The Post-Mirror. (Pilot Point, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 18, Ed. 1 Saturday, June 6, 1891 Page: 4 of 6
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• .
POST-MIRROR. I
i °kssiss:,'&sussa.
Rat sre shall never so* tbs lead. ,
11m pteaennttwl laud «• knew of yoret
Kever, on »uy Muunor day
;' Hear itkc low muuic of it* streams.
Or trnuder down tbo leufy way
Tlutt laadetb to tbo land <ft dree me
I Still. borne upon the ecented air.
, Tbv toue* of blrde Han clear and awnod.
An when I gathered row* there.
And heaped their gloHee H your feats
And el 111 the gulden pathway Ret
At eve ncroee the went ere eea.
And lower* dream beeiatb theae ski**.
Which skins no more for yon and me
So more, ah, nevermore! and yet
Tbeyewetu no near, thoee noinmer dan.
When hope wee like a jewel out.
To otUnwadown tlme'a misty way*.
I sometime* dream that moraine** light
Will bring them buck to neeneo more.
And that 11* but one long, dark night
Klin e we t wo parted by the shore.
W* ported with eoft words end low.
And '‘Carswell till tomorrow” said;
Prim sc* aod eky and eunevtV glow
A golden halo round you shed;
Then as yon went I hoard yon sing,
"Haute time, sweet morrow!” Parting than.
How could we dream that life would bring
Not any morrow there tor usf
We parted, and the loyit fsrowelt
Its shadow on our life path oast;
And Time'* retention* barriers fell
Between us amt our happy past;
And now we meet when rare* and fear*
Have dulled,the petting end the pale.
But never van the weary year*
Bring back our goMho dreams again.
—Catholic New*.
-.UH TO BCfBHCBlBKKS.
three month*.......
We keep all kind* of Rough and Dresifcd Id
Lime and
i Mulhatton, the alleged chain*
liar of America, la confined <n a
igo lunatic aiylum. Moral—
>1 the truth.”
Constantly on hand at reasonable
Favorite
tlon. It** an Invigorating, raster®*
live tonic, soothing ooruial and
bracing nerviiia w- and a certain
remedy for all the. fnnotional da*
rasgemeata, painful disorders ar
chronic weaknesses peculiar to wen
man. It improves digestion, en-
riches the blood, dispels sohea and
pains, melannjhotjr ana nerrowmea*
brings refreshing deep, and restores
flesh and strength. For periodical
America’s waving grain fields offer
great security against any dangerous
financial panic, and while the golden
ban from her mines are being float-
ed across the deep waters*to foreign
• countries her golden sheafs of grain
stand as a barrier against any setious
financial inconvenience — Houston
J. E. Harper.
And Oountrv Produce
fees and kindred ail*
positi-d specifics—%
, If it fain to grip
It’s a funny law that would
undertake to diolate the character
of manta n man shall eat on 8fa-
day.—Austin Statesman.
It would indeed be funny; but
there la no each law in existence,
fhe law alma to dictate what shall
be Sold on the (Sabbath, and not
idHri a man shall eat. (See the dlf
Gereneet -Houston Post.
Pilot Point, Texas
South Side of Square,
satisfaction, in any com, the money
paid for it is refunded. Mo other
medicine for women is sold on the**
terms. With an oadinary medicine,
it can’t be done.
That’s the way its makers prove
their faith in it. Goo tains no alco-
hol to inebriate; no syrup or .sugar
D. J.'Moki
Wilson & Moffitt,
N* WlI.SON.
California HcvIsKed.
The old miner, full of cherished
memories of tlmt wonderful post, on
revUdtlug the scenes of hie early labors
«ees no winding line of miners by the
river marge, with their rattling rockers
or long toms; no smoke from camp-.
to derange digestion; a legitimate
merlMne, not a beverage. Purely
vegetable and perfectly harmless in
any condition of the system.
World’s Dispensary Medical As*
sociation, Proprietors, No. 663 Main
Street, Buffalo, M.T.
Are or chimney arises from the depths
of gorges; cabins are gone; no laugh-
ter or cheery voice pomes up from the
canyous; no ounce a day is dried by the
supper Are. Gone ure most of the oaks
and pines from the mountain rides; the
IkhU of the rivers are covered deep
with the nccamt’lated debris of years,
over which the water, once clear and
cold from the melting snows of the
Sierra, goes sluggishly, laden with uiud,
in serpentine windings from bank to
bank- On the tableland above, in the
chasms made by hydraulic power in the
pleiocene drift, the hollow column* of
iron that once compressed the water
stand rusting away; the monitors lie
dismantled like artillery Iti a captured
Pilot Point; Texas.
A large quantity of farm and pasture la
and -town property for sale. Will exan
land and make report of quality and v;
r r®e « • I f r . 1 11 «*
Gov. Nmthern, of Georglr, ia a
praoticid farmer, and tbrowa all of
bia Influence in (avor of the di-
versification of crops. He says
that lie baa found, after Iff years’
experience, that cotton Is the least
remunerative product be Kafses,
and, to a great extent, he baa
abandoned it, flodiug that grain,
grass, slock, ate. pay better. He
baa a large dairy farm, has learned
to make butter of w standard
quality, and could sell ISO pounds
a week more than be own new
supply. He bus not bought a
horse or mnle'fbi many years, and
finds a ready sale at satisfactory
prices for all the stock be can
raise. ,!I raise a'l I need,” be
1 says, in summing up the matter,
•‘jnst at all other faim'rs might
do,'If lhey would.”—Exchange.
fortress.
All is silence and desolation where
once was the roar of water and the
noise of busy life. The wuue red and
brown soil hi beneath your feet, the
mime alternation of ridgesond gorges U
here, the same skies unfiecked by
clouds from May to November are
oyeriicAd; the same pure dir is left to
breat'Ki in spit* of courts cud monopo-
lies; a considerable portion of the soil
la cultivated; scattered here and there
over the mountain slopes a.e homes
surrounded with .flowers and fruits —
bot.Uu1 early miner.sees It all witli the
• tod Itelief tiint the glory in gone.—K. G.
Waite in Century. .
Tin. P<mtlna -Oartlen* of Caslimpro.
The thousands ot floating gardens on
Cite rivers of Cashmere are formed by
long sedges which u re woven together
in the form of a gigantic tuat. Theta-
aedjje grasses, (lags, stalks, lilies, etc.,
are woven on the river or lak. banks
while tlielr roots aw still growing In
ite slime 'underneath; the required
liiitount of earth is tlien superimpo«e<l
upon the mat; the stalks are then eut
and tiie mat aud its loud is a full
fledged “floating garden." They are
usually about 30 by AO yards in extent,
seldom larger, the full depth of the
* Allot and Its earthy covering being about
three feet
-All Kan rkmn- _
Bspsesses a dangerous condition we often get
hito, from ovrrwotk. sickness, or < *cn un-
keowu rstues. But It riimild be immediately
overcome By Ukfiig Hood's Baron poni:*,
wblcli will iliapel that tired feeling, revive
tlm deellulug powers, reetore lit* sppetc* end
vltaliio (lie Impoverished blood. If yon decide
to try Hood's Baras peri lie do not be tadeee*
to buy say other preparation.
for Infant* Ktid Children
There
*
„ . Witte*.:*
The greatest crop of wheat and
cotton ever grown in Texas will be
credited to the year 1891. Wheat it
the food of the world, anff cotton is
king.—Fort Worth Gazette.
suppress the man*
A dishonest Cashruiri will
sometimes tow his neighbor's garden
away from its moorings and sell the
iaue Berea it during the
since the law- was passed.
the industry ha* grown/
1 attempt on the part of
THE OLD
produce of the other'* toil. The writer
hod frequently seen on. of the largest
of there miniature garden* being towed
by two men In u rowboat which Iturdly
looked larger than one of the lusetou*
melons serenely reposing on the float-
ing truck farm. - St. Ixuihi Republic.
Historical “Halls. ”
Grave historical writers are occasion-
ally guilty of w(mt are called “Hlberni
clsiiia.” Tito following passage occur*
in a poptilur history of Franco;
mNMoFW
***regaKtf $407,670;
,$6+2,7iO: in iSSfi, $6B6.'-
nd lb f«89, <624,490 i While
r/ to the ««» montlu U the
year lipt, *He aggregate of
butter rsvvrket.Itott* during
CURES
•it ia extremely doubtful whether
this prinoe. Iferovwus. ever existed at
alii but he had a son. Cliilderlo, whose
existence Is well authenticated.”
Tin* following I* also front a historical
Work:
"Like Samson of old. who, armed
only witli (.he Jawbone of au asp, put
eleven hundred Philistine* to the
sword."-Youth* Coiupatilon.
%-*-■-------* -.......
Communities, like Individuals, leant
by experienoc, if intelligent and honest
of purpose. Wlten oonfronUtd with
some exceptional problem of adminis-
tration or of government, their anxious
endeavors should be to remedy the
evil, with « view to prevent a reettr
renae. They have failed In their duty
towani tkahMRvM should they atop
i* B. BRAND, Proprietor,
Manufacturer oi aud Dealer in
Itallian and American
ONUMENTSand HEADfeTON
BOTHGRAmTSlani iURBXJl.
t also carry gra-e fencing. ;'
alaa of oleomargarine.
EpitSflK
la«.—National Dam-
VrM
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Moffitt, D. J. The Post-Mirror. (Pilot Point, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 18, Ed. 1 Saturday, June 6, 1891, newspaper, June 6, 1891; Pilot Point, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth982963/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .