The Austin Weekly Statesman. (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 20, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 8, 1892 Page: 4 of 8
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AUSTIN WEEKLY STATESMAN. THURSDAY DECEMBER 8 1892.
Austin Jiatesroau.
BY THB
S T ATESMAN FUBUSHIHC COMPANY
VTON BROWN A. L. TEAGARDEN
' evident and Gc-a Manager. V Ice-r resident
Hbnuy W. Ebown Secretary.
ttoe 122 West Sixth St (Hancock Building.)
u.j ilii ii pJitjfli la AutU Taxae as
A FIXED RATIO FOR SILVER.
Senator Allison has informed the
international monetary conference at
Brussels ttiat his constituents raean-
iuir the people of the United States
would be satisfied if fcilver was coined
at a fixed ratio and made a legal
tender.
Senator AUUon micht as well talk
about making wheat or corn or cotton
a legal tender "at a fixed ratio." Silver
is a commodity dependent entirely in
the marktt on its production and use
or consumption. It has been steadily
falling in price just as the production
in our mines has increased
less the increased consump-
tion in the manufacture of sil-
ver ware. That helps it to some
extent and as it becomes less valuable
more of it is ubi-d in the manufacture
of silverware.
Thirty years at'O fifteen and one-
half grains of silver was worth in the
market one grain of gold now it re
quires twenty five grains of silver to
equal one grain of gold. If there had
not been an increase of supply of gold
from our western mines that was ex-
traordinary and the pioduct of silver
had been the same as it has for the
last thirty years it would now have
taken forty or fifty grains cf silver to
equal one grain of gold.
We believe it is a fact that more sil-
ver is mined in proportion to gold than
tin years ago and that the proportion
of the production of silver over go!d
is increasing every year. How theD
under these condition does Senator
Allison propose to "fix aatio" that is
changing every day? If all the na-
tions represented at the monetary con-
ference at Brussels were to obligate
themselves to buy the same amount of
silver every month that the govern-
meiit of the United States is doing un-
der th eSherman act they might re-
tard the depression of silver for such
a market would have the effect of
booming the white metal for a while
but it is admitted by our best flaan-
tiers of both parties that unless the
Sherman act is repealed it
will bankrupt the United States.
Mr. Sherman the author of the act
who has the reputation of being the
most comprehensive nnd sagacious
financier in this couu. i says it must
be repealed.
It is not likely then that other na
ticn-i will adopt u policy that we are
about to abandon in order to aid the
silver barons of the Western states in
retarding the depreciation of silver
when we admit it his brought us to
the vestibule of an insolvent court.
There if no question in poll ics so
perplexing as the monetary affairs of
a government and it is so because we
have so few men who look
any deeper than the tops of
things. Knowledge on this subject
Is superficial and our money
tinkers are tjros and vampires. We
must honestly get down to the bottom
facts before we begin to lay even a
foundation to a stable and permanent
financial structure.
Gold and silver are both the best
'representatives of values and both are
capable of forming the standard by
which all other values are measured.
And whilst we confess we have not the
capacity to build this structure we
can tee by common sense glasses the
difficulties surrounding Senator Alli-
son's proposition. We are not of the
builders who reject this stone for bi-
metalism can be accomplished but
silver must necessarily be considered
as a flexible factor in the scheme.
"TnE Nation" calls attention to
the inconsistencies of Mr. Secretary
Foster's report and that of the treas-
urer Mr. Nebeker which renders the
condition of the treasury very much
like a Chinese puzzle. Mr. Nebeker
reports the revenue of the govern-
ment for the last fiscal year at $354-
037784 and the expenditures at 345-
023320. Mr. Foster the secretary of the
treasury does not agree with the
treasurer. The figures given out by
him show the expenditures of the gov-
ernmeat for the last fiscal year to
have been $301348660 and that the
revenue amounted to $356033302. The
difference is that the treasurer has
left out its transactions with the na-
tional bank deposit and redemption
funds and has thus transformed a
general and actual net deficit of
$4500000 to a fictitious surplus of
$9000000 but he is not consistent in
this leading method since if he had
followed it in comparison of this
year's expenditures with last year's
he would have found the deficit not
as he says at $10349354 but $20750-
675. The state department last May was
threatened with an investigation of
the official conduct of Minister Pat
Egau and Consul McCreary to Chile
but congress b7 courtesy yielded to a
request of the department to permit it
to make the Investigations. It has
been postponed from time to time
neither Egan nor McCreary nae
returned to Chile but since Mr liar-
risou's defeat like Othello lb. y are
without occupation. It has ueeu
charged time and again that I'gan
made a large fortune by questionable
mthnd9 in Chile. It is time the state
department was clearing its skins by
o ln.octIrratinn into tne IUU luuil m
an ijj ivun-"--
the case.
TEE PRESIDENTS MESSAGE.
The president's message to congress
hna rlo-ht of wav this morning. It is
published in all its essential entirety
and almost wholly as sent to congress.
It Is a complete review of the condi
tion of the government as it exists
just beiore it is to be turned over
the Democratic party. Great stress
laid on the existing general prosperity
doubtless not only as taking all the
credit of it to the Republican party
but as being a mild sort of t
dare to the Democrats to do as well
There is but little doubt they will pick
up the gauntlet and wage a most suc
cessful contest.
The reference to our relations
Canada and the carrying trade that
country is doing at our expense cer
tain.'y points to a very grave state of
affairs and should command tne mosi
serious attention of congress.
The plea for a subsidized merchant
marine is earnestly made and the case
nut as stronclv as possible. That the
United States should have i
thorough merchant marineis undoubt
edlv truo but that it should
be
built up on government subsidy may
be a very different question.
Most of the message is made up
innHfttlnnfi of the ?rand work of the
cabinet officers and of course incident-
ally of Harrison himself. But it con-
tains a great deal of valuable Informa-
tion and should be carefully read by
every one.
There was one point in Professor
Briggs' opening speech in his defense
before the New York Presbytery that
must have struck consternation to the
members of that body. He said-
"Have you considered what will be
required of you if you consent to this
proposal of the prosecution? It will
ha nnmnBurv for vou to eniDlov a read
er to read to you alltheconteats of the
. . . . T 1
Standard! of tne cnurcn an oi rxoiy
Scripture the entire Inaugural Ad-
dress and all of my writings referred
to therein. You are required by law
to have all the proposed evidence be-
fore you."
THE MEDICAL PROFESSION
IN OHIO ALIVE AND DETERMINED TO
LEAD THE WORLD.
Extract From a Lecture at the Surgical
Hotel Columbus 0. on Chronic Catarrh
by Dr. S. B. Hartman.
Catarrh is the coutinual scourge of
Christendom. It hovei nuiousiy
over every city and neetlno ueacher-
ously in every hamlet. It Hies with
vampire wings from country to coun
try and casts a black shadow of dis-
pair over all lands. Its stealthy ap-
proach and its lingering stay makes
it a dread to the physician and a pest
to the patient. It changes the merry
laugh of childhood to the wheezy
breathing of croup and the song of the
blushing maiden to the hollow cough
of consumption. In its withering
grasp the rounded form of the fond
wife and mother becomes gaunt and
spectral and the healthy blush of man-
hood turns t the sallow haggard
visage of the invalid. Cough takes
the place of conversation speech gives
way to spitting the repulsive odors of
chranic catarrh poisons the kiss of the
fondest lovers and thickened mem-
branes bedim the sight impair hear-
ing and destroy the taste. Like the
plague-stricken Egyptians a cry of
distress Las gone out from every
household and the mildew of woe
clings to every hearthstone. Catarrh
in some form catarrh in some stage
lurks as an enemy in the slightest
cough or cold and finishes its fiend-
ish work in heart disease and con-
sumption. No tissue function or or-
gan of thH body escapes its ravages;
muscles wither nerves shatter and se-
cretions diy up under its blighting
presence bo stubborn and difficult
of cure is this disease that to invent a
remedy to cure chronic catarrh has
been the ambition of the greatest
minds in all ages.
Is it therefore. any wonder that the
vast multitude of people who have
been cured by chronic catarrh by Pe-
ru na are so lavish in their praises of
this remedy? That the diEcovery of
Pe-ru-na has made the cure of catarrh
a certainty is not only the testimony
of the people but many medical men
declare it to be true.
As no drugstore in this age of the
world is complete without Pe-ru-na
it can be obtaiued anywhere with di-
rections for use. A complete guide to
the prevention and cure of catarrh
and all diseases of winter sent free by
the Pe-ru-na Drug Manufacturing Co.
Columbus O.
Elegant fish sets game sets ice
cream and berry sets just tbe thing
for a Christmas present at I. Stein &
Co's.
"I would like to sound the praises
of Hood s Sarsaparilla over the entire
universe" writes Mrs. Longenecker
of Union Deposit Penn.
We have opened up a branch store
for the holidays and wl'l offer the cit-
izens of Austin the cheapest dolls
vases fancy cups and saucers ever
shown here. I. Stetn & Co.
Disordered liver made right with
Beecham'8 Pills.
A TRIP TO THE IRON CITY.
SMOOTHLY GLIDING OVEE THE AUSTIN
AND NOKTHWESTEElf.
Admirable Bailway Service Eunning Thro'
a Country Beautiful Beyond Descrip-
tion Llano and her Immense
magnetic Iron Deposits.
Accepting an invitation from Cap-
tain Leitnaker the efficient superin-
tendent of the Austin and Northwest-
ern railroad a Statesman representa-
tive yesterday stepped into one of the
elegant new coaches for a trip to
Llano the future iron center of Texas.
The train was in charge of handsome
George Penn one of the most compe-
tent conductors in the South and with
Dan McNamara at the throttle and
with Sam Gaut feeding the snorting
iron steed the scribe felt sure that his
millions were in no immediate danger
of disbursement among his heirs.
Captain l eitnaker had delegated Mr.
R. J. Swaucoat general claim agent of
the road to watch the reporter to see
that he was neither lost strayed or
stolen on the trip.
At the conductor's signal the train
slowly moved out from the depot
gathering speed as it passed around
the curve ai; Govalle through the
lovely valley dotted by cosy larui
houses embowered in luxuriant shrub
bery and pretty native trees; through
the postoaks now rapidly shedding
their summer robes of green with an
occasional Spanish oak gorgeous in its
many colored foliage ranging in tints
from burnished gold to crimson red. as
though blushing because ot the stolen
kiss by saucy jack frost; then there is
a modest cedar with its never chang
ing green emblemetic of immortalitv
whiie the stately live oak stands out
above all proudly waving its green
branches.detying the winds of heaven
and the blasts of the storm king its
heart repelling the stroke of the wood
man's axe and its fibre mocking the
ravages of decay typical cf the
Southern race its stout heart as theirs
and its everlastine foliage as their un
dying fealty to country and their fel
low-man.
We are out on the great billowy
prairie now. The iron horse like a
blue-blooded racer is training speed
with every bound. Swiftly we fly but
so smoothly over the finely ballasted
roadbed that reading and writing are
as pleasant as in The Statesman's
luxuriously upholstered sanctum.
We look westwaid and the eye
rests pleasantly on the mountains
through which the Colorado cut her
bed ages ago. The mountain tops are
countless ranging back until blended
with the hazy atmosphere. Their
sides are covered with the sombre
green of their cedar garb and the
imagination pictures the sunny slopes
the rugged cliffs and the sylvan glens
hidden iu their deep recesses. Then
arises a mental vision of the glorious
lake to be formed by Austin's great
dam the broad expai-se of piacid
water the shady bayous formed by
water backed up iuto debouching
creeks and ravines the merry picnic
parties with happy youths and maid-
ens clambering up the mountain sides.
But while we are dreaming Engineer
Dan has been putting spurs to his
steed and we dash into the first sta
tion Watters where a new seo
tion house and a large new water tauk
reflect the enterprise of Superintend
ent Leitnaker. The run to Cedar
park consumes but a few minutes and
atter Postmaster Emmett Cluck has
takn off the mail a short ran
through the blackjacks brings us to
the famous Bagdad prairie which is
famed for its fertility and beauty.
Here is Leander a pretty little vil-
lage on the prairie having five stores
shops gins etc and is the 'center of a
fine trade.
Liberty Hill comes next the largest
town between Austin and Burnet
with several stores shops gins hotels
livery stables etc. and especially
noted lor its excellent schools A
pretty new depot building with orna-
mental lawn and a large section hove
betray more of Capt. LeituuUer's pen
chant for disfiguring the face of ma-
ture. Bertram comes nexi a fine cotton
market and a point from which a great
deal of grain has been shipped this
season. Improvements and evidences
of thrift are seen on every baud.
Here we strike the mountains. The
soil is covered with shinoak with lux
uriant herbage on which vast herds of
horses and cattle keep fat and sleek.
In the distance on either side of the
road vast mountain chains loom up
and on the long slopes cozy farm
houses and cleau fields are spread out
to view as ou an artist's cauvas.
We reach the summit of the moun
tain chain 1550 feet anove sea level
and 900 above Austin. The air is pure
and the invigorating breeze suggests
that a reef be taken in your wraps.
For the first time since leaving
Austin there is a jar in
the train's motion as Dan throws on
the air brakes to ease her down grade.
Post Mountain rears his hoary head to
our right and at the giant's feet we
see nestling the lovely little Granite
City Burnet The train does not go
up to tbe business part of town but
enough is seen from the car window to
indicate the business activity of the
growing city. The public square is
surrounded by a row of substantial
twe-story stone buildings. Numerous
church spires and school buildings
attest the religious and educational
standard of Burnet's inhabitants.
Several miles down the rond
at Fairland. the Marble Falls
branch takes off. Here u a
depot building that takes the
eye of every railroad man that sees it.
From the arrangement of the win-
dows the telegraph operator can see
up and down both branches of the
road without leaving his seat. The
story is told that a prominent railroad
official asked Captain Leitnaker for a
blue print copy of the architect.' Han
of the building. "We never had any
sketch" he replied. "I stuck a peg iu
the ground here and another one
there and then made a roucrh profile
sketch on a shingle and told the fore
man or construction to put up the
building."
At Fairland is tbe elegant home of
Hustler Holloway (he was not bap-
BURKS f.:IO SCALDS
are quickly relieved
by applying Russia
Saive. Its cooling
nature allays the
pain gives a sooth-
i; g sensation to the
n .rt3 tmected. Asa
Dressing for all
wounds and sores it
U superior to every
otl ei preparation.
mmm
RUSSIA
SALVE.
Redding & Co.
Pile: 25c.
si.oa
SGc. and
a box.
tised as Hustler but the name filta the
gap in the writer's memory); here also
is his perfect grist mill cotton gin una
necan palisher.
Starting out from Fairland down
Baokboue vallev the road runs seven
miles in a line as straight as engineer
ing science could make it. Over to
the left is historic l'acksaddle moun
tain to the right is stately Backbone
mountain through whose granite ribs
miners are piercing a shaft in search of
nature's hidden treasure. Round ins
the mountain's po'nt we pas into
Hoover's valley and cross the Colorado
river on a steel bridge 1)00 feet
long set on massive granite
piers that will defy the Uol
orado's torrents loner after the cunning
brain that planned it has performed
its earthly (unctions and gone hence.
We run along the bank ot the Llano
river to Hessemer where active mm
ing operations are being conducted by
a wealthy corporation of which Colo'
nel Scbryver. of San Antonio is presi
dent the shaft is now 80 leer dee
and prospects of obtaining pay in:
quantities of high grade Bessemer ore
grow Drighter daily.
THE IRON CITY.
Llano the future great the embryo
1'ittsburg of the west greets our vis.
ion as we turn up the river bank. We
glide into the pretty new depot and
ou oui- right see a number of two-story
brick and granite busine3s houses
while to the left across the river lies
the old town a splendid new irou
bridge just completed (.panning the
river connecting the old town ' with
the new.
TheAlgona a $05000 hotel would
be a credit to any city in Texas. From
its roof a grand view'i had of the sur-
rounding country its irregular moun-
tain ranges lofty peaks and fair fields
a veritable panorama of nature ever
changing with each change of view
and each vieing with the prt ceding oue
for beauty. On the north side of the
river are several large wholesale and
retail mercantile establishments ap-
parently doing a profitable traffic an
ice factory several lumber yards and
other business ' enterprises. On the
south side the public square was a
lively scene merchants busy country
peop'le coining in and going out every-
thing indicating a healthy state of
trade. The new court house is going
up rapidly. It te situated ou a solid
foundation of pink and white marble
the base being of granite walls of brick
with granite trimmings and pillars it
will be a thing of beauty. Pending
its erection the county officials ate.
located in a building near the Square
where County Clerk M. M. Hargis was
found as "happy and jolly as
of yore. All the merchants
reported business good and U;.l. Moore
of the Iron City national bank was
especially elated at tha high p.-ire of
cotton.
Ou the north side tbe Llano lm
provemeut and Furnace Cjuipiny ap-
pear to be the prime factors iu build
ing up the city and iIr. Fnn.k Jla-
lone its president is the utainspriM
oi tne company ms enthusiasm is
exceeded only by Llano's bnu.dlss
resources and the work his company
has done is an achievement he has a
right to be proud of.
Llano county is the treasure vault
of Texas as to valuable mineral ores
aud economic stones. Among the
stones found in paying quantity s an.l
available to work are correctly mt
f arth in a leaflet of the Improvement
and Furnace company a to lows:
''Granite is fouud in prolusion itud
in great variety as to both color nnd
texture There are over twenty s) vies
of granite from as many teparate de-
posits. On the company's town cite is
a deposit of millions of cubiii feet of n
coarse red granite while on th same
property not more than two or thioe
blocks from the ho: el is a
large deposit of blue granke .o
fine in texture that a glaxs is ri'Vtl'd
to distinguish the particles of quariz
mica and feldspar composing the s'oue
Five or six miles north is an immense
field of gray granite said by experts
to closely resemble and tj equal the
Quincy eranite of Massacauseits. The
red granite of which the new Texas
state house is built is from the Lla no
Burnet granite fields. Ou the town
site property is a large deposit of rib-
bon'marble. Five or six miles south
is one of a very beautiful white mar-
ble near which again is one of cloud
ed marble white and blue. In the
town of Llano is an outcropping of
blue limestone which appears to ba
like the blue limestone of southern
Indiana from which the Indiana state
house was built and which has been
shipped to New England. Other lime-
stones are found in limitless quanti
ties. An eighteen-mile range of lime
stone hills not far from town contains
enough of the material for the build
ing and fluxing purposes ot a dozen
Pittsburgs.
But grand as are the prospects of
Llano based upon her ireat variety
of natural products the lias another
resource which is rapidly making her
famous throughout the United State-".
The South has already grown gi eat in
the eyes of the world in her onward
march of industrial progress: but she
has all along telt the want of a Bes-
semer iron ore district from which to
draw her supply of material for steel-
making. And now comes Llano with
exhaustless mines of the Duett Besse-
mer steel ore on the American conti-
nent." Analyses of Llano ore3 compared
with other commercial ores no iu u ie
demonstrate that the Llano county
ores are richer iu metalic iron than
those of any of the Lake Superior re-
gions the famous Cornwall ore bank
or the Santiago de Cuba mines; thnt
the percentage of phosphorus is ex-
ceedingly small and so far below the
Bessemer limit'as to establish beyoLd
doubt the utility of the ores for steel-
making by the ordinary or acid pro-
cess; that the value of the Llano c.-unty
ores is enhanced by the notable ab-
sence of sulphur in their composition;
that tbe element of silica enters into
the composition of the ores only in a
very low percentage which would in
no wise prove detrimental in iron or i
steel-making. With such valuable
ores in unlimited quantities the future
of Llato depends only on the enter-
prise ot her people. The Llano Im-
provement and Furnace company have
shipped ore to 13irminghnm and the
tet was satisfactory. Tins company
i
s pushing its inking enterprises and
hopes ere long to have them so far de-
velnped as to attract capital to erect
rolling mills.
In the olliee of the Algona hotel are
exhibited rocks aud minerals in great
variety some of immense value chief
among which is probably an excellent
quality of lithographic stone.
THE AUSTIN AND NORTHWESTERN
After four hours sight-seeing the
train was boarded for the homeward
trip. As going out the train ran rap-
idly aud smoothly. Few railroad men
in the country can show such a record
as can Capt. L?itnaker in his manage-
ment of this road. He has been in the
railroad busdijes twenty-eight years
twenty of which he has been manager.
He knows railroading from the section
hand to the top round. When he took
hold of the Austin and Northwestern
it was a miserable little narrow gauge
that could not furnish comfortable
transportation for a cow much less a
human passenger. Slowly but surely
the property was built up. tae granite
traffic wus judiciously handled and
the revenue derivr d was expended for
the betterment ot the road always
with a view to making it a
standard gauge. Ten months ago his
hopes were realized aud active work
was begun. Today it is perhaps the
smoothest roadbed in the south; its
new freshly paiuted depots are mod
els each having its lawu set iu ber-
muda grass and or na marital shrub
bery; 100 bridges on the line 17 of
them irou: steel cattle guards; every
thing whitewashed from one end of
the line to the other aud a tire guard
wherever there is a possibility of lire.
The passenger cars were built espec
tally for this road and are not sur
passed for elegance and comfort by
those of any other road in the south.
Captain Leitnaker is very kind to all
employes wincn makes him highly
popular with them and insures faith
ful service. A trip over the road as
now managed is a pleasure and one
who rides over the road once will agree
that the Granite Mountain Lin? is
hard to beat.
FIFTY -SECOND CONGRESS.
ITS SECOND 8E8SION WILL BE
VENED THIS MORNING.
CON-
There Will Probably be Much Talk
Little Legislation Immigration Ex-
clusion Will be Brought Forward.
Also Sunday Closing of the Fair.
but
Washington- Dee. 4. The second
session of the F;fcy second congress
which begins tomorrow will likely be
more remarkable for discussion than
action. Not that there ard not very
many things to be done if the bulky
calendars of the senate and house are
put- in evidence but principally be-
ea'iseof a l ick o! opportunity or of in-tvitii-rioti.
The thing that must be
done ami will be done is to
provide for the maintenance of
the government and it is
generally believed the regular annual
appropriation bills will represent
nearly all of the positive achievements
that can ba credited to this session.
There may however be several iui
portanc exceptions. One of them re-
lates to the subject of immigration.
The public iutereot in this subject
which was awakened last summer by
a fear of the cholera epidemic has
been stimulated by the radical sugges-
tion of the senate immigration com-
mittee that ail immigration be sus-
pended lorayear. Undoubtedly pow-
erful influences will be brought to
bear to compass the defeat of any bill
embodying such a proposition but it
may be that the great public senti-
ment behind it will oblige congress to
pass the measure.
A strong effort will certainly be
made to secure the repeal of the Sun-
day closing clause of the World's Fair
act. It may be too that tome action
will be taken upjn the s jhj-c-1
which the president lias repeatedly
called the attention of congress
namely the desirability of legislation
to protect railway employes Irom the
numerous casualties resulting from
the absence of a suitable device to
couple and stop freight trains.
These matters comprise what tl.e
best judgment concedes to be all the
probabilities of original legislation on
the part of the second session of the
Fifth-second congress. No one expects
any tariff legislation in either
house but the subject if so much in-
volvtd in the revenue question and in
appropriations to be made that more
or less division on that topic may be
expected. The anti-option bill has
advanced so far as to become unfinished
business in the tenate. It was known
(o have a large majority of that body
in its lavor last session upon direct
vote if one could have been reached
but it is threatened with renewal of the
determined and skilful obstructive
tactics which then proved successful
aud the result is still doubtful There
will probably be many propositions
and much talk this Sdssion locking to
reforms iu the national banking laws
a nece-'i-ity lor which is still to ba in-
dicated by the Keystone and Mavt rick
bank failures. The state bank tax
may also be a fruitful theme of dis-
cussion and Al iauce senators aud
representativ s v. 11 be heard upon
some cf .i.. if "radical propositions.
These matters however are likely to
be simply themes for .discussion with-
out action. Strong efforts will be
made by the house appropriations
committee to retrench expenditures at
every point but as this must be done
with great care in order to avoid em-
barrassment to the incoming Damo-
cratic administration there may be
mauy.stormy debates and much teel
ing aroused before the desired result is
obtained.
In the tenate the vice president will
appoint a committee to wait on the
president and notify him that the
body is ready to receive any communi-
cation he may desire to make. To
this committee will be imparted the
information that the president will
communicate to the senate the next
day whereupon adjournment will
iouow.
Thohoure will hold a brief session
during which the customary re3olu.
Hons will be adopted for the appoint-
tueutof a joint committee to notify
the president that congress is ready
for business.
m . i .1 : . j
ing the recess Messrs. Warwick of
Ohio and McDonald of New Jersey.
The house will adjourn as a mark of
respect lo their memory as soon as in-
telligence is officially communicated to
it. Tuesday the house will hearth
president's message aud adjourn.
Cuts
a poor Figure
-the woman who doesn't use
Pcarline. She has much to
do and little to do it with.
Her looks prove that washing
is hard work; her work shows
that washing makes wear and
tear. Pcarline saves the
hardest part of all washing
and cleaning. Pcarline does
away with the Rub Rub Rub.
What it does is safe ; what it
doesn't do is harm. am
Bewaro of imitations. JAMES PVLE N. V.
TO
A COLD IS INFLAMMA-
TION. POND'S EXTRACT
WILL REDUCE INFLAMMATION. -
CURE
Specific
Directions:
ll' A ( OLD IN THE HEAD apply
Pond's Extract (diluted one-
half) by a nasal douche or
vnjtortze it over a lamp Inhaling
Ksb Oidr b' tke iioac.
IF ICOAKSK garglo with Pond'n
R B Extract several times daily.
5?! JFTIIETIIKOATISSOUE i
l i :tra.'E hJIKF rn5 llio nock
I
y
he
5:-tr;-.ct c.zi0.j an rotirias wrap tlie
' P n5f in a wo)!fa
j tl' bondage saturated
v.".;!i rr.ad's F-lrr.ct nad protect-
APPLY?-."::":
IF THE LlGS ARE SORE
Poiad's Extract four or five times a
EXTRACTS
THE LI.?IHS ACHE nnd are sore
rub them vigorously
Willi Pond's Extract.
FOR CHILBLAINS batbe wtih
Pfl O"!?" "d'" Kxtract
HSa 1 and bandage
with cloth saturated with Pond's
AFFECTED
Extract. Itching quickly stopped.
BUT do not purchase some cheap
substitute and expect it to do what
Pond's Extract will. Be sure you
have genuine article made only
by Pond's Extract Co. New York.
RECULATE THE
STOMACH LIVER AND BOWELS
AND
PURIFY THE BLOOD.
A RELIABLE REMEDY FOR
Imlliccfltlon ISillouniicM Ilenilach Conntl
put Ion ypcpnta Chronic Liver Trouble.
lHzzlncHft Bat Complexion Dyncntery
OflVntlre Breath and ull disorders of the
8tnmuch I.lvcr and liotrcl.
Ttlpans Tnbuleg contnln nothing injurious to
the most delicate constitution. 1'lfruw.ut to tab?
Bnfe. effectual (iive immediate relief.
Sold by dnifffriatu A trial bottle sent bj mall J
on receipt ot lb cents. Address
THE R1 PANS CHtMICAL CO. X'
1C SPRUCE STREET NEW YORK CITY. I
BUGGIES captI at h PRICE
Buy diciACT0RY.BT. MIDDLEMEN'S PROFITS.
2T" F l!gy 3X.OO
a Fauenger Open Buggy... S7.S0
4 Faiiinger Top Ctrriag 47.50
85 Han'i Saddle 1.75
A Buggy or Cart Barna.i 3.05
H'i!i Double Team Earnen 12.50
ttli. Bnvn R.i..iii
r Mirlln tUmpun. N. y .wrim: IU(lil leuid'iVti'6ll.(jjT
U. S. BUCC Y & CART CO. I .Cincinnati?.
Sliuuld knorf how child bearing can
uu curuwu wuuuuii jrBun or xianBor
and cure their I1I9. fiend for sealed
Information. A wonderful discovery.
BB. 7. V tTE. Buffalo jr. t.
Haugiug lamps vase lamps boquefc
lamps the largest aud cheapest line
in the city al I. Stein & Co's.
We are overstocked with wood
beam black and sandy land plows
and are selling them at the following
prices for cash only:
Haiman 8. L. 7 Inch $3 go
Haiman 8. L. 8 inch 4 15
Haimon B. L. 7 inch 5 60
Haiman B. L. 8 inch 6 25
Haiman B. L 9 inch " 7 15
Eagle 8. L. 7 inch e Oft
EagleS. L. 8 inch " 7 00
EagleS. L. 9 Inch ' g oo
Eagle B. L. 7 inch ' e 50
Eagle B. L. 8 inch 7 50
Eagle B. L. 9 inch . . 8 50
Q. C. Bergener & Bro.
510 Cong avenue Austin.
D.Kch.clit.Sla89 vefy cheap at I.
frtein & Co'a.
Go and do likewise. If your whisk-
ers are grizzly and unbecoming use
Buckingham's Dye and they will look
as when you were younger.
J
Urn JJ
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The Austin Weekly Statesman. (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 20, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 8, 1892, newspaper, December 8, 1892; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth278623/m1/4/: accessed May 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .