The Southern Mercury, Texas Farmers' Alliance Advocate. (Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 8, No. 46, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 14, 1889 Page: 1 of 8
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"ORGANIZE, EDUCATE AND CO-OPERATE"
[iOFFICIAL JOURNAL OF THE FARMERS STATE ALLIANCE OF TEXAS.]
"LIBERTY, JUSTICE AND EQUALITY
VOL, nil. NO. ¿G.
DALLAS, TEXAS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER U, 1889.
— ■■— r
WHOLE NO. S94.
INVESTMENT BANKERS
FORT WORTH, TEXAS.
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
Office, Corner Fourth and Houston Streota,
E^"Monev always on hand to loon upon farms, ranches, vendors' Hen notoe and city property
at lowest current rates. Lonns closed quickly. Correspondence Invited. Choice securities
reoiire low ratos, und easy terms Address, 1MHOPKN & HAMILTON, Fort Worth, lex.
AMERICAN ROAD MACHINE CO.
Road Graders, Wheel Scrapers, Drag Scrapers, Plows, Etc.
Works—Ktnnelt Square, Fa. R. S. SMITH, Gen'I Agent,
Dallas,' Texas.
py We keep a full stock on hand nnd guarantee satisfaction to purchasers.
E? d?refcident Cleveland cailcd oil Presi-
dent Harrison last week.
TTAND BOOK 1
Jtl("Tell It all!)
D wight, III.
er newly married couples
1C cents sealed. Box 17,
CANCER
ana Tumors CURED: no knlf#¡
tmukírce. mt. ucimiuEl. n.u.,
180 Wabash av., *iuic¿uo. lu-
WIVES
lnformotiou. A wondorfol dl«eo v
DR.it. H. DYE. Buffalo. N. Y.
CHRISTMAS GIFT.
Send your name and P. O. address and we
will send via u handsome Christina prcsont
free of charge, and a sample copy of one of
Vstarjri-icuitural papers in the state. Tuk
Nokth Tkxas Fakmeb, Paris, Texas.
fit MB$
S3
will play 100 tun 03. To In
— traduce thara. ouo in
«very county ortown
turnuhed * relialtlo
poison* of either tex
who will prowlno to
show it anil introduce
our WatclioB, Jewelry
and Musical Goods.
)Send your addretf &
J 4 ,J «Mint stamp and
'yvbo convinced.
WM. WILLIAM ,
121 So. HftlfttcdSUt
CUli'auoilli.
E. FRXEBENHAUS,
Notary Publto and La id Claim Agent,
AUSTIN, TEXAS.
Refers by permission to K. M. House, Austin;
T. W. House. Bunker, Houston,
LOST LANDS A SPECIALTY.
Partios whose relativas or families owned
landsat an early day of Texas, and who have
lest them will And It to their Interest toonr-
r< spond wltu mo,
Patents pruoured a speoialty. Maps and
compilations lurnished at short notice. Tax
titles set aside. Tastes paid in tiny county In
Texas. General land ofllco examination raude.
Fees reasonable, Titl'-s Investigated and
perfected Mans furnished ea «hurt notice
fur any county in Texas.
Sa m a e o
BROTHERS
In the midst of our most success-
ful season in this department, we
can stop Jong enough to call, atten-
tion to a few specially attractive
prices.
Nottingham Lace Curtains
at $1.50, $2 and $2.90 per pair.
Their real value exceeds these
prices by $1 u pair.
ART PATTERNS
in Nottingham Lace Curtains
at $3.75, $1.65 and 85.70 per pair;
were$5.50, $7.00 and $8.25 per pair.
BURMESE SILK
Cross Stripe Curtains at
$5.50 - - were - - $0.75
$6.25 - - were - • $8.00
$7.50 - - ware - - $10.00
Silk Damask Curtains, edged with
Silk Chenille Balls at
$12.00 - - were - - $16.50
Our general stock of Drapery
and Drapery Materials embraces
everything essential for the highest
class work, whilst our nrtists are
the best to be had. Estimates on
any class of drapery work cheer-
fully furnished.
QAH GED
« «^BROTHERS*1
Editor Mercury:—11'eel It my duty to
say to you that there Is one man alive to
the cauie on East Fork. Being a reader of
The Mebcury and other Alliance and
Wheel and Orange writings, I can't sea
why the farmers won't unite and make our
wants known. I hour a great deal said
about oo-operatlon and their failure*. Let
me «ay right hare, thu failure Is (rem the
tact we don't have honest men to run them.
Why does the Dallas News know every-
thing the Alliance does and publish It be-
fore The Mercury does? Don't you know
we have a Judas in the oainp, and he is
there for his thirty plooes of silver?
I have belonged to a co-operative atore at
Forney; was one ot Us stockholders at ill
origin. We established with about $'250.
We crawled for awhile; we got so we could
stand alone, and by this time we increased
our capital stock to $2,000. We took a
young man lrom the plow; he has proved
to be the right man in the right place. He
is getting (1,000 or $1,200 a year. We have
from three to iive clerks, all getting good
wages, and are making some money. I atu
satistied we don't all work under the true
meaning of co-operation. We could save
millions even In Texas, if wo would raise
our own meat and bread and get out of
debt and stay out. There is but one thing
I would go in debt for. and that is a doc-
tor. and 1 h aven't but little use for him.
Now, Mr. Editor, when Í commenced
this I intended to give my ideas about the
condition of our government, but it would
make my letter too long.
With best wishes te The Mrrcury and
its many friends and may CioU bless our
cause, Is the prayer of your friend.
7j. M. Touver.
P
AST ALL PRECEDENT!
OVER TWO NIILLIuNS DISTRIBUTED
Louisiana State Lottery Co.
Incorporated by tbe Lairlilaturs for Educational
and Charitable purposes, umJ Its franchise made
ii part of the praseut Sluts Constitution, In 117V, by
no overwhelming popular vote.
lUORANH EX! RAOIWINARY DRAWINGS
take place Scmi-Annually (June and December),
anrl its 0RAND81NQI.ENUMBER DRA IV1NG3
take place in each of the other ten months of the
year, and are all drairn in public, at Uve Acad-
emy of Music, New Orleans, La,
" ll'e ito htrsby certify thai we supervisa the er'
ran<j:ieitts for all «As Monthly and tie mi-Annua
Drawings of Ths Louisiana State Lottery Company,
and In person manays am! control the Drawings
themselves, ana thai the mine are conducted with
honesty, fatrnexs, and \n oood fatth toward all par-
ties, and we authorize the Company to use this cer-
tificate, with facsimiles of our signature attached,
in Its advertisements."
Commissioners,
We the undersigned Ranks and Banker mill
pay all l'rizcs drawn in The Louis'ana State
lotteries which may be presentact ut our coun-
ters.
It. M. W\LMSLEY, Pros't Louisiana tí at'! B'k.
PIERRE LANAL'a, Pres't State Nat.'l Bank.
A. BALDWIN, Pres't New Orleans Nat'l B'k.
CAUL KOHN, Pres't Union National Bank.
MHMM □ T H ü RAWING
At the Academy of Music, New Orleans,
Tuosflay, December 17, 1889,
CAPITAL PRIZE, $600,000.
100,000 Tickets at tlo; Halves t'Jo: Quarters $10;
Eighths $i; Twentieths f j; Fortieths ft.
LIST OF PRIZE*.
1 PRIZE OF $600.090 l< WOO,000
1 PBLiS Of ^00,100 is íOÍ 000
1 I'lll/.E OF JiO.OOOis POTO
1 PRIZE OF 60,0001s V00U
i! PRIZES OF üu.uOU are 4000U
r. FRIZES OF 10.000 uro 6J0ÜJ
0 PRIZES OF ft,000 aro W000
£:< PltlZKS O" Ü.OWare 60,fii;0
ifl PRIZES OF mu are ío.OOfl
MUk ntjl'/ua /\M anrx - '
Hfl
SOU PRIZES OF
60) PRIZES OF
1 0,i>J0
0J
fion aro
4 0 are
' APPROXIMATION PRIZ83.
lOOPrizosof I1C00 are 1100.000
llXI do tOU am K),U w
100 do 400 aro i'J.OOJ
TWO NUURKR TEBMINALS.
LOTS Prises of $200 aro HOT,CO i
3,144 PrUes amounting to. >2,159.600
AGENTSMIVANTED.
tTTVon Cldii Rates, oranr further Information
tio-lrod wrtto Icirlbly to tbe undermined cioarlr
►tatinn your resldunce, with 8tat«, County, Strain
nr.U ftmnber. Wore rapid roturn ninl! dollrory irlll
boaisyured l y your eaoloalng an Enrelupe beerlns
your lull address.
IMPORTANT.
address M. A, DAlPHIJr,
or M, A. PAIPHU, Orl««na, La..
WBshtuKton, 1). O.
by ordinary idler, cuntalnln^ Money Order,
Issued by all Expresa Companies, New York
Kxclmnvo, Dialt or Postal Noto.
Address Registered Letters containing Currency to
N£W OULmiNATIO.\AL IJAJIK,
New Orieun*. La.
BAlkke ot .Mjw Orleans, and tbe tlck«U ara
hkomt by Ujo fresldeot of an Institution, whoss
chai te red rlnhu are reooenliod In tbe hlxbest
Courts: therefore, beware of all Imitations or ano
ymona sehemes.
W{^fraSionw* rii
IÉ
State.
The Sallttiury bulldlug as.ocUtion of
Hall county ha* filed charter.
A wreck hag occurred on the St. Louis,
Arkansas and TexaB near Husk.
The foundry root at the Busk state pris-
on is burned.
An epidemic of Deugue prevails S miles
south of Hubbard city.
Cattle movoments at Henrlotta are very
heavy.
The demand for stock cars is very heavy
at present.
The new $00,000 hotel at Tyler is under
construction.
Tyler has had IS hours steady rain.
The deepest snow in 12 years has fallen
at Clarendon. It is 6 inches deep on tbe
level.
There are nine engines In a snow drift
at Fields, 75 miles north of Clarendon.
Frank Clusters for the murder of Jim
Orant at Wharton, is sentenced to tbe pen
for life. Both Ure colored.
Four convicts tried to escape from tlio
Buutsvllle penitentiary and one was killed.
Galvestonlans, the philanthropic ones,
put in a plea for a Woman's Exchange.
Mr. Frank Cravons, editor of tbe Texas
Topics of Houston, la married to Miss
Burns, of Weco.
Mr. Morris, of Corpus Christl, who had
bis foot amputated from blood poisoning is
doing well.
A Mexican woman cut her lover in tho
back with a knife at the El Paso smelter,
The irrigation canal ground is broken at
El Paso, the leading citizens olliclated by
handling the plow.
Batesvllle people are hoping that tho
frost they have had there, will kill oil' the
malarial fever.
A crazy negro woman who has been
wandering for weeks in tbe woods und
tlclds is taken in charge by the oflicers at
Mesquite.
Tbe Fort Worth snd Bio Gvande has
purchased 6000 tons additional of steel
rails.
Miss Bfrge, of Sherman, who had a
cocklebur lodged In her throat, has had It
removed and 1s now resting easy,
The contract Is closod lor the property
for the Marvin College at Waxahacbie.
Corpus Christl did not feel tho late se-
vere storm which visited Galveston.
A flow ot natural gas, sulllclent to light
tbe elty li struck at a depth of 1000 feet at
Corpus Christl. Great excltcment pre.
vails.
There Is an ordinance passed at Pales-
tine compelling all persons of the ago ot 18
and over to work tho roads in tho city
limits.
It has been bitterly cold at Colorado city
a bunch ef 2,900 sheep got away and havo
not beon beard ol since.
Somo 30 shots were fired Into,the bouse
of a colored man at Bowie by unknown
parties. A small boy was hurt.
Gen. Claiborne while in conversation
with gentlemen in front of a saloon in Gal
veston, suddenly fell to tbe ground, med-
ical aid was obtained, and be is recovering
lrom his attack of heart failure.
Frank Glassett dies at Dallas from the
effects of a irleudly wrestling match. His
opponent forced his head down upon bis
chcst, fracturing his spine and producing
paralysis.
The Texas cotton crop is estimated at
$1,000,000.
Tho weather at Ulco is dry and unfavor-
able lor wheat sowing.
Karnes Is one ol the best watered coun-
ties in the state.
Greer oountv sent pumpkins to the Dal-
las fair that weighed S3 pounds.
There are six tactories lu Brown county.
Blooded cattle are increasing in west
Texas.
The horse industry is looking up In Mid-
land county.
El Paso has had tho heaviest fall o( snow
in years.
Tbe pecan crop of Wharton county is
unusually large.
Grass is tound for stock all tbe ycar
round In Bander* county.
Tbe stato association of tbe Universallst
church convened at liico.
Tbe finishing touches are being put on
the Brenbarn pulp factory.
G'happell Hill schools and churches will
have to be enlarged.
A large and extensive clothing house at
El Paso has assigned.
The country arouud Lufkin is flooded
with heavy rains.
A 12-year-old negro bor at Florosville Is
shot by another. Tbe ball entered undor
the kidney and be never ble d a drop.
The branch at Colorado City of the
Brown llore at Foit Worth li closed by at-
tacbBent.
The average wheat In Wichita county
tlila year was 24 1-4 bushel* to the acre.
Tbe Southern Building and Loan As«o-
clatlon of Knoxvilte, Tenn., baa organized
a branch la Floreavlll*.
It 1* *ald tbe Frlaeo road will astrad lu
THE
OCCIDENTAL CHEMICAL COMPANY
Would most respectfully announce that they are preparing a work lur pub-
lic distribution; in which their special correctives and appliances will be most
thoroughly and clearly elucidated.
In this work will be presented and defined philosophically and therapeutic-
ally the action of their wonderful Female Breast Cups. _
This work will also give an interesting elucidation ot preventive medicine,
which will not only be in a measure new and original, but of value to the gen-
eral public.
The work will be interspersed with practical advice to mothers—making it
truly a companion for all mothers in all those minor emergencies that are lia-
ble to occur at any moment in a family of children.
This is an age of investigation and improvement in medicinal correctives,
and appliances, and when the proper thing is presented to honest minds, it
seldom fails of receiving a cordial welcome.
Therefore, THE OCCIDENTAL CHEMICAL CO., will put up in good
form for sale and use—a few special formulas, successfully used in private
practice, and adapted to the positive and negative temperamental forces of
the human economy.
These.correctives are only superior compounds for certain common and
easily recognized physical derangements.
They will be manufactured from the freshest and purest native roots, barks
and herbs, gathered at the proper seasons of the year; and may be relied on as
being pure in their corrective properties.
The ploximate principles on which the virtue of every medicinal plant de-
pends are contained in one or more of the acids, fixed and essential oils, resin-
oids, and alkaloids. The acids and resinoids are electro-negative, and the oils
and alkaloids are electro-positive.
line through Bonham and McKluney and
on to Fort Worth.
An unknown nogro 1* killed at Sherman
by oflicers who were In pursuit of him.
Mr. Becker, superintendent of the Lone
Star flouring mills ot Galveston, is dead.
A oar repairer at El Paso, while under
somo cars, had hi* urra run ovor by a
wheel which cut the llesh badly, though it
did not broak the boue.
The recent cold and wot spell at San An-
gelo bus caused considerable loss of sheep.
One mun bus lost S00 head.
It is reported that a vein of pure stiver
Is struck in Sutton couuty, about eighty
miles from San Angelo.
Jasper people subscribo $10,000 lor a
roud from tliat placc to Beuumont.
FJoresvllle lias bad (julte a heavy frost.
Twenty carloads of catite will be ship-
ped to-day lrom Colorado City to Chicago
in tho Candu slable car.
Sale of lands lor taxes lu tho uuorguntl-
ed couuilos is attracting numerous bid-
ders.
Ten now companies lrom outsido stales
tiled charters la Austin a few days ago.
Domestic.
Sclioolbooks in St. Louis will hereafter
bo tree to scholars.
Seventeen inches o( snow covers the
ground at Las Vogas, N. M.
Two mines In San Luis Potosí are prov-
ing bonanzas.
President Diaz has received; a phono-
graph from Edison,
Tbe Forth bridge, Scotland, Is com-
pleted.
Tbe empress of Austria has gono to the
island of Corfu.
San Luis Potosí will establish an indus-
trial school.
Tho negro colonization bill has passed
tho Aloxican señale.
Spanifli sieamors will run trom Cadiz to
Mcxico ami the Argentine Republic.
English engineers report the Guerrcrro
mines, México, to bo good.
The president has signed the proclama-
tion of the statehood of Mo Diana.
All Denver trains havo been blocki-ded
by snow. Thu wind blew u hurricane.
The .Servian government Is negotiating
lor a loan ol $7,000,000 with financiers in
Berlin and Vienna.
Prluco Louis Napoleon has obtained a
commission as major In too Russian army.
A freight and gravel train collided east
ol Kittamng Point, Pa. Nine uicn killed
and iltieen Injured,
Signor Cambraggo, Italian chorge d'af-
faires, was assaulted In his bouse lu Tan-
gier by burglars.
The anniversary of the gunpowder plot
was celebrated In Canada November r>,
Miss Hunt, daughter of the late ex-min-
ister to Kussla, ha< been chosen prívale
scirotary of Mrs. Levi P. Morton.
A* soon as quarantine restrictions will
permit, a steamship line trom Tampa, Fla.,
to Central America will bo eslablisied.
The senniiooal story about young Cana-
dian girls being decoyed to Colorado for
Immoral purpose*, 1* flatly denied by the
Denver pre**.
Tbe governor of Jalosco, Mexlci, order*
punicbment for the boy* who throw xtoues
at pasalng train* to tbe Injury of pa*MB-
gera.
var. plyl
tweeu St. Louis and the lower Mltilsilppi
rivor, struck a snag and wa* sunk.
The tour of the Pun-American delegates
under the auspices of the department ol
stale ended on tho liiih
A number of natives of the Solomon Is-
lands mussacreed an Englishman mid three
nutlve boys and tl>en d ivourcd them. The
oaplaln of the British cruiser Royalist,
shelled the village* whero the atrocities
wore oommlltod.
Dr. Mary Works Burnett brings *ult for
$00,000 damages against France* C. Wli-
lard and two other ludios for circulating
false statements against her concerning
her management of tho National Woman's
Temperauce Hospital in Chicago.
One thousand ship aarponters at Ham-
burg have struck for hotter pay.
Loss from a tire at Petersburg, Vs., is
$700,000
President Martinson, ot tho M. II. & T.,
has returned from Europe.
Mrs. Booth, wife ot the Salvation Army
gent ral Is dying of cancer.
Barnuui Is In London, where he excito*
as much Interest as Buffalo Bill.
A temperance convention will bo bold In
Omaba, December 13.
The convention of tho Woman's Home
Missionary society bus adjourned lu ludl«
anapolls.
A Mormon high priest I* charged with tho
murder of Mis. Hatch und her sou.
The govornor of Crote stoutly maintains
that tho report* ol outrage* in Crete are
unfounded.
'J he 8oi vian budget shows deficit ot 4,-
000,00) franc , which will be mot by now
taxes and relroucbmenl.
Chinese In great numbers are making
their way overland from Mexico to Cull,
forma and Arlzonta.
Miss Jvete Drexel, the $10.000,000 heiress
ol Philadelphia, ha* takou the while veil of
the novitlale.
Hon. Tho*. F. Baynrd, ex-secretary of
■tuto, and Miss Clymer were married lat.t
week In Washington.
Tho prosldout, bus amended tbe civil
, service rule with regard to filling vacan-
| oles in the railway mall service.
, A'I employee* ol the furnaces of Ihe Ma-
i boning Valley are given an Increase In
wage s ol 10 pi r conl. It wa* un*oll< ltcd
Mr. Wni. Bate*, of New York, ia appoint-
ed commissioner of navigation.
Albert Monea ol Savannah. Ga.. cuts hi*
wile's throat from ear to ear. because a
young man escorted her und her sister
homo trom a fetllval.
An explosion of g*s lri a colliery In
Iti rneburg, Prussia, resulted In tho killing
ot ten raen nod many othor* wounded.
The Westlngliouse Electric company
will lu future mlDo Its own copper, having
purchased valuable mines in Arizona. It
uses several million pound* of copper
yetrly In tbo manufacture ol electrical ma-
ctunerr.
Tho tarlft, (low collection*, bad market*,
ovcr-productloD or something like that Is
the usual explanation of business dlfllcul.
tie*, b it the manager of a Philat'elphla
chemical company that went under thl*
week say : "Wo failed for want of caab."
Col. Goodloe, Collector of Internal Rev-
enue ol tbe Seventh Kentucky Dlitriot,
and Col. Swope, another prominent Ken.
tucklan, met In the post-offloe at Lexing-
ton, picked a quarrel, lougbt with pistol
and clasp knife. Swop* wu killed, Good-
loe ma/ recover.
A JeU'ersonlan Sp-aks Again.
Editor Mercury—In a former article
I stated tbo amount of money paid by tbe
peoplo of tho United State* a* a tribute to
manufacturer* on account of tariff, Inter,
nal revenue and license system, immense
as this sum is, Ifcls by no mean* all the
peoplo have to pay on account of these
thing*. Tbo variou* "trusts" and "oombl-
natlon*" formed throughout the country to
bring dowa the price ot the original pro-
ducts of labor on the one hand and to
raise tho price of tbelr products to the con-
sumer ou the other, are loMtered and made
successful by till* same system. But for
these things tho huge monopolies that aro
squeezing ihe lire and prosperity out of the
masses of our people could not exl*t. It
is a system of indirect taxation, and all
indirect taxation 1* robbery. Wblle tar
Is collected primarily from importer and
manufacturer, It I* shitted until it finally
rests ou tbo consumer, a* Is generally sup-
posed, but In tact on the produoor at tho
bottom of the list. To illustrate. The Im-
porter pay* the tarllt and charge* It upon
the goods to bl* customer* who In turn
charge It to their customers till it reaches
ibo consumer, who pay* all coats and prof-
Its. In addition to this they pay every
man through whoso bands the articles pass
a salary for collecting these iudlrect taxes.
We should not complain at thl* last item
and abuse merchant* and dealers for the
high price* we mu*t pay, for it we make
litem lax collector* wo ought to be wllllug
io pay them for their eervices a* tucb.
So of the Internal revenue tbe manufactur-
er 1* required to pay ninety cent* per gal-
ón on bl* distilled liquor* and eight cent*
per pound on hi* tobacco before either can
be sold. Of course these amount* with
the Incidental profila aro charged to every
purchaser until the consubier Is reached,
who foola all tbo bill*. It muit be per«
fectly clear to overy man who will think a
moment, that the inevitable reiult of thl*
system Is to enrich the few by Impover-
ishing the many, until tho few become
money-lenders and tbe many money-bot-
rowsrs, the tormer thus becoming rloher
snd tbe latter poorer as the year* go by.
As groed and gain are nover (atlsfled,
money combine* with money until huge
monopolies are built up whlob foree tbe
prlco of tho laborer'* product* down to
the lowest limit and raises tho prlco to tbe
consumers to the highest limit, thu* burn-
ing ihe produoor'* candle at both end*.
Such are tbe cattle trusts, drossed bee!
trusts, oil trusts, sugar trusts, Iron and
aloel combination*, railroad pool* and
other* too numerous to mention. But we
are told the country 1* enjoying wonder-
ful prosperity. That taxable value* are
Increasing at a very rapid rate, and that
wo aro already the richest nation In tbe
world. Tho monopolies say don't agitate
this question, "lot us bavo peace," every-
thing is lovoly. The y say peace, peace
whon there Is uo peace, for tho wealth Of
tbo country is fust drlltlag Into the hand*
of a few while the great masse* of tbe
people are rapidly drifting toward peon-
age or serfdom, This Is not an overdrawn
picture. How long shull this Hale of
thing* continue? Just as long a* tbe pre*-
ont system of unjust and Indirect taxation
exlsls. How Iniigthou shall this unjust
system existí' Unlit the peoplo In their
soverenity declaro at tho ballot box It
it shall cease. As long as demugogue* and
professional politicians aro permitted to
run the government wo need look for no
improvement. Monopolists pool tbclr In-
terest* In our legislativo halls at the na-
tional and state capítol* aud control leg!*-
ailon In thofr own interests. What can
he done? Is there no remedy? The tusk Is
a huge one. Compared with Itttio clean-
ing of the fubled Augean Stable* was more
child'* play. But In thl* work every free
American nlt'zon Is a Heroule*; at the
bullol box ho I* a sovereign. Let tbo Buf-
fering masse* but say tboy will be free
men and tho work 1* dono. Aboll*b tbe
trrllf, tbo Internal revenue, the llcenie
system, and with them all monopoly ot ev-
ery kind, open tbe inurket* ot tho world In
which to buy and toil, take all restriction*
o If ol labor and trudo and we will begin
the march to such universal prosperity us
the world ha* never berore wltuessed.
In another article we will Indloate how
tbla desirable end I* to be attatued.
A Jkvkekson Democrat.
The only reliable vegetable aubititute
for calamel, whlob act* on tbe liver, blood,
kidney* *nd aiomaoh; and best antUblllou*
purgutlve 1* Magulro'i Cundurango. In-
dorsed by ArchbUbop Ilyan, ot Pblladel-
plila; ltev. McNully, of St. Loul* and a boat
of prominent people.
A marvel of cbeupne* to the Southern
Farm, dirocted by Mr. Henry W. Grady,
and edited by Dr. W. L. Jone*. Tbe No-
vember number ha* (eventy-iwo page* for
the year, and tbe price la one dollar. Tbe
white paper alone would co t nearly that
much. Dr. Jones, tbe editor, la the high-
e*t priced agricultural editor in America.
Besldea, It haa Bill Arp. Uncle Bemui, Mr*.
Felton, Prof. Clifton, Prol. White, Sargo,
JeffWelborn, end a «core of high priced
contributors every mouth. It* success la
not surprldng, although it already baa
over 20,000 ub*eriber*, and la rapidly in-
creaalng. Last month ft bad an artlolo
'rom Senator Ingall* on grata; thla month
It ha* an admirable artlole from Edward
Atklnton on eotton. The November num.
ber.alone la worth a dollar, tbe prloe tor a
year, and every farmer who eaa
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The Southern Mercury, Texas Farmers' Alliance Advocate. (Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 8, No. 46, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 14, 1889, newspaper, November 14, 1889; Dallas, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth186113/m1/1/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 8, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .