The Anvil. (Castroville, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 13, Ed. 1 Friday, November 9, 1894 Page: 2 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Castroville Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Castroville Public Library.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
--
r -r
N
DEMOCRAT MATTERS.
TAX REFORM STUDIES
4 she neswita.
Repupilee= r
EDIED Br norrox UU.
more nlw than the
N
can not fairly defend.
com-
"What values (whieh are exactly
i equab) does the management of thia
*
ANOTHER ASSOCIATION
has
11
ci
• fi
N ,
FREE!
noon Q Mnus
ing
of enjoying the entertainment from
formed. with the objects above set
»
•Great
(
fron till* I
on eart
irei
T
"ufade. 867,0, reel to
ALLIANCE CARRIAGE CO . CINCINNATI. O.
the banishment of capital.
to the* decision of those con-
purposes
. - I'
l.
‘eNN
ment of taxation on
real
mV ■
H ■
ch at the outtart. To
the
. 4
ahy a syetem, fact or accomplish-
I
time have served as assessor and in
various other town offices, and hence
-
must go.
between the mw
■ N,
I .
posed to he worth from one to sey-
sessed of large wealth they invariably
illegal precedents, which to-day
are
responsibility for the
to the country, end ye
criminal classes
itable calamity howler.
rI i
I
3
Th. Family Cobblet,
over
" IV
No “Industry" in the world has ever
\
SHALL MEN BE TAXED
em-
i >
Will lul Haifa Year Yet.
P ice -
r opular
It to not so useful
I ‘
'7
gold
City
irned Poputst.
’ g
i
were
I
"gunht, •
1:1 di
•29343*4-8
VoAamsndk
-tmm
YE WORKS,
ALLAS, TEX.
torial government and . extend
jurisdiction of the United tates
“in heaven’s name! what value dart
the community furnish to widow and
; (secretary Hoke Smith has a clear
idea of the present situation in the
Ind'an Territory, and no little knowl-
edge of t he necessary remedies. Many
a worse prescription for Territorial
ills might be found than that given by
the Secretary of the Interior when he
6lid: “Abrogate the treaties, abolish
the tribe I relations, establish a Terri-
at Dam
iscom-
‛) •'
congress have discorered that the
jacket to too small A rational set of
human beings would have known as
Xl
V
J;
- “9
An esteemed friend of the Times
writes from Cedarvale, Kansas, to ask:
“How often, daring the past twenty
years, have the Republicans had full
control in national affairs, having the
Presidency, the Senate and the llouse?
and state the years"
The Republican party lost control of
the popular branch of Congress for the
first time sines the beginning of the
rebellion. in the election of 1874, just
the I
heat
in el
well
occu
A ct
to t
inse
ceiv
witl
nin,
ter.
the
•w
ThJ
pus
1 a
IlI
l
m1
loti
“i"!
lul
I
Earth. , ._______
The Sure Hoad to Prospernty and Happi-
been n ore highly protected than the
Union Pacific railroad. It is only the
natural result of this vicious legisla-
largest manu-
h who sell dl-
J. Mi ton Turner, the Missouri negro
who way assaulted and thrown into the
canal a’. Indianapolis for making Dem-
ocratie speeches, should reflect that he
was in a state where there is no dis-
crimi nation as to color. Perhaps that
was only a way they have in oosier
only
faciu
ployeeA with a Chinese wall or iguo
rance hy prohibiting them from taking
part in politics.
against small real estate owners.
ILL asb tHUE TALEE.
The law of the state of New York I
explicitly commands the assessment of
at property at "itt fall and tnu ralwe."
Owing, however, to willful. and possi-
bly corrupt, disregard of this plain di-
rection and of their oaths, assessors in
the past have established vicious and
with rhomas H. Reed of Maine in the '------------------ -
ehair. 1 States notes payable in coin, and sut
During the Forty-seventh Congress , ciently large for the wants of the peo-
cannot see that their worship of
is just as Idiotic.—Tennessee
forth. 1
rAxtsO PEHROXAL rnorzarr.
"So this man who has just bought a
ticket enjoys r — '
yet we are told, in
the brazen words of Senator Mills.
[+4-
32G,
ej==di
and the value of improvementa so as
to exhibit each separately.
4 The asensment of both improved
and unimproved real estate at its full
and tue value in accordance with the
present law of the state of New York.
E in order to encourage the build-
ing of homes, the exemption from tax-
ation of improvements to the amount
of one thousand dollars.
rnEI ADDMESS
To the Tax-payers of Kings and
Queens Counties, New York:—In con-
sequence of recent attempts to enforce
the collection of taxes on personal
in congress la 1886 and compare it
- -' - of 1894 in the in-
property, despite the universal failure
of similar experiments wherever tried.
that locality.” .f u
“Exactly, And it is for the special
privilege of occupying one plot of
ground to the exclusion of everybody
else, and of reaping all the benefits of
surrounding society from that locality
that one should betxed." .
“Then under your plan," remarked
a quiet old gentleman, “the widow en-
As he appears noi—the greats* Hv-
1 political accrobat and thauma-
a distinguished prelate toithe church
to which Archbishop Ireland belongs,
while in this city, affirmed mdst pos-
lively on his own knowledge! that:the
A. P. A, organization in his diocese
was managed and controlled under Re-
4
k..‛ •
witch Proposes te stir •• the Tax Ques-
tiom.
The following is the platform of T«
Cizexs Tax Associanox, recently
organised in Brooklyn:
1. The abolition of all taxes on per-
bonal property and their concentration
on real estate.
2. The repeal of all laws imposing
TUs is a true likeness of that
seed am statesman.
Gold! WEattoon"no"manen are
largest taxpayers in their respective
towns Although known to be pos-
to expect the proverbial bull to re-
freinirom attacking the traditional
red rag. But their days are num-
bored. Their time is up, and they
MOGEI • MILLA,
Ae he appeared la 1886, whoa a trib-
une of the people, and before that
unholy lost for power, and glory, and
gold, had made him a traitor un-
worthy the respect of the mangiesi
bound on free American soiL I
The following is a picture of
theater,” said the loud-voiced man.
“The back row in the upper gallery
would pay the same price as the or-
chestra seats.” -
“Ohno! Not so fast! The value to
cachperau of a common advantage is
measured by his individual opportun-
ity of enjoying it A man in an or-
chestra seat has a more valuable op-
portunity of enjoying the entertain-
ment than one in the back row of the
gallery. A party owning a lot on Fifth
avenue has a more valuable opportun-
ity of enjoying the advantages of New
York City than a denizen of the mud
flats of the Harlem river.”
“Then when I buv my ticket." put
fe
Whip for Guarnnteed Work
| W" & D
I. The tariff quoatied is un-
My settled far an' indefinite
hiohare undeniably, indie-
id piatformi. They have
r leave the platform on
were nominated aad which
earned, the inhabitants of each city or
county, who are naturally the best
judges of their immediate interests. In
the cities personal property taxes would
be at once abolished, unjust diserimi-
nations against thrift would ceaae. and
corporate capital engaged in produc-
tive enterprises would not be singled
......w— «au
Not levs ia importance is the adjust-
-0-"oo2,
Wheat, Cotten and suven
I to pecullarly signifcant how
closely wheat and cotton follow the
price The price of siiver for twenty
years proceeding the demonitization
of silver, 1873 was about 1.84 per
ounce, the bigbool being 1.36 in 1859
aad 1,17 La 1879. the lowest.
For the twenty yean after 1873 the
price ran from 1.29 to .75. Whoat
followed silver, in 1872 wheal was
•1.47 aad 1999, .68. Colton la 1879
waswonth19.3,andin 1893 1 cente.
With these lacto Who are say that
the legislation against silver has not
affected alike the price of cotton end
wheat?—Columbia (8. C.) Cotton
Plant,
week than in the corresponding week
n yearago, and eight more in Canada
An Associated Press dispatch from
Harrisburg, Pa, says the iron and
stoel mills in that vicinity are enjoy-
ing an era of unprecedented prosperity.
The production of Bessemer steal rails
ls«t week was the largest ever known
Very True
Thaddeus Stephens said, with tears
streaming down bb face: “You have
one mony for the people and another
for ths bond hold ora" The People’s
to undo this wrong
who worship it
as Iron, or lead.
They won't learn. They are noh-
progressive. For years and years the
Democratic leaders havb made spyr-
rices promises and false pretenses.
They seem to overlook the develop-
ment of half a century, aad try to
force upon the country commercial
legislaton applicable la 184G. They
fail to recognize the mighty progress
of the nation; do not seem to know
that the country is a network of rail-
reais except wbea they want a free
pass Their eforts seem to be aa at-
iempt to compass the carcass of Fat
staff into the jacket of Poina After
Some of the farmers of the state of New
York persist in maintaining that taxes
cm be collected on personal property,
despite the universal failure of all post
efforts of this kind in this and other
states. Where such laws exist their
A UP-TO-DATE CLOTHING
mnara-“ulddireettconpurere lTin»ni wo.
8
I
• For
up o
--- SA
At the box office, a well-known rich
man and a plainly-dressed women pur-
chased tickets for adjoining seats in a
theater. Each is required to pay the
same price.
“Does that strike you as just*' asked
a reformer, with a droll expreasion of
the eye. “Is it fair for the manage-
ment to tax that poor woman as much
for her seat as the millionaire for his?"
“Why not? They both receive equal
value, why shouldn't they both pay an
equal price?"
“But he can aford to pay so mneh
more than she eun." (a0.2
“Well, if she can" afford it why
don't she take a cheaper salt? The
justice of a transaction of this kind
doesn't depend upon ability to pap, but
upon ralut paid for."
“That's just the position we take in
regard to the relation between the
community and the individnal."
“So you would tax a poor widow who
happens to own a lot on Fifth avenue
as heavily as the millionaire on the nd-
joining lot”
“And why not? They both receive
equal value; why shouldn't they both
pay an equal taxi
"But do they both enjoy equal vol-
we" asked a perl Utth nan ia the
the whole Territory.”
The wpy in which American indus-
tries are “being moved to Canada" un-
de? the action of the new tariff law is
ul
bi
ca
w
sb
cs
or
interented, as the principal benefit of >
any improvement or social advance I
goes to them in the increase of value '
given to land. Write your opinions
briefly. Address this office, or P. &
Box M, Buffalo, N. Y.
BRANDENBRO a Co
Chteago, in., st. Louta, ao„ Kansa, aiy Mo,
DON'T THROW AWAY Those CLOTHES!
Have Them CLEANED, DYED, REPAIRED.
B. man
legree of care
ofvw two
w ole ar she
foruel
heir Sdznte
ay they stand
in the rural towns where I am familiar
with the condition of affairs, there
ae a few residents who are sup-
-1
expected under this system, for in ef-
feet it offers a bbunty on perjury and
j avoidance of taxes to such an extent
। that those who are wealthy and fall to
' use the same means soon find them-
selves entirely at s disadvantage and
paying vastly more than their propor-
sent, of the full and true value, or less,
to BO per cent or more.
To estimate the value of real estate
accurately, the separation of land and
improvement values is indispensable.
Houses constantly deteriorate, while
land values in,a growing community
advance. The practice of neparating
these two distinct values is not un-
known to insurance companies, and in
some states it is made compulsory on
the sisessor. Not the least of its ad-
vantage» is the greater ease of asness-
meal and the facility of detecting
inequalities. , /
HKLP Tint noun BvuDVR
The exemption from taxation of 1m-
provements to the modest limit sug-
gestel, will help those who suffer most
from unequal valuations, the small
house owners.
___- ar copper Even a
gold maniac can see the foolishness,
the cupidity of the savage who wlU
bring his food and pelta and ivory
and other wealth to exchange for a
few bright beads, absolutely worth-
less, but the great civilized nations
with a chuckle, “the entertainment is
furnished for all the audience in com-
mon. The advantages of civilised so-
ciety is furnished to all the citizens in
hid full control of the government
only during two Congresses, the Forty-
seventh and Fifty-rst The Forty-
The Republicans claim that there
are 6,000 imported English coachmen
in New York City, each of whom will
vote for Morton because of the John
James Ioward incident. It is to be
Congr ssman Clark's course in r-
solving to answer the demand for hin
services in West Virginia, even at the
expense of home appointments, is right
under tie circumstances. Mr Clark
remark* that the presence of the Hon.
W. L. V ilson in the next Congress ia
of more ixaportanc; than his own, but
if the D:mocrats of West Virginia are
•ike these in Missouri both of them
will be -.here.
period of MM No general bill to re-
Torm. the tariff wil bo brought be-
torelcongrese durine IMS
emoerauedminitratoa. T
ceded on all handa • •
•Whas then have the people to
—-—-them? The tarin
An Open Field.
If nay one has an impresslon that
communications to these “Studies”
will not be published unless they echo
ita ideas, he is mistaken.
Articles oa oay side of the question
wil always be welcome, so they are
decent, well written, within reasonable
limits aad to the point, except that we
do not di sea as the tariff.
We will take our chances in the open
Geld, aad reconsider say proposition
Ely’sCreamBalm
WILL CUBE
CATARRH]
LPrice so Cents,
APP { Balm intoencb nostru.
HYBOS.66Warreust.,N Y.I
vance The result was such a revolu-
tion in sentiment that the Demoeratie
I majority of the Fifty-second Congress
I was greater than it had ever been
since the Republican party was organ-
ized ia 1856. Kansas City Times.
-- ------ . . in the friend.' “I pay for the special
and their abandonment in ail civilized privilege of oceupying a certain seat,
communities save ia the I nited States, to the exclusion of Overvbodv else,‛and
The Citizens’ Tax Association has been . - •-----•---
A local option law would leave all men be taxed in proportion to the
matters relating to taxation for local ' wealth they possess, or according to
---— -—- •—«-»— -a al— -- the value of the special privileges they
enjoy" — L. E wilmarth, in the New
A contracted volume of money pro-
duces a shrinkage of values aad a
shrinkage of the products of labor,
and IbuB resulte, if persisted ia. in
throwlag out of empioyment thou-
sands of oar poople. pot only depriving
them of tbe means of livelihood, but
throwing many of them as a burden
upon the balance of society, to bo
supported by different forms of charity.
Mol only that, bat it hae driven many
people into the pathway of crime. A
contracted volume of money, aad the
evils flowing from it, have their fall
and a first-eiaas banking system, we
quote a part of his message to " on
gress dated December 1, 1862:
“A return to specie, however, at the
earliest period compatible with due
regard to all interests coneerned,
I should be kept in view. FInetuation”
I in the value of currency are injur-ous
t and to reduce these fluctuations t the
lowest possible point will be a leading
purpose in wise legislation Converti
bilily, prompt and certain couverti
bility into coin, is generally acknowl-
edged to be the best safeguard against
them, and it is extremely doubtful
whether a circulation Bof I nited
recently received a number of large
orders The query is now whether
this prosperity is due to the Wilson
tariff law. This change in conditions
for the better is certainly not in ac-
cordance with the predictions of the
protectionists.
There La now no question as to the
lenefits of the new tariff law. Fae
tories are constantly resuming work,
which shows that II was not a fact
that the high protective duties wera
necessnry. We maintain that Amari-
can industries need no protection from
competition. Ilia too well known to
admit of d apute that for the amount
of labor performed th > wages in Am-
eriea are no higher than in other coun-
trie Thia cry of competition with
foreign pauper labor ia all bosh. It is
the good and rapid workmanship of
the American that makes his fabr
\ ? ■ y
■OTHERS
-I fool very thank-
ful for what Hood's
Barsaparilla has done
for me. I havo taken
three bottles and the
medictho hae made s
great change. I was
All Run Down
from trouble and
overwork, and had
otter cotaplalnts com-
mon to my sex at my
nge, 41 years. Nov
since taking Hood's
Barsaparillalammuch
Proof: Bead his speech
that the country will be kept oa the
gold basis by the Democratic party.
—Austin Argus.
WEELys
VSEAM BALM
-89*228/7660
recored his calami lions wails also con-
tained the cheering news—cheering
for everybody aave McKinley and his
partinans--that factories were daily
resuming work in the east, many of
them with an Increased capacity, and
that every indication pointed to good
times in the future. t‛Th Governor is
in suen a position just now that the
misfortune he most dreads is the
prosperity of his country. He is a ver-
to conduet an exhanstive investigation. ....
In IB! a congressional committee ex- hare had opportunity to see and watch,
amined the methods of assess- the Practical workings of this Bystem,
menu in the District of Columbia' espectall in reference to farmers. As
which showed that gross inequalities far as my observation goes those wbo j publican puspices .and. Was, used., ex-
- - ent of large aa thold large amounts of personal prop- clusively in the interest of Republican
“ erty almost entirely escape taxes, candidates for office. * '
but these men are far from being the iness of the coudtry hod beep com-
pletely ruined, the newspapers that
Eastern manufacturers are very un-
kind to Governor McKinley. While
. . „u. .. J.. . the Gcvernor was making his tour
eral hundred thousand dollars each, through the west proclaiming the bus-
they are so prone to langh There are
enough American cogchmen and team-
sters in New York to more than out-
rate the presumptuous cockneys, and
it should be done for the reason that
Tom Platt's committee has made it an
issue, if for no other.-- KS Times.
11 was only an accident, of coursse,
that ex-President Harrison had no
more than started on his much-adyer
tised business trip to New York than n
committee boarded his train and asked
for a speech, and no more than n.turni
that he should comply.
Ex-Governor Boise is not making
many political speeches this fall, but
when he does the voters of Iowa cm
be depended upon to turn out with the
old-time enthusiasm. Horace Boise is
a "political corpse" who m it wiu do
well to watch.
s I
* 6
Ex-United Statos Senator Lyman
Trambull of Ilinols has joined the
Popullsta. In 1879 he left the Re-
publicans aad became a Democrat
Ho eerved elghteon yearn in the
United States Senate and was a friend
__of Mnool. Ho chargee the evils
•jP- affeeting the country on the money
Pi power and corporatlons which control
2o2 leglslation and oppress the poor.
To the Editor of the Advocate':—In
your issue of September 13, in com-
menting on the article by Robert Hood,
ofLixingston. MIluaderstanJ you
both real and personal, as calculated to
mentortakationon real estate to an produce the best results on a basis of
equitable and uniform1 standard, and zzact justice^ Thak taund enota nd
rimihtioatnarshtsneshtkehistaxen 1 , l
Let eri *e present unscientific modes of । There are many objections to this
saeertaiateg -sIsm To this end it is : method of taxing. I have had a long
mEnt —is h. M _______.. proposed to secure the appointment of . experience in farming, and during that
En-ouP°02..re20n-0e.4, a legislative commission, with power ---- *---'-------- - “
millionaire ao exactly equal that both
-------- should be required to pay the same
Iand owners especially should be taxes? asked an important looking
terated as the nrincinal benefit of I man with a loud voice
i provisions for the public wants can be
) made, and the great advantage of a
safe and uniform currency secured? I
know of none which such certain re-
suits, and is at the same time so un-
objectionable, as the organization of
banking associations, under a general
act of Congress, well guared in its
provisions. To such associations the
government might furnish circulating
notes, on the security of United Stale"
bonds deposited with th* Treasury.
These notes, prepared under the super-
vision of proper officers, being uni-
form in appearance and scurity, and
convertible always into coin, would, at
once, protect labor against the evils of
a vicious currency, and facilitate com-
merce by cheap azd safe exchanges."-
Ex * . , . ,( L.
profligacy ran riot, and the appropria- | pie. can be permanently, usefully and
Mfely maintained l" there, then any
other mode in which the necessary
THIS.KNIEE.wS-as
from Linn < oitee Wrappers, and » 2cont stamR 10
pazpozteue. WRite rwoM Spcgco.nne ro
~ _____ 4M Huroq BL, TaixlKi. Q.
^■CARRIAGES
Ar-Eepx Buggies & Harness.
V)W5 Two Medals awarded at the
"MV Worid’s Fair, for Strengta,
•A OrU* tu. Beauty nd Low Price*.
/amoae OurFpiral Hprings warrantd
W 12 years, our vehicla 2 years.
>pdaV Every person owning a borse ' »
WA.4sRmk should send for our mammoth
<95953 F’ree Texns ( atalogue Buy
15? to i£? Comtng Natlon.
uniform record has been failure, al- joying the same special privilege as
though always fruitful of fraud and the millionaire should, pay the same
perjury, the demoralization of politics, tax And if she can't afford it she
the discouragement of enterprise and must take a less valuable privilege.
The whole question seems to be. Shall
tion of public expenses and hence in
the end are compelled to adopt similar
means to theene employed by their
neighbors, nr, as the only alternative,
to become non-residenta
The farmers can not escape, but
most pay their own share and also
that of their rich neighbors. . It is
needlens to point out that such so es-
tablished system of perjury is vastly
demoralizing, not only to the body
politic, but to the social body and pub-
' lie standard of character as well
The second and more important ob-
jet-iicin to a tea .m parxnnni property
is that all such property represents
the results of labor, hence a tax on
personal property is a tax on labor.
Its final effect is to inflict a punish-
hoped that the voters of New York
Fourthounand men are employed ln^ will not neglect this opportunity of
the steel works and the company hsa irebuking the snobbishness at which
the politie of welcoming foreign orators.
---- - Kani as City Time*.
in She party want
Jr f
so"nih .
special taxes on eorporations, except commen. Then according to that idea
on corportions operated under public every man would have to pay the same
franchines. tax v*ether he is a beggar or mil-
3. In smesaing real estate, the as- lionaire."
ecasora to estimate the value of land
whon Lerle Gala. FAR T
If there M a elgus ot people on •y** •u-
that like to deceive men is the "0PT
ulist Every one of them will tel
what Lincoln said in regard to money
and banking, and then wind "P b
claiming ths* he believed just as ths
Popnlist do To show that Abrahai
Lancoln believed ia a Bound currency
am dot a financier, never wm
nd zurely never will be if to under-
2nd the theory, veason, logic and
hilosopby ot the management of the
overnmene fnances for the past
nMexmezandoveriswbe efnan-
br, but thio does not hinder me
rom seeing M wo ell boo that at this
late capital and creditors hold the
ala* and drive, while labor and
ebtore furnigh the loundation for
rosperity and credit and draw the
ond of «overnment with sore necks,
oat backs aad only too often with an
ditaimetor Mi who think alike
TaAAfvenauostion to act together,
‘ tTa, tgeihy and impress their
12on *n2dKory ot tho country
"025 in which they live.
' to this suggestion t<>
dam"he Democratie candidatos
Epting free sil ver it is true
Ulegal preeedenta, which to-day are manage to keep it out of the tax lists,
permitted to override the law and to sometimes by adroit political influence
stifle the consciences of its sworn off- ana sometimes by downright perjury,
cer it can be confidently psnerted ! and the main bulk of the taxes is paid
that anenements..ini Kings and Queens by hard-working farmers of limited
countien ‘rangeall the way from 30 per means Nor is any other result to be
land eilver is dead. • • •
MB thoroughly convipced that
I never have efestoration of’all-
we wait for the consent of Eng-
Was there • reason for the
Ot eilver in 18732 Ac that time
eot true that our present silver
KT aouar was worth a premium over the
5a prerent gold dollar? There is no
oubiotihatfaet aad ae true man
wi deny At Sver had not then
commeneed to depreciate, either m
momey metal or m metal, Thea why
WM it kitted? Tree, ia 1878 aad
again to 1890 a sort of hair life was
P wet la the BMtal by purchases of it by
E2o ' government tor mint purposes,
~. but its tree life, free access to the
mint on equdlity with gold, has never
been restored and never will be
aaUI there b a new algment
7 of perties with owe of them the cham-
plon of the white metal and a tariff
toe revenue ealy. Just the kind of
party the Democrata need to be under
iheledorshipofthe heroic father.
Wm there a sumelent reason for the
dual had second condemnation of
sUver to 1893 by a combination be-
" Vunm 3°. Pomoorat and Kepubli-
woman. Look at the headlight dia-
mond he wears. Should be therefore
pay the management to proportion to
the diamond value he enjoys?"
“What nonsensel The management
don’t furnish him diamonda"
“No more does the eommunity fur-
nish mansiona, stpeka, bond, or barrels
Graver. My King! Still he says be
is a Democrat. But what kind is
what the people would like to know.
with his braying.
terest of Wall street and
ever before ofTered. Buy diree from im
""#4, "We
gs‛suxefamipon“rernengoAteenleg
KorkWkE mammah catalog, addresn
OXFORD MFC.CO..esw-gM,n4n1
344 Wabash Ave., Chicogo, nr.
audience together.”
“Well, what civilized community - .
does not furnish a multitude of advant- l pablic sentiment was outraged and the
ages attractive enough to draw masses party was not able to again carry the
at people together?" 1 country in a Congressional election
yes,but," broke in the little man, ‘ until 1ss8, wbea Harrison was elected
Tresident Upon the face of the re-
• Repubiican A. r. A. e '
Warhixotox, D. C, Oct., 27.—Re-
publican leaders all over the United
States have become alarmed at the re-
cent disclosures connecting their cam-
paign committees. State and national,,
with the proscriptive organization
know as the A. 1*. A., which, as Sen-
ator Hill has declared in New York,
was born of Republican schemes and
has been fanned into vigorous life by
Kepublicsn machinations. A in their
alarm the Hepublicans have called up-
on Archbishop Ireland to help them
ouL His declaration that the Repub-
lican party is not in league with those >
who believe in political .proscription
because of religious faith is now being
circulated most industriously and
pointed to as convincing. 1 V N
.1 But Archbishop Ireland can scarcely
be called an impartial witness. His
opinions are apt to be clouded by his
political purposes. There is not a
more deep-rooted, uncompromising Re-
publican in the whole Northwest than
Archbishop Ireland. The Washington
correspondent of the Baltimore Sun
states that he was personally told in
the rooms of the Republican State
seeiHiss,Af. Minnensta.in.1892that
tower of strength to the Republican
party and had more than once helped
materially to stem the tide against it.
The A. P. rA. organization is used
directly for the benefit of the Repub-
lisan party. Within the last few days'
The Family
A rorpteta.outhe for, . "untrne
kootapazhonrzpatring generni NArnn" and
_ _ . "",,00 Iteli ns.
Kept tor Ml. by hardware denlera and storekeepera
eeneraty, ni teneneigit prepial I to your nearest IL
* tauon upon recept or priee.
Democratie leadere to be
teres there was a small Republican
majority in the Congress elected that
year, which, after the organization in
December, 1889, was increased by
throwingoutseveral Democrats ang
seating Republicans in their places
lire. “The millionaire han a magni-
cent mansion and stocknand bonds and
barrels of money Why shouldn’t he
be taxed for them?”
zlaunhy"hefwetthnt there were 121 Hon when it seeks to surround its
fewer failures in the United stats last It* 1 ---- ---
POABnPROFIT
< a|II This Month
morge.. ",2
“1,000. HIxhest res Write for particulurs (•
AT HI TRADERS SYNDICATE, A
% Traders' Bldg., Cnicago, lu. N
• AeBirrs WAKTED. •
“SMieSsKS
seventh Congress was organised on the
first Monday of December, IS" 1, with
Warren J. Keiferof Ohio as Speaker.
- . . .... j ___ । The Fifty-fist Congress was organized
theater furnish, the rich man and poor • y J December. 1830,
woman just before us?" 1 - - -
"Irst." said his friend, “the man-
agement furnishes an entertainment
attractive enough to draw this large
atronger and tin galning in nesh. I would advise
.11 orerworknd, “red. weak mothera to
tke Hood's Sarsaparilla to build them up."
Mra 0. W. Wanxock, Beverly. Neb. Remember,
Hood’s Cures
9 k Powerful
" Flesh Maker.
■ A process that kills the
taste of cod-liver oil has
done goodService—--but
the process that both kills
the taste and effects par-
tial digestion has done
much more.
Scott’s Emulsion
stands alone in the field
of fat-foods. It is easy of
assimilation because part-
ly digested before taken.
Scott's Emulsion checks Con-
sumption and all other
wasting diseases. ,
Prepared hr Scott A Bowne, Chemist,
New York. Sold by druggists overywhere.
ment upon th. practice of industry,
ecohomy, prosperity and thrift,, by
mean* of a tax which is in the nature
of a fine upon suh persons aa shall
practice these virtue". All improve-
ment* upon real estate are, in their
essential nature, in no wise different
from personal property; they are prp-
duced by th. labor of man and a tax
upon them, like the tax upon persnal
property, is a tax upon labor.
W.L. Douclas
$3 SHOE NO 8QU EAKSNa U .
eem 5. CORDOVAN,
A™ FRENCH&ENAMELLED CALF.
Ake - **■»«,»FlNEGALf&KANGAPOl
dd2 *5.POLIOE,3SOlE3.
«gA5
H £MmMl $2.*1.75 BOYSSCHOOLSHOES.
Wdag - LAD ICS -
MeX-392*32s780NG0L4
‘82 SEND FOR CATALOGUE
W-U-DOUGLAS,
BROCKTON, MASS.
You cai save money by wearing tho
W. Ie. Doming 83.00 Shoc.
Beease, we are the largest mauufacturers of
this gradeof shoes in tho world, and uaranteo thir
value by stamping the name and price on tho
bottom, which protect you agafnst high prices ami
the middleman's pronts. Our shoes equal custom
work in style, oay Atting and wearing qualities.
We here them sold everywhere at lower prices for
tbe value given than any other make. Take no ub
alltute. If your dealer tannot supply you, we can.
------ ■ With full power in their hand* the
“And that would work finely in a Repo bl lean profligates proceeded to
make the best of their opportunities.
All sorts of appropriation" were asked
for and allowed until more than a bill
ion dollars had been disposed of be-
side" making continnons appropria-
t ons, which mortgaged the revenues
of the country for five years in ad
A |
in Proporttom to th. Wraith They Pm.
ram, or Aceording t. the Value of th.
Speelel rriviteges They Enjoyt
V ? •
8,-1
Reed and th. Mek Inter Law.
The Lawrence Daily Journal says:
“Two dayn after Tom Reed had denied
Over.his own "ip nature the report to
the effect that he had denounced the
McKinley law. The Kansas City Times
comes out with an editorial treating
the matter as though Reed had really
said what was reported." f
This specimen of mendacity is
quoted to show to what extreme a
Kansas Republican newspaper will go
in the matter1 of misrepresentation.
Mr, Reed has never denied that he de-
nounced the .McKinley bill “over his
own signature.” What he did do was
to state in a subsequent interview that
be had not made such a statement for
publication, tnd that if he made any-
thing like it, it was in the confidence
■ of social conversation.
But the tenor of Mr. Reed’s New
ork and Chicago speeches confirm
the statemert of his opinions as ex-
pressed in the Michigan interview,
lesides that, the records of Congress
during the period in which the McKin-
ley law was pending are in accord with
the statemeat, and .though Mr. Reed
may not have intended to take the
world into his confidence, there can be
no doubt that he believes what he said
in "social conversation." Kansas City
Times. b ‛
Didn’t the country prosper under
B IBBMT " ' ........ 1 । rvtrrurt. DuI Kd
prospered, interest mongers prospered,
landgratbers prospered, protected
capitalist: prospered, financial com-
bines prospered, coal barons prospered,
pine land thieves prospored, tailrote,
magnates prospered, and John Sher
man ' pr epered.m But the country,
well, Iridecent Dream Ingalls of Kan-
sas, says hat 10,000,000 of ourlyeople
never get enough to eat from ons
years' ens to the other;
The editor of the Troy (Kan.) Chiet,
who has zonsiderable reputation as a
humorist: charges the visiblb improve-
ment in business to Democratic chi-
canery, i nd seems to think the whole
thing is .i plot to “mislead the people."
If good limes are the result of plots,
then the more plots the country has
the bettor, and the longer such plot-
ters are kept in power the greater will
lie the p rosperity of the people.— K. C.‛
Times.
10 consumer. .2
His "Hemedy "
Let natural opportunities be opend
to whomsoever desired to use them;
let us take the weight of taxation off
the agricultural districta where land
has little or no value irrenpeetive of
improvement*, and put it on towns
and eities where bare land rises to a
valuation of million* of dollars.
Leus dinpenne with a municipality
of taxes and a horde of tex-gatherers,
simplify government and greatly re-
dues its cost
Let ns do away with the fraud, cor-
ruption and gross inequality insepar-
able from our present method of taxa-
tion; and then, and not until then, will
Missouri denerve and be what ia now
claimed for her-the title of "Mngnid-
cent Old Missouri" xuw Tu
bn '-V.-?-..
lions were increased so largely that
d -Sme a a
zordumgn "Ak
uon The Hepublicans advocate a
prosective tariff oa prineiple, the
bemoerete do so practically. The
Democrata denounce the protective
tariff M robbery in their platform,
bet when in power they uphold it
by legislation. It is useless to
bMe er ehrink these facts; it is bet-
tar to took them squarely in the
: faee. Ae to eflrar, in 1899 the Ke-
publicans demonetized sUver, dented
it nesses to the mints and of it made
. • commodity. In 1899, twenty years
later, contary to the expectations,
wlehM fluff inpranuoo the people and
Democrats pot the seal of utter con-
‘demnatios on silver mb money metal.
and this when the party was in full
„ a,--Ar Moae uKiteznA V.----^1- ont
WVHHIW- P3 SV5N Paew--
thesovernment . 24
perties on silver abd the
silver M money; to
are given protective
and bilver which the Re-
sans had killed to buried face
MAILED free
to avy Farmer or Farmer t wife
“Upto Date Dairying”
tonbejning Mi imuructlen how s> secure
Higher Grade Product a, mmake '
MOREBBTTERwill thne BETTER PRICE
Md with Less Labor get Hore Money
Revlewing and explalning in a.pracdral manner ... ' v
The Normandy (rnEnew) System,
Danish dairy system
Elgin Scrarator System 4
"heh hara broughe prosperity andeasedo the dairy farmer.
Write for thi Valunble Information. Mall-4 FREI on
applicatjon. Kindly toad atre- rd nelgilorfig Carmen
"hoowacot* AMrtaa R. LESPINASSE,
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.
Haass, Herman E. The Anvil. (Castroville, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 13, Ed. 1 Friday, November 9, 1894, newspaper, November 9, 1894; Castroville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1584321/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Castroville Public Library.