Fort Worth Gazette. (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 356, Ed. 1, Wednesday, November 14, 1894 Page: 4 of 8
eight pages : illus. ; page 18 x 24 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:
Iff
N
Ui
ir
M
iU n
11 H I
f
1
Si
>
SB
I
FT WORTH GAZETTE
TOUT WOIITH TEXAS
TDblUheil IZwty Day In the Irnr lir
bTATis rmvriMJ compasv
n WILLIAMS J I WAT OH
W 1IOELZLD Secretary
n WTLtlAMI a n rnl Jin n titter
E a SU > Tin Mnnrtirna iMIlor
IMIUKST CITY CinClXATIOY
XAROUSr TKXAS CIUClLAIIOV
LAItGCST SOtTllUUV ClltCIXATIOX
With Threw l2 eploi
Entered at tho post office At Tort
Worth Texas as secondciass wail
matter
TKIISIS OP LIllCKIITIO l AltU
TM Dally anu Sunday Qatette one
yc 7 oo
The Dally aud Eunday G met to six
co the J3G0
The Daily and Sunday Carette three
moMh 1200
Tho Dal and Sunday Oaxeetee one
ttonth 75 cent
The Huiday OfltcttP one year 1200
The Sunday Gazette six months
noo
DHMvrnpn ty CATtnirm
The Dally Gatette except Sunday
SO cents o week
Dally and Sunday Gazette 60 cents
a month
THE SBMMYCCKLY GAZETTE
One sear Issued Tuesday and Vti
day lloo
Bx months CO rente
Three months 25 cents
I postmaster ore authorized to act
as agents for The aftxette
TitAtJUiMi Aiars
The traveling agents of Tha Gazette
are W If TKGATX3
J T TnnilY
V H MAItCHMAN
11 M NOMn
n i mhllon
iHOp cAiiii viNcnNT
II T STAITI
Letters of nuthorlty are given to all
other purlin especially accredited to
repre nt Ms rmpr
This paper Is kept on file nnd adver-
tising rates may he ascertained at tho
ofll of the American Newspaper Pub-
lishers AKSoclatlon Tpmpio Court
New York or from Its Eastern busi-
ness otnee 49 Tribune building New
York
Western business onicel B03 Tha
Hookery Chicago 111
S C n ckwltti solo agent for foreign
advertising
IMMA5 III ItlMI
Tl Untherford agent orJcet JIcLeod
hotel
lO I1LU V11UIN >
1rrannd wlm nrx iitittMn i Iniy
Tlir Ctiscttr mi Irnliia or ivh i > to
tUery of lie imncr ttt their iionim
uitnitlUriirlor it 111 cunrer n
tnvor lir tTrlllmc the tnvim l tho
iunnnatiitf > nt
rosTnitB iurn r mitAsr
Th storm waves vt reach this
meridian and tho other changes noted
will occur nt and within 1H miles of
Fort Worth within twentyfour hours
before or after aunsot of tho dates
glvem
November H Wind rhanglnir
No ember lis Cooler and rl en ring
IJovember Ifi rnic and cool
November 17 Moderating
NOT OWNED DY THE TRUSTS
Oil M > Ot Mt
A 1nttulUt In the Ialln itii
Tlitrn i rf tlirrtt eilltiutiti pnrn
Krnili 1 > < iur Inmt tnu tlinl itra
TrtirtH im in a h in n rrituLi > Imin
H t it itltiilo > vnr of th > ipr >
ury Aouoniiornil t itr uUuii
> ui > rr mill Hint I Uliilt urctiC
lenl for Itie N n < i < o
mnpli < > niiiiot l f nalil In vunmirinln
llon r lht > < for M hhrrnllir
nnil tlir mnrked Urareo or Iml
Veiittenoe It Unm r rrnil nitinllrslra
In 1U villtorlii tnllr tit roiiri itf
to nut TUh fa tntlmnlr 1m fhr
I u 1uimiUt orumi lit IU
Kill
The chrysanthemum how Mil open
nt tho Cotton ralaon today and tho
question Is whether Colonel Huis
Kingsbury will bo In It
rirmlnghtin Alabama Is to hao a
hew iteel plant which will bo tho nrst
In that district Tho era of couthmi
manufacturing has fairly begun
Jerry Flmpson will roroow to Indiana
and run for governor In DM It Is a
llui Qhanoe but It beat nn > thine
Kai sas will hao to offer ooon to a
1opullst
Manufactories that hao long been
shut down uro resuming work every-
where Mm whatever may he tho pactl
ean lew of tho causes tho result Is
welcomed by all
RUtyono > ars ago last night oc >
currtJ tho famous metoorlo shower uf
H33 which caused lb superstitious
verjwhere to beilcvo that tho ivorld
was coming to an end
The treasury it entirely nt the mercy
of the New York liftiriti says a Ulolw
> mocrot tpeUM A Pnanclal system
with that ror its climax U not endura-
ble and tho country win not long en
duro It
Tho president is rusMnff a new l > ond
issue through In order to avoid collis-
ion with a Democratic congress When
the now rtcpuUlcan congress convenes
which bo helped to elect by refusing to
voe there will bsjiwj iiy torsucti
diplomacy
t
The Chinese gowmnunt Is gettlmj
leotly to abandon Te ln on th ap
ptoach of tho Jflpaneee army That
event will probably end the war as
the superatltlon of tho Chinese will ac-
cept r lttRjice as useless after the em
poior runs
ThO moit coniaratno of tho Populist
lMers tnUrtalnad alronsr hopes of the
election of Judge Nugent and Culber
sons plurality of ocr 60000 lo as
amazing to thtn as was tho national
result 10 tho Democrats Tliat Oollaa
tpeech was a knockout blow to Popu-
lism
JudM Abbott wai elected tocmngwss
It seems from the latest tigurcs obtaln
M1 p ° Wl3ns3ly luwitae belori
tho ofllclal count but It vm by a tJ so
ihnvc sura Judci AlWrwas another
one of those fellowa ihat uuM rot
tand on tho partys pUtorin t > n iho
dnaucUl tjuitioriOlburns ChiwiicJo
a
tr
Judge Abbott w nominated on a
freo coinage platform Tin Dflllaa con-
tingent of inonomctalllsta trfcJ to beat
him at tho polls but tho frto coinage
Domocrats of Kaufman pulled Mi 4
tfcrot fih
ionno mo or tho rnED
UUOTUIt
A sUff cortsapond nt of the Uuvr
York Evening Post tho leading mug
wump or n ascribes ths Democrats
disaster to On contamination bt tho
party by Southern Influences Hear
him
It Is obvious to every Democrat who
has studied tho sectional division of
parties In congress at close rung
and who has no prejudices to satisfy
that as long as the Democrats of the
North remain In tho same political
household with the great bUlK of the
Democrats of the bouth they must
be content with repeated defeat Tho
bouthern Democrats havo bad their
own way to long In tholr own section
that when such a bugaboo as Popu-
lism springs up there It frlghteni
them Into a fever Instead of put-
ting on a uald front and driving Pop-
ulism out at the point of tho sword
their first thought Is of compromise
the result Is that they tu n their party
organization Into a hybrid despised by
persons who are Democrats from prin-
ciple and unuatlsfactory to the Popu-
lists themsclVLB who having found It
so easy to get half they demanded
will not rest till they get tho whole
If In the North the Democrats wero
equally timid In dealing with tho an
archiKts and the social labor reform-
ers and tho rest of the crew who pro
poso to legislate the w urld upside
down how much respect would they
hao a right to look for In the South7
And how much would they get
In any party reorganization which
takes place as the result of the recent
upheaNfll it is alrendy plain that the
sectional question will play an impor-
tant pitrt He fore congress adjourned
ever > Northern Democrat of standing
httd flguied more or lesa upon the
prospects of defeat and had given
some thought lo tho subject of the
continuance of tho Southern1 nlllanco
In tho future and from what tho
said about tin condition of affairs at
their homes It seemed to be a very
genernl conclusion that the Populists
parading In the disguise of Boutliont
Democrats must be drummed out of
ramp as tho Northern Hnndaltltes had
been or else that the Southerners
must bo content to monopolize the
Democratic seat In cougicss nnd
foeo another lohg experience of nu-
merical minority and political lmpo
tcnou
Tho crowd which this paper repre-
sents pulled off to itself In the lata
election and polted about 20000 otes
of which a large per cent came from
the luekej s and sen ants In tho employ
of the leaden Of eleven or twelve
millions of voters In tho republic It
probably has the nymr > athy of tOOOO
or In other words of the members of
the millionaire clubs and trusts of
various kinds scattered throughout
the country
It Is a shameful confession to make
but it must bo made out of regard for
tho truth that this little en uad of pi-
ratical bushwhackern hnv e been in
virtual coUrol of the arfulrs of tha
Democratic party for tho last ten
1 ears and a pretty men they havo
made of It Cowardly leaders havo
truckled to them and piehunters In
tho South and West havo deceived
tho poo pi o us to their policies as wus
done nt Xampasas In tho state of
Texas In lS01 nd as a rcult they
hav o had things pretty much their
own way In n government supposed to
Lo tho agent of sUtjflVo millions of
people
Now that these precious saints have
brought the party to the orgo of ruin
b their eccentric nnd Insane pcrfoim
nnces tho > really tell ti theso 20
000 starchod nnd plumed lahdedah
dudes of New York city that they arc
going to kick out of tho Democratic
parly the million nnd n half oUra
In tho South who saved it from utter
collapse In tho lato election and whoso
loyalty to It vvhll the moit of theso
jouiitf millionaires or their sites wero
either seeking dikes or legislative
favors at tho hands of the Hipubllc
ant kept It out of the potters field
twenty jwira ago
It ts true that there will bo u reor
ganisation of tho party nnd when It
Is effected mugwumplsm will bo Inell
geble to membership
Wo bellevo w < > speak tho sentiments
of threefourths of the Democrats of
tho South when we say that they
have takon a solemn vow never to
bu caught again In mugnump n so
da tl ins They will never again go to
Carl Schuis X auy Uodktn and specu-
lator Draco for political cdmmand
littler a Republican administration
forover than that The people of the
South honor uny man who 1ms the
courago of his convictions and who
gives mrnty expression to them for
Garfield and Arthur Dljlne nnd Conk
ling Ltmjamln Harrison and other Ite
publlcan leaders alive nnd dead they
had and have a sincere tespect They
honor all honest men whether of one
party or another Uut they havo
neither respect fur nor patience with
a starchamber organization of money
speculators whoso avowed purpose Is
to use their wealth to buy or bulldoza
any party that happens to bo In con-
trol of the government Into granting
special favors to them
Tho Democrat lo party of the South
and we dare say the Democratic paity
of tho North is today ready to Join the
Republican party In putting a quietus
upon the rapacious demands of thesu
freebooters After that honest poli-
tics may be possible In national
affairs
SOLT1U3UN COTTON MILLS
The Poiton Journal o Comincrco
says The success of the south in cot- <
ton manufacturing has for somo jeara
been fully established Most of tho
mills In that section havo been able to
earn each year largo dividends a por-
tion of which has been returned to tho
stockholders while tho balance Imi
been set naMo as a rcservo fund to
keep the mills In guod order etc Many
of theso mm hao southern men at
thetr lion J and In most cases ave run
by southern capital To ono familiar
with that section It Is surprlilng to
tho lmn > rUhc of th industry at the
present time as compared with ten
years ago Many of he moijufacturcrs
wtre then commencing n a very small
way white now they have largo mills
and htve accumulated wealth It Is re-
markable to note how quick southern-
ers without any experience In tho bust
ness have been to grasp tho situation
Very fow who have boon at tho head
of their mills have trade any serious
mistakes In their man a ton en t To a
close observer It Is shown that the most
Kerlcus mh takes during the last fin eon
years that have taken place In tha
managing of southern cotton milts havo
been made by northern men who went
there as men of large experience In the
business and in some cases with a
high reputation and a grand flourish
of trumpets
The cotton mills of the south today
mb on an excellent b tls They earn
larg 0IId4nds Their plants are not
capitalized high and they aro prosper-
ing In Overy way
A HINT TO CtltMSLI TO IlUilGV
Tne New York Time which 1st
recognized as tho personal organ of
the president has this to say of tha
new bond Issue
Congress will not be asked to au
thorise tho Issue Tho call will be
made and the bonds placed before the
meeting of that body Present plans
are to make the call within three days
Ten da > s will be allowed for subscrip
tions The country will probably have
a week prior to Thanksgiving In
which to congratulate Itself over tho
restoration of Its finance liy that
time also some of the gold sent abroad
In the first half of the year will be
sailing back again It has long been
manifest to observers that tho secre-
tary of the treasury commanded 11 tie
influence at the head of Wall street
whatever ho might possess at Us foot
that bankers on the cross streets were
Indisposed to seriously consider his fi-
nancial capacity and that thcra was
generally speaking in the city of New
York a chilling Indifference to his sug-
gestions for tlio restoration of conil
denco In the business world All trls
must have finally become apparent to
the head of the administration At all
events broader shoulders have sud-
denly assumed the burden of admin-
istering financial affairs so long pre-
scribed by custom to be borno by a
subordinate
Ths president has now become con-
vinced that it 1s Important that the
government should ask for another
loan to repstabllffh the gold rc < erv <
The aversion to bonds that prevals
In some Hectlons of the count y finds
champions In high placos and It IS
understood that the secretary of tho
treasury whose unqueotloned dislike
of the banking class has led him to
betray his feelings nnd to provoke
on the other able un unconcealed con-
tempt for his limited financial ability
nnd his scant courtesy 1s again op-
posed to such a course The provident
Is the bend of the administration and
tho secretary of tho treasury Is but hi
ettrk As the piesldent Is convinced
that a bond Issuo at this time for the
replenishment of the gold reserve Is
essential to tho strengthening of public
conildenco it will be perfectly proper
and entirely possible for him to do
what he proposes to do which Is to
direct that proposals be made through
tho press for bids for a loan of bonds
A president never resgns beciuse
his secretary of the trcaiury refuses
to carry out a policy upon which he
has resolved but several secretaries of
tho treasury who found themselves
unable to adopt presidential policies
have escaped embarrassment by offer-
ing their resignations
A good many billions hav e been
knocked uut of values In the last four
years but the Indication aro that
they wilt all be restoied to life and
activity before 1S9S Is half gone
Three women were elected to state
oillceu In Colorado and Governor Walto
may have his revenge when they un
deitake to dress up tho G O 1
UOllUIVl Mil MIYAS
Mujnr Iii ldock KliiMed Ircftlilent of
tltv Imiuluritlltm A oitntluii
St Louis Nov 12 About thirty
promlutnt oltlzena from different parts
of Texas and repicsantattve of every
railroad entering that state were pres
nt at a meeting held hero today for
the purpose of foimlng the Texas lm
mlgiullon association The following
cities weie either represented by dele-
gates or proxji lort Worth Dallas
Houston Waco AblUne Wichita rails
Taylor Cleburne Comancho llrovvn
woiiod Corsicana nnd Pecos Valley It
la their Intention to in courage and In-
crease immigration to Texas for w hlch
purpose a large sum will be raised
Hon II H Paddock ma or of 1ort
Worth was fluted chairman nnd U
D Marshal editor of the Southern
Trader secretary Tho matter was dis-
cussed at length and a committee ap-
pointed coni lsting of J A Kemp of
Wichita Palls i M Houston of Port
Worth Thomas McHmils Fort Worth
i A Johnson of Now York and W
M Paddook to const ter the best means
of diverting emigration to Texas The
committee will adopt some plan and
submit It to the railroad companies of
the Lone Mar state
lipUoopnl tliutch Couurci
Boston Mass Nov 13 The six-
teenth annual meeting of the Hplscopat
church congress opened In Trinity
church today Hit most important part
of the morning service was an address
by IUv IlulUon anhblshop of Central
Pennsylvania who spoke upon the ex
cluslvoneM which Is so apt to creep
Into social church life acting as a
hairier between the rich and the poor
At the conclusion of the addr s com-
munion followed UUhop L4ler cele-
brating This afternoon a meeting or
tho church temperance society was
held In Trinity chapel The speakers
wero Itlshop Henry C rotter or New
York Ue r W Tompkins or North
Carolina and Uev Holland of St
Louis
This evening the congress wilt con-
vene In Muita hall tho subject for dls
uuMlon being The Churchs Duty In
the Matter of Secular Activities
LtMalMK Vlurrlrtl Her
St Louis Mo Nov 13 A apectal to
the PostDtspatch from I xlngton Ky
sa > s Gen Casilus M Clay this morn
ing despite the effort of his children
succeeded In marrvlng pretty 15joar
old Do a Plchardion The ceremony
took place at White haH the elegant
home of tho groom In the presence of
only the farm hand and the s lrla rela
tives Suulro Douglass performed the
ceremony
> ot the Man
Editor Gnzetu In > our semlweekly
Issue of Oct < ih appeared the enclosed
clipping und from which letters of In
quiry have been lecelved here from
ljrt Worth Inquiring If 1 wTs he 2
cused The accused who la now In Jdit
Is named William Green i > iea cor
rect that my Texas frUmds may know
who la accused and that I am not He
specttully a W Orelf
Notc Th cllpplng hlch was an As
sociated Press vltspalch reports the
commission of
a u ti crime bv
William Grot
m
mn aAZTETTT ITOITO WORTH TKXAS rjSDSTSDJir yOVEMBEB 11 iSOi
STARTLING FIGURES ON GRAIN
UUEA 1 JICTIALLV MllllTU X
DOLLAn A DCSUCb
Hu Onr kormr Bmooi Trlelit
n4 at eoklM Aboot h Ar
lro4aot n4 lell f r >
Vftllnff Vb al
Chicajro III Nov ltT r a Mo
Peak CaA money pinlo o
> ear ana pread throughout the op
HgMsned world craduslljr ettled In-
to a period or Bnincial trlneenc >
caulng unu trial dl lru t and liur
resulted In Mvere Industrial depreMloa
and disaster During tbcie same lean
a steady overproduction ot wneat
through phenomenally large crops
caused enormous accumulations or this
grain far exceeding human food re-
quirements until the cost of carrying
the overabundant load completely stag-
gered the trade
These two causes a stringency or
money and a glut of grain hae co
operated to make a record of the lowest
prices eter known m the history of our
grain trade The price of wheat has
heen thus deprused until It has for
months ruled lower than the price of
coarse grains used almost excluileiy
as farm ahlmal feed These two causes
aro legitimate ones and surely govern
prices In the end without reuord to
forestalling or manipulation The com
hlnatlon of Ihese llninclsl nnd agricul-
tural conditions ore wholly chargeable
with discrediting values and lowering
prices of wheat everywhere
This being true It Is useless to expect
relief or tho restoration of remunera-
tive prices to producer unless we can
llnd them In a combination of circum-
stances which will show a complete
change of conditions and a reversal of
their Influence upon the market To
these changed conditions the wheat
market Is now Juit beginning to re-
spond by strons indications of advanc-
ing prices
In every financial center of the uni-
ted Slates there li now a plethora of
money Instead of a stringency and
liken Me thcro Is e er > where except
wheat In public storehouse a scarcity
Instead of a glut of grain arising from
the partial folluro of the com crop of
1834 The price of wheat below that of
com and oats has forced Its substitu-
tion as a farm animal food throughout
tho country far and near We have
passed the experimental stags of wheat
feeding and neither assertion nor argu-
ment Is necessary to proe the adapta-
bility superiority and pront of It bo
cause they are already demonstrated
facts
We have Only to deal now with the
extent to Which wheat has been bo
fed In the place of corn and oats We
can Judgo of the exhaustion of tho
wheat surplus already accomplished
and form some Idea of the dennnds
that ore likely to be further made upon
uur wheat stock resenei and alio esti-
mate how free we can continue to
meet those demands without disturbing
the abnormal and unnatural relation
established by present prices of w heat
and corn
Tlrst there Is the extensive district
over which a severe drought prevailed
and throughout which wheat has been
and still must bo of a necessity largely
fed to farm animals There Is no escape
from the use of wheat for corn pur-
poses In tills dHtrlct to the full extent
of tho entire prop there grown In the
still greater region from which our beef
and pork supplies are drawn and In
the dalrylrg Industry extensive as the
country Itself the profit of 0 to CO
cents a bushel to the feeder of wheat
above that vbttlnable by the seller of
wheat has diverted this grain to tho
hog and cattle trough to a degree far
beyond any computation yet made The
depletion of the invisible wheat stocks
from thls extrcordlnary consumption
has been great and rapid Quite asmucb
so must bo the advance In pi Ice when
this becomes generally known
The usual ordinary consumption of
The usualorordlnary consumption of
wheat has fen one barrel of flour to
ach of some sixtylive and perhaps
seventy millions of human beings Now
to prove the extraordinary consump
tion of wheat tell us for how many
of our 160000000 of cattle swine horses
and heep eating each from Ave to ten
times the uuantlty required for a hu-
man being It Is necessary to prescribe
a partial wheat diet Sum feeding has
been done fdr ov er three months What
the demands upon wheat reserves In
farmers hands have been during this
prolonged period and what they will
continue to be the following figures
from the Agricultural department In
Washington may suggest
Vearly average of aggregate wheat
corn and oat crops for three jears
past 25Wli5S000i aggregate wheatcorn
and oat crops of isai Jisooo ooo the
deficiency therefore being 4D5S0O0
learly overage of aggregate wheat
corn and oat crops for ten years past
28H jJ 7ei oggregote wneat corn and
oat crups of U91 SlSoooooo The de
ficiency In th case Is 039059870 rrom
such a showing as this can It be
doubtod that wo have now reversed the
agricultural conditions from the over
abundance that Jately pievalled to a
startling acarcltyT And does not a
glance at the bank statement now
showing a glut of idle money whero
lately existed an alarming slilngency
prove changed conditions there too
that are cooperating to rostore con
fidence In values and advance prices
Look again and see how real Is this
soardtv and to see It moro clearly
still eliminate from the estimate en
tirely all human requirements for
breodsutrf and thl year c l our whole
grain crop rami animal feed
If w devote our entire wheat crop
this jear to supply the shortage In
farm animal food there Is still a de
ficiency of over 310000000 bushels in
such ahlmal requirements of three
jetrs past and of over 520ooo000
hushels of sucli animal requirements
ror ten ear past And to supply
even this much of the deficiency we
mujt neither feed to our own people
nor export a bushel of wheat or barrel
of flour
In the face of this showing how long
are holders of wheat going to chare
and agonize over weekly exports of
orly 3000000 bushels of wheat and
tumble Into periodical panics every
time the cablegram or foreign buyer
mentions Argentina No better evi-
dence of the Ignorance or the real sit-
uation cHn be found than the ease
with which w permit ourselves to be
deceived
Kor every bushel of wheat held In
this country owners may obtain one
dollar whenever they choos to declare
they will take no less Rut with oasn
wheat nt Mlqneapolls at a premium
nnd mllers trying to fill all the ware-
houses In the Northwest and with
Chicago elevator men bujlng In the
country and struggling to fill the last
bin with iheap wbeat there are now
no enterprising miners to scatter the
famous Hold > our wheat clrculais
as Ihev rild In 1S9L when conditions
ffere different
What Is likely to be tho result of
Ibis scarcity so conclusively proven
To realise U from tho figures given
should enable cm to ateh and profit
from tba Inspiration of such bull
markets as have tiken puce In Chi
cftgi under similar clreuttslanoei
After such a presentation one need
not hestste to express a decided opin
ion nor fesr to advise a co tree of ac
tlon I believe we ore socn to witness
j the most radleil ohsture of sentiment
iv A tA <
tfVfe SS tJfr
violent revulsion of opinion
the most
substantial advance ot
and the most
prices ot groin and provisions evrr seen
In this market Never has wheat pre-
sented such on opportunity for WU
speculation never hoe It promised e
sure a pront to th operator on the
long elle Indeed to certain an I M
legitimate Is the bujexs position that
la entering U train trodo he paeeM
out of the realm ef epeaulaUeo Into
that ef commercial Investment
Tho some reversed conditions new
prevail likewise In Europe to accent-
uate end broaden a bull movement
present glut ot Idle money and severe
shortage ot grain owing to failure of
the malse crop In Argentine Italy and
ths Danublan provinces Indian corn
has ruled for months several cents
per bushel higher In Liverpool than our
No i red winter wheat Tho feeding
of a good quantity of wheat becomes
there too a necessity Much of the
French ond English crops Is unfit for
other purpose
Take the last great drouth year
1SS1 when we had a < orn crop ot but
1191000 oco bushels some f > 0000000
more than we now have and when we
had some 5000000 less cattle swine
nnd sheep lo be fed In that > ear
cash wheat rose from S3 1So to
SI < 3 12 cosh corn from 85 l4c to
70 38c cosh oats rrom 23 84o to
47 l2e and cash pork rrom 12 40 to
J20 00 per barrel These advances
were long and well sustained for dur-
ing the first half of the following > ear
US cash wheat sold at tl 42 cash
corn at S2 lci cash oats at 62c and
cash pork at Jl 75 per barrel
Provlson merchants In the South will
make no mistake In securing contracts
In 0iort ribs for January and forward
months LAMSON lirtOS CO
the rnuiM oi Tim duei
Terrible nxperleuoe of the Crew of
the ICate Itlcbards
Tompklrsvllle 3 I Nov P t
Hook fleet has
boat 14 ot the Sandy
errlved here with the crew of the
wrecked schooner Kate Richards The
eurvlvor of the wreck were In a terri
having
ble condition when rescued
suffered much from exposure
Cant John O
The Kate
Jnmes sailed rrom Philadelphia coal
November 2 for
ltden on Trlday
rrovldenco II I She had a crew of
cook The young wife
five men and a
of Mate John Crossman was also on
left Dela
board When the schooner
ware It was the Intention of Capt
James to enter the Narrows and go to
his destination by way of Hell Onto
Of Uarnegat as the wind mi fair
the schconel was headed to aea for
On Sunday night
the ctlslde course
a heavy storm was encountered A
running and tho
tremendous sea was
little craft was nlmost swamped are
hands kep
fpiang u leak and all were
ronstuntly at the pumps Six terrlile
In their
dy were spent by crew
efforts to keep the schooners GOko
nliOve violef and ot 8 oclock Saturday
Nov 10 pilot boat Williams No 10
Into In sight and took tho almost >
hausted sailors off Half an hour later
the Kave Richards went down the
swrvivcrs were cared for here nnj
aoni > of them foave gone to PhllaJil
ph i
WUTE8 TIItMCSOIMMI
Colorados doverniir laue a tolqae
rrucliimutlou
Denvor Nov 13 Oovernor Wattes
Thanksgiving proclamation after re-
citing causes for thankfulness which
the people enjoy continues IJut
withal thooverhadowlng threat to our
civilisation Is the constant recurrence
of Industrial and commercial panics
which bllsht the lives and hopes or
millions of able bodied and skillful
beings A monopoly robbery under the
forms of law Is the curso ot our times
and withers the best phjslcal and
mental energy Ot the people nnd while
we may be extremely thankful for our
genial climate and unbounded re-
sources let us bear In mind that on1 >
through a conscientious regard for the
lndustilal rights of all tho people con
the one blessing or rellglouv and eco-
nomic rrcedom be permanently estaab
llshed
KMUIITS Or LAUUII
TnlU of an Attempt to Cntu Control
of the Order
New Orleans Nov 13 Neither ex
General Master Workman Povvderly
nor Debs who had been Invited were
present when the Knights ot Labor
convention was called to order at
noon today Until Iowderly reaches
here It U difficult to say what the
nature of tho attempt to wrost tho
control from the pri ient ruling ele-
ment In the order will be
The convention came together at 12
oclock with 90 delegates Ir attend-
ance Qovernor Pastor Is 111 nnd Col
T Bambolo Jones appeared as his
special representative
Mayor nttpatrlck made a brief
I address or welcome After the public
ceremonies the publlo tetlred and the
i session began
I MtlVi NOTED TllIMtUlls
Meet In Cklengo lo Uleu the Ln
bor Question
Chicago Ill Nov 13 Noted think
I ers were present here today when the
congress of arbitration nnd concilia
tion was opened by President Lyman
J aoge ot the Chicago Civic Pedera
tlon The congress was called for
the dlsousslon or means or arbitra
tion and the prevention or trouble be
I tween employers and emplojed
Among those on the program as
1 speakers aro Tror Could or John Hop
kins Congressmen Springer and Taw
ney Josephine Shaw Lewetl Dr
Washington aladden and Pror II c
Adam
leaning up the Esrucrntdu
Valparaiso Nov 13 The worship
nsmcralda which has been purchased
by Japan from Chill Is In dry dock
here being cleaned She will have her
trial trip on Thursday and will soil for
Yokohama next week calling ut one
port In Eeuadoron her way The cap
tain of the Esmeralda Benor Emlllo
Qalln Is a daring and Intelligent soung
officer who commanded Balmacedas
warship the Imperialwhich was colled
tho Chilian Alabama during the revo
lution In IS91 Absolutely nothing has
been don toward a solution of the min
isterial crisis but everthing Is quiet
Foand Ualltr
Larned Kan Nov 13Harvey and
Arnold the murderers ot Mayor Marsh
of Klnsle this morning pleaded gulttv
ot murder In the first degree The sen
tenco ImtJosed Imprisonment until the
Vf r0r U Jt < lJl > whether they
shall be hanged
The bojs were taken
to LMvenwoKb but not until a mob
gathered and threatened lynching
EarlhtiunL tu Uollvla
La Plat Bolivia 1ov 11There have
been violent shock of earthquakeTalon
the northern coasts of Chill and In this
country One hundred people hav o been
killed by the seismic dllturbance with
In a radius ot
forty miles from this cm
The cathedral her has Sen rendered
One tower was thrown down
I The CnlllomU Election
Saa rranclsco Nov 13There ha
been no change In the guberaamH
contest In California in thTpa
I tyfour biurs ComMet retnii en
si precincts ho cudl
W prsaS S
mtzj w > l > e
GRAND FUNERAL OF ALEXANDER
TUB JtOtTE mOM MOICOIV TO ST
rcTEnsuvnOi
Tbomands of Holdlers Line the
notl Tto Trappings ot Wo la-
th Ursa Cathedral > I t ItuprM
lv Csar Cenitnutlr Atteuded
Moacow Nov 12 Thousands ot peo-
ple viewed the body of Alexander III
during the night It rested In state In
the cathedral of the Archancel Mich
acL The eolden pall was thrown half-
back exposing the features of the dead
man On his breast and above the
crossed hands of the dead rested tho
sacred Icon of Bt Alexander Nenakj
the late czars tfatron saint The lead-
ing oflicials were allowed to kiss tho
icon and they alt availed themselves
or this much coveted privilege It was
noticed during > esterooys ceremonial
that the czar showed striking ttacca of
grief and fatigue but he bore hlnuelt
mftnfully and conversed a great deal
with the prlnco of Wales who was
almost constantly at his aide The
body ot the late czar will be taken
on Its way to St Vetersburg this af-
ternoon The Imperial party and oth-
ers accompanying the body have no-
ticed the remarkable chango which
has taken place in the temperature
since they left tho Crimea There the
air was balmy and roses were to be
seen on all sides In full bloom but as
the cortege proceeded northward tho
weather became colder until In this
city the temperature Is two degrees
below aero The route of the funeral
procession at St Petersburg tomor-
row from the railway station to the
fortrcis is Ave miles long and It Is
estimated that the funeral procession
will take four houis and onehalf ln
marchIntr from tho depot to the for-
tress Twenty thousand troops will
line the streets through which the
funeral will pass and six thousand
troops additional will form the es-
cort
The decorations ln the cathedral are
most Impressive The marble pillars
flanking the nave are draped with
sable and studded with trophies of
war Ueneuth the dome is erected
a square dlas surmounted by an ob-
long platform upon which the remains
will lie ln state
TUB DIMIII HULL
Clintlea Antr
Cleburne Tex Nov 12 Charley
son of Mr George Autrey nfter a long
and severe illness died today
J Hood Mrlulit
New York Nov 12 a Hood Wright
who was a partner in the banking
house of Drexel Morgan Co died
suddenly tonight on iho elevated road
I O Illulitoner
dranbury Tex Nov 12 Mr I O
High tower an old and respected oIU
7en of this place died suddenly of
heart trouble last night at 7 oNJock
He was for many > eara an honored
altlzon of Johaaon county Cleburne
papers aro requested to copy
> i > te < l Turfman Den it
Louisville Ky Nov 12 George W
Scoggan the noted turfman died at
hts home five miles from this city at
4 45 oclock this morning aged 40 Jears
Mr tbcoggan was the victim of con-
sumption and had been In u decline for
come time Tho Sccggan brothers as
part ovvntr with Sam Brjant owned
the noted Proctor Knott who won the
futurity worth 10000 as a 2yearold
Judge Morrow Come to Taw and Engi
lien lady were other good ones which
carried the Stoggttn colors
The ltod > Itenche St Pvleriltiirs
Bt Petersburg Nov 13 The funeral
train with the body of tho late czar on
aoard arrived at Nicholas station at
midnight and was switched upon a
siding until this morning ln order to
nab It the Imperial family and their
relative to finish their nights rest
As soon as all preparations for the pro-
cession were completed at about 10 20
i m the imperial train reentered the
railway station tho body was trans-
ferred to the hoarflo In waiting and was
onveyed to the cathedral through the
densely crow ded streets guarded by
thousands of troops
Cln Unrued
Axtell Tex Nov 12 The gin of
Thompson Warwick burned Satur-
day morning Tho building and ma
chlnery were a total loss
The Insurance on the building ond
machinery was J2twg The machinery
was worth 31000 About 73 000 or SO 000
pounds of seed were also consumed
but no cotton was burned engineer
McKoewn lost a gold watch In the
tiro The origin of the flro Is unknown
Mr Thompson vvns In Waco arter bag
ging and tics when the fire occurred
Tire nt Wentlicrford
Weatuerrord Texas November 12
Last night about 3 oclock the flro
alarm was given The nro was round
to be In the barn and stalls In the
wagon yard ot Mr Black on North
Side The barn was fully consumed
ond with It a large amount or reed
and n lot ot valuable farming uienslls
No Insurance Total lost about 350
There Is a strong susptslon that the
fire was of Incendiary origin
AMumciN uvsrUAii cLins
They Seem to Mean Unalnes rrom
Aovt Oil
Philadelphia Pa Nov I The
American association of baseball
h1 tt meeting at the Grand
if 4S 0 holel ln Chicago on November
VLAhe n tlng Is called by Pres dent
HZIa ilcr t0 ml he vacancy
y dropping out of Pitts
burg
A Inoiou Litigant Bend
C niiae ° ov News
l was received
Winn 1 ° Ia nlsht t0 lh tha
SoulWft > PlAlntl In the fa
KV1M < lltleatlon had
Tnl eat ha Itarium t
Oswego
N T
Tho ncw
arataMnf waa corrob
wTd oty Ved rora he
ow otMr sturgl
Tobacco Mcu Meet
Cincinnati Ohio Nov 1Tlie an
nual meeting of the national nrmufac
turers ot tobacco was held today Mr
J Q Butler of St Louis presided Th
P 0 T1 Presetted an Tm
men
mene Interest In tobacco and roelect
nv
ed the former offlccrs
Owens lilotcl
0llf0 rt > N ° v lSThe official
jote In the Seventh district n band
efvZSVX SV Sat to5ay
fH Pmocrot a plurality of
iSnbSS Mi M that Wnyha
emplojed attorney to contest the seat
A rnrados
JSPtXFh Jov 1The hurglar
wa lat nB
tweeS pen Wth nmtl > d >
°
c7 Ure1 b S9
k ne No clue
PASKOLAyg
Gross Ignorance
Its Value antfytji
Fully Estaiiig
sse Paskoia or J Sfj
that we hove i nal
the porpetratora t n tTft
spoonful of glucose ml t
llko
quantity of Pasta
with water shall mmt i
each forty drtoi
or hydrochloric tM
der to Imitate the li
natural gastric Juice hW
ly finely minced
a qdsatarV
raw lean beef chlrtjai 4
hard boiled
egg or ilmim U
Into
each bottle onsouttt I
the bottle
In warm wstiriih
maintain
the contend itii
ture of 100 to 10 aetrm hi
irequently shaking lo oris
oughly
expose the 1Jol j 4
of the solution
In tho cpmae tf t vine
the contents of th twtlia
Paskola will be letn u u
dnd
change ln tvroertliwl
food will have becomi nfe
aolved or digested sherao
tents qf the other toottle ot
the glucose and stcid > mil 1
change be ond a slight tUe
appearance
If you have neither lb bit
the Inclination to msktCt
> ourself we have ta talis
druggist will be till tltfi
perlment The tubes hfresUi
results of a test madaiaoarM
the cuts being from a photons
1 contained glucalf lhi V
kola What are we I tettU
of two things Elto ISr
called chemists are Irwut
honest
Qlucose has no oljtillil 11
This Is a well knows ft
Iajkola Is gl > lug relltt to t
of dyspeptics a truth tut
unsolicited testlmonlua ttlt
upon us The pmenct tf
ferments ln Paikola caaaalV
mined by chemical tnUft
ever seen digestive feraecUl
form and the only r tt 11
their presence I br Dbiertttf
fects which they tirodticetr
This Is a fact recognized tfi
thorlty and will b foutli
Foters rhyslologMaoca
works
Another thing whctltM
and Jealous rivals havi 1
1askola Is that loaimucasl
Is predlgested starch U kr
to encourage diabetes
Wo cannot better aiwrcrSf
than by quoting a paratm
port made to Mayor OW
Tork by Dr Csrua E4 > v
er of health for the elty >
and for the stole 0 XWW
Predlgested tarch tfttl
exact condition that wt
by the digestive otwu a
lotion It Is pretmnrtlil
fw >
Ing hootproductnf
diet or prcdlgCsl 3 ru 11
n man can perform
work than under anr w
tide or rood rreawiw
only Is not injurious WJJ
sentlal article of t A TOJ
In some rorm man csnusw
This lotter from Dr UMJ
ten in onswer to a WW
mayor as to whether of
ed starch was
PaskoU certains f
predlgested tareMi < i
and Is not <
ferment
rood but It olds the < <
nlo
roods In the otom
In the above e K t
seo feeble stomach ot M 3J
weak to do Its duly Itw
phlet JXru yjSt
Srul Pf7iSi
mall you a K5te rS
ot smallpox
>
health todH JJ f
of
leged to tblf Vfl
In which > j
time ago HJasssK
some j hcffgh
SMMTSgM
three cases M r
city thlrtytw
t thJ aa eA
14
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.
Fort Worth Gazette. (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 356, Ed. 1, Wednesday, November 14, 1894, newspaper, November 14, 1894; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth110015/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .