The Albany News. (Albany, Tex.), Vol. [1], No. [18], Ed. 1 Friday, June 27, 1884 Page: 4 of 6
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«P# by tfa# Oastillan friivw ia
oAfflijJ edifice. To day ttie "bare,
Untied interior of the ctrnrch to
lie ha,1 penetrated offered him
kniacei'a«its tkm usual to
He was about to depart when
| eye h. ppeacxl to. fall on a canvas
lf-niddejt iu th &. gloomy recess of a
tawdry chapel. fpiRHHH
Kubfi's ic'v.uioed quickly, stopped
before the viaiutitg and suppressed a
cry of an. Meat.
His pupils weri; arotind him in an
jiistafit.
"What is it, mnslfe
?" aaidltho author
the Cross" and
It represented
and his face
Well,
r of
l&Dpf
K". '-ae'i i&i
[e-hlttng. -
|» V - '
must know
'"LooTs —look tin
of the "Dwcvt f
„'rjMt to tiieiiiin-
fci'i dCfith ofmon
JnPtjifrttonli w>w
had a beauty wlihili ' neither long pen*
anco, nor "iftiug, nor the throes of
de;iT,ii had sncceetMt in obscuring. He
lay on ffietarn* t»ri<*p of his cell, the
£ om< hand %r.i pin;* ja skull, the otlier
ife'&w.,..guig » i crucifix, to his
ife: 4nd offi* his eyea the death
liataA.
nqupupl of this picture
- wai » in*. It hung oroc
t jiarivw pallet tiom which, one in-
ferred, the uonfc hf>4 risen to die with
'greater humility o* the bare floor. It
pruseuUd a benuiifal woman stretch-
1 a bier shrouded in sumptuous black
vm, and wit}.1 the light of wax
_ ;)'S iu t»H -.utesticks streaming
updn Iw r dead
A«j the <>ye rested on these two
scenes, the Ou« coutahipd in the other,
eaning ol.eaoh, tho fact that one
eoiaphimenti 1, < lapieted and explain*
I e?ltho other, ■ >.. <1 itself clearly on
mind. An unhappy love; dead
_«s, a bligjited life; a renunciation
if the worl, , th.-a ;vt*3 the mysterious
Irani a, ivpruiiuwd! on the canvas at
ihioh RtthonKjMid iiie pupils now gazad.
' Tin dra wing, ia coloring, in compo-
sition, the »iotare attested tho hand of
iC"S Who can have painted this magnifl-
t wort, i« i-.ti»rv came in a chorus
"ic master-t pupils,
hap flvth'ntly bei n- a sig-
llii;; :•<<>.*:• v, said Bu'cens,
jdt i; has bean orased, au.t quite
r,l shoftjd |ni%4 The picture is
t mo*! petti thi» t v years old, I think,
Jb than twenty/ As to the an*
r, judging from ,ho merit of the
i lie luiglit b»' V .lazquez, Zurbar-
ibera, or tliat young Renious
. of when i am so much en-
amored. Hht VehiKquez does not
p concern tilings in this way; nor is the
cokninj.. o composition in Zurbaran's
nsittiF Muritto in more tender, and
em fii it wore ombre stylo, be-
; tt; prk •lof" not belong to the
ool of either. N I do not know
s author, I am nure; and I should be
bk billing to affirm '.hat I have never be-
J ffire Been any r>! hit. work. I go still
further, I do not btlitve the artist,
Viiknown ma! jiorh no Ioisger living,
| ytlrn has. given the v.orld this wonder*
i. legacy ev<- i .' mjed to any school,
or over painted anyt iiing but this one
picture, or v.-t <v Id have painted
I iniothfi whieh teoitld have approached
| at in. point of merit. Tlii-i is the work
ration, B i' :-rs .nal affair, a reflex
of the soul, a pi of a man's life. But
| • What a coKovptinn! Ho ypu want to
| Jtnow who paiaUl .his picture?
Jhal .dead monk thejre !"
. "Master, yon are, joking."
"No, ;so, 1. i ow what I say. To
ijoMi wvl*ip mon wtic orders, you know,
is i.j die, to all irtenta and purposes
"o die to the world.'
"Ah, ;<Oit thtnlr - *
"I think the woman stretebed on
I' tttai hi!;i e i-oul and life of
that monV, that wl ■ she died it was
Ills death, too . ihstt iy-> did die, in point
. cf fad, ii from that mo
| mijnt. i holieyis Uu» work represents
ihiti spittutt dying to the world of its
Hlthor rath'jr tlum hil physical death
| Aecordiugly he uiy still be .living to-
r.4»y., ant! #s wft thiii} years' time the
I'frftfoflo' rautpy a l-r.gie episode have a
«to btmm.t • -t eed, I should not
[*woi«Tir''at «U 'f I wtite a very iai and
ia We must cer-
HHp^k him up a?|d, above all, find
Bit if li ev"r pai-t i anything else."
\n el.h |y raf-'ik as kneeling in an
tiu'.jent) approached
Ppni: chapel,
asked }iitji w
jr of the • ou
nsfeot with Si
^ •'>•*, pH
1{*H ran.
■■■piipi mmm
iv he could find the
I. The niouk rose
•< lifflculty.
he said, in a low,
118 Wit
■rmtm H
,thcr, for iriteirupt-
s»id Rubens, with
ifhich lent so great a
Bnt eafa yon tell
of that picture ?"
- - What will you
t> U you I have foxgot-
K ww, a
?e»d1
mmnmrn
to do with the world. Let hiia
die in peace."
"You ask a strange thing of mo, father.
When God lights the sacred fire of gen-
ius in a human soul it ia not that it may
be hidden under a bushel and go out in
darkness. It should accomplish its snb-
lime mission and give light to other
men. Tell me the monastery where this
great artist hides himself. I will seek
him out. He must be riven "back to
his country. What glorious fame awaits
him H
"And," said the prior, in a low voice,
"what if he should refuse it?"
' If he should, I will apply to tho Pope,
who honors me wiih his friendship, and
perliaos his Holiness may convince
him.""
"Ahi you see I was right in refus-
ing to give you his name or that of the
monaster? in which he conceals him-
self!"
"Then, father," cried Rubens, a flush
mounting to his brow, "perhaps the
Pope and the King may induce you to
break your silence. I shall see that it
be done."
"Oh, no, no, Jon will not do this
thing, Senor Rubens !" exclaimed the
monk. "|fc will be wrong-very wrong.
Take the picture, if you like, but leave
him, who is at re3t, in peace to the end.
I' speak in the name of God! Yes, I know
this great man as you call him. This
wretched, blind mortal, as I call him,
loved him, comforted him, redeemed
him from amid tho waves of earthly
pasfions and miseries where he was
drowning. There was a time when he
had forgotten God. Sow. he is very
near to eternal blessedness. Glory,
fame! Do you knowjof greater ones than
those to which he aspires. What right
have you to seek to in flams once more
with earthly vanities a soul in which
there no w only burns the love of God ?
Do yott know the fierce battles that
man fought with his own heart
before he gave up the world—before he
renounced riches, fame, power, youth,
lo^e—all the things for which human
creatures thirst, in which they glory?
Do you know the anguish, the bitterness,
the sn preme disillusions which led
him to a realization of the utter vanity
of all things here below? Would you
drag him back into tho heart of this fray
when he is so near to final triumph?"
"But this is to renounce immortality!"
"It io to aspire to win it!"
"And with what right do you thus
place yourself between this man and
the world? Let mj speak to him—let
me decide—"
"With the right of an older brother,
of a teacher, of a father—for I am all that
to him—I repeat I do it in the name of
God. Respect my right as you hope for
the welfare of your soul.
And drawing his cowl over his head,
the monk glided swiftly up the church.
"Master," taid one of Ruben's pupils
who, during ihb foregoing conversation,
had been attentively scrutinizing the
prior's features, "did it not ctrike you
that there was a singular resemblance
between that old fiiar and the dead
monk in that picture?''
''Truly, you are right" said all in a
breath.
"Subtract the wrinkles and beard,
and the thirty years whioh, tho master
holds, have eJapssd since the pioture was
painted, and I think we shall find that
he was right when-he said the dead
mouk was the portrait of the artist
himself and, moreover, that is the work
of none other than the prior of this
convent." *
Rubens, sombre, shamed and deeply
moved, looked after the retreating form
of the old man. Before disappearing
the monk turned, and crossing his arms
on his breast bowed low to the painter.
"It is he—yes, yes," murmured Ru-
bens. '"Come let us go. The man is
right. What is tho greatness that I
have as compared to his? Let liim die
in peace."
And with a last look at the wonder-
ful canvas he left the church and repair-
ed to the place, where he wus to dine
with the king and quean.
♦ * * * * *
Three days later Rumens, alone and
unattended, made his way birtsk to the
modest chapel, ence mere to see the
wonderful picture and to speak ."to the
artist. ..
But the painting no longer hung in
its placs.
In the nave of the chapel stood a
bier and around it knelt all the member
of the community, chanting office of the
dead.
Tho master approached. On the bier
lay tho prior.
"He was a great painter," said Rubens
aftor a long pause, filled by many mix-
ed emotions- "Now is the time when he
looks most like bis work
raSHl
wood box, ttomaSbow tones
a dreamy currrent of melody. "There's
no place Hke horns*," why it swelled
out to the very storms with its passion-
ate longing. It made those of us who
Were hot going home, homesick down
to the soul. -'A wanderer fcom home"
—there were tears in the melody; no
alien splendor could dazzle a heart'so
home-loving. "Oh arive me the lowly
MB
thatched cottage again," came fairly
sobbing in the tender, bird-like notes,
and again the "Home sweet home"
refrain, sympathetic, rich, plaintive,
yearning.
The train slowed up, stopped, the
conductor came in abruptly, the mellow
whistle died away in a scarce audibly
sigh.
"Oome," said the conductor," I can't
carry yon any further,"
The whistler rose, and as he vainly
fumbled for a button on his buttonless
ooat, started for the rear door.
"This way," shouted the conductor,
and the whistler meekly turned and
walked out by the forward door. A
lantern swings out from the step, the
train moves on, and the homeless whis-
tler is on; in the snow.
"What station is this conductor?"
"No regujar station. It's a crossing.
Station's two miles further down Don't
stop thsre."
"Where did that fellow get on?"
"Climbed on at the tank, when we
took water absut twenty miles back."
Came from nowhere, got off at no-
where, had nowhere to go,and whistled
Sweet Home until he made us all cry.
Ah me, I wish I had given him a quar-
ter. But that's me. My good impulses
are ever slow. I never think of the
quarter in time unless I am on the
sleeping car. And then the porter, who
is a believer in practical, and prompt
benevolence, always helps me to think
of it. But the tattered whistler, whose
lips dropped music like the singing of
the birds when the vinos with the ten-
der grapes give a full smell, why
should he be bounced out in the night
and storm, when fare for his ride and
bread for his mouth were right here in
a dozen pockets? Then I saw that the
race is not to the swift, nor the battle
to the strong, neither yet bread to the
wise, nor yet riches to men of under-
standing, nor yet riches to men of
-skill; but time and chance happenoth
to them all."
A bpahkow has built a neat in the
hand of the bronze statue of Danim
WoLoter, in Central Park, N, Y.
to
bluff and
an
him and
cane, all'
IBBl
Ms gold-headed
.... „... with myoonoeptienof
the English country gentleman of the
olden tune and the better type, and
his sometimes tender walk and gouty
toe, gave evidence that although he
possessed most of their excellencies, he
also partook somewhat of their weak-
nesses. He was greatly beloved in
Ohio, and Beveral aneiSlotes are told
of his kindreds in enforcing the claims
of the United States when he was re-
ceiver of the district land office, for
londs sold on credit, as was the onstom
those days. Upon one occasion there
had been a general tightness in money
matters, and many farms in the region
northeast of Cincinnati but partly paid
for, were forfeited to the government.
In tho discharge of his official duty,
General Findlay attended at the place
of sale. Learning soon after his arrival
that many speculators were present
prepared to purchase these lands, he
mounted a stump and opend the sale;
he designated the lands aforesaid, and
said that he was there to offer them
to the highest bidder; he said also that
the original purchasers were honest
men, but that, in consequence of the
hard timas, they had failed to meet
their engagements. But if they had
more time the government would lose
nothing. It was hard thus to be forced
from their homes already partly paid
for, but the law was imperative, and
the lauds must he offered. ' 'And now,"
continued he. "I hope there is no gen-
tleman—no, I will not say that—I hope
there is no d—d rascal here so mean
as to buv his neighbor's home over his
head. Gentleman, I offer this lot for
sale. Who bids?-" There was no for-
feited lands sold that day. Circum-
stances of this Idfld were some of the
causes of General Findlay's popularity
throughout his district; and conse-
quently, in the days of his vigor, it was
follv to attempt his defeat for congress.
When he ran for governor of Ohio,
however, in 1834, he was defeated by
Robert Lucas.
—
One Life.
There was a wife and there was a
boy. Long before any one now in the
office had a sit in news-room, press-
room, business office or sanctum, and
before the old roan had begun t» look
out at the world through spectacles,
and his figure was aa straight as it was
tall, the typos and reporters used to
hero a great deal of talk about buying
a lot and building a house out on the
hill, where he oould have a patch of
garden. And by and by ho was going
to quit sticking type and get into
something that would let him stay
home nights and get acquainted with
his family. And the suit of clothes he
bought in the fall lasted a long way
into the next summer, and then they
came out again in the winter, and the
old man "rusliad" more than he ever
did again while that dream of home
was inspiring him. It is an old story,
this struggle of a printer to get a homo;
any one of these restless mariners of
the land, drifting from port to port,
aad back again, lured by the ignis
fatuus of so many cents more a thous-
and and a price and a half aftsr 2 o'clock,
and big bills with four or five mgnts'
work. Never a wandering jour, print-
er got a chance to stand at the old
man's case whilo he was saving money
for a house and lot, and the subs looL-
ed at him with the despairing glances
of starvation. But it is hard, up hill
work for a printer to buy a home. Hit-
pay-is easily reduced and hardly raised;
a long strike means the road for him,
and if he has a family and can't tramp,
he breaks his heart, puts dust on his
head, and goes out of the union, and
wearily works at the bosses' rates. So
the old man worked bravely on, as
many a printer has worked before and
since bis time, and the little plant in
the bank began to grow brighter as
the old clothos crew shabbier.
And ,the boy, growing into his tenth
year, used to be seen iu the office after
school, standing at his tall father's
elbow, learning in a very irregular,
boyish, unapprenticed fashion, with a
cataract of questions, to stick type.
The old man never intended the boy
should bo a printer. And he w»4 ho
proudlof him and his standing at school,
and once the boy wrote a ten-line ac-
count of a boy falling down stairs, and
a good-natured reporter sent it in just
as it came, although it was a dull day,
and the scribe wanted awfully to make
it a column and put on a hanging hoad.
And the old man sent marked copies
kithat paper to every soul he knew in
tho world.
But one day aa unbidden guest came
rom ibohool with the boy and
'•fl by4h<s hear!
Not a costly medicine. 25 doses
Piso's Cure for Consumption, 25 cts.
OuB life is made up of little things.
Our attention to them is the index
to our character, and often the balance
by whioh it is weighed.
" I do not like thee, Dr. Pell,
Tho reMoU Why, I annnot tell."
It has often been wondered at, the b&ft odor
this oft-quoted doctor was iu, 'Twatt
because he, being one of the old-sc
tors, made up pills as large as bnllots, which
nothing but an ostrich could bolt without
nausea. Hence the dislike. Dr. 11. V. Pierce's
"Pleasant Purgative Pellets" are sugar-coated
and no larger than blrd.nhot, and are quick to
do their work. For all derangoments of th j
liver, bowels and atomaolx they are specific.
It is easy to love our fellow*man. Do
good to them, and you will bo sure to
love them.
The glory of man is hla strength. If you are
weakened down through excessivo study, or by
early indiscretions. Allen's Bnin Food will permit
nently restore all lost vigor and strenuthen all the
muscles of Brain and body. 81; 8 fur $8.—At drug-
ist«. o» by mall from J. H. AUen 315 First Ave.,
New York Oily.
The total number of separate farms
in the United States is four million,
and their aggregate value is nineteen
billion dollars.
Paj illon Cur© ia an unfailioR remedy for Whoop-
ing Cough. Try it and relieve your child.
Truth—the open, bold, honest truth,
is always the wisest, always the saf-
est, for ever one in any and all circum-
stances.
GREEN APPLES.
Eaten In the eprlog time, or arv other season, H
liable to give one a bowel troublo wlilsh c%u lie
spoedly checked by tho us* ol Dr Digger's South-
ern Remedy, the great specific that will certainly
cure cramp coUe diarrhoea dysentery and restarts®
the little one Krurtnslly wasting sway from the
effects of teething This with a bottle o£ Taylor'n-
Cherokeo ItemedytrtUWeet Hum and Mullein com-
bining the stimulating expectorant principle of the
sweet gum Avith the demulcent healing one of the
mullein for the cure of croup, whooping cough,
colds and consumption, presents a litUe mkdicine
o«esT no household should be without 'or the
speeny relief of sudden and dangerous attacks of
the lungs and bowels
Recent returns show that the sav-
ings banks of New Hampshire have
three million more dollars in deposits
than they had one year ago.
fi-efa., ga.
r--l*havo talten
Begulator fo*
f&llipf of the Womb and other die eases com-
bined, of sixteen years standing, and I pealiy
beliew I am cured tntirciy,- for which please
aooept my heartfelt thanks and most jiro/onnd
pi-fttitudo. X know your medicine saved my
Hie, eoybu see I'oannot speak too highly in
tta lavor. I have recommended it to* several
of my friends who arejsuUsricg a» I was.
Yours very respectfully,
MBS. Wf E, HTEBIUN3.
Treatise on the Health and Happiness of
Woman mailed free.
BiUDMBU) JtEOULATOB Co.,
box 28, Atlanta, Ga.
He who can conceal his joy is greater
than he who can conceal his grief.
" ftOUQH ON RATS '' Clears out rati, mice, t ie»
roaches, bed-bogs, ants, vermin, chipmunks,15c.
The King of 9iam has '^3 children.
■' - .sSSftii?e ■ .'v '
tt* whns^r
he wfco loses
111
neu ntfth'
IPHiRPP I DeMlity, i
i a* a preventive against re
r intermittent Fevers, the "1
aril ft Co., New York,
the best tonic; and lor .
Fever or otter siokne*. It
Depression of
r various forms,
and Ague, and
rro-Ptuwjihor-
I Caswell, Hai-
•twt Rttklr of CtU wy«," made by ■■■
■MHjMiiMMl and sold aU Drnggist*. is
patients recovering from
has no equal.
A Spanish proverb has it that "man
is the child of his own deeds." The
American version should ba lhat "man
is often the slave of his own mort-
gages."
"BUGHU-PA1BA." Qalc.k, complete cure, all an-
noying Kidney and Urinary Diseases, ft.
The township treasurer of Newark
0., began driving a fast lioi s > about a
year ago. The authorities are now in-
vestigating the amount of his defalca-
tion. There is a great moral in this
little story.
The sick, woru »nci riejccted enouitl raadJfoa
advertisementjtaQUiD BaB.!* Toi?JC
An organization has been formed in
North Carolina for the erection of a
home for disabled Confederate sol-
diers of that state.
P. W. Goebet, druggi.it, of I.ouiaburg, Kan
saa, says: "I have sold ' Prickly Ash Bitters'
for five yearB, and I have never handled a
medio/» • which gave more universal satisfac-
tion. I have warranted dozens of bottles and
never had one retained.
The Gatling Gun Company at Hart-
ford has twenty guns nearly finished,
ten of them for the Chinese, and the
rest supposed to be for the Egyptians.
"Dromon show your book account to
the defendant ?" asked a lawyer of his
clieut. "1 did. Your Honor." "What
did ho say ?" "He told me to (to to the
devil," "What did you do then?" "Why
then I came to you."
We think we can cure a bad case of
Backache quicker with one of Carter's
Smart Weed and Belladonna Backache
Plasters, than by any other application,
and after the Backache is cured, yon
can still wear the plaster without dis-
comfort for two or three weeks or long-
er. This combination of Smart Weed
and Belladonna is a great hit, and it is
hard to find any pain or achfe that will
not yield to it. Pries 25 cents. Sold
by druggists everywhere.
It is said there is still oustandtng
$6,894,000 in fractional currency, the
most of which is lost or destroyed, or
in the hands of curiosity collectors.
ACABD .--To all who are suffering from
errors and indiscretions of youth, nervous
weakness, early decay, loss of manhood, Ac.,
I will send-a recipe that will cure you, FBEE
OF CHARGE. iUs great remedy was dis-
covered by a missionary in South America.
Kend self-addreesed envelop* to Rev; Joseph
T. In man, Station. P., New York.
In boarding-house strawberry short
cake it isn't usually the pastry that is
short, but the berries.
"RQUOH ON CORKS." l&c-Ask for It, Complete;
cure, hacil of soft corns, warts, bffniona,
Tktjst not the praise of a friend nor
tli^ contempt of an enemy.
EBMQD.
ipSli
food
tsmt
JKBmlmm
BunwM u«> —
fvOi rem ttj j
§» nlttbufeo th^ ....
ththoso lot**,«; eitai
ing enmplMiiitB peettlimr to
their own c
and delicate who ospeet to
become moiUers ond bring up vigor-
ous children should by oUffioniia uso
It. II will rwtcre auffvrert frmn
Mental orKtrmt i Prostitution aris-
ing from Oner-worTt, Ejse<*ms or
jrrptracUA Disease. It will ^tra
JJrankentusi and Vas Opium Habit
—for as the appetite grows Healthier
and digestion more vigorous through
the uso of this Tonic, tho unnatural
craving dies away until totally ex-
tinct. It is highly beneficial in JAver
Vnmplalnts, Malarial Feecr, and
Ai.L Malarial Disease: and for the
debilitating effects of Fever of any
kind, it has no Bri
waste, improves I W
petite, and atTords tho Dumcptle J
valid an easily assimilable artit
of food; and is so pleasant to tho taste
that tho most sensitive palate will not
reject it.
TO PHYSICIAHS AND INVALIDS.
An analysis of " (JoUIph'h JjhjuUl Xteef
Ttmie," Uy the eminent, oliemiM, A.UTHUU
BILL HASS.VLL, M.U., F.K.S., of L»udor.,
EnglanO ami an endorsement by tho cel-
ebrated physician, Protesfor HIK EBASMt!9
WltSON, r.K.U., LL.D., of London, are la-
bel led on each bottle.
Hulit at wholesale by all feadine
HrusSmtH, find, retailed generally, ut&l per
bottle; 6 for C. N. CIUTTENTON, Oi.x-
iiiiAL Acest. lis Kew York.
Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Sciatica,
Lumbago, Backache, Headache, Toothache, .
More Th . ..at, *w«lUn(^«tpriklna. Bruises,
Haras. Wealds. rros« Wiles.
1S» Khh OTI1KK IUIOUT FUSS ASK MUM.
Bold b, DrulsUW »n<l DeiHwiicjorjwIliire. Ylttf C«nt> a bold.,
nSMpli m ii
TIIE CHAHI.E8 A. VOOHXKlt CO.
HgHrama to *. Toeiut s oo,)
Ulllam M4..L.S.4.
Dk J. BBAnraxn. Jicar
CURES WHERE ALL flSE FAILS.
tmu
Best Cough Byrui
Use in time.. Sol
'Hfttewgooil. fcO
b/ (Irmffif**.
"WHY WILL ANY ONE SUTFEX FROM fiOM
•\vh«n ikvy can cot A bottie of th*> " N
OOSWf «EM()VER"-n certain ami paiwiohK i-crix
Proprietor, ittff<on Street-, New York.
.GLENN'S SULPHUR GOAP INt'BOVES THE SKIN.
FUSE SOLO WATCHES FREE!
So iMtxtrj Scheme. No I>r«wiuK». Open for ah.
Teas farm and Ranch,
1 -ftuly flNB BOLLAK a year, Oftert to ygeats
waivable premiums free getting up cubs. A
Hiolfl TV,itch for » I'tut) of 3® mlminbei • A Mickie
-waiteli for a clnb of JO mbscrlbtrs. a Micro-
sicopti for a etui. *f 8 sobscrlters. A set of 0
Knives a tut forKo (hesTily plated, welching 2
' ofjOM|WS.,'--4Wi
(TOM
one has heard of the gie;
JUBtKl
arrt
ifora club <■■■
* :h torfm-a club
r Valuable p
subscribers.
£
proa,.
TBI LIVER AND ITS FUNCTIONS.
IT has bsooooa well ««tnbHsh»J fart that the
I lsmr portion at diMsses to nbloh fehs bsman
1 family is subject arias In tho Br»t pls.» from
_ sains dersngemsnt of tli. I.lver, This
is not only the largest, but stths Bama t
tbs most(mportaot. The veuoiisblood.
turn to the hssf t, pssuss throuith this organ, Bad
in its passage the Impurities,ss_slso the temeUom
whioh are neoewaiyfor dieestionaswsit as for a
cstbartietoas.Ut ia tb»,renewal of «oste mate-
rial 4o. ore eliminated. From thlslt iseasily teen
that tho Liver is liable to got out of order to 6
greater or less extent, and when this occurs it is
atthe Barao time one of
blood, on Its re:
npoasible for it to properly fulfil its ofQoe of re-
joving all obieotionablo matter from tbo blood,
but allows it to pass through, carrying with it the
pcisoaB of which it shouT*
With lmpnre_
blood the whole sys-
tem becomes affect-
od.andnoorflanean
properl yperfor mi ts
unction onlessifcls
supplied with ppj
blood to maintti
its strength. Sot!
Liver becomes air,
iraportant.ana^
when one ^
hastbe feel-
ing of being
Of0kifi,etc.
Hii in h i i n*
risout
lor.aad
a remedy is
reanirea to
nssUtnat're
!t°..'»1
eocuianla-
tlono, and
rostore itto
Its original
Strength
andViitor.
For all the
apis
have been relieved.
DR. B. F. SHERMAH'8
PRICKLY ASH
ITTERS.
e result of years
!tudy.3iperim'nt
medical, research
and practlcoof Dr.
B.F. SliEKMAN.itS
originator, and,
its success
w herover
i bittersI
u R r<n
ALLDlSEASBSOFTHEii
LIVJSR
KIDNEYS |
STOMACH
B<
^jused is suf«
ficieT
HOOPING
ntguar
anty for its
merit.
DrnatlcPur-
atives and
class
of reiseaies
have
but one of
is by their
violent ac-
tion to do-
BYSi^
ALL DRUGGISTS
pr-iceIpbllar.
AdeUcions syrop, ]
that < i-itresslng afflict)
tew dsy»iV It prevents i
which causes tbe whO'ip. BroDo„... -. —-—I
liacliiiig congh so prevalent in chtldhood sod old
sic, are permanently cured with this xlaiplesyrup.
It is purely vegetable, a - d can bo administered to
infante without the slightest danger. It relisTM
snd cnr-s whooping cou«li and any cough of child-
ren or adults . ,
We ate constantly in receipt of testlmonlsls, and
rpports from physicians and drbggiats, prsising tho
oflicacy of this de'icloun syrap. 3f joar child has
a cold, a few doses of Papillon f^ongh Core will,
prevunt a contagious malady. For a hackingnight
cough, this r. inedy is Miperlor to aU others.
Prioe $l pi r bottle, sis lor 8&- Directions in ten
langnastcs accompany every bottle. t-
For sale by All druggists. . .
30 DAYS TEIAiLl
lOTIiOVOMATO *ii<3
I KlvBOTHia Aj>PljltHOE» sro n ""
,y«' trial, TO Vl-BKOSluY, tOUNG
wlio use Kiiff.jring trow Servoiw
torn, Lost Vitality, A'a^fltlg Woahno
all duor,«(« of a Kii^a Nutuxo,
from whi.tovor-»CsaaeJi. aP jidf «
complete iei'oiat.jn to Uealih, Vigor
Manlioo;! Utmiantaml, Send at otic*
Ulusu-aWd ramphiot free. AifdroM
VlI'vIc Belt (!«.. Hsrslisll. WIcH gin.
TAs Great TurUt*
SluumaMeCvn.
■A sure audposttiroe ...
mutism In a 'jr cf Its various I
—Aciite, Inflammatory, r-"-
i'M will be plven jar •
BheumatUm this trei.tr"
cure or help A curl
lor mmioy reftmded. —
nirnt ia one of the greatest dlsw
erles In ti.e annals or tnedlobiv.
One dose will giye relief, and a fcw
doBcs tm S'V« decided reltofc will
relieve the (lever and pain Pi the Joints. It willsnbdn
the swelling of the Joints In 3 to 8 days, and mavuntat
will become eiisy In 8 to 4 day* A complete cure la •
tojilsya it is not a cure io.-5ll diseases. 1* or the Cttra
Of Rlieiiinim.m orily. StaWfourc^o^odssridforWraiw
° bu, Kaoias city, Mo.
■■mi
ii-
Bheumatism.
ange end
weaken tho
system
MrtlyAih
Sitters acts
iliroctly oa
the Liver,
Kidney®,
Stomach,
& Bowels
In a mild
yet effect'v
manner,
and Is as
pleasant to
the taateas
anycordiuhB
and is as
eatilytuken
by children
PRICKLY ASH BITTERS l» a medleine
of rare msrlt, snd not an intoxicatins beverage,
and being purely vegetable in Its composite csn bo
nsedataU (imeswltn bsnaftclsi reaulta. Itis not
claimed as a euro-oil, but for derangements of
" a organs meatioued. It is a speciflc and as
BLOOD PURIFIER ronks above ail other pj»-
deredforyou.
PRICKLY ASH BITTERS CO..
BOLE PEOPEXETOSfl,
ST. LOUIS AND KANSAS CITY. MO.
WANTED! QUICK!
»»-l!c«t Terii.s-g»
ivtr i ff ird.'osell the
•nr-plves of the coming 1'rcsl 'cut and Vice-Presi-
dent, ni. tlH K Iind LOSAN! History
of Hcpnoiicnn Convention, by J. W ilcSr,, U.
S. Stud 60 Cents by return mail tor complete
oiitflt. Call on or a'ldresi Kan'as city i»nbllsh!ng
Co.. 1C0 Wfl'l lltli istrect Kaisa,>Uitf, Mo. >
OoIIck--1, St. IjllUH,
Send for CirculaiM.
Huiinaae
Tcligrap
ntudonhj yearly.
5,000
I.IFK OP 1ST.AIM',
by an auihor of Ills owi
r. le, tlori, H J. KiMS.
• BLAINE
LADY AGENTS .WI&:
XXX likndcil Tea. Au Imported Gold Baud
Chin* C'a>) ami Saucer given with each pound.
Price iiOc. Mend for partlcuUrf.
J%<. B. i I.UtK, Oreenwleh!»., K. T.
Believed immediately and
on red by usiagCOKF, Asthma
^ _ CoNiivgBOB. Price S3.00
per bottle or a buttiesfor |at»o .lo'tveroil. Address
Db O. Markt. aHiiager, Hjmii.»0h. Ohio,
ARCWTC >»»!?» *;®to 91511 per month nelllng
Hutll I Ooiir.1 mtrated books &HctoralFamily
bibivs ior circulars with fecial terms to agents*
addMc«. Tox;tfi Rook and Bible -
pfcLt, ihejWstlf>£s»»:
fi jottriialidt.
rl,U6*N,
m
by lieu
AGENTS
Wanted.
I'erley forti'e, 22 vcar
an officer of Congress*
Authentic snd cA»n-
]}U tu. Ono vol. 650
p a s 3 ► t' el j) u r trai ts.
.*4 lull Ulustra-
tioiis Outfit resuv»
"50c each, seut post-
paid- Address,
HUB15 VHJU BROS ,
Kan fas < liv, Vo.
and
LOGAN,
or heirs scud stamp for circu-
lars showing who is entitled
to pension, bounty, &c. X. C*
' WOO It* Pension Atty.f Washington, D. C.
SOLDIERS
W WObJ>* Pcnsio
euuieaUi at usunt pvjci! of KKKiblUhftad#
Savei time and »»<meys every menihant needs it. Send for
vrvxilM*. IIousK, IIougtm.,Texits!
PIT EM IS ^Low.te&t^
OlBee, 6QI F STREET,°vifASHINGTQri''D. O.
PATf NTS' J?1??' K' aiulPS<'n. Washington,
^ * O■ p. (.. >-o pay aak^i'l for natotn
until obtMnfd Write for Invontoi's Guide.
M ... «,!!,. KM. ft,h. KI. UX Sl5.
OANCl
r. N ,
r Poaitive cure. —ur.%v. c.
a^ n -MarshatUowa, la
,««». -20-S4.
EMERSON, TALCOTT & CO
THE STANDARD CULTIVATOR!"
WITH 1X3 AlTACHMltHTS FOR *
1'lnnting Corn, Planting Cotton, SoTrtng SirniTn
CUTTING CORN AND COTTON CTATIT!
STANOARO MVE1S, with Weed Guttug tatoi
WSK»B»A1B De*L®BS IS
P«rm Vatom, Mll«h«U, t*.wtn & r.,..
Hi sUlaiw lltijjgici, OarrJagiM smd Wni
Erie Engine Wo
S&W RMUS rn
w»,g«
HAY RAKES
""^^iiS, ,
'WOKWT lC°^l
Ulh Ej!55iW, M anases-
and 839 MAIN ST., Dallas.
■
fc" -"
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The Albany News. (Albany, Tex.), Vol. [1], No. [18], Ed. 1 Friday, June 27, 1884, newspaper, June 27, 1884; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth444847/m1/4/: accessed May 5, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting The Old Jail Art Center.