The Austin Weekly Statesman. (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 8, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 14, 1894 Page: 4 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Texas Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the UNT Libraries.
- 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:
.ntered the postomoe t Austin Texas M
vaoopd class matter. . ;
VtTOHBKOWK . JOHN W.MADDOX.
OIBCO UJ w-tlllrAHt. Hancock Bulldln.)
TKBM8 OF B0B3CRIPTI0N
m IHl CITT.
. ne Motith-ln advance ;
1 Mout-H-in 4vuou
tOOoer ninth.
BY MAIL
nnA Month in adTanco
?hSuin:;::::::;.-.::::
JSSU.id.aScT.U month....
. 1 00
. .76
. 62S
. SCO
. 100
In ad
rale o
1 oo
i 60
i 60
a oo
. i oo
60
a oo
. 100
ADVETI8IN3 BATES.
AdTerti.lng rate will bo made known oa P
'to""1' nir..o. if. Tribune bnlldln
ou.-ryUHl Foreign Ar'vwrUring
tilrpbohm:
nnalnBM Office
"'iiSH&toii m.'ring up ICS.
.1M
.163
wra
J. J. 9. Crawford fh. public 1. oaatiouad
mhnr aurson who
to par mouej .
repro.on mm
announcement.
FOR CONORESB.
. . . . - tho Hon
TtjfHJT iTITHK.
w rn authorized t announce A. II. ;r 'm
COnVUUUUU.
COUNTY OKKICK.
COUNTY JUDGE.
I hnn.bv announco myself an a candidate for
e.eeJtlon to t l e poilllon of county mi . of
Travl! Tom UJ Mibjeci U the action ol the Uem-
OoraUoconveutloiK KopK)BItBOi
l am a candidate for county Indue of Travis
oonuy Hubjocl to the action
oouuty couvei Uon. A. 8. Wai.kmi jr.
I R Hamilton candldalo for county JndRe.
nblwt to lUis action of the Democratic conven-
tion; COUNTY CLEKK.
Wa aro authorized to announco that Mr.
Rbad! Klalier la a candidate for county clerk
Object to "no action ol the Democratic con-
vention.
We are authorized to announce Horny K
Bhefloy a a candidate lor clerk of tho coun.y
court ' of Travis county subKt to the action of
the Democratic county convention.
Wo are authorized to announce that John W.
Horusby l candidate for tho ollieo of county
Olerlll iubjodt to tho action of the. Democratic
convention.
COUNTY TREASURER.
KD ANDERHON candidate for ro-cloctlon
fof county treasurer with abiding faith in ho
Inpport of tho people at the bal.ol box.
A f JERNIQAN in a candidate for election
-ihibaico of treasurer of Travis county. Hub-
ol to BomluaUou by tho Democratic county
onvontlou. a
WE aro authorlicd lo announco Mr. J. B.
Booth m a candldalo lor tho ollieo of
county tteaRurer ol Travis county subject to
the action of the Democratic conveutluu
JUSTICE OF THE PEACE.
We are anthorlzed to announce tho wimp of
K. E. Crawford as a candidate lor Justice of tho
pea?e in -recluct No. 3; subject to uomiuaUon
by tho Democratic county convention.
SUPERINTENDENT OK 1'UBLIC 8C1I00L8.
AT the solicitation of my many friends In
Travis county. I hereby announce my-
elf as a candidate for superintendent of pub-
lic schools in Travis county subject lo tho ac-
tion of the Democratic uaW
COUNTY COLLECTOR.
Wo are authorised to announco W. B. Thrash-
eras a candidate for county collector subject lo
ihe action of the Demucratic county conven-
tion. We aro authorized to announce A.R.Morris
as a candidate ior nix collector of Travis county
at the next neuersl election subject lo the no-
tion of tho Democratic convention.
CONSTABLE.
We aro avthorl.cd to announco J. n. Plumb
as au independent candidate for constable from
V redact No. a
Wealth does not kill magnanimity
in all iueu who possess it. Tlie eou
gregationof H'utii Jeshnriu Fought by
a resort to tho courts in New York to
prevent the Astor estate frotu build
lug a btuble tiiljoiniiti; the Jewish syn-
agogue but they were defeated in
their object the Astors wiimius the
suit. iuee the case has beeu decided
in his favor Mr. Choate the
counsel for the Astor trustees
has written to the attorney of
tho synagogue informing him that at
tho earnest tolicitation of John Jacob
Astor who desires to live on tonus of
peace and good will with his neighbors
and fellow citizens the trustees of the
estate have couoludul in defcrtnee to
the wishes of member of the syna-
gogue to discontinue the erection oi
the stable within 100 feet of their place
of worship.
If every litigant who succee.led in
defeating his adversary were prompted
by the same spirit there would be
much more peace on eh.rth and good
will towards men. So we see that
wealth does not always harden men
and that wealthy men are often quite
as capable of generous deeds as those
who never have resisted Its corrupting
iullaences. .
" THE FORMATION OF A FOR-
KIUN LEAGUE.
This ia the call for a inaaa meeting
alluded to in our editorial of last Mon-
At a meeting of the local branch o
th i-Cltizens Liberal league" be d 1 on
Tuesday the 3d inst. it
to call a ma98 meeting of a 11 liberal
minded citizens ol Aus in and lravls
county irrespective of party lues to
meet at the courthouse on June 0 at
8:30 o'clock p.m. for the ; of
organlzmg to oppose all 'BBl"n
calculated to Infringe upon our per-
sonal rights and liberties and I the in-
terference of the state in f
relio-ion. We call upon all liberty Joy-
inKCitizens to aid lis in our strive to
uphold the principles laid down in
our conatitutfon and to MCompJJh
this obiect we deem it absolutely
neceeear. to give our support ; to .
men only for our legislative bodies
who will Pledge themselves to mo.
Phi'. SVrk ctbw th!
principles and energetically endeavor
to have all laws repealed that are not
in harmony with our princ pies. A Uo
.. nttH the nrlma-
asK ail ciiizbub iu :l
ries. A. Wyhchetzki Chairman.
v !ii nnt the use of "our" "us'
and "we" all through this call which
.0 rf.r fo members of the "Citi
zens Liberal League" or as it used to
he known tne uermau-n..
i.n rmzena Association. W(
furnished with
uau ikuv ww-
a copy of the constitution and by-laws
or the public addreaa of that assoc a
tion and hence did not know its ob
lectsand so stated relying in oui
article upon what had been told U:
'fhl i. it the firsl
WDlOlUUOOUUJa "
communication of disagreement with
I it.ln I .
UUi DUUUliai.
ANSWER TO "THE FORMATION OF A
FOREIGN LKAUUE."
Kdilor of Tho Statesman.
Fairmiuded papers if my memory
serves me right even The States-
man admitted more than once that
the naturalized citizens of German na-
tionality are among the beat and most
law abiding citizens of our state.
The Statesman of June 11 in its
editorial under the above blood-curd-linir
boaiiinsr. atatea that naturalized
citizens (the editorial calls them lor-
eigners coming to this country) "have
all the privileges the natives have."
1 add and iionsequently all the
duties. Amon the privileges of every
citizen native as well as naturalized.is
the right to asaemole in convention
for lawful nurooaes: among the duties
of a good citizen is: To take some in
terest in the welfare oi ma country
including- the duty to caat his vote in
fnvorofauch candidates whom he re
gards the most honest the moat hon-
orable and the moat capable to serve
their country in the poaitions for
which they are elected.
Theae I claim aro unaispuceu anu
uudiapulable facta.
Now unfortunately it is also a fact
that ainoug tho naturalized citizens
ust "the valuable law abiding ' citi
zens of (ierman descent lesa than
other foreigners appreciated the
privilege and attended less to their
political duty to participate in prima
ries and even to caHt their vote at the
polls thus neglecting their duty and
their interest.
To counteract this indolent inactiv
ity and to stir up thes6 otherwise so
"valuable and law abiding" citizena
to do their duty as American citizens
alao at the voting places two years
ago the Uermau-American Citizens
association was called into life; not as
a party not as a political body and
the least as an association to pursue
Uerman national politics.
Finding that with the namo German-
American Citizens association alno
the object of the association
was misunderstood and maliciously
misrepresented by Kuownothingism
delegates of the local associations
convened last month in Austin but
by doors wide open for every decent
peraon and thia convention ready to
welcome the reporters of The States-
man as well as ol every other decent
paper changed the name G. A. C. A.
into Liberal Citizens league and ad-
opted the English language for all
such meetings where Anglo Ameri-
cans would participate. This was
done to do away with the misrepre-
sentation of purpose and the supposi-
tion that tho association pursues for-
eign national politics. The delegates
to the convention met not as Ger-
mans but as American citizens they
wore only the American colors as
badges and the band receiving the
delegates at the depot was instructed
to play before everything Star
fc'pangled Runner.
This is in short the history of the
Liberal Citizens League which your
respected paper brands as a foreign
league thus plainly showing that you
did not and do not understand at all
the object of the call or that contrary
to the Texas custom "fair play to
all" you intended to have misrepre-
sented citizens who availed tnem-
selves of their right to convene for
perfectly lawful purposes as the con-
stitution and by-laws adopted at this
convention will prove to every lair
and sound minded unbiased citizen.
W. H. Streeruwitz
Oho of the Delegates.
We aro glad the writer does us the
nstice to admit that we have always
complimented our (ierman citizens
for their sterling worth. We think
this but gives additional force to the
advice we tried to give.
Rut aa to the history he gives of the
reasons for a change in the associa-
tion's name: It is true the doors of
the convention last mouth were open
but as all the proceedings were in the
German language The Statesman
reporter who was promptly on the
scene when the convention was called
to order was utterly at sea as to what
whs being done All the inform-
ation lie got of those pro-
ceedings was second hand as
they were translated for him after-
wards. Rut the peculiar part of this
attack upon us now is in this that it
seems the very members of this asso-
ciation realized the fact that it was
better to take out oi the name of the
AUgxIN WEEKLY STATESMAN THURSDAY JUNE 14 1394.
association all allusion to any nation
ality. So they dropped the "German
Amerlcin" and eoid "Liberal Citi
zona" instead. Yet with the nam-
rdiftiiwetl the membership of the asto
ciation up to this time is just as it wa-J
before. And if they now are auxiou
to bring in other American citizens is
not that directly in lino with the ad
vice The Statesman gave Mon
day? If they did not feel th
fnrn of the objection to citizen
of one particular nationality taking
the whole initiative in sucu a maiiei
why is the writer of the above letter
so particular to specify tno "colors'
.... ni tva anRcial instructions to
ri hand to play ."Star Spangled
Ranner V" Has he not himself proven
by his admission the point contended
for?
This is the second letter:
To The EJitar of the Austin Statesman.
AirsTiN. Tex.. June 11
The Austin Daily Statesman of
June 11 DUbiishes au article headed
The Formation of a Foreign League
which needs an ausvi er.
Tim writer of same falsifies pur
posely or not knowing the facts and
as writer of a newspaper article he
ought to have informed himself better
on the auoject. .
The article deals with the Citizens'
Liberal league. From all publica-
tions ot eaid league as The Address
to the People of Texas which was
mailed to The Statesman on June 5
and the call iu The Statesman for
the mass meeting of June O.wecann t
see tow The Statesman could head
his article as he did. All publications
say expreaaly.'The Liberal Citizens oi
the state of Texas pledging our un-
wavering devotion and loyalty to the
constitution of the United States and
the slate of Texas." Does The States-
man hold that a foreign born cannot
be a full Hedged citizen and does The
Statesman deny these foreign born
citizens the right to assemble
in convention or mass meeting
and state their grievances not as for-
eigners but as citizens; always stand-
in. on their rights guaranteed under
the constitution? The call for a maos
meeting was only the means to have
all liberal minded citizens irrespec-
tive nf nnrtv linen to take Dart in our
deliberations ad to join the league if
agreeable.
We are against our present Sunday
law and I think every thinking man
will and must be. We are for a more
liberal law in that respect and think
that our former Sunday law to close
on from 9. m. to 4 D. m. would be
more acceptable to all. The article
tnrougnouc speaaa always oi ioreigu-
ra tvhv rinf.B he fin iiv me writer
should know that all who have sign
ed the address to the people ol Texas
and also the oinoers of the league are
vory old citizens from aboutSl) to 40
and more years standing
and may be more identi-
fied with the interests of the
or aro than rh writer. I attach our
declaration of principles to this and
hope that in justice to us i ns states-
man will nuhlish the same bo that
everybody can judge for himself.
Z " wysohetzki
ChairmanCitizens' Liberal League of
Texas.
We have said we did not get "the
address" referred to Had we known
the full import of the meeting the
heading of the editorial would have
been different as we would have 86en
that upon second thought the German-Americans
were trying to ex-
tend their league to include other
Americans as our article advised.
The point of holding meetings is di-
rectly answered by the very
terms of our editorial. We
only dwelt upon the bad poN
icy of one distinctive national-
ity of our citizens holding a meeting
for any given public political pur-
pose. The right so to do is theirs of
course. In not one instance
was the word "foreigners" used
in any oilensive sense. It
either referred to those who had come
here with their customs or who
though born here inherited customs
and ideas foreign to our ualivecitizeu-
ship. That was all. Here are the
declarations ot principle asked to be
published:
article ii: oiiJEcr of the league.
We the Liberal Citizens of the state
of Texas claiming and exercising our
rights as citizens of this oouutry to
assemble iu convention and to delib-
erate concerning our sacred duties
and rights pledge again our unwaver-
ing devotion and loyalty to the con-
stitution of the United States and the
stale of Texas and pass the following
resolutions:
First Within the last decades the
personal freedom of the citizens of
this stte has been unjustly curtailed
by means of an illiberal and undemo-
cratic legislation and the most e acred
and inalienable rights granted by the
constitution of this country to each
and every citizen have been ruthless-
ly destroyed.
Second The present so-called Sun-
day laws and all other laws that are
directed against peisonal liberty are
au attack upon the most sacred rights
aud privileges ofthe American citi-
zen. Third We are moreover ol the
opinion the future welfare of our
country can only proceed from a ra-
tional system of education but that
our present system of public educa-
tion is iu need of speedy reform.
Fourth We consider it the duty of
every man who demands the protec-
tion of the law lor himself and his
property to become a citizen el' the
United States aud as such to assume
all the duties of a citizen.
Fifth We have for these reasons
assembled as American citizens and
have established organizations iu all
parts of tlie state iu order to strive
for the repeal of all such laws aa at-
tack our personal liberty and we are
determined to refuse our support to
every candidate for the legislative
branch of our government who does
not pledge himself to do all in his
power to destroy Buch oilensive legie.
lation.
Sixth We therefore appeal to all
free minded citizens of this country
both native born as well as natural
ized to aid us in our endeavors to re-
gain and maintain the rights and lib-
erties granted us under the constitu-
tion. In view of the fact that none of the
existing partiea has ever given ex-
pression to the principles of persoual
liberty we have as liberal citizens
organized ourselves without any de-
sign whatsoever to found upon these
principles a new party but only for the
purpose of making it the task of each
one of us to use his best efforts in
his respective party in the direction
of bringing the above principles into
prominence.
It will be noted that really the main
point in theae resolutions is found in
the second resolution. So that this may
be considered a clear cut fight against
the American Sunday law. Was the
information of The Statesman then
so iLUch at error as it stated that in-
formation in the second sentence of
the editorial in question which is
herewith subjoined?
Given then the history of the crea
tion of the association as now fur
nished by one of its members given the
objects of the association as furnished
in its constitution and by-laws and
given the piesent purpose of the asso-
ciation as now outlined to gather into
it other than German-Americans can
anyene say The Statesman's edi-
torial was unfair? Can they do aught
than admit that we treated the sub
ject most carefully most temperately
and with the keenest desire to serve
well all our German-American friends
and our citizens generally? This is
the editorial in question published
Monday morning.
THE FORMATION OF A FOREIGN'
LEAGUE.
We did not understand the full ob
ject of the call for a meeting of citi
zens to lorm a league at the court
house last Saturday night. We un
derstood however it was to be a
league composed generally oi German-
Americans and its obiect was toco-
operate in inducing the legislature to
repeal the Sunday laws and open up
Sunday to all kinds of amusements
that distinguish the day in Germany.
If this was so we are glad that there
was no response to the call as any
distinctive league of foreign-born citi-
zens having in view the engrafting of
foreign customs on American institu
tions is injudicious and wrong aud we
believe the great body of our loreign
fellow citizens agree with us. Wo
have no objection to a liberal indul
gence of the kind of amusements and
entertainments that the people born
and raised in another country are ac-
customed to if there is no disturbance
to the enjoyments and in this Sunday
matter no shock to the moral princi
pies of the people in this country.
foreigners cjming to this ouutry
have all the privileges the natives
have in the enjoyment of the largest
liberty consistent with the rights of
others that any nation in the world
enjoys and it certainly does seem that
ought to be all they should demand.
Again we think everything ought
to be done to cultivat e an American
spirit and theae people as they throw
od the yoke of bondage that galled
aud fretted them in their native land
might afford in consideration of the
freedom insured them here to respect
native prejudices that they
find here. Foreign born citi-
zens are passing into another
political atmosphere when they come
to this country and they ought rather
to train their lungs to breathe it than
yearn for an air that is contaminated
with the breath of a monarchy. In
other words these people ought
thoroughly to identify themselves
with the natives in the whole homo-
genous social regiim as they profess
to do in a political.
It may be that the puritan preju
dices that were brought to thia coun-
try at an early day colored too deeply
religious thought on the subject of the
observation of one day in the week
Sunday and it may be that modern
thought desires to modify the rules
and temper the prejudices upon the
subject of that day but the effort to
do eo should not be made exclusively
by foreign born citizens organized ex-
clusively for this purpose. If organi-
zation is necessary lec it be organiza
tion without reference to native1 na-
tionality. Germans alone might desire
to go farther and abolish all Sunday
laws but if co-operating with native
citizens for the same general purpose
the former would be held iu check by
the latter and the laws might be ao
amended as to suit all parties withou'
exciting the oppoaition of tie advo-
cates ofstrict Sunday laws We do
not believe in the organization of ao
exclusive foreign element on Ameri-
can soil. We give you all we enjoy
and we ask you to cultivate Ameri-
canism and co-operate with us in
modifying any laws that the enlight-
ened public regards as oppressive on
any one class of men. The Sunday
laws are made to protect a deep and
profound religious eentiment that
controls the whole native population
ot this country and any exclusive for-
eign iniiuence that would succeed in
having them amended would natur-
ally offend that native sentimeut
when a union ot American cit'zn
might not touch or inflame that
prejudice.
Shiloh's cure the sure cough and croup cure
is in gret denmu i. docket size contains 2i
doses only 25 ceuts. Chikkcn love it. Sold by
John H. Chi.es.
Convention of Millers.
Kansas Citv June 13 The first
annual convention of the Southwest-
ern Wheat Millers' association met at
the Coates house today. Oue of the
priucipal objects of the association is
to place before the people of the
Southwest the tecessity of opening
the JJe.xicun markets to America- mil-
lers. Some time ayo 1 was troubled with
an attack ot " rheumatism. I used
Chamberlain's Pain Balm and was
completely cured. I have since ad-
vised many of my friends aud custo-
mers to try the remedy and all speak
highly of it. Simon Goldbaum San
Luis Key Cal. For sale by J. J.
Tobin.
Her Hobby 1 Train. IS
Tho Tennessee smthorc Will Allen
Dromgoolo lias a hobby. It is walking
' 'tramping ' ' riio calls it. Nine or ten
miles of mountain walking is her daily
constitutional whoa at hor country
home. A short ordinary skirt a Uouso
waist and a fioft gray felt hat with a
history form her walking costume. Tho
history part comes in with tho only or-
nament of tho hat a bullet hole of
goodly Bize. Miss Drumgoole has made
a study of tho coal mines of tho Tennes-
see mountains. When tho war with tho
miners began on Coal crc sho hurried
up thero to sec all sho could of it. "Ev-
ery one of the state authorities was very
nico to rue"bhe adds in telling the
story "but if I wanted to see things for
myself I could not be sheltered any more
than they were. I messed with them
and one evening at enpper a bullet went
through the hat on my head. "
Mrs. Clara Iloyt Burleigh.
Mrs. Clara Hoyt Burleigh the new
president of the Woman's Relief corps
of Massachusetts is a daughter of
Georgo Hoyt M. D. prominent as a
physician and in antislavery times tho
friend and coworker of Phillips Gar-
rison aud other heroes. She is the sister
of Colonel George H. Hoyt known as
tho young lawyer from Boston who vol-
unteered to defend John Brown going
alono and unprotected to Harper's Fer-
ry Va. sent for that purpose by Gov-
ernor Andrew. Mrs. Burleigh was born
in Athol where she now resides. Sho is
a woman of education and raro gifts a
musician of thorough cultivation and
an artist of excellence. Sho is the wife
of Judgo Henry M. Burleigh an active
Grand Army man judge advocate of
tho department of Massachusetts. Bos-
ton Woman's Journal.
Atliintu Women Organize.
About 0 of tho leading women of
this city interested iu church and benev-
olent work mot recently and organized
a Woman Snffrago association. Mrs.
McLcndon a member of an aristocratic
family was elected president. Their
idea is to push tho question of woman
suffrage so ns to havo a good report to
make to tho national association which
holds its next meeting in this city.
Within a month there will bo woman
suffrage associations organized in oveiy
city in tho state. Tho preachers of this
city have taken a decided stand against
tho movement which only challenges
tho opposition of the women. Atlanta
Dispatch.
Women's Grievances.
An English periodical conducted ex-
clusively for women has been propound-
ing this question to its readers "What
is women's greatest grievance?'-' The
seven most popular grievance and tho
"comparative violence" of each are
shown in tho following table:
1 "One law for a man ami another for a
woman" D7
2 Numerical lireuonderanco of women 1!)
a Absence ol ('ood wrvants 11
i SmuUness of women's wages compared
witl) men's 12
5 That men refuse to tako women seriously 1
0 Tho overcrowded state of the female la-
hor market B
7 The absence of a grievance) 5
The Women's Movement In Germr.ny.
Tho women's movement in Germany
is making great progress. Tho congress
called by tho lady delegates to tho
World's fair at Chicago mot in Berlin
recently and it is tho intention of tho
ladies to form a union of all tho chari-
tablo and humane societies in Germany
in order that (ho work of tho societies
may bo conducted upon a broader plan.
A thorough exchange of views between
the different societies is proposed and
it seems likely that tho movement will
havo a decidedly beneficial effect upon
tho femalo mind in Germany. Berlin
Correspondent.
One of Europe. Beauties.
Princess Youssoupoff who has just
died at her homo near Paris was once
ouo of tho most beautiful women in
Europe. At a veiy early ago she was a
widow and refused many offers of mar-
riage. However when moro than CO
years old sho fell in love with a young
man named Chanveau and became his
wife. Two years ago he died and tho in-
consolable widow retired to her country
homo and there passed away. Princess
Youssoupoff had an income of $250000
annually and her turquoises aro said to
bo tho most wonderful in tho world.
Paris Journal.
Wife nnd Husband.
Hitherto it has been the custom to
speak of "husband and wifo" but it is
quite obvious that the tendency of ro-
cent legislation is to invert tho phrase.
This tendency will doubtless bo greatly
intensified "in tho good time coming"
when tho women who constitute a con-
siderable majority of tho population of
tho United Kingdom obtain the suffrage
and outvoto tho men inasmuch as the
"ono woman ouo vote" will have a ma-
jority of 7 per cent over tho other sex
when "ono man one vote" is tho uni-
versal rule. London Standard.
Why?
A contemporary complains that by the
proposed suffrage bill in Massachusetts
the ballot is to bo given to all kinds of
women those who have material inter-
ests and those who havo none those
who are intelligent aud those who are
not those who have character and those
who havo none. But why is it any more
wrong or dangerous to give the ballot to
all kinds of women than to all kinds of
men? If the ballot is to be restricted to
perfect women let us also restrict it to
perfect men. Boston Globe.
Their MUsion
Two women journalists have been sent
on a tour tf tlie world by tho Dundee
Courier and Weekly News. They aro
Miss F. Marru Imaudt and Miss Bessie
Maxwell and their purpose is not to put
a girdle round tho earth in 60 days as
Nellie Bly and Miss Bislaud did for
American journals but to study the so-
cial and economic conditions of women
in the various countries they visit. Their
trip will cover 20 000 miles. San Fran-
cisco Argonaut.
No Crutches Now
A Cripple With Rheumatism
Mads Perfectly Well By Hood'f
Sarsaparilla.
Mr. W. a. Clark
Little Kock Ark.
"C. I. Hood & Co. Lowell Mass. :
"Allow me to thank you for the great goofl
Hood's Sarsaparilla has done me. It is one ot
tlie best medicines I ever saw. For years I suf-
fered with rheumatism and headache heredi-
tary In our family. I tried everything I could
tar of for my own case but could not find any
relief until I began to take Hood's Sarsaparilla.
I must say I was one of the
Most Surprised Men
ever seen for long before I finished the first
bottlo I was so much lmyrowd and felt so much
better that I would often pinch myself to see If
I was the same man. I could hardly bellev.
that I was fur I could cat and sleep well and I
could go without my crutches and after I had
tfiirpn mv third bottlo was a new man and able
to do as much work as I ever could. I ha
laid my old crutches away as a
Memento of My Rheumatism
la the past. I always take pleasure In recom.
mending Hood's Sarsaparilla to suffering hu-
manity as tho best and only medicine that ever
did me any good. It has made a stout healthy
man out of me when I was such a wreck. I
Hood'snCures
also had trouble from sour stomaoh symptom
of dyspepsia and costlvenesss but Hood's Pills
have cured all that." "W. G. Clark 3C4 Ring
Street Little Rock Arkansas.
Hood's Pills arc prompt and efficient yet
any in action. Sold by all druggists. 25o.
-
SPEAKING AT GEORGETOWN.
Cyclone Davis Addresses a LargeCro wd
of Populists Joint Debate.
Special to The Statesman.
Gkorgktowjs- Tex. June 11. The
courthouse was crowded today even
to standing room with Populists eager
to hear their champion speaker Cy-
clone Davis. He was introduced by
Marion Wiiliams of Taylor. The usual
Third party doctrines were advocated
and many beavy blows were aimed at
the Democratic and Republican par-
ties. These were iuvariably received
with bursts of applause ani loud
hurrahs. For two and a half hours he
kept his audience attentive and seem
iufily much interested. The boys from
the forks of the creek began coming in
by daylight to be on hand to hear
C j clone expound true Jeffersonian
Democracy. For this purpose he had
pil-d in front of him nine volumes of
Jefferson and he proceeded to prove
to the satisfaction of himself and audi-
ence that the party calling themselves
Democrats today have strayed from
the fold and abandoned the old prin-
ciples. Only a few Democrats were to be
seen in the audience.
Mr. Craue will speak in joint debate
with Mr. Davis at Taylor tomorrow
m'eht.
Editor Williams of Taylor announc-
ed after the speaking today that they
were preparing for a crowd of 5000 peo-
ple there on that occasion. A crowd
will go from here.
Dead by the Roadside.
Special to The Statesman.
Houston June 12. Last night two
negroes got off an eastbound Southern
Pacific train at Sheldon near Houston.
This morning one of them copper
colored about 24 years old was found
dead uear the depot with two bullet
holes in his head
Read the End
of the story
first. That's
th part that
it'.
win interest
you most.
What you
want to know
and to con-
'a sider m
the result
of washing with Pearline.
And it's all told in two words
it saves. I lard work
wear and tear to things washed
(because there isn't any rub
nil) rub) time money all
saved.
You needn't bother with the
other chapters in the book
doubt as to Pearline's ability
fear as to the damage it may
do if it does the work &c.
There's nothing in them. Any
woman who uses Pearline
can tell you that.
L AT.ro eddlcrs and some unscrcp-
UCWctrC ulous grocers will tell you
"this is as good as" or'1 the
same as Pearlme." IT'S FALSE Pearline is.
never peddled and if your grocer sends you some-
thine in place of Pearline. do the honest thing
ttndittiuk iHl JAMES P.LE New York
m
rhCt
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.
The Austin Weekly Statesman. (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 8, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 14, 1894, newspaper, June 14, 1894; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth278699/m1/4/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .