Fort Worth Gazette. (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 132, Ed. 1, Wednesday, April 4, 1894 Page: 1 of 8
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INLY TWO COUPONS
CHpprd fimi different ln
murm of lite Gmrtt tttln
vreeU nre nrrtlril nHb 1 I
rrnt tt irruw Hie tlrkl
imrt f IUe fKintiu
CENTURY WAR BOOK
Jo Ladies
uch as Care to be
Yell Dressed
I Clothing onos self should
lot bo left to ncoidont or
urry Thero are wellset
led rules of harmony in
Mors suitableness of shapes
Height and figure choice of
material to coi > form to com
ploxion and elm Tteristics
Jin tho study 6f thu points
go probability is tlia the
Irvlco given by onr hou i
all be found of considora
value tmd satisfaction
fopterday tho writer took
10381011 to overlook at tho
necking stand several lots
oat had been bought In
ggess lengths from 4 yards
15 yards some from tho
jllk counter others from
fool studs and several lots
ifrom two to ten dress pat
ItaniB for child miss or adult
jfijoni what is known as tho
jjwasli goods department and
fjii remark passed If such
rotty dry goods wero ever
lAdo before wo never saw
Mem
J Sitro enough somo of tho
luest and daintiest are a
little high in price yet at
too same time otheis for
Jfalf can bo found in our
Wan shelves that look liko
ijiem and still others that
rill servo tho Famo purposo
for a quarter the price It
w all a matter of pride not
jm money If you come
Every day for a month and
live a good look each time
rou will seo something you
Have not seon before Wo
Wdially Invito you to look
pirough our stocks
TIio Wentlier
fecial Dlapali h
lalv < st > n Tex April a The low
W urA aua Is moving slowly east
ffgird and Is central over the lakes and
ppir Mlrilsslppi vnllev and extends
juthwurd to Eastern Texas There Is
area of high pressure off the At
lantic coast and another over tho ccn
ttil Jtotkj mountain plateau region
lis temperatute has risen over the
latern and fallen over the western
Ijrtlon of tho country Cloudy and
ihnwery weather prevails over the cen
Jil valleys and It Is generally clear
jew net e
itluni Tern llaln
Ilent 6fi
larlllo 4
lantu 62
llaroarck 34
gelro CS 24
Sharlottu S
tBhlcago 50 T
Cincinnati 66 T
VCprpus Chrlstl 70
enver DO
odge City DO
livenport 54 T
prt Smith CI
Paso 80
felvelon CS
Jacksonville GQ
ansaa city 60
Ittle Rock CO 34
Irmphls 68
hies Cltv 44
Vdntgomery 6S
Nashville 60 T
New Orleans 70
North Platte 46
Dm a ha CI
Oklahoma City 60
Mli stint 78 T
8ttsburg 66
in Antonio 84
bieveport 64 30
tt Vincent 34 04
Loul 66 12
Paul 40 12
llcfcaburff 74
Bifocal forecast for Texas for twenty
gur hours ending 12 midnight April
North Texas Central Texas East
jpxas and Southwest Texas fair cold
Coast district fair stationary tem
irature
Miss Pollard Appears on tho
Stand Again
SHE TELLS ABOUT A LETTER
Colonel oinridge Is Said
lint Which Hn rinll > enlm Hit
Authornlilp Of On tin tint tun
oj i Tfatlmuuy at the
Kentucky Orntur
By Associated Press
Washington April 3 There was a
variation of the order of the testimony
In the Poll ardn reck In rldse trial to-
day to permit the Introduction t evi-
dence that Col DreckJtirldge had rar
rled on n typewritten Aorrespondence
with Madeline Pollard rrom the house
of representatives in 18S8 The de-
mand of the plaintiffs lawjers to be
permitted to follow this course brought
a delicate question of law before tho
Judcc It was conceded that a docu-
ment might be brought Into n case and
a witness questioned upon it In cross
examination from which to lay tho
basis for contradiction between the ex-
istence of missing documents could bo
asserted and the defendant asked
whether ho wrote It was another ques-
tion which Judge Dradley decided n
the afllrmathe after listening to the ar-
gument and consulting authorities He
held however that the witnesses could
not be asked to give their recollection
of the contents of the letterB
Accordingly Mrrt Louise Lowtll who
conducted a business In typewriting
nnd stenography at the capital In the
year of H66 and had been discovered
by the plaintiff last Sunday stated
that sho had copied the mysterious
letters upona typewriter for tho col-
onel and had alo addressed for hltn a
packaRe nf envelopes to Miss pollard
76 North Upper street Lexington Ky
having made an entry of the address
in ft note book which uhe produced but
which did not entirely substantiate her
statement because it seemed to have
been used In 1SS7 and 18S8
Ml93 Pollard also appeared In a
speaking pnrt wire moj to testify
that she had received the letters In
question During her brief apptarance
the lawyers had their hands full en-
deavoring to make her confine herself
to answering the questions directed to
her for in her untrammelted utterances
when on the stand before she scored
some of the most telling points for
her side Thereafter the program was
a continuance of the fencing between
tho congressman from Kentucky and
the excongressman from Indiana
Roth Col Piecklnridge and exJudge
Wilson aro lawyers of brilliant parts
and no exhibition of Its kind appioach
Ing tho thrusts and parry of the two
men when pitted as examiner and wit-
ness has been heard for years It was
enjoyed by an audience worthy of its
merits for beplde the usual varying
corps of congressional attendants and
lawjers there was a wellknown Meth
odist clergyman In the audience and a
retired judge of the district court lux-
uriated In a seat beside Judge Bradley
Col Breckinridge made Ironclad de-
nials of the testimony of Mrs Lowell
besides contradicting Miss Pollard at
many points
Judffo Wilson was disposed to drop
Into a vein of sarcasm at times speak-
ing of the defendant as a fatherly
looking and perfectly respectable gen
tleman like > oursef He laid the
foundation for more testimony In re-
buttal by obtaining a denial that a ser-
vant at the fashionable boarding house
where Miss Pollard had lived had
ever seen her using In his presence
that work basket belonging to his
dead wife which the colonel swears
he did not vlte the plaintiff
Everybody H guessing tonight the
nature of the new line of examina-
tion which Mr Wilson announced he
would take up in the morning
wiivr was SAin lCftTnnnAY
The Plaintiff Affutn on tli Stnatl
llioae 3ly terlon Letters
By Associated Press
Washington April 3 This morning
Mrs Louise Lowell took a seat In the
witness box She said that she had
1 r n1 > s ff
known Col Breckinridge elnce Febru-
ary 1S86 having become acquainted
vMh him at the house of representa-
tives where she had an offlce to carry-
on business as a stenographer nnd
typewriter In the corridor by the com-
mittee on postomces
Did yod do work for Col Breckin
ridge Mr Wilson inquired
I did
Did he bring manuscript of a letter
to you
He did and I copied It on the t > pe
wrlter
How was that letter addressed
I object Interrupted two or threo
of Col Breckinridges attorneys who
had noticed that there was no Jiroof
of the letter having bwn mailed but
Judge Bradley said to sustain the ob-
jection would be to nullify the purposo
of admitting the witness
The manuscript and the copy had
been returned to the colonel Mrs
Lowell continued
Krom 1680 to 1889 she had copied man
uscript addressed envelopes onJ done
Col Brack lurid gea private correspond-
ence and congressional work alwais
returning the manuscript
Now what was on these en-
velopes continued Mr Wilson
Miss Pollard 76 Upper street Lex-
ington K >
And how do jou remember that
I kept a memorandum book In which
I noted the address
Have you the book
I have she said and the book was
passed around for inspection of tho
lawyers
Ptellng sure that sooner or later I
would hear more of Miss Pollard and
not wishing to trust my memory I
made that memorandum she ex-
plained nnd continuing said He
Breckinridge brought me two or three
envelopes separately then a package of
a dosen small ones > ellowed with age
and not such envelopes as u business-
man would use
The question of the substance of
those letters was objected to and tho
objection sustntned for the preient The
first communication said the witness
w as addressed o My Dear Bister
Louise and when Mr Wilson urged
that testimony of Its contents should
be admitted Mr Butterworth returned
that there waB no proof that It had
ever been mailed or received remind-
ing Mr Wilson that It was on the
ground taken by htm regarding the al-
leged forged letters of Mrs Pollard
I now give jou notice If you have
that letter to produce It cnld Mr Wil-
son to the defense
How can I produce the letttr If t
sent It to the plaintiff Col Breckin
ridge Inquired In reply whereupon Mr
Wilson remaiked in his Inimitable wayt
Tou and I w 111 have a little conversa-
tion after a while
The witness continuing recollected
that eh had copied the letters f r Col
Breckinridge nturly every week but
Bald she could only prove having
done fllteen or sixteen Tho judge
having ruled examination concerning
the contents of the letter Mr But
tirworth made n brief crossexam In i
tlon asking Mt s Lowell where the
had worked and for how long she had
kept a record of the work she did for
congressmen with the amounts re-
ceived In account Sho had indepen-
dent recollection of the rddresn of Miss
Pollard since the matter had made a
cry deep Impression on her mind
Aro > ou acquainted with MJsu Pol-
lard was asked
I nevei saw Miss Pollard until this
morning
In her notebook she had merely en-
tered the amount of work done the
name of the party and the amounts
charged so that no congressmen need
waste worry for fear that tho ledger
will rise up to get them Into trouble
After recess Miss Pollard was placed
on the stand to prov e that the letters In
question had been received by her and
dentrojetl
The defenso objected to this lino of
testimony at this stage but It was ad-
mitted by the court exceptions being
noted
Miss Pollard described those letters
as beginning My Dear Bister LouUe
and My Little Psitfore and nd
dresscd by a typewriter and nil signed
In lead pencil
Then Col Breckinridge was put back
en the stand making flat denlaU con-
cerning those letters
Having finished this branch of the
subject the defendant lold of tie events
of the fall of 1S87 when ne nnd the
plaintiff met In Washington near the
Catholic Institution as a woman In
her condition and supposing himself to
be the author of her condition would
meet
Do jou with to be understood oa
saying that you supported ar In whole
or In part during that two > ears that
she was at the Academy of the Holy
Crosft on Massachusetts avenue was
a question to which the colonel ie
ponded
I would not like to be understood
as saying anything about It if I could
avoid It but as a matter of fact my
contributions to her were net lessened
They were Irregular amounts and I un-
derstood they helped to pay her board
at the academy
Referring to live notes of 100 each
drawn by the plaintiff and Indorsed
by the defendant late In 1B92 to pay
Miss PoUards expenses at the school
of the Holy Cross Col Breckinridge
stated that he did not know what be-
came of the notes did net know
whether they had been pretested was
sure that he had never received no
tlce that two of thorn went to protest
Now to refresh your memorJ te
gan Mr WII n this testimony hav-
ing been tUclted by a string ef ques-
tions do you know that notice the
WV3f sj yij xjyt
W
protest was sent to > ou In i xlnslon
and In Washington
Hn did not and the attorne asked
Do jou know tlw particulars for
which the last notes were drawn1
I do very well
Wai It not to enable her to pur-
chase her wedding trousseau
Nothing like that There is not a
scintilla of truth In it was the col-
onels lmprcslve answer and he want-
ed to tell about the deal but Mr Wil-
son ohoked him off with a reminder
that his counsel vvould examine him
later The crossexamination having
drifted to the renewal of relations In
IS In Washington the defendnnt was
asked Did > ou ever have a room
In the northwest section
We did try that experiment but of
alt the unsatisfactory experiments
that was the worst I ever tried We
hadnot been there more than three or
four times before the plaintiff said It
seemed that every window within three
