The San Saba News. (San Saba, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 14, Ed. 1, Friday, February 1, 1889 Page: 3 of 4
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HEY DE TALIAGE
IKE BnoOKDYIf DIVINES SUN-
DAY SEltMON
Subject Rewards Pop tho DnU M
Well as tho Brilliant
Test CnJo one His jure jjce foJenb < o
anolifr Ciro and to another one to every-
man according to hii tecerai aWIiW
Mutt xxr 15
Many of the parables of Jesus Christ were
more crapic in the times in which He lived
ivi they ara now because circumstances
hare fio much changed In oldsn tuneswhen
a man wanted to wreak a grudge ui on his
nafehlier after the farmer had scattered tho
seed Tvbtat over the field and was expecting
the harvest his avenger would go across the
same field with a sact full or the seed of
darnel cress scattering that seed all
crer the field and of course it would sprout
up and spoil the whole crop and it was to that
that Chrjt referred in the parable when He
spoke of the tares being sown among the
wheat In this land cur farms are fenced
cfl and the wolves have been driven to the
mountains and we cannot fully under-
stand tho zneanig of the parable in
regard to tie shepherd and the lost
sheep liut the paraole from which 1 speak
today is founded on something we all under
xtaai It Is built on money and that menus
the ssme in Jerusalem a in Kew York It
means the same 10 the serf as to the Czar
and to the Chiaeee coolie as to the Emperor
Whether it is m de out of bone or Drag
or iron or copper or gold or silver it
speaks al languages without a stammer
ibe paruble of the text runs in this wise
The owner ot a large estate was about to
leave home and he bad some money that he
vrttfied properly invested and so he called to
gether his servants and stud
V K ° ins away now and I wish you
would take this money and put it to the very
cest possible use andwhen I back
come re
Shs ntauef To one man ho
gave 4UO to other fie cave lesser sums of
money to the least he Eave S18S0 He left
oraeaadwas gone for years and then re
turned On his arrival be was anxious to
kntw about his wordjy affairs and
he called his servants tORether to
report to him Let me know said he
what have yon been dom with my prop
erty since I have been gone The manwho
bad received the W0O came up and said I
invented that money I got good interest for
st l live in other ways rightly employed
it and hero an lS Jo You see I hive
doubled what you gave me Thats very
Good said the owner of tho estate thats
grandly done 1 oJraire your faithful
ness and indmtry I shall reward you
He done well dune Other servants
cuo up with smaller accumulations After
a wh2le I tee a man dragging himself
along with his head nankins I know from
the way he romes in that be is a lazy fellow
He comes up to the owner of the estate and
ays Here are ihose ViSU n What
Says the owner of the property havent
Jon made it accumulate anjthin <
Iothinsnothin3 Why what haveylm
been about a 1 these years i Oh I was
steI it I might somehow
lotstt Intra are your lsso Slany a
man started out with only a crown In hia
pocket and achieved a fcrtuno but thfs
fellow of my textwitb 1S > has gained not
onofartoms Instead of confessing his
in
dolence be goes to work io berate his
master for indolence is most always ira
puJent and Impertinent Of course he lojas
his place and is d scharged from the ssrviie
Tto owner who went out into a far country
isJesus Christ goias from earth to heaven
The servant spoken of in tho text are
members of lbs church
The talents are our
V imUficationi of usefulness given
in different iroportions to different people
lbs coming back or the owner is the lord
Jesra returning at the judgment to make
final sctturiTOil The raisin of some of
these men to be ruleis over five rrtwo ciies
is the exaltation of the righteous at the last
day white tho casting out of the idler is the
V
expulsion of ail tho3 who have misimproved
tLeir privileges
Learn first from this su ectthat becoming
a Christian is merely going out to serrire
If yea have any romantic idps about becom
ing a Christian I want now to scatter tho
rom nca If you enter Into the kingdom of
God it will 1 going into plain practical
honest continuous persstent Caristian
w I know l here are a great many people
who bav > fantastic and romantic notions
about this Christian life but ho who serves
God wdh all the energies of bodv mind and
soul is a wxrthy strant and be who do s not
jtalcnta Under a httle culture it yields
twenty burners of wheat to the acre Here
is another piece of ground that has only one
talent You may pow it anl harrow it
and culture it year after year but it vields
n mere pittance So bcre is a man with ten
talents in the way of getdng good and doing
Rood He soon under Christian culture
vields great harvests of faith and good work
Here is another man who seems to have only
one talent and you may put npon him
tho greatest sptritunl culture but he
yields but little of the fruits of
righteousness You are to understand that
there are different qualfications for differ-
ent individuals There is a great deal of
ruinous comparison when a man says Oh
If I only had that man s faith or that mans
money < > r that min s eloquence how I would
serve God Better take the faculty that
God has given you and employ it In
tho right way The rabbis used to
eay that before the stone and
timber were brought to Jerusalem for the
TempCe every stone and pJece of timber was
marked so that before they started for
Jerusalem the architects knew in what pace
that particular Hece of timber or stone
fchculdnt And so I have to tell you we are
all marked for soars one place in the great
t r tJi l < pnl and do not let us
complain saying x mu i-
to be the foundation stone or
the cap stone Let us go into the very
pace where Goi intends us to be and be
satisfied with the position Your talent may-
be in large worldly estate your talent may be
In personal appenronce your talent may
ba in high social position your taleut may
be in a swift pen or eloquent tongut but
whatever be the talent it has been given only
for one purpose practical use You some-
times find a man in the community of whom
yoamy HehasnotaIentatailandyetthat
man may have a hundred talent His one
hundred talents may be shown in the item of
endurance Poverty comes and he eadures
It persecution comes and he endures it
sickness comes and he endures it Before
men and angels he it a specimen of Christian
patience and be Is really illustrating the
power of Christs Gospel and is
doing as much for the Church and more
for the Church than many more positively
active If you have one tale it usj that if
you have ten talents uss thm satisfisl with
tha fact that we all have different qualinca
tious and that the Lord decideswhether we
shall have one or whether we shall have ten
I learn also from this parable that tbe
grace or ooa was attendel to be accumula-
tive Whan God plants nn aciru He
msms an oak ani wuen lie pUatn small
amount of grace in tha heart He iatenls it
to bj growlhrul end enlarge until it over
shidowstbewhole nature There are parents
who at ttw birth of each child lay aside an
amount of money investing it expeetmz by
accumnlafon and by compound interest that
by tho time the child 6hal come to mid life
this raa 1 amount of moiuy will ba a tor
tuuii showing bow a small amount of money
will roll up into a vast acrumulatioa Welt
God sets aside jx certain amount of grase for
each one of His spirtual children at his Birth
and it is to goon and as by compound in-
terest accumulate until it shall bee irne an
eternal fortune Cai it be possible that you
have been acquainted with the Lord Jesus for
to twenty thirty years and tbat you do
not lovo Him moro now than you did before
Can it be that yoa have been cultured m ths
I ord vineyard and tfastChrst finds on you
nothing but soar grapes Yoa may depend
upon it if you do not use the talent that God
raveyou lfwlli doindla Tie rill that breaks
iYwa the hillside will either widen into a
jiverordryup The brightest day started
d the dim twiughb Tbe strongest Christian j
f JifIST y yqr isw
l l weak Christian Take tho
iSfbS and mak9 tw ° take Ave and
raaccm ull 0 WaS baaM to
l hn C0a for l olence
Thi mar > mto the smaUest amount of
5 7i me 5rolinK iat ° > presence of
iSSrhIrjn Slrea meJOlOOI would
well as this other
SS M 86 mf on > r l8S3and I hardly
fcol hid it ta a
napkin and it produced no
enough But inferiority of faculties
E mL 8 0l fad ° knco Let ma say
to the man who has the least qualifications
by the grace of God he may bo made
SrjD0feBLJle merchant whoso
cargoes come out rrom every Island or the
sea and who by one stroke of the pen can
changii the whole face of American com
merce has not so much power as you may
nave Ijefore God in earnest faithful and
contjnjous prayer Ton sav you have no
faculty Do you not understand that
you m ght this afterncon go into your place
° f Prayer and kneel before God and
bring down upon your soul and the souls of
others a blessing so vast that it would take
eternai ages to compute it Oh you say
I harent fieetness of speech I cant
talk irelL I cant utter what I want to
say ily brother can you not quote
one passage of Scripture Then take
that jne passage of Scripture carry
it wiUx you everywhere quote it under
all prjpcr circumstances With that one
passagsof Scripture you may harvest a
tbouaaad souls for God I am glad that the
chief vorfc of the Church in this day is bing
done bj tho men of one talent Once inn
while when a great fortress is to be taken
God will bring out a great fleldpiec and
rake all with the fireyhailof destruction
But common muskets do most of the hard
fighting It took only one Joshua and the
thouiuntls of common troop under him to
drive lowi the walls of cities and under
wrathful strokes to make nations rly like
sparks from the anvil It only took one
uther for r
Germany one Zwinglius
for Swlferiauu one John Knox
for Scotland one Calvin for
France and one John Wesley for England
Dorcas as certainly has a mission to serve as
Paul hs3 a mission to preach The two mites
dropped by the widow into the poorbox will
be as much applauded as the endowment of
a colleje which gets a mans name into the
newspapers The man who kindled the fire
under the burnt offering in the ancient bunple
had a duty as imperative a3 that of the
high priest in magnificent robes walking
Into the Holy of Holies under the clonl of
JehovahS presence Yes the men with one
talent are to save the world or it will never
be saved at all Tho men with five or ten
talents are tempted to tod chieflv for them-
selves to build up their own great name
and work for their own aggrandizement
ami do nothinjr for the alleviation of the
worlds woes The cedar of Lebanon stand-
ing on the mountain seems to hand down the
storms out of the heavens to the earth but it
Dears no fruit while some dwarf paar tree
has more fruit on its branches than it can
carry Better to have one talent and put it
to full mo than flva hundred wickedly
neglected
My subject teaches me that there is go-
ing to cone a day of solemn settlement
When the old farmer of the text got home
he immediately called all the servants about
him and said Here is the little account I
have been keeping I want to see your ac-
count and we will first compare them and
Id pay you what I owe youand youll pay me
what you oweme Let us have a settlement
The day will coma when the Lord Jesus Christ
will appjar and will say to you What
have you been doing with my property
What have you been doing with my facul-
ties What bars you been doing with what
I gave you for accumulative purposes
There wfil be no escape from that settle-
ment Sometimes you cannot get a settle-
ment with a man especially if ho owes you
He postpones and procrastinates and say
Ill see you next week cr Ill see you next
month The fact is he does not want to
settle But when the great day comes of
which I am speaking there will be no escape
We will havo to face all the bills
I have sometimes been amazed to see
how an accountant will run up or
down a long Jine of figures 11 I
ten or fifteen figures In
rir SthalaSL > t 0rtnim itoDbithalVjmBrir oi p fane aioniT
L fco e4rw l LZ ° l2M > St lme of discarded sacraments willalfbeadded
h er ti nTtSelld 0er m mprove priviiejes Xt
ror < ernmrntw lS c wli K up and before angels and 3ovis and men
raptains and Gcncraji m tune of peace but in
the Church cj God there is no peace until the
last creat victory ihall have been achieved
But I have to tell yon it is a vo nntary ser-
vice FfODle are not brought into it as
slaves were dragged from Africa A young
man goes to an artisan and Eays
Sir I wa1 to learn your trade I
by4hiindenture yi li myse to your care
am servioa for the next four or five or
seven years I wait yon to be my master
and I want C6e your servant Just so If
we come into the kingJom of God at all we
must come saying to Christ Bo Thou my
master ItakeTby service fcrtineandfor
eternitv IchooseiL It is a voluntary service
Tfcero is no drudgery in it In our worldly
rallies KmetmS our nerves get worn out
and our head aches end our physical facul-
ties break down but in this service of the
Lord Jesus the harder a msn works the bet-
ter be likes it and a man in this audience
who ha been for fortv yearsservnrOod en
joyniheemployment betTibtt w en hfirst
entered it The grandest hon or thatcan ever Ix
bestowed upon you is to have Christ say to
you on the last day Well done good and
faithful servant
Learn also from this parable that different
quaJiScations are given to different oeople
The teacher lifts a blackboard and be draws
b diagram in order that bv that diagram he
may impress the mind of the pupil with the
troth that ho has been uttering And all the
truths of this Bible are drawn out in the
natural world as in a great diagram Here
is an acre of ground that has ten
the a rreata wlU bo announced Oh that
will be tho great nay ol ssltlsment f
to ask the question Am I re > lor
itf It is of more importancetb me to
answer that question in regard to myself
than in regard to you and it is of more
importance for yon to answer it In regard to
yourself than in regard to me Every man
for himself on that day Every woman for
herself on that day If thou be wise thou
Shalt bo wise for thyself if thou scornest
of the last day as an occasion
tlon a gre3t demonstration of power and
pomp but there will bs on that day I think
a few moments of entire silence I think a
tremendous an overwhelming silence I
think it will be such a silence as the earth
never beard It will be at the moment when
all nations are listening for their doom
I learn aim irom this parable of the text
ttat our degrees of happiness in heaven will
be craduated according to our degrees of
usefulness on earth Several of toe com-
mentators aree m raatan ths parablo the
same one as in Lnkewhereocemau was made
ru er over five cities and another made ruler
over two cities Would it be fair and right
tbat the professed Christian man who has
lived very near the lire between the world
and the Church tbe man who has often
compromised bis Christen character the
man who has ne er spoken out
for God the man who has never
been known as a Christian only on
communion days the man whose great
struggle has been to see how much of the
woral he could get and yet win heaven is it
right to suppose that man wili have as
grand and glorious a seat in heaven as the
man who gave all his energies of body mind
and soul tc the service of God The dvina
thief entered heaven but not with
tbe same startling acclaim as that
which greeted Paul who had gone
tinder scorchtngs and across dungeons and
through maltreatments into the kingdom of
glory One star duTers from anther star in
glory and they who toil mightily for Christ
on earth shall have a far greater reward than
those who have rendered only half a service
borne of you are hastening on toward the
reword of tbe righteous I want to cheer-
y n up at the thought that thee will be some
kind of a reward waitingf or yon There are
Christian people in this house who are very
near heaven This week some of you may
pass out into the light of the unset-
ting un I saw a blind man going
along ths road with bis staff and he
kept pottniim tho earth and then
stamping wth his foot Isold to him What
do you do that for Oh r he said I can
tell by tl sound of the ground when lam
near adwullin And some of you can tell
by the sound of your earthly pathway that
vou are ccmlng near to yourFathers house
I congratulate you Oh weatherbeaten
voyagerulie storms are driving you into tlo
your friend boijt d the window and shouted
Come iB looms in Just so when you come
to the gale of tho future world and you ore
talking ivith death the black porter at
the gate metbinks Christ wilt nolst the
window ixid say Come in como In I will
make thee ruler over len cities In antici-
pation ol that land I do not wonder that
Augusnu Toplady tbe author of Kock of
Ages d lared in his last moment I have
nothing more to pray for God has given
me everything Surely no man can live on
earthafbirtheglorieslhavewitnessed Oh
my brothers and sisters bow sweet it will be
of ter tbe long wilderness march to get home
That was a bright moment for the tired
dova in tbe time of tbe Deluge when it
found its way safely into tho window of
the ark
Mb Jladstose recently wrote to s
oorresr 3ndent who had asked him his
opinion of the power of the press foj
good and evil Irate the value of the
free press high hut the sentiment jon
inclose could not have been mino 3
am wholly unable to make the com-
parison If asked by a foreign visitoi
I should tell him that in my opinion
the balance of good dono by the press
in home affairs is enormous and es-
pecially that to publio men its criti-
cisms are invaisable but that I have
not so f avorablo on opinion of its aver-
age action in foreign affairs
Thet have patent barrelheads pat-
ent bungs patent faucets and patent
barrels but there is no way of getting
a barrel of cider down cellar It takes
jest as many neighbors and just as
much boss Jig as it did 100 years ago
POPDIiAR SCIENCE
There are hardlv 100 electric motors at
work in Great Britain while in America
there are GOOO
Perfect physiological development of
the infant is absolutely dependert upon
mothers milk
Gneisses and schists are the oldest
minerals known to us and are therefore
to he regarded as the foundation stones
of the earths crust
Professor Ayrton defines inertia from
the European standpoint as resistance
to motion and from the American
standpoint as resistance to standing
EtilLA
A hospital for animals is one of Lon
dons tew humane institutions and the
number of horses dogs cats and other
animals presented for medical and sur
gical treatment has already necessitated
extension of space
Professor Pickering of the Harvard
College Observatory makes tho rather
broad guess that the socalled canals
of Mars are areas of vegetation possibly
immense cultivated tracts It is easier
to guess than to demonstrate
A recent lecture by Professor Honncy
on the Foundation Stones of the Earths
Crust before the British Association
was illustrated by real sections of rock
so thin as to be partially transparent
which were projected on the acreen
Weighty thoughts will no longer
be mere figments of the imagination An
Italian has invented a balance upon which
even dreams or the effects of a slight
sound during sleep turns blood enough
to the brain to produce a measurable im-
pression
A metallurgist gives as a reason why
steel will not weld as readily as wrought
iron that it is not partially composed ol
cinder as seems to be the case with
wrought iron which assists in forming a
fusible alloy wih the scale of oxidation
formed on the surface of the iron in the
furnace
There are only three salamanders in
this country but even three have been
a large enough number to prove the
falsity of the old belief that salamanders
live in the fire They liko to be where
it is warm but they cannot live in the
fire Their diet consists of worms and
jelly fish
Dr Charcot the great French phy-
sician says that children under sixteen
cannot have their brains overworked
No forcing he awerts will get out of
them moro cerebral work than the brain
will accomplish without fatigue It is
not till after the age of sixteen or eigh
teen that surmenage becomes possible
The following is given as an efficient
mixture for cleaning old brass One
ounce of camphor gum two ounces of
alcohol two ounces of spirits of ammonia
four ounces of spirits of turpentine one
pound of star candles one pound of
tallow and one pound of tripoli To
mix first dissolve the camphor in the
alcohol then melt the ingredients and
mix together thoroughly
The scientist Leuwenhocfc says I
have often compared the size of tho
thread spun by fullgrown spiders with
a hair of my beard For this purpose I
placed the thickest part of the thread be-
fore the microscope and from the most
accurate judgment I could form more
than a hundred of such threads placed
side by side could not equal the diameter
of one such hair If then wo suppose
such a hair to bo of a round form it fol
UW11 lows that 10000 of the threads by
I add c and I ad spun J
attempt to them up ijbem whea ta toJ
two or three times I make them different
each time But I hare admired the way on
accountant wQl take a long line of figures
and without a single mistake and with great
celerity announce the aggregate Now in
the lost great rettlement there will ba-
a correct account pre nted God has
kept a long line of slna a long line of broken
gethcr will not be equal in substance to
the size of a single hair
Enpcror Williams Kerr Crown
During some of the leisure moments
which the Emperor of Germany has had
at his disposal he has been overhauling
the crown aad regalia of his house and
has ordered the imperial crown which
he wears as German Emperor to becon
altered in sterr > cr 2sr J43iq
argehouwlTaiMBeirenteoilor
from 50 to 100 a year and all the
necessaries of life arc to be had at the
very cheapest rate The very mules
upon which we are to march to the capi-
tal each of which will carry a load it
2 > 0 pounds are hired at the rate of
eighteen cents per day and yet from this
small sum the muleteer if he be for-
tunate will obtain a good profit
The beasts are fat there is plentiful
herbage for the rst five stages and a
handful of barley and eight pounds of
cut straw is all that the mules will get
during the other six days journey and
each day the mule will march their
twenty to twentyfive miles and go
merrily along tinder their three hundred
pound load for the pack saddle cannot
weii > h less than twenty to thirty pounds
while the load itself is seldom less than
it0 and they will steadily maintain
their pace at an average of fonr miles an
hour save in the case of mountainous
passes storms swamps and tho numer-
ous contretemps incidental to Eastern
travel New York Graphic
When a Millionaire was a Rara AtIs
When I was a boy in this town a
graybcard said as he passed Jay Gould in
Walt street ew York I was walking
along Broadway one day with my sire
when he pointed out a bent old German
going up the steps of his house Look
at that man and youll seo the only mill-
ionaire in the United States I looked
with wonder as he told me that a mill-
ionaire was worth a million dollars and
I saw John Jacob Astor His grandsons
can now toss up a hundred times as
much so can the Vanderbilts and so can
Jay Gould I tell you that a mere mill-
ionaire isnt worth looking at in this
town nowadays By and by youll see a
billionaire Nevi Tori Sun
SENT HOME
DIFLOSrATS WHO HAVE BEEN
OUSTED BY THIS COUNTRY
The Tarions Instances In Which
Foreljrn Ministers Wero Re-
called at the Demand or
tho United States
The political upheaval in Franco
which culminated in the beheading of
King Louis and the establishment of the
French republic brought Genet in
1793 to tho United States as the first
minister of the new regime He had no
Eooner arrived at Philadelphia then the
capital and presented his credentials
to the President than he began the for-
mation of societies in imitation of the
Jacobin clubs of Paris He fitted out
hostile expeditions in defiance of Wash
ingtons proclamation of neutrality and
issued commissions to privateers In
his personal relations he made himself
equally obnoxious Washington in-
censed at bis misconduct demanded his
recall which was dono by the directory
of France flenet however having be-
come attached to American institutions
became e naturalized citizen married
Cornelia Tappan Clinton daughter of
the Governor of Hew lork and settled
down as a useful member of society
Before the close of his second adminis-
tration President Jefferson had a refrac-
tory diplomatic representative to deal
with In 1708 Carlos 3L de Yrujo ar-
rived in Philadelphia as the minister resi-
dent of Spain There had been more or
less friction between the two govern-
ments on the boundary between the
United States and tho Spanish posses-
sions onthe south These complications
culminated in 1S07 when de Yrnjoiasva
accused of attempting to bribe a Federal
newspaper to espouse the Spanish cause
The representative of King Carlos IV
denied the accusation but the proof wa3
satisfactory enough to ask his recall
The government of Spain responded that
the minister lad already asked leave to
return The minister who some years
before had married Sally McKean daugh-
ter of the Chief Justice of 1 ennsjlvania
and a great beJie in official and diplo-
matic society at Philadelphia was in no
haste to leave Washington His con-
duct was such that it became Tery offen-
sive to the govt rnment In response to
a hint from o icial quarters that he
should leave the country he said in a
note that he received his instructions
from his king and not from tbe
President of the United States that
he would suit his own convenience about
leaving His conduct now became mat-
ter of senatorial consideration John
Quincy Adams who was a trained
diplomat himself and familiar with the
diplomatic etiquette of foreign courts
introduced a bill to prevent tho abuse
of privileges by foreign ministers The
bill authorii ed the President upon the
violation of municipal laws by a foreign
minister to demand justice of the foreign
government and upon evidence of
Hostility or conspiracy against the United
States or disresjpect toward the Presi-
dent the government was empowered to
order the ofiending minister out of the
country and if he refused power was
granted to arrest iiim and convey him to
his sovereign the President signifying
his offence Senator Adams spoke iu
favor of the measure Tho administra-
tion doubted its expediency as imply
ing a discourtesy toward nations which
had never offended The government
again asked the recall of the Yrujo
which was now hastily complied with
Had Spain declined the bill would have
passed It was now formally defeated
in the Senate
The next case was that of Francis
James Jackson the minister of King
George III of England That monarch
who through his tyrannous measures
had witnessed the loss of the fairest por-
tions of the Americ wayolonial posses-
sions was still i 3 JPted ° these
misfortunes rgj K H u J Trg
imperial banner or the imperial mantajjii nrtWeSnce with governmental
of State considered altogether satisfac affairs and highhandproccedings in the
tory in their present form and these two
are to be changed in several details
Last and not least tho Kaiser also
found fault with the imperial throne
wheh latelv his
it waa privilege to
° cceX T 3 fionn and h is too is t0 te apprecia
bly changed in appearance to tho no
small perturbatiou of the more conserva
riveof his Majestys subjects who are go-
ing about prophesying all kinds of evil
things which are to befall him and his
hoisa > f he dares to carry out the pro
postal alterations But despite all the
croaking the Emperor means to have
his way and so far as the crown goes at
any rate it is necessary for his own per-
sonal comfort that he should do so For
not only did he find hi3 head uneasy
when he had to wear the crown but
to keep the imperial diadem on his brows
for any length of time involved postiva
torture The fact was discovered when
he put it on to be painted in full impe-
rial rig and the orders given for a Oia
dem that shall really tit his imperial
head are said to have been delivered in
the most peremptory manner by his
Jlajesty And surely Kaiser Wilhelm is
right I certainly do not see why an
Emperor should not be measured for his
crown just as he is for his tunic or lu3
boots He is not expected to wear his
ancestors hats without alteration and I
do not know why he should be called on-
to don their diadems cither or at any
rate not until these diadems have been
duly let in or let out as the state of the
case may require Graphic
Persian Poor 3Ians Paradise
When we enter Persia we are in tho
poor mans paradisea country where
existence is possible upon four pence per
day where meat costs one pence a pound
and bread a quarter as much in ordinary
times where a fowl may be purchased
for twelve cents a partridge or a wild
duck for four cents where a serviceable
pony may be had for a 23 note and a
valuable thoroughbred for 100 where
a servant can be hired for 2 a month
maritime and commercial complications
between Hie two countries during the
first administration of President Jladi
Eon led to a request for his recallin
1810 Two years later war between the
United States and E ngland was declared
The fourth instance and the second in
our diplomatic relations with France
was the case of JL William Tell Savallee
Poussinthe envoy of the French Itepub
lic of 1S4S under Louis Napoleon Pres
ident That designing diplomat was
found implicated in certain intrigues
which tended to compromise the govern-
ment of the United States His recall
was asked by President Taylor and was
complied with
The cordiality of diplomatic inter-
course with Great Britain was tempor-
arily interrupted by the violation of
American neutral obligations in the en
listment of men in the Unitrd States for
the Crimean war by Lord John Cramp
ton the envoy of Queen Aictoria In
this case tho government under Presi-
dent Pierce wnsmore summary It did
not ask Lord Cramptons recall but
sent him his passports which was suffi-
cient notification for him to quit the
country
Tho last case was that of Constantine
Catacazy the envoy of Alexauder II
Czar of Hussia This aggressive diplo-
mat became involved in certain claims
thich soon brought him into disfavor
with tho government but his chief of-
fending was of a social nature JIadame
Catacazy a blonde of large proportion
aud ravishing beauty was offen-
sive to 3Irs Fish the wife of
the Premier of the Grant admininis
tration The minister and his dashing
wife arrived at Washington just six
months after the beginning of the Grant
regime Mrs Fish had heard accounts
of Madame Catacazys previous life and
some incidents connected with her mar-
riage to the extremely affable envoy of
the Czarwhich did not suit her notions
of propriety As a consequence she
would not recognize the English blonde
even though she was the wife of the
plenipotentiary of the autocrat of all
the Uussias Constantize Catacazy and
IIIITTI iiiinij
hostility of the wife of the Ptemier lived
iu elegance entertained lavishly and in
fact were surrounded by a little court
circle of their own No entertainments
were finer and in the presence of dis-
tinguished guests Mrs Fish herself did
not surpass them This condition of
strained diplomatic aud so rial rela-
tions continued for more than two years
The administration at last through
the influence of Secretary Fish declined
to havo any further interecrurse with
Sir Catacazy the Minister from Russia
This step was the result of an indiscreet
publication by Catacazy in a newspaper
in which he made some discourteous and
offensive references to the tflovernraent
and rather pointedly aimingat the Pres-
ident His relations with the govern
ment thus summarily cut off Minister
Catacazys usefulness to his government
came to an end He left the Ilussian
legation to a charge and departed the
country
The severance of relations with a min-
ister of a foreign country does not neces-
sarily involve a disruption of friendly
relations between two governments A
number of American diplomatic repre-
sentatives have been refused by foreign
governments In every instance in which
the government of the United States has
objected to a foreign minister except in
the case of Yrujo of Spain he has been
promptly recalled and a new envoy has
been sent in his place Philadelphia
Timet
A novel contest that will take place
shortly in New York is a counting match
between two rapid money changers
One has bet the other 200 that ho can
beat him counting pieco by piece 10
000 in silver coin in all denominations
The wager has been accepted and the
matih will tak place at Cooper Union
WOKDS OF WISDOM
No mm knows the weight of anothers
burden
learning makes a man fit company foi
himself
We are apt tc blame luck for our owi
mistakes
x
Awink is not a3 good as a nod to as
auctioneer
We all think we can do better than tht
other fellow
The courteous learns his courtesy from
the discourteous
Who gives thee a capon give him tht
leg and the wing
There is no cake but thero is tho like
of the same make
Every one basteth tho fat hog while
the lean one burnoth
The ups and downs of life are bettei
than being down all the time
Excessive labor iswrongbut judicioui
Uborh the safety valve of life
To be really yourself you must be dif
ferent from those around you
A little knowledge wisely used is bet
tertfcan all knowledge disused
Fahjehood can make the best spnrtbui
truth can do the steadiest trotting
A man is not known until hohas passed
through both good and ill fortune
Ue who cannot counterfeit a friend
can never be a very dangerous enemy
Man may growl grumble and fight
but it has no effect upon natural right
Fashion is only gold front jewelry it
may appear well but the value is not
there
Slander is a slime which envious peo-
ple throw on others better than them
cvcsr
BTiTelcsropes
Thetelescope manufactured by ordei
of the late millionaire Lick for the uni-
versity known by his name in California
ha3 ejojed tho distinction of bciog the
largest and strongest in the world but it
is likely to undergo a comparative
eclipse Mr Abram Clark who made it
has undertaken the task of making one
yet larger and more poweiful bhould
he suceed as he is perfectly confident
that he will valuable additions may be
expected to be made to our knowledge of
the worlds by which we are surrounded
In a recent talk on the subject Mr Clark
disclosed some facts quite contrary to
general belief in regard to astronomy It
has been popularly supposed that wo
had reached the maximum of effective
telescopes The big ones the leading
astronomers told us disclose little of the
heavens wonders and they pointed out
that the most important discoveries of
the present centuries had been made by
telescopesof a medium sie Hence the
deduction that it was useless to bother
with larger lenses Such a theory oi
course gave us little of practicable value
to hope for from astronomy With the
telescopes now in use we could expect
to determine more accuaatcly the dist-
ance from the earth to the sun or to lay
bare more stars but in discoveries of
this kind the great mass of humanity
could scarcely be expected to take any
very deep interest It was the verdict of
most of the professionals that the Lick
telescope would be a failure so far as
adding anything to practical knowledge
of the heavenly spheres wa3 concerned
but in this as in many other instances
they were mistaken It has already been
demonstrated that properly constructed
and located a big telescope is more ef-
fective than one of smaller size It has
been shown in fact that there is practi
cally no limit to the power of a tele-
scope and that if a suificiently powerful
one can be made we can bring most of
the planets near enough to examine their
every nook and corner The lens of the
v instrument for the university at L03
geles is to be forty inches in diameter
I Mr Clark claims that he is able to
° > S iuiSet n diameter one
5SaJS 3iSyi9S > HJtbioAi
jioujand teet ot tne earth it s simply
z question of time and money mainly
noney as a telescope with a fivefoot
lensproperly mounted would cost a
millipa dollars It 3Ir Clarks position
Js true and there is every reason to le
lieve that it is astronomy a science
which has been practically at a stand foi
years will take giant strides There will
be practically no limit to the diccoveries
it can make and there should come from
it some practical benefit Each year we
will know more of the heavens and of
all sciences astronomy will be changed
frcm the slowest to the most progressive
PUUAvrg Chronicle
The Stables of a German Prince
The Prince of LippeDctmold who
entertained tbe Emperor AVilliafn re
ccntlyis one of the richest German royal-
ties says Loadim Truh He possesses
an immense fortune and vast estates
which lie principally in Westphalia
He owns nearly the whole of his do-
minions which is very nice for his sub-
jects whose taxes are merely nominal in
amount and they are greatly envied by
their less fortunate neighbors in tho ad-
joining States
The Schloss of Detmold is a magnifi-
cent royal seat with an immense round
tower like that at Windsor The gar-
dens ate beautiful and the fountains rival
those of llerrenhausen but the admir-
ably arranged stables are the great feat-
ures They always contain about a hundred
fine horses all of the famous Senner
blood which are bred at the Princes
farm of Lopshorn These Senner horses
are very hardy and are remarkable for
their powers of endurance I he breed
iis of Arab origin and the stud which
contains 130 mares is probably the
oldest in Europe for it has existed since
the fifteenth century
The Tentoburgian forests around Det
mold which belong to the Prince are
full of all kinds of gameaildthe stags
run even heavier than those in the Duke
of SaxcCoburg Gothas Thuringian
forests
Crust or Crumb
V curious custom prevails iu Ond
lausjiicious nionlhrandoii thc irstSun
day known as review day the lads and
lascs attired in their best promenade
the street separately stare each other
out of countenance and then retire to
make up their minds on the second Sun-
day which is called decision day The
young men go up and pay their compli-
ments to the fair ones of their choice to
learn if they arc regarded with favor
On the third Sunday or day of purchase
the swain is expected to snatch tho
pockethandkerchiefof his adored one
aud if she submits to it with good grace
he understands that his chances of win-
ning her arc flattering The captured
pledge is restored to the fair owner on
the fourth Sunday iho Sunday of bik-
ing possession and it rarely happens
that the damsel refuses the lover for
whom she has indicated a preference
On the Sunday following the suitor ac-
cording to custom calls at the house of
his inamorata where he is asked to tea
If a piece of the crust of a gingerbread
loaf be handed to him there is nothing
left for him but to retire If on tho
other hand tbe parents offer the young
man a piece of the crumb ho is allowed
to come again and is admitted to the
family
A Gigantic Iron Horse
A giant locomotive is being construct-
ed in Boston It is for use on the Atch-
ison lioad and has two tabs one over
the boiler for the engineer and the other
iu the usual place for the firemen The
driving wheels are of paper with steel
tires Economy in fuel is accomplished
by a pump which utili cs the exhaust
steam to heat water and by a large com-
bustion chamber which burns all the
gas It is expected the engine will make
eighty miles an hour with ten coaches
on au ordinary road
Oar Snns Cluster
In the sky on a clear night can he seen
a belt of brighter stars which is very
nearly a great circle of the sphere This
belt is plainly marked and it is inclined
From the District A ttomer of Westchester
County Neir Yerk
White Puuxs N Y April 13 IS 6
I have received many letters in reference to
my testimonials lately published commend
big AlXCOCKS POBOCS PUSTETtS
I cannot spare the time to answer them in
writing therefore would again say through
the press that I have found Allcocks Porous
PrASTEBSlnvaluahle as chest protectors and
Trt n < Mn t fusfrgnrdcoldsFurthermore
as a tonic iVMfc
I havo found Aixcocg PiiST
WilliHypophosphit > SniB two
us unequolcd
for pains In the side back and chest
Xixsojt If BAirxn
ATOTAnof 5730 miles of new road has been
added to the railroad system of thj United
fctates this year thu3 for
Card of Thank
If the proprietor of Kemps Balsam should
publish a card of thanks containing expres-
sions of gratitudo which come to him daily
from those who hare been cured of severe
throat and lung troubles by the use of Kemps
Balsam It would fill a fairsized hook How
much better to invite all to call on any druc
Eist and set a free sample bottle that you may
testroryourself iu power Largo bottles SCte
indSL
PrtAiiuE nrcs hate caused immense dama e
In Minnesota
A Modest lenitive Woman
Often shrinks from consulting a physician
about functional derangement and prefers to
suffer In silence This may bo a mistaken
feelinghut It Is one which is largely prevalent
To all such women we would say that one of
the most skillful priysicians of the day who
has had a vast experience in curing diseaecs
peculiar to women has prepared a remedy
which is of inestimaale aid to ihcm We refer
to Br Pierces Favorite Presoiiption This is
theonlyremedy for womans peculiar weak-
nesses andol ruents sold by druggists undera
positive guarantee from the manufacturers
that it will give satisfaction in every case or
money refunded Bee guarantee printed on
bottle wrapper
Is the ten years ending with 1S80 the wheat
area of theUnited States gained fnraalittlo
under 1900000 acres to nearly 3S 00000 acres
With groans and sighs and dizzied eyes
He seeks the couch and down he lies
Nausea and f aintness in him rise
Brcwracklcg pains assail him
Sick headache lluterelonjrcomeoease
His stomach settles into peace
Within his head the tbrjbbinga cease
Herceg Pellets neverfailhiml
Ior will they fail anyone m such a dire pre
dicament To the dyspepetic the billons and
tho constipated they are alike a friend in
ueed and o friend indeed
y rzTAU Jku l n discovered in the
Rifle Creek Colorado whihis saidtoexcecd
Magara In beauty though not equal in vol
umeDont
Dont hawk hawk blow spit and disgust
everybody with your offensive breath but use
Dr fcages Catarrh liemedy and end it
DorziKEErnts in England ae heavily
fined for permitting betting in their establish
ments
Consumption Wnvilnc Illscnsrn
And General Debility Doctors disagree as to
the relative value o Cod Liver Oil and Ilypo
phcsphltes the one supplying strength and
flesh the other Wvin nerve power and actine
J
p nd entir system
are coiiioiii u
an I thee cct lSTroatlerf L Thousands who
have derived no permanent benefit from other
p eparatlona hae been enred by this Scotts
Emulsion is perfectypalataSle and Is easily
digested b > tho e who cannot tolerate plain
Cod liver OiL
A linden Cure far rplleptle Fit
To the EditorPlease inform your readers
that I have a positive remedy for the above
named disease which I warrant to cure the
worst cases So Mrons is ray faith in its vir-
tues that I win send fieea sample bottle and
valuable treatise to any sufferer who will give
me his P O nnd Express address Kespy
II O ROOT 3L U IS3 Pearl StNew York
Nooptum in PisosCure for Consumption
Cures where other remedies fail 23c
For IVenralgia
FRESH TESTI MO N I AL3
EO Minutes Imgtoa HI Kay 231SSS
Aboat tiraa yaara aj Mrs Egbert Tanarel
waa tat o wltH HenraZfla la a a and lacs bad
affarti tbraa dayi aba triad St Jacobs Oil was
raUaredlaSOitUratcB Jaj T Goodtr Druggist
Prompt CoIombitJ OUo May 291JSS
HsTe snStrtl witb Haafalgla tot many yean
X u St Jacoti OU It fflTM rallef and finally
drives away all pals I woaU an no other mad
Ida sojeia prxirxa
Sure Tuwaada Ill Jena S 18S9
Tli WJt sf EXU0N T AKDIESOM iid palas
In to bead from cslldfcood wUcb yield to St
Jacobs OIL Q W HOW ASP A SPSS Dragglsta
AT D2TTGQI8T3 AJTD DEALERS
THE CHARLES A V0GELER CO Baltimore Hd
Diamond VeraCura
FOR DYSPEPSIA
A rOSITXTE CVZS FOB JNDIGESTI0S AUD AXL
fitoisach TrocbUs Arlilnr Sscieca
Your Druggut or General Denier irUI trt Vert
Curaor you if not already m itot or it vVl be
tail by mail on receipt of 25 cts 5 6ojr l iin
annpi Sample feitt an receipt of 2 cent tamp
THE CHARLES A V0CELER CO BalDscre H6
61 1rcpnatari and Maaaiaciuxaia
fyg Gatap h h
LYs
A particle Is applied
JimitiirprunJ afttrSj JJj CUSrcCOUjj
WfFEVERs
eo dor20 vearsficaa
open and free as to
other J feel very thank-
ful It H Cretseng
ham7BlhSU Brook
into each noflaJJl andisJJ AYPPWPP
agreeable Price50centsB Ei V tm ETi
atdrujnnstB by mail registered CO cents
hLY KKOTUfcKS 56 Warren faL New York
Vioney in Chickens
If yrm lnow how to properl
for them FotJ1 rent in stam s
youranprocnrealCOlAOE BOOK
Kirtnir the t xpenence of a practi-
cal I ultry Hauxr not an arai
tenr bnt a n an working for do
lars and cent during a pen d of
lJ5 years It tcartea yon how to
Detect and fare Diseases to Fe d
for Kirn and alio fo F tteninir
which Fowl to have for UreediLs
IarpcM s and verj thiny nd
you should innw on this snbiect to make it profit
able bent postpaid fo i5c IKOK IN
IIOLSF 131 Jiconnrd Meet N V Cliv
I bare posmT retniilr for tnabom danm
uuravndsof case of th worst kindandoflonrstaaii
har Men cured Sotrtronziamyralthln itaaca ytl
I will send two bottle Ire toeether wah a aina
treaUMOnthlsdlse toanT sutTetvr Olr Expn i
1 Oaddraas Z A nLOCCH M C Ml Pearl St N
about eighty degrees to the Milky Way eTerr PBrt r the
Pi
JA31LSEIV
United StntM AU
jrorrt te > iOO Wo
which it crosses near Cassiopea and tho pricCTaiiKrnnrrom > j ierii
caa surely suit any ttisn ho lahes o tmya farm
Southern Cross Taking all the stars
down to the fourth magnitudo Dr Gould
shows that they are mure symmetrically
arranged with reference to this belt than
they are with reference to tho Milky Way
la fact the belt has 2J4 stars on cne side
of it and 2tia on tho other while the cor-
responding numbers for the Milky Way
are 245 and 282 From this and other
reasons it is concluded that this belt con-
tains brighter stars because it contains
tho nearest stars and that this set of
nearer and brighter stars is distinctively
the cluster to which our sun belongs
Leaving out the brighter stars which
may be accidentally projected among the
true stara belonging to this cluster Dr
Gould concludes that our sun belongs
to a cluster of about four hundred stars i
and it lies in the principal plane of the I
cluster since the belt of bright stars is a
great not a small circle and that this
solar cluster is independent of the vast
congeries of stars which we call the
Milky Way
New York City has a Chinese popula-
tion of something over 10000
ntet CMtTlS d
If your farm l f Taa > u
WUKIIIT Jja Itrondwar rvr lurk
W nil
It has permanently cured TnotisAXDS
of cases pronounced by doctors hope-
less If you havo premonitory symp-
toms Buch as Couph Difficulty of
Ureatlilnrr itc dont delav but uso
PISOS CORE ror CONSUMPTION
Immediately By Druggists 25 cents
GRATEFULCOMFORTING
IPC fll
BREAKFAST
By a thoronuh tDowIttlirs of the mtriTallain
which fsm n the crerttifR of digrstioa and mitrl
tion and by enraul arrlication ° th pr j r
tiwof wcldectd Cores Mr tro lias rniTU > d
otir breakfast table with delicately flavoured beT
era sxhith ma > save us many r tj 0
It in b > tb jikluiitMu of mb rtw 2
a connUtution may be fflitwum
pnoiitfhtu rea f
fc CO Homcenpathic Chemists
London England
one ft tht nine papers Tla rrrsentiflflhopofEden
burg knows the fact Faithfully yours
DIXTON
IKevl JaMr MrorjXToN Mcpovald flT AT
Ti JlrPr A IOIiLTTi 237 Fifth Ae 3 T
tfi lhisSjsUm is taiw t ivrHonally or t y ror
Muney Mi vine Work romplete
H0aSEBD3S STOCKDOCTOR
19 T i 3rtniijju 750 EnpTavinps Galea Pure Faat
FODR BOOKS LEARNED
IN ONE READING
A Years Work Done In Ten Days
rrom tho Chapa n of Exeter Colleare and II > i tttoa
fej riao Prizeman Oxford
Co I Eton Oxon Sept 13RS
DearSIr In April 18B5 wuile thinking of taking
orders In September I niddtnljrrwmTed notice tfait
mi rnlnatioii examination would be heldlnafort
niKht I Lad only len < 1CI daya in which to p eparo
for be Exam I i honld ncommend a irtaft prepar-
ation in the caseof an cue ro utterly unprepared as
I was but youSsvm hat o Mtrettgtluncd mtnat
wral memory that I waa able to remember and aire
the gist of any book after wading it ontt 1 there-
fore retui iJKhtfoot Proctor Uarold Browne
Moi n im itc ie oir and w as Mvecrsufut in every
responibnc all or address as abore for proipecta
WeCieOilTAPRIJ
wher all other remedies fail Our
method or direct and co tinuouf
m Heat ion of tbe wbuie raMpinv
tory vf tern produces same effect
f iTorabierhsnceor ciiiralc
So Ptnoke or diiwirreeable odor
1LLU3TUATCDBOOK eirinfuU
mm sese caurhh cube
Ga State St Chiccro III
BEST AND CHEAPEST
ORANGE LARiB
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BARTON LAND AND WATER CO
I Oh ANniIESCAaU
MEfiCHAHrSBDIGHERS i r
e nam a good mis in jonr locality to pic a >
CALF SK3R3S
forns Cash FurrUhed on satisfactory pnarantj
AddiessC S Pagb Hrderarfc Vermont V S
Bow < In Kidn
hat1 AMeUte Ilea
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Horsemp firi be
ing our
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on receipt of only
lif Siwclmen Copim and Colored Announcement free
tU L
GREASE
Sola Everywhere
X3T OottUeUennine
HAUFORKia ORANGE RSW AND FRUIT LINO
U 9000 acres la any alas tracta Jnst the place
colony Special Inducements to settlers
SIGNOR FERR iJELOVER San Diego Cal
Il JILT lENMONSif
vi disabled pay etc l > esert
ersrriicvcd Laws free A W
w i Btra w
HcCornuc fe hnnVW aahington DC Jfc Cincinnati U
Blairs Pills 1 K ET
Oral JEox ill round 1 1 rill
Days Sanitarium or llont
latinent ir u Fren No Cure 2to Par Tbe
Ham iir tifuicdy tu Ia lavruf Ind
T I1 BootVerpingEusiness Forms
HTJJC ivn man hip Arithmetic Shorthand eic
thoruujhly taught by SH1L Circnl r fne
I > ranii4 Co llrcr 457 Main St linffaloy Y
Lines not under the horses feet rite
Brewster Safety Ue In Holder Co Holley U1
PAfWi UTaatlutaMaBdmakaiBorcRionrywerUBfbrBifhaa
Ify UlatanrfliincfbainlhAworld Kithcr arx CooDroatai
J1UK TenarVS Jilnr TkCS a LO ABgtiata > laiB
gentawtntcd tlanhour50newarticlesCaVlynt
No aJ Warren Mm L New Yorlv
Cares kPrwtst
Colds
Couehs
Soro Throat
Hoarsonoss
Stiff Nock
Bronchitis
or h tbmnand w ill l > e s > nt to yon
Catarrh
Headache
Toothache
Rheumatism
Neuralgia
Asthma
Bruises
Sprains
Quicker Than Any Known Remedy
No matter how rioVnt or rwniclatiny trie pain tht
RhenmaU Hflclr lrlirm irrplad KrTTOu
ieuralslcorpn > atrat < u n Ui uis < iuicsmar anSer
Radways Ready Relief
Wll AfTortl Instant Ease
CTTEKNUXYA half to a twrnonful In half a
tumbler of waer will in a few iiua t core Cramp
tSpasma Sour Jtrnah Nnuaea omltinr Ueart
buro NerYoa nw slrWeuiens sick ileadacht
Diarrhoa Colic Flatul nv aad ail internal pain
Malanaiiit var ou > f < > rm9 cure aud itcwataa
There not a r < w liiJ annt in th wwklthat
rill cure Fever an1 Anwi and tl other ftf
by lUDWAYtf 1ILLi o jiucJ a EAUWAY3
RkAPV IlEJUIZF
ACHES AN PAINS
Tor headache whether aitk or aerroum toothacha
nenraltrla rhearaattsmi liimbtw pain nd weak
msa in the back xnue tr kidney a pi iih amuad th
rJenria > vtvrcllirir < f thf jomtn and puna of al
tver th apili tion of Kaduaya livady IteUef will
afford immediateeaj and it continued use for a
few rtu a etln t a permanent euro Alice CO centa
Sold by all drusgiata
ILL
Tbe Great Lot anS Starch Remefl
Fortbecnre of alldworderaof the Stomach lirer
lidneya Bladder Nervmia Di e Losa of
Headache C < iit ati n C < tiittKBa Indl
re tion liiluMuintfit It tr Inflammation of tha
tls Pile and all derancement of the Internal
nreiy T reUble containing no iscrenry
maUdln are HoaUBt arunu us a ta rtoua dntya
to attack wheever there i a neat point We mar 7r WB45LwttI be accompllahed
escape many a fatal thaftby keepinronr elves well
fortified r 1th jnro blood and a properly nontahcd
frame Ciril S rvice Jazrtte
Mdeairoil WitntoiUctfwater or mli Sold
only tn half lound tin by Grocers Iaieu d thus
Head Deficiency
Skin
Ia it iu the Side lJut Junlt and Sudden it
t > f llttat linrniiur in the Fl h
Afewdoaes of icAIIWA V PI MS will free
the system of all the above turned disorders
ITU t1 ct per box Sold bj all druggist
Send aietter stampu > r > lC HA HV A CO
ZV l nformaton
TOIUEWBUC IWuivandaskrorRADWATS
and ace that the name iUIMtAY la on what yon
buy
NYNTJ 17
WatsTa JnitpsUlatbct ta ana larg as4 handwro Tolnm
neatly btand la e > la lbiwi an < t ba > alUutr lia travt d1 >
< ompteta Aoy I by cab bratr < l aullior a frl f Jtfwr
D inrt iccM W Mla 1L E Itra iltni Onbrirta Mrragt f
Vikl Cultiw A Jtrvlti Trtg + df b Kt Mul nk Tl J
ir p luihltr by ill An S Mphu iWr JJii f by
Kiry acll IUj TXaMnrtttef JJawnjr byXU W FUrMJ
particular freeoponapplcatlofi nmD UtU
COMPLETE
NOVELS
by m llnlfvk TH Vt > l al tl Cata y
riltr19 Ciltlna fat fig CW IInr by it T Caldor Twitm
Stwri by Mrs V rr A Uta im eelal OCert Wa wia
nt Tbe rtaale Hams Journal > r Iww 11H > <
comma W > tjtrat4 Llir > ry > Mf1 FuniH p p r Three SI oaths
en trUl a n r fpt o ojiy Twelve Centla p Ut i mpa
n4 In i nUrril > er will atao read frrf aa < i aoatpald
tia Tco Camalrte > orl abnre fl a uUcrijUiuna with
tba taa acrrela Inea t aart fur M > crata Tbi frrrat ofr Is mad
to ialrodaca onr paper Into new bumra Hftti ea r i >
HMRfyfuW i XMnt U lAPTOA ttb
Uaacr OS 11 array Street Jtew Yort
Beware of Fraud as my name md the price
are stamped on the bottom of all my adrertisetl
shoes before teaviujr the factory lkh protect
the wearers against bleb price and inferior goods
IfadealeroiTfcrs V I Jjoiigla shoes at a re-
duced price or says lie lias tiKiuwiiiKiutmy name
and price stamped on the boih > m pat him down u
a fraud
3 SHOE
InslJe SO TACKS or WAX THREAD to
hurt the fret ea r as handtewed and WILI
NOT in
AV I IIOUCSIAS 8 SnOE th orletaal
and onlr bindscwed writ 1 plo Eqnala ens
tummade slio1 costlnp from fl to J9
ir v ijoucia tssjso roLJCK snon
Railroad Men and Letter Carrier all wear them
bmooln Inside aa a HandSewed tboe NoTacaa
or WaxThread tn liurt tli feet
W L DOUGLAS SaJSt SlIOC 13 nnaeened
lor lieary weir lle t Calf slw for the tirlee
W C I > OC iI > S S3SS W01KI > < 3
MANS SIIOK is tlie best In tlie world for
ronEb wear one pan oucht lo wear a man a Tear
IV I HOUOIAS S2 SIIOK 1UE JJOVS
13 the best Sehor1 Slwie In the world
V L UUDGU S115 YOlITnS School
Shon plrrs tlic small Ito rs a cbacce to wear the
4
Aanlttanipkafrc f K Marshall Lockport K Y bc st shoes in tin world
peerless dyes
I0 > I ° I4 > II > II < I1 I X
The mui wlio lias bivtstedirom three
to tire Uuilars in a Kabber C > at and
at hia Cr > t balf hoars expenence m
a gturm rinds to his surrow tiiat it is
hardly j better protection tUan a mos-
quito netting r t only fiels chaKrined
at beiiii so badly taken in but aiso
feels ii h does notlook exactly Uke
tob
GEVixiarEnr
Tlmoalr calf ST SEAMTrSS rm tmooth
All made In Congress Button and T re If not
toll bij ur neahr wrlle W 1 DOUGLAS
BBOCKTOV MASS
All about a Horse How to pick Out a Good One See Imper-
fections and so Guard against Fraud Detect Disease and effect a
Cure when same is
Age by the Teeth
Different Parts of
to Shoe Properly
hundreds of others
ought to be in the
man and boy who
may have occasion
of all animals the
liable toberequired
the lack of them
of dollars All of
much other inform
possible Tell the
What to call the
the Animal How
These points and
equally important
possession of every
has occasion or
to use that noblest
Horse They are
at any minute and
may cost hundreds
the foregoing and
ation valuable to
obtained by read
< E2ig4 Horse
i L ° pmopostpaid
V e oiler the man who wants serrtce
not style a Rinnent that itQI keep
him dry in the hardest storm It is
CALcd TOWEIffc FISH 1IBANI >
SLlCKKlt a name muliar to every
Cowby sUoverielaiid With them
the wnly perfect IV n
LoatisTnweri if
and take no nth r If
mmnms
Atkbrtbe KlMl UUAND JcKiit H U OESX B J v uratirekeeper
d utii retiien iBRA > DseTdfordescTrpriTecaraln < nif AJ tkv > ltoMoriMa a
i SPECIAL OFFER
TO NEW SUBSCRIBERS
To any New Subscriber who will send us this Slip with
name and P O address and 175 in Money Order Express
Money Order Registered Letter or Check for a years sub-
scription to the Companion wo will send the paper
FREE TO JAN 11880
FOUR HOLIDAY ftlUftlBERS
iiiustraied
Supplements
Sent to Each Subscriber at ThanksgivingChristmasNew YearsEaster
JTn hnTI ° < iSr iJ 1 8 ° Pi0TJ T 30 wln > tal Sit Srrlal Ptorlc 150 Short Storirs profnsrir IBnstratKl
ArtklM Tales of Wrcntnrr Illalrate
Rktci < orTrnrel 1000 Anecdotrt IlltoriraIan < l SclrntiSc ArU = r ilnmor foetrj
FUaie mention thit publication Address
THE YOUTHS CotViPAiMIOlM 45 Temple Place Boston Mass
MM Km Horse Boot
ONLY A QITARTEE IN SILVER OR STAMPS
BOOK PUB HOUSE 134 Leonard St N Y
S
Si
1
DTprpslaFoxi t Stomach Eibousms wU beaYOid
ed as the food that is eaten contribute its nourish-
ing pniwrtic for the auiport a the natural waste
of tin liody
iir Obbcrve the followinff symptoms resnltln
from Diwase ofthe Dbrestv OmtM Constipation
Inward Ill Miliar of the Blood In the Head
Atxdity of tliv Stoiiath N = ii a ItVsrtburn Disgust
of lixdFuliniHair W inlt in thf Stomach hour
tnii iatinns in ink in or Hitttnu r of the Heart
Chninif orSnl < xatv p sensations when In airing
T eba before the
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The San Saba News. (San Saba, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 14, Ed. 1, Friday, February 1, 1889, newspaper, February 1, 1889; San Saba, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth110678/m1/3/?q=music: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .