The Austin Weekly Statesman. (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 20, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 22, 1892 Page: 2 of 8
eight pages : b&w ; page 29 x 22 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
Bf THE
STATESMAN PUBLISHING COM PAN
MimAU DDAWV A T. TF A ft A RT)FN
President and Gen. Manager. Vice-President
Henry W. Brown Secretary
nffl ie 122 West Bixth St. (Hancock Building.)
Entered at the postoWce In Austin 1 Texa
ecoud-olaas matter.
THE TWENTY-THIRD LEGISLATURE
In the following article The States
man avails lartrely of the industry
the Galveston News. In no preceed
no WiHlftture of Texas has there ever
hncn an rnanv new men. As The
News remarks this is ordinarily
Indication of a change of political jom
plexlon but it does not hold gooa
thin Inntanpfi. as the members were
generally elected upon issues present
candidates for governor and those
favnrinir the e-overnor-elect were gen
erally elected. The tent was: "Are
.i.n far TTno-tr nr f!lnrk? Ho that it
--"CO "
may be presumed that the governor
will be fully sustained by the legisia
4ure in any policy he may adopt con
elstent with his promises and plat
form.
Of the thlrtv-one members of th
senate of the Twenty-second
no-Mature onlv four of them
o
re members of the Twenty'
Ihiid senate to-wit: Messrs. Kearby
of Van Zandt Cranford of Hophln
Afion whh and McKlnnev of
d-M. J W W
Milam and the presiding officer Lieu
tnnnt Governor Crane of John
son. but the senate will be
reinforced by several members of the
last house of representatives towit
Messrs. Agnew of Fannin Jester of
.Navarro uowiey w uaiywiuuuiuiiu
In ot Lamnasas and Hwayne of Tar
-w r A t 1 1 ..nnf -vm If wtr lT try
rant. To these experienced men may
be added Col. It. E. Steele of Free-
stone who served in the Eighteenth
Nineteenth and Twentieth legisla-
tures. '
A number of representatives in the
senate and house who have gained
distinotion and who will be missed
are notably in the senate Messrs
. Cone Johnson E. J. Simkins now of
the court of civil appeals C. L
Potter Wm. H. Pope Oeo. W.
Tyler H. M. Garwood and A. M.
Carter. And in the houBe A. W
Terrell Tom Brown now district
Judge Walter Greshare member-elect
to congress A. T. McKinu'ey
R T. Milner A. C. Breltz O. B- Ger-
ia a t ttalrnr W. H TTamblln and
0. M.'Connellee and among the men
who led In the Twenty-second house
these only remain in the present
assemblage: Messrs. H. M. Gossett
of Kaufman nd Jno. II. Cockran of
Dallas. However some of the old
timers are coming back. Messrs. G.
B. Pickett of Wise who was a member
of the Twenty-first; H. H. White of
Brazos who was in the Eighteenth;
Beth P. Willis of McLennan who was
In the Twentieth and Twenty-first;
and Elihu Newton of Tarrant a mem-
ber of the Twentieth. J. Baa. Jones
of Panola who came in with the
Eighteenth and served continuously
for ten yearB will not come back.
The other members of the senate
and bouse are new men but it is reas-
onable to suppose that they are men
who will fall very naturally
into legislative harness. The senator
from this senatorial district the Hon
Walter Tips is fully equipped for pub-
lic business He has for many years
conducted a large and successful mer-
cantile business iu this city and has
time and again bteu uonneoied with
theoity government of Austin as a
memborof the board of Aldermen or
the school board and has been a
director iu the Board ot Trade since Its
organization. He is a very Intelligent
gentleman and very atteniive to any
mattr of business In hand with an
adu.irab e adaptability to legislative
work. Mr. Tips by his ability
and force of character will at
noe commmand a leading position
In the senate ar.d he wll
acquire a large Influeucefn that body
The representatives in the hotse from
Travis county Messrs. Thos. A. Vhee-
less and D. A . McFall are both young
lawyers of good ability. The former
Mr. Wheeless has been the longer at
the bar and has acquired a good prao
tice and become distinguished lor
ability as an orator. It is expected
that both of these gentlemen will give
a good account of themselves and hon-
or Travis county by the position they
take In the house.
TEE UNITED STATES SENATE.
In considering the re-orgauizatlon
of the United States senate it is well
to Investigate the status of the hold-
overs.whicb will settle the question as
to which side in the senate has a ma-
jority vote in the seating of new mem-
bers. There are just twenty-eight
Democrats and twenty-eight Repub
licans who hold i ver and there are
two Farmers Alliance senators who
hold over Senator Kyle of South
Dakota and Senator Peffer of Kansas.
Senator Kyle will act with the Demo-
crate and if the Republicans cheat
the Alliance men in the legislatures
of several Western states as
thev are trylnsr to do Senator
Peffer swears he will Join forces with
the Democrats. Senator Lei and Stan
ford has telegraphed that a Republi
an senator will be returned from
California which means he is' pre
pared to buy the levislature ot nie
nfnto fnr nnmfl Reoubllcan. In the
event that the Republicans succeed
lh their scheme the new senators will
be met by a majority of two in a com
bination of the twenty eight Demo
crats and two Farmers Alliance seua
tors who will control their admission
into the senate. The senate as well as
thn hniisfl are ludces of who are
legally elecled members of that body
So that in any event the Democrats
will control the next senate.
LAND MORTGAGES AND THE
TARIFF.
The Globe-Democrat in comment
iDg on the facts presented by Mr
Waite special agent of the Census
Bureau upon the subject of farm and
town lot mortgages in the South and
West and the disappointment of bor
rowers says it was not their fault
and "the blame does not belong to the
laws either or to political consider
tions of any kind."
It was certainly the fault of some
of these farmers who sustained the
Republican party in power which
saddled a heavy tax on them for the
benefit of Eastern manufacturers and
there can be no doubt it was in
great degree the fault of the laws as
embodied in the McKinley tariff that
laid such a burden upon them that
they could not pay that tax the Inter
est on the money borrowed and give
their families a decent support.
Mr. Waite shows that the increase
of indebtedness from 1880 to 1890 was
155 per cent in the West and 261 per
cent in the South and that the incum
brances 56 per cent on the value
of farms and 65 per cent
on the assessed value or lown
lots. No doubt "these men were
anxious to borrow this money" and
under any other system of taxation
but the burdensome one of a war
tariff they could have so used the
money in improved farming facilities
and improvements on town lots to
meet the interest and work oil' the
principal but that they have failed to
do It is the fault of the laws that
made them pay out a bonus on every-
thing they bought and used on their
farms to other men who were not en
gaged in agriculture but who have
become enormously wealthy under
the receipt of that bonus on protected
manufacture.
The manufacturer has grown
wealthy the farmer has been the
largest oonsumer and if this tax t hat
the farmers of the West and South
have been paying from 1880 to 1890
the factories of the
North and East could have been re
tained by them and have been on
their side of the cash account who
doubts that the farmer could not have
paid off bis mortgages and held his
land and lots now free from incum-
berance? The amount he paid has made other
men rich; If be could have retained it
and he could but (or the high tariff
he would have been just as rich as
the men who profited by hU liberality
in voting such a tax on himself and
paying It impoverishing himself and
enriching others.
THE RETICENCE OF SIR. CLEVE
LAND.
Mr. Cleveland is called to account
even by Democratic papers for not giv
ing au intimation of his policy in his
peech at the Refoim club in New
York last Saturday evening.
It would have been rather bad taste
for Mr. Cleveland ou that occasion to
utlclpate the delivery of his Inaugu
ral. His policy certaluly ought to be
sufficiently known as there was but
one main issue ou which there was
n y difference in the party and that
seue was put In no uncertain language
iu the platform adopted by the con
vention which nominated him.
Mr. Cleve'and would not have con
sented to run without a clear under-
tancinsr that the Democratic party
ere fully and unequivo
cally pledged to a radical
tariff reform a complete change of
the policy of government upon the
ubect of the protective tariff a clean
sweep of McKloleyism and all its
corollary subjects Involved therein.
It would not only have been in bad
form for Mr. Cleveland known to be a
pecial champion of this reform to
enter into the details that he would
recommend to bis party in his mes
sage but it would have been an ad-
mission of weakness in submitting to
these gentlemen bis line of battle and
very much like a want ot independ
ence In a desl'e to consult them or
take thtm into his counsel to discuss
his plans. If he desires to get the
advice of such experienced politicians
as were assembled on that occasion it
would have been much more prudent
and much better to consult them in
private.
It looks like a want of confidence in
the president-elect to insist that he
ought to have unbosomed himself at
that dinner and It is surprising that
such a staunch paper as the Chicago
Herald should indulge in such cap-
tious criticism. If any man has ever
beeu committed to one thing without
reservation Grover Cleveland Is
pledged (o dig up by the roots the
whole system of the robber protective
tariff and he may be relied upon to
A UKT1M WEKKLV elA'1'KM.I.AN
do it if he shall have sufficient
Influ-
ence with congress.
If Mr. Cleveland was reticent as to
the policy Roger Q. Mills was not.
Hii language was good sound and
unmistakable English rammed into
sentences with the force of a driving
wedge. Mr. Mills tells you what the
democratic party will do if it is in its
power He did not say it in a spirit
of bravado or of triumph but plainly
and pleasantly. and with a directness
that could not be misunderstood or
misinterpreted.
Mr. Cleveland by his presence and
applause endorsed Mr. Mills and
what Mr. Mills said more becomingly
than Mr. Cleveland could have said
it under the circumstances as a presl
dent-elect. This may be taken as
rtfiex of the opinions of Mr. Cleveland
These two men form naturally
from their anticedents a pair of run
nirg mates that will keep step with
each other in the progress of tariff re
form. The Chicago Herald has been
a constant advocate of a called session
of tne next congress sometime near
after the 4th of March and its bile
might have been stirred by Mr. CI eve
land's silence on that eubject. Now
if he intended to do so would it not
have been premature and imprudent
for him to announce that fact at this
dinner in New York? Comfort your
self comfort yourself Mr. Herald that
Mr. Cleveland's policy on the subject
of tariff reform will be quite as radical
as you demand or the country re
quires.
THECALLED SESSION OFCONGRESS
A more prudent method is now
under consideration in regard to s
called session of congress. It is pro'
posed that the new congress be called
together in March for the specific pur
pose of allowing Mr. Cleveland to ap
point two commissions one to prepare
a substitute for the present tariff and
another to revise the pension lists.
This work it is thought could be
done by September to which time
congress would adjourn and a law
might immediately be enaoted on the
tariff question which would or could
go into effect in its general features
by Jan. 1 1894 with some exceptions
in order that certain lires of business
might have six months to adjust
themselves to the new order of things.
The revision of the pension rolls is
quite as Important to an economic ad
ministration of affairs as a revision of
the tariff On the 30th of June 1890
there was a total of surviving soldiers
sailors marines and widows of the
same of 1263705 of whom probably
50000 have died since and (loubtlep
259000 of them were of the state mili
tia or emergency men wh6 did not
serve ninety days and were not en-
titled to pensions and there were
other thousands who were not hon
orably discharged and therefore ex
cluded as pension claimants.
If the census reports are correct we
have already pensioned all the soldiers
with a few exceptions entitled to
pensions but we iiave as many
more now asking for pensions.
It has been the main channel of a
wholtsale robbery an- it will have to
be checked nr the government is
bound to go broke.
Both of these matters could be ar-
ranged for action by congress by the8ett 0 Kaufman Cochran of Dallas
first of September 1893. The States
man has opposed a called cession of
con press that was to be called for an
immediate and hurried action on the
tariff because that would have been
unwise and imprudent but there can
be no object lou to a called session
limited in legislation to the appoint
ment of the two commission for the
purposes named.
THE ANTI-OPTION DILL.
It is best to look closely into every
argument made by cotton buyers in
favor of the anti-optiou bill. It is ob 1
vious that the law will be of great ad-
vantage to the cotton buyer in the
South. It would force all manufac-
turers to buy cotton directly from
them and they would not be subject
to any risk in a fall of cotton after
they the cotton buyers had pur-
chased as they now do.
Any candid cotton buyer will admit
that the bill by becomiig a law
would increase his profits thousands
of dollars annually besides ensuring'
him against any risk. Every cotton
buyer in the South is in favor of the
anti-option bill and they are using all
their influence and every argument
within their power to get congress to
pass the bill.
In the light of this fact
let us examine an argument
occupying three closely printed
columns in the Galveston News
of Deo. 13th Inst. by Mr. S. W.
Hampton who admits that he is a
cotton buyer or rather that he has
been engaged in that business for
many years.
His argument is based upon his
statement as a fact that New York
oontrols the cotton market and has
the power at any time .to "bear" the
market and reduce the price of cotton.
As an illustration he takes the past
season He says prioes opened In
Memphis Sept. 1 1891 at 8 3-8 cents
for middling and advanced for two
months until It reached 0 8 8 cents for
the same kind. New York he charges
manipulated the crop reports and
THURSDAY DECEMBER 22 lali.
originated ana cucuiaieu repot ia un
i . . . . . . .
favorable to the crop and the creuu-
lous public mostly of the South
bought freely and In the two months
of September and October New York
sold 6000000 bal' s of "futures"' aud
a margin ot $1 a bale was required
and held bv New York on the trans
actions.
"Now having made the enormous
short sales and havinjr margins of
the buyers in their hands the time
had come for the sellers to break to
pieces" says Hampton and they
pushed down prices three quarters of
a cent in leas than thre9 weeks. Ihis
sudden break required additional
margins of $20000000 on 6000000
bales. The buyers in the South con-
tinued to buy until New York made
short sales of futures of 3500000
bales.
New York still continued to depress
prices to three cents per pound and
closed out with a profit of $700000000
in her banks.
This he says is the constant prao
tice of New York cotton gamblers.
Now to puncture his Hrtrument. II
this is the annual game of New York
whv does not Mr. Hampton in the
place of buvintf futures sell futures-?
In the latter case he would be win
ning every time on a stocked hand
as he has stocked it himself for the
New iork people If this is their
game it is the easiest thing in the
world to eo Into partnership with
them and help them play that stock
ed hand.
If Mr. Hampton's charges are true
then never has the world
afforded an example of more stupid
and perfectly green men
who buy futures whe t they are
bound to win by selling futures and
quietly await the manifestations of the
New York speculators in futures
Judite Lonjrstreet in one ot
his
humorous works painted a very bud
boy"Sam Slick" by name who bad a
very pious father. Sam would gam-
ble. The old gentleman frequently
remonstrated and on or. e occasion
said :
"My son gamblers always lose their
money."
Sam answered by an inquiry.
"Dad who wins?"
Mr. Hampton says the New York
speculators always win by selling
futures to Southerners and o hers
If that is true we can tell
Mr. Hampton how to make a
fortune in one cotton season
Join the New York "bears" and sell
for future delivery and if h e facts art
correct and his conclusions true b
can't help making a fortune in one
season.
But is it not a trifle too much to l-
lieve that shrewd business .i eti wh"
watch the market closely and intelli
gently in the South aud eleewhert
will continue from year to year topla.
into the stocked rand8 of the New
York (-peculators in futures by buy-
ing from them when they have a eun-
thing by selling and are backed
the millions of New York and a
tocked hand? We do not think y.ur
argument will hold water Mr. Hump-
ton. There are eight candidates already
in the field for the speakership of tut-
next legislature towit: Messrs. Gos-
Rogan of Caldwell Watson of Harri-
son and J. R. Gough. All of the
were members of the last legislature
The other new men are Messrs
Breeding of Harris Simmons of El
Paso and Finkney aud there ar
more to come.
THE SILVER MODEL.
The women in New York Chlcngn
and Montana are in a state ol excite-
ment that borderB ou frenzy. Ever'
one of them are jealous ot the selec
tlon of Adah Rehan the RClmss ah
tbe model for Montana's silver statue
to be pl-ced in a conspicuous ;osiiion
at the Columbian ex position next sum
mer. The women are rivaling the
sinewy gentlemen of the pugilistic
prize ring in offering to convince the
sceptics of the symmetry of thir
forms.
Since tbe measurements of the pro-
portions of Adah Reliao by the sculp-
tor Paik and it has been ascertained
that she is too long from the
middle of the thigh to the knee-
cap and -too short from the knee-
cap to tbe bottom of the foot a dozen
or more actresses have been skipping
about New Yoik offering to convince
Mr. Park that each aud every one ol
tbem are better proportioned and
nearer up to a perfect form than Miss
Rebau although out of sixty-eight
points she was perfect in sixty-two
One of the points in which she
fail d is the point of her nose which
violates Grecian art by tipping up a
Utile too conspicuously. Her other
imperfections are guessed at as Mr.
Park is as mum as tbe priest at the
confessional.
The Venus of Milo with equal
measurement of hips and shoulders
is pointed to in order to con-
vince the committee they ought not to
accept Miss Rehan. Montana con-
siders the award premature ai d Is
asking consideration and measure-
ments of some of the native beauty of
the Silver state. Taking Sculptor
Park's own given measurement the
Montana people claim Miss Rehan is
imperfect. He says the line of meas
iirmnnr nf MiBB Rehan'S head IS 8 3
;-4
inches. According to scientific de
rinntions based upon the Venus of
Milo eight times the length of th
head rives that of the figure from tb
crown of the he d to the base of the
fiint. That would make Miss Rehan
5 ft. 10 in. tall but she is not that tall
erzo. Miss Rehan is not perlect ac
cordins to alassio art. Miss Rehan
has been selected but this concerted
actack may knock her off the pedes
tal.
This kind of a controversy may
tend to the classical develop
ment of the figures of Ameri
Ann women but it certainly does
not terd to the cultivation of
modesty for which they have hereto-
fore been distinguished. The number
of respectable women who are willing
to submit to a measurement to prove
their suitable classical proportions for
this silver statute is astonishing one
can understand that it is a fine ad ver
tising scheme for an actress who has
been accustomed to display her pro
portions before the footlights Lut for
the daughters and mothers of private
families to seek this kind of distinc
tion is not very favorable to the repu
tations of American women for mod
esty and retiracy.
The guns of Texas rangers have
been rusting in their scabbards
Colonel Seagar's whole attention for
a year has been given to the state
militia. The Mexicans on the border
are on the rampage fhe adjutant-
general and his staff will have to kiss
their wives and babies and mount
like Lord Lovel their milk white
steeds and be off after Garza and his
troublesome bandits. Goodbye gen-
tlemen hope you will capture the in
surrection.
For Over Fifty Years
Mrs. Winslow'a Sooihlnir 8yrup has b' en uf ed
forchililrcn teething I' si ollis the child sofi-
enR the Bums a lays al pain cures wind colic
aud is the best remedies for diarrhoea Twenty-
five cents a bottle. Sold by all diuretst through
out the world.
For lame back side or chest use
Shiloh's Porous PJastar. Price 25c.
At Cornwell & Chiles.
PEE80NAL DAMAGE SOIL
A Bailroad Employe Gets Judgment
for
$25000 for an Arm.
Special to The Statesman.
Dallas Tex. Dec. 15. A case of
great Interest to railroad -employes
was disposed of in this city in the
forty-fourth judicial district today.
Two years ago at Toyah on the Texs
and Pacific railroad W. D. Reed an
employe while coupling cars
ws caught between the
bumt-ers. He was crippled frr JKe.
losing an arm by the accident. Mr.
Reed who is a young man of 24 re-
tained Wooten & Kimbroug'r and
bioueht suit for $25000 damages
against the company alleging tiiat
criminal negligence on the part of
agents ot tbe company caused the ac-
cident ti at made bim a cripple tor
li'e. The case was tried in Judge
'utker's court. Col. L. J. Freeman
appeared for the railroad company.
last night it was given to the jury
and today a verdict for the plaintiff
was returned and he was given $25
000 damages. This is tbe largest sum
ever given in alike case in the courts
ot DMlas county. The railroad com
pany by Its attorneys will take an
appeal to the higher courts.
without a t ottle of Angostura Bitters th world
ri.nnufiiArl nnnAtirpp rif AT.llj&llA Havm Rdvbiii
of counterfeits.
Shiloh's Cough and Consumption
Care is sold by us on a guarantee. It
cures consumption. At Cornwell &
Chiles.
TBE CRISP EPISODE.
A Letter From Senator Mills Begarding the
Matter.
Washington Dec. 14. Senator
MiIIh of Texas has si nt ti e following
letter to Kllerj Anderson president oi
the Refoim club of New York regard
ing the Crisp episode:
CoL Elh-ry Anderson Preside! t Reform Club of
N. w York:
It is stated by the New York Sun ot
Dec. 13 that I said to several Demo
crats Saturday afternoon of the 10Mi
inet. "Speaker Crisp has come to town
wi h a speech prepared but X know
be will not have an opportunity lo de
liver It" and the Tribune of the same
date says that I am reported to have
said: "Crisp has got a speech ready
to deliver at tbe reform dinner
tonight and has given it
out to the press but he won't
get a chance to fire it off. He will
find this Is not his show." Both ol
these statements are false wholly so
I never knew Mr. Crisp was Invited
to speak or that be was in the city
until I sat down at tbe table aud saw
his name ou the program and the seat
he was to occupy. He soon appeared
on tbe stand. 1 advanced ana shook
hamiB with him and aided him in
finding tbe seat set apart for him. I
teamed for the first time iu the naoer
Sunday morning that he waB indig
nant at his treatment. I said then
and say now that I do not believe the
club or any of its officers intended to
show him the slightest disrespect and
i nave no more connection with the
matter than the man in the moon.
Mgned Roger Q. Mills.
Catarrh cured health and sweet
breaah secured by Shiloh's Catarrh
Remedy. Rrice 60c. Nasal Injector
free. At Cornwell & Chiles.
BneUen'i Arnica Salve.
The best salve In the world for cuts bruise
sores ulcers salt rheum fever sores tettei
chapped hands chilblains corns andallskli
eruptions and positively cures piles or no pay
required. It is guaranteed to five satisfaction
oi mouty refunded Price 2B cents per box. For
s JrJ J Cotu
That Tired Keeling
The marked Dcncin wmcn pcopio overcome
by That Tired Feeling derive from Hood's Bar-
sauanua conclusively
proves that this mo.iu
cine " makes the weak
strong." J.B.Emerton
a well known merchant
of Auburn Maine says
"About five years aga
I began to suffer with
very severe pain in
my Hloiunch grpd-.
jftlly growing worse. 1
took - Hood's Sarsapa.
rilla being convinced
Mr it. Kmerton
at I was troubled with lyprpii compll-
cated with Liver and Kidney troubles. I
unproved at once and am certainly very much
better and feel more like working.
Hood's Sarsaparilla
always pives me relief and great comfort It
In a ;oil-Mecd to any one suffering as I did."
HOOD'8 PlLLSure Habitual Constipation by
entering peristaltic action vt the alimentary caiiuL
TO
WILL REI
A COLD IS INFLAMMA-
TION. POND'S EXTRACT
REDUCE INFLAMMATION.
CURE
Specific
Directions:
IF A COLD IN TUB HEAD apply
A Pond's Extract (dilated one-
half) by a nasal douche or
vaporize it over a lump inhaling
fsOl 1 he fnm
VVLIV by the nose.
IF HOARSE eargle with Pond's
I lI Extrac e'l times dally
I J IF THE THROAT IS SOBE
and NECK STIFF rub the 'neck
EASIEST with the
Extract and on retiring wrap the
'lAf A f neck In a woolen
WW f bandage saturated
with Pond's Extract and protect-
r I Lbs wrapping.
IF THE ITJ!VGS ARE SORE
ROND'S
spoonful of
Pond's Extract four or five times a
EXTRACT:;
THE LIMBS ACHE and are sore
"P ruD them vigorously
J with Pond's Extract.
FOR CHILBLAINS bathe with
wri w r sat - i
PART
Pond's Extract
and bandage
with cloth saturated with Pond's
AFFECTED
Extract. Itching quickly stopped.
BUT do not purchase some eheaa
ubstltute and expect it to do what
Pond's Extract will. Be snre you
have genuine article. Made only
by Pond's Extract Co. New York.
1753
atimntaf cs the torpid liver strength.
eiist3ietKeKtiveortrai!i. regulates tho
Don't In. aud nra nn ..
ANThOlUGUS fl?ED!ClNE.
In matorlnl rMW-..3i4- 41 1
w idel.v recognized as they poasens pec-
?.IAtriKW1;ri-e" 'thesystem
froni that poion. Elee-antly sncsr
coatod. boeuaall. Prlca aacta.
Sold Everywhere.
Offlse 140 to 144 Washing-ton St. N. J
- iL The Aflrlean Kola riant
fc33 T il III 71 discovered in C'uiiko West
JraO till HI Africa Is Nature's un
lor A -lliEUH. ( urc Unaranteed or No
i'ny. lixpnrl Office. 1 14 Krimdwav. .New York.
I'Di'ldtreeTrinlCaae. I KKK by ftlntl aditrew
COLA JMFO.Vi'lNS CO.. 1. 5 Viatit..01nclluiti.OtU.
Tliis T-.i.i" Vm Is on ttie b"st
WATER PROOF COST
IVustrnfed
Ctttu ok-ue
in if. a SYoKu I
reo.
A. J. TOWHR BOSTON MASS.
I CURE FITS!
When 1 say onra I do not mean merely to stop them
for a time and then hare them return again. I nean a
radical cure. I have made the disease ol FITb EPI-
LEPSY or FALLING SICKNESS a life-long (tody. I
warrant my remedy to cure the woret oaaea. Because
others have failed it no reason for not now receiving a
cure. Bend at ocoe for a treatise and a Free Bottle of
my infallible remedy. Give Express and Post Offioe.
H. G. ROOT. III. C 183 Pearl St.. N. Y-
Csvests. and Trndo-Marks obtained and all Pat
ent business conducted for Moderate Fees.
.a0ur 'N"1 Opposite U. S. Patent O.fice.
and we can sernre potent iu less time tban those
remote from Washington.
Send model drawing or photo. with descrip-
tion. We advise if patentable or not free of
charge. Our fee not due till patent is secured
Pamphlet "How to Obtain Patents" with
names of actual clients inyourState county of
town sent free. Address
C.A.SHOW&CO.
OpposHi Patent one. WasNnoton. 0. C.
m m H f?5kHB0
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
The Austin Weekly Statesman. (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 20, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 22, 1892, newspaper, December 22, 1892; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth278625/m1/2/: accessed May 22, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .