Linden Standard (Linden, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 8, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 12, 1891 Page: 1 of 4
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volumeiii.no. 8.
THURSDAY, FEB. 12th 1801.
) O'NEAL, W. 3. 3a:S£B. W. M. WOOD.
PuiniHrRr Vick Ca**mik».
lutden bank.
ftoe ia Wood ft Siaser's Brick Store; Linden- Texas,
TO’, buy and sail Eichisje, and do a general Sinking btuinaai.
K PAfRONAGE SOI U’ITE|l.
2x. J. OLIVER, M. D.
Moravian amt Quaker, amt aome Pu- the amount of Government money he T- Cue . ei«jsitories Kill he required to
ritan* aa well, found in the same In- Spent in the publication of his views gin- m viblty to double the amount of
dian a man and a friend, who wel- thereon, is as dead as a door nail,
corned them to his hearth, and gladly The House con miltee on Post offices
will not even report it.
Representative McCreary, who is
regarded a- one of the most couaerva-
r
I *
V «
V A
knelt at their altar.
|
These last fou nd the secret light-
giving force in the red man's soul,
while the o hers never knew that it
! was there.
in lire placed io their kee|>ing. thus
making the state
ABSOLUTI'.'LY SKC.LRR.
*' l he taxes collected each year
.■iiihiiiui to about $1,000.(100 ami the
live men in the House paid bis rc- avers je amount in the trPrfxuty at
8UROEOX.
PHARMACIST
PRACTITIONER.
TKXJS.
speets to Czar Reed on Saturday in a
It exists today in every human soul manner that was quiet but severe.
-.•m e is $1,500,000. The total amount
of money in Texas is about $11,700,
no matter bow degraded or debased. His committee—Foreign Affairs—hav- 000 rims making the amount contiad-
The electrician draws hit mvsteri- ing been refused « day for the condd- ally held out of circulation in the state
; ous motive |»ower cut of every object oration of its bills, he said: ‘Never ! treasury about one-tenth of the whole.
iu nature, however seemingly dead.
Let us not be blind to the lesson
: which he teaches us.—Ex.
WASHINGTON LETTER
ms
THE
BEST
LIVER
MEDICINE
CHILL CURE.
txmn BfninsK knows
.SIllUBMM QUALITY AND SITE OF DOSE.
IT WrLl, ALSO CVKI
1LI0USNE88, 0Y8PEP8IM,
AMD oaaomo OON^TU-ATIOM.
, , A J OLIVER,
DRUGGIST
LINDEN, TEX.
%
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fes
_ 'HsS
a N.’im.i;.
The world is suffering for smiling
faces, The age is loo intense iu the
business direction, too tlippa.it iu its
political tendency, too heartless in its
literature. The world needs more
smiles and fewer frowns, more sun-
shine and less lightning, it costs
nothiug to allow a smile to play resl-
fnllv upon the features when trading
or voting, when talking or reading. It
I pays!ufinitely more than it costs in
| friendship, in finance, individual
growth! We can win more people by
a smile than we can frighten by a
frown, just as the sunshine grows
more trees than the liglituing shat-
ters.
A smile is the cheapest ami most ef-
fective way to sooth sorrowing hearts;
to quell rebellious pupils or children ;
:o hum* angry employees; to heal po-
litical antagonists, or restore calm to a
disturbed church.
A smile ia like a diamond; it multi-
p'ios the love, it transmits a hundred
fold and intensifies its brilliancy. It
is nothing against the sunshine of a
suule Ilia, there may lie ro-y ’-h.ones,
> • -n. o(
before in my experience on the com-
mittee on Foreign Affairs, haa that
committee been refused a day for the
consideration of bills reported by it. j
The refusal to give this committee a
' day is but another error in the comedy ]
The effect of withdrawing this money
from circulation Is to euetiancs the
value of money, thereby raising the
rate of interest to all borrowers. By
th is cause the purchasing |>ower of
(From our Regular Corespondent.) day is but another error in the comedy I money in Increased, and the selling
Washington, D. C. Feb. 2, 1891. of errors K liieh has marked the Fifty-1 price of every article in the mirket
Mr Harrison lias as hard a task be- first Congress.” | cheapeued. The volume of business-
fore him in the selection of a successor It seems that the republican Sena- transacted in Texas in a year is about
to the late Secretary of the Treasury 101,8 will never finish making personal $300,000,000. Let us suppose that
as Ids worst enemy could possibly have explanations of their course regarding the withdrawal of one-tenth)of tho cir-
set for him ; it is a task too in which the E>«ree bill. Saturday Senators . dilating medium enhanced the value
the country at large is more directly Blair and Teller hail their turns, of money one per cent, a small esti-
interested in than anything he has yet Next! mate, and we have $3,000i000 as the
undertaken. It will be very difficult Secretary Windont’s funeral occnrr- indirect eosl to the people of bolding
to find a man willing to accept the ed here today. All of the Govern- this money
place who possesses me ability com- ment departments the local offices and orr of cmrri.ATiox.
blued with the conservatism of the the public schools were closed. There When the treasurer seuds out a war-
dead Secretary; and what will add no was considerable growling among that runt in payment for services of any
little to Mr. Harrison’s trouble is the large elase who make it a point to at- kind rendered the state, the payee
foot that all the prominent republicans tend every prominent funeral they carries it to the nearest bank, and
in both House and Senate who have possibly can. because admission to the there pays 25 cents or more exchange
been recently repudiated by their con- Church was by ticket, and the tickets [ So get the money on it How much is»
stituenis will he, in fact are already were only furnished to prominent peo- paid out this way every year cannot,
clamoring for the place for themselves. pie. The remaining members of the J be estimated. This is another indi-
Whoever he selects ho is hound to cabinet'acted as honorary pallbearers, reel coat.
make new enemies in his party, and ' The resolution to discharge the “Directly it costs about $60,000
being a candidate for a rcnominaiion House Coinage committee from fur- annually to take this money to tie
that ia just what he cannot afford to ther considciutiou of the free coinage state treasury and to send it out again
do. Besides this, the man selected bill is liable to make the lu:gest sort This amount would lie saved by the
will have to be satisfactory to the bus-, of a rumpus in the House at any time, | depository system. From estimates l
ideas men of the country, or a finan- if that committee persists in its p'es- : am satisfied we could collect iiKc-ret**-
cial panic may de piecipilatud. ent efioris to kill the bill by delay, i to the amount of of $75,O>0 a year.
bo far the men who art mentioned How not to iuveslijjaie tiie silver j Warrants issued by the treasurer
for Ib» vj, v are just ‘hose who |n*-1j Seems to lie real object of, would be pa_ -Able at the depcailorkRA,
” use Muni--*-'- his ostensibly I and those who 1 *'• * with the
* if **!»« 1 •* ******t/i ' \
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Erwin, J. W. Linden Standard (Linden, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 8, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 12, 1891, newspaper, February 12, 1891; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth523223/m1/1/: accessed May 14, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Atlanta Public Library.