The Fairfield Recorder. (Fairfield, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 23, Ed. 1 Friday, February 26, 1892 Page: 2 of 8
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H
She Kfcovbrr.
THE ECHOES.
Bl RD-SLA Ub HTlS.
W«ntoq
L D. U jLABI). ItehlUtute
Fairfield,
’ To*
I There are a good many up~ and down*
in business, but there hi an over-ruling
I •*■ K --—— | ProfSIeaae. .»Y#ars ago 1 made up nay
•j THE SUBJECT OF DR. TALM ACE’S j minfl to trust vGyd «»d 4te *»A8 always
LATEST SfcRMON. I seen tfie through- i irnichlli^r when-I
was your age- 1 had- just eotne
___.____ - r. .. . - ..... , —. ■ , I to town and the temptation of dify life
It is certain that ono of the troubles *’h* **■"*••■* Agate Prom the*~<mn«aln». I gathered around me, but I resisted,
of our jjivUiittiLon is iiie misdirection ft*— *■*“«« 7:7. Rnwlu »'Tf*« fAtt Is there were two old folhs out
of philanthropic mgans and* money, for mm iwtrurtlw libctum Kchwj* j on the old farm, prttyingafor me, and I
»md there Is no expenditure which is of a»4 (iwi ’ ■ I knew it, and somehow IoduUl not do as | teeming witu' blrtls. ' but when tb
regarded with** There universal sat is-I **»»*•»*. % T. Jan. 17. 1W2. Dr- Loom* of »»« clarlm did pr go whor* fashion demanded that every woman’*
<e €M*>1
It la Carried On tu florid *.ln
and ciu.l \¥»y.
■ rThe rush of tourists to Florida In-
creases oiory winter, H arid sot niueh
sliootbig every.uiau neurly takes hit
gun its) rapidly diminishing the gamo
ull through the country*
Tim time was, aipbonly a-iew yearn
ago when every bay and lagofth yitu
which la intelligently, devoted to the
^ relief of misfortune.* ■ .
The prospect of au
cholera or of yellow fever will frighten
any country or community, for thesis
disease*^affect a large number of •- peo-
ple in a community and act with rapid
seruma this morning of liis mastery
the art Of drawing spiritual lessuua
from common natural phenomena, liis
l'«»bject was "Echoes,” and his text:
invasion Of pv^jl 7; 7> •‘The sounding again of the
mountains.” * •
ifrqelt mythology represented -he
Echo as a jhtpiph, the daughter of
Earth and Air, following iiarcissus
pis noth ihg to keep onp rightUke flKA,id-
fashioned religion of Jesus ChrisL .John,
•i h-redufyou goto church la-t Sunday?
(tear/? bow Jsth.6 Young Men s Chris-
and terrible effect. Knch visltatibus1 through the fore*** «nd into
are dreadfifl, but they are fortunately
short-lIveiHn this country. They have
and every whither, and po strange-mid
weird and startling is the Eoho I do not
devastated cities and status, bu£ for all "on,j" ««. ** »-BSJ^titio|U hare
that the v «,-c in thn lomr Imn of less i-U ,nt° th« »npernatumi. Ton
that they are in the long <run of less
consequence than consumption.
Akaiut, Pa, id the abiding place
of a man) .who baa lived in Susque-
hanna'vbunty all his life, and has
never yet set foot upon g railroad car,
though ttie Erie track runs through
farm.. When thp road was built
h'd declared that the locomotive wds
the Invention of §atan, 'and he wanted
to die before one whittled through
bis meadows. Alt attempts to induce
him to take a ride upon a train have
thus far proved futile.
To impose upon the members of thp.
militia regiments the burden of ineeu
ing expenditures attaching to mllita
servants of our civic imitations is un-
just, parsimonious and dbwqrightly
dishonest Either the,, state soldiery
should be abolished or it should be
suitably supported by the state. This
duty is the more imperative because
ih£ men belonging to the regiments
•re InV&riably'solf-supporters engaged
In employments which do not yield
more'than enough for theig duties to
bonnet Qltould lie deco lute I wi),h some
• kind of A bird nr its. (vuthera men
wero sent to Vlorida to procure them,
and one expedition returned, it issijiid.
with 1*00. Oud bird-idcinK, shpt during
the winter. ‘Suph destructios hi novf
tints association prospering?” Aborrtt --Tdt ttUiJalt
themselves and tl
l ttyeir fami^
If.
/' * ‘ j It requyys pretty large, numbers to
exhibit the condition • and growth of
the public schools in, this country.
tjjffcho whole number of pupils enrolled
is 12,291,269, or nearly one-fifth the
, population, the increase last year hav-
ing been 220,903. But the increase is
aud I in boyhood, or girlhood experi-
mented with' this responsiveness of
aunnd. Standing half way between the
hfmse and barn, we shouted many a
time to hear the reverberations, or g\at
among the’ mountains lis;k of our
hums,cm some long tramp, we stopped
and made'exclamation with full lungs-
just to hear what Epekicl calls
“the sounding * again , of the
mountains” The Echo Us fright-
ened many -a child and* many a man.
It is no tame thing after yon have
spoken to heartfiie same words repeated
by the invisible. All the silences are
filled with Voices ready to aiawer.- Yet
it wonld not be so startling if they said
nomething else, but why do those lips
of the air say just .What you say? Do
they mean to iy°ck or mean to please?
Who are you and where are you, thou
wonderouh Echo? Sometimes Its re-
sponse is a reiteration. The shot of a
gun the clapping’ of hands, the beating
"of a drum, the voice of a violin are some-
times repeated many times by the
Echo. Near Coblentz—that which
is said has seventeen echoes In
1760, a writer says that near Milan,
Italy, there were seventy such refleo*
(ions of sound to ene snap of a pistol.
Play a bugle near a Lake of Killarney
and the tune is played back so you as
distinctly aa when you playpd\iL
There is a well SK feet ddrp-Hrt Caris-
brooke Castle in the Isle of Wight.
Drops pin into that well, and the sound
of its fall comes/to the top of the well
distinctly. A blast of an Alpine horn
cornea back frqjn the rocks of Jungfrau
in surge after iurge of reflect rd sound.
is an interesting illustration of tbeV ou noticed_ana this is the reason for
change going on ip the character of i)the present discourse—that this Echo
the population of New England that in the natural world has its analogy in
the school enrollment in that section
has beau declining for several years.
“OrGHT our daughters to be dow-
ered?” is a question apd lately under
full discussion in the North American
Rcvfiewi' The question is so easily
o.i ,|»erBd- tbat It ,h,uld .oon l« | Z
so'tled. Unquestionably a daughter __»__j „n 4»„.
the moral and religions world? Have
you noticed the tremendous fact that
w'uat we say and do comes back
In recoiled gladness or disaster?
So, also, the Judgment day will be
an echo of all onr other days’ The
universe needs snch a day for there are
so many things in the world that need
sfiJed. Unquestionably a dnughter
shi.lldj have .the best, dowry with
wl iih her parents could equip her.
Bi’timoney is not thfe chief and only
(lc tty, as the debaters assume. Bet-
,ter Than riches in the eyes of the
jin Mous bridegroom is the capacity
had not appointed su«;h a day all the
nations would cry out, “Oh, God, give’
day," But we are apt
and speak about it
away off in the future,
having i no special connection with
this day or any other day. The fact is
□auons wouiuci
us a Judgment d
to think ,of it
as a d(iy away
for , marketing Wsely or for getting | that we arc now making up its voices,
UP . u».,. .nd .„Cd.„„r.. b. 'SfSS
*rT
it added, are almost as rare as rubies
and sapphires. '- C
doubts as toui
If anyone has'hny
'inability of the United States supreme
court to keep in sight of its legitimate
’•work the iqero, statement that 1,300
cases are already on its dockets shoifTS
'remove all doubt. - By the hardest
* kind of hard work the court manages
to dispose of 490 cases a year. There
js iftorc than three. years’, business in
sight already. One’ioes not nCed to
„ he told that theidela^ in many of Jhe
cases already docketed will amount to
a denial of justice to the parties in-
terested ap«l that this condition will
”bb IntensiSed in the cases yet tfi be
* appo‘led pftle«3 Ohngrcss afford some
* j relief by legislation. *"
is the meaning of all that Scripture
which says that Christ will on that day
address the aoui, Saying, “I was naked
and ye clothed'me, I' was sick and in
prison and ye visited me.”
My subject advances to tell yeu that
efernity itself is only an Echo of time.
Mind you, thjr analogy warrants my
saying this. The Echo is n^Lqilways
exactly in kind like the sound origin-
ally projected. Lord Raleigh says that
a woman’s voice sounding from a grave
waa returned an octave higher. A
scientist playing a flute in Fairfax
county,. Vn., found that all the note*
were returned, although some of them
5212- in mirri plfrlL* A iyssipct
noon the ruiu ceases and the sun Comes
>ut and the clerks so to their pihees.
and they say within theuuttlves:
TWeli; be rt^’n seee^vital merchant. I
' tnd I guess he knows what he i.atilk-
ng about, and the Christian religion
must be a good thing,
knows I want some help in this
battle with temptation and sin.” The
successful merchant who uttered the
kind words did not know typv much
good he was doing, but the Echo will
comp back, in, fiy lifetimes of virtue
xnd^usefulness, and five'Christian death-
beds, »nd five heavens- From all the
mountains of rapture and all the mo m-
tains of glory and all the mountafHs of
eternity, he will.oatch what Ezekiel in
my text styles “the souuding again of
the mountains.”
And if it is so hard.to destrey a V-1-
ural echo, how much harder to stop "
mora) echo, a spiritual echo, an imir.r**-
tal echo. Yon know that the xA os
are affected by the surfaces, ax the
shape of rooks, and the c.',. th of
ravines, and the relative position ol
buildings? And. once in heaven. God
will *o arrange the relative poaition of
mansions and temples and thrones
that one of (be everlasting charms
of heaven will be the „ rolling,
bursting, ascending, descending, chant-
ing echoes. All thrf' song^' we’">ev ?
ng devoutly, all the prayer* wo h , j
ever uttered earnestly, all the Chris-
tian deeds we have ever done, will he
waiting to spring upon ns in echo. Thu
scientists tell us that in this world the
roar of ar'Jllery ahd the boom of the
thunder are so loud, because
they are a combination of echoes—
all the hillsides, and the caverns
and the walls furnishing a share of the
resonance. And never will we under-
stand the full power and music of sn
Echo until with supernatural faculties,
able to endure them we hear all tho
conjoined sounds of heavenly Echoes—
harps and trumpets, orchestras and or-
atorios, hosannahs and hallelujahs, eftst
side of heaven answering to the west
Side, north side to south side, and all the
heights, and all the depths, and all'the
immensities, and all the eternities join-
ing in .echo upon echo, echo in the
wake ot echo; "in the future state,
whether of rapture or ruin, we will
listen for reverberations of earthly
things and doings. Voltaire standing
amid the shadows will listen, and
from the millions whose godlesa-
nesa and libertinism und de-
bauchery were a consequence of his
brilliant blasphemies will come back a
weeping, wailing, despairing, agoniz-
ing million-voiced Echo. - l’aul will,
while standing in the light listen, and
from all the circles of the ransomed,
and from all the many mansions whoirf
he helped to people, and from all the
throne* he helped to occupants, and
from all the gates 'he - helped throng
with arrivals! and from all the
temples he helped fill with wor-
shippers, there shall come hack to him
a glorious ever-accumulating, trans-
porting and triumphant Echo. -Oh,
what will the 'tyrants and op-
pressors of the earth do with tho
Echoes. Those who are responsible
for the wars of the world will have
come back to them all the groans,
the shrieks. The cannonades, the
bursting shell; the srackle of
burning cities, and tbe crash
of a‘ nation’s ham its.
But you -know as well as I do
that there are some places where the
reverberations seem to meet, surd stand
8uoh
hough
the authorities have
the slaughter, It is like
16’after the hprjjo ,1#
now prohibited t
locking the stab!
stolen.
rOn tbs Apalwchicoia mw Wild tur-
keys -and duck^ aiV» shot wantonty
from the decks of thu atcaipbouts arm
God alligators all aiong the banks come ip
tor a fusilade from tfie-rifies of tho
paasen^erk ray recent trip oh
this river I ^aw - numbers of tdrkeys
shot as they w?ro running along tho
badks, that were of couyse lasted, ba
the boat, couki not stop to pick them
up; and fivory flock ol ducks .that rose
was ftrod’ into,' killing hi- maiming
more’or less of the nr. hot- onLy ba
the ground of wanton cruelty should
the owhers.of ftiose boats pVohlbit the
AMONG THE LEPERS.
uso
noy
of fif-e-arms, but it is a gloat ati-
ance to many passengers to bavb
g* -*-*• "j"*** x I Z ---- ’
sounded ten, times near Glasgow. ] ing there they, rush upon you, they
Scotland, and the ten notes were all re-’ rain upon yon, all at once th*/ Ohptijr*^ _
noated. but a third lower. And the ^Jonr ear And at tho point ^
The potVej* to discriminate in rates
of trtpsportition is one tfust qnnj-make
and _upmake cities, indi-
vidunla Its abuse in dimes-past, has
been one of-the most fruitful som^es of
injustice, and its secr-bLoperation has
broughtiruin unexplained upon hosts
df Alper*cans. All su<?h‘ acts are
dearly prortyiifBced os;
conviction of such offence a m<oi can
’ be heavily fitfad and sent io the penh
tontiary like any other nyilefactor.
Far some time past if has been a de-
batable question Whether it ’wis
possible Tor the government to put ^
stop to rate diacrimipatiops.' If one
railroad or; president or general man -
ager can bo sqnt to alnte prison that
comincfruin wili be answered. It, is
worth while to-make the e^ort.
pea ted, but
spiritual law corresponds with tho
natural world. What we do of good or
bad may'not com? back to us In just
the proportion wc expect it, bat come
back it will; it aaay be from ft higher
a ihan we thought or from a
gladness
deeper woe, from a mightier CQnqnrror
where all heavenly reverberations
meet, Christ will 6tand and- jiaten
for the resound of all his sighs,-and
groans, and sacrifices, and they shall
com? back itT as echo in which -shall
mingle the acclaim of a redeemed world
and the “Jubilate Ijeo” of .a full heav-
Echa ' saintly, chhrubic, arehan-
around them. . to ' say nothing of the
danger to life from tho caroless uSe of
(fifes' by mere boys as some pf them
were. It is a theme tho Forest and
Stream might properly bring to the
notice of the proper authoritioi (the
owners of the steamers) in the cau«o.
and enter a protest against such wan-
ton destruction of such rare game as
the turkey, as well as every other
bird ooining in, for slaughter, ns., ifc
now tho case on the river boats op the
Southern rivers.—forest and Stream.
A CHINESE COUNTRY HOUSE.,
It Him Only Ono Main’ Room, In lljltch
' " tl>« Wji and tlie Fa in Ur I.lvo.
A Chinese farm house ik a curious
looking abode, says tlie Jewish Mes-
senger. Usually K is sheltered with
groves of fputhored_bamboo, nnd thick,
spr&adibg.banyans. The walls are of
clay and wood, and tho interior of the
house consists of eno main room, ex-
tending from the floor to tin- tiled
roqf. with closet-looking apartments,
in the corners for sleeping-rooms.
There is a sliding window In the roof
made out of oyster shells arranged in
rows, while the side windows are mere
An Aiu^rttmi ( spl »iu‘s Notol*
of HSbiiK at MolokitL
M, Souvih. writing to I.e Corre-
gpondont of a Visit made to, the good
Sisters of K a tan pap a. the successori
of the martyr priest Father Damien,,
of tjto Lazaretto of Molokai. Kingdom
of Hawaii; eay«.‘ - \
■*We should not know what to daM
said one of the sistom to me, - -without
the excelled^ Mr. ,N."
“Who Is Mr- N?” sqid 1 to Father
Vaudeliu. wuen he lnoi left the sister.
“You shall see for yourself,” he re-
plied. smilingly.
We stopped a moment at_tl)o door
df a collage similar to all the other*
aud a» yre dismounted a .man of-u(
lout 40 years, of age, tall with a
long.' hlovk beard, high forehpail and
luiaillgc.u; Lu. lbs
shade. Notwithstanding his blua
liner, clothes, he had a fine appear-
ance and di<it.)ngnliih»<J msSS*?. His
hands wjro white , -• :
••We have not seen you to-day, Mr.
N., ” said the priest. ‘ *
“1 have taken advantage of tho hol-
iday to 1 have not loft tho
house.1’/ t »
Mr- Ni employed correct English,
but seemed little Inclined to permit
much investigation with regard to
himseif. As he replied * with great
brevity to tho various questions I
asked him I saw that he was not fond
of such Indiscreet interlocutors, for
which reason I made signs tp the
priest to return to KalavaoL/
>-What do you think of Mr. N. ?”
said my companion. 1 j
- ■ Jlc a jpears to be n very good man,
but rather melancholy- hud silent. Is
he a leper?” . ,y
rOrtpinly not. Mr. N. was a cap-
tain in tho United States array; one
day he left his quarters without say-
inftawird to anybhdy; ho came to
these islands and' asked permission to
visit tlie iazprettoi .Upon arriving
here he succeeded in haring his serv-
ices accepted.' This was six years ago,
and he cues not think of leaving. Ho
nevet1 speak* of his past life. He is
profoundly religious and I presume
that, wishing to retire from the world
for some reason connected with his
heart or conscience, he chose the
only suie de that is allowed a Cat ho
Ho—after, lie ing hla life for thesi poor
unfortunr.toa The agent for the gov-
ernment lias several limes desired to
appoint him tp some administrative
office., but he has always declined to
accept it He treats the sores of lep-
er* in the last stages of tbe dlseaso,
busies the, dead and assists the sisters
in the boys' asylum, living like an
Anchorite without ever relaxing his
Maaey,p«o|ile Jo not i
i in tii worth telling unles
—Ex. . ’
maKxv even th«
i t is sensational.
"Tho iieop'e’s |Vi-h\ or. toe glee divine's
(Uf'UKi, th*' Vnfliii' iVlln-kViHU.U ami tuV» nlii
__JNPBP-'-,p Diilu'» vmiuu and too olJ
mun'lias lo find *,trr*<l
iii-i ji Ini- imin
___^--- pH I)
tti'pH lur pain. W*»Ji, it iH.fouwO ««*■>> .uni'
no mistake. Kvrp.v aiuv *i»L w.ii ijii j uu.
about SaiTHtion Oil.
OUR Mi
The sun Origlyteus every I ife ej-eept
few cuseeof biltmiSor spoiled pooulc.
Jonah felt well protpr"cd flfinl ‘-uld when
lie waS huused in the wf.jla, but lu> coujd -
have iiiivlputed the open sea on Ills baity if, ij
ho had owned u buttie of Dr. Bull s Coiigh
fhmip. , * '
Rcmomb,r that theyo 1s« difference be-
tween conservatism und cowardice.—1-jx,
Wh.v,Is tt*lhut physicians lire opposed to
proprietary I'eejedieif ts it liecnmic such
meritrrlm.wt»>nin 1 ye« as. F0ftdj5.IIs.frat -t or
“ -" '1 ”■ 14%.......bpuaebpid ijofo-zUie*
rTurHujaTuu
Take things us they /tome, and if thejr
don’t edme go after thmn.- News,
FITS. All iUMK-UWl 1 run hr u*. 11.111-1 nRKAT
,VVrv« l!«.ti>rf-r No KU after nr.tdiiy*i,ij.c, Mnt-
vellou. rurr* Tr,‘Mi,r snh >2.00 trial pottle feyr to
ntOMes, HeuS to Dr. KJlne.Hai Arch At.. Hills.. Fa.
People like to lieur bad news almost as
well as they Use to hear good news.—Ex.
. «100 Reward. SIOO.
Tbs readers of thin paper will be pleased to
(oerh thet there In nl l<-«st one dreaded dlsexae
Unit relenee baa been able to cure In *11 Ua ainy, a,
and ibAt !• Catarrh. Hall’s Dauirrh Cure!■ the
only poattlve cure now known
fraternity. Catarrh
tbe medical
j-onstltutlohiig.
dlooaae. requires a cosstitutloual treatuienl,
lUIl’iiCstarrh Cure la taken Internally, acting
directly upon the blood and mucous snrfecen or
tbe system, thereby destroying tbe foundation
of thedleease, and giving tbe patient strength
by building r.p the constiiaOou arid aaaleung
nature In doing Its work. The propftetors have
so much filth In Ita eunttlve |<owera that they
ffcrOne Hundred Dollars for eny eaite that l»
onor _____ . ,,
fills to oure. Send for list of testimonials.
ddress P. ,1. C1IBNSY-& CO.. Toledo, (X
Id by Druggists, Tbo.
Adi
Bob
There are too many dwarfs with giant
am billons.
When Baby was sick,, we gave her Castor!*,
When she wai a Child, she cried for (Jamtori*.
When -he become kiss, she clung to Castoria,
When Shu hod Chlk Iren, she gave them Castoria
4 As soon as a man begins to feel green it
makes him blue. —Dallas News.
carbuycler, sore-, pmiplei
The floor is bar^ earth, where at-- "Do you think. I said, “that he
nightfall there often gathers together living under -• slight dolu-
a misceiiaiieotia fumily of dirty chil- *:on.rT
dren. fowls, ducks, fiigeons and a “Not for a moment. He is iC very
litter of pigs ull living together in ®er'ous woll-bala-ced man. who has
happy harmony. In some districts in- imposed a duty upon himself, \kilh
tested by marauding bands houses are regard to delusions, my dear sir, they
strongly fortified with high walls,
containing apertures for firearms, and'
protected by a moat crossed by a rude
drawbridge. With gram, swine und
a well under his roof, "the farmer and
his inon * might hold out against a
year’s siege; j
MITES OF MIRTH.
Mr* Gazzam—“Why. Mm. Jiwayliack,
the last time I saw you your hair xui
blonde. Now it is dark. ” Mrs. Bway-
backr- ‘Ye«; you know my husband died
since thou.’’ “Yes.” “And I^lyed, too.”
—Smith, Gray & Co.’s Monthly.
pass very quickly from among us.
M'e are too far from the wcurld for the
sacrifice to make much noise, and the
sad monotony of the lazaretto is the
most effioaciou* of Annpyunces. Mr.
N. showa moreover: such modesty
that even, in /Honolulu the greater
number of people'are ignorant of his
existence." / , fj'ji Av
' I shall take cafty to respect the in-
cognito of Jlr Jf.i but frixn the inner-
most recesses of m^-M)ul 1 send l^im a
tribute <• -“fihiratiim. ’ '
I,oeal applications will n|aver cure bolls,
rlieumatisui.
mpuritv is the
a remoily must
the’ blood to a
emfily Is Dr.
so it und you
WPS your-
srliing Joint*, etc H
cause of these ailments, anil
be taken thiit will realore
healthy condition. Such a
John Hull’s iNii'tuparllta.H
will bsve perfect health, Y'
self If you fell to ti-y. it.
The tip-top waiter come
does not come at all.—Newt
high,
or he-
TO CLEANSE THE (SYSTEM
Effectually yet gently, when costive or
bilious or When the bloodl is
impure or
Sluggish, to permanently cure habitual
constipation, to awaken the kidneys
and liver to a healthy activity, Without
uni
irritating or weakening them, to dispel
headaches, cold of fevers, use Syrup of
Figs.
The. question is, what are you going to
do about Itjwhen you can't help It-—News.
A l ad)'! IVrliil Form.
Ladles desirous of having a perfert
JACOBS ou
W thaba mahk^
•Do yon think, Mabel, that your father lenoVof om ltohs“Aid*mBeuuty.1”
would ever help me in business)” ‘ fi’m
surh bo would, George. He said kthe other
night that he would havejriven ^j»eu a lift
if yon hadn't got away from the front
door »o quickly.”—Washington Star.
A lady famed for her skill in cobking
was entertaining a number of friends at
tea. Everything on the table was much
Sent free.in plain, sealed envtlope. Greeu
leaf Toilet Co., box UK), Dallas, Tex.
REMLdy^PAIN
The difference bciweeu sentiment and
sense is that sqntimtyit is sufe to get
hungTy.—Ex. . /
IJniveralty Kxten*Ion.
Have you heard of this new education-
admired, but the excellence of the sponge
pt
cake waa especially the subject of remark.
"Oh.” exclaimed One of tbe guests, “it is
bvautifuHy soft and light Do toll tee
al movement? It is a gigantic projoci Uu
bringing the advantages of a Coll^p-
education right to the home of all tho
people. This work ia to be accomplished
:DYf°K!
Cubes Piohitly and Pekmaninti y
RHEUMATISM,
Lnmbgpo, IlfBiladiD.Toothftflie,
NEURALGIA,
Bore Throat, 8Wcllln(i, Frost-bitM?
SCIATICA,
Sprains, Brnlaes, Harps, Scolds,
TV CHtRI F* » vorri rs co eaWmere. M
where you got the recii>e!” "i am .very by lecfurea, examinations, homy study,
glad. replied tile hostess... ‘‘that you and instructions given by correspond-
find it so soft and light. I made it out of enoe.
my own head.’’—Youth’* Companion.
— .......—■ ^
CURIOUS CLIPPINGS.
I Thai abort-h*nH Huh
I MM now 4..... -
prayer or ^^ph^Tnf ktod- »
P y dtv. our faith or onr «»ho! Everlasting eoiiol Am ul
Uess or onr ernelty,' our faith or ouf
uu.lrclieJ, Onr holy life or our disso-
lute behavior, will come back some-
how. Suppose the boss of a factory or
tbd head of a commercial firm, some
day come* out amoag his clerks or em-
ployes, and putting hi* thumb in th*
armholes of hi* vest,. saysL with an air
at swaggtY"*nd jocosity. “Weil, I don t
The advocates of the'admDsiqn, of
women to tho general copforenco of
the Methodist Episcopal chulVsh as
delegates carried .the election by About
62 per cent, of the total number ql
believe in the bible or the church The
•ne is an hppoftition and the other s
full of hypocrites. I declare 1
not trust one of those very
people further . than I could
, him” Thai Ur all he says, but
hp has said enough. The young men
MASCULINITIES-
Only one AxmsHcan in 364 U over 6 feet
la height
Tha Earl of Dudley ha* *0,000,000 life
insoranca.
1 he Tii^l giant U the maa who can over-
doime I
It ia pd-dble .to becotqe bad undue tha
would t-..t 0r in(Vq‘-4!q«-«
pious 1 A ninn t
vot» *ira*L 'Jhc popular Voting wilL protoamy runiu ■,■■■» -----
how ever, have little to* do with thy, Bn,,* against IMble* and churv-bes ba*
dfuect seUlemebt of the question * ‘
vow taken was merely for thd pit
of ganging the prevailing senti
of the people. The votV‘>J Dm eon1
eacos. will !>•• liken fiji tbo annual
lareiings of tha^rcscnt’winter, and it
r|l 1-equiiJ a yi 1 etcfourtlm majority
to - decide
Eveb Ijmfi' w
ted to the h,lghes
wnldasalbey could rally to their danse
twovthirds of the members of the aaxt
gen-irsl ooafc.euoe.
a! thaii:
1 *
U6>W«u rrffli-maUrclY-
vomuiv/woulf(. not be admit-
.Ighest/coufi of Methodism
A mnn'i dhcffniag years begin at a
worn on's tnflit 15 to 18.
If a woman’s face is her fortune, - *
man's cheek is frequently his
go back to their Counter^ or their fthnt- 1 Love ia ilke soup -iha ttrxt spooqful to
ties, and nay within themselve*: "Well, too heu tha J«t to always too ookL
he is a lin-ei-ssful man and ha* probably a abort acquaintance -Tha man »tt
etudied up the whole subject and la to alway. wanting to ls>now meney
k, ,ldv rlc-hl " That one ■> -"K utter 1 be davit never needa a adV mean
ance against Bibles and church.-a has. «th«, th. on. who to . tyrant to hi.
put five young men i» the: wrong; " that when a mamdrop. hU
and though -the influential man teW . . .ov
rtoken only in belf -icsL the Echo shall
back to him in five naizied
voice It Ttioke. low noto* U&a when h»
raim. K. ,
it bat th. child raoelve* free, what th»
yrein* man sleato, aigji what the old nla»,
l,u\- - >. Ids*
h. custom of call lug th. cblldrwn ol
Liverpool is tbo largest aliippiuK port in
tha world; then comes Lohdon, and then
New York New York -stands second to
London,-’however, as a general commer-
cial city. !’
A Chicago merchant to said to have, ob-
tained a number of specimens of the A i)a
mes* loof, probably tjie largest gold coin
in ..circulation, rated at each, for
nrwientation to his friends as curios.
If all ,the locomotives in the United
Btatep -were coupled .together they would
smkil- a train 200 miles long. Add the
miles long, can-iing 1,500,0110 pos-
ing is directly in the line of University
Extension, and ought to prove populai
with -our readers. See full announce-
ment in -another column.
Mr. and Mrs. l’etorby have been
married several years. They live very
peacefully, as is usual with married
folks, but occasionally have a falling
out . A few days ago she-put on her
things and said she was going to her
mother. When Mr. Petcrby asked the'
reason she said,:
• -That was not a nice way to treat
m LIVER
PILLS
DO NOT 0RIPE MOB 8ICKKN.
f«r« cure for 8ICK HEAD
AC lIlb. I.npnircd digestloH , COnffti-
. putlon.tf.rpi(i KliimU. 1 hi-rnruii#
^ vital Organa, p-»ndv<> neu«4>n. •■!/>
CO •'"'•"-a Magical « < t on Kltl-
j nev?* amil»lf»d«Irr. ('onauer
.1 VailioiiN uorvoui <11*-
: or«lf»r*. EatablUh nut
•* W W ur«l I)Attr action,
me. Tc. day SZi my birthday, add
oonae b*c*, to
lifetime*, a»M? grayed eter
niUea You see the Eehoe* are an
oata-re lower than he «r<llo>petr,V- ;-ft
the other Haml. Mme rainy dav. when
there "are hardly any cuafcroem. Urn
Christian memhstiT otunes out frrun the
ocrunting raom and atanfis among 'ho
71.2’-'"*°^'7~?
day. but It W|^i elear off after * " “« . J /
etagvra \ |
Hitherto the British bushel has bp on
reckoned ns sixty one pounds of grain,
bnt a change having open . made in the
standard whigbt the buslwd in future is to
bedefineci by tire more ronsonnblc number
af sixty pounds. ,
Tbe fact that first strikes American
visitors to Home is 1 Uu_ui>*iuoubly tnoder-i
character of the Holy "City, and the anti-
quities have to bo looked for. Tbe city
appears prosperous and improving, bht
these are a<it thtngs usually spld ef it.
The statue of William Ellery ( Hiartnlng,
to lie 'feected in Newport at a host bf
§20,000, is given l>y W. .1. Whkl. now of
that city, but formerfy a Bostonian. Yhe
granite base will stand ten feet als-ve' the
gropnd. and tlie broille will rlsahine feet .
bl^b.r. / nnrvli
It to legal in Canndaf to advertise the
sale of nil account ngninst. n delinquent
debtee, no matter If It Is dime to tnjnr--
Uie crwliUaxid reiHitatiou of the debtor
Juatic. dlose, of Klngstsm^ba* decided
that an account against fi debtor it tho
you did not surprise me with n pres-
ent. Every year since we have Itnov.-u
each other you have given me a pres-
ent Dn my birthday, and I counted on
your doing it this timeq,’’ <
• But my dear, where would, tln-. o
have been kny surprise if I hail made
-you a present? 1 didn’t give you any-
thing on purpose so that you might
enjoy a surprise. I knew yen wanted
to ho surprised, so K determined to
surprise you even al the risk of your
getting angry.'— Texas Sifting*.
indie ■■Pewdrop,”
erf ill euro of Liquor a»nl
watee prarap*®. _
(#.^)l(eiloie« loss of manhood.
- “Ue w 4 rap
Ag/mts wanted Ui handle
which ts a wj
Opium babi
Preacher* nltfl' lawyers us,- it to enable
tlietn to ctlleft their thoughts uasf speak
Notuiug (in can n equals it. as u
nervtaV. Pnee IVMI per bnitlo b\ mail.
Agontslmnke big money sollimr Dewdrop,
Every wife vboHc nusband driqks should
send fur a bottle. Every husband who
has a wim 4t the morphiao habit should
got a bottlel
pounding
Jealousy ■.*.+ 0,0ute sort o# flattery
ws
AiklVei
•it • y <n
p|
Tbfi Southern Com-
Y rhilin^ Tex.
of the f*r0<Stf^>r (to diipoa# of ,, , - ,
, LT ploasra : l • | U)“l ’ ' ”
» -ilinc of the bejKlsemest cole
. ----— ---- , A ledge of rtoho hae lieen ;dia*overed at ^ 1 line of the haisU.Miesl oolen'darh for
warned wnj»jm far U»*lr m-i-her* maiden (jbwote, Xff., which a* yet no onw ha* 1892 that ha* com* to our noth* W.thal of
,'HM to raid to iujrvxv. in mnw Hoou-b | tawn abi* to Identify The rogk i* of a tb« Cottyi Belt KouW Ateivc the c*,*n-
viUr*. ,ramtoteme fmfeatten. h.vi„g . grassy
bare are an aatonr shin ontiib.r o j touch, amt to »i»c«|itlbl. of a high polish. witMtofic^cy ample and in the midst
ad Bcenie appear*
f^wlp e la this worid 'wbu « Fte llv. oaa
I hundred vewhi bafoie'Yb»yon./ h.ai-U
appeeF* the kitfky heads
It oeal be sawed or shaved with a knife, this graad
but when exposed t« the action of Hr. lie- and mulling face* o( two typical aebtbern
ekuae* herd. ‘ 1 pickeahinle*. One of the** hanctoome
w calendar* can be- bad by addresaing «W.
/ H. WtaOteTo. P. aad f. A,f>ter, Tex
The d&U id
flfwrW
porket
LT V KG ETA HI,K.
pnHfvtnff
mccijrjdUjiftrki to gull cmf, b« onto pill to«n
!too much. Each vTalrm tain* 4ft, toargurtLjnyt-»t
Ilk* ItoR'l pcnfU Iluaine**** lUlin'* frc*l
potoket llk« lrad pentll. liiiaim'** luari’M
tonvonUnw Taken to«akr than eugar Sold «vo
All Rvniitne good* l»rar “Crraocnt.”
tahtorr. AH gcnbln* foo__ ___
Bend 2-cent elajiip. Yoju Ret 33 p*g* book with n*tDpl«,s
no HARTER MFOrtNr ro . St Louts, «*«•
it hda^i Dy
tovery RtoiaJl
i>m,
btoro, Law
V V ^*r. Minin
j * ttor, l>o<*t,i>r;
9^ Public
* 01’hOOl l»
tatoptin^t (I;
»,<|)*nvn and
U9 allthto'fJov
EZ toi nnitont Of
fWer*. h
Hiniuf of il*
^Hclr-nu print,
^■fiinlpil'-n v h
nunlfolrt
Vcoplrt. N<>
IV '
8i* JlaatT, Tiiojimos, td.
meet noted |.li jticlanot Eng
■ land.4i.7a that more than
half of all (Uoeoota couki from
emu* In diet
Bend for ffreo fiaaple of
iOorfltld Tea t* *19
fUth.fitrast, Haw t^fkCKy.
Owe**
and posseiMei]
„m,hie Uit, qaoplej by theil- use./Jo cure
Ives and so get on withofft rnyfng
“S*sr sals
thetpxclves and so gel on wunonr raving
doctors’ Mils! Guvlield' T?u ciiren l-eiwtr
potion arid sickdiuudeehe; rcstoro* the com-
plexion und save* doctors’ bill*.
passers by in|
months.
There are scl
in every nefgil
first girl gave [
fur an ex pi an J
next door tvl
whispers of
owner of the J
.was said, die
who, ffieing a i|
in death to <.
dared to livJ
had sorrowed!
the death of
year of they- ■
• For her htl
tumble wandl
those he shoul
in the most um
without the b|
“And, contil
tone, “every il
one, I hear hel
till it seems [
frig 1 I 1 m ay|
So we lost (
ant.
A strange
come over tl
after a time wl
“next door’’ w|
a little f&rthe
body would ml
when one (itghl
if of fire thereil
staying with tl
by rushing he/
our house bef<|
his room,
house, but thh
sign* of lire col
Th* next tril
.water. We jvJ
for when we pil
sound of ilsT
came thxough [
we sent inform
reply wapr
"Strang)!! t-hl
e-l ..<? 1 he vw«i,p
could bo no
during t In- win!
Still when tl
the rooms, anl
flooded, while!
etorids showetf
on floors and
open, and yet I
enter. -1 tic- lie
At the end o|
house was
soraely flimisl:
and Ul n.-w u l
to be miarrted
beauty and w«
He never car
per a most sinl
isian high life!
stand why the
ty* , .
A wedding
tween Mr. A.,
and Mademol
a wealthy ba
robed for her
left alone in f
the arrival of I
was ushered ii
apeak to a
passed him t
was unseen b
to liis bride;
spoke. He lo
wayB so gent
they were op
face was as
robe. Khe had
cr in lucgi oum
For anot nei
closed, and tl
ed. and tlie
and his family
it! L”Mi May
faced mother
a happy hueba
You all kn
people axe; so,
dined to lie sen
advances thro
chief-making lit
ed our Ibt xen li
patient Dora,
angel face, wh
BS>Y* ««• Of
rPwo weeks
father, when he
look up ivilh a
noticed that th
was very sad,
ed to grow mo
“It is nobhi
change of air.
well again.”
Tbs third Sn:
How well ( r
towhc? r<*
jtilrwl; will
I Cwcll; PErfOifttor |K Rxira. | qtil. ......
do four work In on* bfftir^prtMinf. takt lo unv town
In tin* 1* B. fortl d«(M7«U, C. 0 l> mbjtort t»»
in inr i «». lurti wuainw auiFiri < v
trinl, Onltrnow dndtret Um> Affncr ODEUj TYIt
WUI^I-H CO.,. S5ft to Ml Dtatrlwm Ntrofti, (Tilu*«o, III.
lsi«SW«Ci*i)l|*ll»a,
i
M*'
e<f in their delio
ture teemed to
indeed here. T
the yard, and s
to church. 8t
strange sound
was thrown op
for somebody
was dying.
we rushed t.o
wilh frightened
Ing with unguis
No word was
to try to pus
Bdmelh'ng-
Could pot see—
great tswui,
The doctor w
. minutes was by
for her spii-it lu
• )ike. a child the
tlie life he was
f From thp chi
learned that
si nu* her seCOn
Dora said “m!
whil* the.servai
■INo wond«r,
lady’ tacs to ta
. "*
- ,ta 4, '
X
i
%
i - ■ ‘i ’1-
t . eiv
1. pie.i'tjiawiiia^iiiisitoswgi
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Lillard, L. D. The Fairfield Recorder. (Fairfield, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 23, Ed. 1 Friday, February 26, 1892, newspaper, February 26, 1892; Fairfield, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1119236/m1/2/: accessed July 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Fairfield Library.