The Weekly News=Boy, Vol. 23, No. 9, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 3, 1887 Page: 1 of 4
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^VOL.23.
I^Hd'Qlu**Jtoil mUhtj
s&aoc
Om Tw, IfftM In mttrnme, UN
Sis month#, Cm*. .78
hbt
.an*
JASPER, TEXAS, WEI
?)«ii I'tii j JeiU
.—
JjtMMfrib, nut
■-r-f
Advkrtisino.—Citations mm) gpecia
rr«j^jst isfc
10 Cents n Line 0>r First luaertloo,
£•?* A*H-
i
v. MpMAtti wmmwmmr
'MWW'II w pm .;i
Leave# dally (except S a4a$a) tJ l*
Heterna " " " rt^a
liNinntaMt.
Leaves Moadayaaadjfrtteaet J a. m.
lteturns TmiwiWihflWi
JASPBB TO irajuwyiM*.
Leave* Mondayn, Wednesday and P ri*
days at 7 a. a,
""""•ffiStiSSRlf
JAiriK TO RKMrniUL.
{estir-MnBoii
JASPRR TO UtWlS w ef. j;
I.eates Mondayn an<l Friday* at Sa. m
Iteturui « •• " ««> .
*hi ctftftetftKU-''1 **?'■
«.*«*• *. rnmmrn.
Preaching every Sabbath at U 4 m.
and 7 p. w. *V
Prayer meeting every Wednesday
night. -"'V• •-.• •' ■'
ChlldrckV meeting every SkLmM^
tSAliltathnJu each month. at SfciI9(p< in.
Claw meeting 1st- and <ird. H*!(bMhs
In eaeh month, at 3:!0 p.m.
,4t 1 ' 'A. P. Archer, f sstor,
Sunday School every Sunday at
nr. m. «f * <*r:t ,-*<j ! i.'J.-j/tiMi / Uf
T. W. Ford. Sup't.
SOCIETIES.
Witt Clifton Tiodgp, No. 88,meets
Ifa^. J*Rp#r mf <
fefyTMliy Mgtit
Jasper' TWrtshert"
3nd and 4th Paturilann hi
faaper La lies AM HartM;
Women's Missionary Had**. ■ •«: , iHH
IOk
.erjow* ,at-yc.
.aiAt) axAfi,
iaoo&&s&<«ki
ittZtr6 ■*-
* * i r<j.' .* j ' / v >
QM.
«*Jtt A<X)nRKD TAHTKW.
thru* ORKAT !N'ni'KXCKOV£K
TUX MIND AS WKLI, AH BODY.
Bat it is not alone ip the gros-
ser forms that acquired tastes
ows their enormous power alu
<W «' *****
SEASONABLE
A -VV
. **\ \ >v
GOODS,
1887.
. .*>
MZ
1887.
INCLUDING EVERY, GUApE
l'!- -1
Y -t^OOOS
H
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H«n. W.JLPoafcs,vxMm < «m« v ■
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«6 v go* / CK^
^Wareao4GUs8 r«re.
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/ ^ ^ V - ■< i
«W I W«'« ■£■«. • ■
flmrnfwt Vif :
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K«'i ■_
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it'#
i
k ... . - ••' i." r rrii • jr i. i 11 it*
rjhmr^nmnvfin
it the
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Twtan.
& m. COLLIER, SB..
I • ,3 i.
focdyWs, Tiw
trM* . t. $
•;> *
#-
: > , •> 'Vutv/ h V/ , ■* I,'|r
fttfittaiiy
n
■ . -
hBBY GOODS,
D, J. Henderson
i Ge
W. J.Av ; tT/sr
I OeacKl lewli—dtw .
A-jt y
on. cixmrniNo.
rafts1, Clienitcalg,
•J ••.! ' M * -VS >>1
Lafncr, '
Geneva)
<| CKowtoft^Si,
General Merehandlnc.
R>KOFE8SI NAi
—***
y* Wlf;>r.ii> *} d
t^'-w AK
It
T. Beatv
m" v|T.r""
W<F
P
r narcotism, and may and doos
xist in tilings less material than
appetites and carnal desires and
passions. The intellect, the will,
the mind, tf >> soul—call it which
name you will-^is subject to the
same general law and equally
under the dominion of acquired
tastes. .> *
As an illustration, take the
numerous examples of the over-
powering desire for the bisarre
and abnormal whioh has charac-
terised so Many man, and wo
men, too, of undoubted intellect
and rare nauUl powers. It may
be assumed that no sane person
is born with a taste for the hi-
deous; that no man of education
or refinement takes * natural
delight in visiting scenes of gross
debauchery or witnessing thq
lowest forms of bestial sensuali-
ty. Yet history, and modern
history at that, is ftill of instance
«s of men and woMen who have
become infatuated with all these
things, and whoso chief and only
pleasu re has been in seeing, hear-
ing and reading incidents Of
uelty, of bloodshed and of un-
ied HnwHlinnnnxa^
of tills IS
found in the n>orbid desire whidh
many people evince to see cases
of malformation and monstrosi-
ties. To their vitiated tastes the
most perfect human form or the
most exquisite triumph of the
sculptor's art |K sG8ses no such
attraction as the Siamese twins
or the bearded woman. Physi-
cal evil has become good itt their
eyes, and thoy find beauty in'
ugl|i*e*P aud deformity. ,,
, A HOSE AG&KKABMC SIDK. 1
There is still another side to
tj^a question, more agreeable,
but none the kss illustrative of
the general truth of the propo-
sition, that acquired tastes are
Stronger ihfiu the natural dis-
position. We refer to the taste
the luxuries aud eleganclss
of life, whether in the matter <if
eating and drinking or in those
to ore intellectual matters oi per-
sonal adornment, of heme beau*
lifying, of book collecting and
all, ^ e other varied develop
mentsof sBstheticism. No «sm
ever heard of an excess in eat-
ing caused by simple food. The
man is yet to be bom who will
surfeit himself on bread and wa-
ter. In those primitive coun*
tries where the wowsn wear aa
apron of bark or lcavts and the
men do not, no (me ruins hiss*
self with tailor's bills, nor where
family mansion is a hut or wig-
wam is the proprietor forced inn
to bankruptcy by the dealer in
rare books or art treasure*. Their
simple and natural tastes do not
lead theia into reckless extrava-
gance ia the matter of waed cov-
ings or old china or Artistiedee*
orations. All Utsss things are
thaootgnnrtb of eiviliMthw and
are purely astificial wants. These
is no intrinsic difference ia use-
ful qualities between tweed aad
broadcloth, or between calico
and satin, and 3'et the taste for
the more costly material is all
h'it nr.!v r*al, and too often in
daloadinat the cost of credit
Mid comfort, snd sometimes of
ruiilbui f<i
zatiwsii'
> ii -v> f
these conditions the
111 between wnht and
i get broken down, and
Mi disappears. The
| of the actjuired taste i
a to overshadow the
3L iiii7
*r ffi« .¥, j ; j
miiuiiiw'uiffiit.111111 jx
r Pisa iter- 4h Hatae* Steew..
^ w! is oil,
Mature sirefts have been the
«ib^ect ol so many jests that we
have hardly considered perhaps
tlte real gaip' and vatue there
may lw'for a young inttn' in a
ties aud those that are only im-
agiuinary, and in consequeiiee
life is made miserable by the
struggle for the unattainable and
the energies of a lifetime are
wasted in striviug to satisfy
wauts that are purely artificial.
—8ah Francisco Chronicle. !
enougu
Does Labor Frvdnee Ail U* Wmftk.
Rev. Mr. G. M^teele.in Wo*
and Wages: "Is jjt true that,
•labor produces all the wealth of
of the world*?. ,pf; course,
|)jr. „<lMw : h««- ' Jff, njeant
the putting forth of physical en*
ergy, otherwise the succeeding
seuteoc«s have no meaning.
Does any one who thinks at all
Hbout the subject believe that
he great factories,, the docks,
;he vast building of stpnc and
irick and iron in our great cities
the railroads, the mighty steam-
ships, the complicated machines
and innumerable ether struct-
ures are the result of manttaMn-
>or alone? Suppose there is a
ine of railway fifty miles in
lengtli to bo bulH, and five
orers i
... i&b tlief# nfetiie'r'
Such a friend is often one oV the
uobleet formative influences Oil
the character. The woman who
is kind enough honestly to in-
terest herself in a young man's'
career, and wise enough to un
derstand his neods, very soou
becomes his guide and his phil-
osopher, as well as his friend
The hold she lias on liim may
Veil bojastonishing to lookers
in, but lie" who feels the spell
"ields Jo. ^ jyytyljy.,
Such a woman is influence is
cb^efi^[the' out'"^growth qf her
genuine interest in ;her friend;
she, has grown u litUe tired off
life on her own account. The
8 are withe«<l iqr her, and
''the old, old story" is told now
to younger years. She is dono
with personal Ambitious, aud is
all the more ready, therefore, to
be ambitious for this youth,
uioro chivalous and devoted than
incest sons,and less exacting than
most lovers. S)ie lias a rospon-
iu her hands that slie
l.f
n, hardly overestimate. It is
. .. . , a great ^>arV, to establish
thousand steady, Intelligent and this^nnn's ideal of
•> « ieti! jit;
rke
The c*ar of Kiusia, Napnleofl ' l4
.Wid Irish ItUfiljfr^
only tyrants.
at uur hand, and ej|.S of ih.ru ia
etiliotl public oasuiioicutl'biVeo®
mAfewetit
1 our i.iine#. All ih«l is
to point with eon*
iiWity the Bnger of SiWMi • •of wag
wftb d«viiis4 l«rsasMeb# tW >
erom toagae, aad *h aohlUI HMnt,
the purest «MUte, oa -Ua pWW
to buiUiFWe '&idges, to make the
deep'Cuts, to construct the cause-
ways through the treacherous
swamps, to calculate the grades,
and do other equally difficult
parts of the work? II"w many
ordinary wage workers would it
take to produce a Corliss engine,
the first of itsjkind? No; there
unlst be much besides muscular
eQorts to obtain the*) results.
There must be toil of brain,long
and protracted, and often ex«
haustiug thought,sometimes ac-
companied by great sacrifices
and great hardships. In order
to ekteusive production there an
required greet mental qualities,
some of them of a rare kind.
•There is needed power to cOik
triVc, to j it vent, to organiie, to1
dTrect olr little can be achieved,
"ffi^ man who blows the organ
might claiin that lie" produces
all'the music of the instrument
It true he Is generally an
se itial condition, but not by any
means the Only or the most «#•
sential condition. No more is
manual labor labor the only or
the most essential condition ol
the production of great wealth."
The latest in the way
of a "Trust" is the organization
of all the gambling houses in
Mott street for the purpose of
mutual protection. The^society.
is called the Kwone (Joe, and it
secures money for the defense of
members involved in the meshes
of the law. hires a^aspns to kill
iuforment, subsidizes the pelice,
and carries on ^usin^sp o^. tite
principles whifh very generally
dist|nguisli the Standard Oil and
oU sr monopolies.—New York
World, Dam. ^
The foreigners in Texas who
have heretofore taken ne inter,
est la polities «UI make them-
selvss fislloa Augost i. Ia Dal
las, Fort Worth and Austin over
one thousand foreigner have tak-
en but naturalisation papers and
are fall-fledged American citi-
sene,—Houston Herald/ 1
to eo
tor of desjMiir.—Joo' Howard's Leti'
tor. • /fhuVv
L h' " til itfl ioEsh.1 ,|
In a free country labor mt^||
he free and.so amiit ths cmploi
ef^tat^^^yBSBgk
which sets out lo tellauen(r|i%s
cr whom he shall hire or whom
be sliall discharge wilF flbd il' '
aelf speedily jiiiyMpular 1AmI> It):!
direct ooafliet with HUfclWf W&"
and Um, law iteelt
just to pkw* rostrhjtMMM^Wrilte^
respecte as ita-ould be >n place
similar restrictions upoQjt^ifp)*
ployed. No tt^jpinisation of
manufacturers wbtrfd' rereite
public approral whlch should
declare a certain^ feUt«1'er'
men rriUst be debfitrrod frbm «n-
ployment
text, and.not,Dn.ilw> grouiv| ,/>f
incajweityjot unfitne^e
kjtfjltit&KIO*
be contented with a woman who
lacks strength or sweetness or
cleverness, and her approval of
the wife he will one day choose
will bo as a medal of honor.—
Louise Chandler Moulton iu the
Boston Herald.
OM Vlf >■>■ Puis "sin
i Ne demon of dyspepsia lurks
ia the golden depths of a genu-,
iueald Virginia corn cake if
carefully prepared. Sift info a
large pan a quart ofyellow corn
meal and add a tea spoonful of
salt, una with the meal a {tint
of rich unskimmed boiling milk,,
enough to wake a soft dough,
and add|half ptw^of sweet/resh,
butter. Beat np five sgga iate a
foam, stir tliem gradually jot*
the mixture, and let it cool.
With the same sort of butter,
grease soma tia pans two or
three inches deep and four inch-
es square; fiU the pane. to the,
top, soihatibey wiU rise and;
puff. qp. when ieking. Bake
them.a golden brown, split
batter them white hot ami serve
immediately. -~>hiv.v U -a
who ever presided ov6f4fce4Jlii
ted States House of Hepresenta-
tives. He was only. Uurty-e&ht
years and eight monthspM when
he was elected Speaker^. 183 .
Henry Clay was 34 w
seven months old wl
came Speaks*. .
was still younger wlisaHiis iteo-
or was conferred on
only thirty-four ifMM
months bid.
leaved KobeitO. '
only man li
er of ths Ijfan^o
an's adqunistoat
That>' liviag
statesmanship, Alien ft. ' j!
mart, of Ohio, m dedflning to
run> before the jDenowaltoi <«h
bernsterial: '«ertetioa < toM^
1 wilt merer An Miap^Mfal
office again. I am only a
WjftSSFj
^ a.._- IT n> ll iflsati'l
UHBinOQUn VAWKnnlt 9 fHxm.
•W)h': Vll xJi&yUo# Wil 8l'f.
'll
One day a young clerk Vlro'
was aubitios for a large fortune
determined to visit Oommodon
Vanderbilt aud leai'n from him
the secret ofaccumulating wealth.
He entered the magnffiwrtnt ii-
partments of the millionaire,
Willi whom he was soinewhat
acquainted, stated fHsl'&tond,
and askedhhn on wlnit ntytrte-'
rious principle he conducted
business with such tmexahi^tod
success? Mr Vanderbilt eyed
hint a moment to s?und hft'itHP
lives and then sld#iy replied:
"By working hard aud saying
nothing about'if—DHr Goods
<9bn«itaik' ; i > //t
The Texas frciglu
it isgood for the peopta
war* ia oreri
SM
Shippers
do not want freight want they want
fixed aaddottted tarilbat reasona-
ble Hgurcs.—llonstoo Post.
MA
After ]
country '
jday, " Pie^dOM ' ( .
"Country psopl««A||M (to tttfaaty
ed witheoiaidseattoa iyipttfiw/
paper aNa." Wi ;atoij>
President' Nabody U|t a e«toWX>
paper men whe has to Hl.#.%
dirty pont!c^t rtft9 of the city can
ii.L ;; ^ •iiiik.A
tin? gooo virvMB mm*
of ;ths ' frtoftoiS
toir' Sfteeall tie
goWrtmteat and « wvt otWiptt*
wbeel again* the isiae, Hmohtit
tbsraweWyaditW I i—tSWof
the- greet cifnto i'
spoke the truth <
docs.—Statesmwr
hiatal
onatratiott evto'
Texas.—'Boiistoa Post no aljofoV
mutoantty de* Mift4'ftia>W-«to
coaldenH^ardlygBitofcg'wtoMk
de Msstod/ yrt'I MlWi • fctoW
HftefWiatin #M him^-3M*«utor
Trarelleh !'m< 1 .wdim ovrj
.(rnl'vfi^ ■fhfcbtilrth Wf.W TiltS
,v-,.
«
C.-'
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Blake, R. B. The Weekly News=Boy, Vol. 23, No. 9, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 3, 1887, newspaper, August 3, 1887; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth235874/m1/1/: accessed April 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting The Dolph Briscoe Center for American History.