The Daily Express. (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 349, Ed. 1 Saturday, December 15, 1906 Page: 2 of 12
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THE SAN ANTONIO DAILY EXPRESS: SATURDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 15, 1906.
an hcr.est man in this audience, who,
having his honor called in question, will
fail to go and answer? The man who
asks why I come is the man who feel*
that he Gould bo guilty of the things
charged against me. An honest man will
always answer. A man of courage and
Integrity cannot be kept from going
where his honor is assailed. My answer
to that editor and his kind is that if they
had not been • maligning me today I
would be at my post of duty in tlin Son-
ate of the United States repelling the
onslaughts of Foraker and his associates
in reference to the Brownsville tragedy.
Held Back the Evidence.
"Two months ago, when I had left
the State of Texas to go to the North
and assist in a canvass of doubtful
'States in the interest of the Democratic-
party these samt politicians attacked
me, ami instead of permitting me to go
where 1 could servo the Democratic
party, they compelled me to come hack
here to defend myself, I came back, I
laid the matter before the people of
Texas and when the discussion had
passed they were driven from the field.
I affirm to you today that they then
had in their possession every fact and
every scrap of paper that they have
used since, and yet during those six
weeks when I traversed the State call-
ing the people from their business and
their homes to hear me, not one of them
dared to face me with these accusations.
Not one of them dared to produce these
forged instrument s a"d to base upon
them any accusation against my honor.
But they waited until in the course of
time 1 returned to Washington to take
up my duties sis a public servant, and
three dnya before Congress was to as-
semble they promulgated this new at-
tack. My countrymen, if they believed
these papers to be genuine and if they
believed them damaging, why did they
not lay them before the people of Texas
before the primaries? They had every
one of thr m then, and they knew, when
the people of Texas passed upon my
nomination, everything that they now
kn6w. Was it not their duty as honest
; and Democrats to lay that bare?
s.>me bitter enemies, and there
)babl.v some of them in this au-
and \ et not one, of them will
nd up and face this intelligent
1 justify the conduct Of these
WILL BE IN SAN ANTONIO TODAY.
citizer
] hav
a re p
dience, a
dare to s
audience
men in withholding from you any fact
that would render me unworthy to be-
come your Senator.
"Not onl> were they guilty in with-
holding these facts before the primaries,
but they failed in their duty to you and
to common fairness when they failed to
produce them 'luring the six weeks that
1 traversed this State in an open and
fair canvass before the people.
"They withheld them, my countrymen,
for a willful and malicious purpose,
knowing that it' they produced them
they would be stamped as forgeries. They
withheld them until the very last hour
that they could produce them, with the
effect that they sought to arrive at.
When a Lawsuit Is Not a Lawsuit.
"Theg they produced them in the
course of a lawsuit. You know, my
countrymen, that the average man is
inclined to look upon papers produced
in the progress of a lawsuit as some-
thing which bears the color of truth.
They expected to do precisely as they
did do: to withhold these documents un-
til the lawsuit had come up, and, by
the way. this lawsuit was not a law-
suit. It ought to be styled, 'The suit of
the Attorney General and other conspir-
ators to oust J. W. Bailey from the
United States Senate.'
"They withheld them until they were
forced to produce them if they went t<»
trwl They never intended to go to trial
at that term of the court. When they
were on the very verge of it the At-
torney General himself amended his pe-
tition after the court had Stricken out
some allegations as scandalous and ir-
relevant. After the defendant had !
amended his petition, after the Attorney
General had amended his, after notice
of continuance had been given in open I
court, after the Judge had left the bench l
at 7 o'clock in the evening, an order was
Issued by the Attorney General's depart- |
ment for the production of certain pa-
pers. Immediately the demand to pro-
duce the papers was telegraphed to the
papers throughout the Tfnlted States, to
every nook and corner of America.
,'What could the printing of that no-
tice in the papers of New York have
to do with the case? The dissemination
of that news was the only object of
the Attorney General. It was done to
prejudice the people of the United States
against a Senator from Texas. Not only
are the circumstances under which the
papers were filed proof of conspiracy,
| ■■'
k
of people, it is in th«* records of
gross."
Record on Rate Bill.
SENATOR JOSEPH W. BAILEY.
Tyf U. BAILEY'S visit to San Antonio today is the first he has paid to tho Alamo
* City since tho opening of the campaign against his re-election by the Hous-
ton Good Government Club. Mr. Bailey has many friends in San Antonio, and
there is no doubt he will be warmly welcomed by them on this occasion.
IN the end you'll say,
"I guess I'll send him
a box of cigars." It's
the old story of Christmas
—doing at last what was the
obvious thing to do at first.
If individual gifts must
be brought within a limit of
coft, our Stores can take the
be£t care of you. For ex-
ample these boxes of 50:
Orlando Bismarcks $5.00
(Beat Domestic Made)
Havana-American
Regalias 4.00
(High-Grade Clear Havana)
La Belle Senora Concha
Especial 3.50
(Clew Havana)
Palma de Cuba Londres
(Clear Havana)
Roxboro Invincibles
(Pine Domestic)
Gen. Braddock Colonials
(Mild Domestic)
Santa Bana Perfe&os
(Domestic)
3.00
2.50
2.00
1.50
Every one of the brands
above named is a United
Cigar Store value. It's a
quality list.
Scores of other brands of
equal fame at prices as
varied. Costlier cigars, of
course—notably our Stan-
dard brands of Imported
cigars in fresh goods.
And in our principal
Stores a great display of
smokers' novelties collected
at home and abroad for
Christmas.
UNITED
CIGAR STORES
COMPANY
but some of the very papers which the
Attorney General called upon the defen-
dants to deliver were in the possession
of the Attorney General at the very
time the demand was made.
"in < tod's name, how could the defen-
dant produce the papers when the At-
torney General himself had them?
"But they miscalculated thi- man with
whom they had to deal. Jiad.it been
some men they might have driven nim
from the public service in disgrace, but
1 was not that kind.
Denied Right to See Papers.
"Conscious that i had done no wrong
I did not fear to face them in any form
in the world. And as soon as 1 had !,een
advised of their machinations I took the
train to come to Texas. I demanded the
privilege of inspecting thosa papers and
they refused to grant that privilege.
V> hy, if they were genuine, might not I
have examined them? The meanest
criminal that ever sat before a jury 111
this courtroom was entitled to see any
papers that were held by the Suite as
evidence against him. Ask any lawyer
here in Helton -there are lawyers in the
town who had the bad judgment and
the worse Democracy to join in this
crusade against me—but ask them should
they be an attorney for the worst crim-
inal that breathes, whether or not they
would insist upon his right to see docu-
ments that the State should hold against
him? And yet the Attorney General,
acting for all the people of Texas, refused
a United States Senator permission to
inspect papers said to bo damaging to
his record.
"As an honest official and a Democrat
he should have sent for mo and said:
'Bailey, I have these papers in my pos-
session and they reflect, upon you. I
give you the bene fit of believing they
ai'o wrong, or at le;tst I give you the
privilege of showing that they are wrong
before I endorse them with my official
action.'
"In t'.e very letter I made the demand
In I denounced the documents as forger-
ies. He asked two hours in which to
consider my demands. Ho called his
cabinet about him and took three hours;
he refused my request, but the next day
he gave it to all the press. But, mind
you, the printers did not see the papers
he had in his possesion. They got only
what was said to be copies. Some of
these papers are genuine and corroborate
what I havo said.
"it was not my idea to ask to see these
documents. 1 don't know enough about
politics for that; it was done on the
counsel of my' wiser friends.
Obligation, Not Receipt.
"I did not see them and then I told the
people what I kn w about them. When
the matter was published the first men-
tioned was a demand obligation. I hail
told the people it was a demand obliga-
tion, but they say it is a voucher, a re-
ceipt. They .say: 'You gave the obliga-
tion to pjorce. Pierce got the money
it rn ih" Waters-Pierce Company.' Yet
when tie v publish it they show that it
Was <1 arged up as bills receivable. I
know nothing about the business of
Pierce and th. Waters-Pierce Oil Com-
pany.
"Th mm 1 onfess that I had busl-
nes' ith I'lHie, They are liars. 1 don't
cc -s anything, i assert it. and I did in
fll my sp< eehes. When I was called
bac c to T» >bi i >re to answer distorted
tacts about th. Tennessee property and
they said tin Standard Oil Company
owned that property, I proved that th?
Standard had nothing whatever to do
with tho property. They were lying from
force of habit. I showed that not a dol-
lar was Standard Oil property, and on
every stump in Texas for six weeks I
stated that T not only represented Pierce
in the Tennessee matter, but that i had
other transactions with him.
"I have twenty times helped to pro-
cure pardons for men in prison, but
never a dollar have I charged for such a
service. Yet there are good lawyers and
pood men in Texas who consider that a
legitimate service to be charged fore-
men as good as I am. I havo never for a
fee appeared before a City Council, a
Commissioners Court, a legislative body,
before departments of tho Government,
Federal, State or municipal.
No Crime to Borrow Money.
"They say I ought not to have bor-
rowed money from Pierce. If it is a crime
to borrow money I plead guilty. If it
is a question of a United States Senator
that he has nev r borrowed money, then
how many of you in this house could
qualify? I would have borrowed from
the Waters-l^jerce Oil Company as quick
as I did from H. C. Pierce. There was
no legislation In Congress of which I am
a member that the Waters-Pierce Oil
Company was interested in. i have bor*
rowed money from a National bank,
but 1 havo never had a National banker
ask me to pass a law to favor his busi-
ness. The truth is that six years ago
they were telling it all over Texas that
I borrowed money from everybody and
had never paid any of it back. How many
men do you suppose there are in Con-
gress who have never borrowed money
from a National bank? Yet do you think
any member of the House or Senate
would be asked to favor the banks with
laws because of such loans?
"These men demanded that the de-
fendant produce a draft which they said
I had drawn on tho Waters-Pierce Oil
Company in favor of Henry &, Stribbling.
"1 stated in Washington before I left
that I had never drawn a draft on the
Waters-Pierce Oil Company in my life,
for Henry & Stribbllng, either for them or
for anybody else. In his open letter to
me Mr. Davidson then varied the ques-
tion and said: *
" 'Did you not draw a draft Apr $1500
in favor of Henry & Stribbling fm H. C.
Pierce or J. D. Johnson?' The manner iri
which he asked the question was equiva-
lent to a positive assertion that I had.
1 said that if he could prove that I ever
dre w a draft or endorsed a draft or ap-
proved a draft or order or note or mem-
orandum of any kind in favor of Henry
& Stribbling or either of them for $1500 or
for any other amount, I would resign my
seat in the United States Senate and re-
tiro forever from public life. That is a
sharp issue. Now do you think he has
that draft?"
Says Draft Is a Forgery.
Ho said that th© draft, if it existed, is
a forgery, and that his enemies are afraid
to produce it, knowing that the report
of the banks through which it would
have passed would soon prove it as such.
"Some of my enemies have said that
they have seen the draft," continued the
speaker. "Some of the bitter ones have
said that they havo even held it in their
hands. And yet Mr. Davidson says that
he has never shown it to anyone. Now
they can end this contest forever. They
can retire me forever—not in defeat, but
in confusion and disgrace, just by pro-
ducing the draft which they say they
have."
The speaker then went into his connec-
tion with the re-admission of the Waters-
Pierce Oil Company into the State and
his belief that the company was at that
time an independent concern, much of
which was based on the suit of Attorney
General Crane, when not enough evidence
was introduced against the company to
warrant the submission of the ouster
case to the jury. He went over the argu-
ments of his other speeches made re-
cently in various parts of the State.
He spoke of the good that the com-
pany hud done the oiaie along cotton seed
oil lines, and his belief that if the com-
pany was not connected with a trust, it
would be a good institution to have in
the State. He was applauded frequently
and with much enthusiasm.
"They want to judge me now by the
facts now developed, according to a con-
dition about which I knew nothing. Why
don't they aav Crane, who was Attorney
General, knew the Standard Oil Company
owned the stock in the Waters-Pierce
Oil Company and did not then try to
prove it? He certainly had a suggestion
of it and tried to prove it and did not.
and i accepted tho judgment of that
court.
"Davidson In his open letter to me
said the Waters-Pierce Oil Company
came back to Texas under my guidance
and support. I did not ask him to prove-
that statement, but I said that if- he
would find one honorable man who would
swear 1 was ever consulted about the
dissolution or was consulted about the
reorganization. I would resign. That is
what they want me to do.
Told Pierce to Obey the Laws.
"I told Pierce, the only way open to
him to do business in Texas was to dis-
solve the offending corporation, organize
a new one and come into the State with
clean hands and obey the laws. If he
had done a» I told him there would
never have been trouble with him again
They think it" they make the charge and
make it often enough they will get many
to believe it. What does it amount to—
an attack on my honesty. I said I would
have done all they havo charged. I did
do. so far as being attorney for tho
Waters-Pierce Oil Company, which I -be-
lieved to be an independent concern. It
is not pretended that the transaction is
related in the remotest degree to my
service in the Senate. The sum and sub-
stance of it all is that they charge I did
not tell the people of Texas the truth.
But when they want to try me for not
telling the truth, I object to some of the
jurors. 1 have never seen men or devils
enough to make me tell a lie, but they
have lied about me until they need tho
mercy of God to save their dying souls.
"The Dallas News says that my prac-
tice of the law has caused me to loso
the viewpoint of people. Now that is a
grave charge, and if it is true it is suffi-
cient to condemn me. but they ought to
have brought it forward before the pri-
maries, because I have not cast a single
vote in the Senate since the primaries
were held on the 28th of July, when the
people commissioned me to speak in part
tor them during the next six years. The
Senate has not been in session since that
time. Therefore 1 have loat the viewpoint
ent into his Con-
0 especially during
1 Tela ted ids work
of the people »s
interests. He th"n
meats to the rate
if his work on the
e injunctive power
that the court is
i the hands of cor-
will of the peo-
t by saying that
will finally put
riginally drafted
1 gO rut Of the
put that amend-
If
i and Me Daniel
wisdom of tlvi
will be nobody
- And yet th»>v
roorition infill-
ipers say that I
of the people, I
• on-1 singh' in-
ir assertion."
The speaker then
gressional record, ii
the last Congress,
there in the intere
against the; corporat
v. ent over the am-
bill. He then spok
proposition to limit
of the courts fayir
an effective weapon
porations to defe.it
pie and the commi;
He Ho n said;
• r will close this
if .1 stay in Congrc
that amendment as
it into the rate bill
F-enate the Congress v.
ment in the waste-!. . k
"Culberson and liacc
have questioned tee
j amendment and thev
there to wage its b-itth
say I am subject to
ences. When the new
have lost the viewpoiu
challenge them to - in-
stance in support of th
Mr. Bailey said:
"Pierce offered me $50,000 a year to
retire from the Senate and become his
personal counsel, i declined it. 1 do
not love money enough to leave the
service of the people as long as they
trust me."
Referring to legislatures he said: "If
they are not willing to abide the party
nomination, let them give up the elec-
tion they got by party nomination and
we will fight it out. The scoundrel who
hugs his office and violates his instruc-
tion.1; cannot be trusted. I have no fear
of the result. They only hope to soil
my name. 1 have guarded the interests
of Texas. No man . ver assailed you in
my presence that 1 did not answer back,
in Congress, on the stump, everywhere, t
have upheld the honor of my State.
When I have served the next six years
I can come back with the proud chal-
lenge on my lips that in no single in-
stance have I neglected the interests of
Texas, and I will do that again and
again as long as I see fit to offer and
you see fit to elect me,"
The people crowded about hjm at the
conclusion and applauded him. He went
over to Temple In the interurban car
and went to the home of his sister, Mrs.
Dr. Rucker. until the night meeting.
Senator Bailey arrived at 10;4f o'clock
this morning and made an address at
Ray lor College. Dr. Adison of the school
had the four hundred girls of the insti-
tution awaiting the Senator at the chapel.
His remarks were not political. He dined
at the residence of Dr. J. D. Law.
BAILEY HERE TODAY.
Senator J. W. Bailey will arrive in Ran
Antonio at 7:15 o'clock on the Katy
Flyer from Temple, where he delivered
an address last night. He spoke yester-
day afternoon at Belton.
Senator Bailey's visit in San Antonio
will be unostentatious. He will be met at
the depot by Jot Gunter and a small
party of other friends. He will remain
in Mr. Gunter's office during the day and
will meet a number of his political
friends. Sunday will be spent at the
home of Colonel Gunter. From San An-
tonio Senator Bailey goes to Houston.
BAILEY AT TEMPLE.
Large Audience Listens to Speech in
Temple Opera House.
Special Telegram to The Express.
TEMPLE, Tex., Dec. 14.~Tonight, in
the Temple opera house, Senator Bailey
spoke to an awjUence that occupied every
seat in the building. He was introduced
by Col. P. L. Downs, and those occupying
seats on the stage were: Dr. Rucker,
Colonel Campbell, Mr. Patterson. Captain
Jarrett and John P. Willis of this city.
The audience was a very attentive one.
The Senator opened his speech somewhat
differently than at Belton. He told of
the events prior to the primary election;
how ho had gorn- before the people and
none of these charges were made, but
that as soon as the state convention had
declared the result there was a simul-
taneous publication of the Good Govern-
ment Club circular and later the filing of
the Attorney General's suit. etc. He fol-
lowed the lines of his Belton speech, and
at the close of the address the people
crowded about him and warmly congrat-
ulated him.
Thomas Will Stump Comanche.
Special Telegram to The Express.
DALLAS, Tex., Dec. 14.—Hon. Cullen
F. Thomas, before departing for Waco
via Fort Worth this afternoon, announced
that he will take part in the Comanche
County special Senatorial primary, called
to be held Dec. 29. Mr. Thomas says ho
intends to deliver several speeches in
Comanche County against the re-election
of Mr. Bailey.
Kendall Officials Oppose Bailey.
Special Telegram to The Express.
BOERNE, Tex., Dec. 14.—Only three of
the county officials of Kendall County
voted the Democratic ticket at the recent
election, and these three are nuanimously
opposed to the re-election of Senator
Bailey.
Will Vote for Bailey.
Special Telegram to The Express.
EL PASO, Tex., Dec. 14.—Charles Davis
Jr., El Paso's Representative to the
Legislature, today made the statement
that he will vote for Bailey for Senator,
"as El Paso seems to favor him, and 1
am for him."
—
TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY
Take LAXATIVE RROMO Quinine Tab-
lets. Druggists refund money if it fails to
cure. E. W. GROVE'S signature is on
each box. 25c.
TWELVE MEN REPORTED DEAD.
Tug Boat Crosby and Steamer Ireland
Said to Have Been Sunk Off
Duluth.
DTJLUTH, Minn., Dec. 14.—It is report-
ed tonight that the steamer Ireland,
which was being towed to Duluth, sank
near Ashland, Wis., and that one of
her crew was lost.
The tug boat Geo. Crosby, with eleven
men on board, is also reported sunk.
-Qy
The Texas Wonder.
Cures ail Kindey, Bladder and Rheu-
matic Troubles; sold by all druggists, or
two months' treatment by mail, for 11.
Dr. E. W. Hal!, 292S Olive St., St. Louis,
Mo. Send tor Texas testimonials.
ONE DEAD, WN* INJURED.
Explosion in West Virginia Mine Has
Fatal Results.
BLUEFIELDS, W. Va., Dec. 14—The
explosion ot 1000 pounds of powder on
three mino cars at TSickman today caused
the death of one person and tho injury
oi' nine others, two of whom probably
fatally.
Joseph Steele was killed and Alex Fin-
nay mid Mrs. Csorgo Johnson were prob-
ably fatally injured.
The men were on the powder cars and
the woman waa In a house near by. Th"
powder was in tins and was b*lng moved
from the freight cars to the magazine,
when sparks from the motor set it afire.
The cars were blown into splinters and
the detonation rocked the entire village.
STORE OPEN UNTIL 10 O'CLOCK TONIGHT
istmas Presents For Him
Junior Senator Expected to Arrive
This Morning for Brief Visit to
His Friends,
*J ; :
Novelties
Gentlemen's Shaving Sets
$2.50
E will ,be disappointed on
Xmas morning" if he does
not receive something that he
can use. Most men want a
House Coat, Bath Robe or
Smoking Jacket. Buy him one
and he will stay at home more.
Our assortment is the swellest
in the City. Come in today and"
look them over $5 up
Suits and Overcoats
For Xmas Presents
Not a man living would not appreciate
one of our fine Home-Tailored Suits—
Overcoats or Cravenettes.v See them
when you are in today $10 to $45
Other Xmas Articles
Useful to the Marv
Hosiery 25c up
Handkerchiefs, in silk 50c up
Initial Linen Handkerchiefs... ,15c to 25c
(Boxes of 6 75c and $1.50)
Suspenders with solid Gold and Silver
Buckles $1 to $5
(Other Fancy Silk Suspenders 75c to $1.50
President Suspenders, all in fancy boxes 50c
Muffler, Reefer, and Extra Large Silk Handkerchiefs .$1 up to $6
NECKWEAR—GLOVES—CUFF BUTTONS — FOBS — SHIRT BUTTONS —TIE PINS, ETC.
i ' THE NEWEST TO BE HAD —-n
Drinking Cups. Silver, Gold
Lined
li-nch Case $1.00
3-inch Case $1.50
6-inch Case $2.00
Purses, Wallets, Bill Bonks
Ladies' Dressing Cases _ .. $1 to $3.50
$3 to $15 See our full lino of Leather Novelties Poker Sets . . . $3 vip
Gentlemen's Dressing Cases
$2.50 to $15
tMM. *UkZA.*s+AJUUi!OS>SJXA
LUKIN IS PRESIDENT.
High School Principal Is Chosen
Chief Executive of the Scien- 1
tific Society.
At a meeting of tho newly elected
board of directors of the Scientific So-
ciety held last night at the rooms of the
society in the Stevens Building tho of-
ficers for the ensuing year were elected
and standing committees appointed.
The new officers of the society are:
Prof. Charles J. Lukin, president; Col.
George LeRoy Brown, United States Ar-
my, first vice president; Dr. W. Ij.
Bringhurst, second vice president; Dr.
Malono Duggan, third vice president; Ed-
ward W. Heusinger, secretary; Capt. J.
K. Elgin, assistant secretary; E. G. Cer-
vantes, treasurer.
The committees aro as follows:
Executive—Col. Georgfc LeRoy Brown,
9:45 o'clock at the crossing of the Katy
and the street car line on Arlington
Heights Avenue, in which a street car
was almost completely demolished and
the driver and mules instantly killed.
The unfortunate man was Scott Bratch-
er, who had been in the employ of the
street car company sinco Thanksgiving
Day.
He had been to Trinity University—
the end of the car line—this morning on
one of his regular trips and was return-
ing to the city. He had crossed the
track of the Central, and in attempting
to cross the Katy tracks his car was
struck by a southbound passenger train
with a terrific crash, which was heard a
distance of 300 or 400 yards. The car
was reduced to splinters, which were
scattered along the track for several feet.
FINCK'S 6c Havana cigars.
SEEKING TO END STRIKE.
Business Men's Committee to Confer
With Railroad Management,
Special Telegram to The Express.
LAREDO, Tex., Dec. 14.—The business
rr.«-n of the city held a meeting here to-
day and appointed a committee to con-
fer with the officials of the Texas Mexi-
can and National Railroads looking
toward the settlement of the strike at
the National shops. This strike has now
been on over a month and tho shops
have been closed.
Standard Raises Employes' Wage3.
NEW YORK, Dec. 14.—The Standard
Oil Company announced that It would
advance the wages of all its employes
now receiving less than $100 a month hy
10 per cent, beginning Jan. 1.
IT LIFTS YOU ABOVE
THE CARES OF LIFE
- - •• • .
Best flavor
because
it is the
Best
WfiisKey
CHARLES J. L.UKINS
L
RED TOP RYE WHISKEY
is aged in charred casks, in warehouses flooded with sunshine, distilled from best Northern rye.
selected by a member of tho firm, and purest water from wells sunk hundreds of feet into solid
limestone. Goes to the heart, not to tho head. "//'suptoyou
Ferdinand Westhe&raer ft Sons, Cincinnati, O., Louisville, Ky., St. Joseph, Mo
united States Army, chairman; Prof.
Charles J. Lukin, Edward W. Heusinger,
!•:. G. Cervantes, Capt. J. B. Elgin, Maj.
Henry D. Snyder and Dr. Malone Dug-
gan.
Program—Solon Stewart. chairman;
Dr. M. J. Bliem and Dr. Fredrio Hadra.
Publication—Prof. Bernard Mackensen.
chairman; George Roe and Dr. W. L.
Bringhurst.
There were present in addition to the |
directors: Capt. Edgar Schramm, Judge
Thomas Tj. Paschal, F. B. Headley, Otto
Hagemann and others.
PILES CURED'"IN" 6 TO 14 DAYS.
PAZO OINTMENT is guaranteed to cure
any case of litching, Blind, Bleeding or
Protruding Piles in 6 to 14 days or money
refunded. 50c.
MAN AND MULES KILLED.
Frightful Street Car Accident in
Waxahachie in Which One
Life Is Lost.
Special Telegram to Tlie Express.
WAXAHACHIE. Tex., Dec. 14.-A fear-
ful accident occurred this morning about
Texas Pride
Combines all of thte positive excellencies known to the science
cf Brewing. It is Pure, Wholesome, InviEorating. It will im-
prove your digestion, assimilate your food and will put the
bloom of youth on your cheeks. ^
Drink It
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The Daily Express. (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 349, Ed. 1 Saturday, December 15, 1906, newspaper, December 15, 1906; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth440888/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.