding tariff
reduction as being in the line of reform
subordinate that and all other ques-
tions of public interest to the prime
consideration of financial relief The
members of that party if we except
Senator Stanford are poor in purse
and feel the gripe of poverty They
need money and any plan that offers
to put more money in circulation is to
them of the first and greatest impor-
tance So intensely are they devoted to
the one idea of more money that they
have lost sight of the axiom that
money saved is money made1
A high protective tariff makes every-
thing costly It would better ones
condition very little to have double the
amount of money in the country were
articles and goods of every day con-
sumption to cost twice as much as
they should But when these things
are doubled in cost as by the McKin-
ley bill without any increase in the
circulating medium it is doubly a
hardship
The tariff reformers say reduce the
tariff and give us cheap goods and let
us save money in the first cost The
financial reformers say give us more
money to enable us to pay what we
owe
Why should not these men get to-
gether and say give us a lower tariff
and cheaper goods and more money
as well Tariff reform is good Fi-
nancial reform is good Either is too
good to be crowded out by the other
The Democratic party should unite he
two demands and go before the pejple
on two great issues a tariff for reve-
nue only and an increase in the circu-
lating medium to the point of making
it meet the business requirements of
the countrv
SILVER AND THE NEED Oi MORE
MONEY
A very interesting article on Silver
and the Need of More Money1 appears
in the Forum for this month from the
pen of Senator Stewart of Nevada The
article is devoid of figures and statis-
tics and is mainly a chain of reasoning
reinforced by historical citations to
show that silver coin or free coinage of
silver is absolutely necessary to supple-
ment gold as a redemption coin There
is not he says and never has been
enough of either gold or silver for use
as money nor has there ever been too
much of both combined At present
the two combined are not enough to
supply the needs of business If there
were enough of gold there would be no
use for silver The most serious ob-
jection to metallic money is the want of
a sufficient supply When the mines
of Australia and California poured out
their gold in greatest quantities com-
merce revived and prosperity became
general Whenever in the history of
the world gold and silver mines have
been most productive civilization has
made greatest progress and commerce
has been most active
The demonetization ofsilver in 1873
reduced the supply of metallic money
one half and to that extent violated
existing contracts and reduced values
It was the crime of the Nineteenth
century It compelled the payment
of 100000000000 in gold alone that
had been contracted for in gold or sil-
ver The debtor was forced to sell his
product at a discount of 30 to 50 per
cent in order to buy gold to pay his
obligations Other nations adopted
the same policy of degrading silver
until now every movement of gold is
viewed with alarm The supply of
coin at the money centers of Europe
and America is so scanty as to be a
constant menace and cause of fear and
distrust
When the Barings incurred gold ob-
ligations in South America heavier
than they could carry they shook the
financial credit of the world The
United States had no share in those
speculations but having embarked with
the Europeans in the gold standard
craft they had to endure the buffet
tings of the storm with them Why
it is asked should the United States
adhere to gold alone simply because it
is the coin of Europe The pretense
that gold coin is needed to settle foreign
balances is absurd Such balances are
settled by a well established system of
exchange When coin is transported
whether it be gold silver or paper it
becomes a commodity In such cases
bankers reduce the foreign coin to that
of their own country and so pay it out
A currency that would circulate
throughout the world must be made a
legal tender by every nation In that
case no independent legislation by dif-
ferent nations in the money questions
could be had and a stringency in one
nation would effect all others
Since silver was demonetized the
prices of wheat and other farm products
have declined greatly and remain so
England purchases the wheat of India
with cheap silver which is the national
coin of the latter country The Amer-
ican who sells his farm products in
England for the same prices must do
so for money that has to be discounted
30 per cent
The people are getting tired of the I
reign of the money kings The rule of
plutocracy is growing unbearable A
reform is imperative and should be in
augurated at once Radical contraction t
threatens to breed radical inflation
Unless the money aristocracy relent
the latter will sweep them and their
to ruin
THE STOCK OF GOLD AND CONFI-
DENCE
The drain of gold from New York to
Europe still continues Already in the
last six months more than 50000000
of gold has been carried away decreas-
ing our store of that meal and con-
tracting the currency to that extent
But even with that diminution there is
a far larger volume of money in the
country now than there has lieeu at
any time since the resumption of Bpeciaf
payments and after losing o0000000
or more of gold there is a greater stock
of the metal now on hand than there
was on the first of January 1890 The
mint authorities estimate that there
is 500000000 more gold now in the
country than there was in 1878 and
the silver circulation is very rapidly
being added to Eleven months ag
as the treasury report of July 1 1
showed there was of gold and silver in
this country 1 070184220 and the ad-
ditions bv coinage since then far more
than balance the loss of gold by
pean exportations
Last year our mines of precious
metals produced 103320000 one third
of which was gold This is an average
yield and there is nothing to indicate
that it will not be kept up
For the fiscal year ending June 30
1890 the excess of our exports over im-
ports was 08518000 this being the
balance in our favor The growing
cotton and wheat crops our chief ex-
ports are so bountiful that we will
have more to send abroad than in 1890
and the harvests in European countries
are so unpromising that foreign con
sumers will require all our surplus at
good prices largely adding to the vol-
ume of our exports Besides this the
McKinley bill has put an almost pro-
hibitory tariff on many foreign articles
formerly largely purchased for this
country and the effect of this increased
tariff exaction will be to decrease the
imports of European goods
If with poor crops we were able to
show a balance of trade in our favor of
68518000 in 1890 that balance should
lie more than double this year with the
favorable conditions of larger exports
and smaller imports The gold that is
now flowing outof the country will soon
return to cover balances and much
more with it
There is money in the country
abundance of it and when the crop ex-
ports turn the tide of gold to us there
will be much more What the country
needs now is not only more money but
more confidence to use that money
which we have
BORROWING MONEY ON LAND
The constitution of Texas forbids the
owner of a homestead which may in-
clude a good sized farm to encumber
the same with a mortgage To that
provision in the fundamental law is at-
tributed the happy and fortunate cir-
cumstance that the land of Texas un-
like that of many other states is free
from debt Her farming communities
are not oppressed with millions piled
mountain high of mortgage indebted-
ness resting on those of several states
directly north of us They aro not com-
pelled to pay annually or semi annually
millions of interest to Eastern loan
companies The constitution stands
between them and the suicidal folly
which they 6eem ever ready to commit
and which the mass of farmers in other
states have committed of enslaving
themselves and theirs to Eastern capi-
tal This provision of the constitution
has been the faithful theme for years of
applausive oratory It has been lauded
as the sacred palladium that stands be-
tween the farmer and ruin We have
heard it from the farmer on the stump
and in the halls of justice The last
that clause to a new and far better one
without it It declined to take any
chances to incur any risks on that
point
Now in the face of such a condition
of things as that of such a wise and
conservative sentiment crystalized in
law it is urged as one of the reasons
why the farmers should rebel against
tho lVmAil il 1 i 1 la a
wo i tuwiano jiuu ti uiii us re-
sponsible for the law and support a
third party that he may get money
from tie government secured by
Hoods SarsapariHa
s a peculiar medicine It Is carefully prepared
from Sarssparilla Dandelion Mandrake Doc
fipsiuewa Juniper Berries and other well
known and valuable Tecetablo remedies by a
pculiar combination proportion and process
giving to Hoods Sarsaparilla curative power not
possessed by other medicines It effects remark
able cures whert other preparations faiU
Hooctts SarsapBrilla
Is the best bloofWurifier bjne the public n
eradicates eTerycnrigaxid cures Scrofula
Sa Bhetun BoiUllMles all Humors Iyi
pepia BlliousnelBeadach Indigestion
Genera DebUltyRarrheaniatUin KIdnej
and Liver CompMnits oAdm that tired feeV
ing creates anifrpette and afckk up the system
Hoods SarsafeariHa
Has met peculiar and unparalleled success at
trae Such has become Its popularity iu Lowell
where It n made that whole neighbor
hoods are talcing it at the same Cne Lowell
druggists sell more of Hoods SarsapariHa than
cf all other sarsaparillaa or blood purifiers
Soldbydrajglsts SlsixIcTj5 rrecaredonlvbj
C I HOOD CO Apothecaries Lowell Mas
lOO Doses One Dotar
IsiJ I 3 111 I Irill
mum
We bi- our jrfwW BBbi
merit of xjojflriai VV
sample copyFAiy au
TEXAS PU
solely on the
ily send a free
Jres
rnal of education co
on the aav ti
aro prepaid
BalTeston Texa3
FORT WORTH IRON WORKS
yfJRT WORTH TB
The La
vour
rfrluoi
IriMuUmi - AC i -
gage on his land In the first
the hundreds of thousands of
farmers who cannot now
their land because of the h
law could not procure money
government Only the wealthy land
holders and land syndicates could do
so If there were any good in cheap
money the land syndicate and not the
individual farmer would profit by it
Bat to speculate on that point K futile If
it is inexpedientdangerous and ruinous
for the farmer to mortgage himself to
an individual or company of individ-
uals how can it be the acme of politi-
cal wisdom to mortgage his farm to the
government Does the change of mas-
ters constitute the difference between
wisdom and folly If the homestead
clause of the state constitution be all
that has been claimed for it by tongue
and pen how can the borrowing-money-on-land
scheme of the third partyites
and thir sympathizers be anything in
the world but the grossest delusion
and the stupidest Bnare What is
deemed and generally recognized as
bad policy in Texas and so declared in
her law cannot be wholesome or wise
because allowed by a Federal statute
What magic power has a Federal
statute that it can so easily transmute
evil into good
Thus appears the silly inconsistency
of those political charlatans who ad
vise the farmers to demand money from
the government on land values The
farmers of Texas could not get their
share of it and if they could they
would be only so much the worse for
it
An Invitation
Georgia Alliance Monthly
Col Sledge of Texas
Dear Sir Our legislature meets atrain in
July next Wo presume there will be as
many rhnnces for traffic with the railroads
as during previous sessions You are cor-
dially invited to attend the summer session
STEWARTS MILLIONS
A Syndicate it Is Alleged Formed for the
Purpose of Quashing the Claims
of Irish Claimant
Special to the Gazette
Xew York June 6 The most startling
disclosures evpr made in relation to any
seeminsriy endless litigation over A T
Stewarts millions are promised in rela-
tion to the suit brought by the Irish claim-
ants to recover their alleged portion of the
dead merchants fortune It is an-
nounced that a syndicate composed
of men of this city and Boston
b33 been formed for the purpose of quash-
ing the claims of the Irish claimants and
that members of the syndicate are brainy
and will bear all expenses of the litigation
merely as a speculation hoping to be com-
pensated should it be successful
Further it was said this
session of the legislature refused by an i rate of 1500 for every 50000 that may be
overwhelming vote to submit a recovered by the claimants if the will is
sition for a new constitution mainly on j ffiS untf STSjSS HuS
the ground that the homestead vouch for the truth of the facts
tion law would bo endangered That i i ey sfr h atu t 3 Frid
will disclose
they in the United States cir-
body preferred the old instrument with i cuit court a gigantic conspiracy on the
part of the syndicate to get part of Stew-
arts millions
Lawyer Secor of the counsel for the
claimants declares that so far as he
knows there was no syndicate and
said tliat this yarn was started for
the sole purpose of injuring the claimants
in the eyes of the publie in drawing them
from the real issue I never heard of a syn-
dicate being formed by the heirs If there
ever has been such a thing it
was oefore Gen Butler or my-
self became connected with the case
Gen Butler and myself court all the light
Judge Russell can throw on our conduct in
connection with this case
I Subscribe for the WeelifWPl i
-A J I
Jfectm
M raircri wi 1 T ntaHrt J f
Worth Well Drilling Machinery
Arcliitcctural Iron Wori a Specialty
Q
ou arc paid aim
iptlv All papers are
-
THE LADIES FRIEND
-READ WHAT TB2Y SAT OV TUX-
BUST COOK BOOK OUT
DEXTEK TEX Feb 0 1S91
Fort Worth Gazette
Your premium cook book received We are
well pleased with it All the recipes tried have
given perfect satisfaction I regard it a the
best cook ixok on the market a we have rive
different cook books ana I can cheertully say
tLat yoir book is the best and i heapest one of
them Yours with respect O i Elliott
TBE BEST SHE HAS SEEN
HURST TEX Kt b 17 1SB1
The Democrat Publishing Company
SIBS I think the cook txxk worth three
times the cost and the best mat I eav Been
Would not part with it for twin the price
Mrs F K ilux
CBTXBXXT SATISEAC ORT
Sipk Spbxsw Tex
Dear Srn The book is entirely satisfactory
and everyone who sees it admires it 1 think it
is worth twice the money I gave for it Many
thanks to jou for the book us well as for your
worthy paper C H Tcbser
worth more 1 h uc is asked
Lanuah Count x Tex 1
Feb 1S91
Fort Worth Gazette Fort Worth Tex
The cook book is more than you claim for It
ana worth much more than the price paid for
without counting a years reading of the bst
EJrwK y
y i
ratc paner in tne statp 1 con t see Hoi
n sell such a valuub book for so little
r I would not be without This GAZETTE
arfortwice wliat the book and pper
rieased beyond expectation
i Fori
li H iCIA2f
ILD KOT DO wrrnocT IT
Cuba P O Tex Feb 15 191
Worth Giru Fort Worth Tex
Dear Sin- Your cook book came safe to
hand several davs ao and am wi il pleas J
with it as it is a great hlp to any person keep-
ing nouse We could not well afford to do with-
out it now Yours as ever
W K BO TWKIGHT
TOR RICH AND POOH
SMrniriELD TEX Feb Sa 1891
litor Gazette
We have two or three cook books but not be-
xkliolder in any national bans nor
in the Louisiana suite Inner
n able inane
fextent But 1 lndjBlTCltnusehoid
ette cook pes well
adapted to liijhfTold of limited means
plenty of cheaJMifrmple and healthful recipi
while iLrfTshes to indulge in something
nsive and stjimh there are plenty i
rh to jive a tobacco vn
rife well pleased with it
recipcg Dut tor many j
other uepirtments if you 1
lrrequestin about two years I
tier what 1 tm oi it for it win
that Ions to test the hundreds of re-
utained iu the very vanable l ook
B Mchoij
ALL LADIES SHOULD HAVE IT
E USI1 TIMUEH Feb H I8SH
Te Democrat Publishing Co
SIRS Ilia ve received our uuanecooli boo It
and 1 think it is a took all ladies should have
that hiive cookltsg to do Those that do not
could learn how and I think the price is very
low My wife i very much pleased with ou
and vould not take twice tliu price of her- I
am yours respectfully T K Hambt
HIS WIPE WELL PLEASED
B ELTON TEX Feb S6 1S91
Publishing Company
11 cook book came through In due
time have had hij h living ever since Book
cannot be excelled in the money invested Aiy
wife is weil pleased Yours with respect
A Wsllkb
WORTH THRRE TIMES ITS COST
Ladoma FAH5XH Co Tex Nov 15 1830
Von WcriL Gazette Fort Worth Tex
Dear Sir Tuc cook book is worth three
dme5 the cost I would advise all young mar-
ked couples to buy it and the encvcKrjaedia
W P Febt
Mrcn pleased
Acios Tex Feb 15 1S91
Cditor Carette
Dear Sir I received the household cook
sook as a premium to The gazette My wife
is well pleased with it Much success to The
Gazette in her undertaking Very respect-
fully C G Gardner
HicniY pleased
Valley Mills Tex Feb IB 1391
Democrat Putiishing Co Fort Worth Tex
The household cook book sent my father as a
premium with the Weekly Gazette was re-
ceived in good order 1 have tried it and am
highly pleased Think it or the paper either
worth the money paid for both Respectfully
Juno Scrutchfield
AnnEEABLY SURPRISED
To the Gazette
Must say that I was agreeably surprised
when I received your cook book It is much bet-
ter than expected Besides so many excellent
recipes for cooking 1 rnd other valuable in-
formation an well Best wishes to Thu Ga-
zette TaOS J CHAFMAK
CETS TH3 PAPER ERrT
Lawn dale Tex Feb 12 1S91
To the Eeitor of the Gazette
ve are in receipt ot your Housenoid rook
book sent as a premium with the Weekly Ga-
zette at tho low price oi SI M We are well
pleased with the took My wife is never at a
loss to cook a meal when the book is in the
kitchen Tho book is worth the money so we
get Tub Gazette free Hoping the papermuch
success I remain yours as ever
V W Cowabt
WORTH MORE THAN IT COST
Brazos Palo Plnxo Do Feb 13 1891
To the Gazette
Dear Sir I have examined your Household
cook book and wll say I am pieasd beyond ex
pectations would not be without u tor ton times 1
the cost Success to the Gazette
MK3 fc C DABSEY
MANY YATtTARLE RECTPEo
Arlington Tex Feb 10 1891
Fort Worth Gazette -
The cook book I received as a premium for
one years subscription to The Gazette I con-
sider worth fully the amount of tto cost of the
paper and book t 50 Outside of Instructions
fur cooking thre are many valuable recipes I
found one recipe I paid Si for Success to Tan
Gazette An old subscriber
M J BBI530K
worth doltle tite price
Gordon- ima pinto Cocntt Tex i
Feb 11 1891 f
Dear Sib When I received your cook cook I
was su prised to think how you could bricz out
such a valuable book for GO cents It Is worth
tl with so many valuable cooking recipes and
medical recipe and cacninz recpe and many-
other valuable recipes This book ought to be The
in every home I wish every housewife had D
this book in her house It is valuable to any
one sod I would cot be without it for fl
J B Gisbs I
WSnetVMM 4wt -oh viiLcn unnLs I
at J
and
Chi
dache
HP Vi m P i Mr Mtn CArl H n
BEST FOR THE PR
Panhvxiiie OF
LAKEVIUV HUL I-
Pel
I nave received t e Honseb
have used the same and will -
ooo lor i e price si er oner j
menu 18 1 j every lamilv -
1
Gazettes Cook Book
WEEKLY GAZETTE ONE EAR AND COOK BOOK ONLY 150
relad the testimonials
book vishinsr you access
m n yours truly W Z
WEII PLEASED WITH
QcrrjiAN Tex
Dia Sib My wife is we
cook book so far as ihe hi-
-he would not be without it for tw
site could tot get another J
tony i I
BETTER THAS nCOIOfl
Wtsrux Tel J
Mr Editor
iBAB ik The cook book irv
with Thb Gazbttb is far em
pectcd It is more than it is n
be not only a cook book but full
pes for diseases which children
1 M - t vouid cost at least
1 xi at a bookalorv
JTST THE BOOK
BBXCKMRIDOI - i jg
Weekly Gazette Fort U
Gentlemen Your cook book
miam oame safely to
ceived Mrs Trammel i -pleased
with Its contents b
booh as slie ha Ions needed
and is a handsome preseni
D U Tni
jriTK A HEXP
AUSXAHDBK Pi
IU tor Gazette
Received your cook book and
help to younir housekeepers Bi
ipes for ooofcimr there Is other
uiation tilts J 31
The
your valuable
IKJU llllll
V C ILXMAS IV
azV te Fort i TOtt
h V vTrfbT
reason thousands cannot net enreu of 8rH ial Pri
TliL HE
Ing Con
uiuis she r had
aoooB liook ber mol
a necessary qualification to
able pleasant home was to
properly prepare a meal bei self oi
and I take pleasure in
mother v as correct However
received from you is the beet one
suited and we think you
distributing so useful a pre He
etc p Graham
JUST AS BZPBESl
Davis iv k i irm
Throckmorton Cocntt k i
To the Gazette Fort Worth T x
Slit Your cuok book came tu
and it gifts entire satisfactioi jusi
represented it to be C lid not
Yours truly 1 xi
WORTTt MANY Tilt US ITS
Paint Rock Tea
Editor Fort Worth Gazette
1 received the Household C H
my husband got as a pr IntJ
zette I am delighted with the ha -
tried a number of tho reoipes u -
thorn to be god and car Baft iy say In far
to any book of the kind level ai
is worth many times what 11 co 1
Mrs Jessie m Reatzs
KVERY FA1CQVT ot OUT TO It
JloPBlNsVULE El i -
To the Gazette
Dear sir I am in receipt of v Kir
forwarded nw as premium i I eel i
zete lam well pleased with the i
tliLk that every faiiu oul to have
a better book thar 1 expected f
No one need be without for It la el lal
price Yours respectiuuy
i IBOBCE li liyb
A GO H ISVillILN
Waxahachh Ti Fet t lan
Democrat Publishing COmpac
I leceived the cook bok Irii un well - i
with it and think it would beagood itra -
for every houseuoid Yours
MliS 11 i NuBAJi
ALONE TTORTti TUT T r BOTH
CASTROV1LLE TEX I
Democrat Publiafng KUTiPny Fort Worta
Tex
GENTLEMEN I must SV tUsW U 1
book alone worth the SI fib flcneh pa
perls me best weekly paper punltiviVij
in my estimation and 1 tnui it ought to be ou
at the home comforts in every house Teias
My wife has tried a gum many reciaes out
tho cook book ami was innr thaa i leaeU H
them Yours to command
ROBERT DI iAHrri
wei i wodrrii Tirr i
t AKiaqN
lir l Cm ni -Ali ri14
Is a book that 1 think wi
My wife is well pleased fcti It Bo
1K0UI
w
worth double nra cost
TBlJEHAM COlLM N lif - V TBJ
b ii -
Editor Ga7ette Fort Wort
Gents 1 am well pleasad
book and I think it worth wbal cost
My wife savs she would iituji -
nc has tried I Ynin
sne
Bfci
i
HIGHLY nhA KD WTXR L
PABSOSS TBX ib IS 1391
Editor Gazette -
Your cook book i all yoiL - I
worth the money paid tor iriAu i aifttlj
pleased with it Yours ti
MUs r m
BEYOVD HtS EXBfcTVT
WHTrESHORogTta 1
Democrat Publishing CofcoBjH 1 Worts
Tex
The cook book received usWr mi - CM
Gazette is beyond my expjjtatton3 una -
wife is delight eo with ir Think II - woru
several times its cost Pla M B
for same Yours truly V REAS1
WORTH PRICE OV PAPEmASTJ I
CranfillsGap BosgHr i
Democrat Publishing Coaffljy
TEAB SIB The B
me as a premium with -
promptly received As to sad --
cannot say too much I think well wort
nlirri T inii TlrlfP nt th IV i 1 V S - -
- - r i rm t -
mi - r --
p -
1
WOBTHIBIUHE I
1 - 7
Port Worth
i ttlM Aa -
the cook book and
worth more than t
them Yours tru
ti4citarIV
be nwflrev iaa i -
l n
al Weakness Ijoss of Manhood -fleet Vririooeiel
pen for marxuure or life s duti
1 f li
- iJ fn
wzaMiZiIS awB JB111 M nte ra I
ft JWflSi BWl V - x -if
lUtrUmm t DsSfRia kmf 30i JtPnit Kntbi4ftrKansas f
Mivwj H f Vir
1 Olsfl s5ftiu6raaj2i3pior tne
sreef t remoaj for atH
cosaitni pt
UMU JUVr4Pip sadl F
Chronic Die- an
d resului of abt
is owing i --
toMra ea -
lr
Mo aid IWGesri
1 BOUMifrv citii quarter
sti Aixsmx smmBa m ijw A5u9rs
izuAm FLV MSHSmM
friifs tfiRSAT fivsa tGt gfoMAai
CXr 5 all dfWrders of the J
Mieiiuiewieadacne n rr
reHtlersw
rAELfe
s
KE3ffMfEfET
Itomach Liver Bowes Kidnevs Bladder Nervous h
Stpation Cotlveness Indigestion Biliousness Fever t
M
ffenjl
r3 5rsxHFsLA i
RADWAYS PILLS rp Utr i - i o v lint Thov 1 ina tnm lot apcretlOIl -
healthy action restore Jreniothe stomach andimkble it to perform its function-
HKIUt CEJITIPER BOX TySOLD BY ALL DflUCC IS T -
Idraft Gry4pr Pijfc
c
hers Castoria
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Fort Worth Gazette. (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 27, Ed. 1, Thursday, June 11, 1891, newspaper, June 11, 1891; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth90469/m1/2/?q=Lamar+University: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .