Jacksboro Gazette. (Jacksboro, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 47, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 19, 1892 Page: 1 of 4
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VOLUME XII.
JACKSBORO GAZETTE.
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JACKSBORO, TEXAS, THURSDAY EVENING, MAY 19, 1892.
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NUMBER 47.
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HE NORTH TEXAS BAPTIST COLLEGE,
AT JACKSBORO, TEXAS,
Opens First Monday in September, 1891.
SE3SIONS \r
TheFirstSession *
»egiua lirst Mon-,
lay in 8<*i»tenobor.
ind ends Decern-<
TRT 24th. ■
The Second Ses-
sion begins De-
cember 28th.
HOLIDAYS:
XovemLer ifUti.
December Seth,
January lBt.
TO BE EltECTED.
Primary.,
Intermediate......
traded School.,
rP:''
fete
■§>
m-
FACULTY:
.4. L. H. BKYANT, A. M. President.
W. W. HEUTZ, A. M.. L. H. BRYAET, A. MY,
PRCFKSSOH OF I’KOFEe SOK OF "
ncient and Modern Languages, English Mathematics, History, Ph3’siology,.Natural
Language and Literature. Philosophy, and Botany.
-r. . T. ,__. I rrof. Thomas Lacy. •
Preparatory Department, j pE0F. Ebxkst Kfathlky.
Primary Department. Mrs. S. W. Pistole. Art, Miss Molue Si^f.s
Rev. R. C. Parmer, Financial A gent and Solicitor.
RATES OF TUITION.
.$1.50 per month.
$2.o0 <f 44
Graded School............................. ......................-......$3.00 “ “
i • Collegiate..................................................................SLOO “
All hills payable monthly in advance unless contract made otherwise. No reduction
except in cases of protracted sickness. • „
Beard can be had at $10.00 a month in. advance. / -
For further information apply to the Piesident, Jacksboro, Texas.
j. $ G. FISCHER
HAVE MANUFACTURED
OVER 90,000 PIANOS,
A .. 1 i*
than any other first class maker.
For Prices, Terms, Catalogues, Etc., Address
mL A, WATK1N MUSIC COMPANY,
269, MAIN STREET, DALLAS, TEXAS.
Guitars, Banjos, Violins, Strings, Etc.
WM. CAMERON & CO.,
DEALERS IN
UMBER, SHINGtlES, SASH, DOORS, AND BLINDS.
CEMENT, PLASTER AND PAINTS
WEATHERFORD,
fags
m
TEXAS.
Estimates Furnished Free of Charge and Best Quality
Guaranteed at Prices that Defy Competition
Diversified Industry -At The
South.
Sf. Wats Republic.
The simple fact that the
tion of manufacturing stability in
which one set of industries helps
! on and affords opportunities for
phe- others, constantly adding to the
THE SENTINEL
On .the Democratic Ramparts
Gives the Alarm.
Henry Watterson is ringing the
alarm bell with every shot he fires
these days. He writes to the Cou-
rier-Journal from Washington:
“ In 18S8 Mr. Cleveland was de-
feated. He lost the vote of the
state of New York. Nothing has
happened since to indicate that
he is stronger now than he was
then. Meanwhile" the regular or-
ganization of the party, all the
accredited leaders agreeing, de-
clare against Mr. Cleveland and
in favor of Governor Hill. The
sole support left Mr. Cleveland is
a faction which was not strong
enough to make itself felt in the
regular state convention. He is,
as far as his state is concerned,
the nominee of a revolt. Yet it is
urged that the party fly in the
face of all this, setting aside the
regular organization and accept-
ing the law and gospel from a
body of mere boltefs, and there
are newspapers mad enough to
tell us that, under such conditions,
we can carry New York for Cleve-
land.
“In the beginning I hvd in-
tended to let the whole thing take
its course without a word. If the
Democratic party is bent on going
to the devil astride of Mr. Cleve-
land’s back, and if Mr. Cleveland,
himself, is so dazed by the bee in
his bonnet as to be willing, why
should any dissenting Democrat
interpose an objection! All my
life I have been fighting up-hill
battles for truths which the party
would not see until it was too
late. I am tired. I have earned
a rest. It matters nothing to me
who gets the offices. I never get
anything but abuse for telling the
trtuth. As far as my own per-
sonal interest and predilection
are concerned I would pot walk
around the corner to name the
next president of the United
States. But, on larger grounds, I
should like to see the Democratic
party win the next election, and,
as nobody else seems williug to
say what everybody here knows
as I do, it is put upon me as a
very disagreeable, bnt a very im-
perative, duty to declare, as I
shall continue to do to the end,
that the nomination of Mr. Cleve-
land is the surrender of the eldc
on the
I
|M'
m
m
-
t. /
ife
disaster up-
South would be proof
that there are a great
going on there be-
growing. That the
lemselves sold out by
proves that the news
-farmers’ conventions
en advocating in vain
years" the advan-
ced agriculture,
evidences to
3d manufact-
ring in the
fidly than
The great
ig industries,
seat is in Georgia
olinas, not only hold
their own, but are accepted so
much as a matter of course that
the opening of new establish-
ments or the enlargement of
old excite little comment out-
side of the class publications that
make a specialty of industrial
’ the low priees for
every Southern fnr-
i Owing to the
i which ■
e of cotton has ranks of skilled labor and steadily tlo(f in j*dvance-
reducing the necessary cost of
prodnetion below the point at
which outside competition can
succeed.
Bfurnaces
Let’s reason together. Here’s a
firm, one of the largest the coun-
try over, the world over; it has
grown, step by step, through the
years to greatness—and it sells
patent medicines!—ugh!
“ That’s enough!
Wait a little— -
This firm pays the newspapers
good money (expensive work, this
advertising!) to tell the people
that they have faith in what they
have to sell, so much faith that if
they can’t benefit or cure they
don’t want your money. Their
guarantee is not indefinite and
relative, but definite and absolute
—if the medicine doesn’t help,
your money is “ on call.”
Suppose every sick man and
every feeble woman tried these
medicines and found them worth-
less, wbo would be the loser, you
they ? '
The medicines are Dr. Pierce’s
“ Golden Medical Discovery,” for
blood diseases, and his “ Favorite
Prescription,” for woman’s pecul-
iar ills. If they help toward health,
they cost 81.00 a bottle each ! If
they don’t they cost nothing !
s?y
mm
mmm
multiplication of
i that bears the
to the sue-
of, manufaetur-
the South. In
lern in-
ti nt. ton fae-
‘ of ag-
works in
i cheap Soutb-
of fruit and.
merits in Georgia
Carolina; of plow
. Temple, Tex., and wire
mile, Ala.; of
,ol, Team, and
at Johnson City
glass works in
Va., and of flour
grain
elevators
in Texas,
rd of every week
newly started in
compiled. That
Some Foolish People
allow a congh to run until it gets
beyond the ^each of medicine.
They say, “ Oh, it will wear away,
bntMn most cases it wears them
away.” Could they be induced to
try the successfuMXemp’s Balsam,
which is sold on a positive guar-
antee to cure, they would see the
excellent effect after taking the
first dose. Price 50c and $1.
Trial size free. At all druggists.
If it wfire required to vindi-
cate a principle, I should exclaim,
‘ God speed it! ’ But Mr. Cleve-
land represents nothing which
other, and more available Demo-
crats than he, do not represent as
well as he. We gave him his re-
nomination in 1888, and, with ev-
erything in his favor, he lost his
election. It is a demonstrable
proposition that now, with every-
thing against him, he cannot win
it. In New York he, will have to
bridge an impassable gulf. In the
West, his silver views and record
give ns no assurance that he can
make the gains to compensate for
his losses in the East. Even in
Indiana his name is the keynote
to a schism. He has played out
his good luck, and he ought not
to ask or expect his party blindly
to back his bad luck.
“The force of Mr. Cleveland’s
personality is not, and need not
be denied; but he is not the only
representative Democrat, in the
land. The great cause of honest
Administration and Tariff Reform
lived before he was over heard
of. It will live long after he, and
the rest of us are gone. His ser-
vices to both are not to be dis-
credited. All honor to him for
those services! Bnt for them, and
because of them, we renominated
him and he was defeated. He
was defeated because of the loss
of the vote of New York. He
lost the vote exf New York be-
cause of the knives that were
whetted for him among Demo-
crats whom he had chilled into
indifference or converted into
enemies. Under what obligations
of hdnor, or duty, are we bound
to repeat the misadventure of
1888; to put up again a defeated
candidate; to set aside the regu-
Old Doctor Drummond,
After years of patient study and
experiment has given to the world-
a preparation which is an absolute
and permanent cure for every kind
of rheumatism. Ask yonr drug-
gist for it. The price is 85, but it
is a large bottle and will relieve
the worst case from the first dose.
If you are offered something else,
: lar organization of a great state
and accept the guarantees of a
body of mere irregulars; to face
iu the beginning an impassable
gulf and try the experiment of
shooting Niagara upon the rain-
bow that spans the falls !”
Regeneration By Enterprise.
New York Commercial Advertiser.
We are not accustomed to look
------------------~« to the manipulators of real estate
’< of diversified indus- write direct and we will send you for evidences of moral and social
reform. Bnt our attention has
now been directed to the ethical
i side of land transactions by
sxpress prepaid. Drum-
odicine Co., 48-50 Maiden
Agents wanted.
dinner given at Delmonico’s by
the real estate exchange. Mr.
Henry George was not there, but
Rev. William Lloyd was, and he
made some remarks that are worth
considering. With the after din-
ner eloquence left out and the
conclusion arrived at, the gist of
his remarks was this: That the
effectual antidote to anarchism
and social discontent is to enable
every man to secure a home for
himself on the easiest terms.
This magnificent generalization
has the advantage over many
after dinner conclusions in its
ability to stand examination. The
trouble with Europe just now is
that hope has gone out of it. A
horrible fatalism has settled upon
the masses that are doomed to
struggle on without a chance of
owning anything. At the bottom
of all the discontent is a sullen
despair, at the top is a savage
recklessness.
The Rev. Mr. Lloyd sees very
plainly that to remove the causes
of social peril we must give man
something to hope for as well as
to work for, and the moment he
owns something he arrays himself
on the protective law and order.
In this view—and' no one who
thinks will doubt that it is in the
main an entirely correct view—
the innumerable loan associations,
land improvement companies,
building associations, installment
enterprises avd suburban syndi-
cates are working for the regener-
ation of humanity so long as they
work honestly.
They have made it possib’e
for any frugal and industrious
laborer to own his Own
home. They have shown him
how, with a regular pittance, he
can possess some portion of the
earth.
The enormous regenerative
moral processes here set in motion
by mere enterprise have not been
sufficiently weighed. To
ciate therp one must put himself
in the place of the peasant who,
with his European environment,
was little better than a serf. All
the stimulative energies of life
were crushed out of him by social"
conditions which fixed him for-
ever in a hard toiling groove of
destiny. As his fathers were, so
he must be. Heaven had ordain?
ed that he should look upon vast
domains that he could never own ;
his lot was to struggle, shed a few
tears hopelessly and lay down
and die helplessly. He had given
his son to the service of a'military
emperor; he could not dare to
overstep the social limitations.
To protest was to disobey, and so
his own life was given up to the
state, the tax gatherer and the
landlord, and he was to die where
he began, questioning the justice
of heaven.
The moment he reached the
conditions of a new world with
his scanty savings a milliou hands
of sympathy and welcome. reach-
ed out to him. He hung his head
at first, buttbenew world seemed
to say -to him ; “ Staid up; you
are a man, and are entitled to
your own roof.” The new sun-
shine was full of golden possibil?
ities. There were no bars across
the future. The country every,
where invited him to come and
possess it. He found -communi-
ties glad to receive bis labor.
Railroads welcomed him ; neigh-
bors shook bauds with him. Toil
dropped her fetters. She could
pray without tears.
Presently he. had a humble
home of his own. With it came
citizenship; around it gathered
enlightenment, 1 ensure, peace, and
over it brooded hope !
The Rev. William Lloyd is right.
If you would manufacture patri-
otism and contentment, build
cheap homes. It’s a capital idea
for morality to begin with a spade
and a hammer and end with a fam-
ily altar. A great deal of the
innate religion of the world is a
vagabond. It wants a resting
place where it can recuperate
and germinate. *
The new world has discovered
one panacea in discovering that
if you would make a man self-re-
specting you must let him earn
and own something, and if yon
would have him take an interest
in the conserving influences of
the commonwealth you must begin
by making him an integral part
of that commonwealth. To effect-
ually kill an anarchist, convert
him to a freeholder. Let us pnt
the real estate agent ahead of the
naturalization office. Sell the
man some land first, and presently
he will purchase his right to citi-
zenship and then he will fight
for it.
, ■
A S&*
0TJB NEW GOODS ABE HEBE!
£h
M0BE NICE DBESS GOODS THAN EVEB!
ENOUGH HATS FOR THE WHOLE TOWN AND OTHER THINGS IN
PROPORTION 1 COME AND SEE OUR NEW STOCK IN AT.T. LINES
And don’t forget our “NEW SPRING BONNETS.”
Goods and prices will both please you at Me COMB, EMSTIM & KNOX’S.
"jK'Tg'j
.T III
tate. Rightly viewed, some of
the most precious virtues lie in
the soil, ready at the beck of en-
terprise and thrift and patience
to spring into homes and hearth-
stones and altars, over which in
time the wrinkled peasant hand
will be proud to unfurl the banner
of his new fatherland.
WESTERN DEMOCRACY.
The Colorado Democrats
- Adopt Resolutions that
Ring Like a Sound Sil-
ver Dollar.
The following resolutions adopt-
ed by the Democracy of Ouray
county, Colorado is a sample of
the kind that are being passed
unanimously all over the state ;
Resolved, that we demand free
and unlimited coinage of silver, as
indispensable to the prosperity of
all industrial and commercial en-
terprises of the United States,
and as paramount to all other is-
sues.
Resolved, that no man should
be selected as a delegate to the
national Democratic .convention
at Chicago who is not known to
be absolutely and unqualifiedly
pledged to ignore all other issues
if necessary and all personal pref-
erence as to candidates in the in-
terest of the free coinage of sil-
ver, on an equality, with gold, and
the delegates-elect of this eonven-
appre-^tion are hereby instructed, under
no circumstances to vote for any
delegate to the national conven-
tion wbo in any manner favors the
nomination of Grover Cleveland
for president of the United States.
Resolved, that the action of
Grover Cleveland before, during
and after his term of office, in
using his great influence as presi-
dent and es-president of the
United States to discourage and
prevent legislation on the silver
question favorable to the people,
after having accepted the uomi«
nation and election of president
on a freff silver platform, stamps
him as a dishonest and faithless
official, a pliant and subservient
tool of the creditor class and
money power and unworthy of
the great trust reposed in him by
the people.
Resolved, that we denounce the
hypocritical pretensions of those
individuals, conventions and
newspapers, while demanding the
free and unlimited coinage of
silver, indorse the action of these
public servants, whq have used
the powers with which they are
invested by the people to defeat
the rehabilation of silver, aud thqt
we regard such ns merely ser-
vants of the enemy, treacherously
parading under the banner of the
faithful, with a selflsh eye tQ their
own thrift, and we*earnestly ad?
vise the withholding of all politi-
cal countenance from such indi-
viduals and the withdrawal of all
financial support from such news-
papers.
Resolved, that oar gratitude is
due to those representatives of
the people in congress who could
not be bought nor coerced to de-
sert the free silver standard when
assailed by the shylocks of Wall
street and the enemies of honest
money, and especially do we com-
mend the course of tbo heroic
leaders, the Hon.’ R. P. Bland,
Senators Teller, Wolcott, Slew-
art, Morgan, Daniel and Others,
who have so nobly and unselfish-
ly resisted the glittering influence
of the money power and forfeited
executive favors in interest of tfio
people’s cause,
A Reward of $500
Will be paid for any case of rheu-
matism which cannot be cured by
Dr. Drummond’s Lightning Reme-
dy. This offer is made in good
faith by the proprietors, and there
is no reasonable encase for any
one to suffer longer. An ordinary
case will be cared by one bottle
and it is poor economy to suffer
when relief can be secured so
certainly. The price of a bottle is
$5, and that ia the cost of a cure.
Drummond Medicine Co., 48-50
Maiden Lane, New York. Ageuts
wanted. * 2t
mM
a There is a lot of virtue in real es-
■j, i.
Biisi
._
.illKi
Subscribe for tbo Gassetta
W&dM
San Antonio.'
In a short stay here it fs impos-
sible to see all of interest in this,
a thousand times called a histori-
cal city. Every school history
tells the story of the battle of the
Old Alamo Mission and how the
best blood of Tennessee baptized
its well worn floors. Every old
Mexican veteran, and there are
some of them yet left in Tennes-
see who read these lines, will re-
call the old, old San Autonio.
Now the old gets older, and the
New San Antonio gets newer, the
wide drives with the rushing elec-
tric cars grow larger, until they
end among the big twisted, bend-
ing live oaks ou the brushy, rocky
Almont heights, four miles from
the main plaza. Out of these
rock-ribbed hills come gushing
springs of clear, pure water, and
they make the San Antonio River
that flows fast bet ween the grass
lined banks and beneath the bang-
ing mosses that sway with the
south wind and bends U>w to kiss
the laughing, rippling waters, the
home of thousands of trout, perch
and cgt.
Big ditches assist to water tbe
vegetable gardens along its banks,
and the world of onions, lettuce,
beets, cabbage, peas, beans and
other garden truck that is nofr
ripe for the table, would make a
market man from Paradise Ridge
smile with envy. The rainfall is
abundant in this end of the earth,
and the ground will sprout any-
thing, including heirs ‘ to the old
Mexican claims.
Bat space is precious and we
must boil down. If one ever lived
in Sau Antonio he never wants to
go anywhere else to live, not even
heaven. If one ever sees the
place twice he wants to live here,
even if there are, by actual count,
forty-eight dogs seen on the streets
in a drive of four blocks. And
♦
every dog is guaranteed to have
some fleas on him. Now if four
blocks give forty-eight dogs, nary
two alike, how many dogs in the
entire town !
By special request I am the
guest of A. 0, VSldez, of El Heral-
do, a paper published in Spanish
and English. I drive with him at
midnight through a part of the
city that is yet alive and in the
swim with sights and sounds to
tell all of which might be unlaw-
ful; on beyond thee railroad, but
in a good part of tho city, is his
home; in a large room, in a big
bf.d, with tall, old-fashioned posts,
with tbesonth wind sifted through
the running rose aud sweet bou-
eysuckle on the broad porch aud
through two wide-open windows,
I sleep as only a man can who ba3
been awake thirty-six hours."
In my wanderings about in ~Q-.ld
littlo hotels, narrow s’rents, big
flower decked squares, under
shaded trees afid ou the bridges
that span the river, I stumble
over the following people that are
more or less known to one Ameri-
can readers: Dr. J. McCarty, Mr.
IT. A. McDonald aud wife, Mr, T-
E. Wilcox and wife, of McKinney,
and all contribute to my comfort.
Old Lewis Cook, colored, hob-
bles by and. stops to talk of
the glory of the good old
time in Tennosse and Kentucky
when he was cook on the Forest
Rose, that run from Paducah to
Nashville, when bo had tbe honor
to serve such men as old Capt.
Dick Allen and Ncidam Stanley,
A talk is bad with Mrs. Julia
Truett Bishop, of tbe Austin
Statesman. She was warm a friend
of Maj. John L. Scales, of Mans-
field, La-, and is one of the purest
and beat writers iu the entire
South. She is a Methodist, and
her writings give comfort to thous-
ands from the pipes of old Virgin-
ia tq the thorny borders of the
Rio Grande, and when we all are
called to the convention across
the mountain chain between time
and forever she will have a place
high up among the angels. P. T.
Glass and his son-in-law Butler,
from Ripley, Tcnu., are here for
their health.
While J watch the procession
form for the parade at the “ Battle
of Flowers,” J. M. Norman,'' of
Company E. Seventh Georgia, An-
derson’s Brigade, Hood’s Division,
shakes his empty sleeve at the
procession and tells how he fol-
lowed Longstreet at Knoxville,
Tenn. The procession, consisting
of carriages, floats, wagons, eques-
trians, bicycles, fire engines, with
people of all age», from the pair
of baby twins in tbe arms of the
driver of a big wagon, to some of
the old men just about ready to
die, and all sorts of people were
there. At one time I am almost
under the wheels of Gen. Stanley’s
ambulance, in front of the old bat-
tle-scarred Alamo building; at an-
other, the tall fine-looking police-
man, Jae. Bourn,- streches out his
stroDgarm and keeps me from fall-
ing. Thousands and ten thou-
sands of flowers deck every horse,
wagon, buggy, dog, cowboy and
jackass in the procession, and as
they' canter, march by, file right
and left, the children and grown
people pelt each other with roses,
and this was kept up for hours
amid the'grand notes of the Unit-
ed States Baud.—[H. W. M. in
Nashville American.
Brief Opinions.
The Colorado Clipper thinks
less politics and more business is
what the country needs.
The Dallas News says : The two
consecutive joint debates between
Governor Hogg and Judge Clark
leave the broad issue between the
administrationists and the anti-
administrationists pretty much
where it was at the outset of the
controversy.
, The Houston Post thinks both
Hogg and Clark .are extremists
and that neither is the man for
the times. Texas needs just now
some conservative and prudent
man at the bead of affairs,"a man
whose good judgment will re-
volt af* sensationalism in politics
on tbe one hand and extreme
exaggeration ou the other.
The ^Terrell Register says:
While we are on the subject of
“how the boys from the bead of
the creek ” and “ the poor labor-
ing people” are all for Hogg, and
that he is of and for them, it may
be well enough to n^ention that
the men who met at Tyler and
brought Hogg out as a candidate
for re-election were Sawnie Rob-
ertson, railway attorney; Brock
Robertson, ex-railway attorney;
Horace Cate, railway attorney;
Bob Hudson, ex-railway attorney;
Fayette Camp, railway attorney ;
Bob Stafford, railway attorney;
W-eb Finley, railway attorney;
John Duncan, railway attorney;
Tom Jones, railway attorney; Bnt-
ler^ railway attorney. The men
wl/o have ocen running his cam-
paign are W. Er Hamby, banker;
R. M. Swearinger, bankerj A. P.
Woolbridge, banker; E. M. House
banker; George W. Littlefield,
banker.
The Graham Leader thinks the
People’s party platform is a mar-
velous exhibition of bait-held out
:o catch anybody whg is dissatis-
fied.
The Fort Worth Gazette thinks
it surely meaus ^bmething when
the man who wrote the last two
platforms of the Democratic par-
ty and the men who conducted
the last campaign for the parly
join in the declaration that to
nominate Mr. Cleveland is to in-
voke certain disaster. They onghG
to l>q in better standing with the
parly than the few mugwump pa-
pers in New York aud New Eng-
land wbo represent nobody Unit
themselves, and whose ntter
worthlessness aa factors iu elec-
tions has been proved by every
contest in which they have taken
active part.
The Alvarado Bulletin says:
Put more work at your business
and let politics alone. Texas has
more than two or three men who
have ability to steer the ship" of
state.
The Abilene Reporter says:
There is no denying the fact that
a desperate fight will be made to
capture the legislative offices in
this district and throughout the
state. The strength of these or-
ganizations must not be underes-
timated by the f Democracy be-
cause heretofore a Democratic
nomination in Texas Las been
equivalent to an election. Texas’
business interests can ill afford to
try more experiments in state
government.
The Graham Leader sums ap
the campaign this way: Dema-
goguery on one side and Jimmy
Hoggery on the other side of the
Democratic fence. Cnneyites
and Lily Whites, Prohibs and
Peoples’ party in the field. What
an interesting campaign 1 *
, - . .. -
The Future of Farmers.,
~American A g~ricn 1 tur 1st.
We are of the opinion, after
careful research and conservative
investigation, that American farm-
ers, as a class, are more prosper-
ous and in a better condition to-
day, both mentally and financially,
than they were one year asro.
There is thus a most hopeful
look for fanners daring the
before ns. The country gem
is prosperous and affluent,
means that the people have a
purchasing power. Where farm-
ers can find markets close at
they generally obtain moi
munerative prices than if
pelled to ship their pr
abroad. It is thus to the
of all farmers to help bnild
their own particular sec
iti
■Pm
. h
Wm
“ -1
|
■cM
m
thereby providing markets at theif
own doors. If these'fail, or are
lacking, we have the world before
us, and we believe that the ex-
ports of our domestic pr
the prospective season wills
imate even those of the unprece-
dented season just completing.
This may seem a rash conjecture,
but let us analyze it:
We have still available all the*
markets that have heretofore been
open to us, and even to a greater,
extent, for one of the results of
of low prices is a larger cons am p-
tion, and, when people once be*#.?
come accustomed to consuming
American products, &ey will con-
tinue to demand them, even if
prices be higher, becanse the
quality was satisfactory. In
dition, we have a large)
new markets opened to us
the- reciprocal trade relations
have but recently beei
lished. Heretofore such
with their millions of people
ting a large consumptive
were practically closed by
high tariffs imposed upon our pro-
ductions, but we now enter ” : "
as a favored nation and at an
vantage over our competi
the world’s food supply.
The European \ demand.
American produce also bids ,
to continue its large proporti
Even with average crops on
continent, Europe will be _______
making up her depleted reserves,
and may be expected to be a free
buyer of our products of 1892
We need only a favorable sea-
son to insure success, and
the present time, the indi
are decidedly favorable. ...w.
careful cultivation «on the part of
the farmer, the growing and har-
vesting of good crops, we antici-
pate that there will be no difficul-
ty in finding ,a good and profitable
^r * T*°iifii
jr ops ?*
can be grown, but if only a normal '
increased acreage is devoted to
the principal staples, there is n©
I
-
market for our produce-
much of almost any of our crc
fear as to the result.
yV.
I
Pears
Soap
What
soap for
is wanted of
the skin is to
wash it clean and not
hurt it. Pure soap does
that. This is why we
want pure soap; and,
when we say pure, we
mean without alkali.
m
m
Pears’ is pure; no al-
■
kali in it; no free alka'ri.
■
Thcre are a thousand
virtues of soap; this one
i m -1 j
is enough. You can trust -
* !
a soap that has no biting
alkali in it.
■*11
Ail sorts of stores sell
it, especially druggists.;
all sorts of people
ni
l
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Jacksboro Gazette. (Jacksboro, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 47, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 19, 1892, newspaper, May 19, 1892; Jacksboro, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth730860/m1/1/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Gladys Johnson Ritchie Library.