The Temple Times. (Temple, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 30, Ed. 1 Friday, June 25, 1897 Page: 3 of 8
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PSP
THE TEMPLE TIMES JUNE jfc 1897.
PROFESSIONAL
QOX & WELCH,
Attorneys ft Counsellors at L»w
P. O. Building, Avo. A.
We attend
legal busi-
to all
ness.
Promptly
])R. R. W. NOBLE,
Practice confined to Rectal,
Genito, Urinary and Skin
Diseases.
Offlce under^Maeonic HallCor. Main St.
and iSqaare.
Temple, - - Texas.
J)R. F. H, MacRAE,
Physician and Surgeon.
101-8 W. Avenna A, (Willcnx A Bnrwltz Bldg.
TEMPLE, TEXAS.
Offlce Honrs8 to 10 A12 to 2.
Telephone*. -Offlce, 187; Res. 88-8rings.
Residence 114 Adams Are. cor. 4th St.
Has letters of endorsement from state, coun-
ty, city and church oilicials, together with a
number of. prominent private citizens wno
know him from whence be came, -Atlanta, Ga.
C. A. BRAND. LEWIS WOOD.
BRAND & WOOD,
LAWTEBS.
TEMPLE, _TEXAS
NEW TIME CARD FOR THE
Gulf, Colorado 4 Santa Fo Rj
fm
Still lit It!
Selling Groceries and Feed Stuif at the same
old stand. Why are we still here? Because we please
our customers—treat them fair and square and make
their interest our interest. Want to make a change in
your groceryman? We dont wonder at it- Come ’roiind
and let us figure with you on a bill, you will then see
how we do business, and save money for yourself.
BLAC K :: BROS
Reliable Grocers, 1st Street.
Not
Incorporated
TEMPLE.
No.
1 Express, south bound,
6Limited, southbound,
i Express, north bound,
8 Limited, north bound,
41 Expgees, from West,
42Express, westbound,
Locals.
IS sooth bound,........
14 North bound........
48 west bound,........
ARRIYK. I.KAVK.
1:10, pm-l:30. pm.
1:46, am—1:5* sm.
2:t0, pm—8:00 pm,
2:80, am—2:27, sm.
12:86, pm...........
.......... 3 00. pm.
......... 7:00. sm.
......... 7:00, sm.
......... 7:80, am
BELL COUNTY LUMBER CQ.
E. A. VISSER, Mgr
Grille Carey Lombard Lumber Co.
We have the best grades and largest assortment of strictly
Long Leaf Yellow Pine Lumber
in the County. Best All-Heart Shingles.
White Pine Windows, Doors, Blinds, Mouldings
Everything in stock is the best that can be bought and
this statement is guaranteed The only strictly Long-Leaf
stock in Bell County
The Old Stand, 12th St. nest to Santa Fe Freght Depot.
TEMPLE.
TEXAS
Local freight trains carry passengers, but not
baggage Connections made as follows :—
Train No. 1, south bound makes direct con-
nection at Milano with I. AG. V. train for
Hearne, Palestine and Longview.
TrainNo. 5, south bound, makes connection
with 8. A. A, A P. st Cameron and Wallis,
and with Southern Pacific at Rosenberg for tbe
west and to Wharton, Victoria and Beeville.
TrainNo. 2, Northbonnd. makes direct con-
nection st McGregor with the Cotton Belt east
to Waco, Corsicana Tyler, Texarkana, Mem-
phis and all points east; at Ft. Worth with M,
K.AT. and C R I. AT., and Cotton3elt
Train No 8, nor! h bound, connects at Morgan
with the Texas Central west, at Ft. Worth with
theT A P. east and west, and Trans-Conti-
nental Division with Cotton Belt and C R. I. A
T., at Dallas withT. P. east, and st Paris with
T. P. east.
Trains No 6 and8, limited, are solid vesti-
bule between Galveston snd 3t. Louis.
For rates.and other infonnatiou call on or ad
dress R. D. FIELD, Passenger agent.
G. B. SIMANK
I
Will Furnish Ice this season at the Lowest Market Price and he always
----ON TIME-
|5P“Call For Him.......
Katy Time Table
NORTH BOUND.
So. 2. - 4.35 am No. 4, - 148pm
SOUTH BOUND,
Nol, - 12.41am No 3, - 12 41pm
To BELTON. From
No *6, 100am No 36, 11 50 pm
No 39, 1 00pm No 40, 11 50 a m
No41, 6 00pm No4J, 4 00pm
A PARSON OF THE OLD SCHOOL.
An 'umble preacher. Parson Blue, who made
no great pretense-
An* yet you knew on aeein’ him be had hia
share er sense.
Somehow his face, clean-shaved an* broad,
had on It such a look
As called to mind the moonlight throwed
upon a quiet brook;
Hla lack er learnin’ was made up by love
fur ever’one.
That made the old world, seems to me,
awing closer to the sun;
An* when he grasped your han’ you said
hlB heart was kind an' true—
It sent a strength all through your frame,
that han’ er Parson Blue.
Wurn’t know'd beyond the county line—
Jest speakin’ of the lajJ’—
But I haln't said hla name wum’t spoke
above the ^glitter man.
He preached In rjanggjge that was plain,
an’ never would abuse—
“They know noWhat they do" wua hard
as any phrase he’fLwss;
Hla creed wua: "Help folks up the hlU, an’
strange enuff to say
'Twill make the |l|mer all you- load as you
go on yer way,"
That’s all—but «rten I come to die, I’m
wlahln’ that JTknew
That men oould^wtlte upon my tomb; "He
Lived Like Parson Blue.”
—Will T. Hale, la Nashville American,
If you are going ^4!^^
NOR^TH
tAyaatfs j
ftV/J
felte (J
Tennessee
Fv
(entennial
V J)
imposition
U
jfashville.
m
“ABOVE RBBIES.”
BY BRADSHAW ISHBRWOOD.
I don’t know what it was that made
Sairey Mott 6eem eo happy; there was
little enough in her life or surround-
ings to cause such brightness; but no
matter the day^ or the worries and
vexation that came with it, Sairey was
always the same, singing over her
work, ready with a smile and cheery
word to the passers-by.
“It puts life and hope in one to
have a word in passing with Sairey,”
the old people would say; whilst the
younger generation—especially the
young men—held her in reverence as
a queen. She was one of themselves;
yet there was a difference. No coarse
Sairey when she realized Tom’s un-
worthiness.
“I suppose there iB but one fellow
one can fancy,” she used to think. “I
don’t seem to have no sort of feeling
for any of the others; there’s Sam
Sharman, as steady as old Time; and
Ben Dobbs, with his house and tidy
bit of garden; but it’s the garden, not
Ben, and the pigs, not Sam, as seems
to come first, and with Tom there’s
no sort of background. It’s jest Tom
that shows the difference, I s’pects.”
So time passed on, and Sairey had
long since stepped through the brook-
let that changed maidenhood into
that of womanhood. She was now
a tall, strongly-built woman, not very
much past 40, hut she looked older.
Her brown hair was streaked with
gray, and her soft brown eyes—well,
they had grown softer and more ga-
»lle-like. Increasing years were not
unbecoming to her; and if her smile
was a trifle sadder, it was still more
common, as were her cheery words.
Tom Luke had long since left the
■village and had gone to the otherside
of Dartles, where he worked, and
since the old people’s death he had
not visited his native place, but re-
port said he had steadied down con-
siderably, and was now prosperous
and* well-to-do, and talked of getting
roamed. “Well-to-do,” generally
meant matrimony in the villagers'
minds. These reports, from time to
time, reached Sairey’s ears. “Some
one that has private means,” was one
story; another, “that it was an old
fancy.”
“P’raps men are different,” Sairey
would say to herself, “and can shift
their fancies. Steadied down a bit!
—thank the Lord for that! I reckon
is %
. 0 he’ll make a tidy husband. But I
okc or noisy word was over said be- wjsh j w,, b;t Jfter
«* wh° w tmM to win bar
mmhr “Ess::::
A vniRBinoninma Sairey would give up all hope in Tom. 1 om’t,,ev oonsidftred hcld lier?filf
She believed in his oft-spoken prom-
ises long after the rest of his friends at a high value> but each believ,,l it
had ceased to do so; but at last she, was against nature that Sairey Mott
too, was obliged to give up all belief should die an o](1 maid.
in him, and had to tell the young man j And it became the habit of every.
she could keep company with him no ono f0 run for sajrey jf they were in
, | trouble. If any difficulty arose in
There s some one else a-coming their uneventful life, they would say:
after jer. he had cried, fiercely. “Let’s hear what Sairey say's.” It
Some one that has more to offer, I scemed to bu ber mission to be a sort
rec on. Ah, Sairey, I didnt use to of friend-oi’-all-worklo the whole vil-
think you was to be bought along that aild gbe accepted her mission
road. Ye re like the rest of yer kind. with aI1 the iove of her heart, and so
All yer women has yer price. _ j willing a cheerfulness, that, as the
VILLE RAILROAD CO*
Presents the beat possible service
from Son them to all Northern
cities, and will carry yon through
Nashville, the location of the
Greatest Exposition this country
has ever had, with the possible
exception of the Columbian.
T)OUND TRIP TICKETS AT
? •*- -«. JjDW RATES ******
Will be on sale from nil points to
Nashville on every day between
May 1 and oct. 31, <897.
Hot fall information write to
l & KINGSLEY, Trav. Pass. Agt, Mas, Tex.
t P. ATMOBE, Gen’l Pass. Agt., Louisville, Ky.
* ,, . * . * . willing 11 LllUUliUllHrScij UliU, ilH UlU
Tom — piteously — you know| neighbors said, it “put fresh life into
those words am t true. All as I wants a body. to the sick her care was
is an upright man-—one vho has got worth a power of doctor’s stuff. God
agood name. Can thee offer me that,] bless her!” And so lie did in grant-
■ Caveats, and Trade-Marks obtained and nil Pat-j
|ent business conducted for Moceratf. Flee. *
iOur Office is orpositi; U. S. Patent Officc<
land we can secure patenWn less tune than those 7
jremots from Washington. , < 5
i Send model, drawing or photo., with dcsCnp-j
'don. We advise, if patentable or not, free of J
^charge. Our fee not due till patent Is secured,
i A Pamphlet, “Bow to Obtain Patents,” with
i co; t of same m the U. S. and foreign countries
- \9tnc free. Address, %.
.C. A. SNOW & CO.j
lad?”
But the man o^nly lauglied scorn
ing her her heart’s desire long after
, „ . i - --------she had ceased to think of it, save in
'?rs " as.°”8■ P,yicel the way we think of something very
didn t she hope she might get it? ’ beautiful or rare that can never he
1 oor Sairey. with the perversity so 0UrS; a possession we liave ceased to
o en found in the heart of a good c0Vet because it seemed to he alto-
woman, her heart was touched by the gether out o{ our reach.
most unworthy a man one would Sairey sat eating her midday meal;
have thought in every way repugnant a pot of tea slood "tewing on the hob!
to her high, pure nature; sti 1, as it is, Sbo wag one of tho8ei who eon-
so it will be. and it was a hitter day to gjdered no meal complete unless ae-
comapamea oy tne teapot. Thetable-
cloth, though rough in texture, was
•potless. A jampot, full of primroses
and forget-me-nots, adorned the mid-
dle of the table. The meal in itself
was very meager—a loaf of bread, a
slice of cold bacon, with a potato or
two; but there was something in the
way it was spread on the table that
made it very attractive and inviting.
A knock was heard on the door,
that stood ajar.
“Come in,” called Sairey, without
turning her head. She was accus-
tomed to people dropping in at all
times. “Is it yon, Mrs. Buswell?
Hope the baby ain’t worse.”
“It’s me, Sairey!” It was a man’s
voice, and at the sound of it Sairey
turned with a start, almost upsetting
her teacup.
“Tom!”—getting up.
“Yes, ’tis me,” answered the man.
“Hast thou no w’ord of welcome for
me after all these years?” advancing
into the room. “I’ve took my time,
but I’ve come back with a clean name
to offer yer. That,” he added, as the
other didn’t speak, “was the price you
put on yerself. Yer not gone back
from that have yer? There’s many a
woman as wilj give me a good name
the other side of Dartles. Yer ain’t
gone back, Sairey?” a little anxiously.
Sairey was trembling; her face
seemed to find renewed youth as she
gazed upon the man. At length she
said, speaking slowly:
“No, I ain’t gone back from it, but
I thought as you had gone and took
up with some one else.”
“Not likely. No, Sairey, I never
had no mind for any other woman. I
just waited to bring you a clear, hon-
est name, and one worthy lo offer yer;
and if yer won’t have it, well, no one
else shall—now, then. It’s all for you
I’ve earned it. Say, Sairey, will yer
take it?”
“Ay, Tom,” she answered, “a good
name. There’s naught better as a
man can offer a woman, I reckon; it’s
price is above rubies. ’Tis of high
value, and it’s what I just waited for
all these years, and I ain’t a-going to
give yer the chance of offering it else-
where.”
And, after all, the villagers were
right—Sairey Mott didn’t die an old
maid!—Folks at Home.
The probate court has had before
it one of those cases, plain to lawyers,
but puzzling to psychologists, which
has never ceased to recur since wills
existed and mental capacity has been
closely studied. A shrewd man of
business, who has accumulated a
small fortune and is perfectly able to
take care of it, makes a will which on
the face of it shows no trace of in-
firmity in the testator. His solicitor
sees him in the course of preparing
the will, and thinks his client entirely
Bane. He often meets his client aft-
er the will is executed, and he sees
no reason to consider anything seri-
ously amiss with his mental condi-
tion. Of one delusion—the notion
harbored by his client, Mr. Hounsell,
that he was the son of the late Lord
Onslow—the solicitor became aware.
But, later, Mr. Hounsell said that he
had forgotten about it; and he left
on his solicitor the impression that
he was sensible, shrewd, and level-
headed.
When, however, his papers were ex-
amined at his death, it was found that
his mind had long been honeycombed
with gross and wild delusions. He
believed that he was related to the
late Lord Onslow, and he had been
engaged in voluminous correspond-
ence on this subject with members
of the royal family, prime ministers,
and public men of all sorts. He was
under the impression that he had had
a quarrel with Prince Christian, and
that many members of the aristocracy
had set their minds upon his not ob-
taining the Onslow estates until he
apologized. His life had been saved,
he believed, by a favorite horse, which
never failed to lash out at those who
would have murdered him. His de-
lusions seemed to have increased and
multiplied. Of Lord Salisbury, he
wrote: “I am told lie is my cousin.”
In another letter he remarked: “I
have been informed that I am related
to members of the royal family.” He
penned letters to the queen and the
prince of Wales, asking pardon for
supposed offenses; and lie believed
that attempts were being made to
bring about a marriage between him-
self and Miss Mary Anderson.
For years, it was clear, he had har-
bored the rankest and grossest de-
lusions. hut lie hud kept them locked
up in his breast. Rarely were those
about him permitted to detect what
were, it is now revealed, his abiding
fantasies. We do not wonder that
Sir Francis Jeune refused lo recog-
nize the will of Sir. Hounsell—from
one point of view a sensible man of
business, from another a hopeless lu-
natic. Nor is it. to he doubted that
the president did wisely in refusing
to order payment out of the estate
of the cost of executors who had be-
fore them a mass of correspondence
full of unequivocal marks of insanity.
The interest in the Muse is that in
many respects the testator was per-
fectly sane, and that the scope of the
will was unobjectionable, except so
far as it passed over relativea.-:-I«ii-
don Times.______
EXPORT BOUNTIES.
Senator Csumon Introduces Lubin’s
Scheme to Help Farmers.
H« Makes a Hot Speech and Floors
All Opponents—Present Protection
Is One Sided nnd Robs the Former
—Re Note Sells In n Cheap and Bays
In a Dear Market—Can Be Protected
Only by Export Bounties oh Form
Products—If He Cnnnot Get These
He Wonts Absolute Free Trade.
Senator Cannon, of Utah, introduced
on May 26 an amendment to the tariff
bill which is likely to make trouble for
the republican leaders, and which may
break down the whole protective sys-
tem. The amendment favors the Lubin
scheme of paying export bounties on
farm products. This scheme is now be-
ing pushed vigorously, not only by its
author, David Lubin, but also by the
grangers of many states and by trades
unions and mi nisters. It makes its fight
inside the ranks of protection, and has
already opened more farmers’ eyes to
the folly of the system than all of the
tariff reform work that has been done.
Senator Cannon told some plain
truths when introducing this amend-
ment. lie spoke in part as follows:
It was vvitli great eurprise, upon an
examination of the measure, that I
found that the great class of our popula-
tion who have from the beginning not
only supported the protective tariff
party by tlieir votes, but have supported
the protective tariff principle by their
industry from the beginning of its op-
eration, were In a large degree excluded
from any of its benefits. It is. I say,
to supply a very patent omission from
the measure as it now stands that the
amendment is proposed, and it will foe
advocated here until a vote shall be had
thereon.
The bill, as it is offered to-day, affords
no protection to agricultural staples.
There is remaining, I presume, no ad-
vocate of the protective tariff system
who will contend that in this bill, with
these import duties, there is afforded
any protection or benefit of increased
prices arising from import duties upon
any of those commodities of which we
export our surplus, nor are there re-
gaining at the present time in the
school of protection very many men
who will contend and none who will
prove that the indirect protection af-
forded to the farmer by the tariff on
manufactured goods is sufficient com-
pensation to him for the cost entailed
upon him in carrying the protective
tariff system upon manufactured goods.
It has become apparent to all thought-
ful observers, and certainly it is known
to all who have any direct connection
with the agricultural industry of the
United States, that the farmer cannot,
and the man who reads him well knows
thut the farmer will not, much longer
bear this burden.
There are three remedies possible.
The second remedy, and one which 1,
ns a believer in protection, would be
ready to accept rather than to hold to
and vote for an inequitable bill, would
be absolute free trade, by which the
farmer might (buy as cheaply as he Is
compelled to sell, and that remedy this
congress will not seek to enforce. There
remains, then, but the third—the ap-
plication of an export bounty which
shall in a measure give restitution to the
farmer for the higher prices which he
is compelled to puy in protected mar-
kets.
No proposition based upon tbe decla-
ration of equal protection to ull the in-
dustries of the United Stutes is com-
plete, nor can there be successfully
made a contention that it is just, unless
it gives to the exporter of agricultural
staples from the United Statesun equiv-
alent benefit, to that given to the man-
ufacturer Iby the imposition of an im-
port duty.
A duty of 25 cents a bushel upon
wheat is a delusion and a snare. The
fanner of the United States gets no ben-
efit from it. The imposition of duty
upon cotton, if that were attempted,
would be of no value to the cotton pro-
ducer. The imposition of a duty on
rye is of no value to the farmer of the
United States. Every other protected
industry has a direct benefit from this
tariff, because where we do uot produce
in the United States sufficient for our
own consumption nnd a quantity con-
siderable in extent for export the im-
port duty serves as u means whereby
tbe local producer can enhance the price
to the local consumer.
The immediate benefit to the farmer
derived from the treasury of the United
States would not lie all. For this com-
paratively small expenditure to him he
would receive for these staples more
than $225,000,000 in higher prices than
lie now receives. It is true that this
would increase the price of breadstuff's
to the consumers in the cities, but un-
der the declaration made here to-day
that with higher prices the people will
be more able to buy we will have a
larger consumption of w heat :: d wheat
flour and other agricultural staples in
the cities of the country than we have
now at the low prices.
Mr. Butler—Mr. President, the sen
ator from Utah said lie was in favor <0
about $13,000,000 export duty on wheat
at ten cents a bushel. If we pay an ex-
port bounty of ten cents a'bushel, that
will raise the price of every bushel of
wheat, whether exported or consumed
at home, that much, will it not?
Mr. Cannon—Certainly it will.
Mr. Butler—Then, for an investment
of $12,000,000, which the government
would puy out in the shape of an export
bounty, the wheat farmers of the coun-
try would get. their protection of $00,-
000,000 or $70,000,000, would they uot?
Mr. Cannon—They would, if there
be any truth in the protective principle, j
l^r. Butler—That would be a very,
good Investment. |
Mr. Cannon—It would be a very good j
investment if it were to be made in be-1
half of any manufacturing industry or 1
any trust in the United States, botany- j
thing In behalf of the farmer is looked (
upon with scorn and is considered •
• 4
doubtful Investment by the legislature'
of the United States. j
In addition, Mr. President, It in li-
very poor argument, when you have,
been robbing some man for years and
he asks you for Justice, to say that youj
propose to continue to rob him of more!
and say that you do not know where
you are going to get the money with
which to restore that which you have
unrighteously taken. It is the very first
duty of the congress of the United
States to provide a bill which shall not
only be honest in its present applies
tion, but which shall pay back some-
portion of that which has been taken1
from the pockets of the toilers of this
land.
I have talked with the farmers in 20
states of the union since last fall, and l
firmly believe that this tariff would no
longer endure them until thS farmers of
the United States can have a chance to
revise it at the polls, if you do not give
to them some portion of itk benefits. i
The farmer is bending beneath a bur
den which he cannpt carry longer. He
has been the backbone of the integrity
of the United States, but there comes in>
the place of the free and independent
farmer of this country a rstce of tenant-
ry to reap servilely where he sowed
nobly, men who receive their opinions,
from others instead of giving their own,
independent voice at the polls and in
all their declarations to their fellow
men.
The senate of the United States caw
nfford to be absolutely just. I believe;
the amendment should be adopted.
Mr. Chandler—May I ask the senator
from Utah a question ?
Mr. Cnnnon—Certainly.
Mr. Chandler—1 beard 'the senator
speak of robbery u lit lie while ago with
reference to tbe farmer. Does the sen-
ator mean that the farmer has been
robbed all these years by the tariff?
Is that the senator’s argument?
Mr. Cannon—Yes, sir, decidedly. ,
Mr. Chandler—When did the senator
first think that the American tariff sys
tem was a robbery of the farmer?
Mr. Cannon—Just so soon as the Ben
ator gave sufficient attention to the sub-
ject to understand tbe truth of It I ad •
vocated republican tariffs aa earnestly
and as faithfully in my humble way un
the senator from New Humps hi re, and !l
believed exactly what. I taught
But I am not disposed xny longer to
advocate a -system by which one por-
tion of the population is taxed for the
benefit of another portion of the popn
Jation. I think that it is unfair to
cherish only one class, and that th»
class which has already the most powen
of self-protection. If the senator from,
New Hampshire will go serosa tha
plains of Kansas, ns I have gone, and'
across the plains of Nebraska, I believe
in him sufficiently lo think he wilt
come back nnd say that this bill is rob-
bery of the American farmer.
I have stated that 1 am in favor of u
protective tariff system. I: stated that,
in the guiiclessneBB of my soul, being a
republican, I went out and advocated
the republican idea of a protective tar
iff. 1 never n tie brought quite so close
to responsibility concerning it before
as I am to-day. Heretofore I have dis-
cussed it on «b-e stump, advocating it ini
general terms, but us soon as 1 am con
fronted with responsibility which
obliges me to look more closely into
its application to ull the people I am
simply discharging my duty when 1
seek to amend this measure so that it
shall be honest to all.
Or<lliir.iH«>iiH to Old Tlmri,
f.t cost more to ordain: a minister at
1750 than it does now. There was. Rev,
Solomon Lombard, the first settled min-
ister at Uuu'huui, Me. tils'annual sal-
ary was less than $450, yet $120 was
raised to defray the expenses of bin
ordination, December 26, 1750. The
supplies considered nece-ssary on ttiui
occasion included two barrehs of eider,
two gallons of brandy, a barrel of flour,
three bushels of apples, 54^ pounds of
pork, six caudles (not to burn on thin
altair, though), one teapot and ouq
pound of tea, four g-alloiw of rum, ono
ounce of nutmegs, and the eame quan-
tity of jMtpper, a pound >f -ginger and
one bottle of vinegar. 1
IllKh Art Poster* in Parla.
The fad -of collecting ■•high art j«uk» -
bus” is receiving a check! in France, m
it deserves to wherever it involves vox,. -
dalisin. On nil the posters recen tly pin',
up in anil about. Paris may be found a
warning: “As this poster cun neither
Ixi given nor so-kl, anyone found with it
in his possession will be nroooeutc-d ab
a receiver of stolen goods.'1
- While Mr. and Mrs. ;■uuninghnnt
were at work in a tie d near St. Jo,
Montague county, a few days ago,
their little 3-year-old child wandered
upon the track of the Mi.s-.ouri. Kuusasi
and Texas and fell asleep. The train
came along soon after. The engineer
discovered the little one asleep on tJ.n
track, but too late to step the train,
which passed over the :‘.tlc one. uudi
as the last ear cleared the child it,
awoke, unharmed, but ‘ lid set up v
yell that soon let the parents and pas.
sengers know that it had nil and free {
use of its lungs.
How C»|iH«l<»<» Save TlieinnelvrH. >
The woolen manufacturers contInna
to stock up with cheap raw material iw
anticipation of the coming tariff legis-
lation, the transactions in the Boston
market last week amounting to nearly
3,000,000 pounds of foreign wool and
over 1,250,000 pounds of domestic. They
expect lo reap rich profits when they
can make this wool into cloth lo be sold
at the advanced prices which are now-
in sight. It is one more illustration of
the fact that the capitalists can over-
come many, of the evils of any kind of
tariff. It is the consumers who musti
bear the burden of the suffering.-—
Providence Journal.
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Crow, J. D. The Temple Times. (Temple, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 30, Ed. 1 Friday, June 25, 1897, newspaper, June 25, 1897; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth585534/m1/3/?q=%22%22~1: accessed June 28, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.