TWO
San Antonio Daily Light
Tht Republican Dally al Ttmt
Knitted at th* I’oatofflce In Han Antonio
m mall maU' r at the Mcond claaa.
SAN ANTONIO LIGHT PUBLISH'G CO
Pnnldrnt and Manager. T. B. JOHNSON
£lc<- Prcxident "• ‘ MjSSMI-.R
■errtary H. C. SCHI SAIHhR
•iTeasun r T. B. JOHNSON
Eaxtarn Bumnewe Office, 4.1, 44. 45. 47, 4*.
49. "The Trlbun. ’ Bonding. N'’**"!*
Qty; Western jiuglnc** office 510-1- The
Tribune Bulldffig. Chh igo. The * O.
Beckwit? Bp-dal Agency, bole Agent*.
Foreign Advrrqglng.
SUBSCBIPTION KATKS.
Daily. per month. In advance SV
Dally, per year, in advance '
*8 über ribo!-" not’ receiving their
will plea** m.ik complaint I” Bltteni and
h tee Ie the City Circulators. Bubacnbera
«n warned t<> pay their subscriptions
only to our authorized collector*, a* aa-
Vertleed In the paper
AUTHORIZED COLLECTORS.
The following named are authorized col
teeters for The Light.
HAKVEV STEELE. Subscription.
W h. BITTER, Subscription.
JOSEPH HALL Subscription
H C SCHUMACHER. Advertising.
Subscribers are requested not to pay
their subscription without taking a re-
Ce ' Pt PUBLISHER’S NOTICE.
The regular etaff of reporter* on The
, W MOSEBACH
F. J. CALDWELL
LEE JOHNSON.
A B. HILLAN. . . _ , ...
Special reporters will be furnished with
proper credential* by the
T. H. JOnftovi**
SPECIAL NOTICE.
I will not be responsible for «nv bill*
contracted In the name of The Light or
In my Individual name, unless accompan
»ed by a written f BON .
ADVERTISING RATES FURNISHED
ON APPLICATION.
Home advertisements payable onl the
first of each month Transient ad* ertlse
tnents pavable in advance. ONLY
METAL OUTS USED.
All contracts or bills must be approved
by the manager.
H. J. MOORE
Manager Citv Advertising department.
Artistic displays and write-ups. prepared
on short notice. Telephone L 6 or drop
him a postal, and he will call and fix you
up an advertisement that will bring the
aest result A
Anv erroneous reflection upon the
character, standing or reputation of any
person, firm or corporation which may
annear In the columns of The Daily Light
wfl be gladlv corrected upon its being
brought to the attention of the manage
ment. .
SATURDAY EVENING. NOV 1. 1902
That earthquake down in Guatemala
is tearing up things there as badly as
Pelee did in Martinique, but the loss
of life is not included.
■ o
That Santa Maria volcano is so much
higher than Pelee that when it gets
disturbed tclear down to its base it
will be a holy terror.
o
The strike arbitrators have taken
off their put on duds and gone
into the mines to examine the condi
tions and talk with the workmen
there.
•« 0
Edward is not telling all his little
difficulties of person to the public, and
that X-ray matter comes as a genuine
surprise to the world.
. o
Grover Cleveland has thrown his fi*h
ing tackle' to the winds and laid up hi*
fowling pib.e on the rack for the season,
taking the stump instead in the vain
endeavor to induce or seduce New Jer
gey to return to the Democratic column
and reduce her to her former state of
Democratic imbecility. The effort will
not succeed, although the heavy weight
of the Democracy pules over his love for
the state iff his birth and his love for the
Democratic party that is today suffer
ing for tire sins 6f his administration.
New Jersey has risen from the ashes if
her Democfalt'c inability and clothed and
in her right political mind is sitting un
der the vine and figtree wtii
non* to molest or make her afraid.
o ——
Great Britain and Germany have
come to an amicable understanding
as to their spheres in South Africa
and will divide the Portuguese terri
tory. v -
o
Morocco is now reported on the
anxious seat and a revolution pending
that maydiycome active and seat a new
Sultan on the throne.
o
The Mad Mullah has not become
rabid enough as yet for the Italian
government to intervene and help
Great Britain out of a hole.
— o
Secretary Shaw is not the only Repub
lican leader and administrative secre
tary who si and - for high prices for la
bor and high wages in all things and
high prices for the commodities of the
farmer*. The country is always more
prosperous and there i* more get up and
get about all thing* when the prices
run high and the wage* are correspond
ingly good. Thi* country is a high
pressure one and not a low pressure one
and that is all there i.- to it Give us
high wages and high prices and we soar
high.
Grover Cleveland is in the same old
tariff boat that swamped the Demo
cratic party in 1896 and put an end
to issuing bonds in time of peace to
run the government with.
■ —— ... o
There is nothing in sight in New
York state but an immense Republican
majority, alike in state and congres
sional candidates.
Great Rptain is now about ready to
cable her news around the world, and
. it is timeAhat the United States was
getting there also.
E7>eJBEST IS U/?e CHEAPEST
C. H. MUELLER’S
‘Zinc and Lead’
STANDS UNCHALLENGED
It Is not Cheap, but Good,
• in Quality
THE NEXT MESSAGE.
It appear* to be accepted as gospel
that the message that the President
will send to Contres* on It* reassem
bling will he largely a trust message,
and perhaps this conclusion is justi
fied by the feet*. Certainly the Presi-
dent >:a* taken great Interest in that
subject. He has put the matter into
the ham’s of the strongest opponents
of the combine to make exhauathe
researches into the actual outwork
Ing* of the trusts, as aHo Into the
constitutional limits within which it
is possible to act in the attempt to
curb tin ir usurpation of an absolute
ness of control that is accepted as un
healthy. The President, with his us
ual directness ha* not left this sub
ject and hi* - attitude toward it in any
uncertainty His speeches, notably
his later ones, since the coal strike
so assailed the stability of our manu-
factories and the coal mine owners
refused to arbitrate the difficulty,
snow him opposed to those trusts
that merging all competition in their
combine defy the natural workings of
that competition which is the life of
trade anil through which a just ba!
ance is preserved. He is going to put
upon Congress, to the extent of its
constitutional ability to deal with this
evil, the responsibility of curbing it
by legislative enactment. He is
not opposed to the employment of
great capital under or.e management,
but he is opjtosed to the control of the
industries of anv one kind by a syndi
cate merging those industries into
one and practically dictating to the
nation and the people of it 1:1 all that
concerns it. This coal merger; that
Northwestern Railroad merging; that
beef merger are all assailed by the
President in one way or another an!
with his usual prompt incisiveness it
is to be expected that his message
will express his views and nis recom-
nendations to Congress will be as
direct and practical as in the nature
of things it is possible to make them.
This fight is going to be a hot one,
and the result uncertain. But the
country at large will be behind this
effort to regulate the trusts and will
not be hoodwinked into accepting the
Democratic diagnosis of the case, that
the Republican policy is the cause ot
the trusts and the Republican party
their father. If the trusts are too
strong for the Republican party to
down it is certain that they will con-
tinue to live, for in every attempt
that the Republicans have made to
down the trusts they have been an
tagonized fy the Democrats. This,
while the Democratic party on every
stump, in every state, proclaims itself
the toe of fhe trusts.
That educational bill that -the op
position in Commons were to make
a battering ram of and put Balfour out
of power with, seems to be unequal
to the task.
There are a few of the collieries
and only a few, whose owners pay no
attention to the agreement made with
the miners, but these do not count.
All the old chiefs of the Cleveland
administration are out before the pub
lic in the effort to revive interest in
the old order.
Coler of New York will not see the
color of hi* dust when he run* his pan
through and look* for the stuff in the
bottom next Wednesday morning. There
are section* in which the Democrats may
show a gain, but it will not. be in the
vicinity of where Grover and Hill make
their debut and their demonstrations. If
the returns verify thi* statement where
is the hope for the Democracy in a re
vival of Clevelandism7 Eh!
If Chairman Jones of the State Dem
ocratic Committee made anything out
of his attempt to badger the President
he is not telling it.
The laying of the dust in this city
was appreciated, but the country round
about here is ready for a root soaker,
minus the gully washer.
• O-- •
The taxation of cats is the latest
suggestion in a live stock way, and it
comes from a Massachusetts woman
with a humane soul in her anatomy.
If there is anything under the canopy
that will galvanize the east into life po
litically and give a possible color to
Democratic hope it is the emergence of
Cleveland from hi* obscurity, but that
*ame emergence is the signal for a ral
lying of the anti-Cleveland force* in the
west and these are the dominant Demo
cratic factors there. So it would seem
that between the two the party is like
the burro and the bundle of hay, or the
men who could be happy with either
were t'other dear charmer away. If
there could be an amalgamation of
Brynnism and Clevelandism it might re
capture some lo«t Democratic ground.
That sentence of six months in jail
of a New York autoist for driving his
auto as he ought not to, will keep him
out of mischief half a year.
Williamson county thinks that the
favorable weather of the past month
will add a third to her cotton produc
। tion for this season.
o
Cotton conditions and estimates are
the basis of the sales and the states
that produce cotton should take steps
by legislative enactment to publish
U e most accurate statistics available
at least once a month, to the end
that the cotton raiser may know
BAN ANTONIO DAILY LIGHT, SAN ANTONIO. TEX., SATURDAY. NOV. 1. 1903.
where he Is at and what prices should
approximately be
.Mexico and Cuba are now tn diplo
matic touch and the President of the
greater republic received the Cuban
minister most impressively.
If the eruptions in Guatemala con
tinue the towns In that neighborhood
will have to be abandoned, as there
is no means of protecting them.
Texas ha* been a warm baby in more
Mays than one, ihirfflt? fhe month just
closed, and the visitors Mho came in with
their overcoats on their backs soon hail
them ou their arms'and from there to
the ticket checker where they reposed
in blissful conditions of unrequiredness.
Texas weather is an astonishsr.
Manila enjoys more privileges than
ever she enjoyed before, but with it
all her editors are not allowed to lie
about tlie United States officers.
President Cleveland seems to think
that ihe Democrats are going to take
a fall out of the Republicans in New
York this fall, bit he will know bet
ter three days hence. Cleve) md is
the prophet of a disappointed hope.
San Antonio might have added an
other three thousand to her registra
tion lists had there been any object,
but she did not wish to discourage
the other little towns, so just sampled
then) and kept ahead.
— 0
It would puzzle a Philadelphia law
yer to pick out a ticket from all that
is presented In this city that would
meet the full and unqualified approval
of the man who wants a pure and able
county government and nothing else.
That poll tax measure will go
through a whooping, for it is the
measure of the party, and so would
anything else, even prohibition. Let
ihe Democrats endorse that and eteu
Texas w ill swallow the dose.
o
Galveston is looking up, and her trans
actions ara growing at the port enor
mously, but she is not gaining a percep
tible hair in her methods of doing public
business, carrying out contracts, keeping
faith with her own citizens or any other
of those things by which a growing city
commends itself to the confidence of the
state and the nation. Galveston has a
reputation for municipal and county
transactions of the most shady charac
ter, and it is to be regretted that her
manner of putting her seawall business
on its feet and carrying it forward have
exposed her at home and abroad to the
most unfavorable criticism. That criti
cism is heard abroad, but it is heard
louder on Galveston island than any
where else.
It the Populists in Texas are in the
insane asylum and the Populists else
where are as in this stale then the
Democrats in Nebraska and Kansas
ate at least half demented, for they
are more than half Populist.
Colonel Ed Greene is not figuring in
Texas pclitics in the Fifteenth dis
trict or elsewhere. He is not a state
chairman whose standing or falling
is bottled up irretrievably witn the
Fifteenth district.
There is no sniffling in the Republi
can camp over the result of Tuesday's
election. The grand old party of pro
gress, prosperity, patriotism and
protection is as certain of victory as
if the returns were in.
There was no visible connection
between the reception of the Cuban
minister at Mexico and the gas exhi
bit before President Diaz, but they
both occurred in the presence of the
President and that fact is suggestive.
o
■f fhe betting tide in New York has
set strongly towards the Democracy
within a few days then it is a fact
carefully concealed. Is 7 to > in favor
of th* ilepub.leans a strong tide in
the Democratic direction?
It will not do to bank on the regis
tration in this city this fall as an in
dex of what it may be in the spring,
if there is a real hot municipal ticket
on the boards. If that is the case it
will take more than 5000 to win out.
He Hits Back.
The Orange Tribune says:
“A San Antonio physician takes a
very gloomy view of President Roose
velt's condition and contends that it
is a great deal more serious than the
country Is led to believe. This phy
sician tells us all about it in a letter
to the San Antonio Light, but if it
had been written in Chinese it could
scarcely be more unintelligible to the
average reader. We hope the Presi
dent will speedily recover, but if ho
has as much the matter with him as
this doctor says he must be in a had
fix, indeed "
That Is Why.
The Clarksville Banner says:
“An old farmer truly remarks that
a homegrown, hand-spanked. bare
footed and bard-fisted country boy
makes a much better fighter in the
battle of life than does the pampered,
high collared, creased-trousered youth
of our towns and cities, whose clothes
have always been dusted with a whisk
brom instead of a shingle.”
There is truth in this. The coun
try boy usually has health ,grit and
ambition which are good factors in
success, while the more favored
townsman, brought up in a debilitat
ing atmosphere of the society, be
co nes effete and unequal to the race
for progress that lies before him.
jQ Thl«-ipiaturels on erery box ot the grnuln*
gfr/jy, Laxative Bromo-Quinine Tablets
■O' hB emedy that curve .. all in oiw»
TELEGRAPH BREVITIES
Mitchell ha* hie data ready lor the
strike commissioners.
Strike eommiaaioners visit the mines
and make observations.
Local constabulary defeat ihe Ladror.es
in tlie I*land of Negros.
Adlai Stevenson in New York predicts
a great Democratic victory.
Board of army officer* is. inspecting
the Aransas Paa* jetty work.
General Mile*, U. 8. A., arrive* in Ma
nila on his tour of inspection.
President Roosevelt abandon* hi* pro
|>o*cd bear hunt in Mississippi.
An nir line railroad between San An
tonio and Galveston is mooted.
Four men overcome by sewer gas at
the big tunnel at Niagara Falls.
Thirty-six New York orphans find
home* in North Texas families.
Government of Germany i* petitioned
to permit the entry of meat* free.
It is reported that the oil flow on
Spindietop is decreasing materially.
Pw-byterian .Synod that ha* lieen
l.clcng *e««ions nt Taylor adjourns.
Caw of Houston newspaper men goes
over to the December term of court.
There is continual anxiety and alarm
in the vicinity of Santa Maria, Guate
mala.
Texas Western Oil company declare*
a dividend of 100 per cent on its $175,00(1
capita).
Matters between Bogota and the
American naval officer* at Panama are
friendly.
President Roosevelt is looking over
the Virginia battlegrounds by way of
recreation.
Marconi arrives off the coast of the
maratime provinces for his Canadian ex
perinu nts.
There wa* only the most courteous and
conciliatory language in Hay's note
to < blombia. '
Steel men celebrate the SOIh birthday
of John Fritz, the oldest steel master in
the country.
Shaw explains how anthracite Coal,
that was supposed to be on the free list
is reallv not so.
St. Louis will send a petition to Ed
ward for the release for Mr*. Maybrick,
with liKk) names.
Board of Army Engineer* on matter of
Trinity navigation return and consider
matters privately.
G. T. Ball, of Weatherford, gets 99
years for a criminal assault on his 14
year-old-daughter.
Mclineaux take* fhe witness stand in
hi* own behalf, and denies the crime
er any knowledge of it.
South Texas truck glower* at Bee
ville move for a more perfect organiza
tion of their Texas work.
Bailey predicts an overwhelming Dem
ocratic majority in the Burges* district,
but i* silent as to Garner.
North Texas is in arms against the
poll tax amendment, seping in it a Prohi
bition negro in the wood pile.
President Ixmbet, of Fiance, is ac
tively interesting himself in the settle
ment of the coal strike there.
The Randalls of Carthage, quarrel in
their lawyer’s office over divorce. He
flourishes a knife and she shoots him.
Manager Church, of the Dallas Postal
telegraph business, resigns to become
cashier of the Houston and Texas Cen
tral.
Maior Johnson, <f Cleveland, strikes
a p«publican advocate in the face with
hi* fist during a political wrangle on the
street.
Lieutenant Winship, one of the naval
her.'n of the Philippines, with five Mau
ser bullets in his anatomy, is in hospital
al Montevideo, sick.
Cuba i minister to United
State*, says McKinley promised there
should be no eoabrg station for Ameri
can snip* on the island.
Chairman Grigg. <»f the DnniocraUe
party, will venture no prediction a* to
the election but- thinks that Coler will
I*- eleited in New York.
Civil service report takes cognizance
of the different statu* of permanent of
ficers under the civil rules and those
holding semi-political appointments.
ECZEMA. NO CURE, NO PAY.
Your druggist will refund your
money if PAZO OINTMENT fails to
cure Ringworm. Tetter. Old Ulcers and
Sores. Pimples and Blackheads on the
face, and all skin diseases. 50 cents.
Not Quite So.
The Whitesboro News says:
"Texas with her cheap and won
derfully productive soil, offers an easy
solution to the strike problem. The
man who toils early and late in the
dangerous mines of eastern states for
a scanty living would, with a much
smaller amou.it of labor, provide all
the neccHsariis of life for his wife
arid babies from a small Texas farm
with hb- vegetables, fruits, meat,
bread, mill; and butter. The supply
and demand for coal and the increase
and decrease of wages would matter
net at all to him then."
This in a measure is true, but it
is fallacious. While coal is needed
there must be miners. That some If
not all would be better for taking the
course suggested none doubt but we
must not forget that a good miner
may be a bad farmer and vice versa
There is a place for all men and those
places, must and will be filled. Let
well alone.
Cunningham's Grit.
State Revenue Agent Cunningham,
according to the Waco Times-Herald,
replying to the question “whether a
mnn who calls himself a faith doctor
who treats people without medicine
and does not charge them anything for
his services, but acepts any fee that
bis patients desire to give him, is lia
ble to the occupation tax of a travel
ing physician." said such a doctor
was liable to occupation tax for
traveling physicians and added:
"It makes no difference whether ho
charges a fee or not. He may bo do
ing God s work in curing people and
it may be that God cures them
through him. but so did Christ. He.
Christ, set the example and stated to
His disciples that they must be sub
ject to the powers that be, so not
having anv money with which to pay
His tax. He went fishing and found
the necessary money in either the
fishes' mouth or by selling the fish."
Necessity for Action
The Greenvilie Herald predicts that
dire necessity will yet force the
American people to provide some sort
woman’s I
LHC.... |
Is hard enough a* 71
it is. It is to her that / K
we owe our world, / \\
and everything
should be made as
easy as possible for
her at the time of CT - 71 \
childbirth. This \ \
is just what '
MOTHER'S W
Friend
will do. It will make
baby's coming easy
and painless, and that without tak
ing dangerous drugs into the sys
tem. It is simply to be applied to
the muscles of the abdomen. It
penetrates through the skin carry,
tng strength and elasticity with it.
It strengthens the whole system and
prevents all of the discomforts of
pregnancy.
The mother of a plumb babe in
Panama, Mo., says: " I have used
Mother's Friend aud can praise it
highly.’’
Get Mother’s Friend at the
Drug Store, $1 per bottle.
The Bradfield Regulator Co.,
ATLANTA, GA.
Write for our free illustrated book,
" Before Baby is Born.”
of legal machinery to meet the re
quirement of the'titnos in adjusting
differences between corporations and
organized labor.
There is no question about that and
the sooner legislation is shaped to
that end the better will it be for all
concerned. Compulsory arbitration
seems to be the panacea for the evil.
A Mischievous Doubt.
An attempt at general revision at
this time would be an assault upon
the principle of protection. By again
raising a doubt whether we know qur
own minds it would impair that pros
perity of which the figures given
above are so striking an index. It
would weaken by disturbing before its
cement has hardened our foundation
of economic independence.
The American people see these
facts and we believe they will not
consent merely because the Dingley
tariff works here and there a hard
ship to reopen the whole question
of our fiscal policy. In the light of
the splendid and solid achievements
ot' the last five years they will be
content, we are convinced, to let well
enough alone.—Chicago “Inter-
Ocean.”
Grove's Black Root Liver Fills.
Made trom an active principle ob
tained from Black Root. They act on
the liver equal to calomel, and leave
no bad after effects. No griping, no
sick stomach. Will cure chronic con
stipation. Price 25 cents.
DESIRABLE SUMMER RESORTS.
There are many nesrrable summer
resorts located along the Southern
Railway, among which is the Land of
the Sky and the Sapphire Country,
including Asheville, N. C„ Hot Springs
and the resorts of Tennessee and Vir
ginia. Also various seashore resorts.
For Summer Hours Folder and de
scriptive matter apply to Mr. 11. H.
BONE, Western Passenger Agent.
Houston, Texas, or to your nearest
ticket agent.
Money loaned ou furniture without
removal. EMERSON & CO., 122 Sol
edad street.
LONE
STAR
PENS
Why they are better than other
pens is told in free booklet.
Postal request brings free
samples if you state your business
or profession.
Maverick-Clarke Co.
Manufacturing Stationers
Sole Distributers
SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS
YOU WILL HIT IT EVERY TIME
in the grocery line when aiming out
way. What you encounter there is
High grade goods, low prices, polite
attention, prompt delivery tallying ac
count* and satisfaction in front of the
firing Unes. Train your sights prop
erly on JULIUS HORN, corner Aus
tin and Tenth streets, and let her go.
Cut this out and add to your collec
tion. ( ?e tiigUeU 1
There Will Be Two to Take Y
Through About
'W / NOVEMBER 15th.
Sunset Limited and Pacific Express. Dining Cars
Through Excursion Sleepers to Washington, Chicago. Cincinnati, St.
»> .79
Louis, Memphis, Louisville, Atlanta, Kansas City, Minneapolis and Cali
fornia.
J. M'MILLAN, Div. Pass. Agt. E. McCLANAHAN, C. P. A T. A.
SUNSET TICKET OFFICE, 301 Alamo Plaza.
Sap'Cotton'Belt,
Beginning October sth the “SAP" and Cotton Belt will make di
rect connection at Waco, north and southbound.
Train leaving San Antonio (Sunset Depot) 12:15 noon puts pas
sengers into Waco via Flatonia. 8:55 p. m.. in time for Cotton Belt train
leaving Waco 9:00 p. m. for Corsicana, Tyler, Texarkana and points
East.
Cotton Belt arrives at Waco 7:20 In the morning, which makes
direct connection with the S. A. * A. P. train leaving Waco 7:25 a m.
putting passengers into San Antonio 5:45 same evening.
This makes a new route from South of Central and Northeast
Texes.
TW0....
wjg through
SLEEPERS
Katy Flyer
SAN ANTONIO to ST. LOUIS
Connecting' En Route With Through Chicago Sleeper.
CITY TICKET OFFICE 121 ALAMO PLAZA.
THE TEXAS \ O IM Texas ’Greatest
RAILROAD |. OL KJL INr Railroad
SUPERIOR PASSENGER SERVICE. MAGNIFICENT EQUIPMENT
INTERNATIONAL & GREAT NORTHERN. See Our Agents or Write.
L. TRICE, 2nd Vice Pres, and Gen. Mgr.
D. J. PRICE, Gen. Pass, and Ticket Agt.
“But where to find that happiest spot
below;
Who can direct, when all pretend to
know? —Goldsmith.
Many are satisfied to live in North
west Texas, having proved the value
of the land in this region as a good
Crop Raiser. Not only Cattle, but
Wheat, Cotton, Corn, Feed stuffs, Can
taloupes, Garden Truck and Good
Health flourish here—in a district
where Malaria is impossible and very
little doing for Jails and Hospitals.
Mnd, which is being sold at really
low figures—tho the constantly in
creasing demand is steadily boosting
values —is still abundant; and Farms
and Ranches of all sizes, very happily
located, are being purchased daily.
Wo will gladly supply all askers
with a copy of a little Book, published
by the Northwest Texas Real Estate
Association, which contains an inter
esting series of straightforward state
ments of what PEOPLE HAVE AC
COMPLISHED along the line of
“THE DENVER ROAD.”
Passenger Department, Ft. Worth, Tex
N. B.—We find our passenger pat
ronage very gratifying. It is neces
sary to run three trains dally each
way as far as Wichita Falls, and two
clear thru. We continue, the year
round, the excellent.. Class A service
that insures the preference of Colora
do and California Tourists, Winter
and Summer. By (he way, we offer
now more than half a dozen routes to
California, the newest being via Dal
hart (also good for Old Mexico), with
first grade Eating Cars all the way.
We sell a Home-Seeker's ticket,
good thirty days. at. one and a third
fare the round trip, allowing stopovers
at Vernon and points beyond, both
ways.
EAST IND NORTHEAST
Via New Orleans and the Louisville
& Nashville Railroad. Double Daily
Trains composed of magnificent
coaches, free reclining chair cars,
sleeping cars and dining cars to
Chicago, Louisville, St. Louis, Cin
cinnati, Baltimore, Washington,
Philadelphia, New York and all
points in the North and Northeast.
The finest service and fastest time.
For rates, maps or folders address
any representative of the
Louisville & Nashville R.R.
P. W. MORROW, T. P. A..
Houston, Tex.
T. 11. KINGSLEY, T. P. A.,
Dallas, Tex.
J. K. RIDGELY, D. P. A.;
New Orleans, La.
IPATENTS]
Em]
To California
For S2s.oojVia
TICKETS ON SALE SEPT. iST II
OCT. 31 INCLUSIVE.
(From Some Stations Somewhat Higher),
Through Pullman Tourist Sleepers every
Tuesday. For particulars enquire of
local Ticket Agent, or Address
W. S. KEENAN. G. P. A.
Galveston, Texas.
I Rock Island I
IB n ' i M
I Route 1
Homeseekers' rate to Amarillo via
El Reno. A new country all the way.
$13.40 daily. Limit 30 days. Good for
stopover.
Trains now running to Graham,
Texas, 26 miles' west of Jacksboro.
Leave Fort Worth 8:30 a. tn. daily,
except Sunday.
One faro plus $2 Chicago and re
turn Nov. 29, 30 and Dec. 1.
W. H. FIRTH, G. P. & T. A.,
Fort Worth, Texas.
~ —■ I X
Silver King Saloon
VISIT THE ART GALLERY.
Best of Liquors, Wines and
Cigars. Polite attention.
Cor. 'A*. Commerce and N. Floret Ste.
UNDERTAKERS ;
• *“ R T os« YA ' — '
L. W. HAGY
CONiRACTOR and ‘BUILDER
1906 Buena Vista S» TeL iia»-3.lngs.
esigne and estimate furnished on all
kinds Of rculding And rapxirlng. .