blocks had eyes when we went In
there and I whs eur the people were
standing on even doorstep in sight
every time I went there I am rather
a peculiar looking man so people re-
member me and so we gave that up
Now said Mr Wilson r little later
alluding to defendants criticisms of
Mtas Pollards falsehoods In saying she
had b6n to dinner at his house to
account for her cbwice you are n
fatherly looking man and she ft young
girl both of you from Kentucky Can
you conceive of a better excuse to
glvo foi her absence than that she
had been to dinner with a respectable
elderly gentleman like yourself
Nor can I conceive of a keener
one to be used afterward In a suit
like this was tho repl >
During a part of March nnd April
1833 Itepresentatlve Breckinridge said
his attention was called to another
phn o of the case He had Mjn Miss
Pollard two or three times a day nnd
one day seven times He remembered
a time when he took lunch with her
and they had strawberries but was
certain that this was befure the 12th
of April and not the ISlh nf May
after the Becret marriage as Mr Wll
on would have it He had frequently
met the plaintiff In the houie of Mrs
Thomos on H street but had never
seen her sewing In his life
Did you not meet her onco when
she was using this basket that had be-
longed to jour wife
No never never under heavenl
answered tho colonel striking the wit
uesa box
Did not a servant come In while
jou were there and she wan using
tho basket r
No ilr I never did for I never
knew for a moment until It was
brought In heie that sho had that
basket h
He had met Miss PoQurd in New
York In September ISBt ul not im-
properly and met her linpropeily
there in February 1193
Where did you go then asked Mr
Wilson
I cant tell the place I simply hired
a ooupf she got in and I told the
driver to take us to some safe place
He took us close to the elevated rund
up toward riftysecoudor Ftrtythlid
street It was h large building that
looked like a hotel
Here Mr Wilson suggested that It
was near tho hour of adjournment nnd
as he desired to take up an entirely dif
ferent Hue of examination It was
hardly wortli while to proceed further
and the court adjourned
MILL COMU TO roitr WOllTlt
IU tMrf > of HuMrIntend > n < of be
santn fo to Come llrrr
Special Dispatch
Cleburne Tex April 3Mr Oeo W
Talbot chief clerk to Trainmaster
Dickinson of the Ruita Fe and also
eandldatu for mayor of this city was
summoned by wire to Mineral Wells
on account of serious illness of his
child
Mr D W Lahey bridge maaUr of
the Santa Ke is In the city today
Brakeman 13 T Brown and wife left
for Kansas City yesterday to visit Mrs
Browns parents
Mr A J Davidson superintendent
of the Gulf Colorado and Santa F
railway left for the North on a tour of
Inspection yesterday
Owing to the heavy rush of stock
and a general Increase In tfafllc on the
Gulf Colorado and Santa Ke railway
the company has had to call upon the
Atchison Topeka and Santa P rail-
road and the Frisco line tor additional
power Ten Atchison engines and three
Trlsco engines have been receive and
this goes to show that the Santa Fe
Intends to be In the push
Your correspondent has official In-
formation that the superintendents of
fice of the Gulf Colorado and Santa iff
railway which Is now located at this
point will within a month move to
Fort Worth Arrangements have been
made to add a second story to the
frelcht depot at Fort Worth vhlch
will be used as the office of the super-
intendent A J Davidson and Ms
force
Xato am Open Btrltefc
Special Dispatch
Houston Tex April 3 The Inter-
national and Orest Northern north-
bound passenger from Galveston ran
Into an open swrteh at the lower end
of the yards last night the engine
leaving the track and the moil and
baggage cars being overturned No
serious damage was done and pn
was hurt OayHgbt sw the wreck
aae cleared and tae train rot away
six hours late
A FMIi
Special Dlpttti
Waoo T x Apl 1 A Klrschucr
salooDkefper Hied a deed at trust in
night tThe lWrthtH are ntiU
a EEECTIl MOT
Kanaas Oity tho Scene of a
Desperate Fight
THE A P A AT THE POLLS
And the Result is Bloodshed
and Death
Both Mtl Chnrac the Oilier With
llesTtuulnar tup TroubleUwr
10O shots rireil lu n
Uruwtlvit Mr et
Kansas City April 3 The American
lYotecttve association tuid the Catholics
came together in a bloody conflict at
the polls In this city today
It cannot be stated which side Is re-
sponsible for the affair as the partisans
of each side loudly charge the other
with being the full Cause of all the
troubles
Mote than 100 shots weie exchanged
between the combatants In lefti tWm
that many seconds nnd when the fir
in if ceased the following jinmed were
lying dead d > lng or Injured on tho
pavement
Killed
Mike Callahan city sidewalk r
e pec tor shot through the right side
1ntally Injured
Harry Fowler laborer shot through
the back
Con Brosnahan contractor shot
through tho kidneys
Jerry Pale deputy constable shot In
the face 1
Wounded
Patrick Fleming shot in the left
shoulder
John McGoveru laborer shot through
the tight arm
The riot was the culmination of bit-
ter feeling which had been manifested
by action and words since the poll
opened this morning The two untag
onlstlo elements weresolldty divided In
their choice of candidates for mayor
The aggressive support that each side
gave to Its candidate during one of
the hottest catnttalgns tver known In
this city engendered a strong senti-
ment of bigotry H was therefoie In
no amiable mood that the workers of
tho respective faction came together
nt thu different polling places through-
out the city and thut 0 Uiittfk fi
expecting trouble to occur before the
day wore away is apparent from the
number of deadly weapons that wero
drawn when the tlrst pistol shot was
fired
The riot that resulted so fatally was
the climax of smaller riots that took
pluc at other points earlier In the day
between the organized reltKlous fac-
tious This riot took place on the
southwest boulevard In the Fifth ward
very close to pollct station No 3 and
those who took part In It had been
heated to the lighting temper by re-
ports that hud been hourly at living at
the station of brawls at other polling
place Only ono hour before it was
known that John Qooley a stonemason
was shot In the buck and forehead by
Henry Walker at u voting plate at the
corner of Fifth and Campbell streets
and that thlnwaa directly due to a
fiery debate between the two men re-
garding the principle of the American
Protective association That Qooley
was not Instantly killed was due to the
faot that the pistol was a meje toy of
22callber
The American Protective associa-
tion supported Webster Davis the Be
publican candidate far mayor had
workers at the different polling
places and they distributed in some
precincts their own tickets bearing
their candidates name and decorated
with the American flag Jim Pryor
a Fifth ward politician antagonlsllo to
the American Protective association
who supported Frank Johnson the
labor and factional Democrat to candi-
date was active at the head of fifty
constables whom he got Justice Lst
ehaw to appoint last night It was
aid by some that the constables were
many of them Irrosponslblq charac-
ters and were solely the cause of all
the trouble Consequently theie were
loud threats of mobbing them befere
they got to headquarters after the
bloody riot was over It was claimed
that one of Pryors follower fired the
first shot The man was Mike Calla
han and he was a dead man the next
moment
Then the battle began
The deputy constables at this polling
booth and the workers of all the polit-
ical faction crowded together In a solid
mass about 100 strong and every one
of thm seemed to be armed For a
minute or two the discharge of wea-
pons eunded like a discharge of mus-
ketry iby a regiment Hundreds of
citizens gathered at very point of
vantage to witness the battle which
Iwwever waa of short duration The
onlookers trembled with xoltemcot
Many of the residents along the boule-
vard added to the general feeling of
terror by leaning from their windows
shoutlngjmd gesticulating wlklly
in es than flvfl mtnutee from the
time the first shot watf fired however
the Uuecoats from station No X nad
appeared upon the scene and quieted
the disturbance WKh their first tip I
p aroaoe the flgntlag m > litlcat TtvuiM 1
> 3 nw > ws rqf tw
THE FORT WORTH GAZETTE
MAILABLE EDITION
FOBT AVOBTBT TEXAS WEDNESDAY AlBIL i 1801
VOL XVIU NO 132
ceased hostilities nd mud a quick
effort to hide their
Pr
weapons > ora
men are claiming that Callahan was
an Innocvnt victim They assert that
It was Jerry N Pate an A P A man
who fired the first shot and that was
th shot that killed Callahan IMte
was serving as constable having been
appointed especially by u West port
official to serve a warrant for the ar
rest of Jim Pryor John Pryor his son
and Bert Poor for an alleged felon
ious assault Upon a cltlseu early ln > tha
day Any way he and Callahan met
had somo words and either one or the
other fired the shot that commenced
tho conflict Pryora side of the story
geta some coloring from the fact that
Harry Arthur who It nowever ono of
1riora men says ho himself Is the
man who shot Pate in the face Ac
cording to his story he was standing
on the bridge that crosses o K
cieeL close to the scene of the riot
when Jerry Pate and another man
came from the other end of the bridge
In ft buggy with four men running be-
hind him When Pate reached the spot
where Arthur was standing he Jumped
out of hla buggy with u gun In his
hand and grabbing hold of Harry Me
Govern ha said
Heras one of the men we are after
I have got a warrant for jqur arrest
l went to Pate and euld You cunt
lake him
Jim Todd stepped out too nnd said
No > ou cant take me either
Im a deputy constable and youve
got to go ai Fate and then turn-
ing to the mail In the buggy said
Bead that warrant
Just then Mike Callahan name run-
ning towards us front the northern end
ot thu bridge He ran up to Jivta and
asked him what right he hud ti > carry
a pistol and demanded to aee his per-
mit The two men exchanged angry
words nnd then Vale alined at Calla-
han and fired Callahan returned tho
1in and then I and the rest uf us l
gau to shoot 1 shot Pate
Wlille the riot was in progress it U
rtald that the members of the A P A
telephoned to Ariiumrdale nnd Argin
tine strongholds of that orilet for to
Inforremeiits for 10M armed men nnd
that the assurance was given that the
men would be shortly on the way
Members of the A P A in this citiv
and Annourdalo deny the truth nfthla
story Tho affair Is being healftdly
discussed at most all public report In
the city tonight and feeling runs very
liiHh
iAiinnrnm > m > iis
lot em
Htilifiril 1
lurin IHntrlct
rrtnre aiiil >
Coorl
Special Dispatch
Weatherford Tex April 3 Last
night n fair uudience greeted the Hon
It B Hubbitrd in his delivery of i
lecture on Japan mid the Orient It
w unlWw Jto < j just suelvsu demure
o tho exmtnlsler can deliver Pro-
ceeds JW
A disagreeable sand storm paseod
over Die city at 10 a m today und to
add to the buttle an ehctlon tht >
county and district courts are going
on Visiting attorneys up to this writ-
ing are Messrs lleeder of U ran bury
and Albert Stevenson of Fort Worth
Tex The district court was engaged
a part of the day In nulls nf the
rrnncoTexan Land company against
parties for lndebtwlnoss to it
The ladlos of the First Prwb > terian
phurch gave a publo dinner today for
tho benefit of their chuich In th
Couts building north wide of the
Square The proceeds amounttd to 70
ftemlor Datvra Omimlialnn
Specjal Dispatch
Hufaula I T April 3The United
fltates commission of which Senator
Dawes It chairman met the Creeks at
Ocmulgce today for the purpose of
treating with Ihem for the i llnqulsh
ment of their tribal relations If possi-
ble A large delegation of Creoks are
In attendance but It la not known ut
this time what was done It In known
however that the Creeks nro very
bitter towaida any change and If they
have given tho commission any en
couragement a great change has come
over them in the last two days The
commission will return to South Mc
Alester and treat with the Choctaws
In a few days
OUR NEW OFFER
WORTH ONE DOLLAR
lint 42 xrtfe nb orlber by clip
plnR In eoup < in can eel eaea
part nf the anion Cflutnry Wa
Book for
forONLY
ONLY TEN CENTS
TARIFF JEBATM
Not as Much Interest as on
the Oponing Day
SENATORS FRYE AND HARRIS
Havo a Tilt Over the Wilson
Tariff Bill
The Contcited iieelon Cmi of Joy
OMitlll Klimllr Settled Ik
Latter Urttlnir Ilia Seat
CaltrurulH Cats
By Associated Press
Washington April SThe general
public did not seem to have as much
Intrrest In tho senate today as yester-
day and tho attendance did not lndl
cate that the second day of the tariff
debato was to eicltv as much Interest
as the first
A bill was reported from the sen
Mo finance committee dlwctlng the
parting and refining of bullion to be
carried on nt the United States assay
ufneo at Helena Mont and was placed
on the calendar
Senator Mitchell of Oregon pre-
sented a reaotutlon whi h was
agreed to directing tho t rutnry of
the Interior to ttunemlt to the sonata
a list of all pubtto lands totaled In odd
sections of the states of Or gon and
Washington
Senator Petllgrew of South Dak > ta
introduced a resolution which wo < t
agreed to directing tlm sruretAry of
nuticulture to reply wllhln thna days
to the resolution passed by the senate
about six weeks ago calllnr fir sta-
tistics as to wheat production
The resolution offered a short time
ng by Senator Peffer directing the
finance commute to prepare a bill
fur the repeal of all law a whh h give
the secretary of the treasury authority
to issue Intertbeurlng bonds was
laid before the senate
Senator Sherman moved that It be
referred to the committee on finance
ns It was a very Important propose
tlon
Senator Slewsrt of Nevada opposed
the reference of thq resolution to the
finrho committee uni uiged lmme
dlate ndopijauV The resolution went
49sr until tomorrow In ordir to allow
tho consideration Of the bll > r tM > rrd
by Senator Morgan to give effi > to th
award nt the Paris tribunal on the
Behrlng sea question Th < bill waa
pnsHod
Senator Harils gave notlie thur after
tomorrow he wouM emit day lmme <
dlately after the transntflon of morn
ing routine business ask thai the tariff
bill be considered
Senator Lodge vt Massachusetts gave
notice that next Tuesday ni i o eh t- <
he vvould address the mtiat up in the
tariff question
Ai 2 oclock thoatarlff bill whs laid
befoie tho senate nnd Senator All
won arose to address that body Dur
lug Senator Allison speech Senator
Call rsked hltn to yield for a motion to-
go into executive session
This was tho algna for a very lively
debate which came up in the senate
with the suddenncLS of a cyclone and
In which benators HarrU and Fryu
played tho leading roles The former
said he hoped Senator Allison would
continue his speech and finish It tp
dit for while ho would bo glad person
ally to consult the convenience of every
one In the matter of speaking he
thought It necessary to proceed with
the consideration of the bill us rapidly
as possible
Senator Allison who had been speak
lng for over two hours said he would
be very glad of course to defer the
balance of his speech until tomorrow
but he would not do so It It would be
60 Elegant crayon Tlolures In fine
glass frames given away absolutely
free of charge Commencing THUKS <
DAY APJU1 Ctliwe will giveaway
dally absolutely freo of charge
Elegantly framed and well worth 5
each Every 1 purchase fractions
not counting entitles a customer to a
chauoe
NO 63 AND NO 176
Will win Thursday Both these num-
bers will be drawn and whoever drawB
either of them gets tho picture Tho
lucky wincors have choice of over 25
different views and designs
OHSTNTIG SI
i v
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Fort Worth Gazette. (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 132, Ed. 1, Wednesday, April 4, 1894, newspaper, April 4, 1894; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth90110/m1/1/: accessed May 21, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .