San Antonio Daily Light. (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 58, Ed. 1 Monday, March 18, 1901 Page: 2 of 6
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... T. B. JOHNSON
Postoffice in San Antonio
second-class mail matter.
«J*'ly per month in *dv*nc«.. 50f
per vear in advance $5.00
DKUVKKfD— MAIL OR CARRIEHS
In clubs of over 12 at 80c per je*r.
Subscribers not receiving their paper
will please make complaint to the of
Bce Subscribers are warned not to
pay their subscriptions only to our au-
thorized coilectors as advertised in tne
F*P« r
ADVERTISING RATES FURNISHED
ON APPLICATION.
Home advertisements payable on the
first of each month. Transient adver-
tisements pavable in advanoe. ONLY
METAL CUTS USED.
All contracts or bills must bo approv-
ed by the manager.
*■ — ■ ■ ■■ ■ ■ — —
AUTHORIZED COLLECTORS.
The following named are authorised
tollectors for the Light.
H. C. SC HUMACHER Advertising.
DAN HATTON. .Advertising.
•HARVEY 1.. STEELE Subscription.
W. L. BITTER Subscription.
Subscril>ers are requested not to pay
their subscriptions without taking '
receipt T. B. JOHNSON Mgr.
SPECIAL NOTICE.
Copies of this “paper may be found
an file in Washington at the office of E.
G. Siggers 918 F. street N. W M Wash-
ington D. C.
SPECIAL NOTICE.
I will not be responsible for any bills
Contracted for in the name of the Light
nr in my individual name unless accom-
panied by a written order from myself.
T. B. JOHNSON.
Manager San Antonio Light.
TABLER’S nil n
BUCK EYE rlbu
OINTMENT
CORK NOTHIH6 BUT Pi|ES.
A SURE and CERTAIN CURE
known for IS years as the
I BEST REMEDY for PILES.
I SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
twpirst V >ISI3S3Ca EE. CO- gTAfICTL
The royal family in Great Britain as-
sociate the name of the late queen with
all their family transactions.
Great BriLun-asscrU iliat the United
Mutes Mould be m prosperous with-
out a protective tariff.
Russia is throwing ( hina a sop in thnl
alw is opposing the punishment of any
more of the Chinese rebels. She is
cunning itself.
Some of the big tish in the Philippine
rebellion are landing in the American net.
Being tin m all inland that will bring
in peace.
The state is not so impressed with
the aiblity of the State Executive as to
think well of a commission appointed
by him to govern Galveston.
The lees the state meddles in the af-
fairs munH-i]cil of cities of the state
the better for these cities it will be.
A commission could hardly do worse
for Galveston than Galveston has done
for herself but it is a bail precedent.
O -
Printing bureau in Washington cannot
turn out postage stamps as fast as they
are needed. The business of the coun-
try is writing letters.
o
Ft. Louis has good hope of seeing the
■moke abating bill become a law. It
would work well outaide of St. Louis.
o
George Loving the great cattle syn-
dicate promoter crosses the sea to en-
engineer a $50000000 enterprise on the
other side.
* o
Some of these days suffrage will be
settled on the score of intelligence and
means and not on a question of sex.
There is no scarcity of gold in the
national treasury and yet the Repub-
lican* arc not selling bonds. Good bus-
iness.
The free soup kitchen has largely dis-
appeared from the face of the United
States. Banished by the full dinner
[tail.
Protection has come to stay and
Great Britain is preparing * funeral for
her free trade theories.
Carnegie is doing a hind office buri
Me-s with his library donations and do-
ing it systematically and intelligently.
That proposed gift of $5200000 to es-
tablish libraries in New York is a munif
icept proposition from Carnegie.
The charity that calls on the objects
of it to meet the giver half way in
helping itself is the kind that ought to
BUixieed.
o
The open door policy that will sui
this country is the open door of tie
mill And the forge and the factory.
That groundhog business is almost a
much <>f a failure as free silver and fre
trade and the free Democracy.
Old Fol is crossing the line about nn
and it will soon Ur in order for th
eoulhland to have warmer weather.
Galveston is worse stirred up over thi
Commission* bill than she has been a
- any time since the great Septembe
E ptorm.
Rockefeller is piling up money so faA
that he has no conception of what hi
can do with it himself.
jg iniveston is paying the penalty of
having a government that is not up to
date. She is also paying the penalty of
living in a state that is not and has not
been ready to learn lessons of adminis-
trative wisdom from other sections.
While the Democratic party of Texas
thinks "O we are the jieople and wisdom
will die with us.” so long will the State
■ row numb mid dumb under the press-
ure of her imbecilities in high placet.
In no other state in the great union
of American States could it be possible
that such conditions would lie permitted
to exist as have been shown here since
the great storm of six months ago.
Texas has literally done nothing to re-
lieve Galveston that is the Government
of the State officially and when the mat-
ter is brought up in the Legislature at a
late day in its session it is antagonized
by the Governor who refused to call an
extra session of the legislature to take
into account the awful devastation on
the island mid provide a remedy for the
homeless and helpless people. Galveston
is told that she is not competent to gov-
ern herself and that no state aid is pos-
sible until the city consents to accept a
commission appointed by
Who says so? Has the State so declared
in the legislature? Until they do who
has the right to say what the State will
or will not do? Is there a dictatorship
already established at Austin? No one
challenges the proof whereby the utter
incompetency of Galveston municipality
is demonstrated. That is not it. By
what right of the Administration at
Austin is Galveston told that she can-
not receive State aid only as she sur-
renders the government of the city to a
commission appointed by the head of the
State government? It may be that Gal-
veston is a unit in favor of this change
and surrender of her government .but she
may not Im>. That is not the question
however but that of the right of the
State to usurp the government of the
eity. If it can be done in the case of
Gnlvston it can l>e done in the case of
other cities and state usurpation of mu-
niei]Mil functions become possible here as
it is in Missouri to the detriment of
government the free exercise of local
government by the people of any local-
ity and the whole train of evils of which
St. Louis complains. Texas is falling
upon dangerous times mid establishing
dangerous and undemocratic precedents.
The unwisdom of tlie thing is too appar-
ent. Memphis was in somewhat the
same boat and it killed her energies for
long years. Better go slow.
C/MESSMER
When a mhn’s dollars multiply beyond
lis powers of counting then it is in or-
ler to call for a new deal.
Perhaps it was well that an extra ses-
sion of Congress was avoided but it
would have been better to have amend-
ed the river and harbor bill properly
and passed that.
A chair of economies is mooted for
the Washington and Lee university. A
little more economy at Washington it-
self would not hurl.
Texas seems to be a little sore be-
cause the rural free delivery routes of
other states are more numerous than
her own. This is on account of her
scattered population.
Mrs. McKinley in chosing her gowqs
-elect those that can be maoe of Amer-
ican made fabrics.
If Great Britain repudiates free trade
it will be because United States grew
rich as a protectionist nation.
Competition is killing British indus-
tries and yet Great Britain is the ex*
lament of free trade.
Russia and Great Britain are quite
likely to come to a clash of arms in
Northwest China. What will the har-
vest be!
Great Britain wants no commission of
Chinamen bearing messages of condol-
■nce to her while the Boxer inherits
hat country.
The song that the farmer sings now
is "hard times hard times come again
no more.” Hard times have gone.
Tariff retailiation is the cry of the
old world. Who will be the worse hurt
in that event the man who has to buy
or the one who sells?
Russia is only trying to bitiff the Un-
ited States as to her exclusion of Amer-
ican goods for it would starve her.
o : —■—
Self interest is stronger than a thirst
for reprisals und Russia will buy of us
what it is for her interest to buy.
We hear of the rock ribbed Democ-
racy but it is not in it with the rock-
ribbed prosperity of the country under
Republican administration.
It would not have hurt ex-President
Cleveland a hair to have attended the
funeral of the man whom he met twice
on the battleground of the Republic in
a presidential contest.
France is the only country in
the world that produces more silk than
the United States. She will not do
that very long.
The world is moving up and Bishop
Potter in his narrowness might get
points from some of the British bishops
of the Protestant Episcopal church.
The cry that the women would not
vote if given the opportunity cuts no
ice. Should the opportunity be afford-
ed her? This is tjie question.
Standard oil can go to (the top of the
■•lass for it pays over $80000000 to its
stockholders in the way of dividends in
a year. Shades of the talow candle!
What next?
The attempt of Missouri to exper-
iment with the prohibition system in
the case of juvenile offenders is an
experiment in the right direction.
All measures that lead to reformation
in criminals are to be encouraged. It
is the reformation and not the revenge
of the law that is the real cud sought.
President McKinley and wife are
igain among their old friends at Can-
on. They will die there when their
ime comes.
If those Kentucky feudists are really
pacitital it is a pity tliat the Democrat-
ic party wan not included in the amnesty
arrangements.
OIStNH GALVESTON.
BAN ANTONIO DAILY LIGHT SAN ANTONIO TEXAS MARCH 18 1901.
There will be no attempt to give the
Boers a form of self government in the
settlement. Put that dawn ue already
settled.
Transvaal and Orange river arc hence
forth only colonies of Great Britain and
will be so accepted.
Austin is in hope that President Mc-
Kinley will go to Austin to see Governor
layers. Not likely. The Governor
vill come to San Antonio instead.
Russia doe! not show that humanity
in dealing with her own people that
vould lead one to expect an excess of it
in dealing with China. What then is the
notive of her intervention?
William of Germany got in a nont
■low under the belt in tliat Turkey in-
lomnity affair. His own time is coin-
ing.
Webster Davis is like a ground hog.
When he emerges from his hole there is
Hire to lie some cold weather lingering
around.
Oom Paul Kruger has not been raying
nuoh oh late but there is no intimation
hat he is suffering half as much a« the
ample whom he once governed over in
South Africa suffer. Oom is out.
St. Louis has done the thing up
brown. She just kept piling up World s
?iiir subscriptions without counting pro-
eeeds until slid knew she Jiad enough
then she counted. She has more than
enough.
Vermont is a healthy state. She
.cists of having twelve living ex-gov-
■rnors while the United States can
oast only of one ex-president. There
.vould not la* that one only for a Dem-
atratic specimen.*
President Hadley and Fred George
Williams win go partnership in claiming
the honors attached to a discovery of
the American empire. They have not
yet discovered the emperor it seems.
Boss Gorman is not so large when
■neasured along the lines of national pro-
portions as when he sizes up in little
Maryland.
The Atlanta Constitution comes to
the defense of the President aganist
my charges of partisanshrip in the dis-
ihurgv of his official duties. It ranks
him a man with a high sense of honor.
St. Louis Globe Democrat says that
the 9000 normal Republican majority in
that city eannot be stolen with impun-
ity. Possibly but it can easily be stol-
•n with a state Democratic hook.
There is not half so much occasion to
worry over the attitude of Great Britain
is to construction of Nicaragua canal
is there is over the attitude of our own
members of Congress. Sure.
Good business is all that the United
States asks of Culia. That island must
•ome to regard government as a business
proposition and treat it accordingly be-
fore it can assume that government.
There is no one rushing the telegraph
office in disclosing what is found by tne
derricks down Beaumont way. The real
facts are not being told on account oi
pending land speculations.
Tlie woman is coming into her in-
heritance of the franchise for which the
pioneers have so king contended. She
is in full voting equality with the men
in Wyoming Colorado Utah and Idaho
and in all but fifteen other states and
territories she has some form of voting
privilege accorded to her. In Great
Britain the woman votes for all things
save the members of parliament while
in the Australia* she is on the same
footing with men. She has also the
privilege of a limited suffrage in India
and Russia and so the reform has trav-
eled around the globe. The women
have no reason to be discouraged in
their labors for universal suffrage.
If it should turn out as reported in
some quarters that De Wet is dement-
ed what will Botha do in that case?
He cannot expect to bring a crazy man
into any conference by which the status
of the old republics will be settled.
There is nothing but complications and
troubles and uncertainties out there in
that South African country with the
end not yet in
It may be true that the city of Gal-
veston is not competent to govern her-
self owing to those fatal corruptions in
her municipal government that have eat-
en the heart out of her virtue. But
granting this what assurance is there
that a commission appointed by the Gov-
ernor of the state would do any better?
Putting so much power in the hands
of the Governor is dangerous.
Senator Bailey it seems is on hand at
Austin to take a hand in the legialatMin
there albeit he is a member of the
United States Senate and duly sworn in
as a member of that body. Timo was
when a Senator of the United States
mixing in matters of State government
while the legislature was in session at
the State capitol would have had a
hornet's nest around his ears. Times
have changed and it seems that all things
are possible and lawful in a Democratic
State.
If General Gomez of Cuba knows his
inind as to what he wants or dews not
want in connection with the United
States protectorate over the island it
is more than those know who are sup-
posed to voice iiis opinions lie has been
represented as on every side of the ques-
tion favoring this and then that and
on both sides of it all. This is probably
true for all that Gen. Gomez possesses is
n strong sense of liberty hatred and op-
pression a dumb distrust of all estab-
lished governments. He has no concep-
tion of a government as strbng as the
United States existing for the good of
the governed and he cannot understand
how the administration of this country
would desire to maintain order in Cuba
unless it had something personal to gain.
It is this lack the result of national
prejudice and lack of experience that
teaves the old patriot so uncertain as to
his movements. He wants the best for
Cuba but does not know what that best
is. Some of these days if he lives long
enough it will be revealed to him.
Humors bon* pimpic* and an
eruptions are due io impure blood
and by purifying the blood with
Hood's Sarsaparilla they are C U RED.
WILL ANY OF THESE PROPER-
TIES ATTRACT YOUR
ATTENTION?
Seven-room house all modern improve-
ments newly painted and paired ten
minutes walk from the postofllce; $3500.
Seven-room house two-story all mod-
ern improvements lot 100 by 150 feet
ten minutes walk from court house; $O
500.
Two brick cottages seven rooms each
all modern improvements with cellar
large lot close in; $4000 each or $7000
for both.
Twelve-room house large lot barn
outhouses trees shrubbery all modern
improvement* near car line; $3500
Seven-room house two-story two lots
southeast exposure one block from San
Pedro car line; $3000.
Seven-room two-story house lot 100
by 125 feet south front on Laurel
Heights; $3500.
Six-room two-story house lot 75 bv
125 feet bath electric light etc. south
front; $2500.
Two houses on Avenue D large lot
fronting on two streets; $3200.
Seven-room house large lot on South
Alamo street east front; $3500.
Six-room brick cottage. Cherry street
near Nolan street; $2000.
Eight-room two-story house all mod-
ern improvements on San Pedro avenue
stable servant’s house etc.; $OOOO.
Several houses on Camden street eight
rooms each stable sevant’s room mod-
ern improvements: each $4500
Ten-room two-story house two lots
on Avenue D modern improvements
stable etc.; $7000.
Ten-room rock house stable fine
shrubbery lot 180 feet square fifteen
minutes walk from postoflice; $lOOOO.
Two-story brick ten rooms very large
lot all modern improvements close in;
$14000.
Seven-room brick house fine shrub-
bery an up-to-date place Government
Hili; $0500.
Eight-room two-story house carriage
house and barn lot 95 by 150 feet all
modern improvements fine neighbor-
hood; $BOOO.
Seven-room two-story house large lot
stable all modern improvements on Ave-
nue C; $4000.
Five-room house on Sixth street be-
tween Avenues B and C outhouses lot
50 by 150 feet; $2100.
Six-room house brick on Nolan street
close in lot 60 by 180 feet to an alley;
$2100.
Seven-room house bath sewerage etc.
on Avenue D; $3000.
Six-room house bath stable carriage
house wash house etc. Jot 70 by 187 1-2
feet to an allej* on Dignowity Hill;
$2000.
Six-room house hall grates in all
rooms hot and cold water sewerage sta-
ble. etc. situated on Matamoras street;
$3500.
Nine-room two-story brick all mod-
ern improvements ten minutes
from Alamo plaza; $6000.
Five-room cottage bath hall stable
wood and chicken house electric light
lot 60 by 185 feet on Dignowity Hill;
$2700.
VACANT LOTS.
Two fine lots on Dwyer avenue are
assessed in tlie city for $7000; this
amount will buy them a fine location
for a beautiful home.
Six fine Jots on Lanrel Heights for
$6OO each.
Several lots on Government Hill for
$5OO each.
Yacant lots on San Pedro avenue and
other parts of the city at reasonable fig-
ures.
LANDS.
One hundred and twenty-five acres
twelve miles south of city near Earl
postoffiec on Pleasanton road; $750.
9AOO acres near Bay City twenty
miles from the bay tine agricultural
land; per aerc $9. Fine place to set-
tle a colony.
23000 acres in Zavalla county good
grass running water wells windmills
all fenced well improved one of the
best watered ranches in Southwest Tex-
as ; per aerk $2.
700 acres on the Medina fifteen miles
from the city all fenced plenty of wa-
ter large pecan bottom; per acre $lO.
600 acres on San Antonio river near
Floresville two hundred acres in cultiva-
tion two houses good improvements;
per acre $lO.
4000 acres near Kerrville two houses
all fenced with five wires permanent
water springs live oak. post oak anil
cedar timber 700 acres agricultural land;
per acre $4.
4605 acres on Nueces river near
Uvalde all fenced good grass"permanent
water; per acre $2.25.
240 acres hay land on Blanco road;
per acre $2O.
343 acres near Walnut Springs per-
manent water mesquite land all fenced
one half in cultivation; per acre $lO.
J 42 acres near Sutherland Springs
house one-half in cultivation; per acre
$6.
This is a partial list of the properties
we represent. If you do -not see what
you want in this and will take the time
to call at our office or write us we will
take pleasure in giving you all the in-
formation we can and at the same time
we believe that we can suit you botli
in price and location. Before investing
give us a call. We can also interest
you in some good revenue-producing
property. Do not forget our number
206 East Crockett street opposite the
Grand Opera house
JOHN T. HAMBLETON & 00.
2-21-tf.
STRANGE OLD FELLOW.
Man Who Visits His Own Grave Every
. Week.
Judge William Cole Talcott of Val-
paraiso Ind. is probably the only man
in the world who visits his own grave
every week.
Judge Talcott is a hale and well pre-
served man of eighty-five years whose
activity and freedom from illness or the
ordinary bondage of increasing age
might be envied by half the men of
forty. •
Less than haif a mile from his com-
fortable home in a prominent portion of
Maplewood cemetery of Valparaiso
stands the impressive marble monument
which he has just had erected to his
own memory. It marks the spot the
aged jurist and journalist has selected
for his final earthly reeling place and
its glistening sides'bear the unique in-
scription he has selected to be read by
future generations. A blank space is
left for the insertion of the date of de-
cease otherwise the graven story is
complete. He goes out to see his tomb-
stone every Sunday.
Nor is this the only unusual step tak-
en by Judge Talcott to make lighter
the burdens of his own funeral dircct-
or. In addition he has written out
complete his funeral discourse in state-
ly rhymed verse has bad it printed
and furnished a copy to William
Johnston who is under promise to reud
it at the funeral survive when it shall
occur iu lieu of the usual religious ad-
dress.
Other ‘‘advance copies” have bee’i fur-
nished to numerous friends and relatives
who may not be able to attend the sad
event. An undeniable fact is how-
ever that the old judge bids fair to out-
live many of his younger confreres who
have received the "sermon” which yas
not only written but actually put in
11 po as well by its gr*y-haired sub-
ject.
Judge Talcott is a model character
over Northwestern Indiana. The story
of his career is indissolubly linked and
intenroven with the narrative of the
early development of this portion of
Hoosierdom. For ten ears he was a
preacher of the pioneer circuit -riding
variety an earnest and uniformly suc-
cessful exhorter among the scattered
settlements of a half dozen or more
frontier counties in Indiana's early day.
His religious views underwent a mark-
ed change however in time and he
withdrew from the ministry.
For fifteen years he served as a cir-
cuit judge. For fully twenty-five years
he wielded the editorial pencil of the
first Porter county newspaper which
still exists under different ownership as
the A’idette. He is now retired but
still comes around to the ollioe each
wAk to "help get out the paper ” out
of pure love for the craft and uuselfish
desire to be of assistance to others.
This unselfish humanitarianism is the
strongest feature of Judge Talcotts
character.
He is an advanced thinker and an
advocate of reform in the educational
political and religious fields. He has
published several books in furtherance
of his ideas particularly that of spell-
ing reform. In the latter movement
he has invented a new phonetic system
with an odd looking alphabet of about
twenty-five letters each of which has
one sound and no more. He has got
out several books in this spelling sys-
tem from the type designed and cast
especially for himself. In most cases
he also set the type for these publica-
tions. '
A more enduring example of his work
however will be the inscription upon
his tombs tune which is carved in the
quaint letters of his phonetic alphabet
and is all but unintelligible to the stran-
ger who attempts to read it for the
first time. A reproduction of this in-
scription is as follows:
. In Memori ov s
• WM. COLE TOLKUT. :
: He woz born Des. 25 1815 and did :
: He hopt kooperativ imlusti wud :
: pruv a remidi for povrtri. He woz :
: a spelling reformer sins 1843 and :
: prcjwird this epitaf iu aienst spelling .
: in hiz life. *
San Antonio's famous health resort
the Hot Sulphur Baths is the mecca oi
the health seekers and tourists this win
ter and all express astonishment at the
wonderful virtures of the waters and
the fine improvements that have been
and are being erected. The prediction
is freely made that in a few years time
it will become the most famous resort
m the continent. Arrangement* are
now perfected so that in addition to the
famous hot sulphur tub and pool baths
there are Turkish Russian vapor and
needle baths in separate departments
for ladies and gentlemen with experien
ced masseurs in attendance. Remark-
able cures are being daily effected in
-uses of rheumatism sciatica chronic
malaria eczema neuralgia catarrh and
every variety of blood poisoning.
1 1-26-tf.
CORRESPONDENT WANTED IN ev-
ery eity town and village in America
Newspaper and other work. Experienced
and inexperienced. Good remuneration.
New* and storie* wanted. For partic-
ular* address the Bulletin Press associa-
tion New York. 1-14-tf.
o
PATRICIA'S PIETY.
Boston Globe.
Patricia keeps a pious joy
In penance. Early matins
Now Claim the whilom devotee
Of dancing. bilks and satins.
Are all forsworn. Witlh solemn eyes
Half vbiled by dropping lashes
Each day at dawn she neavenw ard hie*
In sacK cloth and in ashes.
’Tis true the sack cloth's tailor made.
And fits without a wrinkle
Parisian are the pretty boots
.Whose heels 1 hear a-tinkle;
Yet. e’en the roses on her dhecks
Meseems are reverential
And in these Lenten days assume
A pallor penitential.
Both her demeanor and her dress
Arc perfect —made to order;
She's quite correct quite comme il faut
Or does she serve the Lord or
Dame Fashion. When iu church she
kneels
To seek her sin’s remission
The hall-stamp's on her very pose—
Her piety’s Patrician.
A* sister —even in the Lord —
The poor would never claim her;
‘Tis as a creature of a kind
Quite foreign that they name her;
‘Tis possibcl the poor are born
With some plebian bias
Against blue blood. She may be proud
But O Patricia’s pious.
STRIKES A RICH FIND.
‘‘l was troubled for several years with
chronic indigestion and nervous debili-
ty” writes F. J. Green of Lancaster N.
IL “no remedy helped me until I be-
gan using Electric Bitters which did
tne more good than all the medicines I
ever used. They have also kept my
wife in excellent health for years. She
says Electric Bitters are just splendid
for female troubles; that they are a
grand tonic and invigorator fot weak
run down women. No other medicine
can take its place in our family.” Try
them. Only 50c. Satisfaction guaran-
teed by 11. L. Wagner & Co. F. Kalteycr
& Son.
LADIES THREE DOZEN FREE.
Dr. Charcot's Anti-Germ Pastimes.
Festively Infallible in trouble* peculiar
to the sex. Monthly remedy. Nover
dissapoint. Harmless. Simple. Con-
venient. Particulars with free box. Dr.
Julia Pinaud Wood building Nas.uu
street New York City. 1 14 tf.
In the spring time take GRANDMA’S
TEA to cleanse the system of winter's
impurities. 25c af all druggists.
9 )
BREWER* OF ABSOLUTELY FUR E BEERS ONLY. NO CORN RREPA
RATION* OR OTHER SUBSTANCES USED IN THE MANUFACTURE.
■RINK OU R FAMOUS
Cabinet Erlanger Standard.
Telephone 13 Metallic Circuit.
W. M. MAYES «! CO.
MEMBERS OF NEW ORLEANS COTTON EXCHANGE.
SUCCESSORS TO .
SAN ANTONIO BROKERAGE CO.
Cotton Crain Provisions Stocks and bonds.
Orders executed on Chicago Board of Trade New York Stock Exchange
New York Cotton Exchange and New Orleans Cotton Exchange.
Private Wire* to Chicago New York and New Orleans.
'Phone No. 663.—P. O. Box 998. 333 W. Commerce St.. San Antonie.
ELMENDORF & COM'Y.
NORTH SIDE MILITARY PLAZA. t
GIN FARMING AND MILL MACHINERY OF ALL KINDS.
Mechanics’ Supplies Cassidy Sulkey Plows (warranted highest draft
made) Threshers Engines Scales Mowers and Reapers Hardware and Ag-
ricultural Implements. Agents for the celebrated.
Waukegan Barbed Wire Corrugated and Roofing Iron
IRONBREW
(REGISTERED TRADE-MARK.)
A NON-ALCOHOLIC LIFE RENEWER.
From the recipe of a celebrated Carlsbad Physician.
IRONBREW is a combination of Vegetable Tonics and
delicious Aromatics enriching and strengthening the blood
muscles brain; regulating the stomachic and nervous system;
relieving headache nausea dyspepsia sleeplessness general
debility and <»n account of ita life and health re-
newing properties the most valuable tonic and delicious
beverage ever offered to the public. Manufactured by
Maas & Waldstein 107 Murray Street New York and
bottled and dispensed by all first-class bottlers and druggists
all over the world.
BOTTLED BY
6. A. DUERLER MFC. CO. Sole Agents San Antonio Texas.
i a g. k.
BSBTE.
SEETHATYOIHTICKETS READ VIA
™ e "katy flyer
faiSa WHEN GOING TO
ST.LOUIS CHICAGO
KANSAS CITY DALLAS
WW'n FT.WORTH HOUSTON
AUSTIN SAN ANTONIO.
CHEAPER THAN
STAYING HOME.
$9 R 0 San Francisco Los Angelas
and other Califoinia Points.
Every Tuesday until Tuesday April 30th inclusive.
Elegant Excursion Sleeping Cars
ith Rates Lses Than Half
Standard Pullman Rates *v X XX
Sunset Ticket Office Grand Opera House Bld’g. Phone 58
j. mcmillan l. j. parks s. f. b morse
Dist Pass. Agt. G. P.& T. A. Paraenger
ban Antonio Texas. Houston Texas. Traffic Manager.
Ths Sh&rt Line to
St. Louis
Memphis „
North and East.
All points in North Texas and to
Mexico.
And AH Points
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San Antonio Daily Light. (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 58, Ed. 1 Monday, March 18, 1901, newspaper, March 18, 1901; San Antonio, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1684722/m1/2/: accessed June 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .